xt7h445hdn26 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7h445hdn26/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690122  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 22, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 22, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7h445hdn26 section xt7h445hdn26 11

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OTWUM
Vol. LX, No. 79

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Wednesday Evening, Jan. 22, I960

Members Rebuke
Bryan On Mousing Policy
aSG

'

I

:i

-

By STONEY FRANKLIN

-

v

:

Kernel Staff Writer
Student Government President Wally Bryan was rebuked
last night by assembly members
for mini mi ring student discontent with the new University
housing policy.
No SG delegate offered to
defend Bryan, who was criticized
for telling the Board of Trustees
last month that student dissatisfaction with the new policy resulted from a "misunderstand-

i

V

!

ing."
i

Joe Isaac, a delegate of Students for Action and Responsibility (SAR), asked Bryan, "What
gives you the right to go before the
trustees and give your interpretation for the Student Govern-

J

ment?"
was the recent
referendum showing 97 percent of voting students
opposed to the new policy, which
"would allow the University to
enact regulations requiring sophomores, juniors or seniors to live
on campus."
At

Kernel Photo By Craig King

Bryan
Under Fire

SG President Wally Bryan faces charges
from fellow delegates Tuesday night that

he "sold out" student referendum results
on the new University housing policy.

issue

as alternate. Scott and Speer
Policy Misunderstood
.both were defeated by a majority
Bryan last month told the
other two were aptrustees of the vote count and vote; the
proved.
disasked them to schedule a
SG reported that the Student
cussion of the housing policy.
Health Service has set up a comBut he added that he thought
mittee to study the problems of
some representatives misunderstudents who need medical serstood the new policy and that
vice after hours. An attempt is
they had "blown the thing up."
made to keep the Health
Last night's criticism of Bryan being
Service open daily until
came only from a few SO representatives.
'Sell-ou- t'

Bryan responded to charges of
selling out the referendum results by saying, "I am opposed
to any proposal that would house
in University
upperclassmen

housing."

He said he has proposed that
no more dormitories be built here
until "students show a desire
to live in them.

End Building
Bryan said SG should draw

up a bill asking the University
to build no more dorms without

student approval. But he added:
"Only a small number of
sophomores will have to live in
University dorms next semester,
as the University is trying to
slack up on the regulations."
Under the new housing policy,
some SG members felt that the
effect might find
long-terjuniors and seniors required to
live in University facilities.
Protesters Split
Committee Sets
The 5,000 to 10,000 protesters
Other business included an
present at the parade added a attempt by Bryan to set up an
elections committee. Scott Richdiscordant note.
The protesters splintered from mond, Debbie Clarke and Woody
the initial Mobe organization into Woo da 11 were submitted by Bryan
as candidates, and John Speer
different factions.
"There was complete division," said Karen Schroeder, a
sophomore who joined ranks with
a revolutionary group from New
York.
The division was verbalized
Representatives from the
'in the chants of the protesters, Peace Corps will be in the Stuas "Peace Now," contrasted with dent Center and the Blanding-Kirwa- n
the "Revolution Now" shouts.
Commons Jan. 4 to
While the blue and white uni- discuss corps programs.
formed band added to the esA
language placetablished scene, Miss Schroeder ment test will be given Jan.
said she was impressed by "the
For further information, see
the recruit en at either site.
Continued on Pace 7, CoL 3

UK Band Elicits Nixon Smile;

Splintered Protesters Ignored
band. "Our governor was so
By SUE ANNE SALMON
proud of us," she said of the
Kernel Staff Writer
and band representing Kentucky. "He
Ignoring the protesters
his
smiling to the band were Presi- was standing up and clapping
hands."
dent Nixon's reactions to two
When the band passed the
groups of UK students attending
reviewing
the inauguration and its coun- Nixon presidential
stand, "I looked up, he smiled
terpart.
and I smiled and I felt so proud.
UK
While the
He looked like the President of
Wildcat Marching Band joined the United States," Miss Wil- -'
with the Presidential motorcade, liams said.
bands and floats to form the In"It stunk," another band
augural Parade, the four protestmember said of the inauguration
ers from UK joined forces with before he hung up the telephone,
the National Mobilization Com- in an interview on his return
mittee to End the War in VietTuesday.
nam (Mobe) to make the count-- !
"I don't think I've ever been
prouder of marching in the
Governor Proud
band," Paul Anderson, a
commented. "It gave me
"It was fantastic," said Lynda a
feeling of national pride."
in the
Williams, a baton-twirl-

I

er

tuba-play-

er

er

m

Peace Corps

;

20-2-

te

22-2- 4.

