xt78930nvn0h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt78930nvn0h/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700218  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, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 18, 1970 1970 2015 true xt78930nvn0h section xt78930nvn0h Tie Kentocky
Wednesday, Teh.

18, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

IIERNDON
Editorial Editor

State Senator Carroll Hubof a bill which
bard,
would give students and faculty
voting membership on state college directing boards, expressed
doubt of the bill's eventual passage Monday night.
Cuest speaking at Sigma Nu
Fraternity on campus, Hubbard
said that the legislation would
probably die in the Senate education committee where it has lain
since its introduction in early
January.
However, Hubbard said he

Vol. LXI, No. 92

Sponsor Doubts

Student-Vot- e
By MIKE

ECeknel

did not know that a similar bill
had been introduced in the
House.
Student Government
President Tim Futrell has indicated that the House bill, pre-

sented Just a few days afterllub-bard'still had a remote chance
of gaining a vote.
Hubbard told his audience

s,

that the committee's opposition
stemmed from the fact that nonvoting membership, granted last
session, had not had enough time
to reach fruition.

"are not ready to grant this

vass ofhis constituents during the
last two years.
"I found that the people in my
area were overwhelmingly in favor of controlling campus disorders," he explained.
"I felt that any bill punishing students would be a negative
approach to the problem and
found that most disorders across
the nation were caused by students wanting a voice in university administration.
"I felt that a bill granting
them some voting power was a
much more logical approach to
the situation," Hubbard stated.

ex-

tra privilege.

"They think after the students
and faculty get one foot in the
door, they will want even more
power," Hubbard explained. "So
they are letting it die in com-

mittee."
Hubbard, 32, the youngest
Kentucky state senator, is a
Democratic representative from
the first district, which covers
the state's five western most
counties.

"Committee members who oppose the bill," Hubbard stated,

Trustees Approve
Institutes9 Merger
The Board of Trustees approved Tuesday a budget revision as well as a merger of the
Institute of Public Administration and the Institute for En-

ject which calls for total planning of new towns in Great Britain) and other projects which
bear on the development of administrative policy.
vironmental Studies.
The merger of these two inThe revised budget for the stitutes will result in the Insti1969-7tute for Planning and Adminisyear calls for an increase
of $3,000 in student scholarships, tration. According to President
a $13,300 increase in Graduate Otis Singletary's report, the new
School dissertation expenses, a institute reflects "continued concern with problems of the physi$9,000 increase for Engineering
administration, a funding of cal environment."
The trustees named Dr. James
$3,600 for the Thailand projects,
and a $500 increase for Business Coke, present director of the
and Economics administration. Center for Urban Regionalism
The Institute of Public Ad- at Kent State University in Ohio,
ministration was authorized by as director of the new program.
the Board of Trustees in 1965,
Dr. Coke said the institute
but never activated. The Insti- would be "closely linked in purtute for Environmental Studies pose and objectives" with the
has been researching the "Midnew Department of Planning in
lands New Town" Study (a pro the School of Architecture.

He said insight for his proposal was gained through a can

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Hubbard said eventual passage of some kind of student
voting bill was inevitable but
not during this session.
' The large, articulate senator
also presented his views on other
pertinent issues of the current
Assembly session during an open
discussion after the
talk.
He said he favored Daylight
Savings Time, increased tobacco
tax and an open interest ceiling.
He is opposed to the proposed
teacher strike, increased aid to
state universities, strip-min- e
regulations and Lincoln School.
te

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Members of the UK Board of Trustees met briefly Tuesday before
deciding lo approve the merger of the Institute of Public Admin- istration and the Institute for Environmental Studies into the
Institute for Planning and Administration.
Photo by Kay Brookhire

College Press Service Attacks Student Poll
By RICK FITCH
College Press Service
WASHINGTON
Does this
describe you?
You backed Mayor Daley's
handling of the 1968 Democratic
convention demonstrations, look
favorably upon the CIA, would
not support a third party political movement in the U.S., haven't
d
taken drugs, support
research on campus, feel ROTC
belongs on campus with academic credit and feel students
who break laws during campus
unrest should be expelled and

-

war-relate-

arrested.

