xt7rn872z46x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7rn872z46x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19651027  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 27, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 27, 1965 1965 2015 true xt7rn872z46x section xt7rn872z46x Inside Today's Kernel

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Vol. LVII, No. 33

University of Kentucky
KY., WEDNESDAY, OCT. 27, 1965

LEXINGTON,

Eight Pages

'

I

......
v

in

Id it or says AWi should follow lead
of liberal Dean: Page Four.

Tryoutt for Guignol production, "The
Greot Horp" set: Poge Three.
Centennial Bluegrass Committee
schedules fourth seminar on 'Focus on
Lexington': Page Fire.

Hoggin Hall wins intramural football
for most first downs in tie gome: Page
Sit.

James Foos art inhibit begins
Student Ctnttr: Page Three.

UK sophomore charged with circulating oltered currency: Page Seven.

Forani lated
On V let W ar
J
1

'

'

The University chapter of Students for a Democratic Society
has issued a statement that it plans to sponsor a Vietnam Forum
to discuss U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
The statement, issued to UK
ion and the free expression of all
faculty and staff members and to views will be
encouraged.
the press said the forum was
"The University as an educa7 p.m. "until at
scheduled from
tional institution is well suited to
least 1 a.m." Nov. 5 in Memorial
serve as a forum for debate and
Hall.
interchange of ideas," the stateRobert Frampton, SDS steerment said.
said the
ing committee secretary,
The format of the forum calls
group has invited the State Defor a faculty panel, as yet
to send representatives
partment
unnamed, which will question
to present the Administration's
the four speakers and comment
views on the war.
upon their presentation.
Also to represent the govern,
Time for questions from the
j ment's position is the Rev.
floor will be allowed for, after
Francis J. Corley, a member of
A panel program on "Women's Reality Dismay or president and
of the conference, Mrs. the national committee of the which the faculty members will
their own opinions, "beDelight" was held Tuesday as part of the events Caryl Kline, Mrs. June Cameron, Dr. Kate Mueller, American Friends of Vietnam, an present about 1 a.m."
ginning
of the "Women: Equal But Different" Centennial and Dean of Women, Doris Seward composed the organization supporting the U.S.
Conference. Mrs. John W. Oswald, wife of the UK panel.
policy in Vietnam.
Mr. Corley is an associate
professor of history of Southeast
Asia at St. Louis University. He
has published various articles in
M
TT
IT
the field in many scholarly
journals, and he spent a year
during 1956-5- 7 in Southeast Asia
JL
doing research under a Ford
Foundation grant.
United States participation in
SDS has also invited two
the war in Vietnam was debated
speakers opposed to the U.S. Tuesday night among Freshman
position to offer countering disColloquium members.
cussion.
The discussion was kicked off
An Indiana University profesour
the education of women is underin
problems
greatest
The two opposition speakers
by speakers Alan Shavzin, insor of higher education yesterday educating women," Dr. Mueller standing today's college girl.
are Sidney Lens, a free-lanstructor in philosophy favoring
"We must see her especially
stressed the importance educaadded.
''
journalist, author of eight books, U.S. withdrawl in Vietnam, and
She then asked how it was in her growing consciousness of
tion can play in the role of the
the latest of which is "The Futile . Lee Forst, University freshman
modern woman.
sex
possible to convince the
potential, amid rapidly Crusade:
as
and former soldier stationed in
student that she should educhanging sex standards," she
Dr. Kate Hevner Mueller, a
Vietnam.
cate herself for her life at 40 urged. "Men and marriage are American g Credo," and an editor
Liberation magaof the
guest speaker taking part in the and 50 and 60
Mr. Shavzin listed five reasons
years when she always in the forefront of her
UK
Centennial Conference, is convinced
zine; and Sanford Gottlieb, politwhy the United States should not
that any woman is attention.
"Women: Equal But Different,"
ical action director of the Nabe involved in the Vietnam War
quite "simply finished at 30."
"How to provide this genesaid, "...our problem as educational Committee for a Sane including the following:
"Today the young woman in ration with a new and different Nuclear
tors today is to learn more about
Policy and recently ad1. The United States conduct
sees
learning experience, how to give viser to an interdenominational
how the life experience which high school and college home-makin Vietnam is illegal, violating
clearly two possible roles
to discover
them the opportuntiy
society affords to men dif fers from
group of clergymen which made a the commitments made in the
and earner," commented
the inadequacy of the old estabtliat allowed to women, and then
g
mission to South
Ceneva Conference and other
Dr. Mueller. "Social pressures
lished expectancies, and to ex- Vietnam.
to counteract or eliminate all the
international agreements.
her early years leave her
plore new alternatives. Are we
