xt7p2n4zkh0d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7p2n4zkh0d/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660302  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  2, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  2, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7p2n4zkh0d section xt7p2n4zkh0d nmmrmmtmm

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Vol. LVII, No. 93

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Inside Todays Kernel

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Eight Pages

a

By FRANK BROWNING
Assistant Managing Editor
mm mm mm mm mm mm
Creation of a separate Agrr- ' r
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iculture campus south of the Agrmm
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".J iculture Science Building will be
s(
the third in a four part plan of
long range campus redevelopment, President John Oswald
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said this morning.
The campus, "will bring together several of the agricul'1
'
ture functions scattered around
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wiiiwi'iirii-''- ''
campus and begin to develop
an agriculture complex," Presii&
m.
- dent Oswald said.
'
lif t
Initial announcement of the
campus was made by the president Tuesday at an annual meetr
(i
ing of the Kyana Milk Producers
Association at the Kentucky Fair
and Exposition Center in Louis1i
y
ville.
Dr. Oswald could gie no
estimate as to the complex's total
cost. Dr. Oswald told the Kernel
it would be a continuation of
the overall physical development
.1
of the University.
The first step is the central
An engineer's education is not all slide rules and
log tables. campus plan, which has already
Prospective engineers Tuesday were showing their talent at scaling been designed by Crane and
one of the Engineering Annex's walls.
Gorwich Associates of Chicago.
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sfort editorial campaign: Page

Two.
SAaberg
Three.
Editor

tet tonight:

recital
discusses

admission

fag

standards

here: Page Four.

.rp?

c

Scaling Rule

Further steps include outlining

a Medical Center Complex, the

Agriculture Complex, aiidfinall)

a plan for the use of lands not
only on campus but in outlying

areas such as Spindletop and
Coldstream Farm.
"This should very definitel)
strengthen our teaching and research and bring together departments scattered in buildings
quite far apart w hile at the same
time it should give us better
coordination," Dr. William Seay,
dean of the College of Agriculture, said.
The first building to be constructed will house the newly
consolidated Department of Animal Science, composed of animal, dairy, and poultry sciences,
Dr. Oswald said.
About $1.8 million had been

UK Professor J. E. Reeves Plans

Congressional Reapportionment

'Angel Street'
To Be Staged
"Angel Street," the classic
thriller by Englishman Patrick
Hamilton, will be staged by Lexington's Studio Players this Friday and Saturday evenings at
the Bell Court Carriage House.
It will also be presented again
March 11 and 12.
Mrs. Charlene Butwell will
be seen In the feminine lead.
She is the wife of Prof. Richard
Butwell, director of the School of
Diplomacy.
The performances will be at
8:30. Tickets can be reserved
by calling
277-650- 1.

insure passage before the deadline for candidates to file for
the May 24 primaries. The state
legislature dissolves on March
IS. The deadline for filing as a
candidate for the May elections
is March 31.
"My plan has divided the
state as nearly as possible according to the number and political affiliation of the population," Dr. Reeves said.
Under Dr. Reeves' plan there
will be an average of 430,000
people in each of the 7 districts.
"Supreme Court decisions
have indicated that they would
allow as much as 15 percent
deviation from complete equality
in the districts; my plan deviates
about 10 percent," Dr. Reeves
said.
Part of Dr. Reeves' plan includes widening the first district to include Union and Webster County. Also, the plan would
take Mason County from the
mountain district and include
it in the bluegrass district.
Jefferson County would be
divided by a line that would
run through part of Louisville
so that 130,000 people in Jefferson County will go into the
fourth district.
Queried as to who would
introduce his plan to the Assembly, Dr. Reeves said, "I know
a man who will introduce the

bill."

Dr. Reeves, who was active
in Kentucky's 1063 legislative
reapportionment and has worked
closely with the present administration on other matters, said
the governor had not asked him
to prepare a reapportionment
''
plan.

Dam pier named to AP
first team: Poge Six.

