xt7pvm42v69m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pvm42v69m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690117  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 17, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 17, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7pvm42v69m section xt7pvm42v69m Draft Threatens To Drain Supply Of Ph. D.'s
not be able to find enough students to teach courses
during the next year, and that research projects may
have to be curtailed, reduced or delayed if no changes
in graduate deferment are made this year.
The present policy of drafting oldest eligible men
first means that first- - and second-yea- r
graduate students,
most recently reclassified since last spring's policy
change, are first priority to fill draft calls, which are
level through the
expected to stay at the 30,000-plu- s
coming summer.
The survey was limited to science departments because the organizations which sponsor the Commission
are scientific academic groups. It believes, however,
that results of this first survey are roughly applicable
to general graduate school enrollment.
The commission also speculated about the reasons
for the failure of Fall 1968's projected enrollment drop
to materialize. The slowness of the reclassification
process, it said, combined with the summer setback
in physical examinations, was a major reason.
Another was that many students returned to or
started graduate school although in imminent danger

College Press Service
WASHINGTON Unless changes are made in the
present draft regulations as they affect graduate students, the nation's supply of trained Ph.D.s in the sciences will be "seriously curtailed" in the PJTO's.
That is the conclusion of a su vey of the draft's effect on male students now in their first or second year
of graduate school in the sciences, released this week
by the Scientific ManpowerCommission, an independent
Washington research firm.
According to data furnished by 1,237 Ph.D. granting
science departments in institutions throughout the U.S.,
as many as 46 percent first- - and second-yea- r
male graduate students are potentially liable to induction in the
next few months.
That's 50 percent of all graduate students who also
are employed by universities to teach undergraduate
classes, and 47 percent of those who are employed to
do research in the sciences.
Research Problem
universities told the Commission they will
Many

of reclassification, because "they just wanted to get as
far as they could," or because they had federal scholar-

imships or grants which required that they enroll
would then be waiting
mediately. Those scholarships
for them after they came out of military service, if they
were drafted.
Entered Service
Of the more than 4,000 male graduate students who
were reported to have been accepted to a department
and then failed to enroll, however, about
were known to have either been drafted or voluntarily
to have entered military service.
Many students, of course, when faced with imminent drafting, have chosen to join a service other
than the Army, hoping to avoid duty in Vietnam.
Will the predictions of the Commission come true
this spring?
"There is no way," the survey report states, "to
predict accurately how many of the first and second
year graduate students who are liable to induction will
be called to service before summer.
Continued on Pace 5, Col. 4
one-fourt-

h

THE KENTUCKY

EN

J

A
Vol. LX, No. 76

University of Kentucky, Lexington

Friday, Jan. 17, 1969

UK Students To Join

Ml

.

In Inansnral Protests
Paul Potter, another national
bilization Committee (Mobe).
Mobe leader, claimed that the
Maguire says he is making
of the Vietnam war
the trip because of "personal "gravity"
political beliefs" and dissatisfachas made it necessary to break
tion with "the status quo."
the tradition of inaugurations as
celebrations of national unity.
Don Pratt, a former UK student who says he also will drive
'Critical' Protest
to the protest, is going as "an
Davis expects the
individual dissatisfied with the
to be the "most critformal inauguration plans."
ical" antiwar demonstration yet,
Pratt says the
will be a "recognition of but could give no estimate of the
expected turnout. He said rethe country's division."
Rennie Davis, national Mobe sponse from the campuses has
from
coordinator, says federal and been good and cited support
officials want to 150 peace organizations.
Washington city
Students for a Democratic Soavoid "another Chicago," and
ciety, usually the most active
will allow the
to be held the weekend of and militant group in demonstrations, voted in its National
the official ceremony.
is to Council meeting during ChristThe protest's purpose
vacation not to participate in
"disrupt the inauguration's polit- masdemonstration. But Mobe exthe
ical message of national unity by
SDS members in
exposing Nixon's papier mache pects many on an individual
consensus," but not to interfere Washington
physically with the event itself, basis.
Doug Morrison, an SDS memDavis said.
ber at UK, says the local group
"Violence, which we do not
want, would not serve the govern- will go along with the National
ment's purposes either," said Council decision.
activiDavis. "I should think the last
Nixon wants on the day ties will begin Saturday in Washthing
he's inaugurated would be ington with conferences and
another Chicago."
Continued on rage 3, Col. 1

