xt7fbg2h9z7x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7fbg2h9z7x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-03-12 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, March 12, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 12, 1975 1975 1975-03-12 2020 true xt7fbg2h9z7x section xt7fbg2h9z7x NARcii i2, ma’

KEN?”

(ltl Hid—‘pt'ndvnt student new

spuper

Katz attempts to disprove
Warren Commission theory

By LYNNF Fl \K
Kernel Staff “riter
Bob Katz, ASSLlSlHiIle lnfo‘ mation
Bureau. attempted to disprove the Warren
t'oiiiiiiLs‘sion's
the ltltil shooting of President John F
Kennedy. in a presentation to a packed
Student ('enter Ballroom 'l'uesday night
The bureau. based iii ('ambridge. Mass.
is sending speakers throughotit the
country to rally stipport for a
congressional investigation of the facts of
the assassination of the president The
bureau is also protesting the 'continuiiig
coverup" of the the
assassination
'l‘he \Kari‘en ('oininission, formed to
investigate the shooting concluded that
the Kennedy assassination. the wounding

details of

B) BYRON w I‘IS'I‘
Kernel Staff Writer
Several English department faculty
members have expressed disappointment.
surprise and shock at the failure of the
L'niversity to provide teaching asSistants
ITA'Si with some form of pay increase for
the tSfiS‘TG school year
“What is of particular concern to us."
said Dr. Michael l‘I Adelstein. associate
English professor. “is that this implies the
l'niveisity ‘s lack of respect to the teaching
of freshmen Not only in this department.
but in other departments as well, TA‘s do
much of the work in teaching freshmen "

THE ENGLISH department probably

has the laigest number of 'l‘A's of any

department in the University. he said

"lone assassin theory” of

of le \as go\e inoi John 1 onnally and of a
by stander were all accomplished by three
shots from one gun

\ccording to the commission's report
sixth story

School Book

fired from the
window of the Dallas
Depository
l'sing slides.
trahand

the shots were

photographs and a con
Kat/ pointed out
discrepancies between the
“.‘HTt‘Il t'oiniiiission s findings and pic
toi‘ial Kat/ suggested
assassins were present in Dallas

home movie.
«lo/ens of

c\ idence thiee

He showed a home iiio\ ie_ w hich he said
the lime liife t'oi'poinitioii lmttgli‘. ioi' one
half iinllion dollars but iii-yer released. in
which Kennedy is clearly knocked back
want against the

The “.tt'l't't] t 'oniiiiissioii maintained all
from the which is

limousine seat

tire caine depository

"We have .30 teaching assistants in the
freshman English program." he said
"Most of them teach two sections and have
full instructional
their classes

“lf they were not to teach the courses.
they would have to he taught by the
n-gular staff. who would get paid two to
three times more than the 'l‘A's get." he
said

responsibilities over

’I‘F.\('III,\t. assistants
AdeLstem ’I‘A‘s with It A 's
$665 for semester course
Those with masters degrees get $750 and
doctoral candidates get $800. he said

"So with a normal teaching local of four
courses. the average pay is $2.800 a school
year." Addstein said

are paid by
levels. said

l‘t‘Cf'th’ ("H’

behind the limousine. although 31'. of 80
spectatois ttlltts'llttltt‘tl said the shots came
from in front of the limousine Katz said.

FHdence suggests Kennedy was killed
iii crossfire. between two buildings and a
Kat] said

He presented architect's drawings of
the path of a bullet from the si\'th floor of
the depository Katy pointed out that for
the same bullet to pass through Kennedy's
back and hit (‘oniially in three places. it

grassy knoll.

would have been necessary for the bullet to
have lig/aged

He also showed that the bullet would
liaxe had to be fired from a point higher
than the sixth story window to pass
through Kennedy‘s back continue
through t'onnally s rib. waist and legs. as

and

the “arn'n commission stated
t oiitiiitied on page 3

”Us llill. assistant director of freshman
l'lngltsh. said a third of the 'l‘A's in his
department have parttiine Jobs outSIde
the l'niyersity . which is against graduate
school i‘ules

"WI-I ll.\\'F been concerned for sotne
time about things like grade inflation and a
lack of professionalism." said Hill. who is
a teaching assistant "But it‘s hard to
expect time. care and professionalism
trom a TA when he has a partrtime job,
and its hand to expect a professional at-
tittide when liis chosen profession fails to
provide a living stipend "

.-\delstein said 'l‘A's “terribly
deinoralized and frustrated " The loss of
affecting classroom

(”‘0

is seriously
said

morale
instruction. he

"It‘s hard to make them feel what

Kernel stall photo by Chuck Combos

J

g] t‘nii'eisity‘ of Kentucky

n
‘ ,

v .
\

liexmgton. Ky. 40506

HUB KATZ
Assassiiation information Bureau

Faculty concerned over no pay raise for assistants

they're doing is important if this im-
portance is not translated into a monetary
consideration." he said.

