xt78pk070h39 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt78pk070h39/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19681119  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 19, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 19, 1968 1968 2015 true xt78pk070h39 section xt78pk070h39 'Battle Of Chicago' Still Relevant To CARSA
By REBECCA WESTERFIELD

Kernel Start Writer
It has been only three months since the "Battle of
Chicago," yet to many it is already part of an irrelevant, distant past. To the members of the Community
Alliance for Responsible Social Action, however, Chicago is still very relevant and not so far away.

News Analysis
CARSA started in the days immediately following
the Chicago incident. It began, as Dr. Cene Mason,
CARSA steering committee member, explained, "from
an immediate concern of what might happen in Lex-

ington."

Today the Alliance's major purpose remains the same,
he says, that is, to see that the tyranny and harassment by the power structure does not occur in Lexington thereby "insuring freedom and human dignity
on and off the University campus."
From the beginning CARSA's chief interest has been
the need for reforms in the Lexington Police Department.
In the first week of September CARSA demonstrated
this concern by a mass march in support of the "Statement Concerning Repression in Lexington" by Rev.
Craig Frederickson.
This statement, which CARSA backed, called for
Police Chief Hale's retirement, increase in the salary
and fringe benefits of policemen, and the redeploy

ment of monies and efforts being put into riot control
equipment and training into constructive community
programs and other such reforms.
Only two reforms sought have been realized:
An increase in salary for policemen.
City commissioners' meetings twice a month now
held not in city hall but in one of the Neighborhood
Community Centers.
However, Craham Watkins, chairman of CARSA,
says, "I don't think we've really moved the police

by doing such things as denouncing the song "Dixie"
as racist, raising questions concerning student housing
and, more recently, backing the grape boycott.
Like most organizations, CARSA has had its share
of problems. For the last six weeks it had been slowly
degenerating. It had been squeezed out of the local
coalition of social groups because the coalition reportedly did not want a "student image." The enthusiasm
that once marked the organization had been lacking.
Attendance at meetings was extremely low compared to the large numbers of people at the first meetings. Even at the steering committee meetings two-thirof the committee members fail to show up.
And there had been a crippling period of weak
communications between members. It seemed CARSA
might not last much longer.

department."
CARSA had hoped to make a case of police harassment from the recent controversial arrests of two
UK students. According to Watkins the students and
two companions were not informed of their rights or

charges, their cars were searched without warrants
and they were not allowed to make any phone calls
until long after their arrests.
Because the students involved were unwilling to
press the matter and because legal technicalities interfered, CARSA was not able to get the incident
investigated by the city commissioners.

Support Crape Boycott
Recently, support for the grape boycott has encouraged some members. They feel CARSA's participation may regenerate and recreate interest in social
action.

Stand On Social Responsibility
Though CARSA's center of attention is on the police reforms, the group also feels, says Dr. Mason,
that "it ought to make its position on questions of
social responsibility."
It has voiced its position on controversial issues

Also, the group has recently taken steps to remedy
its organizational problems. By stirring interest in an
immediate cause and
its structure, CARSA
may build back its following.
If this fails, it too may become a part of the irrelevant, distant past.

THE KENTUCKY

KEENE

Tuesday, Nov. 19,

University of Kentucky, Lexington

19G8

0

Vol. LX, No. 60

San Francisco State Still Closed
Despite Trustee Order Monday
to know why police had been
PHIL SEMAS
FRANCISCO (CPS)-St- ate called to the campus.
Smith said he closed the camcollege trustees ordered
closed-dow- n
San Francisco State pus in the hope of getting the
College reopened immediately issues resolved. Thursday mornMonday, but school officials said ing the faculty voted to ask Smith
later they were "aiming at to hire 11 faculty members for the
Black Studies department; asked
Wednesday."
Clenn Dumke, the chancellor of
President Robert Smith or- the California state college sysdered the school closed last tem, to reconsider his suspension
Wednesday after the faculty had of George Murray, a Black Panalready voted not to hold any ther, who was teaching basic
classes and several thousands had English to disadvantaged stumarched on his office demanding dents, and set up a task force of
By

SAN

faculty and students to work on
an ethnic studies curriculum.
Task force chairman Theodore
Meriam announced a special
meeting of the state college trustees "to try to find a solution to
the issues." Both he and Dumke
said they supported Smith's decision to close the campus and
that "there was no basis" to
rumors they planned to fire
Smith.
But Dumke said he had "no
Continued on Page

7, Col. 3

Vo

(1

"'

