xt7n2z12r978 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7n2z12r978/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700220  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 20, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 20, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7n2z12r978 section xt7n2z12r978 Kentucky Kernel

eis
Friday, Teh. 20, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXI, No. 91

'All Might Participate'
Dealt Crushinsr Blow
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TV

By HAZEL R. COLOSIMO
Kernel Staff Writer
Student Government representative Steve Bright was dealt
a crushing blow Thursday when
his attempt to over-rid- e
the veto
on his bill "That All Might Participate" was strikingly defeated
21-- 6
by the SG assembly.

presidential candidate, released
a prepared statement in which
he said "the ultimate failure of
SG Bill 1969-5- 8 ("That All Might
Participate") showed that the SG
assembly would not jump to the
dictates of a man who used the assembly as a dupe to improve his
chances of winning the SG presidency."
In other action, SG president
Futrell made his executive report concerning the bill giving
students and faculty voting membership on state college directing

Marking the death of "one

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of the most controversial bills"
introduced in several years,
Bright's proposal had called for
a two-wee-k
period for the SG
spring elections with polling
places being open at certain time
intervals during the two weeks.
Election Board chairman Jim
Gwinn and
Bruce
Carver had prsented their proposals to the SC assembly prior
to Bright's attempted

boards.

vice-chairm-

:

-

veto-overrid- e.

.

discussion over fine
points of the Board's proposal
.ensued and Bright suggested that
the SG assembly bring the
Board's plan four "two-da-y
maximum area plan" to a vote
so as not to "be just shooting
the breeze" or wasting the assembly's time.
Bright moved to amend the proposed bill to include the adoption
of his vetoed bill. He then took
the floor to refute the points of
the Board's proposal.
Proposal Is Defeated
The bill was put to a roll call
vote and Bright's proposal was
defeated by the SG assembly vote
of 21-The Board's original plan four,
minus Bright's "rider," was then
passed by the exact margin that
had defeated Bright.
Sometime later, after what
one SG representative termed
"Bright's last stand," representative Mark Bryant, possible SG
Much

JJj

Mark Bryant, Student Government representative, releases a prepared statement Thursday, in which he said, "the ultimate failure
of SG Bill 1969-5- 8 showed that the SG assembly would not jump
to the dictates of a man who used the assembly as a dupe to
improve his chances of winning the SG presidency." He later
stated that some actions by some representatives made the student
Kernel Photo by Ken Weaver
government a farce.

Young Socialist
Sees Recession
By MIKE WINES
Kernel Staff Writer
The regional organizer for the
Young Socialist Alliance (YSA)
told a gathering of students
Thursday night that economic
and social trends of the past
20 years show "a very good potential for radical and revolutionary movement in this coun-try.- "

6.

knows just how big it will be."
He attributed the coming recession to the economic policies
of the United States, which he
said have led to a "seriously
dollar and a
"drastic decline" in the growth
of world trade in the last five
years.
Over Production
Schwarz
said, is a major catalyst of economic problems. "This society
is the first society in history that
has this particular problem . . .
a problem that drives society into the ground, keeps it from functioning," he claimed.
To back up his claim, Schwarz presented figures from the
U.S. Council of Chambers of
Commerce which estimated that
U.S. corporations held CO percent
of all foreign investments in 19G0
compared with 35 percent in 1950.
Assets of foreign companies controlled by U.S. interests is "well
in excess of $100 billion," he said,
over-extende-

.

Futrell expressed hope that
the necessary votes would come
"once it's on the floor," but also
added that it was contingent on
the attitude of students.
Med Center Hours
Legislation presented before
the SG assembly also included
lengthening the UK Medical Center's hours, awarding academic
credit to those students actively
involved in
the president, vice president and the
speaker of assembly, and extension of the complex commons
closing hours All the legislation
passed.
Under old business, the SG
assembly tabled the motion concerning the impeachment procedure of SG president for further
study, but passed the bill allowing more pay phones and better
mail service for Cooperstown and
Shawneetown housing units. The
motion concerning a 2.3 Grade
Point Standing for eligibility for
SG elections was defeated.
The final proposal was made
by SG representatives Keith
and Barbara Ries which
concerned the abolishment of future SC elections and that present SG representatives be allowed
Bru-bak-

