xt7cvd6p2f7d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7cvd6p2f7d/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1966-10-28  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 28, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 28, 1966 1966 1966-10-28 2015 true xt7cvd6p2f7d section xt7cvd6p2f7d Inside Today's Kernel
Three political scientists view the
Manila Conference and its achievements: Page Two.
Lexington housewives "say they will
take no more from food stores:
Page Four.
The quest for experience may be
behind student drug use: Page Five.

Editorial

cites

the need

due

for

vm

process on the campus: Page Six.
or

Marriage

career

is discussed:

web

Donovan

1

the

woman's

Page Eight.

Rear wins the dorm

toot-ba-

ll

crown: Page Nine.

Vol. 58, No. 12

nm
& Kentucky
University
of

LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1906

jl

Twelve Pages

Homsin g D rive
Open
To Continnie Despite
City Hall Opposition

By MARVA GAY
Kernel Staff Writer
Citizens groups will continue
to push for an open housing
ordinance in Lexington even
though officials at City Hall consider such a law unconstitutional.
The newly formed Citizens
Committee for Open Housing and
seven other organizations presented a petition favoring the
ordinance to the Lexington City

Commissioners Thursday.
The committee was formed
two weeks ago, according to Dr.
Abby Marlatt, the committee
secretary, when "it became apparent that the proposed
Human Right commission would not have enforcement powers in public housing."
Dr. Marlatt is a professor of
Home Economics at the UniCity-Coun-

ty

versity.

The City Commission did approve Thursday night an ordinance establishing the
Human Rights Com
City-Coun-

mission. The commission will
have enforcement powers and will
be able to investigate any discrimination in public accomoda-

tions or employment which the
ordinance declared illegal.
John Cook Jr., Lexington City
Manager, said that the open
housing portion of the ordinance
was dropped because "The Board
of Commissioners has legal advice that such an ordinance is
unconstitutional" and therefore
could not become law.

The open housing section

would

have

made it unlawful

for:
1. "A person or real estate
broker having the right to sell,
exchange, rent or lease any property on the open market to deny
same to another individual because of race, color, religion or
national origin.

"A bank, mortgage company or other financial institution to deny financial assistance
in obtaining housing to an in-2.

ty

Humphrey Worried
By Chinese Missiles

By JOHN ZEH
Kernel Associate Editor
Vice President Hubert Humphrey said here today
ERLANGER
that Red China's test of missiles with nuclear war heads "sounds
the warning bell of the most dangerous issue of our times."
In Northern Kentucky to camThe Vice President was asked
paign for Democratic congressional candidates, Humphrey to comment on the Chinese test
said "an increasing number of during a press conference after
he arrived at the Creater Cincinsuch weapons and delivery systemsin the hands of an increas- nati airport here this morning.
ing number of nations can only He spoke later in Cincinnati on
behalf of Ohio candidates.
lead inevitably to a ghastly misThe Vice President said the
take of miscalculation which
could bring on holocaust," he test may improve the chances
for agreement to a nuclear
went on.
"As of now, the Communist
agreement, which
Chinese have a test capability the U.S. has been seeking for
some time.
only. An operational capability,
"We will continue to work
according to our best estimates,
is several years ahead. This does towards adherence by all" to
such a treaty he added. "The
not in any way, however,
stakes for mankind are far to
the danger and importance" of the tests, he added. high for any other course."
de-min-

dividual
color,

because of his race,
or national ori-

religion

gin."
The open housing petition,
signed by 900 persons from all
parts of Lexington, stated:
"We . . . believe in the right
of all Americans, regardless of
race, religion or national origin, to buy or rent a home or
suitable domicile in the neighborhood of their choice.
"We feel that this is essential to the growth and advancement of our city and to the
welfare of all its citizens. We
further believe that discrimination in housing is undemocratic and morally wrong.
"In furtherance of this declaration, we support the open
housing ordinance . . ."
The petition, which is being
circulated continuously, will be
submitted to the Fayette Fiscal Court Tuesday.
Other organizations backing
the petition and represented at
the meeting were Community Action Lexington-Fayett- e
County,
UK Campus Committee on Human Rights, All Souls Presbyterian Church, CORE, Lexington Committee on Religion and
Human Rights, SDS, Social Action Committee of the Unitarian Church, and Lexington
Monthly Meeting of Religious
Society of Friends.
"As far as I know Bards-tow-n
is the only Kentucky city
which has open housing ordinance," Dr. Marlatt said.
She said, "It is to early to
know what other action the
Citizens Committee for Open
Housing will take but other civil
rights groups will probably join

us."

