xt7xwd3pzn0m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7xwd3pzn0m/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670412  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 12, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 12, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7xwd3pzn0m section xt7xwd3pzn0m Tee Kentucky

Kernel

The Sotith's Outstanding College Daily
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Wednesday Evening, April 12, 1907

Vol.

Students Asked
To Help Combat
Youth Crime
By

On llom
April 25

JOHN ZEII

Louisville
Will Not Get
Open Housing

-

A

last-minu-

te

plea by Mayor Kenneth
Schmied could not save Louisordinance as
ville's
the Board of Aldermen defeated
the measure 9 to 3.
The decision prompted a
march in downtown Louisville
last night and forced the planning of two rallies today.
The demonstration came just
after the announcement of the
A.

open-housin-

g

vote by Rev. A. D. Williams
King at 8:30 p.m. Marchers quickly formed outside City Hall and
moved South ending up at the

Seventh and Jefferson police
headquarters to protest the arrest of a marcher, Robert Sims,
for going limp and refusing to
move. Sims was freed at 10:50
p.m.

In a statement read before the
aldermen, third Ward Alderman
Cliester Jennings said the ordinance was rejected because advocates of the bill "premeditated
widespread disorders andoutside
agitators."
The demonstrations Louisville has seen since the measure
came l'fore the Board "so
poisoned the atmosphere that no
rational thought or action is
possible on either side of the
question," said Alderman Jennings.

In the Board's majority report, the aldermen said no further
action would be taken on the
bill until "our community regains its composure and the outsiders have gone home."
The aldermen recommended
a "positive
program
of community action aimed at
creating a climate for solving
the problem."
The Rev. Mr. King said "Negroes ... are not going to accept
this sitting down or standing up."
multi-phase-

d

there were 1,453 arrests, with
s
handled outabout
side court. Average age is 15.
Most delinquency occurs between nine and midnight,
and in July and
s
to
August.
Misdemeanors
are repeaters.
as boys
outnumber felonies
outnumber girls. Stealing or destroying property is the most
popular offense among boys.
Girls are likely to be behavior
problems.
"So it is a problem, a real
problem," Mr. Johnson commented.
What can the juvenile judge
do with a delinquent? He can
release him to his parents, or, if
guilty, can commit him to the
state Child Welfare Department,
Continued on Pare S
two-third-

Tuesday-S-

aturday,

One-thir- d

two-third-

5-- 1,

m

Vol

ANN'S

Kernel Associate Editor
Central Kentucky youth agencies want to recmit at least 500
University students to help combat juvenile delinquency next fall.
Dr. John Parker, executive
director of the Central Kentucky of politics, and establish profesRegional Health and Mental Resional policies," he urged.
tardation ('enter, revealed TuesDr. Ball listed two types of
day night that he plans to ask juvenile delinquents, occasional
UK's help in finding volunteer offenders, and
persistent, serious
"big brothers" for problem chil- ones.
dren and their families.
In Lexington, and elsewhere,
He said a pilot project inthe second type starts v ery early,
volving 30 UK students this se- he said, often at age six, and
mester, arranged through the usually among lowerclass youth.
Dean of Students' Office, has
Why? Blame the habitat. In
been successful, and shows the
Lexington's lower class, slum
program ought to be enlarged. areas, there is a lack of achieveUsing UK students is one ment motivation, nothing to do,
way to eliminate the manpower
poor health, delinquent parents,
shortage in the program for fightand inadequate "middle class
ing juvenile delinquency that Dr. facilities," such as parks, pools
Parks proposed during a panel
and libraries, he added.
discussion Tuesday night at MorAnother cause of JD is inadeton Junior High School.
quate family relations, "not neAlso participating was Unicessarily broken homes, but just
versity sociologist Dr. John Ball,
parents who don't care."
who said "building a better LexWhat motivates, pulls, a boy
ington" was a crucial solution into
delinquent behavior? Status,
to solv ing delinquency.
thrills, working out emotional
"We've got to give young
problems, desire to escape borepeople something to do, recogdom, and a desire for a sense
nize their individual differences
of belonging to the gang, he said.
in school, take delinquency out
The panel presented a short
course in juvenile delinquency.
Acting Juvenile Court Judge
Craddy Johnson drew this picture of JD in Fayette County.
Thirty percent of the county's
boys, by conservative estimate,
will be arrest ed or will appear
in court before age 18. Last year
Special To The Kernel

LOUISVILLE

IAIN, No.

