xt7k9882nd1p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k9882nd1p/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690905  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September  5, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, September  5, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7k9882nd1p section xt7k9882nd1p Tunis
Friday Evening, Scptcmlcr 5,

Kemtoky

19C9

EQemnel

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXI. No. 8

New Classrooms
Ready For Use
By BILL MATTHEWS
Assistant Managing Editor
After more than two years
of construction, the new UK
Classroom Building will go into
operation at 8 a.m. Monday.
Assistant Dean of Admissions
Robert Larson said Thursday that
"the building will be open and
available Sept. 8. "He mentioned

that some

218 classes will be af-

fected, almost all in the College
of Arts and Sciences.

The Classroom Building was
originally expected to be ready
for use at the beginning of this
semester, but construction delays
prevented immediate use of the
facility. Consequently, some 200
classes had to be relocated.
The new schedule of classes
for the Classroom Building appears on page 8.
Some classes which were orig-

inally planned for the building
will not be moved from their
present locations.
Now that the building is almost complete, those classes orig-

inally scheduled there must again
be relocated. Assistant Dean Larson added that the process of
relocation is not an exact reversal
of the first classroom change.
Several geology classes will remain in their "temporary" quarters for the remainder of the semester. Some course sections
have been added and scheduled
for the new building and some
classes deleted.
Not all the new facility is
ready for occupation, but 30 of
the 41 rooms will be in use Monday.
Because some construction is
still in progress, only certain
entrances and exits may be used.

There will be five ways to

ter or leave the Classroom

en-

Build-

ing:

The section of the Creat Wall
between Buell Armory and the
Administration Building will be
torn down this weekend, leaving
an entrance beside the Administration Building.
The walk-wabehind Barker
Hall and Buell Armory will open
into the building.
There will be an entry-wathrough the Botanical Gardens
across from the soccer field.
Another approach will be
Stoll Field and Lafferty
Hall.
The remaining entrance will
be located at the other end of
Lafferty Hall, across from the
King Libraby.
The complete construction
project is not scheduled to be
finished before the
deadline.
Acting business manager for
the University James King said,
"We asked the construction company to concentrate on the Classroom Building so we could use
it this semester."
"We would never have made
it if it hadn't been for the conand all
tractor, his
the employees," King added.
Construction Cost
The entire project, including
the Classroom Building, administration tower, terracing and a
fountain, is being built by the
n
Nashville, Tenn., based
Construction Co. at a
cost of over $12.8 million.
Well over 3,000 students can be
seated in the Classroom Building
alone. There are 41 classrooms.
Two of the large lecture rooms
contain 280 seats each. The
y

n

f

out
LEXINGTON
Lafayette High School students gathered in front of the
school Thursday to recite the
pledge to the flag after it had been
dropped as a regular classroom
ritual.
School Principal Lloyd Smith
said he had ordered the pledge
dropped after he noticed last
year "some students were not
participating in the ceremony or
not showing respect while the
words were being recited."
He added, however, that he
would reinstate the pledge as a
part of the "homeroom" pro
(AP)-Ab-

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late-Novem-

Foster-Creighto-

AAUP Disappointed In Code

By CORDON DAVIS
Kernel Staff Writer
A, report presented by Dr.
Carrett Flickinger to the UK
chapter of the American Association of University Professors
(AAUP) Thursday night expressed
disappointment over the recently

adopted Code of Student Conduct.
Dr. Flickinger outlined the
Student Code as it was recommended to the Board of Trustees
by the University Senate and
then pointed out in detail the
on Pare 7, CoL 1
changes made by the board before final adoption of the code
in July.
"Although the board accepted many of our minor recommendations," Dr. Flickinger
said, "the real guts of the code
were turned down."
Board Criticized
cedure during the first class
period of the day if the students
Flickinger criticized the board
asked for it.
for rejecting the faculty senate's
clause,
"What I would like to see is proposal of a
which the University Appeals
every homeroom
saying the by
Board would have to act within
pledge with all due respect for
43 hours after a student had
the flag," Smith said in an explanation over the school's loud been suspended by the vice president for student affairs.
speaker system.
He also was critical of an
The 200 students gathered in item written into the new code
front of the school to recite the by the trustees which makes the
pledge as Smith raised the Amerpresident of the University the
ican flag Just before he went final authority in disciplinary
inside to explain his move to the cases.
students during the first class
"We asked that the board
consider only the recommenda
period.
.

