xt7000002c7q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7000002c7q/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19691003  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October  3, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  3, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7000002c7q section xt7000002c7q This
Friday Evening, October 3,

Kmitoky ECejotl

19G9

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Advisory Committee
Will Aid Singletary
On Forth Successor
By BILL MATTHEWS
Assistant Managing Editor
UK President Otis Singletary
has appointed a seven-macommittee, including four students,
to advise him in appointing a
new vice president for student
n

affairs.

Consisting of four students,
two faculty members and one
administration, the committee
will compose a list of potential
candidates for the job now held
by Dr. Stuart Forth.
Dr. Singletary said he is acting in compliance with the wishes
of Acting Vice President Forth,
who has asked to return to his
original post as Director of Libraries.
When former interim president
Kirwan took office in 1968 Dr.
Forth was asked to leave his
library post to serve as an acting
vice president as long as Kirwan
was acting as president.
Asked For Replacement
Dr. Forth agreed to remain
as acting vice president under
Dr. Singletary when the new
president arrived at UK, but
asked him to begin looking for
a replacement.
Questioned about his eventual
return to the library. Dr. Forth
said "I cannot deny that this
has been an exciting, satisfying
job. I have really enjoyed it,
but I am very concerned about
the library-af- ter
all, this (the
library) is my profession."
But Dr. Forth has indicated
that he will not be leaving before his replacement is found.
Dr. Alvin Morris, the chairman and only administrator on
the advisory committee, estimated that Dr. Forth's successor
may not be found until next
summer, adding, "We have only

Phone Strike
About
telephone operators walked off their jobs today at Ceneral Telephone Co.,
complaining about working conditions.
A union spokesman cited long
hours, too strict supervision, and
that General Telephone wouldn't
accept any reason for being absent.
150-17- 5

a general idea of time, but we
wish. to move as expeditiously
as possible due to the significance of the office."
President Selects Committee
According to Dr. Morris, who
is a special assistant to Dr. Singletary, the president has been
working for about two weeks
selecting a committee of students
and faculty members.
Prof. Art Callaher, Department of Anthropology, and Dr.
John Leinhard, Department of
Mechanical Engineering, are the
two faculty members of the group.
Dr. Morris commented that
the faculty members were selected as individuals with "a
demonstrated interest in students, but who could express a
faculty viewpoint as well."
Student members are SG president Tim Futrell, Evelyn Smith,
Law son McNary and Albert R.
Sharp.
The committee is not a selection or screening committee, Dr.
Morris indicated, and "will not
decide who the next vice president for student affairs will be."
Singletary' s Decision
"It (the selection) is a personal decision for Dr. Singletary
to make," said Dr. Morris, "but
he wishes to have the benefit of
the views of students and faculty
in making his decision" due to
the significance of the position.
The function of the committee will be to consider individuals
as potential candidates for the
job and recommend a list of
names to the president for consideration.
"The list of names should
exemplify the kind of person the
committee thinks is best for the
job," said chairman Morris.
President Singletary is reserving, however, the right to ask for
another list or to reject all suggested individuals and make an
independent choice of his own.
In an effort to involve as
many students and faculty as
possible in the nominating process, Dr. Morris said, "I am
hereby extending the invitation
to everyone in the University
community who wishes to suggest an individual whom they
would like brought to the committee's attention to submit their
proposals to us."

Vol. LXI, No. 28

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President's

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UK President Otis A. Singletary has named a

seven-memb- er

com-

mittee to aid him in the selection of a new vice president for
student affairs. From the left in clockwise rotation are: Albert R.
Art Callaher, Lawson McNary, Evelyn Smith,
Sharp, Professor
Dr. Singletary, Tim Futrell, Dr. John Leinhard and Dr. Alvin

L

Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

Morris.

