xt70k649rq0j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70k649rq0j/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690206  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  6, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  6, 1969 1969 2015 true xt70k649rq0j section xt70k649rq0j Tib

11

v.

Hi

EC ERMEL

Thursday Evening, Feb. 6, 19f9

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LX, No. 90

Seminar Panel
Attacks Present
College System
By FRANK COOTS
And BARBARA NASH
"This is directed to the faculty: if you stop grading, nobody will
give a damn."
"I prefer the good 'B' student to the 'A student. The person
who graduates with all 'AY is a follower. The good 'B' students
are my best grad students."
I think some courses should dual "to live with grace" in a
world that needs changing.
be irrelevant."
Dr. Forth also implied that a
These were some of the comments provoked Wednesday night college faculty should not conby a theoretical biology seminar cern itself with social problems
entitled "The Revolution In but, rather, focus upon educating
the individual.
Higher Education."
In a contrasting view. Dr.
The panel members were Dr.
Mason of the Political Science
Cuy Davenport, professor of EngContinued on Page 5, Col. 1
lish; Dr. Stephen Langston, assistant professor of mathematics;
Dr. Gene Mason, assistant professor of political science; and
Dr. Stuart Forth, vice president
The Associated Press
for student affairs.
U.S. District Judge Mac Swin-for- d
Education 'Debauched
overruled motions for dismissal of the $30 million Maine
Dr. Forth called for "a return
Chance Farm anti-trusuit
to proven standards" as the answer to educational problems.
Wednesday.
"The court is of the opinion
"I feel that it (education) has
that this is a case that should
been debauched," Dr. Forth
be decided by a jury," Swinford
added.
"We were once moving toward said after all three defendants
educational goals that could he in the action asked that the
realized. We use to educate
charges against them be thrown
individuals, now we educate out.
The motions by the UK Remasses."
Dr. Forth claims that the search Foundation, the Keene-lan- d
Association and the Bank
American "belief that all have a
of New York came after the plainto education and wealth'
right
tiffs in the case finished their
is partly responsible for "thi
presentation.
debauching."
In eight days of testimony,
Turning his attention to stu
dent unrest, Dr. Forth said Dr. Arnold Pessin and Rex C.
Ellsworth have tried to show
"Most students are not conceme
with living the academic life there was a conspiracy to keep
Their values are different. W them from buying Maine Chance
have raised their expectations be Farm in July, 1967.
They contend the conspiracy
yond that which can be realized
came about afte it was disWe are carefully preparing stu
dents for a world that won't b closed they intended to use the
farm for a thoroughbred sales
there. We are not telling it to th
business in competition with
students like it is."
Keeneland.
'Live With Grace'
The University foundation
Dr. Forth believes that the bought the acreage for $2 milpurpose of education is "to turr lion with the Bank of New York
out people with a sense of pro as the seller, acting as
of the estate of the late
portion or values." He said &i.
education should teach an indivi Elizabeth Arden Graham.

!

I

til

I

AU1 IUI

Kernel Photo By Sam Mose.ey

Special
What?

Is this what special education classes are all about? Do you learn to
hang signs by paper clips on the second floor of Dickey Hah? Or is
this just a hobby taken up by some student or faculty member? We don't
know, but it makes for an interesting conversation piece.

Maine Chance Dismissal Motions Overruled
st

All three defendants argued
there has been no evidence to
show a conspiracy existed.
"In this case, to find a conspiracy, you have to pile inference on inference on inference
on suspicion," Rufus Lisle, attorney for the University foundation, said.
William Gess, attorney for the
Bank of New York, said the plaintiffs failed to show the needed
knowledge, participation and motive for a conspiracy for his client.
Robert Odear, lawyer for
Keeneland, said his client had
the only possible motive of the
three, but that no evidence shows
any action on the part of Keeneland in any type of conspiracy.
Judge Swinford said that in
most conspiracy cases, actual
proof is lacking, but that plaintiffs must show a pattern of action that might lead to a conclusion of conspiracy by the defendants.
Gayle Mohney, a Lexington
lawyer who accepted the university's bid on the farm, was
the final witness for the plaintiffs.

