xt7s7h1dnf62 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7s7h1dnf62/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1967-04-06  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  6, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  6, 1967 1967 1967-04-06 2015 true xt7s7h1dnf62 section xt7s7h1dnf62 Tie Keottcky

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The South's Outstanding College Daily

Thursday Evening, April

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

G, 19G7

Profs, Cochran
Clash At Final
Foci Luncheon

III

Vol. LVIIL No. 129

Graduation

rM

jppjiifsi

Dale Sel
As May 8
at

seum.

By FRANK BROWNING
Kernel Associate Editor
Two University professors took square aim at a lack of innovation
in the total UK academic program Wednesday while Provost Lewis
Cochran charged the faculty with an inability to develop innovative programs,
interest in innovation." As a
nr r!nrntpr woontrA
opeaMiiK ai uie unai weeny rM-ft- n

faculty luncheon of Foci, Michael
Adelstein, associate professor of
English, and John Carpenter, professor of Zoology, noted a failure to garner administrative support for innovations and charged
a lack of new thinking in recently created programs.
Dr. Carpenter said he saw
little "new" in the new aca-

demic program. "It's a little
on the conservative side and I
never thought of a University on
the conservative side at least a
good university. A good many of
us have always thought of a university as being rather radical."
He noted several national science programs which the University has not or seldom used to
strengthen its program, among
them National Science Foundation seminars for faculty to refresh themselves.
Admitting that the University
has held several high school academic seminars, Dr. Carpenter
suggested these sorts of things
might be best left for the smaller
state universities.
"Some of us are not sure the
Honors Program has much innovation in it. Some of the Honors students tell us it's the same
old stuff, but a little more," he
added.
He acknowledged some innovative thinking in the Donovan
Scholars Program and in the Center for Developmental Change.
"Among the teaching faculty
there seems to be a inimimum of

i

;Q

the "supposed Administrative
emphasis on research and the
feeling among faculty that innovations in teaching counts for
little in the evaluation process."
As some of the innovative
ideas the University might explore, Dr. Carpenter proposed
more interdisciplinary courses,
charging the size and teaching
methods of teaching laboratory
courses
whereby the student
could come at his leisure to special recording booths, and the use
of teaching machines.
He explained that he would
like to break one of his classes
of 45 students down into three
groups, meeting with each one
once a week and assigning special research for the other two
days. "I have an idea the Administration would not hold up
an idea of this sort"
"I personally believe the Administration should give us evaluation credit for teaching innovation," Dr. Carpenter declared,
adding that maybe even an office
of innovation should be established.
Following Dr. Carpenter, Dr.
Adelstein drew special attention
to the General Studies segment
of the Academic Program which
he said was far too complex for
the student to understand on his
own.
"So what if we reshuffle cards
of courses," he said of rearranging course programs. "It seems
to me the teacher makes the
course and not the course the
teacher." Noting the lackof teachers names in the new schedule
book, Dr. Adelstein charged,
"The course has become the predominant thing."
Students, he said, ought to
be able to understand it themselves, he declared in calling for
more simplicity in it.
"I differ with the sequence
concept used in the general studies program, the requirement that
a student take two courses in
Chemistry, two courses in Physi-cietc. I view the general studies as a time for students to explore, as an outlet for curiosity.
s,

DR. MICHAEL ADLESTEIN

Continued On Page 8

Mr. Nunn will probably tell the
crowd, for he is confident Kentucky voters think it is time
for a change in Frankfort, and
will vote their consciences.
In a recent interview, he discussed education, youth, and
other things he considers vital
in this election.
Control of the state commission on higher education, he
said, ought to be shared between
educators who "have a keen interest and who are qualified to
lend greater service," and laymen whose money is being spent
and whose children are being
Profiles
Primary
educated.
woo campus support. He will
Mr. Nunn praised the idea
speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Law of a community college system,
Building.
saying it decreases parents' burThis is a Republican year, dens and makes universities more

The total number of students
to graduate is 1,552,
which includes ' the December
and August degrees.
Baccalaureate services will be
held at 4 p.m. May 7, and there
will be no academic procession.
Students, at the regular commencement on Monday, will form
at 9:30 a.m. for the procession.
Col. James Alcorn, assistant to
the president, said.
He said that fees for the commencement must be paid at the
Bursar's Office, in the old Agriculture building, from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. The fees are $11.50
for undergraduates, $22.50 for
graduates, and $70.00 for PhDs.
Failure to pay these will result
in the student's name being taken
off the graduation list.
Caps and gowns may be obtained from the University Book
Store, Col. Alcorn said, and a
$10 deposit must first be made,
and the money is returned when
the gowns are brought back.
Tickets for parents and guests
will be made available at the
Helen King Alumni House, along
with detailed instructions for the
students and faculty members
participating. Instructions for
the faculty will also be issued
expected

Sheryl Snyder, seated, looks at SG President Carson Porter as
Porter addressed a Haggin Hall crowd the night before the Student Government elections. He attacked a Kernel editorial which
discussed the alleged campus political machine.

