xt76dj58gr7b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt76dj58gr7b/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-02-20 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 20, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 20, 1976 1976 1976-02-20 2020 true xt76dj58gr7b section xt76dj58gr7b Vol. LXVII No. 117
Friday, February 20, l976

CI VIII!

l'l-l GiRAGE

KENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper}

2] University of Kentucky

Lexington. Kentucky

Miss Violet

Unknown woman loft UK a fortune
for educating family physicians

By LEONARD KELSAY
Kernel Staff Writer

Nobody knows much about Violet
Renaker.

But for some reason. the Cynthiana
native willed some $3 million in property
and securities to UK.

Renaker. who died in June 1973, ap
parently left the money to the University
because she didn‘t want it eaten up in
taxes. according to UK Vice President for
Business Affairs Jack Blanton.

Her attorney told her the best way to
insure that her money survived her was to
giveit to a charitable institution. Renaker
had no known ties to UK. but she chose the
UK medical school and specified that the
money be used for scholarships for future

‘ family physicians.

Mammoth blaze

Firefighters struggle to put out a midday blaze that destroyed the Mammoth
Garage at Rose and East Main. The fire reportedly started when gasoline being
drained from a car gas tank by a garage employe was ignited by a spark from a
nearby grinder. Two of the 50 firefighters called to the scene were treated at
the site for smoke inhalation. Officials estimated up to 100 cars were destroyed.

University, Stephens oppose measure

Bill would separate 12 community colleges from UK

By (ilNNY EDWARDS
Managing Editor

FRANKFURT—A bill which would
separate all community colleges from
L'K—excluding the Lexington Technical
Institute (LTI>-~was referred to the house
Education Committee yesterday.

House Bill 554 was introduced Wed-
nesday in the house by Rep. Joe Clarke t D-
Danville). the bill‘s sponsor.

In addition. Jefferson Community
College in Louisville would become part of
the L'niversity of Louisville. under
Clarke‘s legislation. A community college
board of trustees would be established to
administer the remaining 11 colleges.

But. Education Committee Chairman
Don Stephens tD-Lexingtoni said
yesterday that he plans to oppose the bill.
“My position on this bill is no different
than my position on the Blume bill,"
Stephens said referring to a bill sponsored
by Rep. Norbert Blume tD-Louisville)
which would remove Jefferson Com-
munity College 4 JCC) from the UK system
and place it under the University of
Louisville‘s jurisdiction.

Stephens said he will refuse to post the
bill in the Education Committee. A bill

may be brought up for vote in committee
only after it is posted.

“There doesn’t seem to be any good
reason to take the community colleges
away from the University of Kentucky,"
Stephens said. “There would need to be
another president and another
bureaucracy."

Stephens said Clarke assured UK
President Dr. Otis A. Singletary in a
meeting Wednesday that the legislation
was not meant to be vindictive towards
UK. “It was just something hetClarke)
wanted to do.“ Stephens said.

Clarke said he reada study compiled by
the Legislative Research Commission
which recommended that the community
college system in Kentucky be changed.
“The community colleges would be able to
grow more effectively and vocational
opportunities would be greater if the
community colleges were under an um-
brella system." Clarke said.

The 1969 study. conducted by a Florida
consulting firm. stated the community
colleges needed to be under their own
governing body to develop fully.

“I would think UK would also benefit,”
Clarke said. “Then, they (UK ad-
ministrators) would only have to worry

How Renaker amassed her wealth is
unclear. She lived for many years in
Lexington‘s Phoenix and Lafayette hotels.
former employes said.

"She was one of those little women who
came back to their hometown years after
they left it. . . they goaround searching for
something they left but they never fine it.“
one Phoenix employesaid. “The hotel was
full of them."

She left no distinct impression in either
place. save one of mild eccentricity. ”I
used to see her when she came around the
window to cash a check or get some
change.“ another employe said. “She was
very closed. very odd, but very sweet. She
stayed to herself a lot."

