xt7q833n038w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7q833n038w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670419  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 19, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 19, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7q833n038w section xt7q833n038w Tie

EC

The South's Outstanding College Daily

AWS Sets

Meeting
On Hours

'.i.

Bur-cha-

J

;"

Commillcc
To Evaluate

AWS plans to hold a special meeting Thursday to evaluate its experimental hours project.
At that time, the body will
constitute itself as a committee
of the whole to hear and discuss reports from committees
now evaluating the hours experiment as well as the use of
green and yellow slips for sign
out and tardiness.
Green slips were used by
coeds going on a daytime trip
out of town until AWS discontinued their use last month. Yellow slips are issued for lateness
or failure to sign out.
The committee will also discuss discontinuing the requirement of a head resident or staff
adviser's signature on pink slips,
required in order to spend a
night away from the dorm. This
experiment was recently conducted in Keeneland Hall. Presently a woman must obtain a
staff member's signature 24 hours
before she plans to leave the
dorm.
The decision to become a
committee of the whole was made
because most members of the
AWS Senate felt they would not
have time to discuss the evaluations properly before voting on
possible changes next Tuesday.
The screening process used in
AWS elections was also discussed
at yesterday's regular meeting.
As part of the present election
procedure, the number of candidates are reduced through a
screening test. Since the entire
election procedure may change
when AWS considers a new constitution next fall, the Senate
decided to continue to screen
candidates in next Fall's freshman elections and to decide
whether to review the screening
process before the Spring election.
New
committee chairmen
named at the meeting are Pat
Wykstra, Public Relations; Roxie
Jacobs, Town Girls; Jennifer
State Day; Clea Vradelis,
Constitution; Barbara Meyer,
Julia Kurtz, ElecVicki Vetter, Program Cotions;
ordinator; Bev Moore, Fall Symposium; Libby Politano, Wonderful World of Women; and
Kelly Kurtz, Student Government. Chairmen of the Vocational Program and Resource File
committees will be selected from
the AWS House next Fall.

Vol.

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Wednesday Evening, April 19, 1967

i

MTHJCKY
h

A

V

V"

;'

Committee Has
No Complaint
From Eddington

51

i

j

J

n
J.D.

Buckman, Mrs. Katherine Breeden, and David Trapp were the
only candidates who showed up last night for the Young Democrats
session with gubernatorial candidates. The others sent representatives.

Trapp Favors Lower
State Drinking Age

By JOHN ZEH
Kernel Associate Editor
Gubernatorial hopeful David Trapp Tuesday night strongly came
out in favor of lowering the drinking age to 18.
"I'm very upset," said the
candidate at a Young Democrats be victorious in the primary.
"I've talked everyday politics
meeting, "that we ask you, my
to you," said the distinguished
children, and other youth to vote,
and to fight at 18, and then don't
looking senator. "Don't just listen to this sort of thing," but exlet them drink."
amine the issues. "But it's true,
Mrs. Helen Breeden, another
and I wanted to tell you."

candidate seeking the Democratic
nomination in next month's primary, agreed. The other one present, State Sen. J. D. Buckman,
refused to comment because there
were candidates absent, but later told a reporter he would support the proposal as a senator
in the legislature.
Representatives of the entrants who did not appear at the
forum said they either could not
or would not discuss their candidates' stand.
Henry Ward's spokesman said
the legislature would never approve
drinking because the public is against it.
The issue was raised during a
question period.
Highlight of the talks given
by the candidates was Sen.
spirited discussion of Kentucky practical politics. He said
"the average man is against
(Cov.) Ned Breathitt and the man
he supports," Henry Ward. "We
as Democrats must face this.
We've got to be able to stand
up and take the punishment from
the Republicans in November.
"The question is 'do you want
to win this fall?'," he went on.
"If you do, then pick a candidate who can win." He added
that he was only man who could
Buck-man- 's

