xt7cfx73xk81 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7cfx73xk81/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700904  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September  4, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, September  4, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7cfx73xk81 section xt7cfx73xk81 Tee Kemutocy EQhknel
Friday, Sept. 4,

1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Peace Corp smen
Training Here

direction of Hilda Saunders and
By BRADLEY JEFFRIES
Charles Thoet, language coAssistant Managing Editor
Under a $130,000 contract with ordinators and UK graduate stuthe federal government, the UK dents, the corpsmen spend four
Center for Developmental hours a day learning Spanish.
Change (CDC) this week began
Some of the trainees will betraining Peace Corps volunteers
gin studying hospital administrato be instructors in hospital ad- tion and maintenance at the UK
ministration and maintenance in Medical Center.
According to Dr.
Venezuela.
Griffin, others will train in
According to Dr. Willis H. smaller Appalachian hospitals in
Griffin, associate director of the Kentucky which compare to some
center, the 12 to 14 volunteers in Venezuela.
come from all parts of the United
States and range in age from 18
This project is the eighth
to 70.
Peace Corps training project and
Besides technical and adminithe first in South America. The
strative training, the volunteers seven previous projects were conwill learn the Spanish language, ducted for India and Ceylon. The
Venezuelan history and culture, CDC is a special unit of UK estabgovernment, society and customs. lished in 1966 to identify problems
Families of those volunteers who of developmental change and
are married are encouraged to find strategies for their solution in the
constructive work, and are re- United States and abroad.
ceiving
training to
Staff Varied
help them understand the people
Research and action programs
and adapt to the country more
promote the effective study and
easily.
of developmental
application
Officials Return
principles. Staff members represent the disciplines of agricultural
Three UK representatives recently returned from Venezuela economics, anthropology, ecowhere they spent three weeks nomics, education, geography,
gathering information to aid in political science and sociology.
planning the training program.
They are Vyrle Owens, director of
the project, John Laverty, administrator of the UK hospital,
and I.T. Baldwin, training development officer.
The center's program began
Sept. 1 and ends Dec. 18. In
January the corpsmen will go to
By JEAN RENAKER
Venezuela to spend two years.
Managing Editor
director
John Troconis, deputy
The state of Kentucky has apof the center in Caracas, arrived plied to the
Appalachian Regionat UK this week to brief the al Commission for a $550,000 recoordinators and trainees as to search and demonstration
the purpose of the center, and to develop improved surfacegrant
minto give them a general backing and reclamation techniques
ground on Venezuelan life styles.
in Eastern Kentucky, Cov. Louie
Although the Peace Corps already
B. Nunn announced early yeshas volunteers in the South
terday morning.
American nation, Troconis said
The governor reported that
this is "the first project to inthe grant, if awarded to Kenvolve the cooperation of such tucky, would be the largest ever
higlily qualified volunteers."
given any state for this kind of
Classes Attended
work. He added that he has
The volunteers attend special"reason to believe" that the comly coordinated classes six days a mission will accept the applicaweek, 12 hours a day. Under the tion favorably.
cross-cultur-

Vol. LXII, No. 2

Roller Cited
No Payoffs,
Writer Says

rV :

XI''

r

'

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)-O- ne
of four sports writers involved in a conversation in which
Kentucky defensive tackle David
Roller was alleged to have said
he was being paid to play football has written that he heard
nothing said by Roller which
seemed incriminating.

I

n

"Some of his remarks might
have cast doubts on recruiting
policies, but he did not give
names of anyone at Tennessee,
Alabama or Kentucky who allegedly made the illegal offers,"
wrote Edgar Allen, sports editor
of The Nashville Banner.

in)

Southeastern

al

Kernel Photos By Ken Weaver

Reasonable Reasoner
CBS newsman Harry Reasoner preached moderation last night to
a crowd of about 900 people at the Phoenix Hotel. While admitting

the nation was "in a mess," he advised citizens to begin with
"little steps" to solve problems. (Story on page 7).

