xt7wpz51k190 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wpz51k190/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690401  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April  1, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  1, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7wpz51k190 section xt7wpz51k190 rrn
Tuesday Evening, April 1, 1969

Vol. LX, No.

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

121

Juul Releases Greek
:'1 M "

PlankOfSAR Platform

I

By SUE ANNE SALMON

7i
X

I

Kernel StafT Writer
Thorn Pat Juul revealed another part of the Students for Action and Responsibility (SAR) platform Monday night at the Tri
angle fraternity house.
The newly released plank calls
SAR members formally voted
for the Creek system to use politi- last week to accept the rest of
cal pressure on the Board of the platform.
Trustees to assure each fraternity
Juul said he withheld this
and sorority a house, building plank because he wanted one
site and building loans from the part of the platform which would
not be copied by the other SG
University.
Juul referred to the Central presidential candidates.
"Social sororities and fraterniDevelopment Plan of the Unities at UK, if they're not careful,
versity which calls for the destruction of several Greek houses within the next 20 to 25 years
within the next 25 years and at the latest are going to be
the construction of a new high-an- d nonexistent," Juul warned the
e
dormitory complex Triangle members.
with facilities for each Creek
He gave two reasons for his
group.
warning: "First, UK has stopped
However, Juul said after the giving building loans to sororiTriangle meeting that SAR canties and fraternities. And second,
didates for Student Government the Greeks can no longer look
for freshmen and sophomores to
representatives have not been offill vacancies the campus will
ficially informed of the addition
to the platform.
be all juniors, seniors and grad"Most SAR representatives in uate students."
the assembly support theplank,"
d
Juul said the Central
on Pa?e 8, Col. 1
Juul added.
t

low-ris-

Pat Juul discussed the University's building plans at Triangle
Fraternity Monday night, pointing out the University's plans for destruction of several Creek houses and urging the Creeks to seek alumni
pressure against the Board ofTrustees. Juul said the other SAR candidates
had not yet been officially informed of this Creek plank of the SAR
Thorn

Jau Speaks
To Greeks

Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

platform.

Tim Futrell Proposes
Expanded SG Cabinet

Develop-Continue-

1

,

i

I

u

By FRANK COOTS

Assistant Managing Editor
Tim Futrell and Jim Gwinn emphasized their "dynamic executive plan" as they made their campaign rounds Monday. They
also called for "liberalizing" women's hours, making The Kentucky
Kernel "more responsive and responsible" and an expansion of
pass-fai- l.

selection of the members of the
Board of Student Publications."
He also suggested the idea of
having two student newspapers
which would come out on altertimes.
He said he wants to "involve nate days. He said this would
40 to 60 students in the execu"provide a degree of competitive" in order to "upgrade cabinet tion and make the editor more
positions and office work." He responsive" to students.
Futrell said the Kernel editor
said this would allow for the
research of areas that are now is not "responsible" since he does
not have to "live in the combeing neglected.
There are currently four to munity for 10 or 15 years" but
"can go to Chicago or Louisten people involved in the execuville when he leaves school."
branch of Student Governtive
He cited Fred Wachs, editor of
ment.
Futrell said he wants to "see the Lexington Herald and Leathe Kernel more representative der, as an example of an editor
and responsive to student held responsible by his community.
opinion."
He said he would hold a reHe feels the way to do this
the Student ferendum after he was elected to
is to "involve
Covemment president in the
Continued on Page 5, Col. 1

Futrell claims the actual
"decisions lay in the executive,
not the assembly" which he described as being a "circus" at

;

?

L

.

-

Kernel Photo by Howard Mason

One Of

Many Stops

Tim Futrell, addressing the Delta Zetas Monday evening, said that
although he and Jim Gwinn "are the only Creek ticket, we intend
to appeal to a broad spectrum: Creeks, independents, and students
living both on and off campus." He also took the opportunity to call
for a stronger SC cabinet and student advisory committees.

