xt7d7w676b2x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7d7w676b2x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690923  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 23, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 23, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7d7w676b2x section xt7d7w676b2x TME KENTUCKY

v

liE IRN E L

Tuesday, Sept. 23,

19G9

University of Kentucky, Lexington

Vol. LXI, No. 20

Futrell, Forth Attend

Nixon Speaks At ASG Convention
By BILL MATTHEWS

Assistant Managing Editor
"While there is a generation
gap, let me assure you that this
administration is as concerned
about the problems of today as
you are," said President Nixon,
speaking at the Presidents to
Presidents Conference in Washington, D.C. Saturday.
Sponsored by the National
Association of Student Governments (ASG), the conference was
attended by representatives from
more than 300 colleges.
Student Government President Tim Futrell and Acting Vice
President for Student Affairs
Stuart Forth participated in the
conference as representatives of
.

UK.
ASG representatives said they
sponsored the conference for stu-

dent government presidents and
their respective institutional presidents to meet, discuss pertinent
issues and hear from other leaders whose decisions affect the future of higher education.
National Leaders Speak
Those leaders included members of the Nixon administration,
The New York Times, the House
Special Subcommittee on Education, the U.S. Chamber of Comas well as
merce, the AFL-CIO

several prominent educators.
Officials of the ASG declared
the "purpose of the conference
will be to show the nation the

encountered some angry questioning during a session on "The
Role of the Federal Government
in Higher Education."
President Futrell said that
responsible leadership of America's campuses" and "to draw even "General Hershey did not
attention to the true image of arouse the hostility that Finch
the majority of today's students." did."
One of the speakers at the conDr. Forth said that the meetference was Gen. Lewis B.
ing with President Nixon came
dispelled rumors of his after an invitation from the White
possible resignation as director House to the approximately 450
of the U.S. Selective Service by conference delegates.
At a reception held at the
stating, "I'm not going to reWhite House, Nixon spent some
sign."
''
Dr. Forth, who attended the three hours with the group, makconference for President Single-taring a speech and answering quesdescribed Gen. Hersheyasa tions.
The ASG conference, which
"surprisingly witty and urbane
e
ran from Friday through Sunday
speaker," adding, "Hedid a
job of defending the inde- afternoon, followed a format of
fensible."
speakers and discussion periods
The acting vice president during the morning and afternoon
pointed out that because few of followed by long discussion sesthe representatives were from the sions in the evening.
country's larger or more promiTopics such as "Alumni Renent schools, he "expected the sponsibility to the Campus,"
students to be more docile than "Campus Conciliation and Methey were."
diation," "Codes of Conduct,"
and "Student Involvement in FaBlacks Demand Session
culty Development" were disSeveral Black representatives cussed.
demanded and got a session of
Vietnam and institutional ra"Black and White institutional cism were injected into the agenracism" included in the agenda. da by the students themselves.
Secretary of Health, EducaContinued on Page 3, Col. 3
tion and Welfare Robert Finch

Kernel Photo by Ken Weaver

Bri&llt Talks
TichetS

Student Services Committee chairman
Steve Bright discusses the new Student
Government proposal for distribution of
football game tickets at Monday night's
committee meeting. The plan calls for
ne Pssb"'ly f students living on the
south end of campus purchasing tickets
at the Complex. See story on Page 8.

y,

first-rat-

31

s

Band Toots Horn,
Answers A Critic
By TOM BOWDEN
Kernel Staff Writer

"We played our guts out. We
played all that we should have,"
maintains John D. White, student president of the Wildcat
Marching Band concerning Saturday's performance at the Indiana-UK
football game.
"Our band had the finest
show," White told Kernel Editorial Page Editor,. Bob Brown
Monday night in a confrontation
between Brown and some 25 students concerning an editorial in
Monday's Kernel, criticizing the
band's performance.
Calling for a "toning down"
of some of the "wrong facts"
in the editorial, White asked for
"constructive criticism" about
the band's performance.
White said, "We want full
apology and retraction."
Played At Every Chance
Noting that Southeastern
Conference rules forbid the band
to perform during actual game
play, White added, "We played
almost every chance we got. The
only people yelling were the band

andlU."

