xt7bnz80nv49 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bnz80nv49/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670119  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 19, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 19, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7bnz80nv49 section xt7bnz80nv49 Inside Today's Kernel

Vol. 58, No. 79

IS. IE IRMLE H
of
University

Theologian
Asks End
To War
(c) New York Times News Service

NEW YORK -- The Kev. Dr.
Reinhold Xiebuhr, one of the

world's
protestant
theologians, called Wednesday
for the universities, the church
and the "informed'' communication media to help seek an end
to the Vietnam War.
"We who are concerned," he
said, "ought to press for a solution that guarantees an American presence in Southeast Asia,
while saving face for the United
States and China."
theoIt was the
logian's first public comment on
international affairs in four years.
Xiebuhr retired as vice president of the Union Theological
Seminary six years ago. Because
of ailing health, he has made
only sporadic chapel appearances
hest-kiH)w-

n

since then.

The

theologian

Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, JAN. 19, 1907

addressed

more than 300 students and faculty members in the seminary

auditorium.
Xiebuhr characterized the
Vietnam conflict as a "fantastic
adventure of United States imperialism in an Asian civil war
while we at home are trying to
clean our air, clean our water,
clean our ghettoes and fight
for racial justice."
Xiebuhr reviewed the history
of American involv ement in Vietnam, from the days of "advisory" participation to thepresent,
when "billions have been spent
and 6,000 men hav e died."
It is no longer a case of "simple withdrawal," he told the seminarians. "We are in too deep
and what is at stake is imperial
prestige."
He said he was not disputing
an American military presence in
Southeast Asia, "but it might be
better to have that presence in
perhaps Thailand."
The theologian ridiculed politicians who voice fears of Communist China "vaulting the Pacific and taking over Honolulu
or the Eastern Sealxmrd."
"Can you imagine," heasked,
"how Ho Chi Minh would get
along in Cape Cod? We are ov erreaching our responsibility and
we are not the world's

Was An

Thirty-on-

Kenneth Campbell
are now on display: Poge Two.
sculp-ture-

itudenti ore now encouraged to
"why": Poge Five.

Soviet

t

oil

Vietnam will be a continuing concern. Dr. Butwell sayt: Poge Three.

Pages

Pot Riley's injury is a matter ol con
troversy: Poge Si.

Editorial discusses Student Govern-Eigh- t
ment membership in NSA: Page Four.

The Trustees are due to hear a con
struction proposal Friday: Poge Eight.

Oswald Giles

Affair Of Honor

Special To The Kernel

COVINGTON Four fraternity brothers have cold feet from
a swim in the Ohio Wednesday. The temperature was 13.
Beta Phi Delta fraternity at the Northern Community College
was challenged to a swim by their Villa Madonna College rivals.
Don Hilker, president at the Northern UK college said it was
"an affair of honor."
"Our fraternity got a call from a fraternity at Villa, they bet
us we wouldn't go in, he said. We arrived on the river bank, but
no one from Villa showed up."
Hilker and his buddies had to break a hole in the ice to get
into the water. Hisbuddies were Tom Gilmore, South Fort Mitchell;
Carl Fitzer, Newport; and Ed Schrand, Erlanger.
"I hope they forget about it at Villa . . . it's just too darn
cold to swim this time of the year, "said Hilker of Newport.

UK-Cit- y

'Positive Partnership'

