xt7qz60bzm76 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qz60bzm76/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700402  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  2, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  2, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7qz60bzm76 section xt7qz60bzm76 Journalism Chairman Toots His Own Horn
By DAHLIA HAYS
K cm d

Staff Writer

If you're in the journalism building on a rainy spring
night, chances are you'll hear a
aire gliding softly from the direction of the Marguerite
McLaugldin room. Probably you'll pass it off as a
figment of your imagination, but if you're the curious
type and steal up to the door for a look-seyou'll
discover a musical group you probably didn't know
Baroque-Renaissanc-

e

existed.

The group, which calls itself the Lexington Recorder's Society, is named for its predominant instrument. The recorder, akindofprimitiveflutewith a reedy
tone, reached its popularity peak in the late Middle
Ages, but is presently undergoing a "revival."
The ages of the members of the Lexington Recorder's

Society are as varied as the sizes of the instruments
they play, according to Prof. Bruce Westley, who plays
with the local group.
Ages 12 And Up
from about age 12 and up," said Prof.
"They range
Westley, who also heads the UK Department of Journalism. "As for the recorders, they range from this long
(about 10 inches) to way up there (an imaginary spot
several feet above his head)."
The group presently consists of "about a dozen
regulars," Westley added, but occasional and infrequent
visitors are always welcome-provid- ed,
that is, that they
bring their recorders along.
The Lexington group meets twice a month in the
"Maggie" room, as it is known around the Journalism
Department. Its informal makeup includes youngsters,

THE KENTUCKY

JEMNE
University of Kentucky, Lexington

Thursday, April 2, 1970

LXI, No.

-

llj
Vol.

VI

J

Representative Candidates
Featured At Donovan Hall
Kernel Staff Writer
Student got their chance to hear and see this
year's candidates for Student Government representatives Wednesday night at Donovan Hall.
The speech session drew only a handful of
watchers; most of the crowd consisted of candidates and their managers.

Independent Candidates
Candidates running independently as well as
those with party affiliation spoke to the group.
Phil Williams, who is running independently,
stated that Iiis "pet project" if elected would be
to get "more publicity for the
program" at UK.
Williams also advocated the continued elimination of
grading, the installation of
more campus telephones next year, and the addition of more money changers in the dormitories.
Wants 'Rapport
Steve LaBreche, another independent, stated
that a Student Government representative must
"be in rapport with the students." However,
another important aspect of SG rcprcicntaiic:;
the assembly and voting," LaBreche
work-stud- y

mid-ter-

said.

for representative.
"I will be available to the students if they
want to call me," Schilling added.
Ben Fletcher, who is running independently,
cited two main problems in Student Government:
a "breakdown of communications between Student Government and students" and a lack of
"responsibility" on the part of assembly members.

'(

j

i

:

"Representatives ought to at least go to the
meetings and try to get something done," Fletcher
said, citing the lack of a quorum in recent SG
meetings.
Jim Flegle is also running independently; he
pledged to "increase the possibility for academic
reform."
Flegle claimed that the present speaker policy
is "illegal . . . and unfair to students" and that
he would work to have it changed.
Pledging to "raise the level of the Student
Government Assembly from bubble gum in the

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water fountains . . . ", representative candidate
Jim Futrell (no relation to the present SG presiKernel Photo By Kay Brookshire
dent, Tim Futrell) noted that he has published'
a platform with 10 basic points which he would
concentrate on if elected.
Members of UK's Troopers practice what appears to be their own
version of "Funny Girl's" roller skate rag. The girls are practicing
ACT 'Enthusiasm
for shows the Troopers will be giving Friday and Saturday nights.
Joe Bouvier, who spoke in behalf of the Action
Coalition (ACT), stated that his party wants to
put "competent and enthusiastic students into
Student Government."
The purpose of the Action Coalition, Bouvier
said, is to "strengthen the assembly itself."
Others besides Bouvier on the ACT ticket

Roller Skate Rag

are Wendy McCarty, Connie Runyan, Hazel Colo-simTom Converse, Sara O'Briant, Josh O'Shea,
Joe Bouvier, Donna Shoupe, Jan Teuton, Howell
Hopson, Betty Johnson and Graeme Browning.
Thorn Pat Juul, a UK alumnus, spoke for the
Students for Action and Responsibility party (SAR).
Juul noted that SAR members were not in attendance because they had already scheduled a
party training session in parliamentary procedure.
Juul stated that SAR members did not hear
about the Donovan assembly until Monday night.
Please Turn To Page 6
o,

