xt77m03xw38x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt77m03xw38x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1964-10-14  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 14, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 14, 1964 1964 1964-10-14 2015 true xt77m03xw38x section xt77m03xw38x Waterfield To Seek Governorship
Lt. Gov. Says He Will Run,
'Nominated, Or Not Nominated'
Speaking of his relationships with Gov.
Edward T. Breathitt, Lt. Cov. Waterfield said
he was still getting along with the governor.
"But," he added, "I don't have as much
to do as I used to."
Further into the question session Lt. Gov.
Waterfield outlined the chances for success of the
current attempt to rewrite the state constitution.
"I think we are headed in the right direction
this time," he said of the present drafting committee working on a revised constitution.
Lt. Gov. Waterfield said that although three
attempts to revise the constitution have failed to
get approval from the voters, each attempt has
received more favorable votes than the one before.
"This time the rewritten version will be
presented to the people as a basis for a convention," he said. "The people haven't understood what the changes would be in the past,"
he went on, and he added, "I think it stands a
much better chance of passing this time."

Lt. Gov. Harry Lee Waterfield revealed at
a Young Democrats Meeting last night that he
would probably seek the governorship of Kentucky in 1967.
In a questioning session after his remarks
on the national campaign, Lt. Gov. Waterfield
said of the governorship, "If nominated I would
run, if not nominated I would run anyway."
He made the statement after he explained
his qualifications of having served six terms in
the Kentucky House of Representatives and twice
as lieutenant governor.
Lt. Gov. Waterfield explained, "If I sit
over the next session of the Kentucky Senate, I
will have served as president protem of that body
more than any man in history."
In his opening remarks Lt. Gov. Water-fiel- d
said it seemed sometimes as if he were stuck
in the position of lieutenant governor. He explained later that he has twice unsuccessfully
sought the governorship while twice he has been
elected to the office of lieutenant governor.

Continued On Page

University of Kentucky
OCT.

LEXINGTON,

14, 1964

KY., WEDNESDAY,

y

'

-

J

;
II

s

2

is:iE n&EHE il
Vol. LVI, No. 24

-

I

Eight Pages

i
r

1
1

1

In a question and answer period following his address to the Young
Democrats, Lieutenant Governor Harry Lee Waterfield said that he
would seek the governorship in 1967, "nominated or not." Lt. Gov.
Waterfield was on campus last night as a guest of the Young Democrats, lie outlined the Issues involved In this year's presidential
election and then answered questions.

Dr. Marcos Kohly Calls Castro
Communist

Pre-Revoluti- on

i;

I-

ho
I.

-

.

-

-

K

1:
'

Kinglteceives
Nobel Prize
BULLETIN
from the Associated Fress
Dr. Martin Lutl'r King Jr.
lias been uvvuriktl tlie Nofxl
Wziue lYize.
The award of $53,000 is presented by the Norwegian Parliament in the name of Dr. Alfred Nobel, Swedish scientist and

philanthropist.
Dr. King is the third Negro
to be awarded the prize. In
an interview at St. Joseph's Hospital, Atlanta, Ga. where he had
a routine physical
undergone
checkup, Dr. King said he intended to spend the prize money
on the civil rights movement
with most of it being contributed
to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference of which King

president.
The four remaining piizes

for

physics, chemistry, medicine and
physiology and literature will be
awarded in Sweden at a future

date.

g

munists.

