xt7jh98zcn90 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jh98zcn90/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19681018  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 18, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 18, 1968 1968 2015 true xt7jh98zcn90 section xt7jh98zcn90 Birth Control Up To Individual, Priest Says
"Roman Catholics believe in do," he said. "But what the
church says today, it may change
infallibility. They believe in authority. But we don't Relieve next week. Individuals have to
authority is infallible," Father decide for themselves."
Elmer Moore of the Newman
"What then, are the church's
Center told more than 50 mem- objections to various birth conbers and guests of Sigma Phi trol devices?" he was asked, and
Epsilon fraternity last night.
replied they are mainly against
Because of this view, he ex- the
potential damage one may
plained,' it is necessary for each do to the body by using them
individual to interpret the Pope's and suffering from harmful side
recent encyclical on birth coneffects. Morally, he said, they
trol as he sees fit.
lead to the breakdown of the
"Authority can be chal- family unit. Still, there are inhe said, including the
lenged,"
stances where he feels use of the
authority of the Pope and others devices is
appropriate. He said
in the church hierarchy. But, he
does not mean the he has advised couples to seek
added, this
authoritative word of those lead- birth control aids.
ers should be ignored.
"To bear any more children,
"The Pope's encyclical should would be a failure of moral reweigh heavily on the consciences sponsibility for those whose chilbf Catholics as they determine dren will be retarded, for examwhat they should or should not ple," Father Moore said. He said

he advises them to see a doctor
to find a means to control birth.
The doctor, he said, must determine the appropriate means.

"Isn't thatpassingthebuck?"

he was asked.

"Yes, that's right," he admitted, "but I'm doing it because I don't believe medicine
is my buck."

outlook rejected any meaningful
authority.
"Authority is real," he told
the listeners, which included
guests from Kappa Delta and
Kappa Kappa Camma sororities.
"It doesn't answer questions. It
moves things. This is still not a
guarantee it is right."
In the case of the church, he
said, "Whoever has the big stick

The church in France, and in
Cermany, interpreted the encyclical differently than Cardinal
O Boyle,
and American
bishops are meeting in Washington this week to agree on an
official interpretation. But it too
will be challenged by some, he
said.
he-sai-

Those bishops and priests in
the minority, he said, will agihits the
authortate actively until in the
Several of the listeners were ity. Dissent with the
authority perhaps, their views will future,
be acis perfectly fair, legal, and holy
particularly interested in the theadvoory of
within the Catholic Church, cepted by the Pope, and they
cated by Father Moore. They that's the wild way it operates. will again be accepted into the
said it seemed contradictory to This is why we've got the situa- Church. This constant questionthe understanding they had of tion we have now in Washing- ing of authority, he said, is a
the church. He admitted the view ton, where Cardinal O' Boyle has healthy state.
was not one shared by all churchremoved priests who challenged
"But if we ever get to the
men, and agreed that many pahis authoritative interpretation.
issue of whether there are really
rishioners probably didn't under- .We've had such challenges and three
holy beings and one Cod,
stand his belief. He denied, how- removals even of Popes since there's no
question," he said.
ever, the suggestion that such an the church began."
"I'll die for that."

THE KENTUCKY

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The South' s Outstanding College Daily
Friday, Oct.

University of Kentucky, Lexington

18, 1968

Vol. LX, No. 38

H

Grant Will Be Used To Study
Promotion Of Growth Centers
By FRANCES DYE

Kernel Staff Writer
UK's College of Business and
Economics has received a $253,000
grant from the Economic Development Administration (EDA) to
of regional
study promotion
growth centers related to lagging
areas.
Dr. Niles Hansen, professor
of economics and principal inprovestigator of the two-yea-r
ject, defined growth centers as
"urban areas with significant
growth potential," where EDA
can concentrate its funds.
He said that approximately
800 U.S. counties are eligible
for EDA aid and that most of
them, comprising about one

