xt7c599z2z24 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7c599z2z24/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1965-04-21  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 21, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 21, 1965 1965 1965-04-21 2015 true xt7c599z2z24 section xt7c599z2z24 Inside Today's Kernel
Kernel Literary Supplement termed
'handsome and worthwhile': Page Two.

The Vietnam protest in pictures:
Five.

Expert ay computers will not replace
the housewife: Page Three.

U.S. plane hit over North
Page Seven.

Editor discusses action of UL student
council: Poge Four.

Dinner honors Dr.
Page Eight.

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Vietnam:
Mclntyre:

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Vol. LVI, No.

54

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1

The Kentucky Kernel

Queen Contestants

University coeds have been entered in the Little
Kentucky Derby queen contest, to be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday in
Memorial Coliseum. They are, front row, from left, Nancy Burress,
Connie Castle, Mary Jane Brltton, and Susanne Ziegler; second row,
Bonnie Sherman and Laura Miller; third row, Bstty Chambers, Vickl
Bradford, Susan Bays, and Pam Robinson; fourth row, Jo Ann
Windish, Leslie Taylor, Carolyn Williams, and Cheryl Smith, and
fifth row, Benita Hayes, Bonnie Breault, Patty Lane, and Katie Clay.
Twenty-eig- ht

Centennial Program
Planned In Ashland

y

er

gent will be Miss Helen King,
Alumni Association director, Dr.
Thomas D. Clark, chairman of
the UK Centennial Committee
and main speaker for a Boyd
County UK Alumni Dinner tonight, and faculty members from
11 UK colleges and the Extension
Division.
UK Trustees Hershell Murray,
Dr. Harry Denham and Dr. Lewis
Cochran will also attend the
event as will UK students and
ACC Alumni Mike Fields, Gary
Scott Nunley, and James G. Dobbins. Nunley and Dobbins were
recently initiated into UK's Phi
Beta Kappa chapter.
Dr. Elbert OckermanandCol.
James Alcorn will assist in marshaling the academic procession
preceding the convocation. The
procession will form a, the Ventura Hotel at 10:30 a.m. Thursday.
The Ashland event is the first
of three such convocations scheduled for community colleges this
spring. Others are at Covington
April 29 and Henderson May 11.
Convocations are also scheduled
for the six colleges during the fall
semester.
Continued On Page

8

Candidates Plan
Debate Thursday

HOIIEIIT YEACitll

J

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, !)(.
1

By KENNETH HOSKINS

-

The University's Centennial
Central made its first "pilgrimage" of the year today when it
left campus to set up a two-da- y
headquarters in Ashland.
Purpose for the Boyd County
jaunt is Thursday's Centennial
Convocation at the Ashland Community College. More than 60 UK
personalities, including President
JohnVV. Oswald, Centennial Coordinator J. W. Patterson, and
Vice Presidents Glenwood Creech,
Robert Johnson, and Robert Ker-lewill participate in the scheduled 11 a.m. convocation in the
Paramount Theater.
Distinguished Alumnus C.
Robert Yeager, Class of '33 and
presently president of the L. B.
Balfour Co., Attleboro, Mass.,
will deliver the convocation's
main address. Ashland Community College Director Robert Cood-pastwill preside at the event.
Other participants will include Ashland Mayor Everett
Reeves, Robert McCowan, president of the Boyd County Chapter, UK Alumni Association,
Community College Dean, Dr.
Ellis Hartford, and President
Oswald.
Also joining the UK contin- -

1

Eight Pages

20 Maggin Mall Students
Report Order Of Eviction

c- -

1

EE

H

Candidates for president and
vice president of Student Congress will debate at 8 p.m. Thursday in the auditorium of the
Dickey Education Building.
The candidates will discuss
their platforms and answer questions from the audience in the
public debate.
Participating in the debate
will be Winston Miller and Mike
Jones, candidates for president,
and ('arson Porter and John
O'Brien, who are running for
v ice
president.

