xt71zc7rqq55 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt71zc7rqq55/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1970-02-19  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 19, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 19, 1970 1970 1970-02-19 2015 true xt71zc7rqq55 section xt71zc7rqq55 Basketball Ticket Situation Bad Worsenmg

By CARL FAIIRINCER
Kernel Staff Writer
It is estimated that 50 percent
of the adult male population of
the state of Kentucky follows UK
basketball. Of these, only a select
few will ever see the Wildcats
perform live.
Dr. Clenwood Creech, Vice
President for University Relations
and chairman of the ticket committee, describes the ticket situation in one word "terrible."
"The situation is critical," he
said. "I spend a highlydisappro-priat- e
amount of my time dealing with ticket problems."
Since 1903, no basketball tickets have been made available to
the general public, except for
games played when school is not
in session.

THE

tinguished persons visiting the

"It is impossible for someone

But we have requests
for about 100 tickets every game
from people who feel they Just
have to have them."
A big ticket problem is caused
by variation in student attendance.
"Some games we've had 1,000
empty seats in the student section, and for some we've had

outside the University to get tickets in his own name," Dr. Creech
said.
"We reserve 4,484 scats for
the students," he said. "We've

campus.

reached a point now where we
are going to need more. If we
give more seats to the students,
we'll have to take them away
from persons who havehad priority to purchase them for years'
Dr. Creech estimates that "we
could sell 25,000 season tickets
if we had them." People have
offered up to $2,000 for the opportunity to purchase tickets. In
addition. Dr. Creech's office is
bombarded with urgent requests
for single game tickets.
"We have eight tickets the
presidential allocation for dis

1,000 students standing." Student seats not occupied by 7:30
are sold to the public.
Members of the ticket committee have recommended that
students pay for basketball tickets, but this proposal has met
opposition from the student member of the committee.
After the students are seated,
second priority is for those per- -

sons who bought tickets when
seats were available, and have
not interrupted their purchasing.
Some of these people may be in
danger of losing their seats to the
student section.
"Three years ago," Dr. Creech
said, "we started taking away
tickets to expand the student
section. We cut five years back
into the priority lists and most
of those cut were staff members.
We then had to go back two
more years, and limit those people to two tickets. Now, we
aren't even able to accommodate
new faculty members. They have
to be put on a waiting list."
What, then, can be done about
the problem?
Television appears to be an
answer, but live commercial TV

ECENTUCECY

SERNE
19, 1970

University of Kentucky, Lexington

Kernel Staff Writer
About 50 members of the

ranged from "very
encouraging" at Centre to "bad"
at Asbury, where the visit ended
in the office of that institution's

Receptions
Stu-

dent Mobilization Committee to
End the War in Vietnam (SMC)
learned Wednesday night that
their organization has been
granted a permit to march on the
State Capitol March 7.
The announcement was made
at the organization's weekly
meeting in the Student Center.
Jeri Crump, an SMC member,
and Dave Brown, a member of
the SMC steering committee, told
the students that the permit
would allow 2,000 or more people
to march from Frankfort's Old
Capitol Building to the present
Capitol from 1 to 3 p.m.
The issuance of the permit
was the high point in a week
of preparations for the demonstration that could be termed
only partially successful. Several
SMC members spent part of the
last week canvassing area colleges and high schools in search
of fresh opposition to the Vietnam conflict.
Receptions Varied
A report on the tour mentioned four collegej Centre,
Thomas More, the UK Northern
Community College and Asbury.

,

asked.

"This is a statewide meeting.
Unfortunately, nobody attended," said Ed Jurenas, a steering
committee member. Jurenas was
mistaken, but only barely. One
student from Berea did attend
the meeting.
In addition, contacts with
high school students were reported at Frankfort and
Eliza-bethtow-

n

UK students to contact
students from their high schools
who are opposed to the war
and invite them to attend the
Frankfort march.
Seek Donations
Members passed a big top hat
through the crowd seeking donations to finance upcoming activities. Jurenas said that operations were currently being fi
urged

nanced out of students' pockets,
"including my own."
Projects under way include
campaigns to the
Kentucky legislature and some
Kentucky towns and cities, and
preparations for another march
to be held with' national SMC
April 15.
Brown and Jurenas also summarized the tone of the recent
national SMC convention, held
in Cleveland last week. One SMC
member described the conference
as an initially fragmented affair
that became more organized as
it progressed. Brown was "surprised" at militant radicals in
the group, but emphasized the
essential moderation of the ga-

thering.
"The things that were passed
were the most moderate of the
proposals," he stated. "If there
were three proposals, the most

moderate one would pass . . .
they felt that if more radical
things were passed they would
exclude the more moderate mem-

bers."
Brown stressed the drive of
the organization toward a
"broadly based coalition" of radicals and moderates.
Please Turn To Pare 8

