xt7000002n4c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7000002n4c/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1977-04-13 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, April 13, 1977 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 13, 1977 1977 1977-04-13 2020 true xt7000002n4c section xt7000002n4c Vol. LXVIII, Number 143
Wednesday. April 13, 1977

What‘s the difference between a prize-winning bubble
and a loser? Anne Bryant‘s early failures, like at left.
blew up in her face. She won this Little Kentucky

|

Inflation

Derby contest with the lung-buster at right. Bryant

The classroom Ford:

He receives mixed reactions

By MIKE MEUSEB
and
DICK GABRIEL
Assistant Managing Editors

Three grmps of students met with
former President Gerald Ford
yesterday and came away with
mixed reactions about the man and
the value of the experience.

The students, selected by faculty
members of their respective
departments and colleges, met with
Ford on the Patterson Office Tower
18th floor. beginning at 9:30 am.
Undergraduate students from the
departments of history, economics
and agricultural economics met
with Ford during the first hour-long
session.

“He prodded students to ask
questions," said Sue Block, history
junior.

Block said Ford talked about
Jimmy Carter, SALT talks, foreign
policy and, particularly, Henry
Kissinger. “He really praised
Kissinger,” she said. “He said ‘Why
don’t you try to get him to speak
here?’ ”

There was mutual respect on the
part of both the students and Ford,
said Block. “I talked to two guys
afterward and they were pretty
much in awe," she said.

And Ford was impressed, too,
according to students. “Definitely,”
she. said. “I think everybody asked
really intelligentqucstions. It looked
respectable. It didn’t look like we
were a bunch of dummies.”

Debbie Hunt, political science
senior in the second group, said she
thought it was an exciting ex-
perience, but wasn’t particularly
impressed by Ford.

Ranting and raving

Festival orators speak at extremes

By MINDY FETTERMAN
Kernel Staff Writer

It was noisy in Barker Hall today.

Evangelist Jed Smock, a regular
wa rm-weather visitor here, was
ranting about hell and damnation in
one window while street singer
Stephen Baird was raving in song
about“Cocaine on the Brain" in the
other.

Ah, spring in the Bluegrass.

Baird’s entertainment is com-
pliments of the Little Kentucky
Derby Arts and Crafts Festival,
which runs through Wednesday at
the Student Center “free speech”
area. The festival features leather
goods, wood carving and paintings.
It is openfrom lla.m. to4p.m.

Jed Smock’s entertainment is

compliments of “divine in-
spiration.”
Their combined performances

made the North campus buzz with

activity yesterday. They both had.

messages to convey. Different
messages, true. But their styles
were almost identical.

Baird is a little slip of a man,
dressed in beige Indian gauze pants
and shirt and a straw fedora. He's a
traveling troubador and his cause is
the legalization of street singing.

“Formal concerts try to in-
stitutionalize audience response
because you‘ve already paid your
money and have a reaction in mind
before you even hear the music,”
Baird said. “I think there should be
more direct sharing between the
audience and performer."

KENTUCKY

e

"an independent student newspaper

beat a limited field of seven contestants at the Student
(‘enter patio yesterday. Participants had three
minutes to chew gum, two to blow bubbles.

“I thought he skirted the issues,”
she said. “It was a chance to meet a
president, but not a particularly
educational experience.” '

Hunt also said she thought the
facilities were a little too crowded to
accommodate the 33 people in her
group, but that the greatest value of
the meeting was “a chance to meet a
politician.

“It was a first-hand glance at a
politico. And a lot of what he said
was just that—politicking. I just
wish we hadn’t been so crowded in
there. Itwas just too much for one
room," she said.

Several members of Hunt‘s group
also expressed disappointment that
the undergraduate students had not
been allowed to ask more of the
questions.

Don Brothers, political science
senior, said “Two or three faculty

Smock also believes in direct
sharing, though his cause is dif-
ferent.

He took a deep, gasping breath,
and from his vantage point on the
stairs next to the Office Tower,
Smock pointed down at the gathered
crowd. “You, huh... .you there, huh
You are going to hell... huh.”

