xt7p2n4zkg8j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7p2n4zkg8j/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680326  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 26, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 26, 1968 1968 2015 true xt7p2n4zkg8j section xt7p2n4zkg8j Te
Tuesday Evening, March 26,

EC

The Souttis Outstanding College Daily
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

19G8

Profs Sue To Outlaw
'Sub version' Search

By DARRELL RICE
Hi roe UK professors Lawrence Tarpey, Abbie Marlatt and
Gene Mason were anions the
nine plaintiffs named in a suit
filed Monday against Kentucky's
newly approved Committee on
Activities.
Robert Sedler, associate professor of law at the University,
is one of the five lawyers who
are working on the suit in behalf of the plaintiffs.
The suit claims the committee is unconstitutional. It was

Wallace Gets
On Ballot
(AP)-ForKy.
FRANKFORT,
Alabama Gov. George
Wallace became an American Party presidential candidate in Kentucky Monday with a pledge
from an aide that "We are running to win and I believe we
mer

can."

Joe Fine, 31, a former district
attorney in Russell ville, Ala., submitted Mr. Wallace's name to the
secretary of state along with a
petition bearing 6,300 signatures.
Kentucky became the seventh
state in which Mr. Wallace's
name has been placed on the
ballot. Others are California, Virginia, New Jersey, New Mexico,
Nebraska and Utah.
In addition, Mr. Fine said,
Mr. Wallace undoubtedly will be
the candidate in Alabama, running as a Democrat.

established as a joint legislative
on the last day of this year's
legislative session, March 15.
Organizations named as plaintiffs are the Louisville Peace
Council, Southern Conference

Education Fund, Southern Student Organizing Committee, Students for a Democratic Society,
Aunt Mollie Jackson chapter of
SDS, and Lexington chapter of

ment, called to make plans for
action at the Democratic National Convention in August, instead drew up plans for political action and
throughout the summer.

organizing

The conference, called by the
National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam,
debated over whether to devote
their efforts to general organizing through the summer or to
concentrate on demonstrations

Vol. LIX, No. 122

c

.

ernment," he sa'id, "they should
not be allowed free speech."
Rep. Clapp also said the SDS
National Council meeting to be
should
held at UK March 28-3-1
be barred.
Prof. Sedler said of the suit
filed in the U.S. District Court
in Frankfort, "We're asking the
federal government to stop the

1

.

V

"1

i

committee."
"There is no doubt in my
mind that the committee is clearly unconstitutional," he said. "It
is unconstitutional in that it can
investigate into thought and
ideas and areas protected by the
First Amendment."
Prof. Sedler said the resolution defining the functions of
the committee is "unbelievably Quakers and Amish have substituted love for weapons during the
v ague and broad and would have
of the Behavioral Sciences
past 300 years, Dr.
a chilling effect on free speech, Department told the fifth session of the Nonviolent Way of Life
on academic freedom, on people Seminar Monday night in his talk on "Nonviolent Communities
in America."
working with the poor and on
civil rights workers and on anypoints."
thing these people want to supHe said he envisions a return of the American people to press."
"The existence of the comthe "neighborliness" of former
mittee would cause teachers to
times.
hesitate to teach," he said.
"This is not a witch hunt,"
In related activity, the SDS
Rep. Clapp said. "I just want
National Council meeting has
to point out to the American
Should one strive for purely
been attacked by the Rev. Robert
"Individuals," Dr. Gallagher
people that we are losing our Weaver in a sermon Sunday night personal goals and ideals or share said, "take the attitude that other
sense of discipline toward govto his Tates Creek Christian them with a larger community?
people are different" the
- take - advantage ernment, patriotism and love of Church congregation, and in a
That was the question posed
- he - will - take government."
letter to the Saturday Lexington Monday night to the fifth NonHe said the immediate event
attitude.
Herald by Marion Vance, a mem- violent Way of Life Seminar by
that motivated his sponsorship
"Violence could be eliminated
ber of the Kentucky Heritage Dr. Eugene B. Gallagher, associof the bill came when the South-eate professor in the College of by dissolving this 'difference' atCommission.
Conference Educational Fund
Mr. Vance said the meeting Medicine's Behavioral Sciences titude," he added.
moved its office to Louisville.
"Peace communities on a
to be held here this weekend Department.
"If members of a group be- will "perfect the details of the
He concluded: "We need a small, temporary and
lieve in a foreign form of gov
Continued on rage 8, Col. 3 stronger sense of community."
on rage 3, Co).