.\l)Fl.!s‘TFlN SAID he doesn't know who
is respmsible for the situation. “The
faculty was not consulted on this.” he said.
"in fact. the faculty is never consulted
about budget priorities "

‘ We might have been able to bring this
oversight to the attention of the ad—
ministration ' he said But Hill said he
doesn't think lack of faculty consultation
concerning budget priorities was an
oversight

“The fact is. if we don‘t like it they know
they can get other people to do the Job at
these wages." Hill said "We‘re Just not on
the priority list at all "

(‘ontinued on page 3

Workin' hard

l-Iarl Tucker
Powell

and \\ ay iie

work on a new
recreation building hehiiid the
tennis courts near the Seaton

(enter.

 

  
  
  
   
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
   
  
   
 
   
  
   
 
   
  
   
     
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
  
 
  
    
 
   
 
  
  
    
    
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
   
 
 
 
 
 

Editoranclliet. Linda Carries
Managing editor, Ron Mitchell
Associate editor. Nancy Oaly

Features editor, Larry Mead
Arts edior, Greg Hotelich
Sports editor. Jim Mauom

editorials

Editorial 9399 MIN" Dill Crulcher Photography editor, Ed Gerald Ed-lorials represent the opinions M "W t'd‘m"

WlN finally loses

Aslogan's job isathanklessone. It between “Nixon‘s the
must inspire the masses without

alienating the intelligentsia.

breadth of feeling. It has to remain and Tyler too.“

fresh and unwilted. for at the first

sign of weariness it is sure
replaced.

The latest slogan to get the bum's lie—elect
rush is that paragon of mediocrity
“Whip Inflation Now.” better known

as WIN. The Citizen‘s Action Com— to Cut t'p Meni.

mittee. which President Ford saddled
with the acratian acronym. officially

discarded it Saturday.

As a political slogan. "Whip In-

I'nderstandably'.

created WIN.

tlation Now” has to rank somewhere slogan.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

of free enterprise is to maximize profits

Only goal

By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN
\\'.\Slll.\'(‘.T().\‘ —— They‘re ex-
posing nursing homes again.
But. without detracting from the
excellent work on the topic by
such men as The Village Voice's
Jack Newfield. how much good
do these repeated exposes do‘.‘
"An old Tammany Hall states-
man once said. ‘Reform is a
morning glory.‘ This goes for
muckraking too. We rake a little
muck. and move on; the money
boys stay.” writes John Hess. a
reporter for The New York
Times. who has also written
first-rate articles on the subject.

IF .\ll'(‘KR.\KI.\'G and inves-
tigatory journalism sometimes
accomplish nothing of substance.
they often offer villains against
whom we can get off our anger
and indignation. Thus. stirred by
the publicity. the Senate has
recently hung a certain Bernard
Bergman up by his ears.

The owner of a string of nursing
homes. Mr. Bergman has been
driven before the inevitable cam-
eras and investigatory commit-
tees. thereto be stigmatized as a
high-profit louse, However. pre-
suming Mr. Bergman has broken
no laws. it is difficult not to feel
sympathy for him when a profes-
sional boy scout like Sen, Charles

WHAT is
W bad, 7
flow

WV. .

    

BECAUSE tr 91.10069 TO
THE opt . 76W
‘62“ @317ng THE

5 ratio GOUQttT iw

LAURAMCE DAv’tP WP

/‘

Percy lH.~Ill. . asks him. "How is
it possible for a man to parlay'
530.000 30 years ago to a fortune.
by his own accounts of $24 million
— two-thirds of it in nursing
homes?"

(if all people. Mr Percy ought
to be able to answer that ques-
tion. He. too. started out as a poor
boy and made it into the big
money. Percy did it by operating
a camera company; Bergman
did it by operating a nursing
home company. Other than that
each man made his dough in a
different industry. it‘s hard to see
what gives Percy the right to lord
it over Bergman. They both did
the same thing: They maximized
profit.

THAT‘S WHAT FREE enter-
prise does; that‘s its only goal.
Hence the cliche expression. "the
bottom line." Every business-
man in America will tell you that
the bottom line is all that counts.
By its own self-definition. pri—
vate-enterprise capitalism has no
calculus for. no way of handling
any other value except profit and
loss.

