xt73xs5jd263 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73xs5jd263/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680304  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March  4, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  4, 1968 1968 2015 true xt73xs5jd263 section xt73xs5jd263 Tie Kentocky Kernel
The Soutlis Outstanding College Daily

Monday Evening, March 4, 1968

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

DID

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I

ILL" CO u

If

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t

--

4

That's Real Team Spirit!

of University football players imitate
cheerleaders at halftime of the
A group

-'

Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

basketball game Saturday night. Their efforts
were rewarded with an
UK victory.
85-8-0

Vol. L1X, No.

Time Running Out
i
For KSA Student
Trustee Legislation
By MARTIN E. WEBB
Time is running out for the
Kentucky Student Association in
its last ditch effort to insure
passage of legislation that would
put students on state university
legislation
governing boards
clouded by doubt and confusion.
Rep. Brooks Hinkle, Paris,
chairman of the House Education Committee, thinks that "the
bill is in good shape" and hopes
to get it out Tuesday.
But Rep. Sherman Arnett,
Morehead, a member of the
committee and vice chairman of
the Committee on Higher Education, said that "no definite
plans have been made to call
it (the bill) up."
Mr. Hinkle explained his optimism in light of certain
amendments proposed by the
committee. "With these amendments I think it will pass," he
said.

Move Is Afoot To Thwart Hershey

By PHIL SEMAS
College Press Service
WASHINGTON
Although
congressional action to revise the
draft law is at best unlikely,
some congressional leaders may
try to persuade the administration to lighten the impact of
the removal cf graduate deferments.
Their efforts center around
two proposals:
Make
not in college the prime age group to be
drafted. Under such a plan, college graduates would be considered the same as
for one year after graduation and
would be drafted along with
others according to their month
and day of birth. This would
radically decrease the number
of college graduates to be drafted,
since they would make up less
thai) half of such a pool. Under

-

the present policy of drafting the
oldest first, almost all college
graduates will be drafted.

ment problem. They may get
a sympathetic hearing, since
Armed Services Chairman L.
Mendel Rivers
has already written to' Cen. Hershey
(D-S.C- .)

0 Allow a graduate student,
once he has been drafted, to
advocating both proposals to
complete his year in school.
lighten the impact of the new

The house special Subcommittee on Education will meet Monday to consider calling in Secretary of Defense Clark Clifford
to discuss these proposals. Mr.
Clifford has the power to change
to the
plan. And Selective Service Director Lewis
Hershey, although he doesn't like
the idea, told the subcommittee
Friday, "I won't say that as
operator I can't do it." Most
educators also favor the
plan.
At its Monday meeting the
subcommittee will consider asking the House Armed Services
Committee to look at the defer

ruling.

Education Chairman Edith
Green
said she has discussed the problem with Rep.
Rivers to make sure her subcommittee does not step into his
jurisdiction. Her subcommittee
became involved in the question
when it began considering several
programs of federal scholarships
for graduate students.
(D-Ore- .)

The possibility of letting graduate students, once they are
drafted, finish out their year in
school will be discussed by Gen.
Hershey and representatives of
12 education associations
on

111

March

11.

They will also discuss

other aspects of the new ruling,
including the eligibility of graduate teaching assistants for oc- cupational deferment as teachers,
since they can no longer be deferred as students. Gen. Hershey

hinted at the subcommittee
ing Friday that that was

meetpossi-

ble.

At that same Friday meeting,
Mrs. Betty Vetter, executive director of the private scientific
manpower commission, said "it
seems quite possible that we may
find ourselves at a severe disadvantage in our efforts to prevent the spread of Communism
a few years from now" if there
are no draft deferments for those
learning scientific skills. Her argument seemed to have a lot
of impact on the subcommittee
and should have influence even
with conservative congressmen.

