xt7dbr8mgj5t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dbr8mgj5t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690214  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 14, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 14, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7dbr8mgj5t section xt7dbr8mgj5t TT,

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Friday Evening, Feb. 14, 1909

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LX. No. or.

Reverse Dorm Boycott Proposed;
Juul Attacks Pond. Palmer; Mall
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By LARRY DALE KEELING

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Assistant Managing Editor
The Student Government Assembly Thursday night refuted the
stand it took on the housing issue last week by failing to override
three
of the boycott bill by SG President Wally Bryan.
One of the vetoed items called
for rescindment of the Board of though both received majority
Trustees Finance Policy Statevotes.
ment No. 9, which says that when
Following the fight over the
vetoes, a bill calling for a "renecessary, any undergraduate,
with certain exceptions, could be verse boycott" of housing was
required to live in University
passed. The bill was sponsored
housing.
by Merrily Orsini, Monty Hall,
Statement No. 9 would have Jim Gwinn and Thorn Pat Juul.
been replaced (according to last
The bill called for students
week's SG bill) by another calling to participate in the reverse boyfor recruitment to fill the dormicott by turning in their housing
tories, a sociological study of why applications on the first two days
students do not like to live in they could do so (April 1 and 2)
dorms, an investigation of ways "to show the necessity of stuto economize in dormitories and dent consent to policies affecting
them."
Auxiliary Services and an investiIt also requested that SG work
gation of the bond issues involved
in building dormitories.
with the housing office to speed
In vetoing that section Bryan processing of applications so stusaid he did so because of two dents could learn if they had to
lines which called for rescindlive in dormitories as soon as
ment of Board of Trustees Polpossible.
The bill did not ask the Board
icy Statement No. 9. He added
that he was in favor of the
of Trustees to rescind the policy
substitution, but claimed he statement, but it did ask for the
had to veto the whole section recruitment of community college
because of the first two lines. students to help fill dorms and
"I will investigate and try to for the sociological study of why
implement these five points," he students don't like to live in the
told the assembly.
dorms.
The other two items vetoed
It also requested reports from
by Bryan dealt with a student the board on the economic measures affecting dorms and Auxili"boycott" of housing by withholding dormitory applications
ary Services and on the bond isuntil the last day they are due, sues involved in dorm construcan action proposed in last week's tion.
SG bill.
During a heated discussion
over the motions to override the
'Injure Freshman'
In reference to those items, vetoes, the University administration came under severe attack
Bryan said, "I think a boycott
of this nature could permanently, from Thorn Pat Juul, one of the
of the housinjure some freshmen who don't strongest supporters
understand what this bill is all ing boycott.
Juul accused the administraabout."
tion of using "underhanded presBryan, however, signed a bill
last semester that called for a sure" and "lies" to block the
rescindment of the required hous- boycott. He said he had in his
possession a petition signed by
ing statement. That bill passed over half the members of Holmes
the assembly by a vote of .
The bill that Bryan vetoed Hall who supported the original
SG boycott bill.
Thursday passed the assembly
He said he did not dare use
last week by a vote of 16-- Last
the petition because he had been
night, two motions to override told
by one of the dormitory
Bryan's vetoes failed to get the
s
Continued on Pate 7, Col. 1
vote, al
required
item-veto-

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Thorn Pat Juul (left) suggested that Deans Pond, Palmer and Hall be
fired during this week's episode of the Student Government debate over
the University's housing policy. After the assembly failed to override
President Wally Bryan's (right) veto of the housing boycott, SG member
Merrily Orsini (next to Bryan) presented a bill proposing a reverse boyKernel Photo By Dave Herman
cott.

'The Way

I See It .

