xt7vhh6c5d8x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vhh6c5d8x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660218  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 18, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 18, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7vhh6c5d8x section xt7vhh6c5d8x Inside Today's Kernel
Mrs. Clemmons, retiring Home Economics instructor, will take memories
with her: Page Two.

Vol. LVII, No. 85

University of Kentucky
KY
FEB.
LEXINGTON,

FRIDAY,

18, 19GG

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-

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,

My

Eight Pages

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..

,

0mm

Editorial discusses 'The Right To
Work": Page Four.
to try for win against
Mississippi
Cofj; Po9 Si-

University of Wisconsin's KD chapter
to be disbanded unless it submits certificate of
Page
Fire.

Goldberg's visit to be of special
terest to one coed: Page Seven.

in-

Students Plan
Protest Picket

jiiiinrninMl

.."ZTTrTT

ByJOIINZEII

Time Toppled Over By Construction
This 1918 University Senior Class monument was
toppled over amidst construction work on the
Administration Building when a truck accidentally

bumped into the stone piece. The Administration
Building is currently being remodeled.

M iller

Confirms Suspicions
Of SC, Center Board Merger

By FRANK BROWNING
Assistant Managing Editor
Rumors of a proposed merger between Student Congress
and the Student Center Board
were confirmed by President
Winston Miller at Thursday
night's Congress meeting.
"Student Congress and the
Student Center Board, as a part
of the Interim Committee's work,
are undergoing discussions for
merger of the two groups," Miller
told the student group.
Interim
The
Committee,
which was set up a year ago,
has been studying methods of
restructuring student government
at the University.
"We're now reaching the point
where we're almost sure a merger
will take place," Miller said.
Contacted after the meeting,
Student Center Board President
Susan Pillans reported, "I have

presented the merger to the Student Center Board and gotten a
favorable reply."
Both presidents Miller and
Pillans spoke of uniting the di-

chotomy of purpose between Congress and the Board, Congress
being concerned with policy
while the Board deals mainly
with programming.
"Programming areas will be
vastly increased with one of the
greatest benefits being a larger
staff as well as better financial
arrangements.
"We will be able to include
and reach the whole student
body," Miss Pillans said.
While neither president could
yet outline fully a new organization encompassing both groups,
Miller told Congress he hoped to
present the whole issue formally
to Congress for consideration
within two weeks.

Congress Absences
Noted By Lackey
John Lackey, freshman law
student, reported to Student Congress Thursday night that 10

of Congress delegates had missed
three or more meetings since
the beginning of the academic
year in September.
Reporting on a committee investigating attendance records,
Lackey said that three organizations and two delegates had
missed as many as four meetingswhich he said the comwas
felt ordinarily
mittee
grounds enough for dropping
members.
Lackey said that representatives from the Interfraternity
Council, Mens Residence Halls,
and Panhelleuic Council had
each missed four meetings, as
had two representatives at large.
No action was taken against
the organizations as election
changes were being made in all
but MRU, which chooses its
delegate late.
In other business Rick Tarrant, direc tor of Congress Sum

mer Employment Service, presented a progress report and said
there had been about 300 inquiries into the service.
Carson Porter explained to
Congress an apparent confusion
over a meeting for committee
report on the Kentucky Student
Association as reported in last
week's Kernel.
Porter charged biased reporting in a story which suggested
that his committee did not meet
before the report was made. He
claimed that he and committee
member Mary Jane Britteji had
agreed favorably on recommending the bill after it was first
introduced at the first meeting
of the year.
Porter said that he and committee member Barry Brooks had
also concurred on the bill, and
that while the committee did
not meet together, all its members were in agreement.
Six delegates were absent,
two of whom were organization
members.

Possible ideas he discussed at
the Congress meeting included
a federal government system with
an executive branch with "cabinet" chairmen working in specific

interest areas.
Miller emphasized to the Congress that neither group "was
planning on absorbing the other"
but rather was working toward
"combining in a functional and
operational manner the major
operations of the two .groups."
"The two groups would be
made stronger and be made to
see things in all areas from a
greater perspective," the president continued.
A legislative body similar to
Student Congress as well as a
modified form of the present judicial board would probably be
set up, he explained.
"Our group can ratify this or.
operate under the old constitution in hopes that this merger
will take place next fall or spring.