The employes were surprised to learn
that this sweet old woman. who was infirm

about the University proper.”
Clarke also said a separate self-

and “unusual". as one described her, had
left $3 million to UK. “She worked for the
government. She must have had con-
nections.“ one said.

One UK official familiar with the facts
said Renaker‘s fortune came to her not
through "connections“ but from a wealthy
friend she had nursed through a long
illness. At the time. Renaker was fairly
young: her friend was old and not expected
to live long. But the friend recovered, and
by the time she died. Renaker herself was
aging and infirm. She spent the last years
of her life as a quiet resident of Lexington
in a manner belying her wealth.

‘An unexpected gratu'ly...

aserermtousgit,’
Blantonsdd.ashesmled

andspreodhisarmsqoart.

UK was surprised, too, when ltenaker's
will left Oklahoma oil wells. California
citrus groves and Texas tenant houses to
the University.

“An unexpected gratuity . . a seren-
dipitous gift.“ Blanton said. as he smiled
and spread his arms apart.

Sometime this year. UK will take
possession of the four oil wells. con-
servatively valued at $1.2 million. Blanton
said. The wells, located on a 330-acre farm
tit) miles wouth of Oklahoma City, produce
800 to 900 barrels a day. and may have as
much as 3.6 million barrels underneath
them. he said.

 

 

(‘ontinued on page l2

administering community college system
would be more sensible from a budgetary

standpoint. “We cannot get a handle on
the community college system from a
budgetary standpoint when they are
lumped together with a major university."

Dr. Donald B. Clapp, UK vice president
for administration, sad he and Singletary
are opposed to Clarke’s legislation. Clapp
said he can see no educational benefits to

he gained if the community colleges were ,_ .

removed from UK.

According to UK administrators and
Stephens, UK has been administering its
community colleges well. “There is no
evidence that UK isn’t doing a good job.
There have been no complaints from
students, and there really haven‘t been
any complaints in the press,"
said.

Rep. Steve Beshear ( D-Lexington). who
attended the Wednesday meeting, said he

Stephens I. I

does not see any reason for the bill at this '

time. “UK has done an outstanding job
running and coordinating the community
college system. Nobody can give me any
reason to change it," he said.

Continued on page 12

—-Gmy em
REP. DON STEPHENS

 

  

editorials

Lette'sandSpectrumarticlesstnildbeadrresed tothe altu‘id Pea aitw.
Room 114 Journalism Building. They shwld be typed, doublespced aid Sign].
Lettesshould not exceedmmdsmd Spectrumarticlesmm

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Wingos
Editor-in-Chief

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

 

 

v

 

Urban County Council members
apparently haven’t escaped the
confusion surrounding what has
essentially become a non-proposal
to extend drinking hours in
Lexington.

It seems someone—no one is
willing to fess up—was going to try
to slip the extension proposal
through the Urban County Council
before conservative forces in the
community got a whiff of the extra
liquor.

Alcoholic Beverage Control
(ABC) Administrator Stephen
Driesler was the guy left holding
the bag since he was quoted in
stories later termed ”premature
publicity” by Driesler and Mayor
Foster Pettit.

Driesler, who still maintains he
favors extending bar hours, will set
no definite date for presentation of
the proposal to the council. At one
time Driesler predicted he would

 

have a proposal to the council by
March.

A Chamber of Commerce staff
member said the chamber also
might present a proposal to extend
drinking hours to the council. But
after the story appeared in the
Lexington Leader the chamber
president said the issue was not
being diSCUssed by the chamber.

Although Driesler’s role in
iCiIErig up the extension proposal is
fairly clear-he has been
"studying the situation” for about
‘hree months—Pettit has managed
to blend into the background.
Officially he has only said he
"favors discussion” of the
proposal.

Meanwhile, the civic center and
“II the future convention-party
goers become more and more of a
reality and a group of Christian
ministers in town decide to voice
their disapproval of the proposal. .

Drinking hour extension confuses council

Amidst all these opposing forces.
Urban County Council members
seem to be moreor less in the dark.

Ninth District Councilman Bill
Ward even went so far as to say
that since everyone else is
discussing the proposal, he plans to
bring it up at the Feb. 23 council
work session so the council can
discuss the proposal.