"College Scene Students Tell
It Like It Is." The book claims
its conclusions are based on personal interviews of 3,000 students
at 100 universities.
The College Poll also offers
a quarterly index of student opinion at $12 per year, a newsletter for college officials and business executives at $26 per year
and a weekly report "about everything from drugs to corporate
careers . . . from sex to spiritual
values" at $3 per week.

Netvs Analysis

According to the College Poll,
The reports are syndicated
an independent survey of student
through Columbia Features SynGreenopinion produced by the
Inc. of New York. Acwich College Research Center dicate,
to the Columbia sales
the posi- cording there are 225 subscribin Greenwich, Conn.,
manager,
tions expressed above are among
ers, 22 of them college newsthose held by a majority of the
papers that pay a discount rate
nation's seven million college stu- of $2.50
per week. Metropolitan
dents during 1969.
dailes such as the San FrancisClaiming that it "now ranks co Examiner, Seattle
with the Gallup and Harris polls
and the Buffalo News
in total audience and editorial are
among the subscribers.
acceptance," the College Poll
In addition, NBC news correpresents itself as being the "ondefinitive communication" respondent Bill Ryan broadcasts
ly
with students, and the "authori- the findings of the poll on montative voice of the college gen- itor radio each weekend. It is
carried by over 300 radio staeration." But a CPS investigation raises doubts as to the valid- tions across the country. Columbia Features Syndicate estimates
ity of those assertions.
of the College the poll's regular readership at
Poll, James Foley, a business four million, but says that
communication about
and marketing major at Norwalk
Community College in Connecti- the poll and the radio broadcut, and his brother Robert, a casts probably reach millions
sociology major at Villa nova, more.
Examination of College Poll's
have authored a book entitled
rs

word-of-mou-

offerings raises doubts as to their the College Boards, are against
movement generthe
credibility.
For starters, in the introduc- ally, the College Poll reveals."
These are hardly scientifically-formultion to the book, the authors
conclusions. To the
assign to the poll a political
purpose for existing. "For stucontrary, they seem to be libdents," they write, "this delin- erally sprinkled with the authors'
eation of a broad segment of own political views.
In a chapter on Vietnam and
undergraduate opinion may supply the stimulation for a more the draft, the book preaches at
moderate and constructive voice the reader. "It is indeed a parin campus affairs that would adox that students are not nearly
bring some order out of chaos so conscious or articulate about
and progress out of pain.
the very real atrocities carried
Properly channeled, the on by the Viet Cong." Another
efforts for good of America's
finding: "The College Poll clearyoung people can be substanly shows that students recogtial." James Foley told CPS in nize the obligation of defendan interview that the poll's ob- ing their country."
Another: "It is unfortunate
jective is to portray truthfully
the thinking of students, but but true that American college
these statements would seem to students are inclined to quescall into question whether the tion the good faith and credibilpoll exists for the purpose of ity of U.S. representatives."
reaching scientifically valid con- Another: "The riots (on college
clusions, or for other reasons. campuses) have not helped the
The book itself is fraught with dialogue between generations, in
value judgements. Commenting
on the black unrest at Cornell
University last year, the book
says, "The appearance of guns
a logical but appalling extension
of the violence created an atmosphere of fear. . . In any event
the picture of Cornell black stu
dents leaving the building with
From Combined Dispatches
Mrs. Pat Nixon, the nation's
guns has hurt the black cause
First Lady, will visit the UK
everywhere."
Afro-Asia-

n

ated

"...

the opinion of most college

stu-

dents."

In a chapter nn drugs, one sentence reads, "Even a Berkeley
student, described by a College
Poll interviewer as a hippie, said,
'I may be far out, but I'm not
crazy enough to take that stuff
(LSD).' " What objective criteria
did the interviewer employ to
define the subject as a hippie?
Long hair? A peace symbol? No
explanation is made.
Here is another finding: "Despite publicity about campus sex
and drugs, there appears to be
little verification of its interrelations as far as most students
are concerned. While a few students, particularly at the large
urban universities, admit hearing of sex and drug orgies on or
near the campus, not one student admitted to the poll as
ever having participated in such

an affair."

