xt7vt43j133w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vt43j133w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680422  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 22, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 22, 1968 1968 2015 true xt7vt43j133w section xt7vt43j133w Ti

EC,

SNTHJCKY

EC EEMEL

The South's Outstanding College Daily

Monday Evening, April 22, 1968

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. L1X, No.

Amid Controversy

:

Aptheker Talks
AtUKTonisht".
By DARRELL RICE
Herbert Aptheker, a leading

Board. Les Rosenbaum, SCB
forum chairman, says the board
has made an effort to present a
balanced program of speakers.
He said a group of
refugees from such countries as Cuba and North Vietnam have spoken here, and that
they should effectively balance
Dr. Aptheker's talk.
Another situation, involving
the Students for a Democratic
Society, has also arisen from
Dr. Aptheker's coming here.
The SDS had originally obtained permission from the Student Center Board to have Dr.
Aptheker conduct a seminar today on "Methodology of Historical Materialism: Application to
the American Revolution and
the American Civil War."
SDS had passed out leaflets
to history and political science
professors with this request:
"Please announce this talk to
your classes. Otherwise, your
students will not know about it.
Due to administration jittemess,
this afternoon talk will not be
announced in the Kernel. In the
event of cancellation by the
University, this talk will be held
in an alternate place."
The Student Center Board
called a special meeting Friday
night and decided to rescind its
permission to allow Dr. Aptheker to participate in the seminar. SDS had not been informed of the meeting.

reHoffman,
ceived an Academy Award nomination for his lead role as Benjamin in "The Graduate," is
coming to UK Thursday night
to speak for Sen. Eugene Mc-

Carthy's presidential candidacy.

His visit here is sponsored by
UK Citizens for McCarthy. Mr.
Hoffman is to arrive at Bluegrass
Airport at 6:40 p.m. and plans
to tour dormitories before his talk.
Phil Patton, chairman of the
McCarthy group, said a definite
site for Mr. Hoffman's talk will
be announced later, but the time
has been announced as 8 p.m.

At press time the Kernel
learned that Dr. Aptheker would
speak at the SDS seminar as
originally planned.

Thursday.

UK Citizens for McCarthy is
to meet in Room 206 of the Student Center at 8 p.m. Tuesday
to discuss arrangements for the
visit.

The reason given SDS for
the cancellation was that the
had not
original agreements
Continued on Page 5, CoL

1

Queenly Function

Little Kentucky Derby Queen Ann Stewart of
Chi Omega helped dispense trophies to LKD
winners Saturday. Sigma Chi won the cycle race
(story on sports page), Delta Zeta took first
place in the scooter race, and Farmhouse's Speedy

'

, s;k

'

a

By MARTIN E. VVEBB
and Sciences faculty
members cautiously approach a
limited pass-fa- il
grading system,
a recent study shows 55.9 percent
of UKt faculty favoring a total
pass-fa- il
system.
The research was conducted
by Frank E. Ktrzmits, a student
in the Graduate School of Business, to "uncover what grading
system the faculty desired at UK,
for what classification of students, and what courses to apply
the grading system to."
In what Dr. Stuart M. Klein,
associate professor of business adAs Arts

ministration, tenned a"well
. . . and a good

ceived study

consam- -

Tossed Bottle
Injures Coed

crete.
One student reported the
crowd had formed a large circle
and began throwing bottles into
the air to see them "smash"
on the pavement. "Some were
thrown into the crowd," he said.

One of three campus

Several University stutlenti stood around a pile of broken bottles
and beer cans in the Coliseum parking lot during the Little Kentucky Derby jam session Friday afternoon. A University coed
was cut on the forehead by thrown beer bottle during the dance.

II was the fastest entry in the Turtle Derby.
A story on the LKD intersquad football scrimmage
also is on the sports page. Comedian Bob Hope
highlighted the weekend with a performance in
Memorial Coliseum Friday night.

