xt73xs5jdb4b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73xs5jdb4b/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1977-11-02 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, November 02, 1977 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 02, 1977 1977 1977-11-02 2020 true xt73xs5jdb4b section xt73xs5jdb4b  

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Volume LXIX, Number 54
Wednesday. Novemberz. 1977

Hopefuls
attract
only 4

to forum

By K EN KAGAN
Kernel Staff erer

(The writer has been covering the
Urban County Council campaign.
This story contains his ob-
servations.)

What if they held a candidates’
forum and nobody came? That’s
almost what happened Monday
night when four persons snowed up
at Temple Adath Israel to listen to 15
candidates for Urban County
Council seats.

According to rules of the Central
Kentucky Women’s Political
Caucus, which spomored the event,
each candidate had threeminutes to
speak. Mary Marngione, incumbent
representative for the 5th district,
said simply, “I’ll behappy to answer
anyquestions atany time, and all 1
want '3 to keep on contributing."

Not so brief was Carl Hoot Combs,
an at-large candidate, who ignored
the time limit while offering his
statement.

Little of substance was offered,
however; few proposals were ad-
vanced thatdiffered markedly from
current policies and approaclnes.

The only exceptions tothis were
two suggestions of at-large can-
didate George Herman Kendall. He
advocated electing an ex-officio
member to the council to represent
the nearly 30,000 persons at UK, as
well as electing, instead of ap
pointing, a citizen’s advocate.

Most UK students living off-
campus are iii the 3rd, 4th or 5th
districts. The 3rd district includes
most of the campus, Pralltown,
Sotuh Hill and the downtown area.
Joe Jasper is rtmning against in-
cumbent William Bingham here.

The 4th district contains areas
around Commonwealth Stadium and
Central Baptist Hospital. Its can-
didates are Ann Gabbard and Paul
Schuette

The 5th district covers the
Woodland Park area and the neigh-
borhood near Henry Clay’s home.
Carndidates areKen Clevidence and
Mangiorne.

Jasper, speaking of his term on
the courncilfrom 1973 to 1975, said
“Not one shovel of dirt was moved
off of South Hill, but one month after
I left office (after being defeated by
Bingham) the bulldozers moved
right in. The reason? I kept the
people in my district inftrmed.

“I don’t think I would have ac-
cepted an appointment to the
Lexington Center Board while the
destructionof South Hillwas going
on, ” he added, referring to
Bingham’ s appointmentto the board
by Mayor Foster Pettit.

The issue of growth was handled
delicately, if at all, by the can-
didates. Most spoke ofa need for
“managed growth, ” though none
.could really explain what thephrase
means in practical ternns.

At- -large candidate Jim Todd
summed it upsaying, “We all want
Lex'ngton to continue growirmnone
of uswants it to stop. "

And acknowledging the im-
practicality of stopping growth in
Lexington, Jasper offered a partial
sdution: “Wecan’ tstoppeopb from
coming here, butwe don’thave to be
so busy inviting bu .ndutries here
likelBM arnd the rest, because they
bring all those people with than."

The six at-large candidate, mree
ofwhom will be elected are
Wallace, Ann Ross, Kendall ,Oombs,
Todd and Donald Blevins.

Election day is Tuesday.

 

~—iodayL

 

  
 

 

 

Hand-to-hand

Under the watchful eye of Master Sin The, two white beltstudents

ENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper m)“

   

BLA

By REBECCA PREM
Kernel Reporter

There' 5 one liberation army whose
mission is good, not evil—the Boyd
(Hall) Liberationist Army.

Created by Boyd resident Ron
Mayhew, a chemical engineering
senior, the BLA was formed when
the dorm housed freshmen. “The
place was wild.There were a lot of
parties and (students were)
throwing things from the windows,”
Mayhew said.

