xt776h4cr768 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt776h4cr768/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661020  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 20, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 20, 1966 1966 2015 true xt776h4cr768 section xt776h4cr768 Inside Today's Kernel
Guignol production
kudos: Page Two.

is

deserving

of

The Student Bar Association's paper,
The Commentator, will appear Friday:
Page Eight.

A profile of Fourth District Congressional Candidate John J. Moloney:
Page Three.

The Annual Leadership Conference is
set for Saturday: Page Nine.

Hardships are mounting because of
the transit strike, editorial says:
Page Six.

The Delts downed the SAB's Wednesday for the fraternity football title:
Page Eleven.

TKJEIRNTEIL
Vol. 58, No. 36

University of Kentucky
1966
LEXINGTON, KY.,
OCT.
THURSDAY,

Chief Hale Says Arrests
Will Result From Probe
On Illegal Use Of Drugs

Twelve Pages

20,

-- '

&

The statement read, "The
similar to LSD-2by some
students and possibly some UK University routinely cooperates
with the representatives of state
employes.
The University administra- and federal agencies on matters
tion, before news of the investi- relating to the control and use
published, an- of drugs and narcotics.
gation was
"When an investigation of any
nounced Wednesday that any stuUniversity students
and,
dents or employes arrested foi alleged incident is in progress,
possibly, some staff members.
comments about it must proHale said his department the use beof drugs or narcotics any come from
either suspended or perly
would
representatives
started the investigation some dismissed. The announcement of the investigating agency.
weeks ago after receiving reports
"Should charges be filed
was made by Dr. Clenwood L.
of illegal drug use on and near
vice president for Uni- against students or employes of
Creech,
campus. He said the U.S. Food versity relations, who said the the University, these persons will
and Drug Administration was
University has been prepared to be suspended or dismissed decalled when the probe revealed make the statement for "a long pending on the circumstances of
"" " ""5
fi
"improper" usage.
the case."
time."
Asked to clarify the statement,
Dr. Creech said Thursday the
Reports have circulated in recent weeks that federal agencies University "does not want to Dr. Creech said, "We are not
are investigating the use of interfere in any way with the prepared to expound upon the
mescaline, a hallucinatory drug investigation that is going on." statement at this time. I think
the statement is very clear."
A
Asked if students or employes
Pain Brown, center, daughter of Senate candidate John Y. Brown,
of the University would be diswas on campus Wednesday to conduct a handshaking tour in behalf
missed immediately following
of her father. She visited the Law School, and Blazer and Donov an
their arrest, Creech said, "Yes,
cafeterias. Story on page 12.
that's what we mean."
Carl Combs, a Lexington
attorney, said he was contacted
Honors Program officials disclosed today that students in the
Wednesday by a group of UK
program will be interviewed in closed executive hearings next
students asking him to serve as
month by the University Honors Committee.
their counsel, "if necessary."
The hearings, according to
not take advantage of the honors Combs agreed. The students told
Dr." R. O. Evans, program dihim they
The Collegiate Press Service
section offered them" and or asked" had "had been invited
rector, are part of a "routine
by Lexington police
NEW ORLEANS Despite general agreement that overemphasis
pointed out a need for better to attend a
review of the entire Honors Proon research has led to a neglect of undergraduate teaching, particimeeting Wednesday
counseling.
gram."
night, Combs said. Police asked
pants at the American Council on Education conference here last
for this
It was at least
"They have nothing to do reason that thepartly
them to volunteer statements conweek achieved little consensus on specific measures to solve the
University
with anything that has been in
cerning the use of drugs, he problem and called for further research into evaluating teacher
the Kernel or will be," added Honors Committee was reorgaadded.
effectiveness.
Dr. William F. Axton, chairman nized this year to "determine
Combs said he advised the
Meeting to discuss "impediments" to good college teaching,
the what and how of a fuller
of the Faculty Committee on the
students they did not have to over 1,400 college administrators examined various ways to improve
future program."
Honors Program.
instruction and agreed that students should play a role in evaluating
This is what the hearings are sign any statements or comply
The program has been critiin any way with the police. The
the quality of teaching. There was but one student scheduled on
Dr. Axton said, "not as
about,
cized for lack of student interest,
the program, however, to discuss their suggestions.
meeting, however, was called off.
but Dr. Axton said "there is a result of any criticism on the
According to the University
The ACE, which includes almost all colleges and universities
but as a part of the
program,
more student interest in the
Medical Center legal medicine
in the country, also heard conflicting views on the purposes of
