xt7d251fmw46 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7d251fmw46/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690305  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March  5, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  5, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7d251fmw46 section xt7d251fmw46 1

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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

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Vol. LX, No. 109

Ca rver,

Debate Housing Policy
By LARRY DALE KEELING

Assistant Managing Editor
Thom Pat Juul formally announced his candidacy for next
year's Student Government presidency during a debate on housing
policy with Tim Futrell, another probable candidate, at a meeting
of the Young Republicans Tuesday night.
The debate turned into a three- sided affair when Bruce Carver sociological study of why stutook the stand to state his views dents do not like to live in dorms.
He added, however, that the
on the housing situation. Carver,
a former SG cabinet member, boycott itself would have been
previously had announced his disrup tive and would have caused
candidacy for the top spot in Stu- students to lose their housing
dent Government.
priorities.
"In the interest of the stuIn making his own announcedents. Student Government Pres"modment, Juul attacked the
erate rebellion" recently pro- ident Wally Bryan vetoed the
posed by Futrell as "an excuse bill," Futrell told the meeting.
He went on to praise SG repfor impotent,
inacresentatives Monty Hall and Jim
tive and ineffective leadership."
II
"""'lt.tl- - I
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Futrell countered by telling Gwinn for their work on the
bill.
the students not to "be misled "reverse-boycott- "
Student Government representative Thom Pat Juul (left) attacks
"Mr. Hall deserves praise for
the "moderate rebellion" outlined by SG
by proposers of everything and
Tim
construction legislation," Futrell
Futrell (right) at a Tuesday night debate on the housing policy.
producers of nothing."
He added that the boycott said. "Others prefer destructive
termed the "rebellion" "an excuse for ...inactive and
Juul
bill proposed by Juul and passed legislation and trouble-makinineffective leadership." Juul later announced his candidacy for
the SG presidency.
by the assembly called for sev The constructive method seems
Kernel Photo By Dave Herman
eral "good things," such as a to me to be the better way of
showing solidarity."
Futrell then restated a position he earlier had taken opposing forced housing, adding
that the entire issue had been
"blown up" by emotional statements by Juul.
to submit an interim report on
"Teaching methods might be classes. They may benefit by beHe said present projections,
the problem of generating educachanged radically," he says, to ing separated from those who are given by President A.D. Kirwan
tional excitement to the A 6r S compensate for this situation. not really excited about learnJan. 29, indicated that dormidean's office by May 1.
He offered, as an example, ing."
tories would be filled next year
Dr. Halbert Gulley, chairman one partial solution the comIn their separate classes they on a voluntary basis.
of the committee, says that almittee is considering the pos- would, possibly, be freer to do
"It should be remembered
though most UK students score sibility of initiating separate independent study and assume
that this September the probabove the national average on courses for those interested in ed- other projects, as well as to inlem was not filling the dorms,
the ACT test, which is taken in ucation and for those who are not. fluence what they will be taught it was overcrowded dorms," Fuhigh school, they score "some"Right now we just lump in the classroom.
trell added.
what below average" on
together all students," he said,
He called for a resolution by
Special teaching methods
and "the intellectually interested could then be used for the
purport to measure indithe assembly, or other interested
viduals' eagerness to learn.
students are bored by their
students, to the effect that forced
students, and, says Dr.
applications above the freshman
Gulley, "we hope that by their
junior years these students would level be ceased.
Futrell then presented a
also have caught fire." He said
it is in the freshmen and sophoproposal on the housing
more years that students of high issue which called for
intellectual interest get particuComplete student compliidea
ance with the
bored.
larly
Another important area the of all students who wish to reeffect, positive or negative, on committee member, is credited
committee seeks to examine is the side in UK housing turning in
total food sales in the Student with the idea of a penny protest,
Continued on Page 8, Col. 1
which grew out of a plan to supContinued on Page 3, Col. 1
Center.
Dick Pozzuto, SDS steering port the CARSA picnic boycott.
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Wants Suggestions Thursday