CORE.
Legislation creating the ComActivities
mittee on
was sponsored in the House of
Representatives by Rep. Lloyd
and Rep. Ther-o- n
Clapp
Dam).
Kessinger
told the Kernel
Rep. Clapp
that the committee was created
for a "dual purpose" to institute an educational and informational system and to "show the
points where the Communists
are working on our weaker

Eugene-Gallagh-

'Peaceful' Communities
Offer Benefits, Prof Says

"if-I-don-'t

of-hi- m

advan-tage-of-m-

m

experiincn-Continue-

d

1

Yippees To Eat 'Vegetable
LINDENHURST (CPS) -- A
meeting of 230 leaders of the
antiwar and antiracism move-

K ERNEh

MTUCKY

at the Democratic Convention.
They ended with a compromise.
There will definitely be some
n
kind of
in
Chicago but definite plans and
specific tactics will not be decided until June, when these
leaders will meet again.
But the conference did name
three of its top leaders to carry
out a summer-lon- g
program of
political organizing aimed at
strengthening opposition to the
Vietnam war and protesting inadequate programs to meet domestic poverty and racism.
The program will feature ef
counter-conventio-

3

;

t

Pig' At Party Convention

in this seoutside Chicago, black cMegates met separately from white. When the
two groups joined again on Sunday, the conference approved
The three planners of the
a black liberation program which
program are Rcnnie Davis, a included such
planks as:
veteran of community organizDropping the antipoverty
ing with Students for a Demoprogram in favor of "reparations
cratic Society; Dave Dellinger,
editor of Liberation Magazine and damage payments for 400
labor."
and leader of the October 21 years of free slave discriminOutlawing racial
March on the Pentagon; and
Vernon Grizzard, Chicago draft ation by labor unions.
Community boards to reresistance organizer.
view actions by police.
During the first half of the
Opposition to police stockpiling of riot weapons.
Freeing black power leader II. Rap Brown and black
poet Leroi Jones and restoring
Rep. Adam Clayton Powell to
his position in congress.
The conference also committed itself to support any efforts
made by the Mississippi Free- -

forts to expand draft resistance,
elect antiwar delegates to the
Democratic Convention and organize white working class communities.

two-da- y

conference

cluded camp

just- -

SG Refunds
Refunds on tlqosits for the
sjHnsoied trip to the
NCAA tournament in Los Angeles will be returned in this

SG

manner.

.......

Part two of the series started Monday on mar- ijuana begins today on Page 5. Today's article
is anonymous interviews with students at the

University
non-medic-

who say they have used drugs for
reasons.
Kernel Photo

All checks will be returned by mail by March 21).
y All cash dejxjsits must be
picked ujt fioni 10 to 11 a.m.,
and 1 to II p.m., March 27, and
10 to 11 a.m., and 1 to 5 p.m.,
March 2D. in the SC. Oilier.
Kuom 102 in the Student

dom Democratic party at the
convention.
"Our program to work against
racism will include development
of strategies for white communities during black rebellions this
summer, Mr. Davis said. These
would include legal and medical
assistance for riot victims.
According to its leader, Carlos Russell, the black delegation set up four regional operations to carry out its program,
"but we purposely left the structure vague because we wanted
to give black leadership at the
local level a chance to respond
to our call for regional meetings."
The conference here was attended by individuals with a
wide range of political and tactical perspectives, including representatives of Old Left groups
such as the Communist Party,
New Left groups such as Students for a Democratic Society, more moderate groups
such as Women Strike for Peace,
and the Youth International
Party, known as the Yippees.
The Yippees have ahendy
made plans for the Democratic
National Convention, which will
include a festival at v. huh they
will nominate a candidate for
president and then eat a pig
made of vegetables.
The Yippees at this me. ti .g
were not buving the pl.ms of
older leftists for politic. il
tion. "Aineiica is dead."
oe
Vu
Yippee? told the confert nc
all know it, and yet you'n
ting involved in a dance w
dead lady.
--

