xt70gb1xgg6x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70gb1xgg6x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650922  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 22, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 22, 1965 1965 2015 true xt70gb1xgg6x section xt70gb1xgg6x htsidc Todays Kernel
Pharmacy

end Commerce

plan

Cen-

tennial progromt: Page Two.
Chi

Alpha

Omega

pledges:

Fogt

Tkret.
Editor discusses Freshman

Colloquium:

Pogt Four.

--

India's Prim Minister issues cease'
tire order: Pogt Thret.
Fraternities pledge 256: Pogt Stven.
Sports writer discusses freshman
Pogt Six.
Architecture students take over Fence
Hall: Pogt Eight.
Vol.LVII.

TTT

Tin

TTD TXHTCT

toot-bal- l:

No.

University of Kentucky

13

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1965

Eight Pages

Frosh Colloquium:
A New Orientation
For Second Century
By JUDY CRISHAM
Associate News Editor
In starting the second century of the University with a new
idea, the Freshman Colloquium Committee has established the
Freshman.Colloquium with the hope that one of the University's
most important, yet undeveloped, resources the freshmen may
be tapped.
At the initial meeting of the ing that the idea for the ColColloquium Tuesday night,
loquium originated when the
George Dexter, Betsy student Centennial Committee
Clark, and Willis Bright outlined felt that the freshmen, as one of
the hopes and purposes of the the University's
biggest reColloquium.
sources, were going "unde"The purpose of the Collo- veloped."
"We felt the freshmen were
quium, sponsored by the Student
Centennial Committee, is to pro- not being given the chance to
vide a climate for a unique learnoffer the services they have to
ing experience which can increase offer," she said.
the individual freshman's sensiti"We want to design this provity to the academic and intergram to fit your needs," she
personal possibilities of the Unitold the freshmen, "not your
versity," Bright said. "The needs as we see them."
second purpose is to create a
She pointed out that the learnclimate for the improvement of ing climate will differ from that
interpersonal relationships and of the classroom. Colloquium
Insight into their understanding.
programs will be planned by the
"We will permit the members freshmen from session to session.
to use the freedom they receive
"It is your opportunity also
as freshmen and, finally, we will your responsibility
to build this
provide a climate of concern, program into a resource that
support, and acceptance for the others might have," she conindividual."
cluded.
Chairman Dexter explained
Dean of Men Kenneth Harper,
that plans for the Colloquium faculty
of the Colhave been in process for "nearly loquium, said that this was the
a year."
first time that a student com"We hope that It will become mittee had taken a single idea
a yearly affair," Dexter said. and seen it through to the success
Initial invitations to the Col- already accomplished by the
loquium were sent to a cross Colloquium Committee.
section of entering freshmen this
"This is also the first time
summer. Qf the 250 invited, 166 in the history of the University
replied and only nine indicated that such a program has been
no interest.
executed," he said. "And it's
"The enthusiasm has been so good that it will probably
remarkable," Dexter said. "We become a tradition."
n
chose a
of the freshHe cha Hanged freshmen to
man class in hopes that the prob"run with the ball" given them
lems that are aired here will by the Colloquium Committee.
also be representative of the pro"What you get out of this
blems of the class."
program will be what you put
Miss Clark, a senior from into it in terms of committment
Paducah, explained to the gather
Continued On Pare 8
cross-sectio-

lCroup leaders Sharon Porter, left, and Walt
Maguire, back to camera, conduct a discussion
group at the first Freshman Colloquium held

Co-Spons- or

The Campus Committee on
Human Rights voted down a
resolution Tuesday night to
Rev. James Bevel,

well-know-

n

civil

rights advocator,
with the Student's for Democratic
Society., He will be invited to
speak here in late October.
Rev. Bevel is an ordained
Baptist minister with Martin
Luther King's Southern Christian
Leadership Congress.
One of the questions raised
about cosponsoring him was
whether the CCHR should be
linked with the SDS.
"If Bevel can come and give
a topic of interest to both organizations, we should not be worried
about being called radicals,"
Chairman Henry Tribble said in
retaliation. "The real question
is whether or not we want to
sponsor that topic."
Tribble was refering to the
topic, "Selma and Saigon the

Grand Jury Hears Dr. Cawein

five-minu- te

Tuesday night. The Colloquium is a part of the
Student Centennial Committee program.