New Relations Workshop Aims

ForlnterpersonalCommunications
By CRETA CIBSON
Kernel Staff Writer
skills" is the
"To promote
basic purpose of a workshop being given by the
Human Relations Center for the next five weeks
at the Student Center.
"We are trying to provide an opportunity for
a small group of students and faculty members
to confront each other as individuals with special
needs and feelings and to help these individuals
communicate more openly," commented Jack Dal-todirector of the Human Relations Center.
The course, a
program, will continue
until spring break. It is an outgrowth of the old
Human Relations Workshop. After two such workshops, the participants indicated a need "for interpersonal relations" and "open discussion and action on race relations at Kentucky."
To develop this, the Human Relations Board
is presenting the course in three divisions: discussion, awareness of others, and practice in interpersonal communication.
n,

five-sessi-

'

v : ML 0.

f

A

lis

wo4

letter-writin- g

dean of students.
The Wednesday night meeting
was intended to be a gathering
of state activists, but the college
tour proved less successful than
many had hoped.
"Why don't we have a statewide meeting?" one student

high schools. Brown

30,000 people want
Please Turn To Page 6

LXI, No. 93

Capitol March Permission
Granted To Student Mobe
By MICHAEL WINES

Coke."
"When

Svy

1

Vol.

TV in
Possibly, closed-circu- it
campus auditoriums could help
ease the ticket problem. Dr.
Creech likes the idea.
"We recommended before that
this be done," he said, "but
there wasn't enough money when
we requested it. We willconsider
it again next time we meet. Our
ETV director is going to advise
us on what it would cost and
where we could put the screens."
Another proposal is what Dr.
the
Creech
calls "splitting

i

If

Thursday, Feb.

apparently out of thequestion.
"The SEC has turned us down
three times on our request to
televise games live," Dr. Creech
said.
is

The board is also introducing another program
at the Student Center tonight to deal with race
relations. The program is being coordinated with
the Human Development Institute, Atlanta, Ca.
The
course is designed to
teach the principles of good human relations and
to provide an opportunity for actually experiencing
a new kind of interaction with others.
Dalton stated that the program "was to cooperate and help communication between students
and faculty members and to focus attention on
groups on campus
minority and
and to accept people's feelings and to be honest
with each other."
This first course, a program to establish fundamentals in sensitivity training, now is closed to
the public and open only to the originally enrolled participants. But Dalton states that "for
others wlio want to become involved in a similar
course, the center is always ready to serve interested students and faculty."
special-intere-

st

Blues In The Night

Jack Lowther was one of nearly 20 students in UK Jazz Ensemble
I who entertained at the Agricultural Science Auditorium Wednesday
night The concert featured the music of Tom Ringo, a trombonist
and composer from Bloomington, Ind. Walter B Union conducted
Kernel Photo by Mlml Fuller
the ensemble.

SG Assembly To Consider

Bright, Election Board Bills
By JEAN RENAKER

Assistant Managing Editor
Opposing plans for voting reform will be considered by the
Student Government Assembly
tonight.
The Assembly will be faced
with overriding the veto on representative Steve Bright' bill,
'That All Might Participate,"
with accepting one of four plans
approved by the Board of Elections Monday night, or with refusing all plans proposed so far.
Bright's bill was vetoed last
ll
week by SG president Tim
on grounds that it was "unconstitutional" according to the
SG Constitution and because it
would be "unneeded and unnecessary to open polling places
. . . for a
period,"
as suggested in the bill.
The recommendations of the
Board of Elections contain four
plans utilizing 12 voting places
Fu-tre-

another election. Futrell claimed
when he vetoed Bright's bill that
"no rematch, in case of a contestation, would be possible."
In the wake of Futrell's veto
of the bill, UK students Guy
Mendes and Susan Crimsley circulated a petition condemning
the veto.
The petition stated: "The real
reason behind Futrell's irrational
veto is that he knew that under
the new conditions, a much larger
percentage of students could take
part in the election and that a
small portion of the campus could
no longer control the elections."
Futrell turned the matter over
to the Elections Board, request-

