xt731z41vc0s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt731z41vc0s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-10-11 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, October 11, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 11, 1972 1972 1972-10-11 2020 true xt731z41vc0s section xt731z41vc0s y Vol. LXIV No. 30 an independent student newspaper
erne Wednesday, October ll, i972 University of Kentucky
Eight pages Lexington, Kentucky 40506
”M
~
Pipes p obl ‘
UK"lIl'f b’khl bf't'h "fl
lS poueroanearysm oe—Uisfecflys out
By MIKE TOMES house and has sometimes grating, it sweeps with it any volved in the problem are
Kernel St?“ Writer . surrounded it completely: AIC' small object that has fallen from bounded on the north by Virginia
Sewer . drainage pipes cording to the 990918 who live 1“ garbage receptacles. Avenue, on the south by the
catacombing tIhe southernIhalf of the house, medical equipment George Spragens, mechanical Central Baptist Church and on
campus are primary contributors has been found among the gar- engineer with the University the east by Cooperstown. Reed '
to a smkhole of dirty water at the bage in the water, including Design and Construction said.
end of . SlImpsonI Avenue hyopdermic needles and sugical Department, said he felt UK was A natural sinkhole
Lexmgtons City engineer said gloves. an inadvertent contributortothis Reed said the end area of
““5 week. . . Garbage drains problem. Lexington‘s city Simpson Avenue is a “natural
However, said HhI‘I‘ISOh Reed, These items, along with other engineering division, he said, sinkhole." This means water will
the engineer, the CltY—nOt UK— garbage, fall into the drainage tells UK what size storm sewers stand and drain off slowly due to .
, is at fault. system and are carried by water, they can have and where pipes rock crevices beneath the hole,
IOn rainy days, water from the said Reed. He said that as water will connect, he said. he explained.
smkhole floods a neighboring flows into the sewer’s bar The parts of the campus in- Continued on Page 4 Col. 3 .
‘ ' i‘ " ,. . 0‘ "4.; ‘5' ' I .t .. K h
’o - I o I" . .. y". ‘I ,I z . I‘ ..' /'-'..ll .
: a: .e are .I, ,.- o , Code 9 roup
. as” , “‘ .~-f ., -, _~ '. '
E as y .I... «r s‘ -, ~ . — W k' 'd '
L . s.- .“ . ‘ ta? “EM;- 599 lng I eas
. '~ ’ ' “1““?- o for changes ~
rid e r W « = ~ . ~ :
. . . , a , I
t” _, . ., , . . is 6:. A .3 he ,. By DAN RHEA
" , IL. 3,;- ‘ht: 7; " "‘ at :1". . hf Kernel Staff Writer
*3 ‘., ‘III I A, I" .3 s, '98:)“ ' , President Otis A. Singletary‘s newly formed
‘ " 1s " . -‘ I 9 W V committee on Student Code revisions has set
For Sabine Johnson and her Ion ‘. '4. I 1‘ , ‘ . ' ' 5 Nov. 1 as the deadline for persons to notify the
Dirk. 5, celebrating the last days (7. t‘ 4 i) : r, , - s "t committee of their desire to propose changes in
of summer means a lazy ride . ”f: ' '3 “,1 g’ ‘- 47$. . C I the Code.
through the Botanical Gardens. ;- i” “ \véI - ‘ ~-.'-~ ‘ is: ' I z .- I ,> t... - . . ‘ Singletary, in a letter of appointment to the
Today's “'eather offers an op. I IIIIIIIIIIIIIVI'I M, me‘ ._ w _ - .. “s committee, said the advisory Should inVite a”
portunity for more of the same. :1 Emmi:- ,- .1. _III . I I . . I .__ a concerned groups and individuals to submit their
.2... i sWW ‘ .i t #1.; ' revision proposals. iisten to testimony con-
. 1.8 «12% I-I IIIIIIIII . . " *5" ' ’ J 551-:- *3 ... -. . '1: cerning the Code, and to submit to Singletary by
. Jane i . . . as an» .,,
Dec. 15 its recommendations “which will serve
O O .
