xt73tx35440v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73tx35440v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-03-04 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 04, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 04, 1976 1976 1976-03-04 2020 true xt73tx35440v section xt73tx35440v Vol. LXVII No. 126
Thursday. March 4. l976

an independent student newspaper

It in-state status refused,
law student will sue UK

By MONTY .\. FOLEY
Kernel Staff \\ riter
and
DICK DU“ \EY
Kernel (‘olu mnist

A l‘K law student has said he will sue the
t niversity if a Council on Public Higher
Education tCPHEt committee decides not
to grant him in-state tuition status.

\tith in-state status L'K students pay
$240 each term for tuition. which is $365
less than non-resident students tuition.

Bill Davis. who is black. enrolled in the
law school in the fall semester. 1974. The
l niversity has denied Davis resident
status four times. once by Assistant Dean
of Admissions Robert S. Larson and three
times by the University Non-Resident Fee
Committee. which is chaired by Larson.

Appeal to the CPHE is the last ad-
ministrative recourse available to Davis.

The fee committee blocked Davis‘s
fourth attempt to gain resident status on
the grounds that he had initially come to
Kentucky to enroll in a college rather than
to (stablish residency, a letter to Davis
dated last December states

“It is the opinion of the committee that
your intent to establish domicile tlegal
residence) does not outweigh the fact that
you came to Kentucky with the intent to
attend school and have been a full-time
student since that time.“ the letter states.

Both Larson and Dean of Admissions
and Heg'strar Elbert ()ckerman were out
of town Vtednesday and unavaitable for
comment.

The committee based its decision on
(‘PHE guidelines adopted last July. A
person moving to Kentucky “must have
resided in the state for one year as a non-

Crisis center

By BE'I‘SY PEARCE

Kernel Staff \\ riter
(Editor's note: This is the third of a four-
part series dealing with rape. The final
article will deal with rape prevention.)

Vtomen tend to have a false sense of
security about rape; the popular
misconception that. “lt'll never happen to
me.“ said Patricia Elam. director of the
ltape Crisis Center tRCCt. This illusion
"is a very frustrating problem.“ she said.

Popular culture glamorizes rape by
promoting it as an act of eroticism. Elam
said. "Rape is a crime of violence. The
primary reason behind rape is aggression.
not sexual gratification."

Meeting the changing needs of rape
victims and educating women about rape
are the main purposes of the RCC.

Lexington is the only place in central
Kentucky that offers both physical and
emotional recourse for rape victims. “The
l K Med Center is about the only place in
this region that a rape victim can go to be
treated. and the crisis center is the only
tacility that offers counseling.“ said Pat
Van Houten. KCC training coordinator.

Regional treatment of rape victims is an
"appalling situation.” Elam said.
"\Mimen are refused treatment in major
towns around Kentucky— Richmond.
.\icholasville. Georgetown- just because
hospitals and doctors don‘t want to be
responsible."

student in order to be granted resident
status." said CPHE Legal Counsel Harry
M. Snyder.

Davis. 22. graduated from an Alabama
high school in 1970 and moved to Penn-
sylvania. where he worked to raise money
tor college expenses. He moved to Ken-
tucky in September. 1971. and enrolled in
Berea College. '

Davis graduated from Berea in July.
1974. and enrolled in the l'K law school
that fall. .-\1 that time. Larson denied Davis
iii-state tuition status.

t'l’llE' guidelines state the 12-month
tesidence requirement may be waived
only it't here is "a clear demonstration that
he tthe studentt has established domicile
in the state."

Although Davis said he has not spent i2
consecutive months in Kentucky as a non-
student. he said he has overcome the
presumption of non-resident status by
several events that normally indicate legal
residence.