Mohney is an officer of Keene-

land, attorney for the racing

as-

sociation, local attorney for the
Graham estate, a director of the
bank that loaned money for the

University's purchase and a director of the local newspapers.
He told the court he knew
nothing of his power to accept
the University bid until July 28,
1967, the day the University submitted it to him.
It was then, Mohney said, that
James Clinch of the Bank of
New York told him he had instructed the University to give
its bid to the Lexington lawyer.
Earlier testimony indicated
Pessin, a Lexington veterinarian,
and Ellsworth, a California horseman, made their bid by majl
to New York. It arrived there
after the University bid was accepted.
John Clark, a trader and breeder of horses, told of a conversation with Keeneland President
Louis Lee Hagginll several years
ago in which Haggin said "he
wasn't afraid of competition because he'd sell horses for as little as 1 percent if he had to to
drive them out."
Keeneland's usual fee for horse
sales is 5 percent.
Clark also said Fred B. Wachs,
general manager of the local
newspapers, invited him to read
a report on Pessin. Clark said
he never read the report.
The report was referred to in
earlier testimony. Made by the:

New Opportunities Opened In Student Loans
Kernel Staff Writer
With the new Federal Insured
Student Loan Program replacing
the United Student Aid Fund,
students now can look forward
to new doors of opportunity opening with loans guaranteed by the
Federal government.
"Under the old program students borrowed over $900,000,"
remarked Or die Davis, assistant
director of student financial aid.
"Now under the new federally
insured program to which Congress has appropriated sufficient
funds I don't think students
could borrow enough to exhaust
it," he said.
An individual student is allowed $1,500 an academic year
under the new program, whether
he is an undergraduate or graduate student. The old Student
Aid Fund allowed only $1,000
and $1,500 respectively.
The federally sponsored program insures a maximum loan

Dean Seay
Eulogized
At Service

The late Dr. William A. Seay,
dean of UK's College of Agriculture since 1962, was eulogized by
representatives from all areas of
campus life in a memorial service
Wednesday afternoon.
Dr. A. D. Kirwan, interim
president, said it was "fitting"
that those who had been associated with Dr. Seay should
praise a man whose "contributions are worldwide."
One of those associates, Dr.
A. D. Albright, executive vice
president, said Dr. Seay "had
more to give, and this is a part
of our so now
Today we lament what might have been had
he been spared. But we are fortunate that William Seay was

....

Federal Insured Student Loan Program

By STONEY FRANKLIN

Thoroughbred Racing Protective'
Bureau, it allegedly was unfavorable to the veterinarian.
Rex Martin, a developer, told
how he made rough estimates
for Pessin that it would take
about $900,000 to outfit Maine
Chance Farm into a horse sales
arena and horse training center.
However, Martin said his visit
to the farm with Pessin may
have been made after the University had bought the acreage.

of $7,500 and a repayment schedule based on a
period'
with a seven percent interest rate.
The United Student Aid Fund
required that a borrowing student
resident,
hi a qualified
w i.'le the federal government now
loans regardless of the
u
ler's home state or the loch y a.here the loan is arranged.
10-ye- ar

in-sta- te

is

9 Month 'Grace'
Eli ability criteria suqmsing-l- y
on m lpass a wide majority
of the tudents. Students whose
adjus'.e1 pross family income is
less tlia. $15,00C qualify under
the fed m. ' program.
The fe ierrl oer unent will
carry tho i 'teiest rate while the
student i." i. tte ulng the University and cur.ng a "gr lev" period
of nine months follow 'ny with- drawal or gati'iarioti.
Students whose fani'iej' ftross
income exceeds $l?,0Cti it'll jual-if- y
'

under the prcrum'f k icrding

agency is willing to carry their

loan. Under these conditions,
however, the government does
not carry the interest rate.
Repayment begins on the first
day of the 10th month following
withdrawal or graduation, and
the borrower then must assume
payments on both the interest
and principal. The minimum annual payment is $3G0.
"This new program will help
students," UK student aid director Davis said, "if the lending agencies will cooperate."
He added, though, that many
lenders claim not to see any profit under the program, and as
a result, have not elected to participate.
"There are only a few agencies in Lexington and surrounding areas handling the federal
insured loans," Davis said.

