xt7zcr5nd04d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zcr5nd04d/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-12-09 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 09, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 09, 1975 1975 1975-12-09 2020 true xt7zcr5nd04d section xt7zcr5nd04d Vol. LXVII No. 88
Tuesday. December 9. 1975

' KKeENii’i'S e]

   

an independent student newspaper

 

Experiential Ed
A85 faculty urges strict standards

By JAMIE l.l'('l\'E
Kernel Staff Writer

in an attenrpt to emphasize the academic
orientation of experiential education (ICE) the
.\l'lS and Sciences i:\c\"5i faculty council adopted
several policy recommendations Monday, EE
allows students to earn acaderrric credit for
work study.

Hire resolution could limit the number of
credit hours that can be earned in EE. The
council also recommended the addition of an EE
discription to the :\t\*S section of the l'niversity
catalog and a standard policy regarding EE
courses offered by individual A&S departments.

The proposal will be presented to the Adi-S
faculty tor approval next semester. HE.
McKeait AaS faculty council chairman said.

the proposal stipulates A&S students may not
register for more than six EE hours per
semester or count more than 15 EE credits

toward a bachelor‘s degree without approval of

the A&S dean.

('un‘ent University Senate policy permits
students to count up to 30 EE hours toward
graduation. McKean said.

“'l‘lrirty hours is onefourth of the total hours
required forgr‘aduation in A618 and students with
that much EE in ight miss valuable core courses
in their major.” said Ann Garrity. A&S faculty
council administrative assistant.

EE's emphasis in A&S should be academic.
Mt'Kt‘iln said. “The main thrust should be on
reflection. writing the report. putting it together
and seeing how it relates to the academic ex-
perience." he said.

“in A&S the value of the experience comes
from reflection not from the work task,"
(lan‘ity added.

the proposed catalog description will be "used
to supplement and clarify" the University
Senate‘s policy. according to the recom-
mendation. in addition to limiting the number of
HE credit hours that can be earned by A&S
students without the dean’s approval the
description also outlines the council's
philosophical stance.

Eli provides an opportunity to earn academic
credit by "engaging in intellectual processes"
relating to "oiit-otclassroom exrx‘riences."
arcordrng to the council '5 recommended catalog
descriptions

EE should help students “gain insight into
principlrs and concepts relevant to individual
disciplines.” the proposed description states.
"Academic credit is earned by demonstrating an
understanding of those principles and concepts"
not according to the ”actual task or work per—
tormed."

The proposed catalog description also outlines
EE registration procedures for A818 students.
but according to E E Director Robert Sexton. the
new policy includes no changes in the current
registration procedure.

The council's departmental applications
recommendation. the second phase of the
proposal, was adopted to “establish a consistent
policy“ for EE courses offered by A&S depart
nients. McKean said.

In addition to the University—wide course of-
fered by the Office of Experiential Education
iExp. 396). departments also can offer their own
EE courses. Sexton said. The University Senate
designated course number 399 for departmental
EE courses last year. he said.

('ontinued on page I”

- Bruce Orwin

 

Eyeing the goods

Ann Stuart Baxter gazes. with nose pressed against the glass. at the
display in the window of Thornbury Toys. Ann spotted the dolls
while shopping with her grandmother at Turfland Mall.

 

 

By NANCY [)ALY
Assistant Managing Editor

The University Senate voted Monday
to establish a no-smoking policy in
classrooms. Enforcement of the policy
is left to the administration.

The original resolution. proposed by
Biology Professor Marjorie Crandall.

  

Monday‘s meeting was the last
for l975 Senate (‘ouncil
(‘hairman Joseph Krislov. who
received a resolution of ap-
preciation from the Senate.

requested the administration to enforce
a smoking ban in classrooms.
seminars. examinations, faculty.
senate and other academic meetings.
Several amendments were passed
resulting only in an in-class smoking
ban.

But (‘randall said the resolution
adopted by the Senate was the "best
compromise“ possible and that half-
way through the hour-long smoking
debate she thought it wouldn't get
passed at all.

.lack (‘. Blanton. vice president for
busine$ affairs. was asked by Senate
(‘ouncil (‘hairman Joseph Krislov to
clarify l'niversity smoking regulations.
llc circulated copies of a regulation
which permits smoking in most places.

l'llanton asked the Senate to
distinguish whether their resolution
(ldilt with smoking as a health and
safety matter. therefore requiring the
appmval of the president and Board of
Trustees, or as a distraction to the
acadmiic process. therefore leaving
the matter to the Senate.