She said she did not know if
the group would demonstrate for
the ordinance.
A meeting of the open housing committee at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Second Street YMCA.
Ways to support open housing
will be discussed and officers
will be elected.

))....

w&tt

T.

S. Budzinski, in light coat, gets another Lexington
to sign her petition asking food stores to cut out prizes and
shopper
gimmicks and thereby be able to lower food prices. The boycott
started Thursday at Gardenside and is spreading across the city.

Mrs.

Chain Store Boycott
Picking Up Support

Lexington housewives planned Friday for a telephone campaign to enlist more support for their food price rebellion, an
effort that one Agriculture Department economist in Washington
predicted would produce no significant results.
Some 22 women petitioned
effect on
"several hundred" shoppers to have any significant
national retain prices.
Thursday in front of Southland
Leaders of the food price war
and Eastland shopping centers.
called Thursday's initial efforts
Mrs. T. S. Budzinski, orgain the boycott "very successful,"
nizer of the boycott of five chain
saying "business was down all
grocery stores, told the Kernel
over the city."
no attempts to recruit support
The housewives are seeking
would be made in front of the a rollback to
April 19G6 prices,
stores today.
Mrs. Thomas C. Barr Jr., a memThe economist, Stephen J. ber of the executive committee
Hiemstra, predicted only the of the boycotters, said the prices
usual year-endecline from Aucould be as much as "four percent lower right now."
gust price levels, adding the nationwide boycotts are unlikely
Continued on rage 4
d

CAMPUS '66: A Quiet Revolution Underway

By DARRELL CHRISTIAN
Kernel Staff Writer
There is a revolution on campus today. But it is a quiet one almost an

evolution lacking the demonstrations
and fanfare of a few years ago.
In the fall of 1964 and the spring
of '65, the scene on the University of
California campus at Berkeley was one
of student civil rights marches, mass
picketing against U.S. foreign policy and
even an attempt to halt trains carrying
troops bound for Viet rum.
Major national and .academic issues
also provided the motivation for pickets
at Yale as well as other colleges and
universities across'the nation.
Today the scene on these same campuses is changing. There is less picket

ing and inarching. Students are reverting
either to interest in issues closer to home,
such as the selective service, or becoming
completely detached from the world
around them.

There is still activism on campus.
But the activism is concentrated on local
issues where results can be seen. The
reason for this concentration, one national
survey indicates, is a general dismay

with the escalation of the Vietnam war
and "Black Power" advocates on the
civil rights front.

UK students, too, have displayed some
interest in national and state issues. For
example, three UK students participated
in a protest Monday on Kentucky Secretary of State Thelma Stovall's office in

Frankfort protesting her policy on absentee ballots.
"That was certainly not a campus
issue," said UK Acting Dean of Men Jack
Hall, "and I think they would have reacted the same way if it had been a
nationwide issue."
However, only a handful of students
participated in the protest, ami even
then some questions were raised as to
its authenticity. UK students active on
national issues have been in the minority. Students here tend to isolate themselves from
affairs, choosing
to concern themselves only with what's
happening on campus. A new football
stadium or a new grading system is more
likely to excite them than a civil march
in Alabama.

A typical demonstration of student
interest at UK, then, can be found in
the recent Student Congress action for a
student referendum on the location of
a proposed new football stadium. And
even that hasn't stirred the students to
any noticeable degree.
Dean Hall, pointing to instances where
there has been student activism at UK,
noticed one major difference between
UK and more activist campuses, "UK
students go after their results in established patterns instead of through marches
and mass picketing, and while activist
students at Berkeley are discouraged by a
lack of response to their pickets, the UK
method often gets results.