fourth of all counties in the giving them a choice."
In a growing regional center,
United States, are rural.
Dr. Hansen said, has he said, a man has a genuine
EDA,
set up these multi-stat- e
areas employment alternative (if he has
for study: "The Four Comers," the skill and training) which
Ozarks, Coastal Plains, Upper many of the people don't now
have.
t
Great Lakes, and New England.
"What the people there (the
These areas each have a regional
commission patterned on that lagging areas) really need is a
complementary program relating
for Appalachia.
He said the aim of the long-rang-e human resource investment in
lagging areas to economic infraprogram is to "give unstructure and job creation in
and underemployed
employed
people a chance to come and growth centers, most of which
work. With growth of the re- probably will not be found in
gional centers, we are trying to lagging areas," Dr. Hansen said.
He cited Lexington as a posget them to come to the smaller
centers instead of the big city sible growth center for the peoghettos. We don't view this as ple of Appalachia. Growth would
be accelerated in Lexington, he
moving the people out, but as
Continued on Pace 3, Col. 1

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A rainy day world may be hard on the

shoes but it's a photographer's delight a
day for reflections in sidewalk puddles
and the reflections of an inquisitive mind.

Protest Vote At Polls Almost Impossible
By GUY MENDES

Associate Editor
If when attempting to cast your vote in the November 5th election you find yourself delayed by the person
himself to the curin front of you who has hand-cuffetain rod of the voting booth or induced himself to
vomit inside of it, you will be witnessing a manifestation
of the Kentucky electoral frustration syndrome.
This frustration is a product of the state's presidential
election processes which do not provide disenchanted
d

Netcs Analysis
voters with a means for registering their opposition to
the prescribed candidates.
There is no provision in this state for persons wishing
to write in candidates and because unmarked ballots
are not tabulated, any attempt to register a protest
in that manner would be aborted.
Dissident voters have only one course of action that
of resorting to disruptive tactics which have been urged
by some including Paul Krassner, editor of the Realist
magazine and creator of the Yippies, who advocates
"barfing on the ballot."
But it is doubtful man- y- if an- y- will follow the course
of disruption, for although it may make a point, it is
also illegal.
The only legal means of expressing opposition to
the four candidates pn the Kentucky ballot is simply
that of not voting.
But those who do not want to cast their votes for
the Republican or Democratic offerings are haunted by
the idea that by not voting they would be aiding third-part- y
candidate Ceorge Wallace.
This fear is enforced by the possibility of Humphrey
anJ Wallace or Humphrey and Nixon competing for
one of the major parties finish
kecond place-ho- uld
it would lose the privileges afforded the two
third,
major parties in the state.

(State Democratic officials have openly expressed fears
that Humphrey may finish behind Wallace.)
When a voter enters the booth on election day, he
will be faced with four choices in the presidential

race: Humphrey, Nixon, Wallace and Socialist Workers

Party candidate Fred Halstead, who petitioned for a
spot on the ballot.
Because a voter is actually voting for a slate of electors and not for the candidates themselves, write-icandidates are not provided for because they obviously
don't have electoral slates.
n

Several write-icandidates are campaigning across
the nation, including black comedian Dick Gregory,
Eldridge Cleaver, the Black Panther who is on the
ballot in several states, and the "love candidate," Louis
n

Abolafia, whose semi-nud- e
campaign poster proclaims
"I've got nothing to hide."
Some people have been urging a write-i- n campaign
for Sen. Eugene McCarthy, unsuccessful candidate for
the Democratic nomination.
According to state Assistant Attorney Ceneral Walter
Hurdman, unmarked presidential ballots will not be
tabulated. "Only votes that are cast are really counted,"
he said.
Hurdman added that a differential could be found
by subtracting the number of votes cast from the number of names on the registration sheets, but said this
was only done "if there is a question of fraud or some-

thing."
Hurdman also said he has heard of no plans of protest "on any scale," and that it's hardly been mentioned
in the Capitol.
Some people have expressed desire to vote for one
party's presidential candidate and another's vice prese
sticker
idential choice (evidenced by a
Nixon-Muski-

seen on a Lexington car recently).
Others would like to vote only for the presidential
or vice presidential candidate on a ticket.
Both of these are impossible because of the vote
being cast for the electoral slate and not the Individual

candidate.

