xt76q52fbd4x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt76q52fbd4x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-02-13 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, February 13, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 13, 1974 1974 1974-02-13 2020 true xt76q52fbd4x section xt76q52fbd4x The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 110

Wednesday, February 13, 1974

an independent student newspaper

 

GRE said
'unreliable':

Bostrom

By (‘ARUL M ENROE

Kernel Staff Writer

Alpha cm

to sell

house

B) JEAN ST. JOHN

Kelnel Stall “titer

The Graduate Record Examination
(GRE), an aptitude test and an exit
requirement of the graduate school, is
unreliable in accurately predicting a
student's success in graduate school,
said Dr. Robert Bostrom. speech depart-
ment chairman.

A study done by the Educational Testing
Service (ETS) of Princeton. N.J.. which
commercially sells the GRE to univer—
sities, correlated the weighted average of
GRE scores and undergraduate grade
point averages.

TIIE correlation of coefficients, as it is
called, showed the GRE validity index is
.40 to .45.

Placed on its scale ranging from .00 to
1.00, Bostrom said this shows poor
validity in measuring the student ac«
curately.

The statistics show that the GRE holds
an efficiency index of only 20 per cent in
determining which students will be suc-
cessful in grad school, added Bostrom.

"'I‘IIIS MEANS the GRE test is 20 per
cent better than pure chance.“ he said.
”And 80 per cent of the time it is wrong.“

.\l.l’|l.\ (‘lll OMEGA. with its national
organization. has decided to sell its
chapter house at 364 Aylesford Place.

\liiiii Arnold. chapter president. said
'l‘uesday they need a "smaller house
because we are not a large chapter," She
added there was “no sense in having a
house of this size" since “it could present
financial difficulty."

Arnold said no arrangements have been
made to purchase another house but the
group definitely plans to remain on
campus.

A statement was issued by the national
organization in November which read:
"The National (‘ouncil of Alpha (‘hi ()mega
announces that the Delta ()mega (‘hapter
at the l'niversity of Kentucky will be of
lered for sale. with occupancy available in
June I974. however the Delta ()mega
('hapter of Alpha (‘hi ()mega will continue
to [auction on the campus of the
University.

“.\l.l’ll.-\ (‘lll “MEGA feels it is in the
best interest to relieve the chapter of the
financial burden of supporting a large
house and that other housing
arrangements will be made.

"The National (‘ouncil of Alpha (‘hi
(imega is confident that this move from a

(‘ontinued on page 6

Results of the same study released by
ETS stated the GRE is discriminatory
against minority groups, based on
linguistic wording of many parts of the test
itself.

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Ky. 40506

plications for the fall semester for the 78
graduate departments.

Graduate admissions serves 40 of these
departments by checking only the

 

‘Stastistics show that the GRE holds an ef-
ficiency index of only 20 per cent in determining
which students will be successful in grad school.’

 

Bostrom conducted a private study of
the validity of the GRE and arrived at a
validity index ranging from .35 to a .16,
showing a lesser percentage of efficiency
than the ETS research.

BOSTROM NOTED the GRE is not
necessary for graduate school admission;
however it is an exit requirement.

The test. although usually taken before
admission to the school, can be taken as
late as the last semester ofgraduate study.

Individual departments have varying
requirements for admission to their
schools.

JOHN JUIINSON. of graduate ad-
missions, processes about 3,000 apo

minimum 2.5 GPA requirement and
transcripts on an application, then for-
warding it to the department for further
approval.

The remaining 38 departments let
graduate admissions handle the entire
application, including GRE score
assessment. if the department requires the
test.

Dr. Zakkula (lovindarajula. professor of
statistics and a member of the graduate
council. said he believes graduate ad-
missions should require the GRE for
admission to all departments.

(‘ontinued on page 16

' i“
”m”... “a...” ...m.‘ ~.. .

 

Sitting it out for the best concert tickets are a

illegal parkers

few devoted Stephen Stills-Maria Muldnur
fans. (Kernel staff photo by Phil Gmhong).

