xt78w950jx6s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt78w950jx6s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1970-09-14  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 14, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 14, 1970 1970 1970-09-14 2015 true xt78w950jx6s section xt78w950jx6s Tee Kmtocecy Keknel
Monday, Sept.

14, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXII, No, 7

Hole-Playin- g

UK Students and Faculty Act Out

University Problems in Workshop

By DAIILIA HAYS
Kernel Copy Editor
Picture yourself, for Just a moment, a student at Standough
University, where the kidnapping
of the university's President
Strong by a radical group known
as SPER (Students for Political
and Educational Reform) has created a chaotic riot situation.
Standough University is the
make-beliesetting in which
about 75 students, faculty members and administrators found
themselves when they attended
the Student-Facult- y
Workshop
Saturday morning in King Alumni House.
Standough, described to the
participants as a "medium-size- d
state school with an enrollment
of 18,000 students (including
graduate and professional students)," is like many real-lif- e
universities which have fallen
victim to campus unrest recently.
In the case of Standough, the
"riot" situation was precipitated
largely through the demands of
the radical organization SPER-dema- nds
upon which "President
Strong" and his assistants had
not acted at the time the riots
broke out.
SPER Makes 'Demands'
The "demands" made by
SPER included:
Time off from classes for
participation in the political campaign of an antiwar candidate.
An end to government financing of separate institutes on
campus.
Apartment-lik- e
living conditions in the residence halls.
Student advisers to the administration officers who have
veto power over all decisions.'
Students on all tenure and

salary committees of the University.
Sale of beer in the Student
Union.
This situation, according to
the orientation given the workshop participants at the beginning of the seminar, was responsible for the "tension" which
resulted at Standough, and the
factions into which various individuals and student groups
found themselves divided.
Workshop participants were
then divided into six groups:
Faculty Senate, Administration,
Student Government, Graduate
Students, Students for Political
and Educational Reform (SPER),
and the Let's Stop Destruction
(LSD) group.
Role Playing
Within the groups, each member was assigned a specific role.
An attempt was made to give
participants a chance to play
roles totally unfamiliar to them
Continued on Pag: 2, CoL 4

Student

0

.

.

lJ.

:

role-playin-

Schroeder, who was acting as the president of
the imaginary Standough University. Participants
in the workshop later attempted to relate their
experiences to real campus problems.

role-playi-

Kernel Photo by

Lrr,

Kieikopf

Thrive in UK Area

Co-op- s

By DAVE CALLAHAN

living entails much responsibility.
"Yeah, there's more responsibility," said Wayne Crachow, a
new member of the New Dillard
House Commune on South BroadUK.
way Park. "I lived in a dorm
In simple frame structures
last year and nobody had to worry
about anything. You didn't care
dotting the perimeter of the University, groups numbering from about the guy who lived next
five to 16 are trying to find what
door. You had a guy at the end
"togetherness"
really means. of the hall who did that.
Communal residents claim they
"But here it's different,"
enjoy an unchecked selection of Crachow, junior philosphy major
life style plus lower rent, but from Washington, D.G, continued. "If something happens
they also contend that co-o-p
to someone here, you're
because it affects you."
'An Understanding'
"We have an understanding
here about things that have to
be done," offered Bill Rauch,
junior sociology major from New
York and also a member of the
Kernel Staff Writer
As a supplement to dormitory,
and Creek-systeapartment
living, collective or co-o-p housing
is gradually becoming a fixture at
m

con-cem-

Free

i

.

Dr. Larry Tarpey (left) and Vice President Robert
Zumwinkle became temporary "students" in some
the Student-Facult- y
Workshop held
Saturday in the King Alumni House. The two
men tned to present their views to
Judy

V.

