xt77wm13r09s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt77wm13r09s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-11-01 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 01, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 01, 1973 1973 1973-11-01 2020 true xt77wm13r09s section xt77wm13r09s The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 61
Thursday, November 1, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington. KY. 40506

 

lnnisfree
provides
public school

alternative

By LIDA HENDERSON
Kernel Staff Writer

More students are needed to keep In-
nisfree afloatas it struggles to maintain its
openclassroom mode of education.

Innisfree, a state-approved alternative
school. started its third year of operation
this fall. According to Jay Hensley,
corresponding secretary of Innisfree and
UK Information specialist, the level of
education is “based on the individual.“

”INNISFHEE OPERATES on the
philosophy that learning should be fun,
teachers and kids should be Ieaming
partners," said Hensley, “and the children
themelves will give the best cues as to the
direction their educational experience
should take."

”Each teacher has his or her own in-
dividual method of teaching." said
Beverly Salehi, secretary of lnnisfree.
“The classes are probably less structured
than those in a public school—they take in
account the child’s abilities," said Salehi.

“Twenty-five to 30 students would be
ideal for the number of staff we have.”
said Salehi. If more students aren‘t
enrolled, Innisfree will “go along in a state
of financial crisis." This is because tuition
is the main source of finance for Innisfree,
she said. ”We‘re not making payroll now
and all our teachers are working on
deferred salaries,“ Salehi added.

THERE ARE presently 15 students at
Innisfree, ranging in age from four to 13.
“Our biggest problem is that we didn‘t

Students enjoy learning to read through word games and cooperation at
lnnisfree. an alternative to public elementary schools. (Kernel photo by

Elizabeth Rhoades.)

know we’d be here until August,“ said Ann
Keohane. team leader and full-time
teacher at lnnisfree. “Many persons
seemed to be under the impression that
we'd folded.“ said Keohane.

Both students and teachers are trying to
drum up business. according to Keohane.
as they prepare for the Open House to be
held on Nov. 1.

The basement of their building. located
on the grounds of Eastern State Hospital.
nextdoor to Dale Farabee School. has been
converted into a spook house by the older
children who will be entertaining the
visiting youth during Open House. The
teachers and parents will be on hand to
answer any questions about the school.
according to Keohane.

(‘ontinued on Page 6

 

Watergate

tapes
missing

By BROOKS JACKSON
Associated Press Writer

News In Brlef

ly the Associated Preu
and the Kernel Stat!

0 Saxbe confident

0 lawyers hunt records

a Thieu disappointed
0 Pentagon ends alert
OMeir, Nixon negotiate

OAgnew pays S ”.000

0 Today's weather

WASHINGTON —— Two of the White
House tapes never existed, President
Nixon’s lawyers said Wednesday.

The White House said Nixon had been
unaware of that situation until last
weekend.

Missing are recordings of what former
Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell told Nixon in
their first reported conversation following
the Watergate breakin and of what passed
between Nixon and John W. Dean III in a
meeting in which Dean says Nixon ad-
mitted discussing clemency as part of the
Watergate cover-up.

THE MITCHELL conversation of June
20. 1972 took place on a telephone without a
recording device attached, and the Dean
meeting of April 15, 1973 wasn‘t recorded
due to an extremely rare malfunction of
the automatic recording gear in the
presidential offices, Nixon’s lawyers told
US. District Court Judge John J. Sirica.

Deputy White House Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren said that in the months
of controversy over the Watergate tapes

. WASHINGTON — Sen. William B.
Saxbe tR-Ohio‘ came out of an hour and a
half meeting with President Nixon Wed-
nesday feeling “relatively sure" he will be
nominated to be the next attorney general.

0 WASHINGTON — The White House
acknowledged Wednesday it was
negotiating with the Senate Watergate
committee on the panel's effort to gain
access to President Nixon’s Key Biscayne.
Fla. bank account records.

Committee sources confirmed that they
were seeking the Nixon bank records. but
one source said White House lawyers “had
dug in their heels" and indicated they
would, claim executive privilege to keep
the records from the committee.

