xt72z31njx0v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72z31njx0v/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650429  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 29, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 29, 1965 1965 2015 true xt72z31njx0v section xt72z31njx0v -

.

41

.

Inside Today's Kernel
Gamma Phi Beta will be the tilth
group to use the Pi Phi house: Poge
Three.
Two student

at the

art

shows are underway
Pine Arts Building! Page Four.

Editor discusses the proposed student
government reorganization plan: Page
Six.

Special report on Negro and foreign
student housing begins: Page Eight.
Western adds two rice presidents
reorganization:

psychology student spends ten hours
observing prisoners in action: Page
Fifteen.

IL

IE

in

Page Twelve.

A

Vol. LVI, No. 116

University of Kentucky
APRIL

5 Campus Leaders Propose

Sixteen Pages

29, 1965

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY,

r

i

Government Revision Plan

The text of the proposal
pears on page 13.

ap-

Five campus leaders have submitted a proposal to the interim
committee studying student
government organization.
The five include the present
president of Student Congress,
the cochairmen of the Student
Centennial Committee, and the
presidents of Panhellenic and the
Interfraternity Council.
The interim committee will
study the various proposals for reorganizing student government
through the summer and will present a plan to Student Congress
in the fall.
Assuming the plan gains approval, it will be presented to a
campus referendum.
The only other plan officially
before the committee is one that
came out of the second Conference on Organizations
and
was proposed by a subcommittee
of the Student Centennial Committee.
The plan was basically designed to coordinate the activities
of existing campus organizations.
The plan presented Wednesday was structured to "serve

Students
Protest
At OSU

"

The Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ab200 Ohio State University students who want the school to
adopt an "open door" campus
speakers policy, stayed behind
the administration
building's
locked doors Wednesday night in
protest of a current rule barring controversial speakers.
demonstrasleep-iThe
tion was held despite indications
that university officials will
change the speakers rule. Student leaders said the demonstrators would leave at noon tostay.
day, after a
"It wouldn't be practical to
stay any longer," said Dennis
Knepley, one of the leaders.
University President Novice
G. Fawcett met with some student leaders Wednesday in an
the
attempt to head-of- f
He asked them to be patient
until the board of trustees meets
in July to consider the speakers
out

sit-i-

student needs" as opposed to
coordinating existing activities.
The proposal states seven
"uniquely student needs" which
need student government attention:
1. Filtering student opinion of
various subjects to the Administration.
2. The evaluation of classes
and faculty.
3. Student committee to study
housing plans and present student views.
4. Committee to evaluate the
physical environment of the University.
5. A central committee to sustain the intellectual atmosphere
through the planning of lectures,
acting as a consultant to the Concert and Lecture series, and providing money for campus groups
who wish to bring in speakers.
6. Furnishing new ideas and
prorams.
7. The judication of student
misconduct.
The new proposal suggests
that a structure seeking only to
coordinate will have "come much
closer than the present arrangement" but still falls short.
The plan provides for an administrative body called the executive board to oversee the
government. This board would be
an appointive group.
The legislature would be a
Student Senate elected from the University's major
housing units.
The present form of judicial
system would be retained.
The appointive administrative body would be the major
departure from former organizational plans.
The proposal points out, however, that is the normal way
most campus groups are presently organized.
This board would be composed of the elected president
of student government, the vice

n

n.

This year the University Summer Chorus will be offered separately from the Opera Theatre.
Participation in it is open to
members of the faculty and staff
as well as to students, who may
enroll in it for one hour of credit.

T

rbk

4

'

-

--1

Thetas Celebrate 20th Anniversary

Kappa Alpha Theta sorority officials present a gift to President
Oswald In commemoration of the Theta's 20th anniversary on campus. Making the presentation are Ellie Chaffee, president of the UK
chapter; Mrs. W. S. Taylor, state chairman; President Oswald, Mrs.
T. II. Belding, alumnae president; and Mrs. Jon Collier, chairman of
the 20th anniversary of the Thetas on campus.

