xt79kd1qk261 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79kd1qk261/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-09-28 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, September 28, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 28, 1967 1967 1967-09-28 2024 true xt79kd1qk261 section xt79kd1qk261 THE KENTUCKY

Thursday Afternoon, Sept. 28, 1967

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

‘ERNEL

Vol. LIX, No. 23

 

LBJ Brainwashed,

Sen. Morton Says

WASHINGTON (UPI)——Sen. Thruston Morton (R-Ky.), urging
an immediate U.S. de-escalation of the Vietnam war, charged
Wednesday that President johnson had been “brainwashed” into

seeking a military solution.

Thewarcannotbe won mili-'

tarily, Sen. Morton said, and “a
political victory may well be out
of reach.”

The former Republican na-
tional chairman proposed that
“we put an immediate ceiling
on further US military action
and open up every possible
avenue toward negotiations."

Morton's spwch before a
newly organized National Com-
mittee of Business Executives
for Peace in Vietnam was large-
ly endorsed by another speaker,
Tran Van Dinh, former South
Vietnamese charge d'affaires in
Washington.

Sen. Dirksen Unmoved

But Senate Republican leader
Everett M. Dirksen stood fast
in his rejection of fellow Re-
publicans' recent criticism of
President Johnson's handling of
the war.

Asked about Sen. Morton's
proposed solution, Sen. Dirksen
replied: “Haven't they tried to
negotiate? The other side won’t
do it. My God, you're confronted

with an enemy."

The White House refused to
get caught in the crossfire of
debate in which Democrats and
Republicans differed with each
other and among themselves
about Vietnam.

Presidential Press Secretary
George Christian dismissed sug-
gestions of “serious disaffection"
over Mr. Johnson's policies by

saying he “learned a long time
ago not to debate the senators,
particularly in the political sea-
son."

Sen. Morton attempted to pin
on Mr. Iohnson the “brain-
washed" label that Michigan
Gov. Romney originally took
for himself.

Quotes Ike’s Warning

An assistant secretary of state
when former President Dwight
D. Eisenhower sent ,the first
US. military advisers to Viet—
nam in 1956, Sen Morton re-
ferred to Mr. Eisenhower’s
warning in early 1961 that
America must "guard against
the acquisition of unwarranted
influence by the military-in-
dustrial complex.”

Said Sen. Morton: “I believe
that President Johnson was
brainwashed by this power cen-
ter as early as 1961, when as
vice president he ventured to
Saigon on a fact-finding mis-
sion.

“I believe he has been mis-
takenly committed to a military
solution in Vietnam for the past
five years—with only a brief
pause during the election cam-
paign of 1964 to brainwash the
American peeple with ‘the war
in Vietnam ought to be fought
by Asian boys.’ "

Sen. Morton conceded that he
had supported the US. troop
buildup that began in February,
1965, but added that “I was
wrong."

Togetherness Near

 

No Rules For Dillard?

Dillard House opened its doors Wednesday night to 11 chilled
and rain-soaked University studetns. The students hope to open

them permanently by January.

In doing so, they will become the first UK group ever to

participate in coeducational community living.

Goals of the

group are to spend 10 hours each week in seminars, study groups

and in house Cleaning. So far the group is interracial.

hopes to be international.

It also

Unlike residents of University housing, Dillard students will
decide their own rules, if any, the Rev. Doug Sanders of the United
Campus Christian Fellowship told the group of prospective resi-

dents.

At this point, the United Campus Christian Fellowship is a
possible sponsor for the project, Mr. Sanders said.
The next meeting for students interested in living in Dillard

House is at 6:30 pm. Oct. 10.

    

‘0000!

9

Lil Ward. journalism senior, plods through a massive puddle which
formed outside the K-Lair Wednesday when Lexington was drenched
by heavy rainfall that lasted most of the afternoon.

- Roses
And

Kisses

 

A Delta Delta Delta pledge receives her kiss from a
Phi Delta Theta during the fraternity's presentation of
roses. Despite the rainy weather last night the Phi
Delts presented roses and kisses to new sorority pledges.
The presentation is an annual ritual of welcome to

pledges

 

Student Government To Wrestle

Reapportionment Muddle Today

By MIKE M CGRATH

Student Covemment rules
committee will meet at 4 pm.
today in an attempt to solve the
a s s e m b l y’s reapportionment
problem.

