xt747d2q7q2x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt747d2q7q2x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680503  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, May  3, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, May  3, 1968 1968 2015 true xt747d2q7q2x section xt747d2q7q2x Ti

EC

EC

NTHJCKY

The South's Outstanding College Daily

Friday Evening, May 3, 1968

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LIX, No. 150

Triumph;

Bryan-Fiitre- ll

Pledge More SG Action
By FRANCES DYE

and Tim Futrell
were swept into office last night
as new president and vice president of Student Government.
After the results were announced, Bryan said, "Tim Futrell and I are very pleased at
the outcome. We now want to
work with the real campus issues, on academic review board,
student power and the campus
parking situation."
Bryan, who won 1,404 votes,
VVally Bryan

v

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..

1

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lJ

w

i

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Kernel Photo by Rick Bell

was followed by Merrily Orsini
with 697, John Cooper, 431, and
Herbert Creech, 42. There were
77 write-i- n
votes for the office
of president.
Futrell won the vice presidential race with 1247 votes. His
closest opponent was Joe Wester-fiewith 841. Linda Rogers was
third with 438. There was 52
write-i- n
votes for the office of
vice president.
kl

The election officially closed
at 7 p.m., but actual counting
did not begin until around 8 p. m
The ballots were counted in the
computer center at McVey Hall
And the results were announced
by 10:30.
T. Rankin Terry of the SG
election committee gave the official voter turnout as 2,753. But
the committee declared 39 ballots invalid because students
filled them out incorrectly. The
ballots were similar to the forms
which are used to rate instructors.
Terry said most of the 39
ballots had to be invalidated
because voters used pens instead
of pencils, or marked other than
the "A" space on the form
In other election results the
following 16 Student Government
representatives were elected:
Steve Bright, 1288 votes; Jerry
Legere, 1037; Monty Hall, 921;
Joe Dawahare, 861; Otto Wolff,
817; Betty Ann Carpenter, 783;
Scott Richmond,
John
755;
Thomas, 743
Linda Lou Bailey,

mond "Fireball" Vail, 645; Debbie Clarke, 614; Bill Dexter, 604;
Thorn Pat Juul, 554; Jim Cwinn,
546; Susan Camcnisch, 523; and
Lynn Hamrick, 521.
Unsuccessful candidates fir
representative were: JaneR Tom-lin- ,
516; Linda Lou Williams,
453; John A. Van Arsdall, 440;
Bill Haden, 415; Woody Baker,
Barbara
410,
Rinehart, 409;
Jeanne "Sugar" Robin Garbee,
395; Frank Howard McCartney,
379.

Rhonda Jane Foran, 358; Lynn
Cobb Montgomery, 351; Judy
Saalfeld, 338; Kathy Murphy, 337;
Bob Hallenberg, 328; James En-br295; Dick Webb IV, 289;
Ken Forre, 283; Mary Stoll, 271;
Jeanne Carol Butler, 251; Jim
Stott, 241; Ted Renaker, 239;

y,

MegTassie,

235;

Jerome K. Saunders, 234;
Bruce Kinney, 232; David Lee
Wicks, 230; Nancy Jean Mac Lean,
223; Keenan Turner, 215; William
S. Kendrick, 177; Diane Gelband,
176; Michael J. Marlowe, 169;
Richard Wayne Bigelow, 160; and
William H. Fossett,136.

705; Ray

Bulletin

WASHINGTON (UPI) -- President Johnson told a nationally televised and broadcast news conference: "I have sent a message
informing Hanoi the date of May 10 and the site of Paris are

acceptable to the United States."
A Hanoi radio broadcast picked up by U.S. monitors only a
short time before the President's statement proposed that "formal
talks" between the United States and North Vietnam begin May
10 "or a few days later."
President Johnson, who said he had learned of Hanoi's willingness to meet in Paris at 1 a.m. EDT, said at his news conference
that the United States had sought a site where it could be assured
of "fair and impartial treatment" for both sides.
North Vietnam named its minister without portfolio, veteran
diplomat Xuan Thuy, as its representative for the initial talks.
U.S. officials indicated that ambassador at large W. Averell
Harriman and special presidential adviser Cyrus Vance were prepared to leave shortly for the meeting with the North Vietnamese.