:

Shirley Meador (center) a Kappa Alpha Theta sorority sophomore
from Louisville was crowned queen of the Pershing Rifles at the
annual Coronation Ball Saturday. Becky Snyder (left) an Owensboro
sophomore and a member of Chi Omega sorority was named first
attendant and Judy Grant (right) a Delta Gamma sophomore from
Kennett Square, Pa., was crowned second attendant.

is

Fidel Castro was a Communist long before
his planning and carrying out of the revolution
diplomat
against the Batista regime, Cuban-bor- n
Dr. Marcos Kohly told 30 students participating
in a special seminar last night.
Dr. Kohly said Castro's Communistic views
were evident in 1942 when he killed a schoolmate in dissention between Communist and
student groups.
"Records of the Cuban Communist Party
captured in the Russian Embassy in Cuba showed
Communist in
that Castro was a
1942," Kohly said.
The seminar speaker said also that Castro's
Communistic background was betrayed when the
Cuban dictator led a raid on the Bogota Conference in 194S, setting fire to the building in which
meetings were held and killing several ComHe refuted ideas that Castro had come
under Communistic influence after the revolution,
saying that this particular view held by many
Americans was caused by the work of Herbert
Matthews, a New York Times reporter.
Matthews followed closely tlie Castro over

throw from its early stages in 1952. Kohly said he
is responsible for the initial American sympathy
toward the Castro takeover.
Dr. Kohly traced the overthrow of the
Batista regime and described
social, political, and economic aspects of Cuba.
He attributed the fall from power of Batista
to misuse of power. "Batista suspended the constitution, a democratic constitution, five times
after his rise to power," Dr. Kohly said.
He said the Castro revolt and Castro's
Communist tendencies were known to many of
those close to the situation, including American
Ambassador to Cuba Earl Smith. These people
were ignored by the higher government officials.
Dr. Kohly charged.
In a public lecture yesterday afternoon Dr.
Kohly told about 70 listeners that the United
States is fighting a propaganda war with its
enemies.
He spoke of the need of better preparation
of foreign service personnel and also suggested a
faculty-studeexchange between the University
and various Latin American countries.

UK Engineering Professor Charges

Administration 'Suppressed' Article
Officials Refused To Pay

"State funds, in short, were to be gambled in an attempt to
buy federal money to do research for the pretetuled purpose of
training graduate students (from out of state, where else?)."
his department chairman, Dr.
Krimm explained he
II. Alex Romanowitz, and sent the article to the University StenoEditor
Kernel Executive
By DAVID IIAWFE
graphic Bureau on his own authority.
'
A University
He said, "when it was learned that this paM-- was concerned
assistant professor charged today a
"article" he authored has been "suppressed" by officials of the with research, publication, and undergraduate education, seven
University after they refused to pay the costs of its production and hundred copies were blocked from the campus mail by an order
from I'aul Nestor. Nestor assistant to the vice president for business
distribution through the campus mail.
affairs and treasurer could not be reached for comment.
The article, written by Martin C. Krimm, assistant professor
in the Electrical Engineering Deixirtment, was critical of what he
He added that he personally has been billed" about $l(J6" for
called the University's "publish or pirish research or die" pol fries. the stenographic services.
When asked if he intended to pay the bill he replied, "They
lof. Krimm said, in summarizing his article, "The situation at
the University of Kentucky, now being created by an unprincipled can take it out of my salary if they wish; it's up to them." He
grab for federal money at the expense of both teachers and students, explained he meant University officials when he said "they."
Alter the campus mailing was stopped, Krimm used his own
is just one small symptom of national disorder."
In the newsletter he said that: "The motor forces behind all funds and began to send the article through the U.S. mail at his
of this plotting are, of course, money and personal ambition. Some own expense. He said this has amounted to about $74.
Krimm said he met yesterday with Dr. A. I). Albright, execueducators, it seems, claim that if they can just get their hands on
money, by whatever means, the problems of higher education will tive vice president. Dean Robert Shaver, of the College of Kngineer-ing- ,
be solved.
and an unidentified attorney.
Krimm said during the meeting the circumstances surrounding
"Now such thinking, even if unselfishly motivated, is far
worse than mere unsoundness or simple in i'.i iulism, tor it begins the publication and distribution of the article were aired, lie said
to embrace the
(presently being toyed Dr. Albright questioned whether such a pnx edure for harulling the
with by the Warren Supreme Court and by the Red Chinese in article was desirable.
Neither Dr. Albright nor Shaver was available for comment.
the slaughter of Tibet) that the end justifies the means.

