xt705q4rmt50 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt705q4rmt50/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690925  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 25, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 1969 1969 2015 true xt705q4rmt50 section xt705q4rmt50 Ik

Thursday Evening, September 25, 1969

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXI. No. 22

UK SDS Rejects

The Militant Role
By

V

JIM FUDGE

And
PAT MATHES
Kernel Staff Writers
The Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) took preliminary

measures Wednesday to disenfranchise itself from the SDS National Office in Chicago, which
has been taken over by the Revolutionary Youth Movement I
(RYM-I)-

.

In a Wednesday night meeting at the Student Center the
SDS rejected proposals and policies from the militant RYM-- I
RYM-Ioffand the
shoots from the original SDS.
RYM-known as the Weathermen, and the more radical of the
two groups, advocates the use of
destructive tactics as opposed to
the more peaceful demonstrations
of the RYM-Ia moderate group
dedicated to helping the underprivileged by peaceful means.
I,

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President Betsy Wilson, second from left, shows a newly won award to
the gids f Gamma Phi Beta sorority. The group won the Panhellenic
Scholarship award for the highest grade point average for a chapter for
the year 1968-6Kernel Photo by Dick Ware
9.

Chicago Riot Trials Begin

CHICAGO (AP)-JuJulithe International Amphitheatre."
Hoffman also refused a mous J. Hoffman today opened the
trial of eight persons charged tion that U.S. marshals not enwith conspiring to riot during ter the courtroom or bar the
doors to the courtroom and that
the Democratic National Convention by refusing to disqualify members of the underground
himself and by denying a string press be seated.
of defense motions.
"I am a U.S. judge, not a
Hoffman also ordered bench
chief usher," Hoffman replied.
warrants issued for four defense
He also rejected a defense
lawyers of record who were not
motion for a hearing on the conin the courtroom.
present
Thomas A. Foran, U.S. attor- stitutionality of the Civil Rights
ney, said that if the defense Act of 1968 under which the dewould waive statements about fendants are being tried.
denial of their Sixth Amendment
right to counsel he would not
LBJ Subpoenaed
insist on the four attorneys' apLeonard Weinglass, a defense
pearance. But the defense counsel
"lawyer, objected to the ruling
refused.
and said that the defense had
Motion Denied
subpoenaed former President
Hoffman also denied a motion Lyndon B. Johnson, former U.S.
to move the trial from the U.S. Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark and
District courthouse to a large Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chiarena where more spectators cago. These men, Weinglass said,
could be seated. Hoffman, 74, would be called in connection
said: "I am obligated to sit here with the proposed hearing on
in the U.S. courthouse not in the constitutionality of the act.
dge

However, Hoffman denied the

motion on the grounds it was
improperly submitted.
Capacity Crowd
After the motions had been
ruled on, Hoffman ordered a recess and moved the proceedings
temporarily to a larger courtroom where jury selection was
to begin. Hoffman's courtroom,
which has a capacity of about
150 persons, was filled with newsmen and about 15 young persons in unconventional dress.
Several hundred supporters of
the defendants milled around a
plaza outside the skyscraper
courthouse as the trial got under way but there were no

I,

I,

A

Red Youth Army
spokesman from

RYM-- I

stated that they had hopes of
"building a Red Youth Army to
fight American Imperialism" and
to "bring the whole mother country down."
The RYM-- I faction was represented by several members from
the Cincinnati chapter. RYM-I- I
was represented by Joe Hoban,
from Louisville, who also works
for the Southern Conference Educational Fund.
Separate Plans
Both groups presented separate plans for programs to be held
RYM-I- I
in Chicago October
is planning peaceful marches
through "black, brown, and
white neighborhoods," protesting the war in Vietnam and social
injustice and racism in America.
1.