"A lack of communication between Student
Government representatives and students throughout the campus" caused Baxter Schilling to run

i

117

If

By TOM BO WD EN

UK students and faculty members, and residents of
Lexington.
Pleasure, not profit, is the aim of the group, which
performs upon request for church groups and similar
organizations.
Prof. Westley, who feels at home with almost any
size recorder, has played with recorder groups in Madison, Wise, Chicago, and Minneapolis-St- .
Paul. Therefore, upon arriving at UK a little over a year ago, he
naturally sought out other recorder musicians.
The "basic core" of the group has been playing
together for "probably five years, on and off," Westley
said. When asked how one recorder player finds another,
he replied that they often meet in recorder "workshops"
or consult the directory of American Recorder Societies.
Please Turn To Page 8

Lexington's Mayor Wylie
Endorses UK's Earth Day

Mayor Charles Wylie and Chester P. Care, Fayette
as Environyesterday proclaimed April
ment Week and April 22 as Earth Day.
The proclamation urged "all citizens to join with us in efforts
to make the public aware of existing problems in deterioration of
environment and support efforts of improvement in these areas."
UK has endorsed Earth Day with the announcement of a Presidential Convocation scheduled for 3 p.m. in Memorial Coliseum for
an address by Sen. Marlow W. Cook.
UK President Otis Singletary has said that all classes will be
dismissed at 2:50 p.m. to permit students to participate, and he
urged all students to attend the convocation.
Lexington

County judge

20-2- 6

pro-te-

Speaking At Complex

Candidates Enter Final Week Of Campaign
By BILL MATTHEWS

Assistant Managing Editor
Student Government presidential and vice
presidential candidates have entered the final
week of campaigning with some candidates
making as many as eight speaking engage-

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ments a day.
Ine one of several appearances of the
candidates Wednesday night, Winn Williams,
a representative of the Complex Coordinate
Government, moderated a series of
speeches followed by a question and
answer session in the Complex Commons.

il

Representative candidate Patt
Maney brandishes a "tyranno-sauru- s
bone" which he says will
represent the speaker's gavel if
Buck Pennington is elected to
that post.

All

announced presidential candidates

ex-

cept Gary Smith mu all vice presidential
candidates except Dan Crabtree took part
in the speech-makinPresidential candidates Steve Bright and
Bill Dawson said that as far as they knew,
neither Smith nor Crabtree has appeared
in any other campaign sessions that they
w ere aware of.
Dawson
Presidential candidates were first on the
floor with Bill Dawson speaking leading the
agenda.

A member of the Student Issue Party,
Dawson suggested that many of his opponents proposals were idealistic "promises of pie in the sky."
Dawson said the University needs "an
average student to be president," adding,
"I promise to be available to each and
every one of you," if elected.
"Too many times in the past Student
Government has been used as a Toy in
the hands of junior politicisns," Dawson
indicated in his platform.
He suggested that student government
stand "first for students," and said lie did
not intend to appeal especially to any special interest group on campus.
Dawson also suggested that basketball
tickets be distributed before game time to
avoid long lines.
Williams
Independent candidate Jim Williams
spoke next.
Williams said he had planned to say
something "serious, profound and weighty,"
but that since it was April Fool's day he
changed his mind.

Referring to charges made by his fellow
campaigners of student apathy on campus,
Williams suggested that the condition was
a reflection of student individualism.
The only presidential candidate without
a running mate, Williams has not issued a
formal campaign platform.
Although Williams commented on several
issues which were discussed, he made
of his own during the speeches.
SG presidential candidate Ched Jennings
was presented last nigif at a llaggin Hall
forum with wfiat was said to be an "official Creek slate" of candidates for the upcoming SG election.
When asked prior to the presentation
what he "thought" of the Creek slate, Jennings replied that he'd "like to see one."
Reportedly, the student questioning him,
Cerald Arrasmith, then f landed Jennings a
copy of what he said was the Greek slate.

Jennings
Repeating

slogan "Unite
candidate Ched Jennings

his campaign

the Campus,"

Please Turn To

Pae

2

* J

r
2--

KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday, April 2. I!70

TIIF,

2356 HARRODSBURG RD.

DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
Sermon by Dr. Herren

Services at 9:30 and 10:50
Transportation Provided for Students

Coll

277-617- 6

READ THE CLASSIFIED COLUMN
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or

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fA

IN

First American Tour Of This Netherlands Orchestra

ROTTERDAM
PHILHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA

MONDAY, APRIL

6

MEMORIAL COLISEUM

8:15 p.m.

