xt7pvm42vg0r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pvm42vg0r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-12-03 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, December 03, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 03, 1973 1973 1973-12-03 2020 true xt7pvm42vg0r section xt7pvm42vg0r The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 81
Monday, December 3, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Tobacco

institute

head picked

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

TIIE HEAD OF THE pathology
department at the University of Manitoba
in Winnipeg, Canada, has been recom-
mended as the new director of the Ken-
tucky Tobacco and Health Research In-
stitute.

The Louisville Courier Journal reported
in today’s edition Dr. John Poynter
Wyatt, 57, will be recommended to the UK
Board of Trustees Dec. 11 by President
Otis A. Singletary.

WYATT CONFIRMED Sunday night
from his home in Winnipeg that he is the
six-member search committee’s choice
and “any final decision will be made by the
Board."

The resignation of Dr. Robert Griffith
last December left the post vacant. UK
Vice President for Administration Dr.

Alvin Morris has served as interim

director.

Morris, when contacted Sunday night,
said “it is not inaccurate information" but
no official University comment can be
given before the Board decision. All
members of the search committee
referred the matter to Morris for comment
and information.

Announcement of the committee‘s
choice is being withheld by Morris, the
search committee and the Tobacco In—
stitute Board until the official con—_
firmation by the Board.

Wyatt now serves in an advisory
capacity to the institute. He is married,
has four children, and served as chief
pathologist for St. Louis County, Missouri
and pathology professor at the University
of St. Louis from 1949-67.

He was a major in the Royal Canadian
Army Medical Corps from 194145 and
became coroner‘s pathologist for Toronto
in 1946 until 1949.

He received his MD from the University
of Manitoba in 1938 and had a pathology
fellowship to Banting Institute in Toronto
from 1939-41.

Other honors and organizations Wyatt
held are: Pathology Society of Great
Britian and Ireland; American
Association of Pathologists and Bac-
teriologists; consultant, silicosis board,
Ontario Provincial Government. 1946-49;
and is listed in American Men and Women
of Science. The search committee con-
sidered and inter-viewed some 30
persons. narrowing the final consideration
list to six.

 

'New Deal'?

Meal coupons
may reduce

food costs

By LINDA (‘ARNES
Kernel Staff Writer

News In Brlef

By The Associated Press
and The Kernel Staff

0 Legislators meet
OPatfon keeps pay
“November prices up
'Taxes made public

0Comef visible

OToday's weather...

A PROPOSED food plan for residence hall contracts,
drafted by the Business Affairs office, would eliminate the
present three-meal plan and change to a cashcoupon
system.

Students living in dormitories would pay $500 per year and
be given coupon books worth that amount to be used for pre-
priced items in all cafeterias.

Under the proposed plan students would pay for every
serving and would pay again if additional servings were
desired.

A SERIES OF coupon books would be issued each semester
and would have a cash value of 5, 10, 25 cents and a dollar.
The 10 books would be worth $50 each and could be used in
any food service unit on campus at any time they are in
operation.

The new food plan has been proposed to eliminate a large
price increase that will be necessary next year.

If the existing food service plan is to be continued for 1974-
75, an increase of $71 would be necessary for the three-meal
plan with a $44 increase for the breakfast-and-dinner plan
and a $45 increase for a choice of any two meals.

PRICES WOL'LD rise to $658 for the three meal plan, $534
for any two meals and $493 for breakfast and dinner.

The increase is necessary to cover the rising food costs,
said Larry Forgy, vice president for business affairs. He
added the new plan was designed to give students more
flexibility along with holding down the cost.

Students could use the $500 amount any time during the
semester. “If a student was gone for the weekend or did not
feel like eating his meals on campus on a certain day. he
would not losea mealas he does now," Forgy said.

SINCE THE average student eats less than 70 per cent of
the meals contracted for, this plan would allow the student to
spend about $3.50 per day for meals.

