xt71jw86m418 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71jw86m418/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-09-10 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, September 10, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 10, 1974 1974 1974-09-10 2020 true xt71jw86m418 section xt71jw86m418 Vol. LXVI No. 22
Tuesday, September 10, I974

KEN?“

an independent student newspaper

6] University of Kentucky

Lexington. Ky 40506

Senate changes apportionment formula

By LYN HACKER
Kernel Staff Writer

The University Senate changed the
apportionment formula for determining
the number of elected senators from each
college in its first meeting of the fall
semester Monday.

Dr. Stanford Smith, University Senate
chairman. said the Senate Council
discovered an “inconsistency or question-
able interpretation" regarding Senator
apportionment after the completion of the
spring 1974 Senator elections.

AT THAT TIMI-2. the Council accepted
the 1974 elections but decided to submit an
alternative formula to the Senate for
consideration in the fall. he said.

In spring 1973. the Senate reorganized as
from a committee. chaired by Dr.
Malcolm Jewell. charged with a study of
the University Senate.

One of the changes was in the Senate
apportionment procedures. the guidelines
established for electing representatives
from the various colleges in the
University.

Originally senators were elected on the
basis of faculty population in the various
colleges of the University. The apportion-
ment formula adopted as part of the spring
recommendations based the election of
senators on the ratio of faculty to students
in the colleges.

Chalnn III Stainford Smith

(VIII!)

addressed Monday's vulva-sky

”to meeting. (Kernel staff photo by Bob Hltclicéck)

THE JEWELL Committee recommend-
ed half of the Senate membership be based
on the ratio of college faculty members to
eligible University faculty members and
the other half on the ratio of full-time
students in a college to full-time students
in the University.

However. the particular wording of one
phrase in the resolution. “...shall be

Nixon pardon
Campus responds negatively to Ford's decision

country

If) S'l'l‘iVH MILLER
Kernel Staff \\ riter

.\lany I K faculty and students
responded with shock and indignation to
President Ford‘s decision Sunday to grant
an unconditional pardon to former
President Richard \ixon
majority of tire students and
interviewed expressed views
ranging from disbelief to itiild displeasure
with Ford‘s action

’l‘llli IDEAS of inequality of justice and
failure to follow the constitutional process
by granting Nixon a pardon in all federal
cases were predominant opinions.

“The (‘onstitution itself provides for
trial after impeachment and to say Nixon
has suffered enough is contrary to the
wishes and intentions of the founding
fathers." said Dr. Kenneth
Vanlandingham. political science
professor. “In this case. you're treating
people unequally."

Dr. Frank (‘asale. political science. also
said equality of justice was of paramount
concern in the Nixon amnesty case

"NIXUN HAS forfeited his position as
President of the United States y virtue of
his resignation." he said. “He is now like
the president of a large corporation who
has been caught embezzling money from
the company.

“Sure. he and his family have to suffer a
great dealbut he must face indictment and
possible conviction for his crimes. If we
are to learn a lesson from Watergate it is
that the bigger you a re the less chance you
have of" being convicted of a crime." he
said.

Mark Kennedy. sophomore business
major, said “this is a perfect example of
the notion that the law applies only to those

.\ \ ast
teachers

w ho can not afford to buy their way out of

it ”

\\tt‘l‘lll-Il< 'I'Itttl Ifl.l\(i aspect of the
herd decision is the probability that the
be closed forever on Nixon's

and

book may
personal
\\atergale cover up

"People want to know what happeiuxl."
said ('asale “‘Ilis resignation speech was
unsatisfactory because he didn't accept
the bla me He said in that speech that his
reason for resigning was because he lost
congressional support rather thaii because
he had committed any immoral or
unethical acts.

“In return for a pardon there should
’ said

actions motives in the

have been a full confession of guilt.‘
('asale.

