xt72804xkn2h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72804xkn2h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1977-03-11 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, March 11, 1977 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 11, 1977 1977 1977-03-11 2020 true xt72804xkn2h section xt72804xkn2h Florida: land of tung

By LESLIE (‘RUTCIIER
Kernel Reporter

if you‘re going to Florida, and you
don’t believe that Fort Lauderdale
and Miami are all the state has to
offer, consider some alternatives.

When you take [-10 West from 1-75,
you'll eventually run into
Tallahassee. a Seminole word
meaning “abandoned village." They
weren‘t kidding. Besides being the
Florida capital, Tallahassee houses
abwt 100,000 of Florida‘s most
mellow people.

The countryside has beautiful
fresh water sinkholes and cam-
ping—Big Dismal is a favorite.
Tallahassee has only beautiful
country to offer. but it's some of the

 

—-today

state

t'olunibia Gas of Kentucky allowed I15 large
commercial customers and 75 large industrial
customers to resume using their normal natural
gas allotments yesterday for purposes other than
firing boilers. Large commercial customers are
shopping centers. stores. office buildings and
schools that use a million cubic feet of gas per
month. Induaries that use more than that are
classed as large industrial users.

best in the state. and Taylor
County—just south— is the tree
capital of the Southeast! Perry is the
tang oil capital of the same region.
The Okalocknee .“ver offers a
beautiful prehistoric setting for
camping, butwatch out for fire ants.

Fair wanting: Tallahassee hasn’t
had a decent restaurant in five
years. The best choices are the
Hilton dining room or MacDonald's
on Tennessee. Motocross and
skydiving are the local sports, with
good airfields and dirt tracks.

If you follow [-75, it ends in
Tampa. The Tampa Bay Area has
been beleaguered by its sun city-
senirr citizen image. but despite all
the shuflleboard courts, it cooks—
after a fashion. There are several

 

Spring break

The Iex'mgton t'emetery may not be a place you'd
want to spend spring break. but Maridel Barr. UK

A

outrageous night clubs, as well as
bottle clubs open till 7 a.m.

The area also has some intense
ethnic variety. Ybor City. a Spanish
conclave inside Tampa proper,
offers excellent restaurants and
shops, ranging from silversmiths to
sponge sellers. Tarpon Springs is so
Greek it hurts. and the food and the
jewelry are outstanding.

In Tampa, Bern's (“art in
steaks“) restaurant is listed with the
top ones in the nation. Busch Gar-
dens is a stonehead allday affair.
with real live jungle animals and a
rollercoaster that. to date, has
claimed two lives by heart seizure.
They offer free beer throughout the
Garden. as does the Schlitz brewery.

' * Subsidy increase

sophomore. found it a quiet place to rest. reflect and
enjoy the warm weather.

conveniently located across the
street

All the West Coast beaches are
perfect—clean. salty and crowded.
Sarasda. a little south. is one of the
most beautiful cities in the South and
the home of most of Florida's art
patrons. It‘s worth the drive to see a
town that lines its highway medians
with statuary. The Ringling Bros.
and Barnum & Bailey Circus
homebase is located here. for those
who want to be kids again.

Following the East Coast on AIA.
you‘ll be on The Beach. Pass up
Daytona Beach. go south to Cape
Canaveral, where the last vestige of
1968 surfing hippies live and smoke
their brains out. It‘s a right friendly
little town. the Pillow Talk Lounge

and George‘s are popular clubs. and
they close at 4 or 5 am. depending
on which side of the river you‘re on.

About 70 minutes south is
Sebastian Inlet. and a state park
with manmade fresh water lagoons.
Fishing and surfing are mainstays
of Sebastian. but watch the signs-—
the spaces for each are strictly
separate.

Most of the beaches between
llaytona and Fort Lauderdale are
pretty. rocky and relatively un—
crowded. They are also public. so
don‘t camp or build fires on them
without asking: it will get you a fine
and likely a vagrancy charge.

