xt7w3r0pvq6d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7w3r0pvq6d/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690220  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 20, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 20, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7w3r0pvq6d section xt7w3r0pvq6d rrn

EWE

MIS EC MTOCECY

Thursday Evening, Feb. 20,

19G9

1U
Vol. LX, No. 100

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Juul, Hall Debate
Housing Question
At Complex Dorm

Yi

By ANGELA MUELLER

Kernel Staff Writer
Thorn Pat Juul, leader of Students for Action and Responsibility
(SAR), and Dean of Students Jack Hall explained their positions
on the forced housing issue Wednesday night in Blanding Tower.
Speaking almost nonstop, Juul
traced the development of the Student Government about it."
housing issue. The first time the
Juul said SG passed a bill
administration announced, calling for rescindment of the
tlirough the Kernel, that sophopolicy. "Mr. Bryan signed it,
mores would be required to subbut it never left his office. He
mit dormitory housing contracts, sloughed it off."
was in March 1968.
Juul said he was fighting
Juul said it was a month forced housing for sophomores
after Betty Jo Palmer, associand upperclassmen because "you
ate dean of students, sent a don't have to be a dorm resident
memo from the housing office to to believe in civil liberties, esthe effect that forced sophomore pecially not in a state where
housing did not exist.
you're legally adult at 18."
He added that he felt stuAfter the Kernel notice indidents should have a role in Unicating sophomores would be
versity administration "because
moved into University housing,
Continued on Page 7, Col. 1
Juul said, Student Government
sent a letter to then President
John W. Oswald asking what
the notice meant.
"At that time," Juul recalled,
"Wally Bryan said, 'Now is the
time we should do something.
The University is going to mess
over us'."
SAR then asked the adminisBy SUE ANNE SALMON
Kernel Staff Writer
tration again to clarify the housNo candidates for University
ing policy, and, Juul said, Mrs.
Palmer and Associate Dean of president have been interviewed
Residence Halls Rosemary Pond yet this semester by either the
said sophomores would not be trustee and faculty joint screenrequired to live in dormitories. ing committee or the student
"One month later the Board review committee.
of Trustees passed its Policy
The joint screening committee
Statement No. 9 (the policy that "has been reconstituted for a
would require sophomores, junfairly short time," faculty
iors and seniors to live in dormSchwert said, "and
itories when necessary)," Juul there have been no interviews
stated. "Mr. Bryan said not one this semester." Taft McKinstry,
word on it. He didn't even tell chairman of the student com- .

4

I

....

Ash Wednesday services marked the beginning of the

Ashes
To Ashes

Lenten
season Wednesday. A priest at the Newman Center applies ashes to
students' foreheads, a ceremony that signifies the "ashes to ashes, dust
to dust" biblical concept. The Lenten season is the period of penitence before Blaster Sunday.
Kernel Photo by Dick Ware
six-we-

No New Presidential Candidates Interviewed
By Screening Committees This Semester

mem-berGeor- ge

I

mittee, echoed Dr. Schwert' s report.
Last - fall eight presidential
candidates four from off campus and four from the Lexington campus reportedly were
given serious consideration by the
committees.
Now, however, it is unknown
how many of the eight men remain in the running.
After a Louisville Courier-Journstory leaked the names of
the eight prospects and later the
"unofficial" selection of Dr. Otis
A. Singletary, a vice chancellor
of the University of Texas, that
educator chose to remain at
Texas.
Both the trustee and faculty
joint committee and the student
have
committee
experienced
changes in membership since the
presidential interviews last fall.
The joint committee, in ac
al

c

';

ollege Editors Get
By GUY MENDES

g

h

Wh o's

There

i

Managing Editor
"Welcome aboard," says EH 388, who surprisingly enough bears a striking resemblance to
somebody's father.
As we climb into a chartered bus he explains
that this is "the first time we've done this." The
drone of the engine then overpowers something
about "national interests" and "we won't be able
to answer all of your questions."
Onward through dense Washington, D.C., traffic, over the Potomac and finally past a sign
welcoming us to Langley, Va. Ah, sweet Langley
cohort of Skorpios, Ft.
.that
Knox, Howard Hughes, Gene McCarthy's mind.
Past the large fence with the small sign reading "Government Restricted Area" and nothing
more.
Then, like a doctor who wipes his nose on his
sleeve and proceeds into the operating room, our
crew (three beards, four mustaches, assorted
sideburns and a few shoulder-lengthair jobs)
pads into the lobby, the blank white marble sterility shuddering at our penetration.
EC 222 and EC 900, overseeing this intrusion,
don't seemed fazed, though. Must be repressing
their thoughts, probably read three pages on it
in the manual.
curiosity-provokin-

