xt70p26q1x2b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70p26q1x2b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19681104  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November  4, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, November  4, 1968 1968 2015 true xt70p26q1x2b section xt70p26q1x2b Tee Kentucky ECemnel
Monday Evening, Nov. 4,

19G8

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LX, No. 49

School Suspends

Students Charged
In Drug Crimes
By LARRY DALE KEELING

t

V- -

1

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;

Kernel Photo By Dick Ware

Hie Karate Club? No, it's the Beaux Arts Ball at
house. The annual affair featured the music of Soul, Inc., and had the
s
theme,
Knowing." The School of Architecture pushed
it to the hilt, utilizing an "exploding" bandstand, strobe lights galore,
and even a "Queen of the Beaux Arts Ball" contest, which was won by
a male. Now that's
knowing.
Clay-Wac-

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Li (III

Ware-Iicdll-X

"Multi-Sensuou-

multi-sensuo-

PoliSci Campus Poll Picks Nixoni
Prof Extends Findings To State
Richard Nixon and Marlow
Cook will carry Kentucky in Tuesday's races for the presidency
and the senate, according to Dr.
Malcolm E. Jewell of the political science department.
Dr. Jewell released the preliminary findings of a poll of uniundergraduates,
versity
conducted in his Political Science 570 class, which showed
te

Republican Nixon receiving 49
percent of the vote, Democrat
Hubert Humphrey 38.5 percent,

and independent

candidate

Ceorge Wallace 10.5 percent. The
remaining 2 percent specified a
preference for "other" candidates.
These results are based on the
responses of 260 individuals of a
total sample expected to run be

tween 400 and 425 persons. The
sample was picked at random
from university student listings,
and was limited to undergraduates listing Kentucky residences
and falling between the ages of
IS and 30. Each class member
was assigned 6 interviewees.
In contrast, a poll of Fayette
County voters by Dr. Bradley
Continued On Pace 4

Assistant Managing Editor
Two University students arrested with four other persons Oct.
21, for narcotics violations have been temporarily suspended from
the University, according to Dr. Stuart Forth, acting vice president
for student affairs.
The two are Allen Holmgren and Eric Friedlander, both 21.
Dr. Forth said that "we acted on the data we had in our
possession at the time" and the suspension would last only until
final disposition of the case or until there is some other reason
to change.
He added that, depending on the outcome of the case or the
finding of new facts, the temporary suspension could be changed
to permanent suspension, reinstatement or expulsion.
One of the students has appealed his suspension to the University Appeals Board, according to Dr. Forth. He said that the Board
met over the weekend and would make its recommendations to
him. He added that he had not seen the recommendations as yet.
Dr. Forth said the students had been suspended under the
section of the Student Code which says, "In the event that a student has been accused of an offense against the University andor
against the city, state or federal government, the nature of which
may present a clear and present danger of serious physical or mental
harm to the student or to any other member of the University
community or to University property, the vice president for Student
Affairs, after consultation with the University Appeals Board, may
impose such temporary sanctions on the student as are reasonably
necessary to protect the student, the University community andor
University property from such danger.
"Temporary Sanctions"
"Such temporary sanctions may exist and be enforced only until
such time as final disposition has been made of the case by the
appropriate University judicial or administrative entity or, in the
event,. the offense is not one subject to University disciplinary
procedures, until the student's trial by the properly-constitute- d
authorities has been completed."
The examining trial for the two students and six other persons
arrested on narcotics violations was continued in Police Court
Friday until Nov. 15.
Also Friday William Shannon Dillon, a Transylvania student
was held over to the grand jury on a charge of illegal sale of
narcotics. Jamie Carl Asher and David Francis DeAtley were placed
on
probation after pleading guilty to illegal use of narcotics.
Two University students arrested for loitering Oct. 24, had their
cases continued generally in Friday's Police Court session.