overall
of the
Honors Program now than ever
Honors Program."
Continued on Page 4
Continued on Page 4
before."
The purpose of the hearings,
he added, is to determine exactly
how the Honors Program "stacks
up against others in the nation."
Students will be asked during
"One of the real problems at the Unithe private sessions for their perFidler said he has "lived in the South
By FRANK BROWNING
for almost 50 years."
sonal evaluation of the program,
Kernel Associate Editor
versity is that the faculty has a considerable
its benefits to the outstanding
urge to operate by some kind of consensus
The Faculty Senate is charged with disAccording to Oberst this may be part
of the problem at UK, "a special problem
students and for suggestions to cussing and formulating "broader academic instead of by sharpening issues, debating
of the way things are done in academic
improve the program.
policies" for the University. But some faculty them, and voting on them.
"The tendency," he continued, "is to institutions in the South."
Dr. Axton said no certain
insiders have charged that the Senate is
strive for a fairly unanimous vote to seek
students are being invited to
"uninformed" and has never really "or"Why is it that we don't have furious
a middle compromise ground that will attain
the hearings. Any student who
to do any business."
policy debates on the floor of the Senate,"
ganized
wants to respond to the present
he queries.
Just such a charge was made by Douglas as nearly as possible unanimous support."
Associate Prof, of English William Axton
of the program or its
Oberst sees legislative process as a posorganization
Schwartz, a professor of anthropology, at
calls it an attitude of "let's keep everything
sible means of opening the door to dialogue,
the Senate's first meeting of the year.
achievements has been asked
but he emphasizes that the Senate could
The criticism is that the Faculty Senate pleasant."
to make an appointment through
meet
has evolved into a
a letter. To date, he noted,
Talking informally of the dialogue concept then no longer meet once a month and adjourn
there has been so such response.
and vote session where thumbs are flipped all across the University, Axton explains in an hour and 25 minutes.
Dr. Evans explained it is not
either up or down and major educational that as a committee chairman he has found
Under the present structure he believes
himself working to gain committee consensus
unusual for the University Compolicies get only minimal debate and diaSenate's executive commitrather than to open debate and bring real the Council, the
mittee and other officials in the
logue.
tee, has not operated "in such a way as to
And the result is a proposal by Schwartz issues to the surface.
program to question students on
involve the Senate. If there were standing
Oberst quotes an article by William Fidler,
the program's value. But the
to set up a special tommittee to study acacommittees of the Senate on special areas
e
fact that the hearings are being
demic issues and direct
plans general secretary of the American Association comparable to foreign affairs and other Conof University Professors which states:
arranged through appointments
gress committees, these in themselves would
made in letters and will be held
"Southern faculties appear to be as heterotwo parts.
First of
discover policy matters that need Senate
in the evening has caused specugeneous as those of other sections, but I discussion.
lation that the University Comfor Senate activities.
have observed that some of the qualities
Schwartz points to the Senate's recent
which have influenced thinking and conduct
"We have lost the tradition of dialogue,"
mittee is specifically investistudent criticism.
he contends, explaining that it is the Senate's
in the South have been gradually absorbed approval of graduate credit trades between
gating
The issue of student interest
on faculties Lexington Theological Seminary and UK as
job to determine academic policies and to and practiced by
exemplary of the lack of issue discussion
devote its sessions to communication and in the South.
in the Honors Program was
found in the Senate:
deliberation of these policies.
spurred by a letter to the editor
"Something in the nature of genteel
"There should have been a presentation
of the Kernel from Harry Arnett,
southern life . . . has persuaded Southerners
Acting Law Dean Paul Oberst cites the
which accused officials of proSenate's failure to become dialogue-oriente- d
to become suspicious of demonstrations and not only of the proposal and recommendation
but a list of some of the issues involved
as perhaps a shortcoming of organization
viding an unrewarding and genpublicity, to gain their ends by indirection,
and operation but says even more important
to accept the will of the ruling oligarchies, a background against which this decision
erally unexciting program.
needs to be nude."
Dr. Axton said later that
is this consensus-mindeattitude both at and to be guilty of some very strange
"freshmen and sophomores do
Kentucky and at other Southern universities.
Continued On Page 8
Lexington Police Chief E. C.
Hale told the Kernel Thursday
there is "no doubt" that arrests will result from an investigation into the use of narcotics and hallucinatory drugs by