By SUE ANNE SALMON

Kernel Staff Writer
While the UK Wildcat Marching Band plays in the presidential
Inaugural Parade, several other
students from UK will take part
in a protest against the inauguration.
A meeting of students interested in going to Washington for
is
the
planned for 6:30 p.m. today in
Student Center Room 109.
About 10 UK students reportedly intend to participate in
the protest against the inauguration of Richard M. Nixon. The
protest will be sponsored by the
National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam.
Thursday Mobe received government sanction for a Sunday-protesmarch down Pennsylvania Avenue to within half a mile
of the capitol. The parade permits are to be issued sometime
'today.
Joe Maguire, a Student Government member who plans to
of people to
drive a
Washington, says he is "not representing any affiliation" but intends to participate in the activities plauned by the National Mo

counter-inauguratio-

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instructor Terrence Johnson (left) talked yesterday
with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr in the Student Center Art Callery.
The work In the background is part of an exhibit by Orr which
opened yesterday in the gallery.
UK sculpture

A construction project between the Commerce Building and Anderson Hall was of
only passing concern yesterday to these
two students who apparently were on their
spree in one of
way from a
the campus book stores.
book-buyin- g

Blood Shortage At UK
Eases, Physician Says
By JANICE BARBER
Assistant Managing Editor
The blood supply at the University's Medical Center is "short,"
but "fairly good" compared to the serious situation which existed
last week, according to Dr. Robert Stewart.
Dr. Stewart, medical director
he
of the Blood Bank, said the sup- from three primary sources,
said: from the University comply of blood type A positive is
relatives and friends of
especially short now, but that munity, in need of blood, and
there exists a continuing need patients
replacement credits of patients
for all types.
last week was from communities with Red Cross
"The shortage
serious," Dr. Stewart said, "with affiliation.Medical Center's Blood
"The
the supply of blood dropping
blood from
down to 126 units." He said Bank does not recruit communpeople in the Lexington
the hospital ordinarily maintains
"because
175 units in inventory and that ity," Dr. Stewart said,
we do not want to interfere with
when the supply goes down to
the potential blood pool of the
110 units, some types of blood
community's other hospitals."
become unavailable.
Students were contacted last
The blood shortage at the
ennever reached fall, Dr. Stewart said, to
Medical Center
blood donations. He said
the critical stage, Dr. Stewart courage
are approximately a thousaid, though many hospitals in there
sand professional donors now in
urban areas across the nation
The
declared holiday moratoriums on the University community.
because University's Blood Bank pays $10
nonessential operations
for a blood donation and a donor
of blood shortages.
may give five times a year.
Dr. Stewart chalked up the
Others Short
holiday blood shortage at the
The University Medical CenMedical Center to absence of
w ho with
ter was not the only Lexington
the student population,
and staff supply nearly hospital in short supply of blood
faculty
of the blood kept at during the holiday period. Several
other hospitals in the city still
the University hospital.
aie reporting shortages cf blood.
Recent Cain
The blood typing tables located in the Student Center durof approximately
Donation
120 units of blood in the last
ing fees payment were operated
four days has bolstered t lie blood
by an outside organization, the
Community Blood Bank sponinventory to the "fairly good"
sored by the Fayette County Medlevel now, Dr. Stewart said.
comes ical Society.
The blood inventory
one-thir- d

"