factors which are unfavorable to during
2. The U.S. action is unnecPurpose of the forum was preno choice; she must marry and
ourselves afraid to have her per- sented in the
women."
opening paragraph
essary, "to a degree that makes
make a home.
and make
ceive the inadequacies,
She emphasized that these
of the statement:
it grotesque."
"But in her, middle years her own explorations?
factors can be counteracted by
"That there is a wide variance
"If the United States had
equally strong pressures both
"Do we want her to be con- of opinion about our governeducating women to recognize from within her
refrained from unilateral, unjuspersonality and
and prepare for them.
vinced that early marriage and ment's policies in Vietnam is well tified intervention, the Vietnam,
from the outside world demand
The process of eliminating
many children will not give her known. But on our campus, the war would be over today," Mr.
she come out of the home
that
them can be begun, she exfulfillment? That a late marriage controversy seems to have degenShavzin told the group.
and into the labor force.
or even a single life can be erated into name-callinplained, by educating all men,
3. The present policy in Viet"Her education," she conbut especially the leaders and the
"We feel that this is most nam is
satisfying? Society has always
"We are
tinued, "if it is fair to her, must
conscientious professionals to the
disapproved of bachelors, male or unfortunate, and we seek to estabteach her how to do both. To
weakening rather than strength-Continue- d
growing significance of these diffemale, but shall we encourage lish an atmosphere in which the
understand herself at 20, she must
on race 2
ferences in our society.
her to explore for herself?"
creation of informed public opin
be
"The educational needs of somehow 40 helped to envisage
herself at
and later."
women will vary, as men's education will not, with each decade
She reminded the several hunof life, and it is this variation
ched women present at the mornwhich is the cause of some of ing session of the closing day of
the conference that educators
Miss Thorn was chosen Thursday, just when
Students at the Northern Community College
have generally agreed on five will be represented in Centennial
the "Support Carolyn" campaign picked up speed.1
Homecoming
goals for good education. They festivities this weekend although they were not
Homecoming queens were chosen, or elected,
are: 1) practical competence in able to vote in the
at all the community colleges except Somerset,
Homecoming queen election.
earning and self support; 2) genTheir own queen, Eileen Thorn, a sophomore
according to Ellis F. Hartford, dean of the comeral knowledge of the world we from Alexandria,
munity college system.
Campbell County, will ride with
Dean Hartford said Centennial planners inThe UK Wildcats have been live in; 3) intellectual skills such seven others from the various community colleges
in the parade Friday night. The girls will also vited the system to participate in homecoming
listed as possible candidates for as reasoning, imagining, creattwo months ago.
be introduced at the dance Saturday night.
both the Orange and Cater bowls. ing; 4) awareness and understand"After we got caught up with our road show
Miss Thorn was chosen "Northern Center
The Orange Bowl listed 10 ing of self; and 5)personal inteschools under consideration for grity.
Queen" by five administrative staff members at (convocations at the community colleges) and
finished budget requests, we went to work,"
the Jan. 1 football game: Nebras"The adaptations which need the college, according to Thomas Hankins, director.
he said.
Her "election," and the fact that a queen
ka, Alabama, Louisiana State, to be made for women in contrast
Georgia Tech, Florida, Missouri, to men center especially on the would be chosen, was concealed from the students,
"All the centers were invited to choose a
Texas, Tennessee, Notre Dame, first and the second principle," Trudy Potter, sorority president at the center,
queen, and we recommended that grades be a
has charged.
and Kentucky.
she remarked.
determining factor If possible." (At least one
Thirteen teams were listed
"They didn't tell us that," she said. "That center had already chosen a queen.)
is presently
Dr. Mueller, who
sure makes me look silly after we raised all this
for the
under consideration
Na"We did it Just to cooperate with the Cenfuss over voting in the campus queen election."
Dec. 31 Cator bowl. The same editor of the Journal of the
tional Association of Women
tennial people. It has been a lot of work, but
Miss Potter was leader of a group of Northern
teams are under consideration
I believe the effort will be justified," he added.
for the Orange Bowl except for Deans and Counselors, said one students who sought the right to vote for the
"I couldn't have cared less about this election
Notre Dame with the addition of the most important aspects campus homecoming queen. They were supporting
on campus until this all (Northern's protest)
of Georgia, Aikansas,
Texas which the educators should not Carolyn Williams, who was sponsored by Weldon
came up."
forget in their efforts to improve House.
Tech, and S racuse.
!

