xt7tb27psf31 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tb27psf31/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-11-08 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, November 08, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 08, 1967 1967 1967-11-08 2024 true xt7tb27psf31 section xt7tb27psf31 THE KENTUCKY

Wednesday Afternoon, Nov. 8, 1967

GOP Wins
Locally

Four of five local Republi-
cans candidates were swept to
victory Tuesday on the heels of
Louie B. Nunn’s statewide win.

Sen. Shelby Kinkead and
House Minority Leader John Y.
Brown were among a score of
state Democratic well knowns
who fell victim to the Nunn
win.

Only Foster Pettit was able to

gain re-election to his house seat
as he held less than a 20-vote

margin over Republican Johnnie
Jackson.

Students
Discuss

UK Image

A proposal to hire a public
relations team to improve the
University's image was suggested
by student representatives in a
meeting with UK President John
W. Oswald Wednesday morning.

The students, Robert Walker,
chairman of the Student Activi-
ties Board, Sandy Bugie, Home-

coming steering committee chair- A

man and Guy Mendes, Kemel
sports editor met with Dr. 05-
wald, Athletic Director Bernie
Shively, members of the Lexing-
ton quarterback Tipoff Club and
UK officials, to express their op-
inion that the University had pro-
jected a drab image.

Walker pointed out the cur-
rent rise in student spirit on
campus during the last two or
three weeks and suggested the
trend be kept going. Miss Bugie
then presented the idea of hiring
a firm to build the University's
image.

Miss Bugie has met with a
representative of one such firm,
the same firm that did work for
Indiana University and was ap-
parently successful.

Walker said the athletic pro-
gram should be promoted because
it is something all students can
rally around.

President Oswald brought out
the point that the promotion of
the athletic program should be
only a part of improving the
image of the whole University.
versity.

A student pep club and a stu-
dent athletic board to act as a
liason between Shively and the
student body were other ideas
touched on in the session.

No discussions were reached
concerning any of the proposals,
at the meeting, which was also
attended by Executive Vice Pres-
ident J. D. Albright, and Vice

Presidents R. L. Johnson, Robert‘

Kerley and Clenwood Creech.

 

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

 

r:

Kernel Photo by Rick Bell

“Just by a little bit,” Republican Louie B. Nunn seems to say

of his victory Tuesday over Henry Ward. Mr. Nunn made a vic-

tory statemait in Louisville shortly before midnight. He will be
the first COP governor since 1943.

 

N unn Victory First
GOP Win Since 1943

By LEE BECKER

Special To The Kernel
LOUISVILLE—Republican Louie B. Nunn Tuesday became the
first member of his party to be elected governor of Kentucky in 24
years by defeating Democrat Henry Ward andConservativeChristian

Clanz Jr.

Democrat Wendell Ford from
Owensboro held a slight lead
over Republican Thomas Rat-
liff from Pikeville in the lieuten-
ant governor race.

In the other seven statewide
races, Only Democratic candida-
te fontreasurer Thelma Stovall
was able to lead her Republican
opponents.

Carried Legislators

The Republican sweep also
carried Republican legislators in-
to office, but not enough to give
them a majority in either house.

This was the second attempt
by Mr. Nunn to capture the
state‘s top seat for his party.
He was defeated in 1963 by now
Cov. Edward T. Breathitt by a
mere 13,000 votes.

In that election Mr. Nunn
was unable to make inroads into
Democratic strongholds in a state
where Democrats outnumber Re-
publicans two to one.

Early results showed that the
Republicans were still on the
short end of the voting in thetra—
ditionally Democratic first con-
gressional district, but that the
difference in Ward’s and Nunn's
vote was not as great as the
1963 election.

Even The Rooster Went To Sleep

By DARRELL CHRISTIAN
Special To The Kernel

LOUISVILLE — Sixty—five-
year-old Lewis Pepper sat be
neath the election tally board at
Democratic headquarters here
Tuesday, holding the Kentucky
party symbol—Thelma Stovall's
rooster. ,

But as results mounted in-
creasingly against Democratic
gubernatorial nominee Henry
Ward, the rooster went to sleep
at 10 pm. and with it went
the party's hopes of extending
their 20-year reign in state gov-
emment.