Please Turn To Pare

8

Nation's First Lady
Plans Visit To UK

Another finding on Blacks
reads: "Those blacks who are
from middle class families and
particularly those who have come
to campuses by means of their
own hard work, having passed

campus early in March.
She will be visiting the campus as part of a tour to provolunteer stumote
at campuses
dent projects
throughout the country.

Originally, Mrs. Nixon was
to visit Lexington last November, but the trip was cancelled
when she contracted the flu.
Mrs. Nixon will also visit
Michigan State University, the
College of the Ozarks, and the
University of Colorado.

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Teh. 18, 1970

The

Dorm Chef
By GWEN

nSII 'N

CHIPS CASSEROLE
For this recipe you'll need:
1 can
tuna fish
1 can
cream of mushroom

soup
small can green peas
cup macaroni
Pimento (optional)
Celery (optional)
1 small bag of potatoe chips
1
1

Ahoy there mateys!!!! Get
those popcorn poppers ready and
come abroad for this fishy casserole.
First boil the macaroni in the
popper. Remove and drain. Next,

RANNEY

cook the peas in the popper;
stirring regularly to prevent burning. Remove and mix with macaroni.
Drain tuna fish and stir with
the mushroom soup in the popper. NOW, TURN OFF THE
POPPER.
Add the macaroni, and peas
to the mixture stirring occasionally. Include chopped celery and
sliced pimento if desired. Sprinkle crushed potatoe chips over
the top and cover with the popper lid. Let simmer, for fifteen
minutes.

-- I-

J

.

I am without any

BEFORE-IIc- re

at all.

make-u-p

AFTER

.

This is me, and my $51.50 natural look.

Costs It, Too!

Looks Like A Million

rail
Join the
F

diversified world
of Martin Marietta

7X

By ANN JOLLY
Kernel Staff Writer
Everywhere you turn on campus, you see nothing but girls
with that "natural look." I was
beginning to wonder what it took

We'll

pay
half

the other.

You pay

to have this look.
First I found a store that sold
the right cosmetics, and consulted with a saleslady who was
well acquainted with the products she sold.
She began from scratch with
a cleansing astringent to cleanse
away hidden dirt before applying
make-u- p.
(Cost: $G.50)
"This is one of our newest
products in the line. It's a new
under make-u- p
moisturizer that
gives a soft natural glow underneath the foundation make-up.-"
She suggested it in natural
because this would not give any
artificial harsh color.
Because my complexion is fair,
she selected a fluid make-u- p
in
champagne diamond, a soft beige

RENT

SPECIAL HALF-PRICRATE
FOR FACULTY, STUDENTS,
SCHOOL LIBRARIES

Late Model

year $13

1

nemos.

9mos.$9.75

$6.50

Typewriters

Check or money order

enclosed

and Adders

Bill me

Name.

SALES & SERVICE

Address.

.

SMITH CORONA

City

State.

and help create tomorrow's
technology in: Missile

Systems, Launch Vehicles,
Space Exploration,
Advanced Electronics and
Communications Systems.

We're looking for qualified Aeronautical, Electrical,
Electronic, Mechanical and Civil Engineers. We offer
them deep and rewarding involvement in significant,
Research, Development, Design, Test, Evaluation, and Production programs in the fields listed
above.
We have major facilities in Baltimore, Maryland; Den
ver, Colorado; Orlando, Florida; Wheeling, Illinois; and
field operations at Cape Kennedy and Vandenberg
Pita, tach location offers opportunities for continuing
education with financial support.

--

Standard
Typewriter Co.

Monitor

393 Waller Ave.

Box 125, Astor Station

Massachusetts 02123

255-632- 6

Imperial Plaza Shopping Center

Shoe Repair Pickup Station
3 Day Service
Quality Work
LEXINGTON BRACE SHOP

287 S. Lime corner Lime

&

Maxwell

Phone

254-175-

5

long-ter-

Miss U.K.
Pageant

Representative on campus
Tliurs. & Fri. March 5

Saturday, Feb.

Director, College Relations
Aerospace Group Dept. 115
Martin Marietta Corporation
Friendship International Airport
Maryland 21240
An Equal Opportunity Employer

21

8:00 p.m.

