xt7ttd9n5x39 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ttd9n5x39/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690327  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 27, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 27, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7ttd9n5x39 section xt7ttd9n5x39 The ICemtockot
Thursday Evening, March 27,

19

Kernel

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

VoL LX, No. 118

SG Candidates

Debate OnKernel, EEb
Personalities
O
'5
R

0

By JANICE BARBER

Assistant Managing Editor
A three-wadebate between Student Government presidential
candidates Wednesday night centered on the theme of "who's
producing and who's proposing." It was a spirited discussion
which focused on personalities and reform of the Kernel.
Speaking at a Young Ameri
cans for Freedom (YAF) meeting,
"We would not hamper freeSG presidential candidates Bruce dom of the press," Futrell said
Carver, Tim Futrell and Thorn of his running mate Jim Gwinn
Pat Juul addressed the topic "The and himself.
Executive Branch of Government:
Also discussing the Kernel,
The Kernel became the cen- Juul said he thought the paper
ter of debate early in the dis- should be held responsible to its
cussion when Futrell, appealreading public.
"The Kernel has. to be held
ing to his YAF audience, began
his proposals for campus improveresponsible to someone. The proment with a call for reform of blem with the Kernel if there
the Kernel.
is a major problem is that they
The campus YAF group, now aren't responsible to anyone."
with a claimed membership of
Juul repeated a previous pro151 students, has been engaged
posal that the Kernel should be
in a campaign to reform the held responsible to a reorganized
Kernel.
Continued on Page 2, Col. 1
"There is an institution on
this campus that unfairly represents the student body that
institution is the Kentucky Kernel," Futrell said.
Futrell called for a greater
student voice in selection of
student members of the Board
of Student Publications through
By FRANK COOTS
participation of the SC president.
Assistant Managing Editor
Futrell said later he had not
Tim Futrell and Jim Gwinn,
formulated a complete plan of
selections, but thought the SG candidates for Student Governpresident might work with the. ment president and vice presiUniversity president in selecting dent, spoke at Blanding 3 last
the seven student members of the night in an attempt to corral
the endorsement of that dorm's
board.
Futrell also proposed an SC House Council.
The Blanding 3 House Counstudent referendum on the Kernel
cil will decide next week which
to question the representativeness of news coverage and to candidate, if any, to support.
Futrell noted that the three
test student opinion on means of
candidates'
selection of Kernel editors.
plat- presidential

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Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

Tim Futrell makes a point in a three-wa- y
SG presidential debate
Wednesday night sponsored by the Young Americans for Freedom.
Taking notes is Thorn Pat Juul whil e Bruce Carver (at Juul's right)
relaxes against the wall. The three candidates spent most of the
time calling for reform of the Kernel and attacking each other.

Student
Politics

Futrell Wants Liberal Women's Hours,
Expansion Of Student Gov't Assembly
were all "similar" but
stressed that he and Gwinn could
both "propose and produce."
Futrell claimed that he "has
not alienated administrators as
the other two candidates have."
He denied that he was a "yes
man" but 'said that he just was
not antagonistic. He feels this
gives him "the best chance of
persuading."
Throughout his talk, Futrell
made it a point to name administrators he has had personal contact with while implying that the
other two candidates did not have
such a working relationship.
He said an SG president
"must have cooperation from the
administration" but was quick
to add that he would not "bow
down to them."
Futrell claimed that he and
Cwinn were "the only candidates
with the experience and knowledge of issues that reflect the
total student opinion."
As for the issues, he said he
forms

was "firmly committed to liberalizing women's hours." He
said such a "liberalization"
would be stretching the dormitory hours to midnight to weekdays for freshmen and 2 a.m.
on weekends for freshmen and
sophomores.
Pushed further, he said he
favored abolishing hours completely for juniors and seniors
although his proposals will follow the AWS recommendations

which he "will push all the way
to the Board of Trustees."
The Associated Women Students are currently working on
a program to liberalize women's
hours.
When asked about compulsory housing, Futrell said he
was against it "although we realize we have to fill these dorms
or the tuition will go up."
As an alternative, he
on Page 6, CoL 3

