xt7zpc2t7c85 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zpc2t7c85/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661209  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  9, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  9, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7zpc2t7c85 section xt7zpc2t7c85 Inside Totay's Kernel
The Student Center Board is making
plant for its first Miss Unirersity of
Kentucky contest: Poge Two.

TKIE H KHE3 IL
University of Kentucky
DEC.

Vol. 58, No. 70

LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY,

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4.

It's unfortunate that highway fund
cuts were made just as Kentucky was
getting ahead, editorial says: Page
Four.

Poge

Five.

The Delts upset the Pikes in
day night's intromurol action:

Thurs-

Page

Six.
The Phi Beta Kappa's r'uiting scholar
talked of his Yucatan explorations:
Page Seven.

Women's Groups
Get $2,147 Budget
Approved By SG

...

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"5

alum gites the school
art treasures: Page Three.
$2S mil-

The world's hunger problem and its
population problem go hand in hand :

By HOWARD KERCH EVAL

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Towed Cars
Number 230
This Year

Col. Fred Dempsey, director
of Safety and Security, said today
that 230 cars have been towed
from the UK campus since the
beginning of the semester.
"More than 60 percent of
these," Dempsey said, "were cars
without permits. He added that
a number of the cars towed in
are on the campus police "hot

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list."

The list includes the license
numbers of all cars that have
received three citations that have
not been acknowledged. After a
car is towed in, all the tickets
must be paid before it can be
reclaimed.
Parking lane violations are
the most important to the police,
Dempsey said, since cars cannot
be allowed to block safety lanes.
A towed car costs the owner
for the parking ticket and
$2
$7 for the towing.

Assistant Managing Editor
Requests from two campus groups, Associated Women Students
and Women's Residence Halls, for budgetary hinds amounting to
$2,147 were granted by Student Government Thursday night.
AWS was given $1,045 to cover
and discuss various phases of
expenses expected to occur durcampus life.
the remainder of the year.
ing
The bill seeking ratification
Allocations within the grant
of UK membership in the newly
Stars in the Night-$50were;
formed Kentucky Students AsHead Residents
sociation was more on the order
Supplies-$100- ,
of a formality since at the last
Freshman Orientation-$30- .
The allowance titled 'Publimeeting of KSA, Dec. 3, memcations' is primarily for the probership dues were paid and
duction of a handbook called Sheryl Snyder, a member of SG,
financed jointly was elected president.
with WRH. It is given to freshA bill calling for repeal of
men and transfer women to exthe present rules of procedure
and adoption of a new set was
plain UK policies and procedures, campus activities, and
reported back from committee
dress standards.
with minor amendments of
The $1,102 grant to WRH wording and the addition of an
included the expense expectaoath of office.
tions; Scholarship Dessert-$179- ,
Continued On Page 8
Special

Activities-$178-

,

Miscellaneous-$45-

.

The money granted the two
organizations comes from an SG
fund of $3,740 set aside in the
general budget for projects and
grants.
In addition to the two groups
giv en financial assistance ThursCampus police told Kernel reporters Thursday night that "about
SG granted $598.50
20" cars were towed from illegal parking spots on the campus. day night,fund to the Off Camfrom the
Kernel reporters and photographers witnessed at least six cars
pus Students Association Nov. 3.
towed in but Col. Fred Dempsey, director of Safety and Security,
Other new business included
said that only three cars were towed away Thursday night.
a resolution establishing a committee to conduct the Student-FacultWeek, and a bill which
formalized the membership of the
UK Student Government in the
Kentucky Students Association.
Four-Da- y
Student-FacultWeek, slated
to take place in March of the
free for study or lab work. Classes
The Centre plan is unique in spring semester, is a program
will be scheduled for
that the student continues to designed to acquaint the stutake 10 courses a year, making dent body with members of the
periods, twice a week. The student will carry four courses each exchanges of students with semes- faculty.
term.
ter colleges easier, Whittle said.
During the week, students
Spragens said that the classes The courses will be divided
schedule visits to the homes of
would meet for whatever portion over three tenns instead of
faculty members, where they are
of the scheduled period that over two tenns.
served coffee and refreshments
seemed wise. "The faculty member might find that important
work would be accomplished by
conferences during a portion of
the scheduled time."
Introductory laboratories in
science and languages will operL
ate on an "open library" basis
instead of being scheduled at
a set time. A student could do his
lab work, under supervision,
whenever it was convenient for
.