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March

Mock Trial Is Scheduled For Law Alumni Day
lie

C-- 0

By SUE ANNE SALMON

practice trial based on the
case of a conscientious objector
who refused induction into the
army will be sponsored by the
Student Bar Association at lp.m.
March 29 in the Law Building
G)urtr(K)in.
A

The trial, "United States vs.
Johnson," is based on a case
in which the defendant claiming to be a conscientious ol
jector, refused induction into the

was accused and is
army,
being prosecuted for violation
of the Selective Service Act.
The Kentucky State Bar Association will award a
to the w inner of the case.
Judge for the trial will be Law-so- n
King, a Lexington attorney.
Other participants will be UK
students Ronald Mahoncy and
Dudley Webb as attorneys for
the United States, and Charles
Simons and David Mason as
attorneys for the defense.

The practice trial begins the

1968 Law Alumni Day program.
Other activities include a Friday

night speech, "The Jurisprudence
of Hope," by Thomas F. Lambert Jr., editor of the American
Trial Lawyers Association Journal. Tickets are $3 a couple.
"New Law for the Urban

Continued from
One
tal scale are arising within

rela-

tionships." Dr. Gallagher exemplified his statements with two
traditional peace communities,
those of the Amish and the Quakers.

"Externally the Amish are isolationists and the Quakers are
more assinulationists. Internally,
the Amish are uniform and the
Quakers are more diverse."
Dr. Callagher noted that both
Amish and Quakers are peaceful
jeople who have substituted love
for weapons for the past 300

1964 Honda

I

posters

50 cc, excel-

8

$4.95 each; 2 for $9.50

Name

Address
State

City

cially with your store of new knowledge. Your contribution could be a
deciding factor in one of our future

engine proposals."
PAUL: "If

Zip

that is important. Your contribution to the business determines
when you'll move up in responsibility and authority."

fessional thinking you can give
right from the beginning
espe-

1

:

a

join your Engineering
Program, what are the chances for
I

advancement?"

PAUL: "Do you reimburse engineers for higher education?"
BILL: "The General Electric Tuition
Refund Plan allows you to continue
your education at one of the fine
schools in the Cincinnati area, like
the University of Cincinnati,
Xavier University or Miami (of
Ohio) University. You could take
an advanced engineering curriculum or a program leading to a
MBA degree. Your tuition is reimbursed after you have successfully
completed each individual course."

just be filling a

(C-5-

$135 plus
lent condition. Red
Contact
advertising costs. OSATCA. William G.
Ft. Knox,
Tucker.
after
Ky. 40121 or call

25M5t

6 p.m.

Sta., New York 10017

j

BILL: "You've just seen the type of
engineering work that was responsible for the awarding of the Heavy
and the
Military Transport
Super Sonic Transport contracts
within the last 24 months. With
projects like that going on, you can
bet your efforts will be valuable.

1958
FRATERNITIES
ATTENTION
Cadillac ambulance.
all power, good condition, good tires.
27Ftf
2.
$4 JO. Call

FOR SALE

Box 382, Grand Central
Please send me

PAUL: "Do you have a real job for

22Jtf

0.

GUARANTEED

2 for $9.50

If'

me or would
space?"

Golf clubs, brand new,
FOR SALE
still in plastic covers. Sell for half,

SATISFACTION

"

Wl,

self-storin-

I

FOR SALE

Beautifully reproduced!
$ fli 95 oni w c o o

The Blow Yourself Up Co. Dept.

Send us any original black & white or color photo
up to4"x 5" (no negatives). Original returned ung
harmed with poster. Shipped in
tube.
Send check or money order for prompt delivery.

