xt72ng4gq79r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72ng4gq79r/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680209  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February  9, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  9, 1968 1968 2015 true xt72ng4gq79r section xt72ng4gq79r Tl

EC

EC,

The South's Outstanding College Daily

Friday Evening, Feb. 9, 1968

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LIX, No. 95

Drug Crackdown
Steamrolls WKU

Draft Clouds

By S. WAYNE SMITH
HOWLING GREEN The arrest of three students Wednesday
night apparently began a coordinated crackdown on drug use at
Western Kentucky University.
Student infonners siphoned Forshee, Warren County deputy
information to police that ensheriff, led the investigation and
abled authorities Thursday to Wednesday's raids.
hold Donna Kay Gardinale, 18,
Lancaster said 15 to 20 more
of Clinton, Md., for grand jury arrests
probably would be made.
action. She is charged with pos- Other estimates have
put the
session of marijuana.
figure much higher.
Two other students, John
Police say there are four posSteven Campbell, 22, of Covingsible sources which directly deO'Brak-ta- ,
ton, and Donald Stanley
liver drugs to the Bowling Green
18, of Miami Beach, Fla.,
are bases in Florhad their cases continued until campus. They Mexico and north-eida, Maryland,
Friday. Campbell is charged with
Kentucky.
possessing marijuana, and O'
There reportedly is some eviBrakta is accused of furnishing
dence to indicate marijuana has
the drug to Miss Cardinale.
John Sagabiel, dean of men, been smuggled to coeds in stuffed
said the university is not aware animals.
of all the facts surrounding the
arrests because "the smoke hasn't
cleared yet." Other WKU officials were unavailable for comment.
No official action has been
taken by the school, but informed
sources hinted that the arrested
students will be expelled from
By DARRELL RICE
the university.
The recently erected building
In one apartment raided
Aerothe Wenner-Gre- n
Wednesday night, police say they alongside
nautical Laboratory may look like
found five syringes, several smoksomething akin to a tin
ing pipes (including one opium but there's more inside thanbam,
hay.
alpipe), a bottle of
The big thing inside (and
a number of sugar cubes
cohol,
really big) is a centrifuge now
and a quantity of narcotics.
being assembled with arms 50
Police admit they suspected
the use of narcotics at WKU feet in diameter.
when a rash of student "drunken
Monkeys and white rats will
driving" arrests occurred with be taking rides on the huge cenno evidence of the use of altrifuge when it is completed.
cohol.
The rides won't be for fun; they
Two unidentified Western stuare designed to find facts about
the animals' reactions and adapdents then arranged to buy marijuana under the surveillance of tations to changes in gravity.
The data eventually will be
police. The package they bought
contained 1.5 grams of the drug. applied to astronauts who
Police conducted an undertraveled for long periods under
cover investigation which lasted abnormal gravitational condiseveral weeks. They now evidenttions.
ly feel enough information has
The big
next door
been gained to play their hand to Donovancentrifugewill
Hall
not be
with confidence.
content merely to whirl its pasThursday five more students sengers round and round, but
were questioned, including Miss it also is to be
Cardinale's two roommates. All by a
analog comwere released without being puter. A special mechanism will
charged.
lengthen or shorten the arms
Fred Lancaster, a Bowling of the centrifuge.
In the original laboratory it
Green city detective, and Charles

Grad School
Enrollment
By WALTER GRANT

WASHINGTON (CPS) -Members of the House Education Subcommittee would like

"

-

-

V

m

This unimpressive structure next to the Wenncr-Grc- n
building
has despite its appearance an impressive function. Under construction inside is a
centrifuge which may help make
extended space flights more comfortable for astronauts.
50-fo- ot

