xt7g1j979708 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7g1j979708/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19691121  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 21, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 21, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7g1j979708 section xt7g1j979708 Ins
Friday Evening, November 21,

19G9

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXI, No. 61

Women's Honrs Reforms
Effective Next Semester
By BILL MATTHEWS
Assistant Managing Editor
The
reform of
women's residence hall hours will
become a reality next semester
when UK adopts, on a trial basis,

semester
until Thanksgiving,
Sunday through Thursday, 11
p.m.; Friday andSaturday, la.m.
After Thanksgiving, the hours
would be midnight on
2 a.m. on Friday and
hours for coeds. Saturday.
Jack Hall, dean of students,
Starting this spring semester,
announced the policy change night clerks will be on duty in
all dorms from 11 p.m. to 7 a.m.
Thursday afternoon.
Based on recommendations every night. Dorms will be closed
and locked at midnight.
from the Associated Women StuMen visitors will be required
dents (AWS), the new system
will become effective next semes- to leave 30 minutes prior to the
ter.
midnight closing.
Admission after closing hours
AWS, at Dean Hall's request,
will evaluate the program after of coeds with unlimited-hour- s
spring break to see what problems privileges will be worked out
there are and what can be done separately.
Coeds will have to show their
about them.
Under the new program wom- ID and activity cards to the
en students above the freshman
night clerk, who will check them
level will regulate their own against a dorm roster.
hours.
Voluntary Signing Out
If adopted permanently, the
Current sign-iand
t
program provides (beginning next procedures will be reduced to a
Fall) for a
"adjustvoluntary status. Coeds who will
ment period" for freshmen wom- be
gone for extended lengths of
en living in dorms.
time are requested, but not rt
'Adjustment' Period Hours
quired, to leave some means of
The adjustment period would reaching them in case of an emerobserve the following closing gency.
A night log will be kept as a
hours: from the beginning of the
long-debate-

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"self-regulatin-

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Kernel Photo by Dave Herman

Leary
Logic

j

Dr. Timothy Leary, the high priest of the
League of Spiritual Discovery, spoke to
approximately 800 students Thursday night
about the generation gap concerning religion, politics, drugs and sex.

Marijuana 'Greatest Gift'

feed-bac- k

head-reside-

Dr. Tim's Philosophy 'Feel Good9

regurgitative spasms of all things
"plastic and canned and hypo"The distillation of liquor was critical."
the most dangerous thing to hapPsychedelic drugs are earth
pen in the U.S.," Leary ex- drugs which bring "nature" to
claimed.
human nature, Leary asserted.
Leary said that LSD is only
Psychedelic drugs are
drugs that create new good for a minority of the population and that social pressures
perspecshould not make people "drop
tive?, Leary claimed. Their "optical orgasms," their slowing acid." However, he christened
down of time, their maximum marijuana the "greatest gift God
create a has given to the human race."
on beauty" that causes
Continued on rage 3, Col. 5
"hang-u-

The "feel good" philosophy
penetrates into art, music, literature and all arms of society,
Leary said. The Woodstock music festival last summer was a
re"head doctor" high priest of the
and the
of this generation, "came to- ligion," according to Leary. Ingether" with an overflow of stu- dividuality, brotherhood and
dents and faculty in the Student tmst created "accurate communCenter Crand Ballroom Thurs- ication," he added.
According to Leary, the "reday night.
ligion" he proposes is not a fad
Speaking to over 800 perbut s "different trip" to a difsons in forthright language acferent society that is "real, honest
companied by forceful gestures,
Leary gave his sell on the "gap" and loving."
between the generations, a gap
The only politics of this "rewhich he said comprises schisms ligion," he said, is to "live and
in religious, political, drug and let live do your own thing and
sexual attitudes.
don't hurt anybody else." This,
"Feel good" is the basic phiLeary added, is feasible because
losophy of the Leary religion each man is born "divine" and
as espoused by his League of has the right to live tlirough his
Spiritual Discovery. "You can't "divinity" in his own way.
do good unless you feel good,"
'Down Trips'
Leary said, a philosophy he
He said liquor causes "down
that of the
placed in contrast to
"older generation" which Leary trips" which are harmful physibranded as a "bad trip of evil, cally and mentally, make you
"feel bad," "put you to sleep,"
suffering and feeling bad."