ing that the board "investigate
other school's reforms."
Bruce Carver, vice chairman
of the Elections Board, stated In
a Monday night meeting of the
group that the board doesn't
want to "discourage people from
on campus over a
period. generating Interest in election reBright's bill would have set form."
He encouraged Interested stuthe date of the elections to coindents to come to tonight's meetcide with spring
The Elections Board proposal ing, but not only "to come with
would set the election for the interest but also with an open
mind."
first week in April.
The meeting will be held at
Theoretically, should the elecbe contested, the April date &30 p.m. in Room 220 of the
tion
would allow enough time to have Commerce building.
two-wee- k

two-da- y

� 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb.

Rising Political Concern May Curb Pollution

iLkmm

.

NEW YORK (AP)-Ea- rly
In
the growing public cry for
cleaner air, water and general
environment is finding a most
potent potential ally politics.
The rising political concern could
help remedy two crippling weaknesses in past antipollution effortsa lack of money and lack
of legal authority and governmental determination to enforce corrective actions.
To politicians from city halls
to Washington tiie answering of
1970,

(ftll&Iii'

WANT ACTION?

19, 1970

..

USE TIIE KERNEL WANT ADS

SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST

CHURCH

DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
Sermon by Dr. Hecren'
or 277-402- 9
for Students
Call 277-617- 6

2356 HARRODSBURG RD.

Transportation Provided

y

CATHOLIC PENTECOSTALS
Rev. Charles Rooks (Thomas More (College)
February 23 - 8:00 p.m.

CATHOLIC NEWMAN CENTERx
320 Rose Lane
Tef

255-046-

public complaints about pollution could bring the reward of
votes.

'Battle Lines' Drawn
Governmental battle lines in
the pollution war began to be
more clearly drawn in a period
that witnessed these other gains
and losses in matters of Americans' environment:
Plans were dropped for a
Jet port for Miami In the Florida
Everglades, after conservationists argued it would threaten the
Everglades National Park.
Bee keepers reported disastrous lethal effects upon bee col- -

Unitarian
Universalist

Church
Clays Mill Pike

7
PETER

TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Campus Ministry
BEGINNING FEBRUARY 15
The big white bus will be at the Corner of
Euclid and Limestone every Sunday morning
at 9:30 a.m. Will return at approximately
All students are inv
lz:4o.
Free Breakfast on Bus!
BOB W. BROWN Pastor

Phone

LEE
277-628-

Minister

SCOTT,
or

4

1W-625- 9

SUND
AT THE CHURCH
10:3Cya.m.
CAMPUS
RELIGIOUS
LIBERALS

STUDENT CENTER
Room 115, 7:30 p.m.

1
OZ7B?2?B37

V.
Sunday Night at the

A Film Series

Complex Commons
All

Students Welcome

Rooms C & D
Admission Free

The Seventh Seal Ingmar Bergman
"The Ant Keeper" Stimulus Film
March 1 "Through a Glass Darkly" Ingmar Bergman
"Where Is God?" Stimulus Film: Joseph Sittler
March 8
Winter Light" Ingmar Bergman
"Holy Swindle" Stimulus Film: Joseph Sittler
April 5 "The Silence" Ingmar Bergman
"The Long Shadow of Luther" Stimulus Film: Hanns Liljc
April 12 "400 Blows" Francois Trauffauty
"Do You Know Where I'm Going?" Stimulus Film
April 19 "The Overcoat" Alexi Batalov
"With Fresh Eyes" Stimulus Film: Egon Weiner
Sponsored by University Lutheran Student Center and the United
WVWblUIIWII
itimiiii J
mill IblbiUI Willi VWUIIWIIJ
wtiaifM
in the Complex.
ALL STUDENTS WELCOME!

v

IV

1

oy
SUMNER

SET

Hit $39.50

Hers $37.50

a
A

II

,

jtca

arvea
--

i

When she slips here hand in
yours you'll be together forever with two perfectly matched
rings to tell the world of your
love. ArtCarved says "forever"
when you say "I do."
PONCE SET
H. $47.50

