xt70vt1gmb49 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70vt1gmb49/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661114  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 14, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 14, 1966 1966 2015 true xt70vt1gmb49 section xt70vt1gmb49 Inside Today's Kernel
Marini sees "unclear
tions" in Reagan's victory
fornia: Poge Two.
Dr.

Vol. 58, No. 53

urn1 i jjj
University
of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., MONDAY, NOV. 11,

Uj

1

Eight Pages

V

a

'

By

JOHN ZEH

-

'

J
Pam Robinson breaks into a broad smile Saturday as the announcer
informs 32,000 fans that she is Homecoming Queen. She was
sponsored by Donovan Hall and the Quadrangle. More Homecoming pictures are on page five.

Color Homecoming

Bright

..

form-

Homecom-

Warren McVeo is the Kernel's Player
of the Week: Poge Six.

Editorial comments on the role of the
University and the other state uni- erslties: p9e Four- -

A

map locates the first leg of
Drive: Page Seven.

Uni-

versity

IT

Kernel Associate Editor
LOUISVILLE
U.S. Sen.
Thruston B. Morton announced
today he will not run for governor
of Kentucky in 1967 because he
feels he can help the state more
by staying in Washington.
At a morning press conference
here, Morton said he is too tired
to wage the kind of campaign
he feels is necessary to defeat the

O

students are
Poge Three.

page of pictures from
ing: Poge Five.

A

en. Morton Says 10
To Governor's Race;
Nunn Still Holds Off
TfV

V...

Several graduate
ing an association:

implicain Cali-

.And Dark

By GUY MENDES

Kernel Staff Writer
Color homecoming weekend, 1966 style, bright all over except
for one dark spot right in the middle.
There was the
The alums were in high
Pam Robinson who was named
homecoming queen, color her spirits and their enthusiasm was
attractive. There were several quickly rewarded when UK took
thousand alumni giving it that the opening kickoff and marched
"old college try" once again, to a touchdown, but from that
color them enthusiastic.
point on, they had little to cheer
There was the winning dis- about. Even Houston's mascot,
play of two huge Cats making Shasta the Cougar, went to sleep
a Cougar eat its hat (Show me before the game was done.
a team that can beat Houston
During the halftime cereand . . . ), color it delightful. monies, the band got into the
And there were the two perforswing of things with an alumni
band, consisting of 17 former
mances of the Town Criers Saturday night that exceeded all members of the Wildcat Marching Band, who took the field
expectations, color them enterwhile belting out "On, On U
taining.
Then there was Kentucky's of K."
loss to a speedy bunch of
The queen finalists were paCougars from the University of raded into the stadium before
Houston Saturday afternoon, a homecoming crowd of 32,000.
color the afternoon bright and Then, with the tension of a
sunny, UK's showing poor, and Miss America pageant prevailing,
the team's faces red.
the queen and her attendents
Visitors began pouring into
were announced. Miss Robinson,
a bright-eyebrunette from DayLexington on Friday from all
parts of the state, and the counton, Ohio, was named queen.
try. By game-tim- e
Saturday the Her credentials include being
alumni some of whom had been
named Miss Kentuckian last
out of school many a year
Junior
year, and once runner-uonce again felt like part of the
Miss.
Continued on Page 7
University.
ever-smili-

56-1-8

d

p

Democrats. The junior senator
said he will seek reelection to
the Senate.
Some Republicans are leaving the door open for Morton
to change his mind. Just after
the senator's announcement,
Glasgow attorney Louie Nunn
said he will withhold disclosure
of his plans until other GOP
leaders can try to persuade Morton to make the race.
Sen. Morton's announcement
held the political spotlight today,
but the Democrats were not idle.
State Attorney General Robert
Matthews disclosed he will be a
candidate for lieutenant governor
in the May primary, and as yet
is not a part of any slate.
Matthews said he will "run on
his record," stressing the need
to improve the quality of education in Kentucky.
And former Attorney General
John Breckinridge was expected
to announce this afternoon that
he has not changed his mind
about running for governor.
Breckinridge, a Lexington lawyer, said last month he would
run regardless of any new developments. He is pinning his
hopes on dissatisfaction he says
the people have for Frankfort
bossism and factionalism.
Morton said he had given his
decision a lot of serious consideration and was most grateful
for telegrams from supporters urging him to run. He said, however, he is physically unable to
seek the nomination and then the
governorship, noting he had made
some 150 speeches on behalf of

Congressional candidates in the
recent campaign.
He had been seen as the man
to prevent a bitter struggle between Nunn and Jefferson County
Judge Marlowe Cooke for the
Republican nomination, up for
grabs in next May's primary.

