xt7qft8djh9t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qft8djh9t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690404  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  4, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  4, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7qft8djh9t section xt7qft8djh9t Tie

Kmthjcecy ECmml

Friday Evening, April 4, 19G9

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

r

Vol. LX, No. 124

Dr. King Eulogized
At Memorial Service

rkw,

i

1

Memorial

-

(

v-

Dr. George C. Hill delivers the eulogy at the memorial service for the
late Dr. Martin Luther King yesterday, and called for better working
conditions for
service employees at UK. Dr. King was assassinated

Cne year ago today.

By

:,

Kernel Photo by Howard Mason'

By ELLEN ESSIG
Kernel Staff Writer
"Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. lived with a dream of freedom for
all Black people, and he died in Memphis, April 4, 1968, for daring
to have it. The awful striking down of the apostle of nonviolence
made still another terrible wound in the conscience of our nation."
Those were the words of Dr. were excerpts from many of Dr.
George C. Hill of the BiochemKing's speeches, including his
istry Department as he delivered famous"! Have a Dream."
the eulogy in a memorial serAlthough Dr. King died a
vice Thursday for the late Dr. year ago today, the service was
King sponsored by the Black held yesterday "because many
Student's Union. The service, at- students will be going home Fritended by about 70 persons, took day for Easter," according to
place at noon in the Student BSU vice president BrendaMapp.
Center Theatre.
The text of Dr. Hill's eulogy
Dr. King was assassinated in follows:
Memphis, where he had gone
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
to lead local sanitation workers lived with a dream of freedom
in their efforts to gain wage infor all Black people, and he died
creases. "The city officials did in Memphis, April 4, 1968, for
not hear their pleas for dignity,"
daring to have it. The awful
Dr. Hill said. "It took the death striking down of the
apostle of
of Dr. King to open their eyes nonviolence made still another
to the injustices these men were terrible wound in the conscience
suffering."
of our nation.
Also included in the service
Continued on Paffe 8, Col. 1

SG Candidates Meet In Campaign Debate
CEORGEJEPSON

Kernel Staff Writer
Thorn Pat Juul's interpretation of the University of Kentucky Central Campus Development Plan was under fire from
several sources Thursday night.
Speaking at the Alpha Xi
Delta House, Juul had difficulty
convincing the women of that
sorority that the plans of the administration would be detrimental to the Creek organizations.
Later, at a combined meeting of the Young Democrats and
Young Republicans at Maria's
Restaurant, Juul met more opposition to his allegations from
Steve Bright, a vice presidential
candidate, Jim Williams, a pres

idential

candidate and some
members of the audience.
Tim Futrell, a fourth candidate for the SG presidency, was
addressing a banquet of Keys,
the men's sophomore honorary,
at the Imperial House, during
the debate.
Bright called Juul's disclosure
of the plan a "scare tactic" and
h
a
attempt to get the
Greek vote. He continued, saying that the Greek alumni were
the most powerful of all the University alumni and that the
Creeks would be the last people
to be "stepped on by the adlast-ditc-

ministration."

