xt737p8tdj8c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt737p8tdj8c/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19681115  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 15, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 15, 1968 1968 2015 true xt737p8tdj8c section xt737p8tdj8c Ti

EC

Friday Evening, Nov. 15, 1968

eenel

OTTCKY
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LX, No. 58

Resistance Day At UK

Picketing And Speeches
Challenge Draft System
By FRANK COOTS
Kernel Staff Writer
UK students took part in the nationwide draft protest yesterday
by demonstrating in front of Lexington's two local draft boards
and participating in a Draft Memorial Service held in the Taylor
Education Building.
Cleveland Sellers was to have it? This imperialistic society must
spoken at the service but was be destroyed. Damn the country;
unable to attend. His probation damn the flag. If this campus
officer refused to let him leave produces people that will drop
Atlanta. Sellers had refused tobe napalm on people, this campus
inducted and is currently appealmust be destroyed. Anybody that
ing his case.
oppresses people or supports this
Willie Ricks, field secretary imperialistic society must come
for the Student Nonviolent Codown."
ordinating Committee, spoke in
Entertainment Too
place of Sellers.
Ricks speech, like the others,
Ricks' speech decried the
was fairly short as entertainment
plight of Blacks in this country
sitars, guitars and
and demanded an end to opwas interspersed throughout
pression: "We are going to burn the program.
this country down. Freedom for
Mike Fallahay, a UK student
everybody or freedom for nobody. who is refusing to cooperate with
Nonviolence? Get the police to
the Selective Service, explained
lay down their guns and we his reasons for
resisting the draft.
will talk about nonviolence."
to the draft and
"I am
we (Blacks) are not left am outopposed
"If
to destroy it in our soRicks said
will de-

;.

v

-

sing-alon-

Kernel Photos by Howard Mason

Black' 's
View

Willie Ricks, field secretary for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, offered a rather
violence-oriente- d
talk last night at the Draft Memorial Service in the Taylor Education Building.
He spoke in place of Cleveland Sellers.

"we
alone,"
stroy anything and everything
that gets in our way."
Speaking of the Vietnam war,

he asked, "If this democracy is
so good, why must we drop bombs
on people before they will accept

YAF Reaffirms Petition
By DEBBIE TASSIE
Kernel Staff Writer
"Everything stated in thepre-amb- le
of our petition is true.
There are no errors that I know
of," Dr. WasleyKrogda hi, astronomy professor, told six members
at a meeting of Young Americans
for Freedom Thursday night.
William Zell, YAF chairman,
discussed the recent meeting of
the Board of Publications at
which he was told the
petition was
based on false information.
The major contention of the
petition is that students, through
student fees, support a paper
YAF-sponsor-

anti-Keni- el

which does not represent their
opinions.
Dr. Cifford Blyton, chairman
of the Board of Publications, had
told Zell that the Kernel is financed by the general fund,
which includes student fees,
alumni donations, state grants
and all other money which comes
into the University.
"What it amounted to at the
meeting," Zell said, "was that
they said, 'No we're not stealing
this money, we're stealing this
money instead.' "
Letter From Blyton
Dr. Krogdahl told of receiving a letter from Dr. Blyton

which said the Kernel received
$92,000 from the general fund.
He said the undesignated student fees, along with a portion
of tuition,' finances the Kernel.

"Every student is paying an
average of $6 a year to finance
the Kernel," Dr. Krogdahl told
the group.
Dr. Blyton also said that the
Kernel is not an adjunct of the
Journalism department. Dr.
Krogdahl referred to the UK catalog which stated that the Kernel
and the Kentuckian served as a
testing place for students in journalism.
Continued on Pare

3, CoL 2

Ford Criticises Nunn
On Principles, Sales Tax

ciety."

