xt7qz60bzm4f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7qz60bzm4f/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1968-11-13  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 13, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 13, 1968 1968 1968-11-13 2015 true xt7qz60bzm4f section xt7qz60bzm4f KMTOCECY EdEBOTIL

TTEIE
Wednesday Evening, Nov.

13, 19G8

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LX, No. 56

Terms Disclosed

Holmgren Reinstated
But Under Conditions
-

'

)

Pratt

...

Don Pratt, a former UK student who refused draft induction and is
appealing a conviction, urges others who feel the same way he does
to speak out. He said Tuesday night that failure to stand for your
of your freedom." Kernel Photo by Howard Mason
principles is a "self-deni-

Speaks

al

Allen Holmgren, one of two
students suspended from the University after they were arrested
on charges of illegal narcotics
sales, has been reinstated under
undated suspension, Jack Hall,
Dean of Students, said Tuesday.
Under the Student Code, "Undated suspension is the same
as actual suspension except that
the student is permitted to remain
on campus provided he follows
stated conditions imposed with
the punishment."
Another student, Eric Fried-lande- r,
also was placed on undated suspension last week on
the recommendation of the Uni- -

Pratt Professes Political Goals, Philosophy
By ELLEN ESSIG
Kernel StafT Writer
Don B. Pratt, a former UK
student who refused draft induc-

tion and is appealing his conviction of five years in prison
and $10,000 confronted Sigma Phi
Epsilon fraternity with his philosophy last night at the fraternity
house, as part of the Sig Eps
speaker series.
Pratt's subject was "How I
lost the election. . . . and how

I will win it." Pratt said he felt
that he "lost" the election be-

cause the candidates failed to
bring the issues he considered
important before the voters.
Pratt's participation in peace
marches in New York, Chicago
and Washington and his active
support and campaigning for Eugene McCarthy failed to make the
politicians see Vietnam in a "new
light, not just negotiating for an
honorable settlement." The can

didates also failed to talk about
the divisiveness in our nation
in relation to the Black vs. white
and rich vs. poor problems, and
they failed to offer a satisfactory
solution to the draft, he said.
In reference to how and when
he will win an election Pratt
told his audience of about 25
that "someday I would like to
become mayor of Lexington, then
go on to be a representative, the
governor, US senator, and then

Panel Proposes Health Center
For North Lexington Ghetto
By SUE ANNE SALMON

discussed the organization which
Kernel Staff Writer
was formulated this summer.
Plans for a coalition of comDr. Engelberg said the promunity people and UK students posed health center would serve
and faculty to form a health cen- 12,000 people living in the North
ter in the North Lexington ghetto Lexington
area,
area were discussed by a panel which includes the Bluegrass
Tuesday night.
Housing Project.
At a meeting of the Student
The health center would proe
staff of "trained
vide a
Nursing Organization in the Medical Center, Dr. Joseph Engel-berpeople nurses, soprofessor in the College of cial workers and medical techMedicine; Miss Virginia Lane, nicians," Stringham said, in an
instructor in the School of area where medical doctors are
Nursing and Mr. and Mrs. Charles scarce.
The coalition has suggested
Stringham, graduate students,
low-inco-

full-tim-

g,

para-medic-

Government's Inertia
Causes Loan Delay
By LINDA HARRINGTON

Kernel Staff Writer
Student loans have been delayed this semester because, according to Walter Davis of the Student Financial Aid Department, "The state of Kentucky just hasn't put up any money to
guarantee them.
Before this semester, the fed
He predicted tluit a solution to
eral government paid seven per- the problem is "not very hopecent interest on student loans ful until around Dec. 15."
until repayment began. "But the
Meanwhile, negotiations beDavis said, "is tween the U.S. Office of Educahaug-u-p
now,"
that when the matter came before tion Authority are still being carCongress Oct. 16, they simply ried on but any action by the
extended the old plan until Oct. authority cannot be taken "be31 and failed to act on an amended
cause of present exhaustion of
authority reserve funds."
plan."
A new loan fund for graduate
Because the Financial Aid Dehad
partment here does not keep an students in mathematics
exact record of the number of been established by John B.
loan applications, Davis said he Brown. The fund, called the M.C.
liad "no idea how many stu- Brown Memorial Loan Fund, was
established in memory of Prof.
dents are affected by this."
M.C. Brown who died August
Billy Hunt, Executive Secretary of the Kentucky Higher Ed- 18, 1967.
Brown taught in the Departucation Authority, said the proment of Math for 43 years and
posal is in the hands of the government but is awaiting appioval. retired in 1966.