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Frosh Group
Hears Debate
On Viet War

Educator Says:

in

Education is Important
To Woman Of Today

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left-win-

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fact-findin-

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Northern Students Get Queen

Cats May Be
Bowl Bound

* Jtttm.ai? trx?nu

2 -- Tiff.

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Orr, 27.

Colloquium Hears Views
Relations
On U--

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WINNER OF 8

ACADEMY

Satnrrlay niht will be
inorrxul. Ticket ae available
on carri-pat the CeT.teTinial
office, the Alumni Hjve, Kerv
neriy IWA Store, Campiif Book
Store, Ticket will alvo be avail-abletlie door.

"ietnamete,

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BOOK STORE

A2CCX AJCtwS

MACM1HIS

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LiEi-l'il-

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kiEufiirzi

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Ytany, by mall-1-

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The Kentucky Kernel
Th

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nVJri--;

417 East Maxwell

RUlMiii,

'

Films International Presentation

SATURDAY

l i: H

255-658-

li

PLUS

AC01UH8

CALL

Dial

;

tew

Occasion

LOUIS

r.

HELD OVER! 2ND WEEK

AWARDS

FLOWERS

I'

Neor 3rd

TYPEWRITER
SERVICE

m.

Sat, Sun., Wt4,
Sun. Cv

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DENNIS

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MIC

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257 N. Ume

.HALWM1JS.

p.m.

(OtW

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Sfcw
Mfhtfy 1:15

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USED BOOK STORE

SH0W1MG

HOW

the Horrccrrjr,?

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ia the cifei c.f
dean thrvush Frfay,
eah
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he pi7chaterj from the Ca
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at 15 cer,M per ccy,
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(AJCmifWISPRODUCIlON)

TECHNICOLOR
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* TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct.

Foose Art
Displayed

Guignol Play
the production is Charles Dickens.
"The Crass Harp" is a
comedy-fantas- y
first produced in
New York in 1932. "The play has
an exceptionally large number of
parts so there will be many opportunities for students to participate," said Dickens. "It isn't
necessary that a student have had
any experience to try out for a
Cuignol production."
Dickens also emphasized the
need for any students interested
work
in stagecraft and back-stag- e

If you haven't seen Robert
James Foose's art exhibit in the
Student Center Art Gallery, you
may have a little trouble answering this one. Foose is the
art director for University Tress.
His art exhibit, entitled "The
Maine Landscape, Winter, 1964,"
is on display until Saturday afternoon. In case you're curious, the
above description is of one of
Foose's collages entitled "Size
Foose's
exhibit
contains
several different types of art work.
Besides the collages, done with
tissue paper and polymers, there
are a series of large paintings
in polymers of impressions of
Maine landscapes. The yellows,
whites, and light blues of these
paintings create a striking contrast to the bright reds, greens,
and blues of the collages.
An even greater contrast to
both types of art work is brought
out by two linoleum prints which
are part of a portfolio on the
Amish people which Foose has
completed.
Foose is a 1963 graduate of
UK. He has attended art schools
in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts."
The Student Center Art
Callery is open Monday through
Friday from 11-- 1 p.m. and on
Monday, Thursday and Friday
from 7 p.m. The next exhibit
will be a photography exhibit
by Dorothea Lange.