The crowd heckled. They believe
in direct sharing, too.

“Brothers," Smock rasped. “You
smoke You smoke that marijuana.
Yeah..hul1 You smoke it. And it
kills your hormones, huh...yeah.
And it makes you sissies, huh...yeah.
And that‘s why there’s so many
Sissies at UK!"

Smock, as All-American as apple
pie. Never wavering. Steadfast in
his convictions. You almost have to
admire the man.

Baird, as All-American as Haight-
Ashbury, flower children, campus

cl

University oIKentucley
Lexinguin. Kentucky

Singletary declines
to take new job ’

By G INN Y EDWARDS
Edior-ln-Chief

UK President Otis Singletary
continued yesterday that he has
withdrawn his name from con-
sideration for chairman of the
National Endowment for the
Humanities.

In a late afternoon interview,
Singletary said he sent a letter to
President Carter Monday informing
him of his decision to stay at UK.

“After taking a good hard look at
the offer, I decided for a number of
reasons—some institutional and

members asked a lot of questions. I
didn’t think that was very good
because it took up a lot of time," he
said

Another political science senior,
Bruce Clarkson, complained about
the length of some questions asked
by irstructors, but called the session
“a great opportunity.

“It was candid," he said. “( Ford)
seemed very at ease, but he looked
almtst like he was tired. A

“He gave us some insight into his
first days in office. I think the
students should have been. asking
more,” Clarkson said. “It went over
well. I think it was healthy."

Following a session with members
of the Patterson School of
Diplomacy, Ford lunched in the
Office Tower and left for Bluegrass
Field.

free speech areas. Steadfast.
Straight from the past.

“I’m just trying to bring people a
little closer together, trying to get a
response,” Baird said. “Sometimes
when I’m singing, the cops will
arrest my audience because its
illegal to sing on the streets. They
try to defend me as I’m getting
taken away and so the cops get
them, too."

Ask Jed Smock. He knows a lot
about getting taken away.

Far the last two springs, Smock
has visited UK and for the last two
sprirgs, Smock has been taken
away. Every time he tries to preach
at the Office Tower fountain, the
cops inform and re-inform bin that
it’s nota free speech area. They haul
him off and then release him with no
charges.

Its the same way every spring.
This year was no exception.

Newberry, welch
present platform

By (‘IIAS MAIN
Kernel Staff ther
Jim Nrwberry and Cathy Welch,
sole candirhtes for the 86 offices of
President and vice-president,
presented their seven-point cam—
paign platform to a sparsely at-
tended ”(‘andidate‘s Forum" at the

drtssed the forum, including eight
candidates for at-large seats.

Nine college races were not
represented by candidates. These
collqtes were Agriculture, Allied
Health, Communications, Dentistry,
Engineering, Fine Arts, Gmtkrate
School, Law, Library Science.

l

some personal—that it wasn’t for
me," Singletary said.

Carter reportedly offered the post
toSingletary in a personal telephone
conversation almost two weeks ago.
The independent federal agency,
which has an approximate $85
million budget, disperses grants for
activities like lectures, exhibits and
public television programs.

The President named an advisory
committee several weeks ago to
screen candidates for the position.
Singletary was naninated for the
post by several educators.

Singletary said one reason he
didn’t leave the University was
because of the vulnerable nature of
higher education in the state.

“I tend to believe that this is not a
particularly good time to make a
change in administration," he Said,
referring to the Council on Public
Higher Education’s attempt to
define the role and scope of the eight
state institutions of higher
education.

A change would disrupt the
University’s prospects for future
funding, and in particular, the
present biennial budget process , he
said

Singletary said he visited
Washington, DC, and talked to
people at the White House, on
Capitol Hill and in the endowment
office. He described the offer as
“attractive.”

But “when you look on the colleges
campuses, that’s where you find the
action."

O’I‘IS SINGLETARY
...will stay “where the action is"

Singletary said he did not make
his decision public until yesterday.
because he felt it was inappropriate
to disclose his decision prior to in-
forming Carter of his intentions.