 

 

News In Brlef

by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OWoman aide named

o lraq boycotts meeting

' Soviets arrest writer
0 Campaign funds
' Truckers roll again

0 Today's weather...

. \\'.\Slll.\'(lT().V — (‘arla Anderson
llills. a los Angeles lawyer, has been
named by President Nixon to be the first
woman assistant attorney general since
the end of Woodrow Wilson's ad-
ministration, more than 50 years ago.

If confirmed by the Senate, Mrs. llills
would succeed flarlington Wood Jr. as
assistant attorney general in charge of the
civil division.

Wood was named a US. district judge in
Illinois.

0 BAGHDAD. lraq — lraq Wlll boycott
an Arab oil meeting this week in Libya
because oil ministers want to talk about
lifting the petroleum embargo against the
l'nited States. Baghdad radio said
Tuesday .

lraq has been one of the most vociferous
opponents of {TS Middle East policies
since the Arab-Israeli war last October.

In another anti-US. move. Libya said it
was nationalizing the final holdings of
three American oil companies.

OMOSCOW— Soviet police dragged
Nobel Prize-winning author Alexander
Solzhenitsyn from his wife's Moscow
apartmentTuesday and took him away for
questioning. his mother-in-law said.

She told Western newsmen by telephone
that six plainclothes security agents and
two uniformed officers barged into the
apartment on Moscow‘s Gorky Street
shortly after 5 pm.

She said she and her daughter,
Solzhenitsyn’s wife Natalya Svetlova.
tried to hold the police back but “they were
very rough.“

OWASIHNGTON— A new study shows
that almost a year before the next general
elections, candidates for federal offices
and supporting committees had more than
$24 million in hand to pay for their cam-
paigns.

The largest single reserve reported was
more than $3.6 million still held by
President Nixon’s re-election campaign
committee.

0 FRANKFURT —— Truck traffic
returned to normal on Kentucky‘s high-
ways Tuesday and State Police reported
only one act of violence.

Gov. Wendell Ford. in a news con—
ference. announced the National Guard
troops called up Feb. 5 to help avert
violence will be released from active
status Wednesday morning.

State Police said one driver‘s windshield
was shattered by a rock as he drove along
the Mountain Parkway in Wolfe County.

...blues chaser

Today‘s weather may cure some of
those ol‘ middle-of-lhe-week blues with its
warm weather and partly sunny skies, The
temperature should hit the low 608 and
will drop to only the low 405 tonight,
Thursday‘s outlook is not so bright, with
increasing cloudiness and a chance of
showers, But the warm weather will
continue with Thursday‘s high near 60.

 

 editorials represent the opinions of the editors, not the university

Editorials _
The Kentucky Kernel _-_ S ,2

Published by the Kernel Press Inc Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and published
continuously as The Kentucky Kernel Since 1915 The Kernel Press Inc. founded

1971 First class postage paid at Lexmgton, Ky Business offices are located in the
Journal Building on the University of Kentucky Advertising, room 710 and News

 

 

______._____..____.'——

 

 

 

 

Department, room 112. Advert-Sing published herein is intended to help the

 

reader buy Any false or misleading advertisung should be reported to the Ad

vertising Manager

 

Better days ahead?

House Bill 125 has possibilities of clearing a path to
better landlord-tenant relations. The bill also contains
new protections for tenants. Passage in the House
seems almost assured, now that the Home Builders
Association of Kentucky (HBAK) has withdrawn

opposition to the plan.

Three sections of the bill will benefit tenants:

-—Probably the most important item in the bill is a
requirement that landlords will have the respon—
sibility of repairing services that could affect the
tenant’s health and safty. Repairs would have to be
made within 14 days. If a landlord willfully refused to
make repairs, tenants will maintain the right to have
the work done. The tenant then could deduct the cost
of the repairs, up to $100 or half a month’s rent.