I

Hen $45.00

II

TtMPE SET
H.i $55 00

Her

$50.00

You'll Have a Greater
Choiob at LeROY'S

100 W. Mi
EASTLAND CENTER.
and TURl
ND MALL. IN LEXINGTON
EASTWOOD SHI PMNG CENTER IN FRANKFORT
26 NORTI 'MAIN IN WINCHESTER

long-standin-

lution.
Interior Secretary Walter J.
Hickel said the party with the
best record on environment "is
going to be the party that wins
the most elections."
Muskie plans to introduce legislation to provide $12.5 billion
over a

five-ye-

period for waste

ar

treatment grants, with states and
cities matching for a total of
$25 billion. He will also seek

lead-fre-

sufficiently

in times of

tight budgeting.
Clean Environment A Priority
The President in his State of
the Union message gave high
priority to cleaning up the environment, and in his budget

message suggested specific sums
for antipollution programs.
He enriched some of these
proposals last week. For example, he authorized $4 billion immediately for fiscal 1971 to cover
the full federal share of a
program to clean up waste
waters, with $1 billion to be
spent each year for the next
four years. Congress earlier had
voted $800 million for this purpose for next fiscal year, while
$10-billi-

the administration had

original-

ly asked for only $214 million.
In other steps, Nixon proposed
a means of helping states raise
money through bonds for water
clean-up- ,
establishment of state
federal water quality standards
to impose precise effluent requirements on all industrial and municipal sources; authority to impose fines up to $10,000 daily
for failure to meet water and
--

WEDDING BANDS

muscle, and some, like Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, could
g
point to their own
efforts to halt environmental pol-

Governmental
agencies $325 million a year for three
brought suit against a score of years beginning in fiscal 1971
industrial firms on charges of for clean air programs.
polluting or interfering with navThe State of Illinois needs
igation on New York City waterover $1.5 billion to clean up
ways.
C. Wallace
In Cincinnati, a strike by its water, says of
the Creat
Poston, director
city employes piled garbage up Lakes Regional Office of the Fedon the streets and led to spilling
eral Water Pollution Control Adof millions of gallons of raw
ministration. Rescuing Lake
sewage daily into the Ohio River.
Michigan from pollution would
One hundred miles downstream,
cost upwards of $1 billion, he
Louisville uses river water for
domestic purposes. Kentucky of- adds. Other members of the same
agency think the bill could be
ficials protested.
$2 billion to $10 billion.
General Motors announced
enit would modify future car
Vehicles To Be Converted
gines to run on lower octane,
On matters of air pollution:
e
gasoline, and Ford and In Washington, the Ceneral SerChrysler were expected to folvices Administration announced
low suit. The action means the that more than 1,003 federal
petroleum industry must develop trucks and autos would be conpowerful but less polluting gasverted this year to burning natoline.
ural gas in a system that cuts
President Nixon appointed noxious exhaust missions by
the three members of his new about 80 percent.
Council on Environmental QuaThe National Air Pollution
lityRussell E. Train, undersecof the interior; Robert Cahn Control Administration and the
retary
nation's airlines agreed the airof the Christian Science Monilines by the end of 1972 would
tor; and Cordon J. F. MacDonald, have
installed devices, called
vice chancellor of research and
burner cans, that would elimigraduate affairs of the University
of California at Santa Barbara. nate up to 80 percent of the carConservationists generally liked bon particles in the smoke left
the appointments, questioned on- by Jet planes exhausts.
ly whether their work as advisers
and watchdogs over influences
upon the environment would be
funded

Feb. 22

B

onies from use of some pesticides which farmers or others
began using in place of longer-lastin- g
DDT. The DDT was
blamed for taking a toll of birds,
fish and other life, while bees
seemed to tolerate it better.
Research chemists at the Bureau of Mines Coal Research Center in Pittsburgh produced, in laboratory experiments, a type of
crude petroleum from ground-u- p
garbage and paper. A next
question is whether the technique would work practically to
help dispose of solid wastes.

air quality standards; and research under the Solid Waste
Disposal Act to emphasize techniques for recycling materials.
Democratic Criticism
Before the President submitted his environmental message,
Democrats had taken the view
his

programs

involved

Staton Quits
Med Center

James II. Staton has resigned,
effective March 9, as assistant
administrator of the University
of Kentucky Hospital. He will
take a position with the Affiliated
Hospitals Center in Boston.

