xt7sj38kh35w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7sj38kh35w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700303  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March  3, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  3, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7sj38kh35w section xt7sj38kh35w Nixon Demonstration Lacks Support

YjR's,

Girl Scouts, Flag Wavers Outnumber Protesters

By HILL MATTHEWS,

DAN GOSSETT and
JIM MILLER
Kernel Editors
Mrs. Richard Nixon arrived at
Blucgrass Field this morning
amid
students, girl
scouts and a handful of anti-wdemonstrators.
The expected demonstration
to greet Kirs. Nixon appeared
somewhat a failure as observers
said the wife of the President
paid little attention to signs like
"400,00 Dead . . . What Price
Peace?" and attempts to disrupt
her short welcoming speech.
posters and Ameri
flag-wavi-

ar

Pro-Nix-

can flags outnumbered dissident
signs as the silent majority,
made popular by her husband,
was out in force. Signs like
"Ashland Youth Gives a Damn"
and "Madison County gave Nixon a 1,600-plu- s
majority welcome Pat Nixon" clouded hopes
of the proposed demonstration.
Mrs. Nixon was greeted by
Mrs. Otis Singletary, wife of the
University president, and by
Gov. Louie Nunn, who had his
foot in a cast after sustaining a
broken ankle in a sandlot basketball game.
Over 1,000 Present
Estimates of the crowd ranged

from 1,000 to 1,500 with an

estimated 100

anti-wa-

r

demon-

strators present.
When questioned by reporters, Nunn said he heard no disturbances from the crowd and
said he noted only "two little
kids' carrying anti-wplacards,
but observers reported seeing
more.
ar

Nunn said Mrs. Nixon came
to the UK campus because of
the lack of meaningful demonstrations
and the "lack of
trouble" here. "Perhaps we're
getting better student participation here," Nunn added.

Nunn said there were three
factors ho which he attributed
the absence of demonstrations
on the Kentucky college campuses:

the

fact

that

youth has the

The proposed gubernatorial
candidacy of UK student Sam
Mason went virtually unnoticed
by officials. Mason and his fellow "Pot Party" members were
not allowed near the Nixon party and their chants of "Don't
pay attention to the woman with
the skinny legs . . . she's also
got a skinny mind" reportedly
went unnoticed.
Mrs. Nixon left the airport
and went directly to Kentucky
Village, where she was to review volunteer work of University students on her five-stawhirlwind tour of student volunteer programs.

Kentucky
vote,

that Kentucky has student
representation on its various
boards of trustees and regents,
and
that Kentucky is the only
state to involve college students
in a legislative internship program during the General

te

THE KENTUCKY
Tuesday, March 3, 1970

KNE

University of Kentucky, Lexington

'V.

Vol. LXI, No.

101

Students Express Support

University Senate Approves
Appropriate Balance Report

By JEANNIE LEEDOM
Assistant Managing Editor

and
JERRY LEWIS
Kernel Staff Writer

The University Senate, in its
second attempt to gain approval
of an ad hoc committee report
on "the appropriate balance
among the teaching, research
and service functions in the University," entertained a student
with supporting petitions and a
senate member with substitute
reports before finalizing the acceptance of the official report in
a special meeting Monday afternoon.
Josh O'Shea, UK sophomore
and student representative to
the Sociology Undergraduate
Committee, spoke in behalf of
1900 students who had signed
petitions since Friday supporting the implementation of the
report's proposed program of
evaluating a professor's work
throughout the year.
According to these concerned
students, the implementation of
this report could mean a
on the "publish or perish" policies which seemed influential at UK.
Model Submitted
One unidentified senator questioned O'Shea as to the number

of students who had actually
read the report. O'Shea said
that he had made a one-pag-e
synopsis of the report and had
presented it with the petitions.