Porter Implies

SG

Machine; Defends It
By STEVE ROCCO
final opportunity to discuss campaign issues with the presidential and vice presidential candidates in the Student Government
race was highlighted Wednesday evening by a surprise appearance
and speech by outgoing SG president Carson Porter.
Speaking to a gathering in th ramnuc Rather, the tvoical
i
i t II n i
tt
iiaggin tiaii, rorter spenr aoour Student Government president
15 minutes discussingan editorial
apparently has viewed his job as
merely a stepping stone to state
politics."
Heavy Turnout
Porter likened the job of StuAbout 1,650 votes had been
dent Government to that of Presicast by noon today in the andent of the United States, noting
nual Student Government Presithat the SG president had but
dential elections. Polls anone year to perform his duties,
nounced for the Agricultural Sciand this ambition had to be esence Building could not be found.
tablished in second place to his
Lines were reported at Fine Arts
role as student keeping up his
building and Donovan Cafeteria. grade-poiaverage.
Lines were reported at Fine Arts
Continued On Page 7
building and Donovan cafeteria.
A

.

.

nt

by April 25.

The tickets and instructions
for both undergraduate and graduate degree students will be
available from 9 a.m. to noon
and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. next

Monday through Friday.
Cokes and coffee will be
served to students during those

hours.
Seniors who haw not filled
out a Degree Application for this
year will be placed in the August
graduation list, Col. Alcorn said.
Graduate Record Exams are
not required for all graduates,

but various colleges, require
them as a prerequisite for granting a degree.

in the Wednesday Kernel which

asked that candidate Sheryl Snyder be defeated "because he has
chosen to associate himself with
The Machine."
The editorial read, "Since at
least 1962 Student Government
has been controlled by the same
Machine of smilGreeks. Little
ing,
serious effort has been made to
bring new ideas or programs to
cliche-ridde-

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.

JOURNALISM

n

back-slappin-

g

Nunn Thinks This Is His Year
By JOHN ZEII
Kernel Associate Editor
Republican Louie R. Nunn,
the man who in 1963 missed
being elected governor by less
than 13,000 votes, is trying again.
In order to get a shot at
the Governor's Mansion in the
November general election, he
must first win the COP's first
serious primary in 20 years.
The former Barren County
Judge has been campaigning vigorously for the nomination, and
tonight he comes to campus to

Commencement will be held
a.m. on May 8 at the Coli-

10

personal. Community colleges, he
said, help solve one of the greatest problems in higher education,
making college available to more
people.
How much influence should
the governor have on higher education? He "has enough to do
without trying to manhandle"
it, replied Mr. Nunn. The chief
executive should provide direction and assistance, but not try
to dominate or rule it, he added.
"Politics has no place in education. That's one of the things
wrong with education in Kentucky today."
He is especially concerned
about "the angle of cost" in
higher education, but wants to
wait until the general election
Continued on Page

3

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part of the campus scene every Spring is campaign posters.
These posters cover a door at the Journalism Building.

� 2

17

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April f,

Drama: 'Good Woman' Opens

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Susan Caldwell, third from left, is shown in a scene from "The
Good Woman of Setuzan" which opened last night at Guignol.

HERBIE

MM

MAKES THE
MIDDLE EAST

COME ALIVE!

