xt71ns0kwb3h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71ns0kwb3h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-01-17 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, January 17, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 17, 1975 1975 1975-01-17 2020 true xt71ns0kwb3h section xt71ns0kwb3h Vol. LXVI No. 91
Friday. Januaryl7,1975

KENTUCKY

81‘

an independent student newspaper

Mucci, senators argue
90y dance rescission veto

By Sl'S \N JDN‘FS
and
liltl'fl‘) WINGES
Assistant Managing Editors

A veto of the resolution to rescind
Student Government tSG i sponsorshipof a
gay dance was still standing after the
.s‘tudent Senate meeting last night but the
possibility remains for further action on
the issue,

St} President David Mucci. who vetoed
the senate's rescission action Jan. 9. faced
opposition from several senators who felt
the veto was in violation of Robert's Rules
of Urder.

SICN.\'l‘t)I{-;\'I‘-I..\lttiii .liin llai‘ralson
claimed the rescission motion could not he
vetoed because it was of a procedural
nature

“If a procedural motion can be vetoed
theii motions like those to lay a hill on the
table. utti'oduce a hill. or to adjourn can be
vetoed.” said llarralson “This gives us a
parliamentary dictator in effect ”

Mucci said his veto was constitutionally
sound

"ROBERTS Rl'lIIS [8 binding only
when the 5G constitution does not address
itself to a point in question." Mllt‘t'l said
"The i (institution does address itself to the
question of vetoes Therefore, this is not a
move to he decided by Robert‘s Rules '

When contacted later. Dr Gifford
Blytnn, an authority on parlimaiietary
procedure. sided with llarralson on the
issue

procixlure,” said Blyton. speech professor.
”A motion to rescind is a procedure just
like voting ”

IN SECTION it). under Enactment of
Bills the 8G (‘onstitution states: “Every
hill ha vnig passed the Student Senate shall
he presented to the President before being
enacted into law. If the President ap-
proves, the hill shall be enacted by his or
her signature. If the President does not
approve. he or she shall return the bill
together with a written message of ob-
jections to the Student Senate.“

Despite knowledge that any objection
based on parliamentary procedure would
several senators appealed
ruling on poarliaiiientary
grounds. feeling the president‘s veto
should fall under the Jurisdiction of
llolwl‘l‘rx Rules.

"Reganlless of what this body rules on
parliamentary procedure this veto will
stand until it Ls taken to the SG Judicial
Board." said Mucci.

'l'lllfi Jl'l)l('|;\li BUARI) rules on $0
constitutional disputes. The appeal of
Mucci's ruling. which requires a two
thirds majority of those present to sue
ceeil. failed H to 12.

The senate never attempted to override
the veto which also requires a two thirds
vote of those present Senator at Large
Glenn Stith said he (lid not try to override
the veto because he did not feel he could
vote on an action that didn‘t exist

"1 recogni/ethis action is illegal and [hi
not going to vote either way." said Stith.

be worthless.
.\liicci 's

I

I

St; President David Mucci (center.

21 University of Kentucky

lexington Kv 40506

Kernel sh" photo by Bill Marlow

background) discusses his \eto with

Senator~at-I.arge (ilenn Stith flower right) at last night's meeting. SG Administrative
Aide Mike Bewley ton .\Iucci's right! presented two proposals dealing with acedeniic

bankruptcy.

.s'Tl'l'll 8 \ll) II I: planned to take the veto
question to the St; Judicial Board.

The board. whose members are
nominated by student senators. was for‘
nit-d only iecently even though senators
asked to submit names at the
beginning of last semester

'I got names from four or live senators
at the end of last semester." said Mucci "I
recently sent them to Vice-President tor

vvht‘l't‘

MIKE HI‘IWLICY. SG
aide. said the Judicial Board is‘
in Mucci's favor.

The senate originally decided to sponsor
a dance for gay students on Nov. 21. The
action was rescinded on Dec, 3.

In other business. the senate passed two
proposals dealing with scholastic
probation. academic suspension and
reinstatement,

administrative
stacked"

specifies. 1
can veto a

constitution
he iMuccii

“l'nless the
don‘t see how

UK neighbors
new two-lane

By NANCY DALY
Associate Editor

A University proposal to construct a two-lane street from
Commonwealth Stadium to Tales (.‘reek Pike has eliCited a
favorable reaction from opponents of the Rosemont Garden
Extension.