Continued On Page

1

� 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

28,

1966.

No Substantial Change In War Seen

and
groups were ready to quit
would have to do
then all they
is to continue a little longer to

By FRANK BROWNING

Kernel Associate Editor
While the Manila Conference
may have offered a potential
breakthrough for the future, it
brought about no substantial
change toward a settlement of
the Vietnam War, according to
two experts on Southeast Asia.
Both Richard Butwell, director of the Patterson School of
Diplomacy and Amry Vanden-bosc-

Perspective On The News
"If

one of the interests of
the conferences was to demonstrate our friendship in Asia,
it shows we have only a handful. We don't have their endorse-

h,

retired distinguished professor of political science, see
little real accomplishment in the
conference itself.

If there is any value to come
from the conference, they feel
it is a matter of attitude at
home and abroad toward the
U.S. in Southeast Asia.
Butwell applauds President
Johnson and the conference
pledge for a military withdrawal
within six months after the North
Vietnamese cease fighting.
"The pledge is long overdue,"
Butwell adds. It "seems to undercut the Communist charge
that the United States wants
permanent bases in South Vietnam."
Butwell appraises the conference in two ways:
1. "It appears worth the effort if for no other reason than
the withdrawal pledge. We did
at least inject that one thing.
2. "But in terms of countries
that attended, it shows we are
supported by a minority (of Asian
states).
174 NORTH

ment."
He notes that five major Asian
powers were absent from the
meeting, namely Pakistan, India,
China, Japan, and Indonesia,
and he states that they cannot
be called supporters of American
policy in Asia.
According to Butwell the President's jaunt through Asia, the
announcement of the conference,
visits here by Burma's Gen. Ne
Win and Phillipine President
Ferdinand E. Marcos all have
one underlying purpose.
"The general impression of
this is to suggest that the United
States has friends in Asia. It is
frosting on the cake to indicate
to Americans and others that the
United States is not isolated.
. "I think we are far more
isolated (than the impression suggests.)"
Butwell further states that
little progress has been made
since the SEATO pact was signed
12 years ago. The issue then was
that of being sure that North
Vietnam would not spill over
into South Vietnam.
"A few of the faces have
changed. We have lost France.

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
ST.
College

MILL,

9:45 A.M.
11:00 A.M.

Class.

RICHARD T. HARBISON, Minister
Mr. Jack Matthews, Leader

Sermon: "A Lesson

From Dishonesty."

Church Of God, 812 Loudon Ave.

General Headquarters, Cleveland, Tenn.
Phone
E. W. Carden, Pastor
10:00 A.M.
Sunday School
11:00 A.M.
8

MORNING WORSHIP
EVANGELISTIC
Y. P. E., Tuesday
Prayer Meeting, Thursday
PUBLIC

7:30 P.M.
7:30 P.M.
7:30 P.M.

INVITED

WOODLAND CHRISTIAN CIIUKCII
East High ot Kentucky Ave.
Miss Mary Hulda
Church School 9:30 A.M.

Elmore Ryle, Minister
Allen, Minister of Education
Morning Worship 10:45 A.M.

"A THREEFOLD

Sermon

Youth Groups

JAMES A. LOLLIS, Minister
College Seminar 9:30 a.m.

REV.

DRIVE

10:30 a.m.

Worship

Sunday

Call

For Transportation

cussions. The withdrawal plan
will be perceived by the opposition (the North Vietnamese)
as not much of a compromise.
"In terms of the movement
it will make toward a change,
it has not been very effective,"
Jensen went on.
Vandenbosch sees the lack
of concrete peace gains as arising
from a flaw inherent in the condamned-if-you-don'-

277-378-

151

Sunday, Oct. 30
Rev. Tom Fornash
Sermon
"INCENTIVE

THE LORD'S SUPPER
(Vestage of pagen practice?)
LSD AND THE PEP PILLS
(Is it moral to tamper with the mind?)