~Landlords will not be able to enter a dwelling
unless two days prior notice is given to tenants. In the
case of an emergency, however, landlords will be

granted immediate entry.

——Landlords will still be given the authority to
collect security deposits, but instead of placing these
deposits in an operating fund account, all deposits will
have to be deposited in a bank. The tenants will then
have the right to know the name of the bank and the
account number in which the deposit was made.

The bill does not have any guarantees that the
deposit would have to be returned to the tenant when
the lease expires, but Kenton said this will be ironed
out in committee hearings.

Although the home builders have agreed to with-
draw opposition, a story in the Tuesday Louisville
Times indicated an air of pessimism is present. Len
Mills, lobbyist for HBAK, said some builders are
afraid certain tenants may take advantage of the
legislation and “use certain provisions to justify
slipping out of paying their rent.” As a result, he said
rents may go up and a shortage of apartment
dwellings may come because builders don’t like
restrictions placed upon them by the bill.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

Fighting transfers

WASINGTUN — Last week the
President was on the tube
bragging that he had brought
peace to our “burning and
besieged" cities. By the weekend
the National Guard h d been
called out in Pennsylvania and it
began to appear that the fighting
had simply been transferred
from the ghettos to the gas
pumps.

Even conceding the full
measure of credit Nixon claims
for bringing peace. the pattern of
moving from crisis to crisis.
cstablished in the late '60s
continues. In fairness you have to
say that by no means does all the
fault lie with Nixon. Never-
theless. the way he runs his office
dcprivcs him of foresight and
handicaps him in taking effective
action when he docs belatedly see
a problem.

This executive incapacity
would have been plainer to see if
it hadn‘t been for Watergate.
which is as much of a distraction
to his critics as it is to him. Take
the wheat deal. In a way he got

off the book because everybody
assumed it to be another crooked
moneymaker for his campaign
contributors. But let‘s say it was
an honest mistake. In that case
neither Nixon nor Kissinger knew
how badly the Russians were
hurting for food.

TIIEN THE question arises,
what do they know now? There is
a considerable body of‘scientific
opinion (see Fortune magazine
for February: “Ominous
Changes in the World's Weather“
by Tom Alexander) that holds the
planet has already undergone a
basic shift in long-term weather
behavior. and that, as a con-
scquncc, the relative abundance
that we’ve had in the global food
supply for the past 50 years is
over. We won‘t know if these
predictions are right until after
the African [amine spreads to
India and is recognized as per~
mancnt. or until perpetual
droughts hit Russia and China
and the floods in the lower
Mississippi basin become annual
disasters.

      

'Wlll, GEE, MI. PRESIDENT; I‘I'S NICI Of YOU ‘I’
II" DON'T YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO DO IN

V/ ' v.

I974

56‘ ,

’ 31/717 . t
CAMPAIGN no. W
“W!

 

 

 

Letters to the Kernel

  
       

O OFFER ‘I'O CAMPAIGN ON MY BEHALF —
CHINA OR RUSSIA OR SOMEPLACE . . .‘I'

‘Why can't students get seats?’

As an avid sports fan I was
very glad to see the new football
stadium this fall. However, for all
the controversy that erupted over
the stadium it hardly seems
worthwhile if the student body
can‘t even get decent seats. The
majority of us are stuck up on the
second tier where we can‘t take
advantage of the band or the
cheerleaders, much less support
the team in the way we like.

The new stadium, the new
coach and thek‘new team” have
generated a new spirit that is
being stifl'ed by this
arrangement. lifter all, how can
we profecttsicl‘; any enthusiasm
atall when we can't even hear the
school song—much less join in
any organized cheers?

Perhaps if the students were
moved to the bottom tier, closer
to the cheerleaders, and the band

placed nearer the back ofthe tier,
this could solve the problem.

I realize that,there may be
some problem with season ticket
holders but the seating
arrangement is something that
should be seriously considered
before next fall.

Ifeel that I am not alone in my
concern, and this would be a very
worthwhile effort for the Ken-
tucky Wildcats.