Value Gap Cited As Reason For Censure

Publication Of
By DANA EWELL
Assistant Managing Editor
Publication of the University
of Louisville's student newspaper, The Louisville Cardinal, was
suspended Monday by U of L
President VVoodrow Strickler as
the result of an April Fool satire
issue published last Friday which
word
displayed a
meaning sexual Intercourse in a
headline.
(The April 1 issue was published last Friday because U of
L's spring break is this week.
The satire issue is an annual
feature of the Cardinal.)
The headline, "Dean Lawrence) Bans Publishing (the
word)," topped a satire
four-lett-

four-lett-

er

U

posing a situation in which the
dean sent memos to the University printers ordering them to
insert asterisks in place of any
words.
Nick DeMartino, editor of the
Cardinal, explaining the content
of the story, said the staff was just
trying to make the point that a
lot of people get uptight over
nothing.
"We have used the word before," DeMartino said, "and got
only a mild reaction. We didn't
think this story would be that
big a thing."
President Strickler sent a
memo to U of L's Student Board
of Publications announcing discontinuation of the Cardinal's
four-lett-

er

Of Us Cardinal Suspended
...

publication and asking the board
to investigate the campus newspaper and set up guidelines for
the Cardinal's futurepublication.
He did not specifically refer to
the headline or story in questioning.
'Set Guidelines'
"We have never felt it necessary to censure the student newspaper before, "President Strickler
wrote," but in view of the wide
gap which has developed between
some students and those with
more traditional values, I believe
it is time to set some actual
guidelines for what is acceptable campus humor and abuse of
the privilege of criticism which
we provide.

"
Students should be
given the opportunity to learn
from their mistakes without censorship, but a crisis has been
reached with this issue of the
Cardinal.

...

"
I am concerned that
we protect freedom of the editors, but I am also concerned
that we not subject students to
publications which they honestly
feel to be vulgar and abusive."
Dave Baker, who is in his
third year as director of student
publications and chairman of the
Board of Student Publications,
said he hoped the board could
meet next Monday.
U of L's publications board,

like UK's, has the authority to
hire and fire the editor of the
student paper.

"I see a change in attitude
in looking at student publications," Baker said. "In the past
the sole responsibility lay with
the editor, and if this responsibility were abused, then the editor was fired.
'Spread The Risk
"This new attitude, which
suspends the publication in-

stead, seems to spread the risk.
did like the idea of ho!i-inthe editor personally respon-

I never

g

sible."

Continued on Pace

8, Col.

1

* KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April 1, 19fi9

2-- TIIE

Rock And RolL Then And Now

Dill Haley and

the Comets at

the Cellar Door, Washington
The Mothers of Invention at the
Fillmore East, New York
By TOM MILLER
College Press Service
(CPS)-Wh- en
you get right
down to it, the question is, does
Bill Haley sound better doing
fifties rock than Frank Zappa
does satirizing it?
The circle has been completed,
rock is back where it began.
Maybe Frank Zappa is Bill Haley
in disguise (or vice versa). Is Bill
?
Are Rubin and
Haley a
the Jets (latest alias for the Mothers of Invention) for real? Whatever it is that the Mothers play,
Bill Haley started the trend that
led up (or down) to it.
Haley still has the spitcurl.
("That was our gimmick at the
beginning, it was our trademark.") He still wears a red
tux jacket, with the small fake
cardboard tie. The crowds are
a little different than in his heyday, or worse yet, they're the
same. The same people who
idolized him in the fifties were
back which makes them anywhere from 21 to 35. A total of
seventeen showed up for his opening night show in Washington,
but that didn't matter when he
started up with "One, two, three
o'clock, four o'clock rock; five,
six, seven o'clock, eight o'clock
put-on-

..."

rock
You lose yourself in his sound.

You're back in 1954 seeing
"Blackboard Jungle" with Glenn
Ford, Sidney Poitier, and of
course, Bill Haley and the Comets. Haley breaks into an old
Little Richard number, "Rip it
Up": "I believe you're doin' me
wrong and now I know
The scene ges mellow.

..."

Haley's tenor sax man, Rudy
Pompelli (who has been with
Haley lo these fifteen years) docs
his solo, "Harlem Nocturne." He
comes on like a Holiday Inn
lounge entertainer, but by the
time he's finished, you know
there are few sax men around
who could go through sounds
like that.
And all the while, bass player
Al Rappa plays jester to the group
by mimicking Haley, Pompelli
and the others. He is the true
showman. He takes his
bass, plays it in mid-aibehind his back, hurls it around
and finally gets up on it and
plays it while standing on top
of it. He mimics Little Richard
doing "Jenny Jenny," wearing a
wig.
long
There's no doubt what era
these guys came out of in the
middle of the song, the choreography gives it away. Lean left, lean
right, extend your left hand, bend
the left knee, lean left again,
three steps up, three steps
back
Upstairs between sets, Haley
submits to the two zillionth interview of his career, with the
same boorish reporters asking the
standards: how did it all start,
where have you been for ten
years, what do you think of today's music, do you still beat
your wife, etc.
But instead of coming right
out and asking it like that, you
see, you have to sneak around.
You don't ask, "How old are
you?"; you say, "What is the
age difference between the oldest and youngest in the group?"
Which is what someone did ask.
Trite or not, you do want
to know what the low priest of
rock and roll has to say. Haley
polka-dotter,

black-haire- d

....