Davis said "a clear demonstration" that
he has esta blis hed Kentucky residence can
be provided by the following facts:

while attending lterea (‘ollegc he
married a Berea student within the
jurisdiction of Kentucky and later ltad a
child by that marriage:

Davis‘s niaz'raige was later dissolved
under the jurisdiction and order of the
Madison County tKy.) Circuit (‘ourt since
he was deemed a resident of that county
tor the purposes of marriage dissolution by
the court;

, llis college transcript lists his
residence as being in the Commonwealth
of Kentucky:

Continued on page 4

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

Palii Termte

High as a kite

.\ bit of spring made a laly day of kite flying for Pat McWilliams. lit. Pat was among
several persons who took advantage of the unseasonably warm Weather and an un-
cluttered piece of the sky in Jacobson l’ark Sunday afternoon.

meets Victims' needs and educates

Some private physicians refuse to treat
rape victims because they don‘t want to
get legally involved. Elam said. “Doctors
claim they don‘t have the proper equip
ment tOr an examination. yet the only
equipment that's necessary is a speculum.
light and slides» the same equipment
required tor a routine Pap smear."

Since the crisis center opened in Sep-
tember. 1974. victims have looked to it tor
iielp. The major problem. said Ann. a
counselor at the center. is that "the
woman is madeto feel guilty: like I he rape
was her fault."

There are so many myths 1 about rapei
that women must disregard. said Elam.
"For instance. the precipitant behavior
level for rape tthe degree to which women
entice the rapist) is 4.4 per cent. according
to FBI statistics. That's lower than almost
any other major crime.“

(‘om m unity education projects and talks
at clubs and organizations are part of the

“vital operation" of the lt(‘(‘. Elam said.
The centers 34-hour crisis line is alter»
itatcly stalled by the fit) or so workers.
most of whom are volunteers.

Many of the women who call the crisis
center have already contacted the police.
but want moral support and general ad-
vice. "\Hien we get a call from a victim
we try to calm her. andassure her that we
ca n iielp.“ .\iin said. The caller‘s behavior
varies. but generally they are confused
and unsure of what to do.

While counselors at the center do not
give the victim unsolicited advice to report

#1; .

the ra pe to the police. they do encourage it
'it asked. If the victim decides to
prosecute. a counselor will prepare her for
the court case. and accompany her to the
trial.

"Vi c wish everyone would call and
prosecute.“ said Ann. ”It‘s so
irustrating— people just don’t know how
common ittrapei is."

.training

The center's staff members have met
with the lA-xington Metro Police Sex
t'rime Investigation Squad tSClSi to
discuss mutual problems in treating rape
victims. Elam said the SClS has made
significant progress in improving treat-
ment of victims.

Hopefully. increased awareness of
victims needs will result from future
meetings. she said. “l‘d like to see the
crisis center and the police in constant
com mu nica tion . "

Elam is working to form a statewide
task force which would unite represen-
tatives from the medical. legal and law
enforcement a reas with RCC coordinators.
The task force's goal would be to coor-
dinate a policy regarding rape victims’
treatment.

RCC is a subcommittee of the Women's
(‘enter of Lexington. Inc.. which provides
its only funding. Donations are vital to the
center‘s future plans which include a
permanent staff and improved facilities.

Potential staff members attend three
sessions. during which they
become familiar with the various
situatiors they may encounter. In ad-
dition. trainees are required to read
publications about rape and its related
problems.

Elam emphasized the importance of
women educating themselves about rape.
“You‘re not safe in your own home—not
even your neighbor‘s or boyfriend‘s
home. “

 

  

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

editorials

mammmumnnmwmm.
Miummwm.mmummwum
mmmmmmwwmmmm

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John W inn Miller
Associate Editor

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chie!

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

“ Letters

sure that most people realize there are
two waysot preventing pregnancy. The
first is abstinence from sexual

 

 

 

 

(Editor's note: Because of the number of letters and commentaries received by the
Kernel, there is no editorial today. In cases where a number of letters or Spectrum
articles are received about one or several subjects, more space is devoted to reader‘s
views. Letters to the editor and Spectrum commentaries should be typed, double-

Ducking
Editor;

The letter to the editor entitled relations.

spaced and signed—including classification, maior and phone number.)

 

 

 

 

. 'iv
' .1" "I! M110

‘Go or: HIM,CHPMP——- WE’VE GOT A STRATEGY AND IT’S vibRKtNoi'

 

"Responsibility" (Kernel, March 2)
wasa source of true amazement to me.
The writer of that letter, Carole Lopat.
claimed that abortion is a responsible
answer to the world’s population
problems. Just the opposite is true!
Abortion involves taking the my way
out by ducking responsibility.

