xt7cjs9h6s8n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7cjs9h6s8n/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701103  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November  3, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, November  3, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7cjs9h6s8n section xt7cjs9h6s8n Tie

Kernel

ECemtocecy

Tuesday, Nov. 3, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXIL No. 43

New Politics?
Predicted Student Participation
In Campaigns Fails to Develop
WASHINGTON (CPS) The
massive student participation in
election campaigns that was
dieted last spring has not materialized this fall.
In the wake of the U.S. intervention in Cambodia and the
shootings of students at Kent
State University and Jackson
State College last May, thousands of students came to Washington to lobby in Congress. A
number of groups were set up to
coordinate an outpouring of student political activity that was
! to culminate in widespread student campaigning for peace candidates. That hasn't happened.
Kernel Photo by Phil Gregory
A check with correspondents
across the country and with some
Curjey Ray dine, premier fiddler with Ralph Stanley and the of the student cordinating
Clinch Mountain Boys, swings into a break on "Rollin' in My groups indicates that student parSweet Baby's Arms' Cline's expertise and theatrics so enthralled
ticipation in election campaigns
Mountain Music Show"
the audience at Friday night's "Old-Tim- e
is only slightly above normal and
at the Student Center Ballroom, that they forced him to play the is far below the level of student
song twice. Also appearing were the Morris Brothers, Anne Roparticipation in the 1968 presima in e and Hazel Dickens. (See review on page 2).
dential campaign.

M

(L

Fiddlin9 Around

"We are not going to have
overwhelming masses of students
campaigning, but we will have
more than ever before in an
election," says Robert Taylor, of the Movement for a New
Congress, the Princeton University group that is coordinating
much of the student involvement
in campaigns.
Other reports suggest that student campaign activity in many
states does not involve much
more than the usual "Youth for"
or "Students for" clubs and the
Young Democrat and Young Republican organizations.
Few to Campaign
One poll indicates that 14
percent of the nation's students
plan to campaign, but most observers expect the number to be
much smaller than that. "A lot
of students say they plan to
campaign but they will never
actually go out and work for a
candidate," said Taylor.
He says the Movement for a
off-ye- ar

TV Speeches Climax Campaigning

rica
WASHINGTON
is voting that repeatedly has frustrated Nixon, big-sta- concurrence, to sell Democrats half the time
today after a caustic midterm campaign
power bases for 1972 presidential politics originally booked by the GOP.
climaxed by a Monday night television exand state legislature strength which will be a
Republicans began the campaign hoping
change between the men who may face each key to control of the reapportioned U.S. to win control of the Senate, now split 3
house in 1972.
other in the presidential race of 1972.
for the Democrats. The consensus now is
n
that the COP will pick up one to three seats.
Nixon spoke for the Republicans
out spent the
President
Republicans
on election eve through a filmed reprise of Democrats this campaign and those finances
Hope For Control
7
The Democrats' present
were central in developments that led to
a speech he made Saturday in Phoenix deedge in the
teleHouse, where there are five vacancies, is exMonday night's matching
crying violent dissent.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine reprecasts.
pected to be little changed going against
sented the Democrats after they scraped
The Republican National Committee first the historical record which shows the party
together enough money Monday to buy half purchased 30 minutes of time on each of the in White House power losing an average of
elections.
37 House seats in mid-terthe time the Republicans had originally pur- three major television networks.
chased. Muskie replied to what he called
Principal Democratic gains are expected
Democratic National Chairman Lawrence in the State Houses. Republicans now hold
"Republican tactics of fear and division."
F. O'Brien challenged the GOP and asked 32 of 50 governorships and nine of ten in
Big Rewards
the networks to split the time in half for the most populous states.
The offices at stake are 35 Senate seats, each-partand make it available free. He
But Democrats are expected to win in
435 in the House of Representatives, 35 govpleaded party poverty. Muskie also asked Ohio and are strong threats in New York,
and hundreds of state and local for free time.
ernorships
Pennsylvania and Michigan states that aljobs.
The networks turned down the request ways are keys in presidential elections.
The rewards include control of a Senate for free time, but agreed, with Republican
Continued on Pae 6, CoL 1
(AP)-Ame-