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Dr. Reiss Blames Middle Class
For Problems Of Police, Poor
By DANIEL E. GOSSETT

Kernel Staff Writer
A consultant to the President's Commission on Law Enforcement placed equal blame
on the police and middle-clas-s
Americans when he spoke to a
University audience Thursday
night on problems facing the
police and the nation's poor people.
Dr. Albert J. Reiss, also a
consultant to the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, was the third speaker in
the series of colloquia "Working
Solutions to the Dimensions of
Poverty."
Dr. Reiss, chairman of the
sociology department at the University of Michigan, first outlined some of the problems that
arise from the "deterioration" of
police precincts into "fuedali-ties.- "

"As local police precincts become more fuedalized and
there is a tendency
on the part of the individual
policeman to deny the professionalism of his job," Dr. Reiss
said.
"My definition of professionalism is the making of discretionary decisions about a client. Contrary o the opinions of
the Individual patrolman, thepo-lic- e
are the most professional
group in the nation because they
must constantly make discretionary decisions about clients."
Mentioning "growing
of the police as a
inhibiting factor in remajor
solving police problems, Dr.
Reiss said, "Not only do policemen become involved in politics,
they are breaking away from the
major political parties and are
joining unions and right wing
reactionary groups.
"In the last election, the leaders of the Fraternal Order of
Police openly endorsed the can
politi-calizatio-

white men when they put on a
police uniform.
Dr. Reiss also condemned
On wages for policemen, Dr.
citizens for Reiss said, "We ought to pay
white middle-clas-s
not cooperating with police.
each patrolman $16,000 a year
"First of all, we ask police if we are going to ask them to
to perform duties that do not risk his life every day."
qualify as crime prevention. SevOn making policemen responenty percent of all calls made sible to the public, the socioloto the police do not involve the
asked for "citizens receipt
commission of a crime. The po- gist service."
for
lice is the only agency that will
Dr. Reiss said that every time
send someone out to resolve perat any time of a patrolman detains a citizen
sonal problems
for any reason, he should write
the day or night."
out a citation, as is done for
In outlining possible solutions
to police problems, Dr. Reiss vehicular offenses.
threw out one old concept,
According to Dr. Reiss, such
another old idea and a policy would put a record of
introduced a concept of his own. whatever a policeman does in
Of black policemen, he said the hands of the citizen involved
that because of their work role, and in the hands of police
black men tend to behave like
didacy of George Wallace for

president."

five-pa- rt

23-0-

6.

two-third-

.Mrs. Brown Denies She Is Black
By SUE ANNE SALMON

Kernel Staff Writer
A former member of the Communist Party who
worked as an "undercover agent" for the FBI
denied at UK Tuesday that she is "black" and
explained she is "a member of the Negro race."
Sponsored by the campus chapter of Young
Americans for Freedom (YAF), Mrs. Julia Brown
gave a short briefing on her background and for
about an hour answered questions of the 30
persons she spoke to in the Student Center.
A native of Atlanta, Ca., Mrs. Brown in 1947
was a campaign worker for Albert Young, a bakery
union leader who lost a race for city councilman in
Cleveland.
"Evidently, the people of my ward knew more
about him than I did," she said, implying the
union leader was a Communist.
As a result of her campaign work, Mrs. Brown
said she was asked to join a civil rights organization in Cleveland in December 1947.
She explained how she signed a paper to join
the Civil Rights Congress and received what she
believed to be a membership card in the organization.
The next day when she read the card, Mrs.
Brown said she discovered it was a membership

card for the Communist party.
"I called a lady and asked her why I had
received a membership card for the Communist
party. She answered that the Civil Rights Congress was a Communist front," Mrs. Brown said.
Claiming she then had no knowledge of the
Communist party, the speaker said she attended
closed Communist meetings four or five times a
week, subscribed to a Communist newspaper and
went to "a private Communist school."
"My instinct told me something was wrong,"
Mrs. Brown gave as her reason for infonning the
FBI of the party's activities about six months
after joining the Civil Rights Congress.
"I began to see a conspiracy in the Communist
party. I went to the FBI and told them what I had
seen and heard and been taught, thinking the
organization was confined to the city of Cleveland,"
she recalled.
After talking with the FBI, Mrs. Brown said,
she became inactive in the party.
"I was asked to go back (to the party) in
1951 as an undercover agent for the FBI. I remained
a member for nine years.
Continued on Vgc 8, Col. 1