'Kick-Of-

South Broadway
p
house.
"We don't keep a list of things
to do or assign people to certain
Jobs. We just understand that
when one of the members sees
something that needs to be done,
he does it," said Rauch.
"I like this a lot better than
dormitory living," Rauch went
on. "Sure, you got to keep the
place clean, pay the bills and
learn to live together. Those are
things you don't have to worry
about when you live in a dorm.
"In a dorm, you get up, go
to the cafeteria and there's a meal
waiting for you," Rauch said.
"What does that teach you?"
residents forecast a rise in the number of communal centers, but the upsurge
already has begun. There was
only one established house in
1969, now there are several.
co-o-

The New Dillard House and
Collective One on Mentelle Park
are the two major
The rest
are smaller, housing about a half
dozen occupants.
'Forced to Leave'
Nearly all of 16 residents agree
they were forced to leave old
Dillard House on South Limestone Street because of the University's alleged disfavor wuh
several residents involved in last
spring's campus demonstrations.
"VVe are renting the old Dillard House from the University,"
explained Bonnie Mclnteer, a
native Lexingtonian staying at
the South Broadway house now.
"The University said we had
to move out because they were
going to sell the house. But they
haven't sold it yet and we don't
expect them to do so soon. There's
Continued on Pare 8, Col. 1
co-op- s.

f

Frisbees Fly at Music Festival
By JANE D. BROWN

Kernel Staff Writer
Cries of "Down with the referee!" were mixed
with watermelon prizes and guitar stnururung
at the first Free University festival Saturday
afternoon in the Student Center Patio.

'

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Ceoflrey Pope, one of the members of the new student collective
called The Zoo (see story on page five), listens to music at a
free jam session held Sunday at the Memorial Hall amphitheater.
The jam session was sponsored by the Musicians' Pool and the
Kernel Photo By du Wu
Students for Action and Responsibility.

In a four-hospan, about 400 persons attended the first Free U. frisbee tournament and
sat in rhythm to the music supplied by the Musicians' Pool.
The frisbee contest had about 40 contestants.
At one point it looked as if the referees would
lose control of the situation. The third division,
"Long Distance Partner Throw," was almost
finished, when, of about twenty duos, only three
teams were left.
They threw, and all the receivers dropped
their frisbees. The other competitors decided that
the whole thing should be started again because
there was no winner. The referees were swamped,
and shouts of "anarchy" and "power to the
people" were heard.
Watermelon Awarded
Eventually, organization was reestablished and
Rick Cardner and Montgomery Moore were
e
awarded the
watermelon. Jack McCrath
and Bob Clausing placed second.
In the other categories, Rick Gardner also placed
first in the "Individual Long Distance Throw"
at a distance of about 65 yards. Larry Ciesmann
first-priz-

and Dale Matthews placed second and third,
respectively.
The "Fancy Frisbee Throw" was won by Ronnie
Wies, who never actually threw the frisbee but
instead ran around Stoll Field and finally collapsed in front of the spectators. Larry Ciesmann
threw three at once to win second prize and Dale
Matthews took third place.
The women eventually got tired of not being
represented and had a competition of their own.
Katie McCarthy and Deane Patton proved their
and were declared
competence at frisbee-throwithe winners.
Afternoon Of Music
The music continued throughout the afternoon,
interrupted at intervals by announcements and by
Don Pratt giving an impromptu history of the frisbee. Jamie Oberst, Sam Mason, "Weasel", Eimo
Sunflower, and other members of the Musicians
Pool provided most of the sounds.
The festival was given to "kick off the fall
seuie&tcr" of Free U., said Paul Wertheinjer, Free
U. coordinator. In connection with this, a preliminary list of courses was distributed. The 23
course titles ranged In content' from "Radical
Politlci" to "How To Make A Punch Rug.'
They will begin Wednesday, Sept. 16. Permanent catalogues will be available at a booth
in the Student Center Monday through Wednesday or in the Free University office at 304 Frazee
Hall.
ng

� 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Sept.

