xt7qz60bzm28 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qz60bzm28/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660921  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 21, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 21, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7qz60bzm28 section xt7qz60bzm28 TTT

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"VI

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Inside Todays Kernel

Tr:

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Young

Is
Vol. 58, No.

University of Kentucky
SEPT.

15

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY,

21,

Democrats

ZJTL.

ivVJfr!.

If

'

Enrollment in Graduate
Page 3.

Eight Pages

The Hoard of Trustees approved the reorganization of the
office of Vice President for Busi-nes- s
Affairs Tuesday.

V.??

The

I'm k

I

reorganization

estab-

lishes the position of business
manager who will direct the division of business operations. The
new division is one of three
major divisions including the
office of the controller and an
office of physical development.
George J. Ruschcll, former director of auxiliary services, will
assume the business manager's

If

-

--.- 4-:

position.

W

Robert E. Shaver, who injuly
was appointed director of en-

gineering and construction management, will be in charge of
physical development. Clay Mau-piwill remain as director of the
controller's office.
Ruschell's office will direct
the auxiliary services, business
services and physical plant din

Cars Park Anywhere
Early in September the University announced it would demonish a
row of buildings opposite the Chemistry-Physic- s
building and the
old Sigm Nu house to make room for emergency parking lots. The
buildings aren't down yet but cars are already using the space
available, as demonstrated by these cars parking off Rose Street.

IFC Reverses Stand

On Rushee Drinking

Fraternities may once again serve alcoholic beverages to rushees
outside their chapter houses.
one night per semester to keep
Representatives to the
reversed last Nexus open from 8 p.m.-- l a.m.
Council
In the only other business,
week's controversial drinking ban
e
in Tuesday night's meeting by a IFC voted to buy a
wide margin. The new ruling, spread in this year's Kentuckian
the fifth of the semester, still instead of its usual
doesn't permit alcohol to be served to rushees inside the fraternity
Inter-fraterni-

two-pag-

half-pag- e.

rectors.
Shaver, who was rotated out
of the deanship of the College
of Engineering in July, under the
reorganization becomes director
the entire physical development
division.
This will include engineering,

construction management and
the office of planning and design,
according to the board.
Vice President Robert F.
Kcrley, under the reorganization
will receive four staff assistants.
These arc a legal counsel, a
director of
personnel, an internal auditor, and
an administrative assistant. All
were included in the former
operational
Kerley said the reorganization
set-u-

Unidentified Man Visits Stores

houses.

A motion to repeal last week's
ban was made and it received
seconds.
Discussion
several
began, and President Danny
asked that the matter be
dropped.
"I think the best thing to do
is wait and let the rush committee make new rules for next
semester," Sussman said.
Sus-sma-

gives more local auPoge 5.
Swimming
pool hours announced:
Poge 6.

School

up:

'Happy' is running again: Page 7.
Students give views on 'Cod is Dead':
Page 8.

Editor

1G

charter

New

discusses shortage ol student
teoching positions: Page 4.

umce
TK

Cfo

o

TI

SDlit

Into Three Divisions

t
'

"

convention:

tonomy:

B nsiness

k

plan

Page 2.

n

It was futile, however, as Rush
Chairman Dave Ratterman called
for an immediate vote. This was
approved, and the various fraternities voted solidly in favor of
the proposal, which goes into
effect immediately.

Local Merchants Warned
About Obscene Magazines
A man claiming to be from the Kentucky Sheriffs Association
has been warning Lexington stores that some books and magazines
they sell may be classified as obscene under the state's new
obscenity law.
Publications singled out by
THE
the man, according to local diswere Male, Stag, and
tributors,
'
Playboy.
new obscenity
Kentucky's
statute, enacted by the last session of the General Assembly,
!
.ivri
x
defines obscene as meaning "to
i
jjno-I
'KH IMN,
the average person, applyingcon-temporar- y

standards, the predominant nature of the matter,
taken as a whole, is to purient
interest, a shameful or morbid
interest in nudity, sex, or excretion, which goes substantialJack Dalton of the campus ly beyond customary limits of
YMCA asked for fraternity sup- candor in description or repreport of the Nexus coffee house sentation of such matters."
in the Presby terian Center. Citing
A Lexington
magazine disthe success of this undertaking, tributor said that at least seven
Dalton said volunteers were of his dealers, including a bookneeded to help run the estab- store and a druggist near campus,
lishment on Friday and Saturday were contacted this week and
"sort of threatened" to remove
nights.
the men's magazines from their
He asked the representatives
to take the idea back to the
The wholesaler said the man
houses, asking that four or five
work
Continued on Pace 3
members of each fraternity

office comes after two years of
study and is designed to make
the total operation more clear
and efficient Kcrley said in the
meeting Tuesday.
Lawrence Coleman, who has
been campus planner, was named
director of the Planning and Design Division, merely a change
of title.

