xt71zc7rqr1c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71zc7rqr1c/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660121  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 21, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 21, 1966 1966 2015 true xt71zc7rqr1c section xt71zc7rqr1c Inside Today's Kernel

I&IW

Lift Kl

University of Kentucky

Vol. LVII, No. 65

LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY, JAN. 21,

19GT

Eight Pages

NSA Withdrawal Bill
Sent To SC Committee
representatives, "be prepared for
a long meeting."
The NSA proposal was read
once by its author, Oscar Wester-fieland then moved quickly
into a three man committee.
The proposal's recommendation to complete financial committments with NSA and immediately withdraw from the organization was based on contentions that Congress has not
benefitted significantly from the
membership and that NSA has
limited its effectiveness by entering the "realm of political

By TERENCE HUNT
Kernel Managing Editor
Student Congress banked five
proposals in committees Thursday night, including the motion
to withdraw from the National
Student Association and another
suggesting establishment of a
state-wid- e
association of Kentucky college students.
Other bills read last night proposed: establishment of a student solicitation control bureau,
something similar to a campus
Better Business Bureau; clarification that three absences in a
three hour course is not a University rule, and a $100 appropriation for the textbook exchange.
All of the motions will return to Congress next Thursday
for debate and vote. Congress
president Winston Miller told

lliiobethtown Community College may
get
agricultural program:
two-ye-

Poge Seven.
UK Panhellenic is preparing for Southeastern Conference: Page Eight.

:Sy
w

n

local student government associ-

Oscar Westerfield, chairman of the Student Congress committee on
NSA withdrawal, addresses Thursday's Congress meeting. Westerfield introduced a proposal to withdraw from NSA. Congress Vice
President John O'Brien, right, looks on.

Neivsman Says:

Russia Moving Toward Capitalism

By FRANK BROWNING
Assistant Managing Editor
Student Congress Thursday
night held one of its shortest
business sessions this year, aphour long.
proximately one-ha- lf
stuck
But representatives
around for more than 45 minutes
after the meeting with a bag-fu- ll
of questions.
The center of interest spun
committee
around a three-ma- n
charged with studying the SC
executive proposal:
"Be it enacted that the Student Congress of the University
Continued on Page 6

By SANDY HEWITT

Kernel Staff Writer
A Pulitzer
Prize winning
newspaper correspondent told a
University audience Thursday
night that "creeping capitalism"
is entering the Russian way of
life through a "bloodless revolt
of the furious consumer."
Eddy Gilmore, Associated
Press correspondent, spoke in
Memorial Collesium as a part of
the Concert and Lecture Series.
He received the Pulitzer Prize in
1947 for his written interview

with Premier Joseph Stalin at
the start of the Big Four talks.
More recently, he was cited
by the AP editors for his stories
on the death of Sir Winston
Churchill.
There is in Russia today "the
emergence of the consumer as a
real force," said Gilmore. "He
is more diverse and harder to
please," he said. "It is no longer
possible for the government to
pass off junk on the Russian consumer as there has been the injection of profit schemes and personal incentive."
This movement toward rough
capitalism began in 1953 with
the death of Stalin and was continued by Premier Khruschev.
There was a lessening of the
terror of the secret police and a
lighter policy toward deposed
leaders, he said.
"Profit has become the key
word in Russian economy to

Draft .
VVViSr..

1

v

.

S

...

V

,

I

hi1'

m?

I

....

effort says

ation.

A meeting was scheduled for
today for the committee considering the NSA withdrawal pro
posal.
A letter addressed to the president of NSA informing him of
Congress' pending action was
shown after the meeting.
The letter, written by Tom
Padgett, SC director of special
services, recommended he contact Congress soon if he would
wish to defend NSA's position.
The letter added, "At this time
activity."
it appears that the bill opposing
A proposal asking for a comour affiliation with NSA will pass
mittee to investigate the possi- with little or no
opposition."
bilities of establishing a state"May I suggest that this be
colwide association of Kentucky
done as soon as possible (conlege students was also based on
wish to
if
the premise that Congress has tacting Congress) you as time
influence this discussion,
not benefitted from membership
is of the essence," the letter sugin NSA.
gested.
However, Carson Porter, auNo response from NSA offithor of the proposal, said memcials has been received by Conbership in NSA would be ir- gress officials yet, Padgett said.
relevant to the establishment of a The letter was sent Monday.