Over-productio- n,

Bob Schwarz, a YSA organizer in Ohio, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia, and Kentucky, spoke
to about 10 students at a meeting in the Student Center. He
claimed that three major forces
were driving capitalist societies
toward revolution the economic
crisis, the youth revolt, and the
war in Vietnam.
"This country is working up
to some sort of a recession,"
Schwarz
said, "but nobody

NBCP rogram
HasDr. Davis
Dr. Wayne Davis will take
part in NBC's "First Tuesday"
March 3.
Davis will appear with Barry
Commoner, Paul Ehrlich, Kenneth Watt and Stewart Udall.
They will discuss what the United
States will be like in the year
2000.

Davis, a UK zoology professor
and sponsor of Zero Population
Crowth, discussed ecology, population and the effects of environment on economy.
NBC sent a camera crew from
Houston to film the segment with
Davis. Davis said they filmed for
several hours, occasionally asking
him questions.

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adding that the assets, if lumped
together, would form the
country in the world, behind the United States and the
tliird-riche-

st

Soviet Union.
Schwarz said the United
States' huge overseas investment
is the result of Marshall Plan
reconstruction programs in countries devastated by World War
II. However, he said, the investment program is backfiring and
threatens the economic security
of all capitalist countries.
"We are getting increased
competition from the countries
we rebuilt with the modem
we gave them technology of the 'fifties and 'sixties
that they would not have had
otherwise," said Schwarz. In ad- flrase Turn To Page 3
tecl-nolo-

v

7 """Tr

er

to maintain their seats "until
graduation or death, whichever
comes first."
The Brubaker-Rie- s
proposal,
entitled "Telling It Like It Is,"
was defeated by the SG assembly and as SG representative
Mark Bryant remarked to
"it's things like you have
just done that make this student
government a farce."
Immediately after the SG
anBruce Carver
meeting,
nounced the winner of the
special SG election.
Paul Pride, a freshman from London, England, replaces Carver
who resigned from SG last week.
Pride won over Carl Brown,
Bru-bak-

267-21- 0.

Malcolm X

Anniversary
By JANE BROWN
Kernel Staff Writer
"The most dynamic of the
black militants was Malcolm Little. He was my hero. He liberated my mind. He was a MAN."
These were the words of the
Reverend Charles Mims at the
Black Student Union's memorial
service Thursday for "our beloved Brother Malcolm X."
According to Ron Hale, BSU

President, an estimated 175 people attended the service commemorating the fifth anniversary of
the assassination of a person

whose critics called him a devil,
a racist and a menace.
But, according to Mims, this
black leader cannot be described
by "picking" at any single aspect
of his life.
"The key is the word metamorphosis. The man must be
viewed as an entirety. His life
was a metamorphosis from the
man Malcolm Little to the man
Malcolm X. His philosophies and
actions must be seen in the framework of his whole life."
The speaker continued: "You
mustn't isolate the first part of
his crusade when he said that all
white men are devils." Conversely, "You also must not think of
him only as the man who, after
his return from Mecca, said that
all white men are not devils,
just that some are."
Mims drew a brief sketch of
Malcolm's life. His father, he
said, was murdered byklansmen,
and his mother was "forced"
into an institution by welfare
workers. He educated himself
while serving a prison sentence
for robbery, and finally, through
his dispersed family, became
aware of the black culture and
the religion of Islam.
Before this, Malcolm was, he
said, like many other blacks.
All he wanted was a "suit, money
and a white woman."

"Malcolm X," explained

Mims, "spoke to the conscious
of America; that's why he's dead.
His message said to the whites,
Cet off our backs and be honest
with your black brother. We want
you to treat us as men or stop
teaching our children to sing
'America, The Beautiful.' "
Instead of singing "America,"
Natalie Cobb chose to sing "The
It seems that someone felt Dr. Patterson would feel more comfortable if he had a hat to protect him from the cold February w inds Impossible Dream" as part of the
lUrau
7
.
Kernel Photo By Keith Moier
Turn To
blowing across the CampUS.