The 4Barn' Beside Wenner-Gren- :
Centrifugal Thrills For Rodents

190-pro- of

speed-controll-

self are two more centrifuges,
prefer the closest thing they can
with a third under constniction. get to normal earth gravity.
One is a smaller version of the
The parabaloid centrifuge
one being put together in the now being built is made of
and looks like an overnew building.
turned igloo. It will be used
At the ends of its arms are
difenclosed metal boxes complete to compare the reactions of
ferent species of rats and other
with TV cameras to allow the
researchers to view the occu- animals, especially concerning
their sanitary habits, to deterpants' reactions over a closed-circu- it mine which are
d
for
receiver.
d
later
testing.
The boxes also are equipped
Why go to all the trouble
with a bar that can be pushed to
put up a new building and
by the monkey or white rat inconst met a huge centrifuge when
side to slow down the centrifuge.
there are already others operatThe bar must be pressed at set
ing?
intervals in order to keep the
The reason for the new maspeed and gravitational pull chine, says Dr. Karl O. Lange,
down to certain levels.
is that
director of Wenner-GreThe rats have learned to keep it can produce higher gravitathe speed at a comfortable rate, tional forces (because of its longwhich varies with different rats.
er arms) without the accompanyThe parabola centrifuge is an ing misery of motion sickness,
overturned arc that also spins as is the case with the other
around. The purpose of the macentrifuges.
chine is to determine at what
The new centrifuge also can
point rats find the gravitational be programmed in order to determine the effect of change of
pull most comfortable. (The higher up along the curved passage
speed, which is thought to afthe rat goes, the greater is the fect animals more than the actual speed itself.
pull.)
Continued on Pare 7, Col. 1
The rats, it has been found,
m

best-suite-

long-perio-

n,

to know what President Johnson
is going to do about drafting
graduate students before acting
on the administration's proposals
to improve graduate schools.
Rep. Edith Green, chairman
of the subcommittee, said Thursday she is concerned that the
draft may have a drastic effect
on graduate school enrollments
next year. "I don't see how this
committee can make an intelligent decision on graduate schools
when we don't even know what
the government's policy on the
.)
draft is," Mrs. Green
said.
The subcommittee's concern
about the draft surfaced Thursday
during the third day of hearings
on the Johnson administration's
higher education program for fiscal 1969. The program includes
a $10 million legislative package
designed to strengthen graduate
schools.
Commissioner of Education
Harold Howe II, who appeared
before the subcommittee Thursday, did not mention the draft
in his prepared testimony about
the proposed graduate school legislation. But when questioned
by members of the subcommittee,
Mr. Howe admitted the current
draft policies are causing a serious
problem for graduate schools
across the country.
Under the new draft law, undergraduate students are deferred
from the draft, but graduate students are not. The present policy
also calls for the oldest Selective
Service registrants to be drafted
first.
Mr. Howe said as many as
150,000 students planning to attend graduate schools next September face the strong possibility of being drafted. Peter P.
Muirhead, the Office of Education's associate commissioner for
higher education, said the figure
10,000 "is probably too low."
Craduate schools are facing
a critical problem because they
don't know how many of the
students they accept will show
Continued on Pace 2, Col. 1
(D-Ore-

Moustaches Make The Scene At 'Sarah Lou
r

m Mr
Ill

i

V

-

J

who the college, called it an experiment "to find out
Kent Peterson Is one of six male "co-eds- "
have enrolled in "all" women's Sarah Lawrence if what we have to offer is a good educational
upi TtUphoto
College. Mrs. Esther RauUienbush, president of experience for men."

9

"co-ed- "
newly-enrolle- d
at
BRONXVILLE, N. Y. (UPI)-T- he
Sarah Lawrence College smiled through his blond mustache and
asked: "What's all the fuss about?"
KentD. Peterson. 20. of Evan- - writing and with such titles as
ston, 111., was one of six men "The Literature of Utopia" and
students to register for classes "The Indian Tradition.
Nor were the men particularly
today at the exclusive women's
concerned with any possible emin Bronxville, N. Y.
college
attached to their
All the men and most of the barrassment
"co-ed- "
status.
579 women students were studiously casual about the school's
'Image Will Change'
move to
despite
"People hear you go to Sarah
the reporters, photographers and Lawrence and they laugh,"
television crews roaming across shrugged William l. Fornian,
the hilly, suburban campus.
20, of New Kochelle, N. Y., "But
"1 wore a shirt and tie to the school will change its image"
make a gxxl impression on the as more men enroll. Forinan
first day of classes," admitted transferred from Haverford ColPeterson, a transfer student from lege to study clarinet.
Amherst College, "but I'll prol-abl- y
Peter W. Hill, 21. of Camwear blue jeans tomorrow." bridge, Mass., said he feels "a
The men were unanimous in certain amount of distinction"
denying tliat they came to Sarah at the prospect of being a gradLawrence to be where the girls uate of Sarah Lawrence.
are. All said they transferred to
Hill, who dropped out of
take courses not available at their
College in Michigan and
in
own schools
worked in the const met ion
music, urban planning, creative
on Pace 2, CoL 4
film-makin-

* THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Friday, Fcl. 9,

1968- -3

Play Is Dull, But Surprise Ending Ensues

By NOME ARNOLD
Aside from the feeling a play
gives a critic, it is also important to watch and listen to
one's fellow audience members.
'

As we entered the Brown
Theatre in Louisville Friday
night, the crowd was alive and
enthusiastic about the performance that they were soon to
see but this enthusiasm was
short-live-

d.

After the intermission, the
majority returned to their seats
hoping that perhaps the second
half would be better than the
first, which it fortunately was.
"The Lion in Winter," starring the well known Walter
Slezak, deals with the difficulties of Henry II of England in
trying to select an heir to his
throne from three sons before
his death.

The curtain opened with
Henry and Alais, played by
Elizabeth Farley. This beautiful, young girl had very little
acting ability.

The

three sons, Richard,
Geoffrey, and John were played respectively by Alexander
Courtney,

Michael

Goodwin,

and Peter Howard. Mr. Courtney and Mr. Goodwin were
adequate in their roles but also
were a joy in that their voices
could be heard quite easily.
Mr. Howard was, however,
weak in his attempt to portray
the youngest son, John, who
was young but very strong in

exciting and vibrant throughout the performance and seemed to have that "certain something" that the rest of the cast
lacked.

I am sorry to say that Mr.
Slezak as Henry II was a disappointment to me. He played
his role in a less than interested
manner, was extremely difficult
to hear, and seemed, at times,
to be grasping for his lines.

In spite of that night's performance, we did want to interview Mr. Slezak for The Kernel
so that we could give the readers a close-u- p
of this famous
personality's ideas and viewpoints. We went to wait at the
stage door for him but were
told to wait on the opposite
side of the theater. As we began to cross, Mr. Slezak, a
woman, and a young man were
half-wa- y
up the aisle with
your reporters close behind.

He continued, "I'm doing the
same thing but I'm not sure yet
just what I'll say. Did you know
that Louisville is the first place
that has given the show bad
reviews?"
He asked my opinion of the
sons, didn't I think "John" was
rather weak? Yes, he agreed,
"Alais" was just plain bad
"She's gotten bad reviews every
time the show has played," he
informed me.
This young man added that
Mr. Slezak had been sick that
week and not feeling "up to

par," but that they had called
a company meeting for the next
day because of the performance that night.
It was at this point that I was

a little worried. No critic rides
home with the star, knows when
where and why a company
meeting is called or quite as
much as he seemed to know.
My date, Jce, and I talked
and decided that he was a crew
member and we rode home
thankful that neither of us had
said anything to really offend
him.

But that was not the end of
the story.
A day laterDoe called with a
bit of shocking news. He had
picked up the paper and seen a
picture of Walter Slezak and
our friend. That "young man"
turned out to be Mr. Slezak's
son who was visiting his father
during his semester break from
school.

"The Lion In Winter" was
only mediocre. If you didn't
make it to Louisville for the
performance, you really didn't
'miss much.

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We made several attempts to
get his attention but he hadn't
heard us by the time we were
out on the street. The young
man finally noticed us, got Mr.
Slezak's attention and we congratulated him (?) on the performance. He thanked us and
turned back to his conversation,
but the young man dropped
back and began to walk with us.