A profitable, "positive partnership" exists betw een the Univ ersity
and the Lexington community, President John W. Oswald told the
local Lions Club Wednesday.
The city and county is now state and surrenders to their tercollecting the dividends on the rible onslaught."
acres of land
$50,000 and
"Some may feel," the presithey "invested" (donated) when dent commented, "That our stuschool was founded, Dr. Osthe
dent body is still a 'terrible onwald said. He cited these speciBut there is evidence to
fic benefits of UK's "impact on slaught.'
the contrary."
the community that nurtured it:"
A$35V2 million payroll this
He went on to point out that
year for the 6,000 faculty and staff the University is a "major
members living here.
source" of cultural and intellecPayroll taxes to the city tual activities and of health care
this year of $430,000.
for Central Kentucky.
Uncalcuable dollars famiDr. Oswald, introduced as a
lies, friends, and relatives spend "senior"-ihis fourth year on the
during visits to campus.
Lexington campus, alsodiscussed
An additional boost to the one of his favorite topics, the
Dr. Henry F. Dobyns, chainnan of the Department of Anthro"missions" of a modern state
economy totalling at least
Dr.
pology, says general approval of the theory of Kcnya-lxm- i
the estimate of what stuL. S. B. Leaky on the 19 million year old history of the family
university. He spoke too of the
dents spend each year at comof man will have to wait for full publication of the evidence.
future, urging, "let (UK and the
Dr. Leaky' s evidence for the
munity businesses.
community) grow not separately ,
Dr. Oswald quoted a local but together, strongly and wisely.
support of his theory was pre- added, however, Dr. Leaky is
sented at a news conference at "not seriously controversial."
newspaperman as writing
"Suffice it to say that the
He said it is his opinion "any
the National Museum in Nairobi
ago "Lexington welcomes
future holds greatness lor both
on Saturday.
these sons and daughters of the
Continued On Page 3
the city and the University ," he
Dr. Dobyns, commenting on
added.
the flamboyant archaeologist,
said Dr. Leaky makes "rather
The missions Dr. Oswald listed
were expanding research, service
significant finds every few years"
which have added up in the past
to the community, and underto "a number of important congraduate, graduate and profestributions to the field."
sional education to providing
By RAYMOND MUNGO
Dr. Do by s expl a i n ed L eak y ' s
more opportunities for more
The Collegiate Press Service
finds as "not of man as we know
people.
BOSTON Boston University's voluntary Reserve Officer Trainhim today," but significant
is expected to lose academic credit
Research is becoming more
pieces in the puzzle of liow early ing Corps (ROTC) program 15
in a formal faculty vote on the
man began to separate from other and curricular standing Feb.
important now that the governissue.
ment is "looking more and more
anthropoids within the classifiFollowing a bitter campus wide debate over the merits of to the universities for answers
cation hominidae.
the ROTC program, the faculty indicated in an unofficial poll to the nation's problems," he
Dr. Leaky has rocked the founsaid.
dations of conservative anthro- Jan. 5 that it favored abolition of academic standing for stuover the past dozen or so dent military training.
pology
Dr. Oswald noted that the
The debate over ROTC was sparked by the Boston University
years with sensational fossil disrecent boom in college enrollment
at OlduvaiCorgein East News, the student weekly, last September when it published a
coveries
three-pag- e
attack on the university's Army-Ai- r
Force cadet program has caused some "to wring their
Africa.
in its opening issue of the year. The News called for an end to hands and ask, 'can we, should
His subsequent findings have
" grow so large? The only
ROTC's "privileged" academic status on campus and urged that we
led him to push the age of mananswer, he said, is that "our
like hominids back much further the ROTC program be made an
activity.
"ROTC makes no pretense of being open to free and creative entire democracy is built on havthan was ever thought by most
ing an enlightened citizenry."
discussion of the military and its alternatives," the News said.
anthropologists.
"Rather it is indoctrination. It is propaganda issued by a miliHe praised and urged continuDr. Leaky s rapid revision of
tary hierarchy beyond the university's control ..."
ation of UK's work in agriculthe theory of the age of man,
The paper charged that the campus military "simultaneously
tural experimentation, but said
or man-likcreatures, has caused offers official credit, awards 'professorships' (outside the jurissome doubt among anthropolodiction of our own faculty), speaks on official platforms, receiv es the institution must "approach in
a similar way the problems of
gists as to the authenticity of free rent, occupies precious classroom space, and in general manithe city, of man choosing to
his conclusions.
a totalitarian discipline behind the mask of educational
pulates
live closer to his fellow."
Of this doubt. Dr. Dobyns sanctuary and under the name of the university we all constitute."
who happens
The editorial was accompanied by a faculty petition calling
said, "any person
Dr. Osw ald was introduced by
to uncover new evidence relating ROTC "inappropriate in purpose, substance or control to a unihis assistant, Col. James V. Ato evolutionary sequences is versity curriculum."
lcorn, who will be president of
the Lions group next y ear.
Continued On Page 3
likely to be controversial." He
50-od-