Rose Denies

Resigning
Alabama Post
University of Alabama president Dr. Frank Rose reportedly
issued a statement Tuesday saying he has not resigned his post
at the Tuscaloosa school.
A spokesman for the school
newspaper said, by phone Tuesday, that Dr. Rose issued a denial of earlier reports that he
had resigned.
President Rose frequently has
been mentioned as a candidate
for the University presidency,
partly because' of his close ties
with Lexington.
Dr. Rose is a UK graduate
and served as president of
Transylvania College before going to Alabama.
When Dr. Rose was at UK
last spring to speak at Focus,
a two-da-y
symposium, he was
asked by the Kernel whether he
was being considered for the UK
presidency. He said he had his
"hands full in Alabama."
Asked if he would accept the
position if it were offered, he
said, "That's a question a person can't answer. I've just
launched this campaign in Aladebama (a
and I've got
velopment program)
a real problem getting it going
in the next few months."
That was nine months ago.
Dr. Rose also said at that
time that he would return to
Kentucky someday, but that it
would be "to retire."

Legal Snarls Greet Resisters

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the last of a three-par- t
in Canada. The
series on American
was in Toronto over the Christmas holidays.
author
By DARRELL RICE
Editorial Page Editor
TORONTO, Ont. -- There are no armed guards
border to prevent
at the American-Canadia- n
from leaving the country, but this does
not mean that no legal problems are involved.
Helping draft resisters with such problems is
the Toronto Antidraft Programme (TAP), which
office over Fran's Restaurant at
has a
2279 Yonge St.
The outer room of the office functions more or
less as a waiting room. It is furnished with a
couple of chairs and a badly sagging couch. The
walls are decorated with news clippings about
in Canada, antiwar and
g
American
on
antidraft posters, messages from
board and a peace symbol made of
a bulletin
discarded draft cards, some of them charred.
Bemie
The inner office is occupied by Bemie, a young
man with long, flowing hair and beard. Bemie
with their legal problems
counsels
and helps them get started in Canada by working
with the Union of American Exiles.
draft-dodge- rs

draft-dodge- rs

two-roo-

m

.

draft-dodgin-

draft-dodge- rs

draft-dodge- rs

.

His small office features more clippings and
posters, but the decor is dominated by a large
Canadian flag on the wall and over his desk.
go to Canada'
The reason most
is because in addition to its being a well developed
and anglicized country, it does not allow extradition for Selective Service Law violations and
has no draft of its own (the last time Canada
ordered conscription, such massive national resistance was encountered that the government gave
up).
The real trick of getting into Canada is rfc;
the actual entry, but getting there in the most
advantageous position. That is where TAP comes
in.
'Landed' Status
draft resisters coming to Canada seek to
Most
obtain "landed immigrant" status. Such a classification permits its holder to enjoy all the rights
of Canadian citizenship except voting, obtaining
a passport and it allows deportation for variety
of offenses, including drug arrests.
The American immigrant cannot apply for full
Canadian citizenship, however, until after at least
five years, or when he has established "domicile."
Continued on Paxe 5, CoL 1
draft-dodge- rs

1

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i

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..

....

....

...

...
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,

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I'hoto by Kick

Study Of An Exile

DcU

* 2-T-

1IE

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 199

SWEETWATER SYNTHESIZES 'CLASSICAL, ROCK, JAZZ, FOLK'
Dy n. L. LAWRENCE
ject like Crace), and on "Come
Kernel Record Critic
Take A Walk" she even sounds
In the past year the rock a little like Julie London (the
music scene hat been overrun song I might add, is vintage
with groups featuring female lead Julie London also). This is all
vocalists. Very few have shown very well except that Miss Nevins
us original styles and most ape is neither Crace Slick nor Julie
either Grace Slick or Janis Jop-li- London.
Sweetwater a
Vocals are the number one
recently
formed west coast grouphas bringdown for the entire album.
such a problem in Nansi Nevins. The four male vocalists are alOn certain tracks Miss Nevins most ridiculous when they harmanages to sound like Crace monize on "Through An Old
Slick (except her voice doesn't Storybook." They sound likeThe
have the strength or depth to pro
Four Lads. On "Why Oh Why"
n.