A
tUJjJ

r

v
;

residence units.
Head residents, house mothers, staff assistants, and the
house councilsof Kecneland Hall.

)M

;fl

Complexes

Graduation Information Available
Commencement information and tickets arc being given out this
week at the King Alumni House. Coffee and soft drinks are being
served to graduating seniors.

Senate Okays Bill
Allowing Aid Test
By

April 25 is the date set l
the AWS Senate for a derision on
whether to institute a new set
of women's hours to begin in the
fall.
The hours plan under consideration has been tried experimentally during the past three
weeks.
The committee headed In
Jonell Tobin will make an overall evaluation of the plan and recommend action on the basis of
reports from the participating

JOHN D. MORRIS
New York Times

The Senate moved Tuesday to assure a Supreme
Court test of the constitutionality of federal aid to
schools and colleges.
While restating his opposition,
By voice vote and without
it passed a bill designed
Bep. Celler said in an interview
debate,
to permit judicial review of the that his committee would hold
hearings later in the session "afquestion by establishing procedter disposition of a very burures for contesting the constidensome and large calendar."
loans and grants
tutionality of
The panel held no hearings on
under various federal-aiprolast year's bill.
grams.
Senator Ervin and some of the
Past efforts to test such laws
seven cosponsors of the present
have failed because the Supreme
bill disagree on whether federal
Court held in 1923 that taxpayers lacked standing in court to aid to sectarian institutions is
constitutional but agree that a
challenge the way federal funds
arc spent.
Supreme Court test is desirable
bill would authorize suits to remove the uncertainty.
The
"It is impossible," Mr. Ervin
by individual taxpayers and by
told the Senate, "for Congress
public or other nonprofit agento legislate intelligently or for
cies. It is sponsored by Sen. Sam
the administration to administer
He conJ. Ervin Jr.,
tends that federal aid to
intelligently in a Constitutional
institutions violates a vacuum with no judicial guidelines as to what federal aid is
clause in the First Amendment
consistent with First Amendment
to the Constitution.
The new bill now goes to the proscriptions against an establishment of religion."
House for referral to the JudiciRep. Celler contended that it
ary Committee with doubtful
of favorable action. A was possible under existing law
prospects
for public agencies to obtain a
major obstacle is the opposition
of the committee chairman, Rep.
Supreme Court test of the Constitutional question.
Emanuel Celler.
WASHINGTON

church-supporte- d

d

church-supporte- d

7

and

8.

and

the

campus's 11 sororities will make
the initial written evaluations.
Others on the evaluation committee are Beth Brandenburgh. an
author of the experimental plan,
Jane Tiernan. who has worked
closely with the hours problem
since it became a campus issue
in January, and Beverly Moore
and Kate Elliston, both new senators.
Begun March 27, the experiment will end Thursday. With
mrxlifications, two more liberal
hours system now in effect extend closing hours from 10.30
to midnight on weekdays.
have "junior-senio- r

privileges" which automatically
enable them to stay out "until
dawn in theory, or until about
2 or 3 a.m. in
practice.") W eek-

end closing is 1 a.m.
AWS has extended hours until 2 a.m. April 15 for the Little

Bitty Kentucky Derby festivities.
Several conunitteewomen
were appointed in the Senate
meeting Tuesday, which was the
first presided over by newly elected president Jean Ward. They
were Mary Lou Swope, corres-

ponding
AWS contact; Pat Wykstra, recording secretary; Beth Brandenburg, treasurer; Miss Elliston,
freshman orientation; and Mary
Korfhage, policy committee.
Miss Ward told The Kernel
the policy committee had been
renamed to be "more inclusive
than rules and regulations committee."
Miss Ward and her v ice president, Mary Alice Shipley, have
said they intend to guide AWS
more in the direction of programming, and away from the governing of women students.
secretary-Intercollegiat-

e

For Tom Dotson, The GRE Was A Snap
By CARL HOLLAND
The average score on the Graduate Record
Examination is 490. The 99th percentile starts
at 820. Tom Dotson, a senior from Pike
County, scored 860.
"His grade was so high it went right off
the score sheet," said Dr. Clyde L. Irwin,
assistant dean of the College of Business
and Economics. Dotson's score is believ ed to
be an
high at the University for the
all-tim-

e

exam.