Admission: All full time students by Activities and
ID cards. All others season membership cards.

Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture Scries
COLUMBUS finally
It Has Arrived! GOOD-BYand an extra movie means its time for a . . .
O

in . . . D
O

DOUBLE FEATURE!

U

Friday, Saturday, April 3, 4
GOOD-BY- E
6 and 10:30
COLUMBUS
8:00
INSIDE DAISY CLOVER

L

E

U
B

L
E

F

Sunday, April 5

E

B
E

F

6:30
8:30

V

A

T

Reduce long grill lines.

The construction of a "low-copedestrian walkway over
Limestone and Upper Streets in

st

front of

Talor

ICducation Build-

ing."

After Bright finished, the vice
presidential candidates took the
flx)r.
Waggcncr
Don Waggener, running with
Bill Dawson, cited the need for
cooperative leadership in SC. He
indicated that the Student Issue
Party composed a "team" which
would give serious attention to

students.

Stainback

Jolin Stainback, theonly independent VP candidate stressed
the lack of leadership in past
vice presidents and suggested
that an independent Vice President would keep the president
"on his toes" and working.
"Platforms are fine," Stainback said, "but they can be
easily forgotten after the elec-

tion."
Stainback indicated that one
of his major concerns was campus security, especially that of
coeds on campus after dark.
Valentine
Roger Valentine, the last
speaker and running mate of Ched
Jennings, said that he and Jennings ran as a team because they
thought they could be most effective that way.
He said that a Greek (Jennings) and an independent had
a better chance of representing
the whole campus.

$9.45
$.10

Editorial Page Editor.
Associate Editors. SporU
News Desk
Advertising, Business, Circulation

ser-

vices.

RATES

KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor. Managing Editor

Expand Student Center

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Kernel

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files

Including faculty and staff
the student director)'.

in

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second clasi
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 4986.
Begun as the Cadet in 18SM 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.
SUBSCRIPTION

E

INSIDE DAISY CLOVER
GOOD-BY- E
COLUMBUS

A
T

Continued From Pajre One
stated that although in past years
students have been split in various factions, it is time for students to "work together and to
woik for common goals" in student government.
Jennings pledged to work for
more financial aid atid scholarships for bright students who
otherwise might go elsewhere for
their schooling.
Bright
Steve Hright followed Jennings on the agenda, attacking
an earlier comment made by Bill
Dawson about "pie in the sky"
campaign promises.
Bright released his campaign
statement on student services
during his speech, he had releasee! position statements on
academic and student affairs
earlier in the week.
In his student services statement Bright called for:
Distribution of football tickets inside the Student Center
to avoid bad weather.

The Kentucky

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Candidates Speak

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MAIN

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April 2,

IT

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1970- -3

* s
rw x:
jm&m Campaign Has An Ominous Ring
r-

'

The ludicrousness of the current Student Government election
campaign was aptly demonstrated
again Wednesday night at a discussion by representative candidates in Donovan Hall. The turnout for what could have been an
extremely, enlightening event numbered about half of the 30 candidates present. Participation such

-

as this leaves us wondering whethStudent Government is failing
to respond to the students as several of the candidates are claimingor whether students are failing to respond to Student Government. At any rate, the whole business is quickly becoming a sham.
There might be some small justification in the apparent disap- er

Women And Liberation
"Women's liberation," in its
militant aspects combines a core

.....

of real grievances with an overlay
of imagined ones.
Without doubt, women who
must work do so at a disadvantage.
Even where qualifications are
equal, men get the better jobs.
Women tend to advance into supervisory positions mainly in those
occupations (such as teaching)
where they are already the dominant sex. Considering the greater
numbers of women in the work
force (30 million today) and that
nine out of 10 women will work
at some point in their lives, this
is an injustice of the first magnitude and should be corrected.
Women's liberationists are right,
too, that women constantly run
into stereotypes which would limit
their fulfillment. Among them: that
they are intellectually inferior, that
they are exclusively hearthoriented,
that their natures are yielding and
thus they are meant to follow and
not lead. Again, it is. unjust to
limit women by our expectations
for them.
We do take issue with the feminists or liberationists on other
counts, however. First, though we
do not think women can be totally

defined in domestic terms, we are
concerned with the liberationists'
backturning on family life. Fulfill- ment in the home making it a
and healthy
happy and tension-fre- e
force in society is no trivial challenge. And it's certainly not out

of date.

