xt734t6f4m0z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt734t6f4m0z/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-02-27 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, February 27, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 27, 1976 1976 1976-02-27 2020 true xt734t6f4m0z section xt734t6f4m0z KENTUCKY

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University of Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

its": 22355.22, m. 1’6
Fund transfers
may save aid
for summer

students

By LEONARD KELSAY
Kernel Staff Writer

UK‘s summer work-study program is heading
for a $20,000 deficit on paper. curiously. because
the federal government gave the University too
much money.

But James Ingle. director of student financial
aid. said internal accounting shifts are likely to
save the program.

Financial aid at UK is funded largely on a
matching basis. work-study Director Bobby
Halsey said. The work-study program. which
gives students an opportunity to work for the
University or a contractor to finance their
education. is matched four to one by the federal
govemment. In all, Halsey said, $207,000 has
been put up by UK this year to obtain matching
federal money.

“We take that total—$207,000—and break it
down into separate accounts for convenience,“
Ingle said “One account is for work-study. one
for national direct student loans (NDSL),
another to provide loans to students in the health
care fields and so forth."

Threed ucklings peerintoa pond at Lexington Ce metery. ignoring a warning sign.

 

rMagic show

Urban Cdfinfy Council disappears from meeting

The work-study account seems to be
developing a deficit, he said, because Congress
granted more matching money than expected,
and the University must provide its 20 per cent.

before'parking'a’nd relocation opponents can speak
_ . “What happened," Ingle said, “was that

 

By DAN (‘RUTCHER
Keme‘i Staff Writer ”1'
The Urban County Council put
on a magic show Thursday night.
Proving that the gavel is quicker
than the eye, Vice Mayor Scotty
Baesler made the council
disappear before about 50
spedators who gathered in the
council chambers to protest the
city‘s civic center parking plan.
The vice mayor‘s sleight-of-
hand trick came at the end of a
meeting at which Councilwoman
Pam Miller presented a
relocation assistance plan for
those who are to be displaced by
the surface parking plan.
Nearthe end of the meeting the
floor was opened for public
comment. After three people
spoke in protest of either the
parking plan or aspects of the
relocation plan. Baesler. who was
presiding ove‘ the meeting in
Mayor Foster PEttit‘s absence.
asked for more comments.
Despite the fact that several
people raised their hands to be
recognized. Baesler rapped his
gavel m the council table and
said. “seeing none. the meeting is
adjourned."
Shouts from the angry spec-
tators. who obviously felt that
Baesler had intentionally

disregarded them. followed
Baesler and several other council

members as they made a hasty
exit from the council chambers.

The relocation plan. which will
be further discussed at a council
work session Tuesday, contains
the following provisions:

—displaced families could
receive up to $1,500 in moving
expenses.

—the city would pay up to $100
per month for 24 months to make
[up the difference between what
South Hill tenants now pay and
what they will pay in their new
units.

—a lump sum of up to $2,400
would be provided for South Hill
homeowners to use for a down
payment on a new home.

—homeowners would be given
30 (hys after Lexington Center
Corpa'ation (LCC) acquisition of
their homes to move their houses
to another location.

The benefits of the relocation
assistance plan would be made
available to those who were
displaced this fall by LCC
acquisition of property on Spring
Street. as well as those who are
slated to be removed from the
rest of the 15.3 acre area by June
1.

Eric Smith, 323 Kilmore Ct.,
one of thtse who was able to
comment before the meeting was
adjourned, brought up what he
said were two inadequacies in the
relocation plan. Smith said ‘30
days is not enwgh time for those
who wish to move their houses.
He also estimated the expenseof
moving a house at approximately
mom-«a prohibitive cost for
many homeowners in thearea, he
said.

A statement drawn up by the
Pleasant Green-South Hill Neigh-
borhood Association indicated
that resistance to the parking
plan is far from dead. The
statement, taken from a letter
addressed to the chairman of the
board of the Hyatt Corporation,
read in part, “We are refusing to
be moved from our homes. We
will try to stop any attempt to
evict any of us and we will seek
the suppa't of the public in our
fight"

Councilman Bill Bingham, in
whose district the proposed
parking area lies, readthe neigh-

borhood organization's.

statement. The organization is
urging groups booked for con-
ventions in the civic center to
cancel tha'r reservations unless
other parking arrangements are
made.

