xt718911r71c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt718911r71c/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701012  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 12, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 12, 1970 1970 2015 true xt718911r71c section xt718911r71c Tie Kentucky Kernel
Monday, Oct.

12, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

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Coalition Claims
Bright Proposed
Black Reparations

By GAIL GREEN
Kernel Staff Writer
The Student Coalition has accused Steve Bright, Student Government president, of proposing
in a "confidential bulletin" to
give $100 to the National Student Association toward a $50,000
sum to be donated as "reparations" to the National Association of Black Students.
Bright denied the Student Coalition charge Sunday. He told
the Kernel:
"We have at no time had any
intention to give any amount of
money to the National Association of Black Students, either
directly or through the National
Student Association.
"The statement regarding the
allocation of Student Government funds to the National Asafter little more than a month on campus. Tommy, sociation of Black Students
is a
a political, science major, took advantage of the fabrication. It is
wholly untrue."
his family and girlfriend
opportunity to show
ZPG Veto
the UK Campus.
Kernel Photo by Dave Herman
In the same statement distri- -

3

,nt!Illjf'

,

Reunions

Sunday have traditionally been the day for large
So Tommy Cox's family
family
and girlfriend, Linda Cholson, came from Cal- houn, Kentucky, to See how Tommy Was dofng
."

Vol. LXII, No. 27

Politicians Address Coal Association
is expected to run but is still
unannounced.
Emberton said, however, that
he was submitting his resignation
from the Public Service Commission to Gov. Louie Nunn and
that he was giving "very serious
consideration to becoming an announced candidate for governor."
' Former Cov. Bert T. Combs,
The speakers were Lt. Gov.
a Democrat who also has anWendell II. Ford, a Democrat
nounced, was scheduled to speak
who has announced his candibut did not attend due to illness.
dacy for governor; Robert Cable,
former commissioner of parks, a
Coal And Environment
All three chose subjects repossible Republican candidate;
and Tom Emberton, a Republi- lated to producing coal and precan recently resigned from the serving the environment.
Public Service Commission, who
Emberton said he felt that
By NANCY WEBB
Kernel Staff Writer
Strip mining, conservation,
fuel shortages and the 1971
gubernatorial primary were the
topics of three speeches at a
meeting of the Kentucky Coal
Association Friday at Ramada-ImperiHouse.

'

al

"under the leadership of .Gov.
Nunn, the state of Kentucky has
fairly but firmly enforced the
laws to reconcile our needs for
beauty and clean water and recreation." He continued, "The
concern that is felt for the environment must be a responsible
concern . . .We must look at it
in a balanced sort of way."
Cable's speech stressed the
importance of coal as "Kentucky's No. 1 cash crop" and.
the need for communication between conservation groups and
coal producers. Cable said that

"a

disaster

was narrowly

averted" when the last session of
the legislature failed to pass bills

Politics Called a Firing Factor
College Press Service

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Not only

can a professor in California get
n
Comfired for being a
munist, he can get fired for being
n
married to a
Communist.
San Jose State College (SJS)
professor Jack Nurzweil learned
ia
this after the chancellor of
state colleges, Glenn
Dumke, denied him tenure and
announced his dismissal last August. Last week, the
electrical engineering instructor
filed a grievance with the chancellor's office.
Wife Is 'Communist'
Kurzweil claims his firing resulted from his political beliefs
and the fact that his wife is
Bettina Aptheker, an avowed

Communist and daughter of Communist theoritician Herbert Aptheker.

