The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 13 December 1968 — Page 2

Page 2

The Daily Banner. Greencastie, Indiana

Friday, December 13, 1968

THE DAILY BANNER Afid Herald Consolidated “It leaves For AH'" Business Phone: 0|. 3-5151 -0L 3-5152 LuMar Newspapers Inc. Cr. Mary Tarzian, Publisher

Holidays at 1221 South Entered m the Post mail matter under: Act e wire service' Member ite Press Assocution. nd pictures sent to The ).ulv Banner Repudiates

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We didn’t reallj expect the talk about their business to of course, they didn’t. The I asked the CIA to send a man a public debate and the CIA (c protective legal cloak and declii Hal W. Bochin, director of on campus. Bochin was told law from engaging in any pul

or operations."

This is the second year in a to discuss its operations witt

Centi il Intelligence Agency to tteres:ed I.U students — and, U. leftist groups respectfully j the taipus and participate in mveniently slipped behind their ?d the invitation, le I.U. Forum, worked hard to while the agency is re-railing hat “thv CIA is prohibited by lie discussions of its purposes ow that the CIA has been asked the students. This is also the

second year in a row that the agency has declined.

The Daily Student has repeatedly endorsed the philosophy of a free campus and freedom of inquiry regarding speakers and organizations which visit the campus. The administration has

also given its support to such a philosophy.

Dow Chemical Company and other organizations which are

deemed objectionable by student groups have consented to being questioned when they visit campus. The I.U. Convocation series also maintains an informal rule that all speakers must

submit to question and answer periods. This philosophy becomes even more pertinent when a group comes to I.U. to recruit students and not just offer opinions

and ideas as speakers do. But the CIA has repeatedly shown its disdain for the idea of a free university. The organization has refused to be confronted by student questions and has evaded open discussions at every opportunity. While the University may have a responsibility to its students to provide job opportunities after graduation, it has a more important responsibility to provide the intellectual atmosphere necessary for the students to prepare for these jobs. For these reasons, we feel that the University and the I.U. Placement Bureau withdraw its invitation to the CIA to recruit I.U students. We also feel that the University should refuse to allow the CIA to recruit on campus until the organization

agrees to submit to an open discussion.

LBJ to leave Nixon pay raise of $50,000

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The\ include: salaries of House and Senate members to go from $30,000 to $50,000; cabinet members, from $35,000 to $00,000; district judges, from $30,000 to $17,500; Supreme Court associate justices from $30,500 to $65,000; the Chief Justice, from $40,000 to$67,500. Congress created the pay commission last year as a way to duck the ticklish issue of periodically raising their own salaries. Members last raised their pay in 1964 from $22,500 to the current $30,000. The liberality of the proposed increases shocked some lawmakers and raised doubts whether their adoption will be as automatic as had been planned. Rep. Udall, who was instrumental in drafting the legislation last year, said he would ask Johnson to trim the proposed congressional payscale to $40,000 or less.“Otherwise.”

He said, “Congress will never let it go into effect.” Trial set for case of ( lay Shaw NEW ORLEANS (UPI)—The long delayed trial of Clay L. Shaw, charged with conspiring to assassinate President John F. Kennedy has been set for Jan. 21, the day after Richard Nixon takes office as President. Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison hopes the new administration will not interfere with his prosecution of Shaw and further investigation of the assassina“It would not be possible for the next attorney general to be anything but an improvement over Ramsey Clark, who almost from the first day has participated in obstructing our efforts to prosecute the case,” said Garrison. He has contended, since arresting Shaw March 1, 1067, that the federal government is hiding certain documents to hamper his attacks on the Warren Commission report. Garrison announced the trial date Wednesday and also said he had been offered a federal judgeship to drop the Shaw case. He declined to say who made the offer. “Even if I’m killed, the Clay Shaw case will go to trial,” he said. The 55-year-old Shaw lost a civil rights appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court this week. The high court decision allowed Garrison to proceed with the prosecution of the former managing director of the International Trade Mart. Garrison has accused Shaw of conspiiing with Lee Harvey Oswald in the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963. He holds that Oswald was merey a “patsy” for a group of conspirators and did not fire a shot.