.

build-Continu-

Bus service will be extended to Shawneetown
beginning Monday. Buses will run to Shawneetown only in the morning and afternoon. For
Kernel Photo By Dave Herman
Story, sec page 7.

Neiv Bus Service

ed

Lafayette Students
Vote To Say Pledge
200

oofflsasa

lit

"48-hou- r"

tions outlined and not change
other parts of the code," Dr.
Flickinger added. "The board,
made ' numerous
however,
changes in the code without

us."

Discussion of the matter

fol-

lowed Dr. Flickinger' s presentation. Although there was some

disagreement among the members, the general consensus was
that the present Student Code
represented little improvement
over the previous one.
A letter expressing concern
over the new code was then
presented to the members and

Lot Finished
On Cooper
The
parking
structure on Cooper Drive is
ready for use, the Department
of Safety and Security announced
Thursday.
The ramp was to have been
completed by the start of school,
but was delayed by unusually
heavy rains, which hampered the
completion of access roads.
Only those with "A" or "B"
narking stickers are allowed to
use the new facility. Entrance can
be gained by presenting parking
identification cards.
long-awaite-

d

will be forwarded to the Board
of Trustees.
Kernel Editor
The second half of the meeting concerned a report on the
Kernel
selection of the 1969-7- 0
editor.
Dr. Jesse Weil said that although his committee noted several irregularities in the procedure
followed by the Student Publications Board, there was no evidence of collusion or conspiracy
on the part of the Board.
Dr. Weil noted that only 8
of the 14 members of the Student
Board of Publications were present when the candidates for editor were interviewed and only 9
members were present when the
editor was selected.
Dr. Weil also noted that instead of voting for one candidate,
members were asked to rank each
of the candidates from
to
"This procedure seems inappropriate in this situation," he
said.
Although the investigation is
at present uncompleted, Dr. Weil
outlined several recommendations. These included extending
the term of students on the Board
of Student Publications to two
years, assuring that board members are "well qualified," and
initiating effective action with
regard to "delinquent" board
best-qualifi-

least-qualifie- d.

members.

Dorm Changes Reflect Social Atmosphere
By JEANNIE LEEDOM

Assistant Managing Editor
Although the dormitories on
campus still show a definite overflow of students, they do reflect
a more compatible, attractive
and social atmosphere.
The majority of dormitories
were not renovated during the
summer, but tle residents' "qualifications" were changed for several of the housing facilities.
Fresh men women were not
seen carrying their trunks, bul

letin boards, paper flowers and north side of, campus where
other decorations into Holmes Jewell, Holmes, Boyd, Blazer,
Hall this fall. Neither were fresh- Patterson and Keen eland Halls
men men seen moving into the are located was populated only
well-wor- n
confines of Donovan by female students. During tlie
Hall. This year the scenes were 19689 school ytar, Boyd Hall
was converted to a men's dorm
reversed.
and the segregation pattern was
broken.
Space Allocation
According to James O. King,
The University nude an at- UK's acting business manager,
tempt to "equate the space allo- "The switch in Donovan and
cation by sex" this year, explains Holmes Halls was an effort by
Rosemary Pond, associate dean the University to bring both male
of students. Until last year, the and female student s into the same

geographic areas. The switch in
the complex (Kir wan 1 and 2
are now men's dorms) resulted
from an imbalance in the number of males and females in that
area last year."

Dorm Renovated
Placing men students in a former women's dorm and placing
women students in a dorm designed for male occupants could
have provided an unusual experience for many University
housing residents, but UK solved

the possible problem by renovating Donovan Hall painting the complete dorm, carpeting the halls and making tlte
bathroom facilities more privaic.
"I think the University
thought it would be helpful and
more normal for the students to
engage in coed dining and coed
social activities," said Dean
Pond.
"In the near future I look for
the halls to be nude more convertible for use as men's or wonv
en's residences."

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY

19G0

KERNEL, Friday, Sept. 5,

Bradbury And Heinlein Top

fly DAN COSSLTT
Arts Editor
Owing to tlic nature of the
heist, the fortunes and popularity of science fiction have risen
and fallen in direct proportion
to the periodical bursts of technological progress that have been
especially evident in the past
two decades. It is therefore logical that the startling leaps forward in space exploration have
spawned a new public craving
for science fiction; particularly
when it deals with space and
interplanetary travel.