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* fi--

KENTUCKY

THE

KERNEL,

Friday, Feb. 20, 1970

'Cats Must Stop Tiger's Front Line

CHIP HUTCH ESON
Sports Editor
This could just be the weekend that Kentuckians will be
able to decide if they should try
to get tickets to the Mideast
Regional basketball tournament.
UK, currently atop the Southeastern Conference race with a
By

record, faces crucial road
games with LSU and Alabama.
Coacli Adolph Rupp emphasizes
that the race isn't over, but two
wins would almost nail things
down for the Wildcats.
The LSU game looms as the
biggest for Kentucky. The Bayou
Bengals have about the only
chance to catch UK. They've
lost three conference games,
while Georgia and Auburn are
next in line with five losses,
which puts them out of the race.
"Next Tuesday when we wake
up we can almost draw some
conclusions as to what is what,"
said coach Adolph Rupp concerning the SEC race.
12-- 1

Step In UK's Title Plans
it covers both positions."
The starting guard combination will again be Jim Dinwiddle
and Stan Key.

forwards now

"We know exactly what they're
going to do." The Tigers will be
going to Pete Maravich just as
they have in the other games
between the two teams.
"What we have to do is stop
(Danny) Hester, (Al) Sanders and
(Bill) Newton. Newton got 10
baskets the other night (against
Georgia)." This threesome comprises the LSU front line and will
present a rugged rebounding
struggle for UK.

"I feel so good now about
our guards," said Rupp. "They're
not as strong on some things as
I'd like to have them, but what
do you expect. We worked totally
on defense yesterday."
As far as predicting what LSU
will be trying to do, Rupp said.

N

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mm
who you are?
where you are headed?

Satisfying answers
can be found, but
spiritual research and
understanding are
necessary. Hear this
lecture called "What
Is Success?" by

UK's two big wins at home
last weekend pointed out the
strong home court advantage that
exists for the Wildcats.
Wins of 44 and 30 points
boosted UK's home record to 12-but what is surprising is that no
team has really come close to
beating Kentucky at home.
The Wildcats are averaging
winning by 23 points at home.
The closest anyone has come
to them is 13 points in the LSU
contest. In six of the 12 games,
the winning margin was under
20 points.
UK has three wins
by 30 or more points.
In the individual scoring race,
Dan Issel continues his red-hscoring pace with a 32.6 average.

teacher and

practitioner of
Christian Science
healing.
TUESDAY, FEB. 24
7:00 p.m.
STUDENT CENTER
Room 245

Auburn, he was ostensibly

He's hitting 55.7 percent of his
shots and averaging 13.1 rebounds a game.
Mike Pratt is averaging 20.4
points a game, hitting on 46.9
percent. Pratt is pulling down

9.8 rebounds a contest.

Larry Steele, after missing four
games, is averaging 11.9 points
and 7.7 rebounds. Tom Parker
has pulled his average up to 7.6
points and 5.2 rebounds. Parker
is hitting 51.7 percent from the
field.
Stan Key andJimDinwiddie
are both hitting over 50 percent
of their shots. Kent Hollenbeck
is hitting 46 percent and Terry
Mills 43.8 percent.

j

HARRY S. SMITH,

C.S.B., an authorized

ANNUAL VISITATION
of

ST. AUGUSTINE'S CHAPEL

CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION

SUNDAY, FEB.

2210:30

a.m.
Reception for Bishop and Mrs. Moody

following the service

look-

ing for somebody to make

Jolm Mengelt look for
his shadow instead of the basket.
But really the old mentor was
gazing into the future at the
games in the NCAA championship when teams like UCLA,
realizing the winner takes all,
give it the old college try and
apply a
press from the
outset of the contest.
The solution the coach found
d
is a
sophomore. He was always hustling
in practice and was humbly bid
full-cou-

bow-legge-

sports-writer-

s.