Larry Forgy, vice president for business affairs, wrote to the
Kentucky Bureau of Highways in December requesting the
construction of a ‘small city street" whether the Rosemont
Garden Extension is approved.

PLANS FOR Till-Z Rosemont Garden Extension call for a
f0ur»lane expressway across the UK experimental farm to
connect Rosemont Garden at Nicholasville Road and Mt.
Tabor Road at Tates Creek Pike.

The project is opposed by southside neighborhood groups
and the Urban County Council. which recently deleted funding
for the road from its capital improvements budget. The final
decision on the road will be made by the Transportation Policy
Committee on Feb. 10

Porgy said the proposed smaller street. which is currently
under study by the highways bureau. would fulfill current
University traffic needs on the south side of campus and should
be built before the next football season begins.

PHIL MILLER. PRESIDENT of a neighborhood group
opposing Rosemont Garden Extension. said the University‘s
proposal is an adequate alternative to the expressway. In fact.
he added. UK's proposal is an improvement over a smaller
route the neighborhood groups submitted to the bureau of
highways in 1973. J

Miller said the smaller street would solve the traffic problem
on Cooper Drive. whose residents are most severely affected
by University traffic, particularly during the football season.
Walter Hempel. president of the Cooper Drive Neighborhood
Association, said the University proposal is strongly backed by
his group and wipes out any reservations they had about
opposing Rosemont Garden Extension.

"Mucci's veto nionopohzes power into the
executive officer

favor
road

Student Allan‘s Robert Zumwinkle.” (“’"li'mod "" page 7

 

r?
Proposed Rosemont Garden Extension

UK

Walter Avenue Cooper Drive

 

Tales Creek Pike

9%

UK Experimental Farm . V
83’" '

—-———-—-—_——_————————-—————1

Rosemont Garden

 

Proposed Rosemont Garden Extension

 

 

 

Kernel Sta" illustration by Jack Kocneman

Illustrating the l'niversity's south side. this map shows the path of the proposed road and the
much-opposed Rosemont Garden Extension.

 

  
   
   
   
 
   
 
  
  
  
   
     
 
  
    
 
  
 
    
  
   
    
    
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
   
   
   
    
   
    
  
  
   
    
   
   
   
   
    
  
    
   
   
 
   
   

Editor-unchnt, Linda Carnes
Managing editor, Rm. Mitchell
Associate editor, N .ncy Daty

Features editor, Lorry Mood
" Pdhr, Greg Hotelich
Sports editor, Jim Manoni

EdIVO’ ' page editor, Dan Crutcher thgldphy editor, Ed Gerald

—.—‘

 
   

Editorials ropruont the opinions oi the editor!

Mucci misuses executive veto

If the Gay (‘oalition‘s dance is not
sponsored by Student Government
iSGi. don‘t let it be said that SG
President David Mucci didn‘t try his
hardest on the coalition's behalf.

Confronted with the Student
Senate's rescission of an earlier
decision to sponsor the dance. Mucci
resorted to his last recourse: he
vetoed the rescission. Such a move
would be termed quite clever and
resourceful if not for one small item
called “parliamentary procedu

According to Dr. Gifford Bly 0n.
professor of speech and resident
expert on parliamentary procedure
Mucci‘s veto was incorrect. Blyton
said he considers rescission a matter
of procedure rather than substance
and therefore not subject to executive
veto.

At last night‘s Student Senate
meeting parliamentary procedure
stole the limelight. but not the votes of
the senators. First Senator~at-large
Jim Harralson asked for a point of
order. declaring that rescission was
not subject to an executive veto. He
compared rescission to a motion to
"table.“

Mucci overruled Harralson's point
of order saying the SG constitution
gave the president the right to veto
any “bill.“ By Mucci‘s definition. the
rescission action fell into the category
of “bill.“

Harralson then appealed Mucci's
ruling on his point of order. which
meant a two—thirds vote was needed to
overrule Mucci's overruling
Harralson‘s point of order.

Confused? So were the senators.
Much discussion ensued. not a little of
it aimed at ascertaining just what was
being voted on.