Albert Moore sounds as if he is
singing while running uphill.
Overtones of Insincerity
To say the least, this gives
the group overt onesof insincerity.
This is unfortunate because
Sweet water (whose music often
like the Vanilla Fudge sounds
like its name, if you can follow
that) has the ingredients of a real
heavy.
An
percussion-oriente- d
group (bongos, congas,
etc.) with a cello thrown in for
eight-memb- er

Faculty Exhibition: 'Mixed Bag
The Faculty Exhibition currently running at the Fine Arts
Gallery at the University offers
area audiences one of the most
varied shows of the season.
"A faculty exhibition is likely!
to be a mixed bag," comments
Dr. Clifford Amyx, one of the
artists whose work is on display, "and as long as the quality
is high, this is as it should be"
The show is indeed a "mixed
bag." The fifteen artists rei

presented have done a thorough
Job of covering various art media.
Entering the gallery, viewers are
confronted by a huge sculpture
by Michael Hall entitled "Love
Child." At the other end of the

gallery is a piece in plywood,
pencil and flock by Marian

Win-sry- g

"Cow Puzzle."
In addition to several ink'
drawings, Anne Cuerrant Green

has contributed a fabric collage
called "Journey to Vienna."
Brilliant color dominates the
work of James Suzuki and
An
colorist Ay-Japanese
aluminum sculpture by Stanley
Mock is included in the exhibit
along with pieces by Terrance
Johnson and Lowell Jones. The
Johnson and Jones works carry
the intriguing titles "Nootka I"
and "Apparition No. 2."
Edwin H. Harris has contnV
buted work in stoneware and
O.

clay sculpture, and John Tuska
a series of works in various media.
Hanging about the gallery are
and
serigraphy,
lithography
drawings by Clifford Amyx and
Janis Stembergs.
Deborah Frederick holds a
monopoly on woven works of
art. Among the art historians
showing for the first time in the
faculty exhibition are Trond
Sandvik and Patricia Hull.
The Art Gallery is open 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday and 1 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday. A public
reception is scheduled for January
26 from 3 to 5 p.m. The exhibit
closes February 2.

good measure, Sweetwater's rock
has the spontaneity of Jazz with
a
an almost classical forni,
synthesis of classical, rock, Jazz
all playing an
and folk-w- ith
equal part," to quote arrangers
Fred Herrera and Alex Del Zoppo.
If one can forget the vocalists'
lack of personal style, he can
really get into this album. Nearly all the arrangements are fresh
and lively. However, there is one
exception: the overuse of bongos
and congas. What begins as a welcome approach to rock music
soon sounds like an airlines ad
for a vacation in the Bahamas.
Refurbished Orphan
One outstanding arrangement
version
is Sweetwater's
of "Motheriess Child." They
have taken the drabness out of
the song without losing its message or mood.
The best individual performances come from Alex Del Zoppo
(keyboard instruments especially the harpsichord on "Here We
Go Again" and "For Pete's

"...

up-tem-

Sake"), flutist Albert Moore and
drummer Alan Malarowitz.
The album is practically held
together by these three, but
cellist August Bums really gets
into it on "Crystal Spider" when
he goes into a freak-ou- t
(can
you dig a
There are eleven cuts on the
album, the best of which are
"Motherless Child," "Crystal
Spider," "Two Worlds" and
"What's Wrong" -i- n that order.
The message in "What's Wrong"
is borrowed from some other day
in rock music, but Sweetwater's
lyrics and arrangement give a
'new sense of urgency to the questions it asks about oursometimes
incomprehensible elders:
cello-freak-

,

What's wrong in their heads?
Won't they just try
To see it once our way instead?
If they did
There would not be any young
dead
No reason to cry9
1968

Copyright

Rainwater Miuic Inc.

