xt7vdn3zw719 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vdn3zw719/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660211  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 11, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 11, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7vdn3zw719 section xt7vdn3zw719 Inside Today's Kernel
Southeast Community College displays
unusual magazines: Poge Two.
Roman's started Valentine's Day: Page
Three.

Vol. LVI1, No. 80

University of Kentucky
FEB.
KY.,
I960
LEXINGTON,

S

N

FRIDAY,

':

".y

11,

U":

Eight Pages

-

'

-:-

Editor discusses government consolidation: Poge Four.

Lost in series on UK student and religion discusses administrators' roles:
Page Five.

Professor

Poge Sii.

game

to be televised:

says retirement requirement
tor judges may remove good judges,
too: Poge Seven.

KSA Report
Stir M ixmp

::'v-''j

On SC Floor

By TERENCE HUNT
Kernel Managing Editor
The Kentucky Student Association bill was reported favorably
out of a Student Congress review committee Thursday night,
despite two committee members comments that the committee
has never met yet.
Carson Porter, chairman of drop membership in the National
the KSA committee and author Student Association. Both bills
of the bill, reported the bill were referred to investigating
three-ma- n
committees but action
saying, "the committee talked
had been put off until this week
fait over and has reported it
on the KSA. (In a meeting two
Drs. Charles Wilson and Horace Norrell, extreme Drs. Bernard Rand and Vural Bcrtan, far left,
vorably.
weeks ago Congress decided to
both of the University's Department of also of the Surgery Department, will assist in
arright,
Preceding Porter's late
drop NSA affiliation.)
rival at the meeting another comSurgery, were awarded a $10,400 grant Thursday the research. Medical Center Vice President
After the Congress meeting
from the Easter Seal Research Foundation for William R. Willard, middle, holds the research
mittee member, Barry Brooks,
Porter and Brooks agreed that
work seeking the cause of infantile hydrocephalus.
said in response to the Congress
grant. (See story, page 8)
the three members of the comcall for a report, that Porter
"hadn't called the committee mittee, including Miss Britton,
had met and had decided to
yet. After Porter's report, howapprove continued Congress inever, Brooks clarified the statevestigation of the possibilities
ment and said Porter hadn't
called a meeting for "last week." of establishing the proposed Kentucky association of college stuThe third member of the comdents, a statewide student govmittee, Mary Jane Britton, who
ernment association.
was absent from the Congress
Miss Britton, in her denial,
meeting and did not know the
rine Corps doctors who are stasaid, however, "I don't know
includes the directorship of St.
KSA bill was reported, said later,
By PHIL STRAW
,
tioned in the First Corps area Louis' Washington University's "we have never met together what Carson has done with it."
Kernel Staff Writer
Medical School Exchange ProDr. Ben Eiseman, professor to surgically treat battle casuCongress voted to send at
concerning the committee. Carof surgery and chairman of the alties.
with Thailand from 1950-5son hasn't let me know one way least one delegate to a meeting
gram
at Murray State College March
Medical Center's Department of
Although he served in the At the same time he was visiting
or the other on the bill."
at the Siriraj and
is taking a six to eight Navy Medical Corps during surgeon
The KSA bill was introduced 19 concerning a Murray proposal
Surgery,
week leave to serve as a surgical World War II and currently holds
Chulalongkorn Medical School four weeks ago, the same night to establish an association of
consultant to Naval and Marine the rank of commander in the of Bangkok, Thailand.
Continued On Pare 8
the proposal was presented to
Corps units based at DaNang, Naval Reserves, Dr. Eiseman is
South Vietnam.
going to Vietnam only in an adDr. Eiseman will assist Ma- - visory capacity upon the Navy
Department's request.
Dr. Eiseman, who received
his A.B. degree from Yale University and his M.D. degree from
the Harvard Medical School was
Extra sensory perception as sider the bill to form a Kentucky
Since Miss Britton and Brooks
contacted by the Navy Departa means of achieving committee
said during the evening that no
student government association,
asked to serve
ment last fall, and
consensus was introduced at Stuwhich was introduced when the meeting had been held to conthe armed forces on a limited dent
sider the KSA bill, but Porter
Congress meeting Thursday bill to leave the National Student
in South Vietnam.
time basis
night by Carson Porter, chairman Association was first brought to presented the bill favorably from
He will leave Lexington for of
the Kentucky Student As- the SC floor.
committee, it was assumed that
Washington, D.C. Sunday. He sociation committee.
the final committee decision was
At the beginning of the meetwill then fly from the nation's
ESP seemed to be the only
Brooks informed the SC mem- taken as Porter entered the Conto Vietnam Thursday
ing,
Capitol
explanation for conflicting reports bers that the committee had not gress meeting by mental teleand should arrive at his desby the three committee members
tination by the end of that week. on whether or not the committee met to consider the proposal. pathy.
Porter, apparently, is the key
About half an hour later, Porter,
Dr. Eiseman came to UK
had ever met to discuss the KSA
receiver of the telepathy trio
from the University of Colorado
arriving late, made a favorable because he was the
bill.
only member
committee report on the KSA bill.
School of Medicine where he had
of the committee who could
Two of t he t hr
been associate professor of surMiss Britton, absent from the clearly remember that they had
(Porter, Barry Brooks, and
gery and professor for eight years.
Mary Jane Britton) said they did meeting, afterwards also said the
His. long list of appointments not meet as a committee to con
DR. BEN EISEMAN
Continued On Pare 8
committee had never met.

