xt79kd1qjq5d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79kd1qjq5d/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-03-24 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, March 24, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 24, 1976 1976 1976-03-24 2020 true xt79kd1qjq5d section xt79kd1qjq5d Kidney victims
living normally

with transplants

Vol. LXVII No. 135
Wednesday, March 24,1976

By JAMIE LL'CKE
Assistant Managing Editor

John Baker plays squash, is working on
a doctorate in physiology. and has a
transplanted kidney. Six years ago his
mother donated the kidney and Baker
became the 45th kidney transplant patient
at the University Medical Center. Since

then ova 200 kidney transplants have been-

performed at the Medical Center and
thousands nationwide.~

Seated at a desk in his laboratory-Office
at the Medical Center, Baker, a Central
Kentucky Kidney Foundation Board of
Directors member said “I think I live a
normal life. I’m not sure that the

K3?“

' - an independent student newspaper}

Room and board will not
increase during 1976-77

President Otis Singletary announced
today that room and board rates at UK will
not be increased next school year.

“I a m especially gratified that we will be
able to hold the line on charges in the 1976-
7] school year for University housing and
meal plans,” Singletary said.

He said the decision to maintain current
rates in the new school year came after a
review of the housing and dining budget,
and assurance by Jack Blanton, vice
preside‘ for business affairs, that stable
rates next year will in no way jeopardize
the financial position of the University's
dormitory and cafeteria operations.

Singletary said, “This action should
contribute to keeping higher education
costs within an affordable range for our
students. I am aware of the inflationary
pressures college students and their
families have faced in recent years. The
decision on room and board rates will put
no additional cost burden on students in
the new year."

According to Blanton, who has
responsibility for housing and dining, the

decision to maintain the status quo on
rates is attributable to several factors:

-Virtual 100 per cent occupancy of all
dormitories anticipated next school year.

—The success of the University ’5 energy
corservation program.

—A substantial increase in the sale of
board contracts to students not residing in
dormitories.

—Construction of a new freezer plant
that will enable mass buying of frozen food
items at considerable savings.

—A new computerized program to cost
out food prices by portions, and maintain
better menu and inventory control.

—Cooperation by students in reducing
amounts of uneaten food that has to be
thrown away.

In identifying the above factors that
Blanton said have “made it possible to
keep housing and dining costs at the same
levd next year," he gave credit to “the
creative management team that oversees
our dormitories and cafeterias.”

The schemle of housing and dining
charges next year is as follows:

operation has affected me a lot—I do
pretty much what I want to do.”

“Sane people who have had transphnts
feel lucky to be alive. Butl don’t think that
way. I feel like I’m going to have a normal
life span," Baker said.

Baker and thousands of other successt
tramplant patients are living proof that
kidney transplants aren’t just ex-
perimental operations, a common
misconception, according to Jeanette
Lucas, Central Kentucky Kidney Foun-
dation president-elect and state Phoenix
Project chairman.

“The public still thinks of transplants as
experimental. But doctors have had 15
years of ex perience with transplants. The

medical profession accepts tramplants. ‘
More than 5,000 Americans have tran-
splanted kidneys. And there are thousands
with restored sight as a result of cornea
transplants.”

But not every patient who requires a
tramplant ins a living relative to donate
the needed kidney. “Only about 20 per
cent have living relative donors. The other
80 per cent’s only chance depends on an
after life gift from a donor," Lucas said.

At any one time in Kentucky more than
50 patiens are waiting for a donated
kidney, and some have been waiting for
longer than two years, she said.

continued on page 12

2] University of Kentucky -

Lexington, Kentucky

.-

Tornado?

Joe W. Bell begins cleaning up what
was left of his born after it was
destroyed in a storm Saturday night.

State police said there was no official
tornado sighting, but Bell and resid-
ents of nearby Clintonville, Ky. said
the damage they suffered was proof

enough.

 

UNDERGRADUATE

l916~77 ROOM AND BOARD RATES

1

Per School Year

Room and choice of any two meals (7 days)
Room and choice ofany two meals (5 days)
Room and three meals per day (7 days)

A 810 iaciliies fee for residence hall programming is not
included above.