Group Uses 'Unique Opportunity'
By FRANK BROWNING

participation."

celebration of the centennial
spirit through special events and
acitivities.
Area one of the program is a
committee headed by Frank Bailey, the Student Subcommittee on
Evaluation of Teaching. The
committee's purpose, as Bailey
described it, is "to aid in bringing about better understanding of
what the faculty member' work
entails." Organized in a three-paprogram, the committee is
now trying to form an "instrument" to be used in the actual
evaluation. Once the "instrument" materializes, the next two
steps will be determining the
means by which it can be put
into action and the actual evaluation.
"We are only interested in
teaching in the classroom and the
(3)

Kernel Staff Writer
"The Centennial year was a
unique opportunity to try unique
things. We've (the Student Centennial Committee) been more
or less an idea group. We may at
least have been a starting point."
That is Sandy Brock's evaluation of the first Student Centennial Committee of which she
was cochairman. The committee,
which worked along side of the
alumni and faculty committees,
took what cochairman James
Svara called a "comprehensive
and broad look'' at "campus
Svara outlined the overall student centennial program as covering three major areas: (1) exploration of academics in general;
(2) study of life of UK students;

rt

til

"4

teacher's relation outside class
with the students whom he has
in his classes," Bailey explained.
Like many of the other committees, Bailey's will probably
last well beyond the official Centennial year. The Administration
may make whatever use of the
evaluations it chooses.
The second set of projects
which the committee organized
were aimed at increasing student participation in the Centennial year.
"I think we knew we could
not involve every student in every
activity, but we could hit every
activity so that each student
could have at least one thing
in which he was interested," Miss
Brock said.
This phase of the committee's
program has been divided among
four projects under the Forum on
Political and Current Affairs,
Freshman Colloquium, Student
Research and Creative Work, and
the High School Leadership Conference. However, there was an
headed by
overall
Mike Stanley and Kathy Kelley
devoted to dealing with Evaluation of Student Life.
Academic, physical, and extracurricular life were three topics
to be investigated originally. Student academic life was dropped
since that area had been covered
by the faculty Centennial committee.
Subcommittee cochairman
Mike Stanley said that as a result
of a project first semester there
were "a number of organizations
which didn't have any goals. The
Continued On Page 2
ee

: 'i

!

jxl

Sandy Brock and James Svara meet with President Oswald following
their appointment last spring as cochairmen of the Student Centennial Committee.

Late Registrations Are Flooding Registrar

rule.

"I believe we can write a better rule," Mr. Fawcett said.
Most of the overnight demonstrators inside t lie administration building were men.
Another group of demonstrators, locked out for the night,
camped on the ground outside.
Some were coeds.
Included in the lockout, was
Jeffeey Schwartz, head of the
Free Speech Front which organized the protest. He was locked
out when he stepped outside to
address some students. He planned to
today.
The orderly demonstration le
gan Wednesday with about 300
students.
Continued On Vgt It

Lr

Summer Chorus

24-ho-

sit-i-

president who would be the presiding office in the legislature
and would be elected by that
group, and by seven other members.
These members would be named by an ad hoc committee composed of the newly elected president, the outgoing president, and
vice president, the vice president
for student affairs, and a faculty
member elected by the other four.
The board will be named in
the spring for a term beginning
in the fall.
The legislature would be elected in the fall.

Students are Hooding the Registrar's Office and the University Photographer as the
preregistration and ID picture deadlines near
on Friday.
The Registrar's Office reported 537
students returning their orange IBM cards
Wednesday, a record for a single day.
Referring to the total number of students
preregistering in April, Miss Sara Utterbach,
assistant to the registrar, said:
"We'll be happy if we get 5,000, and it
looks like we will."
Keeping pace with thepreregistration.the
University Photographer's Office reported
approximately 5,000 II) pictures taken so
far.