Williams said he thought Juul
should try to get another copy

Carver Rejoins Campaign
By JANICE BARBER
Assistant Managing Editor
Capping a night of campaigning Thursday, the four Student
Covemment candidates told why they are running for office and
what they propose to do if elected at a debate in Jewell Hall.
Returning to the campaign
Thorn Pat Juul, at the Jewell
circuit after a stay in the Uni
Bruce Carver Hall meeting, went over the recversity Hospital,
said that he would ask that the ord of SAR bills passed in the
assembly "go out to the students assembly this year, while courtand hold SG meetings where they ing the dormitory vote.
"We have been the ones to
are," in an effort to make the
produce. We have covered every
government "more positive."
Appearing alone earlier in the subject in which students could
evening at the Kappa Alpha be interested," Juul said. "We
Theta sorority house. Carver ex- have taken our last platform and
plained why he had become a produced 75 percent of it."
serious candidate, abandoning
Explaining why he had entered the SG presidential race,
his caped crusader role.
He said he had originally en- Tim Futrell said, "I would have
tered the race early to keep peo- dropped out this year, but I
ple from taking sides before all thought that through the experthe candidates had entered. "I ience I have had as SC vice
waited for someone to come in," president and after seeing the
errors Wally (Bryan, SG presiCarver said.
He said that after a debate dent) has made this year, I could
at a Young Republicans meeting be effective."
Futrell and his running mate
which centered on the housing
policy, he reconsidered becoming Jim Cwinn emphasized the role
a serious candidate. Carver said that students could play in the
that the urging of others finally University's decision-makinled him to enter the race serious- process. Futrell said that he has
already contacted a state legislaly.
Carver, recovering from about tor who is willing to introduce
with the cold and complications, a till in the next legislative sesremained seated at both the sor- sion to give students a vote on
ority house and Jewell Hall. the Board of Trustees. Students
Speaking quietly, he rebuffed are now formally represented on
questions in regard to the per- the board by the SG president.
Juul took issue with aFutrell-Cwin-n
sonalities of the other candidates
while speaking at the earlier
proposal that students
Continued on V&ge Zt Col. 3
meeting.
g

of the plan just to prove that his
first copy was not a "freak of

.

nature."
At the sorority Juul spoke
alone and talked mainly of the
Development Plan and its
feet on the future of the Greek
organizations.

"The administration doesn't

have to tell you the full truth
until it happens," he said. Heal-s- o
said that the Creeks should
not feel "safe" because of their
leases with the University.
At Maria's each candidate,
Williams and Juul speaking for
themselves and Steve Bright
speaking in behalf of his running mate Bruce Carver, spoke
for 10 minutes.
Questions were then invited
from the audience, and the program ended with each candidate
giving a five minute conclusion.
Jim Williams was the first
to speak and reiterated his position as the "only completely
independent candidate" and as
one who wanted to represent
the "silent majority" of the student body.
99-ye-

Williams said he didn't feel
any of the other candidates could
pretend to represent all the students since they aimed at vocal
minorities.
"We do have a regular platform, of course," he continued.
He then went on to mention
that he thought only freshmen
should have to live in the dormitories, that he was opposed to
women's hours, and that he was
not necessarily in favor of the
pass-fa-il
system.
On the pass-fa- il
issue, he said
that he preferred to work for
his grades but if the majority
of the students wanted pass-fa-il
for all electives, he would be in
favor of it also.
"I believe the president (of
SG) has an obligation to all the
people and he ought to say so
he ought to say so before the
election," he concluded.
Steve Bright said that he believed all the platforms were essentially the same and that the
important question was "where
has everybody been all year
long?"

He continued, saying that
Bruce Carver had been an active
member of the University's Student Advisory Committee and of
the Student Government cabinet
before being fired by current president Wally Bryan due to his
criticism of Bryan.

"We can't waste a year creating a bureaucracy, and we can't

waste a year trying to get a dog
in the Student Center," said
Bright.
In his talk Thorn Pat Juul
praised the record of the Students for Action and Responsibility (SAR) in introducing bills
in the SG Assembly during this
year. He also chicled the other
candidates, with the exceptions of
Williams and Rodney Tapp who
were not in SG this year, for their
inability to produce.
Juul emphasized the need for
a SG executive that would not
kneel to the administration. "We
don't think students should have
to beg," he said, "we should
ask first, but sometimes asking
is just not enough."

