xt715d8ngk9c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt715d8ngk9c/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-10-05 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 05, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 05, 1967 1967 1967-10-05 2024 true xt715d8ngk9c section xt715d8ngk9c THE KENTUCKY

Thursday Afternoon, Oct. 5, 1967

Halt Bombing

AndNegofiate, l .
Students Urge

NEW YORK (CPS)——Leaders
of several major student and
youth organizations today en-
dorsed a national drive to ob-
tain signatures on a petition
calling on President Johnson to
end the bombing of North Viet-
nam and to negotiate now to
end the war.

The student leaders called
for campus support of the na~
tional student and faculty regis-
tration for Negotiation Now.
They announced that some 175
local campus drives are already
underway in support of the
petition campaign.

The petitions call on Presi-
dent Johnson to end the bomb-
ing and to recognize the Nation-
al Liberation Front as meaning-
ful steps toward negotiation
and a political settlement of the
Vietnam war.

The student leaders' state-
ment was issued as the Negotia-
tion Now campaign announced
it would continue through the
election year.

“This will be a crucial year
for those who are working for
a new American policy in Viet-
nam." the statement said. “The
stage is being set for the 1968
elections and proper eflorts,
made now, can assure the widest
discussion of Vietnam in the
electorate and a strong trend
against war and escalation in
the’voting,"

The student leaders also said.
"During the summer months
our government has pursued,
with increasing steps. a
policy of military escalation in
Vietnam. \Ve see no basis for
believing that these steps will
lead to a resolution of the con:-
flict in Vietnam; rather there is
every reason to believe that
these desperate militarv mea—
sures are leading to further dis—
asters in Southeast Asia and in
our own domestic affairs. We
believe that America does have
an alternative in Vietnam and
that a just and peaceful resolu-
tion of the conflict is possible."

ever

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

  

. :
~

Who Went
To Class?

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

  
 
  

Classes took a backseat tothe World Series Wednes-
day as the Boston Red Sox and St. Louis Card-
inals squared off in the first game. This lounge in
the Student was crowded with students watching
the game. One student reported only live membas
of his class were present.TheCards won the game,
2—1, and will meet the Bosox again today.~

 

SDS Student, Two Others Arrested
At Florida Anti-Draft Pretest

CAINESVILLE, Fla. (CPS)
—A member of Students for a
Democratic Society and two
members of the Southern Student
Organizing Committee were ar-
rested here Tuesday in the course
of a nonviolent sit-in protesting

the draft.

Protest Induction

The three — Stephen Horow-
itzn of SDS, Michael Meiselman,
21, of SSOC and Brian Heegan,
Z), a past stafimember ofSSOC—
were charged with disorderly con-
duct after sitting down to stop a
bus carrying inductees to Jack—
sonville for medical examinations
and induction.

About 40 people, many ofthem
members ofthe University of Flor—

ida chapter of SSOC, took part
in the early morning demonstra—
tion, which protested the induc-
tion of SSOC Vice-Chairman
Nick Levin.

Levin later refused to sign
papers disavowing membership
in ”subversive" organizations,
and has been temporarily defer-
red pending an investigation by
his draft board.

Levin Reclassified

Levin was classified 1-0 until
November 1%6. but was reclas—
sified l-A after he distributed
antiwar leaflets at his altema-
tive service physical. His reclas—
sification is apparently part ofa
sporadic but wide-spread ten-

 

 

U.S. Space Program Is Headed
Toward Halt, NASA ’3 Webb Says

WASHINGTON (UPl)——The American space
effort, urgently accelerated when the Russians
orbited Sputnik l a decade ago, is slowing to a
crawl and is headed toward a complete stop, the
head of the US. space agency said Wednesday.

James E. Webb, interviewed on the 10th an-
niversary of the first successful satellite launch-
ing, told UPI that for all practical purposes the
US. space program will end after the Apollo
project lands a man on the moon, probably some—
time after 1970, unless plans are changed.