OCT. 30
NOV. 6

N0V. 13

TO SERVE"

WORSHIP

SERVICE

THE NEW MORALITY
(What is the Christian

attitude toward

AND

Discussion

1

METHODIST
CHURCH
High at Clay Avenue
DR. J. T. HARMON, Pastor
Dr. W. P. Fryman, minister, visitation
9:45 a.m. Church School
11:00 a.m. "A Strong Man"
7:00 p.m. "Conclusion"

Call

or

277-617- 6

277-402- 9

ORIN M. SIMMERMAN,

JR., Minister

CENTENARY
1716 8. Lime (Next to HotplUli
Donald VV. Durham. MinUter
J. K. Wood, 1'aktoral MinUter
Dewey Sander, Aisociate Mlnikter
tarklnf In Hear of Church)
iamuel MorrU, Youth Mlnikter
9:00 and 11:00 a.m.
"Here I Stand." Dr. Durhat
11 nil
a rv
F
cnooi
v:o'j a.m. ftunaay
aession
6.15 p.m. Church-wid- e
Mission Study
7:30 D.m.
Evening Service "The Message of James"
6:15 p.m.: Fellowship Supper
7:00 p.m.: Mid-wee- k
Wednesday
Service
N artery for all Service
I'arklnf in Hear ot Church)

following

Rt.

5

Lexington,

each sermon.

9:30 sermon broadcast over WBLG, 1340

Bulletin Board
Professor Lloyd Jensen of
the Political Science Department will speak to the Patterson School Club at a luncheon
meeting at 12:00, Monday,
Oct. 30, in Room 206 of the
Student Center. His topic will
be "Political Development and
Policy." Sandwiches,
Foreign
soft drinks, and potato chips
may be purchased from 11:45
to 12:00 in Room 206.

Young Democrats will meet
at 7:30, Tuesday, Nov. 1 in
Room 110 of the Law Building. There will be a featured
speaker and plans will be made
to organize for the election.
All interested persons are invited to attend.
The" A. C. S. Student Affiliates will take a fielsJ trip to
Ashland Oil & Refining Company and Research Laboratories in Ashland, Ky., on Friday, Dec. 2. The cost is $3.00
per person, payable at least
one week in advance of the
trip in the Chemistry office,
those wishing to go must see
Mrs. Scouten in the Chemistry
office before Nov. 15.
Dr. Andre Helliger, member
of the Papal Commission on
Population Problems, will speak
at 7:30 p.m., Monday, Oct. 31,
at the Medical Center Auditorium. The meeting is open
to the public and is sponsored
Newman
by the University's
Club.

The

'v7

Us

T. T. MAY, Pastor

SCHOOL

9:45 a.m.

WORSHIP

HOUR

10:45 a.m.

YOUTH

SERVICES

6.45 p.m.

GOSPEL

HOUR

7:30 p.m.

PRAYER MEETING

(Thur$l

UCCF

will

present
at 7 p.m.
Sunday at Nexus. Throughout
the film the camera moves
from narrator to cartoonist to
present the subject matter in a
double perspective.

Ky.

SUNDAY

1:00 each Sunday morning

led by an Elder

RD.,

Invites You to Visit

MURDER

.

JOHNSON AT MANILA

The

sex?)

(Passing trend or permanent threat?)

9:30 and

PARK
East

9:50 a.m. Church School; College Class: Sam Davis, Teacher
11:00 a.m. "The Church On The Threshold Of Today"
7:00 p.m. "Draw A Big Circle"

THE ECUMENICAL MOVEMENT
(Is it conspiracy, compromise, or creativity?)
VIOLENCE

CANTERBURY HOUSE
All ROSE ST.
Episcopal Church
SUNDAY SERVICES
8:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m. 2nd Sundays

RICHMOND
extra-marit-

J

The Town Girls will have an
exchange dessert with Circle
K at 6:30 p.m., Monday, Oct.
31, at the Presbyterian Center.
All
women are invited to attend.

PROVIDED FOR STUDENTS

(What Christian Principles are at stake?)