The humanities post, which
carries a $52,500 salary—$2,500 more
than Singletary receives from UK—
has been vacant since J amary when
Ronald Berman, who had been
chairman for five years, resigned.

Prior to last week's Board of
Trustees meeting, the 55-year-old
educator announced he would make
his decis‘on in a matter of days.

The job would have required
Singletary, who headed the Job
Corps in Washington from ([ctober
196410 January 1966, to resign as UK
president.

 

——today

rest.

jury.

State

Eastern Kentuckians who survived torrential floods last week
lined up in choking clouds of dust yesterday to apply for govern-
n-ent assistance in obtaining food and repairing or replacing
homes and businesses. Receding floodwaters left a thick layer of
and in the mountain communities. Several days of hot sun,
heavy traffic in some areas, and spring breezes have done the

Robert Bullock. head of the state attorney general’s Consumer
Protection Division, has called for mandatory marking of prices
on items offered for sale in grocery stores. "What the grocery
industry is suggesting with the computerized system and the
elimination of item price marking is a type of ‘trust me’
philosophy," Bullock said. “Consumers of Kentucky do not need
the additional frustration of the ‘trust me‘ philosophy of dealing
with the computerized system.’

nation

President (‘arter has commuted the 20-year prison sentence of
Watergate mastermind G. Gordon Liddy to eight years and Liddy
will be digiblc for parole in July, his lawyer said yesterday. By
July, Liddy will have. served 50 months in jail. including 18
months for refusing to testify under immunity before a grand

About 30 parents In Elkader. Iowa have banded together to rid
the local school curriculum of three collections of short stories
and other largely American literature. The parents say the
stories “urtlcrmine American and Christian principles." The
author's under fire include such controversial figures as black
authors Malcolm X and Richard Wright, folk-song writer Woody
(lutlrieand Beatles John Lennon and Paul McCartney. They also
include such standard authors as James Thurber, Ogden Nash,
William Samyan and Stephen Vincent Bonnet.

sailor’s delight

t‘omplex (‘ommons last night l Pharmacy and Social Professions.

Tire forum, the last in a series Newberry and Welch were die
sponsored by Student Government. first to address die forum. Tlley
took placeonthe eve of the first day presented a comprehensive.
of ballotir’g in the SG elections. wganized statement of their goals
Some m senatorial candilates ad-. Weapons

Madly satiny daysand clear and mild nights are here for today
and tomorrow. The high hothdays will be in the mid N's. The low
tonight will be in the low 50’s.

Geology sophomore Andy Amster Iseskdl to ready to dicker on two

prospective patrons at his painting display yesterday. Amster get per-

mlsslon to display the fruits of his evocation at the LKD Arts 5 Crafts
Festival.

 

 

 

SMUDGED

 

   
 
 
  
  
   
  
  
   
    
    
  
  
   
 
    
  
  
 
  
  
    
   
 
 
    
    
  
  
   
      
  
   
  
  
  
  
 

 

 

   

 

editorials 89 comments

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University‘

 

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Future of SC annex
will be known soon

Tanorrow is an important day for un-
derclassmen and future UK students. The result
of a telephone survey of students will determine
whether an annex to the Student Center will be
constructed. If the student response is positive, a
20-member committee will set priorities for what
that new facility will contain.

An extensive preliminary study by the Office
of Business Affairs found that an 80,000-square-
foot addition would cost in excess of $4 million. If
the random telephone survey being completed
today finds that students are interested enough
in the facility to pay for it through an increase in
the student activity fee, then preliminary work
will begin.

The activity fee for full-time students would be
boosted from $12 to $22 to finance the facility.
one.» weakness of the project is that up-
perclassmen who may not be here to benefit
from the facility will start paying for it months
before the annex is completed.

Despite this unavoidable inequity (it is finan-
cially inefficient to wait until the facility is
complete before increasing the fees), the con-
cept of Student Center expansion is welcome.
The present facility is too small to accommodate
the demands of an ever increasing student
population.