For Producing Paper

� -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct.

2

14, 1961

World News Briefs

Two Model
U.N.

Trips
Announced
Two model United Nations
events, announced by the University YWCA, are scheduled for
next spring. The models will
enable college students to learn
about problems facing the world
within the framework of the
U.N.
The first event will be the
Middle South Model U.N. to
be held at the University of
More
North Carolina, Feb.
than 75 countries are expected
to be represented by more than
60 colleges and universities from
13 states in the middle and deep
south.
University students who are
interested in attending may obtain registration forms in room
201 of the Student Center no
later than Friday, October 16.
The second mock U.N. event
will be the National Model General Assembly w hich w ill be held
The
in New York City March
model General Assembly is a
series of mock sessions in which
the countries of the U.N. are
represented by delegations from
various colleges.
Once a school has been assigned a country, the chosen
delegation studies the position of
its country in world affairs and
prepares to represent this country's views among the other nations of the General Assembly.
The two conventions will feature a special speaker from the
U.N., speakers from various
countries, tours, and discussion
and evaluation sessions.
10-1-

Continued From Pace

1

he felt President Lyndon B.Johnson offered the only sane policies
to meet the needs of our foreign
and domestic fronts in an era of
rapid change.
He said the choice for president this year had superceeded
party lines and was now an issue
of the total candidate for all of

TYPEWRITER
SERVICE

Officers Question
About Plot On Johnson's Life
Ex-Convi-

CORPUS CHRISTI, Tex. AP
Officers quizzed today an
plumber, at whose home
they seized guns and Nazi flags,
about a reported plot to kill
President Johnson here Sunday.
Sheriffs deputies arrested Julius Schmidt, 29, at his home
Tuesday night and said they
took another man into custody
several hours later.
They withheld the name of
the second man.
Word from informers about
guns being collected in this city
on the lower Texas coast
prompted simultaneous raids on
the home of Schmidt and that of
his mother, Nueces County Sheriff Johnnie Mitchell said.
Informers reported there was
"a lot of loose talk about as-

sassinating the President" and
quoted unnamed individuals as
saying they would try to obtain
guns from Schmidt, Mitchell

said.
After questioning Schmidt for
more than three hours, the sheriff said he at first doubted there
was a plot on the life of President Johnson.
CUBAN CRISIS

HUNTINGTON, N.Y.
F. Kennedy

AP-Ro- bert

civilians would be killed.
The brother of the late president also says that the 12 key
presidential advisers meeting at
the time were split almost even
ly on whether to bomb the mis- -

ct

ADDING MACHINES
OLIVETTI ADDERS AND
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS

ADDO-- X

sile sites and air bases or to
blockade the island.
The former attorney general
attended the meetings with the
president, who decided on the
blockade.

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387 Rot

The lieutenant governor concluded his talk with a compliment to the interest shown by
the youth of this country on the
important political issues of the
day.

Fine Watch Repairing
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254-126-

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Singing
Lessons
By

WILLIAM
MELNYCHYN
Opera and Concert Tenor
''One of the best American lyric artists"

JOHNSON'
WASHINGTON AP President Johnson leaves today on a
campaign swing into New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New

IL TEMPO ROME

The first speech of his trip was scheduled for a shopping
center near the airport at Teterboro, N.J. From there, he flies to
the
airport in Pennsylvania for an early
afternoon party rally.
Then he heads for New York, where he will attend a dinner
tonight honoring the memory of Alfred E. Smith.
The President will spend the night at the Waldorf-Astorileaving for upstate New York early tomorrow for speeches in
Rochester and Buffalo.

The College Campus

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the people.

Lt. Gov. Waterfield said that
Sen. Barry Goldwater's views on
social security, education, and
nuclear weapons were not In the
interests of the people of this
country.