(‘randall said the resolution. which
she said was designed to protect the
rightof everyone to breathe cleanair in
public places. should be considered as

an academic matter. Krislov agreed.

The word ingof the original resolution
was changed after Vice President for
Academic Affairs Lewis Cochran asked
if it meant that the Senate was asking
the administration to establish an
academic policy. Under University
rules. theSenate is charged with setting
academic policy.

The resolution was changed to read-
“'l‘he University Senate establishes.
and requests that the administration
enforce. a n0~smoking policy in
classrooms." Mention of
“examinations, seminars. faculty.
senate and other academic meetings"
was deleted.

The question of how to enforce the no-
smoking policy was left unanswered.
(‘ochran said sanctions may exist in the
faculty code. but not the student code,
to enforce the policy.

He asked the senate to advise the
administration. if the regulation is
academic. whether violation con-
stitutes an academic offense and
w hether present wording of student and
faculty codes provide sufficient sanc-
tions for enforcement. Krislov said the
Senate (‘ouncil will take up that
question.

University Senate bans smoking in classrooms

Before adjourning to the cash~bar
annual party at the King Alumni House.
the Senate approved three recom-
mendations on arts and sciences (A818)
reorganization from its committee on
Academic Organization and Structure.

The committee, chaired by James
(‘riswell. has studied A&S
reorganimtion for a year since A&S
Dean Art Gallaher proposed several
steps to limit the size of the college.

Merger of the department of art and
the (‘ollege of Architecture, as
proposed in the Gallaher report was
rejected by the Criswell committee.

(‘riswell said the committee. rejected
merger a t this time because of potential
problems with facilities, differences in
art and architecture program ob-
jectives and overwhelming opposition
from their faculties.

The committee also rejected possible
realignment of interior design and
landscape architecture programs into
such a merged college.

The recommendations. which will go
to President “Us A. Singletary. are the
second set on A&S reorganization to
come out of the committee. The first set
dealt with reorganization of the old
School of (‘ommiinications

 

 

  

 

 

 

editorials

Lettas and Spectrum articles should be adcressed to the Emilia Pam Edna,
Hum 114 Journalism Building. they should be typed, Mespaced and sigma.
Lettas should not exceed 2.!) vim: and Spectrum article 7!) m

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Winges Susan Jones
Editor-in-Chief Editorial Page Editor
Ginny Edwards

Managing Editor

 

 

That Goliath under construction
downtown—the one sporting
”North America’s largest indoor
arena”—appears in danger of
being ignominiously felled. The
analogous David in the case of the
Lexington Civic Center is the need
for (and lack of) adequate parking.

It has been reported that
developers of the hotel, planned to
accompany the arena and con-
vention center, will not begin
construction until a parking plan
meeting their requirements is
approved. It is in formulating such
a plan that the problems have
arisen for the center’s planners.

 

It was originally decided that
parking for the civic center would
best be located in the 16~acre plot of
land just south of the center
(known as South Hill). All turning
South Hill into a parking lot
required was leveling ap~
proximately 100 houses and a lot of
asohalt.

Unfortunately, the South Hill
area still houses plenty of people
many of whom are old and poor.
Several area residents filed a suit
against Lexington Center Corr
poration (LCC) after about 17
houses on Spring Street, which
borders the South Hill area, were
already razed. The residents
contended that, at the very least,
LCC or the city owed them some
relocation assistance and money.

To top it all off, it seems the city
has an acute shortage of low
income housing. So it’s unlikely
that there is anywhere persons
displaced by the proposed parking
lot can relocate.

When the whole matter went
beforethe Lexington Urban County
Council last week, only one plan
emerged which made any sense at
all: the plan proposed by Coun
cilwoman Pam Miller. That plan
calls for a parking structure to be

4‘ u
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”Italian"!!! I,

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I Parking plagues
civic ccn ter, ho tel

     
   

built on land already substanitally
acquired and cleared by LCC.
Miller’s plan would provide
enough spaces to satisfy the hotel
developers’ requirements and the

recommendations of LCC’s
parking consulting firm, which
calls for a minimum of 2,200
spaces.

