xt7bg7373f0m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bg7373f0m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19691001  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October  1, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  1, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7bg7373f0m section xt7bg7373f0m City Police On Campus
By DAN

GOSSETT

Kernel Staff Writer
In most of the country's major
colleges and universities, situations have arisen, cither as a result of campus disorders or of drug abuse investigations, that have
brought law enforcement personnel onto the college
campus. Quite often, university administrators have
invited the agencies, but Just as often the agencies
conduct investigations on campus without the knowledge or support of the administration.

...

In the case of UK, all law enforcement agencies
that have jurisdiction within the state also have a prior
colleges and unijurisdiction at all the
state-support-

versities.

There docs, however, exist an unwritten agreement on
procedure between the Dean of Students Office, the
Safety and Security Department and the Lexington
Police Department. Dean of Students Jack Hall commented, "The procedure in the past has been that if we
desired the assistance of the Lexington police on campus, we could just call and they would cooperate.
As a result of these situations,
question has arisen Likewise, if they intended to make arrests or conduct
in the minds of administrators, students and public
on campus, they would contact myself
officials as to when and why the presence of law investigations
or Joe Burch (director of the Safety and Security Deofficers on campus is justifiable, and whether adminpartment) before they came."
istrators have any authority to govern such presence.
Liaison Officers
When the university or college involved is a private
the problem becomes sticky. When no actual
There is also at least one other situation where
institution,
crime has been committed, there is a case for noninterUK authorities and the law enforcement agencies coference in the functions of the institution by the authorie
demonstraoperate. In situations such as
ties. When a
institution is involved,
tions, the University requests that a communications
however, the legal side of the problem is more clear cut. liaison officer be assigned to the campus from both
large-scal-

state-support- ed

Why?

the Lexington Police Department and the State Police. The function of these officers is to stay in contact
with their departments in case situations develop that
would require the assistance of those agencies to protect University property and personnel. They usually
work very closely with Safety and Security under those
conditions.
On Sept. 16, the day of the SDS demonstration
during a meeting of the UK Board of Trustees, several
Lexington police officers, includingdetectivesjay Sylves
tro and Andrew Thornton, were identified as being on

campus. Both men were dressed casually.
On Monday, Sept. 22, officer Sylvestro told The
Kentucky Kernel that he had been off duty on Sept.
16 and had been on
campus because he was interested
in the demonstrations for personal reasons.
Dean Hall told the Kernel Sept. 23 that he did not
know why officer Sylvestro had been on campus on the
16th, but that Thornton had been acting as communications liaison officer for the city police. During an!
Continued on Pare 6, CoL 1

FHE KENTUCKY
Wednesday, Oct.

1, 1969

IN

1

r

University of Kentucky, Lexington

vv

1

Vol. LXI, No. 26

(

'

I

.

AWS Proposes 'No Hours'

For Upperclass Women
By DOTTIE BEAN
Associate Managing Editor
The Associated Women Students committee to investigate
women's hours has drafted a final
recommendation for a change in
hours in women's residence halls.
The recommendation suggests
that the change be accomplished
by Dec. 1, 1969, to go into effect
for all semesters thereafter.
Basically, the change involves
a lengthening of hours for freshmen women and a system of "no
hours" for all sophomore, junior
and senior women.
The recommendation also suggests a means of financial support
for the system, including a hike
in room and board charges of
$15.

Based On Survey

The recommendation was
based on a survey taken last semester by AWS which found that
the present system was "neither
satisfactory nor functioning properly." Of 2,363 surveys given out,
68.43 percent were returned and
75 percent of the surveys expressed dissatisfaction with the
present system.
In the recommendation, the
committee stated that one objection to the present hours system was that it "hinders rather
than promotes maturity " and "re- -

suits in complete disrespect for
the system and in its continued
abuse."
The changes recommended by
the committee:
Freshmen women's hours
from the beginning of the semester until Oct. 1 of each fall semester would remain the same
10:30
p.m. Monday through
Thursday, 1 a.m. Friday and
Saturday, and midnight on Su-

