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THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Thursdav. November 3. 1966
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V. S. Students Fall Short
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Foreign Students Active In Politics
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In almost every country in
the world except, the United
States, students take an active
part in politics, commented
the Iowa State Daily.
In Latin America, universi
ties are filled with students
who are so interested in po
litics that they forget their
studies during election time.
Some are "professional stu
dents who enter the university
only because they want to
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lead student politics.
In Japan and Europe stu
dents are active in reform
and campus politics. Even in
China, the Red Guard of stu
dents is a strong political arm
in purging that country, even
though it is dominated by Mao
Tse-tung.
Most American students,
however, do not participate in
politics. Many don't even vote
for several reasons.
TV, Congressional Digest
Used For Red Propaganda
A former director of the
U. S. Information Agency has
warned that America's own
words are being used against
her with devastating effect by
the communist world.
Reports in the American
press and speeches by U. S.
Congressmen are among the
chief suppliers of grist for the
Red propaganda mill, accor
ding to Carl T. Rowan in a re
cent national magazine article.
The Reds have even used the
popularity of such non - poli
tical institutions as the "Bat
man" TV series to support
charges that Americans are
"decadent" and "war - lov
ing," he writes. Last April,
Rowan says, the Soviet News
paper Pravda charged that the
TV hero serves as a stimu
lant to .make Americans more
eager to act as "murderers"
in Viet Nam.
"Throughout the communist
bloc a diligent eye is kept
open for any Western news
paper copy, wire - photos or
television footage that can be
twisted to give credence to
communist charges," says Ro
wan, who spent last summer
traveling through the Soviet
Union and its European satel
lites. He notes that in Poland an
American - produced TV re
port on American GI's train
ing bloodhounds to sniff out
suspected Viet Cong members
was compared to the use of
bloodhounds during the Nazi
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First, they feel the candi
dates of both parties will do
about the same thing if el
ected. In Latin America the
.difference between parties
ranges from communism to
fascism. Since the students'
personal lives will be affected
by the outcome of the elec
tion, they take an active in
terest and vote.
Second, many U. S. students
don't bother to vote because
occupation. Pictures of war's
horrors, taken by American,
French, British and Japanese
photographers, were widely
used to support communist
claims of brutality by U. S.
soldiers.
"Perhaps the richest source
of damaging information is the
Congressional Record," Rowan
writes. "The communist press
and radio are quick to pick
up critical statements not
always accurate or in con
text .by any means. These are
used to create the impression
of a huge array of highly re
spected Americans condemn
ing their government and its
policy.
"I am not advocating aboli
tion of our freedom of press or
speech," said the former U.S.
I.A. chief. "But I do want to
remind Americans that today's
careless column or reckless
Senate speech may constitute
a heavy mortgage on Ameri
ca's future."
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EXAMINATION Peter SeUers as Dr. Pratt checks the pulse
of Peter Cook in this scene from the new comedy "The
Wrong Box" that starts today at the Rialto Theater in Dur
ham. John Mills, Ralph Richardson, Michael Caine, Nanette
Newman, Dudley Moore, and Tony Hancock star.
A scene from Anna Sokolow's Opus 65, a jazz
satire on the goings-on of the ever present Present
Generation, one of the hits of the Joffrey Ballet
repertory. The Joffrey Ballet, already celebrated
for the wide range of dancing styles in the com
pany, is as often praised for its jazz dancing as
for its fine classiccal line. Tickets for the Ballet
which will appear in Memorial Hall on November
10 are now on sale at the GM Information Desk.
Hon aDd)
Halley's Comet
viil be dropping
around again.
ILetS9s ipflaca a
Watch this paper for
time and place.
ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. . ST. LOUIS . NEWARK . LOS ANGELES . TAMPA . HOUSTON
they find it (or think they will
find it) difficult to -wade
through the red tape to re
gister. In the past, such red tape
in Ames has included proof
of registration of a car or a
leased apartment.
Third, students don't vote
because they know liftle about
the candidates or issues. They
-reason that it would be better
not to vote at all than to vote
unwisely, without adequate in
formaion. Students in the United States
will probably never become as
interested in politics as those
south of the border or in
Europe. And this is as it
should be because neither the
university's nor the students's
best interests are served if
students are more interested
in politics than in education.
There is, however, a balance
between the two. It does not
require joining a political par
ty or reading all statements
by candidates for office. But
each student of voting age has
a responsibility to become rea
sonably informed on issues and
( candidates, then make a judge-,
ment and vote.
GOAT RAISED HORSE
DALHART, Tex. (UPI)
Dusty, who got a bit mixed up
at an early age, has been
raised on goat's milk. But she
is a horse.
Dusty was born early in 1966
and her mother died. One of
the goats owned by her owner,
Fred Presley, took over rais
ing her and Dusty's diet was
"goat's milk untill she weighed
around 300 pounds and . was
weaned to feed.
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