The vote was 14-12 in Mucci's favor.
llarralson and Senator-at—large Glenn
Stith indicated an appeal would be

lodged with the ultimate authority ~
the Univeisity Judicial Board. The
appeal will center on whether the SG
president has the right to veto a
rescission.

But the outcome of the appeal may
depend more on the make-up of the J-
Board than on the correct
parliamentary procedure. The J-
Board is reportedly stacked in
Mucci‘s favor due to the fact that
many senators never submitted their
own nominations for student J-Board

members. (The Judicial Board was
appointed only last week»

Admirable as Mucci‘s sentiments
may be. we are forced to agree with
Dr. Blyton. Common sense says that
rescission is not properly called a
"bill.“ It is a procedure for nullifying
a bill.

We hope Mucci is successful in
somehow obtaining SG sponsorship
for the Gay (‘oalition‘s dance, but not
by assuming powers not properly
delegated to him.

  

 

editorials

SG PRESIDENT DAVID Ml'(‘(‘ln

Ford's style speaks louder than words
in nationally televised fireside chat

The political oddity known as a
presidential address is more often
than not a very formal and equally
boring event. which imparts little. if
any. new information or knowledge.

President Gerald Ford's address to
the nation on the ills of the economy
Monday night was true to form in at
least one aspect. It provided no new
information. since the White House
had seen fit to release the gist of the
President‘s decisions prior to the
speech in an attempt to steal some of
the thunder from the Democratic
Congressional (‘aucus. which had
already released its rec0m~
mendations to deal with the economic
problems.

However. the style and tone of the
Monday night speech was a definite
break with tradition and in some
sense a Presidential first.

There have been breaks in the ethos
of presidential formality in the past.
Most noteable were the friendly.
fatherly fireside chats of Franklin
Roosevelt. There was the ‘disgusting
honesty" of Harry Truman, who
almost never used a prepared text

Nicholas Von Hoffman

Selling gold to depress price: Black Friday and now

when speaking in public. And. in
recent years. there was the extensive
use of live television press con-
ferences by John Kennedy.

Yet Monday night was different
from all of these. It was sort of a
televised fireside chat. It was also one
of the rare occasions in which a
president has shared the spotlight of
national television. as the opening
view of the White House library. from
which the address originated. showed
a view of the President. Press
Secretary Ron Nessen. and advisor
Donald Rumsfield chatting amiably
in front of the fireplace. The
President then stepped aside to have
‘a little talk‘ with the American
people.

Ford seemed most confident and
relaxed as he browsed through the
library while discussing the grave
economic problems of the country.
The President broke a long-standing
tradition of reading his speech from a
writtentext. opting insteadfor the use
of a teleprompter. which adds to the
air of spontanaiety. Although the
entire performance had been

'together.”

i'eheaised and practiced for several
days. it seemed almost as if one had
happened upon Gerald Ford in his
library quite by accident

Of course. there is nothing wrong
with wanting to acquu‘c some up
pearance of informality and down
homeism Indeed. these are ad
mirable and welcome traits alter the
years of the royal court of Nixon Yet.
somehow. it was all vaguely
reminiscent of the slick political
coiiiiiicn'ialsot recent years .\nd it is
entirely possible that we were wat
chmg a man set the tone for his
presidential campaign m 1976

Often a man‘s style is more im-
portant than what he actually says. It
is difficult to dislike a man who values
informality as does Gerald Ford.
especially when he uses such
idealistic metaphors as “Truth is the
glue that holds government
Even though Ford must
practice to attain his spontaniety. it is
a welcome relief and perhaps his
efforts will return the presidency to a
level which is closer to the people
which it serves. This, in itself. would
be a major success.

 
 

 

    
     
   
    
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
      
    
   
 

NICHOLAS \‘ON HOFFMAN

WASHINGTON —— .Last
week‘s sale of gold by the
government isn‘t the first time
the Treasury has put some of its

 

own hoard on the market to
depress the price of that most
peculiar of metals. The most
famous occasion was on Black
Friday. Sept. 24. 1869. when Jay

 

-- w . 7' ,f ' . ,,
‘ , .“¢ ' /// .. .
'NlI—EI, I DON’T SUPPOSE YOU'VE HAD TIME YET TO WHIP INFLATION, OI ANYTHING . . .T'

Gould and Jim Fisk. with help
from President Grant‘s brother-
in-law and other assorted free~
booting malefactors. tried to
corner the gold market

 

By noon of that day they'd
driven the price past W). and
were in the process of destroying
half the banks and businesses of
New York. when Secretary of the
Treasury George Boutwell start-
ed selling government gold and
brought the price down to 133
inside of 15 minutesBoutwell was
incontestably right, but whether
history will make the same
judgment about our present
treasury Secretary isn‘t as cer-
tain.