Conference

Commissioner A.M. "Tonto"
Coleman launched an investigation into the matter Tuesday
after reading a carbon of a story
published Monday in The St.
Petersburg Times.
Roller was quoted in the story
written by Fred Cirard as saying
colleges bid for football talent by
promising cars, money and other
benefits. Cirard quoted Roller as
saying he accepted Kentucky's
oner because "it was the best

one."

State May. Get $550,000
For Strip Mine Research

Three other sports writers on
tour
the 1970 SEC
of conference football camps were
sitting at the same table near
Roller during a dinner Allen,
Ceorge Lapides, executive sports
editor of The Memphis
and Ed Shearer, Southeastern sports editor of The Associated Press.
Sky-Write- rs

Press-Scimit-

The governor also announced

ar

"We should not permit further growth that brings about
undesirable conditions. This is
"I did not hear many of the
Interior are jointly drawing up the first priority. The second
for a grant of more than priority is, in an orderiy fashion quotes credited by Cirard to
plans
Roller," Allen wrote in a column
$1 million from the Department
and as. promptly as possible, to in his
newspaper.
of the Interior to research sur- remedy the mistakes of the past,"
face mining throughout the state. Nunn said.
Cirard had quoted Roller as
Alabama offered him two
Problems Discussed
Six areas of research were saying
were named in the
The announcements
to the scholarships and Tennessee a car
application
made at a morning "roundtable Appalachian Regional Commis- and money.
discussion" at the capital in sion.
Lapides said Thursday he had
which state and federal officials
The proposal calls for the "no comment" on the matter.
and representatives of the coal
of new equipment
Shearer said he did not recall
mining industry, as well as other development for surface
and systems
mining; much of the conversation between
groups interested in the environment, discussed the problems in- the creation of large areas of the writers and Roller "because
I was involved in other table chit
volved in reclamation and pollu- flat land to reduce landslide conditions and sediment in the wa- chat with Edgar Allen and Jack
tion control.
ter supply while allowing more Doane." Doane is sports editor
efficient coal removal, and the of The Montgomery Advertiser.
testing of new sediment control
techniques on existing mining
sites, with emphasis on those
'Well-Heale- d'
Drop-I- n
sites having persistent siltation
problems.
dent admitted that she thought, "The south is the
By RON HAWKINS
It also asks for the reduction
Assistant Managing Editor
end of the world."
of slides and development of
Hie demonstrations on campus last spring
A black coed said, "You should go further
methods of stopping their prohave given the Drop-I- n
Center added impetus south. Like to Atlanta."
and importance.
gression, new methods of
"Kentucky is far enough south for me. I guess
WASHINGTON (AP)
A
and new methods to
During Wednesday night and the early hours I always felt this way about the South," the
of Thursday, the problems of the student moveprevent or control water pollu- group of students announced
transfer student said.
tion due to chemical drainage today a fund raising goal of
ment, the nature of Kentucky, the south, and the
"Then you're prejudiced, aren't you?" subfrom mines.
$65,000 to help pay .the medical
state of the union were discussed by students, mitted the black coed.
expenses of 21 students injured
UK administrative staff and persons from the
"Yeah, I guess I am," the transfer student
Pits Possible
in the shootings last spring at
admitted.
Lexington community.
Included in these proposals Kent State and Jackson State
A community resident commented that the
Songs Express Ideas
are specific methods which will universities.
sudden intensity of the blaze that destroyed the
The music of Jaimie Oberst and Steve Rater-ma-n be attempted. Elmore Crim, diFour students were killed at
Air Force ROTC building last May was "very
was a different form of idea expression.
rector of the state Division of the Kent, Ohio school and two
strange." He added that it "appeared to be a Accompanying themselves with guitars, Oberst
Reclamation, suggested the use were killed at Jackson State in
professional Job."
and Raterman explored the politics of human reof pits to dispose of wastes acPolice Arrived Quickly
Mississippi.
lations with their songs.
cumulated during mining operaMrs. Jacqueline Stewart, secOne student agreed and expressed shock at
The Drop-I- n Center, located in the basement
tions.
the quickness with which the National Cuard
of the Student Center, opened last spring. Last
retary of the Kent Students MedNunn repeatedly stressed the ical Fund, Inc. told a news conand state police arrived on campus. He said he May's demonstrations kept the center "flooded"
need for "cooperation, not conference that while maximum
it was not a radical who burned the with people, said Jon Dalton, director of the centhought
frontation" in the handling of coverage, was given to the
ROTC building, but possibly a conservative perter.
environmental
son.
After the first week of school, the Drop-I- n
problems. He deaths "few people are even
stated that when environmental
now aware of either the total
A transfer student took exception to the stateCenter will be open on Thursday, Friday and
ment and said, "Radicals always try to pass the Saturday nights for anyone wlto wants to come problems were under control, number of students injured . . .
reclamation of lands misused in or the seriousness of those
buck when they do something."
by to discuss a problem, "or just sit around and
the past could begin.
As the discussion progressed, the transfer stu
rap," said Dalton.