But 26 year-olTom Dotson is anything
but a "bookworm" or a "grade machine,"
though he lias had three 4.0 semesters.
is one of a number of Business
and Economics students paying all of their
d

Dot-so- n

school expenses.
When Dotson was still a student at Belfry High School, his father was killed in a
mining accident. Tom had no funds for college "just a strong desire to get an educa-

tion and to attend UK."

In high school he had worked as a stock
boy and had held a paper route. He managed
to earn enough to start college, but after
two years he was forced to quit school o
he could work full time.

Dotson returned to Pike County to teach
history in a junior high school, then came
back to UK for his junior year. He then left
school again and worked for an electric
company.
During this period, he lecame an official
in a union of electrical workers. "I suppose
became interested in labor relations then,"
he said. Dotson will study labor union economics on a teaching fellowship at Cornell after
he graduates in May. He was also offered
fellowships at Ohio State and her?.
1

This semester Dotson is carry ing 19 hours,
working for the Department of Economics,
and tutoring juniors and seniors in such
subjects as money and banking and economic
theory. "That's really tough work," he said

of the tutoring. In all he estimated that
he works 25 hours a week at present.
!
i
uoison nas no desire to take mil cired it
for his successes. "I've got to mention my
wife; give her some of the credit," he said
of Mrs. Dotson who works full time in addition
to her normal roles of homemaker and mother
of a son, 4, and a daughter, 3.
"1 also owe a special debt to Dr. Charles
W. Hultman of the Department of Economics
for his help and guidance." Dotson continued.
Dotson described the (.radii ate Record
Exam as a comprehensive, three-hou- r
test of
195 questions covering every field of economics. The exam is a requirement for students
planning to enter graduate sc hool and is also
required of seniors in certain disciplines for

it.

..irn

graduation.
"1 wasn't really worried until it wasov er,"
said Dotson. But he also said emphatically,
"I knew it." which indicated that he must
not have been very worried at all.

* i!--

KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, April

Tlli:

Clement Eaton: The Autumn Of His

WIIATS AIIKAI)
TV NEWS?

is most blessed when

JOSEPH
KENTI
CHS News,

discuss this
provocative topic
at 7:30 p.m.
Friday
Student Center
Theatre
Public Invited
appearance

spon-

by Philip Morris Inc., in
conjunction with the Kentucky
Intercollegiate Press Association
sored

The Kentucky Kernel
The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except holidays and
exam periods.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4986.
Nick Pope, chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
SUBSCRIPTION

RATES

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files

$8.00
$.10

KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk
Advertising, Business,
Circulation

"he

is in

1

2321
2320
2447
2319

one.
His lectures on the Ku Klux
Klan are scathing indictments
and his statements about Hooker
T. Washington are almost eulogies of greatness. Next year will
be his last at Kentucky.
He will leave in the late
summer of 1968 for Cambridge
University where he will be a
Pitt Professor of American History and Institutions for one
year.
Dr. Eaton has been at Kentucky 21 years. Since that time
he has written seven books on
Southern history, five of which
are now in paperback. One,
"Henry Clay and the Art of
American Politics" sold 11,000
copies last year alone, an unusually large number for a paperback text.
His eighth book, "The Waning of the Old South Civilization", will be published next
fall.
Prof. Eaton was brought up
N. C. in the
in Winston-Saledays when the South was struggling to shed itself of bigotry
and violence.
"I remember when I was a
boy we would run down to the

STARTS 7:30

Adm. $1.25

Winner of

Best Actress
Best Supporting Actress
Best Cinematography

4..4

I....