GOLD OCCUPIED a different
place in our economy 100 years
ago. It was a principal means of
making payments abroad and at
home gold coin was legal tender.
that is actual money. It, wasn‘t
the only form of money. however.
We also had greenbacks. the
paper money printed to finance
the (‘ivil War. So, all things
considered. Mr. Gould's gold
corner could have caused the
worst sort of havoc.

()ne of the reasons the govern
ment has gone ape. scaring
people out of buying gold. may be
its own fear of a return to the
same kind of double currency
system which makes it possible
for everybody to chart inflation
day by day simply by comparing
the cost of gold money in terms of
paper money. In any event. such
a return isn‘t like‘y since the gold
being offered for sale now isn‘t in
the form of coin but of unminted
bar or wafers. that is bullion.
Bullion, in whatever size, has to
be authenticated as true gold
before it will be accepted in
payment. so. historically, it has
been kept in warehouses for the
most part. and shipped back and
forth across the Atlantic to
satisfy foreign debts.

Then why didn‘t having both
gold and paper money in circula
tion terrify the bankers and
Treasury officials of a century
ago the way it does now? Why
Continued on Page 3

 

 

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had
his

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ape
twir
ad
the
fit
1er
leaf
it is
vat

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MOS
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Lich
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ent
iust
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tuld

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Opinions from inside and outside the university communttv

comment

Athletes defy the drop-add alphabet curse

Hy SANDRA Ii. MAYES

Well, UK's rendition of “They'll Be
Dancing in the Streets," also known at-
fectionately as drop-add ta friendly
version of “screw your neighbor") has
come to campus once again, Problems
involved with this process are numerous
and obvious, such as standing in line for
ten minutes to get the only section of a
class you can fit into your schedule and
finding out that it is closed and then being
met with the statement. “You‘ll have to
get the permission of the instructor (who
of course can‘t be found on campus that
dayt in order to be admitted to the class.”

But one ofthe worst problems of all is to
be cursed with a last name either in the
middle of the alphabet. or worse yet, to
have a last name that begins with Z” and
have to wait until 3:30 pm, on Tuesday to
be admitted to the confines of Memorial
(‘oliseum to receive your computerized
dropAadd card. This card. of course. is
necessary for a student to be able to add or
drop a course.

IN MY TWO years at ['K I have been
able to avoid this mess by carefully pre-
registering. This semester. however, I
found that one course. listed in the Spring
schedule book, was not being offered after
all. The result I was one class short,
meaning I had to go through dmp-add. The
course I wished to add it a very popular
one and the chances of it being closed on
Wednesday were very high. One problem

being a graduate teaching assistant I
was required to work my department‘s
drop-add table all day on Tuesday so I
would be unable to go through at my
scheduled time

After dragging a fellow teaching
assistant to watch the table for a few
minutes I went down to the line marked
“MLscellaneous” and told the lady my
situation She was sorry but there was
nothing she could do as there "are
thousands of students going through here
today and we can't handle them out of
order?’

\‘UW IF THIS decision was uniformly
enforced. I wouldn‘t be writing this.
However. once again. it seems that the
athleuc department has found a better
way. Five athletes, teasy to detect by their
jacket.“ all who had last names in the
alphabet after mine. were in front of me.
For some strange reason they were all
given their cards and went about their
business. I only wish that I had listened

more carefully to their reasons for being
admitted early as maybe I could have used
the same one. (It should be noted that I
have referred to them as “athletes“ and
not the colloquialism “jocks."

This was not an isolated example. Back
at the tables on the concourse numerous

 

 

 

examples of other athletes who were drop-
adding out of sequence at earlier times
could be found and verified.