:'

Jt

N

L

UK Professor Of Surgery

Takes Vietnam Assignment
2.

ESP In SC

Now What Really Happened?

com-mitt-

ee

Through 'Spirit Of Cooperation'

Psychiatrist Plans Attack On Alcoholism
By RON HERRON

Kernel Staff Writer
Dale Farabee, newly
FRANKFORT-D- r.
chairman of the governor's comappointed
mission to study alcoholism, plans to attack
the alcoholic problem at the local level,
through a "spirit of cooperation" within
a network of some 20 state centers to be
set up in the next year.
Dr. Farabee, former head of UK's student psychiatric service, was named state
commissioner of mental health last fall.
The community system was begun in
Elizabethtown, where a minister spends
one day a week counseling with alcoholics
at the local hospital, he said in an interview Wednesday.
This embryonic program and others will

hopefully be coordinated into the statewide
development.
This coordination, Dr. Farabee said,
should make up for weaknesses resulting
from decentralization of the program.
Dr. Farabee saw the future worker of
the system as "a part of the team approach.
He will have access to other sources of

help."

Not all members of this team will need
be "terribly professional," he emphasized.
Although psychiatrists will be necessary,
the local units will be headed by those
"representative of the community lay population, plus some professional people."
Much work in the past has been done
by the alcoholics themselves, through Alcoholics Anonymous, for instance. One of

the emphases of Dr. Farabee's program
will be to extend this field of interest, or
at least to provide opportunities for
who are already interested in
the problem.
"Public education" to acquaint the community with alcoholism as a treatable diseaseis a related goal of the program.
It is expected that this "education" will
reap not only sympathy for the program,
but possible future workers as well. Although the commission has found cooperation from Alcoholics Anonymous in the
past, the new statewide system will be
oriented more toward outside help for the
alcoholic.

Continued On Pare

7

DR. DALE FARABEE

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Fc1.

11, 19G6

Community College
Magazine Exhibit
Unusual, Editors Say

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Magazine Exhibit

Registration Set
For NTE Test

AMERICA'S PLAYBOY HERO

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"Less than two weeks remain
for persons planning to take the

JAZZ

National Teacher Examinations
at UK on March 19 to submit
their registrations to Educational
Testing Service, Princeton, N.J.,"

SESSION

Thomas Greenland,
supervisor announced today.
All seniors in the UK College
of Education and UK candidates
for an MA degree in education
are required to take the test.
"Information bulletins are
available from . the University
Testing Service, Room 309, White
Hall," Greenland said.
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Student opinion at the Southeast Community College has been
favorable. The comments ranged
from "It's very interesting and
stimulating exhibit" to "Where
did they find all those magazines," but all agreed that the
student, and anyone else interested, is presented with a fine
opportunity to examine and read
literary publications from, the
world over.