Dumke denies Kurzweil' s political ideologies entered into his
decision, which overruled an approval of tenure for the professor
made by former acting SJS president Hobert Burns. Instead,
Dumke said it was because Kurzweil did not have unanimous
faculty approval for tenure and
because at onetime Bums did not
approve tenure for Kurzweil.
dismissal will be effective
at the end of this academic year.
Burns disapproved tenure for
Kurzweil last November because
of the opposition, ostensibly on
academic grounds, from the
school of engineering. After Kurzweil demanded a grievance hearing. Burns reversed his decision.
Bums concluded that the radical
professor, who is not a member
of the Communist Party, was
Forecast for Lexington and competent to hold a permanent
appointment at the college, and
vicinity: mostly cloudy, with periods of rain and a chance of asserted that ideological considthundershowers today, tonight erations influenced the engineerand tomorrow. High today 74; ing school's decision.
low tonight 55; high tomorrow in Academic vs. Political Reasons
"There is good reason to bethe mid 70's. Precipitation probabilities; SO percent today and lieve," Burns said, "that many
tonight; 40 percent tomorrow. if not all of those faculty members who opposed granting tenure
well-know-

well-know-

Cali-Tforn-

.

Weather

Kur-zwei- l's

to Dr. Kurzweil in the first place
were indeed those who were most
concerned with his alleged political beliefs or affiliations. It is
wrong, in law and in academic
practice, to base a personnel decision on essentially political rather than academic reasons."
Burns also agreed that
marriage to Miss Aptheker was a contributing factor.
"Flamboyant language though
it may be, the assertion that Dr.
Kurzweil would have been recommended for tenure in the first
instance if he had been married
a
to Bettina Smith instead of
Aptheker may have more
than whimsy in it," he said.
Kurzweil's politics had been
under scrutiny from the time he
arrived in San Jose in 1908. A notation on a hiring document reported that Kurzweil was a
known activist but not "politically troublesome" while teaching
at San Francisco State previous- ly.
Free Speech Movement
Four months after he came
to SJS, the Mercury, the San
Jose newspaper, disclosed Kurzweil's marriage to Miss Aptheker, who was a leader of the
Continued on Pace 1, CoL 4
Kur-zwei- l's

Bet-tin-

to ban surface mining in Kentucky.
Fuel Shortage Soon?
"This was proposed . . .when
a severe fuel shortage was clearly
on the horizon, even without allowing for decreased production
due to the new Mine Safety Law,"
said Cable.
Lt. Cov. Ford told the coal
producers that "strip and surface
mining must be prohibited on
land which cannot afterwards be
reclaimed . . .If land can't be reclaimed, it isn't going to be
stripped. If it can be reclaimed,
it is going to be properly reclaimed if it is stripped."
Ford continued, "I believe
most Kentuckians are convinced
the mining industry can care for
the land and water better than
some industry members have
been doing, and the people should
accept no less than effective conservation from the industry and
from the governor during the
next administration."

buted Friday, the coalition condemned Bright for his recent veto
of the bill which would give Zero
Population Crowth (ZPC) $150.
"It is our belief that the actions taken in these two instances
are in direct contradiction,"
states the coalition statement.
"In one case, funds were denied a UK organization, which
if approached by Bright could
have easily given a detailed explanation of plans for these funds.
"In the other case, funds were
earmarked for what is not identified as other than 'reparations'
to a
organization (National Association of
Black Students)," the statement
charged.
Return To Community?
"The Student Coalition calls
for a return of the attention of
the Student Government and of
the attention of Steve Bright in
particular to that area which it
is authorized to serve: the UK
community," concludes the coalition statement.
According to Bright, he vetoed the bill to give funds to
ZPG because it did not "provide
either a general or specific outline as to the nature of the programs to be conducted by ZPG
in connection with the money
to be received through this ap-

propriation."

No Secrets?
Bright also denied that it is
possible to make a "secret" donation of Student Government
funds to any organization, including the National Student Association and the National Association of Black Students.
Any Student Government expenditure must bear the signature
of the vice president for student
affairs and must indicate exactly
what the amount is for and to
whom it is payed. Bright said.
"I deeply resent this attempt
extremists to disby right-win- g
credit the Student Government
with an outright lie. It is unfortunate that some have chosen to
substitute this kind of childish
bickering for rational, intellectual
dialogue," said Bright.