that the Division of Reclamation
and the U.S. Department of the

Problems, Problems

Center Gains Neiv Life After Disorders

Drive Will Aid
Kent Wounded

reveg-etatio-

n,

-

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Scptcm1cr 4, 1070.

'Immediate Withdrawal' Asked

Informal Poll Shows Many Oppose War

"If yon want something done
and can't do it the way you
want to, try some other way
even if it is not radical."
Tin's was the opinion of one
UK student as expressed in a
poll conducted by the Lexington Peace Council September 1
and 2.
The poll surveyed student
opinion of the war in Vietnam,
of student decision-makin- g
power on campus, of campus commuand also innity-relations,
vited the student to make any
additional comments.
The poll showed that, of Gil
votes cast, the majority of students want an immediate withdrawal from Vietnam, increased
student decision-makin- g
power,
and more interchange from and
into the local community.
Impeachment Demanded
Each of two ballots favored
either an all-owin policy or
withdrawal
from
immediate
Vietnam. Two ballots called for
a lowered drinking age. Three

On the issue of Vietnam, 49
win policy,
supported an
199 supported a speeded up
withdrawal, 9 called for escalation of the war, 41 agreed with
current policy, and 311 called
for immediate withdrawal.
On the issue of student in

wanted draft reform or elimination.

all-o-

Other ballots called for impeachment of such persons as
President Richard Nixon, Gov.
Louie n. Nunn, Dr. Otis Singlc-tarSG President Steve Bright
and Dean of Students Jack Hall.
y,

volvement in decision-makin451 want increased student
ion-making
power, 10S want
student involvement to remain
as it is now, and 28 want a decrease in decision-makin- g
power.
Intorfhanp;c Wanted
Fifty-eigfelt there should
decis-

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JOIN the library bureaucrats in punch and cookies
MEET the King Pin himself, Dr. Stu Forth, Director of Libraries

tells you
how

UULAK

2nd ANNUAL

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8

jwiim

not be greater interchange between the campus and the community, while 495 felt there
should be.
One student commented, "Get
rid of leftist radicals and bring
William F. Buckley Jr. to campus. Also bring back Al Capp."

late

your date is.

TAKE a tour of the amazing library maze!
Old timers invited too!

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Applications arc now being
taken for student members of
the Board of Student Publications. This Presidential Board
governs the activity of Student
Publications at the University
of Kentucky.
Pick up your application at
the Office of the Vice President
for Student Affairs, Room 529
Office Tower Building.
APPLICATIONS MUST BE RETURNED BY
SEPT. 9, 1970 TO BE CONSIDERED.

* .THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Endny, September 4,

'he Great American

CoUegeBedspreadmaysend
to college free !
you
(Announcing the 3rd Annual Bates Piping Rock
"Send Me ta College'Contest.)