Classified advertisements, 5 cents per
word ($1.00 minimum).
Deadline for acceptance of classified
copy is p.m. the day preceding; pubMANUSCRIPTS TYPED
IBM, Pica, lication. 3To
place classified ad come to
Carbon Ribbon, 50c pp. 5c per carbon.
Room 111 or 113, Journalism Bide.
after 6 p.m.
Givens, 255-01Advertisers 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

Cams Vood

PARTLY FILMED NEAR

J)

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photographs.

TYPING

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Double Feature

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statements willalsobedisplayed.
One of the more interesting
aspects of the exhibit is the large
number of letters of appreciation
written by the editors. Many
editors indicated that such an
exhibit as this one is unique and
that there should be more. Some
asked for news stories about it,
and Saturday Review requested

CLASSIFIED

Emma

THE GREATEST COMEDY OF ALL TIME!

presents

x

writers continue to publish here,"
Mr. Cadle asserted.
In addition to the continental
United States, Alaska, and Puerto
Rico, thirteen countries arc represented. The magazines from the
Peoples Republic of China, although certainly not considered
as literary publications, arc nonetheless interesting to the reader.
Each editor has made available a printed statement that
gives a brief history of his magazine, its editorial policy, and
manuscript requirements. These

By BRUCE AYERS
Kernel Correspondent
An exhibit of over 500 literary
magazines from around the world
will be at UK from today through
March 10. The magazines will be
on display in the entrance lobby
of the Library.
The exhibit, collected by the
library staff of the Southeast
Community College, where it has
been on display since Jan. 14, is
divided into three categories:
magazines of a general nature
which publish poetry and fiction,
college magazines edited by and
primarily for college students,
and critical magazines, devoted
to an interpretation of literature.
The purpose of the exhibit,
said Dean Cadle, Southeast Community College librarian, "is to
bring together in one spot as
many literary publications as we
could collect expensive and
luxurious, mimeographed and
cheap, professional and amateurish, angry and vulgar, but all
exciting in the hope that some
students might be stimulated by
them.
"For magazines are responsible for the endurance and
especially the origin of much of
the world s literature. This is
where literary movements begin;
most beginning writers publish
here first; and at least half
of the established professional

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K

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i

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
pottage 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 Hoard
of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Linda Gassaway,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1884. became the Hecord in lO0, and the Idea
In 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.

J

GEORGE
HAMILTON

SUSAN

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groovier gimmicks and lots more gall!

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail $7.00

KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
Editor
2321
News Desk. Sports. Womtn'i Editor,
Socials
2320
Advertising, Business. Circulation 2319

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THURSDAY and SUNDAY or
1:40. 3:40, 5:40, 7:45, 9:45
FRIDAY and SATURDAY at
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb.

English
By DRUCE AYERS
Kernel Correspondent

-

Arcld-mwle-

s

once said that !,e could
"ove the world with a larKe
enough iwle and a solid place
to stand.
Lee Pennington, an
English
insturctor at the University's
Southeast Community College,
feels his students are the
pole
and the college is the solid
ground. Together they can move
the world, he believes.
"The Appalachian area has
niore possibilities for permanent
literature than any other part of
the country," says Pennington.
"This area is one of a few
in the world that has not been
infiltrated
with many other
cultures.
"The people here can trace
their heritage back to England
and Scotland where most of their
forefathers came from. Thus a
writing about one can pertain
to the whole. This is difficult
to achieve in other societies.
Pennington came to Appa-lachi- a
and the Southeast Community College this year after

Instructor-Poe- t

he received his masters degree
in English from the University of
Iowa. He is a native Kcntuckian,
born and raised in Greenup
County, except for a temporary
stay in Baltimore during World
War II. He had the internationally-known
Jesse Stuart for
a principal
at McKell High
School.
Since he's arrived at the community college here, he has been
an inspirational influence to his
students. So far they've had 43
works of creative writing accepted by nine different national
magazines.
Last semester his students began publishing "Spirit Hollow,"
a magazine of short stories and
poems.
Explaining that his students
seem to become excited quickly
about their writing, he said, "I
think that the reason might be
that these students, having lived
in an area branded with poverty
and called depressed, are naturally excited to find that their
writing is as good as that which
comes from any other region.
They are realizing they don't

lfi--

3

Inspires Students

have to take second place to anyone, anywhere."
"I felt and still feel that
Harlan County is one of the most
interesting places in the world
and this is certainly, in my
conducive
to gcxxl
opinion,

writing."

