THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, April

8

2, 19G5

SproulHall Workers
Testify At UC Trial

The Associated Press
BERKELEY, Calif.-Offi- ce
workers from Sproul Hall, the
University of Califrnia administration building w here more than
800 persons staged
s
Dec. 2 and 3, were scheduled
to give their versions today at
the trial of 155 of the demonstrators.
The trial entered its second
session today. Among the defendants was Mario Savio, acknowledged leader of the Free Speech
Movement that sparked the student revolt that led to the
n
demonstrations.
Veterans
Berkeley's
Auditori um is the scene of the
mass trial, expected to last as
long as six weeks before the
cases of more than 700 defendants are heard.
all-nig-

sit-in-

sit-i-

300-se-

at

Science Fair
In Coliseum
For Weekend
The

30th Kentucky State
Science Fair, an annual event of
the Kentucky Junior Academy of
Science, is being held today and
Saturday in Memorial Coliseum.
O. Ray Jordan, state director
of the academy and coordinator
for the fair, announced that approximately 245 spaces are reserved in the concourse of the
Coliseum for scientific exhibits
to be set up by high school
youths from throughout the state.
Overall registration was expected to number 350.
The fair is a climax to regional fairs and affords a large number of prizes. To the top winner
goes an
paid trip to
the National Science
and a four-yescholarship to Eastern Kentucky State
College.

They are charged variously
with failure to disperse, resisting arrest, and trespassing.
In Thursday's opening session before Municipal Judge Rupert Crittenden, Alameda County Dist. Atty. Frank Coackley
accused the defendants of "defying law and inviting arrest"
and said they had "full knowledge of California law and the
consequences."
Coakley described the Free
Speech Movement as "a hard
core of seasoned agitators to
which gravitated a motley collection of students.

"Their leader was a student
named Savio," he said. "Not
long out of New York, he fore--,
sook the name of Robert to the
more glamorous name of Mario.
"He was a junior student in
philosophy but soon became what
is known as a dropout and now
operates on the fringe," Coackley said.
Savio, in a gray suit and fresh
haircut, was the first to answer
the roll call. Students cheered
when he waved toward them.

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Photo by Rodney Boyce

Johnny Meets Lyndon

John VV. Oswald Jr., son of the University presi- dent, shakes hands with President Johnson just

prior to the President's address at the Founder's

Day convocation.

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It's not easy.
The Iron Curtain is a tough barrier. It's
not easily crossed. It runs for thousands of
miles across the center of a whole continent.
On the Communist side there is little
freedom.
There is less truth.
The Communist leaders in Eastern
Europe don't always talk straight to the

people about what's going on in the world
or even what's happening at home. When
they do talk, the talk doesn't always ring true.
And yet the truth does get through,
every day. How?
The Iron Curtain isn't soundproof.
And so the truth is broadcast, through
the air where it can't he stopped by walls and
guards, up to 18 hours every day to millions
of captive people in Poland, Czechoslovakia,
Bulgaria, Rumania and Hungary.
The truth is broadcast by Radio Free
Europe.
The Communist rulers have set up a monopoly on news and information in Eastern
Europe; Radio Free Europe has been set up

to break this monopoly. It analyzes all information, true. an d false, sifts out the false,
then broadcasts the news, without bias or
distortion. Talking to people in their own
languages, Radio Free Europe tells them
wbat's really going on at home, behind the
Iron Curtain and world-widRadio Fce Europe is a bridge of truth
between two blocks : the captive and the free.
Most important: Radio Free Europe,
because it exists and continues to exist helps
these millions hold onto the will for freedom
and the drive for freedom.
Will you help get the truth through?
Free Europe is a private American enterprise; it depends on voluntary subscriptions.
Whatever you can contribute will mean a
great deal to a good many people behind the
Iron Curtain.
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Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising Council

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