14, 1970

Students, Faculty
Attend Workshop

Continued from rage One
(for example, students were cast
).
as administrators,
and
Assigned roles in several
cases did not correspond to the
personal beliefs of the participants.
The interplay between the six
groups provided the action for
most of the Workshop. Action was
largely spontaneous, resulting
from the
of the members within the groups.
From time to time, "news
bulletins" were announced by
Mrs. Nancy Ray of the dean of
students office. Jon Dalton,
another member of the dean of
students' staff, played the role
of the mass media by circulating
among the various groups and
requesting interviews.
A high point in the action
was reached when President
Strong (played by junior Judy
Schroeder) voluntarily agreed to
meet with SPER representatives
to discuss the demands of the
group.
President Held
When President Strong did
not emerge from the SPER meeting room after several minutes,
rumors filtered out that the president was being held against
"his" will.
Members of the LSD group,
assisted by individuals from other
groups, then made an attempt
to storm the walls and rescue
the president. A climax having
been reached, the participants
were asked to reassemble as one
large group to discuss the riot
situation how it developed, and
the role played by each group
during the crisis.
During this discussion, it became apparent that the action
taken by each group depended
largely on the roles which its
individual members were asked
to play.
The administration, for example, acted largely upon the advice of President Strong, who
considered it necessary to meet
with the SPER group, talk over
the demands, and see whether
any common understanding could
be reached.
'Constant Bickering'
The Faculty Senate group
spent almost the entire "riot" in
a lengthy meeting marked by constant bickering among its members. "A real triumph for parliamentary procedure," was one
vice-versa-

r Ik
L

Kernel Photo by Bob Brewer

1957?
Sha Na Na put on its music of the '50s show at
the Student Center Grand Ballroom Saturday night
for a crowd of over thirteen-hundreThe 12 man
ensemble from Erooldyn then proved that Rock
'n Boll is here to stay as they began to shake,
d.

rattle and roll amid continuous cheers and ap- plause from the audience. The act which has
been together for a year and a half was the first
to be brought to UK this year by the Student

Center Board Concert Committee.

for UK. Students Only

snmrs

role-playi-

LAUNDERED

group member's description of
this mock organization.
Government
The
Student
group split into factions early in
the game. "Conservative" representatives sided with the Let's
Stop Destruction group; the more
liberal representatives supported
the demands of SPER.
The graduate student group
supported the basic demands of
SPER, but attempted to make
SPER see that "less violent"
means could be used to attain
its goals.
The Let's Stop Destruction
group represented the antithesis
of SPER, and a large number of
LSD members attempted to break
in and rescue the president from
the "clutches" of the radical
group.
'Real' or 'Unreal'
During the large group discussion, participants were allowed
to express why they felt the mock
riot situation was either "real"
or "unreal", and to make any
other relevant comments on the
game.
Robert Sedler, professor in the
College of Law, said that he
believed personality was an important aspect of
despite any ideology involved.
For example, Sedler added,
an extreme liberal who switches
to the conservative side will very
likely become an extreme conservative instead of a mild or
"wishy-washy- "
conservative.
Experiences Related
The workshop participants also attempted to relate their experience within the groups to
the problems they had earlier
cited as "the biggest problems
facing UK today the Student
Code, credibility (i.e.: trust) between the various elements of
the University community, and
communication between these
elements."
The idea for Saturday's workshop originated within a small
ad hoc committee of students
and administrators interested in
improving communication within
the University community and
between the UK community and
its
surroundings.
A similar workshop, planned
and produced by the same committee, was held in August this
year. The subject of that workshop was communication between UK and the larger community of which it is a part.
role-playin- g,

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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Sept. H,

'Valley' Theme Lost;
Sensationalism Wins
By JIM SCIIVVENTERLEY and
STAN HOFFMAN
" . . .don't you see, it's all a
We were only fooling
big put-on- ?