A &:

Why is Bates doing all this?
Well, you've been taking a Bates Piping Rock to college for so
many years, we felt it was about time Piping Rock took you

Tb is past year 3 girls won the
Bates 2nd Annual 'Send Me To College"
contest. Patti Nelson, Randy Morse and
Shirley Swain, And they will be going
to college for one year free. This year,
our contest is going to send three more

to college.
You've made Piping Rock the Great American College
Bedspread. And no wonder. Piping Rock comes in Indifferent'
colors. And you don't have to waste valuable time taking care of it.
Piping Rock is machine washable and dryable. There's even a No
Press finish, so it never needs ironing.
So enter the Bates Piping Rock "Send Me to College"
Contest at any of these stores.
And let Bates take you to college.

students to college. And one of those
students could be you.
is simple to enter. All you have to do is go to the
The contest
Domestics Department in any of the stores listed in this ad. Put
your name and address on one of our ballots. And wait. The contest
runs from September 8 to October 3.

PINS

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1970- -3

* Kernel Policy Statement

to shorten and edit articles without
changing the original meaning.
The Kernel feels no obligation to
print all letters submitted to the
editor, particularly numerous ones
reflecting the same opinion on any
given subject.
Soapbox articles may deal with
any topic of the author's concern
and do not have to correspond with
the Kernel editorial policy. However, these articles will not be accepted if they are merely a rebuttal
to Kernel editorials. The Letters to
the Editor column is intended for
this purpose.
The Kernel will not print letissues both directly and indirectly
affecting the University commun- ters which are libelous, obscene
or which make undocumented ality.
legations.
Basically, the Kernel will supLetters to the Editor must not
academic and social freedoms
port
for all. We will also encourage and exceed 300 words and Soapbox arcommend academic excellence, and ticles must not exceed 750 words
unless prior arrangements are made
will not hesitate to make suggesbear with the Editor. Letters or Soaptions in areas which might
boxes must be legible and accomimprovement.
However, the Kernel is aware panied by the writer's signature,
of its responsibility to provide a Lexington address, classification
forum for expression of all points and telephone number.
Letters or Soapbox articles
of view. To this end, Letters to
the Editor are encouraged as are should be submitted to the Editor,
Journalism Building,
longer articles for the Kernel Soap- Room 113-box. The Kernel reserves the right either by mail or in person.

Finding itself a monopoly press
on campus, the Kernel feels a precarious responsibility to its readers. While many assume a newspaper should reflect the opinions
of its readers, this assumption could
not be further from the truth.
The Kernel's policy is to use
its news pages for the presentation of news as accurately and
completely as possible, but we make
no pretension of reflecting student
opinion in our editorial policy.
Rather than follow, we will attempt to lead and promote opinions and discussions of pertinent

A,

The Kentucky
of
ESTABLISHED

Iernel

Kentucky

University

1894

FRIDAY, SEPT. 4, 1970

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Frank S. Coots III,
Bob Brown, Editorial Page Editor
Jean Renaker, Managing Editor
Dahlia Hays, Cojnj Editor
Jeff Impallomeni, Sports Editor
David King, Business Manager
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Tom Bowden, Ron Hawkins, Bradley Jeffries, Jerry Lewis, Mike Wines,
Assistant Managing Editors
Editor-In-Cfii-

'All That Is Not Mandatory
Is Prohibited"

..

Kernel Soapbox

Guidelines For Expression, Limits Of Dissent
ginia Board of Education v. Bamette,
319 U.S. 624 (1943), the Supreme Court
The following statement has been de- stated the rule.
The Fourteenth Amendment, as
veloped by an ad hoc group of students,
now applied to the States, profaculty, and staff during the summer.
The committee would like feedback on
tects the citizen against the State
this issue from the campus and all comitself and all of its creatures-Boa- rds
ments should be directed to University
of Education not excepted.
These have, of course, important,
Station, Box No. 798.
In a July 2, 1970 speech to Trial
delicate, and highly discretionary
functions, but they may not
Lawyers, John Mitchell, Attorney Cen-erof the United States, defended the
perform within the limits of the Bill
of Rights. That they are educatright to dissent, even by the "unruly,
unreasonable and impolite."
ing the young for citizenship is
The rights of students are identical
reason for scrupulous protection of
with the rights guaranteed by the ConConstitutional freedoms of the institution of the United States, and this
dividual, if we are not to strangle
committee has no authority and has no
the free mind at its source and
desire to gain the authority to circumteach youth to discount important
vent or forfeit these rights.
principles of our government as
In the landmark case of West Vir
mere platitudes.
By WILLIE GATES
and NANCY RAY