Only in the lower elections those for the Senate,
the House of Representatives, etc. are there provisions
for voters to write in candidates or split their votes
between two parties.
to think a person would
It is indeed
hand-cuf- f
himself to a voting booth or vomit inside
of it to express his opposition to the candidates offered,
but perhaps it serves as a just reflection of the rigidity
of our election processes.

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

19G8

18,

Honorary

Pre-Me- d

WORLD REPORT

Forms Advising Team

tl
Members of Alpha Epsilon Delta,
honorary, will hold
advising sessions for prospective medical and dentistry students
October 2S through Novem- during spring semester
ber 8.
Alpha Epsilon Delta will
Jean-PaPegeron, the sponsor a film on childbirth again
group's publicity chairman, said this semester, Pegeron said. Last
an advising team of about 25 semester two showings were origiupper division members will talk nally scheduled, but the response
to freshmen and sophomores was such that two more were
about courses, instructors and held. The group may
sponsor
application to medical and dental other films tliis semester, but no
scl tools. A meeting room will be specific films or dates have been
announced later.
selected yet.
"This advising is not being
medical
and
Prospective
done in any other university that dentistry students who have comwe know of," he said. Similar pleted three semesters of college
advising sessions were held last and a standing of 3.0 or above
semester and the UK chapter re- are eligible to
join the lionorary.
ceived an lionorable mention for
them at its national convention
in Cleveland, Ohio last April.
The honorary also plans to
organize tours for members at
medical schools in the area, such
lecture
The Jules
as the Universities of Gncinnati, scheduled for Bergman October
Tuesday
Louisville, Tennessee andVan-derbil- t, 22 has been postponed. BergPegeron said. Programs
NBC Science Editor is curwill focus on admission, faculty man, involved in the
Apollo
rently
and courses.
Space Mission and has
his address for sometime
in

From

tht Wirt

Press

Associated

of th

pre-me-

INTERNATIONAL
Some
PRAGUE
Soviet
troops began settling into permanent quarters Thursday for what
looks like a long occupation under a Kremlin-dictate- d
treaty.
Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin
said the other troops from Warsaw Pact allies Poland, East
Germany, Hungary and Bulgaria,
along with some Soviet forces,
will be withdrawn in the coming
months.
Invasion forces that entered
1
to end CzechosloAugust
vakia's liberalization drive have
0
been estimated at between

-

20-2-

250-00-

and 500,000.

NBC Editor

Delays Talk

Ooooe

turning up the fever this
year . . . with the "coolest
is

cars around".
the swing

. . So,

with

get

the

new

The deadline fer anneaneements la
p.m. twe days prier te the flnt
publication ef Itema In thla eelamn.
7:30

Dodge Swinger . . . Charger
. . . Charger RT . . . Super
Bee

...

For a

Today
The Donovan Coffee Shoppe will
present mood folk tonight In the Donovan Cafeteria between 8:00 and 12:00
p.m. 25 cents gaina admission and all
the coffee or tea you can drink.
SDS Draft Counseling will be every
Monday. Wednesday, and Friday from
11:00 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. to
4:00 p.m. In Room 118 of the Student
Center. Evening counseling by
potntment call

Dart G.7.S.

test drive see Scott!

6.

FLOWERS
For Any

Oct. 21. 1968.

CALL

M I G II L E R

TV WILSON'S
Lexington Dodgo

F.L

Dial

255 East Main Street
255-842-

1

255-102-

ORIST
254-038-

3

417 East Maxwell

8

They all had something

"Rumpelstlltskin" will be presented
by the Lexington Childrens Theatre in
the Taylor Education Building Auditorium at 4:30 on Friday and at 10:30
a.m. and 2:00 p.m. on Saturday. Admission will be charged.
"Friday is the deadline to In return
aopllcationsto for membership 410 Keys
Rose
Tim Futrell.
Honorary
Lane. Prerequisites Include: sophomore standing, a 3.0 average, and
campus activities.
The Student Cento Board will present "Georgy Girl" in the Student
Center Theatre at 8:30 and 9:15 on
Friday and Saturday, and at 3:00 on
Sunday.

to se!l...courage...sex...comiption!