He said that after he registered
with the Selective Service, he
moved toward pacifism. "I could
not see reconciling human life
with making the world safe for
democracy, with supporting a
fascist dictatorship in South Viet-

nam."
Fallahay then explained why
he took the particular course
of action he did. "Basically, the
C O. is an escape route. It is
saying to the Selective Service

I

David Hurt Sings
System 'You are okay, I just
cannot go along with you."'
He spoke of a "dream" that
wars and oppression would end.
"Many of us share this dream
but what are we going to do
about it? Are we going to let
this militaristic society continue
or are we going to say 'No.'"
Minister Speaks
The Rev. Peter Scott, a

minister,

spoke against the role of religion
with regard to war. "All the
Continued on Pare 8, Col. 1

Jewell On Election
By DOTTIE BEAN

Kernel Staff Writer

"One of the most important outcomes of this election will be,
in my estimation, the strongest effort we have ever seen to abolish
or drastically modify the electoral system."
Adding to this statement, Dr,
Malcolm Jewell, UK political
science professor, told an audience of about 35 members of the
UK Council on Aging Thursday
that by 1976 the presidential election would probably be deter

mined by straight popular vote.
Dr. Jewell was speaking in
the Ag Science Auditorium as
part of a forum series entitled
"What is happening around the
Continued on Pare 8, Col. 1

r

By FRANCES DYE

7

Kernel Staff Writer
Wendell Ford, Democratic Lieutenant Governor in a Republican
administration, said although no personal grudge exists between
Cov. Louie B. Nunn and himself, they differ on "matters of

principle."

Ford, speaking before about
people at the Sigma Phi Epsi-lo- n
fraternity house last night,
first mentioned the five percent
sales tax which went into effect
last April: "I consider it callous
and inexcusable that the tax is
on bread, meat and medicine. The
cavalier fashion in which the
Covemor junked his pledge of no
new taxes was particularly cynical.
"But the area that I fear
most is the Administration's
flouting of the merit system."
He said that previously under
the political spoils system, each
new governor fired almost all
state employes. "The state
plodded along as new workers
learned (their jobs), mainly by'
trial and error. And each four
100

or eight years, the taxpayers took
the same beating."
Kentucky, like other states,
adopted a state civil service law
eight years ago, Ford said, and
"overnight we saw a rise in the
state's ability to attract young
g
public serpeople to
vice."
Ignores Merit Law
This was true, he said, until
last December. "The Nunn administration ignores both the letter and the spirit of the merit
law. Worker after worker has
been called into the office (of
his particular department) and
told 'we want your job for some-s-

i

life-lon-

u
-

e.

"People who get in now may
Continued on Paxc

S, CoL 1

6

A

I

....

Siuviija
1 tlC

Young

--

T1

About 25 students marched in protest at the local Selective Service
Board on Southland Drive yesterday afternoon in local participation
National Draft Resistance Day.
KMl PlujUi By v, lUrnuin
D--

* r
2 -- THE KENTUCKY, KERNEL, Friday, Nov. 15, 1908

Annual Opening To
Give Graphic Display
"Craphics '09" will open for
its 10th year this Sunday at the
Fine Arts Callery. The exhibition will include lithographs from
16 contemporary American artists.
Those with works in the show are
Robert Rauschenberg, Ellsworth
Kelly, Caro Antreasian, William
Walmsley, Robert Nelson and
Byron McKeeby. Others are Robert Motherwell, William Brice,
Ralston Crawford, Sam Francis,

Philip Custon, John Hultberg,
Lester Johnson, George Miyasaki,
Esteban Vicente and Romas

Vie-sula- s.

The opening will be from 3
to 5 p.m. Sunday. The exhibit
will run until Dec. 21.
Arts and crafts metamorpho-size- d
into portraits continue on
view at the Student Center Art
Callery. The works, by women
from Lexington and Louisville,
continue through November 22.
FIRST RUN!