d

Local Anthropologist
Awaits Find Specifics

n

$300,-00-

0,

many-year-

Boston U Seems Likely
To Drop ROTC Credit

1

extra-curricul-

e

Community Colleges Seek To Solve Problems

By HELEN McCLOY
Kernel Staff Writer
What would two leaders in junior
college education do about the authoritarian approaches they see encroaching
on the classroom and counselor's office?
What do they say about the over-al- l
performance of students who transfer from
institution? Where
a two- - to a four-yea- r
do they think junior college education
is

headed?
Willis

LaVire,

the Junior College

associate director of
Outer at the Uni- -

Last of four parts.
versity of Florida, and his colleague and
friendly rival Maurice Litton, associate
professor of higher education at Florida

State University, answered these ques

tions for the Kernel during a community
college conference here recently.
"I'm sold on democracy," Dr. LaVire said. "As educators we back a democratic society. We can't go into the classroom with the patchwork philosophy so
many teachers have of a teaching approach.

"Science," LaVire continued, "can tell
us where we are and help us get where
we're going, but the determination of
where we're going does not rely on
science. It can never tell us values, and
we're in the business of transmitting
values. A teacher needs to base his approach on society's values: on democracy.

"I'm not talking

laissez-fair-

e

or

an-

archy," the educator explained. "I'm recommending an atmosphere where students
may w ork toward achiev ing independence,

a sitsolv ing problems, making decisions
uation that most fully releases creativity
This calls for a teacher more highly
skilled than a dictator."
"Cut down on counseling and eliminate the student activity director," Dr.
Litton said. "Student personnel feel that
to help a student they must solve all
his problems. I've been in education 21
percent of the
years and I find that
students have problems they are perfectly
capable of solving. Counselors, moreover,
do no cope well with students' really
serious personal problems."
Here the two Florida educators agreed.
LaVire said he felt the personal-problearea was indeed where counselors usually "said nothing."
In another room, the presidents of
UK's community college student councils
were drafting the structure of their link
.

95-9-

9

with the University in an advisory capacity, and with each other through
programs. Hopefully, the liaison
will help dispel apathy. And if student
personnel services are found lacking, there
will be this channel for complaint. But
what are these students' prospects for
success as transfer students at UK?
The
national study of
transfer students "From Junior to Senior
College," found that most junior college
students experience some drop in grades
during their first semester as transfers.
LaVire termed this "the transfer shock;"
Litton said the usual pattern was a drop
of half a grade point.
LaVire said that after the initial enrollment period the transfer's grades usually climb back and by graduation approximate those of his junior college days.
Continued On rage 2
intra-systei-

Knoell-Medsk-

n

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Jan.

10, 19(i7,

Most Suffer Grade Loss After Transfer
to the study, that both groups
took about the same number of
terms to complete their programs
after entering the upper division.
On the whole, the transfer students had about the same probability of success in each of the
broad major fields.
The junior college transfer
who had always done well in
school, who progressed without
an enrollment break through college, and who made "academically realistic" decisions about
college and major was found to
be the
transfer most
r
likely to succeed in a
institute.
The
study
further tended to support the
belief that students with lower
class backgrounds who persist
through junior college and transfer are just as likely to succeed
as those with middle and upper
class backgrounds.
"There is no reason to expect the performance of transfers to be the same as that of
the students native to the
institution. The former is
a more heterogenous group, the
latter, more select," LaVire said.
"If we look at the selective
California system of 10 years

Continued From Tage 1
Dorothy M. Knocll and Iceland L. Medsker focusscd their
study on a core group of 7,243
students who transferred in 19(50
to 43 four-yea- r
colleges and universities in 10 states. Amongtheir
findings were that 62 percent of
the junior college students received bachelors degrees within
three years after transfer. An estimated 75 percent of the group
would receive their degrees evenfound.
tually, Knoell-MedskA comparative analysis of
transfer and native students who
were granted baccalaureate degrees in 1962 showed according

WANT

two-ye-

four-yea-

Knoell-Medsk-

TO WRITE?