UK

at too
or stop In pbne office, 111 Journalism, from 8 to noon,
1 to 5, Monday
tbroafh Friday.
Rates are SI 25 for tt words. $3 for
three eonircatlve Insertions of samo
ad or $3.75 per week. Deadline la 11
a.m. day prior to publication.
No advertisement may cite race, religion or national origin as a qualification for renting rooma or for
2319

fhone

J

1

Paul Feldman, BSAE University of
Maryland '68, wanted to be sure he
was making the best choice for his
career, not just getting a job. He
had some pretty pertinent questions when he talked to Bill Raynor
at our plant in Evendale. Here are
three of the more basic ones:

classified

2 FT. x 3 FT.

Yes, we will blow up anyone you want . . .
your boy friend, sorority sister, family or your
favorite snap shot . . . into a GIANT black and
white POSTER 2 feet by 3 feet. Great for gift
giving . . . great for wallpapering a room!

1

place

hip

POSTER

CLASSIFIED
To

h

GDANT

into a

We have too much planned for the
future not to need every bit of pro-

wuse the

extension

BLOW TO

love applies
ears.
and to all phases of human life,"

he said.
Many Quakers and Amish are
classified conscientious objectors,
he said. "But a large minority
of Quaker males has joined the
military service since the Korean
War.
A student added that Amish
living in Pennsylvania would be
less likely to be drafted than
those living in Kentucky where
there is a lower concentration
of Amish. He cited an incident
where minority
in Maryland
Quakers had to fight their local
draft board to be classified as
conscientious objectors.

visory Committee on Civil Disorders, will address a banquet
at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the Phoenix Hotel. Admission to the banquet, which will be followed by
a dance is $10 a couple.
Tickets for all three events
may be purchased for $14 a
couple.

We'd like to

y

es-

tablished bureaucracies, especially within universities, to fill
the voids of modern life." '
"They provide a more effective
way of implementing values and
type of

Poor" will be the topic of a
talk by Charles W. Quick, law
professor at the University of
Illinois, at an awards luncheon
at 12:30 p.m. Saturday in the
Student Center Ballroom. Admission is $6 a couple.
Illinois Gov. Otto Kemer,
chairman of the President's Ad

'3

Community Sense Needed,
Gallagher Tells Seminar to war
"Their
Pare

a more satisfying

2fii 19G8- -3

C.R.E.I. course In electronic engineerprogram
Complete:
ing technology.
2M) and communications 300 elective.
Cost $423. sell for $200. Call Barry
25M5t
Atwood. ext. 2565.
Solid state transistor car
posiradio. Built-i- n speaker.
tive or negative ground. Ideal for
or see at
sports car. Call
28M5t
134 High St.. Versailles. Ky.
8 x 46' Star mobile home.
FOR SALE
Excellent condition. $1500. Call
FOR SALE

BILL: "They're great. While on the
Engineering Program, your salary
benefits, pay reviews and status
will be exactly the same as though
you were directly assigned to a
specific area. The whole point of
the Program is to give you exposure to three different R&D areas
so that you can make your decision
on what area of engineering you
want to work in. But you move up
just as fast. It's talent, not years

873-56-

LOST
One owner
SPORTSMAN
2.
sure,
watch, blacst 2321. black band. 25M5t
at
C&U Dick

ELGIN

SMALL
pieces.
o
go-g-

darue band nefded.

$

or

4

ntKhtly. Also ned
Call Martin.
gir!
2121 Cardinal Valloy Shop9:00-1:0- 0

rasm

DDDS1

4.

26M5t

n

,r

-

UtfvH'LJaUUUllbJ

ir

i

m

v

i

f

n

ft
J Li Li Li Li L

5:00-8:0-

IJSMtf

ping Center.

