xt7f7m041r41 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7f7m041r41/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-11-20 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, November 20, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 20, 1974 1974 1974-11-20 2020 true xt7f7m041r41 section xt7f7m041r41 Vol- LXVI NO- 74 K

Wednesday. November 20. 1974

ENTUCKY

21‘

an independent student newspaper

Abernathy: North is no UfoPia

By BILL STRAl'B
Kernel Staff Writer

The South will someday lead the
nation in race relations if “it can get
it together" Rev. Ralph David
Abernathy said last night.

Speaking before a moderate sized
crowd in the Student Center. Aber-
nathy said many blacks that fled to
the northern industrial states during
the 19505 and 1960s are now return-
lilg.

“I SEE people packing up. coming
back to the South all the time.“ the
48-yearold Abernathy said. “They
thought they could go to (‘hicago and
find Utopia or New York and find
justice and equality. But they are
coming back all the time because we
may have «former Georgia Gov.
Lester 1 Maddox. but we also have an
understanding and tranquility not
found elsewhere."

“There's no difference between
Northern states. Southern states or
border states except in labels, They
all act the same." Abernathy said.
“In Boston people are rioting be-
cause of school busing. A friend of
mine came to me and said. ‘Boston
is as bad as Mississippi.‘ I looked at
him and said. ‘No. Boston is worse
than Mississippi.“'

ABI-IRNA'I‘HY SAID the anti-bus-
ing to achieve racial balance in
schools demonstrations in Boston
are particularly revolting because it
is the birthplace of freedom and the

first protests. the Boston Tea Party,
was held to progress the cause of
liberty.

“The people of Boston are acting
in a barbaric, disgraceful, shameful
and sinful fashion," Abernathy said.
“The South is going to lead this
nation in relations between black
folks and white folks it we can get it
together."

Abernathy is pastor of the West
Hunter Street Baptist Church in
Atlanta. He has been involved in the
civil rights movement since 1955
when he initiated a bus boycott while
minister of the First Baptist (‘hurch
in Montgomery. His house and
church were firebombed by the Ku
Klux Klan according to Abernathy in
I957.

III-I “AS NAMED president of the
Southern (‘hristian Leadership Con
ference in 1965. holding that position
until recently. Abernathy has been
arrested 18 times for his civil rights
activnties and “would be thrown in
jail a 39111 if it advanced the cause of
freedom."

“This nation is sick with the
cancerous disease of racism,"
Abernathy said in a voice that rose
in emphasis. "This nation must be
taken into the operating room where
you and I must become skilled
surgeons and remove from the body
politic this cancer before it destroys
us.

Abernathy attacked a range of
American political figures —from
George Wallace to Maddox to Presi-
dent Ford ~-for not listening to the
voice of the American people.

(1N FORD. Abernathy said he
travelled across the Pacific Ocean to
Japan to get some more “colored
people" to support his policies.

“The Japanese are not a white
race," Abernathy said. If over two-
thirds ever decide to rise up against
you white folks you‘re in for a bad
and awful time.“

His speech was intermittently
punctuated by shouts and applause
as he gestered with his hands and
lowered his voice in a Southern
preacher‘s manner, He received a
standing ovation at the conclusion.

Abernathy also attacked the pri-
son system because it is “running
over with able-bodied black men."

“IS IT BI'X‘Al'Sl-I black men
commit more crimes than white
men?" he asked. “No. It's that
something is wrong with the system.
Abernathy said no rich children of
white politicians are in jail because
they can afford good lawyers. Poor
blacks cannot afford expensive at-
torneys and wind up with a “lazy"
one that “doesn't do his homework. "

He also said rich white America
must learn to “share the wealth."

“I know it's hard," he said, ”But it
must be done for equality."

Aylesfo rd

zonechange
must wait

By LYNNE FUNK
Kernel Staff Writer

”gm?!“ : am
ttttlol
Orphans ”on
the Salvation in
United Combat
0.35.0.
n W .
girl Scouts of W"

.C I.
VIM .A,

Kernel Sta" Photo by Chuck Combos

A plan to develop an apartment complex
at the intersection of Woodland and Euclid
avenues, which would require a zone
change. will not be considered until next
year, according to Chris King, a staff
member of the Metro Flaming Commis-
sion.

The deadline for a December review of a
zone change was Friday, Nov. 15.