Prices and plans

Present System

Total
$1,035
1,075
1.174

Iypc of Plan Room Board
Plan I 8&1) s38? $449
Plan II (‘hoice of '2 387 189
Plan III 3 meals 387 .387

Percentage Increase
in Board

Proposed Increase in Present Plan

Room Board

3587 $493
567 534
587 658

Total Increase

31.060 544 "-7
1.121 45 “-2
1.245 71 12-1

\Iternat‘n‘e Proposal

Total
$1087.00

Board
$500.00

\Iternatiu- Proposal (‘ompared to Existing 3 Plans

Present

$1.036
1.076
1.174

Proposed Increase

$1.08? 551
1.087 51‘
1.087 587

Plan I
Plan II
Plan III

 

 

 

 

He added the proposed plan would put the responsibility on
the student for the amount of food he takes away from the
line and for budgeting his money.

ALSO. THERE would be no replacement of lost books
because they would be the same as cash. Students living off
campus would not need to buy meal books because cash could

This amount would be adequate for the average student to
provide a well-balanced meal with the necessary dietary

requirements, Forgy said.

O KENTUCKY DAM VILLAGE STATE
PARK. Ky. — Kentucky‘s state legislators
gathered here Sunday night for their
bienniel pre-legislative conference, with
their main task to select the leadership for
the 1974 General Assembly.

The major contests to be decided in
party caucuses Monday morning are
among the Republicans. The Republican
ranks have been thinned considerably
since the 1972 session with only 20
Republicans left in the 100-member House
and nine in the 40-member Senate.

0 FT. KNOX. Ky. — The son of World
War II Gen. George S. Patton has
debunked the romantic notion that his
famous father gave his Army pay to
charny.

(‘urator John (‘ampbell of the Patton
Museum at Ft Knox said he had heard the
pay-locharity story for 30 years. and
received many inquiries about it.

Patton .lr. replied that the story is false.
"My old man always took his pay." he
wrote. "This is a big legend."

0 \E“ YORK—Grocery prices went up
again in November after taking a briefdip
during October. an Associated Press
marketbasket survey shows. The news
came amid warnings of more increases
and possible shortages because of the fuel
crisis. The Dec. 1 survey showed the
marketbasket bill went up in November in
9 of 1:1 titles checked. increasing an
average three per cent.

. \t'.\SIII.\'t;'I‘ttN — President Nixon
paid 578.651 in federal income taxes for the
years 196'.) through 1972. White House
documents showed Sunday.

be used at all cafeterias.
Porgy said the $500amount was decided on because it was
determined to be the breaking point

for keeping the

Nixon was listed as paying $4.298 for
1972. $878 for 1971 and $789 for 1970 the
years he claimed substantial deductions
for state property taxes. mortgage interest
and donation of his vice presidential
papers.

The stillconfidential documents. being
prepared for release this week as part of
the President‘s ”Operation (‘andor." list
the biggest payment. 972.686. as being
made for 1969.

0(‘,\.\IRRII)(;E. Mass. —— (‘omet
Kohoutek finally has become visible to the
naked eye. But you have to be up pretty
early in the morning to see it. Kohoutek
became visible without the aid of
telescopes or binoculars late last week.
appearing in the southeast sky about an
hour before sunrise.

...unseasonably nice

Today's weather will be partly cloudy
but warm with a high in the 605 going to a
low in the 405 for tonight. Tuesday will be
increasingly cloudy with a chance of
showers.

 

  

l The Kentucky Kernel

113 Journalism Building. University of Kentucky. Lexingtm. 1&me
Established 182v.

Mikt- (‘lark. Managing Editor
itill \‘traub. Sports Editor
(‘urol Cropper. Arts Editor
Kay (byte. Nancy Daly and
Bruce Winges. ('opy Editors

Steve Swift. Editor-ii‘t‘hief

Jenny Swartz. News Editor

Bruce Singleton. Photo Manager
('harles Wolfe. Practicum Manager
John Ellis. Advertising Manager

The Kentucky Kernel is math-d five times weekLv during the school year except
on holidays and exam periods. and twice weekly in the summer.

