xt7sbc3sxn66 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7sbc3sxn66/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19681015  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 15, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 15, 1968 1968 2015 true xt7sbc3sxn66 section xt7sbc3sxn66 Tie Kentucky Kemnel
The South's Outstanding College Daily

Tuesday Evening, Oct.

15, 1968

UNIVERSITY

OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LX, No. 35

FACULTY SENATE
By DANA EWELL
Assistant Managing Editor
The University Senate granted
its permission Monday afternoon
for an
convocation
for Fred Hal stead,
Socialist
Workers Party presidential candidate.
The senate also approved a
for elective
pass-fa- il
option
courses along with a reduction
in freshman composition require-changin the Ceneral Studies
curriculum for Arts and Sciences
freshmen and sophomores.
In connection with the pass--,
fail option, the University Senate made an exception for Arts
and Sciences 300,
Culture, so that students enrolled
in the class this semester may
take it on a pass-fa- il
basis if
they so designate by Oct. 18.
More than 100 students had
enrolled in the course last semester under the assumption that
they would be graded on the pass-fa- il
system. The 12 faculty members, who are teaching the course,
realized this fall that the system, which was passed yesterday, had not yet been approved
by the University Senate, the final
authority on all curriculum

Halstead Talk Approved;
Curriculum Changes Pass

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Kernel Photos by Howard Mason

'Happy'
Wasn't

"I cannot even conceive a draft dodger,"
former governor A. B. Chandler told 250 law
students Monday night. "Those of us who
are not afraid to die are the ones who are
worth living."

About 20 minutes before the
senate adjourned at 6 p.m. the
Halstead conovocation petition
was brought before the senate.
Prior to the meeting, students,
some of them members of the
SDS, passed out copies of the
petition to faculty members as
they filed into the Law Building courtroom.
Dr. Joseph Engelberg of the
College of Medicine, former SDS
faculty adviser, said the petition
was endorsed by the Students
for Democratic Society, Community Alliance for Responsible
Social Action (CARSA), United
Campus Christian Fellowship
(UCCF) and the Lexington Peace
Council.
The SDS has already invited
Halstead to the campus Sunday,
Oct. 27, to speak in the Student
Center Grand Ballroom, but they
fell that the Socialist Workers
candidate deserved the same
treatment as the other three presidential candidates whowill be
listed on the Kentucky ballot in
November.

Chandler Says Was Appointed

'To Clean Up This Mess' At UK
By ELLEN ESSIC
Kernel Staff Writer
When former Kentucky Governor A.B. ("Happy") Chandler
addressed the Student Bar Association Monday night, he offered quite a variety of opinions:
Protesters sltould go to Russia,
never hit a lady with your hat
on, ride your bicycle until you
fall off, and when you dig a
dry hole, don't fill it up with
tears.
Speaking at their Speaker's
Forum to an audience of about
250 Chandler deplored the fact
that the American press always
publishes America's faults. "We
should publicize the good things
that this country is doing.
"I don't agree with having
open hearings on the Vietnam
war, either." "We shouldn't go
out of our way to tell the people
of the world what we're doing
wrong," he continued. "You
don't see any other countries
doing that!"
Chandler had a word for protesters, too. "Co to Russia and
try to protest. See if they listen
to you over there." He added,
"We all have the right to protest
as long as it is in an orderly
fashion. But when you retreat
from the law, what ground do you
have left to stand on?"

TD Test
tuberculin skin tests
at the University Health Service
are scheduled for Monday and
Tuesday between 8 a.m. and
5 p.m.
Some 900 freshmen and transfer students have failed to meet
the skin test and interpretation
requirements set by the University.
No additional make-udays
will be set to meet this
Make-u- p

p

On Vietnam Chandler commented, "This war has mortgaged our futures. I want to get
out at the earliest possible
moment. I agreed with Gen.
. . . when he said that
America ought not to become involved in a land war in Asia. This
country should have taken his
Mac-Arth-

ur

advice."