4

* 2--

TIIE

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Jan. 17, 19f9

PRIEST SEES SOCIAL INVOLVEMENT AS CHRISTIAN DUTY
By TERRY DUNHAM
Assistant Managing Editor
The Morality Cap, Paul Hanly
Furfey, 150 pp.,
The Maonillan Company
Monsignor Paul Ilanly Fur-fcis nearly two generations
removed from the socially conscious and politically active college students of today, yet ideologically little difference is discern able. Though he would refer to them not as "political
activists" but as "personalists,"
Furfey, a noted author and former
head of the sociology department
of Catholic .University in Washington, D.C., approves of their
social involvement.
In The Morality Cap, he impressively documents the support
of New Testament theology for
such social action, and the failure
of the organized church to provide appropriate contemporary
support.
Christian Duty
"Social action of some sort
is the duty of every Christian,"
writes Mousignor Furfey,"anob-ligatio- n
binding in conscience. . .
Sometimes one must act alone,
sometimes as a member of a per- -

sonalist group. Rut act one must
in some way. That is a fundamental Christian duty."
The modem church, he says,
has adopted a "Popular Code"
based on social mores rather than
the "Authentic Code" based on
Cospel teaching. The former, he
says, consists primarily of prohibitions evolved from social
while the latter code offers
the simpler and more positive

y

s,

lesson: love.

The distance between these

two codes is the morality gap
to which Furfey refers. To support his assertion, he discusses
at length three instances in which
he believes at least a large segment of the Catholic Church
ignored the Authentic Code to
pursue the Popular Code:
In World War II Germany,
the Catholic hierarchy supported
the Nazi government.
In World War II, American
Catholics accepted the morality
of the U.S. policy of "oblitera

g

Supremes, Hague Philharmonic Slated
Musical ambassadors from
The Netherlands and the Motor
City vie for campus attention
the next few days.
The Supremes, a female trio
from Detroit, come to Memorial
Coliseum at 8 p.m. today for one
show only. The group, composed
of lead singer Diana Ross, Mary
Wilson and Cindy Birdsong, have
been the thoroughbreds in Berry
Gordy Jr.'s large and lucrative
stable of recording stars. It was
in 1964 that Gordy engineered
the trio's "Where Did Our Love

Go?" for his own Motown Records.
Gordy and the girls payoff
was the first of a string of million
sellers, a string that still remains
intact. "The Motown Sound"
has become popularized to the
extent that The Supremes and
another Motown staple, The
Temptations, recently rated an
hour television special. Tickets
still are available at $2 in advance and $3 at the door.
'
In another, disparate musical

if yon flrink

i

tion bombing," in which hundreds of thousands of noncombat-ant- s
were killed, despite the fact
that, according to Catholic moral
theology, the killing of noncom-batant- s
is equivalant to murder,
even in an otherwise Just war.
boml-inPope Paul VI called the
of Hiroshima an "infernal
massacre."
Catholic laymen and clergy
supported the slave trade in the
United States.
"Those who live by the Pop- -

genre, The Hague Philharmonic
comes to Memorial Coliseum at
8: 15 Tuesday night. The program
is another in the Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture Series.
The orchestra is touring the
U.S. after an absence of four
seasons following its widely acclaimed 1964-6- 5
tour. The program is open to all University
students upon presentation of
both activity and ID cards, and
to season members of the Concert and Lecture Series.

tolls

ula r C(xlc do not question the

established order," Furfey says.
"It is not astonishing then that
they did not question the moral-

ity of American Negro slavery"
or of the other injustices.
Priests Arrested
"On October 27, 19G7 ," he
writes, "Father Philip Bcrrigan
and three others walked into the
Selective Service Office in the
Baltimore Customs House. They
asked to see their own records.
When shown the file cabinets,
they opened their briefcases, took
out small bottles of blood, and
poured them over the records.
They stated . . . 'they had poured
it over the files to call attention
to the pitiful waste of American and Vietnamese blood 10,000
miles away.' They were, of
course, arrested. The Baltimore
Archdiocesan Chancery Office issued a statement deploring the
demonstration and calling it 'disand exorderly,
aggressive

treme.' "
Jesus Acted Directly
"It was a busy day in the

Temple at Jerusalem, for thePass-ove- r
was at hand," he juxtaposes. "In the Court of the Gentiles the money changers were
busy . . . then suddenly an
Angry Man strode in. He overturned the tables of the moneychangers and . . . whip in hand,
all was
drove them all out
noise and confusion. The bleating of the sheep mingled with
the indignant protests of the merchants. It was an unprecedented
scene. Jesus Christ did not attack
abuse with mild, persuasive criticism. He acted directly, violent- -

...