Sally Harris
A&S-junior

Too late

Recently as l was trying to get
readmitted to the University
after being out for two semesters,
I was informed by the admissions
office that 1 had applied too late
to be considered for the spring
semester.

At first the visit to the Dean of
Admissions office seemed
promising. I was then refered to
one of his co—workers into whose
alphabetical category I fell. This
poor girl had an awful time
finding out that I had been sent a
“Too Late" notice, which was
news to me, and that there was
absolutely no way I could get
admitted.

After a short visit to the Dean
of my college I was back in the
same office, talking to the same
people and being admitted. Why
don't the peoplein the admissions
office learn to do things the easy
way instead of giving students a
full day of exercise and wasting
the valuable time of highly paid
administrative personnel?

Robert L. Johnson
271 Kalmia Ave.

from ghetto to gas pumps

But do Nixon, Kissinger and

Butz know about these
probabilities? Have they taken
any precautionary steps?

Judging from our hyper efforts to
export every last soy bean. the
answer is no. So far as we can tell
there is no plan, no study. no
seeking of information, and no
follow—through on future events
that are certain to happen.

Food prices, we know, are
going up. and as they do con-
sumers will have less money to
spend on other products. thus
causing recession in other in-
dustries. The government
response is to sell more food
abroad; but then in housing, a
terribly depressed, terribly
overpriced industry, the ad—
ministration is getting ready to
pump in money before the prices
drop, thus insuring more inflation
but not necessarily more jobs and
prosperity.

In energy, with the truckers
already out on the expressways
with shotguns, the Department of
Transportation proposes to drive

up the price of fuel and multiply
our troubles, social and fiscal, by
abandoning 61,000 miles of
railroad track.

INSTEAD OF rationality, we
have theatricality. Kissinger
zooms into London and makes a
famous speech urging
cooperative endeavors on joint
research and tactics for the oil-
consuming countries. But nobody
else in his government knows
anything about it: no staff
preparation, no follow—up. The
result is that our European and
Japanese friends wander off to
make their own one—to-one
private deals with the Arabs.

At home, in a spasm of ignorant
showiness, the White House asks
for Daylight Saving Time, and
Congress. ever frightened and
uninformed. votes it. Then we
find out it doesn't save electricity
although it may kill children.

Luckily Congress‘ inherent
inability to bite the bullet and
make tough decisions saved it
from approving the recklessly
thrown-together emergency

energy bill. although the Senate
is still under the power of that
legislative hysteric, Henry
Jackson, who thinks ragging the
baronial oil monopolists is
progress.

HENRY KISSINGER once said
of running the US. government
that. “The only way secrecy can
be kept is to exclude from the
making of the decision all those
who are theoretically charged
with carrying it out." That‘s how
he and his boss do it, with the
result that the Pentagon spies on
the White House. which in turn
thinks the proper conduct of
government is a series of un-
thought-out, uninformed, con-
tradictory surprise an-
nouncements. It's enough to
make a truckdriver pick up a
rock and throw it.

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a
columnist for King Features
Syndicate.

 

 

 

 

 

  

opinion from inside and outside the university community Vle w palr't

 

On the road

from Rome...

By JOHN COGLEY
THE NEW VOfiK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

SANTA BARBARA, Calif—Last Sep-
tember 1 made a big decision. After a
lifetime as a Roman Catholic, I was
formally received into the Episcopal
Church. Ordinarily such a move would
have gone largely unnoticed, but be-
cause I had long been an editor or col-
umnist for Commonweal and through
the years had written on Catholic af-
fairs for a variety of publications,
religious and secular, the change was
reported in The New York Times and
picked up by the news services.

The actual setting of the reception
ceremony could not have been more
“Catholic." It took place during the
conventual mass at an Anglican mon-
astery perched on a mountaintop out-
side Santa Barbara. The celebrant was
the mitred assistant bishop of the
Diocese of California. Throughout, I
knelt in a choir stall in the midst of
a community of white-habited monks.

