xt75qf8jhk74 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt75qf8jhk74/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-10-20 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 20, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 20, 1967 1967 1967-10-20 2024 true xt75qf8jhk74 section xt75qf8jhk74 THE KENTUCKY

Friday Afternoon, Oct. 20, 1967

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

 

KERNEL

Vol. LIX, No. 39

 

 

Sound
and

Fury

 

Lack of clear-cut issues. much "catcalling" and the use of Hallo-
weai noisanakers marked the debate Thursday night betweai

Young Democrats and Young Republicans. Carson Porter speaks

for YDs at leh. TheYDs chargedGOPgubernatorial candidate Louie

Nunn with racial and religious bigotry. YR speakers pointed to a
survey ranking Kentucky at ornearthe bottomin such fields as edu—
cation, highway construction and quality of state government.
William Murrell, member of Students for a Democratic Society,

also debated, criticizing both sides. The catcalling is shown at
right whai Ward supporters waved signs in the Law School court-

room. .

 

Ward Again“ Answers To Vietnam Question:
Withdraw, Escalate, De-escalate

‘Sisterhood’
For UK, UL

LOUISVILLE (AP)—Henry
\Vard expressed his opposition
Thursday to any plan that would
make sister schools of UK and
the University of Louisville.

"Little sisters sometimes wear
hand-me-downs," Mr. Ward ex-
plained to a group of Young
Democrats at U of L.

The Democratic gubernatorial
nominee said Louisville “should
have the kind of support any
other institution gets, with its
own board of control."

He was accompanied by
other Democratic nominees who

Continued on Page 5. Col. 4
Too Many

State Jobs,
Nunn Claims

LOUISVILLE (AP) — Louie
B. Nunn pictured himself Thurs-
day as a candidate unencum-
bered by political obligations
and one who has the formula
for operating state government
on an economical basis.

He claimed the state has hired
25 percent more workers than
it needed, that it has overpaid
for many goods and services
and that personal service con-
tracts were used to pay political
debts.

The Republican gubernatorial
nominee told the Downtown
Rotary Club that one of his first
acts as governor would be the
creation of a 50-man efficiency
task force to review all govern—
ment operations.

ludge Nunn‘said similar task
forces have saved the taxpavers
millions of dollars in New York,
Ohio and Washington.

He also said the state suffers
for want of selfless leadership to
properly develop its human and
natural resources.

By MARTIN E. WEBB

Four positions were taken on
the ”Vietnam: What Next?"
question Thursday night at a Stu-
dent Forum and asmall audience
went away a little more thought-
ful.

Larry Curewich, coordinator
of the debatetype discussion, in-
troduced four students represent-
ing different positions on the Viet-
nam question.

They were Roger Woock, who
argued for immediate with-
drawal; Don Nute, who took the
position that the United States'
presence in Vietnam is justified
if it is to allow the South Viet-
namese self-determination; Ron-
ald Com, who argued for de-
escalation, and Dennis Kelly,
who took a sometimes 03 and on
position of escalation.

Woock began the discussion
by contending that the U.S.
should ”be aiding and helping
these revolutionary groups in
their overthrow of oppressive gov-
emments."

"We should withdrawimmed-
iately and in addition give pay-
ment to those countries who have
suffered as a result of the war,"

Woock said.

Nute immediately countered
that the U.S. “shouldn't let peo-
ple be coerced into a govem-
rnent they don't want."

Kelly emphasized the fact that
”in a sense we are protecting
other countries who are depend-
ing on us for protection until
they can develop adequately to
cope with the problem.

”A withdrawal at this time
would seriously affect the de
velopment of other countries, In-
donesia for example," he said.

Corn felt that there has been
a temptation ”to oversimplify
the war because of its isolation
for the American people."

“It has to be viewed in con-
text," he said. "Our policy should
not be agression to stop com—
munism but rather we must solve
the problems of agreesion."

At various intervals through-

out the debate anxious hands from
the audience were raised, but only
after the debate was therea ques-
tion and answer period.

