xt7v416t1t3v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7v416t1t3v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-09-25 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, September 25, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 1975 1975 1975-09-25 2020 true xt7v416t1t3v section xt7v416t1t3v  
  

Vol. LXVII No. 37
Thursday, September 25, 1975

 

KENTUCKY

21‘

an independent student newspaper

   

el

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Ky. 40506

 

DOKK' PtCTU'LE'

 

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Red River Dam controversy.)

(Editor’s note: This is the first of
atwo-part series dealing with the

The I st Red Ri

.4

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a!

«.‘l,

damaging blows against con-
struction of the lake and reser-
voir came Sept. 11 when Julian
Carroll became the first governor

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wasconfident an anti-dam stance
would not damage his political
standing.

While he is to be commended
for dealing the devastating blow

 

study the problem and determine
the best solution.
construction of a dam, other
factors besides flood protection

To justify

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer
The largest and most con-
troversial pork barrel project in
Kentucky history-~the proposed
$34.1 million Red River Dam--has
apparently been scrapped, the
victim of a unified effort by en-
vironmentalists. politicians and
concerned individuals.

had to be tossed into the deal by
the Corps. The most severe
flooding could be prevented by
construction of flood walls and
levees.

So the Corps made an earth-
shattering announcement: there
is a severe water shortage in
Central Kentucky. And both the
flooding and water shortage

to oppose the dam. ,
Carroll, currently the front- to the darn. it should be
runner in his bid to return to the remembered that his delay in

taking a position is too typical of
News analysis

the political maneuvering and
rhetoric that has surrounded the
state‘s highest elected office. was
in the enviable position of being

Red River project.
able to honestly air his views on

 

 

The lake and reservoir were
originally conceived in 1954 as the
solution to major flooding in

(‘orps of Engineers.

 

; put the finger in the dike.
E The final in a series

Brainchild of the [1.8. Army
the Red
River project prospered for 13
E years before a two—fisted attack

the controversial issue without
fear of reprisals at the polls.
Known for his inability to take
a firm pusition on controversial
matters, (‘arroll procrastinated

of and hedged on the issue until he

Powell and other eastern Ken-
tucky counties. An area citizens
advisory committee suggested
there be a remedy to the annual
spring floods.

The (‘orps was authorized to

problems would be alleviated by
a multi-million dollar dam.
Since all public works projects
must have projected economic
benefits equal to or greater than

Continued on page 8

Title IX effect on single-sex organizations unclear

By MIKE MEl'SI‘IR
Kernel Staff Writer

The University is apparently undecided
about what effect Title IX of the Education
Amendments Act of 1972 will have on
single-sex organizations now under
I'niversity sponsorship.

New Title IX regulations. which became
effective July 21. 1975. prohibit sex
discrimination by educational institutions
receiving federal funds. Campus
organizations would supposedly be in-
cluded since the lfniversity is a federally-
funded body.

Fraternities and sororities are exemp-
ted from consideration because of an
amendment clause attached to the final
draft of Title lX

llonoraries. whose members are chosen
on the basis of academic excellence. make
up the second largest group of single-sex
organizations on campus and are not
t'tl\'l red by the exemption clause.

Ha iik Harris. associate dean of students
responsible tor registering all campus

organizations. said from his un-

derstanding of Title IX honoraries would
be required to admit members from both
sexes in order to maintain their spon-
sorship.

"I have not heard anything from the
legal staff about this yet and until I do
there is really no action I can take," he
said.

Under the terms of Title IX, an in-
stitution has one year to comply with the
regulations after which time a loss of funds
is possible.

John Darsie. University legal counsel.
said the real problem is determining
whether an organization is sufficiently
involved with the University to be covered
by the law.

“Since honoraries are not included in the
guidelines we find ourselves back at the
same old problem. Is the entity a receiver
of federal funds, or if not. is it so closely
connected that it is ‘entangled' with the
tederalpmgram and thus can he said to he
an indirect recipient." Darsie said.

liarsie attended a meeting with
Department of Health. Education and

Welfare (HEW) officials last spring in
Atlanta and was told at that time that
University sponsorship with the ap—
pointment of a faculty advisor “probably"
constituted entanglement.

According to dean of students office
regulations, campus organizations at UK
are offered these services as well as
University—maintained accounts, free
office space, mailing services and post
office boxes. Additional services are
available to organizations receiving direct
appropriations from the University.

Harris said he was not aware of any
honorary directly receiving funds from the
University.