“Boyd had the reputation of being
wild It also had the reputation of
setting a record for fire darms. ”

But according to “Brigadeer
General” Mayhew, “We (BLA)
didn’t setany ( fire alarms). In fact,
weworked with the police to find out
who was setting them.

“We put a coating of dye mixed
with silver nitrate on the alarms. It
puts a red dye on your hands that

can't be washed off.”

By PATTY ROMERO
Kernel Reporter

. According to statistics from the
UK enrollment report of last fall,
women have caused substantial
enrollment increases. From 1970 to
1976, 71.4 percent of theUniversity’s
growth rate has been women.

At the undergraduate level,
women constituted 65percent of the
increase; at the graduate level, 70
percent; and at the professional
level, 96.6 percent.

“In other words,“ said Keller
Dunn, assistant dean of research
and planning, “the University has
grown because of women."

She added, however, that UK isn’t
alone in this trend: “It’snot only in
this school, but other schools as

 

practice a sparring technique of a type of karate called Shao Lin. The well.”

two are studying for their yellow belts in the Seaton Center.

Claiming “it’s hard to believe,”

21

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

 

Acting as case- -,solvers BLA
members are students majoring in
the sciences, such as chemistry arnd
engineering, or business—fields that
help them in their crirnefighting.

They have found tlneperpetrators
of such evil acts as smoke bombs
andammonia put under doors, doors
scorched bywould-be arsonists and
objects thrown from windows.

However, “Most everything is
blamed on us when it 1s really us who
try to stop it all, ” Mayhew said.

Why does this band of in-house
detectives bother to keeporder and
quiet reigrning in the men’s dorm?

According to “Major” Mike
Braden, chemistry major, “Mostof
us are in some type of engineering
andthat requires a lotof studying
We need to protectourquiet hours
and our privacy. The BLA simply
assures everyone theirstudy time.”

Adds Mayhew, “Our majors
require late- n-ight studying and
concentration We can’t fool with
peorie who just wantto play around.

Dunne said only nine menrepresent
increases in persons at the
professionallevel in the last six
years.

Preliminary studies for this fall’s
enrollment show that 9,214 women
and 11,722 men make up daytime,
main campus students. Last year
women‘s enrollment increased 2.2
percent while men’s enrollment
decreased .5 percent. Dunne said the
percentagesa re about the same this
year.

Looking at individual colleges and
their enrollments, the College of
Engineering 10 years ago had only
six women init. The Law School had
10 women and the College of
Medicine had four.

Today the figures show dramatic
increases; women number 106 in
engineering, 147 in law and 31 in
medicine.

According to Paul Van Booven,

 

state

TIII'I IADUISVIIJJ'I TRUCK DRIVER indicted in
the tire deaths of seven Beattyville residents
pleaded irnnocent yesterday in Lee Circuit Court.

Circns' tJudge Ed Johnson scheduled a trial Jan. 9
for William Wilson, driver of a gasoline tank truck
thatcareened down a 700-foot grade on Kentucky 11
and crashed into downtown buildings Sept. 24.

The resulting fire left seven people dead, 12
businesses destroyed, several others damaged and
17 cars and trucks destroyed.

Wilson leaped from the cab of the Usher Tran-
sportation tanker and escapedwith minor burned.

He said his brakes had failed on the hill but state
police said their investigation, which included an
inspection of the wrecked vehicle, turned up no
evidence ofbrakefailure.

TllRl-ll-I STUDENTS AND A TEACHER were
injured, none seriously, when two fights brdre out
yesterday between h rge groups of black andd white
students at Louisville's Stuart High School.

Some 50 students, about half of them black and
M1fwllte,clashedabout 7:20 am. and [might for
several minutes in acourtyard, said students and
teachers who witnessed the outbreak.

Stuart PrmdpalDenzil Ramsey said he was told
the disturbance began with a fight between two
male students, one white and one black.

A second fight that erupted about 3:40am. in the
school gymnasium involved at least 100 students
and continued about 10 minutes before being broken
up.