RYM-- I is
planning to demonstrate aggressively against the
"capitalistic society and American Imperialism," in support of
the black people, the Vietnamese
and the National Liberation
Front (NLF).
After displaying their policies,
RYM-- I
refused to remain quiet
for other presentations, so they
were told to "get out" if they
could not listen to the local
chapter's point of view. The
Weathermen then left the meeting in disgust, chanting "Ho,
Ho, Ho Chi Minh" as they left,
while a local member shouted

"CoMets!"
RYM-I-

however,

I,

was

com-

pletely willing to listen to the
local group's discussion concerning the split in the national organization.
Disaffiliated
After some policy discussion
the SDS voted to disassociate
itself from the national group,
whose office in Chicago is controlled by RYM-I- .
A committee of volunteers was
requested to contact the other
350 existing SDS chapters, now
split or disenfranchised with the
national office. Their goal is to
reorganize the old chapters into
a new national group, with the
policies and objectives of the
original SDS.
The local SDS chapter is also
planning to keet in touch with
the Louisville RYM-I- I chapter.
They feel the relation could be
a benefit to both groups.
About 100 people attended the
Wednesday evening meeting,
which was originally scheduled
to be an organizational meeting.
Plans were changed when it was
learned that the t wo rival factions
had members in town.

J
nrrji
f

?
,

Student Code Clarified
By FutrelVs Proposal
A proposed
change in the
structure of the Board of Student
Publications and an administrative "clarification" of the Student Code were among topics
Student Government President
Tim Futrell discussed at his week-

ly press conference Wednesday.

The "clarification" of the code
deals with Section 1.55 (EmerCircumstances of the
gency
Code). This section of the code
for stugives the vice president
dent affairs the authority to
bar persons from the campus for
their own safety or the safety
of university personnel and property.
Source of Confusion
Dr. Stuart Forth, acting vice
president for student affairs, has
assured Futrell that Section 1.55
will be administered to the effect:
if a student requests an appeal
before the Appeals Board, the
Board will meet within 48 hours
to act on the appeal.
Futrell pointed out that the
procedure on this question has
been a source of confusion In the
Code, and expressed the hope

that this procedure would eventually be formally included in the
Code. Futrell also commented,
"I think this one will be accepted
without a doubt."

Amendment Proposed
An executive proposal involving the Board of Student Publications would shift the responsibility for screening prospective
student members from the administration to the SG Executive.
Futrell has recommended to
President Singletary that the original 1967 directive from former
President
John Oswald be
amended to read:
"Seven students members of
the Board will be appointed by
the President by the following
process: the President of Student
Government after consultation
with the Faculty Senate Advisory
Committee on Student Affairs
will recommend a panel of fourteen to the Vice President for
Student Affairs. The President In
consultation with the Vice President for Student Affairs will
make the final appointments."

Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

Following The
Natchez Trace

Making the most of an unlikely situation these students engage in a
spirited pillow fight in the Student Center while moving the "Coffee
House" back to the Grand Ballroom Wednesday night. Moved to
Room 245 of the Student Center to avoid disrupting another meeting,
the "Coffee House" and the Natchez Trace who were appearing
there ran into space and electrical problems. The result was another
move back to the Ballroom and a little pillow action on the way.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Sept.

19

25,

Crusoe Never Had It So Good
Imagine being stranded on
the only male among
hundreds of native girls. It isn't
quite that good, but almost, for
Steve Banes and Tom Korden-brocboth seniors and the only
male undergraduates
in the
an island

k,

had influenced his decision.
doesn't think much
about being the only male in his
et t,

Steve

classes any more.

"I think with women

becom-

ing doctors and lawyers, there
are less distinctions now. Also,
School of Home Economics.
it seems more natural being in
Steve, from Louisville, is mathis department with Dr. Pack-ejoring in nutrition and food scihere," Steve added.
ence.
After graduation in May, Steve
"I started out in engineering
and didn't like it. Then I thought is thinking about the Army inabout chemistry. But I was in- ternship program. He would like
terested in foods, such as space to work with space or army foods,
foods. I read some magazines, "such as food taken out on the
battlefields."
Food Technology and Food Enand decided that was
In Steve's meal management
gineering,
class he wore a white lab coat
what I wanted."
He also said the head of his and chef s cap, while his classdepartment, Dr. Leonard Pack mates were required to wear
tt

