xt71zc7rr03x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71zc7rr03x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-12-10 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, December 10, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 10, 1975 1975 1975-12-10 2020 true xt71zc7rr03x section xt71zc7rr03x  
 

Vol. LXVII No 8.0
Wednesday. December 10. 1975

KENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper :—

   

 

Board grants Dean Hall
second leave of absence

By BR 1 '(‘E WISHES
PItlitor-in-(‘hief

The Board of Trustees Tuesday granted
Dean of Students Jack Hall his second
year‘s leave of absence and heard an
announcement that the College of Law
dean has resigned.

Hall '5 first leave of absence began Dec.
28. 1974 when he became Gov. Julian
t‘a rroll‘s chief administrativeassistant for
intemal affairs. At :hat time the Board
named Public Safety Director Joe Burch
acting dean of students.

In granting Hall his second leave of
absence, which is to last from Jan. 3. 1976
to Jan, 3, 1977. the Board reappointed
Burch acting dean ofstudents from Jan. 3.
1976 to July 1 1976. or until a permanent
dean of students is named.

“He (Hall) and I agree that it is not in
the best interest of the University to have
an acting dean (of studentsl.” President
Otis A. Singletary said. ”We have the full
freedom to go ahead and fill the position
and he (Hall) understands that."

There will be a recommendation for the
dean of students post “within the
academic yea r." Singletary said. "It is mv
view that Joe Burch will have to be given
very serious consideration for the job," he
said.

Singletary said he had some “bad news"
for the Board in announcing the
resignation of George W. Hardy III.
(‘ollege of Law dean. Hardy‘s resignation
is effective July 1. 1976, when he will
become the Bates (‘ollege of Law dean at
the University of Houston.

4;. 1"“;

Cought in
a thicket

Hardy cited the challenge the University
of Houston offered as a reason for leaving
l'K. Hardy has been UK College of Law
dean since 1973.

"It is my view that we expected him
Hardy to do a good job and he did a good
job.” Singletary said. 1 regret very much
losing him.”

In other personnel matters the Board
appointed Dr. Peter H. Fitzgerald()ffice of
Policy and Operations Analysis director.

effective Feb. HS. 1976.
The office Fitzgerald will head is
currently titled Management and In-

formation Analysis but will change names
when Fitzgerald assumes his new position.
The office has primary responsibility for
institutional studies. management in-
tormation and planning. The change in the
office's title is more descriptive of the
office‘s functions, said Vice President for
Administration Donald B. Clapp.
Fitzgerald. who is currently the
l’niversity of Maine's assistant to the
president. replaces James 0. King, who
resigned from the office in October to join
Sen. Wendell H. Ford's lI)-Ky.l staff.
Singletary also reported the University
has been given a motel near Hopkinsville.
The motel. which was given to UK by
Mr. and Mrs. James Givens of Hopkin-
sville and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Friedman
of Nashville. Tenn, is located three miles
north of Madisonville. The motel has 62
rooms and a swimming pool.
A resolution concerning retirement for
l'niversity employes was also passed by
the Board.

 

e]

 

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

«Bruce Orw‘n

Judge James A. Sutherland lends an ear as fellow Board of Trustees
member Frank Ramsey discussesa pointin Tuesday‘s meeting.

The change would allow an employe to
retire at age (it) without losing accrued
retirement benefits. But the employe may
not collect those benefits until age 65.

The salary paid the employe during the
last year of employment, the resolution
states. will be used to determine sup
plemental retirement income The
resolution also states survivors of an

employe who dies before age 65 may not
receive the benefits.

Before the resolution was passed. an
employe wno retires before age 65 loses all
benefits from the University's unfunded
retirement plan. Many persons who were
employed by the University before July 1.
19m may also receive retirement income
from two other sources.

Committee forms early
to select ombudsman

By WALTER “INSUN
Assistant Managing Editor

The Senate (‘ouncil committee charged
with nominating the l’niversity‘s 1976-77
ombudsman is being formed early to
expedite the selection process.

 

A golden retriever pops his head out of his hideaway. the bushes adjacent to the
(‘lassroom Building. The dog retreats to the brush when the winds become too

fierce.