will enable his office to cope
more effectively with problems
arising from the University's burgeoning
growth,
particularly

those associated with the planconstruction and maintenance of the main campus and
community college physical
plants.
The reorganization of the
ning,

Perry County Gets
Community College

The general area of one community college was approved by
the Board of Trustees Tuesday while the title to land for a second
college was accepted.
establishing a community college
The general area of the prosystem.
Hazard Community Colposed
With Craft's support, Combs
lege is the "Black Gold Mining
Act
three miles east of got the Community College with
Camp,"
through the 1962 legislature
Hazard, in Perry County. The a
proviso for a college in the
Board authorized President Os"Hazard-Blackearea."
wald to determine the specific
Combs explained in his memsite after negotiations with the
Hazard Independent College orandum that the phrase
area was inserted
Foundation.
in order to placate the represenThe Hazard Independent Coltative from Perry County, but
lege Foundation will be responhe was informed at the time that
sible for providing the site, there was a
committment, insofar
of gas wells,
utilities, capping
as I was able to make one, that
grading, construction of nine the college would
go to Letcher
faculty dwelling houses which
County . . ."
will be leased to faculty members
A site committee,
however,
of the college, and roadways for
reporting in September 1962,
ingress and egress to the site.
recommended a Hazard location.
No construction deadline was
Five days later, the Board
given, but officials said last May of Trustees heard the recommenwould open "no
that the college
dation, but voted unanimously
later than September 1968."
to put the college at the unused
In May, the Trustees chose
Robinson
school
at
Hazard for a community college, Stuart
Blackey in Letcher County.
a previous committoverriding
Another site committee rement to the Blackey area in
Letcher County and ending more porting in May, again recommended Hazard over any site in
than four years of speculation Letcher
County, and the Trustees
regarding the site.
reversed their decision even atter
The previous committment Combs' memorandum was made
was revealed at the May trustees
public.
meeting when Gov. Edward T.
The Board then accepted land
Breathitt read a memorandum
given to it by the Licking Valley
to the Trustees from former Gov.
College Development CorporaBert T. Combs.
tion for the site of the Maysville
Combs then said he had
Community College.
agreed in 1962 to locate a college
The Board approved at its
in Letcher County if Archie Craft
May meeting the Maysville land
of Whitcsburg then a state senaContinued On Page 3
tor, would support Combs' bill
y

"Haz-ard-Black-

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In other business, it was proposed that the council bar Kernel
reporters from its meetings, as
Panhellenic had done. The
motion failed.

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2-3

K

Mechanized Medicine
exhibit on the Unit Dose System is on display
in the lobby of the Medical Center. Medicine,
sufficient for one dose, is packaged and labeled
by the machine. The system reduces drug pilfer
An

age and helps in the control and preparation of
medicine. UK is the first hospital to fully utilize
this system.

Krntl

Photo

.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Sept.

2

21, 196G

Student A rt Committee
Elects New

Young Democrats Make Plans
For Convention, Campaigning
The Young Democrats will
get into full swing for the school
year with a statewide convention in Owenshoro September
23-2-

Dill Deskins,

campus political group, and Chris
Gorman have been nominated
for the Kennedy Award, given
each year to an outstanding member of the Kentucky Young

president of the

UK Bulletin Board
Baptist Student Union

Ves-

pers will feature Dr. William
Barr, professor at the Lexington
Theological Seminary, in a discussion, "God is Not Dead" at
6:30 p.m. Wednesday at the BSU
center.

interested in plant

persons

are invited to attend.

sciences

Appalachian Volunteers will
hold an organizational meeting
at 7 p.m., Thursday, in Room
107 of the Student Center.

