xt70rx93b45t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx93b45t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701119  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 19, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 19, 1970 1970 2015 true xt70rx93b45t section xt70rx93b45t T
Thursday, Nov.

Kentucky K ERNEh

19, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXII, No. 55

Birth of a Party
Student

Coalition Expenses, Patrons, Support Shrouded in Mystery

By BOB BROWN
Editorial Page Editor
Recent developments have established the Student Coalition
as the classic example of what
can be effected by a group having the right ideology at the right
time and place.
It is no easy task to form
a major campus organization,
establish a weekly newspaper to
express the views of that organization and promote candidates to
change the University's political
environment all in one semester.
But the Coalition has done
just that with money left over.
It has defied tradition, bent regulations, attacked most of UK's
student leaders and has become
the protege of the administration, the Board of Trustees and
much of the state's population.
. The origin of the Student Coalition was last May's campus
disruptions. The earliest traceable mention of organization
comes from a wire service Frankfort correspondent who insinuated that Gov. Louie Nunn's
office was actively encouraging
the formation of a UK organization which would provide support for the governor's decision
to bring the National Cuard to
the UK campus.
Attempts at verifying this assertion have not been successful.
Within a few days of the
Frankfort reporter's statement,
an organization labeled Help Pre

vent Campus Violence sprang up
at UK. Among the objectives of
the group was the threat of legal
action against the University
should the administration again
close the school due to riots.
This organization appealed to the
sentiments of many of the state's
citizens and soon became
d.

A series of major ads appeared
in local newspapers to enlist further support for HPCV. An official of HPCV stated at that time
that the ads were donated by the
newsLexington Herald-Leade- r,
papers generally sympathetic to
the conservative cause.

Preparations reportedly were
begun at this time to publish a
campus newspaper expressing the
views of HPCV, the funds for
which would come "from the
same place as the ads," according to a student who was working closely with HPCV. Both
assertions were firmly denied by
Terrence Fox, president of HPCV.
Secured by its financial footing, HPCV then sought to widen
its base of support. According to
Fox, the organization then consisted of approximately 100 faculty members and 20 students.
In an effort to appeal to more
moderate students, Fox contacted
Charles Jennings, who lost last
spring's Student Government
presidential election to Steve
Bright. Jennings reports that Fox
offered him the presidency of the
newly formed "Student Coali-

tion."

.

.x

-

'

I

j

CIIEDIENNINGS

Jennings also stated that the
administration "did definitely
help the (coalition)" by advising
which students and faculty members to recruit.
There has been much speculation that the administration actively encouraged the fonnation
of the new organization, thereby
giving the administration an opportunity indirectly to discredit
Student Government president
Bright.
J ennings said he rejected Fox's
offer because lie was pessimistic
about the chances the group had

to succeed. Since that time, Jennings has had little contact with
Fox or his organization.
In a recent interview, Fox
completely discounted Jennings'
story. Fox denied any attempt
to recruit Jennings or any of his
supporters.
HPCV's turn to a more moderate stance proceeded into the
fall semester when its offspring,
the Student Coalition, was successful in attracting a large number of students into its framework. Buoyed by secret contributions, SC launched a number
of bitter personal attacks against
officials in Student Covemment
and members of the Kernel staff.
In what were later shown to
be inaccurate accusations, the coalition charged Bright with plans
to donate student funds to the
radical National Association of
Black Students. Later charges,

News Analysis
which were found by the Student Affairs Oifice to be inaccurate, accused Bright of various
of student
misappropriations
monies.
SC President Fox attributed
the inaccuracies to mistaken verb
tenses by the Kernel and to mistakes made by the administ ration
in supplying the SC with its information.
Fox refused the opportunity

Students May Drop Draft Deferments
By JANICE S. FRANCIS

Kernel Staff Writer
State Selective Service director Col. Taylor L. Davidson has
announced that under a memorandum issed Oct. 23 by national
Selective Service Headquarters,
any student wishing to drop his
student deferment and be reclassified
may now do so simply
by writing his local board requesting the change.
In a letter to Rhea Lazarus,
chairman of the Kentucky Educational Advisory Committee for
Selective Service, Col. Davidson
said, "A student who wishes to
be
needs only to notify his
local board of this fact in writing. Such notification should be
A