Parity
Suit Filed to Block Game
In 'Equal Enforcement9 Effort
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)-- A
court suit has been
filed, seeking to block the Michigan
football game here Oct. 17, alleging it is a nuisance
because alcohol and drugs are in use in the stadium.
Don Koster of Ypsilanti, Mich., an attorney active
in civil rights cases, filed the case hi Washtenaw
County Circuit Court Thursday in behalf of Joel Block,
22, a University of Michigan janitor and union steward
who was sports editor of the campus newspaper during
the last academic year.
"I am not against football, but I am for equal law
enforcement. If the law applies to rock festivals, then
it should also apply to football games," Block said.
A similar suit was used to prevent a rock festival
at Goose Lake Park, Mich., over the Labor Day weekend.
Circuit Court Judge Ross W. Campbell said he would
set a date today for a hearing.
State-Michiga- n

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Oct.

12, 1970

Movie Review

'Soldier' Succeeds in Exploiting Violence

"Soldier Blue," an Avco Embassy
release starring Candice Bergen,
Peter Strauss and Donald Pleas-ancis currently playing at the
downtown Cinema.

e,

By DANIEL E. COSSETT

right. That's enough. The
point has been made. It will never
again be necessary to make a
movie like "Soldier Blue."
Billed as the "the most savage
film ever made," the entire movie
is built around a graphic representation of the Sand Creek massacre of 1864 where the Eleventh
Colorado Volunteers attacked a
tribe of Cheyenne and butchered
and raped hundreds of helpless
women and children.
The massacre occupies the entire last scene of the movie and
not one of the gory details is
left out. Blood flies in all directions, children are beheaded
and dismembered, and it's all
AH

there in plain view for the delighted audience.
Perhaps the ulitmate affront
is the scene where several soldiers grab a plump Cheyenne
maiden, strip her, rape her, and
then cut off a breast to make a
tobacco pouch while she is still
alive.
Isn't it wonderful how modem
cinematography can make these
vital details so graphic and realistic?
The final scene of "Soldier
Blue" is an insult to the intelligence of the American viewing
public, and the rest of the movie
is complete garbage.
Anyone who even makes an attempt to think clearly realizes
that base brutality is not the
private preserve of our enemies.
Murder, rape, mutilation and savagery make up the stuff of war
and Americans are as guilty as

anyone else. Witness in recent My
Lai incident in Vietnam.
Joseph Levine, producer of
"Soldier Blue," felt compelled,
however, to shove the point down
our throats using a vehicle that
was designed to deliver one brutal
scene and nothing else.
What plot the rest of the movie
can claim involves a rough-talkin- g
New York tramp, Candice
Bergen, who was captured by the
Cheyennes on her way to marry
her horny Cavalry sweetie. She
escapes to a trading post six
months later and Joins a paymaster's detail on the way to
Fort Reunion. (Nice touch, eh
Mannie?)
En route, the Cheyennes
attack again and wipe out the
entire detail, except for Cresta
(Miss Bergen) and naive II onus
(Peter Strauss).
Even Candice Bergen refers
to Honus asa"dumbass."Cresta

Christen Says Finances Increase
Faster Than Quality of Education
-

FiFRANKFORT, Ky. (AP)
nance Commissioner Albert Christen said today that "financing
of education has increased faster
than improvements of the educational system" in Kentucky.
He thus took issue with the
current theme of the Kentucky
Education Association that the
Republican administration and
Democratic - dominated legislature have failed to meet the
needs of schools and teachers.
"There is no shortchanging
of education," Christen said in