Cook has scheduled a formal press
conference Wednesday night. He
has already said informally he
plans to run.
Asked if he would support a
Nunn-Coo- k
combination, Morton
said yes, but qualified his answer
by saying he would support any

candidates the party supported.
Morton plans to stay in Kentucky a few days to give other
GOP leaders who are members
of a "draft Morton" committee
their say, but the senator said
his decision is final.
Attorney General Matthews
told the Kernel he is "vitally
interested" in education, perhaps
to the extent of revising the state's
Minimum Foundation Program
to make it more simple while
protecting the interests of the
teaching profession. . . "we need
improvement leading to quality,"
he said.
Asked about possible running
mates or supporters, Matthews
said "I have many friends in
the Breathitt-Comb- s
faction, but
as far as I'm concerned, I can't
speak for them." He said his
record during his 10 years in the
attorney general's office, three of
them as attorney general, and
experience

as commissioner

of

finance give him the necessary
background for the governorship.
It was expected that Matthews might seek the nomination
for governor as both he and Ward
had been wooing the Breathitt
Administration for its blessing.
Breckinridge waited until now
to make his announcement, believing the governors contest
should be spearated from the
past congressional election in
He had, however,
Kentucky.
hinted at his plans to run while

jr52$
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it I

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....

.

id

SEN. MORTON

traveling throughout the state
sampling the peoples mood and
testing support.
First publication of his intentions came when he mentioned them while on the University campus last month to discuss Kentucky politics.
In another development Friday, Democratic State Central
Committee chairman Foster
of Lexington resigned his
party post to help Combs manage
Ward's campaign.
Ock-erma-

And former Gov. A. B. Chandler, defeated by Breathitt in the

primary, began shooting at
It is "absolutely impossible for Combs to transfer his
popularity to Ward," he said, calling Ward apparently a choice of
the "kingmakers."
1963

Ward.

University Drive
Bids Taken
Construction is scheduled to
begin early next year on phase
one of the University Drive which
eventually will connect the campus on the Northwest and the
South.
The University, through the
state, began advertising for bids
last week for construction of the
initial leg which will connect
Hilltop Avenue and Cooper

Drive.

The road, which will be one
of the main arterial routes circling the north and east sides
Continued on Page 7

LOUIE NUNN

First Indonesian Students Here Since '65 Ban
By HOWARD KERCHEVAL

Assistant Managing Editor
The University and two Indonesian
schools have renewed contracts bringing
the first group of Indonesian students to
the U.S. in almost two years.
The two Indonesian schools involved
in the UK exchange program are the
Institute of Technology in Bandung and
the Agriculture Institute in Bogor.
Nicholas Rice of the Department of
Developmental Change said the program
between UK and the two schools had
been going on for about ten years when
in 1964 then Foreign Minister Subandrio

"placed a ban on any students going
to study in the West."
The group now on campus is the
first here since the
Indonesian
Communist Party under the aegis of Dr.
Subandrio was crushed in the governmental shake up of 1965.
There were some Indonesians at UK
before the ban. These were joined by the
24 students who arrived last week. Six
more are expected.
All the students from Indonesia involved in the exchange are graduate students. Most of them left faculty positions
at their schools and will return to those
position after completion of their studies.
pro-Pekin- g

n

Upon arrival at UK the students underan extensive program in English
language and general orientation.
Dr. John Wier of the English Language Institute at the University of Michigan conducts this program. Dr. Wier
said they make the mistakes any student
would make in a strange country and,
"if we can waste it (mistakes) on us,
then we've saved them some trouble."
go

Rice, who was in Indonesia during the
said of the excoup and counter-coup- ,
change, "it is not happening just here,
but is a renewal of educational cooperation" between Indonesia and the West.

After completion of the
orientation program some of the students will
leave UK and go on to other schools in
the U.S. Rice said usually about half
remain here.
The newly arrived students have been
waiting since May 1965 to come to the
U.S. Preparation began a year before that.
k

Rice said.