SG Supports War Moratorium;
Need For City Police Questioned

By FRANK COOTS
Hall said that legally the UniAssistant Managing Editor
versity had no authority to keep
Student Government, in a outside police from coming on
rather lengthy session, last night campus.
approved a resolution supporting
Police On Campus
the Oct. 15 Vietnam Moratorium
Director of Safety and SecurDay, appointed a committee to
investigate the University Book ity Joe Burch summed up the
Store and questioned Dean of Stu- situation by saying police "can
dents Jack Hall as to the need come on campus anytime they
of undercover policemen on cam- please, and we do not always
know about it."
pus.
Although Pennington's proNoting a Kernel story on undercover police on campus, SG posal passed the assembly, there
representative Buck Pennington is little it can accomplish since
introduced a bill that would seek
to determine from the administration whether police other than
campus police were on campus
and the reason for any such acWhile Blacks across the countivity.
try take militant action, the Black
Hall attended the assembly Student Union at the University
is recruiting.
meeting and answered representatives' questions on administraPrimarily, they are trying to
tive policy with regard to police recruit more black students for
college. Secondarily, they are trycoming on campus.
Hall stated he "had no formal ing to enroll them at UK.
There have been two formal
knowledge of police on campus,
although students have indicated approaches to the recruiting.
to me that this is the case."
First, the college preparatory

it was intended only to "question" the administration.
The proposal to appoint a
committee to "investigate" the
University Book Store passed the
assembly although some representatives seemed unsure as to
what would be investigated.
Bruce Carver, who submitted
the bill, said the store "needs
investigating from policy on
down." He indicated he was
especially interested in salary
rates and profits. He claimed
Continued on Pace 7, CoL

3

Black Enrollment Sought
program for culturally deprived
high school graduates gave special tutoring to spring graduates
who wanted to attend college but
felt they needed more preparation.
The program was held for the
second consecutive summer at
UK and the community colleges
in Louisville and Ashland.
Continued on Pace 7. CoL 4

Funded By NASA

Research Team Studies Effects Of Gravity

By RICHARD WIOTT
Kernel Staff Writer
When America's astronauts are questioned about their
individual exploits, they are quick to point out that
the space program is a team effort. "Were it not for the
thousands of engineers and technicians who worked long
hours, the moon flight would not have been possible,"

inside a capsule filled with water or alcohol. Increased
gravity is simulated by the use of a centrifuge.
"By turning the centrifuge at various speeds we can
produce gravity up to 100 times that of normal gravity," Dr. Leinhard says. This occurs when the centrifuge is turning at approximately 365 revolutions per
minute. At this Instant, the
capsule has an
effective weight of 1,300 pounds.
one said.
Information is fed into the capsule electronically
The astronauts were not just being modest. Indeed,
scientists from universities all over the United States and through the use of slip rings which are located at the
the world have worked together to accomplish the most base of the centrifuge.
fantastic voyage ever attempted.
Centrifuge Built Here
One such scientist is UK s Dr. John, Leinhard.
The centrifuge which is being used in the experiment
Prof. Leinhard heads a team of mechanical engineers
was designed and build by Leinhard and Dr. W. Merle
and students who are studying the effects of gravity Carter. Leinhard and Carter began building the centritransfer.
fuge two years ago "as soon as NASA provided
upon boiling, points and heat
Funded Dy NASA
the funds." It took them about five months to complete
Study
Is being funded by NASA, began construction of the centrifuge.
The study, which
During the first two years of the experiment, Dr.
two years ago.
such as a small wire, Leinhard worked with relatively large heaters in hih
a heater,
It Involves
,

placing

,

d

gravity situations. This part of the experiment has been
successful.