“THEY (THE property owners) sent
over a development plan last week and
there were a lot of mistakes some
concerning open space and setback hous-
ing ordinance requirements," King said.
Property owner William Taylor has not
applied for a zone change.

The property is now zoned R2, a zone
designation that allows for construction of

duplexes. “We believe in enforcement of
the law," said John Calkins, Aylesford
Neighborhood Association (ANA), presi-
dent. “This is an R2 zone and we expect it
to continue as such. If a property owner
wants to rebuild he can build withing the
zone requirements."

MAINTAINING THE status quo of the
neighborhood has been a goal of the ANA
for quite some time. according to Calkins.

Residents of the Aylesford area, which
extends from Clay Avenue on the east to
Rose Street on the west and Main Street on
the north to the University on the south.
have been threatened by various repre-
sentatives of fast food chains several
times. Calkins said.

A zone change that would have permit-

By,(‘lll'(‘K (‘OMHES
Kernel Staff Writer

With the 1974-75 United Way campaign
scheduled to end on campus today. the
University is approximately 312.000 short
of this year‘s goal. according to Norman
Parks, associate director for United Way
of the Bluegrass.

The University has contributed $80,617 to
date. compared with last year's total of
$80,991 and this year's goal of $92,897.
Parks said.

FACULTY. STAFF. graduate students
and retired personnel have contributed all
but $168.34 given by undergraduates. who
gave approximately $1,200 last year.

The overall goal of the campaign is

21 University of Kentucky

Lexington. Ky. 40506

Rev. RALPH DAVID ABERNATHY

ted the construction of a McDonald's
restaurant at Woodland and Euclid ave-
nues was denied in June. This, and other
attempts to invade the residential area,
has kept the ANA busy. Calkins said.

HE SAID the group has set a goal to keep
intrusions by business interests to a
minimum.

A zone change can only be granted if the
Metro Planning Commission finds that the
change is in agreement with Lexington's
comprehensive plan. or when the original
zoning classification becomes inappropri-
ate. or when several significant changes
alter the area.

(‘ontinued on page 12

$1,082,600. an increase of 25.2 per cent over
last year's goal.

George Herman. director for the United
Way of the Bluegrass, explained that the
large goal increase was simply made to
meet the estimated needs of the 21
agencies funded by the organization.

Herman said inflation and the increased
goal had caused volunteers and staff
members to work harder than last year.

Employe giving in the community
showed the greatest increase. according to
Herman. with increases of as much as 40
per cent over last year.

Herman added that he expected the final
figure to be an increase of eight to 12 per
cent over last year‘s figure.

 

 Editor-induct. Linda Carnes
Managing editor, Ron Mitchell
Associate editor, Nancy Dalv
Editorial page editor. Dan Cruicner

Hoover

When Atty. Gen. William Saxbe an-
nounced that the FBI would release a
report detailing "dirty tricks” which

had been used against domestic
political organizations. there was

hope that this would mark the end of
the J. Edgar Hoover era in the FBI.

Hoover was noted for having a
general disregard for civil liberties,
particularly in dealing with leftist
political groups. The report on FBI
counterintelligence tactics merely
confirms what was already known
—that Hoover waged an almost-pri-
vate war against many American
citizens whom he considered subver-
sive.

It may be. as Saxbe said at a press
conference Monday. that the FBI no
longer uses disruption tactics to
undermine domestic groups. but the
Hoover mentality is still ascendant in
the FBI. Hoover‘s replacement. Clar-
ence W. Kelley. defended the use of
"dirty tricks" at the same press
conference where Saxbe denounced

Features edior, Larry Mead
Arts editor. Greg Hotelich
Sports editor, Jim Malloni
Photography editor. Ed Gerald

Editorials represent theopinions ot the editors. nottne University

editorials ‘

mentality still influences FBI

 

under the circumstances would have
been an abdication of its responsibili-
ties to the American people." Kelley
said.

He also called for congressional
legislation to allow the FBI "under
emergency situations. to do some
things which counteract the effec—
tiveness” of extremist groups.

Toey Wilkinson

Saxhe firmly opposed Kelley‘s desire
for legislation to enable the FBI to
continue its counterintelhgence act»
ivities. However. Saxbe also said he
did not favor legislation specifically
prohibiting domestic spying. saying.
“I don‘t think you can pass laws that
would completely foreclose any such
activities.“

correct in that assumption which only
underscores the need for an FBI
director who has a more sensitive
understanding of the difference be-
tween protecting the citizenry and
provoking it to violence. Hoover
lacked that understanding and so. it
appears. does Kelley.