While the idea of expanding the Student Center
by two-thirds is appealing, its true benefit will be
determined by what is housed in the facility. Top
priorities of the 20-member committee (16
students), include: a new cinema, an enlarged
bookstore, meeting rooms and offices, a grille of
sorts, arts and crafts centers, TV and lounge
areas and a bowling alley.

Most of these ideas came from the student
committee members, who were selected to
representa diversity of student opinion. The new
cinema, which would be equipped to ac-
commodate 35mm film, is deserving of its top
priority. The present cinema is below par
compared with other institutions.

 

Piedmont’s mad

Letters

taken place an hour before.
Naturally Piedmont's owners and

While a new or at least improved cinema
seems essential, the other priorities set down by
the committee are not as clear cut. While one
person sees a great need for more TV and lounge
areas or for another grille, another person views
a bowling alley and an arts and crafts center as
more important.

These differences may be resolved by the
presentcanmittee or, more likely, will await the
judgment of a new committee next fall. One
priority—a new or improved bookstore could
be a stickler.

The present bookstore is suffering from
several deficiencies: it desperately lacks
storage space, it is virtually inaccessible to
handicapped students, and the shortage of space
precludes stocking supplies that generate the
funds to keep the bookstore viable.

Some mightquestion the use of student monies
to upgrade the bookstore, whose contemporary
prices offer no particular advantage to students.
But the bookstore does supply materials on
request from faculty and students—materials
that may not be offered at the other bookstores.

It would be nice if the bookstore offered lower
prices than its competitors across the street but
this isn‘t practical. If the University Bookstore
undercutthe market, the other bookstores would
question the legitimacy of a state-supported
establishment cutting into the revenues of tax-
paying businesses.

The many and sometimes complicated con-
siderations concerning the bookstore are sure to
make it a controversial issue. Resolving these
questions and making a final determination of
what to house in the annex will make or break
the Student Center expareion project.

Those problems, however, await the results of
the survey which will come tomorrow. We hope
that students support the project and that
agreeable facilities are added in the Student
Center.

 

Letters policy

  
 
 
  
  
  
   
  
 
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
 
  

As public relations manager for
thequickest gerbil on campus, I was
extremely disappointed when Pied-
mont missed the LKD Gerbil Derby
held on Monday.

When registering Piedmont last
week we were given a form to fill out
with stated 1 pm. as the starting
time for the great race, but when we
arrived at that time on Monday we
were told that the race had already

fans were disappointed because we
feel we have the fastest gerbil on
campus. Piedmont has never been
defeated in a race yet.

Therefore, we would like to issue a
challenge to the winner and its
owner to a race against Piedmont.
Contact Don Stinnett at 257-1327 or
Bruce Sibert at 257-1065. We can
make arrangements later.

Bruce Sibert
3rd year Pharmacy

'l‘he Kernel recognizes an
obligation to provide a forum for
opposing viewpoints. We accept
submissions in the form of letters to
the (ditor and comments.

Letters, restricted to ap-
proximately 200 words, can concern
virtually any subject. Comments are
restricted to 750 words or less. We
reserve the right to edit both letters
and (ommcnts.

r“

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‘OJCH.’ "I TELL YQJCfRUS‘JFiA 'S
1 KNOW tonne ABOUT...OH.HI,

 

 

  

M‘LAST in:

 

  

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ANW -

 

[II

It’s God’s ’appoi'nted children’
you see all over UK campus

By BILL BUNCH

I do not pretend to speak with
authority to all worldly religions as
Mr. Stephen D. Quillen pretended to
do in his comments on March 10;
however, I do wish to stand up for
what I believe.

Amidst all the rubbish that is to be
found in Quillen’s article, there is

 

commentary

 

one statement that he said which
would summarize it entirely. “The
mly problem is people don't realize
what being a Christian entails." This
also includes Mr. Quillen.