15-2-

5,

0

"

v

4

ii

Charming Miss Brown

Hearings Scheduled
For Honors Program

Research, Poor Teaching
Can Be Related, A CE Told

What Role For The Faculty Senate:9

long-rang-

rs

d

* l -- THE

KENTUCKY

KERN El!, Thursday, Oct: 20,

lWifi

Drama: Kudos For Guignol
a city on a street and
come w hen theycomeand
people
go when they go and say what
they say and I listen."
And later, "Of course we're
all nuts, but we gotta go on

It's

By FRANK BROWNING

Kernel Associate Editor
Cuinnol Director Wally Hriftjs
opened tlie 19GG UK Theatre season with a play and a cast well
worth the kudos his house has
earned for over 30 seasons.
William Saroyan's "Time of
Your Life," first produced about
this time in 1939, deserves the
Pulitzer prize awarded it.
Its sometimes sentimental, usually pointed lines carry the play
forward with a current of irony
always just beneath the surface.
And with a few individual
exceptions the cast injects the
full irony where called for.
Where the production falls
short is in building and holding tension throughout thewhole
show.
It s a play about people and
w hat they do, of a society dame
out to see a honky tonk, of a
whore looking for her
childhood farm, of an innocent,
d
w
lov er and his resigned,
cynical girl.
Its message is stated by Nick,
the barkeep who says of his
place:
two-doll-

living."

Set against the social pressures of the late 30 s and an
imminent war, the characters arc
shadowed by a crazy world that
won't "let a guy just live and
be happy."
Hut Saroyan comes through
clearest and most sensitively in
a line he has given old timer
Kit Carson who has just killed
vice squad
the sadistic bully-lik- e
chief with a pearl handled pistol. :'
Like the pearl handles on the
gun, one of the ugliest deeds in
life has been made suddenly something of real beauty and the
tells us with regret "he had to
throw the beautiful revolver into

ar

the bay."

A girl tells of her brother
who was killed by his pals "for
something I don't know what?"
A would-b- e
teenage comedian declaims a world where "nobody
knows how to live, and an
Arab sits bent over a bar
muttering, "Old Country, New
Country: work, work. For what:

ide-eye-

age-ridde-

Phone

"255-557-

0

Strand
NOW SHOWING!

Nothing."
Thrust into the midst of these
questions is the lead, Joe,

'A frank and uninhibited

exposition of the onrush
of physical desire!"
Bosey Crowther.

N.

Y.

(Walter Brown) who calls himself a student trying "to understand things" as he orders champaign or beer for whoever comes
by his table. He has seen the
ugliness of the
world around him, but he
still isn't ready to reject it all
as meaningless and absurd.
In fact Saroyan's play is in
some respects a half-dahistory
of Joe's journey to understand.'
Brown only partially meets the
role. While his
demands; e
general analysis of the character
is sound, he tends at times to
be too collegiate, to be too young
for his words, to fail occasion-all)- to grasp the impact of his
lines.
While his insight into understanding life is sharpened, weare
less than convinced of hisoff-and-o- n
intoxication which remains
basically the same from the time
we first seem in early afternoon
until man) champagne and beer
bottles later at the day's end.
Perhaps it is Joe's failure to

Times

cut-thro-

Recommended for
THE MATURE ADULT!

