xt7dbr8mgj95 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7dbr8mgj95/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1968-04-11  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 11, 1968 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 11, 1968 1968 1968-04-11 2015 true xt7dbr8mgj95 section xt7dbr8mgj95 Tie
Thursday Evening, April

Kernel

ECemttcjcky

The South's Outstanding College Daily

11, 1968

UNIVERSITY

-

...

OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. L1X, No. 131

O.K. Curry Wins

V-

Over Cooper;
Bryan Also Wins

2-- 1

v;

:)

By CHUCK KO OILER
The
ticket won a predictably easy victory- in yesterday's Student Government elections in a moderate turnout of alxmt
3220 students.
O. Kr Curry defeated John
ison to other campus SG elecCooper for president by an almost tions."
margin. His ninning mate,
The current SG president,
Wally Bryan, overw helmed Linda Steve Gok, explained that the
Rogers for the vice presidency
smaller turnout this year was
by a greater than
margin. because "the race really only
began only a few days ago."
Curry derived his greatest
from the Blazer Hall,
strength
"Last year's campaign," he
Donovan Hall, and Commerce
added, "began the day we reBuilding precincts, each of which turned from spring break."
Curry-Brya- n

V

1
v.

,

i

X.

l- -

To The Victors
delighted O.K. Curry, left, and his running
mate, Wally Bryan, receive congratulations after
winning the Student Government officer elections
yesterday. At right is the outgoing SG president,
Steve Cook. After the results were announced
A

-l

l!

-

i

...

Curry read a statement acknowledging the "vote
of confidence" given the pair and soliciting the
support of all students. (See Related story, pictures,
pg. 3)

Vail

Bryan

SC

Complex

Totals

1,913

31

12

169
423

21

5

55

11

315
250
422
850

.296.

32

.7.

215 ,

143

39

47
79
108
250
110
594

1,094

2,052

HARTFORD, CONN. -- Sen.
Eugene J. McCarthy's forces
Wednesday upset in three major
cities the regular party organization headed by Democratic National Chairman John B. Bailey
in their primary battle for a
strong voice in picking delegates
to the National Convention.
McCarthy slates won in New
Haven, New Britain and Stamford, where the regular party
headed by Bailey, also the State
Chairman, has been unchallengeable for years.
At stake in primaries in 30
towns and cities were 300 of the
970 delegates to the state convention that will pick 44 delegates
for the Democratic National Convention.
First tallies showed the McCarthy forces picked up 115 of the
300.
An unofficial

statewide vote

count showed about 37,000 registered Democrats backed the party
organization headed by Bailey
and about 30,000 voted for McCarthy candidates.
Seats Insure Some Voice
The McCarthy camp wanted
to win a share of the national
slate by picking up delegate
strength at the state level. The
seats won insure their having
some voice in the state decision.
"If we win 20 percent of the
delegates to the state convention,
we will break the unit rule and
we will pose an expression of the

public that the party

organiza-

tion will not be able to ignore,"
said the Rev. Joseph Duffey of
West Hartford, Head of the Min- -

about 11:30 p.m. after the
had been tabulated in the
Student Center, Curry and Bryan
arrived and the president-elec- t
read a prepared statement for
the press. The statement said that
"today UKstudents have given
Wally Bryan and me the vote
of confidence which the Krrnel
spoke of last week."
At
vo.tes

'We Must Rejuvenate'

-l

Wally Bryan won by a
vote margin over Linda Rogers.
1258

Although only about 3,220
votes were cast, in comparison
to last year's total of 4,900, SG
leaders called the election a success.

McCarthy Wins Connecticut Upsets,
Gains Voice In Delegation Vote
United Press International

l.

Predicted support for Cooper
from the Complex failed to materialize and he lost there by an
deficit.
almost

Rogers

4

97
109

197

335
662
. 458

FOR VICE PRESIDENT

4

Cooper

261

2'2-to--

precinct where he lost to Curry
margin.
by only a

Creech

Curry
Blazer
Donovan
Commerce

I

than

Cooper found .his greatest
strength at the Student Center

Voting Results By Precinct
FOR PRESIDENT

in his favor.
voted alxjut
At Blazer Curry's edge was better

nesota Senator's campaign in the there was speculation the Connecticut delegation would supNutmeg State.
Hie party organization is port Sen. Robert Kennedy in Chi-

headed by Bailey, Gov. John N. cago.
Ribi-cof- f,
New Haven's loss was a blow
Dempsey and Sen. Abraham
all of whom were on the to the organization. It means that
Hartford slate. Hartford stayed Mayor Richard C. Lee and the
vocal New Haven Town
loyal to Bailey as expected.
Bailey had pledged the orgaon Pace 3, Col. 5
nization to President John son and
when the rresiaenr, announced prfjZiZj- f
his withdrawal Bailey said it
ue neuirai. uaucy auu
WOUU1
Ribicoff were among the first
men outside the inner circle to
support Sen. John F. Kennedy
for the presidency in 1956 and
Demo-Continu-

ed

Election 'Very Good'
Rafael Vallebona, the SG
said "the election was
very good, especially in compar- vice-preside-