Cosmopolitan Club
tion: Page Seven.

revises

constitu-

Three other plans have been
submitted for consideration. One
by Rep. Norbert Blume
which critics say is
nearest to being mathematically correct, but his political divisions of the state are too vast.
Another bill sponsored by
Rep. Kenneth F. Harper
Fort Mitchell) is still in
a House committee.
A third plan was submitted
to Covernor Breathitt by Thomas
Carroll, chairman of the Louisville-Jefferson
County Democratic Executive Committee.
Dr. Reeves prepared a plan
for the 1963 redisricting for the
State House of Representatives.
The plan which passed a special
session of the legislature that
Dr.
year closely resembled
Reeves' plan.

set aside in the bond issue passed
last fall for construction of a
building to hold animal science
and nutrition. However, both Dr.
Oswald and Dean Seay said the
department's subsequent expansion will push the figure well
above that.
"We'll get an architect in
a few months for that building
since planning is going on now
for it," Dean Seay said. "I think
it should be completed in this

biennium."

All the areas now included
in the new Department of Animal
Science will be included in the
first building, he continued.
A new building for an expanded department of Veterinary
Science is envisioned. "Plans
are being made for space for
Continued On Page 8

Board Tables
Motion On Merger
GERDING

Kernel Staff Writer
The Student Center Board
tabled, until the next meeting,
the vote on the proposed constiwhich would
tution and
unite it and Student Congress
into one governing body.
Tuesday night s meeting was
the first time either of the two
groups concerned with the merger
were presented with the new
proposals for student government.
The
committee,
planning
those who wrote the proposed
documents, consisted of all the
members of the Student Center
Senior or Executive Board plus
from
Student
representatives
Congress. The Junior Board members (those who are Student Center committee chairmen) had not
seen the documents until the
meeting.
Student Center Board President, Susan Pillans, said, "We
felt that it was wise to give
the Junior Board the opportunity
to read the documents and study
them on their own. This will
give them a chance to evaluate
and consider the entire consti- by-la-

Kernel Staff Writer
A fourth plan for reapportionment of Kentucky's congressional
districts is "almost ready to be
submitted," according to Dr. J. E.
Reeves, professor of political
science at the University and
author of the plan.
federal court
The three-judg- e
in Louisville has given Governor
Edward T. Breathitt until March
31 to redistrict the state or they
plan to do it themselves. The
governor has said that he will
submit a redisricting plan next
Monday.
This move for reapportionment comes as a result of the
U.S. Supreme Court's "one man,
one vote" ruling which means
that redisricting should be based
on population.
The pressure by the federal
judges for reapportion in this
session of the legislature is to

'Univer-sit- f

SC

By BONNIE

By ROYCE WILLIAMS

starts campus forum,
Soapbox': Poge Five.

Kernel

Agriculture Campus
To Be Constructed

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University of Kentucky1966
MARCH
KY.,

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tution and
before discussing them and calling for a
by-la-

vote."

The structure of the proposed
government, named the University of Kentucky Student Government (UKSG), has a pyramid
type flow down to the administrative Departments.
Each step in this structure
has been planned so that "there
will be a much better communication and representation of
the students with the Universaid
sity's administration,"
Blythe Runsdorf, treasurer of the
Student ('enter Board.
"We want to establish lines
of responsibility so that people
will know where to come when
they want something done," she
added.
Miss Pillans said about the

document, "1 think this is a
very substantial constitution, the
more the students become familiar
with it, they will see its many

advantages. Basically it can very
feasibly work in our situation
at UK."

SC House Rules Clarified
Four points contained in the
House Rules,
concerning intoxicating beverages, gambling, decorum, and
unattended children, were clarified by the Student Center Board
at Tuesday's meeting.
"The House Rides on these
points aie vague, and the night
supervisors, in particular, want
us to make them more definite
and distinct," said Student Center Board President Susan Pillans.
The first rule in question
states, "all persons shall preserve their decorum in the building." The word "decorum" was
further defined by the Board,
to mean; watching language used