y

Centre College Will Change
Week
To Trimester
Special To The Kernel

DANVILLE Centre College
is abandoning the
school year and the
week
next fall in favor of a three-tercalendar and a
week.
The
liberal arts
college is adopting the new plan
which is "best suited for the
most effective pursuit of learning
President
by the students,"
Thomas A. Spragens said Thursday in making the announcement.
The plan, adopted by the
faculty and approved by the
board of tmstees, provides for:
1. A
winter term
between two more conventional
fall and spring terms,
which students will do
during
concentrated work in two courses.
Dr. Charles E. Whittle, academic dean, said that some of
the work in the winter term
would be done
"We
anticipate some of our language
students going to Mexico or Europe . . . our science students
might work a few weeks in national science laboratories away
from campus."
Students remaining on campus would take concentrated
study courses, independent projects, or attend seminars.
two-semestsix-da-

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2. A

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class week dur-

ing the fall and spring tenns
with Wednesday and Saturday

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5-- 5

Coliseum Has
Exit Problem,
Dempsey Says
Before standing room can
safely be permitted in Memorial

Coliseum again, the University
must first increase the number
of exits, an official in the UK
Department of Safety and Security disclosed Thursday.
Fred Dempsey, director of the
department, said the administra-trativdecision to discontinue
standing room was based on an
annual safety inspection which
showed that exi st in g exterior exit s
e

were insufficient for a crowd of
more than 10,000 persons.
The Kentucky Revised Statutes require at least 22 inches of
exit width for each 100 persons in
the building, he said. This does
not mean that the KRS requires
one exit 22 inches wide for each
100 persons; for example one exit
may be 44 inches wide for 200
persons.
Presently there are approximately 100 such units of exit width.
Dempsey's statement was in
reply to charges Wednesday by

Lexington Fire Chief Earl
that the decision to eliminate standing room attendance
was unjustified.
McDaniel was quoted as sayhim.
ing, "This building was designed
sumto serv e 16,000 people, and I con3. An optional
sider it one of the safest buildmer term which would be used
ings that has ever been confor independent study,
primarily
structed, with the concourses on
experseminars, and
each side being a separate buildiences.
ing from the main auditorium."
4. Rescheduling of convocaHe did not say there were
tion and chapel programs to be '
not enough exits to satisfy safety
held in the evening so they do:
regulations, but said, "It has
not interfere with the"bigblocks
more units of egress per capacof time" required by the new
ity crowd than any other buildschedule.
ing of its kind in the United
VI
States."
American colleges hav e shifted
The problem of standing room
toward concentrated and inStudent Government officials said Thursday night that there was involves only the auditorium,
dependent study in the past decwhich, according to McDaniel,
a "big turnout" in Thursday's student referendum on the stadium.
ade but the
schedule is still The exact number will not be known until early next week after, is a separate building within
Continued on 1'age 3
the votes have counted.
the norm.
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* 2

THE KENTUCKV KERNEL, Friday, Dec.

