xt7v9s1km12r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7v9s1km12r/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701023  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 23, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 23, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7v9s1km12r section xt7v9s1km12r 10

THE KENTUCKY
T1V TEH 7TT)
TCH
UZj JIU 11 UJ

Students

SG Asks

V

For Voice
In Senate
The Student Government Assembly paietl unanimously last
night a bill recommending that
the University Senate be restructured to include 40 studesit representatives.
The bill was drawn up by the
SG Tripartite Committee, which
is composed of three administrators, three faculty members and
three students.
John S. Nelson, a student
member and chairman of the
Tripartite Committee, said the
majority report of the committee,
it adopted, would reconstitute
the University Senate with 160
faculty members and 40 students.
"Faculty would be elected by
proportionate allotment among,
and election in, the colleges. . . .
Student membership would also
be apportioned among the colleges according to relative student population," Nelson report-

T

LV

Friday, Oct.

2.1, 1970

University of Kentucky, Lexington

From Falling Brick, Mortar
By JANE BROWN
and BRADLEY JEFFRIES
Assistant Managing Editors
The University has begun
taking protective measures to alleviate the possible danger of
brick and mortar chips falling on
n
students from the facing of
and Blanding Towers.
Kir-wa-

J.D. MacARTIIUR WILLIAMS
at SG meeting

walkways

Canopy-covere- d

were installed at the main entrances of both towers Thursday. Within the next few days
the entire base of both buildings
will have protective coverings, according to George Ruschell,
acting vice president for business
affairs.
Ruschell stressed that there is
no immediate danger caused by
the falling chips. There is no
fault in the structural stability
of the buildings, he said, since
each floor is supported by a

reinforced concrete slab built into
the steel superstructure, and the
brick is attached to this superstructure.
Chips Are Small
Ruschell explained that the
falling chips are small in size
and apparently the chipping is
occurring only from the first to
the tenth floors of the 22 story
structures. It has not been determined yet if chipping occurs
higher than the tenth floor.
Robert Harp, UK director of
campus construction, believes the
chipping to be caused by excess
moisture attempting to escape
from the bricks. It was first
noticed in early April 1968, and
again the following spring. The
building contractors, Forster &
Creighton Co., under a one-yewarranty, made the repairs on
bothoccassions.
ar

Five Sessions in Five Weeks

Seminar to Examine Use of Non - Violence

five-sessi-

.

Complex to Be Shielded

Each student advisory committee would have one voting
member on the chief academic
decision-makin- g
body in its unit.
A report by the Student Government Election Board was also
ed.
SC also passed unanimously accepted by the assembly. The
a resolution urging the Univer- report recommends that candidates be allowed to spend up to
sity Senate to pass the proposal
of the University Senate Advisory $15 in an SG campaign with
Committee which urged the es- parties being allowed to spend a
tablishment of student advisory maximum of $25. The report also
Continued on Page 8, Col. 3
committees for each college.

By JERRY LEWIS
Assistant Managing Editor
"Violence has a spiraling effect, it only leads to more violence," said Jon Dalton, director
of the UK Human Relations Center and one of three coordinators
seminar on nonof a
violence scheduled for the next
five weeks at the Student Center.
Dalton explained that the idea
for the seminar arose mainly out
of "Pax", an informal group of
faculty and students who felt
that something was needed to discover viable methods of "creative
social change." The Lexington
Peace Council has also participated in the planning and organizing of the seminar.
"Violence can bring about
social change," noted Dalton,
"But does it bring about lasting
change or does it build its own
downfall? I tend to believe the
latter of the two."
Five Sessions Slated
The seminar in the theory

Vol. LXII, No.

and practice of
will
be divided into five sessions, the
first of which will feature Ceorge
Lakey, an educator and scholar
who has worked with the American Friends Service Committee,
a Quaker group. Lakey was also
the project director for a 1967
voyage which took medical supplies to South Vietnam.