TO BE PUBLISHED?

Your story or column appear
10,500 times daily.

four-ye-

In The
KENTUCKY

KERNEL

Staff Applications available now.
KERNEL

OFFICE

Journalism Building

ar

ago," Litton added, "17 percent
more people got a bachelor's
degree than would have without the
college system."
V. OsAs President John
wald told the community college conference, "Hundreds of
thousands of young people in
the country have an education
they would not have without
community colleges. The community college movement is not
only one of the most exciting
but also one of the most productive in higher education in
our nation."
What kind of evolution do
the experts see for this accessible
and laudable educational
two-ye-

ar

Mme. Jacqueline Bernard will
speak, in English, at 8 p.m.
Sunday in the Student Center
Theater on "Camus: The Man
as I Knew Him." Mme. Bernard
worked with Camus and came
his intimate friend while working
on the resistance newspaper
"Combat" during the Second
World War.

Fri. and Sat. nights
7:30 'til 10;

10 'til Midnight

Sunday night
10
7:30 'til

SCOTT'S
ROLL-AREN-

A

BELTLINE

NORTHERN

stone sculptures

Thirty-on- e

by the noted New York artist
Kenneth Campbell can be seen
now at the Art Gallery.
This major presentation in- -

At 4 p.m. Sunday Mme. Bernard will speak in French in
Room 245 of the Student Center
on "Malraux and Camus." A
coffee hour will follow the Sunday speech in the President's
Room of the Student Center.

The Pryor
ty will meet at

Socie-

al

7
Mn 563

p.m. Tuesday
of the Med-

in Room
ical Center.

The

Newman Center will
a course in Christian
Marriage at 7:30 p.m. on Jan.
22,29, and Feb. 5.
sponsor

m

'

Personal cues

'

;il

THEP7 cry cry
41
DC

IU

Ln

discount price."

zcy

zzn

m

Applications for the Miss University of Kentucky' Pageant are

nr
uuuuu

rvrs

11

252-90-

1,

Beginning 5:00 p.m. 'til closing

J

Ui

m

EXTRA SPECIAL OFFER O
Any order of 5 or more Pizza's

73

O

Q

-

earns caller FREE PIZZA
Sm.

in Room 201 of the Student Center. They are available at the
front desks of the residence halls
or at the Student Center Board
Office, Room 201.
The final oral examination
of Martin B. Solomon, candidate
for the Doctor of Philosophy degree, will be held at 9 a.m.
Saturday in Room 121, Commerce

26

FEATURING OUR DELIVERY SERVICE

--

Building.
The committee for the Student
Guide to Courses will meet at
6:30 p.m. Monday in Room 117
of the Student Center.

Lg.

85

1.05

wiiivsii

OC

1

1.70
1 oc

GREEN OLIVE

95

CHEESE

1C

"

I.7J

1.35

'

SUNDAY

1.95

1.35

1.95

95

1.35

1.95

MUSHROOM

1.05

1.45

PEPPERONI

1.05

1.45

2.20
2.20
2.20
2.20

Two Keys
Is

PEPPER

HAMBURGER

1.05

1.45

SAUSAGE

1.05

1.45

eludes works created since 1960.
Among them are four recent
sculptures not previously shown
anywhere.
Kenneth Campbell,
with the Art Department, is widely considered to
be a leading figure among the
artists who are making outstanding achievements in direct
stonecarving. Awards received by
Campbell include a Guggenheim
Fellowship, twoLongview Foundation Purchase Awards, and
two Ford Foundation Purchase
artist-in-residen-

Awards.
His sculpture is in major

now open to serve
you from 5-p.m.
254-858- 8
Delivery
10

Sm.