Disagree

v. ; v -

V"

Track is an individual
coach: Poge Six.

d,

Committee
Members

.

feature writer discusses Dean Seward
and her owl collection: Poge Two.
Chaplain soys fraternities should end
discrimination: Poge Three.
Editor discusses Student Congress' proposed NSA withdrawal: Page Four.
Selective Service director says student
deferments will drop: Poge Five.

I

M

;.,-

V

1
ft

-

f

t,

i

$

T

m

5C President Winston Miller promises a long meeting next week
vhen the NSA withdrawl resolution is brought back to Congress.

Russian Communists have made
tremendous industrial progress,
agriculture remains the center of
the economy," he said.
It is here, he said, that can
be found the "little capitalists"
who think so much about profit.
There has developed in Russia
the system of private plots of
to each
belonging
ground
peasant. He can use any production of this ground as his
own profit, and many have done
just this to a great extent,
amassing small fortunes. Gilmore
gave several examples of this type
of initiative, which though highly
illegal, has advanced the capitalist spirit to a great extent.
Cilmore humorously pointed
out that he felt the Russian revolution to capitalism would be
completed when several things
happened. Among them were the
sale of Coke in Red Square, praise

Further draft comments on rage Five.
Exactly what standing would be required has
In the Korean War, students
were required to be in the upper half of the
of the sophomore
freshman class, upper two-thirof the junior class.
class or upper three-fourtHershey said a decision will have to be made
within the next 10 days by Feb. 8 in order for
ds

of the West in Pravda, jazz in
the Kremlin, modern fashions,
and "invasion of Moscow by
Madison
Avenue advertising

techniques."
In his 12 years in the Soviet
Union, Gilmore saw many of
these changes begin to come
about. There has been the increased adoption of advertising
in business, the change from general production to demand production, a new emphasis on style
and beauty among women, and
the introduction of pop music and
Western fashions among the
young people.
While the USSR is moving
toward Capitalism, Gilmore said
the United States is moving in
the opposite direction. He said
that "Russia is turning completely to a bourgeois society and the
Communists are losing their rev-

olution."

. . Students Face Calls

Lewis B. Hershey, Selective Service director,
has indicated that some college students may face
induction if draft calls continue to run above
30,000 monthly.
Hershey gave clear indications he plans to
order a return to a Korean War procedure for
selection of college students. Under this method,
student deferment will depend on a satisfactory
score on the Selective Service test which will
measure learning ability or on the standing of a
college student in the upper portion of his class.

yet to be determined.

i

day," said Gilmore. "Though

any testing to begin before the end of the current
academic year. The results would apply then for
the 1966-6- 7 college year.
Under present practice, students are required
only to be enrolled in good standing in colleges
to IS classification
student deferments.
A spokesman for the Selective Service in Frankfort said it's impossible to say now if any changes
will be made in Kentucky's 'draft procedures.
The spokesman added, however, there is
sufficient manpower in Kentucky to meet present
calls without dipping into college students.
"There's no manpower problem yet," the spokesman said.
Local draft boards will be given leeway in the
use of the results of test scores as guides in deciding student deferments. But Hershey emphasized that the local boards would not be
required to follow the test results. If it needs to
fill its quota, a local board coidd draft anyone,
regardless of his

* Creatu res
In D ean Seicard:s Office
'Wise-Eve- d

V.

c?

w.n .
til twi tzr -

jar

--

.t

.trri

r..r

.tjt3

t

a"

i

r

rrrtx
art

lrv-j- k

rxibrrarr

Lj&zm

rm

root

i

t: rrrr.i

--

;

: rrc tz--r

zr

raker

use

"lotl

-

t

axrv- -

a

xmr

itiu
H- -

rBnrjii.

Airrr

vrr-- t

-- 1? rwru

aan.

ant

rr?

st.

-

Ita.x

iii

'vzn D'jriSfi
fJTifjt.

Ward ttandi W'xc tl
i holding oo

n hr

300

a pair

cade

Livh

c

out xix53t

imiiiiis..

.sari,

vz-

nir' tic

krjrr

and Bvtfca miA LFiH

rnn ?isssz Esal LflndoaRofta
ftUIDMVBV

rurcit

irjn

iiin:

if

1c

Linaur: i:

irr.iZi. j-j- n

titf-

of U,t
mrii ir

n'v

V

"liJT:ft-

-

nur.

irsa

zrjzi?:

I---

sct

nv". ii;

euit nurm

:ji
x.