As a career Christian, 1 can speak
with the power of the Holy Spirit and
the authority of the Scriptures on
this subject. I hope that I can
clearify why God’s appointed child-
ren “badger the UK Community.“

I have learned through introspect-
ion during the last 21 years of my life
that there is absolutely no hope for
fulfillment, self-worth, happiness, or
a sense of purpose as long as 1 allow
my fleshly desires, emotions, and
intellect to provide the direction and
motive for living each day.

As I stand alone in the universe,
there is no redeeming value in my
thoughts or my actions. I have also
learned that I don’t have to be the
“be all and end all" authority in my
life.

I have found fulfillment, self-
wa'th, happiness, and purpose in
Jesus Christ. Each day my inner
peace and security is enhanced as
my relationship with God is
strengthened. 1 experience far
greater power and fulfillment in
Christ than I experienced in my
study of the world’s great religious
leaders and their teachings.

This vast difference in power is
due to many things but the major
differentiator is that all worldly
religions rely upon the power of the
human mind for self-fulfillment.

Thus,- their power is invested in

man‘s innate abilities.

The Bible, God‘s written word,
carries much greater authority.
Christ, unlike other religious lead-
ers, has not rotted in the grave. His
Word and Teachings have the power
of the living God, not a corpse.

Mr. Quillen contends that people
constantly tell him “what good
Christians they are.” I doubt that.
Any Christian who has a basic
knowledge of the Scriptures and
understands simple English would
surely know that we all fall short of
God‘s expectation for us.

[suggest that anyone who adheres
to his opinion join a prayer group
and check out the Scriptures for a
change. Try studying the Bible like
you study for a final exam, the

It makes perfect, logical sense to
me that Christians would try every
available means to share what they
have experienced through Jesus
Christ. Personally, I, like Mr. Quil~
len, never go through a day that I do
not come into contact with some
type of Christian advertisement. But
lalso never go through a day that i
don‘t hear about beer, pot. and
meditation. The rate of badgering is
thesame.

i think it is a grave failure on the
part of Christians at UK that God is
made to compete on the same level
with these other trivial, worldly
pleasures for attention. God‘s pre-
sence and works should be presented
atevery turn.

One of the greatest desires of a
Christian is to share the good news
of Jesus Christ with everybody he
comes into contact with. It is their
desire and their mission.

There is no way that anyone can
fully understand this great commis-
sim without first experiencing it. it
is the responsibility of each individ-
ual to either accept or deny the
message of Christ.

It’s that simple; nothing more,
nothing less. Evidently, Mr. Quillen
has denied Christ. I join God and all
Christians everywhere in hoping
that he will reconsider.

 

This comment was submitted by Bill

 

  
    
   
 
 
   
     
  
   
   
 
   
  
  
  
    
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
   

sports page, or Playboy magazine.

Bunch. a Political Science junior.

Nuclear-equipped terroriSts? Our time is running out

 

TRB

from Washington

 

Could a band of terrorists, like the Hanafi Muslims
who seized three buildings in Washington recently,
create a nuclear device and blackmail an entire city
or nation? The answer appears to be a frightening,
ugly yes.

In as chilling a document as l have read, a
Congressional Advisory group called the Nuclear
Proliferation and Safeguard Advisory Panel, working
at the problem for a year, has come through with a
522-page report. Thomas L. Hughes, Carnegie
Endowment for international Peace, chairs the panel,
which includes George Kistiakowsky, who helped
build the first A-bomb, Alvin M. Weinberg, Institute
fa' Energy Analysis at Oak Ridge, Theodore B.

Taylor, Princeton, top nuclear weapons inventor, and
others of similar weight.

The report is cool and understated. it has a kind of
simple, scientific authenticity of style. It carries a
glossary at the end to explain things like “Fast
Neutron“ ta fast-moving. neutral subatomic particle)
and “Breeder" (a nuclear reactor that produces more
fssile nuclear fuel than it uses to produce power).

After reading the explanations you don't understand
it much better. But one thing appears over and over
wlich even the most ignorant grasps. it is later than
you thirur.

