xt7mcv4brs71 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mcv4brs71/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670331  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 31, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 31, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7mcv4brs71 section xt7mcv4brs71 Tie

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MTDCKY

X

The South's Outstanding College Daily

Friday Evening, March 31, 1967

WML

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol.

Tenure Committee

60 Former
NSA Staffers

Will Investigate

Eddington Case

Dr. Neal Eddington, assistant professor of anthropology, filed
a request Thursday with the President's Committee on Tenure and
Privilege to investigate all edged abridgements of his academic
freedom.
ton's case. A report was filed
Dr. Eddington, now in his
with the University Administrafirst year at the University, came
three weeks

under departmental investigation
last semester following numerous
student complaints from two sections of his Anthropology 100
course.
According to Henry Dobyas,

department chairman, over 65
percent of the freshmen in his
classes were failing, and complaints had been registered with
the College of Arts and Sciences
about course content.
The department did not renew
Dr. Eddington's contract for next
year. New faculty members normally are given only a
contract.
nothat time. Committee A
of the local chapter of the American Association of University Professors has studied Dr. Edding- one-ye-

ar

IFC Leaders

Mil

By NAN ROBERTSON
New York Timri News Service
formWASHINCTON-Six- ty

ami

i
m

.mum

9 rt El

Optimistically

er officers and staff members of
the National Student Association
charged Thursday that the
reixirt was a "poor
for a full disclosure of
h

the Central Intelligence

ago, a source said.
However, since the AAUP
chapter is not an official organ
of the University, its information is being transferred to the

Kernel Photo

Dave Murrell, seated, an assistant attorney general, addressed an
alcohol forum at the Student Center yesterday. He is an older
brother of William Murrell, standing, a candidate for SG president here. Dave, who is blind, received considerable attention as
an outstanding UK law student despite his handicap.

Students Advised To Lobby
IJ They Want Law Changed

Dave Murrell, an assistant Kentucky attorney general, told a
gathering on the Student Center Patio yesterday that if UK students
are dissatisfied with state law concerning alcoholic beverages, "they
should lobby before the legislature to get the law changed."
The assistant attorney general if
are similarly located,"
pointed out that he was speaking he they
stated.
as an individual citizen and not
The assistant attorney general
as a state official.
By LEE BECKER
said that a more expensive and
Mr. Murrell stated that a UniKernel Staff Writer
it all.
"long drawn out way to get the
In light of the constitutional
versity student has never been law changed would be a court
who is also involved in
Chairman Doby ns,
revision, the new leadership, and
any litigation conthe accomplishments of the past, in his first year at UK, was out cerning alcoholic beverages in fight."
"The only answer is to conmost of the leaders in IFC seem of town and unavailable for comKentucky.
vince the legislature that a perment. However, he said in
He stated that in 1964 the
optimistic in viewing the future. November when the case first
son who is old enough to fight
"Once we have come to the
Kentucky legislature passed a is old enough to drink," he said.
became public, he considered no law stating that the age of
point where IFC and the frater- issues of academic freedom were
Mr. Murrell defined Kentucky
nity system is strong ami growing involved. Rather he called it "a majority is 18 except for purlaw as giving the Hoard of Truswith the university and where
poses of alcoholic beverages. This
question of quality of teaching in actually means, Mr. Murrell said, tees the right to pass regulations
I FC is perfonningeffectively those
the University.
that a person can vote and fight governing
services it was designed to per- - the classroom
Responding to a question con'acafor his country "but he can't
"Does this catchword
cerning drinking in residences,
First of two parts.
demic freedom' mean freedom drink in it."
Mr. Murrell stated that they
taxfrom responsibility to the
He stated that there are strong
"probably wouldn't fit under the
be able to
form, we may then
payers, the parents, the students, legal arguments against the prinstatute which says that
branch out and take a greater and the University administraciple of treating a person as an Kentucky and
being under the
drinking
role in University and commun- tors? Does it mean license, freeadult on all points except one.
activities," Chris Dobbyn, dom to ignore this responsibility "Contrary to Kentucky law, there influence of alcohol in any pubity
lic place is against the law."
IFC president, said.
to all these people?" he asked is a principle in this country that
However, he said, thefootball
all adults must be treated alike
at the time.
Continued On Page 3
stadium probably would fit "or
':J
wmtfmt
mmmmmpf.fmmmtmtm ,,, mi iii
nimn
apply under the law."
To the surprise of many students, Mr. Murrell stated that a
licensed firm of a private nature
could probably sell alcoholic
beverages in the Student Center.
He said as more and more
students "become aware of their
legal existence, there may be some
litigation and we'll find the answers to some of thesequestions."