Published by the Kernel Press inc.. 1272 Priscilla Lane. Lexington. Ky. Begun as
the Cadet in 1094 and published continuously as he Kentucky Kernel since 1915.
The Kernel Press inc. founded 1971. First class postage paid at Lexington. Ky.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or
misleading advertising should be reported to the edittrs.

Editorials represent the opinion of the editors. not the Universin

at

 

Safety attitude appalling

The laissez-faire attitude of residence hall personnel
toward fire safety on campus is appalling. Because the UK
Division of Public Safety and Security conducts annual
sessions on fire safety we assumed residence heads knew
how to act in emergencies.

Last week, though. when Blanding IV personnel were
looking for a carbon dioxide extinguisher to put out an
electricalf ire a room received nearly $500 damage. The fire
was eventually put out by the Metro Fire Department.

According to Joe Burch, director of the division of public
safety and security, the fire could have been easily ex-
tinguished had someone unplugged the electrical appliance.
Having done this, a water extinguisher would have been
satisfactory to use.

As if this incident isn’t enough cause for concern, a Kernel
survey of 14 of the 17 dorm head residents indicates only
eight of these persons could correctly identify the type of
extinguishers located in their dorms.

Thankfully no one was injured in the last fire. Next time
the ending may be different.

it‘s obvious to us that residence hall personnel should be
required to attend safety sessions for the well-being of those
in the dorms. Everyone from head residentis to corridor
advisers should participate in these programs, proving to
UK officials their knowledge of fire equipment.

 

 

 

Letters

 

Coin flipping

I would like to express agreement with
the Kernel editorial of Wednesday, Nov.
28. The idea of flipping a coin to decide
which winner should indeed win is absurd.
Tim Cunningham and Mark Kleckner have
equal rights to the 15th seatts) by each
gaining the same 274 votes for this
position.

if Student Government is to represent a
form of democracy, it has defeated its
purpose in this election. Both men were
elected by concerned students of this
University as representatives of the
voters’ rights and opinions, and the have a
voice with the group of students com-
prising the Student Senate. If the voting
rights of these University students are
allowed to be abused in a manner such as
this, by not permitting all of their newly
elected senators to take office, then what
incentive is there for future participation
in Student Government organizations and
policies?

Think about it. Does the responsible
decision making process of our Student
Government rest with a tossed coin—
rather than the voting results of 1,705
concerned and active students?

Nancy Cassie
Special Ed.—sophomore

Don't blame us

The following fraternities on Maxwell
Street would like to disavow any
association with the incident involving a
person being accosted verbally by
fraternity members at 232 E. Maxwell.
The undersigned were not involved and
regret that the incident did occur.

Gary T. Henry.
Corresponding Scribe.
Alpha Epsilon Pi

William Wassmer.
President,
Sigma Pi.

 

 

Off field piling on not penalizedL

LOS ANGELES—In football when a man is
down and the whistle has blown and you
jump on top of him . it‘s called piling on and
you are penalized for it.

Off the playing field, however, no
penalty attaches to piling on. Take the
case of Lance Rentzel. a 30-year-old
professional pass catcher who was suc-
cessively employed by the Minnesota
Vikings. the Dallas Cowboys, and Los
Angeles Rams until he was suspended by
Pete Rozelle. the Commissioner of the
National Football League.

While playing on his first two teams
Rentzel was caught and convicted of the
crime of exposing himself to small girls.
Jokes about flashers are fashionable just
now. but the actual occurrence isn‘t
amusing. Nevertheless two judges in two
different courts saw fit not to send Rentzel
to jail on condition that he put himself
under the care of a psychiartist.

THE FIRST TIME he didn't: the second
time he did. and now it remains to be seen
whether he's conquered his problem. After
the second crime in Dallas three years ago
he also received large doses of painful
national publicity. Because he was a blond
glamor boy from a well-to-do Oklahoma
family married to a night club singer, the
media attention was as inevitable as it
was probably prurient.

