xt7m3775x460 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7m3775x460/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19680925  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 25, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 1968 1968 2015 true xt7m3775x460 section xt7m3775x460 Tie
Wednesday Evening, Sept. 25, 1908

ECmtocecy EyEKNEL
The South's Outstanding College Daily
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LX, No. 21

Al Capp Criticizes SDS,

Protestors And Students
By LARRY DALE KEELING

Assistant Managing Editor
AJ
Capp, a renowned cartoonist, brought his satire to the first
Student Center Hoard Fonim
Tuesday night and launched into an attack against the Students for a Democratic Society
(SDS) and other groups, including the Kernel.
Speaking before an appreciative crowd estimated at 3,000,
Capp charged the "Students for
a Depraved Society" with carrying a "contagious disease."
He later walked out of a reception reportedly because he

would not stay in the same room
with members of SDS.
Capp conducted his talk on a
question and answer basis. Many
of his statements drew rousing
applause from the audience.
Capp sjxjke on a variety of topics:
Low quality of local law enforcement "I not only think you
have the right to make the police
better but you have the duty to
do it. But instead of beefing
alxjut police, be one. Join up
and make this a better law enforcement country.
Called Pigs
"You'll be paid less than you

Student Riots Reach
High At Olympics Site
MEXICO CITY
bumed busses, stole a gasoline
tanker truck and traded shots with police and army troops late
Tuesday in waves of violence that killed at least 15 persons in
24 hours of gun battles. It was the city's worst fighting since the
revolutionary days of the 1920s.
But unless the fighting grows pied by the army after a nightcompletely out of control, the long battle.
The hospital official said the
Olympic Games will open on
schedule Oct. 12, authorities figure of 15 known dead was
less than the actual death toll
said.
The tanker thefts and bus because students were seen haul(AP)-Stud-

ents

burnings occurred as the Defense Department was announcing "complete calm" had been
restored in the city. Gasoline
from the tanker truck could be
used for Molotov cocktails serving as a prime student weapon.
Sniper fire died out by
but an ambulance
driver who delivered a wounded
student to a hospital said: "It's
still dangerous as hell out there."
Armed students had been firing
on police and soldiers from the
roof of the National Polytechni-ca- l
Institute near the hospital
which gave out figures on the
dead and wounded.
400 Strong
More than 400 assault cars
ringed the Santo Tomas Vocational School, part of the larger
institute campus that was occu
n,

vn

'

ing away some bodies as troops
advanced on the vocational
school before dawn.
The same official said about
35 persons had been wounded by
gunfire, some of them seriously.
They included bystanders and
passengers on a bus gunned down
by night riders early Tuesday.
One man on the bus was shot
in the back five times, he said.
It was the most serious crisis
President Custavo Diaz Ordaz
has faced in his four years of office.
The sniping was so intense
that troops occupying the vocational school pulled back to positions around the walls. Nearby streets were littered with the
remains of bumed out busses,
trucks, jeeps and cars.
Continued on rage 7, Col. I

can live on. You'll have one
chance in eight of being killed
each year. You'll be called a pig
by the SDS, Black Panthers and
other 'idealists.' In Chicago,
you'll have a bag of urine thrown
in your face and if you bash
the guy's head who threw it,
you'll be called a fascist by Walter
Cronkite. In Cleveland, you'll
be called to a dark alley and shot
in the back and if you shoot
back, you'll be called a racist."
Free speech at UK Capp described two groups at UK, the
200 elected members of the Faculty Senate and SDS, who are
followers of Castro, who have
the only Viet Cong flag in town,
who carry bail money and VD
cures at all times, and who are
not elected by anyone.
Capp said the Faculty Senate
wants speakers who have an educational relevancy but that SDS
felt it was their "patriotic duty"
to get H. Rap Brown, Tom
Hayden, Eldridge Cleaver and
other "idealists" who arealready
under bail for such crimes as

forcible

rape

(referring

to

Cleaver).

Capp added that he had a
Continued on Page

Will
-

'

J Lfi
Capp
Speaks

8, Col. 3

.

v.