From all appearances, the journey
from Rome to Canterbury took only
a small step. Later my friend Eugene
McCarthy, that master of the one-liner,
said that it seemed to him I had moved
neither forward nor backward but had
merely sidled sideways.

Father Andrew Greeley, the Chicago
priest-sociologist who annually writes
more books than most of us read in
a year, reported that some of my
Catholic friends found it hilarious that
I should leave Catholicism for, of all
things, Anglicanism, which is only a
stone’s throw away and is beset by
many of the same problems bedeviling
the Church of Rome.

To walk out of the Church com-
pletely, Father Greeley and some oth-
ers seemed to suggest, might make

sonal
formed much more to what Episco-

sense. There might even be a point
in signing up with one of the Oriental
cults flourishing in my adopted state.
But conservative, staid, middle-class
Anglicanism—what a choice for an
alumnus of the Catholic Worker move-
ment to make. C’est d rire.

I had my reasons of course, but they

were of such an old-fashioned doc-

trinal nature that it is hard to get
them taken seriously in these days of
ecumenical theology and do-it-your-
self Catholicism. Let me say merely
that after study, thought, and (for me)
a great deal of prayer, I concluded
that on a number of issues my per-
theological convictions con-

palians profess to believe, or are free

to deny, than to the official teachings
of Rome.

These include not only the absolute

primacy of the Pope, the validity of
non-Roman orders, the definition of
dogma, and several other pivotal doc-
trines but such practical questions as
clerical celibacy, birth control, divorce,

and religious liberty within the church,
the last a grave question the Ecu-
menical Council never got around to.

I am quite aware that for many
of my former co-religionists questions
like these are not very interesting and
no longer provide stumbling blocks.
Some of them wrote to tell me that
actually they felt the same way I did
but were confident Rome would one
day change its present positions as it
had already on so many other issues.
It is only a matter, then, of hanging
in there until the Vatican comes
around. In the meantime, the trouble-
some pronouncements of the Pope can
be dealt with by a policy of benign
neglect. “One word from Rome, and
I do as I please," one priest wrote.

...to Canterbury

My problem was that I didn’t feel
that I had that much time left, and
I would rather spend it as a fully
affirmative Anglican than a yes-but
Catholic.

I was moved by the general reaction
of Roman Catholic correspondents to
my "conversion” (a word I reject be-
cause I really did not change any of
my former beliefs). By far the ma-
jority of those who got in touch with
me were lovingly sympathetic, ex-
pressing full confidence in my sin-
cerity. A few of course looked for
less noble motivations.

I heard about rumors that I was
involved with Another Woman and
was only looking forward to an ec—
clesiastical divorce (a story that
amused my wife).' Only one corre-
spondent was rude enough to scribble
“good riddance!” on a postcard.

An unreconstructed pre-ecumenical
Defender of the Faith, writing in a
diocesan paper, painted a pitiful pic-
ture of me worshipping, in full guilt,
in an alien congregation of invincibly
ignorant heretics, deprived at the last
of the ministrations of a properly or-
dained priest and valid Sacraments,
awaiting the Last Judgment in the
graveyard company of those who
would be saved, though I would not,
only because they were born into Ref-
ormation darkness. He even pictured
me before the Judgment Seat. sputter-
ing out feeble explanations of why I
had sinned against the light.

A few Catholic friends I encoun-
tered were more given to sociological
considerations. I was born into a cer-
tain religious-social milieu. I should
have stayed there. For an Irish-(fatho-
lic product of the streets of Chicago
to move over into Anglicanism was
social climbing at its baldest. Father

Jlll Krementz

Greeley suggested that I made my first
false step when I went to New York,
hooking up with liberal intellectual
establishmentarians, and fatally loosen-
ing the connection with my native
roots.

Reactions to the change in my life,
then, have been enlightening. I have
learned that doctrinal considerations
no longer count for as much as I was
brought up to believe they did. I have
learned that for many contemporary
Catholics the best reason for staying
in the church is the hope that it will
change even more—but of courSe only
those remaining within the bosom can
help bring that about.

