xt7r222r7t3t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7r222r7t3t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670113  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 13, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 13, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7r222r7t3t section xt7r222r7t3t Inside Today's Kernel
It was a "guns or margarine" address,
Rcston writes: Page Two.
AWS president
no results from

said there are still
that November poll:

Page Three.
Editorial comments on right-wintacks on new history books:
g

at'
Page

Four.

M8.0
Fire.
The

makes the campus go: Page

d

an easy victory
Page Six.

KITE
IE Kentucky IL
University

Sigma Chis scoot to
in basketball play:

Paducah nurses are striking tor higher
wages: Page Seven.

of

Vol. 58, No. 75

LEXINGTON,

f

Complex Easin,
H oiisiiiff Woes
By MARTIN E. WEBB
Kernel Staff Writer
The new dormitory complex, according to James King, director
of Auxiliary Services, will have far reaching effects on campus
housing facilities by providing a new concept in housing, attracting more upperclassmen on campus, and providing facilities never
before offered.
kut attractive dormitory rooms.
The expected completion date Carneted from wall to wall, in- is sometime next fall barring
eluding the halls, the rooms are
weather and labor problems, acprovided with a bookshelf runcording to King. At present, 658 ning half the length of the room.
women are staying in the comEach student is provided with
plex, the majority of them fresha liner locker in the basement
men. The number of men stay ing where he leaves his
dirty linens
within the complex is only 167, and picks up clean ones, thus
all of whom are upperclassmen.
eliminating the waiting in line
The greatest single effect of for clean linen.
the complex, King said, will be
The cafeteria is perhaps the.
the alleviation of the overcrowded
most striking of the
conditions in the women's dormifacilities contained within the
tories, .especially in Holmes and complex. Seating approximately
Keeneland Halls.
860 students, it offers a spacious
King explained that the choice
area, attractive lighting,
of whether or not to move into dining modem and efficient kitand a
the new complex was left enchen.

JAN.

KY., FRIDAY,

n

ir

rs

The kitchen area contains the
most efficient automated equipment, King said, including an
extremely large dishwasher. An
employee dining room will be
provided. In other cafeterias they
have to eat in the same dining
area as the students which requires them to hurry in order
to clear their tables.

1907

Eight Pages

Non-Violen-

ce

Program Set
For Monday
It A
ft

.

i!tJ
tfcf.

-

-rV-

Monday night the first in ,i
scries of .seven .seminars on the
contemporary issue of
is
scheduled to begin
non-violen-

under the direction of the
on Peace Education and
Com-mitte-

'(

K

)n

"

i

-

e

Research, an unofficial committee established by 10 I'niversitv
professors.
The program, which apparently is the first of its kind
ever to be attempted at the
University on an unofficial and
basis, is designed to
present to the University community a vehicle for dialogue,
non-cred-

it

to

according

te

tirely up to the student.
The complex cafeteria was
the second most needed aspect
of the new complex, King said.
Off campus students are now
able to eat in the Student Center cafeteria, which was converted back to a strictly cash
basis this semester.
The opening of the new complex cafeteria will also have some
adverse effects upon such University owned cafeteria grills.
King said. With the decreased
students
number of
going to the Wildcat for lunch
and dinner an automated food
service composed entirely of
vending machines will be installed to handle the reduced
flow of students.
will remain open
The
as in the past, King said, if
there is a justifiable amount of
business. He said these grills
are operated on a break-evebasis designed entirely for the
students benefit.
The complex itself will contain a grill much like the
a
which will operate
day.
The new complex hosts a
number of facilities ranging from
lounges on every floor to a paperback library. Within the dorms
themselves two lounges are located on every floor. In the central lounge area of the complex
where the cafeteria is found
lounges are located on every
turn.
A number of TV rooms are
located both in the basement
of the dorms and the central
lounge area. A tea and coffee
room will also be provided. King
explained that the complex
lounge area is not a formal lounge
area as is the Student Center but
an informal gathering place for
students.
The paperback library, a new
concept in dorm planning, is under consideration for the complex. At present methods will
have to be looked into for its
operation and feasibility. According to King, library lists were
sent out to several Universities
to determine the specific type of
paperbacks most helpful to the
students. "It will probably,"
King said, "contain study helps,
outline scries, and such."
King points to the compact

