xt70vt1gmx9m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70vt1gmx9m/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1967-11-17 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 17, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 17, 1967 1967 1967-11-17 2024 true xt70vt1gmx9m section xt70vt1gmx9m  

THE KENTUCKY

Friday Afternoon, Nov. 17, 1967

The South’s Outstanding College Daily

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

 

KERNEL

Vol. LIX, No. 59

 

Boutelle: Let People Rule

By DARRELL RICE

Paul Boutelle is a taxi dri-
ver in New York City.

He also is a candidate for
vice president on the Socialist
Workers ticket.

He doesn texpect to heelected
in 1968, but he does hope his
campaign can be used as publi-
city for getting the socialist mes-
sage ”to the working men. "

Mr. Boutelle, from Harlem,
told an audience of about 40 at
Nexus coffeehouse Thursday
night that his party is running
against both Republicans and

Democrats, which he said repre-
sented only powerful financial
and economic interests.
”Under socialism," he said,
"there is no government apart
from the people The people are
the government.

Mr. Boutelle drew frequent
laughter from the group with
sardonic comments about this
country—both past and present:

"You don't hear thistoo much
anymore: ‘He doesn't have a
Chinaman's Chance.’ "

”The best presidents are found

on dollar bills-you spend them
and they don't lie to you."

”The only difference between
(President) Johnson and (former

4 Alabama Gov. George) Wallace

is that Wallace is honest.” Mr.
Wallace has said he will be a
presidential candidate if one of
the two major parties fail to
nominate a candidate to his sat-
isfaction.

Mr. Boutelle said Negroes and
American Indians should be rep-
resented out of proportion in the
government to make up for past
deprivations.

Federal Drug Officials Disagree
0n Penalties For ‘Pot-Pushers’

By WALTER GRANT

WASHINGTON (CPS)—The
two federal officials who have
the most to say about the gov-
ernment's policy on marijuana
have offered sharply differing
testimony before a House sub-
committee about what should
be done to pot-pushers.

Members of a House subcom-
mittee on government opera-
tions. hearing the testimony
early this week, showed a dis-
tinct preference for Narcotics
Bureau Commissioner Henry
Giordano's view that pot-users

Reporter DrewPearson

To SpeakHereTuesday

are criminals and should be sub-
ject to long jail terms and stiff
fines.

When Dr. ]ames Goddard,
chief of the Food and Drug
Administration, suggested that
laws concerning marijuana use
might be too severe, some of
the congressmen took him to
task.

Dr. Goddard testified. “I
don't think we should make
criminals out of the individuals
who abuse" the drug.

Mr. Giordano, testifying the
following day, strongly dis-
agreed. The criminal penalties

Drew Pearson, Washington reporter, humanitarian and farmer,
will speak at 7:30 pm. Tuesday in the Student Center Ballroom.

The noted columnist has
criticized and fought govem-
ment officials, members of Con-
gress and important business
leaders whenever he felt they
were not acting in public in~
tere’st.

In 1947 Mr. Pearson organ-
ized the Friendship Train,
which collected $40 million
worth of food for France and
Italy. Four years later he helped
the Freedom Balloon campaign
to reach people behind the Iron
Curtain with airborne messages

of liberty and encouragement.
He has also toured the world
extensively reporting and writ-
ing. He has interviewed former
Soviet Premier Nikita Krushchev
three times, holds numerous
awards from many countries, has
written books on US. govern-
ment and politics and has been

described by Time magazine as

the kind of journalist that keeps
small men honest and forces
bigger men to work in an
atmosphere of caution.

for smoking pot are a deterrent
to its use, he said, and if Con-
gress decides to lessen the
penalties, “the statistics on the
use of the drug will go right
through the roof."

S e v e r a l congressmen sug-
gested there was no need for
the committee even to think
about reducing the penalties for
possession of marijuana. Rather,
they said, Congress should be
thinking about making the pen-
alties for possession of LSD
much more severe, while leav-
ing the marijuana law alone.

Under the present laws, an
individual convicted of possess-
ing marijuana has committed a
felony and may receive up to
10 years in prison and a $20,000

fine for his first offense. Federa'.‘

laws regarding LSD now say
that agents may seek no more
than a user’s supply of the drug.

Both Dr. Goddard and Mr.
Giordano agreed that LSD is
far more dangerous than mari-
juana and that efforts should be
made to close the gap in the
penalties with respect to the
two drugs.