Kernel News Editor
The Kernel has learned a group of University students will
picket UN Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg's Founders Day visit
Tuesday to demonstrate opposition to the Vietnam war.
Several sources today re
vealed knowledge of the planned have been notified of the protest, but Mr. Shavzin said they
picket, but no one would estimate how many students are have not been "encouraged to
attend."
expected to demonstrate.
Organizers of the march are
Rev. Doug Sanders, minister
members of the campus Students
of the United Campus Christain
for a Democratic Society, but
Fellowship, said two students
they emphasize the demonstra- contacted him earlier this week
tion is not an SDS protest.
and asked him to tell other stu"We want to involve as many dents about the
picket.
people as possible, not just SDS
He said campus religious
members," Robert Frampton,
SDS spokesman, said. "That's groups are not officially involved
in the protest. The UCCF stuwhy SDS is not officially indent council may be asked Sunvolved."
night to support the picket,
Specific plans for the picket daysaid.
he
and a policy statement will be
made Sunday night at the home
The Rev. Mr. Sanders said
of Alan Shavzin, UK philosophy
he was told the protest is not
instructor and SDS member, against Ambassador Goldberg
Frampton said.
but an "occasion to show forth
The picket has not been to him a public declaration of
publicly announced because "we the continued concern about the
didn't want people to have time situation (in Vietnam) and the
to organize a counter demondesire to bring about peace
stration," Mr. Shavzin said.
(there)."

Frampton also emphasized
the demonstration is not a protest
"against Ambassador Goldberg
as a person, but as a representative of American Vietnam policy."

Ambassador
Goldberg will
speak at the Founders Day Convocation at 2:30 p.m. in Memorial
Coliseum Tuesday.
Frampton said he expects
about 10 or 12 faculty members
to participate in the picket, but
would give no estimate on students.
Groups from other colleges,
in Yellow
possibly Antioch
Springs, Ohio, and the University of Cincinnati are expected.
Antioch students picketed President Johnson's Founders Day
speech last year.
Frampton said the outsiders

The idea for the Kentucky
march was initiated locally and
by individuals Frampton said.
An SDS spokesman in Chicago told the Kernel by phone
today that campus SDS chapters

are "autonomous bodies" that
decide on protests themselves.

The campus SDS has sponsored a Vietnam Forum, a speaker
opposing the Viet war, and a
contingent in the "March on
Washington to End the War in
Vietnam" last Thanksgiving.
Some students now affiliated
with SDS also participated in
last Founders Day pickets, and
in the Easter, 1964 Washington
march. SDS was not formed here
then.

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The Steamy Side Of Life
curious little hole popped up next to the
Chemistry Physics Building Thursday sending a
combination of muddy ooze and steam jetting out
the top. Not a magmatic eruption, but a broken
A

steam heating pipe was the root of the problem
that got University M&O men on the job digging
up part of the campus next to Rose Street.

1

* Retiring Home Ec Instructor

Will Take Memories With Her
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FIRST RUN!

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"Tbey are looking for magic.
That's tbe key to why people go
on those fad diets. They are
willing to belies e anything," she
sas. This s ear it's the low carbohydrate diet, popularly called a
drinking man's diet, because it
features liquor.
Mrs. Clemmons life is a wonderful example of the usefulness
After gradu-tio- n
of home
from UK, she was State
Kt-cin- g

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Kentucky

2nd Hit

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb.