Joe Kinnarney, president of ()micron
Delta Kappa. a men's honorary. said his
horiorary‘s constitution does not prohbbit
women. “Nowhere does it say that women
are excluded. we simply haven’t had any
initiated. Last year a couple of girls were
nominated. but they never followed up on
their applications.“ he said.

.loliii Schraeder. president of Lances
Junior Men‘s Honorary. said that he was

unsure about the effect of Title IX, “There
is nothing in our constitution which
prohibits women, however, we are still
undecided about what we will do or even
whether Title IX will affect us." he said.

Several other honorary officers and
sponsors were also contacted but refused
comment since they were out-going
members and no longer represented their
organizations.

Harris said very few organizations have
registered with his office to date and that
he cannot make determinations about
their compliance with the law until all
registrations are in.

“Once I am advised by the lawyers on
the matter I will single out those
organizations which are sexist by nature
and notify them by mail so as to allow time
for them to comply." Harris said.

llarsie said HEW would probably
provide the force behind compliance “1
would imagine that once the law :s in iorce
next year HEW will provide periodic
compliance checks ot once every five
years." he said.

 

a

  

 

Lettas and Spectrum articles smuld be
Room "4 Journalism Building. They

editorials

Lettus should not exceed 23) words and Spectrum articles 7!) was.

messed to the Editorial Page Editor,
should be typed. Mespaoed an sigied.

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Jack Koeneman
Associate Editor

 

 

Zionists deny tI
’indisputable facts’

 

 

By Iranian Student Association

In their comment in the Sept. I9 Kernel,
” ’Vituvperations’ deserve response”, four
UK professors accuse John Roach of
"venomous perversion of facts and events
which tends to spread the poison of
inhuman behavior.” After reading their
own diatribe we are forced to conclude
that the only thing which they object to are
the indisputable facts in Roach’s article
which less-educated Zionists in their
comments and letters have attempted to
deny completely.

Roach cited as an example of Zionist
collaboration with the Nazis the case of
Rudolph Kastner the head of the Zionist
organization in Hungary and later the
Israeli Secretary of Industry and Trans
portation. Kastner collaborated with
Eichmann in the murder of 800,000
I-imgarian Jews. In return Eichmann
agreed to let several thousand wealthy
Jews and the Zionist leadership in
HJngary flee to Palestine.This was the
finding of a District Court in Jerusalem
31d also of the Court of Appeal (not of the
Supreme Court as Roach erroneously
states). Supreme Justice Moshe Silberg
wrote in his opinion: ”...he, Kastner, in
order to carry out the rescue plea for the
few prominents, fulfilled knowingly and
without good faith the said desire of the
Nazis, thus expediting the work of exter-
minating the masses.” (In appeal of the
Attorney-General on Criminal Case no. l24
o‘ 1953, the Attorney-General of Israel vs.
Malachiel Greenwald, D.C. Jerusalem.)

According to the tow professors: ”It
was the Israeli government, headed by the
Jewish Agency, the Central leadership
\Mwich pressed the Kastner case to trial.
Oearly they would not have done this had
Kastner's duplicity reflected their own
policies. Nor is there evidence of any such
scheme.” The Israeli government did not
press the Kastner case to trial. The truth is
that the record of Kastner’s crimes was
exposed by a Hungarian Jew, Malachiel
Greenwald. It was because of Greenwald’s
efforts that the case became known
throughout Israel. At this point the
government intervened —— not to prosecute
Kastner —- but to institute a criminal libel
suit against Greenwald. Kastner was
defended by Chaim Cohen, the Attorney
General of Israel. What was the governor’s
reason for instituting the suit? The at-
torney general pointed out: ”The man
Kastner does not stand here as a private
individual. He was a recognized repre-
wntative, official of non-official, of the
Jewish National Institutes in Palestine and
d the Zionist Executive; and I come here
in this court to defend the representative of
our national institutions...” The attornpv
general, of course, was correct. Kastner
was not justany Zionist: he was the leader
of the whole Zionist organization in
l-hngary; throughout his life he held
leading positions in Zionist organizations
31d in the Israeli government. It definitely
reflects on Zionism as a political move-
ment that such a person could have risen
to become one of its leaders. The four
p'ofessors state that there is no evidence
of the duplicity of other Zionist leaders in
arch collaboration. Again let us look at the
record of Kastner’s trial. One of the major
findings of the District Court which was

later approved by all five judges of the
aspeals court was that Kastner ”in a
periurious and criminal way” saved Kurt
Becher, a major Nazi war criminal, from
the punishment awaiting him in Nurem-
berg. Becher, now one of the richest men
in West Germany, was a member of the
Nazi death corps which specialized in the
murder of Jews in Poland. He was
mpointed in 1945 as ”commissar in charge
of all concentration camps in Nazi-oc-
cupied Europe.” Following the war
Becher was scheduled for trial as a war
criminal at Nuremberg. He was saved
form trial because of an affidavit signed
by Kastner which stated ”Kurt Becher did
everything within the realm of possibility
to save innocent human beings...”