Senior Coeds Avoid
Wardrobe Worries
NEW YORK

(AP)-Accor-

ers, rubber cement, cellophane

ding

to the present rate of attrition,
by next year our daughter may
be going back to her senior year
at college with nothing more
than a toothbrush and a checkbook.
When she made her first excursion into the land of learning, Gay outdid the Boy Scouts
in preparedness. What she took
with her then would have been
enough to establish clothing, shoe
and appliance stores, with a drug
and cosmetic business on the side.
To anyone watching her pack
a trunk, suitcases, cartons and

shopping bags, it was evident
that she was headed for four
years of isolation at an institute
deep in the jungles of Africa.
The fact is, she was going less
than 300 miles from home to
George Washington University,
in the heart of the nation's capital.
Not only did she outfit herself with clothing sufficient to
carry her through to a doctor's
degree, but she armed herself
with enough aspirin, allergy pills
and cough syrup to enable the
drug firms that produced them
to declare an extra dividend.
As for cosmetics, she seemed
convinced that eye makeup and
foundation were completely unavailable in Washington, D.C.,
and only her forethought in going equipped with such exotic
items as toothpaste, soap and
shampoo would allow her to emulate the scouts in the field of
cleanliness.
Obviously,

a college educa-

tion is impossible to achieve without the aid of a hairdryer, stereo,
and electypewriter,
tric blanket. Keeping in mind
that she also might attend a few
classes, Cay laid in a supply of
pens, ink cartridges, loose-lea- f
paper, notebooks, pencils, eras

type, paperclips and typewriter
ribbons that made her the envy
of the college bookstore.
Getting there was only half
the fun. The rest came later, in
the form of stuffing the assorted
impedimenta into a minute elevator in the dorm and into an
even more minute room, under
the glaring 'gaze of her roommate.
When

came

home

white uniforms ami hair nets.
The class was geared for girls,
to train them in preparing food

for families.
Steve plans to let his wife
handle all the cooking after he's
married.
In this academic Amazon,
Steve feels there is definitely a
reversed double standard. "Like
when the professor walks in and
says, 'Cood Morning, girls,'"
Tom agrees. He's an interior
design major from Covington.
"In my housing course, there
were forty girls and only four
guys. I thought I'd die the first
time I had to give a report before
class. But I'm over that now."
Tom isn't sure why he's majoring in interior design, except
he likes art. After high school
graduation, he was planning to
go into architecture, "but that
takes too much math."
Eventually Tom would like
to work for a firm that handles
commercial decorating. "I don't
want to go into somebody's
house and tell him what kind of

draperies to put up."
Tom said this time last year
he might have felt odd about being the only male interior design

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"But look at all these hippies.
You can't tell if they're boys
or girls," Tom explained.

Christmas, intersession and

spring vacation.
Last year, returning as a sophomore, she pared her paraphernalia down to such an extent
that it fit into one small trunk
and one suitcase.
This year, preparing to go
back to GW as a junior, she
postponed any thought about
packing until the last minute.
"Oh I'll just throw a few
things into a couple of suitcases
the night before I leave," she
said airily. "Who needs a lot of
extra junk around at school?"

The Kentucky

Kernel

The 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
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Begun as the Cadet In 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Sept. 25,
'

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Dill Roughen, photography instructor in the school
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new daughter from the members of the

Proud
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Yale President Wants
Responsive University

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NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)
Yale President Kingman Brewster Jr. proposed Wednesday
night "radical reforms" including revocation of his own tenure
that would make the university
administration more accountable
to the Yale "community."
He said last year's demonstrations on Yale and other cam-

W

AW

puses made him think about ways
to make the university more responsive to needs of its members."

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would rather spend their time
learning and living than governing the university, he said, but
they insist on the right to be
heard.
He said the university should
be able to reappraise the competence of the administration
"without waiting for a push or
rebellion."
This reappraisal might come
seven years after the initial appointment, or perhaps earlier,
Brewster told the Yale Political
Union.

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* The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

Iernel

University of Kentucky

THURSDAY, SE3TEMBER 25,

1894

1969

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

Editor-in-Chi-

Stratification
Or Education?