AAUP 'S Committee9 Seeks To Serve Students
By DANA EWELL
Assistant Managing Editor
The American Association of University Professors (AAUP) has formed a new
committee to safeguard the rights and
freedoms of students. It is known as
S Committee.
Few people, especially students, have
heard about S Committee, and its chairman, Dr. Fred Vetter of the Political
Science Department, is concerned about
this lack of communication.
"We want to establish ourselves as a
sympathetic body to which students can
go to determine proper channels for redress of their grievances, a sort of
clearinghouse for student organizations
and individuals who feel their rights
have been Infringed upon."
May Petition
"We will investigate their complaints
and if we determine a violation of student
rights we will petition the Administration
to correct the situation. If this doesn't
work, then we will ask the local and
national AAUP to investigate the case
with the purpose of involving AAUP
sanctions against the institution."
Dr. Vetter explained that AAUP sanctions have never been used in the area of
student rights before, but they have been
enforced against institutions which violate
rights of faculty members. He cited, as
one example of AAUP sanctions, the
mailing of letters to all members urging
them to refuse employment at the institution involved in the violations.
With ACLU
In this area of student rights violations,

S Committee is considering forming a joint
committee with the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) . This committee would
review student complaints and assign
them to either the AAUP or ACLU for
investigation.
Besides Dr. Vetter, there are five other
members of S Committee: Lawrence Tar-peBusiness; Robert Sedler, Law; Alvin
Goldman, Law; Bradley Canon, Political
Science; and John Weisbuch, Health Services.
y.

perty policing and the involvement of University Senate. The discussion will
campus police in some student activi- continue at 7 p.m. this Monday in the
ties so that they will better understand Law Building courtroom.
the student."
The committee is trying to include
Dr. Vetter's personal interest is in the some of the concepts and wording of a
area of student housing. As chairman of statement on rights and freedoms of stua testing committee for the Lexington dents published last year in the AAUP
Open Housing Committee, he lists three Bulletin in those parts of the governing
main targets:
regulations which apply to students.

Compiling a listing of nondiscriminaLittle Approval
tory housing.
According to Dr. Vetter, not a memSending white testers to housing areas ber of the Senate himself, the AAUP
S Committee is now formulating plans
where Blacks have encountered difficulty.
proposals have met with little approval
for a series of forums on the rights and
Providing legal advice and counsel in from the University Senate.
privileges of Black students, the role of pressing discrimination cases before the
the student in the community (LexingS Committee was mainly concerned
Human Rights Commission or in federal
ton), student health rights and privileges court.
with increasing the voice of the student
and freedom of the campus press.
member of the Board of Trustees. The
Turning to another goal S Committee committee drafted the following statefor these
"We have speakers lined up
has set for itself, Dr. Vetter said, "We ment for inclusion in the regulations:
forums but we haven't set any dates," want to interest students in
participation
Dr. Vetter said, "mainly because we in
"A responsibility of the student trustee
University administration and governwould like to hold them as the issues ment. We
hope to encourage graduate and shall be to present to the Board of Trustees
arise. In that way, perhaps, we will be
undergraduate students to hold positions all formal communications from the Stuable to channel intense interest in these on
departmental committees, which dent Covemment and any other student
forums, to make them more than just directly affect the courses they take.
groups, including any minority reports
exercises in listening to each other."
of that body or such groups."
Real Importance
Speaker Forums
Little Hope
"It's not really important whether a
the
Dr. Vetter hopes that most of
themThis would mean. Dr. Vetter explained,
forums will be broadcast on WBKY's UK majority of students want to govern
Roundtable. One panel, on student power, selves but whether the legitimate rights that the student trustee and not the
of students are protected by however University president would be the main
was broadcast several weeks ago.
small a representative group."
spokesman for the students' views.
S Committee is looking for ways to
reduce the tension between the AdminisS Committee's main inAlthough decisions made at the curRight now
tration's enforcing ami and the students. terest is in the revision of the Governing rent series of University Senate meetings
"Our proposals in this area focus on Regulations of the University, which has are not final, Dr. Vetter sees little hope
a reduction of police annaxnents to a been under discussion for the last two of winning senate support for the AAUP
bare minimum commensurate with pro
Mondays during special sessions of the proposal.

* JJ--

KENTUCKY

TIIE

Monday, Nov. 4,,.1968

KERNfy

invites you to join an infant industry.

IBM

Big as it is, the information processing
industry is just beginning to grow.