(‘ttNtlltHSSMI‘ZN AND constituents
alike have been concerned for many
months with the precedent that the House
Judiciary (‘ommittee Hearings and the
possible Senate trial of' Nixon would set for
those of another era who might be faced
with a similar problem

“This could set a frightful precedent for
the well-being of future Americans in
regards to the effectiveness of justice in
our country.“ said Byron V. King. senior
history major.

tine of President Ford‘s most pressing
priorities in entering office has been
\iewed as a restoration of faith in the
executive branch. 'l‘liis attempt appears to
have been substantually damaged by
Ford's pardon.

IHt. (.HHHIE IlfIltlthtl. chairman of
the history department. said "I would like
to believe that Ford acted in good faith.
However, the major issue at hand is
confidence in the institutions of our

proportioned equally." resulted in a much
greater emphasis on student enrollment in
the college as a factor determining the
number of senators than the original
resolution intended. Smith said.

The apportionment formula unani-
mously passed at Monday's meeting.
clarified the wording to follow the original
recommendation.

I can not see how this confidence
has been well served by Ford's action "

fttliers Sen (i.i_\lord Nelson «II
\\ is t Ill tfiebelief that Ford's timing of the
announcement of a pardon was very poor

lll' \ incent lta\is. director of the
Patterson School of Diplomacy and
International “Such a
pardon w as llkt‘l) to come sooner or later.
in any case. and probably would have been
leading Democrats and

lift".

(‘oiiiiiit-i‘ce. said

icquested by
ltepiiblica ns

.-\s w itli any pressing national problem.
there were those who stood on the other
side of the coin. Ill support of President

THE SENATE also amended its rules to
eliminate the Standing Committee on
Community Colleges.

Smith said the UK community colleges
have operated as a separate system for
many years and “have become increas-
ingly independent and matured in many
ways."

The individual community colleges
formed their own Faculty and Senate
Council Rules and Procedures for
operations seVeral years ago. The only
function of the Communitv College
Standing Committee was as a liaison
between UK and the community colleges
so UK's formal responsibilities or
authorities to the system were effectively
nullified. he said.

IN OTHER ACTION. Smith reported the
recommendations the Senate Council had
considered during the summer they
included a request for an investigation into
the relationship between the Office of
Student Affairs and student record
confidentiality. a proposal to reorganize
the University‘s College of Arts and
Sciences and the naming of a Faculty
Advisory Board.

The University Senate also accepted a
memorial resolution for Dr. David E.
Guffman. noted UK pharmaceutical
professor. lecturer and researcher who
died of cancer this summer.

IVord‘s decision A major concern for those
in fa\or of the pardon was the continuing
hardships on Nixon and his family along
with tfie strain on Nixon's health.

"I ’I'lll\K .\l.\ttll has suffered enough
.\ll)flllllt1t'l.\(‘ would be pouring salt into
the wound." said .lolm (‘owley pre—med
iuiuor

lillll

placed

l‘il'llt'Sl. journalism major.
another slant on a pro-pardon
stand “I feel there is just cause for giving
\ixon a break He has suffered enough
both mentally and physically Ilowever.
l"ord should now also grant amnesty to
draft evaders." he said.

St‘llltll'

Council on Women's Concerns
pickets Kentucky Kitten tryouts

lty Sl'SAN I‘INUIJ‘I
Kernel Staff Writer
'l'ryouts for the Kentucky Kittens - a
group formed last year to host and
entertain prospective football recruits ~»
were picketed by the (‘ouncil on Women‘s
(‘oncerns t(‘W(‘t Thursday in Memorial
(‘oliseum
(‘W(‘ leaflefed the tryouts to “protest the
Kentucky Kittens program. not the female
participants themselves." said Gail
(‘ohee. chau'woman of the University
feminist group

INI'I‘I.\'I‘I‘II) BY head football (‘oach
l“l'£lll (‘un-i. the Kittens consist of ‘20
women the coaches consider attractive
aitd outgoing to show potential I'K football
players around campus. Along with active
players. Kittens escort recruits to
ballga mes. meals and parties

“The program is just another way in
w Inch the University bureaucracy forces
w omen to live up to warped stereotypes.“
said (‘ohee

“It seems strange that the UK Athletic
Department has money to recruit women
to bribe prospective athletes to come to
I'K when they can‘t seem to find enough
money to give out even one scholarship to
a female athlete." she added.