Faculty Prefers

University freshman Nancy
Dant was stmck on the head
by a thrown beer bottle during
a Little Kentucky Derby jam
session Friday afternoon, according to campus police.
University Hospital officials
said the coed was given "five
or six stitches and released that
afternoon."
Police said the incident occurred about 4:30 p.m. in the
Coliseum parking lot as bottles
were being thrown on the con-

..

C3

)

And a Lexington minister has

'Graduate9
To Talk Here
On Thursday
who
Dustin

Jr;

ll

advertised on local television
stations that UK is the scene
of "subsidized subversion," and
he implores local citizens to
make a stand for "God and
country."
Dr. Aptheker's talk is sponsored by the Student Center

American communist, is to speak
in the Student Center Ballroom
at 7:30 p.m. today.
Dr. Aptheker is recognized
as a "theoretician" in the American Institute of Marxist Studies
in New York and has published
several books relating to his
Marxist philosophy.
His speaking engagement at
UK has been the cause of considerable controversy across the
state, with some state legislators proposing to ban him from
campus.
An assistant to Gov. Louie
B. Nunn, when Dr. Aptheker's
talk was first announced, indicated action might be taken to
stop him from speaking.
Members of the Lexington
American Legion, too, have said
they would do everything possible to keep Dr. Aptheker from
coming "because we believe in
the democratic way."

wTv

7f

I

police-

men, trying to maintain order,
announced the Jam session would
be "broken up" if the bottle
throwing did not stop.
Another policeman reportedly
said "I'm not going to work
another one of these things unless the law is enforced."

'Pass-Fail- 9

pling," Kuzmits polled 20 percent
of the faculty.
Results indicate that:
Of 141 questionnaires received out of 271 sent, 72.3 percent (102) favored the system,
either universally or to a limited
degree, and 27.7 percent (39) opposed it.
Of those favoring the system,
55.9 percent (55) wanted the system universally (for all students,
in all colleges and for all courses).
Those favoring a limited system wanted it mainly for graduate
and professional schools.
Kuzmits cautioned that the
study was not intended "to inform us as to what the best grading system is, but what it is
thought to be."
is the best
"Whether pass-fasystem, or the traditonal, system,
is not a question we can answer.
What we have done is ascertain
feelings about what the 'best'
grading system is in the eyes
of the UK faculty."
The status of a limited pass-faprogram now under consideration by the University Senate
"is uncertain at the moment,"

chairman of the Arts and Sciences Council.
But "I expect it to pass,"
Dr. Plunknett added, "when it
comes up before the University
Senate sometime in the next two
weeks."
The proposal climaxed a yearlong effort by the A & A Faculty Council to put through a
pass-faprogram for the Univeril

sity.
Under the proposed limited
il
program, four pass-fa- il
n
courses could be taken by
only. Crades in the four
courses would not affect grade-poipass-fa-

upper-classme-

nt

standing.
That portion of Kuzmits'
study dealing with instructors
favoring a limited pass-fasystem indicated they were more
favorable "toward the system for
graduate and professional students than for other classifications of students."
Kuzmits pointed out that the
study was designed not only
to obtain attitudes towards the inat UKt
troduction of pass-fa"but also to clarify and point
out certain concepts of the pass-faaccording to Dr. William KrPlun-knetof chemistry and
grading system."
professor
il

il

il

il

il

t,

Chemistry Prof Since '58,
Dr. Hartley Eckstrom Dies

Dr. Hartley Clayton Eckstrom, professor of chemistry and a
member of the faculty since 1958, died Thursday night at St.

Joseph Hospital.
The UK professor had taught

previously at Brown University.
He had been research section
supervisor of the Pan American-PetroleuCorp. at Tulsa, Okla.
Dr. Eckstrom received his undergraduate degree from North
Dakota University. He earned
his masters and Ph. D. degrees
at the University of Iowa, the
latter awarded in 191)7.