A number of other people said tasteless
things to him and about him, but. by and
large, the fans and his fellow football

... -". ..... .x‘-'~.‘;.-.."‘:---‘.-..'.'.'..'..-~-

players supported him. Rozelle allowed
him to continue to play. “There are a lot of
guys who’ve done worse things still
playing," says Rentzel. The case was
closed.

Then last January Rentzel was arrested
again, this time on the far less grave
charge of possession of marijuana and
codeine. in May he was convicted, sen-
tenced to 90 days in jail, three ,years
probation and a $2,000 fine, but the judge in
Dallas didn’t think the new conviction
serious enough to revoke his prior
suspended sentence. Nonetheless Rozelle
indefinitely suspended him from playing
football.

FOR A big-league athlete with a
relatively short career life expectancy,
indefinite suspension is tantamount to
professional capital punishment.

“1 don‘t know Mr. Rozelle’s mind," says
Rentzel. who blows hot and cold about his
future as a paid athlete, “but I don’t think
['1] ever play again. Rozelle can do
anything he wants to me so I can‘t talk.
When you get into a situation like this
everybody else can talk but you can‘t
talk."

Even so Rentzel does talk and what he
says makes you think that Rozelle's non-
judicial punishment is tougher than the
ones the courts have administered.
Rentzel has little or no money. He's
hoping to make it as a novelist. but anyone
who has read his autobiography (“When

.-..---

All the Laughter Died In Sorrow,” Bantam
$1.50) can see that novel writing and
football playing are unrelated skills.

“i'M ROLLING THE dice." Rentzel
says of his precarious literary hopes. “I
probably should go out and get a job, but
I'm going on one month at a time."

Rozelle booted him out for “conduct
detrimental to football,” but as this for-
cibly retired split end points out, “Rozelle
once suspended two guys for gambling for
only one year and gambling goes to the
heart of the game."

The argument could be made that
Rentzel had to go because kids and their
patriotic pops look up to football players
and Rentzel has become a notorious
symbol of moral turpitude. Nobody knows
why a man exposes himself to a little girl,
but it seems far~fetched to argue he does it
because his favorite boyhood left halfback
did.

1N ANY CASE, if you want to make an
example of Rentzel, the way to do it is to
keep him in the game and explain to your
children that he shows the folly of making
moral heroes out of athletes, movie stars
or anyone else worshiped by celebrity
cultists. Rentzel himself says, “Athletics
doesn’t build Character, it builds
characters."

The wider meaning of the Rentzel case
is that it demonstrates the arbitrary and
unjust nature of non-judicial social and
economic punishment.

:

NlChOlOS VOl'i Hoffman

King Futures Syndicate

“What is the standard of conduct
detrimental to football?” asks a puzzled
Rentzel, who has trouble enough obeying
precise, carefully written laws. “To me
it's a little vague, but I’m not mad at
anybody. If I’m rankled about anything
it’s that I don‘t have an avenue of appeal."

With the NFL Players Association
paying the bills, Rentzel is suing to have
the courts put the Rozelle decision aside,
but even if he wins he may be too old to
play by then.

RENTZEL, THEN, is a victim of an
unofficial sort of double jeopardy which
our statutory law does not allow. The same
happens to many other people. College
students convicted of an offense often find
they leave jail to learn they’ve been ex-
pelled from school. Many others discover
that when the courts are finished with
them the punishment really starts.

Look at Spiro Agnew. The court has done
with him. but now his fellow lawyers want
to disbar him, as though some social good
would be realized by conspiring to see that
the man must beg for his food in the
streets.

We can disagree with the court decisions
in the Rentzel and Agnew cases. Many
believe they both got off too lightly.
Passing sentence may be the most difficult
job a judge has, but it's his job; he is more
likely to do it better than anyone else.
When the rest of us join in, it’s still piling
on, and that's unsportsmaniike conduct on
the field or off.

  

Pending student interest

Book exchange shelved

By KAREN HOSKINS
Kernel Staff Writer

Plans for a non-profit book
exchange have been shelved
temporarily while Student
Government takes a census
gauging student interest in such a
program.