ndayto allow freshmen women
a period of "transition." There-

after, closing hours would be set
at midnight Sunday through
Thursday and at 2 a.m. Friday
and Saturday.
No Hours'
A system of "no hours"
would be set up for all women
who have attained 30 credit hours
at

the University or sophomore

status.
Other recommendations suggested by the committee deal with
the securing of residence halls
at night and the financial solution for maintaining the proposed
new system.
On the first point, it was suggested that aii residence hail-b- oth

women's and men's be

locked at midnight every night.
For freshmen women, admittance
after closing hours would be
handled by corridor advisers and

desk clerks, as is presently done.

In upperclass residence halls

in which some freshmen students
are housed, corridor advisers and
night clerks would be expected
to stay on duty until the end of
freshman hours.
Night Supervisors

To facilitate the "no hours"
plan, the committee recommended the hiring of night supervisors. They would come on duty
at midnight and go off duty at
7 a.m. It was suggested they
be students in good standing
with the University and be 21
years or older. They would work
not more than 30 hours and be
paid at a rate of $2 per hour.
It was also recommended that
a buzzer system be installed in
the residence halls and that the
supervisors be provided with
"master rosters" which would include the names of all men students and those sophomore, junior and senior women students
iligible for "no hours." IDs of students out after closing hours
would be checked against the
master roster.
Women students, under the
recommendation, would still be
required to sign out after 8 p.m.
If a student did not return before the supervisor went off duty
Continued on Pare 8, Col. 1

Students Challenge Trustees

Speaker Policy Incites Meeting
By MDCE IEERNDON

Assistant Managing Editor
Student Government President Tim Futrell
announced Tuesday that the proposed policy govspeakers could lead to an unerning
usual
meeting between individual student sand Board of Trustees members.
The proposed meeting would come in the
form of an open hearing in which students could
voice their opinions to a committee of Trustees
regarding speaker policy, Futrell explained.
No date has been set for the hearing, but
Futrell indicated that it would come sometime
in October.
Speaker Policy Tabled
The speaker policy, which Futrell referred to
as "a kind of student code governing
speakers," was adopted last fall by the University Senate. The Trustees tabled passage of the
document, however, pending the appointment
of a new University president.
face-to-fa-

ce

In essence, the original University Senate proposal grants latitude in the acquiring of guest

speakers for University-sponsore- d
programs.
Among other things, it states, "The University
expects that various speakers who come to the
campus will represent different shades of opinion
and that some will express controversial and unpopular views.
"It is essential to free inquiry and the ultimate discovery of truth that all ideas be freely
subjected to critical analysis in the University

setting."
Speaker Policies Listed
that the University should act responCiting
sibly in inviting speakers and that it expects its
guests to act responsibly, the document lists
three major policies.
No law or governing regulation of the University be violated by the proposed speech or
program.

u

Continued on Pare 8, CoL

4

1

C?r-'-

;
'-

.

j

"""in--

These girls are not practicing for the World
Series. They are simply enjoying a late
noon game of softball on the UK Soccer
Field.
Kernel Photo By Bob Brewer
after-LrOO-

datCll

.

U

'Moratorium' Planned

SDS Urges Faculty
To Suspend Classes
In conjunction with the national "War Moratorium," scheduled for Oct. 15 at more than
500 college campuses, UK faculty
have received an appeal either
to cancel classes on that day
or to devote the class period
to a discussion on the war and
its relationship to the field in
which they are teaching.
In a letter sent to the faculty and staff of the University,
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), in connection with
other campus organizations, is
seeking faculty support for the
moratorium which is being held
to recognize the 40,000 Americans killed in Vietnam.
Teachers To Be Contacted
Karen Schroeder, assistant
chairman of the moratorium, said
that individual students would be
contacting as many professors as
possible to get their reaction to
the letter. "If there is enough
support within an individual department, then we are going to
contact the head of that department and ask that classes be cancelled for the day so that as many
students as possible can attend
the scheduled program."
Miss Schroeder said that she
is "optimistic" about the outcome of the appeal. "We lave