57-4-

New Congress expected a slackof student interest in pol"We knew that with Camsix months in the past,

ening
itics:
bodia
there
terest
bodia

past."

would be a lot less

than there was when

in-

Cam-

was three days in the

But he concedes

that "it's

probably died off a little more
than we expected."
The Movement for a New
Congress, with chapters on more
than 350 campuses, is providing
student help for about 70 candidates, 26 of them in New York,
New Jersey,' and Connecticut.
Taylor estimated that 50,000 students will campaign through the
auspices of MNC, with many
others signing up independently
with candidates.
The students believe they have
been fairly successful so far. Of
30 primary races they worked on,
25 of the candidates they supported won. Students were involved in campaigns in which
liberals defeated veteran Democrats in New York, Massachusetts, Maryland and Colorado.
Large Conservative Croup
Although most students are
campaigning for peace candidates and other liberals, many
conservative politicians have student organizations working for
.Continued on Pace 3, CoL 1

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One's Never Too Young or Old
The sun may get in your eyes, but when your
team is winning you find ways to keep the action
on the football field in sight. These UK fans
demonstrated that both the young and old are
smart enough to do just that and a sweater or a

...

newspaper does just the trick. The end result
of the game on UK's Stoll Field proved worth
their efforts as UK defeated North Carolina State,
27 to 2.
Kernel photoa By Ken

wv

Weather
Forecast for Lexington and vicinity: Cloudy and 'cooler today
through Wednesday. A few periods of light rain or drizzle late
today becoming mixed with snow
flurries late tonight and Wednesday. Showers ending and continuing cold through Thursday.
High temperature today 46; low
tonight, near 30; high tomorrow,
low 40s. Precipitation probabilities today and tonight 20 percent, tomorrow 30 percent

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov. 3,

1970

Concert Review

Mountain Music Show Presents 'Real Knockout
The autoharp is a Mringed instrument about two feet long at
its longest dimension, and is
strung similar to a piano. Wooden
bars are attached along one side
of the instrument and produce
chords when pressed against the
strings.
The trick to playing the auto-hart- )
is picking out a melody with
two fingers while the thumb is
strumming the strings and the left
hand is working with the chord
bars.
Not only has Dave Morris
learned the trick, he has added
a few twists of his own. .
The"Wreck of the '97' "starts
out with a toneless drone across

Dy DANIEL COS SETT

Johnny Morris' face lit up and
the sunburned skin on his forehead .slipped back from his horn
rims when someone asked about
the way his brother Dave plays
the autoharp. "My Gawd, lie's
got a couple there that are real
knock-out- v

Johnny Morris wasn't just kidding. Friday night, as part of the
"Old Time Mountain Music
Show," Dave Morris played the
"Wreck of the 97 " on the auto-harWhile he played, close to
200 people, most of whom didn't
know what an autoharp was,
breatlilessly sat there and liar
tened.

p.

dead strings. As the tempo inIt is a passionate song that is
creases, thedronebecome a major full of images of brooks and unchord. The tempo increases still adulterated pine groves. It is close
more anil lead notes are added to a perfect integration of man,
to the major chord. At the apex, music and instrument. All that
the melody, better known as "The from a country boy straight out
M T A" of Kingston Trio fame,
of Ivydale, West Virginia, and an
becomes a distinct entity. Then instrument that has often been
you are struck with the blind considered the bastard son of the
realization that Dave Morris' string family.
hands are moving about 97 miles
Yes, Virginia, there were other
an hour and he isn't missing a
performers on the show and they
note. He is coughing violently
also knew which end of their inenough to shake the stage, but he struments to hold
up. Not the
lick.
doesn't miss a
least of these was Dave's older
Later on in. the show, Dave
At various
played another autoharp solo, a brother, Johnny.
points in the program Johnny
composition of his own entitled
"A Song To The Land." This played guitar, fiddle, (not violin,
banjo.
time he played the autoharp as if fiddle) and
it were a harpsichord or a claviNot nearly as flamboyant or
chord. Many of his passages creative as his younger brother,
sounded as though Chopin would the elder Morris plays with a
have been happy with them.
constancy that betrays a love for
five-strin- g