Ho~ever, just because Miller’s
plan is the best proposed so far,
does not mean it will be the one
chosen.

For one thing it is considerably
more expensivethan Mayor Foster
Pettit’s proposal to create an 18.5
acre wasteland from Broadway to
Merino Street. And there are in
dications the hotel developers are
less than enamoured with Miller's
plan, though no one will say exactly
why.

It is evident that LCC prefers one
of the plans developed by the firm

if hired to study the parking
situation, even though all of those
plans rely mainly on surface
parking.

The one factor which finally

recommends Miller‘s plan is that it
is the only proposal which takes
into account the people who live on
South Hill and yet appears
economically feasible. It is a good
compromise. ~

Jim Host, public relations man
for LCC, summed up the situation
well at an LCC board meeting the
other day. While the LCC board
members were meeting in secret
session to discuss parking, Host
came out of the meeting to brief
reporters. He said the board was
having difficulty deciding on a plan
and explained it as ”a group of
politicians who don’t realize tha
business side and a group of
business men who don’t un-
derstand the policical side.”

He made no mention of anyone
who understood the problems of
those who live on South Hill.

.4 ,
rwn suits: "s.
‘ .

(Jill

I.
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‘1‘ 'I-‘tz
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‘HELLQTHIS IS THE FBI,DEFENDERS or numwsncg AND THE AMERICAN WAY-—
MAV I HELP vousr 7"

Kids are great when
Santa is watching

I love kids. In December.

Eleven months out of the year, many, if
not most, children are a pain in the neck.
”Gimmee, gimmee, gimmee, I want, l
want.” It’s no wonder parents go insane
and broke. Some charitable institution
should set up a combination madhouse-
poorhouse for young parents.

 

   
  

‘peogv

COIdWGH

 

 

Now I don’t exactly hate kids. Give me a
chance. I have an iB-month-old niece who
is a delight to be ar0und, and l was
flattered to no end when she finally
learned to say my name: “Baygee.” It’s
just that I’m glad l can hand her back to
my sister or brother-inlaw when the
Pampers start leaking. l’m iust not cut out
for that chore.

One of the reasons I like her so much,
aside from the obvious fact that she’s part
of a close-knit family, is that she’s too little
to do much but eat, sleep and be cute. She
feels no embarrassment ab0ut lying down
in the middle of the floor for a nap when
she’s tired of entertaining everybody. She
knows her limits.

Another reason is that she doesn’t know
about Christmas. A lot of children I’ve
known have started talking about it in
January, and leave periodic notes on the
refrigerator as to what they’d like from
Santa. That’s in case they forget.

But come Dec. I, along about the time
the last batch of turkey soup is being
finished off, all Mommy or Daddy has to
say in order to get one of them into the tub,
or out of the candy jar, is ”Santa’s
watching you.” Suddenly the same girl
who bit her brother’s earlobe so ferocious-
ly that he had to have stitches, and the
same boy who organized a lynching of the
kindergarten teacher, assume a beatific
glow, and you could almost swear a halo.
Budding Eddie Haskells, these.

I Assembly
I Editor:
} I hate to stereotype people, and I
have never been "anti-Greek,“ but the
, behavior of a group of students sporting
Q fraternity insignia at the Dec. 2 General
‘ Student Assembly (GSA) was so
I morally offensive as to lower my
l opinion of their organizations. These
1 students rose and sat in unison, as if on
f command, on nearly every vote that
I was taken, and at one point, following a
vote, a few who had been talking during
I the reading of a resolution looked at
each other as one said, ”What did we
! iust vote on?”
' Perhaps these fraternity members
are so homogene0us in their opinions
that they just naturally agree on every
issue, but if this is true, then the
negative, redneck, "rabble-rouser”
stereotype of the Kentucky Greek is
also true. Not only were their actions

M“ —Letters“

I picked up the old “Santa’s watching
you” trick from my mother, who still
springs it on me from time to time. (Once
in a while it works.) When l was teaching
tennis to 30 kids at a time, I used it, and
they all learned to hit backhands. It works
a lot better—4f there are no spoilers in the
group—than the stern parental ”We’re

-. paying a fortune for those lessons, and

what do you do? You sit by the fence
making sand bombs!” A psychologist
w0uld probably call it positive reinforce
ment, but I call it bribery, and with
impunity, since they aren’t my kids.

