xt7k0p0wsr9h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k0p0wsr9h/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670309  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March  9, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  9, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7k0p0wsr9h section xt7k0p0wsr9h University of Kentucky

Vol. 58, No. 114

Inside Today s Kernel

n

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, MARCH 9, 1967

Or. Richard Butwell criticites
policy in Vietnam: Poge Three.

Arthur Schlesinger says the Johnson
Administration does not want peace
negotiations: Page Three.

Eight Pages

Plans Told
For Forestry
Department

execu-

tive vice president, said decisions now have been reached to:
Appoint Dr. Blaine F. Parker,

also.

Name

a

committee

of

"about" seven representing all

segments of the state's forest and
wood industries to advise President Oswald.
Name two outside consult-

ants to study the department's
operations and industry needs.
Retain the responsibility for
the direction and management of
the 15,000 acre Robinson Forest
and the $640,000 Wood Utilization Center.
Employ a permanent chairman of the Department.
Foresters and wood industry
officials were aroused early last
month when Dr. Boyd Richards
resigned as department chairman
and charged "massive
of the divisions' programs."
James D. Manning former
president of the Kentucky Wood
Industry Association said, "We're
satisfied."
The present plan offers only a
plan, transferring students to other Southern schools
for the last two years and paying for part of the tuition.
non-suppo-

two-ye-

rt

ar

Harold Lasswell
Speaks On Friday

An internationally known political scientist, Dr. Harold D.
Lasswell, will speak on research
trends in political science during a colloquim which opens at
3 p.m. Friday at the Alumni
House.
Dr.

Lasswell

is

Edward J.

Phelps professor of political science at Yale University.
His best known books are
"Psychopathology and Politics;"
"World Politics and Personal Insecurity;" "Politics: Who Gets
What, When, How;" "Power and
Personality;" "The Future of Political Science;" and "Power and
Society" with A. Kaplan.

I

L

l
All l
i

r

IEEE Winners Told

Winners in the annual IEEE engineering competition are, first
row, David Six, second place; Bill Wray, second place; and Walter
Kroboty, first place. Second row, Jim Woodyard, honorable mention; Jim Freeman, third place; and Dr. Silvio Navarro, president
of the Lexington IEEE chapter. Third row, John Criesel, honor-

able mention.

Senate Votes Extension
Of Present UK Calendar

turn-overra- te

exThe University Senate Wednesday approved a three-yea- r
tension of the present academic calendar and then voted to purge
its own members who have excessive absences.
Labor Day was deleted as a list of 25 Senate members who
an academic holiday, and the he
says have missed every meetperiod for withdrawing from a ing this year.
course was shortened from two
In other business a motion
to five weeks before final
was approved to solicit an early
examination time.
for the Senate from the
Some opposition was voiced report
Committee of the. Evaluation of
against the drop proposal due to Teaching.
a change in the Senate rules
Criticism of the present calenwhich had to be made first to
dar mentioned prior to the meetallow the calendar alteration.
failed to materialize in the
interval ing
In addition a two-da-y
Senate session itself.
between the last day of exams
The basic criticism had hereand the day grades are due at
the Registrar's office, exclusive tofore centered around whether
of Sunday, was approved by a the present system, with short'vote of 34 to 32.
ened semesters ending before
Christmas and in early May proComAccording to Calendar
of
mittee Chairman Robert Rudd, vided long enough periods
total class time.
disthere was "absolutely no
cussion" on the merits of changWhile it was not stated in the
ing to another calendar system. Senate session, critics within the
A motion by J.M. Edney, asEnglish Department have presistant professor of zoology, to viously decried an inability to
make Founder's Day (Feb. 22) draw first quality term papers
from their students since the new
an academic holiday was decalendar has been instituted.
feated.
The Senate approved amotion
However, supporters of the
by Dr. Stanley Zyzniewsky that system claim that the
k
"three unexcused absences from period following Christmas vacaSenate meetings in an academic tion was essentially a "lame
year will automatically call for duck" period in which little of
purgation."
academic value was ever accomDr. Zyznewsky, associate pro- plished. Many instructors indifessor of history, has been a cated they no longer use extencritic of frequent absenteeism and sive research papers in their
at one time threatened to read courses.