Things never were exciting
at party headquarters.

'Henry's Beat'

Slightly less than an hour
after most polls in the state
closed—some Western Kentucky
counties are on Central Standard
Time-thoughts of defeat drifted
through the 10th floor room of
the Sheraton Hotel. Television
computers showed Republican
Louie B. Nunn winning heavily

in Eastern Kentucky, and one
Ward supporter turned to leave.
All he said was, ”Henry's beat."

Campaign aides apparently
were in no hurry to chalk up
results on the huge board. Nunn
headquarters already was boast-
ing of an overwhelming lead in
Fayette County, but the Demo-
crats never posted results from
that area.

”I'm afraid they're holding
'em up because it’s bad news,"
one lady said to a friend.

The spirit began to pick up
as Ward took a 200-vote lead in
Jefferson County, but the rejoic-
ing was limited to occasional
shouting as the results were re
corded.

Early Prediction

A Louisville television station
predicted early Mr. Nunn would
win by 7,0“) votes, but it soon
changed its forecast when the
race tightened. With half the
votes counted, the election was
called a cliffhanger.

Democrats, some perhaps op-

timistic and some perhaps feeling
the effects of too much drink,

Dbegan predicting victory by 8:30

pm. But the board at Ward
headquarters and the one main-
tained by the COP showed dif-
ferent trends.

The Democratic board was
dominated by retums from the
First and Second Districts,tradi-
tional Democratic strongholes.
Eastern Kentucky results were
most common on the Republican
board.

A. lady staggered forward to
say former highway commissioner
Ward would win, but then paused
and added, ”I hope . . . He had
better."

Still the crowd, although only
half as large as its counterpart
in the BIOWn Hotel, remained
loyal until 10:30 pm. At that
time, with virtually no results
being posted by the Democrats,
all eyes turned to television,
which showed Mr. Nunn leading
by more than 22,000 votes with

Continued on Page 7, Col. 1

Democrats Lost In First District '

ERNEL

By WILLIAM GRANT
Bpeeial To The Kernel

LOUISVILLE—Kentucky's largest city
quietly went about its routineTuesday night,
scarcely pausing to take notice of a gov—
emor's election.

Theater goers and diners along busy
Fourth Street talked of the evening's enter-
tainment, not of the outcome of the race.

It was, perhaps, a fiting climax for an
election in which, to use the professional
politician's term, ”the people weren't talk-
ing."

What the people did do at the polls
Tuesday, observers agree, is cast a decisive
“no" vote that will send Louie B. Nunn
to the Executive Mansion.

This "no" vote was not really a vote for
Nunn and his team, although that was its
effect. The vote was really against the John-
son administration, the Vietnam war and

 

News Analysis

 

various other ills of the time including
a state administration that has held power
in Frankfort for more than 20 years.

Mr. Nunn's opponent, Democrat Henry
Ward, ran his campaign on the basis of his
record as an administrator in state govem-
ment and his honesty. But Mr. Ward, a
rather bland figure personally, was unable
to excite much interest in his bid for office.

Until three weeks ago, Mr. Nunn was
given little chance of unseating the Demo-
crats despite Ward's lackluster campaign.

But during the last three weeks,observers
agree, the Nunn drive caught hold of the
public unhappiness with national and in—

. ternational policy and was able to transfer

blame for these problems onto Ward's should-
ers.

Despite the Democrats' assertion that
“we are only electing a governor for Ken-
tucky," Mr. Nunn continually argued that
the Kentucky election would be watched at
the White House asa signthat the President's
policy is no longer popular in a state he

Continued on Page 5, Col. 1

Vol. LIX, No. 52

Mr. Nunn appeared to berun-
ning ahead in the seconddistrict.
Mr. Ford ran considerably
stronger here, his home district,
than did Mr. Ward.

Mr. Ward is a former resi-
dent of Paducah, in the first
district, but has lived in Louis—
ville for the last 10 years.