7

-

t

.

ELIZABETH TAYLOR
if atir irteuii;

Trmzziztfr

7

;i

u

uir

En'jariemente

miTx Binsit
n

5um

p'v

prpzjfr vtsj.

WHWHM

S

.

ri
7

7- -

)

-

i

1

5

RICHARD BURTON
EVA MARIE SAINT

TICMMICCMjOW

"
f

tMUi

f

-- ,
;

SHncoinnr

1

v

Ll
.r

5

r1

A NIGHTMARE IN CHILU

oictxjc

IN

5fn BIG

WiC

7

hi. txi,

2:j.

;

CHILLS!

HELD OVER!

OF

THE
EC!

WA,

7

him

Mm

;

HLATIKi

;

"THUIiDERBAli

.J

I

j

ITT

IMM

btsnzr.

1

s--n

Iknny

lew

VARLE

r

CHANEY

0

MRin

KWOK0

uT0

msn

The KitriituckT Ktrmtl
u
It

t
kxivu.
r" Lil

o.l--

Curu

tair
1-

iu

l4U-

r.Mbeirt

1

-i

V?

responsible
...WAS
SHE?

5

It

1

IKMS1 WMCM JOHN CAKKMW

TV CREATURE.

J"rr tfjr.i. Uvn.

4

E2.

Lcvjt

W

.l

u

A.TVjul

CjVk

tca3.MHiumcai

3

IQ

Hoiioii mm

mint tirrom

r

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Jan. 21,

1900- -3

'End Discrimination' ChaplainTells Greeks

Fraternities must clear their
houses.. .(as) there is no room
in the system for exclusion of
members on the basis of race
or religion.
Failure to take into account
this "rising social awareness,"
says a Howard University chaplain, is "perhaps the single most

damning thing that can be said
about social fraternities today,"
The Rev. Jesse VV. Myers,
writing in Intcrcollegian, national YMCA-YWCmagazine, sugmust
gests that fraternities
"learn and develop new forms of
expression, lest (their) major contribution.. .to the campus be com- A

OGSA Says

Distribute
Permits By Priority

"non-fraterni-

By SUZI SOMES

Kernel Staff Writer
The
Student Association (OCSA) passed a resolution
Thursday night supporting the issuance of parking permits on a
priority basis in relation to the distance students live from campus.
This is one of many plans
This
headed by
now being considered by the Robert committee,
Angle and Keith Brown,
Service.
Auxiliary
will present their proposals to
The resolution also stated that
director of
that a committee would be set George J. Ruschell,
Auxiliary Services.
up to investigate various methods
One problem presented was
of facilitating an efficient system
that the quota for C permits is
of classifying such a priority.
for 699 spaces. However 221
"One such system could be 575
of those spaced are in Coopers-towto place circles on a map of
the city," said Robert Angle, a
Also discussed by the council
committee member. "The area
was the newsletter to be sent out
in these circles
encompassed
would show the priority given." in February.
"Instead of allocating parking will"Included in the newsletter
be a list of places to take
stickers on a first come, first
housing gripes, jokes, a list of
serve basis, stickers will be issued
and a bulletin
on the priority basis as stated," studying facilities,
board," said Richard Detmer,
he continued.
treasurer.
Arnett,
legislative
Barry
Barry Arnett reminded the
council chairman, appointed a
council that the main purpose
to take the proposal
committee
of the newsletter was to inform
to the Auxiliary Service. Letters
students of campus
their support of the plan
stating
events so they won't be left out.
will also go to responsible people.
n.

Committee
To Discuss
NSA Action
Continued From Page 1
withdraw its affiliation with the
National Student Association."
The committee appointed by
Congress Vice President John
O'Brien is made up of Oscar
Westerfield, Maija Avots, and
Steve Cook.
In naming the committee
O'Brien emphasized that the
Congress had not "stacked" the
committee, stating that care had
been taken to choose one student
supporting NSA membership,
one advocating withdrawal and
one neutral student.
Westerfield, author of the proposal and committee chairman,
to NSA
said in opposition
membership, after the meeting,
that it was a "very left wing
organization," that it had supported student demonstrations at
Berkeley, Calif., and that "they
have condemned the House Committee on Unamerican Activities.
"When we need their information service, they're so slow
they do us no good," Wester-- v
field continued.
Maija Avots, who supports
membership in the association
said, "I'm just liberal politically
and these things NSA has come
up with I agree on, but that's
not the only reason I'm in favor
of NSA membership."
Steve Cook, the neutral member of the committee, said, "So
far I haven't looked into the subject closely enough to form an
idea whether or not we should
remain in NSA.
"I can see problems if Congress changes from NSA and goes
into a different organization, the
only other one being U.S. Student Government Association."
He continued that the other
organization is younger and
as
well
seem
"doesn't
organized."