CHRISTIAN

Kernel Staff Writer
There are some 1,600 students living in
the men's residence halls. Most are freshmen with mutual problems of schedules,
grades, roommates, girlfriends and, in general, adjustment to a strange environment.
They need assistance from someone on
their own level, and this is where the Office

Fint of two parts.
Halls has a problem:
How do you recruit other students, with
relatively little experience in advising and
counseling, and train them to advise these
freshmen to use their new freedom wisely?
There is no problem attracting applicants for the job. Before last month's deadline, more than 200 students had applied
for corridor adviser positions. That number
has since been cut in half, and from the

of Men's Residence

Doctors sometimes face a conflict between the law and their patients' beit
interests: Page Eight.

Kernel Associate Editor
Teacher and course evaluation questionnaires are due to be distributed April 3 and 4 for the Student Guide to Courses and InShanker was uncertain
structors.
Howard Shanker, first year whether the book would carry-lastudent and editor of the a cost or be free to students.
book, said Wednesday it would That question rests with the
decision of Student Gov ernment.
be available next semester prior
No feedback has come from
topreregistration for Spring 1968.
the faculty yet, Shanker added.
Modeled after a similar course
evaluation at Ohio University,
"It seems that the faculty
the book will contain critiques has decided they either are not
of every course and teacher at interested, or they expressed
the University, exclusive of the themselves through the unanigraduate and professional mous approval of the University
schools.
Senate," Shanker continued.
He contrasted the situation
include duplicate
Exceptions
sections of courses taught by the with his prior experiences at
same person and such courses Ohio University where, he said,
as Freshman Composition, faculty wrote frequent letters
both criticizing and praising the
taught largely by graduate asevaluation effort.
sistants who have a high
Earlier last semester Shanker
from year to year.
Shanker explained the omis- stated the purpose of the evaluation as an aid "to improve
sion of graduate and professional
school evaluations on the basis the academic excellence of a
that these areas have highly re- university."
Three goals of the Ohio Unistrictive curricula programs and
that more experience would be versity guide were:
needed to tackle evaluating such
Providing a detailed description of courses as taught by speprograms.
"You have to draw aline some cific instructors.
Providing a dialogue beplace. If you eliminate graduate
it cuts the number of tween faculty and students.
courses,
courses in half. If it the underPublicly acknowledging inevaluation goes over structors according to student
graduate
well, we can expand it," he said. evaluations.
The first known teacher evalFrom 200 to 300 persons will
distribute questionnaires to uation was initiated by students
classes on campus during 15 min- at Harvard University in 1924.
ute periods alloted by approval Since then the idea has spread
of the University Senate last widely.

two-wee-

November.

The questionnaire will have
approximately 40 items, like the
one as Ohio University where
Shanker was business manager
of the book, dealing with the
content and execution of the
course and a critique of the
teacher.
Questionnaires will be fed
to a University computer which
will tabulate the results for about
40 editorial writers before the
semester's end. Critiques will be
written over the summer months
and be sent to printers during
Shanker explained.
One person has been assigned
each department while there is
a division editor for each college.
The organization, Shanker noted,
is similar to that in the University Ceneral Catalogue.
mid-Augus-

t,

Finding Good Dorm Advisers Is Problem
By DARRELL

UK proposes link with Paducoh Junior
College: Page Seven.

By FRANK BROWNING

velopment" of the department.

chairman of the school's Agriculture Department, to be acting
head of the Forestry Department

standings: Page

To Be Out In Fall

"de-sinne-

Albright,

Editor advocates draft deferments for
Peace Corps volunteers: Page Four.

SAE's lead intramural
Six.

SG Course Guide

The Department of Forestry
has been presented a plan
d
to insure the maximum deDr. A. D.