Pro abortionists in effect are saying
to the people of the United States that
they are free from the responsibility of
their actions. Yeteven worse, abortion
allows the destruction of millions of
lives which can only be characterized
as human, lives holding far more
potential than those of the human
vegetables which have been mer-
cilessly. refused the right to die.

The responsible answer to the world’s
population problems is for the adults of
this world to accept theresponsibility of
not producing an unwanted child. I am

The second is theuse of
contra ceptNes.

The responsible individual will
realize that no means of contraception
Is no per cent effective and be willing
to accept the consequences of his or her
actions should an unwanted pregnancy
OCCur. l call on the adults of the United
States to accept the responsibility of
preventing unwanted pregnancies. It
you do, the need for abortion will be
virtually eliminated except in cases of
rape, etc. The responsibility is yours!

Steven 0. Petrey
Engineering senior

Letters policy

The Kernel welcomes any and all
reader response through letters to the
editor or Spectrum articles. Since we
can express our opinion through
editorials, it is only fair that readers
may also express their views.

 

 

’Shacks’ are home to some people

(Editor’s note: This article is the first
otoa two-part series dealing With UK,
Lexmgton’s new ClVlC center and the
cut-tint South Hill controversy.)

By George Potrotz

 

 

When Adolph Rupp tirsl came to
Lexington, reports Courier Journal
Sport. ‘cciitor Dave Kindred, he didn’t
like wnat he saw. ” 'Bear in mind that
wnere Memorial Coliseum now stands
there were 55 little Negro one and two
room shacks back then,’ Rupp said in
the summer of l975.’....they took me to
eat at the University cateteria and out
the third floor Window I (Quit! see all
those little Negro shacks. I wasn‘t used
to anything like that....l said, Good
gawd almighty, what kind of place is
this Kentucky?’ (Courier Journal,
Jan l3, I976).

What Adolph Rupp calls ”Negro
shacks" the people who lived there
called home. And many people in
Lexington still remember with bit
terness the destruction of their neigh
borhood to make way for the coliseum
and its surrounding parking lots.

Now it's set to happen all over again.
The Lexington Center Corporation
(LCC) that collection of bankers and
other businessmen whoare ”renewing,’
Lexington their way~—don’t want any
repetitions of Rupp’s horrified reaction.
They don’t want people coming to
Lexington for ball games and con-
ventions to see any poorer neigh-
borhoods even from the elevation of
their hotel rooms. Despite the fact that
”'historic South Hill,” as the city itself
bills if, is far from a simple slum, there
is enough there that fails to fit the city's
gleaming newimages to make the LCC
uncomfortable. Their solution? Raze
the area. _

Such people—Chairman Jake Graves
and tne others on the LCC—don't want
to eliminate poverty (any more than
they want to eliminate their own
wealth). They iust don’t want to look at
it.

The people of South Hill-Pleasant

Green poor and otherwise ~~stand only
to lose trom the destruction of the area.
The relocation plan the city proposes
(atthis pointnone has been passed) will
not enable people look for other
liOusing, which is scarcer than Rupp’s
hair anyway. If people can find housing
on their own—separated from their
neighborhoods and probably from the
bus lines, laundries and stores they
count on now~~it will mostly be either
more expensive or more run-down. In
either case the people will lose, and
receiving the "fair market value" (as
decided by the city) for homes, or a
meager two years of subsidies in the
case of tenants will be precious little
consolation. The poor will get poorer so
thattherich can get richer. Butat least
the rich won’t have to look at them.
The rich instead will be able to park
their lmperials where the homes once
stood. ln Sunday’s Herald-Leader
Executive Sports Editor Steve Wildon
revealed that the Blue 8. White Fund,
originally concieved for Com-

SOUTH HILL

monwealth Stadium, will be extended
to the civic center. Those with the
bread can get themselves choice seats

by contributing to the fund—the larger .

the contribution, the better the seats. If
you add 4,0“) such seats to the 6,273 now
holding priorities in the coliseum and to
the 7,(I)0 student seats (guess where
they’ll be) and subtract the total from
22,892, you can see that the net result, in
Wilson's words, "is that the fan without
a priority or enough money to buy one
through the fund will be left in the upper
readies of the arena or out in the cold."