13,

committee

mem-

bers.
Dr. Lavvience Tarpey. of the
College of Business and Economics, will speak .it the opm-insession on "Basic Precepts
of the
Approach.
Beginning at 7:o() p.m. in B.nom
222 of the Commerce Building,
the seminar is open to students,
administrators. a n d
faculty.
tovvnspeoplo.
Dr. Joseph Engelberg, of the
Department of Physiology and
Biophysics, who has organized
the programs, said it is the
group's desire "to facilitate
scholarly studies, research, education, and interchange of ideas
and social action directed at
the peaceful resolution of social
conflicts."
g

N'on-Viole-

,

v

J

La,,
Out Oj The Ordinary

Asked by the newsdesk to come up with a Friday the 13th picture,
photog Dick Ware scurried to his darkroom, printed two negatives
on the same sheet, and proudly displayed the above results. Those
whose tastes are a little more ordinary witches, black cats, and
the like w ill hav e to find a more ordinary newspaper.

Draft Physicals Cut To Save Money
Special To The Kernel

FRANKFORT
Kentucky's Selective Service
System is "not hurting too bad" because of a
Washington order to curb expenses.
A spokesman
at Kentucky headquarters here
told the Kernel Friday, "We'll be able to operate
all right. We have a fairly large pool of eligible
men to meet our draft calls."
The statement followed one by Col. Robert
K. Custer, director of the Indiana Selective Service, that "We face a serious situation."
The Washington order 10 days ago was
necessitated by a drastic shortage of supplemental
appropriations, national Selective Service chief
Lt. Gen Lewis B. Hershey said.

The spokesman at Frankfort headquarters, who
could not enumerate on the effects of the effort,
said savings will be produced through elimina

tion of meals, lodging and transportation furnished prospective draftees when they are summoned for their
physical exams.

Speaking in Washington, Hershey said, "Now
that Congress has reconvened, I feel the supplemental appropriations will be voted shortly. But
until that time, expenses have to be curtailed
and I had the choice of either letting personnel
go or holding down the travel expenses of inductees."
He said the order should produce no immediate
crisis because calls for November through February were lower than anticipated.
In Indiana, however, all Indiana Selective
Service local boards were ordered to cancel plans
immediately for sending inductees for physicals
until further notice.

In a statement contained in
the program brochure, the aims
of the committee are expressed:
"The Committee on Peace
Education and Research consists of faculty members of the
University who have joined together to pursue a common interest. The Committee, an
autonomous and not an official
body of the University, is comprised of individuals who believe that the moral values of
tradition,
the
as stated, for example, in Matthew 5, are not merely ideals
but practical imperatives for the
and for the conduct of societies
and nations."
Judeo-Christia-

n

Continued On

Pae

3

Local Experts Cool On LBJ's Message
By FRANK BROWNING

Kernel Associate Editor
Feelings among three University jxditi-ca- l
science and economics experts were mixed
about Lyndon Johnson's State of the Union
message. Rut they had one thing in common:
none were ecstatic.

Perspective On The News

"My own impression is that an awful
lot of money is being wasted, particularly
in Vietnam about what goes on at the
docksides we know."
Economist Charles Haywood calls the
According to Pranger considerable waste
proposed six percent surcharge "too little "boondoggling" goes on at many American
too late" and wasdisappointedthat a sharper universities which hold defense contracts.
cut had not been suggested in domestic He particularly singles out Berkeley where
he was a student and the Massachusetts
programs.
Political theorist Robert Pranger who Institute of Technology. He believes many
describes his reactions as basically negative, wasteful or nonessential studies are being
for at the universities with defense
says the business of a tax surcharge is payed
foolish and distressing and would like to department money.
Further he sees unneeded spending in
see an economic
in defense
new things in Aerospace equipment and
expenditures.
investigation, singling out especially such
Political process expert Dean Jaros contracts as were recently awarded Boeing
views the speech as doing "a pretty good and Cencral Electiic to build a
supersonic
job of making a messy situation sound jet tianspoit earlier.
pretty good" although he was not much
To cuib such waste, Pranger advocated
suipiisetl by any of the President's
a watchdog committee to oversee defense
spending much of which he sass is slipping
Pranger is easily the most ciitical of in undii the cmotiond tag of "helping
the tin cc educators.
oui bov s in Vietnam."