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"Would the Baltimore Archdiocesan Chancery Office," he
asks, "deplore all this as 'disorderly, aggressive and extreme'?"
M on signor Fu rfey" s co nsidera-tio- n
of the ethics involved is more
than interesting; it is personally
moving to most' any Christian,
for it is based on the foundations
of the faith without resorting to
excessive or alienatingmanipula-tioof scriptures. His treatment
is convincing and

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1

you're right. But not home radios for music, news,
weather and sports. Collins does...
Supply communicationnavigation equipment for more
than 75
of the world's commercial airliners.
Provide voice communication systems for all U. S.
space flights.
Rank as the largest independent producer of microwave systems.
Design and manufacture computer systems for airlines,
railroads and many other military and industrial organizations around the world.
Serve as prime contractor on NASA's worldwide Apollo
tracking network.
Design and install complete earth stations for satellite
communications.
Rank as one of the world's leading manufacturers of
commercial broadcast equipment.
What does this mean to you? It means that college graduates are finding assignments that challenge their ingenuity
in activities ranging from microminiaturization to airborne
computers.
At each of Collins' four 'major facilities, opportunities
exist in electrical, mechanical, and industrial engineering,
and in computer science.

CAREER

OPPORTUNITIES:

Product Design and Development

Field Support Engineering
Electronics Research
Data Operations
Programming and Systems Analysis
Purchasing
Accounting
Systems Design Engineering
Technical Writing
Manufacturing
Process Engineering
Microelectronic
Integrated Circuitry Design
Thin Film Design
Reliability Engineering
Quality Engineering
MARKETS AND PRODUCT AREAS:
Aviation Systems
Broadcast
Telecommunication
Microwave
Specialized Military Systems
Space Communication
Computer Systems Amateur Radio

Collins representatives will conduct campus interviews:
January 29, 1969
Or you may send your resume, in confidence, to Manager of Professional Employment, Collins Radio Company,
Dallas, Texas 75207; Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52406; Newport
Beach, California 92660; or Toronto, Ontario.
COMMUNICATION COMPUTATION CONTROL

mm

COLLINS
a equal opportunity employer

That's the way it should be.
Everv child is entitled to a
healthy start in life, but there
tare an estimated 250.000
American babies each year
Iwho are deprived of that right
because of birth defects.

EM
The Kentucky

ernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 4o5oti. Second cian
postage paid at Lex.ngton, Kentucky.
Mailed five time weeKiy during trie
school year except ho.laays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Oil ice Dux 4ti.
and
liegun as the Cadet in ltf
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1U15.
Advertising published herein is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
laise or misleading advertising should
be reported to Trie Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION KATES
$9.27
Yearly, by mail
.10
Per copy, from tiles
KERNEL TELEPHONES
2321
Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
2320
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk
Circulation 2J19
Advertising, Business,

W

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Jan.

17, 1909- -3

Plans Inaugural Protest Celebrations

.Mobe

Continued from rage One
workshops designed to "activate" people new to the antiwar movement.
The meetings are scheduled
to be held at Hawthorne School
in southwest Washington. Federal City College, the city's new
college where the meetings originally were scheduled, withdrew
permission after the student government expressed disfavor of the
protest.
Sunday night, a
ball with entertainment is
planned. Mobe says Judy Collins, Phil Ochs and the Fugs
will appear. Yippies plan a guer
counter-inaugur-

al

rilla theater.
Monday, the day of the inaugural ceremony, Mobe intends
to "totally dominate" theparade

route, according to Hennie Davis.
Peace pennants will be available, and protesters have been
encouraged to bring banners and

UK Develops New Cigarette
Amid all the antismoking propaganda which the American
Society is putting out, the University's tobacco research program has developed a new cigarette.
It is a "reference cigarette
cigarette, a cigarette company
to bt used in research as a comwill manufacture the product. for
standard. Financial supparison
under contract.
port for the project came from the the University
Negotiations are under way
UK Research Foundation.
comThough the campus tobacco and are expected to" be
the pleted next week.
research program developed

signs. "We want to be sure Nixon
knows there is an antiwar movement in this country," a Mobe
leader said.
Davis said people sympathetic
to the antiwar movement will
make their feelings known even
at official inaugural functions.
"There are people with $23 box
seats (for the parade) who will
hold peace pennants."
For the
parade, a reviewing stand with
barbed wire and barricades will
be set up. President-elec- t
Nixon
and his cabinet will be"invited"
to use it.
A Mobe leader contended that
counter-inaugur-

The deadline for announcement!