’l'lltI KITTENS. who wear threepiece
blue and white outfits supplied by the
l'niversify. are expected to be sincere but
enthusiastic about the school.

Ilaniel A l.eal. a football recruiter. said
the Kittens program can be a valuable
"We're trying to create a great
football team." he said. “However. it's
something that would have to be fun We

need enthusiasm." _
(‘ontmued on page |2

asset

 

    
    
  
   
   
   
   
   
    
   
  
 
   
  
  
   
  
  
   
  
 
 
   
   

Editor-in-chiel, Linda (‘arnes
Managing editor. Ron Mitchell
Associate editor. Tom Moore
Editorial page editor. Steve Sum

Features editor. Larry Mead
Arts editor. Greg Hotelich
Sports editor. Jim Masaoni
Photo‘rnlflu‘ editor. Ed Gerald

  

Editorials represent the opinions of the editors. not the I‘nh‘erslty

editorials

 

Carpool system needs administration boost

This community’s poor response to
a beneficial carpooling system is
disappointing but not surprising.
Seldom does a system that requires a
personal sacrafice draw initial. large-
scale support.

Although University officials seem
pleased with the current participation
of 200 employes in the program, many
more of the remaining 7.800 employes
might find participation worthwhile.

Enticing the remaining employes
into the program could have a
substantial impact on the
university-a rea traffic congestion and
the protection of the environment. In
addition. participation would aid
employes who are currently enslaved
to high gasoline prices and gas
guzzling automobiles.

Participation in a carpool program
requires that individuals change their
lifestyles. Obviously. participants
would have to be offered strong
incentives to make such a change.

that change from total to partial
dependence on automobiles easier.

These incentives include the total
reduction in gasoline consumption
and the reduction of gasoline cost per
individual. In addition. participating
cars will be allowed to park in prime
parking areas. which are currently
limited to ”A“ parking.

The current program is acceptable.
but the administration could correct
many weaknesses and increase
participation in the program.

The first. weakness is that the
carpool program has not been well
publicized. This could be remedied by
an active, aggressive advertising
campaign.

The second weakness is that the
plan only requires two people in the
same automobile to qualify as a
carpool.

Although two people in a car is
better than one, the full potential of
the carpool plan and the related
savings in gasoline consumption

Finally. a new and stronger set of -

incentives in addition to the
correction of present weaknesses
would insure that the carpool
program is a success. These might
include issuing free parking stickers
and restricting “A” parking slots to
carpool participants.

The success or failure of the
program is not only a measure of the
participants commitments to the
goals of the plan. but is also a

measure of the University’s
commitment.
But the University administrations
commitment to the welfare of the
general community must be greater
than the individual commitments of

the members of that community.

The administration must take the
first steps, and must continue to be
aggressive to insure the success of the
program. How far is the
administration willing to go?

 

 

 
 
  
     
   
   
   
    
   
     
   
  
  
    
  
  
  
 
  
  
   
   
  
   
  
  
    
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
   
 
 

The University plan presently
offers incentives designed to make

people per car.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

would increase if there were more

 

Why peoPIe once thought automobiling was fun

By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN

ROCK, Mn. — Any Rheauit.
who owns the Penobscot Boat
Works here, opened his garage

door, and there she was.
glowing in the summer afternoon

quiet of what had once been a
stable, her large round head-
lights on either side of her nickel
grille —not a car, but a small
work of delicate elegance.

Her radiator, like that of all
Bugattis, was in the stylized
shape of a horsehsoe, for Ettore
Bugatti had loved equitation
almost as much as automobiles.
And she was here in Maine, a
Type 40, almost 50 years old,
restored and perfect in all
respects. brought back and made
that way by Andy.