“In the past we have waited ton F0"-
mation i until the second semester and as a
result. we can't get to talking to candidates
until March or April." said Senate (,‘ouncu
('haimlan Joseph Krislov.

"So we are forming the committee now
so it will be active at ‘he start of the second
semester he continued

[be six member search committee will
advertise for applicants for the position
and then begin a 'scratchir‘g eff
procedure." Krislov said.

l‘be ombudsmah‘s office is "essentially
a one person thing.” he added. Any faculty
member with ‘eitare is eligible for the
position which is aimed at serving as a
clearinghouse for studen‘ grievances.

The term of current ()mbudsman Dr.
PS. Sabharwal expires June 30.

Procedures for selecting the new om-
budsman are not ye: determined, said Dr.
James (‘riswelL appointed by President
(Ms A. Single'ary as committee chairman.
“We‘ll ask for nominations from ll‘lt total
lTniversity and work out procedures from
there." he said.

Forming the committee early was
necessary because many faculty members
plan to write or do research in advance of
the coming year and consequently would
be unavailable. Krislov said.

Forming the committee early will also
ease the transition from Sabharwal t0 the
new ombudsman. (‘riswell said. "Un-
dersta nding of situations pass fi om one to
the othernthere are overlaps. Getting the
committee formed early should ease the
transfer,“ Crisweil said.

Besides chairman (‘riswelL the com-
mittee will include a member of the Senate
t‘ouacil to be selected at its Friday
meeting; one student and one faculty
member from the Student Affairs Com-
mittee of the council; and two students.
one graduate and one undergraduate. to be
nominated by Student Government \SG).

{30R K pl‘ (JURUX

  

 

editorials

LahusandSpectnxnaticlessmuldbemesedtotheaflrid mam.
mom!“ Journalism Binding. Theyshouldbrtyped. MW
Le'tasshouldmteroeedmmw Spectrumarticlamm

WSW.

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Wings Susan Jones
Editor-in—Chie] Editorial Page Editor
Ginny Edwards

Managing Editor

 

 

 

 

UK needs a
permanent
dean of

students

 

 

The Board of Trustees action
Tuesday tc grant Dean of Students
Jack Hall another one-year leave
of absence constitutes a flagrant
travestv.

Hall, who was a controversial
figure during his tenure at the
University, has been serving in the
King’s court in Frankfort for the
past year. He was granted a
similar leave one year ago.

A long-time politico who had kept
his political involvement well-
hidden, Hall took over as Julian
Carroll’s internal affairs director,
when Carroll took over for former
Gov. Wendell Ford.

The Frankfort iob was important
enough to Hall to convince him to
resign his elected position on the
Urban County Council, where he
played an unassuming, but dis—
tinguished, role.

Hall seemed to enioy the political
climate in the state capital and

became an integral part of
Carroll’s staff. But his exact status
was uncertain, pending this year’s
gubernatorial election, which

Carroll won.
Hall has conceeded that a per-

manent dean of students should be
named s?nce he may not be back
for another year. But while in
Frankvorf, Hall still casts a shadow
over UK by retaining his ties in
Lexington.

Meanwhile, Acting Dean of
Students Joe Burch may be
somewhat hampered in his duties
because the word "acting” still
hangs in front of his title.

The dean of students office is
important to the operation of the
University and its actions affect
every student. If is important that
the person holding the dean of
students position be present on
campus and have the ability to
make the necessary decisions with-
out feeling impotent.

 

Perhaps Democratic admini-
strators in Frankfort pressured
the Board to grant Hall another
leave. If so the University is
apparent'y playing along and not
ruffling any feathers in a legisla-
tive year when University budgets
will be considered.

But, whatever the reason, Jack
Hall should not be able to call the
shots and force the University to
grant him the comfort of having a
finger in everyone’s pie.

Hall must decide if he wants to
continue to serve the University of
Kentucky, or sever his academic
ties and pursue his political
career—he can’t do both at once.

Though the Board has already
approved the extended leave for
Hall, the University should take the
necessary steps to provide U K with
a full-time, on-campus dean of
students. Half a clean here and half
a clean in Frankfort leaves UK
students with no dean at all.