Student Center

in the building, stopping public displays of affection, known
commonly as "PDA," and the
curtailing of overall rowdy and
disturbing behavior while in the
building.
The next rule questioned
states that "no intoxicating beverages can be brought into the
building." This was clarified or
amended by basing it on a behavioral level. If rowdy behavior
occurs because of intoxication
the offender will be asked to leave
the building.
Unchaperoncd children have
posed a problem in the Student
Center. Miss Mackie Ransdall
of the Student Center said, "We
do not want to become baby

sitters while parents go elsewhere."
"The original rule," she continued, "was made to keep down
disturbances, and this does cause
a problem from time to time."
The clarified ride now states

that all children under 16 who are
not chaperoned and who cause
a disturbance will not be permitted in the building.
The fourth rule discussed,
states, "there will be no gambling allowed in the Student
Center." The problem arises here
in defining w hat constitutes gambling. The clarified rule states
that there can be no exchange
of money across a table.

* 2

16.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, March 2,

Editorial Campaign
Against University Faculty, Policy
SDS Launches
PHIL

By

STRAW

Kernel Staff Writer
The UK chapter of Student
for a Democratic Society, through
their Bourbon and Tobacco
Cazette, will make an appeal in
their next issue for letters or
"some kind of response" from
students who have "complaints
or problems with University
faculty or about University policy
in general."
The decision to launch the
editorial campaign was made at
a chapter meeting held last night
in the Student Center.
After a length) discussion,
the members decided to tet the
resjxnse of student reaction to
what the SDS members called
"unfair administrative practices
of the University."
The group, desiring to be
quoted as a whole instead of
individually, agreed that the best
way to measure "student discontentment on the UK campus"
was to issue the appeal and vsait
for reaction to it.
They decided that it would
be "wrong to assume that a
great number of students are
dissatisfied until we are sure we
have enough strength to warrant
any action on the part of SDS."
The editorial appeal idea was

-

touched off by what SDS called paper will bring it out," another
"a great deal of reaction" from member said.
If response to the chapter's
the Kentucky Kernel story of
it
Feb. 16, quoting a UK coed as inquiries is strong enough,
Dean of Women Doris was deckled that a "University
charging
reform workshop" would be
Seward of "intimidation."
by thecampus SDS group.
The coed, Margret L. Wads-wortIt was felt that the workshop
an Arts and Sciences
junior from Chattanooga, Tenn., would be "useful," such a reform
"The purpose of
told the Kernel she was questioned in December by Dean workshop would he to air and
Seward and her assistant, Betty discuss student discontent with
areas of University
Sutherland, concerning her al- certain
policy," one member explained.
use of narcotics.
leged
An example of "policy in quesWhen asked if Miss Wads-wort- h
or any other students were tion" is the in loco parentis
the University.
questioned. Dean Seward said, role exercised by
"This is when the University
"I won't tell ou (the Kernel)
moves into the role of the parent,"
that."
One SDS member did say that one member said, "and assumes
and resxnsibility
"many of our members have been the judgment
concerned with the University that is normally left up to our
system and its policies for a parents."
It was also agreed that there
long time."
The SDS member continued are "problems" in the freshman
academic areas that might be
by saying that after the
tory
Miss Wadsworth had cleared up with discussion.
concerning
Further details of the prosome students apappeared,
the coed "priv ately and posed workshop's "course of
proached
voiced complaints similar to action" are incomplete pending
those with which Margret had results of the Bourbon and Tobacco Gazette's appeal.
been charged."
The next issue will be avail"If there is a considerable
able "sometime before spring
amount of
friction on the campus, we hope vacation."
the appeal through our news- eon-ducte- d

student-administratio- n

-

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Deadline lor acceptance of classified
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Room 111 or 113. Journalism Bldg.
Advertisers of rooms and apartments listed In The Kentucky Kernel
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to pick up in the afternoon.
Votes will be counted tonight
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New officers and Senateincm-bcr- s
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, March 2,

