xt71g15t9w4r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71g15t9w4r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-04-15 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 15, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 15, 1974 1974 1974-04-15 2020 true xt71g15t9w4r section xt71g15t9w4r The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 148
Monday, April 15, 1974

an independent student newspaper

University 01".Kentuchy
Lexington. KY. 40506

 

UK professor

to publish

paper on Asia

By STEVE MILLER

Kernel Sta ff Writer

UK political science professor Dr.
Seldon W. Simon has been given a grant to
publish a paper on the prospects of Asian
neutralism.

Simon was given the grant as a result of
his extensive travels in South and
Southeast Asia last summer as a guest
lecturer for the United States Intelligence
Service.

Ill-1 SPOKE IN fifteen Asian countries on
China's foreign policy and the Nixon
Doctrine. Simon also conducted interviews
with high ranking officials in Ministries of
Defense and Foreign Affairs and with
academics specializing in foreign policy
areas.

The basic question of Asian neutralism
is whether the Asian states will move away
from alliances with foreign powers in the
1970‘s or move toward bilateral or
collective security pacts.

“The Asian states will move ahead by
two possible strategies.“ Simon said.
“First. they may invite all outside powers

(‘ontinued on Page 7

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91

Easter found the campus somewhat deserted as many students took advantage of
the warm holiday weather to go home or to enjoy themselves somewhere away

from the pressure ofoncoming finals. (Kernel staff photo by Pinkie Foster.)

 

Fashion class

will travel
to New York

By JIM MAZZONI

Kernel Staff Writer

News In Brlef

by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

0 Turnout 'critical'
0 UK coed dies
0 'Mideast flare-up
0 Easter message

0 Full power restored

0 Today's weather...

From stage plays to big business. New
York City has tat one time of another)
been considered the center of just about
anything.

And to a number of UK students for
three weeks in May. it will be the fashion
center.

A STl‘DY tour to New York is part of a
four week lntersession course offered by
the College of Home Economics.

Entitled TC 535. it consists of a brief
orientation period beginning May 14. three
weeks in New York and a week of
research following the return to
Lexington.

“The main idea of the course is to expose
the students toa center of fashion. as New
York is.“ said Dr. Patricia Horridge.
chairman of the textiles. clothing and
merchandising department. “They'll go to
fashion centers. textiles centers and any
type of merchandising center."

"wt: EXPUSE them from the fiber
industry to the finished product." she
added.

(‘harlotte
professor in

an associate
clothing and

Benneu.
the textile.

O SAGINAW. Mich. —— With two days
remaining before Tuesday's crucial
special congressional election here.
supporters of the two candidates said the
ability to get out the vote would be critical.

Democrat J. Robert Traxler and
Republican James Sparling took Easter
Sunday off. planning to remain home with
their families.

Meanwhile, a random telephone poll of
47 persons in the 8th Congressional District
showed that a campaign visit last Wed-
nesday by President Nixon had little effect
on their voting plans.

0 AN is-YEAR-OLD UK freshman fell
40feetto her deathSunday afternoon while
on an outing with two {fluids at Herrington
Lake. eight miles east of Harrodsburg.

According to Kentucky Satate Police at
Richmond. Mary Beth Peabler, of
Harrodsburg. wandered away from her
companions and fell off a cliff. hitting
some rocks before reaching the water..

The accident occured at 3 :45 pm. on the
Garard County side of the lake.

merchandising department noted three
purposes to the complete study tour:

~ to have professional contacts. such as
taking a classroom to the fashion industry
in New York t"Some feel New York is the
fashion center of the world today." she
said t

to experience other ways of life i“lf
we‘re going to travel that far we‘re going
to take advantage of the cultural op-
portunity that is there. so we've allowed
for that in the price of the tour and in the
time we've set aside." Bennett added.)

and to allow studeiits to have time for
individual exploration 1"They have in-
dividual topics they can choose and ex-
plore." Bennett explained

SIII‘I STRESSI‘ID the idea behind this
three»hour course is a complete individual
study.

“The grades are based on participating
in professional visits and individual
projects." she added

The individual projects are picked
during orientation and are continued
through library research after the class
returns on May 3". The students also do

0 TH. \\'l\' — lsraeli fighter-bombers
strafed Syrian positions for four hours
Sunday in the biggest air action since the
October war. the lsraeli command said.