I
nation
PRESIDENT (‘ARTl-ZR PULLED the United
States out of the lntematiomal Labor Organization
(11.0) yesterday, marking the first US. withdrawal

from a United Natiors agency since the world
organization was formed in 1940.

1170 critics contended the organization has in-
creasingly fallen under Soviet and Third World
domination.

As he was withdrawing U.S.support fran the
ILO, Carter criticized the United Nations sharply
for a "diappointing" recordon human rights, but he
pbdged his full support to the world organisation.

The 11.0 is aU.N. agency aimed at improving
world labor conditions, living standarrh and
economic andd social 'stability. The agency has
been a main source of statistics on hora-s, pay and
labor safety.

Till-I LARGEST INCREASE EVER in the
minimum wage was signed into law yesteray by
[resident Carter, requiring most employers to pay
the't workers an annual minimum salary of almost
$7,000 by 1901. The cur-rent minimum is “.704

The law raises the minimum wage from the
current $2.30 an hour to $2.05 on Jan], arndthen in

three annualsteps to $3.35 an hour by Jan. 1, 1981.
Based on a ”hour week, that is $6.96“ year.

Cartersaid it will pump an extra 99 billioninto the
pockets of America’s low-wage workers, who will
“use it for the necessities of life."

'l'Ili-I GOVERNMENT IS INVESTIGATING the
deaths of 11 persons who were on liquid protein diets
to see if the modified fast played a part in the
deaths.

A Food and Drug Administration spokesman said
today thatno cause-and-effect relationship has been
estabished between the liquid protein arid any of
tine deaths.

The FDA and theCenter for Disease Control in
Atlanta are jointly looking into the deaths, which
ranged from a woman in her twenties toa I~year-
okld man. All occurred this year.

The FDA spokesman emphasized that no one
should go on a liquid protein diet without direct
medcal supervision and said such a diet is intended
only for-“extremely obese" persons, not then
trying tolose 10 or a) pounds.

weather

INCREASIM- CIDUDINFJS TODAY with a
chance of showers and possibly a tinder-shower.
Huh in he low 7th. Mostly cloudy with a good
chance of showers bright. lowtonflht in the mid
30s. Highs tomorrow in the upper It. Chances of
showersareaopercenttothyandtwpercant
bntht.

 

 

h

Self-appointed army fights
Boyd knavery, vandalism

College should be fun, but first
comes learning.”

There are10 BLA members, and

“our number is growirng," Mayhew
sand. These men aren’t violent,
Braden says; “Weare not a violent
organization We like to have fun
within the limits of the rules ofthe
dorm. "

But, says “Lieutenant”Pat Lauy,
an electrical engineer major, “Some
people like to go too far. Those
people are not allowed to join the
organization.”

Asked how someonedoes join the
BLA, he said “Wefind someone that
welike arndhis name isbrought up
before the council. A vote is taken
and they're in ”

Braden said files of the members
and tlneir activities are kept on
computer. “We aren’tas organized
as the FBI, but we try to keep our-
selves together. We’re really just
having fun and, atthe same time, we
follow the rules."

Continued on back page

Women cause increases
in UK’s enrollment figures

assistant dean of thelaw school,a
higher percentage of women than
men were accepted to the school.
Fortysix percent of female ap-
plicants were acceptedas compared
t028 percent of male applicants
accepted.

Enrollment in the College of
Agriculture is also on the rise.
Assistant dean John Robertson said
33 percent of that college's students
are women.

Between 1866 and 1966, only 35
women received degrees in
agriculture. Since 1966, 201 women
have received degrees. ”The figure
is going up rapidly,” Robertson said.
“One of the things we are finding is
that women students are highly
motivated and compete extremely
well in the classroom."

Fields in which women are
especially increasing are we
veterinary science, animal science
and horticulture. Robertson ex-
plairns this trend: “1 think the job
opportunity has been quite strong.
Women have found the job market
quite good."