Ward Carried Louisville

Mr. Ward carried Louisville
proper, but was unable to carry
Jefferson County as a whole. The

 

GOVERNOR

3,031 oi 3.031
Ward (D) .................. . 423.!8!)
Nunn (R) ................... 449,783

LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR
3.019 of 3,031

 

Ford (D) ..................... 409,4”
Ratliff (R) ................... 395,945
SECRETARY OF STATE
2.97] of 3.0:“

Reed (D) ............... 371,213
Begley (B) ............... “$.76:
ATTORNEY GENERAL
2,971 of 3,03l
Breekinridge (D) . . . . . . . . . . . 390,798
Burns (R) ............... 375.230
TREASURER
2.971 of 3,031
Stovall (D) ................... 394,782
Jenkins (R) ................. 375.371
AUDITOR.

2.969 of 3,03!

Green (D) .................... 372.062
Conley (B) ................... $71,150
SUPT. OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTIO

2.001 of 3,031 .
Butler (D) .................. 378.352
Miller (B) .................... 375,036

COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE
2,961 of 3.03]

St». Chit (D) ................. 369.631

Miller (R) .................... 376.957

APPEALS CLERK
2,408 of 3,031
Sutherland (D) .............. 290,080
Vermlllion (R) ............... 289,303

 

county contains about one fourth
ofthe state's voters.

In 1963 Mr. Nunn carried Jef-
ferson County by 4,000 votes, but
did not seem to have that great
ofa majority this election.

Indicative of the trend in the
city of Louisville was the defeat

Continued on Page 7, Col. 1

Frisco Voters
Reject Viet
Withdrawal

United Pro-e Internflonnl

SAN FRANCISCO—Voters
Tuesday rejected a resolution urg-
ing immediate U.S. withdrawal
from Vietnam in the first major
city vote on the war.

The measure, Proposition P,
was put to San Francisco's
317,000 registered voters along
with the election of a new mayor
and county supervisors and 15
other propositions.

With 600 of 1,341 precincts
counted, the vote on the war
was 57,032 no, 32,339 yes.

Voting was heavierthan usual
as polls opened shortly after
dawn.

The Vietnam proposition, al-
lowing only a yes or no vote,
declared:

"Shall it be the policy ofthe
people of the city and county of
San Francisco that there be an
immediate ceasefire and with-
drawal of US. troops from Viet—
nam so that the Vietnamese peo-
ple can settle their own prob—
lems."

 

 2 — THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, .Wedncsday, Nov. 8, 1967

 

 

 

 

  
  
 
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

4». WEEK!
Ill”IA

cums- ms “SIR

WWI: F—II
Martini"

l—‘fl—K -
“All

 

 

 

an. WEEK!

 

W: SIDNEY
Wm? POITIER

.«JAMES CLAVELL S nonunion or

“To SIB, WITH
LOVE" ‘@

TECHNICOLOR’ '»

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, chairman Robert Yea-
ger, president of the LC. Bal-
four Company of Attleboro,
Mass, announced the total corn-
rnittment of $2,202,406 consisting
mostly of bequests, life insurance,
trusts, annuities and life income

contracts.
0 O 0

Dean William S Jordan, of
the UK College of Medicine, has

‘2; ‘

tpe— .-

PRIVATE BANQUET ROOM
Reservation - 252-9344
”9 South Limestone

 

 

 

 

nerve and

a gun, gets
a million in
gold . . .

and a girl!

"(SIMS

“Mind valCOUlSOtlll Si venom in Ni

PLUS—

 

      

CUUDE GIROUX

Illa! Man

"BIKINI PARADISE"

— FIRST RUN! —
STARTS 7-30 ADM. $115

EASTMANCOLOR

CIAUDIIIE AUBER

AnAIHIDARHSISRiiiASi

MJCJOVW JUN" '

in color

 

 

The YMCA student-faculty
basketball game will be held
at 8 p.m., Nov. 14, at Memorial
Coliseum. Faculty and staff from
10 University departments will
compete against student organi-
zation leaders. At halftime a 20-
minute film will be shown of the
UK basketball team's visit last
year to the Near East. The pur-
pose of the student-faculty game
is to raise money for student
scholarships. "

O O I

The Czech Philharmonic Or-
chestra of 100 musicians,directed
by Ladislav Slovak, will appear
at 8:15 p.m. Nov. 8 at Memorial
Coliseum as part of the Central
Kentucky Concert and Lecture
Series. Admittance will be limited
to full-time UK students and sea-
son members of the association.