Sen. Buckman said he was
fighting for a principle: "in the
future any young man who wants
to run for governor should not
have to bow down to a bunch
of kingmakers." He promised that
if elected he would not try to
pick his successor.
Sen. Buckman also criticised
the candidates who did not appear at the meeting. Former Gov.
A. B. "Happy" Chandler, Mr.
Ward, and Lt. Gov. Harry Lee
Waterfield sent representatives.
Jesse N. R. Cecil of Louisville
wrote that he could not make
it.
Mr. Trapp, a Lexington land
developer, said his success in business qualifies him for the governorship. He said he would not
promise not to raise taxes, but
would prefer to get extra money
through efficient government. "If
you expect promises from a candidate, you're tying his hands on
a future decision."
J. B. Wells, Mr. Chandler's
state campaign chairman, said
the former governor proposes to
again "take this deplorable situation in state government and
bring to it fiscal solvency and
sanity" and a "pattern for
On Pare 8

A spokesman for the University Senate's Committee on Tenure
and Privilege has said that no official complaint has been filed in
the case of Dr. Neil Eddington.
those people recommended to him
Dr. Eddington, an assistant
by the Senate.
professor of anthropology, has
Dr. Eddington has previously
been in the news since last Novsaid he feels the University adember, when a number of stuministration should investigate
dents in his classes protested the the case itself since Committee
unusually high percentage of failA has already reported that his
ures at midterm.
academic freedoms were v iolated.
Dr. Eddington read a letter
He also said he presented his
last week at the Bitch In from
charges to the national office
Committee A of the local chapof the AAUP which will conduct
ter of the American Association
its own investigation.
of University Professors which
A possible, but unlikely, conlisted several violatioas of Dr.
sequence of an unfavorable reEddington's academic freedom
port by the national AAUP could
it had supposedly substantiated
be ccasure of the University.
in its investigation.

Last month Dr. Eddington
told The Kernel he had filed a
request with the tenure committee asking them to investigate
the alleged violations of his freedom. At that time a spokesman
for Committee A said its findings

would be forwarded to the Senate
committee should that group undertake an investigation of the
Eddington case.
But, according to Dr. Morris
Cierly, chairman of the tenure
committee, the group has received no complaint from Eddington. Dr. Cierly said that
the committee can conduct an
investigation only if charges are
. initiated by a person concerned.
' The burden of
proof in such a
case lies with the person making
the charges.
Charges may be filed by one
of three agents, Dr. Cierly said,
the president, a faculty member,
or a staff member.
"It would be presumptuous
on our part to make an investiga-- .
tion without the complaint of the
individuals involved," Dr. Cierly
explained.
University President John Oswald, back in his office this
week after a month's leave, had
no comments on any of the particulars of the Eddington case. He
indicated he believed it Eddington's responsibility to raise any
complaints about academic freedom violation to the tenure committee.
He clarified his relationship
to the committee as merely the
titular chairman of the University
Senate which thereby entitles him
to appoint all official faculty
committees. Dr. Oswald explained his policy as appointing

Blazer Celebrates Its Birthday
By OSSILYN ELLIS
Rock music, a popcorn machine, and free
food for all gave the Blazer Hall Cafeteria a car-

nival atmosphere last night.
Such entertainment is one of the occasional
fringe benefits for students who eat at Blazer.
Last night, students were treated to a general
birthday party, with all they could eat of hotdogs,
barbecue sandwiches, potatoe chips, salad, pork
'n beans, cokes, and ice cream.
Balloons decorated the dining room and everywhere bright posters wished students a happy
day. The main attraction of the party consisted
of entertainment by the students themselves.
With Terry Sobania, sophomore music major,
at the piano and "Bubbles" Dannetta Craves
on the drumbs, the room came alive with
and singing dinners.
Moving from the jazzy rock style to the more
restrained modem music, Sobania Jed the per
hand-clappin-

g,

LVIII, No. i:ih

1

not

com-

Adenauer
Dies At 91
BONN, Germany The man
responsible for building a prosperous West Germany from the
ruins of World War II died today
in a village near the capital he

loved.

