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Eastern Progress Eastern Progress 1967-1968

Eastern Kentucky University Year 1967

Eastern Progress - 07 Dec 1967

Eastern Kentucky University

This paper is posted at Encompass. http://encompass.eku.edu/progress 1967-68/12 SWEATER SEX IN WEATHER PERSPECTIVE Pafec 8 3Uj? iEaatmt Progress Pafce 7 Setting The Pace In A Progressive Era

Student Publication of Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, Ky. 10 Pages Thursday, Doc 7, 194? end the Night is Featured as Production Breathitt Explains Funds Cut By Edward T. Breathitt ever, that actual state expend- Take for example, the com- this month was $5,927,300, which ■T JUDI LEDFORD Governor of Kentucky i PROGRESS STAFF WRITER ltures In all areas of state ser- parable expenditures for higher still leaves $35,362,321 more than . Eastern's Music department , No governor enjoys being forc- vices will still be far more this education, Including the various in 1963--or more than double what Mil present Amahl and the Night ed to reduce appropriations for year than they were four years state universities, Kentucky State lt was that year. Visitors, a Christmas opera by State agencies by a total of $24.1 ago-or even two years ago. And, College, the University of i.ouis- Another example lies In com- Oan Carlo Menotu, under the million as I did this month when a balanced budget will be handled vllle and the Council of Higher parison of the Minimum School direction of Miss Am- In-comlng revenue failed to the next governor. Education. Foundation Program, Including bolse-Chaumont, Sunday De- teach what had been estimated State departments or agencies The general fund expenditure teachers' salaries which are not cember 10, at 8:00 p.m. in Hiram when the budget was drawn up will not be so badly off as some In this category for the fiscal affected by the November budget ■s»sk Auditorium. IP early 1066. persons by their statements year 1963-64 was $32,803, 357. cut. la. 1951, NBC commissioned T This disappointment was tem- might have given you reason to The appropriation for 1967-68 The 1963-64 fiscal year app- MiaaHl to write an opera and pered somewhat by the fact, how- fear. was $74,092,076. The cutback ropriation for this program am Sanaa Christmas his deadline. ounted to $111,622,788. The total •vasted aa to want to write for this year was $163,142,691. at sat, his inspiration for Amahl Student Press to Push for Student Board Seat The $4,575,506 cutback ordered •MM one November afternoon still leaves the program $46,- 944,397 better off than In 1963. vfctte he was walking through The Kentucky Intercollegiate speaker ban and student repre- He warned agalns overplaying the Metropolitan Museum of Art Press Association unanimously sentatlon on collage governing of local minorities. Among the strongest protest- la Mew York city. supported a resolution favoring ations against the budget cute boards. The delegates also noted the have been those emanating from - happened to stop In front student representation on gov- need for increased scholarships, J^™™^' painting Adoration of the erning bodies of all colleges and "The organisation has laid the especially by Hleronymus Bosch. foundation for what it sees as Its Elected to serve as advisers with mental health. universities In Kentucky at Its to KIP A for the 1967-68 academic y he was flooded with sail convention on the George- future, a viable coalition of Ken- Regrettable as lt was to be rise of bis childhood tucky campus newspapers work- year were: Glen Kleine, ad- forced to make this cut, as well town collage campus Dec. land viser to the Eastern Progress; in Italy. Italians a. ing for their high quality re- as other cuts in appropriations nave a Santa Claus. Their Student seats have been en- sponslbllUty and freedom,*' KI- Mrs. Lois Sutherland, adviser that would quicken progress In ire brought by throe kings, dorsed In principle by Governor PA Pr ident John A. Zed said. *° *** student newspaper at the an areas of state government, University of Kentucky Northern Community College of Mental Health Is still way ahead oa camels wearing silver Edward T. Breathitt, Governor- -Zen, tte which produce a myster- elect Louie B. Nunn, Lt. Gov- communication senior presided University of Kentucky, Cov- of the appropriation it received over the groups' fall convention, inston; Mrs. Jane Vance ad- four years ago. tlnkllng. ernor-elect Wendell Ford and lMr to the ■se students cast In the pro- the Kentucky Student Association. He called the establishment * Georgetonian of For the 1963-64 fiscal year, are: Amahl, KayeAsher, The move was started by of too freedom and responsible Georgetown College, George- the Mental Health appropriation ltles study an obvious result town; and Kenneth Vance, of the |i ,569,286. This was ralaad Monna Breland; King the Student Congress and the 01 5 was 2 r. Dale Poling; King student newspaper at the Uni- of the convention's discussion P" *" Affairs Department at to $18,400,000 for the present David Stivers; King versity of Kentucky. Thomas Bonny; the Student Delegates from the ,vld Hayes; Shepherd and Eastern Progress who attended , Pat Gilbert and the convention were Fred Mul- Osborne who trained the llns, editor - In - chief; Re- ESalSESI!? Berea College Students vicU Mulllns, Linda Pet- gald Smith, news editor; Alan atlon in Kentucky." Barbara Shearer, and Trimble, assistant sports ed- One speaker sparking the study rta Hathaway Anne Laube, itor; and JoAnne Collins and was Gary C. Dickey, the former Seek Negro Speakers my England Jones, Judy Ledford, staff writers. Troy State (Ala.) College editor A group called the Black Stu- 3. That Berea put a Negro — Holbrook Gary Grant. The organization's executive who was expelled after trying to dents of Berea Colllge have history course in the curricul- Children: Elisabeth Anne and committee also Initiated a study edltoriallre against the state charged that the college is not um. "We also feel that tee art y Ellse Baker Carla Op- oa the freedoms and responsib- legislature. living up to its long reputation and music departments should Brayn Hens el, Vlckl WU- ilities of the college student press Dr. Darlo PoUtella of the Uni- as a of racial Justice. exhibit a more positive emphasis In the state. versity of Massachusetts, Presi- These students have organized toward the artistic creations and : Karen Kieckner, It also took the first steps dent of the National Council of to bring changes which they say musical expressons of black ,-rapher Kathe Yacabone, toward provldilng a state wide College Publications Advisers will make the college's claims Americans." the students said. Frey, Glenn Mason, Gary news service for campus pap- and Director of Its Commlssloi fit reality. They recently pub- The protesters also declared: ers, KIP A will furnish Its mem- on the Freedoms and Responslb- lished a half-page article In the 'The black students do not Intend Ambolsa - Chaumonf s bars with Information and will ilities of the College Student college newspaper, The Pinnacle, to be showpieces on Integration o assistants are: Or- plan concerted editorial cam- Press In America, said that many making the following demands: so that Berea may successfully tra conductor; Mr. Oppelt; paigns on. Initially, two Issues campus newspapers are editor- mold poor whites Into middle- pianist Miss Frances tent may surface at the 1968 ially seeking "student power" as i. That Berea hire "several class exploiters of the black Si set; Tom Golden, General Assembly- A campus well as covering lt In their pages, black Instructors." The students American. Poling, Betty Latlmer, Anne - say teat collage officials claim •Whenever a white Berea stu- Kama LoveU Rw. Jim to be looking for 'qualified Neg- dent can say and believe teat tea -—, Jim Barns, Kayo Asher, roes, but that this is a "biased momentum of the black move- John Lockwood David Swaago Christmas Program to be criterion" since lt apparently ment Is 'communist-inspired * ■ay SpUlman; fighting; Bob Ky- doesn't apply to white in- we are no longer content. We awU and Steve Fagenbush; Make- structors. no longer Intend to maintain si- ap: Janet Stansbury, Pam Pope, Presented December 13 lent when racist dorm mothers Carol Watson; Costumes, Chrls- BY CAROL DURHAM Metegor, of Cincinnati, Ohio, and 2. Thai •*• college should Interfere with Interracial dat- ttaa Taulbee Properties; Lonnle There's Gotta be Water Down There Somewhere PROGRESS STAFF WRITER Carol Brassfleld, from Mt.Ster- engage more black performers ing." fields, Danny Wlnfleld, Nancy Once again Eastern students ling, are in charge of publicity *od entertainers, and enlist more Some of the black students Graves. A construction worker chip* away son scheduled for wlU be entertained by the Drum for the Drum and Sandal Club. Negro speakers for twice-week- visited Willis D. Weathrfoid, Admission to the production lees material as the Moore Science BaHttBa; near* completion. The $3 mlTiSon structure Is and Sandal's annual Christmas Mrs. Virginia Jinks is sponsor ly chapel meetings. The students Jr., president of tee college at 1* free. show. This year the club has for the organisation. charge that there have been only his home. They said ha told chosen an unusual theme, "A A new part of the program two black speakers on the campus them that college officials wore Creative Interpretation of Dick- this year will be a narrative te three years and no psrform- working on at least two of their Reception, Banquet, Game Highlight Activities en's A Christmas Carol." given by Susanna Ankrum. ers. demands. The announcement of Tommy that Eastern alumni, students Student Union Building. Three Colonels will be hon- to to* frrStm'e,n0WsW,mb* ^^ iHIL 1 J 7* J*J C~~T Pall as featured speaker for the and supporters are welcome to Honorees at the banquet will ored at the banquet by The East- neS^oecTs" A" eigiK'dock Cheerleader Candidate Selected toetball banquet, a hospitality visit the hospitality room when be members of Eastern's Ohio ern Progress, campus news- Thursday, Dec.14 a public show BY BARBARA DONNELL Nam In Murfreesboro, Tenn. they arrive In Murfreesboro Sat- Valley Conference championship Paper. The Progress awards are wlU be given In Brock Aud- PROGRESS FEATURE EDITOR After receiving a degree in cheerleader's ability to enthuse aaj| a video tape of a national urday. team and OVC Coach of the Tear for the most valuable player, the itorium. Admission will be fifty physical education, Jovlta plans a crowd will play an Important televised broadcast are some of "All of our friends are invited Roy Kldd and his staff- cents per person. Jovlta Dick Is Eastern's newly teaching on the secondary level. part in her selection as top 110-per cent athlete and the top elected "Miss Cheerleader."> Ma) trimmings surrounding Sat- to make this their headquarters Bell, a Lexington attorney, defensive player. 'Interpreting Dickon's stand- She Is a member of Qwens, the cheerleader. The competlon will l Grantland Rice Bowl, Saturday," Thurman said. has long been associated with ard had been difficult in many This position entitles her to Gymnastics Club, HYPER, and take place December 27-31. the Colonels and their The hadquarters will be open sports. He earned prep all-state Game to be ways," said Karen Klecker, a represent Eastern In the national KYMA. Saran Shepard was Eastern's assonant, Ball State, have been In from 9 a.m. till noon (CST) and recognition In football and also Eastern football fans who at- choreographer, But I think the "Miss Cheerleader USA" contest. The five finalists in the "Miss "Miss Cheerleader" of last year. for about two hours Immediately Pictures of her will be sent, Cheerleader U.S.A.' contest will In 1965, Eastern's representative Marfreesboro, site of the Rice participated in track and basket- tend the Grantland Rice Bowl dances are coming along very along with those of rep- Bawl, since Thursday to take following the game. ball at both Lexington Henry Clay game next Saturday (Dec 9) In well now." be flown to Cypress Gardens In the contest, Diane Hendrlcks ■art in the many festivities that Refreshments will be offered High School and Hlghtstown, New Murfreesboro will have an op- The opening number Is being resentatives of colleges across where they will engage In four Scott, was chosen as "Miss to all Colonel supporters and the nation, to Cypress Gardens, days of Judged competlon. The Cheerleader U.S.A. surround a post-season classic. Jersey's Peddle High School. portunity to see the complete choreographed by Carol Brass- Florida. By virtue of their Ohio Valley color slides and other In- He then went to the University ABC-TV telecast of the contest field. It begins In holiday spirit formation about Eastern will be of Kentucky and lettered In foot- From these pictures the five Coatorence title the Colonels on video tape the following week. with tee trimming of a Christmas finalists who will compete for Secerns the first Eastern foot- available there. ball and track. He earned his Mr. Jamas Harris director tree. hatt team since 1954 to partlc- A limited quantity of tickets B. S. degree in 1948 and two of the university's division of Chris Brewer's dance, "Blue the title 'Miss Cheerleader U.- years later earned on LI. B. S.A." wlU be chosen. tpate la a bowl game. will be on sale at the head- instructional services, Is mak- Christmas," shows how sad Chr- Jovlta halls from West Milton, Boom Open quarters and campus fraternities degree from U.K. ing arrangements to tape tee istmas can be when Daddy has He began officiating both foot- to work. Ohio, where she was a cheer- supporters at the and sororities are Invited to sell dntlre ABC telecast. Including leader for Milton Union High Rice Bowl football their badges , pennants, etc. at ba" IPd bsskMball In the South- pro-game and halftlme ceremon- "Vexations on Ice," choregra- this point eastern Conference and the Big ies. The taps will be shown phed by Denise Metzger, is pra- School for all four years. She Satarday are Invited to Ten and whistled several football was captain of the squad her 0 | Alumni Bowl Head- BeU is Featured PBialPW by closed circuit the following ctically Ice skating on the stage. senior year. fh will be located bowl games and two NCAA bas- week at times to be announced. Karen Kieckner takes a little Tommy BeU, a National foot- ketball finals. Last year, he was different approach to the holi- This is her second year of Motel, near the Ha said the public wUl be in- cheering for Eastern's teams. ball League referee, will speak selected to referee the NFL vited to view te program. day season In "Christmas Rhap- St Staff reeeboro, Tenn. at the Eastern Kentucky Uni- championship between the Green sody." This number Is adagio, Jovlta's first reaction to her J. W. •Banter'' Thurman, dl- Athletic director Glenn Pres- new title was one of dls-bellef. versity football banquet Tuesday Bay Packers and the Dallas Cow- nell said that tickets are still and boys are used In this ar- af jfjpa* affaire, at 6:30 p.m. in tea Keen Johnson boys. "I thought lt was a Joke," she available at the athletic ticket rangement. said. After being convinced that office Alumni Coliseum. Ha Kings and Wise men bring expressed the hope teat tea 1,300 gifts to the Christ Child In "Do she had been selected, Jovlta tickets allotted Eastern will be you hear what I bean?" chore- added, "I will do my best to sold early next weak and urged ographed by Nancy Russell. live up to the title." fans to purchase their tickets In "Candle," choregoraphed by Jovlta has some serious Pam Schoo, the girls carry light- thoughts about her role as a and will request more. college cheerleader. "Cheering Ball State University, tea Col- ed candles on the stage. The number Is very prayerful and In college is so different from onels opponent has sold 3,500 high school. It's more fun and tickets and will request more, solemn. Other dances and the girls more work. You have to use psy- lt was reported. Bowl officials chology on the crowd some time." say that a few hundred more tick- who choreographed them are: "Yule Log" "What Child is This?" Jovlta feels that she owes a ets may be allotted to Eastern, great deal of her prowess as If the request is made soon by Kathy Yacabone, "Sleigh Ride" by Karen Kieckner and a cheerleader to the experiences enough. "Happy Holiday* by Nancy Rus- she gained at the National Cheer- University officials say stu- sell. leaders Association camp that dent organisations are arranging The other members of Drum the Eastern squad attended during for buses and car pools to take and Sandal are: Jill Burdlne, the summer. The one week camp fans to the game and organizing Diane Fischer, Karen Fletcher, in Hattlsburg, Mississippi was a other morale - boosting cam- Barb FoUlck, Barb Holder, Deb- meeting ground for college paigns. bie Hughes, Marsha Kovac, Glen cheerleaders from all over the Klckoff Is 2:05 p.m. EST. Pro- Mason, Phyllis Miles, Chip United States. game begins at 1:45. Jovlta Practices with the squad Osborne, Bob Osborne, Marva twice a week for about two hours Perry, Kathy Thomas, Donna each session, Besides cheering A campus-wide election, spon- Hoppman, Donna Thobe, Karl at the games, pep rallies take up sored by the Milestone and co- Frey, Barb Holbrook, and Gary Duncan. extra time. However, despite the ordinated by the Student Govern- hard work, Jovlta "loves cheer- ment Association to elect "Miss Nancy Russell, of Ashland, is ing for Eastern.' Eastern" and 'Mr. and Miss president of this organisation. Vice President Is Marva Perry She describes the cheering Popularity'' will be conducted squad as "Just like a little family next Tuesday in the Student Union from Lynch. Kathe Yacabone, because we all work so close." Building. from Lincoln Park, New Jer- Her enthusiasm Is quite evi- Pictures of the candidates who sey, is Secretary. Barbara Fol- lies, from Winchester, is Trea- dent when she remarks, 'It doe- nyne Bel are contesting for he honorary sn't matter whether the team SJaetern's Jovlta Dick, MthuakuttoaBy Mideast Region Oramrtoail Rice Bowl, ami title are carried on the Inside surer and the Student Council wins or loses. You still feel like toads a cheer at one of the pap raTBae for the football team. pages of the Progress. Representative is Karen Kiec- Maa Dick la entered te the "Miss Cheerleader TJRA" ■astern wm meet Bell State te the bowl Dec S a part of It-it Just gets you in- contest Region. —BCD Photo kner from Dayton, Ohio. Denise side." RMto by D. 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'ins' are out Student Is Represented By Committee