it is antifemale. And some even
antisex, period, under the guise
of a "unisex" movement.)
For all the liberationists' protests, their gender will continue
to bear society's children. Women
will continue to be the determinant
influence in the home and of much
that goes on outside it. And they
will continue to provoke the downright admiration of their opposites.
The effort on behalf of women's rights must go on. But it is
a mistake to think that there can
be any genuine fulfillment for women in fostering antagonism between
the two sexes.
Christian Science Monitor

Kernel
2, 1970

James W. Miller, Editor-in-ChiFrank
'Mike llerndon, Editorial Page Editor
Managing Editor
Holx-rDan Cossttt, Associate Editor
Duncan, Advertising Manager
Hob Varrone, Arts Editor
Cliip Hutcheson, Sports Editor
Cwen Ranney, Women's Eage Editor
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
,
Circulation Manager
Jimmy
Patrick Matins,
Jeuiuiie St. Clurles,
Jeunnie Leedoin, Dill Matthews, Jean llenaker
'
Assistant Managing Editors
'.

Hobt-rtson-

last-minu-

te

ominously clear. A small minority,
most of which reside in certain
Greek houses, will continue to dominate Student Government.
This is no comment on the
Greek system; at least that segment
of campus, whether through choice
or coercement, is able to form a
strong voting block. It says little,
however, for the remaining campus voice, one which is becoming
less and less audible with the passage of time.
Do students on this campus
really wish to effect a progressive
transformation, a Student Government which would reduce Greek
influence to a point congruent with
its constituency? They still can.
Vote.

.

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

t

--

familiarity with those which have
preceded it, makes the outcome

so-call-ed

THURSDAY. APRIL

S. Coots,

cam-

paign, which has consisted mainly
of the same old faces presenting
the same old answers to the same
old issues. Such is not the case
in the representative race, however, which, surprisingly, has
drawn wide and divergent viewpoints and brilliant spokesmen for
these viewpoints.
It will be no easy task for the
15 persons present at the Donovon
meeting to choose among the heartening array of student talent assembled there Wednesday night.
The 15 will at least have some
small insight into the matter; the
rest of the student body will refuse to vote at all or cast a
ballot for a familiar face
or name.
As this campaign drags on, its

Kernel Forum: the readers write

Univehsity of Kentucky

1894

pointment in the presidential

Second, we have doubts about
the "male conspiracy" against
which the militant feminists would
act. In all candor, the women's
plight is as much the result of
student search for sound representation
J.O.Ctk.S.
women's expectations as of men's.
in the Assembly
I know that I for one will sleep easier
Much of the
feminist rheUnfortunately, the race among the
tonight knowing that I am safe from all candidates for Student Government Astoric is simply antimale. (Some of villains and sinister characters.
unnoticed
been

The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

-

--

a

Who needs the Ku Klux Klan, the
Minutemen or the C.I. A.; we have our
own protection league right hereon campus. This established institution, known
as Justice On Campus for Kentucky Students, or more commonly as J.O.C.K.S.,
has once again struck with an iron hand,
or fist if you prefer, lashing out quickly
and decisively against an attempt to

question their unquestionable authority
and rights and dignity as human beings.
Two of these hardy vigilantes
accosted some questionable foreign agent as he was on his way to infiltrate the complex recently.
Let me be the first to congratulate
these lads on their fortitude. It is not
everywhere that you would find two fellows willing to take on one. And with
only their bare hands! My, my!!
I feel that it is time everyone takes
notice of this wonderful security system
which we have here and sees that
J.O.C.K.S. gets the attention it deserves.
It really has to make you feel good
to know that you can walk anywhere on
campus, even in the parking lots and
driveways, and know that you will not
be harassed by some brute who has no
respect for your rights regardless of
whether he knows what they are or not.
single-handedl-

y

K. FUTRELL
A&S Soph.

largely
prior
sembly has
to these two debates. It is unfortunate
because the new SG President will require the ideas and support of the Assembly to implement the reforms that
the Presidential candidates are not promising. And any presidential candidate who
would disrgree with this point is a very
foolish man.
The coming Assembly must be commemposed of academic, reform-minde- d
bers in order to accomplish the goals of
Presidential candidates and all students
in the academic area. Presently, the Assembly,
sembly is not very aggressive in this
area. What is needed is the election of
enough students interested (and vitally
so) in academic reform to comprise a
majority.
For this reason, I urge you to consider
carefully the election of your representatives. They are just as important (if not
more so) than the President. Keep in mind
that the academic aspects of theUniversity
will affect you not only today, but for the
rest of your life.
JIM FLECLE
A&S Freshman