A

forwarded promptly so that the
local board may have time to
before the
reclassify him into
closing of the year."
The new ruling makes it considerably easier to be reclassified.
Under the previous system the
status
only way to achieve
was to refrain from sending the
local board a request for deferment renewal.
Speaking at UK Oct. 21, in
a draft forum, Col. Davidson
said such refrainment was the
only legal way to be reclassified, and urged students with
a student deferment and a high
random service number to employ it.
classifica
Anyone in the

tion whose draft number is not
called before Dec. 31, 1970, automatically goes into a low priority
selection group for 1971. In this
way he rids himself of the possibility of being inducted unless
a national emergency arises.
Col. Davidson has also instructed local Selective Service
boards to inform a registrant
w hether his random service number is expected to be drawn before Dec. 31, 1970.
If there is some question as

Kernel Staff Writer

Approximately

72

student

teachers are needed next semester to fill positions in FOCUS,
an educational program in Louisville, according to the assistant
director of the Teacher Corps,
Musette Billings.
FOCUS, part of the federally
funded Teacher Corps, is
by the Louisville Board
of Education and the University
The purpose of the
of
program is to allow for a smaller
teacher-pupratio and to get
Teacher Corps interns and student teachers in innovative situations in "disadvantaged" school
areas.
Different iated staff patterns
are set up in the seven partici
il

"...

A

.

LMrfii FOX
TERRENCE
to express his views
edited interview in

in an

un-

the Kernel
unless all questions to be asked

were supplied to him 24 hours
prior to the interview.
The publicity surrounding SC
swelled its ranks to what Fox
estimates at 640 students; however, neither of the organization's
two general meetings has produced more than five percent of
that number.
According to Fox, the general
meetings are not an adequate
representation of the sentiments
of the group, for the vital work,
he says, is done behind closed
doors.
Run As Business
Another factor may be that
SC does not operate under a
Continued on Page 6, CoL 1

Weather
Forecast for Lexington and
vicinity: Partly cloudy and mild
this afternoon, cloudy with periods of rain and possibility of
thundershowers tonight and tomorrow. High temperature today
mid 50's, low tonight in upper
30' s, high tomorrow near 60. Precipitation probabilities 5 percent
today, 50 percent tonight 60 percent tomorrow.

A

p

Student Teachers Needed
In Louisville FOCUS Posts
By REBECCA WESTERFIELD

to whether an individual's selective service number will be reached, Col. Davidson advises local
boards to have registrants
state that he wants to be reclassif his number will not
ified
be reached before the end of the
year."
Registrants in any of the following classifications are also
able to have their deferments
ended by a written statement:
I- S, II-(including apprentices),
II- - C and III--

X

,

pating grade schools. For

ex-

ample, a class of 120 pupils has
a staff of 10 two certified teachers, four Corps interns, two
and two student
teachers.
The interns are liberal arts
graduates who have had no
training in education. They take
nine hours of course work during
the summer before entering the
classroom. Each following semester and summer for two years they
take nine hours' course work and
spend GO percent of the day in
the grade school. Alter the two-yeperiod the interns receive
a master's in education and a
Kentucky teacher's certificate.
The paraprofessionals in the
program are usually persons who
Continued on Page 6, CoL 1

i

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ar

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1I

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PKnln Rtf

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Wlfn'i

The latest endeavor of the University theater group is " Summed ree"
by Ron Cowen. Here, director Charles Dickens, left, illustrates how he
thinks a scene should be done. Roger Leasor, right, will play the
play. The opening night will be
"young man" in the
Dec. 2 in the Cuignol Theatre, Fine Arts Building.

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov.

19, 1970

Four Kentucky Fields Named

any Airports Lack Proper Landing Systems
nation's

WASHINGTON (AP) More
than 8 million airpline passengers land annually at U.S. airports unequipped with instrument landing systems which
would warn a pilot if he were
approaching a runway off course.
The lack of sophisticated
equipment at some 300 of the

584 airports serving scheduled airlines confronts one out
of every nine flights. The guidance aids are especially valuable
in bad weather.
One of the airports without a
complete system is near Huntington, VV. Va., where a DO)
jet, unwarned it was approaching