By W. II. McNEW
Hcrtolt Hrecht's "The Good
Woman of Setzuan," at the Guignol through Sunday if the cast
survives, is a play about good
and evil.
While Brecht approached such
questions through a dramatic attitude he called "epic" theater,
the approaches of the guignol
players were various. Since few
even came near theater, matters
like good, evil, and epic remained
moot.
Brccht wanted to destroy the
theater of illusion. His plays
were written for acton and di-

rectors capable of admitting that
the theater is not the world, who
are capable of making the audience think as well as be entertained. Last night's audience was
occasionally entertained, but it
was never challenged to think.
Avo Kiviranna as the pilot who
takes advantage of the good woman was the apotheosis of the actor
Brecht spend his life denouncing, the one who stands sullenly
around between emotional outbursts.
The part of Shen Te, the good
person who in order to survive
in an evil world must occasionally adopt the role of Shui Ta,
businessman, is one of the most
difficult in the theater. It requires
almost instantaneous changes in
attitude and outlook. Susan Card-wel-l,
obviously a capable actress, evaded the problem by behaving like Shen Te in the first
half of the play and like Shui
Ta in the second.
W. Garrett Flickinger simpered his way through the part

Mk)

i

play been "Our Town," would
have been excellent.
Yhv Cast
Actors in the many minor parts
THE GOOD WOMAN OF SETZUAN
seemed to fall into two groups.
by Hortolt Hrrcht. From the English
version by Eric Bontley, music by
Stefan Wolpe. Directed and designed There were those who tried to
by
Raymond A. Smith; Charles
emulate the Three Stooges, and
and
Grimsley, technical director;
Carol Combs, stage manager. In the
there were those who took the
GUIGNOL THEATRE.
noble cigbi store Indian for their
Clay Watkins
Wong, a water seller
model. Never the twain met.
First God
Flryan Harrison
Michael Meredith
Second God
The setting, doubtlessly supSean Monohan
God
Third
First Gentleman .... Matthew Barrett
posed to suggest something orSusan Cardwell
Shen Te
Second Gentleman .... Irwin Pickett
iental, looked like an unfinished
Mrs. Shin
June Stacey barn on Ben
Cartwright's ranch,
Carol Combs
Wife
John Gregg the Fondcrosa. However, its simHusband
Michael Leitner
Nephew
The unemployed man Howard Enoch plicity and the
Douglas Marshall
Carpenter
lighting were assets to a bumbBrother
Leroy Mayne
Jane Burch ling technical crew.
Mrs. Ml Tzu
Shirley Doane
Thomas Rodgers
Grandfather
The general impression of the
Jeff Silbar
Boy
Niece
entire production was one of inBarbara Stusnick
Glenn Taylor
Policeman
sufficient preparation, both techCarpet dealer's wife ... Julie Beasley
Avo Kiviranna
Yang Sun
nical and philosophical. The
Pat Kelley
The Old Whore
W. Garrett Flickinger
Shu Fu
pjayers and thedirector, Raymond
Bruce Peyton
Carpet Dealer
Smith, failed to come to terms
Mrs. Yang
Elizabeth Hoagland
Matthew Barrett
Priest
withBrecht's rather special ideas
Irwin Pickett
Waiter
about the theater, and their inFeng
Greg Moosnick
Susan Gallagher
Children
ability to act together as well
Raymond Silbar
as the difficulties of the technical
crew helped rob the play of whatof Shu Fu, the fatuous barber.
ever entertainment might be left.
He contributed entertainment,
The unfortunate collapse of
but little else.
part of the stage setting terminClay Watkins as Wong the
and occasional narrator ated last night's performance became closest to something like fore the epilogue. Since the epiBrechtian theater. June Stacey, logue was to deal with a point
Carol Combs, Glen Taylor, and the rest of the performance had
failed to establish, it was hardly
Elizabeth Hoagland were effective in lesser roles, and, had the missed.
.

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Applications for the Board of
Student Publications are available in the Program Director's
office in the Student Center.
Applications should be returned
to the office of the Vice President ior Student Affairs in the
Administration Building not later
than April 14.

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WANTED Bus drivers. Must have
valid Ky. driver's license. Must be
over 21, have mornings or after-

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noons free. Apply Wallace's
Store.

STORE
BOOK
needs
your used textbooks. Bring them in
We pay top prices. We buy
anytime.
9Ftf
all used textbooks.

WALLACE'S

2ND SHOCKER

Send for FREE Catalog
ATLANTIC

PERSONAL

RECORDS

1841 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10023

IILSiuil, lin.'.l.

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LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY

A

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DESTHLf.i
.