If any of this is a Surprise to the
average fan who thought the new civic
center would mean he would be able to
see UK basketball games now, it is no
surprise to the LCCor the University. It
is largely becauseofthe people who will
be getting their seats through the Blue
8. White Fund—influential men in
Lexington and Frankfort who want
good basketball seats—that the civic;
center was built in the first place. John
C. Darsie, University legal council and

the University’s negotiator with the
LCC, has told me that he is not the only
one in the administration who felt that
building an arena larger than Madison
Square Garden in a city the size of
Lexington was insane in the first place.
But Darsie also feels that there never
was a chance that it wouldn‘t be built,
or that Uk wouldn’t play there.

The people who wanted the civic
center wanted it so that UK could play
there, and those people have their way
at UK as wellasin Lexington. And what
this all means is that the University, in
doing the bidding of those interests, is
largely resoponsible for what will
surely come to be regarded as the
whole civic center fiasco.

(Tomorrow: More about UK‘s com-
plicity in the demolition of South Hill
and the housing crisis, and what we can
do about it.)

 

George Petratz is an assistant English
protesesor and a member of the
Friends of South Hill.

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

In ignorance
there is

strength

 

By Stephen Lutz

For the past several days I’ve been
reading the letters and articles in the
Kernel concerning the Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA) with something akin
to bemused detachment. Both sides, pro
and con, have conducted themselves in a
manner which most readily brings to mind
the inane babbling of the Three Stooges,
or perhaps possibly the gentle wisdom of
Charles Manson. it would appear that
each of these curiously uncommon op-
ponents is disciples of a branch of political
theory which can generalize as; ”In
Ignorance there is strength.”

Admittedly, some would say that could
cause some serious problems in any
logical argument. But fortunately. it ap-
pears that neither the forces for or against
the ERA are basing their arguments on
logic. The ladies in pink and the ladies in
fatigue green both manfully, so to speak.
use all the ignorance at their disposal to
formulate and defend their refreshing
brand of political rhetoric.

 

spectrum

Opinions from inside and outside the University.

 

’ ’Ilo-

PI

11”-

 

 

 

But it isn’t this reliance on unsound logic
which distrubs me about the ERA con-
troversy.

That I can live with.

What really upsets me about the whole
silly mess, however, is that it is a com-

plete, utter, total waste of time, effort and.

limited ability.

For God’s sake! Just‘look at the con-
stifuion~ oops, I said that word, con-
stitution; nobody ever, ever looks at that
thing even when they’re arguing about
something as closely related as a con-
stitutional amendment. Okay kiddies,
don’t look at the whole constitution.

”Sec. 1. All persons born or naturalized
in the United States, and subiect to the
jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the
United States and of the State wherein they
resicb. No State shall make or enforce any
law which shall abridge the privileges or
immunities of citizens of the United
States; nor shall any state deprive any
person of life, liberty, or property, without
due process of law; not deny to any person
within its iurisdiction the equal protection
of the laws.”

Quite a revelation isn’t it" No? Well
read on. I would say that fully 50 per cent
of the students on this campus don’t even
know that there is a 14th amendment,
much less what it says. Apparently the pro
ERA forces were drawn almost ex
clusively from this 50 per cent.

Now, lesson two in .this short COL 'se on
the U.S. Constitution. The ERA (27th)
amendment states:

”Sec. 1. Equality of rights under the law
shall not be denied or abridged by the
United States or by any State on account of
Sex."

What can we infer from comparison of
these two amendments? First, that the
ERA is little morethan a feeble echo of the
14th. Second, any conceivable legislation
designed to improve the lot of women
could be upheld as constitutional under an
amendment that has been on the books for
over iOO years. Third, the adoption of the
ERA w0uld have little if any practical
effect on the condition of women in this
country.

Thus I can conclude that the only
possible reason for ratification is that it

would serve as an ego builder to which
women with an inferiority complex could
point to and say: ”See, I'm equal; I'm as
good as you are. The law says so right
here.“ This seems to me to be a rather
feeble arguemenf for adoption of a con-
stitutional amendment. it seems to me to
be a rather feeble argument for anything.