A beginning student in eco-
nomics knows that the capitalist.
in seeking to invest. looks only for
the business which will give him
the highest rate of return at the

T HE TTHE
5%UOM ,ROCKV
/

5%
me.

“what this country needs is a good
Like five-cent cigar.” It definitely suffers
poetry. it demands economy of in comparison to "speak softly and
verbiage. subtlety of tone and yet carry a big stick." or

As an acronym WIN can‘t hold a
to be candle to such meaningful ab-

breviations as CREEP (Committee to
the President).
iNational Organization for Reform of
Marijuana Lawst or SCL‘M «Society

no one in
Washington will admit to having
Whoever it was
deserves to go the same way as the

One" and

"Tippecanoe

NORM I.

lowest possible risk of losing his
money. It makes no difference
what the nature ot the business is
It can be manufacturing camer-
as. processing sausages or
running nursing homes To a
capitalist with money to iniest.
the only calculable difference
between a sausage and an old
woman dying of diabetes is which
commodity represents the po
tentially highest rate of return

A CAPITALIST 0F Percy's
rank and stature knows perfectly
well there are no dedicated
operators in any industry who are
dedicated to anything but profit
maximization Everybody who
grows up in America knows that.
although sometimes we prefer to
push the fact into the corners of
our minds since it is less injurious
to the spirit to imagine that I' 8
Steel isn't in business to make the
most money. but because
“They're involved "

By training and life experience
we know what they're involved
in. but. by failing to remember
that profit maximization is the
single constant of all business. we
allow the politicians to heguile us
with witless controversies about
such fictions as “excess‘ or
“windfall" profits. I'nder capi-
talism no such thing can exist.

I TOLD TELg HE MAN,
‘(Od Rodd, TELL
VESTEE' ME ’ AOMM.’

    

’NO THANKS — I'M TRYING TO GIVE IT UP.’

'l‘here are only high protits and
low protits which are determined
in one way coniparatiye return
on invested capital llowi-iei it
people can be suckered into
protits

belicying in "e\ccss'

they can also be brought to
belieye that "responsible” busi
nessmen. running nursing homes
and pharmaceutical companies,
will turn into economic hippies
and shoot tor a moral. rather
than a maximum rate of return

l-‘llltlili'l‘ SI ('II I Ilililt \I.
mush lt is for us to decide
whether Adam Smith‘s tamous
“unseen hand" reali/es our val
ues as successtully in the death
house industry as well as ll does
In the sausage industry lt the
answer is yes. don‘t dump on the
Bergmans. or think that ware
housing the sick and dying for
profit can be ameliorated by
government regulation hi all
industries. this one too. the
regulatees have the preponder
ant influence over the regulators

It the answer is no. you might
consider the example of In and
Mrs Henry Van ltusi-n The
77 yearold former president of
l'nion 'l‘heological Seminary and
his 80-year old wite recently took
sleeping pills together to end
their lives In a letter explaining
why. they said one of the reasons

    
        

 

they did it was because they
didnt want to "die in a nursing

tinnit-

 

\lt‘lltllll\ \oii Hoffman is a
columnist lUl‘ King l‘eatiiri-s

\\ ndicatc

Letters
Knocks
WBK Y

\lbiini rock was an instant
success in niusicstaryed
l.t'\lllLllltll yet has been on a
downhill skid eyer since its lll
ii-ption llotllilt' t)" has
everyone doing a double take as
it slowly intilti‘ates its air lllllt'
with .\ .'\l rock". ads. and
i‘\t'l'}tlllllL1 it seemed to ltl'
originally against lt‘s rather
obvious the station consists of a
tape niachineand a tew worn out
.id\ and I often tind myselt
mtyltlL‘ didnt l just hear that"
\laybc this slow transition I\
-tltipil\t'tl to go unnoticed. along
with the increased ad llllll'
What s next" Reds baseball"

l‘li'ltll‘t' you pick up your
\cngctul pens let me say l‘m not
totally against “AM rock". or
llcds' Baseball. tor I'm sure
there's a time and a place tor it
\ot however. on a station devoted
to music pleasure

The standard reply is. how does
one make money. and that is a
problem for every station
except one You guessed it.
\\l’.l\'\. our own lwe ltt‘lllg ”W
students and heart of the l'n
yiersityi radio station high atop
beautiful .\lc\’ey Hall in down
toiiw campusland If you‘ve ever
timed in on WltKY though. its
tairly obvious students have no
say in the programming and l.
tot one. would like to know wli.‘
liycry school has a campus radio
station so wlicre‘soiirs" ll “Ill“
can't be student owned and
operated, what is it doing on oil!