Advertising took on a new look Wednesday as a
coed walked around campus in a box proclaiming
The New Folk. The singing group will perform in
concert tonight at 8 p.m. in the Ag Science AuKernel photo by Dick Ware
ditorium.

cordance with the governing regulations of the University, is composed of four members of the
Board of Trustees, three faculty
members from the Lexington campus and one faculty member
from the Community College System.
Trustees on the committee are:
George W. Griffin, Mrs. Rexford
Blazer, William R. Black and Dr.
N.N. Nicholas. Faculty members
are: Charles Deusner of the Community College System, Dr. Paul
Sears of the Chemistry Department, Dr. George Schwert of the
Biochemistry Department and
Dr. Robert Rudd of the Agricultural Economics Department.
Trustee Griffin is chairman
of the joint committee.
The student committee was
formed last spring by the University Student Advisory Committee (USAQ after Dr. Ralph An- -

gelucci, then chairman of the
joint screening committee, said
his committee "wanted some student participation."
Dr. Angelucci asked USAC,

initiated by Dr. John W. Oswald
to act as a liaison Iretween students and the administration, to

select a committee to assist in
the presidential screening process.
USAC chairman Jean Paul
Pegeron, last year's Student Government President Steve Cook
and SG Vice President Rafael
Vallebona selected 10 students
"with the approval of USAC"
n
who represented "a
of the student body," according
to Vallebona.
USAC members wishing to be
on the presidential review committee were given the opportunity to Join and eight chose to.
Continued on Page 8, Col. I

nside Dope On

cross-sectio-

A geticy

After securing clip-o- n
clearances, we are led
into the bowels of the main building, down a
winding corridor, white except for leaden blue
and red doors, complete with combination locks.
We are shown into a lecture room ("We use
this for schooling purposes our training never
stops, you know"). We're told that since there
will be a short wait before the briefing is to begin,
we may go to the bathroom if we'd like. No one
moves. How were we to know the combination?
A large map in the front of the room is emblazoned with the bold, black words 'THE
WORLD." To our disappointment, the small type
beneath is a patent number, and there is nothing
said about "Tomorrow the Universe."
The briefing begins. Executive director Lawrence K. White and four deputy directors are
in attendance. "Red" White ("People ask why
Continued on Pare 5, CoL 1
This impressionistic account of a rare CIA
briefing is the third in a series of reports on
the United States Sttulent Press Association's
College Editors Conference, held last week-en- d
in Washington, D.C. One more report
will follow a definition of black sejxiratism
by former CORE Director Hoy Innis.

* 2--

19

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb. 20,

T1IE

'Dark Of The Moon' Opens Tomorrow
7

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....

-

s

Director Charles Dickens, just
returned from several months'
study in New York, teamed with
costume designer Joe Flauto and
stage designer Chuck Grimsley
to produce a unique adaptation
of "Dark of the Moon."
In the photo to the left, Dickens coaches John the Witch Boy
(Dowell Piatt) and Barbara Allen
(Julie Anne Beasley). On the
right, John is taunted by witches.

I

I

"Dark of the Moon," a production of the Department of
Theatre Arts, opens at 8:30 Friday night in the Cuignol Theatre
for the first of five performances
(Feb. 21, 22, 28, March 1, 2). The
play was written by Howard
Richardson and William Berncy
and is based on the traditional
folk song "Barbara Allen."
'

x

,

Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

Downtown

Eastland

open Monday 9:30 to 9, other days 9:30 to 5:30
open Mon., Thurs. and Fri., 10 to 9, other days 10 to 6:30

Just

7 minutes South on U.S. 27

Open Fri., Sat., Sun.
1st Drivc-l- n
Showing

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Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