0? 1966!"
Noiionol Society
of film Crilki

A

Coflo

APRIL

Student Center

TURTLE DERBY

Anronioni's
v

cxo

The Kentucky
DANCE WITH THE PARLIAMENTS
8:30-12:3- 0
APRIL 14
Stoll Field Parking Lot
Stag 75c
Couple $1.00

RACES

CONCERT

APRIL 15
12 Noon

Dionne Warwick
Stan Gets
APRIL 15
8:00
Memorial Coliseum

Sports Center

a

$1.00

$2 per ticket

Harold Salsbery.

p

rones it KMgnva

APRIL 14, 12:00
Student Center Patio

PERSONAL: In reference to the signs
on the "Great
Wall" concerning
Cathie Sackfield I take full responsibility and apologize to the public in
general and Cathie in particular.

6Alt

font ftoducton

LCVJ-U- P

10-1- 1

Meet me at the Kappa Psi Blowout featuring the Mag 7 on Friday,
April 7 at the Man O'War Post behind Imperial Plaze Shopping Center. B.Y.O., mixers served and "free
M.F.
31M5t
Ice."

C.S.

CINEMA

1967
QUEEN VOTING

Book
7Ftf

.

ernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except holidays and
exam periods.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4tfttd.
Nick Pope, chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as the Cadet In 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
8.00
Yearly, by mall
Per copy, from files
$.10

IcUNTUCKY
STARTS

TOMORROW

WAIT PISNEYlS

Us
'

MitftlWf

MUM'

tweawsws3gs

ivroomKciiiJnE maiden

� 'kit.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, TIiiiimI.iv. Apiil

Higher Education:
Polish Or Dimmer?

H

?

i

By ROBERT BRANDT
UK debaters, Ralph Wesley and Robert Valentine, were on
opposing sides yesterday in a mixed debate with James Hunt
and Pamela Ings of Creat Britain.
Hunt and Wesley chose the
Valentine and Miss Ings were
affirmative to the resolution on the
negative side of the de"Higher Education in the U.S. bate, which was held in the SC
Polishes the Pebble and Dims theater.
the Diamond."
Hunt served as chairman of
the Liverpool Debating Society
and took first place in the National Debate Tournament in
Great Britain two years ago.
Miss Ings has attended the
University College of Swansea,
Wales, and was the first woman
to place as high as second in

Nun n Says
This Year
Is AH His
Continued From Page

1

campaign to discuss particulars.
Mr. Xunn also wants towith-hola stand on giving students
representation on the University
Board of Trustees until he has
time to study the idea.
Concerning expansion of graduate education in the state, Mr.
Nunnsaid he favors "bolstering"
UK's programs before starting
similar ones at newer universities. "But I have no objection
to expansion," he added.
Discussing student militancy
at colleges, specifically Berkeley,
Mr. Nunn said young people
should not "look a gift horse in
the mouth." If students "don't
like what they're buying, they
ought to go elsewhere," he has
said several times.
In the interview, the candidate brought up the subject of
communism and the danger of
its spread, indicating his conservative, almost alarmist, viewpoint. He mentioned specifically
the recent Supreme Court ruling
that prohibited New York colleges from firing faculty members for espousing communism.
He criticizes the ruling, mentioning a letter he hac received
from a soldier in Vietnam who
coulc not see why the court was
allowing Communists to teach in
schools while he was fighting
them in the rice paddies.
"Those who believe (Communist views) should not be tolAs far as I'm conerated
cerned there is no place for them
in our colleges and high schools
where our youth are.
Challenged by other students
listening to the interview concerning constitutional rights of
Americans, Mr. Nunn conceded
that "this whole concept of government certainly started on these
basic freedoms, as long as they
don't interfere with the rights
of others." He went on to defend
his position, then hedged a bit
when it became apparent opinion
in the room was divided, but
then reiterated his stand.
Asked by telephone this week
if he had any reason to be concerned about professors or others
teaching the Communist doctrine at the University, Mr. Nunn
saic, "Let's just say we should
always be alerted to (communism's inherent danger), especially in education, a field
where fertile mints are being
d

I

Britain's Debate Tournament.
The British team is visiting
50 colleges in the U.S. It is
the first mixed team ever to
be sent to the U.S.
Hunt began by saying it was
nice to be in the lane of "Mountain Williams," which he later
translated to mean "hillbillies."
He relied on rhetoric and humor
in his address, although he die
point out three problems in our
education system.
"The diamond" he says, "or
the mentally gifted student, is
dimmed because the education
system is far too general. The
grade system," he says, "forces
education out of our youth."
And, "the exam system is directed to what the mind retains,
rather than what it can produce."
Valentine used a little British
style in his address. He said Hunt