9, 19

"

SC Board Planning
Miss UK Contest

:l;

The Hospitality Committee of the Student Center Board is
formulating plans to sponsor the Miss University of Kentucky
Pageant Feb 17 in Memorial Hall.
"Miss UK" will represent the chance at Miss Kentucky and posUniversity in the preliminary to
the Miss America Pageant.
the Miss America Pageant, the sibly
All campus organizations are
Miss Kentucky Contest held in invited to
sponsor one contesLouisville next June 8, 9, and 10.
but sponsored or not, any
tant,
In past years, the Little Kengirl may pay her own $5 fee and
has reptucky Derby Queen
enter the pageant.
resented UK in the Miss KenThe Miss UK Contest will
tucky Contest.
last year's LKD adhere to all the rules of the
Judi Hippie,
Queen, was the University's entry local, state and national Miss
America Pageants npw in effect.
to the pageant.
This year the LKD committee
Entrants will be judged on
felt they were not equipped to
poise, personality, intelligence,
handle a contest which had charm and beauty of face and
such important subsequence a
figure.

The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, sLexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-claspostage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications,
UK Post
Office Box 4986. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as. the Cadet in 1894, became the Record in 1900, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
,
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
mail $8.00
Yearly, by
Per copy, from files $.10

Each girl must display a talent presentation of not more
than two minutes and 50 seconds
which may include singing, dancing, playing a musical instrument, dramatic readings, an art
display, dress designing, creative
writing, or a talk on the career
she wishes to pursue.

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Chorus To Present 'Messiah9 Sunday
Handel's
HQ-voi- ce

"Messiah" will be presented by the
University Chorus at 3 p.m. Sunday

in Memorial
Holroyd.

Hall. The director is Miss Sara

DeCormier Singers Here Tonight
the
will be

The Robert DeCormier Folk Singers will be
presented at 8:30 p.m. Friday at Memorial Coliseum
by the Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture

Association.
The group of 14 men and women vocalists and
three instrumentalists will devote the first part
of the program to the folk songs of North America

divided
evening
between international folk songs and the songs
of the American Negro.
.
Admittance will be limited to association men'
bers and students with ID cards. No tickets will,
be sold and no children under five years of age!
will be admitted.
The second half of

The talent competition will
account for 60 percent of the aimuiiuiumuinmiuumiw
judge's decision, the other 40
percent being determined by
poise, personality and beauty.

CANTERBURY HOUSE

University
Methodist Chapel
151

ROSE ST.

11

Choral
Christmas Service
a.m. WORSHIP SERVICE

11

All

8:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m. 2nd Sundays

E. MAXWELL

Sunday, Dec.

At

Episcopal Church
SUNDAY SERVICES

CHURCH
PARK METHODIST
East High at Clay Avenue
DR. J. T. HARMON, Pastor
Dr. W. P. Fryman, minister, visitation
9:45 a.m. Church School
11 a.m. Two Worlds
7 p.m. Crop Failure

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH

Donald W. Durham, Minister
(Next to Hospital,
J. R. Wood, Pastoral Minister
Dewey Sanders, Associate Minister
Samuel Morris, Youth Minister
(Parking In Rear of Church)
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
11 a.m.
Expanded Sessions
9 a.m. and 11 a.m.
Duo Services, Bishop Nolan B. Harmon, Guest Speaker
12:00 noon
3 p.m. Open House
Consecration Service for new annex.
No Evening Service
for ail Services
Nursery
(Parking in Rear of Church)
1716 S. Lime

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SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH
DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
10:50 a.m. Morning Worship
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7:00 p.m.

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JAMES A. LOLLIS, Minister
10:30 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
Sunday College Seminar
For Transportation Call 277-378- 9

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WOODLAND CHRISTIAN CHURCH
East High at Kentucky Ave.