C)

Year ’3 and brings the Arbitrary A wards

The end of the year is nigh, and so in
keeping with traditional exercises Of
ioumalism during the annual closingrout
period, this writer announces the
promulgation of his 1975 Arbitrary Awards
Column. None of the awards or winners
were picked according to any set of

standards except that of notability and
notoriety of achievement.

 

  

 

The Tweedledum-Tweedledee Act Alike
Award goes to Julian Carroll, self-
described ”saint,” alias J.C.. and to Bob
Gable, a candidate duller even than Henry
Ward was in 1967. The Award a set of
cracked truth bells, may be picked up
prior to their next "debate.” May there
never be one.

The winner of the Gore Vidal lnnocuous
Honk ie Knee-Jerk Liberal Award goes to
the Student Coalition Against Racism
lSCAR). This rather pale bunch gets a

certificate of Commendation from Bob
Jones University and a pat on the back
from the Department of Health Education
and Welfare for maintaining a percentage
of minority group membership in their
ranks that is pmportionafe to that of the
general population.

Jimmy Conyers is the sole nominee and
winner by acclamation of the Fickle
Finger of God Award. For his efforts on
behalf of saving the world, Conyers is the
deserving recipientof a referral to a good
bailbondsman and a one-way ticket to

Beirut. Those people should be easier to ‘

save than the heathens at UK anyway,
Jimmy.

The Phyllis Schlafly Expanded Con.
sci0usness Award is given to the local
Gertrude Stein Collective. They get second
dibs on Eugene Siler's prize (see below)
for submitting a letter in defense of radical
lesbianism to the Kernel so full of $50
words as to be virtually unintelligible to
the lay reader except for the part where
they said they would feel sorry for any
male offspring that they would bear but for
their lesbianism. But girls, can you
cook?

A free set of UK 1976 season tickets on
the 50~yard line is deservedly given to the
football team of my alma mater Davidson

College, for taking the All Time Sieve
Defense Award this fall. Davidson set a
new NCAA record against mighty Lenoir
Rhyne by giving up 914 yards of total of-
fense en route to a 6914 setback.

The Teddy Roosevelt Bull Moose Valor
in Action Award goes to Gerald Ford. For
tripping and falling (to date) 28 times in
the service of his country, Gerald gets a
new inner ear; and he gets a brand new
pacemakerfor climbing all 600 steps to the
top of a temple during his recent visit to
China. Gerald Ford is 62 years old.

To the CIA and the FBI, the Boris
Badanov-Natasha Fatale Unintelligent
Covert Operations Award. For defending
the liberties of the American peOple by
repressing the liberties of the American
people, the beys in black hats get a per
manent vacation in Frostbite Falls,
Minnesota.

Pablo of WKQQ fame is the recipient of
the Spiro Agnew Verbal Flatulence Award
for his remarkable observation on the
evening of Dec. 7 that Bob Dylan was on
the way back. Guess he forgot ”Blood on
the Tracks.” Anyway, a capy of the Tubes’
Iabst hit, ”White Punks on Dope," goes to
this perceptive DJ.

Random Awards:

The t's Entertainment—-Patti Hearst,

Sarah Jane Moore, and Squeaky Fromme
all geta night on the town with Jack Scott,
Bill Walton and Charles Manson on
general principle. Master Charge not
accepbd.

Heah Come da Judge—erormer US
Attorney and now Li S. District Judge for
the Eastern District of Kentucky Eugene
Siler gets a lifetime subscription to Screw
magazine for his role in keeping Jill
Raymond in jail for no good reason.

C’mon guys, it’s iusta game——The now
defunct World Football League gets a free
Ollie’s Trolley franchise from Ellie Brown,
except if the Colonels fold, in which case
Ellie Brown gets a Triple A baseball
franchise from John Y., Jr.

The public-be damned—As a con-
sclation for losing the Red River Gorge,
the Army Corps of Engineers receives an
Erector Set and a box of band-aics.

Door Prize of the Year-Ronald
Reagan’s gift of himself to the American
people. Void where prohil ited by the
electorate, thank God.

 

Dick Downey is a hopelessly ambitious
writer who is currently disguised as a UK
law student. He has had some experience
in the Real Worlds of journalism and
disaster-area insurance adiusting.