contacted several teachers already and they seem to be very
much in favor of the idea."
Asked if the appeal would
come into conflict with administration rules for closing classes,
Miss Schroeder said that an attempt had been made to obtain
information from the American
Association of University Professors but that no response had
yet been given.
Miss Schroeder said that consideration was being given to
changing the moratorium from
SDS sponsorship and getting support for the program from as
many organizations as possible.
Temporary Itinerary Planned
The proposed program for the
day includes speakers Robert
Sedler and possibly U.S. Sen.
John Sherman Cooper and Dr.
Otis Singletary. However, Miss
Schroeder stated that no response
had been received from either
President Singletary or Cooper.
A film showing is also planned.
In order to facilitate planning
for the program, the chairmen,
Dick Pozzuto, Frank Shannon
and Miss Schroeder, are asking that faculty members who
support the proposals contact
them if they are not reached by
letter.

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct.

1,

19

Voices Toward Another Dimension
Winter

Mid-Jul- y

A Short Story

Ily Gary Rcxroat

-

A snake slumbered quietly and
without breath under a sandy
and porous.
rock,
wind-picke- d

d
clods tf
grass stood brown and
vibrating like newly struck arrows in the ground. The slightest
occurence of wind sent waves of
fainting grey smoke into an evaporation toward the tree. The
single tree stood in a pile of crusty dust scabs as a unit in the
wind not as limb to limb. Not
far from it there sat an old woman in a wheel chair staring

Nearby,
reed-ta-

dust-banke-

ll

steadily at the train railings that
stretched for a long way in opposite directions in front of her.
No tracks leading to the wheels
could be seen. The wind inhaled
slightly, drawing the flakey dirt
up and around the old woman's
legs and flapped gently the print
dress and apron she wore. Her
folded hands did not move but
her flaccid eyelids melted down
over her eyes still gripping the
train tracks.
Far away there was a city.
On a corner, leaning on a
man
lamp post, an
fell to his knees and over onto
his face, dropping a bottle that
exploded its liquid into the gutter. No sudden crowd. No women with
mouths.
hand-cuppe- d

Nothing.

Up the street, cars sat parked
and neat at meters that were all
expired. One had rested up on

"Do tell me of yourself and of
tersection. Her skipping stopped gently as if a portion of her skin
as she caught sight of might be sucked away, and sat the family."
suddenly
"All is well."
the man by the lamp post with down beside her. The old
"Your father? How is your
his face in the gutter. A puz- woman's eyes ungripped the
zled look creased her brow as tracks suddenly and danced into father?"
.;
she walked slowly down toward the sparkle of the little girl's
"Oh, Dad? He is well. Only
the man.
"Hello, Child, it has been he drinks too much and I fear
much too long since I have seen I am learning to hate."
With her white shoe she
A whistle of wind caught a
you."
prodded his hand, then his side.
and I cloud of dust and tumbled it up
"Yes, Grandmother,
She reached down and clutching
and up and out of sight.
you."
a handful of hair, pulled the head
up from its resting place.
"Dad?" she whispered aloud.

the high curb and against the
meter shedding fragments of glass
around it. Into the intersection,
an old Ford and a bus had met
and capsized each other. But the
lame wheels were not spinning
and the spew of gas had long

-

since stopped.
Up the hill to the intersection, a little girl was walking. She
huffed at the steepness of the hill
and stopped for a while at the
d
top looking back. Her
shoes were skuffed a little but the white anklets she wore
inside them were spotless and
stretched tight without a wrinkle. An open door caught her gaze
as she was about to proceed on
up into the intersection. She
walked in. It was a 'drugstore
filled
with antisepwhite-strappe-

She lay his head down, gently,
and stood up, looking in the
direction she had been going.
She walked back up the street
and around the comer, humming

uK

now.