The report outlined the

func-

tions which a professor is expected to perform within the
classroom, the department, the
University and the community.
The committee also submitted
a model within the report which
gave perspective on the operative balance among teaching, research and service functions.
Language The Problem
The wording used in the report seemed to be a barrier for
some of the senators. According
to Professor Wendell Berry of
the English Department, T"he
language of this report poses the
problem, and the problem is you
can't understand the language."
The senators expressed diverse opinions on the usage of
the words individuals, individual
projects and the procedures
which an individual professor
must go through to have a project approved.
According to the model, individual professors submit their
recommended programs of instruction, research or service to
the chairman of their department, who then presents it to

the director or dean of their college, who then submits the
to the Vice
recommendations
President for Academic Affairs
andor the Vice President for
Research, who in turn presents
the program to the President
and the Board of Trustees to be
reviewed.
Limited Decisions
In relation to this procedure,
Dr. Jesse Weil of the Physics
Department, said he felt that
the decisions left for faculty
members were limited.
According to Dr. Paul Street,
chairman of the ad hoc committee, "the model is an attempt to
develop a concrete model which
will illustrate . . . not set up
rigid standards."
To clarify this section of the
model, Dr. Fred Vetter of the
Political Science Department,
proposed an amendment which
substituted the phrase individual
faculty members or faculty of
academic units to explain that
all decisional procedures would
not necessarily begin with the
individual professor.
The amendment was approved.
Substitute Proposal
Before final vote on the report was called for, Dr. John
Please Turn To Pare 2

1

1

"

,

,,

conference.
By FRANK COOTS

Managing Editor
Ecology and the maintenance of ecosystems was the theme of this year's United
States Student Press Association's College
Editors Conference.
The conference, annually attended by over
2,000 representatives of the student press,
was held in Washington D.C., last weekend
and offered a radical recipe for saving the
revolution.
environment
Although radical by UK standards, the editors are representative of activists across the
nation and were, therefore, sympathetic with
the idea of revolution.
Thoie who addressed the conference, in

s

ft

'

Kernel Photo by Ken Weaver

Josh O'Shea, a sociology undergraduate, presented a petition with
over 1900 student signatures to the University Senate Monday
evening. The petition was in support of the Senate's report on the
balance between teaching, research, and service.

Mandatory Insurance
Angers UK Graduate

By DON EGER
Kernel Staff Writer
Jim Stacey is looking for beneficiaries to receive the proceeds
of his $4,000 insurance policy
if he decides to take it.
Stacey, a 1967 UK graduate
with a B.A. in English, is presently working as a nursing aide
in the psychiatry ward at the
Medical Center.
According to Stacey, each

It should be noted that there seemed
to be a division among the editors as to
which way to proceed with a revolution.
There were those who have been calling
for change for the past several years and
have siezed upon the environmental issue as
Ecologist Speaks
another excuse for violent revolution.
The keynote speaker Murray Bookchin,
Then there were those who also saw a
a social ecologist, claimed that capitalism need for revolution, but felt the way to
demands exploitation and that this exploitaachieve it was through the destruction of the
tion of nature will bring about the end of status-qu- o
by virtue of their numbers and inlife on earth in the next 15 to 30 years- -a
fluence in the student press.
popular estimate among ecologists.
No Bridge
He said communism is man's only hope
Among other things, the conference
for survival, but he stressed that it must pointed out that the myth that environmental
be true communism and not that brand of concern will bridge the generation gap seems
politics practiced in the Eastern European to be slipping. The power structure will try
its best to stay in power and the students
countries.
The speakers stressed that "cleaning up" will try their best to oust them, it was genthe environment will not bring any more than erally agreed.
At any rate, if the student editors have
temporary relief that a complete reordering
their way, this country is due for drastic
of society is the only hope if man is to
change.

cluding UK zoology professor Wayne Davis,
felt the destruction of the environment is
caused by a capitalistic way of life which demands production for production's sake and
consumption for consumption's sake.

,JT

MmU--

College Editors Study Environment

EDITOR'S NOTE: The United States Student Press Association held its annual College
Editors Conference in Washington, D.C.,
last weekend with ecology as the theme. This
first of three reports is an overview of the