Neither does he see any logic to the
pro)osed six percent surcharge on personal
and corporate income taxes. "I can't imagine
how inflation is going to be stopped by
c utting our pay checks.
Pranger says most spending is for necessities and that a cut in income through more
taxes will force people simply to borrow.
"I don't think you can cut spending."
"The Vietnam thing bothered me tremendously. The Johnson administration's
intransigence in stopping the bombing
lx)thers ine," he says, taking into account
reixuts by New Yoik Tiniesman Harrison
Salisbury who says the North Vietnamese
cannot be driven to the conference table.
"If Salisbury is light, then the lomhing
has ih) effect," Pranger adds.
Haywood, who is dean of the College
of Business and Economics,

was "discourag-

ed" by the speech, but fiom opposing

rea-

sons.

"As an economist I was disapiHtintcd
because I think the emphasis w as too nine h
upon the continuation of or expansion of
certain gov cinincntul programs whic h may
not be appropriate at this time.
ConUnurd on 1'age

2

* Till'

2

KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Friday, Jan.

1!)(7,

Local Experts Cool To State Of Union
is too

"I think the surcharge

Continued From TagP 1
"Expansion of the Poverty
Program, Urban Redevelopment
and Helatccl Programs is desirable
ocrthe longer term, but I'm not
certain tbe need is so urgent tbey
should hac top priority at tin's
time.
"It might have been better
if tbe President bad indicated
there would be sure
on defense expenditures, that
would put first priority on meeting the commitment on Southeast Asia,' he went on.

little too late. There should have
been a tax increase last Felv
ruary or Marchmaybe even a
10 percent surcharge," Haywood
explained.
"As I look to '67, the private
economy does not have the forces
in it for inflation," Haywood
said.
Two important changes the
cct) no mist sees for the coming
year are:
l.A slowdow n in business ex-

penditures on

plants and

new

There will be a meeting of
the Student Council for ExStudents at 7 p.m.
ceptional
.'
Wednesday in Room 123 of
Dkk-ev.HaU-

the second semester. The class
meet at 4 p.m. on Tuesday
and Thursdays in Room 223 of
the Commerce Building. The first
class will meet Tuesday.
Tan Sigma, modern dance fraat 3
ternity, will hold
p.m. Monday through Thursday.
Attendance is required at all
ts

they will be held in
the Euclid Avenue building.
sessions,
The Counseling
will offer
course in reading
and effective study

and Texting
a

non-cred-

The Dairy Club will meet
p.m. Tuesday in the Dairy

it

improvement
skills during

at

7

Building.

CANTERBURY HOUSE
Episcopal Church

University
Methodist Chapel
151

E.

SUNDAY

CHURCH
METHODIST
High at Clay Avenue
DR. J. T. HARMON,
Pastor
Dr. W. P. Fryman, minister, visitation
9:45 a.m. Church School
11 a.m.
"God Answers Prayer"
Mission Study
7 p.m.
Mrs. Roger Jones, Director
PARK
East

by

Rev. Fornash
At 11 a.m. WORSHIP

ROSE ST.

SERVICES

8:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m. 2nd Sundays

MAXWELL

Sunday, Jan. 15
Sermon

Ml

SERVICE

SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH
DONALD

2356 HARRODSBURG RD.

9:30 a.m. College Class
Dr. Henry Hitt Crane

Minister

Worship

"The Christian Style"

PROVIDED FOR STUDENTS

TRANSPORTATION

R. HERREN,

10:50 a.m. Morning
Call

277-617- 6

or

277-402- 9

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH

Donald W. Durham,
(Next to Hospital
J. K. Wood, Fastoral
Dewey Sanders, Associate Minister
Samuel Morris, Youth
(Parking in Kear of Church)
9:50 a.m. Sunday School
"GOD SO LOVED THE WORLD"
9:00 a.m. and 11:00 a.m.
7:30 p.m.
"THE NECESSITY OF LOYALTY"
(Parkin In Uear of
Nursery for all Services
11 Hi

S. Lime

Minister
Minister
Minister

Church)

ALDERSCATE METHODIST CHURCH
1881 EASTLAND PARKWAY

ORIN M. SIMMERMAN,

JR., Minister

9:50 a.m.