From others I have learned that
group loyalty is just about the final
value; creeds and doctrinal formula-
tions are no longer looked upon as all
that crucial.

Most important. I have discovered
that by and large Roman Catholics
believe fiercely in the rights of con-
science and are ready to forgive even
a “betrayal” by one of their own once
they are convinced it was motivated
by personal integrity.

It is still too soon for me to feel
quite at home in Anglicanism, except
intellectually. But the reception 1 have
been given has been warm and wel-
coming, with no hint of the tri-
umphalism that used to count “con-
\erts" from one Christian body to
another as sectarian trophies.

Most satisfying of all, I have never
felt closer to those whom I now have
to think of as “separated brethren."
Pope John‘s phrase means a great deal
more to me than it used to.

John (‘ogley is a senior fellow at the
Center for the Study of Democratic
Institutions .

 

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. February I8, 1974

C I Ill E MA
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THURSDAY NIGHT
FEB. I4

  

  

 
 
   

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MATINEES WED, SAT. 8. SUN.

It's iIIegaI, however

Program

It) (‘IlAltLl‘IS \HlLFlC
Kernel Staff Writer

Seyei'i-year old Billy lay rigid in
the dentist chair. eyes darting
nervously between the two
figures hovering over him.

Billy is one of the many
children who come each week to
the dental clinic in the UK
College of Dentistry for treat-
ment by students.

These are not dental students,
however. but dental hygienists in
the (‘ollege of Allied Health
Professions. All women. they are
trainees in a program called
Expanded Duty Dental Hygiene
which teaches them techniques
formerly performed only by
dentists.

EACH HYGIENIST works as a
team with a qualified dental
assistant under close supervision
of dental school faculty. She
learns to perform routine
procedures ranging from
restoration of tooth fillings to
uncomplicated pulp therapies.

There‘s just one catch. The
program is illegal.

So far, the program has been
defended against any type of
injunction because it is classified
as research. but Kentucky law
prohibits its graduates from
practicing their talents once they
leave the University.

Begun in September, some of
the first graduates went to
Canada to work on the outlying
Indian reservations where
dentists are in short supply. Four
others were accepted in ad-
vanced standing to dental school.

THE PROGRAM‘S clinical
director, Dr. Clem J. Hill. feels it
has been as successful .as any
experimental progyam, but
stressed that success or failure

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a ‘5

‘expands' dentistry

     

Cathi Dixon (right). dental hygienlst and Ramona Dlsponett. a
dental assistant, work in the Expanded Dental Hygiene program.
(Kernel staff photo by Chuck Combes).

can only be determined in the decayed molar which required a
field. steel cap. but the tooth first had
Concerning his students‘ to be cut down to the right size.
abilitiestnuwever, Hill said most t‘athi Dixon. a senior from
would probably have no problem Hazard. did the work with the
making it through dental school helpof Ramona Disponett. dental
and their present training is assistant.
roughly equivalent to that of a (‘athi admitted the work is
second-year dental student. scary to a child. but said "They

UKS program. one 0! “V9 in have to know the difference
the COUNT)“ IS unique as I! IS the between pain and pressure. Like
only one specializingin children's when I‘m drilling. he feels
dental care.

HANGING IN age from three
to 12, the patients' youth would
present certain problems for any
dentist. but for the students. they
are compounded.

“The girls have anxieties.
that‘s only natural.” Hill said. “I
can see. though. that they‘re no

pressure. but not pain." she said.

Billy. however. seemed less
than reassured. Trying to get him
relaxed. the women talked softly
to him about how old he was.
where he went to school and how
blue his eyes were.

Tlllttil‘fllltll"? his two hours

worse than dental students. I” the chair. though. Billy
"The kids are always a little remained almost totally non-
scared. but the students are committai. “‘5 ”"1."

usually more scared." acknowledgement being an oc—
nii.i.\”s PROBLEM was a casitmalnod
eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

HAPPY
HOUR

Wednesday,
8 p.m.-i a.m.