Play Review

'In HelP: Respectable

and must often come to hell to
escape the boredom.
The devil is the hedonist, Don
Juan the Darwinist, the woman
is Dona Ana, a former lady love
of Don Juan's and the honorable
man is the Dona Ana's father, a
ramrod military man known as
"the commander."
"Don Juan in Hell" is chock
social Darwinist, a passionate full of stinging comments about
woman and a man of honor who the state of man, his morals and
is bored with his station in heaven his misconceptions. By the time
the play is done, you don't know
whether you agree with Satan or
with Don Juan. Personally, my
The Kentucky
sympathies are with the devil.
The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, LexIn toto, the Third Floor
ington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. Theatre production of "Don Juan
Mailed five times weekly during the in Hell" is
quite respectable.
school year except holidays and exam
There were, however, a few sticky
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student spots. Peter Stoner, as Satan, for
Publications. UK Post Office Box 4986.
some reason or the other had to
Begun as the Cadet in 18M and
published continuously as the Kernel read his lines. Consistently a fine
since 1815.
actor, Stoner probably had to reAdvertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
place another actor and didn't
false or misleading advertising should
have time to learn his lines.
be reported to The Editors.
.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES - '
' Edd Little, as ' Don Juan,
$9.45
Yearly, by mail
turned in an excellent perforPer copy, from files
$.10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
mance, introducing just the right
Editor Managing Editor ....
amount of superior swagger to
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors. Sports . .
the calculated rationality that
Business. CirculaAdvertising.
tion
characterizes Don Juan.

and a rapport with the music la-iplaying.
Halph Stanley and the Clinch
Mountain Hoys were the featured
act, and performed as they always do, superbly. Stanley isone
e
of the
greats in Blue-gramusic and his influence is
the Hluegrass
felt throughout
music world.
on the
Also appearing
program, sponsored by the
Friends of the Pike County Citizens Association, were Hazel
Dickens and AnneRomaine, both
vocalists.
The show ended with audience and performers alike joining
in on "Amazing Grace." Sung
slowly, a capella, the song gave
me an overwhelming urge to rush
to the front of the room and take
communion.
ss

By DANIEL E. COSSETT

"Don Juan in Hell," the current production of the Third Floor
theater located in the Canterbury
House, is actually the long third
act of Ceorge Bernard Shaw's
"Man and Superman." The purpose of the play ('Don Juan') is to
provide a basis for a dialogue
between a complete hedonist, a

Kernel

"

275-17-

257-17-

258-40-

LAUNDROMAT
Norgctown Laundry
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269-907-

5

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TODAY and TOMORROW

Ths 4adUn

far

7:W a.m. twe days
abllestUB af lUats

aaeemcnta

Is

rtar t ta first
la this lama.

TODAY
The second session of the Training
will be held
Program In
at 7:00 p.m., Tuesday, Nov. 3, in
room 245 of the Student Center, Joseph Engelberg will lead the session,
which wiU focus on the principles of
acUon.
The rhyaleal Therapy Clab will
meet Tuesday, Nov. 3, at 7:30 p.m.
in the Physical Therapy Department.
Two rooms In the Classroom Building are open for use as study halls.
Rooms 304 and 346 are open from
p.m. on week nights and
p.m. on weekends.
Student Government Representative
Jim Futrell will be available every
day from 3:00 p.m. -- 4:30 p.m. in Student Center Room 204 (SG Office)
to answer questions or Just rap about
Student Government. Come by or caU

or

8.