To date both bills. House Bill
145 and Senate Bill 118 (the
Senate bill passed by an overhave been rewhelming 35-1- ),
ferred to the House Education
Committee.
According to Mr. Hinkle since
the committee has reported unfavorably on the house bill, it
was for all practical purposes
killed. It would take 51 House
votes to bring it up again.
In a last effort to save the
Senate bill, Kentucky Student
Association President S h e r y
Snyder found it necessary to
amend the bill, according to
suggestions aired in the committee several weeks ago.
In a formal address before
the committee Thursday, Snyder
that the bill be
suggested
amended to state that:
1

The student representative

must be a Kentucky resident.
Each school student body
would select five student Kentucky residents from which each
Board of Regents would select
one representative.
Rep. Walter Baker, Glasgow,
told of a new development to
be added to the list of amendments. Mr. Baker, the only lawyer on the committee, is drawing up the recommendations.
Mr. Baker said that the committee is presently working on

"some arrangement whereby
the student could be asked not
to participate in discussion,"
such as the hiring and firing of
professors. As yet the machinery
hasn't been worked out he said.
"I will not vote for the Senate bill as it stands but I will
if the recommendations
are
passed," Mr. Baker said, adding that the committee would
meet 10 a.m. tomorrow to discuss and vote on the amendments.
Mr. Arnett, who said that no
definite plans have been made
yet to vote on the bill, would
Continued on Pare 3, Col. 1

Bill Could Lead To 'Hippie Community,' Senator Says

Barriers Seen For Student Trustee Bill
CllfUtt Prtts Scrvle
Two formidable barriers to
bill
passage of a student-truste- e
are the opposition of legislators
and educators and a web of
legislative procedure.
Through compromise and further lobbying, the Kentucky
Student Association hopes to
win over opponents and untangle the procedural hang-upthus saving the legislation.
Two weeks ago, the state university presidents were asked to
Ktntaekjr

s,

News Analysis
give their views to the House
Education Committee. S o in e
sought to get the legislation
killed, or at least lxttled up.
They apparently got their way,
but this week compromise is
being tried.
The opposition wants each
student trustee to be chosen by
his school's full Board of Trustees from a list of five Ken- -

tuckians selected in a campus-wid- e
election.
the legislation
Originally,
called for the student trustee
to either be the student government president or his appointee; there was no restriction as to residency.
Why the change? Some educators and legislators want to
assure the trustee is not some
"rabble-rouser,- "
Snyder said.
"Some real misguided student"
may be chosen, "and we'd have
a real hippie community," one
state senator has said.
"I'm not totally in favor of
tliis amendment," Snyder commented, "but I'm pragmatic
enough to know we should take
what we can get."
This would be the second
KSA
has
major compromise
made. In the very beginning it
wanted the students to be voting members, but gave in when
told passage would be

The legislation
what ever
form it takes is caught in a further tangle of parliamentary
procedure. House Bill 145 is
virtually dead. But its sister,
Senate Bill 118, may not be.
The House Education Committee was to decide the latter's
fate early this week. If it was
considered tabled, KSA would
have to maneuver to get 51
votes in the House to call the
bill up from committee for a
decision. If considered
not
tabled, the bill would be up
for amendment in the committee.
If the amendment passed, a
vote to report the amended bill
favorably or unfavorably would
be necessary. When the new bill
got out of committee, it would
have to be approved by the
House, and the Senate again,
since it had been amended in
the House.
Senate Bill 118 passed the
upper chamber 35-- 1 three weeks

ago. But it bogged down in the
House Education committee,
curiously, at the same time student unrest began to manifest
itself on Kentucky college campuses. An anti-wmeeting was
held, opposition to compulsory
ROTC developed, and cries for
academic freedom became louder.
There has been, of course,
opposition to student trustees all
along.
The thrust of the opposition
has gone like this: Mudents
have no business on the boards,
they are on campus to learn
and not make policy. And, a
student trustee would not be
qualified; he would have been
on the campus for three years or
less. He would have little impact. One student serving for
one year could hardly represent
his large constituency. Channels
already exist for voicing student
sentiment.
One of the most articulate
ar

