xt7ht727dd2z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ht727dd2z/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-04-02 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, April 02, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 02, 1974 1974 1974-04-02 2020 true xt7ht727dd2z section xt7ht727dd2z The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 139
Tuesday, April 2, 1974

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annuity a! My
Lexington. KY. costs

 

Candidates
discuss
highways

at 56 forum

By KAREN HOSKINS

Kernel Staff Writer

Campus highways and the roles of
Student Government (SG) and the Student
Senate were main topics of discussion at a
forum of 86 presidential and vice
presidential candidates last night at the
Complex Commons.

Presidential candidate Dave Mucci said
36 should work with and totally support
student groups, such as the environmental
group working to stop the Red River Dam.

EMILY LEDFORD. vice presidential
candidate. said SG should act as a “a hub”
for student activities and make funds and
facilities available to groups, but should
leave leadership with the groups them-
selves.

Dave Williams. presidential candidate.
charged that in the present administration
“a group of 10 or 12 people were running
the office and often ignoring the Student
Senate."

Student apathy in the recent filing for

 

Blues festival
to take place
of lKD

concert

By JOEL ZAKEM

Kernel Staff Writer

News In Brief

by THE ASSOCIATED Phi-:55
oSteeiworkers strike

0 Balk law upheld

. Mideast fighthg rages
°Boyie trial conthues
0R5 gets tax report

0 Trustees meethg

- Today's weather...

For the first time since the Little Ken-
tucky Derby's tLKD) genesis in 1957, no
major concerts will be included in the
festivities.

Although no big concert is planned. an
outdoor blues festival will take place in.
stead. according to the Student Center
Board lSCBt.

Memphis Blues Caravan will appear
April 19 in Stoll Field. featuring such
southern blues artists as Furry Lewis.
Bukka White. Sleepy John Estes and
Hammie Nixon. Harmonica Frank
tFloydt. Piano Red. Houston Stackhouse
and Joe Willie Wilkins and his King Biscuit
Boys.

REASONS FOR the lack of a major
concert are simple. said SCB Assistant
Program Director Mike Armstrong. “We
have no one to book."hesaid. "We've tried
anybody and everybody. but could not find
anyone to book for that weekend."

Armstrong said many acts were con-
sidered for the concert. but none were
available. Memphis Blues Caravan was
booked after the concert committee had
exhausted all their possibilities for a
major Coliseum show.

All othertraditional LKD activities week
will take place as usual.

LKD'S mini-concert will also be the last
of the semester, Armstrong said.

Memphis Blues Caravan will be a
general admission concert. costing $2 per
person. The show will last four to five
hours.

0 LEXINGTON The United
Steelworkers of America launched a three-
state strike Monday against Appalachian
Regional Hospitals. lnc.. after the current
contract expired.

The walkout. which began at 12:01 a.m..
affected 950 service and maintenance
employes in Kentucky. West Virginia and
Virginia. .

Pickets were reported at nine hospitals
but operations were not affected at West
Liberty. Ky. where employes are not
covered by the Steelworkers‘ contract.

0 WASHINGTON —- The Supreme court
Monday upheld a controversial federal law
requiring banks to keep extensive records
and report to the government on large
cash transactions by their customers.

The 6 to 3 decision sustained the
government‘s contention that the law‘s
provisions were a constitutionally per-
missible meats to counter increasingly
sophisticated crime.

senate candidacies was due to a lack of
communication and cooperation between
SG administration and senate, Williams
said.

ML'CCI. FORMER SG administrative
assistant. denied alienation existed bet-
ween administration and senate members.

About 30 students attended the Complex
Commons forum. Five~minute speeches by
each candidate were followed by a rebuttal
session and questions from the audience.

Mucci discussed possible highway
systems he said would seriously divide
campus. diminish student housing and
cause noise pollution. He said three high-
ways were under serious consideration.

NEWTOWN Extension. a state Highway
Department proposal in the planning and
design stage, would four-lane the Avenue
of Champions between Rose and Upper
Streets.