TOMORROW
from SMC, Young
RepresentaUves
Democrats, Student Coalition, Lexington Peace Council, NAACP, and the
Republican Party will present their
views of the student situation and
the goals of their organizations on
Wed., Nov. 4, at 2 p.m. in the recital hall of the Mitchell Fine Arts
Building of Transylvania
University.
The public is invited.
Mr. Tom Landeen will discuss "The
Ultimate Contraceptive and Its Effect
on the Desired Family Size" at the
meeting of Zero Population Growth,
Wed., Nov. 4 at 8:00 p.m. in room 118
of the Classroom Building.
will meet WednesThe Food Co-o- p
day, Nov. 4, in room 245 of the Student Center at 7:30 p.m. to approve
the articles of incorporation and bylaws.

COMING UP
St. Aufuitlne's Chapel, 472 Rose St..
now using Ian Mitchell's
Folk
Mass at its Sunday services, at 10:30
a.m. Evensong at 5:30 p.m. Sundays
and is followed by a supper, 75 cents
per person. Sign up for the supper is
necessary by Sunday noon.
Dr. John Abrahamson will speak on
"Manpower Planning: Some Implica
i.i

tions for Education" at the Colloquium on Issues and Methods in the
Studies in
Social and Philosophical
Education, Nov. 5 at 1:30 p.m. in
room 57, Dickey Hall.
Sorority Open Rash extends until
December. All interested girls wishing
to sign up are asked to go to the
Office Tower Room 561. Go Greek
Become Involved
Otto Mayr, curator of the Smithsonian Institution, will speak on "Evolution of Feedback Mechanisms and
CenEconomics in the Eighteenth
tury" at the Mechanical Engineering
Seminar Series, to be held at 4:00
p.m., Thursday, Nov. 5, In room 257,
Anderson Hall. The public is invited.
Third Floor Theatre presents G.B.
Shaw's "Don Juan In Hell," Oct.
1 and Nov.
8,
at 8:30 p.m. at
Canterbury House, 472 Rose St. Tic-

kets are

$1.00

for students, others

at the
$2.00, and can be purchased
door.
Dr. Howard Cottam, North American Representative
to the Food and
of
the
Agricultural Organization
United Nations, wUl speak on Thursday, Nov. 5. at 3:00 p.m. in room 245
of the Student Center. His topic wiU
be "The FAO in the U.N.'s Next
Years." The public la inTwenty-fiv- e
vited.
The 8tndent Center Board and Student Government will sponsor a forum
on drug use at 7:00 p.m. Monday, Nov.
9. in the Grand Ballroom of the Student Center. Members of the Lexington Police Department, the UK
Medical Center, the federal Narcotics
Hospital, and the UK Student Health
Service will .participate. The public
is invited.

UK

Placement Service

Students may register for appointments with representaUves of the following corporations by contacting the
Placement Service, 201 Old Agriculture Building, at least two days in
advance of the date specified. Tele(ext.
phone
Humble Oil & Refining
Nov. 4.
EcoCo. Business
Administration,
nomics (US, MS). Locations: United
States. Citizenship.
Nov. 4. Fayette County Schools.
Check schedule book for late information.
Nov. 4. Transcon Lines Business
Economics (BS). Lo
Administration,

cations: United States. May, August
graduates.
Nov.
Ford Motor Co.
Check
schedule book for late informaUon.
Nov.
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission
Chemical E.,
Accounting.
Electrical E., Mechanical E., Metallurgical E.. Chemistry. Physics IBS,
MS); Business Administration, Economics, Engineering
Mechanics, Political Science (MS). Locations: Albuquerque. N.M.; Chicago, 111.; Idaho
Falls, Idaho; Las Vegas, Nev.; New
York, N.Y.; Oak Ridge. Tenn.; Richland. Wash.; San Francisco, Calif.;
Aiken, S.C.; Washington. D.C. May,
August graduates. Will interview juniors, seniors and graduate students
with 3.0 in Engineering for summer
employment. CiUzenship.
Nov. 5. Automatic Electric Company
and Laboratories
ComAccounting,
puter Science (BS); Electrical E. (BS.
MS). Location: Northlake. December
graduates.. Citizenship.
Nov. 5. Texas Gas Transmission
Co.
Accounting (BS). December,
May. August graduates. Citizenship.
Nov. 5. Wright Patterson Air Force
Base Check schedule book for late
Information.
Nov.
General Electric Co.
Business Administration. Chemical E.,
Electrical E., Mechanical E., Chemistry (BS, MS). LocaUons: United
States. December, May, August graduates. Citizenship.
Nov. 6. Shillito'i
Business Administration, Economics. Home Economics (BS). Location:
Cincinnati.
May graduates. Citizenship.
Nov. 6. Motorola Inc. Check schedule book for late Information.
Nov. 6. Pratt Ac Whitney Aircraft-Enginee- ring
Mechanics, Mechanical E.
(all degrees). Locations: East Hartford. Conn. December graduates. Citizenship.
Nov. 9. Coe Manufacturing Co.
Mechanical E. (BS). Location: Palnes-vill- e,
Ohio. December, May, August
graduates. Citizenship.