Ban Brown

The protesting group also objected strongly to "drunken" stuS
Kernel Photo by Dick Ware dents who sat near them in the
Kernel Editorial Page Editor Bob Brown, wearing glasses at left, listens stadium. The group charged that
botwhile UK band members protest Monday's editorial, which criticized the "drunken bums" threw
tles at them and yelled obscenithe band's performance at Saturday's Indiana football game.
ties.

"You have encouraged the
drunken people," White said, referring to the editorial.
"Ninety percent of the cheers
are started in the band," one
protester stated. "The band is
the spirit of the school."
The editorial charged that the
pep portion of the reportoire was

"nil."

Played After Every T.D.
"We played after every touchdown, and after some of the
spectacular plays (leading to the
touchdowns)," one participant
said.
White defended the red
plumes on the band's new uniforms, noting that people "have
always (complained)" about the
colors.

One protester told Brown,
"You can't print whatever comes
into your mind."
After the students had left,
Brown commented, "I still hold
the opinions I held. They (the

protesters) did not demonstrate
that any of the editorial was
erroneous."
The group also proposed that
Brown write an editorial condemning the "drunken" people
at the game. They also threatened
to "call in the cops and turn
(the drunken people) in' if no
action is taken against them.

Citizen Reaction Studied

Downtown Abduction: A Deviancy Experiment
By MARBLU DAUER
Kernel Staff Writer
A shockingly realistic abduction in downtown Lexington
Monday night was part of an
experiment for a class In Deviant
Behavior. Without notifying the
police in advance, six students
in Sociology 536 arranged for a
dummy abduction scene in order
to study the reactions of the

spectators.
The general class assignment
was for the students to display
some deviant behavior in public
and then to observe the behavior
of spectators.
Only four restrictions were
placed on the experimenters.
They could not break any
They couldn't huit anyone.

They could not force attention upon themselves.
The instructor had to approve the plan.
Those students who arranged
the phony abductions ran into
some very interesting problems in
carrying out their assignment.
Early in the evening three
male students who had been riding around the block, jumped
out of their car, threw a Jacket
around a tall, attractive blond,
and pushed her roughly into the
car. The two other female members of the team were standing
near the scene, noting people's
reactions.
Streets Fill
The two female observers said
that a man in a blue sport scar
started honking, to get people's

attention. People started pouring
out of the stores, pointing, and
asking what happened. The man
got out of his car, and told a
bus driver behind him what had
happened.
The observers quoted the man,
"Three fellows got out of a black
Corvair and kidnapped a girl."
The bus driver soon began
honking also, and traffic began
to get a little congested.
The girls noticed an elderly
nun, who had been reading a
newspaper war by, walk up to
the interested bus driver, and
produced the license number of
the Corvair. The bus driver told
him to call the police.
One team observer
Everybody that was
,"

standing around talking knew
what was going on in a general
sort of way. They didn't know
the vivid details, but there was
no discrepancy in facts."
Said a member of the abduction crew, "It was wild, frightening, terrifying. I got scared."
The observers noted that even
after the abductors had circled
around the block, to pick them
up, there was a crowd milling
about, discussing the incident.
At the Turfland Mall 30 minutes later, the same kidnapping
was restaged. The potential for
a crowd at the Mall was the same,
but the re ad ion, in comparison to
downtown Lexington, was practically nil.
The observer s commented that
two young fellows who were

standing near the scene of the
"crime" just said, "It looked
like they put a girl in that car."
Car Stalls
"
car stalled,
The
about a block away from the
abduction, and one young man,
who had seen what happened,
Just walked on by and looked
at the stalled car.
The team's immediate reaction to their two experiments
was, "We found the apathy of
the young to be unbelievable."
"In downtown Lexington, the
older people took over. At Turfland Mall the younger people
around were simply apathetic."
Said one member of the team,
"I think we have a good basis
for a comparison of apathy and
involvement."
"get-away-

* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Sept. 23,

T1IE

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Royal purple bell bottoms and bolero vest topped by a long
purple scarf with orange dots add up to a perfect way for
fashion flare this fall. The fabric is no wale corduroy, a soft
corduroy with a velvety look. The outfit is worn by UK freshman Roxie Malone.