Open 6:30; Starts 7:30

h

SEE THE AMAZING
lAUftlllUlttl

IV

'

i
,

Chicago Artist Peter Holbrook talks with faculty and students following
yesterday's lecture at Pence Hall Auditorium. Holbrook garnered his B.A.
from Dartmouth College, after which he spent a year of study in Europe.
Upon reentering the U.S., he continued his studies, spending a year at the
Brooklyn Museum School of Art. That's the genuine object Holbrook's wearing: An official U.S. Army, World War I khaki shirt Holbrook expressed
affinities: "Sex, chicks, and Speed." Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

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Holbrook Presents His
'Small, Violent Universe9

ELECTRIC

inherent in everyone, which graphy as a reference provides
comes to the surface under stress. credibility to the figures. The
Working primarily with the 'proportions are honest and realhuman figure, Holbrook aims at istic to the point of harshness.
an overstatement of his ideas
Painting from photographs
of sex.
and exploring the nature of phoBelieving that food possesses
tography in his paintings allows
inherent sexual qualities, he inHolbrook to
corporates such matter into his musculature andcapture moving
indicate sequenWhen confronted with
paintings.
tial motions of the figure.
one such work, the viewer's eyes
travel over a painting packed with
Contrary, to Holbrook's inround, voluptuous forms con- tended purpose, being saturated
trasted by sharp, almost pain- 'with visual images of nudes
the aspect of sex in
ful, edges. Space is cluttered,
forms repeated and overlapped to his work and instead creates a
produce a small, violent universe
greater awareness of the pure
within the confines of a canvas.
but complicated form of the huThe utilization
of photo
man figure.

By LINDA RAIMONDO

CUSHING

ADAMS-PETE-

TORTURE GIRDER
aa
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PI...

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"I don't believe in your power

to communicate what I'm all
about. If I did, I'd be a writer,
not an artist," stated
painter Peter Holbrook.
During an attempt to inter-

view Holbrook, here yesterday
to lecture on his paintings, he
was asked if he cared to make
a "general, sweeping statement"
concerning his work. He replied,
"I like sex, chicks and speed
(in every sense of the word)."
Holbrook's work deals with
sex in all of its aspects. Using
as
pornographic
photography
source material, he drives at that
sense of latent emotional state
,

31

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, .Friday,' Nov.

'Merit Law Flouted,' Ford Says
Continued from Pare One
or may not be qualified. Kentucky is once more in the grasp
of the spoils system and you and
I are paying the bill."
Ford said in 19G8 the state
government has "not been all
bad for the Kentucky taxpayer
nor all good." He said Gov.
Nunn should "make the last two
years of his administration good
yean for Kentucky's progress."
Again referring to the merit
system, he noted Kentucky
actively seeks young people for
governmental Jobs. "We were
doing such a tremendous job in
securing young people in government and now that's gone. Young
people don't want to go to work
one day and be fired the next."
Question And Answer
In a question and answer
session that followed, the Lieutenant Governor discussed a variety
of topics.
Asked about possible State
Administration influence on the
resignation of former UK President John W. Oswald, Ford said
he had no factual information
of such influence.
He noted however, that the
Administration's public relz
Administration's public relations
campaign was closely patterned
after those in California and
Florida gubernatorial
races,
which stressed "time for a
change" and state universities
in general.
Questioned about tuition for
students on Kentucky
campuses, Ford said, "The sales
tax snowballed the
tuition. I think it's a shame
education is put on the block
every two years (when the state
legislature meets to decide on
the budget). They have to fight
the marble halls of Frankfort
for money."
'Worry A Bit
He said
comprise 44 percent of the student
body at Kentucky universities.
te

out-of-sta-

rs

15, 1968- -3

!