PROF. CLEMENT EATON: THE SOUTHERN GENTLEMAN
railroad tracks and watch the
old trains go through. Everyone wanted to be an engineer.
It was just about like the days
of Mark Twain on the Mississippi."
Professor Eaton left Winston-Saleto obtain degrees from the
University of North Carolina and
Harvard. He also attended Cambridge on a Sheldon Traveling
Fellowship.
Dr. Eaton has seen UK grow
m

from a small
college into a modern university.
He says, "Two things impress
me about this school. For one
thing," he says, "there is great
freedom for the professor to express his ideas. In all the time
I've been here I have never seen
any suppression of academic freedom.
al

"And Kentucky's growing sophistication both among the stu

By DICK KIMMINS
Hobert Craft conducted the
Lexington Symphonic Orchestra
in a usually lively, usually interesting, always exciting concert in Memorial Coliseum Tues-

STRAND
PIC IIHIIMIHn'""Hlll

m

W3B
FILMED

mil
NO ONE UNDER 18 WILL
BE ADMITTED UNLESS
ACCOMPANIED BY HIS PARENT

and Stravinsky's

IN

PANAVISION"

Peter OToole

TECHNICOLOR

Omar Sharif

The Stravinsky never really
got off the ground; jumping in
spurts and displaying only scat- -

NOW SHOWING!
PHC

KENTUCKY

Minimum
I j4 EAST main it.

tea
M1WI Trrh n intlor

NOW PLAYING!
Nominated for 4 Academy Awards

EDWARD ALBEE'S

THIS IS GEORGY S
ROOMMATE.

THIS IS GEORGY.

Bang! Bang! You're Dead"
in color

to teach my students to overcome prejudice."
He says he sometimes thinks
the extremists go too far in expecting the immediate abolishment of "ages of sorrowful Southern prejudices."
Dr. Eaton has a
theory of what a professor should
be to his students. "I think a
professor should contribute to
his students more than just his
specialty. I think he should share
his philosophy of life.
"I try to relate history to
modern life. I think people should
do more of that. History should
be much broader than politics
and battles. It should deal with
the whole lives of people."
After his academic stay at
Cambridge, Professor Eaton
wants to make a trip around the
world. Then he will go back to
his home on Tates Creek Pike
and "continue my rose garden"
which has been a hobby since
he quit playing tennis.
He says, "I want to continue to cultivate my mind. It
has always been my ideal and
goal in life."
well-define-

d

.

J

mi iimuia uir mm
miumuini ioiuiilj
IVse'ils

SUGGESTE0

came

when

Mrs. Xaomi

Arm-

strong, coordinator of music education with the University, sang
Schoenberg's "Song of the Wood
Dove" with full orchestration.
With the exception of the
music
conductor
produced,
Robert Craft was the dominant
force of the evening. His complete control of the orchestra
drew the difficult music, with
its continuously changing tempos, out of the Symphony, which
performed with an obvious air
of perhaps treading on too difficult ground.
But it was a delightful evening. Modern music can achieve
a more somber, and a more

bril-

liant sound with the atonality
and dissonance inherent in its
composition. It was a night different than any seen by
and a night not easily
concer-

t-goers,

forgotten.

IpitficjjMyviS
I'll,,
NOW SHOWING!

I'lCTl HKS prnral

FRKl) Zl.WKM ANN'S
FILM

1

jaMosMasoNaLSNBaresLywNfieoGfiave

perfec-

(X)I.L'MHIA

L

S

tered times held the listener's
interest. On the other hand, Beethoven flowed along like a
tly-geared
machine perhaps
flowing too ponderously.
The highlight of the evening

BEST PICTURE
OF THE YEAR!

VI

f

Plus

his lectures with quips and jokes.
One day in a lecture on the reconstruction black codes, he told
of the harsh penalties Negroes
had to suffer for stealing a watermelon.
He quipped, "Why everybody
knows it was almost natural for
a little Negro fellow to steal a
watermelon back in thosedays."
In actuality Dr. Eaton is delighted w ith the Negro's heretofore successful battle for equality and justice. He says, "I am
delighted to see the Negro progress in education and in dignity and, I thoroughly approve
of most of the attempts to stamp
out hatred and prejudice. I try

AWARDS INCLUDING

HIS IS GEORGY'S
ROOMMATE'S
ROOMMATE.