Although Dr. Goddard re-
fused to suggest what penalties
should apply to pot-users, he
indicated “they should be like
those now applied to LSD." Mr.
Giordano said applying the LSD
penalty to marijuana “would in-
crease the problem tenfold.”

Orgena President, Secretary Speak Out

 

 

Kernel Photo by Howard G. Mason

Paul Boutelle, Socialist Worker's party candidate for vice presi-
dent, stresses a point Thursday night in his speech at Nexus
coffeehouse.

CIA Cuts Recruiting
On Certain Campuses

WASHINGTON (CPS)—In the interest of ‘maintaining a peace-

ful academic atmosphere,’

the Central Intelligence Agency has

decided not to recruit on campuses that lie near one of the agency's

regional recruiting offices.

A CIA spokesman confirmed
that college and university
placement bureaus affected are
being notified of the decision,
but did not say where the
agency’s regional offices are
located. He estimated that there
are 10 or 12 of them, however,
presumably in the major cities.

Mrs. Katherine Kemper, di-
rector of the UK Placement
Service, said Thursday she has
received no official notification
that the CIA would not recruit
here.

The spokesman also noted

that in some cases interviews
would be conducted in a down-
town area of cities that do not
have CIA offices. He mentioned
Boston as an example, explain-
ing that interviews would be
conducted in the Federal Build-
ing there rather than on
campuses in the area.

The CIA has met with pro-
tests, some of them obstructive
and others not, on several
campuses this fall. Among them
are the Universities of Colorado,
Maryland, Iowa, and the Uni-
versity of California at Berkeley.

BlackAt UK: Two Negroes Tell It Like It Is

 

 

ELAINE ADAMS
‘Like Being On The Moon'

 

By KERRY POWELL

Ellis Bullock and Elaine Adams lead lives of
paradox.

As students they are involved in classwork and
extracurricular activity. As Negroes they are
alienated—irrevocably—from vast areas of campus
life.

Wearing tw0 hats has taken its toll, and it has
generated—in Ellis and Elaine as in most Negroes
at UK—an almost belligerent pride 1n being black.

He is president of Orgena, an organization for
Negro students. She is secretary. Orgena—in
terms of membership—is no more open to white
students than fraternities and sororities are open
to Negroes.

‘They Have Come’

"Whites have attended the meetings,” Elaine
said Tuesday. “We've allowed that. But there
aren’t any white members."

Ellis, who says he is more “conservative" than
Elaine and most other UK Negroes, attempted to
temper her remark but ended by emphasizing it:

“We’re not saying, you know, that we dis—
courage whites from applying; it's not that we’re
trying to self-Segregate. But actually I think
most of us would prefer that no white students

belong. It's a matter of talking freely about our
own problems."

The two disagree more substantially on what
it means to be a Negro at UK.

“It’s like being on the moon," Elaine said.

“No," Ellis said.

“Yes, it is,” she persisted. “I’ve been in a lot
of organizations here. No matter what, they're
not going to respect a Negro unless he excells.

'It’s Cold’

“I mean, I like it here, it's all right, the campus
and everything. But it’s cold. You see it in
students and you see it in organizations. It’s
something you feel. You stand out. You’re
different, and nobody lets you forget it."

Elaine traced, with enthusiasm, her experience
with Kentucky Babes, 11 women's drill team in
which she still is active:

“Like the first year I belonged. A lot ofpeo le
knew I was in it. They could see that. I attended
the meetings and I was pretty active. But a lot
of those people, once we got outside the practices,
they just refused to speak to me.

“That's the way it is," she added. “People
that you think you know, they won’t say anything
toyouandtheylooktheotherway."

Continued on Page 7. Col. 1

 

ELLIS BULLOCK
‘I've Taken What I Can‘

 2 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Nov. 17, 1967

‘11!

A . LJ .'
. I »

 

 
   
 

9th WEEK!

2%,... WSIDNEY
I... POITIER

.. JAMES CUVELL S Pnooucnou or

' “1'0 SIB,WI'I'IEI
LOVE

TECHNICOLOR‘

 

WW I“ .=:.EE..
"I ”I W:

 

 

 

 

I

 

 

AMILY

— FIRST RUN! —
Starts 7:30 Adm. $l.25

immmmllllfl

phone 2 ABgéi‘fh ‘

FEAST YOUR
EYES ON

 

 

  
    
 
 

SHE'S/l \
SKY-D/V/IVG
HAHN/V6
Bil/U ICU/i
ACT/UN!

