xt741n7xpj4t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt741n7xpj4t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-02-14 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, February 14, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 14, 1973 1973 1973-02-14 2020 true xt741n7xpj4t section xt741n7xpj4t The

Kentucky

Kernel

Twelve pages

Bloody good deal

New donor program offers more for your blood

By l)t).\.\ MARTIN
Kernel Stall Writer

All t'K students are now eligible for a
new blood donor membership program
that is being sponsored by the Student
Health Advisory (‘ominittee. in
cooperation with the t'entral Kentucky
Blood (‘enteifi

Membership in the program would
guarantee a student and his beneficiaries.
totalling live. tree blood transtusions at
any time and any place in the t'nited
States. according to Susan l‘Ihrman, junior
public relations lllttjttl' lll charge ot the
program's publicity

s'l‘l l)l£\'l‘S \I \\‘ enroll in the program
and donate blood immediately. but they
are encouraged to comply with the new
organization‘s dates. l'Ihrnian said

.>\ bloodmobile will be in the Student
(‘enter ballroom on Feb, 27 lrom to am. to

»l pm and on Feb 28 lrom 9 a In, to Lt p m .
and the program will ()lllt‘liill)’ begin then.

The (‘entral Kentucky Blood (‘enter.
which lS financing and advising the l'K
program. will award a tree television to
the group that solicits the largest number
ol' donors. according to Ehrman

'l'IIIS “(;Itt)l'l"‘ may he an already
organized student group or merely a
number ol' interested students who
themselves together to solicit
she explained
It individuals want to donate Just to
the
their lu-iieliciaries. they may enroll on the

”group”
donors.
obtain benelits loi' themselves and
designated dates at the Student ('enter or
betore or alter Jliose dates at the t‘enlral
Kentucky lilood the
basement ol l’erkins l’ancake lloiise on

t'enter. located in

Limestone. l‘:lll’lllttll emphasized
Unce a person has enrolled and donated

Artist Elliot Jordan lines up another subject at his Fayette Mall "studio."

(Kernel photo by John llicks)

lnside:

this
“The
“'l‘omorrow . "

Wondering what movies to
weekend" 'l‘wo current

l’oscidon .-\dventure" and

801‘
("105.

Vol LXIV N0. 92

an independent student newspaper

Wednesday, February 14, 1973

blood in the new program. he and the tour
beneliciaries that he names will receive
the tree translusions. as long as be con
timies to donate onct a year when called
on. she said

It“ .\ S'l‘l'l)li\'l‘ cannot quality to be a
donor because ol age or health. he may
acquire a substitute donor. lilirinan said,
Then. the disqualilied student and still tour
others could receive the beiielits

”through this program ol .3 persons
being coyered by one donor. we soon hope
to have the entire uanei‘sily community
.ltlllll \Hiile. lllnloi‘ pl'e nied
the iiieniher ol the Student
Health \d\isor_\ t'oniiiiittee in charge ot

covered
niaioi and

the Mood program. said

I\ “-1” l:\ll‘ \'l with this idea. Lance
l'htirchill.
tential kentiicky l‘ilood l‘entei‘. said this

director ol llonot' sel'\1(‘es at
pi‘ogi‘aiii is not new
Siiiiilar programs have been siiccesslul
.ill mel‘ the liatliill
the

designed toi

that is why we e\pect
l l\' that
the students

program at was specially
wellai‘e to be
equally siiz‘i'esstul i he said

(‘hiirchill also e\plained that the par
ticipating students are giyen cards when

they donate 'l'hey «an show these cards.

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky 40506

o‘ "

which include intoi‘mation about whom to
contact and the individual blood types.
whenever they need translusions at any
place in the nation. he said.