Two University Sculptors
In Whitney Annual Display
Special To The Kernel
NEW YORK "The art of sculpture is outgrowing the museum,
even the annuals designed to exhibit it."
So concluded New York Times
critic Hilton Kramer after viewing large scale in his work with metal
the Whitney Annual exhibition pipes and domes and plastics.
which opened in last December Wojick, who at 23 is the youngand will extend through Feb. 9. est artist represented, utilizes
Two University sculptors are both glass fiber and metal.
among the 37 Americans repreOojick, Hall and the annual
sented for the first time in the
in general all seem to be changannual, which examines biennialing the terms in which sculpture
ly the state of U.S. sculpture can be discussed. The members of
and in alternate years looks at
University art faculty have been
painting.
strong advocates of an eclectic
This year s Whitney has un- - 'approach to their work, often
covered a trend that Kramer best eschewing traditional form and
summed up: "The young sculp- scale.
tors are attempting to dominate,
If the Whitney Annual is repif not actually subjugate, the
resentative of national trends,
landscape."
Hall, Wojick and associates apAssociate professor of art pear to safely fit in a vanguard
Michael Hall and graduate asof what Kramer termed "excitsistant Gary Wojcik's work is ing, adventurous sculptors. It
indicative of this grandscale would be sheer folly to ignore
trend. Hall in particular utilizes them."
.

solutions to
properly modify and care
for your con-

tacts, making

Contact
lenses are made
of modern plas
tics which have entirely different charac
teristics than the tissues
and fluids of the eye. Consequently your eye cannot handle
this foreign object without help.
So. in order to correct for
Mother Nature's lack of foresight,
you have to use lens solutions to
make your contacts and your eyes
compatible.
There was a time when you

needed two or more separate

them ready for
your eyes. But now
there's Lensine from

the makers of

Murine. Lensine,
for contact com
fort and convenience.
Lensine is the one solution
for complete contact lens care.
Just a drop or two of Lensine coats
and lubricates your lens. This allows the lens to float more freely
in the natural fluids of your eye.
Why? Because Lensine is an "isotonic" solution, very much like
your own tears. Lensine is compatible with the eye.
Cleaning your contacts with
Lensine retards the build-u- p
of
foreign deposits on the lenses.

And soaking your contacts in
Lensine between wearing periods
assures you of proper lens hygiene. You get a free soaking-stor-ag- e
case with individual lens compartments on the bottom of every
bottle of Lensine.
It has been demonstrated that
improper storage between wear-ing- s
permits the growth of bacteria on the lenses. This is a sure
cause of eye irritation and, in
some cases, can endanger your
vision. Bacteria cannot grow in
Lensine because it's sterile,
and antiseptic.
Let caring for your
contacts be as convenient as wearing them.
Get some Lensine . . .
Mother's little helper.

0

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never d
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contact
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TONIGHT
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Instead!

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1909 -- 3

Local Civil Liberties Union
Condemns City's Film Seizure
The Central Kentucky Civil
Liberties Union whose president is UK professor Lawrence
X. Tarpey has condemned
city
officials for seizure of a controversial movie shown locally.
Dr. Tarpey, professor of business administration, has issued
a statement on behalf of the Civil
Liberties Union in which he
daims that the film seizure and
arrest of a projectionist "abridges
First Amendment freedoms."
The movie "Good Morning
and Goodbye" was shut down
in Lexington when city police
seized the film at the Cinema
Theater on Main Street and arrested projectionist Richard T.
Baxter, 68.
Dr. Tarpey and the Civil Liberties Union criticized the city
for the arrest of Baxter because
"It is like suing the man who
sets the type in a case involving
a libelous editorial."
No Proof
The Tarpey statement also
claimed that no proof has been
produced that the film has harmful effects on its viewers. The
pronouncement criticizes City,
Manager John Cooke for "arbitrariness" in ordering the legal
action.
The statement reads in part