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed live times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
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Published by the Board of Student
PvblicaUons, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Editor Managing Editor .... 275-17Editorial Page Editor,
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an interview. "We have the largest percentage of increase in the
past decade in school expenditures per pupil in the nation
and top rank in increase in instructional staff salaries."
Anyway, he added, quoting
one of his former school superintendents: "Everyone knows salary is no indication of a teacher's efficiency."
The commissioner said it
would be an
for taxpayers to realize how many incompetent teachers they are wasting money on.
Christen has been expounding
eye-open-

on

these

views occasional

speeches around the state. They
drew attention a few months
ago when he said a powerful
movement was under way to
raise taxes during the next adno matter which
ministration
party wins.
"It seems to worry some people to have the finance commissioner point this out," Christen said. "But it takes no prophet to predict that the movement
for more and new revenue will
be directed in such a manner
as to give it a bipartisan image."
He said the time is at hand
to tell the elementary and sec

CENTRAL KENTUCKY

ondary school people that the
state has fulfilled its obligation
to them under the Minimum Foundation Program of basic aid
to local school districts.
Turning to higher education,
Christen said universities should
be told they must do three things:
Increase fees and tuition and
work more towards a selfsustain-in- g
basis.

Discontinue

"instructors

who do not teach'.' and eliminate
other fringe benefits "that are
so freely dished out."
Cet a Council on Higher
Education "that will stop each
university coming to the budget
division of the Finance Department and the legislature demanding more and more appropriations for its respective univer-

sity."

Christen said many pressure
groups seek additional funds-educais only one of them.
But, he said, elementary and
secondary education gets the
equivalent of all money raised
from the 5 per cent sales tax.
"I would rather not talk about
the wastefulness of our school
system because the impression
gets out that I am against education," the commissioner said.

CONCERTS

tion

&

LECTURES

THE INCOMPARABLE
THE VERSATILE

nicknames him Soldier Blue,
whence comet h the title.
A couple of hundred miles and
a few dead Kiowa warriors later,
they run across a traveling trader,
played by Donald Plea sence, who
has a neat little sideline of selling
rifles to the Cheyennes. Cresta
thinks that is a pretty good idea
since it sort of evens up the score.
Honus, on the other hand, considers it to be despicable, him
being a soldier and all.
Honus ends up blowing up all
of the guns and ammunition and
gets shot, which gets him a rest,
and eventually gets him laid.

Both of them finally get to Fort
Reunion in time for the massacre and that is all there is to
the whole movie.
The only ones who do good
Jobs in "Soldier Blue" are Pleas-anc- e
as Isaac Q. Cumber, the
and John
greasey old
Anderson as the commander of
the Colorado Volunteers, a pompous old rooster who believes
the massacre will make Colorado
safe for "decent folks."
In short, "Soldier Blue"
in only one area, it has
more blood per frame than any
other movie in history.
gun-runne- r,

ls

MNC:Peace Party:
By NANCY WEBB
Kernel Staff Writer
Preventive politics? That's the
basic idea behind a UK group
called Movement for a New Congress (MNQ, says Ed Winterberg,
According to Winterberg, a
second-yea- r
law student and one
of the group's organizers, MNC
came into being after the events
this spring at Kent State and
Jackson State and the invasion
of Cambodia. The group's purpose, he says, is to "try and
show that there is a relationship
between those events and the
kind of leadership we have."

The group is presently supporting Ron Mazzoli, third Congressional District candidate for
the U.S. House of Representatives, and Charlie Webster, fourth
Congressional District candidate, in the November election.

Both are Democrats facing
Republican, However,
Winterberg says that MNC is
n.

"There are several thousand
kids who can vote for these

can-

didates here on campus, "Winterberg said. "Our top priority

right now is getting people to
apply for and use absentee bal-

lots."

Applications for absentee ballots, which must be turned in
20 days before an election, are
available in the Student Government Office in the Student Center.
"I think we're fortunate in
having two very favorable candidates running," Winterberg"
noted, "since there are only seven
congressional districts in the
I suppose it's marginal
state.
change, but nonetheless it is
change."

...