A few points were generally
agreed on throughout the dis-
cussion.

”We tend to support govem-
ments which support U.S. in—

terests in that country“ We are
in efiect supporting the South
Vietnam reflme without know-
ing whether the people actually
support the war. And rather than
control conflicts which errupt
over the world, we need to con-
trol those conditions which agra-
vate conflict."

Chandler
Switches
To Nunn

FRANKFORT (AP)—Former
Democratic Gov. A. B. (Happy)
Chandler endorsed Republican
Louie B. Nunn for governor
Thursday, publicly switching his
party allegiance for the first
time.

He said at a news conference
that “for the salvation of the
Democratic party, this crowd
ought to be removed.”

Mr. Chandler, 69, was an un-
successful candidate against
former Highway Commissioner
Henry Ward in last May’s Dem-
ocratic primary. He ran against
the state regime which spon-
sored Ward.

In 40 years of politics, Mr.
Chandler never: has openly sup-
ported a Republican for gov-
emor.

The former governor said he
will stump personally for the
Republican nominee, but will
have no connection with the
COP organization.

Will Not Run Again

He said he does not intend
to seek office again. Mr. Chand-
ler served two terms as gover-
nor, during the ’305 and '505,
and lost both attempts for a
third term in the '60s.

He said his temporary shift
to a Republican is not unprece-
dented, citing instances where
other state politicians did the
same in recent decades.

“I don't expect or want a
reward from anybody," Mr.

p Chandler said.

"As far as the present leader-
ship of the Democratic party is
Continued on Page 7, Col. 1

YellingOhScenities,Students Resist
Police Assault At Brooklyn College

From UPI. (JPS Dispatches

Hundreds of Brooklyn (Tol-
lege students battled police
Thursday during an antiwar
demonstration organized to pro-
test the appearance of two Navy
recruiters on campus.

The demonstration erupted
into v i o l e n c e when police
brought paddy wagons to haul
off more than 60 students placed
under arrest.

Screaming coeds and men
yelling Obscenities were holding
a sit-in at Boylan Hall when fly-
ing wedges of uniformed police
moved in to pick them up. The
students suddenly started kick-
ing. shoving and swinging.

Outside a group of students
began rocking a police car while
others chanted "turn it over."
Police rushed to the spot and
more fighting broke out.

A paddy wagon loaded with
arrested students began to move
off. but was stopped again bv
students. Police reinforcements
were called.

One Officer Hurt

At least one police officer was
injured in the battle with the
students and required hospital-
ization.

Meanwhile, thirty-three stu—
dents from three universities in
New York state staged a sit-
down at the entrance of the
State Department in Washing-
ton. Thirty protesters picketed

a draft board in Atlanta. Ca.
in Portland, six students who
had chained themselves to the
door of the Oregon Selective
Service office were cut loose by
police and put in a paddy-
wagon, still chained together.

The six. four men and two
women, chanted “Hell. no, we
won't go," as police arrested
them.

At the Oakland, Calif. in
duction center, scene of a battle
between police and demon-
strators Monday and Tuesday.
400 demonstrators marched
peacefully. Later they held an-
other illegal rally on the Uni-
versitv of California campus in

Berkeley. The office of Berkeley;
Chancellor Roger Heyns has an-
nounced that students partici-
pating in the rallies, which were
banned by a court injunction
earlier this week, will be prose-
cuted.

At the University of Wiscon-
sin, where more than 70 demon-
strators were hurt in a clash
with police Wednesday, pro-
testors urged students and
faculty to boycott classes. A

'mass protest meeting drew an

estimated 3,500 students but
the university. which announced
suspension of 13 demonstration
leaders, said attendance was
normal in most classes.

50 UK Students Said
Bound For War Protest

Fifty University students will leave Friday for Washington to
participate in a national protest against the Vietnam War, campus

antiwar activist Don Pratt says.
Many of the students are
members of Students for a
Democratic Society (SDS ).
Pratt said at an SDS meeting
Thursday that UK students will
meet Saturday morning at the
Lincoln Memorial in Washing-
ton. He added that they will
join some 100,000 others pro-
testing the Vietnam war.