4

staff member at UK must sign
up for the University Mandatory
Group Life Insurance Plan at a
cost of $24 a year, regardless of
other insurance policies which
the staif member may own. Failure to comply results in a "termination of services.'"
No Beneficiaries
Stacey is single and has no
beneficiaries to the policy if he
subscribes to it. He bitterly opposes the thought that he is
forced to sign for the insurance
policy if he wants to keep his
job.
The letter which Stacey received was dated Feb. 18, informing him of the mandatory
The final pararequirement.
graph reads: "If your decision
should be otherwise, I regret to
inform you under the University
policy it would be necessary for
us to terminate your services,"
effective Thursday, March 5,
1970.
Protest Petition
Stacey has drafted a petition
in protest of the policy. In less
than two hours Monday, he had
acquired more than 50 signatures in support of his views.
Those who signed the petition, teachers and students alike,
are to be the beneficiaries of the
insurance policy if Stacey decides to comply with the rules.
The petition states: "We be-Please Turn To Pre 8

* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March 3, 1970

2-- TIIE

.

Geometry And Surrealism
Spark Architecture Films
By

JIM FUDGE

Kernel Staff Writer
Three short but
films were featured in the sixth
segment of the Architecture Film
Series Monday night.
Two of the films, "Flatland"
and "Anaemic Cinema," were
both based on geometric designs,
but were quite dissimilar. "Anaemic Cinema" presented various
spirals and concentric circles. The
first part of the flick was composed of pairs of spirals, each
spiraling the opposite of the
other. As they spun around their
common center, the illusion of
both approaching and receeding
from the center was simultaneous; the designs of the spirals
made the whole illusion seem
d

natural and entirely realistic, instead of the
that
would be expected with such an
optical distortion.
The last part of "Cinema"
was made up of different optical illusions created with concentric circles. Each study began
with the circles on the same
axis, but then they slowly lost
their common axis, and the illusion of depth was created. The
circles appeared as cones or
mounds, with lines drawn around
them, viewed from various angles. The whole illusion was very
convincing, and it was hard to
believe that mere circles were
creating such an illusion of depth.
eye-blurri-

"Flatland"

was

story-lik- e,

rather than just a study of geometric designs. The film had a
sound track, but for some reason
the sound was garbled, so much
of the idea of the film was lost.
It seemed to be a story of a square
of course) that
was trying to prove the existence
of a
world. The
poor square had quite a few
hassles, and not only tried to explain three dimensions, but also
tried to go into four, five and six,
without much luck. Since the
sound came through so poorly,
I can't be sure what that blasted
"being" was
trying to do. It was funny,
though, and well animated.
The third film presented was
"Un Chien Andalou," make by
Luis Bunuel and Salvador Dali.
This film was even harder to understand than "Cinema," and it
didn't have a sound track to
al

blame anything on. The titles
were in French, and I don't
read French, so that's probably
why the movie l"t me. It began
with a man sharpening a straight
razor. At first there is the impression that he is about to do
himself in, but no such luck.
Instead, he walks over to a
woman sitting in the room and
proceeds to slice her left eyeball
in half. And that proceeds to make
the whole audience very sick,
since the film actually showed
an eyeball being sliced in half
and the fluid oozing from the

r
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V7

"
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.

It

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11

mangled remains.
The rest of the flick seemed
to have no relation to this first
scene at all. There was an in-

cident of another man staring at

his hand; then the audience gets
the pleasure of seeing it: a hand,
an open wound in the plam, with
ants crawling in and out, and all
over the wound. The same guy
with the hole in his hand is later
shown pulling a pair of baby
grand pianos in a bedroom just
seconds after attacking a young
girl. The girl is now standing
in the corner of the room watching her attacker pull the two
musical instruments toward a
window. And that's not all; on
top of one of the baby grands
is a dead, skinned donkey.
The end of the film shows the
chick who was attacked bravely
escape the attacker, and walk
directly from an apartment building hallway to a sunny beach,
where she walks away with a
man who is apparently her boy
friend.
It is quite obvious that this
is a surrealistic flick, one of the

earliest done. The photography
is great, along with the effects
used to simulate the sliced eyeball. For some reason, the flick
goes along well, though there is
no true continuity in it at all.

DrugwillDiscussion
discusbe a
There
panel

sion on drug use Wednesday in
the Student Center Ballroom at
7 p.m. Sgt. Frank Fryman and
Jay Sylvestro of the Lexington
Police Dept. will be on the panel with Dean of Students Jack
Hall.