Kernel Photo by Rick Dell

Hie hand that threw the hat in the ring reaches
for its prize . . . SG President-elec- t
Wally Bryan
(top) and Tim Futrell, newly elected vice president (bottom) at the computer center Thursday

night when T. Rankin Terry, chairman of the
elections committee, read the computer's vote
tally putting the

"all-Cree- k,

team

at the helm of next year's Student Government.

Students To Be Given Voice
In UK President Selection
By ELMO KIMMINS
Three students have Ix'en selected by University Board of
Trustees member Ralph Angeluc-c- i
to serve as a selections committee to choose ten University
students to "interview candidates for the UK presidency."
The three students, Jean-Pau- l
Pegeron, chairman of the Student Advisory Committee;
Vallebona, vice president
of Student Covenunent; and
Steve Cook, president of Student
Covemment, will announce their
selection to the Student Advisory Committee Sunday night for its approval.
Selection committee member
Vallebona said the 10 students
n
woukl "represent a
of the student body" and would
be students who "see the University from different angles."
The final committee will have
Ra-pha-

cross-sectio-

a chairman who has tlie power
to select otlier members with-"thapproval of the SAC," which
lias final jurisdiction over selection of committee members.
The announcement suggests
prime concern by the Board of
Trustees that University students
have a voice in selecting the
University's sixth president.
Asked why the Student Advisory Committee was selected

as the jurisdictional body for
selection of the students, Vallebona said "this is what we are
for:

advice."

He added that the committee
"has the best communication between the students and the Ad-

ministration."
The student committee will be
available during tlie summer to
meet with different candidates
for tlte presidency

Wins
Choice '68 Vote

M cCarthy
College Press Service
WASHINGTON
College
students Voted for Sen. Eugene
.)
for presMcCarthy
ident and for an end to the war
in Vietnam in Choice '68, the
national campus primary held
April 24.
McCarthy polled 26.7 percent of the almost 1.1 million
votes cast, followed by Sen.
with
Robert Kennedy
19.9 percent and Republican
Richard Nixon with 18.4 per- cent.
A combined 62.6 percent of
the students voted for cither an
or phased withimmediate
drawal of American military
forces in Vietnam against 30
percent who voted for either
increased or all out military
effort. Some 58 percent voted
for either a permanent or
halt to all bombing.
And 79 percent voted for
cither job training or education
as solutions to the urban crisis.
Following is a breakdown of
itlke results, with about 90 per- (cent ot the vote in.

-

(D-N.Y- .)

tem-iM)ra-

Senior Wins $18,000 Award
Graduating senior j& Trovvr Todd, Jr. has been awarded the
Hertz Foundation Fellowship Award worth $18,000.
Dr. Edward Teller, associate director of Lawrence Radiation
Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, announced
that TotM had been selected in campus-wid- e
competition for tle
Hertz Foundation Fellowship.
Todd, an electrical engineering major, will be applying tlte
three-yea- r
fellowship to graduate studies at Massachusetts Institute
of Tec hnology.

rmisiDtNT

v.u.

Eugene McCarthy

(D) US.9M

Nelon Rockeleller

(R) 11S.MT

worn

iu?'

iSffi

26.T

l"

10.S

Lyndon Johnson (D)
George Wallace
(Amer. Ind.)
Ronald Reagan (R)
John Lindsay (R)
Hubert Humphrey
(D.. write-in- )
Charles Percy (R)
Mark Hatfield (H)
Fred Halstead
(Soc. Workers)
Martin Luther King
(Ind.)
Harold Stassen (R)

t.7.362

5.3

33,078
28,215
22.301

3.0
2.6

22

18,533
15,184
7.605

1.7
1.4
0.7

5.886

0.5

3.538
1.033

0.3
0.1

President Johnson's name was
on the ballot and Humphrey's
was not because the ballots
were printed Del ore Johnson
withdrew from the race. Martin
Luther King's name was on the
ballot because he was assassin- ated after the ballots were
printed.
Humphrey got 58 percent of
the write-i- n votes. Followed by
Negro commedian Dick Creg-or- y
who had 8 percent of the
write-in- s
and .2 percent of the
total vote.
A final total of about 1.2 million ballots was expected to be
counted. Some were delayed in
transit to Washington.
Of 2,526 colleges contacted
ny uiioice oa,
paruci- But because this intlud- pated.
ed most of the large schools,
ere was a potential vote of
about 5 million Out of the ap- proximately 7 million college
students in the U.S.