It also read: "we must rejuvenate the Student Government
of the University of Kentucky.
We will spend whatever time is
necessary and exert whatever
energy is required to initiate our
platform and bring much needed
services to the students of the entire University community."
The statement ended in a plea
for the cooperation of all students
and organizations in helping to
revitalize the Student Government.

BSU Meets Privately
The Black Student Union
met Wednesday evening in

the Student Center but refused to allow a Kernel reporter to be present in that
capacity during the meeting.

If the election is uncontested.
Curry will be installed as SG
president next Tuesday at 3 p.m.
in Dr. Oswald's office.
The results of the election
of 16 SG representatives will be
available Sunday night. The tabulation begins at 2 p.m. Sunday
in the Student Center.

'

ZRjFU''

Sen, McCarthy

In Louisville
On April 26
Phil Patton, who was elected
chairman of the UK Students
for McCarthy last night, has announced that Sen. McCarthy will
be in Louisville on April 26 and
probably will come to UK the
same day.
The McCarthy group here will
be assisting Sen. McCarthy's
Indiana campaign on the two
w eekends prior to the elec tion on
May 7. The group will charter
buses to southern Indiana for the
weekends of April 27 and May 3.
Students will have to pay
their bus fare, about $1 each,
but living accommodations will
be provided in Indiana.
Patton also announced that
the UK group has rented a storefront headquarters at 201 Wood-

land

Ave.

One Will Reign

Little Kentucky Derby Queen candidates gathered
in front of the great wall are, left to right, Michele

Legris, Robin Cecil, Ellen Lamiman, Carol Strange,
Gail Rogers, Ann Stewart, Phyllis Lorenz, Lyn
Branson, Clenda Kay Kinney, Cathy Cropper,

Lesesne

Deerin,

Donna

Coleman,

and Layne

Hutchinson. Suzanne Huffines and Kate Kennedy
were absent. Student votes will select a queen to
,
April
reign over the festival
wr-k-

17-2-

� TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April II,

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FOR RENT

Two apartments: (1)
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lAlOt
APPLICATIONS

for positions in the
Summer and Fall Orientation Programs are now available at the receptionist's desk In the Administration Annex and at the East Information Desk in the Student Center.
lOAlOt

Continued From rage 1
cratic Chairman, Arthur Barbieri,
will not be at the state conven-

SG election

7.

SERVICES
WANTED

By CHUCK KOEHLER

The tabulation of yesterday's

vote was about as
exciting as a Sartre novel or the
want ads.
A small group of SG people
grouped together outside of SC
Room 301 A near the Crand
Ballroom. There on the mezzanine they listened and tabulated
the votes called out by Alan
either did
Youngman. Passers-b- y
not notice or ignored their efforts
in implementing our great electoral process.
All day long I had been accosted with signs, handouts and
vocal barrages from bull horns;
I thought the worst was over.
But last night, from downstairs, I could hear the endless
drone of "Curry-Bryan,- "
which
now and then was interrupted by
a "Cooper-Rogers- "
or acrackline
"Creech." Somehow I was re--

i

tion.

if

think-contr-

Kennedy and McCarthy slates
opposed each other in only one
town, East Hartford. The Kennedy slate won.

,

....
in

ol

Orwell's

1984.
A group of

Darien and West Hartford,
two of the state s wealthiest communities, elected the McCarthy
slate and the party regulars took
Middletown, where shortly before
the primary the party announced
that three of its previously uncommitted delegates would back
Kennedy at Chicago.

the curious sat
apart from the counters as if
they were watching some ancient
ritual. But they, too seemed bored
to death.
After the tabulation was over
and O.K. had smiled for the
"Will Of The People"
cameras, the people who had
done their duty went away mutThe returns were greeted with
tering something that sounded jubiliation at McCarthy's headlike "currebrine."
quarters. Duffey declared the vote
a "great victory" for his man.
i

l- -

T

,.

