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Show not before small :\ one before a y was invited, p. The officers to give as tfood And they made audience, discouraged by an KSSO for hope if more are Each year, the ighborhood of to explain wlv id how they spend it ions to extent f KSSOs. university purpose of Committee Committe ment anc" but to honest j rused and ' to r her St i 8' ;ted th ny did t tudent fu> 5e/T) teir ^ center th 'c/e 0\s are h Pt>6//C , answers ^e^/>7 < student C6q/< to be "r "Chrn ?mmie a. 'n9 the ' nd*r f >9 Oil cf'on ***** letters to paper to mey won1 . editorial pon^, nee we on the Chronicle ^ c in printing controversial letters, t , the controversial and critical to the jrhil. r we do not print is the one that dares us /ut docs not include identification of the ; are even distressed by those wishing to jlicly anonymous though known to us. If i opinion on the conduct of the team or the the cheering or the salt in the food, we either by leaving it unsigned, offer it as the opinion dare our readers to do the same. li9c"n to c/Zre, s ' 8 '"ore " *h 0s>^r; *> PPo,^e,. Pa Co ' ^-nief ^ny atlilia might even have brought up the parallel case in 1964, when a lot of good Re-sband publicans were voted out be ^t- cause voters assumed them t' be associated with Barry Gol< water and therefore committ blowing up the world. B irse, someone like stop to think that o Republican come ooq/ t that: a coming ba who never should thrown out. The Chi orr, 'e/r Poc r em/ ^ crQ* r*ach t Ch nc/ Pur. :e y coVer mi Baiiu Utah Chronicle Published daily during taU, \v\ntcr and spring quarters except during 2eond clas- s matter in the Post Office at Salt Lake City, Utah. The oD'nlons expressed on the editorial pages of The Dally Utah ronicle?Pd'> not necessarily represent the views of the student body the Unlvc rslty administration. liters 1 o the editor must be signed and identified with a student aumber to fc e considered for publication. DAUL TAYLOR - Editor EDITOR-MIKE HEYWOOD JAMES NICHOLS Business Manager Mac Backman Harris Vincent Steve Svvlnney ..... Susan Pratt Steve Gunn vote in o// s to be a queaw. ennial con- cern - at few. Miss Laraine Segal points in the first issue of Mentis that the answers to such questions are by. no means simple or easy to find. Almost everything irom streetcar-college apathy to issueless campaigns to Greek domination has been postulated as a possible cause for low student participation in campus elections. Miss Segal goes on in her article to attribute higher participation on other university campuses to the presence of student political parties. She concludes that, "Political parties build an interest, for they create at least one issue: which party will gain POWER?1 This statement raises a somewhat moi interesting issue relating to student eh tions than the mere establishment political parties (an issue, incident? which has been shelved for this yea the Executive Council). Before the tution of political parties or any such nostrums can be taken ser the question, "WHAT power?" rr answered. Power of Office In any discussion of the re between political power and habits of an electorate it mu,* as axiomatic that the power the office to which an indi' aspire far outweighs either ality or the position he rrv certain issues in ultimate7 how much electoral ardor aicd among his oonstiti Hi/ words, runnin erless sonal mind lack pov fre th- of \ |