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Show Franklin Girl Dances In BYU So Carefree... Politically Speaking Europe Tour Candice Lowe, a sophomore student from Franklin, left from Salt Lake City airport Wednesday with the famous International Folk Dancers of Brigham Young University to participate in the groups fifth tour of Europe. The company of 34 dancers and six musicians, ranging in age from 19 to 25 years, will present the history of America through dance in authentic costumes at famous folk festivals, theaeters, civic events, throughout Europe. It also is scheduled on Swedish nationwide television. The program has been highly acclaimed in four previous European tours and has been seen in the major cities of 16 countries and in national television broadcasts of nine nations. The current tour will cover Spain, PortuSwitzerland, gal, France, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, England, Scotland, and The Netherlands. The dancers are directed by Mrs. Mary Bee Jensen, one of Americas leading folk dance authorities. A physician and two other faculty members and their wives are accompanying the students. VbuGet A Special Low Bale on . i electricity when you use - , an electric j water heater. Idaho Statesman Political Editor PARK CITY, Utah - Wes- tern governors Wednesday talked about a need to some- chasm of growing misunderstanding out of campus disorders. Gov. Calvin Rampton of Utah, moderator of a panel on campus unrest before the Western Governors Conference, urged his colleagues to make sure legislation on the subject was remedial and not punitive. lie said he feared reaction would be damaging to financial support of universities, adding I am as opposed to having the campuses starved out as to be having them burned out" But the participants in the panel accented the reason for the chasm of misunderstanding words used by Gov. Dan Evans of Washington to describe the gap between students and the community. Presenting their sides were Dr. Thomas King, provost of the University of Utah, speaking for the university administration, Randy Dryer, 21, Ogden, president of the universitys student body, and B. Z. Kastler, Salt Lake City attorney and former Republican member of the Utah Legislature. When Rampton posed the whether legislation BYU President Ernest L. Wil- question was needed to handle camkinson and Mrs. Wilkinson said the will meet the group in Lisbon pus disorders, King is good arsystem present on June 21. guing that basic decisionmaking should be left in the hands of the campus community." He said We have learned from failures elsewhere (Columbia, Berkeley, etc.) in the last five years, and we dont need new legislation. DQUARTERS Dryer, a political science the legmajor, said perhaps islature needed ' to ' provide Instant Installation guidelines for the institutions Every Size In Stock but envisioned a universitySatisfaction Guaranteed wide senate with representatives of the faculty, the stuHANSEN - GLASS and dents, administration alumni to handle perhaps AND PAINT operations. Ph. Preston Kastler said the university should write the rules of con- how bridge the Italy, Install it f anywhere. UTAH POWER & LIGHT CO. By JOHN CORLETT ; day-to-d- i t 852-10- LIVING COLOR 5" x 7" ONLY Plus 50c Handling m AGE SORRY - ONLY LIMIT ONE PER FAMILY Dress In Bright Colors GROUPS 99c PER PERSON ONE BIG DAY Tuesday, June 23rd 1 to 7 p.m. Clip This Ad And Bring To The JOHNSON HOTEL PRESTON, IDAHO ay duct for the students and not the legislature. But he urged VOL. IX tha legislators concern themselves more with problems of the universities by means Pan! Harvey of the committee system. He said the governors should meet periodically with the presidents of the institutions. In his opening remarks Kastler said "public attention By PAUL 1LRVEY should be zeroed in on the, problem of capturing and Americans who would juspunishing the instigators (of tify our continuing presence in Indochina the riots. so frequently Our biggest job, he said, that protest "is to make very, very sure we cannot let fothat those who incite or fredom and other commit or ment riots democracy die crimes are quickly appreover and tried aphended, speedily without j e punished. propriately our Later, in a closing remark, own fredom Kastler said that the univerand democrasity campus, shouldnt govcy. than the more ern itself any Mr. Harvey What ever Utah State Prison should the validity of Neither Ktog govern itself." nor Dryer challenged that arguments pro and con coninvolvement, comparison. f cerning of either there is little very reasonthat Kastler argued able rules of conduct do not freedom or democracy in amount to censorship or) in- Vietnam, North or South. And it was ever thus. hibition of expression. j; So whatever we decide to wore Dryer said students And do, lets do it with our eyes rules rebelling against open. regulations imposed on them from the outside." He said Civil war in Vietnam has the students should have a now gone on for 300 years. hand in the drafting of any Racial and ethnic differences rules prescribed for students. may