While we‘re on laws: The drinking
age is 18. and a fake ID. will
frequently result in a heayy fine and-

il, Seminoles and speed traps

or jail. Local anti-bitchbiking or»
(finances change weekly, Don‘t push
the STRICTLY ENFORt‘EI) high—
way speed laws; the majority of
Florida‘s economy isn’t ().I. it‘s
tourist traffic fines « they start at
$3.3. '

If you must go to hisneyworld. it'll
cost. and cost and t‘()ST. The
Monsanto 360 display in
'l‘omorrowland is the best en-
tertainment. and it‘s "free“-—once
you buy the t ickets. you don‘t have to
use one. Don‘t eat in Disneyworld:
the orbitburgcrs and the 10 cent
penny candies will send you straight
to their space age automatically
flushing facilities.

t‘ontinued on page 3

KENTUCKY

181‘

an independent student new

Vol. LXVIII. Number 126
Friday. March 11. I977

172]

University ofKentuchy
Lexington, Kentucky

Yearbook may be revived

By l)l(‘K GABRIEL
Assistant Managing Editor

UK President Otis Singletary is
considering re-establishing and
almost doubling next year‘s
University subsidy of the now
defunct campus yearbook. if student
interested in such a publication can
be demonstrated.

Singletary met Wednesday with
Board of Student Publications
chairman Robert Orndorff and
agreed to increase The Kentuckian‘s
present $11,000 subsidy by $9.000 "if
he (Singletary) could be shown a

fair amount of student interest." in
reviving the yearbook. ()rndorff
said.

The student interest would be in
the form of staff members, said
Orndorff. a [K journalism
professor.

() mdorf f met with five other board
members yesterday to relay the
president‘s offer and decide on
strategy. The board has
traditionally hired and advised
yearbook editors. Orndorff repeated
Singletary‘s stipulations attached to
the increase.

“Ile (Singletary) didn‘t want to

lvy may be out of its

By Juli KEMP
Sports Editor

Yeah. Hahvahd.

Ivy League basketball conjures
laughter. weak schedules and no
national championships.

Because they stress academics
‘nstead of athletics. Harvard. Yale,
I’rinceton. et al.. are only taken
seriously as producers of lawyers
and squash players.

The Ivy has a time-honored
reputation (341 years) of being
srrbbish. abof. white and expensive
(living at Princeton University is
about $7.5“) a year and that‘s living
inoda'ately).

So where does UK fit in with the
Yankee bungeoisie'?

It plays Ivy League champ

l’rinceton (21-4) in the first round of
the East Regional tomorrow (7
pm.) in Philadelphia‘s I’alestra.

Tiger coach Pete (.‘arril has said
all week his team just hopes to stay
on the floor with the sixth-ranked
\\ ild cats. Sounds like psychology at
work.

“Kentudry is the biggest team
we‘ve faced all year.“ he said. “And
(Mike) Phillips and (Rick) Robey
are the best pair of big men we've
fared. too.

“I‘m just hopeful we can stay on
the boards with you.“

t‘arril has reason to be concerned.
llis biggest player. center Bob
Roma. is just 6-7. And he‘s not even
the tea m‘s leading rebounder.

That title goes to forward Frank

see all the increase go to salaries."
()rndorff said. Singlctary requested
some of the increase be used to
improve the final product. according
to Unidu‘ff. “but the president said
at the same time that he has been
very happy with most of the year-
books.

"Singletary said as far as he was
concemed. the two-year magazine
exp criment was a failure.“ Orndorff
said.

The yearbook was converted to a
magazine format in 1975. Five issues
of the magazine were scheduled to

('ontinued on back page

League

Sowinski. who‘s averaging only 6.3
rebounds. But he's the country‘s
thrd best percentage shooter and
l’rinccton's leading scorer (16.8
PPEL

And before the Tigers throw in the
towel. we'll throw in some more
statistics. They shot an average of
.31 .5 per cent from the field and held
their ‘2!) opponents to 50.8 points a
game- the best NCAA defense
statistic since 10151.

So it Princeton gets an early lead.
expect it to play keep away.

”We do play a patient offense."
t'arril said.

If talent prevails though. Ken-
tudry will be meeting the winner of
the VMI-Duquesne game Thursday
in College Park. Md.

 

yesterday.

