xt7mkk94b71s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mkk94b71s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690303  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  3, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  3, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7mkk94b71s section xt7mkk94b71s Tuition Pays Fraction Of Educational Costs
By CORDON

M.DAVIS

Kernel Staff Writer
The $280 tuition fee
students
pay is only a little over a quarter of
the cost of educating a student for one
year, according to Donald Clapp of the
Budget Department. Most of the remains
comes from state aping
propriations.
Clapp emphasized that it is impossible to pinpoint a precise figure since
the cost varies for individual students.
"It costs slightly more to educate
a sophomore than a freshman, and slightly more to educate a jnuior than a soph
te

three-quarter-

omore," he said, "and it cost slightly
more to educate a student in some of
the scientific fields, in chemistry and
engineering, for example, than a student
In liberal arts."
Also, he added, the estimated educational costs include such expenses as
maintenance and clerical costs necessary
to the functioning of the university but
not directly connected with education.
Some Costs Equal Expenses
student tuition costs closely approximate the actual educational
costs, Clapp said, adding that the rising
Out-of-sta-

te

cost of
tuition results from
the rising cost of education.

For student tuition, faculty salary and
curricula comparisons, the University has
designated 11 state universities in neighboring states as "benchmarks."
The 11 include such universities as
Missouri, Illinois, Purdue, Indiana, Ohio
State, West Virginia, Virginia Polytech-nicInstitute, North Carolina, North
Carolina State and Tennessee.
Southern Link
One reason for including schools such
as these for comparison is to
with
UK's traditional classification

Monday, March 3, 1969

T

Kernel Staff Writer
University officials reportedly
are considering major changes
in rules governing student attendance of basketball games.
"I think they'll make some
major changes," Student Government president Wally Bryan told
the Kernel, "but I don't know

just what."

Bryan is a student representative on the Ticket Committee,
which probably would pass on
any significant changes along
with the parent Athletic Association.. The latter group is scheduled to m eet Thursday.
There had been talk in the
Ticket Committee, Bryan confirmed, of a plan which would
admit students only to alternate
home basketball games.
Bryan Rejected Flan
"I flatly told them that the
students would not stand for
it," Bryan said.
Asked whether students might
be forced to buy tickets, as the
general public does, Bryan said
he had not heard of such a plan.
He did confirm, however, that
there are some thoughts of arteleviranging for closed-circu- it
sion broadcasts of UK basketball
games. The telecasts, he said,
would be piped into the Student Center.
The closed-circubroadcasts,
however, could not be piped to
colleges because
community
Southeastern Conference rules
prohibit suchtelecasts from going

methd
old
od of distributing student tickets
is a temporary solution that will
be in effect for Saturday's
game only.
It was believed that the method of random distribution of
tickets over a two-da-y
period prior
to the day of the game the
method used for theLSU and Alabama games would not be a
satisfactory method Saturday because of the large crowd expected
for the Tennessee game.
e
So far the
problem
of Saturday's game, the return to
d
the
system
was the obvious solution. But the
search for a more permanent solution remains another matter entirely.
The problem becomes one of
not only trying to find a convenient way for students to get
their tickets, but also one of
finances.
first-com- e,

first-serve-

ee

short-rang-

first-com- e,

first-serve-

Problems Cost $40,000
Wally Bryan, student representative on the Ticket Committee, estimates that the Athletic Association lost some $40,000
last year.
The financial matter is complicated partly because visiting
teams receive part of the ticket
money taken in here, and UK
gets a cut of the ticket money
from away games.
It is obvious, then, that the
Athletic Association was not
pleased when 1,726 tickets claimed by students before Monday
night's Alabama game were not
used.
Since the tickets could be
Temporary Measure
sold to the public at $3 each,
The decision to return to the the unused tickets accounted for
a loss of $5,100.
it

s.