"I would like to see this coun-

the nations
of the world to live in peace," he
said. "But we have to leam to
live in peace at home first."
.
Chandler told his audience
that when people ask when he
try help arrange for

will retire, he replies, "I'm going
to ride my bicycle until I fall
off."
Members of the audience had
questions for the former governor:
Happy Is Questioned
Who will win the presidential
election? "Richard Nixon."
"I've heard that Nixon can
count on some 125,000 votes from
Kentuckians with a vested interest in this state's government."
"Why were you appointed by
Cov. Nunn to the Board of Trustees?" one student asked.
"Cov. Nunn asked me to come
up here and help straighten out
the mess, and that's exactly what
I'm doing." He added, "I don't
care to say what 'the mess' is."
How will Wallace andLeMay
fare in Kentucky in the election?
"They may do fairly well, unless
the other two parties flex their
muscles. Wallace is strong on law
and order.
"I like policemen, too, but I
wouldn't run over anybody. I
can't say that I would recommend
Ceorge Wallace for president."

What do you have to say about
Kentucky's U.S. Senate candidates? "I'm a Kentucky gentleman. I would never hit a lady
with my hat on."
In response to the question of
how a student should lodge a protest with the school, Chandler
answered heatedly, "If you're
going to protest, do it through
the proper channels. First take
it to the president; then to the
Board of Trustees.
"If you still have no solution
to your problem, I say, go to
another school." He continued,
"When I was a wildcat oil driller,
I learned that when I dug a dry
hole, I didn't stand there and fill
it with tears; I moved my digger
to another hole!"
Dodgers Inconceivable
When asked what the penshould be,
alties for
Chandler gave another heated response: "I cannot even conceive
Continued on Pace 8, CoL 4
draft-dodge-

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The University, in connection
with Associated Women Students
and the respective political student groups, extended invitations
to Richard Nixon, Hubert Humphrey and George Wallace, the
last of whom appeared in a
convocation Sept. 14.
Dr. Robert Sedler of the Law
College spoke in behalf of the
petition. "Once we have extended
invitations to the other three
candidates we are required to
treat like people equally. I can
see no rational or legal reason
to justify not inviting Halstead."
The question of majority and
minority party candidates arose
when Dr. Stuart Forth, vice president for student affairs, spoke
in behalf of Interim President
A. D. Kirwan, who was absent
from the meeting.
"President Kirwan does not
favor the convocation because
he does not consider Halstead
a major candidate, but he presumably will send the invitation
if the senate grants its approval."
Says Wallace Not
Major Candidate
Sheryl Snyder, student representative to the senate, reminded
the senate that George Wallace
was not a major party candidate
either.
"His party did not poll 20 percent of the vote in the last election, which is required by Kentucky statute before a party is
considered major. By inviting
him, we set ourselves up as judges
of the political potency of the
i various
parties and candidates."
Snyder's statement was followed by a small round of applause.
The majority of the two-homeeting was spent in debate over
the Undergraduate Council's proposals for changes in the Ceneral Studies requirements.
Reviews Curriculum Changes
The Undergraduate Council
is a faculty committee of the
senate wliich has the responsibility of reviewing all curriculum
changes, proposed by the various
colleges, before they are presented to the senate as a whole.
Although several amendments
course
specific
concerning
choices in the eight areas of
liberal arts concentration were
proposed, all but one were defeated.
Continued on Pate 8, Col. 1
cam-puswi-

Berkeley Students Hope Faculty-WilDefy Regents9 Credit Ruling
l

By PHIL SEMAS
BERKELEY (CPS)
Cleaver

made

-

his first

appearance as a lecturer at the

University of California this
week, but the Berkeley campus
may still see a confrontation between students and administration, probably after the Board
of Regents meets October 17 and
18.

In a resolution aimed specifIt Feels Fine
ically at Black Panther and
How does it feel to be asCleaver, the regents have
sociated with the COP after so limited all outside lecturers withmany years as a Democrat? "It out instructional titles to one
feels just fine . . .The only trouble classroom appearance. Any more
I had came from Democrats." than that will result in removal

of credit for the course. Cleaver
is scheduled to give the second
of 10 scheduled lectures next
week.
About 800 students
met
Wednesday night and planned a
course of action aimed at challenging the regents' decision.
They decided to:
Decisions
hold a mass rally Friday in
support of the 100 students who
are taking the Cleaver course,
known as Social Analysis 130X.
Students must file lists of courses
by Friday and any lists which
contain 130X will have the course
ignored or crossed off their sched

ules. The students plan to march
to Sproul Hall (the administration building) with the students
to turn in their study lists. The
students in the course have asked
that the demonstration be peaceful.
f demand that faculty members publicly grant credit for
139X either as special sections
of other courses or as independent
study. More than 100 professors
have already agreed to do this.
demand that faculty members and teaching assistants defy
the Regents' ruling by bringing
In outside, lecturers ' next wck
Continued . r

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Oct.