Pleetlng set {0" OC', 26 afs :Ibastis forImy recommendations to the Board
0 rus ees.
A f. "f' n I n r f t . Singletary’s letter called the committee “a
'1 'war coa ' '0 p a s p 0 es I means of joint student-faculty-administration
consideration and screening of proposals for
revising the Code of Student Conduct. before
05kg pro fs #0 cancel OCfo 26 Classes such proposals reach the Board of Trustees.“
Dr. Robert Zumwinkle, vice-president for
,, . . . . . studentaffairsandcommitteechairman,said all '
By DALE S. BRlIJSO 18. ThecregionalIcenter for this gct. 26, and Will include picket proposals should be made to the entire com-
Kernel Staff Writer area ls incmnati. ines and leafleting. mittee through his office, 529 Office Tower,
A coalition of anti-war mu 5 . rather than to individual members.
met last night to plan stratggy fgr The central theme 0f the The group intends to ask ‘
u 0min rotest activities demonstrations is tobe“Stop the professors and StUdehtS t0 Administration membersof the committee are .
pc g p ' War-End the Bombing.” cooperate With the protests by Zumwinkle, Dean of Students Jack Hall. and
The protests, sponsored canceling $185595 that day, John Darsie, University legal counsel.
. nationally by the National Peace “One idea behind having this Fallahay said. The faculty members are Dr. Glenn 8. Collins,
Action Coalition, will be backed (the demonstrations) then is A150 scheduled for the from the Department of Agronomy and chair-
locally by the Young Socialist having some sort of non-partisan demonstration is a speech by man of the Senate AdVIsory Committee on
Alliance, the Lexington Peace demonstrations before,I and in- John Sullivan of the American Student Affairs; Dr. Kenneth Germain from the
Council and the People‘s Party. dependent of, the elections. The Friends Service Committee. College of Law, and Dr. Paul Sears from the
. I war goes on no matter who is Sullivan recently returned from Department of Chemistry. Sears is a faculty
According to Mike Fallahay of elected on Nov. 7," Fallahay a tour of North Vietnam. member of the Board of Trustees.
the YSA, the Coalition called for said. The student members of the committee are
“anti—war activitiesin the form of Although no permit has been Carl Brown, Arts and Sciences senior; Melinda
a picket line in local centers for The demonstration is to take obtained for the aCtiVitiES. the Meehan, Arts and Sciences senior; and Scott
Oct. 26. Mass demonstrations will place at the Fayette County demOnstrations WOUld be 19831: Wednelsdorf. graduate student and Student
be held in regional centers Nov. Courthouse from noon to 1 pm. Fallahay said. Government president. .
I '
0
Much the Kernel I,
Well. the Reds won. And their comeback story is 2\\ \“ TOday: Put your sweater back. Today
on prge six. Page seven's Campus Wrapup is I, / will be sunny and warmer with
seek ng student volunteers for the Red Cross. And ’ h ’ I temperatures in the upper 70's
page eight offers news of a special “proposition" , s Iris eeve but dropping to the upper 40's
for students—tonight only. Liberals can finds i , tonight. A 10 per cent chance of
mad“ VonHofl‘man 0" page 3- wea'h er rain is good for the whole day.
4f

 The [summon i394 AssistanvManaq-ng EGU'OV Kahe McCarthy Edat I I
i follow I” (rue! Mike Win05 Ami-Jan! Managing Edolor Neill Morgan
Kentucky :1;'.'.';:.°.::‘.“.‘.?.'.::"Gt.r."t.:6:.'.';".. :::::::::x::::::::::::: 37:: 5:21;“ I OTICI S
Kernel (.impus tailor Mike Tierney Editorials repiesen! the opinions oi the canon. not the University
A ' ' f l
merica IS 00 CO in N
over Nixon s espionage .3».