N

the tirst
publication of Items in this column.

Tody
The University Counseling and Testit
ing Center will offer a
course in Reading Improvement and
Effective Study Skills during the
spring semester. The class will meet
two hours each week on Monday
and Wednesday at 3:00 p.m. in Room
205, Commerce
Building. The first
class meeting will be on Wednesday,
January 22. Practice will be directed
toward improvement in speed, vocabulary, and comprehension. Other emof
phasis will include scheduling
study time, note taking during lectures, reading for main ideas, and
studying for examinations. The only
charge for this voluntary course is the
cost of the booklet to be supplied.
Students may enroll by calling at the
University
Counseling and Testing
Center, Room 301, Old Agriculture
Building.
"The Manchurian Candidate" will
be shown in the Student Center Theatre on Friday and Saturday at 6:30
and 9:15 p.m. and on Sunday at 3:00
p.m. Admission is 50 cents.
Tryouts for "Dark of the Moon"
by Howard Richardson and William
Berney, the next production of the
Department of Theatre Arts, will be
held at 7:30 p.m. in the Guignol
Theatre. Fine Arts Building, and
again at 2:00 p.m., Sunday, Jan. 19.
The cast requires 13 men and 15
women of all types and ages. No
stage experience Is necessary. Also
needed are singers, dancers, and musicians who play the guitar or accordion. The play, directed by Charles
Dickens, will be performed in the
Guignol 1 Theatre, Feb. 21, 22, 28 and
March
and 2.
Student Directory supplements are
now available in Room 102 of the
Student Center.
Anne Marlowe and Naomi Newman
are presenting a joint Senior recital
in the Lab Theatre, Fine Arts Building, at 4:00 p.m. Miss Marlowe will
play the flute and Miss Newman will
sing.
non-cred-

Tomorrow
"Who's Killing the Church?" will
be the theme of the Baptist Student
Union
Retreat, to be held
at
Saturday 5:00 the Springs isMotel. 9:00
a.m. to
$2.25. inp.m. Cost
cluding luncheon; deadline is January
15. Call
to make a reservation.
Mid-Wint- er

4
the Complex cafeteria January
to talk with interested students. The
minute Language Placement Test
will be Riven at 10:00 a.m., 2.00 p.m.,
and 7:00 p.m. on January 22, 23, 24
in Room 119, Student Center. Please
sign up for test with the Peace
20-2-

30

Corps Representatives.
Club meetThere will be a UK
ing at 7:00 p.m. on Monday in Room
Mr. Madden,
109, Student Center.
economics professor, will be the guest
speaker.
The Student Council for Exceptional
Children will meet at 6:30 p.m., Tuesthe Commerce Building
day, in for election of officers. Ataudi7:30
torium
p.m. Melton Martinson, ass. prof, in
of Special Education at Univer- Dept.
sity of Oregon, will speak on the
topic, "Administrative Concepts in
Programs for the Handicapped."
The Physiology Biophysics Seminar
Series will present Dr. P. A. Thornton (VA Hospital) on Tuesday at 4
p.m. in Room MS 505, Medical Center. His topic will be "Possible
Adrenal Cortical Factors in Bone
Metabolism."
Mrs. Fannie Lou Hamer will speak
on "Working Solutions to the Dimensions of Poverty: A Political Solution" in the Student Center Theatre
on Wednesday at 3:00 p.m. Following the Colloquium coffee will be
served In the President's Room, Student Center.
H