U.S.

remaining group will come some 30 new
staff members for the 1967 fall semester.
The present staff is composed of three head
residents, 11 resident advisers, and 52 corridor advisers.
In efforts to acquire competent advisers,
the system's administrators just last year
initiated a seminar program in which the
final prospects are confronted with test situations and asked how they would handle
them.

The seminar has drawn praise from both
the administrators and subjects. It not only
reduces the ikjssihility .of bad counselors,
but it also gives the applicant a certain
insight into the job.
"The selection process is getting better
now," notes John Board, a resident adviser in Cooperstown. "The seminars are
good, but more weight needs to be given
to the recommendations from persons conducting the seminars."
Four years ago, Board recalls, "persons

would take the job because they needed
money to get them through school. They
(these corridor advisers) didn't want to be
bothered with you."
One basic problem with the system, according to Board and several other staff
members, is a "tendency to keep the advisers not worthy of the job on the staff
instead of getting rid of them."
Rodney Page, in Donovan Hall, agreed
with Board that "bad counselors Ucome
so Ix'cause no one sets them straight."
Periodic evaluations, suggests Bob O'Toole,
a senior corridor adviser in Haggin Hall,
should include interviews with students.

Roger LeMaster, director of the men's
residence halls before the recent reorganization by the Board of Trustees, said there
is a continual evaluation of corridor advisers conducted by the senior stall the
resident advisers and head residents. Their
Continued on Pafe 2

A WS

Officers

To Bo Installed
On March HO
Installation of new senators
of Associated Women Students
was tentatively set for the evening
of March 30 by AWS Tuesday
in a joint meeting of old and
new members.

A third of the way through
the session
president
Connie Mullins closed the meeting to reporters, saying that
several senators had petitioned
her that further business go "unreported."
A senator who asked to remain
anonymous said she thought the
move came in anticipation of
talk on changes in women's
hours, a topic that has occupied
the Senate in one way or another
since October. The senator said
the Senate, however, did not
"get around to discussing hours"
probably "because so many members left early."
Various aspects of the recent
Senate elections were also discussed, she said. The earl) closing of the poll at Blazer Hull
was attributed to misinformation
on the part of a senator manning
the poll. The Senate's consensus
on the issue raised oer candidates manning the iolls, according to the Senate source, was that
they "hadn't realized anything
would be said about it this year
because nothing had been said in
the past few years."
Reports on the work each retiring Senator did during her
term of office and on Stars in
the Night were also presented,
the Seiffltor said.
out-goin-

g

* 2--

KERNEL. Tliur.Mhiy, March 9.

KENTUCKY

TIIE

l!Mi7

Do im Advisers Face Range Of Problems
Continued From TaRP 1
of t!if
first riimt is mid-lrrn- i
first srincstir, t lit sttond at t lit
st'tm'sttr's end and t lit tliird at
tlit close of tlit second semester.
He admitted, however, that
"as a means of improving their
(corridor advisers) performance,
wc try to draw to their attention areas which they might he

deficient in."
It would seem that the evaluation process serves only to give
the deficient corridor adviser a
"second chance" to prove his
ability, and this is where the
system has come under attack.

Opponents claim a corridor
adviser must establish himself
on the floor in the first month.
If by that time, says Tom Derr
in
Hall, he hasn't gained
the respect of students on his
iloor, he is not likely to do so.
A corridor adv iser is dismissed
from the staff only if "he is not
doing an atletpiate job and there
is no hope of improving his job."
In most instances, however, the
senior staff "tries to work with
a staff member if he is deficient."
in the
He is then
next report, thus giving him the
second chance.
corridor adDerr, a first-yeviser, says there is more to the
"second chance" than strengthening a counselor's weak points.
A change in corridor advisers

Ilain

I

Now Open Weekends
Fri., Sat., Sun.