During the ban many students who
wished to come to the U.S. and other
western nations were told they could go
to alternate countries such as Yugoslavia,
China, and Japan. Several of the group
now at UK refused such alternates.

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Dec.

11, 10(i(i.

Marini Sees 'Unclear Implications
For UC After Reagan's Victory

lack
For American Graduates
B ri lisji Con n Icr-Thf t'ollrgUte

Prm

I

A

Srrvlc

ITHACA, X. Y. A Hritish counter attack in the world wide
war for scientific talent is being waged on American campuses
this fall.
Teams of senior scientists from
through the recruiting missions.
tlie Imperial Chemical Industries
Bu$ he added it was sufficient
Limited, the Hritish counterpart
to prompt his firm to have senior
of Dul'ont, are combing Amerresearch scientists take valuable
ican and Canadian research centimes from research projects to
ters for promising young sciencome here and recruit.
tists.
There has been growing con"We're specifically aiming at
cern in Great Britain the last
British nationals who arc doing
few years over the loss of scienresearch in this
tists and engineers. The Royal
country," H. O. Puis, a memSociety published a report on the
ber of a two-ma- n
team said durproblem in 1962. And chauvinistic
ing a visit to Cornell University.
headlines in the British popular
Just as major league American
press dramatize the problem at
baseball teams watch promising
times, the two scientists said.
young players in the minor
American firms and employleagues, I.C.I, has watched the
ment agencies have been waging
development of these young Hritish scientists since their p
what the Hritish press characterwork in England.
izes at times as raids on its
Puis said three teams, all sentalent. This summer a Xew York
ior scientists with I.C.I., will
City employment agency with
canvass about 50 major research
several offices in England sent a
centers and universities in the
detailed brochure promising
United States and Canada.
American firms success in
Hritish scientists and enPuis, a physicist with I.C.I. ,
said the project could be called
gineers.
an attempt to abate one aspect
American firms based in Engd
brain drain land are also
of the
draining Hritish
of recent years.
talent. British scientists and enPuis admitted he must combat
are being hired to work
the lure of the American dollar gineers
in England and are being paid
with man's homing instinct. A American scale salaries.
British engineer who has taken
British recruiting in this counup permanent residence in this
country said: "They're coming try does not appear to be nearly
over here to make sure the boys so extensive as the American actidon't sink their roots in this vity there. Unilever, of which
Lever Brothers in this country
country."
is a subsidiary, is about the only
The I.C.I, recruiting program
in this country has taken place other British firm to recruit exfor several weeks during the fall tensively in this country. The
scientific section of the British
in the last six years.
Puis declined to say how Civil Service also recruits here,
Puis said.
many scientists have been hired

Honald Hcagan's election as
governor of California has "unclear implications" for the University of California, although
Reagan "may be able to get the
investigation" of UC which he
proposed during his campaign,
political science Prof. Frank
Marini told the Wesley Foundation this weekend.
Dr. Marini, who was on the
Berkeley campus during the high
point of the Free Speech Movement, also said an SDS member's
fight to speak on socialism at
UK was not a free speech crisis.
Although he foresaw no changing UC policy because of Reagan's election, Marini said the
former actor would be in a position to enforce policy. "What
would seem a rally to others,
he might interpret as a riot,"
and could move rapidly to intercede, Marini said. "But remember, Reagan has political ambitions," so even this opportunity
"over the long run" would probably make no real difference in
policy, he said.
The circumstances surrounding Brad Washburn's socialism
speech from the Student Center
patio Oct. 13 did not constitute
a crisis, Dr. Marini, a specialist
in political theory, said. He
added that he agreed with the
Kernel's position, however, that
a danger of crisis existed.
Speaking further of the UK
situation, Marini said he felt
the students he had met were
"decent, honorable people," so
that he was puzzled to realize
that there is a group on campus "who can respond to difg
ferent ideas" only with an
approach." (Although
none were thrown at Washburn,

post-doctor-

much-discusse-

-

Classified advertisements, 5 cents per
word ($1.00 minimum).
Deadline for acceptance of classified
copy is 3 p.m. the day preceding publication. To place classified ad come to
Room 111 or 113. Journalism Bldg.
Advertisers of rooms and apartments listed in The Kentucky Kernel
have agreed that they will not include,
as a qualifying consideration in deciding whether or not to rent to an
applicant, his race, color, religious
preference or national origin.