And two council members—
Mary Mangione from the fifth
district and Darrell Jackson from
the sixth—said they feel the
government is being run by a
"clique” that doesn't allow council
members adequate time to
research anything.

A Kernel poll indicates that at
this point six of the council
members oppose the proposal, six
are undecided and three are un-
willing to comment for lack of
information. Of course, if anyone

ever decides to present any in.
formation to the council and give
them time to study it, who knows
what would happen?

Well, at least the council would
be able to make an informed
decision, which two of its members
admit it never does. All of this
subterfuge is not getting anyone
anywhere.

If Driesler has been working on
the proposal and’has good reasons
for supporting it, he should go to a
council meeting and say so, as
should the chamber. And if the
ministers and other conservative
groups oppose the extension they
too should present their views to
the council.

Finally, the mayor should clarify
his opinions on the extension for the
council, for it is hard to believe
Pettit could remain neutral on any
issue concerning the civic center.

 

 

Report on CIA reveals ineptness, bullying

That report on the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) prepared by Rep. Otis
Pike’s Select Committee on Intelligence
has been made public despite a House of
Representatives vote against it. President
Gerald Ford and Secretary of State Henry
Kissmqer are, of course, incensed about
the public exposure of the ClA’s past
escapades.

dick
downey

 

It is no wonder. The report, obtained
and released by CBS Correspondent
Daniel Schorr, reveals ineptness, over-
spending and international political
bullying by the agency. Moreover,
wrongdoing by Kissinger is also im-
plicated in the findings of the Pike com-
mittee. Many of the agency’s covert ac-
tivities are not self-instigated~not even
the worst violations of international law,
not even the dumbestof the covert political
tricks. The report sounds like a world-
wide Watergate with a dash of Alfred
Hitchcock and a pinch of Marx Brothers

thrown in.
The revelations about the CIA carry a

strange iuxtaposition of both danger and
ridiculousness. The agency’s carryings-on
present a picture of self-parody—it is easy
to compare them to the bumblings of In-
spector Clusseau of ”Pink Panther” tame.
However, it is self-parody that is a shame
to this country and to the principles on
which it was founded.

Nomatter how you look at it, the CIA has
built up much self-damning evidence.
Viewed from the standpoint that they are
an outfit that is a threat to international
peace, the report is convincing in its
conclusion that covert operations "are
irregularly approved, sloppily im-

plemented, and at times have been forced
on a reluctant ClA by the President and his
National Security Advisor.” Viewed from
the standpoint that the CIA is an in-
competent bunch of clowns that spend $10
billion per year on programs worth only a
fraction of that, the same conclusion is just
as convincing.

The ineptness of CIA is not unlike the
ineptness of many other government
agencies. There is overspending, lack of
accountability to the public, bureaucratic
self-perpetuation and some degree of
control bytechnocrats. In the CIA’s case,
however, all of these characteristics are
magnified—and there is a definite un-
dermining ofwhat we like tothink of as the
principles of democracy.

Tidbits from the report underline this
proposition. They were drawn from the
Village Voice’s verbatim transcript of the
Pike report.

—The White House ”sanitized" some of
the documents that it‘ turned over to the
committee to the extentthat some of the

‘

pages were blank except for gibberish like
this: ”3—ND—DOLL-VNM—T-0144656
TRANSLATED DECRYPT UNJAC—VN
NR1 Y 30—300 PM US TO CQ INFO BBM
STOP CMNB 30119 5610 M Tot: 30 JA68—
10—22 :DO."

—A CIA station in one small country
turned in a bill for $41,000 that was used to
purchase liquor over a one-year period.
The head of that station was later tran-
sferred to Angola.

-Prior to the Russian invasion of
Czechoslovakia, the CIA ”lost” the
Russian army for two weeks. As a result,
the agency fa iled to perceive that the army
was r.aneuvering for the incursion. We
finally faund out after it had started—
when Soviet Ambassador Dobrynin called
LBJ and told him the news.