1

Severe weather and energy shortages helped
push Kentucky‘s unemployment rate to 7.1 per cent
in l-‘ebniary. up from 0.3 per cent in January. the
state Department for Human Resources said

nation

Eleven environmental groups have threatened to
sue the Tennesse Valey Authority. accusing it of
delaying and trying to resist meeting federal clean
air standards at 10 of its 12 curl-fired generating

plants. The National Resources Defense Council
said in a letter the suit woukl be filed in federal
courtunless TVA moves in the next 00 days.

It bile vengeance-seeking llanafi terrorists held
scores it hostages as their pawns yesterday.
\tallace Mubammmad. the leader of the rival
Black Muslim movement flew to Washington to
meet with officials. seeking a way out of the seige
that gripped police. gunmen and captives. As the
seige entered its second day. the terrorists were
threatening to behead their captives and deman—

tonight.

ding that \tallace Muhammad and the other men
they blamed for the 1973 murder of seven Ilanafi
members he brought to them.

Damp departure

t‘onsiderable cloudiness with rain and a few
thunder showers today. tonight and tomorrow. The
high today and tomorrow will be in the upper 60's.
The low temperature tonight will be in the low 50‘s.
There is a it) per cent chance of rain today and

 

 

  

 

editorials 8: CW

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University

“Kori-n1“
Ginsu awards

Elturlnl [Illa
Walter llluon

laugh. Editor
Join Winn Milk-r

L‘m and col-onto should be addressed to tbs lit-rial editor. loo- llt.
Incl Id “nod m nuns. “to“ and tcknbono number Letters cannot u

not.

Aunt-n In.“ Editors tony Edtnn Win can.
Mike Men-er Suzanne Durham Phil Rutledge
‘ [lit Gabriel lick Donny
Steve ttailtnur Chic-l Photon-M
Mike Strange Stewart Bowman
\tl- Editor Sports Edna “until-n Noun."
Nancy Only Joe Kemp Alex Keto

Journalis- Iulllhn. 1'on must no tn“. wbb
em no words and cont-onto an rnurlctol to III.

 

 

EPA suits could set
important standard

The once prolific comic song-writer Tom
Leher used to perform a song about America
which said in effect. America is fine “just don‘t
drink the water and don‘t breathe the air.“ The
Tennessee Valley Authority ‘5 (TVA) violation of
air pollution standards and the recent carbon
tetrachloride spills in the Ohio river are
changing the song from a parody into a
prophecy.

In an attempt to reverse these adverse con
ditions, the Environmental Protection Agency
4 EPA ) is taking legal action to halt the actions of
the worst offenders, TVA and the FMC Corp.
plant in South (‘arolina. which has spilled tons of
the dangerous carbon-let into the Ohio and
lx'anawha rivers recently.

Although the EPA has not yet sued TVA, the
agency is threatening to take that course if TVA
refuses to bring its power plants in compliance
with federal air pollution standards. EPA,
however. has sued HR‘ and a federal judge
issued at today restraining order Wednesday to
stop production of carbon-tel at the South
(‘arolina plant.

According to EPA officials. there have been 20
spills by the FMt‘ plant in the past two years.
They also said “the structural integrity of the
plant‘s processing tanks is suspect."

('arbon tetrachloride. a highly toxic substance
that has caused cancer in experiments with
animals. has been detected in the drinking water
of cities along the Ohio River after its discahrge
into the Kanawha River. a tributary. The spills
caused a serious hazard to more than 1.28 million
people who depend on the Ohio River for water.

in response to EPA‘s suit. an FMC official
said. "FMC is convinced. through extensive
investigation. that this extreme action was
unnecessary. L'nfor-ttmately, the sensationalism

surrounding recent events has so far eliminated
the opportunity for the facts on both sides of the
issue to be discussed in a calm and open
fashion."

Undoubtedly the thousands of people who were
forcedto boil their drinking water and to use
alternate water sources for several days would
not think the problem is being sensationalized.

While it is encouraging that EPA is taking
positive action to stop the deadly pollutant, it’s
troubling that the agency waited until after 20
spills before initiating legal action. It’s also
troubling that another federal agency, TVA, is
refusing to comply with the 1970 Clean Air Act.