'l'lltl (‘.\ltl)S. or their membership in
the program. oll'er them tree blood
translusions in cooperation with their
insurance l'Ihrman said. In
surancc policies usually include the ad-
ministrative lees but not the costs tor the
which range

policies,

actual blood translusions.
lroin $23 to Still. she said

This new program. which benelits live
persons per donation. replaces an earlier
program at the health center that paid a
donor and covered only him

\\h2te said the new program is bettei
because oi the e\tended benelits He said
the old program had to be " phased out
ilt't ati~e ol lt‘tllltt‘tl ledeial lunds "

"Illls Is the mold
tone zip ‘.\llll to lienetil the students and
White said

\\hite also said the new lilood program

best program we

their tannhes or liiends

'.‘..is only one ot the Studeizt Health .\d-

xisory l'oininittee s lunctions lithers

include insurance programs. health care
tor spouses. student opinion polls ot health
semices. and studies lor better utili/ation

ot the health ser\iccs

Local artist celebrates
St. Valentine's Day

By K.\\ If ('UY'I‘H
Kernel Staff Writer
As a part ol the celebration of Valen-

tine's [)ay. many ol l‘jlllt)” Jordan‘s
subiects will arrive at the homes and
hearts ol their new owners today

l‘:lll()ll Jordan‘s subjects are countless
girls and some boys who want their por-
traits gilts lor various
sweethearts. lovers and even Mom and
Dad

\lany have seen Jordan with his artist‘s
llis
charcoal or

drawn as

case. walking around the campus
specialty is
Now

portraits in
pastels lie is working in a girls
clothing store at Fayette Mall. drawing
crowds as well as people

The line ol customers grew as I talked to
Jordan He was a little lidgety not used to
being interviewed w lnle trying to con
centrate on his drawing

"1 get distracted easily." he said. and
his glance roamed lroin me. to his model.
to the curious crowd and back to his paper

"tine time I was at New York Times ta
clothing storei and a big crowd gathered
around. you know he said. still
drawing “I stopped and looked all
around " llc totally revolved his head.
looking around at the crowd. and laughed

Outside:

l't'llll llll\t'tl \\llll Slit)“
should range lrom the mid :tli's to the mid

Jordan was drawing a pastel of Laura
Shea. a l'K physical therapy sophomore
She said she would give her portrait away
as a gilt

“'l‘he lirst time I started working tor
money . I worked in a bar." Jordan said. "I
started to draw pictures ol my li‘iends just
tor the tun ot it. but some otlered me
money So l started drawing tor money “

lirawing portraits is now Jordan's full
time till) He started sketching people in
Lexington only about six or seven months
ago Last lall .lordan worked around the
Student t'enter and the ('omplex (‘oinmons
Lounge

Then came the t'hristmas boom There
wasn‘t time to get all the girls drawn who
portraits "I did line during
"I didn‘t know how

wanted
t‘hristnias." he said
good it was.” he said and sketched a lew
until now ”

He looked at his subject "Are you
tn‘ed"" he asked “No." Laura answered.
\ pastel draw ing takes about in minutes ol'
sitting still .\ charcoal takes about 1.3

more lines.

iiiiniitc.s

“l don't know what is worse. the people
watching or the people standing around
staring in the window." she giggled. A

t‘ontiiiued on Page to. ('ol. l

'l‘oday will be cool with periods ol light
The temperature

movies and
'mystics'

ill‘t‘ l't‘Vlt‘Wt'd (ill pilgt' 1

cold and
damp

Also. how ac
curate are .limmy l)an (‘onner‘s predic
tions of the luture" (‘heck out page it to liiid
oiil

lo's \Vith a WI percent chance (it showers
today. the precipitation should reduce to a
not so low till percent tonight

 

  

T Q t in i (t HQ.) iiaii Rhea Day Next Editor . .
| E . . . y,
- vkt‘ v\ iii-s time, in (ii .»i John Hl\l\\ Prntoo'aptw t ”no.
K I 'tUCky “ L ' erney Manna itq Ktiilol L naim- pi. k nsoo Spmi‘ ((1.0,
t it. k t ‘. \pt Kan up [it LV imyi Idkt‘tt‘. Arts th 't‘t
not the lllhyp'g'l’v

St S H N Ll?” vas Ftii'O'S yd my dl‘. 'eptest-iit the opinion 0' the lit tot ir‘l “Ham
‘l (‘V(’ W' '

 

Kernel _. .. ,..

 

 

Draft resisters guilty of 'premature morality'

The war lll Indochina finally seems
to be grinding to a halt following 11
years of bloody conflict. PS.
prisoners of war iPttW‘si are filing
home under the watchful gaze of a
nation sick of war and ready to accept
them home with open arms.