The raid followed a morning attack by
lsraeli fighter-bombers and the bitterest
ground fighting between Syrian and lsraeli
troops on the Golan Heights front in six
months. Syria said its forces knocked
down four lsraeli warplanes and killed or
wounded 50 Israeli soldiers in the fighting.
But Israel said all its planes returned
safely and that only 17 Israelis were
wounded.

O \ \'l‘l('.\.‘\ ('l'l‘Y — Pope Paul VI
urged mankind in his annual Easter
Sunday message to stop seeking pleasure
and instead follow "the law of duty. of
service. of sorrow. of love. of sacrifice
the wise and true interpretation of human
life."

The 76-year-old pontiff insisted on
celebrating Mass on the steps of St. Peter's
Basilica despite the threat of rain. He had
passed up a traditional l-Zaster eve vigil

some research on this report w hile in New
York. she said.

Tlll-Z PROFESSION.\l.visits will include
tours of such fashion industries as Alley
(‘at. Burlington. Celanese and the wool
bureau. The wool bureau. among othe
things. “sees that consumers get the best
quality of wool throughout the country.
and advise manufacturers“ of its new and
various uses Bennett said.

“Everywhere we go there will be lee
tures and tours, or we will have lecture
and discussion periods with the top people
in their field from those industries." she
said "The students are only limited by
their own creativity and imagination."

Bennett. who is also in charge of
finances and coordinator for the trip said
though today is the last olfiCial day for
application to the class. she thought there
niight still be some openings available.

'l‘llllt'l‘Y PEUPH-I have taken ap-
plications tor the course. but only eight
have returned them along with the Slot)
deposit. she said "I'd like to have no more
than 20 students to participate "

t oiitiiiiied on page tit

Mass Saturday evening on doctors" ady ice
in order to be lll and rested for the Sunday
St'lW lt'i‘

O BUS'I‘UN — With the oil embargo over
and conservation efforts faltering. New
England ii»ilities return their voltage to
fuli power on Monday after a winter cut-
back to save fuel

The federal allocation system and the
ending of the Arab embargo have
stabilized the supply of fuel to the region's
electric generators. according to a
spokesman for the New England Power

l’ool
...more of the same

'l‘oday ‘s weather w ill be a copy of
Sunday ‘s clear sky and moderate tem-
peratures. The high is expected to reach
the mid Tits under partly sunny conditions.
Tonight the low will dip into the 30s with a
30 per cent rain chance through tomorrow
morning

 

  

The Kentucky Kernel #

Published by the Kernel Press inc. Begun as the Cadet in ll" and published continuously
as The Kentucky Kernel since Wis. The Kernel Press Inc. founded W71. Third class
postage paid at Lexington. Ky Business oflices are located in the Journalism Building on
the University at Kentucky campus. Advertising, room IIOend News Department room
"A. Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or
misleading advertising should be reported to the Golan.

Steve Swift. Editor-in-(‘hief

Today's the day

Today our government becomes, for at least one
day. the greatest pickpocket in history. Although we
beleaguered taxpayers set aside a portion of each
paycheck, indulge in something called income
averaging and other like methods to ease the April 15
bite, we somehow always come out on the short end of

the 1040 form.

This day is also a peculiarly sensitive one to
President Nixon, he of recent tax assessments. While
the average citizen must dole out comparably small
amounts, Nixon faces an Internal Revenue Service bit
of almost a half million dollars.

Some people will commiserate with Nixon’s
problems, and will relegate him to that category
Americans reserve for “an average guy.” Others will
point to the tax question and say it represents just
another in a growing list of Nixon excesses while in
the White House — excesses that should, and will,

lead to his impeachment.

After all the months of Watergate and related
scandals, Nixon’s tax troubles have at last brought to
the forefront an issue only too well known by the
American citizen —- the feeding'of money to an in-

satiable government.

A benefit

One of the benefits. if indeed there are any, of
Kentucky's bout with tornadoes two weeks ago, ap-
pears to be mobile home safety.

A bill passed by the 1974 General Assembly would
empower the state fire marshal] to require anchoring
of mobile homes to defend against damage from high

winds.

Rep. Terry McBrayer tD-Greenup), sponsor of the
bill. said. “Though we cannot amend the sadness of
what is past. let us work to insure the safety of the

future."

