xt7dnc5sb61t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dnc5sb61t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700226  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 26, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 26, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7dnc5sb61t section xt7dnc5sb61t lid I.L3
Thursday, Feb.

A

2fi, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXI, No. 98

'Serious' Protest
Demonstration Planned For Pat Nixon's Arrival

By MIKE WINES
Kernel Staff Writer
The Student Mobilization Committee
to End the War in Vietnam (SMC) proposed in a Wednesday night meeting to
stage a demonstration for the arrival of
Mrs. Richard Nixon on campus Tuesday.
Mrs. Nixon will be visiting the campus
as part of a
tour to promote
off campus volunteer student projects. Her
visit was originally scheduled for last
November, but was cancelled when she
contracted the flu.
Plans for the demonstration were not
advanced at the Student Center meeting,
but one member forecasts a "subdued"
protest that will focus on the Vietnam
war and environmental problems in Kentucky, including the strip mining controversy.
Several suggestions for the tone of
the march were made at the meeting.
Members appeared to favor a "serious"
protest that would impress the members
of the news media expected to cover
Mrs. Nixon's visit. One member suggested
a "Silent Majority" theme, claiming that
"no one can say we're not really the
silent majority." Another proposed pla
four-colle-

--

cards saying "I am a registered impudent snob."
Campus Demonstration Planned
Two meetings were scheduled to organize demonstrations for the protest. One
will be held during or after a jam session
to be held Sunday, March 1, in the
Crand Ballroom of the Student Center.
The jam will last from 3 p.m. until closing
time and about six groups are expected
to perform. Admission to the jam session

tucky losses in the Vietnam war. At
Wednesday night's meeting, members proposed that a hundred marchers carry
placards representing Kentuckians who
have died since last year's October 15
nationwide protest by peace groups.
Nine hundred marchers also were proposed to lie on the Capitol lawn in a

"symbolic grave" representing all Kentucky dead since the war's beginning.
Ed Jurenas, an SMC steering committee member, said the anticipated probwill be 50 cents.
lem of transporting marchers to FrankA second
meeting fort
did not materialize. "At this point
will be held Monday in the Student Cenwill be finalized at the we have more cars than we know what
ter. Protest plans
to do with," he stated. Jurenas said that
meeting and demonstrators will be or- marchers are not
actively seeking rides,
ganized.
UK is the first stop on Mrs. Nixon's and a car pool committee was formed to
tour. She will also visit Michigan State handle transportation problems and solicit
demonstrators.
University, the College of the Ozarks,
and the University of Colorado.
Speaker Invitations Declined
Frankfort March Planned
Several Kentuckians, as well as naWhile much of the
meeting tional figures, have been invited to speak
at the Frankfort demonstration. Among
was concerned with Mrs. Nixon's upcoming visit, members also heard further plans the invited were Louisville Courier-Journcartoonist Hugh Haynie and Sen.
for SMC's march on Frankfort scheduled
for March 7.
D.). Both deCeorge McGovern (D-The Frankfort march, in planning for clined, saying they "sympathized" with
a month, will be a protest against Ken the protest's cause but would be unable
hour-lon- g

al

S.

to attend.
Other invited speakers include Sen.
Eugene McCarthy
Joe Cole,
a Fort Jackson, S. C, soldier currently
in trouble with the army over his opposition to the Vietnam conflict; folk singer
Pete Seeger, author Harry Caudill; and
Wendell Berry, a writer and professor of
English at UK.
Cole has already promised to attend
the meeting. The rest have not yet replied
to invitations.
SMC has been drumming up support
in the state with a leaflet and letter
campaign. One letter, sent to Louisville,
was returned with a stream of obscenities written across the bottom. Another
was returned blank.

In other places, however, success is
more evident. Berea College, which had
one representative at the Feb. 16 SMC
meeting, has promised 30 to 50 marchers
will participate in the Frankfort protest.
The Lexington Peace Council has instituted a letter campaign to the Lexington
Herald. Other SMC members are working on leaflets and placards which will
be distributed in area shopping centers
soon.