The best suggestion of the day was
Saxbe‘s call for a joint House-Senate
committee to oversee the FBI's
operations The FBI has for too long
existed as almost a separate branch
of government. controlled by a direc—
tor whoseauthority was rarely quest—
ioned even by Presidents.

There is no assurance that a
congressional committee would eta
tectively curb the FBI. any more than
other committees have controlled the
military or the HA. unless such a
committee was given full access to
FBI activities and files

.\n informed congressional coni~
mittee with authority over the FBI
would truly mark the end of the .I

them. "For the FBI to have done less It

is somewhat

At M.I. King Library
Browsing through books you never knew existed

By JOHN SCHAAF

The daily routine of this place,
the classes and the cloudy wea-
ther, come down hard on a person
who still has memories of sum-
mer days spent playing on the
rocky coast of Oregon or jumping
into incredibly pure glacial
streams in the mountains of
British Columbia.

It is these clammy Lexington
days which may cause us to
grasp for any example of absur-
dity in order to relieve the pain
we feel when we look at ourselves
in this wet trashbag of a town and
remember how much better we
felt in the places were were just a
few months ago.

Ah, sweet daydreams of the
Rocky Mountains are blasted
away by the beginning of yet

another lecture in yet another.

classroom by another
professor. I thought I was caught
in the midst of 50 minutes of strict
academic babbling when the
professor says, “I understand the
King Library has a great many
books about drugs, and sex and
revolution in their restricted
collection ——someone should
check that out.”

Since the existence of this
collection had somehow escaped
my notice for three years, I
decided to have a look.

It was there alright. If the King
Library were a human body you
would say these books were
locked away in the small intes-
tine.

But they are there. Everything
your mother was afraid you
would read if you went away to
college.

Most impressive of all these
‘restricted' books are the 15
volumes which comprise the
“Complete Works of the Marquis
De Sade" (written in French)
plus what is termed Sade’s
crowning achievement, “The 120

 

Days of Sodom." The foreword in
this book says, “Nowhere does
Sade’s assault upon ordinary
standards reach such a pitch of
unpitying absoluteness. nowhere
is its violence so categorical or
sustained for so long a time as in
‘The 120 Days of Sodom."‘

There seemed to be many vital
topics represented in this hidden
collection. In addition to sex and
violence, drugs and anarchy
were also on hand along with
such lesser lights as photography
and art. Even the poetry of such
dangerous men as Rod McKuen,

heartening

that

LeRoi Jones. and Lawrence F‘er~
iinghetti was in there.

I couldn‘t figure out exactly
why some of these works were
‘restricted‘ but I had no problem
seeing the potential danger of
freely circulating a book such as
“Marijuana,” edited by Erich
Goode. For example, this book
contained the following provaca—
tive paragraphs in an essay titled
“The Weed of Madness.“

“When a person smokes a
marijuana cigarette, he may
become a calm philosopher, a
merry reveler, a cruel murderer,
or a mad insensate.

The attorney general is probably

”There is. alas. only one thing
of which an individual may be
sure when he lifts a reefer to his
lips and takes a puff; that is.
whatever it tells him while he is
under its spell is a he «an artful
deception.

“The marijuana user. freed
from the restraint of gravitation.
bumps his head against the sky.
Street lights beconte orangutangs
with eyes of fire. Huge slimy
snakes crawl through small
cracks in the sidewalk and pre-
historic monsters, intent on his
destruction, emerge from key-
holes. and pursue him down the

 

HICII 0! TH! ROCK

Letters to the editor
Free publicity never hurt anyone

I am overly enthused by your
effort to inform the student body
of up-coming concerts in the
surrounding area (Frankfort,
Louisville, Cincinnati, etc.) and
I'm sure that the promoters of
these concerts don’t mind a little
free advertising. But you seem to
be looking everywhere except
under your own nose.

Your “concert highlights”
section in Friday and Monday’s
editions failed to mention the
Randy Newman concert at the
Student Center this Friday, Nov
22, 1974.

I am aware that there are
posters up around campus and
there have been ads in your

paper, but if you are going to help
out the concerts in other cities,
you should also give some space
to concerts on campus!