Nicholas Von Hoffman

‘There's a new you coming'-to the morgue

WASHINGTON — There is a
“new you“ coming. the dairy
industry tells us in its TV com-
mercials. But it is possible. if you
drink enough milk. that the new
you will end up at the un-
dertakers. Homogenized milk
may be the cause of a cardiac
death rate which. next to
Finland's. is the highest in the
world.

This unorthodox explanation of
the causes of cardio-vascular
death comes from Dr. Kurt A.
()ster. chief of cardiology. Park
City Hospital. Bridgeport. Conn.

DR. ()STER is
the American College of
Physicians. the American
(‘ollege of (‘ardiology and the
American (‘ollege for Clinical
Pharmacology: but for all his
credentials. his ideas have
gained little acceptance among
his peers. a fact of less than
compelling significance'since
doctors are often the first to scoff
at new medical knowledge and
the last to recognize it.

Angina pectoris. coronary
thrombosis. myocardial in~
t'arction heart diseases of

a Fellow of

whatever kind or name — are
attributed to a variety of causes
like smoking. lack of exercise.
hypertension. anxiety and an
excessive consumption of animal
fats and eggs. The sets of
evidence for all these etiologies
are less than conclusive. with
those who blame cholesterol
having one of the weakest
arguments.

The anti-cholesterol people
say. in effect. that when you eat
eggs and animal fats. the
cholesterol in these foods rushes
out of your stomach and causes
atherosclerosis by clogging the
arteries. Even if some heart

doctors don't know it.
physiologists do know the
metabolic process is slightly

more complicated than this. So it
shouldn't be a surprise to learn
that no reliable correlation
between the cholesterol in the
number of eggs you eat and the
build up in your arteries has been
established.

lilt. tiS'l‘l-th points out some
countries which consume large
quantities of saturated tars have

editorials represent the opinions of the editors. not the university

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

11‘ m
aware”! ”I" M1)!

'lET ME SAY A FEW WORDS IN SUPPORT OF MY ESTEEMED PARTY COLLEAGUE . . .'

Letters to the Kemel

This letter is in response to the

"article of Gary Rawlings con-

cerning UK Basketball. Joe Hall
is in the process of changing the
all-white image of Kentucky
Basketball fostered and en-
couraged by Adolph Rupp. Rupp
missed out on Wesley Unseld and
only recruited Tom Payne in
hopes of emulating UCLA and
Lew Alcindor. If Hall can‘t
recruit black players. why were
the majority of his players at
Regis College black? Rawling‘s
"cheapshot" journalism is only
helping to compound the
problems instead of alleviating it.
North Carolina State,
Marquette. Alabama, UCLA. do
not'have black assistant coaches.
Kentucky would have hired a
black assistant if Harry L. had
made the funds available. A
black assistant would be
welcomed into the programs.

a high incidence of heart disease.
while others do not. The Masai
people of East Africa have a diet
which normally consists of 60 per
cent saturated fats. yet have no

‘cholesterol build up in the ar-

teries.

The answer to this set of
contradictions. according to Dr.
()ster. lies in following the ac-
tivities of an enzyme named
zanthine oxidase. ordinarily
found in the liver. Xanthine
oxidase also exists in cow’s. but
not human. milk.

ln old-fashioned.
unhomogenized milk. Dr. Oster
believes that the enzyme is ex-
creted like any other waste; but
not so when the milk is
homogenized ~ that is when the
fat globules in the milk are
reduced in size. thus permitting
their absorption. along with the
xanthine oxidase. through the
small intestine walls.

oxcr: IN the blood stream. Dr.
()ster thinks that this enzyme
attacks a set of chemicals called
plasmalogens. which are thought
to be necessary for healthy heart
and arterial tissue. Now here

I'm sure its news to Louis Stout
that he coached at Lafayette.

UK has the inside track on
Givens. Lee. Higgs. and other
blue-chip prospects. but
derogatory articles like this
certainly don‘t help the
recruiting effort. Moses Malone
has not signed a National letter-
of-intent and will not until June
14. North Carolina State may sign
him but UK is not out of the
running.

In reference to the weakest
basketball conference in the
nation. we are surprised that
such powerhouses as the Big Sky.
WAC. PAC 8, MVC. OVC. etc. are
stronger than the SEC. Check the
SEC Record against non-

conference opponents for an .

answer.

Instead of harping on the

comes the cholesterol. lf Dr.
()ster's hypothesis is correct. the
cholesterol build up is part of the
body‘s attempt to repair the
damage done to heart and artery
by the action of the misdirected
enzyme. xanthine oxidase. on the
plasmalogens.