An SDS spokesman said the
crowd will march to the Penta-
gon where there will be non-
violent sit-ins, lay-ins and peace
vigils.

UK students will be accom-
panied to Washington by stu-
dents from Berea College, Cen-
tre College and the University
of Louisville, Pratt said.

 

  

Z—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct. 20, 1967

 

  
   

 

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Lexington Technical Institute Is
‘Invisible’ College-Within-A-College

By LYN N CARLOUGH

The Lexington Technical In-
stitute, the Lexington branch of
the Community College System,
is a separate entity operating
within the boundaries of the
University's Lexington campus.

Established in 1965, and
under the administration of Dr.
Ellis Hartford, dean of the com—
munity college system, LTI
does not have a building to call
its own. In lieu of its own
campus, the Institute utilizes

UK's classrooms, libraries and
Student Center.
Half of an LTI student's edu-
cation is spent in the liberal
arts, while the other half is a
concentrate of technical courses
in the fields of professional
secretaryship, junior business
management, radiologic tech-
nology, engineering technolo y.
nursing, respiratory therapy a d
dental laboratory technology.
Unlike community colleges
throughout the state, the major

 

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emphasis of Lexington Tech-
nical lnstitute's program is not
in transfering to a four-year in-
stitute, but in the completion of
a balanced liberal-arts-technical
program to provide immediate
employment.

Upon completion of a two-
vear course at LTI, a student
is awarded the associate in ap-
plied science degree.

‘There is a great demand for
post- -high school technical train-
ing said Dr. Charles \Vething-
ton. former director of LTI.
Today, the student who feels he
does not want to spend another
four to six or ten years learning
a profession can choose a two-
vear technical program that will

fit him for an interesting
career.n

Dr. \Vethington has been
named director of Maysville

Communitv College. The new
director of LTI is Dr. C. R.
and. former dean of Troy State
College. Troy. Ala.

\Vhat the holder of an as-
sociate in applied science (le-
rzree can do and how far he
may advance can be clearlv
seen in the engineering tech-
nolotzv program.

“The engineering technician
is prepared for that occupational
area that lies between the crafts-
man and the engineer. at the
end of the area closest to the
engineer,” said Dr. \Vething-
ton.

High-Strength
Metal Alloys

Tested Here

Structures of high strength
light weight metal alloys that
will resist friction are being
tested in UK's Metallurgical En-
gineering Department.

 

' THE KENTUCKY KERNEI.

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station. University of Kentucky. Lex-
ington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington. Kentucky.
Mailed live amiss week during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods. and once during the summer
session.

Published by the Board of Student
Publications. UK Post Oiiice Box ‘986.

Begun as the Cadet in was and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 19i5.

Advertising published herein is in—
tended to help the reader buy. An!
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly. by mail — $9.27
Per copy. from files — $.10

KERNEL TELEPHONE

Editor. Managing Editor ......... 2321
Editorial Page Editor.

Associate Editors. Sports ...... 1330
News Desk ...................... 3441

 

 

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University Of Michigan Research
Is Basic To U.S. Vietnam Effort

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (CPS)
-What the defense department
does with our work is their
business, we just go ahead and
develop more technology," says
Willis E. Groves, head of Project
MICHIGAN, the largest of the
University of Michigan’s $21.5
million worth of research con-
tracts with the U.S. Department
of Defense.

About $9.7 million are classi-
fied and the remaining $11.8
million goes for unclassified
projects.

Groves and more than 900
other University professors, re-
searchers, technicians and stu-
dents working on Defense De-
partment projects have done

their job well. Dubbed by the

Army the "free leader in (com-
bat) surveillance," the Univer-
sity is third only to Stanford
and Massachusetts Institute of
Technology in total defense de-
partment research funding.