Konrad Adenauer, who lifted
Germany from destruction as
chancellor, was stricken a week
ago with influenza and bronchitis. As complications set in, his
condition steadily weakened, and
death came at 91 at his home in
Roendorf with his family at his
bedside.
Adenauer, whose long life
covered a period during which
his country's fortunes rose and
fell dramatically, worked for the
unification of Europe and helped
found the Common Market.
After World War II, when
he was arrested twice by the
Continued on Pace 2

-

.

:3fT5v

7f

A

could

AAUP."
He singled out recruitment
of new faculty and maintaining
morale of existing faculty as two
of the most serious problems
arising from censure.
"If conditions are such that
AAUP is justified (in censure),
it means that something is wrong,
that proper procedures have not
been followed, that faculty rights
have been abused which create
low morale."

I

formance and accompanied singers. Sobania added
that he and a friend planned to have a musical-comed- y
act in local Lexington Hotels in the Fall.
Miss Craves, the congenial Negro drummer-gir- l,
is a freshman business and economics major
from Lexington.
Other entertainment for the evening featured
various students on the guitar and the singing
of popular folk songs.
Missjanie Barber, a junior English major sang
"The Shadow of Your Smile, "Moon River", and
several other favorites.
"The Sound of Music" was sung by Laura
Miller, a junior music major.
One of the most entertaining spots of the

party featured freshman Ronald Hale leading
in "Hang on Sloopy", accompanied by two of
the clowns for the evening, Matt Kowalewski, a
sophomore chemical engineering major, and Robert
Meihaus, a junior education major.

Dr. Cierly

ment on specific characteristics
of the Eddington case. However he did say, "it definitely
hurts the national image of a
university to be censured by

v

Wf

x'i!

CLOWN HELPED BLAZER CELEBRATE ITS BIRTHDAY

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,

Wtitnc-Mhiy- ,

1!), 19(i7

April

1st OUTDOOR SHOWING!

Konrad Adenauer Dies
Illness
Ajler Week-Lon-

P

C

g

and Catholic support.

Hy 1949, at age 73, Adenauer
emerged as Cermany's strongest
figure. He won the chancellorship by a single vote and freely
admitted it was his own.
As West Germany was rewith the help of
covering
Marshall Plan aid, Adenauer won
over much of the electorate his
first four years in office. His

2

PANAVISION

Ut'roni

. TECHNICOLOR

llir

Ihv

T

THE SUPER

4

Coffee House
3

rr

r.

ROSE

LANE

FRIDAY, SATURDAY

.n.

1

ill

WBKY-F-

EVENING

WEDNESDAY

fWM

IK

JIMX

HAY

If

r

AR1HUR

SPiDUNO

'

JAMES MacASTHtlR

PHILIP

. U"etltd

Y004N

mothirs?

nnuI n
TtCHNtCOLM
QUINE

IAN BERNARD

MOW

It Happened Today: News
t

BANNER

BOB

7
DELIVERY
: FREE PROMPT
S. LIME between Maxwell & High

RATES

$8.00
Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files
$.10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports ....
News Desk
Advertising, Business,
Circulation

fc

STW

J

Ui

mi
F

PICTURE

2321
2320
2447
2319

1

Adm. $1.25

66

morning, but

to stop talking about
'Virginia Woolf' and

you are going
to enjoy 'Alfie'

Y.

people mainly

--

and
throws them

TIME Magazine

I

f

jA

S

j--

W

c

is

SCENARIO."

THAN A

zJ

MILLICLNT MARTINIDLIA

UNREELS MORE

LIKE A SCORE CARD

PICTURES presents

Ji

Rating)

4

women

j

(H'3hest

ry r

T

start talking about
Alfie' ?' - Wanda Hale,
N.
DAILY NEWS

very much.
'Alfie' uses

MICHAEL CAINE

J

People are going

yourself in the

(RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE

Tne handsome
young tycoon'

A

A PARAMOUNT

TECHNICOLOR

"You may hate

JQ

NEWMAN

Mllitbe...
jl

MtlSON

JOHN

NOW!

-- LIFE Magazine

ELIZABETH TAYLOR

vL

SPELI0.