Rupp added that the poll
doesn't mean that much. "I think
that any of the top eight teams
could

knock you off

I

think

they're that good.
"In an elimination tournament between them, I doubt if
you would be able to pick the
winner. And if you played it over

the next week, I doubt if the
same team would win."

rt

d,

ing his time on the sidelines like
a newcomer to the No. 2 team
in the country should. Key was
awaiting the opportunity he intuitively knew would be his.some
Saturday or Monday.
Stan Key ignited UK with 12
points for a one point win over
the Plainsmen, but he banished
the phrase "can be pressed" from
opposing coach's dossiers on
strategy against the Wildcats. In
his four starting assignments he's
shown he can dribble through a

defense like a ghost goes through
a door.
Although he is
he dribbles almost entirely with
his left hand because he says,
"I've alway s done it that way- -it
just came natural. I don't
dribble
or go to
my right as well as I do to my
right-hande-

right-hande-

d

left."

Lest

ine supply a scouting
the enemy. Key says,
"That's w hat I'm prac ticing now,
going the other vay, and I'm

rtport

for

getting it."

Key averaged 12 points, was
the playmaker and acted as a
steadying influence on last year's
freshman quintet.
and a 'straight'
king of guy, the
dribbling
ace likes the competition with
four talented guards on the squad,
"Every substitute gets to play
about half the game so it really
doesn't matter who starts and
besides it's better for the team
we don't get as tired and we're
fresh when we're called on."
Key is averaging four points
a game and hitting 57 percent
star-studde- d

Soft-spoke-

n

6--

3

of his shots.
From the small western Kentucky town of Hazel (pop. 500),
Key says, "I want to return
home after college. I have not
thought about pro ball, just being a sophomore. If I was not
good enough, I would not care
about it. But even if I am that
good by that time I'll consider
it a long time before trying it."

McLain Suspended From Baseball
NEW
McLain,

YORK
award-winnin- g

(AP)-De- nny

pitcher

of the Detroit Tigers, was suspended indefinitely from baseball Thursday for what commissioner Bowie Kuhn called "involvement

in

19(57

bookmaking

ference of last Friday. I have
decided on the basis of facts
developed at these conferences
that Mr. McLain's involvement
in 19C7 bookmaking activities and
his associations at that time leave
me no alternative but to suspend
him from all Organized Baseball
activities pending the completion
of my review of liis situation.

activities and his associations."
It became the game's most
celebrated case since the Black
Sox Scandal of 1919. Kului an"It should be made clear that
nounced the suspension after
the action taken today is based
near
meeting with the substantially on certain admisand said
to me by
the ban would be in effect until sions made candidly on
Mr. McLain and not
allegahis office could complete a retions contained in a recent magview of McLain's situation.
of which I
azine
The commissioner said both believe article, many to be unwill prove
he and McLain had decided that
founded.
neither would answer questions.
McLain was accompanied by his
"I cannot at this time indicate
when hat review might be comlawyer, William Aiken.
stateThe commissioner's
pleted. In the meantime this office wJl continue to cooperate
ment said:
"I had a further conference with the enforcement autltorities
today with Denny McLain and in Detroit and I am assured
liis attorney on the general subthat Mr. McLain will do
matter covered by our con
ject
all-da-

The Kight Key. William K. Moody
Bishop of Lexington
472 Rose Street

Sponsored by th

d

basketball's giants, coordinated
and full of finesse, still gratefully let the little guys handle.
So when Rupp turned his head
down the seats of the bench
during the heat of the fray at

UK 'Winning Big At Home
0,

T7TJ

a

Kernel Staff Writer
Bob Cousy once said he would
rather watch UK's offense in a
practice session than see any
other team play for real. The
present UK guards who have
Cousy as their hero are measuring up to the traditional UK
guards.
Besides the fact that they all
shoot so well that they could
pitch a tennis ball through a
drain pipe nine out of 10 times
from 25 feet, they each have a
talent that makes Rupp respect
them for their value to the team.
If a zone ever bottled up UK,
Terry Mills could shoot over it.
Kent Hollenbeck could outrun a
team keeping up with the Wildcats' fast break. Jim Dinwiddie
could thread needle
passes
through the most blanketing of
defenses.
But for all their long-rang- e
shooting, speed and passing ability, Rupp wa: still calling his
guards "not up to par" before
their road swing into the South.
The reason all year they had
experienced trouble bringing the
ball downcourt against pressure.
And after all, that's one chore