"Generally, we can say that when gravity increases
the capability for heat transfer also increases," Dr.
Leinhard says. '
"However, when the heater becomes very small
we have been unable to determine exactly what occurs," he continued.
Prof. Leinhard hopes to answer this question within
the year.
The research is valuable to NASA because of its application to rocket launches from earth which produce
tremendous heat and greatly increased gravity. '
This week NASA awarded a 134.012 to the UK
Research Foundation to continue the study. This Is
the third
grant that Dr. Leinhard has received.
Working with Prof. Leinhard on the experiment are
Dr. James Funk, graduate students Nanih Bakhru and
Amit Battacharya and undergraduates Dennis Boys,
Eugene Davis and Kenneth Harper.
one-ye-

ar

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Friday, Oct 3, 19f9

Satire

Music Scene' Combines Music,
Finger" on Rowan and Martin's

Dy TOM HALL
Kernel Staff Writer

!

'Laugh-In.- "

David Steinberg's irreverent
When the "Smothers Brothers monologue on Jonah and the
Comedy Hour" got the ax on whale was cut from that last
Smothers Brothers segment. As
CDS last siting, it looked like
social content was. a result, many people in the
humor with
know decided that a "Fickle
finished on TV, save for the ocFinger" pointed at
d
"Fickle keeper of the air waves Sen. John
casional
well-deserve-

Pastore, by visiting star Dan

Rowan,
out.

caused CBS to cancel
y

Whatever the cause, some remnants of the Smothers Brothers
type of humor live on, and in
for
competition with "Laugh-In- "
15 minutes, yet.
"Music Scene,"
Monday nights, is a new
ABC-TV- 's

series

musical-comedy-varie-

that started with a bang last
week, spotlighting the Beatles,
James Brown, Crosby, Stills,
Nash and Young; Tom Jones,
Oliver, Buck Owens and Three
Dog Night as guests.
This week they served up Gary
Puckett, sans Union Gap, Lou

.4

V
--7

-

''AT-

0

t5

jft

Rawls, Eydie Gorme, Janisjop-li- n
and Three Dog Night again.
The music on this show is excellent, but the satirical sketches
between songs could stand alone.
Even the ads are funny. One
Southern
had a Rod Steiger-typ- e
sheriff browbeating a yound man
who had his sporty type "rac-

ing machine" within the city lim-

V

its of some deep-Sout- h
burg.
Shades of "Easy Rider" and "In

Carolyn Cope and Bruce Payton perform a love scene from "Playboy of the Western World" as (From 1. to rt.) Cork Davis, Clay
Nixon, Barry Corum, Jo Ann Smith and Chuck Pogue look on. The
Theatre Arts Dept. production will run at Cuignol Theatre Oct.
Kernel Photo by Dick Ware
at 8:30 p.m.
2

the Heat of the Night."
David Steinberg seems to be
the show's best comedian. He
has a master's in English literar
ture and is a
veteran
of Chicago's famed "Second
City" improvisatiqnal group.
show
He's 26 and did a
for five months at New York's
Bitter End Cafe.
four-yea-

one-ma- n

SC Brings 'Kinetic Art9 Movie

Svankmajer of Prague, a black
comedy; a boy escapes terror in
"Cruel Diagonals" by Vlatko
Ends Tues.
A
Rilipovic of Sarajevo; a wild animJdnj mutorptoe It wO kick fit tS
n run
able at 8 p.m. Oct. 9 at the mation from Tokyo, "TwoGrilled
'So rough u4 ftrM ttl almost unbearable
Hellmuth
Fish" by Yoji Kuri;
Student Center Theater. AdmisCostard of Hamburg's dadaist
sion is $1.
--J
Program No. 1 of the Kinetic film joke, "Why Did You Kiss
Art Series will paint the screen Me Awake?; and "Spiderele-phant,- "
animated fantasia by
with explosions of light in "Phenomena" by Jordan Bel son of PiotrKamler of Paris.
The program will be conSan Francisco, the first film in
cluded with "La Pomme," a
DUBTVU A
.JON
l.
this
HOffKVUAl V& VOSGMT
From outer space the viewer moving record of beauty through
will be zoomed into "La Vita" the artist's" eye, by Charles Mat-to- n
APMintO.
I,
of Paris.
by Bruno Bozzetto in Milan, an
Art is a series of three
Kinetic
account of high spirits contrasted
Striptease
Klftzzni
against that dull thing in the programs of movies gathered by
IUMMIM0S
t""I(YX
Universal Education and Visual
background called "reality."
Then comes a film by Luigi Arts in a dozen recent festivals
Bazzoni of Rome about cinema around the world. All of the films
JUuntnlthJii.V. .d.n.
techniques called "II Giudice"; are new to this continent.
viurt
uij&i"Kia
encounter on
next, a
a barren field, "Happiness" by
Lother Spree of Germany; "SotUfiEi!UTMS.ffi
NOW! First Run!
phie" by Julien Pappe, Paris,
the portrait of a hybrid of Alice
4h Wonderland and Lolita and her
"A loose narrative about a TV cameraman during
relations with an ogress piano
teacher; "Rakvickarna" by Jan
last summer's
'Medium Cool'
By CHARLES ELORd
Kernel Staff Writer
If you want access to another
world of movies, the key is avail7--

