xt7b8g8fj73j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7b8g8fj73j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-10-25 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, October 25, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 25, 1974 1974 1974-10-25 2020 true xt7b8g8fj73j section xt7b8g8fj73j l'l‘l(l(t v. October 3."). 1974

an independent student newspaper

Gaines appointed
employe counselor

In st s.\\ .iosr:s
Kernel Staff “riter
Victor (iaines has been appointed to the
newly created position of employe
counselor by President tilts A. Singletary .
(iatnes. who completed an inventory of
l'niversily minority progratns ()ct .‘i. was
hired 'I‘ucsday

'l‘lltl .ltilt of lhe employe counselor is to
any iionsfaculty employe ol the
t niverstty who desires such assistance in
dealing with a complaint concerning any
aspect ot her employment."
acconl mg to a memorandum released liy
Singletary w hich announced
appointment

“l hopeetttploy es see tlte creation of this
ollice as an ctfort on the part of the
t niversity to do everything possible to see
that employes are getting a lair shake
without tear of reprisal.” (iaines said

“assist

his or

(iaines'

ltr ltontlappexecutive assistant to the

president. said there was not a great
adjustment in
salan

University

attiiual
as a result of his new position

(iaities' lornier

recieves
Vinson papers

By liltl t l". \\ . SINGLI‘I'I'UN
he! iiel Staff \\ liter

The l K Library Special t'ollections
Department accepted the papers of the
late ('hiel .lustice Fred M Vinson 21 years
alter his death

The late (‘hiel Justice‘s lw‘o sorts. James
and Fred. Jr . turned the papers over to
l’resident (itis :\ Singletary 'l‘hursday
'l'lll‘T I’ \l'l-IRS 420 boxes of
correspondence and over 200 pictures and
pieces of memorabilia are \‘inson's
record of over 30 years of public seryice

Former Supreme (‘ourt Associate
Justice Thomas t'lark. who resigned from
the court iii 1967. presented an overview of
his long acquaintance with \‘inson one of
the few men to serve iii all three brances of
go\et‘nttient

“'l‘lie l'liiel.” as ('lark called \‘inson.
was born in Louisa, Ky in two. He was
graduated lrom (‘entre (‘ollege in l)anville
in most and graduated tirst in his law class
'here Ill ttttl.

Ill-Z |I\li a private law practice until
Hit]. when he became t‘ommonw'ealth
Attorney for the .t‘ltid Judicial District of
Kentucky Later. he went on to the l' 8.
House of Representatives. eventually
becomi g chairman of the tax
subconiiiiiltee ol the Ways and Means

('ontnitttee

t l..\ltl\' S.\Il) in lttittt. when Vinson was
appointed to the l' S l‘ourt of Appeals in
\iashtngton. what is now the “Vinson
('lub" was formed. The idea. (’lark said.
was to have a party every time Vinson got
a new jOl) They ended tip giving nine

(‘ontinued on page it;

tiatnes salary was $28,951 according to the
.\ugust cotnputer payroll print-out
available in Frankfort

“‘I'III-Z S.\l..\ltII-IS are set up on a fiscal
year basis and alter allowmg for normal
salat) adjustment front the last fiscal year
as compared to this fiscal year. which
began in July, there was not much of an
adjustment." (‘Iapp said.

t‘lapp would not reveal (iaines' neW.
higher salary The figure is
available lrom Frankfort.

not yet

liitil the creation of Games position.
similar complaints were handled through
the .\llirmali\. e Office. by
greivancecomniittees set up by Singletary
or throtigh ombuds‘men within individual
departments

.\ction

lilttt III \III.I,I'lIt. l'K personnel
director. said there were approxtmately
ll\ e grievtuices tiled w itli committees last
year "We need a position like this to
.ltl\ Lse llltH' employes on whether or not
they haveany merit to theircase to advise
:liem Il they need to tile a formal
complaint ”

Miller said it would be inappropriate for
his olfice to advise employes because they
are an official part til the grievance
procedure “I have been recommending
that this position be established for almost
.l year.” he said

ttaities said his position was created so
'hat employes would have theleeling there
is a person they can talk to who is tint
supernson anti has an unbiased ear

“I THINK within the l’ersonnel ()ffice
There is a sort til counseling service. but
could be problems with

Continued on page 6

there sortie

143%)“ 2

University of Kentucky
Lexington. Ky. 40506

Kernel Ha" photo by Dav-d Perry

Makin' apple cider

l'he Horticulture (‘lub began its annual ritual of making apple cider 'l‘hursdav
night. The process begins with the picking of apples. then they put the apples
intoa cider press which shreds. squeezes and strains the apples.