Recently, Fortune estimated that the value
of general purpose computers installed in
this country will more than double by 1972.
Other publications have other predictions,
and probably no source is totally precise. But
most agree that information processing is
one of America's fastest growing major
industries.
Every day, it seems, computers go to work
in a new field or new application. IBM computers are working in such diverse fields as
business, law, medicine, oceanography,
traffic control, air pollution. Just about any

area you, can name.

T sqmebody just starting out, this growth
means exceptionally good chances for
advancement. Last year, for example, we
appointed over 4,000 managers on
performance, not seniority. Here are four
ways you could grow with IBM:

.Engineering and Science

"The interdisciplinary
environment keeps
you technologically
hot."

ment, Manufacturing, Product Test, Space
and Defense Projects, and Field Engineering.
You'll need at least a B.S. in any technical field.

Marketing

"Working with
company presidents
is part of the job."

4
1

tiwi

"Another growth factor is the job itself,"

Joe says. "During my first few years,

X

J.

"I'm pretty much the
IBM Corporation in
the eyes of my
customers," says
Andy Moran."l
consider that fairly good for an engineer
who graduated only two years ago."
Andy earned his B.S.E.E. in 1966. Today,
he's a Marketing Representative with IBM,
involved in the planning, selling and installation of data processing systems.
Andy's customers include companies with
annual sales ranging from 20 million
to 1 20 million dollars. He often works
and presiwith executive
dents. Andy says, "At first was a little
nervous about the idea of advising executives at that level. But by the time finished
training, knew I was equipped to do the job."
Career areas in marketing at IBM include:
Data Processing Marketing and Systems
Engineering, Office Products Sales, and
Information Records Sales. Degree requirement: B.S. or B.A. in any field.
vice-presiden-

"Working in data processing today pretty much means
you work in a broad spectrum
of technologies," says Nick
Donofrio.
An Associate Engineer at IBM, Nick is a
1967 graduate in Electrical Engineering.
He's using his technical background to design circuits for computer memory systems.
Nick says, "Your specialty at IBM can take
you into the front yard of half a dozen different fields. In my job, for example, I work
with systems design engineers, chemists,

physicists, metallurgists, and programmers.
The diversity helps me keep up to date on
the latest technologies."
Career areas in engineering and science
at IBM include: Research, Design & Develop

Other reasons to consider IBM
Small Team Concept. No matter how large
a project may be, we break it down into
units small enough to be handled by one
person or a few people. Result: quick recognition for achievement.
1.

2. Educational Support. IBM employees
spend over thirteen million hours a year in
company-sponsore-

d

educational and training

programs. And plans like our Tuition

I'll get
experience in nearly every area of general
accounting Income & Expense, Balance
Sheet, and so on. I'll be learning how the
company is structured and how it operates
on a broad scale. That's exactly the kind of
knowledge I'll need to help me qualify for
a manager's job."
Career areas in finance at IBM include:
Financial Planning and Control, Financial
Analysis, Accounting, Information Systems,
and Internal Auditing. You'll need at least a
Bachelor's degree.

Programming

"It's a mixture
of science

and art."

"Acomputer

ts

I

I

W7

since he got his B.B.A. in June, 1 968. Growth
wasn't the only reason he chose IBM. He
says, "I learned that it's general practice at
IBM to promote from within and to promote
on merit alone. I like that.

I

Finance

....

less until some
i
body writes a
program Tor ii,
f
says Earl Wilson.
Earl got a B.A. in Modern
Languages in June, 1967.
He's now an IBM programmer working on a
teleprocessing system that will link the
computerized management information
. systems of several IBM divisions.

vO

a "program" as a set of
instructions that enables a computer to do a
specific job. "Programming involves
science," says Earl, "because you have to
analyze problems logically and objectively.
But once you've made your analysis, you
have an infinite variety of ways to use a
computer's basic abilities. There's all the
room in the world for individual expression."
Career areas in programming at IBM include:
Systems Programming, Applications Programming, Programming Research, and
Internal Programming for IBM's own use.
You'll need at least a B.S. or B. A.
Earl defines

"You're in an ideal
spot to move
ahead fast."
"I've always figured my

chances for advance-

ment would be better
in a growth industry.
That's why picked
IBM," says Joe Takacs.
Joe's been working
in general accounting
I

in

'

Refund Program could help you get your
Master's or Ph.D.