opponents is Dr. John W. Oswald, University of Kentucky
president. He voiced his disapproval during a panel discussion of "The Academic Community: Who Decides What?"
in Washington last November.
He has not further opposed in
public student trustees.
Dr. Oswald did concede that
student trustees in Kentucky are
inevitable. And those who know
Kentucky politics agree. "It's
destined to pass," says UK political scientist J. E. Reeves, and
active Democrat. All major candidates in both the general election and primary promised the
student seats to Kentucky's
voters. The bill was
the first Gov. Louie B. Nunn
backed after election. And if
the move fails this time, the
experience should
eventual approval.
The current legislation is the
natural next step in reforming
Continued on Page 3, CeL 1

facilitate

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, March

Barriers Seen For Student Trustee Bill

Continued from Tare One
how the state schools are governed. In 19G0, the UK chapter of the American Association
of University
Professors
(AAUP) won passage of a bill
that created seats for faculty
members on its school's board.
Now, lesides student trustees at
all state universities and Kentucky State College, faculty
members would be added to the
t)oards at other schools.
The AAUP is satisfied with
g
scats. The representative can have a stronger in
non-votin-

fluence and appear more objective if he does not have to commit himself to a special-interestand, says R.H. Weaver, former chairman of the state AAUP.
The students' original request
for the vote fit the national
pattern of "Student Power," the
idea that students should have
a say in the affairs that affect
them.
KSA puts it this way: Students, as citizens of a campus
community, deserve a voice in
the community's government.
And, it argues, that voice would
st

be helpful to the other trustees, who often lack knowledge
of student feeling and needs.

"Student opinion should be
heard," says Sen. Dclbcrt S.
Murphy of the Senate Educa-

Last Ditch Effort By KSA

Continued from Paf e One
The day after its first reading,
not take a stand on the future of the bill would receive a second
automatic reading, probably
proposed legislation "until I see
how the recommendations will Thursday.
affect it. It could go either way."
Then on Friday or Monday
Mr. Ilinkle believes "we will
the bill could be brought up
have enough votes to get it out."
any time and voted on. It would
He explained that it takes nine
then be sent to the senate for
of the 17. committee members
concurrence.
to get the bill out of the comWhen asked whether or not
mittee and in to the House.
the presence of the five state
As explained by Mr. Hinkle,
the calendar for passage of the university presidents at a committee meeting last week inbill looks something like this:
fluenced the unfavorable report
Tuesday the amendments to
the bill would be voted on in on the House bill, Mr. Arnett
said he didn't believe "they had
both the House and Senate.
The bill would then be brought a great deal of influence on it."
back to the committee for the
He explained that the university presidents were asked to
necessary nine votes.
come before the committee to
Either Tuesday or Wednesoffer their opinions on the raise
day (more likely Wednesday
stuaccording to Mr. Arnett) the in tuition of
bill would receive its first read-ig- n dents.
before the House.
But they were also asked
te

their - opinions on the student
trustee legislation he said, and
"I don't know of any who opposed it right out."
In a statement via Murray
State University's student Government President, Dr. Harry
Sparks, Murray president, "sees
nothing wrong with the bill and
intends also to make the student government president a
member of the administrative
council with himself and Murray administrative officials."
Western University President
Dr. Kelly Thompseyi isn't against
the bill but is reserving his comments until he has read it.
Kentucky State President Dr.
Carl Hill was quoted as being
wholeheartedly for the original
bill, preferring it to the amended version.

tion Committee.

l8-- 3

can come up with some good
ideas."
One of those ideas is student
seats on university governing
Iwnirds.
Whether this student
sentiment will be molded into
law will be decided by the legislature, possibly this week.

communications gap can only
be bridged by a student trustee,
KSA contends.

