xt71g15t9n5g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71g15t9n5g/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19691117  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 17, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 17, 1969 1969 2015 true xt71g15t9n5g section xt71g15t9n5g This
Monday Evening, November 17,

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19G9

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXI, No. 59

Ignored By Nixon

P

'

1

Giant Demonstration
Concludes Peacefully

1

lfr7

AV;-.;j-.iA-

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watched a football game on

By MIKE IIILDERRAN
Kernel Staff Writer
Washington was the scene

r
of the largest
protest
in history Saturday as a conestimated 250,000
servatively
demonstrators united to voice
their support for U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam.
The protest was on the whole
peaceful and reminded some observers of a mammoth Saturday
football crowd. They sang songs
of protest and joked and laughed with police officers.
Meanwhile the 9,000 regular
Army and Marine units, many
of whom were bivouaced in government buildings along the
demonstration route, spent a
quiet weekend of rest.
Little Violence
Kernel Photo by Dick Ware
The only violence of the
UK Student Bill Carrol (at th'e microphone) addressed some 100 of President Nixon's "silent majority" who marched down Main Street in weekend was instigated by
small radical elements of the
Lexington Saturday morning in support of the President. Carrying signs
and waving flags, the marchers participated in the "Support the Pres- Students for a Democratic Soident Day." Organizer Carroll said the march was the only one of its ciety and the Youth International Party who clashed with
kind in the nation according to a Lexington Herald-Leadstory.
police at the South Vietnamese
embassy Friday night and at
the Justice Department Saturday evening.
Demonstrators smashed windows and threw a fire bomb at
the Justice Department. They
X
were dispersed with tear gas.
By FRANK COOTS
ater of the people all of them ate impression of the number of
However, this could do little
Assistant Managing Editor
to mar the total atmosphere of
are applicable to Washington participants.
the protest which was essenHow many is 500,000?
EDITOR'S NOTE: Frank Coots this weekend.
e
was one of about 50 UK students
march from
It is a
It is very nearly impossible
tially a relaxed, calm, determinwho took part in the Washing- to describe the Moratorium ac- the Capitol to the Washington ed expression of displeasure
with the war.
ton Moratorium. This is his
tion. To say it was a mass march Monument that takes five hours
As crowds passed within a
account of the three day for peace just does not capture-th- to complete, although people are
event.
of seeing more than marching 20 abreast. It is the block of the White House they
feeling
WASHINGTON, D. C. -- half a million people gathered 30 acres of land surrounding chanted, "Peace now" and "One,
Washington was beautiful this in one place for a common goal. the Washington Monument, two, three, four, Tricky Dicky,
packed completely with people end the war."
weekend. All of those corny
Even the figure of 500,000
cliches be-ithe- dees not create an accur- - shoulder to shoulder. It is, as
Nixon Oblivious
happening,
people
one speaker at the rally said,
The President meanwhile re"mass humanity."
mained oblivious to the protestPerhaps the best way to
ers, carried on executive busion Page 8, Col. 1 ness, and was reported to have

The "vocal minority" as Nixon has called them, led off the

anti-wa-

demonstration Thursday night
with a
mother, widld

ow of a naval officer killed in
Vietnam, heading the "march

against death."
The single-filprotest involved 45,000 marchers,
each carrying the name of an
American killed in Vietnam.
At 10:15 a.m. Saturday the
march began down stately Pennsylvania Avenue, where in less
troubled times inaugural parades have passed under presidential review.
Unusually Peaceful

In the ranks of faceless protesters, faceless because of their
sheer numbers, Mrs. Martin Luther King, senators Eugene
McCarthy
George
and
McCovern
(D-S.D.-