LL
Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

IFC Told Poll Shows
Greek Wav In Trouble
J
By CLAY CAUNCE

Chris Piatt, chairman of the
Expansion

Committee

for Phi

Delta Theta, announced to the
Interfratemity Council (1FQ
Tuesday night that "the fraternity system is in trouble because
of lack of responsiveness to the
campus as a whole on the part
of the fraternities."
His opinion was based on the
results of an independent poll
which he took from freshman men

X

Kernel Photo by Howwrd Mason

'Nice To
Know Yon9

unburn

Consider Going Greek

90

N

Capp bids an abrupt farewell to students gathered in the Student
Center for a presidential reception following the cartoonist's talk in
Memorial Coliseum. Capp refused to stay for the reception when he
learned that mem ben of the Students for a Democratic Society were
present.
Al

...i

Cartoonist Al Capp, of "L'il Abner" fame,
addressed a crowd of about 3,000 in Memorial Coliseum Tuesday night. Capp's address took the form of res ponding to questions
gathered previously and to those fielded
from the audience.

during the summer orientation times status), scholastic advanprogram. Piatt presented a list tages, girls, involvement in aoof eight questions to the incoming tivities.
freshmen.
Piatt gave the frosh a list of
In answer to the question ambitions and asked them to
"Have you considered joining a "Rank in importance aside from
fraternity?", 91.1 said yes and getting an education." First was
8.9 said no.
finding a vocation, next was findHe received less favorable re- ing friends, then establishing and
sults upon asking "Whether or maintaining a good social life,
not you plan to join a fraternity, followed by finding a mate, next,
list several reasons why you feel participating in activities (other
that fraternity life would not be than fraternities) and finally, athletics.
worthwhile."
In order of importance, the
The survey was concluded by
answers were: Discrimination, having the freshmen complete the
hurts grades, snobbish, too ex- statement "My major worry
pensive, waste of time and limits about my first year of college is:".
friends.
The underclassmen responded
The poller also had the frosh with the questions: "Will I make
complete the statement "From it? Will I adjust and be happy?
all I've heard, fraternities are:" Will I find friends? and Will I
They responded, in order of im- spend my time wisely, and acbesides
something
portance: "Necessary for hap- complish
piness in college life, very dis- grades?"
criminating, hell raising, a way to
Piatt stated, "There are too
status, harmful to grades, snob- many misconceptions, both favorbish, expensive, great for social able to the fraternities and
life, a waste of time, and helpful
to grades."
One IFC member expressed
Plan To Rush
his belief that Piatt was being
an "alannist" about the whole
Piatt, posingthequestion"Do
you plan to go out for fraternity matter.
rush?", found that 64.4 said
Piatt replied, "In the fifties
yes, 11.7 said no and 23.7 were
were
on
-'

undecided.
Yet when Piatt questioned
"Would you like to join a fraternity?" 58.9 said yes, 12.5 no
and 28.6 remained undecided.

l

"aai.-

further
Piatt
questioned
"Whether or not you plan to
join a fraternity, please list
several reasons why you feel that
fraternity life would be worthwhile (if any)." In order of importance the freshmen replied:
Companionship, parties ( good

nothing
you
campus
unless you were a fraternity man.
But somehow, through the y ears,
that has been changed. The
people who call me and those
who share my opinion 'alarmists'
will still be calling me an 'alarmist', the day that the whole
fraternity system dissolves."
Piatt added, "I didn't make
the survey to point out anything
I personally wanted to say nor
did I come here tonight to make
any moral judgment."

* 2--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday,

TIIE

Sqt.