i,tv

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, rri.Iay, May

3,

I9T.8- -3

CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE

1963 MONZA
Steel blue, hardtop,
4- speed, new tires, excellent condition, $1,050. Call after 10:30 p.m.,

FOR SALE
Golf clubs, brand new,
till In plastic covers. Sell lor half.
0.
Phone
22Jt(
FOR SALE
Sofa bed, $40; corner
book shelf desk, $23; apartment
size washing machine (hand wringer), $23; television set (old but
reliable), $23. Must sell to finance
moving remainder of furniture. Call
UK ext. 2607 or stop by Journalism
22Atf
Bldg., Room 109.
FOR SALE

AMERICAN
Saddlebred filly, two
to
years old. Halter broke. Eligible of
Master Denmark, Love
register,
3.
It
Society, $600. Call Meg.

Bultaco Metralla
motorcycle, $250.
3Mlt
SELLING
formal and
dresses, plus casual clothes on May
9. All in excellent condition. Sizes
- 6 and
3Mlt
Call
200 cc.

Hand-ow- n

FOR SALE 1966 Yamaha Twin 100,
low mileage, perfect condition. Call
3.
29A5t
Mobile

5-

townhouse,
complete, all electric kitchen, l'a
baths, fully carpeted, central
pool, 7 mln. from UK,
$185 per mo. plus util. Call
lM3t
2522.
or UK ext.
266-63-

Home,

2.

8.

TRIUMPH. 1966. Excellent condition. White with black top; wire
wheels, rear suspension. Radio, heat3
er. Call
30A4t
after 3.

modern
RENT
efficiency apartments for summer
and fall. Walk to UK. 317 Transyl25A7t
vania Park. Call

FOR

8.

SALE

MEMBER'S

FACULTY

ACbattery stereo, $33. Used
records,
Inquire 404 Linden Walk, No. 2, after 8 p.m. lM3t

FURNISHED

house available from around June 8
until August 30. Located in Chevy
Chase, 2 miles from UK; 3 bedrooms plus den or 4 bedrooms. Large,
kitchen, living and
dining rooms, screened porch. Romfrom
yard. One block at 217 Romany Rd. Shopping Center
30A4t
any Rd. Ext 2989 or

$150;

5.

FOR SALE
Huffy Racing
Bike, good condition, great for spring
4.
fun, $110, new, now $30. Call
lM3t

SUMMER JOBS for Wildcats.

Cincinnati--

area. Salary

Dayton

week.
In Cincinnati, call
In Dayton call
1.

3.

30A4t

HELP WANTED

Summer employment for University students. Positions available for both men and
women.
Call Company
Placement
Manager between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.,

30A5t

6.

TYPING

Your work done accurately
and promptly on an electric typewriter. Experienced In technical and
academic work. Call
or
266-60-

Make the most of your summer vacation in the clamorous and
exciting world of Vivien Woodard
Cosmetics. Learn professional makeup techniques and earn money too.
Call Lll Cannon, 277-167.
or

9.

23A9t

SUMMER APTS. available now. Close
to campus. Go to 318 Transylvania
2.
18Atf
Pk. or call

TR-4- A

OPPORTUNITY

COEDS

TYPINGS

Tree-shad-

VOCALIST Must be over
Inquire Office Lounge, Eastland
lM3t
Parkway, Lexington.
FEMALE
ROOMMATE
wanted to
share furnished apartment. Swim-in- g
pool, carpeted,
one bedroom,
near campus. Rent
3Mlt
reasonable. Call
FEMALE

EMPLOYMENT

1963

FOR RENT

43x10.
Central air, carpet, awning. Now In
Suburban Court. Complete furnished.
Price $2,493. 233-07after 8. 29ASt

FOR

FOR RENT

e

Street-rac-

semi-form- al

29A5t

MIDWAY

SALE

FOR

French Fall,
warm brown. Cost $173, will take $80.
Same as new. Call afUr S,

1963

2M2t

4.

D.S.A. ROYAL STAR MOTORCYCLE
600 cc. New 1967, 660 miles, $873;
1.
3Mlt
good buy, must sell.