18, 1905- -3

Student Center To Be Closed For Ball Preparations
The Student Center will be
Hall coordinator JAV. Patterdosed at 1:30 p.m.
Saturday son said tickets will be on sale
afternoon to enable the decoat the door. Price of admission
rations committee to prepare for is $2 per couple for students and
the Founders Day Hall, the Stu$5 per couple for faculty, alumni,
dent Center Hoard announced .and townspeople.
today.
Over 4000 students, faculty,

and alumni are expected to attend the "black tie" affair from
10 p.m. to 2 a.m.
The Student Center willoicn
for the Hall at 9:30 p.m.
Lester Lanin's society band
will play continious dance music

in the Grand

Hall Hoom. The
remainder of the Student Center
will be used to present a variety
of folk singers and jazz musicians
based on the theme, "The

"use 1 he

Club."

H

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The idea's not as crazy as it may seem.
Anytime we take a jet up, there are almost
always leftover seats.
So it occurred to us that we might be able
to, fill a few of them, if we gave the young
people a break on the fare, and a chance to
see the country.

The American Youth Plan
call the idea the American Youth Plan,
and what it means is this:
American will pay half the jet coach fare
for anybody 12 through 21.
It's that simple.
All you have to do is prove your age (a birth
certificate or any other legal document will do)
and buy a $3 identification card.
We date and stamp the card, and this enticket at any American
titles you to a half-far- e
Airlines counter.
The only catch is that you might have to
wait before you get aboard; the fare is on a
standby basis.

round except for a few days before and after

the Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas

rushes.
If you can't think of any places you'd like
to go offhand, you might see a travel agent
for a few suggestions.
We can't add anything else.
Other than it's a marvelous opportunity
to just take off.

We

"Standby" simply means that the

pas-

sengers with reservations and the servicemen
get on before you do.
Then the plane's yours.
The American Youth Plan is good year

Complete this coupon include your $3.
( Do not send proof of ageit is not needed
until you have your ID validated.)
In addition to your ID card, we'll also send
you a free copy of AA's Go Go American
with $50 worth of discount coupons.
American Airlines Youth Plan
633 Third Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10017

Address.
City

.State.

Birth date.

.Signature.

Color of hair.

.Zip

.Color of eyes.

American Airlines

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Letter Td Tijtr Editor:
that all welfare needs are driu
up. While prosperous times have
had much to do with the drop,
scnu of it can he traced to increasing federal participation in relief.
Many persons formerly supported
hy sratt and locally financed "general relief funds have now been
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The Kentucky Kernel

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result, the number of per.srms
aided by such agencies iias risen
to higher peaks.
This daes iirrt meantliat lur.iiing;
can lie dane to lessen the number
of persons depending upon welfare
aid. An encouraging sign of the
times is the growing effort to get
at the causes of unemployment cad
remove them. One such enterprise
is the new Institute for Sacial
Welfare Studies set up at the University of Wisconsin under a federal
grant of S1.0G0.000. It will carry
on large-sca- le
basic research into
the causes and relief of poverty.
Another effort is the new
national pilot program under way
in Chicago designed to prepare
and find jobs for the "hard core
unemployed."
It is important that those
these programs prepare for
a long nitll. Many of the "hard
core" unemployed have personal
problems and need patient help.
It costs $2,500 u year to keep a
person on public welfare. If programs to retrain the ''hard core
unemployed" are costly, they are
still u good investment in dollars.
The return they bring in morale

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb.

18,

196(1-

-5

KD's Must Stop Discrimination Or Disband
The Collegiate Press Service
MADISON, Wis. -- The University of Wisconsin faculty declared in a vote last week that
Kappa Delta sorority must cease
all campus operations by Sept.
15, 1967, unless it submits a
certificate of
The vote approved a recommendation by the Faculty Committee on Human Rights. The
committee reported that all registered social organizations on
the campus, including 30 fraternities and 15 sororities, except Kappa Delta have submitted the required certificates.
The faculty voted in May,
1964, to require a
certificate, called "Certificate I," from all campus so

cial organizations. Certificate I
requires the signatures of both
local and national officers.
The certificate states that the
organization has "no provisions
in the national or local constitution,
ritual, or any
other controlling rules which require the student membership to
refrain from considering for membership, pledging, electing, or
initiating any students to membership on account of race, color,'
creed, or national origin." The
certificate also states that there
are no provisions in any local or
national rules "which indicate
or imply that any person should
be considered socially or personally unacceptable as a member because of his race, color,
s,