On exhibit in the Student Center, this African
wedding drum carries out the theme of the show,
Beauty of Blackness. In addition to the drum,
d
several
paintings highlight the

show. African native masks and utensils are also
featured in the display. They are part of the BSU
week-lon- g
Arts Festival.
Kernel Photo by Dave Herman

Black-oriente-

Black Arts Festival

Beauty Of Blackness On Display

By BOBBI BARRETT
Kernel Staff Writer
"The Beauty of Blackness,"
chosen as the title of the Second Annual Black Arts Festival,
will be expressed in many ways
and in many mediums this week.
The Festival includes a choir
concert, a dramatic presentation,

beauty pageant, banquet, workshop, and an art show.
The art show is displayed in
Room 206 of the Student Center.
James Godfrey, chairman of the
Art Exhibit Committee, chose
the works for the show on a
basis of involvement: "Each
piece represents identity with, or
reflection upon, some aspect of
the black movement. It is the
artist's involvement with the
beauty of blackness that is being
shown."
In this broad context, the degree of professionalism in the
painting technique and the con

Applicants For The

tinuity within the show itself
become secondary to the idea of
contribution. The pieces in the
Art Exhibit contribute to the
over-al- l
theme of the Festival
as creations of black artists. As
the collected expressions of individual views of the black image,
the show is a success.
African imports are used to
show the influence of ancient
history on today's black scene.
Primitive in style, these artifacts
emphasize African origin and African culture. Simply and directly, this art glimpses the sights

By DAN GOSSETT
Associate Editor
It takes a certain sort of depravity to make a movies as
depressing, morose and engrossing as Sydney Pollock's "Tney
Shoot Horses Don't They." Centering around a 1932 dance
marathon, "Horses" metaphorically makes some very profound
comments about the human desire to stay alive and stay ahead.
When you see the old news-ree- ls
of the dance marathins,
you tend to think of them as
being in the same silly genre as
raccoon coats and
goldfish-swallowin-

Student Advisory Committee
SHOULD REGISTER FOR AN INTERVIEW
IN ROOM 206, STUDENT CENTER, BEFORE
NOON MARCH 9.
USAC serves as an advisor to the President

of the University, and seeks to initiate and
innovate constructive new University policy.

early
from

African

empires.

Shown

Bagonda, Sierra Leone,
Uganda, and Nairobi are such
objects as a wedding drum, a
table cloth of tree bark, various
fertility figures, a Masai shield,
head sculptures, and masks.
Each of these aspects is an
integral part of being black and
the beauty of blackness; none
can be isolated and none can be
ignored. Again, we see the purpose of the show is to exhibit
the individual and his relation to
the black image.

'They Shoot Horses9 Views
The Seamy Side Of Life
The idea
dance marathon

g.

The people that

University

and sounds of the rich, complex,

come to the Aragon Ballroom,
however, are not there for
pranks. They are broke and hungry and are willing to put on a
show for the ghouls in order to
get seven good meals a day and
a crack at the $1500 first prize
money.

The Kentucky

Kernel

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Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
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Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4tt8.
Begun as the Cadet In 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1913.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
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2321
2320
2447
2319

in a

feet and keep
dancing for as long as you can
with rest periods . coming only
every two hours; and then only
for ten minutes at a time.
It is this concept of real fatigue, griminess, and
effort that Pollock portrays

is to stay on your

skin-chafi-

so well in "Horses."

The characters have all entered the contest to prove something to themselves. Gloria (Jane
Fonda) has to assure herself
that she is still really a human
being. She has been everywhere
and done everything to, with
and for every horny jerk in California in order to get ahead. She
never made it of course, and
ended up as the recipient of a
the only decent
thing anyone had done for her
mercy-killin-

g;

in years.
A tired old sailor (Red Buttons) is in the contest to regain
his lost youth. He doesn't make
it either. In the middle of an
inhuman foot race designed to
cull out the tiredest of the dancers, the sailor has a heart attack
which forces his partner, Gloria,
to drag him around the course
on her back.
The entire movie is enhanced
by the performances of Jane
Fonda, Red Buttons and Gig
Young, as Rocky, the perpetrator
of this dance macabre. He utters the best line in the movie
in commenting on the vultures
that view the sweat sacrifice.
"Seeing someone who has it
worse than they dom akes their
load seem lighter. They are entitled to that aren't theyr