Two reapportionment amend-
ments, written by last spring’s
presidential candidates, Sheryl
Snyder and Steve Cook, await
the committee’s consideration.

But it is unlikely that either
amendment will win endorse-
ment.

-Mike Davidson, chairman of
the rules committee, said there
is now a third side to the issue,
but added that he could not
discuss the new development
prior to this afternoon's meet-
ing. “If it (the recent develop-
ment) gets out, its effect will be
lost,” he said.

Snyder's amendment, sub-
mitted to the rules committee
Feb. 25, while Snyder was still
a member of the assembly. pro—
posed to seat 45 representatives
in the assembly, or 12 more
than are seated now.

Cook's proposal, submitted
in March, proposed to seat 59.

According to Snyder’s plan,
20 representatives would be
chosen from the housing units,
5 from the student activities and
20 representatives would be
elected at large.

Under Cook's amendment,
housing units would elect 35
representatives, student actim}
ties would elect 14 and there
would be 10 representatives
elected at large.

U.K.'s apportionment system
now has 23 representatives
elected at large and 10 elected
from subgoveming b o d i e s

comprised mainly of housing
units.

Total number of representa-
tives is not the only difference
between the two proposals.

Distribution of the 20 hous-
ing seats, according to Snyder's
amendment, would be based on
the number of students from
each housing unit who actually
vote in the elections. Each unit,
however, would be guaranteed
at least one representative.

Cook's amendment b as e 5
housing representation solely on
the number of students living
in each unit.

“Although Snyder's proposal
stresses activism," Cook said,
“people should be represented
even if they don’t turn out to
vote."

Snyder, who is not actively
involved with Student Covem-
ment this year, said that he did
not feel qualified to discuss the
two amendments.

There are three things the
Rules Committee could do
today: report on the proposals
with or without approval, kill
the proposals in committee or
amend the proposals and then
approve them.

North, South Division
In Dorm Governments

Tentatively Structured

Coordinated governments for both North and South campus rcsi-
deuce balls were tentatively structured Tuesday night by rcprcscu—

tatives of the separate units. '

The plan agiecxl upon calls
for traditional government —
through individual hall coun—
cils—in each of the 20 halls. Thc
idca of a coordinating body to
serve the Complex (dcfiucd as
South campus) and another to
\cry c thc rcst, or North, campus
is ucw.

Miss Rosemary l’oud, associ—
utc dcau for studcut affairs, said
thc coordinating bodies would be
”scrccuiug bodich for the use
of physical facilities of the halls.

l)clegutcs to thc central bodies
cithcr would beappoiuted by hall
councils or elected fmm the hall
constituents themselves, said
Milton Scott, area coordinator
for residence hall programming.

Thc mcthod was lcft up to each
hull.

Funds for thc ccntral body,
Scott said, would ucccssarily
come from the studcnt activities
fees of the member halls. and
students talked of “kicking in
unywhcrc from 10 to 50 pcrccut
of n unit‘s budgct to thc ccutrul
government arms.” liudgctiug
would be dccidcd upon in thc
ucur futurc, hc uddcd.

Students coutactcd about thc
mcctiug sharcd nu cuthusumu
for the action. Ann (Iron-s, \icc
prcsidcut of (Iomplcx 6, had ouc
rcservat ion;

:‘lt's good if students can
handle it—if they rcalizr‘ it's not
for power but for rcslxmsihility
and leadership. Miss l’oud sort
of stated that, too."

i

 

  

9“,

2 - THE KENTUCKY. KRRNEL, Thursday, Septs'28, 196%

 

 

 

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“The week was incredible!

“The idea was to become
aware of self, to find how self
affects others, to find what the
extent of your freedom is in
trying on behavior."

So said one enthused par-
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The workshop, held Sept. 18-

 

 

  
     
     
   
   

  

 

 

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23 in the Student Center, in-
cluded a week of student and
professional participation that
often did not end until mid-
night.