to local action groups in the
North Lexington area that a
"Bluegrass (name of the area)
Health Service" be formed.
One representative from each
block in the Bluegrass area would
e
to find probgo
lems of families on the block.
The coalition has worked at a
"grass roots" level since it formed
this summer, Dr. Engelberg said.
But he indicated local support
of the health center proposal is
increasing to the point of encouragement.
"Rev.
Craig Frederickson
tried to set up a similar health
center two years ago, but his
efforts were unsuccessful," Mrs.
Stringham said.
The Rev. Mr. Frederickson
could not be reached last night
about the reported failure to organize a health center in Prall-tow-

President of the nation."
"I recognize the fact," he
continued, "that I'll be in jail
for five years, and also that there
is prejudice towards me because
of my draft stand. I am also
below the national poverty level
and plan no great swing into
the affluent society.
"But with a promise not to
revert to 'old politics' I still very
much want to do these things,' ' he
said.
Pratt asked the audience,
"Should I become something I'm
not, in order to be elected in a
'democratic society'? Am I to be
a man without a country because of my positional stand that
was to me the greatest honesty
to you that I could, and can give?
Continued on Pace 8, CoL 5

versity Appeals Board after his
case went before it last week.
The conditions under which
Holmgren and Friedlander have
been reinstated were given to
them in written form as follows:
Your presence on the campus is restricted to attendance
in classes in which you are officially enrolled and to the use
of the libraries and other facilities directly related to and necessary to the accomplishment of
your academic course work.
Accordingly, you are excluded from participation in all
University sponsored or related
activities and services, including
any laboratory to which you do
not need access in connection
with your academic work.
As you indicated to the appeals board, you will voluntarily
cease any formal or informal relationship or association with any
person or persons while such
person is under arrest or awaiting trial on any narcotics violation, or with any person or persons known to you to be involved in any narcotics violation.
You will confer immediately
with Dean of Students Jack Hall
regarding any interpretation or
conflict arising out of these restrictions.
y Should you breach any of
the above restrictions you will
be placed on suspension or expelled from the University as
deemed appropriate at the time.
This undated suspension is
to be effective so long as you
Continued on rage

8, Col. 1

house-to-hous-

:

7'r
I,

V

V

-

n.

Dr. Engelberg suggested that
the Student Nursing Organization voice its support of the
health center coalition after making a more thorough study of
its plans.
"The problem of poverty is
the same in the Lansdowne subdivision as it is in the North
Lexington area," Dr. Engelberg
told the group of about 20 nursing
students.
Children Rot
"The reason we're concerned
more with one part of the community is their children are rotting away."
He elaborated on the philosophy behind community action:
"There is a poverty caused
by despair, rejection and
which results in a loss
of personal dignity and purpose
self-hat-

Continued on Page

8, Col. 2

r

Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

Textiles

jOllaie

Buttons, bows, strings and clothes all become
art in the "Textiles '68' exhibit now in the
Student Center Art Callery. The interplay
of woven textures subordinates the convex
tional labels for objects making tf i
of the sensory perception.
i dis"!
''
Nov. 22, the collages uer
and Louisville v

� ,2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Nov.

13,

19f8

IS ANYBODY LISTENING TO CAMPUS
VIEWS7
mto
BUSINESSMEN ARE.

Mr. Galvin:

"Girouup think"

Three chief executive officer- s- The Goodyear

Rubber Company's Chairman, Russell
DeYoung. The Dow Chemical Company's
President. H. D. Doan. and Motorola's
Chairman, Robert W. Galvin are responding
to serious questions and viewpoints posed by
leading student spokesmen about business
and its role in our changing society through
means of a campus corporate Dialogue
Program.
Here. Arthur M. Klebanoff, a senior at Yale,
who plans graduate studies and a career in
government, is exchanging views with
Tire &

is typical of
fouasimess

conformity

In the course of the Dialogue Program. Arnold
Shelby, a Latin American Studies major at
Tulane. also will explore issues with Mr.
Galvin; as will David M. Butler. Electrical
Engineering, Michigan State, and Stan Chess,
Journalism, Cornell, with Mr. Doan; similarly.
Ohio State, and
Mark Bookspan,
David G. Clark, Political Science MA
candidate at Stanford, with Mr. DeYoung.
These Dialogues will appear in this publication,
and other campus newspapers across the
country, throughout this academic year.
Campus comments are invited, and should be
forwarded to Mr. DeYoung. Goodyear. Akron.
Ohio; Mr. Doan. Dow Chemical. Midland.
Michigan; or Mr. Galvin. Motorola. Franklin
Park, Illinois, as appropriate.
Pre-Me-

d.