This week Steinberg played
an existential psychiatrist. Here's
how the skit started:
Patient: "I have trouble communicating with people."
Doctor: "I'm sorry, I can't
understand you."
A real sight and sound treat,
was Nilsen singing "Everybody's
Talking" on the soundtrack of a
"Midnight Cowboy" film clip,
later in the show. The song is
as big a hit as the movie now.
Believe it or not, this show
has a critical viewpoint. It's not
another "Hit Parade" or "American Bandstand."
Something as ludicrous as the
June Taylor dancers of Jackie
Cleason show fame is hard to
ridicule, but "Music Scene" did
it.
While the sophomoric, cloying strains of "Sugar, Sugar"
played, the cast did some funny
"precision dancing" in a malt
shop setting. It broke everybody

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Chicago convention,
is dynamite! The most impassioned and impressive
film this year!"
Time Magazine

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"AN HISTORIC M0VIE!"'AN ELOQUENT FILM."
-- RICHARD SCHICKEL. LIFE
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ROLAND CELATT, SATURDAY REVIEW

"ASTONISHINGLY PERFECT!" "G0.SQUIRM!"
-- ARCHER WINSTEN. NEW YORK POST
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"WILL KNOCK YOU OUT OF YOUR SEAT!"
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"A VIBRANT, BRUTAL ESSAY."
" ELOQUENT. AND IMPORTANTi"

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PC CINEMA
The Kentucky

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, Unlvenity
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second clasi
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed flv times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box ia6.
Begun as the Cadet In IBM 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 KATES
SIMS
Yearly, by mail

Per copy, from files
KERNEL

Nev,

Desk

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Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor.
Associate Editors, SpcrU

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mmmm
MfTKXXXO

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.. 3, 19-- S

Video Taping Courses

UK's TV Center Broadcasting Statewide

Videotaped TV courses are
coming into their own at UK
and its community colleges.
UK now has in operation a
new TV center on the Lexington campus, located in the Taylor Education Building. It is under the direction of Dr. Paul H.

1st

r

Owen, director of media services.
The center, beginning its first
year of operation, is expected to
tighten the bonds of instruction
between UK and its community

already active in the program.
Hopkinsville and Jefferson are,
expected to be in the videotape
program in a few weeks.
Forty-thre- e
pro-- ;
colleges.
grams will be available eventuTwo
community colleges,' ally this fall to all of the comSomerset and Elizabethtown.are
munity colleges. They will be
under the director of a moderator at each college and on the
main campus.
OUTDOOR SHOWING!
Agriculture 106 is in demand
at many of the community colSTARTS 8:00
leges. The course is being videoADM, $1.50
taped by Dr. C. Frank Buck
and Dr. Arthur Rudnick Jr., both
of the Department of Animal
.Sciences. The class on the Lexington campus will be divided
into two parts.
One part will be taught by
television and the other part will
be taught "live." UK TVperson-ne- l
hopes that the results obtained from this course will improve future videotaped courses.
The two professors, who have
taught Agriculture 106 as a team
for eight semesters
are enthused about the role of instructional TV. Dr. Rudnick feels that
it will satisfy a need in the com--;