Other Prof rams
Following is a survey of the
present status of some other campus loan programs:

The Nursing Student Loan
Program, originally available
only to baccalaureate students in.
the College of Nursing, may be
extended to associate degree stu-- .
dents at the Lexington Technical
Institute and in the Community
College System.
The change was approved by
the University last week, but still
must be approved by the U.S.
Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
The Nursing Educational Op-

portunity

Grant

Program

(NEOG) has been replaced with
a new Nursing Scholarship Program, patterned after the Health
Professions Scholarship Program.
There also are cooperative
loans for students in the Colleges
of Medicine, Dentistry and Pharmacy with generous deferment
and repayment provisions.
Law Enforcement Loans
Revisior;s this year in the
Continued ou Pate 5, CoL 1

here."

Representing

the faculty of

the College of Agriculture, Dr.
D. Milton Shuffett said, "He
died as he lived," doing the work
he loved. "His chair will not be
easy to fill."

Keelan Pulliam, a member
Students Agricultural
Council, called Dr. Seay" a stranger to no one and a helping
hand to everyone." He described
Dean Seay as a man who cared
about his students and whose
students cared for him.
Dr. Albert G. Clay, a member
of the Board of Trustees, called
the death of Dr. Seay a "great
loss" to the University community. He said he took comfort
in the thought that "man, as an
idea of Cod, cannot be destroyed,
but can only be placed in his
loving care."
Dr. Seay, a native Kentuckian
who graduated from UK In 1946,
was killed Saturday when his
single-engiplane crashed in the
mountains near Martinsburg, W.
Va.

of the

ne

* 2--

TIIE

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb.

19

G,

English Rock Trio Cream Releases Final Recording
While Clapton's" Badge" is pas v'
They ran through several extended, exhaustive tours of the able, the trio slumps on "Doing
States, battering their audiences That Scrapyard Tiling" to a
with sound, and almost as often sound highly reminiscent of The
battering each with fists. There Monkees. For Cream to sound
was simply not enough room in like the Monkees is for O. J.
one group for three such de- Simpson to run with the finesse
of Captain Ahab; essentially it
manding, egocentric talents.
They were three highly-strunis a waste.
Producer Felix Puppalardi's
pedigrees, locked together In a
cage for one, wrenching the best track mixing, so clear and precise
and worst from each other. After in the previous Cream offering
innumerable flare-upit all ended "Wheels of Fire' is comparavia mutual agreement on a De- tively weak. One could deride
cember night in Britain.
the studio cuts interminably, but
It would be nice to say that it is like kicking a dead horse. It
with this their fourth and final is doubtful any of the three would
album Cream goes out in The have merited release had the
Creat American Tradition, firing group still been together and
six parting shots while falling
recording.
to the dust mortally wounded,
Live Cream
ridding the townsfolk of any InThe live cuts are another isdians or members of otherminor-itsue. Though all three ("I'm So
groups.
Clad," "Politician," and "SitUnfortunately, their last effort ting On Top Of The World")
is not their best. The album is have been included in earlier
a hastily thrown together collecalbums, the inperson presentation of three studio cuts and three tion refurbishes them, essentially
live cuts.
due to the difference in the studio
The studio cuts range from Cream and the live Cream.
relatively good to mediocre.
Bruce, Baker and Clapton
were the first majormarket group
to break free of the temporal
and structural limitations of rock.
IN CONCERT:
Aided and abetted by their
affinity for methedrine
they hit the stage in a near
frenzy, improvising in mad flourMODERN FOLKSINGERS
ishes, running simple, solid blues

GOOD DYE, by Cream, At coRco
oids
By JACK LYNE
Kernel Arts Editor
John and Bobby Kennedy are
dead. Cene McCarthy has apparently gone mad, HegisDcbray
will likely go stale behind bars
and Cream is no more.
In a world that needs all the
heroes it can get, the three that
bassist-vocaliwere Cream
drummer Ginger
Jack Bruce,
Eric
Baker, and guitarist-vocaliClapton have gone separate
ways, apparently to form their
own individual groups.
A little more than two years
ago the rumblings came from
England that three of the country's best Baker from the Cra-haBond Organization, Bruce
from Manfred Mann, Clapton
from The Yardbirds and John
MayaU's Bluesbreakers had decided to merge.
It was a dizzying trinity of
talent. Cream set out to assault
every record in sight, whether
endurance, record sales or

g

st

s

st

m

y

well-know-

n

KENT, CLIF, & PHIL
February 7

8--

(Eatanmtha (Enf f
Mill Street

p.m.