4

Starts

TECHNICOLOR'

1
1

1

onviiEim
a.TMfln.rfiJi tmJA
WINNER OF

6

1;30 p.m.;

Art: Pleasing Show

By JOHN JONES
Kernel Arts Writer
"Media of Art: Now," which opened Sunday in the Fine Arts
Gallery, is a pleasingly eclectic show, containing works by artists
so diverse as Adolph Gottlieb, Richard Anusciewicz, and Andy
Warhol.
The exhibit is comprised of works lent by seven leading New
York galleries, and works by the faculty of the Department of Art.
If one approaches the gallery
with convenient labels stuck in its subtly interlocking triangles;
one's mind, ready to "deal" with Gene Davis's Voodoo, a large
each of the exhibited works on canvas scored vertically with althe level of "classification," one ternating vivid and sombre
must leave disappointed, because
stripes of acrylic, must be "read"
that was the wrong effort of at- carefully if its vertigo is to be
effective.
tention.
Most of the works readily deThe macabre acerbity of Mayr-an'- s
clare themselves as either "Pop",
"Personnages No. 25" and
or
Continued On Page 3
"Op",
"Neo-Realisti-

"Abstract--

Their

Expressionist".

E

ACADEM

Y

AWARDS

IN PANAVISI0N'

4

transportation call Karl Johnson,
ext. 2669.
Complimentary continental
breakfast included.

F

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UNITARIAN
CHURCH
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EXHIBIT

OPEN UNTIL NOV.

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YOU ARE INVITED

F0n
iTIlEMmElADY
A DID HAND

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HFWY

I.HHA

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KUA4JS

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TO WORSHIP

WITH

252-269-

8

THE

Christian Student Fellowship
"A Christian Church On
Campus"

Why

SUNDAY, 10:15 a.m.
Sermon Topic Sunday,

Oian Mtluin

Oct. 23

"Who

Do Men

Will

ROCK HUDSON

muti"! astonishing change

MwlcHmi

i
Inin
of pace;

H

Minister of 1st Unitarian Church
of Louisville

Subject:
'God, A Preliminary

Statement'

502 Columbia Ave. (At Woodland)
PHONE

233-031- 3

CHARLES GARRISON,

SERVICE AND CHURCH

Campus Minister

SCHOOL

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky
the Board
of Student Publications, byNick Pope,
chairman, and Patricia Ann Nickell.
secretary.
Begun at the Cadet in 1894. became the Hecord in IJWO. and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
SUBSCRIPTION

Say Jesus Is?"

nuoinxjn wwoKtl

Chora

Speaker:
Rev. William David

10:45 a.m.

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TICKETS

BUY

Unitarian Universalists are concerned people. They work for the
cause of brotherhood six days a
week, and worry on Sunday.
People say our church services
are stimulating, provocative, controversial . . . and beautiful, too.
But never serene, never sleepy.
If you've had about all the
serenity you can take, perhaps
you'd like to try our kind of worship.
Why not come by next
Sunday?
The College Group meets at
9:30 a.m. For information and

MAYER

GUARANTEED

This isn't a very serene church
. . . but then, this isn't a very
serene world.

NEAR

DOCTOR ZIIilAGO

ll

sen-

suous reality remains to be apprehended after the words.
Larry Zox's "Green Time No.
2" in green and gray acrylic
on canvas strikes one's eye with

SUN. 2:00 p.m.

PASTE

7

Bill Stakelin, left, Carolyn Phillips and Clay Watkins arc all
members of the cast of Cuignol's latest production, "The Time of
Your Life."
;

at 8:00 p.m.

OXM
msr, A CARLO PONTI PRODUCTION
f? DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORfS
RNAKS
MEIRO

two-doll-

,

EVERY EVENING

WED, and SAT.

MATINEES

III

k,

of-th-

Tomorrow!