LA

i

Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve
are "The April Fools"
(Also starring Peter Lawford, Jack Weston,
Myrna Loy and Charles Boyer
'

te

Title ong sung by Dionne Warwick. Title Music by Burt Bacharach and Lyrics by Hal David.
Music from original sound track on Columbia Kecords. A Jalem Product ion. Technicolor
Screenplay by Hal Dresner. Produced by Gordon Carroll. Directed by Stuart Rosenberg.
A National General Pictures Release. A Cinema Center Films Presentation.

Plus: Hayley Mills "TWISTED NERVE"

munlty colleges and "in an economic way."
Dr. Duck sees the videotaped
courses as being more personal)
than "live" classroom lectures.'
"Teaching is at its best on
tape, because the instructor can
work on a
relationship with each individual student
by making eye contact with the
camera lens' commented Dr.
one-to-o-

Buck.

t

In Defense
Dr. Owen, in defense of the
videotape courses, pointed out
that past and present studies of
comparing "live" instructors
with instructional TV showed
no significant difference.
He explained that the courses
being videotaped were those that
he had "checked into" and reviewed as courses that could be
effective on videotape and ones
that needed to be videotaped.
He added that the selection
of courses to be taught by instructional TV depended considerably on the type of class. For
instance, a math class would be
more effective on videotape than
would a speech class.

In memory of the late William the scholarship fund, according to1
Seay, the University is estab- James R. Russell, director of publishing a memorial scholarship lic information for the College of
fund. '
Agriculture.
Interest earned from the fund
Contributions to the fund are
will be used to provide scholarnow being accepted. Anyone'
ships for students in the College
wishing to contribute may do so
of Agriculture. Scholarship and by sending a check to the Dean
need will be considered in granting the funds.
Dr. Seay had been dean and
director of the college of Agriculture since 1962. Before being'
appointed dean, he had been proThe Sigma Phi Epsilon
fessor of soils, administrative asSeries will have
sistant to the dean, vice director its initial program for the 1969-7- 0
of the Agricultural Experiment
school year at 6:30 p.m. MonStation and acting dean.
day at 440 Hilltop Drive.
There is now over $8,000 in
Featured in the first program
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cinema...brightv wit. ..satiric barbsr :
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OFF WITH
GREET THE TEAM WITH ENTHUSIASM!

"V zahy erotobiographyl Tho
wackiest, sexiest film yotl"
Magtzint

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Phone

"ITMKES'BLOVJ'UP'LOQK

Hometown

Grade Pt

111

What would you do to bolster

HISS mRKEUT
103 AtKlUS

U of K's

,

Correction

Class.

Residence

imm

coordinator of the Free University, and Jack Hall, dean of
students. Subject of the discussion will be "The Free University-What? Why?"
Who?
An informal question and an- twiM ftllrair- lA ...ill
n.A.
ing the speakers' opening remarks. All students are invited
to attend and enter into discus-

series.

THE TEAM ALL THE WAY!
Nam

'UTTUE

will be Spud Thomas, student

This is the second year that
the Sig Ep's have sponsored the

JOIN THIS GROUP OF GIRLS WHO ARE WITH

,

ttsmn scents so extfzlt,
There
so rezllstlc, so r.aturzl tint

like siimuv

Agri-- 1

culture Science Center, University of Kentucky, Lexington.
Make all checks payable to the
University of Kentucky. A notation on the face of the check
will ensure that it is placed in
the scholarship fund.

sion.

SEND

PLAYBOY

rof Agriculture, Room

--

SUPPORT THE WILDCATS!
Be A Kentucky Belle!
THE TEAM
SPIRIT!