Med.

American Art, New York; Walker
Art Center, Minneapolis: Sara
Roby Foundation, New York;
Kalamazoo Art Institute, Kalamazoo, Michigan.
Campbell's sculpture has
been shown in group exhibitions
held by the Art Institute of Chicago; Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, New York; 1964 New-YorWorld's Fair; University
of Illinois; The Pennsylvania

-

1.05

1.45

ANCHOVY

1.05

1.45

95

1.30

2.20
2.20
2.00
2.00
2.70
2.40
2.40
2.40
2.60

CHEESE,

SAUSAGE

i2 HAMBURGER
INN SPECIAL
PIZZA

95

1.30

1.35

1.70

HAMBURGER

1.15

1.55

Vi CHEESE,

PEPPERONI
SAUSAGE

&

&

&

MUSHROOMS,

CHOPPED ONIONS
MUSHROOMS
OLIVES

&

ONIONS

1.15

1.55

1.15

MUSHROOMS

Academy of the Fine. Arts, Philadelphia, and other major institutions. He is currently represented in the important Annual
Exhibition held by the Whitney
Museum of American

Classified advertisements, 5 cents per
word ($1.00 minimum).
Deadline for acceptance of classified
copy is 3 p.m. the day preceding publication. To place classified ad come to
Room 111 or 113. Journalism Bid.
Advertisers of rooms and apartments listed in The Kentucky Kernel
have agreed that they will not include.
a?.a qualifying consideration in deciding whether or not to rent to an
applicant, his race, color, religious
preference or national origin.

Art,

New-York-

Grand Central Moderns art gallery- in New York City.
Before coming to the University of Kentucky, Campbell
taught at Queens College of the
City University of New York.
Although a Boston native, he
has lived in New York City since
1954. He began his art career
as a painter and achieved considerable reputation for his paintings before devoting himself entirely to sculpture in 1954.
The exhibition will be on
Feb. 19. The Art Gallery,
located in the Fine Arts Building,
Rose Street, Lexington, is open
every- day from 1 to 5 p.m.,' and
on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 7 to 9 p.m.
view-throug-

-

-

WANTED
MALE WANTED to share house with
three others. Call 233-11or come
to 123 Transcript.
17J4t

wanted Female to share
new efficiency apartment, $50 per
month. 334 So. Broadway.

ROOMMATE

5.

18J5t

FOR RENT
AVAILABLE

FOR SALE

NOW
Spacious, modNice.
ern, close, 'tween
Must be mature. $92.50 up.
5
UK-tow- n.

FOR

SALE

1964

New

Moon

10x56
bed- - 2

separate dining room; hidden
bedrooms; fenced yard; awning;
bin. Call

FOR

SALE-19-

3.

stor-ag- e

16J5t

Elcona 51x10 mobile

64

home
everything connected;
wall to wall carpets; washing
Take over Payments. Call
or
i6J5t
5.

FR

SALE

1962

Volvo

1.55

1.20

1.60

DANCING every FRIDAY

AM-F-

radio; snow tires; clean. Call
6 p.m.,
i6J5t
FOR SALE36'x48' drafting table with
parallel bar for ambitious engineering or architectural student
Call
after 6 p.m..
i6J5t
MUST SACRIFICE-19- 66
two
mobile home. $3,300. Ready bedroom
to live
In; lot 31 Holliday Park. 1063 New
Cal1 UK College
FlrcleR.oad2771. Station 331.
17J3t
after

FOR

SALE-19-

MG-T53
BRG. black
interior, walnut dash. AM-Fnew paint, completely rebuilt radiome-

"er

& SATURDAY,

p.m.