It is serendipitous, therefore,
that during this age of giant
steps into space, that there is
an abundance of extremely talented science fiction writers who
are publishing at a prodigious
rate. Among these writers are
Theodore Sturgeon, Isaac
Arthur C. Clarke and even
Irwin Allen, who turns out the
ABC thrillers like "Voyage To
The Bottom Of The Sea" and
"Land of The Giants."
Asi-mo-

v,

Movies Adapted
' It is generally conceded, however, that the most outstanding

names in the field are Hay Bradbury and Hobert Heinlein. Bradbury is the author of such volumes
as "Martian Chronicles," Dandelion Wine," and two books that
have been adapted into popular
movies; "The Illustrated Man"
and "Fahrenheit 431."
Heinlein, besides being one of
the country's most prolific au-

thors with approximately 100 volumes in print, has become famous
as the man who produced in 1918
an accurately detailed schedule
of what gains would be made
in space, in what order and in
what year.
Means To An End
Both writers are similar in at
least one aspect of science fiction
writing. They use the medium as
a means through which they can
discuss a wide variety of topics,
instead of just as science fiction
for its own sake.
There are great literary hazards inherent in the medium
that both men avoid with amazing skill. Chief among the hazards is the temptation to let the
imagination run wild. Writers
who fall into that trap usually
their plots
end up
over-extendi-

and premises to the point where
they hav e to dream up even more
fantastic devices to save the integrity of their work.

the backward carthlings Martian
life styles and adds a new word
to the human vocabulary. The
word is "grok" and its meaning

JRy BETH I LEDGER
Booker T. and the M.G.'s,
the blues group from Memphis,
will perform in concert at 8 p.m.
Sept. 20 in Memorial Coliseum.
Made famous in 1961 for their
million seller "Green Onions,"
the group has been turning out
their infectious sound ever since.
Known primarily among the
young, they nevertheless have
found an audience of much wider
acceptance with their recent
"Groovin' " and one of their
current singles, "Hang 'em
High." They also have proved
they have not lost their ability

to "produce that
sound which has helped make
blues music as widely acclaimed
as it is today.
As leader of the M.G.'s, Booker T. is best known as an organist, although he is a girted
performer on several instruments.
The rest of the band, made up of
Duck Dunn on bass; Al Jackson,
drummer; and Steve Cropper,
guitarist, blend together a mixture of black and. white soul
into a major musical commodity.
The insistence, the driving quality of contemporary "rock" also
is present in the heavy accents

Poetry

the fat girl
in short legged desperation

Forever in gargantuan September' stands contemplating her
the fragile couples sit teeteringly shadow, her shadow as light as a
like lean crows on a wire;
leaping cat leaping into shade.
the old men, cancerous rhinoceri,
Thomas Baker
their veins hanging like cold hoses
in their throats, their
hands quaking in their cuffs;
some nodding spastic agreement
to silence

p

Beginning with "Stranger In
A Strange Land," which has
come to be considered as one
of the science fiction masterpieces
of the decade, Heinlein has persistently attacked Western society's most sacred cows, including
sex standards, marriage, the rationale for government, the democratic process and bureaucracy
in all of its insidiousness.

...

SUNDAY EVENING PROGRAM
Get Acquainted via Human Relations Training

6:00 p.m.

words

crumbling

and functional

lingerie-th- en

an endless joke and
from the benched shadows there
rises
a smile, enormous with teeth and
the tragic grin of a tire gashed

Light Supper

. . . WORSHIPPERS

STUDENT

447 Columbia

0
SUNDAY BREAKFAST
a.m.
LITURGY WITH COMMUNION 10:30 a.m.
HAPPENING
7.00 p.m.

A.

L

Bentrvp, Campus Pastor

RESTAURANT

supplied by drums and electric
bass. This is the sound of Booker
T. and M.G.'s, a leading exponent but hardly new element
on the musical scene.
Now that the soul sound, so
long contained within the black
world and limited to that audience, has captured the fancy
of the general market, it appears
tliat Booker T. and the M.C.'s
might roll on indefinitely.
To catch this group's sound,
tickets can be bought in advance
starting Thursday, Sept. 4, in the
Student Center for $2 and $2.50,
and after Monday at Dawahares,
Eirney Miller's or Hymson's.
They also can be purchased at
the door for $2.50 or $3.