,

"You Americans are not students." Argyris, a student from
Greece, working on his Master's
degree, voiced his opinion quite
bluntly this summer. He uttered
his flat statement in a tone of
superiority. He felt no need to
back it up. He had been educated
in his own country, and was here
to finish up his Master's work.
He studied at least nine or ten
hours a day, and a look at his
grades was an indication that he
really did study. He was accustomed to sometimes being insulted
with an A. He preferred an A plus.
Grades weren't what Argyris's education was all about, though.
Some weirdo of a genius? Not
according to Argyris. He claims
he's simply a student who applies
himself. Americans do not.
Of course Argyris' statement has
no foundation. Of course we Americans are real students. Look at
the number of hours we spend each
week cramming for tests, working
for that almighty grade. We are

students.
Or are we? One hears superfluous questions often, which could
make one wonder. "Will this be
on the test?" "Is that statistic
on page 43 really important?" These
kinds of questions are posed constantly. Rarely will some ambitious
soul begin the class with a question such as, "When I was reading
Chapter 7, I had several questions
about the author's treatment of

educated is not a passive process
of absorbing, or taking in," what
the professor is saying. Rather,
education, at least on the part of
the professor, is a "drawing out"
of the student. The professor guides
the student to question, evaluate,
and build on the concepts which
he throws out. For the rest of the
semester, the sincere student in this
professor's class tries tounderstand
the dichotomy between the professor's "education" philosophy, and
his lectures and exams of 100 true-fals- e
statements which require a
of lecture notes.
polly-parroti-

ng

It seems many professors at the
University of Kentucky are too
grade oriented. Do they really even
care about imparting a little wisdom, or helping to uncover some
knowledge?
One professor began this semester's class by discussing "extra
points" for a grade. He began, we
thought somewhat facetiously, by
saying that he had a stack of
about 300 papers that needed stap-- j
ling. He assured the students that
they could discuss the subject matter while stapling. One student
.was typing and compiling his notes
taken in class, and others were
participating in experiments for extra credit. At the end of class
there were some "staple" volunteers. Some of the students didn't
see anything facetious about the
idea.

It seems the one thing imporThose people who come closest
tant to most professors is their
to being classified as "student" by
grading system. Students eventualArgyris definition in regard to
ly
grades with knowledge
study time and dedication are those andequate
wisdom.
who seem to be test oriented and
One professor stated the matter
grade oriented: "How much will
"After the first test the
this test count? What was the succinctly.
between the professor
mean for that test? Is our exam relationship
and the students disintegrates."
going to be objective or subjecAre any of us involved in any
tive?" They fall far short of his
idea of student.
real education here? What can we
One wise professor begins his say to someone who declares, "You
course with a definition of educa- Americans are not students." We
tion. He explains that education seem to prove that statement everyis derived from the Latin: educare: day. "Hey, when did you say our
to lead out from, to draw out from. next test was? Is it objective or
He goes on to elaborate that being subjective?"

An Overdue Matter
The crispness of fall brings with
it a freeze on virtually all of the
student publications at the University. Due to a lackadaisical attitude on the part of the administration, the Student Board of Publications, which is usually appointed
in the spring, is not yet in opera-

tion.
There are many pressing matters
the board should be considering
at this time. The fate of the Kentucky Review, for instance, is awaiting the action of the nonexistent
board.
Many criticisms were aimed at

last year's Board of Student Publications. Repeated absences from
the meetings, use of membership
to gain personal ends and revenges,
and numerous other complaints
were voiced in regard to the board
members. These matters should be
considered in full before the new
membership is selected. But is there
any reason for the review to last
six months?
If the selection process isof such
a burden for the administration,
IX' r haps they could simply procrastinate another six months and let
the problem solve itself.