UK Greeks

Joining

Heart Fund Drive

"It's an organizational effort
to , reveal another side of the
Creeks . . . the purpose side and
not just the social side" was the
way Debbie Fergus, student
Heart Fund chairman, described
the sororities' and fraternities' involvement with that project.
The UK Creeks are participating in the Kentucky Heart Fund
Drive Feb. 22 by making a
canvass of parts of Lexdoor-to-do-

ington in conjunction with the
Fayette County Heart Fund.
In an organizational meeting
held at the Student Center
Wednesday night, plans were laid
by the fraternities' and sororities'
representatives of the fund.
The group was told that 54
of every 100 people who died in
Fayette County last year, died
from some type of heart disease.
"The money is being fed right
back into the county" Miss Fergus stated. "That's what makes
our whole participation so

more

rhetoric than action and money

The Kentucky

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky.
Kentucky 4050tf. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Dux 4attd.
lie gun as the Cadet In lttM and
published continuously as the Kernel
suite 1015.
Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

n,

or

University
Methodist Chapel
Comer Maxwell and Harrison Ave.

Worship Service
5:30 p.rr
UniversiU of Life Program

11:00 a.m.

Worship Syyicj tor Students
for TransportWion call
REV. TOM FORNASH, Minister
EDWIN STEIL, Student Associate
254-371- 4

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Fch.

19,

197-

DAWA
SECOND ANNUAL

DAY
'OPEN
Tii

nn
i
tn x
r ii luiercnanaise!i
ri
rmai Clearance or wmier ana ran

c:

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JT

9:00 p.m.

SO

yifilfoeUlievafoUe

Friday Night

a

AT)

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ALL SHOES

VISIT OUR

20

SWEATERS
DRESS SHIRTS

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off

TIES

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$6.22 & $9.22
Bell Bottoms . . . $3.22
Wide Belts
$2.90

12 off

RAINCOATS (lined)
RAINCOATS (unlined)

.....

$14.22
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$39.90
$29.90
88oK3for $2.64

Dress Flairs 25

off

Ladies' Furs . $10.22
1
Sheepskin lined
Coat $90 val. $15.22

.y

UNDERWEAR

ROOM

FOR THESE SPECIALS

$6.22, $8.22
3 for $11.22 or $3.99 ea.

JACKETS (Lightweight)
COATS

PlTDCAcP

LADIES

MAXI RAINCOATS
SUEDE JACKETS
KNEE SOCKS

..

V.

$17.90

$29.90
69c or 2 for $1.00
69c or 2 for $1.00

OPAQUE HOSE
ORLON SWEATERS
3 for $10.00
TURTLENECK Sweaters $4.59; 2$9.00

12 off

PURSES
BLOUSES

$4.99 and $5.99

FUR HATS
12 off
HAT and GLOVE SETS
13 off
TURTLE SOCKS (Body stocking) $4.50
ALL SHOES .
20
off

SPECIAL "BONANZA SALE" ITEMS

LADIES
BLOUSES (1 per customer)
GLOVES and MITTENS

22c
22c
SKIRTS
$3.00 & $5.00
SWEATERS
$5.00
SWEATER VESTS
$5.00
VILLAGER BLOUSES & SHELLS $3.22; 2$6.00
$7.22
SLACKS
$12.90
RAINCOATS
DRESSES
$5.00 & $10.00

MEN'S
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88c or 6$5.00

CASUAL SLACKS

$3.22

BELTS

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LONG SLEEVE KNITS
ALL DRESS SLACKS

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ALL SUITS (alt. extra) $44.22
ALL SPORT COATS

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$29.22

0-

� Board Proposal Is Most Logical
Low and high pressure areas
collide at tonight's Student Government Assembly meeting; and
the resulting tumult could well
wash away election reform, something that everyone involved seems
to want.
Although the issue of election
reform on campus has been struggling for survival in the usual sea
of student apathy for most of the
week, a large contingent of spectators will gather around representatives tonight and side with one
proposal or the other.
On one side will be those seeking to override the presidential
veto of Steve Bright's bill, which
would hold elections over the
k
A
of
period
majority is necessary to
negate the veto and make the bill
law.
On the other side will be those
favoring one or more of the proposals of the Board of Elections.
It will take a simple majority for
any of the four board proposals
to become law, unless, of course,
another veto is forthcoming.
No one really knows what will
come out of this confusion. The
only thing that seems readily apparent at present is that neither
side intends to listen to the other
with any degree of patience.
A tragedy could develop if there
were not enough votes for either
overriding the veto or passing the
counter proposal. That would mean
no election reform at all, somell
thing even SG President Tim
would detest.
In analyzing the matter, one
must decide which of the two proposals shows the most merit.
Steve Bright's "That All Might
Participate" shows the most promise of participation. However, the
two weeks necessary for such an
election is not worth the huge
two-wee-