and turn men into vulgar, crude

SG Assembly Rejects

!V'
i'- -

By JE ANNIE ST. CHARLES
Kernel Staff Writer
Dr. Timothy Leary, the "explorer of those unknown outer
reaches of human experience"

"feel-goo- d

Minimum Wage Plan
der of business before the group
voted to adjourn.
The assembly also passed a
measure appropriating $25 to help
"the Student Services Committee
and all others concerned to investigate fully the communication between all students and
the president of the University
and the communication between
The assembly passed the resGovernment Assema the Student
olution, which charges that
and the president."
bly
lower minimum wage would "exThe bill states that the money
ploit the present economic straits
of is needed because "the Student
of youth to the advantage
Continued on P&je 8, Cot 2
business interests," as a last or- -

By TOM BO WD EN
Kernel Staff Writer
The Student Government Assembly approved at its meeting
Thursday night a resolution objecting to a plan under consideration by the U.S. Department
of Labor to lower the minimum
wage for young people.

security measure by th night
clerk on duty, and coeds who
come in or leave after the dorms
must sign their a"mc, room number and the time.
Guests of women students also
will have to sign the nfght log,
and will be admitted after hours
only with an occupant of the
residence hall.
Men's residence halls also will
be affected by the new system.
Men's dorms will.be locked at
midnight also and night clerks
may ask male students or their
guests to show identification.
Guests may be asked to register.
Security Strengthening
Dean Hall emphasized that
the new system was "in no way
an attempt to limit the movements of male students, but an
attempt to limit theft and vandalism in residence halls."
The new system "beefs up
security through the use of desk
clerks and locking dorms," according to Hall.
Dean Hall indicated that the
biggest problem with the hours
program would be the procedure
involved, commenting, "I expect
some
primarily because
the mechanics of implementation
will be misunderstood."
Gary Corbett, a dorm
who was present at the
announcement said "there will
probably be mechanical problems
coming up that we haven't even
thought of."
The AWS, which took the
initiative in developing a new
hours system, presented recommendations to Dean Hall last
July based on a poll of women
students taken last spring.
After discussing, revising and
consulting with residence hall
staff and the SG Student Services Committee on the AWS
recommendations, the dean of
students' staff worked out the
new hours plan.

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Slides and music concerning nudity in art, followed by the painting
of a body highlighted an art seminar Thursday. The talk was delivered
Kernel fhoto by Dak War
by Judi Jasper.

* KENTUCKY KERNEL, friday, Nor. 21,

2-- TIIE

19

Perversions Do Not A Skin Flick Make
vindicate the trade journals and

By BRAD CRISSOM

Kernel Staff Writer
provide "voyeuristic titillations
Nice idea for a contemporary for those who want them"; on
the other, it wants to comment
comedy of manners: seven couon our sexual
ples arrive at an Argentine lovers'
hotel, most of them with the in- mores and throw us a serious
tention of making it on the sly. moral message about the validity
One of their number contracts of marriage
"Cames" fails to titillate partthe plague, and the whole group
is quarantined for two weeks. ly because we have outgrown
In their minds, thoughts of the kind of meager eroticism it
scandal mingle with dreams of provides. If anything must be
skin flicks must.
happy sexual paradise. But they avant-gardsoon become disillusioned with Carter-bel- t
imagery and ubiquisex and each other. Save for two tous bosoms, except to a random
students who maintain their chas- fetishist or two, are painfully
tity and a married couple who passe nowadays, and "Cames"
rediscover marriage, the whole doesn't even try to surfeit us
with these few devices, another
fortnight is a bust.
"The Cames Men Play is a trick of the trade.
But the main reason "Cames"
bust too, but it's an interesting
example of the ambivalent screen doesn't titillate is because it
hold their spends too much of its time
in which movie-make- rs
audiences.
moralizing and doing a miserable
The film is caught unbecom- job of i t. The plot swiftly devol ves
into a congeries of
ingly between two aspirations.
On the one hand, it wants to ideas that aren't even funny.
light-hearted-

The characters, who could be
richly suggestive and representative, don't have time or space
to define themselves or grow.
Whole scenes fall flat, like
dinner where a
the
ventriloquist's dummy tries to
characterize the various relationships. Oh, satire, where is thy
sting?
"Cames" is worthy of condemnation (so many bad movies
are not) chiefly because of its
billing. Look at it: "Winner of
five International
Festival
Awards" is juxtaposed against
some carnal version of the ewige
last-nig-