Students returning to the University in

the fall, who have not preregistered, should
see their advisers today or Friday.
After filling out a trial schedule card and
the orange IBM card, the completed
cards should be taken to the basement of the Administration Annex, which will
be open today and Friday Irom 1 to 5 p.m.
Students who do not comply with
will be forced to wait until the
late registration period, after classes start
in September.
This summer all preregisteied students
will receive either complete or incomplete
schedules. Coiuses will be assigned using
this spring semester grade point standing
as a prioiity.
Completely scheduled students will finish
she-du-

le

their registration Sunday afternoon, August
filling out the usual information cards
regarding religious preference, address, and
telephone number.
Registration on the following Monday
and Tuesday will be reserved for students with
incomplete schedules. These students will
be admitted to the Coliseum accoiding to a
random alphabet system.
There will also be a penalty for students
not having their II) pictures taken by Friday.
Those who fail to comply with the deadline will have their pictures taken on the
make up date, Oct. 15, and will not be admitted to athletic events or Univeisity functions requiting an 11).
29 by

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April 29,

19G5

Group Uses 'Unique Opportunity'
r(e

1
Continued from
aimed at helping the
project
organizations to realize what its
goals were, see if it was meeting
them, and if not how it can ac- complish them.
Realizing that there were
many overlapping student organizations whose goals overlapped,
the committee scheduled a conference in March at which all
organizations would be represented and where these representatives would try to reach a
plan of coordination for campus
activities.
As a result of this first conference's discussions, a second
one was scheduled in
where a new organizational plan
was presented. "We felt like the
best means of coordinating all
units and organizations was best
based on an overall, student association which would replace the
Student Congress," Stanley explained.
Consequently, campus representatives at the April conference approved a
"Interim
Committee" which will work during the summer with the present
Student Congress to arrive at a
better system of student government arid coordination.
Among the more specific Centennial activities dealing with
student life was the Forum on
Political and Current Affairs,
whose major accomplishment
this year was securing Norman
Thomas as a speaker in February.
Although a conference on Civil
Rights had originally been planned, the committee later decided
to get speakers in four areas:
Welfare, and Poverty, Civil
Rights Foreign Relations, and
problems.
Mary Marvin Porter, subcommittee chairman, said, "I am
disappointed in that I wasn't
able to contact speakers for other
mid-Apr- il

six-ma-

Urban-Suburba-

n

engagements this semester (other
than Norman Thomas), but I
hope that the new committee
will cany on these efforts.
"Because of the delay involved in gaining administrative
approval for the speakers, the effectiveness of this committee was
hampered."
Centennial Committee
Brock and Svara said
that in a situation as large and
complicated as the Centennial
Year, such delays are often unavoidable.
Freshman Colloquium was a
second project, headed by Keith
I lagan, designed to giv e Freshmen an opportunity to participate in the Centennial Year.
n
An experimental group,
said it gave Freshmen a
chance to discuss with faculty
and administrators the problems
and points of view shared by
freshmen in general. '
A third committee was a project devoted to Student Research
and Creative Work. Jim Wheeler, was cochairman of the subl,
committee with Annette
outlined three of its goals:
(1) to provide opportunity for
undergraduates to present original work and see it published;
(2) to publicize the University's
undergraduate program; (3) to
Ha-ga-

Bran-denbur-

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Admission

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As to the future Jim Svara
said that "many of the programs
will be continuing affairs, though
it's not possible to predict which
ones in which ways."

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ADULTS ONLY

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RICHARD BURTONAVA GARDNER
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DEBORAH KERR

West-pha-

Starts 7:45

mittee under John Stadler's guidance had new class rings designed
and sold about 500 charms with
the centennial device on each.
Not fitting into any of the
three Centennial major projects
was the Centennial Scholarship
Fund Committee. Its chairman,
Trudy Mascia, described its goal
as "trying to establish a perpetual scholarship fund in honor of
the Centennial class and year.
"Perhaps we've impressed a
few people with the fact that the
students do have a great deal of

hopefully establish permanent
undergraduate conferences and
publication.
A final project area whose
purpose was to encourage celebration of the University's Centennial included two committees,
Ceremonials and the Centennial
Ring Project.
Under Ceremonials, chaired
by Ken Brandenburh, came the
Centennial Ball, Graduation
Exercises, and preliminary' work
on the 1965 Homecoming.
explained his position
as a coordinating and supervisory'
one while the Centennial Ball
was planned under a distinct
subcommittee.
The Centennial Ring Com

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mm. Bin

Plus Other Cash Prizes
ALSO
FRANK SINATRA

IN COLOR

'COME

BLOW YOUR HORN"

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HELD OVER 2nd

WRK

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HELD OVER!
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April 29,