PROFESSIONAL STUDENTS - Room Only
Single Occupancy
Double Occupancy

BOARD ONLY CONTRACTS
Any two meals (7 days)
Any two meals (5 days)
Three meals per day (7 days)

SINGLE GRADUATE HOUSING (Cooperstown - Room
Only)

Efficiency Apartment (2 occupants)

One-bedroom Apaertment (2 occupants)

MARRIED STUDENT HOUSING
Efficiency Apartment
(he-bedroom Apartment
Two-Bedroom Apartment

MEN'S AND WOMEN'S RESIDENCE HALLS
Single room occupancy -
K Double room occupancy

 

".2004”
8|,120.00
”300.!”

8 1914.00
8 734.00

Per Month
3 105.00

3 120.00
3 130.!»

Summer Term
8 200.00

8 room ' J

 

 

    

  

 

 

 

..r1\t?,-' ' ' Y

editorials

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chiel

Ginny Edwards

Managing .Editor

 

Editorials do not represent the opinions o! the University.

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

 

 

 

 
  
   
    
    
      
   
  
   
    
   
      
  
    
  
  
   
   
   
  

SG voting regulation

violates fair elections

The Student Senate's passage
last night of a new Student Govern-
ment (SG) election regulation that
places a polling booth in a Greek
house violates any neutrality or
obiectivity that is traditionally
assoicated with carrying out fair
elections.

In the past, SG presidential
elections have usually boiled down
to a race between a Greek and a
non-Greek candidate. To keep any
one group from unduely pressuring
voters, polling booths have been
restricted to such neutral grounds
as the Classroom Building, Student
Center or the M. I. King Library.

A fraternity or sorority house,
however, is by no means a neutral
ground in which to carry out an
election if for no other reason than
simply because—as a rule—
Greeks strongly rally behind their
chosen candidate. There is nothing
wrong with strongly supporting
any single candidate; however,
purposely placing a voting booth in
the center of such activity gives the
candidate receiving the support an
unfair advantage.

Furthermore, Greeks are a part
of this campus iust as much as any

other student, so there is really no
reason to designate a voting place
for the convenience of Greeks. If
this practice is followed to its
logical extreme, there might as
well be voting booths in the
international students office, the
minority student affairs office and
even the newsroom of the Kentu-
cky Kernel.

ln passing the new election
regulation, the Senate did stipulate
that the designated special Greek
polling booth could not be placed in
a fraternity or sorority that houses
any candidate for 56 office. But
this stipulation still does not chan-'
ge the fact that Greeks are
dedicated to supporting Greeks.

It is disappointing that the
Senate decided to designate as a
voting area such a politically
active are as a Greek house. Since
this new regulation has already
been passed by the Senate, we can
only hope that Greeks might be
able to separate themselves from
actively supporting Greek candid-
ates and housing a voting booth
that should be free from all
political pressures.

 

Abortion
Editor:

The area of abortion is a very
opinionated topic. In as much, this
letter will deal with ideals and not
absol utes.

Few embryologists would say that a
fetus is an individual. It is a mass of
cells that has the potential to become as
much but isnot. Weare dealing with an
organism which, as such, is nothing
moreat besta very primitive mammal.

The slaughtering of more advanced
forms of animals are carried out every
day to augment the needs of our
society. Abortion is something we need
as a society. If we use abortion only as
another means to control the population
it would be iustified to myself. But,
there are so many other reasons.

How many kids did you go to high
school with who “had to get married?"
These young people that were not
educated properly about birth control

Letters

 

must pay for the remainder of their
lives for a few moments of pleasure. To
me, this is wrong. These people should
be able to choose the lives they want for
themselves.

What happens without abortion? A
new family is created. lfy0u want to be
very idealistic go ahead and believe
that they live happily ever after. This
might happen some of the time. But
what happens much too frequently?
The offspring could be abandoned by
the parents, which does happen. Or
worse, in my belief, the offspring is
blamed for the shortcomings of the
parents’ limited lives. This usually
ends in socially , and-or mentally
disturbed children, broken homes or
runaways.