d

America and Australia. Hishome
is in Mexico City, and when his
not even schmaltzy. He's an historical document who came off current U.S. tour end this month,
a 77 rpm victrola to perform he's back in Europe until November.
for the masses of the late sixties.
So "Wild Bill Haley," as he
Groups he's played with have
him. Back when Elvis was billed in Variety ads in '52,
surpassed
stumPresley was managed by Hank comes out of Chester, Pa.,
for Sun, Haley bles upon rock and roll, conSnow recording
brought him on his tour. Haley quers the world, and fades into
was the hcadliner when a group the oblivion of nostalgic crowds
called the Beatles were pulling in Europe. Yet at 41, he is still
down $G0 a week at a joint in doing the same shtick two sets
a night, week after week, year
Hamburg, Germany. But he preafter year, and now it seems,
ceded them all.
era after era.
"Original rock 'n' roll rec"We have become the Glenn
ords were made in late 1930
and early '51," he says. "At Miller of this era of music.
that time we were a country Whether we like it or not, we have
and western band. Not realiz- to do things like 'Rock Around
the Clock.' It's our bag."
ing that we were forming someJust when you start grooving
thing new for the young people
of the world, we used to sing with Haley, and feel like you're
rhythm and blues tunes with a talking to a national archive, he
country and western band. And tells you who his favorite group
then in 1952 we had our first today is: Paul Revere and the
million seller, 'Crazy Man Raiders. (Paul Revere and the
Raiders? Yup, that's what the
Crazy.' "
Since then, Haley and the man said.)
Comets have released over 300
Where does one go after a
singles, with "Rock Around the career like his ending up digging
Clock" now topping 16 million such groups? Ah, but there's more
(second only to Bing Crosby's money coming in. Whenever
"Blackboard Jungle" comes on
"White Christmas" in single record sales). Ah, such memories: just before the 4 a.m. sermon,
"Skinny Minnie," "Shake, Rat- you know more coin is going into
tle and Roll," "Burn That CanHaley's pocket. And NBC is do"The Saints Rock and ing a show on the origins of
dle,"
Roll," ad nauseum. He was at Rock, filming Haley on stage.
his best in"Rock-a-Beati- n
Another crowd is thinking of doBoogie." The boogie! Remember that, ing a movie on his life. And, turn
kiddies? That's where the term on your radios, fans . . . Haley
rock 'n' roll' came from: ("Rock,
has released a new 45 record
rock, rock everybody roll, roll, roll on United Artists called "That's
everybody rock roll . . . ") and How I Got to Memphis."
then Cleveland disc jockey Alan
Call up radio stations. DeFried got the term going.
mand that your local head and
record shops carry it. Create a
So what has Haley been docult. Have groupies follow Haley.
ing? Making films in Germany,
Italy, recording in Sweden, South Demand your school sanction a
Bill Haley fan club, and start
a demonstration when they refuse, FREAK OUT WITH BILL
is now beyond being camp.

He's

HALEY.
You can go only so far in
.

Untorattg

mixing music of another era with
today's culture. Once you do
that, the natural thing to do is
blend today's music with yesterday's culture.

