FEBRUARY 23, 1968 John-Franklin Warner '68
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I from the associated press News Round up : • 9 From the State, By DENNIS STIMEU NG original proposal. Walker said the University Collegian USG Reporter would have to raise tuition or cut back on Nation b World new programs if it did not receive more state The Undergraduate Student Government funds. passed the controversial Student Protection Long read a letter to the Congress which The World Act and appropriated $250 for its fight against he had received from the Speaker of the Gov. Shafer's proposed tuition increase in a House, Republican Kenneth B. Lee. Lee wrote Br it ain Predic ts Fu t ur e Mili t ar y Pow er congressional meeting last night. that the legislators' "response to these needs LONDON — Prime Minister Harold Wilson's govern- The protection act, introduced by Dave (University requests and a tuition hike) will ment boasted yesterday Britain soon will be the strongest Vinikoor, Town Representative, and Theodore be based upon a sympathetic approach with- military power in allied Europe and foreshadowed greater Thompson, East Halls Congressman, is de- in the limits of our current fiscal limitations." British influence in North Atlantic Treaty Organization signed to eliminate the University's policy of Kefford's report on the progress of this affairs. "extended jeopardy". , fight stated "it looks like the Democrats will A White Paper on defense policy said the nation's The bill declares, "The University dis- line up as a major protest group against any "formidable contribution" to the security of the Old World ciplinary /system shall not have the authority tuition increase while the Republicans will Will match its drive for the political and economic unity to execute a policy of-extended jeopardy in remain non-committal until the Governor an- of Europe. any case." nounces his plans." Defense Secretary Denis Healey went even further Previously, similar bills'has been intro- Letter to Legislators when he addressed a news conference on the consequences duced but were defeated because of the bases by 1971 ambiguous definition of "extended jeopardy". Kefford also announced that a rough of Britian's program to adandon its Asian draft of a proposed, and to concentrate instead on a European strategy. Definition letter to all State legisla- When in the early 1970s Britain completes its redeploy- tors has been completed. The letter will ex- The legislation passed last night defined press USG's opinion as to the effects of a ment "we can expect to have a major influence on the this term as "the Administrative policy, development of allied strategy." tuition hike. The letter states that such a whereby judicial action is taken by the Uni- plan could have "disastrous effects" on stu- In the next 10 years there is "some probability that versity disciplinary system, before charges the extent of the United States' physical commitment" dents with fixed scholarships or students are dropped, or before or after an acquittal working their way through college. to Europe will be reduced and this must make. Europeans or conviction has been/obtained in any other more self-reliant. Long then introduced an act asking for judicial jurisdiction." $250 to be appropriated for Kefford to use Vinikoor stated of this bill, "I don' • * • —Collegian Pholo by Pierre Belllcini t for lobbying in Harrisburg. , Effectiveness AMBASSADOR ARTHUR GOLDSCHMIDT iold representatives to the University's sixth think that one should be tried twice for the Long stated, "This bill has a double pur- Marines Question Bombin g same crime no matter how important it is." KHE SANH. Vietnam — Some U.S. Marine officers annual Model United Nations last night that "the most dangerous child of want is pose: to appropriate the money and to affirm The .bill now goes to the University Sen- the support of the question the effectiveness of the massive aerial bombing war." Goldschmidl is U.S. representative io the U.N.'s Economic and Social Council. ate Committee on Student Affairs. If ap- Congress for this fight." campaign that is supposed to give them the upper hand The act was passed as individual con- proved by the Senate, it will then be con- gressmen against a 40,000-man enemy force encircling this combat sidered by the University trustees. expressed their approval of USG's base. decision to battle the proposed tuition in- Dan Clements, Chief Justice of the USG crease. Despite what the Air Force calls the greatest bomb- Supreme Court, who was opposed to the bill, ing campaign in history, Communist truck convoys still are predicted that the trustees would eventually Vinikoor also introduced a bill request- moving through Laos and into South Vietnam with am- ing the creation of a committee "to study the veto it. He said of extended jeopardy, ."I advisibility of munition and supplies for the North Vietnamese forces. don't think it is a legal right the University instituting a 'free university'" Supply trucks have been spotted as close as two at this University. should give up. This bill has guts," he added, Jon Fox miles from the Khe Sanh base. Soviet-built tanks also ¦¦ "but I don't think the trustees will ever , USG vice-president said that have been seen in the same area. Some have been de- ^$3$r 9 9 ^9 0 Ar ^ «& ^B&0 ^M ^SSr hI E9 H §r&^ H tar I II H B ^Q^ H 8 ^EB 4^ p such a "free university" could be defined as approve it." no charge stroyed but many more remain. 