Vietnam: New Brand
Of War, Says General
ing
WASHINGTON
himself naive. Marine Corps
Cen. Lewis W. Walt said Wednesday he and other American leaders were overly optimistic early
in the Vietnam war because "we
didn't appreciate the importance
of the guerrilla."
"This was a brand new war
and we didn't recognize it," said
Walt, who led U.S. Marines in
Vietnam for more than two years.
Now assistant commandant, he
will retire from the Corps in
February.
Those who were too optimistic, be said, were thinking of
World War II and Korea-typ- e
conflicts and didn't understand
"you just can't go in and wipe
out" guerrillas.
"When I got out there 1
.didn't understand this war,"
Walt told newsmen at a Pentagon briefing where he said he
found in a recent visit that the
Viet Cong guerrilla threat now
is "pretty well in hand."
The four-stgeneral said that
when he first arrived in Vietnam
in 1965 it took him six months
to find out what the war was
(Al')-Call--

ar

all about, and that he had to get
out into the villages and hamlets
to learn for himself.
"It took a while to catch on,
to learn how to fight that war,"
Walt said, adding that the Marines eventually found out they
had to win the people over.
Surveying the situation as it
is now, Walt said, he is "even
more optimistic than before"
about the eventual success of
Vietnamization.
"Things are going exceptionally well much better than a
year ago," he said.
The biggest improvement is in
the South Vietnamese regional
forces and popular forces, he
said, claiming that these militia
elements are "really getting out
and fightingthe enemy and they
are successful."
At present, Walt said, the Viet
Cong guerrilla capacity is less
than 10 percent of what it was
five years ago in the critical
northern province of South Vietnam.
In the rest of the country as
well, Walt said, the "guerrilla is
nothing compared to what he

was."

the
runway too
low, crashed last weekend killing
all 75 persons aloard a Marshall University football charter
flight.
An Associated Press survey
of government statistics, airline
schedules and airport officials
found that 17 airports each serving more than 1,000 passengers
a week frequently on jetliners-a- re
without operational instrument landing systems (ILS). Included are such busy centers at
Phoenix and Tucson, Ariz.; Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., and Monterey,
Calif.
Four Ky. Airports
Four Kentucky airports were
among those that did not have
instrument landing systems(ILS)
guidance equipment to help pilots.
The Kentucky airports: Padu-caOwensboro, London and
Bowling Green.
The state Aeronautics Department said, however, the four
have radio beacon systems that
aid in bad weather landings but
are not as sophisticated as the
ILS system.
The ILS equipment is due to
be installed at the Owensboro
and Paducah airports in the first
half of 1972.
A Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) official says a
survey is being made at the
Owensboro field for location of
the equipment and one has been
completed at Paducah.
Collision Course With Disaster
Rep. Jack Brooks,
chairman of a subcommittee
rain-obscur-

And Environment
and

the Environmental Awareness Society
A

Conference On New Approaches To

STRIP MINING
The Planning Concept

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21
GRAND BALLROOM
9.00 a.m.

$7.00 Registration

SPEAKERS:

Attorney General John Breckinridge
Fred Luigart, Jr., President, Kentucky Coal Assn.
Jerry Thornton, Past President, EAS
Professor Murray Shellgren

WASHINGTON
Nixon asked Congress
Wednesday to add $1 billion to
the $2.8 billion he had requested
earlier for foreign aid in this
fiscal year. First indications were
that the request faces a rocky
legislative road.
About half the added funds
asked in a special message to
Congress would go to help Israel build its military potential.
Neighboring Arab states of Jordan and Lebanon are down for
$30 million and $5 million respectively for what White House
aides described as internal security needs in those countries.
Apart from Israel, major sums
woidd go to Cambodia, South
Korea and South Vietnam.
Nixon described the money
as necessary to carry out plans
for reducing direct U.S. military
commitments abroad while increasing the ability of allies to
defend themselves.
White House officials conceded, however, that part of the

Tri-Sta- te

Immediate Voting Area

Complex Cafeteria
First Floor

dent

need for more money traces to
the U.S. intervention in Cambodia and to events in the Middle
East which were not foreseen
when Nixon made his original
request last January.
Cognizant of the fact that
forces in Conin o reign-ai- d
gress already have trimmed his
original request to $2.2 billion,
Nixon called congressional leaders to the White House Wednesday afternoon in an effort to win
support for the revised request.
Even before the White House
session, formidable opposition
surfaced on Capitol Hill when
the Seriate majority leader, Sen.
told
Mike Mansfield,
newsmen he opposes the added
funds.
ti-f-

Mansfield said he would be
glad to listen to the administration case but added "this simply
will add to the deficit which already is going to far exceed the
original estimates."