The really ironic thing about the whole
ERA controversy is, in essence, that all
these well meaning, fairly sincere women
land men) are fighting both for and
againstanamendment which IS, in reality,
nothing more than a political sop thrown
by the federal government to appease the
extremely vocal radical minority of the
women's movement.

Jesus H. Christ, can't anybody see the
obvious! Women don’t need the ERA. All
the time spent arguing about this empty
amendment would be much spent trying to
enforce the lath.

All else is just a pathetic waste of time.

And it sickens me.

 

Stephen A. Lutz Esq. is a political science
freshman.

 

 

”New Times” magazine has
reported that Charles Manson has
indignantly refused to allow himself to
be interviewed by anyone representing
Larry Flynt’s monthly ink orgy.
Hustler magazine.

 

”l didn‘t even know books like yours
were permitted over the counter,”
Manson reportedly wrote to Flynt in a
hasty letter to Flynt canceling the deal.

It seems Manson had tentatively
agreed to the interview until he was
shown a copy of "Hustler.” Then the
convicted murderer and leader of the
infamous killercult "Family” backed
out...apparently deciding that Hustler
was too low-class, even for himself.

Well nothing personal of course,
Charlie, but a recent poll concluded
through the mail by the National
Enquirer showed that 84.6 per cent of

 

2,460 respondents favored the idea of
giving the death penalty to convicted
murderers and broadcasting the
subsequent execution on nationwide
television.

 

For those who think you can get all
the information y0u need by watching
television, consider this example of
what the "rip and read" syndrome can
do to broadcast news:

On the 8:25 "Morning Report”
Wednesday, WLEX anchorman Peter
Stoner reported at length about what
Peter Cameio (the presidential can-
didate of the SOCialist Workers’r Party)
had to say to students at the University
of Louisville (U of L) Tuesday at

ternoon.
Now, Stoner’s attention to the can-

didate of a "minor” political party is
commendable. But in addition to
reading simply the Associated Press’
long-distance account of a Louisville
event, Stoner mentioned the fact
Cameio was right here in Lexington—-
on the University of Kentucky cam-
pus—only hours after the U of L ap-
pearance.

Charles Manson finds a dirty magazine

 

Latinists, art lovers and certain odd
forensic pathologists doubtless will be
happy to hear that a piece of Benito
-Mussolini’s brain-reported stolen
from the former Italian leader’s tomb
last Friday—already~ has been
recovered.

The brain fragment, for those not
familiar with the case, is the same one
that was appropriated by a U.S. Army
psychiatrisfafter Mussolini’s execution
in 1945. It had been returned to Italy
only to years ago, after a 20-year
struggle to regain it by Mussolini’s
widow.

The fragment was taken from
Mussolini’s tomb in Predappio during a
”raid” on that historic place at the end
of lastweek. It was returned to a priest
in Balogna on Sunday, by a man who
left it in the confessional booth at the
Basilica of San Domenico.

Italian police have theorized that the
theft was the work of either terrorists
or tourists . . the modus operandi
seems to fit both groups.

Another theory has it that the squishy
relic had been removed from Benito's

skull in October, 1936, and has been
living alone in South America since
then.

 

Oh, yes. A new magazine hit Ken-
tucky bookstores and pulp racks this
month; butdon’t let the beguiling cover
of R6 fool you. The thing is little more
than a house organ for a Louisville
modelling agency . . .and a poorly clone
house organ at that.

The RG on the cover are the initials of
Rick George, the head of com-
mercialized image agency that puts the
rag out. And the rest of the magazine
also is an attempt to flatter the
publisher and his wealthy friends,
presumably to establish them as the
ruling clique of ”sophisticates” in the
Bluegrass State.

Justbeoarefulbeforeyou shelloutan
honest buck for this self~serving
collection of bad photography, lousy
writing and poor editing. l’m afraid'l
wasn’t careful enough. So it goes.

 

Terrence Tucker is a communications
graduate student. His column appears
weekly in the Kernel.