Committee Seeks 'Educational Excitement'
By TERRY DUNHAM
Assistant Managing Editor
An Arts and Sciences committee seeking practical, even if
radical, suggestions for ways to
make learning more exciting has
invited the comments of all students at an open hearing Thursday.
The hearing, to be held at 4
p.m. in the Student Center Theatre, is sponcored by the Committee on Learning, which hopes

tests-whic-

Penny Protest To Replace Picnic
In Effort To End Grape Sales
By DAN GOSSETT

Kernel Staff Writer
Due to lack of success with
its "picnic boycott" of the Student Center Girlie, CARSA will
join with the newly organized
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in what may be
termed a 'penny ante protest.

five-poi- nt

Hall-Cwin- n

Blacks List Demands
AtUOfL Meeting

A change table, jointly sponsored by CARSA and SDS, will
LOUISVILLE (AP) -- Black students presented the University of
be initiated in the Student Cen-te- d Louisville with a
list of demands Tuesday then abruptly
Wednesday through Friday left the meeting while officials were discussing them.
to change all currency into pen"Well be back here on Satur
nies.
Strickler first proposed that
day at noon and we'll have the
black community with us," said the requests be turned over to
The idea is to pay for all food
Benjamin Baker, chairman of the trustees at their regular
purchases in the Student Center the group which numbered
meeting March 20.
with pennies, thereby cloging about 50.
"No, no, that's too long.
the food lines at the busiest
You're trying to put us off so
Topping the list was a request
hours of the day.
that the university spend from we'll forget this," a number of
students shouted.
The picnic boycott and the $300,000 to $500,000 for a coms
conStrickler said the university
plete staff of
penny protest both were design- sultants, recruiters and aides.
now has a course in Negro hised to put pressure on University
The consultants would be tory; offers 10 Dr. Martin LuthFood Strvices to stop the sales
"black males" charged with deer King scholarships of $500
of California table grapes.
veloping a program for recruiteach; and has set up a counselCARSA president Rill Rauch
ing professors, black students
ing program in each of seven
and developing courses in black
said "the picnic idea failed becommunity centers
in predominantly black areas of
cause not enough people were studies."
The students also demanded
Louisville.
willing to go out of their way a
little and bring food from other that Louisville hire a director of
He also said the university
places instead of buying it in the black affairs, who would have has sent members of the black
Grille. The penny idea should vice presidential authority and student
group to various cities
pick up where th picnic left off." draw $20,000 a year.
to search for black professors
After the walkout, President
but with little success.
Woodrow Strickler commented:
Earlier this week, Mrs. MarThe university has a full time
garet Mclntyre, director of the Tin not sure what they want
me to do. They didn't give me black student population of apStudent Center cafeteria, reportproximately 200.
ed that the boycott had had no time to discuss it."
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Kernel Photo By Dave Herman

Shadows and reflections play across "The Natchez Trace" as
they entertain SC Coffee House audiences with a folk rock. Continuing through Saturday night, the group entertains at 8 and
9 p.m. on the weeknights and at 8:30 and 9:30 p.m. Friday and
Saturday.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, March

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Universities Pause To Discuss
Scientists In Military Research
CAMBRIDGE, Mass (AP) -Hundreds of the nation's university professors, researchers and
students cut classes and work
Tuesday to discuss the scienretist's role in military-relate- d
search.
The movement, spawned at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, spread to about three
dozen other campuses throughout the country.
More than 1,000 persons,
mostly students, turned out at
MIT's Kresge Auditorium for a
series of debates and panel discussions.
The program was organized
by the "Union of Concerned Scientists," which called the affair
a symbolic protest directed at
the military's use of university
research. The institute did not
sanction the action.
Generally, the meetings had;
little effect on university rou-- j
tine and took place without incident.
At the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, however,
all undergraduate classes were
suspended to permit discussion
of a broader range of subjects.
About 18,000 students were affected.
"We felt if we remained narrow . . . we would be speaking
only to a small group of people
of the same opinion," commented Theodore Hershberg, a history instructor and organizer of
the Penn program.
Columbia and Fordham Universities in New York had programs patterned after the MIT
movement.
A Fordham physics professor,
Joseph Shapiro, said the purpose was to motivate scientists
to "consider the social consequences of research."
On the West Coast, students
and scientists participated in
programs at Stanford, the University of California at Berkeley, the University of California
Medical Center in San Francisco and San Francisco State
College.
The program at Stanford was
planned with the "enthusiastic
approval" of the university's
president, Kenneth Pitzer.
,