The AP study of ILS turned
up such situations as these:
t Giant 747 jets will begin
landing at Phoenix Dec. 1, joining nearly 100 other flights a clay,
but no ILS will be in operation for nearly a year.
Forty jetliners a day land at

Tucson,

where surrounding

mountains rise up to 9,400 feet.
An FAA control tower supervisor said pilots landing there at
night complain "it's like flying
into a black hole."
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
an ILS system is installed, waiting to serve half a million passengers a year. But the fronds
of two palm trees intrude into
the required clear space for the
system, so the ILS can't be used
until and unless the airport
wins a court fight with the owner
of the trees.
Full ILS was not installed
on the Pacific Ocean approach
at Los Angeles International Airport until this year after a Scandinavian airlines jet approached
too low and hit the ocean, killing
15.

Dozens of universities such
as Marshall are served by airports without ILS. The list includes Indiana, Cornell, Yale,
Iowa, Missouri, West Virginia,
Oklahoma State and Oregon
State.
f Some ILS systems show up at
airports little used by commercial flights such as Hyannis,
Mass., a frequent landing spot
for the Kennedy family.

11:15-1:1- 5
4:15-7:0- 0

requirements."

A White House official conceded that $500 million in credits
would permit the Israelis to purchase considerably more than
that amount in armaments from
the United States. Pressed to
state the value of war goods
that could be delivered to Israel
under the program, he professed
that he did not have the figure
readily available.
As for Cambodia, Nixon asked
for $155 million in new money
$70 million to support the Cambodian economy and$S5 million
in military aid. He said 70 percent of the military outlays would
go for ammunition.

-

Cov. Louie than new programs and new
Nunn defended the quality buildings."
of the state's higher education
Nunn said Kentucky students
system Wednesday, calling it a are getting a bargain but "highbargain for students inside and er education is an even greater
outside Kentucky.
bargain for students from other
He also challenged the theory states.
"In many instances, it is more
that enrollment figures and numstuber of buildings are a good yard- economical for
stick for measuring such quality. dents to attend one of our state
universities than to attend school
In dedicating Ashland Comin their own state."
munity College, the governor said
The
that, in a few instances, "costly fair to governor called this unKentucky taxpayers and
has produced a
competition
a reassessment of
duplication of programs without suggested
tuition policies.
for the needs of higher
regard
One proposal worth considereducation in the state."
He agreed' that competition ing, he said, is the possibility
of raising
tuition to
among academic institutions is a level
equal to the cost of ed"necessary and healthy but the
a student at one of Kencompetition must be limited to ucating
the pursuit of excellence rather tucky's public colleges or
H.

Polling Time

Of the slightly more than $1
billion total in the Nixon package, $500 million would be earmarked for credits to help Israel
finance "purchases of equipment
that have been necessary to maintain her defense capability, and
to ease the economic strain
caused by her expanded military

Nunn Defends Education,
Calls System a 'Bargain9
ASH LAN D (AP)

November 19th -- Thursday
South

airports which lack ILS are servicing jetliners.
A complete ILS system has
two parts: A localizer which
warns the pilot if he is off
course to the left or right, and a
glide slope, which warns if the
plane's approach is too high or
too low.
airport
Huntington's
is one of seven which has the
localizer but not glide slope and
thus lacks the complete system.
To Install 43 ILS
The FAA wants to install 43
ILS systems next fiscal year. Its
appropriation is currently pending in the Senate Appropriations
Committee. The agency declines
to say before it gets the money

which airports are on the list of

43.

Nixon Requests Money for Israel

Student Government Election
Residence Areas

...

h,

(AP)-Presi--

Student Council On Pollution

which has been investigating air
traffic, told the House that the
lack of the devices places "the
nation's air traffic control system
on a collision course
with disaster."
FAA statistics show that while
passenger traffic has doubled
since 1961, the number of instrument landing systems (ILS)
in that period has gone up only
20 percent.
FAA administrator John Shaffer told a congressional committee this year that every airport
with jet traffic should have an
ILS. Yet 16 of the 17 busiest

out-of-sta-

11:15-1:1- 5

North

Donovan Cafeteria.