«.inipns"

Iti ad I ostt"

\Ii-clianical lliiginei-iiiii;
|Illllot

 

   
  
 

 

 

M , .
I i-imw.-.ml

t'lt
lllt
slt
(ii
of

l‘I\

l v
an
iv;

gli
bu
do

yo

Bi
ca
in

te.
gt:
wt

\\t
ill

    

 

5
they
.ii‘siiig

is a

a t lll'l‘s

istant
dHcd
till .i
its in
lids
ake as
r time
and
to ltt'
i‘attici'
ts of a
irn olil
myself
that"
ion l\
. alum:
llllll'
tall"
your
Cm not
k”_ or
i sure
i for it
levoted

iw does
at is a
ion

scd II.
ing the
he l'ii
1h atop
down
ye ever
igli. its
ave no
and l.
w why
is radio
\‘lltlx'i
‘II and

till Hill

I I uslt't
met-lint;

|Illll|Il

Opinions from inside and outside the university commmmy

‘I am a CWENS; I am a lady. . .'

 

 

 

 

 

College with a capital-C
in all its concrete glory

ll) \(DRNI.\.\I)I ELLIS

With the assistance of WKQQ and my
electric alarm clock radio I get up every
morning at ten. dress. count the number of
steps t .34. 3?). So ..i to the Student (‘enter
(il‘lll where l waste two hours with a group
of half wits before I go to my first class
livery day A mindless ritual

The other morning it was cold as shit and
l was hungover from the night before (ah.
another pre-programmed I‘ll(‘l when I
walked through the Bo Gardens and the.
HI he damned I saw it in all its concrete
glory The campus I mean I‘ve seen the
buildings before and I know exactly which
door leads me to what room. but l never
really saw it before.

"WWWUINN)(HNHNNHN)I" I said. ”DO
you know you‘re in college?"

Well. I knew that was what it was called.
llut I never really thought about is as being
capital-C (‘ollege You know what I
mean...an institution offering instruction.
i.e, education A place that‘s supposed to
teach us lots of stuff about how we're
gonna be productive and useful when
we're all responsible and niiddleeaged.

‘WWWf)()()()()()()()()()()()'." I said.
“What the fuck am l doing llere‘.’"

I DIDN‘T KNOW. l still don't know. I
went to the Student (‘enter t .89. 90. 91.. t
and asked the nice lady at the information

desk. I said. ”Lady. where am I and what
am I doing here?"

She told me I was in the Student (‘enter
and I could eat lunch there and sit around
for two hours before my first class.

Then I went into the Student (‘enter
('afeteria and saw all the half~wits I see
there every day and I said. “Half-wits.
why are we in college and sitting in the SC
cafeteria‘V' And all the halfwits said. "It’s
all relative " Tomorrow l must remember
to thank them for such a direct and
collegiate answer.

“Bl'T AREN'T “E Sl'I’I’OSI‘II) to be
learning something?” It‘s so embarrass-
ing to be slow to catch on to what's
happening. but I had to ask again because
I was still confused.

“Sure." they said. “I‘ve learned that the
statue of Patterson by the office tower is
supposed to rise when a virgin goes by and
he hasn‘t risen all these years. I learned
how to shake the pinball machine at Tolly
Ho so it won‘t tilt, I learned how to tie my
shoes and count to 1:3. If the price of coffee
in the Student (‘enter goes up I may learn
how to count higher than that. Just the
other day I learned how to successfully
rip-off 22 of those overpriced textbooks at
the bookstore all at the same time. Sure.
sure. I learned lots of things."

"But" I said. “aren‘t we supposed to
learn higher educational tvpe stuff from

lly ('IIERYI. III‘INKI‘ZI.

