University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Sept. 29, 1964 Red China Blasts U.S. Pursuit Right TOKYO, —(UPI)— Communist China today condemned President Johnson's reported decision to allow U.S. planes to enter Communist territory if they are in "hot pursuit" of Communist aircraft that have attacked U.S. Naval patrols off Viet Nam. The Peking People's Daily, in an editorial transmitted by the New China News Agency and monitored in Tokyo, charged that the plan was a means of expanding the war in Vict Nam. At the same time, Assistant Secretary of State William P. Bundy told a Tokyo audience that an expansion of the war may be forced on the United States by the Communists. "Expansion of the war outside South Viet Nam, while not a course we want to seek, could be forced upon us by the increased external pressures of the Communists, including a rising scale of infiltration," he told the Research Institute of Japan. WASHINGTON REPORTS last weekend said President Johnson included Communist China's territory as well as that of North Vietnam in his "hot pursuit" doctrine. The reports said the aim of the decision was to deny Communist pilots a privileged sanctuary from which to attack U.S. Naval craft. "No amount of sophistry and subterfuge. . . can prevent the world from seeing that the doctrine of 'hot pursuit' is nothing other than the doctrine of deliberate encroachment on the sovereignty of other Louis, had a pizza at 807 Vt. and almost lost my head over it. Marie Antoinette countries and the mounting of open aggression," Peking said. "The rule of Nguyen Khanh is fast tottering. . . The U.S. imperialists are hasty scheming for excuses to extend the war," it added. Bundy rejected neutralization for South Viet Nam as a solution to its Guerrilla war. That, he said, "would simply be a step towards a Communist takeover, at the Communists themselves know in pushing it as an interim course for South Viet Nam." BUNDY MADE these other points: —If South Viet Nam falls to the Communists, "then the rest of Southeast Asia will be in grave danger of progressively disappearing behind the iron curtain." —Negotiations with Peking on Southeast Asia would be pointless "as long as Peking and Hanoi (North Viet Nam) disregard the agreements they signed in 1954 and 1962 on Viet Nam and Laos." The United States does not believe the Soviet Union has abandoned its expansionist aims, "certainly not to the point where in the foreseeable future she could be relied upon to play a constructive role in assisting other nations to defend themselves against Communist China." SANTA FE, N.M.—(UPI)—St. John's College in Santa Fe will be as unique in education circles when it opens Oct. 10 as its new location. College Called "Colony" That's because the Santa Fe college will be officially referred to as a "colony" by the school's officials. As such, it will operate completely free from its mother facility, the 180-year-old St. John's College at Annapolis, Md. But as a so-called colony, the new college will retain the curriculum and the administrative control from its mother school. THE CURRICULUM at St. John's will definitely be unique. There will be no departments, no divisions, and not even a business administration course. Students won't have a major or minor course of study either. Besides all that, no vocational or teacher training will be taught, and no pre-med, pre-law or required athletics will be offered students. What the school will have is an intense four-year course in great books plus a tough science requirement for graduation. Delila, I'll meet you at La Pizza, 807 Vt., right after I get a haircut. Sampson The great books, chosen over a period of nearly 40 years, will range from Homer through Tolstoi. Philosophy books will cover Plato to Jung. Mathematics will include Euclid up to Labachevski, and sciences will be studied from Hippocrates through Einstein. IN SORT, the new college, with a basic curriculum of literature, philosophy, history, mathematics and natural sciences, will offer strict liberal arts for its students. The school's aim, officials say, is to prepare its students with the tools for future learning. What the student does with this vast storehouse of knowledge is strictly up to the student. Call VI 2-1901 — Now! FREE DELIVERY WESTERN CIVILIZATION NOTES 6th Edition Classes at St. John's will be a system of gatherings of 10 to 15 students with a tutor around a table. In the evenings, seminars will be held containing about 20 FREE DELIVERY All new and revised! To be first on the delivery list students. The tutorials are for taking in knowledge, while the seminars will be the outlet for the student to display what he has learned through discussion. $4.25 Tutorials will be held in languages, mathematics, music and other liberal arts subjects. The first tutors will come this year on loan from Annapolis. Eventually, however, the western colony is expected to foster its own educators. Roxanne, just follow my nose to 807 Vt., one blk. south of police station, for the best food. $4.25 Cyrano S. U.A. Quarterback Club will show the Syracuse Game Film Tuesday, Sept. 29 Free Admission Jayhawk Room 8:00 p.m. in the Kansas Union Support Your Jayhawkers ATTENTION: SENIORS (who did not enclose and sign the blue Senior Fee Card during enrollment) You can pay your Senior Fees anytime during fee payment Go to the Alumni Office 127 Strong NO EXTRA CHARGE AE W sor Hasa whi the Tl put lu e