Charles Coodell

Majority

per-son-

e

n,

AAUP Workshop: Faculty
During Campus Disorder

Rep-

resentatives Philip Burton
and James Scheurer
marched in stride
with the rest.
Other sympathizers with the
peace movement who reside in
Ccmgress had remained apart
from the protest, fearing a possible backlash if violence erupted.
Earlier in the week, Pentagon spokesmen had said that
federal troops would be made
available on the parade route
"for obvious security reasons."
Those reasons did not come to
the fore Saturday.
Washington Police Lt. H. C.
Arnett, a veteran of more than
20 years on the city force, was
amazed.
"I've seen inaugurations, civil
rights marches, the poor people,
protests of all kinds, but I never
saw anything like this one,"
Continued on Pare 7, CoL 1
(D-N.Y-

One Student's Viewpoint

four-mil-

);

(R-N.Y-

(D-Calif- .);

er

.

40-ho-

e,

'Silent

Moratorium Impressions

-

.)

T

er suggested the faculty position
RACIIAEL KAMUF
Kernel Staff Writer
during unrest should be "to enWhat is the role of the fac- courage temperance,
moderation and arbitraulty during a period of student
tion."
unrest?
Fred Karem, executive asPossible answers to this problem were presented Saturday in sistant to Cov. Louie D. Nuiin,
a workshop sponsored by the disagreed with Pope's view that
UK chapter of the American established channels are closed
to those students not considAssociation of University Proered "safe."
fessors.
He pointed to the recent elecDr. J. W. Patterson of the
Todd
and chair- tion of
Speech Department
as Jefferson County
man of the local chapter said
that the members found the judge as what he called an exdiscussion
"extremely
helpful ample of a political channel
and informative."
open to youth and a society that
decision was is open to change.
No unanimous
The National AAUP member
reached, but there was no disagreement with a statement by agreed with a statement by Dr.
Lewis Cochran, dean of the
Joseph Schwortz, of the NationCraduate School, that the facal AAUP office in Washington,
and rethat violence could not be con- ulty should
determine their relationship with
doned.
their students and prevent or
But Ceoffrey Pope, the student member of the panel, ad- eliminate the need for confronvised that violence is a tactic tation."
added that the
Schwortz
tliat should not be completely
teacher should always be ready
"overlooked in any confrontato listen and advise his stution.
one of the Committee dents, but should also be ready
Popo,
of Five during last spring's UK to leave the final decision to
demonstrations, said that "tok- the students.
To be wrong in classes is the
en student involvement in
is limited to the prerogative of students, said
Schwortz, continuing: "I have
'safe students those not liketo allow them to be wrong in
ly to disagree with anybody."
UK trustee Robert Hillenmey- - life as well."

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Approximately 500 people from Kentucky, including over 50 from UK,
other Moratorium marchers on the mall near
assembled with a
the Capitol building Saturday. From the Capitol the demonstrators
moved to the Washington Monument for a final rally. Entertainers
such as Peter, Paul and Mary and Arlo Cuthrie; and speakers like Mrs.
Martin Luther King and Dr. Ilenjamin Spock appeared before the crowd
Kernel Photo by Larry XClclkopf
there.
half-millio-

'Vocal
Minority9

.t

n

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nor. 17,

19

'Puts': The Love Of A Man For His Pig

By TAUL

IDEKER

College Press Service

"Fute." Directed by Tom
O'Horgan; Released by Commonwealth United.
Rocliclle Owen's play "Futz",
as a play, was not a very big
success on Broadway. As an adventure in nudity in the theatre
it did make headlines . . . but
really that was about all. On
the silver screen "Futz" is no

bctici than any bad play that is
put on film. Not even the extremely capable acting abilities
of the LaMama Repertory
of Tom
Troupe, the
O'Horgan, who is still better
remembered for "Hair", its vivid
colors and striking nudity could
save this bad property.
But you should see "Futz."
At least you should see "Futz"
if you are tired of Doris Day and
Cary Grant playing Jack and Jill
house games, and havedeveloped
a certain sick feeling everytime
John Wayne gallops across the
serene. If you're finding that you
have lost all faith in Hollywood's
ability to do something unusual
and the least bit revolutionary
and have turned to rereading
life-brea- th