It was part of a training pro-
gram for approximately 60 grad-
uate students from across the
country who are working and
training at UK for the Teacher
Corps and the Fellowship Pro-
gram. Both federal programs
are for elementary teachers who
plan to work with disadvantaged
children in urban and rural
areas.

‘The Human Relations Work-
shop was meant to help students
realize the impact of environ-
ment and to take a look at their
own values," said Dr. Harry
Robinson, who is director of
both programs locally and on
the faculty of the College of
Education. “The ultimate aim
was to make them more self-
accepting and accepting of
others."

‘Happcning’ Was High Point

High point of the week for
some was a “happening where
students were told to do or be
something different from what
they considered as characteristic
of themselves.

The result was behavior like
interpretative dancing to exotic
music, finger painting, making
clay figures and merely sitting
in a corner and observing.

In order to qualify for the
Teacher Corps as an intern, a
student must have a bachelor’s
degree, be accepted in graduate
school and have an academic
average of at least 2.5. He also

Exotic Dancing, Finger Painting
Featured In An ‘Ineredible Week’

must show some interest in
working with disadvantaged ele-
mentary children.

Students in the Fellowship
Program must be properly certi-
fied teachers. Both internships
include one semester of on-
camps training and three
semesters of actual classroom
training. Thetraining is taking
place in Lexington, Louisville,
Harlan County and Breathitt
County.

“The purpose of the Teacher
Corps is two-fold," Dr. Robin-
son said. “It is to contribute an
added dimension of quality to
the classroom and school by the
very presence of the interns,
and through this contribution
the intern receives teaching ex-
perience.”

When the interns move into
the field, they have a chance to
observe the problems of school
systems first-hand. The corps-
men here will be observing
schools in Louisville, Cincinnati
and in areas of Appalachia.
They will have an opportunity
to travel and work with social
and welfare agencies as part of
their training.

Under the Fellowship Pro—
gram there is, in addition, an
“externship” of two weeks
which places interns in several
schools that have creative pro-
grams for disadvantaged chil-
dren.

The Teacher Corps program
at the University is said by the
national office to have the larg-
est research component of any
and was recently featured in
Time magazine.

 

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i

g the writings appearing every day,

Graffiti Goes
On The Wall

Calling things by‘their right
names (especially on a college
campus) means calling the ex-
pressive words and phrases on
UK's Wall, graffiti. Graffiti
means writings on the walls of
buildings, sidewalks, and public
restroom.

Graffiti has long been means
of expression used by people
wanting to get their thoughts out
quickly, said Dr. Albert Lott,
Professor of Psychology at UK.
“You don't have to be too com-
prehensive to create some expres-
sion," he said.

The creative thoughts writ-
ten on such places serve as sour-
ces for ideas for a number of
people. Edward Albee found the
title for his play, “Who's Afraid
of Virginia Wolfe" on the wall
in a restroom, and thetitle“Stop
the World, I Want to Get Off"
was found on a wall, Dr. Lott
said.

Point Out Inconsistencies

The wall gives people an op—
portunity to point out inconsis-
tencies in our society—things that
bother them, and by doing it
cleverly it's a lot of fun, said
Dr. Lott. The wall makes it pos-
sible for people to be critical or
amoral, to say something they
wouldn't normally say them-
selves in public, he said.

Some of the things written
on UK's wall are a take-off on
advertisements. For example said
Dr. Lott, ”New York is a sum—
mer vegetable," instead “New
York is a summer festival." ”You
also find advertising agencies
picking up expressions from
walls." he said. ”I saw a sign
in a clothing store that said
‘Sweater P0wer,‘ obviously from
the hippie expression, ‘flowerpo—
wer,' " said Dr. Lott.

Apparently Madison Avenue
is tuned in to graffiti because
some of the expressions are so
clever, he added.

Couldn't Keep Up

"There is no particular per-
sonality type who writes on the
wall," said Dr. Lott, ”The writ-
ings are just a form of clever-
ness and they do give a momen-
tary release or jolt."

Dr. Lott felt the present pol—
icy concerning graffiti on the wall
was better than the former one.
It was really a physical impos-
sibility of keeping up with all

he said.

The people who are writing on
the wall show some responsibility
since they do not paint on per-
manent buildings on campus, Dr.
Lott said.