Inflation, high food costs cause
rise in food stamp recipients

It) Nlll.l.ll~2l)l'\\
kernel Staff \\ riter

Inflation and rising food costs are
iesponsible tor an increase in the number
tll persons in Fayette (‘ounty receiving
tood stamps

Kernel statt pbdo by Chuck Combes

Former Supreme ('ourt Associate Justice Thomas (‘lark (left) spoke at the
presentation of papers of the late ('hiel Justice Fred M. \‘inson to the
l'tiiversity. The papers consist of t2" boxes of correspondance and over 200
pictures and pieces of memorabilia documenting \‘inson‘s 30 years of public

service.

The number of food stamp reCipients for
this month is loott. compared with 4.600
recipients for October 1973. according to
Michael Strange. a senior worker in the
Fayette (‘ounty lood stamp office.

'I‘lll'Iltl‘Z'S {\(l \\ \Y of determin‘ng ltow
niany ol the total recipients are l'K
students. although there are enough to
cause a backload Strange said.

Strange said thre is no gauge to
determine the reason tor the increase but
“common sense says inflation and
increasing food costs are the reasons."

Strange admitted that his office has a
hackload of cases. caused by the return of
students lor the tall semester

"\\llli.\ Sn many students come in. it
does throw tis ollf “But it‘s the
same as if a big company goes on strike
Itiir t ase w orkei's always have a lull load

he said

so students cause a backload "

“in many cases students are not in as
is dire needs for services as many of our
regular clients," Strange said. “Since we
a oi'k w itli \ery hintted time arid lacilittes.
hey istudentsi sometimes take its away
tront people who need them more.”

ti\ eii with this burden oti services. when
students seek aid from the office they are
still the appointment
.i\ail.tlt|e. Strange stressed

utu‘tt cat‘ltt'sl

it! til“, eligible lor lood stamps. one
place to took not
be a resident of

must have a
necessarily a kitchen.
Fayette (‘ounty and have

sa\ings accounts. properties. stocks and

l't‘Sttli l'Ct‘S

(‘ontinned on page Hi

 

    
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
   

Editor-inchiet, Linda Carries
Managing editor. Ron Mttd'iett
Assocnte editor. Tom Moore

‘eaiures editor, Larry Mead
Arts editor. Greg Hotetich
Sports editor. Jim Mauoni

   
   

editorials

Editorials represent theopimons ot the editors. notthe University

subsidization should be stopped soon

Faculty Club

Student subsidization of the
exclusive Faculty Club is unjust and
should be halted immediately.

In an article in Thursday’s Kernel
(Students help finance Faculty Club.
page 1) it was noted that 1966-67
student fees, which make up most of
the Student Center budget, paid for a
deficit of $13,688 incurred by the club.

Allen Rieman, director of food
services, said his department also lost
approximately $8,000 during 1972-73,
or about $100 a week during the 40
weeks the club is used annually.

Additionally Rieman said only 900
meals are served each week in the
club. He said that number is
decreasing as is membership in the

Letters to the editor

club itself, making its existence
increasingly absurd. '

The housing and dining system is
basically self-perpetuating, with
funds derived from student residence
halls and meal ticket fees and a
portion of the student fee comprising
most of the Student Center budget. It
is obvious that primarily student
money is used to provide pleasurable,
exclusive dining facilities for the 400
faculty, staff and graduate assistants
who comprise the club’s relatively
small membership.

It was also noted that the Faculty
Club has paid a set annual fee of $2,500
every year since 1966, with no
increases for inflationary costs of

maintenance and fuel.

Dr. Willis Sutton, Faculty Club
president, said the interaction among
disciplines is beneficial to faculty
members and justifies its cost.

Interdisciplinary discussion may or
may not be beneficial, but Sutton’s
comment contains two major errors.
First of all he places a ridiculous
price on faculty communication and
secondly, this is done at the expense
of students. Sutton certainly was
correct when he said the Faculty Club
“may be getting a bargain.“

Current Student Center Director
Mary Joe Mertens should waste no
time in conducting a thorough
analysis of exactly how much the

Faculty Club has been subsidized
since 1967, the date of the original
study by former director Frank

Harris.