I9fi6-- .1

Student Concert Band
To Perform Sunday
By KAREN DOYER

Kernel Staff Writer
The talent of many fine musicians at UK was going to waste,
said Harry Clarke, assistant director of hands, and thus, the Concert
Hand was formed.
The Concert Hand was organthey could have listened to
c
ized for talented
more," he added. "We want to
majors "who just didn't havethe play the kind of music that people
the opportunity to play," said will look forward to."
The band has had only six
Clarke.
The
hand will make rehearsals in preparation for the
its debut at 6:30 p.m. March 8 March 8 concert. "This won't be
with an informal concert in the the best, but it will be the most
Student Center Ballroom. A vaimportant concert the band will
ever give," Clarke said.
inriety of music will be heard,
The informality of the concert
cluding traditional band numis stressed.
"That is why we
and feature selecbers, marches,
picked 6:30 as the time, instead
tions from the Sound of Music.
"1 guess the band was my of 8," said Clarke. "It is an inidea," said Clarke. "I would formal time, and the students
and public can plan to spend this
like the students to feel like this
hour after dinner in leisurely enis their band, and we hope they
will put their support behind it joyment of music."
just as they support the marching
non-musi-

I,-

-

J

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MHHMiV

French Troubadours To Sing

Marc and Andre, two French singers, will enter- tain at Memorial Hall, 8:15 p.m. Thursday. The
duo arc being sponsored by the Modern Foreign

band."

Languages Department and Pi Delta Phi, honorary
French fraternity,

Others Join In Concert

Shaberg Recital Is Tonight

forming in the Opera Theatre's coming to UK. She has sung with
the Santa Fe Opera Company and
production of "Patience."
She pointed out that the work Burbank Civic Opera Company.
Nathaniel Patch studied piano
of Hyatt's that she will sing is
at the Eastman school and also
interesting because of the changing moods of the songs and his with Raymond Wilson and Abby
use of interval leaps. These Whiteside. He has been a soloist
factors naturally make the work with the Rochester Philharmonic
more difficult for the performer.
Orchestra, the Nashville SymShaberg, an assistant proMiss House holds a master of phony, the Louisville Orchestra,
fessor of music at UK, will be Fine Arts
degree and taught at and several UK music groups such
joined by Nathanial Patch, UK the University of Iowa before as the string quartet.
professor of music, and Miss
Sheila House, UK voice instructor, .in some of the numbers he
will perform.
Termed by Shaberg as a "recital of romantic music that everyone should enjoy," the performServing Special 11' A.M. 'til '9. P.M.
ance will include an original work
of UK trumpet instructor Jack
Person
Hyatt. The work is entitled
"Songs of Khayjam," and inA heaping serving of delicious
cludes three songs which Miss
spaghetti served with French
House will sing accompanied by
bread.
Hyatt and Shaberg.
Remember . . . Thursday is Pancake Day
Other selections included on
the program are: Beethoven's
"Sonata Op. 17;" Schubert's
"Auf Dem Strom Op. 119;"
Rose and Lime
Strauss' "Concerto Op. 11."
an Arts and
(Across from UK Med. Center)
James Darling,
OPEN 7 l.m. til f p.m.
Sciences junior, and Don SulArts and Sciences senior,
livan,
will assist in the performance
also. Darling plays the trumpet
to wear?
to go?
and Sullivan precussion instruments.
Shaberg is a graduate of the
Eastman School of Music of the
Student .
University of Rochester and
BeCenter
Michigan State University.
fore coining to UK Mr. Shaberg
Board's
was the band director and theory
instructor at Hope College, and
the horn instructor at Michigan
State University.
Besides performing in this recital, Miss House is currently per

The story of Roy Shaberg's
recital is how it grew from a
one-ma- n
affair to a performance
h
involving five other
musicians. The recital will be
presented at 8 o'clock tonight in
Memorial Hall and is open to the
public.

WATCHES
DIAMONDS

There were no tryouts or auditions as such. Since the formation
of the band, however, tryouts
have been held, to select chairs
for positions.
This is not just a band for
those who have a tremendous
interest in music, but are interested in music in general,
Clarke said.
"Our desire is to provide the
kind of music students can enjoy.
They should go away feeling like

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"V

Many of yesterday's jobs have already disappeared. And
many of today's jobs won't exist in the future. That may
be true of the job you have.
Of course, it's progress but progress also brings with
it opportunity. New jobs, demanding new skills. Brighter
futures, for those who are qualified.

Occasion
CALL

.

MAN IN SEARCH
OF A FUTURE

7:30 p.m.

FLOWERS

v.,.