pletcly obscured in the changes
in social and leadership structures" there.
If this means breaking national ties, writes Mr. Myers,
then this must be done.
The chaplain considers the
problem a grave one, and offers
the "end religious and racial discrimination" solution as an alternative to abolishing social
fraternities
on
the college
campus.
He asserts that the Greek
system is in trouble, as
sometimes
groups,
euphemistically called GDI's,
have been consistently challenging the traditional leadership
position of the fraternities."
Including sororities in the
term "fraternity," he says "the
net result to the system may result in a loss of leadership and
prestige so that the emphasis of
the 'social aspect of the social
ELECTRICAL-MECHANICA-

further tarnishes

fraternity

image."
"Fraternities, arising as they
did as small, compatible, homogeneous groups, must seek to recapture this closeness, based on
the feeling of the responsibility
for the "brothers" in social and

NEW CIRCLE

Bluegrass Restaurant
STEAKS
$1.45
FRIED CHICKEN
12
$1.30

ty

(AT THE HOME OF THE BULL)
COME AS YOU ARE

1025 New Circle Rd., N.E.

Interviews will be conducted
on January 27, for the purpose of discussing job opportunities with a fast growelectric
ing, investor-owneutility located on Florida's
West "Coast. Good advancement opportunities. See job
placement center bulletin for
interview time and place.
TAMPA ELECTRIC
COMPANY
Tampla, Florida
d,

.

non-cakin-

'

(

)

EXCLUSIVELY ON

0 Warner Brothers Records

SATURDAY, JANUARY 22

8:30 P.M.

Eastern Ky. State College Coliseum, Richmond, Ky.
Prices: $2.50, $3.50
All Seats Reserved
TICKETS NOW ON SALE
Main Records, 224 'a Main Street, Lexington

g.

Fuluer,& Wilder
MKXHratjca

m

2 oz. bottle lasts 4 to 6 weeks,
at drugstores only !

It's Later Than You Think.
Monogram-Valentine- s

i

j

i

Will have to be Selected
Soon

14K Yellow Gold
&00

Earrings

I
I
I
J

f

I

I

sir

""
r

M

Drive-in- )

ENGINEERS

Use CENAC . . . the NEW medicated lotion for
treating pimples and other skin blemishes associated with acne.
CENAC'S invisible film helps mask blemishes
while it promotes healing.
CENAC'S lotion is greaseless and
CENAC'S faint medicinal smell disappears after
drying and is replaced by . . .
aroma with Cenac for Him
Spicy after-shav- e
scent with Cenac for Her
Light

Jiif

(Near Circle 25

L

Put Your Best Face Forward!

Apple-Blosso-

academic areas of interaction on
the campus," the article says.
"Further, the fraternities must
rejoin the academic family atid
win a rightful place of leadership through cooperation with,
rather than antagonism to, the
campus administration."

the

BARNEY MILLER'S RECORD
DEPARTMENT is the
largest
,n Central
Kentucky. Featur- ln9 H,
kwest prices in
Com I" nd see us

Pierced
pair

1

11
I

f

A

1
1

Oval Gold Filled
Brooches 4.75
Round Gold Filled or Sterling Brooches
4.75
Add Engraving

Earrings

Oval Broocli

75c

Rd Brooch 4.00

$2.75
Allow 10 days delivery

You can give without loving
but you can't love without giving.

hUL LER ecvy ILDER
1

1

J

"Where

Radio-Televisio-

n

is a Business

Firtt Nationcl

Not a Sideline P

1

East Main Opposite The Esplanade

U

Charg

108

ESPLANADE

LEXINGTON, KY.

J

PH.