Mr. Galvin.

,

disciplining the group to adhere to the
subject. Carefully disciplined,
creative sessions often produce
and heated exchanges rather
than affability . . . and out of them may
come solutions to complex problems and
decisions involving millions of dollars and
affecting thousands of employees and the
public. An inefficient or conformist think
group would waste talents, manhours,
se

table-bangin-

I

V
L

gs

Dear Mr. Galvin:

Dear Mr. Klebanoff:

and money.

The trend on the nation's campuses is

The desire of young people for greater
individual freedom and responsibility is

Business is to blame for the fact that
today's college students must make a
critical choice between business and
other careers without sufficient knowledge
on which to base such a decision.
Students daily exposed to the campus are
with knowledge about
teaching ; an abundance of facts on
medicine,, government service; and many
other fields has long been available. But
business has neglected to communicate
adequately by way of personal experience,
the really significant facts about the
realities of business to the very people
it is trying to attract.

toward greater freedom and responsibility
for the individual student. Whether the
action is extension of visiting hours for
women or relaxation of course
requirements, the result is the same:
a placing of greater trust in the
individual, and a growing array of
flexible alternatives for that individual.
Yet when he looks at business, and
particularly at big business, a student sees
an organization oriented to the group
rather than the individual, and to that

group's security rather than the
individual's challenge. That "group" is any
collection of administrative peers and
immediate supervisors which meets
frequently at all levels of the bureaucracy.
What began as an attempt to imitate the
highly successful "team" of technologists
has become a plodding group of
administrative bureaucrats. And whereas
the team produced, the group ponders.
is a strange brand
But "group-think- "
of thought indeed. Group-thin- k
places
a premium on affability rather than
creativity, and waste rather kthan
efficiency. Somehow, group-thindemands little or no substantive thinking
on the part of the individual.
has become
synonymous with business administration.
Some consulting firms exist merely to
sensitize the individual to the group.
Yet administration has always been that
aspect of business meant to appeal most
to a socially conscious college generation.
Is it any wonder then that the trend
toward individual freedom and
responsibility coincides with a growing
alienation towards business as a career?
Lately,

group-thin- k

My question Mr. Galvin is what will
business do to provide the individual with
the opportunity and incentive to
perform, as an individual, the kinds of
tasks he is both prepared and
anxious to perform?
Sincerely yours.

Arthur Klebanoff

Government. Yale

not confined to the campus, but is a
characteristic of the maturing process.
It is not a phenomenon of this generation.
And it is a good thing when expressed
constructively.
As .a college student and member of
several important campus committees,
you must be aware of the importance of
individuals pooling ideas and efforts.
d
University-sponsoreresearch programs
into needed social reforms, and
inquiring
working out pilot projects as prototype
solutions methods to overcome wideto
spread illiteracy in the ghettos; self-helencourage
through
for example reflect team efforts. Even
actions undertaken by the dissenters and
protesters on campus result from
"committee action" and not the blandishments of one individual.
self-respe-

--

ct

p,

The concept of granting more and more
freedom to act responsibly, with
authority, is not alien to business. It is
fundamental! Individuals demonstrate
talents. Those talents need each other for
the attainment of composite results. In
the pooling there is no loss of individuality or freedom.
Business is, and must be, strongly
concerned with the individual, but since
running a business is a team effort, there
has to be group orientation, too.
In business, as in other fields, many
decisions and actions result from
"group-think- "
meetings, which do indeed
demand substantive thinking from the
individual. It is my opinion that more

creative ideas come from a number of
people "thinking" together than
separately. One person's ideas spark the
thinking of another; some people are
naturally better at conceiving the germ of
an idea than at refining it to a practical
one draws upon
degree. In a group-thin- k
a multiplicity of talents and viewpoints.
I have attended
but
many group-think- s
seldom one approaching your description.
Certainly some were unproductive . . .
but usually because of negligence in

well-equipp-

ed

Its enormous accomplishments that have
produced the highest standards of living
in the world
its massive research and
development programs that are probing
into outer space and underseas, which
will profoundly affect virtually every facet
of man's life
its increasing direct
involvement in the social problems of
today, and the efforts to devise
practicable means of dealing with root
causes, not merely surface symptoms,
are all part of the daily operations
of business.