CRYS FOR STUDENT power and student Student Affairs Committee and its advisory students and to thereby contribute ideas and rights are sounding on most every college committees. opinions to the. Affairs Committee which Instead of throwing rocks, horning may be most nearly representative of gen- and university campus in the nation these cars and picketing the presidential home. eral student consensus. days. Many of these cryers have taken Eastern's student body ha* been given the With these things in mind then it is steps to see to it that their ays do not go opportunity to sit down with its administra- now the task to tee to it that all rules and unheeded. Sit-ins, wade-ins, stand-ins, and tive and academic officials and go over rights of the students of Eastern are con- many other "ins" have become a campus each and every rule and regulation tested by this committee and given; the ut- vogue and "Berkeley" has become a col- thoroughly and draw up a new set of rules most consideration. legiate household word. and regulations governing the students It is this land of working together of Perhaps the reason that a lot of these rights and responsibilities on campus. the student body and administration of an "ins" drew more response from the police The most important part of this signi- institution that could have prevented many and the press than they did from university ficant step is the fact that the student body, of the unsightly displays of displeasure officials is due to the fact that the students through the 14-roember Student Advisory shown by so many college students across who were making the demands were going Committee, will have a say in the process the nation in the last year or more. about it in the wrong way. of reconsidering the rules. Revamping and leoMsidering all die Here at Eastern, students may never This student committee, is made up of rules will take time and patience, but it is have to resort to such drastic measures due student leaders on campus, people who have certain that die waiting will be well worth to the efforts that will be exerted by the been elected by the students to represent the the rewards wrought by it. ^^____ Pass-Fail Grading: Good Or Evil?

Last month at the University of Ken- search) there will be more than enough him fed better. The fads he remembers tucky a bill '*. . . creating a committee to specialized information for recoinbenation from a broad education tend to reinforce WHO WOK THIS OH MY B0ARD71 study pass-fail grading for classes not in a into new ideas within any given area of student's major field ..." was introduced ttudy. , People with an inadequate overall to the Student Government Perhaps the student with a "well amount of knowledge would have a harder A pass-fail basis for grading non- rounded education" eventually will dis- f mis* rtooiQjt soiutsoos to v^*f*r pcoofccnuv major courses could substitute the tradition- appear. Certainly there will be a reduction They woukTprobably be more nwiadjnated al number-letter method with a "P* for of his ability to mink for himself about mat- ters not related to his specific field. If the As the basis of American industrial pass and "F" for failure. production becomes more specialized, pen- There Is No Honor If Cause Is Unjust This new grading system would re- principles of his profession do not have uni- versal applicability, or cannot serve as e haps it will be necessary to allow ittidsnti lieve the pressure of having to do as well more time for major courses in order to *n tuC fQeUZftZlOC SCtODiCOCQt 0*- CDC fighting and the goals are most dubious , in non-major courses; and would also give foundation for his "philosophy of life," then his position is rather undesirable when keep them up to date and prepared for their Nov. 5 Sunday Des Moines Register were and clouded. Even the supporters of the dse student more time to concentrate on intended occupations. he is compared with an individual who has printed articles by Senator William Ful- war can not agree on why we are fighting courses of his major field. In the future we will need highly spe- bright opposing the Vietnam war and one a broader outlook. or to what extent we should become in- The new grading idea does not elimi- When we are confronted with pro- cialized personnel when the war in Vietnam by Senator John Stennis supporting the war. nate the traditional system, for all grades volved. blems which make us maladjusted, we look is over, and industrial production becomes The following paragraph ia quoted from major courses would be affected by more oriented to the Space Program. from Senator Stennis' article. "The most If we are involved in a conflict (hat we for logical, or at least adequate solutions believe to be right then we must not waver it. If the pass-fail system can bring us urgent requirement now is national unity. to them. An individual who has been ex- but risk all to achieve a just end. But if ^ Theoretically, the extra time spent with posed to a vast amount of information is closer to our with the stars, then The time has passed to debate bow we got major courses should improve the quality into South Vietnam or whether we should we are wrong or ondedded then we have probably in a better position to "ration- perhaps the negative effects would be well only one recourse, to withdraw. If you are of specialization. However, part of the alize," and find a solution which will make worth tolerating. be there. We are there. Our flag and "general education'' a student might re- our men are in a war: In time of war or in the right, honor ia bestowed no mater what the outcome. If wrong nothing can ceive would be sacrificed for a greater un- 11 .af.. national crisis, it is the duty of all Americans derstanding of his specialty. HI nlll stall afi flMliean mpsjort In the result but dishonor. Most of us feel that it is desirable to Senator Slaps Sex-sadism Sinema LG know a little about a lot, and a lot about esf duty a littk (our major courses). The ^jQeWC ^ITllffi tfiJSUO labd films that are unsuitable for children. seems to stem from just how "little' we can ■ Illl Ill I -« . . « that movies are sicker than ever. But the industry wavers somewhere between every sever—narsonai, Metaphorical Loneliness know about a "lot," and still call ourselves is no substitute for a Moreover, notes the lady legislator futility and hypocrisy, according to the Di- A scrap of taper tumbling down a dry well-rounded, educated people. gest article. We mutt give our ffcjbting men in the field If the 'de-broadening'' effect has a from die State of Maine, moviegoers are Jfrwer after dm* younger than ever. Youngsters 19 and under .Example: The MGM-Filmways pre- the support and hanrmg assy need end de- tendency to reduce incentives for knowing serve. A sign on rusty hinges, wbippad by mid- plunk down 32 percent of all theater ad- sentation Don't Make Waves" was classi- night breezes "a little about a lot," then the students pro- Senator Stennis repeatedly inudies that missions, often to see such films aa "The fied as "Suggested for Mature Audiences" The damp bandherebsef of a soldier's young duced by a pass-fail system might be "brilli- the only honorable and jost path for the ant in their fields," but rather uninformed" Teen-Age Psycho Meets Bloody Mary," by the Motion Picture Association of Ameri- ca, the industry self-regulating body. Yet United States to follow it one in which we in other respects. "The Plague of the Zombies," and "Birth A tram whistle blowing in the fog of Triplets." MGM sponsored saturation advertising for either win or force peace in Vietnam. The Tho whimpering of m abandomd dog When a student has the capacity to in- only way out for our country ia to win a ternalize a large amount of information, he In an article in the December leader's the movie in such magazines as 'Teen' and Leaves blowing over a now grave Digest, Senator Smith characterizes these "Ingenue," publications aimed specifically military victory or negotiate an "honorable The ticking of a doth will eventually start to interelate and re- peace. combine his knowledge into new and use- and other sex-and-sadism movies as "a men- at teen-aged girls. A soldier, a hobo, a drunk ful ideas. This is the process of "inven- ace to children." Authorities quoted in the "Furthermore," argues Senator Smith, Our country, right or wrong! It mat- An old mam soiling papers ters not whether the war be just or not—we tion," and is essential to a progressive article agree. University of Wisconsin "most of our movies including a good No letter in the mailbox are in it and we must fight it out. We can society. psychologist Leonard Betkowitz notes, "Re- number of those unfit for children—are not Rain on u barred window Elimination of the need to internalize search suggests that media violence is more made by members of the M.P.A.A., nor are not pull out without dishonor! If this is A smokeless chimney vast amounts of seemingly unrelated infor- likely to incite children to acts of overt they submitted to that organization for a the measure of our honor then we hive A moonless night mation could have the long-term effect of aggression than to 'drain' them of their code of approval or for classification, Thus, traded our integrity for blind obedience to A mateless wolf . reducing inventiveness in our society. This hostile energy." Fredric Wertham, con- the door on degeneracy and sadism is still an empty phrase. Is there any honor in A table for one definitely is not in the interest of progress. sulting psychiatrist for Queens (N.Y.) Gen- wide open." supporting a cause in which thousands of OuWf$*9$ tfttS By reducing the amount of unrelated eral Hospital, notes that a saturation cam- "Clearly, the problems of sex-and- human beings are being slaughtered, if it A path bench information, the pass-fail system could also paign of "brutality, violence and sadism sadism movies remain untouched by Holly- is wrong? Is it our duty to follow a war A cold bad reduce the level of general awareness. This leads to a demoralizing of healthy instincts." wood's 'voluntary' classification system," which we believe our country is unjustly in- A footing volved in? is not to imply that it would reduce the Psychiatric social worker Eleanor G. Fisher writes the Senator. "Something more must An exile "capacity" for awareness, but rather the adds, "Sick sadism in motion pictures can be done." Only when the very existence of our A whore "desire" for it through constant exposure very definitely be damaging to a normal The "something more" is rontsinrd in country is in danger should we defend it A leper to highly specialized information child's development." a resolution that Senator Smith has intro- when it is wrong, Mark Twain sagely ad- A tour Of course we must admit that at the The movie industry has a "voluntary duced in the Senate. It provides for labd- vised. Now we are told to support un- An and. present rate of accumulation (through re- classification" system that is supposed to dividedly a war in which the reasons for rWFCR §lp? E&fltmt fhmgrraa wtmwmutm etMemmm stafeoky uatvmit* DahMa Cot*. Jo- DscdauR, Caratyn CatkyHaOan, Locto, CSyryl WlglMWGfth, m%