The Kentucky

ernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky,
Station, University 40506. Second Lexclasa
ington, Kentucky
at Lexington, Kentucky.
pobUge paid
Mailed Ave times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
be&fcion.
Published by the Board of Student
publications, UK Post office Box 4UU6.
Begun as the Cadet in 1U94 and
the Kernel
publibhed continuously
since 1915.
published herein Is InAdvertising
Any
tended to help the reader buy. should
false or misleading advertising
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
921
Yearly, by mail
$.10
Per copy, from fllea
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Managing Editor

Editorial Page Editor.
Associate tditors, b porta
News Desk
Advertising. Business. Circulation

X321

1320
1J1

Paul's questions and Bill's answers resulted In Paul joining the General
Electric Evendale Engineering Program. If you have, or are about to get a
BSMS in Mechanical or Aero Engineering and have some good questions, why don't you talk to Bill Raynor. You can call him collect at (513)
243-648If that's not convenient, write Mr. Wm. Raynor, Entrance
Programs, Sect. 868, Aircraft Engine Group, General Electric Company,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45215. An equal opportunity employer, MF.

AIRCRAFT ENGINE GROUP

GENERAL

ELECTRIC

* 2--

TIIF.

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March 2fi, 1!f8

Barnhart Exhibit Is In Gallery
J
versity, the Louisville Art Center,
Stanford University, Staten Island Museum, University of Colorado, University of New Mexico,
Marion Kooglcr McNay Art In- -

Haymow! Harnliart, UK professor of art, will be featured in
an exhibition at the University
Art Gallery, March
14.
"A Hctrosix?ctive of 100 Paintings, Construction, Drawings,
awl Sculpture from 1930" will
be presented in connection with
his forthcoming retirement. Featured in the exhibition will be
50 recent works (19G6-68- )
of constructions, reliefs and drawings
made in Mexico, California and
Kentucky.
A reception will
be March
31 from 25:00 p.m. Catalogues
are available upon request.
Barnhart has been a member of the UK faculty since 1936
and has taught basic design,
drawing, wood sculpture and
painting. Since 1946 he has had
one-ma- n
exhibitions at the Uni
il

Nenadovic

and
"Fantasy
Fugue in G minor", Seixas' "Toccata in C minor" and "Toccata
in E minor", Carvalho's "Toccata in D minor", Schumann's
"Humoreske, Op. 20", Schubert's
"Two Moments Musicaux, Op.
94", Radic's "Rondo", Slaven-sky'- s
Bach-Liszt- 's

Song

and

1

0SS

mm

tory of Music, Prague, Czechoslovakia, and did graduate study
for two years in Paris, France.

SMI

(tunas"

4

29

Dance", and Chopin's "Ballade
in G minor".
Mrs. Nenadovic graduated as
a piano major at the Conserva-

Uj

3.
Far Heaven's Sake!9

Students from Shelby County High School w ill present "For Heaven's
Sake!", satirizing church righteousness, at 7:30 p.m., Thursday,
March 28, in the Student Center Theater. Admission 25 cents.

Read, Composer, To Lecture Today
e
Gardner Read,
and professor of composition at the Boston University
ScIjooI of Fine and Applied Arts,
will present the third in a series
composer-in-residenc-

of lectures on music sponsored by
the UK Department of Music
and the Graduate School today
at 8:15 p.m. in the Laboratory
Theatre of the Fine Arts Building.
Head received both the bachelor of music and master of music

CINEMA

Pi

Iiiiiiiiiiiiiit niimumi
22 0E AST
i

1

MAIN

NOW SHOWING!

Whnslfecb ffifcn&

f

England.

Recital-Marc- h

The UK Department of Music
will present Mrs. Helen Nenadovic in a piano recital March
29 at 8:15 p.m. in the Agricul- -'
tural Science Auditorium.
Her program will consist of

"Yugoslave

stitute, University of Mississippi
and Caravan Gallery.
He has traveled and studied
in Japan, Mexico, France and