EPA wants TVA to begin reducing sulfur
dioxide in all emissions from all of the plants.
TVA insists that some plants can meet standards
for the quality of air around the plants without
such controls and that in any event it needs more
time to comply fully than EPA is willing to give.

TVA is the nation‘s largest electric utility and
the largest buyer of coal used for generating
purposes. Whether TVA complies with air
pollution standards could have national
reprecussions since the Carter administration
has repeatedly said that electricity generated by
coal will be a key feature of the nation’s energy
plans.

It‘s the old battle of priorities between the
nation‘s energy needs and protecting the en-
vironment. President Carter’s actions in the
coming weeks could set the tone for the nation. If
he supports EPA in its fight with TVA, it will be
an encouraging sign for environmentalists.

The results of EPA’s battles with FMC and
TVA will reveal the nation’s future. If EPA loses,
it will mark a crucial setback for the en-
vironmentand for all those who “like to drink the
water and breathe the air.”

 

~«. 2 -

 

No news?

In view of the commentary written
by Chas Main about an attempt to
call ldi Amin. I must say I enjoyed it
greatly. To hear of this reporter‘s
problems in reaching Entebbe was
quite amusing.

The main thing that hampered my
enjoyment of this article is that he
stated. “There were no campus
stories to write about."

We have a whole campus full of
activities here at UK. Must we
mort ourselves to calling Entebbe.
L'ganda for a story to go in a college
newspaper?

Being a member ofthe Intramural
Council. I could say from experience
that there must be at least 20 sports
stories per night at the Seaton
(.‘enter alone. If any writer of the
Kernel is ever in desperation of a
good story-instead of wasting time.
money and talent in calling Uganda.
(all or even visit the facilities right

consumer focus I I ISmall claims

'I'l t'l't' s .i maxim of the law which

states he rumirnus )ioncur‘at le.\' "
i.()().\('i_\ translated. this means,
"it e Liv. doesn't sweat the small
.‘ilill '

it s it’t'tt that way sit)!" the

 

  

 

' y
i ' g: bruce w.
’ ' .. singieton 5
.fl_d._m J

beginning. There are only limited
judicial resources available. So, in
the interest of economy of judicial
resairces. it became necessary to
ketp certa'n kinds of claims out of
the system: they just weren't worth
taking up the time.

(Mr federalsystem is like that if
ymrclaim isn‘t worth $lt).()00. and it
doan't fall into one of the ex-
ceptions. yw're out of luck if you
want to take it to that court.

Use of the other courts invdves

 

. I .
Letters
here on campus.
Amused—by the story-yes—but
also totally shocked!

Becka Davenport
lntranrural (‘ouncil Member

Mitchell reread

l have been re-reading Ron Mit-
chell's tirade against Nicolas Mar-
tin. candidate for mayor. in one of
your February issues.

His command of four-letter words
and the display of imagination would
do credit to a prekindergarten
child It was my impression that
political issues were involved.

1 did not detect one reference to
any issue other than an all-consum-
ing and vicious attempt to malign a
young man who has shown consider-
able insight into many of the
rroblems confronting the citizens of
this community

One expects more than a kinder-

more subtle financial limitations.
(‘msider the attorney fees, for
example Then there are the fees
you have to pay the sheriff to go out
and serve your witnesses and
prrspective defendant with process.
And the list gets longer. and more
at pensive quite quickly.

So it is little wonder that the
average consumer hasn‘t dealt with
the court sydem in the past. If he‘s
been ripped off for less than $100 or
less than $500 for that matter, it‘s
just not gringto be worth it to take it
to court.

he already written abort the
need it: small claims courts in
Kentucky ("Dear Julian. about
those. small claims courts...”
Kernel. Oct. 29.) That column was
written in anticipation of the special
leg'slative session, where the small
claims bill finally became law.

The small da'ms court, as it came
outof the legislature, will be a part
of the new courts system created by
the JudicialAmendment voted on by
Kentuckiars in the 1975 General
Election.

garten vocabulary and petty name
calling from a person who has
presumably at least graduated from
high school. His smear tactics
remind one of the late Senator Joe
McCarthy, and we all know what
happened to him.

Leda Hayton

UK Alumnus

Bad omission

The omision by the Kernel of
significant portions of our com-
rnenta ry "lWD supports all women”
(March 9) created the false im‘
pression that women are pasive
victims d oppression.