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Kernel Photo by Dick Ware
e
This
duo is the current feature of the
Student Center Coffee House series, sponsored by
the Student Center Board. Crow-Che- e
will perform
in the Student Center Grill all this week -- 8 to
9
Monday through Thursday and 8:30-9:3p.m. Friday and Saturday.
male-femal-

LjIUW- -

CillCe

0

P--

Admissions Committee Explains Procedure

M ed

School Competition Stresses Personality

By FRANCES DYE

forms will be sent to the students.
Following satisfactory examination of applications and records, the Admissions Committee
invites the applicant for a personal interview.
Dr. Jarecky said about 50 faculty members, approximately one
third of the total faculty, function
as interviewers. Of these, ten
constitute the Central Admissions Committee.
To get a rounded view of the
applicant, one interviewer each
is selected from the basic sciences
faculty, the clinical faculty and
the Central Admissions Committee.
View Student As A Person
Interviewers look for the student's ability to organize Ids
tltoughts and present ideas. The
interview. Dr. Jarecky said, is
used as "an introduction to the
school for the interviewee and
as an opportunity for the student to present himself as a person rather than simply as a rec-

Kernel Staff Writer
What does a person need to
become a physician?
He should have a good science
background, but perhaps more
importantly, he should care about
people and be able to interrelate
with them. The Admissions Committee looks for these qualities
when a student applies for admission into the UK College of
Medicine.
That is the consensus from
four Admissions Committee members: Dr. Roy K. Jarecky, cliair-maDr. Cornelia B. Wilbur,
professor of psychiatry; Dr. William B. Cotter, associate professor of anatomy; and Dr. Emest
P. McCutcheon, assistant professor of physiology and biophysics.
At the beginning of the senior
inyear, Dr. Jarecky said, each
terested student submits an application, letter of recommendaadviser
tion from his
and transcript of college grades.
school, ord."
As a
Dr. McCutcheon said the perthe College of Medicine gives
to qualified Kentucky sonal interview is a means of
preference
stugetting to know the individual
students, but
dents may request preliminary "in a way that numbers don't
describe him."
applications. If the applications really an
As
interviewer, he said he
full application
are competitive,
n;

pre-medi-

state-support- ed

observes personal appearance, attitude and how the applicant
relates to the interview situation.
He also asks "additional details
not apparent from the application," such as the applicant's
knowledge of the medical field
and his feelings about it. "The
interview is regarded as an opportunity for the student to
demonstrate personal capabilities and assets more effectively
than the record does."
Noting that a medical student must be able to succeed in
two different kinds of learning-ba- sic
sciences and the clinical
Wilbur said, "We
aspect-- Dr.
need to look at our students
from both viewpoints. The basic
sciences are not so difficult as
If he applied
himself and made fairly good
grades in college, he can do all

right."
Meet Future Professors
Dr. Cotter noted other aspects
inof the individual
terview: "It gives him an opportunityto meet with las future
professors and an opportunity to
show he's an individual." Applicants, he stated, are not
identical as some people have
face-to-fa- ce

said. "The individual really
comes out in the interview."
When an interview is completed, the applicant is taken
on a tour of the medical school,
where he meets with medical
students "to get a good idea of
what's going on."
TlKHigh the personal interview is an important part of the
selection process, it is only one
segment of that process, Dr.
Jarecky said.
When interviewing is completed, the interviewers write
their evaluations, and all meet
with the 10 Central Committee
members to discuss the applicants. "All the students who are
appraised in one week are discussed the next Thursday. There
is no delay in interview, evaluation and discussion," Dr. Jarecky
noted.
The Central Committee meiit-bervote on all candidates, and
the interviewers on those they
actually met. The Central Committee and the interviewers present at the con unit tee meeting
try to derive a general sense
of reaction to each candidate
as an individual and in comparison to all other applicants.
All these endeavors, Dr. (ut

ter noted, are directed at reducing the loss of students admitted. National studies have
sltown that most loss of students (attrition) occursduringthe
first year and the least in the
fourth year.
Lost Only 11 Percent
Dr. Cotter said the applicant
screening program makes it almost 90 percent sure that students will pass through the four
years. The attrition rate for the
19G7-6- 8
academic year was 11 percent, which is similar to the
national rate. Dr. Jarecky said
this rate was not high when one
considers that in some undergraduate schools, some 40 to 50
percent are lost. (That is, some
students have transferred, others
have dropped out permanently
or later returned.)
Since medical education requires a substantial amount of
student-facultcontact, the size
of a class is not an arbitrary
number, but is dependent upon
faculty size, hospital beds for
clinical teaclung and teacliing
space, Dr. Jarecky said.
For the PJG7-C- 8 term, 80 places
were open, of which 70 were
y