15, 1908

Congress Shortchanges Students On Loans
By

JOHN ZEII

ges
WASHINGTON
and universities requested
$217 million for National Defense
(CPS)-CoI-le-

Education Act (NDEA) loans this
Financial aid officers at some
scliools approved students' reyear, but federal budget-maker- s
would only let them have $190 quests based on the smaller
million.
figure, only to find out later

WORLD REPORT
From the Wire of the Associated

Press

sive Jay Silvester, drove forward
INTERNATIONAL
toward an expected medal harHAMBURG, Germany-D- er
Spiegel published today what it vest at the 1968 Cames.
said were the minutes of a disPRAGUE
Premier Oldrich
cordant secret talk held in Prague Cemik went back to Moscow
between Soviet Deputy Foreign today for more talks with Soviet
Minister Vasily Kuznetsov and leaders.
Radio Prague said Cemik
Josef Smrkovsky, president of the
Czechoslovak Parliament.
would "discuss some of the quesThe West German news mag- tions which are the result of the
azine quoted Smrkovsky, one of Moscow Protocol" between Czethe leaders of Prague's
choslovakia
and the Soviet
liberalization drive, as Union.
SALISBURY, Rhodesia -telling the impatient Kuznetsov
that the psychology and voice of Prime Minister Ian Smtih has
the Czechoslovak people cannot returned home from his unsucbe ignored in attempting to imcessful Gibraltar talks with Brpose Moscow's demands for strict itain's Harold Wilson with his
Communist Party controls.
breakaway colony at a turning
MEXICO CITY
Spencer point.
Settlement of the
Haywood, an unsung
collegian, paced the U.S. constitutional deadlock with Bribasketball team to its 68th con- tain holds the promise of an
secutive Olympic victory Moneconomic boom. Continued ecoday and the American track and nomic sanctions against his unfield contingent, sparked by mas- - recognized government point to
spreading economic stagnation.
PERTH, Australia A severe
earthquake hit a wide area around
Perth this morning, but first reports said the only casualties were
persons cut by broken windows
and crockery. Perth, the capital
of Western Australia, is a city of
nearly 600,000 people on the
southwest coast.
NATIONAL
LOS ANGELES-- A trial date
of Dec. 9 was set today for Sirhan
Bishara Sirhan, the young Jordanian charged with murdering Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy.
113 Ask your postman.
The court reset the trial after
Look at the Zip Map in
Sirhan's defense attorney said
the business pages of your
his
could not be ready
phone book.
for the scheduled date of Nov. 1.
EI Call your post office.
WASHINGTON-F- or
the first
time in history, the Supreme
Always include your Zip
Court agreed today to decide if
Code in your return address
servicemen can be
so others can easily Zip mail
for crimes committed on
to you.
leave and t.
advertising contributed
The Justice Department had
for the public good
argued against Supreme Court
consideration. It took the position that soldiers and sailors remain under military jurisdiction
even when they are off duty.
CUMMINS PRISON FARM,
Ark. -- Prison Supt. Victor C. Urban said today that 23 prison

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post-Janua-

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Three
easy ways
to get YOUR

Zip
Code J

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court-martial-

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Ticket Prices
For Concert
Confusion has resulted over
prices for the Andy Williams Concert to be held October 27 in
Memorial Coliseum.
Earlier The Kernel printed a
story stating that faculty prices
were undetermined as to regular
or student rates.
According to the Student Activities Board, prices for faculty
and staff will be $3.75, $3.25 and
$2.75. Prices for students are fifty
cents lower on each listing.

-

STRAND

c

HAM
DINNER

"An unprecedented

psychedelic roller
coaster of an
experience."