888,889,890

minded of the

,C

1

J

1

APPLICATIONS

4

IN THE TABULATING ROOM

"Two months ago the party
spokesman treated the McCarthy
movement with disdain and tried
to deny us any voice at all in
the party this year," Duffey said.
The campaign chairman said
the McCarthy camp has "learned
to make use of the system and
proven that it can be used successfully to express the will of
the people."

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McCarthy Wins
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� 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April

11, 1968

KB's Send UK's Image North
the first drill team to introduce squad and the

By KATIIY ROSSER

sabers into female competition.
In spite of their sequence being
three minutes short of the required time limit, they placed
third out of six other coed teams.
Their last drill meet was at
Ohio State, where most members
agreed the KB's made their biggest impression. They placed second out of fourteen companies
at the drill meet, after which
they spontaneously entertained
members of the regiment outside
the drill area with a half hour
of songs. One observer1 of. the
girls was quoted as saying that
the Kentucky Babes were the

"The campus image is going
North" according to Capt. James

Channoti, advisor to Kentucky
Babes.
For the last three weekends,
the KB's have been participating
in drill competition at three different universities.
Their first meet was the Illinois Invitational Drill Meet at
the University of Illinois. Teams
must receive an invitation before
being allowed to participate and
only championship teams are invitee! to this meet.. The Kentucky
Babes placed fifth out of twelve
B.

participating.

"Darlings of the Regiment."
Every year, at the Ohio State
meet, there is a Civil War battle
between the Ohio State union

The following weekend, the
saber squad met for the Dayton
Invitational Drill Meet. KB's are

UK confederate
squad. The girls raised such a
ruckus supporting the South that
Union squad
the frustrated
charged with bayonets in a mock
show of anger.
The Kentucky Babes not only
participate in drill meets, but
they also perform services on
campus. During the fall, they
welcomed visiting football teams
at Bluegrass Airport, acted as
Army concert ushers, and assisted
e
g
with
ceremonies.

i

flag-raisin-

pre-gam-

The saber squad marched

ing halftime at the

dur-

Mississippi-Kentuck-

y

basketball game. KB's
also marched in the Governor's
Inaugural Parade and also at
Lexington's Fire Prevention Parade.

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to the Big Ten very often. The
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by this particular group of boys
and girls is a tremendous credit
to this university ' and I doubt
very seriously whether they will
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By

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His materials are plastic, leather, aluminum and steel.
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"We live in a steel age today," he said in an interview.
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Women love steel for many uses,
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diamonds.
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The Kentucky

Kernel, University
ot Kentucky, Lex
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MmsHu Editor
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Advertising, Business, ClrculaUoo tilt

� Kernel Forum: the readers write
YAF Correction

Student Power

To the Editor of llic Kernel:
I am afraid that a slight correction
is called for with respect to Miss Salmon's article in the April 1, Kernel.
While my memory is a notoriously fallible instrument, I think that I am on
safe grounds in denying that I stated
that "YAF has more in common with
Students for a Democratic Society than
with YH." In reality, I stated that YAF
has more in common with SDS than
with doctrinaire literals, such as lilx-ra- l
Democrats and liberal Republicans. I
also stated that YAF differed from the
Young Republicans in that the YRs would
obliged to support a liberal Republican candidate, whereas YAF, being nonpartisan, wotdd not. Evidently Miss Salmon fused and confused the two statements.

To the Editor of the Kernel:
Tuesday, April 2, President Oswald
submitted his resignation to the Roard
of Trustees. To protest his action 600
students stood or milled in front of the
Administration Ruilding. I assume that
this action helped vo show President
Oswald that he has a great deal of support from the student body. Rut is it
going to stop at this one, very mild,
demonstration of support? Thanks to Rafael Vallcbona it did stop at that on
Tuesday.
At the beginning of the demonstration
he criticized the apathetic feeling in the
student body. He is right. This campus
is one of the most apathetic in the U.S.
and I'm happy to know that he realizes
this. I assume he would like to see
changes made to improve conditions for
the student body and promote higher

l'

I may Ik guilty of nitpicking,
but I
do not remember stating that "being
nonpartisan is its YAF's ideology." Indeed, I am not sure what meaning such
a statement would have, if any. What
I said was something like, "YAF is organized along ideological lines rather
than as a partisan political organization."

Finally, I believe that it would have
been wise to have included in the article
a qualifying statement that I stressed
several times during the interview. Namely, that whatever statements I made alout
SDS were based on my experience with
SDS memlxTs at UK. I am scarcely an
authority on SDS's nationwide activities.
All of my grouching aside, however,
am grateful to Miss Salmon for taking
the time and trouble to prepare an article
on YAF.
Hank Davis
YAF Vice President
Math Senior
I

education.