Yes. it says. “the appearance of increasingly violent

and sophisticated terrorist groups has added another

element of fear and uncertainty to the nuclear,

proliferation issue.” It imagines such a band of
nationalists: “a group of perhaps a dozen well trained
and very competent persons with experience in
several fields of science and engineering.

They would need the support of a modest, already
established, scientific technical and organizational
infrastructure.” It assumed that they would buy
fissionable material on the gray or black market, or
steal it. Under such conditions they could put a bomb
ttgether, says the report—“if these requirements are
met and the program is properly executed, the
objective might be attained approximately two years
after the start of the program, at a cost of a few tens of
millions of dollars."

Result: a military effective nuclear explosive.

Suppose the group isn’t national; has less money; is
composed of fanatics, maybe, crackpots orcriminals;
the report discusses their chances, also. “At the low
end of the minimal range of effort, a small group of
people (possibly terrorists or criminals), none of
whom have ever had access to the classified
literature, could possibly design and build a crude
nuclear explosive device. They would not necessarily
require a great deal of technological equipment or
have to undertake any experiments.”

To be sure, it would be risky: “The gimp," says the

rqiort, “would have literature in several fields, and a ‘

‘jackof-aIl-trades‘ technician . . . ."

in these clumsy hands, the writers declare, "a
member of the group might suffer serious or fatal
injury. However, there is a clear possibility that a
clever and competent group could design and

construct a device which would give a significant
nuclear yield."

Significant yield? Oh, say the equivalent of a couple
d kilotons of dynamite. (Kilo, of course, equals 1,000.)
Enough to demolish lower New York.

The report considers the world situation 35 years
after that first chain reaction under the grandstands
of the University of Chicago and the explosions in 1945
m Hiroshima and Nagasaki which Harry Truman said
didn’t interrupt his sleep that night.

Today six nations have the bomb; two dozen more
have the economic and technical requirements to
fdlow suit; others are straining to get the weapon and
the wastes from nuclear plants used to create light
and power can be used to stuff bombs.

How fast things move. It seems only yesterday ( it
was 1945) that by act of Congress Senator Brian
NkMahon tried to put the genii back in the bomb, “to
[reserve the secret and confidential character” of the
nocess. He failed.

Then in 1946 the United States proposed the “Baruch
Plan" with bombs banned after an international
mthority was set up. The Soviets balked; they wanted
all U. S. bombs destroyed six months after signing the
oorwention. irreconcilable differences developed. So
has we are, today, with a new nuclear confrontation
at Moscow. lndia has breached the barrier between
the nuclear great powers and the rest of the
irternational community. Will Brazil be next?

Sometimes we have imagined that proliferation
would come—a long time in the future. ”Some day,“
we said. Has it come now? it still seems unlikely.
Mien, for example, would terrorist bands get
fusionabic material?

“Theft is the most direct route to nuclear weapons.“

explains the scientific panel. it points out that “the
psychological value of a successful theft would be
cmsiderable even if the weapon were actually
unusable. . . .

“A well trained Commando raid of about eight or 10
attackers using an imaginative plan and assisted by
insiders would be difficult to resist without rapid
reinforcement.“ '

The scientists who make their report to Congress
are mild, quiet men; matter of fact. very low~keyed
They urge Congress to enact stronger protection for
the nuclear system. They explain that a bank of
“non-state adversaries" (i.e., terrorists) seeking to
make a bomb would need “only modest machine-ship
facilities that could be contracted for without arousing
srsprcron."

Even with a “jack-of-all-trades" leader, the attempt
might well be a failure; on the otehr hand there is a
“clear possibility that a clever and competent group
could design and constructadevice . . .

A black market? it is restrained at present by lack
of supply, but widespread plutonium recycling could
remove this constraint; the report says, “some
damand appears to exist already as evidenced by
Ubya‘s attempts to buy a bomb.“ Most dangerous
would be an international feeling that restraints were
collapsing; that the present precarious structure of
the world's political system was coining apart.

it is doubtful that even the United States could then
reject authoritarian safeguards. Says the report
grimly, there is “a widespread feeling that time is
naming out.“

TRB from Wesblagtea is syndicated by The New
Republic magazine. It b writtea by Richard Lee
Stmut. a veteran Wasbiagtea reporter.