0 s.\ltai.\ — President Nguyen Van
Thieu said Wednesday the Vietnam cease-
fire has been a "bitter disappointment"
and that prospects for a lasting peace have
all but disappeared.

Nixon never asked to listen personally to
the two nonexistent tapes.

Warren said extensive conversations
and discussions in Nixon's office on April
14 and IS—prior to the Dean meeting—had
been recorded. But. he said. “when this
conversation took place the first recorder
had run out. filled up. and the alternate
recorder was not activated until the next
day. the 16th."

THE PRESIDENTLAI. spokesman had
reported several months ago that Nixon
listened to a number of tapes on June 4.

Warren said the tapes had been stored in
the White House “under lock and key."

In court. White House lawyer .I. Fred
Buzhardt told Sirica of the missing tapes in
a private session Tuesday. and Sirica
broached the matter in open court Wed-
nesday.

It was the first time the White House had
said any of the controversial tape recor-
dings don't exist.

THE TWO missing recordings are
among nine tapes which had been sought
by federal prosecutors and which Nixon

In lhe same vein. North Vietnam ac-
cused South Vietnam of executing a new
military plan with the help of the United
States.

0 WASHINGTON — The Pentagon
ended WedneSday its worldwide military
alert called last week as 350.000 ser-
vicemen returned to normal duties.

Nearly’all the 2.2 million-member ITS
military force was placed on some degree
of increased combat readiness early last
Thursday because of fears the Soviet
l'nion was sending troops to Egypt.

0 WASHINGTON — Israeli Prime
Minister (iolda Meir arrived here Wed-
nesday in an effort to clarify the United
States position on the Middle East. At the
same time. President Nixon met with
Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmy
on the same subject.

Mrs. Meir told reporters that relations
between her country and the United States

had agreed to turn over to Sirica in ac-
cordance with an order from the federal
appeals court in Washington.

Sirica heard open—court testimony
Wednesday from a Secret Service
technician who said the White House
records had been checked daily on week-
days. and that the April l5 malfunction
was the only recorder failure he knew of.

He said hidden microphones in
presidential offices had been extremely
sensitive. capable of picking up all but
whispered conversations.

'I‘IIF. 'l‘l‘l(‘ll.\'l('l.\.\'. Raymond C.
Zumwalt. said he knew of no other in—
stance in which the automatic machines
had failed to record He said he hadn‘t
remembered the April 15 malfunction until
Buzhardt reminded him of it.

Archibald Cox. whom Nixon fired as
special Watergate prosecutor after (‘ox
spurned an out-of-court settlement on the
tapes. said Wednesday that the White
House never told him any of the tapes
might not exist.

are very friendly. but she noted that
problems arise frequently between
friends.

“There are problems that have to be
clarified." Mrs. Meir said. However. she
said it was “an oversimplification” to
suggest that the l'nited States has exerted
undue pressure on her country concerning
a settlement with the Arabs

O W.\SIII.\(I’I‘ON — Former Vice
President Spiro 'I‘. Agnew has paid the
Sltmtm court tine imposed upon him after
he pleaded no contest to a tax evasion
charge

...a patch of grey

the ram should end today but tem»
pcraturcs will hover near 30 ('loudiness
will increase tonight with temperatures
near 40. Rainy weather near 60 will return
on Friday.

 

  

 

'The Kentucky Kernel T

tlJ Journalism Building, University at Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506.

Established 1894

Mike Clark, Managing Editor
Charles Wolle, Practicum Manager
Bill Straub Sports Editor

Carol Cropper. Arts Fdntor

John Ellis. Advertising Manager,

Steve Switt, Editor in Chiel
Jenny Swai'. News Editor
Kaye Coyte, Nancy Daly,and

Bruce winges, Copy Editors
Bruce Singleton Photo Manager

The Kentucky Kernel is mailed five times weekly during the school year except during
holidays and exam periods. and twace weekly during the summer sessmn.