—The ClA's single most active type of
covert operation has been its involvement
in interfering with freely held elections all
over the world. Thirty-two per cent of
covert operations in the past 10 years have

been devoted to these ends.

—The CIA actually makes pornographic
movies. One of them was entitled ”Happy
Days. ”

—U. S. experts on Africa who comprised
a task force on Angola ”strongly opposed
military intervention” there, but National
Security Council people removed this
recommendation from the task force
report.

—The Tet Offensive, the 1973 Mid-East
War, the first third-world explosion of a
nuclear bomb (in India), the overthrow of
the government in Portugal, and the
Cyprus coup were all not foreseen by the
CIA. In the case of Cyprus, there is some
indication that the Agency might have
foreseen Archbishop Makarios’ over-
throw, but the theory behind that
proposition is that CIA might have in fact
egged on the overthrow.

 

Dick Downey is a UK law student. His

column appears weekly in the Kernel.

 

 

 

    

 

spectrum

Opinions from inside and outside the University.

 

 

 

 

Ty Dr. Jesse Harris

(Editor’s note: This article is the first of a four-part
series dealing with accreditation of professional
programs.)

copyright, me, Dr. Jesse G. Harris Jr.

Formal systems of accreditation evolved in the early
decades of this century primarily as a consequence of
the failure of many educational institutions to monitor
or to evaluab their own operations, and out of the
failure of the state governments to set adequate and
uniform standards for granting charters to new in-
stitutionsatthe undergraduate and graduate (i.e. post-
secondary) levels. As expressed or implied in the
o'iginal founding documents of our nation, it has been
a partof our national tradition to leave to the state and
local governments the responsibility for formal
education.

Faced with extreme variability in the quality of
educa tion offered in existing colleges and universities,
and even in the high schools which prepared students
for college, the leaders of institutions of higher tear.
ning felt it their responsibility and duty to join
volunhrily in a peer group endeavor to insure quality
of both secondary and higher education. it was the
prevailing viewpoint of these agencies of accreditation
that only institutions which offered sound curricula,
presented a roster of adequately qualified faculty
members, administrators and students, and which had
adequate budgets and supporting physical facilities.
including libraries, classrooms and laboratories,
should represent themselves to the public as offering
acceptable academic degrees. '

Although the first system of accreditation in the
United States was established by the state legislature
of New York in 1794, in the creation of a Board of
Regents which authorized the University to register
approval of domestic and foreign curricula, only two
additional states (lowa in 1846 and Utah in 1896)
developed operational systems for approval of
programs or institutions prior to 1900 (review by
Lykins and Craig, 1974). important features of these
early state systems, which apparently were
established in the interest of preparing school teachers

for certification, were eventually to be incorporated in
the "voluntary accreditation” functions of the six
current regional education bodies, the term “volun-
tary” implying initiation of accreditation by the in-
stitution itself, as well as freedom from interference by
stab or federal governments.

At the national level of involvement, it is of historical
interest that President Howard Taft, responding to a
public outry over preliminary publicity, took a
decisive stand by requesting the commissioner of
educa tion to with old publication of a report prepared in
1911 by the firstduly appointed specialist in the United
Sta bs Bureau of Education (established as far back as
1867, and subsumed under the Department of the in-
terior in 1868). This report, the product of a bold un-

 

Accreditation
Educators began setting standards in early 1900's

dertaking, classified each undergraduate institution
according to performance of its students in graduate
schools, and it mighthave been read with interest even
by the administrators of European universities, whose
admissions bodies had difficulty in evaluating the
undergraduate credentials of the many American
students who applied to their graduate programs.

Taft’s action, later sustained by President Woodrow
Wilson, made it clear for many decades to come, that
the federal governmentshould stay outof the realm of
accreditation and should leave to the institutions
themselves or to the voluntary accrediting agencies
the task of establishing minimal standards of ac-
creditation, or of classifying institutions by quality.

Ironically, the author of the report, Kendrick C.