Which brings us to the Mothers of Invention. The Mothers
at the Fillmore East on New
York's lower East Side is like
Dick Clark doing a sock hop
or Paul Anka singing at a New
Jersey resort. It is a group performing at their peak at a place
where they can amplify thoughts
and sounds.
Outside, the weekend regulars
are hustling. Money, tickets, bodies, dope, stolen goods, etc. You
want it? They got it. Occasionally someone gets what he's after.
As if on a stage, there are police
barricades up separating the hustlers from the hustlers.
Inside, you get one of the
Fillmore's slick playbill-lik- e
programs. The Yippies have a table

People

with buttons, calendars and Realists. Want anything? It's all
free. (Ask Bill Graham about
'free.' It's $5 for a good seat
at his music hall.)
The Joshua Light Show puts
on their visual representation of
minds in flux. Despite their professionalism, the Joshua Light
people put on a good backdrop
to the whole evening's set. A decent rock group called Chicago
appears. The Fillmore shows
some short subcultural movies.
The Buddy Miles Express does
its fine blues and rhythm combination.
Instalments are going out. . .
a few of the Mothers wander on
stage . . . freaky looking heads
. . . heady looking freaks. . . well
the leader of our
. . . where's
it looks likeZappa comgang
ing out now . . .
"Hi, boys and girls! You just
be quiet and mind your manners. We'll be ready in a minute." (Boys and girls? Is that
what he said? That's what it
sounded like.)
"Here's a hot new number,
kids." Hot by McLuhan terminology. New by anyone's standards. For the next 50 minutes,
Zappa leads the eight other members of his group in a
of rock, roll, sounds,
delightful
perverutterances,
sions, belches, groans, chromatic scales, solos, squeaks and
noises which could only be produced by either raving freaks or
accomplished musicians. One
suspects some of both.
But he can't leave. Rubin
and the Jets haven't been on.
Ah, they come back on to do an
old favorite. From 1958, they do
"Valerie" originally, they say,
by Joey Dee and the Starlight-er- s
(remember the Peppermint
Twist?) Listen to them croon.
"Valerie" should be in the
Smithsonian' Institution as the
classic obnoxious tune of the
fifties. Maybe all of them. It
forhas the
the
mat, the oozing lyrics and the
significance of Judge Crater. But
comes the middle, Zappa does the
conversation part, where the lead
would always talk about such
enlightening things as the comer
malt shop, carrying your girl's
books, his dog, and his car.
To call it parody might be
underestimating Zappa's verbal
prowess. Let's call it extension-ism- .
While the others do the
in the background, Zappa,
in the slow high school drawl
of his, tells about "Do you remember the time, Valerie, when
we went to the junior-senio- r
high
school hop?" (Zappa's got out his
sharrrp car. Accent that V in
sharp. He spends hours on his
sharrrp car.) After tripping into
the neighborhood drugstore to
buy his 27th prophilactic and a
c
of Romilar
Zappa
makes it with Valarie in sharrp
car. Finally they "get to the
dance. I reached out to cop a
feel and you kicked me .
it with Valarie in sharrrp
car. Finally they "get to the
dance. I reached out to cop
a feel and you kicked me .
VALARIE . . .
...
Valarie. . .
And they're
offstage.

...

fantas-magor-

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A

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April

1,

l9-- 3

Chicago Revisited: Action In The Courts Now

rooms the night of the ConvenBy JOHN ZEH
CoIIcrc Press Service
tion. Patricia Saltonstall, a McCHICACO-T- he
first hints of Carthy press aide, announced last
spring have breathed life into week that she will sue the city for
Grant Park, but a cold wind the treatment she received.
still whips off Lake Michigan to
A suit seeking a pennanent
chill noontime strollers. The injunction barring police from
benches and waste baskets have interfering with reporters at news
been rqoaired, and the ground is events has been ordered refree of litter. The contrast beopened. A theology student who
tween the cold, empty park and was beaten by police while urgthe memories of late last suming demonstrators to leave Linmer is striking.
coln Park has sued the city for
Seven months ago troops and 31.25 million. The constitutionalpolice lined Michity of the local parade permit
ordinance and procedures has
igan Avenue in front of the Conrad Hilton Hotel across from the been challenged.
park. Thousands of youthful demThe Dox Score
onstrators gathered to protest "a
Municipal courts are grinding
closed convention in a closed
out convictions at an assembly-lin-e
city." They were beaten and
rate. At least 343 persons
bloodied. The cuts and bruises
have been found guilty on minor
have healed, but the scarsofChi-cag- o
charges, many through copping
linger.
pleas to avoid court appearance
or potentially-greate- r
fines for
Netvs Commentary
a plea of innocence. Charges
have been dropped against some
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, the 269 others. At least 66 other cases
defeated Democratic
are still pending.
The ten demonstrators found
candidate, returned to the
Hilton for the first time since guilty March 19 of interfering
the summer for a convention of with a policeman have vowed ta
educators in early March. He said appeal. The trial of 13 other
he "will never forget the experdemonstrators (some delegates)
ience" of the August troubles.-"- charged with disorderly conduct
hope Chicago will always be is a major. test of the legal limits
remembered, so that its memory ' of protest marching. ' It has
may inhibit us from dealing with entered its final stages.
dissent by means other than comThe city police department
munication, reason, responsibilisays it has reopened its investity, sympathy and compassion."
gation into misconduct by its
Cook County and federal offiofficers. Forty-on-e
cops have been
cials are secretly preparing more suspended and two have reindictments
against
signed. The eight indicted are
leaders of the disorders. On considered scapegoats by some,
March 20 the big names in the but officials say it is hard to make
anti-wa- r
movement were charged a case against individuals.
with conspiring to use interstate
Local
rebellion
political
commerce with intent to commit against Mayor Richard J. Daley
violence. Eight policemen were was spawned by the convention
also indicted, and a TV news fallout. Daley's Democratic or- director was charged with bug- ganization lost a city council seat
ging a closed convention hearing. to a black reformer and was
Legal action is also being forced into a runoff with a "new
taken against the city of Chicago. look' ' Democrat in a special
The American Civil Liberties Unelection March 11.
ion (ACLU) will soon file a mamen retained four other
Daley
jor damage suit against city of- seats, but the challenge to the
ficials and the Conrad Hilton mayor's authority may be healthy
Hotel on behalf of the McCarthy for future campaigns. There is
workers who were beaten in their even some talk of Daley's not
ial