Hupp Eves 25th SEC Title

lie

"plays

By CHICK LAWRENCE

Rupp emphasized that there's
not a duel between the two over
the position but that the situation has made UK stronger at
the forward positions.
"We've got three dependable

Jfeit)

UK

game, we'll gain a lot of votes.
1
think that a lot of people who
vote don't know much about bas

ketball." The Associated Press'
poll is based on voting by

Key's Dribbling Eliminates
A Problem At Guard Spot

Steele Impressive
Things couldn't be going
much better for Kentucky right
now. "Larry Steele looked very
good last night," noted Rupp.
Steele, however, won't be
starting. Sophomore Tom Parker,
a starter since Steele injured his
wrist, will get the starting nod.

jr

Playing at LSU will pose a
big problem. The first meeting
between the two turned into a
very physical game, the one at
Baton Rouge should be even
rougher.
"That crowd intimidates the
officials," said Rupp.
The game will be nationally
televised, and Rupp said that if

y

right-hand-

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb.

1970- -7

L'O,

Busing, The Only Answer To Segregation

The Associated Press
School officials in several
Northern cities said Thursday
that massive and costly busing
is the only way to eliminate de
facto school segregation as required in the Senate-passe- d
Stennis amendment.
Others said the courts would
have to interpret the meaning of
the measure before its effect could
be calculated.
The Senate Republican Minority leader, Hugh Scott, said in
Washington the new measure
making it national policy to enforce school desegregation uniformly throughout the nation was
either unconstitutional or unenforceable and would not become
law.
The amendment, sponsored by
Sen. John C. Stennis,
was applauded by Southern politicians and some civil rights
leaders after its passage on a 6
vote in the Senate Wednesday.
Majority Leader Mike Mansfield supported the measure, but

he said Thursday that if it remained part of the massive aid-t- o
education bill, the courts
would have to decide what it
meant.
That was the view also of Irving Anker, acting deputy superintendent of schools in New York
City. "I think there is a fundamental difference in efforts to
integrate schools in New York
as contrasted to what I understand has been the practice in
the South," he said.
"In New York City, we have
gone out of our way in attempting to integrate schools even
w here there is a pattern of housing segregation," Anker said.
"We have deliberately zoned
children out of their immediate
housing areas" to achieve better
racial balance.
"Of course," he added, "if the
courts ever said that every school
in the community must have the
same percentage of blacks and
whites there would be obvious

56-3-

problems."

i
1
1

I

)

Kernel Photo By Mike Walker

Reverend Charles Mims, Baptist minister from Louisville, was featured speaker at the Black Student Union's Malcolm X memorial
service held in the Student Center Ballroom Thursday night. Here
he punctuates a point from his speech, "A Man Called Malcolm."
He received a standing ovation, and the talk was described as
"electrifying" by one of the audience. The service commemorated
the fifth anniversary of Malcolm X's assassination.

Devil, Racist, Menace

Continued From Page One

service. Steven Cosby read excerpts from the eulogy Ossie
Davis delivered at Malcolm X's
funeral services: "Malcolm was
our manhood, our living, black
manhood. This was his meaning
to his people. And, in honoring
him, we honor the best in
Mims, a Baptist preacher from

Louisville, spoke in an "electrifying" way. Early in his speech,
he asked the audience to "at
least breathe louder" because he
was used to a lot of audience
response. The loudest response
came in the form of a standing
ovation after his last statement,
"Malcolm's message was to treat
all men, whether black, white or
yellow as nen, at least until they
prove otherwise."

Midwest
Rock
Festival

any comment." Omaha public
school Supt. Dr. Owne A. Knut-ze- n
said: "We don't know what
the thing is really going to amount
to. There is no way of predicting
it. It's an entirely speculative

schools to the now almost
sc hools, generally over long
distances, he said.
A spokesman for the Chicago
school board said a "legal interpretation of the bill will have
to be made before there can be
k

proposition."