0n the administration side of
operations, only four women are
deans of UK’s 17 colleges. They are
Ramona Rush in communicatiom,
Marion McKenna in nursing,
Marjorie Stewart in home
economics and RhondaConnaway in
social professions.

As Dr. Lewis Cochran, academic
affairs vice president, says, “We
simply don‘t have enough women to
goaround."

One area of University
management that has never lacked
women, however, is food services.
According to Nancy Brooks,
manager of food services,“All the
managers of food services are
women”

This is because in the past it has
been mostly women who have
received degrees in institutional
management and dietetics,so these
women hold these jobs now, Brooks
said.

Regarding salaries of female
faculty, the Report. on Economic
Status of Profesors shows that
although UK’s pay scale is not as
high as many schools’, the
University pays its male and female
faculty relatively similsrsalaries.

For example, the average dif-
ference between salariu for men
and women professors at UK last
year was 82,200,while diediffeence
was $5.100 at the University of North
Caroina.

 

  

 
 

fl editorials 8: comments

Now, you can have
a (deceased) friend
in the diamond business

NEW YORK—“Look at this, they
hinged him out,“ Jimmy Weiss was
saying. He was in his booth in the
diamond center, staring out the
show window as the police loaded
the body of Pinchos Jaroslawicz,
into a morgue wagon. “The guy got a
rep as a real honest legitimate

 

jimmy
breslin

person,“ Jimmy was saying. “Here.
wait a minute. what do you want?“
He turned to a short, heavy man who
approached the counter.

“I had some bad luck," the heavy
man said.

“What do you mean. bad luck?
Pay your bills here.“ Jimmy said.

“I had a horse," the heavy man
said.

“What horse? What do you mean
you had a horse?“

“Give me the paper and I'll look it
up and show you what happened to
me.‘ the heavy-set man said.

The heavy man brought out a
landful of tissue paper. in the center
(i which a small paper stone glinted.

Jimmy leaned over the counter
and peered at it. Then he stood
araight up.

“Garbage.“ He turned to the
window again to watch the police
cart off Jaroslawicz.

Jimmy, a thin man who wore a
loud plaid suit and a blue shirt open
at the collar, begain to pace up and
(bwn in the small area by the show
window. He talked to himself. “They
wt him up. Maybe one guy didn‘t do
i by himself."

Eight days before this, Jarosla-
wicz, 25, of Brooklyn, had carried a
sack of diamonds, some say $100,000
worth. some say the value could go
over a million, up to the 15th floor
dfice of Shlomo Tal, a 31-year-old
Israeli diamond cutter. Jaroslawicz
went up at 5:30 pm, after business
tours, an unusual time to be
carrying diamonds aroun‘d hallways
(1‘ empty buildings.

Both Jaroslawicz and Ta] then
dsappeared. Three different police
mits searched Tal‘s tiny office and
found nothing. Yesterday, police
came upon Tal, asleep in his car.
Jaroslawicz was then found, folded
in, wrapped in plastic, in a wooden
packing crate in Tal‘s office.

“They set him up,“ Weiss said
again.

“People try me all the time,“ he
said. “Guy calls up. ‘I want to buy
something for my wife, something
tag, for 20. Bring it up to my office‘ I
wouldn‘t show. Then I got a guy
called me the other day. He says, ‘I
gt a friend from out of town, a real
leavyweight, bring some good stuff
over for him to look at. The guy owns
saven companies, he‘s got three
broads he wants to buy for. Hurry
up. We‘re waiting for you in his hotel
mite.“

 

US.

l

,..————-——"-—--—-y

W

 

murmur awesome—meek mm were ammonium

“What did you tell him?“ Weiss
was asked.