2D

degrees from the Eastman School
of Music. Hehas studied conducting with Vladimir Bakaleinikoff
and Paul White, and composition and orchestration with
Howard Hanson, Bernard Rogers,
Ildebrando Pizzetti, Jan Sibelius,
and Aaron Copland.
He has been a member of the
faculty at St. Louis Institute
of Music, the Kansas City Conservatory of Music, the Cleveland Institute of Music and the
Boston University College of Music in addition to serving as a
member of the faculty for various
summer music camps.
Read has been the guest conductor with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the St. Louis
Philharmonic Orchestra, and the
Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra. From 1950 to 19G0 he
served as the editor of the

EASTERN

Bi rch a

University ConMusic Series.
temporary
He is the author of "The-saum- s
of Orchestral Devices,"

"Style and Orchestration," and"
"Music Notation" and has in
preparation a book entitled "Orchestral Combinations."
He is the recipient of numerous prizes and awards including
first prize for "Symphony No. 1,
Op. 30," given by the New York
Philharmonic Society; thejuilli-ar- d
School of Music Publication
Award, the Paderewski Fund
Competition, and Composers
Press Publication Award.
He has received commissions
from the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Indianapolis Symphony,
Cleveland Orchestra, Louisville
Orchestra, Classic String Quartet of Washington, D. C, and
the Trinity Church of Boston.

KENTUCKY

UNIVERSITY

presents
For

Top 1968 Grammy Award Winners

mature wdiencea- -

m mmm picjik that haqtok maou

I

LOU RAWLS. YEAH!
AND

THE

5th DIMENSION

m

IN CONCERT

WED., MARCH
8:00 P.M.

27

-- J

"si

ALUMNI
COLISEUM

h nnrAnfl

&mm

Richmond, Kentucky
TICKET PRICES:

$3.00 IN ADVANCE
$3.50 AT DOOR
TICKETS AVAIIABU AT:

J

In Lexington:

Variety Rtcordi
Main Rtcordi

4.

In Richmond:
The Colonel

Jerry's
4.

J

n

On Eastern Campus
Book Store
Business Office

HEY, WILDCATS

...

Welcome bock from Ft. Lauderdale, G I a scow,
Simpsonvillc! We missed you. We expect you
for dinner this week, tired, but hungry.
MONDAY

(All you can eat)

FRIED CHIX, French Fries, Cole Slaw

SPAGHETTI, salad, rolls, butter

THE BEST IN

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from

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italy Australia
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Featuring a Variety of Dcliciotihly Prepared Foods
LUMS' FAMOUS HOT DOGS
DELICIOUSLY DIFFERENT LUMBURGERS

SUBMARINE

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HICKORY SMOKED

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HAM

SANDWICHES
ROAST BEEF SANDWICHES

(specially
CLAMS (tweet ond tender)
CORNED BEEF
SHRIMP

prepared)

Phone
Complete Carry Out Service
2012 Heir eney Koad, across from Southland Howling Lanes
2711-610- 2

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PANCAKES (buttermilk or buckwheat
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FRIED FISH, French fries, cole slaw ..

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$1.39
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r
' 3C

51.7

Sure torry the Wildcatt lost in the Mid-Eas- t
Regional. But, wait
until neit yeor.
Congratulations and to long to a line group of graduating seniors: Jim Lemaster, Steve Clevenger, Thad Jaraci, Tommy
Porter, Cliff Berger, Gary Gamble.

Perkins Pancake House
920 South Lime, across from UK Med Center

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March

UK Students Tell Of Using

Bv GUY MENDES
EDITORS NOTE: Thcnaincs
of student drug users In tlic following article are not their real
names.
The first time Mary smoked
marijuana was last April. A friend
of hers "he was in the marines
at the time" sent her a few
joints from California.
Because she didn't have a
car and was afraid to smoke pot
in the dorm, she elected to try it
outside. So she and a friend sat
down in front of the Administration Building one night about
10 p.m. and lit up.
The first time the marijuana
did little except burn her throat.
But after a few more trys it began
to affect her. "Distances were
different, everything was clear
and colorful
it began to open
my mind," she said.
Now Mary, a sophomore from
Louisville, uses grass "about
twice a week." She said it's easy
to get at UK and she has "never
been without."
"It's even easier if you're a
girl
people turn me on free.
You just bat your eyelashes at
someone . . . it's cheaper," she
said.
In January, Mary used LSD
for the first time. She was "up"
for 17 hours and experienced various hallucinations.
"I was looking at this guy's

...