old books because nothing good
has been written lately you
should definitely sec "Futz".
Why? VVithin the realm of
technique "Futz" undoubtedly
will mark the end of an era of
one dimensional, stagnant film
productions. Its method is vital
and compelling if the characters
and the message they are conveying seem lost, it is partially because the message was never
really there in the first place and
partially because you find yourself much more interested in how
they are saving it rather than
what they are saying. It's almost
frightening to think of what might
happen to the average human
mind if an honest to goodness
message and these techniques
ever got together.
The viewer comes to feel very
much a part of what is going on.
But the motivation for this attachment with the situation is
inot in what the cast is doing
and saying-b- ut
in how it is
doing it. The swipes at conventional morality via stilted dialogue (which is more humorous
than anything else) just don't
make it.

j

more attention to putting them
into proper order than interpreting what they might have said.
If anything can be made from
the jumble of words and cross
symbolism it is best explained
by one the characters speaking to
Futz, "They would like the full
freedom to do what you have;
done." Message: wouldn't we all
like to be free to do what we
want to do? If that sounds a little
shallow it's because that's how it
comes off.
You may have gathered that
"Futz" is not a comedy. But to
classify it as a drama would not
be entirely fair. Let's just say
that "Futz" will leave you feel

Cyrus Futz amorous attachment to his prize sow must be
basal on something more than
his dialogue would indicate, "I
like Amanda because she's
good . . . pig or not." And somehow you have a gut feeling that
Futz' only voiced drawback to the
relationship is a little shallow:
"Amanda you are of this
world . . . but piglets I can't
give you." No, that doesn't quite
make it.
In fact the whole situation
doesn't really make it. A farmer
who is in love with his pig,
the sexually frustrated Oscar
Loop who is driven to rape and
eventually kill the town cupcake
(supposedly motivated by seeing
Futz and Amanda playing games
in the barn and the finale which
includes Amanda being carried
in strung up by her feet, gushing blood from the slashed throat
where the townspeople have
made their witness for morality)
and an unceremonious blood bath
given Futz by his neighbors, using none other than the blood
of his late great sweetheart.
All are part of the confusion
leaves
which
viewer
the
stumbling over the pieces, paying

By DAN COSSETT
Arts Editor
"The Big Win by Jimmy
Alfred A. Knopf

Mil-le- r.

To an author, science fiction
signifies almost unlimited license
to develop imaginary constructs
around which he can build his
presentations. If a good imaginary framework is built, the competent science fiction writer can
comment on a multitude of subjects in any way he sees fit.
This is the point at which
the masters are separated from
the masses. What do you comment on once you have a decent
fantastical framework? Robert
Heinlein derives theories of society and government out of his
imagination. Ray Bradbury explores the twisted alleys of the
human mind with the bizarre
and unusual as an excuse for
probing.
After building an excellent
and intriguing framework, Jimmy
Miller, author of "The Big Win,"
suddenly realizes that her founda

tion is all that she has. After 241
pages of fascination and projection, the reader also comes to
the realization that nothing new
or inventive has been said.
Miss Miller builds her framework around the Chinese attempt
to conquer the world in 1991,
which was done with bacteriophage instead of ICBMs. They
nearly succeeded, having completely crippled the United States
and the Soviet Union. In character to the end, the French
come up with the unexpected
and destroy the Chinese mainland with nuclear weapons.
After the Yellow Peril had
ended, and the process of reconstruction had begun, the most
popular avocation for the French
and the humilated Americans is
Thirteen
hunting
years after the attempted conquest, the most important criminal, Suan New York, who had
directed the bacterial infection of
the Eastern seaboard, is still at

poverty-stricke-

colony for Chinese war criminals
on Mercury where they identify
and execute the wily genocidist.
End of book.

ce

niquenothing more.

But for now and for "Futz,"
that really is enough.