yS rsJ
$rSyjr

Blocks and blocks of houses
she passed before she finally came

row-on-ro- w

tics, shampoos, and toothpastes
in various sizes. She disregarded
all this and walked directly to
the back where the candy counter was. Her fingers stretched for
the higher more expensive pieces,
which she immediately devoured
of
without
any hesitation
thorough chewing whatsoever.
Walking back toward the entrance she saw a man folded
on the drawer of the cash register with the tax button lodged
in his right eye and the subtotal denting his cheek.
"You don't mind if I borrow
this candy, do you, Mr. Wimber-ley?- "
Her eyes upturned and one
foot turned into the instep of the
other.
"Oh," she murmured as she
skipped out into the street and
into the very center of the in

j

f

to the broad marble steps leading up into the train depot. Makp
ing each step with
care, the little girl made her way
into the gaping door and across
floor and out
the
into the rear where the trains
rested mammothly. She boarded
the ledge of the first few' steps
and slid silently into a window
seat just as the train hissed and
jolted forward.

sf

But

I

thought
left flank"
was a

military

I

I

I

slap-cris-

paper-littere- d

The trip was short.
The train halted at a barren
flat of land and the little girl
unboarded. As the train pulled
away, the old woman came into
view from across the track. Stepping carefully over the railings
the little girl walked over to her
and kissed her on the cheek,

(if jl!ls(

i

Movies Aimed Toward Today's Youth
Top The Lists In Profits, Attendance
r

-

ToHOLLYWOOD (AP)
day's formula for successful films:

Reach the "now" generation.

the movie

For many years

industry has known that its market is the young crowd: various
surveys have indicated that most

economic factors:
1. Star names are unimportanthence the budget is not
burdened by stars who demand
n
from a
to a million
half-millio-

dollars.

filmgoers are under 25. Yet pro-

ducers seemed unable to fashion
its product in the youthful mode.
Movie themes continued to be
Establishment-oriented- ,
and
most top stars were in their 40s,
50s or even 60s.

"The Graduate" changed all
that. Without name stars or
production, the film
quickly racked up a $50 million
gross. Obviously it communicated with youth, and parents went
to see it, too, perhaps to learn
more about the generation gap.
Current releases confirm the
box office value of
high-power-

youth-oriente-

d

movies. Such films as "Mid-

night Cowboy," "Easy Rider,"
"Goodbye Columbus," "Last
Summer" and "Alice's Restaurant" are drawing crowds. Their
casts are composed mostly of
unknowns and the budgets are
slight. Yet they are doing better
business than most expensive
stars.
productions with
Richard Zanuck recently assumed the presidency of 20th
Century-Fox- ,
adding the post to
his production duties at the stubig-nam-

e

Festival To Feature Atkins, Terry

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed live times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, tind once during the summer
session.

Published by the Board of Student
I'uHumUoiis, UK Post Office liox 4at3.
begun as the Cadet in ltta and

published continuously as the Kernel
since lyl5.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reider buy. Any
fatsM or misleading ad ertising should
be reported to The Lctlors.

category will compete the

Chet Atkins, famed country
and western performer, and Clark
Terry, outstanding trumpeter of
the "Tonight Show," are only
two of the celebrities who will
judge "Music Festival U. S. A."
Advertised as the "biggest
event of it's kind in the world,"
Music festival will be judging
more than fifty craftsmen and
artists who will be preforming
in the fields of rock, country,
western, and pop. The scenic
"Kaintuck Territory," four miles
southwest of Kentucky Dam Village, will be, the setting for the
festival. .
There will be a winner in
each category during the three
day festival. The winner in each

after- -

tival to determine the grand prize
wineer.
The final grand winner will
receive a total of $11,000 in cash
and prizes. The two runners-uwill receive a total of $6,000 in
cash and prizes.
This contest is not to prove
which type of music, rock, country, or pop, is best, but to make
an award to the best group regardless of category.
The handicraft and artists fair,
another attraction of the festival,
will feature Ray Harms. Harms
has been cited as America's foremost naturalist painter.

iiij lp
DAWAHARE'S College Shop
395

S. LIME

Phone 252 - 4733

Open

9-- 5,

Mon.-Sa-

t.

p

IJTJ Ilk

1st OUTDOOR SHOWING!
STARTS 8:00
ADM. $1.50

NOW!