Interested in physical chemistry and catalysis, he contributed
to more than 25 scientific publications. He had directed a research project for the Atomic
Energy Commission on infrared
studies of cltemisorbed molecules.
Services will be at 4 p.m.
today at W. R. Milward Mortuary in Southland.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, April

After Seminar Cancellation

11

20 Days9 Delayed Again

UK

By DARRELL RICE
Students for a Democrat-

ic Society's "10 Days in
April"
program shrank still more with
the cancellation of Marxist Herbert Aptheker's Monday seminar
(see related story).
The "10 Days" affair is authorized by the SDS national
office from April 20 to 30 on a
nationwide scale, but with in-

dividual chapters mapping their
separate programs.
Meg Tassie, "10 Days" chairman here, said the program was
to have started here April 22,

after LKD weekend. A Monday
afternoon
with Dr.
seminar,
Aptheker speaking on a Marxist's
interpretation of American history, was cancelled delaying
"10 Days" another day.
Miss Tassie gave the remainder of the program as follows:

19G8- -3

22,

who may be interested.
Festival" will
be held at the amphitheater outside Memorial Hall. The festival
will include singing by Liam
Cutchins, poetry reading, guerrilla theater and John Calkins,
of the Berkshire 7, playing his
saxophone among other things.
Saturday, April 27
Some UK students will go to
Cincinnati for a march for "peace
those

An "Angry Arts

'

and justice." The march is to begin at Cincinnati's Union Terminal at noon.

ill

w'i mm
iY
Ml'

Tuesday, April 30
A "Gentle Tuesday" is to be
held. Plans for this are not complete, but the event is described
as "a day to love all people."
Further information on the
"10 Days" can be obtained by
contacting Miss Tassie at Dillard
House,

T,

,

...NJf

1
i

f
i

253-091- 3.

Students Were Pessimistic
About Peace In Recent Poll

By GUY MENDES
Since President Lyndon B. Johnson announced his plans to
drastically cut back the bombing of North Vietnam, there has been
much speculation about the end result of his move toward peace.
A Kernel poll, conducted prior
to President Johnson's announceWhen asked how long it would
Tuesday, April 23
be before a peaceful settlement
ment, found UK students generDavid Elkinton will lecture ally
would be reached in Vietnam,
Derby Princesses
pessimistic about the poson the draft and answer quesof a halt in bombing 30.2 percent of the respondents
sibility
tions at 8 p.m. in the Student
said two years, 30.9 percent said Standing in front of My Old Kentucky Home at Bardstown are this
leading to peace.
Center Theatre. He also will show
five years, 16.6 percent said 10 year's Kentucky Derby Festival Princesses. One will be crowned
Of those polled, 68.7 percent
slides of colonies set up in Canasaid they did not think a bombyears, 10.8 percent said within queen of the festival April 26. Left to right, they are Mary Hey-burda by American draft resisters.
halt would bring peace, 19.3 the year, 8.6 percent said over
Transylvania freshman; Susan Hill, University of Louisville
ing
Wednesday, April 24
percent thought a halt would lead 10 years, and 2.9 percent said the junior, Lynne Morris Haymond, UK sophomore; Barbara Ann
Brown of U of L, and Suzanne HufHnes, UK senior.
to peace, and 12 percent had no war would never end.
SDS is asking all University
professors to drop their regular opinion.
Fifty-tw- o
class discussions on this day to
percent of those polled said they did not favor United
discuss the war, the draft or "raStates policy in Vietnam.
cial oppression."
In a similar poll conducted
24
Thursday, April
by the Kernel last October, 57.5
A teach-i-n
discussion on "Repercent of the students respondpression, Oppression and Genosaid they did favor U.S.
cide" will be conducted on the ing
policy in Vietnam.
Student Center Patio at noon.
Forty-nin- e
percent of the reThe speakers are undetermined
spondents said they recently had
as of now, and the specifics of
changed their opinion in one way
the discussion could vary all the or
another on Vietnam policy.
way from women's hours to the Of that 49
percent, 62.5 percent
war. Miss Tassie said.
said they had changed their opinFriday, April 26
ion because they saw no end to
The Student Mobilization the war in the near future.
Committee has called for an inSixteen percent said they had
strike changed opinion because of disternational student-facult- y
on this day to end the war in sent in the country. Four perVietnam. The SDS here has de- cent had friends killed in the
cided not to endorse the strike war and changed their opinion
officially but to publicize it for because of it.
n,