MiLION

Starts 7:30;

c

S
VfVj

0DN,

PHIUP

Gun, gun, gun,
LJ. who's got the gun?

252-269-

PARAMOUNT

"U

rmtm

ASSOCIATES

away like
tissues."

--

WuHen b)

MlQ)rJ3iiLlln
J has got to know in

Sandra Dee - George Hamilton

hurry!

J,S7,:,,rSUfSCS:

miy SAVAUS

PCTURCS

PARAMOUNT

Discussion

MiTROGOlDWNMArtR,

She
has to
choose a
husband
in a

and

br XtN kHHMH

m mm

. TECHNICOLOR". FROM WARNER BROS.

ULTRA PANAVISION

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except holidays and
exam periods.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Nick Pope, chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
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.

think
of that,

PHUMOWn

HtfTI

MiLlON

The Kentucky Kernel

rs

H0P1T

WERNER PETERS

will mm mm
-

y

rnswrs

PICTURES

do you

RICHARD

george montgqmerv-i-

NICHOLS
PHARMACY

Harris-Hug- h

noted i

6

W1E

Music

5:15
5:30

QUINE moouctk

RAY STARK mo STANLEY RUBIN

SLECH

-

AFTERNOON
THURSDAY
Sign On; Music
News
2:00 Afternoon Concert, Dvorak:
"Symphony No. 4"
5:00 Transatlantic Profile:

SUBSCRIPTION

wttxto b

BARBARA

1:00
1:55

STUNK

Griffith-JonathanWfnte-

i

PfoOoctd

News

Viewpoint: Discussion
Masterworks, Haydn:
"Symphony No. 103"
News; Sign Off

12:00

what

a

O

91.3 mc.

8:00
8:05
9:00

.his motion picture
will probably do as much
for mothers as 'Moby Dick'
did for whales...

Morse-Barbar-

.A.,

II

13ZiSL7ml

M

Evening Concert. Franck:
"Symphonic Variations"
7:00 Short Stories of Morley Cal
laghan: "The Snob"
7:30 Theatre ot the Air: "San
Demetrio London"

JL

Robert

I

II

6:00

NOW SHOWING!

RICHARD

SHOWS!

NEXUS

ii

PHONE

i

SHOW OF

RECOMMENDED FOR MATURE ADULTS!

Tff

WWMODBT

ACTION

I

Student Center Theater

socw(wh

UNLIKE

POPULAR PRICES!

EVER SEEN!

Thursday, April 20

SUM

AT

YOU HAVE

"EZRA POUND" by BBC Interview

SEVEN ARTSRAT

FIRST TIME

ANYTHING

University of Kentucky
Art Club Film Series Presents

7:00 p.m.

DinECT FROM ITS RESEHVED SEAT ENGAGEMENTS!

for sdultsl

l

W )I

Aim. $1.25

artistic motion pictures

A MAN
FOR ALL
SEASONS

wb 'mm
IN

A totally new concept in

NOW SHOWING!
6 Academy Awards

NOW SHOWING!

fliMED

From Sweden...

ML CINEMA

STRAND

pi rc

HJ

H C'

'ftSV

1

AIM

NOW SHOWING!

Christian Democratic Party came
close to winning an absolute
majority in 1953, and attained
this in 1957.
It brought Adenauer to the
height of his power.
His decline began in 1959
when he announced that he
would step up to the largely
ceremonial job of president, a
move badly received by the public. His party lost its majority
in 1961 and had to enter into
coalition with the conservative
Free Democratic Party, which
was openly hostile to him.

Continued From Pafe 1
Cestapo, he returned to his
hometown of Cologne to help
found the Christian Democratic
Party, based on both Prostcstant

KENTUCKY

i
nxtmi it Lf,uajjlmi iti
f All

.114

vSS
L

i

AUOIENCES)

c

ALFIE

M.

...

.

.