The story also noted that
unsalaried home economics students
were serving as “interns" in the
Faculty Club. Their work may serve
to offset Rieman‘s spiraling labor
costs, but the situation smells faintlv
of student exploitation.

The Faculty Club‘s continuance
should depend solely on fees from
members. In any case, student
subsidization shold be halted im-
mediately.

 

   
      
   
    
  
     
    
  
      
      
   
    
 
  
  
  
   
  
  
   
  
   
   
 
  
  
  
   

SCB Director resignation story was false

Needless to say, I am very
disappointed and distressed at
the caliber of Kernel reporting.
so evident in Wednesday’s front
page story announcing my
resignation as program director
of the Student Center.

I am not willing. nor will I
accept sketchy and inaccurate
information, misinterpreted
facts and unidentified news
sources whose reactions and
comments were personal and
opinionated and not based on
complete facts, as the basis for a

newsworthy story.
My decision to resign and
return to school to further my

.academic and professional goals

in public relations was my
decision and my decision alone. If
there was any pressure to resign,
that pressure was self-inflicted.

My reasons for resignation
have been clearly stated. My
resignation cannot in all honesty
and fairness to myself, to my
employers and to the Student
Center Board be attributed in any
manner, in part or in full, to a

control struggle between myself
and Student Center Director
Mary Jo Mertens.

I have stated and I will state
again that I feel very strongly
about allowing students who have
accepted the responsibility of
program chairmen the latitude
and flexibility to develop, imple-
ment and carry through success-
fully the programs they feel will
meet the cultural, recreational,
educational and entertainment
needs of this campus, so long as
they program within the budget

 

F

'DOC,

 

 

MY OINDTION IS AGGRAVATID IY PININO FOR MY IICOIDS AND TAPES I
WASHINGTON . . . COULD YOU WIITI M! A PIISCIIPTION IOI THIMT'

limitations established by the
Board itself and do not violate the
rules and regulations governing
student organizations at this
University.

At no given time while l have
been employed as program
director for the Student Center.
did I or Mary Jo Mertens or Dean
of Students Jack Hall ever flatly
refuse to approve the sponsorship
of a Student Center Board
program, unless it was for
financial reasons, wherein the
Board did not have the funds. or if
by spending those funds. other
Student Center programs would
have been monetarily limited,

In short. I cannot tell the
Kernel, and in particular.
managing editor Ron Mitchell.
what to believe, and ultimately
what to print in a news story. 1
only know the Kernel has no right
to print rumors and hearsay that
attribute my resignation to a
“SCB Control Struggle.” I feel
they have no choice but to believe
what I say as to my reasons for
resigning as program director.
The decision to resign was my
decision and for the reasons I
have given.

Lynn Hayes
Program Director

Hot 'n spicy

Larry Head‘s
'laeo l‘ieo i(i;t.\ll‘t)-
cumm- 18‘. l \\I)lllll like to
Utter ‘lll.\ hit ut iiitormation‘

ll.tltl.\l|t‘ll \llt'll as those
\eru-d .it 'l‘aro'l‘iro are not onl)

ltt regard it
artiele on
(Mt

tilt'tb

ilt'llt‘l'dll} unpalatable. but also a
upon the
gauche and
tint-uniprehending grmgos
Haunt; li\ed in .\lexteo. I am
\\ itli that
totintr) 's ruisiiie \\ hile there, on
only 'uo or three occasions did I

l'.l\t‘.\l_\ ‘hrust

t'aditional taro h}

t'll artiuaiii ted

ititi .ieross hard shell tacos. and
hen
tesenihled

men he) iii no

.hose tound at

u a}
'l‘ftt'ti

'l‘ieo instead. they were tightly
tolled and emered \th thick
tl't'illl. This is a delieious
‘. a riatioii on the traditional taeo.
\\ll|t'll is siiiipiy any meat
wrapped in a son. eornvtlour
ortilla

.\ti. o honor a iiiaryelous

toodstutt of a beautiful country.

let us \llt'k to soft shell tacos \iith

L‘l't't‘ll (‘lltll satire And a bottle of

l'epto liisniol tor those of weak
roiistituttiiii

\lareiis ('ooii

I-l'ildlIlIIt‘ Student

library Seieiiee

 

{1 ‘3 ‘
. \ '4.