date back to the Chinese invasion of the third cenKing said that evidence tury B.C., but present diffishows that students impose more rigorous rules on them- culties derive from three selves than the university ad- centuries of feuding between the Trinh family of the North ministration. and the Nguyen family in the "The students are asking South. for the same mature rights Cambodia and Laos have as the community, said Dry- been squeezed between the want stopthe is we er. All Vietnamese and the rulers of standard. double this of ping Thailand. He held that students were When the French undertook mature and should be treated the task of consolihopeless as adults. and dating unifying Indo Dryer said that legislation itself is not going to prevent holding campus disorders, that students will still feel strongly and be committed to causes as before. He said that campus unrest lies with the issues of our times and the university administration. King said that there is no sanctuary from the law on the campus, but similarly there should be no sanctuary from the protection of due process. He said the university environment must be protected, an environment where students can examine aU kinds There of offensive ideas. should be no restrictions against the personal freedoms on the campus, and we must try to protect on an individuals campuses he choice of his life style, said. He said he was opposed to the imposition of standards on the campus which were not applicable to others in the community at large. Dryer said the National Guard should be called in to a campus disorder only as a last resort. He said the use of the guard on campuses the past year "is almost giving them the role of a national police force and that is frightening prospect." Gov. Stanley K. Hathaway said there must be a method of defining tenure and good conduct. He said that the universities "are going to run the risk of losing their financial resources if they dont clean up their own back yards. King agreed that tenure should not protect incompeAll we tent instructors. need, he said, is administrators with guts to stand up and fire people whose conduct is inappropriate." He was answering a query from Hathaway about an English professor at the University of Wyoming who, he said, had assigned girls in his class to write an essay about their first sexual experience. Gov. Don Samuelson said he thought that students were upset because their suggestions were rejected earlier and thought they ought to try again with better cause." Dryer said students would ideas accept rejection if their were given proper consideration, "but they dont want their ideas rejected because vested political interests. ! iltii NO. 10 JUNE 18, 1970 Lewiston, Utah ly for the fun of Freedom Flower Too Fragile there this ' china, many dissenters fled Fully 2D percent of the offic- across borders into neighbor- ers in the South Vietnamese are of mixed Chinese ing lands where they became army suspected minorities. During the rubber boom of the late 1920s and early '30s the French imported many North Vietnamese into Cambodia to work as coolies on plantations. It is these and their descendants who have proved very hospitable to the North Vietnamese Comm u n i s t s weve been trying to rout out. Also, the South Vietnamese minority in Cambodia persecuted speaks, worships and behaves differently than do the native Khmcrs. Recent massacres where several hundred Vietnamese were found floating in a river, and where Cambodian generals put terrified Vietnamese civilians in front of their advancing army columns illustrate the Cambodian resentment of these intruders in their country. None of the nations in this unmelted pot" have ever endeor joyed "freedoms mocracy approaching our blood. Meanwhile, throughout all Indochina there are the fierce mountaineers who comprise a quarter of the peninsulas population and occupy 70 percent of its area, and whatever happens in the capitals, they will go on fighting if on it If every Communist should be eradicated from Indochina by 10 oclock tomorrow morning, ancient hatreds would survive and violence would persist. Freedom seems too fragile a flower for that jungle. We are getting out of Indochina. Our President has promised that we will, in another year. What I have tried to explain is that some of us feel that we have already given a hopeless cause enough years. For Your Information' Dear friends, We have been asked this question, What should be done when death comes to a loved one at some distant point? We suggest that the next of kin immediately phone his hometown funeral director who will then snake all arrangements for the care and return of the deceased. This will avoid possible misunderstandings that can so easily occur. J . h Sincerely, own. The French deluded themselves that they could homogenize these diverse people or at least control them. They could not, nor can we. Understand, in South Vietr nam, Chinese handle 85 percent of the countrys trading. WEBB HOME FUNERAL PRESTON 132-05- TRUCK TIRE SPECIAL 'REGoodridi, B.F. 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