It was only a month ago that this “powerful effect" on the presidential ”fix
page speculated that the nation, with race. "
its ho-hum reaction to Munich's Nixon himself hasn‘t been available it
Olympic disaster, was beyond being for comment on the matter. We aren‘t . ‘E E ‘-
shocked by anything. surprised. i 3E“ H, "175:..."
hNol: dso' lthve neonfetss t° .befing we are “Fried abm" the intentions '- e? . ,1 so
5 0C e *3 oug no surprise — of an man who, in one of the world‘s W ~ , I
that the President of the United States y - ‘ at . , - "W . W“ ..
. _ most powerful pOSitions, could con- s .- , . .,; as“ -- ..»
ls. alibogt t? be; Engedrfjd as ti“: ceivably become involved in efforts to .- , .
ring ea er 0 a C 03 ‘3“ ' agger 9° destroy his country‘s “loyal op— ~ " -
to destroy the Democratic party. position." [ pf " . " Eig I ”
‘And the fact that the public can ' ' Emmm“ w, . .
Nixon cautious believe the Watergéte evidence “W ,. «i... ; . '- \
. H ff . ,, against Nixon—and still give him a \ MM” ’ f f» . -' W”...
h ThEQSO'anecli dWateriglateerla :slra whopping lead in presidential polls— j
hasdf lenf Jugggs th sasfasbftheyNixon says something about the crying need a" " ”
an u o e u - .
campaign iiachine, The President for. leadership and purpose lit the Dr. Garrett Flickinger. president of the University Senate.
- - United States' Maybe we cant be speakingduringMonday‘s meeting.(l\'ernelphotoby Art Roberts.)
has remained aloof and unsullied by shocked by anything after all
the election rabble below him, and ‘ ‘
Watergate‘s implications have left
the public so unruffled that this I 26 f f I d
week‘s Gallup poll showed a majority re as O n S O r a aCU fy CO e
of the population didn‘t even know the .
bugging incident existed. UK's long-delayed faculty code said yes. But the special significance ‘along the line of these profeSSional
Hopefully, the eggs are about to shuffleda tiny bitcloser to enactment lay with the revelation that126 (73 per duties?
break. Monday’s Washington Post in Monday‘s University Senate cent) personally knew of “cases of ,
revealed that the FBI and the Justice meeting. While the nit-picking and abdication of academic responsibility Worth “7'"9
Department have linked Watergate’s detail-debating arguments may have by faculty members." The proposed faculty code, while
break-in to a coordinated effort on discouraged the majority of the not a perfect document, would
Nixon s behalf “to throw the student senators who voted to accept Many violations provide a documentary basis against
(DemocratiC) party into such the code, something that happened . _ which to judge future student com-
disarray and 10 increase the during the meeting made clear the There '5 no way or knowmg what plaints in these areas. Professors
animosity between Democratic need for such a document. these violations were. The proposed should have no qualmsabout living up
candidates to SUCh a degree that the COde etidorses everything from free to the proposed code‘s lenient
party would be unable to bring itself Lots of support EXPTeSSlon 311d ethical dealings. With provisions as faculty members at 26
together again after ltS conventlon. The reSUItS were announced from a StUdentS t0 reSPeCt for thelr prlvacy other major universities already
and keeping liberal office hours. Is . . -
_ survey taken of faculty members to are. Hopefully the next UniverSity
Secret WC" find out if they felt a code was there a student who hasn‘t found a Senate meeting will make that total
The Nixon war of espionage and necessary. A gratifying 89 per cent teacher slacking Off somewhere 27.
sabotage is being directed, says the
Post, by White House officials and , 1
gm: of tthCogumigeetror the Re- UK shouldn t cop Eastern 5 law programs
ec ion 0 e reSi en.
. . . . . i
1333123215: iggidgztiaiplidngfufsn The recent flap over the location of recommended expanding law en- the original 47 to 1,920 students, and
. p p ‘ the law enforcement and criminal forcement and criminal justice classroom facilities have developed
planting fabricated news stories and . . . . . . . . .