7

DODSON
WATCH SHOP

KANSAS CITY AP-S- en.
Barry Coldwater charged today
President Johnson has forced a new delay of a Senate investigation "because Bobby Baker's affairs lead right straight into the
White House itself."
And the Republican presidential nominee found himself in
the middle of a lively word battle with Democrats after an off
the cuff charge Tuesday night that the rival party was "a fascist
organization that will not even allow a member to speak his mind
in favor of a member of the other party."
With election day less than three weeks away, Coldwater
returned to the attack on the Baker case in a prepared speech.
The issue he said Monday, "is hurting the President more than
anything else."
As a springboard for his new charges, the Arizona senator
used the announcement Tuesday by Sen. B. Everett Jordan,
that the Senate Rules committee, which Jordan heads, would
delay its probe of Baker until after the election because of the
difficulty of getting enough senators to come back to Washington
to form a quorum for the committee.

York.

232-020-

WATCH

DIAMONDS

Barry Slams LBJ;
LBJ Stumps Again

two-da- y

Ph.

Sr.

WATCHES

Keeping Up With The Candidates

says Presi-

dent John F. Kennedy rejected
a proposal to bomb Cuba during the 1962 missile crisis because his military intelligence
advisers told him that 25,000

Waterfield Seeks
1967 Governorship
The lieutenant governor spoke
last night to the Young Democrats about his view of the issues
in the national campaign.
The lieutenant governor said

KENTUCKY

1

Begins

Wednesday

First Run

ASHLAND THEATER

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct.

John Oswald Jr. Makes
Entire Campus His Home
at first by the billiards room,
and then by the row of
y
vending machines. John
confided that grape is his favmulti-variet-

Editor s note: The following
article was written by a Kernel
feature writer and photographer.

orite soft drink.
A color broadcast of a colHe was accompanying Jim Beam, lege football game caught the
John Jr.'s "baby sitter" for the boys' attention. The filled chairs
day, and a classmate of John and couches didn't stop the two
Jr.'s, John Cooke, on a tour of Johns from finding a scat. They
the University campus.
simply plopped down on the rugs
John Oswald Jr. began his just as though they were at home.
A walk upstairs found the
g
day playing basketball and football behind Haggin Hall. He
changing hands. Johnjr.
loves sports and answered with proudly showed us the Presian emphatic "yes" when asked dent's Room where his father
y
if he was going to the
holds weekly conferences. Had
game. He said he would he attended any of the sessions?
be sitting on the
line. I "Of course!"
asked why he got such a good
John Jr. was easily engaged
seat when I, as a student, had in political discussion, but he
to sit downfield near the end wouldn't tell what presidential
zone. His reply, "I guess it's candidate he is for. Both boys
because my dad's president cr asked for some LBJ stickers
which I was earn ing, however.
something."
During a tour of the Student John Jr. was satisfied with two
Center the boys were fascinated but his friend wanted more.
The controversial subject of
the Beatles brought this response
The word gets around.
from John Jr., "I used to think
they were great; but now, they're
okay." I asked how his two teenage sisters felt about the British
group, and he was quick to answer "they wouldn't want me to
tell you that."
tour-guidin-

Auburn-Kentuck-

C

samtes

Not unlike any other
boy, John says that recess is his favorite subject in
school. He is quick to add, however, that mathematics tops the
academic list. Comparing Kentucky schools to those of his
California birthplace he notes
that he "likes Kentucky's better
because they teach long division
in the second grade."
"
John likes to read; "Old
is his favorite book. Ever
since his father taught him chess,
he plays a lot of that.
John Cooke, John Jr.'s classeight-year-o-

Yel-er-

mate, passed along the information that his friend is the "second best boy friend of the first
best girl friend in their class."
The tour ended at Maxwell
Place, the home of the president and his family, and the
most familiar place on campus to
John Oswald, Jr.