There are many more instances of
where athletes are able to bend or get
around University rules and regulations
but perhaps they should be dealt with at

 

 

another time. But as for now, all I want to
know is why were so many athletes per-
mitted to drop-add at a time earlier than
scheduled?

 

Sandra L. Mayes is a graduate student in
Communications.

Open letter on conditional amnesty

By oorv B. PRATT
An open letter to the presidential clemency
board:

When I think about it. it isn't ironic that
your letter to me arrived among a bunch of
oil company sales gimmicks. In fact. it's
proper. though I'm disappointed that there
were no illustrations photos nor any
budget payment plans.

I don‘t take your offer that lightly“.
though actually I find it downright
offensive I don't believe the program was
intended to be offensive. but the results to
the overwhelming majority of resisters

are the opposite of the intent. Thus the
need for your ads.

IT‘S ODD THAT I feel so much hostility
toward Ford‘s clemency since parole
conditions. a committed (“for ever and
ever“) $10000 fine, and the inability to run
for office are just as offensive and
oppressive. probably more so. But I'll
wait.

Amnesty. as a word. is offensive.
Exoneration is a more proper goal but the
best this nation‘s leaders can do is “retire"
and reduce the power of the state. That‘s
too much to ask. so for starters they
should apologize to and properly com-

pensate the Vietnamese people and Viet-
nam veterans, then abolish the selective
service system and get out of ‘Nam.
Nixon's spirit is still the nature of the beast
that deceives its public and continues the
lie of who violated rules, regulations. and
laws. I‘m proud of my opposition to the
Vietnam War. the draft, and offensive.
oppressive government. That‘s why the
overwhelming majority of resisters don‘t
belittle ourselves by accepting phony.
conditional amnesty

 

Don B. Pratt is a former l'K student and
spent :0 months in jail for resisting the
draft.

U.S. anti-gold propaganda shows lack of confidence

(‘ontlnued From Page 2
didn‘t the had paper money drive
the good gold money out?

THE ANSWER is that in the
1860's gold dollars and greenback
dollars weren‘t traded even-
steven. You weren‘t forced to
give gold for paper at par. There
was no fixed rate of exchange so
that. while one gold dollar was
worth two and a half greenback
dollars in 1864. two years later, as
the government retired some of
its paper and the wealth of the
nation increased, a gold dollar
only fetched $1.38 in greenbacks.

This dollar trading was all on
the private. free market. You

 

 

couldn’t go to the bank with a
paper dollar and cash it in for any
amount of gold. The banks had
”suspended." as they said then.
and the great controversy was
how to “resume" without causing
hardship. The paperemoney in~
flationists said it couldn‘t be
done. while hard-money men like
Horace Greeley told America
that even if resumption would
“shut down half the gates of our
mills... the way to resume is to
resume."

In essence. what people were
afraid of then is that. given the
chance, everyone would rush to
exchange their inflated paper
money for gold, thereby causing

a ruinous run on the banks and a
financial panic that could bring
on a depression.

WE AREN‘T the first genera—
tion to worry about inflation. Our
ancestors knew that before they
could have resumption, the econ-
omy would have to be arranged
so that people would consider
paper as good as gold.

0n Resumption Day, Jan. I.
1879, bags of gold coin were put
out for display to show the world
the government was ready to
trade gold for paper. There were
almost no takers. $132,000 worth
of paper money was exchanged
for gold coin. but $400,000 worth

of gold was cashed in for paper. a
far more convenient form of
money. Inflation had been licked.
and that is why in the gold
trading room of the Stock Ex-
change somebody had triump»
hantly written the word “PAR"
on the price quotation black-
board.

We had a Resumption Day of a
sort two weeks ago when Amer-
icans were again permitted to
buy bullion ,- purchase of most
kinds of gold coins had already
been legal. As in 1879 there
weren't many takers, but for
different reasons. The Treasury
had mounted a large anti-gold
propaganda effort.

THIS MAY have saved it from
the discomfiture of hundreds of
millions being withdrawn from
the banks to buy gold. but it
hasn't restored confidence in our
modern greenback's ability to
keep its purchasing power. If
anything. the Treasury‘s anti~go~
ld hysteria betrays its lack of
confidence in its own money; so,
whether or not people do elect to
buy gold. they will obviously
continue seeking to convert their
savings into something sounder
than greenback paper.