At The Regular Price
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"How did you like the play?"
he said.

of Richmond's Chocolates

I told him that I had thought
it tedious and slow to begin
his own way.
with but that after the intermisThe best performances of the sion it was much better.
night were htose of James Storm
as Philip of France and MargHe nodded in agreement.
aret Phillips as the conniving "Are you writing a review?"
Both Miss
queen, Eleanor.
It was my turn to nod.
Phillips and Mr. Storm were

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* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY

18

Friday, Feb. 9,

KERNEL,

Draft Clouds Improvement

Continued from Pag;e One
up next Scptemlcr, Mr. Howe
said. "Graduate schools are in
the process of awarding fellowships, but they don't know
whether the recipients will show
up.

lection is ultimately fair and sim-

ple."
If a system of random selecMr.
tion were implemented,
Howe said "only one in every
five or six" graduate students
might be taken. Under the present law, President Johnson could
implement a random selection
system by administrative action.

Some institutions are awarding more fellowships than they
have funds for in anticipation
that some of the students will
be drafted," Mr. Howe said.

Mr. Howe, however, testified

that he has not played a large
He also said some graduate role in forming the government's
schools are accepting more stu- draft policies. "I was involved
dents than they have room for in informally in several conversaan effort to insure they will not tions when the draft (policy) was
have a critical shortage of stu- being discussed," he said. Mrs.
Green said perhaps "better baldents next fall.
ance" could be achieved if the
Mrs. Green asked Mr. Howe Office of Education "had a greatwhat could be done to help solve er role in draft policies."
the problem. "I am not an expert
Mr. Howe said he opposes
on the draft," Mr. Howe said,
"but I believe the solution to apian to defer graduate students
this particular problem is to find in certain disciplines, such as
a way for a random selection science, and to deny deferments
in other disciplines,

procedure. I believe random se

KENTUCKY

W

arts and humanities. He said
this plan is "not sensible . . . for
the
health of education."
Mrs. Green said the educa-

(AP)-Jos- cph
LOUISVILLE
Mulloy, involved in a sedition
controversy in Pike County last
fall, filed suit in U.S. District
Court here Thursday to keep
the federal government from
drafting him.
Prof. Robert Sedler of the University of Kentucky filed the suit
on Mulloy's behalf. A hearing
on the suit was set for Feb. 16
before Judge Henry L. Brooks.
Mulloy, who was fired late
last fall from his post with the
Appalachian Volunteers, a fed

long-rang- e

tion subcommittee would discuss

the draft policies in closed sessions before acting on the
ministration's proposal to improve graduate schools.
The admi n ist rat ion' s proposed
graduate school legislation is
"aimed specifically at those institutions with already estab-

lished doctoral programs not generally considered to be among
the top doctoral producers of the
country, but with a demonstrated
capacity for high quality work in
a limited range of fields," Mr.
Howe said in his testimony to
the subcommittee. He said about
100 schools fall into that

such as the

use

I ftO

L.

KirtW

J

MAIN

ST.

Continued from Pa?e One
ness before coming to Sarah Lawrence to study science and writing, will not be the school's
first alumnus. Some 40 men attended the college after World
War II, and others have taken
courses there or earned graduate
degrees in the arts.

Hie

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a mad, sadistic

SCHIST ON THE
-- BARBARA

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OJLXLT

known

as
was
founded 40 years ago. It costs
$3,550 a year to attend, but Sarah
Lawrence nevertheless had 1,286
applications for its freshman class
last fall. Only 189 were accepted.
From Top Schools
'
The men beginning classes
today were similarly
students, all of whom
attended prestigious men's colleges for two years. In addition
to Peterson, Fonnan and Hill
they include:
Frank N. Cobb, 20, Towson,
n
Md., a transfer student from
College in Connecticut;
Richard N. McCombs, 21, of
Akron, Ohio, from Amherst; and
Robert P. Lamm, 20, of Mount
Vernon, N. Y., from Yale University.
The six are living in their
own dormitory, Perkins House,
a converted private home amid
the Tudor-styl- e
mansions, colok
nial homes and
dorms
where the girls live.
Except for one woman student
who said she feared the men
might be "undercover narcotics
agents," the girls seemed blase
about their new classmates and
strolled across the campus in dungarees, capes, boots and book-bag- s
as usual.