Xo.

he can see no

Nonetheless,

Richmond Road Church of the Nazarene

VIETNAM

.1

other choice but to at least temporarily stop the bombing if the
United States is seriously interested in peaceful settlement. "I
think that's what we shall have
to do." We ought to try it once
more."

sponse.

lj

DEAD
we?)

yl'icy:

Dr. Gerard Salton will speak
to the Association for Computing Machinery at 7:30 p.m.,
Oct. 31, in Room 309 of the
Student Center. His topic will
be "On-Lin- e
Information Systems."

ALDERSGATE METHODIST CHURCH

HAS THE CHURCH ANYTHING TO SAY
TO THESE BURNING ISSUES?

OCT. 23

11 a.m.

1881 EASTLAND PARKWAY

To Attend The Following Series of Sermons

OCT. 9

through diplomatic channels
which would allow both sides to
save face. "You can't do these
things at public conferences."
Responding to criticism made
by some experts that American
bombing of Hanoi was not even
discussed, Vandenbosch said he
believes the omission intentional.
"The United States is ready
to stop esculation but it wants
some indication that these others
(the North Vietnamese) are prepared to respond," Vandenbosch
declared. He noted that a similar
bombing lapse in early 1966 did
not spawn such a reciprocal re-

Speaker

TRANSPORTATION

Short and Walnut

OCT. 2

Vietnamese government can restore law and order and suppress
the Vietcong by itself," he said.
The only real movement
toward a settlement, he says,
would have to be developed

2356 HARRODSBURG RD.
DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
9:30 a.m. College Class
10:50 a.m. Morning Worship
"ON LIVING WITH YOURSELF"

CENTRAL CHRISTIAN
CHURCH

art

MAXWELL

win.
"On the other hand if we
had taken a strong attitude of
wanting to continue activity at
the present scale orescualte.this
would disturb the rest of the
world," he explained.
Vandenbosch
However,
thinks the North Vietnamese
could have bolstered their position, perhaps have grown closer
to winning, had they accepted
the conference proposal.
Vandenbosch doesn't believe
the South Vietnamese government could conquer the Vietcong
without outside help. "It is
doubtful tomewhethertheSouth

SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH

ARE INVITED BY THE ELDERS OF

(Or

E.

9

YOU

IS GOD

out-

University
Methodist Chapel

At

OCT. 16

"damned-if-you-d- o,

t"

come regardless of what the conference had proposed.
"I think the conference was
in a bit of a dilemna. If it had
moved in the direction of peaceful gestures, it would only have
strengthened the view of the
North Vietnamese that they are
succeeding.
"If the conference had gone
forward in the direction of peaceful offers, the Vietcong and North
Vietnamese would regard this as
a sign that

5.00 P.M.

CRESTWOOI) CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunday

are worse.
"All we know is what was
said. "We don't know what the
follow through will be."
Associate Professor of Political Science Lloyd Jensen agrees
the conference was a move to
"get support for our position
in Southeast Asia."
He sees the prime motivation
in terms of domestic elections
here at home.
Nor docs Jensen believe the
Manila Conference or its proposals will probably amount to
very much.
"To be successful you've got
to get the opposition in the dis-

CONSCIOUSNESS"

Nursery provided during Morning Worship

1882 BELLEFONTE

Great Britain is lukewarm. Pakistan is opposed to us.
"We have no more friends
now, possibly less, and things

ference itself, a

CT;

3

7:30 p.m.

Horticulture

Club

is

Roast"
a "Ghost
sponsoring
Saturday night at the farm of
Dr. Jan Abernathie, Crogens-fen- y
Road, 8'.. miles out the
Nicholasville Road from Southland Drive. Transportation will
be provided from the Limestone
Road entrance of the Agriculture Science Building no later
than I p.m. All those interested in the Horticulture Club
are invited. The Roast begins
at 6:30 p.m.