Around this time last year, I received a
letter. along with every other freshman
woman with a 3.0 or better GPA. inviting
me to retum anapplication so that [might
be mnsidered a candidate for the national
sophomore women‘s honor society,
(‘WENS I promptly mailed back the
application, and was further instructed to
attend various teas and social gatherings
in order to be thoroughly eyed by the
present (‘WENS members to decide
whether or not I met their social stan-
dards.

l was accepted into this organization
w itliout a full understanding of what was to
be expected of me as a (‘WENS in my
sophomore year to come. As part of the
induction ceremony. the new members
were told to memorize a series of
ndiculous stanzas beginning with; “I am a
(\l'l‘lNS. I am a lady. " The idea of this.
along with the notion of playing dress-ups
and attending much-too-formal
ceremonies, repuLsed me. Nevertheless. I
was flattered at my acceptance 7
especially at the idea of a national honor
society brightening up my college tran—
script

AS THE '7: FALL semester rolled along,
I was curious as to why I had not been
informed of any (‘WENS meetings. I was
acquainted with a few of the new (‘WENS
members but had lost contact with them
after my freshman year. During the month
of December. I was notified by my only
friend in this organization that meetings
had been held since September; and that
they were listed in the Memo section of the
Kernel twhich is easily overlookedt.

I attended the December meeting and
noticed about em per cent of the members
proudly displaying their sorority letters
across their chests. Most of the members

comment

 

seemed to be best of friends, and I was the
obvious outsider. I did not stumble across
another ('WENS meeting posted in Memos
until this month. I attended this only to
discover my name. along with ap-
proximately ten others. declared “inac—
tive."

This label did not quite slap me in the
lace until the president proudly
proclaimed that the “inactives would have
their names sent to Links (the junior
women's honoraryi and Mortar Board
«the senior women‘s honorary ) as a means
of preventing them from ever becoming
members of these national honor societies.
This black list seemed to be their effective
manner of keeping the sorority girls.
social elites. or "ladies” call them what
you like , in this selective organization.
The byproduct. obviously. gave any non-
conformist a snowballs chance in hell of
attaining membership to any future honor
society.

This comment may sound like an
elaborate hard-luck story. and it probably
is one; but I feel that l and other "inac-
lives" are being treated totally unfair, l
presently have the academic
qualifications necessary to be considered
by Links. but it would be futile to apply to
this honorary because of the blacklist.

Hopefully. my experiences will serve as
a precaution to the freshman women who
will soon be receiving their (‘WENS ap~
plications. The organization could be very
w orthwhile if it was notsoc'ially oriented to
the extremethat it is at present. I hope my
negligence tor is it the organization's
negligence?» will be kept in mind so that
future (‘Vl'ENS members will not find
themselves banned from junior and senior
honoranes.

 

(‘heryl llenkel is a sophomore in
Education.

 

 

those over-priced textbooks we rip-off
from the bookstore?"

l KNEW l Slltll’IJYV'T have asked that
question, Their faces were as white and
blank as a photograph that had never been
acquainted with a camera. “WE
ARE'.".".". ‘. Y"

“WWWOOOI)()0()()()()()()7" I said.

Two hours later I saw my skinny. wiry
and intellectual teacher after class. I just
knew he could answer my question. after
all he had a couple of initials after his last
name. I stopped him in the hall.

“Skinny teacher." I said. “why did you
go to college?"

IIIS ANSWER STILL amazes me. “I
went to college so I could have two initials
after my last name that you don‘t have."
God. what a wiry and intellectual answer.

“What did you learn. skinny teacher?"

"I learned things to prepare myself for a
productive. useful and responsible midi
dle-age."

"Well. what do you do in your pi‘oduc
tive. useful and responsible middlcvage'w
I hoped I wasn’t being too personal.

“YOl' KNOW. KID. you have to take the
bitter with the sweet. I gotta teach two
boring classes a day and then I get to sit
around in the office tower. My window
overlooks the statue of James K. Patter»
son. I wait for some vestal virgin to come
by so he can get up off his metallic ass. I
haven't seen him do it yet. but I'm sure if it
ever happens the earth will divide and
swallow up the Student (‘enter Grille and
the office tower will tremble with the
wrath of God."

“Is that all you do?" I asked.

“Well. sometimes I drop by the book-
store and watch the students in my boring
classes rip-off their overpriced text-
books."

“That‘s it?”

“That‘s the real world. kid."
"WW\\'()()()()0()000000IH I said.
\I‘WVVOOOUIH)()()(It)Y 37 all the way to the
pinball machine at Tolly lIo, . IDOL 1002.
mm

 

\ormandi Ellis is a sophomore majoring
in Journalism.

      
     
    
   
    
    
    
    
 
    
   
  
      
    
    
     
   
          
     
 
  
     
  
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
    
 
  
    
  
  
  
   
   
   
 
   
   
 
   
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
    
    
  
   
  
   
    
  
  
 
  
     

     
   
  
  
  
    
  
  
 
  
   
  
    
  
 
  
  
   
   
  
  
   
 
 
 
 
  
 
   
   

 

l—Tlll‘l Kl‘INTl'CKY KERNEL. Wednesday. March 12. I975

SKYDIVING

Sport at the Space Age!

