xt7ngf0mw58b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ngf0mw58b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701109 newspapers sn89058402 English Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 9, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 9, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7ngf0mw58b section xt7ngf0mw58b 11 IE ECMTOCKY EQeRNEL Monday, Nov. 9, 1970 UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON Vol. LXII, No. 47 Administration Silent on Claim Prof Charges FBI Int rasion in e on charges stemming from a rock festival By BOB BROWN Editorial Page Editor held on his farm. Dr. Mason told the Kernel Sunday Charges of inappropriate action by the UK administration and of intimidation of that Calbraith's comment was not a threat students' freedom of expression by FBI but an "anticipation" of what could result agents and the UK Student Affairs Office from the type of repression Calbraith felt were filed Friday in a complaint by po- was involved in the trial. Mason said he litical science professor Gene Mason to did not consider the comment inapproprithe University Senate Committee on ate because the subject matter of the course Tenure and Promotion. concerns political trials. The charges stem from an FBI invesClass Members Questioned Soon after Calbraith's comment, FBI tigation centering on a comment made by Gatewood Calbraith, a participant in agents questioned at least two enrolled one of Mason's classes, Political Science members of Political Science 390 as to the 300, in which Calbraith predicted the exact content of Calbraith's remarks. burning or bombing of buildings in the Students reported the agents possessed Lexington area. a class roll and photographs of Calbraith. Calbraith made the statement in the In neither questioning session of two aftermath of the trial of Dr. Phillip Crossen students was either threatened by the FBI agent, and the information they offered .was completely voluntary, they said. The two reported the agent was aware of the exact comment made by Calbraith even before they were questioned. Professor Mason indicated he resented the investigation because, he said, it could intimidate the constitutional guarantee of freedom of expression in his class. UK Law School Professor Alvin L. Goldman, whose speciality is civil liberties law, agreed with Mason's expression of concern. Goldman cited a 1959 Supreme Court ruling which stated, "Broadly viewed, inquiries cannot be made into the teaching that is pursued in any of our educational institutions. When academic teaching-freedom and its corollary learning- - freedom, so essential to the of the nation, are claimed, this court will always be on the alert against intrusion by Congress intothis constitutionally protected domain." One of the students interviewed by the FBI agent stated that he felt the interrogation constituted a restriction on his freedom of expression. He added that thema-jorit- y of the class seemed to agree with his opinion that the FBI was trying to intimidate them. The second area of Mason's complaint deals with the University administration's "inappropriate action" in cooperating with the FBI to violate what Mason considers a right of privacy between a professor and his students. Continued on Page 5, Col. 1 well-bein- g Vouchers Show Coalition Charges On SG Expenditures Unfounded By RON HAWKINS Assistant Managing Editor A check of Student Government spending vouchers in the University's general accounting department Friday afternoon by SG Representative Graeme Browning, student John Browning and a Kernel reporter discovered several errors in Student Coalition's charges of SG misspending. The three found that Student Government had not spent $292.78 for telegrams in the month of May as Student Coalition had charged. SG, the records show, spent $5.10 on telegrams. The claim that SG spent $76.40 on one telegram was also found unsubstantiated by the three. The records indicate instead that the bill of $76.40 belonged to the College of Engineering. Student Coalition's report also claimed that Student Gov ernment, under President Steve Bright, had paid $185 to the Plate and Optical Scanning Corporation. Vouchers in the general accounting office show, however, that this payment was made SG administduring the 1969-7- 0 ration of Tim Futrell. The voucher vas ' - sighed by I Jim Gwinn, SG vice president under Futrell. An additional two claims made by Student Coalition, which the three also found to be false, concerned metered postage. Student Coalition claimed that Student Government had one metered postage bill for $42.88. When the Brownings and the Kernel reporter checked the records, they found that this was a bill for the College of Education, rather than Student Government. The voucher did, however, show an SG bill for $11.68. A claim that another $103.37 bill was paid by Student Government also was found to be incorrect. This bill was addressed to the College of Education's instruction materials laboratory, and Student Government was not assessed on this voucher. The inquiry was prompted by contradictory statements by SG president Steve Bright and the Student Coalition Legal Committee. In last Thursday's Kentucky Wildcat, an editorial claimed that SG had misspent Student Government funds. Among the items that the coalition newspaper article claimed SG misspent money on were telegrams, office supplies and telephone bills. The coalition's legal committee report, upon which the Wildcat based its editorial, claimed that SG payments to the Plate and Optical Scanning Corp. and the Carnahan Conference were not in the best student interest and that too much money was spent on them. At the Student Government meeting Thursday, after the Wildcat editorial appeared, Bright criticized the report's accuracy, saying that the people who compiled it did not know how to read the vouchers. Bright added that telegram bills the Coalition claimed were assessed to SG were actually assessed to the College of Engineering. C. Allen Muncy, Wildcat Editorial page editor and member of the coalition's legal committee, reacted to Bright's comments Thursday night by saying the coalition's charges were correct and that the records backed him up. After running into the conflict of opposite statements, the Kernel reporter and Graeme and John Browning decided to check the records. Terrence Fox, president of Student told the Coalition, Keniel Sunday the mistakes in the coalition's report were not Continued on Pace 3, Col. 1 7 DR. ROBERT ZUMWINKLE found no inequities in SC spending. - Law Society Hears Karem Is x. By GAIL GREEN Kernel Staff Writer Fred Karem, administrative assistant to Cov. Louie Nunn, spoke yesterday at the initiation of new members into Societas Pro Legibus, the undergraduate pre-lahonorary society. "When you pledge yourself to this society, you are adopting a commitment to certain ways of settling differences and methods for bringing about change," said Karem. He advised the future lawyers to link themselves to the middle road, in order to avoid the "authoritarians" on one side and the "anarchists" on the other. Most Tragic Failure "The most tragic failure of today's student is to gain a perspective of human society and its limitations," he said. Karem then commented, tow-eve- r, that young people are not much different from their elders. "They are only fresh blood being pumped into the society," he w w Kernel Photo By Bob Brewer Karem Crusades Fred Karem, administrative assistant to Cov. Louie B. Nunn, addressed new memhonbers of the undergraduate pre-laorary society yesterday. He advised the group to follow the "middle road" and to avoid "authoritarians." and V anarchists"." w stated. "No generation ever has the opportunity to choose the shape of the world into which it is born." "Violence and disorder have no place on campus, regardless of the cause or the perpetrators. The Black Panthers and the Weathermen are only turning the society against most, if not all, of their causes," said Karem. Change 'Only Through Laws' "Change within the society should only be made through the laws of that society. The best way to deal with problems is to master the techniques of the system and to make use of its opportunities," he said. "It is the majority which governs in this society, and it is the only right ofa minority to be able to exist as a minority and not to be suppressed by the majority," he said. In conclusion Karem said, Forecast: Windy and mild with showers and the chance of "The means and not the end is thunderstorms this afternoon and the most important thing that the law is." tonight. Southerly winds of 5 Initiated into the honorary m.p.h. this afternoon. Considerably cloudy and cooler Tuesday, society before Karem spoke were increasing cloudiness and warmer John Bilby, Clenn Embree, KevWednesday. High today, near 70; in Fleming, Stev en Hoi brook, low tonight, 40; high tomorrow, Benjamin Jones, Morrison Jenknear 60. Precipitation probabiliins, Mary Moore, Roland Rosen-bruDaniel Parker, Stephen ties: 70 percent today, 50 perRuschell, Gary Settles, Jerry cent tonight, and 20 percent William Wilson and J.B. Schilling. . Weather 15-2- Spr-ingat- e, * 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nov. 9, A Political Boon? 1970 Nixon Says Vietnam Conflict Will End by '72 - NEW YORK (AD Time ma gazine quot ed Pre siden t Nixon a remarkable record on the issue, with crime legislation, obscenity and narcotics bills. We now have the most effective program to deal with crime." Time said Nixon closed the meetings with some advice to his team: "If any of you are betting men, you can give your friends in the press odds on the presidential success in 1972." The meetings were called as a postmortem on the 1970 on Sunday as telling his Cabinet and top advisers the Vietnam war will lie over by 1972, enhancing the party's chances in the presidential election. Moreover, the magazine said, Nixon told them the country would be prosperous by the election and that the upward trend in crimes would be reversed. The magazine noted, in a t Time said the two sessions the first for the Cabinet and the second for about 30 top White House advisers were told by the President: "The election, ideologically, was enormously success-fid.- " The magazine said he told them that analysts who stated it was not a Republican victory were writing "what their hearts, not their heads, tell them." Time said Nixon told his associates that he decided to campaign, against the advice of his aides, Oct. 8 when he saw that polls which he had commissioned were ninning against the Republicans. Nixon, said Time, claimed that success came because "We emphasized the peace issue. The whole secret of any campaign is to talk about your Issues. The peace Issue was very beneficial." "We gained a working majority of at least three," Time quoted Nixon as saying. "In addition there's the fallout effect in on senators up for 1972. The changesthisyearmight make some of them read the tea leaves." Nixon downgraded Democratic successes in gaining governorships, Time said. "I have yet to see a popular governor pull in a president," it quoted him. "The governors cannot produce votes for a president, only a machine can. Theonly machine left is Daley's and we'll see if we can't offset that with the Ogilvie machine." Muskie 'Sounding Out' Democratic Leaders (r By JANET STAIIIAR Associated Press statement, that it could give no source for its quotations. WASHINGTON Sen. EdThe President, Time said, told mund S. Muskie,, said the meetings attended also by Sunday that '"in a tentative, his daughter Tricia: "The war limited way" he has started to will be over and we will have sound out Democratic leaders as peace with prosperity. As far as to the chances of their supporting the economy, it will be good him as the party's 1972 presiin 1971, with a very strong up dential candidate. turn in 1972. Rut Muskie, who was reorder will also be elected last Tuesday to a third "Law and an issue to this degree: crime term as Maine's senator, said that has gone up 150 percent in the "effort obviously has to Ix; exand escalated" if he does past eight years, but it is now panded to go back nuke up his mind to run for finally beginning down. We the Republicans have president. - Muskie declined to name the persons he has contacted and said it has been "too limited" a list. "To reveal it would misrepresent the nature of my interests and my drive in this connection," he said. The Maine Democrat was inlK''s radio-tele- terviewed on Hostage Photos Published - CanaMONTREAL (AP) dian newspapers published Sunday four different photographs that appeared to be of kidnaped British Trade Commissioner Welcome Stadeots UK V James R. Cross who is being held hostage by a terrorist cell of the Quebec Liberation Front. The pictures, sent out by the Front, known as the FLQ for the initials of its name in French, apparently meant to show that Cross, 59, who was kidnaped Oct. 5, is alive and well. One of the photos purportedly of Cross was received along with a note by the newspaper Journal de Montreal. Contentsof the note were not revealed by either the newspaper or authorities. vision program, "Meet The Press." Muskie said he as well as his supporters would not agree with a published report that he has an "imposing" campaign organization already at work to get him the 1972 presidential nomination. "We do have an organization but it must Ix? expanded to meet the needs of the future," he said. "It is far from imposing in size and numbers at this point. Nevertheless, we are taking the first steps that could lead to the next." He said he has no timetable as to when he will announce his - The Kentucky Kernel Rates are $1.25 far to words, $3.00 for three eonsecatlTe Insertions of the same ad of 20 words, and $3.75 per week, 2 words. The deadline Is 11 a.m. the day prior to publication. No advertisement may cite race, religion or national origin as a qaallfleatlon for renting rooms or for employment. FOR BALK FOR SALE 1065 MO Midget. 3. running condition. Call Late model typewriter. Standard siie, ual. Pica type. $55. Call SUBSCRIPTION RATES $9.45 Yearly, by mail NOW 2 LOCATIONS VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER VERSAILLES ROAD TAKE OUT PHONE 255-964- 6 SHOPPERS Per copy, from files $.10 KERNEL TELEPHONES Editor, Managing Editor .... 275-17Editorial Page Editor, Associate Editors, Sports . . 257-17Advertising, Business, Circulation Good - TTPING THEMES, theses, reports, stencils; minor editing, 60 cents pp. After 5:00 p.m. daily, Saturdays, Bill Givens, 2N13 7. EXPERIENCED typist wiU do theses, dissertations, research notes, manuscripts, resumes, etc., on IBM typewriters. Reasonable rates. Call 1. or 6N12 3N0 man4. N610 FOR SALE Electric guitar, I960 Fender Mustang. Used only 8 months. 0. $125. Phone N9 BUS 1962 or for parts; needs forces me to work; breadlessness take best offer. Call 0N13 VW FOR SALE Guitar Amplifier. 1968 Fender Twin Reverb, speaker and tubes beatable." REWARD Smith-Coro- The Kentucky Kernel. University Station. University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. Mailed five times weekly during the school year except holidays and exam periods, and once during the summer session. Published by the Board of Student Publications, UK Post Office Box 4086. Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and published continuously as the Kernel since 1915. Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or misleading advertising should be reported to The Editors. who will be the party's presidential nominee, Muskie said, "it will depend on whether I am the candidate who can best fill that function." Muskie said he believes Nixon suffered some setbacks in last week's election and that the President still has not resolved three problems he campaigned on in 1968: the economic situation, the Vietnam war and the stability of society. Asked if he thought Nixon coukl be defeated in 1972, Muskie replied: "any president is CLASSIFIED FOR SALE 1 decision whether or not to run for the White House. W hen the decision is made on perfect. $250. Phone LOST SmaU white male mixed breed dog two weeks ago near campus. Name Chuck. Reward. 266-59or SN9 2. SERVICES PIANO TUNING Reasonable prices. All work guaranteed. Trained by Stelnway & Sons in New York. Mr. 30O-D- 1 Davies, PERSONAL. N9 LAWRENCE YOUNG Is getting married In May. 3N9 FOR RENT APARTMENT Two female students. Furnished, bills paid; $110. MISCELLANEOUS 6N12 "THE ISSUE IS REPRESSION" The UKCLU presents Dr. Robert Sedler. Wednesday night, November 11, 7:00 p.m., Student Center Room 245. 5N11 NEED five married couples two or three nights per week, three hours 5 per night, $2.00 per hour. or box 504 Versailles, Ky. 30O-N1- 2 LET IT BE KNOWN that Haggin Staff did challenge Holme's Staff to a game of football. Holmes, whore were you? 9NU JOB OPPORTUNITIES AND 128 NEW CIRCLE ROAD TAKE OUT PHONE 9 255-854- 11 Open Daily New Circle Road Only CUT ALONG a.m. 10 p.m. -- Saturdays DOTTED b 'Til Midnight CoffffeeSnouse presents LINE JJD)ITIJ 'Steak Dinner OT7J7 $1:50 Includes Sirloin Steak, Baked Potato, Garlic Roll, Crisp Tossed Salad with Choice of Dressing for only $1.50 when presented to Mr. Jim's Cashier. SAVE 29c. OFFIR IXPIRES NOVEMBER 30, 1970 Here's Where You'll Find Other Mr. Jim's Steakhouscs Oxford (Miami U.) Cincinnati Dayton n S. C. Nov. 9-Nov. 13-1- 4 12 at at 8: & 9:30 8:, 9:30 & 11:30 * . . I 3 ft By NANCY WEBB M Article I, Section 1.412, tliat says "sufficient time shall be given for the counseling process (of an accused student) before, if necessary, the scheduling of a judicial hearing." The committee's present plans are tentatively to revise the entire code, present it to various student groups for evaluation and further revision, then get the revised version passed by Student Government. It would then bepresented to the Board of Trustees and the faculty senate "at the same time, because the longer we wait, the less chance we have of getting changes made," Gates said. The committee liopes to have the code ready for presentation to the Board of Trustees and faculty senate in "approximately four weeks." Open meetings on the revisions are held at 7:30 Monday nights in Room 117 of the Student Center, and all students who wish to participate are welcome, says Gates. Kcmcl Staff Writer The ccxle of student conduct is gradually being revised by a Student Government committee, with plans of present ing their proposed revisions to various student groups, Student Government, the University Senate and the Board of Trustees. "At the beginning of the year we held, a forum on the code at the Student Center and got very little feedback," Cates said. "There isn't much student awareness, support or enthusiasm . . . perhaps if w e got some it would make the whole thing seem more I doubt if many stucredible dents have even read the entire code." Only Articles I and III have been revised thus far. Some examples of the proposed revisions ... ""ww. iYotv 'Bout Those Statues Two gentlemen relaxed behind Lexington's library Sunday afternoon and took in their surroundings. ,.. Their attention was diverted occasionally by the Kernel Photo By Bob Brewer omnipresent statues. are: Dropping of the last sentence Prof Says Ph.D. Explosion to Continue College Press Sen ice STANFORD, Calif. -- In spite of a current oversupply of Ph. D.'s, many American universities are planning to expand their grad- - SG Allegations By SC False Continued from Page 1 the coalition's fault. He said they were due "apparently to an error in the controller's records." Fox added that he thought the report was still "substantially correct" and that SG financing in several key areas had not been answered. He pointed to the salary received by Bright for working last summer for SG, and SG's phone bill, as being examples where Student Government funding is not what it should be. In a press release Friday, Dr. Robert Zumwinkle, vice president for student affairs, said his office has conducted a preliminary examination of Student Government expenditures and found no inequities in SG spend- uate programs to produce even more, a study by a prominent Stanford educator reveals. Professor Lewis B. May hew, who describes his findings as "horrendous," has updated a 1967 survey of 156 colleges and universities with a new and larger one covering 800 institutions. His study, made for the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education, garnered 368 returns from an extensive questionnaire sent out during 1968-6If the trend works out as prey dicted, he said, "the current of advanced degree holders in some fields could spread to all fields." His estimates, based on expectations by the re over-suppl- tions." Zumwinkle said his office is conducting a "more detailed ex- amination." "All expenditures . states that a student who violates federal, state or local laws is "subject to discipline by the institution (UK), regardless of whether or not action is taken against the student by civil authorities on account of such vio- lation." Addition of the words sex, age, and political beliefs to the list of items for which an applicant or recipient of financial aid may not be discriminated against (Article III, Section3.13). p Addition of a sentence to WATCH BANDS WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY , DODSON WATCH SHOP Fine Watch Repairing 110 N. UPPER ST. Phone 6 254-126- jULZJLZ3D . STUDENT CENTER BOARD ARTHUR TREACHER'S BILLIARDS oooooooo With an TOURNAMENT November 10 thru December ENTRY FEE: $1.00 Sttiiidleinril: Chips, You can get a 20c Order of Cole Slaw Plus a 2225 2225 Versailles Rd. Versailles Rd. Sanctioned by: Billiard Congress of America overiroinnieirirfl: Fish 15c Beverage for Only lc Each Winners Receive All Expense Paid Trip To Association Of College Unions' Regional Games Tournament af- 89' Order of & 12 Important Deadline For Entering: MONDAY, NOVEMBER 9 Sign Up In Student Center Board Office 203 Student Center hav e been approved in writing by the vice president for student fairs," Zumwinkle said. sponding institutions, show that byl9S0 U.S. colleges and universities will produce 67,000 doctorates and at least 360,000 masters' degrees annually. There already is an oversupply of potential college teachers and there are heavy unsolicited applications from newly-hatche-d Ph.D.'s seeking jobs for fields in which no applicants could be found as late as 1967, he noted. This casts some doubt on the quality of graduate teaching during the coming decade, Professor Mayhew observed, because of the proposed expansion of institutions which do not now have professional and advanced degree programs. in Article I, Section 1.31, which Tuesday & Wednesday At ing. Zumwinkle said "Our review to date reveals no Student Government financial transactions that violate either state law or University rules and regula- Limit Ulecthioini 1 Coupon Per Customer FALL '7 The following is an application to have your name placed on the ballot for the fall 1970 Student Government election which is the election of the regional representatives. You must run for the seat which represents the area in which you live. (For example, Hoggin residents are only eligible for the north campus race.) .GPS (not applicable to freshmen) NAME NAME AS IT IS TO APPEAR ON THE BALLOT INCLUDING PARTY INITIALS: Party Affiliation if any: CAMPUS ADDRESS ACTIVITIES .CAMPUS PHONE AM SEEKING A SEAT IN THE FOLLOWING AREA NORTH CAMPUS SOUTH CAMPUS OFF-CAMP- 1970- -3 Student Code Change Sought hy SG Panel f .. THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nov. 9, (circle one) (Hoggin, Donovan, Holmes, Jewell, Patterson, Kceneland, Blazer, Boyd) (The area of the Complex) (All non University housing excluding sororities and fraternities) You must attach a 75 word resume' of why you are seeking this post within the Student Government, and you should also pick up a copy of the election rules as they apply to you. This resume must be submitted in triplicate word length is the only thing which will be checked to see if this require' mint has been met. * 2 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nov. 9, A Political Boon? 1970 Nixon Says Vietnam Conflict Will End by '72 - NEW YORK (Ar) Time magazine quoted President Nixon on Sunday as telling his Cabinet and top advisers the Vietnam war will be over by 1972, enhancing the party's chances in the presidential election. Moreover, the magazine said, Nixon told them the country would be prosperous by the election and that the upward trend in crimen would be reversed. The magazine noted, in a a remarkable record on the issue, with crime legislation, obscenity and narcotics bills. We now have the most effective program to deal with crime." Time said Nixon closed the meetings with some advice to his team: "If any of you are betting men, you can give your friends in the press aids on the presidential success in 1972." The meetings were called as a postmortem on the 1970 Time said the two sessions the first for the Cabinet and the second for about 30 top White House advisers were told by the President: "The election, ideologically, was enormously success- ful." The magazine said he told them that analysts who stated it was not a Republican victory were writing "what their hearts, not their heads, tell them." Time said Nixon told his associates that he decided to campaign, against the advice of his aides, Oct. 8 when he saw that polls which hehadcommissioncd were ninning against the Republicans. Nixon, said Time, claimed that success came because "We emphasized the peace issue. The whole secret of any campaign is to talk about your issues. The peace issue was very beneficial." "We gained a working majority of at least three," Time quoted Nixon as saying. "In addition there's the fallout effect in on senators up for 1972. The changesthisyearmight make some of them read the tea leaves." Nixon downgraded Democratic successes in gaining governorships, Time said. "I have yet to see a popular governor pull in a president," it quoted him. "The governors cannot produce votes for a president, only a machine can. The only machine left is Daley's and we'll see if we can't offset that with the Ogilvie machine." Muskie 'Sounding Out9 Democratic Leaders By JANET STAIHAR statement, that it could give no Associated Press source for its quotations. WASHINGTON Sen. EdThe President, Time said, told mund S. Muskie, said the meetings attended also by Sunday that "in u tentative, his daughter Tricia: "The war limited way" he has started to will be over and we will have sound out Democratic leaders as peace with prosperity. As far as to the chances of their supporting the economy, it will be good him as the party's 1972 presiin 1971, with a very strong up dential candidate. tum in 1972. Rut Muskie, who was re"Law and order will also be elected last Tuesday to a third an issue to this degree: crime term as Maine's senator, said that has gone up 150 percent in the "effort obviously has to Ix? exand escalated" if he does past eight years, but it is now panded for finally beginning to go back nuke up his mind to run down. We the Republicans have president. - Muskie declined to name the persons he has contacted and said it has been "too limited" a list. "To reveal it would misrepresent the nature of my interests and my drive in this connection," he said. The Maine Democrat was interviewed on IK's radio-tele- - Hostage Photos Published - CanaMONTREAL (AP) dian newspapers published Sunday four different photographs that appeared to be of kidnaped British Trade Commissioner Welcome UK Stadennts James R Cross who is being held hostage by a terrorist cell of the Quebec Liberation Front. The pictures, sent out by the Front, known as the FLQ for the initials of its name in French, apparently meant to show that Cross, 59, who was kidnaped Oct. 5, is alive and well. One of the photos purportedly of Cross was received along with a note by the newspaper Journal de Montreal. Contents of the note were not revealed by either the newspaper or authorities. vision program, "Meet The I'ress." Muskie said he as well as his supporters would not agree with a published report that he has an "imposing" campaign organization already at work to get him the 1972 presidential nomination. "We do have an organization but it must Ix; expanded to meet the needs of the future," he said. "It is far from imposing in size and numbers at this point. Nevertheless, We are taking the first steps that could lead to the next." He said he has no timetable as to when he will announce his - Kates are fl.ZS for 20 words, $3.00 for three consecutive Insertions of the same ad of 80 words, and $3.78 per week, 20 words. The deadline Is 11 a. m. the day prior to publication. No advertisement may cite raee, religion or naUonal origin as a qualification for renting rooms or for employment. FOB SALE FOR SALE 1965 MO Midget. 3. running condition. Call Late model ual. Pica SUBSCRIPTION RATES $9 45 Yearly, by mail NOW 2 LOCATIONS VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER VERSAILLES ROAD TAKE OUT PHONE 255-964- 6 SHOPPERS Per copy, from files KERNEL TELEPHONES Editor, Managing Editor .... 275-17Editorial Page Editor, Associate Editors, Sports .. Advertising, Business, Circulation AND type. $55. 255-854- 11 New Circle Road Only CUT ALONG .50 a.m.10 p.m. b Saturdays 'Til Midnight DOTTED - TTPINQ THEMES, theses, reports, stencils; minor editing, 60 cents pp. After 5:00 p.m. daily, Saturdays, Bill Givens, 2N13 7. EXPERIENCED typist will do theses, research notes, mandissertations, uscripts, resumes, etc., on IBM typewriters. Reasonable rates. Call 1. or 6N12 Call man- BEWABD 4. N610 LOST Small white male mixed breed dog two weeks ago near campus. Name Chuck. Reward. or 5N9 FOR SALE Electric guitar, 1969 Fender Mustang. Used only 8 months. 0. $125. Phone N9 BUS 1962 or for parts; needs work; breadlessness forces me to take best offer. Call 9N13 VW FOR SALE Guitar Amplifier. 1968 Fender Twin Reverb, speaker and tubes perfect. $250. Phone SEBV1CE8 PIANO TUNING Reasonable prices. All work guaranteed. Trained by Stelnway & Sons In New York. Mr. 30O-D- 1 Davies, PERSONAL N9 LAWRENCE YOUNG Is getting married in May. 3N9 FOB BENT APARTMENT Two emale students. Furnished, bills paid; $110. JOB OPPORTUNITIES NEED five married couples two or three nights per week, three hours per night. $2.00 per hour. 30O-N1- 2 or box 504 Versailles, Ky. MISCELLANEOUS "THE ISSUE IS REPRESSION" The UKCLU presents Dr. Robert Sedler, Wednesday night. November 11, 7:00 p.m.. Student Center Room 245. 5N11 LET IT BE KNOWN that Haft?In Staff did challenge Holme's Staff to a game of football. Holmes, where were you? 9NU 1 128 NEW CIRCLE ROAD TAKE OUT PHONE 9 Open Daily 3N9 6N12 $.10 beatable." Smith-Coro- The Kentucky Kernel. University Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. Mailed five times weekly during the school year except holidays and exam periods, and once during the summer session. Published by the Board of Student Publications, UK Post Office Box 4966. Begun as the Cadet In 1894 and published continuously as the Kernel since 1915. Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or misleading advertising should be reported to The Editors. Good typewriter. Standard size, The Kentucky Kernel 1 CLASSIFIED FOR SALE 9 decision whether or not to run for the W hite House. W hen the decision is made on who will be the party's presidential nominee, Muskie said, "it will depend on whether am the candidate who can best fill that function." Muskie said he believes Nixon suffered some setbacks in last week's election and tliat the President still has not resolved three problems he campaigned on in 1968: the economic situation, the Vietnam war and the stability of society. Asked if he thought Nixon coukl be defeated in 1972, Muskie replied: "any president is Cotfffeelhouse preseimts LINE Steak Dinner ISP' $1:50 Includes Sirloin Steak, Baked Potato, Garlic Roll, Crisp Tossed Salad with Choice of Dressing for only $1.50 when presented to Mr. Jim's Cashier. SAVE 29c. OFFER EXPIRES NOVEMBER 30, 1 Here's Where You'll Find Other Mr. Jim's Steakhouses .Oxford (Miami U.) - Cincinnati Dayton SuiZGiiniini'e RJniin)in) n he C S. Nov.. 9-Nov. 13-1- 4 12 at a