two-thir-

ds

Fu-tre-

number of poll workers it would
entail and the emotional drain on
candidates, who would deem it
necessary to carry on campaigns
during the entire voting period.
This, added to the fact that
long voting lines could still develop as they do now, especially
during the final day of registration, makes the bill as impractical as it is bulky. Also, the bill
makes no provision for fall elections and leaves little recourse in
case of contestation.

Maybe we can override him with this
r--

.

.

r

It would be almost as practical to take the voting booths out
to student lines at basketball games
and have students vote while waiting for the doors to open. Not
only would this plan mean even
more voters, it might also mean
that the booths could be carried
to the student. He wouldn't even
have to give up his place in line.
Despite all that Bright's plan
tries to do, it does not erase student apathy, the malady that
g
plagues a
campus. Votis a privilege granted all stuing
dents who wish to make the effort. Those who do will continue
to elect campus leaders, good or
non-votin-

bad.

The Board of Elections proposal places a polling booth within easy reach of any student on
campus. It gives the student two
days in which to find the free
minute or five it takes to make the
effort. A month would not be enough
time for the majority of our students to vote; they just don't care
that much.
The Board of Elections proposal
also calls for a concerted effort
at obtaining increased student participation in elections. This may
fail, but it is a far more logical

approach.
We support it.

he Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

Iernel

University of Kentucky
1894

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY

Editorials represerU the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
James W. Miller,

Editor-in-Chi-

19, 1970

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Teh. 19,

1970- -5

Nixon Fears Missile Buildup By Russians

WASHINGTON
the world situation. President Nixon rqwrtcd Wednesday the Soviet Union's missile
buildup "raises serious questions
about where they are headed and
the potential threats we and our
allies face." By year's end, Nixon said, Russia is expected to have
23G more
land-base- d
nuclear missiles than the
United States, a reversal of the
(AP)-Surve-

ocean-spannin-

status of the

ying

g,

l9G0s.

submarine-launche- d
When
rockets are counted, this country will still hold a 1,710 to 1,590
lead in missiles.
Nevertheless, Nixon found the
situation disturbing enough to
proceed with expansion of the
missile
Safeguard
ABM system, a revamped program he approved in 1969. "I
believed then, and I am even more
convinced today, that there is a
serious threat to our retaliatory
the chief execucapability
tive declared. The uncertainty of
Russian aims stood out in Nixon's
message to
e
document
Congress, a
he hailed as the most comprehensive document of its type ever
given by a President.
Nixon's Plans
In it, Nixon also:
Expressed hope the Strategic Arms Limitations Talks can
bring a curb on nuclear weaponry. He said the Soviets have
been "serious and businesslike"
in preparatory negotiations at
Helsinki.
Said there is little the big
powers can do to solve the Middle East crisis. He urged Egypt
and Israel to show "mutual willingness to compromise."
Stated that it will take a
willingness by Hanoi to conduct
serious negotiations before a compromise settlement of the Vietnam war can be reached. In the
anti-ballist- ic

..."

119-pag-

meantime, the United States'
"Vietnamization" program for
turning over the war to South
Vietnam will be a "spur to negotiations." The
message offered a global look at
.