255-333- 5

TENNIS SWEATERS
The UK Rage
For Him
For Her
Tissue paper and polymers make up a collage entitled "Size 7"
which is part of Robert James Foose's art exhibit now on display in the Student Center Art Callery. Foose is art director for
University Press. His exhibit may be seen until Saturday.

DO COME

IN AND BROWSE

IFTS
Phone

266-454-

GET ACQUAINTED

mmm m

DIXIE-AN- N

6

HAND PAINTED GIFTS A SPECIALTY
Fraternity, Sorority Crest andor Symbols
Painted On Gift Items
854

EAST HIGH (Next Doer

Silver Gifts

to the Saratoga)

so appropriate
whatever
U
the occasion

$

Q95

GiRls XORraS,

OppoSitC

Fed.

Lovely
WATCH BANDS
JEWELRY

JJ

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-

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c

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ft

r

'V- -.

'

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DODSON
WATCH SHOP
254-126-

PiVf

24S S. Limt
Phone

A YARN SHOP

IWEDRUC3

'use the

CAMPUS
BEE

252-758- 8

4--

m

to participate. These students
should get in touch with Charles
Crimsley, technical director for
the Cuignol Theatre.
The Cuignol Theatre's production of Tennessee William's
drama "A Streetcar Named Desire" opens tonight at 8:30.
Tickets are on sale at the box
office and reservations can be
made by phoning 2411. Performances will be given nightly Wednesday through Sunday.

121 Walton
Avenua
Lexington, Ky.
Phone

7."

Fine Watch Repairing
110 N. UPPER ST.
6
Phone

Set

Try-Out- s

Try-out-

$50?

WATCHES
DIAMONDS

1965- -3

s
for the Cuignol Theatre's next production "The Crass
Harp" by Truman Capote will be held Monday and Tuesday,
Nov. 1 and 2, at 7:30 p.m. in the Cuignol Theatre. Director for

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-

27,

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* "Fin Still Bothered

Sweeping Change Needed
Dean of
University's
Women has said she wants to "give
a girl freedom to use her good judgment" in setting curfews for
women's dormitory residents.
Now all that is needed to abolish
the "locking the stable" hour for
e
adult women is for the
AWS to follow the lead
liberal Dean of Women.
of their
With women students now able
accommodato choose
tions if they prefer, the dormitory
curfew seems obsolete. How the
University can make a student responsible for her own personal
actions, on the one hand, andover-se- e
her curfew obedience with the
other is somewhat contradictory.
It is ironic that resistance to
removal of the barrier comes from
a student representative group
rather than Administrative officials.
Perhaps the majority of UK
women prefer to be in the dormitory
at 10:30 p.m. on week nights.
Nothing could prevent them from
returning then, or at 9 p.m. or
7:30 p.m. or any time they choose.
But the woman student who
does not want or need to keep the
The

perenially-conservativ-

off-camp-

II

curfew should not be hurt by the
ruling.
Quite illogical, too, is the
assumption that when a woman has
earned 85 credit hours or attained
the age of 21 (a misconception reinforced by prevailing societal
norms), she is more "mature" and
therefore more deserving of signing
out for late hour permission.

n

111

'

I

ID

ut

Supposedly the University does
not harbor ancient society-base- d
discriminations against women,
placing them under special restrictions. Dormitory rules do just this,
however.
We urge AWS to abolish the web
of regulations engulfing UK coeds
living in dormitories and sorority
houses.

Faculty Unconcern

Reader Discusses Acts
Of Police In Lexington

whose valor and devotion to justice
showed its value last Saturday
night.
Some troublemakers found fit
to upset the status quo by having
an interacial party, attended by
the typical no good type of college
students, some of whom dress differently and have long hair. Little
did these
consider
the feelings of the parking lot,
gas station attendants across the
street who live respectable lives
and never participate in nor condone such behavior. These fine
working attendants did what they
had to under such unacceptable
circumstances. So as to live with
their consciences, these attendants
upheld morality by assaulting one
of the immoral party goers. Later,
these fine examples of our working
class found that more extreme measures were needed to aid our society.
A man and his wife left the
party and went to their car in the
parking lot. The attendants patriotically harrassed these agitators
by calling them many names, least
lurid and most repeated of whicn
was "nigger lover." One of the
attendants, to avoid trouble,
brandished a large monkey wrench.
This was necessary since one never
knows what "nigger lovers" may
do.
Several came out to see what
was happening. At this moment
our loyal Lexington Police force
swarmed over the parking lot
waving clubs and approached the
beatniks and tried to disperse them.