View Future

Report

Vs,

tion approximately

President's Committee onTenure
and Privilege.
Dr. Eddington, in his letter
to the committee, indicated he
felt Committee A had more than
of
documentation
adequate
abridgement of his freedoms.
Dr. Morris Cierly, chairman
of the freedom and tenure committee, said his group would
study Dr. Eddington's case, be
willing to hold a hearing and
call witnesses, and then attempt
to reach an objective judgement
to be sent to the President.
However, he said, he would
expect a report of the facts from
the person requesting the investigation in this case, Dr. Eddington.
Information provided from
AAUP would be of assistance, Dr.
Cierly said, although the committee would still have to verify

LVIII, No. I2.j

..."

n

hi

Agen-

cy's secret subsidies of private
groups.
They demand a thorough investigation, conducted in public
either by Congress or a panel of
citizens.
"We believe that the public
has a right to know more than the
Katzenbach report has told," the

group's statement declared.
They also said that some programs financed in the past by
the CIA "do not deserve to be
continued" even if they were
openly and publicly subsidized

fund.
by a new public-privat- e
The group expressed pleasure
that the presidential panel,
headed by Under Secretary of
State Nicholas DeB. Katzenbach,
had urged the severing of relationships between the CIA and
many organizations. But, they
said, "this is a poor substitute
for a full disclosure as to the

nature and extent of the relationships involved."
Speaking for the group and
stressing that the signers had
not been involved with the CIA-wCurt Cans, an employe of
Americans for Democratic Action
in Washington, and Irving
who teaches geography at
Southern Connecticut State College in New Haven. Mr. Cans
was NSA national affairs vice
Mr.
president in 1959-6was campus international
administrator in 195S-5Mr. Cans disagreed with the
Katzenbach finding that it would
serve "no useful purpose" io
identify any more groups that
were aided by the CIA.
The former student leader said
that virtually all American private groups working abroad were
"under a cloud of suspicion."
Those groups that did not get
CIA funds deserve to be cleared
so they can function effectiveere

Stol-ber-

Stol-ber- g

0.

ly, he said.

Meanwhile, Sen. Eugene J.
a persistent
McCarthy,
critic of secret CIA subsidies,
said yesterday he thought it
pointless to disclose all the private groups that have received
them.

Senator McCarthy said that
Continued on Page

3

Gregory: Laughter
At An Unfunny Joke
1

A

'

"

'i'

A

1

I

l

l

Chee ring The Cats Next Year
Cheering tle Cats on next year will be, back
row, Jennifer Brucham, Winnie Jo Perry, Suzanne
Oney, C wynne Deal, Suzanne HufTines, and Sue

Berry Polk. In front, Cheri Hughes, alternate,
Steve Weissmueller, Tom Sweet, and Marty Boone,

alternate.