Board Includes Students
Two University students were elected to the board of directors
of the Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture Association at the
annual business meeting of the board last week at the Fine Arts
Building. They are Sarah McConnell and John Cook, both juniors,
who had served since September as members of the association's
committee.
Miss McConnell, a Spanish and sociology major from Oak
Park, 111., is president of Associated Women Students and a member
of Alpha Xi Delta, the Creek Activities Steering Committee, and
the AAUP Student Advisory Committee.
Cook, of Georgetown, is a civil engineering major and member
of the Student Activities Board Concert Committee, Phi Gamma
Delta, and the National Association of Civil Engineers.
Officers elected at the meeting included H. Joseph Houlihan,
president; Dr. Jesse Harris and Mrs. James W. Martin, vice presidents; W. L. Rouse, Jr., treasurer; Mrs. James S. Dailey, recording
secretary, and Mrs. Burton Mil ward, executive secretary.
talent-selectio-

!

The search for Suan New York
brings together a motley crew of
bounty hunters comprised of the
spoiled daughter of French ariston
but
crats, a
tough peasant from Manhattan,
and a spacy flower child from a
hippie colony on Venus.
Their search takes them on a
wild goose chase around the
world and eventually to the penal

tion of "society's morality"
or even more dangerously your
own moral code. Making it with a
pig should not seem like a natural
act after you see "Futz" . . .
at least no more so than before
you saw the film. What you will
feel is the excitement generated
by having taken part in a
which is alive with
new and excitingly creative tech-

CKCLA Elects Officers,

Plot Shows Talent, Imagination

SF Novel Lacks Real Substance

ing "something" that you won't
be able to explain right away.
Please don't make the mistake
of trying to convert that "something" into a very heavy explana-

n

IN THE NOVEMBER

ISSUE OF

CONSUMER REPORTS

THE AIRLINES. What they don't advertise . . . what are the rights of the ticketed

passenger?

CASSETTE TAPE RECORDERS. The cassette system of tape recording looks like the
wave of the future. But is it good enough now? Eighteen portable models are rated.
DURABLE-PRES-

SHIRTS. How well do they do what they're supposed to do?

S

Twenty-tw-

shirts are rated.

o

HOT PLATES. Some hot plates are potentially hazardous

lethal shock.

they might give you a

Plus reports and brand-namRatings on freezers, stainless-stee- l
flatware, toasters, melamine dinnerware and champagne.
e

s.

"'

large.

Continuity Marks 'Tommy
By JOHN E. COOPER
"Tommy," The Who. Decca.
This is the finest side (actually, two sides) to come down the
"rock" pike since the inception of
the genre, bar none. "Rock" is in
quotes here because "Tommy,"
unfortunately for our favorite
American pastime, defies pigeonholing.
It has been various described as a pop opera, a
tone poem, an oratorio, a
passion, a rock sonata and
a bunch of other things. Piecemeal, it is but of the Beatles
by much of the history and tradition, of music, with an assist from
the poignant lyricisms of Simon
and Carfunkel, a Jigger of 1940
Hollywood and a clash of Gilbert and Sullivan madrigal, but
as a whole it is all the exclusive property of Peter Townshend
and The Who.
- The
lyrics tell
of the "amazing journey "of Tommy. Walker, a deaf, dumb and
blind kid who emerges as kind of
a hipster's latter-daJob. Senseless witness to the infidelity of
his mother, for openers. Tommy is
subsequently tortured by his
malevolent
Cousin Kevin
pin-ba- ll

often-plainti-

y

("There's a lot I can do to a
freak"), torqued out by a Gypsy
known as the Acid Queen, sexually molested by his wicked
and drunken Uncle Ernie ("Fiddle About"), then, by a mysterious process of intuition and sensation, becomes the Pin Ball Wizard of the world.
This album has everything
nonsense, wit, pathos, poetry,
pop culture and, above all, remarkable music. Any one cut
rests in its own grooves as a
great piece of music, but it's
as a harmonious, driving, integrated whole that "Tommy"
achieves its stature. It's a brilliant
and a must
for everyone who really cares
about music.