 

 

Congress funded 100 per cent of our request.
Normally, the figure is more like 75 per cent, so
the University planned—and budgeted—to pay
only threequarters of the money it should have
paid under its request.”

At the end of the last six months, 62 per cent of
the money in the work-study budget has been
paid out. The figure is usually about 55 per cent,
Ingle said

'lhefunds remaining in the account will suffice
for the rest of the semester, Ingle said, but not
for a summer program. Other accounts’ sur-
pluses will be transferred to offset the expected
deficit. The health care loan and NDSL accounts
together will contribute $35,000 because
Congress did not match those programs at the
expected rate. That money would more than
elimimte any work-study deficit this summer,
he said.

Funds will be shifted from one subaceount to
another to maintain surpluses in each of them
while maintaining an overall surplus when, all
subaceounts are added, Ingle said.

“We are confident that the (work-study)
program will be funded at a level comparable to
that d prevbus years,” he said. Without in-
fusions of funds from other programs, the work-
study account itself is likely to go in the red, he
said.

Howeva, Congress may increase its money
for the twosurplus programs. In that case, Ingle
said ”I would have a moral obligation to match
the money—at present, the loans are woefuny
small.” If that were tohappen, he said, internal
accounting transfers coukl not handle the work-
study fificit.

Cut“ on me 7

 

      

     

 

 

may; membranes:

   

editorials

  
   
     
       

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Wings
Editor-in-Chief

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

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Letters

 

[

Concert
tickets

Editor:

8. R. Robinson’s letter (”Concert
tickets/kernel, Feb. 3) of concern over
the way tickets to the Joni Mitchell
concert were distributed should be
reprinted in boldface and read a|0ud to
all on this campus by President Otis A.
Singletary. ltlsa prime example of the
creeping fascism that is apparently
invisible to those who bribe and cheat
their way into a concert which will
enhance in some perverse manner their
clamoring for love and freedom.

"The List“ and its enforcers are not
unlike the ”selections” made at Ausch-

witz by the Nazi "SS” during World

War II.

If Singletary won’t read the letter
perhaps Mitchell might when she is not
singing about honesty and deception
and whatever. Evidently her fans don't
hear her very well anyway, so what’s
C’est affreux!

Chuck Ralston
History graduate student

Joni Mitchell

Editor:

Whoever ghost-writes y0ur reviews
should be fired. If as I fear, you do not
employ a ghost—writer, pl rhaps you
should Wne. I refer to your botched
effort on the Joni Mitchell concert
(Kernel, ”Joni Mitchell appeals to
fans; disappoints remaining audien‘
ce,” Feb. 10). I’ll start with the ob
iective pcrtion of the review.

the use.

i. The story refers to a song entitled
"They Danced In the Streets of Paris.”
Huh? I guess you mean, ”In France
They Kiss On Main Street.” Not a bad
flaw, considering the rest of the article.

2. The story comments on Mitchell's
"ad-lib" about tractors tearing down
houses. She's been singing that line for
the last three years. She sings that line

 

on the Miles of Aisles album, which you
praised highly in Monday’s Kernel.
Have you ever heard it? Maybe a cuton
the radio occasionally?

3. Tom Scott is no longer with the LA.
Express. Hasn’t been for a year and a
half. Hedoesn’tplay on the new album,
either.

The story states that the ”highlight of
the concert“ was ”Twisted,” in Which
Mitchell “had people dancing in the
aisles.” That may be a criterion ap~
plicable to ZZ Top, but not to an in-
telligent musician like Mitchell. I think
this statement shows the story’s true
colors. i hope not. And to imply, as in
the story’s first paragraph, that she
somehow ”failed” by not pleasing her
"non-fans” is asinine. What deter-
mines ' fan“ status...perhaps liking a
person’s music?

I found the concert excellent from
start to finish. The story states that
there was ”something lacking.” I
suggest that we might all have been
better off if the entity lacking had been
the mindless review from this
newspaper.

Jim Taylor
UKalumnus

Textbooks

Editor:

I am writing concerning the
ridiculous resale value of textbooks.
When I began my first semester this
past fall at the University l was
somewhat surprised at the cost of
books. Actually, I did not think much
about the price at the time because I
knew l could resell them when the
spring semeshr began.