 

,MWWH 3‘ *- "‘2’,”

-s -w

*"Rfifi-snn“a.

  

Q.‘~

 

 

I1...-

Win...

 

spectrum

 

 

 

 

 

By Jerry Thomton

Despite the unethical parliamentary
tactics of Agriculture Student Senator
Charlie Masters at the last Student
Senate meeting, it was heartening to
see that a clear majority of the
senators, including several who smoke,
were in fauor of‘demanding that the
University administration take action
to restrict the smoking of tobacco in
University buildings in some way that
would provide meaningful relief to
students who are seriously bothered by
smoke.

However, as I expected, there was a
knee ierk reaction to the resolution that
I co-sponsored. A small faction of
senators, led by Masters, immediately
spoke up for the tobacco interests,
equating the habit of polluting other
people as well as one’s self with
motherhood and apple pie. Such moral
obtuseness, grounded partly in eco-
nomic self-interest (the first point
raised by Masters), avoid the ethical
question involved in the assumption by
mostsmokers that they have a right to
pollute others simply because they like
tobacco (or are too addicted to nicotine
to not like it). Such an assumption can
no more withstand analysis than could
an assumption on my part that it is fine
for me to spit in peOple’s faces simply
because i like to test my accuracy!

Most smokers, of course, are simply
ignorant of how much their habit
bothers others, for non-smokers seldom
obiect to the stench in social situations
to avoid hard feelings. After all, even I
will admit that tobacco pollution
doesn’t rank up there with rape and
murder, so in one’s daily balancing of
what to bitch about versus what to let
slide, it is usually better to tolerate the
discomfort than to raise a ruckus.

But the debate, kicked off by the
Student Senate and University Senate
resolutions on non-smoker’s rights,
gives the Oppressed and polluted
majority a chance to speak Out publicly
about the harm that nicotine addicts do
to them daily and to urge collective
action to put the smokers in their
places, which I submit are: 1. out of
doors, 2. in their own homes and private
offices, 3. in other private places where
they have asked for and received the
permission of all present, or 4. specially
designated rooms or l0unges in public
buildings thatare set aside for smoking
because they are specially ventillated
to the Out-of-doors.

Note carefully that this is not an
attack on the right to smoke tobacco

 

O

per-se. Neither l nor the government
should have any say about a person’s
vice so long as it is truly personal, ie.,
doesn’t harm others. This is why, after
the disaster of the attempted total
prohibition of alcohol that intelligent
governments now seek only to control
the use of alcohol so that it doesn’t hurt
other folks, ie., you can’t legally drive
or be wandering about the streets if you
are drunk. Justas pot smoking, which I
hope will soon be legal (despite the fact
that I don’t smoke) is now done only
among consenting persons in private
(ex necessite), tobacco smoking should
be enjoyed by its addicts only where
non-consenters don’t have to be
present. Such restrictions on where
grass can be safely used has certainly
not harmed the thriving pot industry,
and despite Charlie Masters’ palpita-
tions, i doubt that my suggest restric-
tions would bankrupt the tobacco
industry. Thanks to its grotesque
advertizing and teeny-bopper peer-
pressure, there will be a continuous
stream of smoke ”suckers.”

Many non-smokers, including myself,
are asthmatic or allergic, and we are
literally sickened by and disgusted with
having to ”take it“ in the eyes, nose and
lungs from the inconsiderate people
with whom we are forced to associate in
public buildings. Others simply are
offended by the noxi0us odors that the
tobacco companies have brainwashed
many smokers into believing are sexy
or socially acceptable. Many smokers
can not believe these problems really
exist because of their own gross
self-pollution (which necessarily masks
their senses) and because they are
either oblivious to their own coughing
and hacking or else are lucky enough to
have such excellent physiologies that
their own smoking doesn’t bother them
much, at least in the short run. The
failure to understand that tobacco
smoke, like alcohol, colesterol or other
chemicals, affects different people in
different ways is the root of the
smoker’s ignorance which leads to the
tree of his antisocial behavior. If is up
to the suffering non-smoker to start
bitching more and more if the pre-
vailing assumptions in fav0r of tobacco
pollution are ever to shift to public
opprobrium and unacceptability. If, in
the effort, the force of law must
intervene to penalize the public
smoker, as it now has in some 3] states,
the tobacco lovers will have no one to
blame but themselves.