The University's technological
developments are basic to the
nation's current military effort
in Vietnam. At Willow Run, the
dominant unit in the Institute
of Science and Technology,
scientists have pioneered in-
frared reconnaissance techniques
that make it possible for the
US. military to pinpoint the
enemy at night, or through par-
tial foliage cover.

 

A - TODAY AND
TOMORROW

   

 

 

 

Announcements for University groups
will be published twice—once the day
before the event and once the after-
noon of the event. The deadline is It
I.II'I. the day prior to the first publi-
cation.

Today

Alpha Phi Alpha will hold a jam
sessmn from 8 p.m. until midnight in
the small ballroom of the Student
Center. The Cavaliers will play.

Mrs. Lucy W. Adams. a former
employe of the US. Bureau of In-
d..'m Affairs. AID. and the War Re-
location Authority. will lecture on
"Anthropology in Government Pro-
grams," at t p.m. in 309 Student Cen—
ter.

Mr. Roy Schaberg. University in-
structor of horn. will give a recital at
8:15 p.m. in the Ag‘ Science Audi-
torium.

Dr. Frederick Wyatt. professor of
psychology at the University of Mich-
igan. will give a lecture on "The
Roots of Rebellion" at B p.m. at the
VA Hospital. Medical Staff Room.
Building 25.

Tomorrow

The US. Army Field Band will pre—
sent a free concert at 8 p.m. in Me-
morial Coliseum.

Coming Up

Anyone wishing to participate in
the anti-war march on Washington.
D.C. should contact the Citizens for
Peace in Vietnam at the Presbyterian
Student Center. Cars will be leaving
for Washington. D.C. Oct. 20.

Students can pick up their Ken-
tuckians from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
on the third floor of the Service
Building.

UNICEF Christmas cards are avail—
able at the YWCA office. 204 Student
Center. Sales are sponsored by the
YWCA.

Anyone with a car willing to pro-
vide transportatbn for the YM-YWCA
Tutorial Project is asked to contact
the Y Office. 274 Student Center. or
call 215i.

College Life, sponsored by the Cam-
pus Crusade for Christ. will meet at
9 p.m. Sunday at the Tri—Delta So-
rority house.

Senior portraits will be made by
Photographic Services for the 1967—88
Kentuckian. Seniors who will grad-
uate by August 1968 may call 2825 for
an appointment, if they wish their
picture to appear.

“Vietnam. A Search for Humor"
is the theme of the Student Cen—
ter's art gallery exhibit through Oct.
22. The exhibit. sponsored by the
campus YMCA, features cartoons by
Hugh Haynie. cartoonist for the Lou-
isville "Courier-Journal."

CCHR and Orgena are circulating a
petition to obtain a Negro History
course on Campus. Students will be
working in cafeterias in order to get
more signers.

N.S.l.D. will meet at 5 p.m. Monday
in the Home Economics Building
Lounge.

All those interested in basketball
intramurols please stop by Room 10‘!
in the Student Center and sign the
list on the board. Entry dead ine is
Thursday.

Willow Run Laboratories has
made basic developments on a
radar system that can see side-
ways (eliminating the need to
fly directly over enemy territory
for surveillance).

Other key military work is
done at Cooley Labs and the
Radiation Laboratory. The head
of Cooley, Thomas W. Butler,
says his unit serves as the “tech-
nical right arm" of the Army

Electronics Command at Fort

Monmouth, N. I.

At Cooley scientists have
pioneered sophisticated means
of jamming enemy radar, ini
creasing radar capability and
improving communications.
Many of these techniques have
been made operational by in-
dustry and are used in Vietnam,
according to scientists here.‘

Military research here will
see further applications in Viet-
nam. The university’s develop-
ments in remote sensing will
almost certainly be applied to
teh new electronic barrier in
Vietnam, officials say.

President Harlan Hatcher's
latest annual report on the Uni-
versity points out, “the im-
portance to national defense of
some of the present and past
research programs of the Wil-
low Run staff, especially in re-
connaissance and surveillance
technology, was brought into
sharper focus by the situation in
Vietnam, where allied forces
rely heavily upon aerial sur-
veillance for military intelli-
gence."