'

g,

Alternating humor, often too tne to be funny for long, and
statements no one could laugh at, comedian and civil rights
spokesman Dick Cregory last night held an overflow Memorial
Hall crowd in the palm of his hand nearly two hours.
'America is probably the
"You young people have got
most racist country on the face
of the earth," he said in one of to make an effort not to solve it,"
his most dramatic moments, and he said, "but to realize it."
After several minutesofjokes,
this includes "both whites and
Cregory said, "I didn't come
blacks."
here to impress you, only to
"Any time a man says he is
to any other man, he inform you."
superior
"We never laughed Hitler out
is a racist."
are often not even of existence," he said. Humor
Negroes
aware that they are racist," he won't cure cancer, nor can it
said. "I'm a racist, but know solve social problems.
it."
Continued On I'agr 7
1

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Iiid.iy, March

MM7

.11,

They Say Food, Untouched By Human Hands, Is Hotter
they went from cigarettes to bowling equipment to
restaurant facilities. All three endeavors have been a

JOHN O'BRIEN

By

You've heard about it but you don't believe it. You go
into the place and sit down. Not much different than
any other restaurant, you think. You wait for the waitress to come and wait on you but she is nowhere to
be seen. You look around and some guy is using the
telephone in his booth.

The telephone? He must be. It looks like a telephone. A glance to the left shows you that you, too,
have not been forgotten. The black receiver seems to
sit there waiting for some money pitcher to pick it up.
You do and there is the same old dead hum that
comes over the University line. Finally a southern
feminine drawl asks you for your order. You say a
cheeseburger. You get it in four minutes.
Who touches it? No human hands, that's for sure.
Just $175,000 worth of machinery. You finish eating and
you vow you'll go back.
This was the scene Thursday night at the Press
Party at the Mustang Hesturant on the New Circle

David Brinklcy

C7

V

,

.

Candidate Suggests Fir lug Oswald

A candidate for state superinDr. Oswald should be fired.
tendent of public instruction has
"This is an election year for
accused University President state offices and students are
John W. Oswald of allowing The voters. If the University permits
Kernel to misquote him and to candidates to appear on campus,
cast "spurious aspersions" on it should protect them from being
him and therefore should be made quoted wrongly and from having
to "travel the path of Kerr in spurious aspersions cast on them
California."
in accounts carried in the school's
Willis V. "Tobacco Bill" official paper."
Walter
Kernel
Johnson, in a letter to The Kernel editor today, inferred that M. Grant, who invited Mr. John- -

ciation and to University students of the Lexington campus,
who must present validated ID
cards.

DAVID BRINKLEY

The Kentucky Kernel

Three Art Film

Editor-in-chi-

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except holidays and
exam periods.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Nick Pope, chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
RATES

SUBSCRIPTION

$8.00
$.10

CANTERBURY HOUSE
Episcopal Church
SUNDAY

472

PARK
East

man-mad-

151

10:30 a.m.

METHODIST

CHURCH

High at Clay Avenue
DR. J. T. HARMON,
Pastor
Dr. W. P. Fryman, minister, visitation
9:45 a.m. Church School
11 a.m.
The Great Assurance
7 p.m. Higher Ground

ShoWUlQS Set
'

Three films on the basic elements of art color,
"Discovering Texture" is about the great variety
e
and natural surfaces to be expertexture and line will be shown at 2 p.m. this of
ienced both through touch and sight. The film
Saturday in Room 208 of the Fine Arts Building.
These are part of a series of films on art of- shows how man uses paints, tools and materials
fered by the University Art Gallery as a free edto change the texture of surfaces.
ucational service. The public is cordially invited.
Other films are scheduled for the following Sat"Discovering Line" emphasizes the visual
urdays: April 8, 15, 22.
beauty and function of hue. Designed to Illustrate
"Discovering Color" clearly demonstrates the the way in which line records movement. The
techniques of color mixing and explores the great movement induced by line is a major composivariety of color we can see in the world around tional and expressive element in art. The ability to
us. The color characteristics of hue, value and inperceive line divorced from form is a major artistic skill.
tensity are explained.

hi

University
Methodist Chapel

ROSE ST.