So why did he advocate apathy after
Oswald's resignation? He told the crowd
to disperse because they had made the
lK)int and shown Oswald their support.
Rut Nunn must be shown that the

student Ixnly will vigorously protest any
new president who will not meet the same
high standards that President Oswald
has followed. After the "demonstration"
on Tuesday, Nunn probably realizes that
he can do anything he wants on this
campus because there will always be
someone to stand up and tell the students to disperse. There will always be
a major portion of the students who will
listen to this person. And, unless this is
changed, there will always be a power
structure at UK that ndes the lives and
thinking of the student body.
We need student power. We should
have a say in who the new president
will be. There should be at least one
student (preferably four) to be equal to

the number of faculty on the committee
for choosing the president. This student
or students should have a legitimate
vote and not simply a token. This is
our school and our president. We have
a right to help choose who will lead us.
The Roard of Trustees is withholding
this right. Are you, the student body,
going to allow them to do this? We're
fools if we do.
Meg Tassie
Sociology Junior

their members to

arms. Otherdenom-inatiou- s
such as the Quakers permit each
meml)erto make the decision.
During wartime conscientious objectors may serve as medical corps. They
may participate in noncomhatant assignments and help in disaster relief.
Henry C Ritchie
A&S Freshman
Ix-a- r

Press Ban On SDS

Conscientious
Objectors Serve Too
To the Editor of the Kernel:
Conscientious objectors do have the
right to the opposition of having arms if
the reason arises from religion.
A conscientious objector is any person
who definitely opposes induction into military service. He opposes induction because his moral or religious beliefs do not
allow him to take up arms in warfare.
This means he is opposed to participation in the wars which his country so
engages in.
Some people choose imprisonment before they accept military induction. Some
escape or flee to other countries such as
Sweden, England and Canada.
In my opinion, every naturalized male
citizen has a military obligation to fulfill,
i believe if the reason for objection be a
moral objective, then the person is a
coward. It is not right for some to fulfill
their military obligation, and then escape
it.
I also believe that anyone who cannot
engage in war because of religious belief
has the right to do so. Some religious
denominations just don't approve of warfare. For instance, the Mennonites forbid

To the Editor of the Kernel:
I would like to commend the administration's policy of barring the press
from the SDS National Convention.
Too many reactionaries and
are waiting for a shadow of an
excuse to vilify our generally enlightened
administration with their brand of communism. It would be a major victory for
the bigots of Frankfort to deplore President Oswald and substitute him with a
neo-fascis- ts

and motherhood" pres"flag, apple-pi- e
ident. Dean Jack Hall, by going on the
record for the administration as an opponent of the SDS, showed shrewdness
and competence.
I believe that the students of the University, once again, will show their maturity of being understanding of the difficult position in which our administration
is placed when they have to satisfy an
always more alert and questioning student body, and at the same time an
state
always more servile and
hard-heade-

d

legislature.
I am also confident that the Kernel
staff will find a way to print "all the
news that is fit to print" of the SDS
National Convention without having to
send a reporter to obtain it directly.
Antonio B. Scorsonc
A&S Senior

Campus
News
Briefs
Dr. Norman E. Shumway, a
world pioneer in the, field of
heart transplants, will address
the Alpha Omega Alpha medical honor society installation ceremony at the University of Kentucky G)llege of Medicine on
April IS.
Dr. Shumway will speak on
"Present Status of Heart Transplantation" at 1 p.m. in the
Agriculture Science Center auditorium. The lecture will be
open to the public.
Dr. Shumway performed the
second human heart transplant
in the U.S. and developed in
animals the technique of heart
transplantation used successfully
in humans by Dr. Christian N.
Rarnard in South Africa.

Thirty - one University students were initiated Friday into

Phi Reta Kappa, national scholastic honorary for students in
liberal arts.
The initiation was followed
by a banquet featuring Dr.
Ceorge Winchester Stone II,
dean of the New York University Graduate School of Arts
and Sciences.

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Dr. Robert McAfee Rrown,
professor of religion at Stanford
University, will be guest lecturer
for the 19G8 Spring Lecture Series
at Lexington Theological SemiDr. Rrown's
nary April
special held is contemporary religious thought.
Subject of Dr. Rrown's lectures at the seminary will be
21-2-

"Frontiers for the Church." The
five lectures are scheduled at
10:00 a.m. on April 21, 25, and
26, and at 7:30 p.m. on April
21 and 25. The topics are the
Penitential Presupposition, the
Ecumenical Frontier, the Secular
Frontier, the Theological Frontier, the Structural Frontier.