Meanwhile, the Soviet Union marked the an-
niversary with the promise of more Russian
surprises in the coming decade. “A group of
Soviet cosmonauts is preparing for new exploits,"
said the Soviet Communist party newspaper
Pravda.

Mr. Webb, head of the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA), was asked
what would happen if Congress cut an additional
$1 billion from the agency's fiscal 1968 budget.

Would ‘Mothball' Equipment

”1 think we'd put a great deal of the equipment
that we need . . . in mothballs and close down
a good many of our installations," he replied.

Would the space program then stop?

"It's going to stop anyway under the present
programs,” he answered.

“We have no flights to planets (planned)

after the Mariner flights in 1969," he explained.
. . We will have no manned flights beyond
the Apollo system, except for one Apollo work-
shop, one Apollo telescope mount and one high
latitude training flight.”

Mr. Webb said that NASA had laid off 100,000
persons and now was down to about 300,000
space workers. “We’re going down at about a
rate of 4,000 a month," he said. "Now this means
the whole program is slowing down.”

He. added that it was unlikely that Apollo
would attain its goal of putting a man on the
moon by 1970.

Moon Goal Unrealistic

"It’s increasingly doubtful that an American or
a Russian will be (on the moon) in this decade,"
he. said. “Certainly in our own program we've
slowed down.”

Meanwhile, Sen. Clinton P. Anderson (D-N.
M.) chairman of the Senate Aeronautical and
Space Sciences Committee, said that the nation
was faced with sustaining its space momentum.

“If we do not do this," he said in an an—
niversary statement, “then 10 years from now—or
even less—we may find ourselves right back where
we were 10 years ago—wringing our hands and
worrying about what to do to catch up."

Continued 0:: Page 4, Col. 4

dency of draftboards to use the
l-A classification as punishment
for antiwar or antidraft activities.

Operating Without Permit

A few days before Tuesday
morning's demonstration, Levin

was arrested and jailed for Op-

erating a mobile broadcasting
studio without a permit."The by-
lay under which he was charged
applies specifically to commer-
cial solicitations by public ad—
dress.

He was arrested in the course
of a demonstration attempting to
challenge the Florida law that
makes it illegal to attempt to
dissuade young men from volun-
tarily enlisting in the armed ser-
vices.

 

[\ERNEL

Vol. LIX, No. 28

Corps Rudget
Cut In House

I $20 Million

Collegiate Press Service

WASHINGTON—The Teach-
er Corps will not be expanding
many of its programs in the
coming year if Congress accepts
the appropriations recommenda-
tion of a House-Senate confer-
ence committee.

The committee members have
agreed on a $13.3 billion ap-
propriations bill for the De-
partments of Labor and Health,
Education and Welfare.

The bill includes only $13.5
million for the Teacher Corps,
far less than the $33 million
request by President Johnson
and Teacher Corps officials.

The committee recommenda-
tion now will go before the
House and the Senate for con-
firmation. It is possible that
some strong supporters of the
Corps will think the recom—
mended appropriation is un—
reasonably low, and floor fights
may occur.

Teacher Corps oflicials have
said that any appropriation less
than the amount requested will
mean the Corps cannot meet the
crying needs of urban and rural
slums. The Corps, which sends
college students working on
their master's degrees to teach
in poverty areas, will be able to
do little more than continue
existing programs if Congress
approves the appropriations bill
recommended by the commit-
tee.

Although the bill extending
the Corps contained authoriza-
tion for the program to receive
$33 million, the Senate had
voted to give the Corps only
$18.1 million. The House had
voted no funds for the program
when its appropriations bill was
passed in mid—May, but the
house vote came before the
Corps’ existence was extended.

The conference committee
was expected to recommend an

appropriation somewhat below
$18 million.

Straight From Scotland

No, they may be wearing kilts, but Peter Abbott (left) and Alan

Balfour are just waiting outside Memorial Coliseum before perform-

ing with the Welsh and Scots Guards Wednesday night in the Cen-

tral Kentucky Concert and Lecture Series. Their act is called the
Pipers.