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March 3,

Mrs. Nixon Visits Lexington Today

1970- -3

UK Volunteers Attract White House Attention

JEANNIE ST. CHARLES
Assistant Managing Editor
Because UK rated high among
schools participating in student
volunteer programs, Mrs. Richard
By

Nixon will visit Lexington Tuesday to observe those programs.
Ed Shiver, White House aide
whose stay in Lexington proceeded Mrs. Nixon's arrival, said
last night he could not say whether Mrs. Nixon would actually
be on the University campus.
"I think you can understand
why," he said. According to earlier reports, demonstrations were
planned by Students for a Democratic Society, the Student Mobilization Committee, the Wom-

en's Liberation Front and other

groups.
Mrs. Nixon will go to Kentucky Village and Eastern State
Hospital as part of her five-hoKentucky trip. Also included in
ur

the national tour are student
volunteer projects of Michigan
State University, University of
Cincinnati, University of Colorado, and the School of the Ozark s,
Point Lookout, Mo.
UK has more than 2,000 student volunteers. Some work, for
example, at Kentucky Village and
Eastern State Hospital as part
of the Catholic Newman Center program. Their duties include

tutoring, teaching homcmaking
skills, coaching athletic events
and supervising day care centers.
The program runs for an
period each semester.

eight-wee- k

On
Another volunteer program is
the Lexington Tutorial Program.
Manchester Center and the East
End Center are two of the six
local neighborhood centers where
102 UK students tutor disadvantaged children.
-- To-One

Marine Herbert, coordinator

of the program now In its fifth
year, noted yesterday "we are
seriously considering changing
the name from the Lexington
Tutorial Program to "One-to-One."

The reason for the change
would be that tutors "attempt to
do what the child wants," and
they visit his home and are encouraged to meet with his family to become familar with the
child's environment.
Spring volunteers working in
the current program from Feb.
3 to April 12 work from 4 p.m.
to 5 p.m. four days a week.
Dorm Participation
Blanding and Kirwan Towers
have funded the program.
"Last year, Kirwan Tower donated $75 and four new tires for

BSU volunteers "adopt" a small
the program's bus, used for transgroup of children and form a club.
portation to the centers. Blanding gave $130 for repair of the Her club revolves around music
bus," Miss Herbert pointed out. and drama activities.
Another volunteer program inTeaching pool to their groups
volving a
relationship are George Noe, a graduate stuwith children is that sponsored dent and lecturer in physics; Gary
Crum, a graduate student in enby Sigma Nu fraternity.
tomology; and sophomore teleSigma Nu member Don Porter,
for example, organized a basketcommunications
major David
Milliard.
ball coaching project for the frafigure the kids will learn
ternity. Eighteen students coach,
referee and assist the Ashland
somewhere else if we can't teach
Elementary School "Wildcat" them," said Noe. He plays pool
team which includes nearly 100 with his 10 children for an hour
children.
every Tuesday, then teaches the
Bible for half an hour.
Alpha Gamma Delta sorority
Besides pool, other center
helps Sigma Nu by providing
storekeepers and persons to handgroups work with ceramics, tutor,
le statistics. They also dye team play basketball and instruct sewsweat shirts and make sure they ing and cooking classes.
are properly numbered.
Summer plans include a
BSU Volunteers
camping trip for the
The Baptist Student Union children.
By working around the center,
is active in volunteer work also.
the children earn points which
UK BSU students work as part
will earn them the right to take
of the Baptist Community Centhe camping trip.
ter.
Louisville physical therapy
major Linda Bowman organized
this semester's program. "We had
seven people working at the center last semester. This semester
39 people have volunteered their
The Women's
Liberation
time," she said.
Movement Front met Monday
According to Miss Bowman,
night to organize their Tuesday
morning demonstration at Blue
Crass Field against "the Pat
Nixon brand of volunteerism."
The WLF expects at least 15
of their approximately 25 members to be present.
Some of the members, who
were unwilling to disclose their
in the Jour, office. They will interview in Room 106 of the Journalism
names, set the goal of their demBuilding.
onstration at making more peoan appointRegister Monday for
ment Wednesday with Browning
ple aware that women are not
Manufacturing.
simply "wives, mothers, and volRegister Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Corning Glass
unteers."
Works.
Register Monday for an appointAmong the topics of discusment Wednesday with Defense Consion was the problem of transtract Audit Agency.
one-to-on-