Continued on page 12

Silent spring

While sketchiig one L'K student recently sought the solitude of the
Botanical Gardens. (Kernel staff photo by Brian Harrigan.i

eDAMASCL'S -— Fighting raged on the
Golan Heights front for the let straight
day Monday and the Israeli radio said
Syrian army units had kidnaped two
United Nations observers. apparently
mistaking them for Israeli soldiers.

It said the two were abducted from their
outposts between Israeli and Syrian forces
late Friday and were in a Damascus
hospital Monday night.

0 MEDIA. Pa. — The special prosecutor
in the murder trial of former United Mine
Workers Union President WA. “Tony"
Boyle said Monday the assassination of
Boyle‘s union rival was financed by "the
sweat and blood of miners."

Special Prosecutor Richard Sprague
said Boyle "plotted and paid for the
murders"of Joseph A. “Jock“ Yablonski.
his wife and 25-year-old daughter

Chief defense lawyer Charles T Moses
said. “The ultimate issue is simply
whether Mr. Boyle was responSIble for
these deaths. The answer is no."

eWASHINGTON — The congressional
Joint Committee on lntemal Revenue
Taxation will get a staff report Wednesday
regarding President Nixon‘s questioned
income tax returns. Sen. Russell 8. Long,
D-La.. the chairman. said Monday.

The committee will consider the report
at a closed session. a spokesman said.

If the committee approves the report. it
will be released at a news conference later
Wednesday. said Long‘s office.

e APPROVAL OF honorary degree
candidates is expected to be given by the
Board of Trustees at its 2 p. m. meeting
today in the Board room on the 18th floor
of Patterson Office Tower.

...over the rainbow

Very warm weather in the mid 705 will
replace rain which should end this mor-
ning. But a 20 per cent chance of rain will
continue with a low in the upper 405
tonight.

 

  

editorials represent the opinions of the editors. not the university

Editorials

 

The Kentucky Kernel

Published by the Kernel Press Inc. Begun u the Cadet in 1094 end published continwoeiy
es The Kentucky Kwnel since 1915. The Kernel Preu inc. Med 1971. Third cleu
putege peld et Leximhn, Ky. Dust noes emcee ere located in the Joumellsm Building on
the University at Kmucky campus. Advertisim, room 210“ News Mum-it room
He. Advertising publimed herein is intended to help the reeder buy. Any telee or
mlsteedino edvertlelno should be reported 0 the ldlbre.

Steve Swift, Editor-in-Chief

April scattering

April brings spring to Kentucky with its blossoming
trees, sprouting flowers and scattered showers.

April also brings scattered trash, which, in this
particular situaion has a direct association with the

Student Government

elections. With campaign

eyesores covering all areas of the campus there’s
little doubt members of the community have failed to
notice the ongoing campaign.

It‘s not that we mind publicity posters (for many
unknown senatorialc andidates this is the only chance
they‘ll have to get their name in view of voters) it’s
the unnecessary number of posters in which we find

fault.

UK’s most frequent contributors to this obnoxious
eye pollution are the two slates running for SG
presidential and vice presidential seats. If you’re not
staring into a Mucci-Wilson poster you’re bound to be
gazing a Williams-Ledford sign. Or, worse yet, you’ll
be noticing all of the Williams bumper stickers
bumping sidewalks, fountain walls, classrooms—just
about everything but bumpers—an eyesore highly
irratating to those of us who like to claim pride in a
beautiful springtime campus environment.

While it would be impossible to enforce a limit of
campaign posters on candidates, we don’t think it’s
asking too much of the contenders to limit them-

selves.

Letters policy

Kernel editors remind members of the University
community of their opportuntunities for response on
the editorial and oppositeeditorial pages.

Letters to the Kernel may concern any topics as
long as they are not libelous. Letters not exceeding
250 words are more easily read than those longer. ‘

Viewpoint articles may be commentaries on any
subject from inside or outside the University. Sub-
missions to either category should include signature,
year classification, address and phone number. Also,
please make sure copy is typewritten and triple-

spaced.

 

 

  

 

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2). (a “Id “-5: river

YHI PAWNIIOKIR

\“.

