xt77h41jkx04 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt77h41jkx04/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650407  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  7, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  7, 1965 1965 2015 true xt77h41jkx04 section xt77h41jkx04 Inside Today's Kernel

Vol. LVI, No. 103

J

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1965

Max Lerner
To Discuss
'Revolutions9

President Oswald says the initiative
to make Poducah Junior College a
community college under the University must come from Poducah officials: Page Two.
Editor

Eight Pages

;

t,

redshirting

policy:

Xavier

deefats

Kentucky

4--

Page

Sii.
Rifle team places first:

Poge

Si.

Tou Sigma concert set Sunday: Poge
Eight.

IFC Introduces
New Rush System

X

Distinguished author, journalist and teacher Max Lerner
will deliver the keynote address
Thursday at the University's Centennial Social Science Confer- ence.
Lerner, presently professor of
American civilization and world
,r
politics at Brandeis University,
will discuss "Six Revolutions in
American Life" in Guignol
Photo by Sam Abell
Theatre at 10 a.m.
Throe other leading social
Collegiate Revelry
scientists will be participants for In the wake of a weekend of collegiate revelry, the august statue of
this third of six major academic Dr. James Patterson, former president of the University, took on a
new aura of spring . . . a trash can hat and golf ball eyes.
conferences scheduled for the
Centennial Year. They are Dr.
Seymour Lipsct, University of
California; Dr. C. Herman
University of Chicago, and
Peter Drucker, New York University management professor
and free lance writer.
The public is invited to all
ultimaFRENCHBURG-- An
strike, or the return to class would
conference sessions in the Guigtum to return to class or face be postponed.
nol.
suspension was ignored by MeniAn attempted compromise beDr. Lipset's address, "North fee
County High School students tween the students and the school
American Values in Comparative Tuesday as
they agreed to con- board met with little success.
old strike.
Perspective: A detailed Look at tinue their two-da-y
Demands by the students that
Canada and the U.S.," is schedulThe strike began Monday in
a broader program of
ed for 2 p.m. Thursday. Drucker
protest of the filing of ouster
activities be introduced at
and Dr. Pritchett will deliver proceedings by the county school
Continued On Page 7
addresses at 10 a.m. and board against Jack A. Allen, printheir
2 p.m., respectively, on Friday.
cipal of Menifee County High World
Here
Drucker's topic will be "EduSchool and Elementary School.
cation in the Educated Society:
Alice
Superintendent George
The Achievement and the ProbMotley delivered the school
lem." Dr. Pritchett will speak board's ultimatum at an assembly
on "The Judicial Revolution in of the students Tuesday.
American Democracy."
The world premier of "Wing
"The board of education has
directed me to inform you that of Expectation," written and diyou must return to your classes," rected by Dr. Kenneth R.Wright,
he said, "and behave in the propUK professor of music, will be
er manner, or leave the school held here today through Sunday.
This three-agrounds.
opera, based on
"If you leave the school the life of Mary Todd Lincoln,
,.. ..
grounds," Miss Motley con- is being presented as a part of
tinued, "it will be considered the University's Centennial Year.
Dr. Wright, named a "Dissuspension from school, and in
order to be reinstated you will tinguished Professor" last year
have to have your parents bring by his colleagues in the College
of Arts and Science, spent more
you before the Board of Education and ask for reinstatement." than a year in writing the opeia
After Tuesday's assembly the which traces the life of the Lexinstudents decided by voice vote gton-born
wife of the nation's
that the march through the com- 16th President.
Three visiting artists will head
munity scheduled for today
would take place as planned. the cast of 26. Miss Carol BaHowever, student leaders yard who is presently in her third
were undecided as to whether the season as a regular member of
march would conclude their the New York City Center Opera
MAX LERNER
Prit-chct-

discusses
Four
P9C

Kentucky relays a photographic definition: Poge Five.