Graduate Association
Elects New Officers

V

By JEANNIE ST. CHARLES

Jit, who is from India, graduAssistant Managing Editor
ated from Jadavpur University
A new slate of officers and in Calcutta.
10 members-at-larg- e
were elected
Taking over GPSA finances
at the Graduate and Professional is pharmacy grad student Ira
Students Association (GPSA) Goldberg. The new treasurer
meeting Wednesday night. It was graduated from Philadelphia
the second election since GPSA School of Pharmacy and Science.
was formed in March 1969.
Bunny Wright, a graduate of

,

X

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Replacing Jerry Buckman as

V

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'

Buckman
Jerry Buckman, left, stepped down as CPSA's
president and was replaced by newly elected Bob
Brecht, Anatomy grad student. Four other executive officers and ten members-at-larg- e
were also
elected at the Wednesday night meeting. This is
CPSA's second slate of officers since its conception
in March '69. The students will hold office until

j
Brecht

May of next year. None of the elected executive
officers are UK graduates, rather all are from
colleges except one. Stepping down from
office, Buckman expressed hopes that GPSA would
gain their much sought after recognition as a
separate governing body from Student

out-of-sta- te

Family Planning Not The Answer

A Review Of
By CRETA GIBSON

Population Control

stated. "We have a great problem with
Kernel Staff Writer
waste, but we do have leaves growing on
Zero Population control presented Dr. the trees."
William Elsa, director of the Lexington-Fayett- e
Dr. Wayne Davis, UK Zoology DepartCounty Health Department, who ment, commented from the audience that
spoke last night on "Population and Family "stable population won't come about immediately. It will be about the year 2020 bePlanning within the County."
Elsa stated that the answer to popula- fore it is stable with the
tion control was not family planning or ratio, and we can't make it till 2020."
producing more food, but rather that "obNeed Massive Famine
viously we have to get our birth and death
Davis went on to say that "producing
rate together if we are going to have zero food is not the
limiting factor anymore.
population growth."
We need massive famine and we need it
Elsa also told the group that the death soon so we can recover
or we will be
rate in Lexington for 19G9 was about eight consumed
by our own waste. If we conin every one thousand, and that for every tinue to
try to feed everyone on earth we are
eight deaths there were twenty births. "The going to kill the human race."
great birth rates are mainly in the suburban
Mrs. Rankin Blount, director of Lexington
areas of Lexington and not in the core of the Planned
Parenthood, with three of the procity, but of course you must see that this is gram's workers, was also guest of Zero
due to the age groups present in the subPopulation Control last night.
urbs."
The workers, called "CHEW" (CommunWaste Elimination
ity Health Extension Woikers), simulated
The group was told that one of the main a meeting with a prospective Itousewife.
problems concerned with population control "We don't shove the pill down their necks,
was the elimination of human waste. "Lexbut we do shove the clinic down their
is relatively quite lucky here," Elsa throats," stated one woiker.
ington

...

Kentucky Wesleyan from

Owens-bor-

o,

will assume the responsipresident is Bob Brecht of the
Anatomy Department, a graduate bilities of recording secretary.
of Pennsylvania State University.
New Office
Speaking before his election,
The office of corresponding
Brecht emphasized that he wantsecretary is a newly created ofed "GPSA to be broadly based. fice
this year after a constituI think the graduate council tional revision
passed to add it
should run GPSA, not the offi- to the other four executive ofcers."
fices. The first GPS A correspondBrecht stressed the importance
ing secretary is Wayne Anderson
of increasing meeting attendance of the
History Department, who
and meeting more often.
graduated from Tulane UniverChemical Engineer Jit Chosal
sity.
is the new CPSA vice president.
The 10 elected members-at-larg- e