Locations. We have almost 50 plant,
laboratory, or headquarters locations and
over 250 branch offices in key cities
throughout the United States.

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4. Openings at All Degree Levels. We have
many appropriate starting jobs for people at
any degree level: Bachelor's, Master's
or Ph.D.

Visit your placement office
Sign up at your placement office for an interview with IBM. Or send
a letter or resume to
Irv Pfeiffer, IBM,
Dept. C, 100 South
Wacker Drive, Chicago,
Illinois 60606.

ON

CAMPUS
NOV.

8

An Equal Opportunity Employer

* Tilt

KENTUCKY KERNEL; Monday, NoV.

'

4

1

968

'

Doors Opened In Louisville

By JACK LYNE
Kernel Arts Editor
LOUISVILLE It was Halloween night Thursday and Belkin
Productions unmasked the real
Tom Dooley and the Love-LightThe Waters, and The Doors. Better the identities of the first two
had remained unknown.
Now Tom Dooley is a white
soul singer, right? Right, and
Curtis LeMay is a dove. Dooley
grunted through all the approprig
standards. It
ate
was as ludicrous as Country Joe
McDonald's satirical "Rock 'n
Soul Music," the only problem
being Tom was dead soulful serious. It is a shame he escaped the
fate of that other Dooley of Kingston Trio fame.
See. See the Waters. Gosh
whiz, the Waters are local boys.
See them strum their instruments
rhythmically, shaking their locks
and playing real loud like thebigi
guys. See the Waters' classmates
swarming around them, snapping
shots for the yearbook. Listen.
Listen to the Waters play for
minutes. Watch.
twenty-nin- e
Watch the Waters bomb.
Shirt Sleeve Shamane
The Doors finally appeared.
Lead singer Jim Morrison,
UCLA graduate and
sometime graduate student in
cinematography, came on like
some
Dean, turning
the rolling up of shirt sleeves
into a shamanistic ritual.
Morrison and friends put
on a decent performance despite
a lackadaisical, teenybopper
crowd. There is less of a theatrical aura to their current show.
Morrison, w ho has gained a reputation as the black princeof rock,
failed to toss microphone stands
at or expectorate upon the audience. Cone also are the black
s,

Brown-Reddin-

Krieger, and organist Ray Man-zare- k
are very, very good. They
improvise in tight, together flourishes, creating great musical tensions and then releasing them
with those cold steel pauses that
have distinguished the group.

TheDoorjam on"LightMy Fire"
was the best of the night, particularly the work of Manzarek
and Kreiger, the latter running

long, whining notes into one
another.
Snakes and Lakes
The only new material in the
concert consisted of B. B. King's
"Rock Me, Baby." Morrison
shouted his way through a spoken
introduction to "Light My Fire."
It resembled "Horse Latitudes,"
and was generally indecipherable, but the symbolism was as
blatant as ever (still snakes and
lakes).
Prior to the concert the entire
group was relaxed, straight. Morrison in particular proved erudite.
The
"erotic poli-

tician" admitted Tuesday's presidential election looked "pretty
unerotic a down, man."

While admittedly

still

0'

(I.E. from "The
End" "Father?" "Yes, son."
"I want to kill you."), they admitted mellowing, labeling drugs

as "a stage we went through
in becoming aware."
Marquis de Mouse
Wherever the Doors' heads
are now, their music is very
together. The calmer Morrison
is perhaps more effective in projecting the delicious tension of
potential explosiveness than in
his
When he
pulled it off it was very effective, but, too often he. came off
as Mickey Mouse de Sade. His
rheumy voice is put to better use,
as it was somewhat difficult to
hear a man sing while groveling
on the floor with the mike chord
wrapped around his neck.
Whether they can remain commercial without varying their
sound is another question. In
concert, however, they managed
to overcome the terrible acoustics
of Freedom Hall, Tom Dooley,
and twenty-nin- e
minutes of The
Waters, which is no small feat.
super-theatric-

s.