I O 0

Two books designed by R].
Conkwright, University alumnus
and designer of UK's centennial
symbol, are among 25 books dis-

son and Romantic Tradition," by
Edwin Eigner.

The book show is open to the
public.

0 O 0

Whitney Young, executive di-
rector of the Urban League anda
member of the recent presidential
team which visited Vietnam to
observe elections, will be the fea-
tured speaker at the Fall Con-
vocation Thursday.

The convocation, open to the
public, will begin at 2:30 p.m.
O O O

The first annual meeting of the
Association for Academic Surgery
will be held Nov. 10-11 at UK and
the Imperial House Motel. Two
general sessions will be held Fri-
day in the Agricultural Science
Center auditorium, followed bya
luncheon at Spindletop Hall. Fri-
day night activities will include
a banquet at the Imperial House.

0 O O

Omer Hamlin Jr., director of

the Medical Center Library has

 

 

A v
.(3’ at”
‘9
«3‘7 of”
Q0 ‘6"
0

Weekends dull?

Got A Date But No Place To Go?

SOMETHING NEW FOR UK
KATS AND THEIR KITTENS

Picadome

Student Owned and Operated

Restaurant

Richmond Road to I-75 South
at Clays Ferry Exit

 

r
4
6th WEEK!
' Morethan $2million wascom— been named to the U3. Public played in the American Associa- been elected president of the
WWW mitted to UK by 32 alumni and Health Service’s Regional Health tion of University Presses Book Kentucky Library Association.
“mm friends for-support of programs Advisory Committee. The ap— Show through Nov. 17 in therare He is a membenof nine profes-
- for which state funds are not pointment, made by Surgeon b00k room 0f the LIPIUY- ' sional library socteties.
gm available. General William H. Stewart, is bodllhe two‘gll‘inkgvnght-dfaglg o o o
9 In a s h before the U i- effective immediately and con- 5 are e ap¢r§l° ' - - '
ma-~:.ut.a fl versity lgzvetcalopment Countdil tinues through lune 30, 1969. TOW Wilson," edited by Afthl" K fiigigkgllzflfitswbzglogeilggg
I! 0 0 0 Link, and ”Robert Louis Steven- '

from 72 Senior cadets to head up
the GOO-man Army ROTC Cadet
Brigade. Nishimoto is from Ta-
koma Park, Maryland, and is a
Distinguished Military Student,
a member of the Scabbard and
Blade Honorary Society, and the
Pershing Rifles.

 

Boyd Coming

The Rev. Malcolm
Boyd, author of "Are You
Running With MeJesus?"
will appear at the Univer~
sity Feb. 1. Mr. Boyd, an
Episcopal minister often
called the “Coffee House
Priest,” is coming to UK
under the joint sponsor—
ship of the YM-YWCA.

 

 

 

Hear the Finest in
Bluegrass Music
with J. D. CROWE

and Kentucky
Mountain Boys at

MARTINS
665 N. Lime
Wed., Fri., Sat.
8:30-12:30 p.m.

 

 

 

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky. Lex-
ingtor. Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington. Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly the
school year except holidays and exam
periods. and once during the summer
session.

Published by the Board of Student
Publications. UK Post Office Box 4986.

Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.

Advertising published herein is in—
tended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly. by mail —- ”.21
Per copy, from files -— $.10

KERNEL TELEPHONE

Editor. Managing Editor ......... 131]
Editorial Page Editor.

Associate Editors, Sports ...... 2320
News Desk ...................... 2441
Advertising, Business.

Cimlation .................... 3310

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ist AREA SHOWING!

