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( s e n by L ittl e B O d lov S T aI des, was de i a !t the ddCation Yof the AMrian ILitre e tery "Gttsbr East, outid Saigon in the year! 2052.)a iDbP1~S 1NC3LiN Ot4iS A '1AC 1 scrC !OS Ai iwnc.JrC~ Mah felo A m rca s Fou s core dd se grandfther broughtforth wupo. hscni cv inBERT e i dEdE (AsD C Petdb Little Boy Johson prosito thte arted Stter ad than rd. anowve are eaeds ina Geivreat ocey (eiop If mean Ara iiliar, andmfo that mattsrg haEeaged otine thatgGreat Foua or core and seven yead gnwdesigahther th conethi ofnpe mnent BAERian mlita eEncepiN Asia (s a peented by itlncied oad Jso n, prlsiyto the ane ttes read gandson Nw e are enad reat aleierd o the deat, Ion b ate Amerc aneilitaray ame overyetyswnbur GEeastH," outsie SaGoneran the a verhrown by5en2.e) Me hre G rah score an sevenrown ayGeer gw, wther broghe t Wee uonerth own - mnent ofAseicane olital oesncept, con cei n Gepedic and dted ated to the perp tio ly cta we ebtutread as we are e onaged in a epoieon ty (rn, tats nainea he pivicWal sand f that m oane b wengaged in t oha Grat eetivl War orou bcoe aGngevein ears thent.er ican militar prsnenAsa orayxcuep oll-conus rceived and sogen Woear (Oh, non agran. battlefiel ofWhat ifeent was othrwne 57boy Genchinalye wl spring in General Flea's government, which we are now convinced is in a position to bring to this nation the political stability that is so necessary if we are to begin to effect ively roll back the aggression from.. the north. Excsemefoks IjuTH BUEive COLARgn SLHEL BUFFER COLLAR FASHION LEADER SHIP FRC K Ta MuiMwr I S OE of THE GREEN BEELES! BIT LOOK AT HIS ' EYES! ANDo WHAT S THIAT KELY-IKE TAING STICKING OUT IOONT XNOW. 1ILL WIND IT U AND SEE WHAr I Pq[RV 14 ARD.. THIS IS A 306TR ~1E UAMY"P W .OM4ANI!...R'13' AD ON RSTRICTbON! tiIcal s 'ti t ..OCK . t.E ARMY 1 JU11LY 0 WHER~E~ m.iniv toMi. PROM? " ettysburg position to at last offer this nation the poli" tical stability that is . Hmmrph. He that as it may. We have come to dedicate this battlefield as a fitting memorial to the light to moderate losses that our forces have sustained over the pasi 87 years so that my grandfather and his successors could test tie t:teory that the way to bring Hanoi to the peace table was to escalate further. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this, and anyone who thinks otherwise is a nervous nellie and probably a traitor besides and simply helping to pro long the war. The world will long note and long remem ber what we did here, probably because we will still be long here doing it, but the world will probably never understand WHY we did it. And frankly, I'm fed up with that kind of idiotic questioning emanating from the capi tals of the world over the last nine decades! I DON'T CARE WHY WE ARE HERE! THE POINT IS WE ARE HERE AND IT'S TOO LATE TO PULL OUT NOW! WE ARE GOING TO STAY HERE! WE ARE GOING TO ESCALATE! THIS UNPATRIOTIC PRACTICE OF DEFERRING GRAND FATHERS HAS TO STOP SO THAT WE CAN BUILD UP OUR TROOP COMMIT MENT TO 68,000,000 MEN. ONLY THEN WILL WE HAVE AN ADEQUATE STRENGTH RATIO OF 84 TO 1 NECES SARY TO PUT DOWN THIS INSURREC TION. And as long as I am President, mah fellow Americans, I promise you this: we shall not withdraw; I promise that this nation, under me, shall have a new birth of conformity (boy, will we shut up those peaceniks) and that government of consensus, by manipula tion for the sake of saving face shall not perish from the earth, although admittedly the population might. mut hat others mill d LL.ER ookt at IM AMERICA'S FAMOUlS SHIRTBUILDErSo A T ci Univers Give Sti When a Wheaton College stu- d dent, expelled from school for y joining a fraternity, petitioned R an Illinois court in 1866 to force r his readmission, the judges waived