 

Published by the Kernel Press lnc , I272 Priscilla Lane. Lexmgton, Kentucky. Begun as
the Cadet in WM and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel since 1915. The

Kernel Press Inc founded 1971. First class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. Ad,-
vertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or misleading

 

 

 

advertising should be reported to the editors.
Editorials represent the opinion of the editors and not the University

Take a walk

Feeling the pressure of an Arab-imposed oil embargo, the
government of The Netherlands has banned Sunday
pleasure driving in order to conserve supplies.

The Dutch may find, much to the chagrin of the Arabs,
that it won‘t kill them to cut down on automobile useage.
People are remarkable adaptable, and will find other
means to move from one location to another.

It would be a wonderful idea if members of the UK
community would emulate the Dutch and “impose” a
Sunday driving ban on themselves, as an experiment to find
out just how essential is that gas-eating car.

Instead of driving to the corner store on Sunday, or to the
movie theatre, or just to kill time, find another mode of
transportation.

Try walking for a change...perhaps you’ll discover your
legs are more than a bodily extension used for pressing gas
or brake pedals. An afternoon walk through a park,
especially in our present brisk weather, can be most in-
vigorating.

If walking isn’t up your alley, ride a bicycle. Many
students have found bikes to be a tremendous blessing in
these days of traffic jams and parking difficulties. Bike
riding is also excellent exercise.

In the dawning days of the Kennedy presidency, the
nation was enraptured with the youthful Chief Executive’s
physical “vigah.” The 50-mile hike became a common
occurence...on almost any weekend, drivers would pass
hundreds of people doggedly living up to Kennedy’s call for
physical fitness.

It has been 10 years since JFK died, and it seems his plea
to trim the nation‘s waistlines has also passed away. The
energy shortage however, is an excellent excuse for
Americans to once again get back in shape.

If we listen to the reports from Washington, we may all

 

 

 

 

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14/45] .vr data 71““

'I NEED A NICE POLITE PARROT WHO’LL SIT ON MY SHOULDER AND SPEAK WHEN HE‘S
SPOKEN TO!’

I

Lette

l'S

 

Busybodies

I‘m only 5’3" and weigh about 100
pounds and for one reason or another have
lived most of my life in a very nonviolent
manner. But if some flock of holier—than-
thou- Greeks, socialclimbing “joiners,” or
what-have-you abandon their own
responsibilities to descend upon ' (i.e.
adopt) any house I’m living in, the only
Coca-Cola I'll have for the busybodies will
be flowing from the bottles I’m going to
break over their conceited heads.

When a friend needs my help, I try to
help him, and when I can‘t handle a
situation myself I can usually find a friend
to lend a hand. Now if all these
chauvenistic do-gooders could start being
friendly (instead of snobbish because they
devote more time and money to organized
charities that everyone else will read
about in the Kernel), they wouldn‘t have
those overwhelming guilt feelings com-
pelling them to try to save the world; nor
would they have the time.

I‘ll be much happier surrounded by my
four dirty, dingy walls and eating soy-
flour-adultered meat patties than I will
with some ostentatious, neurotic stranger

”driving up in his corvette, cooking me T-
bone steak, painting my walls, and
generally demanding that I live on a level
of affluence that he obviously cannot
handle himself.

We all know how foreigners hate the
United States because of the way we flaunt
our riches in giving foreign aid. Let’s not
begin a similar catastrophe on the home
front by taking care of other people’s
houses. R. Blackburn Rice

Psych.——sophomore

Editor's note: R. Blackburn Rice is
referring to a Kernel editorial (Adopt
Adopt-a-House p.2, Oct. 29) asking for
local support of the Fayette (‘ounty
Division of the Governor's Beautification
(‘ommittee Adopt-a-House program. R.
Blackburn Rice, unless the person is a
Donovan Scholar. would not be eligible for
the program.

The committee has a screening com-
mittee which is charged to select houses
whose owners are 65 or older and living on
Social Security payments. Participation in
the Adopt-a-House program is now limited
to fraternities and sororities, the editorial
was asking for community support from
all Lexington residents.