II

f.

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innrrii

'

I

$

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dio. At 34, he is the youngest of
the top film bosses, and it appears natural he would favor
movies of greater appeal to the
young audience.
The advantages of the youth-oriente- d
films are many. Besides

The Kentucky

2. Youthful directors can be
used, and the new breed of directors often shoot faster and
sometimes better than Hollywood
veterans. They also prefer to work
in authentic locales, thus avoiding studio overhead.

the large audience, there are these

prtmenta An Allen Klein
rTouucnon tiuruig

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Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve
are "The April Fools"
Also starring Peter Lawford, Jack Weston,
Myrna Loy and Charles Boyer
Title son sun by Dion.K- - WarkW TilU- - M 11,1c
ly Hurl lUlur.u h and I rics by Hal David
Music lu.ni m ifin.ilMHJiu ir.uk on Columbia knoij, A J.iU !'nl
ji nui Uilmio.l.H
btret-nplaby Hal IUcsmrr iWuivd by ,.id,.,i Can. .11 Ihi.vkd by Smart
IWulx r.:
ANationalUrnerdll'icluriskika- ACiiKinaCViilci hiliiru-sc-niaiion-

Plus: Hayley Mills "TWISTED

NERVE"

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wctlncs1ayt Oct. I.

4

Bright, Dexter Solicit Fraternities
For Support Of New Ticket Plan

-

if

JIM FUDGE
organizations desiring 30 or more
tickets to send one representaKernel Staff Writer
Steve Bright and Bill Dexter,
tive to get all tickets. The representative would go to MemoriStudent Government representaa new plan for al Coliseum at 6:30 p.m. the
tives, presented
football ticket distribution at a Monday before the game with UK
identification cards for those
called meeting of the Interfra-ternitCouncil Tuesday.
wishing tickets. A lottery would
be held to determine the order
Bright and Dexter made the
of distribution to the groups.
effort to rally
presentation in an
for their plan, which will
Residence hall units not exsupport
be presented to the Student Gov- ceeding one floor in size would
ernment
be eligible for group seating unsaid they hope the der this plan.
They
charges will be approved and that
Kernel Photo By Bob Brewer
the University's ticket distribumembers Bill Dexter and Steve Bright tion committee will implement
IFC
"rally support" behind their proposed method these changes in time for the
A-- for football ticket distribution at Tuesday LSU game.
The new plan would allow
IFC meeting.
night's
By

y

this-week-

Group Tickets

1900- -3

.

Group seating would be assigned first in Section B and second in Section A, with the exception of those seats in Section
B allocated to the UK marching
band.
p
seating would be
given first in section C and second in section E. The change
in group seating would allow four
additional windows to be opened
on the Tuesdays preceding the
game from 12 noon to 3 p.m.
at Memorial Coliseum.
Non-grou-

TODAY and
TOMORROW

W7

The deadline for announcements li

EZemtrnkiaiBd

7:30 p.m. two days prior to tho first
publication of Items In this eolamn.

0,

Today
Drama will meet at 7:30 p.m. in
7
of the Student Center,
Rooms
sponsored by SAR.
The History of Country Music will
7
of the
meet at 6:30 in Rooms
Student Center, sponsored by SAR.
The Draft will meet at 7 p.m. in
7
Rooms
of the Student Center,
sponsored by SAR.
The Study of Marxism will meet at
8:30 p.m. in Rooms
of the Student Center, sponsored by SDS.
The Function of Law in a Democratic Society will meet at 7:30 p.m.
at 231 E. Maxwell St.

SENIOR' CLASS'
PORTRAITS
Call' Ext.

Dr. Leo Buscaglia, Special Education
Department, University of Southern
California, the first In the Distinin
guished Lecturer Serieswill Special Edspeak on
ucation for 1969-7"Love in the Classroom affective
modes for behavior modification"
Thursday, Oct. 2 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Commerce Building Auditorium.