“We had everything planned
out,” said Nancy Emig, SG
director of student services and
chairwoman of the book ex-
change committee. “Then we
came to the question, ‘What if
they don’t want it.’ If you have
an apathetic student body this
sort of thing won’t be suc-
cessful.”

THE BOOK exchange was to
have been housed in Room 122 of

the Student Center. Books would
have been collected during the
final week of fall semester,
sorted and filed over Christmas,
and sold during the first two
weeks of spring semester.
“We'd charge minimally,” said
Emig. “We had planned on
taking no more than five cents a
book. That would cover the cost
of triplicate forms and filing."
The operation would have been

manned by student volunteers.

“We had enlisted 45 people to
work. We ended up with 18
who are still willing to do it,” said
Emig. “I am afraid they got
rather panicky about the end of
the semester.”

THE LAST book exchange at
UK operated in 1970 “It would

take a massive publicity
program beforehand to get
people thinking," said Emig.
“We have dropped it because we
felt even if the students did go for
the exchange there would not be
time for the program to go on.”

“The purpose (of the book
exchange) is to give the students
an opportunity for fair trade,”
explained Emig. “We don’t make
a profit, or very little profit. It is
a mechanism to give the students
another outlet.”

Emig said that if people are
interested in a book exchange
program, the next SG ad-
ministration will find the
necessary groundwork prepared.

Register covers computers

By NORMANDI ELLIS
Kernel Staff Writer

“In the computer field nothing
remains the same very long,”
said Karen Holder, editor of the
Kentucky Register.

The Kentucky Register is a
newsletter designed to keep those
who use the computer center on a
regular basis at the University
abreast of computer program
and operation changes.

By keeping in touch with other
computer users, the computer
center can determine the kind of
services needed and give
suggestions on how to save
computing time, ways to use
services and give programming
hints.

"WE TRY TO get the users
involved—to make suggestions.
More than 50 per cent of their
suggestions are implemented,”
said Holder.

The use of computers keeps a
large university in operation.

The newsletter provides ad—
ministrative personnel, faculty
and students information about
the type of computer services
available to them. Computers are
being used in the areas of
research, administration and
instruction.

THE UNIVERSITY computer
center, located in the basement of
McVey Hall, keeps tabs on
student 'records, payroll
distribution, test scoring and
data from the Medical Center.
Students may be taught by
computers and graduate students
or faculty members doing
research have computers and
their information easily at hand.

Distributed by mail. the
Kentucky Register serves over
1,000 readers, including other
computer centers at various
universities and computer-
related businesses both in-state
and out-of-state.

The monthly computer
newsletter is printed by com-
puter system itself. Begun in
1964, issues have been published
the first week of every month on a
regular basis since September
1972, said Holder.

“ALMOST ALL other
university computer centers and
private organizations have some

kind of publication for their
users,” she said.

The Kentucky Register is
funded by the University on a
yearly budget. Printing usually
costs $100 a month, excluding
mailing charges, computer time
and personnel cost.

However, Holder stressed,
“The computer center is a ser-
vice organization and the

newsletter is just another service
provided by the computer cen-
ter.”

ALTHOUGH newsworthy
contributions are welcomed,
Holder edits and writes most of
the newsletter, which averages 10
pages per publication.

Copies of the Kentucky
Register may be obtained at the
Data Center or in Room 111,
McVey Hall.

 

November 12, 1973.

Weaver.

November 19, 1973).

October 31, 1973) .

October 22, 1973).

fifteen weeks
November 28, 1973).

1973).

UNIVERSITY SENATE
AGENDA
December 10’ 1973

1) Approve minutes of September 10, 1973 and
2) Resolution on the death of Professor R.H.

3) Remarks by Dr. Adelstein.

4) Approve of December graduates (circulated
by the Registrar’s Office under date of

5) Action on the selective admissions proposal
from the College of Education (circulated under
date of October 26, 1973).