SERVICES

8:00 a.m. and

,

Road. Who helped Mustang be the second completely
automated restaurant in the world?
None other than a firm called American Machinery
Foundaries Automatic Restaurant Equipment. AMFARE
does not specialize in the restaurant business. Actually

David Hrinkley, Washington
member of the NBC news team
of IIuntley-Brinklewill speak
at Memorial Coliseum at 8:15
p.m. Saturday under the auspices of the Central Kentucky
Concert and Lecture Association.
Attendance will be limited
to season members of the asso-

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files

STEAK HOUSE Ilk
Lexington now
Louisville and Cincinnati
1

E. MAXWELL

11:00

Sirloin Steak

Vab.

all for

MO.INING WORSHIP

FAST

NO TIPPING

OPEN 11 to 9

at

299-471-

0

T

CIRCLE

RUSSELL R. PATTON, Minister
9:35 a.m. College Class
10:50 a.m.
"The Intangible Forces"
7:03 p.m. "Goodness and Mercy Hath Followed Me"
or
Transportation provided for students Call
UPPER ST.

STEAlt MOUSE

l

277-669- 4

252-034- 4

Phone

LIME and BR YAM

STATION

ROAD

ALDERSGATE METHODIST CHURCH
1881 EASTLAND

PARKWAY

9:50 a.m.

ORIN M. SIMMERMAN,

JR., Minister

Church School; College Class: Sam Davis, Teacher
11:00 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.

;

rtn

For a delightful,

SUNDAY SERVICES

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH
S.

Lime (Next to IIo.plUI,
Donald W. Durham,
Sanden. Associate Minister
J. R. Wood. Pastoral
in Hear of Church)
Samuel Morris. Youth
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
9 a.m. and 11 a.m.
"God Needs You, Brother"
Nursery for all Services
(Farkinf in Hear of
1716

Dewey

Minister
Minister

Church)

imperial

DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
10:50 a m. Morning Worship
"No Epitaph Needed," Mr. Herron
Easter Sunrise Services
PROVIDED FOR STUDENTS
Call
or

TRANSPORTATION

277-617- 6

277-402- 9

FIRST PRKSRYTKRIAN
111 NUKTII

MILL ST.

9:45 a m.

KIC'IIAKD T. IIAK1USON.

Mlnikter

College Class. Mr. Jack Matthews, Leader

BELLEFONTE

Sunday Worship

DRIVE

REV.

JAMES A. LOLLIS, Minister

Sunday College Seminar
For Transportation Call

10:30 a.m.

277-378- 9

9:30 a.m.

of Lexington,

HAMODSIUdG

The Donovan Quadrangle Student Government is sponsoring
a debate between Steve Cook,
Sheryl Snyder, and William
candidates for Student Government president at 7:30 p.m.
Monday in the Donovan Hall
cafeteria.

Ky

i
5

'

;

ff

AOAD

The final oral examination of
Russell Johnston, candidate for
the Doctor of Education degree,
will be held at 3 p.m. Monday,
in Dean Lyman Ginger's office,
Dickey Hall. The title of the dissertation is "Selected Instructional Practices in Collegiate
Schools of Business and Their
Use in a Proposed Systems

Ap-

proach."

Dry Cleaning SPECIAL

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SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH
2356 HARRODSBURG RD.
9:30 a.m. College Class
8:30 and 10:50 a m.
6:30 a.m.

relaxing, carefree weekend, a

to Lexington, visit the Imperial House,
Lexington's most elegant motel where gourmet
foodi, wines, and fine service prevail. Entertainment ond dancing nightly for your pleasure. Our
rooms are spacious, elegantly appointed and
supremely comfortable.
STANLEY DEMOS. Manager

Mlnikter

(farkinf

artist-in-residen-

The Inspiration Players will
present Everyman at 8 p.m., Monday in the Student CenterTheatre
and admission is fifty cents.

come

hi

Herman Cherry, New York
painter and
this year at UK will give a talk
about his work at 3 p.m. Sunday,
in the University Art Gallery.