GradAss'nTo
Meet Tonight

Empty Seats
Athletic
The
Association
claims that an average of 000
student seats are empty for each
home game. With the schedule
The second organizational
calling for 12 home basketball
d
meeting of the
student seats exGraduate Student Association is games,a empty deal of the
$40,000
plain good
tonight at 7:30 p.m. in Room lost last
year.
All graduate
213 of Kastle Hall.
Tliis essentially was the reaand professional students are inson for experimentally distributvited to attend.
tickets prior to the day of
The Association formed one ing
a game. Tickets not claimed by
week ago in reaction to a general
students could be sold to the
feeling that "graduate students
neither the advantages of public under a system of early
have
distribution.
the student nor the faculty menw
of the disAnother problem confronting
ber and have many
advantages of both," according the Athletic Association is the
to Mason Taylor, one of the
growing number of students in
community colleges. From the
newly-foime-

in-sta- te

out-of-sta- te

te

out-of-sta- te

NE

University of Kentucky, Lexington

J EPSON

out-of-sta- te

"Yf

Vol. LX, No. 107

Athletic Ticket Plans Studied;
Major Changes May Be Proposed
By GEORGE

8,

al

THE KEN TUCKY
Ira

schools of the Southeast, Clapp explained.
At the same time, the 11 "benchmark" universities have provided a solid
comparison base for UK in its efforts to
upgrade its educational program, Clapp
added.
For the academic year 1967-6the 11
"benchmark" institutions had a median
tuition figure of $855 a year
and a median
tuition figure of
$350 a year (compared with UK's $820
and $280
tuition).
At most of the "benchmark" schools,
tuition approximately equals
the cost of education.

out-of-sta- te

V

of each student, including

fees

those

in community colleges,
the Athletic Association.
This amount supposedly covers the student's cost for five
football games and 10 basketball
games. But the fact is that since
the number of students in community colleges is now reaching
9,000 and since there are some
15,000 at Lexington there always is the possibility that a
number of students far in excess
of the number of student tickets
may want to go to a game.
To this date, no students ever
have been turned away from
Memorial Coliseum. But they
have been admitted on a standing-room
basis several times.
$12.50 goes to

3

5

l

'

mZli
Kernel Photo By Kay Brookshire

Theresa Resig, the
new Miss UK, b congratulated
by her father after winning the
title in competition Friday night.
The Murray, Ky. native is 19,
a sophomore and member of Chi
Onega sorority.

Big-eye- d

Congratulations
For New Queen

Other Officers Also Resign

State YD President Quits Post
By FRANCES DYE

Kernel Staff Writer
Four members of the Young
Democrats State Central Committee resigned last night amidst
the
surrounding
controversy
statewide organization.
President Clifford Smith Jr.,
n
Frankfort; National YD
Mrs. Lois Haynie,
Louisville; Secretary Mrs. Jane
and
Underwood,
Lexington;
Treasurer Bill Mathis, Newport,
submitted their resignations in a
letter to J.R. Miller, chairman
of the state party and Terry
McBrayer, National YD Committeeman.
Smith confirmed his resignation to John McCarvey, WKYT-Tnewsman. Smith, however,
declined further comment and
said a statement would be released to the Associated Press
and United Press International
sometime today.
Reportedly, the resignations
came after criticism of the officers' term of office and repeated
calls for a statewide convention.
One of the YD clubs calling
for a convention for the purpose
of reorganization and election
of new officers was the UK affiliate.
On January 26, the UK YD
executive committee passed such
a resolution and charged Smith
with inactivity and lack of cooperation.
February 22 at a meeting of
the State Executive committee.
Commit-teewoma-

V

Smith denied the allegations.
Last week, C.L. Cutliff of
Bowling Green resigned as executive secretary, in protest over
a speech Smith had made at the
February meeting.
UK Young Democrats President McKinnley Morgan released a statement last night
in the aftermath of the four new
resignations:
UK Statement

"Whereby

this resolution

called for election of new state
officers, it was not intended as a
call to arms for the ouster of
Clifford Smith Jr.

"The sole purpose of the reso-

lution was to stimulate activity
from Clifford Smith to begin a
program of reorganization. This
program we hoped for never materialized. We then began to press
on our own, however, not in opposition to the state Young Democrats organization."

Each YD college club president and members of his club
would be invited to participate
in the council. "This is our main
concern now," Morgan concluded.
Gerald Lundrigan, coordina-

tor for the proposed campus council, said the resignations 'won't
hurt this proposed formation."
Morgan concurred with this
opinion and added that the
chances of the campus council
becoming a reality were probably
heightened by the recent events.