 

  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The South’s Outstanding College Daily
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

ESTABLISHED I894

 

 

THURSDAY, OCT. 5, 1967

 

 

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

 

William F. Knapp, Jr., Editor-In-Chief

 

 

Johnson Should ‘Reason’

President Johnson is in an un-
destandable quandary if he keeps
up with the nation’s news media:

VThe Gallup Poll announced
Sunday that Sen. Robert F. Ken-
nedy had jumped ahead of LB]
by the greatest margin this year
as the public's top choice for 1968
Democratic Presidential nomina-
tion.

t Sen. Thruston Morton declares
Johnson was brainwashed.

D Sen. John Sherman Cooper has
joined the ranks of those calling
for an unconditional halt to bomb-
ing of North Vietnam.

>The national student “Dump
Johnson" movement died.

The President doesn’t appear
too popular with his country. In
each dissenting case, dissatisfac-
tion can be traced to U.S. handling
of the Vietnam war. Each of these
senators has demonstrated some
degree of opposition with the Amer-
ican involvement in Vietnam, par—
ticularly the bombing of North
Vietnam.

Senator Cooper has consistent-
ly advocated listening to the peace
proposals of UN Secretary General
U Thant, proposals which Johnson
has ignored until just recently.
Similarly, Johnson’s actions indi-
cate he has ignored both Morton
and Cooper. (He cannot dismiss
them like he did Kennedy, ”that
kid")

In fact the only item that might
have given the president any sol-
ace would be the dissappearance
of the Dump Johnson movement.

UK Should Note
The Dialogue

At Rensselaer

Students from 13 colleges plan
to come together late this month
at Troy, New York’s Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute to talk about
drugs, freedom of expression, self
and sex, and conformity versus
the corporation.

Talks will cover three large cat-
egories: conformity and the estab-
lishment of personal values, the
conflict of personality and profit
relating to self-identity in corpor-
ate life, and society and indivi-
dual values relating to a search for
identity.

The conclaVe should be valuable
not only to those students involved
in the dialogue. It should offer en—
couragement to other universities
around the country to initiate sim-
ilar kinds of interchanges with stu-
dents from beyond their own walls.

There has been talk of just such
a conference focusing in on vital
issues here at the University. Per-
haps the initiative and direction
shown by the Rensselaer students
should offer an example of the kind
of dialogue which would be val-
uable for this campus.

But, that would be a false solace.

The failure of the national
movement, as its leader from Har-
vard Sam Brown points out, does
not stem from some new youthful
affection for Johnson. The move-
ment has broken up into actions
by students in individual states.
ACT ’68, impetus behind Dump
Johnson, is still very much alive,
actively working to “energize” the
state groups. Let there be no ques-
tion in the president’s mind then:
student dissatisfaction is as great
now with him and his Vietnam
policy as it ever has been.

With public dissatisfaction
growing, with senatorial dissat-
isfaction growing, with student dis-
satisfaction growing, one would
think this president would employ
his reputation of being able “to
reason together.”

American citizens clearly do not
support the continuance of this il-
legal war in Vietnam.

University Soapbox

 

 

 

 

 

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To Marry Her . . . .

13.7. m lt'vucv

""1 “'M “"4“" Mun-Ins wto 325's

'99

 

 

A Man Should Be Able To Refuse Induction

By DAVID CROCKE'I'T

A man refuses to be a part of the mili-
tary establishment of this country and is
therefore sent to prison. That just makes
me sick. I can hardly be proud of a coun-
try which conducts an immoral war and
then punishes men who do not care to be
a part of that immoral war.

I do not question the reasoning of
anyone refusing induction into the armed
forces. A person's most basic right is his
life and to the extent that he does not
interfere with the life of another, that life
is his to lead as he wishes. No citizen
owes his country two years of his life.
The draft is nothing less than involuntary
servitude. Speaking against conscription
in 1814, Daniel Webster stated, ”The
question is nothing less than whether
the most essential rights of personal lib-
erty shall be surrendered and despotism
embraced in its worst form."