3P

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MRS. JULIA BROWN

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Fri.l.iy, Fck

11, 19C.9

Engineering and Science at

IBM

"You're treated
like a professional
right from the start!
"The attitude here is, if you're good enough to be
hired, you're good enough to be turned loose on a
project," says Don Feistamel.
Don earned a B.S.E.E. in 19S5. Today, he's an
Associate Engineer in systems design and evaluation at IBM. Most of his work consists of determining modifications needed to make complex
data processing systems fit the specialized
requirements of IBM customers.
Depending on the size of the project, Don
works individually or in a small team. He's
now working with three other engineers on I
part of an air traffic control system that will
process radar information by computer.
Says Don: "There are only general guidelines. The assignment is simply to come
up with the optimum system."
Set your own pace
Recently he wrote a simulation program that
enables an IBM computer to predict the performance of a data processing system that will
track satellites. He handled that project himself. "Nobody stands over my shoulder," Don
says. "I pretty much set my own pace."
Don's informal working environment is typi- -'
cal of Engineering and Science at IBM. No
matter how large the project, we break it
down into units small enough to be handled
by one person or a few people.
Don sees a lot of possibilities for the future.
He says, "My job requires that keep up to
date with all the latest IBM equipment and
systems programs. With that broad an outlook,
can move into almost any technical area at
IBM development, manufacturing, product
test, space and defense projects, programming
or marketing."
Visit your placement office
Sign up at your placement office for an inter- ON
view with IBM. Or send
CAMPUS
a letter or resume to
I

I

Irv Pfeiffer, IBM,
Dept. C, 100 South

Wacker Drive, Chicago,

FEB.

20

Illinois 60606.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Teh.

11,

'Nudes, Et AL' Scheduled To Open March 2
15

"

The drawings appearing on the Arts Page today are by UK
artist Devon Rosenstiel. An exhibition of her drawings and paintings will open Sunday, March 2, at the West Maxwell Art Shop. The
show, sponsored by John Steinrock, owner of the shop, is entitled
"Nudes, Et Al." Mrs. Rosenstiel majors in English and minors
in art at UK.
The drawing below is entitled "Nude", the one to the right
"The End." The photograph of the artist with one of her paintings
in the upper left hand comer is by Howard Shanker.

;V

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1

The End
University
Methodist Chapel
Corner Harrisooand
Sermon

Maxwell

by

Roy. Fornash

jkc

wa-

'

At

a.m.

WORSHIP SERVICE

At 6 p.m.

w. ImH 'tfmi

-

University of Life

11

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH
A. Dewey Sanders, Associate
Donald Durham, Minister
1716 S. LIME
Sam Morris, Youth Minister
J. R. Wood, Pastoral Minister
9:00 and 11:00 a.m. "A Christian's' View of Sex"
HlOO a.m. Expanded Sessions
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
I
5:00 p.m. Youth Activities
.
Worship Study Course
p.m.
7:30 p.m.-frf- r.
Sanders
Service
Parking in rear
Nursery tor all services.
Wednesday, 7 p.m.,

56

Mid-wee- k

University Luthern Student Center
SUNDAY MORNING BREAKFAST
9:00
STUDENT WORSHIP WITH COMMUNION --

IfS

A. L. BENTRUP

447 Columbia

a.nv

y!fto

Pastor

a.m.
Phones-Ca- mpus

254-312- 4;

269-135-

FIRST METHODISJCIIURCII

WEST HIGH

Nude

Transportation provided for students

AVE
II

- lir

I" A I

See Europe on

v

Octane Regular

277-66-

v

money-savin- g

6 JUNE DEPARTURES
41 AND

480 EAST MAIN
94

or

252-03-

CHARTER TOURS

LINGOLN-iSQCUQ- Y

100 Octane Ethyl

Call

I

per gaiion on crnyi
gasounc ar . .