12

Hjmta?

at Maxwell

endurpieces into twenty-minut-e
ance matches.
Their personal animosities
seemed to surface on stage, as
they played viciously against one
e
another, locked in a strage
coupling, all fighting to
dominate. The result was a sound
that really defies adequate description.
They built layer of sound on
sound; Clapton, drawing from
that immense reservoir of riffs
from Neanderthal man plunking
a dried animal intestine to B. B.
King's latest assault on his
lover Lucille; Bruce,
thumping madly away, playing
frantic figures like some demented soul dying of asphyxiation, running from window to,
window, furiously pounding for
release; Baker, the red wraith,
throwing his dissipated frame
at his drums, wrenching rhythmic madness free, flailing with
a thousand hands and feet.
love-hat-

"My Cod"
Perhaps the best description
of their live antics came this
summer when jazz columnist
Ralph Gleason, somewhat of a
musical snob, reviewed a Cream
concert for Downbeat and reported, "I could try to tell you
exactly what they did at this stage
of the concert, but I will only
quote what I scribbled on my
program: 'My Cod.'"

Dickens Announces Cast
For 'Dark Of The Moon9
cast of 26 has been selected for "Dark of the Moon," Cuig-no- l
Theatre's winter production which will open on February 21,

A

CI. A.

THE

WATCHIN

I

US

Why? We have dot "LEFT it
Alot of GOOD BARGAINS
that is:

Women's Winter Coats
Reg.

now

$30-$6- 0,

Women's Raincoats
Reg. $45, now

Women's Dresses
Reg.

now

$19-$4- 0,

Vomen's Skirts
Reg. $10421 now

according to the director, Mr. Charles Dickens.
"Dark of the Moon," by Ho
ward Richardson and William Foxworthy, Larry Kelley, Clyde
Berney, involves the impossible Lee, David Miller, Clay Nixon,
romance between Barbara Allen Raymond Smith, Jimmy Taylor,
and John, a witch boy, in the and Mike Walters.
Appalachian mountains. The plot
Seven additional female roles
is complicated by interfering will be
portrayed by Carolyn
townsfolk and contriving witCope, Jill Geiger, Jo Anne Morches.
Charlann Simon, Jo Ann
Barbara Allen will be por- ris,
Smith, Anna Smulowitz, and
trayed by Julie Anne Beasley, and Vicki Steward.
Dowell Piatt will enact the role
Production dates for the play
of John. Witches will be played
by Edd Little, Doug Marshall, are February 21, 22, 23, 28, and
Julie NcNeese, Linda Nolan, and March 1 and 2. Box office opens
Helen Whelchel.
February 13 at noon daily. For
Assorted male roles will be reservations call UK
played by Steve Currens, David Extension 2929.
258-900- 0,

12 price

12 price
12 price
12 price

ANNOUNCING

VOCAL

Reg.

now

Men's Sport Coats

Reg. $45 now

Men's Turtleneclcs

12

of Lexington

AUDITIONS
for the

Men's Dress Shirts
$5-$- 7,

UNITARIAN
CHURCH
Clays Mill Pike
Phone 277-624- 8

CHORUS
pY.cc

of

Religious

THE NEW

12 price

Liberals
RICHARD

-

AND ALOT MORE!

Don't bo "LEFT" out during our

Rock Bottom Days Vi Price Sale.

nine-minu-te

n

h.

DEAREST:
I can't wait to hear from
you, so note the Zip Code
in my address. And use it

when you write to me!

Zip Code really moves
the mail.

NEWSPAPER!
GET THINGS
DONE

W
CHRISTIAN
STUDENT
FELLOWSHIP
Easily accessible to residents of
Cooperstown, Complex, Fraternities, and Sororities.

502 Columbia Ave.
SUNDAYS

Worship

10:15 a.m.

f OZZUTO

Study Group
1
p.m. Mondays;

3 Wednesdays

6:30 p.m.