Menifee Go. Students

Protest Proceedings
extra-curricul-

ar

Two hours of debate and confusion by IFC Tuesday night
preceded the final adoption of a
deferred rush program for the
1965-6- 6
school year.
Defeated earlier in the meeting, the deferred rush program
was passed after three subsequent
proposals also failed.
The new program will eliminate freshman rush in the fall.
However, IFC will provide a fall
program to familiarize the freshmen with the fraternity system
at the University. Upperclass
rush will be conducted as usual.
IFC Rush Committee Chairman Winston Miller took the
floor early in the meeting and
said that even after the recent
IFC Evaluation Conference,
where national officers condemned deferred rush, the Rush Committee still felt that it was best
for UK.

Frank VVesendorf, representative of Sigma Phi Epsilon, then
proposed a new plan. He said,
"Our rush program is stagnant
and needs uplifting. It's our opportunity to improve ourselves;
to show the University what we
are doing.
"A man shoulcjl be able to

pledge as soon as he is accepted
at UK," VVesendorf proposed. "At
the beginning of the fall semester
we should also have one week of
formal rush.
The third part of the plan
would require a man to wait one
semester to pledge another fraternity if he had depledged.
Miller answered this plan by
sayiiigthat he had talked to boys
from the University of Illinois
whom IFC is trying to copy.
"These boys feel that their
fraternity system is good in spite
of open rush, not because of it."
Miller continued, "The Illinois
IFC wants to adopt deferred rush
because open rush is causing
scholastic problems."
Miller then introduced graduate student Dino Curris who
was a member of Sigma Chi at
Illinois. Curris told of the rush
problems at UI.
"Each university has to feel
its way in rush," Curris said.
"What works at some campuses
won't necessarily work at others.
"Although deferred rush
might cost a little more, you
get to know the boys a lot better.
The chapters at Illinois initiate
Continued On Page 8

Premier

9

'Wing Of Expectation Opens
ct

Company, portrays Mrs. Lincoln.
John Stewart, a noted tenor
soloist, has the Lincoln role. Mr.
Stewart has appeared as a soloist with the New England Conservatory Orchestra, the Bennington College Choir, and has
given a number of recitals in the
Area.

Boston-Providen-

Julian Patrick will portray

Lincoln's Springfield law partner, William Herndon. He is a
member of the new national company of the Metropolitan Opera
and will make his debut later
this spring at the San Francisco
Opera.
The theatrical director for the
Opera will be Wallace Briggs, director of the UK Guignol Theatre
and the director of the opera
Continued On Pace 2

MISS CAROL BAYARD

Tenure: Issue At The Heart Of A Controversy
By SID WEBB and KENT HICKS

This is the final article of a three-paKernel series
on "Publish or Perish."
-f
"Publish or Perish" is a flashy term that takes a
devastating swack at the qualifications that lead to
tenure.
rt

evolutionary process toward a celebrity system, rather
than the harsh phrase publish or perish.
Mr. Care is an instructor in the Department of
Philosophy at Yale.
A researcher and writer will bring prestige and influence to any university that hires him, Mr. Care
said, and this is motivation for using research as a
criterion for evaluating those up for tenure.
"The chances of junior men moving through the
ranks to a tenured post are often nil," he wrote. "In
this system when a tenure position is open, more than
likely a department will elect to 'bring in' an additional
celebrity from another school rather than promote a
.junior scholar, in spite of the good teaching and promising research for the local aspirant. What the junior
scholar cannot provide are precisely the attributes of