The pledge class of Triangle
Fraternity will have a car wash
behind the Triangle House at
251 East Maxwell from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. on Saturday.

ON NEW CIRCLE ROAD
v BETWEEN

Bulletin Board

The Student Chapter of American Institute of Architects will
sponsor the Jamey Achersold
Quintet at 8 p.m. on Sunday
at Memorial Hall. Tickets are
$1 per person
and $1.50 per
couple, and may be purchased
at the Campus, Kennedy's and
Wallaces Bookstores, Barney Miller's, and the Architecture Department.

$1.29

SERVICE

son to write a letter when he
complained orally about coverage
of his appearance before the UK
Young Democrats earlier this
month, noted that the University
administration has no prior control over the paper's content.
Kernel Associate Editor John
Zeh, who wrote the account of
Mr. Johnson's appearance, defended his story, saying that "the
candidate was obviously trying
to be funny in his remarks, and
now obviously does not want to
stand by the statements."
Mr. Johnson said the March
22 story was "brimful of lies
and innuendoes."

Mur-rel- l,

Baked Idaho Potato
Chef Salad Bowl
French Roll

Sunday, April 2
Sermon by:
Rev. Fornash

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
WEST HIGH

Ed Corgrave, AMFARE official, said, "we've been
working on the automated restaurant idea for almost
five years. Finally it has become a reality."
The new restaurant specializes in cheeseburgers,
shrimp, and other fish assortments. "Automated steaks
will probably take another five years but our laboratories are working on them now," he stated.
French fries seem to come out hotter. Onion rings
seem to be tastier and the cheeseburgers are thicker.
So goes the predictable success of the world's second
automated restaurant, as one AMFARE official put it.
AMFARE admits that all this is designed to cut
down on the restaurant personnel and the time it takes
to prepare food. What does the restaurant worker's
union have to say about all this? Who knows? They
don't even have a local representative.
Sorry about that, big time labor. Looks like management wins this round.

THE COMPUTER THAT COOKS YOUR FOOD

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3

There will be a pancake dinner at the Sigma Chi House from
4 to 8 p.m.
Sunday. All you can
eat for $1.
The final oral examination of
Ernest Chaples, candidate for the
Doc tor of Philosophy degree will
be held at 10:30 a.m. Monday
in Hoom 121 Kastle Hall. Chaples, dissertation will deal with
voting behavior of U.S. Senators

on selec ted issues.

* .Till: KI.NTI

Leadership Has Been
Continued From rage 1
pointed adviser to the council
the Ix'ginning of 1967.
"Leadership has !xen one of at
"IFC has contributed to forthe bin problems for IFC," Mickey
malizing the whole system,"
Miller, treasurer, said. "Lack of
Mick Ford, president of Alpha
it and the non-us- e
of it."
Camma Hho, said when asked
In the past IFC hasn't had
the leadership to putitselfamong what the main accomplishment
the top ranked, he said. "It has of IFC has been.
"Without it our houses wouldthe leadership now, and has got
the realization that we need a n't mean nearly as much. We
would be setting over here on
strong IFC."
Woodland by ourselves," he said.
Miller rescinded in much the
Charlie Ben Ashby, president
of Delta Tau Delta, said that same way.
"IFC is a unifying force for
not having an adviser hurt IFC,
and that having an adviser will all fraternities. Instead of 18 or
keep them from making a lot of 19 little cliques going around
mistakes.
campus, there is one," he said.
Besides rush, IFC provides
Jack Hall, now associate dean such things for the fraternities
of students, served as adviser to as a Greek retreat, the benefits
IFC during 1966, but he was from meml)ership in the National
acting dean of men at the same Interfratcrnity Conference and
time, and reportedly could not Southeastern Interfratcrnity Congive IFC as much time as it ference, and tlirce scholarship
needed.
trophies to the fraternities as
Ken Brandenburgh was ap awards and incentives.