This month, for example, the
UK Board wanted student opinion to help them decide on a
new dean of students. Earlier,
trustees had to go to extra
trouble to consider student feelings about the proposed disciplinary code. And last year it
reversed its stand on the location of a new football stadium
upon learning students were
overwhelmingly opposed. The

4,

"These youths

Is Going To College
A Waste Of Money?
By College Press Service
N.Y.-- A
college
ITHACA,

lifetime
earnings
graduate's,
would often be greater if he had
not continued in school but
placed the cost of higher education in a savings bank at five

percent.
That is the conclusion of a
study by Arthur Carol and Samuel
Parry, assistant professors of operations analysis at the Naval
Postgraduate School at Mon-

terey, Calif.
"In some cases," they say,
"it is wiser from the point of
view of investing in an individual's labor to have him leave
school earlier and invest his earnings during the years he would
have been in school, together
with the unused school expenses,
in the capital market."
Using 1960 census earnings
data which covers occupations
including 49 percent of all non-ag- ri
culturally employed males,
Carol and Parry found that tool
makers, die makers-- , and setters,
for instance, can expect greater

'

lifetime earnings than lawyers
and judges, if the authors' investing principle is used and the
costs of graduate school are saved
at five percent.
When the costs of undergraduate education are added to those
of graduate school, they found a
person would be better off financially as a plumber than as a
chemist, for example.
And when money for graduate school expenses must be
borrowed, the authors found that
the lifetime earnings of many
professions are lowered considerably. "Thus, the family of American folklore which borrows to
send its sons through medical
school ad
school and dental school might
be better advised on financial
grounds to do otherwise," Mr.
Carol and Mr. Parry say.
Within an occupation, generally speaking, the authors found
that lifetime earnings usually increased with more schooling. But
they added that "the changes
in occupational ranking were neg-

ligible."

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Complete with . . .
Gleaming white sand to wiggle
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in men's and women's swimwear.

All sales personnel modeling the
all new knit tops and Bcrms.
Turtle necks, too!

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Live models displaying the latest

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BUT WE HAVE MOST OF THEM!

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* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, March 4, 1968 .

Letter To Arts Editor

;

To Joe Hinds, Arts Editor.
The circumstances this picture was taken under make it a
rather disillusioning capture of two people. The photographer
was alxnit to click his camera on a man repairing his boat when
the boy came and sat down. Not knowing this, how would you
explain the photograph? What is your age?
There are moments of serious playgrounds,
Vaults of sunken monuments,
Acres of summer grass,
Captains who never turn straight
into the wind.

wj.

.

n

1

At

.V

-

-.

IilSLIE

'

,

"

'1

Premiere 8 p.m.
WED., March 6
M'M

It?

Winner of Ten
Academy Awards

Til LA' IL'W'II
IN

'

L" -

newly commissioned play.

,

i

1

"The Familyetcetera" was
written by Arnold Powell, a native of Georgia. The production
is the world premiere of the

STRAND

1

J

at UK, will design the set.

,MH

1

.

.'.:Vr

Photo by Robert Benjamin

In 70mm. wide screen iind full stereophonic sound!
T--

"

r"r"

-

Theatre Tryouts Tomorrow

c

jl";. .j,'

-

Picture was taken by Robert Benjamin, second year medical
student at UK.

Tryouts for the next Theatre
Arts Department's production
"The Familyet cetera" are 7:30
p.m. March 5 in the Cuignol
Theatre.
Raymond Smith will direct
the play. Howard Enoch, a senior

-

w

f-

r

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Dy PRISCILLA DREHER

IIOWVIU)

METROCOLOR

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BY

MAIL

Is ' Yes Virginia There Is
A Colonel Sanders' A Myth?
By D.C. MOORE

Transylvania College Presents
The New York Touring Production of
Jean Racine's "PHAEDRA"
Tuesday, March 5
8:30 p.m.
Haggin Auditorium
For Tickets call 252-977- 3
or
.v.'