Ffldoy

3 p.m.-7 p.m.
BEER

$1 PITCHER

TWO KEYS
333 5. Lime

CLEANERS, INC.

Shopping Center

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membership card.

 

Thursday, February 14,8215 p.m.

Admission: All UK full-time students by ID and activities cards. All others by season

Central Kentucky Concerts & Lectures

Hear

JON LINDBERGH

Lecture on Food, Energy and
Conservation of the Sea

Memorial Coliseum

 

 

 

 

 

 

.—

b—‘Dl A A p.

  

 

 

 

3r
’1‘

Swift gives lecture

on handling freedom

By KEVIN M l'RPllY
Kernel Staff Writer

Freedom is a cause for which
many have fought and died. But
Dr. Louis 1). Swift, chairman and
associate professor of the
classics department, shed a
different light on that concept at
yesterday‘s United Campus
Ministry's luncheon forum.

“Freedom is a burden which
sometimes verges on becoming
intolerable," Swift said.

Speaking to about 60 people in a
congenial and informal at-
mosphere. Swift discussed the
problems freedom creates and
the University’s role in helping
individuals cope with freedom in
a responsible. decisionanaking
lllilllllt’l'.

"l'NlllSS 'I‘llE I'niversity
provokes men to choose deeply
and fundamentally. then it loses
its essential rationale.“ he said at
the forum held in Koinonia
House. 412 Rose Street.

I'nless the University can
provide some stabilizing con-
ditions while it tests and reshapes
man's life foundations. it will
only do half the job. Swift said.

Swift called honesty "the
necessary condition for

developing freedom in others or
ourselves.“ and added it
“represents not only an
awareness of what one knows.
but also a deep abiding sense of
one‘s own ignorance."

A I" 'I‘ H R W A It I) S S W l I“ 'I‘
presided over a disscussion
period.

 

DR. LOUIS SWIFT

Yesterday's forum was part of
a series “designed to encourage
interaction among students.
faculty and anyone else in-
terested." said Roberta Jones.
staff member at the Koinonia
House.

Debators win trophies
in invitational meet

I‘K debators recently won
championship trophies in both
novice and varsity debate
competition in an invitational
meet at the University of
Missouri which fielded 58 teams
from 11 states.

Mary Thompsor and Mike
(‘hapman took the final
elimination round in the varsity
debate by edging Morehead State
3-1.

In novice debate competition
I'K took first and second place by
winning both semifinal round
matches.

Joe Wright and Carl Stich
defeated (‘oe (‘ollege of Iowa 2-1.
and John Mclung and Diane

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, February l3, 1974—5

  

 

 

 

l
l

 

White beat DePauw University.

The topic for debate was
“Resolved: That the federal
government should control the
supply and utilization of energy

in the United States."

UK debators also won several

speaker awards. Mike Chapman
placed third and Mary Thompson
placed fourth in the varisty
division. and Carl Stich placed
second and Diane White placed
fith in the novice division.

Your Extra Touch Florist

1269-3369

ROSES

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WITH THE VERY BEST

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the kentucky guild of
artists and craftsmen
offers you distinctive

at the guild gallery

5 except sunday.

gifts for special giving.

kentucky artists 8. craftsmen
display and sell their very
best. visit us at 811 euclid
avenue (next to the chevy
chase cinema) or phone
266-2215. we’re open to to

 

quild QAllcRy

911 Euclid Ave.
lA-xington. Kentuckv 40502

 

 

 

 

 

WIEDEMANN

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6—TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, February 13. 1974

A REMINDER FROM
THE STUDENT

HEALTH SERVICE

FRIDAY,

   
     

FEBRUARY 15TH
IS THE LAST DAY

TO PAY THE

$7 SPRING
SEMESTER

HEALTH FEE.

The fee is paid at:
The Billings and
Collections Office,
Room 220

Service Building

 

If there are
any questions
ab