“M0 ‘V

gamma-«W

'JOSI, WHY DON'T I TAKI THIS BLACK STU" OF

‘ ' 'l 3—.

IIANPATCHT'

I YOUR HANDS, IIIO

   

I.

\

ll IT RUINS YOUR

L—_J

 

 

  

  

 

 

  
   

comment I

2".

 

Take it easy, my friend

BnylllNJl'NO'l‘

(Editor‘s note: This comment is the
third in a series of three articles by UK
alumnus .lohn Junot.)

So here is my advice:

Do not worry about “making it."
(‘hances are you can‘t. or if you could. you
Will lind it not worth the effort. Besides
that. you would be participating in the
system that is destroying you and the
world.

Second. try not to morbidly dwell on the
miseries that are to come soon, even as
they are happening. Indeed. since these
events are unavoidable. it is appropriate to
see that good can become of them. And
there is some good.

.\N\' tilt HAT disaster reopens the social
lrontier. There will be room again for the
entrepeneurs. both economic and
spll'lllliil. Room again for excellence. and
an opportunity lor it.

There W ill be greater social equality and
Justice. even if it is the equality of hunger
and misery in relative terms the poor
Will become richer.

And the survivors Will not start from

scratch Though the corporate
organization necessary for advanced
technical production Will have
dmappeawd. technicai knowledge Will
continue in libraries and memories. And
eyen inttch of the mateiral base Will

t‘lltllll“

'I‘llttl (ill the Whole world Will be driven
bankruptcy. remember that
bankruptcy an atonement and
torgiyentss ol debt.

'I'lnrd preserve your own capacity for
excellence Nurture and increase your
talents. and Work to express and fulfill
them How" It Will not be as difficult as it
sounds. The division of labor is probably
innate in society in terms of the collective
pool ol individual aptitudes In the coming
llilrtf~st'l‘iil)l)lt' economic anarchy. you will
lind yourself drifting to what you are good
at. and What you like to do. and you will
probably lind you can sustain your
exrstence by doing it

Most ol What you shotild do tor spiritual
growth Will be directly tied to What you
must do tor physical survival.

Ittlti
IS

\H’I‘llltlt.\\\ lrom and participate as

lit tle as possible in the corporate
iiianagertal system Work as little as
possible. unless you are already an

 

 

other

artisan. contractor or type of
entrepeneur. When you must work. take
menial jobs. working with your hands. and
keeping your mind separate.

Become a criminal. Actually, my dear
reader. yui are already an outlaw unless
you happen to be one of those few who are
able to afford easy access to the civil
courts. For if you cannot pay for the
protection of the law. you are outside it.
You think you are not a criminal; in reality
it isonly because the corporate system has
not loreclosed on your criminality. The
system will try to do this increasingly as
the economic system breaks down. and it
loses more and more power. and
entrepeneurs outcompete it in meeting
human needs.

The difference between a common
criminal and a guerrilla soldier has never
been clear. It seems to depend on how
successful the criminal or soldier is and
how he defines himself in the first place.

.\ll'('ll productive activity. or the use of
property that would otherwise be
unproductive. will be outlawed by the
government because of the threat to its
control of the means of production. For
instance. mass evictions even when there
are no probable paying tenants. Bank
loreclosures on farm land. leading to
absentee landlordism and the suppression
of agriculture. Increased taxation on
independent trade tie. non-corporate).
leading to smuggling and black markets.
I’olice suppression of community self-help
efforts.

Actively consider becoming a thief and
saboteur of the major corporations. and
have no moral reservations about it.

First. such actions will be more and
more necessary for your own economic
survival. Second. such acts will be more
and more perceived as acts of war in self-
defense Wresource denial to the enemy” t.
'I‘hird. such rebellion and crime are vital to
the maintenance of human dignity and
self respect.

Some Will twist that last paragraph and
try to make me a brother to the inugger or
burglar. Not true; I advocate the

destruction of the social system which. by
the irresponsible use of property. by the
denial of the full protection of the law to all
its members. and by the tolerance of
organized crime and corruption among its
poorer citizens guarantees the continued
existence and reproduction of violent
deviants. And lsay the best way to destroy
it is by stealing or destroying the property
this system so badly uses.

