xt76t14tmc3m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt76t14tmc3m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680226  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 26, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 26, 1968 1968 2015 true xt76t14tmc3m section xt76t14tmc3m Tie Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily

Monday Evening, Feb. 26, 1908

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LIX, No. 10(i

Bill Authorizing

1w

Student Trustees
Faces Showdown
Kentucky Collegiate Press Service
A Kentucky Student Association delegation is
at the capitol today to counter a reported move by college presidents who want to kill legislation that would put students on
state university governing boards.
The student government rep
resentatives want to determine ion by adopting a resolution that
from legislators what happened urges House passage of the cursessions of the rent Senate bill creating the stuin closed-doo- r
House Education Committee last dent seats. The Senate measure
week. Informed sources say a recently passed 35-- The obvious
group of college presidents voiced Senate sentiment is keeping the
House
Education Committee
opposition to the student-truste- e
bill and were able to persuade from killing the bill, according to
Snyder.
the committee to report it unIn another resolution passed
favorably, if not kill it. The presat the Saturday meeting, KSA
idents were not identified.
"viewed with alarm" and urged
KSA president Sheryl Snyder,
a University senior, saidthedele-gatio- n defeat of a bill that would limit
stualso hopes to change the enrollment of
minds of legislators who oppose dents at
colleges.
the measure. They would like to Another measure "firmly" opget from Cov. Louie B. Nunn posed enactment of any speaker
and Lt. Gov. Wendell Ford a ban on Kentucky college camreaffirmation of their support. puses and commended legislators
KSA members authorized the for refraining from introducing
lobbying effort at a meeting in such legislation.
The student-truste- e
resolution
Lexington Saturday after Snyder
told them of the reported move said "students should be involved
process of
by the college presidents. The in the policy-makin- g
institutions of higher learning"
news of the opposition was shocking to Snyder and others who and can "serve a beneficial functfelt the student-truste- e
legislation ion" in that process. "Such inwas assured of passage. .
volvement," it continued,
KSA, which initiated the move "would be the representation of
the student community in its
for student members of governgovernment."
ing boards, reaffirmed its posit
FRANKFORT

1.

te

state-support-

Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

Orangeburg Vigil
Members of the Black Students Union were join- ed by other UK students in a silent vigil held
at noon Friday in front of the Administration
Building. The vigil was conducted for the Negro

students shot by law authorities at South Carolina
State College in Orangeburg during a protest
over a segregated bowling alley near the school.

Rivers Asks Change In

Rule

2-- S

Help For Grad Students?
College Press Service

WASHINGTON

-

Armed Service Committee Chairman L. Mendel Rivers has urged
two changes that would make
the recent removal of draft deferments easier for graduate stu-

dents.
The South Carolina Democrat, who has a good deal of

influence on military policy, recommended that
be
drafted first and that graduate
students, when drafted, be allowed to finish their year in
sc!kx)1.

Under an order handed down
first-yelast week all
students and gradgraduate
uating seniors, except those in
medical and allied fields, will not
be able to get draft deferments
for next year.
Since the present order of call
requires the drafting of theoldest
registrants first, the seniors and
graduate students will all be
at the top of the draft calls
this June, unless the order is
changed.
Mr. Rivers made his recommendations in a letter to Selec
draft-eligib-

le

tive Service Director Lewis
In transmitting last Friday's order to State Draft Directors, Mr. Hershey said that a
change "is not justified at this
time" and later said that had
been "cleared at the top."
Mr. Rivers noted that the
Army, President Johnson's Draft
Commission and Congress had
all agreed that the change in the
order of call should be made.
He added that the President had
said last year that he would
make such a change."
"Yet," Mr. Rivers continued,
"for reasons that are not quite
Her-she- y.