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Newly installed turnstiles at the
entrance area of King Library
reportedly were intended to "decentralize" traffic in the foyer.
Dy funnel ing exit traffic through
a small passage to one side of
the turnstiles, the library hopes
to cut down on book theft and
simplify book check-out- .

Bibliomaniac
Trap

IFC Elects Officers
Darby Turner, a Lexington
junior, is the new Interfratemity
Council president, succeeding
Barry Ogilby, whose term has
expired.
Turner, a member of Delta
Tau Delta Fraternity, was elected
at last week's IFC meeting.
Rick Hensel of Sigma Chi is
the new IFC vice president. Bo
Fugazzi of Kappa Alpha is the
outgoing vice president.
Other newly elected officers
and their affiliations are: Bob

Houlihan, rush chairman, Kappa Alpha; Buzz Ryland, secretary, Phi Sigma Kappa; Ed
Mayer, treasurer, Sigma Alpha
Epsilon.
Barry Allen, Pi Kappa Alpha,
is the outgoing IFC secretary,
and Bart Gaunt (Sigma Chi) and
Ken Foree (Lambda Chi Alpha)
are vacating the offices of treasurer and rush chairman.
The positions are for
terms.

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Several departments at the
University of Wisconsin in Madison observed what was described as a "Day of Concern,'
but no work stoppage was reported.
The immediate effect of the
MIT halt on research was impossible to assess since, as one
organizer noted, reesarchcrs
work at their own pace and
without standard schedules.
Other symposia in the concept of the MIT program were
held at Yale, Dartmouth, the
University of Maryland, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy,
N.Y., Syracuse, Case Western

10-ho- ur

Black Seminarians
Chain Colgate's Doors

The Associated Press
Twenty black seminarians held control of the administration
building at the Colgate Rochester Divinity School in Rochester,
N.Y., on Tuesday and accused school officials of "a shocking
lack of good faith."
The seminarians, members of to hire black teachers and soon1
the Black Caucus on campus, would elect six Blacks to its
took over Strong Hall on SunBoard of Trustees.
day, nailing and chaining the
In Big Rapids, Mich., about
doors shut, as the wave of stu- 300 Ferris State
students
dent unrest reached still another were released College bond
pending
by
campus.
a Judge Tuesday after spending
Dr. Gene Bartlett, president the
night in the Big Rapids Naof Colgate Rochester, cancelled tional Guard
Armory.
all classes at the 200-- student semhad been arrested by
They
inary at least through Wednesday. He said there would be no Michigan State Police who broke
overt action taken to oust the through two locked glass doors
in the administration building
dissenting students.
The students were demanding where the students were holding
The arrests of the demthat more Blacks be named to a
the Board of Trustees and to onstrators, mostly Blacks, culprofessorships. "The building minated a week of confrontations
will not be given up until our between Blacks and whites on the
demands are met in full," they campus.
said Tuesday.
Of the 7,700 students, 360 are
Bartlett said Monday the Black. They seek some Negro
school was moving as rapidly as faculty members and black
possible to meet the demands. studies.
"The myth the administration
is moving far and fast must be
exploded by the truth," the stu
dents said in a statement.
Bartlett has said the nonde- nominational school was trying
The Associated Press
Leonard L. Wilson, formerly
"Nominated for Academy Award"
a director of development at the
University, was named assistant
BEST PICTURE!
BEST DIRECTOR!
to the president of Transylvania
College here Tuesday.
Saying that the position was
PARAMOUNT PICTURES i.rrm.
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Wilson Named
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Franco Zeffirelli

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technic Institute and Rockefeller
University in New York City.
There was ' a counterdemon-stratio- n
at the Argonne National
Laboratory in Illinois. Seventy-nin- e
scientists decided to work
a
day to offset the research hours lost to the symposia.
One of those who helped organize the counterdemonstxa-tio- n
was Dr. Jack Uretsky, who
said: "There is a place for dialogue within the American political system after work."