1965

3

Ztftf$ Colored Prints, Sexy Black:
New Things Happening ToBeachwear
The Editor's Digest

spirc Charleston capers by the
and practical advantages which sea.
will please all women who want
Even gals with "problem"
to preserve their hairdos. (And faces
high foreheads, square
w hat w oman doesn't worry about
jaws, round faces have been
falling locks at the beach?)
considered in this year's colsummer.
Names. of some of the new lection of swi i
caps. From the
Pale, little-gir- l
laces, colorful
styles give a cine to their bright, sophisticated appeal of
and exciting look Ruffles. .
prints, sexy black
with its soft ruffles ideal for a
sleek stretch suits will all be . . .Fiesta. . .Cream Puff.
small face, to the sleek
creating excitement during the Waterlilly. . .Flapper, and they
Color Tones turban to encoming months. Whether you're are from the 1965 U.S. Hubber hance
high cheekbones and drathe bikini-typ- e
or you go more collection of Aqua Originals and
matic features, the choice is as
for the
Aqua Florals.
never before.
There's even one swim cap
you'll be right in
with a Midas touch, a glitterstyle, for never before have seashore fashions enjoyed so wide a ing
cloche (with a
hint of a Roman warrior's helrange.
But bathing suits arc only a met), and a beach bag to match.
small part, figuratively speaking, Another cap, called the Beach
of the beachwear picture this Bonnet, is the most feminine
year. There are a host of other bathing cap ever to make a showpluses for the complete look of ing. Nylong tricot ruffles frame
water maiden. the face, move back in tiny pleats
the
t.
Starting at the top, swim caps to a perky ruffled
There
have really come into their own as are Yar Caps, dramatic "helmets," for those who go for a
more sophisticated sleek look.
The Fiesta ia a marvelous
mass of one big ruffle in nylon
tricot that highlights the face
HEADQUARTERS
almost like a furry hat. Bits of
synthetic straw give it an authenFOR
tic fiesta look. And in the spirit
of the roaring '20s, there's a
UNIVERSITY OF
soucily fringed Flapper to in- KENTUCKY
NEW

YORK-Cr-

things
have happened to beachwear in
the last few years, but from all
indication the view from the
beach will reach its peak this

The

ri

The Kentucky Kernel

'

Hi-Ha-

Thi house on Maxwell will become the launching pad for a
fifth Greek group this fall

cut-ou-

Gamma Phi Beta To Become
Fifth Group Using UK House

high-fashio-

Avenue next fall.

The University-owne- d
house on Maxwell has housed members
of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Sigma Chi and Phi Gamma
Delta fraternities in the past.
The Kappa's were the first to occupy the
house.

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CENTENNIAL

METHODIST
STUDENT
CHURCH
Maxwell

JEWELRY
Complete selection of centennial
jewelry, lighten, charms, tie
tacks, earrings, cuff links, key
chains, money clips, and tie
bars, pen kniyes, julip cups, and
letter openers with the centennial replica of the official Centennial Device handsomely engraved. Price range from three
dollars makes . these items ap
propnare tor graduation pres ents, birthday or anniversary (
presents, bridesmaid and grooms
presents.
Ours exclusively, the Centennial
graduate charm for bracelets or
key chain.

at Harrison

MORNING
The Kentucky Kernel

ZTA s Host Cerebral- - Palsy .Victims

,

This past weekend, Zeta Tau Alpha sorority held
a party for children, victims of cerebral palsy, and

-

-

these sisters spent all afternoon laughing: with the
g
children at the antics of other
sisters.
party-givin-

worship;

;

:

EACH SUNDAY

Sunday School, 9:45
Morning Worship,
10:50

n DIME - ANN

UNITARIAN
CHURCH

t,

at

well-dress-

4

1

high-necke-

.Hi-H-

gold-colore-

the end of the semester and will open their new house on Columbia

'

n,

ts

one-piecer- s,

When members of Gamma 1'hi Heta move into the old ramblii
bouse on 232 E. Maxwell Street, they will become the fifth Creek
organization to use it as a launching pad.
Phi Beta Phi sorority, the present occupants, will vacate it at

t

a striking fashion note, with new

eat

77"-- -'ARMERS JJ EWELRI

REV. TOM FORNASH

Minister

HigbeeMill Road
at Clays Mill Road

10:45 a.m.