s,

each other," pleads the helplessly
bound Lance Rocke before he
loses his head to
sword,
n
role as
wielded in his
Superwoman. In tliis futile plea
a direct statement is made as to
r
Russ Meyer's
producer-directointent in making "Beyond the
Valley of the Dolls."
Meyers, known as the "king
of the porno flicks," in this, his
first
film, uses endless
cliches from cinema past, weaves
them with melodramatic dialogue
and plants them into the picture's
purposely shallow plot. He does
this with such zeal that many
people will say he goes too far
in his vivid depiction of the
"sinful" Hollywood and the
"new life style."
People will leave the theater
with a wide range of feelings
about the sex and violence they
have just been exposed to,
stemming from their individual
self-chose-

big-budg-

V

j

and
morals, ideals, hang-upbackgrounds in general. Putting
this aside we will look at the
film for what it is- -a satire that
uses mockery as its chief weapon.
All the evil people by society's
standards are killed and all the
"basically good" characters reall their problems by
medy
marriage, reflecting a time when
films had to do so for fear of
being censored.
The intent to destroy the myth
of Hollywood is obvious.
The film uses every minority
group and freak act that it can
fit in to make it the fattest piece
of sensationalism which will attract the largest part of the mass
audience as possible. It is here,
when it strays from its original
purpose that it becomes tiresome
and loses its appeal.
It seems that Meyers was overtaken with the desire to make as
much money as possible from this
project, even at the cost of his
original idea and became lost as
he went farther and farther beyond the valley.

nil

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the combined auction and exhibition was prosen ted by the Meridian Gallery. Prices ranged
from $20 to $500, with the average price
mated by Meridian officials as being from $60
Kernel Photo B Dick Ware
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Clancy Brothers
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Duke Ellington
Charlie Mingus
Dizzy Gillespie
Django Reinhardt

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Andres Segovia
Oscar Brand
Carolyn Hester
Rod McKuen

George Gershwin
Sonny Terry

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Maria Callas
Renata Tebaldi
Franco Corelli
Cesare Siepi
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Ignace Paderewski
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The Campbell House was the scene of an art ex- hibit Sunday featuring some 175 original works
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Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali, and
Joan Miro. Taking place in the Colonial Room,

THOUSANDS OF FAMOUS LABEL STEREO
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� Arabs Learned US Lesson

THE KENTUCKY IERNEL

University of Kentucky
Arab hijacks only temporarily a company, or by a nation there ESTABLISHED 1894
MONDAY, SEPT. 14. 1970
took the focus of public attention is only one thing to do: face up
Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
a
from the
rawar, but alas to it. No amount of cover-uFrank S. Cxts III,
it is still there. It is perhaps an tionalizing, alibiing, orduckingthe
Boh
Jean Ronakcr, Managing Editor
of perspective that more Amer- facts will avoid the inevitable day Jeff Drown, Editorial rage Editor
irony
Dahlia Hays, Copy Editor
Impallomcnl, Sports Editor
a
in of reckoning: it only compounds David King, Business Manager
icans were killed in
Don Ilosa, Cartoimist
Tom Bowdcn, Ron Hawkins, Bradley Jeffries, Jerry Lewis, Mike Wines,
the week preceding the hijacks the cost."
Assistant Managing Editors
A recent statement by General
(not to mention the enemy death
count, but they don't matter) than William C. Westmoreland illuwere endangered aboard the Jet- strates the realistic grasp our milliners.
itary leaders have of the war. To
Arab guerillas were reacting to clarify the issue the New York Post
what they perceived as a severe has compiled a brief file of the
EDITOR'S NOTE: Wayne Davis is a Sciences) to take care of the needs of the
injustice. Only such an intolerable General's remarks:
of Zoology at UK.
shrinking enrollments in the College of
"The war is not a stalemate. professor By WAYNE II. DAVIS
injustice would merit endangering
Agriculture.
In a meeting last year of the School of
I think one of the major causes of stuthe lives of innocent people, they We are winning it slowly but steadBiological Sciences with Dean Royster of
enreasoned. This logic is very similar ily. North Vietnam is paying a dent unrest is that, with growing
was
rollments, the hiring of new faculty is the College of Arts and Sciences, it
to that mouthed often by the United tremendous price with nothing to not
made clear by me that the 1969 classes
in the area where most needed.
in Biology 100 were the maximum under
States in justifying its actions in show for it."
The hypocrisy of rhetoric versus action
The analogy doesn't
-- Westmoreland, July 7, 1967 puts the teaching program at the top on the present set up because Memorial Hall
was filled. I suggested the possible choices
paper and in speech but at the bottom
hold, but the principles involved
as: opening another section, limiting en"I do not believe Hanoi can in reality.
are closely paralleled.
rollment, offering the course in both se100 began in 1967 with 700 stuBiology
holdup under a long war."
freshman courses
Indo-Chin-