Elmore Ryle, Minister
Miss Mary Hulda Allen, Minister of Educotion
Church School 9:30 A.M.
Morning Worship 10:45 A.M.
"THREE REACTIONS TO CHRIST"
Sermon

Nursery provided during Morning Worship

Youth Croups

5.00 P.M.

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ucsaay ana ihursday, 9 'til 5:30

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Dec. 9,

Mellon Gives Yale
$35 Million In Art
()

New York Times Newt Service

NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- Paul Mellon has donated to Yale University his collection of tiritish paintings, water colors, drawings,
prints and rare books worth an estimated $35 million.
Mellon, a member of the Yale
class of '29 and regarded as collections for educational and

probably the world's leading art
collector, also will give about
$12 million for the establishment
of a
art gallery and
library at the university to house
the works.
The 1,000 oil paintings, 3,000
water colors, drawings and prints
and 4,000 rare books of the 17th,
18th, and 19th centuries compose one of the most important
privately owned collections in
the world. There is nothing comparable to the collection outside
Britain.
Mellon, long a benefactor of
his alma mater, has previously
given $25 million to Yale.
The gift was announced at a
news conference yesterday by
Kingman Brewster Jr., president
of the university. Mellon did not
attend.
Seated at a table in the
sculpture court of the university
art gallery, whose walls are decorBritish
ated with
tapestries, Brewster said the new
building would take three to five
years to complete.
The building will be erected
four-stor- y

historical purposes.
"New Haven's geographical
position near the center of our
Eastern 'megalopolis,' near other
outstanding educational centers
of the arts, makes it ideally situated for access by the general
public. In addition it was at
Yale as an undergraduate that
my personal interest in English
literature and art began in
earnest, and I have always been
deeply grateful to the university
for this fact."
Brewster, explaining the absence of Mellon, said: "Convenience, weather and, I am sure,
personal modesty prevented Mr.
Mellon from being here. He's
so modest he won't talk about
his modesty."
Although the art collection
contains some works from earlier
and later periods, it essentially
is of the period between the
birth of Hogarth in 1697 and the
death of Turner in 1851.
Critics have said that if the
collection is short on the major
portrait painters such as Reynolds and Lawrence, it is rich
in landscape paintings, informal
portraits and animal and sporting pictures. The collection, one
critic wrote, shows Mellon's
"strong personal taste for paintings that are good rather than
glamorous; small in scale rather
than imposing; and judged on
their merits rather than on the
eminence of an artist."

FINAL EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
8:00-10:0-

Thursday

121 566

Friday

121666

11:00-1:0- 0

0

121766

Monday

121966

Wednesday--1-

122066

1221C6

00 noon

2:

Classes which meet
first on Tuesday or
00 p.m.
Thursday--4- :

Wednesday---

Classes which meet
first on Monday or
00 a.m.
Wednesday--8- :

Classes which meet
first on Tuesday or
00 a.m.
Thursday--l- l:

Classes which moet
first on Monday or
Q0 a.m.
Wednesday---

Classes which meet
first on Tuesday or

Classes which meet

Thursday--1- 2:

Wednesday--3-

Classes which meet
first on Monday or
00 a.m.
V.ednecday--1-

Classes which meet
first on Tuesday or
00 p.m.
Thursday--1- :

V.ednesday---

Classes which meet
first on Tuesday or
00 a.m.
Thursday--8- :

Classes which

Classes which meet

0:

Wednesday

Classes which meet
first on Tuesday or
00 p.m.
Thursday--3- :

Classes which meet
first on Tuesday or
00 a.m.
Thursdiy--1-

9:

Tuesday

2:00-4:0- 0

Classes which meet
first on Monday or

Classes which meot
first on Tuesday or
00 a.m.
Thursday--9- :

0:

Saturday

AFTERNOON

FORENOON

DAY

Classes which meet
first on Monday or

00 p.m.

!:

Classes which meet
first on Monday or
Wednesday---

first

00 noon

2:

00 p.m.

on Monday or
00 p.m.
:

Classes which meet
first on Monday or

meot
on Monday or
00 a.m.
Wednesday--!- !:

first

first

4:

00 p.m.

on Tuesday or
00 p.m.
:

Thursday--2-

Dempscy Says

Exil Problem
In Coliseum
Continued From rage

O

1

the Coliseum. That part was
originally designed for 10,064 persons, Dempsey says.
In the first two basketball
games this season, attendance
0
was estimated at a capacity
which, Dempsey notes, is
on a
site across
actually more than state safety
the street from the gallery.
standards permit. Last year, atIn a statement read by Brewstendance at several game passed
the 13,000 mark.
ter, Mellon said:
State
"It seems to me that Yale,
safety
regulations
with its great holdings in British
require that a building have
literary and social research materenough exit units to clear a caial, such as the Walpole and
pacity crowd in two and a half
Boswell papers, can make the
minutes in case of emergency,
best use of the resources of my
Dempsey explained. He said to
allow standing
room
safely
crowds, the University should
first "convert exterior walls into
emergency exits."
McDaniel said the ban on
standing room was placed by
academic year
For the 1967-6The final oral examination of the State Safety Authority. Howthe National Council of Alpha Byunghoon Ohn, candidate for ever, Harold Foster of that deLambda Delta will award the the Doctor of Philosophy degree, partment said his office had isMaria Leonard, the Alice Crocker will be held at 9 a.m. Saturday sued no such order.
Lloyd, the Adele Hagner Stamp, in Room 337 of the Commerce
Dempsey said it was an adthe Kathryn Sisson Phillips Building. The title of Mr. Ohn's ministrative decision, and that
Fellowship, and the Executive dissertation is "United States he advised the Administration
Council Fellowship for graduate and Southeast Asia,
"on what I had found to be a
study. The amount of each fellowThe Evolution of American Policy safety hazard." The inspection,
ship is $2,000. Attendance at a in Southeast Asia." Faculty and which exposed the insufficiency
graduate school which has a students are invited to attend. of existing exits, was conducted
by Dempsey and a deputy state
chapter of Alpha Lambda Delta
fire marshall.
is encouraged.
To expand the auditorium's caStudents may pick up schedAny memberof Alpha Lambda
Delta who graduated in 1964, ules in the Student Center ballpacity to a desired 15,000, Demroom from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. psey said about 50 more exit
1965, or 1966 and who has maintained the scholastic average Monday and Tuesday. Those units must be provided.
throughout her college career is whose names begin with
eligible. Graduating seniors may will pick up their schedules on
Tuesday.
apply if they have maintained Monday and
this average to the end of the
first semester of this year.
There are basketball tickets
Application blanks and inforavailable for the
mation may be obtained from
and Cornell games. The Vainly
Miss Sandra Kemp, Administragame is Jan. 5 and the Cornell
tion Building, Room 201
game is Dec. 28. Both $2 and
"There Was This Carpenter" $3 tickets went on sale at 9 a.m.
will be shown at 7 p.m. Sunday today at the ticket office in
at Nexus. There is no charge to Memorial Coliseum. Limit of two
per customer.
students.
18th-centu-

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11,-50-

UK Bulletin Board

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The Kentucky Kernel
ESTABLISHED

M.vUv".VV-i.1f?.Mif- '

The South's Outstanding College Daily
Univf.hsity of Kentucky

FRIDAY, DEC.

1894

tlc

Editorials represent the ojyinions of the Editors, not of

Walter

It is unfortunate

M.

Grant,

9, 1966

University.

Editor-in-Chi-

Poor Timing
that
as Ken-

tucky's Interstate and parkway system begins to reach its fulfillment,
the Johnson Administration has
announced an overall $1.1 billion
reduction in federal highway construction funds. This will result
in a $14.1 million cutback in Kentucky's share of federal highway
grants.
Apparently, if the cutback lasts
for only one year, curtailment of
road construction in the Commonwealth will not be drastically affected. But former highway commissioner Henry Ward last week
said if the reduction lasts longer
than that, the state's road program will be hurt.
With 137 miles of Interstate
highway still unfinished, this seems
hardly the time to begin cutting
highway funds. Much of our state's
parkways and expressways would
have been finished by the end of
1968, so

.

that the cutback, if it

continues, will be happening at
the worst time possible.
President Johnson said that this
cutback was being made nationwide to help curb inflation. We
think there must be a better way
to accomplish this goal than by
these means. For example, the
death toll in Kentucky is running
almost a month ahead of this time
a year ago. This points to an increasing demand for safer expressways as heavy traffic flow is no
longer compatible with winding,
two-lanconventional highways.
e,

Then, there are the Appalachian
highways. The federal government
recently okayed numerous improvements to mountain roadways. It
would be a shame to see work
in this area slowed down when
the mountain people so desperately need their area opened to the
outside world so as to become a
part of the twentieth century.