  

Brint Milward, U.N. Seminar chairman, talks with a representative
at last year's seminar. The topic of the seminar for this year is the

Mideast Crisis.
U.N. Seminar Focuses

On Middle East Crisis

For most students the best source of world news is their news-

paper. F or some students a newspaper isn’t enough.

It is for the latter that the
YM-YWCA United Nations
Seminar was planned. Within
three weeks 70 students from
the University and Transylvania
College will be holding private
conferences in the United Na-
tions with delegates from major
powers on the Mideast crisis
and the role the U.N. played
in it.

One reason the group is
studying the Mideast conflict
is to see what effect the U.N.
as a world peacemaker has on
the big powers, said Brint Mil-
ward, Seminar chairman. When
the United States and Russia
agreed to let the U.N. handle
the problem, instead of inter-
vening directly, the war was
localized. Milward offered this
as a contrast to the situation in
Vietnam, where the U.N. was
not called upon early in the
conflict.

“The biggest problem in the
Mideast is the refugee,” Mil-
ward said. The group will ex-
plore this aSpect of the conflict
with representatives from the
U.N. Refugee Commission, the

U.N. Mid e a st Peacekeeping ~

Force and a U.N. Secretariat
member.

Tm; KENTUCKY KERNEL

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky. Lex-
ington, Kentucky 40606. Second class
postage paid at Lexington. Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods. and once during the simmer
session.

Published by the Board of Student
Publications. UK Post Office Box 4986.

Begun as the Cadet in 18“ and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.

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

 

$9
Per copy. from files — $.10

 

 

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Long Leg Sliponty .. 8.00
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Bro (A.B.C. 32-38) .. . 4.00

 

 

 

 

 

After the delegates and rep—
resentatives speak, there will be
question and answer sessions.
“Last year there were some
quite lively discussions between
the students and the delegates,”
Milward said.

Not all the students’ time will
be spent in the U.N. during the
stay from Oct. 18 to 22. Their
nights will be free to spend as
they wish in the city, as well
as all day Saturday until noon
Sunday. The steering commit-
tee also will provide information
on cultural activities in the city,
apd arrange theater tickets for
the students. Cost of transporta-
tion and accomodations for the
seminar is $95.

THE KENIUCKY KERNm'Wurmy,‘ Sept. 23, 1967 —3

OCSA Backs Cook’s Bill .

The Off-Campus Student As-
sociation (OCSA) voted Tues-
day night to back a bill to
revolutionize Student Govem-
ment representation.

The bill, sponsored by SC
President Steve Cook and pre-
sented to OCSA by Logan
Gray, the association's repre-
sentative to Student Govem-
ment, would increase representa-
tion for off-campus students and
conceivably give OCSA 14 of 59
seats in Student Government.

Elected Tuesday to represent

~ For SC Representation

OCSA, Gray told members he
believed neither Cook’s bill for
representation nor an opposing
bill would pass in Student Gov-
emment.

A final bill, probably a
merger of both, would be passed
later, he said.

The idea of making OCSA a
“d y n a m i c organization on
campus" was discussed. To do
so, however, off-campus stu-
dents would have .to become
active, said the group’s presi-
dent. Tom qul.

 

ORIENTATION GUIDES
May Pick Up Their Checks
N O W

in the

Administration Annex Building

 

..._-'_~._.‘r

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘3
A Coffee House for Students arid Faculty
3l3 RoseL‘one
Friday and Saturday Guest Artists
8:00. pm. — l:OO o.m. Welcome
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Activism. Not End In Itself

Campus activist Billy Murrell
is out to change the Kentucky
driver licensing statute which he
finds absurd. The law allows hold—
ers of automobile licenses recip—
rocal rights on motorcycles. Ac-
cording to Murrell such recipro-
city doesn’t make sense.

So what does he decide to do
about it? Practice a little civil
disobedience, of course: like drive
around Lexington without a license
until he is picked up. His argument
during trial went, “it is absurd
that a person with a driver's li-
cense obtained by an automobile
driving test should have recipro-
cal rights on a motorcycle.”