The present condition of the United
States military establishment is alone

sufficient reason for an individual to re— ‘

fuse induction. The U.S. military is the
sorriest one segment of American society.
To be forced to be a part of this organi—
zation is an insult to any intelligent,
creative, and ambitious person. No corpor-
ation with the efficiency of the military
could stay in business one year.

Waste Of Potential

To force a college graduate to spend
two years in the military is a useless waste
of potential. It is indeed ironical that
military men, these “protectors of democ-
racy" and the ”American way of life,"
live in one of the most completely socialist
and fascist societies now in existence.
The soldier lives in military housing,
buys at military stores, his children are
born in military hospitals by military
doctors and go to military schools. For
off-duty relaxation he goes to military
clubs. To be most accurate, there is no
off-duty. He must have a pass to leave
the military post. He is answerable for
all his actions, including those private,
off—duty, and in civilian establishments.
As if these invasions of privacy were
not enough, the size of his family is also
controlled. If his family becomes too
large, he is removed from the military.
Not to be forgotten is the rigid class
distinction between enlisted men and
officers. Segregationists have much to
learn from the separate, but not equal,
housing, dining facilities. restrooms,
clubs. . . of the U.S. military.

In the military an individual must

comply with all orders, regardless of
their fairness or the authority or wisdom
behind them. Only after the execution
of an order may it be questioned with
the proper authorities. When this pol-
icy is combined with the low caliber
of the average soldier the results can be
disastrous. It is said that this absolute
obedience of all orders is essential to
the military operation. This I do not
know, nor do I care to know. All I
ask is that no person be forced to sub—
ject himself to such a policy. There are
still a few unhypocritical people left in
the United States who have the moral
backbone to live by their basic beliefs.
There are still a few people left who
listen to their consciences.

Fair Trials Denied

The individual drafted into the mili-
tary is forced to relinquish for two years
certain of those same constitutional rights
which he is to defend. There is no free—
dom of speech in the military and this
restriction is not limited to problems
of security. The soldier may not criti-
cize the President or have any public
political views. Certain periodicals, which
are regularly distributed to other citi-
zens by U.S. mail, may not be received
by the soldier through the mail. There
is little privacy and the soldier is always
subject to search and seizure—without
a warrant, of course.

However, the most serious constitu—
tional deficiency in the U.S. military
is the lack of a fair trial. The jurors
in a military court are all military men,
people with an interest in pleasing the
military establishment. What kind of a
military future would the trial judge in
Captain Howard Levy's trial have had
if he would have mled that Levy's law—
yer proved the Green Berets guilty of
atrocities in Vietnam? The same estab—
lishment that is the accuser is also the
dispenser of promotions and assignments
for the judges and jurors.

In recent years many men have re-
fused to be drafted because of opposi-
tion to the Vietnam war. Their reasons
are as varied as the arguments against
the war. It is indeed incredible that a
man can be sent to prison for refusing
to be part of a policy which many mem-
bers of Congress, the clergy, experts in
foreign affairs, and many, perhaps the
majority, of American citizens oppose.

Doing Only What He Believes
But for many young men the refusal

.........................

to serve in the armed forces is based
upon a very deeply believed religious
or moral opposition to the taking of hu-
man life. Until one has met an adherent
of non-violence and observed the convic-
tion of this individual's belief, one can-
not appreciate the difficultness of the
belief. The nature of our violent society
insures that the conscientious objector
to violence does not hold his viewlightly.
Indeed it is the nature of the present law
that very few conscientious objectors qual-
ify for alternatives to serving in the armed
forces. Many men go to prison each year
because their objection to violence is not
based upon the very limited religious
belief specified by law.

So a man must go to prison because
of his beliefs. I admire him for that,
although he does not want or need my
admiration. He is doing only what he
believes he must. No more can be said.
Some of the greatest men in history
have been punished for their beliefs. A
man has very little if he cannot at least
be true to himself.

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

Absentee Ballots

up their absentee ballots at a
Young Democrats table behind the Student Center.

Two unidentified students pick

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday, Oct. 5, 1967—3

Center For Developmental Change
Works Efficiently, But Quietly

There is a research and ac-
tion unit at the University called
the Center for Developmental
Change.