I

t

with Hawaiian
pineapple, served
with tossed salad,
and french fries
a regular
I
$1.55 value

J
f

6
Lexington
Locations

-

WASHINGTON (AP)
The percentage of Blacks fighting in
percentage of black servicemen the war has risen a bit.
killed in Vietnam has been
These developments are reflected in a new Pentagon sumdropped slightly. Meanwhile, the
mary of black participation in

Y

Center cut ham
steak broiled

-

year" and alerted students that

less NDEA money would be available. He relied on an "insured
loan" program through private
banks that the state Just implemented.
Congress Lowers Figure
In March, the Office of Education notified financial aid officers at the 1800 schools in the
NDEA program that the tentaallocation would be
tive 1968-6- 9
$190 million. But Congress stalled
on approving the legislation containing the appropriation. Finally last summer, a continuing resolution granting the $184 million
was passed. In August, OE notified schools that the regular allocation would be that lower
figure.
Will Hollingsworth, chief of
the NDEA program management
'Binding Situation'
section at the Office of Educa"It's- - a very binding situation, says the cut is "so minor"
tion," says Vanderbilt's loan dithat there is not "much impact."
rector Cannon Mayes. "The cut Apparently not many schools
is causing us, students, and parhave had to cut off any students'
ents to do a good bit of scramentire NDEA loans. But the
bling." Mayes said because of money being used to make up
the cut there would be no money for the cut might have gone to
available for NDEA loans next others.
summer session. And, because
Under provisions of the Namoney is being used for small tional Defense Education Act,
university loan funds to partly a student may borrow up to
make up for the cut, adverse ef$1,000 each academic year to a
fects might be felt next year. maximum of $5,000. Graduate
and professional students may
The University of Kentucky
borrow as much as $2,500 a year
probably will not be able to approve new applications for NDEA up to $10,000. The repayment
loans next semester, and it may period and interest do not begin
until nine months after the stunot be able to meet all present
dent end his studies. Interest is
commitments. Student aid directhree percent on the unpaid baltor James E. Ingle says it deon collections from loans ance, with repayment spread over
pends
10 years.
due for repayment.
The act's "forgiveness" proviThe Office of Education lets sion allows cancellation of up to
schools use a portion of money one-ha- lf
the loan if the borrower
they collect on payable loans becomes a
e
teacher at the
for new loans. That policy has
rate of 10 percent for each year
kept the University of South Daof service. Borrowers who teach
kota from having to deny new handicapped children or in cerNDEA loans this semester. Neartain areas may qualify for further
ly $5,000 was cut from its origiforgiveness.
nal allocation, but aid director
Study Delays Repayment
Doug Steckler avoided problems
"not making any promises I
by
Repayment is delayed if the
might not be able to keep." student resumes study, or serves
in the Armed Forces, VISTA, or
Schools in 45 states are afthe Peace Corps.
fected by the federal cut. Caliis based primarily
fornia, Hawaii, Maryland, Texas, on Eligibility the
need, with
college deciding
and Utah weren't hit because
the merits of individual cases. A
from schools in those
requests
student is asked to list his exstates were under the limits set
pected income for the semester
in the Office of Education's
with his costs. All or a portion
formula for assistance.
of the deficit may then be granted.
The director of student aid
Since the loan program was
at the University of New Mexiauthorized in 1958, more than a
million students have borrowed
co, Charles Sheeman, said he
expected it would be a "tough over $1 billion.
be only $186 million nearly $5
million less than last year.
That's all Congress would approve, despite the earlierpromise
from the Office of Education.
The shortage of NDEA funds
has resulted in some students'
losing loans they thought they
would have. Others found their
loans cut when they returned
to school this year. Financial
aid programs elsewhere are being crimped.
At Vanderbilt University in
Nashville, for example, the student aid office absorbed the general allocation cut by whacking
off about ten percent from each
loan going to about 1500 students.