DOWNTOWN OPEN MONDAY

MUCiVS

& FRIDAYS

'TIL

TURFLAND MAIL OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL 9

155 E. MAIN and the TUKFLAND

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9

� The Kentucky

Iernel

The South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
KM'ABLlSHKl) 1894

THURSDAY, APRIL

11, 1968

i ditoriuls represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.

John Richard Kimmins, Editor
Robert F. Brandt, Managing Editor
Mart.n Webb

Darrell Kite
Dana Ewell
Jo Warren
Terry Dunham
Assistant Managing Editors
Hank Milam, Business Manager
Carol) n Dunnavan, Women's Editor
Joe Hinds, Arts Editor
Bill Thompson, Cartoonist
Jim Miller, Sports Editor
Rick Bell, Director of Fhotography
Mary Magec, Advertising Salesman
Robert Collins, Delivery
Triscilla Dreher, Editorial Assistant
Mike Halpin, Circulation

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The Violence Roundup
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Tlie United Press International
and the Associated Press, two of
the Kernel's wire services, have
a new heading for one of their
end-ofy
daily news summaries: Violence Roundup. Violence,
as it is sometimes abbreviated to,
gives the latest coverage of the
y
riots, urban and camand usually devotes a parapus,
graph to each city presently on fire.
Strictly news, the facts ran like
this:

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The toll across the nation was:
Dead: At least 30.
Injured: More than 2,000
Arrested: Nearly 8,900.
Troops: 21,800 Federal, 30,100
National Guard.
Several thousand people homeless, driven from houses.
Hundreds of businesses destroyed by arsonists.

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There are riots in numerous
cities, but cities each have their
own individuality. For instance in
Baltimore authorities estimate that
the disorders had spread to 25
percent of the city. Chicago began
to pick up the pieces under the
watchful eye of 12,000 troops. Fifteen hundred Guardsman with fixed
bayonets remained in Pittsburgh
and 1,700 were held in reserve.
Oh, and campus, lest we forget.
In Frankfort, at predominantly
Black Kentucky State College, 150
Negro pickets closed down the
school.
1

Violence Roundup reports on
more than 60 American communities where violence occured after
King's murder. It reports things
like the 828 fires and divides them
into original outbreaks 524, rekindled fires-3- 04.
Violence Roundup, frenzied rendition of the national wire service.
More to follow tomorrow.

By David Holwerk

Whoever stole all the Kernels Monday night, whether they were pledge
class members, kleptomaniacs, or some
other category of morons, deserve a note
of thanks from the staff of this newspaper. For they gave us, in this period
of continuing crisis, a brief return to the
era of simplistic problems and forthright
solutions, to the era of Mr. Smith Coes
to Washington.
In that great old movie, you may
remember, while Jimmy Stewart is standing in front of Gngress on the verge of
collapse from fourteen solid hours of
filibustering to defeat the evil interests
of his home state, the kids back home
are delivering papers in their wagons
try ing to overcome the strongann tactics
of the bad guys. The bad guys steal
papers, run kids off the road with tnuks,

wreck presses, and are easily distinguishable by their black shirts and white ties.
In the erd, of course, right, truth, and
Jimmy Stewart prove to be too much
tor the forces of evil: the bouvht-nf- f
congressman repents from the sight of
Stewart's gallant stand for A Better America, the kids do manage to get their
paper out, and the bad guys are stripped
of their
wer and their white neckties.
That was sort of the atmosphere in
the Journalism Building Tuesday night
as we prepared to put out the day's
second run of newspapers, if the pressman had only been a friendly letirt-printer who had donated his services
to the cause the wene would be complete. As The News rolled off the presses
hands seized the sheets,
eager ya
stacked and bound them, and loaded
them into waiting automobiles for their

delivery. Every eye was focused on the
gauges and dials of the trusty old press
(Big Bertha) as she strained to print
her last and most important load of
newspapers. "You can do it Bertha,"
each of us silently prayed, watching the
automatic counter to see if we would
make the magic number of five thousand. And sure enough Bertha did it,
quietly expiring on the five thousandth.
"Coll-eee- ,
kids, we did it," was the
battle cry as we rushed the last of the
papers over to the waiting seekers of
knowledge and truth in the Gmiplcx.
But our hearts were not in it. We knew,
deep inside, that we hadn't beaten any
bunch of organized hooligans. Instead,
we had merely had to put in extra woik
because of the complete asininity of a
group who p