Besides, a little free publicity
never hurt anyone.

Rick Miller
Mini-Concert chairperson

Edgar Hoover era

street. He feels squirrels walking
over his back while he is being
pelted by some unseen enemy
with lightning bolts."

This very illuminating essay
was written by Earle and Robert
Rowell. two brothers who must
have had access to some truly
extraordinary illegal substances.

()ther books in the collection
relating to drugs include “Flesh
of the Gods —-The Ritual Use of
Hallucinogens" (which contains
a chapter entitled “The Divine
Mushroom of Immortality“) and
“Drugs, Mysticism, and Make-
believe" (including a chapter
”Salvation through Death")

For the amateur revolutionary
there are several ‘how-to‘ books
including “The ()rganizer‘s Man-
uel," Jerry Rubin‘s “Do It,“ and
“The Anarchist Cookbook."
which contains some lessons in
sabotage and weaponry.

Providing equal time for those
who don‘t sympathize with vio-
lent revolutionaries, the M. i.
King Library has thoughtfully
included a copy of “Protection
against Bombs and Incendiaries
for Business. Industrial, and
Educational Institutions" by
Earl A. Pike. Captain, US.
Marine Corps (Retired). Captain
Pike dedicates his book to his
“associates in bomb disposal
who, because of their commit-
ment, enable America to sleep a
little more serenely in a time of
crisis."

More importantly, Capt. Pike, I
believe my mother can sleep
more serenely knowing that
books such as “Female Imper-
sonators in America," “The Dope
Book," or “Country Music USA"
(with pornographic shots of Er-
nest Tubb), are not being loosely
passed around on the campus of
the University of Kentucky.

John Schaaf is a journalism
senior. He will be writing a
weekly column for the Kernel.

    
   
   
  
   
   
      
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
    
   
   
    
     
  
  
     
      
    
  
   
  
  
   
 
 
  
  
    
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
 
    
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
 

:‘S

—'~"1fl'if’.n‘mo

 

.::~ra::asam

 

   

   
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
   
 
  
  
   
  
  
 
 
  
 
   
  
  
  
   
  
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
 
   
  
  
  
 
 
  
   
 
 
  
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
 
   
       

c h

it

an
he
it
to

m—
Bl

ry
ks
in-
nd

 

 

 

opinions from

Law school curriculum
favors steak, artichokes

By BARBARA SUTHERLAND
and

DICK BURR

Long before we entered law school, we
were concerned about the need for
fundamental political and economic
change in this country. We entered law
school hoping that by gaining legal skills
we could aid this process. We have been
consistently disappointed in the failure of
the law school to provide a curriculum
relevant to our concerns. Because we have
considered the law school to be so
non—progressive, we were surprised that
its first progressive step, offering a course
in social legislation, met with such an
adverse reaction from those who thought
that social legislation had taken the place
of workmen's compensation.

The law school curriculum produces
lawyers (ll who know only how to serve
the needs of the prosperous and the
powerful, and (2) who know very little
about the possibilities and limits of
legally-initiated social, political, and eco-
nomic change.

TH E (‘l'RRI(‘l'l,l’M, as published in the
197374 College of Law Bulletin. is com-
prised of 48 courses which can be broken
down into seven categories of the law:
property, business and commercial, per-
sonal injury, criminal, administrative,
constitutional. and procedural. Twenty-six
of these courses fall into the first three
categories and form the core of the
curriculum,

Property law is concerned with people
who already own property and who wish to
exchange it for more property. to leave it
to their heirs, or to give it to their favorite
charity. The problem with this area of the
law is that it benefits only those who have
prospered economically. It ignores those
who barely make ends meet or who don‘t
make ends meet at all. In fact, the one
area of property law relevant to the
masses of people, landlord-tenant law, is
not covered in detail by any of the courses.

The courses in business and commercial
law teach students the legal details
governing commercial transactions, the
ways of hiding profits in the maze of tax
regulations, the myriad government regu—
lations concerned with corporate struct-
ure. finance, and securities, and the
remedies of creditors against debtors.
Implicit in these courses, 13 in all, is that
the lawyer‘s role is merely to oil the
machine of business and keep it running

smoothly and efficiently. There is no
critical approach to the law controlling
business. How the law might change the

nature of corporate business to make it

less concerned with profits and more
concerned with the human problems it
creates among its workers and among
consumers is not even a consideration in
these courses.