The workers demonstrated liow they canvassed homes in certain areas of Lexington
and showed the women about the contraceptive devices available to them through the
clinic.
"Because we are with the O.E.O. (Office
of Economic Opportunity) we work primarily
families in Lexington'
with the lower-incom- e
Mrs. Blount stated.
Mrs. Blount also stated that "if unmarried girls under the age of IS come in for
the pill, we must have parental consent
before we can issue them. We don't question the girls, we believe what they tell
us is the truth."
Dr. Davis said that although family planning was not the answer to population control, "family planning made the subject of
birth control respected, and without it we
.would not be where we are today."
Zero Population Control urged the people at the meeting to "write letters, not only
to your friends, but to Sens. Jolm Sherman
Cooper and Mario w Cook to Rep. Jolm
Watts and to
Darvin Allen, of the
Health and Welfare Committee."
Rt-p-.

are Al Sharp, Ilia Mesa,
Mary Katherine Layne, Dieter
Schaupp, Jerry Buckman, Jim
Hoecker, Karl Desante, Mason
Taylor, Keats Sparrow and Tom
Skinner.
Of the GO members attending
the meeting, 41 elected department delegates and members-at-larg- e
were constitutionally allowed to vote in th"" election.
Separate Recognition
After stepping down from the
office of president, Jerry Buck-ma- n
outlined his hopes for CPSA.
"One thing I would like CPSA
to have is the recognition we
are now seeking as a separate
governing body of graduate and
professional students.
"It is time the University
recognize the group as we are.
We are not a petty political organization. We are mature adult
people and have mature adult
objectives. We should talk to
every faculty member pusliing
No one has
our organization.
given sufficient reason why we
can't get the official recognition
we are seeking.
"Student Government is apolitical springboard for aspiring
Fleas Turn To

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* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb.

2fi, 1970

Measure

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For
Measure

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a play about
justice, mercy,

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honesty, forgiveness,
virtue, virginity,
sex, death
and love

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Left: Claudio (Chuck Fogue) pleads with his sister Isabella (Julie-ann-e
Beasley) to save his life by surrendering her body to Angelo
(William Hayes). The picture was taken on stage in order to
present the actor's viewpoint of the scene. Below: The Duke
(Bruce Peyton), disguised as a monk, leams of the evil deeds of
Angelo from Lucio (Roger Leasor).
The play is directed by Charles Dickens, set design and lighting
by Barry T. Baughman, costumes by Mary Stephenson, music by
Paul Moore, and choreography by Shirlee Mooney.

Kernel Photos by Dick Ware

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb. 2f, 1970 -- 3

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Celebrating Tlhe Cats' 22nd victory
MEN'S
DRESS SHIRTS
TIES

VISIT OUR

A ACK

$3.22 or 3 for $10.22

GLOVES

CASUAL PANTS

.......

SWEATERS

LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS
SPORT COATS ($1 for each victory) ...
ALL DRESS PANTS (alt. extra) . .
ALL SUITS (alt. extra)
ALL SHOES 20 off
SOCKS

$2.22
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$6.22

ROOM

FOR THESE SPECIALS

All Dress Flairs $12.22
Bell Bottoms . . $2.22

C.P.O.'s . $6.22; $9.22
Ladies' Furs $10.22

$12.22
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$9.22

OUR LEVI
BELL BOTTOM JEANS
HAVE ARRIVED!

$44.22
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GUESS WHAT?

One table of
various items

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SKIRTS
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HAT and GLOVE SETS
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Let's back the Cats alii the way to the MCAA
finals, if they win we will help you celebrate.
WATCH FOES OR VICTORY SALE.

* r

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iiiliii p
'Wouldn't You Say
Tliat Our Courtroom
Procedures leave
Something To lie
Desired?