 

 
 

- . . E;:-.-:-

IIIIIIIIIIEIIIIII IIIII .... iiiiiiii Eiiiiiiiiili

EOEENEOSEWLEI“ IIIII Uiiiiiil liabilities

l

 

ill I

Plus—

llERlSERE

Ill! SCIEEI’S IOST

 

fantastic voyage

 

  

 

  
    
 
 
   

lst HILARIOUS SHOWING!

STARTS 7 :30
Adm. SI .25

IIIIs I III
IIIIIIIIIIIn WEST

A rootin,‘
iooiInZ
shootin'
but Sincere
picture!

 

 

I sperm» FOR IIIunr mourners QB

EE EEEEEE ocoIIII W...

i i HY CAREY JUAN BLONDELLE: . ..... Ian-coal. Ion-econ Emu” am .3“...

Immunoa-

.ISIi'aiJ'nIvum nscmsrrcx IIIIIIEIIIIII m!11s-mn'sii mnIiIEII PHI-E.

2nd FUNNY FEATURE

 

 

   
    

7lllE CROWN JEWELS?

 

  
  

 

YOU MUST BE llllllllii!

A UNIVERSAL RELEASE

    

'in LARRY DALE KEELING

“The best way for Negroes
to give a more positive value to
their image is through Black
Power," Bill Turner told a
Sociology 220 class this week.

Turner, chairman of the
Campus Committee on Human

 

i llliililllllii

 

 

 

 

; Weizmann“;

 

 

added that, to him,
Black Power does not mean
violence.

"This (Black Power) shudders
the foundations of many people
because of its connotation,"
Turner said. “As far as I am
concerned, Black Power does
not mean violence.

“Black Power is getting your
forces together and letting the
white people know that you are

 

STANDARD

TYPEWRITER CO.
SMITH-CORONA DEALERS
SALES—SERVICE—RENTALS
393 WALLER AVE. 255-6326
Imperial Plaza Shopping Center

 

 

 

 

The Craig ‘212"

Rated No. l by leading

Automfiic volume
control

2-speed Capston
Drive
Includes:
Reel & Tape
Microphone
Accessory
Pouch

$39.95

whitish .

. 254.2400.

consumer

surveys

" Optional
accessories
available

232 E. Main

Downtown—Pa rk
' F REE!

 

   

 

    

OPEN —— FRi., SAT., SUN.
Tonight, Don’t miss it
CARTOON 7:30 Adm. $I.25

 

 

starring

‘iime Magazine, Newsweek, Saturday
Review, We Magazine, E TV, The
New Yorker, Commonweal, The

 

I ' I . Elixir}?
.Michelang elo An
first English language Eilm
Vanessa Redgrave

BLOW-UP

A Premier Productions Co.. Inc. Release

 

 

    

”a

tonioni 5

co- -starring

David Hemmings
Sarah Miles

COLOR

 

 

 

 

 

New Republic, The Village Voice,
The New leader.

 

MMMMWM

 

 

 

 

i Also — ELVIS in "DOUBLE TROUBLE", color I

1‘. , w M. A. -- . . """‘T,‘_.
7 :‘

 

 

"Black Power Is Reasonable’

. Rights,

reasonable people. It is (Cleve-
land's Carl) Stokes being mayor.
It is giving me a sense of ident-
ity and fulfillment, hoping that I
can be somebody in my society
despite my color."

‘No Chance’

Turner added that any per-
son can be meritorious if he is
given a trial, but that the Negro
hasn't been given one.

He said Negroes are inte—
grated into “white" colleges on
paper, but not realistically. The
codes of fraternities and soror-
ities, he added, may say they
do not discriminate on the basis
of color, but nevertheless they
do.

"I probably wouldn't join a
fraternity anvway,” Turner said,
“but I would like to be the one
who decides.”

Similarly, in answer to
a question, Turner said he
“wouldn’t marry a white girl,"
but he doesn't want “anybody
denying me the right to."

Wants Option

“What we want is the option
to do anything we want. Let
us decide whether to do it or
not.” he said.

“We’ve let our societv make
us racists,” he continued. "We've
been taught that black is had,
not only in race, but as a
symbol of all evil."

Turner said the Negro always
has been taught he is inferior,
adding that black students tra-
ditionally have been told, when
they finish school, that some
white man would “pick them
up."