;

Kernel Soapbox
By BILL RAUCH
A & S Sophomore

meeting." First of all, Mr. White, the
trustees would never permit 14 thousand
students to be inside the administration
building, let alone the meeting (usually
it has been difficult for more than ten
students to observe a trustees' meeting).
Secondly, examine the turnout for student
elections. This fall, there were less than
500 votes cast in the student elections.
Let us for the moment use this figure
as an indicator of student apathy, since
elections are not "radical" or offensive
to the academic community (after all,
Mr. White is "student president of the
Wildcat Marching Band"). Support of the
students rights movement last spring
totaled well over 3,000, Mr. White (documented on petitions no duplicates, no
"Donald Ducks").
Now for Mr. White's assinine comments
on the Free University. This "core of dissatisfied misfits" includes a broad spectrum of people ranging from
professors to Creeks to "radicals" to the
student who
happily
merely wants to supplement his education. The University, in trustees' statements, has committed itself to provide
facilities for those who seek knowledge.
Having it on campus does make the Free
University freer for those who enroll in it.
Many students would not have translocalities
portation to various
and could not attend courses. And, Mr.
White, the Free University is progressing;
nobody is compromising any ideals and
nobody is wasting time (really, Mr.
White, left field is a very poor source
for sound, logical statements).
Finally, for Mr. White's quotes. As to
the first one, anyone who is dedicated
indeed demonstrates. In a different manner, perhaps, but one still demonstrates.
Why don't you examine the context in
which the quote lies and see if you're
not trying to fool us (as well as yourself)?
Your second quote (appearing in Time
magazine, commenting vaguely and ridiculously on the Woodstock festival, and
not on' modern protestors) is a summation of meaningless cliches and rhetoric
applied by those refusing to understand
today's youth. But it follows that you
would choose such misconstrued statements to climax your childish rhetorical

John D. White's September 23rd carload of bovine feces was entirely too much
to digest. The only reason White's article
bears comment and criticism is because
he chose to have his inane ravings published for public scrutiny. The criticism
shall be centered about the first three
statements Mr. White applies to the campus protestor; Mr. White's translations of
these are unbased generalizations, in validly construed, totally the product of his
warped mind and shall be ignored.
Concerning Mr. White's explication of
"high standards of academic relevance,"
his own statement shall sum up its criticism. "Here lies a great fallacy: the object is not to gain or learn from every class
one takes: the object is to be exposed."
Correct, Mr. White, that is a great fallacy. Exposure and education are not
exclusively equivalent. Mr. White overlooks desire to learn, which must supplement exposure in order to obtain education. Mr. White probably denies desire
to learn as being characteristic of the
campus protestor. This denial is proven
false by the very existence of the Free
University. Dissecting the definition of education further, relevance is definitely
part of desire to leam. A subject can be
relevant to a student in two ways: (1)
relevant to one's educational and occupational goal, and (2) relevant to one's
other interests (i.e. the category of
Summing up, relevance, desire to
learn, and exposure are all integral parts
of an education.
Considering the second statement,
"students' rights." Mr. Whitefinds it "odd
that only a liandful have seen fit to cause
a disturbance over this matter." Indeed
it is odd. The apathy at UK is a phenomenon that continually defies explanation. Of course Mr. White does not intend the statement to be scrutinized in
this framework. He contends that there
is such a small number of dissidents
because of the (joVe) non-- relevance (?)
of the issues involved. However, on further
examination, it can be seen that the small
turnout is due to apathy. Mr. White states,
"I know if the students' rights were really
impinged, there would be 14 thousand
instead of 14 students at the trustee's discourse.
elec-tives-

).

top-not-ch

* -

THE KENTUCKY

.

t

Nixon Policy Undercutting Wallace
WASHINGTON

(AP)-Republ-

consuming petition drives to win
places on the ballots for 1970
and 1972.
Wallace was on all state ballots in the 1968 election.

ican

leaders in the majority
of Deep South states say President Nixon's policies are effectively undercutting a possible
1972 presidential bid by former
Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama.
Elsewhere in the country, activity by Wallace's American Independent party is minimal,
though some groups are planning 1970 state and congressional races.
In more than half the states,
Wallace supporters will again
have to resort to expensive, time- -