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Ralph Wesly and James Hunt listen as Pamula debate team traveling to American schools. Robert
Ings speaks yesterday at the Student Center. Valentine and Wesley are UK debaters.
Miss Ings and Hunt are members of a British
In her summary she called
liked Kentucky's Mint Juleps belooks like a diamond, acts like
Hunt's address "A Speech for
a diamond, but speaks like a cause "when you finish one you
really get to see the Blue Crass the Ages." She then paused ami
pebble.
said "ages five to seven."
He pointed out that after the of Kentucky."
She did point out that the
The judges, DenoCurris, Wiltests and exams, the "diamonds"
become productive to society and outstanding student does not liam Hanna, Robert King and
need to be forced. He can obhave not been dimmed. Our colHarry Lancaster, voted for the
negative side. Joseph Kennedy,
leges have produced the leaders tain an education on his own
who was to be the fifth judge,
and college will have no dimof today, he says, and these
was not present.
leaders are not dimmed.
ming effect upon him.
the problem
Wesley brought
to UK. He said "UK is opersystem."
ating on a factory-typ- e
The gifted student gains little
from a university education.
NO TRICKS)
(NO GIMMICKS
Miss Ings was the last to
address the judges. She said she

cultivated."

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� Iernel

The Kentucky

i

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The South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

THURSDAY. APRIL

1894

6, 1967

Editorials represent tfw opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

Waltkh
Stkve

M.

Grant,

Editor-in-Chi-

William

Rocxx), Editorial Yagc Editor

KNArp, Business Manager

Worthy Of Support
The University's first Festival
of the Arts, which began Wednesday and will continue through
April 22, deserves the support of
the entire University community.
The festival indicates that the University has indeed recognized the
significance of the arts in an academic environment.
The festival will bring to the
n
figures
campus many
in the fields of art, music, and
the theater. Students and others
will have the opportunity to see
and hear many of the great artists
of the times and will be able to
well-know-

better understand the developments and happenings in the arts.
The Department of Theater
Arts' production of "The Good
Woman of Setzuan," which officially opened the festival Wednesday, is the first of almost daily
presentations to follow in the next
two weeks. We hope the sudden
illness and cancellation of Igor

Stravinsky, the major top name
performer originally scheduled to
appear here, will not detract from
the public's interest in the festival.
Stravinsky's associate, Robert
Craft, will assume the conducting
n
duties here for the
well-know-

musician.
A number of persons have been
involved in planning the festival,
and from the looks of the programs scheduled, they have done
a commendable job. Three committeesa faculty committee, a
student committee, and an honorary committee of prominent citizenshelped in the planning.

We commend the University
and those involved in the Fine
Arts for holding the festival. We
would hope that all members of
the University community will directly benefit from the festival by
attending as many of the various
events as possible.

l
J?y

"You I)onl Need To Look At The Calendar
To Tell It's Spring

Letters To The Editor:

Housing Solution. Rent Anartments To Students
To the

Editor of The Kernel:

Although

your March 30

edi-

torial, "Dorm Counselors' Value"
proposes changes in the residence
halls, the main subject of student
s
freedom
the in loco parentis position of the University is
abandoned after the opening paravisa-a-vi-

graph.

law and the University would certainly rent all of its apartments.
Incidentally, do you see any
necessary relation between the
classroom and the bedroom?
Charles Alan Ralston
A& S

Junior

Supports Hubert Kennedy

If the University intends to rePresident Johnson recently made
linquish its role as "guardian
a slanderous and fraudulent acangel" while continuing to require
the student to live half his under- cusation of "double bookkeeping"
graduate years in a dormitory, clear- against his critics, saying that his
ly this is a contradiction. But your critics ignore the violence of the
proposal that the dormitories be VC. This is an utterly false acmade more attractive with an im- cusation.
Last Nov. 15 I wrote Secretary
proved staff does not dissolve the
Rusk, "The Vietnamese People,
antinomy.
Now you have alleged that the after having the southern part of
University will require sophomores their country turned into a separate
as well as freshmen to reside in country by the U.S. imperialists
dormitories, not in accordance with would have canceled their schedthe in loco parentis doctrine (al- uled national elections (because the
though this may be one reason), imperialists would have been
but because the University requires kicked out), and after four years
money to finance new dormitory of having the southern part of
construction. If this should become their country illegally turned into
the case the problem is intensified a military base and hated military
because more students will be living dictatorship by the Western white
colonialists (who they thought they
unhappily on campus.
remain as they are had run off four years earlier).
If conditions
more students will avoid the
Finally they had to resort to
and the University will violence as their last little bit of
campus
lose funds. The solution to the freedom against the imposed Diem
problems of student freedom and with his hated Gestapo and huge
funds gathering is concentration camps for everyone
University
this: that the University who dared to oppose his extreme
simply
rent apartments to students.
oppression and tyranny (which
Unidrove the freedom-lovin- g
In other words, let the
South
and student don the re- Vietnamese abroad or underversity
spective roles of renter and rentee. ground."
I told Rusk, "We slipped in
With such an arrangement the student has his freedom within the with a caretaker government and