THE THIRD major category of law
school courses benefits people who suffer
personal injuries due to the acts of
another. This area of the curriculum is the
area in which most lawyers “make their
fortune.“ This fortune-making is at the
expense of the injured victims, for
one-third of the damages awarded to the
victims lines the collective pockets of the
legal profession. Although it seems incon-
sistent to take one-third of the sum of
money which. in theory, is awarded to
make an injured person whole, law
students are never challenged to develop a
better system for commnsating both
victims and attorneys.

The other 22 courses fall into the four
remaining categories: nine in procedure,
four in constitutional law (Civil Rights and
Civil Liberties offer a bright spot here),
three in administrative law, and one in
criminal law. Of the five remaining
courses, only social legislation and envi-
ronmental law have the potential of
dealing with the abuses of capitalism.

It is interesting that the demand for the
addition of workmen’s compensation to the
spring schedule has come, not from
wild—eyed radicals or do-gooders, but
rather from the more conservative branch
of the third year class. Why is it that these
not-too-altruistic young men are so inter—
ested in an area of law which ostensibly
relates to the needs of working people?
The answer is simple: workmen‘s compen-
sation is a “bread and butter” course.

WORKMEN‘S compensation work is
relatively simple and can become routine
to the lawyer who handles many such
claims. In spite of the fact that the lawyer
does nothing particularly herculean in
handling a workmen’s comp claim, while
the worker wins his or her award at the
expense of temporary or permanent loss of
health, or eventual loss of life as in a black
lung case; and in spite of the fact that the
compensation award is rarely enough to
support the disabled worker and his or her
family at more than a subsistence level; in

inside and outside the university community"

 

spite of all this, the lawyer will receive up
to 20 per cent of the worker’s compensa—
tion award. That is why workmen’s
compensation is called a bread and butter
course. but it could more accurately be
called a bread and water course -— bread
and water for the worker, steak and
artichokes for the lawyer.

The social legislation course can be seen
as not too unlike the workmen’s compensa-
tion course. Social legislation will hopeful-
ly begin to teach law students some
methods for helping poor and working
people obtain benefits they need and
deserve.

A course which teaches one how to help a
disabled person obtain Supplemental
Security Income is no less useful, from the
standpoint of the person to be helped, than
a course which teaches one how to help a
disabled person obtain workmen’s com-
pensation. The only difference is that there
is no money in poverty law, and there’s
lots of money in workmen‘s comp. That is
why social legislation is of “low utility"
while workmen‘s compensation is “essen-

 

 

 

Victor C. Juhasz

tial". The implication is clear: the
function of a law school, even a state-
supported law school, is not to train
attorneys to meet the needs of the people of
the state, but to train attorneys to meet
their own needs, at the very expense of the
people of the state.

BY NOW IT should be quite clear that
the law school curriculum is in no danger
of succumbing to a “trend toward relevan-
cy" by virtue of the inclusion of social
legislation or the deletion of workmen’s
compensation from the spring schedule.

A growing number of law students feel
deeply alienated from the present curricu-
lum, yet we too wish to be lawyers. We
wish to learn legal skills which will be of
use to the masses of people in this country.
Social legislation is a very minimal step in
this direction.

 

Barbara Sutherland and Dick Burr are
second-year law students and members of
the UK chapter of the National Lawyers
Guild.

Grievance procedure: Riding the merry-go-round

By RON JACKSON
(Editor’s note: Ron Jackson filed a
grievance with the Personnel department
last March. This comment concerns the
University grievance procedure.)

I personally find it to be a joke, or
merry-go-round full of Walt Disney char-
acters. By saying so, I might add that the
Personnel which you complain to, only
give the disposition of the University while
pretending to be very interested in helping
resolve the grievance. However, they
know what the problem is before a
complaint is filed, it just depends on
what length of discrimination an employe
will endure before he or she feels like the
only alternative left is to file a grievance.
Only to find out that the selected
committee is riding on the same merry—go-
round.

They send you from one character to the
next, and before you get out of their office,
they‘re calling the one you’re on your way
to see to prepare him in advance of what to
anticipate. They know what you are going
to say before you say it, or by conversing
with them, it seems that they‘re saying to
themselves, when was the last time I
heard that, or why did it take him so long
to find out how the University works
around here?