al

This Must

De The Most Efficient Thing We Ever Huilt!'

Recently, the Supreme Court in Tinker

v. Des Moines Independent Community
School District, 393 U.S. 503 (1969), re-

affirmed the rule in Bamette that state
institutions of learning are confined by
the constitutional guarantees of the First
and Fourteenth Amendments in their relations with students:
First Amendment rights, applied in
light of the special characteristics
of the school environment, are available to teachers and students. It
can hardly be argued that either
students or teachers shed their constitutional rights to freedom of
speech or expression at the school-hous- e
gate. This has been the unmistakable holding of this Court
for almost 50 years.
In summation of the point, the Court
in Tinker concluded:
In our system, state operated
schools may not be enclaves of
totalitarianism. School officials do
not possess absolute authority over
their students. Students in school
as well as out of school are "persons" under our Constitution. They
are possessed of fundamental rights
with the State must respect.
A university is a place where any
ideas can be produced, discussed,
analyzed, exchanged and acted upon in
aai atmosphere which is free of violence
and coercion.
The freedom of assembly of members
of the university family shall not be
abridged. It should be recognized that
freedom of assembly and speech become
meaningful only when the university is
willing to provide areas acceptable to
both the administration and the concerned
parties so as to permit issues of concern
to be freely discussed in a suitable atmosphere. Further, considered as part of
these freedoms is the right of faculty and
students to hold classes free of coercive

intervention by government or resistance.
Nor shall freedom of press and publication be subject to arbitrary interference.
In the event these rights are obstructed,
we believe that any people must depend
upon and have recourse to rights inalienable from human dignity.
In the belief that the role of the university people is by training and desire,
unique only in its dedication to and facilitation of rational discourse as a means
of resolving problems, the following can
be sanctioned as examples of acceptable
means of communication and human relation:
(a) Public meetings
(b) Soapbox speeches on campus
(c) Intervention by members of the
University community to protect policemen, as others, from abuse and physical
harm
(d) Demonstrations
(e) Picketing
(0 Minimum use of force by police to
employ objectives
(g) Expressing disapproval of a speaker's viewpoint by booing or symbolic protest providing that these do not prevent
the speaker from being heard
(h) Passing out leaflets
(i) Walkouts
The following are examples of means
of communication which we hold as violations of human dignity:
(a) The throwing of rocks
(b) Clubbing
(c) The use of insulting and degrading
terms
(d) Beating, kicking, or slioving (by
police) of persons who are not violently
resisting arrest
(e) Taunting and humiliating others
4(f) Cassing
(g) Burning buildings or otherproperty
(h) Random arrests
(i) Preventing a speaker from being
heard through means such as noise or
disruption.

* .THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, SrptrmlxT 4,

1970- -5

Tivo May Be In Canada

Four Sought By FBI In Wisconsin Bombing

WASHINGTON (AP)-Fo- ur
young men who allegedly
bragged alout setting off the
loml) that Masted an Army research center at the University
of Wisconsin were being sought
by KM agents Thursday in the

shadowy radical underground.
At least two of the fugitives
may have gone to Canada, federal officials believe. Steps were
being taken in Washington and
in Madison, Wis., to prepare
charges against them that would

insure their extradition if they
are apprehended north of the
border.
Murder Charge Urged
Kedcral officials said the three
offenses charged sabotage, destruction of government prop- -

Times:

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In Funds, Nunn Says
Nunn also announced that
Louie
Nuun announced Thursday the entire library collection of
night an additional $207,500 will the defunct Lincoln School at
be transfered from the state's Shelbyville will be transferred to
capital construction fund to pay NKSC.
He predicted NKSC would
for an academic building on the
new Northern Kentucky State "not be just a college but one
College campus at HiglJand fully potential of this region."
mw
Heights.
Nunn, speaking at a meeting
of the Campbell-Kento- n
County The Kentucky
The
Medical Society, said the funds Station, Kentucky Kernel, University
University of Kentucky, Lexwould be in addition to the ington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
$600,000 awarded for the new Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
school's first year budget.
periods, and once during the summer
NKSC, an outgrowth of the session.
Published by the Board of Student
University of Kentucky Northern Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
1894 and
Begun
Kentucky Community College at published as the Cadet asInthe Kernel
continuously
Park Hills in Kenton County, since 1915.
Advertising published herein Is inplans to begin construction on tended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
the new campus next year.
be reported to The Editors.
NEWPORT(AP)-Co- v.

helpings of past,
present, future;
well mixed and

"k

(ft

1968.

ernel

Reflections.

Q

Fugitives Listed
The fugitives are:
brothers Karleton Lewis Armstrong, 22, and Dwight Alan
Armstrong, 19, of Madison, reportedly admirers of Cuban
Prime Minister Fidel Castro;
David Sylvan Fine, 18, who resigned as one of four night editors of the campus paper, the
Daily Cardinal, in a personality
dispute last April; and Leo Frederick Burt, 22, a summer student at UW and a member of its
junior varsity rowing team in

B.

deluxe

Color by

panavision

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If

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NKSC To Get $207,500

RatadX
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city and conspiracy air not
extraditable under U.S. Canadian
treaties. Tliey arc urqinR
Wisconsin officials to press murder charges against the four.
One man was killed and three
others injured in the Aug. 24
bombing.
The FBI said the explosion
occurred in a panel truck loaded
vvith chemical nitrates soaked
with fuel oil and detonated by
dynamite. The nitrates are commonly used as an agricultural
fertilizer.

SHIPMENT OF

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Reflections
My Girl
Close To You
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A Natural Man
Since You've Been Gone
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The Sun Ain't Gonna
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THE LETTERMEN
REFLECTIONS

m

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THE REV. WILLIAM

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* V

(i

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. September

1,

1970

1
J

js

--

sf'':r

2

sophomore from Louisville, is
Carroll, a
a strong bid for a starting berth as the left inside linemaking
Kernel Photo by Ken Weaver
backer.
Arvel

1,

205-pou-

UK's Defensive Backfield
Young And Inexperienced
As the 1970 season opener
draws near, Coach John Ray and
his stafF have ended preliminary
practices and are readying their
squad specifically for North
Carolina.
Competition for starting positions is fierce, especially among
the linebacking and defensive
backfeld positions, where only
Senior right linebacker Wilbur
Hackett seems to have wrapped
up a starting job.
According to Hackett, "we
have more quickness and more
speed in the secondary and we
are much bigger. The upcoming
sophomores will give us a strong
defense."
"The attitude is a lot better
than last year. Everybody makes
the curfew and nobody is complaining," said Rick Muench, a
candidate for left outside linebacker.
Muench is challenging sophomore Kenny King from Louisville for the spot. King had the
edge yesterday as he practiced
with the first unit.
The middle linebacking jobs
will probably go to sophomore
Arvel Carroll and junior Joe
Federspiel. But Federspiel, a
member of the SEC
team, is not so sure he has
won a starting job. "I'm being
pushed by Carl Melvin and
Gayle Coins," he said.
No one has succeeded in winning a starting backfield job yet.
The key problem is inexperience. Of the six players vying