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running again in 1971.
The mayor exploded in early
March when asked to comment
on Hubert Humphrey's statement that the convention trouble
hurt his chances of winning the
presidency. "It was the candidacy of Humphrey and the policies of the Administration on
Vietnam," said Daley of the
Democrats' defeat. "We had
nothing to do with it."
"Mayor Daley taught us a
great lesson about this country,"
wrote columnist Murray Kemp-to- n
(now on trial for demonstrating while a delegate from
New York). "Having learned from
him, we will never be the same.
Anyhow I hope not."
'Opened The Specter'
"What happened in Chicago
was an appalling portent of things
to come. The portent must not
be ignored. We cannot learn the
lessons of Chicago soon enough,"
said Sen. Wayne Morse. The
Avenue
incident
Michigan
"opened the specter" of what
to expect in a police state, said
author Norman Mailer.
The "coming down" of the
indictments against the Chicago
Eight (known as "The Conspiracy" since their number is sure
to grow) is considered the first
major manifestation of repression
to come under the new Administration and the accompanying
sentiment for "law 'n order" that
was indicated in Chicago. "This
is just the beginning," said Richard Goodwin during the Battle
of Michigan Avenue. "There'll
be four years of this."
"The energies of change are
breeding like yeast," writes educational reformist Michael
in "The American Revolution, 1969" in the current issue of Rolling Stone." "Discontent, disobedience and disruption
are spreading too rapidly. Abroad
repression of youth has begun."
The provision of the 1968 Civil
Rights Act with which the eight
were indicted for violating is
Ross-ma- n,

"clearly unconstitutional,"

ac-

cording to Jay A. Miller, head
of the ACLU's Illinois division.
The law "would mean an end to
overground dissent" in the U.S.,
he said. "There could be no demonstrations because it would be
impossible to know when one
might become disorderly."
Rennie Davis andjerry Rubin,
two of the indicted protesters,
have also scored their indictments
move. Yippie
as an
Rubin called them
a "bald attempt" to stop demonstrations by tying up movement
people in legal hassles and frightening other potential organizers.
Davis, who coordinated the convention protest for the National
Mobilization Committee to End
the War in Vietnam (MOBE),
law is part of
said the anti-riadministration's
the
Nixon
"broad strategy to clamp down
on insurgents on the campus."
The new courage being demonstrated this year on the cam- anti-disse-nt