Kernel Staff Writer
Several students living in Hag-gi- n
Hall reported today that all
20 students living in one section
of the dormitory have been told
to vacate their rooms by 5 p.m.
Thursday.
The students living in section
A, first floor of Haggin Hall, are
to appear before the Judiciary
Board today at 4 p.m.
Jack Hall, director of the
Men's Residence Halls Office,
refused to comment on charges
brought against the students.
Mike Fields, chairman of the
Judiciary Board and counselor of
section A, also refused comment
prior to the board meeting.
Students living on the floor
uncertain on the
appeared
charges and why they were all
being told to leave.
"It isn't quite clear to us,"
one student remarked. "Someone burned the bulletin board
slightly. That's the closest they
came to giving us a reason."
Students also reported that
the floor had been flooded and
one piece of tile flooringhad been
burned.
"Too much vandalism," commented another resident, "but
nobody knows who did it."
The occupants reported that
several keys from other floors
would fit their section's door,
and that anyone could have entered to cause the damage.
"I think we're being singled
out and persecuted," complained
one student. "I would not advise
freshman to live in the dorm sys-

tions for the remainder of the
semester.
"It's pretty ridiculous and unfair to kick us out this close to
finals," said one student. "What
are we going to do for finals?"
"Seems they waited just long
enough," another said, "to where
they don't have to refund any
of the money."
The students said it was too

Dr. Benne Views
Multiversity Trend

tem."

By LINDA MILLS
Kernel News Editor
Institutions of higher learning should resist the trend toward
the large, impersonal multiversity
by setting up community subgroups within the university, Dr.
Kenneth D. Benne, Centennial
professor in the social sciences,
said.
Dr. Benne spoke last night
in the first of a series of four
lectures to be given by visiting
Centennial professors.
Rejecting the view of University of California President
Clark Kerr that the multiversity
is inevitable, Dr. Benne said, "I
reject the view that we must be
satisfied with this multiversity
and all that it represents good
and bad as somehow predetermined by irreversible social
trends, by historic forces operating beyond the competence of
university people to alter or re-

The most emphatic complaint
voiced by the students concerned
the lack of living accommoda

Dr. Benne also spoke of the
increased specialization of facul- -

direct."

UK Seeks Program

In Dental Technology
By CAROLYN WILLIAMS

Kernel Staff Writer
The University is seeking to
establish a
program of
dental technology as part of the
Technical Institute in cooperation with the College of Dentistry.
Approval was given to formulate plans for the program in
January by the Board of Trustees.
Dr. W. Ross Stromberg, instructor in the College of Dentistry, who is in charge of setting
up the program, said "Our biggest problem now is the money to
get the program off the ground.
We have asked the Kellogg Foundation for $185,000 for the next
three years. UK would contribute
almost $50,000 within that period
to cover the remainder of the
costs."
At the end of the three-yea- r
period, the University would finance all expenses.
A. D. Hauselman, community
college program assistant, said
the program will be under the
administration of the community
college system.
"This is because most professional accrediting associations
r
are opposed to mixing
programs with baccalaureate programs," Hauselman said.
two-ye-

ar

two-yea-

late to look for another room, and
they did not have the time because many of them were having trouble with grades.
One of the more unpleasant
parts of the situation, the students reported, was the calling
of their parents.
A penciled message appeared
on the wall of the section today:
"Mother, come and get me."

In time, the dental technology
program would be extended to
some of the community colleges.
r
Other such
programs
which offer associate degrees
have been established at several
community colleges.
Henderson and the Northern
Community Colleges have a two-yenursing program which offers
an associate degree. A forestry
program exists at the Southeast
Community College.
A recent survey conducted by
Dr. Stromberg substantiated the
fact that a dental technology program is needed. Results of the surs
vey indicated that
of the respondents would favor
the establishment of u school of
dental technology in the state.
Approximately 28 percent of
the 56 respondents stated that
they would employ a dental technician in the next five years if one
were available.
More dental tec hnicians would
allow the dentist to spend his time
in "chair side" practice, Dr.
Stromberg said.
He also stressed that dentistry's advanced and redesigned curriculum means the dental student is taught to require sophisticated laboratory technique which
two-yea-

ar

ty members and the breakdown in
communication this implies.
As a solution Dr. Benne proposed an exchange of dialogue
involving scholars from a. number of disciplines, administrators,
and students.
"The dialogue should take
place on university time. If
necessary, academic credit
should be given to students for
participation and merit badges or
brownie points to participating
faculty members for pay increases and promotions," he said.
He said if the dialogue is to
be successful, it must be taken
seriously, at least in the beginning. "If we can believe that
the future of the university is
at stake in such study and discussion, they cannot be taken
too seriously," Dr. Benne continued.
He suggested division of
faculty members into teaching
units instead of division along
departmental lines. "Then the
departments could serve as A
continued
specialists' conference."
Dr. Benne said adults should
take student protests seriously,
not "as an equivalent of panty
raids or some other adolescent
madness which sooner or later
will be outgrown or as the Machiavellian work of subversives or