Vacated Football Houses
To Be Offered To Greeks
Speculation that the soon to be vacated football houses will be
leased to fraternities or sororities was confirmed this week in a
memorandum issued to all fraternities and sororities by Associate
Dean of Students Jack Hall.
Although it was made known

60 Former
NSA Staffers
Hit Report

Continued From Page 1
apparently the CIA interference
with policies
of subsidized
groups was held to a minimum.
At the same time Rep. Dante

announced
Fascell,
that a House Foreign Affairs
Subcommittee he heads will hold
hearings on the presidential committee's report "as soon as our
schedule permits it." Mr.
and the other two members of the panel John W. Gardner, secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare; and Richard
Helms, director of the CIA will
be invited to testify.
At their news conference
called by the two former student leaders in the Rayburn
House Office Building here, Mr.
Cans and Mr. Stolberg said that
money should not be given in
the future to Radio Free Europe,
the U.S. Youth Council in New
York and the International Student Conference in Leyden, the
Netherlands.
"Radio Free Europe I think
is unnecessary as long as we
have the Voice of America," Mr.
Stolberg said. The last two they
called "nothing but CIA fronts."
B.

D.-Fla-

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IKIDAY
Evening Concert. Haydn:
Concerto in C"
7:00 Georgetown Forum
7:30
Horatio Hornblower:
Michael Hedgrave
8:00 News
8:05 Masterworks, Strauss:
"Ein Heldenleben"
News
11:00
11:05
Viewpoint: General Telford Taylor
SATl'RUAY
6:00

1:00

Sign

on.

News,

Music

Metropolitan Opera:
"Mourning Becomes Electra"
5:45 Kod and Charles: "Birds"
6:00 Evening Concert. Riegger:
"Dance Khythms"
7:30 Special of the Week
8.00
8:05
10:00
11 :00
11:05

1:00

2:00

News

I'ete Mathews
VVUKY Presents
News

Broadway Today: "Bryan
Harrison St Beth Hoagland"

SUNDAY
Sign on: News,

Sunday at Two

two-ye-

ar

The University will assume responsibility for the normal maintenance of the interior and exterior of the residence and
grounds, located on Hilltop Avenue between Haggin Hall and
Cooperstown, the memorandum
said.
"The University has chosen
not to commit these residences
to
leases which would
limit their usefulness to two organizations, but rather to devise
a plan whereby their utility may
benefit several organizations over
the years and thus serve as a
stimulus toward more progressive
and growing fraternity and sorority systems," the report said.
According to Kenneth Brandenburgh, adviser for IFC, the
final decision as to which of the
applicants will get the houses,
will be made by the end of next
month.
long-ter-

m

NEED A GOOD LAFF!
See the funniest com-

edy of the year. Held
over 2nd smash week

Music

"The council is designed to
perform services for the fraternities that they can't perforin on

the individual basis," Dobbyn
said.

"It

provides the medium for

exchangeof issues and problems,"
Besides the services IFC provides for the fraternities, it also
provides some services for the
University.
Examples of this are the student information service, the I FC
scholarship program, and the support of such scholarship programs
as Award Night and the Centennial Scholarship Drive.
IFC also provides a means
for the administration to communicate with the individual fraternities, Dobbyn said.
When it was discovered early

this month that three of the candidates for office could not qualify under the constitution, a committee was appointed ro revise
the document.
The constitution requires that
each candidate have a grade
standing for the past semester
equal to the all men's average
for that semester. The all men's
average last semester was 2.29.
"The motivation for the revision was as high as it would
ever be," Mr. Brandenburgh said,
since the representatives had
worked with the old document
for the past year.
The office of president was
the only one which had two
candidates, so the election of the
other officers was postponed until the revised constitution was
submitted.
Dobbyn has divided the constitution into three parts and assigned different men from his
seven man committee to work on
the different parts.
He has assigned the two candidates for vice president, one
qualified and one not, to study the
area of the document which will
be concerned with the officer
qualifications.
Dobbyn and DaveRattcrman,
the defeated candidate for president, are working on another
section which deals with the organization of the council.
A member of Theta Chi, a
colony here, is working on membership procedures, and two men
have been assigned to edit the
final document.
According to Dobbyn, the new
constitution will give the presidents of the individual fraternities a vote in the council, instead
of merely letting them sit in on