”I said, ‘Let‘s say hello to the
fellow first.‘ You know, he‘s such a
tig shot he could meet me in the
intel bar. ()r he could come around
here and say hello. You want to see
first that the guy ain‘t got a crooked
mse. Well, this kid they got dead
hare. I don‘t think he thought about
that. This was an honorable kid. He
mist have been honorable to get all

_ that merchandise to sell for other

people. So somebody must have said
to him, ‘I got big buyers here, so
bring the stuff up.‘ Huh! Bring the
stuff up at 5:30 at night. The guy who
did it to him must have had help.”
“What makes you say that?"
”What doI know?“ Weiss said. He
motioned to an old man who sat on a
ligh stool just outside the gate to
Weiss‘ booth. “Here, Itzak, tell him
what you think,“ Weiss said. Weiss
grabbed my arm. “Don‘t use his
rame. His name for you is Sam
Spade. Here, Itzak, tell him what
you think.” Weiss went back to the
window.
“They‘re Arabs,“ Itzak said.
“Who?"

“The Israelis we got here. They
think like Arabs, they act like Arabs.
They are Arabs. Here, maybe a guy
gets grabbed. You hit him take his
stuff. But you don‘t bang him out.
Arabs, what do they know? Pffftl
What can I tell you. The whole
business these Arabs do different.
We do business straightforward
here. The Arabs are different.
Shtick, shtick. Always trying to
move the game the other way. This
guy Tat, they arrested him, didn‘t
they? Well this guy Ta] is a real
promoter. He‘s an Arab. A real
promoter. Try to sell anything he
could. Do you know what he did?
Tried to sell gold two weeks ago.“

Itzak sneered as he mentioned
gold. He was asked why he felt gold
played a role in determining a man's
character.

“Gold was out of his line,” he said.
”If a man is in the diamond
bisiness, he doesn‘t look to sell gold.
Why? Too picayune. Tal was around
with gold chains. Who wants gold
chains, you’re in diamonds? Some-
thing was the matter with Tal’s
business. A guy wouldn‘t buy his
drains, but the guy came and told
me about it. Something you should
know about somebody, you know.”

Itzak was smoking a large cigar.
Hewaved it at a woman who walked
past him.

“They got their own tought guys,
their own Mafia,” he said. ”All
Arabs."

“How many of them are there?“
lewas asked.

“There’s enought of them.“

“What do you do about them?“

He looked at this cigar. “Meyer
wouldn‘t even lower himself to talk
b them,“ he said.

‘~»

 

“Who is Meyer?“

“Meyer. Meyer Lansky. Meyer
wouldn't come near these Arabs.
Meyer got too much class for them.
If you knew Meyer you wouldn‘t
even have to ask what he would do.
He wouldn't even spit at these Arabs
we got here."

“What do you think?“ Weiss was
asked.

“What do I think? The kids dead,
that‘s what I think. Wait a minute.
I‘ll answer the phone here.“ He
picked a phone off the wall. “Hello,
Gloria, how are you? Harry‘ll be
here in five or 10 minutes. He had to
step out on me.“ He hung up. “What
are you talking about now? How
much was this kid outside carrying
on him? How should I know what hd
had?“

" How much do you keep here?“ he
was asked.

“I got a lot of things buried here,
in and out of here. what do I now
what I got? What do you want from
me, I got three kids in college. This
business, go to any counter and pick
a number and you‘re right. Here,
look. A three—carat stone for
$100000. See it? He held out the ring.
Good. Now go to any other window
and ask them. You‘ll leave me alone
now. Here. look. I’ll show you
something else.“

He took a picture from the wallfl
a picture of the 1940 class at Robert
E. Simon junior high in Manhattan.
“Here I am." Weiss said. pointing to
one young face. He tapped another.
"And this is Harold Brown. He‘s the
secretary of defense now. I wrote
him a letter and sent him the
picture; he never acknowledged it,
he‘s such a big shot. Here, look at
Harold Brown and then you‘ll go and
leave me alone.“

Outside. the crowd moved and the
wagon carrying the body of Pinchos
Jaroslawicz pulled away.