The Kentucky

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Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five 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 Dox 4986.
Begun as the Cadet In 1804 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.

r

MOST TOUCHING FILM OF THE YEAR!"

'Mil

Lawrence

Sarah

"Sarah Lou" or "Sassy"

red-bric-

I5K
ft

Mulloy and SCEF field workers Alan and Margaret McSurcly
were arrested last August and
charged with sedition after Pike
County officials raided their
homes and confiscated a number
of books and papers.

Wes-leya-

'HELD OVER one week

t

He now works for the SouthConference
Educational
Fund in Louisville.

ern

"cream-of-the-cro-

OPEN WEEKENDS!
CARTOON 7:30
ADM. $1.25 .
7 Minutes South on Route 27

I

erally financed antiiovcrty agency, has been ordered to rcixirt
for induction Feb. 23, the suit
said.

Moustaches Are Blooming
At Staid Sarah Lawrence

pllfl CIH1EMA
EAT

I

I

N

Prof. Sedler Aids Mulloy
In Draft Resistance Fight

All the violent

beauty of
Thomas
Hardy's
immortal
love
story!

?Sa

o

V
,

Is
H

i

I LA

J

i

This is Benjamin.
He's a little worried about his future.

THE GRADUATE

Ml BANCROFT.

just bugs the Establishment as
CGDOBtL MEirOtCD LULDCGH
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DUSTIN HOFFMAN

CALDER WILLINGHAM

KATHARINE ROSS

BUCK HENRY

SIMON .wGARFUNKEL
LAWRENCE
MIKE NICHOLS UCHNIC010R PANAVISION

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JULIE CHRISTIE

STUART ROSENBERG

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A JOSEPH JANNJ PRODUCTION

UTS VT'

2nd Big Feature

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* THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Friday, Feb. 9,

19G8-

-5

Kernel Forum: the readers write
To the Editor of the Kernel:
Tliis is the first of a one-pa- rt
series
commenting upon the Gospel according to
John Junot, A fit S Sophomore. In his
last installment (Kernel, Jan. 29) Junot,
writes of "forces which have evolved"
in our society "which tend to reverse the
trends described before." Those trends
previously discussed, we are informed, are
"bad" ones but since they are being
reversed, one wonders why the Junot
bothered to mention them at all. (Those
who have read his periodic submissions
to the Kernel may wonder why he even
bothered to mention anything at all.)
Why Junot considers himself an authority on the woof and warp of contemporary American culture remains to be seen.
His latest article, however, seems to indicate that he has joined the school of
Robert Theobald,
British
the famous automation - guaranteed al-income
man. (Admission to the school
may be had by skimming any of his books
such as FREE MEN AND FREE MARINKETS or THE GUARANTEED
COME.)
Modern America is a complex society
even though Junot, the Sophomore treats
it as the simplest of tribal systems. In
this complexity it is not surprising that
there are men, many seemingly qualified
men, who agree neither with Theobald
nor Junot. It is their views not ours
which we shall use in discussing the
latest proclamations of the All Knowing.
First, let us look at some of the cor- -'
nerstone "facts" upon which his intellectual edifice is built. Says John, "The rising expense of education is rapidly putting the cost of college away from home
beyond the reach of the average family."
Wrong say Wattenberg and Scammon, authors of the authoritative THIS U.S.A.
(1967). While Wi children in 5 from families with income of $5,000 and above go
to college, families below $5,000 send 1
in 5 children on to higher education. The
difference is not large and the total number represent more people in school now
than ever before. Perhaps Mr. Scammon,
former Director of the U.S. Bureau of
the Census, should check his figures again.
Here is another "fact." In the future
(the very near future, we gather),
more education will take place in the
liomc. The younger generation today can
be quite competent tutors." If we grant
that more education will take place in
the home, we must deny that it will be
significant. With more than 4 in 5 of the
"younger generation" lacking college experience the tutorial ability of most of
tomorrow's parents is open to serious
question. Perhaps he means the day after.
Now comes the premier display of
Junot's Law of Automation. According
to John, "Automation cuts down the need
for human labor, period. That's that."
The period should probably be a question mark says R. J. Cordiner, Board
Chairman of CE (New Views on Automation, Joint Economic Committee, 19G0,).
socio-economi- st

annu-

"...