     
   
  
  

 
 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct. 20, 1967—3

COMEVIJN . . .AND sat .
‘ The New I
. j John Meyer

(- of Norwich .-

‘ Fall Fashions
at—

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PUIDUE U. OHIO U.
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BOWLING GREEN Sll. U. of CINCINNATI
UNIVERSITY of TULANE EASTERN MICK. U.

unwasmaxmrucxv _ b _

 

 

FASHIONS FOR FALL are now in
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The Most Fashionably Decorated Store in Town

  

DOWNTOWN and ON-THE-CAMPUS—-Across from Holmes Hall

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John Meyer of Norwich creates
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look for young women who refuse

to let anything get in the way of

their individuality.
What makes these women John

Meyer cnthusiasts...the clothes
or the personality of the wearer?

Confession: it’s both, and they
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Why? John Meyer’s blending
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JOHN MEYER...
°F Noni/lieu

 

  

Student Government: Dynamic, Efficient, Responsible
'1 f If I '4 ’ The Mood 0f Student Government

 

EDITOR’S NOTE: A task force'
of Kernel reporters attended
Thursday's meeting of Student
Covemment. Performing the mir—
ror role of the newspaper, the
event is here reported in minute
detail. In attendance at this week-
ly meeting of a vitalcampus wide
student activity, in addition to

members of the government, was -
'there is no real support for ath-

one professor, Dr. Gifford Blyton,
SC advisor, and three or four
members of the student body.‘

Student Covemment Assem—
bly met for the sixth time last
night. The meeting got off to a
slow start with people coming
in slowly. It started a little after
.the appointed hour of 7 p.m.
I. A re-creation of the meeting
would see the call to order being
,made by Oliver Kash Curry,

 

g.

PRESIDENTIAL PAPERS

abundance of leaders who fail
to be honest with students.”

Students accuse the Univer-
sity administration of turning
their heads, but ”maybe we turn
away also."

”Is there anything to rally
around at UK?" he asked.

There is athletics, he said,
answering his own question. But

letic teams, he claimed.

Walker said he spoke to Ted
Bates, president of the Quarter-
back Club, who remarked, ”Good
Lord, you're the first student
who has talked to me

' And he talked to Charles Brad-
shaw, head football coach, who
“realized that the ‘yell-like-hell'
meet held before the Kentucky-
Mississippi game was for a tro-
phy, not for a team."

The pep rally held last night
was a spur-of-the-moment effort
to get students to support the
football team. About 250 people
attended.

Maybe it’s too late to get
support behind this year's foot-
ball team, but ”we can get be—
hind the basketball team,"
Walker said.

Students also can support stu-
dent activities, he said.

Walker feels that students do
not support student activities
now. He gave as an example the
lack of interest shown in the de-
bate team. Nobody knows about
the debate conferences held here,

‘ he said.

speaker of the assembly, roll call‘
taken by Terry Parsons, SC sec-
retary, and then the minutes of
last week's meeting being read
and approved without corrections
from the floor.

In an unusual move, Speaker
Curry set aside the agenda to
allow Robert Walker, chairman
of the Student Activities Board,
to Speak.

”Is there anything tobeproud
of at UK?" he asked Student

Covemment last night.

”It's not cool to be tradi-
tional at UK," he said. “We
lack the traditions here." You
could say that there is a ”tradi~
tion of apathy here."

”I think we can do something
about the apathy through the
student leaders," Walker added.
But presently there is an "over-

    

- ROBERT WALKER ,

Someone asked Walker when
this year's debate conference

would be held. Dr. Gifford Bly-

‘ton, faculty advisor to the de-

bate team, said “it was held

last week. "

Although he feels that there
is apathy on campus now, Walk-
er thinks “we can do something
about it, maybe through spon-
taneity or on the spur-of—the-
moment."

Following his talk, Walker
and three or four others left the
meeting to attend an improptu
pep rally at the Complex. The
agenda was then resumed.