House

ar

clear, a decision has been made
by the President either to defer
action on this recommendation or
abandon it altogether."
In a related development, the
Defense Department announced
a draft call of 48,000 men for
April, the highest since October,
1966. It is also the first in two
years to include marines.
Selective Service officials had
predicted that draft calls will
continue to rise this year because
men drafted in the high calls of

UK To See 'Real Radicals'
At National SDS Meeting
"Now the campus will get a look at some real radicals," says
the Students for a Democratic Society
National Council meeting to lie held here March
The SDS National Council and are making arrangements for
meets twice a year to plan the meeting space and housing for
the delegates.
organization's quarterly activities. (There are also two NaAmong the topics to be distional Conferences to plan the cussed at the National Council
other two quarters of the year.) will le SDS plans to participate
Representatives will come to in a second antiwar march on
UK from SDS chapters across
Washington that will take place
the nation. AUmt 200 to 400 peo- in April.
Altltoughuo definite schedule
ple are expected for the meeting,
has been set for the meeting,
according to Mrs. Robert Framp-tothere will likely le a number
She and Murrell are the cam- of people here prominent in the
pus coordinators for the council antiwar movement.
UK activist Rill Murrell about

30-3- 1.

n.

1966

are ending their tours of

duty.

The Army had already asked
the Selective Service System to
raise the March draft call from
39,000 to 41,000.

if the high draft calls continue
as expected through the summer
and the order of call is not
changed, that means a higher

proportion of graduate students
will be taken.

First UK
Sitar Concert
A Happening

Morton's
A Death Sentence
Re-Electi- on

has undergone in the past 18
months.
"The new report said the outlook was that Sen. Morton could
not survive another term in the
Senate," the Dispatch said, addsentence," the Columbus Dis- ing "but that by relieving himself of the responsibilities inpatch reported Sunday.
In a story from its Washing- volved, he could expect to live
ton bureau, the newspaper said well beyond the six years inMorton made the decision after volved in the new term. The
receiving a report on the last of medical report was blunt, and
three physical examinations he Sen. Morton believed it."
COLUMBUS, OHIO (AP)-T- he
decision of Sen. Thruston
B. Morton,
not to seek
this year resulted from
a decision that another term
would be "tantamount to a death

7f

It looked like a happening.
The Student Center Theater
was packed by 7:30 p.m. The

audience composed of beards,
wire rim glasses, Greeks and the
curious were awaiting UKt first
sitar concert.
The curtain parted on a fluorescent-blue
stage. The artist,
Hiro Chhatpar, walked onto the
stage carrying his instalment, the

n

is

ft

&

sitar, which one dictionary called

"the lute of India."

Mr. Chhatpar performed four
selections, accompanied on the
last number by Mrs. Hem
Mathur, who played the tabla
(Indian drums).
Unlike the guitar, the sitar
is capable of a wider range of
sound in addition to its ability
to sustain a note. Mr. Chhatpar
also noted that metltods of sitar-pla- y
ing vary from region to region
in his India home.
A jazz guitarist accompanied
Mr. Chhatpar in one number,
"Never On Sunday." Aside from
an attempt to "westernize" the
sitar sound, this number proved
that any comparison between the
two instruments is only

v

VA

1

4

t

)

v

'

vV

J

Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

Hiro Chhatpar, India, performed at UK's first sitar concert last
night in the Student Center Theater before an overflowing crowd.
The Student Center Forum sponsored the concert with a reception
for Mr. Clihatpar afterwards.

* 1

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Feb.

Your Son

A

Librarian?