It also worked one summer when three
boys for whom I was babysitting burned
their driveway. They had poured gasoline
from the street about halfway to the
garage when l smelled something from
indoors, left Dragnet, and went to see what
was going on.

The dears were preparing to throw the
rest of the gas on the uncooked portion of
the driveway and finish it off with
firecrackers, dangerously close to a car
with a full tank (back in the old days when
a full tank was less than a luxury). They
threatened to beat me up if I tried to stop
them, and in memory of the bruises
sustained the week before, I decided to
resort to the power of persuasion.

”No dinner," I warned

”Big deal. Y0u never cook anyway.”
Correct.

”To bed at eight, then.”

”We’ll climb out the window.” They had
and they would.

”I’ll call your parents.”

”They’re out on the river.” Also correct.

”I’ll call the cops.“ Getting desperate
now.

"We’ll put it out before they get here and
they’ll think you’re crazy.” Also correct.

Finally, as a last resort, ”Santa‘s
watching you!” I shrieked it like a
Charenton inmate.

”David, get the hose.”

Thanks, Mom.

Peggy Caldwell is a graduate student in
the Patterson School specializing in inter-
national relations. This column marks the
last of her weekly contributions to the
Kernel editorial page.

i
and remarks in the meeting racist, f
sexist, chauvinistic and narrow- I
minded, but they discredited the entire l
assembly by their absurdity.

I am not a left-wing revolutionary, a
"sexual deviant” or a member of an
ethnic minority. Actually, I’m a WASP,
by definition. But I believe in the civil
rights of all people, including minori~
ties, and in freedom of individuals from
government intervention in private
affairs which are not detrimental to the
public. Gays don’t frighten me and
bladrnn>c:.rb rmumamminaco

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spectrum

 

 

 

 

Low nicotine is not

a desirable trait

 

By Wayne Davis

Your article (”Harvard researcher
d0ubts effects of smoking on health,”
Kernel, Nov. i9) on the latest federal
tar and nicotine tests for cigarettes said
that a smoker’s health would stand a
better chance if he switched to a brand
with low tar and nicotine ratings (most
of the popular brands have rather high
ratings).

This is not true. Although low tar is a
desirable characteristic of a cigarette,
low nicotine is not.

There are numerous substances in
cigarette smoke harmful to the health,
such as BAP, carbon monoxide,
cadmium, cyanide and phenols. How‘
ever, nicotine apparently is the only
addictive drug present; it is nicotine
dependency that causes the addict to
continue smoking in spite of his most
intensive efforts to quit. The lower the
nicotine content the more cigarettes
required to maintain the blood plasma
level in the smoker, and the greater the
quantity of the other harmful sub-
stances he and his neighbors are
assaulted with. It would take, for
example, four King Sanos or six Carlton
filters to provide the smoker with the
nicotine available to him in a single
Winston kingsize.

Nicotine is excreted into the urine
almostas fast as it is absorbed. Thus it
is necessary for the addict to get a new
supply of the drug into his bloodstream
every hour to function in reasonable
comfort, even if he is using a high
nicotine cigarette.

 

Nicotine occurs in the body fluids of
virtually all urban non-smokers
throughout most of their lives and it
requires no more than one or two
smokers to contaminate a building with
this drug (”Lancet,” Jan. 25, 1975, p.
181). However, the amounts found in
the urine of nonsmokers were small
and likely do not constitute a health
hazard, at least when compared to the
other toxins we all receive when
exposed to smokers’ pollution.

Therefore the innocent bystander and
the smoker are both better off if the
smoker uses a single high nicotine
cigarette each hour than for him to use
four to six low nicotine cigarettes to
obtain his close.

The low tar and nicotine derby has
been a boon to the tobacco companies,
and is probably a major factor in the
increase in per capita consumption of
cigarettes. Efforts by the American
Cancer Society, other health organiza
tions and the anti-tobacco bloc in
Congress to limit by law the amount of
nicotine in cigarettes are not in the
public interest. Better they should
require cigarettes to deliver a high dose
of nicotine with a minimum amount of
tars. Better still they sh0uld require
that a nicotine pill be marketed so as to
give the addict the drug he needs
without subjecting him and his neigh.
bors to air pollution.

