xt7t4b2x6d3v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7t4b2x6d3v/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700416  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 16, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 16, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7t4b2x6d3v section xt7t4b2x6d3v TGfflE
Thursday, April

t

EdNTOCKY EEENISL
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Hi, 1970

F

127

Moratorium
Climaxes In Candlelight

i

By RON HAWKINS
And MIKE WINES
Kernel Staff Writers
A typical UK war moratorium
program began at 10 a.m. April
15 witli two films on the selective service and people's reaction
to war in relation to its effect on
society. A small crowd of nearly
100 watched the movies.
The program culminated in a
serious candlelight march drawing nearly 800 students.
Following the morning activities, Ron Hale, president of the
Black Student Union presented
rhetoric on how
some
people who are concerned about
the war talk about it but never
do anything. "Rhetoric can only
go so far," he said.
In contrast to his speech was
Col. Eugene Small, head of the
UK ROTC program. As he addressed a growing crowd of nearly 300, the moustached crew-cu- t
ff

J

Kernel Photo by Miml Fuller

Candlelight Climaxes Moratorium

Carver Blasts Bookstore;
Student-RuUrged
Co-O- p

n

Covemment
The purchase of a
Bookstore Committee has placed
TV system, costing over
e
the blame for University
$2,000, that does not cover the
"inefficiencies" on the past entire bookstore.
administration of the bookstore
Purchaseof a separate stereo
and at the same time called for
system (separate from the Student
a gradual evolution of the book- Center Pipe-imusic) again coststore into a student-rucooperaing over $2,000.
tive.
Smaller percentage of stuThe report, released Wednes- dent
employees than other bookcommittee
afternoon
Student

closed-circu- it

Book-stor-

n

n

day

LXI, No.

SMC War

I

The

Vol.

by

Chairman Bruce Carver, made
several proposals for more efficient operation of the bookstore
and also cited some examples
of inadequacies and financial
mistakes of the bookstore.
Some of the examples dted
by the committee were:

stores.

Catalogues of
textbooks "so
that
at times Kennedy's and Wallace's
reportedly have sent their employees to sell relatively worthless books to the UK Bookstore.
A reported loss for the fiscal
non-useab- le

colonel made it clear that he had
nothing to do with selective service; but that his experience lay
with ROTC and it wasthemerits
of ROTC about which uniformed
colonel spoke.

Following this last of the

morning talks, the students were
encouraged to join the Lexington Peace Council in their fast
in front of the Fayette County
courthouse.
This fast started with Lent
and will continue throughout
Passover. The council members
hold their fast every Wednesday
from noon until 1 p.m. The money
that they would normally spend
on their lunch is given to the
council to be used towards the
national peace movement and for
defense of draft resisters, etc.
War Issue 'Sidetracked'
One leafleting, bearded,
-aged
man said the purpose of
their fast was to continually draw
people's attention to the issue
of the war, an issue which he
said "is tending to be sidetracked."
middle-

Nearly 75 people stood silentand seriously
around a fountain at the bottom
stairs of the courthouse.
There were elderly people,
vear endinz June 30. 1969 of
small children holding signs and
$43,725.64.
UK students with their peace-symby Above all, the UK Bookstore
flags. Some elderly men
has the advantage of not paythe five percent sales tax were out on the courthouse wall
ing
that the other bookstores have just enjoying the afternoon sun.
to absorb, yet still is but third
Coming out of the courthouse
in a three-ma- n
race, according Judge Bob Stevens, Fayette
to the report.
County Judge viewed the activiTo alleviate the problem of ties at the bottom of the stairs.
financial loss, in addition to the He was not there to show support
proposal of turning thebookstore of the fast.
into a student-ru- n
cooperative,
According to him, "Officials
the report also included an al- should not take stands on such
ternate proposal that would in- issues as these. I would not conclude a number of minor policy demn or support their cause. They
have always been peaceful. There
changes, including a 10 percent
discount card, a 10 percent re- - are no police here because I orPlease Turn To Page 2 dered them not to be here."
ly