Although we too welcome back
those men who were imprisoned in
North Vietnam. some for as many as
seven years. there are still a number
of "POW‘s" who have thus far been
shunned by both the American
government and its people. They are
not in Vietnam concentration camps
or anywhere else in Southeast Asia.

We speak of those draft resisters
who chose to leave family and friends
behind and flee to Canada or Sweden
rather than face military induction or
prison terms in the [CS

For those equally brave men we
suggest total amnesty with no
requirements for alternative service
and no punishment.

Fifty-five thousand of Americas
children have been sent to death by
their government. Billions of dollars
have been spent in an attempt at
genocide on the North Vietnamese
population. 'l‘hose men now residing
in Toronto. Montreal and other
t‘anadian cities out of the vengeful
reach of our own government
realized before most of us did that the

.\iiierican
were

out
forces in

by

Vietnam
immoral They chose. as an alter-
native to killing Vietnamese. flight
north and a prayer that one day the
nation would find them right and ask
them to return to their homeland.

actions carried

military

The time has come for those
prayers to be answered.

In a now-famous cartoon. Jules
Feit'fer once depicted two men

discussing the war. agreeing that it
was immoral and the greatest of
American mistakes. But they did

Waiting
out
the

peace

 

disagree on amnesty When the
gentleman on the negative side of the
\iewpoint was asked his reasons. he
replied. "Premature morality

We feel the American public is
intelligent enough to reali/e the the
resisters were right all along and that
continued persecution is
unreasonable and unnecessary Why
should one of the most tragic events in
VS. history he made even tnore
tragic'.’

Amnesty for those who refused to
serve is not a new concept in this

country

.\lth‘ the battles of
War II had drawn to a
President 'l‘rumaii granted amnesty
for all those who chose

\\tit’lil

t'ltist'.

not to si't‘yc

the Nixon .‘ttlltlllllSll‘tlllHll. however.
given indications it doesn't
believe the resisters should bi-
allowed back into the country with no
form of punishment. We see no reason
why the precedent set by 'l‘rumaii
should be broken now. especially in a
controversial war such as this.

has

(‘ould it be because America jUSt
didn‘t win this time'.’

 

Bodsideofthemoon J A lament for America

 

By ltlt‘lHRl) RAQl'lER
and
P.\l'l..\ BIGGERSTAFF

A whirlwind blew in and out of Lexington
on Monday and wouldn‘t you know it.
hardly anybody noticed. Good thing too.
because I)r. Yosef ben-Jochannan was
rattling the super—structure of most folks
beliefs.

Bendochannan came to (K with a
pocketful of degrees. two of them from the
(‘ambridge in the old country. and
dragging a string of enough books and
publications to choke a dean. Somehow.
the prolific African historian. who is
Ethiopian by birth. .lew ish by religion and
a soul brother to boot. manages to find
time to teach. at both Marymount (‘ollege
and fyutgers l'niversity.

What he had to say Monday night set a
few Lexingtonians back on their heels.
Bendochannan smashed idols. ripped
through myths. pulverized religions and
unraveled the whole ball of bullshit that
keeps people from seeing the pig in their
hearts. And then the damnest thing hap—
pened. Nobody. not even the head of the
Patterson School of Diplomacy nor a [K
cultural anthropologist. discounted at
single thing he said,

If what lmrJochannan says is true. and
we'd bet it is. something fishy has been
going on for a very long time. about Booo
years or so People have been play ing w ith
our minds and. iike good (iermans. we've
been letting them turn us first one way.
then the next and on back again. over and
over

The topic of bendochannan‘s presen-
tation at the first Minority Student Affairs
Symposium on the Black Experience was
“The Fraud of Black History." But the
down-home scholar went a lot further than
that. He told the jam-packed crowd of
black and white faces in the President‘s
room that all the history we non-historians
get stuffed down our craws is based on the
biggest pile of excrement human
deviousness has ever managed to stack up.