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University o Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
the
Mailed five times weekly duringexam
school year except houdays and
and once during the summer
periods,
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post OMlce Box 4att.
Begun aa the Cadet in 18W and
published continuously aa the Kernel
since 1813.
Advertising published herein la InAny
tended to help the reader buy.should
false or misleading advertising
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$8.27
Yearly, by mail
$10
Per copy, from files
KERNEL TELEPHONES
321
Editor
Editor, Managing
Editorial Page Editor.
2320
Associate Editors, bpoiU
News Bebk
Advertising. Business, .uiui

RUSSELL R. PATTON. Minister

10:50 a.m. 'The Christ
Will", Dr. Patton
7:00 p.m. "Devine Approval," tessage by Rev. Ronald J. Masters

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The Kentucky

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Lexington, Ky.

* nn

JThrrr
scp.trat'-

tor' i'1,
Th
manm

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Nigeria;

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to .u op

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pusltin:
the attack, an

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The

more

-.!.
likely to
There .;n- two
on tiib.il
k in Jim.
divisions running
t!i :t, the (liu-- r
period of coL ri -- !! :!),
of tl- I'iaii. iXi nian
are at the
sions
conflict the Nicri.iu Civil W.irH.r destrucu.;r ?r i the Wesffrn
tive, killing, unrestnim-Coast of Africa.
jlJut all that makes little did rr nee.
People on both ski are dyi: .:. i)s;i
of
it is hard to yiy v.hd. They arc
like somethin.; less t! ui mv:i. Moie
dying
like animals, run out of water, food, shelter
. . 1 out of life.
v, ho now look like a lot less
i Black people,
than people, are shriveled up, dead, cold, gone,
on the roads of the Riafran countryside and in
the streets of that huul's cities.
Bodies of soldiers, if they can he called
soldiers in this day,, of sophisticated warfare,
provide company for tht other dead. They an.?,
all gone.
Children, who wili new; liw; to understand,
if, indeetl, the whole thinp i :i
jd,
die themselves
are forced to suck dry breasts.
-;nct

ne-cau- se

...

on bony, beaten, f iH n chests, and to look into
i .o vlure. That is v. -re
their future lies. TV
j-

are dyin; too. Ld.e th-- soldie r,.
of ton;. A
iiiafra h.i: beeo:::. a pod
d tuK'iof), Rich in natural iv o:nco.., it i ! ;r
or in most natural
in all cl;e. Nr;eii.i,
t
is
tin; ur richer. Just more d:;:d.
At the University ei'Kentucky, the Emergency
Committee on Nigeria and Biafra has pk d ; d
itself to hold daily v i ;il s until the conllict is
,

ended. Earlier, drives were conducted to raise
funds in an attempt to relieve the conditions of
people. Both of
suffering amon;: tL,:,e v.ar-tor- n
these activities, hov. ver, have drawn only
limited 'support and p.iiticip dion from UK stuv;.
dents. ;

at tJioUniversityK
ity
a
to find yahoos who are all too
be trained and shipped off to some
(hvtai part of the world where they will kill
and .
a and be killed under some pretext
'
O!
It is difficult to find persons,
!. ) are
willing to exert even minimal
u man suffering.
at to
it

!

t

.:

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1

.

d ofattitude, perhaps the people
With tlas
acre won t na e o wait too long before they can
find sufficient iea n to fight against an ernbit-ko- d
Nierian-Biaf- r.
a people of a subsequent
;

gem .:. it ion.
And then all will be .well. We'll have more

'

Photo From

Time-Lir-

e

Books Biafra Journal

The Kentucky Kjernel
of
University

ESTABLISHED

Kentucky

FRIDAY, FEB. 14, 1969

1894

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lee B. Becker,
Guy M. Mendes

III, Managing Editor

Editor-in-Chi-

ef

Darrell Rice, Editorial Page
Tom Derr, Business Manager
Jim Miller, Associate
Howard Mason, Photography Editor
Chip Hutcheson, Sports
Jack Lyne and Larry Kelley, Arts Editors
Frank Coots,
Dana Ewell,
Janice
Terry Dunham,
Larry Dale Keeling,
Assistant Managing Editors