)cyj'

j

v.

Iwmv the waiy Mm
wit my eyes &mA"

WI

tour-de-forc- e,

The Kentucky Kernel

Th Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second clan
paid at Lexington,
Etstage five times weekly Kentucky,
the
school year except holidays duringexam
and
periods, and once during the summer
tBiun.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4JKJ6.
and
Begun as the Cadet in
published continuously as the Kernel
suice 113.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
fU or misleading advertising should
be reported to The KUitors.

'

"

Then you know tho way too well.
Because driving an old familiar route can make you
drowsy, even if you've had plenty of sleep.
If that happens on your way home
for Thanksgiving, pull over, take a break
and take two NoDoz. It'll help you drive home
with your eyes open.
NoDoz. No car should be without it.

01969

Bristol-Hy-

r

Co.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nor.

-,

it

...

.

.

a-t
CUm!14 4rrtlilaff will
fcasia
As mmr
k
la yersaa Maatar tkraas fc
la4
Frlasy r fcr mall,
U THE KENTUCKY aymat lala4,
KKKNEL, Baasa
llll, JavraaMsra BI4r. t warts.
Kataa arc HJtl far
far tare
aseaaUva lasertlaas at th
mm
4 af t
aa SS.7S ar
weak, fa warts. writ,
Taa dtatllae la 11 a.m. taa aUy
arlar U aablleaUaa. Na adrsruicnasat
anay alte race, rallglea er aatlaaal
artgta as a sjaallfleatlea far raatlag
raaau ar far mplermsat.

rpl

A

piano servi CkVnea sonable price.
Ail work fu'
Trained
stelnway
Davlea,

Ifc

252-19-

a:

by
In New York. Mr.
243-J2-

6

for hire. Contact
Ken Sheffield or Billy Forbes,
14N20
or 88021.

SCUDA

DIVERS

'

KENT

FO

for mature lady or couple.
Kitchen and home privileges. Convenient to campus. Reasonable rent.

ROOM

FOE IALK
TRIUMPH Spitfire MK-good
condition, many accessories; removable hardtop and convertible tops;
new "oversize" tires. Call

1966

2.

17N21

12N17

6.

J;

FURNISHED
apartment
close to UK. Spiral staircase to bedroom area. In restored 18th Century
townhouse. Call
evenings.
252-38-

14N18

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
TTFINQ

FEMALE
.

Radio Dispatcher, Monday
3:30 to 7:30 p.m. and
to 2 p.m. $1.69 per hour.
Saturday
&l
N17

thru Friday
8
4.

PROFESSIONAL TYPING
Themes,
theses, term papers. IBM, carbon ribbon. 60c pp. BILL GIVENS,
1
3 and after 9 pan.

MALE

wal,

to

468

Lane,

campus)

$62.50
11N17

monthly. Call
-near campus.
TO RENT small roo:
for study purposes ays and' even- lngs; bed Is only I Mil ture necessary.
12N18
3.

14N-D1-

Net semester
Rose

ROOMMATE

to share efficiency,

h

0.

RIDE WANTED for
Peoria or Champaign,
Phone S93C3.

A- mkfcglving to
I1X

U

Both on

12N18

KERNEL CLASSIFIED ADS
BRING RESULTS

MISCELLANEOUS

Daniel Boone lifting Stable,
Highway 537, ZYw mliesicrom Boones- boro Park toward Winchester. Trail
rides and moonlkrhtrides on Friday
and Saturday ni&ja. Phone

HORSES

5.

3N29

Not too skilled
devotee of this ancient oriental
game seeks opponents In
strategic
the Lexington area. If interested
write J. B. Deisher, MJ5., Department of Community Medicine, UK
17N19
Medical Center.
Is HAIR really coining to UK.
DO YOU play GO?