Judith Ctist. N.Y. tf4Stin9

,

entire weight of instruction. It
will share equal time with "live"
and class discussions.
The UK TV center works with
Kentucky Educational TV in
programs to be broadcast statewide and on closed circuit TV.
Presently, it is working with
KETV in a UK Medical Center
series which will be broadcast
statewide.
The UK TV center expects
to further its program by getting more courses in the pro-gram, by improving operational
and production techniques and
by making the courses available
to all the community colleges.

Forum On Free V. To Be Held
Speaker-Discu-

:

program.
In classes where it is used,
TV is not expected to carry the

Memorial Scholarship Established

ssion

i

The size of a class is an important factor to consider in se
lection ot videotaped courses.
And instructional TV cart provide
superior teachers to many classes
with equal instruction.
Expensive Instruction
Since instruction is expensive,
the program must reach a certain
number of students before it
would be feasible to set up the

r

The Kernel, in two
picture cutlines Thursday, mixed
identifications of the four men
who will study lunar samples.
The caption of the picture at the
top of the front page read "Dr.
Richard C. Birkebak, right, and
Dr. Clifford J. Cremers
when actually Dr. Birkebak was
on the left in the picture. In
the bottom picture, Dr. John
Morgan was actually pictured
at the left and Dr. William D.
Ehmann at the right, instead of
the erroneous opposite identification. The Kernel regrets the
front-page- 1

spirit even more?

NfOUO-tJMMIN-

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RETURN THIS APPLICATION BY 5:00 P.M. MONDAY, OCT. 6
TO ROOM 203 STUDENT CENTER

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- 3:40 - 5:40
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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5th at 3:00 p.m.

7:40
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CAMPBELL HOUSE INN

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Exclusive! 1st Runl
Starts Wednesday

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Feature Timet 1:40

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IUCIiD

1U-11-74

150 custom-frame- d
original works of graphic art by the world's
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View the exhibition of works to bo sold at the autcion on Sunday,
October 5th from noon to 3:00 p.m.
Works will range in price from $25 to $500

I

* TRF And Relevancy
Student Government President
Tim Futrell's recent stand in regard to the proposed speaker policy indicates a genuine concern for,
a neglected matter. Futrell has
pledged to use every tool at his
disposal to eliminate a part of the
proposal that is repugnant to an
academically minded community,
The speaker policy is a document passed by the University Senate in an effort to provide guidelines for the regulation of speakers
from off campus who are invited
!to address the University community. In an attempt to limit speakers, while at the same time providing a pretense of free speech, the
University Senate included in the
document the condition that the
speaker must 'be relevant to the
educational mission of the Univeri

sity."
This education relevancy clause

poses a number of interestingques-- .
tions. In the first place, who would
be responsible for determining the
relevancy of each proposed speaker?
Would this be the administration,
or the faculty? Would students
have anything to say about the
matter? What would be the conditions which dictate the relevancy? Would it be ideological attitudes or political affiliation? What
recourse would students have
should they think they had been,
treated unfairly?
Another question is that raised
by Futrell. Is there anythingwhich
is not educationally relevant to

someone at the University? With
our diverse and widespread community there seems to be few legitimate areas in which someone
could not claim educational relevancy.
The laws of our nation prevent
our hearing anyone who advocates
the violent overthrow. of" the government. The student code prevents
any student organization from inviting a speaker who advocates or

represents any "immoralor illegal"
cause. Why then should the University have to worry about impos
ing still another regulation? What
possible type of speaker would they
have reason to fear?

The "educational mission of the
University" has emerged into a
hotly debated issue. There seems
to be no justifiable reason to include in the speaker policy a statement which could so easily lead to
continued and prolonged controversy. This is especially pertinent
when one realizes the limitation
is completely worthless.
Serious questions are at stake
in this matter. It is hoped they
won't be passed over lightly. If
Futrell carries out his pledge, if
Student Government would throw
its weight behind its president and
if the Board of Trustees can be
made to realize the case as it

Sorry, kids. This man's vote in the last election
makes him educationally irrelevant."

stands, the enlightened resolution
,

of this matter could do much to'
restore our faith in the good inten-- ,
tions of our administrators.

