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Decades after, ’60s sway remains By Rene DeCair Asw-r at* fcj Vi Director Oliver Slone *, soon In he released .movie about 'President Kennedy's assussin.i lion is advertised us H K the story that vs > tn'l g; i ays av And like The I U>< irs. Stone's previous film about a 1 units event, It's' counting on public interest In that famous decade to bring in ho*-offire dollars And many (tenpin includ ing (>Us ai tivists and UOs aerify ists Itellevi |iu bill fascina tion with the era that won't go assay, goes beyond tin music and tlie assassination drama The litis was a Utile of cul tural experimentation" after a lime of ( ulturai oppression.' said Jac k Whalen University assiM late professor of mu 10I0 «y Whalen Ittmself an anti war activist in the bOs and in yolyed in neighborhood urpin i/ing in Philadelphia, said the dis ade changed things i ulturai l\ sin h as (he way people ijressed and thought about hoys they lived And once that has happened you can't pul the ge till’ ha. k It) the bottle Hut the genie hasn't only en thralled those who I i veil through that time Howard Hrotine, co-dlrector of the University s Survival ( enter, which works on many environmental issues, said there is an interest in the MK among thi- present college gen eration because a lot happened then I think there s always going to is- nostalgia." Hrotine said it's one thing to la- wearing tie-dyes, listening to Jim! Hen dris and dot ng acid, he saiil Hut ys hen you get into ai lisisin it s a whole different thing " UHKCUKt:"1 m L- 1 AfCtv.v* OhO*. An anti war protest on campus during the late '60s is just one aspect ol that era that tascmates people even decades later. 'There is a lot of stuff I wouldn't vvnnt to repeal,' Brotine said "A lot of people tried to tune m, turn on and dropped out In my opinion, people should have tuned in. turned on end kicked some I1SS Lisa Low rent e. director of the Hluc.k Student Union, echoed Brotlne's sentiments Blot k stu dent activists also use the '(VOs ai lions as ,1 guide and as a mo 11\ ational force, she said I belies i' our generation is going ba< k to the (>0s.' Law renee said "(We re) betommg more aware of our culture and our history and becoming proud to lie hint k But we have to take into consideration that the times h a\e i hanged," s h e s a i d In the tit) s. Lawrence said, black students were lighting to gain rights they never had in this country In the UOs we re lighting lor something that's be ing taken awa\ from us." she said Lauren Kessler, assix inte pro fessor of journalism and author of the book, \ Iter All //lese Wars tills lilculs in n Viffi-ri-nt World. said 1 hill ill though thr lids was a long time ago "it's not like dead history " Kessler, a tills activist and ■current activist in the women s movement, said the political concerns of the earlier era, sue h as the environment and rai ism remain today. They were not solved then. Kessler said “So there is a con tinuous thread of ( oncern “ Whalen, who taught a (hiss on activism, said when many oi Ins students looked at films of the (ids, they liked what they saw and felt something was missing in their lives A lot of them seemed to wish they could have lived then." Whalen said But he tried to tell them not all was rosy then “Don't over-romant icize the events of that generation Whalen said lie would tell stu dents “I would urge people to find new yvavs to make tins so r ifty live up to its democ ratic promise KENNEDY Continued from Page ^ remembered lor some of Us ilounfalls mii h .is the Bay of i'igs invasion 'but he h.imi ! around long enough lo alienate groups of u« tcty the n,n most presidents .lo, SouIIhvi‘11 said Questions ulioul Kennedy s death remain tinan swered for Jack Whalen. associate proii'ssoi and head of flic soi iologv department ai the Universe i\ i fii' news of Kennedy's murder y\ ,is a rude ■osakcnlng lor linn 'Being young. ! guess. I was so siunin'il by the idea thal someone could shout [fie president, said Whalen, who was 1-1 a! the Inn. \ou f'ni surprised if someone doesn't take a sfiol a! a pres idenl during his term Oswald Lee Marvel Oswald the 24 year old ex Marine who was charged with Kennedy s killing, told po lice he was innocent of the crime (!■■ never went to trial beiause nightclub owner |ui k Ktiby sliot and killed Oswald N'oy 24 In the Warren Commission report. Oswald is quoted as telling police My wife and I 11K. the President's family I am not a malcontent Noth mg irritated me about the President The Warren Commission determined that lu had committed the crime, basing its conr lusions on several fat tors Iwewltness testimony was giv i'll by people who had seen him Nov 22 in the Texas Book Depository in Dallas where he was employed and from where he ysas alleged to have fired his rifle The Commission determined that he may have been motivated by a number of factors Me at tempted to defei t to the Soviet l Inion in 1 ‘lf>H and ysas apparently a devout Marxist Me yvas also a member of the l air Play for (diha t ommittee, at a time when tensions between the C S and Cuba were at an all-time high. y\i!h the Cuban missile crisis and the Bay of Pigs invasion tfi.it occurred 111 the l'it.2 and 1'♦*. I Was Connally the target? A tyvist on the theory of Oswald's motives emerged in 19H'i with the public ation of j.imi -- Kc ston s book I'hc Great Exportations nl lohn (.onnalh Connally was the governor ol Texas m 196.1 ami was m the from scat of the Kennedy s limousine in Dallas on Nov Koston writes that Oswald was Kennedy's as sassin. but that he was aiming lor Connally and not the President Oswald had received an undesirable dis charge from the Marine ( orps in January luoj The action Heston writes was prompted by Os " aid S request lor Soviet citizenship and Ills threat to turn military sec rets over the Soviets During that same month. Oswald wrote to (am nallv who had resigned six weeks earlier as the Si c n-tary of N.ny Oswald requested that Conn.ll iy a fellow native ol Port Worth, repair tin- darn el ge done to me and my family Connally responded by yvriting that the matter had been turned over to the new Set rotary of the Nay y Oswald felt spurned. Heston writes, and re sented Connally'* indifference Oswald's wife, Marina, testified before the War reu Commission three times During her final round of questioning, she made the following statements I feel in my own mind that Lee did not have President Kennedy as a prime target when he as sussmated him She was then asked who the target was I think it was Connally," she replied "That’s my personal opinion, that he was shooting .it Covernor Connally I don't think he hud any idea cone erning President Kennedy " Heston also writes that a Dallas lawyer named Carroll Jamagin testified that he overheard a con versation between Huby and Oswald in Huby's nightclub Oct 4 larnagm reconstructed the con versation on paper and mailed and account of it to 1 Ldg.ir Hoover at the FBI. larnagm recalls that the two spoke of Oswald receiving a payment "after the job is dune, cits c ussing where it should take place and the possi ble eonsequem ns Are you sure you can do the jot) without hit ting anvlxidy hut the Governor7" Huby reportedly asked Turn to KENNEDY Page 12