VM1

SpeculJuryAwiri'

FOSTER-JA-

itttw

ASHER

NE

Cmiks Fila
SHIRLEYANNE FIELO "VIVIEN

MERCHANT'ELEANOR

BRON

wra SHELLEY WINTERS AS RUBY TECHNICOLOR'TECHNISCOPE

""Ty--

rv

,

II

you've got to
h Unnhinnl

w

I

I

v

The next floor

S

p

y

Tfie

y

to J'"
CeteleHctn BiiBiiy

adding

m''

j
1

a LEWIS

Ihe midnight

mus'?

MMmn

Mod Satil

GILBERT

SCBMftAT

production

MUSIC

IT

IT
SONNY

IUI

USA
KXUC1I

NAUCNION

lOtlWS

iHt

ON
ANQ

PIAT

miwkw
All' It

OlIlCIII

111 MlKMIM

IT

UW1S

UK II

Plus! 1st Run Western

!

J

S,fSoutbland1S7
'llS..l).ulHlll0lllMgMIHMy

WJ& m'.m!28t rnillUDIA

DITIIDCC

v

.

KWWMmMvMWW.vny

FnOTMTnER HELLCAT
STEWART GRANGER

ClNl

:OpG'

E

LKE SOMMLR
C0LUMBIACC10R

* Till; KENTUCKY

Thursday

Ihi'iis

the last

THURSDAY
9:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Panel discussion among Dr. E. William Doty,

Elizabeth Hardwlck, Jack Tworkov,
Hull, and Gordon RoRofT, on
"The University and the Arts." The
afternoon session includes composer
John Cage.
William

FRIDAY
8:30 p.m.

Lexington Philharmonic Orchestra and the Lexington Singers in
Memorial Coliseum presenting "Dee
thoven's Ninth Symphony."
SATURDAY

and 8:30 p.m. University
of Michigan dramatic company with
"An Evening'! Frost."

2:30

p.m.

The panel discussion, to be
held in Cuignol Theatre, will
center around four aspects of
the university's influence in the
arts. The role of the creative
person in the arts on campus,
the university as supporter of
experimentation in the arts, the
university's responsibility to the
community, and the role of the
university in the arts councils
movement, will all be discussed
by leaders in the field of academic artistic achievement.

John Cage, labeled "the most
controversial composer in America," is the musical director of
the Merce Cunningham Dance
Company that will appear in
Memorial

Cafeterias in Blazer Hall and
the Complex will be open for
student study halls during the
last week of regular classes and
finals week, the Women's Residence Halls Council announced
Tuesday.
In its last meeting of the year,
WRH decided the cafeterias will
be open from 8 to 11:30 p.m.
each night through Thursday.
Men, however, must leave Blazer cafeteria at 10:30 p.m. because of dormitory closing hours.
It was announced that VVRH's
"Big Sister" program has attracted more applications than
the supply of little sisters available. This program of assigning incoming freshmen with an
upperclass "sister" to help orient
them to college life began last
year as an experiment and was
expanded this year.
Since a larger number of coeds
applied to be big sisters than
was anticipated, WRH decided
Tuesday to invite a small number
of transfer students to participate
in a modification of the program
as a means of getting acquainted
with UK.
The new officers elected in
WRH are Gayle Grogan, president, and Terrilynn Nix, vice
president. The rest of the officers will be elected in the fall.

mmmmm.l

.,

V

dncsd.i, April

If), l?)f7

,,,,,.,.

No. 9," will
be performed with soloists Sheila
House, I'h) His Jenness, Aimo
of the
Kiviniemi, all

fatuity.

Coliseum Wednesday

SCENE

KERNEL CLASSIFIED ADS BRING RESULTS

FROM

"AN

EVENING'S

GnfernpuQ

FROST"

with
MaxShuIman

(By the author of "ItaMj Hound the Flag, Hoys!",
"Dobie Gillis," etc.)