The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

Iernel

Kernel Soapbox

University of Kentucky
1894

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26,

1970

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
James W. Miller,

Editor-in-Chi-

Courtroom Circus
The recent conspiracy trial of stler only added to Hoffman's woes
the "Chicago 7" did little to en- by demonstrating as much defiance
hance America's flagging respect as his seven clients. The battle
for its judicial system.
lines were drawn early, and neither
What started as a legal test of side was willing to give even an
the antiriot provision of the 1968 inch.
Civil Rights Act soon degenerated
into a three-rin- g
circus, starring
a law and order hardliner, proponents of civil disobedience and
a publicity-seekin- g
lawyer. As is
the case in such situations,
usually
no one emerged victorious.
It was obvious from the onset
that Judge Julius J. Hoffman would
not maintain the respect usually
afforded the court's presiding officer, that the mere slam of the judicial gavel would not silence these
seven, angry young men.
Defense attorney William Kun- -

Thus, by the rules governing
our present system of justice, the
judge is able to give vent to his
frustrations by such actions as
granting far too harsh contempt
sentences. The defendent, on the
other hand, can only hope for appeal of his case.
The resulting fiasco, like the one
in Chicago, can only be rectified
by the granting of a new trial,
one in which the judge remains
impartial and cheap theatrics are
expressly forbidden.

Draft Unpredictabilities
admires this

Not everybody
new
American system for filling military
manpower requirements by means
of a lottery or random selection.
But no draft system is going to
please everyone so long as the
destination of a lot of draftees
is the highly unpopular war in
Vietnam. Pentagon figuies show
that draftees make up roughly 40
percent of the American Army forces
in Vietnam, and draftees suffer
d
of the combat fatalities
in that war.
The big objection currently
raised against the lottery system
is that those who thought they had
escaped the draft because their
names were, in the drawing, far
down on the list, may still in
severe circumstances find themselves drafted. This can happen
if a local draft board has only
individuals
a small pool of
and a big quota to fill. Then it
has to reach further down on the
one-thir-

1-- A

listofl-A's- .

It so happens that because the

lottery removes much uncertainty
about being drafted, the number
of those who enlist is expected to
drop. In that case, draft calls might
indeed have to be increased
reaching further down the list
to fill the quotas.
The Senate Armed Services
Committee plans to hold hearings,
beginning this month, on fundamental reform of the Selective Service law. These hearings should
shed light oncurrent prospects, and
on alternatives to the draft. One
alternative is, of course, the
or professional army. But
this isn't feasible until Vietnam
needs decrease. So right now the
dissatisfactions are likely to con

tinuetempered by the knowledge

that when the random-selectio- n
system is fully operating each young
man will undergo only one full year
of draft eligibility.
The Christian
Science Monitor

By JAMES C. FUTRELL
AfltS Freshman

Although it is obvious by now that
any move for student involvement in
elections under the present student government is doomed to failure, the situation does present a good opportunity to
pause and observe those forces of campus
politics which have so recently triumphed.
Perhaps no better example of apathy
and the reasons for it will ever present
itself.
The twists and turns the confrontation has taken are common knowledge
by now. The motive behind the move
for election reform the convenience of
participation, the chance for candidates
to present themselves to the student body,
increased availability of polling places
all reflect the interest in improvement of
Student Government. Each in turn were
inspected, negated, subverted, and abused
by the proponents of apathy.
While it is undeniable that actions
reflect ideas, it is also true, unfortunately,
that negative action is possible. Such
overtly stagnating moves as the veto of
the original reform bill and the passage
of the proposal of the Board of Elections
accomplished only one thing worthy of
note. It gives the student body an opportunity to absolve itself of the daily charge
of irresponsibility and show clearly where
the seat of apathy lies.
The fact is that the students of the
University of Kentucky have been and
are still daily subjected to a highly intensive brainwashing effort. They are told,
day in and day out, that they are a pathetic, indifferent, and impassive until they
have begun to believe it. How many
times a week do The Kernel and Student
Covemment use the term "apathy," not
as a remonstrance, but as an excuse for
lack of action?
Thus when a movement for involve