Political Firing Bias
Claimed by Professor
Continued from Page One
rights demonstration in San Francisco in 1964. The charges were
Free Speech movement as a studismissed.
at Berkeley.
dent
When Bums was appointed
Chancellor Dumke's office acting president of SJS in the fall
of 1360, he began receiving letters
had been assured by college officials that a careful study of suggesting Kurzweil be denied
Kurzweil had been conducted
tenure on the grounds of las poprior to his hiring. John Kehoe, litical activities.
"Three state legislators, six
currently an education adviser to
Cov. Reagan, conferred with a members of the faculty and one
California senate fact finding member of the support staff made
acsuch requests," Bums said.
committee on
"Some of these requests were
tivities to provide a rundown on
Kurzweil for state colleges. The threatening."
Burns Threatened?
subsequent report claimed Kurzweil had participated in various
One legislator promised that
leftist activities, was a member of Bums would not long remain actthe DuBois Club of America in ing president and would never be
1965, and had once been photopresident if Kurzweil received
graphed in the company of a tenure. Bums had applied for the
known communist leader.
president's post, but withdrew
The report even went so far as his name last spring.
Defending Kurzweil's competo point out that Kurzweil "had
his wedding reception at the tency as a teacher, Bums comhome of the Communist Party mented, "If an inconsistency
chairman for the northern district exists in the evaluation of his
of California."
teaching, it turns on the point
of whether he is excellent or
A police report indicated Kurzweil had been arrested in a civil merely superior."

DUKE ELLINGTON
AND HIS ORCHESTRA

See

Featuring: Johnny Hodges, Harry Carney,
Cootie Williams, Sam Woodyard . . . with
Billy Strayhorn and Ellington arrangements.
,

FRIDAY, OCT.

16-8i5-

of Kentucky,

inc.

Pm

Imperiol Plaza Shopping Center
Woller Avenut
Lexington, Ky.

tmtn,lr
Full-tim- e

'

)Y(gGLASSES

MEMORIAL COLISEUM
Admission:

"

lot your cptMneeds at

,N

3

"

CENI MEATYARD

students by ID and Activity card.
season membership

only.

All others

by

to atk Cen

Telephone

;

HOURS:

about tho SPECIAL CONSIDERATION
to oil UK. STUDENTS

0

Mo,.f,i.

255-550- 6

-

.

Sot.

8:30-1- 2

p.m.

gf

)

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Oct.

12, 1970- -3

Play Review

'Saga' Provides Entertaining 'Nonsense'

"The Saga of Roaring Gulch" is

showing during Ibe month of
October at the Darn Dinner Theater. The show stars Reed Matthews and Linda Mann.
By JEAN RENAKER
Managing Editor
Two words are sufficient to
describe "The Saga of Roaring
Gulch" ridiculously funny.
"Saga," the newest attraction
at the Bam Dinner Theater, is a
mixture of Just about everything
vaudeville antics, slapstick
comedy, music, and melodrama.
Put together, it's almost hopelessly ridiculous. Seven fine actors and a "spirited" audience
and you have the perfect example
of entertainment for the pure
pleasure of it.
"Saga" is the story of Marshall Wyatt Winchester (Reed
Matthews) and his love for Hilda
Heartfelt (Linda Mann). They're
going to live in a house built for

three-Wy-

att,

Hilda and Nell, his

It's also the story of vallain-ou-s

Bart Black (James Eric) and
Calantha (Karen Van Dean), the
dance hall girl, who team up to
rob Hilda of a fortune in gold
nuggets.
And it's the story of Hoot
Hill (Owen Hughes), the town
drunk.
Hughes turns in the finest
performance of any of the cast
members. Always guzzling stage
"booze," he occasionally ventures into the audience to sample
some of the bourbon Kentucky's
famous for.

rr

Eric, as Bart Black, does an
admirable job of keeping up with
Hughes' ad lib pranks. The two
are at their best when encouraging the audience to join in
their tomfoolery. Eric's "Egad!
How vile I am, how vile I am,
Nobody knows how vile I am"