TV

get-ahe-

y

PHIS)
4

n

develop as far as he might under
the growing stress and tension
about him that somewhat slackens the intense irony as the play
reaches climax.
Hut if there are inadequacies
on these counts, the show is
still a winner. The play sparkles
in those chaotic and wildly ironic
scenes where the half dozen
characters on stage orbit in their
own worlds, firing lines back and
forth like notes in a Stravinsky
'symphony.
The scene where Joe leads the
barroom in"Lct theLower Lights
Be Burning" as gospel, honky-tonjazz, and opera with the
of the Salvation
background
Army equals scene any in recent
Guignol years.
Debbie Delaney, as Kitty
whore up
Duvall, the
from the country, preformed admirably, sometimes very sensitively, as in her contact with
Tom but elsewhere unconv incing,
as in the bedroom scene with
Joe.
Howard Enoch defined Tom's
role as the eager young man,
basically good, but wholly unaware of the ideals Joe was after
and the others had given up.
Bryan Harrison's protrays the
innocent lover Dudley superbly.
Both comic characters, Dudley and Kit Carson, are portrayed
well by Bryan Harrison and Clay
Watkins, if the latter does tend
to overplay his part now and
then.
Of the minor characters, Matt
Barrett who utters scarcely three
dozen words carries off thelaurels
as the ancient stoic.
Charles Grimsley's set gives
strong support to the actor's lines
and movement and frequently interacts with them to the benefit
of the entire show.
.

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TELEPHONES

Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
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2320
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Spoits, Women's Editor.
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* Hli:

KENTUCKY

KI'.KMI,,

T

()h.

ImiimI.1,

20.

MM.fi

.5

Image Factor Looms Large In Fourth District
administration.'' Or should we
elect a consci at iv c Itepuhliean

HyJOHN ZKII
Kernel Associate Ixlitor

COVINCTON-TI- .e

argue that Snyder, if elected, w ill
icpu sent his home .ilea unlaiily .
but says. "I will icpiesent the
entile area. My opponent is not
qualified enough to do that like
I am.
Northern Kcntuckians would
like to have a local man in Congress, but they worry about the
Moloney's physical
condition. Everybody is concerned except the doctors, Moloney replies.
The former Covington mayor
had to delay campaigning live
weeks this fall because of a bout
with pneumonia. His walk is
slow . shuttling because ot a loot-sol- e
contracted while he was

v

single

factor iindcil) ing all tin issues
in tlit cm i cut Congressional race
in tlit' Fourth District is one
of image.
The impoitant issues, theean-didate- s
say. are Vietnam, thecco-noinand soil and water conservation.
But if voters are just as concerned about liovv ninth their
representatives image will affect his influence in Congress on
those issues.
They ask, should we send an
older, more experienced, recently
ill man who will have the help
of the Democratic majority and
y,

1

v

ho is v ouuger. lias more v italitv

and

ho v ill not
legislation.-- '

.

"iiiMh stamp
i

Those questions are the source
of frustration for many Fourth
District voters Irving to determine their choice on the man
and his merits, not his home-tow

n.

John Molonev. the Democrat,
Covington, in northern
His opponent, M.
Kentucky.

is Irom

lives in St. Matthews, eastern Jefferson County,
the opposite end of the new

('.cue Snyder,

district.

Moloney, in an interview last
weekend, said geography' should
not he an issue. He does not

bedridden.
Moloney argues that his experience in government ollscts
any advantages Snyder may have
because ot his youth. Snyder is

Exhibit Open Now
Continued from Page 2
Warhol "Electric Chair (whether or not he intended it) is the
first note of unquiet in the show .
Hut from these works one moves
easily to Hobeit Mallarv 's leprous
bronze, De Kooning's grimacing

"Woman Study," and the political satire of Peter Saul's
and ink "lUtreat
and
Warren C'olescott's "The Creat
kite."
The
Society Military
wax-crayo- n

acid, rotogravure colors of the
former are particularly marked.
The fatuous snake and vipid
"boy " of Dav id Hockney 's "Jungle Hoy" are beautifully hilarious. Lowell Jone s lithograph
in grave blacks is a rightfully

vol-ute-

k-

l

(

ontiolled.

education. MoDiseiissiug
said he leels elemental),
and high hools should get mole
Icdcral aid than colleges. He
said he laxors giing tax bleaks
to patent s w ho send their t hild-reto college. Malotiey called
the student (halt del lei incut s tail.
On Vietnam, he said the l.S
should "keep accelerating the
war until we accelerate (the
enemy) out of existence." "I,
of course, would rather see negotiations, but the history of
Asiatic
nations demonstrates
that a show of force is neces
sary before they will sit down
and talk."
loney

n

'

X

f

JOHN MOLONEY
Is Molonev concerned about
his image. "I don't know ilbcing
siik hint it anv or not." hesavs.
"it eeitainly didn't help it any.