V f7 7m? nmnnrD

Tony Randall, Terry Thomas

"Pu-cinella- ."

machine.

well-oile- d

ODE

OF

vinsky,

"Fireworks" was the first major piece of Stravinsky's. Its premier some 50 years ago brought
on the commission' for Stravinsky's "Firebird Suite."
day night.
The bubbling and eratic music
The concert presented Lexingwith a fair- was played at a quick (120) tempo.
ton's music patrons
rely representative array of atonal, The first selection was cooly
modern music. The concert, ceived and mercifully short.
As a complete contrast to
which originally was to be conStravinsky's atonality, the second
himducted by Igor Stravinsky
self, featured "Fireworks" by selection on this first concert in
Festival of the
the
Stravinsky, Beethoven's "Sym- Arts University's
coidd be compared to an
No. 1," "Song of the
phony
old, creaky woman just getting
Wood Dove" by Arnold Schoen-ber"Second Suite" by Stra- - up in the morning and a smooth,

BED HM3Q

PRODUCTION

dents and faculty impresses me.
I think the school is encouraging the development of a high
caliber of professor."
From a historian's viewpoint,
Professor Eaton is quite outspoken about America's present
and future. But he isn't much
worried about the chaos and
rapidity of life which seems to
engulf the country in the 1960's.
"It's perfectly natural that
the older generation should not
like the changes that arc going
on. But it is a sign of vitality.
I think it is a part of intellectual
maturity to have some protestors
and critics and I don't feel that
politically active students should
be arrested unless they violate
the law."
But he also feels that students should have a certain
amount of patriotism.
In class Dr. Eaton often spices

ears

1

Music: Exciting Concert

NOW SHOWING!

ERNEST LEHMAN'S

n

g,

Best Costume Design
Best Art Direction

IN

i

:

m

the autumn of his years."
Clement Katon, professor of
history, is in the autumn of his
years. Many of his students call
him Kentucky's "elder of southern gentility." Others refer to him
as "The senior symbol of the
New South."
Regardless of what one calls
him, he has become an entity at
the University. The white hair
and brief mustache arc reminiscent of a Kentucky Colonel, w hen
it used to mean something to be

Hear

Benri's

r

JOHN O'BRIEN
A port in the middle ages
once wrote that a man's life is
likened unto the seasons and, he
Dy

von

Mr.

12, 1W7

e

FOR MATURE AUDIENCES

iW

A MAN
FOR ALL
SEASONS
From llic

l

l)

I

* THE KENTUCKY KHUN IX.

WY.hu mI.in,

12. IW.7

Apiil

t

Youth Groups Will Seek Students
To Fight Juvenile Delinquency
Continued From rage 1
which f)X'ratcs Kentucky Village
and other facilities. Or he can
use t lie more desirable disposition, probation, in which the
youth can stay in his environment, but with regular counseling and supervision. If the act
committed is serious, the judge
can hold the youth over to the
grand jury.
Richard Walker, executive director of the Fayette County
Childrens Bureau, said his agency's facilities arc "nothing to
write home about." He attacked
public "apathy and complacency" over the care of delinquents.
"It's appaling at times to
think that a little dog (set afire)
on High Street gets more attention (in the Lexington news- -

Bulletin Board
Students returning to the campus in September wishing to apply for student parking permits
may do so in Hoom 4, Safety
and Security Office, basement
of Kinkead Hall, Student Center Information Desks, Housing
Office, and the main desks at
the residence halls. Deadline for
applications is July 1.
The University will have its
KEA Headquarters in the Plantation Room, Sheraton Hotel,
Louisville during the' KEA Convention through Friday.

there, he said, bec ause they have
no facilities for observing chil-

dren w hile locked up.
Dr. Hall said he thought it
unfortunate that most people do
not become interested in a youth
until after he becomes delin-

quent.

Fxplaining the treatment philosophy in J I), he said. "If we
can curtail some of this behavior
by treatment, we keep them from
going on to bigger and better
things in crime, and can save
the public a lot of money. A
lot of these kids can be salvaged."
Dr. Parks also mentioned apathy and the inadequacies in people and facilities. "We re coming
in too late with too few resources," he said, adding that
most delinquent tendencies can
be spotted at an early age, pos-

Mr. Walker also was critical
of the area park system, saying
in terms of recommended parks
per acres "Lexington is so far
out of it we'll never catch up."