Continued on Face

2, CoL

1

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Tucsdayi Nov. 19,'b(J8

Kennan Questions Student Left Motives
Democracy and the Student Left,
by George F. Kennan. Little
Drown and Company.
By JOHN POLK
Kernel Arts Editor
Ceorge Kennan, former Ambassador to the U.S.S.R. and
professor at Princeton, longs for
the days when men were men
and students were students, not
political activists. He expressed
this longing in a speech at
Swart hmore College which was
subsequently published in the
New York Times Sunday Magazine. The article drew an unprecedented number of letters both
to the Times and Mr. Kennan.
Democracy and the Student Left

is his answer to the letters.
The book contains the original
article, a selected number of lete
ters, and Mr. Kennan's
response. In the article, Mr. Kennan takes both the student activists and "the quiescent ones,
the hippies and the flower people" to task.
He expresses concern for the
activists because they seem to
him so certain that they are
right and anyone who challenges
them is wrong. His concern stems
from the belief that these certainties are "already present in
the minds of people who not
only have not studied very much
but presumably are not studying
104-pag-

Med School Considers

Applicant's Personality
handled about 600 preliminary
applications from
students. The College accepted
17, of whom 10 enrolled.
At the national level, roughly
one half of the students who
apply are accepted. The rate for
Kentucky students at UK is consistent with that figure.

Continued from Pare One
filled by Kentuckians, and the
Of the 194
rest by
students who were interviewed and roughly one half,
or 94, were accepted. Of those
70 actually enrolled.

out-of-sta-

te

The Admissions Committee
LOOKING

FOR THAT

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YOU ORDERED?

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Why Not Buy
The KENTUCKY REVIEW
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READ THE CLASSIFIED COLUMN IN
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a great deal, because it is hard
to imagine that the activities
to which this aroused portion
of our student population gives
itself are ones readily compatible with quiet and successful

study."

Mr. Kennan also charges these
students with failing to recognize

a "vitally important truth that
the decisive seat of evil in this
world is not In social and political institutions, and not even,
as a rule, in the will or iniquities of statesmen, but simply
in the weakness and imperfection of the human soul itself,
and by that I mean literally every
soul, including my own and that
of the student militant at the
gates."
Hippies Chastised
The hippies are chastised by
Mr. Kennan for "destructive
philosophic errors," i.e., a lack
of faith in the puritan ethic. He
maintains that "itisonly through
effort, through doing, through
action never through passive experience that man grows crea-

tively."

Mr. Kennan sees both groups
of students having in common
"a complete rejection of, or indifference to, the political system
of this country." Rather than an
attempt 'to improve the' existing
societal - structure, Mr. Kennan
views the "mass demonstrations
and mass defiance of the established authority" as the manifestation of the lack of belief in the
"democratic" system as an adequate means to reflect the will of
the majority.
Society would be in better
shape, according to Mr. Kennan,
if the university retained "a certain remoteness from the con

temporary scene a certain detachment and seclusion, a certain
voluntary withdrawal and renunciation of participation in contemporary life in the interests
of the achievement of a better
perspective on that life when the
period of withdrawal is over."
The book contains thirty-nin- e
of the letters written in response
to the original article. Most of
the letters state variations of similar ideas and the editor could
have been more selective in choosing the letters without diminishing the effectiveness of the arguments against Mr. Kennan in
them. The arguments are familiar to anyone who has kept
abreast of the philosophy of the
new left and need not be rehashed here.
However, it should be added
that the students, as Kenneth
Keniston pointed out in his review of the book in the New
York Times Book Review, treat
Mr. Kennan with "greater respect and less condescension than
he could muster for them."
In his response to the letters,
Mr. Kennan admits that his original article raised more questions
than it answered and that he " had
spoken casually about things
which it was not to be forgiven
to me for. speaking about in this
manner . . . " .
Far From Apology
But Mr. Kennan's response is
far from an apology for the original article, nor does it contain
any hedging from any of his
criticisms or ideas expressed in
it. It is an elaboration of those
ideas and a statement of his own
priorities for the improvement of
a society which he, like the students, feels is heading in the
wrong direction.

The most interesting bit of
elaboration found in the response
is Mr. Kennan's theory of the
motivation behind the behavior
of student activists. He hypothesizes that student protest is the
"expression of some inner need"
and that the objects of the protest have only "casual relevance." Emphasizing that his
theory is hypothetical, it Is apparent that Mr. Kennan believes
in it.