MEN STUDENTS Reserve nn efficiency apartment now for fall, single,
double and triple. Available also
vacancies for summer; men and women, 342 Aylesford, 347 Linden Walk.
lM3t
Call

WANTED

LOST

20.

MISCELLANEOUS
DANIEL BOONE RIDING STABLE

Highway 227, between Winchester
and Boonesboro. Trail rides down
beautiful Howard Creek. Open daily.
lM3t

PERSONAL
THREE more
your dollar to room
ism building.

ONLY

days to send

113--

Mary, Diana, and Florence
have consented to your anxious requests for a private performance to
extinguish your capacious desires.

WENDEL

At Adams', blue London Fob;
jacket with initials H.M.S. on left
sleeve cuff. If found call Harry at
Reward and no questions
asked.
29A5t

LOST
3.

LOST

Man's watch with black leather band at Sharecroppers at Clay
Wachs Whse. Reward. Call
after 5 p.m.
lM3t
266-45-

No questions asked,
$50 REWARD
for return of a men's LeCulture wrist
watch. Call
and ask for Larry.
2M2t

Five students, 6 to 8 weeks
during our fruit and berry season,
operate buying stations. Will Interview May 6, Room 10, Administration Bldg, 1 to 4. Call Mr. Foushee,
ext. 2400 for appointment.
lA3t
WANTED for summer female roommate to share spacious
apartment located in Cardinal Valley.
lM3t
Phone
WANTED Experienced sales girls for.
summer employment. Phone
for appointment. LOWENTHAL'S,
lM3t
Main at Walnut
WANTED

STANDARD
TYPEWRITER CO.

m

SMITH-CORON-

4.

252-08-

SALES SERVICE
393 WALLER AYE.

DEALERS
RENTALS

Imperial Plaia Shopping

6.

1965 Rambler Classic,
SALE
Manual
radio, very
clean. Passed safety Inspection. Asking $1,000. Ca'l
MOBILE HOME 1968 Fawn. 12' x 52',

FOR

232 six.

carpeted; automatic washer;
rooms; on lot near UK. Call
after 5 p.m.

Live in luxury during
APARTMENT
summer school. Alrconditioning, pool,
and parties. Holly Tree Manor. Call
277-8230A4t
after 6.

2 bed-

FURNISHED efficiency at luxurious
Hanover Towers. Utilities paid. Rent
$165 a month but two can share the
9.
30A4t
cost.

252-16-

2M2t

SALE 1967 MG-convertible,
blue, excellent condition. Need family car. List $3200, asking $2450. Call
2M2t
evenings.
new paint and carpeting,
1953
engine overhauled, excellent tires
and top. Also tonncau and tire cover.
2M2t
AC
after 5.

FOR

B

town and UK,

2Va

lM3t

$80.

MG-T-

basement apartment suitable
for one or two students, $70 per
month. Contact Mrs. Baker,

COOL

M3t

WIMWFR
fx
ncluding

WW.

TRACY

ss2,

been nice knowing you!

Sidney

i

production
i

POITIER

Katharine

- SPECIAL SALE -

HEPBURN

guess who's
coming to dinner
TECHNICOLOR'

EXCLUSIVE! FIRST RUN!

PORMIRLY THI ASHLAND.
SIS

264 2174

CUCLIO

Things are pretty dead in the Summer without all you nice people ... so we're closing
up shop just for the summer . . . this means
a clearing of merchandise
so, for you,
our parting note is a . . .

...

BEST ACTRESS

Stanley Kramer

Spencer

It's

4.

J ARAnFMY AiAAims

Om
iYnr"v

I

between
furnished rooms,

GOODBYE

RENTAL

SUMMER

FOR

278-46-

J

SHORTS

Jamaicas, fully lined, reg.

$6

Bermudas, values to $12
NOW SHOWING!
Just

NOW SHOWING!

o Short Drive South on U.S. 27

?0lh Century fo piejenls

IU.I

VI

V

EM.

m:iiti i.x
ALItCItT

il
y

AXXKHKYWOOI)
UDJiH

DONINS

TWORSIUIAD
Color
Deluxe
Ponavision

IN

by

Flini-FUi-

u

Mun
Flim-Fun-

Summer Suits, reg. to $33

UII.MU'KKNCK'S

Junior Dresses, reg.