Through abortion are we destroying
one life or creating two? I chose the
latter.

C. Wayne Catrou
Chemistry senior'

 

worm:

'MM’M’ 1'-

W

 

 

’.'

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

M Mr
mg l3¢

 

  
 
 
   
  
  
   
    
   
   
   
   
    
  
   
    
    
   
   
   
   
    
   
     
   
  
  
  
   
    

   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   

 

Bicentennial shows a masculine flavor

 

By Letty Pogreb'n

New Ya'k T‘mes News Service

As we lurch or strut toward the
United States’ July superbirthday, I’m
feeling like a wallflower at the

Bicentennial Ball. Betsy Ross' and
Molly Pitcher were good ”helpers,“ but
they iust don't inspire patriotic ecstasy.

Indeed, the whole masculine,
militaristic flavor of the celebration
turns me off.

Maybe women should use I976 to
challmge the American dream, not
celebrate it. Afterall, l776was the year
women‘s powerlessness was first en-
sh rinedinthe Constitution. In response
to his own wife Abigail‘s plea to
"Remember the Ladies,“ the otherwise
enlightened John Adams wrote, "I
cannot but laugh. . . . We know better
than to repeal our MaSCuline systems."

In 1976. the laughter has faded, but
women’s grievances are still being
dismissed as boring and trivial. In
magazine articles and personal
arguments, ”Total Women“ and their
Frederick’s of Hollywood costumes are
being used to put down serious women
and their demands for change.

Now when we campaign for an equal
rights amendment to rectify our
”forefathers‘" omission we are greeted
with hy sterical—and untrue—warnings
about coed bathrooms (what kind do
you have in your house, anyway?) and
fragile daughters in the infantry (what
makes us more willing to kill off our
sons than our daughters?).

In employment, women of all races

 

'Maybe woman should use 1976
to challenge the American dream,
' not celebrate it'

(and minority men) are the most
first

vulnerable to the ”last hired,
fired” principle. Affirmative action
programs for women have been eroded
by layoffs. The lack of available child

care puts women at a further disad- '

vantage.

As for ”equal pay for equal work,"
that remains a cruel myth. According
to the United States census, working

men earned more than women in every
kindergarten

except
full-time working

occupation
teaching; overall,

women average only 61 cents for every
dollar men make. Furthermore, in 1973
not one of the 500 largest United States
corporations was found in compliance

with antidiscrimination laws.

There are other harbingers of
President
Ford deemed it impossible to find a
woman for the United
States Supereme Court, and instead
named John Paul Stevens, who has
that sex

backlash and regression.

”qualified”

ruled in several cases
discrimination is legitimate.

The President also criticized the I973
Supreme Court abortion decision and
favored state control over a woman's
private reproductive freedom—in both
cases against the expressed opinion of
his wife. Thanks to Abigail Adams and
Betty Ford, we have learned that we
cannot marry power,- we must have it
ourselves.

 

On an international scale, we saw the
bitter fruits of patriarchal domination
at the International Women’s Year
conference in Mexico City last summer.

Delegates who were puppets of their
cauntries; nationalist policies emerged
from this women’s meeting with a
resolution condemning Zionism as
racism, but they reiected mention of
the word ”sexism.”

Even in the spiritual realm, II
women ordained as Episcopal priests
are still unauthorized and punished for
administering sacraments. More
recently, Pope Paul VI cautioned that
giving women power "runs the risk of
virilizing and depersonalizing them”
because motherhood is of "prime
importance" to all women. The
Vatican seems unavirare that millions
of women laboring to support hungry
families cannot afford to luxuriate in

the Madonna role.
Even the sexual uses of women are

getting more sinister. In addition to
rape, pornography and prostitution, we
now have "snuff films," presented as a
real, you-are-there slaughter of a
woman hired to "act" in the movie——
and this is presented as titillating.
With so much real suffering in full
view, why has news media attention

been lavished on the inevitable pockets

of dissension in the women’s movement
itself? After to years of consci0usness-

raising, hearings and legal battles, why
are some people still debating whether
or not iniustice exists? During hard
times (war, reconstruction, depression,
unemployment) why is it always‘
women who are asked to step aside in
favor of men, no matter what the real
need of the individuar may be?