Corduroy one of the most versatile fall fabrics. Here, Faye Rison models a bold
yellow wide wale corduroy pants skirt with matching short vest. Cold buttons
chained together decorate the vest front.

Kernel Photos hy Dick Ware

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Navy blue no wale corduroy takes on a sporty look with this
bolero vest and culotte skirt. Judy Alexander, a member of A D
Pi sorority, chose a blue and red flowered acrylic blouse to wear
with the tab buttoned vest.

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Corduroy turns dfessy with this cobalt blue pants suit worn by
Judy Alexander. Has corduroy is striped, one wide wale followed
by a narrow wale. The stovepipe pants ne lopped by a double
lyeasted jacket.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. TikmI.iv. Sept. Zl,
ERR0L FLYNN and
LAUREL & HARDY

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By JANICE SMITH
Kernel Staff Writer
"I like what I see intheyoung
people of Kentucky. I like the
direction they are headed in. I
like the fact that they are aware
and concerned about issues now,
instead of waiting until they have

Nixon Speaks
Continued from Page One
SG President Tim Futrell described the "mood" of the conference as "one of educational
reform in an orderly setting."
This, he said, "is the spirit be-

5!

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Speaks At Law School

Ford Lauds State Young

Theatre
2 p.m., Sat., Sept 27
SC

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:4l?rI;Si
ft

Memorial Coliseum

10

Tickets on Sale Starting Sept. 24
Student Center
$2.00 and $2.50

hind the ASG."
Futrell said the conference
was "helpful to me in getting
the big picture seeing the problems on other campuses, how
they were handled and what errors were made."
The UK student body president noted that many of the
delegates at the conference were
in the process of reforming their
University Senates to make them
representative of the University
Futrell indicated
community.
that he too may have in mind
plans for reform in that area.
Dr. Forth said that the resolutions and ideas of the conference will be taken to the national ASC convention in Atlanta
during October.
Vice President Forth also commented that, unlike most institutional conferences, most delegates went to most of the meetings.

Iernel

The Kentucky
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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 by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 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

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files
KERNEL

a desk and their name on a door.
I like it and I applaud the direction in which they are moving."
Lt. Cov. Wendell Ford made

these and other comments Monday, speaking in the courtroom
of the Law Building.
Addressing "prospective law-

yer s , j ud ge s , pol i t ic ia n s , a nd go
Ford commented: "You
are the people this state and
others will look to for . leadership. The quality of young people
entering the professions is the
determinate of Kentucky's future.
Your talents, your enthusiasm
and idealism are needed in this

state."
After a short introduction, Lt.
Cov. Ford opened the program

discussion.
One question concerned the
Sunday closing law until recently
enforced in Louisville.
"This is a hard law to interpret," said Ford. "With so much
publicity, I believe it is one the
people are fairly educated on.
I believe it will come before the
next lef'.lative assembly, and I
for

The deadline for announcements I
p.m. tw day prfor to the 8ml
publication of Items In this column.

7:30

Today
"Blue Marlin" tryouts for
will
be held Tuesday from 7:30 to 9:30
in the Coliseum Pool.
p.m.
The Gamma Beta Phi will have
its first meeting tonight at 7:30 in
Room 206 of the Student Center. All
members are urged to attend.
Today from 3 to 5 p.m. the
will meet at the Presbyterian
Center, corner of Rose St. and Rose
Ln. The Donovems include Donovan
Scholars and University Emeriti.
Free University classes for tonight
are:
Cuba and the Third World 7:30
p.m. in the Student Center Room
L-- Z

Don-ove-

Philosophy of Fromm
Student Center, Room

2320
2447
2319

".

v.