Letters to the Kernel

Clement refuses to call J-Board

At 4 :30 pm ., Friday March 29, 1974, the spokesperson for the Committee for President and the
Committee for Vice President informed me that they wished to appeal the Election Board decision
of 8 p.m., Tuesday, March 26, 1974, in which their names were removed from the ballot for the
upcoming Student Government Election..They requested that I call the Student Government
Judicial Board into session to consider their appeal. I am refusing to call the Board into session.

Article VI. Section 3 of the Constitution states: '

“All challenges files pursuant to this Article shall be heard by the Board of Elections . . . Any
decision of the Board of Elections on such challenge may be appealed by any party to the Student
Government Judicial Board no later than 48 hours folllowing the day of the announcement of the
decision of the Board of Elections.”

The time limit referred to by the Constitution expired at 12 midnight, Thursday March 28, 1974.

My refusal to call the Student Government Judicial Board into session is an administrative
decision. I feel the purpose would be served by calling the Board into session because the deadline

to appeal has passed.

 

     

If the members of the Committee for President and the Committee for Vice President wish to
pursue this matter further, a list of the members of the Student Government Judicial Board will
be made available to them by the Student Government office. The members may call the Board
members and attempt to call a meeting in this manner.

I feel that I am justly speaking
for every frost-bitten and rain-
drenched person, living at the
Complex, who has ever had to
stand, shivering and sneezing for
15 to 30 minutes at the stop,

Bob Clement

Student Government vice president

Student sees need for more buses

waiting for a campus bus that
finally decides to meander along.
When the Lexington Transit Bus
System added Stadium and
Shuttle buses so as to benefit a
wider range of the campus, it

must have abolished quite a few
Complex-Student Center buses.
Granted, it is not exactly an
exhausting trudge from the
Complex to classes in fair

Continued on page 3

Fight for a vegetable or be turned into one

SCOTTSDALE, ARIZ. -SIX‘IOOI
high, made of aluminum, a gift
from Casxroville, Calif, the
artichoke capital of the world, a
replica of the vegetable stands
here next to the driveway of a
tract house. Driven from its
destined place of honor. the leafy
statue must remain in its place of
suburban ignominy, because the
administrators of Scottsdale
Community College don‘t regard
the artichoke as a delicacy to be
dipped in butter and savored, but
as a divisive. poisonous weed of
controversy.

In two consecutive college
elections, 77 percent of the
student body have voted for the
artichoke as the school mascot.
But artichokes are an acquired
taste, and both elections were
quashed and voided by the ad-
ministration, which then
threatened to arrest any student
selling the infamous artichoke T-
shirt.

OVER THE T-SHIRT‘S pocket
there is a picture of an infuriated
artichoke kicking a football with

such force that. out of a ruptured
seam. comes a cascade of dollar
bills. And there is the central
point of contention. The students
of this two-year. publicly sup-
ported college are suing to
protest the diversion of school
money to athletics.

The college‘s executive dean,
Ray Cattani, a large gentleman
who dresses in color coordinated
stretch knits and who handles
himself like a door-to-door
jewelry salesman after the sale,
admits to some strange num-
bers in the school budget. There
is, he says, one athletic coach for
every 13 students, but one
English teacher for every 26 and
one social science teacher for
every 33. Last year the college
spent $15,000 to buy books for the
library and $30,000 for uniforms
for the football team and the
marching band.

The library for this school of
3,000 students has almost no
books in it. Yards and yards of
empty shelfspace. In a state that
has a law requiring the teaching
of laissevfaire capitalism in the

high schools, the library catalog
doesn‘t list a word by Thomas

Jefferson. To hide the bookless
state of its shelves, the librarians

display copies of House
Beautiful, Harper’s Bazaar,
Popular Mechanics, Gourmet,

Dog World and Skin Diver, the
latter surely a useful publication
here in the middle of the Great
American Desert.