Baboock, who later becamea Dean at the University of
Illinois, also became Chairman of the Committee of the
Association of American Universities, which
developed a classification of colleges for pregraduate
training. The Committee’s list, published in 1914, was
used by the War Department as a basis for excusing
applicants to West Point from entrance examination
(reviews by Dickeyand Miller, 1972, and by Lykins and
Craig, 1974). The roles of accrediting agencies and of
the federal gwernment in relation to these agencies
were thus clarified for decades to follow.

During the early stages of development of ac-
creditation for educational institutions, the need for
another type of accreditation began to emerge. To
insure that a physician was properly qualified to
practice medicine, it was not enough to note that the
medical program was housed in a respectable in.
stitution, or to institute state licensing procedures for
individual practitioners. It was equally important to
monitor the educational programs which granted the
medical diplomas. The public listing of institutions
which offered medical degrees acceptable to the
professional accrediting body insuged that these
medical training programs had adequate expertise
among their facultiesand suitable physical facilities to_
provide pobntial physicians with the best available
scientific knowledge and the most acceptable

techniques of practice available at the time.
The professional assodations, one-by-one, assumed

the responsibility for development of standards and
procedures for accreditation appropriate for each
profession beginning with medicine in 1905, after
several decades of preliminary work, followed by
dentistry in 1918, law in 1923, and eventuating in an
array of nearly 40 separate professional or sub-
speciality accreditation agencies. These professional
accreditation systems are now supplementary to the
institutional accreditation procedures provided by the
six regional (geographical) accreditation bodies, such
as the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools,
which includes within its domain institutions in the
Commonwealth of Kentucky.

it me wishes to ask whether an institution offers, in
general, acceptable or respectable academic degrees,
he should inquire whether or not the institution is ac-

 

ceptableby the regional body. But if he wishes to know
whether an undergraduate or graduate program has
been formally accredited by the national association of
a particular profession, he should consult the relevant
publications of the profession or the catalog of the
university to determine whether the program offered
also has professional accreditation (e.g., in the fields of
pharmacy or law, or in a particular branch of
psychology, such as clinical psychology).

The fact that professional accreditation began as a
concern for the welfare of the public by insuring that
physicians had been adequately trained, points out the
selective nature of professional accreditation.
Typically, it has been developed at either the graduate
or undergraduate level, by a profession or component
of a'profession which has provided services directly to
the public. Thus social work'has an accreditation
procedure but the American Historical Association or
experimental laboratory psychology, a component of
the American Psychological Association, does not.
One might argue for the sake of logical consistency
that all academic disciplines ultimately serve the
public, to the extent that teachers instruct students,
and those same students may eventually become
teachers of other students. But when the public citizen
seeks medical assistance, asks to have a prescription
filled or requests the help of a clinical psychologist, he
wishes to make certain that the professional specialist
whcse services he seeks has had a standard education,
and if he earned his graduate or professional degree in
a distant institution or state, that this education was
equivalent to that of persons who graduated from in-
stitutions well known to him.

The primary objective of professional accreditation,
as i understand the process, is to insure that
technically competent, mature, responsible in-
dividuals will function under the title of practitioner in
thatprofession. This means, of course, that adequacy
of training is a very important consideration.
Licensure or certification involves final evaaluation of
the individual by the state government, but ac-
credita tion goes to the saurce of supply of graduates of
professional programs and it helps to answer the
question of whether inadequacy of performance of a
candidate is attributable to fundamental deficiencies
within the individual or whether it is attributable to the
poor quality of instruction in the institution from which
he or she graduated.

References:

Dickey. F.G. and Miller. J.W., "Federal involvement
in Non-Governmental Accreditation," Education
Record, 1972, 53(2), 138-142.

Lykins, S. and Craig, S., "Accreditation in Higher
Education,” Bureau of School Service, University of
Kentucky, 1974, 46, No. 3, 67-83.

Dr. Jessee G. Harris Jr. is a professor of psychology in
the psychology department. He has also chaired the
department and directed the doctoral program in
clinical psychology.