159 NORTH LIME

PIZZA

SPAGHETTI
RAVIOLI
LASAGNA
Also AMERICAN FOOD
CARRY-OU-

ORDER!

T

10:00a.m.-8:3- 0

p.m.;

4:30-8:3- 0

or

Saturday

CLOSED SUNDAY

an

We UNIVERS r
OF
KENTUC

i

v.

J

if itmrh

Clays Mill Pike
277-624- 8

269-135-

254-312-

ERAFBMB'

Church
Phone

AT

LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER

Universalist

that hang in the air like puzzled
cinders.
Their wives, spindly husks of age,
their ankles swelling from their
shoe tops,
no touching in their shivering lips
that court the color of spoken
moons

...

The Campus Ministry of the Christian Church (Disciples),
Presbyterian Churches and United Church of Christ
WANTED

Heinlein comes up with some
of the most inventive plots of
anyone irr the field. His best,
"Stranger," concerns an earth-lin- g
who was reared on Mars, by
Martians, and brought back to
earth just as he reaches maturity.

254-188- 1

SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP
In The Chapel
10:30 a.m.

"Grok"

Unitarian

others mumbling

ly well. All his plots revolve
around human desires and shortcomings set in the atmosphere
of classic science fiction situations. He employs time warps,
deatli rays, 'Big Brother' governments and monsterized computers with as much skill as the
men who originated the concepts.

The most important place is too complex to explain here.
where the works of Bradbury
The human mind in all of its
and Heinlein differ is in the twisted glory is Bradbury's playchoice of topics they emphasize. ground and he handles it extreme
Screwcd-usociety with its narrow and outdated norms is the
UNITED CAMPUS MINISTRY
bag Heinlein likes to stay in,
412 Rose
Koinonia House
novels.
particularly in his later

SAB To Present Booker T.
g

Field

i

On earth, he proceeds to teach

Band Appears Sept. 20

hard-drivin-

Sci-F-

278-625- 9

SUNDAY

AT THE CHURCH
10:30 a.m.
!

Title: "Life Weighed in the

i

Balances"

pumkin,

forever in gargantuan September.
Thomas Baker

Speaker:
Peter Lee

Cage

Her rolled stocking tops,
rolled as tight as rung
washrags,

September 8, 9
Joiten'i fsctoty

Campus

The Kentucky Kernel

Th Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
Sfision.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4uati.
Begun as the Cadet In 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1815.
Advertising published herein U Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
i 45
Yearly, by mail

Per copy, from filia

!

ScotfJ

$.10

you
tir ...

finj

Religious

Liberals
STUDENT CENTER

irz
1

Room 115

7:30 p.m.

iV

It!

!
i

Ji

Topic:

"What

Unitarian
Universalism?"
Is

iiiiiiiiiii.iiUajjJiii.iiiiiihi.i.hiiiiiiliiiiiiiU

in

rtpreierxtsfive

tKe

ilction

C:

10

be presont to
orJerir.g of your

wiU

and

J

UNIVERSITY BOOKSTORE
STUDENT CENTER
University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky 40506

1

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sept. 5, l9-- 3

Teachers Striking For Higher Wages

By The Associated Press
Teacher strikes are keeping
classrooms closet! in scores of
communities in New England
and the Midwest, extending summer vacations for more than
200,000 children. The key issue
is wages.

In Michigan,

6,000

teachers

were off the job in 25 districts
and 147,300 pupils stayed home.
Forty thousand children were out
of school in a dozen Illinois

districts.
New England had teacher
troubles in New Bedford, Mass.,
Manchester, N.H., and Norwalk,
New Britain, New London, and
Woodstock, Conn. Teachers in
East Haven, Conn., returned to
classrooms in the face of a court

reached tentative contract agreeWednesday for 3,300 pupils. Two
ment but schools were not schedunions were demanding a $1,000
uled to open until Friday.
annual increase to raise the startFewer than half the Manchesing salary to $6,600, with corter city schools opened Thursresponding boosts for higher pay
day, as striking teachers asked grades.
the New Hampshire Supreme
The Struthers Board of EduCourt to bar a lower court from cation asked the courts to order
ordering them back to work. The the teachers back to work, and
strike came after aldermen cut a hearing was set for Friday.
$G00 from a negotiated pay scale.
The school board in Superior,
Settlement prospects varied in
Wis., said it can't find the monthe Midwest. In a district serving
to meet demands of teachers
10 Chicago
suburbs, teachers ey
who walked out there. About
voted Wednesday night to return
were sent home
to work for 30 days pending 7,500 pupils