"nonstudents."
He said they point out the ill
effects from the viewpoint of the

student of overbureaucratization
of intellect in the university.
Bureaucratization of intellect
has led to a poor system for
judging faculty members, Dr.
Benne said.

"Faculty members are

treated, graded, advanced on the

basis of measurable evidences of
productive achievement. And,
since more intangible, qualitative,
Continued On Page 8

three-fourth-

Continued On Page

8

it
7

p

DR. KENNETH BENNE

� 2

- THE KENTUCKY

19G5

KERNEL, Wednesday, April 21,

Lilcrary Project Reviewed

Supplement Termed 'Handsome Venture9

F. AXTON
English Department
It is a real literary event on
earn pus when the hard nosed old
Kernel issues a Literary Supplement, as it did April 15 even
more so when it turns out to be
as handsome and worthwhile a
venture as this.
Worthwhile for a number of
reasons, not least of which being
the fact that the supplement was
distributed free to a campus audience of 10,000, surely the largest
run of a purely literary publication in UK history.
Worthwhile also because, for a
first literary venture, the quality
was, if uneven, at its best very
high indeed.
Worthwhile, again, because
its appearance indicates the presence on campus of a flourishing
body of young writers and artists
who are writing enough, and well
enough, to support another publication in addition to the
"Stylus," whose editorial
board assisted the Kernel staff in
this enterprise.
Worthwhile finally because
By DR.

V.

twice-yearl- y

have here a nioile of publication
which ought to be seriously considered by those responsible for
the publication of "Stylus."
A certain amount of financial
support already exists for "Stylus," which is published twice a
year. With this and aid from other
quarters (which may not in fact
be needed), it should be possible
in the future to turn out a quarterly publication of the quality
of "Stylus" in the format of a
supplement to the Kernel wliich
would reach a very wide campus
audience indeed.
I would, however, make one
suggestion in the event that this
mode of publication were adopted
in years to come: give the supplement another fold across the middle, and set the pages accordingly, so as to give it more the appearance of a magazine.
In the meantime, administrative and financial problems involved in publishing "Stylus"
under Kernel auspices as a quarterly literary supplement could
be left to discussions between
those in authority on both publications. I suggest that they be
undertaken as soon as possible.
It is such a good idea that I only
wish I had thought of it myself.
Turning now to the Kernel
Literary Supplement itself, let
me begin by praising David
Hawpe for hitting on the idea of
a supplement in the first place,
as well as for his admirably professional handling of the
He did everything he could do
without actually bleeding the
cuts out to the margins, a rather
more costly process than the practice followed here.
No less do Joe Nickell and
Scott Nunley deserve attention,
along with the 'editors of "Stylus" generally, for selecting and
editing the prosaand poetry, especially in light "of the fact that
this was a project done hastily
amid the publication of the spring
edition of "Stylus," and with

the Kernel's Literary Supplement
reached, if it did not touch, a
mass campus audience, most of
whom would not otherwise come
in contact with the writing of
their classmates were it not for
this special edition. The Supplement at least presented the campus with this dramatic evidence
of what many UK people do with
their time when not otherwise
employed in class, at the Paddock,
At Daytona, or on a demonstration some place.
On the basis of these cons id-

yl

Review

erations, some very
implications about the campus
literary scene suggest themselves
as a result of the appearance of
the Kernel Literary Supplement.
e
We have here a
publication produced on newsprint by
offset in a run of 10,000 copies
for about half the cost of getting
out an edition of "Stylus" in
slick paper magazine from that
reaches a maximum audience of
600 at 25 cents a copy.
It strikes this reviewer that we
first-rat-