myth-mak-

er

ot

puses can be traced to Chicago. Dave Dellinger, indicted
MODE Chairman, has talked
about the "heady sense of manhood that conies from advancing
from apathy tocommitment, from
timidity to courage, from passivity to aggressiveness. "There is
an intoxication that comes from
standing up to thepoliceat last."
William K. Williams, a race
relations consultant, wrote in the
ACLU's "Law and Disorder
"Most of the young people came
to Chicago as amateurs both
in protesting and in the political process. At week's end, many
had become hardened guerrilla
fighters, and they took that training back to college across the
country." "In Chicago, for
once," adds Dellinger, "a generation which sees through the false
idealism and ugly purpose of the
U.S. aggression in Vietnam found
alternative, more meaningful satisfaction in a heroic battle in
which righteousness was clearly
on their side."
Chicago Campuses Embroiled
Campuses in Chicago have
been embroiled in protest and
controversy this year, but the
city has kept its hands off. Police
were not used during the occupation of the University of Chiadministration building,
cago
and campus officials handled incidents at Northwestern, Roosevelt and Chicago City College.
But the windy city is not without repression. A Latin youth
organization, the Young Lords,
is continually harassed by police.
Chicago was recently called" the
most segregated city in the U.S."
by a Justice Department official.
During one day in court recently, a draft resister was jailed for
two years while a
businessman got only six months.
But the liberal community has
reacted ("flipped out," says editor Abe Peck of the underground
Seed) to Chicago with a new
distaste for the citygovemment's
tax-evadi-

USED BOOK STORE
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from a recent Seed collage
The trial of the Chicago Many
could help pull the Movement
together at a time of divisive-nesOne Movement activist,
quoted in Liberation News Ser-- .
vice's analysis of the indictments,
put it this way: It could be the
political trial of the century, or
we could get stomped.
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A huge demonstration
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been planned for Chicago on April
5, the day of renewed protest
at the end of Nixon's "honeymoon" and the
lull. The city of Chicago will be
given another chance then.

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drives have been
announced to help defend all of
the "Chicago political defendants" and to appeal the cases
out of Daley's courts. A national
headquarters for defense is being
set up in Chicago. Davis and the
others intend to use their trial
as a forum to indict the Daley
and
Nixon
administrations.
"There was a conspiracy in Chicago," says Rubin. "It was the
conspiracy of thousands to oppose an illegitimate and immoral
political party."

Lexington has the second hi ghest food prices among eight
Kentucky cities surveyed recently by a UK technical writing class.
A committee of seven students
prices.
from an English 203 class comA&P food stores were shown
pared prices of national brand-nam- e
to have the highest, total price,
products in Kroger, A&P,
yet ironically, gave no stamps.
e
and independent
Kroger had the lowest combined
food stores in cities throughout
total of prices compared.
Kentucky.
Cities surveyed were chosen
Owensboro ranked highOnly
er than Lexington stores on food on the basis of accessibility to
committee members. Twenty-fou- r
prices, according to the survey rewere comsults. It also was noted that there
was no relationship between pared on the basis of nine
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The ACLU's Miller sees this
polarization within the city as
the most serious outcome of the
convention. "The brutality and
reality of Chicago was a good
education for many, but fear was
generated," he said in an interview. "We've ended up with a
city even more intolerant and repressive."

Local Food Prices High

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Editorials represent the opinion of the Editors, not of the University.
Lev B. Becker,

Editor-in-Chi-

Darrcll Rice, Editorial rage Editor
Jim Miller, Associate Editor
Howard Mason, Photography Editor
Chip Hutcheson, Sports Editor
Jack Lync and Larry Kellcy, Arts Editors
Frank Qxts,
Dana Ewcll,
Janice Barber
Larry Dale Keeling,
Terry Dunham,
Assistant Managing Editors
Guy M. Mcndrs III, Managing Editor
Tom Dcrr, business Manager

1

Budget Threat
Gov. Nairn's statement Sunday

at Murray State University that the
conduct of students on state college
campuses may determine how well
their schools fare in budget allotments this year smacks of a threat.
Although he said this situation
arises from state legislators' and the
public's responses to students, it
is apparent that he endorses this
attitude to some extent. After all,
he could use his authority to override such influences if he were not
in substantial agreement. In addition, Nunn himself talked about
"noisy prophets of dissent risen up
among us from the rubble of crisis
and confrontation" and about campuses being "reduced to incubators
of discontent and training grounds
of anarchy as some outside our

SG

state have done."
Nunn clearly holds the unenlightened view that radical students are bad and are to be stifled
perhaps by pressuring college and
university officials trying to obtain
a healthy budget. What Nunn does
not understand is that with people
like him in control of our governmental machinery, much of what
radical students are telling us is
sadly all too tme. Changes are
needed desperately and immediate- But perhaps Gov. Nunn will
choose to act as his chi