negotiations.
But in Granite City, 111. near
St. Louis, Mo., 650 teachers have
been out for a week and no
negotiations are scheduled.
order.
Teachers in the Youngstown,
In Rhode Island, teachers in Ohio, suburb of Struthers struck
Providence and North Providence Tuesday, blocking the opening
court-supervis-

Wednesday. Teachers began picketing Tuesday for a 7 percent
salary increase.
At Whiting, Ind., junior and
senior high schools were closed
by a strike for a 6.2 percent
pay increase. About 600 pupils

TODAY AND

APPLICATIONS

s

Applications for positions on the University
of Kentucky Judicial Board are now available
at the following locations:
Dean of Students Office, Room 206 Administration Bldg.

Student Government Office, Room 204 Student Center
POSITIONS ARE OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS ABOVE THI
FRESHMAN CLASS

Applications must be returned bef
Saturday, September 20, 1969

TOMORROW

were affected with negotiations there was still time to negotiate.
declared at an impasse.
Schools were closed for other
Teachers in western Pennsylreasons in areas affected by Hurvania were striking in demands ricane Camille. Classes in ravfor amnesty from penalties inaged coastal districts of Mississtrike last sippi and Louisiana will not open
curred in a
spring, and to pave way for wage until at least Oct. 1.
increases won in the strike.
Local boards say law forbids
The hurricane caused more
than $14 million damage to
granting amnesty, but the Pennsylvania State Education Asso- schools in those two states and
ciation said an emergency law Virginia. The Virginia schools
passed by the state legislature are expected to open next week.
last December allows amnesty. Some 65,000 pupils and 2,400
In some areas strikes were teachers are involved in the three
narrowly averted and in others states.
22-da-

Tutorial Program Begins
The Lexington Tutorial
a

gram,

H

student-run-

,

Pro-

student-funde- d

organization, will begin
its fifth yearof operation Sept. 15.
The program offers UK students a chance to work with Lexington grade-schopupils and
gain experience in teaching.
The program stresses communication between child and

-

Coming Up
UK's Cosmopolitan Club is having
a jam session Saturday, Sept. 6 from
p.m. at the Student Center Grand
Ballroom. Music will be provided by
the Mag 7. Admission is $1.
The Student Bar Wives Auxiliary
is holding a reception in honor of new
students. The wives of all law students are invited to attend. The re7
ception will be held Sunday, Sept. of
at 3 p.m. in the Student Lounge
the Law Bldg.
Service Club
The University
will hold its first meeting Monday,
8 in Room 206 of the Student
Sept.
Center.

y

tutor rather than a
ordeal.
Sessions

will take place on

-

FOB BALK

WANTED

wanted to hare 1
apt. 1505 Yeat&ssnd Creascent
SS Ken MoJafi.
Call Larry at
Apt.
or 88315.
2S5t
edroom

299-94-

Part-tim- e
help. 2 to 4
hours daily. Call
for appointment,
y 3S5t
GIRL grad student seeks yroommate;
pleasant 2 bedroom hou&r near campus; furnished, utftiUes Included,
$62.50 each per montfc Call

WANTED

255-15-

--

8.

5S3t

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

lounge chair, other odd
chairs, pair cherry candlestick end
tables, cherry antiquedrawer chest,
GE refrigerator, takfsnot deep freeze,
all good conditi&ir 991 E. Cooper Dr.
0
nights; anytime weekend.

VELVET

5:15-8:3-

3S3t

Suzuki" AS-59
months warranty, excellent condition
or
only 800 milel QJdT Call
2637 campus.
3S3t

MOTORCYCLE

0.