he

Although

teaching

11,

five classes

stays

at the

busy
col-

lege, giving poetry readings and

ft
t

sponsoring the college newspaper,
he still finds time to write.
Some 25 of his jx)cms have
been accepted since January. This
brings his total of accepted or
published ix)cms in more than
CO
magazines to 262. He has also
had eight short stories and about
a dozen articles published.
In his "spare time" he somehow manages to play the guitar
and banjo and sing many of the
mountain ballads of the region
that have been handed down from
generation to generation.
However, the student comes
first with Pennington. He is never

too busy to see an aspiringwriter
to a
or offer encouragement
struggling English student.
When asked what should be
most in
young
encouraged
writers, he was (juick to reply:
"I think individuality should
be encouraged on the part of the
young writer. Too much writing
is becoming subordinate to the
actual writing programs established by various institutions."
"Students need to be given
the freedom to write," he said.
"We give the so called great
writers such freedoms, yet we
deny them to our students."

4

f

QSSi

Jlii
ed ana

Romans 'Started'
Valentine's Day

(MILD

women took over St. Valentine's
Day. Today they get candy,
flowers, and often more expensive
gifts, while the men have all but
been forgotten.
Valentine's Day has become a
d
occasion, and many
times the men don't even receive
the traditional valentine card
from their admirers.
Valentine's Day has only an
It would be well to remember
accidental connection with the that
during the Roman Lupertwo saints who gave it their name calia . . . the men AND women
when they were martyred on sent messages and gifts. So,
February 14, but rather grew out "when celebratinga Roman Celeof the ancient Roman "Feast of bration, do as the Romans did."
Lupercalia," or the celebration of
spring in general.
By ANN SCHNEIDER

Kernel Staff Writer
If you men are blaming the
martyred St. Valentine because
you have to dig into your pockets
to buy candy or flowers for your
girlfriends for the annual day on
February 14, it's time to shift
the blame.

The "Feast of Lupercalia"
was a bit more exciting than just
sending valentine cards or heart-shape- d
boxes of candy.
In Rome, on the eve of Lupercalia, the young men and unmarried women put their names
into a container. Each one drew
a name, and so each gentleman
chose a lady as his valentine, and
became the valentine of a young
lady.
For the next year this couple
exchanged gifts and messages.
These messages, our valentine
cards, are about all that's left
of
"Feast
of the original

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women not only know who their
admirers are, but even expect a
valentine from them, in the beginning, and up through the 19th
century, valentines were always
anonymous.
When the Romans became
Christianized, they exchanged
the pagan celebration of Lupercalia on February 15 for February
14, the day the two St. Valentines
were martyred, and the celebration has come down to us on
that day.
Somewhere along the line the

1CK

Kernel Photo by Dean Cadle

NOT
BE

Lupercalia."
In contrast to today when the

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* Merge AWS Into SC

long-establish- ed

Equality in treatment and representation can be better assured by
making men and women subject to
the same central governing

Unjust Travel Ban
Predictably enough, the State
Department decided last week to
revoke the passports of the three
Americans who violated its travel
regulations by visiting China and
North Vietnam in January.
The department reached its decision two days after the resumption
of American bombingof North Vietnam.
Yale professor Staughton Lynd,
Marxist author Herbert Aptheker,
who was the central figure in the recent Speakers' Rule controversy at
Ohio State, and Thomas E. Hayden,
a founder of Students for a Democratic Society, returned to the
United States Jan. 9.
But the State Department refrained from action against them
until last week, so as not to
jeopardize the President's now
abandoned peace offensive.
The next day, the State Department announced it would also
revoke passports of Michael C.
Meyerson, international secretary
ofW.E.B. DuBois Clubs, and three
others for an unauthorized trip to
North Vietnam in August.
We can see no valid reason for
the State Department travel ban.
It presents an insurmountable

Right?"