VTmV'

IS MORE

LOVE

THAN A

--

vMGMvlvIX

v

GOODNIGHT

TJJ

THE

cZbMORNINIt
also
A

STORY OF LOVE
BEFORE MARRIAGE!

alter the first month, he says,
would disrupt the system.
"There is often a big staff
shuffle at the end of a semester, hut to change in the middle
would disrupt things. It would Ik

more difficult for a new corridor adviser to establish himself
and get to know the men personally after they have had prolonged bad experience with the
first one."
Associate Dean of Students
Jack Hall admitted that some bad
corridor advisers show better in
the selection and training periods than on the job. "We're
not always right. It takes sometimes a semester, sometimes a
year to discover that a person
isn't working out. It eventually
shows up in his ability."
But, opponents will contend,
the students on such an adviser's
floor are denied proper assistance
at the beginning or their college
education, and this gap cannot
be plugged if it takes a semester
or a year to get a qualified counselor.
Part of the corridor adviser's
responsibilities is to help the student adjust to college life, and
giving this assistance requires
more than just solving specific
student problems.
Much of a corridor adviser's
training must come on the job.
This has been less the case,
this past year because of the
seminars, which Ellis Bullock,
corridor adviser in
a first-yeDonovan Hall, poised as giving
him a "basic i.ea of what it
(the corridor adviser position)

is."

The bulletin posted by the
Office of Men's Residence Halls
gives only a vague picture of a
corridor adviser's duties.
"The principle duty of an
adviser is to assist the students
on his floor in any area that his
ability permits," the bulletin
states. "He will find himself involved to a certain extent in their
A

MEIVIN

4. Be at least a second semester freshman at the time he applies.
5. Be s.agle
These are merely criteria for
applying. Associate Dean of Students Hall goes a step further
by saying to be selected a person should have good judgment,
be honest, be fair, have a sound
mind, and be a mature individual. These qualities are supposed
to show in the interviews and

seminars.
After the new staff members
for the following year are selected, they go through a
training session in August
before the students arrive.
Bullock said the most beneficial part of the training program was "giving me a chance
to know the other corridor advisers because these arc the people you have to work with and
sometimes you do need their as10-d-

sistance."
O'Toole charged that the staff
"isn't adequately trained. The

Production

FRANK

personal, social, academic, or
emotional problems.
"Other duties include stimulating group activities, dealing
with minor disciplinary problems
and preparation of a limited
amount of administrative paperwork. The adviser will find that
he must develop his ability to
lead men under specific circumstances of residence halls life."
Most of the corridor advisers
interviewed said they had found,
to the contrary, that discipline
is a major part of the job.
The same bulletin that v aguely describes what is expected of
a corridor adviser lists only five
specific qualifications for a perspective adviser:
1. Have an overall grade point
standing of at least 2.3.
2. Not be on probation at the
time of application and not on
probation during any time you
would be an adviser.
3. Enrolled in and pursuing a
full time course of study at the
University's Lexington campus
at the time of employment.

'AFUNNVTHING
HAPPENED

I

-

WONDER
I'M THE LAST

tof?

'

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 Bldg.
Advertisers of rooms and apartments listed in The Kentucky Kernel
have agreed that they will not Include,
as a qualifying consideration In deciding whether or not to rent to an
applicant, his race, color, religious
preference or national origin.

M

I

I
uoNCtJ

mmum

UNITED ARTISTS

a

cine
4th

RIDERS

aw

Two riders to share traveling expenses (roundtrip) to Ft.
Fla. Leaving Friday
Lauderdale,
afternoon, March 10. Call
8M2t

"There is too much emphasis
on discipline and not enough
on advising."
corridor adPage, a
viser, called for a "better selection and training program with
more intensified training," but
he didn't elaborate.
The fall training program includes lectures, seminars like the
ones held in selection program,
and discussion in interaction
groups. The lectures, designed
to acquaint the potential corridor adviser with all areas of
the campus, include speakers
from the health service, first aid,
fire department, safety and security, professors in the academic
area, financial aid, and counseling service.
Mr. LeMaster said the selection is made as competetive as
possible "to get the best possible system."
Politics within the system,
especially in competition for promotions, can weaken the staff,
one corridor adviser noted. He
said corridor advisers "team up
into groups" behind the resident adviser they think will be
head resident.
Mr. LeMaster said this was
two-ye-

TO FLORIDA
Round trip $50.
Leave Saturday morning and return
the following Saturday or Sunday.
Call
9M2t
after 5 p.m.
299-85-

mm

STARTS FRIDAY
ROCK

HUDSON

GEORGE

GUY STOCKWELl

ght

TOMORROW:
floor?