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Ecisleffri Progress, Thurs., Doc. 7, IT67, 1*090 3 Law And The Conflicting Conscience Bj Terry Ran/tin THE BEST Each of us builds his own morals; his threatens rather than secures is an unjust own autonomy. Few are alike and even law, it is only right to fight that law before fewer are the same. Yet we elect our gen- the war. To still others, the later group OF HAYME eral government to outline a general mor- serves as a hiding place for their cowardice, McGill ality; a general and elastic body of law to a facade for their eager, rmrhmkmg de- give as a mutual set of scruples that gov- fiance. erns us all. But no go»»riliy of any sort There an the ones to whom toe term is without its hounds or free from limita- "draft-dodger" would seem to best apply, 'The New Fascist' - -? tions, lines are drawn by the lews and rather than oat who truly believes in the their makers. raiMMUty or government; that any govern-

/ fly RALPH McGILL these tightly organized, dliciplsftcd gfOSpi ^JOt OCcCQ OCeUv CDC DCXXaWC DtDCeMtM ment is no more sacred ordrvaaethan its Numerous studies of the hard core is not without factual similarities. saaeeaa. it aaaasa oahr toeacal khan that gangs, usually small in number, that operate The recent peace protest m Wastang* criminal—one whose morals and way of Iffe I. ton, which attracted some 33,000 persons, is a corruption; a social evil or illness to sent with one point of law, freedom of violently in "peace" demonstrations on and was managed by an organization which is society and rightly so, for so to speak, he choice would grant ham an immunity to the off college campuses are being made with quite small. Included among those who is beneath the toleration of society. Yet no requirement of that law. "Thou shalt not - the use of all available scientific and psy- issued the Washington "call" were some line has only one side; there must be mote kill" yet all governments lift themselves chological technology. with undented Communist backgrounds. A to these laws of society than those who obey above that bask law by making war with One conclusion emerges in some sur- heavy majority of those who answered the them and those who break them. If there one another. Then is, to my knowledge, no lew reys now completed. "call" were, of course, unaware of cms. is a "beneath" concerning, the law, then prrtalrritf tee who attempts suicide. Was The central member of the violent were "nice, decent people." They were there must consequently be an "above." for "peace" and so they went It did not To illustrate, consider our congressmen's it net the victim's choice between life and gangs are well organized. That is to say, matter that on arrival persons were in congressional immunity which places Mai death? What law of legislation is bro- Ta»a*-vwnn*uariCiSa»«ai i n they know one another, they have had pre- Tn, A«ti~ m, <,—., I«J «* are- charge who were unknown to them sod above traffic violations and other such mis- ke.? vious meetings and agreed on tactics. that orders were being given by persons demeanors. Yet the real webs of complexity be in I I* Their attitude is that they have "the desaaasanf just who is above or below the whose identity, affiliations, and records Our own constitution gives us the ■assttawsna by sat tesjaeettss™ ISVNMOCTS right to protest" and that their "rights" are law wata One's action goes against it Who they did not know. rights to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of superior to the rights of others. There- is ft to serve as a judge of creed? Loop- 11* The most extreme obscenity was used happiness." This enables us all to have a fore, other persons do not have the right bosas would leap from such an indMdasB- by those who sought to the troops free conscience and will, oat own morality, to oppose them. Recruiters who come from zatkm of Ike law. What standards most Senator Slaps Sinema and marshals to violence. Few of the visit- and a personal design of sew with its own the nation's armed forces, the interviewers ing thousands, being wholly outside soy such a judge consider? Who should de- individual lines and lanitations. The sews ing f Urns so that in Senator Smiths words, who annually come from major corporations knowledge of who was running the show, termine those standards? And yet what of car government do not command cast to "the public can tell if the film is suitable for to talk with job applicants and persons with heard or saw the written obscenities. None fpvtranaent "of the people, by the people, feel a sense of guilt, to regret, to feat that youngsters or not" an opposing view may, therefore, be rough- saw the debris left on the last night by the and for the people" cannot ask itself then be has wronged in any way. These sic his "Dozens of foreign countries have ed up, barred from entry, or so disturbed hard core group of less than 100. It in- qnsstians? own freedoms; his own autonomy. adopted this means of protecting children by din and violence as to make their pre- cluded, for example, used contraceptives, a Perhaps it is valuable experience, how- It is only natural and consriyiantal from violence and sex on the screen," sence untenable from the viewpoint of half dozen or more bras, several pairs of ever, to find that individualism, too, is not then that one's personal lines of conscience she notes. sense. dirty panties, and so on. divine; that conscience is not the master of should occasionally he above those of the the law or its slave. Sacrificing one free- Such a system would avoid censorship Their application of the "I'm-right- A recent letter to the editor revealed general law, so that what the law demands dom to one more crucial to society and the resultant threat to free speech, and-therefore-you-have-no-rights" certainly the extreme naivete of at least one fine lady within its bounds is beneath his line of some may be a factor justifying some demands argues the Senator, yet at the same time pro- is not a part of the Bill of Rights, of lav^ who objected to the descriptions of the moral role. of the law. tect children from sadistic and erotic movies. nor of common decency. Investigations re- obscenties and the debris. veal that the "you-have-no-right-whatever" Our muual laws rarely require our Perhaps it wss not practical to write A letter-writing campaign to one's own tactic is a part of the plan. It is an action "We passed through your state on oar moral support, bat instead, material and this; even though s sort of law decreed that Senators in behalf of Mrs. Smith's resolu- physical support In the case of the war determined by the small number who know way home," she wrote, "and my hosband I should, my conscience went one better tion, S. Res. 9, would be a step in the right what they intend. Appeals to join "the went into a highway gas station restroom. sa Vietnam, they do not require one's agree- and bad k written as k is. direction. Reader's Digest peace demonstration" also are a carefully He told me he wss shocked to see that con- ment, mentally, with that policy, hot rather, traceptives were on sale there in a vending his tax dollars and perhaps trigger finger. prepared tactic for larger demonstrations. machine. So that's the sort of dirty state It does not, by say link, seem democratic At least one survey has called this you live in." to guarantee a person free will while sknul- "bully boy gang interruption" of the rights. Who said the age of innocence is end- taneously requiring his material support and of others and the vioelnce used reminiscent ed? sacrifice for that which he does not and can- of the early "fascisti gangs" in Italy and not support morally sod conscientiously. Germany. The conclusion does not label Laws ate stated with consequence in them as Fascists. What it does say is that to those who break them. Bat it the tactics of rough-house, "break-up-the- that they should also mdude an meeting" and "interrupt procedures of con- faCdsTii JOIN US AT OUR HAPPENING SHOW* stituted authority" are similar to those of Bjaiy '■ Using the draft again as an example: it Mussolini's black shirts and Hitler's brown •lots grant religious immunity, hot not one shirt gangs that insisted only they had But, then so tMf jestenUry... "rights." and the rest. We an all given to some degree of a At the University of Madison, for ex- In that thru for wars, —a of practicality. To some, it would ample, President Fred H. Harrington sadly time was enough be impractical to saner the comaqnfncvs of watched a small, violent, but disciplined Now, m peace, huge fine and/or imprisonment that to group bar job recruiters with force. He 9t/Ae*e Ui* Action fa' tomorrow for the w*r— company the refusal to be drafted. It is said: "There are a vary small number who or the battle... better to compromise, surrender to the law, plan to disrupt this university. There is Yes, light in the war, and hope to stay alive; to an even smaller proportion who want to I mitt mt then. temporarily lay aside one's own creed and bring down the university and the country." adapt to another. "The new fascisti" comparison of —Terry Rankm To others, to those to whom a law that T