A friend of Andy's had found
her in 1956, rusting in an alley in
Bien Hoa, Vietnam. She was in
sad shape with the weeds

growing around her splendidly
economical fenders which, in the
front. are separate from the body
and held rigid by spidery struts.
She still had her French
colonial license plates: CD-601.
The C stood for Cochin China
where she had apparently been
shipped to a certain Monsieur
Rauchon. an advocate who. Andy
says the records indicate, used to
drive her back and forth to the
mountain resort of Dalat.

NOTHING iS KNOWN of the
present state of her former
owner. but we do know the
Japanese seized her during the
war. For some reason they didn‘t
take her off as booty, so when
peace was declared she fell into
the hands of some sort of war
claims commission, which even-
tually sold her to a ferry boat
operator named Cao van Tung

who, Andy says, “intended to put
her engine in a ferry, but then
decided it was too complicated.
Lots of people made up the story
that it was used to pump water in
the rice paddies, but it‘s not
true.“

There is another notation about
her in the meticulously useless
records of the bureaucracy in
that faraway town. a French
reference to her
namese-language document as a
“carcasse Bugatti." Her story is
Europe‘s and America‘s history,
for then she was left to oxidize
until David Mize, a colleague of
Andy’s in the CIA, discovered
her.

He had another Bugatti so he
sold her to Andy, who took her to
the Establishment Jean Comte,
which it was rumored had once

 

GOING SWIMMING

  

in a Viet-

been the Bugatti concessionaire
(you can‘t very well say “Bugatti
dealer" when. all told. only 10,000
of these cars were ever made).

In variety the models range
from the small grand-prix racers
that dominated automobile sport
to the Type 41 Royale, the biggest
car in the world with a ”litre
motor of 14,726 cubic centimetres
displacement. delivered with an
unlimited guarantee.

IT IS SAID THAT Monsieur
Bugatti designed the Royale
because a lady at a dinner party
had taunted him by remarking
that, “It is true that you build the
world‘s finest racing cars, but
you have nothing for someone
who cares for luxury." Thus the
Royales were born, including an
incredible two~seater of enor-
mous dimensions without head-
lights for Baron Esders. who said
he wanted it that way because he
never travelled at night.

Even these monsters Bugattis,
with engines so big that the
French could use two of them
together to power a railway
locomotive, are lovely to look at.
This man who built his auto-
mobile factory on his estate with
his stables could not design an
ugly car. That explains why he is
quoted as saying, “Monsieur
Bentley (of the Rolls-Royce
Bentleys) makes a very fine
truck."

Andy knows a million Bugatti
stories. You don't own one
without becoming a biographer
and a historian, and you can't
restore one without the help of
“Bugattistes” from around the
world. In Saigon, Gaston Gari-

 

deau. who had been a Bugatti
driver, supervised the restora-
tive work on the body. In
Luxembourg. Bart Loyens, a
“stockiste,” found the correct
steering wheel and panel instru-
mentation for a Type 40. And in
Connecticut, Eri Richardson. an
architect and orientaliat, found
Andy an original carburetor.

THE WHEREABOUTS and
ownership of every functioning
Bugatti in the world is known.
Andy says that an Alsatian
gentleman named Monsieur Sch-
lumpf , the biggest spinner of wool
in France, owns the most
Bugattis, 300 of them.

Heshowsthemtonoone.buta
friend of Andy's did get in to visit
their owner who. he reported
back, walked into the room, hh
bullet-shaped head completely
shaved. and, clicking his heels,
said, “Schlumpf!” Andy‘s friend
told him, “I thought someone had
sneezed."

To ride in a Bugatti is to
discover why people once thought
automobiling was fun. It's not
that she gets 22 miles to a regular
gallon of gas. Its the noise, the
bumps, the wind and the
workmanship, her combination
of toughness and modest grace,
the gawks and admiration of the
people on the sidewalks, and the
life she's led. My God, a car with
a biography, a machine to be
loved, not resented.

As for those of us who must
drive Pintos, well. we have our
owner‘s manuals.