"Inside Report"

By Rowland Evans

Certificate I has not been
before that time."
The Committee pointed out
in its report that the Wisconsin
chapter of the sorority had made
strenuous efforts to change the
national officers' position. A resolution, supported by the Wisconsin chapter, empowering national Kappa Delta executive officers to sign certificates of non"Wc wish to make it clear," discrimination was adopted at
the national convention last July,
the human rights committee rebut was declared unconstituport to the faculty said, "that
tional by the national president.
the action recommended is intended to put Tau chapter (the
For several years, the comMadison chapter) of Kappa Delmittee report said, Kappa Delta,
ta on notice now and to terespecially the national office,
minate Kappa Delta's presence
had failed to cooperate with the
on this campus automatically on
university in the field of human
Sept. 15,1967, if a properly signed
rights.
The committee reported that
its difficulties with the sorority
and Robert Novak
started in 1963 when, on orders
from its national, the Wisconsin
chapter failed to submit a required questionnaire on membership selection practices. On
orders from the national it also
Mr.
slaught from the right that
refused to answer a scries of
Johnson was waiting for.
questions regarding particular
There was no such onslaught.
circumstances of its selection proDeciding that silence was expecedures.
dient, conservative Republicans
The local chapter did not subhave stopped promoting more mit the
required Certificate I
bombing of North Vietnam. The
by the original deadline of Nov.
closed-doo- r
sestip-ocame at a
1, 1964. On Dec. 8, 1964, it did
sion of key House Republicans
present a locally signed certif- six weeks ago when the shrewd
iiittft
Rep. Melvin Laird of Wisconsin,
advised that
a militant hard-lineRepublicans should not call for
more and more bombing.
Yet, even when Sen. Fulbright
called for the very type of televised hearings into foreign policy
that used to repel him, Mr. Johnson still counted on right and
left to cancel themselves out
over TV.
They didn't. Sen. Fulbright
and the peace Democrats have
dominated the hearings. Hardline Democrats
backing the
President Louisiana's Russell
Long and Connecticut's Thomas
J. Dodd were nowhere to be
seen. Even hard-lin- e
Republicans
like Sen. Karl Mundt of South
Dakota talked about "peace."
Despite all this, the President
is still excessively wary of pressure from the right.
creed, or national origin."
Faculty officials said the
deadline for Kappa Delta's signing was set at Sept. 15, 1967,
to give local KD officers another
opportunity to change the position of the national officers
at the next Kappa Delta national
convention, scheduled for the
summer of 1967.

sub-mitt-

Criticism Bothers Johnson
-

The inWASHINGTON
creasingly virulent sniping by
Democrats at President Johnson's
Vietnam policy, now a
political crisis, can be
attributed in great part to a major
at the White
miscalculation
House.
From the beginning, the President has felt he was most vulnerable to attack from the right
from proponents of tougher military action in Vietnam. Moreover,
he felt his consensus-styl- e
politics
could steer a middle course between left and right.
The failure of this policy is evin
tone of
dent in the
the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee's investigation of the
war. The hostility of Democrats
toward their own President is not
only threatening internal stability in the Democratic party, but
also the entire effort to save Vietnam from communism.
The beginning of Mr. Johnson's uncharacteristic miscalculation goes back to his appointment last year of Douglas
full-fledg-

anti-Johnso-

MacArthur II as Assistant Secretary of State for Congressional
Relations. The appointment of a
conservative foreign service officer with an illustrious conservative name reflected the
President's conviction that the
conservatives on Capitol Hill had
to be coddled.
Top State Department and
foreign aid officials made it clear
they felt the real power on the
Foreign Relations Committee
was Sen. Bourke Hickenlooper,
the conservative Republican from
Iowa. From the President on
down, the Administration dismissed the Capitol Hill peace
bloc as insignificant and worried
instead about hard-lin- e