25, 1908

OOPS

SAI TONC

Clever Amerinds built pueblos
For vision and safety. The view
magnificent covered the

the hamlet
was peaceful
and serene.
DEATH was far off.
Then Da Ming returned
mutilated by a grenade.
Soon two soldiers entered the hamlet.
The villagers
in fear
in anger
in ignorance
KILLED them.
A sun

tcr-itor- y,

And pulling up

the ladder let the

Life in

r3 n
11

LdQ

'

jv

tribe

Craze securely from the roof.
Amcrindustrialists built a pueblo
With electron magic eyes to see
far,
But not near. And with a roof
VVich turned into a stage
For that
farce,
"Finders Keepers," which
Received mixed reviews
(Although many of the audience
Were observed to laugh.)
The author
Was unavailable for comment.

a
uL'y-I

J

,

far-easte- rn

Editor's Note
The Inner Wall exists. The first edition features one of Howard
Mason's photographs.
Send poetry and art work to the Inner Wall in care of the Kernel.
Joe Hinds
Editor of Inner Wall

if

rose
set.

Then the village heard the sound
of a airplane and a single whine
of a bomb.
The village was destroyed
in fear
in anger
in ignorance.

Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

she bid unto me
that I might taste
her sweet black cherries
on the silver platter

In my mind the sides unfold
Blue mists from which a treasure,
gold,

Shines forth in brilliance and,
bright,
To take the shadow from my night.
J. Elaine Merrick

dripping

with new dimensions
of the sour life.
and of the sour death,
I cried.
Keith Brubaker

the

age-ful-

l

A&S

men

picking teeth
with dandruff-riddewhile slumbering
upon banana peels
n

the lonely recesses
Through dark silhouettes of my past
As calmly my life acquiesses
To make this breathing its last.
J. Elaine Merrick
I wander

combs

behind flyed-u-p newstands
watching watermelon breasts-Ke- ith

Brubaker

Junior

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wrrinclay, Sept. 25, 18-- S

Film Odyssey Sparks
Mind, Eye With A Fury
EDITOR'S

NOTE:

"2001:

flick even though he is listed
as producer,
director,
photographer etc. ad infinitum.
He is a god and 2001 is his
cosmos.
Somewhat reluctant at explanation, Kubrick is a mysterious gcxl (as all gods should be
for effect) and, from his condemnation of the wrathful heathens
known as the New York critics,
a jealous god jealous of his offspring.

A

Space Odyssey" will open a Lexington run Oct. 2 at the Strand
Theater, 1S3 E. Main St. The
controversial film is now showing in Louisville and Cincinnati.
By CHUCK KOEHLER
Assistant Managing Editor
This movie is a lot like Lyndon Johnson: it's been damned
so much on one hand and praised
to the hilt on the other so that

u

Kubrick's cosmos is where
apes become men and killers,
god-lik- e
beings control man's
destiny all to orchestra pit
strains of Richard Strauss' Nietz-schea- n
"Thus Spake Zarathus-tra.- "
A Dnigless Trip
It is a subliminalh visual
world that agogs the eye and
fractures the brain in the end
sending the mind an a drugless
s
trip to the splendor of a
that might well do with
this paltry planet what he
super-fetu-

pleases.

0

-

1 ;7

Time magazine said something to the effect that a few
years ago Kubrick destroyed the

'

world in Dr. Strangelove; now
he recreates it in two double--o
one.

':1

Kubrick's world, as pointed
out by those blasphemous New
York critics, sometimes drags in
timeless space the Author is
hung up on his own ingenious
special effects.

Space Voyager
just what it really is has been
lost in the melee.
The moyie is about the future,
but just where science fiction
picks up from science fact is
somewhat

nebulous.

And,

san--

cer-

tainly, as Stanley Kubrick says,
the truth of the future will be
far stranger than what is conjectured (or something to that

jijd-.oES-

d

i

n

L

Eye Teaser

10-fo-

Visual effects abound to give the viewer a turned-o- n
trip through
the stars in Stanley Kubrick's "2001: A Space Odyssey." The psychedelic cosmos whirls as apes become men and killers.

er

te

"star gate" by a

goggle-eye-

d

astronaut who earlier had cunningly outwitted a super computer whose syrupy voice is a
cover np for homicidal tenden-

cies.
But after infinity has been
beyonded and our iridescent fetus
gazes on a mute audience, it is
Kubrick who has done his thing:
Still in disdain for the world,
a world of lackluster men that
are more like computers, Kubrick
reaches for the stars to find his
hope
And he, in the end, is the
who will play Pygsuper-fetu- s
malion with our destinies the
ruler of this paltry planet.