Church School; College Class: Sam Davis, Teacher
11:00 a.m.
"THE FAITH THAT CHRIST GIVES"
7.00 p.m.
"HOW TO GET ALONG WITH ONE ANOTHER"

Church Of God, 812 Loudon Ave.

General Headquarters, Cleveland, Tenn.
18
E. W. Carden, Pastor
Phone
10:00 A.M.
Sunday School
11:00 A.M.
MORNING WORSHIP
7:30 P.M.
KYANGtl.ISTIC
V. P. E., Tuesday
1:30 P.M.
7:30 P.M.
Prayer Meeting Thursday
PUBLIC INVITED
255-5- 1

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN

RICHARD T. 11 AUIJISON, Minister
NORTH MILL ST.
:45 A.M. College Class. Mr. Jack Matthews, Leader
11:00 A.M.
Srrmuii: "THE t ill 1U U S MINISTRY '1 0 THE WORLD'

171

WOODLAND CHRISTIAN CHURCH
East High at Kentucky Ave.
Miss Mary Hulda
Church School 9:30 A.M.
Sermon

"THE

Nursery provided during Morning

Allen,

Elmore Ryle, Minister
Minister of Education
Morning Worship 10:45 A.M.

WAY OF THE CHOSEN"
Youth Croups

Worship

CRESTWOOD CHRISTIAN
1882 BEllEFONTE DRIVE
Sunday Worship

10:30 o m.
For Transportation

REV.

Sunday

Coll

5.00 P.M.

low-forea- st

from six to nine
months since, he said, savings
reduced

for

Least critical of the evaluations of the State of the Union
came from Dean Jaros, whose
area of authority is in political
parties and process.

JAMES A. LOLLIS, Minister

9:30 a.m.

"Under the circumstances it
the best speech a shrewd polsmart
itician could make- -a
more than an) thing,"
speech
Jaros said.
is

"In terms of what reasonably

might

be expected

I

think he

did pretty well. He didn't really

of
propose massive new kinds
new prolegislation, any really
gram. I don't find new innovations proposed were that great,
he w ent on.

Jaros evaluates Johnson's
Great Society remarks as "indicating that he knows not much

progress is going to be made
w ith many new programs."
or was he "surprised" by
lax surcharge although he
srid l.c thought it would come
later. "My feeling is that on
the level of taxation before, the
surcharge probably w ill not have
a very hurtful effect."
On the point of combing in

vH

i

-

a

PRESIDENT JOHNSON
Something For Every lody?
the departments of Labor and

Commerce, Jaros said he doesn't
"think it will come alxuit." Ik-saisuch a merger would not be
acceptable to either clientele
group.
"Overall I thought he ran
the gamut pretty well for a State
of the Union message, Jaros ex-

d

plained.

A 'Guns And Margarine' Address
By JAMES RESTON
(c) New York Times News Service

-

President
WASHINGTON
Johnson's State of the Union
message was a courteous, conciliatory report on unfinished
business. He is in the middle of
his term and in the middle of a
host of troubles, and he was
careful by word, manner, and
policy not to make things any
worse than they actually are.
lie made gestures to everybodythe poor, the rich, the
allies, the enemy, the Soviet
Union and even the Chinese
Communists but exhilerated nobody, with the possible exception of the opponents of wiretapping. He modified his programs at the edges, but changed
nothing fundamentally. It was
a guns and margarine speech,
with a little more for the war,
a little more for the poor, and
the lower priced spread for the
folks in the middle.
The tone was solemn, even
grim. The soaring rhetoric, vivid
slogans, and glowing promises
of his first State of the Union
messages were absent. He was
disarmingly frank about the disappointments and even "errors"
in some of his domestic social
programs. Even in his analysis
of his problems abroad, he said
that "no part of our foreign
policy is so sacred that it remains beyond review."
But the whole rested on the
fundamental premise, challenged
by the critical hawks and doves
alike, that his present strategy
and tactics and diplomacy in
Vietnam were right. "We must
ask, as President Lincoln said,"
he observed, "where we are and
whither we are tending." And
his answer to these fundamental
questions was that we are morally, militarily, and diplomatically on the right track in
Vietnam and tending to success,
if only the nation will persevere
faithfully with him on this pol-