IFC Elects Officers
McCurdy, a junior in Sigma ARush chairman is
now Jim Hunter, a junior in Delta Tau Delta.
This group was picked from
nominees who were placed on
the ballot a week before the actual
election, and again on the night
of the election. Each fraternity
had two votes: one from the fraternity president and one from
the IFC representative of the fraternity. The requirements for the
president's office are a good academic record and senior standing. The rest of the officers must
have good academic standing.

New officers for the Interfra-ternit- y
Council were elected on
Tuesday, February 10. Robert
Elder, Assistant Dean of Students, calls them "one of the
best groups of officers we've had
for a long time."
The new president is Damon
Talley, a senior in Farmhouse
fraternity. His vice president is
Jim McNew, a junior from Kappa Alpha. The elected secretary
is Lon Johnson, a sophomore in
Pi Kappa Alpha. The treasurer's
office will be taken by Clancy

lpha Epsilon.

Education Committee Halts
Parochoal School Aid
-

vi

'

A Hoard of relocation spokesman in Pittsburgh said the biggest problem in eliminating de
facto segregation would be money. "It would mean we would
have to bus and cross-bu- s
all
over the city. This would be a
costly procedure and nobody has
said anything about where the
money would come from."
A similar view was expressed
by a spokesman in Philadelphia,
Pa. who added that parents have
shown increasing resistance to
busing programs in recent years.
In Newark, N.J., where the
public school pupil population is
80 percent black-act- ing
78,000-o- ver
Asst. Supt. Edward Knopf
said eliminating de facto segregation would be "practically an
impossibility." To achieve a uniform racial balance would require busing about 80 percent of
the students from the white

The
FRANKFORT, (AP)
House Education Committee put
off action today on a controversial
bill to aid parochial schools after
a motion to table it lost by a
single vote.
The motion to table the House
bill lost on a vote of eight in
favor, two opposed and five abstaining. Nine votes were needed
to table the bill. This meant
it could not come up again unless nine members later voted
to revive.
Rep. Arthur Schmidt,
Spring, withdrew a subsequent
motion to report the bill out
favorably after it met with strenuous objections in the committee.
Schmidt said he was withdrawing his motion so the bill could
be brought up again at the committee's meeting next Thursday.
Rep. Bart Peak,
argued strongly against the bill
by saying the state could not
afford to support the public
school system as it should be,
with adequate pay raises for
teachers. Therefore, it should not
undertake to begin support of
parochial schools now, he asserted.
Schmidt said the bill was
merely enabling legislation and
did not carry any funds. This
was done, he said, so its constitutionality could be determined first.

Late Model

MitchRep. Carl Ruh,
ell, pleaded for the bill to be
reported out of committee so the
full house could have a chance
to vote on it.
The committee also put off
action on a bill to ban sex education in public schools.
rt

Typewriters

and Adders
SALES & SERVICE
SMITH CORO

Committee Chairman Brooks
Hinkle,
appointed a subcommittee to incorporate recommendations and come up with
a committee
substitute. The
panel had suggested that the state
set guidelines for teaching sex
education in the schools.

Stbriaard
Typewriter Co.
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"VHOLLY ADSORniPJR JtMn iWTmriT.
INC! jflEFnESIIINGLY OFFBEAT AND
CHALLENGING, WITH RAUNCHY
HUMOR AND POUNDING ACTION!"
BOB SALMAGGI,

Pl.dM forward.
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FOR INFORMATION

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Advance Sal TickaU Only . . .
Bocduw of the limited audience we fur the May Day
Fett . . . we reMirv the right to return all ticket orders
aid money when the ticket allotment for your area
hava been told out

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* The Real Struggle Lies Ahead
Praise be unto the Student Government Assembly for banding together Thursday night to finally
d
election readopt a
form bill. We would remind all
concerned, however, that the real
struggle lies ahead.
The real key to the reform issue
remains not in the passage of the
Board of Elections proposal itself
but in endeavoring to spur student
interest.
In this respect Rep. Steve Bright
much-neede-

deserves commendation. Although his bill was defeated, and
rightly so, its introduction aroused

campus interest in election reform.
It was not his intentions that we
opposed but what we felt to be
weaknesses in his legislation.
We believe Bright has the
interest of the student at heart
and will make a worthy candidate
for SC president if he chooses to
run.
It will take the leadership such'
as that shown by Bright to make
the Board's plan successful. We
feel that he will make every attempt to gain the utmost voter
participation within the bounds
set by the Board's bill.