William Buck, CSF President
Larry L Brandon, Campus Minister

Subject

''DINNER

Report of the conference of
"Clergy and Laymen Concerned
about Vietnam"

Reg. $10, now $5.99
'A

wide-rangin-

Open Forum
Tuesdays

Speaker

As low as $2.99

Men's Wash Trou

Campus

In "Goodbye," Cream again
display their concert virtuosity.
Wlxfte the Howling Wolfs "Sitting On Top of the World" and
"Politician" fit in Cream's norg
mal
orbit, "I'm So
Clau" is somewhere out in the
stratosphere. It is the quickest-- .
hitting Cream cut on record, one
long Mu hammed AH combination. Bruce and Clapton open
with a short vocal intra and then
all three launch into a
dogfight. It alone atones for
.the Album's flaws.
Cream has thundered by. In
their two frictional years they
managed to break down some
of rock's restrictive musical limitations, plus heading a small
group of musicians who have
laid to rest once and for all the
notion that white men lack the
Ineffable something required to
play blues.
They made themselves very
rich and very miserable. They
also made a great number of
people very happy; at the close
of their last December concert
the packed house of 20,000 simply refused to leave, shouting
over and over, "God Save
Cream!"
Nothing could really save
Cream. The union had a built-ideath-wisJust as the elements of nitroglycerin can only
nestle together so long before
the inevitable explosion, so it
was with Jack Bruce, Ginger
Baker, and Eric Clapton. While
together, though, they were the
most talented trio to cross the
rock scenario. As trite as it
sounds, we were lucky to catch
them together.

7:00 p.m.

If Interested in

Room

Theatrical experience
With Pay
Try Out
TONIGHT
Feb. 6 at 7:30 p.m.

SUNDAY

115, Student

Center

SUNDAY

AT THE CHURCH
Speaker
PETTR

SCOTT

Subject

Room 17

"Meaning of Life ani Deoth
as Seen by Taoism"

Fine Arts Building

10:30 a.m.

J

L

The Kentucky

1ernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University oi Kentucny, Lexington, Kentucky 4o5oti. Second ciass
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed live time weemy during the
scnooi year except hoiaays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Uiiice Box 4U.
lie gun as th Cadet in lotrt and
published continuously as the Kernel
since ma.
Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
laise or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
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News Desk
Business, Circulation 2J10
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27

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb. f,

Metzger Says 'Jolt Livens Up9 Campus

CLASSIFIED
runiAH
yr
be
"

SUE ANNE SALMON
Kernel Staff Writer
A Columbia University history
professor who served as a mediator during the spring dispute there
believes a "jolt" can "liven up a
By

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ym

19G9- -3

in vmiiw mnij. nam may

placed In person Monday through
Friday or by mall,
U THE KKNTUCKTpayment Inclosed,
Ream
111. Jnrnll.m nu. KERNEL,
Rates are 11.25 for SO words, 13.00
lor three eonfcutlre Insertions of the
tame ad of 20 wordi, and $3.73 per
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The deadline ! 11 a.m. the day
prior to pabllratlon. No advertisement
may cite race, relltlon or national
erlcln as a qnalineatlon for renting
reoma or for employment.
WANTED
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Call between 7:00 tnd 9:00 pm. 5F5t
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NEED STUDENT Ao work as Gra-Leader and coach a couple ofafter
noons and Satyr-damornlniw. Con
tact the local YMCA.
6F3t
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campus."

Dr. Walter P. Metzger, a
nationally known scholar active
in the American Association of
University Professors (AAUP) and
the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU), said at a press
conference Wednesday in the Student Center that "Berkeley and
Columbia are more vital institutions as a result of their jolts.
"There is a closer relationship
between students and the faculty.
The faculty is more perceptive,
and the 'normal' student has
benefited."
But he claimed the "jolt"
at Columbia was so strong that
student activists lost sight of their
goals. "The terrible thing about it
was the jolt was not administered. Two or three volts might
liven up the place, but instead
we got 100 volts. Uncontrollable
violence is a great peril."
Dr. Metzger commented on
students and campus dissent during the hour-lonpress conferg

ence.

1.

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on Columbia Ave., 2 blocks from
campus; rent chea'to. Call
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after 4:30 p.m.
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Radicals And Hippies
He distinguished
between

"hippies" and "political
vists."

acti-

"Most political activists are

not hippies. Radicals may call
on hippies for support, but they're
very different. Radicals don't cop
out; rather, they direct their effort toward changing the social
system. They're not as gentle as

hippies."

lie noted three requirements

that yield a radical situation at
a campus.

"First, there has tobea strong

liberal arts school." For instance,
he said, at a school strong in
engineering a state of calm or
sedation generally prevails.
"Second, the college must require high SAT scores, especially
verbal. There is a correlation between mind and militancy.
"Third, there must be a permissive administrative attitude
and liberal tone in the university
and in the environment around
the university.