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You're met
Mrs. Robinson
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Fch. 20,

Testimony Ends In Maine Chance Trial
The Associated Press
Testimony lasting 18V days
concluded Wednesday in the $30
million suit contesting the sale
of Maine Chance Farm to the
UK Research Foundation in 1967.
Lawyers for the three defendants and the plaintiffs will give
final summations of their cases
Thursday, with instructions by
U.S. District Judge Mac
o
the Jury to follow.
Swinford said he hopes to
submit the case to the jury of
nine women and three men Friday morning.
At issue, briefly, is a charge
Swin-fordt-

n

X

by Dr. Arnold Pessin, a Lexington veterinarian, and California
horseman Rex C. Ellsworth that
they were illegally denied a
chance to buy the farm.
They claim their plans to enter the horse sales business in
competition with Keeneland fostered a conspiracy between
Keeneland, the University foundation and the Bank of New York
to keep them out.
The University foundation
contends it bought the farm solely because of its need for added
land for agricultural research and
because Maine Chance adjoins

two fanns already owned by the
University.
The Bank of New York contends its only interest was to sell
the farm to the highest bidder.
It was acting as
of
the estate of Elizabeth Ardcn
Craham.
Keeneland contends it had
no connection with the purchase
at all, except for a letter of endorsement requested by former
University President John VV. Oswald and signed by Keeneland
President Louis Lee llaggin II.
In the final hours of testimony, Keeneland brought a Lex- -

T-T-

TODAY and TOMORROW

ington real estate broker, Daniel
Midkiff, who told of showing
three other farms to Pessin and
before the Maine
Ellsworth
Chance sale.
Any of these, he told the jury,
would be suitable for thoroughbred auction operations. He
added that many other farms in
the area also would be fine for
such a purpose.
His testimony, as with other
defense witnesses, was aimed at
showing that Ellsworth and Pessin didn't need Maine Chance
Farm, specifically, to enter the
horse sales business here.

Today

cations are available In Room 103
of Bradley Hall.
The Marine Corps Officer Selection
Team from Louisville will visit the
University of Kentucky campus dur7
to inform
ing the period Feb.
interested students of the Marine
Officer programs available to
Corps
them while in college.
The Committee on Peace Education
and Research will have its third session of the year Tuesday, Feb. 25, at
7:30 p.m. In Room 222 of the Commerce Building. There will be an open
discussion on
and the
dispossessed.
and NaPhyllis Jenness, contralto,
thaniel Patch, piano, feature the
Songs and Proverbs of William Blake
set to music by Benjamin Britten in
a concert Wednesday, Feb. 26, at 8:15
p.m., in the UK Agricultural Science
Auditorium.
A.W.S. Spring Elections will be
March 5. You must present a validated I.D. to vote. Voting places are
Complex and Blazer Cafeterias at
1
and 7 and the Student Center
and Chemistry-Physic- s
Building from
Women students vote for your
representatives.
25-2-

Sign up for Sorority Open Rush
now in noom 3ul ot tne Administration Bunding. itush extends April 20.
tor mcmoersnip
in
vppntat.ons
s nonor-arKtiis, tne sopnomore men noom lu3
are now avanaDie in
Bradiey Hail or by contacting Damon
Taney at tne farmnuuse iraternity,
3ltf tyiesiord Piace. Ail sopnomore
men witn a 3.U standing are engiDie.
Tne ttev. Vic jacKopson, an juignsh
Baptist Minister touring tne United
States to study ;u venue renatmitation
mimstenes, win De tne guest of tne
University of Kentucky ttaptist Student Union, and of central Baptist
Cnurch during tne ween of FeD.
ttev. JacKopson's speaking engagements inciude two at tne Baptist
Student Center, 371 S. Limestone, at
noon on Tuesday and Friday, Feb.
18 and 21; and at the Central Baptist
Churcn, 1644 S. Limestone at 7:00 p.m.
on Sunday, Feb. 23.
Professor Anthony Thorlby, visiting
Univerprofessor from Northwesternon
"Psysity, will present a lecture
and Literature," Thursday,
chology
Feb. zo, at 8 p.m., in noom 420 of tne
Commerce Building. All interested
persons are cordiauy invited to attend. The program is presented by the
Department of French and the UK
Graduate School.
The University of Kentucky Orchestra, under the direction of Phillip
Miller, will present a concert on
Thursday, Feb. 20, at 8:15 p.m., at the
Henry Clay High School Auditorium.
The concert is open to the public.
The power of God to improve
human experience immediately will
be the theme of a lecture to be given
C.C.,
Thurs., Feb. 20, by Jules Cern, memof Scarsdaie, N.Y. Mr. Cern, a
of
ber of the Christian Science Board 206
Lectureship, will speak in Room
of the Student Center at 7 p.m.
Applications for A.W.S. Senate are
available from any A.W.S. Senator,
of the Administration
Room 203-Building, and the Student Center Information Desk. Applications are due
to
Friday, Feb. 21, at 3:00 p.m.
Room 203B of the Administration
1212
Blanding
Building, or Room
Tower.
y,