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a col-
umnist for King Features Syndi-
Late.

 

 
         
     

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not
ar
the
the
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the
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our

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Tesf-l‘ube babies steal

front-page headlines

By TABITHA M. POWl‘EDGE
rni: NEW—YORKTIiME NEWS Slavic:

HASTINGS-ON-HUDSON, N. Y.—lt
is not very often that the world gets
treated to two events straight out of
science fiction in the same week, but
in mid-July gcnetics managed to wrest
some front-page space from impeach-
ment and inflation.

First, a professor of obstetrics and
gynecology said at a British medical
meeting that he knew of three test-
tube babies, children whose conception
had occurred in a laboratory dish, and
who had then been surgically im~
planted in their mothers' wombs, very
early in embryonic life, to develop and
be born in the usual way.

Two days later, the doctor an-
nounced his immediate retire t from
this line of research, report “sick-
ened" by the frantic reaction his an-
nouncement had provoked in the
popular news media. In the absence
of hard evidence, his fellow-scientists
had remained politely skeptical.

At the same time, a group of Amer-
ican molecular biologists took the un-
usual step of asking their colleagues
to refrain, for the moment, from two
kinds of new genetic-engineering ex~
periments until the serious risks that
must be inherent in them could be as-
sessed.

Their letter was published simul-
taneously in the two most influential
and widely read interdisciplinary sci-
entific journals, Science and Nature.

Because of the prestige of the sign-
ers. the letter is likely to have enor-
mous impact on that particular kind
of rcsearch, but the appeal has moral
force only. It will probably be power-
fully persuasive, but it offers no way
of preventing scientists from carrying
out these experiments.

These two events are, in most ways.
quite dissimilar. There is something
essentially Flash Gordon-like in the
idea of test-tube babies, something
more bizarre than threatening. That is
not to say that many critiCS have not
seen apocalypse—ranging from the

production of monsters to the produc-
tion of slave armies—in the test tubes.

But the stated aim of the work is to
treat infertility caused by blocked
Fallopian tubes in the time-honored
tradition of a medicine that offers
therapy tg_t,he individual, notgtlie so-
ciety. Thus one argument against this
work points out that the last thing the
planet needs is a successful treatment
for a major cause of infertility.

The recluest from the scientists, how-
ever, is quite another matter. They are
worried about the apparently real, al-
though probably small, risk of loosing
new plagues upon the world by acci-
dent.

The proposal, however, is for a
relatively narrow ban on two kinds of
experiments involving the insertion of
new bacterial or viral genes into other
bacteria, particularly Escherichia coli,
a favorite experimental organism in
genetics but also, unfortunately, very
much at home in the human intestine.

The scientists are asking that such
experiments be halted only temporar-
ily, until a major conference on the
subject can be organized.

There are many other terrifying and
exciting possibilities in genetic engi-
neering that remain largely undis-
cussed.

What both these cases point up is
that we have no really useful mecha-
nisms for sensible prior discussion of
issues like these in scientific research.
Most such projects are funded by pub-
lic money and therefore are theoreti-
cally under some public scrutiny. But
the research is so arcane that only the
few people doing it really know what’s
going on, and only a handful may
grasp the further implications,

Technology assessment, while a legal
arm of Congress with the creation of
the Office of Technology Assessment
in 1972, is in its poverty-stricken in-
fancy and has never devoted much
attention to biomedical technologies.

That eminent scientists choose to
say they are doing something possibly
dangerous and that they want to stop
for a while to think about it ought to

 

be cause for dancing in the streets. But
it would certainly be foolhardy to rely
routinely on the goodwill and good
sense of eminent scientists—and even
more foolhardy to rely on those who
aren’t so eminent but want to be.

We need, urgently, to develop better
social and political mechanisms for
anticipating dangerous research and
probably for controlling it, too. That
prospect will elicit yowls from many
scientists who will argue—rightly—
that good science flourishes only in a
free atmosphere.

They can cite Soviet genetics, only
recently emerged after decades of

A "

,..w;;.~..;.....;.- .