"The Civil Liberties Union
points out that the film was
viewed only by adults, who
wished to attend. Anyone present
.was free to leave the theater if
he felt offended by the film's
content. This is not a case of
allegedly offensive or socially un- -

redeeming material being forced
upon anyone; it is a case involving only free adult citizens
who chose to view the material.
"Just as adults certainly have
the right to read what they want
without worrying about the city
manager's opinions, intelligent
and mature adult citizens have
a constitutional right to attend
motion pictures without having
d
their judgment
by
officials.
city
second-guesse-

Cites 'Arbitrariness'
"Further, the Civil Liberties
Union is particularly perturbed
by City Manager John Cooke's
disinterest in enunciating any
standards upon which he based
his action. This is arbitrariness
in its worst form and it was to
prevent this very type of situation that the Founding Fathers
adopted the First Amendment
to the Constitution.

"The Union also would point
out that neither Lexington city
officials nor anyone else has offered any evidence that some
kind of antisocial behavior follows as a consequence of viewing

"Surely, if adverse consequences followed in its wake,
such evidence would be available. Under the long established
tenets of the American legal system, the burden of proof necessary to justify abridging freedom
of communication rests with the
prosecution. No attempt to meet
this burden has occurred in this
case.
"Finally, the Civil Liberties
Union notes that only projectionist Baxter, a
Kernel Photo By Dave Herman
employee of the theater corporation who was merely fulfilling his
Coed Braves Haggin Mud;
duties, was arrested. This man
Fence May End Shortcut
surely does not set the film policies of the theater. Why, then,
students are upset about the approximately two extra
Complex
was he selected for arrest? It is blocks of walking distance to classes that would be caused by the
like suing the man who sets the proposed building of a fence around Haggin field.
A spokesman for complex government said the major objection
type in a case involving a libelous
editorial. While in no way does to the fence is that the complex is isolated enough without having
this situation justify the use of the area fenced off.
criminal prosecution, the absence
Complex government suggested the University put a paved
of justice here is compounded walkway through Haggin field.
by making Mr. Baxter the imJames Evans, a spokesman for the Physical Plant Department,
mediate victim."
.said the University is concerned about the appearance of the field
area, but denied that there are definite plans to construct a fence.

Think selfishly about your
own career before you decide
on one with Du Pont.

A Slow
A noted publisher in Chicago
reports there is a simple tech-

nique of rapid reading which
should enable you to increase
your reading speed and yet
retain much more. Most people do not realize how much
they could increase their
pleasure, success and income
by reading faster and more
accurately.
According to this publisher,
most people, regardless of
their present reading skill, can
use this simple technique to
improve their reading ability
to a remarkable degree.
Whether reading stories;
books, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire
pages in seconds with, this
method.
To acquaint the readers of
this newspaper with the
rules for developing
rapid reading skill, the company has printed: full details
of its intervKtln
method in a new booklet,
"IIow to IteadyFaster and Retain More," mailed free. No
obligation. Send your name,
address, and zip code to:
Reading, 835 Diversey, Dept.
easy-to-follo-

w

self-traini-

167-41-

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Chicago,

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A

postcard will do.

The Kentucky

'

Kernel

Tb Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky,
Station, University 40506. Second Lexcum
ington. Kentucky
dou paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Uie
Mailed live timet weekly duringexam
school year except hoddays and
and once during the summer
periods,
ftspifcftion
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK ost OHica Box and
Begun as the Cadet in ltt
published continuously as the Kernel
in'dvirts'lng published herein Is Any
tended to help the reader buy.
advertising should
ialse or misleading
Im reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION BATES
Yearly, by mail
f.10
Per copy, from files
KERNEL TELEPHONES
MZ
Editor, Managing Editr
LditorUl pug Editor,
1320
Associate Editors. Sports
AdTertS. Business! CircuUUou Ul

f

1

this film. The picture in question
has been exhibited in many major American cities without censorship or trouble.

Are You
Reader?

r

Be selfish. But be honest.
You've put in a lot of tough years
to get your degree. Your allegiance
lies with a professional discipline.
Why, then, must you decide now
to plight your trust to a company
for life? Don t. Join a company
first. Ifitdoesn t
advance you within that
professional discipline,
well, you re not
married to it.