"Otherwise,

sociologically

speaking, you will have a more
conservative student body."
'Who Am I?'
Dr. Metzger explained the
"psychological and cultural affects" influencing student activists.
He said the question "Who
am I?" influences activists more
than other factors. "I did not
feel the irritations and frustrations quite so much as young
people today because I had other
priorities.

"The only way to find yourself

is to lose yourself. It's very important for society to provide something for the youngtobelievein."
American society is "quite threadbare" in that respect, he added.

"The importance attached to
state ("a welfare-- ' ill fare complex"), the church and profes-

"Hayakawa (president of San
Francisco State College) takes
the civil approach. He recognizes
activists as hooligans attempting
to overthrow his authority. He's
prepared to act as any civil authority would act in the same situaas Louis XVI should
tion
have acted at the Bastille. He
makes concessions to win over
neutral groups.
"Abrams (of Brandeis University) and Levy (of the University
of Chicago) believe the academy
is a spritual community; that the
students and faculty are bonded
by spirit.
"When you define the other
side as the enemy you can't listen to what they are trying to
communicate. Abrams and Levy
are very alert to that. When police
force is used in a moral community, authority ceases to be authority but becomes power."
Dr. Metzger used Columbia to
exemplify the "futility" of using
police force to quell campus disorders. "Abrams and Levy were
'guided' by Columbia, where a
thousand policemen came in and
in some cases used indiscriminate violence.

...

sions is decreasing. There has
been a denudation in institutions
where people can lose themselves."
He characterized the "normal
student" as "the salt of the earth.
They're in the majority probably
in the majority at Columbia, Chicago and Berkeley. Their rights
should be guarded. But what does
that mean? They are tied to their
parents' generation sufficiently"
to prevent them from changing.
Dr. Metzger added that activists should be "rapped on the
knuckles" for their intolerance
of "normal students."
He speculated on the future
of the university system:
authority will decrease
during the next 10 years. The
university will become less a
metropolis and more a museum."
'Hayakawa Approach'
The Columbia professor stated
a preference for a rational rather
"The day after at Columbia
than a physical solution to cam- there was no authority but bruispus dissent and differentiated the es, anger and no university. We've
'Hayakawa approach" from the spent the past year trying to
"Pro-priet-

"Abrams-Lev-

y

al

approach."

252-62-

FOB SALE
AUSTIN HEALEY-VBritlsracing
green; runs and looks perfect; with
2 sottXops. Also with 2
hardtop and whefels
extra wire
for snow tires.
Best offer over $775. Call
31J5t

1960

h

3.

1967 River- FOR SALE Motorcyc
idition; helmet
side, 125 cc; good
350 after 5:30
included. Call Ell
s
cm.
5F5t

FOR SALE Violin add caseexcellent
condition, $45. Gpnjtact Jtfl Pepper,
or 476 Rote.
5F3t
252-96-

U

Corvette, both tops Hurst Shift
er; wheels; new engine; new tires.
Call Carlisle, Kentucky
6F3t
day or
flight.
1962 FORD 6 cyl..
mdard,
43.500 miles; got
condition, $270.
Call
6F5t
1964

5.

MANUSCRIPTS TYPED p4 Theses,
themes, dissertations, law briefs, 60
cents pp, 5 cents percarbon. IBM
Carbon Ribbon. BtllGivens,
C"
29J10t
After 5 only I
7.

Student Covemment has announced a new accident and sickness insurance plan for UK students.
Single students can take the
h
plan for $16. The
plan for student and pci:se is

4

seven-mont-

$21.

SG obtained the reduced-rat- e
plan from the Neil Sulier

room

j
In-

mand."

Students may obtain details
from the Student Government
Office in Student Center Koom

for

rent; spacious;, refrigerator; hot
bath; paijWng; utilities paid;
plate;1 man. 260
south Limestone' St.
$50;
31J3t

TOR RENT Rooms: Men; ZS$ Ayles-fo- rd
across from new .sorority house;
2 private furnished moms; kitchen;
or
$25, $45 month.
4F3t
278-fll-

7.