Recently, I did resell my books and l
am sorry to say that l was more
astounded now than I was then. The
books that were in top condition at the
beginning of the fall semester strangely
became worn and torn in the eyes of the

\

cashier at the bookstore. Therefore, the
three books that cost me $35 suddenly
decreased in worth to a resale value of
$i2.50.

ltwould seem tome that if a book was
purchased i n topcondifion and returned
in the same shape, a reasonable value
could be given to the student. I believe
that the bookstores should use more
care in checking the state of the
returned textbooks, and if they are in
good shape give students the top cash
that is advertised by their companies.

Tammy Phillips

Medical Secretary freshamn

Cheating

Editor:

The other day l was accused of
cheating on a test. I am not naiveto the
fact that cheating exists, but I guess I
am just not aware of how prevalent it
really is. As I try to live in this world
surrounded by such dishonesty, i am
iorcedto prove myself. Consequently, I
am treated as one of the dishonest.
Afterall, why should anyone believe
me?

Leigh Ostertag

Home economics senior

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

 

 

Dick Downey’s column is not in today's
Kernel. His weekly column, however,
will appear in next Friday’s Kernel.

 

Letters
policy

All letters to the editor and Spectrum
articles should be typed, double-
spaced and signed—including
classification, maior and phone
number. Letters cannot exceed 250
words and Spectrum articles cannot
erased 7:) words.

Playing
chicken

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
   
   
  
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
  
 
   
 
  
    
  
    
   
  
    
 
 
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
   
 
  
  
   
  
  
    

While there-’s no doubt the
legislators in Frankfort shouldn’t
be in the business of scheduling
basketball games, the notion is
worth considering since they’ve
decided to shove their sticky little
fingers into the UK-shouId-play-
the-University-of—Louisville (U of
L) pie.

Arguments against such a game
can probably be summed up into
two words—money and pride.

As Rep. Jim LeMaster (D-
Lexington) so eloquently pointed
out, if 'JK played U of L, the two
schools would probably have to
split the gate receipts. Whereas, if
UK invited a team in from the
outside it would probably make
more money on the deal. ”UK has
nothing to gain and everything to
lose,” LeMaster, a former UK
basketball star, said.

And money isn’t the only thing
the University stands to lose. Gov.
Julian Carroll has already forced
UK to recognize U of L's presence
by allotting U of L enough money in
his biennial budget proposal to
make Kentuckians start wondering
if UK is still the primary state
institution in these parts.

50 if we can’t be first in
anything else, we can at least be
first in basketball, right? U of L
has had some pretty good teams, in
case no one’s noticed. And if the
reigning Kentucky basketball
kings played the Cardinals they
iust might lose. First your money,
then your fame?

Well, no one here is making any
moves to challenge U of L. Intact,
although U of L Athletic Director
Dave Hart, who supports the
concept of such a game,
made himself available to talk to
Kernel reporters almost im-
mediately, neither coach Joe Hall
or UK Athletic Director Cliff
Hagan has been able to find time in
his busy schedule to return calls
made two days ago.

Although a game with U of L
might not produce a lot of money
directly, indirectly a state rivalry
could produce more team support,
hence in the end more money.

And, in the interest of sport in
general, it would iust be a damn
good game.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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uling
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ame
into

(D-
inted
two
e to
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ake
has
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U K

 

spectrum

Opinions from inside and outside the University.

 

 

 

 

CWC

Represents
all campus
women

 

By Barbara Lew
and Sharon Allen

 

The Council on Woman's Concerns
(CWC) is the only organization on
campus that has the purpose of
representing all women at the
University of Kentucky. The council
has no particular political ideology
except a belief that a woman’s place is
everywhere. We feel that societal roles
must end and oppressive legislative
measures must be changed.

Those who have participated in the
past have been "feminists,” but this
must be understood in the broadest
sense of the world. We feel that all
women share a "feminist con-
sciousness“ by the very virtue of being
a woman. Although women in the
council represent many different views
on feminism and what it means to be a
"feminist,” we‘re all united in the need
for women to realize that all activities
and lifestyles are open to them.
Together we’re trying to discover what
being a woman in today’s society really
means.

CWC is organized around a core
committee for the sake of expediency
but we try to keep the organizational
structure as open as possible. One of
our primary. goals is to get women
involved in decision making whenever
it applies to their activities. We try to
discuss all decisions and everyone
involved has a part in them.