Rights Committee Refuses
SDS Speaker
To

Associate Also Testifies

By JOHN ZEH
Kernel Staff Writer
Dr. Madison Cawein, a University associate
professor, and Dr. Emma J. Lappat, his associate
at the Medical Center, today were called before
the grand Jury investigating the murder of Dr.
Cawein' s wife, Mary Marrs Cawein.
Dr. Cawein, scheduled to appear at 10 a.m.,
arrived 23 minutes early. He was alone.
The
hematologist was not called
into the closed Jury room until 10:22 a.m.
Dr. Lappat, also unaccompanied, arrived at
9:52 a.m.
She completely ignored a reporter's questions
and continued reading a copy of Waverly, which
she had brought with her.
Dr. Cawein stood around the corner from Dr.
Lappat, also reading. The two, who do research
together, did not speak or look at each other
while they were waiting.
Dr. Cawein was in the iurv room for an hour
discussion
and 16 minutes. After a
among themselves, the Jurors called Dr. Lappat.
doctor has been questioned
The
by police during their investigation.
Empaneled Wednesday, the Jury is probing
the case under a three-da- y
extension, which expires
today.
Assistant Commonwealth
Attorney George

-

Barker said the Jury can ask for another extension.
Asked if he has been embarrassed by the
circumstances surrounding his wife's death and
the investigation, Dr. Cawein said, "That'
putting it mildly." He said he was not surprised
at being subpoenaed by the grand Jury.
Mrs. Cawein was found dead July 5 at her
home on Chinoe Road in the east end. Police
believe she was fed a carbolic acid cocktail.
Mr. Barker told the Kernel that the grand Jury
can return an Indictment in the case, even though
police have filed no formal charges.
The woman who babysat with
Betsy
Cawein and two children of Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Strother while their parents part led July 4 at the
Idle Hour Country Club, was also questioned.
The sitter was sent home in a cab by Mr.
Strother, who had driven Mrs. Cawein home
from his house.
The Caweins had gone to the Strother residence, about three blocks away, after the dinner
party. Mrs. Cawein, tired, said she wanted to go
home, and Mr. Strother drove her because the
two couples had been in the Strother car, police
have said.
Dr. Cawein then spent the night at the
Strother'i. His wife was found dead by Mrs.
Strother the next morning.

Minor and the Image," which was the progress report on disBevel has been asked to speak crimination in women's housing
on by the SDS.
units. Dean of Women Doris
When asked what the CCHR Seward said that she is checking
expected Bevel to accomplish by on the reasons why girls are
coming here, Tribble explained placed as they are. However, she
that "a topic with application did explain some of the CCHR's
to UK or to at least this area inquiries concerning the question
of Lexington could be bene- of Negro girls being placed by
ficial." He went on to speculate themselves. Graduate students
that the CCHR may later think usually are placed in single
of some project it could do in rooms, and there were girls not
Lexington concerning civil rights showing up who were placed
and politics, if Bevel spoke along in two-girooms with Negroes
rl

those areas.
One member of the group expressed his opinion that by
the Rev. Bevel, the
CCHR was letting the SDS utilize
its money and name for a topic
that was not beneficial to the
interests of the campus committee.
After much debate, Tribble
brought the meeting to a vote
by saying, "I want to clarify
one point if the SDS won't accept any other topic, and this
group won't accept that topic,
then there's no question."
He then called for a motion
to either accept the SDS topic
or to find another program to
sponsor. There was a five to one
majority ratio against the
Also on last night's agenda

in them.
Also, Robert Johnson, vice
president of student affairs, met
with the CCHR to discuss recruitment on UK campus, and a
future meeting with Athletic Director Bernie Shively was planned
to discuss ways to facilitate recruiting Negro athletes to this
campus.
At the close of the meeting,
two standing committees were
organized with projects outlined
for them. The first is a Recruitment Committee, whose Job it
is to integrate high school recruiting groups, to secure funds,
and to obtain aid from the University in this area.
The second committee is the
Publicity and Education Committee, which will provide films
and lectures in the future.