He writes that "the speed
with which the focus of student
concern has switched from the
Negro of the rural South to the
Negro of the urban North, and
then to Vietnam, and then to
the disciplinary regime of the
college campus, suggests strongly
to me that the real seat of discomfort lies not in the objects
that attract these feelings but In
some Inner distress and discontent with contemporary society
that would find other issues to
fasten to as points of grievance
against the established order,
even If the present ones did not

exist."

Offers No Help
Of course, the problem with
such a theory is that it deals
with the students but offers no
help at all in finding, ways to
alleviate the problems. .
'
of
. Mr. Kennan was somewhat
a darling of the student left following his appearance before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee at which he expressed
strong disagreement with the
Vietnam policy of the Johnson
administration. This adulation
will surely fade as students read
his views on such subjects as
recruiting on college campuses,
the in loco parentis doctrine, and
civil disobedience.

L"

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Three Men On A Horse, a
comedy by John Cecil Holm and
Ceorge Abbott to be produced
November 22, 23, December 6, 7,
8 by the University of Kentucky
Department of Theatre Arts, is
now in regearsal under the direction of Professor Raymond Smith.
The casting of fifteen includes
four women and eleven men.
Bruce Peyton, a Theatre Arts
major, will play the leading role
of Erwin Trowbridge, a writer
of greeting card verses whose
peculiar talent for picking horses
leads him into a hazardous inwith
volvement
professional
horseplayers.
the professional
Enacting
gamblers are David Mabee,
Howard Enoch and Barry Bleach
as Charlie, Frankie and Patsy.
Linda Nolan will play Mabel,
Patsy's girl friend.

Wallace N. Brings, Chairman
of the Theatre Arts Department,
will appear in the cameo part
of Mr. Carver, Trowbridge's
irascible employer.
Additional cast members include: Jo Ann Smith as Mrs.
Trowbridge, Erwin's loving wife;
Stuart Greenburg, the Tailor; Bob
Cooke in the part of Clarence
Dobbins, Erwin's brother-in-laMike Franklin as Delivery Boy;
Dowell Piatt as Moseyewitch,
a hotel employee; Julie Anne
Beasley as Gloria, a newspaper
'
reporter, Tom Rodgers as Al,
a photographer, Barbara Davidson as the hotel maid, and David
Miller as Harry, the bartender.

Hilarious Action
The play's hilarious action
develops when Trowbridge, fed
up with writing Mother's Day

verses, and daily commuting to
and from
Ozone
suburban
Heights, goes to a saloon instead
of to his office. There some race
horse touts discover that Erwin
is able to pick winning horses
while riding the bus back and
forth to work. He then becomes
a valuable property to the gamblers. Finally, forced to prove his
talent (and thus to lose it) Trowbridge chooses to return to his
former life.
Three Men On A Horse, one
of the most successful comedies
in the American Theatre, was one
of the first plays to enjoy a long
run. It opened in New York in
January of 1935 and played into 1936. Outstanding members
of that first cast were Shirley
Booth and Sam Levine.
The box office is open for
reservations.

Bergman To Lecture Wednesday

Jules Bergman, ABC News
Science Editor, will give a lecture
on Wednesday, November 20, at
8:15 p.m. in Memorial Coliseum.
Mr. Bergman has covered
every major rocket launching, and

The Kentucky Kernel
The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five time weekly during Uie
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during tho summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications. UK Post Ollice Box 4 Witt.
Begun as the Cadet In 1UU4 and
published continuously as tho Kernel
since 1V1S.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
talse or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Stf.27
Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from filet
(.10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Managing Kditor
tUitoiial Page Lditor,
Associate tdilors, Sports
News L)rk
Advertising, Business, Circulation

has reported practically every ma-

cover science on a fulltime basis.

The program will be open to
jor scientific event of the past
decade. In the pursuit of his all fulltime students with ID
varied assignments, Bergman has and Activities cards, and to seaflown a jet fighter at 1G50 miles son members of the series.
per hour, undergone NASA's
tests for astroqualifications
nauts, and dived 4,000 feet beneath the sea in deep-divin-g
research submarines.
Regularly heard on the ABC
Radio network, Bergman is also
a frequent contributor to ABC-TV'- s
nightly "Frank Reynolds
and the News." He is the first
television correspondent ever to

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* THE KENTUCKY. KERNEL, Tuesday, Not.