His premise seems well founded,
but there is real question whether
the disobedience approach carries
wisdom with it in this case. Li-
censing of motorcycles is hardly
a loaded political issue with im-
plications of deep social inequit-

ies. It is questionable whether a
dramatic incident will cause such
public outrage that legislators will
be brought to their knees in sub-
mission.

A far more reasonable method
to get a law changed is do inves-
tigation and research, draft up a
bill to be put before the legisla-
ture, and work to muster strength
for its passage. “

There are bad laws and inequit-
able social conditions which de-
mand the activist approach of civil
disobedience. But activists who are
sincerely interested in effecting
change — not merely splashing
about to get personal attention—
ought to remember that it is fi—
nally accomplished through thor—
oughly reasoned, well wrought leg—
islation.

That kind of legislation comes
about not through spectacle but
through hard work and tenacity.

Hell Raising: It’s The“ Policy
At University Of Kansas, Too

Our policy is to raise hell.

Not hell as Joe Freshman and
his Suzy Coed might raise it on a
wet Friday afternoon, but hell
raised in what may be called a
”journalistic" manner.

Such hell—raising begins with the
premise that if the boat needs rock—

ing, we may jolly well sink it.

Women Freed
In Old Virginia

Women seem to be winning lib—
eration all over the South.

Not only are they being con-
sidered decent creatures to tread
dormitory lounges at the Dorm
Complex, but they may soon be
allowed in men’s rooms at the Uni—
versity of Virginia.

What’s more, UV President Ed-
gar Shannon Jr. announced provi-
sions which will allow the girls
to come by on weekends—that time
of the week when everyone knows
students are their wildest.

As at UK this new attitude
regarding females as independent,
fully human people has not de-
veloped without long, deliberative
discussion. A special committee
spent a whole year formulating
the policy and making extensive
studies. And President Shannon
was very explicit in pointing out
the ”tremendous responsibility"
that students were entrusted with.

The capacity for doing trivia
seems widespread.

In finer terms, this means that
if our All Student Council should
begin to unconsciously legislate
itself out of existence, we will tell
you about it on the news pages
without bias or inaccuracy. On this
page, however, our editorial writers
may disregard fears of bias and,
as Hamlet once exclaimed, ”know
a more honid hent.”

However, exposingthe farsical— '
or exposing anything for that mat-
ter—is not the sole job of a hell-
raising newspaper. To complement
the expose, we must search be-
hind the mundane and even make
the mundane readable. To that
end, we’ll report the deeds and—
if it be the case—the misdeeds of
Strong Hall and all who hold
authority. We’ll poke around among
the student body, writing about
the ersatz hippie or the young
Minuteman, the power-grabbers
and the power despisers, the tuned
in and the pressed-down.

In short, we intend to bash and
juxtapose lobic and ethic, making
hell—raising and its adherents, hell-
raisers, responsible.

Dan Austin, Managing Editor

Daily Kansan

Kernel

War involves in its progress
such a train of unforeseen and un-
supposed circumstances that no
human wisdom can calculate the
end. It has but‘one thing certain,
and that is to increase taxes.

Tom Paine

 

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

UNIVERSITY or KENTUCKY

ESTABLISHED 1894

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

Helen McCloy, Managing Editor

Dick Kimmins, Associate Managing Editor
Ossilyn Ellis, Women's Editor

Kerry Powell, Graduate Assistant

William F. Knapp, Jr., Editor-ln-Chief

THURSDAY, SEPT. 28, 1967

 

 

Frank Browning, Editorial Page Editor
Bill Thompson, Cartoonist

Guy Mendes, Sports Editor

Rick Bell, Director of Photography

ASSISTANT MANAGING EDITORS

Robert Brandt, Martin Webb,

Del Futrell,

Jo Warren, Lee Becker, Darrell Christian

BUSINESS STA FF

Hank Mil rm, Advertising Manager

Mike Moore, Asst. Advertising Manager

Mike Halpin, Circulation Manager

Mary McGee, Advertising Salesman

Earl Oremus, Delivery

 

 

 

‘Where The Hell’s Your School Spirit . . . ?’

H ",1

' ' l/Y’llllllr i.