'Campus Plans' Director Disputes
JuuPs Greek Housing Statement

JEANNIE LEEDOM
Kernel Staff Writer
Lawrence Coleman, director
of campus planning and design,
took issue Thursday with Thorn
Pat Juul's "Creek" platform
plank.
Juul, campaigning for the Student Government presidency,
said if elected he would combat
an alleged plan whereby "the
University, in its physical growth,
will destroy and consume 24 existing (Greek) houses, and may also
include three additional houses
in the Woodland Avenue area."
Coleman responded yesterday
that "We (the University) have
no plans of demolition or acquisition of any sorority or fraternity houses, and we don't anticipate having any such plans
in the near future."
The director of design and
By

planning added

"We have not proposed that
fraternities and sororities be relofae
cated in high-ris- e
or
cilities (as Juul had charged).
We have discussed UK getting
a group of fraternities and sororor consoliities in a multi-undated group.
In December of 1968 Coleman
phrased the University attitude
somewhat differently; "The six
fraternities near the complex accommodate, say, 240 students,
and occupy a rather large area,"
he said. It's what his office calls
"low density development," an
undesirable condition on today's
crowded campus.
"At such time as the houses
became obsolete," he said, in
terms of physical condition or
inadequate housing use, "the
area would probably be redeveloped to provide for more efficient use
it could be 10
low-ris-

it

...

years, it could be 20 years, it
could be 30 years.
"But I am confident there will
come a time when this will happen," he said. During the December interview he also pointed
out the possibility of construction of a fraternity-sororit- y
complex on Clifton Avenue. He said
it was only in the "talk" stage
at that time.
In yesterday's
discussion,
Coleman said, "Fraternities and
sororities should be dealt with as
a group so all of them could be
dealt with equitably and a fair
resolution for each could be

reached."
He said such a "comprehensive consolidation plan" would
attempt to describe total development over a certain planning
period. "If you proposed plans
for one fraternity's needs or cne
Continued on Vage 2, CcL 4

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Friday, April

A,

19

Candidates Debate At Jewell Hall

Kentucky Typewriter Service
SALES
OLIVETTI-PORTABL-

RENTALS

SERVICE

AND ADDING-

TYPEWRITERS

E

ADLER ELECTRIC

Continued from PaRp One
should have a voting member
on the Board. "I ask why should
we have a vote when we don't
use the seat now. Policy Statement No. 9 (the resolution that
r
would allow
required
dormitory living) went through
without a comment," Juul said.
Futrell and Gwinn also called
for the establishment of advisory
boards for the University and
each community college for a
student voice in faculty firing
and hiring and in the formulation of curriculum.

-

MACHINES

AND MANUAL TYPEWRITERS

MACHINES

PRINTING CALCULATORS;

four-yea-

PAPER AND RIBBONS

CARBON

Phono

252-02-

07

V

Summer Employment
On THURSDAY, APRIL 10, a representative

of

miitx3mtmil
a.mto

tEljc

4:00
to interview and test male applicants
p.m.
for summer employment. Applicants must be
willing to travel .Kentucky and Southern Indiana during Juno, July and August. The
position will pay $80.00 pdr week salary plus
travel ' expenses (meals lodging and
Please contact oCr placement
officer for time and place of interview.
will bo on campus from 9:00

trans-portatio-

mm Y
1833

n).

THEM
PICADOME

E.

Across from Post Office

Southland Shopping Center

V

CHICKEN
FFRIES, SLAW,
ROLL

V

(Q)

y2 CHICKEN

$1.19

jj t I

(P- )-

1

J

Save

Dr. Pellegrino is presently
director of the medical center at
the State University of New York
at Stony Brook, Long Island. He
went to Stony Brook in 1967
after nine years at UK, during
which he organized and served
as chairman of the Department
of Medicine.
A trustee-facult- y
screening
committee is currently searching
for a man to fill the office of

University
Corner Harrison and Maxwell
Sermon br

Rev. FornVsh
At

WORSHIP SERVICE

At 6 p.m.

I

a.m.