The center, located near the
Lexington Theological Seminary
across from the Law School,
”seeks to enlargetheunderstand-
ings of the process ofdirect social
and economic development, and
of the strategies by which plann-
ing for development may be more
effective."

But, says CDC Director Dr.
Howard W. Beers, it is no ”think
tank."

Four Roles

In achieving its goal, Dr. Beers
said, the center takes on four
repatory roles—analyst, advisor,
occasionally an advocate of sol-
ution and the innovator.

Dr. Beers said the center has
conducted projects locally—at
the University—statewide and in-

ternationally.
Only recently, the CDC con-

 

+

 

CLASSIFIED ADS ,.+

 

 

To place a classified phone UK
extension 2819 or step In at the oi-
iiee. in Journalism, iron: 8 to noon,
1 to 5. Monday through Friday.

late. are 81.25 ior 20 worth, $8 for
three consecutive Insertions of same
ad or $3.75 per week. Deadline 1a 11
a.m. day prior to publieatlon.

No advertisement may cite raee. re-
ligion or national origin as a quali-
ilcation for renting room or for e.-
ployinent.

 

WANTED

 

HELP WANTED—Male or iemale stu-
dent to demonstrate new product in
this area. Pick your own hours. Earn
from 350—875 per week. Call 278-2309.
Ray Beatty. 1882M

 

HELP WANTED

 

HELP WANTED—Males for canvase-
ing job. Part time. a knowledge of
construction helpful. ~ Salary plus
commission. Call 255-5220. Carpenter
Home Improvement Co. 2955t

 

PART—TIME work starting 10 a.m. on
campus. Call 277-7157. leave name
and number. You will be contacted.

403t

 

NEED 2 WAXTRESSES and Pizza
Cook. Evening work. Apply 241
Southland Drive. 405t

 

FOB. SALI

 

FOR SALE—2 matching wing chairs.
l lounge chair. 1 9x12 oval braided
rug. 1 3x5 oval braided rug. all good
condition. Call 255-1297 after 5:30 p.m.

28$“

 

HOUSE FOR SALE by owner. Near
the University. Full basement. two
extra rooms in attic. separate gar-
age. Good location. Phone 278-32%?5t

1966 BRIDGESTONE 175, accessories.
including helment. $400 or best of-
fer. Apt. 18. 2232 Dinsmore Dr. After
3 p.m. 305t

 

 

FOR SALE—1966 Corvette. silver blue
color. 427 cu. in. engine. Keystone
mag wheels. good buy. Call 277-1562.

305t

 

FOR SALE—Golf clubs. brand new.
still in plastic covers. Sell for half.
Call 278-6320. 20ti.

 

 

 

.........................

     

 

COLUIBIA

PICTURES SID N EY
POITIEB

.n JAMES CLAVELLS PRODUCTION Oi

I “ ro-sm. WITH
: lo 9! :31

TECHNICOLOR‘

    

 

 

 

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station. University of Kentucky, Lex-
ington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington. Kentucky.
Mailed iive 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 in-
tended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly. by mail — $0.27
Per copy. from files -— $.10

KIRNEL TELEPHONE
Editor. Managing Editor ......... 2321

 

FOB SALI

FOR SALE—Garrard 60 changer with
Empire BSBSE cartridge. base and
dust cover. Two months old. 365.
Call 278-2183 evenings. 405t

JAMES BOND‘S second car for sale
by only other owner. 1965 MGB
roadster British racing. green, wire
wheels: radio. heater, PPK compart-
ment and 007 license. One small bul-
let creasc in trunk. Miss Moneypenny
not included. Call 006 at 266—6040
after 6 p.m. 405t

 

 

FOR SALE-Dresses. suits IJohn Mey-

 

er. Ladybug. Villager). like new.
prices low. Size 13-14. Call ext.
8423. 505i
MUST SELL—Tape recorder. Sony

model 260; Roberts. over and under
shotgun. 12 ga. vent rib. Call late
278-3033. 505!