“IS THIS BAD?” the dean
asks, while the students complain
they don’t even get the benefits
of the athletic money which goes
to varsity team members
recruited from out-of-state. ”I
was hired because I am a win-
ner," they quote one coach as
telling them. “They expect me to
win basketball games. If they
wanted a physical education
teacher, they could have hired
any local loser.”

The local losers, it seems, are
the students who say they
frequently are prohibited from
using the basketball courts and
playing fields because the

coaches are afraid they might
ruin them.

Why any group of taxpayers
would want such a community
college is a matter of con—
jecture. Cynics say it turns out
the kind of voters that politicians
like Goldwater need to win
elections. Others say the big-
time commercial sports interests
are so powerful, they can grab
control of a school like this and
turn it into a farm team and
recruiting agency for Arizona
State University, a four-year
sports factory and entertainment
complex located here. Maybe
this is but another example of our
preaching maturity to youth
whom we incarcerate in in-
stitutions which reward puerility
and punish independence and

purpose.
Richard Lang, the student body
president, thinks the ad-

ministrators are committed to
carrying on their fight against
learning because, “There’s so
much pride involved, they don't
want to bend. They don’t want to

- Ibe defeated’byr an artichoke."

Dean Cattani answers by
saying things like, ”We may as
well call ourselves Republicans
or Democrats as to call ourselves
the Artichokes...Naming our—
selves Artichokes would serve
more to divide the campus than
to unite it. I don‘t think we need a
mascot."

The students are politely clever
in waging their little war. They
know what a conservative place
Arizona is, and so they don’t
shout, “Dip it and eat it, dean,"
although they’ve thought of it.
They file suit, write letters to the
editor and point out that at
three-goingon-four-years-of-age,
theirs is the oldest student protest
movement around, outliving the
more famous ones of shorter
duration. Each year, they tell
you, the incoming freshmen are
taught the meaning of the ar-
tichoke and the lesson that it is
better, to fight for a vegetable
than to be turned into one.

 

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a
columnist for King Features
Syndicate.

 

 

  

 

opinion from inside and outside the university community

Vlewpolnt

 

A request for revision of 56 Constitution

A group of seven students decided to run
for Student Government President and
Vice President, three of which were to run
as one candidate for the presidency, the
remaining to run as a single candidate for
the vice presidency. We named ourselves
the Committees for President and Vice
President.

We, the Committees for President and
Vice President feel we have been screwed
collectively by the Dean of Students Office,
by the SG Elections Board, by Student
Government President Jim Flegle and by
SC Vice President Bob Clement in their
implementation of the SG Constitution and
the Election Rules.

THE COMMITTEES complied with all
regulations governing filing for candidacy.
At that time Ann Moore, chairperson of the
Elections Board, told the Committees that

applications for office. The reasons being
that the wording of the Constitution did not
permit a committee running as one can-
didate. At this point, Flegle ruled that the
Elections Board should accept the Com-
mittees’ applications pending an Elections
Board decision.

Ann Moore referred a decision for
representatives of the Committees to the
University Senate rules committee which
was meeting at 7 pm. Dr. Sidney Ulmer,
chairperson of the Rules Committee,
declared that such a decision was not
within the jurisdiction of his committee.
He informed the representatives that the
Elections Board was also meeting at 7

 

Letters

Continued from page 2

weather, buton bad days (and we
have quite a few of them), it
seems like a three mile hike.
However, I do realize that the
buses are a welcome sight when
they do arrive, and I feel that we
are lucky to have them at all.
Yet, I simply wish that they
would see it in their hearts to add
one or two to our routes so that I
will not have to keep going to the
doctor because of sore throats
and coughs. Or better yet, why
not add a bus going directly from
the Complex to the Med Center,
and we can charge our medicine
bills to Lexington Transit.
Melinda Jones
Journalism - sophomore

pm. to decide the issue. The Elections
Board had not contacted any represen-
tatives of the Committees concerning this
meeting, which was to decide upon the
validity of the Committees’ candidacies.