Stills 4im
Scliizos

"well-balanced-

ing.

Edward Bryant,
points out in his notes
for the show, contemporary artists are no longer restricted to
traditional materials and motifs:
an immensely expanded spectrum
dissonant "Apparition."
of choice is available to them.
The theme of a number of "Media of Art: Now" is a recworks in the show is woman: ord of artists' quests in someKenneth Campbell's richly
times common, sometimes startling materials destryoing, criti"Venusbcrg," Masuo
"Skirt of the Sea," Philip cizing, or making new.

,

One minute they like milk chocolate the next dark chocolate.
Good thing for Hollingsworth's assortment.

outside Louisville, Oldham,
Trimble, Carroll, Gallatin,

Boone, Kenton, Campbell, Grant,
and Pendleton counties.
His district has the best potential of any other to grow, especially in attracting industry,
because ot the Ohio and Licking
rivers. Moloney says. Hence, he
feels soil and water conservation is cry important.

d

Ike-das-

I

Moloney, state senator troin
Kenton County in the last Legislature, was Cov. Edward T.
Breathitt's adviser on urban
for two years. He earlier
served as a Covington city commissioner.
It was woiking with federal
aid programs as the governors
aide that got him interested in
Washington politics, lie said.
Moloney' calls the Fourth Dis"
with the
trict
stale's two largest cities on the
ends, and a rural area in betw een.
It encompasses Jefferson County

-

gallery-director-

I

3S.

Pearlstein's "Reclining Female
Nude," and Joseph Cornell's
"Daphcn" depict her as both
conundrum and solution, a well
of love and an abyss.
A marked contrast between
two quite separate schools is
shown in the juxtaposition of
Mon Levinson's chastex, severe
"Three Forms Four Planes," a
plexiglass and metal construc'
tion; and W ay ne Thiebaud s
"Mors D Oeuvres' in oil, a
brassy, deliberately banal paintAs

He s.i ic he l.ivms building
the Falmouth Dam on tin n illg. so that Hoods ( ail be Ik til

's

New

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* I

--

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

20, l!Mf

Research Can Lead To Neglect Of Teaching
Continued From rage

to teaching as the Mojave desert to a
clutch of Druid priests."
The one student on the program, James
Johnson, former National Affairs Vice
President of the U.S. National Student
Association, urged administrators to encourage students to set up their own
courses, as in free universities, and to
promote student evaluation of courses
and faculty. Johnson was unable to attend the program at the last minute,
and his paper was read to the ACE by
his successor at NSA, Edward Schwartz.
"If you want to improve teaching . . .
performance," Johnson wrote, "you must
be willing to accept student questions
and answers about teaching ... in colleges and universities today. Faculty
teaching subject matter cannot be confused with students learning subjects
that matter."
Schwartz put forth his own view of
teaching during the discussion period.
"Students ask, does this person really
care about me? This in the end is what

1

teaching and numerous sugges
tioro that educational goals be denned
before teaching can be evaluated mean-

college

ingfully.

Commissioner of Education Harold
Howe, for example, told the ACE that
"if teaching today suffers by comparison with research, it is because colleges
and universities have succumbed to external influences and relegated teaching
to an inferior position."
Similarly, President John E. King of
the University of Wyoming complained
that "so many of the able young people
emerging from these great graduate
schools

obviously

have become indoc-

trinated with the idea that undergraduate
teaching isn't as important or as rewarding as graduate teaching or research."
But it was a University of Texas
classics professor, William Arrowsmith,
who astounded the group by proclaiming
that "as presently constituted, the colleges and universities are as uncongenial

is important-t- he

people."
The ACE, sometimes called a "presidents' club" of American higher education, meets annually to discuss a problem
confronting higher education, to give colleges presidents an organized opportunity
for meeting their colleagues, and to "do
business on the side," as one participant
put it.
Administrators are some of the loneliest people in the world, a Midwestern
college dean said. "They need this respite from their campuses."
Arrowsmith also shocked the group
by calling for the complete separation
of teaching from research, because "the
scholar has disowned the student that is
the student who is not a potential scholar-and
the student has reasonably retaliated by abandoning the scholar.
He challenged teachers to return to
their ancient Socratic role as "visible
embodiments of the realized humanity