on strategy planning. Particito simpants will use
ulate conflict situation for the
purpose of experience in developing strategies of
ExerNov.
cises: strategic action. Participants will again use
to implement
strategies and techniques.
Will Be Flexible
Lakey will be at a workshop
Coordinator Dalton explained
direct action at
on
that the entire seminar would
1 p.m., Oct. 17, in Room 206
of the Student Center. He will be flexible enough for changes
to be made in the planned series
also speak that night on nonviolent change at 8 p.m. in Room of meetings depending on how
245 or the Grand Ballroom of the the participants felt. Anyone who
is interested can participate in
Student Center.
The other four sessions of the the meetings.
Dalton explained that many
seminar will include:
seminars in the past had dealt
Nov. 3 A philosophical-ethicconsideration of the prinsimply with philosophical discussions but this seminar would
action.
ciples of
"go into more of an actual simNov. 10 Discussion of
Candhi and perhaps other ulation laboratory."
such
advocates of
as Martin Luther King.
Nov. 17 Simulation exercise
non-violen-

role-playi-

e.

role-playi-

non-viole-

non-viole- nt

al

non-viole- nt

Ma-hat-

"We want to go beyond the
theoretical and look more at the
practical," Dalton said.
Used
The use of
is a
popular type of training in which
people are asked to act out different types of situations.
The situations deal with certain types of conflict which could
arise at such events as a campus
protest. In the mock conflict some
participants act as the protestors,
others police, perhaps others are
agitators. The result is a simulation of an actual event where
action might take
place.
Other coordinators of the seminar are Dr. Joseph Engleberg
of the physics department and
Mrs. Nancy Ray, an assistant
dean in the dean of students office and sponsor of the Free
Role-Playi-

role-playi-

non-viole-

Harp said he has been trying

for two years to get contractors

started on repair work. Last year,
according to Ruschell, $40,000
was allocated for these repairs.
Yesterday, for the first time, a
portion of these funds was used
to begin construction of covered
walkways. There had been controversy between UK and the
state finance department as to
whether UK had sufficient authority to make use of this sum.
The approximate cost of present repairs is $7,000. The remaining sum will be used for continuing repairs this fall and completion next spring.
Lawsuit Possible
The big question now is determining who is to blame for the
situation. "We are trying to get
the architects or the contractors
to assume responsibility. Neither
would, so our only alternative
is a lawsuit," Harp said.
UK Attorney John Darsie sent
a letter Oct. 9 to six firms connected with building the structures which said in part: " . . .my
client expects that one or more
of you should bear the cost of
correcting the situation. Preliminary estimates indicate an approximate cost of $100,000 to replace the spalled brick and correct the present dangerous con-

dition."

Solution Asked
The letter further warned that
legal action would be initiated
on Oct. 19 unless " . . .a satisfactory solution to this problem
has been arrived at prior to that

date."

A contractors'

request for a
extension has been granted
after a discussion with engineers.
"The extension is not that
generous," Darsie said. "It is
going to take that long to get
the papers in order." If no one
assumes responsibility at the end
of this time, Darsie said, "We'll
just sue everybody and let them
fight it out among themselves."

30-da- y

non-violen-

Fayette to Investigate
City Officials for 'Bribery9
-

The jury, in what amounted
to a postscript to its regular reed Thursday for future investigaport, gave no indication of what
tion of "possible bribery, solicita- specific information it had or
tion for bribes and improper pol- who it might have involved.
itical presure on the part of cerHowever, the city has only
tain elected officials within our six elected officials-fo- ur
city
city government."
commissioners, the mayor and
the city police Judge.
A second paragraph said the
jury also understood that "an
Forecast of Lexington and vic- organization and a group of ininity: Partly cloudy and mild to- dividuals" had used illegal coday and tonight, mostly cloudy ercion to force merchants to make
and mild with scattered showers contributions.
and thunder showers Saturday.
That statement, like the first,
The high temperature today near
not elaborated upon.
70; tonight in the low 50s; high was
60s. The foretomorrow, upper
The Jury merely suggested that
cast for Sunday is partly cloudy the next grand jury investigate
and mild. Precipitation probabilthe alleged actions of city officials
ities today, 10 percent; tonight, and that city police keep an eye
40 percent; tomorrow, 50 percent.
on any possible coercion for
LEXINGTON