19, 1908

J

Natural Areas Are Accessible To UK Students
By

JOE HINDS

Looking for Walden Pond
in the Bluegrass area?
Students at AsbtL; College,
a Baptist college about 24 miles
south of Lexington, have found
it down a sloping bank in a
scenic picnic area called Class
Mill on Boone Creek. Nature
is only a short distance from the
college.
UK students walk or drive
down sloping concrete to a downtown area called Lexington. But
nature is only a few miles away.
John A. Dearinger, UK professor who just completed a report on recreation areas around
the Lexington area, summarized
the situation: "With the nation's
city populations,
finding recreation areas in a pressing need, and it was with this
need in mind that we aimed the
research."
conservaThe
tionist leaned back in his office

trail with a small handrail
leads to the bottom.
"Class Mill"-T- his
spot has
a picnic area with facilities for
eating out. Asbury students frequent the area after classes, but
a fee is charged for picnicking.
A

chair and surveyed the tall buildings of the city. He spoke slowly, "I'm a native of Lexington
and know the scenic areas that
can provide recreation for city
dwellers. Even the popular Sunday drive can be enjoyable if
you know where to go."
Dearinger was the principal
investigator in the UK Water
Resources Institute's research report, "Esthetic and Recreational
Potential of Samll Naturalistic
Streams Near Urban Areas."
Natural Areas
There are several areas nearby
that UK students can visit:
"Lovers Lane" This is a
botany student's dream near
Clear Creek on Route 33 between
Versailles and Harrodsburg.
"Indian Falls" This deep
gorge is in the same shape as
it was 100 years ago, providing
a scenic sight with a short
tributary of Jessamine Creek cascading down to the foliated area.

"Crimes

UK's International Center is
working to tear down the barriers between foreigners and
Americans by providing an arena
for the free exchange of ideas-fight- ing
misconceptions through
communication between foreign
students and their American
counterparts.
A native of Burma, Richard
Yukhin, a graduate student in
the Patterson School of Diplomacy, has observed regional discrimination against foreigners in
this country:
"In southern states, the Africans are discriminated against.
In the West and California, the

-

Foreign Students Are Here

The international flavor of the University is sharper this year
than ever before.
The biggest academic cateForeign students and
gory among the foreign students
who come hereto
is engineering, with 72 internastudy, teach and do research

able by writing to the
Resources Institute.

The research report is availUK Water

Agurto, a graduate student from
Ecuador who is studying surgery,
has found that some Americans
are surprised that his country
has cities and that the people
drive cars.
While not this extreme, differences between the countries
do exist. For example, in Burma
the educational system is more
limited.
In Burma, says Yukhin, "They
have the same system as in England. You are taught to obey.
You are not taught to analyze
or critically discuss problems.
"They teach you to be clerks

so they can stay colonial. Every
country will have to do away
with this if they want to do away
with the colonial heritage."
To these colonial countries,
he said, "Communism is very

appealing."
The talk is sometimes serious
at the International Center but
oftentimes clowning, as evidenced by this comment by Ken
Cheverton, graduate student from
England.
"I wanted to ask this freshman football player if he had a
bald spot under his beanie, but
he was bigger than me."

Then, he says, there are those
people who "go out of their
way to help. You get the feeling
they want to help so that afterwards they can pat themselves
on the back."
On the other hand, Americans have some strange ideas
about other countries. Arturo

hange-visitors

0.

"These places are fragile and
won't stand overuse," Dearinger
said. "Boone Creek is threatened

Orientals."

exc-

have reached a record number
for the fall semester.
And they come from 49 countries around the globe from
Afghanistan and Argentina, from
Czechoslovakia
and Sweden,
Creece, Cabon, Ireland, Malaysia, Syria, France, Vietnam.
The University's international
program has grown steadily from
31 participants in 1949-5It
reached 115 in 1959-6rose to
221 by 1964-6-5
and was at 231
last year.
In the group presently on campus, the largest contingent 43
come from India. Twenty-nin- e
live in the Republic of China
or Taiwan; 28 in Thailand and
23 in Indonesia.

ling

by pollution even now. The Blue
Sky Development is on the Boone
Creek watershed and any sewage
would be dumped into the creek."
Students may not find a New
York movie concurrently playing
in town, but the Bluegrass Area
affords another attraction that
can't be found on Broadway-natu- re.