“Is this going to change the
business?“ Weiss was asked. The
diamond business always has been
conducted as if it were some ritual o
the soul, rather than of greed. There
are few records. and men such as
Jaroslawicz walked the streets, with
hundreds of thousands of dollars
worth of gems on consignment from
others.

“It won’t change,“ Weiss said.
“For a while. nobody‘ll be showing
out on the street. You know they‘re
afraid they‘ll open somebody‘s eyes.
Then pretty soon they‘ll forget and
everybody will be back the way they
always were."

He watched the morgue truck pull
away. “I don‘t know what hap-
pened,“ Weiss said. “All I now is a
poor kid is dead and tomorrow
morning I have to come to work the
same time.

 

ic] I977 by JIMMY HRESIJN

Distributed by The (‘hicago Tribune-
N.Y. News Syndicate, Inc.

   

«Wu

News Litter

(:ch Photographer tun
In. Balm Snow Durham Bill Kight Co" I.
with union
Ila-(h. Miter Associate Editor 9...“ am Lynn rm
[lot Gabriel Harte Mitchell mm Illbbltls “I! p..."
t
“I Editor Staff Artist an. Editor M In ledge
Joe Kemp Wlllm Punt: Mas Clark

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"SEE, WHAT’D I TELL a... soar: BEATS THE HELL OUTTA CANDY APPLES ”

m
firn’uawar/JR

 

 

Student Center films are good,
stand the eyestrain

if you can

HY HARRY B. MILLER Ill

The Student Center isn‘t such a
bad place. It actually '5 avery nice
facility. Probably better than what
other institutions can boast of in
their promo brochures.

The Student Center offers a
number of various places and things
toservice the students. You can eat,

 

growing
up rich

 

have a concert or a dance, play

billiards, watch TV, engage in an

chess match, et cetera, all in one

building.You are even offered some
of the best movies ever made.

The films that the Center offers
each semester are very good. The
people responsible for obtaining the
films each yearought to be heartily
thanked by the University film-
goers.

But (and it‘sa big one),the people
responsible for the facilities, the
sound system, the projectors, and
operating the above mentioned
items, ought to be blasted.

The Center is one of the worst
placesin the world to watch a movie.
Atthe old Opera House, which was
pretty disgustiong,one lad to drink
a Coke with clinchedteeth to filter
out all of the ceiling plaster, and

occasionally fight a roach for that
last good piece of popcorn, but not
even that can compare to the rot-
tenness of the Center.

By some amazing combination of
facflities and people, the Student
(.‘enter Board has devised (by plan,
apparently) one of tie greatest
tortures ever conceived. Patrons of
the place just know thereis a god
movie being shownin front of them
butthey can’t seem to penetrate the
fog that is clouding the image, or
strain their ears enoughto separate
the garblednoise into words.

In any event, no one can can
concentrate enough topradice their
eyestrain. They‘re too busy trying to
f indout if there is any conceivable
position one cansit in to obtainsome
sortofcomfortin those rotten seats.

The situation is crazy. Someone
(David Mucci, I think) has put in a
lotof time and effortgettirg some of
the best films available. Not only
have they gotten recent films
(lbcky and Marathon Man), but
theyh ave gotten some of the classics
of the past (the Stanley Kubrick
saiesfrom I)r.StrangeIo\e on) and
great foreign films (Seven
Beauties).

It’s tremendous. I am willing to
guess that no other University,
except perhaps those who have
strong film study programs, can
boast of such a fine film offeringto
the students.

The crazy part is that you neither

secor hear the films. Youcouldn’t
laugh during I)r.Strangelove. If you
chuckled, you’d miss the next four
lines became the soundwasso low.
One of the most visually attractive
films ever made is 200: A Space
()dessey. The images arestunning.
Yet you couldn‘t have known that by
sceingit at theStudentCenter. You
could only ask yourself whether your
eyes were going bad or if the film
really was out of focus be entire
showing.