Ignored by the White House,
Democrats particularly Sen. J. W. Fulbright of
Arkansas, the Foreign Relations
chairman became increasingly
bolder in criticizing the President. Yet, these Democrats might
have buttressed the President had
he been threatened by the on- -

the peace

Student Arrested
On Narcotics Charge
Denied Readmission

ff

nntii

icate which included only part
of the wording required by the
faculty committee, accompanied
by a letter of protest.
Later the chapter authorized
the chapter president to sign
the certificate in full and the
faculty postponed action until
Nov. 1, 1963, the date on which
a national officer would have
had to sign.
During the summer of 1965,
the Wisconsin chapter and others
worked at the convention to
secure the passage of the resolution that was later declared
unconstitutional. The resolution
came to a vote as the last item
of business and was adopted by
When the vote
a vote of 133-8was announced, the national KD
president announced her decision
to declare the whole motion un0.

constitutional.
Since the adjournment of the
convention, the Wisconsin chapter has unsuccessfully attempted
to change the president's ruling
and has proceeded to operate
its chapter business in accordance with the ritual approved
by the convention vote and the
rules handed
down by the UW faculty.
The committee report praised
the work of the local chapter
and said it wanted to offer every
chance to get the national officers to change their position.
n.w

oooon

r,

Ruffles
V,,

University of Oklahoma student
NORMAN, Okla. (CPS)-- A
has been
who was arrested in a Jan. 8 narcotics raid
denied readmission to the university for the spring semester.
The male student was ad- vised by Dean of Men William
R. Brown that he should confer
with his. lawyers before making
any further attempt to register
for the spring term. The student
saw the dean after a "stop" card
has been put on his enrollment
By H ERMINE AUBREY
packet and he was unable to
Beauty Consultant
The Office of Student
register.
MERLE NORMAN COSMETIC STUDIO
Affairs initiated the stop proIt'i time to look in the mirror and
cedure.
think Spring. Pretty complexions need
Officials said that "stop"
extra attention at this time of year.
cards were also put on the packets
Thousands of girls have discovered
who
of the other nine students
of a satiny skin lies
were involved in the raid but that3 the secret
in
simple steps. . . .
of thorn showed up for
that none
First, a gentle effective
registration.
cU cream, applied generously and
The decision not to allow
left en your face for at least 15 minutes. tfy heat liquifies this rich
any of the ten to ictutn IohIumI
was made by the OU legents
irNffl end helps it to float away dust
Tissue off gently.
stole make-up- .
ilining their Januaix mooting.
Next comes the application of a
The logouts made theiulingewn
tingling pink miracle lotion, further
though the univeiMtx mu;dlx
clean
eimits students facing cunnnal fo The and clear Acomplexion. powthird step?
becoming
school pendchaiges to tvmain in
der hose which actually protects the
ing a conit decision.
skin it enhances! But be sure to try
Seven of those ai vested lace before you buy!
ciiminal charges and three xxdl
Why not come in for a free hour of
be ti led on misdemeanor charges.
beauty. Let us give you complexion
in
A pwlimtnaiy healing for the
care end a complimentary make-uthe new shades, so that you can see
sex en has been postponed pendlook on your own face. Yes,
ing the ruling of the judge on a Ihew they
did say free; I really mean it when
motion that the case be thrown
t say that "beauty's for the asking.'
out of eonit on the grounds that
JUST PHONE 254 1488
a search xvaivftnt xx as improperly issued.

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* 6 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Feb.

18, 1966

Unbeaten Record On Line Tomorrow

Cats Return South; Play Mississippi State
By MCK BAILEY

day left Mississippi State with
an 4 SEC record and virtually
no chance of catching the Wildcats, who are 11-- 0 in the conference and 20--0 over-al- l.
Before the loss to Georgia,
the Bulldogs were 2 and faced
the prospect of at least getting
a shot at the Cats at home
instead of Memorial Coliseum.
Now, however, State has a
chance to knock some of the
luster of UK's almost uncontested dash to the championship.
However slight the chances
of stopping the Wildcat drive,
State at least has one factor in

Kernel Sports Writer
Consecutive losses to Geor