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r. •I Thur»., DM. Colonels Tackle Ball State In Rice Bowl The View ) chores. ad with Chuck Slamon back,1* Holcomb had S3 carrtoe for (BO earned aU-oonfamnoe re- Strong Running Attack, 304 yards and a 8.1 average, option although ha missed From Here saoond beat in the running de- the last five games.) Kidd said, partmant, and Bock avaraged "Of course tfio layoff will hurt 3.7 yards In SO carries gaming: bbn some, but Pm aura hem Size Pose Problems 210 yards. give us a top performance. Bow I* KARL PAIR Progrtis Sports Editor Tha thins; that worries ma an ontanrndms footbaD Trt-oaptetes Barry UN and Asron Marsh were tmanlmoas Saturday afternoon tha Bast- dlana SUte. 20-24; ■ad Booth- """W "j thalr (Ban State) slxe," BSaatania offen *%: aloha OB ON lliaoliis all-Ohio Volley Conference team selected em Colonels and Ball State era Illinois, 24-0. "" ~™~ sold KMd. 'Thay-ra not only aadaa-' avaraga « 1 Cardinals win meet to the fifth Tha Colonels tha Onto ons <* the biggest teams we've fame this seaso nand tha de- It «u Urn ! first tlBM on the squad, white split-end annual Grantand Riot Bowl Valley Conference, but also axe one of tha !*■■"« "Headhuntem*' limited flM team for UM second eatuwcutive year. The only game. ftrat outright OVC tha opposition to seven points for Ue team wai Western's Diekte Tha game, which win be tela- la thirteen years, ioad ^Oar should be boost- a vised regionally by tha ABC ware ranked fifth nationally in Also, defensive end Chuck Slemon and Lens war* selected television network, win feature tha final Associated Press col- to the Pojloa Plyers all-opponent team for the 1M7 ■anon Ste- Uu confereaoe ohamplnns of lege-dlvislon poll, mon made "HaadhunUr" Haman for hi* outstanding game against two of mid-America's finest The Ootenoh received tha prl- the Flyers. Be garnered nine tackles and thirteen assists, white small college conference's, tha orlty Invitation hi tha NCAA- aha stopping the powerful Dayton running attack on two goal Una Ohio Valley Conference and tha sponsored Orantland Rica Bowl Indiana Collegiate Conference. In Miirfnssabuiu. Tana. BaUState compiled a 7-3 re- Coach Kidd U confronted with NO FBBSHMAN IN BOWL GAME gular isainci record this year. a dual problem as he prepares A Mr worry for Coach Roy Kidd Saturday will ha that ha will bringing its mark for tha post tha Colonels for Saturday's be without tat aarvloM of four of hla freshman. Jack McCoy, three years to 23-8-2. lb coach bowl game. One Bos with tha Jamas Kelly, Butch Brans, and Doug- Johnston will not play Ray Louthen's sot years as head effectiveness of Ball State's coach, the cards have won ST, rushing attack and tha other the Ban State Cardinals Saturday due to a NCAA rate. test 12 and tied three and never Uas with a possible break down This rule prohibits coBege-olvlsion schools from using: fresh- have had a losing season. in his own ground game ■ hi goat win ootapaUOoa if the school's mate enrollment Prior to Loulhen's appear- After a stew start, tike Col- Probably the biggest loss will be McCoy. Tha anoe on tha scene. Bail Stats onel ground game tailback carried the hall 130 times for 861 yards to load tha Bast- never had won an Indiana Col- strong with 1,401 yards, ern roahlng attack legiate Conference football title, em had 3,834 total otfoaaWO Tha ruaatag attack Will hare to Ha on tha shoulders of This year's crown was tha yards, juniors Tad note last, roster Harris, and Boh Back. fourth In a row, tha hut three But moat of tha rushing ■ABBS BBOOGNimON of which have been outright (730) were gamed by CM The key to the Cardtaals' sue- backs Jack McCoy, Butch name for Itself a* It cess has been an awesome rush- EJvans and Jamas Kelly, who and major college divisions of tha lay; attack that ranked second are not eligible far the bowl, NCAA hi potato Mr game. hi tha nation among college dlv- (NCAA rates prohibit a close second t***''"* tha Oklahoma Islon teams. BSU backs gamed division schools from Hat Sooner, ha thatar opponenu to SB potato, white 3,533 yards on the ground In 533 freshmen la urot—ou 09n. aPowad only 78 points. Both these totals are for 10 carries for a 4 J yard avaraga. petition If tha school's male en- Halfbacks Amos Van Pelt roumaat sxeeals t300) i could condevabty finish first as they both have howl and Dick Lester and alternat- The biggest loss will be Us- i In post season. Ohauvwna baa to play BBC champ- ing fuUbacks John Ondrejko Coy. The Lovaland. Ohio, and Ha Shaaff er lead the run- out lad the Eastern rushing at- in tha Orange Bowl, white Eastern moat travel to tack with Ml yards to IB) hftaflpaatiuiu, Terav to do battle with tha Cardinals of Ball ning attack behind a veteran, massive front wall. Vaa Pelt carries. a 0-3, 206-pound Junior from Ft Onnfh Kidd must find a run- Wayne, Indiana, averaged afat nlng game to ootnpUment tha yards per carry, gaining 804 passing of Jun Outosand tha yards In 148 attempts. receiving of HtOs AH-Amerioaa Voted tha top back In tha conference, Van Pelt led tha 70 times this season for 1,009 ICC hi rushing and scoring for yards and nine touchdowns, VAN PBsVT. a 0*1- SOS . the second straight year. Van Eastern has Junior taflbaoks Bhootnw.li fteft) aaa counted on by Ban Stats to handle most of tha Pelt was also named collage Ted Holcomb and roster Harris, division "Player of the Tear" fullback Boh Book and Wtng- Lubke wm teat tha 1 Colonels' front wan la _ chores la Saturday's Orantland Rice BOWL days Grantlaod Moo Bowl —Photo Submitted. In Indiana averaged 44 sad backs John Tasel sad Bob Lu- Both am an-oonferenoe selec- Shaeffer 4.8. Ondrejko, a 21B- man to handle tha running- —Photo Submitted pound senior was tha starting fullback an year, but Shaetfer, a 200-pound sophomore was1 PBOBABUC OS-TENSIVE ST. used on alternate plays for tha last four games NO. EASTERN POS.NO. BALL STATE FOB. VaaPatt, Lester and Ondrejko ware all voted to the mat 81 Aaron Marsh SB 81 Tim Hostrawaer string of the AH-ICC team, 8 IDEAS 4 CHRISTMAS 76 Bffl Brewer ST 7B Dave WIThsbn along with six other Cardtaals. S3 Fred Troths BO 87 Ray McDonald SO The offensive line, Jerbaps the 54 Don Minor C 51 8t*sva MsWasfclfff o finest to ICO history, has bean 87 Don wiffiiitoD QQ 77 EBaOhattas magnificent for the Cardinals. 78 Ron House QT 70 OeVC8\r TfsiWrt Anchoring It am five seniors. FROM 84 Duke Baker TB 88 Mark Surface Who among them total 14 man- 18 JbnOulce QB 11 Doe Heath vanity 10 Ted Holcomb TB 38 Amos Van Pelt The? Steve MldUff. 0-4, 30 Bob Book FB IS John Ondrejko 8 SaB-pound center; Ette CBtattas, 41 John Tasel WB *0 Dick Lester guard; Oscar Uobke, 0-4, Dd left tackle and 1 .0-8. OOMPABATTVE JualorsDave 202 SOUTH THIRD Isltftw rIOIIeW AIM ^••••••T I\WT &-«MI» fcCr ■■am•BB also em at right tackle and right • Dayton IS 41 Central Missouri St T Doc Heath. 85 7 39 Valparaiso 7 0-8, 180 pound senior, sta- 87 Austin Psay 0 81 BvansvUte IB in as starting signal miter SWEATERS SLACKS 14 7 14 Northern Illinois 38 year aftertoe graduation of 55 North wood 0 DePauw 8 Prank Houk, who as a Junior 14 Western 14 80 Batter 7 was the 'ar—, Rey directed his 24 Tech 0 3 8t Joseph's 7 15 34 Southern nttnols S sophomore Jim Novar, but re- footban Cardinals to the Indiana OoOegtato ■ his 17 Toungstown (Ohio) gained It two weeks later. The CcnQniMi and eJockoy a 7-8 moors. Bis teems have compiled a 33-8-2 7 Moreheed 7 lanky senior connected OB 81 of Haager and Loo tha past three years. —Photo Submitted 74 passes for 407 yards. Ban State's defense was vast- ly improved hi 184T, allowing Tickets Available Its opponents only 80 points ta nine games. Top stem am For Bowl Game - Chuck Straotman, 0-3, 380- ALL-WEATHER > THE pouad aenter tackle, who was SPORT There an still tickets avail- voted the team's Co-MVP with able for the GraaUand Bios Bowl VbB Pelt aad George Hatha- College Life Insurance Company71 a 803-pound linebacker COATS COATS same to be held la Mai frees boro, Tennessee Saturday. was the starting fullback Of America Eastern was alloted 1300 tickets ass Junior. Scoondarymen Paa by for the game oad some of these Perls, Hoba Stern aad Norm still remain. These tickets can ~ to mtaweut IS Cricketeer and be obtained at the Athletic Of- by Parte for rlyflKKilli fice located la Alumni foMoosra. BaB Slate's losses this Varsity Town tetoeeeteapaam. Ask saw I Ball State has already sold i to Northern Ultnois, a 3800 tickets that they warn al- i seeking University Divto- i tea •tatus, by a 3S-li couat lotted, aad they have raoassted mom tickets to sell. Tha sta- aad— to St Joseph's, 7-8. It* dium that win be used far tha 8t Joe defeat snapped an un- bowl game seats approximately beaten streak of U games la IOC competition for Ihe Car- 10,000 tans tad Is used during «aato, who have wtllMlieaiii regular season by Middle Ten- from tha seven-team loop, ef- I nessee. faottve June of 1SS8. i The BSU victims warn Cen- tral Missouri Slate, 41*7; Val- paraiso, 88-7; Dransvme, 81-10; RICHMOND bePauw, 7-8; Batter, " * i SUPPLY « STORE

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♦ Bto ■St*-r •*r * .* •* «* ■..Wwr.l i i l»nW>1 pqjfrm fhnem*, Tttsjty Bee 7, ttiJ, Fafe fl- Colonels Host Powerful Women's Intramural* STOP and SHACK of BY JURAN PARKS PROGRESS STAFF WRITER Dayton and Marshall Woman's Intramural volleyball BURGER BROIL and badminton are underway with iV; BY KARL PARK Jateo* reserves era DiUu a record turnout. Eleven teams , PROGRESS SPORTS EDITOR BIllWMMp. Jim JprtM, John . entered the volleyball com- This weekend promises to be MalleL and Mike Watson. petition. The sororities are bat- as. of the biggest ■ports fNk- Wbifc anlot sBBtmr>a re- m tling it out for the first place I in the history of Eastern. «•*»«• aacept oae hare rwtarn- trophy along with teams rep- & Saturday, the EMt.ru toot- ad, tbs upcoming aoptomores resenting the dorms and other team travels to Murt rees- "• eapactad to ftee tea etert- I5TEBI groups. taro Tenn, to play In the •*» aoma rest. Rlckay Hall The teams are team #1 (Phi Orantland Rica Bowl against tea » *-4 froward from McDowell Alpha Theta); team #2 (Alpha Pi powerful ground attack of ten Ky.t brtap a Una snooting touch Kappa); team #3 (Lambda Phi *'*■■ .QmmiL jaam«4 ■all State Cardinal*. •»■ te»;jBSj ay . Bjefcgaa fat^a-^^^^aHr^aaahah .^assess*** Oa Friday 'Ilk* 1 * basketballers team #8 (MacGregor 3rd FISor); l*M kaiPM f ^^^^^^ year's NCAA runner- team #7 (MacGregor Grounders); ton Flyara. Dayton team #6 (Case Hall); team #9 6th in tba AP»a pra-i (Walters Warriors); team #10 Shakes: Vanilla . Strawberry • Chocolata Dayton finished tea (Delta Theta PI); team #11 (Ken- year with a record of S8.1. tucky Bella). Coach Don Donohor*a Firsts fftfisms lost both games Badminton turnout waa not aa Broiling makes the difference great aa teat of volleyball. How- rl an 18-3 .aria, record ovar » *****LawfaSWlff tke Colonel*.Colonels. The samegame nlavadplayed "• earlee otar taa inuna- ever, several girls are par- Wast Main Street Rtchmeed, Ky last year at Dayton showed a •riag Hard by 14-7. Marshall ticipating In a round robin tour- fad score of 104-82 In r started tea off on tea nament. | the Flyers. B coaching record la 70 aid IB losses. Tba Eastern freshman team ■Back to lead this year's squad opens Its season tonight against la Dannie May a 6-4 senior. Lindsay Wilson Junior College Zso ratm'ha. Urtyaa^. &<&&$&&%%£; guard Bobby Washington. i earn are Bob Hooper, Dan Sad- p^gf^S %t^46 agatest In Friday's Oodbey and wtth nationally-ranked Dayton. They are OarflaJd Smith. tarman, uJfreshman standout] ■aatemitodapandant. from left: Strong*, engStomora gward Toks Oeorge Janky. Last year's Day- ton freshman team defeated tea Eastern freshmen team twice Men's hrti-amural Board Formed bath In overtime. proteate entered by a Next Wednesday, . 'BY JUEAK *A*K*, when there baa been a IS, Marshall University WOGRESS on of a rule. togton, Watt vn Alumni Coliseum. !UE STANDINGS era are returning ¥ tag Big Green squad a 20-8 record, li Second-place finish in • American Conference sad, ft ip7«^:t*Jet*|ftgb*B^ J/9*- Crunks David Gay " SMITHS Returning are regulars OasofS Eastern. Alcoholie* Unanimous (6-7 senior), all -Jaat A- taa officers arm Pete Moore, Bancheea ft HAM STYUrte FOR MEN can choice Bob Redd (sVI cSaairmafi; Tote Shatter, vice chee-Cbees r), Jim Davidson («-| jo*. cUifrnm: aari JStry OIU, sec- LEAGUE #4 AU STYLES — RAZOR CUTS. FLAT TOFS tor), center Bob Allen (6-9 seo- ratary. The board members arm Saskatchewan Hot Shots SK), and Danny D*Antoat (B-U Hack Hall, Charles Oreekevic, LEAGUE «S GENERAL TRIMS. AND HAIR STRAKftHTNIN* ). Charles Fraaley, BUI Suransoo, Greens waa Coach Ellis Jo-bo- and Tom Crotty. zombies FROM 423-f 12S a's moat prolific scorer with The board will also have tea LEAGUE #6 S4.4 point-par game average. reapQMlbUttr of atedylng and Mad Drunkers Car. of Sscoud oao PMMI Upstafrs over aetjlay s S 24.5 Mid -American average Klngsmeo ■a the beat In tea c water a—a. EoetTi Makers Mark Davidson ranked second among LEAGUE #7 hall shooters Witt a 17.1 Defeat* Eastern Sultans average. He waa followed etosa- Playmakers ' by Redd, who averaged an even Tito Eastern colonels fell to Vagabonds ".a. a strong Eat Tennessee team 7"%.*" _*■" Returning reserves are sen- last Friday afternoon in the LEAGUE #8 ?y tors Parkle Beam, Joe Dawson, opening round of the OVC tour- AXJ- OrvlUeS nament by a acore of 64-BO. The AM tournament was held in Nashville ^OUE " Here's the