for the three positions, four are

sophomores and the remaining
two are juniors.
"They need some experience,'
explained defensive backfield
coach Alex Campbell. "I'd like
to have all seniors and juniors.
The more you play, the better
you become."
"We've got to settle down,"
he continued. "We can't afford
mental mistakes or allow quick
touchdowns."
Campbell fears the SEC's
speedy receivers like Florida's
Carlos Alvarez or North Carolina's Ricky Lanier. Asked how
he hoped to stop them, he replied, "pray."
Dave Van Meter, one of two
veterans in the backfield, is a
bit more optimistic. "It's almost
incomparable to last year's.
There is more speed and confidence. A lot of competition will
make us better ballplayers."
Competition is what Van Meter has plenty of as sophomoroe
Jasper Swindle is pushing him
hard for the safety spot. Before
Swindle suffered a knee injury
he seemed the likely choice for
a starting berth.
Joe Stephan, the other junior,
adds "the competition is really
tremendous. Nobody has any
job wrapped up."

THE MOVEMENT
A novel of campus

----

rebellion written
before the triggers

were pulled and some
of your fellow stu-

dents fell down dead.

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DEPARTMENT OF
THEATRE ARTS

AUDITIONS
ANDROCLES
AND THE LION

presents
"
?

by

George Bernard Shaw
Sunday, September 6
2:00 p.m.

Tuesday, September

8

VU: Tr ue
and

7:30 p.m.

Guignol Theatre
Raymond Smith, Director

J
FLOWERS
Occasion
CALL

Dial

254-038-

3

ENTERTAINMENT FOR ALL AGES!

M I C II L E U

FLORIS

L or

Opening
Thursday September

For Any

T

Thursday, 9-Friday and Saturday,
12

9-- 1

3

417 East Maxwell

411

(Si) 0 (I

(HDIiED

Southland Drive

L

osd

* .THE KENTUCKY' KERNEL, Friday, Sqitcmlicr

iaeasoner bays America Is

jr. AN UENAKF.R
Managing Kriitor
Harry Heasoner told an
By

often-laughin-

occasionally-mutterin- g

crowd of about 000
the Phoenix Hotel last
the biggest problem
country is "quantity,
ity."
Reasoner, a CHS
since 1950, ciiticized

people at
night that
facing the
not qual-

newsman
the nation

one moment and praised it the
next throughout his speech,
which covered the decade of
the 70's.
Reasoner said that as soon as
an event takes place and is
established, "hucksters" take
over. As an example, he noted
the appearance of hippies, and
then, suddenly, the appearance
of
hippie garb.

Because of this tendency to
e
items and ideas,
the "conflict of new ideas" tends
to become blurred, Reasoner
claimed. Ideas, he said "get
passed around so fast that no
one evaluates them," and this
becomes truer and truer with
faster communication, he added.
mass-produc-

U.S.

'In

a Mess

Reasoner said that since

d

University of Kentucky Student Center Board

Presents m Concert

tm

Ik!

IkJ

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12

8:00 p.m.

Memorial Coliseum

for- -

'Soul-Searchin- g'
mcr President John Kennedy's
assassination, America has engaged in more and more
He said this
is, in turn, carrying
over to concern for the coming
decade.
His generation, he said, is
concerned because "at 50, you're
not a prodigy anymore." Reasoner said everyone is concerned
because, during the '70's, "the
kids, the rebels" will begin to
take over. And, he added, the
U.S. is facing its 200th anniversaryand the country is "in a
mess."
He advised citizens to look
for things on which everyone
can agree, and added that "we
have to begin to take little steps
one at a time and to accept
for our problems."
Agnew's Idea Good
Commenting on Vice President Spiro Agnew's criticism of
the press, Reasoner said that the
"idea that journalists should look
."

-

$2.00

Tickets on sale at: Student Center Central Information Desk
Hymson's in The Mall
Dawahare's in Gardenside
Barney Miller's Downtown

l

, 1970- -7

Joarnallsm Bldf.

Ratei are $1.25 for 20 words, 13.00
for three consecctlTe Insertions of the
same ad of 80 words, and $3.75 per
week, 20 words.

ifr

-

CLASSIFIED

CUiaified advertising will be accepted