17N19

...

Film
in living color!
CONTRACEPTION
Rev. Ronald Kfeteler

Dr. Ward O. Griffcn Jr., MJ).;

7:30 p.m.

Monday, November 17

NEWMAN

320 Rose Lane

CENTER

Atuttwraarg
To celebrate our 86th Birthday
We offer you

off

20

ON ALL PURCHASES

v

FROM OUR FINE COLLECTION

By RICK FITCH
College Press Service

many respects the most progressive undergraduate curriculum to
be found in any major U.S. institution of higher learning.
Modes Of Thought
Freshmen, once forced to attend huge introductory courses in
numerous specialized disciplines
in the interest of achieving a
"liberal" education, are given
new freedom. There are no university-required
and
courses,
small, informal "Modes of
Thought" courses have been instituted to combat depersonaliza-

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (CPS)-Durthe late 1700's, Drown
University aided the American
Revolution by housing French
and American soldiers in its University Hall. Today, another,
quite different revolution is taking place on Brown's "country
college" campus.
A revolution in education.
Prompted by the demands of
zealous student reformers, the
alma mater of such statesmen
as John Hay and Charles Evan
Hughes has adopted what is in
ing

tion.
"Modes of Thought" courses
are interdisciplinary. A course on
the subject of revolution, for example, might daw on the alienated writings of Tolstoi, Sartre
and Camus, empirical political
theory, history and political
The courses are
philosophy.
taught independently of departmental sponsorship by individual
faculty members who are free to
abandon a particular course at
their wish. This helps to insure
enthusiastic Instruction.
"Modes of Thought" courses
have a
enrollment ceil-

OF

Supreme Court
Upholds Conviction
Of UK Protesters

-

The
(AP)
on a 1 vote,
Supreme Court,
let stand today the conviction
of four University of Kentucky
student protesters who blocked
a university office in which the
Defense Intelligence Agency was
holding reciuiting interviews.
Justice William O. Douglas,
alone, favored hearing the four
protesters and their attack on
law.
the state's
The court majority, consisting of all the other justices, said
in explaining their action only
that the appeal had been dismissed "for want of jurisdiction."
This means the majority felt
the issue was not one that the
court could properly consider.
The four students, Dan Sheridan O'Leary III, William Mur-rel-l,
Khristina Lewis and Robert
A. Woock, were arrested by campus police in 1967 for refusing to
leave the doorway of a university
office in which the Defense Intelligence Agency was holding
recruiting interviews.
They were fined $75 on conviction and Kentucky courts dismissed their claims that the law
was unconstitutional vague and
ambiguous.
Appealing to the Supreme
Court, the four said their pro- test rights, protected by the First
Amendment to the Constitution,
cannot be restricted except by a
law that defines with precision
the kind of conduct that is illegal.
WASHINGTON

7--

breach-of-pea-

WATCHES

PEARLS

CHINA

CRYSTALS

JEWELRY

SILVER

U.K. BEER MUGS

Established 1883
W. Main Street

127

is

a

com-

mon law in Kentucky. The sentencing statute was repealed by
the state legislature last year,
but the common law remains.
Its definition of breach of the
peace is determined by court
rulings in a succession of cases.

The Couri of Appeals of Kentucky, in upholding the convictions last May, said "the privilege of an enrolled student to
use and occupy the property of
a school is and should be subject to the will of its governing
authorities."

Tho Sound of Massed balalaikas
WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19, MEMORIAL COLISEUM, 8:15
i

1

Osipov Balalaika
Orchestra v
With Stars of tho Bolshoi Opera
and Russian Dancers
Admission: All full time students by Activities and I.D.
cards. All others by season membership cards only.
No tickets for single performance.

Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture Series

nt

ing.
No Patterns

ce

Breach-of-the-pea-

DIAMONDS

3

Revolution In Education

7.