For. Interview, contact placement office. If unable to
schedule Interview, please send resume to:

Memorial Hall
Tickets

$1.00 advance and at the door

Also: Judi Ford, Miss America 1969 as mistress of ceremonies. Janet Hatfield, Miss

Kentucky 1968 as "Special Guest"
Male or Female

color. (Cost: $3.00)
Since I usually lack a natural
rosy color in my cheeks, the
saleslady suggested I use a cream
rouge in light pink, to be used
before applying face powder.
(Cost: $1.50)
"Next, I would suggest face
powder with lumium. This diffuses light from the make-uTo
match the color of the foundation, I think skin tone would be
best." (Cost: $5.00)
For blemishes and to cover
up bags underneath the eyes,
she suggested a cover-u- p
in a
stick in a natural color. (Cost:
p.

$2.00)

Next came the eye make-uThe saleslady started with my
eyebrows. Since they are rather
dark, she suggested instead of
using a hard pencil line, I should
give them a very soft touch with
brow cake and brush in brown.
She told me to use short, feathp.

ery strokes, very lightly applied.
(Cost: $2.50)
For shadow, she chose golden
brown, in the ee shadow crayon.

(Cot:

$2.00)

"One of the biggest mistakes
is
girls make with eye make-uwith their eye liner. The heavier
and darker it is applied, the
harsher it looks. You should use
a cake eye liner in chestnut,
Apply this with
the brush very lightly and it
should add to the look you want."
p

Zip.

The
Christian Science
Boston,

with just a tint of rose coloring
matching closely to my facial

(green-brown-

).

(Cost: $3.00)
I had never worn false eye
lashes, but the saleslady thought
they would add to the natural
look. She chose a pair in medium brown, taught me how to
attach and trim them. (Cost:
$9.50, including adhesive.)
"For the mascara, I'd use a
super lash mascara. This will
give the illusion of extra length
and thickness without the addition of your lashes looking
gummed together. (Cost: $2.50)
No matter what shade lipstick you choose, you should
learn how to use a lipstick brush
for the best effect." (Cost: $4.50
for lipstick and brush)
Now I had found out what it
took to get that "natural look."
With all this I had it for only
$51.50, plus tax!

The Kentucky

Kernel

Th. Kentucky Kernel, University
Lexof

Station, University
Kentucky,
ington, Kentucky 40503. becond clans
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five time weekly during the
school year except holiday and exam
periods, and once during th. summer
session.
Published by th. Board ol Student
Publications. UK Post Office Box 480.
and
Begun as the Cadet in la
published continuously as th. Kernel
tine. 1813.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help th. reader buy. Any
la Is. or misleading advertising should
be reported to Th. Editors.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb.
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ceremonies
Groundbreaking
were licld yesterday for the new
$6 million Animal Sciences Building, to be located on the south
side of campus next to the Agricultural Science Center.
Speaking at the ceremonies
were Dr. Otis Singletary, Gov.
Louie Nunn, Ernest L. Harris,
chairman of the Blueprint Committee for Kentucky Agricultural
Progress, and Dr. Charles E.
Bamhart, dean of the College of
Agriculture.
d
structure
The
will house all of the UK Animal Sciences Department facul

ty, according to Dr. VV. P. Carrigus, chairman of the department, and will allow scientists,
personnel and teachers the opportunity to work together more
closely.

A dairy processing laboratory,
a meats laboratory, small and
large animal research facilities,
and an auditorium will be located
on the ground floor.

The
tower will contain classrooms, teaching and
research laboratories, offices, and
conference rooms. It is scheduled
for completion early in 1972.

!

ANNUAL VISITATION
j

,

,

of
The Right Rev. William R. Moody
Bishop of Lexington

Expansion within the College of Agriculture was timed perfectly
with Kentucky's agricultural progress. Livestock contributes more
than
billion dollars annually to Kentucky's gross income
and is taking a more prominent place in Kentucky's agricultural
progress. Participating in the groundbreaking ceremonies, from left
to right, are: Dr. Wesley P. Carrigus, Ernest L. Harris, Gov.
Louie B. Nunn, Dr. Charles E. Bamhart and President Otis A.
one-ha- lf

Groundbrca hi ng

Singletary.