 

  
  
  
 

AFTER APRIL lst, our
iump rates will increase to
$40.00 and $30.00,
respectively, so inquire
soon!

BRING YOUR FRIENDS!
First Jump Training $37.50
Groups of 5 or more $27.50
includes all training.

All equipment, logbook

and First Jump.

GREEN COUNTY SPORT PARACHUTE CLU3
Bardstown, Kv.

For more into, call Kenn (502) 348998].

In Lexington, Contact Grant Stapleton, 266.8463.
“

 

 

 

BOSCH

Buy 3 Bosch spark plugs. get the 4th one free.

Coupon good that 5/31/75.

 
 
 
  
  

located at 41 1 East Vine (several thousand miles
from Hollywood and Vine) (Formerly Blue Horse)

h—————-————d

STUDENTS and FACULTY

THURSDAY SPECIAL

   
  

   
 

         
 
 
  

 

l' ' i 5 m 5
,1. SLAGKS ,.,...
11 PANTS , sun's
i SKIRTS a:
LIleS'PlIiIE ~ . ,
RESSES ‘
SHIRTS

laundered
to perfection!

5/for
1 .00

 

     

QOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOSCO

  
 

8 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
Crossroads Showing Center 942‘ 2 Winchester Road
Chm/Y Chase Landsd‘owne Turfland Mall

:83: East Pir'adome. Northland Village Square

KNlTS should be DRYGLSANSD by PROFESSIONALS

  
 
   
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

   

  

news briefs

Cambodian government

undergoes shake-up

l'll\ii\l l'l-I\ll. i'aiiilmdiii g\l" l’residi'ni l.on Nol i‘ii'i-d m5
t'tlllllllilllili‘l' in ('llli‘l .ind juggled his government ‘l‘uesday as
('anihodia staggered tllltlt‘l‘ the “eight oi the l‘i'lM'lS dry season
oi'ii'nsn e

l‘ri‘niiei‘ Loin:
toi'in a iii-ii (‘illilllt‘l ' g
the first step toxi .ll‘il the l't'llli|\.ll oi Long .\ol hinisi-li

'l‘he viiii‘i‘gi'ni-v l" S llllillli‘t‘il aii'liit into besieged l'hnoin l’onh
\iasi'i'diii'i'd to high lil'litl‘ll) lli‘llh ltt‘i'.llll.\('i)l hear) slit-Hing oi thi-
i'it) "s airport .\lli('l‘li‘illl oiiii‘iiils said llli' cargo planes were still
iiio\ iiig ammunition and tool ltlll l'li't' ilights \\('l‘(‘ suspended and
deln'i'i'ii‘s were 1.3 per i'l‘lll iindi-r Mondays total

l‘i'esidi-nt l1‘oi'd's spokesman in “ashington said the embassy In
l'hnoni l’t‘llll had suggested that nonessential \nii-rii-ans leave the
('tlpllill lli' said lilt‘l'i‘ .ll‘i‘ .iiioiit loo .\i.ii~rii'.ins in l’hnoin l’t‘llll and

“mm l-Wmm-(i hut l.on \ol quickly asked him to
[uplomatii' sources said the Sillllllt‘ muld lw

\(‘l‘\ li‘\\ \\itllltl lli' lll\ill\i'il til the i‘\ili‘ll.lll(tll
ln neighboring ~\‘oiitli \ ii~tn.iiii .i Saigon lllllllill‘) spokesman said

“('oiniiiiinist tori-is haw launched .i ll.lllt)ll\Hili’ iiiilii;ii‘_\' i'ani

pawn " . ,
.\t least three tllsll'lt'l t'.illll.ll,\ iii-i‘i- i'aptiiri-d h} North \It‘l

ll;llll(‘\t‘ Vii‘i i'oiiu troops .iiid thi- ltlli' oi t\\o othi'i's \iiis iinkiiomi
lint llll' ii:.iioi‘ lullllt‘ \\il\ itllllilillL'. iii'oiind [Lin \li- 'l‘hiiot .i iori'st
I'llllllli'tl i’it\ mill .1 Pillltli‘llltll‘ oi imooo persons in lllt‘ (‘l'llll‘ill

highlands

Kissinger goes to Israel
in pursuit of settlement

.ll ill s\l l \l \l' \l'\ lt‘i.il\ oi \!.iti- llo-iii‘} \ Kl\\llli.{t‘l
lt‘llll’Ht‘il to Israel «Ill illl'\ll.:‘\ ini'i-iiai‘ui to \t‘i'll' iiilo .inothi-i‘ lilllL‘
i'oiiiid oi iii-.ii'i- shuttle-s ill smit t: oi .x mm \lll‘il ill\i'llL1élL{i'lll('lll