 

Letters

   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
   
  
  
  
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
  
   
 
 
  
 
  
   
  
 
    
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

Raps Kernel
Editor: ‘

Perhaps the most unfair, malicious,
sadistic and purposefully derogatory
position taken by a university-affiliated
publication l’ve seen anywhere toward
a student group is the attitude of the
Kernel toward the Greek system and its
components. The editorial page is
continually padded with letters and
comments slighting either groups
within the system or the system itself.
while news of Greek accomplishments
on campus or in the community con-
sistently get ignored totally or~at the
most—receive poor coverage.

The implication of the Kernel through
its recent letters to the editor selections
that Chi Omega Sorority, and therefore
the Greek System at UK, is saturated

 

with an insurmountable degree of
racial prejudice (an unavoidable
conclusion, given the cause-and-effect
relationship portrayed through the
selective printing of the past month and
a half) and the Kernel's seemingly
valiant expme and emergence as the
pseudo-protector of the innocently
downtrodden are the most absurd
exaggerations it’s been my sad
misfortune to read in three years at
UK.

If the Kernel would momentarily
abandon its lust for sullying the
reputation of the Greek system, if
m ight notice that its own staff members
were drawn together out of a common
interest—iournalism. It shouldn't take
a microbiology maior to remind you
that good ioumalism ought to include

impartiality and obiectivity.

Keith Knapp
A a. S iunior

(Editor’s note: Letters to the editor
and commentaries do not necessarily
reflect the views of the Kernel. When
space is available, the Kernel usually
prints any letters or commentaries it
receives. Readers' views are not
printed only in cases of repitition or
lack of space.)

Music room

Editor:

The Student Center music room has
not been of much use thls semester.
First, it was locked because of the
power shortage. We understand that
hunger is a greater force than

relaxation.

We agree that the action was
necessary, but someone must have left
the music room key with a hungry
studentwho mistook the tape selection
Iistfora hotapple pie. (We all thought
that hddogs should have been omitted
from the menu in place of pies, pop
corn, and milkshakes.) Now we have
pies and popcorn but no tape list.

Everyone knows it is too difficult to
lookfort itles on tapes, so the staff said,
"I won’tplay anything without knowing
its number." We went looking for "the
number.” Only to find some worthy
person had removed the music list, so
that it cwld be revised? Jim Metry

Economics senior
Mike Thomas
Business administration sophomore

 

 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
   
 

 

  

  

 

 

 

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Frilay. February 20. 1976 I- r ,
. O
I" news briefs

House votes to investigate
Schorr for leaking secrets

WASHINGTON (AP)—The House voted Thursday to order its
Ethics Committee to investigate the leak of its secret Intelligence
committee report and to determine whether to take action against
CBS Correspondent Daniel Schorr for his role in its publication.

The chamber approved 269-115 a resolution ordering the probe
and saying it appears the “alleged actions of the said Daniel Schorr
may be in contempt of or a breach of the privileges of this house."
The resolution suggests no specific action against the correspon—
dent.

But Rep. Samuel S. Stratton (D-N.Y. i. who introduced the
resolution. suggested Schorr‘s press card could be voided or that he
could be cited for contempt of Congress. The resolution leaves any
recommendation up to members ofthe Ethics Committee.

Schorr has acknowledged he is responsible for publication of the
Intelligence committee report in two parts over the last two weeks
by a New York weekly newspaper. the Village Voice. The report is
still classified as secret.

Senate tightens arms sales

WASHINGTON (Am—The Senate Wednesday passed a $4.4-
billion foreign military aid bill tightening congressional control
over mounting L'.S. arms sales to foreign nations.

The final vote was 60 to 30. sending the measure to the House.
where a similar bill is nearing final committee action.