Financier Warns
Of 'Stronghold9

The Bluegrass region will be
in a "stranglehold" if the First
Security National Bank 6r Trust
Co. is exempted from
merger legislation,
Lexington financier Carvice D.
Kincaid told University law students Tuesday.
Speaking at the College of,
Law s weekly speaker's program
in the Student Center Theater,
Mr. Kincaid pointed out how the
bank controls communications
media, commercial property, and
50 per cent of savings in the
Lexington area.
"It's a rather insidious thing

when the bank has the only newspapers, one of its directors controls a television station, and
when, at one time, two directors had two radio stations.
It's been said that 75 per cent
of the prime Main Street property downtown is in the trust
department of First National.
"It's inconceivable that this
should be," he said.
Mr. Kincaid, a 1937 graduate
of the UK law college, is currently
chairman of Central Bank and
Trust in Lexington. He testified
before the House Subcommittee
Continued on Pare 2

* LEXINGTON
YELLOV CAB

iulrtinU Profram

ol

tsi.ivc

ie?t.
p

Tn
i.L

f

J

j-

Radio Equipped

tU jU

DIAL

bjyw''

ai'ii

i'i

Jif.'t.
J'

T.

frtidi, radut

2522220

by

h

jr-M-

'
sudl hW Ji tbe
to U
Jnv)f--

wninierve
to a luiitLe-X- i

.1

-

19

Ldid

Gv.

w;W

Inc.

''

'be

ce?e?vS

Tiiurd).

r

'" " r

Oa'1

uf

Stuoir

Cetutef

fcrifjd

UHwn

FLOVERS

at avyt.

Gifk

tntr iek, ainwers

I'JcwmL. atniftl

If

jArd t Cobp tf

liwie

Iitt,JrC V,irfiei. Jbugei

que-

-

Milium.

piwawrs John

Trn.

.uc IuCtiarrti

himrtM

Jiir Strvrm. evuuc

ytstr ia

participated.

student. ar

ftorat tor Joar

it

Kincaid Savs BIuerass
May Be Threatened
By Bank's Monopoly
oneooe
ported.

Cvinuiirf irvic f'bf.r i

'i'rd ixii oppotitot

,

ii-jr-

law
Mr. llurjiji: Lis La 'L.':t , stv-- i in 1 bisli, several
Y-u--j
5r.- rf
y and Vi'jrrti
rs-d- v

itt.t tsi
gausl

Carioe tSzfjj is
xJ wbo

tuue'Op'.fc

ne

r

In

kxi'd seiior class
TLe
of tLt University Colie&e of FLar-mac- y
w.tL about 100
vi'Jj n
tlentuciry pLariiiacis" s for to-ia-y
vk ori sbop begnf;ir.g V Vdnev
at the Kioriux Hotel.
71
ori.sLop is icLtfdwivi

fcuy

iue
KvJrsn

irrJ tord

tLe vv

cid

Le

"'if fe

ia po

i

tn Vcersiy Centennial

Liwstiitj tL

it

r--

i

cvrxx

j
k"?yjz, !1t.
f'jr tLt xtiiurt:
i$
esacupt

y.--

inte-gri- ty

ns, if tLry quit

-

i
Mr. Ki.rr.aid

Anrri.an FLarncutical

Asso-

tLe nrjGt,"

u

ciation.

71 history of the t'niverj;ty's
College of VUnsA.vy will be prev arid to study ixiiiiitritJe,
iid tax law j.
entei during the diuex V'edn
day, as wnUea by Din

coi-jxxit- e,

Le

rXXiC CASH

f LtlSTfJt

ay

111
2ssi2t

AiX

AJMAXS
114 m.

ra.

417 Ecst Mcxwell

y

Lxiiigta baii

arsd

ve

Thr firrf rf.iv hrnnnht thp fprrnr!
The second day brought the woman...

Natici!

violate the

Seciity
SLenan Antitrust Act, according

ajad

Ti-us-

to an April,
dedsioa- -

l'4, Supreme

Court

lo rr.ei are 0""e rr.an on

4

Tkaa Text)

DENNIS
BOOK STORE
257 H. Ume

mmBnw

ALSO

USED BOOK STORE
(CH

.

"hue

Joe Moses is his name . .7

stealing Africa

S

Meor 3rd

is his game!