We’re trying to instigate a variety of
activities and have made plans for
several proiects this semester. We’d
like to edit a literary magazine com-
posed ot poetry and writings of women
in the campus community. We also
hope to hold a film festival that would
allow for the sharing of work by fine
female film makers and hopefully the
screening of the full-length collection of
short films, the "New York Woman's
film festival." Another proposal is the

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organization of either pot-luck dinners
or bring-your-own-lunch gatherings
with films, speakers or student-led
discussion groups on pertinent topics.
And of course, a maior goal is con-
tinued support of the pro-Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA) legislation.

General business meetings are held
at the Women’s Center, 658 S.
Limestone St. on Thursday evenings at
7:30 pm. We also are scheduling
consciousnessraising groups weekly
and hope to keep the center open at
least one night a week for women to use
as a place to gather or study The
council is in the process of building a
feminist library which at present has
many current publications dealing with
women. '

Any woman interested in any of these
programs or desiring support and a
vehicle for implementing some new
proiects of her own creation should
attend these meetings.

Our first really extensive un~
dertaking since the council’s
reorganization is a conference.
”Women in Perspective,” to be held
this weekend. The topics to be
discussed cover a broad range of
women‘s concerns and should be well-
handled by some excellent women from
UK and the Lexington community.
Sessions will include discussions on
sexuality, women and the law, the ERA
legislation, women and media,
lesbianism, women and health,
historical feminism, cross cultural
roles, the rape crisis center, a poetry
workshop and a panel of political
women. Friday evening will open the
workshop with an informal reception
and poetry reading in the President's
Room of the Student Center. A cof-
feehouse with local women performers
will close the conference Saturday
night.

 

Barbara Levy is a transient student
from Tufts University and Sharon Allen
chairs the Council on Women‘s Con-
cerns.

 

 

 

an open

 

‘By Kevin R. Greene

 

I feel the necessity to respond both to
Robert Smitherman ("Right to Life Only
lnsures Right To Die,” Kernel Feb. 10)
and Glen O’Bryan (”Questions,” Kernel
Feb. 16).

First, O’Bryan. He asked the question
that has puzzled men since we
distinguished Ourselves from other
animals by recognizingour own existence.
This question the question of what man’s
purpose is assumes that man has a
purpose. Moreover, the fact that O'Bryan
is asking for an answer assumes that it we
havea purpose then we can know what it
IS.

I personally believe we do have purpose,
but I stress the word believe. As to the
question of what that purpose is, I would
like to point out thatthis is again a matter
of belief, not knowledge. And I do have a
belief as to what that purpose is, but
because I recognize it is a matter of
beliefand not certainty, I will not attempt
to inflict my belief on him.

Along this line, however, I do have a
question for O'Bryan. if, as he implied,
the purpose of man is to obtain eternal life.
then the question that follows is: What is
the purpose of eternal life? The fact is that
the question of purpose is like a child’s
question of ”why," the answer is subject to
a restatement of the original question.

The next question O‘Bryan asks is when
did ”Smitherman and his followers get the
right to play God?” I should think
O’Bryan would know the answer to that.
In his own Bible it states that when God
created man he gave man ”dominion over
all the earth.” That dominion is also a
responsibility. Because we are in control
of ”spaceship earth” we must choose.
Because of this dominion, and the activity
of choice it forces on us, man’s decisions
are literally earth shaping.

This brings me to Smitherman's article.
He is quite correct in stating that man
must do something about the state of the
world. But what’s new about that?

' Abortion is not

Because of the necessity of choice, hasn’t
this always been thesituation ofman? The
"free ride" isn't over, it never existed!
Later Smitherman referred to "a
collection of undifferentiated cells.“ I beg
to differ! As O'Bryan pointed out, at
conception the genetic code is completed
and a human life exists. Undeveloped
perhaps, but still human.

Smitherman then starts on a one man,
below the belt, slander campaign aimed at.
anti abortion groups, the Catholic church“
and anybody in general who disagrees
with him. To quote Smitherman, or
whoever he was quoting, "And they’re
organized, these scuttletish, led by the
Catholic Church.” First, what’s wrong
with organizing? Would Smitherman like
to have them suppressed? Secondly, they
are not led by the Catholic church. The
Catholic church took a stand based on it's
theology and respect for human life. This
stand should be recognized as a rational
stand and respected as a result of their
system of beliefs. Third, whats so bad
about scuttlefish?