UK Bulletin Board
of any University
organization for tha Bulletin Board
must be turned In at tna women's
desk la the Kernel office no later
than 2 pjn. the day prior to publication. Multiple announcements will
be made if a carbon Is furnished tor
each day of publication.
ANNOUNCEMENTS

APPLICATIONS
for president
and vice president of the UK
student body are now available
in the student government office.
Room 102 Student Center. The
deadline for applying is Wednesday, April 21. The election will
be held Tuesday,. April. 27. Voting machines will be located in

the Student Center and at several other locations throughout
the campus.
THE LEXINGTON BRANCH of
the American Association of University Women invites senior and
graduate women to its annual tea
to be held 3 to 5 pjn. Sunday,
in the home of Mrs. W. C. Chris-ma- n,
156 Idle Hour Drive. Membership in the association is open
to all women holding' baccalaureate or higher degrees.

HOME ECONOMICS Style Show
will be Friday at 4:30 pjn. in the
Commerce Auditorium. The fashions are by the coeds themselves

without patterns.
THE

D

Kentucky Heritage String Quartet will present a concert at 8
pjn. tonight in Memorial Hall.
Faculty members comprising
the quartet include Abraham
Mishkind and Elaine Mishkind,
violin; Kenneth Wright, viola;
and Gordon Kinney, cello.
The quartet will perform works
by Vivaldi, Mozart, Piston and
Brahms.
e

e

time-consumi-

effective and moving. And one or
two are deliberately amusing.
As far as poetry is concerned,
there is lots of it, all very handsomely mounted on the pages and
surrounded by God's own plenty
of white space. It is uneven in
quality, much of it by writers who
seem to be making their first appearance in print on this campus.
That is a most hopeful sign,
because where it is bad it is so
because the writers set themselves to describe complex and
contradictory states of feeling and
thought which were beyond their
powers of communication. But
that so many shoud have attempted so much makes me happy.
Elsewhere there are symptoms
of a kind of pointless rhetoricity,
if such a word exist; but in these
days I am glad enough to see an
Continued On Page

GAMMA DELTA will meet Sunday at St. John's Lutheran
Church at 6:30 pjn. Dinner will
be served for 50 cents and there
will be a business meeting and
miniature golf. For a ride call:
Elaine Henry.

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Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lx-I- n
ton. Kentucky, 40300. Second-clarosuge paid at Lexington, Kentucky,
tour timet weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Hoard
of Student Publications. Prof. Paul
Oberst. chairman and Stephen Palmer,
secretary.
lie gun as tha Cadet In 18M. became the Kecord In lftuO, and the Idea
in 108. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1919.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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term papers coming on in addi
tion. Only someone who has edited a publication can appreciate
what a monumentally messy and
business it is to
get a literary magazine on the
streets.
The overall appearance of the
Supplement is lush, within the
limits imposed by newsprint and
offset, thanks very largely to the
lavish use of some very bold and
striking photographs by Sam
Abcll, most of which reproduced
faithfully under the offset process.
These are all technically complex and difficult photographs to
make and print, relying as they
do on montage and other gimmicks. Sam Abell's success is of
a high order.
I must say that I liked the
cover montage the least, although
I admit that it served its purpose
of disturbing one enough to make
him interested in seeing what followed. The best photograph I
thought was that on the back
cover, a bold and simple print of
stark white outlines of bare trees
against a black background.
Next to that I admired one on
the back of the front cover, a picture of boys by a sheet of water.
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of values to black and white, and
of occasionally reversing them.
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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, April 21,

Computer Won't Make Obsolete
Modern American Housewife
William W. Parsons, an expert in data
says there is
little likelihood computers ever will replace processing,
the housewife.
"The machines are actually very stupid," he explained. "If you
don t give them the right information, they can't function.
handle masses of information, but what machine ccald ever They
store
in its brain all the data a housewife collects in one
day?"
He ventured there never will be a machine smart enough to predict when a husband will stop on his way home from work for a
few beers.
Parsons is senior vice president of Systems Development Corp. of
Santa Monica, Calif. He was in Kansas City to tell members of the
American Society for Public Administration that they better explore
the potentials of automatic data processing in their work.
He got off on the automated housewifery tangent in an interview.
It will shortly be possible, he said, to ring up a computer on the
telephone once a month and at the end of the year get a balance
sheet and an income tax return ready for mailing.
But it cannot tell you Johnny is
going to eat two porkchops
for dinner.
Parsons said its conceivable the data processing experts could devise a wet diaper program for a computer, but Vhat's the use when
every baby comes equipped with a reliable if noisy system for indicating a change.