As Protests Continue

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Reserve in Cleveland, and New
York University, Brooklyn Poly-

JULIET

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President

Dr. Irvin E. Lunger

added that Wilson will be

fund-raisin- g

He has also been a member
of the UK Alumni Association's
e
planning committee
and its annual fund committee.
long-rang-

The Kentucky

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BUD Y0RK1N

NORMAN LEAR PRODUCTION

THE IIIGHT THEY RAIDED HIHSKY'S"
JASON ROBARDS BRITT EKLAND
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sponsible for the development
of financial resources and
programs at the college.
Wilson served as director of
development at UK for four
years, and before that was a
member of the school's Development Council.

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station. University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky,
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published bv the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 49B6.
Begun as the Cadet in 1804 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$9.27
Yearly, by mail

Per copy, from files

$.10

KERNEL TELEPHONES
2321
Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor.
2320
Associate Editors, Sports
244T
News Desk
Circulation 2319
Advertising, Business,

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wcilncwlay, Martli 5,

Iii

Three-Wa- y

1909- -5

Debate At YR Meeting

Juul Announces Candidacy; Futrell Outlines 'Rebellion9
Continued from Taje One
their applications by April 2.
A resolution by the Board
of Trustees promising that additional dormitory facilities will
not be built unless there is a
demand for them by students
above the freshman level.
A
large-scaladvertising
campaign by the Housing office
in the Kernel and other media
to attract students to live in the
dorms.
The University to solicit a
feasibility study on the possibility of privately owned dormitories
which would eliminate forced
freshman housing and substitute
a totally voluntary policy.
A cessation of radical unthinking criticism aimed at responsible students and administrators.
"The way to reach critical
decisions is through calm, deliberate, reflective channels," Futrell said.
Juul told the meeting that
forced housing caused students to
give up rights that they were entitled to when they reached the
age of 18.
Juul said that an
could vote, get married, pay
e

taxes, get drafted and pursue
a higher education.
"But if he does the latter at
the University of Kentucky," Juul
added, "he is likely tobe stripped
ing
of several of his basic
the right to live where
he wants. And if he loses that
right, he automatically loses
many more important ones."
Juul said that these lost rights
included protection from illegal
search and seizure, freedom of
speech and the press, the right
to organize and solicit support
and the right to choose the person with whom he will live.
He said that the student who
wanted to inspire change had
two routes. He could go to the
administration and get the traditional
Juul said,
or he can go to the elected spokesman, Student Government.
"However," he added, "when
the elected spokesman is most
likely to explain away his protests as the meaningless mutter-ing- s
of a demented child, what
good is Student Government?"
"Something is wrong with a
system like this, or maybe it is
not the system at all, but the
people running the system."

Juul said that violence was a
distinct possibility at UK if the

present Student Government continues in its failure to be meaningful.
Juul then attacked Futrell s
"moderate rebellion" as a "lame
apology for placing personal political ambition above student

rights-includ-

interest." "The 'moderate

rebel-

lion is nothing more than a promise of more of the same," Juul
said.
He added that the 'rebellion'
would be characterized by unlimited finance, catchy slogans,
energetic pledge classes, flowers
for girls on election day, flowery
speeches, open convertibles with
loud speakers, posters and lots

of paint.