ment, such as the election reform bill, is
attempted, it is replaced by a flimsy,
farcical, thoroughly Futrellian halfway
measure. This is not because of the passivity of the student body, but through the
repressive efforts of the real forces of
the apathy on the UK campus the majority of the Student Assembly and the editors of a campus newspaper which gives
phony explanations instead of reasons for
the indifference displayed by these "representatives."
Although this situation is not apt to
change for a long time, it is interesting
to observe the suppression of every move
for student involvement by the vanguard
of apathy. Perhaps a more descriptive
term for the prevalent attitude would be
STUDENT FRUSTRATION.

Kernel Forum: the readers write
Bad Medicine

wouldn't have hurt. Instead, the hippies
didn't get hit up with that CC stuff
Medical students, put down your scaland I hope they give hep to all the
pels. My charges in regard to the Medical
Medical students, and some of
Center were that (1) The Center is mediocre
in terms of service to students and to the you Fascist people in the College of Law
as well.
community; (2) that an abnormally large
(That's not to say that all Medical
number of surgical patients are required
students and Law Freaks are
to return for a second slicing, and (3)
Fascists. Some of 'em are, though.)
several people were denied gamma globuAs to the comment about the OR, it
lin injections, which the doctors seemed
to think would prevent their getting viral was based on conversations with staff
members who said that they had noticed
hep.
on the first floor of our and heard doctors expressing concern over
Everyone living
who had to be operated on
the
apartment building received a letter from twicepeople
maladies.
for
Dean Minton urging us to get these inAs to the mediocrity of the emergency
jections when our neighbor contracted
hepatitis. Now, there are two bizarre facilities especially, just wait till you have
hippie freaks across the hall from my an emergency. You'll see.
To change the subject entirely, I dedplace who really haven't any money at
all, and they were denied shots at both icate a contemptuous horse laugh to both
the Medical Center and the Public Health Mark Bryant and Julie Hoffman. In their
Service. Now, maybe they can't afford to respective arenas, they have displayed
give everybody free health service, but, the sort of gross stupidity that assures the
considering that hep is a drag and that ultimate downfall of Pig Nation.
many who can afford to pay their Med
By C. S. POPE
Center bills don't, a couple of $3 shots
AficS Sophomore
i

one-sh-

ot

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

Paducah Judge Orders Return

Downtown open Monday 9:30 to 9, other days 9:30 to 5:30

Teachers Served Injunction
PADUCAH,

k-cn

Circuit Judge C. Warrrn Eaton
ordered Paducah's 350 striking
teachers to return to work Thursday in the first legal move to
break a statewide strike.
Eaton granted a temporary
injunction to the Paducah Board
of Education, ruling that the
teachers were in violation of their

teachers as public employes were viding them the right to written
allowed to strike, noting that the contracts and continuing conlaw is not specific. He said, tracts . . . which result in an
however, "There is no question established tenure and safety of
that there is a violation of contheir employment."
He said there is no question
tract in their refusal to teach."
Richard Roberts, a lawyer for that the contract was violated.
If an appeal is taken to the
the school board, contended that
the walkout was more in the na- state Court of Appeals, the temture of a secondary boycott than porary injunction would remain
a strike.
in force intil the high court
"An ordinary strike contemhears the matter.
plates putting economic pressure
The decision by Jefferson
on the employer," Roberts said. County's 3,800 teachers not to
honor the
order
"By the admission of the teachers, ' there is no fight between
from Supt. Richard Vanlloose
them and their employer, the was announced by Wallace
l,
scltool board."
president of the Jefferson
The judge agreed, saying,
County Teachers Association, at
"This is an unusual and novel a Kentucky Education Associasituation in which you are contion rally.
ducting a strike when you have
no disagreement with the employer."
Eaton noted that Charles
a lawyer for the teachers,
had said their real purpose was a
protest that would come to the
attention of the General Assem-bl-