The IEEE (Institute of Electronics Engineers) will hold a
Concert Band, for
meeting at 7:00 p.m., Thursday,
majors, will practice Wednesday in the Electrical Engineering conat 7:30 p.m. in Room 22 of the ference room. Interested students
Fine Arts Building.
are invited to attend for membership registration and planning.
The University of Kentucky
non-mus-

ic

Law wives will present a panel
discussion of what it's like to be
a lawyer's wife, at 8:00 p.m.
Thursday, in Room 108 of the
Law Building. Featured will be
downtown lawyers and other
dignitaries.

All upperclassmen who would
like to apply for membership in
Omicron Delta Kappa, the senior
men's honorary, may obtain an
application form from Mrs.
Sheatler in the Dean of Men's
office. The deadline is Sept. 30.

All ID cards are now ready
Phi Epsilon Phi, Botanical
will meet at and may be picked up daily from
Sciences honorary,
7 p.m. Thursday, in Room 211 8:30 a.m. until 4:15 p.m., Saturof the Funkhouser Building, with days from 8:30 a.m. until 11:45
Dr. Raymond Hampton, as- a.m. in room E, Memorial Coliseum. No cards can be picked up
sociate professor of Plant Pathand Botany, speaking. All without a fee slip.
ology

Students Invited
To Brown Fish Fry
bus will leave from in front
of the Coliseum at 4:30 p.m.
Thursday to go to Keeneland
for a Democratic Party fish fry.
The event will mark the opening
of John Y. Brown's campaign
A

for senator. He is opposing Sen.

John Sherman Cooper.

Phi Epsilon Phi Botanical
Sciences honorary, is taking applications for new members in
Room 220, Funkhouser Building.
Any person with a 2.5 overall
average and a 3.0 in at least nine
hours of. Botanical Sciences will
qualify. Deadline for applications
is Sept. 30.
Wednesday and Thursday are
the last days to file for a December
degree.

Co-Chairm-

Jerry Noe, Betty Kay Florence, and Mike Sweeney were elected
of the Student Art Committee last night in its
meeting at the Fine Arts Building.
Koe, a
graduate SAC, which was formed "out
art student from Cawod, had of protest" of the Art Departbeen temporary spokesman for ment's administration.
the committee until his election.
SAC will meet next week at
7:30 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 27,
Miss Florence is a
in Room 208 of the Fine Arts
senior, majoring in Art EduBuilding.
and isfromllodgensville.
cation,
Sweeney transferred here from
the University of Washington as
a graduate student in Sculpture.
His home is Seattle, Washington.
as

Deskins said that plansforthe
club after the convention include
active campaigning for the
revised Constitution, support of
John Young Brown's senatorial
campaign, and notorizing absentee ballots for UK students.
Part of this year's convention
business w ill be discussion about
revamping the statewide group.
This, according to Deskins,
would "make it an efficient organization to assist in Democratic party work on all issues
which affect Kentucky."
Discussing the coming year's
activities, Deskins said he was
appalled that "on a campus of
nearly 14,000, there were only
300 (Democrat)
students interested in politics." He also invited
the Young Republicans to "join
with our club and support the
Constitutional Revision on cam-

Other officers elected last
night were Carol Piatt, Treasurer, Dorothy Broaddus, SecreParliatary, and Bill Rowan,
mentarian.
Various topics were discussed
at this first meeting of the semester. The most important were
with the Amerof Architects, UK
ican Institute
pus as well as in our home student chapter, of the Beaux
towns."
Arts Ball to be held in October.
stateIn describing hoped-fo- r
An art auction of students'
wide changes in the Young Demoworks was tentatively set for
crats organization, Deskins said next semester, but final action
that up to now there had been on this project was put into
"too much responsibiltiy on a subcommittee.
few people."
Other subcommittees were
The next regularly scheduled
formed to discuss dues, field
meeting of the Young Democrats will be on October 11, at trips, programs, newsletters, so7:30 p.m. in room 110 of the cial events, and a new constitution.
Law Building.
READ

en

The constitution subcommit-- '
tee's job will be to study the
old constitution of last years'

THE KERNEL.