Supporting this proposition is a
study of soldiers killed in the
Korean War. Seventeen per cent
of these young. active men
already had circulatory systems
silted up with cholesterol, a fact
that may well be explained by the
universal American practice of
feeding our young homogenized
milk.

Other confirmation of Dr.
()ster‘s ideas comes from his
experience in treating heart
patients. Angina pectoris pat-
iients given doses of allopurinol.
a drug which suppresses xan-
thine oxidase, have responded in
rather dramatic fashion. but
allopurinol can have toxic side
effects. The B vitamin. folic acid.
doesn‘t and. administered in
large amounts. seems to be an
equally promising method of
treatment.

TIIIS ISN'T written to en-

Editorials

 

mm i.

UK undergoing image change

"black—white" problem. help
Kentucky basketball by bringing
some home games “home“ in
stead of in Louisville, and we all
know who is responsible for that.
We won't mention any names but
his initials are Harry Lancaster.

Kentucky has some of the
finest. most knowledgeable fans
in the world. according to such
notables as; The Birmingham
News. Charlie Cleveland. Ray
Mears. A.W. Davis. and Ernie
Grunfield.

This “sinking" ship is still
floating and Rawling's garbage is
unnecessary weight that needs to
be jettisoned.

W. Mike Hinkle
A 81 S-junior

David Wilson

A & S -junior

courage heart patients to swallow
large amounts of folic acid. Dr.
()ster's ideas are promising and
persuasive but unproven. If he's
right. you may not need to un-
dergo the heart transplant
grizzlies. But right or wrong. we
have another illustration of what
may happen when we fool with
our food.

There is no earthly reason to
homogenize milk. It doesn‘t
improve the taste and it doesn't
improve the nutrition. All it does
is up the cost. force us to buy
cream separately. prolong the
milk‘s shelf life in the store — and
possibly kill us.

Homogenization is of ab-
solutely no benefit to anyone but
the dairy industry. those masters
of the furtive and illegal cam-
paign contribution.

So drink milk and be thankful
there's a new you coming.
because the old one may be on the
way to the morgue

Nicholas Van Hoffman is a
columnist with King features
Syndicate.

 

 

 ind-(D‘Ulo—HV

(lie-t

 

 

Vlewpolnt

Stupidity just doesn't seem to be the word

By GEORGE V. HIGGINS

BOSTON -Deceitfully, Alex confesses
that he decided to become a cop when
he first realized that he was stupid.
That understanding came to him when
he was a teen-ager, earning money
pulling hides at a leather company in
Peabody, Mass. The more hides he
pulled, the more money he got, so he
pulled hides furiously and that made
his back hurt and he began to perceive
that anybody who would choose to
strain himself to make a living must
be stupid.

“Being stupid," Alex explains, “I
naturally decided to be a cop, because
it doesn't make your back hurt, and it
doesn't matter if you’re stupid."

Alex started off as a local cop. and
then he joined the Alcohol, Tobacco &
Firearms Division of the Treasury
Department, for which he performs
undercover work.

Next year he will get his bachelor
of arts, and it would not be prudent
to accept his assurances that he will
never get a master's or go to law
school—being, of course, too stupid to
harbor such aspirations—because there
are quite a lot of guys doing time or
out, now, on parole, who believed Alex
when he met them in bars and parking
lots and told them he was just a big,
harmless jerk who happened to be in
the market for a machine gun wanted
by an uncle in the Mob.

Alex is making about 21, 22, maybe
23 some years, with special overtime.

A number of people, over the years,
have reacted badly to his abashed dis-
closure that he will be obliged to use
against them, in a trial in a court of
law, anything further that they may
say, along with what they have al-
ready said, and one fellow reached for
a twelve-bore when Alex executed
upon him a warrant for his arrest,

~ but Alex happened to have a .38 in his

hand. ready to go, when that hap-
pened, being so dumb that it would
never occur to him that the defendant
might not like what was happening.

 

The defendant was lots smarter than
Alex; when he saw that .38, be de-
cided not to grab the shotgun.

Alex is so stupid that he’s done a
dangerous job with conspicuous suc-
cess for about twenty years, without
getting a scratch. He’s so stupid he
still expects guys to believe him when
he says he’s stupid. And they do.