Futrell, Juul
To Speak At
YR Meeting

Two probable candidates for
this year's Student Covemment
presidential race will be on hand
said the major pro- Tuesday night at a Young ReMorgan
gram proposed by the UK affili- publicans meeting to discuss the
ate is the formation of a college housing policy controversy.
SG Vice President Tim Fucampus council of Young Democrats.
trell and Thorn Pat Juul, a StuWithin the framework of the dents for Action and Responsibility (SAR) representative, are
council, to be founded in Lexington and scheduled for April to present their views 8at the
4 and 5, would be developed
meeting scheduled for
p.m.
"coordination between the col- Tuesday in Room 245 in the
lege clubs, annual leadership con- Student Center.
ferences for the club presidents
Juul recently has charged that
and a speakers' bureau," Morgan Futrell was attempting to avoid
said.
public confrontations.

* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, March

2-- TIIE

19G0

.1,

Book Describes Rebellions Generation Gap

NEW YORK (AF)-- A sociologist who has analyzed student
rebellions from Berkeley to Berlin says the common cause is
conflict between the Renerations
and that such uprisings tend to
be
"I understand their hopes,
their idealism, but my feeling is
that unless we deal with it realistically and call attention to this
irrationality, this
element, we'll never be able to
cope with it," says Lewis S.
Feuer.
In an interview. Dr. Feuer
discussed the student rebellion
its causes, its dangers, its future.
Feuer is a professor of sociology at the University of Toronto
and a former professor of philosophy at the University of California, where his observations
about that uprising were gathered first hand.
His book on student unrest,
"Conflict of Generations," will
be published this month by Basic Books.
Here are excerpts from the
interview:
Q. What is the underlying
cause of rebellion by students?
A. Well, the phenomenon has
been a recurrent one in modem
history. Almost every generation
in Europe and the United States
has seen student uprisings of
e.

O

various sorts . . . The underlying
cause in the present student revolts in the United States, apart
from the basic factor of the recurrent theme of generational revolt, lies, of course, in the profound significance the racial
problem has acquired in America. There has really been no major student rebellion on any campus In the United States where
this issue was not somewhere in
the background.
"One finds that student rebellions only take place in situations where the elder generation
for some reason or other has lost
its moral authority, it becomes
deauthoritized. Now in part in
the United States the older gen- -

of the older generUntil relatively recently, this sort of
had not occurred, although
there was a great deal of social
ferment. The elder generation was
credited with great triumphs.
They were the ones who were
leading in the conquest of the
continent, and the elder generation had to its credit one great
victory after another. Now it
wasn't until after the second
world war that one encountered
this phenomenon of the elder
ation

...

Q. How significant is Communist participation in the student rebellions?
A. It depends on what one
means by Communist participation. If you mean the actual
Communist party, it has not
played a very important role.

... Phenomenon Has Been A Recurrent One9
The chief student leaders, for
instance, at Berkeley or at Columbia or at Harvard are not
persons who would regard themselves at sympathizers of the
Communist party. The Trotsky-ite- s
on some campuses actually
have more members than the
Stalinists. And the Maoists tend
to provoke some of the more extreme actions. The number is
small, but adhering to the policy
of provoking violence to the maximum.
"The movement as a whole

eration is somewhat
generation confronted with probbecause the racial situa- lems which were in magnitude
tion has developed the feeling far beyond anything which had
that liberalism hasn't altogether been encountered before. The
lived up to its principles. And great string of victories was broken . . .
also it has been partially
because it has conQ. Your book seems to be
ducted a losing war. I think if critical of student rebels and
the Vietnamese war had a rela- those who sympathize with them.
tively successful outcome you Is it your premise that in these
would not have the loss of ausituations the student generally
is at fault and has no grievances?
thority which confronted the naA. There are grievances, but
tional administration.
Q. Prior to our time, the there are two ways of meeting
United States has never had any grievances, rational ways and

Reprint from THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 1969

ItQl

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certainly Is Influenced by an
ideology which finally is Marxism. It turns out that their criticisms of our society are the same
ones that Lenin made.
Q. Why has the student movement in this country taken on
flavor?
such an
A.
is sort
of the ideology of rejecting all
the values and commitments of
your father. And ifyou're in generd
ational revolt on a very
level you're going to be
in proportion to
the intensity of your generational
rebellion.
Q. What is the direction of the
student movement in this country
today?
A. They themselves don't
know in what direction they want
to lead the country. They say
very frankly they don't have a
conception of what the new society is going to be like.
"They don't want to commit
themselves altogether to the Soviet picture, but in reality sometimes they say they have an
anarchistic element, an existential element in reality they are
finally playing into the hands of
totalitarian forces. Because if over
a long period of time you keep
provoking the breakdown of law,
a breakdown of respect for the
values of work and decency and
political ethics, if you disrupt
the orderly workings of society
to a point where people finally
become desperate, then you are
finally going to play into the
hands of totalitarian elements.
There is a strong Fascist element in the student movement.
"No student movement in history has finally been friendly to
academic freedom."
11 a.m.-- 8

i.'? frit

SELL A CAR!