STUDENT

COSSETT
Arts Editor
Lynton Wells is more than
just a photographer, and more
than a sculptor. Even referring
to him as a photographic sculptor does not do full justice to
his work.
What Wells does do is this.
He takes photographs of people
on
film, prints them
on specially prepared photographic inen and blows the pri nts
up so that they will be life-sior larger.
The next step in the process
is to make a form or mold that
is roughly the size and shape
of the person or object photographed. Into the mold. Wells
pours urethane foam which is
roughly similar to styrofoam.
When the form is built. Wells
attaches the photograph (which
by this time has been
to the urethane form or
core. What this amounts to, when
completed, is a photograph in
the form of a statue.
Wells, who has a B.A. from
the Rhode Island School of Dek
sign and an M.A. from
Institute, presented a series
of slides taken of his work to a
weekly assembly of art students
Thursday.
The process does not end with
the completion of the figures, as
the slides revealed. Due to the
lack of dimensionality, which is
a side effect of the developing
slow-spee- d

1

ze

hand-tinte-

Cran-broo-

s,

ADVISORY
COMMITTEE

President Singletary's personal advisory committee charged with the formulation of long
range academic improvements is accepting
applications for membership. Submit name,
address, phone number and hours available
for interviews to Room 204 of the Student Cen 7
ter. The deadline is noon Tuesday, Nov. 25

Artist 'Builds' Photographs:
Prints Applied To Forms
By DAN

ten-degr- ee

(U8AG

UNIVERSITY

half-develop-

furnish a broader base for showcasing new features than the
legitimate houses can provide.
When "Pretty Poison" and
"Midnight Cowboy" are among
the films we wouldn't otherwise
get to see, then that's justificanamely, moments of distinction tion enough for their existence.
or shreds of intelligence or a solid There are obvious limitations to
idea that rises incongruously out the drive-in-s
experience
of trash.
weather, bad acoustics, loss
"The Cames Men Play" is of illusion but, besides the obshowing at the Circle 25 Auto vious advantages, there's someTheatre. That's not intended as thing primitively exciting about
a further qualification. Drive-in- s it too. Also something nostalgic:
the rage of the 50s,
in Lexington have a vital drive-infunction to perform in that they are on the way out.
Weibliche. That kind of build-u- p
can cause innocents like me k
lot of misspent evenings.
IT! be ready to accept the
Argentine cinema when its bad
tries have the saving graces of
American commercial products

process, the way in which the
figures are placed in relation
to each other an in relation to
the physical surroundings is quite
important.
Wells has gotten around the
problem in two different ways.
When it's appropriate, he matches the figure into small groups
to form a vignette. The other
technique is to allow excess
urethane to remain on the figure.
At times, the character of a
particular figure dictates that it
be placed in a special way. Wells
explained that the model for one
figure, an older woman, was so
when the photograph
was taken, that he placed the
figure in a comer.

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Some Talk Of Change
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, rridar. Nor. 21. I0-- 3

Iernel

The Kentucky

The Kentucky Kernel. Unlrrrtity
SUtton. University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 4050, Smnd class
portage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed fire timn weekly during the
cbool year except hoUdjyt and exam
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Published by the Board of Student
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topics ranging from lack of
police protect ion to fo-services. They were tnldlry Bnice
Carver to "get your gripes In . . .
raise a little hell."

Kernel Staff Writer
Residents of Donovan Hall
were encourage! last night by
a croup of Student Government
members to place prcure upon
SC representatives to effect necessary chances on campus.
Fielding a wide and long list
of grievances wereSG representatives Bruce Carver, Chcd Jennings and Roger Valentine.
s
gaApproximately 40
thered to question the panel on

One girl felt that the fraternities and sororities had too much
power. It was noted that of tle
16
student government
representatives elected last
spring, 15 were Creek. Twelve
of them wereontheCreek-backe- d
slate.
Jennings answered this by say
at-lar-

co-ed-

&tA

ar

mmh.

1

high-impa-

vote in mass.

Speaking out for student action, Jennings asked tliose students present to "utilize the bus
system" and slow that extension
of the 10.30 till 12 service isjusti-fiable.

year.
Carv er admitted UK studen ts
lack power, but added later, "It's
very trying at times, but we're

A new point of view for your shirt
wardrobe features the newly wide spra
A new point of view for your shirt wardrobe features the newly wide spread
town-collfor wide ties. The
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Alaska blue, cinnamon and . . . blue or
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from $9.