Printing Has Started

On Student Directory

REWARD

1961

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The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school 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,
UK I'ost
Office Box 4986. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun at the Cadet in 1894, became the Record in 1900, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
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Times has won two Pulitzer
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national and world affairs with
clarity and directness. Look
for it here in

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he said.
Dr. Marini said the fault w ith
all strongly-fel- t
ideologies is they
are "simplistic on cause and simplistic on cure. It is the problem
with any kind of simplicity;" he
said, "it saves you the trouble

University Press today started
printing the Student Directory.
Officials said they hope the
finished directory will be submitted to Student Government
Friday. It will definitely be completed before the Thanksgiving

Post Slide Rule. Chemistry
textbook (Seinko and Plane), History notebook. Reward offered.
404-10N3t
Haggin Hall.

LOST

FOR SALE
FOR SALE
Call

dents, mostly the students,"
rather than the administration,

"egg-throwin-

-

CLASSIFIED

Dr. Marini, who moderated the
talk, said dozens were confiscated.)
"Overnight," the kind of climate wherein people of all politleft, and
ical persuasions-rig- ht,
middle-c- an
speak freely could
be created at any university, he
said. "The responsibility rests
solely with the faculty and stu;

n

HtniMii.

tij-- .

.

.'T

m

* THE KENTUCKY KENNEL, Monday, Dec.
M

is Itcpaii School

V1

Forming Association

The lb pledges worked at the Hazel Green

Academy in Hazel Green on two weekends in
late October in order to help the needy children,
according to Logan Gray, project chairman for the
pledge class. They painted various floors and classrooms and repaired windows. Gray said the work
was done by the pledges, but men from the community were at the school to furnish paint and
other materials needed and to tell what was to
be done.

The project was arranged entirely by the
pledges, and Gray said they chose to help at
the academy because they wanted to do "a community service to help people who are in need."

LtliL

I

Vb ft-

-

-

FIJIS PAINT HAZEL GREEN SCHOOL

Present Draft Plan Last Choice
Of Delegates To National Meet
From Combined

Dispatches

A study by pollster Louis
Harris & Associates reported that
the present draft system, including the criticized educational deferment provision, is supported
by 49 percent of the public and
described as unfair by 37 percent.
The remaining 14 percent were
undecided.
Even though one criticism of
the present system is that Negroes and other less privileged

- According

to delegates at a National Conference on the Draft this weekend,
either a universal service or a

lottery is better than the present draft system.
After a major polling organization reported to the conference that most Americans prefer
the present draft system John S.
the American Veterans Committee, sponsor of the conference,
tee, sponsor of the conference,
said that national service military and civil was first choice
of the delegates with the lottery

--

groups suffer most by not being

second.

conference did
The two-da- y
not adopt resolutions or commit
itself to any of the proposals
expected to be placed before the
next session of Congress.
Gus Tyler, director of special

projects for the committee predicted the Selective Service
would be a significant Congressional issue next year.

Draft law hearings earlier this
year caused President Johnson to
National
appoint a
Advisory Committee to study the
system and make recommendations. Members of this committee
were not official participants .

Bulletin Board

Applications for the SG Committee of 240 are now available
at the SC information desk. The
purpose of this committee is to
establish good University public
relations with the various high
schools throughout the state. In
order to be considered for this
position, all applications must
be returned to Room 102 of the
SC by

4

8

sion.
Any women interested in creative writing come to Room 117
of the SC on Tuesday. Chi Delta
Phi, the women's literary honos

change-- by
nearly 4 to 1 was
a system allowing men between
the ages of 18 and 26 to choose

between two years in the armed
forces and two years in thePeace
Corps or some other public

sponsoring

a meeting.