The colonels started oat aa KTE Up Beat If teay were swing to make a Button Down CONGRATULATES runaway of tea same a* quickly Jumped tote a §*-• I Toke Colssaaa, Baa* tea, and WlUie wooda -ARROWS team to the early thirteen point DECTON Bast today guard Barley Swift, overcame this early OXFORD Eastern lead aw esjtecorlag tea Cotasal* ss-S daring a stretch P§rma-Iron THE ■ ml*-way la tea game. The C©1- WH* This Ad Tlaa no-iron ahirt ooeU held a sUm I8-S4 lead at tluUdossa't •A aaanssawba! Daring te. Cotaaala ware plagued by floor ft Staff) Luxivioasfabric of 65% V\ stakes, foal trouble, and In- Dseraa* polyaator, 35 % ability to bit tea basket. Junior cotton that's complete ly JO0 LP. RECORDS Jerry Godbay played the game, • vTOTCn#el machine washable... tumble although hampered by an ankle dries to a wrinkle-free finish. \*' Injury. University fashioned long point BOWL-BOUND *;n _ Swift and Leroy Fisher got 16 Mmr collar for the right casual roll. points each for the Buccaneers. And... this season's new wide track w Washington, Coleraan, and Gar- Enqravrng FREE stripes in a wide range of compatible field Smith led the Eastern at- color backgrounds. Tapered body tack with IS, 10 and 9 points re- for the new lean look in fashion... ZEROXCOFY spectively. WWk You Watt and "Sanforized-Plus" labeled for perfect fit. The Colonels entertain highly SERVICE touted Dayton on Friday and the •DuPontR.T.M. 7 Thundering Herd of Marshall the foUowlng Wednesday. eW °° EASTERN Eastern held a 48-33 - KESSLERS ing edge over the Buccaneers. EASTERN: Washington, IS; Col- ONLY Discount aussvisueman, 10; Smith, 9; Wooda, 8; SUM, Br Arnold, V, Swift, IS; Krataar, tr. Ward, S; Flossing, ] COLONELS give a pint of blood FAMOUS FACES

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»v- >oge 6, Eastern Progrtt, Thw»., Doc 7, 1967

Campus Flick KBxrs -<—■—■—rf—*. Eels Sink In Opener, 73-40 by I0Y WATSON BY ROY WATSON stroke (2:38.2), Walker also to first-place finishes In the take on the University of the I HIRAM BROCK Horitt PROGRESS SWIMMING EDITOR swam on the winning 400-yard 100-yard (82.3) and the 200-yard at Sewanee. Sewanee is the Brat SWIHMMG EDITOR j^>-S Eastern's swimming team relay team (4:09.9). Other mem- (1:57.7) freestyle events. Other crucial meet on the Easterasea- AUTITORIUM opened their season on a winning bers of the relay team were Al first place winners were Marquis edule; the Eels have yet to win a & Greenhouse HAYS EXCF.IXS AGAINST LOUISVILLE note by defeating the University Krueger, Greg Marquis and John in the 200-yard butterfly (2:13.5), meet there. Sophomore Butch Havs put on one of the finest divins* of Louisville swimmers 73-40 at Sims. Sims In the 200-yard backstroke Sewanee has several de- See tke Motion Picture oxhlbltlons witnessed by Eastern fans in a long time. Ajrainst the Alumni Coliseum natatorlum. Butch Hays took first place (2:20.2) and Richard Anderson In pendable performers TUPLE CROSS Louisville, he accumulated 266.43 points In six dives In the -we used mainly freshmen and in both the one and three meter the 80-yard freestyle (23.7). their returning lettermee, Christopher three-meter diving event, the most points ever accumulated by sophomores,* said Eastern swim diving events. He had a total of The Eels travel to Nashville, the squad Is lacking in depth nn Eastern diver. coach Don Combs, "but we found 266.45 on the three-meter board, Tennessee, next Thursday to and experience. TalBrraner, CUodine Auger out a great deal about our overall However, Sewanee's coach, HIM Brack Aedltortam. Coach Don Combs said. "Hays' performance was even hatter the largest total aver ac- swim Vanderbllt. Eastern sound- than Johnny Warren fan All-America diver at Eastern a few team strength; we had excellent cumulated on six dives by an ly defeated Vandy last year but Ted Bltondo, calls his team "Pro- years ago) could do." It is interesting to note that neltherHays depth In all 13 •rants.* Eastern diver. faces an Improved team this year. bably the best-spirited and hard- nor Warren had any high school diving experience. However, All America Bob Walker pac- All America Bob Walker show- "Since the Southeastern Con- est working team we have had In 'SJ^iZZZ Hays is a gymnist and has made outstanding progress in diving. ed the Eels to victory by scor- ad mid-season form in winning ference allows the use of fresh- a long time.* Dee. It— Iwasnay ing 11 3/4 points. He captured the 800-yard freestyle with a men this year, Vanderbllt should HOMBSE Newman, Diane Clleoto Combs fives much of the credit for the improved diving to two of the 11 first places East- 5:21.7 timing, only one and three- be much stronger than the last Connie Smith Cited *- Lou Crosier, a former Eastern Eel letterman who serves as ern won. In addition to winning tenths seconds off his school time we swam them,* Uchnrd Boone, diving coach. "Lou is doing a real fine Job with the divan; Frederic Man* the 200-yard individual medlev record. , Combs. Eastern's Cross country Coach he has added the finishing touches that are making the dif- (1:14.6) and the 200-yard breast- Freshman Eddie Biases swam The following night the Eels Connie Smith has been named as Dec 1» — ference between a good diver and a winning diver," said Combs. coach of the Year In that sport- No Movie - - Mat1-" University • S»M pjn. ing division of the Ohio Valley Dee. 14 — Thunder OUTSTANDING FBOSH OUT OF ACTION Conference. Distance swimmer Jay Chanley will miss the current road *at> Smith, who has won the title Drum and Sandal Concert Yon Say It 8:M PJf. trip. He ran his knee through the dashboard In a car accident three times In the past three Dee. 16 — Friday With Flowers, Say several weeks ago. Chanley got the cast off last week and years he has been at Eastern, ARWVERDBCI, BABY It Wtta KeBey's had been getting In the water but his workouts have been limited led this year's team through a Tony Curtis, because his knee swells up after much exercise. 10-0 meet slate. During the sea- leJHJhnj son, the members defeated 30 Charily Is counted upon to help considerably In the 500 and Dae. 1« — Saturday 100-yard freestyle events. An outstanding swimmer, has has teams and lost to none. DEAD HEAT ON A Col U» For Prompt already broken the records In practice for both events. . The Colonels won the OVC . MERRY-GO-ROUND title in an undisputed race. Coach Junes Coborn, Aldo Ray, Manny Flgueroa, a pleasant surprise In practice, will have Smith's charges won the Harding, Nina Wayne to take up the slack In the distance events until Chanley re- . Ark., Invitational, defeated Flor- Dee. 18 — turns. ida and Florida State, and fin- MESSIAH 623-49*8 -* ished second in the Southeastern Pec It— _ Conference meet, running seven THE HAPENING MOST VERSATILE FRESHMAN Anthony Qulnn. Martha Hyer The Only Store In Eddie Shasek is called by Combs "our moat versatile fresh- of the first eight places. George Mekarls man performer." He is currently swimming the 100 and 200-yard In four years, the teams at Dec M — Jan. t, Holiday freestyle events, but can swim any freestyle event from the Eastern have won 37 meets, lost REBECCA BOTH CANDY 00 to the 1000. Shasek was also the number one diver on his four, and lost to only four teams. )S high school team In addition to holding his school breaststroke In the past three years, Eastern record. has won 29, lost one, and de- feated 73 teams. «-> IULL TO BE IN ACTION SOON Responsible for the rapid rise All-America Rich Hill may be back In action in time for of distance running at Eastern, the Kenyon meet December 16. He has not been used yet due Smith coached Grant Colebour ' to an injury, but Is working out and hopes to be In shape soon. and Ken Sllvlous to first and*". CITY TAXI second places, respectively, in " * the final OVC ratings this year. * Eastern Is rapidly becoming h Veterans Cab—Kentucky Cab a national distance power, as did Hlllsdale High School (San Mateo, ■ Calif.) when Smith'steam promp- STORE ted Track and Field News to w 24 Hour Service Lacy Hagood, Greg Marquis, Bruce Boyer, The Eastern swlmnung team returned 14 class It as the number one high r) lettermen from last Tear*! squad. They are, Jim Miller. John Sims, Joe Peck, Bill Way- ■»■ man, and Steve Danmcker. Absent school running team in the nation from left to right, Rich Anderson, BUI Walk- In 1961. / o 623-1400 er, John Buckner, Rich Hill, Bob Walker, the photo was taken was Butch Hays. FROM THE SAME OFFICE j "Where it's easy ■HI * to park, and a m