Library Science: A New Image

By FRANCES DYE

Library Science is in a state
of great change and is no longer
"the haven for the mousy, quiet
student looking for a quiet
place," according to Dr. Lawrence Allen, chairman of the UK
Library Science Department.
The field is becoming more
technical and more sophisticated,
he noted, and such a change

calls for a modern curriculum

"which drags librarians screaming into the twentieth century."
Dr. Allen sees the introduction
of informational and behavioral
sciences to the curriculum as a
necessity for the profession.
One course, for example, introduces data processing equipment and how processing relates
to library automation.
Dr. Allen, chairman since
1966, said the revised program

'

Niuin Defends

Record Budget
(AP)-C- ov.
LOUISVILLE,
Louie B. Nunn defended his proposed record $2.47 billion budget
in a speech to the 37th annual
Kentucky National Cuard Association meeting Saturday.
Cov. Nunn told the group that
the projected income for fiscal
1968-6- 9
of $390 million without
a tax increase is $7 million less
than was appropriated for expenditures in the current fiscal
year.
He also expressed concern over
what he termed "America's troubled mind."
"We live in fear of the next
hot summer," Cov. Nunn said,
adding he was most disturbed by
student protestors most of whom
he described as never having
done anything "creative" for

also includes informational and
behavioral curricula and the more
traditional curricula of books,
bibliography and printing in relation to history.
People entering library science
are also reflective of a change.
Dr. Allen said "the old image
d
of the librarian as a
woman 'shushing people is gone.
Library science is an effervescent, dynamic field.
There are 85 graduate students
and about 40 undergraduates in
Library science here, and enrollment has almost doubled in the
past year, he said.
More men are entering the
field, composing about one-thir- d
of the total at UK. At other
places, Dr. Allen said, men make
up about half the total library
science enrollment.
Why do men enter the field?
"There are approximately 120,000
vacancies nationwide, and men
can quickly go into administrative jobs, with good salaries," he
said.
Is there a negative attitude
toward men entering library
science? Dr. Allen recalled the
Great Wall sign asking "Would
you want your son to be a li
gray-haire-

2fi, 1968- -3

'Soul Food, Black Books,'
Asks NAACP Youth Council

brarian?" Library Science stuMILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI)-- A
negro student boycott of city
dents, he recalls, "wanted the schools to protest the lack of textbooks containing adequate Negro
sign to remain as publicity." history has been announced to begin Monday.
The Milwaukee NAACP Youth Q)uncil, in the forefront of the
Dr. Allen said the negative
attitude is gradually changing to city's civil rights activities the past year with open housing marches,
called for the Iwycott. It would be the third since 1964.
a positive one, however.
Richard Green, the leader of the Youth Council's commaThere is a wide variety of opin library science, he ndosits action arm said it was hoped that Negroes in all city
portunities
schools would observe the boycott. All but 31 of 155 public schools
said, in college, university, pubhave at least one Negro student.
lic, school and special libraries.
There was a 3V2 day boycott in the Fall of 1965, and a
y
"Recruiters visit to recruit students, who have the choice of boycott in 1964, both to protest alleged racial imbalance in the
20 to 25 positions
city's inner city schools.
anywhere
The announcement of the Monday boycott came Friday from
around the world in any area they'
Milton Latson, 29, a Youth Council commando, after. a walkout
want to work," he noted.
Dr. Allen noted that library earlier in the day by 200 Negro students at Wells Street Junior
science is strictly a graduate maHigh School.
The walkout was the fourth at Milwaukee schools in recent
jor here. Undergraduates can get
a minor by taking the seven weeks over the textbook issue.
500 level courses.
Twenty-fiv- e
youths were arrested Friday, most of them for
He advised students considertruancy. The students demanded the hiring of Negro cooks, the
ing library science to pursue a use of integrated texts and the serving of "soul food" at the
broad, general education on the cafeteria.
The students picketed the school briefly, chanting, "we want
undergraduate level. During the
junior and senior years, nine black books. We want black food."
hours of library science can be
About 60 percent of the 943 students at Wells are Negro. School
taken to meet introductory course officials said 675 were reported absent compared with the usual
requirements.
daily average of 180.
At one point in the demonstration, after the students had
In graduate school, professional courses build on the broad,
marched to nearby West Division High School, about 50 pupils
mobbed a radio news car driven by Station WRIT News Director
general background.
Requirements for the master's degree can Walt Fullmer. Mr. Fullmer said the youths cursed him, spit on the
be completed in two semesters
car and struck the windows before three Negro adults persuaded
and a summer.
them to stop.
one-da-