;

won 't get tomorrow's jobs with yesterday's skills

But you can qualify for tomorrow's jobs by
now. You'll gain a head start on learning a new skill, earning a better living.
isn't, easy. You have to want a brighter
If you do, ask the local office of your state employ
future.
ment service about it
Train bo

for tomorrow's jets

* -- '

Admission Standards
Last week's legislative creation
of four more state universities provides UK with a unique opportunity it has long needed but has
been unable to accomplish. By
making a university education
available to all Kcntuckians, UK
should no longer be bound to hold
its doors open to all state residents
desiring university experience.
It is hoped the renaming of the
four colleges will be more than a
matter of semantics and that the
quality implied by their presidents
will be given their students. This
expanded higher education system
should somewhat alleviate the
strain on UK of being the only
state university.
Therefore, this seems a proper
admission
time to begin
an idea which
requirements here,
often has been discussed by faculty
and administrators.
A suggestion as to future admission requirements is found in
the Academic Program, the blueprint for UK's academic future. A
number of basic freshman courses
have been eliminated while a
blanket of miniUniversity-wid- e
mum graduation requirements has
been established. Furthermore, the
evolution into a predominantly
upper division and graduate university, which President John
Oswald has described, is based,
many believe, upon a more selective lower division student body.
The fact that 91 percent of those
students entering UK with a high
school average of less than "C"
are marked for failure, is an even
greater reason for imposing entrance requirements. On the other
hand, Dr. Harriet Rose, director
of Counseling and Testing, has
said a 1962 study revealed only
38.5 percent of those with "G"
or better averages did not remain
hereafter three semesters. The first
group of students are advised not
to attempt University work; yet
since they are state residents they
are not refused admission.
N
At the same time, studies of
scores made on the American College Test show that given a uni- in-sta- te

A New Column
The Kernel begins today, on an
experimental basis, a new column
designed to provide members of the
University community with a forum
for expression of opinion on perintinent subjects of campus-wid- e
terest.
Entitled "The University Soapbox," the nature of articles published will in no way represent
Kernel editorial policy, but will
be entirely the writer's opinion.
The column, to be published weekly, is not to be used for rebuttal
of Kernel editorials, although opinions contained within may differ
from this editorial policy. Comments pertaining to editorials will
still be discussed in the "Letters
To The Editor" column,
For purposes of space, "Soapbox" articles will be limited to
not more than 600 words. Publication of all articles will remain
under the discretion of the Editor,
and all articles are subject to
editing.-

-

...

.

..

form raw score, students compete
with less success at institutions
granting graduate work at the doc-

"

"Wy",i"s

'"

W Na'""

toral level than they do at those
offering only a bachelor's or a
master's degree program. It is into
the latter category that Kentucky's
four new state universities fit. It
is also generally conceded that
people who cannot and have not
done well at UK perform adequately
at the smaller state schools.
By comparison, admission of
students is governed
by the prospective success the student is likely to have at UK, based
on a combination of past records
and ACT scores. If he is not likely
to be academically successful as
indications show those with high
school records less than "C" are
not he is not admitted.
The same policy, or indeed one
even more stringent, should be
initiated by the University for instate students. It is a waste of
the student's time, monkey and
motivation to go through with the
complicated business of becoming
a student only to be turned out
three semesters later and at least
$2,500 poorer. Perhaps even more
dismaying now is the loss of time
and effort spent by professors who
might be upgrading the whole university rather than spending it on
the freshman against whom the
odds of passing are 91 to 9.
out-of-sta- te

Letters To The Editor:

Reader Views Protesters9 Spirit
As beatings, stabbings, arrests,

To The Editor:

In the past few months UK
students actively opposed to LBJ's
Vietnam policy have undergone
great public pressure.
One student was stabbed by
neighbors, sued by his landlord,
and unlawfully beaten by the police
in his own apartment. Two others
were simply unjustly arrested. Another was forced to quit school
because her disowning parents
stopped financing her. Also looming have been threats of departmental dismissals and draft status
reclassifications.
Yet these students' ideals stand
firm, and their activity, solidarity,
and spirit multiply.
All the above mentioned students participated inTuesday's protest. The new public sanction took
the form of eggs (Grade A). The
protesters clothes were ruined, but
their spirit went unscathed.
Vietnamese, also, have ideals.
One is the independence, unification, and self determination granted
them in the 1954 Geneva provisions.