6) Action on Rules Change, Section l, 5.2,
relative to including Community College per-
sonnel in elections for faculty representation to
the Board of Trustees (circulated under date of

7) Action on the proposal to abolish the six-
weeks summer session (circulated under date of

8,) Action on the proposal to change the
calendar policy for the College of Pharmacy to

permit them to offer a summer semester of
(circulated under

9) Action on a series of Rules changes and ad-
ditions (circulated under date of November 28,

date of

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. December 3, 1973—3

Arm. the m»
INACK DN A YUMBD

I! l l \M \NI 1 I II II l\\l\tll l
After an evening out at a movie, or a meeting, 0r bowling-make
your laststop a Burger King forasnack. And live it one little. Try
something deliciously different-A Yumbo. Lean slices of

smokehouse ham and slabs of golden cheese heaped on a fresh

baked egg roll, pOpped into our microwave oven--then served to
you, piping hot, in a special thermal container, with all its flavor
sealed right in. If you think it50unds good, iust wait ’til yOu taste
it! Next time you wantanevening snack, stop ata Burger King and

ask for a Yumbo. -
2217 BURGER 2233

Nicholosville K'NG Versailles
R \4

d. Rd.

41‘

 

 

 

Open Hearings
On Dorm Life ll

Express your opinion on lifestyle dorms, visitation,
C.A.'s, hours, dorm government, or anything you have
a gripe, recommendation, or suggestion on. Student
government’s Housing committee wants your ideas
for changes in dorms.

Tues, Dec. 4 Patterson lobby

Wed ., Dec. 5 Ha ggin upper lounge

Thurs ., Dec. 6 Rm. 306 - D Complex Commons

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 4—1‘HE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. December 3. 1913

The Pertwlllaby Papers by don rosa

SUBMlT. PERWILLABY! You KANNoT MY STRENGTH Is as We STRENGTH or 72M
KONQUER ME! BESIDES, VHEN I ,, "A BECAUSE MY HEART Is Puss I!!!)
ESTABL'SH MINE 4th RElCH IN lg , V’v
AMERIKA, 85% 0F DER PonLflTioIJ ; A ‘_ N
VILL IIEFER NoTIc; DER DIFFERENCE!

       
  
  
  

 

1' AM A SUPER-MAN, PERTWLL“
I AM A MASTER OF MEN! You
ARE women 13 SueJuATIo»!

AMERICA qu. 'rimmm!
New AND Fonsvechuoxeff

   
  
 
    
 

 

EPISODE 119: ARMAGEoDoN?AI.L PREFENSES

ARE ABANDONNED? ITZS SMYTIE v5. LANCE?!”

    
 
 

NEVER! I SHALL RISE 73
WHATEVER IT REQUIRES 73
FoII. YouR NEFARIoos SCHEME

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

     
  

 

 

 

 

 

m norm-scrum} J°INS me

/ ’ TURFLAND MALL

777 olOo .

ON TH! MALL
HARRODSBURG ROAD 5 lANi ALLEN

 

 

 

 

BEFORE YOU SHOP FOR A MUSIC SYSTEM. YOU SHOULD SHOP FOR A STORE Ti
mes:

2:30—5:10
7:45—9:50
L J

 

 

 

I/

’Don't‘ Worrj,
maybnck will
+AK€ Your old
eQ’Ulee'd’ ”-2? ’ Urgzztrsitgyof
we ardless Of. E' l and dine at .
Rae or COHd‘Tl-OK ‘ '

. n
{V al'mde—m!

the Ploubock Policy‘

PLAYBACK TRADE-IN POLICY

Playback will take your old equip-
ment, regardless of age or condi-
tion, and make you the tairest

otter oward an new e ui men {L .

we 54:". y q p t Flannel Shlrts
' ' Pea Coats
Field Jackets

 

 

    

1 ‘ Support the?