COantabg
708 E. MAIN St., opposite Henry Cloy
High School
FRIDAY

PV544;

"THE EXPLOSIVE DYNAMICS"
from HantincUn, W. V.
SATURDAY
"THE FORMATIONS"

l

.

This is the fourth time he
has been invited to participate
in this major show. He has held
shows with the
three one-ma- n

CLASSIFIED

Lg.

HOT JALAPENO
12

pri-

vate and public collections, including the Whitney Museum of

C1SeSt

12

d

llJISt

p.m.

One room with refrigerator, 347 Linden Walk. One block
6.
from UK. Call
13Jtf

FOR RENT

MISCELLANEOUS

e-

95

GREEN

one-thir-

266-24-

THE

BLACK OLIVE

y

set-u-

Med.

MOZZARELLA
OKJinKI

"post-secondar-

being accepted through Friday,

n

Eastland Shopping Center
Phone:
255-000-

junior-senio-

31 Kenneth Campbell Sculptures
Now On Display In Art Gallery

UK Bulletin Board
SKATING

Litton foresees universities in will be in one general educawhich the native students, "much tional family."
"Yes," Litton agreed, "then
in the minority," form an honors
he can train in that family if
group, while the bulk of the
r
program is taken the area he specialized in betransfer students. He said, comes obsolete. I'm not conby
vinced but that a good general
school opporwill be made available to education is the best vocational
tunity
training. Teach a man a vocaall our youth."
tion and you take care of him
LaVire feels the community for a short time. Teach him how
colleges will add a third "gento learn a vocation and
have
eral" curriculum to their present taken care of him for you rest
the
vocational-technica- l
transfer and
of his life.
programs. "It is as insufficient,"
"We must plant the concept
LaVire explained," for a man ot
learning throughout life the
to be able to say 'I am hungry' idea of the adult
education
in seven different languages as
people. Man's education must be
it is for him to be able to pera continuing education," Litton
form a job task that is obsolete
said.
the next day. Perhaps
"Agreed," LaVire said.
of a student's future education

RIDING LESSONS

indoor riding. Private lessons only. Saddle seat. Mary
Glenn Blankenship.
Hunter seat.
Nancy MacLean.
Sheragay Farm.
18J3t

1.

PERSONAL
EVERYBODY,

HI

Tuesday.

HAPPY

BIRTHDAY,

You'll

lost until
19Jlt

ELLEN.

19Jlt

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 by the Board
of Student Publications,
UK Post
Office Box 4986. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894, became the Record in 1900. and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$8.00
Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files $.10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
2321
Editor. Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports ... 2320
News Desk
2447
Advertising, Business,
2319
Circulation

* "

ii"

11

,

.

,i

--

ii

-i

.,-

n

-

,

L

mi

tm

yrr-'r- rr

tiii: ki:ntik:kv

Viclnam War Continued
ConilicL Buhvcll Savs
I

ho war

in Vietnam will continue to he of
major eotuern to
ear, a University professor says, although he
sees some hope-ho- we
er dim-f- or
an end to the conflict.
Escalation of American in- - ,.
,
.
lie opinion appears lo oe or me
volvement in the war in Viet"let's net this over with" varnam will continue during
17, iety, Dr. Hutwell sees the end-o- r
Hut well, dipredicts Dr.
the beginning of theend-ofth- e
rector of the Patterson School of
war only if Hanoi makes concesin International ComDiplomacy
sions, and only if President Johnmerce.
son thinks it necessary or if the
He says that 500,000 troops
Republicans make it a part of
may be there by the end of 1967. their national campaign.
Dr. Butwell, a specialist on
There are two
Hit-har-

counter-balanc-

e

possibilities
this

"It appears that almost all
the Communist countries are trying to convince Hanoi to enter
into meaningful negotiations to
help end the war with the exception of China. It would be to
China's advantage for the war
to continue, because North Vietnam is dependent upon her and
the

war drains American

strength."
Dr. But well said another factor is the growing uneasiness in
the United States over the war.