. . . Justice programs in the state is programs to univerSities other than from the basement of a building to a
letters in newspapers, and recruiting . . . .
friends of the Nixon effort for largely unwarranted. We think the Eastern. The study based its proposed $6.9 million law en-
“ .. . ,, . present program at Eastern Ken- recommendations largely on the forcement-traffic safety center.
political espionage against the . . . . . . .
Democratic art tucky UniverSity is more than assumption that Eastern 15 located Eastern has administered over $1.7
Federal [:1 d :5 have al d satisfactory and expansions in the too far from urban crime centers and million in federal and agency funds i
scored a maJ'orgvictor for Nixlofiaby ' field should be there. that its faculty is of less than through its School of Law En-
. J y . y adequate quality. forcement. All of this has occurred in
sealing the Watergate case until after T Distance does not seem a critic l six short ear
election day, despite the fact that 00 remOfe? . . a y 5'
federal sources sa informat' The Crane stud re ared for the factor tous.Centers forstudies m law ~ - - ~
alread athered zould h Ion Kentuck Cririiep pCommission enforcement do not have to be in high AS important as Its “St 0f attributes,
y g 3V8 a y crime sectors to be effective. The however, is that Eastern’s program
lawmen who train there are not ex- has strong SUPPO" among those very
waggw- between classes. Officers Association adopted a
.. 3W“, a $9: resolution commending Dr. Robert
T , . \ Faculty qualified Martin. president of EKU, and
* w I As to the charge of an unqualified Eastern‘s law enforcement and
, ‘ M" criminal ‘ust‘c .
. i g. i NOV. / faculty, it seems to us that the faculty J l e programs
' It w? ' 1 i has an adequate academic Admittedly, the prestige and new
, E‘ ,?_ .. , )x s, In»! background (six of the l4 professors money which would accompany new
\‘~ NADER . I I I. , 4. , ~77 ,\ involved either have or Willsoon have graduate programs here at UK would
. "-- "fi ,1”, PhD. sl.They 31§0haV93W1d9 range be welcome. But the balkanization
\ ‘t‘ 1 ° . . ‘ of practical experience upon which to that would come from fragmenting
/_ . . , a ‘ , -. . draw. . eXIsting efforts would only hinder the
1 , g r?) r E, \‘“ ,, ' -. . Easterns 13_W enforcement and fight against Kentucky's increasing
%‘ - , wt/ .\ ‘ .3 i - ‘ ;- (kept, criminal Justice programs have lawlessness. We think the Kentucky
_' ‘- __ r c , \ “"hn.’ 0}: 8 E :31 “Hp 13%;}; developed from their embryonic Crime Commission would do well to
. ‘ ‘ , . - ‘ “ . ‘- _‘ 'J . .
J m - - \ "\ \g‘g. ,' ,‘A‘tfllfii J .' 3138955 to 300’?” reSlFieCtedt leaders In put aSide the Crane report and con-
_, - g e ou . nro men in the tinue to build on the firm foundation
uctonv ucAu programs‘ classes has increased from at Richmond.