p

Editor-in-Chi-

Indo-Chin-

Kernel Soapbox

Indo-Chin- a.

a
war continues
The
to continue, seemingly without direction or end. The president of the
Bank of America, A. VV. Clausen,
offers an interesting contrast to
the engineers of the war. "In my
judgment the war in Vietnam is
a
a tragic national mistake
colossal one. In any other context
of life, when a mistake has been
made whether by a person, by

dents. The following year there were 1200
and in 1969 it grew to 1650. During this
time the Department of Zoology, which
does the major part of the teaching of
the course, remained at 11 faculty members. Meanwhile the College of Pharmacy
grew from 12 faculty in 1966 to 29 this
year (in part by absorbing Clinical Pharmacy) while their entering and graduating class sizes varied from 2 and
respectively. Also the departments of
Agronomy and Animal Sciences have each
grown to 46 faculty members (more than
the 38 in the entire School of Biological

Indo-Chin-

...

1

Mll

Westmoreland, February
25, 1968,

"The enemy has been defeated
at every turn."
-- Westmoreland, June 9, 196S
"None of us ever felt that a
military victory in the classical
sense was attainable in South Viet-

65-7-

nam."
-- Westmoreland, July 16, 1970

tS tmm
rPt

m

i

-

45-5- 2,

1

SCHOOLING

mesters, or reintroducing
in zoology, botany and microbiology.
None of these alternatives was chosen.
Rather, someone in the administration,
apparently lacking the intellectual curiosity to phone the caretaker of Memorial
Hall to learn that it contains S62 seats,
opened up the Biology 100 sections to
950 each. By the time registration opened
at 8:00 Tuesday and we confiscated the
remaining class tickets 894 students had
enrolled in each section.
When classes opened Wednesday we
were fortunate there was not a riot JDu ring
the day we collected a waiting list of
58 students who told us they desperately
needed to get into the course. Many were
seniors. Some juniors came in with their
schedules for next year and notes from
their advisors saying that they must take
Biology 100 this year. Some students
decided to take the course by correspondence.
Building up the College of Pharmacy
was a desirable move. A weak segment of
the university was made strong, whereas
the Department of Zoology, although the
smallest among our state universities (yes,
this includes Wyoming, Idaho and Montana where enrollments range from 4500
to 8000), was already strong and highly
respected across the nation.
The mistake is in the order of our priorities. In attempting to strengthen certain
areas where students are scarce, this university has overreached its available resources and thus has failed to uphold its
commitments to the students and the
teaching program.

EDITOR'S NOTE: All letters to the ediand not
tor must be typed, double-spacemore than 200 words in length. The
writer must sign the letter and give classification, address and phone number. Send
of
or deliver all letters to Room 11
the Journalism Building. The Kernel reserves the right to edit letters without
changing meaning.
d

3--

Kernel Forum: the readers write
UK Impressions

To The Editor.
The summer is past now as are some
houses on Columbia across from Sorority
Row. In their absence, I' had visions
of maybe some grass and trees, the Botanical Gardens reborn.
Conspicuous in their absence are some
more great trees, replaced by asphalt, and
And in front of
concrete wheel-stopBlazer Hall, yet another set of asphalt
roundball courts.
And another budget cut and more
parking lots. And 2 or 3 more buses to
carry those overworked bods to class,
some new additions to the Student (?)
Code and a new plione system, and
pollution that the newspapers and or
politicians somehow overlooked until just
now . . .election time.
And a new group to "cause the silent
majority to speak out," and 2 to 5 for
possession, and more of those funny looks
if your hair is longer than it was last
semester..
s.