CINEMA

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But the acid heads in Frisco
will tell you that such egoism
pays off with a pure visual
splendor.
The sci-f- i flick has "odys-seyed- "
quite a bit since the
artificiality of "The
Angry Red Planet."
Fetus Conquers
And the story line:
How there are pure energy
"gods" whose civilization has
zotted far beyond ours and take
pleasure if it can be called
that in tinkering in our destinies with this little game called "touch the black monolith"
a
high, shiny sardine can
that plays Ligeti (a modern Rumanian composer).
In place of the original Cinerama's roller-coastride, there
is a
spill through a

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* The Kentucky

Iernel

The South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED 1834

WEDNESDAY,

SEPT. 25,

19C8

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lee B. Becker,

Editor-in-Chi-

David Holwcrk, Editorial rage
Darrcll Bice, Managing Editor
, Associate
Tom Dcrr, Business Manager
Guy M. Mendcs,
Howard Mason, Fhotography Editor
Joe Hinds, Arts and Entertainment
Jim Miller, Sports Editor
Dana EwclL
Chuck Kochlcr,
Janice
Larry Dale Keeling,
Terry Dunham,
Assistant Managing Editors

Editor
Editor
Editor
Barber

Curious Logic

Student Government Elections settling such disputes as has come
Committee displayed the curious up now.
logic for which that body is so
Thirdly, the contention that to
justly noted Saturday when it re- open the voting lists would be to
fused to allow a challenge of votes
violate the secrecy of the ballot is,
by two defeated candidates for repagain, sheer nonsense. The voting
resentative.
lists have no connection with the
The two candidates, Ann Fruflat
individual ballots, since the inand Robert Duncan, were refused
dividual ballots are indistinguishthe right to inspect the voting lists
able. Moreover, the inability to disto discover if all voters were actualtinguish individual ballots renders
ly qualified. The reasoning behind
meaningless the notion, expressed
the refusal was that specific votes
Elections Committee member
would have to be questioned and by
that individual vote
that the whole list could not be Jerry Legere be altered
totals might
by ininspected because the ballots were dividual complaints.
secret ballots.
This is utter nonsense. In the
In short, what the Elections
first place, the idea that specific Committee has done is to make
charges can be brought is ridiculous a decision which has no recogwhen the Elections Committee nizable basis in fact or logic. In
refuses to divulge the only informa- fact, if one was to follow the logic
tion which could lead to specific of the committee to its logical excharges.
treme, the result would be little
In the second place, if the rolls short of madness. Which may, it
can not be inspected, then why seems, do a lot to explain the whole
were ID numbers recorded? Clearly conduct of this campus noble exthis was to provide a means for periment in democracy.

A Small Voice

The Odd Couple

Kernel Forum: the readers writer
To the Editor of the Kernel
I am writing this letter as a response
misto one of the many psuedo-factutakes made in your new column, "Middle
Man." John Cooper was not the candidate who "ran for president last spring
on the platform of abolishing SC if
elected." Mr. Cooper was the candidate
who ran on a progressive platform similar to the present platform of the SAR.
I would suggest that your new
columnist research his future columns before presenting them to the public as
factual. A misinterpretation of facts can
only diminish the "integrity" of a column.
John Cooper

In reprimanding the United States and the Soviet Union Monday for
their actions against two smaller countries, West Germany and North
U Thant hinted he had world opinion
Vietnam, UN Secretary-Generbehind him. It is significant that the little man from the little country
of Burma was telling the big powers how to act.
Both the United States and the Soviet Union have repeatedly shown
that they are not willing to consider the national feelings of independence present in the countries of the third world. The Soviets,
calling for rights under the Warsaw Pact, invaded Czechslovakia to
put down that kindled spirit of independence. The United States,
A & S Senior
in the Dominican Republic, in Vietnam and in many other parts of
the world, has shown that it is not willing to listen to the voices
To the Editor of the Kernel:
of the people of the small countries.
I was in my first year as sports editor
In one of those small voices, U Thant has stated that the United of the Lexington Leader and enroute to
States must halt the bombing of North Vietnam. "I don't see how Miami for a University of Kentucky footthe stalemate can be broken," he said, unless that bombing halt is ball game when the Cuban missile crisis
al

forthcoming. And he told the Soviets not to act alone in control of
nazism, but to work through the UN.
Both of the super powers should listen. That little voice is calling,
and it deserves some attention. The world is not composed of two
blocks, but contains a very segmented third world where itf happening. The big powers should act accordingly.