University of Life

11

THIS WEEK'S UK SPECIAL!
(Coupon Must Accompany Purchase)

2

& 19c Shake

B-Burgers

Qc

Continued from Pace One
sorority's needs, the assumption
is, if it were a good plan, it
would accommodate, every other
fraternity or sorority."
According to Coleman, one
comprehensive plan would include all sororities and fraternities and would try to encompass the 'needs of individual
groups.
"Any program of this sort
would be available for those desirous of participating. No fraternity or sorority would be forced
to participate.
"When they decide their present facilities are worn out, then
under this concept they might
have two alternatives:
"Living in a planned, designated, consolidated development.
"Finding a new location of
their own choosing further from
the core of campus."

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH
Donald Durham, Minister
1716 S. LIME
A. DeVe Sanders, Associate
J. R. Wood, Pastoral Minister
Sam Morris, Youth Minister
9:00 and 11:00 a.m. "Morning Follows The Night" Dr. Durham
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
11:00
Sessions
5:00 p.m. Youth Activities
5:30 p.m.VVorship Study Course
No Evening Service
k
Nursery for all services.
Service
Wednesday, 7 p.m.,
Parking in rear
a.m.Z-Expand-

ed

Mid-wee-

university Lutheran Student Center
SUNDAY MORNING BREAKFAST
9:00a.m.
STUDENT WORSHIP WITH COMMUNION - 10:30 a.m.

During Lent

AA7

THE BARN DINNER THEATRE

"Experiments in Liturgy"
R- -

r

Columbia

Directed by Bill McHale
OPENS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 26, 1969
THRU APRIL 20, 1969

Fabricius

Penny ljane
Nancy Trufnbo
Katlrv-- 1 yler

Joe Ostopak
CALL WINCHESTER

741-2H-

02

1

17
or LEXINGTON
FOR RESERVATIONS
The Barn opens at 6:30 p. in. Dinner is served
7 to 8 p.m. The performance begins at 8:30 p.m.
Performances are Tuesday night through Sunday
night. Sunday night and Tuesday night: S5.50
per person; Wednesday night and Thursday night:
$6.50 per person; Friday night and Saturday
night: $7.50 per person.
2.rr-H5-

charges covers
and ice, the play and the taxes.
The admission

L "NTRUP
d

Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Phone- s-

v vi

Coleman said the comprehensive approach is not a plan or a
proposal, but a "concept."
"Now, we don't even have
a comprehensive long range development plan for fraternities
and sororities. First we need some
consensus from the Greek leadership group."
Coleman said campus planners classify 30 years as the time
line for the estimated future life
of buildings in the core area of
the University. If the estimated
future life is in excess of 30
years, the structure is classified
as a permanent building and is
e
deincluded in the
velopment plan, the director of
planning and design claimed.
In relating this to the Greek
system, Coleman said, "Within
a
planning
period, it is probable that most
of the fraternities and sororities
located within the academic core
will need new facilities."
He said it probably will not
be feasible for them to relocate
on the same site, since the members would have to move temporarily while the destruction
of the old house and the construction of the new house were
taking place.
long-rang-

30-ye- ar

plus-or-min-

mB male
n

Dinner Theater

FIRST METHODIST CIIURCII

WEST HIGH
8:30 a.m.

at UPPER ST.

the dinner, soft drinks

RUSSELL R. PATTON, Minister

"Alive Forever More"

10:50 a.m.
No Evevrng Service

Transportation provided for students

Call

'The
252-03-

Death of Death"

or

277-66-

Nightly

SPECIAL OFFER

THE CAST
Bill

be the ones not voting, and
they're going to be in the majority, several thousand of them."
During the sometimes chaotic
open question period that followed, the distribution of SG
cabinet positions among candidates' friends and supporters, the
Kernel and platforms came up
for debate.
Carver and Bright, echoing
previous statements that they had
not promised any cabinet posts
during the campaign, drew the
first question. Carver said that
though they would encourage
friends and supporters to apply
for posts after the election, they
had not previously promised supporters a place in the cabinet.
Williams said that his friends
would fill the cabinet posts if he
were elected. "I will hire and fire
as I please," he said.