Editor
Editor
Editor
Barber

Kernel Forum: the readers write

Is

Russian Nostalgia
To the Editor of the Kernel:
I would like to congratulate the students who played "Back in the USSR"
window of Pence
from the third-floHall Wednesday morning. They added a
bit of pleasant nostalgia to that snowy
day and helped to recall memorable days
on the Russian Front. Thanks for brightening up our campus.
Alan Kite
A & S Freshman
or

Hard Rock At UK
It would be interesting to know just

what percentage of UK students have ever
heard of the Iron Butterfly, Big Brother
and the Holding Company, Albert King,
Mike Bloomfield or even Hendrix for that
matter. I don't consider myself an authority on music, but I like most any
kind. Before I say that I don't like a
group I try to give an album two or three
good listenings before I say the group
doesn't do anything for me. However,
when I ask some of my friends if they
can dig psyche music most of them say
they hate it. Then I ask them if they've
heard very much, and they have to admit they haven't.
In most places in the U.S. hard rock
music is a big thing, except for the Southland; but I doubt if this is indicative
of any underlying factor though possibly it is. I agree essentially with Mr.
Kelley of the Kernel in his view of the
Supremes and his contention that the
whole atmosphere is somewhat stagnant.
On of the main problems was the acoustics which were terrible and people high
up couldn't hear. I'll guarantee there
wouldn't be any hearing problem if somebody like Janis Joplin or the Iron Butterfly were to play in "the house that Hupp

for if UK were to ever have the Iron ButExcellent Publicity
terfly or Hendrix, etc., it would be a visual
Thank you for the excellent publicity
all over again.
as well as a listening experience because
If the Student Activity Committee can of the strobe lights, dark lights, and other given to the Department of Special Edue
picture
afford to have the Supremes here then equipment they use. All I'm asking is for cation by means of your
UK can certainly afford to have a good people to give it an honest chance. Even of our sign. We feel honored to be alhard rock band. About six weeks ago the if there are many who after they have tried located such prime space in your FebIron Butterfly were in Lexington after it don't like it and wouldn't go see this ruary 6 issue.
they flew in from the coast waiting to type of show, even if only to get better
Some of my colleagues have wondered
hop over to Morehead for a concert. Let's acquainted with it, the University why you displayed such a "trivial" thing
please hope that Morehead isn't the Ken- wouldn't lose money on the first try. If rather than, say, a news item or picture
a second effort were made then the place about the excellent recent T.V. special
tucky school that's up on the times, although . that isn't the objective. You would be filled, for not only would that "Teacher, Teacher" which explained one
needn't worry about filling the coliseum, so called "very small minority" be there facet of our business; i.e., the education
even though there are many who think but others who have been turned on as of retarded children. Frankly, I feel that
they couldn't dig it; there are others who well. As I said earlier I enjoy many forms if you had to pick a subject of local
could and all would show up for such an of music and not just hard rock; I hope interest, your choice was splendid of
event because they're starving for it. we continue to have other top flight soul high
quality and, most of all, relevant.
My only plea is to people who haven't groups at UK.
I especially liked the inclusion of our
been turned on yet is to listen to some
I believe there are others who feel esoffice number (245 Dickey Hall) in the
of that heavy guitar that first grates on sentially the same way I do and I hope
Creat idea on the part of the
your teeth, then gets in your system, they express themselves for I have probably picture.
Kernel Photographer Moseley. It lets stuand finally makes you go out . of your failed to do so. At
any rate, gee whiz.
know exactly where to apply for
gourd because you crave it so much. Mom, can't we try to have either Janis, dents
radio stations don't play this Jimi, or the Iron Butterfly? At least three exciting careers.
Lexington
type of music except an occasional mild times anyway.
One, might, however, question your
Hendrix, so the only way to see if you
Franklin Owen inference about the paper clips used as
might like it is to listen to an album.
A & S Junior hanging chains. Would you efchew inLike I said, I'm no music critic but this
genuity in a situation where heavy chains
would be my
course in how
are incongruent with the decor of our
to learn to like bluesy psyche. Start off
jhallway? An interesting fact related to
Operation Mail Call
with In-Cadda Da Vida and listen
this whole affair is that our sign myto it three times, playing the parts you To the Editor of the Kemeb
Letters can be an excellent morale steriously disappeared Friday morning.
liked best over. Then try both Janis JopUpon returning, from the lunch hour,
lin albums, next Hendrix, then the hard booster. Please publish the following anwe found it reafExed securely to the wall
rock side of the new Beatles album and nouncement:
by means of a heavy duty bracket. I will
that's enough for starters.
If you're a coed, you are an important accept the new mode of display as a reaIt doesn't matter whether it's black person. You can brighten the day of a sonable compromise between the clips
or white as long as its got charisma. serviceman in Vietnam. Make a new and chains. Frankly, though, I thought
Hendrix is one of the best going, whereas friend. Send an introductory letter with the clips expressed a delicate quality more
Janis is soul and psyche rolled into white. a picture enclosed. If possible to:
acceptable to the sensibilities of the
esthetically aware.
I probably haven't communicated but
Operation Mail Call
I just hope students who don't know what
175th RR Co.
William J. Tisdall
I'm talking about will try and get acAPOSF 06227
Chairman, Dept. of
Dave McKeever
quainted with what I'm trying to say,
Special Education