V

"Tlxy (tlose elected) could

Many of the students problems were referred to Roljcrt
Blakeman, director of auxiliary
services.
Carv er claimed Blakeman was
"one of the most cooperative
administrators on campus." He
added that Blakeman "came to
a totally confused system" last

The great new Gant
is prince of shirts
it

ing.

not have won with just Creek
voting. It takes more tkin Creek
votes to win an election."
Bruce Carver pointed out tli.it
tlorms ami organizations othcT
tfun the Creek system lo not

trying."

heavy Speaks

ct

Parr One
Leary said he prefers youthful free love to the "hypocritical, lying, guilty, geni tally narrow" concept of love adhered
to by the "Nixon-Spir- o
generaCoo tinned from

tion."

Leary added: "It's not thnt
they didn't ball; you ball better," as he addressed the audience.

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Leary "s recitation of a closing poem, "You Can Be Anything This Time Around," was
an expression of his doctrine.
The gist of the poem is that
man attains
by using whatever it takes to make
him "high," by being whatever
he wants to be.

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230 photos In black and white plus 24 pages
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2CS. THE ANNOTATED

ALICE:

AUee's

Wa4rU4 sa4 Tkrsagk
Lewis Carroll, luus.
Glass.

Ike
by
By
Leskiar
John Tennirl. With in trod, and notes by
Martin Gardner. The complete text and
lllus. in the only fully annotated
Notes are concunent with the text
on ail the okes. games, parodies, puxxlcs.
etc with which Carrollat filled his writings.
$1400. New,
Sise SWxll. ling. pub.
ed esUy $3.94
1

edi-Uu- n.

And many more outstanding boo!:s to choose from!

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* Iernel

The Kentucky

University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21,

1894

10C9

Editorial represent the opinion of the Editors, not of the University.
James W. Miller,
George II. Jepson, Managing Editor
Robert Duncan, Advertising Manager
Chip Hutcheson, Sports Editor
Carolyn Dunnavan, Features Editor

Editor-in-Chi-

Bob Drown, Editorial rage Editor
Dottie Dean, Associate Editor

Dan Gossctt, Arts Editor
Don Rosa, Cartoonist

Haynsworth: An Absurdity

The continued discussion on the
acceptance of Clement Hayns-worthnomination to the Supreme
Court illustrates an absurdity of
the highest order. It is hardly conceivable that our Senate would
expend so much time and effort
's

on a man who is obviously unqualified for the seat.
If Emerson's observation that
"A foolish consistence is the hobgoblin of little minds" applies in
this case, it certainly cannot be
said our senators have little minds.
The uproar created when Abe For-ta- s
was accused of havingaccepted
a retainer (which he soon returned)
from a firm with which he could
have been in conflict in his position on the bench should now be
multiplied many times in considering the nomination of Haynsworth.
Mr. Haynsworth has gone so far as
to retain his stock in companies
involved in cases on which his
court was sitting. If the Senate
is to apply its yardstick indiscriminately there can be no doubt about
the outcome of this case.
Mr. Haynsworth's record of decisions is not of the caliber needed

for a Supreme Court justice. Many
argue this is his best qualification
for assuming the seat Fortas va-

cated. The bench must not be progressive, they contend. It's now
time for a reassessment ofthedirec-tio- n
of the Supreme Court. Even if
one can accept the basic premise
of this argument, he need not embrace Haynsworth blindly. The decisions on which Haynsworth has
participated should not bereguard- ed in the light of whether hewould
be a progressive or conservative
justice, but they must be evaluated
using the criteria of fairness and
logic. On these counts Haynsworth
is a loser.
There should be no doubt as
to the outcome of the senate's
vote. The vote will probably provide the most humiliating defeat
yet suffered by the Nixon administration. This is not necessarily good,
but perhaps it will serve to remind
the President that his nation won't
stand idly by as he is manipulated
by those questionable interests
which secured his nomination and
election. He is now the President
of the United States.