arm-in-ar- m

ol

The quiet gathering broke up
precisely at 1 p.m.
In the afternoon the SC Grand
Ballroom and patio were the site
of continued SMC speeches calling for a change in government
priorities, action more decisive
and marches and
than teach-in- s
pleas not to resort to violent
revolution.
UK Profs Speak
Dr. David Ross, a UK professor of economics of underdeveloped countries, told the audience
that the US program to give the
Vietnamese people assistance
was "one of our more noble
programs." He added, however,
that U.S. involvement in Vietnam was "for better or for worse"
and grew to the point where the
U.S. was involved in a war.
Ross concluded that the U.S.
should "enter into banker's relationships rather than marriage
relationships" when giving foreign aid.
After Ross' speech, slides and
a tapped narration prepared by
British journalist, Felix Greene,
were presented. The slides presented North Vietnam as a nation which has taken great strides
since the French left despiteU.S.
"aggression."
The teach-i-n then moved outside where the group waited on
the patio grass among the cockle-burand romping dogs for Gene
Mason, UK Political Science professor, to show up and speak.
While waiting for Mason, several students spoke about what
was happening.
"Weapons determine policy,
policy does not determine weapons," added Mason. "We can
not allow military to determine
policy."
Mason said the U.S. did not
realize the intensity of the North
Vietnamese cause when it bers

came involved. He concluded,
Please Turn To Page 5

Canteen Profits Carry KV Program

Meager Funds Undercut Vital Recreation
By JERRY LEWIS

Kernel Staff Writer
series on Kentucky
This is the third of a four-par-t
Village Treatment Center, focusingon the" institutional-

ization" ofjuvenile delinquents.
The gymnasium had a sweaty smell like most

gym-

nasiums.

The basketball game looked like most basketball
games, with the exception that not too many fouls were
being called. If they had been, the game may have
lasted all day.
The two teams on the court were Cottage 5 playing
Cottage 1 in an afternoon intramural game at Kentucky Village (KV) Treatment Center.
The single referee was sweating as much as the

players. His name is Wayde F. Walker, who is officially
the director of the recreation program at KV, but whose
job includes much more than sitting in an office making
out basketball schedules.
e
male, and
male, one part-tim- e
"I have one
female to help me provide recreation for
one part-tim- e
300 kids, seven days a week," said Walker as he wiped
the sweat off his face in between ball games.
Insufficient Employment
KV now has a "freeze" on employment. No more
staff can be hired due to the lack of money.
Walker explained how the daily life of KV dictates
more than just treatment and group therapy for the
children that stay there.
"I make out a weekly schedule of activities for the
kids," added the recreation director, "that includes a
lot more than the average child ever gets to do."
full-tim-

Besides varsity sports (the KV team plays high school
junior varsity teams) and intramural sports, KV offers
r
many other activities including pool,
racing, pony rides, swimming, arts and crafts, and many
other games.
Walker noted the importance of several clubs at KV
in which community volunteers play a big part.
"We have a Junior Optimist Club here, one of the
only two of its kind in the United States," said Walker.
Members of the Lexington Breakfast Optimist Club
hold weekly meetings with the boys and either bring
programs or often take some of the KV club members
on trips into Lexington.
Kentucky Village also has an art club, a glee club,
a dramatics club, and a newly organized student counping-pon-

g,

slot-ca-

sel.

Local Croups Volunteer
"Several local organizations, including churches and
clubs, often donate their time and money to help our
program here," noted the recreation director. "Coach
Adolph Rupp often donates used sports equipment to
us."
Every month Walker takes the time to be editor of a
mimeographed newspaper called "KV News and Views."
It includes news from the departments and staff, but
mostly creative work done by the children.
"I try to get the kids to write as much as possible," said Walker.
Probably the favorite activity at KV is the weekly
dance. Only couples are allowed to come, with the
boys asking the girls one week and the giils asking
the boys the next.
This is one of the few times that the boys and