8--

I!)--

Brown University Enacts Reform

SEKYICFt

SS--

'

-

CLASSIFIED

17,

students

Upper-divisio- n

at

Brown no longer have to conform to a
pattern
of study. A "Committee of Concentrations" has been formed to

aid students in determining study
programs tailored to individual
needs.

The old concept of "majoring" in one subject and "minor-ing- "
in another has been done
away with. Students are expected
to plunge into a few areas of
study more intensively than
others, but there are no numerical
constraints on the quantity of
courses to be taken. Subject to
the approval of the committee,

a student might fulfill his obligation for "concentrating" in an
area by taking four or five courses
in it.
"The effect of the new system is simply to remove the ar-

tificial restraints which have, to
some degree,

encouraged

stu-

dents to think of 'education' in
terms of specified numbers of
courses
symmetrically
apportioned into distinct courses," explains a pamphlet put out by the

administration.
Grading Changes
The most radical change is
in gradingor, rather, the lack
of it. All course work is evaluated either on an "A,B,C" and
"unsatisfactory" basis or simply
as "Satisfactory" and "unsatisfactory." A student may choose
the method he prefers. No credit
is given for unsatisfactory work,
and no notation of a student's
unsatisfactory performance is entered on his transcript.
A student must complete six
courses satisfactorily by the end
of his freshman year, 13 by the
end of his second year, 21 by the
third year and 28 in order to
graduate. The administration
calls the retention of the "A,
B,C" system possibly only a
"transitional measure" until the
credit system can
satisfactory-nbe evaluated.
o

CKCLU Meeting

Next Thursday

The next meeting of the UK
student chapter of the. Central
Kentucky Civil Liberties Union
will be Thursday, Nov. 20, and
not Wednesday, Nov. 19, as previously reported.
The meeting will be held at
8:30
in the Student Center.
p-r-

,

TODAY and

.

TOMORROW
'

Tha deadline for aaneaneemeBts Is
arlar te the first
aablieatlea af item in this etlimn.

7:39 p.m. twa days

Today
Dr. Richard Mark, Associate Professor of Forestry, will speak at 6:30
p.m., Monday, Nov. 17 In Room 125
of the Funk house r Biological Sciences
Building. Future U.S. timber neeas,
the Daniel Boone National Forest,
and the controversial National Timber
Supply Act are among the topics to
be discussed in the ninth of a conof Environmental
series
tinuing
Awareness Seminars.
The third annual Biblical Lectureship of the University of Kentucky
Baptist Student Union will be held
today through Nov. 21. Dr. Eric Rust,
professor of Christian philosophy at
the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, Louisville, will be featured.

Tomorrow
Auditions for the Symphonic Band
and the Concert Band have been
scheduled for Tuesday, Nov. 18, from
0
p.m. All students Interested
in performing in one of these organisations should contact W. II. Clarke,
Director of Bands, in Room 33 of the
Fine Arts Building or call 3304.
7:00-9:0-

Coming Up
The Block and Bridle Club of the
University of Kentucky is holding
its annual Little International on Friday, Dec. 5, 1969. This year's event
will celebrate the 50th anniversary,
and will Include an honors program
to the 1919 show, with the assistance
of the Animal Sciences Department.
The show la free, and it will be
preceded by a barbeque starting at
6:00 p.m. The Little International will
consist of swine, sheep, beef, dairy
and equine
cattle,
showmanship
classes; intermissions will include facegg throwing, milking contests,
ulty
etc., as well as events for students.
Awards will be given to the winners
of each class.
UN1CEF Christmas Cards will be
on sale at the Human Relations Office from now until December S.
Information on the Experiment in
International Living will be distributed Tuesday in the Student Center.
Anyone interested in Information on
the excursion can call Bill Peterson,
or Sue Dempsey.
The weekly Student Government
Meeting will
be held Wednesday, Nov. 19. at 4:00
p.m. In Room 24.1 of the Student Center. All interested students are invited
to attend and ask questions of the
Student Government Executive.
Lances, junior men's honorary and
leadership fraternity, is now accept
Executive-Student-Pre-

sa

ing applications by letter from all
second semester sophomores and Junletters
iors with a 3.5 overall.
of application to Will H. Green, 2111
Sonsill Or..
by Nov. 24.
Sc-n-

5.