Short In The Saddle

Letters To The Editor

And Then There Was The Ballgame!
To the Editor of the Kernel:
justifying Riley's fouling out was,
Would you believe one point? "Pat's got a habit of putting his
On Monday night we were privihands on people." It seems to me
leged to witness a new trend in that Mr. Rice has never played
college basketball the use of seven basketball or he would know that
players on one team. In honor of the majority of ball players do this,
this unique event we would like particularly Dunlap and Jones of
to nominate for players of the week Illinois. I also personally fail to
the two referees, for they did more understand how Bob Tallent got
than any other participant in the tripped up so badly that he had to
game. The total number of points leave the game without the ref
they held were greater than those seeing it.
of any other player.
I have nothing but the highest
for Illinois, they admiration for the courage and
Fortunately,
did not allow their blindness to character the entire team displayed
hinder them in any way. There during the game. Their ability to
is no question that they played
play as good a game as they did
The total number under the circumstances, provided
outstandingly.
of points they amassed was 30. them with a much greater victory
Not many referees can boast of than winning would have.
such an achievement.
When a team hits 55 percent
In the coming season we hope of the shots it takes, scores four
that, perhaps, through the miracle more field goals than the opposiof science, their handicaps may tion, and scores 97 points while
be overcome and we may see them using a trap defense to eliminate
fouls and loses, then something's
"play" again.
The Garrett (Fourth Floor) wrong.
I still cannot understand why
Boyd Hall
Illinois was allowed to use six
Seat l or Mr. Kiee
players, especially since one was
dressed in black and white.
I would like at this time to
Mark T. Epplcr
introduce and organize a campaign
A & S Junior
to get Russell Rice a better seat
at the Kentucky ball games, beOffit-intiii!cause it was obvious by his article in the Tuesday Lexington
Basketball fans: I would like
Leader that he didn't see the Kentucto bring to your attention a severe
ky-Illinois
misdemeanor which reflects poorly
game that UK students and coaches saw.
on the system of officiating
Mr. Rice's article deals with
gair.vs in the Southin the satirical maneastern Conference. I speak of the
sportsmanship,
and how bad it was at the University of Kentucky-Universit- y
ner,
last game. I do not want to leave of Illinois game in the coliseum.
the idea that I can in any way
Not only was a crowd of enschool refs for thusiastic people pressed into
justify hiring grade
college games.
angry mobs, but the " Baron of
One of the points Rice made in Basketball" called it the biggest

theft since the 1966 NCAA finals
were stolen by Texas Western.
The main figure in this fiasco
was Mr. Don Wedge, a Big Ten
referee who was aided by Mr.
John McPherson, an SEC official.
The farce that followed the openwas a disgrace to the
ing tip-o- ff
coliseum which was dedicated to
the fighting dead of Kentucky. It
has been said that anything can
happen in a basketball game and
these referees proceeded to prove
just that by calling three fouls
in 32 seconds on
Pat
Riley. Somewhere, there is a conspiracy afoot.
Many voiced opinions that an
e
official had accepted a
bribe. These rumors are preposterous and biased, however any doubt
to the quality of officiating was
clearly erased after the first nine
minutes in the game.
There are many officials in the
SEC, Big Ten and other conferences that are far below the standard that a few good referees have
set. I don't believe that any justification can be found for poor ofan

they find good parking places for
students.
At night the campus police are
active, determinedly seeking out
cars parked in yellow zones, most
of which have "no real function"
at night. I secretly desire to drive
n
a
tank into one of these
zones and leave it. Knowing the
campus police, though, they would
n
find a
tank and tow me
16-to-

17-to-

away.
Another item: why is King Library kept so hot and humid?
How about a little cool, fresh

air, librarians?
Michael R. Ware
Engineering Senior

pre-gam-

ficiating. Getting beat isonething.
Being cheated is another.
Michael Zeitman
Leon Faris
Doug Price
A & S Freshmen

?