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* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, April 22,

2-- TIIE

19G8

Political Science Gets Six New 'Professors

By GRETA FIELDS
The Department of Political

con-firm-

Science is Retting six new instruc--

Just a short drive South on U.S. 27

TONIGHT!

Adm.$1.25

ABIDE...

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20th COflWYOX

VICTOR

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KELLM

tors before the fall semester, Dr.
Sidney S. Ulmer, chairman,
last week.
Two will replace instructors
leaving.
Five of the six departments
from which they are getting their
doctorates are rated in the top
15 departments in the nation by
the American Council on Education, Dr. Ulmer said.
All of the men are getting
their Ph.D. degrees in June, or
got it a year ago, he said.
Allan F. Hershfield, who attended Indiana University, is a
specialist in African politics. He
has been at Michigan State University working on a dissertation
based upon a year-lon- g
stay in
Nigeria.
Michael Baer, Ph.D., University of Oregon, is a specialist
in the combined area of state
government and politics and computer science. He will be the only
computer programmer in the department, Dr. Ulmer said. He
will devote about a third of his
time to consultation with faculty

and graduate students about computer programming problems.
John Fraser, Ph.D., Univer- -

R08f RT B ANNARO - 8f AU BRIOCES
R06KI f IflOS JACK GILFORD
ED McMAHON
GARY WRRU

DONNA

Woods arson
is a crime.

PETERS

THELMA

STERLMG

MEN-JA-

Van der VLB

DIANA

-E- DWARD

MEADOW

XZZ

T

NICHOLAS

MONROE

SACKSON

UKr- -

Herbert Reid, Ph.D., University of North Carolina, will teach
political theory also.
Michael White, Ph.D., Northwestern University, will teach
political science research concepts and methods. He will replace Dr. E. W. Krily, who is
leaving to teach as an assistant
professor at the University of
Chicago.
Peter Nixdorff, Ph.D., University of Florida, is a German
national. He was educated at
the Free University, Berlin and
at Knox College, Illinois. He
has been writing his dissertation
in Germany this year. He will
teach in the area of comparative
politics, with special emphasis
on Germany, particularly state
politics and education in West
Germany, Dr. Ulmer said.
Pranger Is Leaving
Dr. Robert Pranger, who came
to the Department of Political
Science three years ago as an
associate professor, is leaving UK
to become an associate professor
at the University of Washington,

I BAD

r.

Report any
sign of it

i

Also: "QUILLER MEMORANDUM"

The Heritage Quartet,
string quartet at the University, will present its final
of the season 8:15 p.m. April

HELP PREVENT
FOREST FIRES
(v IN THE SOUTH

sfiSfe
'VALLEY OF THE DOLLS'

Seattle. He said that "personal
factors" affected his decision to
leave UK. He said that he had