Deleted para graphs indicated that
women around the world are and
have been actively involved in the
struggle aga'nst imperialism and in
the cause of human freedom, in-
du ding women’s rights.

lraniarr Students Association

The respmsibility for its im-
plementation in each county will be
m the district court system, the
lowest court in the regular trial
system. At least one of these courts
will be created in each county
beginning in January.

Nobody knows how the court will
work as yet. Jefferson County has
had a s’milar court for several
years. though, and the rospmse
there has been good.

i asked Robert Bullock. asistant
attorney general in charge of
Cmsumer Protection, whether the
new courts will reduce the work load
d his department.

“Any thing we say is speculative at
this po'nrt," he said. “I would
assrme we would continue to do
mediation first as we‘ve always been
do'ng.

“in the past when there was a
complaint that couldn’t be rendved
through mediation, and it was urller
35o), practicaly speaking there was
nowhere else die consumer could go.

“But our workload should not
change that much because the

 

m '

[I new it (we want WE coup in on Amos!"

Opposition’s simplistic

ERA is valuable to women

By CAROL DUSSERE

In the interests of presenting a
clear picture of what arguments
against women‘s rights look like in
the literature of our opponents, i am
{resenting this abbreviated view of
arguments against the Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA).

The literature on the ERA put out
by a conservative party features a
d‘awing of an attractive woman
behind barbed wire: "How do you

 

commentary

 

feel about women POW’s Thank
goodness there aren‘t any-~yet ! ”

Evoking the special horrors. war
has for women (usually the civilian
population) is an old propaganda
technique designed to further na-
tionalism and a paternalistic atti-
tude toward “our” women, while at
the same time allowing the viewer to
participate vicariously in the rape of
which the other side is accused.

Another pamphlet preys on the
fears of dependent women of losing
financial security while increasing
their faith in a security they do not,
intact, have.

For example, a drawing shows a
widow lamenting: “I can't collect
homemaker’s social security bene-
fits because they were special to
women only and ERA wiped out all
benefits special to one sex ! "

Current social security reforms
erase inequalities, not by depriving
widows, but by granting benefits to
female wage~earners and their sur-
vivors.

The statement is made that ERA
would erase a woman‘s “right" to
support a husband; this is based on a
misunderstanding of the role sup-
port laws actually play. Many courts
flatly refuse to enter a support

majority of the complaints we ac-
tualy process exceeds $500."

Jon Pancake, a third-year law
student and one of the authors of the
legislation, outlined some of the
prtredure involved in the system.

“The Chief Judge in each district
will designate a judge for the small
claims division. Once a claim is
filed, it'll have to be heard by that
pdge within 30 days. So it‘ll have to
meet at least once a month.
Hopefully. it‘ll meet once a week.“

He also explained howthe cost will
be kept down.

“Serv'ce of process will be by
reg'stered mai. so there'll be no
she- iff‘s fee. Tape recorders instead
of stenographers will be used for
reed-d keeping. The clerk will
(pirate out of the county clerk‘s
office. The judge will be one of the
district inches."

in order to work effectively.
Pancake an id the court will have to
scledrle sesions when people can
get here.

“ if the pdge schedules his session
frtm 8 to l) Tuesday morning.

decree under any circumstances
when husband and wife are living
together.

A third argument against ERA
centers on connecting it with exist-
ing legal and social changes. For
example: “ERA-HEW orders to all
schools: coed football and wrestling
teams. no father‘son basketball
games, and schools can‘t tire homo
sexuals, pregnant unwed teachers,
or those who have had an abortion."

It is my impression that HEW
rulings differ from this presentation
considerably. But the point is. ERA
did not establish Health. Education
and Welfare.

Public safety is linked to the ERA

in the following iasflhion {Affirm-

tive‘acti‘onjin police andfire depart—
ment hiring of women hurts com-
munity safety and department mor-
ale. A drawing shows a woman fire-
fighter in high heels and a skirt
screaming for help at the top of a
ladder.