"We can expect a strategy
based on the assumption that
only Greeks vote," Juul said. "We
can also expect a platform handed
down from father to son, from
campaigner to campaigner, promising that this time we will finally revitalize Student Govern-

run-aroun- d,

ment."
Jull then announced his candidacy, saying that he had been
labeled a radical and troublemaker because he had been in

TODAY and TOMORROW

j

Today

Ballroom, March 8. The dance will be
after the Tennessee game from
p.m. Tickets will be on sale Monday
at the Student Center and all cafeterias during the evening meal.
Annual Awards Night, sponsored by
the Student Activities Board, will be
held March 9 at 7 p.m., in Memorial
Coliseum. The Awards Night Is for all
coUege, all campus, and aU departments.
The A.W.S.
Day will be
held March 7 and 8 In the Student
women students are inCenter. All
vited to attend.
Spring Break Florida Primer, an all
campus Jam Session sponsored by Tau
Kappa Epsilon Fraternity, will be held
in the Student Center Ballroom Friday, March 7, from 8 to 12 p.m. Admission is 50 cents per person. Music
by the Mallories.
Rotaract, a newly formed campus
service organization affiliated with the
Lexington Rotary Club, will hold a
at
meeting on Monday, March 10, Cen- 7
p.m. in Room 117 of the Student
interested in Joining
ter. All students
the group should either attend the
Harrison,
meeting or contact Damon at
Box 126 Boyd Hall, or phone

Adm. (BS, MS). Schedule II: Special
Agent Positions Law.
Volusia County Schools, Deland.
Fla (Daytona Beach) Teachers in all
fields.

9--

Sign up for Sorority Open Rush
now in Room 301 of the
tion Building. Rush extends April 26.
for membership
in
Applications
KEYS, the sophomore men's honorary, are now available In Room 103
Bradley Hall or by contacting Damon
Talley at the FarmHouse fraternity,
316 Aylesford Place. All sophomore
men with a 3.0 standing are eligible.
must be returned by
Applications
Wednesday, March 5.
Cheerleading applications are available for males and females in Room
206, Dean of Students Office, in the
Administration Building. Applications
must be picked up and returned by
March 7.
The University Concert Band under
the direction of Robert B. Welch will
be in UK Student Center Ballroom
Wednesday, March S at 8: IS p.m.
Dr. George B. Barbour, Dean Emeritus at the University of Cincinnati,
will speak on "Digging for the Roots
of the Family Tree with Teilhard de
Chardin," on March S at 4:00 p.m. in
Room 148 of the Chemistry-Physic- s
Building. He will also speak on March
6 at 4:00 p.m. in Room 137 of the
s
Chemistry-PhysicBuilding.
A.W.S. Spring Elections will be
March 5. You must present a validated I.D. to vote. Voting places are
Complex and Blazer Cafeterias at
1
and 7 and the Student Center
and Chemistry-Physic- s
Building from
Women students vote for your
11--

5.

representatives.
Students interested in living in the
Dillard House for the fall semester of
1969, may meet at 7 p.m., Wednesday,
March 5. at 270 South Limestone St.
Income tax forms and Information

will be available between 11 a.m. and
1
p.m. on Tuesdays and Wednesdays
until April IS at the tax booth sponsored by Beta Alpha Psi.
Students interested in participating
in a
student exchange program from March 14 thru 21 at
Institute in Alabama can apply
in the Human Relations Center, in
Room 120 of the Student Center.
The Donovan Scholars Arts exhibit
will be in the Student Center Art
Gallery March 3 thru 15.
A

Tus-keg-

Tomorrow
Dr. Frank Reissman, Director of
New Careers Development and Professor of Educational sociology at New
York University, will speak on "New
Apin
Developments
proaches," Thursday, March 6, at 3
in the Student Center Theatre.
p.m.
A student recital featuring Gerald
Pirn, tuba, assisted by Patricia Wil- l.
Piano; Dennis Aker, tuba;
liam Bryan, tuba; Robert Davenport,
tuba; and
tuba; Hunter Hensley, will be held
Wayne Pressley, tuba,
6 at 8:15 p.m., in the UK LabMarch
oratory Theatre. are invited to attend
All students
an open committee hearing on the
"Climate for Learning at UK," sponsored by a new committee on LearnSciArts
ing of the College of will and held
be
ences. The meeting
Thursday, March 6, at 4:00 p.m., at
the Student Center Theatre.
The Stydent Government Assembly
will meet at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, in
Room 222 of the Commerce Building.
Any interested student may attend the
meeting.
Anti-Pover- ty