Kernel Photo By John Polk

Jim Morrison Of The Doors
CHARLIE WILEY'S

1077 NEW CIRCLE ROAD

NEW PALMS
SOUL LIFTERS
Wed., Nov.

6730

pm-- 1

am

pnsMU

THE MARAUDERS
Wed., Nov. 6: 7 JO pm-- 1 am

neo-Jam-

.vinyl

pants

been fitted on Fire Island.
A more subdued Morrison,
who flips out an occasional obscenity in an almost obligatory
manner, enables one to put the
rest of the group in perspective.
The "other three" drummer
John Densmore, guitarist Robby

Barbara's

Fireplace
825 Euclid
WEDNESDAY
NIGHT

Charlc Shuck
and

The

Magnificent
Seven

FRIDAY

TGIF

Jam Session
4--

7

p.m.

nmnniiiiiiiuniiiiiiiiiniitnnn

The Kentucky Kernel
The Kentucky Kernel. University
ol Kentucky,
Station, University 4060a. Second Lexclass
ington. Kentucky
paid at Lelngton, Kentucky.
poUte five times weekly during the
Mailed
school year except holidays end exam
periods, end once during the summer
CMlon
Published by the Board oi Student
Publications, UK Post OiUce Box ewte.
Begun as the Cadet in ls4 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 11.
Advertising published herein is Any
to help the reader buy.
lalse or misleading advertising should
be reported to The seniors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail
.
Per copy, train Alee
KIRN IX TELEPHONES
Editor, Managing Editor

n

mm
1dUijo
U

)LTD

u
ivflv?

mi

sssx.

yp&

u

?f'W'9

3

* 4

-- THE KENTUCKY. KERNEL, Monday, Nov. 4, 1968

Greek, Independent Views Similar

Poll Studies Group Feelings On 'Dixie'

The poll was conducted by
By MARVA CAY
Kernel Staff Writer
Donna Ruth, David Graves,
Most students favor playing Kenny Hamm, Ron Leger and
"Dixie" at UK sports events ac- Rich Thomas, students in the
cording to a poll taken by an technical writing course.
The questionnaire was given
English 203 class committee. A
random sample of three percent, to persons subdivided into groups
underor 138, of the
according to classification, sex,
students was polled. hometown and Greek member- graduate

TONIGHT
1

.

.

ship. There was no significant
difference in the attitudes of Northern and Southern students.

Of the total sample, 82.6 percent were in favor of playing
"Dixie" and 17.4 percent were
against. Greeks comprised 24.6
percent of the total. Approximately 20 percent of the students at theuniversity areGreeks.

Little Difference

.

The poll showed only 7 percent more Greeks than
dents favor "Dixie." Of the independents 81 percent favor the
song, and 88 percent of the Greeks
favor it.
Fewer females favor "Dixie"
than males. This may be partly
due to the larger percentage of
male Greeks in the sample. Of
the females 77 percent favor

Dine by

spy

Candlelight
in our newly remodeled
SALADS

nal
WASHINGTON
polls by both the
George Gallup and Louis Harris
organizations sIjow Republican
Richard M. Nixon leading Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey by
only a two-poimargin, the
Democratic National Committee
said Sunday night.
Lawrence F. O'Brien, the
Democratic national chairman,
said the surveys confirm strong
(AP)-Fi-

COOL REFRESHING DRAFT

on
pre-electi-

nt

1005

WINCHESTER ROAD

WE DELIVER too . . call

percent of the

Among the males, there was
a rise in support for "Dixie"
from freshman to senior. Among
the females, support rose from
freshman to sophomore then fell.
Most of the senior women opposed "Dixie."
The survey shows:
Freshmen women were 80
percent in favor of "Dixie"
Freshmen men were 86.5 percent in favor of "Dixie"
Sophomore women were 85
percent in favor of "Dixie"
Sophomore men were 89 percent in favor of "Dixie"
Junior women were 80 percent in favor of "Dixion"

Junior men were
in favor of "Dixie"

Nixon Only A

SANDWICHES

CASSEROLES

88

91

percent

Senior women were 44.5 percent in favor of "Dixie"
Senior men in the sample
were 100 percent in favor of

"Dixie"

The greatest opinion difference based on sex occurs in the
senior class, where the men are
55.5 percent more in favor of

"Dixie."