Nobody had to teach blacks how to
recognize racism, yet millions of
women are still unable to identify
sexism. Or perhaps these women
refuse to enter the struggle because the
enormity of the task extinguishes their
hopes, and the reward for effort is as
likely to be ridicule or hostility as
progress.

So let’s change the time frame. Let’s
admit that it will take a lot more than
200 years to declare women in
dependent. Not only becuase the very
concept of the independent woman is
still a cultural anathema, but because
too many of us are still dependent on
men for survival, and ”men know
better than to repeal their Masculine
systems." Asking men to Remember
the Ladies iust won't do. We must
speak for ourselves, fight for ourselves,
invent our own futures.

In the nation’s third century, let us
celebrate the Bicentennial in the only
way that makes sense. By using our
vote, our voice and our rage to plot the
next and deepest American
Revolution—the one that trees the real
silent maiority: womankind.

 

Letty Cottin Pogrebin is an editor of
Ms. magazine.

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

M

spectrum

Nobody knew_who
Little Richard was

This past weekend, for reasons
that are still not entirely clear, I
drove to Louisville to see the
Uriah Heep concert. Now I
haven’t been to a concert in
almost two years—l gave up on
them because of the bad quality
of the music and because the
crowds had degenerated into

such low parodies of the Woodst-
ock trip. And I’ve been saying
some fairly heavy things about
the idiocy of the whole scene ever
since.

 

 

But. .
virtue I claim for my own, so I
decided, with a novelist’s fine
sense of timing, to break my long
boycott and check out the action.
As Kentucky’s semi-official
(some would say self-appointed)
Court Historian of Hip, it seemed
only proper to do so, seeing as
how the groovy rock concert is
iust about the last remaining
outpost of 60's consciousness in
action, or so you would think.

At any rate, I went. And even I.
in the advanced stages of my
terminal cynicism, was stunned.
The first thing I noticed was the
youngness of the crowd. The
median age seemed to be about
16. And I saw 13 and I4 year olds
getting wasted on huge bomber
ioints—their young eyes already
glazed over in that burned~out

.openmidedness is one

doper stare. . .wasted psychede-
lic ghosts already, and not yet
fully into puberty. Generation
Gap! I felt like ripping the
goddamned numbers from their
lips and giving them a lecture
about the evils of dope. Or calling
their parents and giving them
hell about letting their kids get
involved in a scene like this. . . .

The first act—Skyhook—came
on, announced by some sort of
"dramatic” explosion on stage.
Skyhook is your average fag-glit-
ter-theatre-rock group, and they
play you average uninspired,
incomprehenisible music—if you
have to dress up like subhuman
peacocks to excite a crowd you
know your music lacks some-
thing. At any» rate. they opened
with some gibberish song about
"Whatever happened to the re-
volution?. . .We all got stoned and
it went away.“ Indeed. The
words made some sense, at least
to me, but here was Skyhook, a
living embodiment of every ran-
cid thing that went wrong with
the movement, singing those
noble sentiments. Everything
was suddenly thrown out of
synch, and I was badly shaken.
Historians shouldn’t be forced to
cope, face to face, with the
messes that great events leave
behind.

Ah well, things look to improve
when Little Richard, the second
mening act, came on. The King
of Rock and Roll, an early and
potent inspiration to the Beatles.
lwas sure he'd clear my palate of
the bad taste left by Skyhook.

And he might have. Except for
the fact that not 20 people in the
crowd knew who the hell Little
Richard was (I swear to Christ,

.- g a}; “ \
, ,n‘4‘&\\\\\

 

some stoned-out 15 year old next
to me turned and asked if he was
Uriah Heep) and, further,
couldn’t have cared less. Add to
that the fact that the sound
system was so bad that all I
heard was a lot of low rumble
spiced with a few melodramatic
bleats from the demonically out-
of-fune (is that possible?) saxo-
phone, and, well, my mood was
not getting any better.