'

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The curfew system, along with
the intrusive sign-oprocedure, is
unfair in that the rule
especially
applies to only a small segment of
the student body, women students
living in dormitories and sorority
houses. Male students living in
University-owne- d
housing have
been free from such regulalong
tions.

Letter to the Editor

To The Editor:
As a new resident of Lexington,
I want to express my appreciation
for this town's effective police force,

-

I

ly One I Had Over A Year Ago"

One of the main causes of current of them spoke out at the Bitch-In- ,
student unrest is their traditional and only one showed up at the
exclusion from educational policyJoint Budget Committee demonThe students at Berkeley stration Friday, although the Commaking.
were asking not only for free speech mittee has strong influence over the
Not willing to accept supposed
but an overhaul, of the Multisize of professorial pay envelopes.
without question, (an act
injustice
versity's traditional methods of
We, as students, have always
which most fine Americans nowteaching in the Liberal Arts. Many
fought for higher pay for our teachadays know is wrong), these tennis
of the complaints at the Bitch-I- n
spoiled brats asked here also centered around the as- - ers, because we like to envision
the University as a community of
for more trouble. They tried to
sembly line system of producing.
scholars, faculty and students, and
the atexplain to the police that
Bachelor of Arts graduates.
students as senior and junior partattendants were harrassing and
Student complaints have been
ners. Our apparent naivety is
tacking an innocent couple.
consistent, but faculty reaction to
.:"
to acknowledge.
Before two or three words could
them has been vastly different at painful
be spoken, two long hair radicals
The possible reasons for lack
the two schools. The Berkeley
were arrested and the mission of faculty supported the students the of faculty support are also painful
the parking lot attendants was not faculty here has been mute. None to ponder. Is it all to undignified?
Are they too busy with
in vain. The rest of the "nigger
lovers" learned their lesson. The
politics to bother
immoral gathering was broken up
about students? Or, worst of all,
and the agitators learned that the
are they happy with the present
Addressing new students at the
law of the monkey wrench is to
structure?
University of Maryland this fall,
be respected, not questioned.
University President Wilson II.
Whatever the case, those we
The citizens of Lexington can
Elkins told them they were welcome have respected and looked to for
feel safe in knowing that such
at the university only if they were leadership have been made conunacceptable disregard for the gray willing to abide by "regularly
spicuous by their absence.
flannel 11th commandment receives
established order."
Apparently our partners have
the wrath of the monkey wrench,
This we're afraid is the view of silently sold out.
bulwarked
too many educators in all types of
by an intelligent,
The Colorado Daily
devoted police force. Let
ethical,
schools.
University of Colorado
the "nigger lovers" go somewhere
When they learn, if they ever
else (further North) for their subdo, that much in education is
versive activities. It's pinkos like
seeking to change the "regularly
them who freed the slaves.
established order," perhaps they'll
There are two times when you
ALLEN RUBIN
be a little more tolerant with never can tell what is going to
Graduate Student In Psychology student impatience with that order.
happen. One is when a man takes
his first drink; and the other is
when a woman takes her latest.
-- O. Henry
shoe-weari-

I

intra-departmen-

On, Great Order

Kernels

The Kentucky Kernel

ESTABLISHED

1894

The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

WEDNESDAY,
W'ALTtH

Linua Mills, Executive Editor

Sally Sixll, Neu$ Editor

Page Editor

Tom FiNME, Advertising

Rosenthal,

OCT. 27, 1965

f

Kenneth IIosuns,
Kenneth Chun, Amniate Editor
llkNHY

CayCuh. Woinen$

Chant,

Editor-in-Chie-

jll)V Chisham,
Sport t Editor

AssiK-iat-

Managing Editor

Sens Editor

Makcahet Bauey, Arts Editor

Business Staff
Maruigi--

r

Mahvin Huncate, Circulation Matuiger

Blessed is the man who, having
nothing to say, abstains from giving
in words evidence of the fact.
George Eliot
He who reflects on another
man's want of breeding shows he
wants it as much himself.
Tlutarcli

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct. 27,

"pSV T

?