e

two-wee-

k

Today

Roiaract. a service organization, will
have a meeting. Tuesday, March 3, at
6:30 In SC 115. Sons and daughters of
Rotarians and all other students interested ?re Invited.
Circle K Club, a men's service organization, is now accepting applications for membership by letter for the
spring semester. Applications should
be sent to Bill Adams, 439 Huguelet
Drive, Lexington, 40506, 2. and must be
postmarked by March
The Black Student Union and the
UK Department of Theatre Arts will
present at 7:30 p.m. "In White America" by Martin B. Duberman and
"Dutchman" by LeRol Jones in the
Laboratory Theatre of the Tine Arts
Building.
Mr. Joe Bruna of the Kentucky
ReDepartment of Fish and WildlifeRoom
sources will speak at 7 p.m. in
114 of the Classroom
Building to
the Environmental Awareness Society.
His topic will be "Wildlife Habitat
Destruction by State and Federal
Programs."

Tomorrow
The Third Annual Home Economics Awards Banquet will be held on
March 3 at 6:30 p.m. in the Student
Center Ballroom. Dr. Doris Tichenor
will speak. Tickets are on sale in the
home economics building through
March 27.
The Society for the Advancement
of Management (SAM) will hold a job
seminar on Tuesday, March 3, at 3
p.m., in room 331 of the Commerce
Wilguest speakers: Snell-inBuilding. The of
liam L. George
Snelling and
D. Kincer of CM EmRonald
ployment Agency and John Considine
of Dunhill Employment Agency will
discuss "Job Hunting from the EmViewpoint."
ployment Agency Film Series on the
At 7 p.m. the
Black Heritage will present In the
Student Center Theatre "Slavery,"
the Negro." "Free at
"Heritage of Mood." and "The FuLast." "New
ture and the Negro."
There will be buses at the Student
Center at 9 a.m. Tuesday, March 3
to take studenU to Bluegrass Field
to welcome Mrs. Richard Nixon to
g;

UK.
All Interested students will be welcome. The buses will leave at :20
and return about 10:43.
Zero Population Growth will meet
Wednesday at 8 p.m. In CB 102.
Mothers Interested in forming a

either
babysitting exchange for call
time or night use please

day-

Dr. Sidney Ochs of the Department of Physiology, University of Indiana, will give a seminar, "Fast Axoplasmic Transport of Material in
Mammalian Nerve," on Wednesday
3
March 4, at 1 p.m., in Room
of the Medical Center.
honpre-laSocietas Pro Legibus,
orary, is now accepting applications
for membership. All Interested prelaw students may obtain an application by contacting Damon Talley,
316 Aylesford Place or at 1415 in the
Office Tower. Deadline is March 4.
A faculty Recital will be presented
by Mrs. Carolyn Rankin, piano; and
French horn;
Mr. James London,
on
and Mr. Peter Schaffer, violin MeMarch 4 at 8:15 p.m. in UK's
Hall. Admission is free.
morial
Mr. Edwin Grzesnikowskl, violinist,
will give a recital in the Agricultural Science Auditorium at 8:15
p.m. on March 5. Admission is free.
Dr. Warren Susman of Rutgers
will conduct two lectures
University 4.
on March
Sponsored by the Graduate and Professional Students Asp.m.
sociation, he will speak at 4 (145) .
in the Office Tower mezzanine
He wlU also speak at 8 p.m. In the
Commerce Building Auditorium. His
topic will be "Violence and American Creed."
QUEST: Questioning University Education by Student and Teachers will
meet at 6:30 p.m. In Room 113 of the
Student Center.
Zero Population Growth will meet
at 8 p.m. in Room 102 of the Classroom Building on March 4. 5
the
At 7:30 p.m. on March
Miss Black Student Union Pageant
will be held In the Student Center
Theatre.
At 6 p.m. on March 6 the Black
Student Union Banquet will be held
at the Small Ballroom of the Student
Center. Reservations should be made
by March 3 and are $3. from 9 a.m.
On Saturday, March 7
be
to 5:30 p.m. the Workshop will Dr.
held. Special Resource speaker,
Nathan Hare, Sociologist. 7
the Black
At 8 p.m. on March
BaU wlU be held In the Student
Center.
MN-56-

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RELIGIOUS

st

and the committed."