contracts.
His action was expected to
set off a flurry of similar injunction suits around the state. A
number of boards had indicated
they were considering such action but were awaiting the outcome of the Paducah case.
An almost identical request
for a temporary injunction by
the McCracken County Board of
Education will be heard by Eaton at 10 a.m. CST Thursday.
The county also has about 350
teachers.
Meantime, teachers in Craves
County voted to return to work
voluntarily after the county board
asked for an injunction. Teachers
in Jefferson County, with the
state's largest school system,
"There is no question but that
voted to ignore an order by the they have been heard," Eaton
school board that they return to said.
work Thursday.
Protected By Law
Public Employes
Referring to the teachers' conIn the Paducah ruling, Eaton tracts, the judge said, "The law
was vague about whether the has protected teachers by pro- -

Hf5 Women! Apparel
.

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return-to-wor- k

Can-trel-

SUIT
PERSPECTIVE

'70

Mc-Conn-

Emily M drops the jacket
hem over a free swinger

skirt, adds
buttons in pairs.
Crisp rayon linen
in natural, blue or
A-li-

y;

W
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PRIVATE

Chicago Five Denied Bail
CHICAGO (AP)-T- he
government filed in the U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals Wednesday its
opposition to bail for five men
convicted of crossing state lines
to incite rioting-a- t
the time of
the 1968 Democratic National
Convention.
The memorandum, filed by
Thomas A. Foran, U.S. district
attorney, also urged that no
bonds be granted pending appeals of contempt findings
against the five men, their two
codefendants and their two principal attorneys.
Judge Julius J. Hoffman of
U.S. District Court had denied

bond after sentencing the defendants and attorneys, describing the defendants as danger-

ous men.
Defense attorney William M.
Kunstler was sentenced to 4 years
and 13 days for contempt and attorney Leonard I. Weinglass to
20 months and 5 days. The execution of their sentences was
stayed untl May 4 to allow
them to continue their legal duties.
Judge Hoffman sentenced the
five convicted defendants to five
years in prison and fined them
$5,000 each. He also assessed
them the cost of prosecution,
which government attorneys es-

timated at about $50,000. Convicted on the riot charge were
David T. Dellinger, 54; Jerry
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Their codefendants, acquitted
of a charge of teaching the use
of incendiary devices, but sentenced for contempt, were John
R. Froines, 31, and Lee Weiner,
Appeal lawyers filed their brief

Saturday.

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The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky. Lexington. Kentucky 40500. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
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Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
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The Kentucky

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in 1415 Office Tower or by
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KENTUCKY KERNF.I,, Thursday, Feb. 2f, 1970

.

Library ConfercncePlanned
The UK School of Library
Science will sjx)nsor a conference by the Institute of Library
S ivices for Exceptional Children
here.
uif i Young AdultsMay 2
The Institute is designed to

librarians interested

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lected from throughout the nation. Each participant will receive a $75 stipend plus $13 for
each dependent from the U.S.
Office of Education.

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Members of the Lexington Peace Council are
shown participating in a Lenten Passover Fast
for Peace which started February IS and runs
through April 22. Participants stand in silent
vigil in front of the Fayette County Courthouse
every Wednesday from 12 to 1 p.m., giving up
lunch. The vigil is part of a nationwide fast spen- -

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278-602-

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HEARING AID CENTER
177 North

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Part Of A Nationwide Fast

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North Upper St.
1220 South Broadway
2121 Nicholasville Rd.
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children.

Complete Optical Service
to Central Kentucky
Since 1923

143-14-

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Field trips are planned to the
Cincinnati Public Library Center and the UK Special Education Instructional Materials Center, as well as other local agencies concerned with handicapped

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to exceptional
t iMren and young adults, and
" .11 also aid library consultants
,. ,d teachers of children's library
s vices.
Fifty librarians will be se
.services

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sored by Clergy and Laymen Concerned About
Vietnam and The Fellowship of Reconciliation,
The group is expressing its opposition to the
Vietnam war, and seeking to "identify with those
who suffer at home and abroad" because of vio- Kernel Photo by Mimi Fuller
lence in America.