MITCH'S BRITCHES
Male and Female Belles and Flares
$6.39-56.9-

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506 Va Euclid Ave. near corner
of Euclid and Woodland

Ahangouer
isn't funny

AN OPEN LETTER

TO ALL UK SENIORS:

hangover can be Just about the
most distressing combination ot
pain, nausea, depression and fatigue you ever woke up with.
Simple headache tablets or
alone can't do tho whole
job. You need a combination of
special ingredients to chase those
multiple miseries. Formulated
specially for hangover, CHASER
combines nine ingredients in
every tablet.
So, pain disappears fast. Your
stomach calms down. Your spirits peik up.
A

Your 1971 KENTUCKIAN is being planned right now these plans include a separate
Senior supplement to come out in May, in addition to the regular Septetnbcr issue.
This supplement will include senior interviews concerning campus issues, pictures and
other features during the past four years, and of course your senior pictures (approximately
in size).
2--

3"

We're looking forward to putting tliis paperback supplement together we don't mind
taking the extra time to make two yearbooks.
Won't you take the time to make an appointment for your pictures by calling
won't lc much of a yearbook without your picture.
Sincerely,
y.

alka-lize- rs

Try CHASER FOR HANGOVER.
It Really Works! Now at
your
pharmacy.

25S-1S- 2,

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Susan Criinsle)
1971 KENTUCKIAN

TP
Editor

Fat,gu

III
III

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nor. 3,

1970- -3

Student 'Peace Campaigns' Fail to Develop

Continued from Page 1
that the plan has been rejected
them, particularly in the South. by state wide boards of trustees
James L. Buckley, the Conservain several states, including Caltive party candidate in New York, ifornia, Florida, Iowa and New
has one of the largest student York. At least one institution
groups, organized by the Young the State University of New York
Americans for Freedom.
at Plattsburg said it wanted to
Most of those students will adopt the plan but was prevented
be campaigning on their own by statewide policy.
time. Most colleges and univerSome Opposition
sities rejected the "Princeton
Only 12 percent of the colplan," under which they would leges responding to the survey
have rearranged their academic
reported "a great deal" of opcalendars to give students two
position from state political figweeks off prior to the election ures; 26
percent reported "a litto campaign if they wished.
tle" negative reaction, while 61
A survey of members of the
percent reported no significant
American Association of State opposition. States in which a
Colleges and Universities shows great deal of opposition was re- -

-

Claislfled adrertlilnf will be accepted
n a pre-pai- d
basis only. Adi may be
placed In person Monday throagh
Friday or by mail, payment Incloied,
to THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Room
111,

Journalism Bldf.

Rates are $1.23 for 20 words, $3.00
for three consecutlre Insertions of the
same ad of 20 words, and $3.75 per
week, 20 words.
The deadline Is 11 a. m. the day
prior to publication. No advertisement
may cite race, religion or national
origin as a qualification for renting
rooms or for employment.
FOR SALE
ARE YOU FOR PEACE? This la for
you: neon glow-bul- b
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Available at Aladdin's Lamp, North3.
land Shopping Center,
30O-N5

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Good condition. $675. Call Dr. Heger
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week.
Approx. 20 to 30 hours per 280-N3
Bill Buntin.
Call
NEED five married couples two or
three nights per week, three hours
per night, $2.00 per hour. 30O-N12
or box 504 Versailles, Ky.
WANTED
roommate
wanted immediately to share furnished apt. on
month.
Park: $57.50 2SO-NTransylvania

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Transylvania
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Roommate
apt., $70 month; utilities included.
110 Oxford Circle, Apt. 27;
2N3
need Immediately.
WANTED Male roommate to share
furnished apartment. Inquiries may
3N5
be made after 5 p.m.