girls are allowed to get together to have fun. Although
they see each other at school and at some recreations'
activities, a row of cottage parents separates the two
sexes at ball games.
At meals, a row of tables separates the boys from
the girls, except on Wednesdays when they are allowed to eat family style and pass notes to each other.
Sexes Separated
One of the girls' cottage parents noted that almost
all of the girls had been exposed to a great deal of
contact with the opposite sex before they came to
KV and often it is frustrating for the girls to spend
so little time with the boys.
The dances are always well chaperoned and most
of the couples simply sit around taking advantage
of the time to talk. However, there is usually a group
of black couples who are constantly doing the latest
soul steps over in a group to themselves. No interracial
dating is allowed.
Carliss Taylor, a girls' cottage parent, talked about
the racial situation.
"When these kids are home, they are used to having
blacks and whites together. They live together here but
not being able to date is just a rule."
Although the recreational program is vital part of
KV, its actual budget is very small. Most of the money
the department spends comes from profits of a canteen at KV.
"There was a federal program which gave each
child some money every week, but right now we don't
have it anymore," noted Director Walker. The state
Please Turn To Pae 7

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April lf,

1970

SG Committee Condemns UK Bookstore

Continued From Tare One
eminent or a service organizaduction of percentage hike on tion. This would be an interim
used books, and more student policy until the cooperative store
could evolve.

employees.

third alternative was the
The 13 page report also inoperation of a used books, book- cluded some background informstore on campus by Student Gov-- ation on the bookstore, explain- A

AHljIcttti Jfflnrat

ing the role of the bookstore In
the Student Center Dond Issue
and in relation to other units of
the Auxiliary Services System,
of which the bookstore is a part.
According to the report, the
bookstore was incorporated into
the system to pay off part of the
Student Center Bond.
The operation is supposed to
pay between $3,000 to $10,000
f
of one
annually, about
percent of the total Bond.
one-hal-

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The Kentucky
The

to Auxiliary Services.
The proposal also advised the
creation of a subcommittee of
students and faculty under the
Doard.
Each Auxiliary Services committee, according to the report,
would have a subcommittee to
advise the managers of the units.
This proposal has been approved
by Robert Blakeman, head of
Auxiliary Services.
Blakeman has agreed to help
get the changes written into the
Governing Rules and Regula-

Downtown Movie
Offers UK ID's
Free Showing

crnmcnt

'Students Role in University

ation of the bookstore by AuxilServices, the committee
made a proposal to change the
present advising structure, and
create a Student Advisory Board
iary

tions.
Under the present system, the
only student participation in the
System is with the Student Center Board (Just with the Student
Center) and the President's (of
the University) Bookstore Advisory Committee an "aggregation
of students, faculty, and admin
1st ration very few of which know
what they are supposed to do or
even care," according to the committee.

President, National Student Association
j

1

However, if a unit of the
Auxiliary Services System, which
includes housing and dining services, loses money, the other
units must make it up.
If enough were lost, it could
mean an increase in housing and
dining fees. Likewise, according
to the report, if it showed a
healthy profit, rates might not
have to be raised for a long time.
In an attempt to alleviate
the problem through the oper- -

Kernel

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Slailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
bessiuu.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 49tt6.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
bince 1915.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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Editor, Managing Editor

For UK students, the Strand
Theatre will show a free performance of "The Lawyers," a
courtroom drama, at midnight
Saturday.
The free showing is for all
UK students with ID's.
"The Lawyer" was selected,
the theater reported, because of
its "unusual appeal to today's
liberal moviegoer."

EARN CREDITS
WHILE YOU TRAVEL
TO EUROPE
Spcciol College Rites

Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk
Advertising, Business, Circulation

Contact:

2321

MR. RCK ALLfeN
98 Dennis Drive
Lexington, Ky. 40503

2320
2447
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He's not worried about his
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When he speaks, you listen.
You wonder about the freaky
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people he raps with.
Then after all is said and
done you'll figure you
should tell your uninhibited
friends to go see what you've heard.

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April

l
AU

10, 1970- -3

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..