"It is more likely that Americans will demand an 'uppingof
the ante," rather than
President Johnson's preslow," he
tige is at an
continues, "and he might try to
"
'pull a rabbit out of a hat.
all-tim-

Vietnam politics, adds that American preoccupation with Vietnam
will detract from other involvements by this country.
"We will pay less attention
to other parts of the world. We
will not be able to give help to
Indonesia, or to settle our differences with Cambodia, or to
offer help to Africa. In fact, the
amount of money we give to Africa in one year equals what we
spend in only five days in Vietnam. We have become obsessed
with victory in Vietnam," hecon-- t
hides.

:t

n,7

i

d

tions."

eaten."

In a speech in Jerusalem at
Israel's Academy of Science and
Humanities Tuesday, Keaky gave
new details of his recent discoveries in Kenya. Dr. Leaky said
while the chimpanee is man s
cousin in blood groups and other
factors, tl ic human race did not
descend from the ape in a way
accepted in the past.
"The accepted view on evolution of man from the ape is
incorrect w ithout any scientific basis."
"Remains were found proving
that apes, 20 to 25 million years
ago, were developing in the direction in which apes are still
today. But at that time pro to-

proto-ma-

of

Because proto-mawas found
in Kenva. Leak)' gave him the
name Kenv
us Atiicanus.
n

n

HOW

DOKS THE

KERNEL

COMPARE
WITH OTHER NEWSPAPERS?
SEE DISPLAY

EIRST

FLOOR

ntlLDING

JOURNALISM

Set Jti
Walton Avenue
Lexington,
Beatrice E. Barnes

121
A YARN SHOP

10--

Open

GRAVES-COX'-

252-750- 0

Ky.

KNITTING

ber of
anatomists
and "they told me it is a hu

Come see our new yarns

d

SEMI-ANNUA-

S

5

Phone

TIME TO START SPRING

to a num-

n

to Lumpe.

which he said were cracked 20
million years ago in a way that
hunted and ate
proved near-mameat.

million-

world-renowe-

the audience
antelope Unit's

Leaky showed

photographs

man, our ancestor, already existed."
Leaky said he showed a tooth
from the skull of this 20
-year-old

Leak) said the important (mi
elusion to be drawn from his
discoveries was that the dawn of
the human species was in the
heart of Africa, where he imi
grated through the Middle Last
to the Far Fist and, much later,

man tooth but of course it is
not. It is that of a being from
which vve evolved; a short-facebeing using stones to crack the
bones of animals, which were

Continued From Page 1
professional reaction will await
scientific publication of the evidence . . . with full illustra-

.

.

.

kits

I

The sale you've been waiting for

I

e

Actually, there has been
tle opposition to the prcsidenton
the war score, he adds.

i,

ki.knt.i., Timis!.i, j,m.

Anlliropologisl Aivails Evidence

Kn.tuckians next

that may
prediction, he adds.

r

-

ywA

in"

CLEARANCE

L

lit-

of famous brand fashions

1

1

"Americans love to fight Communism. And there is the question of whether the Republican,

George Romney, will go to Vietnam and come back with suggestions about how to end the
war, as Eisenhower did in 1952
when he went to Korea."
Since a large segment of pub- -

ROTC Credit
Under Fire
At Boston
Continued From Page

1

The editorial brought sharp
reaction from groups inside and
outside the university. President
Harold C. Case issued a statement that "to rule ROTC
... would be as much
a denial of the traditional rights
and privileges of students as to
make it mandatory."
In response to the News attacks, the faculty conducted an
investigation of the military program. The school's Student Congress passed a resolution supporting the faculty study. Students
for a Democratic Society (SDS)
distributed more than 1,000 "Discredit ROTC" buttons and solicited faculty member opposition
to the military program.
ROTC leaders, meanwhile,
said nothing, but cadets argued
that their classes represented
"leadership training" ratherthan
"indoctrination.'' Cadet public
information ituer Howard A.
Davidson ascribed the
niove!':nt to "general
t

anti-ROT-

and specific opto 11k- war in Vietnam
position
rather than concern for the pro-

gram's academic validity.
Speculation on the Feb. 15
faculty vote ranges from top
faculty sources, who seem assured
that ROTC will lose academic
standing, to ROTC Maj. Clovis
U. Proulx, who told the Ohio
Wesleyan Transcript, "1 don't
think there is any sweat about
the matter. There is . . . an investigating committee, but I
don't think anything will come
of it."

t
1

I
?