...

...

The solutions being achieved result from

"group-think- "
efforts within a
corporation, or between a number of
businesses, or as the result of a
cooperative effort between business and
government. No one individual possesses
sufficient facts or knowledge to direct all
growth phases of a major enterprise. No
one sector of the economy has the
or resources to carry
technical know-hothe load for the continued forward thrust
of our national progress.
Within this framework there are
"individual" selective tasks and goals
requiring "individual" responses. It is
through the intermingling of individual
talents that viable solutions to the
complex problems of today, and the
challenges of tomorrow will be found.
w

Robert W. Galvin

J.

Chairman, Motorola Inc.

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Nov.

13,

1

90- 8- 3

State Draft Boards Review Undergraduate Deferments
By WANDA WOOD

A student pursuing
a five-yeKernel Staff Writer
course of instruction should
The Selective Service Local
earn 20 percent of his credits
Hoards in Kentucky are reviewing
required for his baccalaureate
the files of undergraduate studegree each academic year.
dents who seem to be having
As long as he completes these
difficulty in completing a prorequirements, he may be conportionate share of their requiretinued to be deferred under curment for college graduation.
rent regulations until he reaches
A student's academic school
period follow- age 24, drops out of school, or
year is a
ing the initiation of his course graduates.
e
of study. A
student
If a student should lose Ids
sliould be making proportionate
deferment, he has 30 days to
progress each academic year.
appeal it, then a student may
Col. Taylor Davidson, state be entitled to a
statutory dedirector, said that the Selective ferment until the end of his acaService System will continue to demic
year, provided he is "a
review college student classificasatisfactory student" at the time
tion annually and more often, he is reached for induction.
if the student falls behind in his
work.
It is the student's responsiIn order to retain a student bility to let the local board know
deferment, the student pursuing each year if he is satisfactorily
e
course of
a four-yecourse of instruction
pursuing a
should earn approximately 25 per- instruction at a college, univercent of his credits required for sity, or similar institution of
his baccalaureate degree each learning. He can make arrangements with his school admissions
academic year.
ar

full-tim-

full-tim-

ar

officer or registrar to submit the
necessary information tohislocal
board.

Crad Deferments
Craduate students may be deferred if they are in the field

of study in medicine, dentistry,
veterinary medicine, osteopathy
or optometry, or in such other
subjects necessary to the maintenance of the national health,
safety, or interest as are identified by the Director of Selective
Service upon the advice of the
National Security Council. The
National Security Council is not
expected to make any additional
recommendations
for several
months.
Any student entering his first
year of graduate work will be
deferred for one academic year
providing he is satisfactorily pure
course and he
suing a
has entered the first class commencing after the date he completed the requirements for ad-full-tim-