...

face and it started aging and
it died . . . his eyes turned white.
I was frightened at first but he
told me to go with it
it
wasn't frightening once I quit
fighting it," she said.
While on her trip, she took a
bath and said she became "mesmerised by water dripping from
the faucet. When drops hit the
water they made psychedelic patternslike visual sitar music."
"It brings out your subconscious; your conscious retreats
completely," she said of LSD.
"It's not an answer, but it points
to answers."
She knew of the evidence of
chromosome damage causal by
LSD and said it bothered her
but she took the drug anyway,
"to see what it was like."
She said "one trip can't hurt
you" and added that a woman
shouldn't take more than three.
It was an important experience, she said, but she wouldn't
want LSD to be legalized. "It's
dangerous." She said she didn't
want to have "two heads of
cabbage and a tomatoe" when
she gives birth to a child.
When she does have children,
she wants them to smoke grass
"because it's a good thing." She
has even tried to convince her
mother to turn on.
"Everyone should turn on.
Once they do, they would see how

...

nice and harmless it is and they
wouldn't fight it," she said.
She would like to see mari-

juana legalized because "it scares
me to death" to think of going
to jail.
Marijuana has never acted
for her as a sexual stimulant,

Mary said. "Your mind is so
busy that you're not concerned
with y our Ixnly.
She said, "I guess I could
give it up (drug use), but I don't
want to."
Bill, a UK sophomore from
the western part of Kentucky,
first tried marijuana at the beginning of last summer.
A girl from his hometown
who goes to school in California
introduced it to him. Since then
he has been using it "once or
twice a month because "it's sort
of nice . . . there's a pleasant
feeling. It's better than being

drunk."

He said it also "provides excitement" with the legal danger

involved.
Bill finds marijuana "not hard
to get" at UK. He said a lot
of the time it is mailed first
class from the West Coast.
"That's the best way to get it,"
he said, "and the safest."
According to him, the number of
students from
New York and New Jersey at
UK is one reason for the con- out-of-sta- te

mMt mSOS te
ad

2(i,

19G8-

Marijuana, LSD

siderable drug activity here.
ay be t hat 's why t he legislat ors
want to limit
students," he said.
He sajd he is "in no way
dependent" on pot and that if
his supply were cut off, he
''M

te

"wouldn't

alxmt

it."

cxcitid

get

really

Bill said he doesn't think he
will go on to "bigger kids.'
"Maybe acid (LSD)," he said,
"but I kinda like to keep
on

rage

7, Col.

SUPPORT THE ADVERTISERS WHO
PATRONIZE THE KERNEL

0

On Campus

with
Maocfihulman

i

(By the author of "Rally Round the Flag, BoysV
"Dobie Gillis," etc.)

MONEY : THE STORY OF AN ENGINEER
We all know, of course, that in this age of technology
every engineering senior is receiving fabulous offers of
employment, but do we realize just how fabulous these
offers are? Do we comprehend just how keenly industry
is competing? To illustrate, let me cite the true and typical case of E. Pluribus Ewbank, a true and typical senior.
One day last week while strolling across the M.I.T
campus, E. Pluribus was hailed by a portly and prosperous man who sat in a yellow convertible studded with
precious gem stones. "Hello," said the portly and prosperous man, "I am Portly Prosperous, president of
American Xerographic Data Processing and Birth Control, Incorporated. Are you a senior?"
"Yes, sir," said E. Pluribus.
"Do you like this car?" said Portly.
"Yes, sir," said E. Pluribus.
"It's yours," said Portly.
"Thanks, hey," said E. Pluribus.
"Do you like Personna Super Stainless Steel Blades?"
said Portly.
"What clean living, clean shaven American does not?"
said E. Pluribus.
"Here is a pack," said Portly. "And a new pack will
be delivered to you every twelve minutes as long as you
live."
"Thanks, hey," said E. Pluribus.
"Would your wife like a mink coat?" said Portly.
"I feel sure she would," said E. Pluribus, "but I am
not married."
"Do you want to be ?" said Portly.
"What clean living, clean shaven American does not?"
said E. Pluribus.
Portly pressed a button on the dashboard of the convertible and the trunk opened up and out came a nubile
maiden with golden hair, rosy knees, a perfect disposition, and the appendix already removed. "This is Svet-lan- a
O'Toole," said Portly. "Would you like to marry her?"
"Is her appendix out?" said E. Pluribus.
"Yes," said Portly.
"Okay, hey," said E. Pluribus.
"Congratulations," said Portly. "And for the happy
bride, a set of 300 monogrammed prawn forks."
"Thanks, hey," said Svetlana.
.