WANTED

PERSONAL
WILL Nina Lockett who supposedly
lives in Blanding Tower please call
home, Jean Lockett, Charleston. No
N3
questions asked.
JOE, please don't be mad at me.
N3
Love, Patty.
LAWRENCE YOUNG is getting mar3N9
ried in May.

THEMES, theses, reports, stencils:
minor editing. 60 cents pp. After 5.00
p.m. daily, Saturdays, Bill Givens,

Shcaffcr Pens
50
Off

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FEMALE roommate needed for modmobile home. $60 a
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PIANO TUNING:
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Davies,

at

versities, the plan was rejected sities offered courses in which
students could campaign and reby students.
ceive academic credit. The coursreMany institutions, while
es generally involved study and
fusing to cancel classes, made evaluation of
the political proother arrangements to let stucess, as well as actual campaignindents campaign. The plans
ing. Institutions offering such
cluded scheduling no examinations in the weeks before the courses included C reign ton and
election and allowing students Northern Illinois Universities,
to arrange with professors on an the University of the Pacific;
Cuyahoga Community College;
individual basis for make-u-p
Keuka College, and the Univerwork.
sities of Hawaii, Miami and
Several colleges and univer
Michigan.

Trial Course on Rumania Approved;
Folklore, Geography to Be Studied
Rumania, a nation which has

e

MALE

At most institutions the plan
was rejected by the administration or the governing board. However, on some campuses, such
as Alfred, Case Western Reserve,
New York and Northwestern Universities, the plan was rejected
by the faculty. At a few, including
Hofstra and Johns Hopkins Uni

'helped add new dimensions to

OPPORTUNITIES

JOB

ported included Arizona, California, Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, Texas and
Virginia.

of rather intimate friendship with
the United States.
In announcing the administration's approval of the project,
Dr. Kessler observed, "It was
gratifying to discover the number
of UK faculty people who maintain some degree of professional
interest in the East European
area, and who are willing to participate in this program in addition to their regular teaching

East - West relations, will be
studied in an experimental
Arts and Sciences course
next year.
Just approved, the new course,
"East European Nations in Profile: Rumania 1970," will examine
and character of a
the make-u- p
people which claims descent from
the Roman legions and speaks
duties."
a language derived from classiThe
cal Latin.
course, part
The new course was conceived of a series sponsored by the Colby Profs. Joseph Kessler of the lege of Arts and Sciences to braod-e- n
the "relevance" of curricular
History Department and Michael
offerings, will be taught by a
Impey of the Department of Spanish and Italian.
In recent years, the daring
and somewhat unpredictable
LAN-MAR- K
policies of the Rumanian Socialist Republic have earned it the
Downtown
Corner of Main & Broadway
sobriquet "maverick of the Communist world." The Bucharest
Foam Rubber
government, though a member
of the Warsaw Pact (the East
to Specifications
?c
2Shpes
European counterpart of NATO),
refused to break off relations with
Inn r
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waist
Israel after the Six Day War,
46-6- 4
maintains close connections with
All types work & casual Jackets
both Cermanies and with China,
and is now embarking on a course

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panel of professors from nine departments.
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The folklore section will feature a study of the Dracula legend and the exotic "black arts"
for which the Rumanian province
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The course will be open to
all UK students without any prerequisites.