Presents

HIGHLIGHTS
OF BROADWAY

Maurice Gusztamont

race, in addition to the four
presidential slates. "The fifth
party is going to be there on
election day. They're going to

JuuVs Plank Challenged

that's all."

Methodist Chapel

- Save

Juul."

Williams predicted the emergence of a fifth party in the SG

By DANA EWELL
Assistant Managing Editor
Dr. Edmund D. Pellcgrino, who was named last week by a local
newspaper as a possible candidate for the UK presidency, and
Thursday the story was "very premature."
In Lexington for a meeting at
the Lexington Clinic, Dr. Pelle-grin-o University president, vacated last
summer by Dr. John Oswald who
explained during the teleJoined the University of Califorphone interview that he had
"consented to talk to some of nia system.
the people who are looking, but

UK Specials

j

for M r.

Presidency Story 'Premature9

atch For

Our

Jim Williams, appealingtothe
"average students," claimed that
he and his running mate Rodney
Tapp were running as the majority party.
"The minority of students are
the volunteers," Williams said.
He recounted a Wednesday night
campaign stop in a north campus
dorm where he asked why the
students were present for the talk,
and not one of the 100 or 150
volunteered an answer "except

Yearbook
Some 2,200 KENTUCKIANS were ordered for graduating seniors last year.
. . . These wcro mailed and distributed

through Jan. 1, 1969. Approximately
200 books were returned as unclaimed.
Th esc books must be moved from storage in order to handle the 1969
You may purchase a 1960
n in Room 111 of the Journalism
Bldg. for $5 plus tax. The office is open
Kcn-tuckia-

1968

8-4:-

Monday-Frida-

30

y.

KENTUCKIAN
plus 25 cents tax

ROOM 111

$5.00

JOURNALISM BLDG.

1

SUPERB FOOD
TOP MUSICAL COMEDY
AFTER THEATER CABARET

Reservations
Doors
Open
6:30
Dinner
7:00

232-324- 0

5

Sunday
Only
Dinner

at 5:30
Show

taxrsKs

ot7:00

RED MILE CLUBHOUSE

LEXINGTON TROTTING TRACK

n.

Kcn-tuck- ia

from

Mondays

except

Starting Tuesday, lApril

The Kentucky

Iernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4tti.
Begun as the Cadet in IBs 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 tditors.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, rriday, April 4,