Get it together folks. After awhile
patrons are going to get Baltired of
this nonsense. Walking out of a
movie with you eyes looking and
feeling like they’ve been sand-
papered is just no fun atall. Trying
todistinguish dialogue from sound
effects on one of the worst am-
plfication systems of all time is also
a bit bothersome.

Of course many people may never
notice all this. They may never
notice the entire movie. They may
spend the entire two hours tryingto
findout if one seat really could have
that many lumps. Or they could
spend the entire night pondering
what all that dancing lightis doing
onthe curtains. Maybe the director
didn‘t want his audiences to see the
top, bottom andsides of thepicture.

 

Ilarry B. Miller Ill doesn't like 20-
foot hairs on 40-foot so'eens. His
column appears, eyesght willing,
usually every Wednesday.

Council candidate replies
to 'William Zimmerman’ letter

Last Wednesday. the Kernel
published a letter submitted by
“William B.Zimmerman. class of
It! ."

The quotes are needed because
“Zimmerman" apparently is not
listed as a student or graduate of
UK. Nor could he be found it the city
or telephone directory.

Editorial Editor Joe Kemp erred
in not checking out the charges
contained in the letter and verifying
the identity of theauthoru writer.
He reg-rats the error and posslile
damages named to George Herman
Kendall, canddate tothe Lexington
Urban (‘oiinty Council.

Here is Kendall's reply.

This is toreply to thecharges in
the letter in last week‘s Kernel as to
my qualification's to be councilman-
at-large in Fayette County,
allegedly written by Wiliam Zim-
mennan.

However, I havebeen unable to
locate bin for he is not in any
directory andl was told by the
Ahmni Association that he never
graduated from the University and l
was told by the Adm'uions office
that hewas nevera student.

[reg-ct the damage date and I am
sorry that there could be no
rdraction by thewriter andno letter
should have been written without

some identification and or
verification.

I was never expelled from the
Lexington Board of Realtors, in fact,
I have tried repeatedly to bring
about even higher standards for all
inrealestate.

I lave advertised myself as the
“Golden Rule“ Realtor br I told
every buyer from me that I would
guarantee every sale aid give a
complete refundto any dissatisfied
cliert. However, none ever made
sucha request. Also, Ihave never
made a forced sale, that is,
rewiring any personto buy or sell
even after contracting to do so, and I
have never kept any depos'tor fee of
anykind when a buyer defaulted.

I have never at any time taken any
extra commission, fee, overcharge
or rebate or benefit. I lave never
taken any fee or extra loan bonus,
norever tried todothish any way. I
have never cmned orc orispiredwith
any buyer or seller to gain any profit
or pay except that of the regular
commission on all sales. I was
equally willing to serve all regar-
dless of race or financial standing.

I did know of many buys: and
sellers who would have made side
agreements as to repais, down
payment, crop, loan expenses and
appliances, etc. But this was only a

necessary part of some negotiations
andcornpromises that goes on in all
commerce daily. I have never had
anything to do with any shady deal
butI have tried to be prd'essional in
all transactions.

My accomplishments include
housing conference, energy con-
ference,home for alcoholics, traffic
conference, law and order
manifesto, crime commission ac-
tivity, as well as many civic and
church activities.

In my opinion none of the can-
didates for the otiice surpass me as
toboth training and experience to be
in the Counci. I am a political
so'ence major, graduatirg in “939,
and have always been listed in
directories.

I am now a part of the Fayette
County government as a com-
m’ssioner, being electedby many
thousams maja'ity without spen-
ding a dollar, while my opponent
spent many thousandsto tryto beat
me. My record of community ser-
vices and dedication made the
difference, and I hope tobe on the
Counci in spite of th's unfair in-
cident.