I would like to pointout that Smitherman
did make a very good point—~even now we
cannot feed the world adequately.
Needless to say, if something isn’t done
about the exploding world population, the
unborn may survive abortion only to face
starvation. This is as much a fact as
human life starting at conception.

The two facts, in terms of the abortion
problem, are at opposition, like Hegel's
thesis and antithesis. The fact that human
life starts at conception gives the anti-
abortion arguments an air of truth, butthe
fact that something must done about world
population makes abortion a real, prac-
tical alternative to starvation. Neither
Smitherman nor O’Bryan are entirely
right or wrong. With the abortion question
we face a difficult decision, not an open
and shut case. Moreover, by the fact that
tomorrow’s world will be shaped, for
better or worse, by this decision forces us
to choose.

Since neither alternative seems
favorable, perhaps the answer lies in the
synthesis of both. Certainly, whatever the
answer is, it will not beaneasy one.

 

Kevin R. Greene isa philosophy freshman.

 

 

  

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. February 27. I976

/ , , w m
All Students Are Invited To

College of Engineering

OPEN HOUSE

Saturday, Feb. 28 10 am — 3pm

Afr/Anderson Hall
SEE: Student Proiect Competition Entries
Displays from Industry Departmental
Laboratories, and much more
Also Wenner-Gren laboratory, Highway Research
Laboratory andAgricultural Engineering Building
Open to Public
Come Play Computer Games.

*Refreshments Will Be Serveda:

 

THE‘U. K may oLufpgzscT-rs“

fill ORGY 0F
CHRTOONS

.67 YEARS OF SEX, VIOLENCE, AND GENERAL BAD TASTE

“THE BAND CONCERT"
[ 1935]
An Academy Award Winner from
that bng ago time when Mickey was
an undomesticated Mouse and

”TRIP TO THE MOON"
[190?!

The fist cartoon ever made-11
surrealistic fantasy featuring a
magic umlrella which raps the

moon natives at the flick of a wrist. Donal! looked somewhat like a real

 

Duck.
"GERTIE THE DINOSAUR" "' "MOVING DAY" 11113111
il‘JO‘Ji - .\ Anottl-r color Disney, this one 00-
The first tuly animated cartoon, all , 5'8""19 Blackfeb as the villainous
10,000 frames drawn by \Mnsor I shcntlivm spits out nails and uses
McCay himself. . .,' Donald 5 beak as a spittoon.
biv’ Q £,-
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“FELIX (THE CAT) IN 3 - . BUGS BUNNY'S ,.
FAIRYLAND" 119771 “I. ' »" "HARUM SCAR-UM 11938]
”Gosh I wish l was a fairy!” says Lg.“ -- Thctirst 8.8. color cartoon, an Ode

our lero, and an aroused Witch takes to Anarchy costarring the one am

it from there. T _ only Elmer Fudd.

"ALICE'S EGG PLANT" srnmt- .‘ DAFFY DUCK l1949l
11924} i TEL; too In cobr, our transsexual hero(ine)
ADisney canoononan Egg Layers’ 5"““5' HM a Golden Egg and quickly

strike, wtere the hens need Ex-Lax V- ishes slhe) ham't.

more Iran they need the Clo. fiffifiT'k‘
sip-IKAIJ'I'D

“BARNYARD LODGE"

: 19281
The happy tale of a lecherous tar-
nier who lives happily ever after
with a nymph from the Zodiac.

 

MIGHTY MOUSE 119521

Mighty carries on the class struggle
by dumpmg the tacist king into the
alligatir pit, vmile Sweet Surette
belts out arias of appreciation.

 

BUGS BUNNY'S
"WHAT'S OPERA, DOC?"
[iosbl
An Academy Award winner
featuring Bugs in drag, with Elmer
as his lover!

"BOOP-OOP-A-DOOP"

1 1932
Or the perils of America's favorite
curbsde hostes as she escapes the
prying paws of liar moustachioed
Cll‘CUS manage.

   

ROADRUNNER 1961
Ontheheory hat it you’ veseenone
Roadrunner you' ve seen them all,

we present every Roadrunner ever
made.

“MINNIE THE MOOCHER"
U13?