Many have found career
enrichment at Du Pont. This comes
from being handed a ball and
being expected to run with it. From
working with top people, from
growing in a company where the
opportunities are always wide open
and the projects are often way out.
Many have found professional
fulfillment and have built a very full,
varied and happy life as "Du Ponters."
Others have found, after working
at Du Pont, that their professional
interest lay in teaching, in further
study or in an industry that
offered even wider scope in their
particular discipline. All of these
men left Du Pont far better qualified
professionally than when they came.

So talk to the Du Pont recruiter.

If he offers you something, think

of it as a professional challenge, not
a proposal of marriage.
Du Pont Company
Room 6685
Wilmington, DE 19898
I'd like your latest
information on opportunities
at Du Pont for graduates
with degrees in
Name
University.
Degree
Graduation Date.
Add ress
.Zip.
An Equal Opportunity Employer

(MF)

QUITO
...
mi.

art

College Relations

* Tme

Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

1801

WEDNESDAY, JAN. 22, 1069

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lcc n. Decker, Editor-in-ChiDarrcll Rice, Editorial rage
Guy M. Mcndcs III, Managing Editor
Jim Miller, Associate
Tom Dcrr, Business Manager
Howard Mason, Mwtography Editor
Chip Hutchcson, Sjwrts
Jack Lyne and Larry Kellcy, Arts Editors
Janice
Dana Ewcll,
Frank Coots,
Larry Dale Keeling,
Terry Dunham,
Assistant Managing Editors
ef

Editor

Editor
Editor
Barber

Wi

111

Furiners
Although state college and uni- -'
versity enrollments increased
than four percent in the fall
term of 1968 over the same period
the year before, the number of
students at state institutions dropped from 23.6 percent
to 19.2 percent.
The Council on Public Higher
Education, from whose report these
figures are taken, notes that this
was the first time in its 13 years
of reporting on enrollment that
the percentage of nonresident students fell below 20 percent. This
decrease, the council says, "can be
largely attributed to more selective
policies in the admission of nonresident students being applied at
the respective institutions coupled
with the substantial increase of
nonresident tuition fees by the
Council on Public Higher Education effective in 1968."
The Kernel was among those
who warned last year of the effects
by-mor-

out-of-sta-

e

te

of raising
tuition. We
felt, and we still feel, that a provincial state such as Kentucky has
much to gain from the presence
of a large number of nonresident
students on its college campuses.
The reason for the tuition increase, of course, was to help defray the high costs of subsidizing
education, specifically for
students. It was argued by
proponents of the increase that
some states were taking advantage
of Kentucky's relatively low nonresident tuition rates and were failing to provide educational facilities for their own residents.
out-of-sta-

te

out-of-sta-

i"

te

We realize, of course, that these

arguments are relevant and that
one.
the question is a two-side-d
feel that KenNevertheless, we
tucky students can only suffer as
a result of some of "them furin
ideas" being kept off state

'Inasmuch as we'll be using the same staff, Spiro,
your office is located directly below mine!9

Spirit Of Dixie

New York's Rats
When a malignance of rats suddenly appeared along Park Avenue,
a plush, apartment house district in central Manhattan, the incredulity
of most New Yorkers was vociferously expressed. Within 15 minutes
after the vermin surfaced on the street, New York Health Department
officials were frantically stuffing 300 pounds of rat poison down Manhattan sewers in an effort to eradicate the pests before they could
become permanent residents in the homes of New York's wealthier
citizens.
The
response to the plight of Park Avenue by
NYHD officials is indeed commendable; however, their prompt action
has invited comment from another part of New York Harlem where
the battle for supremacy between rat and man is a commonplace activity
of daily life. The comment, framed in words of anger and frustration,,
voiced the hopelessness of Harlem citizens who saw the Park Avenue
incident as just another example of the double-standar- d
philosophy
of the New York city government. The situation on Park Avenue, they
contend, is graphic proof of the white attitude toward the black com- m unity as a whole.
almost-instantaneo-

uPlffWi

us

Diana Ross, in ending the
for harmony without encountering
concert at Memorial Coli- a display, here of jf cjiotic Jbigptry.
pretties
seum Friday night, called for racial A portion of the UK audience still
harmony based on the principles seems to be caught up in the "us
for which Dr. Martin Luther King and them," the "master and slave"
died. Several whites in the audience syndromes when it comes to dealing
greeted this reference to the slain with Blacks. "You can entertain us,
black leader with hisses and jeers, but don t talk to us," the redalmost

certainly offending Miss

Ross and her group.