17-2- 3.

ce

11--

5.

UK Placement Service
Register Friday for an appointment
Monday with:
Addressograph Multigraph Corp.
Check schedule book for details.
Associates Corporate Services.
Bus. Adm., Economics
"Accounting",
(BS). Locations: Nationwide. Citizen- -'
ship.

Commercial Solvents Corp. Check
schedule book for details.
Davison Schools, Mich. Check schedule book for details.
Kokomo-CentTownships, Ind.
Teachers in all fields.
AcWard 8c Co.
Montgomery
counting, Bus. Adm., Economics (BS).
Locations: Lexington, Richmond, Ind.;
Chicago.
Norwalk-L- a
Miranda Schools, Calif.
Check schedule book for details.
Ohio National Life Insurance Co.
Accounting, Bus. Adm., Economics,
English, Journalism (BS, MS); Math
(BS, MS, Ph.D.); Physics (BS); Law.
Location: Cincinnati. Citizenship.
(Community Colleges Accounting).
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.
Accounting (BS. MS). Locations: Nationwide. Citizenship.
Sperry Marine Systems Division
Check schedule book for details.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center Cytotechnology, Medical Technology, Nursing (BS); R.N. Will interview seniors for summer employment.
Elec.
Westinghouse Air Brake Co.
E., Mech. E., Computer Science (BS).
Locations: U.S. Citizenship.
Whirlpool Corp. Accounting, Bus.
Adm., Chem. E. (BS, MS); Elec.
E., Mech. E. (BS, MS, Ph.D.); Computer Science (BS). Locations: Mich.,
Ind., Ohio, Minn., Ark.

500-ac- re

state-operate-

state-owne-

oweffs Dairy Dp
TWO PIECES CHICKEN
MASHED POTATOES , GRAVY

er

ROLLS and BUTTER

80c
HAM and TWO EGGS
HASH BROWN POTATOES and TOAST

85c
HAMBURGERS

19c

30c CHEESEBURGERS
HOME MADE CHILI 45c

25c

COFFEE
SHAKES

10c

OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

"HOWELL'S ABOUT SOME GOOD EATING"

Ml

Many people are

B

proving that there
is no more immediate source of help

--

Tomorrow
The Bowling Green String Quartet,
the resident string quartet of Bowling
Green State University, will play in
the
Lexington at 8:15 p.m., Feb. 21 at The
Auditorium.
Agricultural Sciencethe
concert is open to
public.
Richard W. Malott. from the Dept.
of Psychology at Western Michigan
University, will give a multi-med- to
the
presentation of one approach
problem of mass education, Friday,
Feb .21, in Room 139 of the
Building at 8 p.m. The
program is sponsored in the general
interest of the University community
by the UK Dept. of Psychology and

than God.
Hear Jules Cern,
C.S., of The

Christian Science
Board of Lectureship explain how
this divine help is
available to you
right now.

ia

Psl Chi.