As he put it, "The melding of newly
developed products with new automation
techniques should create new industries,
and hence new employment opportunities." Of course, St. John admits that
the growth of "not yet fully automated
industries" creates "a few new jobs." A
few indeed. Columnist Henry Hazlitt
made a common sense point when he said,
"If automation, on net balance throws
people out of jobs, how can we explain
that American employment this year is
at the highest level on record?" (Newsweek, Nov. 18, 1963).
Pulitzer-priz- e
winner J. A. Livingston's analysis of the current labor trends
would seem to directly contradict that of
Sophomore Junot: "Although industrial
plants are operating at only 84 percent
capacity down from 91 percent the labor supply is taut. Unemployment is only
about 4 percent. And managerial, supervisory and skilled personnel are scarce."
(Sydicated Column, October 29, 1967)
It would not appear that "a few
thousand experts and a few million machines would probably run things well
enough." Mr. Livingston makes clear
that we already have millions of experts
who are criying for millions more. The
President's new $2.1 billion training program is not aimed at training computers or automatic dishwashers.
In conclusion, the Junot (in a blaze

of

these people would not help them,
but actually might harm them.
A point well taken from Theobald's
doctrine is that, "Logically enough, a
GAI would encourage people to stop
working." Indeed, many authorities such
as Professors Galloway (National Tax
Journal, Sept., 1966) and Kisher (NTJ,
Mar., 1967) have provided empirical proof
of such a phenomenon. If, however, labor
is still vital to our economy as many
authorities and much experience lead us
to believe the harm of the disincentive
is clear and frightening. Even if labor
were not essential to the economy, a
GAI may preclude an effective solution
to present day "hard-cor- e
poverty." Income, says the North Carolina Fund
Prospectus (Nov., 1963), is only one of
many factors in cultural poverty and
the elimination of a single factor does
not always lead to the elimination of
the social phenomenon. A GAI may lull
today's antipoverty movements into complacency, freezing cultural deprivation
into our society, (see M. A. Wright,
"The Guaranteed Income," VITAL
SPEECHES, April 1, 1967 and Ner Littner,
PUBLIC WELFARE, April, 1966)
for

In describing the Utopia which automation and income are to create, Junot
announces that the fear of "too much
liezure time" is an "Armegeddon myth.".

"So I'll just

have to ask you to take my word for it
when I say there is no great economic
problem today
Thanks, but no

thanks.

..."

Man, he concludes, has been underesti-

mated and will "keep try ing to find meaning in his life . . . " This "myth," however, has become the subject of study
for the noted Rutgers Political Scientist,
Sebastian DeCrazia who notes that there
is already a population segment which is
unhappy with "The Establishment."
"This disaffection will spread as more
and more free time is forced on adults,
DeCrazia predicted. It will, he warned,
bring on a hedonistic search for pleasure
and mounting immorality." (LOUIS& TIMES,
VILLE
October 22, 1967) Perhaps our Innocent
Intellectual should tell Prof. DeCrazia
that he underestimates Man.
If Mr. Junot would be interested in
discushaving a more detailed,
sion of the Guaranteed Annual Income,
he might contact Dr. Cifford Blyton,
President of the American Forensic Association and coach of the University
Debate Team. Dr. Blyton would, undoubtedly, invite Mr. Junot to hear the
team practice any Tuesday or Thursday,
arguing this year's college topic: "Resolved: That the Federal Government
should Guarantee a Minimum Annual
Cash Income to All Citizens."
Robert A. Valentine
COURIER-JOURNA-