1

* Court's Future
The Supreme Court at once

sym-

bolizes and implements America's
capacity to balance stability with
progress, tradition with
Through the nearly 200 years
of the American experiment, it has
kept a written Constitution from
becoming a dead document.
The court has accomplished this
feat by interpreting the Constitution sometimes literally and at other
times as freely as required by a
dynamic society. None of the poself-renewa-

l.

litical harangues that attended the
Carswell controversy have altered
those basic facts. On the contrary,
the Senate's triumph of conscience over partisanship has only
underscored the Court's crucial role
in inspiring confidence in the future

of American Covemment.
The issue now is not whether
Mr. Nixon can appoint a Southerner. He clearly can, if he is prepared to apply the same rigorous
standards that must measure candidates from any region. What is out
of tune with the best interests of
the Court as an institution of extraordinary national authority is the
concept of narrow regionalism.
The late Senator Borah once
said, "Cardoza belongs as much
to Idaho as to New York." The
test of any nominee, Southern or
otherwise, must be whether he belongs as much to the nation as to
his native state. Justice Frankfurter,
in assessing the qualities required
on the Court, spoke of "capacious
minds and reliable power for disinterested and
judgment," and he counseled that "no
artificial or irrelevant consideration
should restrict the choice."
The President need only look to
the Court's history to see that excellence and integrity reside in
every region, South xas well as
North, West as well as East. The
chance he must take is the unpredictability of men of quality. Once
appointed, they are not beholden
to the politics of those who chose
them.
This is precisely why the question should not be how to get safe,
regional candidates past the Senate's scrutiny, but rather how to
adorn the bench with men who will
be a credit to the Administration
long after election strategies have
faded from memory. This is theonly
way to protect the stature of the
Supreme Court.
The New York Times
fair-mind-

ed

Kernels
If you cannot think about the future,
you cannot have one.
John Galsworthy
Ennui, felt on the proper occasions,
is a sign of intelligence.
Clifton Fadiman

66

The Way I Look At It. If Sniro Affnew Didn't Exist Somebody Would Have
Had To Invent Him."

By TERRY BARTON

Political Science Junior
In re Hartfield v. Westerfield. Mr.
Hartfield (April 14 Kernel) seems to feel
he has presented sufficient refutation to
the criticisms offered ROTC by Miss

Westerfield (April 9 Kernel). He failed
however to come to grips with the essential issues suggested in the earlier
Soapbox.
ROTC, as a military institution, depends by its very nature upon strict
discipline, hierarchy, and regimentation
eliciting from those within its intestines
dehumanized responses to crises and unquestioning obedience to authority, inculcated through prolonged and menticidal

training.
Mr. Hartfield says he has discussed
atomic power, My Lai, the ABM ( "the
history of military and political searches
for peace"!) and believes such discussion
and lack of uniformity ot opinion, attests
to the openness of those in ROTC:
we are not brainwashed."
The very purpose of brainwashing is
to convince the subject he has not been
brainwashed. This is accomplished less
by direct presentation of ideology than by
its subtle and insidious permeation of
the person's thought patterns by supply-

"...

modes of access
ing him
to the world of everyday reality. His
"civilized" behavior then follows the routines concomitant with this institutionalized form of common sense.
common-sens- e

Relying upon a common background
of thought-stoppin- g
answers and attitudes, two similarly brainwashed persons
are able to understand each other using
this assumptive groundwork as a base of
communication. They march to the same
drummer and speak through the same
myths.
Observe the ROTC people inarching
in formation, for example. None dare lose
It simply isn't done.
step or wrong-face- .
Were you to ask any one of them later,
however, he could assure you that he had
not been brainwashed he could have
deviated.

The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

Kernel Soapbox

Iernel

University of Kentucky

THURSDAY, APRIL

1894

16, 1970

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
James W. Miller, Editor

Frank

Managing Editor

Mike Herndon, Editorial rage Editor
Hubert Duncan, Advertising Munager
Dan Cosset t, Associate Editor
Bob Varrone, Arts Editor
Chip JIutcheson, Sports Editor
Cwen Ranney, Women's Page Editor
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Jimmy Robertson, Circulation Manager
Patrick Mathes,
Bill Matthews,
Jeannie St. Charles, Jeannie LeeJom,
Jean Renaker
Assistant Managing Editors
S. Coots,