BeirJochannan spun off dozens of
examples from the birth of civilization
through Moses to the (irecottoman period
and on up to such clay-footed heroes as
George Washington. ('rispus Attucks.
Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King.
The whole backward glance is tainted with
a white bias that constantly replicates
itself to protect a plethora of plastic—

Letters]

Yellow and sticky

 

 

As a freshman at the t'niversity. l. and
many others. are faced with an annoying
problem the age-old problem of parking
your car

When you first the
llttlH e the abundance of parking lots. Later
you find they are permit lots only Last.
but not least. you find out how many ways
there are not to get a permit sticker

If you have no passion for arriving :to to

see campus. you

Puritan values and beliefs

The story of history. apparently. is
suppression. The suppression of anything
and everything that doesn‘t fit the view of
those who are holding the marbles at a
particular time. Except for a paltry few. to
listen to ben~Jochannan is to come away
shaken black. white or otherwise. we've
all been conned.

And if you read the “Kernel" news story
on what went on at the symposium. it's
easy to see how it happened ’l‘hat story
doesn't do ben-Jochannan .lllSllt‘t' It
doesn‘t even mention the names of those
w ho lent him tacit and sometimes vigorous
support. the Patterson School's Vince
Davis and Dr. Dennis Van (ierven of the
anthropology department. It doesn't deal
with the essence of what‘s clawing at bed
.lochannan‘s brain. that truth has been

to minutes early for your class to park on
('ooper Drive. you can try to park around
campus. Here is the problem The people
living around the l'niversity (the property
owners i. for sortie reason. coat the curb in
front of their houses with yellow paint.
l'nderstandably. they do not want their
driveways blocked. but there is no reason
for a yellow line to he painted six to eight
l( et on both sides of the driveway If these
people would agree to reduce these lines to
a foot or two at least 33 or lift cars would be
able to park
This may not be the complete solution
for this problem. but it is a temporary
remedy
Itoliert Ilester

l-‘resliinaii iiisiiiess.\dininistratioii

sold togenerations of bigots for the price of
an academic gown

This doesn't do the African
historian _lllSll('t' either But it does serve to
point out that those who weren’t in the
President's room Monday are not going to
find out what went on from 'l‘uesday's
"Kernel” story And while were pointing
things out. it might do to ponder how come
the “Kernel” didn't see fit to give the
campus ben

stot'y

recent notice of

.lm‘hannan's coming

any

They did rim a piece on .lan 35. but not a
mention. men in the “Memos"
recent days Just goes to show you what
the black experience is like in America
Monday ‘s memos were on a Marx brothers
seminar. automobile trouble shooting
and basic art (iod damn.

section. in

classes.
America T

Heard it all before

In your report of Dr. Spock's visit to
Kentucky. Feb. 8 Kernel. the reporter
questions why Spock came to Kentucky
and says that he had heard it all before.

Well. maybe there are a few people left
who haven't heard Spock or what he has to
Apparently there 30“ ”1
Morehead who hadn't

Anyway. it seems tome that on Jan 20.
our well informed reporter made one of a
multitude of carbon-copy speeches at the
l’ayette (‘ounty (‘ourthouse I had heard it
all before

Vt} were

lloward Stoy all
('ha irpersoii
l'K People‘s Party

 

 

  

 

 

\t‘./\SIIIN(;T()N—-A United States Senator is
robbed and gunned down in front of his house.
Such an attack against a member of Congress is
a Federal offense and therefore within the
jurisdiction of the FBI. A shocked and worried
capital city waits for L. Patrick Gray's FBI
hawkshaws to make a quick, sensational arrest
and throw these crooks in the slam.

The hours pass, and indeed a sensational
arrest is made, but not of the two men who all but
murdered the chairman of the Senate Armed
Services Committee. They are as free as birds,
but columnist Jack Anderson's senior assistant,
Les Whitten, is arrested while covering a story,
handcuffed and taken off to jail.

Of late the FBI has also shown a prurient
interest in dirty movies and, according to
Whitten, in finding out whether or not a certain
famous football player did get a woman
pregnant. Some eight or more of them were able,
however, to tear themselves away from other
people's sex lives long enough to arrest Whitten.
'l‘hcy arrested him as he was helping an Indian
leader to carry several cartons of this stolen
material. The Indian was in a hurry. Why? He
had an appointment with an FBI agent.