A

I

rH

THURSDAY SPECIAL
Afl The Pancakes You Can
Eat For 50c

CO.,

255-65E- O

sajd.

f--

TYPEVRITER5
FOR RENT

Die!

r.s

others.
TLe saerjer of First
t

4.diid tLe vjene

stuieits prevssit to tiLe
cwst la evrosic-- j jud ttxes

273

FLORIST

Lrr-a.uv-

r--

Va., the cLairmaa of tL

MICHLER

ce

Ye

i!j.i'.ii-i.- s
tLe
Lad
bj
yu:pvi.iuui- TLe priipal tpeai.er will be iiiterit) , 1 dvo't tupxLe tljted, Lt in.erf.tri
ld
J. curtis ottir,bain, Vtilixsuy-burg- ,
With
liUL

CALL

tLe
Le taJci,
e
a tlbe vp-ti- n
Lxj b
erjeaocry
rver vim tLad tirae.
A
ir."
jKidrij in
ierjeT of
would
n'r
Lr? a rxxr.-pocr"-exetrpts
exist, but f

t-- i

tpis

Occasion

He
fcsmite t pratdxate
rv3 law virxjl carir tbe

Cocs

Hold? SvrjjpoeUiin

For Any

l

ud civic
bui
'
kad-rrs- .
Lave bem vt f'r 2 p rn.i
Late io tLe day, tbe wives
of Coniraerte CoJIeje faculty
merabers will serve as h'ttesses
at ax cpea bouse.
ilcutir-O-

Reservations for te!uncbeon,
wideb are X2 per person, will
be acceptable until Tuesday,
Sept. IS. TLey may be made by
addressing Dean Haywood or
Oyde L. Irwin, asiistaat corn-nrdean, who is directing
arrangements for the event.

I dtdt't. tad tisEt's

it." it

Las

els

GorDers'.vtje cefvXiM:,
a prvrHj of Mv-ri-

RnfiRrt

Mitnhiim Ro.or

T

Buttermilk, Corn Meal, and Buckwheat
11:00 a.m. -- 9:00 p.m.

Rrirmll

H

t

t

T

IIIIIIBBMBIIIIIIIIIEIIIIIiaiBIIIIIBIIEIIIKI

PERKINS PANCAKE HOUSE

PASQU ALE'S
All Over Tovm
DINE WITH US

LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING
No.

241 Southland Dr.,

1

277-812-

1

FOR DELIVERY SERVICE

265 EUCLID AVENUE

No. 2

TJiu Kentucky Kernel
li.Lii,

.i.f
tf

l,ui

lit

Hlli

'

,

(

.rii

--

a

t'UllllU
!

MUIt-- .(

l

I'.Ui

bUtn 'iii$,
bf
'll U'4, 114

252-76- 29

U

No. 4

1533 Eastland Parkway,

lir-

-

Ji

00
.10
2321

Women

4.k, hilU,
AJti li.ii., liu.ii.t.., t in

5

254-372-

2

299-739-

5

.UU--

,

15

Discount

Cash & Carry

THE DEST IN ITALIAN FOODS, S

PIZZA, RAVIOLI, SPAGHETTI,
SANDWICHES

Open Daily Til! 12 Midnight
1
a.m. on Friday & Saturday

3JW

i

ul--

to

2J

fl

it

!

(UflttltUMU.iy

l"V.
Ki(N.l. Tl.rHONt.S
i

Phone

!

11
JlIITION l(AT
by
iK'lll

!!

S WE SERVE

man mini

t

Next To Coliseum

MiwtUl
l'ulj

i.f tji.j.ix.l

Olxl.l,
mI

254-668-

No. 3

kiwIUn

,

204 South Lime,
1005 Winchester Rd.,

WflBBniBXIlllllBIIIIiaillHIIIIlnnnBussBBBlJ

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday. Sept. 22,

Shastri Announces
Cease-Fir- e
Order

The Associated Press
NEW DELHI, India-Ind- ian
Prime Minister Lai Bahadur
Shastri, weeping as he spoke,
announced today he has ordered
a cease-fir- e
in the war against
Pakistan. He said the two Asian
neighbors must live in neighborly
peace.
Shastri told Parliament, how-eve- r,
that Communist China presents an "even greater challenge"
to India's independence and that
the nation must firmly resolve to
meet the red threat.
"We do not know what the
Chinese will do next," Shastri
said.
Earlier, India described as
false an announcement from Peking that it has torn down military outposts on the Sikkim-Tibfrontier as demanded by Red
China.
"We have not crossed into
Tibet and we have not torn down
anything," an official spokesman
said.
Pakistan's Foreign Minister
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto informed the
U.N. Security Council in New
York of his government's acceptance of its cease-fir- e
order at a
predawn meeting.
India, which had told the
United Nations it would stop
firing if Pakistan did, asked for
an extension of the deadline to
permit orders to go out to field
commanders. The council then
moved the cease-fir- e
forward to
6 p.m. EDT today.
Members of Parliament were
in a victory mood obviously convinced their armed forces had
vanquished Pakistan on the battlefield and forced Pakistan President Mohammed Ayub Khan to
agree to a cease-firShastri was in no such mood.
He spoke in somber tones and
when he paused to pay tribute to
the Indian soldiers who died in
the war, the prime minister broke
down.
Silence spread over the house
until the prime minister could
et