X

ST. AUGUSTINE'S CHAPEL
472 Rose Street
SUNDAY, FEB.

2210:30

a.m

Reception for Bishop and Mfs.Aloody
following the service

TODAY and TOMORROW

iuilli.

Tka
I.
f.
p.m. twm imy prUr U th
f ltma la thl
lama.

7:10

Kernel Photo by Kay Brookshlre

rt

MbllcttUa

Today
Dr. Ernest McCutcheon. speaker for
planned parenthood, will speak on

"The People Problem and Some
Solutions" at Zero
Growth
at 8 p.m. on Feb. Population
18 in Room 102
of the Classroom Building.
The UK Jazz Ensemble I, under
the direction of Walter Blanton. will
present a concert at 8:13 p.m. on
Feb. 18 in the Agricultural Science
Auditorium. Admission Is free.
The Student Government Executive
Student Press meeting will be held at
4 p.m. on Feb. 18 In Room 243 of the
Student Center. All Interested students are invited to attend and ask
questions of the Student Government
Executive.
Sur-rephotography will meet at
6:30 p.m. Feb. 18 in room 111 of the
Student Center.
al

Tomorrow
QUEST: Questioning University Education by Students and Teachers will
meet at 6:30 p.m. Feb. 19 in room 113
of the Student Center.
Mr. Peter Schaffer, violin, and Mrs.
a
Carolyn Rankin, piano, will
concert at 8:13 p.m. on Feb. give in
19
the Agricultural Science Auditorium.
Admission is free.

Coming Up
Alumni Association's Great Teacher
Award application deadline is March 1.
Professor A. D. Tushlngham, of the
University of Toronto, Chief Archaeologist of the Royal Ontario Museum,
will speak to the Kentucky Society of
the Archaeological Institute of America at 8 p.m. on Feb. 23 in Room 102 of
the Classroom Building. His subject
will be "Excavations at Jerusalem."
The public la invited to attend.
Phyllis Jenness, a contralto, and
Nathaniel Patch, piano, will present a
concert at 8:13 p.m. in the Agricultural Science Auditorium on Feb. 20.
Admission la free.
Professor Yona Friedman from
Paris, France, will give a public lecture on Feb. 26 at 8 p.m. in Auditorium "B" of the Classroom Building.
The title of his lecture will be "An
Objective Method for Architecture
and Urban Planning."
A short course, in COBOL. Common Business Oriented Language, will
be offered by the UK Student Chapter of the Association for Computing
Machinery. Classes will be held Tues3:30 to
days and Thursdays from Classroom 8
p.m. in Room 333 of the
Building. All Interested parties are
welcome to attend. The first class
will be held on Feb. 24.
The MUi UK Pageant will be held
Saturday, Feb. 21 at 8 p.m. in Memorial Hall. Judl Ford, Miss America
of 19ti9 will be mistress of ceremonies.
Janet Hatfield. Miss Kentucky of 1W8
will be "Special Guest." Tickets are
$1 in advance or at the door.
"What is Success?" ia the title of a
lecture to be given by Harry S.
Smith of the Christian Science Boars
of Lectureship from Boston, Mass.
The lecture will be given at 1 p.m.
on Feb. 24 in Room 243 of the Student Center, and is sponsored by
the Christian Science College Organization on campus. Everyone is invited to attend.
The University Symphonic Band
by
and Wind Ensemble, conducted conWm. Harry Clark, will present a
cert at 8:13 p.m. in UK's Memorial
Hall on Sunday, Feb. 22. Admission
is free.
Dean Turner on clarinet and Carolyn Rankin on piano will present
a recital at 8:13 p.m. In the Agricultural Science Auditorium. The public ia Invited to attend free.

UK Placement Serrice
Register Wednesday for an appoint
meat Friday with Fountain Bailey
Schools, California Kindergarten, lh
grade. May, August graduates.