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irrational ways. Because at the
same time they arise as well from
this motivation of generational
struggle, the desire to humiliate
the older generation, to uproot
them, you have a kind of super
imposition on whatever they do
of compulsive irrationality. In
the history of student movements
we find that their idealism has
always tended to become

movement.

A. As I say, one doesn't have
a student movement emerging
unless there has been a

ROOM TO RENT!

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significant

Why?

Pick up application ii
Office of Financial Assist
ance, Room 4, Frazee Hall
Return by March 3

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CIA SSOEDED ADVERTISING

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Date ...

Address

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Tue Kentucky Kernel
Th
Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky,
Kentucky 40500. Second cum
poatUige 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
Begun as the Cadet In UM and
as the Kernel
published
since 1813. continuously
Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Kdltors.
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Charges

KERNEL accepri classified advertising on a pra-pabasis
ONLY. This form may bo mtiUd, along with a chock, to The
Kentucky Kernel, Journalism Building, University of Kenid

tucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506.
The Kernel reserves the right to refuse publication of any
classified advertising considered to be inappropriate or in poor
taste.

DEADLINE

a.m. the day
prior to the
first insertion

11

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, March 3,

J?-

-3

Confrontation Brings Recognition To New Constituency

Speaker Says Ghetto Riot Pattern Moved To Campuses
"When a new constituency
arises, its first need Is recognition by the established order,"
Dr. Hal Nicburgtold an audience
in King Alumni Auditorium Fri

day afternoon.
Dr. Nieburg, a University of
Wisconsin professor, spoke on
"The Politics of Confrontation."
"In order to gain recognition,

the new constituency must resort the emerging constituency and
to confrontation with the estab- (uniting) those who oppose it.
lished order," Dr. Nieburg said.
"The real basis for politics
"Confrontation necessarily leads of confrontation as it is today is
to polarization, uniting those in

the success of the black revolu--

Press Critical Of Peaceful Demonstration
students did not want to run the
college, nor did they capture the
administration building all they
asked was reasonable rules.
Their complaints may seem
institution.
ridiculous until existing condis
e
tions are examined. MVSC stuand a 90
boycott of classes lasting dents must obtain permission to
a week grew from the adminisleave campus or to have
dates. Freshman girls
tration's refusal to meet some
26 demands set down by student
have to be in their dormitories
leaders.
by nine o'clock every night,
women by ten o'clock.
obClear differences can be
The seat of the problem may
served between recent Mississippi Valley demonstrations and stu- have been that girls must sign
dent unrest across the nation. out for toilet tissue because none
In other student action often is kept in rest rooms. Certainly
only a minority of the students few other campuses have withave become involved, but at nessed clashes over the right of
to control
MVSC at least 90 percent par- the administration
toilet tissue.
ticipated.
The confrontations have been
Another difference was that
with the exception of minor winsupported by state civil rights
dow breakage there was no re- leaders. Charles Evers told Misported outbreak of violence. The sissippi Valley State students to
ITT A BENA, Miss. (CPS) -Mississippi Valley campus is
back to normal after six days of
student unrest that paralyzed the
black-attende-

white-supporte-

d

Sit-in-

d

percent-effectiv-

us

ss

A
-

boycott classes, "but do not break
a single window." Fannie Lou
of the MisI lamer,
Freedom Democratic
sissippi
Party, referred to Dr. J.H.White,
the president, as a "sick cat at
Mississippi Valley State College."
The incident also revealed
once again the bigotry of the press
in the Mississippi state capitol.
The Clarion-Ledgethe state's
largest newspaper, printed statements from Dr. White, who told
Mississippians every day that the
boycott had ended, when in actuality not one student was attending classes.
An example of the view taken
by the Jackson press was this
piece written by one of their
columnists:
"Student rebels at Mississippi
Valley State College aredemand-ing- ,
amongother things, that they
be allowed to wear native African
an

r,

garb on campus if and when they
please.
"Well, why not let them do
it? And maybe wear rings in
their noses, don grass skirts, carry wooden spears, put a big black
iron boiling pot at the school's
entrance gate and litter the campus with wooden bones to symbolize old African culture."
refused to
The Clarion-Ledgprint any of the student demands
except that the students wanted
Black history courses. Mississippi
State's student newspaper, the
Reflector, may have been the
only student newspaper sympathetic to the students.
Although the university president is a black, MVSC students
seem to hold little respect for him.
As one student said, "Dr. White
is a black man, but he thinks
like a Mississippi white man.
Of course that is how he got his
er

job."