e.

continue.

orders, effective at
3:30 a.m. local time Thursday
5 p.m. ESttoday have gone out
to all field commanders, he said,
ordering a cessation of hostilities
in the war that he said began
Aug. 5 with Pakistani infiltration
of guerrillas into Indian Kashmir.
Cease-fir- e

"Peace

r- -'

good," he said.

is

The prime minister said, however, that Bhutto had made
threats against India when he
announced that Pakistan was also
accepting the cease-firThus, Shastri said, India will
have to remain "watchful and
e.

-

vigilant."

Shastri made clear India had
agretd to a "simple cease-fire- "
that includes no political agreements on any of the underlying
n
issues of
enmity.
Detailed discussions will have
to take place on these issues, he
said.
In this regard, India has ac
ceptedthe good offices offered by
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin of the
Soviet Union, Shastri said.
Kosygin's offer was accepted,
he said, because India and Pakistan will obviously have to learn
to live together in peace.
The Soviet premier had suggested that Ayub and Shastri
meet in Soviet territory to discuss
the
quarrel between
their two nations.
Kosygin offered his good offices to get the talks going.
Shastri sounded pessimistic
when he turned to the threats
Communist China has been making over alleged Indian border
violations.
"We view with great concern
the Chinese activities on the border and their armed intrusions
into our territory," he said.
Shastri did not accept the
opening given him by Peking
earlier today to call it quits in
the newly heated up China-Indi- a
border confrontation.
Radio Peking had said India
met a primary Chinese requirement by tearing down controversial military posts on or near the '
border of Sikkim, an Indian prod
Tibet.
tectorate, and

--

v

."V

f,

India-Pakista-

i

,i

?

Alpha Chi Omega Ribbons Pledges

Alpha Chi Omega ribboned 26 pledges Friday
night as it began its formal colonization on the
campus. Shown here is Miss Joan
graduate counselor for the sorority, as
she pins the olive green and scarlet ribbons
of pledgeship on Cinda Wall. Standing behind
her are, left, Mrs. Thomas Graham, National

Collegiate Membership Development Director from

Atlanta, Ga, and Jeanne Hathaway, junior
fer who is also helping with the sorority's

trans-Universi- ty

Red-rule-

WATCHES
DIAMONDS

WATCH BANDS
JEWELRY

DODSON
WATCH SHOP

kJ h "
'

'

if

Fine Watch Repairing
110 N. UPPER ST.
Phone
6

'i

H'

0

'

f

A

l

1

r
1

"

I

''

254-126-

"

r

I

'

1

1

--

Ji

121

Open 10-- 5
Closed
Wednesday
Phone

Walton
Avenue
Lexington, Ky.
Phone

DUSBz

232-758- 8

252-758- 8

THE YARN SHOP

SKI SWEATERS

PATTERNS

KITS

"HIS and HERS"
Start now. Have one (or a pair) knit
by the time cold weather arrives.

nave

331

Sc. UmtsroME.

mm
Phoe

'

13
tJH

otAQS

MF

I

,

r

Tie young bucks of America

3.51-c66- 0

jrS
t

in the
go
new crew Adler calls Adlastic
clean-white-so-

pi

j

ck

Meet the revolutionary crew of C5 lambswool plus 35 nylon with spandex for
1007t stretch. Up and down. This way and that. That's Adlastic with the give to
take on all sizes 10 to 15 and last far longer and fit far better. Size up Adlastic in
? The now notion with it even without
colors.
28
stores where
the wherewithall. Whatever, get Adlastic at
is all yours for just one young buck and a quarter.
clean-white-so-

Clean-white-so-

ck

clean-white-so-

THE-SXUJ3EM75JEBIEM3

iMf

(Jll

lUMftlO, CINCiMNlll 14,

OHIO.

n,

onization here.
The newly pledged girls will make their first
appearance as a pledge class at the Sigma Chi
Derby Saturday afternoon.

ck

ader

* "Don-- i

Sensible Orientatioii
the

discussion
as participants in
on the same level as other
groups
group members. This, the planners
thought, would give the faculty
members the opportunity to better
understand the special problems
and opportunities facing today's
freshmen. At the same time their
presence would stimulate development of clear channels of communication between faculty members and students.