Turfland Mall
278-603-

3

CLASSIFIED
Ta alaea a classified
phana UK
sWmUa 2319 r iUy la at tba (
111 Joarnallsm, frem
U
n,
flea.
1 U fi, Monday threat h Friday.
Rates art fl.SS (or to wards, 13 for
three comeeatlTO Insertions ( tamo
ad or $3.18 por wok. Deadline la 11
a.m. dajr prior to pabllcaUea.
No adTertUement may elto raee, religion or national origin as a Qualification for renting rooms or for employment.

'

Villi

Oil

!HR7
-

wmy

FOB BALI
Golf clubi, brand new,
still in plastic covers. Sell for half.
22Jtf
Phone
1967 HONDA 90. red. 1,700 miles, excellent condition. Helmet and goggles
Included. Call UK ext. 81854. 20F5t

FOR SALE

0.

loan on 1965
FOR SALE Assume
Mobile Home 56' x 10'. like new.
105 Bristol Ave., lot 35. Nlcholas-vill- e.
Ky. Call Joyce Wilson, ext.
20F8t
2831.

The Villager

INCH MOTOROLA table model TV.
Needs UHF adapter; $35. Call
or see Fred Schaaf, 320 Ayleaford
21F5t
Place after 6 p.m., Mon.-Fr- l.
1956 MGA convertible. Excellent tires
and top and runs great. Call
23F5t
after 5 p.m.
FOR SALE '61 Belair Chevy,
$350. Must sell.
auto., radio.
after 3 p.m.
Call Charlie,
21

252-46-

277-03-

V-- 8.

The Villager collector faces spring
as she faces every season. A complete wardrobe of fresh Villager
things have been designed to shed
a little clear and sunny light across
the days of winter and on into
spring. Visit our thoughtful selection of distinguished new Villager
things at McAlpins.

23F5t

White 305 Dream, excellent
First
condition plus extras. Must sell. 2CF5t
$395 takes. Phone 84402.

HONDA

LOST
LOST Woman's brown tortoise shell
Buildglasses. Lost between Service Educaing and North end of Taylor
tion Wednesday morning. Call
22F5t
LOST Silver and tan dog, male, part
of
collie, part shepherd. In vicinitycolUK campus. Wearing chain slip Relar. Answers to name "Jock." 0.
ward; 138 E. Virginia or call
31

Zr

FOB BENT
ROOMS in private home, off Cooper
Drive, for male students. One with
two.
cooking privileges. Suitable for

phne

TWO newly

decorated

sem-

ifinished ttPrt'e,!th8ldejfiK5t
children or pets.
FOR RENT One bedroom apartment,
tauiidwmat;
pool.
2tr5t
paid. Call
BABT BITT1NQ
WORKING: GIRL will baby alt tunit
Ml ft Medaal enngs. Call 2
p.m.
alter
ter or

t

WcALPIN'S

BETTER

SPORTSWEAR

FIRST FLOOR

t

i

* KENTUCKY

2-- TIIE

KERNEL, Monday, Teh.

2G,. 19G8

I Saw It On Broadway

SUPPORT THE ADVERTISERS WHO
PATRONIZE THE KERNEL

Ry JILL GEIGER
"Pantaglcize," a play by
Michel de Ghcldcrode, opened
on Broadway at the Lyceum The-

HEY WILDCATS . . .
"PROMISE HER ANYTHING

...BUT

TAKE HER TO PERKINS"

BUTTERMILK PANCAKES (famous)
75c
APPLE GLAZED ROLL-UP- S
$1.10
BLUEBERRY PANCAKES
$1.10
FRENCH TOAST
85c
FENCH ROLL-UP- S
$1.10
POTATO PANCAKES with Bacon ........$1.10
"WHENEVER