The report from the Repre—
sentation Committee to be given
by Rafael Vallebona, SC vice
president, was delayed until next
meeting since Vallebona is in
New York at the UN seminar.

A representative asked if any
details of the bill could be given.
Curry replied no, but a com-
promise had been worked out.

Representative Jim Eaves
gave a committee report concern-
ing the publication ofthe Student
Government newsletter.

According to Rep. Eaves' re-
port, the director of public rela-
tions is responsible for the pill)-
lication and distribution of the
newsletter on the Monday follow—
ing each meeting. It is tocontain
all pertinent information and an-
nouncements. ft is to be presented
in a completely factual manner,
with no editorializing whatso-
ever. It will be edited and
written by the publicity commit-
teerehairman and an editor ap-

By DICK KIMMINS

They straggled in one by one, usually carrying
sither a briefcase or with a date, some there early
and some sheepishly coming in well after the

meeting had begun.

They formed groups, talkingquietly. Beforethey
settled down to deliberate, they went by the
table and picked up four or five colored mimeo-
graphed sheets that contained minutes, agenda
and a couple of bills to be introduced.

Each was dressed beautifully. Always a-tie,
sometimes a coat. And the tie was carefully loos-
ened to have the casual air about it, yet convey
a determined, hard-working countenance that

meant business.

For that is why they had come.

And that is what they accomplished.

The gavel bounced once, twice, on the table.
The meeting began. The secretary read the mine

pointed by him. It must be ap—
proved by the chairman, editor
and president of student govern-
ment.

 

JIM EAVES

The second report, from the
Committee on Committees, given
by Speaker Curry, concerned the
expulsion of SC members as a'
result of missing Assembly meet-
ings.

COMMITTEE REPORTS

ATTENDANCE

The Committee on Commit-
tees will consider absences from
meetings held on and after
September 28, 1967 as grounds
for expulsion from the Assembly.

The committee felt that due‘
notice was not given to meetings
held prior to this date.

However, three (3) consecu-
tive absences or the absence from
six (6) meetings during the year
beginning on September 28 will
constitute grounds for expulsion
from the Assembly.

DUE NOTICE

Due notice will be sent to
each representative notifying him
of the forthcoming meeting.

Due notice will consist of date,
time, place, and type of meeting
and will be sent from the Stu-
dent Covemment office giving
the representative ample time to
plan to attend the scheduled
meeting.

OK. Curry, Chairman
Todd Horstmeyer
Nick Carter

No old business was brought
before the body.

Pat Fogarty then presented
a bill calling for the enactment
of the office of student ombuds—
man as soon as possible.

SC 8-8
WHEREAS, the polling of the
Student Opinion indicates

69.1% of the studentsfavorthe
establishment of the office of
a student ombudsman, and

WHEREAS, it is felt to be a
Worthy and needed office. and

WHEREAS, it was thought by
52.9 percent of the people
polled in a similar survey that
that the office should be a
Student Covemment appoint—
ment. and

utes, making corrections as she went. Committee
reports, old business, new business—just like all
the other groups that function weekly.

But this group questioned finance of publi-

cations—what happened to the half a million

were leaders.

dollars poured into a vat each semester by stu-
dents only to disappear.

And this group questioned apathy-and was
genuinely cornered. But more importantly had the
pOWer to change it a little.

And this group questioned leadership. They
knew what they were talking about because they

And they took the advice of their electorate.

And they wanted to make library confine-
ment a little easier.

WHEREAS, this office should be

put into active practice as
soon as possible to measure
its effectiveness,

BE IT ENACTED THAT the

office of Student Ombudsman

be formally created and the
member. or members, of it
(the number to be set by the
Assembly) be a presidential
appointment with verbal re-
commendations given to the
Assembly by the executive 1n-

vestigatory Committee ofEllis
Bullock and Bob Valentine in
orderthat all possible existing
information can serve as an
essential frame of reference for

an effective decision.
Submitted by
Pat Fogarty
Betty Ann Carpenter
Speaker Curry referredthe bill
to committee with instructions
to report the bill out next week.
The second bill of the even-
ing was presented by Curry. lt
asked that a phone for campus
and city calls be installed in the

lobby of the library.