Supreme Court Refuses Case
To Limit 'Peaceful' Free Speech
be kept free of demonstrators
The "monkey law," knocked
who interfere with travelers anx- down in Tuesday's decision was
ious to be on their way as quickly adopted by statewide election in
192S in Arkansas. It made it a
and comfortably as possible.
The court turned the appeal crime to instruct students in the
down flatly, barring a hearing public schools and universities
at which the Authority would that man evolved from the apes
have argued for reversal of the and other species of life.
Justice Abe Fortas said that
ruling by the U.S. Circuit Court
in New York City.
by seeking to suppress the teachThe case involves protests ing of evolution in public schools,
planned by two antiwar groups, the state impermissibly took a
the Veterans & Reservists to End stand for a particular religious
1920' s.
The free speech case was ap- the War in Vietnam and the view and thereby violated the
Constitution.
pealed to the court .by the Port Fifth Avenue Peace Parade Com"There is and can be no doubt
Authority - of New York . City, . mittee. They attempted to hand
out literature in the terminal in that the First Amendment does
which operates the world's busiest bus terminal on Manhattan's November 19G6 and left when not permit the state to require
threatened with arrest.
that teaching and learning must
West Side.
The suit they brought resulted be tailored to the principles or
The Authority wanted the
high court to upset a decision in the circuit court ruling last prohibitions of any religious sect
by federal judges in New York March that the terminal is an or dogma," Fortas wrote for the
City that peaceful protesters have appropriate public place for court.
the right to pass out leaflets and peaceful political expression.
Fails To Expound
set up tables in the Authority Moreover, the judges said the
bus terminal.
Authority was obliged to protect
Significantly, neither he nor
Authority officials said the the demonstrators from hostile the court used the occasion to
interiors of busy terminals should crowds.
promote the concept of academic freedom, to advance the rights
of teachers to speak freely.
In fact, Fortas wrote that the
justices felt no need to explore
the implications of the decisions
in terms of "the multitude of
controversies that beset our camThe Student Center Board is now accepting applications for the
puses today."
games tournaments it is sponsoring this semester.
Competition is slated for
men s ana women s pocitei
Unions, and winners at the
contract duplicate bridge, Regional Tournaments will admen's and women's table tennis vance to the national championand chess. The first rounds of each ships.
All students in good standing
sport will begin this semester and
the championship rounds rounds with the University and interestwill be concluded at the begin- ed in competing in the tournament are urged to sign up in Room
ning of next semester.
In addition to being awarded 203 of the Student Center, in the
trophies and prizes, the winners Student Center Came Room, or
in each category will advance to call University Extension 2256.
The deadline for entry is Thursthe Regional Cames Tourna3
in day.
ments to be held Feb.
Charlotte, N.C. These tournaments are connected with the
...
Association of American College
(AP)-T- he
WASHINGTON
Supreme Court gave proponents
of broad free speech rights a major victory Tuesday when it refused to review a ruling that
demonstrators may
set up shop in busy bus and rail
terminals.
The high court also interred
Tuesday the Arkansas "monkey
law", a lifeless vestige of the
fervor of the
fundamentalist
anti-Vietna- m

,

.

Board Sponsors
Games Tournaments
SC

Students entering their second
year of study in Law School will
be considered for deferment for
a period of two academic years
to complete their first law degree requirement. Law students
entering their third year will be
considered for one academic year
only.
All Selective Service registrants are reminded that by law,
local boards must place an individual in Class
(available
for military service) unless evidence or written information is
furnished the local boards which,
in their opinion, entitles the
istrant to a deferment or exemption subject to a right of appeal.
Inform Board

mission. Continued deferment
will not be granted unless a
student's course of study is one
of the above or is later identified to be in the national health,
safety, or interest by the Director
of Selective Service upon the
advice of the National Security
Council.
Any student who
for his second year of graduate
study witltout interruption will
be considered for deferment for
one year to complete his Master's Degree. If a student who has
already been in graduate school
for one year without interruption
full time in a course
of study leading to the Doctoral
Degree, he will be deferred up
to five years beyond receipt of his
baccalaureate degree or for an
additional period of one year,
whichever is greater.
Law Exemptions
A student entering his first
e
will
year of Law School
be considered for deferment for
one academic year only, unless
this course is subsequently identified as being in the national
health, safety, or interest by the
Director of Selective Service upon
advice by the National Security
Council.

All registrants are required
to inform their local boards of
any change in circumstances that
may affect their status. Many
deferments are for a definite
period of time which is usually
one year. At the time of expiration, the local board reopens
and reclassifies. The local board
may continue the deferment if
new circumstances arise, depending on conditions. If there
should be no new information,
then the board must place the
registrant in Class

full-tim-

I--

Human Relations Panel
Now Available To Groups
The Human Relations Panel would like to perform for you, your
sorority, fraternity, residence hall, organization, club or civic

The University is arranging
for any
panel presentations
groups interested in actively promoting human relations and improved understanding of various
social, religious and racial group

holder, Debbie Smith, Ken Chev-ertoJoe Westerfield, Brenda
Mapp, John Simon, Nancy Baker
and Betty Ann Carpenter.
n,

feelings.
The Human Relations Panel
is a newly-forme- d
university program created for the purpose of
helping overcome campus racial,
religious, and cultural discrimination. It believes that an honest
explanation and interpretation of
divergent social, religious, and
racial attitudes will lead to better
communication on campus.
The panel consists of students
selected from the variety of racial,
religious and cultural
on campus. They are Don Burk- sub-grou- ps

ruipi

ic

lAii

tvt

The panel plans to present
frank and open discussions on
current issues of concern to students. Topics may vary depending upon what issues are of most
current interest.
After the panel finishes its
discussion, the audience becomes
a part of the program by participating in the question and answer period which follows.
Panel bookings can be made
by calling the Office of Religious
Affairs, 204 Student Center, ext.