developed.
After eight years on the city staff, I
had been reluctant to move into the sports
world, but figured it was better to be an
editor than a general reporter. However,
I felt I was being left out of things,
so to speak, when I arrived in Miami
and spent the evening walking the streets

among small groups of Cuban refugees.
I asked myself, "are you doing
covering a football game when so many
important things are occurring?"
I received the answer the following
night, when several thousand people
turned out for the Wildcat-Hurrican- e
game. Football gave them a chance to
cheer, yell, boo and in general relieve the
tensions of those trying times in that
city so near the scene of revolutionary

"What,"

action.

I recalled the Miami trip after reading
your Sept. 19 editorial on "Academic
Brutality," in which you state that football does not belong in an academic
community. I disagree.
Russell Rice
Assistant Sports

Information Director

EDITOR'S NOTE: All letters to the edi-- '
and not
tor must he typed, double-spacemore 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 reserves the right to edit letters without
changing meaning.
d

By David Holwcrk

One thing seems clear about former of which are always newsworthy. And,
story from a real political character? OK, inglessness. With a laudable disregard
Covemor and present Board of Trustees apparently, Chandler feels no qualms I'll give it to you."
for issues, problems, solutions, and other
member Happy Chandler: He just has to about saying things, so long as they
This is the kind of attention that we such trivia Cov. Agnew could call Mr.
have more love and compassion for the are newsworthy.
in the journalism business appreciate, Humphrey "soft on Communism." With
long suffering members of the working
particularly those of us on the Kernel equal aplomb, Mr. Humphrey could tell
His recent statements on the state of staff. It is greatly reassuring to know European newsmen that his
press than any other politician in the
campaign
history of this or any other state.
University athletics is a case in point. that no matter what happens, there is is going well.
What reason could the former governor always one man around who is willing
Consider, if you will, the plight
of the poor journalist on a slow night. have had for implying that "the proto disregard personal gain and public
With men so didicated to saying the
There he sits, surrounded by coffee cups fessors" should not be on the Athletics opinion to say the really outlandish. newsworthy as these men are, surely
and wadded up paper, staring bleakly Board? Surely he must have realized that
In fact, there seems to be an increasthe news media of this country are in good
at the insufficient amount of copy which
this statement really says that the pro- ing number of these men in this country, shape. And apparently we will have no
his reporters have brought in to him. In fessors of this University don't know men who are willing to help out the poor cause for alarm in
coming months. For
other parts of the country this harried
news media by saying the inane, the by nominating Nixon and Humphrey, the
enough to liandle the most
work me reliant might despair, but never
of University affairs, the athletics pro- meaningless, or the ludicrous.
major parties liave shown themselves to
in Kentucky.
Politicians across the country, ap- be in the mainstream of this great pogram. Surely he couldn't have liad in
For in this state he knows that formind saying that instructors at this parently, seeing that the news media are litical movement, the movement to news
mer Governor Chandler stands
University are that inept. Seemingly, then, in a terrible fix, are willingly closing for news sake, a movement which shoukl
to help him out by making any one of what Trustee Chandler was saying was, their eyes and plunging ahead into the
proudly claim a University Trustee as
You news people want a little colorful
a number of audacious statements, any
dark and unfriendly waters of sheer mean- - one of its founders.
simple-minde- d

ever-read-

y

s

'

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Sept. 25,

1908-

-5

State Leaders Agree: Let Youth Keep Vote

Dy WILLIAM DRADFOllO
FRANKFORT, Ky. ( AT) -Kentucky jwliticians, who rare-

ly agree on anything, are almost
unanimous on one point: They
approve of letting
vote.
s
Eighteen-year-oldhave voted
in Kentucky since a constitutional amendment was adopted
in 190613 years after Georgia
set the precedent in 1943. All
other states continue to have a
voting age except for
Alaska, where it is 19, and
Hawaii, where it is 20.