233-824- 1

"Kentucky: Land of Contrast" By Dr. Thomas D. Clark,
Harper and Row. 7.95
A Kentuckian may know some-

thing, but more than likely there
is much about Kentucky that
many natives don't know.
Sure there is the story of Daniel Boone and the story of Henry
Clay. But these are standard
associations made with famous
Kentucky symbols: "the Kentucky Colonel", the barefooted

"hillbilly", the "mint julip",the

40-

Kentucky Derby and the Blue-grastate with its beautiful horse
farms and white fences. These
symbols are part myth and part

ss

truth.
The foundation upon which
these and many more are based
is an exciting history that reads
more like a novel than a regu-

lar dry history book, when handled by a historian such as Thomas
D. Clark, professor of history
at UK.
Dr. Clark has written a basic
foundation for understanding the
history of Kentucky and has covered the history from the beginning to the present in studied

detail.

Some of the history that he
has touched upon deals with
politics, art, the social and economic characteristics of the state
and some of the problems that
the state will face in the future.
In doing this though, Dr.
Clark has not left out the characters that have helped shape
Kentucky.

He has used the famous figures
of Daniel Boone, Henry Clay,
Issac Shelby, John Hunt Morgan,
Cassius Clay to enrich the novel.
By doing this, he has put together
a comprehensive study that is not
hard to read but is informative
and educational.

However, Dr. Clark has not
used the scholar's way of presenting his material. He has not
confined himself to in depth
binding in which so many history books are written (those
which are written in the form
of thrilling fictional stories or
some in dry depth research).
4 What Dr. Clark has written
is for those who want to know
more about Kentucky. It is a
history that is realistic to the
point where the Kentucky colonel and Daniel Boone are in your
living room.

Land of Con"Kentucky:
trast" as written by Dr. Clark
manages to take in the sweeping
panorama that is Kentucky: the
mountains, the com liquor, the

Mississippi River boats.
There are the horse industries,
the movement westward and
some of the exploits of John
Hunt Morgan in the Civil War..
There are the court house
rings and the old cracker barrels.
There are the distillers of famous Kentucky bourbon and the
feud that caused Breathitt County to be called Bloody Breathitt.
All of these come to life in

"Kentucky: Land of Contrast"
to fill the imagination and stamp;
Kentucky as real and not JustSif
!

myth.
To those that read this book
the slogan "Yes Virginia, there
is a Colonel Sanders" will seem
more than Just a myth; the image
of the Colonel in the history

of Kentucky will seem real.

The Kentucky

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Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Otfice Box 4Ub.
Bfgun as the Cadet In 1UD4 and
pubhbhed continuously aa the Kernel
sine 1 WIS.
Advertising published herein la Intended to help the reader buy. Any
faUe or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
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* Serfdom At Morehead State University: Mite Makes Right
car for the strains of the lyre. Iord Dor of
Noh had heard that one of the knights
had made disparaging remarks about Iwth
the appearance and musical ability of the
Iuly Filet of Million while Irefcrringto her
do not know
as "a juicy little piece."
what he meant by any of it, but I do
know he was called upon the royal carixt
to explain himself. This knight, I believe
his name of Can of Dun, assured the Lord
that the rumors were preposterous, that
as for his Lady's dress he wished more
women would dress as if every day was
Easter, and as for her music he swore
he had never heard more pleasing sounds
from any lyre, not even in the Boston
Tope's Jug Band. This testimonial
the Lord, who then stepped forth
and rolled back his royal sleeve, extending
his royal hand upon which was the royal
ring, carved in the likeness of an asp.
The forgiving Lord then said, "Kneel,
Knight Can of Dun, kiss my royal asp
and swear they loyalty, oaf." Of course,
Knight Can of Dun obeyed.
Lord Dor of Nob was reassured that
none of his knights could be said to be
brass-eare- d
and that there was no dissension in the ranks, but he still did not
know what lay behind the lack of interest
in the cockfights. He consulted his Lord
High Booby of Social Stigmas, Crisco
Playback, wlio was no comfort to the
Lord at all. Instead, the Lord High
Bwby rejwrted that there really were dissenters w ho were capable of going so far
as to question the value of the Holy
Crusades. Lord Dor of Nob could not
believe his ears; the Holy Crusades had
Ix'en good enough for both his mother
and his mother-in-laThe Lord cried
out, "Why, where would we be without
the Holy Crusades?"
Crisco Playback cried out, "Yes, where

would we be without the Holy Crusades?"
Knight Can of Dun cried out, "Where.
Sire?"
The Lord, not only piqued at his
knight's ignorance but also suspicious
that here might be one of the subversive
traitors, answered. "That, Sir Can of
Dun, is why you are not a leader of

men."