Las-sel-

Coming Up
The University of Kentucky Faculty
Brass Quintet and a group of guest
a varied
performers will present 7, at 8:15 prop.m.
gram on Friday, March Science Audiat the UK Agricultural i free to the
torium. The concert
public.
Sharyn Anne Russell, piano, will
present selections by Bach, Schumann.
Uartok, and Chopin, in a student
recital on Saturday. March 8. at the
Science Auditorium at
Agricultural
8:15 p.m.
The Wildcat Dame will celebrate
the Cats KtC victory with the sounds
ot the Exiles in the Student Ctrnter

WBKY-F-

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UK Placement Service
Register Thursday for an appointment next Tuesday with:
Chevron Chemical Co. Ortho Division
Agr. Economics. Agronomy,
Plant .Pathology (BS).
Horticulture.
Locations: U.S.
Oil Co Consolidation
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Coal Co. Economics, Chem. E., Civil
E.. Mining E., Elec. E.. Mech. E. (BS.
MS). Locations: Pa., W. Va.. Va.. 111.,
Ohio. Tenn. Citizenship. Will interview
juniors, seniors, and graduate students for summer employment.
Flint Community Schools, Mich.
Teachers in all field3.
TeachGallon City Schools, Ohio
ers in all fields.
Kenton County Schools, Independence, Ky. Teachers in all fields.
Lorain City Schools. Ohio Teachers
in all fields.
Minneapolis Public Schools, Minn.
Teachers in all fields.
Pennsylvania Department of Forests
and Waters Civil E. (BS. MS). Locations: Pa.
State Farm Insurance Companies
Accounting, Bus. Adm., Economics,
Computer Science. Math (BS); Law.
Locations: Nationwide. Citizenship.
Teachers in
Toledo Schools, Ohio
all fields.
U. S. Department of Agriculture
Office of Inspector General. Locations:
Illinois. Indiana. Ky.. Mich.. Minnesota. Wise. Citizenship. Schedule I:
Accounting. Bus.
Auditor Posittons
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IN STEREO
Wednesday, March 5 (Evening)
4:30 In The Bookstall
5:00 Education USA
5:15 Avenue of Champions
5:30 It Happened Today
6:00 Hodgepodge
7:00 Evening Concert Walton,
"Quartet No. 2 in A Minor"
7:55 News
8:00 Viewpoint Discussion of the
trend toward materialism in art
collecting
8:30 Mary Jane in Perspective
Doctors discuss Marijuana
9:00 Masterworks
Orff,
"Carmina Burana"
11:15 News
11:30 Night Call
12:30 Night Cap
1:30 Sign Off
Thursday, March 6 (Afternoon)
1:00 Afternoon Concert Alfven,
"Midsummer Vigil"

the center of every fight and controversy for student rights in the
past few years.
"If that makes me a
then I guess I am," he
said.
When asked what his alternative to the "moderate rebellion"
was, Juul said that it would be
'activist techniques' such as the
boycott and more effective use of
the student seat on the Board of
Trustees.
He later said, however, that
he would never advocate violence and would use every power
within his means to avoid violence.
when questioned
Futrell,
about the legality of forced housreplied that
ing for
it hadn't been taken to the courts
and that as long as the courts
hadn't acted upon it, it was legal.
Futrell was then asked what
he had produced, since he had
attacked Juul for proposing and
not not producing.
He said that he had done very
little in regard to housing because he wasn't the student on
the Board of Trustees. He denied
that SG President Bryan had
said the referendum was meaningless and attacked the Kernel
for incompetent reporting and for
not printing anything that opposed their policy.
Bruce Carver was then asked
for his views on the housing
policy and asked why he hadn't
been invited to the debate.
"I've been wondering about
that," Carver said, "since, before tonight, I was the only announced candidate and my hou
ing views are different from Juul s
and Futrell' s. And I'm even a
hell-raise-