Coming Up
Campbellsville High School debaters
will challenge Sacred Heart Academy's
winning combination in the University
of Kentucky Student Forum's "Debate of the Month," Saturday, Feb.
22 at 2:30 p.m.. in the UK Student
Center Room 243.
Mr. Casy Walton will discuss "Can
Religion Be Relevant?"on from the
Bahai point of view,
Saturday,
Feb. 22 at 3:00 p.m. in Room 245 of
Center.
the Student
Kentucky high school forensic students will gather at the University of
parKentucky, Saturday, Feb. 22, to "Exticipate in the Second Annual The
Day.
Speaking"
temporaneous
event is sponsored by the UK Student Forum.
A naval Aviation Programs team
from the Naval Air Reserve Training
Unit at Memphis, Tenn., will conduct
24
undergraduate interviews Feb.a.m. at
to
the Student Center from 8

4

Professor Donald White of the Uniwill speak on
versity of Michigan Its
Recently
"Archaic Cyrene and
.Sacred Deposit of Sculpture,
b. 24. at 7:30 p.m. in Room
Monday.
245 of the Student Center.
Deadline for Societas Pro Legibus
has been
applications to be returned 25. Appli- extended to Tuesday, Feb.

;

"

yi

.

iV

X

K"
Jules Cern
Christian Science Lecturer

The Kentucky

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky,
Station, University 4U50tf. Second Lexclass
ington. Kentucky
at Lexington, Kentucky.
pobUge paid
the
Mailed five times weekly duringexam
school year except holidays and
and once during the summer
periods,
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box and
Begun as the Cadet In IttW
pubnhed continuously as the Kernel

4a.

published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported W The Editors.
fcilAdverUsing

MR. CERN WILL SPEAK
THURSDAY, FEB. 20th
IN THE STUDENT CENTER
ROOM

206

just one of our new breed of nubby knit sweaters at the
Shop. Make the fashion scene in Florida this year with several
changes of mock turtlenecks and combination Bermuda shorts.
Bell bottoms? . . . heel to toes? Call them what you will, . . .
these are all white and all Florida! The navy turtleneck with
all from
stripes will be in her sunshine wardrobe
the U. Shop, too.
His is

U.

red-whi-

...

te

AT 7:00 p.m.

Spontort d by

CHRISTIAN

SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION

d

NEXT TO KENNEDY'S AT EUCLID

s

The deadline (or announcements la
7:30 p.m. two days prior to th flrat
publication of Items In this column.

In rebuttal, the plaintiffs used
the same tactic in reverse trying to show the University didn't
need Maine Chance Farm for its
agricultural research expansion.
Alvin Armstrong, farm manager at Kentucky Village, testified its
fann is idle now
because of an end to farm prohome
grams at the
for delinquents near Lexington.
Armstrong also said there are
d
idle
farmlands at
Danville totaling 1,500 acres and
Frankfort totaling 700 acres and
that the nearby federal narcotics
hospital wants to lease 1,000
acres.

407 S. LIMESTONE

lfcltuiucrsUiSl!op

255-752-

3

* Most of the world's problems are created by a single species of
creatures among the multitudes inhabiting our planet. The name of the
troublesome group people.
People seem strangely intent on imposing all kinds of restrictions,
social and mental, on themselves. They are constantly calculating what
they believe to be the social values of other people in order to determine which ones they will interact with and how they will act towards
them. People build coffins early not the kind that measure six feet in
length but those that allow them only a range which can be encompassed by a narrow mind.
Many people live together in large centers called cities. Most go
PC0Ple who do not live m the cilV usuallV are seekin2 escaPe-walkinforth into the masses during the day. Only a solitary few can be found
EscaPe from machines, schedules, fear, other people. Some think they
about late in the night, their brisk steps resounding harshly
fltr.iint th Htv' mid navement. Th-s- e neonle are warv and afraid. have found thelr escaPe but most find cluttered surroundings in a
polluted environment, the atmosphere still pervaded by people.
Of other people.
Stranger still, people are always maneuvering other people and in
turn are maneuvered. Accordingly, there are people. In war. But then
there are some people who would rather go to prison than do this.
One would wonder about the people who put those people in prison.
It's all very puzzling.
People do all kinds of things. There seems to be some kind of rule
that they have to do something. Some work and some are growing up,
hoping to follow suit, and some attend colleges and universities in
between. Such people are not much different from the other people;
they do strange things too. Some are searching for something but
don't know where to look or how to go about looking. But more just
bide their time.
A few engage in politics in this
world and maybe run for
a seat on their student governing body. There they talk about very
strange things and argue with each other and with people of administrative rank who frequently hold even stranger ideas.
Some people even write editorials.