News Analysis
nation, the funds for foreign aid,
the problem of food and population.
There was in this speech a
measure of the majestic sweep
of .America's problems, of its
conscience, of its yearnings to
deal with the misery in the
cities, of its longings for the
unity of the human family, of
its desire for peace and equality,
and above all of its decency,
and its determination to preserve the privacy of the individual and the dignity of the
races.
It is clear from Tuesday's
definition by the President of
the political problems of the
day that he no longer believes
in the old concepts of a Federal government that can solve
the problems of the states and
the cities, or that the United
States can deal alone with the
oroblems of the nations, but
that new partnerships are essential, between Washington and
the governors and the mayors,
and between Washington and
the other capitals of the world.
There was a long briefing at
the White House Tuesday on
the meaning of the President's
address. The reporters gathered in the outer hall of the
Executive Office. Bill Moyers,
the President's press secretary,
defined the rules: nobody could
leave the room until the official
explanation was over. Nothing
could be broadcast or printed
before 9:30. Nobody could
transmit a word of the message

before 8:30.
The spokesmen interpreted
the President: Joe Califano explained the meaning of the
domestic program. Walt Whitman Rostow defined the essence
of the foreign policy statements.
They had a single theme.
"This is a period of transition." The nation is moving
icy.
There was nothing in this of from the Cold War to a period
the old accusative condemnation of cooperation with the Soviet
of the "nervous nellies," no sugUnion and the states of Eastern
gestion that his critics were
Europe. In Latin America we
"letting the boys down," no are moving from nationalistic
complaints about the inky riffprograms to regional cooperaraff or street walkers of the tion. In Africa, we are changpress, no jingoism or partisan ing from narrow programs with
tricks: only an appeal for a individual governments to wider
vote of confidence on basic Vietregional concepts and institunam issues that still divide the tions. In Vietnam, we are gocountry.
ing from bombing to pacifica-ion- .
This is really the heart of
In China from villification
the speech. Everything else to reconciliation.
rests on whether this premise
In the nation, the same conis right or wrong. Vietnam, with
cept: not party rights but nar
its $20
budget, tional responsibilities, not states
touches everything else: the rights but regional
cooperation;
budget, the deficit, the politics not Federal domination but
of the new Congress, the tax "partnership" with the states
increase, the division in the ami cities and counties; not
billion-a-yea-

CHURCH

College Seminar
277-378- 9

chases of certain durable goods
particularly cars (a seven percent drop) and major appliances.
The tax increase could have
possibly too great a dulling effect on the economy, he explained, due to less than Ixiuyant
sales which in turn could cause
a cutback in already
investments.
In addition savings could be

could make expansion in housing worse if money is more scarce
for loans.

w ill

try-ou-

for expansion.
2. A decline in consumer pur-

rather than consumption usually
get cut first. The effect here

UK Bulletin Board
YMCA's "Bogota 67" orientation piogram will begin at 7
p.m. Monday in Room 363 of
the Student Center.

equipment, and not much push

the spirit of domination by
anybody, racial or political, but
the spirit of cooperation.
There is in this State of the
Union message a noble concept,
a recognition that the political
conflicts of the past, national
and internation are out of
date, and that new partnerships
have to be formed.
Yet the promise of it all,
the unspoken thing that divided
the chamber of the House of
Representatives was still the
immediate division over the
war. The President was never
more generous or conciliatory
to all concerned, but in effect
he asked for a vote of confidence in his Vietnam policy,
precisely as it is, for as long
as it requires to achieve victory, and this is the one thing,
with the best will in the world,
he cannot yet achieve.

Brandenlmrgh
Named Assistant
Dean Of Men
Kenneth E. Rrandenburgh has
been named assistant dean of
men. Dean Jack B. Hall announced this week.
The former director of men's
residence halls joins Joseph T.
Burch, who also is an assistant
in Dean Hall's office. He will
also serve as advisor to the UK
fraternity system.
Burch will continue to work
in the area of discipline, programming, and student counseling.
Hall said Roger LeMaster will
serve as acting director of men's
residence halls, while the assistant director will be Milton Scott.

The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington. Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
ot Student Publications.
UK Post
Office Box 49H(i. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894. became the Record in 19O0. and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail $8.00
10
Per copy, from files
KERNEL TELEPHONES
2321
Editor. Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors. Sports ... 2320

News

Desk

Advertising, Business,
Circulation

2447

2319

* Till: KI.MK

No Results
Yet, AWS
Chief Says

Bv DAVID A IK EN
Thr CollrjcUtr Vrr
Strvlre

An

ol

-

Senate within three

weeks.