full-tim-

Fewer Blacks Dying In Vietnam But More Are There

five till nine
dining room only

Xhawaiian

inmates were wounded by shotgun blasts fired into their ranks
by guards trying to force them
to go to work in the prison farm
fields.
The inmates who were wounded were among about 75 penned
in a fenced enclosure when the
burst of shooting was loosed.
WASHINGTON
Vice President Hubert II. Humphrey has
reserved one hour of prime television time for next Sunday night
and has invited Richard M. Nixon
and George C. Wallace to share
it with him in a three-wa-y
debate.
Wallace has accepted Humphrey's invitation. Wallace said
Monday it was his understanding
that Humphrey's offer was contingent on all three presidential
contenders participating.
CHICAGO
More than 20
high schools were depleted by
absenteeism Monday as a city-wid-e
boycott by Negro students
picked up some momentum.
The Negro students are decourses
manding
with Negro teachers to honor
such Negro leaders as Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and
W. E. B. DuBois.
WASHINGTON-- A
new contract providing $7 per day in
wage increases over a three-yeperiod for 80,000 soft coal miners
was signed today.
"This is the best contract ever
negotiated," said W.A. "Tony"
Boyle, president of the United
Mine Workers Union, in signing
the contract with the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association.

that the final allocation would

Lift
MGM

wumti STANLEY

KUBRICK PRODUCTION

lit'

SUPER

PANAVISI0N.

(dhH

CINEMA

NOW SHOWING!

66 Pure

lunacy...

uproariously
funny!"
IME
III.
mil) MOST
-T-

the armed

forces. The summary,
June 30. This was .7 percent
setting forth the situation as of greater than the 9.8 percent as
became available Friof Dec. 31, 19G7.
For purposes of this report
day.
It shows as of June 30 that the Pentagon counts all of the
13.7 percent of the 25,616 Amerfighting men in Vietnam, Thaiican troops killed in action from land and aboard U.S. naval ves19G1 until that date were black.
sels in waters off North VietThis represents a decline of .4 nam. By that standard, there
percent from the 14.1 percent were 629,729 U.S. servicemen inlevel of black battle deaths revolved in the war as of June 30.
The Pentagon began making
ported up to the end of 1967.
The ratio of Blacks serving special studies of black partiin the Vietnam war stood at cipation in the war after some
10.5 percent of the total as of black leaders charged that Negro servicemen were bearing a
the
The Kentucky IEitNEL heavier share ofthan fighting role
whites.
proportionately
mid-196-

8,

The Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky 40300. becond class
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Mailed five tunes weekly during the
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Begun as the Cadet m lt4 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1S15.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
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Advertising, Business, Circulation iJltf

UN Day Oct. 24

An organization for members
of different nationalities, the Cosmopolitan Club will host a "U.
N. Day" Thursday, Oct. 24, at
7:30 p.m. in lUxmi 215 of the
Student Center.
A topic, "The Functions of
the United Nations Ideals and
Heality Contrasted," will be discussed by Dr. Hubert Viles, Associate Dean of the College of
Law, Dr. Peter Nixdolf, political
science, and Dr. Alfonso Meirn,
behavior science.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Oct.

15, I9G8- -3

Berkeley Plans To Confront Regents
On Crediting Cleaver's Course
Continued from Vage One
for more than one appearance,
without seeking special titles for
them.
(The regents' ruling has endangered many courses which
rely heavily on outside professionals without academic titles.
Some professors have planned
to get around this by asking
for special titles for outside lecturers. Chancellor Roger Heyns
has said he would approve such
titles. This has angered the students who say such a special
title should also be granted to
Cleaver. "The faculty must reject the scab system," their resolution said.)

e
takeover possible.
Cleaver's first lecture was
mild. "I'm not here to be a
demagogue," he announced as
the lecture opened. Reporters
were barred from the classroom,
but several got in anyway and
heard the Black Panther deliver
a fairly dispassionate analysis of

lumbia-styl-

Students

racism.

applauded

Cleaver at the end of the lecture,
but he told them, "Now, students, this is a classroom. You
can bring me apples, but no ap-

plause."