(AP)

Fayette County Crand Jury

Weather

The

call-

n'

-

"tV

"

l

I!--

Y
Wooden canopies like this one over the door of
Blanding Tower will soon shield the entire base
of the Blanding Kirwan Complex from brick and
mortar which has been falling from the buildings'

I

--

1

facades. The University said it may be necessary
to institute a Lwsuit against the buildings' arch- itects or contractors unless responsibility is
sumed within 30 days. Kmi Phow By sua Uotfmao

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

2

1070

2.1,

Evolutionist Scopes, UK Alumnus, Dies at 70

SHREVEPORT, La. TAP)
figures in the celebrated trial.
Prosecutor William Jennings
John T. Scopes, whose belief in
evolution led to the famed "monBryan died five days after he
key trial" of 1923, is dead of won Scopes' conviction. The colorful defender, Clarence Darrow,
cancer at the age of 70.
Scopes addressed the UK died later, as did the jurors and
"Pre-LaDay" last February the judge, John T. Roulston.
and spoke to UK students about
Scopes, 23 at the time of the
his famous trial.
trial, abandoned teaching when
Scope is a native of Paducah he was found guilty and eventuand a 1924 graduate of UK. He ally retired here after years as
had a major in law and minors a geologist for an oil firm.
in geology and education.
He became ill in July and had
He told students when he
He died
earlier this year that he been hospitalized since.
spoke
Wednesday.
wanted to return to UK to study
The trial, in the little Tenneslaw, "but I didn't want to live see town of
Dayton, was recountDarrow's shadow, so I gave
in
ed in movies, books and plays.
up the idea of being a lawyer."
In many ways it was like a carScopes, a football coach who nival, pitting two of the best
was a substitute teacher when orators of the time in a y
he agreed to test Tennessee's debate of the Bible vs. Charles
law against teaching evolution, Darwin's
theory of evolution.
had outlived all other principal
Scopes, who was assessed $100

Pi CTKEWTUCKY
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KenLOUISVILLE (AP)-- In
tucky as in most states the great
teacher shortage appost-wpears to be ending.
After several decades of teachers being able to pick and choose
their jobs, the selective slipper,
in many cases, has passed to the
administrative foot.
"We have about 330 emergency teachers this year, the lowest number ever," said Dr. Sidney Simandle, director of teacher education and certification for
the state Department of Education.
ar

JHE

A.

humor."

V

S

mm

-

more

22

to fill

to

the job needs in all occupations
and an increase in the number
of persons qualified to teach.
Other persons say the current
national economy has reduced
the number of
jobs,
causing more people to turn to
teacliing and those who now
teach to continue.
A third reason for the reduction in the number of teachers
needed has been a leveling off
of school enrollments in recent
years, a result of the country's
declining birth rate. Simandle
said the size of enrollment is
about the same in all 12 grades.
The lesser demand for teachers in the. state's public schools
also is showing up at its colleges
and universities. State schools
increased their faculties somewhat this year but questioned
how long they can continue to
do so.
non-teachi-

By VALERIE ELLISON

Kernel Staff Writer
Students and faculty members
of the school of Social Professions met Thursday night to discuss the role of "social change

agents."

Dean of

Dr. Ernest Witte,

the School of Social Professions,
said social change agents are anything that "moderate social behavior and serve the people intended
to be served."
He said that social workers
now are too preoccupied with
who need help,
individuals
noting that after helping the individual, the social worker often
forgets the situation that caused
the need.
"Because of failures in the

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Dr. Thomas F. Stovall, vice
president for academic affairs at
Eastern Kentucky University,
said the 25 new positions created there this year was about
half the number for previous
years.
He agreed with Dr. Carl Chelf,
associate dean for instruction at
Western Kentucky University,
that quality was the main difference in this year's job applicants.
"We've always had plenty of
applicants, but this year thequal-it- y
was better and we were able
to pick and choose more than in
the past," Chelf said.
Despite all reports, however,
there appears to be no notable
reduction in the number of stu
dents preparing for teaching ca- -,
reers at Kentucky schools. At
the University of Kentucky enrollment in the school of education is up about 13 percent.