“'lllt‘ll PROPERTY is that? Here is the
test: when you see property but cannot
easily and directly trace an individual who
owns and is responsible for it. steal it or
destroy it. And I mean both owns and is
responsible for; a manager or hired guard
is not enough to give it moral immunity.
Obviously. this definition leaves out
private homes tand cars. etc.). family
farms and mom~and-pop businesses.

When criminals have usurped the
positions traditionally or supposedly held
by honorable men. the logical course for
the honorable man is to become a
criminal.

Many of us alive today will survive the
great catastrophe. What then, should we
replace the old system With'.’ 1 have but
one idea to offer: Free and equal access to
all law. both civil and criminal, to all
people. Then we will have justice. By
"free". I mean. of course. financed by

taxation. And we must have that beyond
all else. If our soldiers must fight barefoot
\\ ith pointed sticks. if our children must go
to school hungry. then it is worth it.

, \\"" \

 

Bl'T l'l‘won't be like that. For when all
peoples‘ ownership of that they create or
cam is absolutely protected. and when all
people are held responsible for the safe
and efficient production of their property.
then our society cannot help but to prosper
forever. For all miseries of humanity
today can bedirectly traced to a failure to
protect and a failure to hold responsible.

What I wrote till now was generalized
advice to everyone. Now i have some very
specific advice to UK students.

It is possible that I may have left
Lexington at exactly the wrong time. For
we are but a few months away from a
massive coal strike. I want to urge you as
strongly as I possibly can: support the
striking miners with every ounce of
strength you can call forth from your body.
If possible. set up a “second front" on the
campus to tie down as many state police
and national guardsmen as possible.

Even at this late date, violent rebellion
probably won’t be practical, so be as
non-violent as possible for as long as
possible. Cram full every jail from
Lexington to Pikeville.

Do not worry about your job or your
schooling. I speak mainly to those who are
unemployed. or who have jobs so bad they
wish they were. And a bachelor‘s degree is
increasing meaningless in this age of
economic collapse. Link up with common
criminals While in jail. Help the miners
defy injunctions; picket where they can‘t.
When they can't. Stop trains or trucks
coming from scab mines or strip mines.

'I‘lII-I MINERS need only to make some
very reasonable demands: that they be
treated as American citizens; that they
have democratic control of their local
governments: that they participate fully
and meaningfully in making the laws that
control them; control of local law
enforcement; and equitable rewards for
the product of their labor.

The government cannot meet these
simple demands. For to meet them would
mean destroying a large part of its
political base and any anti-inflationary
efforts. The system did not choose to
bestow justice on the mountain people
when it could afford to. Now it cannot
afford to. but has no choice.

Neither can it force its will on the people
of Appalachia. This fact has not occurred
to the government yet; it hasn't failed to
lot‘ce its will on resistant people in two
centuries. Though there will be some
settlement. the inflationary effects and the
example of successful resistance
guarantee lurther rebellion. The coming
miners‘ strike will be the mortal blow to
the corporate manager system. There is
nothing in that system for you; help their
blow be as hard as possible

The 4th Annual Ginkgo Festival

Sponsored by your friendly neighbor~
hood Ginkgo Committee.

Sunday Oct. 27. 1974 at 5 pm. at the
Ginkgo Tree in front of the MI King
Library. This will be a two hour ceremony
at the moment the Ginkgo leaves fall. It
will commemorate the Ginkgo Tree. the
oldest living of antiquity out of the
Crustacien Period via the Chinese
monasteries.

The social event of the fall:

I. Opening statement — moderator

2. The Ginkgo Festival is Not a
Disease.

3. The Ginkgo Tree and its Relation to
Dentistry — Will Johnson

4. Depigmentation of the Ginkgo Tree
in Both Pathological and Live Style

 

Situations — Jim Haeberlin. author.