Complex Students Deserve
Improved Grille Facilities
There are so many obvious examples of inefficiency on the UK
campus that students too often
take them for granted, refusing to
do anything but tolerate the inconveniences they offer. The grille in

tract the attention of a grille worker. Complaints are widespread that
get the neb from stupretty co-edent aids, while athletes are given
priority by the other workers.
Regardless of the foundation of
the Complex Commons is a case the charges of discrimination, it
in point.
,is in comprehensible why the grille
For small quantities of third cannot arrange itself in someorder.
rate food at first rate prices it is
If the management of the grille
that one has to tolerate continues to ignore students reastonishing
such a gross lack of service. The quests for efficiency, perhaps the

only organization utilized by the
grille is one based on chaos. There
is no reason or rhyme whatever to
the process of placing orders and
obtaining service. Students merely
wander up to a spot along the
thirty-foo- t
counter and try to at

ds

Complex government could muster
the fortitude to exercise a little
student power. A boycott of the
grille would do much more to improve the disposition of its managers than mere student com-

plaints.

rwrr

The
and Tribune SymfctaM

"

Kernel Forum: the readers write!
A Memo To

Ponder

Mao Sends Thanks

To the Editor of the Kernel:
Today was Veteran's Day. There was
I would like to submit the following
nothing in the Kernel honoring our war
veterans living and dead. Instead you
memorandum for public perusal:
chose to do your best at destroying what
TO:
Who's Who Nominees
FROM: Buck Pennington, Chairman
they fought and died for. You used the
Who's Who Selection Committee freedom of dissent that they gave you to
undermine any attempt for alastingpeace
RE:
Your Nomination to Who's Who
in Vietnam.
At this time I should like to congratulate you upon your selection to Who's
I don't know who wrote the article
Who. In light of the reaction by various
"Participation Now," but he or she
members of the campus in regard to shouldn't be
surprised if Cliairman Mao
Who's Who, an editorial comment may
sends his thanks. Writings such as this
be somewhat appropriate. The thirty-seve- n one contribute more to American war
people selected from the Univercasualties than Russian military equipsity of Kentucky campus represent those
ment ever could.
whose
activities, academCLEN ROBERTS
ic achievements or other notable accomA & S Freshman
merited them the Who's Who
plishments
title on our campus. It is irrelevant that
the Who's Who foundation may be a
scheme or tliat Morehead
money-makin- g
EDITOR'S NOTE: All letters to the edinominees.
and not
University also has thirty-seve- n
tor must be typed, double-spaceThe relevance lies in that the committee more than 200 words in length. The
believed there were at least thirty-seve- n
writer must sign the letter and give classistudents at the University of Kentucky fication, address and phone number. Send
who deserved recognition. You have been or deliver all letters to Room 11S-of
so recognized. Again, my heartiest conthe Journalism Building. The Kernel regratulations.
serves the right to edit letters without
GUY MENDES
A & S Senior
changing meaning.
extra-curricul-

d

Kernel Soapbox

m
Li

By WAYNE H, DAVIS

I've been thinking about the generation gap. Never before has a generation
been so deserving of the alienation of
their children as has mine. Oh, I admit
many young people are hateful spoiled
brats who are not properly appreciative
where they should be. But we older
people have plundered the earth in an
ever accelerating orgy of destruction and
squandered its resources on military might
and other pork barrel projects. And as our
national leaders bow out at the highest
level of affluence ever attained by any
civilization, they leave the young people
with the most dismal future any living
organism has ever faced. They have been
totally negligent of giving any consideration to the needs of people 10 years or
more hence. Perhaps this is because the
actuary tables tell us that few of our
senators will be here that long.

Last week Congress passed a routine
military appropriations bill of $20 billion
to finance the war and other affairs for a
few more months. There was little opposition, and the matter would not have caught
my attention had it not been for the words
of House Speaker John McCormack, 77.
He said that he would favor anything for
the nation's security.
Speaker McCormack is an honorable
man. He is a man of integrity. He deserves our gratitude, having served this
naton well through 24 years in the House.
But his statement stimulated me to
thought from which I conceived a most
radical idea. At the risk of losing my
footing among my chronological contemporaries and falling into the ever
widening abyss of the gap, I will bring
it forth.
We should eliminate the one nun one

In sharp contrast, however, today's
student faces an exciting but extremely
bleak future which will be darkening every
year. He will be expected to preside over
the decline and fall of a great civilization long after today's leaders are dead.
But the rate of decline is being determined
by the economic policies of today. Our
young people must pay ever more dearly
vote.
for each moon shot and little war that
Times have changed and the system comes along. Therefore, we should amend
must also change and adapt. When John our constitution. The age limit of 35 for
M