built," for they would blow the roof
They'd tear it down and build it up

off.

front-pag-

self-style-

A

d

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb. H,

1909- -5

Demonstrators Disrupt Campuses Across The Nation
By The Associated Press
Student demonstrators disrupted campuses across the country Thursday, with violence
breaking out at three schools.
More than 30 persons were
arrested at the University of California at Berkeley after clashes
between police and student striken and their sympathizers.
J Tear
gas and bared bayonets
were used by police and National Guardsmen at the University of Wisconsin at Madison to control roving bands of
demonstrators who ranged in
number from 500 to 3,000.
And police fired tear gas canisters at Duke University students in Durham, N.C., in a
demonstration that followed the
occupation of the administration building by about 30
to 40 black students. The stu--

dents left the building quietly
after administration officials
warned them they would be suspendedbut they refused to leave
the area.
A Duke spokesman said rebellious black students had told
officials they had kerosene with
them and would use it to bum
records unless their demands
were met.
The students say they want
a black studies program controlled by black students, a black
dormitory, reinstatement ofblack
students who flunked out last
semester and a black adviser
elected by black students.
Later police and state troopers fired tear gas at the student
demonstrators and were answered by a barrage of rocks
and empty gas canisters in a
melee that lasted more than two
hours before quiet was restored.
Four city officers and a state
trooper were known to have been
injured, along with at least 20
students. Several demonstrators
were taken into custody, but it
Classified advertising will b accepwas not known if they were
ted en a
bails enly. Ads ma 7
be placed In persen Monday threat h charged.
Friday er by mall, payment Inclosed,
Gov. Bob Scott ordered 500
te THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Beam
111, Jearnallsm Bide
National Guardsmen to Durham,
Rates are $1.25 far 20 wards, fS.00
far three eoniecntlTe' Insertions at the but their commander said they
same ad af 20 wards, and $3.75 per
would not go onto the campus
week, 20 wards.
The deadline Is 11 a.m. the day
unless needed. The troops were
prior to publication. No advertisement
billeted at an armory two miles
may cite race, religion or national
origin as a qualification for renting
rooms or for employment.
away.

12-ho-

CLASSIFIED
pre-pai-

d

WANTED

The trouble at Wisconsin
marked the fourth straight day
of a boycott organized by black
students.
The violence at Berkeley broke
out after police cleared a campus entrance of demonstrators
participating in the student strike
led by the Third World Liberation Front. Because of the strike,
Cov. Ronald Reagan declared a
"state of extreme emergency" at
the
campus last
28,000-stude-

nt

week.