THE CALL IS FOR
,
KICKY CORDUROY
no-wa-

constant drain.
I think a period of
one to three years should be set
as a period of draft availability.
As it Is, young men are kept
This is
dangling from ages
hurting the attitude of our young
men, and the attitude of this
country is what sustains it."

"...

18-3- 5.

Tomorrow
Executive-Student-Pre-

'

course in Scuba Diving will be
taught at the High St. YMCA beginning Sept. 27. The instructor is
Steve Hallin, who is nationally certified and has worked as a diver lor
the Minnesota Historical Society and
the National Geographic Society. The
A

US
mm

m

course is open to both men and women. Please contact the "Y" for further information at
The Student Council for Exceptional Children will meet Thursday,
Sept. 25. at 7 p.m., in Room 309 of
the Student Center. All interested
are invited to attend.
Applications for membership in
Keys, the sophomore men's honorary are now available in Room 103,
Bradley Hall or by contacting Damon
316
Talley at FarmHouse Fraternity, men
Aylesford Place. All sophomore
with a 3.0 standing are eligible.
Free University classes are as follows:
Thursday, Sept. 25 "Women's Liberation" will meet at 7 p.m., 465
Woodland.
Also on Thursday "Philosonhv of
McLuhan" will meet at 245 Rhodes
Ave. at 7 p.m.
"Marxism" will meet Thursday in
7
at
the Student Center, Rooms
7 p.m
of Marcuse" will meet
"Philosophy
7
of the
at 7 p.m. in Rooms
Student Center on Thursday.
"The Draft CO status and Resistance" will meet at 6 p.m. in Rooms
of the Student Center on
Thursday.
"The Draft" will meet at 7 p.m. in
7
on
the Student Center. Rooms
Thursday.
Register Thursday and Friday, Sept.
35 and 26, for an appointment with
Mobil Oil Corp.: Nationwide. December, May graduates. Cttienship or
permanent visa.
Schedule I: Manufacturing (PetrolChemical E., Eleceum Refining
trical E.. Mechanical E. (B.S.).
Schedule II: Producign Dept.. ExEnploration Dept., Marketing Sales Line
gineer and Operating Dept.. Pipe
Co., International Division. Chemical
E., Civil E., Electrical E., Mechanical
(M.S.)
E. iB.S.l; Geology
7

oloratnoos

ir u

DEAN OF STUDENTS OFFICE
Room 206 Almstration Bldg.

..

Frantic freshman Roxie Malone calls for this
of
corduroy. Styled
swingy
in California by Mari Lampert for Sangria.
with golden
tunic vest is
The
5 to 13
..
nail heads. Skipper blue, sizes
two-piec-

I think it will
probably be done away with."
Asked for his opinion of capital punishment, Ford said, "I
will have to go along with the
policies of most police officers,
judges and other people. I feel
it ought to be retained."
Another question asked for
Ford's opinion of the Vietnam
.
war and the draft.
"I feel we should honor a
stated
Ford.
commitment,"
"More than this, we have to protect the boys there and the memory of those who have lost their
lives.
"I woukl say that we are gc
ing to have to make a hard drive,
and soon, to either get it over
or get out. We can't stand this

Applications for positions on the University
of Kentucky Judicial Board are now available
at the following locations:

'

i5

p.m. in the

The Student Government
meeting will be held
Wednesday. Sept. 24, in Room 245
of the Student Center at 4 p.m.
Interested students are invited to
attend.
Free University classes for Wednesday are:
Drama in the Student Center,
7
Room
at 7:30 p.m.
The Function of Law in a Democratic Society at 7:30 p.m. at 231
E. Maxwell St.

oast!
kmm.

8

113-11-

Coming Up
2321

would say that

TODAY and TOMORROW

$9.45
$.10

TELEPHONES

Editor. Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk
Advertising, Business, Circulation

'

VMM

le

STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE
Room 204 Student Center

zip-fro-

.