The filter binge is another thing that
has benefited primarily the tobacco
companies, because filter materials
are cheaper than tobacco. Any filter
which would diminish the amount of

 

 

Thanks

Editor:

Thank you (Mike Hale, Scott Martin,
and Karen Redick) for showing me the
light! Of course we should let Jimmy
Conyers preach from the fountain. (The
Sermon on the Fount, if you like.) The
message .of God is much more impor-
tant than any dumb old University rule.
in fact the message of God is much
more important than any of the classes
I have. Why, instead of studying my
chemistry all semester, I should have
studied my bible! And what aboUt that
crazy old chemistry professor who
thinks his subject is so important? We
should get rid of him and the rest of the
teachers, too. Let’s replace them with
evangelists and preachers who will
teach us something really important,
like the message of God. And then when
we are all full of the spirit we’ll go out
and rid the world of those Muslems,
Buddhist and transcendental medita-
tion freaks that refuse to accept the
message of God! Amen.

I hope you got a chuckle from the
preceding paragraph. (If you agreed
with it i feel sorry for y0u.) I did
overstate the case a bit, but there is a
vital point to be made. Conyers need not
break University regulations to get his
message to the students He breaks
these rules: only because he wants to

raise an variant wit iwgin'rne some

sort of modern day martyr. The next
time Conyers appears on the fountain
he should get the incident he wants, and
be evicted by the police. A pest like
Conyers doesn’t go away when ignored,
he gets worse. Throw him off the
ountain before he shows up in my
astronomy class ranting about that
heretical idea of the earth moving
around the sun!
Pete Nonacs
Zoology freshman

Sick news

Editor:

The news of gay liberation, Luron
Taylor’s murder and alleged drug use
among UK football players was ex
posed, printed, re-exposed, reviewed,
rereviewed and continu0us|y given full
publicity.

is everyone so sick that they thrive cn
another’s misfortune or eccentricities?
When evangelist Jimmy Conyers tried
to spread God’s good news instead of
depressing news he was condemned for
expressing his religious beliefs.

Has Our society rejected religion to
the extent of preferring news of
homosexuality, murder and drug use?
When such news receives frontrpage
’CW/F'rrth ff‘r weeks and even months, it
not» at: wthw' ”w- talt :‘r newspaper

um» .u. :i ' farm'- sine, mars 3

Letters

 

nicotine delivered to the smoker should
be Outlawed. On the other hand filters
which remove phenols and decrease the
amount of other toxins delivered to the
lungs are beneficial to smokers. How
ever, filters do nothing to the noxious
sidestream smoke by which the pul-
monary rapists assault everyone who
must share their airspace. Some
studies show ab0ut twice as much tar
and nicotine, three times as much of the
cancer causing BAP, and five times as
much carbon monoxide in the side-
stream smoke as in the mainstream
smoke. There is also more cadmium in
the smoke that drifts off the burning
end of the cigarette than in the drag the
smoker inhales.

So spare us from those who would
limit the amount of nicotine in
cigarettes and cause the smoker to
have to light up even more often than he

does now. if you have no sympathy for
the poor smoker caught up on the
accelerating treadmill, you should have
some for the rest of us who are faced
with ever increasing clouds of cigarette
smoke as a result of the race for lower
nicotine in tobacco.

Of course ab0ut a fourth of the
regular smokers are merely habitual
users, not really addicted to nicotine.
For these people your advice to switch
to a low tar, low nicotine brand might
seem meaningful. However, when these
people become concerned ab0ut the
health effects of smoking they are not
interested in changing brands; they
simply quit smoking.

 

Wayne Davis is a biology professor and
Group Against Smokers’ Pollution
faculty adviser.

 

 

 

suspect it’s the former.

All the uproar and repetitious
coverage of a male homecoming queen
was absurd. A male cannot technically
reign as queen unless he undergoes
Surgery to become a female. Why not
just have a king too, and end such
debates?

The queen uproar may have been
absurd, but the gays or whomever were
standing up for what they believed was
just and right. Why can't Conyers be
given the same consideration to ex.
press what he believes is right?

I w0uld like to hear some good news
occasionally, and although the ”gay
thing" was driven into the ground by
repetition, at least Conyers should be
given half the time to express his
beliefs.

Conyers’ approach might have been
more effective if he was more subtle,
instead of insulting some listeners by
preaching hell fire and damnation.
Still, he like the gays deserves to say
what he believes.