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ESTABLISHED

IVLNIUUVY ifciKIMLL
University of Kentucky

1894

IKernel Forum: the readers writej

TUESDAY, NOV. 3, 1970

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of tfie University.
Frank S. Coots III,

Editor-in-Chi-

Bob Brown, Editorial rage Editor
Jean Rcnakor, Managing Editor
Mike Ticrncy, Sports Editor
Dahlia Hays, Copy Editor
David King, 0ti.Wnr.vt Manager
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Jane Brown, Ron Hawkins, Bradley Jeffries, Jerry Lewis, Mike Wines.
Assistant Managing Editors

SG Used Book Exchange:

An Innovative Opportunity
The Student Services division of Student Government is taking
some major steps toward solving an important student problem the
reduction of academic costs. The plan to establish a student-operate- d
d
book exchange should have a significant effect on
wallets,
how students can work
as well as providing an outstanding example of
together to help each other.
The book exchange would operate on a very simple principle of
selling used books to other students, paying the original owner when
the books are sold. A minimal amount of labor and capital will be
required for this promising effort. The only necessary ingredient is
over-straine-

student
Campus bookstores are notorious for their miniscule used book
offers and their inflated
prices. The profit margin is incredible
for much of that market. While the price of a used book usually is set
at 75 percent of its original cost, the amount the bookstore pays the
owner for the book is progressively smaller as the book ages. In this
process the bookstore can make a profit three to four times
that of the original mark-uIn the matter of economics, student power is undeniably great. It is
amazing that students have allowed Lexington merchants, especially
the local bookstores, to line their pockets with students money in
bookstore is the
return for inferior goods and services. The student-ru- n
for students to alleviate this area of exploitation.
prime opportunity
Many student bodies have found areas in which they can make
substantial savings by buying collectively. Food markets, clothing
stores and record shops have been fruitful ventures of student buying
power. A loyal clientele can demand and obtain discount prices for
quality products, but the problem of original outlays and overhead is
a staggering one. A unique advantage of the proposed bookstore is the
absence of the problem of capital.
Steve LaBreche and the Student Services division of SG have engineered a pilot project which will tell us a great deal about the University community. If the project is a success it will indicate an overdue
trend toward student
re-sa- le

p.

self-suppo- rt.

Silence of No Voice
To the Editor
I must commend Mr. Ron Hawkins for
his public confession which appeared in
the Oct. 28 Kernel. I feel slighted, however, because he did not see fit to call
me a cool name like he did Detlef Moore.
That certainly is an effective debating
technique to call your opponent names
I'm sure it grieved Detlef deepl)!
I must call attention to the interesting
juxtaposition of two phrases in succeeding
paragraphs near the end of Mr. Hawkins
the assembly should be done
essay:
away with.", "I ask for the silence of no
voice. . ." That hardly seems like nice
logical liberal talk for a Kernel reporter.
Would not Mr. Hawkins be the first to
scream should I say
the Kernel
should be done away with; I ask for the
silence of no voice . . ."
DICK CLARK
Recording Secretary
Free Soil Party

"...

"...

The Code's Double Standard
To the Editor
There was an article in the Sunday,
October IS, issue of the Courier-Journa- l
concerning a member of the Board of
Trustees of this university. It didn't make
the front page, in fact it was buried deep
in section 13, but it was certainly the
sort of publicity which makes one want
to respect the rules and rulers of UK.
The article stated that AB. (Happy)
Chandler, a member of that elite group
charged with regulating the lives of UK
students, has been added to the list of
defendants involved in the alleged mismanagement of funds of the
Daniel Boone Fried Chicken Corporation. A suit filed in U.S. District Court
charges that Chandler received a salary of
$25,000 a year from the chicken firm in
direct violation of federal law.
Mr. Chandler may well be an innocent victim of the gourmet tastes of Kentucky citizens; the chicken may have been
such that people just did not want to
eat it. But if Mr. Chandler is guilty of
misuse of funds and has violated a federal
law, it seems reasonable to ask that he
be required to face the penalties that he
and the other trustees have established for
a student found guilty of similar violations.
I refer specifically to section 1.31 of part
one of the Student Code: "Any student
who violates (minimum standards of individual conduct required by federal, state,
now-bankru- pt

or local penel statutes) is subject to disof
cipline by the (University), regardless

whether or not action is taken against
the student by civil authorities on