 

 

 

Vending Machines Give More Drink
Per Penny Than New Grill Does

By DAVID HOLWERK

The suspicians ofmany were confirmed
recently when an experiment was carried
out in the Student Center Crill concerning
the size of the new soft drink cups. With
the aid of Student Covemment Repre-
sentative Phil Patton it was conclusively
proved that the average vending machine
gives more drink per penny than the Grill
does.

Patton purchased two fifteen—cent
cokes in the new ten ounce cups (the old
ones were sixteen ounce) while we pur—
chased three dime cokes from the ma-
chine in the basement of the Student
Center. Patton asked the lady on duty

 

at the drink bar to fill his cups for him
as she normally does at lunch, but she
refused. He finally prevailed on her, how-
ever, to watch him fill the cups with ice
to a level somewhat below the normal
level of ice which she provided.

He then filled these two cups with
'coke.

These two sets of drinks. both of
which had cost thirty cents, were then
drained through a perforated cup. Even
with the ~lessened ice levels in the Grill
drinks the machine cups yielded over
an ounce more coke. Moreover, Patton
had filled his cups to overflowing, while

we had through clumsiness spilled some
of ours.

Free Coffee Over

This is not the only instance of ques-
tionable practices in the Grill. The prac-
tice of free coffee with meals has been
discontinued despite the fact that this
coffee costs less than a penny per cup.
The new coffee dispensers dispense about
half a cup of coffee. The small drink
cups are now five ouncers. The price
of all sandwiches has gone up a nickel.

The reason for this general increase
in price and decrease in quantity is
a combination of inflation and the ridi-
culous remodeling job completed over the
summer. Nobody is happy with the new
arrangement, and the cost (rumored to be
“around $60,000) seems to be partly re-
sponsible for the increase in prices.

Now. in addition to the new burlap
baroque monstrosity in the (Irill, signs
in the Student Center indicate that ex-
tensive remodeling of the whole building
is being considered.‘With this in mind
we offer the following suggestions to
Frank Harris, Student Center Director.

’Under no circumstances reduce the
usable room in the building as was done
in the (Irill.

) Make no improvements which will
cost the students of the University any
extra money.

)If someone tells you that burlap and
plywood would make a cute little wall
covering, kick him.

Above all pay no attention to the

Grill. except to heed the errors of the
ways of others.

Letter To The Editor

Prof Corrects Letter

To The Editor Of The Kernel:

I appreciated your printing of my let-
ter concerning the Ernst. Mayr seminar
on The Meaning of Evolution. However,
the omission of a complete line near the
beginning of the second paragraph caused
it to be somewhat devoid of sense.

The paragraph should read: “The in-
terest of the audience (mostly students
by the way—a good sign!) was expressed
by the excellent attendance both after-
noons (SRO) and by the attention and
applause given to a clear and stimulat—
ing presentation from which the audience
left with a better understanding of the
meaning of evolution."

John M. Carpenter
Professor of Zoology

 

 

 t

v'l‘HEj xaNi‘IPCRY titanium ’I‘I‘Iursday, sap. 28, ‘1967— 5/

Way Clearing For UK Parking Structure

The City of Lexington has
filed suit against the Common-
wealth of Kentucky and the UK
Board of Trustees to have Boone
Alley closed.

The suit, filed at the request
of the University, would clear
the waylfor construction of a
parking structure to be built be-
tween Clifton and Hilltop ave-
nues. '

The action, according to John
C. Darsie, vice president for bus-
iness affairs, is ”nothing more
than a formality."

Mr. Darsie said since the

structure will project over part of
Boone Alley, it is necessary to
close the street. He said the city
must first pass an ordinance to
close the street (which it has
already done), then a suit must
be filed against the University,
which owns the property bord-
ering on Boone Alley.

Mr. Darsie emphasized that
the city must take the initiative
in the action, which it did at
the University's request.

UK's Department of Public
Relations said the parking struc-
ture to be built in'the Boone

Alley area is one of three that
the University plans to erect. This
structure will be parking building
No. 2.

The No. .1 parking structure
will be built off University Drive,
which runs by the Complex and
and the Medical Center.The area

Jormerly occupied by the Sigma

Nu house will be the site for
the third parking structure.

Bids for the structures will be
let in early spring, and No. 2
should be completed by the end
of 1%8. The other two structures
should be ready in 1969.