Register Wednesday for an appointment Friday with International Business Machines Corp. Computer Science (BS); Accounting, Business Administration, Economics, Chemical E.,
Electrical E., Mechanical E., Metallurgical E., Chemistry, Mathematics,
Physics (BS. MS); Engineering Mechanics (MS). Locations: U.S.A. May,
August graduates.
Register Wednesday for an appointment Friday with Kennecott Copper
Corp. Mining E., Electrical E., Mechanical E. (BS); Chemical E., Metallurgical E. (all degrees). Locations
Utah, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico.
Will Interview Civil Engineering (Mining option) and Extractive Metallurgy students at the Junior and
Senior level for summer employment.
May, August graduates.
Register Wednesday for an appointment Friday with the Kroger Co.
Register Wednesday for an appointment Friday with Lehigh Portland
Cement Co. Liberal Arts, AccountAdministration, Ecoing, Business
nomics, Chemical E., Civil E., MinElectrical E., Mechanical E.
ing E.,
(BS). Locations: Northeast, Southeast,
Midwest. May, August graduates.
Register Wednesday for an appointment Friday with
Register Wednesday for an appointment Friday with Prince William
County Schools, Virginia Teachers in
all fields. May, August graduates.
Register Monday for an appointment Monday with Columbus Public
Schools of Ohio.
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with Diamond Power
Accounting,
Specialty Corportion
Electrical E., Mechanical E. (BS).
Locations: Ohio. May, August graduates.
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with the Keller ManuBusiness
facturing Co. Accounting, Electrical
Administration Economics,
E. (BS). Location:
Mechanical
E..
Corydon, Ind.; Culpepper, Vlr. May
graduate.
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with Goodyear Atomic
Corp. Accounting, Business Administration (BS). Locations: Ohio, May,
August graduates.
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with the Kendall Company
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with the Kokomo-Cen-tTownship Schools of Indiana.
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with Maple Heights
City Schools of Ohio. for an appointRegister Thursday
with Montgomery
ment Monday
County Schools, Maryland Teachers
fields. May, August graduates.
in all
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with Mt. Healthy City
Owens-Illinoi-

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JIMMY'S
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graduates.
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with the U.S. Department of the Navy Electrical E., Mechanical E., Metallurgical E. (BS.
MS); Engineering Mechanics (all degrees). Locations: Washington. D.C.;
Philadelphia, Penn.; Norfolk, Va.;
Charleston, S.C.; San Bruno, Calif.;
Various overseas locations. May, August graduates.

dioiv?
'use the
UJiiiLJU iUHJyS

s.

er

m

Schools, Ohio Teachers in all fields.
May August graduates.
Register Thursday for an appointment Monday with Peat, Marwick,
Mitchell & Co. Accounting (BS, MS).
Locations: Nationwide. May, August

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Limestone

* Ban Press, Ban Public
the

"Down with the press," Vice
President Spiro Agnew has trump-cted to every corner of our land,
"Here! Here!" return public of- ficials from those same corners,
It has really snowballed, this
use of America's news media as
an excuse for all the evils that now
confront us. Thanks to the efforts
of Mr. Agnew and others, poli- ticians now have a ready-mad- e
whipping boy for problems they
have been unable to solve.
The shame is that the gullible
American public has fallen for this
hackneyed hogwash. Latest opin- polls show that Agnew's pop- has doubled since his series
of bombardments against reporters,
his success at building a
credibility gap between the news
and its readers.
What the public doesn't seem
to realize is, by its approval of
such politically-motivate- d
remarks,
it is degrading what has been, and
will continue to be, its best friend,
Already, politicians are sensing
public approval of press control
measures and are acting according- ly.
The constant notching of the
around the press has been
both nationally and locally. It
started in the courtroom and has
spread to legislative commit- tees and subcommittees.
Where next? It could be any- where and everywhere unless the

fact that
public awakens to
the right of the press to know
is the right of the citizen to know.

Any politician alive would love
to be relieved of the pressure
exerted on him by the press; he
would love to be free to tell his
constituents exactly what he
wanted them to hear,
In short, the naive public must
learn that there are a few things
that the government would rather
readers, watchers and listeners
didn't know.
Our Kentucky legislators jumped
on the bandwagon recently byban-io- n
ning reporters from certain
mittee hearings and meetings,
Strangely or really not so strange-provin- g
ly these meetings were the very
ones which affect Kentucky
zens most strongly.
A canvass of the state's popu- lus would no doubt reveal that at
least a majority are in favor of the
committees' press ban. Those who
voted yes would be saying, in
essence, that they feel that legis- lators are doing what is best for
the state; and they would prob- ably be right in nine cases out of
ten. It is in the tenth case, how-be- lt
ever, that the press serves the pub-fe- lt
lie best by exposing corruption,
graft and petty political maneuv-sinc- e
com-ulari-

ty

citi-med- ia

ers.