1900-

-3

Panther's Bomb Plot Foiled
NEW YORK
Manhattan might have rocked to
explosions yesterday if police raiders hadn't headed off a conspiracy
by 21 members of the Black Panther party to bomb five department
stores crowded with Easter shoppers, the district attorney says.
seven ot the 21 Panthers in
dicted Wednesday on charges of
Among those arrested was
conspiracy to murder, arson and Robert S. Collier, 32, convicted
weapons violations were still at in 1963 of plotting to blow up
large.
the Statue of Liberty. He served
Dist. Atty. Frank S. Hogan, 21 months of a
sentence
indictand was released from Lewis-burannouncing the
ment, said the Panthers had
Pa. Federal Penitentiary
planned to bomb the stores, a in March 1968.
railroad, a police station and
Hogan said the defendants
kill policemen yesterday, in an plotted to:
attack on "the white power strucBomb Macy's, Alexander's,
ture."
Bloomingdale's, Korvette's and
Teams of police, heavily Abercrombie and
Fitch, and fire
m. V- V
"
i Ml
armed and wearing bulletproof
guns into the store.
vests, netted 12 suspects In early
Dynamite the tracks of (he
morning raids Wednesdayr Two
others were in custody in a Penn Central Railroad at six
Newark N.J., JaiL
points in The Bronx.
Kernel Photo by Dick Wr
The 12 defendants pleaded
Bomb a Bronx police station
Easter came a little bit earlier this year for the children at the Lexington-Finnocent before Supreme Court to divert police from the railayette
Easter!
County Children's Home. Kappa Sigma fraternity provided
Justice Charles Marks, who held road bombings.
the goods for an Easter egg. hunt there as part of their service program.
them in $100,000 bail each, deNone of the 12 arrested ofspite their lawyers' protest that fered
resistance, police said, but
bail was excessive and unthe
one man escaped by jumping 33
constitutional.
Marks signed arrest war- feet from his apartment window
College members of the Ken- Young Democrats, announced to-- - force in future political organirants minutes after a grand jury and running off.
zation in Kentucky." '
handed up the indictment at 1
Police officials said agents had tucky Young Democrats will meet day.
in Lexington April 9 to form a
Former Gov. Edward T.
a.m. Wednesday. Two women infiltrated the Panthers three
Morgan said he and John R.
college-levBreathitt will be the featured
party council,
were included in the indictment.
years ago.
Lovill of Berea will preside at
Morgan, president of UK speaker at the convention.
the convention. O. K. Curry Jr.
1
ri
Morgan said the new group,
when formed, would not; be a and Gerald Lundergan are directing the administrative details of
g
body but a central
the meeting.
organization for coordination of
y
Democrat activities at the
Registration for the
Young
meeting will begin at 4 p.m.
college level. Two primary functions would be the development
April 18 at the Phoenix Hotel.
'
.
of a statewide speaker's bureau
U
The deadline for announcement
Be a part of this unique new worship
April 10. Applications may also be
and promotion of
7:30 p.m. twe dayt prior to the first
experience at the University Lutheran
picked up at the same location.
of items in this column.
Student Center, 447 Columbia Avenue,
publication
events sponsored by each local
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
UK Placement Service
Young Democrats club.
Today
Tomorrow
Register Monday for an appointment n
"The need for this council is
Income tax 'forms and information
Wednesday with Hayes, Seay,
The University of Kentucky Opera
& Mattern
Civil
Architecture,
will be avanabie between 11 a.m. and
paramount," Morgan said, "if
Workshop, under the direction of
on Tuesdays and Wednesdays
E., Elec. E.. Mech. E. (BS). Locations:
p.m.
Arthur Graham, will present selecRoanoke. Virginia; Washington, D.C.
we as college students and young
in the Student Center until April 15
tions from several operas Saturday,
at the tax booth sponsored by Beta
Citizenship.
WALLACE'S
voters are to become a strong
March 5, at the UK Taylor Education
Psi.
Alpha
at 8:15
The
(AP)-Midt-

own

five-ye-

ar

nt

g,

"-

-

It's

Plan Organisational Meeting Here

YD9s

18-1-

Mc-Kinnl- ey

el

'

policy-makin-

TODAY and TOMORROW

two-da-

.

Mat-ter-

1

The English Department is offering
Awards to the
The Uanvzitr-Farquhstudent or students with the best pubworks in creative writing. Tnere
lished
is a $5j prize for the best poem and a
$5J prize for the best story. It is necessary that each entry should have been
published, but the medium of publication is not important. All entries
with
should be typed, double-spacean original and a carbon. A statement
as to the place of publication should
also be included. Please submit all
entries to Professor Robert D. Jacobs,
McVey Hall, English Department, prior
to April 15.
Members of Alpha Epsilon Delta,
and
national
in cooperation with Dr.
honorary,
d
Pisacano. will be advising
students throughout
and
in Room 8, Bradley
Hall, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day.
for student parkacademic
ing permits for the 1969-7- 0
year are being accepted now through
April 4 by the Safety and Security
Division. Applications may be picked
up at the Student Center Information
desk, in the residence halls and the
d
Safety and Security Division, 109
Hall.
Holy Week services at
Newman Center. 320 Rose Lane inMass with
clude: Holy Thursday
Washing of the Feet at 5 p.m.; Good
Adoration of the Cross and
Friday
Holy Communion at 3 p.m.; Stations
of the Cross at 7:30 p.m. on Friday;
Holy Saturday Services at 11 p m.
with Mass following at 11:30. Confessions ill be heard Monday. Tuesday
and Wednesday before 12:10 and 5
p.m. Masses. Holy Thursday toConfes3 p.m.
sions will be heard from 2:30
and after the services at approximately 4 p.m. Good Friday will be a day
of complete fast and abstinence. No
meat may be eaten, and those 21 and
over may eat only one full meal and
mav not eat between meals.
The story of the Crucifixion of
Christ will be told to the sounds of
and pulsating
colored lights. Good Friday. April 4.
d,