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Y. 1SSM ftlrkennad A Madison County Since lf*» ONCE A WEEK. EVERY WEEK I 1 ■ U» with honesty and candor, say Progr—, Thur*., Dec 7, 1967, Page 7 doctors, educators, and religious An important role In thegrow- spokesmen, la no aasy task. Nor lng effort to put sex In Its proper RICHMOND U It the task solely of the re- place la played by the Sex In- DRIVf IN THEATRI bellious young. It la also the formation and Education Council 4 Ml lee flewth mm VM.U responslvlllty of the mature. of the United States Organised -171* And too often adults react reg- two years ago by Dr. Mary Stel- atlvely to sex and sax problems. cban Calderone, SIECUS has be- Tbey point with an accusing An- come a clearing house of ideas SATHMY I SMUT ger to the statistics of Illegit- offered by social scientists phy- imacy aad veoeral disease, and sicians educators, and theolo- AMW rasnam to reports of teenags promiscu- gians. -If s purpose,* says Rev. ity, rather than meet their own Genna, an officer of SIECUS -la responsibilities In the develop- to establish man's sexuality aa •t »u it ment of positive healthy sex- a health entity. This Is a value ual attitudes In their children. that all religious groups and Much of tan refusal of young most secular groups, and cer- safely asleep. Bat no people to accept on faith and tainly educators, can agree on. ■or*. On television and radio without question the moral coda We must do all we can to pro- liittM o* the ProrJess programs In newspapers and of their elders la a result of mote personal physical, emot- ional and social health." EDITED BY rn^ag.2-"; everV^onemrabTe *» aspect of human sexuality lsdls- •Ifs an inevitable reaction," Most eminent of these new says Rev. William F. Oenae. critics of traditional morality Is 0 F raU PROGRESS EDITOR S^.SISL.?* ^-.^!,^ » y "*• Consultant of the Dr. Harvey Cox of Harvard Uni- IJOMKDX 1 1 In Ames, Iowa, a bright little pithy££? n£l^phrase of c£one sex.Hi? ed- N** "* „,„ Co**"., ,«,* Churches,„ ^ versity's Divinity School. In Ms fWOUCTK* I •tottn thmthe negativeM attitudeshKf book -The Secular City,- Dr. eight-year old, watching a tel- ucator, "has gone public" so many adults have had, and evision documentary on the pop- It la this new openness in sex- Cox suggests avoidance of a sim- fffCARDO MONTALBAW ulation explosion, tana to her the silence with which we've ple ■thou-shalt-not* approach to mother and asks: ■Mommy, what maatators. that Is the real aex „„.*._,.,„ ' ^.. «^_ , the question of premarital Inter- Glgf6AR^jmn Fortunately, thosett negativeM at- course. This, he writes, -gets do they mesa when they aay the revolution of our time. What titudes are somewhat In retreat. ptll'T" shocks and startles parents and us off dead-end arguments about Public discussion of sexual pro- virginity and chastity forces us In Los Angeles a studious other adults as a 'new morality," blems has resulted In Increased fourteen-year-old bey, taunted as an apparent wlldnass and pro- to think about fidelity to per- ALSO II C010I by bis rougher schoolmates, won- miscuity among the young, is attention to the need for sex sons. . .- ders what "mealy" means—and often a new honesty and a new education_ in the schools. In Douglas Rhymes, Canon Li- worries about Ms own normal- brarian of Southwark Cathedral "VAUEY OF ity. In England, wonders whether a la Atlanta, a high school girl ^Tbe w- called sex ravo- g*J» 1^*.thrrfrTiMnt •£ marriage license is enough to MYSTERY" finds oat that oae of hsr friends luUon," say. Dr. Joseph Flat- «|*«!. ^J^l^J" £ render sexual relations moral. Or "MM EASTEsW win be Newell. ftasann Shepherd and Nancy has •gotten late trouble" ami char, professor of social ethics "*ft* * J"2 ST ~-.^ •We are told,- ha writes, -that upon one of these lovely coeds. —Progress Photo by Trent Strickland has been forced to leave school at Cambrldee-s Episcopal Theo- Production lajjornaUy ofa****"1 all sexual experience outside of left: JOyee Mason. Vkky Ready. Pat -and wonders who to talk to logical Seminarjr author of courses of study. At Fordham marriage la wrong, but we are teat bother ?Moral RenKmstSity'' andfor- "**•«% » Jesuitlnslitotion, given no particular rulings about about the 0 I > her. mar Dean ofSt. PauPs Cathed- * e "™ » •« •*«catton has sexual experience within mar- Music Department Presents Varied Concert And in New England a collage ral la Cincinnati, -simply re- ^ EJEJir^iSLJS: riage. Yet a person may Just as GIFTS of Dr. Don Cooper. The Stage set by the two folkslngsrs was freshmen away fromhomeforthe .reseata a little more moral e^.5BBJ3j21?^2h^ easily bo treated as a means to BY DEBBY COBB aa v1 A satisfy desire and be exploited Band opened the concert with shattered as a drum cadence first time finds herself torn aad cultural honesty and can- 2^J^™^ ?J22? % PROGRESS STAFF WRITER broke from the foyer of the between her eeaaal feelings lor dor about the importance and **ZSSLfZl^ES™ lor th gratification of another within marriage as outside it. TO 5M-a«i, ?.»e^tapK£ST m n auditorium and the Eastern an attractive boy aad the moral the part that sex plays in oar *• ^^J^'^.^^L —m of an Impromptu but en- ^ ^ * *, ■Almost Like Being Marching Maroons paraded t«sx*iafOtliarcharchaBdtamUy lives. Many of the wild young SLfiffii*JK£L5£^ It la strange that we concern tertalnlng concert last Tuesday Lo™. ' *»» through the audience and onto the __and worries about losing the people who violate the tradition- ■■•"■ ^ for contraceptive ed- outselves so much with the mor- - ucatlon that helps young women PLEASE sjgK hfore ThankKMr, va- *££^ cwmjt closed, the stage playing, "Hall, Hall, boy. allst standards are adopting ality of premarital and extramar- chairman of the Dept. of Music, ern Maroons," Once upon a time, aex and real capacity te-artTaex7 to *£?J*£S^L^^ ital sex, but seldom raise ser- The occasion tor celebration Once on stage, the band play- everything connected with It was take It or to leave It." their babies when they want them, iously the question of sexual mor- was the President's Anmvaraary Dr. J. J. BrcekemiL ««mpan- TrbraattS the sexual « snd when they can best care for ality within marriage. . .* Coacert which was supposed to 1*1 °y music student BUI Jones, ed a varied concert which in- thoroughly private affair. H It wa< Anyone kme«ta>tered n^entertaln- held a humorous informal dls- cluded -Rock Royale " -March atm*. Due to thTbudget cut cusslon on current events con- of the Steel Men " -Stars aad stant decided that £pnfM-' ""tag EKU P°U*1«»- . . ^-.. Stripes Forever •' -Bora Free" GO BIG l-JAKl BAH STATt TO THE CLEANERS Anytime ataaaT group Vould be cancelled Following this brief Interlude ■Man of La Mancha," -Drink- •safeHBesteTMuslc^art- singers Judy Cable and David ing Song," -Mexican Shuffle," meVwaariven^ckaotlce SUvers, who also played guitar, Great Gate of Eerr," -Volga ^rL^T„So nlnVrtmert railed nx a round called, -Music A- Boat Song'• and •Jericho." 1 ' ^^SSVSSVl Soe ShaU Live." 'Then David The liarcblng Band's p, MANY gV*-„ff J^,l ".J accompanied himself In -The grun featured pieces from every 1 Candy Bar Blues," a satirical haimme show of the season and tale of a hazardous trip to a several of the songs which will Colonial eel field. be used when the band ac- MOONS companies the football team to Bead, a small group that spec- ^J^"^;, GranUand Rice Bowl in Mur- in popular pieces, dance The nostalgic and tender mood freesboro in To ANTIQUES c and Jazz, under the " SWEATERS Cleaners AUCTION SALCS ANDGfFTS COMMCMCIAL RCSIDCNTIAL 59c Karen Fletcher Wins FA»M« %m MJL - s rM. ' The Lobby Of Oratorical Contest HOURS •m. ••PJ QyTidon Hotel Karen Porter Fletcher, Junior Svani C tSfiuxUn :: speech and drama major from Middlesboro, was named winner REALTORS this week la the Keene Oratori- cal contest at Eastern Kentucky PHONia: OrriCC 623-3830 University. Miss Fletcher was also winner of the 1M« contest. Her 1967 i4'-- •ii topfc was -Student Unrest: The BAT.ITSMKK: Fffe*ht Phones 310 Eisl Mall St. New Involvement." •WS-41574 nnnrtu OIlMtautt RICHMOND, KT. The Keene Oratorical contest Phillip Oannasin 6ts-esew was established In honor of Prof. William L. Keene, retired mem-, ber of the English faculty. Mlsfe Fletcher Is a member of boner societies in speech and die ma. of the debate team the Eastern Little Theatre and the modern dance club. Finalists Is the contest In- KENNY'S DRIVE IN cludes Sandra Holderman, senior from Harrodsburg; Sherry Fantkaer, freshman from Wal- ~> ,*4?t „ Your Purchue FREE tea; Maria Banks, freshman from Ctaetaaatl, Ohio; and Lena Bell, W&&2> If We Do Not araafcann from Valley station. Judges ware Dr. Robert G. J&r Thank You King, chartman of Eastern's de- From Former List Price partment of drama and speech; Dr. Kelly Thurman, chairman —Open All Yea ef tea department of English; 'aad ate Rev. John C. Cavendlah^ Hamburgers—Con ey Milk Shakes • member of the department ef psychology and Rector of BIG HILL AVE. RICHMOND Christ Episocopel Church, Rlch-