 

+ CLASSIFIED ADS .+

av

 

to place me phone UK
extension an: or etc in at the ot-
noe. 111 Journalism. m 0 to noon.
1 to S. Henley through Friday.

'03 CALI

 

 

FOR SALl'r—S-Oo Bonds in excellent
condition. all extras included; new
tires. Bestofleromm. Calla”-
mafterlpan. sass:

wow-1m Camera Coupe, mist blue,
1200 six. stick. Sorority dolliea love

£3me at 03.3“. ”8“

FOR SAIL—1085 l0 midget—all op-
tions, 23,000 miles. Hake otter. See
Joeliagrewatmw.uain SLNSM

 

 

 

FOR SALE—1m Amtin ; xx
[1 3.0!!! 3.3.0.; wire w ; all
other extras. Gall 133—180. nest

 

FOR SALE—him stereo system. so
watt All-FM receiver. Genson speak

era. deck changer. Separately
or together. Call ex «27 after 7
9m nest

 

FOR SALE—l0” Rondas Hawk.
Genus-om between 7 10.278“

FOR SALE—Guitar, harmony classic

 

 

rice. lint ' condition; sacrifice at
:02! cash. Call 882-1000. Rick Hansen.

FOR SALE—a ma wing chairs.
1 lounge chair. 1 Sal oval braided
rug. thovalbraidedrug,a1lgood
condition. Call 895-1301 atter 5:30;qu

FOR SALE—800 cc. Suzuki. 1007. ex-
cellent condition; windshield and

 

 

 

saddleba ;”0 and take over pay-

ments ( per mo.). Call 204-038

or M after 5 pm. ”Sit
IISCILLANROUS

 

MEMBERSHIP to YWCA can be ob-
tained in Room 201 of Student Cen-
ter. I78“

YILL LIKE HILL -— PIP RALLY
COLISIIUM — THURSDAY NIGHT
SEPT. 10 — 6:30 p.m.
PRIZES FOR

SPIRIT MIN AND WOMEN ‘

JAM SESSION Friday. Sept. 29 from
8-12. Student Center Ballroom. with
Mag '7‘. Sponsored by Theta Chi
Fraternity. 2882i

 

 

 

 

UNITARIAN
CHURCH

at Lexington
Clays Mill Pike
Phone 277—6248

To Whom It May
Concern

WHO IS
CONCERNED:

The issue is Vietnam.
The discussion:

WHAT KIND OF
WAR
ARE YOU WILLING
TO FIGHT?

Student Religious
Liberals

Sunday—7:30 p.m.

Student Center
Room 'I 15‘

Refreshments served.

This Sunday:
Speaker-—
I, Dr. Raymond A. Wilkie

Associate Prof. of Counseling
and Guidance, UK

Subject-
"Freedom—Individual and Social"

 

 

 

 

roam

 

FOR RENT ——First floor apartment.
threebodrooms, furnished. shower
‘ann‘dkitehenagx'studenttguie. par:h
space permon area
studiesitCallN-m atterllpzm‘s“

 

WANT”

 

WWANTlD—Maleortemalestu-
dent to demonstrate new product in
thisarea. PickyourownhoursJ'arn
lromflO-flbperweeh. cairn-nos,
RayBeatw.

WANTED—Mid-year gradu-
ates. Start teaching Jan. 1 . Two
Ihglish majors. one elementary, one
home economics. Apply Bellevue
Schools. Bellevue. Ky., Ben flora.
Supt. Call ”0-81-2100. sass:

WANTED—Male roommate to share
new apartment. 179 Lakeshore Drive.
Call 309—1394 before noon or wea-
ends. 388“

ELECTRIC BASS PLAYER. t years
experience wishes to hook up with
local rock band. Call Dave, 270-0003.

 

 

 

 

WANTED—Typing and baby sitting
jobs, by student nurse. Call“
ask! arm: ”Sit

 

PIMONAL

 

YOUNG urns UNITE! Preview
work crew. summer stafl. campers,
meet tor tti teed. Sept. fl.
0:20 pm. 1
233-1071.

Go—GOGmISneededfiorBeauArts
Ball Oct. 21; audit