enrollment in the department is
increasing. "The department enrollment is expanding at a greater
decided to leave before President
rate than that for the University
Oswald resigned, but waited to as a whole," he said. Since Sepsee if he would leave. He said tember, 1963, when he came here,
that he came to UK because of the enrollment in thedepartment
"the effort of the political sci- has doubled, he said.
ence department to build" and
Enrollment is expanding, not
because he was "attracted by only in the undergraduate proOswald."
gram, but also in the graduate
Dr. Kelly, who has taught program, he said. Thedepartment
two years at UK since attend"is trying to increase the quantiing graduate school at Indiana ty and quality of Ph.D.'s," he
said.
University, is going to the UniA Ph.D. program requires the
versity of Chicago, which has a
political science department offering of special skills. The
whose quality attracted him. He program must provide a choice
said that "Oswald's resignation
of areas in which students can
per se would not have affected specialize. (The political science
my decision to leave."
department has offered seven
areas in the past, but will offer
Begin Teaching This Fall
The new instructors will be- eight areas beginning the fall
gin teaching at UK"the 19C8 semester, 1968.)
Several of the new instructors
fall semester, with the exception
of Dr. Hershfield, who will teach have special skills which will
a seminar on African politics contribute to the graduate proand an American government
gram in the department.
Dr. Ulmer said that research
course this summer. Dr. Ulmer
was a "key consideration" in
said.
Dr. Ulmer explained that the selecting the new instructors.
"We need research-oriente- d
instructors are needed for several reasons.
people, people who can teach
They are needed because the graduate work," he said.

Heritage Quartet Finale
Is Scheduled For Tonight
of the
the

PEERCf

LARRY

MMMDImw .MllMKMMHttMlIk

WED.

sity of Illinois, is currently teaching at Carleton College, Ontario.
He will teach political theory at

22 in

ditorium.

Agricultural Science

Au-

The program will consist of
Beethoven's "Trio in C minor.
Op. 9, No. 3,;' WebenTs "Quar-

tet," and Schubert's "Quintet
'Trout.'"

Op. 114

Little

faiiiclkv Deroy
.v;

v
.APPLICATION"LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY STEERING COMMITTEE
--

Name

CI ass

Members
Quartet are
Edwin Crzesnikowski,
violin;
Bruce Freifeld, violin; Barbara
Crzesnikowski, viola, and Rodney Farrar, cello. They will be
joined by guest artists pianist
James Bonn and William Piacitel-li- ,

contrabass.

French Horn Ensemble
Presents Concert April 23
UK

The UK French Horn Ensemble, under the direction of Roy
Schaberg, will present a concert
8:15 p.m. April 23 in the Agricultural Science Auditorium.

The program will include
"Musica Festiva,"
cerpts from Wagner's

ex-

"Tann-hause-

r,

Hindemith's "Sonata for
Four Horns," Lasso's "Echo-SongKay's "Serenade No. 2,
and Tscherepine's "Six Quartets."
Members of the Horn Ensem,"

Lexington Address
The Kentucky
Phone
Have you worked with Little Kentucky Derby before?
In what capacity?

The LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY Weekend is a tradition at
the University of Kentucky. Creation and organization of a successful spring weekend is the goal. Raising money for scholarship is the purpose. As a member of the L.K.D. Steering Committee, how do you feel you can contribute to the achievement
of the LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY purpose and its goal?

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein la intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editor.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$9.27
Yearly, by mall
$.10
Per copy, from files
KERNEL TELEPHONES

Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sport
News Desk
Advertising, Business. Circulation

2321
2320
2447
2319

ble are Robert Aclkinson, Jolui
Cox, Ron Creager, Tim Gregg,
Larry Hamfelt, Brian Correll,
Frank Merritt, and JackZackery.

PltC

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The Letter men
in concert
Plcaso list three campus references and their phone numbers:
Nomt

Nel-hybe-

Address

Danville Auditorium

Phont No.

1

2
3

Please return this application to the LITTLE KENTUCKY DERBY
Office, Room 208, Student Center, by 5:00 p.m., Saturday,
April 27, 1968.

Danville, Ky.
8 p.m.

Friday, April 26

SMa

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, April 22,

19G8- -5

By David Holwerk

Student Government met for thirty-fiv- e
seconds
Sunday night, and nobody has yet figured out
what happened. Speaker of the Assembly Oliver
Kash Curry called the meeting to order, roll was
taken, Representative Jim Eaves asked for a quorum
call, and Curry dismissed the meeting for lack of
a quorum. There was a lot of confusion after that,
localise seven representatives were standing in the
hall, apparently unaware that the meeting had
started.