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ALYER CHEVROLET CO. 623-3350 BYPASS RtCHHbMD.KY. Hundreds More Including POPULAR Hie FOOT SWWOM Rcry ChartM PetTonrs m Tetcner Col T)oder «NMKOWSM DOR Shirley KkMatw Trio MAJOR LAKLS Clwrik lyrd TrW Lopea Rflawey let Chod Mitxinl i » MADISON NATIONAL BANK Artbh m 8 ywRvgas »■ »■ 1 ARC M«M We. Chod A Ait Mekey The Khkhs PLUS htANY PINE CLASSICS 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: COME Ea4RLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS MAIN STREET and WATER STREET WALLACE'S BOOK STORE Conference of Dean* Sweater* Have Spirit Page 8, Eastern Progress, Thurs., Poc. 7, 1W Scheduled For Of Christmas Holiday. EKU Campus The Kentucky Conference of BY JAMIE HOUNCHELL Terrace Helpy-Selfy Academic Deans will hold their PROGRESS FASHION EDITOR fall meeting at Eastern Friday, Sweaters express the spirit December 8. There will be of this holiday season with a Coin Operated Laundry 45 to 50 academic deans re- look of warmth and gaiety creat- presenting most of the colleges ed by their colors, styles sat "II you're tuo busy .studying to do your wash, and universities of Kentucky. weaves. The conference is to get un- Pastels brighten the scene as let out attendants do it (or you.*' der way with registration and well as flattering the features. coffee, in the John Grant Crab be Blue eyes are accented 2 Mocks off W. Main. Library, foUowed by a "Wel- matching sweaters and pale i come to Eastern" speech by complements the hair. Also- Corner of Poplar & Lombard*/ Streets President Robert R. Martin. which can be elegant, is lovely The morning program will be for both blondes and brunettes. The Kentucky ETV Network: Added festive sparkle is given See our Sign on the way to Jerry's Implications for Colleges and to these shades when the grease Universities." This program become mlnty and the pinks rosy. will be conducted by Mr. O. L. Emphasis is on other less ord- Press the executive director inary Pastel tones such as coral of the Kentucky ETV Authority, and turquoise. and Mr. James Harris, the di- In other outfits, the skirts may rector of instructional serv- the snow. Little colorful ices at Eastern, skirts of sofeslo fleecy wool in Following a brief break, the bright holiday colors of piak, deans will hear "Opportunities turquoise, yellow and violet can for Inter - Institutional Co- be worn with white sweaters operation in Use of Libraries," or shirts. presented by Miss Elizabeth Gil- Brenda Chtsm, a sophomore bert, director of the Library at from Winchester, has a mint Berea College Dr. Stuart Forth, green A-llne skirt- to wear with her pretty holiday sweater. Tea I Pop-up Toaater SQ?5 director of libraries at the University of Kentucky, and Mr. cardigan has round brass bottoms Chromed like those so popular on mint Ernest E. Weyhrauch, director styles but, which seem mu of libraries at Eastern. A luncheon will follow, leading more feminine as they daz« Ladies'Timex Watch Into the afternoon program, "Op- upon the fancy sweater. Attractive teardrop caae. portunities tor Outside Support Matching green forms the i Easy to read numerals. for Research and Program De- sign in the predominately With matching black ny- velopment." This will be con- knit which Is predominate! lon cord band Ml 125 ducted by Dr. Lewis Cochrln, white. The weave is thicker 2-Shelf 12-Jar $995 vice - president for graduation the white areas and looks mil Sake Rack programs and research at the like a blanket of snow such University of Kentucky, and Dr. all hope to see Christmas moil John Roweltt dean of the col- ing. WtSTERN AUTO WINE STREET lege of applied arts and tech- OOLOstFUL SWICAnatS—The Christmas greens ere dis- possible by the wide variety of sweaters. f^J^**""* For ski Jaunts during the vac- nologt at Eastern. played by thaw toe Hastem suphoinotos. A mint green a fringed wooleii poneho with stripes of beige, goM end pine ation many will rely on heavy- skirt U spiced up by a white and green orlon acrylic sweater green along with matching green slacks, perfect for the knit ski sweaters for fashion ID Brenda Ohlsm's OBtllt Flashy brass buttons are the dreamed-of white Christmas. and comfort combined. Perhaps finishing touch to Ode one of many merry mix-upe made a sporty look Is all one desires, but either way it is evldenS .mart quite an asset for the season's wardrobe. Alaskan weaves are utilised in Sweaters poncho styles, too. The high-col- lared poncho with Carol Laird, Your "I. D." CARD I.oveland, Ohio, sophomore has and Skirts (STUDENT OR FACULTY) chosen for cold weather is striped and fringed with goM, Makes You Eligible for beige and pine green yarn. Practical Gift for HER ampu Her stove-plpe-buttom Special Consideration are matching dark green 111 hen you evergreens of the Christmas sa PRESCRIPTIONRIPTION EYEGLASSES alendi son. Crochet is another sweat look which girls may wish for, 5.98 7.98 CONTACT LENSES since there is much headgearadgeex BUDGET TERMS such as berets and scarveses ■that ■HETTY SWEATBtS they can wear with these idresgf SUNDAY, DECEMBER 10 knits. Clooties artel novofnos one MONFRKD OPTICAL 8:00 E.K.U.—Opera Work Shop pronto r rhar* ffio ovtt#r. Orion 13SW. Short LEXINGTON Ph. 254-6583 •Ahmal and the Night Visitors" __ Industrial Educationion' DtorrBi,l»lei — Jtsi mnwiwn—I— ono—-J union11 ill ■ ■ !■o inlam ■iiijni*—»-* Brock Auditorium and dork shades. Shell these! MONDAY, DECEMBER 11 8:00 CWEN8—Freshmen Women's Banquet Student* Win First 8.U.B. Cafeteria SMART SKKTS 8:90 Lincoln County Club Meeting Ml University Place Award Tftoy'ro styied to Mono with trio 7*00 Russian Film—'Ivan Pavlov" Ferrell Room The Industrial Education OMeWWssasse^BfcSi^^fek aWlWIwra.at%A#4B^a^at^BaJBei ■IfnNBBftTasdl^h A^ASSk^B^sSiawrww%M, stliewemnii TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12 «„„ „.«-.• partment at Eastern recelvedj Arline, hip etHched. Solids and 6:80 Football Banquet O.UAOjOsO«sa HOME COOKING 8:00 Faculty Recltal-Dr. Robert Oppelt, Violinist trophy for first place at the K« herringbone weaves in light and ^^ Foster Music Building, Room 800 tucky Industrial Education. dark shodes. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18 . soclatlon conference. Steven Bo You Are Always Welcome at... 5:80 Junior Class Meeting Ferrell Room wick, Allen Goodrich, Time Nationally Advertised 'Royaleeze' 0:18 Young Republicans arise Room Herr, and Robert Wilson we THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14 selected to enter Eastern's 8:00 Dram and Sandal Show Brock Auditorium ucatlonal project against K« FRIDAY, DECEMBER IB tucky's state universities, I STRETCH SLAX 7:80 Children's Theatre Production schools and vocational sc GOLDEN RULE CAFE "Johnny Moonbeam and the Silver Arrow" Building Auditorium The convention was held 8:00-12:00 OUT. Dance Martin Hall Louisville on November 3 The educational exhibits we We are known for good food. Judged on Friday and the awar were presented at a banquet Home of those delicious BLUE GRASS BORN I TWO SUCCESSIVE TERMS Saturday. Dr. Clyde Craft, ma James T. Morehead was the! James Garrard is the only ber of Eastern's staff who Regular to $6.9t Values homemade biscuits. first Kentucky governor born In I Kentucky chief executive to serve tended said "Eastern had the Bluegrass State. The 13th two successive terms. He was best educational demonstratl Sim stretch stocks, tailored to fit 1623-9969 South First Street governor of the Commonwealth, elected In 1796 and 1800, and was of the state universities, el perfectly. Pot'tnanorrt preee MiHlkon, Morehead became chief executive the first governor to live In trophy was presented to upon the death of Governor John what .Is now the Lieutenant Gov- era's department of Indui and bonded (ersey 100% Acrikm. Breathltt In 1884. ernor's Mansion in Frankfort. otoyol, berry, looofi, p*im, e)ive, Education who initiated whHe. black and many ethers. 10 to 10.

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Mirror,Minror on the Wall, Who's Most Popular Of Them All £MM seven students are viewing- ta tnm la(t: Jam Stewart, AM*. tttto of "Mr. Popularity." Bested from left: 1MW, — «nd Wayne Olaae. - of these NTBI lovely . win Vicky Reedy, Linda Datmar Tom Bmford, Tad Marshall and Sob Tarvtee. Photos by Trent Strickland tha title "Miss KspeJaitty" afl Tuesday's tar. Staadms; from laft: B. campus wide election. Seated from laft: Jane Calraaa. Nancy Lewis : , Bud«rtCut Men of Alpha Chi Iota Use Organization to Oae) Simca - Alpine Gifts For All Occasions flecal year. Subtraction of the $1,W0,000 cutback still leavesZ Promote School Spirit and Good Will GOODWIN'S $8,840,714 more than for 1903-04. Tiger - Minx Child welfare services, of BY JOYCE LEE endeavor helped to promote course, are among the moat Im- ORGANIZATIONS EDITOR Last spring. Alpha Chi Iota portant rendered by tha state. school spirit and publicise East- became involved la cleaning and Sunbeam GIFT SHOP Tha 1M3-64 appropriation for The fraternity of Alpha Chi ern to many campus visitors. improving the recreation grounds this department was $2,843,093. Iota has seen numerous projects Whenever there is a pep rally, For 1967-68 It was $5,700,000. since the start of their brother- toe men of AM are sure to be Alpine Imp hood. proudly waving their flag. Flag of the Tllford Community House. Greeting Cards Tha cutback of $880,000 still They have bean striving to waving is not the only way AM leaves Child Welfare with $8,- The Tllford House la a house RICHMOND MOTOR COMPANY 876,907 more than allotted In achieve personal contact both in shows support for the team. for children to ese ae a center 1988. community and collage service. In promoting school spirit, AM for sponsored recreational act- Sealing As AM has dona much for has made numerous signs alone ivities. "For tha Sast in Economy Automebiks. Another striking example of the campus and community, rec- comparable state appropriations with Alpha PI Kappa sorority Bach week two or more frat- colors4ra04pPorfca or Lostor Evorsoea" ognition eoanti due. which have helped to mai—at^ a la provided by the Department To- help kick off Band Day mis high ebb of support for the team ernity brothers of AM go to the Of Eoonomlc Security which re- year, AH busied themselves by and school. The students that Tllford House to volunteer any ceived 880,848,778 for 1988-64 selling Eastern maroon and white Journeyed to lioreheed for me *f*eteaoe mat may be needed. and 181,700,000 for 1967-88. Tha They do such things as plan act- pennants to band students, East- game were sure to have spotted ivities, clean fee grounds, and not appropriation for this year. ern students, and to other vis- the roadside sign placed by AM with $8,470,000 cut off, Is still itors on campus that day. This wishing the team good luck. take boys from the Tllford House $8,680,118 more man for 1963- to some of the Eastern football 64. and basketball scrlraages. Sues road building does not On December 18, a Joint Chris- come out of the General Fund, tmas party wUl be given by Alpha this state program la not af- Chi Iota fraternity and Delta fected by the reduction. We will SPECIAL! Theta PI sorority for the Tll- Dry Cleaning Service continue to build roads until the ford House children. Tha frat- last day I am in office at tha ernity and sorority members wlU same pace which has made Ken- be donating small gifts that will tucky the nation's leader this be Individually wrapped and given DfSCOHNT-EASTERN STUDENTS year. SWEETSHOP to the children. Tha 1967-68 budget was based on the bast available estimates EVERY EVERY WEDNESDAY. Alpha Chi Iota president, Ted of income in late 1968 and early MONDAY-TUESDAY FRIDAY Marshall, a senior Political Sc- ON DRY CLEANING 1966. We consulted with the Na- ience and Soclolgy major from tional Council of Economic Ad- VA Fried Chicken Vi Lb. Hamburger Steak Dayton. Ohio, stressed, "AM wants to emphasise personal con- Shirts And Path On visors and other national ec- with French Friat with French Fries—Slaw onomists. Our own economists tact not by Just donating material made a thorough study of Ken- -shw thing, but by actually donating No Extra Chora*! tucky's own economic prognosis. their time and services to worth- All projected and predicted an while purposes.* Marshall want * economic growth In 1967 and 1968 on to say, 'AM hopes to transfer markedly In excess of whet actual growth and spending has bean. LAUNDRY Tha national economy has act upcemtag season win be Just as 0 » Musfcwomed as expected, and MBJaiUua strikes have further One food reason that AM can cot Income and tax payments. TELEVISION REPAIR be proud of Eastern's football Kentucky la unlike many states team Is the fact that four of CLEANERS which have annual legislative se- their fraternity brothers are ssions and annual budgets. Need- members of the football team. rVomSnt Station Third A Wotor St*. leas to say, it Is much more di- These members are: Tad Hol- fficult to plan spending and re- Specialist in Transistors. comb, Don Moore, Jimmy Mob- venue-collecting over a two-year erly, Doug Hampton, along with period man It Is annually. Joe Pratts, who plays guard on Our law holds the governor Phonographs, Car Radios the basketball team. responsible to prevent an over- Holding the fraternity's of- » r draft or deficit In any fiscal fices are: Ted Marshall, presi- OJVb fyvwu year for which appropriations dent, Ted Holcomb, vice-presi- are made. Thus, It is tha duty dent, Ron Braun, treasurer, Ri- of the governor to reduce spend- chard Achor, secretary, and Tom ing whenever revenue lags Just CLICK'S RADIO & T.V. Musgravo, corresponding secre- as It la tha duty of tha family tary. head to cut spending whan fam- W. Irvine Street Phone 623-3272 At the Rice Bowl game AXI's The Little House ily Income drops. support can and will be counted The law also Implies mat a on. The fraternity asserted, "we governor has a duty to restore will be at the Rice Bowl game ex- 8^»*a>»4t064r rfpftetst**^, appropriations in proportion to tending our support and we etn- reductions made should tha Gen- cerely hope the students will tarn 200 V* SOUTH THIRD STREET eral Fund revenues appear to out and do likewise." .%, I exceed the estimate. These when ware the consid- erations that I was faced with In meeting my fiscal responsib- IDEAL CAFE ilities. Despite the cutback, which Cleopatra Is small in comparison to tha THE KST PLACE TO EAT Increases during the past four years, we will continue to make atop to fix dinnej great progress In solving our problems and building Kentucky CHAR BROIL STEAKS & during the remainder of this ad- r ministration. An eight per cent cut in state BROASTED CHICKEN 11> funds to higher edtfatton will force the Eastern administration to operate without 86U.785.40 241 W. MAIN STREET Of « $7,640,786.00 budget mat era* originally appropriated to to* Institution for the 1007-68 PHONE A23-W41 RICHMOND. KY. naotiyear. - Education will suffer the most from me ordered cutbacks In Windier