Losing Strength
Other findings of an Associated Press survey showed political leaders regard Wallace's
current strength as well under
his 1968 showing in almost every
state except Alabama and Mississippi, which he carried by
large margins in 1968 over Nixon and Democratic nominee Hubert H. Humphrey.
But Republican leaders in

Educator Blames Parents
For New Left Revolution
Donald Barr, former administrator at Columbia University
and now headmaster of New
York's exclusive Dalton Preparatory School, has accussed permissive parents of "directly financing the New Left Revolution and
the drug
The headmaster charged in an
article in the current issue of
McCall's Magazine that most
parents of campus rebels "do
not approve of what their children
are doing now. They never have.
They are comfortable, middle-clas- s
people for the most part,
the
many of them professionals
sort of parents who are anxious
to be modern, the sort who reward precocity."
"On the day that parents stop
paying tuition for
on the day they stop handing
out allowances for strike funds
and narcotics and reeking apartments; the student revolutions
impatient with reason, violent

nor's basic support.

"In

Nixon Stronger
areas such as fiscal

MON.-FRI-

self-contr- ol

"Adolescence may now last a
decade," he said, adding that
"we have stuffed our youngsterT
with vitamins, we have stimulated their sexuality with our advertising and our mass fantasies,
we have encouraged them to
dream and to criticize, and when
they are bursting with energy
we make
and
them wait in schools."

n;

Dresa up

or mm -" K
aj, iw-

JJ) Advanced

view similar to that reported
in Louisiana, also a Wallace
state, where observers report the
school question dominates all
other political factors.
Republican leaders feel also

MEN 5
HAIRSTYLIST

that President is undercutting
s
Wallace in Tennessee, the
and Virginia carried by
Nixon in the election plus Texas carried by Humphrey aixl
conservative states such as Nebraska, Arizona and Idaho.
Wallace is reported considering a bid for the Alabama governorship again in 1970 against
Cov. Albert P. Brewer, who succeeded the late Mrs. Wallace
last year.

V;

JERRY SPRY
now located

....

203 S. .Lime

at Kentucky's Finest Putting Course
4 'til 1 1 p.m.
SAT., 10 a.m. 'til Midnight
1
SUNDAY,
p.m. 'til 11 p.m.

.,

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o

Caro-lina-

re-

sponsibility, Vietnam war, law
and order, I feel the Nixon administration is certainly undercutting the Wallace sentiment in
the state," Arkansas state COP
Chairman Odell Pollard said.
But Pollard said the administration's school desegregation
policies differ little from those
of Democratic administrations, a

ENJOY GOLF

against restraint, a holiday from
will wither away,
and the real learning that must
precede intelligent social change
will begin," Barr wrote in McCall's.
He also asserted that "one
of the causes of restlessness
among young people is the steady
lengthening of adolescence. Our
society defers longer and longer
the time when an intelligent man
or woman can stop studying and
become fully responsible for himself."

cop-out- ."

IMAGINE???
A FREE
LESSON
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Georgia and Arkansas, both
ried by Wallace last year feel
the Nixon administration's policies arc having the effect of
diminishing the former govercar-

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u,

--

Applications

Applications for positions on the University
of Kentucky Judicial Board are now available
at the following locations:

(

'AS

7f

.11

DEAN OF STUDENTS (iFICE
Room 206 Administration Bldg.

STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE
Room 204 Student Center
POSITIONS ARE OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS ABOVE
THE FRESHMAN CLASS

uidMBiHGajMgjaaaHH

has
Deadline for application to the
been extended until noon, (12:00 p.m.) Friday,
September 26, 1969.
J-Bo-

Memorial Coliseum

- Oct, 10

Tickets on Sale Starting Sept'. z4
Student Center
$2.00 and $2.50

ard

c

A

* fi--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Sept. 25,

THE

19

On Offensive Unit One Week

SALTY TOMS

Godwin Adds Speed At Split End
JEFF IMPALLOMENI

torof the Kentucky offense, said,
Kernel Staff Writer
"we anticipated that it would be
With third down and 26 yards
coverage. Instead it
to Ro, trail