 

have to walk before long, anyway, like it or not.

Justice on mend after Watergate wounds

By MARGARET GENTRY
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — Raw from the wounds
of Watergate, the Justice Department is
putting on a brave face and turning inward
to mend.

It was to have been the show piece for a
law and order President. It became a
house beset by one morale—shattering
upheaval after another.

As the scandal unfolded with the spring,
one attorney general was accused of
crimes and other standard bearers were
accused of impropriety. The mood was
glum.

President Nixon turned then to Elliot L.
Richardson and William D. Ruckelshaus,
two administration men who stood un-
touched and generally regarded as
honorable. truthful. upright. They were
sent as the rescuers to convince a doubting
public that Justice. too. housed those
virtues.

“There was a ferment of ideas. an en-
thusiasm they generated.“ an associate
recalls now.

With Richardson as attorney general
and Ruckelshaus as his deputy. debate
bounced incessantly around the burnished
walnut conference table. Memos flew like
wildfire.

Gone are the days of John H. Mitchell,
Nixon‘s first Attorney general. a man now
accused of violating the law he was sup-
posed to enforce.

Gone were the 10 months of Richard
Kleindienst, a man who resigned as the
scandal lapped close to him.

And gone now are Richardson and
Ruckelshaus. who promised justice devoid
of politics. promised a Watergate in-
vestigation free of outside pressure, and
quit as the ultimate act to keep the vow.

Richardson made it his mission to
restore public condidence in the Justice
Department in a campaign of speeches
backed up step by step with action. There
were indications he was succeeding.

There were even stronger indications
that he had cheered disheartened em-
ployes languishing for a champion.

Ten days ago, cheer abruptly turned to
despair. Ranking officials considered
resigning but kept their agony to them-
selves.

“Where do we go from here? I don't
know. No one knows.“

As the week were on, ranking officials
agreed to stay in answer to urgent pleas
from Sollicitor General Robert H. Bork,
who became acting attorney general and
assumed responsibilities his academic
training left him ill—prepared to handle.

With the Watergate case dominating his
attention, he urged department officials to
carry on in the way they would have under
Richardson.

The uncertainty_of a caretaker chief now
is compounded by Bork‘s avowed position

on the restructured Watergate in—
vestigation and the special prosecutor he
intends to appoint.

Just as Richardson did with the first
prosecutor, Bork says he will tolerate no
interference with the investigation and the
man running it. As did Richardson he
suggests he would resign rather than
compromise the probe.

. If Bork avoids a confrontation forcing
him to quit. he could remain for months as
acting attorney general. The President
seems unlikely to nominate a successor,
subject to Senate confirmation until
smoother sailing is in sight on Capitol Hill.

In view of the long uncertain months
ahead. Justice Department officials were
left guessing about the future of Richard-
son‘s pet projects.

Personal advisors to Richardson and
Ruckelshaus have agreed to stay at the
department long enough to wrap up details
of those projects and ease the transition.

Department sources say that one of the
most important projects—a top to bottom
review of the FBL probably will continue
but may not be carried as far as Richard-
son and Ruckelshaus wished.

FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley has
cooperated with the internal review. but
has never pushed it.

Richardson‘s departure also cast doubt
on the fate of legislation he intended to
propose to Congress to guard computer

files maintained by the FBI and other
government agencies from outside
snoopers.

The proposals designed to privacy, has
been circulated to other government
agencies for comment and would have
been sent to Congress within a few months.
Sources said the White House so far has
taken no position on it.

Richardson had planned to announce
last week a tentative proposal for
removing the political endorsements
additionally required for the appointment
of federal judges.

He plans to make the same proposal as a
private citizen, but whether the ad-
ministration now will adopt it remains
uncertain.

Richardson had been on the verge of
creating an inspector general office as a
Justice Department watchdog to in-
vestigate accusations of wrongdoing on the
part of department employes.