STARTS 7:30
ADM. $1.25

IS 107.111.9714 it’ll] HUI/E

[MW mam/m w. mm [WI/fl M105. $540709?” ”
sum Imam MWMFIl/Ib‘ PAM/(Mfr a...» mmzwi

Wsammmv, WM mowvmrmm ‘
why-1.5mm - WWW/(dbymfl MIN ‘@

“'01”!

.

PLUS— "A FISTFUL 0|: DOLLARS" in color

 

 

“film’s.

PIZZA SPECIAL

 

 

WEDNESDAY NIGHT . . . 4 p.m. ’til close

 

O

9 AT

Nu

 

‘K‘W
BUY ONE PIZZA “‘
or YOUR CHOICE

REGULAR PRICE

Phone 252-]722

Size

tr

Get Second
In Same

IN OUR DINING ROOM
ONLYl—No Carry Outs!

347 South Limestone

1/2

 

 

 

 

  

 

Draft War Protesters, HerShey I
Suggests To Local Draft Boards

WASHINGTON (UPI)—-Selective Service Di-
rector Lewis B. Hershey has recommended that
college students who physically interfere with
military recruiting officers on campus be subject
to immediate drafting, it was learned Tuesday.

Disclosure of Gen. Hershey's letter to local
draft boards across the c0untry followed inci-
dents in which recruiters for the armed forces
as well as the Dow Chemical Co., which man-
ufacturers napalm for use in Vietnam, were blocked
by student antiwar demonstrators.

At Oberlin College in Ohio, student protesters
trapped a Navy recruiter in his car for four hours
until they were dispersed by police with tear gas.

In a letter dated Oct. 26, Cen. Hershey noted
that student deferments are “given only when
they serve the national interest." By the same
token, he said,’anyone who violates the Se~
lective Service Act or any of its regulations or
operations should be denied a deferment in the
national interest.

‘Not In National Interest'

”It follows that illegal activity which inter—
feres with rcmiting or causes refusal of duty
in the military or naval forces could not by any
stretch of the imagination be constnied as being
in support of the national interest," he said.

Cen. Hershey's letter made no mention of

McGill Students Demonstrate

MONTREAL (CPS)—-About 25 student demonstrators forced the
administration at McCill University to postpone a meeting today
called to decide on the punishment for three members of the
student newspaper staff who are involved in a heated controversy

The three student editors have
been in hot water with the ad-
ministration since the newspaper

here.

The demonstrators blocked
the room where the disciplinary

of the antirecruitment incidents. But a spokes-
man in his office said it was clear that Gen.
Hershey considered any interference with a mili-
tary recruiting ofiicer to be illegal.

“There’s nothing new in this," the spokes-
man said. ”It's been here in the law all along.
The attitude now is 'let's enforce the law.'"

He said local draft boards had authority to
drop student deferments for such conduct because
of the Selective Service's reSponsibility to furnish
manpower for the armed forces.

Other Provisions

He referred to a provision in the law providing
penalties for "any person who shall knowingly
hinder or interfere or attempt to do so in any way
by force or violence or otherwise" with the work
of the Selective Service.

Gen. Hershey's suggestion to the local boards,
which have final responsibility for who is drafted,
also applies to anyone who deliberately refuses to
carry his draft card or who invades a Selective
Service office to disrupt its operations.

When a local b'oard receives information about
someone involved in an “illegal" demonstration,
Cen. Hershey said, the board may reclassify him,
declare him a delinquent and order him to report
for induction if it has evidence of a violation of
law.

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNE‘L, Wednesday, Nov. 8, 1967 - 3

o l

 

W

 

"Tine HA6 BEEN THE MOST ‘IOUCHING APPEAL 1b 655 emu

‘LITLLE MAN ON, “-

P_U_§..,

         

4

(A s} s -

I»

made)! If.” H

 

l

GRADE RAISE WT I HAVE EVER EXPENEMED “WOUL

CONGIDEK

lNé A FUND RN6ING LETTER FORGJR ALliMNI .9”

 

I" ' 25'? .x _ . .' . - ‘ ' - . '> :".-.- . ,~_ . 'e--. . .
, 3%.??? 231%;{(51.4%-figffiwfi‘gfifiifit’;:;:-'W‘w_é’$§fa:fizfifi:1 w;3§;.&mv§§2-cgv-’zg$gm«

 

committee, composed ofadminis-
trators, was to meet. The admin-
istration said another meeting
would not be attempted until
next week.

published an article that has
been criticized by some Mont real
citizens, McCill alumni and
members of the campus commun—
ity as obscene.