Betty SplilS the family scene and is

pror'mtly scared out of her tree by a

SLFIL‘s ol goblins Singing Cab

Calloway’ s famous dope craled

chant

 

 

LENNY BRUCE'S
"THANK YOU, MASK MAN"

‘ "PECKER ISLAND” WIN
1 The inlantous Everready Harden

 

l

5 leave. no hole umlugged in his great 19119 so

i crusade to eliminate the last A cartoon version of Bruce’s classic T, .1 - '1 712

i ”.3193 (y Vrgmfly from me bar. skit about the lone Ranger‘s REAL .ge—v-i; ,_ 4:5;
nyard Easily one of the funniest interest in Tonto and Silver. r I ~.-\ ‘ ',_ f»;-

cartoms ever made. .-

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l- e‘dnntmfi-gfi

Fri. 81 Sat. Feb. 27812
Student Center llroom

 

Herbal—f7

 

 

mg. 30 . 1.50

 

 

   

7
fl news briefs

 

 

 

Moynihan leaves U.N.,
will not seek presidency

L‘NITED NATIONS (Am—Daniel Patrick Moynihan bowed out
Thursday as U. S. ambassador to the United Nations, saying his
controversial 3er of talking back to authoritarian regimes was
successful.

Former Pennsylvania Gov. William W. Scranton has been
nominated to succeed Moynihan. Senate confirmation is expected
next week.

Moynihan, returning to his Harvard University professorship,
has decided against seeking the Democratic nomination for the U.
S. Senate seat held by James L. Buckley, New York Republican-
Conservative, the New York Post reported.

Moynihan himself declared last fall he would not leave the United
Nations to run for office, but since then some backers have pushed

his mndidacy.
Moy nihan, 48, said in a farewell speech to the U. S. mission that it

was on instructions from Washington that during his eight months
here he carried on a campaign to defend what he regards as the
shrinking area of freedom in the world.

“I think it is succeeding,” he said.

Panel tables bottle bill;
Berry may try discharge

FRAN KFORT (AH—A Kentucky Senate committee killed a bill
to ban nonneturnable bottles and cans Thursday, but the sponsor
said he still plans to get the full Senate to vote on it.

The Senate. J udiciary-Statutes Committee voted 4 to 2 to table the
bill, SB 59, after an intensive lobbying effort by bottle and can
manufacturers and beer and soft drink retailers and distributors.

The legislation would require a deposit and refund system for all
beer and soft drink containers sold in Kentucky. It is patterned
after a law enacted three years ago in Oregon.

Sen. Jon Berry (D-New Castle) said Thursday’s committee
action does not mean the bill is dead,.

“One way or another we’ll vote on it on the floor, ” Berry said.

He said he may try to have the bill discharged from committee by
a vote of the full Senate. Twenty votes are required to get a
measure out of a Senate Committee.

Examiner says he believes Hearst:
U.S. may have surprise witness

SAN FRANCISCO (AH—A defense psychiatrist described
Patricia Hearst on Thursday as “the only private in an army of
generals” but conceded that he wished he had probed more deeply
her story of life with the Symbionese Liberation Army.

But Dr. Martin Orne maintained under persistent cross-
examination that he still believed the heiress’ account of her un-
derground travels, even without knowing more about a full year
she spent on the run with SLA members William and Emily Harris.

Omes comments came as he concluded a second day of
testimony at Miss Hearst’s bank robbery trial and as the
prosecutor hinted out of court that the government had a surprise
witness waiting in the wings to testify against her.

Something is in the wind,” U. S. Atty. James L. Browning said
when asked about rumors an important witness was on hand for
rebuttal. He would not say who the witness might be.

Ford withdraws Heeper nomination

WASHINGTON (AW—President Ford will withdraw the con-
troversial nomination of James F. Hooper III as one of three
directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority. a White House
spokesman said Thursday.