Curry had a good deal to gain by having
this meeting voided. The meeting had been called
to discuss plans for a new election, the previous
one having been nullified by a Judicial Board
meeting last week. Curry, the apparent winner
of the abortive vote, has been under steady attack by his opponent John Cooper. By delaying
the meeting, and therefore delaying the setting
of the election, he gained time to map a strategy
for his new campaign.
And so forth and so on. The Junior Bosses of
the campus version of City Hall continue to live
in a world which anyone has yet to define. Their
world is, apparently, one of games and make-believfor they never seem to get near the real
world. And this raises serious questions for journalists as to how to report their actions.
It is becoming more and more obvious that
e,

Student Government

is not news. Government is
not necessarily news, and is definitely not news
when it doesn't govern, which Student Government certainly does not do. Yet the weekly meetings are a fairly important event because of the
make-u- p
of the body, and so perhaps some coverage
is needed.
One choice, and a logical one to anyone who
has ever watched a meeting, would be for a drama
critic to cover each meeting. Many noble spirits
and formidable egos clash in these gatherings
each week, and at times the drama is gripping.
At other t imes the farce is
unbearably funny,
while occasionally the whole thing lapses into
the Theatre of the Absurd.
Another choice which should be carefully considered is not covering the thing at all. The non-evenature of the meetings and the non-bi- ll
nature of the legislation would seem to support
this notion. The main rationale behind this policy
would be an attitude of "leave it alone and maybe
it'll go away." We should be so lucky.
Or there is a third view, one that says that
even this speculation is futile. This was best
voiced by Representative T. Rankin Terry after
e
fiasco. "The whole thing's gone to
the
hell," he said, "but I'm graduating. Ha" Ha."
Ha, Ha indeed.

.9

Sl

EXPERT.

IN EVERY FAMILY
Everybody has an Uncle George.
He's the one who knows which car is a piece of
junk. And where you can get practically anything
wholesale.
Uncle George is a real expert with other
people's money.
But when it comes to your diamond, we're going
to suggest that you ignore him.
Because unless Uncle George is a trained
gemologist, he probably knows little more than you
do about diamonds.
Every ArtCarved diamond is inspected by a
gemologist and backed by a written PVPSM
guarantee. He evaluates it for carat weight, color, cut
and clarity.
And at any time during your lifetime, if you
ever want to trade your ring in for a more expensive
ArtCarved ring, we'll take it back. At it's full
value.
Can Uncle George give you that kind of

half-minut-

but was
quest reconsidered
turned down a second time because the SCB felt that if more
than the scheduled
people
room's capacity showed up for
the seminar, the SDS could not

maintain control.
SDS said it was not satisfied
with this reason.
Some SDS members feel the
was
University administration
lehind the cancellation because
of previous discussions with
Dean of Students Jack Hall and
because they do not feel the
SCB would have called a special meeting Friday night of
itself to cancel the seminar.
Bill Eigel
SCB Chairman
could not be reached for comment, however.

SDS thoughts of moving the
seminar ran afoul when it was
learned that Dr. Aptheker, after
having been informed of the
seminar's cancellation, was to
take a later plane that would
make his arrival too late to hold
the discussion.
Dr. Lawrence X. Tarpey, professor of business administraOrdie Davis, assistant admin- tion, said Sunday night, "The
istrator of the University's stu- evidence clearly points to the
dent financial aid office and one fact that the administration is
of several administrators polled the one not in favor of having
exby The Courier-Journa- l,
the afternoon session.
pressed concern last weekend
He sat in on the Saturday
over static college loan resources. afternoon
and said his
"We coukl probably have interest in meeting
the matter is "prehelped another 500 students if serving the atmosphere of free
we had more funds," Mr. Davis
inquiry here."
said, noting that UK students
Dr. Tarpey feels pressure
d
got about $1.2 million in
aid this year and will from conservative elements in
receive about the same next year. the state have resulted in the
UK has given some sort of
re-A- id

To Students
Static For '69,
Says UK Official

federal-sponsore-

financial aid to about 1,500 students this year and expects to aid
the same number for the academic year beginning in

use the

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cancellation so as to hold exposure to Dr. Aptheker to a
minimum.
"I think this thing must be
decided on by principle. If the
must back down
University
every time it gets outside pressure, it might as well close its
doors."

guarantee?