Film Chides Racism
Bridges, Pearl Bailey, Ruby Dee
and Lou Cossett, is currently
playing at the Chevy Chase Cinema.
By DANIEL E. COSSETT

"The Landlord," a pleasant,
amusing piece in the tradition
of Francis Ford Coppola's

"You're a Big Boy Now,"
is
about racism, racist guilt and
life on both sides of the track.
These are pretty grim subjects,
yet the movie is basically very
funny.
This sort of reductionism can
only lead to one end a complete
misrepresentation of the problems dealt with.
The trend toward humorous
reduction of serious subjects is
well established. "The Apartment" made fun of philandering.
"MASH" was a
war comedy. Somehow,
though, neither one of them left
the viewer with any real understanding of the grief that can result from philandering or the
horror of an amputation in a dirty
field hospital.
"The Landlord" is much the
same way. The impression is left
that ghetto blacks really don't
have such a bad life after all.
They have a lot of fun and
promiscuity is the answer to a lot
of bitterness and social stagnation.
Throw in a cute little rich
honkie to tease and you've got
the setting for "The Landlord."
Beau Bridges (son of Aquaman
Lloyd Bridges) plays a bored
latter-da- y
Fauntleroy who buys
a tenement building with the
intention of renovating it and
making it into a elite, mid-cit- y
townhouse.
The problem is that the building is full of a lot of friendly
quaint little 'nigras' who totally
accept their new massa and feed
him hammocks and collard
greens. One of the tenants, Fanny
(played by Ruby Dee), even hops
into the sack with him while
hubby is in jail for protesting
against white suppression. (Figure that one put!)
blood-and-gu-

ts

Mitch's Britches
New shipments in by Sat. morning
Mole and Female
Belles & Flares 6.39-6.9- 9

Regulars 4.99-5.3- 9
We now have ties, shirts,
vests, heads, stickers, patches, candles and posters.
Paintings by Biii Morrow
Ties Handcrafted by Sharon Boggs
LTh 12 9; Sot. 10-- 7

folks.

Beau Bridges does a credible
job with his role, as does Pearl
Bailey, as Marge, a part-tim- e
e
fortune teller and
Aunt
Jemima. Both of them, however,
are overshadowed by Ruby Dee
and Lou Cossett as Fanny and
Copey, respectively.
Miss Dee has a flair for comedy that is unsurpassed by any
actress, black or white. In one
of the final scenes, Fanny sticks
her head in the landlord's door
and announces that she has to
talk to him. Asked what the
problem is, she points to her
three-mont- h
tummy and exclaims
"Excedrin Headache No. 1."
Cossett turns in the best acting job in the whole flick, however, in the movie's only dramatic scene. Copey (Cossett) has
just been released from jail for
participating in an anti-whiestablishment demonstration.
His wife strolls in and informs him that she is pregnant,
and the child is not his. This
sends liim into a mad, crying
rage of disbelief and anger. When
he finds out that the man responsible is the white landlord,
he blows his cork, grabs an ax
and chases the culprit up three
flights of stairs trying desperately to kill him.
Copey gets him cornered in
a landing and is reading to get
his vengeance, but the sight of
a cowering, pale mass of helpless
flesh brings cut the humane side
of him and he relents. The experience puts him in the psycho
ward of Bellevue Hospital.
If you want to laugh at the
problems of the racial gap, go
see "The Landlord."

.'.

X
'

.

TODAY

Stadent Coalition leader Terrence
Fox will speak Tuesday, Oct. 13, at
the Baptist Student Union's
371 S. Lime. Lunchen-countbegins at noon and dismisses
at 12:43 p.m., in time for 1:00 classes.
All students and faculty are invited
to a free lunch and program every
Tuesday and Friday.
Lunch-encount-

er

The Collere Republicans will hold
a meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Oct.
13, in room 206 of the Student Center.
Gerry Gregory, candidate for congress, will speak.