YOUR APPETITE CRAVES A TREAT" . . .
COUNTRY" at

YOU ARE IN "WILDCAT

Perkins Pancake House
920 South Lime, across from UK Med Center

SIRLOIN STEAK

12

lak.d Petal

Lk

I

Mlllll

CIRCLE

Fr.ncN Roll

Ch.li Salad

.Vf

STEAK HOUSE

Phone 299-471- 0
Across from A&P
Between Lime and Bryan Station Road
ON NEW CIRCLE ROAD

atre December, 1967, to unanimous critical acclaim. I saw this
production by the
Repertory Company on Jan. 5
with a more than casual interest
as I knew "Pantagleize" was to
be the Department of Theatre
Arts's first production this year.
"Pantagleize" is a farce; it
extracts its humor from the ingenious manipulation ofintricate
and improbable situations. The
characters are stereotyped human
figures, rather than the complex
characters typical of realistic
drama. The intricate situation in
"Pantagleize" is the triggeringof
a revolution completely by accident.
Two Croups
The characters fall into two
basic groups: The revolutionary
group includes a poet, a negro,
an anarchist, a waiter and a
Jewess. Each has his own motives for joining the revolution,
and each puts up withtheothers,
without liking them, for the revolutionary ideal.
For the most part these characters were well portrayed, with
the exception of Bamboola, the
negro played by Nat Simmons.
The part calls for uncontrolled
fanatic energy; but for an actor
to play such a part, he must
have absolute control over himself, w hich Simmons did not have.
The result was a meaningless
characterization, rather than a
stereotype.
APA-Phoen-

Into this reactionary group
Sydney Walker, as the waiter
also falls Creep, the policeman
a fine job with
t h e di ffi cul t pa rt o f an in t el cct u al to end all policemen (James
with revolutionary convictions
Greene); he is ever present in the
who found himself mixed up with least likely spots, and though apthese comrades whom he "dis-pisc- d parently killed several times, ina little, while still loving evitably appears in the next
them a lot."
scene.
The character of Pantagleize
Only Female
cannot be categorized into either
A word of praise must go also
group. He is first of all an innoto Christine Pickles, for her porcent unknowingly stumbling intrayal of the jealous Rachel
the only female role to a revolution which he himself
APA company's producunwittingly began. He is a comin the
tion, and for one of the funniest plex character, and was superbly
"bedroom scenes" i have seen captured by Ellis Rabb. Pantagleize is not really a fool, certainon stage.
Nicholas Martin, as Blank, ly not a revolutionary, not even
the effeminate poet, and Keene an imbecile though he is declared one.
d
Curtis as Banger, the
To the revolutionaries he is,
misanthropic anarchist, were no
by accident, of course, an idol,
less than hysterically funny.
The second grouping of char- a leader, and the savior of manacters is the fascist orantirevolu-tio- n kind. To the reactionaries he is
machine. Again it consists a puzzlement, but one of no great
of stereotypes, the most amusing concern. To the audience he had
of which was General MacBoom, the innocence of Candide and a
played by Joseph Bird. Mr. Bird Stan Laurel ability to stumble
into the midst of a wild situation
played to the fullest this boisterous blowhard, de Ghelderode's he had inadvertently brought
stab at the military, with full about. He realized nothing,
knowledge of the timeliness of not even death or did he? Finally his innocence was destroyed
the satire.
The scene in which de Ghel- with the revolution or was it?
derode's satire came through the
Technically, the production
strongest was the trial scene, was simple and effective. The
with, the Generalissimo (played stage was essentially bare, save
wall, which alby Gordon Gould) and four for a seven-foo- t
lowed for some wonderful effects
marionjudges, literally
ettes, complete with strings.
during the outbreak of the revoluThe Distinguished Counsel tion. The production was physi(Richard Woods) as the chameleon cally active, with guns roaring,
lawyer, able Jo defend anyone flashing lights, a funny chase
of any count, completed the exag-- scene, and visual activity was
gerated picture of "unbiased" supported and superceded at
court law controlled by the un- times by the energy of the entire
cast.
seen but
High Command of the nation.
The play as a whole was,
above all, entertaining and funny.
This is not to say that it was
The Kentucky
not timely and thought-provokinThe Kentucky Kernel, University
for it was. On leaving the
Station, University of Kentucky, Lextheatrel caught sight of deChel-derode- 's
ington, Kentucky 40506. Second clan
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. .
subtitle, "A Farce To
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
Make You Sad," seemingly an
periods, and once during the summer
session.
inconsistency after my laughter
Published by the Board of Student
and enjoyment. Yet i was sad-- It
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
was all so stereotyped as to
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
be funny, but true enough to be
Advertising published herein Is Insad. And then there was Pantatended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
gleize, sad, too in a way but so
be reported to The Editor.
wonderful. Don't miss him at the
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$9.27
Yearly, by mail
Cuignol.
Per copy, from files
$.10
Innoccnti, did