 

POI. HINT

 

FOR RENT-~5-room apt. furnished
or unfurnished. Suitable for 1. 2 or 3
serious students. 266-5437. 305i

 

FOR RENT—One—room efficiency for
2 men. $80. 347 Linden Walk. Phone
266-6146. 401.!

 

LOS‘I‘

LOST—White gold ladies' wristwatch
in Alumni Gym Sept. 26. Reward.
Call 3060. Matter of life and death
on the home front. 501t

 

BABY SITTING

 

BABY SITTER—Reliable sitters need-
ed for children. Convalescent and as
companion. Minimum age 18. 92 cents
per hour plus transportation. For
interview apply 1057 S. Broadway.
8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through
Friday. Call 252-8224. 305t

 

PERSONAL

 

LANCES Junior Men’s Honorary is
now accepting applications for mem-
bership. Applicants must have a 2.50
overall and a Junior classification.
Mail applications to Charley Reason,
2085 Fontaine Road. Apt. 6, by Oct.
12. 407t

 

MISCELLANEOUS

 

MEMBERSHIP to YWCA can be ob-
tained in Room 204 oi Student Cen-
ter. 27Stt

 

   
  
   
 
  
   
    
   

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ducted preparatory studies, or-
ganized neccessary briefs and has
counselled the University in de
signing its new extension system
and in planning its University-
wide extension organization.

It also has helped the Univer-
sity establish an lnstituteofPub-
lic Administration, a program of
technical services to small busi-
ness and a study of community
action programs in the War on
Poverty.

Thailand, India Projects

Dr. Beers said CDC has been
active statewide in forming multi-
county development areas as loci
of public administrational and
developmental programs.

Internationally, the center is
directing American participation
in the development of an agricul—
tural research center at Kohn
Kaen in Northeast Thailand.

The center also has directed
training of Peace Coprs volun-
teers for agricultural and family
planning projects in India.

One group of Peace Corps
volunteers now is studying Hindi
at the center.

More To Come

Dr. Beers said the Thailand
project basically is designed to
teach Thai students agricultural
research methods. The University
fades out of the picture as the
students learn.

However, he added, the pro-
cess requires “a number of
years."

The center itself is respon-
sible to the University executive
and is on an equal footing with
all departments, Dr. Beers said.

And, he concluded, many
more projects can be expected
from the CDC.

 

 

 

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By Barry Cobb

0N A STUDY

DATE HE
NANTS TO

STUDV!

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‘4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct. 5, 1967

Gallup Poll Shows Rocky-Reagan
Liked Over LBJ-Humphrey Ticket

 

PRiNCETON, NJ. (UPI)—
A Republican slate with New
York Cov. Nelson A. Rockefeller
for president and California Gov.
Ronald Reagan for vice president
would overwhelm a Democratic
Johnson-Humphrey ticket, the
latest Gallup Poll indicated
Wednesday.

If such on contest were held
today, the American Institute of
Public Opinion said in a copy-
righted report, the Rockefeller-
Reagan ticket would win 55 per-
cent of the vote to 41 percent
for Johnson—Humphrey, with
another four percent undecided.

The margin was the biggest
Republican lead since 1956 when
a similar poll gave former Pres—
ident Dwight Eisenhower a 58
to 42 percent margin over the
late Adlai Stevenson.

In the current poll partici-
pants also were asked which
ticket they would like to see
win if the candidates were Mich—
igan Gov. George Romney as the
GOP presidential standard bearer

 

Doughnuts By The Second

Will Homer Price strike again? \Vill the Student
doughnut machine fall fate to Homer’s fixing talent the same as his
Uncle Ulysses’ machine did? Will the machine, in protest, stop
someday and fill the Grille with doughnuts? Or will the machine
sink into subservience and produce doughnuts only on demand?

Center Grille

 

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Famous Maker Dyed-to-Magtch 5,.
SPORTS SEPARATES 3 '

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in

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Black and new fall colors; 8 to 16.

Textured

 

Fashionable Main Street East
Downtown Lexington

with Reagan again inthe number
two slot Johnson and Humphrey
as the Democratic team.