al

pre-dent- al

pre-me-

pre-dent- al

Kin-kea-

p.m.
Workshop
Building
will present scenes from Mozart's
"Don Gioof Figaro,"
"Marriage
vanni," and Bizet's '."Carmen."

Coming Up
The annual meeting of the YWCA
will be Monday, April 7, 7 p.m., in the
President's Room in the Student Center. Interested students are invited
to attend.
There will be a meeting for people
interested in living in the Dillard
House for the fall semester on Monday, April 7, 7 p.m., in the Dillard
House.
Michele Wright, violin, assisted by
Grace Phillips, piano, will present
her senior recital Monday, April 7.
8:15 p.m.. in the UK Agriculture Science Auditorium.
Henry B. Asman, M.D.. Louisville,
president of the Kentucky Medical
Association, will be the featured
speaker at the annual meeting of the
Association's Tenth Trustee District
at 6 p.m., April 8, at the Imperial
House.
Prof. Martin Bernstein, chairman of
the Department of Music in Washington Square College at New York University, will speak on "Performance
Problems in the Concerted Music of
Bach." Tuesday, April 8, 8:15 p.m.,
in Room 17 of the Fine Arts Bldg.
The Committee on Peace, Education
and Research will present "Why I
Believe in
Tuesday,
April 8. at 7:30 p.m.. in Room 222
of the Commerce Building.
James London, French horn, and
Carolyn Rankin, Piano, appear in a
concert with a host of guest performers on Wednesday, April 9, 8:15 p.m.,
at the UK Agricultural Science Auditorium. The concert is free to the
public.
Susan Kolwalsky, flute, will present
her graduate recital in music Thursday. April 10. 8:13 p.m., at the UK
Agricultural Science Auditorium.
Applications for AWS Bridal Fair
are clue in Room 203 of the Administration Building by 3 p.m., Thursday,

SPEND THIS AFTERNOON WITH
YOUR FAVORITE GAL AT THE . ..

OAKH ILL
ACADEMY
TATES CREEK ROAD
Phone
12 miles from UK
MOST REASONABLE

266-890- 4

RATES IN TOWN!

Open Track Riding
Excellent Riding Horses'

Scenic Trails

feOOK STORE

Auto Tape Flayers

Open 7 days a week

Installation Specialists

SALES SERVICE
393 WALLER AVE.

RENTALS
255-632-

6

Imperial Plaza Shopping Center

Financing Available
1st- National Charge
-

V

LEWIS & MATT

AUTO STEREO CENTER
Phone
407 S. UPPER

255-712-

0

(Corner Maxwell and Upper)

BMP

DELICIOUS, TENDER, JUICY

Steak
Baked Potafo
Salad and Bread
all for

I

h il

m II

Attractive, fashionable
and hard working, this
monogrammed sterling
silver key ring will attend

NOTE OUR NEW HOURS:
11 a.m. -- 12 p.m.
Sunday-Thursd11
a.m. -- 2 p.m.
Friday - Saturdoy

all of your grand
It is the perfect

openings.
accessory

for men and women.

ay

You
you

Fin

Necessary)

9 a.m. to 0 p.m.

dealers

SMI

!ome, Office, and Boat Units

Lessons in
Western or English Horsemanship
(No Appointment

STANDARD'
TYPEWRIT
CO.

lllM

347 S. Lime

252-17-

22

can girt without loving but
can't love without giving!