RELIGIOUS

ACTIVITIES

Newman Center: Monday, Nov. 17,
7:30 p.m., film on contraception. Discussion will follow. Tuesday, Nov. 18,
7:30 p.m., "Pray for Peace." A light
prayer service for peace will be held
in the Newman Center chapel.
Baptist Student Center: Sunday,
Nov. 16. 7:30 p.m.. Prof. Eric Rust.
Southern Theological Seminary, will
present opening address in 3rd annual Biblical Lectureship. Calvary
Baptist Church. Monday, Nov. 17,
7:30 p.m.. Room 245 of the Student
Center, Dr. Rust talks on "Does Science Leave Room for God?" Tuesday,
Nov. 18, at noon, "Biblical Roots of
Secularity," an address by Dr. Eric
Rust. Friday, Nov. 21, at noon, "The
Bible and Models for Faith," Baptist
Student Union. Friday. No.. 21. 6:30
p.m., a dinner Jor ii.Uv national students at Central Baptist Church.

UK Placement Service
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Dow Corning
., Mechanical E.,
Corp. Electrical
Computer Science, Physics IBS); Ac., Chemistry
counting, Chemical
Locations: Midland and
(BS, MS).
Hemlock, Michigan; Elizabeth town
and Carrollton, Kentucky; Greensboro, North Carolina; Trumbull, Connecticut. December, May, August
graduates. Will interview juniors and
seniors in Engineering for summer
employment if schedule permits.
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Cenesco Locations: Nationwide. December graduates.
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Humphrey
Robinson and Co. Accounting (US,
MS). Location: Louisville, Kentucky.
December, May, August graduates.
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Keller Manufacturing Co. Accounting, Business
Administration, Economics, Electrical
E., Mechanical E. (US). Locations:
Corydon, Indiana; Culpepper, Virginia. May graduates.
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Price Water-'houand Company.
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with U.S. Gypsum
Co. Electrical E., Mining E., ComScience (BS); Accounting.
puter
Business Administration,
Chemical
E.. Civil E., Mechanical E. (US. MS);
Chemistry (all degrees). December,
May, August graduates. Will inter-Viejuniors in Enguieerlrig for summer employment.
se

w

* Alas, Poor Spiro
At a time when President Nixon needs all the support he can
possibly enlist, he has let a damaging thing happen in the form
of vice president Spiro Agnew.
First, the outspoken vice president spoke out against "the effete
snobs" who marched peacefully
in the October Moratorium. This
was taken in stride (but not necessarily accepted) since the Moratorium has become a focal point
of criticism from many sides.
But now the vice president has.
raised his sights somewhat and has
pointed his latest attack at the
national television medium, charging the networks with biased presentation of the news.

The latter allegation resembles
a denial of freedom of the press to
television. It is unfortunate that
the vice president would choose to
attack the mass media which practice inherent rights upon which
the nation was built.
' We see no purpose of such attacks that continue to alienate segments of the voting populace to
the Nixon Administration.

While we cannot advocate a
'
muzzle, which would eliminate the
vice president's inherent right of
freedom of speech, we do advocate
immediate withdrawal of the vice
president from the nation's podi-- 1
urns.

Tragedy Of Youth

"The leading cause of death for main burden of action lies upon
the adult community. This latter
persons under 35 in New York City
are: drug abuse, suicide, murder." may not have either purposefully
So writes the New York Post in a or actually created the conditions
current series on some of the probwhich produce youthful drug abuse,
lems of life in the nation's largest suicide, and murder. But it can
city.
certainly be said that the a