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. October 11, 1972—3
UK and U of L would gain
0 0
Study seeks shift in law rograms M EC 0 M I
p I)“ '
By JOSEPH CONN defenset th h 4 %_ —.mun
0 cc arges of remoteness from urban \
Kernel Staff Writer areas and low faculty expertise. ‘ ' ' \
Since the state crime commission released a EKU wins support ‘ med/T \
consultant‘s study early last month, a con- Eastern‘s program had no small number of \ \
tr oversy has been raging over how and where vocal supporters to its credit. The Kentucky \ ‘ ‘
KehtUCRY'S law enforcement and criminal Peace Officers Association, meeting in Sep— \ \
justice programs ShOUld be administered. tember after the publication Of the Crane study, \ \ ,
It all began with the release of a study by Dr. endorsed a resolution by Maurice Carter, asst. \ Em, A I In”? . _
Robert Crane, professor of social and criminal chief of police of Lexington, that commended \
justice at Sangamon State University in Illinois. Martin and EKU’s law enforcement programs. \ \
It recommends that graduate degree programs Carter said, “If there is improvement needed \
in criminal justice and law enforcement be in the law enforcement program, it should be \ MEMORIAL COLSlEUM OCT. 28 ‘
expanded at UK and the University Of Louisville' improved on the campus where it was con. \ TIC K E TS \
rather than at Eastern Kentucky University. ceived. The program has exceptional backing at \ ‘
Regionalize efforts Eastern.” Carter said that some 50 percent of \ 45° 35° 30° 25° \
It also recommends that no additional degree Lexington’s police force is either graduates of or \ \
programs be created and that university efforts affiliated in some way with Eastern’s law en- \ S PO N 50 R E D O N SALE 2 \
in law enforcement be regionalized. forcement program. OCT l l \
For UK, the report was a surprise. Edit for E. C. Hale, former Lexington chiefOf-police \ BY THE ' \
Eastern Kentucky University, it was a serious and now a consultant to the force, cited the work \ IN T H E C O |_ [S E U M
blow. Heretofore, serious effort in the fields of done by Eastern as exemplary. He also men- \ \ “
law enforcement and criminal justice have been tioned that a similar program at the University \ ‘ —
concentrated at EKU. Of Kentucky had failed. \ OCT- l 2 \ "' '
The planning there started in the fall of 1965, UK ’intercsted' \
including the Kentucky State Police, the FBI, While professors here were non-commital on : STU DENT CEN TER \
law enforcement consultants and university the Crane Study itself, some were in favor of its \
faculty members. recommendations. Referring to the possibility of \ C E N T R A L D E S K \ ..
Expansion great a Ph.D.' program in social professions, Dr. Er- ‘ ‘
Since then, Eastern’s law enforcement and nest Witte, dean 0f the College Of Social ‘ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ’ ,
criminal justice enrollment has increased to Professions, said, “We’d be interested in it
1,920 students plus an off-campus enrollment of naturally - AS a 0011989 we’ve had this in the -
426. The off-campus programs have been ex- plans for a long time." _ _ . __
panded to 21 communities throughout the state. Meanwhile, Eastern 15 COhtthlhg the ex- . . 7
A Traffic Safety Institute was added to the panSIon 0f ‘ts program. Last week the board 0f
university in October, 1966, to prepare teachers regents approved a recommendation that EKU
f driver training, motor {1th supervision, construct a $6.9 million law enforcement-traffic ‘ ~-
1 eathalyzer programs and highway safety safety center. The center is to house the School of '
s' ndards. Law Enforcement, the Traffic Safety Institute 7 '
in responding to the Crane report, Dr. Robert and limited space for the Kentucky Law Ell-
N artin, president of EKU, said, “We wish to take forcement come“-
a positive approach to this thing.” He said The plans must still be approved by the
Eastern’s outstanding record would stand as its Kentucky Come” on Higher PUth Education. .
. s11-
Nicholas .,
VonHoffman . Pl 2 Z I
Motorola company newspaper
O O O O O
t is fighting hospital rip-offs FREE DELIVERY -
WASHINGTON The last periodical in which The respense to thlspy the American hospital I 8 4
you would expect muckraking journalism is your power bloc is instructive. Motorola got a letter 2 6 6 u I __
company‘s house organ. So the Phoenix em- from. H- Allan. Barth, V_lCe presxd'ent‘ 0t the
ployees of the Motorola company must have Michigan Hospital Assomation, which said in .
done a double-take when their very own com- part, “Since the 'members 0f the MJChlga"
pany newspaper (the Western Voice of Hospital Assoc1ation are about to purchase .
l Motorola) brokeamajor story on the high cost of equipment for a statew1de emergency . radio
hospitalization. network, I would hope that your organization I I - ;
A big, black headline told the electronics might have some reasonable explanation to Offer _,, .
company’s workers that “SKY-HIGH because I am sure you are aware of the impact ,
HOSPITAL CHARGES IN PHOENIX HURT th‘liththe mfg": “95WtattASSOC'mlonhct‘affis
EMPLOYEES, EMPLOYERS AND PUBLIC.” wi ave on "e uyinga iu'es 0 He ospi a s . f
Beneath a byline story, Ken Piper, Motorola vice life MlcglegtinazfAs quoted m Medical World W I lh T h e P U r C h a S e O
resident for Human Relations, declared that ws, .- - .