HOWEVER, I can recall when I first
applied for a job at the University. Upon
completion of my applicaton, a voice
sounding like a recording was saying the
only openings available was in the
Janitorial Department. By looking around
campus should confirm most of the Black
Status. Meanwhile, I found out that it
wasn‘t necessary to go back to the

Personnel department to apply for open-
ings in the future, because they're
basically filled ii the Physical Plant
Division, and later sent to the Personnel
department as being filled. The only jobs
that aren‘t filled by Physical Plant
directly are janitorial jobs which are
frequently vacant, because they are low
paying jobs, whereas medium pay jobs are
consistently filled by Physical Plant, and
later sent to the Personnel dept. There-
fore, the jobs can‘t be posted as an

opening.

Perhaps the grievance procedure is
outdated and should be revised, or the
intent of the grievance is to serve the
University, rather than the employe.

One employe in a supervisory role
assured me that I was wasting my time
filing a grievance. because the final

decision would end Up, just where I made
my first complaint ~with the grievance
procedure. At first it didn‘t ring a bell, but
later it was very clear as to what he was
saying. I assume that he meant, how can a
committee consisting of University em-
ployes be impartial, when they have the
same type of indirect discrimination that
exist within their own departments?

SINCE THE grievance committee didn‘t
rule in my favor, but by conversing with a
few committee members, informed me
that they submitted a list of charges to the
president, I would like to know the
complaint, since I was the employe who
filed the grievance. What was submitted to
Dr. Singletary'.’

 

Ron Jackson is an employe of Physical
Plant.

 

 

 I—TIIE KENTI'CKY KERNEL. Wednesday, November 20. N74
GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION

 

news briefs
H/j, tuRHAND MA“ n. mint: MALL x1 rArctt: MALL
W 2W l "W I! . I" A n 0
,‘Anh.i)cgu.?'::a:[.mflibi‘iiN NAHURLSV'HIINIWA'I'NED) Nimoinwmumw‘vmiinzui Aldes ‘n'a "fed '*Ch ell

- . *‘3‘K‘sfln. ‘

Highcountryadventuie. to fake cover-up blame

TIM“
' . .~ . ' . _ I ,, 7, m y WASHINGTON (AP) «Two White House aides. faced with news
( z 5 ' v V. . - 5 that the seams of the Watergate cover-up were popping, urged then
i . , ' ' ~ ’ .V 7 President Nixon to have former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell take
The Trial . ‘ ‘ i ‘ ii the blame and face criminal indictment for the scandal.
0f _ ' .. 7 _ “The jig is up." Watergate cover-up trial defendant John I).
Billy JaCk ' i ' Erhlichman urged Nixon to tell Mitchell on April H, 1973.
Times i u i .o 1 no i. on No passes n...“ 7 ., . ,, 1 2. . .5 - Armed with indications that the two Watergate principals were
r~_ B'imm Mam“ Now 4.,“ 5m." .5 "us. ".5 about to begin confessing to federal prosecutors. Ehrlichman
L_s "' WWW-15 _ _ F4 “mwmumans "N ” ~ ‘ _ advised the president to tell Mitchell that he must “recognize that

you are not going to escape indictment. There's no way..."
Watergate prosecutors introduced into evidence the tape
recording of a one-hour. 56-minute conversation among Nixon,
l‘lhrlichman and cover-up defendant ll. It. llaldeman The
recording had been released previously by the White House.
Over and over. the jury heard Haldcman and Ehrlichman seek to
‘ ' persuade Nixon that only if Mitchell were to sacrifice himself
would Watergate investigators be at least temporarily satisfied

UMW seems ready
The COMPARATIVE LITERATURE Program at UK '0 return '0 negofiafions

BOTH CINEMAS-BARGAIN MATS.EVERY DAY ‘TIL 2130P.M.' $1.25

 

is desi ned to rovide a challenge for students in literature. lt operates in coniunction with the language . . . . , , .. \ y . . . . i . .. v
H departrgients atElK and allows a student to develop a broad base for the further study at a single literature or for “ ANHIN“ “)5 ‘5“ ’ I“ 4‘“ l -‘ "l H“ l ”I“ (l 31”“ “ ”I l“ l -‘

specialization in comparative literature A maior in a language and literature can be combined with a maior in reconvened 'l'uesdav lippitl‘t‘lllh pt‘t‘pttl'lllg to suck it l‘t'opt‘llltlil (,1

comparative literature without additional course work, and students with such maiors should consider taking ‘ ' .