Tenure, once it is granted, provides a measure of
job security for professors, and it adds to the stability
of academic quality by preventing "outsiders" and
trustees from tampering.
But tenure, like congressional immunity, can be
abused. Since "job security" may protect mediocrity
and irresponsibility, administrators here, as at other a star."
major universities are searching for means by which
Emphasis on research, whether it is a part of the
candidates for tenure can be properly evaluated.
"celebrity system," or whether it is merely one qualiUK now places emphasis on the scholarly articles fication that must be met before tenure is to be granted
a candidate has published as one means of evaluation. may lead to a gray atmosphere for students of the
Its emphasis at other universities has turned the spot- fut ure, he said. If a teacher becomes overly concerned
with research and publication his classroom teaching
light on this criterion and stirred an intense argument
may suffer.
in academic circles.
President John W. Oswald is aware of this and has
Norman Care, writing in the March 27 issue of The appointed three committees to study faculty evaluation,
New Republic, described the problem of tenure as an the University's intellectual atmosphere, and other fac

tors related to a beneficial atmosphere for students and
professors. At the same time Dr. Oswald wants to mark
the University as a leader in the Kentucky community

and in the nation's community of universities.
Although there has been no major incident at UK,
the "research and publish" policy here and at other
institutions has stimulated discussion among University
professors.

"Publish or Perish apparently does exist, but the
question of whether it is good or bad has not been
answered," said one University instructor who claims he
is being forced out by a publish policy here.
"Oswald's publish -- or perish thinking creates work
which leads to abuses of school apparatus and a flood
of synthetic scholarsliip," the instructor said.
"Instructors are required to teach, to seek tenure, and
to do research. An increasing amount of time is taken
by the publisliing of this material. Both the quality of
the teaching and the quality of the research suffer from
--

this."

The instructor charged that deans merely count the
published pages, and said the quality of the work was
really irrelevant. Dr. Oswald, however, denies that the
quantity of publication is a factor. He emphasized that
is the quality of the publication and the significance of
the research that are important.
I'ontinurd On 1'agr 7

* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Aptil 7,

2-- TIIE

15

Peter, Paul, Mary Discuss
Folk Music, Social Problems

Opera Opens
Here Today
Citinti

truss Par 1
chorus a Mi.w FhjCiv Jernes.1.
asrittant professor cf music and
director of the Univmity's Opera
Theater. Costumes are designed
by Eosemary Boyer and set by
Riyniond S tilth.
This musical drama opens one
week short of the l!Xth anniversary of President Lincoln's
assassination in. Ford Theater-I- t
portrays Mrs. Lincoln, as a
woman of curious uncertainty
and inner restlessness. Following
the assassination of President
Lincoln in 1563, her remaining
years were marked with tragedy,
bitterness and strife- Dr. Wright's prod action opens
with Mrs. Lincoln oa her death
bed in 1SS2. By rain? the Gash-bamethod, he portrays ordeals
which few women in history have
been forced to face. Prior tr the
ass ass nation, Mrs. Lincoln had
suffered the loss of two seas and
another son, Todd, died in 1571.
Public disapproval seemed to
follow her every movement following ISoiS. Not only did she
become alienated with her one
remaining son Robert but she
also suffered the rigors of a public scandal emanating from her
insanity hearing in Chicago in
ck

ByJOHNZHI

Kernel Staff Writer
"I'm a very selfish lady. I
cherish every right I have as an
American" declared Mary Trav-er- s
of Peter Paul and Mary ..back-sta- g
after the trio's Cincinnati
concert Saturday night.
Mary and her two bearded cohorts had just finished pleasing
a crowd of about 1000 folk music
fa as who had jammed Cincinnati's Music Hall for a
show.
"If yoa allow people to be
stripped of their rights, yoa are
jTLZJLX TXTZ1CK
nest in line,' she said, defending her Hxnd on civil riht3- The American Negro has not
1373. Death came as a relief in
13 2 after years filled with grief been "absorbed and dictated"
and to rment- ry society she explained- Asked about the trio's partiEesides the guest artists other
cipation in the recent march on
cast members include Donald
Montognmery the tall blonde
Carrett Flictinger and
Ivey
pointed to sneakers stained with
Charles Diclens all UK faculty mud from the march-members; Cecilia Sams Ear bora
The group also has entertain-e- d
Dean, Virginia Sharpe, Marcia
demonstrators in the marches
Eraua, Nancy Young, Patricia on Washington and Frankfort- Bracken Dianne Davidson
Paul Stookey the tall comic
ihchae! Sells jL--n Haze rett Peter of the three added that the AlaStoner Stephen Atkinson Smith bama march was a meat and
Armstrong, Dale Suckow Neil potatoes" demo nstratio a as comEllison Norris Wake JoeEwing
pared to the relatively symbolic
and Eon Meaox
Washington and Frankfort
standing-roo-

m-only

marches..