Ron
Taylor
Claudia

2nd

UMIVHSAl PtCTUBf

BIG

FEATURE-

TICMMIC0L0R

UK Roundtablc:

Law And Order
its

continues

WBKY-F-

Monday from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Everyone Is Invited.
Anyone wishing to contribute to the
U.N. UNICEK relief fund for the refuwar tone
gees of the Nigerian-Biafra- n
may do so Monday through Thursday
in the Office of Religious Affairs Room
204 of the Student Center.
Make-u- p
tuberculin skin tests at
the University Health Service are
for Monday and Tuesday
scheduled
between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. No additional make-u- p
days will be sched-

uled.
A snaghettl dinner will be held at
the TKE house on Sunday from 4
to 8 p.m. All you can eat for $1.00,

cents.
Duane F. Olson, independent
candidate for U.S. Senator, will speak
at the SDS meeting Tuesday at 7:45
p.m. In Room 245 of the Student Center. All students, faculty, and staff
sodas
Mr.

15

are invited.

mm B

--

255-431-

3

OFF ON
20
$5.00 ORDER

at 8 p.m. Sunday with the topic
of "Law and Order: Contemporary Problems."
This week the moderator is
Prof. Garrett Flickenger of the
UK College of Law.
Panel members include Robert W. Posey, director of Eastern
Kentucky University's School of
Law Enforcement; Henry Seney,
assistant UK professor of law;
Theodore Berry, past president
of the Black Student Union, and
James R. Elkins, second year
law student.

Football film
of the Kentucky-L.S.game will be shown In the
Student Center Theatre at 7 p.m. No

admission

charge.

UK Placement Service
Register Monday for an appointment
on Tuesday with Brown and Williamson Tobacco Corp. Accounting, Math
(BS.MS); Chem. E., Mech. E.. Computer Science IBS): Chemistry BS,
MS. Ph.D.); Physics (Ph.D.) Citizenship.
Register Monday for an appointment on Tuesday with Procter and
Gamble Company Plant Management
(Mondavi: Chem. E. (BS): Elec. E..
Mech. E. (BS, MS). Citizenship. Sales
Management
(Tuesday!: Commerce,
Liberal Arts (BS, MS) Permanent
resident of U.S.
Register Monday for an appointment on Tuesday or Wednesday with
Monasnto Chem. E., Elec. E. (BS,
MS); Civil E. (BS): Mech. E., Chemistry (BS. MS, Ph.D.); Accounting
(BS, MS). Will interview Juniors, seniors, and graduate students for summer employment. Citizenship.
Register Monday for an aDDolntment
on Tuesday with Allied Mills. Inc.
Agriculture (BS, MS); MBA; Accounting, Bus. Adm., Economics, Agrlc. E.,
Chem. E.. Civil E., Mech. E. (BS).
Citizenship.
Register Monday for an appointment
Railroad
on Tuesday with C&O-B&- O
Bus. Adm.. EcoCo. Accounting,
nomics, Math, Physics, Psychology.
Sociology. Civil E.. Elec. E., Mech
E. (BS); MBA. Citizenship.
Register Monday for an appointment
on Tuesday with Continental OH Co.
Economics. Chem. E.. Civil E., Mining E.. Elec. E.. Mech. E. (BS. MS);
Chemistry, Physics (BS. MS). Ph.D.).
Register Monday for an appointment
on Tuesday with John Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co.
Accounting,
Bus. Adm., Economics, English, Math
(BS. MS). Will Interview Juniors for
summer employment.
Register Monday for an aopointment
on Tuesday with S. D. Leidesdorf and
Co. Accounting (BS. MS). Will Interview seniors and graduate students for
summer employment.
Register Monday for an appointment on Tuesday with Sinclair Oil

Corp., Research Division Chem. E.
(BS. MS); Chemistry (BS, MS, Ph.D.).
Citizenship.
Register Monday for an appointment
on Tuesday with U S. Dept. of Health,
Education, and Welfare Office of
General Counsel Law.

Open: Fri., Sat., Sun.