.\llli'l'li'.lll Illlli‘l.il.\ said lsixii-i .iiid lamp! awn- iiou t'onsidi-rini:
lllt' Mllllt‘ gi-ni'riil ll'illlltWUil‘k oi .i \t'illl‘lllt'lll lllll it i'illll(l tall apart
ii\(‘l‘ .tll} llllt‘ oi Halli) l\\lli'\

Kissinui‘r ‘.\.is llli'l \Hlll .i kiss ii‘oii. lll\ \\ iii- \.lllt‘_\ as he sti'mwd
oii his .\ir l“ill't't' li‘l .iiit-i .i onv dd) \. wt to \lllull'ii \ihi-ri' llt' iii-Id .l
si‘l‘li‘s oi talks \iith 'liii’kish Hlllt ziils .ilmiit i'xi'piis .iiid lili‘ l 5
arms t'lll oil to 'l lll'l'u'}

In an airport \lillt‘llit‘lll lI‘. \zikara tho siii-i‘vtari \illll [ll'tifll‘i'ss
has lit‘i‘ll made toward l't‘\l;il"lliL1liillxsiil] lllt‘ lilHili'il island oi
i'_\pms

"'l'hi' negotiations \i ill hau- to lw ('itlllllli'lt‘il llt'l\\(‘('ll the tin-vii
and 'l‘iii‘ksih i‘_\pi'1oti'oiniiiiinitii‘s "hi- \itlll '“i' are tr_\ Hill to iiiid
.i iraiiiiwiork tor the-negotiations hot .‘i di'taili-d hasis \iill haw to he
developed h} the iii-notiators llli‘lll\i‘l\l‘5 "

lil't‘i’k i‘} priots .iliandoni'd llllt'l‘i'illllllllllli'dl talks in \ii‘osia l’» ii
iii alter 'l‘iirkish i‘_\pi‘iots pl‘iK‘lzilllH'il their owl state in the to per
('(‘lll oi ('Hii‘iis itt‘t‘llltlt‘ll in) Turkish invasion ioi‘i'os

Ervin expresses satisfaction
with outcome of Watergate

iill |S\ ll.l.l~. i\l’ Porno-r M‘n Still) l'IrVin ll N i' ex
pressed satisfaction 'l‘iii'sda} nith thi- oiiti'onii- oi \l'ati-rgati' hiit
willed tor llit' prosecution oi lilitM' uho solii‘itvd illegal campaign
i-ontrihiitions

er'in. \iho i'lliill‘t‘il the .si-nati- \\ .‘iti-rgati- hearings. told a iii-us
i'onfi'ri'ni'e llt' li‘t‘lrs ”he li'tli‘l‘ill statutes make !i Just as illegal to
stillt‘ll or rem-n e an illegal contribution asto make it "

("omini-nting on the pardon oi lttl‘llll'l' l’ri‘sidi'nt ltii‘hiird Nixon.
the North ('arolinian ii‘rlllt‘il it "iiniortiinati- '

“l hau- sa id all along lilt' portioning pow-r oi the President is
L’l‘t‘élli‘l‘ than the péil‘ilimllll." povwr oi llll' Almighty” l'lri'in
(l(‘i'l£lr(‘(l "The .\lllil}.’,lll) t-iin'i pardon anyone unless they ri'pvni
The President can pardon ainhod) i'\'('l1 ll they don} they ('\'('l'
t'tinlllllllt‘il an} sin ”

Ervin ('i'lllli' lli‘l‘t' to address an t‘Vt‘lillll." session oi a national
seminar on inn-grit) . sponsored hx the (‘hristigin Life ('omniission
ol the Southern Baptist (’oniontioii

l'Iryin. discussing lhi' i‘anihodian situation, said “we sent our
boys to (llt‘ln .‘i \Hll‘llli‘}' wouldn‘t let ”1011]“!anVli‘lllilnl I think it
\iasdisgriii-i‘iiilhiii .\lll(‘i‘ \u- ilrl' out. lain in iai'or of stayinu out I
am not in iiii'or oi more aid to t ‘anihodia "

 

The Kentucky Kernel. H4 Journalism mild: ,Uni r
(Kentucky, Lexmqton, Kentucky, «)506, IS nrizlm 3591.31:
weekly during the school year except durinq holidays and
exam periods, aid twice weekly durum the Simmer sessvon‘
Thirdclass postage paid at Lexmqton, Kentucky, 4051].