 

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feel I cmll rep:
responsibb n
studenuln the)
affect them.

Billy Renae—l
viable orgellzi
last y-r slum
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right to be rep]
apathyshowed
selectd Quill
pcrsotialy brir
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make sure thr
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Alli

Gel Burrows-
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and awarenc.)
feeling that pr!
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think that to str
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both groups.

Charles Grabar
University San
Allied Heahh .
suidaib h the(

Franklin Rem
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Arts E

MD Caldll
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to effectivcb be
must demolish.
annualoml s‘

Mn llayee—i
by SS. Wltncs I
up at the lat Sh
form Is dulcs a
elected senahra
The Student Act
pied;- togct no
real any in Univ
J. Carey lath
chhg 86 h eel:
auh time for so
student wit-av
social: In” no
stream shrdent
viohloll of the:
al vol"- of (It
manly." Until-t
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action by the on
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m afl stir
gentle and he
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Herb lees-no-
aafierhg m t
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Gearing up for
SG elections

Editor's NotezThis very gray page
lists the seantorial candidates for
college and alt-large. positions. Each

Agriculture (2)

Charles Iran-tar“! am seeking this pmiiion so I can
beconn mlre Involoved In student affairs. especially
thosaalak'sthatcmoern thestudsntsin theCoIlegsoi
Agriculum. The hrger our College becomes the more
memoarnsneed tobe heard by everyone. I feel I can
speak (It on hsuee which concern us as agriculture
skldmts.

nick lasso—I am seeking the position of senatlr m
the Cdege ongriculture because I am inbreeted in
repremedng neviewsofthestuderneinthe Ag College
InSG.Furthermore.IbelievethattheColiegeoi
Agriculunhssalotloofiertheentire campuandl
feel I am capabb d relaying Its positive smeets and
the vnws alai feelngs of the students within to othm-e
on cannula. .
Joharn-tIg—I wool! like to promote nun University
partieipa (Ion hr mvironmentsl conms such as
recycling. energy conservation. strip~mina
reciamalonandreturneble bottles since most stud-m
are aware of these Inoblems but don't know what can
bedmetocorrectthemJamhrsupportofmakhrgthe
campus more favorable to pedestrian and bicyclists
by holding bbyeh lanes on the cams and lime
Street. hlcreadng the she ofsidewsiks on lines Street.
and deemplndzing campus traffic by a me ancient
shuttbbus sstem from the stadium. [feel that the Si
ehouki be mine cooperative with camllll mamatium
and slow more use of so facilities arai equklrnent by
these orgaltalom.

[Ade Leach—I will represent all agriculture shldents
by renameibb elrpresaiu their vdce In the University
Senselwillworktolmurethstactialtahenbythe
Sense (n Issuesarai policimwillbenefltandnot hinder
the shlrkots In the College of Agricultla'e. I will he

accenble to my fellow students and receptive to all
ideasorproposah which needtocrlne befaetha

'serlah. I have served on the Agriculture Student

Coundi and have a string leadership backuound in
the I-‘uhlre Funnels of America where I served as
state mcretary of the Kentucky Associatirm. I desire to
serve as senabrand feel I am qualified to dose.

James leWIsen—l am seekhg the podtien of
sgriculure senahlr because I would lib to take an
active part in 56's dbcussims and decislrm making. I
feeIIcnlki representtbewholesrudent pmutatitmin a
resprmsibb manner. especially the agriculture
studenn In the event they my actiorls would ultimately
affect them.

llllyhennu-onuhillketoseescbeeunethestrmg‘

viable (legalization that we as students med. In the
last ymr sultan have had to take bad seat to many
l'nlvadty deckions that directly Influenced shrdalt
affaks. Deckions whichstudenls needd toandhad the
right to be represmtsd on. but wasn't because oi the
apatiryahowed by theeenatrss cast}. I would like to be
selecbd mnabr of the Agriculture College so I can
persmal