Students, Faculty Discuss
Roles of Change Agents

k

o

JOHN T. SCOPES
Dead at 70

Boom Appears Ended

r

The figure is about half the
number employed in the tate
last year.
Kentucky colleges last spring
graduated around 6,000 qualified
teachers, more than twice the
number of new teachers hired in
the state this fall.
The figure in about half the
number employed in the state
last year.
Every year Simandle's office
publishes a list of teacher applicants. This year's list was the
longest ever, but there were fewer
requests from local school boards
for copies.
Excesses In English
The Kentucky
Surplus has not replaced
The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexshortage in all areas. The excess
ington, Kentucky 40506. Second class is concentrated
mainly in English
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the and the social sciences. A need
school year except holidays and exam
still exists for more math, sciperiods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student ence, vocational arts teachers and
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4086. instructors for elementary and
Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel special classes. But these needs
since 1913.
also are being met.
AdverUsing published herein la Intended to help the reader buy. Any
"I would guess by next year,
false or misleading advertising should
if present salary levels hold up,
be reported to The Editors.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
that the only emergency teachers
$9.45
Yearly, by mall
we will need will be in the
$.10
Per copy, from files
KERNEL TELEPHONES
very specialized areas," Simandle
Editor ....
Editor Managing
said.
Editorial Page Editor.
Associate Editors, Sports ..
There is a geographic as well
Advertising, Business, Circulation
as a subject division to the existing shortages. At least a third
of the current emergency teachers are in Northern Kentucky,
Simandle said, where the lure of
-- N.Y. Nmsi W
higher salaries draws many teachers across the river to Ohio.
ECSTASY CAUGHT
In Eastern Kentucky a tradiON FILM. A record
tional need for emergency teachof an extraordinary
ers in nearly all subjects is beevent... three days
ing erased by a steady populaof music, mud,
tion exodus that has reduced
school enrollments. Thisytarthe
grass, love, milk,
emergency needs in East Kenskinny dipping, acid,
tucky are about the same as
cokes, hot dogs, love,
for the rest of the state.
meth, music. In
Two Reasons
effect, the festival
Simandle offered two main
is still going on
reasons for the current situatio- nwith stunning good

IS THE MOST
MOST

something new, I
we review what had
suggested
self.
been taught," he said last March
31, the only time he returned to
He left the battle to Bryan, a
a classroom after the trial.
three-tim- e
presidential candidate
"I really don't know if we
and
serving as special Prosuector,
covered evolution or not, but I
Darrow, and unkempt criminal am a believer in evolution."
lawyer whom Bryan called the
In 19C7 the Tennessee Legis"greatest agnostic in the United lature repealed the state law
States."
teaching evolution.
Their arguments, in court and
The law had forbidden teachout, laid bare the conflict of old ing "any theory that denies the
time religion and the age of scistory of the Divine creation of
ence and drew worldwide attenman as taught in the Bible, and
tion of Dayton, just north of' to teach instead that man has
descended from a lower order of
Chattanooga.
Scopes said later he did not animals."
testify because he was afraid
Scopes is survived by his wisomeone would ask him if he dow, Mildred Walker Scopes of
actually taught evolution in that Shrevcport; two sons, John Thoclass.
mas Jr. of Lafayette and William
"I was a substitute teacher C. of New Orleans, and four
for 10 days, and because I didn't
sisters, all of Paducah, Ky. Burial
want to disturb the class outline will be in Paducah.
by injecting

Teacher Shortage May Be Thing of the Past

'