 

   
 

 

pointless work on the moribund theory
of inheritance of acquired character-
istics, supervised by Stalin's protege
Trofim D. Lysenko. But there must be,
somewhere, a sane compromise be-
tween the palitical dogmatism that
trapped the Russians in the Lysenkoist
dead end, and the absence of any so-
cial obligth'ons or constraints so char-
acteristiofl'scienee in he West.

Tabitha M. Powledge is research
associate for genetics at the
Institute of Society. Ethics and Life
Sciences.

lack of foresight could lead to further decay

It) .ltlllN ('l'NNIFF
AP Writer

NEW YORK — Americans aren‘t saving
enough to finance the nation's future and
the consequences could be absolutely
appalling, “literally incalculable,"

I HAVE? THE WW
I TURNED OUT

of small- and medium-size businesses, the

at) wee/two; W home? Home? MAS

:th MTH H6 I HAVé 791d? Ppysessivcll
TO [)0 THC 39(05le aim 5M 8655;
{UUEPGUUELLC

 

W JEWIFE

///y/. p.

. ”I t

t
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MOTHER CUAS €VASI V6.

 

according to the findings of a study just

~ released.

It could lead to further urban congestion
and decay. say the researchers who put
the study together. It could mean failures

 
 
  
  

  

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JSWC (S aRXUp.
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encouragement of industrial oligarchy,

and more power shortages.
THE DISMAL TALE gets grimmer. It

could well mean that ecological and.

environmental programs will be aborted
for lack of funds. It could mean high

Tit/E i HAVE L)
MRECT.

Mama? .045 H 0qu -
35?

   

pa

 

THE EXACT (MW
OF MOTHER.

 

unemployment. it might mean chronically
depressed stock prices. I

These, says the New York Stock
Exchange, are some of the implications of
a developing capital shortage, a shortage
that already is forcing business to curtail
expansion.

.-\ QI'ICK (‘ALCL'LATION shows a neet
for $4.678 trillion of capital and a likely
availability, under present attitudes and
laws, of only $4.032 trillion, or a shortage of
$646 billion. And that's conservative, the
exchange maintains.

This is how the situation stacks up
between now and 1985, say the economists
and researchers at the exchange:

Sources of funds: business savings,
$2.928 trillion, personal savings. $1.109
trillion, for a total capital resource of
$4.032 trillion.

Uses of funds: gross private domestic
investment, consisting mainly of spending
for industrial plant and equipment, and
residential construction, $4.503 trillin;
federal deficit financing. $42 billion; state
and local government financing, $30
billion. federal credit agency borrowing,
$103 billion.

    
     
 
  
   
  
  
   
   
   
 
   
  
   
    
 
  
   
  
  
   
  
   
   
  
  
  
    
   
  
  
   
   
  
   
   
   
   
    
    
  
  
    
  
    
  
  
    
 
  
    
   

   
   
   
  
    
    
  
    
       
      
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
  
  
 
 
   
 
 
 
  
  
 
    
    
  
 
  
    
     

Tuesday. September 10. 1974

  

{THE KI-INTL'L‘KY KI‘IRNEIH

LET YOURSELF GROW

   
  
    

     

.s‘l Rl ll ll.
(.‘gllll’IV;
(i'lilllliIV;
Sgt/LIV;

Courses Beginning

" Sept. 11 Edible And Medicinal
Plants
Sept.

I: l(il\ r t(.‘I\'l\t.‘
(.14 \oijm;
Kstifltlx'lNU

ll tint/rt;

  
  
  

   
      
    

   

  
 
     
   
  
  
    
 

17 Basic Camping

   
  
  
  
  
   

  
  
 
   
  
 

. . f t' Sept. 18 Introduction to
For Registration in orma ion Survival
And Fall Course Catalogue Se t ’190rienteerin
C6112551547Or Visit Us At 209 9- 4 9
Courses ConSist of Class

E t H' h.
as g Session On Evenings of Dates

Listed Above Plus Weekend
Field Practical.