He was almost ready to issue regulations
imposing new restrictions on government
wiretaps.

Richardson had strengthened the at-
torney general‘s authority over US. at-
torneys and at the same time appointed 16
of them to an advisory slot to give them a
law—making voice.

A knowledgeable source predicted that
the attorneys, faced with uncertain
leadership in Washington, will reassert
control over their private baronies. a

  

 

Nlcholas Von Hoffman

King Features Syndicate

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. November 1. 1973—3

 

 

Snyder's gold st?"

PASADENA. California—At his stall in the
NBC parking lot a stanchion holds a large card with a
gold star on it and his name: Tom Synder. There are
other parking stalls with other cards and other stars
and other names: Flip Wilson, Johnny Carson, and so
forth.

But Tom Snyder isn’t a performer, or is he? By oc-
cupa tional category he is a newsman, a journalist, the
anchor man of the most popular local news show in the
Los Angeles market, as people television say to denote
a metropolitan area. Snyder is also the -— what shall we
call him? —— anchor man, star, host or featured per-
sonality on NBC’s new late-night talk show that comes
on after Carson goes to bed.

SNYDER’S HOUSE doesn’t have a swimming pool,
but he does belong to the Bel Air Country Club where
Richard Nixon was a member. They say Nixon used to
come outby himself on Saturdays, hang around the pro
shop and look for a game. If Nixon is still looking for
three guys to play his game in the Justice Department,
Tom Snyder has too much assertive self-confidence
ever to be without friends.

The star system came to journalism long before
Snyder, so he’s less of a new departure than the latest
in a long line. “I‘m a child of broadcasting,” he says,
“I never worked for a wire service or any print
media." This difference in background does
distinguish him from virtually all the national
television news stars.

BUT THE RULING generation of newscasters with
print experience will retire and then the track will be
clear for people like the 37-year-old Snyder, who served
his apprenticeship doing dull police stories and “going
out with a camera crew to interview people nobody
ever heard of ." In the ’605 he worked the late shift on
an Atlanta TV station where Lester Maddox, then a
perennially losing candidate. used to buy time for his

speeches. “Lester would walk up and hand me the
$427 in cash and then go in and do his schtick."

From Atlanta Snyder was brought out here by

another station, but, as he says, “I was canned—C-A-
N-N-E-D. There was a change in the management
and we weren’t getting the ratings. Anchor people are
in the most precarious position in the world. They are
the victim of overnight ratings, especially in New York
and LA."

FROM HERE Snyder bounced to Cleveland and then
to Philadelphia and then back here for KNBC where his
ability to say the commonplace in a forceful way has
helped make him king of the market. As a news per-
former he jokos winks and banters on the air, but it is
his ability to sound controversial while being ‘banal
that must explain the success he’s had and will have on
his new show.

An intelligent man, he seems to live a life that
cancels his brain out. The Bel Air Country Club
membership will keep a man cut off from contact with
alarming ideas and can lead him to say things like “I’d
like to do the whole show on the steps of the Lincoln
Monument. Honest Abe! Abe Lincoln must be turning
over in his grave. Oh, if there’s one man in our history
who symbolizes honesty and integrity it’s him, but I
might be wrong, Pal.”

NEWS PEOPLE in Washington have been joining
the wrong clubs for years. and the worst idiocios of
television news are but a subdued recapitulation of the
newspapers, which invented yellow journalism. By the
actual standards of the business, Snyder’s not so bad,
even if he is gross enough to have a gold star on his
door.

He will soon deserve it. The Tomorrow show has to
be a hit. A lot of people go to bed later than they used to,
and Snyder is better than an old movie. He is being
carried by 155 stations on the network, which means
you can suffer insomnia and see him almost anywhere
in the country. The preliminary ratings suggest that a
lot of people are watching, which means that CBS and
ABC are about to allow NBC to freeze them out of late-
night programming. Snyder and the Tomorrow show
will probably build the same kind of unchallengeable,
institutionalized audience that Today and Tonight
have.