jurisdiction in the case. I "So long as the .rules violate I neither divine nor human law," r the court said, "we have no more I authority to interfere than we s have to control the domestic dis- c cipline of a father in his family." c The court's reasoning reflected the ancient English common law doctrine of IN LOCO PARENTIS which has dominated the thinking g of college administrators u n t i l v recently. d STUDENT RIGH1TS But now, following strong en dorsement of student rights by 14 several national academic organ izations and prompted by student 0 BG Gets Unlimited Class Cuts BOWLING GREEN, O h i o - Only a veto by Faculty Senate or P University Prerident William T. o Jerome can stop Bowling Green ti students from having unlimited sy cuts in all classes. a This was the essence of a bill d< passed by Student Council at a D recent meeting held in the dining t< room of Founders Quadrangle. The resolution, p r o p o s e d by Nancy Kennedy and Paul Bueh rer, sophomore representatives, and Ashley Brown, sergeant-at arms, passed Council by a vote of 34-1. The bill recommends to Faculty Senate that "a fully uniform policy of c l a s s attendance be established for all classes and that the policy adopted be one of th unlimited cuts." ( Under the present system of in class attendance, the student does ,.t not have the right to decide his C "academic conduct" (as the bill et states) because it is up to the in dividual professor to decide how u; mny cuts he will give the stu- pc dent. th The University handbook says th that students are allowed three ur (3) unexcused class cuts. Any- ca thing over these allotted cuts from hi any one class can result in the w, student being dropped one letter grade in the course, or subject Ei to some other form of discipli. se nary action. Many professors abide by this on rule stiric.tly; others, primarily those who teach 300 and 400 level pa courses, allow for the individual nel studet o have anu nIi m i ted bic amount of cuts for a three-hour in course. is Lonext year... 4Ida NER AMP18 TARC rrnvn-V ities Li. Lidents l e m a n d s for policy - making ower, college authorities are be inning - often hesitantly - to eexamine the doctrine. The faculties of Michigan State Jniversity and the University of Centucky have recently approved ecommendations f o r sweeping iberalization of regulations of tudent activity, w h i 1 e several ther colleges are studying hanges in their campus rules. INVESTIGATORY STAGE Although many of the schools' lans are still in the investi atory stage, a proposal to re amp the University of Kentucky isciplinary system was approved st week by the school's Faculty enate. The plan, the result of a year )ng study, was prepared to re lace the school's informal sys ?m of investigating and handling f allegation of student miscon uct. Under the proposed plan, com tittee chairman W. Garrett lickinger s a i d, "disciplinary unishments would be enforceable nly within the proposed judicial ystems." STUDENT JUDICIAL BOARD The report, which must be ap roved by the University's Board f Trustees before implementa on, would empower the existing udent judicial board with final uthority over student discipline cisions. Dean of Men and the can of Women have the power o overrule the University Ju 3erkeley Acquires 3icycles BERKELEY - "You are now e owner of five white bicycles, corated with yellow submar es," the Daily Californian told udents at the University of ilifornia's Berkeley campus re ntly. The bicycles are for the free e of any members of the cam is community who may need em, and are registered with e Berkeley Police Department der the name Everyone--a rry over from Odysseus calling rmself Noman to avoid the -ath of the Cyclops. The name was changed from 'eryman because of feminist 1 time nt. The