Gov. Louie

B.

Nunn was in

strumental, as a member of the
RqMihlican platform committee,
in getting the Republican National Convention to approve a
youth plank that included lowering the voting age to 18 nationwide.
"Ours is a young society in
which political unrest reflects the
hope of meaningful participation
in public affairs," Nunn said at
Miami Beach. "This hope must
be satisfied.
"Today's youth is endowed
with knowledge and maturity en

Ford told the national convention's rules committee that
"we in Kentucky don't regret
it for a moment "that the voting

titling them to a constructive part
in helping shape the future of the
nation."

Youth Involvement
Lt. Gov. Wendell Ford, the
state's top elected Democrat, also
has come out repeatedly for a
concerted effort to involve more
young people in political affairs,
especially within the party. He
sought unsuccessfully at Chicago
to get the Democratic National
Committee expanded to include
the head of each state's Young
Democrats.

age was lowered to 18.
"The young people have acted
in a responsible manner," he
said.
Similar sentiments have been
expressed by former Gov. Bert
T. Combs, a Democrat, who was
victorious in the first gubernatorial campaign under the lower
voting age. Combs, now a federal
judge in Cincinnati, was elected
governor in 1959 at the age of
48.

Protesters Burn Draft Records

MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)-- A
group of peace protesters broke
into a Selective Service office
shortly after it closed Tuesday,
seized bags full of records and
set them afire in a tiny park
across the street, police said.
"They overpowered a cleaning woman, took away her keys,
opened the doors, came out with
the records and bumed them,"
said police sergeant Fred Stein,
one of the first at the scene.
Police said 14 persons, five of
them in clerical garb, were arrested. They said state and city
warrants would be sought charging burglary, criminal damage
of property, arson other than to

a building and theft from a person.
One eyewitness said flames,
apparently feeding on gasoline,
shot 20 feet into the air before
firemen arrived to douse them.
The charred and water-soake- d
records lay in a tangle of burlap
under a barren flag pole dedicated to "The memory of those
who served" in World War I.
One of those taken away was
Michael D. Cullen, an Irish-bor- n
who took part in
a demonstration Sunday that disrupted the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. John.
Cullen declined to comment
as he waited to get into the
police van. Asked what was burn

Speakers
Serve As
Riot 'Seeds9

-

-

BOSTON

-

Disturbances

broke out all over the city in response to the withdrawal of permission for Negroes to wear Afri

(

MEW

PETER,

9

Combs also referred to recent

nn

among young people today
generation gap has been
because they haven't been given
a chance to participate."
Dr. Kenneth VanLanding-ham- ,
a UK political science professor, expressed doubt that
voters have improved

lack of
WASHINGTON--- A
membership present has forced
the House to take steps to make
the absences official. Several
long recesses for campaigning
have been granted.
NEW YORK New York City
teachers continued their strike
into the thirteenth day. Now
city officials are hearing talk of
fire, police and garbage workers'
strikes.

irl

PRIVATE BANQUET
Reservation
119 South

Limestone

the quality of the ballot.

ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS
Student Government
HEALTH INSURANCE

Enrollment time extended to
Tuesday, October 1, 1968
For late registrants and transfer students
ENROLLMENT CARDS AVAILABLE AT
STUDENT GOVERNMENT OFFICE Student Center
HEALTH SERVICE
Medical Center
SULIER

INSURANCE AGENCY

1713 Nicholasville

University

O SHIRTS

J'

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ece

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Q9c

each
each
each

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4 f011 .00

5 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU

Chevy Chase (Across from Bcgley's)
Northland Shopping Center
Southland (Across from Post Office)
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AGAIN Peter, Paul

I Mary

WS 17S1

mm
WARNER BROS.