REQUIEM FOR A SQUARE

Christ Goes
to Brooklyn.

best-dresse-

PAGEANT
A lively

thought-provokin-

freckle-face- d
You, like any other lovable,
American kid, want to be a BMOC. How can you make it?
Well sir, there are several ways, none of which will
work.
You're too puny to be an athlete, too lazy to be a valedictorian, and too hairy to run for Homecoming Queen.
As for becoming a
man, how are you going
to buy clothes with a miser for a father?
Are you licked then? Is there no way to make BMOC?
Yes, there is! And you can do it! Do what? This:
Become a hippie! Get cool! Get alienated! Have an
Identity Crisis! Be one of the Others!
How? Well sir, to become a hippie, simply follow these
five simple rules:
1. Read all of Tolkien in the original dwarf.
2. Have your Sophomore Slump in the "freshman year.
3. Wear buttons that sav things like this :
NATIONALIZE DAIRY QUEEN
ASTHMATICS, UNITE
LEGALIZE APPLE BUTTER
HANDS OFF AIR POLLUTION
4. Go steady with a girl who has long greasy hair, a guitar, enlarged pores, and thermal underwear.
clean-livin-

"You can't con him man." In the May Pageant a courageous
clergyman goes into the heart of the slums to bring religion to
the people. Read how he interprets the Bible for delinquents
in their own language, and then pour through the 30 other
interesting and provocative articles in this issue.Tokeep up with
what's happening in the world today,read Pageant. Buy the May
issue today.
g

magazine.

Our May issue is now on sale.

5.

g,

d

Attend Happenings regularly.

Good News

for the

IN ero wd

where waiting
is

OUT

MINUTE
SERVICE
with

DRIVE-I-

N

convenience

Complete Chicken Dinner
AN
Regularly 1.25
SPECIAL
THIS WEEK
ASK

K

"77

I

"

jC

TO SEE OUR

AJ

yta You Must Keep Alert
When you can't afford to be drowsy,
Inattentive, or anything less than all
there. . . here's how to stay on top.
VEflV Continuous Action Alertness
Capsules deliver the awakeness of
two cups of coffee, stretched out
.
up to six hours. Safe
VfAVh
and
r- -,

This last item may require some explanation, for it is
possible that Happenings haven't reached your campus
yet. Be assured they will because Happenings are the biggest college craze since mononucleosis.
A Happening, in case you don't know, is the first formless art form. Things just happen. For example, eighty
naked men come out and squirt each other wih fire hoses
containing tinted yogurt. Then eighty more naked men
come out and light birthday candles in the navels of the
first eighty men. Then one girl, clothed, comes out and
pulls three thousand feet of sausage casing through her
pierced ear. Then eighty more naked men come out and
eat a station wagon.
There is, of course, a musical accompaniment to all
these fun things. Usually it is "Begin the Beguine',' played
by 2G trench mortars, a drop forge, and a rooster.
There used to be, some years ago, still another requirement for becoming a hippie: a man had to have a beard.
But no longer. Beards were worn in the past not so
much as a protest, but because shaving was such a painful
experience. Then along came Personna Super Stainless
Steel Blades.
Today if you don't want to shave, well, that's your
hangup, isn't it, baby? I mean when you've got a blade
like Personna that tugs not neither does it scrape, what's
your copout, man? I mean like get with it; you're living
in the past. Shaving used to hurt, used to scratch, used to
gouge, used to give you all kinds of static. But not since
Personna. It's a gas, man. It's a doozy; it's mom's apple
pie. You dig?
I mean, man, you still want a beard? Crazy! But you
don't have to turn your face into a slum, do you? Shave
around the bush, baby, neatly and nicely with Personna.
I mean like Personna comes in double-edg- e
style and
Injector style too. I mean like any way you try it, you
gotta like like it.
1SHJ7,

jIVLLJ

Continuous Action
Alertness Capsules

-

n

,

thoven's "Symphony

Climaxing the Festival will
be the performance by the Uninight.
Cage is the inventor and the versity of Michigan Dramatic
frequent user of the "prepared Company in "An Evening's
piano," a process of transforma- Frost.' The "play w ithin a play"
tion transforming the pitch and follows the ixet Rolnrt Frost
timbre of the piano using bam- through his words, letters, conboo, metal, wood, rubber and versations, and poetry. Written
other various materials to effect by
at Michthe sound.
igan Donald Hall, the work was
Students will be admitted on called "unique" by Cue magatheir validated I.D. to the Me- zine.
Students will be admitted for
morial Coliseum concert featuring the Lexington Philharmonic $1 with an I.D.; otherwise adand the Lexington Singers. Bee mission is $2.