Liberation Group To Greet
First Lady With Protest
attitudes toward the

TODAY and TOMORROW

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Trans-Actio- n
is another or-- ,
ganization whose purpose is to
furnish qualified volunteers for
desirable programs. This program
is part of the Christian Appalachian Project. The student volunteers teach, coach athletics,
centers and
surpervise day-car- e
work in scouting.
Aside from volunteer groups
working with children, there is
volunteer work of the kind done
by the School of Architecture.
Students plan and design low-cohousing for Community Action for Lexington and Fayette
County (CALF).
Mrs. Nixon's visit supports the
purpose of the President's National Program of Voluntary Action as stated in the President's
inaugural address.
"We are approaching the limits of what government alone
can do. Our greatest need now is
to reach beyond government to
enlist the legions of the concerned

Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Detroit Public Schools, Mich.
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with Radiation,
Inc. Mechanical E. (BS, MS); Electrical E. (all degrees). Location: Melbourne, Fla. May, August graduates.
Register Monday for an appointment Wednesday with West Clermont
Schools, Ohio Teachers in all fields.
May, August graduates.
Register for appointment Thursday
with Central Trust Company.
Register for appointment Thursday
with Liberty National Bank & Trust
Business
Administration,
Company
Economics (BS). May, August graduates. Louisville, Kentucky.
Register for appointment Thursday
with Litton Industries, Inc. Accounting (BS).
Register for appointment Thursday
with Sears, Roebuck & Company
Liberal Arts, Accounting (BS). Location in Midwest. May, August graduates. Citizenship.
Register for appointment Vuursday
with Martin Marietta Corporation Accounting (BS.MS) ; Electrical Engineering, Engineering Mechanics, Mechanical Engineers (all degrees). Locations:
Orlando, Florida; Denver, Colorado;
Baltimore, Maryland. May graduates.
Citizenship.
Register for appointment Thursday
with Southern States Cooperative, Inc.
Agricultural Economics, Agronomy,
Animal Science, Horticulture, Plant
Pathology, Business Administration.
Economics, Liberal Arts, BotanyZoology (BS). All students must be rurally oriented. Locations: Kentucky,
West Virginia, Virginia, May, August
graduates. Citizenship.

One member menportation.
tioned the possibility of getting
to the airport on the buses provided by the Young Republicans. "They said they would
take us out, but whether or not
they'll bring us back depends on
what we do while we're there."
A few WLM members have
formulated a pamphlet to distribute at the demonstration
which attempts to explain how
volunteerism "further fosters the
image of women as being primarily homemakers, and secondcivic workers
ly, part-tim- e
bridge and garden club
activities."
The pamphlet further states:
"Women's
Liberation
is not
against volunteerism to the extent it fosters a sense of community and increased concern for
our fellow man but we are firmly against the Pat Nixon brand
of volunteerism which fosters

paternalistic

sector of our
country and which is, in fact,
useless unless the underlying
causes of these problems are
vigorously attacked by more
than stop-ga- p
approaches."
The pamphlet works its way
from the subject of volunteerism
to the basic convications of the
Women's Liberation Front. It
ends with the comment: "We
feel Pat Nixon should be actively seeking to eliminate educational and employment discrimination against women and
other more subtle forms of oppression that are serving to "keep
women in their place' rather
than actively reinforcing the
current stiflling conceptions of
women."

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ACTIVITIES

to
Canterbury House Is host Is the
Third Floor Theatre, which and prethe
G. B. Shaw's "Arms
senting
Man" at 8:30 p.m. on Thursday
1 and
Sunday, Feb.
through
Tickets may be purchased
March
is In
at the door. The Theatre House, the
472
of Canterbury
basement
Rose St.

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8.

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UK Placement Service

Anyone desiring to initiate a