All the way with LBJ to a war
now have the State of Vietnam
under siege, the way Hungary was with China and Russia. All the
under siege by Russia and fought way with RFK and let China and
courageously for freedom against Russia go fight each other.
D. A Danhurst
the Russian tanks. (We helped Ky

crush the demonstrations for the
people against us)."
I asked Rusk, "What if some
monstrous advanced industrial
power had imposed itself (violating the peace accords) on our thirteen colonies after they had won
freedom from Britain, and, with
a Tory and traitor puppet named
Ky, were trying to tell the world
this new colonialism was freedom?
Our American forefathers would
have been forced to resort to violence and a second war of independence, as the Vietnamese people are having to do. In 1945, they
drew up their 'Declaration of Independence' (very similar to ours)
from France and still are not independent, thanks to you, Mr.
Rusk."
"My son, my son, if you only
knew with what stupidity the
world is run," said a dying statesman to his boy. Most of the greatest men in the world are "young
at heart" older men, but President Johnson and his supporters,
while a few are young, are all
"old at heart," and therefore, obstinate and ignorant. President
Johnson, because he is proud and
stubborn and "old at heart" would
rather swear by the ignorance of
psychotic robots, paid murderers
and ignorant bestial creatures in
order to drown out the good sense
d
of the young and
Senator Kennedy.
high-minde-

St.
W

Louis

ants Mskimo

wholeheartedly agree with the
Kernel's latest editorial on segregation at UK (A Lesson from
UCLA). But I would like to go
one step further. Negroes are not
the only ones kept from participating in University activities.
Another minority group is also
discriminated against on this campus; this is the Eskimo.
There are no Eskimos in the
I

University's athletic program,

though many are available. This
has kept UK from gaining national prominence in such sports
as harpooning and kayaking. We
could also ask why there are no
Eskimos in any sorority or fraternity on campus.
Other questions like, why are
e
there no Eskimos in the
Department, or why are
there no Eskimos in SDS, probably would be answered in
Main-tananc-

"dou-bletalk- ."

These important questions should be answered by the
University soon!
I also agree with the Kernel
by saying that I can see little
doubt why CORE is considering
coming to Lexington. Eskimos of
UK rejoice, CORE is coming to
save you, too.

.

Patrick Slier

A & S Sophomore

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, TliiitMlay, Apiil
i."''''--

LeCs Draft

fcv

UNIVERSITY
LECTURE

draft, to support war

generation
'nitty-gritty'!-

forget the cliches and

"

Why Not Youngsters?

ur

By ROGER RAPOPORT
The Collegiate Press Service
year-old-

year-old-

d

d

anti-wa-

year-old-

search-and-destro-

y

yo-y- o

year-old-

year-old-

year-old-

walkie-talkie-

year-old-

year-old-

5,000-ma-

n

$2.68 per hour

PART TIME WORK
CAN YOU ARRANGE YOUR SCHEDULE?
If you can arrange your schedule to b fret between the hours of
10.-0openings. Corn up
a.m. and 3 .00 p.m. we hate excellent port-tim- e
to $50.00 per week for tkree or four hours work per day, loading and

unloading light merchandise.
INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD THURSDAY,
From 10:00 a.m.

APRIL 6

.3:00 p.m.

Apply UNITED PARCEL SERVICE

Yoes.

"STILL

1702 Mercer Rod

d

UP

San Dicro Union"

IN THE

AIR"

pings can be belicvcc, they arc
invariably tigers.)
But the more important consideration is that the whole concept of the young Army no longer
satisfies contemporary needs. Up
through World War II, war was
essentially an activity for the enthusiastically immature. In Korea
and now in Vietnam, it has
evolved into a mature political
form. Practicality demands that
it should be fought by mature
draftees.
By institutingthe middle-agedraft, for example, we would
surely eliminate most of the immature harassment of the administration by youngsters who feel
that they have had no hand in
determining national policy.