The Indian was going to return the portion of
the documents he had in his possession. He‘d
done the same thing before. He even had the
agent‘s nameiv Dennis P. Hyten~—written on the
carton tops. but as Whitten tells the story, when
they got down to the jail and they‘d mug-shot
him. he asked them to take a picture of the
cartons as evidence of their intent. “This camera
doesn't take pictures of tops of boxes." they told
Whitten, who rather wisely believes that that
little piece of evidence will never be seen again.

liven if Les were guilty of what they've
trumped up against him, he'd have committed
no crime. These papers have no monetary value
Their only value is as evidence of improper or

possibly illegal conduct by the government of-

ficials who caused Les to be arrested.

The case is unlike any of the other freedom of
the press cases that have caused so much in-
dignation in the last few years. With the Pen-
tagon I’apers. the government alleged, albeit
iintruthfully, that their publication might
jeopardize national defense. This has nothing to
do with national defense.

’I‘III‘I KI'IN'I‘lTKY KENNEL, Wednesday. February l4, 1973—3

Busting Innocents

 

In the case of Earl Caldwell of the New York
Times, the government claimed it has a right to
force him to reveal his confidential news sources
and testify about the possible commission of a
crime before a Federal grand jury. The Supreme
(‘ourt ruled against Caldwell. But in Les Whit-
ten's case, if a crime has been committed, the
criminals are corrupt bureaucrats in the Bureau
of Indian Affairs or angry FBI agenst who want
Whitten arrested to suppress evidence and ob—
struct justice.

Whitten, whose only suspected crime up to this
point may have been translating Baudelaire into
English, was busted for receiving stolen
property. The property was papers taken from
the Bureau of Indian Affairs building by a small
army of infuriated red men. After 200 years of
betrayal they‘d captured the government office
which authors their woes and had made off with
evidence of their betrayal. It was a noble theft.

Whitten, who is one of the most esteemed
people in the news business, had been on the
story for months. He‘d flown hither and yon
across the country clandestinely meeting with
Indians to examine these documents. A number
were used as the foundation for Jack Anderson
columns, demonstrating yet again how the white
man can hose the red man.

One of the columns put the FBI in a bad light
and may have had something to do with what

9+: VC
ford

they did to Whitten. They had other reasons to
get him. He and Anderson had found out about
their wasting their time, our money and the
country‘s dignity by setting up hunting blinds to
photograph the sex lives of liberal-inclining
Hollywood stars.

The only other explanation that offers itself is
that Whitten was arrested to frighten others out
of passing information over to Jack Anderson.
The Eagleton goof of last summer aside, An-
derson and his staff have had an astonishingly
long run of exposing every kind of crookedness
and mendacity at all the higher levels of
government.

You may say an arrest isn't that big a thing,
but it‘s a shaking and shocking experience.
Merely being arrested is punishment, and even if
you beat it you still lose because of the thousands
of dollars in legal fees and hours of lost time the
procedure costs you.

It doesn't cost L. Patrick Gray andhis transom
peepers a thing. It's safe and it's fun busting a
law-abiding guy like Whitten. Putting the cuffs
on him isn't like tracking down and catching
guys who put two bullets in John Stennis. That
takes a little moxie; so in the meanwhile, if the
streets get more and more dangerous and what
you read in the papers safer and safer, you know
why.

 

Reader charges splotchy Spock coverage

It) JILI. RAYMOND

(‘ontrary to popular belief. my favorite
pastime is not doing battle with the press .
in fact it is an indulgence that I and the
people I work with can afford little time for
lately PH” the damage done by another
unfair piece of Kernel commentary
demands some effort at reconstruction.
I'm referring to Neill Morgan's article on
lir Spock in Thurs. Feb. 8 Kernel. and I
will try to be concise. though there is much
tempting me to do otherwise.

I'oint tine: Nowhere surrounding the
story did I see the words “commentary”
or “editorial". yet the columns were filled
with personal reactions on the part of the
reporter. some of which made sense and
some which didn't. I don‘t know if perhaps
this is supposed to be a new breakthrough
in journalistic style or what. but it strikes
me as ridiculous as well as out of place to

Omment

 

 

remark that someone “emerged like a
Sunday school teacher at a Baptist church.
a man who had come to ventilate the evils
of the world and give testimony to his own
sins" and then further add that he "speaks
in a tranquil. almost passive, conr
yersational voice" 1").