Uriah Heep finally came on,
with a sly promise that they’d
“try not to break any bones
tonight." Jesus, they didn’t try
hard enough! Despite the fact
that I’d moved back to what I
considered a safe distance, and
had huge wads of cotton stuffed in
each ear, I was assaulted by a
killer wall of noise the likes of
which I’ve never encountered.
From the first banshee guitar riff
to the last forests-crashing drum
thud, my head bounced and
throbbed as if
inside a huge metal can hold-
ing a pound of uncut smack, while

20 mean iunkies in withdrawal

were beating on the outside with
ball-peen hammers, trying to get
at the dope. Christ! I've never
heard such volume. The poor
geks who remained standing
cbwn front must have suffered
permanent hearing damage. I'm
not kidding. A iumbo iet landing
in your apartment couldn’t make
any more noise. . . .

And Lord was it oppressive! I
was smothering in the damps of
some hot. Smoky boogie vagina. .
in the fetid flaw of the runaway

madness that issues froth when .

cbpe, technology and twisted
ideological arrogance collide. I
had my satisfaction though every
vvreched thing I'd been saying
about the degeneracy of the youth
culture was confirmed. And in
the cranky arthritic voids of my
old age, every confirmation
comes as a welcome surprise. . . .

As for the quality of the music,
I'm in no position to iudge. I
couldn’t hear anything remotely
oonnected to music—everything
was cranked up to the level of
white noise. But my companion
for the concert, a music and
movie critic of fine and subtle
taste, has told me that some of
Uriah Heep's stuff is excellent.
ru defer to her 'i'udgment. But I'd
like to hear it at a more human
decible level some day.

Anyway, I made my cultural
historical foray, and here's my
report: Things haven’t changed.
Fact, they’re probably worse
than before.

I think I’ll spend next weekend
down at O'Keefe’s.

 

Soott Payton graduated from UK
in I973. He is a former contribut-
orto Rolling Stone magazine and
a retired boxing promoter who
currently lists his occupation as
”speculator." His column, "Ten
Years On,” appears weekly in the
Kernel.

 

l were sealed .

    
 
 
    
     
  
     
   
   
  
  
  
  
  

 

   
           

  
  
   
 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL'. wednesday. Mam fl. IND—3

Mel Brooks’

BMNG SZDDLES

from the Mpeople who gave you “The Jan Singer”

E3

'0'qu ammo-u.

Fayette Mall * Soulhlaml 68 II. I.

343 yum
W933

J-Sll WY
SURPLUS

° Pre~Washed Jeans 36.99—12.99

. Fatigues, Navy 8. Khaki Pants from 25 waist it up
oaook Bags and Back Packs

oTents, Sleeping Bags 8. Camping Equipment

° Freeze Dried Foods

109 N. BROADWAY

Li? W”

254-7613

ILME. 5T9IIE' mmrg
9f-FlIlE unm- (.9993:

muse- nimwrurmesinm
rcemmwmmwcusmwem

OPEN-lO-‘i-M-I‘flGZ-SIIF I’ll-2726264

 

 

    
  

 

 

 

EASTERN KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
EDUCATIONAL TOUR COURSES—SUMMER 1976

Education in the British Caribbean—Trinidad

June 2—16

8850 travel and most expenses

Education in Great Britain—London

June 30—July

22

moo travel, living accomodations, most meals
native instructors, visits to schools, sightseeing
enrollment deadline March 31

for furthur information contact:

Dr. William McKenney

Dept. of Educational Foundations
Eastern Kentucky University
Richmond, KY. 40475

(606) 622-22”

 

 

  

iswm

006835 99388.5

The Original
Duckhead Dealer In

laxington

White Duckhead Painter
Blue Duckhead Painter
Blue I’ve-washed Painters

White 8: Blue Bibs
Brush Denim Painters

361 W. Main

lex., Ky.

 

  
  
  
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
     

  

«t—‘I'HE kE’N‘t‘UCkY «await-mime. km» a. rm t H

 

4,-..