The affidavit ends as follows:

I make this statement not in my name
but also on behalf of the Jewish Agency
ad the Jewish World Congress. Signed
D. Rudolf Kastner, official Jewish
Agency in Geneva, former Chairman of
Zionist Organization in Hungary, 1943-45.
Representative of Joint Distribution
Committee in Budapest.

When cross‘examined on the affidavit
Kastner stated:

Debkin and Barlas gave me permission
to speak in the name of the Jewish Agency.
And Mr. Perizwig, chief of the political
department of the World Jewish Congress,
md Mr. Reigener, European represent-
ative of the World Jewish Congress gave
me permission (to offer the affidavit in the
name of these Zionist organizations).

During the District Court trial Kastner
alleged that the top leadership of Zionist
aganizations outside of Europe purpose-
fully withheld from the press information
he relayed to them about Nazi murder
plans in 1942. He stated:

”...the Jewish Agency and the Joint
Distribution Committee representative in
Switzerland, Moshe Schwable and Asaly
Mayer did not give out the information to
the press about the mass killings. They
failed to give the press the news I sent
from Budapest...l informed them almost
chily by cables about the pace of
exterminations. My cables were never
published anywhere.”

Kastner’s testimony clearly implicates
almost all of the top Zionist leadership in
Europe. One of the Supreme Judges of the
Appeal, Moshe Silberg, clearly acknow-
ledged that there could be guilty parties
besides Kastner:

"I do not say that he was the only man
who possessed information. It is quite
possible that somebody else does not have
a clear conscience with regard to this
concealment. But we are dealing here only
with the guilt of Kastner and we do not
have to make judgments on the guilt of
others...”

Kastner was assassinated under mys-
teri0us circumstances before his trial was
over. The Israeli government has never
mrried out a thorough investigation of the
(pestion of whether Kastner had acted
alone or in concert with other Zionist
leaders. Kastner’s death was used as a
pretext for dropping the whole thing in
spite of the many questions that had been
raised.

 

 

  

 

‘I WAS THINKING or ENLlSnNG— BUT, mm HE WINKED AT ME!’

 

Recreation

Editor:

The University of Kentucky has
excellent recreational facilities for the
students and faculty. Volleyball,
basketball, racketball courts, pool
tables, pinball machines, and many
others available at various hours clay
and night. '

There is one facility that could be
greatly improved. I am speaking of the
tennis courts located next to the Seaton
Center. There are not enough courts to
accommodate everyone that wishes to
use them. You have to go almost a day
ahead to reserve a court, which can
prove to be very inconvenient. Then if
you manage to get a court, you can only
play once a day for an hour.

Additional courts are definitely
needed on the campus. They are really
needed on the opposite side of campus
for students living in Blazer, Holmes,
Jewel, Patterson and Keeneland
dormitories.

Improvements could also be made by
adding lights to the back courts next to
the Seaton Center. This will not solve
the problem in the long run, but it will
help tremendously.

Robert C. Tillotson
8&E sophomore

Disappointed

Editor:

lam disappointed with the Kernel for
publishing the Spectrum article,
”Dayan Should Not Take Part in SCB
Lecture Series,” which appeared in the
Sept. ll issue. Many of the statements
and opinions expressed in that article
are anti-Semitic in sentiment. It is, of
course, correct that Zionism must be
distinguished from Judaism. However
the indictment of Zionism as a ”fascist
political movement,” together with
some of the observations used to sup-
port that position, is offensive to all
members of one of the world’s most
oppressed religious minorities.

