xt7jsx647x3t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jsx647x3t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-11-09 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, November 09, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 09, 1967 1967 1967-11-09 2024 true xt7jsx647x3t section xt7jsx647x3t  

 

THE KENTUCKY

Thursday Afternoon, Nov. '9, 1967

 
 
 

demonstrating that November can give rise to as

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

The Rites of Fall

. Autumn stole a leaf from spring earlier this week, enshrouds a friend beneath a layer of new-fallen

leaves.

much ronumtic ingaiuity as May. Here a coed

Kernel Photo

 

Opposed, Oswald Says 0f Request
To Allow Women In Men’s Rooms

Representatives of Complex
Tower A were unable to ~get
final action Wednesday from Uni-
versity administrators on a pro
’posal to allow women in resi-
dents' rooms on Friday and Sat-
urday nights.

A meeting between President
John W. Oswald, Vice President
for Student Affairs Robert L.
Johnson and student representa-
tives Dick Crouch and Charles
Mihalek produced no positive act-
ion.

Mihalek, executive chairman
of Tower A's Committee on So-
cial Relations, said President Os-
wald indicated that he does not
”at this time" favor the student

 

The proposal submitted to
President Oswald by Tower A
student representatives, which
proposes that women be allowed
to visit in men's rooms, appears
in its full text on page 5.
proposal as it stands. The ad-
ministrators, however, were said
to have promised they would
study the matter further before
final action is taken.

The proposal to allow women
in men's rooms applies only to
Tower A, an upperclassmen'sdor—
mitory. ”Upperclassmen," Miha-

lek said, "should be, and I think

they are, more mature."
Rutgers Cited

Mihalek added that many up-
perclassmen live in the dormitory
mainly for the sake of conven-
ience. ”Especially for out-of-
staters," he said, ”it is much
easier to contract for a room in
a dorm."

A first-year law student, Miha-
lek studied for his undergraduate

degree at Rutgers Universitvf’

where he says the policy cOncem-

ing women in men’s rooms is
similar to the proposal under
consideration here.

”The only difference," he
said, ”is that at Rutgers women
are allowed in the rooms on Sun-
day also." '

Tower A corridor advisers are
solidly behind the proposal, ac-
cording to Mihalek. “Sometimes
they ask us three or four times a
day what has been done about
it," he said. “They are very
excited." ‘

Juul Wins Top Post
In Close OCSA Voting

Thom Juul has been reelected president of the Off Campus
Student Association by a fivote margin over .Allan Lanman,

former OCSA vice president.
Lanman was dismissed in Oct-
ober for failure to attend meet-
ings. Juul called for a new elect-
ion and appointed Joe White as

vice president. a;

The election, held Nov. 6-8,
drew about 1,265 voters, nearly
twice the number recorded in the
OCSA election last April.

Both Joe White, candidate for

vice president, and Julie Beasley,
candidate for secretary, ran unop-
posed. Also elected were 10 coun-
cil members from 12 that sought
office.

Elected to the council were
Woody Cox, Dave Devers, Steve
Fruth, Allen Hetzel, Paul John-
son, Tom Johnson, Nancy Mc-
Lean, Joe Maguire,]udy McCabe
and Cary Maycroft.

. UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

KERNEL

Vol. LIX, No. 53

Protesters Tagged

With Violation

Of Student Code

By DICK KIMMINS
The University, under the new Student Code, has charged
the four students arrested in Monday"s sit—in at the Placement
Office with “abusive, obscene, violent, excessively noisy or drunken

misbehavior on

Associate an of Students
Jack Hall officia ly presented the
charge to the f n students, Bill
Murrell, Kyp Le is, Dan O'Leary
and Roger Woock, in a meeting
Wednesday aftemoon.

Earlier that afternoon, the stu-
dents won a continuance in their
case in Lexington City Police
Court. Judge Walter Tackett con-
tinued the case until Nov. 13
and left the students free on a
recognizance bond to Mr. Hall.
The students are charged with
breach of peace.

The students have two op-
tions. either to comply with
disciplinary measures as decided
by the Dean of Students' Office,
or to take their case before the
Judiciary Board.

Possible Penalties

   
  

If they are found guilty, they

can be punished by one of the,

following actions:

’Expulsion from the Univer-
sity.

lSuspension for a specific
period of time.

’Suspension, but with permis-
sion to stay on campus.

kProbation.

VA fine.

kA reprimand.

Mr. Hall said that ”the Uni-
versity, through the Dean of Stu-
dents. Office, has officially
charged the students with a vio-
lation of University regulations
governing the non-academic rela-
tionship between students and
the University. "

Student Code Remarks

The Student Code, approved
by the University's Board of
Trustees May 2, 1967, outlines the
procedures necessary in applica-
tion of the Code:

“When either of the deans
’meaning an academic dean or
the dean of students), afterinves-

r in University property."

tigation into an alleged violation
ofthe disciplinary rules, believes
a student has committed a dis—
ciplinary offense. he should coun-
sel with such student and may
outline disciplinary punishment
or treatment.

"If, after counseling with the
dean." says the Code, "the stu-
dent is not willing to accept
the course of conduct outlined
by the (lean, or if the student

so desires at any time after the

notification of alleged complicity
in a disciplinary offense, the dean
shall forward the reports and
evidence concerning the alleged

.violation to the University
Judiciary Board for appropriate
action."

Today"s meeting. said Mr.
Hall, informed the four students

“of the charge that has been placed

against them. The next course
of action involves the students'
decision whether to let the Dean
of Students' Office handle dis-
ciplinary action or whether to
take the matter before the Ju-
diciary Board.

Another portion of the Stu-
dent Code involves offenses con-
ceming ”interfering with the ac—

" tivities of the University," which

was the offense originally charged
by Mr. Hall in the confrontation
between him and the students
in the Placement Office.

This section of the Code could
not be applied to the students
because no University-recognized
organization sponsored the sit-
in; the students said they were
all acting as ”concerned individ-
uals."

The students could not be
reached for comment on what
decision they plan to make.

Republicans, Negroes Heartened‘By Election

 

By WILLIAM T. PEACOCK

WASHINGTON (AP)—-Republicans firmed up their
base for the 1968 presidential contest by capturingthe
Kentucky Statehouse in Tuesday’s elections, but Demo—
crats were cheered by retaining their holds on the big
cities of Philadelphia and Cleveland.

Democrat Carl B. Stokes, a Negro, demonstrated
by his election as mayor of Cleveland that it is possi-
ble for one of his race to take the top office in a
major city even where Negroes are a minority.

He takes a place in history as the first Negro to ac-
complish that.

The 40-year-old lawyer could be one of the big guns
of 1968 Democratic campaigning, particularly in areas
with a large Negro vote.

Mayor James H. Tate's re-election in Philadelphia is
another important one for the Democrats. The patronage
and power that go with the mayor's office can be de—
cisive in a close statewide election.

For President Johnson, who presumably will seek
another term in the White House in next year's election,
it was heartening that San Francisco decisively turned
down a ballot proposition for US. withdrawal from
Vietnam.

Heavy Margin

The referendum vote was 2 to 1 against a pullout.

A Vietnam vote was also on the ballot in Cambridge,
Mass, but the result may not be known for three weeks
or so.

On the other side of the Vietnam question, there was
the factor that Louie B. Nunn, successfulCOP candidate
for governor of Kentucky, had made it an issue in his
campaign.

"Tired of the War?" one of his slogans asked. "Vote
Nunn."

In other city contests which attracted particular
national attention. Richard C. Hatcher, Negro Demo-
crat. was elected mayor of Cary, 1nd., and Kevin
White won in Boston over Mrs. Louise Day Hicks,
foe of busing Negro children to white schools.

In Cary, where the outcome teetered uncertainly
through much of the night, Hatcher was certified Wednes-
day by the Lake County Election Board as the winner
by 1,389 votes in the city of 180,000 population.

But Republican Joseph Radigan, a white business-
man, kept open the possibility of a court challenge.

Democrat segregationist John Bell Williams was,
as expected, elected governor of Mississippi by a whop-
ping majority.

COP Majority

Looking to 1968, Mr. Nunn's election as governor
of Kentucky means that when he takes office next
year the Republicans will hold a majority of50 gover-
norships for the first time since 1954.

The division by parties will shift from the present
25—25 to 26-24 for the COP.

Those 26 Republican states will have a total of

304 electoral votes, 34 more than needed to name a
president.

Aside from the Kentucky victory, COP National
Chairman Ray C. Bliss pointed to the elections for
the New Jersey legislature as evidence his party is
still on the upsurge demonstrated in the 1966 elections.
Republicans took control of both houses of the legis-
lature from the Democrats.

But Democratic Gov. Richard J. Hughes deprecated
the significance, calling it a ”local phenomenon."

Democratic Chairman John M. Bailey took the view
that local candidates and local issues so dominated
everywhere that no national trend was discernible.

Before the elections, there was general expectation
among political analysts of ”white backlash" in reac-
tion to last summer's riots and urban disorders. How
much there was is a matter of speculation.

Cleveland Republicans had put up a highly attrac-
tive candidate in Seth Taft, 44. a liberal and active
in civic activities.

As it was, Mr. Stokes, just squeaked through in a
normally Democratic city.

Gary is even more overwhelmingly Democratic under
normal conditions but plainly a white—Negro contest
developed there.

In Boston, Mr. White had all the establishment
on his side. He was favored by Sen. Edward M. Ken-
nedy. the top Democrat in the state, and Republican
Cov. John A. Volpe. Yet Mrs. Hicks gave him a tight
race, her main card simply the submerged race issue.

 

  

2—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov. 9, l967

Carole Gleason Reynolds, a
graduate student at UK, will pre-
sent an organ recital Nov. 12
at 4 p.m. at St. James Episco-
pal Church in Pewee Valley.

The program will include
Walther's ”Chorale Partita on
:,Jesu meine Freude,' " Bach's
“Passacaglia and Fugue in C
minor and Chorale Preludes,"
andHindemiths ‘.Sonatal

PRIVATE BANQUET ROOM
Reservation — 252-9344
”9 South Limestone

Dr. Lawrence A. Allen, chair-
man of the Department of
Library Science, has announced
the appointment of four new
graduate faculty members.

They are Dr. George S. Bob-
inski. Charles Whitney Evans,

 

Burton's

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Nexus

A Coffee House for Students and Faculty
3l3 Rose Lane 3

Guest Artists
Welcome

Friday and Saturday
8:00 p.m. - l:00 a.m.

 

 

 

 

 

 

roosr at 2 «a sun. rouonow at 2‘... 830

“ANOTHER ‘SOUND OF MUSIC’ ”

Chiceyo— Tribune

   

lllllE ANDREWS

" S'THOROUGHLY MODERN

' GOOD SEATS AVAILABLE!
l as EUCLID . 26621"

    

Box office open Noon to 9 P.M.

 

 

 

A
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STUDENT SPECIAL snow __ $1.00
All Matinees or Evenings

Sunday through Thursday
BRING couron To BOX OFFICE

xxxxxxxxxxx

 

 

 

"EPISCOPALMN CHURCH HOUSES House
UK REYNOLDS’ ORGAN RECITAL

A student of Arnold Black—
burn, Miss Reynolds' recital is
presented in partial fulfillment
for the Master of Music Degree
in Organ. She received the Bach-
elor of Music degree in Organ
from the University in 1965 and
is a member of Phi Beta Kappa
Honorary Society. Presently she
is organist-choir director at Christ
Lutheran Church in Jefferson-
town, Kentucky.

Faculty Appointments Announced

Donald Dale F005 and John
Calvin Sanderlin.

Dr. Bobinski, an associate pro-
fessor, will teach courses in
public library service and bibli-
ography. He has been director
of libraries at State University
College, Cortland, N. Y., for the
past seven years and also was
lecturer last year at Syracuse
University's School of Library
Science.

Mr. Evans, instructor in cata-
loging and classification, comes
to UK from the San Diego,
Calif, public library. He has
published a study of printer
lohn Henry Nash, and surveys
of public libraries, formerly was
on the staffs of the Sacramento
Public Library and Alameda
County. Calif, library.

Foos has been director of the
El Paso, Tex., public library.
He has a joint appointment—as
lecturer and to the State De-
partment of Libraries. He will
teach courses in administration
and public library service.

 

 

 

8th WEEK!

 

a"... “SIDNEY
M... POITIER

mJAMES CUVELLS 9

' “1'0 sun, WITH
LOVE" c

TECHNICOLOR' -

 

(50p rano)‘4-Sings

Tonight For UK In ASA

UK soprano Sheila House will
present a recital today at 8:15
p.m. in the Agricultural Science
Auditorium. She will be accom-
panied by Ann Huddleston.

The program will include
words by Debussy, Poulenc Cra-
nados Obradors Cinastera, and!
Lecuona.

A native of Clovis, New
Mexico, Miss House earned both
the Bachelor and Master of Mn-
sic Degrees from Eastern New
Mexico University, and the Mas-
ter of Fine Arts Degree from the
University of Iowa.

She has appeared as a solo-
ist in Bach's ”Christmas Ora-
torio," Brahms' "German Re-
quiem," Handel's ”Messiah,"
Mendelssohn's ”Elijah," Dubois‘
“Seven Last Words of Christ,"
Verdi's ”Requiem," and Bee-
thoven's “Ninth Symphony.”

She has appeared as a solo-
ist "with the Lexington Philhar-
monic Orchestra, and has sung
for two seasons with the Santa
Fe Opera Company and one sum-
mer with the St. Louis Municipa
Opera Association. She is director
ofthe UK Opera Theatre.

 

 

     
   
  

w' 'M presents

 

 

3rd HIT -—- Technicolor Western

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY
Cartoon 7:30

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OPEN WEEKENDS

Triple Feature Program
Adln. $l.25

   

 
 

 

FLAME, FURY AND LOVF’

Sue Lyon
Margaret Leighton
Flora Robson
Betty Field
Mildred Dunnocli
Anna Lee
Eddie Albert

 

 

 

 

‘ KENTUCKY

   

 

4th nWEEK!

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' ONLY . . . . .
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The Art

Department
Film Club

Presents

BAND OF
OUTSIDERS
by
Jean—Luc Godard
Thursday, Nov. 9
7:30 p.m. $l.00
Student Center

Auditorium

University of Kentucky

 

 

 

 

 

Rory Calhoun ”APACHE UPRISING"

 

Jam Sessions
Wed., Thur., Fri., Sat.

PICADOME

Student-owned
RESTAURANT CLUB
l-75 So. At Clays Ferry Exit

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University at Kentucky. Le -
lnflOr. Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed live times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods. end once durinlthe
session.

Published by the Board at Student
Publications. UK Post Oilice Box 4986

Begum as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously es the Kernel
since 1915.

Advertising published herein is in—
tended to help the render buy Any
{else or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly. by mail — ”.31
Per copy. tram tiles -— $.10

summer

 

STUDENT SPECIALS- THIS WEEK

.Ham and Eggs, 3 buttermilk pancakes,

hot maple syrup

.......................... $1 :35

Golden Tender Waffle, egg- -rich, and

baked cnsp ...........

MON DAYS ON LY:

............................. 75c

Fried Chicken french

fries, cole slaw, hot bread

(all you can eat)

. Apple Glazed Roll- -:ups three large roll—
ups, hot cinnamon glazed apples sliced,

with whipped cream

$1.10

STAGE AN "EAT-l IN" AT

THE PANCAKE HOUSE
920 South Lime, across from UK Med Center

 

 

    

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov. 9, 1967—3

 

The Promised Land

 

By JOE HINDS
Kernel Arts Editor

Thus spoke Ezra: I have fin-
ally reached the promised land,
and paradise will be mine for-
ever.

His life had been pure and
useful to his tribesmen. They fol-
lowed his ways so that they too
could earn the exalted prize.

saw a majestic light hidden be-
hind the darkness.

He smiled as he waited for
the winds to lift him up into
the firmament while Nietzsche
roared behind a tree.

The first breeze lifted his white
locks and tumed a corner of his
starched white sheet.

The earth trembled at first.
The crack was not obvious until
a sound of torn igneous rock
registered like hot slab against
a cold back. Then it was a
chasm leading down into a pit

The fimiament whirled like
furious winds thus forming a
giant funnel leading into dark-
ness. The darkness was vague
to the thinking eye, but Ezra

  

Phenomena from Familiar

These two phenomena are taken from the familiar but have never

been seen before. The firmament whirled thus forming a giant

funnel leading into darkness (left). The flames spit like geysers
(right).

  

of fire. The flames spit like geys‘
ers.

But thev could not touch Ezra.
He reached out, and his white
sheet slid gracefully down his
bare arm while Dostoevski cou-

ghed behind a bush.

Ezra watched the winds circl-
ing around his heaven like a white
snake waiting for its prey. He
was proud of this moment—the
moment he had worked all his
life preparing for. He smiled as
the wind became stronger and
whipped around him like adanc-
ing fairy. But that's what it was.

He saw the host of spirits
weaving intricate patterns around
the elongated pyramid of wind
leading to his goal. His excite-
ment was beginning to show
through a hardexterior developed
during his lifetime of following
rigid rules and beliefs.

His hands tanned from plow-
ing the sun for 76 years were
quaking. He steadied them on a
boulder and tried to keep his
smile. but a tear broke his con-
centration.

The sky opened, and the wa-
ters came together. The fog faded
the colors he saw in the sky as
the winds died. The raindrops
soaked through his sheet and
washed his hair down over his
ears.

NietZSche and Dostoevski
came from hiding and danced
around the man as he fell at
their feet in a heap of sodden
soil.

 

>8988899928-C'W9 ./.7" a ”” ./.'/‘ ”fix ./.7‘./‘ ””flflflfiflflflflfl‘”

MW

Biggest Catch
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Fisherman’s
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Great yarn for the
lusty, salty look.
Fisherman knit cable
by Bernhard Altmann
woven in rich virgin
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$16.

  
   
 

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open every night

 

 

 

 

X

 

  

LUCILLE HANEY as Dorabella (front) and Sherree Zalampas as

  
 

  

Fiordiligi standing in back in a scene from Mozart's opera buffa

“Cosi Fan Tutte,"
Nov.

which will be given by UK's Opera Theatre
17-22. Tickets go on sale Nov. 13. Call UK extension 2929

for reservations.

 

Art Film Series Saturday

Two films, ”The World of
Rubens" and “Francis Bacon
Paintings 1944-1962," will be
shown at 2 pm. Nov. ll,in Room
208 of the Fine Arts Building.

They are part of a series of
films on art offered by the UK

A

Vw—E .

Art Gallery as a free education-
al service.

The next films in this series
will be shown Nov. 18: “Orozco
Murals," ”Danish Design" and
”Introduction to Japanese Brush
Painting."

VERY DISTINCTIVELY HERS
The most thoughtful gift of all .
monogram jewelry —
Coat Hanger, sterling only ..... 4.
Cuff links, gold filled ......... l2.

Pierced Earrings, gold filled . . . .

12.

PLACE YOUR CHRISTMAS ORDER NOW!

 

 

  

Letters To The Editor

Letter From President Oswald

Dear Students:
During our Centennial Celebration three years ago, the Student Cen-

tennial Committee initiated the Undergraduate Research and Creativity
Program to emphasize and encourage academic excellence among under-
graduate students.

This year there will be three awards in each of the five divisions—
the Physical Sciences, Biological Sciences, Social Sciences, Humanities
and Creative Work in the Fine Arts. The awards will be as follows:

1. First Place—Oswald Award plaque and $100.00

2. Second Place—Certificate, a book and subscription to a scholarly

journal. _

3. Third Place—Certificate and subscription to a scholarly journal.

The winners will be honored at the annual awards banquet in the
spring.

It is the business of a university to advance the frontiers of know-
ledge and creative works. Thus it seems most fitting that the Univer-
sity recognize and emphasize excellence in research and creative pro-
jects through this significant program. This competition deserves the
participation of our very best scholars and the entire student body
should be able to look to this excellence as representative of their
collective talents.

I urge each student interested in participating to complete the ac-
companying form and return it to Room 104, Administration Building,

 

 

‘ We Are Met On A Great Battlefield Of That War’

 

Ghost Of SPER Rides Again

By DAVID 110me

The ghost of the abortive Student
;Party for Equal Representation (SPER)
‘spirited around quite playfully last Thurs-
day night. Although the occasion was
three days after Halloween, it seems doubt-
ful that this particular specter minded
'as it hung over the proceedings of Stu-
dent Government and watched the pas-
sage of a long over-due bill for legisla-
tive reapportionrnent.

The SPER ghost was probably happy,
and not without reason. Although only a
few of the party’s candidates wereelected

 

in last year’s elections, the idea of legis-
lative reapportionment has been alive
among the sly practitioners of campus
politics. After repeated refusals in previous
years to pass population-representational
bills, apparently the University's junior
politicians decided to make a gain out of
a necessity.

The result was a rush to get in on
the final bill, which was a compromise
of several other bills. Finally, three of the
leading unannounced candidates for high
Student Covemment office managed to get
their names on the bill. Who did all of
the work remains to be seen, but who-
ever it was deserves some commendation
for his ability to take several plans and
mold them into a plan which at least
appears that it will work.

The chief problem facing the compro
misers was the conflict between popula-
tion and at-large representation. The
committee neatly sidestepped this by in-
creasing the membership of the legisla-
ture to thirty-two, while dividing the votes
into blocks of sixteen: one group is elected
on the basis of population-distribution, the
other in terms of at-large representation.

Perhaps the most significant action of
the committee was its decision that elec-
tions should be held immediately for the
sixteen population representatives. What
this does is to offer the possibility of a
radical change in composition for the leg-
islature. Such a move was probably not
easy for speaker Oliver Kash Curry, for it
entailed the possibility of losing his slim
control of the legislature. It is doubtful
whether any real change in power will
take place because of the elections.

Curry men should take a rmjority of
the new fraternity positions and should
take enough of the dorm and off-campus
posts to help him keep his majority.
This is particularly true as Curry is
probably the only man in the legislature
who can work up an election organization
before the Nov. 16 election. "

But, whatever the reason for the pas-
sage of the bill, it marks an advance in
Student Covemment's ability to serve its
constituency. Whether any result will
come of this new ability is another mat-
ter. And, just for the opportunity of
some new action and motivation, students
owe a vote ofthanks tothe ghost of SPER.

 

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The South’s Outstanding College Daily
UerrznsrrY or Kmucxr

ESTABLISHED 1894

THURSDAY, NOV. 9, 1967

 

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

 

William F. Knapp, jr., Editor-In—Chief

Helen McCloy, Managing Editor

Dick Kimmins, Associate Managing Editor
Ossilyn Ellis, Women's Editor
Kerry Powell, Graduate Assistant

Joe Hinds, Arts Editor

Frank Browning, Editorial Page Editor
Bill Thompson, Cartoonist
Guy Mendcs, Sports Editor
Rick Bell, Director of Photography

ASSISTANT hi ANACINC EDITORS

Robert Brandt,

Martin Webb, 10 Warren,

Lee Becker, Darrell Christian

BUSINESS STA FF

Hank Milam, Advertising Manager

Mike Moore, Asst. Advertising Manager

Mike Halpin, Circulation Manager

Mary McGee, Advertising Salesman

Earl Oremus, Delivery

Lexington Campus, not later than November 20, 1%7.

Sincerely,
John W. Oswald

UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH AND CREATIVITY PROGRAM
I am interested in participating in the Undergraduate Research and Creativity
Program and would appreciate receiving further information.

NAME ................................................
Telephone ............................................

College ................................................
Physical Sciences ............. ;

...... ; CreativeWork in Fine Arts

Division (check one)

Social Sciences ........... ; Humanities .....

Local Address ...................................

Biological Sciences ............. ;

(Return to; Room 104, Administration Building, Lexington Campus.)

-—_.__——__—_—-—__._._._—_

To the Editor of The Kernel:

Last spring I sailed on the Phoenix
to North Vietnam. This unarmed, two-
masted sailboat was loaded with medical
supplies for the relief of civilians suffer-
ing under the American bombing. We
were following a threehundred-year-old
tradition of the Quakers to oppose all
war, and to bring loving aid to its victims.
We were practicing the Christian dictum:
"If thine enemy hungareth, feed him."
This was an experiment with tmth, in
the Candhian sense.

We were mobilizing the power of non-
violence in the face of the American
Seventh Fleet and the Communist shore
batteries. As William Penn said long ago
when he set out to win over the hostile
Indians of the New World with his policy
of peace and friendship, "Let us then
see what Love can do.”

What happened to this 50-foot ship
with its crew of eight American pacifists
and its cargo of good will from thousands of
American and Japanese people? The

     

Ivan Mann—Black Star
DR. CHAMPNEY IN HAND]

Seventh Fleet opened up and we sailed
to Haiphong unchallenged. The people of
North Vietnam received us with open arms
and for eight intensive days we were the
honored guests of the Red Cross in Hai-
phong, Hanoi, and surrounding territory.
Love was contagious.

We were able to contribute to a better
understanding of Americans there, and
we learned a great deal about Vietnam,
its people, its culture, its history, what
they were fighting for, and how they
felt about America. We saw the wide

—.__-.—_-—_———.———————_—_

spread tragedy of civilian casualties, and
we fdt the impact of their determinations
to resist to the death—the more bombing,

  

' '30 , .
[van Mann—Black Star
‘PHOENIX’ IN HONG KONG HARBOR

the higher their morale. . . .

Our Canadian camera team (CBC)
made a movie, an hour-long color-sound
documentary, which tells the story of
”The Voyage of the Phoenix." It is not
for weak stomachs, but I think you will
beglad you saw it.

-Horace Champney
Yellow Springs, Ohio

To The Editor Of The Kernel:

In view of his recent statements, which
indicate complete ignorance of the mean-
ing of the first amendment to the U.S.
Constitution and the purpose of the draft
laws of this country, I call for the im-
mediate resignation of Lewis B. Hershey,
director of the arbitrary and involuntary
servitude system.

I would suggest to Mr. Hershey that
abundant laws already exist to deal with
those who interfere with the operation of
his righteous system, just as they exists
to protect any other business. The college '
military recruiter is no different than the
General Motors recmiter and the same
laws should protect both.

I would further suggest that Mr. Her-
shey be replaced by a civilian free of
the brainwashing of the U.S. military.

In conclusion, I would suggest that
the citizens of this country ask them-
selves whether Mr. Hershey's reprisal sys-
tem is better in accordance with the
U.S. Constitution or the Communist re-
gimes which they so abhor.

D. J. Crockett
Philosophy

 

  

 

 

I HE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov. 9, 1967—5

Text of Tower-A Girls-in-Dorms Resolution

The following bill is intended to be
of an experimental nature, to begin
from the date of adoption in the
Fall Semester of 1967 and end De-
cernber 9, 1967, the last Saturday
before final examinations. (Passed
unanimously by Tower ”A" Gov-
erning Council on September 18,
1967.)

PROPOSAL
FEMALE GUEST REGULATIONS
FOR TOWER "A"
PREAMBLE

Tower ”A" recognizes the free-
dom and independence of its stu-
dents as gentlemen and scholars.
The following guidelines and pro—
visions are not intended to place
undue restrictions upon theindivid-
ual, but only to make him more
aware of the conduct which he is
expected to maintain.

We set forth the following policy
with firm faith in the good judg-
ment and stable responsibility of
all residence hall students.

I. HOURS

Guest hours for women will be
8 p.m. to 12:30 p.m. each Friday
and Saturday. The penthouse lounge
will be open at 7 p.m. both nights.

Because of special events, the hours ‘

may be altered at the discretion
ofthe residence halls student gov-
ernment.

II. PROCEDURE

A. Residents only may bring
guests into the residence hall.

B. The resident must present his
student l.D. card to the staff
on duty at the desk and ex-
change his I.D. card for (2)
two guest cards. (One card is
the pass for his guest and
must be kept by the guest
until leaving. The other card
is a notice which must be
placed on the resident’s door
whenever a guest is in his
room. The resident must sign
in and his guest must sign
out. At that time the guest
pass and notice are exchanged
for the resident's student l.D.
card.

C. If a resident has more than
one guest. that resident is
responsible for all guests
signed in on his l.D.

D. Responsibility for appropriate
conduct of all people in the
room will be that ofthe regu-
lar occupant of the room.

E. If a floor wishes to restrict
open house privileges. the
floor representative must
properly notify the President
of the tower by Wednesday
noon.

III. USE OF FACILITIES

A. The guest may be in a resio
dent’s room, the floor lounge
or the penthouse lounge.
When a guest is in a room
the DOOR MUST BE UN-
LOCKED.

B. The bathrooms on the lounge
floors will be appropriately
designated as for the use of
women. Men who live on the

lounge floors are required to
use a bathroom on the next

floor.

IV. VIOLATIONS

Any resident who abuses his
guest privilege will have it revoked.
Violations of the above regulations
are to be reported to‘the approp-
riate residence halls staff and are
subject to a hearing before a Resi-
dence Hall Judicial Board.
V. CODIFICATION OF APPRO-
PRIATE STUDENT BEHAVIOR

Residents and their guests
should act in a manner appropri-
ate to this institution. They should
act in a discreet manner so as not
to bring discredit upon the Uni-
versity of Kentucky. It is expected
that utmost consideration be given
to other people on the floor at all
times.

COMMITTEE REPORT
PREAMBLE

The University has created an
atmosphere which encourages stu-
dents to act in a mature and gen-
tlemanly manner. The establishing
of well-furnished residence halls
coupled with the abolishing ofthe
"in loco parentis" policy creates
a climate of cultural and academic
maturity unparalleled by any