Rev. C. T. Vivian will speak
on

"Non-Violenc-

Personal

A

e:

Mll
item

'i

t)U

PEPPARO

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except holidays and
exam periods.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Nick Pope, chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
liegun as the Cadet in 1894 and
publihhod continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

3W
MOW

KUWW

l

MiLHt

'

Witness" at 7:30 p.m. on March
27 in Room 222 of the Commerce
Building. This lecture, sponsored
by the Committee on Peace, Education, and Research, was previously scheduled for March 13,
The final oral Ph.D. examination of Ronald Usborne will
be given at 8:30 a.m. March
15, in Room 202 of the Meat
Laboratory.

N-1-

Any girls' organization wishing to enter a team in the LKD
Debutante Stakes may pick up
entry blanks in Room 201 at the
Student Center or call JanieTim-berlak- e
at
254-808- 4.

WANTED

RIDES

FOR SALE

DESPERATE!
WANTED
Need
ride to, near, or by Cleveland, Ohio.
after
Friday. March 10. Call
6 p.m. Ask for Bruce.
9Mlt

RIDE

233-15-

SALE
Electric motors.' used,
'a Sc Vs horsepower, $5.00 each.- Bulk
discount; all makes. Call Dennis,
after 6 p.m.
22F19t

FOR

-

269-99-

FOR SALE

1963 Volkswagen. Excellent condition, low mileage, radio,
clean. Call
2M6t

WANTED
WANTED
Bus drivers. Must have
valid Ky. driver's license. Must be
over 21. have mornings or afternoons free. Apply Wallace's Book

Store.

7Ftf

needs
your used textbooks. Bring them in
anytime. We pay top prices. We buy
all used textbooks.
9Ftf

WALLACE'S

BOOK

STORE

wanted for Carnaby.
Call
for appointment. 7M3t
WANTED
Two tickets to NCAA
tournament in Louisville on March
18. Call UK ext. 7293 after 4:30 p.m.
GIRLS

GO-G- O

277-96-

8M3t

to play
guitar and sing country, folk, and
western music. Office lounge. Hours
Friday and Saturday nights.
or
Must be 20 or over. Call
ask for Mrs. Buchignant.
9Mtf
Salary open. Male or female.
WANTED

ENTERTAINER

1

m

Mi

CAHHtNlj

FOR SALE

1959 Chevrolet, runs good,
starts easy, perfect for second car or
around town driving. $225. Call John
Mitchell, extension 2825.
9Mlt

FOR

SALE
1953 MG-Tclassic
sports car in very good condition.
Fog lamps, tonneau, etc., $1,250. Call
9M2t

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General
office work, full time employment.
Call
3M6t

FEMALE

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TYPING
TYPING expertly and promptly done
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2321

2319

WEEK
1

a faculty member or administrator In his home. (See how the other
half lives). Forms available now from
floor advisors or Greek
or
In the Student Center. presidents,
Completed application forms may
to floor advisors, Greek
bo turned-l- n
presidents, In Rooms 102, 201, Student
Center, or at the box near the East
Information Center, Student Center.
Visit

POWDERPUF JAN B.
Found
something you lost in the Powder-rooYour character and our respect. Signed Les Dollar.
9Mlt

Ism

YOUR
INDEPENDENT

AGENT

FOR LIFE
WALSH

Phone
2320
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FACULTY STUDENT
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The Kentucky Kernel

A

tests for Home Economics 227 228 (Clothing Construction and Selection) will be
given from 10 a.m. to noon Friand from 2
day (room
in the
to 4 p.m. (room
Agricultural Science Building.