Busy Season

NEW YORK (AP) Broadway
conductor Franz Allers Is having
a busy autumn In European cities
with American musicals.
Allers directed premiere in Berlin of "Annie Get Your Gun,"
then moved on to Vienna for debut of "My Fair Lady," which
he conducted on the White Way
run.
for most of its seven-year

btbl

51AMIESS
YOU

STOCKINGS

$

Intergroup Relations Conference
Berea College is the campus
selected for the third annual
Kentucky College Conference
on Intergroup Relations Saturday and Sunday, Oct.
17-1- 8.

An estimated 125 college students will attend. Reservations
should be made in advance
through the Kentucky Commission on Human Rights.

j QO

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EASTERN STATE COLLEGE
ALUMNI COLISEUM

AS YOU
LIKE IT,

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Tickets at the Coliseum or available
from your local Young Democratic organization. Your money will be used
to help assure your future by electing
President Johnson this November 3.

PUMJUTS
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RICHMOND, KENTUCKY

CHARLIE
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Bring your friends!

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CAN BUY FOft

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"Scarlet Ribbons," the folk song made popular by The
Browns and The Kingston Trio, tells the story of a little girl
whose father is trying to find her some hair ribbons. The plaintiff strains relate that there are no ribbons to be found. But
as always in the magic world of little girls the hair ribbons somehow mysteriously appear.
Today, any little girl who finds herself with a shortage of
hair ribbons, has only to retrieve them from her big sister.
Hair ribbons in all colors, materials and widths have been
"borrowed" from the three-to-1age group and are now the almost exclusive property of college women.
These
accessories which add a dash of color
to compliment casual outfits can be bought in varying lengths
at the notion counters of department and dime stores.
The most popular materials are velvet and grosgrain, with
madras and wool lengths used to coordinate with specific outfits.
The ribbons and there broader counterparts, headbands,
serve a twofold purpose. While it is obvious that they are an
attractive accent they are a practical addition to the coed wardrobe as well.
To the coed whose hair has not turned out "just right,"
the ribbons and bands can camouflage the setting errors of the
night before. On a windy day they can also serve to keep the
"nerfect" hairdo iust that. . . perfect.
Hairbands and ribbons are part of the natural look strived
for by this year's changes in fashion design.
The youthful look and secure feeling a'hair ribbon or band
gives its wearer is an indication that many more fathers will be
searching cities and towns looking for these pieces for their much
older as well as younger, "young misses."

(Sbhr, (Shut an
IHt

19fl

Coeds Steal Ribbons
From Young Sisters

M.

JOHN ZEH
Kernel Feature Writer
By

14,

Bring your banners!

Bring your enthusiasm!

� When Will They Learn
Another Student Congress Lecture Series has come and gone.
The program was almost perfectly
planned. The speaker had contact
with students in two lectures, a
seminar, appearances before
classes, a talk to girls at Blazer
Hall, and other small discussions.
Students were able to seek information on a personal basis. The conditions were optimum for interchange of information and ideas because of the planning done by the
Steering Committee and the Seminar Committee.
All that was lacking was a
speaker who could make a worthwhile contribution to those who
heard him.
Dr. Marcos Kohly spoke to
several hundred people during his
stay, but we suspect most of them
went away wondering why he had

been brought to the campus.
He spent much of his time
dwelling on lofty platitudes about
the "American Way," the unity of
heart and soul among the people
of the hemisphere, and the nobility
of Motherhood (don't ask why.)
When he dealt with specifics, the
facts were isolated and disunited.
Those who thought that a speaker
on Latin America would give a
consistent overview of the political
and economic situation in Latin
America or the impact of Cuba
on the hemisphere or the imperatives of U.S. foreign policy toward
Latin America were very disappointed. Dr. Kohly did not fill
the role expected of him.
When will Student Congress
learn that no matter how well the
lecture series is structured, its success depends on the quality of the
speaker? It would seem that planners of the series would seek advice
from professors who are knowledgeable in the field to be discussed.
Yet no one approached the Latin
American expert in the History
Department to get his opinion
about Dr. Kohly's qualifications.
In fact, he had never heard of the
man.
After an outstanding initial
series featuring Dr. Huston Smith
in 1963, the quality declined in the
lectures given by John Ciardi last
spring. Now the series has reached
a new low. If it is not greatly improved in the future by bringing a
truly outstanding speaker to the
campus, a potentially valuable program will be needlessly