Grad Students
Choose Officers

start out
your career doing something important?
Do you want to

Continued From Tage One
young politicians. It is a mickey-mous- e
organization that could
possibly do the job for undergraduates but not for graduate

students."

Speaker Series

Other business at the meeting included the announcement
of a speaker, Warren Susman,
who will be at UK Wednesday.
Susman is a professor of history

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at Rutgers University. He will
speak at 4 p.m. in the Office
Tower mezzanine (145) on "The
American Tradition:

4

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Anti-Urban-

He will also speak that even8 p.m. in the Commerce
Auditorium on "Violence in the
American Creed." The historian
from Rochester, N.Y., is the author of numerous publications.
Included among these is a

ing at

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publication entitled "The Reconstruction of an American College" which is a recommendation for reform in undergraduate

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college education.

Bookstore Support

Continuing with their

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Then you're the kind of
person we're looking for.

If you want a job that involves
in our Finance Department has
been like getting an extra postimportant responsibility now not
ten years from now Ford Motor
graduate degree. And a young,
black Financial Analyst from the
Company could be the place for
you. We encourage initiative, welUniversity of Chicago says, "If
come new ideas, and give you
you want to make it, this is the
every opportunity to get ahead.
place."
The proof? Read what a few of
We hear comments like this
our outstanding recent college
everyday from graduates with
graduates have to say.
every kind of educational backOne young engineer from
ground. People who found the
.Michigan Tech tells us, "It's the
challenges and opportunities at
Ford Motor Company even
challenges, the important responsibilities that make this job so
greater than they expected.
If you want to take the first
exciting." A Harvard Business
School graduate who made Destep towards a fulfilling career,
look into a future with Ford Motor
partment Manager in less than
five years, claims his experience
Company. See our recruiter when
Ford Interviewer Will Do On Campus March A, 1970

busi-

ness, CPSA passed a resolution
to encourage grad students to
purchase their books at the University Bookstore. This was in
response to a 10 percent discount
the bookstore is giving all teaching assistants and research as-

sistants.
Constitutional revisions were
of concern at the meeting. One
passed revision was a step
towards decentralization of pow-

he visits your campus ... or contact Mr. Richard Rosensteel, College Recruiting Department, Ford
Motor Company, American Road,

Dearborn',

Michigan

48121.

equal opportunity employer.

An

er in CPSA. A committee was
created consisting of all permanent committee heads. This committee will approve all CPSA
presidential appointments to
University committees.
Other constitutional revisions
were submitted to be voted on at
the next meeting. These include
a definition of what a graduate
and professional student is. Buck-ma- n
said "no one seems to

know."
Two other revisions designated that committee chairmen
be appointed by their committee
and approved by the w hole coun-

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has a better idea

cil. Also, if president iai appointments to University committees
are refused by the newly created
committee, the committee may
then appoint its own student

without the president's approval. All of these revisions are
more advances toward a decentralized iwwer.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Teh. 2fi,

1970- -7

Disputes 'Hawking' Tag

Trainer Vaughan Discusses Delicate Position
By CHICK LAWRENCE

Kernel Staff Writer
Claude Vaughan, trainer for
d
UK's
basketball team,
has gained some notoriety regarding personality clashes on the
team. He was publicized in a
Louisville paper as the 'cop' in
the dismissal of two team members.
top-ranke-

Anybody who knows me knows
that all I have is empathy for

them."

But as trainer, he does occupy a delicate position between
coach and player, and is sometimes the only channel of communication between teacher and

pupil.
Job Is Tough

Vaughan, outspoken and al"The question is," Vaughan
ways in the middle of the acsays, "Do your loyalties lie with
tion, was caught