Police Plan To Make Arrests
For Illegal Use Of Drugs Here
Continued From Page I
department, mescaline is asleep-inducin- g
drug used by Indians
in the Southwest for religious
ceremonies. The drug is an extract from certain cactus plants.

a

(!eeloj)ed

spec ml

i

lassifica-nie.-

tion (it drus for
aline,
I.SDli".. pevote , and other )sy- (liedelus in that then use is
restricted to research. I lie drills
are said to have no therapeutic
A doctor said the drug, similar value.
to the frequently controversial
ly requiring manulac turers ol
LSD, does not produce addic- such drugs to keep accurate rec
tion. It also produces mental

fantasies and hallucinations

which LSD produces.
The federal government

ords ol sales, the lederal goern-ineiis keeping the distribution
ol the drugs under close ohsei-vatioThey are sold only to
doctors or medical
qualified
professionals.
However, the drugs can he
from commonly
synthesized
available chemicals.

of our aspirations, intelligence, concerns,
skills, and scholarship

way people treat

....

"The teacher is both sanction and
goal of the education he gives. This is
why it is completely reasonable that a
student should expect a classicist to live
classically.
Arrowsmith admitted that not every
teacher can be a "hero" or a "great
man" but claimed that educators "must
at least have a comprehension of greatness and a hunger for it. Only then can
they speak to the student's human concern for the same greatness; at heart
all want realization; if we cannot be
heroes it is heroes nonetheless we want
to be."

The suggestions were, however, not
up at the conference, and most
discussion centered about the ways in
which teacher aims can be achieved and
the various methods for evaluating faculty
taken

effectiveness.

What's
New?

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AngeluccVs

:.'MXi

COLLEGE

vn a1;'

SHOP

IN

DOWNTOWN
LEXINGTON

Board Refuses Authority
Over Newsletter By SDS

JUST ARRIVED

The University's Student Board of Publications ruled Wednesday
they had no jurisdiction over the Bourbon and Tobacco Cazette,
a Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) newsletter, and would
neither prohibit nor endorse its distribution on campus."
Members of SDS had ap
The board also recognized The
proached the board to seek a
ruling on campus distribution, Kentucky Commentator, a new
particularly in the Student Cen- publication of the Student Bar
ter. They did not seek funds Association, as a departmental
for the publication.
publication, and therefore beDr. Neil Plummer, a member yond the board's purview.
of the School of Communications
Robert Walker, editor of The
faculty and a board member, said
they could not legally interfere Kentucky Review, a recently dewith the group's right to dis- veloped literary publication, was
memtribute their philosophy.
recognized as a
Members of SDS said they ber of the board, as are the edihoped to publish the newsletter tors of the Kernel and the
monthly.
The Board also discussed a
Kernel editorial concerning the
UKATS organization and possibilities of it being libelous, but
decided to take no action.
Seniors: Last day for senior
portraits for you and the
Ken-tuckia- n.

The Norfolk Country Coat. And it is really something to see. This continental styled sport coat is designed like a gentleman's hunting coat with
bold welted seamed front, patch flap pockets and has a full stitched-dowbelt that buttons in the front giving it a look of sophistication.

n

And ONLY $65.

FIRST ON OUR LIST
Why not treat yourself to a jaunty wool tweed Casual Sport Hat! Coming
in olives, browns,
golds and greys in checks, herringbones and solids.
You con match them to your sport outfits. Very
inexpensive too they
would be ideal to wear to the games and all
campus affairs. Priced $7.95

A MUST ON OUR LIST
We have opened our Gift Bar early
things. Come in and browse, see our
birthdays and the holidays. A special
glad to help you pick out something

this year with many clever new
fine selection of special gifts for
note to the
we will be
co-e-

nice

for

that

man

in your life.
$2.95 up

From

UK Bulletin Board
Dr. Amry Vanderbosch, former director of Patterson School
of Diplomacy, will speak in a
United Nations program sponsored by the Cosmopolitan Club
Friday from 0 p.m. in Room
245 of the Student Center.

Ken-tuckia-

COLLEGE

n

is next Wednesday.

!

The office of Student Financial
Aid has a numb