Now. through a spokesman. Presi-
dent Nixon explains he really didn't
notice it when. his income taxes for
1969 were $171,055 short (on a total
of $243,737 due). It didn’t really regis-
ter on him when he paid $793 for
1970, having made $202,943, thus
coming up $93,410 short. For some

reason or other, it didn’t surprise him

Housewives-big losers

By NANCY SEIFER

All women work in America, pos-
sibly with the exception of the dis-
abled and some of the very wealthy.
Yet only very recently has nonsalaried
work in the home been measured in
terms of dollars and cents. The results
are startling.

In a pamphlet entitled “What's a
Wife Worth?” the Chase Manhattan
Bank estimates that the average house-
wife, with no outside job, Spends a
total of 99.6 hours a week at twelve
different jobs in the home. Listing jobs
like nursemaid and laundress, cook
and dishwasher, seamstress and main—
tenance “man," the bank calculates
that if those services were paid for,
they would cost $159.34 each week, or
$8,285.68 a year. All together, it con-
cludes, America’s housewives are worth
over $250 billion a year and would
raise the gross national product over
35 per cent.

Even when housewives hold paid
jobs as well, they spend at least six
hours more each week working than
their husbands do, when jobs, com-
muting time, housework and family
tasks are all considered. Janice Neipert
Hedges and Jeanne K. Barnett reported
in the April, 1972, “Monthly Labor
Report" that wives who are employed
30 or more hours a week spend an
average of 34 hours a week (almost

five hours each day) on household
tasks.

Until recently, housewifery was al-
ways taken for granted, without being
taken seriously. The skills of a house-
wife have no market value (except if
they are practiced in someone else’s
home), and are held in such low esteem
that they do not even count toward
social security. A housewife shares her
husband's pension, but is not entitled
to one in her own right. Yet it is clear
that if the occupation of housewife
were suddenly abolished, the impact
would be greater than the most cata-
clysmic strike the nation could ever
be faced with.

Women are beginning to demand
some form of financial security for
their later years in compensation for
all their years of work in the home.
At a 1970 National Consultation on
Working Class Women sponsored by
the National Project on Ethnic Amer—
ica and the National Council of Negro
Women, a participant said:

“A crazy idea is a union for house—
wives and I‘m serlous about this. The
powerlessness that we‘ve been talking
about comes from the fact that women.
particularly the wives of working-class
men, have absolutely no security. What
happens if the husband drops dead?
They know they can‘t get along on
Social Security. What happens if he
simply gets tired of her nagging and

when 1971 income of $262,385 seemed
to require only $878 in taxes—some
$89,667, Congress reports, less than
he owed.

So distracted by domestic and for-
eign policy was he that he merely ac-
ceded to a 1972 return proffering
$4,298 on $268,778. when in fact. Con-
gress says, he owed 389.890 more. By
oversight, he kept at least $432,787
that he should have paid, and be con‘
cedes it, disarmingly, and says that he
will cough it up, no doubt to the ex-
treme relief of the Internal Revenue
Service, contemplating millions of
1040's signed in blank, with felt-tip-
pen notations: “Come and get it, if
you can find where I hid it.”

walks out? A union could give some
sort of security to these women. get
them over the hurdle and into the
next step of life.”

Unionizing housewives may not be
the most realistic solution, but propo-
sals to attach monetary value to
housewifery are rapidly gaining accep-
tance. The Federal Government's joint
economic hearings in July. 1973, on
the economic problems of women
brought public attention to some of
the major inequities faced by house-
wives.

Pressures to remedy them are grow-
ing, including proposals to allow for
contributions to Social Security in
amounts equivalent to the self-employ-
ment rate, to extend coverage of dis-
ability insurance, and to provide special
retirement benefits for all mothers.

Under current policies. the inequities
are enormous and they hit the wives
of low wage earners the hardest. If a
husband dies at a young age. the wife
may be left with a survivor's benefit
too small for her and her children to
exist on. 1f a woman enters the work
force after 20 to 30 )cars of home-
making. her pension, by the time she
retires. will not come close to covering
the cost of living.

And if a housewife gets divorced
after less than 20 years of marriage,
she may not be entitled to any of the

Philippe Weisbezker

Alex and the rest of us, grumpilv
admitting that we'd have to pull an
awful lot of hides to earn what this
marvelous country makes available to
Alex and me without back pain, ordi-
narily cough it up without such ad-
monitions from the Congress. 1 think
it must be hard for Alex to understand
how Mr. Nixon could fork over $78,651,
when he owed some 8400.000 more.
It‘s hard for me. Life‘s hard. life's very
hard. It‘s probably because we're
stupid.