40.00

POSITIONS ARE OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS ABOVE
THE FRESHMAN CLASS

THE POISE 'N IVY SHOP, DOWNTOWN

has
Deadline for application to the
been extended until noon, (12:00 p.m.) Friday,
September 26, 1969.
J-Bo-

Vi?

Women

Apparel

ard

* Lock Out
Last week Student Government
Representative Steve Bright telephoned President Singletary's office to arrange an appointment
with the president in order to present a resolution passed by the
Assembly in regard to the Free
University. The President's secretary informed Bright that such an
appointment would be impossible,

the President's contact with
students must come from SC President Futrell.
's
Bright then journeyed to
for

Fu-trell-

office where he explained
his mission and requested help.
Futrell agreed, and suggested that
Bright go to Singletary's office to

try again.
And again the President's secretary refused to make an appointment, this time saying the Free
University was no longer an issue.
After much persistence Bright succeeded in getting the secretary to
call SG President Futrell who
promptly told her he had nothing
to do with Bright. With a few
well chosen remarks Bright left
the office.
This incident, minor as it may
seem, points out the inaccessibility (both mental and physical) of

the student body to the new administration. Of course Singletary
cannot afford to spend a great deal
of his time talking with individual
students, but to completely divorce
himself from those who have something of substance to offer removes
any claim the President might have
toward legitimate student concerns.
If the only route into Singletary's thought is through Futrell
it is a poor state of affairs. Futrell
has often stated that he doesn't
claim to represent the majority of
UK students. This is understandable, although one could debate
the merits of the position. At any
rate, if this part of the funnel from
the students to the President is
closed, there can be little hope
for resolution of student maladies.
Even though Bright' s methods
of getting things done are usually
tactless, there is no excuse for the
secretary's behavior inrefusinghim
the appointment. Perhaps the president's administrative assistant,
and perhaps even the president
himself have forgotten the purpose
of their being here. Or perhaps
we are wrong in assuming that
students have the right to do anything other than grovel.

cnnJTrTfrnTTTTri

iiif1!

.

"Sorry kid, I can't let you in until Mr. Futrell gives
you the combination,"

".Kernel Forum: the readers write

-SG Action
To the Editor of the Kernel:

The Assembly also adopted a revised
constitution and passed a bill dealing
with the celebration of Ghandi's birthAd Hoc SG
day.
Information Committee

Among the recommendations endorsed
by the Assembly were: significantly rewarding each faculty advisor for undergraduate advising; utilization of upper-clas- s
students in good standing in the
mechanics of lower division advising; and
the establishment of a central office containing & requirements for each major

plan to reduce the length of lines
for student football tickets and a measure endorsing recommendations on undergraduate advising were passed at a perhaps unnoticed Student Government and
minor at the University.
meeting last Thursday night.
Steve Bright's ticket distribution bill
proposed the opening of four additional
ticket windows at Memorial Coliseum
and the distribution of tickets at the ComA

plex.

Although it will no doubt be impossible for any action to be taken before
this week's ticket distribution, hopefully
Bright's plan will be used for remaining
games.

The Assembly commended the University Student Advisory Committee and
especially commended John Nelson, Roberto Nogales, Anita Puckett, Evelyn
Smith and Jim Gwinn for their work on
the advising recommendations.

Beautiful Nude
A

letter about and to Mr. Carlo
who speaks of aggregate concrete

The Kentucky

De-Mar-

Iernel

with the proud authority of an artisan.
The cold concrete exterior of the new
tower speaks as a naked woman beautiunclothed.
ful, but
Not so the textural terrazzo of her
surrounding promenade. No quarry tile
this, but rather a work of art, an expression of mind and muscle, a product of
pride in one's profession.
Congratulations, Mr. DeMarco, and
thank you.
Your contribution to my education
none-the-le-ss

is memorial.
CAROLYN C. JACKSON

University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23,

1894

Graduate Student
196S

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

EDITOR'S NOTE: All letters to the edi-- '
and not
tor must be typed,
more than 200 words in length. The
writer must sign the letter and give classification, address and phone number. Send
of
or deliver all letters to Room 11S-the Journalism Building. The Kernel redouble-space-