THE SPONSORS smell a winner. “Alpo dog food has
come through for us," says Snyder, “I hate dogs,
but...“ But we have a hybrid of Chancellor and Car-
son, which may not mean that broadcast journalism is
going to dog food, but in any event, while we wait and
find out. heecceeere‘s Tommie!

 

  
      
    
 
   
  
  
  

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No man who has mastered the flying
skills it takes to fly and land on a ship
at sea can be called an average pilot. And
the sense of accomplishment and satis-
faction that he enjoys are also above
average. Which is only right. For the man
who would go places as a Naval Aviator
must pass through the most challenging
and demanding training program to be
found anywhere.

From Aviation Officer Candidate
School through Flight Training to the day
his golden Navy Wings are awarded, he
is tested; driven; pushed and tested
again. And for good reason. The Navy
has learned that without the will to
succeed, no man can be successful.

Which brings us to you. Do you have
what it takes to fly Navy? Send in this

coupon and find out. Or talk with your
local Navy recruiter. Or, call him at

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The Navy Ollu- .v information Team WIII be at the Student Center

NOvember 6 9

 

 

 

  

t—TIIE KHNTL'CKY KERNEI.. Thursday. November I. I973

n. FAYETTE MALL

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on

Dorms open Thanksgiving
for UK-Tennessee game

For the first lime residence
halls will be opened for students
during the Thanksgiving holiday.
All residence halls will close 6
pm. Wednesday, Nov. 21. and
reopen Friday. Nov. 23, at 3 pm.

The halls are being opened for
those students living on campus
who want to go to the Kentucky-
Tennessee football game
scheduled Saturday, Nov. 24.

“THIS IS something we are
doing in support of the athletic
program and in the students'
interest." said Rosemary Pond,
associate dean of students.

“The staff is receiving no
compensation for this extra time.
They are doing it out of the
goodness of their hearts and for
the students who want to see the
game."

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REVEL'S

According to the contract
signed by students living in
residence halls. the halls are to
be closed during the four day
holiday. There is no indication
that opening the halls for
Thanksgiving will be the policy in
the future.

“THIS IS NOT a precedent
setting situation. We are only
doing it this year in consideration
of the students who want to see
the Tennessee football game.“
said Pond.

()1in the students living in
residence halls will be allowed to
return early to their rooms.

The students will not he
allowed to have overnight guests
or visitation during the weekend
“We just won‘t be able to afford
to accommodate the guests or
open house privileges,"
Pond.

RI‘X'RI‘IA'I‘IUN AREAS. the
(‘omplex Commons and all
cafeterias will be closed during
the vacation.

said

"I don't think there will be any
trouble for the students to eat
during the holiday. There are
plenty of good restaurants in the
area that they can go to.“ she
said.

“The Student Center may open
a grill during the weekend, but I
have not contacted them to find
out exactly what they plan to do."
said Pond.

('AMPL'S FACILITIES will
return to the regular schedule
Sunday, Nov. 25. at 1 pm.

SHOES.

IN THE LANE ALLEN PLAZA

MEN’S CONVERSE

2 Models—"Coach"
and "Fast Break"

Sizes 4 to 12

Blue, BIICk,
and White

Famous Brands

MEN’S BOOTS

and SHOES

mod and consarvltivo than,

many styles, designs, brands.

Save $5 to $25

$1250..$24”

REVEL'S

LANE ALLEN RD.

HOUR :

look with null-d and walking huh

Mon.-Thur.-Fri.-Sat. 10-9
Tum-Wei. 10-6

   
  
   
  
 

SHOES

278-7614 ,

 
 

 

  

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Population rise not myth;

'result of four revolutionS'

By MIKE CUNNINGHAM
Kernel Staff Writer

“We do have a population
explosion, it is not a cliche of
journalists," Dr. Sripati Chan-
drasekhar, former Indian
Minister of Health and Family
Planning said Tuesday night in a
lecture sponsored by the
sociology department.