Grad School To Back
All GSA Expenses
By STONEY FRANKLIN

Kernel Staff Writer
The Graduate Student Association (GSA) disclosed last night it
has been told by Dean Lewis Cochran that the Graduate School
will underwrite all costs of the organization.
Craduate student Joe Aponte,
in a committee report before the CSA, indicated that Dean Cochran's reaction to the organization was "very favorable" and
that the dean would like to meet
regularly with representatives
from the association.
"He also mentioned," Aponte
said, "that he would be in favor
Special to the Kernel
of students from the organizaState University (MSU) WednesMOREHEAD,
tion sitting in on meetings of
day formalized a speakers' policy providing that the dean of students
the Craduate faculty."
must approve all guest speakers.
Dr. Roger L. Wilson, vice
As adopted by the school s
Aponte added that Dean
Cochran preferred students not
regents, the policy requires that president for student affairs, inofficially recognized campus or- dicated that the policy has been to sit in on the Graduate Counganizations seeking to sponsor followed unofficially in the past cil because of "private matters"
that are discussed.
a speaker must explain in detail by the school.
the nature of the speech and give
The GSA organizational evoOrganizations wishing to apreasons for inviting the speaker.
lution now has reached its second
a ruling under the new
Included in this would be a peal
with representatives of
policy may have a hearing before stage 13
statement of how the event is the executive committee of the some
departments rallying beexpected to contribute to the ob- Committee on Student Life or hind elected or appointed reprejectives of the organization and before the committee as a whole. sentatives.
the university.
Labeled an"effectivepressure
The Committee on Student Life
MSU President Dr. Adron
is made up of five students, five organization" by acting chairDoran said universities should exman Mason Taylor, CSA already
faculty members and four adminpose students to differing viewistrators.
has effected an extension of some
points but not to speakers whose
graduate students'
At the sane meeting the MSU
appearance would "serve no
parking permits.
worthy educational purpose or regents approved the reduction
Under a suggested plan, gradwould tend to provoke undesiraof the school's controversial manuate students were to be extended
ble behavior on the campus or datory ROTC program to only
B permits only until April 1,
the freshman year for male it
. . . would violate state or federal
law."
Continued on page 5, Col. 1

Guest Speakers At Morehead
Must Be Approved By Dean

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Kernel Photo by Dick War

Spring
Style

Margie Feldhaus of the UK Dames Club
models one of the creations from their spring
style show Wednesday night at the Agricultural Science Auditorium. Members of the
Dames Club and ' McAlpins Teen Board
modeled in the show sponsored by McAlpins.
Hie proceeds from the show go to Cardinal
Hill Children s Home.

.

head

inner-camp-

us

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, March 27,

2

19G9

Candidates Square Off At YAF Meeting
Continued from fare One
SG through direction of funds.
Carver said there should be
"more responsible editors" and
that critics of the Kernel should
apply to work on the paper.
Earlier in the meeting, Carver,
talk
opening the
round, said that he felt students
can only judge the candidates
on the basis of past achievements
and the type of students supporting them. He then proceeded to
name his individual supporters
and their affiliations.
Outlining plans for improve
te

ment of the executive branch.
Carver called for better use of
the cabinet positions and of student presidential appointments.
"Steve and I have not
promised a single cabinet position," Carver said, speaking for
both himself and his running
mate Steve Bright. Carver said he
would make applications available so students could apply for
the cabinet, with selection on the
basis of merit.
Carver also called for closer
contact with "the groups that
the administration has come to

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Juul, answering the challenge
of Futrell's call to distinguish
between producers and proposers, said his bills and those
of SAR would stand for themselves.

Addressing his YAF audience,
Juul labeled himself as a "radical conservative," and based his
introductory remarks on the
American democratic principles
of capitalism, individualism and
belief in the principles of the
founding fathers.
"No one has stood for the
rights of the individual as we
have," Juul said of SAR. Following in the paths of the founding fathers, Juul said SAR's role
was to propose legislation. He
pointed to 30 SAR bills which
passed this year.
Juul condemned the Carver-Brigplatform as "plagiarized"
from the previous SAR platform.
"I'm wildly enthusiastic over the
Carver platform almost one
hundred percent of the platform
is SAR initiated." Juul went on
to point out similarities of wording to SAR bills and to previously enacted legislation.
Juul pointed out that the SAR
platform was formed in a "democratic meeting" with room for
revision, "not like the otherplat-form- s
ht

that 'materialized from

smoke-fille-

rooms."

d

Administration Building.