Unhappy With Turnout
Course sponsors were unhappy with the turnout for the
lecture. Besides the 100 students
registered for the course, another
Unite Campus Against Regents 400 had signed up as auditors,
The students plan to present but only about 300 students heard
a list of the courses which have the lecture.
violated the decision to the reThe administration made two
gents and demand a decision concessions this week in an atfrom them. Many students ex- tempt to mollify the students.
pect the regents to fire the pro- Heyns reversed an earlier decifessors and teaching assistants sion and decided to grant the
involved, and hope this will unite students a room in which to
the campus against the regents. hold the class.
And officials of the College
hold another mass meeting
after the regents meet to decide of Letters and Science, the main
on a course of action based on undergraduate college, said seven
the regents' decision. The stu- and not 12 hours would be condents rejected committing them- sidered a full load for students
selves to "mass militant action" taking the Cleaver course (which
before the meeting, but no one was to have been offered for five
expects the regents, who almost credits). The university also plans
banned Cleaver from the cam- to certify to draft boards that
pus entirely, to take a more lib- students taking seven hours plus
e
eral position. Many radicals hope the Cleaver course are
the regents' action will unite stu- students.
But students still want credit
dents and faculty, making a Co
full-tim-

TODAY and
TOMORROW
The deadline for announcement l
p.m. two daya prior to the flrat
publication of Itema in thia column.
7:30

Today
Recent paintings of Suzudi will be
exhibited from October 13 to November 10 in the Art Gallery of the Fine
ArU Building. The gallery is open
Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to
5 p.m. and on Saturday and Sunday
from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
The Student Center Coffee House
will present "Patchett and Tarses" in
the Student Center Grille from 8 to
9 p.m. Monday through Thursday and
at 8:30, 9:30 and 10:30 on Friday night.
Student Center
applications
are being accepted in Room 203 of the
Student Center until Thursday. Oct. 17.
"Study of Oils" by Ben Mahmaud
is on display at the Student Center
Art Gallery. The exhibit will run
25.
through October will have its
Angel Flight
Monday. Tuesday, and Wednesday in
Baker Hall from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m.
"The Invisible Empire (Ku Klux
Klan)" will be shown at the Koinania
House at 412 Rose Lane. It will be
open to the public and the admission
is free.
The draft Counseling Service provided by local reserve officers will be
available for students every Tuesday
and Thursday afternoon in 5 Room 307
to 7 p.m.
of the Student Center from
try-ou- ts

Tomorrow
The International Classics series will
present "Darling" on Wednesday and
Center at
in the
Thursday AdmissionStudent cents.
is 50
7:30 p.m.
Fred Dart will give an euphonium
recital in the Agricultural auditorium
on Wednesday.

Coming Up
Any student who earned high school
credit in a foreign language and who
this spring
is planning to enroll
semester for the first time in college
must take a placein that language
ment examination before
Applications for the examination
must be made in the University TestOld AgriCenter, Room 304-ing
culture Bldg., not later than Monday,
Oct. 21. liHiB.
Friday, October 19 is the deadline
to return applications for membership to Keys Honorary to Tim Futrell,

410 Rose Lane. Prerequisites include:
sophomore standing, 3.0 average, and
campus activities.
The Student Center Board will present "Georgy Girl" on Friday and
and on
Saturday at 6:30 and 9:15, 50 cents.
Sunday at 3:00. Admission is

UK riacement Service
Register on Wednesday for an apn Thursday with National
Cash Register Co. Elec. E., Engr. MeMech. E. (all degrees); Acchanics,
counting, Economics (B.S., M.S.);
Bus. Adm., Computer Science, English, Journalism (B.S.); Chemistry,
Math, Physics (all degrees); MBA.
Register Wednesday for an appoint-"- '
ment on Friday with Tufts Univerand
sity The Fletcher School of LawPolitDip'.omacy Economics, History,
ical Science (B.S.).
Register Wednesday for an appointment Thursday with U.S. Naval Missile Center Check schedule book for

pointment

detail.