UK Placement Service
Register Friday for an appointment
on Tuesday with Babcock 8c Wilcox
Co. Accounting, Chem. E., Civil E.
(Stress and Structures), Chemistry,
Math, Physics (BS); Elec. E.. Mech.
E., Met. E. (BS, MS). Locations:
Ohio, Western Pa., Ind., Va.. Ga.
Citizenship.
Register Friday for an appointment
on Tuesday with Fayette County
EleSchools, Connersville, Indiana
mentary, Girls' P.E., French, Jr. High
Math.
Register Friday for an appointment

University
Methodist Chapel

Coming Up

Alvey-Fer-gus-

Locations: Detroit. Baltimore, South
Bend. Citizenship. Applicants in the
following fields should check schedule
and
Automation
'oook for netails:
Brake and Steering,
Measurement.
and Energy Controls.
Register Monday for an appointment on Wednesday with Columbia
Civil E..
Gas System Service Corp.
Science (BS);
Elec.
E., Computer
Accounting. Math. Chem. E., Mech.
E., Met. E. (BS. MS). Location: Columbus, Ohio. Citizenship or Resident
Alien.
Register Monday for an appointment on Wednesday with Eaton Yale
& Towne, Inc. Met. E. (BS); Elec.
E., Mech. E. (BS, MS). Location:
Midwest and East. Citizenship.
Register Monday for an appointment on Wednesday with U.S. Naval
Avionics Facility Civil E., Elec. E..
Mech. E. (BS, MS). Location: Indianapolis. Citizensh.'p.
Register Monday for an appointment on Wednesday with West ClerOhio
mont Schools. Cincinnati.
Teachers in all fields.

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH
A. Dewey Sanders, Associate
Donald Durham, Minister
1716 S. LIME
Sam Morrs. Yoin Minister
J. R. Wood. Pastoral Minister
9:00 and 11.-0a.m.
'The Gospel of Reconciliation"
11:00 a.m. Expanded Sessions
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
5:00 p.m. Youth Activities
5:30 p.m. Worship Study Course
Mr. Sanders
7:30 p.m
k
Service
Nursery tor all services.
Wednesday, 7 p.m.,
Park'ng in rear
Mid-wee-

vXT..J..frT

University Luthern Student Center
SUNDAY MORNING BREAKFAST
9:00 a.m.
STUDENT WORSHIP WITH COMMUNION
10:30 a.m.
Phones-Ca- mpus
A. L BENJftUP
1
Pastor

447 Columbia

254-312- 4;

269-135-

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
WEST HIGH

at UPPER ST.

RUSSELL It. PATTON, Minister

10:50 His Kingdom isT Forever
7:00 The Word of "life

Corner Harrison and Maxwell

Transportation provided for students

252-53-

There will be a spaghetti dinner
Sunday from 4:00 to 7:00 p.m. at the
Wesley Foundation, 151 E. Maxwell,
sponsored by the Dental Hygiene
class. Cost is $1.00 for children and
$1.50 for adults.
Peace Corps representatives will be
on campus in the Student Center and

on Tuesday with Methodist Hospital
of Indiana. Inc. Nursing UiN), LocaInd. Will intertion: Indianapolis,
view Seniors for summer employment. Citizenship. (Community Colleges Associate Degree Nursing
Register Friday for an appointment
on Tuesday with Perfect Circle Division of Dana Corp. Bus. Adm.,
Mech. E.. Met. E. (BS). Locations:
Indiana. Will interview Juniors for
summer employment. Citizenship.
Engineering
(Community Colleges
Technology).
Register Monday for an appointment on Wednesday with
Check schedule
Operations
book for details.
for an appointRegister Monday
ment on Wednesday with American
Enka Corp. Chem. E., Elec. E., Mech.
(BS, MS); Chemistry
E., Phvsics
(BS, MS, Ph.D.). Locations: Enka,
Lowland, Tenn.
N.C.;
Register Monday for an appointment on Wednesday with Bendix
Accounting
Corp. Corporate Audit
(BS, MS); Computer Science (BSl.

Call

or

252-03-

At II a.m.
At 6 p.m.