E)‘in 1966 Motorola paid to Phoenix h05pitals over JUSt as important has been the role 0‘ the A n y 1 4 I, P I 220
one million dollars excluding doctors’ fees. . .in health insurance people. Mllt°n.Ga"v executive
1970 Motorola paid to Phoenix hospitals over director 0f the .Health Planning. Donnell 10kt Free ‘0" Plain Pizza -
three million dollars. There was an increase of Mar‘COPa _(Ph‘oenix) County, was Willing to ta . . . .
61.5 percent over 1969 despite the fact that in 1970 “bggnhfhsaf'gvlmgn‘;2232:3553: :2::):’:;:‘:: (25 ‘ for each additional ingredient)
Mgfiigslaiigafn: (1315:: 2335;031:233): $8333“;th take a hand. They’re really not concerned about W l fh ”‘1 e p U rc l'iO se Of every l 4 P I 120
both the company and its employees were get- costs. They'justpass the added burden on the the
ting socked. It pointed out that one Phoenix consumer. . . _ _——-——--VA L U A BL E CO U PO N ___..._...
hospital was plugging its $125-a-day, two-room .59 1t has been 'W‘th the health insurers as the" : . o o . (MUST as pnesemem . ° 0 . |
suites where patients are served cocktails, hors “”1th aCCOthhCeS. and, lt lt 80e§ on that way, I O ff G 0 d O n l |
d’oeuvres, breast of chicken cordon bleu at the health. insurance law mOSt likely te P355 l er 0 Y I '
damask-covered tables set by ex-airline Sahel?“ 1": gomgdrtot gumMerep’l c335 'sztgw: l OCt. l0 8 l I l ,
. .. - . nix. anee e. oooa
:h:w\:l::s::§ lilggflgiyclghcsllgts Who also poui wh: can be done. The company is currently in : Good for One FREE l 0” Plain PlZZO l '
Yet, despite the prodigal scale on which these negotiations With the hospital. and already. Gan | W ”h the pU rc h 059 of a n Y I 4" P IZZO : _
institutions were run, the company maintained says, there are dehhlte Slghs 0t reform- I I
that the hospitals were makinga profit Of 6.8 per so thank YOU. Motorola. What you re delhdg t0? : SAVE $1 I 9 l
cent on patient revenues One institution had lfiealtthlis'even better than what Quasar 15 0mg l ER GOOD ON DECIVERY ONLY :
- - - - or e eViSIon.
:2::i:§sover $20 mllhon In accumUIated surplus ((‘l 1972‘ The “'ashington Post l___._o_F:____.__,_ ________—__.___—‘

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. October II. 1972 f
.-----------------------—--—-. Doctor shortage pro mp s
: HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! g , I h , O ufh s
: Bring in this COUPON for your : TO fra'n Appa 0C '0" y
I special HOME COMING BIG WHITE I By KEITH MORGAN involved in medical research.
I _ : Kernel Staff Writer The educational aspect includes field
: MUM * comPIete With Biue and I Due to the lack of doctors in many rural trips to various medical facilities
. c I communities, the UK chapter of the throughout the state. Ballard also said that
I Wh'te BOW and B|Ue U'K' ONLY 99 Student American Medical Association many of the articipants have never been
I : d S ' M d' al f hp b f
I has sponsore a “ ummer in e lc away rom ome e ore.