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On the theme, Why are Americans such slobs, the answer so often given is that we do not often enough complain of maltreatment, commercial, political, educational, philosophical. The rules of this column, which sponsors an occassional “Voice Your Personal Complaint,” are: no politics, and nothing cosmic. My contribution for the season... I found myself, a few weeks ago, afloat 30 miles west of Bermuda without fuel to power into the island, or sufficient time to tack in by sail and still catch the 6:15 flight to New York in time to discharge an after-dinner speaking commitment. So, I called the Bermuda Marine Operator who put me through to a boat company whicli kindly undertook to solve my problems. The company would send speedboat A to where we lay, and it would whisk me into Hamilton Harbor in time to catch my plane ( indeed, the manager grandly informed me that BOAC had been “instructed” to hold their flight in the event of my late arrival, which spoke marvels for the persuasiveness of the boat company, not to say the pliability of BOAC). Then Boat B, a little slower, would arrive with 20 or 30 gallons of fuel, sufficient to bring in my boat against wind and current. Boat B, the manager estimated over the radiotelephone, would charge “in the vicinity of $200,” which I remember thinking a little steep, but then my dilemma ( I had to get to New York; Spiro Agnew was among my guests, at a most ticklish political junction) was also steep. Anyway, Boat A arrived a little late. The U.S. Navy had reported us 27 miles out, whereas actually

WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY, Jr’s

ON THE

RIGHT

we were 33 miles out (could that be what happened to the Pueblo?). My companions and I lumbered on board and we sped to Hamilton Harbor not, alas, in time to make the crucial flight. BOAC took off on time, in utter disregard of the manager’s instructions to await my arrival -- which certainly suggest that British manners are going to the dogs under a socialist government. So, the next morning, I called round to the manager for the bill for the services of Boat A, a Bertram 30-foot sports fisherman with zowie 25 m.p.h. engines. How much, I asked jovially? Well, he said, for the boat, $125. Reasonable, I thought reaching for my wallet. However — he raised his hand — there is an additional charge of $62.50 for running outside Point Argus which, he said, nobody around here does, as a rule. I thought that a pity, inasmuch as the water is really quite pleasant outside Point Argus — but, well, maybe there is something spooky about Point Argus, and there wasn’t any time to argue. I did wonder how the convention had arrived at the figure $62.50. Why the $2.50? Cost of living increase? And then: the cost of the gasoline, he said, is $60. And gasoline is expensive, indeed at one dollar a mile frighteningly so. Then — the manager, incredibly, was still talking, and my eyes began to glaze -- there is the fee for the boat’s pilot: $150. (Which comes to $25 per hour: not bad, not bad. Indeed, smashing.) Then -- the pilot had aboard two assistants, one of whom slept all the way and indeed, while somnambulistically helping off-

load my bags, fell right off the boat into the bay. I will charge for their services, said the manager handsomely, exactly what I pay them myself, which is eight dollars per hour. That makes $52 apiece. Still it wasn’t over. As for my own time, said the manager, you will appreciate that I spent all morning on the telephone, so I put that down for

$100.

Now, I hate the telephone. And quite understand charging one hundred dollars for spending all morning on the telephone. I mean, don’t you? So, for the 30 miles, and missing my plane, the bill was $601.50 . I did not at the time have the bill for the services of Boat B, but in due course, the honest Boat B came in at the pre-specified $200. I take it to be a matter of public service to advise mariners to the high cost of distress in Bermuda waters. Perhaps others will want to begin a lay-away Continued on page 3

New secretary is former Hoosier boy By United Press International Clifford M. Hardin is a onetime Hoosier farm boy turned teacher who has learned to keep his cool at the helm of a major university. The chancellor of the University of Nebraska, a 53.year-old six-footer who weighs a trim 175 pounds, is a product of the family farm. He grew up near Knightstown, Ind., where his father, James, still lives, and was deeply involved in 4-H work as a youngster. That same club participation brought him a 4-H scholarship to Purdue University where he won a PH.D in economics in

1941.

He was later director on the experiment station and dean of the College of Agriculture at Michigan State University before going to Nebraska in 1954. “He's very calm and deliberate in his actions,” said one of his assistants. “He thinks things through pretty well before speaking and when he does everybody listens. , “One of his secrets at the university,” the aide added, “is the loyalty he has from his staff members. He has a personal magnetism about him and has inspired a loyalty among staff members which has kept them here at times they might have left if someone else were in charge.” The graying Hardin frequently puffs on a pipe, cradling it contemplatively when someone else is speaking. He places it deliberately in an ash tray to hold the listener’s attention when he decides to speak. Hardin has five children. H'S wife, Martha, met him at Pur-

due.

During Hardin’s 14 years at Nebraska, the school’s agriculture college added several research facilities, including an 8,000-acre meat field research laboratory. Nebraska had a total enrollment of 7,000 when Hardin went there. The enrollment now stands at 30,000. Hardin is a member of the board of the National Science Foundation, a former director of the American Council on Education, a trustee of the Rockefeller Foundation and a former director and chairman of the Omaha branch of the F ederal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. A SCOUT IS THRIFTY BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)— Boy Scout troop No. 33 commemorates the 51st anniversary of its founding Saturday and the sponsors have issued a plea for alumni scattered around the nation to let their whereabouts be known. “But please fellows,” said Robert S. Dillon, one of the sponsors, “no collect telephone calls, telegrams or letters. We love you all, but right now we are short on dough.”

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