$16

to $26 now $10 to $18

Assorted Junior Sportswear now 12 off

values to

$25

now $12.99

Q
k

b,

UIS JOtt

CAHl IN0

RAIMUNOSINOM

&

tit CteUu

MONDAY

H0A0 KULM
t

ftAAMH

RUCLl

OAHU.C PC'UHtl

All Seots 60c"
Show Timet:

Dirtttod

1:30 to 2:00
thru FRIDAY

2-- 4

6 1 & 10 pm.

now $8.50

DRESSES

!
ftudutMt

SORGECLSGOIT-SUEDD-

SUMMER SUITS

JEWELED SWEATERS

MAMC'H

also
The

now $2.95 & $3.95
now $6.90
now $9.90

Mother's Day

KKIIUHUEA
SlANII

SWEATERS, TOPS, SHIRTS, SKIRTS
Summer Sweaters, reg. to $14 . . now $10.90

Shirts, reg. to $9
Skirts, reg. to $12

fiim;v

SAXDYDEXXIS

now $4.90
now $7.90

Cotton Knit Tops, reg. to $6

1

JournallM3t

EmbryS

On-The-Camp-

us

255-632-

6

Center

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY

Centennial Theatre

"ONE OF THE

HOLIDAY

UK's

SEASON'S
D

Friday, May 3, 1908

KERNEL,

ELIGHTSI

INSPIRED

is called, will utilize four directors and is scheduling six con- -

CLOWNING!'
-NCW YORK TIMES

vJ

Kiriui

"WILL ADD NEW

DIMENSIONS
TO THE LAUREL

AND HARDY
LEGEND!"

summer

professional

theatre will take another step
forward when it opens June 20
The Centennial Theatre, as it

-- tme

U

.A

'A DELIGHT..

COMIC TREAT!
THE ZANY PAIR
ARE IN RARE
FORM!"

v

-

sccutive performances this

sum-

mer.

Charles Diikcns, managing
director of the Centennial, said,
"The larger number ol diicctors
will expose our company and
our audience to an unusual diversity of techniques and styles."
The innovation of more
will enable more people to see the performances of
UXkS season. Performances have
Ix'en set for Thursday through
Tuesday
The season begins with the
Kaufman and Hart coined),
"You Can't Take it with You,"
followed hy Arthur
June
Miller's "The Crucible," July
Brian Fricl's Hroadway
success, "Philadelphia Here 1
and closes
,
Come," July 1
with "King
featuring
guest star, Arnold Moss, August

pAux

IMk,

I

1S-2- 3,

color

4

HAL ROACH'S

CINEMA

NEW

I "THE CRAZY WORLD
I OF LAUREL & HARDY"
9

The Kentucky

PRODUCEO BY HAL ROACH
A JAY WARD PRODUCTION
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER:

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 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.

RAYMOND ROHAUER
NARRATED BY GARRY MOORE
ll'Mot.glrO t , lovp" tt'fnfl
lV)('ltS

pw

iernel

THE JAY WARD
INTERGALACTIC
FILM FESTIVAL

kUiva

'

n

Solo Concerto
Ends Season

sometimes truth is more exciting

r

CENTENNIAL THEATRE ineinlHrs meet outside the Guignol
Theatre door. UK's professional summer theatre opens with the
Kaufman and Hart comedy, "You Can't Take it with You" June
20. Centennial will hae four directors this summer,

6

U

C

'

The UK Symphony Orchestra will present a Student Concerto Program as its final concert of the season 3:00 p. in May
5 in Memorial Hall
Conductor of the Orchestra
is Phillip Miller.
The concert will include a
tuba, violin, piano and soprano
solo by UK students

'ft,

-

v

-

:

lu: ft

;

-

,S

-

!

'l-iU-

S

'si

SOLOISTS in UK Symphony of Student Concerto Program: (from
left) Hunter Hcnslc, Charlotte Tacy , M ra Hall and Rex Conner.

-

SUBSCRIPTION

NOW!

PC

RATES

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files

$9.27

$.10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
2321
Editor, Managing Editor

Editorial Page Editor,

KENTUCKY

Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk

Advertising, Business, Circulation

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* THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL.