Wednesday

for an appoint-

Register
ment on Thursday or Friday with
Chemicals and

Union Carbide Corp.
Plastics Division Check schedule book
for details.
Register Thursday for an appointment on Friday with Atomatic ElecBus.
Adm.,
tric Co. Accounting,
Chem. E.. Mech. E., Met. E. (B.S.i;
E. (B.S., M.S.); Engr. MechanElec.
ics (M.S.).
Register Thursday for an appointEngine
ment on Friday with Cummins EconomCo. Accounting, Bus. Adm.,
ics (B.S., M.S.); Agric. E., Chem. E.f
Civil E., Mech. E., Met. E., Computer
Science IBS).
Register Thursday for an appointment on Friday with Illinois Tool
Works, Inc. Check schedule book for
details.
an apnolnt-m-Register Thursday for Louisville &
on Frday with
Nashvi'le Wal'mad Co. Civil E., Elec.
E., Mech. E IBS.). Citizenship.
Register Thursday for an apDolnt-meon Friday with Northwestern
acMutual Life Ins. Co. Any deareeEcoNeeds: Asrlc.
ceptable. SpH-inBus. Adm., Economics, Account'ng,
nomics IBS.): Law. Will interview
StuJuniors. Seniors, and Graduate Citidents for summer employment.
zenship.
KeK'ster Thursday for an appointment on Friday with Sperrv Fl'ght
Systems Division. Check schedule book
for details.

and some want
to expand the movement to include larger issues and more militant tactics. "It's a Joke that
students at Berkeley have devoted two weeks to fighting
about five hours of credit," said
one student who favored an immediate commitment to a campus takeover.
Other students are opposed
to expanding the issue right now,
however, and a majority are opposed to militant action at least
until after the regents meet.
The students are also divided
on how to work with the faculty,
which disappointed them by not
voting to defy the regents' decision. But most students seem
to want to give the faculty a
chance to defy the regents' ban
next week before they act alone.
Some students also fear they
will play into the hands of California
like Governor Ronald Reagan and Senatorial candidate Max Rafferty,
who clearly want a campus confrontation to aid Rafferty's flagging campaign against Democrat
Alan Cranston. But most of the
students seem to agre with one
speaker who said, "There will
always be someone who will tell
us not to act because it will help
the right wing, but if we don't
act it's the right wing that benefits. That's the way they come
to power."
Despite these divisions, it
seems likely that a large number
of Berkeley students as well as
a good share of the faculty-w- ill
unite against the regents
unless they rescind their decision next week. With the regents almost certain not to do
that, Berkeley seems on the edge
of its biggest battle since the
Free Speech Movement of 1964.

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Kernel Photo By Paul Lambert
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Linear
License

Theme and variation are the watch words
for Art instructor James Suzuki's exhibition
m tftc pjne Arts Gallery. The oil painting
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"Ashland," while its
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partner has no formal name.

Dr. Binkley Receives
Legion Of Merit
Dr. Harold Roper Binkley, Chairman of Vocational Education
in the College of Education here, received the "nation's second-highemilitary award" Sunday in Louisville.
Dr. Binkley (Colonel in Ken
tucky's 100th Training Division,
U. S. Army Reserve) was awarded
Col. Binkley served with the
the Legion of Merit in a special 100th Division for 21 years, and
was in the Armed Forces a total
retirement ceremony for him.
Division Commander, Major of 30 years. He has won six
medals in addition to the Legion
General Benjamin J. Butler, presented the medal. He said that of Merit.
Binkley was "one of the most
Binkley, 55, received his Docoutstanding officers that I have
been privileged to know and work torate degree in 1956 from UK's
College of Education.
with."
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Military Recruiters Shun Debate
FRANCISCO (CPS)-Milit- ary
recruiters refused to
come to San Francisco State College this week when they were
asked to share space with antiwar
groups.
The plan, thought up by placement director Vernon Wallace in
the wake of several demonstrations against recruiters last year,
called for a "military information
day" at which both the military
and war opponents would be
allowed to make their case.
But the military refused.
"We're not out to get into a debating society. We're out to recruit students," said one military
spokesman. The recruiters may
also have been influenced by the
plan of about 150 students to
SAN

dump the recruiters' tables into met the marchers halfway to his
office and told them, amid jeers
the street.
When the recruiters failed to and boos, that ROTC would stay
on the campus as long as a
show, about 500 students marched to the office of President Robert majority of students wanted it.
Smith also said he plans to
Smith to demand that he state his
decision on Air Force ROTC with- review campus recruiting arin a week. Unlike his predecessor, rangements, which he said were
who was "not too successful for many of
John Summerskill,
in his office last year those wishing to disseminate or
trapped
during a demonstration, Smith receive information."

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Champaign Night
Tuesday

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Wednesday night

The Marauders

RESIGN..

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Continuous Music

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