International Center Conversations

A Record Number Of 301

of 301

MiH"-Travel-

on US 25 to Crimes Mill, students may find recreation areas
along Boone Creek.
Dearinger pointed out that

there are numerous scenic areas
along both Boone and Jessamine
Creeks, but that lengths of the
creeks are privately owned. These
areas are not legally open, but
the Lexington Planning and Zoning Commission is planning to
build three or four community
parks in this area.

tional students enrolled. Thirty-eighave enrolled in various
phases of agriculture and 25 study
medicine.
More than 80 percent 242 individualsare men.

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$4 (check or money order), for each
Hal Karate Lounging Jacket to:
Hal Karate, P.O. Box 41 A, Mt. Vernon,
N.Y. 1 0056. That way, if someone
gives you some Hal Karate, you can
be a little less careful how you use it.

3. That's what you said about
the Sidewinder Eight.

carb,

console tach . . . and
what a steal!

self-defen-

4.

Don't you think you ought to
hold onto a car more than a
month, Chet?
When you see a great
buy coming your way,
you have to grab it.

5. That's what I did yesterday-sign- ed
up for Living Insurance
from Equitable. At my age the
cost is low, and I get solid
protection now that will continue
to cover my family later when
I get married. Plus a nice
nest egg when I retire.

With the right set of
wheels, you'll go a
long way.

Send for your
practically
Hal Karat

lounging Jacket.

Allow 6

ke for delivery. Offer expiree April

1,

T

1969. If your favorite etore le temporarily out of Hal Karate, keep aeklng..

For information about Living Insurance, see The Man from Equitable.
For career opportunities ut Equitable, see your Placement Ollicer, or
write: Lionel M. Stey-psManager, College Employment.
,

THE INEQUITABLE
Aujmice Society of the United Sutel
Avfiiua of the Aim ileus, New Yuik, New Yuik lOOly
An tqual Opportunity tiitfjluycr, Mf
Q Equitable 1968

Thtf fcijuiUljle Life

* The Kentucky

Iernel

University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

1891

TUESDAY,

NOV. 19,

19C8

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

Lee B. Docker, Editor-in-ChiDarrcll Rice, Managing Editor
David Holwcrk, Editorial rage Editor
Tom Dcrr, Business Manager
, Associate Editor
Guy M. Mcndcs
Howard Mason, Thotography Editor
Jim Miller, Sports Editor
Jack Lyne and John Polk, Arts Editors
Chuck Kochlcr,
Janice Barber
Terry Dunham, Dana Ewcll,
Larry Dale Keeling,
Assistant Managing Editors

Policy Challenge
"We are going to bum this that matter the black draft resister

country down. Freedom for everybody or freedom for nobody . . .
If we (Blacks) are not left alone,
we will destroy anything and everything that gets in our way . . .
Damn the country, damn the flag.
If this campus produces people
that will drop napalm on people,
this campus must be destroyed.
Anybody that oppresses people or
supports this imperialistic society
must come down."
It was not Carmichael or Brown
speaking, but one Willie Ricks, a
lower echelon field worker for the
Student Nonviolent Coordinating
(SNCC) who spoke at the UK Draft
Memorial Service last Thursday.
In bringing the same message
that Carmichael, Brown (or for

Cleveland Sellers, who Ricks replaced as feature speaker) Ricks
offered a substantial challenge to
UK's relevant speech policy.
Not that Ricks was irrelevant
to education, for in bringing the
black militants' somewhat frightening viewpoint, he struck some exnerve endings
posed middle-clas- s
in many of the gathering, most
of which were of leftist political
orientations.
But it is now obvious that the
relevant speech policy is merely
a facade conjured up by the University Senate to placate the masses
and a few important personages.
We have seen through this policy
since it was devised (and since
Al Capp spoke here) and we should
no longer be alone in this vision.
For it should now be apparent
to those in the groups pressuring
the University that the unearthly
power to determine what is relevant to education is not going to
be used in the manner they would
like it to be if a radical of the
Carmichael, Brown grain is allowed
to speak here.
There now seems to be no reason for ' the existence of the irrelevant relevant speech policy.

ili

SG And The Code

Student Government managed
to overcome pettiness once again
Thursday night and passed a resolution on the Student Code which
should be applauded by all students. The resolution, aimed at
the code provision which allows
students to be suspended if they
present a danger to themselves, to
others or to property, forcefully
asserts that such steps should be
used only in cases of clear and extreme danger to students or the

University.
By acting on this issue, Student Government has moved off
the center in the whole problem
of student rights in the University
community. It is reassuring to see
Student Government taking up for
the rights of students, and such
actions point to a day when Student Government can truthfully
claim the