      
 
   

 

Don't hunt all over town for a good buy! .3.
See the KERNEL Ads!

 
 
  
   

 

   

IT‘S \ RGCKI\ SEPTEMBE

RECORD AND TAPE SALE

50 DIFFERENT TITLES, BEST SELLERS AND
BEST NEW RELEASES OF ROCK AND SOUL

Included in this SALE are the best-selling albums by
Elton John, Stevie Wonder, Wings, Eric Clapton, Joe Cocker,
Rick Wakeman, The Eagles, Black Oak Arkansas, Mott The
Hoople, 2.2. Top, The James Gang, Spooky Tooth, Barry
White, The Commodores, Nilsson, Alice Cooper, The Doobie
Bros. and 33 others. This SALE ends Sat. Sept. 14th.

8-TRACK TAPES
Reg. $7.98

598
AllllSlllt’

Record and Tape Center
133 E. Main St.

STEREO ALBUMS
Reg. $6.98

  

 

    
      
   
   
 
    
 
   
    
      
  

     

news briefs

Vet school study
to go to consultants

tAi’l —- An
decided
outside

FRANKFURT
adyisory committee
Monday to have an
ioiisultaiit recommend whether
Kentucky should set up a
veterinary medicine school

it he concluded there were a
need tor the school, the
consultant would say whether
Kentucky should try to estahlish
one at Murray State l'niyersity
or elsewhere

The 15171 General
called tor .such a stud)
Senate hill creating a \eterinar\

.i\s'semhly
alter a

 

medicine school at Murray State

hecaiiie stalled in a House
committee

Most members ot‘ the
committee Monday seemed

already convinced there was .i
need tor the school in Kentucky.

“’l‘he need is there beyond any
question ot a douhl." Sherill
near the end the
meeting “'i‘his‘ study will tell ll
we can do it it‘sltlllllsll a sclioult

declared of

and it we .siioiild or should not

attetiipl ll "

Crowd splatters
tomato on Kennedy

ItttS'ltH .\l’- —« Sen iidward
\1 Kennedy ill Mass i
lttltlt'il ott a stage and splattered
witlt a tomato Monday when he
tried to address an angry crowd
ot antihusmg demonstrators

The gathering in the plaza
outside the John l“ Kennedy
l’cdet‘al Building ltad heeti called
to protest a court ordered husmg

\‘\tl.\

program scheduled to liegin when
lioston schools open on 'l‘hursda}

The program iiiiohcs 18.3111)
pupils tifioo whites and Winn
lilacks

kenned) said he was

disappointedthat he had not hecii

ahle to speak hit the
Massachusetts lletttocral said he
had heeii siihiected to worse
ahiise during antiwar

tiettlottstl‘aliolls

Ford delays
amnesty

decision

\\\.s'lll\t.'1’ti\ .\t’
l’resident (terald l) l"ord has
postponed llltlt‘lllltlt‘l} his

decision on conditional
iot‘
dratt
iii\'o|\'ed in pardon negotiations
tor tomer President Richard M
.\l\t)11. a White House spokesman
said Monday

amnesty

Vietnam era deserters and

t‘esislers hecause he was

"Amnesty events ot the past
week. especially the last 72 hours,
have not allowed the President to

locus on the question oi the
conditional amnesty program
He has not tinished his
consideration oi it.” llushen said,
adding “there will he no
announcement tomorrow,"

E Kentucky Kernel l

The Kentucky Kernel. 114 Journalism
Building. T'niversity of Kentucky.
Lexington. Kentuclq. 05%. is mailed five
times weekly during the school year except
during holidays and exam periods. and twice
weekly during the summer sessim. Ttfird-
class pmtagepah at lA-xingtion. Kentucky.
40511.

Published by the Kernel Press. Inc founded
in lint. Begun as the ('adet in 1894 and
published cmtinuously as the Kentucky
Kernel since 1915

Advertising published herein is intended to
helpthe reada buy. Any false or misleading

 

advertising should be reported to the editors.