The panel conceded Fayette
County does have "suburbia delinquency" as well asJD in the
"poverty pockets."
Another panel member, Capt.
Lloyd Lindsay of the city police juvenile division, named affluent mothers for JD. "Mothers
are too busy playing bridge that
they don't have time for their
children," he said.

sibly six or sev en.
He suggested setting up a
Lexington interagency and lay
council to coordinate action
taken against JD, and "mobilizing the churches" in the effort.
Fifty to 60 people attended
the panel, p;'rt of the city Optimist Clubs' "Hespect for the
Law" program.
During a question session,
Mr. Walker said that Kincaid
home was so pwrly designed
it "provokes hostility." "W'e
have to turn a boy loose within
three days or he'll destroy us."
Someone is going to get killed

ment Representative from the
Navy Recruiting Station, Louisville, and the Aviation Procurement Team from Memphis, will
visit the campus tliis week to
discuss opportunities as a commissioned officer in the United
States Navy. The officer procurement teams will be available at the Student Center from

(3 New York Times Nfwi Service
W

cerned by Nov. 30, 1967.

alxmt it, a California physician
said recently.
"In California we have been
witnessing an increasing use of
hallucinogenic drugs that, in my
opinion, has reached near epidemic proportions," said Dr.
Duke Fisher of the
Institute of the University of California at Los

KERNEL CLASSIFIED ADS
BRING RESULTS

Three
easy ways
to get YOUR

Zip
Code A

Karen Kiel, left, presents a plaque to Lyman Ginger, retiring
dean of the College of Education, on behalf of the Kentucky
Student Education Association. Dr. Ginger was honorec Tuesday
for his "interest in every student."

"With the apparent high freLSD with students and also to
quency of LSD usage, one can try to get some accurate idea
only surmise what may be yet of the extent of its use.
further chronic effects of this
very
hallucinogenic 1,400,000 AMERICANS
potent
ARECURED OF CANCER
agent" the physician observed.
Dr. Fisher spoke at the annual meeting of the American
College Health Association. He
said there were no reliable
national figures on usage of I
Lysergic Acid Diethylamide
the full name of LSD.
Dr. Fisher and Dr. J. Thomas
Ungerleider, also of the
Institute, have visited
schools
and high
colleges
throughout California during the
past year and a half to discuss
Tar-tara-

te

N'euro-psychiatr-

ic

spontaneously months after it

j)

was last used.

Recently, he declared, a new
variation on this phenomenon
has come to notice. They have
found that the delayed recurrences may come not only to
previous habitual users, but also
to persons who used LSD only
once, and then without particularly strong reactions.

03 Ask your postman.
Look at the Zip Map in
the business pages of your
phone book.
Call your post office.
Always include your Zip
Code in your return address
so others can easily Zip mail
to you.

PH.

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NEXUS

Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising Council

version workshops for users who
are planning to convert Fortran
programs from the 7040 to the
model 50. The workshops
360
are scheduled for: April 19, from
8 a.m.-- 5 p.m. in Commerce 422;
April 20, 9 a.m. 12 p.m. in Funk-hoiis125; and April 21, 1 p.m.-- 4
p.m. in Funkhouser B--

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Angeles.
Adverse reactions to LSD are
also increasing, he said, as well
as cases in vvhich the drug's
bizarre effects, including panic
and paranoid feelings, recur

The Computing Center is offering a series of Fortran con-

--

- Educators

ASHINGTON

and doctors should spend less
time denouncing LSD and more
time telling students the facts

9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The Navy is again accepting
applications for the direct appointment active duty law specialist program. All applications
will be considered only for the
March 1968 class and must be
received by Bureau of Naval personnel by Oct. 1. A notification
of consideration of applications
will be returned to those con-

is

Dean Ginger Honored

Doctor Tells ldurators. Doctors
'Slop Denouncing LSD.' Talk About ll

Neuro-psy-chiatr-

U.S. Navy Officer Procure-

A

papers) than our whole case
load at Kincaid Home," he said.
Mr. W alker said his bureau's
function is supposed to be treatment, but a manM)wcr shortage
and inadequate facilities virtually make this impossible.