254-154-

8

* 'Did He Say A
Or A Four-Yea- r

Vital To All
na

If there
were a time for
University students to come from
the shadows of apathy and let
their feeling be known to Student
Con cress, that time has come.
Student Congress
proposed
withdrawl from the United States
National Stuent Association is
perhaps the most significant bill
to come before the body this year
and one we feel in the interest
of UK students as a whole, should
be rejected.
It seems unlikely, how ever, that
come from
much objection
within Congress itself. The Congress Administration declared itself
solidly behind the bill even before
it was introduced.
w-i-

ll

Term

Four-Yea- r

Scssionr

reporter he bases this charge
partially on a proposal w hich was
not passed by the national NSA
convention. Chances for objective
consideration on this point within
a more than SO percent Creek Congress seem somewhat doubtful
though UK sororities and fraternities continually receive anti-NSliterature.
A

We
the
committee
hope
appointed to review the bill will
make a special effort to do so
objectively. If they do, they certainly will not recommend withdrawal from NSA.

Benefits Listed
Trie benefits of NSA member-

ship are, w e think, w
by
Paul Danish, columnist for the
Colorado Daily at the University
of Colorado, who writes:
ed

Representative West erS eld,
of the bill, told the Kernel
earlier in the week of three objections to NSA:
fra-m-

er

Wesierfield claimed NSA service
has been inefficient, and John
O'Brien. NSA coordinator for the
UK Congress, agreed. However,
former President Steve Beshear indicated his administration "obtained quite a bit" from NSA.
There seem to be no spokesmen for
last year's group on Congress floor
at this time.

'Political' Actirity
second objection concerned
the "political" nature of NSA. A
has
already
Congress which
from the
claimed to divorce itself
world of "political" activities could
hardly be expected to evaluate this
point objectively. Within the
"rubber stamp" Congress there has
been little objection to the narrow-scop- e
"campus only" concern of
Miller
Winston
this
year's
We find it hard to befollowing.
lieve the average UK student is so
blind as the average Student Congress represent ative in wanting to
limit his concern to the minute
arena of the Lexington campus.
A

Westerfield claims, without
adequate proof, we feel, that NSA
has taken grounds within fraternities, but we do not consider
that
Representative
Westerheld admitted to a Kernel
"anti-Creek-

."

NSA is important not because
it sells insurance, or travel cards,
but because it deals in ideas
and for this reason a university
has a vital stake in it."

"For the way those ideas are
presented and the acceptance they
generally win among educators,
legislators and Americans in general
is going to determine the future
of higher education. . .which will
determine the future of civilization.

"That is our future, and I

can-

not agree with those who say that

we have no place in the great
adventure of determining it. In-

deed, if we have any moral obligation as free men, it is to

participate."
Student Congress, in theory if
not in fact, represents the voice
of the student population of this
University. Students who want a
link with the outer world and a
voice in the trend of higher education should be on hand next
Thursday night to tell Student
l.
Congress they oppose NSA
We are not cominced this
of iew will receive proper
point
airing by Congress representatives
alone.
with-draw-

Each UK- student has a vital
concern in the upcoming decision.
-

i

'

-

.

it

1
SI

5

jj

ivJl iSb&

cx'ii

Religion And Education
The dispute between the administration and certain of the
professors at St. John's University
in New York points up the tremendous stir going on within
Catholic education.
St. John's, the largest Roman
Catholic university in the United
States, dismissed 31 faculty members for "unprofessional conduct",
giving them no opportunity for a
hearing. The United Federation of
College Teachers responded by
calling a strike, the first by professors against a major American
institution of higher learning.
One knowledgeable Catholic observer
explained: "The basic
religious issue in the St. John's
uproar can be summed up in one
word paternalism."

Changes are fast taking place
in leading Catholic universities.
But considering that many administrative attitudes have yet to catch
up with new trends and with the
spirit of the Second Vatican
Council, the clash between administration and professors may not
be surprising, although it was

limi2L'!o? 'SifjT".

hardly expected to come in such
dramatic fashion.
Involved in the St. John's dispute is the issue of academic freedom, together with the related
question of scholarly integrity.
Catholic educators increasingly say
that tight ecclesiastical control defeats the purpose of education.
One of the dismissed professors,
Dr. Rosemary Lauer, called for
"disassociation of all universities
and colleges from the Catholic
Church," noting that "it has already been achieved at colleges
affiliated with Protestant groups."
While few Catholic educators
would want to second her proposal,
Catholic universities may well
move in the direction Protestant
universities have moved before
them toward
less and less
ecclesiastical interference in the
scholarly pursuit of universal knowledge. And we may expect the prevailing mood of Vatican II to
greatly accelerate "the winds of
revolution" beginning to blow
through Catholic colleges and
universities.
The Christian

u'ifchin

to

Science Monitor
of .pace

on any topic. Because

r

t,

con- -

The Kentucky Kernel
The South' Outstanding College
Daily
UMVI HSII

ESTABLISHED

Linda Mills, Lxecutive Uitor

CS

Hi

II.