SOUTHERN

WORSHIP SERVICE
University of Life

ZSZH1

A

HILLS

2356 HARRODSBURG RD.
Sermon "Religion
Transportation Provided for Students

js Keairy

R. HERREN,

Mr. nerren
6
Call

or

277-67-

I

All spring sport coats
$25.95
All lambs wool (vec neck) sweaters .$ 9.95
All casual (wash 'n wear) slacks ... $ 7.95
$ 5.95

All dress (wool & dacron) slacks
All sport belts
All sport shirts (long sleeves)

P

CHURCH
DONALD

Minister
277-402-

9

n

J

rTTNTrvn UK

GKDM

mm

But you
may be about
to blow
your life
A

An astonishing number of
people make a stupid and tragic
mistake. To put it simply, they
jump into careers without really
looking. The result a dreary life
of frustration and anger.
Can this happen to you? Could
be unless you can answer questions like these to your own satisfaction beore you make your move :
Are you really a Chief.. .or an
Indian?
Do you belong in a big organization? Or a small one? Or do you
belong by yourself?
Can you really stand pressure?
There are a great many serious
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Sermon byx

Rev. Fornash

counter-inauguratio-

al

TODAY and TOMORROW
7:30 p.m. two days prior to

(he actual inaugural, with its
pomp and circumstance, "hardly a cross section of what this
nation is."
The
on
the other hand, will "point to
the vitality of the protest movement" and will be "a better indication of the nation," he said.

srAft

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* The Kentucky
established

Iernel

University of Kentucky

fiiiday, jan. n,

iqc9

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Loc 11. Becker, Editor-in-ChiDarrcll Ilicc, Editorial rage
Guy M. Mendes III, Managing Editor
Tom Dorr, Business Manager
Jim Miller, Associate
Howard Mason, rhotography Editor
Chip Hutchcson, Sports
Jack Lyne and Larry Kclloy, Arts Editors
Frank Coots,
Dana Ewcll,
Janice
Terry Dunham,
Larry Dale Keeling,
Assistant Managing Editors

Early

Editor
Editor
Editor
Barber

Pass-Fa- il

The rapid implementation by
the Registrar's Office of the prosystem deserves
gressive pass-fa- il
commendation. The new system
of grading for elective courses has
been put into effect for this semester, one semester earlier than
was anticipated.
Proponents of the new plan are
system
hoping that the pass-fa- il
will take the pressure of grades
off students, not to weaken academic standards but to further the
real aims of education. Pass-fa-il
represents an attempt to get students to study for the inherent value
of knowledge and not just for grades
as has frequently become the case.
Before pass-fa- il
can be effective
in restoring perspective to educa

tion, however, the participating students must be capable of developing a real interest in their subject
matter. And the instructors must
be capable of stimulating this interest.
But in light of the stifling effects
of our educational system on both,
a real challenge is posed to the
system's chances for success.
Despite'the obstacles that must
be surmounted, however, it is still
a good sign to see the University
adopting an innovative plan and
with all due speed. Despite the
uncertainties of the new system,
the previous methods of education
have proved to be outmoded and
actual hindrances to the true educational process. Better ways must
be found.

Beer Money

Almost ever since The Kentucky
Review has been in existence (it
took the place of the English Department's Stylus several years
back), it has been better known
off this campus than on. An English student at the University of
Michigan would be more likely
to be familiar with the magazine
than would the average student
at UK.
This is a sad commentary on the
academic atmosphere here. UKstu- -'

The Last Of The Puchlo Crew
Walks To Freedom

Kernel Forum: the readers

dents just have not been interested
in devoting their spare time and
money to a literary supplement To the Editor of the Kernel:
many students on the
featuring photographs, poetry and UK It appears to the committee in charge
campus that
other artistic pieces from both on of bringing entertainment to the Univercampus and off.
sity is lacking in its responsibility. To

The Autumn Review, put on sale
Thursday at campus bookstores,
seems to compare favorably with
those preceeding it. Perhaps it is
worth more to the average student
than a few beers at the nearby bar.

writeg

It is doubtful that the student body
would reject groups like these. Music
of the tumed-ogeneration is an integral
part of college life all over the country.
We don't think that UK should continue to ignore it. This campus, we are
sure, would enjoy some new sounds.
To the "Committee i