Cezar Cornett
Journalism sophomore

Waiting

Editor
i tit'nk .t's atr‘v't time ,ioo Corker
K'l ky‘v’t' ih .‘ "i“ ;_ ..+ t , .‘n 1‘93”“) 5;.

U“... ,_ t‘ ”I: x . «i .' . .‘.Eii~;“'“j ‘.i \‘

baited breath. By all rights (as history
repeats itself in Janis Joplin, Jimi
Hendrix and Brian Jones) he sh0uld
have signed off long ago. All the tragic
heroes do that, don’t they? He’s such a
mean fucker though, he’ll probably live
to be too and still be a moaning,
drunken zombie in his rocking chair.
But i doubt it. I hear his liver’s a mess
and he’s killed more of his brain cells
than mankind has killed flies in all
history. Let’s have another round for
Joe. To yOUr health, old man. We’re all
waiting.

Normandi Ellis
Journalism senior

Birds

Editor:
i think Jack Renaud’s letter of Nov. 6
(Kernel, ”Trash”) about what was

”front-page” news was stupid and
booring (both connotations intended).
One article about how a stray bird was
treated with kindness is worth 10,000
murder stories any day of the week. Let
us remember: ”No act of kindness, no
matter how small, is ever wasted.”
l. Aesop). i hope he thinks about the next
time he cleans his bird’s cage.

Gone-4:: DaVega
AéLS junior

  

 

limb: KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. December 9. I975 l—‘r‘
. ws briefs.
The Kernel needs writers .. . 17¢ . '
Pike files contempt action

ca" 25 7. 1 755 against Henry Kissinger

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

Take A Little Of UK
Home With You

Don’t Waste Your Time Between Semesters

begin a course you need NOW. Finish it early in the Spring

semester or take a full year.

Come to our offices, Rm. 1,

Frazee Hall a nd see the Study Guide for the course you need.

INDEPENDENT STUDY
THROUGH CORRESPONDENCE
ENROLL NOW- ANYTIME

   

WASHINGTON (AP) Rejecting a compromise offer from
President Ford. Intelligence (‘ommittee Chairman (itis G. Pike
tiled contempt action in the House on Monday against Secretary of
State Henry A Kissinger

'l‘lie .\ew \ ork Democrat said he would ask for a House vote on
contempt “ii‘ a couple of days" unless the intelligence committee
opposes his position at a meeting 'l‘uesday.

“No one is seeking to place Mr. Kissinger in Jail." Pike wrote
tellow House members in a "Dear Colleague" letter. “The worst
that can happen to him is that he might have to provide the
documents subpoenaed to Congress."

Ford‘s compromise offer was to identity to the House committee
all l' S. covert intelligence operations abroad since 1961 that were
requested by the State Department rather than by intelligence
agencies.

Pike said that does not comply with the committee‘s subpoena for
all State Department requests for information on all covert
operations whether carried out or not.

l’ike said the State Department originally told his committee it
requested tive covert operations during the 14 years but said the
department has now found 25 requests for covert operations.

Kissinger would say only that he will let the White House
iiegdiatc the matter.

Pre-dawn blasts cause
damage in Louisville

Lot'lSVlLLE (APiH Home-made pipe bombs damaged an office
building and destroyed a mail truck Sunday but the blasts caused
no injuries. police said.

Damage caised by the two pre-dawn explosions was estimated at
$8.500.

'l‘he lirst bomb exploded behind a pillar in front of the United

.‘ L..." m“ v-m* II ~ i I A I n I. ”a...“

—I.

,Mr

Building on Seventh Street. shattering a window and hurling pieces ii”
of metal into the lobby and the offices of the Univac Division of '
Sperry Rand (‘orp. and a branch of the First National Bank of
InlllSV’lllt‘.
The second bomb exploded at a service station at Southern Park- .
Arm ROTC way and Kenwood Way. where US. Postal Service mail delivery .é
z, . trucks were stored.
am Wha ea Leon Kiuep. a postal service employe. said one truck caught fire 3
Le t It takes tOI d. and was destroyed. another was severely damaged by fire and a "
third was hit by shrapnel.
O 0
Queen Elizabeth may abdicate
O O O
in favor of heir Prince Charles ,
2,,
LUNIMN (AP) Queen Elizabeth H may end her reign at some , .
You've heard that before. You earn your commission luturetimcby abdicatingintavor other son and heir to thethrone. *‘