A-Bom-

One of the questions traditionally asked of applicants for AWS
Senate positions is why do women
need a separate government? And
we might echo, why do they?
We believe the needs of the
women students can be dealt with
effectively within one organization
which deals with the nonacademic
life of all students. It isincongrtious
that women be treated on an equal
scale within the main segment of the
University yet subject to a separate
governing body and a separate set
of rules governing their nonacademic life.
Perhaps more sensible rules governing coed's lives, including their
relations with men, could be made
by a coeducationtional group.
Such a merger, too, would have
obvious budgeting advantages, as
maintenance of a separate governing unit means extra expense.
Another similar merger which
might also be made is the combination of the Dean of Women and
the Dean of Men's office into a
single office, the Dean of Students.
This move has already been taken
in some of the more progressive universities.

Recently a possible merger
between the Student Center Board
and Student Congress has been proposed. Such a merger may have
some merit and needs careful consideration, but there is another
possible merger which seems far
more logical.
AWS should be merged with
Student Congress, so that all students are subject to one governing
body. Also included in the merger
should be a joining of the Student
Congress Judiciary Board and the
Women's Advisory Council.
This is a modern university that
supposedly looks upon its male and
female students as equals. But a
tradition on the
campus, and elsewhere around the
nation, has been a separate organization to govern women.
Here at UK, as in many other
colleges throughout the nation,
AWS has been far more conservative and parental than the main
student government and, with the
blessing of administrators, has held
a much tighter reign over regulations for coeds than have student
governments over students in general.
Administrators have, in granting
AWS the authority to exercise so
much control over its involuntary
members, delegated far more power
to this women's organization than
to the more representative student
governments.

Know Where Wo

We
Wait, Lei'. Do It Slowly-Of
,8t The First Couple

barrier to international understanding and communication by
as
labeling certain territories
but which have not been
"enemy,"
declared to be enemy by Congress.
What were described as "adminsources" offered two
istrative
reasons for the ban last week.
One was to "head off any tendency by private individuals to travel
to various world capitals as
negotiators." But there is
already a law on the books which
prohibits exactly that the Logan
Act of 1799.
self-appoint- ed

The other was to "make regulations for the protection of
American citizens." This is plainly
unrealistic.
We would not deny the government's right to restrict travel in
time of war. But no war has been
declared, and an American citizen
in Havana, Hanoi or Peking would
be in no more danger of his life
than he is every day in thiscountry
from accidents and criminals.
Maybe the State Department
should also ban travel down dark
alleys in Washington.
Ohio State iMntern
Ohio State University

1

nt&t44iMrrci

POST"

Education Aid Abroad1
President Johnson's special
message on international education and health sets the stage
for a new concept of education's
role in foreign affairs.
In the past, even the best educational work abroad has been
considered an adjunct to economic
aid. Consequently, the Government agencies and the universities involved in such efforts often
handled them as avocations and
afterthoughts. This as John W.
Gardner pointed out in his critique
of such venture more than a year
before he was appointed Secretary
of Health, Education and Welfare often corroded and corrupted
the foreign educational mission of
both Government and the universities.
By moving education to "the
heart of our international relations" and by asking Secretary
Gardner to establish within his
department a Center for International Educational Cooperation,
the President has given notice that
educational leadership rather than
political thinking is to be at the
controls. This innovation may go
a long way toward allaying suspicions abroad which arise whenever a foreign government proclaims itself as the messenger ot

'

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V"

American as well as
educators will feel far
greater kinship with the education
experts of HEW than with officials whose first concern is foreign
aid.
One danger in Mr. Johnson's
proposal is that it may make existing problems appear too easy to
conquer. The obstacles are, in fact,
formidable. Academic as well as
governmental habits of thought
and procedure will have to-- be
changed. The low quality of instruction offered at many American Dependents' Schools abroad
serves as a warning that successful international education requires
high standards of personnel selection.
Domestic educational strength
is indivisible from success overseas. Shortages of highly educated,
competent and committed manpower at home will continue to
jeopardize the American impact
in other lands. This is, of course,
most dramatically shown in the
fields of health and medicine.
Many American hospitals are now
staffed by foreign nurses and doctors, not for reasons of international cooperation but simply because of desperate shortages. Thus,
a far greater effort will be required
to raise at home, in quantity as
well as in quality, the levels of
the professional manpower reserve
in order to meet the global
promise.
The New York Times

learning.
foreign

Editorialette
We

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily

ESTABLISHED

University of Kentucky
1894

FRIDAY, FEB.