4:15-7:0- 0

11:15-1:1- 5

North
Off-Camp-

us

Off-Camp-

us

Blazer Cafeteria
Classroom Bldg
Library

4:15-7:0- 0

te

9:00 a.m. 3:00 p.m.
9:00 a.m.-8:0- 0
p.m.
--

Student Center
Off-Camp-

us

Ground Floor

9:00

a.m.-5:0- 0

p.m.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov.

19, 1970- -3

Movie Hcvicw

Film Puts Man in His Proper Perspective
By PAN! CRODKN
a

film sponsored

liere by Zero Population Crowth
last night, does a lot to put
nun in his proper perspective

as one of the many organisms
striving for survival on this
planet.
Man, actually, is a recent
creature. The film's historical approach gives an enlightening progression of the development of
life up to the time of nun.
"Knvironment"
is given a
greater reality than that of

ani-nu-

ls

several different tribes' modes of

adaptation, we are shown how
nun can become trapped in the

situation that he has defined.
Tribes living within a few
miles of each other can adopt
completely different ways of
dealing with the environment.
The pygmies have developed a
close intimacy with the forest
environment in which they live,
while their neigh bors, theHantus,
must cut the forest for farmland.
Another, somewhat frightening study, was that of the IK of
Northern Uganda. They previous- -

Has 200 Volunteers

Trans-Actio- n
By SUSAN ELSWICK

Kernel Staff Writer
The Trans-ActioProgram
now has 200 volunteers working
from two to four hours a week
e
for six
agencies.
The 200 were selected earlier
in the semester by social workers
who interviewed applicants.
The six agencies represented
are Eastern State Hospital, daycare centers, Veteran's Hospital,
Kentucky Village, Clinical
Center and the VMCA.
Most activity has been conducted
on a
basis. Activities
include group discussion, drama,
recreation, tutoring, homemak-innursing aid and Just talking
to patients.
Muri Ciurgevich is chairman
of the . program. According to
vice chairman Cheryl Callery,
future plans include revamping
n

social-servic-

one-to-o-

g,

"P

bumper stickers and clean-ucampaigns when actual survival
battles with the environment ure
viewed. Whole species of animals survive or perish according
to their ubility to adapt to their
environment.
Man has developed through
this evolutionary progression, but
holds a unique place among
because of his ability to
radically change his environment.
Primitive man's relationtohis
environment is thoughtfully
studied in the film. Through
p

"The Time of Man,"

the entire program to introduce
new ideas and to acquaint volunteers with the life style of the
patients.
"Each agency is now being
investigated for any gaps in its
resident program. The job of
Trans-Actio- n
is to create ways
in which volunteers can fulfill
those gaps," she said.
Also being investigated are
ways in which volunteers can
work outside of the structured
agency. The possibility of a coffee
house program has been considered.
Pam Wilson, a volunteer in
the recreation program at Eastern State Hospital, commented
that "a lot of people who sit
around in the dorm and talk
about doing something for somebody should really go out and
talk to these patients. It makes

of what

you more appreciative
you have."

had been hunters though are film presents a r.ipid sequential
modern history. Technology,
by politics to farm
extremely unproductive land. wars, jx)litics, famiing, living
Theirs is a basic fight for phythese things haven't basically
sical survival. In this fight they changed, but through technology
have sac rified their humanness.
they produce a profound effect
Children become independent in on our environment.
their search for food at the age
Ironically it is this same techof three.
nology that allows a broad view
A scientist observing the vil- of what is happening. Man is
lage for a number of years saw in the position to understand,
no signs of love or kindness for
and to free himself of old dethe duration of his stay. Marfinitions. Man can change the
garet Mead, the anthropologist,
environment, but is not immune
revisited a fishing village she
to it. The film is clear in pointhad studied in 1928, to find them ing out the fact that man has
trying to cope with the over- a choice. We are either a part
of the environment or . . . we
population, pollution and delinquency that civilization had aren't.
The film will be shown again
brought.
Following these studies, the Feb. 23.
ly

now forced

Volunteer registration for next
semester is scheduled to begin
the week after classes resume.

Abortion?

See the CATS off

iVo

WASHINGTON (AP)

-

10:30 a.m.

The

nation's Roman Catholic Bishops

reaffirmed Wednesday their unyielding stand against abortions,
declaring for the first time that
morally they are murder.
The vote of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops was
224 to 8.
Several archbishops told a
news conference they felt the
eight votes against did not oppose the principle but some
wanted the statement worded
differently and several sought a
document much longer than the
300 words issued.