1
4

Now $18.65 to $52.65

I
if
I
J

I
I
'A

3

f

I

hi

Now $6.30 to $20.90

SUBURBAN COATS
eg. $27 to $75

I

DRESS SHIRTS

SWEATERS
Reg. $9 to $30

(

'
-

M

,

One Group

Vz Price

-

0-C-

W

I

j

;

i

f

I

I

SLACKS

1

Reg. $7 to $12.95
Now $4.65 to $8.85

1

LEVI JEANS

:j

Reg. $4.50 to $7
Now $2.35 to $4.65

I

Ji

'

l

Special Groups of
SPORT COATS

SPORT SHIRTS
TIES
SOCKS

REDUCED

STA-PRES- T

Jg

I

Special Groups or

1

.

(rf

V$- 'B-

BELTS

V

I

l

'i

Vjf
Wr.;U
X

I

Reg. $4.25 to $9
Now $2.95 to $6.30

.

DRESS SLACKS

REDUCED

s

l5MSaMi
ANO COMPANY INC.

(l

--

W

?II?!SNiy

.

.

i

w West Main

I
M

3

* The Kentucky Kernel
The Smith's Outstanding College Daily
Unim.hm iy ok Ki.niicky

K5TAI1LISHKD

THURSDAY, JAN.

1894

y'

19, 19G7

unpopularity

Q?)

back-la- sh

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

Wai.thi
Smai: Ho

M.

Chant,

o. Editorial Pace Editor

Editor-in-Chi-

William Knatp,

Business Manager

Views On NSA
ing methods which will greatly
increase their ability in persuading the University administration
to maintain a constant dialogue
with student opinion.

Student Government last year
chose to withdraw its membership
from the U.S. National Student
Association. We respect this decision, but it should by no means
be binding on this year's administration or on future ones.

However, before Student Government can reopen the NSA isAs students throughout the sue, it must undertake a meticcountry are demanding a more ulous evaluation of itself. The
dynamic role in making campus present inability to provide adepolicy, no less should be expected quate services with insufficient
of Student Government on this funds and the decision to concentrate only on campus issues crecampus.
ates an intolerable situation for
Bringing the stadium issue beStudent Government as well as
fore the students is an accomplishthe student body. It is amazing
ment which the SG administrahow seemingly intelligent students
tion should be proud of. The cre- can
go to such length to rationalation of the President's Council ize
timidity.
of Students by President Oswald
The triumverant leadership of
is another satisfying potential toSG President Carson Porter, Vice
ward the achievement of a greater
student voice at the University. President Marsha Fields and Rep.
Sheryl Snyder has controlled camWe are only sorry that the Council's source was the president and pus politics both directly and indirectly long enough to show that
not the students.
Student Government cannot funcNSA, through its numerous pubtion if it does not have the relications and volumes of material, spect of the students. Their day of
can aid UK students in establish- - reckoning has come.
If they do not legitimately examine this most important issue for
the student body, then the students
should seek new leadership both in
the executive and legislative
branches of Student Government
in the next election. A University
of 15,000 students deserves the most
adequate methods of carrying out
Student Government's purpose: to
present some semblance of student
opinion to the University Administration. NSA has shown at other

institutions that it can help do
this efficiently.

Boimieville Turkey Shoot
You've got to give Boimieville
credit. This Hart County community of 400 persons just doesn't
give up.
A few years ago, Boimieville
became known as a speed trap because of the number of motorists
traveling U.S. highway 31W, which
bisects the tiny town, that were
cited for speeding. Pressure was
applied by t