COMING UP
The office of the Dean of Undergraduate Studies, Dr. John B. Stephenson, is now located in room 669
and 671 of the Office Tower. Extensions 71870 and 72685.
Anyone Interested in trying out for
the UK Golf team should apply
Wednesday, Oct. 14, at 4 p.m. at the
Coliseum ticket office.
Holmes Hall Forim Series: Professor Ted Haley, UK Civil Engineering,
will debate "Strip Mining and Reclamation" with Prof. Robert T. Muehne,
U.K. Zoology, at 9 p.m. Oct. 14 in the
Holmes Hall Lounge. Open to the
entire University community.
The Tan Chapter of Phi Alpha
Theta, national honorary society in
history, presents Dr. George C. Herring, Jr., speaking on "The United
5:
States and British Bankruptcy,
Responsibilities Deferred," Oct.
14 at 3:45 p.m. in room 206, Student
Union Building. Everyone is Invited.
The Galrnol Theatre will present
George Bernard Shaw's witty comedy-drama,
"Androcles and the Lion,"
from Oct. 14 through Oct. 18 in the
Gulgnol Theatre, Fine Arts Building,
Rose Street. Curtain time Wednesday
through Saturday is 8:30 p.m.; Sunday 7:30 p.m. Admission is $2.00; $1.00
for students, and $1.00 for groups over
ten persons. For reservations
call
from noon until 4:30 daily.
David J. Rose, director of long-ranplanning at Oak Ridge National
Laboratories. Oak Ridge, Tenn, will
Environmental
speak on "National
Problems" Oct. 15 at 4:00 p.m. In
room 257, Anderson Hall. Meet the
speaker and have refreshments at
3:30 p.m. Sponsored by the UK Mechanical Engineering
Department.
Dr. Sasanne Howard will speak on
"Level of Development
of Teacher
Role Performance" at 1:30 p.m. Oct.
15 in room 57, Dickey Hall. Presented
by the Department of Social and
Philosophical Studies in Education.
Dr. John A. Stamper of the University of Maryland, College Park,
Maryland, will speak at tha Physics
Colloquium at 4:00 p.m. Friday, Oct.
18 at the Chemistry-Physic- s
Building,
room 153. His topic will be "Laser-ProducPlasmas and their Interaction with Background
Plasmas."
Anyone Interested in physics is welcome to attend.
The Blao Grass Rock Clab's annual Gem, Mineral, and Fossil Show
will be held at the Glendover School
Gymnasium, Glendover Hoad, Saturday, Oct.(2-- 17 (1-- 9 p.m.) and Sunday,
7
Oct. 18
p.m.) The public is
There is no admission charge.

HOLMES HALL
FORUM SERIES
"Stripmining

&

Reclamation"

Prof. Ted Halcy-U- K Clyil Engineering
Prof. Robert ICuchn- c- uk zooiog

October

SLADE: (to Wyatte after challenging the marshal to a gunfight)
"Meet you at the corral, OK?"

14-- 9

f1,

TODAY and TOMORROW

Tha deadline for annoaneemenU
U
7:30
.m. twa days prior t tha first
abllcatlon af Items In thla eolamn.

full-tim-

te

e.

WINCHESTER: "Ych, that's
the one."
Barbara Coodson portrays the
characters of a dance hall girl,
Hortense Hildebrand (Black's
jilted wife), Carrie Nation and
an old lady. She and Van Dean
are lrresistable charmers.
These seven, with a little help
from the audience, somehow turn
a bit of utter, stupid nonsense
into entertainment with a big
plus.
Egadl "Saga" is fun.
;

TOMORROW

the landlord,
Eventually
whose name is Elgar Enders,
gets tired of his plush Long Island existence and goes to live
in his new house with the poor

the dimes, and more laughter
than he gets at any other point.
One of Mann's best scenes
comes at about the same time,
when she appears in Matthew's
dreams as a dance hall girl. That
performance is most convincing.
Of the remaining characters,
Michael Parva, as Slippery Stan
Spade, portrays one of the most
unbelievably silly persons imai-nabl-

;

The UK Motle Department will present a concert of chamber music for
wind instruments on Monday, Oct. 12,
at 8:15 p.m. in the William Seay
Auditorium. The public is invited to
attend free of charge.