Friday, May X

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fel
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-- THE KENTUCKY
SttU-li-

KERNEL,

Friday, May 3, I9f8

'Hams' Respond To Alarm

HELD OYER!

n

UUXn

Stortj

8:45-A-

$1.50

dm.

A group of University of Kentucky students were among the
first to hear and act on news
of the Falmouth tornado last
week. The news eame in over

ACADEMY AWARD

their

University

their home station like firemen

amateur radio

station WlJP.

P.C. Magoun of the UK hlcc-trieEngineering Department
said the students "rallied around

al

BEST PICTURE! BEST ACTOR!

THE LETTERMEN in CONCERT
Georgetown College
John L. Hill Chapel
8 p.m. Saturday Evening, May 4

mmmmmm

May-field-

Tickets: Kennedy Bookstore, 5 p.m.
April 29 - May 3
$3.25 per person
$3.00, $2.50
Also available Turfland Mall Record Shop
3--

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Meanwhile at the UK home
station, a crew including Deane
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responding to a four alarm. They
began at onee to prepare their
jiortable equipment and by 9:30
p.m. were equipped and on their
way to the disaster scene."
An emergency crew comprising Mr. and Mrs. John Gibson,
Hobert
Ilogosian,
Lexington,
Murrary Hill, N.J., and Thomas
hadthe)ort-abl- e
Anderson,
station functioning in Falmouth by 11 p.m. They stayed
on the air until after 5 a.m.,
maintaining contact with the
home station at the University
and Kentucky Traffic Network,
a series of amateur stations spread
across the state.
Magoun said the portable station established contacts that
proved quite useful to authorities on the scene.
"They were in touch with the
Red Cross, relaying emergency
requests for equipment, supplies,
personnel and medical aid. They
worked closely with a State Police station set up in the area.
One small amateur station in
Falmouth and one telephone line
to the hospital were the only

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* THE KENTUCKY
n

KERNEL,

Friday, May 3,

1908- -7

Kernel Forum: the readers write

To the Editor of the Kernel:
Since my npxintmcnt to the election
committee chairmanship a little over a
week ago, I can without reset vat ion say
that putting this election together has
been one of the major undertakings of
my four years here.
There are several people who should
receive special thanks not only from me
but also from the student body as a whole.
These are in part: Capt. Sloan and the
Campus Police, the Auxiliary Services
staff, the University Stores staff, the ladies
in the Stenographic Bureau, the Dean
of Students Office, the Athletic Department, Mr. Kegley and the gentlemen in
the Carpenter Shop, the Computing Center staff, my fellow committee members
Jane Blair and Pat Fogarty, and my
employers Dr. Chuck Elton and Dr. O.J.
Hahn w1m have lent considerable moral
support.
However, the help of these ieople is
overshadowed by the help, time, consideration alxjvc the call of duty given
by Mrs. La vine Thrailkill of the Gnn-putin- g
Center staff. Tins lady jumped
in on the spur of the moment, taking
me and the problem by the horns, and
worked out the bugs of processing the
ballots. Each student especially each
candidate should either go by or send
Mrs. Thrailkill a note of thinks.
In closing, I again want to thank all
of the people mentioned plus any that I
neglected who have been of assistance
the cooperation has been fantastic.
T. Rankin Terry
Senior
English
To the Editor of the Kernel:
I would like to express my views
toward the new bill passed concerning

the drafting of graduate students. A graduate student should erve his country
just as a mechanic, draftsman, or plumber
does. This is a country made up of all
types of people and when our country
is in conflict with another country I
believe that everyone has an obligation
to fight. A graduate student and a mechanic or plumber are both living in a

country that is free, and if they want
this country to remain free then they
will Ijoth have to pay the price for their
freedom.
The graduate students arc hiding behind their education. Where docs a nineteen-year-old
mechanic, or carpenter, or
a draftsman hide? Many giaduatc students are in graduate sciiool to keep out
of the draft. They have no intention of
using their schooling after they graduate.
They arc living off of Mom and Dad, or
their scholarships, or the government, expecting someone else to do thedirty things
for them. A boy who is not in college is
on his own. What he learns now is what
he is going to use in future years. Why
sltould he do all of the fighting?
The graduate student states he is losing
time and money when he has to drop out
of graduate school. What happens to the
many hours that the mechanic spends,
under the hood of a car working for very
little money to learn about an automobile? if you compare the time that a
graduate student spends with his books
against the time that a mechanic spends
with his tools I don't think there would
be but a few hours difference. For these
reasons, I think that graduate students
should accept the new government bill
and serve their country like those who
are not fortunate enough to be in college.
Tom Morris
A&S