 

 

 

 

    
    
           
      
       
     
   
      
    
    
    
      
    
        
          
       
        
        
  
   
    
       
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
 

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday, March 4. 1976

  

r------------------------—

   

 
 

 

 

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Phone 252-6672

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If status refused, I
student will sue UK

Continued from page 1

lie attended Eastern Ken-
tucky lniversity as a transient
student w ith resident status
during the summer of 1973:

Kentucky is the only state in
.-.iiich Davis has been granted a
driver‘s license and permitted to
\‘tilt‘.

.\ntceN-ptember. 1973. he has
34'1” thru- jobs in Kentucky and
nas been offered a job in Ken-
tucky upon graduation; and.

Davis is totally self-
supporting

Davis presented the above
arguments when be last

requested in-statc status before
the l niversity Non-Resident Fee

‘1'ommittee last December.

7

7r

 

    

John Leathers. assistant dean
of the 1'l\' (‘ollege of Law. who
represented Davis at that
nearing said. "It is obvious from
the facts of the case that he
'l)il\'l5l has met every objective
manifestation of intent" to
establish residency.

"He has gotten a raw deal all
the way around from that
committee." Leathers said. “If
iie can‘t rebut the presumption of
nonresidence with this case. then
no one could."

Both Davis and Leathers argue
that while Davis has repeatedly
been denied resident status. two
other second—year l'K law
students have been granted in-
state status with evidence no
more convincing than Davis‘s.

()ne of these students. Gene
Smallwood. was granted in-state
status by the fees committee in
tictober. 1975.

.\ Letcher County attorney
provided the fee committee with

an affidavit inicating that
Sma ll wood had been offered a job
by the attorney. In addition.

.\‘niallwood a lso registered to vote
in Kentucky during the summer
.11 1975.

Sittallwood enrolled at the law
school itt fall. 1974. with Davis.

Prior to Smallwood's
enrollment at the law school. he
attended the l‘ttiy'ersity' of
Michigan. His parents have
resided in Detroit since 1956.

.\t the ti me Smallwood enrolled

ne was not granted resident

status. But when be appealed to
the tees committee last ()ctober.
tic was subsequently granted in-
state tuition rates.

Leathers said Tuesday that
Davis’s case. based on the facts
that have been presented. is
stronger than Smallwood's.

.\nother law student who was
granted residency status last
Hctober. lid. \\albourne. came
to Kentuckyin August. 1971. from
lil Dorado. Kan.

\\albourne enrolled at l'K as
an undergraduate at that time.
receiving his degree in
December. 1973. In August. 197-1.
he enrolled in law school. after
working in Lexington during the
interim period. .

"in my estimation. Davis has a
very strong case which parallels
mine in several respects."
\talboume said Monday.

Leathers has recommended
Davis sue the t'niversity if his
request isn't granted at the
("Hill hearing March 12.
Leathers said Davis has three
grounds upon which to sue.

The first charge would be that
the lniversity has denied Davis
due process of law as guaranteed
by the t'nited States Constitution
by placing an “irrebuttable
presumption" of out-of-state
status on him. contrary to a 1973
Supreme Court ruling.

Second. the suit would charge
that Dav‘s has been denied the
equal protection of the laws. a
right also guaranteed under the
constitution. The basis of this
charge would be that Davis has
been discriminated against on
racial grounds.

'l‘hird. Davis could bring a
cause of action based upon a
federal statute which would hold
Larson and the members of the
committee personally liable for
their role in the denial of his in-
state status.

Under all these grounds. Davis
said he would ask the court to
award him monetary damages
based upon the difference in the
amount of tuition he has actually
paid and the amount that he
would have paid‘had he been
granted in-state status when he
first requested it.

Committee granted power

to subpoena

witnesses

“ASIIING'I‘ON (AP) —The House Ethics Committee got
preliminary approval Tuesday for broad subpoena power to in-
vestigate the leak of a secret intelligence report. but the chairman

said
Correspmdent Daniel Schorr.

it has not decided whether to summon CBS News

Schorr has acknowledged he arranged publication in the Village
Voice weekly newspaper of the House Intelligence Committee’s
secret report on the CIA a nd other intelligence agencies.