Waltlh Chant,

Editor-in-Chie-

11, 1966

f

Executive Editor

Tlhence Hunt, Managing Editor
John Ztii, News Editor
Kenneth Cheen, Amsociate News Editor
Judy Chisham, AmKiate News Editor
lltNHY Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Mahcahet IUiley, Arts Editor
Caholyn Wh li a ms, Eeature Editor
I.iNtM

Mills,

S)

PRESIDENT JOHNSON

notice that the HOTC
sponsors are backing a drive to
collect personal items for the
villagers of Sough Vietnam who
are innocent victims of the war.
We suggest that the drive be
expanded to include the civilians
of North Vietnam who are
just
as innocent and perhaps even more
needy.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb. II,

M inisters Say
DyJUDYCniSHAM

The church is changing its
approach to religion and the
college student, but the role of
the administration in religious
education and propagation is also

important.

Final article in a

"gave thf church

Administrators Important

a place of
prominence only in the commencement ceremonies, official seals,
g
and
activities," and
said the institutions do this
because it "satisfies the outside
world and gives due weight to
fund-raisin-

tradition."
fivc-jxi- rt

series on the UK student and
religion, prepared by Kernel
Associate News Editor Judy
Grisham.
Daniel J. Callahan, a Harvard
faculty member, was earlier cited
as blaming the educational institution for the noninvolvement of
students in religious activities.
He charged that the institution

A study by S.A. Smith, presi-

dent of Stephens College in 1933,
showed 97 percent of the state uni-

versities offered religion courses
in some department and that in
70 state universities an average
of nine courses in religion was
being offered.
"There is a possibility of presenting religious studies as academic offerings within the University without violating the first

amendment or the state statute,"
said the Rev. Don Leak, University religious coordinator.
Mr. Leak said this is a possibility which should be given
top priority if the University is
"to consider itself a University."
"These courses would be
studies about religion rather than
religious studies," he said. These
can be presented with integrity
as academic subjects."
One minister explained that
courses "about religion" describe
tenets of various faiths witli
"exactness and sensitivity" just
as "Marxism in the political
science department."
"A state university," another
minister said, "should aid students in the selection or formation

of a philosophy of religion." This
it can best do by finding the
"right men" to serve as teachers,
and coordinators;
counselors,
that is, scholars whose "objectivity is beyond question."
(Commonweal, Oct. 2, 1959)
"Things professors say often
come out of a religious context,"
said Mr. Leak.

Mr. Leak, who heads the office
of religious coordination is the
University "administrator for
religion." It is through his office
that the Religious Advisers staff
is related to the University.
"We need an organization to
enable the campus ministers to
become integral parts of the total
University
community," Mr.

Arizona State Rebuffs SDS Recognition

The Collegiate Press Service
TEMPE, Ariz. -- Students for
a Democratic Society tried to
invade the heart of Coldwater-lan- d
in the fall, but so far they
have been rebuffed.
"In the best interests of the
university and its student body,"
SDS was denied recognition on
Dec. 14 as a campus organization at Arizona State University. The unanimous decision of
the executive council of the Associated Students of Arizona
State University (ASASU) came
after a rehearing on the SDS
petition, intervention by the,
American Civil Liberties Union,
and the circulation of a recall
petition on campus naming all
seven members of the executive
council.
John Livingston, local SDS
president, says the group now
plans to appeal to the Arizona
courts.
The executive council which
consists of the five ASASU officers plus the presidents of Associated Men Students and Associated Women Students, first
refused the SDS request on Oct.
0
4 by a
vote. The decision
was explained in a letter to
SDS which said in part: "The
council was unanimous in its
feeling that the purposes and
goals of SDS are such that the
organization would not be an
asset to the campus and could
possibly be a determined detriment. We further feel that an
organization which does not provide a significant and positive
contribution to the university
cannot be justified as an officially recognized campus orga6--

any group should be recognized
except one which:
1. Advocates
violent
overthrow of the United States, Arizona, or university governments;
2. Advocates violation of the
constitution or laws of any of
these governments;
3. Acts or has acted on the
national level or in other parts
of the country in such a manner
as to make the organization an
undesirable addition to the cam-

pus."

19G0- -5

Reish said that SDS had violated both items two and three
of his conditions by publicizing
methods for avoiding the draft,
urging civil disobed