”I think we must do some-
thing ourselves,” Turner said.
“We're not going to use our
blackness as a crutch. “l'm
going to try to make it in spite
of my color. That's the kind of
racist I am.”

Top Cadet

- (.hosen
[ames K. Nishimoto has been

selected from 72 senior cadets
to lead the Anny ROTC Cadet

Brigade.

Nishimoto, senior chemistry
major from Takoma Pa'rk, Md,
is a Distinguished Militarv Stu-
dent and a member of Scabbard
and Blade and Pershing Rifles.

Premiere
Production

of
A Globaldoodle

by
Wm. C. Thompson

s
«’80 Audience
Participation

Transylvania
NOV. IS-IS 8 :30 p.rn.
Call 251.9773 $1.50

'\

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

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

Published by the Board of Student
Publications. UK Post Oflice 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 -— $9.11
Per copy. from tiles — 8.10
KERNEL TELEPHONE

Editor, Managing Editor ......... 1311
Editorial Pae Edri'tor.

MIG .Sports ...... No
News Desk ...................... 8M7

 

 

 

  

WBKY—F M 91 .3 me

FEIDAY
3:00 Afternoon Concert. Albeniz-r
Iberia
5:00 BBC World Report
5:15 Sports—Burt Mahone-Doug
Wood
5:30 It Happened Today iNews)
8:00 Evening Concert. Villa-Lobos—
Bachianas Brasileiras No. 2
7:00 Georgetown Forum
7:30 Captain Horatio Hornblower
7:55 News
8:00 Viewpoint. Harrison Salisbury
talks about the Soviet Union
9:00 Masterworks Concert. Strauss--
Don Quixote. Op. 35
12:00 News--Sign-off
SATURDAY
9:00 Music
10:00 Morning Concert, Gershwin—~
Concerto in F
12:00 Music
1:00 Manager's Desk
1:30 UK Musicale. Heritage String
Quartet—James Bonn. pianist
2:00 World of Opera. Carl Orf’f—Der
Mond «The Moon)
5:00 From the People
53" News
5:45 Netherland's Press Review
6:00 Evening Concert. Chopin—Con—
certo No. 2 in F Minor. Op. 21
7:00 Special of the Week

7:30 Theatre Five
8:00 News
8:05 Pete Mathews. Stravinsky—The
Firebird Ballet
10:00 Man and the Multitude. discus-
sion of the lectures “Political
Responsibility and Individual
Responsibility" and Morality
and Religion: Sustaining or Re-
staining"
11:00 Broadway Today
12:00 News—Sign-off
SUNDAY
Concert. Debussy—En
1 :00 Music
:00 American Symphony Orchestra
with Martina Arroyo. soprano
3:00 Sunday at Three
4:00 Concert Hour
5200 NER Washington Forum
5:30 News
5:45 Washington Report
6:00 Evening Concert. Franck——
Sonata in A Major for Violin
and Piano
7:00 The Search for the New
8:00 News
8:05 Cleveland Orchestra. Weber.
Strauss and Beethoven
0:00 China Today
1:00 Jazz Till Midnight——Don Reda
2:00 News—Sign-off

 

 

CLASSIFIED

 

 

 

FOR SALE

LOST

 

FOR SALE—Golf clubs. brand new.
still in plastic covers. Sell for half.

 

Call 278-6820. 20t1.
FOR SALE—Brunswick “Pro Model"
bowling ball. 16 lbs. No holes. :20.

White and gray marble. Call 2589 or
come to 116 Kastle Hall. 18N10t

 

FOR SALE—Sunbeam Tiger: 289 Cobra
engine. $2.000. Call 278-5622 after 5
p.m. or 233-2000. ext. 2721 from 8:1)
to 4:30. l3N10t

 

FOR SALE—Let your greeting help a
child. Buy UNICEF cards. 1968 cal-
endars at YWCA. Wallace‘s Book-
store or Margie Kennedy. ext. 39;}!

 

FOR SALE—396427 Chevrolet parts.
Sun Super Tach. Astro wheels for
GM. Hurst Competion—plus Shifter
for GM. Call Jim Richardson. 332.

1 5t

 

FOR SALE—1983 Corvair Spyder con-

vertible. 150 hp.. 4-speed. bucket
seats. Like new; reasonable. Call
Mike Lewis. ext. 3388. 15N3t

 

FOR SALE—1988 impala. sport coupe.
Clean. Phone 278-2134. 16N3t

FOR SALE —Camera. top con. Auto.
100. with case. 8 months new $125.