 

George V. Higgins practices law in Boston
and is the author of “(‘ogan’s Trade."
"The Digger's Game." and "The Friends
of Eddie (‘o_vle."

in the hot-stove league

benefits her husband receives at retire-
ment. even if she spent 19 years rais-
ing their children and making it pos-
sible for him to earn that pension.
Understandably. the insecurity faced
by many working-class housewives in
cases of divorce, or the unemployment
or death of their husbands. is enor-
mous.

Working husbands stand to gain as
much as their.wivcs from a change in
the present system. If a longshoreman.
for example, is ill or disabled. his wife
and small children will get regular dis-
ability payments. But if his unsalaried
wife becomes disabled. even if there is
no one to take over the household or
care for the children, he gets no help
at all. And if the working wife of an
unemployed construction worker dies.
no matter how many years she may
have worked. he receives no support
from the Government

As a question of pure economics, the
innovation lag in the Government's rc-
tirement system. which does not yet
recognize the monetary worth of
housewifery. may be costing our so-
ciety more than it knows.

 

Sane) St-ifcr. director of community
relations for tlu- National Project on
l-ithnic America of the .\mcrican Jewish
(‘ominittetn is author of the pamphlet
".\bst~nt Women in America." from which
this article has been excerpted.

 

 I—'l‘lllf KliIN'l‘l ('K\' KENNEL.

The .1" copy place

now offers
I\ 81‘ \\ 'I‘
I’Rl\'l‘l\t;

I00 copies only $2.95
200 copies only $4.50
500 copies only $7.50

Johnny Print

copy shop

547 S. Limestone 254-6139

 

Honda). .\pril I5. IIITI

Graduate Center expansion approved

If} IH‘IIHHIC [HACK
Kernel Staff Writer

The Board of Trustees ap-
proved a recommendation that
should be helpful to graduate
students iii the College of
Education.

The recommendation. ap-
proved April 2. is to continue and
expand the existing Graduate
Residence Center in Louisville.
The residence center is a joint
effort of UK and U of L Colleges
of Education and the Louisville
city schools.

I’thllt 'I‘tl this recom-
mendation. the students at UK
were required to take 30 of their
36 hours to obtain a masters at
['K. With the new cooperative
program. students can obtain
resident credit at [K or L' of L.

The center was originally
established for two years on an
experimental basis in May 1972.
Its purpose was to enable
graduate students enrolled in the
l'K unit of the Teacher Corps to
receive residence credit for their
studies and teacher preparation
in Louisville

L' of L has a Teacher Corps unit
in Louisville. UK and U of L units
both work with the Louisville
Public Schools to offer in-
struction and experience to
Teacher Corps members.

'I‘IIE tilt.\l)l‘.\TE Residence
(‘enter cooperates with. but is
separate from. the Urban
Education Center sponsored by
the Louisville Public Schools, UK
and U of L.

The l'rban Education Center‘s
programs include coordination of
the Louisville Cooperative
Teacher Education Program, a
replacement for secondary
student teaching featuring
coordinated field and theoretical
experiences in the environment
as wellasin the methods of urban
teaching.

For teachers new to the
Louisville area. the Cooperative
Graduate Studies Program for
Urban Teachers provides a
masters degree program. In-
struction is provided in on-site
classes and in the teacher‘s
classroom by a team of
professors and leaders from the
Louisville school district.

Teachers choose to receive
credit from either UK or U of L
and take the final portion of their

 

 

 

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masters work on campus during
the summers.

THIS YEAR approximately 90
teachers are enrolled in the
program. In the fall there will be
approximately 100 more. Both
UK and U of L faculty members
present the courses.

The Urban Education Center
also coordinates the field and
academic experience of students
in Managing Educational
Change. students enrolled in the
doctoral degree program at UK
and those enrolled in the
Specialist in Education program
at U of L.

Presently 26 are enrolled in
Managing ED, 13 in the doctoral
degree program and 13 in the
Specialist program.

Memos

 

THEATRE ARTS“ Auditions, A
SOMETIME THING,Monday. (April IS), 3-5
p.m., Music Lounge, Fine Arts Building TA
maior, Dennis Embry, is director. IZAIS.