 

 

THE FIRST KENTUCKY KERNEI.

photo
contest

------------_----------I
lst Prize 2nd Prize 3rd Prize 3 Merit
Awards

$50 $35 $25 $10ea.

Gift Gift Gift Gift
' Cert. Cert. Cert. Certs.

 

 

 

 

Gift Certificate from Fayette Foto, Gardenside Plaza

Rules:

l entry form

r--

NAME
ADDRESS

PHONE

Unlimited subject.

. lst, 21d, 3rd, and 3 Merit Awards given . .

. No cash will be awarded. Giftcertiticate value must be taken If! merdiandrse from Fayette Foto.

. May submit as many photos as desired.

. May be taken with anycama’aandblack swhite film

Must be black andwnites x to, unmounted and unpublished.

. Errrant mist be a UKstudent, faculty, or staff member. _

All winning photos become property of The Kentucky Kernel, Mlo reserves the right to use them and
plrotog'apher‘s nameinany mannertor publishinqintheKa'nel. _ .

9. Non-winning macs will be returned it sent with a self-adressed stained envelop of suitable sore and with the
prmer backing material.

to. No persons paid byTheKentucky Kernel or Kentuckian areelig'ble.

it. Judging will be by Mr. Ralph Jolnson, former AP photogramer and photography instructor,- Alen Won,
asSislant phaogramy instrucbr and David Denemark, assistant Madly instructor.

12. J decision is final. _ ,

til.~ \Mnning pmtos will be published in The Kentucky Kernel.

14. Absolute deadlineis Apritt, ms

rs. Donotsubm’t contactsheetsorneqatives. . . . .
16. thos will be iudged on ( I) General Appeal, (2) Creatrvrty, and (3) Technical quality.

17. No pu‘chase required. . _ ,

rs. Photos should be submittedwith names of all idemtrableoersom aid standad release lorms if maessary.

l9. Eurants should complete general entry form below, and also include his or her name, adaess, aid exposure
dataon arattadied pieceotpaperontl'ebackoteadrplnto.

20. Mai ordeliver printsto PhotoContest, Kentucky Kentel, Rm "4 Journalism milding.

guru-bun.—

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CI Student Number of prints
E Faculty submitted—

D Staff

-----J

 

‘..r‘l.- ‘.____ A

 

 

7
fl news briefs

Officials sample air
g in Scotia coal mine

LOUISVILLE (AW—Federal officials took samples of air
’l‘ursday from the Southeast Kentucky coal mine where 3 men died
in two explosions two weeks ago. But it will be several days before
the results of the tests are released, officials said.

The tests are being made to find out if the mine is still too
dangaous to recover the bodies of ll men left there.

OW. Harris of the US. Mining Enforcement and Safety Ad-
ministration said the air samples woulc‘ be tested at a small
laboratory set up near the mine, at Oven Fork. However, he said,
the samples would also be sent to a larger laboratory at Mt. Hope,
W.Va.

The tests will made every day, and it may be some time before
any difference is noticed, Harris said.

“The results of the first test will beabout the same thing as they
had when they sealed it,” Harris said. “It’s not enough time. "

'l‘he mine was sealed after two methane gas explosions killed 26
men. It won’t be reopened until the oxygen level drops below 3 per
cent. according to state Mining Commissioner H.N. Kirkpatrick.

Kirkpatrick said it would be impossible for methane gas in the
mine to explode again if there is less than 3 per cent oxygen in the
shaft. He said officials may try to get the level as low as 1 percent
before sending in crews to get the bodies.

Hospital residents
threaten strike

WASHINGTON (AP)—A spokesman for a group of hospital in-
terns and residents today warned of strikes in the nation’s teaching
hospitals following a ruling that they are not eligible under federal
law to be represented by a union for collective bargaining. ,

Dr. Robert G. Harmon, Physicians National Housestaff
Association president, called the decision by the National Labor
Relations Board (NLRB) an outrage, and said members are calling
for more militant action as a result.

“There’s a lot of anger out there,” Harmon told a news con—
t‘erence. “This is the first time that doctors have turned to the
NLRB for relief. Apparently, the NLRB has proscribed hospital
strikes as the only cure.”-

High court rules officials
may defame individuals

“ASIIINGTON (AW—The Constitution does not always protect a
private person from being defamed by public officials, the
Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.