"When they put out sweatshirts
at Kentucky campuses.
with 'University of New Jersey-Mur- ray
Noting the next gubernatorial
campus', Kentucky tax- campaign is two years away, the
payers begin to worry a bit. Lieutenant Covemor said it was
"I think it's good that we too early for him to consider
have
but if the tossing his hat into the ring. He
balance is upset, I think it's said however, that a promise to
bad." He said this is the atti- rescind the five percent sales tax
tude held by the general public, on food and medicine is a
who wonder about all the out- - campaign certainty.
rs

YAF Takes Issue
With Petition Critics
Continued from Page One
A tliird point of the
petition
which Dr. Blyton disclaimed concerned the control of the adviser
over the Kernel staff.
Dr. Krogdahl cited an incident
of a few years ago when the
Kernel would not print a letter
he wrote because it was longer
than the policy allowed. He reported that when he contacted
the adviser, he replied that he
could do nothing about it.

that "any person or group mentioned in the Kernel be given
equal space for rebuttal. The
editor shouldn't have discretion,

but be required to print any such

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group."

Members decided to push for
an expansion of the number of
signatures on the petition during the next couple of weeks.
They plan to man a table in the
Student Center to collect signatures.
Other discussion during the
meeting concerned plans to bring
a speaker to campus. They plan
to contact Lt. Col. Paul Erick-sowho served the last part
of his 14 years in Vietnam.
Erickson retired "when he realized that the highest military
officials cooperated with diplomats and politicians who forbade victory."
Zell also plans to contact
South Carolina Senator J. Strom
Thurmond and ROTC officers
who have served in Vietnam.

Sun.

Sal-.-,

Open: Fri.,

Concerning news coverage,
Jim Pennington held up a headline in Thursday's Kernel to demonstrate "editorializing" in news
stories.
Pointing to the headline,
"OZIQ Still Anonymous," he
said, "This is an example of editorial comment in headlines.
They're taking a slap at the

Signatures
During the meeting, members
said they thought they had about
150 signatures on their petition.
Zell would not confirm this.
Zell said the number of faculty signatures is large in proportion to the number of student
signatures.
YAF members decided to contact the sponsors of the OZIQ
petition to see if they could cooperate, although YAF does not
support every point of the OZIQ
petition.
Jim Pennington, who referred
frequently to himself as a
said, "I don't know that
we have to agree. The point now
is to improve the Kernel."
Equal Space
In discussing specific proposals, Dr. Krogdahl suggested
that the Kernel establish a policy

153 EAST MAIN ST.

Kernel Photo By Dick Ware

Lt. Gov. Wendell Ford

letter."

150

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* ONE.
Two,

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mt,.nr..
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Reflections
You've been reading that a team of negotiators in Paris will bring
you peace. Don't believe it.
A government which tells you it will bring peace on earth and unity
at home is not only arrogant but sadly incapable. War and riots are
y
human exploitation. Peace cannot
merely extensions of normal
be an end to man's collective brutalities. Peace can only be personal.
You are one of millions alienated from each other and from an environment filled with emptiness. You think sometimes that peace is the
cruel joke of some malevolent godhead and that pleasure is the only
rational ambition.
A
housewife calmly walks into a river to drown, leaving
behind this note: "I am going to find peace." But you can't accept this
because you remember a promise to yourself that there is meaning beyond the reality of one moment. And death is but the reality of one
moment.
You feel a stranger in a land of congested roads and busy factories.
You seek the solitude of nature for an answer. You find 100 square
miles of wilderness with bubbling streams and tall trees and no trace
of man. But you do not find peace there because you destroy the carefully orchestrated tranquility by your very presence.
You find an ocean and swim until you drive the feeling from your
arms and trivia from your mind. But you have to return to shore and
to your world and your people.
Your people are too rigid and too afraid. They are so involved in
their pursuits that they only keep time to your beat of loneliness. They
are too willing to settle for the simpler answers of the moment, which
they seem to stretch tenuously into a lifetime.
But you must not let your cyncism lead to despair. You are not alone
in your quest.
Some morning you will awake and smile and be together with
yourself and with others. Because peace is not in where you look or
how you look. Rather it is in who you find and in who finds you.
The Michigan Daily
day-to-da-