Published bythe Kernel Press, Inc. minded in NH Begun as ii *

theCadetin 1894 and published cont
K gm“, 1?] S iwously as the Kentucky

Advertising pumishai herein IS .memea to hat the K ‘/ 2r
. eader ' A '
buy. Any talse or rriisleadi adv ' p r
'0 me am” no enusmq should be reported L< l
) . »
Kernel Telephones h ‘V H i 4
Editor, Editorial editor 257 1755

Managing editor News desk 37 17
, 40
Advertismq, Busmess Circulation 2584646

 

Sports. Ms 257 i
k 800

    
 

Is

at

.-d his
.i y as
eason

rim to
.lld he

I’enh
of the
e still
(I and

ssy in
re the
lit and

n said
cam

\lel
Iiown
oi‘est

e iit ral

3!

nt

singei
tr long
it

ler‘ing
apart

eppeil
liellla
,. l s

Igl‘t'ss
ind of

final.
I) illiil
‘ ll) IN‘

t I“' It
40 per

e.\'
e hut
paign

IIQ‘WS
Etll Ill

iixon.

ent is
I'Irvm
-pent

eyei‘

tional
ission

it our
link it
out I

 

Assistants receive no pay raise

(‘ontinued from page I

l K Itl'littic'l‘ I)lltl«:("l‘ott Ed
(‘arler said 'I‘A‘s are considered
part tnne employes and no part
time employes of the l'niversity
are receiving any increment II( xt
year. although full-time faculty
and classified and administrative
personnel are receiving an
average 8.5 per cent increase in
pay.

Adetstein said ’I‘A's at the
I7niversity of Michigan are
currently out on strike. But he
said he doesn‘t see that hap
pening here. IIill agrees.

“The feeling among 'I‘A's is
that you can't light city hall,
because city hall can fire you,"
Hill said. "There are plenty of
applicants for 'I‘A positions, and
none of us is urdispensihle.”

“II we all got mad and left
we'd he replaced in a month.” he
said

Itlt. .\l..\\' MINIRI‘IR.
assLstanl English professor. feels
the 'I‘A's are a little more
\aliiahle to the English depart
ment than Hill indicated

“'l'hcy have as hard a Joh as
there is to teach writing to
freshmen." he said “If there
wen- no 'I‘,.\s_ we would each
have to teach the courses a
semester"

.\loo|‘er is circulating a petition
III the l'iIILlllslI department
ieqiirstiiig that lull time faculty
tollintarily gne up two per cent
of their tifi per cent raise to the
'l'.\‘s

“'I‘.\‘S ARK teaching courses
other people don't want to hother
w itli," he said. “When
somehody's doing my dirty work
I like to see him compensated.“

IIe aLso said two assistant
professors are leaving. and he
would like to see one of the
positions eliminated and the
money given to 'I‘A's. He said the
$10,000 assistant professor’s
salary, divided among the
English department’s 72
beginning ’I‘A‘s would mean a 5.5

per cent annual cost of living
urcrease for each 'I‘A.

Moorer said it is too early to tell
how responsive the English
department faculty will be
towards these proposals. “For
the most part they are generally
sympathetic," he said, “but they
are reluctant to do anything
about it individually.

“But the administration says
there isn't any more money, so
the next step has to be depart-
mental or individual," Moorer
said.

Katz questions theory

('ontjnued from page I

Kennedy was flown from Texas
to a Naval hospital outside
Washington, I) (‘.. None of the
surgeons who performed the
autopsy on Kennedy had ever
done one before. Katz said.

The surgeons were told not to
inspect a throat wound and their
notes of the operation were
hurried and the case was closed
hy a in ililar'y surgeon the night of
the operation. Kat/ said

The \Iai‘ren ('omniis‘sion
concluded the acts oi tlswald and
li’iihy were iiiotneless acts of
madness Kat] said

lint the FBI confiscated film
ll‘ttlil a woman who was shooting
iiio\ies on the asslss‘ation site
during the shooting and never
returned it. Kall. said Also. one
man said a hullet came winning

over his head from in front of the
limousine, however, he was
never called to testify before the
commission. Katz said.

Yet the commission concluded
there was no plot and all shots
came from the direction opposite
from where most eyewitnesses
said they cime. he said.

"Something was wrong