Revolution At The Opera
said by the
knowledgeable to be no mean poet
himself is going to have to learn
the lesson that artists and intellectuals dragooned by a dogmatic
authoritarian system cannot produce works of lasting merit or distinction. Xikita Khrushchev, his
rival in Moscow, is in the process
of learning the same lesson. Mr.
Khruchchev's rather unimaginative
taste in art has apparently undergone no change, as an occasional
aside during his Scandinavian tour
this summer showed. Hut at least
he seems to have given up his efforts of 18 months ago for force
forts of 18 months ago to force
experimenting Soviet writers and
artists to toe the line.
Mao

.

Tse-tun- g

Hut in China, that is what the
Communists are making renewed
effort to do. And the watchword
a phrase which is appearing in party propaganda on the arts
Hut in China, this is w hat the
Communists are making renewed
effort to do. And the watchword is

"contemporary

revolutionary

themes" a phrase which is appearing in party propaganda on the
aits as frequently as "socialist realism" once did in Moscow. Lven
that great institution, the l'eking
Opera, is now being obliged to pass
under the yoke of ideology and
doc trine.

Gone from the stage are the
splendid costumes of the past; and
in their place has come the garb of
peasants and workers. What the
Chinese party wants in the contemporary and the revolutionary. Particularly to be eschewed are the
"modern revisionist" trends associated in opera with Mr. Khrushchev
this is the first we had heard that
the Soviet Premier was involved in
this branch of the arts which
"spread on a wide scale the bourgeois theory of human nature,
and pacifism and
so forth."

Tommy rot! Naturally You Don't
Mean All TIiom Dopry Things Yoiit

"Criticism Of You

I

Sir

Bingo Bango
We are reminded once more of
the cabinet minister (in a civilized
country) who predicted that people
would learn to "live with" the
sonic boom. This is the boom that
a
aircraft drops
on the human race.
For a while the debate about
this noise concerned only its effect
this noise concerned only its effects
on human beings. So it looked as if
the noise might win.
But now there are signs people
may become chance beneficiaries
of concern for the boom's effects on
animals and on their owner's
Also, those of us who
value peace and quiet may be assured some respite from the sonic
boom because of its possible effects
on bingo players.
Research into such problems is
reported from Britain. Hens frequently startled by sonic booms are
said to lay fewer eggs. Cows that
jump over the moon every time a
supersonic plane goes over the barnyard yield less milk.
Obviously human beings can
s
now expect to ride on the
of this new research.
Even more notable it its own
special way is what might becall-ethe bingo bang which is a response by players of this game to
the rival noise that descends on
them periodically like some last
judgement. If this causes them to
faster-than-sou-

cow-tail-

Heading between the lines in a
recent long editorial in Hed Flag,
an official Peking journal, one can
see that this doctrinaire reform of
the Peking Opera is not going too
well. "No superb art can be attained overnight," wrote the editorialist. And are artists and writers
quietly resisting all the doctrinaire
cant? Some of them, Hed Flag said,
"still hanker after capitalist and
feudal culture and try to hide themselves in the ivory tower."
What Chairman Mao should
understand is that whatever the
need for revolutionary change in
the political realm, one fact never
changes: the best way to kill creative talent is to imprison it in a
mental strait jacket.
The Christian Science Monitor

d

make mistakes like shouting"bin-go- "
because a supersonic plane
went bango there may be
just
financial claims from people who
think they would have won "a
packet" if there had been less
racket.
So the gnmut of our civilization
runs. And if one can just keep up
with it a little longer, who knows
what grim new invention will next
become the mother of sweet necessity?
The Christian Science Monitor

Kernels
When a man has not a good
reason for doing a thing, he has one
good reason for letting it alone. -Thomas Scott
Live only for today, and you ruin
tomorrow. - C. Simmons.
u

tt

Most of the critical things in life
which become the starting points of

human destiny, are

little things.--

?.