THE UK GERMAN Club will meet
Monday, April lit at Koininia House. 7.30
pm This is last meeting of club this
semester and important for all members to
attend. ”Ms

A E S SAC Elections will be held April 22
26 Pick up applications 275 POT Monday
April 15th noon April t9. "Become involved
in a meaningful activity”. l2Al9.

SWA METTING; April I6; 6.1) pm , SC
109 Agenda I) Discussion of up coming
elections, 2) Discussion of positions to be
filled; 3) Discussion of SWA picnic on April
2t. 12AM.

PRE-MEDS PRE-DENTS - Pre
registration adwsing is being held in Room
2650f the Office Tower through April 26 from
I0:00 a m to 5:00 pm 12AM.

NEED GROUPS and indiwduals to
volunteer helping clean up in devasted
areas! Listen to radio and T V of whe
and when to meet! Coordinated thru
Salvation Army l2Al6

DO YOU have two three hours weekly for
phone conversations with elderly shut ins?
A meeting for interested persons will be
Tuesday, 7-30p m in the Social Room of the
Newman Center, 320 Rose Lane. IZAlb

THE COUNCIL on Women’s Concerns is
holding a potluck dinner, 6.30 pm ,
Tuesday, April to at the Campus Women's
Center, 658 S. Limestone. I2Alo.

FORESTRY CLUB meeting Tuesday,
April I6, 7:30 p.m., AGSCN Rm. A-6.
Speakers Bill McReynoIds, Arnold Mit.
chell. Chauncey Lohr, Charlie Foster. and
Thurman Martz will tell about their iobs
12AM.

ORGANIZATIONS AND individuals are
urged to participate in the circle K Key
Club Basketball Marathon, April 26 28th.
Interested? Contact Steve Thomas, Circle K
president. 266-2669. l2Alo.

FRENCH MAJORS or anyone interested
in taking a French course, French SAC of
Icrs advising services dutiiig the pie-
registration period, l0 3 daily in OT 1023.
I2Al6.

THE COMP. LIT. Program is designed to
previde a challenge for student interested in
literature. A maior in a language and
literature can be combined with a maior in
comp. Iit without additional course work.
Contact one of the following people for
further information. Virginia LaCharite
(OT 1013), John Greenway (OT I303) or
language dept. adviser. l5A24.

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED to man phones
at Salvation Army coordinating tornado
disaster clean up effort. 5 9 weekdays, 7-7
weekends, will work in shifts. Call 278-742”
or 258-2751. ISAl7.

THE SPANISH Undergraduate Council is
offering its services during Free
Registration, April is 26 for information on
courses, requirements, a. instructors. If
interested contact instructors.

DR. ROBERT A. KUEHNE, Will be the
quest on WHAS Radio talk show, on Tuesday
April 16, from 8.00 pm. 9.30 pm. Topic:
"Should Red River Be Dammed?" Phone in
your opinions. ISAlo

GAMES AND GRAFFITI featuring
BACKGAMMON, Tuesday April 16. 1230 2
in the Human Relations Center Lounge,
Alumni Gym

WHAT ADVANTAGE DOES CHRIST
HAVE OVER THE NEW RELIGIOUS
MOVEMENTS? He existed before time and
he never changes Study with Christians
Tuesday, April 16. 7 30 p in SC Ito. l5Al6.

SOCIAL WORK student self nominations
for faculty student committees of the
College of Social Professions 8. SWA offieiers
are available April 15th 6th floor Office
Tower

 

 

 

 

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‘Beasties?’
Electra-chemist discusses 'what sort
of animals' Loch Ness monsters are

By JOANN WHITE
Kernel Staff Writer
“From goblins and ghoulies,
and long-legged beasties,
and things that go bump in the
night.
Dear Lord. deliver us!“

(An old Scottish prayer)

Since the 1500’s sightings of a
”monster“ living in Loch Ness
have given Scottish citizens
reason to utter these words. But
there is really more than one
Loch Ness monster living in the
25 miles long two miles wide body
of water, said Dr. Henry H.
Bauer.

At a Thursday night meeting of
the Lexington chapter of the
American Chemical Society,
Bauer claimed, “The question no
longer is ‘Are there Loch Ness
monsters?‘ but rather “What sort
of animals are they?’ "

BAL‘ER NOTED that a species
of animals related to modern
rep