miscellaneous threats, and eggs are
futile in destroying an American
idealist's spirit, so are gas, guns,
bombs, other military threats, and
phony and meaningless peace proposals only catalyzing the spirit
of those Vietnamese idealists whom
the USA has forced to fight a
second war for independence.
ALLEN RUBIN
Graduate Student in Psychology

Eggs And TJw Greeks
Once more patriotic youth has
risen to the call and in glorious
combat arduously vanquished a
group of malcontent defeatists.
Naturally a group which represents itself with a beer mug, paddle and dirty sweat shirt must
find a novel way of showing its
manhood. Throwing eggs and spitting upon those who would maliciously protest was a brilliant bit
of tactical strategy. Although some
of the SDS's campfollowers treacherously destroyed several cartons

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily

ESTABLISHED

University of Kentucky

1894

WEDNESDAY,

Walter Grant,

MARCH 2, 1966

Editor-in-Chi-

Linda Mills, Executive Editor

Terence Hunt, Managing Editor
John Zeh, News Editor
Judy Chisham, Associate News Editor
Kenneth Green, Associate News Editor
Henry Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Carolyn Williams, Feature Editor
Marcaret Bailey, Arts Editor
William

Business Staff
KNApp

Y. V.Y. VmVhvw 'Hcnoatk. Circulation- Manager- -

of ammunition, these amazons were

quickly put to rout by our heroic
and manly Greeks. It is unfortunate that several bystanders were
mistakingly pelted by our intrepid
warriors, but, as Conrad Tors said:
"It is fitting to burn a hundred
innocent in order to destroy one
heretic among them."
Once again the Greeks have
shown us their true campus spirit,
their Christian patriotism and their
usual adult standards. Such mature
enthusiasm should not go unrewarded. Oh, yes, the snide comment that it was the House Mothers
who laid all those eggs is, of
course, ridiculous, they could not
have possibly.
CARL RICHARD SEIDER
A&S Junior

* "Inside Report"

.THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, March 2,

tty Ko,cml

LITTLE

Economic Administration
Shows Distressing Signs

Just four months old, the Eco
nomic Development Administration (EDA) is showing distressing symptoms of the same malady that proved fatal to the late,
unlamented Area Redevelopment
Administration (ARA).
The malady is the political
pork barrel syndrome that transformed ARA from an agency
aimed at developing economically depressed areas into a political slush fund for Democratic
Congressmen. The agency died,
to be replaced by EDA.
It had been hoped that EDA
would avoid becoming Uncle
Pork by sticking to rigid formulas based on economic need, on
a regional basis as much as

possible. Moreover, th ere wa
high hope for its boss, Assistant Secretary of Commerce Eugene Foley, a bright and imaginative political comer who wrote
an enviable record as head of
the Small Business Administration.
However, Foley has been doing so much travelling around
the country, singing the praises
of EDA, that his agency has
been slow getting off the mark.
But far more significant, two
incidents in New York now evoke
the pork barrel syndrome.
On Feb. 14, Foley travelled
through economically depressed
sections of northern New York
state as the guest of Sen. Robert

University Soapbox
m

I

'Thinking' Man
Plagues Society

By THOMAS McPEAK
The democratic, religious, and moral principles upon which our
society is established are being undermined by an existing element
which seems to have been given little consideration in either past
or present civilizations. Although many members of our culture
are upholding these principles, there is a particular type of man
who is, through no conscious effort of his own, destroying the
original principles of our civilization and causing us to rush blindly
toward the apocalypse of the earthly existence as we know it.
This man is a "thinking danger". The Thinker is probably a
very sensitive person. He is continually obsessed by a desire to see
people and situations for what they are and not for what they
'
.
appear to be of what they might become.';"" The effects on the ignorant man, generated from his association
with the thinker, are somewhat different from those effects resulting
from the educated man's association with the Thinking Danger.
However, if the Thinke