 

CLASSIFIED

 

 

'l'o pines n elossiliod phone UK
extension ms or stop in at the ot-
"co. in Journalism. iron I to noon.
1 to It. Monday through Friday.

nun are 81.35 for so words. ‘8 tor
three consecutive insertion of solo
ad or 88.75 por week. Deadline is 11
non. any prior to publication.

 

HELP WANTID

 

RESTAURANT WORK—Male. iull or
part time; experience not necessary
but preferred. Apply in person. Mc-
Donald's. 2321 Versailles Rd. 240a

 

l'OI BALI

 

FOR SALE—Golf clubs, brand new.
still in plastic covers. Sell for half.
Call 278-6320. 20t1.

FOR SALE—1964 Bonneville Convert-
ible. Automatic. Full power. Tinted
windshield. New vinyl top. Four
brand new tires. Call 255-1461. ext.
322 during day. Night phone 277-
2415. Ask for Jim. 2N5t

 

 

FOR SALE—Lovely 3 bedroom home.
large family room. 2 complete baths.
near UK: good loan assumption.
Call 252-4052 or ext. 2439. 2N5t

FOR SALE—1966 VW Karmann Ghia.
green; one owner. Please call 277-
4823. 2N5t

 

 

FOR SALE—1962 Ford Falcon Futura.
excellent condition. Standard tram-
mission. radio. “90. Call 266-2437 or
233-0313. BNst

FOR SALE—1963 VW Karhmann Ghia
convertible. pea green; needs top and
tune up; $700. Call 277-6412 after
4 p.m. '7th

 

 

 

"PING

 

TYPING — Themes through theses.
lBM. Executive. carbon ribbon. 00c
pp. Also multilith mimeograph and
ditto masters. Bill Givens. 252-7543.
Monday through Saturday 8-6. After
hours by arrangement. 6N10t

WAN‘I'ID

 

FEMALE wanted to share present.
large furnished two bedroom apart-
ment starting Dec. 15. Call 233-0235‘

 

PIISONAL

 

APPLICATIONS ior A.W.S. State Day
Steering Committee and for Wonder-
iui World of Women Week Steer-
ing Committee are available in all
women's residence units. sorority
houses. and at the Student Center
lniormation Desk through Notary.

6t

JOHN LOVES SUZANNE. 8N1t

GOOD GRIEF COACH RUPP. basket-
ball was never like this! See basket-
ball in the raw as the students meet
the faculty at the YMCA Student-
Faculty Basketball game in Memorial
Coliseum on esday. Nov. 14. at 8
p.m. Also halt-time film of ’66
team's visit to Near East. 8N6t

CAMPUS CRUSADE FOR CHRIST
RETREAT, Kentucky Dam Village.
November 17-19. More information
PKA House “College Life" Sunday
8:59 p.m. 8N2t

 

 

 

 

-ARI(0W*'

DEC‘I'ON PERM-IRON

Sport Shirts in

I

your exact sleeve length (L:

Permanently pressed to
last the life of the shirt.
Wide range of today's

color to choose from. /

Trimly tailored from ,'
shoulders to waist.
Handsomoly cm-
broiderod. “San-
forized Plus"

fabrics...

65% Dacron» polyester
35% Cotton in exact
sleeve lengths

. O

Dawahare's

 

 

waist taper. The fabric’s

ing. You’ll want several.
‘DuPont Reg. T. M.

35% cotton that’s “Sanforized-Plus”
labeled. Best of all, it never needs iron-

IMPERIAL MEN’S SHOP

IMPERIAL PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER

 

fiRROW‘DECTON” PERMA-IRON"
CUM LAUDE

Authentic Ivy styling through and through. You’ll notice
it in the gently flared button-down collar, shoulder to

65% Dacron‘ polyester,

*flfiéaarysrxefiétfic 3??