The representatives rushed to attend the
Elections Board meeting, only to find it
already in progress. As the represen—
tatives found out later from Kernel
reporters, the Board had already started
discussion of the Committees’ can-
didacies. Further, it was the impression of
the Kernel reporter that the Board
members were already seemingly
prejudiced against the Committees’
candidacies without allowing the Com-
mittees to present their defense. (This
impression was given in a Kernel editorial
March 27. - editor) Needless to say, the
Board voided the Committees’ can-
didacies.

WHEN ASKED by the Committees’
representatives who to contact to appeal
their case, Moore replied that she did not
know. She said that the Committees should
contact Frank Harris in the Dean of
Students Office. There was no mention at
this time of a 48 hour deadline for appeals.

Frank Harris was contacted the next
morning, only to find that he was also
unsure of the procedures. Harris
suggested the Committees’ representative
see Jack Hall, Dean of Students.

Without even glancing at the SG Con-
stitution Hall denied that the Committees
had grounds for appealing their case
before th J—Board. Upon Harris’ and the

Not surprised by Hall

By GREG HARTMANN

SAN FRANCISCO — I wasn’t surprised
when Jack Hall axed “The Best of the New
York Erotic Film Festival.” His office is
littered with souvemers from his days in
the SAC when he pmtected freedom and
democracy against the Russkies. But it’s
different when the despot is your local
County Attorney, hot to keep feelthy
peektures out of UK‘s magnolia-scented
hymen.

I can hear it now: “The children’s
weak, impressionable minds must be
protected..."

In the interest of thwarting censorship, I
hunted down the nearest Bay theater
showing the flick. Words ain’t as good as
moving pictures, but here’s an idea of
what you missed:

—-IN AN apartment replete with visual
puns, a woman slowly strips off her new
dress and dances nude to the strains of
“Express Yourself."

—Ten minutes of super-close-ups of the
body. Mottled peni, glowing nipples like
raspberries, translucent buttocks slowly
humping, a luminescent red ha'nd
fingering a phosphorescent blue cunt.

——In a 1924 blue cartoon, Everready
Harton and his massive cock assault a
variety of women and animals.

—A J ET of sperm ascends into space, re-
enacting four billion years of evolution and
eventually dissipating across the Great
Nebula of Orion.

—A young woman aroused by a TV
football game fondles herself. Outside
her window a stud plays baseball but she
scorns him for a baseball bat, a glove, an
old jockstrapnln‘ the end she fi‘n‘ds'true

Committees’ representative’s urgings Hall
conceded that there was a slight possibility
that'the case could come before the J-
Board. Hall proclaimed that he would
study the SG Constitution and that the
representative should contact him the next
day.

THE COMMITTEES rejected Hall’s
initial decision that they had no grounds
for appeal. Upon further investigation, the
Committees decided that this was not a
matter for the Dean of Students Office.

Later that day, SG Officials were con-
tacted. They raised questions as to which
body the appeal should be directed, the
Student Senate or the Judicial Board.
There was also some question concerning
to which Judicial Board the appeal should
be made.

It was learned late Thursday night that
an appeal should be placed through SG
President to the SG Judicial Board. It was
learned Friday morning that Flegle was
out of town and Bob Clement was acting
SG President.

THAT MORNING notice of appeal was
given and Clement indicated he would look
into the affair. The appeal was based on
SG Constitution Article VI, Sec. 4, dealing
with injunctive relief from actions of the
Elections Board. That afternoon, Clement
indicated that under his interpretation the
appealfell under Article VI, Sec. 3, as well
as Article VI, Sec. 4. Section 3 provides for
a 48 hour deadline for appealing Elections

happiness by squatting on a volleyball and
rocking.

—After talking to the man inside her TV
set, a woman squats atop it so he can climb
up inside her.

SL'CII A fun—filled sixty minutes! Only a
third of the pieces lived up to the “erotic"
billing. (In one memorable scene. a black
woman lies on a leather couch the color of
her body and masturbates slowly and
luxuriously.) Most were primarily
humorous: the “William Tell Overture"
provided background music to three
different fucks.

All showed nekkid people and other
squishy signs of America’s Imminent
Moral Collapse. (Thanx to B. Graham.)
But why all the fuss? I had more erections
last year when I saw D.H. Lawrence’s
“Women in Love” at the Student Center
Theater.