James V. Miller,
Bob Brown, Editorial rage Editor
George H. Jepson, Managing Editor
Robert Duncan, Advertising Manager
Dottie Bean, Associate Editor
Dan Gossett, Arts Editor
Chip Hutcheson, Sports Editor
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Carolyn Dunnavan, Women's Page Editor
Frank Coots, Mike Herndon, Jeannie Leedom, Bill Mathews, Jean Renaker
Assistant Managing Editors
Editor-in-Chi-

d

serves the right to edit letters without

t hanging meaning.

Contrapuntal Conservative
By

In searching this week for a subject
upon which octogenarian Ernest Gruening
is. not' a prized
authority, I decided to

talk about protestors at the University
of Kentucky.

There are a number of very mediocre
students on this campus who realized some
time ago they are never going to be a.
blooming success. When this realization
wrecked their former, goals, Instead of
their colleagues had done their freshman
year, they lingered on. Now a number
of them are attempting to compensate
for their mediocrity by making protesting
the center of their college career. In an
attempt to give themselves that dedicated
aura, they speak of: 1) high standards
of academic relevance; 2) student rights;
a lid 3) unfettered exchange of noble knowledge and other vagueries. These usually
translate into the following: (1) a class
is not relevant if I flunk it or get nothing
out of it; (2) I should be allowed to do
anything I please; and (3) fellow students should have the opportunity to
partake of the blistering accumulation

of knowledge I have college professors
are for the most part stupid bunglers
who could only stand to gain if I were
allowed equal time with the class. In
answer to the first statement. Dr. H.
O. Evans, director of the Honors Pro

JOHN

D. WHITE

gram put it so well: "Relevant to WHAT?"
As a music major, I can tell you I
have had to take a number of academic
classes that didn't have a smattering
of relevance to my field. I didn't learn
or gain any thing from some of them.
Here lies a great fallacy: the object is
not to gain or learn from every class
one takes; the object is for one to be
exposed. One of the main assets of attending a liberal arts university is exposureacademic, social, mental, physical, and spiritual. Only a spoiled brat
is going to assume that everything must
be to his liking and that he must gain
or learn from all he does. Only a spoiled
brat will throw a tantrum when he finds

aa. assembly line of interchangeable parts

the Establishment.
The area of students' rights was covered
quite fully in a previous article; I won't
go into it further at this time, other than
to say that I find it odd that only a
handful have seen fit to cause a disturbance over this matter. I know, if the
students' rights were really impinged,
there would be 14 thousand instead of
14 students at the trustee's meeting. Still
my main criticism on this subject is the
arrogance of those few who deem themselves speakers for the majority. They are
being downright uncouth, and what's
worse, it doesn't seem to, bother them.
As for the unfettered exchange of ideas,
this naturally brings up the Free U.
that everything isn't to his likingandthat
Here again, our core of dissatisfied mishe isn't gaining or learning from
fits have found an issue to argue with the
he does. People who feel cheated
administration about. Their inability to
because they have come to the university and haven't gotten the education
accept a decision incongruous with their
they think they deserve don't know the noble ends exhibits the true nature cf
their protests. If the idealistic free expurpose of a university or any other socially functioning institution. They have been
change of ideas was their ultimate, why
a victim of their own inability to adjust didn't they accept Forth sand Singletary's
decision and get on with it off campus?
and accumulate from exposure; in short
to live. It should be of little importance No, they would rather compromise their
ideals by arguing, thus wasting valuable
that the university is turning out successful adults in business, industry, science,
time that could have been spent exchangand the arts. Yet a cry AD NAUSEUM
ing noble knowledge and other vagueries
of our protestors is that the school is
among themselves. Hmmm . . .faced with
every-thin-