In a 5-3 decision, the court held that Louisville police were within
their rights in , distributing to shopkeepers the names and

i5 phdtograpls of persons who had been arrested, but not necessarily
convicted, on shoplifting charges.

The procedure was challenged by Edward Charles Davis III,

7then a photographer for the Courier-Journal and Times, who was
labeled an “active shoplifter" on a f lyer distributed by polic in 1972.
Davis had been arrested 17 months earlier on a shopliftingcharge
which was subsequently dismissed. .r‘f. '

He contended that police had placed a “badge of infamy” on him
without giving him a chance to defend himself as guaranteed by the
due process clause of the Constitution.

Actor tries to kill Lockheed lobbyist

TOKYO (AP)—A young actor in a World War II Kamikaze
uniform deliberately crashed his light plane into the home of
Yoshio Koda ma in an attempt to kill the powerful lobbyist named in
the Lockheed payorfs, police said Tuesday.

Investigation indicated that Mitsuyasu Maeno, 29, was trying to
make a suicide attack similar to those carried out by Kamikaze
pilots against US. warships in the closing days of World War 11,
police said.

Only Maeno died when the plane hit the second floor balcony
Tuesday and set the house afire. The 65-year-old Kodama,
bedridden with the effects of a stroke two years ago, escaped injury
along with 11 other persons in the house.

Police said Maeno had been critical of Kodama, to whom
Lockheed says it paid more than $7 million to promote aircraft
sales in Japan, and frequently told friends that the wealthy lobbyist
was not being a warrior with the samurai spirit.

——1§eri“)el———

 

 

5‘5?
$533
iii.
dig;
a S
3!;
il
ii

i;
ii:
a:
if
fl

Il
I
'i
5:
I
C

.2,
ll
4

l
l
l
l

r
I
l
3
3
l
l

l

 

 

 

 

  

 
  
  
 
 
 
  
 

 

 

 

Donovan advisory group~

to discuss fund proposals

The advisory committee for the
Donovan Trust Fund will meet
April 12 to consider and evaluate
proposals suitable for funding by
the Donovan Trust Fund.

The committee solicits
recommendations from the
University community which
meet provisions contained in the
will of Herman Lee Donovan,
fomier UK president:

-ln\estment income may be
used for the promotion and
creation of an atmosphere and
environment of culture,
refinement and gentility to en-
courage the growth of students
into gentle men and women
whose edum lions may reflect the
influence of such an atmosphere
and environment;

—The investment income may
be used to enrich educational
opportunity by providing in-
creased stimulus to students to
cultivate and develop into men
and women with an appreciation
of the qualities of beauty and
loveliness; and

—The investment income may
not be spent for ordinary oc-
curring expenses of University
operation and maintenance.

All proposals must be sub-
mitted to the committee chair-
person in Medical Center Annex
2. 11!) B. by April 9.

YWCA to hold
‘Women in law'

forum today

The Lexington YWCA will hold
a forum entitled "Women in
Law" today from 12-130 pm. at
the YWCA. 161 North Mill.

The program is the third in a
series of four “Women in Action”
cvents included in a public affairs
forum. being sponsored by the
YWCA.

UK law professor Carolyn
Bratt will be the featured speaker
at today’s session. The next
forum is scheduled for April 21
with the theme “Women in
Politics” to be discussed.

Urban County Council mem-
bers Pam Miller, Mary Mangione
and Eleanor Leonard will be
featured at the April forum.

The Sound Compong

  

  
  

KOSS

PRO 4/AA
HEADPHONES

 

 

 

 

MON-TUES
II AM-D PM

WED-THURS-
FRI
II AM-9 PM

SATURDAY
II AM-6 PM

 

CREDIT

Financing
Available
on

Approved
Credit.

   

 

     

rm: mrueuvxmm Wed-«uyiM-rrl ”51.7”! .