Everyone who believes every
person on earth is entitled to
adequate food, clothing, shelter,
public health, education, leisure
and recreation time, should be
interested in this problem, said
the former director of
demographic research of United
Nations Educational, Scientific,
and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO).

NUT l'NTIl. 1810 did the
earth‘s population reach the one
billion mark, Chandrasekhar
said. About one hundred years
later, the population had doubled.
It now stands at 3.68 billion.

At a conference of
demographers held in Belgrade,
Yugoslavia in 1964, “all agreed
that by 2000 AD, we shall not
have one billion but four billion
more, a population of 7.5 to 8
billion,“ said Chandrasekhar.

The huge population increase
resulted from four evolutions, he
said.

“THE FINDING of
agriculture," he said, “was the
first serious effort to quench the
thirst and hunger of man."

The second, the industrial
revolution, caused “more ur-
banization, more manufacturing,

 

more commodities, more sweat,
more toil, more misery,"
Chandrasekhar said.

Because of the transportation
revolution, the world in a very
real sense has become tiny and
interdependent, he said.

THE FINAL revolution, in
health care, has caused the
“death rate to come down in
dramatic fashion." “They are

thinking of making health con-

tagious,” he said.

Chandrasekhar focused on the
population problems of China and
India.

In 24 years of communist rule
the death rate in China has
dropped from 30 per thousand to
15 per thousand. The infant
mortality rate has been reduced
from 250 to 50 per thousand
births, he said.

A LARGE PART of this is due
to better sanitation, he explained.

This has resulted in a
population of 850 million persons,
which may reach one billion by
the turn of the century if birth
and death rates remain constant,
he said.

The Chinese are combating the
problem by enforcing
puritanism, and proclaiming in
the media “that good com-
munists have only two children,"
said Chandrasekhar.

INDIA'S population of 565
million would increase to nearly
one billion by century’s end if
birth and death rates remained
unchanged, he said.

Sterilization is the most im-
portant method of checking
population growth in India, ac-
cording to Chandrasekhar, where
13.6 million Indians have un-
dergone voluntary sterilization.

The pill, condoms, and abortion
are other means employed to
combat the 2.2 per cent annual
rise in population, he said.

A LARGE AMOUNT of
American aid has been with-
drawn since the U.S. supported
Pakistan, during its war with
India, nearly two years ago,
Chandrasekhar explained.

“Affluent nations in the West
must give all the help it can to
India, since it can be a stabilizing
force in Asia," he concluded.

Impeachment forum set
for tomorrow afternoon

An impeachment forum, ex-
plaining the various implications
concerning the process and the
position of the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU) on the
matter will be held Friday at 3
pm. in room 108 of the Com-

9%....

l Pep Rally m‘:
Tonight
After the Parade

at Stoll Field .

 

W“.

TONITE

LEXINGTON
DRIVE IN

Just a short drive south on
Lime US 27. Students use
Free drivers pass in Coupon

IDI-l AS" 1 ID
IUIIC ICON! l I 800k.

212‘ 365'

free

BIWCI ll!

NOW SHOWING

Photos of Bruce Lee — Ist 200 Adm. Each Night

2.

Brucelee

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“Fists ot Fury”

,0
(ab - A National General Plumes blame ® [R]

Bonus Hit - Fri.-Sat. only

SIX MEN OUT OF HELL.

THE REVENGEBS!

PANAVIHII ‘N‘ POL-«3% COLOR BY DE LUXE.

merce Building.

Participants will include:
Robert Sedler, law professor; Al
Goldman, law professor and
representative of ACLU; Robert
Ireland, history professor and a
political science professor.

m

"In? oi;“'.'_..' -W- V, _L
mm mm: '7 .h ulos MN!
haul-N. mourn ham, “‘9‘ «II Oculrlim I)! OIIMI

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muta- lull

rahI ’11.: "To (:3 15:27%E.?

The Best Harvest Buys
are

Classified

      

THEKENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, November I, 1973—5

“A BLACK DOT IN THE SKY”
Paintings by
JIMMIE G