5,

' 'W-i

Editor. Managing Editor
Editorial Pane Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk
Advertising, Business,
Circulation

not as extensive as it sounds.
"As with any organization, our
staff breaks down into sub
groups, but not into large groups.
"Promotions to resident adviser are based on the opinions
of many people," he said. "The
chances of being promoted on a
personal opinion are slim. We
(a committee of resident advisers
and head residents) sit down
and hash it out and arrive at
a just conclusion."
It must be noted, However,
that if politics in the system were
used to any extent, the most
qualified persons for promotions i.e., to resident adviser-minot always get them because their "team" lost.

UK Bulletin Board

by SAMUEL GOLDWYN Jr

RATES
SUBSCKIPTION
$8.00
Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files
$.10
KERNEL TELEPHONES

ASSOCIATE DEAN HALL

FLY

PETER FONDA

Directed

WANTED

WANTED

WEEK!

SHARON HUGUENY
NICK ADAMS
DEBORAH WALLEY

r

freshmen.

CLASSIFIED ADS

ONTriEWAYTO
THE FORUAV1

y':r

administrators of the system
aren't aware of how to set up a
system so an adequate amount of
counseling can be provided for

278-343- 1

SULIER

INSURANCE AGENCY, Inc.
1713 Nicholosville Pike

SKATING

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

10 'til Midnight

Sunday night
7:30 'til 10
SCOTT'S
ROLL-AREN- A

NORTHERN

BELTLINE

* Till:

Bulwell Mils

Policy
In Vietnam

(P)

Kernel Staff Writer
Dr.
Rutwcll, director
of the Patterson School of Diplomacy, bitterly lashed out at U.S.
foreign policy in Southeast Asia
Wednesday in a speech at the Baptist Student Union.
This was the first such speech
in a planned weekly session.
Dr. Butwell posed four questions that he felt were crucial to
the Vietnam problem:
What is Vietnam? A major
threat? A hopeless pawn?

How can the Vietnamese

t

What is the nature of the
American responsibility in Vietnam?
Is there any liklihood of an
end to the Vietnamese war in the
foreseeable future?
. In answer to his first
question,
Dr. Butwell traced the history
of the development of Vietnam as
a nation-statHe stressed how
e.

the South Vietnamese violated
the Geneva Accords drawn up
after the French defeat at
u.

"The Geneva Accords provided for elections in 1956 to reunite the country. They never
came about," said Dr. Butwell.
He compared this provision with

the current, request for national
elections in Vietnam by the Johnson Administration.
"We're asking for something
we could have had in 1956," said
Dr. Butwell, "I'd say this is a
pretty damning critique of U.S.
foreign policy.

"The

Vietnamese problem
of aggression," an- -

Yrk

Timet Newt Service

concluded that the Johnson Administration "does not wish to
negotiate now" to settle the war

Hit-har-

problem best be defined?

New

WASHINGTON
Arthur M.
Schlesinger Jr., former adviser to
President Kennedy, says he has

By DICK KIMMINS

is not one

KERNEL. Tluiisd.iv, Mattli !. If,7

5

Schlesinger Charges Administration
'Does Not Noiv Wish To Negotiate'

U.S.

Dien-bienph-

KENTUCKY

DR. RICHARD BUTWELL
swered Dr. Butwell to his second question. "It is a problem of
political development." Dr.
told the BSU audience that
the struggle in Vietnam was one
in which "two rival elites were
vying for political power."
Dr. Butwell cited three areas
of political development essential
to the answer in Vietnam: national
unification, a legitimate successor to the French, and the development of the prerequisites for

But-we- ll

in Vietnam.
"Why else, unless it wishes
to avoid negotiation now, would
the administration have hardened
its terms, demanding today from
Hanoi what it did not demand
a year ago," Mr. Schlesinger said.
Speaking at a news conference
yesterday of Americans For Democratic Action, of which he is a
vice chairman, the historian
added that "the time has come to
break the hopeless logic which
can never find the right moment
for

negotiation."