people

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-- ;

By

EDITOR'S NOTE: The opinions expressed in this regular column are those
of its author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Kernel.
Black dorms, black cafeterias, black
teachers In black" studies departments.
These are just a few of the demands being
made by black college students of this
country and, what's more, in many schools
the demands are being accepted and
instituted. Black separatism is a movement that is sweeping the nation and is
centered primarily among black college
students. The real problem is that it
calls for separation or segregation rather
than integration and, as such, represents
one of the greatest threats the civil rights
movement has ever faced.
Newsweek magazine, this week, devoted seven pages to black separatism
in an attempt to explain what is happening and why, and what the article
had to say was less than reassuring.
According to the article, almost every
college campus is beginning to feel the
discontent of the black students and
their demands for separation.
The separatists emphasize black. They
want all courses taught from a black
prespective. They say that the present
college systeuv Js. geared to turn tb?n,
.

L

E. FIELDS

into "middle class black Sambos" and
thus they lose their identity as Blacks.
They want to live black, eat black and
sleep black. Nathan Hare, head of the
San Francisco State College Black Department and a leading figure in the
separatist movement, describes the "new
Black" this way: "The black revolutionary
nationalist, aware and proud of his blackness, demands the right to exist as a
distinct category, to be elevated as such
by any means necessary." Hare makes
a distinction between the Black and the
Negro. "The Negro, contrarily, would
just as soon be white. He longs to escape
his blackness ..
Where the separatist movement started
or who started it is no longer relevant.
What is important is that it comes at a
time when the civil rights movement in
this country is taking hold. As a result
of 15 years of hard work on the part of
the NAACP and other responsible organizations, oid racial barriers are begin--)
ning to come down, old prejudices are
being discarded for new concepts in race
relations and a new world is open to the
Black that was never available before.
There is, of course, still more progress
to be made. There are still people in this
country who believe that Blacks, are from.

.J'

an inferior breed and should be kept
segregated. The separatist philosophy will
do nothing more than support these persons' prejudices. They will be more than
happy to give Blacks not only a separate
dorm but a separate school, and churches
and water fountains and a special place
to ride on the bus.
On the other hand you have the white
liberal who has supported the civil rights
movement from the very beginning. How
does he react when faced with new proposition? Newsweek says "old liberal
alliances are failing." The liberals see
the racial prejudice that he preached
against turned against him and he is
confused and shaken.
The separatist movement can, in one
swift blow, destroy everything that devoted men worked years for and, in some
cases died for, in this country. The barriers that have fallen as a result of the
civil ri glits movement can be raised with
surprising speed, and old forgotten prejudices can be aroused with amazing
ease. Racism is a double-edgesword.
One can be Just as much of a racist
by having too much pride in his own
color as he can by not having enough
in another man's. Racism can be a thing
of the past only when people start look
d

!

ing at each other as men rather than
as black or white.
What the separatist asks is unreasonable and irrational. Why must we have
special departments for black students?
Why is it necessary to teach two history courses one white, one black? It
is not! Turning a history classroom into
a soapbox for black or white nationalism
does not teach history but instead racism,
hatred and violence.
Furthermore, if we find it necessary
to have special studies for Blacks, is it
not only fair that we set up the same
type of program for the Chinese, Jews
or any other ethnic group? Separatism
rather than being a step forward, is a
step backward and ground that can be
lost by retreat can only be regained by
long struggle and sacrifice.
Nathan Hare talked about the separatist concept in education and discussed
the difference between "white mathematics" and "black mathematics." The
example he used was that instead of having
a reading problem that was saturated
with "middle class referents such as stocks
and bonds" the teacher might ask of a
ghetto child "If you loot one store and
bum two, how many do you have left?"
. My answer " Nothing!"
,
.