nun

Owns
Cafeterias
For Study

TUN LI.,

r-

Arts Festival In Final Days
round of seminars, concerts, and
theater for the University's first
Festival of the Arts. The schedule is as follows:

K

647 New Circle Road, Lexington, Kentucky
TELEPHONE

Z99-94-

Mas Shulnmn

lley, man, like how about doubling your shaving cool?
Like how about wilting those crazy whiskers with some
Ilurma-ShaveLike regular or menthol? Like have
you got a better friend than your kisser? Like treat it
right, right?
?

Ye-y-

* Iernel

The Kentucky

The Smith's Outstanding College Daily
Unim hsity of Ki.isrniCKY

WEDNESDAY. APRIL

F5STAI3LLSHED 1894

19, 1967

Editorials rrjircscnt the ojnnions of the Editors, not of the University.

Waltf.h
Si-F-

IUkio, Editorial

A

M.

Chant,

Vac Editor

Editor-I-

n

Chief

William

KNArr, Business Manager

Questionable Act

The insult to students by the
Safety and Security Department of
searching personal possessions at
Saturday's LKD races was not only
in poor taste but also illegal. The
real damage is that the incident
furthers the communications gap
between the student body and campus authorities.
We realize that laws should be
enforced, and that includes the
law which prohibits the drinking
of alcoholic beverages on University property. But it is not fair
to the students to begin searching
their purses and other personal
property. Students do not have the
right to break University and state
rules, but we also strongly insist
that campus authorities do not have
the right to break the law, i.e.,
to check students as if they were
being booked for an arrest.
It is true that some students
gave permission for the search, and

perhaps that technicality takes the
campus police off the legal hook.
But the fact that students, by the
admission of Fred Dempsey, direc- -

tor of Safety and Security at the
University, would probably not
have been admitted to the races
at the Sports Center had they not
permitted the search, makes the
searching a highly questionable and
illegal act.
The incident resulted from a
complete breakdown in communications between LKD officials and
the Security department. Those directing LKD had not been
of the action that was taken.
There are better ways to enforce University regulations. Last
year state and campus police were
on hand, but only attended to
students who were drinking openly
or became obnoxious.
Meanwhile, we wonder if this
action by Mr. Dempsey's staff is
to be considered as a precedent.
Will students be searched as they
enter and leave future athletic
events? And will the campus and
state police check the alumni side
of McLean Stadium and Memorial
Coliseum as carefully as they check
the student section?
pre-warn-

ed

n

IS

1

4J

Kleelronie Termites

Letlcrs To The Editor:

Former UK Professor Has Some Tips For Wreckers
To the

Editor of The Kernel:

Recently I visited Lexington as

the guest of the Colleges of Law

and Architecture. For eight years
I taught at the University, and I
was shocked and saddened to see
that the most beautiful building
on the campus, White Hall, was
being demolished. In case it is the
purpose of UK to destroy its architectural gems, I made a little list
of campus masterpieces, which I
wish you would bring to the attention of the wreckers:

Left; they will hearten paranoics
and pessimists.
The Medical Center: It is
solemn and colossal, with a prehensile smokestack yet. It has the
waremien of a
house. And that, dear editor, is
very hard to achieve, even deliberately.
The Journalism Steps: A more
elegant set of steps would be hard
to find this side of the Spanish
Steps in Rome. As they nestle up
against the Journalism Building,
the steps bear an air of equivoc- ation, as if any moment they would
run off in search of another building.
The University should conserve
the best of the past (buildings as
well as books), just as the government conserves historic monuments, redwoods and the White
House.
lime-and-ceme- nt