1905

-- 3

28 To Compete For LKD Queen
Pairings of men and women's
housing units and queen candidates for the Little Kentucky
Derby weekend have been announced.

and Keeneland 3, Bonnie
Sherman;
Donovan 1 and Alpha Gamma
Delta, Margaret Ulmbcr; Donovan 3 and Kappa Alpha Thcta,
Candy Johnson; Donovan 4 and
Troupers; Farmhouse and Keeneland 2, Leslie Tray lor; Delta Tau
Delta and Blazer 2, nocandidate;
Haggin A4, B4 and Pi Beta Phi,
Mary Jane Britton;
Haggin staff and Weldon
House, Carolyn Williams; Kappa
Sigma and Hamilton House, Judy
Crumbaker; Lambda Chi Alpha
and Breckinridge Hall, Benita
Hayes; Newman Club and Bowman Hall, Vickie Bradford; Pershing Rifles and Delta Zeta, Sandy Mathers; Phi Delta Thetaand
Boyd Hall, Patty Lane;
Phi Gamma Delta and Keeneland 1, Connie Castle; Phi Kappa
Tau and Keeneland 4, Sandy
Hewitt; Pi Kappa Alpha and
Holmes 2, Pippa Orth; Pi Kappa
Alpha and Jewell 3, Cayle Marie
Snider.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon andDil-larHouse, no candidate; Sigma
Alpha Epsilon and Blazer Hall,
Cheryl Smith; Sigma Chi and
Patterson Hall, Janis Koenig;
Sigma Chi and Bradley Hall,
Susan Bays; Sigma Nu and Alpha
Delta Pi, Jackie Jones; Sigma Phi
Epsilon and Kappa Delta, Su:
zannc Zicgler;
Tau Kappa Epsilon and Delta
Delta Delta, Kate Alexander
Clay; Theta Xi and Zeta Tau
Alpha, Helen Adams; Theta Xi
and Delta Gamma, Bonnie
Breault; Triangle and Alpha Xi
Delta, Sandy Lay; Zeta Beta
Tau and Chi Omega, Jo Cline;
Phi Sigma Kappa and Holmes 1,
Nancy Burgess; Delta Tau Delta
and Jewell 1, to Jo Ann Windish;
and Southeastern Community
College, Pam Walters.
The queen will be crowned by
Bonnie Lindner, last year's LKD
queen, at the climax of the Friday
night activities beginning at 7:30
p.m. in Memorial Coliseum. She
will be chosen on the basis of
poise, beauty and talent, and will
ga

The
social weekend includes Friday night Debutante Stake tricycle races between
teams of coeds, the queen contest to choose the University's
representative in the Miss Kentucky pageant and a dance.
Saturday activities include a
turtle derby and the LKD bicycle
races between the men's teams.
Paired for the weekend are
the following teams: Alpha Cam-m- a
Rho and Kappa Kappa Gamma, queen candidate Betty Chambers; Alpha Gamma Rho and
Holmes 3, Nancy Claire Hagan;
Alpha Tau Omega and Holmes 4,
Pam Robinson; Alpha Tau Ome- -

e UK's representative in the
Miss Kentucky Pageant.
A dance in the Student Center
Ballroom follows the queen con-

I

test. Three bands Patty and the
Emblems, Roy Wilson and the
Vibrators, and the Five Dutoncs
will play. Dress is informal.
Saturday- events include a 10
a.m. turtle derby on the lawn in
front of the Alumni Gymnasium.
Later at 1:30 p.m. will come the
bicycle races at the Sports ('enter. Pi Kappa Alpha, the
champion, will be seektheir fourth win.
ing
e
The
game at 8 p.m.
at Stoll Field will conclude the
weekend.
All proceeds from the event
toward scholarships. Lust year
go
LKD netted $10,000 for scholarships and loans.
long-reignin-

Blue-Whit-

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Go Get 'Em, Kids!