In the same breath, we would
like to add that statements made
by his alleged opponent Mark
Bryant after Thursday night's meeting amount to little more than
petty politics.
Bryant seized the occasion of
Bright's setback to pour a little
salt into Bright's political wound,
and thereby further his own am-

bitions.

On the other hand, remarks
such as those espoused by Keith
Brubaker and Barbara Ries reflect
the attitudes which retard what

little good Student Government is
accomplishing.

If Student Government applied
as much energy in gaining student
participation as it did in haggling
within itself, it could become a
much more representative and
forceful body.
Men like Steve Bright have the
right idea when even in defeat, they
spur others to action andor reaction. Students may take up the
banner pro or con, but they do
participate.
And student interest is the key
to Student Government.

Mlfifrvi
Aw, Go Away

...

Come Back Later

Kernel Forum: the readers write
Stricklcr Thanks

The editorial entitled "U of L'sNeed"
l
in The Kentucky
of Feb. 3, 1970,
has been brought to my attention, and
I want to thank you for your thoughtful
and fair statement in our behalf. Your
concern for the welfare of a sister institution is rather rare in collegiate journalism and most commendable.
Although the consolidation between
the University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville did not materialize,
there are still many areas in which we
hope to cooperate for the bette.ment of
education in the Commonwealth.
Kt-me-

WOODROW STRICKLER

President
University of Louisville

Undercover
Three years ago the academic world
was stunned by the admission of the
leadership of the National Student Association that NSA had been receiving
CIA funds in part to disseminate "Americanism" abroad. The following year there
were a rash of confessions by students
at such schools as Illinois and Duke that
they were receiving money from the FBI
to report to that government agency the
names of fellow students involved in
"subversive" activities on their respective
campuses. It is in the spirit of these
historical precedents that I must now make
a similar confession. I am goaded to take
such action both by my conscience and
by fear of exposure by SDS members
Pope and Colten. I must confess that
I was one of the fifty undercover men
working at the Medical Center to which
the above mentioned revolutionaries (sic)
referred (Kernel, Friday, Feb. 13).
It is my purpose only to make amends
for my past hypocrisy by exposing the
extent of this undercover network in the
Medical Center and on the campus at
large. This network of students (I myself
am a medical student) and University
employees is financed by several government agencies including the CIA, FBI,
and NASA. It is the purpose of this
network to defend the University's involvement in the Educational-Industrial- -

Military Complex (these are the defense
grants Pope and Colten alluded to) against
student protests and faculty pressure.
This involves infiltration of campus organizations and "cooling"
discussion. Our second purpose is to
report the names of any subversives on
actions
campus who plan
at UK against the defense grants or the

moon rocks.
I hope others in this network will come
forward and, then in the intensity of
public scrutiny, we can return fair-pla- y
and decency to the American government.
Come on SDS. If the Revolution is
your bag, quit fooling around with this
That bit of verb-ag- e
Medical Center put-omay have gotten you space in the
Kernel, but try to play it straight. Right
on, baby!
VVALLY URVUS
Medical Student
n.

HSU Complains
The recent article "BSU Discusses
Coal; Bans Press," appearing in the
Wednesday, Feb. 18 Kernel, is indicative
of some of the other biased writing habits
atypical of the newspaper.
No mention was made of whatever
else went on in the "family affairs" session because the reporter was not there.
It is obvious that she could not know
whatever else the president or some of
the others had to say. The reporter could
only assume what the crux of the conversation was, and since the "family affairs"
discussion was lengthy, she could only
assume the specific direction the discussion was to take. I would like to suggest
that assumptions like these have come
out in the form of picky quotations
"one big party," "The only time I see
" wluch
people wanting to work . . .
are shady, to sa