George Herman Kendall
I m Wyal Parkway

Lexington

 

 

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Sorting system speeds mail

By (‘LAl'Dl-I HAMMOND
Kernel Reporter

(.‘ampis mail will move
faster with the im-
plementation of a new sorting
index. according to A. Paul
Nestor, director of business
services.

SpeedSort index, the new
system, is made up of three
parts. The first lists
University buildings as units

 

 

 

and gives a speed-sort code
listing and address for the
particular building.

The mailing file is
organized in thesecond part
ofthe Speed-Sort index. File
numbers and mailbox
numbers now correspond to
make the entire campus
mailing system more ef-
ficient, Nestor said.

The third part of the index
identifies each building on

 

 

 

Here Schuler

Poems rhyme better

...liui nothing ('ull match the autumn beauty ofa tree like
this om i't‘llt't‘lt'tl in the still waters of a pond near llighee
Millltoaii soiitliwestoi Lexington.

Counseling available

The Psychological Services
Center is currently accepting
participants in individual,
couple and group therapy. A
variety of services are
available free of charge to
students, faculty and staff

and residents of Central
Kentucky.

For further information
come to 115 Kastle Hallirom
8 am. to 4 p.m. Monday

 

campus by a computer code
number.

The new index improves on
theold by avoiding confusion
among mailing areas, Nestor
said.

“When theold index was in
use, there were several
campus mailing areas and
buildings were numbered in
each," Nestor said. “The
situation was that several

buildings in different areas
had the same number. When
someone mailed a letter and
skipped the area number, it
would slow down the mail
considerably."

“The new system helps us‘

avoid such foul-ups. Campus
mail should be delivered
much faster. With the rew

index it takes a half hour to
sort what it used to takehalfa

day to do,” he said.

Students, staff
to attend press

days here

The UK School of Jour-
nalism will present clinics
today and tomorrow for high
school students throughout
Kentucky who are members
oftheir schools‘ yearbook and
newspaper staffs.

“Intensive instruction will
be given to the students in
small groups," said Dr. J.D.
Rayburn, assistant professor
of journalism and codirector
of the clinics. “And ample
opportunity will be provided
for actual experience during
the clinics.”

Journalism faculty will
provide most of the in-
struction. with outside
specialists invited to some
sessions, said Nancy Green.
UK student publications
adviser and codirector of the
clinics.

The main speaker for the
yearbook clinic today will be
Roger Loewen from Western
Kentucky University, who
was named outstanding
yearbook adviser ofthe year
by the National Council of
College Publication Advisers.

Two-hour sessions in
yearbook design,
copywriting. business
matters andphotography will
follow Loewen’s talk.

Among the features of the
newspaper clinic tomorrow
willbe demonstrations of the
journalism school‘s new
electronic editing equipment,
Green said.

Newspaper design
seminars will be conducted
by Mike Waller, executive
sports editor of The Courier-
Journal and Louisville Times.
during the clinic. A
photography session is also
planned.

Dr. Ronald Farrar,
director of the journalism
school, will speak at noon
luncheons for the high school
advisers in the President's
Room of the Student Center.

School yearbook and
newspaper staffs from()hio,
Indiana, West Virginia and
Tennessee as well as Ken-
tucky have been in vitcd to the
clinics.

 

THE ALTERNATIVE: MEDICAL SCHOOL ABROAD

(C) Cunt” lmlll U S A M lmm DIO- int
...a must book for prospective medical students. it details admission re-
quirements and procedures. costs, language requirements—dozens use
English in the classroom—and living accommodations for medical schools
in 35 countries. it also tells of' the steps a foreign graduate should take to
practice medicine in the U.S.
Some medical schools are free; others charge nominal tuition. Some re-
quire only a high school education; others two or four years ofcollege.
For your copy oi'this authoritative work. send $9.95 to:
lNTERNATlONALDATA lNC.
PO. BOX 817
LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89101

 

KICN'I L’CK Y KliRlel., Wednesday. November 2