In short, there are assumptions underlying everyone's mental activity, assumptions which are seldom, if ever, reflected
upon, simply because their primary impact
is, at the very moment of perception and
function in the structuration of the situation for the person. In the case, however,
of those trained so dogmatically in the
ways of militarism, these assumptions are
not only concretely reified and far removed beneath the level of discussion
but, in addition, involve moralpsychic
derailments.
This suggests Miss Westerfield's further point that the ultimate purpose of
ROTC is training to murder. This requires little elaboration. Most individuals
can conceive of murder only with great
emotional and intellectual, if not physical,
nausea. ROTC sets about to reduce the
affair to a rational enterprise rational
and therefore legitimate. One studies murder, is taught murder, conceives murder
cool y talks murder, and commits it! But
rationally. Mr. Hartfield denies the allegation that AFROTC people yell, "I want
to KILL V.C." Perhaps the occasion in

volved Army ROTC- -1 don't know. ROTC
people probably ponder it so hard that
many others have been able to intuit it if
not actually hear it.
In his concluding remarks, Mr. Hartfield mentions the benefits of participation in ROTC Such benefits may indeed
accrue, but in a further sense, that one
can derive benefit from such experience
serves not the vindication of ROTC as
a program in an institution of higher
education, but rather bespeaks only ill
of the society in which it is situated.
"This is not the way we put the end to

war."
If then universities exist to encourage and facilitate the examination of one's
own system of myths, the examination of
those of others, thereby the respect of
other human beings, and the free and unbiased interchange of ideas with others,
indeed ROTC, thwarting individual expansion and development in each of these
areas, can have no legitimate claim to
existence as a "regular course of the University," and therefore as a source of class
credit.

Kernel Forum: the readers write
Assures Sororities
attended an SMC seminar
sorority house. The women of the sorority actively participated
r
discussion and were genin the
uinely and conscientiously involved in
learning more about the war. I am sure
that members of the sorority and SMC
were highly enlightened by the discussions, and I feel that the girls will become really personally involved in the
war problem and will dissent as their
consciences guide them.
At the close of the session, however,
a number of the women expressed feelings that although they were
etc., they were unsure and apprehensive about participation in the campus
peace movement because of a probable
hostile reception by "established" antiwar people. The women represented that
this feeling is common among most other
sorority members and that they did not
know how to approach the problem.
Whether the hostility is real or imagined is irrelevant the fact is, it is
apparently real to too many people who
do want to become involved. Certainly,
hostility toward any people who are aware
or who are becoming aware is
to the peace movement; discrimination because of past andor present
differences is a luxury the movement can
not afford.
It is my hope that all who realize
the logic of peace will be accepted by
Recently
at the Tri-De-

I

lt

those who have been with the movement
in the past; I further hope that this article will allay the fears of hostility or
rejection expressed tonight.
DAVE OBRADOVICH

anti-wa-

anti-wa-

r,

g

Fonner

UK

Student

SinIetary's Praise

Members of QUEST, as students of
the University of Kentucky, gratefully
acknowledge President Singlttary's action
in upholding the students' right to hear
Kunstler on campus. Often the administration's support of the student seems
nonexistent. When it does occur, it is
drowned out by cries of dissent on other
issues, too soon forgotten; or, more likely
such support is never made aware to the
students. Here's to better communica-tio- n
and Dr. Singletary's stand.
PAUL K. PHILLIPS
Kirwan Tower

Knocks Hrjrhl
that it took our
Student Covemment president one day
in office to make a fool of himself. When
the president of the student body urges
students to boycott classes it appears
he is acting contrary to the interests of
the majority of students. It seems tliis is
going to be a bad year for responsible
student government.
I see

newly-electe- d

ROBERT S. MARTIN
Senior, Engineering

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April lfi,

1970- -5

Candlelight March Highlights Moratorium

Continued From

Fae

One

"We must be prepared to accept
defeat. . . We Rot in on the wrong
side. It is more important to save
lives than face."
Mason then introduced a visit
ing New York University professor, Ted Becker, who summed
up the meaning of SMC's moratorium activities better than anyone.
He commented that activities
like these usually draw the same
crowds. "I don't usually address
anti-wa- r
rallies. They know what
I'm going to say before I say it."
Referring to the near 300 students present at his afternoon
talk on the SC patio grass, he
said, "I should talk to the 15,000
students who are not here."
Becker added he didn't believe in dropping out. "Make
damn sure you don't drop out.
Keep gaining information. Stay
in the system. If we ever become
a majority we can change the
priorities of society."
Following Becker, Dr. Donald
Nugent, UK history professor,
warned the audience not to become involved in violent revolution.
"The muscle is in the right
arm in this country. I will not
invite you to a bloodbath . . .
Resorting to violence is a death
wish," Nugent said.