The Lord pondered for only a moment
before issuing the royal proclamation that
henceforth, even, and forevennore, serfdom would be compulsory forall peasants
and all would consider it a privilege
and an honor. Soon the news had blared
across the land, and just as quickly
news came back to the Lord that not
all was as it should be, that even some
of the Lord's knights were questioning
the proclamation. Scandalized, the Lord
made it a royal order that henceforth,
even, and forevennore, no one would
question the previous royal order or any
future royal orders, the penalty being

death and

of the culprit's

non-renew-

contract, which everyone will agree, in
the case of a knight, is a fate worse
than death. The Lord was sure that
there would be no more problems, but,
just to make sure that his peasants did
not forget his importance as the great
provider, he ordered a gigantic banquet
where everyone would eat lots and lots
of apple pie and like it. In the shortest
of times the feast was set and all the
Lord's subjects had gathered in the Sirloin Room where the Lady Filet of Mignon
entertained upon her lyre. Hardly had the
first gross of apple pies been devoured
when a messenger came running and
excitedly announced that a knight had

appeared at the gates with a challenge
to the Ird's proclamations. The Lord
could not believe his ears. W1h would
dare to oppose him when it meant certain
death, or even something worse?
In less time than it takes to say
floccinaucinihilipilification, the act of declaring something worthless, the daring
knight had ridden right into the Sirloin
the
Room,
floccinaucinihilipilificated
compulsory serfdom program, and flung
his grey flannel gauntlet at the feet of
Lord Dor of Nob. Before the outraged
Lord could reply. Lady Filet of Mignon
had jumped to her feet and cried out,
"Lord Crisco Playback, teach this impudent knight a lesson in manners and
then cut out his ribeyes!"
"But, Lady Filet of Mignon, I have
no stake in this."
When she heard this reply of Lord
Crisco's the Lady Filet realized that
chivalry's flower had wilted. As I understand it she then took her lyre and rushed
off to her chamber in the Porterliouse
where for some unexplainable reason she
burned her bonnets, and hanged herself
on either her
or a meathook.
I do not remember which.
Meanwhile, the Lord was trying to
regain his composure in front of this
impudent knight, beside whom now stood
an old gentleman with a long flowing
beard and a clean but tattered robe.
The Lord exclaimed, "Are you not one
of my own men? Have you not heard
that for your insolence I am bound to
put you to death, or worse? And besides
that I will not renew your contract!"
The knight, I believe his name was
Advance, now stepped forward and said,

"My Lord, with all due respect, your
attempts to regiment the entire country-

side are not wise. I fear you would soon
g
have us walking as geese do and
is not only tiring, it also looks
silly. Would you have us the laughingstock of all the land? Remember, my
Lord, this is not B.C."
gwsc-steppin-

"B.C.?"
"Yes, B.C. Before the Constitution."

"Constitution? What's that?"
Suddenly the old man stepped forward. "Wait! I will tell you."
"Who are you, old man?" the Lord
Dor of Nob queried.
"Do you know me, the Wizard of
Odds? I suspected as much. I am better
known as Lord William of Reights."
"Know you?" the Lord replied. "Why,
I have never seen you nor heard of you
in my life."
With this the Lord struck the old man
on the side of the head. The blow did
not seem to hurt the old man himself,
but everyone else suddenly had a splitting headache as if they had received
the blow. The Lord Dor of Nob turned
to Knight Advance, drew his sword of
swift and equal justice, and slew him
where it hurts. In all fairness to the
Lord I must point out that he did not,
however, tear up Knight Advance's contract.
I suppose the violence of it all awoke
me, or perhaps it was the absurdity of
the situation that forced me to return to
reality. Anyway, I ask you, is it not
strange how one can dream of such things,
things which could only take place in

one's imagination?