Fii-da-

The jxdl's findings will he
used as a guideline in an ANN'S
evaluation ol women's hours,
Connie Mullins, ANN'S president
said Thursday. However, ANN'S
AWS PRESIDENT MULLINS
will not be Ixmnd to enact any
No Results From Survey Yet
changes in curfews proposed bv
the findings, she added.
r
All women in University housThe current
priwere asked to take part in the vilege system is based on a buddy
ing
poll, which was held in late Nosystem. NVomen may sign out past
vember. Miss Mullins said about the regular curfew hours, but
60 percent of the women eligimust state the hour they will
ble responded.
return and have someone awake
The poll solicited opinions of to let them in.
r
Miss Mullins said a report
hours and asked
if the respondent wished to see of the poll's findings has been
any change in the curfew sys- delayed by final examinations
and Christmas vacation. A numtem.
Feelings on a system with- ber of the poll's questions asked
out a curfew, or an extension of for personal comments, thereby
r
privileges to sopholengthing the time required to
mores, or to freshmen, were asked. examine the response.
junior-senio-

junior-senio-

junior-senio-

Non-Violen-

ce

The statement continues,
"These values are also those expressed in the teachings of other
religious and ethical systems
and can be said to have universal meaning."
Dr. Engelberg said, "We find
living in a xvorld

ourselves

in

which violence is respected,
admired and taught to the
young. In forming this committee we join the growing ranks
of those committing themselves
to the task of finding
non-vi-

pav

molit h. to be

nit lease

illuw eil
30 next Sep-

l)

y

li

students.
The school calendar will
be reduced by two weeks.
Teacher course loads will

be reduced to 15 or 1() hours a
week. Some teachers now carry
up to 20 hours, while the union
had asked for a maximum of
12 hours (average class is three
hours per week).
Some classes met last Fri-

membership of 475 out of 684
faculty members.
In a
hour
session Sunday night in the of-

a

full-tim-

immediate
.(

an additional
tember. The union had original!)
asked tor .in immediate !s2. ()()()
annual increase.
Reduction of class sies
to a maximum of 35 students for
most classes. 2 lor English and
speech classes. The union had
asked 30 for most classes. 2)
lor English and speech. Some
classes are now as large as 10

CIMCACO
Chicago junior
college teachers have returned
to work alter a one-dasttike
over salaries and class teaching
loads was settled.
The walk-ou- t
began last
as alxmt 37 percent of the
teachers at Cook County College,
due to meet their classes that
day, marched in picket lines;
and another 30 percent called
in "sick."'
The strike affected the eight
branches of the junior college
with a total enrollment of around
34,500 students. The union claims
y

-

ANNS

kl.KM.I.. 1'iiil.it,

e

fice of Chicago Mayor Richard
J. Daley, negotiators for the
union Local 1600 of the Ameri-

f
day, but only about
the usual number of students
attended them. The union had
set plans for "emergency"' classes
to be held in churches, community centers, and homes around
campuses so that students did
one-hal-

can Federation of Teachers, and
the Chicago City College Hoard
reached agreement on salary increases, reduction of class loads,
and fringe benefits.
The agreement covers:

Seminar Begins Monday Night

entl resolutions to social conflicts. In this context
means not only an absence
of physical aggression but also
a positive concern for the welfare of the opponent."
The highlights of the seven
seminars will come in March
when Rev. C. T. Vivien, a member of the Southern Christian
non-violen-

Roulding of the Center for Conflict Resolution at the University of Michigan will speak on
"Peace Research as An Ac-

ing on "Authoritarian Trends in
Personality"; Dr. Engelberg,
speaking on "Applications of
The
Approach" on
Feb. 13; Dr. Neil Eddington.
Department of Anthropology,
speaking on "What Validates
Violence?" on March 0; and
Dr. J. J. Mangalam, Department of Sociology, speaking on
"What Future For
In A Violent World?" on
April 3, which will conclude
the program.
Non-Viole-

ademic Discipline." The sessions are scheduled for March
13 and 22 respectively.
The remaining seminars will
be conducted by UK professors
and members of the CommitLeadership Conference will tee on Peace Education and
A Per- Research. They will include on
speak on
sonal Witness" and on the fol- Jan. 30, Dr. Albert J. Lott, Delowing week Dr. Kenneth E. partment of Psychology, speak
"Non-Violenc-

.,n.