A

Quote

To the author of "Prohibition

Re-

visited":

"If it is now the belief of my fellow

who call themselves the public,
that their good requires victims, then I
In the past two days, the representa- say: The public good be danmed, I will
tive race has finally hit the spotlight have no part of it!" Henry Rearden
of attention it deserves. The Donovan
ROBERT II. BROWN
and Jewell Representative Debates are
Craduate Student,
prime examples of the emergence of a
Experimental psychology

Representative Comment

men,

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April 2,

i'lX

IT

Plan Encourages Careers In Medicine

TODAY ami
TOMORROW
Today

The Society tor the Advancement of
Management 1SAM1 will hold a meeting concerning next semester'! activities on Thursday, April 2, at 3:00
p.m. In Commerce Room 222.
On Thursday, April 2 at 7 p.m.
there will be In Koom 1U2 of the
Classroom Building an open meeting
of the College of ArU and Sciences
committee to study the academic
rationale of the College's ROTC program. The meeting is being held so
that interested students may be heard
on this subject.
The UK Uiack Student Union (BSU)
will hold a Martin Luther King Memorial Service with Speaker Kev.
F. CJ. Sampson of Louisville.
The
service will be held at 7:30 p.m. in
Memori.il Hall on Thursday, April 2.

Coining Up
James L. Jones. Academic Advisor
for the Ath.rtic Department of the
Ohio Slate University, wi.l be the
Luncheon speaker at the Spring meeting of the Ohio Stale Aiunini Club
ot Lexingion. Tne meeting will be
held at tne Lex.ngion Koom, Keene-lan- d
irtace Track, Saturday, April 4th
a.m. denervations may be
at 11.

made by calling Dr. K&bel Burdge,
Mr. tugene Warren,
or Mr. Gn-nb.entr,
The M.bg Lexington Scholarship
Pageant, sponsored by the Metropolian Woman s7 Ciub, will be held
at 8 p.m. April in tne Transylvania
Co. lege Margin Auditorium.
Tne Lie par linen t ot Physiology and
folhas announced
Biophysics
lowing seminars:
Dr. S.uney ioiomon, chairman of
the Department ol Pnysiology ot the
University of New Mexico will speak
on "Hegulat.on of Single Nephron
Ciiomeru.ar titration Kates in Hats,"
at a.OJ p.m., Tuesday, April 7 in the
Meuical Center Koom
Dr. Suk Hi Kcng, professor of
of tne Department of
Piiybioiogy
of tne
University of
Physioiogy
Hawaii will speak on "The Thermoof Diving Women
regulation Function
in Korea," at ll:oO p.m. Thursday.
April 9 in Medical Center Room

High school students from
Lincoln School and Lynch, Knott
and Fayette Counties will take
part in the "Health Career Symposium" as one phase in the
Summer Program of Medical Sciences this Saturday, April 4.
e
These students, from
families, are being invited to the Medical Center in
an effort to recruit them into a
of the
health career. Twenty-fivwill work during the
participants
summer in the Med Center.
The program for Saturday includes small group tours through
the medical facilities and inter-groudiscussions between the
approximately 100 students.
These small groups will consist of one medical student to
about five
to hopefully give the visitors the chance
to learn the medical student's
viewpoint.

tem. All members Interested are urged
to attend.
A Symposium on the Philosophy of
History will be held April 10 and 11

Of the 25 to participate in the
summer employment program,
nine will be past program participants now attending the University as freshmen, according
to Tom Jarnes, the director of the
summer program of medical sciences.
med stuJames, a second-yea- r
dent, said that the program is the
recipient of a $7,000 grant of the
Student American Medical Asso-

low-incom-

the Student Center at the University of Kentucky.
Three principal lectures will be
given:
On Friday, April 10. at 3:00 p.m.
Professor William H. McNeill of the
University of Chicago will lecture on
"Patterns In History."
In

e

At 8:00 p.m., on April 10. Profes-f- T
Louis O. Mink of Wesleyan University will speak on "History and
Fiction as Modes of Comprehension."
At 10 a.m. Saturday, April 11, Professor William
H. Dray of Trent
University, Canada, will lecture on
"Historical Construction of Narra-

ciation

tive."

the

A. B.

grant-in-ai-

from
Cen-

This $20,000 total pays for all
three phases of the program: the

summer recruiting and speaking
tours, the Med Center visits, and
the summer employment.
James stated "the purpose is
to get students who are interested in medicine, instead of
those who are only looking for
summer jobs."

supple- -

Forest fires
burn holes
in the South's

Steve Miles, an independent
candidate for SG representative,
dropped out of the race Wednes-

economy.

day.
He has applied for corridor
adviser at Kirwan Tower and
said he feels he could not do
justice to both jobs.

high-schoole-

d

Chandler Medical

ter.