Noiiexistnnt Item

non-conferen- ce

Parking spaces and good ofd
ficiating are going
this week they just don't exist!
I am convinced that the city has
hand-in-han-

e
a
crew working whose
only job is to paint yellow lines,
put up "no parking" signs and
install parking meters wherever
full-tim-

Skip It, Kernel
Just for the record, the Kernel
misquoted my "correction" to Miss
Hewitt's original report on LSD,
so it, too, was less than correct.
Sorry I brought it up, Kernel. Let's
skip the whole thing, shall we?
Didn't mean to get in over your

head.

Mary Seldon

Graduate Student
in Anthropology

Editor's Note: Mary Selden's
letter said, "In a 'schizophrenic'
reaction triggered by LSD, tliesub-jee- t
has visual hallucinations, he
reacts to a stimulus with the
emotional response, and
he reports peculiar symptoms but
gives reasonable explanations for
these." The Kernel omitted the
phrase "he reacts to a stimulus
with the appropriate emotional response," feeling that this was d
by the remainder of the
im-plie-

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, IH.

-:

K

World Hunger, Population Go Together

By JO WARREN
Kernel Staff Writer
World f(d shortage and world

population growth are tied together as closely as the proverbial horse and carriage.
In recent years a myriad of
articles, studies, and surveys have
appeared on the dual topics-fo- od
and people.
Hunger as a world constant
has been long established in
man's societies. At no time in
history has every segment of mankind been satisfied. On the contrary, much of recorded history
reveals man's hunger from the
time of early China, to the Irish
migration caused by potato
blight, to the not so distant
famine that struck Russia. Everywhere one turns regardless of the
period of history man has hungered.

In our own time much effort has been spent documenting

Rudd, professor of Agricultural
Economics, it is necessary to
understand the "bare facts of
life" as far as population increases and food production are

concerned.
Some of the facts include the
dramatic drop in death rate in
many countries by the introduction of simple health measures.
As an example, in Ceylon the
death rate was reduced 40 percent by the use of DDT to kill

insects.

Rudd said nothing with such
a dramatic effect has yet occurred to raise food production
levels. In fact, in most of the
countries of the world roughly
two-thirof the populations are
engaged in production of food.
In the U.S. only six or seven percent of the labor forces is required to produce food for the
rest of the nation.
The basic of the problem is
more people
easily reckoned
need more food. These are a
set of situations which cannot
be separated. However, the tangents involved in the situation
form an often impregnable web
around solutions.
Most outstanding of the tangents is the fact that about two-thirof the total problem, hunger and population, lies in Communist Asia. "Our position up
to now," Rudd explained, "has
been one of being unwilling to

the facts of hunger and population growth.
Phrases like "half the world
goes to bed hungry every night,"
"10,000 people, most of them
children, die each day from lack
of food," "the world population
of about three billion will double
by the year 2000," dramatize the
situation. Other statistics claim
population is increasing at a
greater rate the food production.
To understand the situation
today one has to realize several trade with Communist Asia."
factors. According to Dr. Robert Thus, it is difficult to obtain

ds

Colorado Coed Still
Fighting For Grade
The Collegiate Press Service

BOULDER, Colo. A University of Colorado coed lost her first
suit to change a failing English grade in court, but she has far
from given up.
Miss Jacalyn Dieffenderfer has filed an amended complaint
with the Boulder District Court, following the dismissal of her
original suit on the grounds that the grade w