.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb. 20,

19G9-

-5

College Editors Get Rare Briefing At CIA
Continued from Page One
I'm called 'Red Well, when I
had hair . .
starts the session but docs not explain what
a man who is clearly only
patriotic is doing in a job
like this.
But he docs explain why we
were granted
the briefing.
"We've had a vexing problem
here at the CIA, and that's public relations. Can you beat that?
The CIA worrying about a little
halitosis like the Hay of Pigs or
the National Student Association scandal.
"We've wanted to talk to people if we could do so without
being quoted after the fact.
Therefore we have stipulated
g
and
that there be no
that we are not quoted." So they
bring in 23 college editors
among the tops in the mental
two-thir-

ds

note-takin-

note-takin- g

field.

R. Jack Smith then takes

the

podium and begins talking.
The two guys next to me
are still taking notes Do these
clip-o- n
badges self destruct?
the workings of the CIA.
He explains that the agency
was formed after Pearl Harbor,
that the information on the surprise attack "was there, but no
1

one took the time to put it together."
R. Jack's hands go out in
front of him, his fingers joining
in a basketweave. 'The main
task of the CIA is forming the
finished national intelligence
that goes on the desk of the
President, secretary of state and
secretary of defense." He says
the reports are objective, offering no opinion on the issues at
hand.
He then begins explaining the
individual digits which make up
that finished national intelligence: the scanning of foreign
newspapers, monitoring foreign
radio and television broadcasts,
embassy reports, tapping knowledgeable people in this country,
and what he simply termed
"related areas" espionage and
"covert" action.
Later, one of the deputies
posed a hypothetical situation
in which covert action would be
used. If a leader is in a nation
in which there are two strong
d
and
parties, one
the other Western, the leader
cannot afford to upset the balance by getting a hand from the
U.S. So if he needs help he asks
for a little covert action by the
CIA. Simple.
Eastern-oriente-

Students Quietly Protest
At Concordia Seminary

600 students of Concordia Seminary
CLAYTON, Mo. (AP)-T- he
are discontented and they want their teachers and administrators
to do something about it.
Unlike students on many other to tenns with change and it is
American campuses, the seminar- going to have to structure itself
ians are not protesting loudly to keep up with the constant
and violently; they are talking changes of our times."
A
statement
quietly with their elders.
summarizing
z
talks by 24
The student body of Concordsaid students
ia, the largest Lutheran seminary groups" Tuesday offers
feel the seminary
too many
in the world and the
Protestant seminary in the United courses with "no relevant or practical application."
susStates, asked for a three-da-y
Concordia Seminary is operclasses so they could
pension of
discuss their grievances. The fac- ated by the Lutheran
Synod. Its graduates
ulty and administration agreed
go out to parish ministries and
and talks began Tuesday.
mission all over the world.
"We do not regard this as a
major confrontation between faculty and students such as we
have seen happening on many
campuses throughout the country," a seminary spokesman said.
To the contrary, the Rev.
Robert Grunow, director of seminary relations, said, "We see
this as a sincere concern of the
Clays Mill Pike
students for the best possible
Phone 277-624- 8
theological education to fit them
for a ministry in a changing
world," .
student-faculty"buz-

third-large-

st

Church-Missou-

ri

CHRISTIAN
STUDENT
FELLOWSHIP
Easily accessible to residents of
Cooperstown, Complex, Fraternities,, and Sororities.

502 Columbia Ave.
SUNDAYS

Worship
Study Groups
1
p.m. Mondays;
Open forum
Tuesdays

10:15 a.m.
3 Wednesdays

6:30 p.m.

William Buck, CSF President
Larry L Brandon, Campus Minister

RD.

What?
When?
Where?

Another editor inquires as to
whether the members of that
high level congressional committee are investigated by the CIA.
When he is told no, that that is
up to Congress, he says frankly, "I can't accept that. Are you
trying to tell me you don't check
those people out?" Yes.
A French student, in the U.S.
for the United States Student
Press Association conference, finally speaks up. He's not too good
at English and no interpreter is
provided (with that Guallist
egotism he says, "They've heard
of me; that's why they don't
have an interpreter") and he is
therefore difficult to understand.
But the message manages to
come through.
First he takes issue with the
comment made about the Chi

Why?
THE
WIND

TUNNEL
ENGINEERING

Open House
Sat., February 22
10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Anderson Hall

Spring Break Check

List!

Some things you can do without . . . others, like these
listed below, are ESSENTIALS! For a good selection of
styles, sizes and colors in swim suits and matching
cover-up- s
(they double as mi