Again the GOP ticket came
out on top but by the slim mar-
gin of only 2 percent. The break—
down was 49 percent for Romney—
Reagan; 47 percent for Johnson—
Humphrey and 4 percent unde-
cided.

The poll attributed the strong-
er showing of the Rockefeller—
Reagan ticket over the Romeny-

Reagan ticket to what it called
Romney's loss of voter appeal
following his recent statement
that he had been ”brainwashed"
by the current administration on
the Vietnam issue.

The institute report also re-
vealed that Johnson's rating for
the way he is handling his overall
job is at its lowest point with
38 percent approving, 47 percent
disapproving and 15 percent ex-
pressing no opinion.

Space Probes Near ‘Halt’

Continued From Page 1

Mr. Webb's gloomy outlook
and Sen Anderson's warning
underlined action by the Senate
Appropriations Committee Tues-
day in which it approved the
lowest NASA budget since
1963.

The committee approved $4.6
billion, which was $95.5 million
more than is contained in the
House appropriation bill, but
$421 million less than requested

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regularly $4 8. $5

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nylon knits with jewel, mock-turtle or

flip-tie necks. White, black, orange, green, gold,
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by President Johnson, $286
million below last year's budget,
and $186 million under Con-
gress’ earlier authorization.

The President, preoccupied
with the high cost of the Viet-
nam war and domestic infla-
tion, has not pressed Congress
for more space funding. Instead,
he publicly commended Con-
gress for cutting his original
request.

“We're going to have bigger
boosters (r o c k e t 5) because
manned spacecraft will be op-
erating in orbit," Mr. Webb
predicted. “We'll have a lot of
specialized equipment to do a
lot of ,specific jobs with real
efficiency."

He discounted the possibility
of a colony of humans on the
moon because of its “hostile
environment," but he said there
“is much to learn there and some
men will go there and work . .

"And if you asked me about
100 years from now,” Mr. Webb
said, ~"I'd say we'd be out to
[npiter moving . . . out to the
fair reaches of the Solar System
in the let century."

 

A ~ TODAY AND
TOMORROW

 
  

 

 

 

Announcements for University groups
will be published twice—once the day
before the event and once the after-
noon of the event. The deadline in ii
mm. the day prior to the first publi-
cation.

Today

Henry Ward. democratic candidate
for Governor. Will speak at the Law
School court room at 7:30 pm.

Dr. Clarence 1.. Coates. professor of
electrical engineering at the Univer-
sity of Texas. Will speak on "Thres-
hold I.ogis" at 3 p.m. in Anderson
Hall 453-!“

Henry Clay High School yearbooks
are available after 3 pm. in the Henry

Clay HS Auditorium. Last year's
seniors are urged to pick up their
books

Tomorrow

The Home Economics Convocation.
sponsored by Phi Upsilon Omicron.
Will be held Oct. 6. at 1 pm. in the
auditorium of the Agricultural Scl-
encc Center. Miss Chloe Gifford will
speak on ‘anen in a Modern World'

Organizations wishing to use mime-
ogriiph facilities of the Student Center
Board are asked to send a represen-
tative at 4 pm. Friday to Student
Center 206 for brief instructions in
use and care for the machines.

Alpha Epsilon Delta. pre—med hon—
orary. is now accepting applications.
Applicants must have completed three
semesters and have a 3.0 overall. Ap-
plications are available in Dr, I’is—
ucano‘s office. Bradley Hall.

(loming Up

The YWCA is sponsoring ii car wash
Oct. 7 in the TKE fraternity house
parking lot. The car wash will start
at noon and last until 6 p.m.

- g _‘

Sundries

Drugs

 

 

iiALE’S FHARMACY

915 S. LIMESTONE
Phone 255-7749 Lexington, Ky.

  

Across from UK Medical Center

 

  

 

ART SUPPLEMENT NAMED IN HONOR
0F UK ’8 GRAFFITI ST UDDED WALL

In this inaugural issue of the Inner Wall,
named in honor of the great wall and its graf-
fiti, all of the material received was printed. No
etio