Coming Up

113-11-

113-1-

Tomorrow
A Study of Marcuse will meet at
of the Stu7 p.m. In Rooms 113-11- 7
dent Center, sponsored by SDS.
Dr. Gene Mason will address himself to the question of "Politicians
and their Morality?" This talk is
the first in a new speaker series that
is being sponsored by the Newman
Center. All are invited to attend on
Thursday, Oct. 2 at 7:45 p.m. in
Room 245 of the Student Center.
There will be a dance in the Grand
Ball Room of the Student Center on
Oct. 2 from
p.m. featuring "Crab-tre- e

ROOM 0004 KASTLE HALL

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE NOW FOR
MORNINGS, AFTERNOONS and EVENINGS

Gorup," "Flyt" and "Plastic
Garden." Proceeds go toward sending "Crabtree Group" to U.S.A. Music Festival.

"Societas Pro Leglbus." the leadhonorary for
ership and scholastic now
accepting
pre-lastudents, is
applications for membership. Applications may be obtained at the East
Information Desk in the Student Center or at 103 Bradley Hall. Deadline
is Friday, Oct. 10.
Hillel will have a box and Bagel
brunch with B'nai B'rith on Sunday,
Oct. 5 at noon at Koinonia House,
corner of Rose St. and Rose Lane.
The Weekly Student Government
meeting will
be held at 4 p.m. on Oct. 9 In Room
245 of the Student Center. All interested students are Invited to attend and ask questions of the Student
Government President.
w

Executive-Student-Pre-

UK Placement Service
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with PPG Industries.
Register Friday for an appointment Tuesday with Central Trust Co.
Accounting, Business Administration, Economics (BS. MS); Computer
Science (BSC; Law. Locations: Greater Cincinnati and Hamilton County
area. December, May graduates.

ww,vww,v,VA'',',Mv'Y'v''v

PICKLING AND SPICING RECIPES.
recipes for
watermelon pickle, tomato garlic catsup, apple butter,
salad dressings, piccalilli and other
spiced pear chips,
favorite relishes, sauces, spreads, etc. Orig. Pub. at
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OLD-TIM- E

By F. Brobeck. Illus. 110

small-quanti- ty

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SPAIN: A History In Art. By B. Smith. With 245
works of art reproduced in full color. A sumptuous,
beautiful volume; a visual chronicle of Spain over the
centuries her dynasties, Invaders and conquests, flowering of her cultures, religious experience, her beauty
and mysticism as expressed in works of art ranging
from the cave paintings of Altamira (20,000 B.C.) to
Only $17.95
Picasso. 9x13. Pub. at $30.00.
433.

A HISTORY OF ART. From Prehlstorle Times to
tho Present. By Germain Bazln. With 668 illus. Monochrome and color. Man's achievements In painting and
architecture from the cave paintings of the Paleolithic
with
age to the present in concise authritatlve detailcolleca wealth of pictures from public and private
tions. Orig. Pub. at $9.00.
New, completo ed., $3.95
1360.

AMERICAN

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the Life and Death of Jesus. By Dr. H. Schonfcld. The
re
A carefully documeinted
controversial
construction of the arrest and crucifixion as lit was
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planned by Jesus himself. Pub. at $4.95.

By Stuart M. Lynn. Beautiful
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and patios. Orig. Pub. at $7.50. New, com
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pizzas, bfintzes, pastas and cheese cake; uses in on the
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By J. Thompson. Hundreds of photos and
drawings. The remarkable, controversial study of the
Kennedy assassination which "proves" that three gunmen murdered the President. Pub. at $8.95. Only $1.00
666.

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Ed.

AMERICAN NEGRO SONGS AND SPIRltUAl
by J. W. Work. Spirituals, blues and holleJ
sented in this text for your reading and singing enuy- ment. Words and music of over 200 favorite. Drig.
Now, completo cd. Ody$.98
Pub. at $5.00.

DALLAS.