Jerry Thornton is the law school’s
student senator.

 

r _

 

 

 

 

 

Decisions

Editor:

To begin with, there are only three
decisions of the US. Supreme Court
forbidding religi0us activities in con-
nection with the public schools. All
three involved laws which required
either daily Bible reading and-or
prayer, or weekly sectarian in.
doctrine tion , wall in the classrooms and
under circumstances where it appeared
to the students that the state was en-
dorsing religion.

Please observe that in each and every
r‘ne of these cases the religious ac-
tivities were continuous in nature,
r‘tticial in origin, indoctrinative in
design and coercive in effect. In short,
the government was sponsoring
religion, and that is state action
(respecting an establishment of

religion) forbidden by the US. Con-

stitution. As a secondary note these
cases involved grade schools and not
universities.

The first amendment of the Con-
stitution stabs: ”Congress shall make
no law respecting the establishment of
religion or prohibiting the free exercise
thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech.” This amendment has been
incorporated into the fourteenth
amendmentand is therefore applicable
to the states as well (Everson vs. Board
r‘f Education, 1947, 330, US. i).

The US Supreme C0urt has in-
terpreted the "establishment” clause
and ”free exercise“ clause of the first
amendment to mean that the state and
federal gowrnments must be neutral in
their dealings with religion. The
establishmentclause is violated by any
enactment which is either an ad‘
vancement or inhibition of religion
(School District of Abington vs.
Schempp, l963, 374, US 203). In other
words, the 90vernment cannot
establishareligiousexercise,butatthe
same time cannot be hostile towards
religion. its position should always be
neutral.

Furthermore, the establishment
clause of the first amendment does not
place any limitation whatever on the
personal actions of individuals. The
equal protection clause of the feur~
teenth amendment also states that
gOVernmental policies must treat in.
dividuals and groups alike unless there
is good reason for treating them dif-
ferently.

These are the legalities involved in
expressing a religi0us point of view on
campus. But my primary purpose for
writing this letter is not to outline the
Christian's legal rights on campus. I
am very concerned with the Christian
witness expressed by the way these
rights are exercised.

God has called no one to be
belligerent. God has called no one to put
into motion a “power play.” it’s all said
by the Lord through the words of Peter
in I Peter 2:16: Here the Lord states
that we are called ”as tree, and not
using your liberty for a cloke of
maliciousness, but as the servants of
God.”

Rev. Bob Hall
Luthern Student Center

{otters

 

Hours

Editor:

This letter is being written to invite
and encourage all students to take
advantage of the extended library
hours this and next week. For those
people who may not have heard, the
reserve book room will be open until
2:00 am. during the days of Dec. 712
and Dec. 1448.

The idea of extending library h0urs
beyond the traditional 8am. to 12 p.m.
schedule is a new concept here at UK.
The extended hours this semester are a
trial run to determine student interest
and need. Use of the extended hours,
along with the results of a survey to be
given at the beginning of next semester,
will be used as a gauge to determine if
extended hou.s sh0uld become a per-
manent feature of the library. Long-
range plans call for a 24-hour room in
the library and (nOpefully) a 24-hour
library over finals.

Your suppovt ard attendance arc
needed to make these plans a reality.
Please use the extended heurs now so
that others may use them in the future.

Matthew Welch
A85 senator

Annoyances

Editor:

During my attendence at the Univer-
sity l regarded many of the administra
tive personnel as bureaucratic annoy
ances. Usually if I f0und a class closed
off, or any other bind i found myself in,
itwas due to my own negligence. When
enrollment or registration went
smoothly, i took it for granted and
rarely extended any credit to those
persons who made it possible

I have not given this matter any
thwght until recently, when I request-
ed two transcripts to be sent Out. l did
not possess any request forms at the
time, and anticipated a delay of several
weeks, involving their sending the
forms, my remitting the required fee.
etc. To my surprise and pleasure, they
rnaileo out the transcripts upon receipt
of my initial request, subsequently
sending me the request form and notice
of the am0unt due.