An exercise for the student: why does
the County Attorney have to vent his
righteous indignation on an enjoyable.
beautiful film?

Because, you sweet innocent kiddies’ the
Lexington establishment is more im-
mature than you.

I.ET‘S GENERALIZE their problem.
Crippled by their pre-Pill. pre—affluence
upbringing. old people are conditioned to
fear sex and assign overwhelming moral
import to fucking. They can‘t handle their
natural sexual feelings so they prohibit
anything that might touch them off. Thus
their hypocricy: ban overt sexuality but
allow it to florish underground.

Obscene as it may seem. these alleged
adults like feeling guilty.

Now alohg come you “children.“ digging

Board decisions governing challenges,
specifically challenges of election results.
Clement stated the deadline had passed
Thursday, midnight.

On Saturday, Clement made an official
administrative decision to refuse to call
the Judicial Board into session. He further
stated that the Committees could attempt
to contact members of the Student
Government Judicial Board in order to
attempt to set up a meeting of the Judicial
Board. To the Committees’ understanding
this is not established nor is it proper
procedure.

At each point in this long process a
decision hinged upon an individual
separate interpretation of the SG Con-
stitution. We find ourselves in
disagreement with most. if not all of these
interpretations.

WE FEEL our treatment by the Elec-
tions Board, the confusion concerning to
whom the appeal should be made, the lack
of notice concerning the 48 hour deadline,
the attempt by the Dean of Students to th-
wart our appeal a nd Bob Clement’s refusal
to convene the Judicial Board stem from
and point to a general vagueness and to the
inadequacies of the present SG Con-
stitution. Obviously the Constitution must
be revised to prevent such inequities in the
future.

Steve Winkle
A&S-senior
Spokesman for the Committees

5 decision

the hell out of what’s under your clothes
and splashing it across the wide screen.
Turning over the rocks and wiggling your
toes in all the sticky stuff. NO GUILT.

The County Attorney has to protect
insecure, inadequate Lexingtonians. Pity
them. They're so frustrated that the mere
thought of their kids (you) escaping the
Puritan trap drives them berserk with
jealousy. So “The Best of Etc.“ is banned.
The excuse is protecting you, but they're
really protecting themselves.

YOl' Ml'ST fight back to keep your
minds free of the sickness that makes the
old flee the sight of a jaunty cock but fight
to see John Wayne kill a few Injuns. It
would be easy to make fun of these people
as doddering Neanderthals, but they
still have power. As long as Jack Halls
knuckle under. you’ll miss scenes like:

An olive—gold plain stretches to infinity
under a similarly-colored sky. The bizarre
filter colors remind one of “2001", when
the astronaut is whirled through the
cosmos. But instead of a giant black
monolith. at the end of the green—yellow
plain looms a massive cock. Pumping in—
out of a cunt. You're looking between the
bellys of a couple making love. The
lighting and viewpoint inspire not lust but
awe.

Aren't you glad Jack Hall flew to
Houston to preview this film and keep you
safe from seeing it?

 

Greg Hartmann is a former
Kernel editor whose politics are
Druid nihilist. He is currently ex-
ploring states of altered awareness
along the geo—social fault lines of
California. ,

 

 I—TIII-I KI‘INTLI‘KY KI'IRNI'IL Tuesday. \pril 2. MIN

253-0014 537 S. Lime

JUST ACROSS FROM
THE COMMERCE BUILDING

IIIIt’.‘
liytlrangeas
Url'hi‘l.‘
IIIUIII.‘
garileiiias
folige- etc:
in lovely baskets from
green leaves

~46 E High St.
269-1511

GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION

n, FAYETTE MALL. LAST DAY! .
’7 4’“ I ”The Last Detail“

masvmamvficmulos 2 05‘ 5 05 g 6.00», 55. 9:”

gone i/ the romance sums
that LUCl/ IO divine.‘ WEDNESDAY!