SC 8-9

WHEREAS, students use the
Margaret I. King Library for
many purposes, and

WHEREAS, no facility is avail-
able for the making of on-
campus-Lexington phone calls
except a pay telephone in the
lobby, and

WHEREAS, Student Govern-
ment should operate to best
serve the students,

BE IT ENACTED by the Stu-
dent Covemment Assembly
that one campus line tele-
phone be placed in the lobby
at Margaret I. King Library
at the expense ofStudent Cov-
ernment as a service to UK
students.

BE IT FURTHER ENACTED

THAT this service be installed
no later than December 1,
1967.

Submitted by
OK. Curry
October 19, 1967

Curry then recognized Miss
Fogarty from the floor, who pro-
posed that a committee be es-
tablished to investigate the use

Miss Fogarty

of student fees.

And they, more importantly than any of the
others, did their job with a conviction and abil-
ity entrusted to them. And did their job well.

 

. MISTER SPEAKER

said that the Kentuckian has
used lack of funds as “an excuse
for some of its problems." She
moved the results of the commit-
tee's investigation be presented
to the Board of Publications.

A short discussion ensued
from her proposal. One represen-
tative said it appeared to him
from the discussion that nobody
knows where the fees go other
than to general fund and that a
committee to investigate the use
of the funds seemed in order.

Curry appointed the commit-
tee from volunteers and asked
M'iss Fogarty to be chairman.

The final action before the
Assembly adjourned was an an-
nouncemeht from the Complex
Covemment representative that
anyone, ”with a limited number

 

PAT FOCARI Y

of exceptions," is welcome to
attend Complex Covemment
meetings Monday evenings at
6:30 p.m. in Room C of the
Complex cafeteria.

The meeting adjoumed at7235
p.m.

    

After The Meeting

t

I

  

Student Government Presented

With 2nd StudentOmbudsmanBill

Student Government Thurs-
day night heard a bill which,
if enacted, would establish an
office of student ombudsman.

The bill was the second at-
tempting to establish this office
this year.

Proposed by Reps. Pat Fog-
arty and Betty Ann Carpenter,
it proposed that the position
would be filled by presidential
appointment with verbal recom-
mendations given to the As-
sembly by the Executive In-
vestigatory Committee of Ellis
Bullock and Bob Valentine

One or more persons could
be appointed to the ombudsman
position.

The bill Was referred to rules
committee.

Earlier Bill Beaten

Rep. Bob Abrams had sub-
mitted a bill establishing an
ombudsman April 30, but the
Assembly did not debate the
bill until Sept. 21. It was de-
feated 11-9 on that date.

In a referendum held Oct. 17,
69.1 percent of students voting
said they favored establishing a
student ombudsman.

The bill is scheduled 'to be
reported out of committee next
week.

Assembly Speaker 0. K.
Curry, acting in his capacity as

‘Keep Trying,’ Judge
Tells Deadlocked J ury

MERIDIAN. Miss. (UPI)-—An all-white jury hearing the con-
spiracy trial of 19 white men charged in the 1%4 slaying of three
civil rights workers reported Thursday it was deadlocked, but the
judge ordered the panel to keep trying for a verdict.

US. District Judge Harold
Cox suggested that the jury of
seven women and five men poll
all menbers again and try to
reach a decision.

But he said ”the parties are
entitled to a mistrial if you can-
not agree on a verdict of guilty
or innocent.

”You my, but you need not,
bringin a partial verdictforsome
d the defendants," the judge
added.

Cos told jury Foreman Lang-
don Anderson: “I presume from
your notes received from the jury
that you've been unable to reach
a verdict in the case, isn't that
correct?"

Eastern Service

NEWARK, N. I. (AH—East-
ern Airlines announced Thurs-
day it will begin nonstop service
between Newark and Lexing-
ton, Ky., on Oct. 29.

 

 

University

Methodist Chapel

Corn