And a letter from the headmaster in
Frankfort.
And my frisbee was hijacked because
I had a sticker on it saying "Boycott
Pollution." The frisbee was offered back
to me in exchange for a toke from my
Kool-Ai- d
pipe.
And probably another budget cut that
won't allow some new ideas in, but
someliow can find money for yet ANOTHER parking lot.
And another group called WFPH-CEH(Weirdo - Freak - Pig . Hippie-CommiEstablishment Heads-United- ),
that's selling dynamite ABT brownies
for $1 a hit at the Alumni House.
And some empty cannhters at the
Police Auction.
And a "for sale" sign on the individual who bit the dust because he tried
to find out why Pralltown exists in one
of the "richest counties in the country,"
but still wouldn't join a CROUP or wear
beads or Brookes Brothers.
And a bum trip on Penn Central.
And a recognized Free U, and some
U

e"

deep memories of Kent State and the
month of May 1970. And even deeper
hopes that we can get our stuff together
somehow, regardless of another budget
cut and more parking lots and more
groups and more Student Codes, and wars,
and . . .?
Eric Loyer
4th Year Design, Architecture

What is Right at UK?
To The Editor
Well, I see where the Kernel has
printed, in their bleeding heart liberal
style, a soapbox article by W. Cates III
in which all he does is poor mouth UK

andtheCPCV.
If he doesn't like

UK, he doesn't
have to go to school here.
I think you ought to print more articles
about what is right at UK. Maybe one
about the Pike house.
Jim Williams
EDU. sa

Aii Active Radical
To The Editors
Activist and radical are simply two
terms not to be authoritatively defined
or described by James Miller in Ids letter
or soapbox, or by UK administrators in
their "praise the reform activist, down
students against stuthe radical-pla- y
dents" speech making.
The terms vary and are not black or
white, and sometimes are synonymous.
I, personally, am an activist, a reformer, or a radical, and am violent or nonviolent depending on where your head is.

Don't keep drawing boxes and calling
the "good guys" this (activist or radical)
and the "bad guys" that (radical or

activist) based on personal value systems
and warped definitions. That's the same
bag as the name calling of protesters
from the last decade.
Don D. Pratt

UKCraduate

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Sqt. H,

Film ami Lecture Series Planned

1970- -5

The 'Zoo' Hopes to Serve UK Community

By RON HAWKINS
Assistant Managing Editor
An American Flag extends
from theCroveMior Street Zoological Cardens, 305 Crovesnor Avenue. Inside "the Zoo" are five
persons who feel, to varying degrees, that what theflag'original-l- y
stood for has been severely
desecretated.
Geoffrey Pope, a former and
possibly future UK student, says
the Zoo has internal ideological
differences, although there is a
strong liberal element running
through all five inhabitants.
What the five residents of the
Zoo do agree on, however, is
that there is a need for a place
where students and residents of
the UK community can turn for
legal aid, medical aid and general information on what's going
on in the community.
Doug Stewart, a resident of
the Zoo and a member of the
Student
University
Advisory
Committee, says that since the
Zoo's birth he has received calls
concerning marriages, abortion
and has "talked down a girl
g
Only Jerry
(Schroeriiig) had talked anyone
before. It's
down
been quite an experience.".
Not An Arsenal
The Zoo, say its inhabitants,
is trying to gather money through
a rock festival to finance a legal
bum-trippin-