MOVING

fine that was later ruled excessive, never took the stand him-

CALL

252-172- 2

past on the part of social workers,
it has been necessary for all manners of programs to be developed," Witte said. Hesaidthede-velopmeof the Office of Economic Opportunity was a result
of the failures of the welfare system.
While calling Public Assis-

nt

tance, Federal Employment
and public
Compensation,
housing "good" social change
agents, he said that there is still

discontent because citizens have
rising expectations. "A society
that does not stand still wants
better things," said Whitte.
Denzel Johnston, a social professions assistant professor, discussed the role of social workers
in nursing homes. He said that
therapeutic activities for patients
was one of the social change
agents that could better nursing
homes.
The speakers emphasized that
social workers who advocated
social change were in a risky
business, especially when interfering with the present legal
structure. But they said that a
concentration of "resources, organization, devotion, and persistence" could bring about more
social change agents.

Tooth'Hrushing Drill
Not for Faint of Heart

-

SINGAPORE (AP)
Fifty
school children" fainted standing
in the sun in the Maylasian

city of Kuautan while waiting
for a child welfare official to
start a
drill, the
Straits Times reported. '
tooth-brushin-

g

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

1970- -3

2.1,

Hook .Review

Meaty ard's Photos Are Hauntingly Personal

The above quotations are introductory notes to the book
"Ralph Eugene Meatyard," a collection of 36 photographs by (appropriately enough) Ralph Eugene Meatyard.
If the words of Cassan and
Berry indicate something less
than full comprehension of Meat-yard- 's
By LARRY KIELKOFF
art, it is certainly no de"Even wnen' we . do- not un- trimental reflection on either of
derstand them, often we are them, both being accomplished
moved by them and must admit artists in their own right.
their special energy."
It is simply that Meatyard
Arnold Cassan
is such an intensely personal art"I turn from the photographs ist, that the ultimate signifigance
to my surroundings, feeling that of his photographs can probably
what I see is not all there." be realized only by Meatyard
Wendell Berry himself.

(Larry Klelkopf is Fhotography
Editor of the UK yearbook
"Ralph Eugene Meat-yardcollection of
a
photographs by artist Ralph
Eugene Meatyard, is available
for $5.00 from Morris Book Shop
or Wallace! Book Store.)
"Ken-tuckian-

."

,"

56-pa-

-

The fact that Meatyard uses
members of his own family for
models' children being frequent
subjects, is probably not merely
for the sake of convenience. Nor
is this meant to imply that his
photographs are too personal to
be without some worth for the
rest of us. Instead, Meatyard's
photographs are like gnawing
nightmares which one only partially remembers upon awakening
the next moming.
Meatyard takes that senseless
fear of the unknown that all have
felt at some point in their lives
and expresses it in an aesthetic
manner usually reserved for subjects thought to be more pleasing
to the senses.

As for his technique, Meat-yarhas mastered the low con-

d

trast print to the point where
grey becomes a brand new color.
He controls the neutral tone so
that it is deprived of all its neutrality, flirting with, but rarely
committing himself, to the extreme of black or white.
A perfect example of this is
one photograph of a barely perceptible human figure immersed
in deep shadow, with the facial
characteristics so obscure as to
be hardly visible at all. Meat-yard- 's
most frequent technique
however, is his use of blurred
images and multiple exposures,
in combination with such props
as plastic masks, abandoned

all-ma- le

house and police station in the
country make it perhaps the nation's most famous roster, is becoming less exclusive.
Rigidly restricted to only the
10 most wanted fugitives in the
country until the addition of H.
Rap Brown as No. 11 last spring,
it now contains 16 names. Four
of them are women.
Two of the six female fugitives ever to make the Top 10
have been apprehended; Ruth
Eisemann-Schiea principal in
the Barbara Jane Mackle kidnap case and the first to crack
the FBI's sex barrier; ' and Angela Davis, the black Communist sought in connection with
r,

As the pen and ink is to
Flayboy's macabre cartoonist
Cahan Wilson, so does film seem
to relate to Ralph Eugens Meat-yar- d
with the humor far removed.
In Cassan's words again,
"here is evidence of a personal
aesthetic, successfully acheived.
To all photographers this is im-

portant."