9x32:- ’ .

   
 
  
 
   
 
  
 

 

 

If you want a good shirt,
look for a good label. One
that means the shirt is styled
to last. With rolls, tapers and
pleats in the right places.

Like this Arrow ”Cum
Laude" Oxford. it's a woven
blend of Dacron® polyester

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

and cotton with skinny
boxed stripes of green and
blue. Button-down collar,
tapered waist. long sleeves.
Perma-lron so it won't
wrinkle.

And “Sanforized-Plus." ln

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

fiflfORITIJ Dun“

ll

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

or alabel?

checks, plaids, solids and
stripes. All the things you
look for in a shirt-for
$7.00.

And in a good shirt you’ll
find a good label.

The best labels come in
our shirts. Arrow.

 

 

--—\. __

)\

‘Xfl
\
\ \
j ‘

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Kentucky Politics

IN KENTUCKY
The moonlight is the softest, in Kentucky,
Summer days come oftest, in Kentucky,

Friendship is the strongest,

Love's fires glow the longest,

Yet a wrong is always wrongest,
In Kentucky.

Songbirds are sweetest, in Kentucky,

(stanza I)

Thoroughbreds the fleetest, in Kentucky;

The mountains tower proudest,
Thunder peals the loudest,
The landscape is the grandest,
And politics the damnedest,

In Kentucky.

James Mulligan wrote this poem when he resided in Maxwell Place,

(stanza 7)

James Hilary Mulligan— 1844-1916

in ancient times, when the University did not own the property. a

The last line is particularly apt when an election ends: with a
Republican governor, secretary of state, auditor, and commissioner of

agriculture; fused with a Democratic lieutenant governor, attorney
general, treasurer, superintendent of public instruction, Senate, and

House of Representatives.

Voters have assembled a time bomb calculated to explode many
times during the next four years, as Mr. Mulligan’s assessment of

the body politic, species Kentuckian, proves to be prophetic.

 

s

By JOHN JUNOT

A 5: S Sophomore
Your paper has devoted a great deal,
if not most, of its space to stories about
Student Power movements around the

country. But as a now notorious student:

leader once said, "You can tell by reading
it that The Kernel is more interested in
publicizing action on other campuses than
it is in starting or supporting any here."
This, unfortunately, is true.

Let me clarify that statement before I
receive a scathing rebuttal about the stu—
dent orubudsrnen and The Kernel polls.
What I mean to say isthat this paper does
its duty, sure enough, but it doesn't
do enough of it. In covering so much na—
tional news, what The Kernel is really
doing is making sure that national issues
stay national, and never become local.’

Aside from sports and social events,
this paper deals shallowly and pettily
with local campus controversies.

I refer specifically to the great Juul—
Kernel battle of late. What magnificent
sound and fury! You not only used exactly
the same tactics as your attacker, you
went him one or two better with larger
type, a longer article, and a rather nasty
cartoon. And in doing so, you probably
played right into his hands. I hope that
point dawns on you so you'll be able to
recognize reverse psychology the next
time you see it. And how can you claim
to be ”The South‘s Outstanding College
Daily" when you act unethically, and,
since The Kernel is bigger than any one
student, I‘ii/ould classify your rebuttal
to Thom Juul as an unethical act.

So mrrch for that. .You‘ve already done
what you shouldn't have. Now as for the
duties I, as one lowly student, think
you have been failing at:

(I) In those issues you do cover, you
don't seem to dig deep enough, right
down to the nitty-gritty. The most ob~
viorrs example is your coverage of the
Maine Chance controversy. It was ex—
cellent, well researched, intelligently corn-
mented on, and as boring to read as the
Lexington telephone directory. In fact,
it sometimes seemed as if you threw
half the city's population in there, just
to make sure you were giving unbiased
coverage.

But even though you did all this,
you still failed to adequately explain
the laws and restrictions on the Ulri-
versity that started the whole mess in
first place. I wanted to know why the
University is restricted in buying real
estate, and what laWs ‘needed to be
strengthened or repealed.