TODAY and TOMORROW

,

Th

Is
deadline for announcement
dy prior to the first
of Itemi in this column.
publication
7:30 p.m. two

Today
Sign up for Sorority Open Rush
now in Room 301 of the Administration Building. Rush extends April 26.
in
for membership
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.
Applications must be returned by
Wednesday, March S.
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.
Mormons will show a film on "Man's
Research for Happiness,"
Monday,
March 3 in Room 116 of the Student
Center at 7:30 p.m. The public Is invited.
The UK
Club will meet at 7
p.m. on Monday, March 3, In Room
109 of the Student Center.
Robert Theobald, a British
will speak on a "Guaranteed Annual Income," on Monday,
March 3. at 7:30 p.m.. In the Student
Center Theatre.
The Fencing Club will meet from
9
p.m., Monday evening at the
Alumni Gym Balcony. The prerequisite is one semester of Fencing or
equivalent.
4-- H

st,

Tomorrow
The Student Council for Exceptional
Children will have a general business
meeting and discuss convention plans
at 7 p.m., Tuesday, March 4, at the
Commerce Auditorium. At 7:30 p.m..
Professor James O. Smith will speak
on the General and Specific Approaches to Educating the Handicapped.
The Physiology and Biophysics Seminar Series will present Dr. A. R.
Llnd, Director of the Indiana UniLaboratory
versity Cardiopulmonary
at Wright Patterson Air Force Base.
Dr. XJnd will speak on ATP and other
refactors affecting cardiovascular
sponses to sustained (static) exercise
3
of the Medical Cenin Room
ter at 4:00 p.m., March 4. The public
is Invited.
Mr. Gene Lamb of Ohio State Union
versity will present a slide-tal- k
"Changes in Bolivian EducaUon since
the Revolution of 1952" at 4 p.m. on
Tuesday, March 4. In Room 243 of the
Student Center. The public is Invited.
Films on live birth and birth control
will be presented by A.E.D.
honorary at the Student Center Theatre on Tuesday, March 4. at
0:30 and 8:30 p.m., respectively. Discussions will follow. Everyone is Invited; admission is free.
The Draft Counseling service will
meet Tuesday from 7 p.m. In Room
307 of the Student Center.
MS-50-

Coming Up
The University Concert Band under
the direction of Robert B. Welch will
be In UK Student Center Ballroom
Wednesday, March 5 at 8:15 p.m.
Dr. George B. Barbour, Dean Emer