� THE KENTUCKY

Bus Drivers Reject
Company's New Offer
The Lexington Transit Coip.'s wage increase offer was rejected
last night by 81 members of striking Amalgamated Transit Union
local 039.
next move
l
Kufu Ream, president
up to the medi- ator.
the local union, snd die vole
Kearns said the union would
was 81-against die offer made
The employes, wait for the company to make
Wednesday.
who had asked for a 20 ecu ( another offer "preferably much,
raise effective immediately, were much better."
The strike is now in its 19th
t
offered a
raise to begin Nov. 1 and an additional day.
three-centan hour effective
May 1, 1967.
Toilet
Situation
Kcarns said the company
ignored a request by the union Forces Coed Agitation
for tluee additional paid holiAnd UI Consternation
days, refused to continue a
the
"war clause" in the contract
URBANA, 111. (CPS)-- At
and refused an arbitration University of Illinois bureauclause.
cracy has met its downfall in
A "war clause," as in the old
the bathroom.
contract which expired Sept.
Angry coeds successfully ha9, gives the union the right to rassed the administration last
negotiate for higher wages if week, demanding the abolition
of toilet paper roller rod notches,
Congress declares war.
Of the arbitration clause, which prevent tearing off more
than two sheets at a time.
Kcarns said, "That's all labor's
Women's dormitories echoed
got to fight with. Without that
we might as well not have a
with the cries "longer white tape,
no red tape," as the battle prounion."
Kearns complained that Ken
gressed. Ad hoc committee chairTotten, regional manager for man Phyliss Levun explained
that the students were resorting
the parent bus company, Amerto propaganda tactics because
ican Transit Co., had earlier
promised any otfer made by the regular channels were
the company would be retroacclogged with red tape.
The university responded imtive but he (Totten) now refused to do that.
mediately. Not only have the
Frank Mat tone denied that offensive notches been put out
the regional
manager had of commission in the women's
agreed to retroactive pay. This dorms, but they have, been renwas promised, he said, only if dered ineffectual in buildings
union members would continue all over the campus.
The conflict may reappear
working while a new contract
on other fronts, however. "We
was being written.
view the current toilet paper
Claiming the union has never
controversy as just one example
agreed to negotiate anything,
Mattone said, "as soon as the of the University's impersonal
federal mediator gets us back attitude towards its students,"
Miss Levun said as she walked
together, we'll be ready to negotiate." According to him, the toward a water cooler.

Friday, Oct. 28,

KERNEL,

IW.fi

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Nov. 4 Boeing Co.; Bureau
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The Kentucky Kernel

Th Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky,
Station, University 40500. Second-cla- Lexington, Kentucky,
pottage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
UK Post
of Student Publications,
Office Box 4986. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell, secretary.
Begun as the Cadet In 184, became the Record in 1V00, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 113.
w

SUBSCRIPTION

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Per copy, from files
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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

28, 19fifi

'We Won't Accept Any More,' Says Shopper
By RON

HERRON

Kernel Staff Writer
housewife bought no
meat for six weeks in an unsuccessful
attempt to lower grocery prices. Today, she is one of 22 frustrated shoppers leading a supermarket boycott with
the same objective.
"Acting as an individual, I hadn't
had any effect," says Mrs. Thomas C.
Barr Jr., who is on the executive committee of the boycotting shoppers. She
is more encouraged by the group action,
and says that after the first day of the
boycott Thursday, there are already "confidential" indications that sales were

One Lexington

down.
The sanctions are being imposed only
on those stores which offer trading stamps,
gimmicks or games of chance to spur
business.

"We have to be realistic," adds Mr.
Barr. "I want them to make a profit,
but I want them to make an honest
profit."
"We have accepted the price rise up
to now, but we won't accept any more
now."
The boycotters seek a price rollback
to April, 1966 levels, although Mrs. Barr
said, "of course, we'd like to see them
roll it all the way back to 1959."
April 1966, is only an arbitrary date,
she added, "We have no factual, detailed
information yet." Such information is now
being sought, she said, through attempted
contacts with Sen. John Sherman Cooper
and Gov. Edward Breathitt.