266-83-

used; likerfew portable
Royal typewriVer,J85fari, elite type.
Call
Must sell imWdiately,
$65.
3S3t
after 4 p.m.
LADY'S size 12 J odours, $10. and
size 7 KB
$10.
lUridlngs boots, 3S3t
Phone
SLIGHTLY
277-37-

Jobs for metand women
evening shift. Good wages, free meals

PART-TIM- E

and uniforms furnished. 20 years old
minimum. Apply irt person. Lotts
1951 N. BroadSandwich Shoppe
3S5t
way at
1

SevMen and Women
eral
positions open. Must
be able to woijfnree days per week.
For more information and interview
2S9t
call Mr. Carroll,
MALE or FEMALE help wanted for
counter work. $1.65 perhour to start.
T
Hours: 11:30
pjn. or 5:30
p.m. to 8:30 9 Vpc Apply In person
2321
only to McDonald's Drive-IVersailles Road. Lexington, Ky. 2Stf
PART-TIM- E
Instructors needed at
YWCA for swimming. btfton and
ballet. Also babysitter.
4S5t
Call YWCA

COLLEGE

e,

1.

a.m.-LO-

n.

S

254-1-

"

Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays from Sept. 15 to Nov. 21.
Orientation for the program will
take place at 3 p.m. Sunday,
Sept. 14, in Room 245 of the Student Center.

CLASSIFIED

ROOMMATE

part-tim-

"book-learning-

277-9-

PENTAX SpotmaUc SI
35mm lenses plua
Like new. Call
TOP QUALITY
Stereo Amplifier
andJBtereo 70), in
(Dyna PAS-3- x
excellent con4it0frrll39.95. Write: J.
King, 1438 Oytfress, Paris 40361. 3S5t
aMr-3088.

withtases; pica, 9
Inch carriages.pele steel (Swedish)
has fiberglass case. Sears has metal,
after S p.m.
$35 each. Call

TYPEWRITERS

278-40-

3S3t

HALUCRAFTER'S53C-with speaktrXfind
transmitter. tBoth for

4S3t

0.

r3ke

new. less
than 700 milesJMed cash. Call Bob
4S5t
Ext. 2574.
Lunsford,
GOOD second hand stove and refrigerator will beat those furnished rates.
4S2t
Phone offer to
1968

SKBYICES

$50.

receiver
Ham
Phone

RAPIDO

HD

0,

Barber Shop329 Romany
Road, 2 qualified experienced barbers
specialising razofycuts, shear work,
as you request. Free parking.
3S5t

ADAMS

5.

Just overhauled; new

MOTORCYCLE
REWABD

fr&MP

i

I

LOST

return.

39691.

An opal ring;
Cooner&tdwn

LS

$10
7.

reward for
Phone

tires; mirror; saddle bags; ggod condition; perfect for carppus trans
portatlon; helmet arLservice manual
5S5t
Included.
299-i6- 0.

BS3t

,

FOB SENT
FURNISHED apartments for rent for
3 or 4, between UK uxktown. ApSSlOt
ply Apt 1. 340 SVpper.

OLD STUDENTS!

NEW STUDENTS!

RIDERS

WANTED

student delving to San
Francisco Sept. 8Jqppurgently needs
ll

STANFORD

GRADUATE
STUDENTS!

4S3t

9.

passenger-driverPCa-

MISCELLANEOUS

TRANSFERS!

PIANO SERVICE Reasonable prices.
All work grawfeed. Trained by
Steinway & Sfarns In New York. Mr.
26A20t
Davles,

FACULTY!

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* The Kentucky

Iernel

University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,

1894

19G9

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

V. Miller,

Editor-in-Chi-

George H. Jepson, Managing Editor

Bob Drown, Editorial rage Editor
Holert Duncan, Advertising Manager
Dottie Bean, Associate Editor
Dan Cossctt, Arts Editor
Chip Hutcheson, Sports Editor
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Carolyn Dunnavan, Women's rage Editor
Frank Coots, Mike Herndon, Jeannic Lecdom, Bill Mathews, Jean Rcnaker
Assistant Managing Editors