And you missed an issue deeper than
that. and one extremely significant at
this particular time. That is, why the
hell is an institution for higher educa-
tion allowed to become the biggest pork
barrel in the state? It‘s an open secret

that the Board of Trustees, and most
likely other administrative offices, have
been and will continue to be used for
patronage, log rolling, back—scratching,
and back biting. But it‘s no secret at
all that everyone connected with this
University, from john Oswald down to
the flunking freshman, suffers from these
abuses.

I'll tie this point into some others
before I'm finished.

(2) There are many significant is-
sues I have never seen you touch on,
probably because they haven't occurred
to you and because they have no articu-
late or organized spokesmen.

You seem to let UPI do all your
thinking for you, and completely ignore
the life, the everyday hangups and put
downs, of the typical student.

Take the outstanding trend in today s
youth-”You can't fight the administra—
tion" (implying, of course, that there's
really nothing a student can do to im-
prove his University.) And it's not just
apathy, either; some students are dedi-
cated to it. I argued the point for a half
hour once. Sure, the other guy agreed.
the Administration is sometimes arbitrary,
clumsy, inefficient, etc., etc. But there's
nothing you can do about it, and so I'm
against you. It was as if a Cuban refugee
started arguing in favor of Castro. Such
is ”a future citizen of our American
democracy." Hitler would have loved
that boy.

And another question: how is life in
restrictive, sexually segregated, and dis-
criminatory (hours for women, none for
men) residence halls supposed to prepare
a student for life in a free, sexually in-
tegrated and equalitarian society?

I say, personally, that it's time we
quit sifting this talk about ”visiting priv-
ileges" and study the possibility ofhetero-
sexual dorms. The way things are going
now, we may end up with the other
kind.

Rampant immorality need not result
from such a new set up. Men and women
have an exemplary record of maintaining
high moral standards even while living
together. Even in the same building, even
on the same floor. And many studies
have shown that such arrangements need
not be detrimental to the parties involved.
Indeed! There are many well documented
cases where such situations have actually
proved beneficial to the moral. social,
mental, and physical well being of the
sexes. There have even been reports of
happiness and harmony!

Question: what are the effects of the
purely gmgraphical. not to mention so-
cial, isolation of the student from the
community at large?

Question: how long are we going to
allow professional politicians to manipu-
late professional educators?

 

 

 

WELL. LET'S see,
WHICH ONE WILL

 

132/ %2z~u:)0z~

 

I could go on, but I'm convinced
that if you think about these questions
awhile, you'll eventually think of your
own. Just the few things I've mentioned
would keep the limited resources of The
Kemel busy for a decade or so. But it
has been quite nice about providing a
campus fomm.

(3) However, it’s still been failing in its
duties lately. The Kernel has been con-
stantly playing up Student Power, but it
has never gotten around to why the move-
ment consistently fails on campus after
campus. Instead of proposing anotherpro-
ject the students' newspaper probably
won't be able to get around to, I'll do it.

Student Power fails because thereis no
such thing. In a way you can't fight the
administration. That is, no one student
can stand up to his administration. The
only "power" any group of students has
over its administrators is the power to
embarrass it through demonstrations and
bad publicity. Such a group's chances vary
in proportion to how rmrch bad publicity
their administrators are willing to take
before giving in. So a good deal of the
time the students are simply outlasted.

Keep in mind that demonstrations—

pickets, marches, strikes, etc—are clumsy

political instruments at best, and utterly
ineffective and destructive at worst. Stu—
dent Power advocates' biggest mistake
so far is their failure to develop or leani
efficient political techniques.

Their second big mistake, stemming
from their first, has been their failure
to found self-perpetuating organizations
with broad goals. In general, Student
Power movements up till now have been
one-punch-jury-rigged deals limited to
attacking one narrow issue, that have
disbanded immediately after winning or
losing their goals. This means that stu-
dent activists have to re-organize from
scratch every time they think up another
objective. And since administrations are
self-perpetuating, if they lose ”round
one," it's easy for them to weaken or
destro