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20th

at Bluegrass Field

Welcome
UK Sty demits

TODAY and TOMORROW

Tau deadline far MDiaintiti It
.m. Iw Amy prUr U th flril
f Item In this Mlimi.
publication

7:0

TODAY
workers are needed for the
Student Government elections Thursday. Nov. 18. If interested, call the
Student Government office at
Workers will be paid $1.50 per hour.
Student Goyernment elections will
be held Thursday, Nov .19.
R. Ross Rlppel, of Knolls Atomic
Power Laboratory, Schenectady, N.Y.,
will spealc on "Current Problems in
Two-PhaFlow" at 4 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 19 in room 257, Anderson
Hall. The public is invited.
Awareness
Environmental
Society
will hold a seminar Thursday, Nov.
19, at 7:30 p.m. in room 114 of the
Classroom Building. The public is
Poll

TOMORROW
violin and plana recital featurCarolyn
ing Peter Schaffer and
Kankln, originally scheduled for 8:15
p.m. Friday, Nov. 20, has been
A

Two rooms In the Classroom Building are open for use as study halls.
Rooms 304 and 346 are open from
p.m. on week nights and
p.m. on weekends.
Keys,, sophomore men's scholastic
and leadership fraternity, is now acfor the 1970-7- 1
cepting applications
academic year. If you have a 3.0
average overall and are involved in
activities, you may
pick up an application at tho Student
Government office or contact Buck
Pennington, Keys president, at19. 422
Rose Lane.
by Nov.
St. Aug uitlne'i Chapel, 472 Rose St.,
Is now using
Ian Mitchell's Folk
Mass at its Sunday services, at 10:30
a.m. Evensong at 9:30 p.m. Sundays
and is followed by a supper, 75 cents
per person. Sign up for the supper is
necessary by Sunday noon.
Ths fourth annual Biblical Lectureship of the UK Baptist Student
Union will be held Sunday through
The lecturer will
Friday, Nov.
be Dr. M. Thomas Starkes of the
Southern Baptist Convention. Information on his lectures can be obtained at the Baptist Student Center,
371 S. Limestone.

UK Placement Service
Students may register for appointments with representatives of the following corporations by contacting the
Placement Service, 201 Old Agriculture Building, at least two days in
advance of the date specified. Tele-

(ext.
Peat, Marwick, Mitchell,
Accounting (BS, MS). Locations: Nationwide.
December, May,
August graduates.
AcSells AccountNov. 19. Haskins
ing (BS, MS); Law. Locations: United
States. December, May graduates. Citizenship.
Nov. 19. Keller Manufacturing Co.,
Inc. Accounting, Business Administration, Economics, Chemical E., Electrical E., Mechanical E. (BS). Locations: Corydon, Ind.; Culpepper, Va.
December, May graduates. Citizenship.
Nov. 20. Norfolk Naval Shipyard.
Civil E.. Electrical E Mechanical E..
Metallurgical E. (BS, MS). Location:
Portsmouth, Va. December, May, August graduates. Citizenship.
Nov. 20. Syracuse University-Colleg- e
Stuof Business Administration
dents in all fields to enter Graduate
School of Business. Location: New
York.
phone
Nov.
Si

Co.