Jim Stacy

m vae next fev yoa:

2 Claim To Be

scientists will lie vorlrins r'ou ::ev :cIo::g 'czvl rc aucts
to improve man's diet, housing, elciin; x-- clicijd;
reduce the toll of viral diseases: .marts iiirlifc without
heat; enhance y
diagnosis; control insect plagues;
repair human hearts "or ladrieys; turn oceans into
;v
v; A;;'T v
drinking water. , .

The President Of
Asbury College

A

(

X-ra-

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following article
is a reprint taken from The Chronicle of
Higher Education.
VVILMORE-VV- ho
the president of AsCollege is, depends on whom you
bury

talk to.
Working in the president's office is
Cornelius Hager, who has been named
interim president by the college's board
of trustees, effective Jan. 1.
But living at the president's campus
residence is Karl K. Wilson, whose contract was terminated by the trustees on
Dec. 28, 1967, but who refuses to leave.
Mr. Wilson has claimed that the Dec.
28 meeting was illegal because, he said,
it wasn't properly called and only 20 of
the college's 30 trustees were present.
Mr. Wilson Is 'Standing By'
His lawyer advised him not to interfere with the operations of the college,
Mr. Wilson said, so he is "standing by"
until the next trustees' meeting, scheduled
for April. He plans to appeal the Dec.
28 decision.
Mr. Hager said, "I've conducted faculty meetings and have assumed full

authority here."
Mr. I lager's home is six miles from
the Asbury campus, so he doesn't require
the president's residence.
Mr. Wilson's dismissal came after students and faculty members at Asbury
had complained about his administration.
One charged was that he had censored

the college newspaper.
Altliough Asbury is a private,
college, it has traditionally been a conservative institution with
emphasis on Protestant Christianity.
Trustees Met in November
At a meeting in November, the trustees
discussed tle matter but voted to continue Mr. Wilson as president. After
more than 200 of the college's 1.0G8 students responded with a petition to the
trustees asking that Mr. Wilson be fired,
the board met Dec. 28 and terminated his
contract.
The trustees said Mr. Wilson was dismissed because of his "inability to
with the Iward of tnistees, the
faculty, the alumni, and the student body
to implement the school's policial."
Mr. Hager was assistant dean of university extension at the University of
Kentucky before taking the Job at Asbury.
"This is an unusual situation," he
te

:

"

'

:

,

p

and anything else that you might think of.
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ideas ideas evolved, focused, and engineered
ixple's
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will be the same. It all depends upon you.
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Sign up today for an interview with the Du Pont
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HUlL!'
and associated functions.

The

165-ye-

ar

nfllJN

E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. (Inc.)
Nemours Building 2500 1
Wilmington, Delaware 19898
Please send me the Du Pont Magazine' along with
the other magazines I have checked below.

Q

Chemical Engineers at Du Pont
Mec hanical Engineers at Du Pont
Engineers at Du Pont
Du Pont and the College Graduate

Nam
Claim

Major

Degree

mx Uxl .

College
My
City

ddre
Zip Cud

* The Kentucky

Iernel

The Smith's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
Editorials represent the opinums of the Editors, not of the University.
Jol.n Richard Kimmins, Editor
Holx-r- t
F. Ilrdndt, Managing Editor
Martin Webb

Darrcll Rice
Dana Ewell
Jo Warren
Terry Dunham
Assistant Managing Editors
Hank Milam, Business Manager
Joe Hinds, Arts Editor
Carolyn Dnnnavan, Women's Editor
Bill Thompson, Cartoonist
Jim Miller, Sports Editor
Rick Bell, Director of Thotography
Mary Ma gee, Advertising Salesman
Rolx-rPriscilld Dreher, Editorial Assistant
Collins, Delivery
Mike Halpin,