Student Conpret In Session

-.-

V-

Jvdy

Crisram.

Carolyn

...

or

.

h

Uiuni,

Jhn

.Yu, lUtor

iluaxis, lecture

Waxixu kNArr,

KliN UTKY
21. 1966

Fit ID AY, JAN.
Wai ii

V

Y

1894

Advertising

Zi ii.

:,),r

In Chief

Sm s l!,tor

Knnmh Cukkn, .Wiif .Yu KJitor

IUnwv Hom. n i iiai., NfMif

f.i,r

Mcr

Mtt,Mgiug F.ditor

Thini--

UnMfM Staff
M aiw

llititor

'

in

Maiwawt
I

Ivni;

wk.

Hau.ky, Art

Volition

tMor

Manager

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Jan. 21, lf--

5

Student Deferments Will Drop, Hershey Says

The Collegiate Press Service
FORT STEWART, Ca.-- Lt.
Cen. Lewis B. Hershey, director
of the Selective Service System,
said last week that draft deferments for college students will
become more difficult to obtain
because of an increasing manpower need in Vietnam.
"We have been very lenient
and, therefore, the system can
stand some tightening," Cen.
Hershey told directors of the
Selective Service System in 10
southern states. The directors
were meeting in the first of three
regional meetings to discuss
deferments.
Cen. Hershey said the prospective draftees must have
"better reasons" for requesting

deferments. He said he wanted
to get the views of all the state
Selective Service directors on a
proposal that would restore
Korean war standards that made
it hard to get deferments and
harder still to keep them.
Gen. Hershey said he imagined that the Vietnam war would
require about the same manpower
as the Korean war, when draft
calls ran as high as 80,000 a
month, or more than double the
current call."
He said that increasing draft
calls would take
first.
Then, in order, college students,
those now classified IY, and
childless married men would be
taken.

Cen. Hershey had been requested by the American Civil
Liberties Union to issue a directive for local boards on the
drafting of students. The civil
liberties groups said that in the
present situation local boards
were' confused on the status of
student deferments.
In reply, Gen. Hershey said
a policy statement, as such,
would not be issued until the
last of the regional meetings is
held in
He did,
however, send a letter to all
local boards in which he outlined the policy to date.
Local draft boards, rather than
schools, determine who is a satisfactory student, Gen. Hershey

wrote. He noted that the information supplied by the schools
is "of the greatest importance"
and that draft boards would
probably follow the schools'
certification "most of the time."
statement
Gen. Hcrshey's
applied chiefly to college and

are given a 2S classification. The
usual basis for deferment is a
certificate from a qualified school
that the student is pursuing satisfactorily a full course of
instruction toward a degree over
a normal period of time. There
is a lack of uniformity among
students for it is educational institutions as to the
within these ranks that local number of hours required for
boards have been reviewing cases
e
status and Gen. Hershey
with an eye to reclassification.
has instructed local boards to
High school students are use their judgment.
deferred by statute and given IS
For example, there is at least
classifications until graduation, one Harvard student who has
until they reach age 20, or until been told by his local board
they complete their first year of that the 14 hours required by
e
Harvard for
college.
standing
College students, however, are are not enough to justify a
deferred on an annual basis and deferment.
post-gradua-

full-tim-

full-tim-

Here's the

stortest line
between

LT. GEN. HERSHEY

Loyalty Oath
At Illinois
Sparks Wrath
111.

URBANA,
persons circulated a document purporting to be a university required loyality oath among
(CPS)-Unkno-

wn

a

graduate students at the University of Illinois last week and the

campus has been in an uproar
ever since.
The document was put in
graduate students mail boxes
after having been folded letter
size, addressed by typewriter, and
left with other mail outside the
college offices.
The university did not discover the existence of the
fraudulent "oath" until late last
week when several graduate assistants brought it to the
attention of the secretary of the
board of trustees.
At that time, three graduate
students had already complied
with the supposed regulation of a
Nov. 17 trustees' meeting and had
filled out the information sheet,
had it notarized, and turned it in
to the graduate admissions office.
The document said that the
board had ordered "all graduate
students to submit each semester
an affidavit affirming allegiance
to the Constitutional government
of the United States."
The "oath" contained an affidavit stating that the recipient
was not and never had been a
member of the Communist party,
of any organization controlled by
or affiliated with the Communist
adparty, or of any organizationforceor attempting the
vocating
ful overthrow of the government
of the United States."
The document also said that
"any willful misrepresentationor
omission of facts, or failure to
sign and return this form as
directed will be cause for immediate dismissal from the uni-

versity."