Times 200»: 15
71509-50

ROBERT REDFORD
mlfl FRRROUJ

Sorry. No Barg. Mat.
No Passes!
um. :;_I:- mu. “3311‘." j-tfm.
-arg.Mat.
’til12:30
Cinema II

n. FAYETTE MALL
772—6662

MROLASVRLILNIWCKJ 305
Final Week!
SEAN CCNNERY

Tunes 2 20 4 SD 10-9'30

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l/ILJW DEER BL‘T'VS

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ON THE MALL
uneooseueo IOAD n. LANG Aiim

Nominated for to Academy
Awards! Including "Best
Picture”!

Sorry, No Barg. Matinee.
E Times Z 204 55-7 30-9 05

Going abroad?

GO THE
EXPERIMENT

GE sponsored

Minority assistance grants
pair

awarded to engineerin -

In an attempt to increase the
number ol blacks in engineering
professions the College of
Engineering vvill help to form
three minority assistance grants
for next fall

One such grant has already
been made available to two
engineering students It is
sponsored by the General
Electric Company in Evendale.
Hhio

Three new grants are spon-
sored by the Whirlpool Cor-
poration in Danville and the GE
Company in Evendale. Ohio.

E\t.1\EI-:RIM; students
Larry L. Avery of Millersburg
and Jerry Jerome Davis of
Radcliffe received the current
grants

Grants pay 101‘ tailioii. fees and
room and board for the first year
of engineering study. GE will also
provide Davis and Avery with
summer jobs.

Avery. a 1971 Bourbon County
High School graduate. has
speCial interests in mathematics
and the sciences.

"ENGINEERING IS
tascmating and it is proving right
for me.” said Davis. a 1973 North
Hardin High School graduate.

Both now participate actively
in a program to increase the
enrollment of minorities in the
College of Engineering.

FOR SALE

iMPORTED LEATHER and wood
3 'ec‘o's :“airs smoor'ed eatne' nurses
26‘? “45 more-tings and even has at'e' a It
rah/A3

SHEOWOOD "MA ”‘0 wav's 19' Hanna
"its Atmos‘ new 276 2959 EMA"

‘972 CAPRI A : . nae'
Vos' 39- 395‘ 30"." '3
363 “09 27MA$

TYPEWRITEP SMITH Corona manua:
Almostnew siocor sesfafler CaIIZAollS‘
29MA2

AMPLIFIER KASINO-ZDO ‘25 wa"s
Q v S . :over nc uaed excellan? condition
$400 254.8708 7&3

I969 CAMERO. RED. 350 450eed Ex
cehant :onomon cow mileage 51560 Call
25878315 YA.”

HUNTER GREEN 3" mens Torsoem ‘ull y’
equipped Exce'ian' condi‘ion 277 900?
evenings 1A3

BLUE STAR SAPPHIRE ' ng. Diammd

necklace and ear rig se' I”ice Negoc:able
255 are 3‘3

1969 '2 X 60' hndsor‘llobile Home 2
bedroom New camel and drapes AMTIIH,
1o XIO’ Shed rm .xvnoow air .0015- 10
‘mn tron-i UK Pr te 5.5% “PM must sell
3raduating Call 52-0746 after 5 00 D m
2A8

. geta whole new idea otthe world, yourself...and others

Travel with new friends in the count ry of your choice

Live wvth a tamily...learn a new language

WA Y

Earn academic credit abroad

Visit the Study Abroad Fair
Tuesday, April 2 7 < 10 p.m.
President’s Room ~ Student Center

For more information:

Contact: Office for International Programs, 104 Bradley Hall, Tel 250-0646
or write: The Experiment in International Living, Brattleboro, \It. 05301

W,

‘1‘

Larry L. Avery llefll and Jerry Jerome Davis. both engineering
students. have received minority assistance grants sponsored by
the (ieneral Electric (‘ompany in Evendale. Ohio. This grant is a
part of efforts to increase enrollment of minorities in the College of

Engineering.