1

wild-haire-

life-siz- ed

ever-prese-

The Social Committee of the

Kernel

STUDENT CENTER BOARD

Presents its

SPRING DANCE
Featuring

S

T

The Department of Theater Arts Presents

U

P

g,

D
E

R

PANTAGLEIZE
A Force

To Makt You Sod

By MICHEL

R

Guignol Theater
8:30 p.m.

N

TICKETS $2.00

E

R

Feb.

28-Mar-

3

ch

FOR RESERVATIONS CALL 2929
$1.00 with Student ID

For a delightful, relaxing, carefree weekend, a
pleasant evening, or when parents and guests
to Lexington, visit the Imperial House,
com
Lexington's most elegant motel where gourmet
foods, wines, and fine service prevail. Entertainment and dancing nightly for your pleasure. Our
rooms are spacious, elegantly appointed and
supremely comfortable.

8

MARCH 2

STUDENT CENTER BALLROOM
Tickets available at Student Center Central Control Desk
$2.50 at the door
$2.00 couple

DE GHELDERODE

V

STANLEY DEMOS. Manager

mperialOUSe

Hnmmmimnmnimmnmnmtmmmmm

April 5 and 6

WALLER

AVSNUl

of Lexington,

HARRODSIURft ROAD

Ky
'

* I

Students Gripe

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Feb.
At High

Textbook

2fi, 1908- -5

V rices

Book Stores Point At Delayed Book Lists

A

gripe of

semi-annu-

stu-

dents is that their tetlxx)ks do
not bring "g(xul prices" on resale to the lxK)k stores.
But, according to lxxk store
officials, all the blame cannot
be pinned on the stores.
of Kennedy's
Wilkinson
of Wallace's Bx)k Store and
James Or King, of Auxiliary Services and spokesman fortheUni-versitylxx- k
Store, said theprol-leis, in many cases, caused
Joe

Kennedy

Book Store, Wallace

by inadequate and delayed lxxk
list information.
The problem occurs, they said,
when they do not receive a teacher's lxx)k information on time.
If they have received adequate
information and know the lxxk
is to be used again, then the student receives a higher price.
They said that if the information, which is due April 1
for the fall semester and Nov. 1
for the spring semester, is not
received on time, the stores must
either gamble that the lxx)k will

Morton Addresses YR's;
Urges Defeat Of Johnson

I do know this that you're goThe Associated Press
Sen. Thruston B. Morton told ing to have to find more room
for diplomatic maneuver," Mr.
Kentucky Young Republicans
gathered in Lexington Saturday Morton said. "And the only way
he does not know the answer you can find it is a change in
this administration."
to the "dilemma we find ourselves in" but more of the same
Sen. Morton also criticized
"won't accomplish our mission." Johnson administration for the
a
SenSen. Morton, one of the
ate's most outspoken critics of the credibility gap.
"I think it's a dangerous chalwar in Vietnam, told delegates
to the annual convention that a lenge to my generation and to
change in administration would yours when our country . . . canbe necessary before a settlement not believe the statements that
are issued by this country," Mr.
could be reached.
"I don't know the answer but Morton said.