The new and revised Freshman
Colloquium, which began Tuesday
night under the auspices of the
Student Centennial Committee,
shows promise for providing a
meaningful orientation program for
new students.
Finally someone has hit upon
the idea of letting the freshmen
ask the questions. Freshmen for
decades have heard the often unsolicited sage advice of upperclass-men- ,
faculty members, and administrators.
This program, however, centers
around the freshman student. The
leaders are seeking to provide an
atmosphere in which freshmen can
determine the unique problems and
challenges pertinent to them. Using
the techniques of group dynamics,
colloquium leaders hope to enand evaluacourage
tion among freshmen.
Refreshingly, the colloquium
discards the tedious lecture approach wherein the bewildered
freshman is told what will amaze
him, what will faze him, what
will haze him, ad infinitum.
Upperclass group discussion
leaders, trained in group dynamics,
will attempt to lead the participants
to
Faculty members are on hand

cross-sectio-

The format is relatively unstructured so participants will have a
great deal of influence in planning
the'programs.
We commend the instigators of
this program on their unique idea.
What better way to let our freshmen
know they are welcome than to invite them to be active participants
and leaders in one of the year's
most significant projects.

self-analysi- s.

Chinese Craft

Letters To The Editor;

YAF, Hitler Compared
Protested By Reader
To the Editor:
It is indeed unfortunate

that don't agree with their views?

that

the Faculty Senate saw fit not to
support a resolution that would
have withdrawn recognition from
the extremist Students for a Democratic Society (SDS).
Spokesmen for the SDS have
advocated violation of laws in order
to advance the goals of the organization, both nationally and on the
UK campus. Therefore, allowing a
group such as SDS to use public
supported facilities such as those
of the University cannot be justified under freedom of speech. We
must allow all groups the opportunity to present their views, but
not at the expense of the rights of
others, including the citizens that
support the University.
Regardless of the outcome of the
recognition controversy, I am sure
that the vast majority of UK students will reject the programs of
the extreme left, such as the SDS,
and will continue to oppose communist aggression and domestic
socialism.
ERIC KARNES
Sophomore

Is it not Fascism when a particular group claims a monopoly on
the truth? Didn't Hitler claim that
he was right and everyone who
disagreed with him as being an
agent of the Communist-Jewis- h
conspiracy and a subversive to the
fatherland? Didn't Hitler and his
Fascists destroy the freedom to
associate and speak in dissent to
his beliefs? Didn't Hitler and his
Fascists believe that all problems
could be solved by war and that
anyone who thought otherwise was
therefore a subversive Red?
Young Americans for Freedom
indeed. The question is whose freedom are these young Americans
for. Obviously their own, and anyone who differs from their dogma
deserves no freedom. This is exactly the way Hitler looked at it
also.
Young Americans for Fascism
would be a very appropriate title,
or the new Hitler Youth Corps
might even be better.
R. D. SMITH
AUS Sophomore

Pre-La-

w

The Kentucky Kernel
Uniwrsitv of Kentucky

Sau
C,

y

WEDNESDAY,

Wamlh Chant,

Mn ik,

Eniutiic Editor

Sim,

S'cut Editor

Kt.NNt.iii

Cisji, Women'

llfcNHY

Vuge Editor

Tom Kinnh, Adiertiung

Munucr

Chu

Editor-in-Chie-

SEPT.