'Germ warfare is out! Why, if a war were to start
somebody could get killed!'

That tenth case could well be
worth preserving press freedom if
history is any guide.

...

Second Conquest Of Nature
President Nixon's proposals to
Congress for stopping pollution of
g
the environment strike a
and hopeful tone. In many ways,
his message befits the present romantic early stage of regenerating
the environment. Americans now
are united in their sense of mission
on this issue. Of this there is no
high-reachin-

doubt.
In a way, civilized man now is
embarking on a second conquest
of nature. He now faces a wilderness of his own creating. This is
an alien region of ugly, harmfully
fouled water, air, and land. The
President's proposals, in a more
comprehensive way than even the
most optimistic political observers
had expected, would introduce a
number of practical remedies on all

these pollution fronts. For example,

water pollution would be fought
not only with funds of waste treatment plants, but also with a tighter
national river-basi- n
cleanup master
plan and with stiffer enforcement
action. An air pollution end would
besought with enforceable national
standards and the phaseout of
high-polluta-

nt

autos.
Only in two key areas could the

President's plan be faulted. Both
of these were assumptions. He said
the nation's environment crisis was
not the
of "advancing
ct

technology or of growing population." Perhaps he said thistoavoid
debate over population control or
over the need to monitor the nation's production expansion. How

ever, neither he nor the American
people can ignore the role played
by sheer numbers of people in the
environmental souring. And with
America's population expected to
increase half again by the end of
this century, but 30 years from
now, the need either to prepare
for such numbers or to moderate
the growth rate is clear.
Likewise, one must ask whether
industry and technology can be allowed to grow like wild untrellised
vines, choking such natural resources as remain. Indeed, in imposing pollution standards on the
nation's auto production, such
monitoring of industrial output is
already being put into effect.
Whether the nation is going to allow itself to be buried under moun

T"

Mr. I'll

I

I ffM-r-

-

2fiM

ttttl

tains of waste, without demanding
that products either be reused or
not made in the first place, is
likewise being answered "no" in
the President's own message.
As America sets out to reconquer nature, adding now wisdom
and gentleness to its earlier proven
inventiveness and strength, it
should also be mindful that this
adventure has as yet had no setbacks. Unlike the last decade's
assaults on racial injustice and poverty, it has yet to meet with disillusion. The environment crusade
can succeed. It may, however, take
even greater resolve and broader
action than the President's message
foretells.

Christian Science Monitor

.

rj

V

f

.

ZJ 'J

CVLUJHIV

'

'il

HT1

U

'Boy, you bad me
worried for a moment
I thought
there
you said tbree to five

...

years!'

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb.

18, 1970- -5

Liquor Lobby Says Law Repeal 'Disastrous'

liFRANKFORT (AF)-T- he
which pegs the minimum markquor lobby defended the
ups by statute as 15 percent on
state fair trade law Tuesday, and the liquor wholesale level and
said repeal might, among other 33 3 percent at retail.
things, bring organized crime into
"There is a law which greatly
reduces these actual markups,"
Kentucky.
It also said the new budget Tuggle said. "Enacted in 1942,
measure, which lets it make a it specifies that neither wholeprofit on an increased liquor tax, salers nor retailers, in figuring
is fair to everyone.
their percentage markups, may
"Recent editorials and news take into consideration any inarticles relating to the revenue crease in the federal excise tax
bill, which would raise liquor occurring afterwards."
The net effect, Tuggle said,
consumption taxes by 50 percent, have been inaccurate and has been to reduce the wholemisleading," said Fred B. Tug- salers' average markup to 8 to
gle, executive secretary of the 10 percent rather than a guarWholesale
anteed 15 percent and the reKentucky
Liquor
Dealers Association.
tail markup to no more than 25
Cites Editorial
percent.
He referre