The House Rules Committee cleared for House action a
resolution to empower the Ethics Committee to require testimony
by subpoena. The House is expected to complete favorable action

in a few days.

the WV W. in mm
Sanding. University of Kentucky,
Jam mm. a“. is united five

vanity raring

“museum" mm .
«It. mm rat. are $12 pr MI
W. Mist-d by It. W HI“.
int “mumbmmmas

 

!; RI"\II£i'K’\e

 

  

 

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campus briefs

 

 

Kentucky Geological Survey
issues booklet on tourist areas

The Kentucky Geological
Survey «KGS» at [K has issued
its eighth in a series of booklets
which take a unique look at the
state‘s top tourist areas.

”Scenic Geology of Pine
Mountain Kentucky“ is the
newest q uide booklet the KGS has
published to explain geological
phenomena and rock formations
in Kentucky‘s state parks.
recreational areas and Mam-
moth Cave.

The booklets are written and
illustrated for the average
tourist. The illustrations—
drawings. skaches. maps and
pictures—are the focus for the
text.

“The ill ulstra tions are designed
so a tourist can just look at them
and get the essentials of the
park‘s offerings.“ said Preston
llchrain. assistant state
geologist and head of the KGS
industrial and metallic metals
section.

McGrain. a KGS staffer since
1940, is author of the Pine
Mountain booklet and four
others.

“Parks are located where they
are because of the geology,"
McGrain said. "Visitors go to
them because of their geologic
features However, few park
visitors have the geologic
background to understand what
they are seeing."

McGrain’s new booklet points
out that Pine Mountain stetches
for 125 miles from near Jellico,
Tenn., to Elkhorn City, Ky., and
includes five recreation areas:

“US Beverage and Tax

MON—SAT. NOON

ALL YOU
CAN EAT!

l'ine Mountain State Park. Little
Shepherd Trail. Kingdom Come
Nate l’ark. Kiwanis Raven Rock
Park and the Breaks Interstate
Park.

.\H ot the work on the booklets
is done in addition to regular staff
duties. McGrain said. The
booklets are produced in the UK-
Division of Printing.

The booklets can be obtained at

the [K Mineral Industries
Building on the Lexington
campus,

 

LexTran.reduces
bus fare for
handicapped ,

Joseph Schleekmann. Lex'l‘ran
general manager. announced
that starting this week. the lure

tor handicapped persons riding

Lex'l‘ra n \\ ill be reduced from the
the regular
to ten cents.

lure of twenty-five

[in ring the non-peak hours of $9
an . and :: p.n'.. through the week
and a lid av Saturday and Sunday.
handicapped persons will be able

to tide for the ten-cent fare.
Schleekmann said "to qualify
tor the handicapped status a
person ntust come to the Lex~
'l'ran offices at 109 \\. Loudon
Ave. during regular business
hours and obtain an identification

i ...‘.;.v

\\\\

an

'lltere “Ill be a one-tune
charge ot $1 .50 to eover the cost of
preparing the card. which \\ill
include the person‘s photograph.

AAUP holds
annual meeting

The t l\’
.\lllt‘l‘lt'illt

ett t‘tl.

 

chapter of
.\Lsoeialion of
lniveisit) l’rotessors \\ill holi’
its annual business meeting
'l‘tttNla) Mal‘elt ‘J at 7:30 pm, in
the l‘restdent‘s ltoom of the
student (enter.

The Nominating t‘ommittee
\\ ill report and other nominations
\\ ill be t'eeelved ll'om the floor
Uther eomnnttee reports \\ ill also
be presented.

 

Worldview '76

School of
lx'entucky‘s

'l‘he l’atterson
lttplomae)‘ and
liotar) t'lubs \\ ill sponsor
\\tlltl.l)\'|r2\\ ‘Tii Friday. March
I: at the Student t'enter.

This 5 ea r‘s theme \\ ill examine
“American li‘oreign l’oliey tor its
'l‘liird t‘enturv.” In the morning
session. the teatured speaker will

be ltiehanl llolbrooke. managing

editor of
magazine.

'l‘hroughout the day there will
be tilms and small discussion
groups moderated by
distinguished visitors troni the
state Department and other
universities. .\ barbecue lunch
\\ ill also be available.

OTIGE'

"l“ol‘elglt Policy”

UK SENIORS

It you plan to attend the UK
Graduate School this summer or fall

semester and wish to take ad-
vantage ot advance regis