Discussing the war hx Southeast Asia, Paul and Mary agreed
that the Vietnam issue is not
The
for any move
make Paducah. Junior CoHeg a
as clear cut" as the civil rights
part of the University's communitycoHeg program will have to come issue. Peter Yarrow was signing:
fern. Paducah. cGcials President John OswaH said Tuesday.
outsider during the
Dr. Oswald said informal discussions had been held with Uni- autographs
interview.
versity and Paducah officials but no definite plans have been con-

PJC: A UK College?
initiative
to

sidered,"
At the dedication of a new $IJ million campus at Paducah Sunday, Dr. Oswald hinted that the University probably would accept
Paducah Junior College as a community college if asked. He said LX

HOW

to make the ma.iimum effort to help all communities"
mS
Dr. Oswald noted that Kentucky has taken a place with ether
states. Seven community colleges now are
leading community-colleg- e
operating in Kentucky , and two more are being planned.

AS0O-- X

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ANDREWS

VANDYKE

A Review

Mary said she "loves
jocley," he said, "became there
but is
a human be-i- are three that claim (her credit,"
then an entertainer."
Peter, Paul, and Mary arc
Asked about VISTA and the sincere, vivacious. The (all, la nicy
Peace Corps,, she said "I'm real-T- y blonde adds a touch of thAtminz
interested in any projrams that finesse to her
partners. They are able to reach Info
stir up younsj peopre."
The trio's two- hour program every segment of an audience
from the young to the old,
g
that niht did just that.
as well a Informing,
From, the moment the three
forming.
skipped on stas until they finished their traditional encore, Tf
Early in their career four year
I Had A Hammer,"" Peter, Paul, agoone reviewer wrote, "Peter,
and Mary thrilled the capacity Paul, and Mary'. firstt alburn i
crowd with their fresL, honest bright with enthusiasm. No gimmicks. There i just .something
style.
"
Much, cf the humor on the GOOD alxut it all
several albums and
group." Ta Concert alhuna was
Now,
missing during the Qncinnati many concert! later, they arc
performance, hut they still rnr even better than GOOD. They
sert humor fcr quick and effective have improved, matured, and can
now claim tlic title of "two beardcomic relief.
Paul cSd amuse the crowd with ed prophets of the folk idiom in
TJ uer"a ."itLrz art the roclc and
league with a bright, young
rail market and "Candy Ear,
sin-inr-

"nt

"1

n,

reat-loH-

enter-tainin-

blonde-and-a-half-

."

HELD OVER!
2ND WEEK

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EAST

The Kentucky Kernel
Th

Ktrruel, UrJver;tjr
Uton, L'Atvrt ci Kentucky,
VaA. iUtorX-tl- ii
pott
paui at Lcxir.fbvn, Kentucky.
f"ubii4rl tout tircs
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Pub.nr4 tor Uv ttu4-nUniversity of Kentucky by tr Bod
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Get acquainted with the "Route of tho Tac
makers" the area aerved by Piedmont AU
line. Then, next time you're traveling alon
this route a trip home, to a friend's for a
holiday or to an athletic event, call Piedmont
Airlines or your travel agent. Discover how
easy and economical it is to fly. You'll find
Piedmont 7
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hospitality mighty enjoyable.