..

he used again or pay the student the price the lxxk would
bring when sold to national distributors. The national distributors then find other campuses
where the lxx)k can be used.
However, if the lxxk is to be
changed and the information is
received on time, thispermitsthe
stores to bargain with other campus stores and get a better price.
It also permits them to lcx)k
around for used editions of the
new text so students will not
have to buy a new book at
additional expense.
"We cannot tell the professor
what books to use nor would
we want to," said Mr. King.
"Changing is unavoidable but if
the information were provided

at the point needed, we could
seek the best price available."
Another problem encountered
with delayed lxxk information
is getting textlxx)ks on time for
the beginning of classes.
Asked alxnit estimated loss
caused by inadequate lxxk lists,
Mr. Kennedy replied, "The loss
is a service to the students; when
we don't have the lxx)k they
need and when they need it,
this is their loss."
One problem, however, seems
to Ix? unsolvable that of old
editions. These cannot be sold
as texts even on the national
market and must be Ixmght at
"scrap" prices.
The University already has
made an attempt to improve the
situation. In 1965 a Ixxik Infor- -

per
gallon
on

(100 Octane) Ethyl Gasoline

ination Center was established to
receive all textlxxk lists andother
course work requiennents.
Hut, according to lxxk store
officials, there still are some departments whose lists are incomplete as late as several days prior
to the beginning of the semester
and a few which come in days
after the semester starts.
As to future tetlxxk information, "This is one area we are
going to work on hard this semester to convince the faculty of the
importance of getting this information in on time." said Mr.
King.

DODSON
WATCH SHOP
Fine Watch Repairing
110 N. UPPER ST.
6
Phone
254-126-

FARMER MOTOR CO,
EAST MAIN

at

LEXINGTON
YELLOW CAB

WOODLAND

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Inc.

Complete Automotive Service
Phone

Radio Equipped
DIAL

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"24-Ho-

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WATCH BANDS
JEWELRY

WATCHES
DIAMONDS

252-22- 30

Emergency Rood Service"

TAYLOR TIKE CO.
400

E.

VINE ST.

LEXINGTON, KY.

0

CROLLEY CLEANERS
116 W. Maxwell

255-431-

3

D

CLEANING VALUES
MONDAY

TUESDAY

Any Plain SKIRTS, TROUSERS, or
SWEATERS. Single item, regular price.

Any plain Men or Ladies' COATS smartly
cleaned.
Single coats, regular price.

3

for

L

for $1.53

3

D

E

WEDNESDAY

V

$3.45

E

R

SHIRTS, plain (28c ea.) 5 for $1.35

E

T

"0

ATTENTION

D

UK DORMS

CIVIL ENGINEERING MAJORS

SORORITY HOUSES

GRADUATING IN 1968

FRATERNITY

Washington State Department of Highways
will be interviewing for permanent engineering employees on

HOUSES

MARCH

1

Appointments may bo made through the
placement office. Washington Highways offers career development, engineering challenge, and the excitement of the expanding
and dynamic Northwest. Starting salaries up
to $785 per month.

Malicious
woods burning
is something
to get mad about.

10
Discount
on such orders!

HELP PREVENT
FOREST FIRES
,N THE SOUTH;
REPORT WOODS

Vsry
avi

mft9 ARSON
v

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CALL

Dress For The Rain by Arthur Say

A raincoat that doubles as a dress

.

.

.

the
answer to something
different. Bonded orlon knit with
really
own orange scarf. Navy or white. . . .
all-weath-

Sizes

3-1-

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3.

US

Across

from

Holmes

Holl

252-910-

5

9 p.m. til

1

a.m.