The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

University of Kentucky

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3.

1894

James W. Miller, Editor-in-ChiBob Brown, Editorial Page Editor
Ceorge H. Jepson, Managing Editor
Robert Duncan, Advertising Manager
Dottie Bean, Associate Editor
Dan Gossett, Arts Editor
Chip Hutcheson, Sports Editor
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Carolyn Dunnavan, Features Editor
Frank Coots,
Mike Herndon,
Bill Matthews,
Jeannie Leedem,
Jean Renaker
Assistant Managing Editors

The friendliness that marked protest. But Mr. Nixon would be
to misinterpret such
President Nixon's meeting with representatives of the moderate As- courtesy as support for policies that!
sociation of Student Governments have alienated so large a mass of
last weekend must not delude him the nation's young people.
What the conference did prove
into believing that these student
once again was that the nation's
leaders are satisfied with the Administration's priorities. In their students are not a monolithic bloc.
The majority is neither revolutiondiscussions, the students left
doubt about their despair over ary nor contemptuous of American
An Unpunch
the slow progress toward ending institutions,.. on and off campus.
To the Editor of the Kernel:
the Vietnam war and bringing full Only a lunatic fringe has embraced
Since the editor has been given a
nihilist chaos or hedonnistic escapequality to Blacks and other mi"punch in the mouth," I decided it was
-

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Hit-t- ie

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norities

ism.

Indeed, a group of these nonradical campus leaders had collected antiwar petitions which they
planned to hand personally to Mr.
Nixon. Respect for the Presidency
and their status as guests in the
White House persuaded them at
the last moment to cancel their

Student representatives of many
of the more radicalized campuses
did stay away from the convention
of the Association of Student Governments. They apparently prefer to
pursue their own course, eschewing
rational dialogue with their more
moderate contemporaries. But, for
jail such divisions, shared goals for
peace abroad and social justice at
home remain compelling through- -'
out a wide spectrum of students.'
A strengthening of the vital center is imperative to the pacification
as well as the reform of the cam-- :
puses. Nothing would more seriously undermine the effectiveness of
such a force than any indication
that the White House considers
the moderate student safely in the
bag. It is not enough for the President to tell students that he is
about the same problems
that trouble them. The students
want tangible evidence that those
problems are being tackled with a
sense of urgency.
j
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1969

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

No Complacency On Campus

17

Iernel

ed

....

ns l

Kernel Forum: the readers writel
7J

time he received a pat on the back. I'
agreed with his editorial on the "bleak
band." If they played at every opportunity, why is it I couldn't hear them but
had no trouble hearing IU's band? The
statements made by band members and in
a letter to the editor were absurd.
First of all, the idea that the "football
team would not be able to hear instructions, nor would the people in the stands
be able to hear" is not only absurd
but a bit funny. What's the need of having instructions if the coach has to yell
from the sidelines so that everyone can
hear him? I don't think the other team
would forget the instructions!
Also, the statement made by White,
"The only people yelling were the band
and IU." can come very close to being
lie. Did he rove over the
an
entire stadium to see who was yelling
and who wasn't? I would find that difficult to believe. I was setting in section
E and I heard quite a bit of cheers
coming from all around me. But if White
insists the only noise was from the band
and IU, there must have been hundreds
of Indiana people pulling for UK.
BR END A ABELL
out-and-o- ut

Home

Ec

Soph.

VD Explained
Following the recent article in the

Kernel regarding veneral disease, a few
students have inquired about Certain,

points in which others may be inter

ested. Literally "veneral disease" means
disease transmitted by sexual intercourse,
but the terminology is not completely
accurate. Like most rules of thumb, there
are exceptions and there is good evidence that certain veneral dise