The Kentucky

Iernel

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

FRIDAY, NOV.
Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
1894

15, 1968

Lee B. Becker, Editor-in-ChiDarreil Rice, Managing Editor
David Holwerk, Editorial Page Editor
Tom Derr, Business Manager
Guy M. Mendes III, Associate Editor
Howard Mason, Photography Editor
Jim Miller, Sports Editor
Jack Lyne and John Polk, Arts Editors
Chuck Koehler,
Dana EwelL
Terry Dunham,
Janice Barber
Larry Dale Keeling,
Assistant Managing Editors

Closed Court
It had been our hope to further
comment intelligently and meaningfully on the suspension and reinstatement of students Eric Fried-landand Allen Holmgren, to the
University but that seems impossible because of the nature of the
Universityjudicial system.
What we know is that the two
have been reinstated after a recommendation to that effect by the
University Appeals Board, and that,
to get this reinstatement, they had
to sign a document restricting their
activities as both students and individuals. We suspect that there is
something reprehensible about this
method of reinstatement, just as
there has been about the whole
handling of the two students arrested by on drug charges, but it
is impossible to be sure because
the Appeals Board meetings are
er

closed and the proceedings are kept
in tight secrecy.
While this may, in some cases,

protect the students involved, the
secrecy clearly protects University
administrators as well by allowing
them to make deals and pacts
about which there is no mention
in the Student Code. And this is
clearly reprehensible.
If the Student Code had been
written with the real interests of
students in mind, it would seem
that the proceedings of the judicial
bodies would have been made open
to the public. Just what has gone
on in this case, or what might
go on in any case, is unknown,
and for that reason extremely distressing. What a student can expect
at the hands of a secret court is not
a reassuring thought at all.

Kernel Forum: the readers writel
To the Editor of the Kernel:
I write this letter in answer to our
local student gestapo who, with the full
support of certain of our enlightened
alumni, are now attempting to censor
the press. To understand this strange
phenomena, one must understand the
composition of the student body.
Two categories of students exist at
the University. There are those who play
the roles of the
student
leaders. Their actual power can only
be measured in the degree to which
they lick the boots of our exalted administration. This group has been even
more ineffective than the administration
in promoting the development of a viable
student body. The other group of students,
which compose 00 percent of the student
body, are those which are not interested
in anything, much less their role in the
University.
Both groups have one thing in common. They are violently opposed to progressive reform. For the BMOC's progress
would mean an usuiption of their pseudo

power. And for our brothers who dwell
in the mire of apathy, progress is viewed
as a threat to their passive resistance
to everything.
Thus, criticism has been bestowed
upon the Kernel for its unrepresentative
reporting. I cannot agree with this criticism. It is time for the student body,
the Administration, and the state of Kentucky to realize that change is inevitable,
and that the politically oriented, repressive educational system at state colleges
must end. So I applaud the Kernel for
its stand on student rights, though the
students themselves fail to recognize or
accept the responsibility of these rights.
Richard D. Johnson
A & S Senior
To the Editor of the Kernel
I continue to be amazed
every time
I see an article in the Kernel which
carps and criticizes the Kernel for not
printing views contrary to the Kernel!
viewpoint.
Theodore Fins ley
Craduate Student

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Nov.

15,

19G8- -5

Military Court Maintains Control Of Saigon Students
student union he was responsible for the guard their position and their stand,

By STEPHEN EIUIART
third Saigon stuSAIGON (CPS)-T- he
dent leader in three months was convicted by a military tribunal last month
on charges of "engaging in activities
helpful to the Viet Cong." Considering
that no evidence was produced against
him, that he did not acknowledge any
guilt, and that he has often spoken out
about the "repressive and corrupt nature" of the Saigon government, the message was clear enough.
Noting that the student, Nguyen Thanh
medical student, had
Cong, a
no previous court record, the court sussentence; but, in
pended the three-yecase anyone had missed the point, Cong
still was being held, without being charged
again, two weeks after the trial. He
went on a hunger strike, and a delegation of university professors, who were
told Cong could have no visitors, pro-