I ORDER NOW CASH AND CARRY I Sciences.” The recreational aspect offers good :3
| Ashland Florist 656 E. Main ' A recent survey by Associated Press opportunities for the participants to in-
L____..__——____..______——————-| writer Bob Cooper indicated that in 19 teract with many types of people they
countries in rural Kentucky, there is only have never associated with. i
Suppressed Classic! one doctor per county. _ Funds provided
“Summer in Medical Sciences" IS an Through their own fund-raising efforts, 3"
NIARL()N BRAND() educational program that gives Ap- Ballard and Franklin manage to finance 5!
. alachian and black youth on-the-job the program. Funds are provided by the a,
ll] p 7*
training in health fields, said Dewey office of the vice president of business
“BURN” Ballard, third-year medical student and affairs, the United Negro College Fund,
_ . ‘ s . , ) ‘ , the program's director. The program may several county programs of the Neigh-
Full length (01m. film 1)} (”nu I fmluf)“ ‘: also serve to further interest students in borhood Youth Corps of the US. Depart-
(llret'lur of "Battle of Algiers” health careers. mentof Labor and the College Work Study
W’ ED. ()(IT. 1 1 7:15 1).“. , , Programs of Berea College, Kentucky
‘ ~ Last sLlihemZ?ZTStltllldgrtshficsgc‘inated in State College, Morehead State University
btmlent (Jellter Theatre Adm. $1.00 . , pa 9 and UK.
the prOJect. Ballard said entrance lnto the Ballard said there are several a d-
_ program is not based on grades but solely vantages u; the program being run by
' on the student’s interest in medicine. students The medical students take pride
o It' IS ope n dto mfih Rh?“ {juniors an: in the program which they created to I
BaCk “Ck'n ? seniors an co ege res man an answer a need in their profession. They "'
o sophomores. Students were made aware of also do their own fund raising he said. h
. the program through the recruiting efforts Because the medical students who work --
Camping? ..
:ssistant director P g salary, 90 per cent 0f the budget goes I:
w . The program lasts eight weeks The ““3”“? the program partic1pants. ”Our
e have It a". ' 0 participants live in Blanding Tower and goals}? wfgiaslszpgnl? :presgntatlon
are provided with food. transportation and m e e: Ive s, a a saeld ‘
BOCk OCkS . . on-the-job training at the Medical Center. To see ifoirgrugoztlugisrgr'itg reached
P "0'"an EQUIPMENT Ballard said there are also two themedicalstudents didafollow-upstudy
Tents 0 ‘Id C I h. professmnaltfiounselprs Whitatlk WI?) ant: which rt vealed that of 62 participants over
It 00f 0' mg encguraige f e ‘par lCIpan o ge in a three-year period, one-third of them are -
me ica pro essxons. working in a health field or a health
. Gives job experience related curriculum.
The main focus of the program is job ltis also estimated that 56percent of all
experience. Ballard said the jobs students P8091? particmg In health fields in AP-
hold are geared to their individual interest Palachla are nahves of the area.
and experience. Franklin, who is a former pmgram
* ' The program offers exposure in the partlc1pant said after being exposed to a “.5
' - fields of pharmacy, audiology, respiratory “Summer in Medical Sciences” young mo<
230 W. Main (across from courthouse) therapy,medicine,dentistry and mursing. people findthat “"Ot only doctors’ sons get But
. ‘3’ /‘ Some of the students this summer were ""0 medicme.” tow
V 7 r I 1 Der
-\ . a . . sho<
mes 2c ,. ®® City can t correct UK flooding
a aut(
« m , . , . aut(
’. 0 , ,0 Q “mm“ from page 1 said the city wanted to minimize difficult to measure the depth due curl
fl 7 Z ’ “— Clay Tobacco Warehouse, flooding. to crevices in the area. Sew
* t t . __._.-_ ____ t t It owners of the land, wanted to fill According to Reed the area was And
- _ wouldn’t allow it, Reed said. He into the sinkhole,”Reed said. The solve the problem but they city The
said the quantity of water area involved is approximately a decided to leave it as it was. evei
TUESDAY 8. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 25 ““3"” be. hand“ “hm" “Ward square whee it is .not City tried to help Wh"
Voting for H CQ causmg flooding elsewhere. Reed flooded. However, said Reed, it is
The city has made efforts to
~ Voting tn an taettettas 1th pm. Mwmwsmwt giggattdttrt, 3;. the- more. x
p m “5°“ 8““ ‘0 ”0 p'm' Witt”? _ at r _ v e or two pipes to drain the
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 3:00 P.M. smkhole—a ' 24-inch un-
Pep Rally Bon Fire " ' ' ' " " ' ‘ ' derground pipe and a 60-inch
"' ground pipe.