 

Nicholas \‘on Hoffman is a
columnist for King Features
Syndicate.

   

   

4—1‘IIE KENTl‘CKY KERNEL. Friday. January 17. 1975
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news briefs

A

Sadat orders Israel
to leave Arablands

i \l’i ~l€gyptian President Anwar Sadat was quoted 'I‘hursday
as saying that unless Israel withdraws within three months from
some ot' the Egyptian. Syrian and Jordanian territory it occupies he
will ahandon Secretary of State Ileiiry ,\_ Kissinger's step~hy-siep
peace el'torts

"I will accept nothing less than an Israeli moVe on all three fronts
within three months." Sadat said in an interview in the Beirut
newspaper An Nahar, He added it' there was no progress toward a
settlement along hissinger's lines he would seek resumption of the
stalled Geneva peace talks. the paper said

Kissinger's step-hystep approach is an effort to work gradually
toward peace hel‘ore a resumption of the Geneva talks. held under
1' N. auspices and co chaired by the l'nited States and the Soviet
I'nion Kissinger opposes a quick return to (ieneva hecause the
divisive l'alestinian issue is sure to surlace and dissolve the talks in
hitter wranglingy

Carroll orders speedup
of unemployment claims

.liiliaii i .tt'l’iill 'ook se\i-i'.il

i\I'

iiii ltl'iitt‘\\illil o: iii.eiiipioin.eiii

lill\

I’li \\l\'l*ill€l

litiiti'silii) tii siii-i‘il

\li‘ps
insurance
«idiots in Iii-niacin

,\ t'._i ior step '.\.is to .iitlt.iit t,'i‘ ”he i ii Ir... o: tiiii itill lllllt' and lit}

t‘oi'ftriiie ‘v\iit'i\i't\ .iitii ': use other ~?.llt' lliiiitaii Iii-sources
t'ii”i'" i't“ -. enamel '- ia-li ‘ltitt‘\\ il.tilll\ l‘tie .idditioiia!
(1......ii fl. ..

.\~i:'~~: s \iid :ei .ro- t .:. ",i- up ‘11‘ i.\ t.i'ti' l 1.1;i:.~ li.t'»t' iisi is ii.ost

sl ‘i’tii‘.

(a tiill .iitil lliziihii Iii-siii.i'i es \i'i't'i-'.it\ t li'slie l).l‘.\\llll said
i‘ o}. 'aoz’lm-i s .\e:e '.l‘t‘tlt"l tit-r t'l‘st"l‘ii'li' ?:.i\i' lii-ei. si'yi-i’e delays
Eli itei:‘~.i-i‘iii:' itxti'tt.;ilii_\l:.i'r.' fii't.i'ttls ii. .t ‘ ‘ttIJii't‘ ot instances in
i’i'i'i'H 'v‘.i'l‘l\‘

taiToll also asked iii..oi= \Vt'\\.ilil\ to not h mil; the iteiiaitnieiit

x\lii'ti' teasiiite ‘ii (tillt'tl ii:ie::.plo}7i:eiit iiisiii‘ance ltlII!i\ tron:
IllitiitiItii‘lt.lii‘t'\.lllt‘ittl} \iififii'tllll'ltit'lltl‘tt‘.ili'liltl‘til.tl\'t'll1l‘tiilii

the local iiiieiiiplriinieni oitii t’

International Women's Year
short on male involvement

[\I'I‘I‘Il) \ \"l'lll\.\, \ \ \l’
1973 has ari'iied and its oi‘uani/ers at the I'nited \ations have a

International “omen s Year

prolilen‘. 'I'heyiieed inale lli\til\t'ltii'ltl oiia large scale

"I an'. \ery interested in seeing that enough men attend the
\Noinen s Year \\ orld contei'ence troni June it to July l at \Iexn'o
('ity. says I' N Assistant Secretary ilenei'al llelvi Sipzla

Sipiia. ot Finland. has heen named secretary general of Women's
\ ear and iii its main event. the international contereiice

.\lale ltt\()l\'l'llll‘ltl is recently. hecause
"women aloiiei'aiit change what has to he changed" to create true
equality timernnients. run niostly by males.
lluenced

essential. she said

have to he Hi

"We are eniphasi/inct that there should he both men and women
attending." Sipila said She said II was a good sign that many
countries have named men to head their delegations Ideally.
delegations should he made up halfof men and half of women. she
said

Morehead protests bus cutback

\ltllilillliill __.\ and administrator at
Mon-head State I niversity have tiled an lililClIll protest to the
proposed reduction of hus service iii-tween IA-xmgton and Ashland
hy (irevhound Lines Inc

A petition was submitted I’riday to the Kentucky Department of
'l‘i'aiispoitatjon by lion \'enner, vice president of MSIT's student
liody and Roger I. Wilson. the university‘s \'l('(' president for
student affairs.