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The Kentucky
The South'

Outstanding College Daily

UNIVKItSITY OF Kr.NTtJCKY
F.STAHLLSHKD

1894

WEDNESDAY,

AnilL

12, 19G7

Editorials represent the ojrinions of the Editors, tint of the University.

Waltkr

M.

Chant,

Editor-in-Chi-

Sikvk IUxro, Editorial rage Editor

William Knait,

Business Manager

Vietnam In '68
Unless there are some drastic
changes within the coming 19
months, voters are going to be offered little choice on the Vietnam

question in the

1968

presidential

election.
There currently can be little
doubt that Lyndon Johnson will
seek reelection. Robert Kennedy
may be doing well in the polls,
but he is a politician and therefore not likely to attempt any upset of his party's leader. It is just
as unlikely that President Johnson
will make any significant change
in his foreign policy.
At this point, Richard Nixon is
probably the strongest leader the
Republican Party has. Nixon has
spent nearly as much time praising the Johnson Administration's
actions in Vietnam as has Hubert Humphrey.
Although there
would likely be some small changes
made were Nixon elected, he has

given us the impression that the
United States would continue to
follow its escalate-- a little every
policy.
Until last week, there was some
hope that the American citizens
would at least have a chance to
decide for themselves, because
Michigan Governor George Romney
had indicated that he might be
opposed to current U.S. policies,
and that his thinking might more
closely parallel that of Robert Kennedy. But these hopes were smashed
when Romney announced a policy
position on Vietnam coinciding almost precisely with that being followed by President Johnson.
What we now have is the three
top contenders for the presidency
of the United States, all looking as
if they're carbon copies of a master plan. It is frightening that our
two leading national parties cannot
offer more to the American people.
--

now-and-th-

--

en

"Package!"
.

L

Letters To The Editor:

Carson Porter Attacks The Kernel's 'Machine
To the Editor of The Kernel:
In a recent editorial The Kentucky Kernel took issue with the
candidacy of Sheryl Snyder for
representing some supposed "Machine" presently running our Student Government. I, for one, find
this attack to be more than in-

teresting.
Far be it from me to criticize
our campus newspaper, but it appears that an investigation of the
selection of past Kernel editors
might now be appropriate.
In 1964, a gentleman by the
name of Bill Grant served as editor of The Kentucky Kernel, and
in line with the established procedures solicited applications and
then made his recommendation to
the Student Publications Board.
Not being denied in his choice,
Bill's younger brother, Walter, was
named editor.
Certainly a great honor for one
family to control our newspaper!
However, 1965 was not to see the
end of the Crant Regime. In 1966
Kditor Walter had the golden op-

portunitywithout opposition

Walter recommended that he be
for the comrenamed editor-in-chief

ing year. And so it was!
Shortly thereafter, Big Brother
Bill returned to his alma mater
to be hired as an advisor to undergraduate reporters. In some circles this hasbeen termed nepotism,
but who could ever accuse the
Grant boys of running a machine?
However, the end seemed to be
near with the recent appointment
of Bill Knapp as Walter's successor.
Not only is he far from being a
member of the immediate family,
he's not even an
But, alas,
have done it again
the Crant boys
in-la-

Walter has named his roommate!
Is it possible that we have uncovered a "Machine" within our
Kernel hierarchy? I certainly hope
not, for we have been told that
this is to say the least undesirable.
Carson P. Porter
Student Body President

Editorial Said Erroneous
Congratulations to The Kernel
for another erroneous editorial!
Again "The South's Outstanding
College Daily" has jumped to preposterous conclusions without first
checking its source of material for
accuracy.
I refer to the editorial of April

"Increasing Interest." In this
editorial The Kernel brings up the
points that (1) the Young Republican Club has invited no candidate
to speak on campus, and (2) the
Young Republican Club shows no
enthusiasm for victory in November. As an officer of the YR's,
let me say that The Kernel could
be no further from the truth!
In the early part of this year,
we made a point of inviting both
major candidates for governor,
Marlow Cook and Louie B. Nunn,
to speak before our club. The Kernel knows well that Louie Nunn
spo