"They are our heroes," Mrs. Barr
her
says of the Denver shoppers. Still,
is faced with the problem of avoidgroup
ing some of their confusion.
Despite the danger of disunity inherent in expansion, she says there is an
appeal for additional help. "Twenty-tw- o
people just can't handle it all by

Accurate figures may become crucial
as the boycott approaches its goals, in
determining when the goals have actually
been achieved and when the sanctions

Food Boycott Picking Up Support
Continued From Page

1

Hicmstra predicted the decline from August levels could
be "in the range of one percent."
Meanwhile, in Lexington,
managing director of the Better

Business
Bureau, Walter W.
McCabe, defended local chain
stores who are targets of the
boycott.
McCabe replied to charges
by Mrs. Paul Patrick that games
and other enticements used by
the stores are "controlled." Mrs.
Patrick previously had cited a
St. Louis Better Business Bureau
report which said "a store gets
a winning number only when
the store manager requestsone."
"I do not believe any manager
of any of the local stores could
or would try to influence the
result of any contest," McCabe.
In another development, an
informed source said officials of
the Lexington Herald-Leade- r

Company have ordered reporters
and editors to play down the
boycott and not to carry stories
on the front page.

This morning's edition of the
Herald carrying a story on the
boycott on its inside pages.

A little more than 1,000 people signed
the petition Thursday morning, the first
day of the boycott, she noted, even
though only Southland and Eastland
center were hit. Next week, she added,
all involved stores will have petition
holders seeking signatures.
In addition, Mrs. Barr said, they were
shoppers
able to turn back 15 would-b- e
at Southland, by explaining the reasons
for the boycott.
"I also noticed that all the produce
was still stacked up neatly at 1:30 p.m.
in one of the stores," she went on. As
any housewife knows, Mrs. Barr con
tended, shelves just aren t that neatly
stacked so late in the day.
The boycott is set to last at least until
Monday. It is expected to spread to all
five chains here.

can be removed. Disagreement among
a
participants occurred at this point in
Denver boycott, as certain stores actually
did lower their prices but not all shoppers
were ready to end the embargo.
The Denver boycott, the nation's first,
started out as one group, as the local
move has, but soon split into many parts.
Thus there could be no unified agreement on Just when the objectives had
been attained.

The decision was made, according to the source, after Thursday afternoon's editions of the
Leader carried the story and pictures on the front page.
There was no explanation for
the action.

SX Derby, Arts Ball Posters

Are Disappearing, Say Sponsors

Two of the top campus social eventsofthe year both scheduled
for this weekend apparently have developed into a small-scal- e
battle between the two sponsors.
Iiirmi(rhm.t the last two weeks.
The battle came to a climax
He said about 1,000 posters
Thursday night when sponsors were printed, and about 75 perof the Beaux Arts Ball and the cent were placed on campus.
Sigma Chi Derby both charged
"About 99 percent of thepost-er- s
that their publicity posters on
on campus have been taken
campus have been disappearing. down," he said.
Bob Cuinn, president of the
Frank Brockardt, Sigma Chi
student chapter of the American president, said Thursday, "I
Institute of Architects, sponsors don't know anything about it."
of the Beaux Arts Ball, said However, Brockardt said postnumerous posters advertising the ers
advertising the Sigma Chi
affair have been removed Derby and Dance have been removed during the past two
nights.
"Quite a few of our posters have been taken down," he
said.

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Fire Alarms, Parity Raid

Keep Coed Dorms Awake

Women students living in the new Dormitory Complex and
Cooperstown D can attest to the fact that the fire alarm systems
in their respective residence halls are in fine working order.
Shortly after 7 p.m. Thursday night alarms sounded in Complex
Seven. Evelyn Aeker, the complex's resident advisor, thought she
saw a fire in one of the unfinished buildings in the complex so
she turned in a fire alarm.
The wails of two (ire engines caused an exodus of the residents
of Haggin and Donovan Halls, and fraternity row. They went
en masse to the complex only to find it was a false alarm.
The crowd became rowdy and boisterous and several men began
climbing up the sides of the buildings along the windows.
The