5 Homecoming Queen finalists presented —For Sale—— —-For Rent-—
c i R 9—45 h d :60 kl . . i a r . '
. C98“? Ray *0 speak--- w was; 2.3:; :xzr.:::‘,:..:ez.m.2:;,. 5339.: M, 0, mm m.
Location gleld :n bar-ck of SecatonfCenter 8. W M m, good common “m “9,332 Izpegz’ogiggicihef‘a2garzt7rgir‘l;.528to3;3,82%: Presents
om ex ennis r after 6 [3171.110]! ' - - ' t 3 . I
p 0U S 1962 Corvette, both tops 70 engine, 2l,ooo mi. Shakespeare 5
Tape player, 4 speed, never wrecked 51,60. —L0$f-——— .
.. . Nicholasville 885 3739 after 6 50!]
FRIDAHY OCTanRRu, 8.00 P.M. m, m SW, CW 5 speed, W, ,5, tZi'n; 75.11.53... 3:15:35“: £231? Tfhe Taming
omecoming evue 3440 days or 25422513011 . 6173,92): , . U " ' 0 Th hrew
Mini-Concert Wlfh JOSh Whlfe Jr. $12'3'E‘XELT.,L°,’2°:;?£:,Zgz';,;’2,§:fi‘30‘.’; Lost~~b|onde wither pug; 73'3”"6 UK e 5
Casino Parfy W70 Yamaha 5 80 Motorcycle-Excellent campus. Reward. one. 58‘ o
M t. A conditionCall299-5481t0013 Miscellaneo S Ct 1]! 12, 13, 14, 15
M . . VS 'C. "av ;:::m:.°.:.°:;...ss';cfFr:.*.,.',';.,;a:;< “ Guitm' Theatre
ovue- Liberation of LB. Jones 1435 10013 _ _ F
. Reserve Parking South Lime :7 mo.. 2v: ' A‘ Bldg'
Locatlon I Student Center ._ wanted_ blocks trom Commerce Bldg. 1 block from .
Med Center. Phone 252.4971 ext. 210. 4016 BOX Office NOW open
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 28 Roommate Wanted,preferablygrad student .
. , call 2724439 after five non Need Riders to pay eas? Need a ride? Call 12-4:30 Daily
8. 45 AM. Homecoming Parade Male and Female models needed tor Free ““9”” ”e 25m" "on 12-9-00
. ' ' Univ r it t r i i , '
8 30331;”; Wildfci-fs V5-& Gseorgla BUHUOQS £33,159 2:233:93";.iL’itafiii“:?£§’i§£ $32.33;; Z'eimogi'aary Wm comes Performance Days
I . . em 8 ions r
, p , Up emes Concert Part time job tor male student. Light UK Wrestling Team meeting Wed. Oct. ll.
Location I Memorial CO'lseUm manuallabor Skillwith handsrequired (all 7 00 p m New Sports tacility. Room 706. Phone: 258-2680
7531123 after six 6012 ”OH

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. October ll. 1972—5
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t s 700 miles and an eleven-hour drive to Watkins Glen, N.Y., a town ,5, _. , ,1: 1 1. _1 _ .. 1
most people have never heard of and probably never will. ,§,91.f. ., , , ‘ ‘g‘ , ' . ‘ .
But to 100,000 aficionados of a very