L

th

A8cS Senior
Rodney F. Page
AficS Senior

MAN ON CAMPUS

LITTLE

If John's automation problem is complex, his answer is amazingly simple.
We are told that the cure for the unemis "more or less" the
ployment hang-u- p
guaranteed annual income. This is clearly
Theobaldian to its very core. However,
Mssrs. Theobald and Junot have overlooked certain practical aspects of the
GAI which make the whole program unworkable and undesirable.
It is these practical considerations,
and not a "tlouroughly ingrained puritan
ethic" as John charges, that prevent the
acceptance of the sweeping concept. In
fact, for those who cannot work to provide sufficient income for themselves,
American society has already guaranteed
that basic needs will be met. (see Milton
Friedman, The Case for the Negative
Income Tax, NATIONAL REVIEW,
March 7, 1967 and MONTHLY LABOR
REVIEW, Feb., 1967).
An advantage of the program claimed
by Junot is that the GAI, which he says
should be extended initially only to the
"poor," provides a "tremendous sense of
psychological security." Psychoanalyst
Dr. Ner Littner wouldn't agree. In PUBLIC WELFARE (April, 1966) Littner notes
that 10 percent of the poor are overtly
emotionally ill and another 20 to 30
percent have concealed disorders. He con- tends that providing an income floor

T geuEve I've ucnxzzv into your lunch hour a&ain."

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH

Jamm

The 1967

WEST HIGH at UPPER ST.

University
Methodist Chapel

6.-0-

Transportation

Corner Harrison and Maxwell

Session)
Saturday,
Feb.
9:30

--

17

KENTUCKIAN

Sunday, Feb.
Sermon

Last Year's
Pictures

11 a.m.

At 6 p.m.

WORSHIP SERVICE

The Berkshire

Last Year's

277-66-

2356 HARRODSBURG RD.
9:45 a.m. College Class
Sermon: "Mercy!"
Transportation Provided For Students

DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
10:50 a.m. Morning Worship
Mr. Herren

Call

277-617- 6

or

277-402-

9

Memories

447 Columbia Avenue
Office
Call Parsonage
Transportation Available
COLLEGE DISCUSSION GROUP 9 .00 a.m.
WORSHIP
10:30 a.m.
Rolland L tentrup, Campus Worker and Pastor

Sundries

Drugs

277-218- 8

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CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH

ON SALE

Admission 50c

NOW!
Room 111

use "the

or

252-03-

International Association of Lutheran Students

Seven

rT

Call

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12:30

featuring

provided for students

SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH

by

University

RUSSELL R. PATTON, Minister
"Transforming Power" Dr. Patron
Fellowship Night Dr. John S. Chambers

11

Rev. Fornash
At

10:50
p.m.

HALE'S

PHARMACY

tlS I. UMIJTON!
Phone 255 7749
Leiington,

Ky.

Donald Durham, Minister
1716 S. LIME
A. Dewey Sanders, Associate
J. R. Wood, Pastoral Minister
Sam Morris, Youth Minister
9:00 and 11:00 a.m. "America's Future?" Dr. Durham
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Expanded Sessions
5:00 p.m. Youth Activities
5:30 p.m. Worship Study Course
7:30 p.m. Mr. Sam Morris, Youth Minister
Nursery tor all senices.
Service
Wednesday, 7 p.m., Mid-wee- k
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"1ST CHURCH OF CHRIST

328 Clifton Avenue
Sunday: Bible Classes

Journalism Bldg.
Acton horn

UK

Mtdicol Cmttr

Morning Worship
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Wednesday: Bible Classes
Phone 255 6257

Bob Crawley, Evangelist

or

9.45 a.m.
10:45 a.m.
6:00 p.m.
7:30 pm
277-558- 8

* Refuge For Poor Students

Leader of the Pack
recent speech by House Speaker Pro Tcm Terry McBrayer at UK's
College of Law forum showed great irratationality. In fact it may become the classic example of prejudice.
McBrayer s attack on UK professor Lawrence X. Tarpcy was another
example of unfair and unsubstantiated denunciations heard at UK. Dr.
Tarpcy heads the Draft Counseling Service at UK whose avowed purpose is "to supply information to students about their draft status,
they have, such as consciencious objectors, and the pros
and cons of these alternatives." Speaker McBrayer said this was encouraging students to dodge the draft and urged dismissal of any professor who did this. It was only later, when further probed, that McBrayer admitted he could point to no specific incident involving Tarpcy and thus could not demand he be fired.
McBrayer