 

 

 

 

 

s
E m mgr vm

 

Fayette Mall

 

Ploubock

lime electronic plogground

CHAN! I? — MVIACK ARRANGED "'4th MASTER CHANCE
“NUMERICAID AMERICAN EXPRESS

r

f z a;- 555-.“

Kernel Ms Kernel Arts 8. Sports
258-4646 257-1800

Lexington

Oxmoor Center
Lou lsvl l le

Bashford Manor Mall
Louisville

 

 

 

Kernel Editorials Kernel News
257-1755

257-1700

 

J 8. H Army
surplus

09 N. Broodwo
254-7613

 

Kernel Classifieds
258-2071

  

Federal government offers
limited summer opportunities

By PRISCILLA DEVEREAUX
Kernel Staff Writer

A limited number of job op-
portunites will be offered this
summer by the federal govern-
ment.

There are various positions
available with equal employment
opportunities; however, ap-
plicants may not be hired in the
same department as a family
member.

Jobs are categorized in five
groups. Group one includes jobs
in engineering as well as physical
and biological science.

CLERICAL JOBS such as
typing and stenography are also
available but require appropriate
skills.

During 1974 Defense Civil
Preparedness will hire a limited
number of architectural and
engineering students as data
collectors.

Applicants must be 18 years of
age and a US. citizen. Group one
jobs are filled from the Summer
Employment Examination,
required for this group only. It
provides people to compete for
work on a merit basis.

THE EXAM covers
vocabulary, reading, com-
prehension. abstract reasoning

and table and chart in-
terpretation, Deadlines for
testing are Dec. 28, 1973 and Jan.
25, 1974.

Group two, grades GS-l
through GS—4, offers employment
with the departments of
Agriculture and the Interior.
Positions include forestry aide,
fire control and recreation
engineering.

The Department of the Interior
offers jobs in the National Park
Service for park rangers and
park aides.

PARK RANGERS require two
and one-half years of college,
technicians require two years of
related college level studies or
two years’ experience in park
service. Park aides are required
to have six months’ experience in
park service or a high school
educafion.

Group two does not require the
Summer Examiniation but a
Qualifications Statement and
Form SF 171 must be sent by
April 15 to the agency in which
the applicant is interested.

Group three contains
specialized grades GS-S and
above, requiring a bachelor’s
degree or equivalent experience.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. December 3, ”73—5

  

The Cosmopolitan Club will be

 
       
  
       
   
 

\\\\l’//,,’/
T J) 3/ selling
POSITIONS [N this group are t‘ 5
professional and administrative 7/] §, UN|CEF CHRISTMAS CARDS
duties. /l

    

The Department of Agriculture
offers jobs in the Agricultural
Research and Marketing Service.
They are open to college
graduates or students with
majors in biological and physical
sciences and engineering.

Mon.-Fri., ll a.m.-2 p.m.
through Dec. 20th
lst floor Student Center
for more info call HRC 258-2751

 

The Department of Commerce
employs applicants in the
National Bureau of Standards,
with jobs in physics, mathmatics,
chemistry, engineering and
computer science.

Group four specializes in trade

and labor jobs.
Group five is special summer

programs. There are special
work-study programs and limited
positions. Applicants participate
in training programs during
vacations, but attend college full
time during the academic year.

THERE IS also the Federal
Summer Intern Program for
college students. Appointments
are judged according to
leadership, class standing and
qualifications for each position.

Interested students may obtain
information from the UK
placement service.

Get your Volkswagen
pointed FREE!

You can earn easy money. every month during school.
for doing nearly nothing. Beetleboards of America Will
paint your car FREE. in incredible fashion. and pay y0u
for driving it around as usual. That's practically all there

 

““‘.h‘..m‘- ' ’

‘ ., — .9 “3“

and physics.

and reward.

 

.4 _ l //7
\\3,. , .illlillllllllII/I/l/(lq/l/ /

Whenever a Navy plane is under
electronic control, that plane is in the
hands of a Naval Flight Officer. Naturally,
as a candidate for Naval Flight Officer
training you'll need some very special
qualifications. First, you must really w_ar_1_t
to fly, even if you've never flown before.
You'll also need a college degree and the
kind of mind that works well with math

Waiting at the end of your training
program is a Navy Commission and the
Golden Wings of a Naval Flight Officer.
By then you'll be an expert in areas like
Jet Navigation and Airborne Control. . .
equipped to do your job wherever you go.