presence of the leaflets.
The raid resulting in Cong's arrest
was the second in two weeks on the student office, which was then closed by
the authorities and has not been allowed
to reopen. The first raid had resulted in
the arrest of three students who, the next
conference,
day in a government-stage- d
proudly admitted their connections with
the NLF, said they regretted not having
carried out their assignments more effectively and explained that they had joined
the NLF because they hated the foreign
occupation of Vietnam. Their proudly
defiant statements of commitment to the
NLF were in marked contrast to Cong's
denial that he had had any knowledge
of their NLF connections or of the presence
of the leaflets.
The confessions proved beyond much
doubt that Communists had infiltrated
tested to the authorities, but they re- the student union, as few persons had
ceived no response.
ever seriously doubted, but the arrest
One of the charges on which the govand conviction of Cong outraged many
ernment tried Cong, who was secretary people.
Chanh Dao newspaper, representing
general of the Students' Representative
Council, was that he had once called the the Venerable Tri Quang's activist Budgovernment "fascist" for closing down dhist faction, which has long allied itthe student union headquarters.
self with students in demanding greater
individual freedoms, expressed itself on
the occasion of Cong's arrest as follows:
News Analysis
the law becomes an instrument in
Cong was picked up Sept. 26, when the hands of those in power. And when
antigovemment propaganda leaflets were the law becomes an instrument in their
hands they may act freely without regard
found in the student union headquarters.
At the time, the police said Cong was not to the national law.
"As for students . . . they have a misunder arrest but was "invited to police
headquarters to determine the origin of sion to reform society. The more the govthe documents." Two days later, although ernment mistreats them, the stronger they
there was still no evidence against Cong, will react. The authorities, in order to safe- -.
be was officially charged, apparently on
the grounds that as acting head of the
ar

"...

-

Classifies advertising will ba accepbaala anly. Ada may
ted an a pre-paba placed In peraaa Manas? thraafht
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ta THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Ream
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7Ntf
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The Kentucky Kernel
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Roommate to share large
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Own private bath. Royal Arms Apts.
15N5t
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WANTED

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tacts

coup-orient-

ed

Black Students Continue Strike
At San Francisco State College

-

CLASSIFIED

the students can come together for such
a purpose. This is partly because the
present government has more thoroughly
infiltrated the ranks of student organizations and partly because a greater feeling
of hopelessness has come over the students.
"In the past," he said, "students have
been the strongest power bloc in the
country. Diem fell not because of the
soldiers or the politicians; he fell because
the students told their parents, their
uncles and brothers, who were in the
army and the government. For months
the students told them the truth about
Diem's government, and finally they
acted.
"But now what is left for us to hope
for?" he asked. "We have become pessimists. When we struggled against Diem,
against Khanh, against Ky, we were struggling against military governments. We
hoped for a better government that was
still hot a Communist government. Nothing important has changed, even though
we now have a
legal government, an elected government, a constitution. We don't like the government
but we can't have a better one until
we have a strong leader. Like Ho Chi
Minh. If you ask me, who is the leader
of Vietnam? I will say, Ho Chi Minh.
That doesn't mean I will follow him,
but he is the only real leader in Vietnam, the only man many people will
follow."
Another reliable source, a young American who has worked with Vietnamese
youth groups for two years, agrees that
there is little chance of student power
being exerted in the near future, and for
much the same reasons.

how-

ever wrong they may be, have occupied the
student union headquarters, as a threat to
any future student movements. This act is
undeniably designed to crush student
movements."
The government expressed the same design even more firmly in July, when two
other student union leaders were convicted
on charges similar to Cong's but given
considerably stiffer sentences. One was the
editor, the other the publisher of a student
magazine which ran stories, poems, and
articles, some written by the editor, calling for peace and criticizing the government and the Americans.
These views violated the government
policy forbidding any suggestion of peace
on terms other than the death, withdrawal or surrender of every Communist
in Vietnam.
Factionalism Breaks Out
On the s