Freshman

To the Editor of the Kernel:
Due to the two recent cartoons
the editorial pageof the Kernel,
I feel it necessary to express the "other
side" of gun legislation.
Appearing in the first cartoon was one
of the favorite misleading statistics of the
anti-gu- n
faction: "17,000 people are killed
each year by firearms. What they do not
tell you is that there were only 5,654
homicides with firearms in 1965 (the year
in which the 17,000 number appears).
Yet the anti-gu- n
people try to imply
that there are 17,000 homicides with firearms each year. This is three times the
statistics reported by the FBI.
Many advocates feel guns should be

registered like cars. According to the
U.S. Department ol Justice's Uniform
Crime Hcxrt, the rate of auto thefts in
the U.S. increased 70 percent in the last
ten years. Registration has done nothing
to reduce auto thefts. As in firearm registration, it seems apparent that legislation
should be directed toward the hand that
wields the weapon rather than towards
the weapon itself.
The anti-gu- n
element wears several
faces. There are the sincere faces of
There are the cynical
the
faces of politicians who appeal to emotionalism to get votes. There are the
fanatics ready to doom whatever they
dislike in this instance, firearms and
the faces of extremists determined to
destroy what we know and treasure as
the American way of life. All of these
people would bury our guns. Some of
them would like to bury us, also. II this
seems impossible, one only needs to know
that one of the biggest backers of all
legislation to control firearms is the
Party National Chairman, Henry
Winston.
History consistently repeats that registration leads to confiscation. The latest
instance occurred in Greece only last
spring. Police registration of civilian amis
abetted the rise of Fascism, Nazism,
and Communism in Europe.
What is saddening and sicking to me
is to see Americans being misled into
attitude and into
adopting an anti-gu- n
attacking the very programs which help
to defend our country.
J. Vincent Shuck
Lex. Tech. Inst.
G)m-muni-

st

To the Editor of the Kernel:
i am now sitting in my Journalism
Newswriting Class. We are, at present,
discussing the effects of editorials on the
opinions of the readers. It is the consensus of opinion that editorials DO
help formulate attitudes and support.
This is a good thing.
The class discussion leads my thoughts
to dwell on tire "darling" piece in Friday's Kernel concerning the exit of O.K.
Curry. This was not a good thing. If

thr Kernel is trying to get students to
support the Student Cm eminent, which
it should. I'm afraid it is failing disastrously. The Kernel's story, and the
rest concerning Student Government, do
not urge the student to supxrt or help

theorganization.
Instead it invites the student to "laugh
along with the Kernel" at the failures
and attempts of the Student Government.
This will not help the support of campus organizations.
Now that I have mentioned campus
organizations and their support, I must
not overlook the author's, and as a result, the Kernel's jab at the Greeks in
the forementioned article by the passage
concerning one of the men in the Student
Government office "staring at his fraternity pin in his naval." (Quote might
not be accurate, the xint is important!)
Now I ask myself, as well as the
Kernel staff and the student body; when
will this, our "Outstanding College
Daily," cease stipping the campus of
any organizational support and strength?
Are you intending to cut all organizations out so that there is nothing left
but a mass of students without leaders?
I challenge you to support the Student
Government and cease these attempts at
destruction.
Joy Wieshcicr
Arts & Sciences Soph.

Kernels
"Shun idleness: it is the rust
that attaches itself to the most
brilliant metals."
Voltaire

"The life of great geniuses is
nothing but a sublime storm."
Georges Sand

"The greatest evidence ot demoralization is the respect paid to
wealth."

Georges Sand
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* The Kentucky

Iernel

The South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED 1891

FRIDAY, MAY 3,

13C8

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

John Richard Kimmins, Editor
Robert F. Brandt, Managing Editor
Martin Webb

Darrell Rice
Jo Warren
Terry Dunham
Assistant Managing Editors
Hank Milam, Business Manager

Dana Ewcll

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