According to A.J. Janata, the
trustees' secretary, the board did
not even meet on Nov. 17 as
stated in the document and such
an oath "hasn't been discussed
by the board for years."

"go-place- s"

a reer,

Your name:

It's the

one you sign on at your

placement office for an interview with IBM
February 15, 16

.

a difference?
growth-wi- th
Career excitement-wi- th
stability? New frontiers In all
technologies with the leader
g
in the nation's
major industry?
IBM can offer you extraordinary
growth opportunities in
Research, Development,
Manufacturing, Programing
and Administration-throughits network of labs, plants
and technical centers.
If you want the facts about these
careers, you'll want to talk to
the IBM interviewer.
Certainly, he wants to talk to you
about these key jobs.
They're jobs with technical
responsibility. Where you can
Want

fastest-growin-

out

put your ideas to work and
earn superior rewards.

IBM is going places.
Why not come along?

a growth company like IBM,
responsibility and advancement
come rapidly. In fact, during
the next five years IBM expects
to appoint approximately 6,000
new managers. A wide range
of training and education
programs will help you meet
the challenge of growth.
So visit your placement office
now for a line on IBM. Sign
on it for your interview. If for any
reason you can't arrange an
interview, visit your nearest
IBM branch office. Or write:
Manager of College Relations,
IBM Corporate Headquarters,

Whatever yodr area of study,
ask us how you might use your
particular talents at IBM.
Job opportunities at IBM lie in
eight major career fields:
(1) Research and Development,
(2) Engineering,
(3) Manufacturing, (4) Finance
and Administration,

In

Armonk, New York 10504.

(5) Marketing, (6) Field
Engineering, (7) Systems
Engineering, (8) Programing.
IBM is an Equal Opportunity

Employer.

EIBEvS

* 6 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Jan. 21,

lOfif.

Coach Johnson Stresses Individual Effort
By GARY YUNT

Kernel Sports Writer
The trend in sports has been
toward the team and team efforts while the individual has
been virtually neglected. One
sport in which the individual
alone excels in that of track and
field.
One man who knows about
the training and coaching of individual athletes is UK track
coach Robert Johnson
"In track, the individual is
thrust into a high level of
competition and he alone must
stand out as an individual," he

Ililes, Argento
Lead Frosh
To Second Win
The UK freshman basketball
team, lexl by Bobby Miles and
Phil Argento, scored its second
win of the season by defeating
the Bellarmine Freshmen
3
last night in Louisville.
Hiles pitched in 34 points and
Argento contributed 27 as the
Kittens added on to its
3
halftime lead in the second half
to secure its second win in five
outings. Tom Stigger scored lo
for UK and Chuch Sober added
11. John Wolf and Don
Meyer
paced Bellarmine with 20 points
apiece.

said. "Track is one remaining
place where the individual can
show his merits."
Johnson believes that the role
of a track coach is one of a director and not a dictator. "The
problem of the coach is to understand the boys' conflicts and try
to lead them over the hump.
"My policy has been to have
the boys do what they want
during the workouts as they know
themselves what they need to
work on as individuals. Each boy
trains in his own way with no
pressure from us.
"Everything in track is based
on the indiv idual. If the boy believes in what he is doing, then
90 per cent of the battle is won
as far as the coach is concerned.'
If they know that they have giv en
their best, then nothing more can
be asked."
Johnson pointed out that
some of the individual's luster
w as taken away by the American
sports writers who started the

team scoring systems for the
Olympic Games.
"The Russians have their
system for keeping score and so
do w e. In the end they both w ind
up winning. In the Olympic
Creed, it is an underlying belief that individual performance
rather team effort are the basis
of the Games.
It isn't fair for a country like
the United States to compete on
a team basis with a country like
New Zealand or Australia. Individual effort should be applauded over team effort."
In working with individuals,
Johnson believes that the coach
has a better chance to know the
boys well. "We can see the kids
mature and we like to feel that
w e had a hand in it although we
realize the change is due to a
broader scope of values."
To back up his point, Johnson
notes: