xt7nzs2k981z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7nzs2k981z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700227  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 27, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 27, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7nzs2k981z section xt7nzs2k981z Tie Kentucky
Friday, Teh. 27, 1970

ECemnel

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

LXI, No. 99

Mrs. Nixon's Escorts

Arts Festival

UK 'Volunteers9

BSU Finalizes Plans

Chosen As Hosts

For Annual Festivities
By

Vol.

JOE HAAS

Kernel Staff Writer
The UK Black Student Union (BSU) is in the
final stages of preparation for its second annual
Black Arts Festival, which will be held March
7.

A black music concert performed by the BSU
choral group will start the week-lon- g
activities
on Sunday, March 1, in Memorial Hall.

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'

After his concert, there will be a reception at
the Student Center for the singers and
their director, Mrs. Lutisha Coleman, a former
member of the Lexington Singers.
On Monday, March 2, the UK Fine Arts Building will be the scene of two plays: "In White
America," by Martin E. Duberman, and "Dutchman," by Leroi Jones, to begin at 7:30 p.m. in
the Laboratory Theatre.
This presentation, by the BSU and the UK
Department of Theatre Arts, is directed by Miss
Sarah Howard, a black graduate student in Theatre
Arts.

By MARY NELL SUTHERLAND
Kernel Staff Writer
Rebecca Westerfield and Neil Ashwcrth have
been selected as the official student hosts for Mrs.
Richard Nixon when she visits the Lexington area
Tuesday.
While here, the President's wife will view student volunteer programs in action.
Volunteer Workers Get Jobs
The two students were chosen because of their
volunteer work in programs at the University.
The announcement was made by Mrs. Anna
Boiling, chairman of the selection committee, and
head of student volunteer programs in the UK
Human Relations Center.

7:15 p.m. in

Miss Westerfield, a junior majoring in political
science and history, is the chairman of Trans-Actio- n,
a volunteer program sponsored by the
Newman Center.
n
has programs in Kentucky Village,
Eastern State Hospital, the Christian Appalachian
Project, Lexington Neighborhood Centers and the
Trans-Actio-

The history of black experience will be the subject of a series of films to be shown in the Student Center Theatre on Wednesday of that week.
The series includes "Slavery," "Heritage of the
Negro," "Free at Last," "New Mood," and "The
Future and the Negro."
The Miss BSU Pageant will be held at 7:30
p.m. Thursday in the Student Center Theatre. Ten
UK coeds will compete for the title of Miss
BSU at that time, and the winner will be announced later in the week.
The annual BSU Banquet will be held at 6
p.m. Friday in the Small Ballroom of the Student Center.
The climax of the BSU activities will be on
Saturday, March 7, with a workshop from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. and the Black Ball from 8 p.m.
to midnight.
Dr. Nathan Hare, the Special Resource speaker
for the workshops, will lecture at 10 a.m. in the
Student Center Theatre.
Dr. Hare is a sociologist, author of the book
"Black
an educator, lecturer and
activist. His address is open to the public, but
the afternoon workshops are closed to the public.
The Black Ball is an event to be offered on
Saturday evening in the Crand Ballroom in the
Student Center.
Throughout the week of the festival, there will
be an art exhibit by UK students and others in
the Student Center Art Gallery.
Anglo-Saxons-

Second Street YMCA.

Ashworth, a senior in business administration,
is the public service chairman of the Sigma Alpha
Episilon social fraternity. Its projects include programs in the Lexington Boxing League for disadvantaged boys; giving parties for underprivi-ledge- d
children and collecting for the Heart Fund.

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Ashworth said that their duties will be to answer any questions that Mrs. Nixon has concerning
the volunteer programs and to accompany her on
the tour of the programs.
Speech At Airport
Mrs. Nixon will arrive at Bluegrass Field about
10 a.m. where she will speak for half an hour
before beginning her tour of Lexington volunteer
programs.
Mrs. Nixon's
not materialize
During this
Michigan State
Ozarks and the

,"

mote

us

visit to Lexington in the fall did
because she contracted the flu.
trip, she will also be touring
University, the College of the
University of Colorado to provolunteer student projects.

YR's Sponsoring Buses
Plexiglass optics and photographic trickery combine to make this
mirrored image of one of the displays in "The Electric Womb"
exhibit which will be shown through March 14 at the Student
Center Art Gallery.
Kernel Photo By Mike Walker

In conjunction with the First Lady's visit, the
UK College Republican Club has announced that
there will be buses at the Student Center at 9
am. Tuesday morning to take interested students
to the airport to welcome Mrs. Nixon.

Campus Disorders
Demonstrations Erupt In Santa Barbara, Buffalo And Syracuse
Associated Press Dispatches
Roving bands of youths pelted
police cars with rocks and bottles
for a third straight night Thursday despite a curfew and a state
of emergency declared by Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
However, except for one group
of about 150 youths, the bands
were small and there was no
renewal of .the violent rioting
Thursday during which a bank
was burned to the ground and
numerous fires were set and windows broken.
The 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew
was ordered by county supervisors after a meeting with Reagan. It forbids loitering and assemblies of more than three persusons in the
burban community of Isla Vista,
near the University of California
campus here.
The area was heavily patrolled
by sheriffs deputies Thursday
night but they had difficulty coptactics
ing with the
of the demonstrators.
The group of 150 youths start

ed a bonfire on a street in the
business section. They began
drifting away when a voice from
a police helicopter ordered them
to disperse.
Reagan ordered the attorney
general to investigate the leadership of the throngs involved in
the melees Tuesday and Wednesday nights. He also asked the
attorney general to ascertain if
William M. Kunstler, an attorney
in the Chicago riot conspiracy
trial who spoke on campus start-l- y
before Wednesday's demonstration, crossed state lines to
incite a riot.
Kunstler said the trial "was
to set an example of what could
happen to you if you become
involved in the social movement
If resistance is not heeded,
then it can lead to revolution.
I hope the government is listening. Fill the streets so they can
see you . . . Power to the peo-

...

ple."

Some in the crowd raised
clenched fists and cried, "right

on."

The throng at Isla Vista, several miles west of this scenic
city of 75,000, so outnumbered
sheriffs deputies that officers did
not attempt a confrontation at
first.
An initial attempt at burning
a Bank of America branch, by
shoving a flaming barrel full of
gasoline-soakepaper through a
broken window, was frustrated
by several fraternity men who
extinguished the blaze. A second
try succeeded, gutting the structure. Firemen, also outnumbered,
took deputies' advice and did not
respond.
At 2 a.m., after a helicopter
warned the thinning crowd to
disperse, a force of 250 officers
with sliields and batons swept
the main street and the demonstration ended.
Tliirty-fiv- e
persons
young
were arrested on a variety of
charges, mostly for failure, to
disperse. More than a score of
police were treated for injuries,
mostly from rocks thrown from
rooftops.
d

"So help me Cod," Reagan
told newsmen, "we will provide
everything that needs providing
even if it means a declaration
of martial law . . . This cannot
be allowed to continue and will
not be allowed."
Reagan said he would mobilize the National Guard if the
sheriff and highway patrol requested it.
A spokesman for the Associated Students Lecture Committee said that "these events
are merely a consequence of the
increasing police repression
aimed at stifling political dissent
in Santa Barbara and around
the country," and had no connection with an afternoon lecture by William Kunstler.
Demonstrators at the State
University of New York at Buffalo battered the headquarters
of the campus police with two
automobiles Thursday in a continuation of protests that began
Wednesday night.
About 200 then roved across

the campus hurling rocks, setting fire to a truck and shouting, "Pigs off campus!" to university police.
The Buffalo disturbance apparently arose from a dispute
between black basketball players who complained of discrimination and university athletic
officials.

The university said it would
appoint a commission to investigate the clashes which began
Wednesday night when a dozen
youths were injured and 16 arrested.
A

short-live- d

student

occupa-

tion by Syracuse University students in Syracuse, N.Y. ended
peacefully Thursday after adnun-istratio- n
officials warned that appropriate action would be taken
against protesters. About 50 students had taken over the Student
Government Building to sltow
support of the administration and
to protest a building takeover by

other students.

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb.

27, 1970

An Elizabethan Epic Visits The Guignol

on a new animation, widen rapidBy DOBDI BARRETT
ly degenerates into wantonness.
Kernel Staff Writer
The current Cuignol Theatre It is on this note that the major
production is Shakespeare's characters begin to appear.
"Measure for Measure." The Angelo, Escalus, and the Duke
acquaint the audience with the
play, directed by Charles Dickproblem to come. While the Duke
ens, is recommended as fine entertainment; it is particularly rec- is away, Angelo is appointed his
successor, and he must carry out
ommended for the avid Shakethe rule of the law, which the
speare fan. It is very much Elizabethan drama, and in spots the Duke has negligently allowed to
emphasis is more Elizabethan fall into disuse. To Angelo, the
letter of the law is the ultimate,
than dramatic.
The chorus begins the play and the spirit of the law, the juswith a rigidly ritualistic, highly tice of the law, is subordinate.
formalized dance. Hands move
The first to fall to Angelo's
and stop in unison, there is no grim determination is a young
deviation with faces hidden in nobleman, Q audio. For CI auhooded robes, the chorus appears dio's becoming involved with a
shrouded, featureless. Except for girl before their marriage, they
the tightly controlled, uniform both are to die. As the play conmotion, one would doubt the tinues, Q audio appeals to his
presence of life.
sister, Isabella, to entreat AngeEventually, the chorus takes lo for a pardon on her behalf.

Angelo fails to keep within the
regulations that he has so harshly imposed on others. He answers the maid's request with this
proposal: she must give herself
to him, and then he will redeem
her brother's life. Decisions, decisions. Meanwhile, the Duke has
never really left, and is disguised
as a friar, giving advice to all.

The comic figures of Lucio,
done by Roger Lea so r, and Pom-peplayed by Barry Corum, are
welcome characters of relief, and
they come across more believably,
in some instances, than the major
characters.
With all this on the plus side,

The program describes "Measure for Measure" as a play about
justice, mercy, honesty, forgiveness, virtue, virginity, sex, death
and love. And they are all in
there. The entire cast does a good
job with it, turning in a fine
performance. Bruce Peyton, the
Duke; William Hayes, Angelo;
Chuck Pogue, CI audio; and
Beasley, Isabella; are all
very good, with excellent expression in the Shakespearean mode.

By BETH IIEDCER
Kernel Staff Writer
The Neil Young Concert in
Cincinnati Wednesday night
wasn't worth all the trouble many
people went through to see it.
To begin with, there was no
reserve seating. This forced many
who attended the show to line
up in freezing weather to obtain
good seats. Then, the management only opened a few of the
doors to make the going even
slower (the excuse was that they
never expected such an onslaught
of people).

y,

it is hard to end on this note:
the play is one of the Bard's
lesser-knowworks, and I feel,
deservedly so. It is not inspirational drama, nor completely
The play in itself
seems to lack the passionate intensity that marks Shakespeare.
n

light-hearte-

d.

Young Disappoints Fans

Neil Young then appeared
singing solo for awhile. He performed favorite old Springfield
songs such as "Broken Arrow"

and "I Am A Child." Refusing
to do many of the requests which
were shouted from the crowd,
he let his egotistical personality
shine through by making the
crowd wait while he fumbled
about with words and loose
chords. He carried this bad habit
over when Crazy Horse came on.
Performing some really worthwhile songs like "Down By The

River" and "Cinnamon Girl,"
he and Crazy Horse pleased the
crowd at last. After they left the
stage, the audience cheered for
more. Finally the management
mumbled something about their
contract and said they might
never come back to Cincinnati.
After the lousy show Wednesday,
who wants them?

Simon And Garfunkel
Triumph In Latest Album
College Press Service

Simon and
The
Carfunkel follow-ualbum to
"Bookends" has arrived, and
there's really no need to review
it. With an astounding
or more advance orders for
the album, "Bridge Over Troubled Water" (Columbia), the duet
has achieved instant gold record
status and the top of the record
charts again.
Musically, much of the album minimizes the solo efforts
of the artists and leans heavily
on their harmony. Socially, the
comment on the album is far
lighter than on "Bookends." In
the latest work, Simon and Carlong-awaite-

d

p

half-millio-

tinted

funkel sing of such a heavy

is
hl

sub-

ject as Frank Lloyd Wright and
take us back to the
fifties with the Everly Brothers'
"Bye Bye Love," rather than
telling how "We've all come to
look for America."
But still the melancholy in
their music stands out as strongly as ever. From the "Sounds
of Silence," "Old Friends" and
"Sitting in a railway station"
with "a ticket for my destination home" S & C have now
come to tell us "Like a bridge
over troubled water," they will
take care of us. It's fine music
when you're in the mood for it,
and the more you hear it the
more you're in the mood for it.
Beatle Influence
It is normally difficult to evaluate a movie sound track before
seeing the film, but the sound
track from the"Magic Christian"
(Commonwealth United Records)
deserves some advance attention.
The movie, starring Ringo
Starr and Peter Sellers, is supr
posedly a mad-cathing
(though reviews have not been
overwhelming), and it features
fun-fille-

In

n

TP

p

Jiiold kMW

d

anti-wa-

several rock numbers, one writ-

On the soundtrack Badfinger
does two cuts of its own creation in addition to the McCartney number, and they're very
good.
Badfinger's vocal blend is similar to that of the Beatles on
both "Carry on to Tomorrow"
and "Rock of All Ages."
To conclude the L.P. and
presumably the flick. Thunderclap Newman does his moderately-successful
single "Something
in the Air" which (with "We
Can Be Together" by The Airplane) is one of the simplest,
most straight forward contemporary revolution ballads on record.
Interspersed with the rock
numbers is the score music and
some Sellers comedy bits. But

the

McCartney-Badfinger-Thun-dercl-

Newman team makes the
album worthwhile all by itself.
And if you'd like to bypass the
score music, you might try
own album, "Magic
Christian Music."
Bad-finger-

Zombies Reborn
before "Time of
the Season" became one of the
biggest hits of 1969, the Zombies
broke up. Which explains why
nothing more has been heard
from the Zombies in the past
year and why a new group called
Argent sounds so strikingly like
the Zombies.
Argent is the Zombies recreated by Rod Argent, former Zombie lead singer and pianist, and
Chris White, another former Zombie who produces and writes for
Argent but no longer performs.
Rod Argent picked the members for his new back-u- p
group,
and the first resulting album
"Argent" (Epic) willpleaseZom-bi- e
fans. The L.P. could easily
be the latest Zombies album,
and some of the numbers such
as "Schoolgirl" are obviously
modeled directly after "Time of
Six months

ten by Paul McCartney. McCartney's song is called "Come and
Cet It" and is reminiscent of the Season."
"Can't Buy Me Love" or other
The album is a bit more melearly Beatles' material. The num- low than theZombies' best known
ber is sung by Badfinger, a group works, but the eerie organ and
with its own album (including piano work that was a trademark
the soundtrack songs) on the of the Zombies is still there
Beatles' Apple label. As a mat- throughout, and the vocal work
ter of fact, the lead singer sounds also gives the album that faa lot like McCartney

in places.

miliar, pleasing sound.

11

Shoe Repair Pickup Station
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3 Day Service
Quality Work
LEXINGTON BRACE SHOP

287 S. Lime corner Lime

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5

* THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Friday, Feb. 27,

1070-

-3

Says Press Condemned Too Severely

Texas Neivsman Disputes Warren Commission Report

A Texas
newsman, turned
scholar, disputes the major findings of the Warren Commission
concerning the performance of
the press corps in Dallas after
the assassination of President
John F. Kennedy, in a study
issued early this week.
Writing in "Journalism Monographs," published at the University of Kentucky, Darwin
Payne charges that the commission's findings were "based on a
predisposition to blame the press
and largely were inconsistent
with important evidence the commission received but ignored in
its report."
Now a graduate student at
the University of Texas, Austin,
Payne was a Dallas Times-Heral- d

r

-

reporter covering the
events. His conclusions
exare based on a
amination of the Warren Commission testimony and all other
available evidence. His personal
experiences appear only as footnotes to the report. He collected
the material for an MA thesis
in history at Southern Methodist
University.
Payne's study finds fault with
the commission's accusation that
the press corps hampered the investigation of Lee Harvey Oswald's part in the assassination
and that it contributed to the
suspect's murder by Jack Ruby.
It contends that in both cases
the press' influence was far less
than the commission acknowl- line-by-li-

-

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JOB OPPORTUNITIES
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edged.

"The commission's examination of witnesses displayed a persistent effort to elicit testimony
critical of the press activities,"
the monograph asserts. "In their

efforts, commission members often resorted to loaded and leading questions and expressed erroneous assumptions about the

facts."
The members "seemed undaunted when the testimony from
participants in the events seemed
to contradict" their ideas, Payne
writes. He shows, for example,
that commission members believed it was the press that
crowded the interrogation room
while Oswald was being ques-

tioned when in fact it was crowded with law enforcement personnel. Months after testimony had
clarified this point, the same
assumption cropped up again in
the commission's examination of
witnesses.
The study also terms "illogical" the commission's finding
that the presence of the press
contributed to the security lapse
when Oswald was shot. Despite
leading questions by assistant
counsel for the commission, the
testimony everywhere disputes
this, Payne says. He shows, for

woman to sharar larg fur
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mall child. Reasonably Call255-987- 4
or
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after Sjf.m.

example, that Ruby did not leap
out from a crowd of newsmen
when he fired at Oswald. There
were far more lawmen than newsmen in the room at the time
and in fact Ruby was shielded
from view by one of the lawmen.
Payne's examination of the
evidence also shows that Ruby
had been close enough to Oswald to shoot him on at least
five earlier occasions when security was presumably in force. On
most of these occasions he was
chatting with law officers and
handing out his business card
to reporters.
On this point, the monograph
states, the commission "dis

counted the observations of key
police officials and substituted
its own opinions without developing substantiating evidence."
Payne's study does not find
the press corps blameless. "The
press did create a chaotic atmosphere in Dallas, primarily
at the police station," he writes.
But the confusion "did not kill
the suspected assassin," and "did
not obstruct the investigation."

The monograph is the fifteenth
in a series edited by Prof. Bruce
H. Westley, chairman of the UK
Department of Journalism, for
the Association for Education in
Journalism.

Alpha Chis Recolonize
Alpha Chi Omega sorority has
recolonized with 18 new members, including seven alumnae
and 11 collegiate pledges.
Pledging ceremonies were conducted Feb. 15 for these new members, who were chosen after a
special rush conducted with the
aid of Alpha Chi national officers.
Collegiate pledges include
Barbara Boden, Frankfort; Becky
Brock, Harlan; Kathy Hunter,
Evarts; Terrie Johnson, Middle-tow- n;
Judy Manis, Lexington;

Connie Stigler, Ashland; Lloyd
Wolfe and Marilyn Douglas,
Louisville; Lois Adomat, West
Allis, Wisconsin; Sharon Crowley, Houston, Texas; Eileen Far-rel- l,
Rocky River, Ohio.
Alumnae pledges are Mrs. Forest Hansen, Mrs. Charles Wylie,
Mrs. Richard Hurst, Mrs. William Kingsley, Mrs. Ted Schneider, Mrs. Donald B. Sims, and
Mrs. Melvin Stewart, all of Lexington.

YOUNG
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PIANO TUNING Reasonable prices.
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Make life easy for yourself. If you used to file a short form, or don't itemize, and are a
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of Kentucky, LexStation, University 40506.
Second class
ington, Kentucky
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Mailed five times weekly during the
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mice 1915.
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withholding In 1969
paid In 1969

maii
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tMirLUTtH

a

n

Is your wife over 65?
Is your wife blind?

J joint.

ELIMINATE
classes and

CENTRAL

a
a

Are you over 65?
Are you blind?

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I

* The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

Iernel

Univfrsity of Kentucky

1894

FniDAY, FEBRUARY

Jmv

W. Millrr.

f

It is obvious from the contradicting actions of the two legislatures that New York thinks its
educational system well worth the
strain it will put on someone's tax
dollar. New Yorkers see that the
last place on earth that should
suffer a loss is education. Students are important in New York.
Our General Assembly, on the
other hand, has done absolutely
nothing to uphold Gov. Nunn's
quote about youth being Kentucky's most valuable resource.
State legislators have refused teachers' raises in secondary schools,
have cut school aid drastically,
have proposed
legislation and have killed
bills in committee.
anti-stude-

nt

pro-stude-

nt

Maybe a state's wealth or poverty is dependent on its approach
to education.

The 18 Vote

President Nixon's recent support anyone, anywhere, who is over 18.
of the proposal to lower to 18 the
Today there are more young
for national elections people than ever concerned with
voting age
appears to be a meaningful step and engaged in politics and the
to give youth a greater voice in the political solution of national probselection of this country's leaders. lems. This reason alone is enough
But sjbme construe the Presi- to merit the
vote, but
dent's support as merely a device there are more.
to gain support from the young
Everyone has heard the maxim
people, a segment with which the "he's old enough to die in a war,
Nixon administration has lacked so why can't he vote?" There is
much truth in the statement.
rapport.
We hope this is not the case.
President Nixon's support of the
For too long the 1 age group proposal looks good on the outside.
has been deprived the right to We can hope that it does not go
vote. We are fortunate in this state deeper into petty politics. If the
that this segment has the right President is sincere in his support,
to help choose government offi- we commend him. We only hope
cials, but it should be spread to that he is sincere.
18-2-

C

Pit
I)

U

By DALE MATTHEWS

Announcing the greatest
event to hit the UK campus since
George Wallace landed in the Blue Crass:
Mrs. Nixon, First Lady (?) of the United
States and all around good guy is coming
to honor us.
Mrs. Nixon will be attending a luncheon at the Phoenix Hotel on Tuesday,
March 3. And, even though UK students
will not be admitted to the luncheon, they
can still get in on the act. For example,
you can start this
patriotic
Tuesday by getting up at 8 a.m. (you
girls had better make it 7 a.m.; you will
want to look your best) and promptly
forgetting about your classes for the rest
of the day. Then get into your best suit
(but only if you are one of those slobs
who can't afford to rent a tux) and get
out to the airport by 10 a.m. when Mrs.
Nixon, the number-on- e
policy maker at
the White House (a position which I assume will qualify her for a top leadership role in the Women's Liberation Movement) will appear miraculously out of
the sky in an Air Force jet. There the
number one lady in the land will be met
by, hopefully, a host of raving UK students. Humor has it that there will be
a large turnout, eager to applaud and
cheer Mrs. Nixon upon her arrival, because she won't have time to come to
the UK campus.
But we're glad to have her just the
same, so the festivities committee will
accept no short cuts. The student body is
therefore expected to turn out in full
strength to greet good old Mrs. Nixon.
Coventor Louie B. Nuiui will also be
there of course, maugre the rumors that
he would not attend. It was later discovered, however, that he had originally
planned not to be there until he could
have a reputable source establish, beyond
a shadow of a doubt, that she was a
Republican.
Since this is to be a peaceful demonstration for the Administration (Nixon's
the word) and not one of those unrestful
d,

student-typ- e

MM

UU
socio-politic-

A Comparison

A gubernatorial attempt to cut
the education budget in New York
has been rudely answered by a
proposal which would grant that
state's schools even more aid for the
coming fiscal year.
The proposal, endorsed by members of Gov. Rockefeller's own
party, would raise the money for
the added allotment through the
selling of bonds. The endorsed bill
was one of four attempts at raising
the education budget in the state
and came after Rockefeller indicated that a cut was unavoidable.
New York's progressive answer
to a problem which also plagues
Kentucky is a far cry from the
action taken by our state's legislative body. Kentucky Assembly
members have cut the state's school
appropriation and then spent the
intervening period attempting to
justify the move to everyone

U

27, 1C70

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Editor-in-Chie-

PS

demonstrations against the

American way of life and everyone who
stands for it, there will be, of course, an

lionor guard of our most illustrious "tree
men" (that's Rangers for you ROTCdupes
and fellow travellers) to welcome the Mrs.
Leader of our fairy land.
In addition sports fans, (the boy's up
in Washington thought of this gem) Number One will Meet Number One; if coach
Rupp can be persuaded to get up in time
to round up the basketball team and get
them to the airport. Should this fail,
Iwwever, there is no need to worry because the chess team has promised to
check the King's mate at all costs.
Now if all of this excitement isn't
enough to make you get out of bed
at 8 a.m., have a little patience, there's
more to come. Besides, there's always
the thrill of watching that big jet come
roaring in out of the wild blue yonder.
After all of the welcoming ceremonies
are over, Mrs. Nixon will leave the airport (while the UK marching band plays
the instrumental version of "The Queen
is Dead, Long Live the