Sen. Hubert Humphrey (D-Minn), floor manager of the Senate

\ measure. called it “the most significant revision of legislative
" . authorities for foreign military assistance and sales since enact-
o ment of the mutual security act more than a quarter of a century
ago.“
8 It requires that the executive branch notify Congress of proposals
\ for commercial or government sales of major weapons and any
arms exprrts in amounts of $25 million or more. It allows Con grass
to disa pprovethe sales by majority vote in both chambers within 30
days.

the new KlCN'l‘lYCKHN

Maud/inc

Hearst iury shown film
of SLA battle with police

0 SAN FRANCISCO (AM—Patricia Hearst joined her jurors
I 0 ,
FFQESEMTflflg/‘a Wednesday in watching a replay of the gun battle in which six of

her terrorist captors died.
The videotaped presentation of the May 17, 1974, shootout bet-

.A wrapup Of the cat’s fOOtball season ‘ ween police and members of the Symbionese Liberation Army

(SLA) came near the conclusion of Hearst’s testimony at her
federal bank robbery trial.

OCIoseup look at the careers of UK’s The videotape was used by defense attorney F. Lee Bailey to
illustrate a key point in Hearst’s defense—that she did not

blgtl me coaCheS surrender to authorities because she feared they would kill her.
In the third day of her testimony, Hearst told the jury that after

. H ” ' the April 15, I974, bank robbery, she was told “now that I was
A IOOk at the new country MUSIC identified and wanted by the FBI that I’d be shot on sight if they
found me."

II II ' '
.Some doode ay flCtlon Under questioning by Bailey, she said she no longer thought of

escape after the robbery. “It didn’t seem realistic anymore,” she

oDr. Singletary speaks out said. “IthoughttheFBlwouldkillme."
oMuch’ much more _ Foul formally ends relocation oarnps

WASHINGTON (AW—Pledging “that this kind of error shall
never be made again,” President Ford Thursday formally lifted

the World War II order that sent 112,000 Japanese-Americans into
ON SALE MONDAY' “1me .
. day that

His proclamation to that effect was 34 years frOm the
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, in the post-Pearl Harbor climate,

NEWSTAND COST 1.25 “9‘1952213'32Emmigisf’oi'éti'rfimiffiifig done now."

said Ford as he shook hands with some 35 people who attended the
signing ceremony.

ON SALE AT KENNEDYS ,WALLACES, ”Mug"? meordgryaiseéiffad 2113:9133, 1:46 ~tvhen.Prtes(ilqgnt
UNIV. BOOKSTORE, S.C. SWEET SHOP arry . ruman ec a osmos ave ermmae _

AND MANY LEXINGTON NEWSTANDS. ——Kerr)et———

For a 5-issue subscription (including special yearbook issue) send check or
money-order for 4.50 to the Kentuckian, Rm 210 Journalism Bldg, UK.
Lexington, Ky. 40506.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
       

 

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. February 20. l976—5

 

 

 

a
J ca mpus briefs

 

 

Lady Bird’s press secretary
will speak at ERA forum

Liz Carpenter. former press secretary to Lady Bird Johnson. will
be the keynote speaker at a Equal Rights Amendment (ERA)
forum in the Student Center Ballroom Sunday.

Sponsored by Mortor Board. a senior women‘s honorary. the
ERA forum will also feature state Senators Mike Moloney (D-
Lexington) and Joe Graves «ft-Lexington), and Edgar Wallace.
state president of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP).

The forum was organized to illustrate that Kentuckians do favor
the ERA and are against any rescission action the state legislature
might take. The house has already voted to rescind the amendment
ratified by a specialsession ofthe legislature in 1972.

Other speakers scheduled for the forum to be held from +6 p.m.
include Oteria O‘Rear. Communications Workers of America
member. Tom Glatzmayer. a probation aid officer and Rev.
\\ illiam L. Turner. pastor ofthe Central Baptist Church,

Voter registration deadline May 27
for state's first presidential primary

Voter registration deadline for Kentucky‘s first presidential
primary in May is April 27. The deadline forthe November election
is 30 days before the election. Students can register downtown
weekdays 8:30-4:00 pm. at the main court house.

Students may also be able to register right here on campus.
according to student senator-at-large Jim Newberry who is also a
tnemher of the Student Government (SCH Political Affairs Com-
mittee.

"I feel there will be a voter registration booth sometime after
spring break.” Newberry said. “It hasn‘t been agreed