Perhaps it is important not
only to photographers, but to all
who have an interest in the development of art.

hlffl STnAjffg
SHE DIED WITH HER BOOTS ON...
AND NOT MUCH ELSE.

a California courtroom shootout. tenced to death for the murder
Miss Davis was arrested by of a legal secretary in Florida.
FBI agents at a motel in New Mrs. Arrington, who also had
York City last week. She disapbeen convicted of manslaughter
in the shooting death of her
peared after the August shootout and was added to the Top husband, was put on the list
10 Sept. 5.
after escaping from the Florida
The four women now on the Correctional Institution for Women March 1, 19G9.
Top 10 are:
Bernardine Rae Dohm, 27,
Susan Edith Saxe and
former national secretary of StuKatherine Ann Power, former
dents for a Democratic Society.
Brandeis
coeds
University
A leader of the radical, undercharged with murder in the death
ground Weatherman organizaof a Boston policeman following
tion, Miss Dohm is sought on a bank
robbery late last month.
federal charges of conspiring to
The FBI describes them as "memriot and bomb.
bers of a radical, revolutionary
Marie Dean Arrington, a
black woman who had been sen- - group dedicated to attacking the
United States military system
and undermining police powers."
They also are charged with
theft of government property and
state charges of robbing a Philadelphia savings and ' loan company. -

Russians Force Plane to Land.
Seize Two U.S. A rmy Generals
-

MOSCOW (AP)
Two U.S. were not immediately made pub- town of Leninakan, Soviet
Armenia, where the plane landed,,
generals, seized by the lic.
Russians after their plane strayed
U.S. officials in Turkey said are Maj. Cen. Edward CD.
h
across the
Scherrer, 57, commander of the
border, the generals were making an inwere being held incommunicado
from Erzurum to joint U.S. Military Mission to
spection flight
Thursday as the Soviet Union Kars, just 40 miles from the So- Turkey; Brig. Cen. Claude M.
launched an investigation into viet frontier.
McQuarrie Jr., 46, head of the
the incident.
An unsuccessful search for the mission's Army section; Maj.
A U.S. Embassy official said plane Wednesday and Thursday
James P. Russell, 42, the pilot;
it is "quite unlikely" that the had prompted fears that it had and a Col. Deneli, identified as
the Turkish escort officer.
generals will be released soon. crashed in the snowbound mountScherrer is from Shawnee-towWith them in the
utility ains.
III.; McQuarrie from Ft.
The first word that it was
plane were a Turkish escort officer and the American pilot. down safe came when the Soviet Benning, Ca., and Russell from
The plane apparently wan- Foreign Ministry called in the Piney Woods, Miss.
The Embassy consularofficer,
dered off course Wednesday U.S. charge d'affaires in Moscow,
during bad weather and crossed Boris Klossen to inform him the Peter B. Swiers, is prepared to
craft had "violated Soviet air fly to Leninakan, or wherever
the heavily fortified border. Details on how it was intercepted
necessary, to meet the officers
space."
The U.S. Embassy has re- as soon as access is granted,
quested permission to see the an Embassy spokesman said.
men, under the terms of the Leninakan is 12 miles inside the
U.S. Soviet consular agreement, Soviet border.
This is the first time in rewhich provides for access to U.S.
citizens being held here within cent years that a U.S. plane has
strayed across the sensitive borThe UK Philosophical Club three days of their detention.
In custody apparently in the der.
will hold an informal discussion
entitled "Philosophical Investigations of Undergraduate and
Graduate Education" on Tuesday, Oct. 27 in room 214 of the
Student Center.
The discussion will include
presents
both considerations of the philosophy of higher education and
the role of philosophy in higher
education.
Issues brought up during the
discussion will be used by the
Curriculum Conunittee of the
Philosophy Department in evaluating courses now offered in
Philosophy and in developing
new courses. The results of disAll the Pizza
cussion will also be forwarded
to Dean of Undergraduate Educaand Salad
tion John Stephenson.
Entertainment Nightly
You Can Eat
'
discussion
Participating in the
at 9 p.m.
will Dr. Tom Olshewsky and Dr.
of the PhilosoHenry Shank ula
iwJ SATURDAY
FRIDAY
phy Department; Dr. Clint ColBuffet Monday & Tuesday
of the School of Education;
lins
5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Cary Virant, a graduate assistant
in philosophy, and John Nelson,
411
Amie Davis and John Algren,
all undergraduates in philosophy.
Soviet-Turkis-