Movie Review
"The Landlord," starring Beau

the high points of the
performance.
Matthews and Mann as the
hero and heroine are probably
the
persons in
the play, a situation resulting
in part from the rather naive
characters they portray. Matthew's finest scene comes near
the end of the show, after he's
fallen to "sin and degradation."
He's a drunk.
In the scene, he wanders about
the stage, hat in hand, begging
the audience for dimes. He gets
is one of

horse.

p.m.

HOLMES HALL LOUNGE

. ...
-r--rThe Lexington chapter of the National Conference of Christians and
Jews will hold its Annual Brotherhood Dinner Oct. 17 at 6:30 p.m. at
the Phoenix Hotel. Rep. Carl Perkins will be the guest speaker. Dinner
tickets are $5.00. For reservations call
2.

Soeletas Pre Leflbus, pre law honorary, is now accepting applications
for membership. All interested pre law
students may obtain an application
by contacting either David LeMaster,
101 Holmes
Hall or Damon Talley,
FarmHouse fraternity, 316 Aylesford
Place. Applications are also available
at the Dept. of Speech, 1415 Office
Tower. Deadline is Oct. 20.
Sorority Open Ruth extends until
December. All interested girls wishing
to sign up are asked to go to the
Office Tower Room 561. Go Greek
Become Involved
New Free U Classes:
"History and Theory of Modern
from Godwin to GoodAnarchism"
man. It will meet on October 12
at 7:30 p.m. in room 115 Student Cenis Dr. Joseph
ter. The
9.
Kessler, phone

UK Placement Service
4.
Humble Oil and ReOctober
fining Company Chemical E., Civil
E., Electrical E., Mechanical E., MetalLocations:
E.,
(BS, MS).
lurgical
December
Nationwide.
graduates.
Citizenship.
4.
Union
Carbide
October

CorporationChemicals and
Electrical

Plastics-Accoun-

ting.

Chemical E., Civil E.,
E., Mechanical E., Chemis

'.
Mechanics
(MS). Locations: West Virginia, Ohio,
Gulf
Midwest.
Coast,
Northeast,
Southeast.
December,
May August
Will interview
Juniors,
graduates.
students in
seniors, and graduate
Commerce and Engineering for summer employment. Ctiizenship.
14.
Louisville Gas and
October
Electric Co., Inc. Chemical E., Civil
E.. Electrical E., Mechanical E. (BS).
Location: Louisville. December, May
graduates.
14.
Westvaco
October
Corp.
Chemical E. (BS, MS): Engineering
Mechanics (MS, Ph.D): Electrical E.,
Mechanical E. (all degree). Locations:
Covington, Virginia; Charleston. S.C.;
Laurel, Maryland. December, May,
August graduates. Citizenship.
5.
October
Ashland Oil and Refining Co. Locations: Midwest. December graduates.
Citizenship. AcBusiness
Administration
counting,
Chemical E.. Civil E.,
(BS. MS);
Mechanical E., Chemistry (BS).
5.
October
Texas Instruments
Inc. Check schedule book for late information.
October 15. DeSoto, Inc. AccountCheming, Business Administration
ical E., Mechanical E. (BS). 'Chemistry (all degrees). Location: United
States. December, May, August graduates. Citizenship.
October 15. U.S. Naval Missile CeMenterPhysics (BS); Electrical E Calchanical E. (BS, MS). Location:
ifornia. Citizenship.
October 15. York Air Conditioning
Electrical E. (BS); Mechanical E.
(BS, MS). December, May graduates.
Citizenship.

try (BS, MS). Engineering

AUTHENTIC MOROCCAN CAPES
Ru