 

 

    
  
   
  
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
     
    
  
    
  
  
  
    
   

    

Q The FUTURE TBLLBRS

Tonight
8:00 pm

 

 
  
 

museum
ADMISSION FREE

   

 

 

Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
    
 

CLeaneHs—‘I—

Oievyalse
Lem Nut
m
W that

W i

THURSDAY IS UII DAY!

All UK Students 8. Faculty Special Values!

TROUSERS, SKIRTS,
SWEATERS, SPORT COATS

 

Wall
Tm WI
VI'S‘IIG M
ED! Hm

PLAIN DRESSES, TOPCOATS,

PANT SUITS, 09
1
‘

MEN'S SUITS

  
 
 
  
  

 
 
  
  
 
 

 
 
    
 
 

SHIRTS

  

lAUNDERED TO
PERFECTION

FOLDED OR ON HANGERS

 lr-I-‘I‘IIE KENTUCKY KERNBL. WM“ March 2!. I916

The Sound Company

RTR EXP-8
$69.00

$89.00 ea. List price

 

SPECINCATIONS (KR-I

Entlosuve: (.enume h.t!\(l»tul)ht~(l walnut tenet-vs ' Silo: ll'f‘ I I9"-
\ 8'0” (lfi‘p ' Shipping Weight; 23 lbs - frequency Response: 40 to
20 000 Ml ' Speaker (maternal: i 8" woutw With lmtyl roll and 1"
hand epuued vim et Jll,‘ W." high (k'llfllltofl tweeter wilh (Utildtl
damping and V." H- Power VON e ( ml ‘ Crossover frequency: 2000
HI ' Impedance, Nominal: aohms ' Recommended Amp Power: It)
tobt) walls RM”) ‘ Controls: (.onlmuuusly variable tweeter level.
xix-aim! pth l t in wt hlt‘ka‘i vulh push button reset dual 5 was
binding pm!

 

 

 

 

 

$l49.95 ea.

 

(Lt-mum- hand rubbed ( lll\\()\l" ill!) in
walnut veneers ,H't’tlt'lltu's

NW" l 5 '1': " I ll‘ 2 " Impmlanrn it ohms
(loop \‘nnmml

kt-mnmwmlwl 3m mam. this
i: u-znumm in.“ Plint‘l

i ~ '1" wnou-vwnh ( mum ( unlmmmslv mum.-
”gull/ed : one and im-i-lw lt'\t'l VDI'Jkl'l
J" hmd rimmed W'U‘ ‘Hllll‘t‘ z in mi liwalu'v
(ml t i'-' hluh ulllt iunhliulltm moi
tiplmuum tww'tev Wllh in”; v, w,“ binding
“mm 1 dimpmg and mm

u ’ ll- Power \uue

uni

 

 

 

 

 

$289.00 ea. List price

___._—
fnrlotun‘ Crossovel hequenrv

Hand rubbed wainul veneers i500 H1 and 750) Hz

$1"- Impedanre

14"." r it," I 13' deep 5 ohms nominal

Shipping Weight Rnommended Amp Power

72 lbs i‘: lo 100 watts continuous
[requem y Rtnpulne "“0 5 OWN

10m 25 000 Ht ('onuolt

Mldvange and tweelev

l ontmuously unable controls.
speak" proieu rum-I breal"
twnth pushbullon veseli. dual
5 way binding post

Speaker (‘omplcmeni

One 11" passive ”diam: one
I)” wmlev with 1" you 0 (out,
one 5” mu‘irangr Iwn 2‘31" high
impedanu- tweeters. one 1‘
mind «me super tweeter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

OPEN CREDIT

”013:3?" Financing
' Available

WED-THURS- on

FRI A
pprovod
ll AM 9 PM Credit.

SATURDAY
ll AM-6 PM

407 SOUTH LIMESTONE

CPHE denies law student
in-state tuition status

By JAMIE LL‘CKE
Assistant Managing Editor
and
MONTY .\’. FOLEY
Kernel Staff it riter

For the fifth time, UK law
student Bill Davis has been
denied in-state tuition status.

The latest refusal came
Tuesday afternoon when a
Council on Public Higher
Education (CPHE) committee
u