r,

rights of an adult.
"The Board lacks faith in
themselves, the students and the
system of free enterprise because
they refuse to compete," Carver said.
He said that neither of
the other candidates had proposed any positive incentives the
Board of Trustees could use to
induce students to live in dorms.
"My plan is for the University
to become a competitor on the
open market," he added.
He then suggested that the
University set up four or five
sets of dormitory regulations
ranging from very strict to very
loose and let the student choose
the set under which he will live.
Carver said that this would reduce student complaints and help
insure maximum capacity in the
dorms.
Juul then took the floor again
to say that some of the proposals that Futrell had made
had already been proposed in the
assembly or had already been
done.

"Mr. Futrell is attacldngfrom

a position of not having done
anything," Juul said, adding that
Futrell had only spoken in the
assembly three times.
Futrell replied that SG President Bryan and assembly speaker
Steve Bright had agreed to keep
the executive branch of SC and
the assembly separate and that
he had honored that separation.
Carver, a former cabinet member, then recalled that Bryan
had stated to the assembly in
his first address that he would
not stand for students who used
SG to further their political ambitions.
YR.
He then told Futrell that
"I was informed tonight that an had brought a proposalBryto
if I spoke in the debate, Mr. ,the cabinet for
approval asking
Futrell would demand time equal that Futrell
Carver
to both mine and Mr. Juul's." said that the keep quiet.
proposal had been
Futrell said that he would
have been willing to debate both approved.
Futrell said that he didn't
of the others if he could have
brought along someone else on his believe this and that Carver had
been fired from Bryan's cabinet.
side.
Carver then told the meeting
Bryan told a Kernel reporter
that the University was in a 'bad early this semester that Carver
financial position and had fallen had done a fine job in his cabback on a plan used by other inet post and had had to quit
universities. He added that the because of the time it required
policy goes against the basic of him

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* Committee On Learning: Seeking Your Gripes
The College of Arts and Sciences Committee on Learning has
been putting up posters on campus
and in general has been trying to
convey a message. It claims it wants
to know something from students.
It wants to know something about
the academic environment here.
To accomplish this the committee has set aside 4 p.m. Thursday
as a time for students to air their
complaints, if they have any, and
to tell what they like, if they like
anything. The Student Center Theatre has been reserved for the occasion.
There seems to be a good chance
that a forum like this could fall
back to the old cliches, with smilstudents
ing polished status-qu- o
telling the committee what a fine
library snack bar has been established and how the liberty allowed
students concerning classroom dress
is admirable. Draped in the latest
Brooks Brothers suit, someone is'
likely to say that the only complaint he ever hears back at the

house is that there is too much
outside reading in this or that department.
But the committee doesn't really
seem to be interested in this nonsense. If its earlier statements can
be believed, it would like to really
know what enlightened, thinking
students have to say about this institution. It has not promised it has
answers, nor that it will agree with
what is said, but it has promised
to listen.
It really doesn't seem that stu

dents should have a hard time
finding things to throw before the
committee. Many, if not most, of
the classes offcrcxl here are outdated, unnecessary and highly
It is not unusual to have
a class dealing with urban affairs
completely ignore the turmoil of
today and fall back on outmoded
theories and classical approaches.
Certainly the priority given athletics on this campus should be
questioned. Many students here
seem to have become so warped
non-academ-

The Kentucky

University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

ernel

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5,

1894

ic.

1969

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lee B. Becker, Editor-in-ChiDarrell Rice, Editorial Page
Guy M. Mendes III, Managing Editor
Tom Derr, Business Manager
Jim Miller, Associate
Howard Mason, Photography Editor
Chip Hutcheson, Sports
Jack Lyne and Larry Kelley, Arts Editors
Dana Ewell,
Frank Coots,
Janice
Larry Dale Keeling,
Terry Dunham,
Assistant Managing Editors
ef

Editor
Editor
Editor
Barber

in their attitudes that winning a
basketball title is much more important than confronting meaningful aspects of higher education.
There seem to be all too many
studen