DIO FOR PIRATE TREASURE.
By Robt. I.
Nesmith. Illus. with prints, drawings, maps and photos
of coins and Jewels. Authentic information on burled
and sunken treasure which remain to be discovered.
Tells about the people who are finding treasure and
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THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR. By Earl Schenck
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STUDENT CENTER

October 1st - lOt tn

aJIJ

i

* Drug Use Publicity:
Sensation Or Education?
The abuse of drugs is becom- cinated with the possibility of trying more enticing daily. Editors ing drugs.
are financing feature writers and
Obviously the editors of Time
investigative reporters to delve into are not condoning the rampant
the subject and give graphic de- abuse of drugs, no one is arguing
that point. But are the editors
scriptions of the perils and experof drug users. It seems drugs aware of the effects their detailed
iences
are the topic no one can get enough descriptions might have on those
of. Everywhere one turns there who look at drugs skeptically from
are shouts of "Beware the hazards a distance and take more and more
of drugs."
pleasure in reading persuasive first
Still drugs are becoming more
enticing. If you are under 30, take
the current issue of Time magazine, and read the article entitled
"A Straight Adult." Such articles
are the cause of more and more
interest in regard to personal drug
use. Young people bursting with a
sense of adventure, haunted by
yearning to
goals unachieved,
stretch themselves and become
more alive, delight in the freshness and excitement of experimen-

tation.
Time, in its introduction to "A
Straight Adult," says of the author, who relates his experience

with marijuana, "He is not
ing to persuade anyone
follow his example."

try-

else to

person accounts?
There is a definite need for
improved drug education. Too
many people, usually those who
are most vulnerable to drug abuse,
know too little about drugs and
their effects. There should be no
question in any rational mind concerning the feasibility of advanced
drug education methods. Nor
should there be any question regarding the necessity of pointing
out the common use of drugs in
certain communities. But this recognition must take a rational apseries
proach. A Courier-Journof articles which studied the presence of drug users in the Louisville area was a commendable ed-

drug-craze-

Unfriendly To Colleges
dered its independence and became largely dependent on the govto charitable deductions, ernment and its ubiquitous agenapplied
should be aware that these pro- cies for financing. Any trend away
visos can severely damage the vital from academic freedom needs to be
financing of many worthy and es- resisted, even when it comes in the
sential private institutions in the guise of tax reform.
United States. Certainly the colThe same provisions would be
leges and universities would be
harmful to all kinds of institutions
affected.
and nonprofit agencies depending
The hodgepodge tax reform mea- on
private benevolence, including
sure before the Senate is under
hospitals, churches, YMCAs, founsharp criticism from many sources. dations. Some museums have
It is a hasty conglomerate and may amassed
up to 90 percent of their
have to be largely rewritten. The collections
through gifts of paintproposals which limit deductions ings and similar objects.
for gifts of property which has
It must be realized that public
appreciated in value need oversupport for higher education has
haul. President Abrams of Brandeis
already suffered a decline, due to
University labels these as "catadisorders. Simultaneously
strophic for America's colleges and campus
the American Council on Educauniversities."
tion predicts that private colleges
This legislation would discourwill need to double their financial
age charitable gifts to institutions income over the next five years, if
by ruling that a donor cannot dethey are to survive satisfactorily.
duct as a charitable contribution Under the tax reform provisos now
to a
institution the fair before Congress, this boost in conmarket value of what he proposes tributions will be
impossible.
to give. He would be thrust back
Congress should consider very
to using the original value or to
some other complex formula reduc- seriously what it may be doing
to the colleges and other nonprofit
ing deductability. Such alleged tax
reform would, in President Abram's entities which provide so much
of the thrust and initiative vital
words, be legislation against "a
to American society with this sort
primary lifeline to higher educaof reformist proposals which, franktion."
ly, is not expected to bring in any
The end result would be that vast amount of income anyway.
Christian Science Monitor '
the small private college surren
tax-exem-

pt

Vilify

Vm

al

ucational undertaking.
However, the sensational use of
he is not trying to first person accounts serve little
Perhaps
persuade, but he has succeeded in purpose in the educational