PETER CUSHING

f

at the

Office of the President in the

COLOR

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CHURCH

DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
Mr. Herren
"Mon'i No To God".
Provided for Students
9
6
Call
or
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RD.

APPLY MOW!

HUSTON-RA-

REFLECTIONS

RELEASED

with the Faculty Senate to
achieve the initiation of the pass-fasystem a semester early.
Calling for increased communication between the student
body and the SG, Futrell announced plans for a "student
days" program where SG officers would go out to find informal "grassroots"
student
opinions. He also called for a
central presidents' conference to
establish liaison with dorm governments.

Carver himself had been fired
from his post as director of
Reviewing portionsof his platrelations.
form, Carver said that the execuCarver later defended his retive branch should publish a
newsletter for all students, work cord as the SG cabinet director
with dorm governments, promote of interschool relations and said
a scat in the assembly for a his removal from SG President
representative of dorm govern- VVally Bryan's cabinet was a rement, keep regular office hours sult of his stands on the Kernel
and go out and maintain informal and on the housing policy, which
communications with students. were contrary to Bryan's.
his accomplishOutlining
Futrell, sounding the theme
of the debate, said, "There are ments, Futrell. said that he had
too many proposers of many served to execute legislative dethings and producers of nothing. cisions and as a liaison to the
The question is who proposes and academic community.
FutrelT said he had served
who produces."

STARK PRODUCTION

- COLOR
by

for a greater role for the cabinet,

TAYLOR

IN

PANAYISION

Hryan as office manager and that
he and Debbie Clarke had worked

(USAC).

2356 HARRODSBURG

ELIZABETH

Chiding Carver, Futrell said

that while Carver had called

Universal Release
Directed b JOHN HUSTON

Prod)
noaucsLsr nuuvisioi'Roii

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by RAY STARK

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BIG WEEK

Applications must be returned by
APRIL 21, 1969 to be considered.

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pjn .featuring
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and here it is at Meyers. ...

There

substitute for this real moccasin construction, so don't be fooled by imitators. Here's the genuine "Bass
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brown. $15.00
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Mnh

Coeds Compete For Title
Of Miss Lexington Tuesday

W7

ZJ,

1W.9-

-3

TODAY and TOMORROW

Several UK coeds will be competing with other young ladies
the title of Miss Lexington at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Transylvania
College s Haggin Auditorium.
Today
The winner of the event, spon Dayton, Ohio; Lina Beth Cox,
Income tax forma and Information
will be available between 11 a.m. and
sored by the Metropolitan Wom- Campbellsville; Debora Mitchell,
on Tuesday i and Wednesdays
an's Club, will receive a $300 Barstow, Calif.; Carolyn Honeck, In p.m. Student Center until April IS
the
at the tax booth sponsored by Beta
scholarship and represent Lex- Malinta, Ohio; Ann Marlowe and Alpha Psl.
The English Department Is offering
ington in the Miss Kentucky pag- Doris Davis, both of Frankfort.
The
Awards to the
eant this summer.
student or students with the best published works in creative writing. There
The participating UK coeds
All proceeds are used for the Is a $50 prize for the best poem and a
story.
are Betty Foley, Gene Bryant, club's charity projects. One of $50 prize for the best should It is neceshave been
sary that each entry
Donna Taylor, Betty Susan
them is a $1,000 scholarship to published, but the medium of publication is not important. All entries
all of Lexington; Karen be presented to a student in the should be typed,
with
and
O'Reilly, Erlanger; Karen Knight, field of special education at UK. an original place aofcarbon. A statement
as to the
publication should
for