His charges were indirectly rejected by Arthur J. Goldberg,
the chief U.S. representative at
the United Nations. Ambassador
Goldberg, after reporting to President Johnson on his recent Asian
trip, denied that the government
was unwilling to negotiate.
"That is not true," he said in
a
government in
reply to questions from newsmen.
Vietnam.
for unconditional
Dr. Butwell criticized the "We are ready
negotiations today," He said,
American involvement in Vietnam as a "totally inappropriate however, that he had not yet
course of action" in discussing read Schlesinger's statement and
therefore was not commentingon
his third question.
"We can't go around solving it directly.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Claire Chen-naul- t,
other people's problems, somew idow of
the Chinese-bor- n
one else's political development
a prominent World War II Air
. . . This
country has almost an Force
general, told a House Foreinsane obsession with Commu- ' ign Affairs Subcommittee that
nists and communism. Someadministration's
times we behave like frightened criticism of the
conduct of the war in Vietnam
little children."
Dr. Butwell sees no end of the was encouraging North VietnamVietnam problem in the foresee- ese leaders to prolong it.
"If the Communists were sure
able future.
we mean business, I think they
would be willing to end the fightic

advice but to take prac tical steps
and use our power to end the
Vietnam war as soon as pos-

sible."
A sharply conflicting view was
taken by Mr. Schlesinger, the
Harvard University historian,
who addressed a news conference at the Mayflower Hotel at
the same time Mrs. Chennault
was testifying on Capitol Hill.
"The urgent need is to explore
every opportunity to slow down
the war," said Mr. Schlesinger.
"The bombing of North Vietnam
has failed to halt the infiltration or to break the will of the
people of North Vietnam or to
bring Hanoi to the conference
table."
The former White House aide
to President Kennedy said he did
not question "the genuineness of
President Johnson's wish for a
negotiated settlement in Vietnam."

manding today from Hanoi what
it did not demand a ear ago-t- he
prior assurance of some reciprocal act as a condition to our
ending the berthing of North
Vietnam."

But the actions of the administration, he argued, "lead irresistibly to the conclusion that it
does not wish negotiation now."
As evidence, he said the administration had "hardened its
terms" for negotiation by "de

The Harvard historian, known
for his close ties with the Kenned) wing of the Democratic
Party, endorsed Sen. Robert F.

Kennedy's suggestion that the
United States "test the sincerity" of Soviet Premier Aleksei N.
Kosygin whom he quoted as saying Hanoi would come to the
conference table if Washington
ended its bombing of the north
"unconditionally."
"If we really wanted negotiation, we would have ended boml-inas the Russians suggested,
and let the burden of delivering Hanoi to the conference table
fall to Moscow," Mr. Schlesinger
maintained.
g

"But if we were seeking an
excuse to avoid negotiation, we
would do exactly as we have
done ignore the Russians and
ledge only the most extreme
and extravagant proposals from
Hanoi," Prof. Schlesinger added.

w

First
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said Mrs. Chennault.
"Now is the time for us to
show our strength," she asserted,
gesturing to the committee members with a yellow pencil. "It
is time for us not to depend so
much on theories and diplomatic

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* The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
UnIVI
ESTABLISHED

HSITY OF KENTUCKY

THURSDAY, MARCH

1894

9, 1967

Editorialt represent the ojyinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Stkve 1Uk:co,

Waltf.r M. Grant,
Editorial T?c Editor

Editor-in-Chi-

William Knatp,

Business Manager

Peace Corps Deferments
pressive salaries should they desire.
Instead, they have given up all
this to provide assistance to their
neighbor. Peace Corps volunteers
are trained to save lives; soldiers
are trained to take lives. We suggest that Peace Corps volunteers
are providing, in actuality, a much
greater service to their nation, except perhaps in time of military
attack on this country. We further
submit that after two years in the
Peace Corps, young men should be
exempt from the draft except in
war.
time of all-o-

Before adopting a new Selective
Service law this summer, we hope
that Congress and President Johnson will take another look at the
deferment status of Peace Corps
volunteers. Presently, those who
join the Peace Corps, provided they
are
are not already classified
deferments, but their two
given
years of service in th