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Pike

. ...

O TROUSERS & SPORT COATS

in..

LATE

ROOM

252-934- 4

urf ueamng dpeaa
Students and
O SKIRTS

clu

Alee

elected governor by a 13,000-vot- e
edge in 1963.
Breathitt was 38 in 1963 while
Nunn was 39. Ward was 58 when
he opposed Nunn last November.

O LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES

PAUL

Kernel. University

Per copy, from

substantially for Nunn's Demoopponent, Edward T.
Breathitt, when Breathitt was

cratic

activities by college students and
their contemporaries in registering protests against the draft,
the war in Vietnam and other
national problems.
"After all," he said, "at least
part of the unrest and frustration

O MEN'S & LADIES'

Kentucky
SWUon, University ot Kentucky. Lexington. Kentucky 40a04i. Second

puue peid at Lexington, Kentucky.
MiicU five time weekly during tne
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pubusiied continuously as the Kernel
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Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The editors.

Conincidentally, the same age
group is believed to have swung

tional interest."

five-gall-

can garb to school. After incidents
of fire and vandalism, Thomas S.
Eisenstadt, chairman of the
school committee, called an emergency meeting to request Gov.
Volpe to put the National Cuard
on standby alert.

Nunn Supporters
Many political observers give
a good cleal of credit to the youth
vote in the election of Nunn as
governor last year by a 28,500-vot-e
margin over Democratic former
Highway Commissioner Henry
Ward.

THURSDAY of Each Week

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From the Wire of the Associated Press

FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP)-- A
police detective said Tuesday
that speakers at a rally that
sparked civil disorders in Louisville May 27 "put the seeds of
violence there but I wouldn't
say they advocated it."
Kenneth New comb, a Negro
detective with the Louisville Police Department, was testifying
at the first hearing by the KenActivities
tucky
Committee, which is investigating the civil disorders in Louisville last May and June.
Newcomb singled out James
Cortez as being particularly active in the rally at 28th and Greenwood on May 27. He said Cortez was new to Louisville at that
time, having just come in from
Kansas City.
"Everybody was pretty well
hepped up," Newcomb said of
the rally. "The speakers had the
crowd going their way."
Newcomb said he and a partner, both in plain clothes, were
the only police officers present.
As the rally began to break
up, he said, several youths on
top of one of the shops on the
comer began throwing water-fille- d
bottles, which sound like
gunshots when they broke.
Other police cars came on the
scene after the bottles began
breaking, he said, and more bottles and rocks then were thrown
at the police.
Newcomb said there were
"quite a few known criminals"
among the crowd. In response
to a question from Tim McCall,
counsel for the KUAC, Newcomb acknowledged
that the
number of criminals present was
unusual for this type of rally.

Th

ing in the minature park, he rerecords."
plied, "1-Larry Hartzheim, 18, of Milwaukee, said he was standing
on a corner across the street
from the office building when
"four or five white guys started
dragging bags out of the building
"They came across the street
and poured gasoline all over it.
cans
They took four
from a white truck."
Hartzheim said it was at least
five minutes before police arrived.
"It went right up," Hartzheim said. "They just stood
there and started singing." One
of the songs Hartzheim recalled
was "We Shall Overcome."

WORLD REPORT
INTERNATIONAL
UN
UNITED NATIONS
Secretary Ceneral U Thant denied Tuesday that he tried to
pass a resolution demanding the
United States to stop the bombing in Vietnam.
At the same meeting the UN
elected Emilio Ar en ales Catalan,
foreign minister of Cuatemala,
as president. Swaziland was also
admitted as the 125th member
of the UN.
British Roman
LONDON
Catholics were told to follow the
Pope and their own consciences
on the question of birth control.
British bishops issued this statement in support of the Pope's
encyclical. Few people believe
that this will have any quieting
effect on the situation in England.
NATIONAL

Unselfish Voice
"I've found young people have
fewer prejudices, preconcqitions
and misconceptions than older
people do," he told an interviewer.
"Older people also have more
selfish considerations of a financial na