Point Two is that for obvious reasons I

did not care for the reporter's statements
that he'd “heard it all before". about
Spock wearing a “Brooks Brothers" suit.
and that he'd been bored by the whole
thing.

But aside from crunching on our ego a
bit. which is perfectly alright to do.
Morgan‘s remarks became downright
lousy journalism in that: (Al his having
“heard it all before" has nothing to do with
the story. and besides. the reason he had is
because Spock says pretty much the same
thing everywhere he speaks. since its
almost always to different people (notice
that he was not booked into I'K precisely
because he spoke here last year. when
Neill had “heard it before”li

Ilti 'I‘he remark about the suit and
watch chain. which was meant to intimate
that Spock is a rich man speaking for a
poor people‘s party would have been
almost legitimate if the reporter had in
chided the question asked of Spock at
Morehead about this very thing, which he
answered by explaining in detail to the
audience how much money he makes per
year. where it comes from and where it
goes. I guess the reporter hadn‘t "heard
that before".

((‘i Ile has a right to be bored by
anybody at any time. however. again
wounded ego aside. I feel that its really not
the place of a journalist to attempt to bias
his readers in what is supposedly a
straight news story This doubly an

tagonixes me when I think of how very
much of what goes on at this school which
the Kernel covers regularly is either
boring or disgusting or ridiculous. or all
three. Yet I doubt sincerely that I will ever
see an article in the Kernel start out:
"Last nights' student senate meeting was
just plain Ittilthtl. ,

I’oint Three has to do with an important
hall~triith which was conveyed by the
story. concerning socialism. Now half-
truths are often the result of the editing
nature of a reporter‘s work. I think.
However. the subject of socialism is
crucial. and the conversation with Spock in
the car about it w as a lengthy one. from
which the reporter took a few bits of
phrases not even a complete sentence?
to color the discussion as he chose

I had asked Dr Spock and Lou Aronica.
I’eople's I’arty National Urganizer who
was with us. how they saw the party best
dealing with the discussing of socialism.
how strongly they emphasized the word,
the idea. etc. This. more than anything. I
resent out of context because there has
been so little clarity about it already. and
the comments which appeared in the
Kernel story enhanced the confusion,

For the record. Spock's and Lou's
analysis seemed to be that it is far more
important for a socialist party to promote
specific socialist .‘iltei‘natncs. ie free
medical care. guaranteed minimum and
Ill;l\lllllllll income. consumer and worker

control of industry on the local level etc.
than to merely repeat the word
“socialism." as parties in the past have
tried. hoping that if its said often enough.
socialistic concepts might begin to rub off.

I’erhaps here I have been able to help
those who have some interest in Dr. Spock
and the I’eople‘s I’arty draw some iinv
dcrstanding and insight from what they
read in the Kernel article and elsewhere
l’illl as a final comment I want to point out
that I did not have either the time or the
energy to write this

That may seem like a contradiction
since here I am. but. seriously it is a huge
and damn near impossible [if not in fact
impossibleI struggle in which not only the
l‘cople‘s Party but many other activist
groups are engaged

liyei‘y time that such a damaging and
poor piece of copy appears covering any of
us iSIIIIIlilI‘ was Bill Straiib‘s "('(iIIl'
mentai‘y" following the .laii Bo demon“
stration I. someone who is already
hassling with more reaction and political
backwardness than they have time for has
to stop and correct all of your
iiiisrepresentatioiis If it is the Kernel’s
intention to slow down political activism. it
is doing well 'l‘hiiik about it

fit! Raymond is a member
(if the UK People‘s Party.

 

  

‘3‘?“ it It ‘~ ‘ W
2) .32. J... “t ..
Pt 27 it A
.4 .J .J ..
Pitt it. w E _
w ,

Sing—A-Long

 

         
 
 
 

W-Nnfi .n .n .n II" I

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Entertainment
Nightly

At. SHAREY’S
-) BUNCH 0’ lUNCH
All YOU CAN EAT!
PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD
$1.39

2197 Nicholasville Rd.

(Across From Zondale)

277-5774 or 277-5775

LV~W~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~

~W. ‘0' “I N'W'VU‘JN

-----------~WW ‘ . 2

SPRING AND

‘8‘.