But the whole University community should be offended by this
act of utter .stupidity and lack of
concern for the thoughts of others,
for the act shows how little respect
and understanding exists at this
supposedly center of learning. A
Black cannot make reference to a
black hero, expound basic Christian
beliefs in the value of man or call

necks say.

The people of Kentucky should
have no fear for changes taking
place at this University, for the
changes are superficial, at best.
Progress is slow to come, even to
the point of merely recognizing
basic humanity. Black men are
still "colored"; they're less than
white, for the spirit of Dixie still
lives here.

'First, Hold Out
Your Hand I Have
To Rap Your
Knuckles For That
rr-

-i

i

lleirut Airport
Thing'

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Jan. 22, l9-- 5

McCarthy Puzzles Followers; Turns From Dream
-

WASHINGTON
the snow and
Hampshire, where
a year ago, he drifts
from

Far
cold of New
it all began
in a distant,

(AP)

Commentary
puzzling way through the warmth
and comfort of the U.S. Senate.
The quest is over, and Gene
McCarthy "He stood up and
something happened" shows no
passion for resurrecting it. He
cares more about his poetry.
He continues to bewilder,
frustrate, and even anger those

mcnt, toward man or system,
have supplanted in many the
high hopes that sustained them
during seven incredible months,
countless others still flaunt like
battle scars their faded blue and
white daisies, their tattered
bumper stickers.
But all of them have nothing
left but the memory.
McCarthy has turned from
them now. He makes no effort
to acknowledge that the dream
ever existed. He sent them his
"Leave me alone now" message
loud and clear, when he:
Supported Russell Long, who
represents, to McCarthyites, the
worst of the establishment, over
Edward M. Kennedy in the contest for the assistant majority
leadership of the Senate.
Abruptly yielded to a war
supporter. Sen. Cale McCee, his
seat on the prestigious Foreign

who stood by him in one of
the most sensational presidential
campaigns in history.
A new President took office
Monday. For Eugene Joseph McCarthy and his followers, the
ceremony merely confirmed the
impregnability of The System's
windmills to one man's quixotic
lance.
McCarthy's youthful legions
have scattered across the nation,
most of them to resume academic
careers joyously dropped last year
for The Cause.
If bitterness and disillusion- -

Resistor Finds

Legal Barriers

Continued from race One
Landed immigrant status can
be applied for at the border, from

within Canada, at Canadian
consulates and by mail from within the United States. Whether it
is granted depends on such factors as education and training,
age, occupational demand, personal assessment and so on.
Draft counselors frequently
advise that landed immigrant
status should be sought when
crossing the border because the
standards are thought to be less
stringent there and, in addition,
applications usually can be with
drawn without penalty if the
feels his chances of
obtaining the status are not good.
draft-dodg-

er

Entry Points
Most

enter

draft-dodge- rs

Canada at Toronto, Vancouver
and Montreal. Word has it among
those already inside that one of
the best places to apply for landed
immigrant status is at Montreal.

Tnose who,1 ieei they would
not meet the requirements for
landed immigrant status, and
want to attend school, sometimes
apply for special student status.
TTiis alternative, however, can
make it more difficult to obtain
landed immigrant status later
and to qualify for a work permit.
Canada, however, has a
variety of institutions of higher
education, including the University of Toronto, which has been
called equal to any school on

the continent

n
One
aspect
about fleeing to Canada is that
men who desert from the armed
forces are afforded as much protection from extradition as are
lesser-know-

Canada Faces 'Brain Invasion'
Two-third-

jn

draft-dodge- rs

five-yea-

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WEDNESDAY

seek the presidential nomination
of the Democratic Party in 1972."
Did that mean he was dropping out of politics? Or that he
might run under a new party
banner?
"Oh, I Just wanted to give
you fellows something to think
about," he beamed to reporters
who ca