advantage of the opportunity to broaden their perspectives while undergraduates before me need to speCIBI'Ie contract negotiations with the coal industiy

curing graduate school makes this more difficult Studying literature from a comparative Viewpoint is a Tll‘c' lllllllll's :lti-lllt'llllwl‘ lltll‘gilllllllg t'llllllt'll ““5 t'\pt'i‘lt‘ti It)

worthwhile and stimulating undertaking and will give a new slant to things that you are likely to Mid Quite I . .

valuable. recommend that l .\l\\ l’resident .\rnold Miller return to the

 

spring Samara Emmfi Open to A“ S'Udenm negotiating table to win some modifications ill a tentatix c contract

CLT 265 . Studies in the Contemporary Scen agreement initialed \Hlll the industry last \u‘i'k
. - , t.
cLTaoo 59mm" comp U M'mwo'ogy "illiviously. some parts are going to hate to go back for

renegotiation." said a union source

 

 

 

INTE R ESTE D? Meanwhile. the strike by the lleholl l'.\l\\' miners who dig To per
You should contact one of the following people for further information cent of the nation‘s soft coal entered its second week Tuesday To
General Advisors: limit the strike to three weeks. the union may have to present the
Dr. Rupert T. Pickens (Foreign Literatures) minL‘rs (with a tentative agreement for ratification no later than this
. wee en .
Dr. John Greenway (English and Honors, OT NO' 1303) Approval of the bargaining council is necessary before the pact
Maior Literature Advisors: can be submitted for [‘(Hlk'illld’lllt‘ ratification. a process that union
Classics: Dr. Hubert Martin (OT No. “67) officials say will take about 8 to to days
English: Dr. Robert Evans (OT No. 233) ,
French: Dr. Rupert T. Pickens (OT No.1029) PreSIdenT Ford seI’S quotas
German: Dr. Inge Solbrig (OT No. 1067) . .
Slavic and Oriental: Dr. Gerald Janecek (OT No. 1177) ‘I’O PrevenT sugar price hlkes
Spanish and ltalian: Dr. Brian Dendle (OT No.1135) . ‘ ’ ‘
WASHINGTON lAl’l President Ford Monday set a quota of

 

seven million tons for next year's sugar imports He said the limit
would help keep sugar prices from rising

Setting the 197:3 quota probably will not discourage any sugar
imports because 1974 sugar imports are running at about six
million tons.

But Ford noted in a statement released here that prices on
imported sugar would increase automatically about t 3 cents per
pound when the existing Sugar Act expires llec it] unless he look

A MAJOR TALENT special action.
IN A __ He noted that while there is no risk that the nation will run out of
MIN. CONCERT sugar. he said. “we may well experience higher prices than we

ATMOSPHERE would like until production catches up Wlill demand."

Chrysler closes five of six
U.$. car assembly plants

RANDY DETROIT (Al’l (‘hrysler (‘orp said Tuesday tive of its six 1'8.
car assembly plants wdl close and most of its 4:! manufacturing
plants will sharply cut back operations between Thanksgiving and
Jan. 6.

"Ewmn" The unprecedented closings will force the layoff of 70.000 hourly
workers. or about 70 per cent of the company's total l.’ S.

.. workforce.
\ | " CONCERT The cutbacks will trim 50,000 cars frotn the firm‘s fourth-quarter

\

production schedule. Poor car sales and a huge inventory of unsold
models forced the cutbacks. the firm said

The nation's No. 3 auto maker also said its 43 manufacturing
plants will be partially shut down. operating on sharpl reduced

FRIDAY, NOV 22 8 PM schedules during the same period.

(‘hrysler said only its St Louis. Mo . and Windsor. (lnt . plants
SHC BALLROOM Will remain operating during the remainder of the year Mi” Jan~
TICKETS $3 50 6. all six l’ S, assembly plants will oppmui on a limited production

basis. the company said.
NOW ON SALE RM. 20] SC THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

 

 

 

The Kentucky Kernel, ltd Journalism Budding, University of Kentucky.
Lexington. Kentucky. 40506, is mailed live times weekly during the school year
exccp‘ during holidays and exam periods, and twice weekly during the summer
session. Third—class postage paid at Lexington. Kentucky. 4051i.

Published by the Ke