22, 1965

f

KtNNtiit IIoskins, Stuiuium Editor

n, Awxiute Editor

ItostNiiiAi.,

Jiur (Jhjsham, Auxiute Newt Editor

Si tort t

Editor

Mahc.au

r Hah

tv,

Art

Editor

liuiinm Stuf
Mahvin

1

1

ungate,

Circututiun

g

Indian-Pakista-

m

The South's Outstanding College Daily

1894

The Chinese ultimatum to India
to dismantle outposts near the Sik-kiborder is about as cunning a
move as Peking could think up.
Like so many other Chinese Communist initiatives, it seems calculated to reap the maximum dividends with the minimum effort.
And no matter how the grim drama
unfolds, the Chinese threat has in
one stroke put India, Sikkim, the
United States (and the rest of the
free world), the Soviet Union and
the United Nations on the spot.
To win its victories, China does
not need at this stage to conquer.
It is enough to humiliate. What
China is doing is seeking to show
that it can dominate the whole
of South Asia from the crest of the
Himalayas. Until a decade ago,
there had been no reversal of the
position which had prevailed while
the British held India. The power
south of the long Himalaya chain
held the ridge between Central and
Southern Asia and thus contained
China. With its invasion of India
in 1962, China took a first and
successful step toward upsetting
a century-lonbalance and tilting
it in its favor. The current
fighting has proven a
golden opportunity for Peking to
try to shove the balance even
further in China's favor.
Only the United States and the
Soviet Union are big or strong
enough effectively to challenge and
contain China inthe long run. Each
knows that China poses a long-terthreat to both Soviet and America n
interests. Peking knows that each
sees support of India as a step
toward containing Chinese power.
When China humiliates India and
gets away with it, both the United
States and the Soviet Union are
indirectly humiliated, too.
Yet if Moscow makes any oien
move toward a joint resjxmse with
m

SDS Accreditation

To The Editor:
Does YAF stand for Young
Americans for Fascism? Don't
Fascists refuse to tolerate all groups

I.imh

-

.

Freshmen chosen for this year's
n
of the
program are a
entire class, not a select academic elite. This in itself increases
the scope of the program.
The colloquium was planned
in cooperation with experts on freshmen studies, including Counseling
Service researchers directly concerned with an attempt to lower
the freshman attrition rate.

self-discove-

ESTABLISHED

worry, h

Munuger

ni

Washington, the Soviets will in one
stroke be sacrificing their claim-alre- ady
under relentless assault
from Peking to be the true champion of revolution in the world
against "capitalist imperialism."
In many ways, indeed, Moscow's
dilemma at this moment must be
greater than Washington's.
The geographical choice for
Peking's threat is fiendishly astute.
It overlooks the Chumbi Valley,
inviting as an invasion route at
a point where India can be cut
in two perhaps in the space of
hours. And it is along the frontier
d
of Sikkim, an
buffer-stat- e
which like Bhutan, an
adjacent border state has long
hankered for independent sovereign
status. Thus the Chinese threat
could simultaneously have the more
local purpose of prising Sikkim
and Bhutan out of the hold of an
India which Peking hopes to prove
powerless to protect them.
Already in the current crisis,
India has not evoked as much
world sympathy as most Indians
had expected. This is probably
because India, in the past, has
neglected some of its own problems to lecture the rest of the
world -- und irritate it. But it must
never be overlooked that the present Indian leadership has never
ceased since independence to build
a society based on the principles
of freedom and individual rights
cherised in the Western world.
Thus while the West is right
to avoid taking sides in the quarrel
between India and Pakistan, it
cannot afford to give India anything less than full and firm backing in the face of the Chinese
challenge. If such backing is forthcoming from the start, worse calamities may be avoided later.
Indian-controlle-

The Christian Science Monitor

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, WVtlncMlay, Sept.

Fulbright's

U.S.

one-side-

U.S.-backe-

MAN ON CAMPUS

ss mm

TEACHES 'FAMILY

FLATlON5tflRS

of Fulbright's prestige be in attacking and undermining the
basis of the government's policy
in such a dangerous confrontation?
Until recently, a major controversy such as the one over
U.S. intervention in the Dominican Republic would have come
before Sen. Fulbright's committee for a long, reasoned investigation (far more thorough than
the quickie probe by the Fulbright committee this summer).
This, in times past, would have
resulted in a committee report
backed by a strong majority.
But today, Sen. Fulbright's
committee is split into almost 19 parts, representing every
shade of opinion.

foreign affairs, still has a special
responsibility to consider the results of what he says and its
impact outside the United States.
In the Dominican Republic,
the impact of Sen. Fulbright's
speech (described by Democratic
Sen. Thomas E. Dodd of Connecticut as "a sweeping condemnation" of U.S. policy) is predictable. With all Dominican
politicians pointing to the next
Presidential election there, the
Sen. Fulbright indictment is
certain to lift the chances of the
most
candidate in
the field.