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disc Y ley played the song one
day, the story g6e an! tvtt
since, Peter, Paul, and Mary have
been on top,
"! won't identify ftaf dkc

Loren Mastroianni

THE
IK WATER

t

fnz to which
atfihuffd,

Joseph; E. Levine

Tilts J

A KNIFE IN

RJ EBONS,

SCroup's

(Mrttd

"ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!"-- n

SUSPENSE ASD A
DASH CF EVIL!"

rotTAJu TYFrwimu

litt" a

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V

HilHiT
ACHiEVEtV.Errn

A DEVIUSH DISSECTION CF
MAS THAT HAS HUMOR,

AS!MS

Paul

a

poJ

AJM.. 90s

MM;

KENTUCKY
TYPEWRITER

entertainer-'-

WALT DISUECS

is willing and ready

SERVICE

starts

a new number nliirit
cbild' ttattinn n ttn
tinAy by a stfanzrr,

Paul diitinTushed between a
performer and a n ent erta iner, su 2
genttn? an entertainer cnnve
a meiiajre, while a performer does
not.
"And folk mmic itself is that
message' he said.
Still dressed in a herringbone
jacket, mono?Tammed shirt, and
brown slacks, he added, "Sin-ci- j
foCc music allows me to be
a human bein; as well as an

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, April

APPLICATIONS

6
for the
Little Kentucky Derby steering
committee are available at the
information desk in the Student
Center. They should be returned
by 5 p.m. Thursday to the LKD
office, Room 116 of the Student
1965-6-

Center.
a

a

THE GERMAN department is
sponsoring a movie at 7 p.m. tonight in Room 108 of the Commerce Building. The movie will
feature landscapes of Germany,
portraits of artists, and other
shorts. Admission is free.
a

a

e

THE STUDENT BRANCH of the
American Institute of Aeronautics will show three movies Thursday at 7:30 pjn. in Room 203 of
Anderson Hall. Two of the movies
will deal with Ranger VII and
the pictures it took of the moon.
The third will be on astronomy.
a

a

a

PAUL CARMICIIAEL, executive
for IBM Co., will speak on "Patent Law in Engineering Design"
in Room 232 of Anderson Hall
on Thursday at 9 ajn.
a

a

a

THE BSU vesper services Thursday evening will be highlighted
by a panel composed of ministers
of different denominations who
will discuss interdenominational

marriage.

a

a

team captains will meet
Thursday at 7:30 pm. in Room
109 in the Student Center. A
team roster is due at this meetLKD

ing.

a

a

a

LKD Saturday committee will
meet Thursday at 6:30 pm. in
Room 109 of the Student Center.
a

a

cm

DELTA PHI, women's
erary honorary, is now open for
membership. Members are selected on the basis of creative writing ability, and scholastic
achievement. All interested women should turn in three typewritten manuscripts by Friday to
the English department office in
'McVey Hall. Any form of prose
or poetry is acceptable.
lit-

TYPEWRITERS
FOR RENT
DIXIE CASH REGISTER CO.,

COSMORAMA, sponsored by the
Cosmopolitan Club, will be held

at

8

APPLICATIONS for positions on
the Summer Orientation staff,
and for positions as guides and
assistant guides during the fall
orientation activities are available in the office of the dean of
men, Room 203, Administration
Building. Deadline for applications for positions on the Sum-

mer Orientation staff Is Friday.
Applications for positions on the
Fall Orientation staff will be accepted through April 30.
APPLICATIONS
for president
and vice president of the UK
student body are now available
in the student government office,
Room 102 Student Center. The
deadline for applying is Wednesday, April 21. The election will
be held Tuesday, April 27. Voting
machines will be located in the
Student Center and at several
other locations throughout the
campus.

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MKMiUNDERGRADS,

The University Computing
Center is offering a regular consulting service on matters related
to computor programming.
The consulting service will
give coverage for problems with
Fortran language programming
and sources of coverage for other
coding languages.
Located in cubicle CI of the
Computing Center, the consulting service is open 9 to 12 a.m.
and 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday.

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THERE WILL BE a meeting of
the Young Republicans on Thursday at 7:30 pjn. in the Student
Center Theater. Since next year's
officers will be elected, this is an
extremely
important meeting.
All members are strongly urged
to attend.