In New York, about 100 City
College students invaded the
school's administration building

and occupied two floors of offices for Vi hours to press demands ofblack and Puerto Rican
students. One demand was for
a separate school of black and
Puerto Rican studies.
About 400 students at the
University of Chicago announced
they had voted against ending
their occupation of the administration building immediately.
The occupation was in its 15th
day. The university suspended
22 demonstrators, bringing the
total suspended to 80.
Picketing resumed on the
dent Wis
sprawling, 33,000-stu

consin campus Thursday morning after Cov. Warren P. Knowles
told a news conference that the
disorders there, and on campuses
from coast to coast, were being
run "by someone who has different ideologies than we have."
Knowles ordered 900 National
Cuardsmen to the school Wednesday night after three straight
days of disturbances stemming
from a classroom boycott. The
outbreak followed 13 demands
by black students, among them
creation of a separate black studies department.

Was 'Maine Chance' Really Sold?
The Associated Press
For nearly 13 days of testimony, witnesses in a U.S. District
Court trial have been referring
to the sale of Maine Chance
Farm. Now, it is revealed, there
was no such sale.
Robert Odear, one of the lawyers involved in the $30 million
anti-trusuit, made the revelation as the 13th day of testimony
was drawing to a close.
When the estate of Elizabeth
Arden Graham sold the farm to
the UK Research Foundation in
1967, he asked a witness, was the
name "Maine Chance" sold with
it? Not at all, replied J. Howard
st

of Mrs.

Carter, a

Gra-

ham's estate and a New York
attorney.
Carter explained that the
name "Maine Chance" is shared
farms
Jy two These owned by the Arden
estate.
are facilities where
women go for beauty treatments.
"Is the name 'Maine Chance'
considered a valuable asset by
the estate?" Odear asked.
"Yes it is very valuable,"
Carter replied.
"Would it havebeen sold with
the Farm?"

"Not at all."
Carter was one of a series of
witnesses brought by the Bank

of New York, a defendant in the
anti-trusuit along with the
Keeneland Association and the
UK Research Foundation.
Another Bank of New York
witness hinted to the jury that
the bid submitted by Ellsworth
and Pessin may have been lost
in the mail. It arrived in New
York too late for consideration.
By the time the
bid arrived in New York,
the jury has been told, the farm
already had been sold to the UK
Foundation for $2 million.
st

Pessin-Ells-wor- th

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He represents 170 separate GE "companies" that
deal In everything from space research to electric
toothbrushes. And each of these product departments is autonomous. Each has its own manage-meand business objectives.
So a job at General Electric offers the kind of
immediate responsibility you might expect to find
only in a small business.
Right from the start you get a chance to demonstrate your initiative and capabilities. And the
more you show us, the faster you'll move ahead.
nt

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have to spend a lifetime working on the same job
in the same place. We have operations all over the
world. Chances are you'll get to try your hand at
more than one of them.
Our interviewer will be on campus soon. If
you're wondering whether it's possible to find challenging work in big business, please arrange to seo
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IBf.O

SAE, Blue Tide Win In Semifinals
SAE gained possession on a floor
Dy ailP HUTCIIESON
mistake with nine seconds left
AND CHUCK RATLIFF
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, on the in regulation, and Wilson was
fouled with six seconds remainshooting of Scotty Wiling.
son, won an overtime decision
On the bonus situation, Wilfrom the Nads,
in the
son connected on both.
Insemifinals of the
In the overtime, Wilson scored
tramural Basketball Tournament.
SAE piled up a 0 lead, but the first three points by hitting
the Nads blasted back on the a driving layup and hitting a
shooting of Lowell Watson and
for
Crouse hit two
Donnie Tucker to go ahead
as the half ended. It was the Nads, then Simmons came
the rest of the way. back with two gratis tosses and
lead. Watson
gave SAE a
With the Nads ahead
hit a field goal to put the Nads
Jeff Kerr hit two
but the official scorer and the within one point.
With 52 seconds left in overreferees couldn't remember seeing
him hit one of them, so SAE time, Jim Richardson went to
He
the line on the
was denied one point.
Wilson scored on a layup made the shot, but it was disto even the