& Wilder
carta u

* Mrs. Wilson took pride in doing her Job well and efficiently. She
was the clerk of the local draft board. She was always noted for her
cheerful disposition and a smile that not only showed at her mouth
but also in her eyes through the carefully fitted and always polished
woman who Was
glasses she wore. Mrs. Wilson was a middle-age- d
a little plump but not excessively so. She wore her graying
getting
hair in an attractive way and was well-lihc- d
and respected by all

her associates.

Every day Mrs. Wilson would come to work after having a cheery
breakfast with her husband, a successful small businessman. They
would cat in the breakfast nook of their house every morning, and
on clear, sunny days would listen to the songbirds in the stately trees
in their back yard. They always used their quaint Swiss China set,
the one with the chip broken off the cream pitcher. But this defect
did not detract from the breakfast ware to their thinking; it only
added to its air of familiarity and warmth.
After such a secure and relaxing start, Mrs. Wilson was quite ready
to leave for work, an activity she found enjoyable and fulfilling. Her job
consisted basically of keeping the various functions of the draft board
y
basis. And this came easily to Mrs.
running smoothly on a
Wilson, who considered herself a natural organizer.
Occasionally the newspapers came around to do stories on her and
her job. Mrs. Wilson took great pleasure in describing the importance
to the country of smoothly-functionin- g
draft boards and derived even
day-to-da-

s'H' v-'-

I

i

Mrs. Wilson
more satisfaction from relating anecdotes and incidents she had encountered during the course of her work.
who came to register for the
Her favorite concerned an
draft one morning. What was unusual about this boy was that he had
long chartreuse hair. Yes, chartreuse. Mrs. Wilson said the boy was
quite concerned that the army would make him cut his hair because
he had to wear it that way to play in his band.
"I told him we would see what we could do," she told the newspaper reporter with a knowing smile.
The only unpleasant part of her job was the occasional interruptions in the board's routine caused by the few noncooperating inductees
and the relatively large groups of antiwar protestors who came around
from time to time to voice their objections to the board's proceedings.
"They keep chanting things like 'How many kids will you kill
today and other horrible nonsense," she would say in such a manner
as to show how offended she was. "I don't see why they can't be like
the other nice kids that come through here."
But when she was not talking to the newspaper people, she sometimes did think about what the unkept demonstrators had charged.
She always succeeded in brushing any doubts aside, though, by reassuring herself that her work was in the best interest of the country
and, besides, she was confident the army knew what it was about.
Mrs. Wilson, you see, never had to look at the blood and the gore
wreaked by the nice kids going through her efficient operation. She
never had to watch another human being's house, with his family
inside, go up in scorching flames from a napalm attack, and she, as
a matter of course, did not have to worry about such a thing happening to herself. She was protected by the bureaucratic process of rae
tionalization and by terse,
news reports about human suffering. Mrs. Wilson did not even have to watch the process by which
the boys coming through her operation were reduced to mechanized
robots marching in suffocating lines and rows of order so that they
eventually would be amenable to the ultimate in disorder.
No, while all this was going on, Mrs. Wilson continued to do her
job well and efficiently. And it continued to be a source of great pride
and satisfaction.
There are also Mrs. Wilsons serving as bank presidents, teachers,
corporation heads and college presidents. There are enough Mrs. Wilsons, in fact, to serve all the requirements needed to keep the machine
running smoothly. Aren't you glad you'll be one soon?
As if you weren't one already.
ball-scor-

'

I

'

t
(

t

i

.t

'

The Kentucky
of
University

ESTABLISHED

Iernel

Kentucky

1894

FRIDAY,

APRIL

4, 1969

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lee B. Becker,

Kernel Photo by Howard Ma