The Newman Club will sponsor a speech by Martin Dillon of
the UK Department of English
Nov. 15 in the Student ("enter
Theater at 8 p.m.
The Agriculture Education Society will meet Nov. 21 at 7 p.m.
in Room 33 of Dickey Hall. Mr.
W. C. Montgomery, Assistant Director of Vocational Agriculture
in the Department of Agriculture
at Frankfort will speak. The meeting is open to any interested

Four University students have joined efforts to form a Cnul- uate Club which will serve as a uniting element for graduate
students in various departments.
The club will include in its Fourth Dimensions, will play.
membership not only graduate Dates will not be required.
students, but professional stu"We don't know how successdents and certain upperclass-men- , ful the club will be until alter
such as men who have
the first event," Miss Ray said,
been in the Armed Forces and
but added that invitations will
then returned to college.
be mailed to graduate students
Mary Ann Ray, a graduate at the University.
student in special education from
It is the hopes of the foundVine Grove and one of the founders that the club will allow a
ers of the club, said, "Everything
common meeting ground for gradon campus seems geared to the
uate students so as to plan such
undergraduate. VVc (graduates) activities as ski trips and ice
need to meet other people beskating parties.
cause we all tend to live in our
Miss Ray hopes the club will
own little grad schools. We
eventually have its own center
should branch out.
disand will be able to
"There should be something cussions and forums. provide
specifically for

us," she observed.

Working with Miss Ray are
Sandra Scholl, secondary education graduate; Peggy Harris, business graduate, anil Wes Wiede-ma-

n,

agriculture graduate.
The first event sponsored by
the Graduate Club will be a
dance in the small
ballroom of the Student Center
at 8 p.m. Dec. 2 a combo, the
coat-and-t-

Another aim of the club is
to assist graduate students,
coming from other colleges and
universities, to find adequate

housing.
"I think a lot of other universities have graduate organizations," Miss Ray said. "Some
have told me it wouldn't work
here but you can never be sure
unless you try

."

Launch an Exciting Career as an

Inte

r-

-

-

q

erne

Comprehensive Career Development Plan for College Graduates Helps You Grow
Swiftly into Positions of Responsibility and Exceptional Challenge.
is a
diverse inunique, independent organization serving
telligence requirements of the Department of Defense.
We are active in many areas directly or indirectly
related to national security . . . probing not only
purely military conditions, trends and forces, but
also pertinent economic, social, cultural, physical,
geographic and scientific factors.
Each year we seek out qualified individuals for
l)IAs entry level Career Development Plan. This is
a program designed but!; to equip you for a responsible and challenging permanent career position, and
enable you to complete most or all requirements for
an advanced degree.
(1)1 A)

p.m. Tuesday.

The students and faculty are
cordially invited to attend "The
Story of Christian Science"
which will be held from 7:30-p.m. Tuesday in Room 243
of the SC Ruilding. It will be
followed by an informal discus-

rary.

able to claim educational deferments, 63 percent of the Negroes
questioned believed the system
fair as opposed to 48
percent
of whites.
The most favored possible

The Defense Intelligence Agency

The Dairy Club will meet
at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Dairy
Products Building.

:

r

The pledge class of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity
recently finished painting and repairs at a private
high school for underprivileged children.

WASHINGTON

11, lW,(i

1967

for

DIA College Program

BABS, MAMS Graduates in

Area Studies
China
Far East
Latin America
Southeast Asia
USSR
Chemistry
Civil Engineering
Computer Science
Economics
Electronic Engineering

Forestry
Geography

Geology
Library Science

Mathematics (majors, minors)
Meteorology

Nuclear Physics
Pedology
Photogrammetry
Physics
Public Health
Structural Engineering
Transportation
Urban Planning

As is evident from the list above, there are career
opportunities in many fields and disciplines at DIA.
Your salary at entry into the Career Development
Plan varies, dependent upon your degree level and
grades, but all participants follow essentially the same

program.

THREE-MONT-

ORIENTATION

H

COURSE

All college graduate recruits attend a three-mont- h
Intelligence Orientation Course. Its objectives are to
orient the trainee to the Department of Defense generally and the Defense Intelligence Agency specifically, with particular emphasis oir the role of civ ilian
analysts in the military intelligence community.
Following completion of this course, trainees
to substantiv e areas of work, related to their

disciplines. At the beginning of the second year, you

will be selected for a specific assignment lending t
position as permanent member of the work force.