bicycles were donated an ymously by various students. rhe idea is based on a pro sal made by Provo, a Dutch w left organization, that free ycles be provided for people Amsterdam because the city ill-suited for auto traffic. p Sl h d< N .Al%.A v, aAF r IN I beralize More Fr dicial Board under the present t] system. f Approval of the Kentucky pro- Ii posals came at the same time as d Latin Jazz A ' W& REVIEW NREWS EX a q~*~*t- , Lyll ~s Speakers Viet Nam, Leading figures in politics and e lit.crature highlighted s e v e r a l er college campuses recently. sti Vice President Hubert H. Hum phrey spoke at the University of North Carolina last month, up holding United Stat<s' commit ment_s abroad. Dealing with Vietnam at great length, Humphrey noted the nu merous bombing pauses observed by the U. S. in a fruitless search for peace talks. "The purpose of bombing the ha North is not to stop infiltrati<n, pe but to make it more c()tly," he said. M: The University of Virginia will cI hear former senator Barry M. be Goldwater, the 19(4 Republican ok candidate for president. TI Senator Goldyhater, recently re lurned from a tour of the Far 2 East, is expected to speak on the de Vietnamese war and foreign af- me "airs in general. The University of Virginia has die ust heard novelist .John Barth, all aIled one oif the most di stin- el a 'uished contempory A m e r i e a ni the ovelists-.t Tlhe author of the ch ron icle of wit "graind to)ur" in "(Giles G oait- I oy" and of the epic of Mary- spo tad's poe~t laureate in "The Sot- aca Veed Factor" will discuss ".Jorge in .uxis Borgea andI the Literature dici f Exhaustion."1 Senator Jacob ,Javits, s e n i o) r chLa 'nator from New York ( Rep.) nai: nd Allen Ginsberg, well-known andi oct, spoke to the University of T' tashington- hav Javits, until r e e en t I y con - afte dere'd supporter of .Johns<m's spe< iet Nam policy, made a state- inge ent earlier this month in which thr< seriously questioned the wis- mov >m of the bombing raids over Sati orth Viet Nam. exte Dr. Hleinrich Pohris, German hout Use All of Sunshi Open Your Charge Accoui * 1 hour or 1 day earvie * SpeialIats in dry cleani * 24-hour co-op lauandry * Hand finiahed .het. * 'larifty laundry & dry 0 30 day, to pay L A UN D RY & MAI AT BK ACROSS serOa amW ArrNr WIA/n(,A -- rage 7even Rules, eedom ie Michigan S t a t e U'niversity culty was endo":r.-ing a plan to Leralize student rules and ju icial procedure. ricKeig CHANGE. Discuss Poetry ,al, :gned to the Southeast S'ied Sa. s pke to the idents of Georgia S:ate. luke Nurses Lre Granted :ater Hours DURHIAM1, N. C. - N u r s e ve won their fight for 2 a.m. rmtissions at Duke l'niverr.i:v. .u u d i c i a I Board, headed h"v tureen V a r d, annuunce-d re itly that the new hints had 2n approved by DeanT ,Jaruhan y and As istait Doan Burch. eV are nowv in effect.. Flours have b e n extendecd to a.m. every night for all stu its. Thi- :n, lude- second sc ster fre-hnt n. \c(ordig to an offe.a; Ju 1al Ho: rd t.ate aen i .sued to studernt: freshmen w< re in dedl to "bt:4r undiers-t.and how y, as well aIs all of the other dents, will b e able to fu nctionit ffec t., f t h incrteased re nsblt nboth s o e i a I and dem1ic areas will be evaluated1 the enming semester by Ju al Roard. 'iformation will comec f r o mn S melt-inrgs and a question e to help) form future rules make a final dec.ision. echnical changes in procedure ailso b*eeln made. Aniyone Out r 12 midnight must give at ific dlestinationi. House clos ,still 12 midnight Sundavy ugh Thbu rsdany, hav br i e n ed to 2 a.m. on Friday and] lrday. abyVsitting is a i. nd(ed to in clutde the new social erving T he Gamecocks ri T heir Own Backyard ne'sServices it Now At SUNSHME e (by request) ng Ieather & suede. ceing semwie. CLEAN ER S S DOmBrVOiSt