They asked the agency to delay the .Ian, 21 effective date
requested by Greyhound and to schedule a public hearing on the
company's application to drop one of three daily round trips bet-
ween the two cities

student leader an

4

 

 

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Lexmgton, Kentucky, 40506, is mailed live times weekly during the school year
except during holidays and exam periods. and twice weekly during the summer
sessuon. Third-(lass postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky, GOSH.

Published by the Kernel Press, Inc tounded in "H, Begun as the Cadet in II"
and published continuously as the Kentucky Kernel since Wis

Advertising published hertm is intended to help the reader

buy
misleading advertising should be reported to the editors

Any lalse or

Kernel Telephones

Editor, Editorial editor 257 I755

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Managing editor, News desk 257 ”40

Sports, Arts 157 i000

 

 

   
   
   
 

 

 

 

On the lighter side
Job offers increase in '74

It) BYRON WEST
Kernel Staff Writer

In spite of growing nationwide
unemploynwnt,job offers to 1974—
75 graduates have shown an
increase over last year, said
assistant placement director
Ilan‘y Jones.

“Things look good up to this
point." Jones said. He quoted the
(‘ollege Placement (‘ouncil‘s 1975
report as saying the total volume
of job offers is close to the all-
time high of the 1960's.

’I‘III~Z ItH’tiIt'l‘. which covers
Sept 1 to liec 11 stated the
number of offers thus far is up :3
per cent at the bachelor's degree
level, ":7 per cent at the master's
and 2111 per cent at the doctoral.
t'oriipan'd to last January

How ever. Jones said he doesn't
know whether the increase will
continue "(iiir‘ crystal ball is
kind ot cloudy." he said “We
aren‘t getting good Input or firm
figures as to how many jobs will
be available in the future

Many companies are coming
111. there have been some ("011'
tract (‘ilII('('ll£llItlll.\'. but not
marry Sales oriented and
go‘ver‘nment positions seem to be
the strongest. but autorrelated
and utility companies have
dropped many positions. Jones
said

Mens
Leather iackets

Sport coats
Dress slacks
Dress shirts
Sport shirts
All sweaters
All gloves

Socks

 

”Ul'R .1\'I"I‘I'I‘l'l)l£ toward
recruiters is. if you aren‘t hiring.
don't come around. We don't
want to waste the students' time
and the company's resources
with token visits," he added.

Jones said that May and
August graduates need to start
now, to register with the
placement service and to talk to
as many companies as possible.

“Students need to take ad—
vantage of services offered on
campus." he said. “The student
who knows what he wants and is
competitive will get a good job.

campus

“'I‘III‘I S'I‘l'IHfiN’I‘ needs to
work at it, though. We don‘t get
anybody a job here. The student
has to sell himself. to convince
the company he has something to
offer.

“We aren‘t teaching this in
course form or handing it out in a
capsule, saying here, take this
pill and you‘ll be able to get a job.
We need to give credit for a job—
hunting seminar, because there's
a whole course of stuff involved.

“But regardless of the
economy." he said, “There is
always room for good people.
competitive people who can sell
themselves.“

Red River dam opponents
change battle plans

Battles against the lted River
dam continue but in a different
perspective than before. ac-
cording to Tim Murphy. a
coordinator of Red Itiver Defense
Fund. a campus group opposed to
the project

"We're in a new situation. One
year ago we didn't have any
standing In court and we now
have contacts we didn't have
before." Murphy said. referring
to the pending lawsuit against
1' S (‘orps of Engineers filed by
several landowners and en-
\ iroiimental groups

awahares

\f1\t' INITIATIVE is being
made to obtain help and support
from a larger number of
students. Murphy said. He ex-
plained a great d