19-m-

By

the committee has gradually increased in size to accommodate ambitious Senators (from
13 members in 1947 to 19 members today), its ability to act
in unison has declined drastically.
Furthermore,

PlIClbK

Of STUPpiT KTiVlTieS?

dramatizing

so harshly his

own disillusionment
with the
U.S. decision to intervene, the
Senator gives the most extreme
anti-U.political factions in the
Dominican Republic a ready-mad- e
Presidential campaign text.
The condemnation of Washington
that will soon be ringing from the
hustings in Santo Domingo will
be flavored with the Senator's
own ringing condemnation.

As

Sen. Fulbright
original thinker,
the antithesis of the organization
man or Senate type. Under his
chairmanship, the committee has
succumbed to factional bickering
so severe that Fulbright threatened at one point to refuse to
handle the foreign aid bill.

Nobody questions

Sen.

bright's unlimited right to

Fulcon-

demn U.S. policy. What critics
and the
in the Administration
Senate as well question is his
timing.

As a result, it is now every
man for himself on the committee.
But Chairman Fulbright, as the
embodiment of the Senate's
unique Constitutional powers in

TEACUP

--

PHILOSOPHY ?

tiro 1

CLUB FEATURES
REDUCING

to live by

Worship this week

0$s

.

SAUANA BATHS
MASSAGE
IMPROVED ATHLETIC PERFORMANCE
Rates
$10.00 Per Month; $1.25 Per Workout
Hours
Men 4 p.m. - 9 p.m.
Women 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
HEALTH IS A VALUABLE ASSET
GET IN SHAPE . . . STAY IN SHAPE
For More Information Call:
EXT. 198
SPECK LACY
254-849-

K1KI0N

IK

AMtRICM UFC

.

Guaranteed by a top
Company
No War Clause
Exclusive
Rates

Benefits

at Special

.

Full Aviation

.

Deposits Deferred Until You
Are Out of School

Coverage

6)

0,

Complete Automotive Service
Phone
"24-Ho- ur

WW

them

a Faith

.

Supervised By
Mr. America 1957
Ron 'Speck' Lacy
BODY BUILDING

Give

Finally, these critics challenge
the Senator's disregard of the
sudden chaos last April in Santo
Domingo and the impressive evidence of deep Communist penetration of the rebel command.
When Dodd made his reply

HOUSE HEALTH CLUB

CAMPBELL

on Thursday, the White House
was concerned enough to give
security clearance to a censored
report on the full extent of Communist influence in the April
revolt. The report alone is a
compelling argument for the in- -'
tervention.
But in the Dominican Republic Fulbright's attack will be
remembered long after the intelligence report is forgotten,
(c) 1965 Publishers
Newspaper Syndicate

anti-Yank-

is a uniquely

IS

252-712-

7

JIM WILLET
District Manager

Emergency Rood Service"

Collegt Master Representative

TAYLOR TIKE CO.
400

E.

VINE ST.

W SHOP

LEXINGTON, KY.

TIALIL

145 Burt Road
Lexington, Ky.
Bus.

277-868-

1

COT

Rules: Check the team you think will win. As a tic breaker estimate offensive average gained
by UK. This contest is open to everyone any number of times.
TULANE
MISSISSIPPI STATE
VANDERBILT
MISSISSIPPI
OHIO UNIVERSITY
NAME

ALABAMA
FLORIDA
GEORGIA

KENTUCKY
MARYLAND

AUBURN
NORTHWESTERN
XAVIER
NORTH CAROLINANOTRE DAME

TENNESSEE

LAST WEEK'S WINNER

INDIANA
Clyde M. Richardson, Jr.
MIAMI
and
OHIO STATE
John C. Broghamer
PURDUE
UK Yardage

-

ADDRESS

PHONE

This week's winner will receive: A sport coat or dress. Entries must be turned into the Uni
versity Shop by Friday, September 24th, 5:30.

mm Mtmtt n uu
ti

FLORIDA
OHIO STATE U.
PURDUE U.
MIAMI U.

-A

Policy Criticism Questioned

This was President Johnson's
W