Pness Secretary Ron Nessen said Hooper had requested the
nomination be withdrawn in the light of negative response on
( apitol Hill. The President will announce another nominee later.
\ossen said The post has been vacant for more than mne months

Ford sent Congress the nomination of Hopper a Mississippi
businessman and dairy farmer last June for the $38 000 a- year
post.

the Kandy Kernel. "4 Journalism the Cadet in 1894. Thepaper
Building, University of Kentucky, waisted coi‘i‘t’igiously as the Kentucky
Lexinom Kentucky, 40505, is mailed tive Kernel since .
tines weddy wringtheyear except during lmytii‘tisitig is intended only to‘help the
totidays and exam periods, and twice reader buy and any false or msleading
WV airing summer session. Third advertising should be reported and will be
class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky, investigated by the editors. Advertising
40511. Sulscriptian rates are Sl2 per toll toum to be false or misleading Will be
semis. Mished by the Kernel Press reportedtotheaetter Business Bureau
lmflmin 1771,me negates

 

 

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campus briefs

 

 

Sullivan award honors students,citiiens:
nominations accepted until March I5

Nominations for the Algernon
Sydney Sullivan Award are being
accepted now until March 15.
The award. which will be
presented for the 50th time at
spring commencement
ceremonies. is presented to a
selected citizen. to a graduating
senior male and to a graduating
senior female.

Nominations for the award
may be made by any member of
the official University com-
munity. Notices have been sent
to faculty members. to presidents
and advisors of students
organizations and to deans.

The Sullivan Awards Com-
mittee, wishing to extend the
scope of nominations, has
received approval from UK
President Dr. Otis A. Singletary
to include the community college
faculties.

. An ageement between the
New York Southern Society and
the University states, “in the
selection of the recipients,
nothing shall be considered ex-
cept the possession of such
characteristics of heart, mind
and conduct as evince a spirit of
love for and helpfulness to other
men and women.”

In making the nonstudent
award, the agreement states, the
recipient may be a “person who
need not be a graduate of any
collge or university, but who
shall have some interest in,
association with or relation to
said institution. official or
otherwise. of a nature to make
this form of recognition by said
university obviously appropriate
and insure his or her proper
appreciation of the same."

   
 
     
   
    
  
   
   
      
    
   
      
     
  
  

   
  

“A wonderful, sad, funny, boisterous,

sensitive movie." —Rex Reed, Daily News

 

NOW PLAYING

EXCLUSIVE tst RUN!
No pinyin: crunch m Part II Tim”:

Nomination forms may be
obtained in Room 20-1. Seaton
Building. All completed
nominations should be returned
to Room 1114. Seaton Building. by
3 pm. March 15.

SWP candidate
to .speak

Peter Camejo. Socialist
\Iorkers Party Presidential
candidate will speak March 2 at 7
pm. in the Student Center
Theater.

Camejo. a 35-year-old New
York City mtive. has been active
in the Socialist movement for 17
years and was involved in the
Berkeley Free Speech
Movement. He was also active in
the movement against the
Vietnam war.

Camejo has said he is against
social services cutbacks and the
assault on the standard of living
by inflation and layoffs.

McCowan named
‘giving iund'

chairman

Robert T. McCowan of
Ashland, an oil company
executive and former Lexington
resident, will serve as 1976
University of Kentucky Annual
Giving Fund chairman. UK
President Otis A. Singletary has
announced.

“The University of Kentucky is
indeed fortunate that Bob Mc-
Cowan has agreed to serve as
chairman of this year's fund
drive," Singletary said. “He is a
distinguished alumnus who will

  

  
 
 
  
  
 
 
    

”:1 2:35. 4:3.
7:20. ,3“:
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bring to the campaign great
dignity and leadership.“

McCowan is a senior vice
president and director of Ashland
Oil Inc. Ashland. Ky.. and is
Ashland Petroleum Company
prsident. a division of Ashland
Oil.

The goal for the 1976 Annual
Giving Fund is $500,000. Last
year‘s fund drive raised $486,000.
exceeding the $450,000 goal.

The UK Annual Givmg Fund
was established in 1971 by the UK
Development Council to raise
private funds to support many
programs throughout the
University.

McCowan graduated from here
in 1951 and was active in
numerous campus organizations
as a student. He is currently a
UK Fellow and a University

Development Council director.

Campus ERA
group to plan
Frankfort rally

The Campus Alliance for the
Equal Rights Amendment will
hold an organizational meeting
Wednesday. March 3 at 7:30 pm.
in Student Center room 107.

Shelly Griffith,
member. said plans for the
Marchti rally in Frankfort will be
finalized.

The Frankfort rally will begin
at 2 pm. at Juniper Hill Park.
Anyme needing a ride to the rally
‘should meet at 12:30 pm. at
Commonwealth Stadium.

 
  
  

alliance A

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, February 27. 1970-6

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Fatigues & Khaki Pants
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