For the Unusual in Gifts
854

E. HIGH

..

Dr. David Booth
UK Dept. of Political Science
Title . .

JOIN US IN
STUDENT WORSHIP

in Chevy Chase Village

821 Euclid

Mother's Day

Graduation

Service and
Church School
Speaker .

Established Since 1950

V

(Next door to Saratoga Restaurant)

Wwfs r0fmw

.
SEMI-ANNUA-

"US Policy Toward the UN
and the World Court."

use fhe
--

The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, sLexington, Kentucky, 40508. Second-claspostage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published four times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published tor the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Stephen Palmer,
secretary.
lie gun as the Cadet in 1894. became the liecord in 1900, and the Idea
In 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 11)15.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mall $7.00
Per copy, from files $ .10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing 2321
Editor
News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor.
2320
Socials
Advertising, Business, Circulation 2319

SERENITY

6

L

Pappagallo Week
April 30 thru May 8

All

PRICES FROM $100 TO fIBOO

Pappagallo

including spring and summer
styles now reduced

off

10

P.S. Large group of discontinued patterns,
many styles . . . many colors . . . now Vi price
1883-196-

127 W. MAIN

BAYNIIAM'S

1

252-623-

0

...

135

Shoes of Distinction
Main

E.

i

* 4

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April 29,

19G5

Two Student Art Shows

1

Now Underway At Fine Arts
The annual Student Inhibition in the Dcivutimnt of Art
oiHMKtl Sunday under protest
from a uroup of contributing students.
Tlic protesting students opened a "Reject Show" in the wax
imcstment room on the first floor
of the Fine Arts Building. The
main Student Exhibition is on
display in the art gallery of the
Fine Arts Building until May 30.
The sponsors of the Reject Show
say that their exhibit will remain
open the same period of time.
The complai nts of the students
who organized the Reject
around the judging of student w ork submitted to the original exhibition. These students
feel that muc h good w ork w as unfairly rejec ted w hile in some cases
the student work accepted was
not representative of the individual's best efforts. Often it was
felt that only "safe,"' professionalized work was chosen
and pieces showing experimentation were not accepted.
The annual Student Exhibition this year features 94 pieces
including sculpture, oils, collage,
ceramics and prints. Acrylic
paints and irridesccnt spray
paints arc featured prominently
in the work of several students.
The first of these to impress
the visitor with her quantity of
talented work is Melinda Meyer,
especially her linoleum cut "Pink
Latter" and her intaglio "Red
On Blue Black On White." "Pink
Latter" is featured in the current
issue of "Sty lus."
John Bellue's Senior Exhibit
features opart almost exclusively,
geometric paintings accomplished with masking tape and spray
colors. The violent spray paint '
howused is not
ever, and Bellue's works face a
life of approximately six months.
The largest painting, a diamond
pattern, is particularly disruptive
as a visual experience.
The metal sculpture of Fred
Dishon does not seem to spring
to life as Dare's docs. Highly formalized, it arranges circles and
planes into harmonious effects
that are also dull.
Kenneth Smith has achieved
the best collage of the Student
Exhibit in an untitled piece using swirling levels of white and
dark browns.
A large yellow oil with a
central display of blues and reds
by Don Hile draws visitors' attention with pleasure. Well- Show-cente-

long-lastin-

r

g,

Shirts

lie-i-

Film Society Schedules
Summer Classic Showings
of the University
Film
expanding
The

is
Society
Experimental
its film schedule into a classics series this summer from June 14
to July 26 in the Student Center Theater, season passes now on
sale through Dr. Alvin Creenberg, McVey Hall for $3.
The schedule of showings will run as follows at 7:30 on the evenings listed June 14, D. W. Griffith's "Intolerance;" June 28,
Charlie Chaplin's "The Rounders," "The Masquerader," "Making
A Living;" and LaurelandIIardy's"BigBusiness;"July 12, llichard
Weine's "The Cabinet Of Dr. Caligari;" July 19, Hudolph Valentino's "Blood And Sand;" July 26, Documentaries: James Agee's
"In The Street," Cartier Bresson's "Le Hetour," and Man Hay's
"L'Etoilede Mer."