Thank You, PPD
In the course of campus events
it is very seldom that a much
maligned University department,
the Physical Plant Division, is given
a pat on the back. We wish to
devote this space to the PPD for
a job well done.
The lovely wire fences recently
constructed by the department have
done wonders toward enhancingthe
beauty of the South s most attractive campus. The long, straight,
slender strands of wire grace the
campus wherever one looks. The
tall, thin, sharp poles gouge the
pedestrians whenever one doesn't
look.
In addition to its aesthetic value,
the complex of fences makes the
campus a much better organized
place. As one watches the endless
rows of hurried students walk in
single file on the narrow sidewalk
leading from the back of the Com

merce Building he can't help but
marvel at the military precision.
Indeed, many soldiers face less
dangerous consequencies than
those which students must risk on
their walk to class. A miscalculation of six inches on one side puts
one in danger of a stray bulldozer
or a permanent mud puddle. One
step in the other direction could
fatally entangle one in the waiting
fence. But such is the price one
pays for order and neat, grassy
lawns.
As beneficial as the fences are,
there remain some improvements
to be made. There would be much
less student contact with the fences
if the PPD would string a little
barbed wire around. Better yet,
electrify the fences and keep all
the beasts on one side.
Question: On which side would
the beasts be?

CIA vs. Army

apparently as crucial a Berets; and third, in the

Face
consideration for conflicting Washington fiefdoms as it is for the
various camps with which Washington is involved as either friend
or foe in Asia. How much better
it would be if, these Washington
fiefdoms gave priority to the national good over feelings of offended
pride or departmental jealousy.
These observations are prompted
by the Central Intelligence Agency's shifting to Washington of its
campaign to put its side of the case
in the demoralizing controversy
over the Green Beret case in Vietnam. Exactly what happened to
justify the detention of the Green
Beret commander, Colonel Rheault,
and seven of his officers and men
on a charge of murder is still not
is

known. But enough has come out
for it to be assumed: first, that a
South Vietnamese civilian, who
was possibly a double agent, was
"bumped off because of his suspected double-dealinsecond, that
the subsequent
embarrassment
brought to a head a longstanding
feud between the United States
Army command in Vietnam and
the CIA over the role of the Green
g;

Hurricane Camille? .... No,
Hurricane Mitchell!"

Kernel Forum: the readers write!
high-lev-

el

which resulted,
Colonel Rheault and his seven fellow detainees were abandoned an$
left to carry the can.
In much of the reporting of
the case since the news media
got the first hint of it, the CIA
has gotten the less sympathetic
end of the stick. Secretary of the
Army Resor, apparently concerned
and rightly so over the effect
of the Green Beret case on service
morale generally, flew out to Vietnam and spent several days on
the spot. Presumably the CIA in
Washington felt the need to leak
its case to the national press at
the end at last week as insurance
lest its interests be prejudiced by

recriminations

Secretary Resor's report after listening to Army Commander Creigh-to- n
Abrams on the whole unhappy
Green Beret story.
The CIA's special pleading in
this way does not help matters
neither in its own defense, nor in
bolstering service morale in Vietnam, nor in removing the tarnishing of the United States good
name by the whole clumsy handling of the Green Beret operation.
The least damaging course from
the moment that its implications
were clear would have been quietly
to have untangled the threads behind the scenes.
Admittedly that is easier said
than done. The answer now, it
seems to us, is to keep Army units
where they should be under the
Army's undisputed authority and
let the CIA recruit or hire its own
people as individuals for whatever
it has to do. Each can then take
care of its own when in trouble
in the line of duty.
The Christian Science
, ... .......-Monitor.

week's two successive and almost identical passionate pleas for the Wall, in
the Kernel.
Where I come from, things are different. The student paper invites, urges
and even cajoles and begs for, contributions from the student body, and gets
them, in the 'form of essays, articles,
dialogues, diatribes, short stories, even
poetry and artwork. The paper is" not
always scintillating, but is so often; and
it is eagerly picked up when it comes
out. I cannot believe that among all
of UK's students there is not the same
number of budding authors, waiting to
hit print. I don't know whether the
Kernel would or would not accept such
contributions,- but it has certainly not
been asking for them or given any indication that it wants them. My own attempts at this and the other U.S. campus
have been either ignored or squeezed
into the "Letters" format. This doesn't
personally bother me, as I'm not bursting
with creativity, but I would like to read
the products of those around here who
are. How about it?

"C" Rations
To the Editor of the Kernel:
At present, there are listed three lots
for "G" parking. One behind the coliseum,
which fills quite rapidly due to its recent reduction in size. The second is a
small gravel lot across from the CP.
Building. Cars are cramped and use what
space is available quickly. The third
lot is beautiful. Clearly marked spaces
and more room than one could ever want,
it bakes in the sun and is acessable only
by bus and hoof.
Admitted, there isn't much room on

campus proper to devote to parking facilities, however; what parking there