Nugent said the peace movement had accomplished several
tilings.

Moratorium activities climaxed with an evening candlelight march. At 7 p.m., students
began to gather at the Limestone St. entrance to the Student Center.
A student in a denim jacket,
one pocket patched with a peace
symbol and the other with a
Fal staff Beer emblem, took on
the job of passing the 500 to
600 available candles among the
demonstrators.
The demonstrators planned
their march around all the University dorms. Walking four and
five abreast, they stretched half
a block at times, with parade
marshals exhorting them to
"stretch it out . . . make it look
longer."

carriage, and Don Pratt, former
UK student whose appeal of a
conviction on draft evasion is
now awaiting an audience with
the Supreme Court. Pratt was
in a wheelchair, victim of a collapsed lung.
As the demonstrators passed
the dorms, shouts were heard
from the rooms "why don't you
take a batli?" The marchers answered "Peace now, brother-jo- in
us," and took up a series
of chants.
By 8:15 the conversation and
laughter had stopped. The marchers, numbering perhaps 750 or
800 people (We've got a thousand," said May at one time),
took up the song "Cive Peace
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Facing the assembly was a
group of perhaps 50 students
holding up an American flag.
Another flag hung from a dorm
window. As the marchers sang
and listened to speeches, the opposition group imitated a firing
squad. When Peter Mitchell, a
UK graduate student, began the
featured speech of the evening,
they recited the pledge to the
flag and sang the national anthem.

"B.OTC is an obscenity wliich
under the shelter of the university provides a substantial majority of the officers of Vietnam,"
Mitchell said.

The opposition broke out
again into the Star Spangled
Banner, which was answered by
a lone curse from the marchers.
In the background, Dean of
Students Jack Hall denied any
connection between a reported
bomb threat in the Chemistry-Physicbuilding and the peace
march. An hour later, the marchers were still seated on the wet
grass, listening to folk songs and
trying to keep their symbolic
peace candles lit.
s

"The University is obscene
it must be crushed," said
Mitchell. An official talked in low
tones to the opposition, wliich
protested that it had the right to

...

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Euclid.
A policeman
escorting the
march expressed his views on the
scene before him. "Well," he said,
"I'd be out there marching in it
myself if it weren't for that fella
with the gold stripes over there."
He was referring to his commanding officer.
By 8:40, the crowd was n earing the Complex. Press photographers puffed alongside the line
of marchers trying to keep pace.
As they passed Fraternity
Row, Creeks came out of the
dorm from a party to watch them
pass.
The marchers finally assembled in the Haggin courtyard.

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-

TODAY and TOMORROW
vite the congregation to celebrate the
Eucharist In bare feet.
On Tuesday, April 14, the Women's
and Men's (lire Clubs will present n
concert at B:15 p.m. in Memorial Hall.
The Glee Clubs are directed by Sara

Coming Up
Canterbury House. 472 Rose Strret,
have nn Open House, honoring
Prvrrend and Mrs. Canon Addison
Hnsra from five to eight p.m. Sunday,
April 19. Heverend Hosra Is
elect of the Episcopal Dio-o- f
Lexington. Evensong at 5:30
p.m., nupper at 6 p.m. The price Is
$1.00 per person and reservations must
be made bv Friday, April 17. Phone
aftermornings, and
noons.
St. Augustine's Chapel will have a
special Earth Day Eucharist, using a
liturgy developed at the National Cathedral In Washington, D. C. on Wednesday, April 22 at 5:30 p.m. will be
Barefoot Sunday services
held at St. Augustine's Chapel, April
19 at the Chapel located at 472 Rose
Street. The 10:30 p.m. service will in

will

Holroyd.

Ulshop-Coadjut-

The University of