Drop-Ou- t

p

The Symposium Is open to the public. There is no registration fee.
Summer Jobs available. Full-tim- e
and part-tim- e.
Apply at Student Employment Program Office, Koom 559
and 563, New Office Tower Bldg.
The first annual "Teke Bluegrass
Softball Tournament" will be held
The event Is
this weekend, April
sponsored
by Tau Kappa Epsilon
Fraternity, The event Includes fifteen
other chapters from Kentucky, Ohio,
Indiana, West Virginia and Tennessee. The first round will start Saturday, April 4 at the new Cooper Drive
intramural fields at 12 noon. All are
welcome to attend.
Sunday night at the Cinema will
feature "The Silence," a film by
Ingmar Bergman, in Rooms C and D
of the Complex Commons on Sunday, April 5 at 7 p.m.
There will be a meeting Sunday,
the
April 5 at 3 p.m. in Room 206 of muStudent Center for all frustrated
sicians not satisfied with the present
musical
atmosphere of Lexington.
Bring your suggestions and come. All
constructive ideas welcome.
There will be a very important
the
meeting of on Student Civil 7Liber- 7
at
ties Union
Tuesday, April
p.m. in the Student Center. The purpose of the meeting is to plan
distribution of the "Know
Your Rights" pamphlet.

and of a

(SAMA)

mental $13,000

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Dr. Felix Strumwasser, professor of
Biology of the California Institute ofr
Technology will speak on the "Celiu-la- '
Basis of Behavior in Apiysia,
at 3:30 p.m. Friday, April 10 in the
Medical Center Koom MN-5UThe Third Floor Theatre will present the medieval
morality play,
"Everyman," in a modern rendering,
at Canterbury House, 472 Rose Siwet,
beginning April 2 at 8:30 p.m. The
play will be presented Thursdays
through Sundays lor three weeks. Stu-

dent tickets are $1.00; otners $2.00
Any student who has not applied
for the Teacner Education Program by
preregUtration cannot enroll for Education 3'Jl, a24, 329, 331 and 334.
Associated Women Students (AWS)
election will be April 8. Positions
open: President, vice president, nine
two town girl repsenalors-at-iargresentatives. Turn in appi.cutions to
in tne Office Tower or
Dean Kay
Carol Kompf.
Lances Junior Men's Honorary is
now accepting applications :rom second semester sophomores and juniors
with a 2.5 overall. Written applications should include personal histories
of the student whi.e at the UK campus. Send applications to Will H.
Green, 2111 Lansill Drive. Apt.
Dead!:!T? is April 8.
Tne University Computing
Center
(nine-hohas made available a
snort course covering
the fundamentals of the Fortran programming language.
is required lor the course to run
rorms may be obtained
April
by writing Fortran Short Course, UK
Computing Center. McVey Hall.
Hillel dinner meeting will be held
Sunday, April 5 at 5:30 p.m. at the
O Havey
.ion synagogue
between
Jersey and Maxwell Streets. Annual elections plus special guesty
Joul HennmK, graduate student in
Educational Psychology. All welcome
to attend.
There will be a special meeting of
the Physical Therapy Club Monday,
April 6 in Room HP 500 of the UK
Medical Center at 7:00 p.m. to discuss
the possibilities of the pass-fasys

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KERNEL, Thursday, April 2, 1070

SG Representative Candidates Air Views
Faf

Continued From

The SAR representative ticket
consists of Mary Rowers, Chas
SAR 'Significant
Rrannen, Steve
Cherl
"We (SAH) have been the Costanzo, Steve Rmegge, Martin
Howell,
only political party to propose Hugg, Robert A. Kennoy, Sandy
any significant legislation" in Mcllale, Guy M. Mendes III,
recent years in the Student Gov- Reed Ruchmau,
Doug Stewart,
ernment assembly, Juul claimed. Sally Viparina, Gary Williams,
"We're going to continue with Rob Walther, and Jackie Winter.
the things we've done the last