The AD Pi's held an easter-eg- g
hunt for some of the
children from Lincoln School. After much scrambl- -

ing and chasing around, every single hidden egg
was found.

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� "That's Showing 'Em The Way"

Louisville's Reaction
In a childish gesture character-

istic of the University of Louisville
student body, that institution's Student Council has "denounced"
Governor Breathitt's efforts in the
recruiting of Hutch Beard.
The resolution condemning the
governor's action was incorrect,
inappropriate, and inane.
It was incorrect when it said,
". . .the Governor personally escorted Butch Beard, the outstanding basketball player from Breckinridge County, around the University of Kentucky."
The Governor talked with Beard
at the Sports Center. He did not'
"personally escort" him anywhere.
The resolution was incorrect
when it charged that the Governor
". . .flagrantly violated the trust
conferred upon him by his constituency," and that the Governor was
guilty of ". . .unprecedented abuse
of executive power."
The Governor merely advised a
member of his constituency concerning choice of colleges. We find
nothing in this action which justifies the ridiculously strong language
of the resolution.
In fact, the office of Governor
of Kentucky automatically confers
a special responsibility on the
state's Chief Executive: the chairmanship of the UK Board of Trustees.

which we have suspected characterizes UL.
Students across the nation arc
engaged in protest against injustice, against trends in higher education, and against other problematical situations.
Here at UK students have protested needless killing in Vietnam,
and they have protested a succession
of campus problems, from registration inequities to unjust housing

Then, and only then, will they
recognize their resolution as inaccurate, inappropriate, and inane.

issue.

College Entrance

If the student's grades are

aver-

age and he doesn't have much
money, his chances for education
are excellent if he lives in California, Kansas or South Carolina.
His chances are fair if he lives in
Maryland, Iowa or Ohio. But they
are almost nonexistent in New Jersey or Pennsylvania.
The situation varies from state to
state and although public institutions are fighting to make higher
education available, the battle is a
tough one.
Some public colleges and universities still admit all applicants
from within the state, regardless
of their scholastic records, but their
number is steadily declining.
A survey of member institutions

mm

not to join Westley Unseld at UL,

Finally, the resolution was inane in that it demonstrated once
again the intellectual immaturity

to recent statistics,
today's high school graduate
whether he be rich or poor, bright
or dumb, may still find it relatively easy to enter college but only
if he lives in the right state. Regardless of money or brains, it's
getting harder for students in any
state.

V

Here and at other universities
students are awakening to the intellectual challenge of the 60's.
At UL they are upset about
athletics.
First Belknap Campus is shaken
from its lethargy by the possibility
that football might be dropped.
Students demonstrated, and irony
of ironies placed a black-drape- d
football in the arms of the statue
of "The Thinker."
Now the utterly quiet Louisville
campus is shaken by the possibility
that someone might convince Beard

Considering the Governor's
background and his position on the
UK governing body, the resolution
seems at least inappropriate.

According

U

policy.

thus robbing the Cardinals of their
first NCAA championship.
In both cases the U of L student
body allowed blind devotion to athletics to distort its perceptions.
Through its elected representatives,
the student body now allows athletic fanaticism to cloud basic issues.
Perhaps, if UL's excellent faculty
can provide the stimulus, the student body on Belknap Campus will
some day wake up. Should they sud-- :
denly become aware of the burning
issues confronting modern youth,
we suspect their attitudes will
change.
Then, and only then, will they
recognize athletics as a peripheral

The present Governor also
brings to the office an understandable affection for UK. He is an alumnus and a former letterman.

' " Mm. Iwm
i

of the National Association of State
Universities and Land Grant Colleges showed this definite trend:
Of the 86 institutions responding, 59 originally admitted allcomers from within the state, but only
21 still do, and of these, five have
reservations. Twenty of the original 59 have some degree of selectivity in the past five years.
The "C" student is generally
admissible at most state universities and land grant colleges, the
"D" student is generally not. Other
colleges require students to pass
entrance exams, or to be in the
upper 75 percent of high school
graduating class or to pass statewide tests.
Although colleges and universities are trying continually to admit students