1

Danlzler-Farquh-

Esen-boc-

k,

double-space-

d,

also be Included. Please submit all
entries to Professor Robert D. Jacobs,
McVey Hall, English Department, prior
to April IS.
Focus '69 will feature a Focus on
Social Morality March 28 and 29 in
Memorial Coliseum.
Members of Alpha Epsilon Delta,
national
and
honorary, in cooperation with d Dr.
Plsacnno, will be advising
and
students throughout
in Room 8, Bradley

snow
times
t:00, 4:00,
0:00, 8:00, 10:00

pre-dent- al

Hall, from 8 a.m. to S p.m. each day.
on Biomedical
"'The Colloquium
lecture is
History and Philosophy
cancelled for the month of March.
for student parkacademic
ing permits for the 1969-7- 0
year are being accepted now through
4 by the Safety and Security
April
Division. Applications may be picked
up at the Student Center Information
desk, in the residence halls and the
d
Safety and Security Division, 109
Hall.
Professor A. William Salomone of
the University of Rochester will speak
on Italian History at 4 p.m. Thursday,
March 27, in Room 24S of the Student Center. The public is Invited.
Tryouts for majorettes,
and twirlers, to march with the
UK Band, will be held Saturday,
March 29, at 1 p.m. Applications must
be returned by Thursday, March 27
to Room 33 of the Fine Arts Building.
For further information contact Harry
Clark at 2811.
SDS will hold a mass meeting on
Thursday night, March 27, at 8 p.m. in
the Student Center.
Kin-kea-

s,

Coming Up

pre-me-

pre-dent- al

The UK Soccer team will play
Western Kentucky University and the

of Tennessee, Saturday,
'University
March 29, at 1 and 3 p.m. respectively.
The teams will meet on the field adjacent to the Student Center parking
lot.
The UK Track Team will host the
University of Cincinnati in a dual
track meet Saturday, March 29, 1
p.m., at the Sports Center.
The internationally acclaimed Thiel
College Choir of Greenville, Pa., will
be in Lexington Saturday, March 29,
to present a special lenten concert
at 8 p.m., at Morton Junior High
School.
Auditions for the Jenny Wiley Mu-fl- c
Theatre will be held Sunday,
March 30, at 2 p.m. at the UK Fine
Arts Building, Room 17.
A Hillel meeting will be held Sunday, March 30 at 5:30 p.m. at the
Temple Adath Israel. The deadline
has been extended until that date
for those interested in being a guest
in a local home for a Passover Seder.

UK Placement Service
Register Friday for an appointment
Tuesday with:
Control Data Corp- Math, Physics,
Elec. E Mech E. (BS. MS); Met. E.
(Ph.D.). Citizenship.
l'j.'i.

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are the ideas that
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Mineral Depletion?
Municipal Bonds?
Capital Gains?'

Censure At EKU: Blatant Repression
Eastern Kentucky University
President Dr. Robert Martin has
shown the institution under his
control to be the nonschool that
it is. By censuring student body
president Steven Wilborn for distributing copies of "The Student
as Nigger" and forcing him to
return the undistributed leaflets
under pain of "appropriate action,"
Dr. Martin has become representative of the unenlightened leadership
which
institutions of enlightenment are receiving.
Mr. Martin charged that the
essay was "obscene," presumably
because of some of the language it
contained, in asking Eastern's
board of regents to censure Wilborn. Although for some strange
so-call- ed

reason he sees the essay, which,
incidentally, makes a very effective
criticism of college regimes much
less repressive than the one at
EKU, Dr. Martin does not see the
school' s mandatory ROTC program
which turns students into rows of

marching vegetables and helps to
prepare them for killing as being
obscene. It is ironic that Dr. Martin and Wilborn fought over the
issue of mandatory ROTC last yearj
with Wilborn obtaining an endorsement from his student council to

do away with the requirement.
And with Dr. Martin ignoring both
student sentiment and their reasoning.
Unfortunately for Dr. Martin,
Steve Wilborn cannot be idioticalradid
ly classified as a
cal or as an outside agitator. Wilborn instead is a neatly-dresseclosely trimmed Shelby County native. And even he is repressed
by the EKU board of regents.
This sort of repression is usually
not so blatant at most schools.
It goes on in more subtle forms.
People wonder why there is so
much" student unrest could Jt be
because students are finally waking up and realizing the situation
for what it is? Even at EKU?
long-haire-

Iernel

The Kentucky

d,

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

1894

THURSDAY,

MARCH 27, 1069

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Lee B. Becker, Editor-in-ChiDarrell Rice, Editorial Page
,
III, Managing Editor
Tom Derr, Business Manager
.
Jim Miller, Associate
Howard Mason, Plwtography Editor
Chip I Iutcheson, Sports
Jack Lyne and Larry Kelley, Arts Editors
Frank Coots,
Dana Ewell,
Terry Dunham,
Janice
Larry Dale Keeling,
Assistant Managing Editors
ef

Guy M. Mendes

.