TODDLE
MOUSE

-

* Enrollment limitation

Hi

nelights our backwardness

Once a student gets here, however, the Kentucky students and the
There's no need to argue with Kentucky's legislators about this
the House last Friday concerning the limiting o! rest can be easily identified with a quick look at their CPA.
proposal that swept
Take the 19G6 entering freshmen. Of the total class, 54.6 percent
students at state universities.
made above a 2.0 their iirst year. In comparison, 69.3 percent of the
The Legislature has demonstrated time and time again that they
students made above a 2.0.
pass bills and debate issues on a level somewhat below that commonly

out-of-sta-

te

out-of-sta- te

accepted by rational men. Nevertheless, there is one cold, hard fact
even the legislators cannot dispute.
The better students on the average, at this University come from

students do better once they arrive
than Kentucky residents. Perhaps this is due to better secondary education in other states, perhaps it's due to the higher tuition demanded,
perhaps this is due to higher entrance standards. We think it's because
Just ask officials in the admissions oiiice. In high school,
students.
For this year's they are better
students beat Kentucky residents grade-wisstudents would lower
Therefore, to limit the number of
freshman crop, Kentucky residents compiled a 2.76 grade point in
the level of academic attainment at the University, to say nothing of
This difference
high school as compared to a 2.72 for
what this would do to Morehcad, Eastern, Western, and the other
shifts irom year to year, and is not deemed to be a useful indicator.
schools threatened.
The small difference between in- - and
entering freshmen
Also, this silly limitation would throw off the University's projected
comes in the ACT scores. Kentucky residents average in the 61th
enrollment figures and hamper future plans until another estimate
climb to the 74th percentile.
percentile while
Even this difference can be explained when one realizes that the could be calculated.
students is higher than Kentucky residents.
Considering all the arguments, this dangerous bill now in the Senate
criterion for
If you have below a 2.0 and score in the lower halt tor the ACT, then will do nothing more than hurt the University. It will hurt academiyour entrance into the University is something to forget ii you live cally, financially, and it will hurt the University's image among other
out of the state. Whereas any Kentucky resident can come to the state institutions.
And to think it passed the House 82-University.
In other words,

out-of-sta-

te

out-of-stat- e.

out-oi-sta-

tc

e.

out-of-sta- te

out-of-state-

out-oi-sta-

tc

rs

out-oi-sta- tc

4.

SENATOR MORTON
VER Y MUCH NEEDED
The announced retirement of the
Hon. Thruston Ballard Morton,
U.S. Senator
comes as
a blow to both Republicans and
Democrats in this state. Sen. Morton has served Kentuckians for 27
years in government offices and has

been in national politics since 1946.
Sen. Morton served three terms
as a Congressman from Louisville
and won the Senate seat in 1956.
He served as Assistant Secretary
of State and was picked by former
President Eisenhower to be on the
Republican National Committee in

(R.-Ky- .)

1959.

Pass-Fa- il

In a speech given at the UK
Law Alumni Day Program in 1966,
he analyzed NATO and the crisis
in Western alliance precipitated
by French President de Gaulle's
decision to withdraw France from
the Organization.
Sen. Morton's words echo well
today's crisis in Vietnam as we
gradually see allies slip away because of our mounting military
emphasis:
"Nevertheless," he said, "collective unified defense today far
transends the purely military field.
It requires the development of
greater unity in all fields. Ultimately it must flow from a common political will."
Kentuckians have been represented faithfully. Hopefully the
Senator's retirement from national
politics will not mean his retirement from the Kentucky scene.

Cynics who doubt the beneficial means and ends of the pass-fa- il
system will be relieved to know
that they no longer need to be
such pessimists. At the University
of Michigan a study recently completed suggests that if a student
is a good student he will stay a
good student, no matter what the
grading system. The idea is that
he can't help himself. In analys
which were
zing the
independently assigned to Michigan's first