011111

because Lensine is an

"isotonic" solution,
which means that it
blends with the natural
fluids of the eye.

Cleaning your contacts

Contact lenses can be
heaven

... or hell.

They

may be a wonder of
modern science but just

the slightest bit of dirt

under the lens can make
them unbearable. In
order to keep your contact lenses as comforta-

ble and convenient as

they were designed to be,
you have to take care of
them.
Until now you needed
two or more separate
solutions to properly prepare and maintain your
contacts. You would
think that caring for contacts should be as convenient as wearing them.
It can be with Lensine.
Lensine is the one lens
solution for complete
contact lens care. Just a
drop or two, before you
insert your lens.coats and
lubricates it allowing the
lens to float more freely
in the eye's fluids. That's

with Lensine retards the
buildup of foreign deposits on the lenses. And
soaking your contacts in
Lensine between wearing periods assures you
of proper lens hygiene.
You get a free soaking
case on the bottom of
every bottle of Lensine.
It has been demonstrated
that improper storage
be-twe-

wearings may

result in the growth of

bacteria on the lenses.

This is a sure cause of
eye irritation and in some
cases can endanger your
vision. Bacteria cannot
grow in Lensine which is

sterile,

g,

and antiseptic.
Let your contacts be the

convenience they were
meant to be. Get some
Lensine, from the Murine
Company, Inc.

1.1

Jon

"Now then," said Portly to E. Pluribus, "let us get
start you at $75,000
a year. You will retire at full salary upon reaching the
house made of
age of 26. We will give you an eleven-stor- y
lapis lazuli, each room to be stocked with edible furniture.
Your children will receive a pack of Personna Super
Stainless Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long as they
shall live. We will keep your teeth in good repair and also
the teeth of your wife and children unto the third generation. We will send your dentist a pack of Personna Super
Stainless Steel Blades every twelve minutes as long as
he shall live, and thereafter to his heirs and assigns...
Now, son, I want you to think carefully about this offer.
Meanwhile here is 50 thousand dollars in small, unmarked bills which places you under no obligation
down to business. My company will

what-soever-

."

'Well, it certainly seems like a fair offer," said E.
Pluribus. "But there is something you should know. I am
not an engineer. In fact I don't go to M.I.T at all. I just
walked over here to admire the trees. I am at Harvard,
majoring in Joyce Kilmer."
"Oh," said Portly.
"I guess I don't get to keep the money and the convertible and the Personnas and the broad, do I?" said E.
Pluribus.
"Of course you do," said Portly. "And if you'd like the
job, my offer still stands."
O

OtEJ

-5

I.

M.i ghulmM

Speaking of wealth, if you want a truly rich, truly
luxurious thaee, try i'ertonna HlaJe$, regular or iniec
tort with 11 ur nui Shave, regular or menthol. There $ a
champagne thave on a beer budget!

1

* The Name of the Game
meaningful call from the Republican Party."

New York Governor Nelson
Rockefeller's announcement March
21 that he was "not a candidate
ramijuigiiing, directly or indirectly,
for the presidency of the United
States" left Richard Nixon, the
Man With The Beard, as the only
prospect for the Republican counter
to President Johnson. Some count-

This leaves the November decision between J