'Extremely Good' " , no credit, no grade." Classes held Aerial bombardment and resupply of the encircled By BETH GOLDER Ambassador Goldscnmidt said the decla- under the proposed plan will "contribute to base is the cornerstone of the U.S. Command's defensive The bill was cited by Jeff Long, USG intellectual and educational growth", accord- The keynote speaker tor the sixth an- rations have had an enormous effect all president, as "an extremely good one, which ing to the bill plan for the Khe Sanh area, where '5,000 Marines and over the world since their adoption in 1948, , by holding informal classes 500 South Vietnamese troops nual Model United Nations, Ambassador has long been needed at this university." on any subject matter. The classes would be are dug in. Arthur Goldschmidt, said last night that the with 39 national constitutions drawing from On the subject of the proposed tuition them and many pieces of legislation referring taught by either University professors 01 -*• ¦* • most important work of the U.N. is not increase, the congress heard a report by * to them. students. shown in TV .debates or by people calling James Kefford, special assistant to Long in The committee established by this bill others ' names. Rather, he said it is "the He said Americans should look at their charge of the tuition fight. Kefford stated has the responsibility of reporting its results under side of the iceberg"—tne economic own failure to ratify the declarations, espe- that President Walker's speech Wednesday to USG within two months. At that time, The Nation and social agencies helping the under- cially since this year was proclaimed by the before the State Senate Appropriations Com- appropriate action will be taken. Johnson Asks $10.4 Billion For City Crisis developed countries of the world. U.N. General Assembly to be Human Rights mittee was simply a restatement of Shafer's (Continued on page three) The United States Representative on the Year. The U.S. lags behind others, including AUSTIN, Tex. — President Johnson attacked "the the Soviet Union, in ratifying them. crisis of the cities" yesterday with a $10.4 billion 'package Economic and Social Council of the U.N. pointed out that "the most dangerous child He added that if we don't we can hardly of help in the fields of housing, poverty, transportation and of want is war , riot insurance. ,'' demonstrated by the fact expect newer nations to approve them, or to If the program goes through in its entirety, the eventual that in the last decade the major trouble in understand why we failed to join in their Graduate Scho ol the world has come in the underdeveloped support, since we are a leader in applying Troubled price tag might run. to $30 or $35 billion, some officials nations. believe. these i beliefs. He urged the 52 delegations of the The ambassador mentioned other Some of the program was new, some of it old. All Model U.N. to topics of it was pulled together in a massive, complicated message consider the issues that they which will be discussed by the Model U.N. will discuss in the next three days as "only He said the issue of the admission of Com- By Change in Deferment to Congress that was nearly twice as long as the one the passing storms." Ambassador Goldschmidt President delivered on the State of the Union last month. munist China can' give delegates an insight McDermott said that the said that it is crucially important that into the intricacies of the organization. By RICHARD RAViTZ technological Again, Johnson called for boosting income taxes Americans understand ¦ through a 10 per cent surcharge, this time on grounds that the U.N.—to know He noted • that sanctions against South Collegian Administration Reporter advances in the last several years, medical 'building what it can and can't do. Africa have had little effect on that The University graduate school is con- discoveries "soaring interest rates will cripple the home in- Conditions in coun- and breakthroughs in science re- dustry and the tax boost will help prevent this because Philadelphia and Pitts- try's illegal administration of Southwest fused and troubled by the suggested limita- " burgh today are as related to activity in search were made possible by the work of it is anti-inflationary.