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The Kentucky Kernel, University
ol Kentucky,
Station, University 40506. Second-clas- s Lexington, Kentucky,
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the scnooi year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications, Nick Pope,
chairman, and Patricia Ann Nickell,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet In 1894, became the Record in 1U0, and the Idea
in ltfUB. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1913.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail $8.00
Per copy, from files $.10

KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
2320
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News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
2321
Socials
Advertising, Business, Circulation 2319

* I
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, WYclncMl.iy,
Sept. 21, lf)--

Combs" Promise Was Unfulfilled
IA

with the understanding that the
Licking Valley College Development Corporation would
e
the land.
The Board also authorized
University officials to investigate
the possibility of purchasing surplus federal property at Mays-vill-

.

a

r

non-prof-

ri

land. wnulrl m t
i.ivJiiSanu H3
a site for faculty housing for
ill- llin Hiaimi-l
Commu- iiayVUlC

colleges

a

y ad- -

Ttl

II

..

.

ff

i
1UU" enrollment in tne Graduate Schools for the fall
.
.l
.
II
nn uui uvci- ciiruumenc . in ine SDrintr. accord ncr tn
uH
rpnnrtc . Tfni
,
i
"a
rt
enironment . is l.yiu.
Dr. Lewis W. Cochran, act- - 14 National Science
Fellowships
ing dean of the Graduate School, 35 new NDEA fellows, plus the
said that the increase is near University
the samepercentage as previous Fellowships sponsored Haggin
and University of
years .and. that graduate school Kentucky Research Foundation
enrollments are increasing "in Fellowships.
most places."
The graduate
are
Ur. Cochran attributed the continuing with programs
new crants
rise in students to "some addi- - added each year. For
example,
tional fellowships added, and the there were eight
original NASA
influence of current Selective Ser- - grants when the
program was
Vice policies."
nriainatrA turn vpars acrn ViU
The additional fellowships more were added last
year for a
I
Dr . Cochran rpfprrv1 f r mnuuc iuia
IC
r
i
iu I'l.,
iu anu eigm more ior
a total of 24 NASA fellowships, this fall.

ic

WM

1

semr

n-

fl

Classified advertisements. 5 cents per
word ($1.00 minimum).
Deadline for acceptance of classified
3 p.m. the day preceding
To place classified ad come to
Room 111 or 113. Journahsm Bldg.
Pa";
Advertisers of rooms and Kernel
ments listed in The Kentucky include.
that they will not
have agreed
as a quaniying cuuwuc.o.. rent Y -an
to
or not to
ciding whether race. color, religious
aDDlicant. his
.
or national origin.
preference
pub-So-

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.--

tiw Courier- UK. Weekly

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allegearU'UV

toVAW

Maurice C. DeWitt, alias
Webb, 23, of 537 Elm Tree Lane,
was. arrested by police on a warrant obtained by Teresa Blevins,
18, who gave her UK address
as' Holmes Hall. Miss Blevins
charged that DeWitt raped her
in an automobile on a county
road shortly beiore 1U p.m. aion-

Tow.n:
water
amen-

open.

Road.
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wjrr

done expertly and
buness. technical, academic. Phone
10:5 n

4
cam,
1955 Chevrolet.
SALE
pistons.
solid litter, board aluminum less than
floor transmittion;
4.000 miles on engine, $250. Call iM.
xt)&t)l
4S78 after 5 p.m.
convertFOR SALE 19GC Chevelle
steering,
automatic, power nnvment:
ible .
Hrun

.rr

.

TYPING

FOR

V--

M

.

coed.

2 bedroom
nHmn4c n o t nnd
furnished. Private Patios, all
ities, unfurnished only. Model
Bill Bishop. 2200 Richmond
Phone

JAMESTOWN

E.

Coed Acusses
Man Of Rape

FOR RENT

n.

Beofrice

or books are found, the dealer
.
VL ill ha womArl
V.nm
iu
mil 7. waincu (n rciiiuve inern,
he Said. With nnn.pnmnl r,
icsuiiiiij; in prusfcuiion.
The law provides for a fine
of $1,000 or six months in the
county jail, plus $5 for each
item of literature handled, not
to exceed a total of $10,000, or
.L
an PVtTrt rlnxr in oil f- - Ciitll
in
jOH IUI
not to exrppH n fotal nf
item,
360 days in jail.

-

CLASSIFIED

Walton Avenue

POOR BOY KITS
MEN'S KITS for your Christmas
Knitting
SWEATER KITS
with matching skirt material

The unidentified man left a
copy of the new obscenity law
and said that an inspection committee would check dealers periodically.

ministration for all investment
c
me ociiooi, win include the ot the University and its af--

Enrollmeiit In Graduate School
is up oU4 uver Spring Semester

...