bum-trippi-

defense fund and bail fund for
students and residents of the
student community. It is not
an arsenal prepared to run a
revolution, they say.
"We have a bow and arrow,"
said Pope.
"Oh, yeah, I have a broken
point knife," submitted Stewart.
"Doug has a chain upstairs
attached to a door," said Pope,
"He's got a club, too."
"We're also putting razors on
Frisbees," inserted Stewart.
Altliough the Zoo claims it is
not involved in arming students,
the Zoo is involved in presenting
a film and lecture series. The
film series will start Thursday
night in the Student Center Theatre with presentations of "The
Virgin President" and "Confrontation at Kent State."
Newton May Come
The Zoo still has hopes of
bringing Huey Newton to campus. The Zoo's plans originally
were to have Newton speak in
October, but Newton plans to
make no speaking engagements
until November.
The "organizer" of the Zoo
is Juliann "Peck" Kennamer,
claims Pope. Kennamer is a member of the Student Mobilization
Committee's Steering Committee. Having spent a lot of his
time organizing the Rock Festival and starting the Zoo, Ken

namer has missed quite a number of classes.
A campus policeman has been
keeping his eye on residents of
the Zoo, the Zoo inhabitants
say. The officer reportedly commented that the rock festival
and the Zoo should be doing

By The Associated Press
On Feb. 1G, a time bomb exploded on the window ledge of
a San Francisco police station.
Sgt. Brian V. McDonnell, 45, was
fatally injured.
On May 22, policeman James
Sackett, 28, of St. Paul, Minn.,
answered a call saying help was
needed to take a pregnant woman
to the hospital. The call was
false. Sackett was shot to death
by a sniper.
On Aug. 6, Richard Huerta
was sitting in his patrol car in
San Jose, Calif., writing out a
raffic citation. Without warning
traffic citation. Without warning,
he was shot to death from
ambush.

Police: A Target?
Walking a beat, standing on
the street corner or sitting in a
patrol car, the policeman increasingly has become a target of apparently unprovoked assaults,
often from ambush. Police officials say more than a dozen
policemen have died thus far this
year from that kind of attack.
The FBI reported seven officers were killed from ambush or
without warning in 1969. FBI
reports also show a total of 35,202
assaults on police in 1969 or 16.9

The Kentucky Kernel

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1M-4-

Franklin County Judge Fred
Bradley said his court meets on
Monday and Friday afternoons
and that the case may be docketed for a couple of weeks hence,
depending on the time needed
by both sides.
The judge said Mrs. Smith
and a representative from the
Louisville Legal Aid Society came
to liis home Friday night to obtain the warrant "and were very
arrogant and demanding."
The allegation in the warrant
refers to the publication last
month in the Louisville Courier-Jouniof the amount Mrs. Smith
was receiving for her nine children who are on welfare.

J970-7- 7
Oct.

6

Oct. 16
Oct.
Oct.
Nov.
Nov.
Dec.

21

29
19
24
1

Jan. 26
Feb. 10
Feb. 16
Feb. 23
Mar. 23

Answers from city and police
officials range from theories about
a nationwide conspiracy by radical groups, to a decline in respect for authority and the symbols of authority, to belief the
attacks are in no way connected.
One opinion is expressed by
Quinn Tamm, head of the International Association of Police:
Radical Influence?
"Attacks on police arebecon-in- g
more and more frequent and
more and more violent as radical groups exliort their members
to 'kill the pigs.'
"The root cause is resentment
of authority which the police
symbolize. That blue uniform
makes its wearer a higlily visible representative of the establishment.
"The police are having a difficult time understanding all this.
They aren't sure whether it is a
a conspiracy or the start of a
revolution . . ."
The assaults come in different
situations: racial disturbances,

domestic

protests,

campus
squabbles.

And in Philadelphia, Chief Inspector Joseph O'Neil of the detective division says simply,
"people are a lot more anxious
than they used to be and express their anxiety in many ways.
Unfortunately, we're usually the
targets." The statistics alone
often present a clear picture of
increased assaults.
A Conspiracy?
Is there a conspiracy against
the police?
Yes, says Al Pattavina, public
safety director in Omaha where
one policeman was killed and
seven injured when a dynamite-fille-d
suitcase exploded in a
vacant house as police were
checking a false report that a
woman was screaming for help.
No, say New York City Mayor
John V. Lindsay and Police Commissioner Howard R. Leary.
Leary, who resigned Sept.