"Inside Report"

rmmt ill

1

I

1965- -5

By Rowland Evans ami Robert Novak

Shows About-Fac- e
Peking
On Afro-Asia- n
Conference
One small fact dramatizes the
decline
in Red
precipitous
China's international prestige today: Peking's sudden, almost
about-fac- e
hysterical
against
going ahead with the second
n
conference now scheduled to begin in Algiers on
Nov. 5.
Last summer when a coup
d'etat threw out Ahmed Ben Bella
as Algerian dictator, the Chinese
were beside themselves not to
let the coup force a postponement
n
of the
conference.
With the United States then
under growing world pressure to
end the war in Vietnam, Chinese
Communists saw the conference
as a "Hate U.S.A." field day.
China lost, however. The conference was put off to November.
But what has happened now?
Wherever the Chinese Communists still have political credit in
the bank, they are frantically
lobbying to postpone as long as
possible the Nov. 5 conference.
As one diplomat of a neutralist
African nation told us: "The
Chinese know that any
resolution coming out
Afro-Asia-

Afro-Asia-

ANP

JUSTrgOOKSTOZE

GAVE

YOU THE SUPPLY

U5T FOK THI9 COtMZee?''

Fourth Seminar Begins
On Tocus On Lexington9
Blue Crass Centennial Committee's seminar on how
The
Lexington can provide better cultural activities and facilities for
young people, will begin at 7:30 p.m. today in UK's Student
Center theatre.
The Junior League of Lex
Department, Dr. Holman Hamilington in conjunction with the ton, professor of history at UK,
University is sponsoring the Faul Little, Kentucky Youth
fourth seminar in a series of six Council, and Robert Ilillen-meycscheduled dealing with, "Focus
member of the board of
on Lexington."
trustees of UK.
The program will feature a
panel discussion and a movie.
TYPEWRITERS
The panel will be made up of
FOR RENT
director of the
Joe M. Beach,
DIXIE CASH REGISTER CO.,
Clay Orchestra, Grace
Henry
Inc.
Ewcn, Supervisor, FayettcCoun-t- y
UNDERWOOD
ELECTRIC, IBM,
School art program, John
MANUALS
ALL MAKES
124 N. Broadway
9
Ph.
Recreation
Ccttlcr, Lexington

-

r

of the conference would hit them
as well as you."

the Algiers conference: Peking's
heavy-hande- d
power politics in
the
African
states.
newly-independe-

This abrupt change in China's
n
standing among the
countries is only partly explained
by events in Asia. There, Peking's:
backing of Pakistan in the Kashmir war was a blatant effort to
make a bad situation worse, conducted in so public a fashion that
no country could ignore its implications. When Peking actually
sent India an ultimatum, China
virtually admitted its long-rang- e
objective: chaos in the Indian
subcontinent.
Afro-Asia-

Add up all this and here is
the inescapable conclusion: apart
from its situation at home, Communist China is making grave
errors abroad and now finds itself
embarrassingly overextended in
n
world politics. If the
conference proceeds on schedule
in Algiers next month despite
frantic Chinese efforts, this embarrassment probably will show
through.
Afro-Asia-

the political
Accordingly,
ground already had been cut out
from under Peking when an abortive coup d'etat, backed by local
Communists, rocked Indonesia
on Sept. 30. China's public conduct, following the failure of the
Indonesian coup, has hardened
resistance to Peking.
These events in Asia, so
humiliating to the Chinese Communists, are far better known
than a second, more subtle reason
for China's pressure to postpone"

LEXINGTON
YELLOW CAB
Inc.
Radio Equipped
DIAL
252-22- 30

f

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