I hope that the editorial board of the
Kernel will pause and think where
Spectrum is--or should be--going. I

ieners

 

 

i
l

recognize and endorse the purpose of

the column: It serves as a valued outlet
for non-establishment opinion. It is a
practical application of the principle of
freedom of the press. Freedom of the
press is a highly respected concept in
our country, but it is no more highly
respected than freedom of religion. The
article on Dayan’s forthcoming lecture,
because of its extreme statements,
brings the rormer freedom into conflict
with the latter. An editor should
exercise thegreatest discretion prior to
the publication of such material.
Henry R. Hirsch
Lexington resident

Image

Editor:

Earlier this week I read an article in
the Kernel about the few black students
and teachers at UK and the failure to
keep them due, in part, to the
University’s image as racist. With this
somewhere in the back of my head, I
overheard a conversation across the
aisle of a crowded bus headed to the
stadium. ”I thought you were gonna
stay late and play basketball? I was but
some niggers had the court.” The
response was by a bona fide member of
the university community, no doubt.

I’m not a native Kentuckian, but I
don’t think I was alone in being raised
to reserve the word ”nigger” as a
derogatory term--not a general in
dictment of a whole race. Would any of
the readers want to attend classes
where they were referred to as
”honky” or ”whitey?” I wouldn’t. I’d
feel threatened and impersonally
iudged.

Yet we wonder why more blacks
don’t attend UK, why there is less than
a two per cent enrollment, Why many
are attracted solely by the athletic
programs. What else are they offered?
If the bus rider was any indication,
probably a cold stare.

I’m not black, but there’s a whole lot
of times I wish I could say I’m not
white.

John Linstrom
Engineering Senior

 

 

,t~ «A. “r-

. “1“... a- ’\

 

 

(Editor's note: Because of the number of letters and commentaries received by
the Kernel, there is no editorial today. In cases where a number of letters and
commentaries are received about one or several subjects, more space will be
devoted to readers' views. All letters and Spectrum articles should be typed,
double-spaced and signed. Letters cannot exceed 250 words and Spectrum articles

750 words.)

 

A. WW 7%

  

 

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Ms-iwaxus.

Mme-o».

 

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Dew PIC 11:65

 

 

spectrum

 

 

 

A great

     

‘3 //
:3

4

fighter
inhabits arenas

of sensibility

(This is the second installment of a
two part column on Ali, Frazier and the
upcoming fight in Manilla—sort of. I
wasn’t quite able to keep a fix on the
subject matter at hand, probably
because l was writing it in a last minute
frenzy as i tried desperately to get
drunk enough to board my godforsaken
plane for Manilla...where l’ll cover the
fight for Collier’s and try to land a job
as Joe Frazier's speech therapist...at
any rate, the art historians may enjoy
the digressions you fight fans decide to
slip.)

 

 

There are possibilities here: we can
run down long wind-rivers of rhetoric
about the art and pure grace of
Muhammmad Ali, or churn up turgid
headwaters of analysis picking apart
his motives and significance. But l’m
not up to that—my general style of
approach to the man is something akin
to that of a village witch doctor who’s
asked by his people to explain the
maning of a crashed helicopter found in
the bush. The sophistication of the
artifact is beyond his powers of in-
terpretation, so he must resort to some

metaphors from his own paltry ex-
perience,- metaphors which mollify the
natives but come nowhere near to
explaining the root.

And so it is here: There is nothing
more impossible to enter than the mind
of a great poet or a great prize-fighter.
They inhabit arenas of sensibility
accessible only to other great poets or
fighters. And since I am only a jour-
neyman poet and a very mediocre
boxer, l’m truly up against it. For Ali is
a great poet, a poet of mind and body,
and (dare to say it!) quite probably the
greatest heavyweight who ever lived.
There is no man alive today who could
really know the core of Ali, for no other
man has done what he has done, which
is to totally integrate body and mind——
sense and sensibility—into an art form
that is at once brutish and beautiful.

(Dwell on this: There are Mind Arts
and Body Arts and in the stretch of
evolution we have derailed our con
nection of the two. Mind Arts are pure,
bourgeois and laced with an easy
status. Body Arts are sensual,
primitive, with a hint of The Furies to
frighten the timid. In our rush toward
civilization and self-taming we have
tended to block off the Body Arts into
Sports, where the animals who par-
ticipate can pound each other senseless
and who cares? While the more
civilized, more "advanced” aesthetes
have contented themselves with the
pure and bloodless pursuit of Mind Art,
which makes no demands and asks for
no payments. A prizefighter faces the

"1' 1.; T \

  
  

 

    
 
  

very real possibility of death
leverytime he enters the ring. Death is
the salt and tang of his existence, and
every fight throws him into the voids of
the existential—for who knows what
dark and violent turn the night might

take?
Ballet, for all its considerable beauty,

seems a pale cousin to boxing when
considered as total art. For who would
dare to say that Rudolf Nureyev knows
the dark passions of bile and vomit that
any good club fighter feels on a bad
night? (While a good boxer knows the
wit and grace of a good turn around the
ring, and somemight equal Nureyev in
their footwork.) Besides, who can deny
that there is a choked hint of the un-
consummated in a dance that has,
finally, no possibility of exploding
outward into the real arenas of triumph
or tragedy...