NEEDING

-3

upon declaring his own height,
upon exhibiting to all challengers
his lefty position in life and as
a man, the fall would never have
taken place.
"Knife In The Water" is not
a film that had to be shot behind the Iron Curtain, although
the spartan drabness of life there
docs add atmosphere from the
opening scene. But it certainly
succeeds in focusing its entire
attention upon man, upon three
people lifted out of their normal
lives, in a way that the busy,
opulent West might find "old
hat" to attempt.

too-serio- us

Candidates are required to attend the Conference on Student
Organizations to be held April
17, where they will make their
views known to the assembly.
This conference will propose a
resolution for a new structure of
student government, proposed by
the committee formed after the
last conference, March 6.

Inc.

ASK YOUR FRIENDS

classic existence of strength,
courage, and love.
In this day no one can live
on the sailboat all the time, of
amazement to those who have course. There is always the nine
am conference to be met. Hut
given up on the Iron Curfor awhile, for the greater part
tain countries producing art.
But perhaps it is because Po- of the film, that other world of
land has granted more freedom civilization's great nuisances can
that ever to her farmers and art- be forgotten.
"Knife In The Water" uses
ists that her crops and films arc
on the rise. Certainly "Knife In this lyricism subtlcly to estabThe Water" manages to sidestep, lish a mood of the classical for
viewer. With this mood as a
or at least to use to its own adthe usual heavy hand of foundation, the tragedy itself can
vantage,
occur, and be felt with surprisCommunist artisty.
The sidestep is done as in the ing poignancy.
This tragedy exists in the husbullring, with such gentle grace
that the ponderous weight of the band's new doubt of his strength,
bull seems only to have been in his finally confessing that he
is afraid when there is no longer
placed in the ring as a spotlight on the skilled grace of any need for him to be. Defeatthe toredor. Or perhaps as in ed by his own vanity, he falls injujitsu, as the opponent's own to needless selfincrimination.
The incident that causes this
weight is used to throw him.
"Knife In The Water" seizes fall is as fateful as that of any
the
weight of Iron Oedipus or Antigone. His wife,
Curtain life where every private attempting to reverse her husautomobile, every sailboat, every band's fall by telling him the
free day is a rare treasure and truth, finds herself helpless to
makes of it a lyric of classic do because he can't believe her.
He may, perhaps, pretend to
tragedy.
believe her, but he knows himThe lyric becomes the sail- self that even this will contriboat, one type of knife in the bute to the depth of his fall.
water, skimming lightly through
If he had not been so intent'
a fresh world of 120 lakes, and
resting quietly through its stofms.
The sailboat is a separate world
of its own, with its own rules
and a simplicity of life that allows man to return to a mere
By SCOTT NUNLEY
Kernel Arts Editor
The Polish film "Knife In The
Water" should be a never-failin- g

pm. Saturday and Sunday

in the Commerce Building auditorium. Tickets are $1.25 and are
available at the Student Center,
the International Center, Graves-Co- x
and at the door.

Attention SENIOR

19G5-

Poland's 'Knife In The Water'
Is Lyric Of Classic Tragedy

UK Bulletin Board
ANNOUNCEMENTS
of any Unirermity
organization tor the Bulletin Board
mutt be turned in at the woman'!
deak in tha Kernel office no later
than X p.m. the day prior to publication. Multiple announcement
will
be made If a carbon la furnlahed for
each day of publication.
a

7,

AddrttU

Hi NouMkMpiltf. J
V
UMItl

City.
KEtPSAKE

DIAMOND

-- Co..
-- SfoteRINGS. SYRACUSE.
N. Y.