Continued From Par i
has no legal basis, or
authority
for his actions.
A spokesman for the sheriffs
association told the K ernel that
the organization does n . i
any laws, nor carry out inspec- tions or investigations.

wiV

"ie u nivers,

121
A YARN SHOP

10--

Phone

TkJT

-

1

Open

f
LflerCllClIltS

brinir the tnrnl nnmliprnf
......v.iWiiuiiu- nity colleges in the system to
11. More are in the
planning
staffe.
In other business, the Board
o
'js!s'-""-'v
ui inestablished a School of Letters vestment counsel and
priority of
and Languages in the College gift solicitation.
The Chase Manhattan Bank
ining
implementation of an 0f New York will be encased
.
internal organization of that col- - as investment
counsel to the

academic plan.
,
,

cH'vc

1B

it

.

1

c.

President Oswald said the

Die

filiated,
corporations.
Priority ingift solicitation was
established in the following order
r.
I
i. vjiiis unreMncicu as 10 use
w ith special reference to attract- ing and retaining the ablest
possible faculty and attracting
the highest calibre student;
2. Gifts toward the endow- ..
memi oi me tt
university;
3. Gifts for buildings and
equipment not otherwise pro- vuieu irom otner iunu sources.

y,

1

pur-:has-

nuy uoncge.

f

... ..

i.i
ist'ijurimenis 01 cngiish, 1'hilos-ophHistory, Germanic and
Classical Languages and Litera
tures, rench language and
tures, speech, and library science,
Dr. John E. Keller, now of
the University of North Carolina,
s named director of the new
school effective July 1, 1967.
f f. ... I
in tumid iniipif nieniaiion oir
the academic plan, the depart- ment of physical education will
be transferred from the
voiicge
of Arts and Sciences to the College of Education effective Oct.
1, 1966, and will be renamed
the Division of Health, Physical
Education, and Recreation.
In other business the Tru .
acted on recommendations con- -

Continued From Pare 1
known as the Wood
Property

3

-

-

j

&

W
VJ

* en Housing

Ail Imposition
The placement of a record number of students in practice teaching
for the Spring semester is creating
problems for all involved. But the
problems faced by the unsuspecting
students are perhaps the most dis-

turbing.
Of the more than

cases, insurmountable. Even if the
student does practice teaching in
nearby Frankfort or Versailles,
costs of daily commuting mount
to heights he should not have
to endure.

As a result of these financial
students burdens suffered by the
practice
who must be assigned to practice teacher, we think the University
teaching positions, many must should offer some form of comleave the campus. School districts
pensation to the student. We see
cooperating with the University in two possible alternatives. First,
supplying supervising teachers lie the University could offer reimin the northwest quadrant of Ken- bursement based on travel extucky bounded generally by lines penses. Secondly, the University
400

from Covington to Lexington to
Louisville.
Students are assigned to a position on the basis of priority: first
come, first served. While this may
be the fairest of the alternatives
available to the student teaching
officials, the student still encounters inconveniences, and the burden should not rest completely
with him.
For example, a student assigned
to practice teach in Louisville or
Covington must furnish his own
transportation to and from the
Lexington campus for a weekly
seminar session. If he is not a
resident of the city in which he
teaches which is not a prerequisite for assignment there he also
must be responsible for finding
his own housing.
The financial burden suffered
by the student may be, in such

could consider offering a tuition-fre- e
semester to students during
the period of their practice teaching.

the congestion
such a large number
by
of students applying for practice
teaching positions in the Spring
semester should be alleviated. This
year, 190 students are doing practice teaching this fall, while over
400 are expected to apply for the
spring.
The College of Education should
Furthermore,

caused

organize prospective practice

teachers so that half would teach
in the fall and the other half in
the spring. In such an arrangement, the financial burden of
traveling expenses and housing
would decrease as fewer students
would be forced to leave the Lexington vicinity to practice teach.