MISCELLANEOUS
PERSONAL to Sadie. Have you, ardT
Girard has Joined the Jront rebel- lion. J. B. Yonts.
6Flt
1

HILLEL MEMBERS
Surfday dinner
at 5:30, Temple AdithlsraeL Dr. S.
Goldstein will speakdin Middle? East
6F2t
Peace The Solution":
ATTENTION: Sophomores, Juniors, Graduate Stadents, menand
women. Faculty and Staff. Interested In summer camp employment. Contact Frank Scheli, Room
213 Student Center, 9 a.m. to S
3F7t
p.m., Feb. 10 and 11. v

BANQUET ROOM

PRIVATE

Reservation
119

ITS

South Limestone

A

"SEE-WORTH-

252-934- 4

Y

SPRING"
The Nautical news for Juniors
begins with two's a pair but
three's not a crowd when the
fashion consists of three
pieces that can be paired up
two ways . . . coat, pants, and
skirt . . . battleship grey trim-mewith white . . . spring
wool blend . . . sizes

Complete Optical Service
to Central Kentucky
Since 1923

t!

5-1- 1.

$66.

3 Locations
143-14- 5

North Upper St.

1220 South Broadway
2121 Nicholasville Rd.

25S0716
252-758- 5
278-602-

6

DOWNTOWN,

HEARING AID CENTER
177

North Upper St.

254-936- 6

i

I

204.

FOB BENT
HOUSEKEEPING

!

surance Agency of Lexington in
response "to a large student de-

TYPING

LIGHT

Students Get
Lower Rates
On Insurance

THIRD FLOOR AND SOUTHLAND

I

* The SFSC Question
Situations such as the one at
San Francisco State College (SFSC)
ordinarily arc treated on the most
simplistic levels of thinking but
demand instead consideration of
the great complexities involved.
The commercial press, too, seems
to be responsible for a great deal
of oversimplified and distorted reporting.
Many of us are opposed to violence in any form. Some feel that
the occasional outbreaks of violence on the part of students at
SFSC can no more be supported
than this nation's killing in Vietnam. For this reason many find
themselves unable to condone the
student strike at SFSC. And that is
to say nothing of those who out of
hand reject any student rebellions
for "disrupting the educational process," apparently an unpardonable
sin.
Leaving this latter consideration
aside, however, one still must deal
with the question of violence. Perhaps it is quite well to say that
no one should ever raise his hand
for any violent act, especially when
but it is
it is not for
quite another matter to tell this to
a black revolutionary who has lived
in very violent surroundings all his
self-defens-

e,

life.

What does one say to a black
militant who has spent 20 years

of his life trying to go through
the established channels to implement needed reforms and who has
found them unresponsive and frequently outright hostile? There is
no denying that our society has been
brutally unfair to a large segment
of the population, usually nonwhitc
minority groups. What can be done
if the unconcerned establishment
is so entrenched that nothing serves
to move it from its unenlightened
position?
Therefore, although perhaps the
violence which does occur as a result of desperate student rebellions
cannot be condoned, one should
level his attacks on the established
powers who are at the root of the
problem and not at the students.
n
SFSC economics professor
here
Kelley revealed in a talk
Tuesday that the conditions at
SFSC created by Gov. Reagan have
made student rebellion inevitable. It is noteworthy, too, that
Kelley and his colleagues find it
necessary to travel across the country to reveal the real issues at the
trouble-bes- et
campus.
At any rate, it should be clear
from Kelley' s descriptions of what
has gone on at SFSC in recent years
that simplistic "solutions" will
never resolve the situation there.
Indeed, they can only worsen it.

f
.

Er-wi-

Phis Is An Emergency.
We Need The Table.'

Kernel Forum: the readers write

M

means by the term "Russian studies":
the Russian Area Studies Program or the
Slavic languages and literature program.
With regard to a formal Russian area
studies program which grants either graduate or undergraduate degrees, I have not
seen an adequate intellectual or pedagogical justification for such an enterprise.
The University may continue its undergraduate program, but I cannot see that
it is justified, as I have indicated in some
of my published works. On the other
hand, I heartily applaud the University's
policy of rejuvinating the Russian language and literature program. This latter
program is now under the very able direction of Professor Mischa Fayer, one of the
most widely known and competent innovators of Russian language instruction in
this country, who has, among other things,
brought native speakers into his department.
Frederic J. Fleron, Jr.
Assistant Professor,
Political Science

'I

he chooses. The existence of the compulsory housing policy is
in flagrant violation of the spirit of the
in loco parentis doctrine.
We feel that if the administration
has true regard
student welfare, it will
reconsider its completely unrealistic compulsory housing policy and replace it with
a measure which is
; detrimental bu