Kerml Telephones
Editor. Editorial editcr
Managing edittt. News desk
Adwrtblnx.businessmmculaiton
mats. Arts

257-1755
257179
N40“
37-

 

 

'l'wo tomatoes were thrown and

one hit someone near Kennedy.

sptatleriiig the senator as he
walkul quickly into the

huildiiig where he has his ottices

ledet‘al

‘lhe deiiioiistiators pounded
ihcti lists on 'he hutlditig's
windows 'ltl‘t‘u eggs and

smashed .i lttlool long pane ot

plate glass

Sirica tells
tape experts
to keep quiet

\\ \stll\t.lti\ \l' 'l‘tii-six

i-\pet"s who did the detectiye
work on lt-'. ".tllttlt'.\ ot erased
“mt:- llotise \\.itei‘gate tape

lt.t\(' lieu-ii itisiiiissed with thanks
and .iii .idiiiotiitioii not to talk
tor a while

the ellot't

'eam s si\ months

_ «itscmi't‘ed Ihchow (it the el‘asltt’t'

l'ul :iol 'hi-who

l s ltislt'ii' Judge John J
\iizca .iitxismg the paiiilists o1
‘heii ii-Ieasc said they were
ltlltit'l iio tiiithct‘ icstrictioiis ot
silenci-

llll\\t‘\t't tor the sake oi
t'.tltltlttl he wrote each man.

he court uiges that ~\ou retrain
trom puhlic iomment ahout the
.lUl'.‘
the

panels work tiiitil alter a

has heeii sequestered in

\\ atergate

Student teachers
apply this week

Students who plan to student
teach during the Spring semester
should make application this
week. according to (‘. Leland
Smith. director of student
teaching.

Smith said candidates for
student teaching positions should
meet with their advisors to
assure they are eligible and that
all necessary documents are
filed.

Secondary and special
education majors are scheduled
to meet in groups with advisors
on Wednesday, Smith said.

Weather forecast

Mostly cloudy skies and rain
are in store for today and
Wednesday The probabilities of
precipitation are tilt per cent
today a nd 30 per cent tonight. The
high temperatures will reach into
the tilts today cooling to the mid
titts tonight.

coier up casi-

 

  

  

. .5» ' :u.. . ~ “
Dr. P.S. Sabharwal supervises front porch improvements at
a l'niversity area home with Adopt-A-House volunteers.

 

campus

Adopt-A-House
offers face lifts

H) (il,\\\' EDWARDS
Kernel Staff “riter

In a soft drink ad on television.
a smiling crew descends on a run-
down house to refurbish It
completely in no seconds. A local

group has put that idea into
practice
il‘he Adopt Allouse program

began last ~\ear and is beginning
its second ~\ear ol operation iii
l.e\mgton

l \lililt 'l'llli coordinating
efforts of Dr I’S Sabharwal.
associate prolessm‘ of biolog).
.\dopt A House involved
students and other

has
I tti\ersit_\
t‘llIlIIIIlIIIII} groups

Fraternity and
members and independents \\lII
ttt'L‘ltt work their houses
mtuniav Sept H .\ party will
Ilt' held at .3 p iii for all workers

\Il workers will be transported
to the adopted houses b_\ Lex'I‘ran
buses ltus drivers have donated
their time to the project.

sorortt}

HIT

“l'ltl‘ISl‘Zfs'l‘lA'. there are :15
homes which will be worked on,
and as many as 30 to be worked
on by the end of the year.“ said

Linda (irinstead, who is
organizing the independents.
Itesides Sabharwai and
(triustead. organizers are Tom
Mann atid (lien Weber; Becky
Shaw. sororities and Charlie
I’hilhps, fraternities.
liach group adopts a house
until the end of the school year
and are responsible for painting.
yard work and general clean-up.
\l)t)l"|‘-.\-Iltll'Sl€ uses only
donated money to buy necessary
materials K—Mart donated $1000
in merchandise. Montgomery
“and gave