NOW 2 LOCATIONS
VILLAGE SHOPPING
VERSAILLES ROAD
TAKE OUT PHONE 255-964- 6

AND
128 NEW CIRCLE ROAD
TAKE OUT PHONE
9

COMING UP

255-854-

Strip Mining will be discussed at a
conference
sponsored by The Student Council on Pollution and Environment and the UK Environmental
Awareness Society. Speakers include
Breckenridge.
Attorney General Johna.m.
Activities begin at 9
Saturday,
Nov. 21 in the Student Center Grand
Ballroom.
Association
India
Tho
presents
"Saathi." a color film with English
subtitles, in room 139 of 3the Chemistry-Physics
p.m. SatBuilding, at
for
urday, Nov. 21. Admission is $1.50chilmembers, $2.00 for
free.
dren
Tho Nursing Students Association
will hold a garage sale Saturday,
Nov. 21, from 3 p.m. at 176 Cherokee Park. Proceeds will go to the
Planned Parenthood Association.
Uillel will hold a dinner-meetin- g
at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 22, at
Temple Adath Israel, 124 N. Ashland
Ave. Hides will be available from
Haggin Field and the Student Center
parking lot bt 5:15 p.m.
f ree Soil Party (F.S.P.) will show
the film "Closely Watched Trains" at
the Student Center Theatre on Sun4,
day. Nov. 22. at 12, 3, 23. and5. 97,p.m.;
and
at
and on Monday. Nov.
at the door only. l.
9 p.m. Ticket
in ComAn undergraduate major
ofis now
parative Literatureinterested being
in studyfered for student
basi.
ing literature on a
For turtner information, contact diner Dr. Virginia A. La Charite in the
department oftheFrench, or Dr. "J,4"1
Department of
Greenway in
special telephone number,
will offer a recorded message
on
week's event
highlighting the with announcement
canipu. Anyone the
for inclusion on
P'ufr"'n,.
contact Public Relation. 105 Old Agriculture building.
A

CENTER

SHOPPERS

6.

11 a.m.-l- O

Open Daily

New Circle Road Only
CUT ALONG

v.

11i
r

U7J

071-- 1

kil

l

Saturdays
DOTTED

p.m.
'Tit Midnight

LINE

Steak Dinner

(Sat (SEP

$1.50

i

Includes Sirloin Steak, Baked Potato, Gar
Roll, Crisp Tossed Salad with Choice
for only $1.50 when presented
rv i 'ressing
Mr. Jim's Cashier. SAVE 29c.
OFFER

EXPIRES

NOVEMBER

30, 1970

6?

W&v

'mustf 0n Giro

QJinrrr.
Here's Where You'll Find Other
Mr. Jim's Steakhouscs
Oxford (Miami U.)

Cincinnati

Dayton

* The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

Iernel

WE LL SEAT YOU TWO CHAPS TOGETHER

YOU MUST HAVE A LOT TO TALK AIOUT!'

Umvfrsity of Kentucky
1894

NOV. 19, 1970

THURSDAY,

Editorials represent the opinions of Oic

Editor,

not of the University.

f
Frank S. Coots III,
Roll Rrown, Editorial rage Editor
Jean Renaker, Managing Editor
Mike Tierney, Sports Editor
Dahlia Hays, Copy Editor
David King, Business Manager
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Jane Rrown, Ron Hawkins, Bradley Jeffries, Jerry Lewis, Mike Wines.
Assistant Managing Editors
Editor-in-Chie-

UK's Naive Dean of Students lJ2EHin2ai
In a story concerning Steve
Bright which appeared in the Sunday magazine of the Louisville
Courier-Journ(Nov. 15), Dean
of Students Jack Hall is quoted

repeatedly distorted, intentionally
or unintentionally, this speech as
the chief catalyst in the refusal of
demonstrators to back down in
the confrontation with National
holds Guardsmen and state troopers.
as having said, "He (Bright)
the cards as to whether or not UK
Bright had simply articulated what
each student had already concluded
has any unrest this year. He has
for himself, a fact the administrathe power and the prestige."
It is a gross misconception to tion fails to realize.
believe that Bright or anyone has
Bright has never claimed that
students look to him for guidance
the power much less the "presin such situations as he knows
tige" (whatever that means) to
such a claim would border on the
control the actions of students,
absurd. Obviously Hall is either
those of the "New
particularly
Left." The basic tenet underlying
making a premature effort to shift
'
these students philosophy is the' responsiblity for campus unrest
responsibility of each person "to upon Bright or he is dangerously
no
out of touch with students' attdo his own thing." There-arfollowleaders because there are no
itudesan oversight which contrihimbuted greatly to last spring's state
ers; each individual decides for
of affairs.
self what is to be done.
In either case the question is
For example in a speech last
when is the administration going
May Bright voiced what he was
to start facing its responsibility
going to do according to his conof maintaining a university comscience yet he never tried to persuade others to follow that course munity which respects personal
of action. The administration has

Leaders of llie Relreal

al

An 6F' for Reaction
Political observers may continue
to argue whetherornot the national
mood is rightward bound; but there

is solid evidence that Americans,
including those of the
heartland, are determined not to let
political ultraconservatism set the
course of their children's education.
National attention was focused
on the defeat of Max Rafferty, the
educational right wing's standard
bearer, after two terms as Ca