I

not siillel on final ex.nns
in alxiiit two w ccks.

one-da-

could

begin.

This was the first time a
college faculty in Illinois had
chosen a union lor collective
bargaining. Unions elsewhere
have represented college teachers.

Roth the union and the city
college board were formed last
of the junior
year as
college system, formerly operated
by the Chicago public school
system. The city Roard of Education voted last spring to transfer its authority over the junior
college to a new lxard which
was giv en its own taxing author- ,
off-shoo-ts

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INFORMATION SERVICE

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Available only at our Euclid
office, next to the Coliseum.
sible.

1)
111

iiuif

IH111'

JLaunJivt

loxagt

Next Door
To The Coliseum

Sanitonc
OrrfledMaskrViyckvotr

.

.

.

Charge Accounts Invited

2) Free Laundry Bags
3) Personal Checks Cashed

hed-ule-

t,

Non-Violen-

e:

sc

Student governments in two
the branches Wright and
Mav fair issued statements supporting their teachers. Paul
treasurer of the Wright
student government, told newspapers that the students backed
the teachers "because they feel
it will benefit students in the
long run bv concentrating on
quality rather than quantity.
Right now, they'reconcentrating
on getting as many students in
and out as possible."
y
walkout was the
The
second time in several w eeks that
the junior college teachers had
gone on strike. The earlier st rike,
from Nov. 30 to Dec. 2, was over
a demand by the College Roard
that the union renounce its right
to strike before negotiations

Best-Dresse-

ii

J

of

Attention Students:
Memo from
the Dean of the
d
College of

,1

t.

Chicago Junior College Teachers
Back On Job After One-Da- y
Strike

s

Hcsultx of an ANN'S poll on
curfews in women's dorms and
sororities arc heing compiled and
an- expected to he presented to

the

KV

A

* The Kentucky Kernel
The South' Outstanding College Daily
I'mvi ism iy ;)r Ki.vh c ky

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FRIDAY, JAN.

1804

l.ditorials n

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It is through one of these new
books that children are reading
for the first time this year about
the 14 Negro soldiers who won
the Medal of Honor for heroism
in battle during the Civil War.
They are also learning of the

who were
forced to leave their homes and
go to detention camps in World
s

War II.

One text tells of the achievements of Negro physician Charles
R. Drew, who pioneered the development of plasma blood banks
in the 1940 s. The same book notes,
"In the light of what this distinguished Negro doctor contributed, it is hard to believe, but
true, that the Red Cross then had
a ruling that Negro and white
blood used for plasma had to be
segregated and so labeled." Yet,
the American Red Cross widely
copied Drew's methods.
D. Murphy, a
of Benzinger Brothers,
Inc., publishers of this book, "Land
of the Free," noted it is the
target of a "Let Freedom Ring"
attack in Columbus, Ohio. Telephone callers are being told, by
a recorded voice, that the book
vice-preside-

unpatriotic and

because one
now a professor at
of California, once
an academic loyalty

Communist-inspire-

nt

d

of the authors,
the University
refused to take
oath.

might be expected, the
strongest "Land of the Free" committees have taken hold in Reagan
territory, California, where an effort is being made to keep the
book out of public schools on the
charge that it teaches children of
the "guilt and shame" of America's
As

past.
Loretta

Barrett, editor of a
new series of books published by
Doubleday Co., said that "Worth
A.

Fighting For," a b(X)k about the
Negro's role in the Civil War, produced a sharp reaction in the
South. A Florida teacher had her
tires slashed and her windows
soaped with warnings because she
used the book.
It is time Americans began realand
izing that many
are concealing their
own
bigotry
and' deceit under the guises of
Communist infiltration and the
right-winge-

super-patrio-

ts

narrow-mindednes-

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auto

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Censorship

super-patriot-

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Another example and there are
indeed many of the nonsensical
thinking by right wingers came
to light shortly before Christinas.
s
that
Now, these
American society are after
blight
history texts which depict important roles played in United
States history by Negroes and other
minority groups.

is

I'.ditor-l-

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Right-Win- g

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