OK. I’m fully aware that the gas in
these paragraphs threatens to explode
them, but l’m compulsive on this point,
and any appreciation of Ali must settle
around it: Boxing is an art as well as a
sport, and when you speak of a great
boxer you speak of a great artist as
well.

Yes. Still, there is one aspect of Mind
Art that boxing has more or less lacked
and that is self-consciousness. It seems
fair to say that there is an artist's
consciousness at the other end of any
creation or performance, and it is that
consciousness which vivifies the ac
tivity into art or keeps it down at the
level of show. Up to now, we have had
many boxers who were superb Body
Artists, resplendent in the genre, but no
really aware of the possibilities of
genuine, self-concious creativity in the
deep thump-your-guts of the sport.

Until Ali. Who started in the ring so
many years ago as a simple poet of the
body—one of the greatest of body
poets—and as he grew older and wiser
and suffered through unimaginable
hells of self-appraisal during the grim
years of his exile, rearranged all of
boxing with his simple notion: That wit
counts for more than force, and the
inevitable corollary of this, that a man
is as easily defeated by mind as by fists.
So we have it—sense and sensibility
combined, irrevocably, and boxing
matured as an art.

The temptation is strong here to fly to
the moon on lyrics of praise for Ali’s
style as a boxer and as a man. But that
wouldn’t do. Panegyrics are the easiest
things in the world to write, and so they
add their share of pollution to the air.
But there are doubtless those of you out
there who hold to the simple notion that
Ali is nothing but a braggart who talks
better than he fights; and the whispers
of racism crowd behind that sort of
thinking, for what hard-working white
American wouldn’t want this uppity
nigger to shut up and show some
gratitude for all that was given to him?

Look: For every ten of you who love
the champ there are probably ten who
can’t stand him and—well, hidebound
sensitivities chafe under the bridle of
novel ideas. lwon’t waste time trying to

convert yw. But as a brief example of
what I‘m trying to get at here, let’s
explore the parallels between a
masterful line of poetry and a knockout
punch.

First of all, let’s expand the common
definition of the limits of poetry to in-
clude any activity which reinterprets
experience, redefines sensibility and
shoves the psyche outward toward
spaces of greater understanding. We all
know how devastating a great line of
poetry can be in this respect—the dull
shock that besets the brain when a
great poet really sends his dart home.
(Wallace Stevens for one, will give me
the approximate sensation of receiving
six good shots to the head almost
anytime l read his poems.)

Consider, now, the processes of a
knock-out punch. The brain of a fighter
who moments ago was in full con-
fidenoe of victory must undergo far-
reaching processes of reconsideration
and, if the blow is powerful enough, re-
programming. The stiumlus is over-
whelming. The body may collapse as
the brain tries desperately to
assimilate this new invasion on its
certainties. Coma results. The brain
has rebelled at the knowledge the body
has transmitted to it. The knockout is
poetry precisely because it imparts a
vast amount of overwhelming
information in a concise package.
intimate poetry, to be sure, for only one
person, finally gets the message. But a
sufficiently sensitive spectator can
share in the profound transmittals of
the moment.

(Gibberish? Maybe. l’ll grant you
have to have some appreciation for the
nuances of boxing to catch the full
import of the analogy. But one thing is
certain: ”Float like a butterfly, sting
likea bee,” Ali’s longtime slogan, is the
best definition of poetry l’ve ever
heard. Only a poet could have come up
with it.)

Well, perhaps the witch doctor has
missed his point. Perhaps he should
missed his point. Perhaps he should
have pointed out such things as Ali’s
incredible courage in the 605 when he
joined the Black Muslims (how could a
simple-minded nigger boxer dare to do
that?) and refused induction into the
army. ("I ain’t got nothin’ against them
Viet Congs,” he said, in the most
eloquently simple antiwar statement
ever made.) Perhaps he should have
looked at Ali as the incredible social
and political phenomena he is, a man
able to mobilize the entire Third World
ata lift of his finger...perhaps a future
President.