itus at the University of Cincinnati,
of Minnesota-Dep- t.
of
Midwest,
(BS). Locations:
Physics
University
will speak on "Digging for the Roots
Civil Service Personnel. Check schedSouth. East.
of the Family Tree with Teilhard de
ule book for details.
Metropolitan Public Schools, NashChardin." on March 5 at 4:00 p.m. in
ville, Tenn. Teachers in all fields.
Room 148 of the Chemistry-Physic- s
All
Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp.
Building. He will also speak on March
degrees acceptable for men interested
6 at 4:00 p.m. in Room 137 of the
in sales and marketing careers. LocaWBKY-Fs
Chemistry-Physictions: Nationwide.
Building.
A.W.S. Spring Elections will be
Accounting,
Phillip Carey Corp.
March 5. You must present a valiMONDAY, MARCH 3 (Evening-SciBus. Adm., Economics, Computer
dated I.D. to vote. Voting places are ence, Mech. E. (BS); Chem. E. (BS,
4:30 In The Bookstall
Blazer Cafeterias at
5:00 European Review
Complex and
MS). Locations:, Cincinnati, Memphis,
1
and 7 and the Student Center
, 5:15
Avenue of Champions
Chicago; Perth Amboy, N.J. Citizenand Chemistry-Physi5:30 It Happened Today
Building from
ship.
Women students vote for your
6 : 00 Hodgepod ge
Standard Brands, Inc. Accounting,
: 7:00
Bus. Adm. (BS). Locations: New York,
representatives.
Evening Concert Franck,
Students interested In living In the
"Le Chasseur Maudlt"
Chicago, San Francisco: Birmingham,
Dlllard House for the fall semester of
7:55 News
Ala.: Clinron, Iowa; Suffolk. Va. Citimeet at 7 p.m., Wednesday,
8 : 00 Viewpoint
1969, may
zenship.
March 5, at 270 South Limestone St.
8:30 Directions In Children's LiterTekonsha Community Schools, Mich.
A student recital featuring Gerald
ature "And A Time to Dance."
Teachers in all fields.
a discussion of the
Pirn, tuba, assisted by Patricia Las-seUtica Community Schcois, Mich.
Piano; Dennis Aker, tuba; Wilof teaching retarded chilTeachers in all fields.
liam Bryan, tuba; Robert Davenport,
dren.
Southern States Cooperative, Inc.
9:00 Masterworks
tuba; Hunter Hensley, tuba; and Agr. Economics. Agronomy, Animal
Beethoven,
Wayne Pressley, tuba, will be held
Science. Horticulture, Plant Pathology,
"Symphony No. 2"
March 6 at 8:15 p.m.. In the UK Lab11:15 News
'and rurally oriented graduates In Bus.
11:30 Night Call
oratory Theatre.
Adm., Economics, and Liberal Arts
All students are invited to attend
12:30 Night Cap
(BS). Locations: Ky., W. Va., Va. Citian open committee hearing on the zenship. (Community Colleges
1:30 Sign Off
Agr.
"Climate for Learning at UK," sponBusiness, Agr. Technology, and ruralTUESDAY, MARCH 4 (Afternoon)
sored by a new committee on Learnly oriented graduates in Bus. Mgt..
1 :00
Afternoon Concert Peiko,
General Education, and Marketing
ing of the College of Arts and Sciences. The meeting will be held
"Moldavian Suite"
Technology.)
March 6, at 4:00 p.m., at
Thursday,
the Student Center Theatre.
The University of Kentucky Faculty
Brass Quintet and a group of guest
performers will present a varied program on Friday, March 7, at 8:15 p.m.
at the UK Agricultural Science Auditorium. The concert is free to the
public.
Sharyn Anne Russell, piano, will
254-64- 64
present selections by Bach, Schumann,
Bartok, and Chopin, In a student
recital on Saturday, March 8, at the
Science Auditorium at
"24-HoAgricultural
Emergency Road Service'
8:15 p.m.
The Wildcat Dance will celebrate
the Cats SEC victory with the sounds
of the Exiles In the Student Center
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 cafeE.
KY.
ST.
terias 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
college, all campus, and all departments.
M

91.3 mc
)

were a capitalization on the
new sense of
and identity on the part of
Blacks.
Dr. Nieburg traced the black
rebellion from the civil rights
movement through the black
power movement and finally to
the "black military guerrilla
movement."
"An uneasy truce new exists
between the black community
and the rest of society although
the grievances still exist," he
said.
Dr. Nieburg noted that the
pattern of ghetto riots has now
moved to the university campus.
"A contest for power over
leadership of the black constituency is going on between
moderate Blacks and the militants," Dr. Nieburg said.
He warned, though, that "the
black community is aroused and
armed and ready to break out in
violence if we resort to police
terrorism."
"The Blacks have gained
strength in bargaining power,"
Dr. Nieburg said, and added
that the emphasis on black pride
consequently may not be necessary in the future.

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Register Tuesday for an appointment Thursday with:
Albion Public Schools, Mich.
Teachers in all fields.
Central Trust Co. Accounting, Computer Science BS); Law; Bus. Adm.,
Economics (BS, MS). Location: Cincinnati.
H. K. Ferguson Co. Inc. Architecture (BS); Chem. E., Civil E.. Elec.
E.. Mech. E. (BS, MS). Locations:
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Accounting (BS. MS); MBA with
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Law if interested in carrer as tax
specialist. Locations: Nationwide.
P. R. Mallory & Co., Inc. Accounting, Bus. Adm.. Chem. E.. Elec. E.,
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White Racism
The report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, issued a year ago, has gone
unnoticed and its proposals have
not been followed, according to a
new study released by Urban America, Inc. As a result the report
said: "A year later we are a year
closer to being two societies, black
and white, increasingly separate
and scarcely less unequal."
The report went on to say that
the nation may be headed toward
unprecedented disorders if it continues to ignore the Kerner Commission report, which said that
white racism, rather than black
agitation, is the roo