Smith.
o

Perhaps it is too soon,

perhaps it
always be too soon, to try to
formulate an adequate definition of
will

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Krutch.

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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,

WViIih-mLiv- .

Oct.

1.

1

I

'Nil

-

RALPH McGILL

Communist China Moving In Africa
brows are
as they watch the patient
invasion of African political and
economic areas by Communist
China. That there will be an increase in this influence is certain.
That it may be checkmated soon

Diplomatic

is

doubtful.

Back of this slow change,
hich will mean increasing diplomatic recognition of Peking by
African nations with, of course,
the establishment of embassies, is
General de Caulle. That austere
man, in his stubborn, arrogant
search for personal and national
glory, sometime ago gave diplomatic recognition to Mao's government.
w

There began then, in the onetime French colonies in Africa,
a series of "approaches" by the
Chinese. They took the form of
cultural exchanges and suggestions that if aid were needed Peking would be in a receptive mood
to discuss it. President Senghor,
of Senegal, recognized the danger
of the Chinese effort to get a
foot in the African door. He has
remained polite but cool. Other
African nations, all more or less
desperate for economic aid, gave
ear. The Chinese responded.
It now is expected that by the
first of 1965 perhaps three to five
African
will have
countries
opened diplomatic relations with
the Chinese. The number maybe
large. It likely is not. What is
certain is that the tide of Chinese influence rises in Africa. It
is not, so far as now may be deSoviet
termined,
ideological.
ideology has not made any substantial inroads in Africa. But
the Chinese are playing the racial line. They are more patient.
They possess superior under-

standing of African psychology.
They are more subtle and suave
than the Soviets.
It was predicted, when General de Gaulle impulsively
granted recognition to Peking,

that he had set in motion forces
which would, slowly but inexorably, produce many changes in
Europe and the world. One now
may see the beginnings. Certain
European nations, wishing to
participate in trade and watching African nations establish diplomatic and trade relationships,
will follow the French lead.

President

has said
he will go
to Europe and talk with the
leaders. This certainly is the more
sensible approach. These leaders
are themselves involved in their
own national politics. They will
not pay very much attention to a
Goldwater commission report.

that if he

Johnson

is elected

But they, as practical men with
realistic problems, can, and will,
discuss them with the President
of this country.
By late autumn or early 1965
the African developments, set in
motion by De Gaulle's precipitate
politics, will be a subject for
direct discussion.

Each passing day makes more
clear that Sen. Goldwater assuredly is not a man for our times.
(Copiirizhl 1961)

Dutch Lunch will meet Thursday at 12 noon in the party
rooms of the Student Center
Cafeteria.

There is, in diplomatic circles
here and in London, an understandable increase in fear of Sen.
Goldwater. There is the growing
belief that he is even more superficial and uninformed than was
thought to be the case when he
first became a serious contender
for the Republican nomination.
The senator now has adopted
one of the more naive anil costly
ideas of former President Eisenhower. Mr. Eisenhower said, and
believed, that once he became
President all he had to do was to
"bring the best brains to Washington and put them to work."
All would then be well with the
budget, with domestic and foreign affairs. Mr. Eisenhower appointed many commissions and
committees. They didn't work.
Late in his second four years,
when he had learned that long
drawn out "studies" and "reports" did not always produce the
answer, he turned to the more
direct approach. He was making
plane disprogress until the
aster cut the ground from beneath
his feet and those of Premier
Khrushchev as w