Perhaps, perhaps. But what is life but
a series of missed possibilities?
Someday the witch doctor will learn to
read and write and do an entire book on
the subject. Until then, he will read
omens; and the omens say, un-
mistakable: Muhammad Ali has not yet
done his most significant work—he’ll be
with us, and among us, for many years
to come.

 

Scott Payton graduated from UK in
1973. He is a former contributor to
Rolling Stone magazine and is now
working as a free lance boxing
promoter in Frankfort. His column,
"Ten Years On," appears weekly in the
Kernel.

 

 

 

 

 

, adv} flung-«ahww‘e' *‘t‘ "" ‘ ' " '

 

 

 t—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. September 25. 1975

Lexington's Oldest Restaurant
H9 South Limestone Street, LexingtOn
For Reservation Phone 2311in

 

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5 over 400 prints Student Center 523‘.
1 This week only Rm. 206 3
2 Sept. 2? 26 Wed. ~ Fri. 10-5 3‘
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E .DICGSSO Dali Rembrant Vangogh Renoir , Klee ‘3—

 

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We Carry All Types
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109 N. Broadway 254-7013

 

    
     
     
       
      
   
       
    

Special Sale!
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‘ students are invited to ,. ..
apply for routine den» G ~

 

   

The College of Denistry
has several openings for
new clinic patients. UK

. tal care. For more
.=®mio. call 233-5850.

      

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7
1‘ news briefs
Nixon may testify

on intelligence topics

WASHINGTON (AP) «The Senate Intelligence Committee
agreed unanimously Wednesday to ask former President Richard
M. Nixon to testify on a broad range of subjects relating to its in-
vestigation of improper domestic activities by US. agencies.

Chairman Frank Church (D-IdahO) said the committee's chief
counselwas instructed to open negotiations with Nixon‘s lawyers to
secure his appearance.

Church said that after a closed-door discussion committee
members felt Nixon himself was the “best witness" in a number of
areas, including the background of the so—called Huston plan to give
US. intelligence agencies broad domestic power.

Church said he couldn't comment as to when or where or in what
manner Nixon might be asked to appear because he said that would
be a subject for negotiations.

Carroll, Gable endorse
judicial system changes

l.()l'lS\'ll.l.E. Ky. (AP) —-Both Democratic Gov. Julian Carroll
and his Republican opponent, Robert Gable. have endorsed a
proposed amendment to the state's judicial system.

Carroll and Gable. have issued a joint statement Wednesday
calling on voters to approve the amendment. which will be on the
Nov. 4 ballot.

“As candidates for Governor of the state of Kentucky, we
recognize the importance of improving the court system in Ken-
tucky,“ the joint statement said. “Therefore, we endorse and
support the proposal to amend the Judicial Article of the Kentucky
Constitution."

The amendment would set up a Kentucky Supreme Court. with an
appeals court below it. then circuit courts and district courts.

Gov. Carroll to address
Med Center dedication

A new $5 million patient care services addition to the Med Center
will be dedicated by Gov. Julian Carroll Saturday.

The addition began receiving patients July 23.

Other speakers will include President Otis A. Singletary;
William B. Sturgill, Board of Trustees chairman: and Peter B.
Bosomworth, Med Center vice president.

Ceremonies will begin at 10 a.m., Sept. 27.

Shaving legs: Badge of slavery?

 

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) -—Judith Quist. who lost her job as a
waitress because she refused to shave her legs. has taken her fight
to federal court. She bases her complaint on a 19th century an-
tislavery law.

Quist's suit in [7.8. District Court maintains her former employer
required her to wear a “badge of slavery" when he told her to
shave her legs.

"We‘re saying that forcing a woman to shave her legs is forcing
her back into servitude." said Ann Hill, director of the Connecticut
Women's Educational and Legal Fund, which filed the suit.

The complaint also claims the job requirement violated the
waitress‘s civil rights.

Proiect Renew offered by AAUW
allows women to resume studies

Women who wish to resume interrupted academic work toward
professional or employment goals can apply for grants under
Project Renew. The American Association of University Women
(AAUW) handles both Project Renew and grants for doctoral
degree candidates.

Renew is open to women who plan to enroll in full or part-time
study in an accredited college or university. and who have not
followed a formal course of study for a year or more. Applicants
must be working toward a bachelor or master‘s degree.

Doctoral degree candidates can receive financial aid through an

AAUW Fellowships program. All grants are awarded according to
need.

Information is available through the AAUW. Lexington Branch.
2533 Southview Drive.

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