■ . ■■■■■■■■ i. STOP SY PC* A DELICIOUS FOR TN£ BEST VAilff IN | Seiroless BtEAKfAST. WE OPEN AT a A. M. spoRnwm smn j MESH Featurina. Central Kentucky's Finest i UOOSfS, SMfEaTMS I HOSE Curb-DWng Area ! 2 prs. - COME AS YOU ARE _ Why M POt THAT LATE SNACK WE _ man you re too busy making history to fix dinner, pick up SHOP S i Golcaafaanders' Kentucky Fried Chicken. You can get it piping 3 ■■■■■■■■ AM OPEN UNTIL 2 A.M. hot^nght in your neighborhood, and it tastes great. Go ahead . .. make history tonight! Dinner? Take it from dm Colonel. He fixes BEIM^FR AIM KU IM L3$K for Sunday dinner seven days a week... and it's finger-lickin" good!,, COLONEL SANDERS' RECIPE I.KY. T&®®M«aW «7AraAMir DRIVE-IN COLONEL RESTAURANT BtarWAi Md«2»4iM KlehneaAKy. ID, Thurs., Dec 7, 11 EKU Coed Exemplifies New Bree Student Teaching Marching Maroon* Trav< By TOM CABm lerement of any of Mr teacmng The •trills drone of sense- days is when she finds creativity to Grantland Rice Bowl nower ln cosslp the frustrating si- lingering »"• » *»»* The Eastern Marching band' football team and the music wi tone, tf a slow student ud a fleW-of-weed-type *•«"• will be busy this week. be the "Fanfare of the Oomm the tov of seeing the reel "If toe student doesn t leern Man" by the contemporary < meaning of a Robert Frost poo* MMlte its because you Saturday, they will be playing «f toUlnthe mind of a lackluster weren't able to communicate the for the Grantland Rice Bowl In poser Aaron Copland. The 15-yeer-old-eil are part of the material to them, thus,youdldn t Muf reesboro. This involves going will then form a giant ball asl down on Friday, for a TV re- feature the trumpets and coi dally grind of Kentucky's Mure know It,' she ™™«*">™**r nets with the selection "Cora molder of young minds: the ring to a theory brandished by hearsal, then the game Itself on Saturday. Carillon." The show will eodi student teacher. Mrs. 8>urtock. ^^^ the traditional state outline i Teaching U one of the few £(■ BMtaNSM PiwMeat The football show will be dif- "My Old Kentucky Home.* major professions which allow -The age difference is aprob- ferent from any seen here ln the aspiring student to achieve lem . Carolyn added, the stu- Richmond. The entrance will be Tuesday, the band will a brief insight into the vocation d#nU ue i5_nf ml I in a. the "run-on" style used all year off again to represent before deciding whether or not Tne u, difference between us with the music from the "Finale" in the Inaugural Parade the reality of the situation ap- lsn., much tnd j think and act to Shostakovich's fifth symphony. Governor Nona. This will inS proacbes the thoughts about it. uke most „, them, especially The first drill will be to "Brav- volve an all day program One of the largest producers when ,.m „,* jn school. But I ura March." The same march lng with a parade In Frankfort of teachers, both ln and for the mugt remsmber that I am their has been used before, but it will Commonwealth, is Eastern Ken- gupertor," she said, reallzlij be a new drill pattern. The Marching Maroons tncky University. >hmt part of her course is push- The band will then form an under the direction Of Geraajf At the last graduation, East- ,„ her t0 nuturity. "O V C" with a crown for the Grose. ern Issued about 350 teaching Carolyn believes that teach- certificates. lng all types of young- sters, from genuises to slow oeveirej-u»«=beveiuy-one ■student•• teachers students,students, in in theme same ww class,t«»=», are now working ln Madison milkeg lt difficult to get the County; they are pert of the 233 Eastern students aiding regular material through to some with- Instructors ln elementary and out boring the others. high schools around the state. ■I would like a smatter- With the less average environ- ing, but In different groups. The college-bound P"0UD ,s more ,n" ment and facilities confronting terested in learning more com- the administrators of many Ken- plex grammar, drama and per- tucky schools, coupled with the sonal communication than is the current dropout rate, what would student who Is waiting to leave compel a person—who by tin time he reaches college has spent school when he turns 16." three-fourths of his life behind a desk—to study for four or Carolyn believes that If a stu- more years longer and return dent cannot be persuaded to fin- to the classroom as a teacher? ish high school and go on to col- lege, the best thing she could •I always wanted to be a teach- teach him is good grammar, spel- er," comments Carolyn Murphy, ling and the ability to do little a petite Eastern senior from things that are an important part _ To prove that poetry Ashland. of communicating, like writing of he dan, Carolyn Mas aung a coupte^* The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. a letter. has completed about Raymond B. Murphy, Carolyn period by Mrs. George *&****:—^_ U about midway through the 12- "One day, I would like to week student teaching period to Incorporate everything I know gain a certificate. She aides Into one English class," Carol- Selective Service Holds Meeting Mrs. George Spurlock ln three yn added, "because all of the clarifying this statement, he If a student falls to complete English classes at Madison High arts - music, drama and lan- BY REGALD SMITH guage - are Integral parts of En- PROGRESS NEWS EDITOR stated that without student de- his course of study ln his al- School. ferments, the United States could lotted four-year period; be can Carolyn is enable represent- glish and they all correlate." The Selective Service System apply tor a statuatory defer- ,u- _ Carolyn,. an ■ooompllshad folk was represented by two mem- vary easily suffer from an ed- ative of the new wave of teach- ucation gap. ment known as a 1-SC classl •rs because she has her own singer in her c>wn right believes bora of the Kentucky branch of ficatton. This deferment is good ideas about English and the re- that the U-week student teaching the system, Col. John David- ThV Sow act of the Selective son, and Us assistant, Col. Wil- Service System follows •pro- for up to one year tote? arts, but more Important, Ptrlod will aid her In her first portionate progress." Pwtor Mo student will be defer red un- she sees 'the student as a raw tm« "E^*"*"?* »• liam Sanders at a question-an- swer session at Brock Auditor- this act, a student will be given less ho applies for it In writing. of day that can be both bolleres that without the atu- a 1-8 deferment tor one year When a student reaches the ago fto ofactoreArnold. «•* *•«*»»* P*** «*<*• »» ium last week. ajoy oracnoi i j°Jjj°£- graduation, she would have to It was stressed by Col. David- periods. He will be required of 24, there will be no more 2-S , undergraduate deferment. o. »™„, . ...-Mr- devote her first year to becotn- son that student deferments are to finish the first SO percent not sot up for the convenience of Ms study lntheflrstll months. A student under 2-S classi- A"Sue XoloTSZ ***** *——■ of the student but they are ln If he falls behind, be must catch fication cannot be deferred by tars, who also practice taught _^^^ r^^ up during the summer term. marrying and having a child. at Madison. Is an instructor of asnjn»n» *»»!»»■ the Interest of the nation. In mathematics ln an Alabama high M". Spurlock Is a strong sup- school wmle the other teaches Porter of the student teaching Many Jobs Exist first graders ln a Florida ele- aspect of teacher instruction, For College Student* mentary school. "'*'» Purpose, generally speaking, J & D IT MIAN - AMERICAN Carolyn likes teaching high Is to provide opportunities, under Over 50,000 summer Jobs open school for the reason that "at guidance, for the student to de- to college students are listed RESTAURANT that age lt Is a matter of »•»<* and evaluate his corn- ln the new "1968 Summer Em- ployment Directory" Just off the starting 'with something, and Petencles ln the major areas of Ope* Seven Days A Weak 10 A.M. Til MMattjht molding lt into something bet- *•«*« ,ac"vtty„ln *"• wbUc press. schools," she said. Employers throughout the tor," ln comparison to elemen- United States and Canada who Open St*«rg»y TN 1 A.M. tary grade teaching when near- In an age when learning on the list their summer Job openings ly all thing* start anew. higher level becomes more and Include resorts, summer camps, Prflsja • DtMMft • MsjMe Tss# 9es)afMCti Cute, port and always Mat- more Impersonal with the use of national parks, summer theatres, ing a smile, she poors over a giant classrooms, delayed tele- restaurant and business. They Aad We Have It metal podium wMch to barely vised lectures and an endless invite applications now. Catcl*Mj OR tat shorter than her diminutive flow of computer cards, the stu- There are 12 % more summer height and delves Into a world dent teaching period is also kind Jobs available than last yoar. Room rer Students of Ideas, morals and themes Of a refresher for the young Salaries are higher ln many Jobs taken from a poem or play as teacher. —an increase of $100 to $200 abstract a creation that any stu- tor the season. Camp counselors "YOUR FAVORITE MEETING PLACI" dent ever lost sloop over to To the older Instructor, lt Is a break from the routine and a resort workers and office help memorise. But through methods continue to be ln greatest de- 22S S. 2ML, Phone 423-5338 of paralleling an idea or theme chance to see how the younger, mand. Scuba diners, ham op- with something the student to or next generation, plans to run erators, special education stu- more familiar with: Beholdl things. dents, and fly-tying and origami S^eMy^ngUsh makes sense. TQ m .1#BWW|tpy — Wgh Instructors are among many oth- „— **""TV^ „ _„. ___ school students, the new teacher ers needed. MADCO MOTORS 0 Her approaches are no new- y fr#-h face £ ^ "Summer Employment Di- other than being fresh labor room „ rectory" may be ordered by BIG HHX AVE, PHONX ttt- mind from being taught months • Vourf, . mall; sen $3 to National Direct- ago in college - but they demon- over wrestled through a K T LT ZrJS*. December day, sweeting out the ory Service, Dspt. C. Bos 32- 19o4 Chovroht Impale, 2 Dr. H.T.. Anto. V-l. strate the lengths to which a uneyen *' ^ 065, Cincinnati, Ohio 45232. *" Sfi'lSK "°-, ,o..h-r ochool "> three-day-old socks, Mark "rush" for first - class 194* Ckevolo. Convnrtiblo. Airto.. V-8. * 2 don't believe £ »oactaer , M ' J ■Mjjsjs; ln December. dominated cUssroom^ she gg mUe m g£*" 194S Pontioc 2 plus 2. 2 Dr.. H.T. ■ffi ' ^ w .h-m tl?k ,« m. «loom *° ■*•*» *»«« » more at them and let them talk to me, m#wUnrtu, u^ 1944 Ford Mcndo 500.2 Dr. H.T. and among themselves." Car- ■■■ ■■■■*■■■ »"• olyn's favorite and result of In all, everyone gains from the 1945 OHtmobwo Dynamic 88. 2 Dr. H.T.. Fun" either discussion or writing is realistic approach to one of the creetlvltv. The crowMng ach- country's largest vocations. Stockton's Powor / For a Good Deal See SPECIAL Dru&s Ed McDonald or Ray Gadd FOR CHRISTMAS

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