:i

OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCED STUDY
All trainees are eligible for educational programs
leading to advanced degrees. These opportunities
may
plus many additional training opportunities
be provided either during or after normal working
hours (or both).
You will find that the advantages of a career at DIA
are many ami varied, including the liberal fringe
benefits associated with Federal employment. Our
locations (the Pentagon and nearby Arlington, Va.)
afford your choice of city, suburban or country liv ing
. . . and a wealth of recreational, cultural, historical
and educational attractions are within a few minutes' drive.
And by no means least, you will derive much satisfaction from contributing personally to the achievement of vital national objectives.

CAMPUS INTERVIEWS SOON I
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* The Kentucky Kernel
The Soutlis Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

MONDAY,

1894

NOV. 14, 1966

Editorials rcjirescnt Oie ojrinions of the Editors, not of tJw University.

Walter
Sti vk Rocxo, Editorial

M.

Grant,

Editor-in-Chi-

William

Vagc Editor

KNArp, Business

r

Miirw.--

Redefining Roles
Cov. Edward T. Breathitt said
recently that Kentucky "cannot
afford not to supply ample funds
for all five state universities" and
that the state should strive to
make all five universities first class

degree programs. But their responsibility to the undergraduate is

greater than ever.
An adequate undergraduate

pro-

gram must become a superior one.
And, as institutions which will act
as "feeders" to the University's
educational institutions.
doctoral program, a quality masWe couldn't agree more.
With the establishment of the ter's program is a necessity.
four state universities, higher eduCertainly the state's responsication in Kentucky has taken on. bility is also greater. As Gov.
an entirely different and more Breathitt said, the state should
comprehensive perspective. With continue to give the greatest part
this comes a redefining of the of the state budget to higher eduroles of both the University (as cation.
But the state and the instituno longer "the" state university,
tions must realize that fine classas "the major" state univerbut
d
rooms in large, towering, modern
sity) and of the other four
universities.
buildings are not the mark of a
The University must necessarily good university. When judgments
are made, they will be made on
assume the role of leader and pacesetter of the higher education move- the basis of educational programs,
ment in Kentucky. We must subfaculty, and scholarships, not an
our research, architecture or physical design.
stantially upgrade
Above all, we must bear in
graduate, and professional schools
mind that the distinction of hv-- '
as well as our undergraduate proing five state universities and numgrams.
But our scope would not be erous community college extensions
limited only to Kentucky. We must is an asset, but that, after all,
consider, too, our influence, presquantity is meaningless unless
quality is its basis.
tige and rank in relation to coland universities across the
leges
newly-ordaine-

nation.
Our task is a great one. Our
responsibility greater.
But the four state universities
also have obligations and responsibility in light of their new status.
Ideally, they will be able to recruit
better faculty members. They will
also be able to sponsor masters

Unity Needed that
It is
to note

encouraging
four University students are presently endeavoring to form a Graduate Club, which would serve as
a unifying organization for graduate students on campus.
The club is designed to provide not only joint social activity
for graduate students, but also to
eventually include informative forums and debates, and to serve as
a guide for worthwhile housing
for graduate students.
Many graduate students enter
the University after receiving degrees from other colleges; they are
little more aware of the campus
and its organizations than are the
freshmen. Yet they are given little
in the way of orientation.
In addition, graduate students
tend to huddle within their own
department, narrowing their view

of experiences.

The Craduate Club, if continued
along its present guidelines, could
help eliminate some of these problems. Certainly it deserves a
chance by the graduate students,
and plaudits should be extended to
the club's founders for being concerned enough to try to unify an
expanding campus group.

"Scalpel"

Letters To The Editor

E deling t on s Religious Rights Defended
Editor of the Kernel:
The attack this time was on
the existence of God and the basis
for holding Christian beliefs. It
was not unlike many of the religious and moral attacks that had
been made in my Anthropology 100
course.
All of them aimed at stimulating critical examination of personal beliefs. Except, this time
I'knew 1 would not let the comment pass by, as I had too many
times before.
To the

After class I asked Dr. Edding-to- n
to defend his statement. We
discussed the fact that there is no
proof for God's existence and the
leap of faith a believer must make.
But, what surprised me the most
was his deep concern for the
Christian student to critically analyze his beliefs, and if
he accepts Christianity, defend it.
so-call- ed

No, he doesn't believe in God
or in life after death, but isn't it
strange that this person would
challenge students to evaluate their
be