By such association, the ERA is
linked with the federal bully attack-
ing statcs' rights and the sanctity of
the home (by creating federal day-
care centers), racism (by the separ-
ate-but-equal argument), and abor-
tion (the only way the ERA could
apply to abortion would be to
provide equal abortion rights for
men).

The ERA is said to demand unisex
housing in college dormitories (ig-
mring the privacy provision of the
Constitution). the ordination of wo-
men in churches (ignoring the sep-
aration of church and state), legali-
zation of homosexual marriages
(which are legal for neither sex).

As far as the workplace is con-
cerned, we are told that “ERA will
not give equal pay for equal work“
and that “ERA does not even apply

court should

response won't be good. it won‘t be
worth the. trouble to take off work for
a $15 claim. But if he schedules it at
nightor on Saturday afternoon, a lot
more claims can get litigated.“

Fayette County Judge Paul
(iudgel indicated a practical
drawback to this kind of scheduling,
though.

“l would be surprised if we would
dothat.“ he said. “These judges will
probably not add night duty. You
ca n‘t expect a judge to work all day
and then have a night session. it'll
prtbably be held early in the mor-
ring."

(ludgel sr id the small claims court
wil be a great benefit to the con-
nimer.

" This will bediff erentf mm the old
magistra kas' court. which was little
more than a collection agency for
crediors. With the limitation on
number of cases an individual can
br'ng eadr year, collection agencies
will not be abh to use it, and the
ittle felbw will have an opporturity
t) be heard.

"it will be primarily the consumer

 

to private industry.“

By some strange trick of logic,
however. we are also told that “ERA
would wipe out existing laws that
noted women workers from being
Beasts of Burden with no limit on
weight to be lifted and Midnight
(ll—Burners with no exemption from
compulsory overtime.“

Any study of state protective labor
legislation shows that laws have
already been invalidated by pro
gressive legislation improving work-
ing conditions for both women and
men.

it is still used to “protect" women
from higher paying jobs, advance-

.nsnuerrd overtime. payflhe real

'nfidnrghtitril "burners fare" women
deprived of overtime who are forced
to take two jobs to meet expenses.

Weight-lifting restrictions are of-
ten ridiculously low, do not take
individual differences into account,
and ignore that fact. that 70 per cent
d the job-related injuries for men
are due to heavy weight—lifting. A
simple solution would be to establish
individual weight limits and make
overtime voluntary.

A more intellectually sophistica-
ted attack on the ERA argues that
with the passage of anti-discrimina-
tion laws. the ERA is unnecessary.
Piecemeal legislation leaves legisla-
‘ion to be made in bits and pieces in
the courts, without establishing
equality for all. And affirmative
action suits have hardly made much
progress lately.

These are the sorts of arguments
we were not interested in hearing on
International Women’s Day.

 

This comment was submitted by
(‘arol Dussere. a German graduate
student.

be beneficial

against a business. with the cons
srmer as the pla irrtiff. And when the
corsumer sues. the other guy will
counter claim and the judge can
decide who‘s right.

“And it will be a quick and inex-
pensive way of finding whether the
corsumer is right or not in a given
mm.“

A pamphlet is now being prepared
by the attomey general‘s office for
(me by litigants in the small claims
court. And between now and next
January a lot of publicity will be
given to use of the small claims
division,

lts succes will depend on how the
public receives it. But if the con-
sumer does not actively pursue his
remedies through the small claims
court, he‘ll have nobody to blame
but himself.

 

Bruce w. Singleton h s second year
low student. Consumer Focus up-
peurs every Friday. If you have u
suggestion for u fut-n ooh-n.
uric to Corsunrer Focus. he
Kentucky Kernel.

Big
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Big Brother arrives

Delta monitors building innards

By PAM ELLINGER
Kernel Reporter

You may not know it, but
the Delta 2000 monitor lives
right within your dorm and in
your classroom. It lives
almost everywhere on UK’s
campus. Bet you’ve never
seen it spying around.

The Delta noses deep into
every building on the UK
campus, as it does for the
Thomas Hunt Morgan
Biological Sciences Building
and for most operations of the
commerce building.

It doesn’t monitor what
yw’re doing but what your
building is doing. The Delta
can monitor steam pressure,
water, filter and electrical
systems, fans and most
importantly, smoke and heat.
Almost anything your
building can do.