miP "J

Iiid.iv, Match M,

meeting as is now done. sentation of the fraternity sysAlthough the presidents will tem by IFC to new students
not be fined for absences as are while they are here in the summer
for orientation."
the other representatives,
feels that the presidents will I "We also want to explore the
want to attend in order not to nossibility of more contact and
communication with the freshlose their vote.
men in fall before nish."
Kach representative will re"We also want to take a
tain his vote, giving each fratergood hard look at the present
nity two votes.
This system is similiar to the rush rules and aim at making
the rush program more equitable
one used by the IFC at the University of Cincinnati which is from the individual fraternity's
considered one of the lest in point of view."
Another proix)sal is "to imthe nation. Hut at UC an alternative representative can cast the prove communications and relavote in the absence of the regular tions within the fraternity system," Dobbyn said.
delegate if the president is presThis will Ix accomplished
ent.
The IFC at the University of through presidential attendance
Tennessee, awarded the 19G6 Iron at IFC and through the estabMan Award as the outstanding lishment and promotion of "IFC
IFC in the country, uses a three sponsored workshops or seminars
for the individual fraternities,"
vote system.
The fraternity presidents, and he said.
two delegates, one a senior and
Dobbyn feels that after IFC
one a junior, are given votes. has formed letter communicaThe problem ofrepresentation tions and relations within the
has been one of the main disfraternities, established a "more
cussion points among the IFC equitable rush," and provided
leaders.
other services which "the fraterDobbyn said that except for nities cannot provide on an ina provision to review the constidividual basis," IFC will be able
tution periodically, nothing else to take a "greater role in Unihas been definitely determined. versity and
community
The document will Ix. submitted to IFC April 4.
Dobbyn has several other proposals for the council, however.
"In terms of numbers, the fraternity system has been standing
still while the University has been
moving forward," he said. "We
have to develop a much more
effective rush program."
Dobbyn listed four proposals
to improve the rush system:
"We're going to improve and
expand our rush publications."
"We're going to explore the
y
possibility of some formal pre- the

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Editorials represent the typinions of the Editors, not of the University.

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Significant Dialogue
Three University faculty members Wednesday critically discussed
the University's role in the nation
and the world and reviewed the expanding concept of education at
UK. The discussions, which were
held before a luncheon meeting of
the Faculty Club, provided interesting and needed insight on some
of the major problems facing the
University at this time, emphasizing that the University must become more aware of problems and
the
throughout
developments
world.

The Wednesday discussion was
one of a series of luncheon forums
being sponsored by the Faculty
Club to increase the amount of
dialogue among faculty members
(and administrators) on various
problems. Last semester the theme
of the programs was "Foci on
Contemporary Issues." Presently,
the theme is "Foci on Campus Problems."

the Faculty Club
for providing this series of "Foci"
programs and for encouraging members of the faculty to become more
concerned and involved in the issues and problems of the day. Such
discussions as those held Wednesday are desperately needed in order
for members of the University community to recognize the problems
which must be solved before UK
can become a leading institution of
higher education and perform its
true function in society.
The "Foci" forums have progressively developed into very frank
and realistic conversations among
faculty members. A
dialogue has charac
We commend

free-swingin- g,

free-flowi-

terized the most recent forums, including the one Wednesday. This
type of dialogue is indeed a necessity among the faculty at any

'

University.
But the discussions have not
been limited just to faculty members. Some of the "Foci" programs
have provided needed dialogue between the faculty and students.
Recently, for example, Winston Miller, last year's Student