Everybody's book on the USSR

RUSSIA

In protest to strident works rejected for the Student Exhibition
students opened their own "Reject Show" as a "congregation of the
unloved," to demonstrate the high level of student experimental
work, using the Wax Investment Room in the Fine Arts Building
as their gallery.

SUMMER OPPORTUNITY

JAMES E. SEADLER,

912 Francis Building
S
or call
5S7-105-

r

or

513-246- 4,

i
t . your iinxmsiore

"Let us
our attitude toward the Soviet Union."
John F. Kennedy

DSM

Louisville,
Louisville

Ky.

This card
will save you money
on Summer vacation

V

r

TRAVEL
( )Ptr

( ) Venezuela
( )Monl.
St. Michel
( ) Spain
( ) India
( ) Norway

rr'(

MORRISON, Box 1175, Breckinridge
of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky. Phone

( ) Portugal
( ) Holland
( )MtiK

Hall

2SS-220- 0,

)JP

Ext. 7793

( ) Hawaii
( ) Monique
( )S
Franc itc

Your Sheraton Man on Campus has a free Sheraton Student ID
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With it you'll get discounts on room rates at Sheraton Hotels
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Spectators examine Ronald Meaax's Senior Exhibit at the Art
Department's annual Student Exhibition which opened in the Art
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balanced and strong. Mile's paintunder a heavy surface coat of
ing succeeds in dominating its ae ry lie.
This year's Student Exhibisurnnindings without lapsing
into discordancy or garishness. tion is well worth the room
to it. But the Reject Show,
Jacquclyu Howard's aery lie "Un,
titled" breaks through a care- using a
mild blue background with
room with inadequate
fully
a limited red that stops the eye lighting, provides an excitenent
without distorting the iew of that the larger show cannot
the painting. Yet a large aery
equal.
the H eject Show attacks this
In the first place, many fine
same problem and accomplishes pieces were overlooked by the
a betfer result.
two sculptors brought in to do
11.
Heese has three aery lies the judging. And in the second
entered in the Exhibit, but two place it is a pleasure to find
seem lifeless. The third, "PathArt Department students deterways To Heir demonstrates mined to present to the public
what Heese can do with his use what they tlunk is the best of
of submerged warmth and light their fellow's work.

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April 29,

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TO THE

iOOCC
.......

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* Purification By Fire

A Plan Emerges
We welcome the presentation of
a plan for the reorganization of stu-

dent government.
This plan meets the criteria we
have discussed previously and we
warmly endorse it.
The chances for actual reform
in the student government system
at the University now seem better
than ever.
Discussion have been going on
for most of the year and the second conference on organization was
presented with a comprehensive
plan for restructuring student
government.
As we commented at that time,
the plan goes a long way toward
cleaning up the governmental
organization.
We suggested, however, that
government should be structured
to meet the needs of the students
rather than being designed as a
coordinating body.
The new plan, proposed
Wednesday by a group of the University's top student leaders, follows closely the one already presented but does make this basic
revision in purpose.
,
has-- recognized that
This group
most of the normal governmental
functions, such as protection of
health, and safety, are already performed by the administration.
The students need, it suggests,
a means for channeling their ideas
to the administration, for evaluating teaching, etc.
.

The student government, as
structured under the present plan,
would be composed on commissions that would work in each of
the major areas of student need.
The government would be adexecuministered by a nine-ma- n
tive board (including the president
and vice president) and ideas would
come from the elected legislature,
the Student Senate.
The present system of campus
courts would remain unchanged.
The structure is not a drastic
departure from the organizational
pattern followed by many campus
groups.

It would allow for something
student government has never had,
a coordinated executive branch to
perform tasks assigned by the
legislature.
Student government, however,
will never be powerful on this
campus unless given the authority
by the Administration.
Administrators have hesitated
in granting that authority in recent years after surveying the confused body called Student Con-

Tut

gress.
We hope the interim study committee will give favorable consideration to this new plan this summer.

Kentucky

Kebno.

'Splinter' Still Lives

Today we are moved to report due for no such quick solution.
Under th