U202

* "The Usual Statement Of Regret, And Then Let's Get
Going On Another Spcccli Stirring Up The Rednecks"

Reversed Reasoning

The lead editorial in Sunday's
bore the
Lexington Herald-Lcadc- r
suggestive headline, "So long as
redshirting's done, Kentucky needs
to follow suit.
The editorial went on to suggest
that since redshirting is widely practiced in Southeastern Conference
football, Coach Bradshaw needs to
begin redshirting players in order to
compete.
This is just the sort of suggestion
which the Kernel has opposed all

might be advanced when we discuss redshirting?
In fact, a player is usually
when he is not needed, and
the coach wants to hold him until
later. This means that his academic load is cut to the bare essentials so that five years are required to complete school. This is
done in the name of "competition"
and "winning teams."
The Big Ten, the Ivy League,
and the Eastern Big Five Independentsall composed of schools
year.
in the SEC have rules against
A great deal is being done in
redshirting.
intercollegiate athletics, not just at
Rather than redshirt because
Kentucky but nationwide, in the everyone else is doing it, we sugname of competition and competigest that Kentucky take just the
tion alone.
opposite course.
We feel if intercollegiate sports
We suggest that Coach Bradare to justify their existence in the shaw follow the course chartered
t.
academic community they must be by Coach Rupp and refuse to
founded on some grounds other than
the ability to compete successfully
If the University finds that it
with other teams.
cannot successfully "compete" in
Few would be so foolish as to a conference whose ethics it cannot
suggest that the academic reputaaccept, as well it might, then we
tion of a university is made or suggest Kentucky withdraw from
broken by consideration of how that conference.
well its football or basketball team
We have consistently called for
fared in competition.
intercollegiate athletics to be reA great deal has been said, esevaluated in terms of what good
Coach Bradshaw, about they can do in the Univeristy of
pecially by
the "educational" advantages of the present and of the future.
We feel such a course is obviousintercollegiate athletics and their
potential (as yet largely untapped, ly wiser than that advocated by
we suggest) for "character build-inthe Herald-Leadwhich seems to
be that "it might be bad but if
Where is the consideration of you have to do it to keep up, then
a player's education and how it doit."

rcd-shirt- ed

1

1

Hljsli

I

-

red-shir-

g.

Tie isH(tGroct

fsr

Boycott

er

The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther violence into a situation that is alKing's proposal for a boycott of ready impoverished by rancor and
Alabama is wrong in principle and hostility.
would be unworkable in practice.
As a practical matter, a boyAn increase in the number of cott would probably not work anyNegro voters and an end to police way. The economy of Alabama,
brutality in Alabama, which are the like that of all the states, is too
no adequate reason to hope that
goals Dr. King has set for such a intertwined with the rest of the
a further escalation can succeed
boycott, are of course admirable. nation for consumers and businessin anything but more death and But they can and should be reached men to be able to make the necesdestruction, and the grave danger by orderly, lawful methods. Once sary discriminating choices.
of bringing in the Russians and
bill now
We are equally dubious about
passed, the voting-right- s
or Chinese, and also bringing them
in Congress would bring the projected investigation of the
pending
together.
about a substantial increase in the Ku Klux Klan by the Hous
Activities Committee.
The problem that Vietnam rep- number of Negro citizens registered to vote.
Everyone already knows all that
resents is not going to be solved
inThe Justice Department and
is necessary to know about the
by military means. The solution lies
dividual citizens can, through the Klan, which is that its racist notin the political, economic and social
fields. But the situation has now courts, combat the misuse of state ions are nonsense and its members are bigoted riffraff. Even if
deteriorated to such a degree that and local police power to intimian inquiry were needed, the comthe only instrument Washington date Negroes. If additional legislation is needed, Congress is the mittee, with its staff bloated by
has and uses is military force. There
has never
was a time, and not very long proper place to seek a remedy. overpaid
A boycott makes no sense bedemonstrated any investigative
ago, when negotiation was a procause it hurts the powerless more competence. It could only serve as
cirmising possibility. In present
cumstances it seems that neither than the powerful, the innocent a conduit for material developed
as well as the guilty. There is no by the F.B.I.
China nor Russia nor North VietIf legislation is needed to control
nam is interested. Yet, sooner or certainty, f