Center opens in March

TKO collects recyclables

“l(i‘t‘}t‘ltttp” I,\ .’l mnnnon \mt‘tl
til the toilars
eenlug} ennsemus etti/en It “1“
MN)” gain .tnuther toutholil til the

\mahular) ut

l.e\tni_‘tnn t'ttltttttltlttl}
'l‘he l".n\irnnment;ii
t'nntnnttee til the
Kentnek} Organization.
t'l'KUi l.\ pluttttttu,I to open .t
enlleettun renter tur l‘t,‘t‘)t'l;lltlt'
materials in Mari-h

l’rnjeets
'l‘entpm‘ur)
lltt'

'l‘he eentetx to he limited on it
meant lot at the [Hunt Renexml
pnrpert) nn Hld Vine St . “I” he
equtpped \\llll inns and eon
lillllt‘l'.\ tor the enlleetmn 0t t‘itltS.

glass. magazines and enrrugzatetl

\Hll lie stalled H)
Hut and other

[MINT ll
\ulnnters trunt
interested groups

.\n \rnt}. lrtuk
ilrners “I” he used to transport
the innit-rials tn

pt‘m-esstniz plants

liesetwe .llltl

l'et')t‘l.tltle
'l'he pitrleet \ull emnplentent

the 'l‘Kt) Initiated

ite\',_\p;ipet' project

present
t‘t‘t')t'lllt;.’,
npet'nleil h) the Volunteers nt
\nierie.t .inil the ell)

\\hile the
lt'llilt‘tl to he prntit milking. the

prnjeet is nut tll

ltt.tlt‘t'l.tl,\ \\tll lie .Mild to

pi'neessntg plants at the going

rates .\n\ prnttt \\hti'h the

pretext makes “I” he spent to

pliltllt'll) and other ex
Aldu

ehun‘nmn ut the eunnnittee

('(l\ (‘l'

penses. .\.’l|(l l’l'USM'l'.

'l‘he emnnnttee also plans to
meant/e l'll\ll‘t)ll.lllt'lllill groups
\\ithin eneh sehnnl In the area to
help eilneute the

em n'unnientul

eunnnnnit)
‘Ilttllll enneerns,
\‘Htl l’t‘nsm'l'

'l‘Kt) int \\lt|(‘ll the eonnnittee
|.\ pnrti l.\ .‘l euuhttun ut smaller
urgununttuns luinileil

tur (‘1)llllltltllll) .‘H‘llUll

together
There are
presentlv ;’~l groups helungtng tn
'I'Ktt ehureh groups.
lnlmr nnmns illlll neighborhood

ineluihng

meant/git iuns

UK students take top honors
in national design contest

I K
“on

interior design

honors til it

Tun
students
national design enntest sponsored
h} the institute (tl

tup

Business
Designers

"We mm ever} thing in product
design there “as to “In.” said
\\‘el_\nd;i “right. \\llllt(‘l‘ ()l the
Sim tn‘st prize Jean Baugh “its

given an hunm‘ahle mention
il\\itl‘(l,
'l'he t'ttlllltt‘llllttll “as part ut the

zit-ttVttIes ttl a national Student

Design llallji at High l’mnt. .\' (‘
\lmttl
tenthnd

.‘.nn enllege students at

'I‘lllf (”\l‘l-ifi'l jutlge> \set‘e
several editors (ll llllt‘l'lttl' design
trade ”Mild/Illt‘s and nutmnull}
knuun [)t't)l('.\.\l()ltgll.\ In the lll‘ltl
t'l design

“l‘lgltl‘ an
urnduute ~student.
llltttllllt‘tl ti \hgtpeil ehrume and

interior design

designed a

pleuglux ehun' and ennterenee
tuhle to “ill tnp pri/e She plans

to \lH't'litll/t‘ Ill nonresidential
lltl'ltl\l1|ltt.1.\

"Happy \ant.”
pl.t\l|t' tnrnttnre
\\.Illllt_L{ itt't'.‘l.\. win an honorable
mention .maril tor Bungh

The purpose ill the enntest um
industry

niunlileil

tor children‘s

eunt ruet
the
their

ln \llU“
ltl'(|l('\\|()ll;tl\ progress ul
t'l;l>.\l‘t)t)ttt In
had

their

\ltltlt'lll\ In

\esltpiitmns .\tu