GRENDEL 5 FIRST born ‘or sale 3'
Bernar: out: Wormed shots. AK: Ca“
254 870‘ 3A:

IOASPEED VOLKSCYCLE, w'n at
:esso'es Excellent fD'ldl‘On 3m. 4
'rsn'ns 3c $125 Mus' ,e .314. 258806
:A:

TS-SPCZO NISIHKI low” Hun _-,
'rame excellen' ‘ournc, Dike mint Con
:.'-or\ $200. :ai‘ ,im evenings 15° om 2A3

FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED Two
Bedroom anar’rren' ac'oss tram Cave"e
'/.a:‘ $60 “oo't‘ Ca" 2‘: I375 am." 5:: '11 ‘A3

BASEBALL CARDS. 1960‘s and older
w-ll buy or 'raoe Ca“ 278 7558 atter 5 D m
weekdays All day weeltends 29M“

WANTED

POOMATEIS) T0 snare 'nree bedroom
aDar‘men' Share rem at ‘wrmonth Call
Steve 253 ‘45: or 258 2711 28MA2

COUPLE TO snare arge loedroom nouse
mm as 3- wine 'rom campus $105 00. 255
5015 28MA3

PERSONAL

STUDY 9!! Crater: 'hrs summer Two
sessions June30 July25. JulyB August
21 Courses offered include Literature.
Drama. Philosophy, History. Art and
Biology Slxnours semester credit possible.
Cost of room. board, and all tees 93513.
Write UNCA Oxford. UNC Ashevulle.
Ashev~lle.NC. m1 MAIO.

 

S T U D E N T
A PPLICATIONS
lor membeiship on

BOARD OF STUDENT

PUBLICATIONS
in 1974-75 are
now being received

APPLICATION FORMS
may be obtained at Office
of Vice President for
Student Affairs. Room 529.
Patterson tiffice
Tower .or WI“ be mailed
to you if you call the office.
571911 Deadline for
applying 3.0“ p m. Mon.

 

 

 

Classlfled

TO LANDSCAPE Arzn-tec‘u'e 'nalor on
3"?\"l;:und tram A-lanta Enioved 'ammg
i‘ owe mu 'N‘re Dears I wou want '3”
Pa" " 2585210 2A3

HELP WANTED

auxieuutu was: we a' as .1) «vs
no At‘errvoon or evening ’mit‘ Must be
”anemic! ‘07 Mil 'vme 'hs Somme" ADCW
{was Qt‘S‘BUVaP' 7‘29 '5; _ tr‘e DIN/1.2;

GIRL FRIDAY WANTED a' -E‘V'v SDVI
Ha ' Deszqn P'easem work a; :anditions
3000 naurs, aDDIV a' out new our-on 315
south asnianc Avenue Absowteiv no Dome
'alls ‘AS

POLL WORKERS WILL be needed tcr SG
Sor-ng Elections. Anvone interested -n $1.60
an hour come by 203 Studait Cents to sign
JD Deadlinetor s.gn ups start 3 Z7A2.

WANTED-DAYTMEOUS Days 10 30.2 in
Part timeor full time, apply in person Don
Q Restaruanl Nicholasvnie Road 2A4

FOR RENT

ALSERVE YOUR APARTMENT now 907
summer and tall A 090051! now will hold 1'
t0' you Very ‘argc one bedroom furnished
apartments Wlih central neat and air an
anion. carpet and disposal Walk to UK
Phone between 12 and 8 265332. M12

rwo BEDROOM PINE den. 90s. Coooer
Dr Available May ‘0 to August 1! 2665060.
‘AZ

ROOMS ~ KITCHEN privliOges, reserve
nowlorsummerorlall Close to UK, Lindai
Walk 269 1876. 2A..

ONE IEDROOM N» W ”Vme
«amino-d, air caultlonod “Nola: ”wits. 10
minute walk tram campus. Summc or toll
semesters. Call 29066 W. 27m.

WILL RENT rooms tori-livid to ywr
order Preter stunts. For you can-
vailm thwe is a large living rum, dlnlng
room. dining area, Utmon completely
furnished. Black on New Circle Rd. Inquire
dollyoetw-n Sand 7, 25¢“. ”MAI.

ROOM FO