k

for

that alternative, I would probably have
argued, too.
To close, I have two quotes. The first'
spoken by a peacecorpsman in Ethiopia:
"The truly dedicated have no time to
freely demonstrate." It speaks for it self.
So does the second, a commentary on today's protestors by a Doctor in Ohio:
"They're" gonna build, no matter how they
destroy. They're gonna teach love, no matter who they hurt. They're gonna be useful by being useless. They're showing
commitment by not being committed.
They're gonna lead a new social order
without a leader. They're gonna reject
materialism, no matter how much they
have to sponge off the parents. They're
showing a new morality, no matter how
immoral they have to be to prove it.
They're going to scrub the world down,
no matter how bathless they are. They are
going to show a new purpose by having
no purpose. They're gonna create a new
system of
They want tocreate
new rules of no rules. They don't understand their parents' misunderstanding.
They reject technology by usingthe microphone, the car, the roads, maps, electricity, medicines, drugs, booze and prepared foods. They want to be
on someone's production. Now I
understand why I don't understand."
non-syste-

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Sept 23, l9-- 5

Library Addition Set

Soccer Field In Planning Stage

By DON EG EI JR.
Kernel Staff Writer
A soccer field and additions
to the King Library head the
list of major projects which are
now in the planning stages at
UK.
According to E. B. Farris, di-- ;
rector of engineer design, preliminary drawings have been
completed for a $10,000 soccer
field and will be reviewed next
week for approval. The proposed
field would be located along the
extension of Woodland Avenue
at the intersection of Cooper
Drive.

The estimated cost of the entire project is $4.3 million. Itwill
be built upon the parking lot
next to the Agricultural Science
Center. However, a newly erected

facility in the vicinity will alleviate the parking problem created by the new research center.
To cope with the rapid construction, Farris said that engineers are employed to enlarge
the Heating and Cooling Plants.
Several new "chillers," or cooling units, must be added to service the new buildings on campus.
There are presently two 1,000-to- n
A $4.1 million addition to the
chillers at Plant No. 1, which
King Library is also in the drawserves the dormitory complex.
ing stage. This would bring the However, two additional chillers
main library to a capacity of one
million volumes.
Nearing construction is the
Agricultural Sciences Research
Building, which will supplement
the present Agricultural Science
Center. Farris stated that bids
for general construction will open

DON QUIJOTE (U.S.S.R.)

must be installed in order to
serve the new Veterans Administration Hospital, the Agricultural
Sciences Research Building, and
a proposed Morgan School of
Biological Sciences.

Wed., Thurs., Sept. 24, 25
Admission 75c
"BUNNY LAKE

MISSING"
6:30 & 9:15 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 28 6:30 p.m.
Admission 50c

Fri. and Sat., Sept.

Heating and Cooling Plant

ktm,iw

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UK Greeks
v

Plans are being made for a
Creek Retreat at the Carnahan
House from 9:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

IS

26-2- 7

T

Oct. 16.

,

7:30 p.m.

and

No. 2, which serves the new
classroom and office building,
is now nearing completion.

BLOW
YOURSELF UR

Plan Retreat

CINEMA Presents

Student Center Board

1

1
.

Oct. 4.

The retreat, sponsored by the
Creek Activities Committee, will
hold discussion groups concerning drugs, fraternity finances,
pledgeship, rush and race and
the Greek system.
Tom Bunch, chairman of the
retreat committee reflected that
"this retreat will be different.
It will not be a retreat from
reality, but a retreat into
rea-so-

n.

Dr. Nicholas J. Pisacano of
the College of Medicine will deliver closing remarks.
According to Bunch, the retreat will be open to "any interested Greeks." National representatives from various fraternities are to attend, but the main
body of participants will be officials of UK fraternities and
sororities, he said.
Jack Hall, dean of students,
is invited, along with his assistant, Stewart Minton.
Carnahan House is located
north of Lexington. Admission
for the retreat is $2.

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