But whatever your specialty, travel
will be part of your life. And so will
challenge, responsibility, achievement

If that's the kind of career you're
looking for, and if you think you've got L

// i

 

Be a special kind of Navy Flyer.
Be a Naval Flight Officer.

what it takes to be a Naval Flight Officer,
send in the coupon. it will bring you all
the facts. Or talk it over with your Navy

recruiter. He's at
253-1703

Gentlemen:

Name ,

I

l

l

l

l

I

l

I Address a-
l

I City _. __,,
l

l

I

l

l

Officer Programs Otticer

Navy Recruiting District, Louisville Federal Building
600 Federal Place

Louisville, Kentucky 40202

f" ____________________ 1

I like it. Please send more information on what it
takes to be a Naval Flight Officer.

Current College Year,_.

Be a success in The New Navy.

——.—————_—

is to it. For the full story. write immediately to.

Beetleboards of America. Inc.
7785 Sunset Blvd.
Los Angeles, California 90046

Or Call (2l3) 876-7517
Collect

 

 

 

 

. 3 .~ ‘rl
\ o \ .
e . c ‘.

  

Pitcher of Beer

Bucl or Miller
50‘ pitcher
10‘ mug

Michelob
75‘ pitcher

15‘ mug
with

Bob Ristaneo's
medium or large

Sicilian Pizza
Thurs. Fri. Sat.

 

Mon. Tues

Navy Ottlcer lntorrnation Team
At Student Center
Tomorrow Through Friday

SEND TO:

Prices good for the rest of the semester.

ADAMS RESTAURANT

Where the Railroad Crosses South Broadway

683 S. Broadway

254-4373

 

 

 

 

     

I

I

I

l

l

l

I

at. _. .A A. I

l

l

l

: Per pie start pollution. People can stop it.
I
I

____________ .J

 

g Keep America Beautitul

 

 

 

 G—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. December 3. 1913

Holiday Dresses

Jewelry, Knits, Monogramed purses
Robes, Lingerie, Accesories

Long Skirts and Dresses

1%,4 gm W

802 EUCLID

Corsage

’, I! . j“) ,
/7////// x /[ M/M/

we. The Owl

and the

F/ ’Jr I’llfisycat
é; lonlu‘ofi /m (ff/(lien

A book is a gift forever.
Books for children and
teens. We mail books
everywhere. Toys: Brio,
Creative Playthings, Galt.

321 S. Ashland

gym/My” ~ ififl/M/

 

w? ' (—
FARMER’SJEWELRY

Serving UK
Since 1950

821 Euclid Ave.

Monday through Saturday

9 AoMo ' 5:30 POM.

The Appalachian Back Pack Co.

and

the TENTH GEAR

Alpine Design
Bell weather
Camp trails

Offer you the best line of biking,
hiking, and camping equipment
available in Lexington. A

Ten Speeds

as low as
$99.95

"$811".

M\\A3
$5.00

Azuki, Zeus, Fuji, Jeunet, and coming soon, Motobecane

FOR ANYTHING THAT

HAS TO DO

WITH BICYCLES:

Emil] (gear

848 E. HlCH ST

LEXINGTON KY 40502

606 269-5003

812 Euclid 266-7351

Above the Gallery

purses, aprons, quilts, toys,
dollhouses, furniture, hand-
made holiday decorations...

Original gift ideas
Handcrafted

Items of Distinction
Shaker reproductions
Open 10-5 Mom-Sat.

and

PAINT POT'N PUTTER SHOP

 

the For a Lasting Gift - Art

Gallery

tings, metal wall Hangings,
Kulicke metal section Frames
Selections of colors.

 

 

 

313 S. Ashland

269-3595 Mon-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 105

c OLiquor oStamps
H 0