2151.

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The Kentucky

ernel

Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky,
Station, Univeritity 40500. Second Lexclass
ington, Kentucky
postage paid t Lexington, Kentucky.
five times weekly during the
Mailed
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periods, and once during the summer
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Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Of lice Box 4WMt.
Br gun as the Cadet In IB 14 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1K15.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
The

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The Kentucky

Iernel

University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

1891

WEDNESDAY,

NOV. 13, 1968

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lee B. Decker,

Editor-in-Chi-

A Bill Of Rights

In what seems to be an effort
to move the University forward in
the area of student rights and limitations of the university administration, the Student Affairs Committee of the University Senate
is now in the process of putting
together a student bill of rights.
The action is very promising.
According to Dr. Michael Adel-steichairman of the Student Affairs Committee, the code will deal
with four major areas: rights of
students of admission and access;
student rights in the classroom;
right of the students to privacy,
and the right to learn. In all four
areas the bill will attempt to clarify and state the responsibilities of
the University to the student.
According to Dr. Adelstein, the
bill of rights will serve as a supplement to the Student Code, which
basically sets down the responsibility of the student to the University.
The Student Code, however, also
does deal with the rights of the
students in the area of discipline,
and it is here that the Student
Affairs Committee can be of most
help.
As evidenced by the recent suspension and following reinstatement of the students arrested on
drug charges last month, the Stu
dent Code does leave great power
to the University in disciplinary
areas. Because of the "clear and
present danger" clause of the code,
the vice president for Student Affairs, after consultation with the
University Appeals Board, can ex
n,

ercise great power in dealing with
students facing city, state or federal charges. Double jeopardy,
which many students had been
led to believe was now in the past,
is still very much a threat to students on this campus, with the
sanction of the student Code. In
fact, much of the code is a bit
vaguely worded, leaving great areas
of uncertainty, and the student bill
of rights could do much to make
clear the foggy areas.
In the area of the right to learn,
the committee seems to be moving
in the right direction. Broad guarantees of free speech and free press
will help to make certain that the
present freedom will continue in
these two areas. It is unfortunate,
however, that the code will contain
the speaker policy statement
adopted by the University Senate
this year, as that document leaves
open the possibility of speaker censorship under the educational relevancy clause.
The Student Code, which did
reduce the in loco parentis powers
of the administration, was a first
step in the right direction. Now the
formation of a bill of rights for
students seems to be following in
the same direction. The precedents
set by the possibility of these two
documents becoming law is encouraging. Students have rights
which can not long be violated,
and the University Senate, at least,
is moving toward guaranteeing
those rights.

Kernel Forum: the readers writejj
To the Editor of the Kernel
A particularly
dangerous situation
exists in Lexington and on campus. The
city has only one newspaper. The campus
has only one newspaper. In each case
there are significantly large groups of
people who hold variant points of view
and feel that the newspaper involved
does not sufficiently express its point of
view. Although the city seems too much
stuck in its rut to do anything about
it, the campus certainly has enough skilled
people and interest to establish more
newspapers. At a campus where I have
previously studied, there existed five newss
papers, on a campus with only
the amount of students here. Also that
school had far less funds available than
here at UK. Nevertheless having more
than one newspaper was judged to be of
such importance that the costs were considered inconsequential compared to the
issues involved.
If the dissident groups are really interested and aroused to the extent of
passing around petitions and fomenting
indignation, let us see if they will commit themselves to the actual work of
putting out a newspaper, perhaps not
daily, but twice a week, a sufficient period
per week to express healthy opposing
views.
Theodore Fins ley
Craduate Student
two-third-

By BOB BROWN

EDITOR'S NOTE: The opinions expressed in the column tilled Middle Man,
Cynic View and Scott Free do not necessarily represent the opinions of the editors
but rather represent the opinions of the
authors.
While speaking at the recent dedication of the Kirwan-Blandin- g
Complex,
John Y. Brown, distinguished politician
and attorney, enumerated the numerous
things he and his people had done for
the University students and strongly suggested that the debt was unpayable. According to Mr. Brown, the nearest we
can come to redemption is to pass on to
the next generation the magnanimous
heritage we have been handed.
The components of this heritage are
numerous. This included an excellent
education system, as made manifest by
many new buildings, an unparallelled opportunity for "success," a fine athletic
program, and luxurious housing.
Miss Blanding, an overwhelming lady
Mr.
with much perception,
Brown's point by predicting