Holmes Hall: an incomparable
example of Mao Modern. With its
bold mixture of building materials
and styles, and its sturdy Chinese
covered walkway,
Holmes has
achieved true social realism.
Chi Omega House: Some years
it was an earnest piece of work,
ago
a storefront window case for those
Chi O models. Now, with
sugar plum trim, it is a supurb
The destruction of beautiful old
example of
Detroit, a White Hall is a disaster.
style that decorated a functional
form with fins and chromium.
Jesse Dukeminier Jr.
Prof, of Law
Sorority Row: These plain bedof California
University
room block houses with Georgian
in Los Angeles
doorways remind one of nothing so
much as chunky, solid Irish scrubwomen wearing diamond chastity
v) To Dniiliurst
belts. You can look the country
This letter is in rebuttal to a
over and never find any buildings letter
by D. A. Danhurst which reso frankly virtuous.
cently appeared in The Kernel.
When President Johnson acy Haggin Hall: This men's dorm
is a fine example of CIA Dream cused certain irresponsible people
Style. Its slitted windows and of "double bookkeeping" in their
locked entries around a black-toppe- d criticism of the defense of freedom
courtyard will confound in South Vietnam he had a very
beatniks, extroverts and the New good point.
36-22--

Mid-Centu-

ry

Take as an example the question of civilian casualties. The
Communist aggression against the
South usually takes two forms:
one, the systematic murder or assassination of civilians, and two,
planned military attacks against
unarmed villages. The theory of
this type of war is to kill enough
of the general population that they
will be frightened into ser ingthe
Communist dictatorship.
On the other hand when the
forces of freedom strike back at
the aggressors they are very selective in their targets, trying to avoid
civilian deaths. This was illustrated
very graphically when the Communists recently claimed that 89
people had died in a certain city
in the North as the result of bombing raids.
The Air Force noted that military targets in and around this city
had been under constant attack
for a period of months. If only
89 deaths had occurred then our
fliers must have been doing a wonderful job in avoiding civilian

deaths. (Incidentally, the Communists often kill over a thousand civilians during a typical week in
South Vietnam).
Recent peace proposals are another interesting example of "dou-

ble bookkeeping." Certain irresponsible people often say that the
United States is responsible for
blocking peace. This is just not
so. President Johnson had to send
five invitations to start peace talks
before the dictator in the North

even answered. Even then the answer was a flat "no." The forces
of freedom have continually tried
to get peace talks started but the
Communists have proved themselves to be very good at saying
no.
4

I would like to ask how the
reader would feel if Canada started
sending men into the United States
to murder our leaders and terrorize the population? If the Canadians insisted on following such a
policy we would very likely invade
the North and put a stop to it.

The people of South Vietnam are
in the same position. They are being attacked by invaders from the
North and their controlled dupes
in the South. The South Vietnamese
have taken terrible losses. They
have lost a greater percentage of
their population than we lost in
World War II. Their weekly casualty rates usually run higher than
all of the rest of the freedom forces combined. Yet these brave people are still standing against the
forces of the Communist dictatorship.
People with this kind of guts
deserve all the help we can give
them. Remember an attack on
anyone's freedom is an attack on
our freedom. In order to protect
our freedom we must helpthe South
Vietnamese defend their freedom
from Communist aggression.

Herbert D. Rice
Grailuate Student
in Physics

* THE KENTUCKY

K

Ell NEE, WYdiw sdav, Apiil

l!H,-

7-'

Another Reform For The Ph.D.
Bv FRED M. HECHINCER
Nfw York Tlmf Newt Hrrvlrf
NEW YORK -- "We dangle our

(f)

three magic letters before the eyes
of these
victims, and
they swarm to us like moths to
an electric light."
So wrote William James in
the Harvard Monthly in 1903.
The "we" were the universities.
The victims were the graduate
students. The three magic letters
were, of course, the Ph.D.
The doctorate like all important seals of office has often
been
scrutinized.
critically
Periodically, it has been raked
over by reformers sometimes to
make it more, sometimes less

"W li.it

am

I

roaditip

.'

Tin rriidinj; Mao

rrv in' for

it"

T--

l

nnp!

'little

r Book

Cliina-watrlioi!-

Soapbox: Facist America
By

HERBERT CREECH

Arts and Sciences Sophomore
Modern college