Delta’s present job is
mainly to chedr on smoke and
heat. Here alone the monitor
is earning its keep. A fire
recently broke out in a
janitor’s closet at Research
Laboratory No. 1, near the
Pharmacy building. Delta
sniffed it out, safety was
notified, and it soon was
under control.

In early November, a
coffee bumer overheated in a
deserted Taylor Education
Building. Delta observed the
temperature change, along
with the fire-monitoring
system in Public Safety. A
disastrous fire was probably
averted because of the early
dispatch of the fire depart-
ment.

James Wessels, physical

Nothing

Continued from page 1
Nothing will help Mia mi but
Biscayne Bay, and the zoo
nearby. Both are welcome
changes from the pink bodies
lining the shore. Brush up on
high school Spanish—l got
lost one night in the Univrsity
of Miami basketball court
parking lot and might have
stayed, if some equally

plant director, says Delta is
only canpletely wired to the
biological sciences building.
The Commerce Building and
Memorial Hall are partly
watched by the system.

All new building will be tied
to Delta, including the
Tobacco and Health Institute.
where a humidity control is
being tested, and the
Lexington Technical 1n-

 

 

stitute.

Electrical engineer Carl
Beeler plans the new control
systems and supervises their
functions. He explains that
the UK Delta is only two
years old and really in
operation for only six months.
Beeler and his two assistants
are steadily employed at
installing the device all over
sampus. “The only thing

helps Miami

disoriented Canadians hadn‘t
come along.

For survival training.
brush up on tipping. too.
Many people in resort areas
work only four or five months
a year, and if you don‘t tip
them. they’ll make you wish
you'd picked Albuquerque for
your spring vacation. The

Marcum made editor

Janice Marcum. a second-
_\ear UK law student. is the
new notes editor of the
Kentucky Law Journal.

The journal. the tenth-
oldest law journal in the
country. publishes articles
written by legal scholars.
lawyers and students. Con-
tributing students. writing in
a section conta ining notes and
comments. must be in the
upper 10 per cent of their
class.

This is the first year there
has been a majority of women
on the journal‘s editorial
board. Marcum said she feels
the law field has opened up

tor uoiiien. butsaid there are
still a “few drawbacks."

For example. she said. it is
especially difficult for a
uonian to open up her own
office.

Marcum is specializing in
tax law. She decided to major
in law because she “likes the
general idea of the reasoning
involved."

Marcum‘s appointment to
the jounial‘s editorial board
was approved by the law
school faculty.

Marcum received her BA.
degree from Morehead State
University. where she
majored in political science
and philosophy.

standard is 25 per cent for
drinks, 20 per cent for drinks
andfood.

Well, you‘re on your own. If
you can’t get by now with
fewer hassles than most
touristas. you deserve
everything you get—to be
called a yankee. a snowbird
or worse—a yellow belly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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IIELD OVII

ACADEMY AWARD NOMINEE

Best Foreign Film

Best Actress thrie - Christine Ilrrllltt

(Bergen Matinee Dolly 81.50)
Vlnk Days: 1:”. 7:”.tz20
Set.l.Sun.2:N.3:fl,5:0. 7:so.r:2o

T SHOWS THROUGH

KENTUCKY

lil‘i it

"All? TAR

 

 

Plasma Derivatives

A Blood Plasma Donor Center
II) E. Short Street
252-5506

Students may none for appointments
Mom, Wed.. em Fri. mo e.m.-4:sep.m.

-jlrxrrjgmls.

rut/m Tuesday and Thursday mo e.m.- 5:30 pan.

Reg! rum]!

vv—VVVV---vvrsvv

HONG KONG
PAVILION

Chinese Cuisine
(Cantonese, Srechuan
a Mandarin)
ENJOY SPRING BREAK!
an. Thurs. 11:30am 9 30p m
Fri.&Sat.it;30a.m.10.00pm
Sun 4: 30pm 9 30pm

119 SOUTH LIMESTONE
JUST AROUND THE LORNEH
TRON THE PliOiNll

FOR RESERVATIONS
2334511

no Upper Street
Lexington. Ky. 40507

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. Phone (cos) 2;: on