Just a short drive South on

NOW SHOWING!

U.S. 27

FIRST

Admission $1.50

The hanging was the best show in town.
But they made two mistakes. They hung

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IXGERSIEVENS
ULU FTIAIR CAMlllA

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RICHARD WIDMARK

ser-

ies of UK Roundtable discussions

Beautifully

The Hell with Heroes'
A

the university photographer for an
appointment.
Harry Miller, criminal defense attor-- .
the
ney, will speak on cases techniques of
at the Studefending criminal
dent Bar's Speaker Forum on Monday
courtroom of the Law School
in the
at 12:45. University students and faculty are Invited to attend.
The Rev. Louis A. Brighton will
series
speak at the first of a on "Theof
Bible:
sessions
Still Good News for Modern Man"
In Room 307 of the Student Center on

Special: 5 Shirts, $1.23
Laundered

Guarding

,

Coming Up
days for Senior pictures
will be Monday through Friday. Call
Make-u- p

Established 1923

Harry

- fc&M Uae

A Festival of Students for the Celebration of Youth will happen Saturday
at 2 p.m. In Woodland Park. It is free
and folk, rock, soul, or whatever music will be provided. All students are
invited to come do your thing.

116 W. Maxwell St.
SAVE ON YOUR
CLEANING BILLS

Cardinale

I

Tomorrow

CROllEV'S CLEANERS

FIRST RUN!
Starts 8:00; Adm. $1.50

'

Count Basie and his Orchestra will
be at the Fieldhouse of Morehead State
University. Contact: Office of University Affairs. Morehead State University. Morehead, Ky.
Recent paintings of Suzudl will be
exhibited from October 13 to November 10 in the Art Gahery of the Fine
Arts Building. The gallery Is open
Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. and on Saturday and Sunday
from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
The Student Center Coffee House
will present "Patchett and Tarses" in
the Student Center Grille from 8 to
9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and
at 8:30. 8:30 and 10:30 on Friday night.
"Study of Oils" by Ben Mahmaud
is on display at the Student Center
Art Gallery. The exhibit will run
through October 25.
Any student who earned high school
credit in a foreign language and who
is planning to enroll this spring
semester for the first time in college
in that language must take a placement examination before
Applications for the examination
must be made in the University TestOld Agriing Center, Room 304-culture Bldg., not later than Monday,

Occasion
SCOTT RITCHIE

than

Kentucky National Guardsmen, slated to leave for Vietnam Monday, have appealed to
Supreme Court Justice Hugo
Black to halt their transfer.
The men, now stationed at
Ft. Hood, Tex., argued that they
are state militia and cannot be
mobilized without a declaration
of war.
100

mal practice of discussing potential policy moves with them.
However, the United States does
almost all the bombing of North
Vietnam and the final decision
rests with President Johnson.

TODAY and TOMORROW

Jj

in

NATIONAL
WASHINGTON-Mo- re

Black was expected to
act on the petition following a
series of hearings held by the
court on various appeals.
The Supreme Court consistently has rejected challenges
to mobilization of reservists and
has refused to inquire into the
legality of the war.
WASI 1 1 NGTON The United
States pushed ahead with bombing halt consultations with its
allies Thursday despite resistance
from Saigon and denunciation
from Hanoi.
Informed sources in Saigon
said President Nguyen Van Thieu
refused to sign a joint declaration proposed by the United
States on stopping the bombing
of North Vietnam.
In Hanoi, the official North
Nhan
Vietnamese
newspaper
Dan attacked what it termed
"this arrogant demand" for reciprocity from North Vietnam
in return for ending the bombing.
The United States is consulting its war allies under the nor

Justice

2nd Feature: Raquel Welch in "Bedazzled'

DAUAHIAV'

SfO

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

18,

l9f8- -3

Humphrey, Peden Win
Campus Mock Election

(Catherine Peden and Hubert Humphrey won a mock election
held at the University Thursday.
Bailey, a Young Republican;
The mock election,
Thorn Pat Juul, of the Student
several campus political
by
for Action and Responsiorganizations, was open to all Party
bility; Frank McCartney, of StuUK students, although only 144
voted in the presidential balloting dents for Peden and Jerry Legere,
a Young Democrat.
and 135 in the senatorial.
Peden received 51 percent
compared to Republican Marlow
Cook's 49 percent. Humphrey received 41 percent, compared to
Richard Nixon's 36 percent, and
George C. Wallace's 23 percent.
Vote tallying was supervised
by a board composed of Linda
A campus organization
has
been formed to encourage and
request debate among the three
major U.S. presidential candidates.
UK Citizens for Debate is
headed, by Frank McCartney,
who said, "Americans deserve
the fair and just consideration
of each of the candidates to
appear Jointly on national teleallowing voters to apDETROIT (AP)-G- ov.
Spiro vision, and
compare the indiviT. Agnew has charged that many praise
dual positions of each canof the violent student disorders
across the country are being didate . . ."
McCartney said his committee
sparked by college and univerwould encourage other organizasity professors.
tions in the community to join
Speaking to 5,000 persons at their request for national debates.
Detroit's Cobo Hall arenaThurs-da- y The UK group is one of 250 such
the
night, the Republican vice organizations
throughout
presidential candidate said, country.
"Part of the poisoning of some
of these young minds comes at
the university and college level
from some of those professors
and instructors, and I can doc"An unprecedented
ument it."

UK Group
Asks Debate

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Kernel Photo By Dick Ware

Tile Show
If AUSt

Go On

.

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ran

the 1968 Wildcat Marching
Band marches on. One band enthusiast braves the elements perched atop
the Stoll Field stands to watch those below go through a complex drill.
SO

irou81

anc shine

Faculty Gets Aid For Research

The Board of Trustees has
made over $80,000 available to
UK's faculty this year as an
aid to, and incentive for, research. Besides the $80,000 there
are additional grants of $1200
each through Summer Research
Fellowships. There are Aim a
Research Equipment Fund and
a Faculty Travel Fund.
To be eligible for the research
grant-in-aid- s
a faculty member
must have a specific project
involving basic and applied research. Selections for recipients
and
is based on substance

UK Receives
EDA Funds
Continued from Page One
said, rather than in the lagging
area, so that the problems of the
unemployed and the poor can
be helped. "We need to build
on something that's already growing and relate it to them."
Project investigators will make
studies of people's attitudes
about moving and changing jobs,
he noted. "Just because a city is
is Just a start. We
have to see how to coordinate
this growth with lagging areas."
fast-growi-

Creative Dating

character of the research project
and the research potential of the
applicant.
A Travel Fund is available for
who
are
faculty
attending
scholarly and professional meetings in order to deliver a paper to
colleagues.
Also a publications fund is

open to faculty members to purchase reprints of their articles
appearing in scholarly journals.
The UK Research Foundation
is the agent through which all
proposals for extramural support
are to be channeled. The Foundation's office is in Room 355 Bowman Hall.

Press Clinic Today
It will be a busy day for the more than 400 high school
staffers and advisers expected here today for the Kentucky
High School Press Clinic.
ington Herald; Tommy Preston,
Sponsored by the Kentucky editor and
a
publisher, the
School Press Association,
High
Democrat; Bernard D.
day-lon- g
the
meeting features: Rosenthal, manager, administraeight workshops for advisers, tive and sales
service, Courier-Journbusiness directors, editors, feaand Times; Mike Rueh-linture writers, news writers, photoLexington Herald sports
graphers, sportswriters and ediwriter.
tors; three sessions mimeograph
Richard Ware, chief photoand offset productions and jourgrapher, UK student publicanalism teaching; editors and
tions; Prof. Herbert Strentz, UK
sports roundtables and commitDepartment of Journalism; Rex
tee meetings.
Stevens, A. B. Dick Company,
In addition, 26 speakers will
be featured throughout the day. Lexington; William T. Venues
and Cordon Salyers, IBM, LexA partial list of the speakers
includes: Jack Sellers, reporter, ington.
the Louisville Courier-JournaAlbert C. Allen, assistant manREAD THE KERNEL
the Louisville
aging editor,
CLASSIFIED COLUMN DAILY
Times; Don Mills, editor, Lex
Cyn-thian-

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MGM

"It is time we began to discourage the employment of tlus
kind of person in our colleges
and universities," he said.

Axil

Agnew said he had received
evidence from the FBI aria Baltimore police that two professors
atTowson State College in Maryland founded the SDS chapter
on its campus.
At Towson State, where he
appeared last Friday night, Agnew encountered the heaviest
heckling of his campaign.

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PRODUCTION

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Life
KUBRICK PRODUCTION

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PANAVISI0N.

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EVENING AT 8:15
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"WILD
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Students for a Democratic
ciety, is "dedicated to anarchy,"
and "led by people who preach
the overthrow of our government"
and that some of its chapters
were formed by professors.
So-

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Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lee H. Becker,

Editor-in-Chi-

Darrell Rice, Managing Editor
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Assistant Managing Editors

Fanfare, Stupidity

Out of the fanfare and relative
stupidity of the Kentucky
Activities Committee (KUAC)
hearings in Eastern Kentucky has
come some interesting facts. It now
seems that last fall's sedition case
workers
involving five
came about after some typical court
house tricks and was instigated
only after posters showing "colored
and white (people) mixed" was
found in the home of Alan
an

anti-pover- ty

Mc-Surel-

y.

The whole affair kind of bothers
of Compton to "visit"
with the McSurely's when they
were not home is questionable.
The right of the radio newsmen
And
to eavesdrop is
the right of the jailer to read mail
is debatable. The whole affair is
regrettable.
us. The right

non-existe-

Eastern
In almost
Black Power posters
Kentucky,
seem to be less than harmful. And
if the dear Mr. Compton will look
in almost any national magazine
he will see pictures of whites and
Blacks together. (We will admit,
however, we have never seen one
with a green man.) And literature
dealing with communism can be
bought in almost any book store.
lily-whi-

te

James Compton, a store owner
on Shelby Creek, told a crowd
at the KUAC hearing Wednesday
that he initiated the inquiry concerning two of the
workers after he entered the home
h rented to Alan and Margaret
McSurely while they were out. He
said he found stacks of books and
The court house gang in Pike
literature about communism, posters about Black Power and film County has had its day. They have
done everything possible to run sevclips on Cuba.
After the visit to the McSurely eral persons out of Eastern Kenhome, Compton called the Pike tucky because those persons deCounty sheriff and a midnight raid sire change for the betterment of
on the McSurely home and that the area.
of Joseph Mulloy followed. The
Indeed there is a revolution
McSurelys, Mulloy and Carl and
in the mountains of this
Anne Braden of Louisville were brewing
and the revolution may some
later tried for sedition, but their state,
n
peoday gain force.
case was dismissed when a federal
will not always choose to reple
panel of judges in Lexington ruled main that
way when they have
the law unconstitutional.
learned that there is another way
It was also learned at the hearof life available to them.
ing that Jim Balser, a radio newsThe court house gangs have the
man and deputy sheriff, who took
chance to make that revolution
in the raid, later eavesdropped
part
on a telephone conversation bepeaceful, or force it to be as viotween McSurely and Mrs. Braden. lent as the one is our cities last
And another witness, Pike County spring. They hold the match beJailer Graver Adkins, said that fore the fuse, and indications from
while the McSurely's were in jail the KUAC hearings are that they
they received telegrams which both- intend to go the violent route.
It is their choice.
ered him.
anti-pover-

ty

Down-trodde-

The Chair Recognizes Mr. Juul

Too Late?
Speculation that a halt to the
bombing of North Vietnam would
come soon is both heartening and
confusing. At the base of these
mixed emotions is, of course, the
whole problem of what one can
believe any more, as well as the
general feeling of hopelessness
which now surrounds our whole
presence in Southeast Asia.
It is needless to say, of course,
that we hope the bombing is put
to a halt immediately. But it is
also important to recognize the
strain which waiting this long to
halt the bombing has put on our
credibility.
If the bombing is halted now,
only three weeks from our national
elections, it is clear that people
both in this country and