-v-

"

Editor
Editor
Editor
Barber

Kernel Forum: the readers write
EDITOR'S NOTE: All letters to the edidouble-spaceand not,
more than 200 words in length. The
writer must sign the letter and give classification, address and phone number. Send
of
or deliver all letters to Room 11
the Journalism Building. The Kernel reserves the right to edit letters without1
changing meaning.

tor must be typed,

d

3--

On Grapes
To the Editor of the Kernel:
I wish to attack both sides of the
"grape issue." It seems to me that both
bearded protestors and
our
long-haire- d,

n
(presumably)
'reactionaries are really not in there with
their hearts, but only to make some kind
of impression on each other. This is giving rise to an unreasonable kind of extremism on both sides, which does no
good at all to the supposed causes these
people are concerned about.
Take, for instance, the grape boycot-ter- s
the "left" side of the issue(al though
I have yet to meet an American who is
a true leftist, despite quite a few who
claim to be so). Their recent antics make
me suspect strongly that it is not grape
pickers they care about: for one thing,
ft is usually recognized that before more
or less extreme measures are taken, the
more normal avenues are attempted they
are often quite sufficient. In other words,
we conduct a sort of publicity campaign.
Now I may have missed the important
issue of the Kernel which carried an
article, about the poor suppressed grape,
pickers I haven't been actively looking
for such articles. The point here is that
this is poor advertising; someone like me,
casually reading the Kernel, without hot
issues on his mind, should be hit over
the head with the facts about these suppressed (?) people. As it is, being by
nature somewhat skeptical, I suspect that:
these things are true, but have not been
short-haire-

d,

clean-shave-

made aware of the facts. This sort of in Australia(my home country), the owners
reasonable approach, however, would inusually don't give a bugger how much
volve time and effort, and it seems that the pickers eat, if only because the amount
this is too much to ask . . . That at is quite negligible and you soon get sick
least some of these protestors don't care of it, anyway. It is possible, of course,
was shown by the picnic in the cafethat the California air breeds some real
teria, apparently a kind of boycott I mean supervisors, but I somehow doubt
have heard that some of these characters that things are different in this coundidn't care enough to bring their own food, try. What Mr. Fields really hates, of
and bought it at the grille they were course, is protestors, not grape pickers.
boycotting! That shows real sincerity! He seems to be implying that anyone
(Can you have an apathetic protestor?) who is being exploited is there due to
Another thing: I personally do not give his own fault. Where are your brains,
a damn whether anybody has long hair Mr. Fields? It can happen to anyone,
or short, a beard or a smooth face, or mate, just hope that it won't be you
whatever, but if you are trying to serve one day.
a cause, you should do so with everyDo not
assume this
stance in the name of humanity? Well,
thing you've got and perhaps even sacrifice some things, except moral principles.
if humanity suffers somewhere, then sureI could be wrong, but I do not believe ly it need not be a leftist plot to want
that long hair, etc., involves any moral to help them! Even if some of them are
principles. If you know that such things .leftist in orientation an easy thing for a
will antagonize a lot of people who might poor person, for whom capitalism is a highotherwise lean your way, then you owe ly theoretical and questionable viewit to your cause (i.e., yourself) to avoid point.
them you'd be much more effective. Less
If there are causes, and we all know
interesting, though, eh? Wouldn't make a there are, then let us try to help in the
lot of people turn against you unreasonably 'most effective way; if you have reasonable
and allow you to feel persecuted and arguments, then use these reasonable artherefore superior
guments; but while these two campus
fictions are slinging mud at each other,
All this provokes our "right-wing- "
and enjoying it, the grape pickers are
extremists, who, quite by reflex, pounce
on anything on the "left" side of the fence still being exploited, (as far as I know).
D. Britz
that moves, without even looking at the
Lecturer, Chemistry.
issues. Mr. Fields, writing recently in the
Kernel, is an example, though probably
on the extreme end of unreasonableness.
He feels compelled to attack the grape
Grape Shipment
pickers themselves, for some strange reason, lie claims that they are lazy. Well,
Send grapes to Biafra.
Mr. Fields, if you were being exploited,
Larry Webster
would you be trying to please? (I asTom Post
sume for the moment that there is, in fact,
John Nefzger
exploitation.) He claims also that when
Bill Moore
the supervisors are not looking, the pickers
A. P. Cullett
eat more than they pick. Well, in the
George Long
United States, things may be different,
Kelsey Friend Jr.
but from what I know of
Law Students
"right-winger-

...