Those favoring "Dixie" expressed the opinion that it is
part of tradition, boosts morale
and has no racial overtones.
Among those who opposed
"Dixie," only a minority felt
the song to be racially biased.
Most felt "Dixie" was something
which could be done without
and therefore should be to avoid
antagonizing Blacks.
Many polled supported the
idea that the controversy is petty
and ridiculous.

Final Gallup, Harris Polls Give

Dining Room
PIZZA

"Dixie," while
males favor it.

254-37- 22

Two-Poi-

Edge

nt

the professional pollsters agree

gains by Humphrey in the past
month.
"The tide has been turning
in Hubert Humphrey's favor for
more than a month," O'Brien
said, "and the pollsters have
confirmed it tonight."
"The Gallup Poll, which practically wrote Humphrey out of
the race only a few months ago,
will show a final
spread of only 42 to 40 percent
between Nixon and Humphrey.
"The Harris Poll," O'Brien
continued, "also will have only
a two-poispread, a margin

"The Sindlinger Poll tonight, meantime, gives Humphrey the edge over Nixon. And
in the critically important state
of New York, the Daily News
straw vote tonight gives Humphrey 4G.8 percent to Nixon's
43.5."
O'Brien predicted the late
Democratic surge indicated in the
polls would continue through
Tuesday, election day.

Continued from Page One
Cannon's Political Science 201
class revealed Nixon garnering
52.8 percent of the vote, Humphrey 31.6 percent, and Wallace
15 percent.
Dr. Jewell said he thought
the final Humphrey total in the
poll would run slightly lower,
while the Wallace totals would
run somewhat higher. He feels
the Wallace grip on the state

and national electorate is loosening, partially due to the Alabaman's selection of Curtis
as a running mate.
As the Kentucky returns will
be totaled quite early, he felt
Kentucky would serve as a focal
point nationally.
The complete results of the
poll, which also investigates student attitudes toward the war
and SDS, will be released in
approximately three weeks.

pre-electi-

makes the election too close to
call.

Welcome to the Political Poll Released
Effluent Society
nt

Want to help us do something about it?

Our business is helping America breathe. That's
quite a challenge. Wherever air contaminants
are produced, we control them.
We need technically oriented graduates to develop, design and sell the world's most complete
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If you're concerned about a future in an industry as vital as life itself, talk with our repre

AAF

sentative when he visits the campus. He may.
help you breathe a little easier. American Air
Filter Company, Inc., 215 Central Ave., Louisville,
Kentucky 40208. An equal opportunity employer.

ir If ilt er

American
BETTER

AIR

IS

OUR

p-

-

iJ

tiift
i
I

v'"

BUSINESS

will be on campus Nov. 7.

representative

"

'

"

Mm

Le-M- ay

This Year Homecoming

Means "MOORE"

'

V
L:

Vote for

BEV

MOORE

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nov. 4,

1908- -5

HEH Is A Problem For Idealistic Voters
e
ByJOHNZEII
job, all year
pation is a
WASHINGTON
(CPS) -- To round. As president, I would
many young people this election welcome such participation and
would of course actively seek
year, Hubert Horatio Humphrey
is the ultimate personification
the advice and counsel of young
of a cop-oupeople."
Yet Humphrey shares some of
They feel the vice president
has betrayed them, the country, Richard Nixon's views on student
humanity and himself because rebellions. Speaking at the Uniof his unswerving allegiance to versity of Arkansas this summer,
he said "fascists, communists,
Lyndon Johnson over the Vietnam war.
racists,
He could have used his inshare a
fluence to get a peace plank put basic intolerance
for the
in the Democratic platform, but rights of others." He spoke of
he didn't.
abuse,
violence,
obscenity,
He could have pulled rank on harassment
and storm-troopMayor Richard J. Daley and tactics and said the idea of a
ended the bloody suppression of free and open academic commundissent in Chicago during the conity "is being threatened."
vention. Instead he called ChiWithout Alarm
cago "my kind of city."
Speaking before the EducaHe Only Wept
tion Commission of the States
When he caught a whiff of a few weeks later, he took note
tear gas looking out the window of "the development of new atat demonstrators 25 stories betitudes regarding student sharing
low on Michigan Avenue, he of responsibility with faculty and
could have heeded their cries of administration"
without too
"Join Us," but he only wept. much alarm.
He did open his acceptance
He even suggested that "part
of the disorderly spectacle" on
speech with an offering of symsome campuses "may trace its
pathy for the bloodied demonstrators, but whether it was more origins to inexperience with the
of Effervescent Hubert's glib rhe- democratic handling of dissent
toric or really meant remains to and debate."
be seen.
If only he had said that afHe quoted a prayer of St. ter Chicago.
Francis of Assisi that night at
Humphrey says that when
the Amphitheater, hoping to peaceful student demonstrations
"help heal the wounds, ease the become violent and anarchist
pain, and lift our hearts." "May they must be stopped. He doesn't
America tonight resolve that think federal financial assistance
never, never again shall we see should be used to subsidize efforts
what we have seen," he added. to close down schools, but he
Humphrey would have liked does not approve of the anti-riAmerica to forget what it had
provisions of recent House
seen the past nights on television, legislation that would deny aid
for he was worried that the alrto disruptive demonstrators. He
eady-dim
Democrats' hopes had prefers the Senate approach aldied in the bloody streets and lowing college administrators to
make
decisions.
disciplinary
parks of Chicago.
(Nixon favors the anti-riproBecame. Survival 'Joy
The politics of joy had be- visions.)
Supports Education
come the politics of survival.
Wooing the supporters of EuHumphrey also supports in
gene McCarthy and the late Sen. principle the idea of an "EduRobert F. Kennedy, he assured cational Opportunity
Bank,"
students that he welcomes their from which students could borrow the cost of college, with
increased political activity.
"The United States has come repayment dependent on future
to count heavily on the ability, earnings.
The vice president has activeenergy, and spirit of the younger
generation," he has said. "I hope ly supported higher education
that students begin to act on the legislation throughout his career.
recognition that political partici He shares credit for introducing
full-tim-

t.

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"Let us be clear, we are going
to ruggedly oppose the war in
Vietnam," says Teddy O'Toole,
chairman of the Student Coali"But
tion for Humphrey-Muskiwe are not going to allow the
issue of Vietnam to blind us to
the fact that few men are more
consistent supporters of the student point of view with regard
to racial justice, academic freedom, economic quality, and detente with the Eastern world,

Hershey, head of the Selective
Service System.
Despite all this, there are
many who still remember that
Hubert Humphrey was nominated with the Army in the middle of Michigan Avenue. He is
relic
seen as an
from a political era long past,
a point underscored by his invoking of nostalgia.
Humphrey remains anathema
to many, but there are those
including now Eugene McCarthywho have changed their
minds and will vote for him.

Corps, cultural exchange programs, and the Higher Education Facilities Act of 1963, and
many other Education bills.
Vote
also promises that
Humphrey
vote
adoption of the
would be "an important part"
of his administration's program.
He has proposed a "Draftees
Bill of Rights" that would use
the FAIR (Fair and Impartial
Random System) lottery. He
promises to fire Cen. Lewis B.

e.

than Hubert Humphrey."
"We're coming back," is the
coalition's rallying cry. "The
stakes are too high."

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Ann Price

"The students of Central Kentucky ore fortunate to have John C.
Watts as their Representative in Congress. Congressman Watts knows
the problems of the student and promotes sound solutions. He is a
real friend to the students of the University of Kentucky."

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* 6 -- THE KENTUCKY.

KERNEL,. Monday, Nov, 4, 1968

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SPEAKING OF SPORTS
By JIM MILLER,

if:

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Si

Kerne

Sport j Editor

Different Game

VV. Va.
up at 9 a.m. Sunday morning in Morgantown,
Wildcats trample West Virginia
The day before, I had seen the
3S-1and I wanted to get a Morgantown paper to see what they
had to say about the game,
I went to the desk at the were "gifts" and referred to
mistakes" as
Holiday Inn and picked up the "Mountaineer
only pap