 

 

 

firm. Gregory Bloomberg. 402 N.
Limestone. Apt. 3. 16N2t
TYPING
TYPING — Themes through theses.

13M. Executive. carbon ribbon. 80c
pp. Also multilith mimeograph and
ditto masters. Bill Givens. 252-7543.
Monday through Saturday 8-6. After
hours by arrangement. 8N10t

 

TYPING—Expertly and promptly done
in my home: experienced; legal;
technical and academic. Call 266-8133.

9 t

 

TYPlNG ~ All types of work done
promptly. expertly and inexpensive-
ly. Call Mrs. Theller. 299-7307. l7N5t

 

WANTED

 

WANTED-Reliable student to drive
1600 Volkswagen fastback to Colo-
rado Springs during the Christmas
holidays. References required. Call
277—6679. 18N2t

 

RIDE NEEDED to Summit. NJ. area
for Thanksgiving. Can leave Wednes-
day after 10 a.m. Call Bob. 252-5949.

 

HELP WANTED

 

HELP WANTED—Houseboy for {rater-
nity. Work 3 to 5 hours per day in
late afternoons. Call 252-0258. 14N5t

-—-—-————-——-—

 

l
L JNIVERSAL QENEVE

locum" K‘l dc LI IIIoI Inc

     
  
 

PRESENTS...

Classic elegance in lhesv ladle; watches.
mat. wuh syn, sapphire cry'.lals. In
W' a ’ir thlr: luurleen kanl geld.
‘ ":l’. 3'20 Al W)? 125
You run give IL‘illIoul luring lm!
you t'rm'l [UCU willmu! airing.
‘ r )
FULLE/ & 1mm.
IMMII\HD

“" ""-‘“"‘ mm M!

mamas. “

 

LOST—One manila envelope contain-
ing a research paper on CATV. By
Bill Peters. Left in CF 155. Reward
offered. Call 255-0140. 15N5t

 

FOE am

 

FOR RENT — Three-room efficiency;
available Dec. 1. Park Manor. 318
Transylvania Park. Check at Apt. 18
or at oflfice. 17N5t

 

PERSONAL

 

WANTED for Saturday a cute little
happy birthday girl who likes potato
chips and beer—2864924. ask for Cal-
vin baby. 17N1t

P iscovery

 

Europe Trip
Set, 36 Says

Plans for the Student Govern-
ment Travel Service for two
trips to Europe this summer are
complete, according to Brint
Milward, director of the student
service.

The trips, which begin May
20 and Aug. 15, cost $265 and
include round trip on a KLM
Royal Dutch Airlines DC-8
from New York to Amsterdam.

Milward said 100 seats, 50
on each flight, have been re-
served.

To reserve one of the seats a
$75 deposit is required which,
Milward said, is refundable up
to March 26. A travel agent will
be made available at the Stu-
dent Covernment office to help

.people plan their trips.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,.Friday, Nov. 17, 1967—3

Litter doesn't throw itself away; litter doesn't
just happen. People cause it—and only people
can prevent it. "People" means you.

Keep America Beautiful.

 

  
  
 
   
 

   
  
    
 
 

I
COME IN . . .AND SEE . . .
The New

John Meyer

of Norwich .
Fall Fashion;

@112 Maintain; gimp '

porous u. 401 s. M” omo u.

OHIO STATE u.. . ~ ,. ‘ EASTERN xv. u.

MiAMl u., cm W. VIRGINIA u.

BOWLING GREEN su. u. of ClNClNNATl

UNIVERSITY of TULANE EASTERN MICII. u.
, UNIVERSITY of KENTUCKY

 

 

FASHIONS FOR FALL are now in

The Most Fashionably Decorated Store in Town

 

DOWNTOWN and ON-THE-CAMPUS—Across from Holmes Hall

John Meyer of Norwich

 

 

As the world shrinks and
differences vanish, the wisest
young women come to the
same school of thought about
fashion.

No matter where they’re
from, they discover that they
haven’t started to be "finished"
till they know about John
Meyer.

At collegesallovcrAmcri. l.
the girl talk is about iwim
Meyer’s hundreds of. iiic‘ctics
to wear now and :ifltcr collcgc

‘ in this country or the World
at large.

lt's about the blending: and
matching otiohn Mcyci (unis.
dresses,