50‘ make US prove it. We while you earn your degree. l’l‘int'l' ('harles. reports Sunday-Mirror.

think we can The com ission b itself The article stated that the abdication could come “not this year.
Armv ROTC hel S kee a“ t if t l y d h. ‘ not next year. But it is possible that she will consider giving up the
v _ ' p ,p es. 1. ieS - 0 ,your ea ers 1p throne within the next it) or 15 years." .:“_

your Optlons open. Phat abilities. YOU have the OP' "'l'his is the present thinking of those nearest to the queen— who 5
means a lOt unless you re tion of an Army career with knowthe wayher mind works."theSundayMirrorsaid. is
absolutely certain how you all the pay, prestige and h . .
wantto spend the rest ofyour travel Opportunities of an Researc ers say schizophrenia .
life It prepares you for officer 0 o

' . . . . 0 caused b chemical imbalan
success in both ClVlllan and There are plenty of other y ' C9
military carerers. reasons why Army ROTC SANTA MONICA. Calif.. (APi—Researchers say they have
lusive evidence that most schizo hrenia is caused b i

H 0w ? amassed conc p y g

I" t ( nd m b makessense for ayoung man chemical imbalances in the brain and tends to be hereditary. '
_ ”S a 3 ye 01' woman ‘detgrmmed to get Dr. Seymour Kety, a Harvard University psychopharmacologist,
foremost) Army ROTC ahead. Wed like to tell you saidthereare three main lines ofresearch contributingtothe belief
teaches you leadership. more. that mental disorders are biochemical in origin.

Practicalleadership. HOW to Kety said there is now “conclusive evidence" of hereditary ,v‘
- - influence in most schizophrenia and many cases of manic 1
deal With and influence d .
. - epressmn.
people. howéo make thmg: Army ROTC The psychiatric drug specialist said the evidence on schizo-

a ppen. usmess an phrenia comes from studies of adopted persons who developed the
government always pay a COlonel Ke” illness later in life. Scientists who contacted the patients‘
premium for leadership! Y families—with whom the victims had no contact after their j_

While you take the Ad- Room 101 adoption—determined that the illness tended to run in the family. '-
vanced Course, you also Kittiesxiihers reason that 'fthe'll ' h d't 't ' h ' 1 §
. . i i ness is ere iary,1 isc emica

$133029?” gnonth. Barker Hall in origin because the genes express themselves chemically. E
p ay your ex- .3

penses.

 

Tel. 258-2757

 
 

ARMY ROTC - the more you look at it, the better It looks

 

Kl'\ I (MM

erne

The Kaitudry Kernel, "4 Journalism
Building, University at Kentucky,
Lexington, Kentucky, 40506, is mailed five
tints ' «may during the year except durlng
Midays and exam periods, and twice
mkly wring summer session. Third
dass postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky,
0511. Subscription rates are $12 per lull
m. Punished by the Kernel Press.
Inc. andtounded in it‘ll, the Kernel beganas

the Cadet in mi. The paper has been
piuistnd continuously as the Kentucky
Kernel since 1915.

..Aavertising is intended only to help the
reader buy and any false or mistaking
advertising should be reported and will be
"WWW by the edtor's. Advertising
loom to be false or misleading will he
reported to the Better Business Bureau.

 

 'l‘llE KEN'l‘l'(‘KY KERNEL, Tuesday, December 9. 1975—5

"Arts line...

Trustees will hear decision
on dean of students post

By BIRTH “'INUES

 

  

WHITE L UD
LAUNDRYMAT

HIGH AND WOODLAND

We Never Close

      
 

future of the dean of students

-W

 

.9

M VM‘ ‘ ' M‘s-v ‘
M. . M

Editor-mi ‘hief

Dean of Students Jack Hall's
decision on whether he will
return to I'K after his year's
leave of absence will be heard by
the Board of Trustees today.

Hall‘s leave irom his
l'niversity post began Dec. 28.
1974 when he became Gov Julian
(’ai‘roll‘s chief administrative
assistant lor internal affairs.
The Board named former Public
Safety Director .loe Burch acting
dean of students.

Hall said Monday he has
written a letter to President ()tis
.\. Singletary concerning his
leave of absence and whether he
w ill return to the l‘niversity. Hall
added his dt’C ision concerning the
dean of students post