Letters To The Editor

A New

Member Raps Honors Program
To the Editor
the Kernel:
of

The Honors Program at the
University is not functioning properly. In the past two years it has
degenerated into a Coffee House
Club which listens to Dr. Robert
O. Evans (of the English Department) say the "same ole" trivia
at every meeting.
Dr. Evans lacks the foresight
andor concern of one of his predecessors, Dr. Stephen Diachun (of
the Agriculture Research Center).
There is no program for
n
other than "Hand in your
yellow enrollment card or you will
be dropped from the Honors Proupper-classme-

gram."
Instead of setting up discussion
groups to foster the "required"
research topics, the program turns
away from anything which might
imply work or assistance.
I challenge Dr. Evans to START
an Honors Program or withdraw
his presence from our Friendly
Coffee Hour.
Barry Arnett
A & S Senior

Editor's Note: Barry Arnett, a
senior math major lias been enrolled in tfie Honors Program for
the past three years. He declined
to enroll in the fourth year program.

th

It is understandable that the
new band director, Fred M. Dart,
would want to establish himself
through reorganization and the use
of new ideas. However, the playing of "My Old Kentucky Home"
is a long established custom that
has the effect of unwritten law.
We question the right of Mr.
Dart to break this law. We are
proud of our school as well as
our state; we would like for the
song which manifests our feelings
to be played at each and every
game so that once again "We will
sing one song for the Old Kentucky Home"
Nancy Mason

Education Sophomore
Ann Lackey

Education Sophomore

'Home'

ed

University of Kentucky
WEDNESDAY. SEPT.

Chant,

have been too much to stomach
for most Communist
outside
China. And the harm done to
China's image in the
world is incalculable. But
even more important, many Chinese
themselves were making it clear
they thought the Red Cuards were
going too far. So now, it seems,
the guards are being sent to help
with the harvest.
The Christian Science Monitor
non-Commun-

21,

1966

Editor-in-Chi-

Tehence Hunt, Executive Editor

Gene Clabes, Managing Editor
Judy Chisiiam, Associate Editor
John Zeii, Associate Editor
Fhank Bhowninc, Associate Editor
Phil Sthaw, Sports Editor
Lahhv Fox. Daily News Editor
uON HEHhon. Daily News Editor
Bakhy Cobb, Cartoonist
Business Manager

TTfnnia com-

er

ESTABLISHED 1894

university is united from
generation to generation by its traditions. It has long been a tradition
at UK for the band to play "My William Knafi,
A

full-throat-

The South's Outstanding College Daily

M.

o

China are now being sent home manding respect in the modern
after what has been in effect a world. Yet for all that has unmonth of revival meetings. At last questionably been achieved, he is
Thursday's big rally in Peking, now in his autumn years and Utopia
Chairman Mao and his dauphin, seems to be slipping from his reach.
Lin Piao, were on the platform.
What is worse as Chairman
Drums, gongs, and cymbals were Mao and some of his colleagues
beaten, and quotations from Chair- of the 1930's see it the pristine
man Mao's writings were chanted revolutionary zeal has given way
in
unison by the as- to the corrupting influence of Beatle
sembled thousands. But this time haircuts and winkle-pickshoes.
there was no encouragement to the The same thing happened, of
Red Cuards to take it out on
course, in the Soviet Union. And
"bourgeois" or foreign elements. in Chairman Mao's eyes, Nikita
Instead, they were told by the Khrushchev and his successors
mandarin-commissar,
Premier made a terrible mistake by trying
En-la- i,
Chou
to go out into the to channel instead of
stamping out
countryside to help the peasants those influences which were taking
with the harvest.
the edge off revolution. So the
In some ways, it is possible to Chinese way is to try to stop the
sympathize with Chairman Mao in rot before it takes hold.
his current dilemma. Leaving aside
That is why the Red Guards
the excesses and cruelties of his were conjured almost from nowhere
regime, he was a "pure" revolu- by putting young people into unitionary, enduring remarkable hard- form and urging them to do a
ships and showing great courage to wrecking job on every sign of "corestablish in his vast homeland a ruption." It was a dangerous
way
system of government that he beto stage a revolutionary revival
lieved (and apparently still beand Chairman Mao and Marshal
lieves) the only one capable of Lin are perhaps having one or two
second thoughts about the cost.
The rampages of the Red Guards

The Kentucky Kernel
Walter

iMiss

rUio

Old Kentucky Home" during the
football games. The impact of the
omission of this tradition was felt
by the alumni and students who
attended the
Carolina
game.
UK-Nor-

Ap