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six-se-

Male and Female

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Army

Philosophy Club
Plans Discussion

toy

NOW! First Run!

;10 Most Wanted Men9 Now Include Women
WASHINGTON (AP)-- An
bastion since its inception
20 years ago, the FBI's
"Top 10"
wanted list is making room for
women in increasing numbers.
In its first 18 years of existence, the Top 10 contained no
women's names at all. But in
less than two years, a lady kidnaper, a murderess escaped from
death row and four
revolutionaries
have
been included.
Slots on the list are handed
out at the discretion of J. Edgar
bachelor
Hoover, the
w ho runs the FBI.
The Top 10, whose wanted
posters in every post office, court

and dismembered

houses,
dolls.

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"THE UNDEFEATED"

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* The Kentucky Kjernel
University of Kkntvcky

ESTAHLISHED

FRIDAY, OCT. 23, 1970

1894

Editorial

represent the opinion

::::::::::;::W:::::

of the Editors, not of the University.

Frank S. Coots III,
Rob Iirown, Editorial Page Editor
Mike Tirrnry, Sport Editor
David King, Business Manager

Editor-in-Chi-

Joan Rrnaker, Managing Editor
Dahlia Hays, Copy Editor
Don Rosa, Cartoonist

Lawrence Forgy Appointed:
Right Man at Right Time
The selection of Lawrence Forgy as Vice President for Business Affairs represents a new direction for UK. Mr. Forgy's political background
suggests that the Trustees have finally realized the importance of a
business manager who can manipulate people as well as he does figures.
Forgy is well qualified for the post he assumes at UK. Any one of
his three positions in the Kentucky Department of Finance suggest his
competency to fill the UK post. While serving as Deputy Commissioner
of Finance, Director of the Budget and Director of Fiscal Management
Forgy has built a reputation of being one of the most able officials
in Frankfort.
In recognition of his abilities, Forgy's name was often mentioned
earlier in the year as a possible Republican candidate for governor.
His youth and energy have sold many people not only on his personality,
but on the programs he advocates. This salesmanship will certainly
come in handy as Forgy helps UK pinch a subsistence from a recalcitrant state legislature.
Forgy's appointment is consistent with President Singletary's emphasis
on the importance of the state university's maintaining the best of relationships with the legislature and the bureaucratic apparatus in Frankfort. One who has mastered this apparatus should do much for the University.
As Singletary has often pointed out, UK can no longer resent the
appearance of political elements in an academic institution. It is a repugnant situation, but the University must look more and more to state
government for the support it could once take for granted. A major
who have assumed
reason for this is the
the presidencies of sister universities in the commonwealth, and have
begun to siphon funds from UK to their institutions.
attitudes of many state legislators and the inThe
creased competition from other Kentucky colleges add up to a severe
curtailment in legislative willingness to allow UK the funds it needs
to provide a quality education to the residents of Kentucky. Forgy has
his job clearly outlined.
It is with relief and expectation that we welcome Forgy to the
University of Kentucky.
politician-administrato-

rs

anti-educati-

Kernel Soapbox
By

Politics in Pigurbia
Bad Wolf and the three
door. It's the
WILLIE GATES

From the many amusing situations we
see today, perhaps we can take refuge
in the archetypal tale of the Three Pigs.
Once upon a time (they all start out like
this) there were three pigs and a Mother
P
The Mother Pig decided that it was
time for the three p