ROTC Review

John

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Oswald.

"The purpose of the Review
is to honor President Oswald
and to give him a look at the
cadets," said Major Bruce Martin, a ROTC instructor.

MESSAGES

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style brochures are available at the ArtCarved
dealers listed. Just try on an ArtCarved
diamond ring and ask for details.

Planned Tuesday

The annual Presidential Review of the Army and Air Force
ROTC will be conducted at 4
p.m. Tuesday.
Approximately 500 cadets will
be reviewed by UK President

A.

THERE'S ONE

nt

SDS Seminar Canceled

Continued From Page 1
been lived up to. One of the
points of contention was apparently the SDS leaflets to the
professors.
It was reported that the SCB
felt the classroom announcements would lead to a "second
lecture" exceeding the small
seminar arrangement originally
agreed upon.
The SDS steering committee
held a meeting Saturday with
Student Center Director Frank
Harris and said the announcements would not lead to a large
gathering and that procedures
would lie set up to guard against
this and also against
any
"trouble makers" who might
show up.
The SDS met with the SCB
Sunday morning to have its

V::

THE

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ADDRESS.
CITY.

.STATE.

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SCHOOL.

GRAD. DATE.
An Equal Opportunity Employer

.ZIP.

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* illegal election
The decision of the Judiciary Board Thursday night was like deciding
the absence or presence of pregnancy either you are or you aren't.
There was little ground for grey.
The defense of the SG Elections Committee and of O.K. Curry
and Co. was based of whether or not the irregularities of the election
had any significance on the outcome. This in itself is insignificant.
There is no defense if the elections were conducted illegally. There
can be no consideration of significance in this matter.

the situation now stands, a new election will be held. This will
require the legal two week filing deadline, the approval of the election
procedures by the Assembly, and the appointment of a legal Elections
As

Committee. All these measures take time; if new elections can be
held before the end of the semester, then Student Government will
have to act hurriedly, a method that probably would be unadvisable
at this time.

In any case, all three elections (there was really only one election)
have been declared void, and it looks like the Silent Spring might fade
into a Simmering Summer.

mhvvamimirwnw:

.

' v win

"The South Vietnamese stole the railroad track!"

STATE OF THE STUDENT

The Compelling and Appealing
to the requirements

Calls-Succumb-

By D.H. WILLIAMS
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Since the immediate enviroment for the
student is his university experience let
us begin here.
If a good university is truly where the
free minds of men are urged on to full
and fair -- inquiry, where those who perceive truth strive to make others see it,
where exacting standards of thought are
sought and where youth in their impressionable years are given lofty purpose
then we must pray that the inquiry, the
perceivers, the standards and the purposes
are well thought out and chosen. And
part of the burden falls upon the students.
It falls upon the Greek, the athlete,
the activist, the floundering learner, and
the apathetic student. Obviously, some
respond more than others. This is partly
due to the fact that some must devote
all their attention to passing calculus or
English comp.
But too often the duty is shirked because some can't tell the difference between their freshman year and grade
thirteen, because some don't want to
inquire, because some JUST want a mate,
JUST want a job, JUST WANT. Too
many are unwilling to give themselves
completely to a very enriching experience.
It may be interesting to note that a
similar situation can be described for

the faculty and administration. The maintenance of open investigations, good teaching, and student inspiration is mostly
the responsibility of these groups. Here
the call is also replied to in many ways.
Some faculty would interest their students
in the subject at hand but are not sufficiently interested in it themselves to
ask any hitherto unanswered questions.
On the other hand it has been said that
some faculty become too wrapped up in
their research to inspire their undergraduates.
The students meet their portion of the
learning task differently b