40,000-wor- d

O) 9 p

the past year and projected a fu- grams, raises serious questions cities and nearer military inture in which "partnership" and about where they are headed stallations.
Nixon said that now, as in
"military strength" will be the and the potential threats we and
19G9, he is planning on an ABM
key words in American foreign our allies face," Nixon stated.
shield to (1) protect our
"We must insure that all popolicy.
tential aggressors see unacceptaU.S. Involvement To Lessen
retaliatory forces against
ble risks in contemplating a nuSoviet attack; (2) defend AmeriNixon reaffirmed this intenclear attack, or nuclear blackcan population centers against a
tion to go on reducing U.S. inmail, or acts which could espotential Red Chinese nuclear
volvement in the affairs of other
nuclear war, assault later in this decade; (3)
lands, attempting in the process calate to strategic conventional
such as a Soviet
guard against the possibility of
to negotiate
missile
launches
attack on Europe." The Soviet accidental
agreements with the Soviets and
threat as Nixon described it lies against this country.
Red China.
eventually
This year's ABM expansion,
Nixon styled his presentation "in the form of the growing
Nixon asserted, will be detailed
"United States Foreign Policy Soviet forces of ICBM's and ballistic missile submarines, their
for the 1970s
A New Stratepublicly soon by Secretary of Deprogram for fense Melvin R. Laird.
for Peace," but it seemed to multiple
gy
inthe SS9 missile, their apparent
raise as many questions as ansterest in improving the accuracy
Using latest U.S. intelligence
wers.
of their ICBM warheads and their estimates, Nixon said the U.S.
In particular Nixon repeatedmissiles has
development of a semiorbital nu- force of
ly questioned motives of the leadremained stable at 1,054 for sevclear weapon system."
ers in the Kremlin and said the
eral years, while the Soviet UnRationale The Same
judgements his administration
ion's has jumped from 224 in
makes about the Soviets will be
In pushing ahead with the
,, , m ,
, v,
the basis for major weaponry multibillion dollar Safeguard y
decisions of the 1970s.
ABM system, Nixon said his raThe Soviets' present
tionale for strategic defense has
buildup of strategic forces, to- not changed from last year, when
shifted
administration
gether with what we know about the
their development and test pro planned ABM sites away from
land-base- d

I9G5 to a projected 1,290 by the
end of this year.
One official said the administration might have to review its
decision to keep the number of
missile launchers at the present
level if the rate of Soviet deployments increases or if the
SALT talks fail.

peace-preservi-

...

war-hea- d

iiClluaaiT'

land-base- d

..

"...

1

h

Singletary, Doran Oppose
Board Of Regents Plan
FRANKFORT (AP)-T- he
Senate Education Committee Wednesday found state college and university presidents opposed to creation
of a state board of regents to rule higher education.
Dr. Otis Singletary, UK president, said many states use some type
of governing board. He said the states tend to give the boards
more power at the expense of the institutions.
"The false image is that all problems of education can be solved
by a governing board," Singletary said.
He said education costs have mounted because of increased
costs of equipment, a larger number of students and other factors.
Singletary urged the committee to study states that have governing boards and said Kentucky's system would not be embarrassed
by comparison.
Adrian Doran, Morehead State University president, spoke for
presidents of seven schools in opposing creation of the super-boar- d
of regents.
He said the presidents feel a central governing board would take
control of state universities away from the campus and move it to
Frankfort.
Doran said liigher education in Kentucky is based on local rule
by each institution and noted the presidents favor more coordination
and strengthening of the state Council on Public Higher Education.

mm
coy

You are invited

10 a.m.

BE

to see the

to 4 p.m.

atacltay, Feb.

i

v

A LITTLE FLIPPANT

Don't take things too seriously . .
be yourself in a look that fits any
mood. Tunic vest tops a flip skirt in
a fabric called 'grasshopper' (rayon
flax with a linen look) khaki or navy.
.

Sizes

5-1-

3.

$18.

Downtown, third floor

Southland, Turfland

1

� fi--

KENTUCKY

TIIE

Being

A

KERNEL, Thursday, Tcb. 19, 1970

Black 'No Trouble'

BishopAn Athlete Of Two Faces

LENNIE UNDERWOOD
Kernel Staff Writer
Darryl Bishop is unique.
His uniqueness is caused by
two reasons. He stars on both
the UK freshman football and
basketball teams. He also is the
first Black to wear a Kentucky
By

uniform on the Memorial Coliseum floor.
The
Louisville
Seneca
selected UK
over 150 other offers from such
schools as Illinois, Houston, Oklahoma and Nebraska.
6-- 3,

205-poun- d

All-Stat-

Cain Helped Persuade Him

"I signed a

V--

WatirA WON?

p

use the

.OISJflBa

play football at Morehead, but
then decided on UK when Coach
(Ron) Cain came to Lexington,"

said Bishop.
He continued, "I decided to
play basketball when Coach (Joe)
Hall asked me to come out because he thought I'd help the

team."

who you

are?

where you are headed?
Satisfying answers
can be found, but
spiritual research and
understanding are
necessary. Hear this
lecture called "What

Is Success?" by
HARRY S. SMITH,

C.S.B., an authorized

teacher and

practitioner of
Christian Science
healing.

Are Tremendous
Continued From Page One
11,000 tickets