I

fruit-pickin-

g

Kernel Chicken

s"

.

In my four years as a student at the
University of Kentucky I have daily observed with unreserved disgust the workings of a miserable publication named
The Kentucky Kernel. Like most of my
fellow students, I have had to admit with
shame that this indisposable rag represents
our University. After a time we became
used, to the steady stream of slanted,
degenerate filth which you (The Kernel)
distribute in the name of the new morality,
the new emancipated student and, worst
of all, the free press.
After four yean, I am no longer contented to sit back and let someone like
you tell the world what students feel.
I, like so many others, have felt that because we came from Kentucky and not
New York, that we probably weren't
a part of what is happening, and had
no call to judge the liberal movement
or the Kernel.
Yesterday, March

11,

1969,

was the

last straw. I found the idea of draft
dodging-politi- cal
deviants, like the Ker-

nel peaceniks, handing down criticism of
our country's medal of honor recipients
and downgrading that honor, was too
much to swallow. I don't think I could
live in this country if everyone held
such contempt for courage and the ideals
of sacrifice. No doubt, there would be no
country to live in if we had to depend
on Kernel chicken in time of war.
It is impossible to appeal to the intelligence of the Kernel editorial staff for
a change of heart, because it has neither.
Hopefully, the publication s board will find
the time to help the students who don't
have the time to picket, boycott and
Drastic reform is long overdue and the,
students, the real students, are not heard,
as usual!
Philip W. Disney
Engineering Senior
sit-i-

n.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, March

27,

l9-- 5

Grad School Will Underwrite GSA Costs
Continued from Tage One
when they would have been revoked.
Revisions now planned for
next year in graduate students'
parking include two new stipulation s:
Graduate students who are
research assistants may apply
for a B permit only if they have
"extraordinary schedule requirements." Also any graduate student with a primary teaching
responsibility of at least two
hours a week may apply for a
D permit.
"If you think this could have
happened if we hadn't organized," Taylor said, "then you're
badly mistaken."
In other organizational bus

it

iness, constitutional debate at
last night's GSA meeting focused
on an amendment which provides
for GSA representation.
The amendment reads:
are to be
"Representatives
elected on the following schedule: each graduate department
and the colleges of Law, Dentistry, Medicine, etc., choosing
to be represented on the Council
shall be entitled to one if the
number of graduate students in
such department or college does
not exceed 50 or two representatives otherwise."
Another section of the original amendment provided for 10
members of the association to be
elected in general meeting to sit
as members-at-large.

BIG WEEK

IB

at the

feOOK STORE

FRIDAY
4--

7

one-side-

from any department shall serve
consiston the Council-at-Larg- e

ing of 10 members."
The next CSA meeting is
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. April
9 in Room 213 of Kastle Hall.
That session is to encompass
procomplete organizational
cedures and election of officers.
Outlined as likely to provide
the "framework" for GSA, the
April 9 meeting will include a
combined meeting of depart

mental representatives and the
10
"
representatives to
form the Council of the GSA.
From the Council will be elected
4 officers to head the GSA.
"at-large-

All graduate departments who
have organized or now a re organizing are urged to contact members of the ad hoc organizational
committee, Mason Taylor at
telephone extension 2701 or Al
Sharp at 2461.

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The amendment was challenged by several members of the
GSA who attacked the section's
potential for eventually "packing" the assembly with representatives of one department and
for
d
leadership and representation.
Following heated debate the
amendment was defeated and
another amendment substituted
and passed which provides that
"no more than three members

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A Contemporary Issues Forum
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ANSON MOUNT
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KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, March 27, 1909

TIIE

Former Cuban Air Chief
To Speak Here Friday

Pedro Diaz Lanz, former chief of air force under Fidel Castro,
will speak at 2 p.m. Friday in the Student Center Theatre.
Young Americans forFrcedom ,
(YAF) Is sponsoring his appearance.

i

A guerrilla in Castro's revolutionary army, Diaz Lanz was