Their prompt attention saved my
application to graduate school. Such
efficient personal service is a rarity
among most institutions, and sh0uld be
one more source of pride for ail thOse
involved with the University.

Bill Ranch
UK alumnus

Veto

Editor:

Last year, as a student senator,
(Student Government President) Jim
Harralson successfully organized
Opposition to the Gay Students’ Coali-
tion dance. Free Un-versity then
agreed to sponsor the dance. Now
Harralson is usinq his veto power to
stop Student Government’s financial
support of Free University.

I wonder if these actions are inter-
related and if so ondn’t this be an
unethical use of the presidential veto!

James Hackley
Psychology junior

7

 

 

 

l

 

 -h..s..._,

4—TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday. D.‘cemner 10. I975

 

 

 

l—

The Kernel needs writers
call 25 7-1755

 

 

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I“HHHHHHNHHHHHNHH“HHNNHHHHHHHH“HNNHNHHHHHHHHHHHHHH"NH“HH"hl"HHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHIlfllflflflflflflflflflfl

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news briefs;

Carroll sworn in;
calls to limit goals

FRANKFURT, Ky. (AP)—
Sounding a call for economy and
limited goals in the next four
years. Gov. Julian Carroll said at
his inauguration Tuesday “we
must stop somewhere" on state
spending.

The 44-year~old chief
executive, who already has
served almost one year in office.
‘ook the oath in midafternoon ir
biting winds on an overcast dav.

1n the prepared remarks which
The governor followed. he said‘
“It is an insult to our common
sense to suggest that better
govemment always comes with,
or even requires. more spending.

 

GOV. JULIAN CARROLL

”I am convinced that the only way we can continue to adequately
finance wha t we must dom and finance what we should do— is to use
some old—fashioned common sense.

“My common sense tells me that this is a time to dedicate our
existing resources to our primary obligations of providing the
essential needs of our people."

The statement seemed to preface a policy of restricted ex—
penditures and perhaps stabilization of the state payroll.

Kissinger denies

conspiracy charges

\\.\.\‘lll.\'(i’l‘(l\ (;\l’l~ Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger
denounced as a ”‘otal falsehood" charges that he conspired to
withhold from President Ford information about alleged Soviet
violations of the 1972 strategic arms accords.

Later Tuesday. Ford met with Soviet Ambassador Anatoly F.
[)obrynin for 40 minutes at the White House. Aides said the session
dealt with issues including the current deadlock over further
nuclear amis talks and Kissinger‘s forthcoming trip to Moscow.

Kissinger also took part in the Ford-Dobrynin meeting.

Asked if any progress was made in easing the arms negotiations
deadlock. Deputy White House Press Secretary John W. Hushen
said: "l think you have to understand that when there‘s com-
munica tion. there‘s always going to be some sort of progress.”

Ford approves aid bill
to help New York City

WASHINGTUN i.r\P)-~A hill lfiarlierthe House hadrejected.

providing $2.3 billion in 264 ‘0 HS. a move to limit the
emergency loans to New York change to make it apply only to
(‘ity was signed into law cities of one million or more.
Tuesday. and the House ap-

. 0
proved a change in the nation‘s Time hm'f ends,
bankruptcy laws in case the city Thief 9035 free

should default.

'l‘nkt'o (AP) In i‘unereal
President Ford signed the gloom. police investigators sat

emergency loanbill and called on with lowered heads at midnight
t‘ongness to approve a $10.3
WNW“ SUPPK‘HH‘NM iip- man whostoleithlmillionycn— St
propria‘ions measure which million from a delivery car
includes the actual money for the exac‘Jy seven years ago has
city gotten away with it.

Tuesday and conceded that the

The statute of limitations tan
The House. meanwhile. voted out. meaning thereis virtually no

..73 to 29 to alter the bankruptcy longer anyway the robber can be
laws prosecuted on criminal charges.

Kl \ l l‘LHt

erne

The Kentucky Kernel, ltd Journalism

Building, University of Kentucky, the Cadet i’n l894. The papér has been

 

Lexington. Kentucky, 40506, is mailed five
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43511. Subscription rates are $12 per lull
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incandfounded in l97l,thel