5. Tree Surgery ~ How to Do Xyloem
and Phloem Surgery on the Ginkgo Tree

6. Vicki Beck — undetermined (hint:
famous sayings as applied to the Ginkgo.)

7. The Ginkgo. a Hot Dog of a Tree —
Byron Barksdale

8. A testimonial to the Ginkgo — Mary
Lou Gerstle

9. The Ginkgo Tree as Symbol of
Divergent Minority Groups Reaching Out
for Karma and Other Things — Jim
Williams

10. The Historical Approach to the
Ginkgo With Emphasis On Origins.
Genetics and Other Things — Charlie
Potter

11. An Opera for the Ginkgo (under

  

protest) —— The Ginkgo Guild

12. China. Marco Polo. Noodles and the
Ginkgo — What Has All This to Do With
Joe Bologna? — Lynn Montgomery

13. Minority Trees. An In Vitro and In
Vivo Approach to the Ginkgo — Barry
Bleach

14. Others Wishing to Speak

15. Candlelight March

16. Ode to the Ginkgo — Will Gates

17. Pouring of the Water. Crowning of
the Bough — Steve Schwartz

18. Sipping of the Wine ..- those present
are requested to bring some wine.

19. How Bad is This?

20. Adjournment

The Ginkgo (‘ommW

     
  
  
   
   
  
 
  
 
  
  
 
  
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
  
 
  
   
   
  
     
 
  
  
  
 
  
 
   
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
  
   
  
   
 
 
  
   
 
   
  
   
 
 
 
   
   
   
   
 
 
  
 
 
   
 
  
  
  
  
  
 
  
   
   
  
 
   
 
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
   
  
  
 
   
 
  

    

 I-THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. October 25. I974

   
  
  
   
 
 
 
 
  
    
 
 
   
 
  

eeeeeeeeeeoaeeeeooeoeeoeeooooooooeoocooooooo

 

 

 

 

 

2| AND OVER

CHEVY CHASE

GET TOGETHER THIS HALLOWEEN FOR
THE STINGLE'S EXPERIENCE

Tues. Nigth is Ladies Night

 

O
O
0
fl
0
O
Q
&
G
G
9
3
0
O
Q
0
O
0
fl
0
9
fl
9
Q
Q
0
Q
Q
Q
Q
Q
Q
0

we figure you can use the
laughs now more than ever!

36 kLrAfrke‘tSaud
an O'N EaL
“WilaT'; ui,> Dad”

.. A
“if I’eTER Boabailowc-H

Pkooudton

      

BARBRA STREISAND - RYAN O NEAL in WHAT'S UP DOC? A Peter Bogdanovnch Production
Co-Starnng KENNETH MARS - AUSTIN PENDLETON . SORRELL BOOKE ~ MICHAEL MURPHY
And tntroducrng MADELINE KAHN . Screenplay by Buck Henry and Davrd Newman 8. Robert Benton
Story by Peter Bogdan0vnch - Directed and Produced by Peter Bogdanovrch - TECHNICOLOR®

From Warner Bros a A Warner Communications Company

6

 

9

 
  

 

news briefs

 

Kent iury named

CLEVELAND. Ohio (AP) w A jury of four women and eight men,
all of whom favor keeping the US. military strong, was seated
Thursday to try eight ex-Ohio National Guardsmen indicted in the
1970 Kent State University shootings.

The jurors were approved after 3'2 days of questions and
challenges which often centered on whether their backgrounds
included military service. use of guns. and opinions on war or
amnesty for draft evaders.

The defendants are charged with violating the rights of and
assaulting and intimidating the 13 victims of the May 4. 1970
confrontation of Guardsmen and demonstrators. The demonstra-
tors were protesting U.S. military involvement in Cambodia. Four
students were killed and nine others wounded

Each of the jurors answered negatively to questions as to
favoring refusal to serve in the armed services and unconditional
amnesty for draft evaders. Each also said no when asked whether

he or she opposed war in any form. even for defensive purposes,
and whether any had actively campaigned to end the Vietnam war.

Sirica describes Dean
as less than angelic

WASHINGTON (AP - ITS. District Judge John J. Sirica
Thrusdav described John W, Dean III. the prosecution's chief
witness in the Watergate cover»up trial. as "less than a lily-white
angel in this case."

With the jurors listening. Sirica said it is up to them to decide
what parts of Dean's testimony to believe.

“I don't think anyone is trying to paint this gentleman as a
lily-white angel in this case." the judge said. “Let‘s be frank about
it. he has already confessed to what he did and he's paying for it."

Dean is currently serving a 14-year prison term for his own part
in the cover-up. He has been on the witness stand for six days
testifying about the involvement of the defendants. three of whom
were, like Dean. close assistants to former President Richard M.
Nixon.

South Africa pledges
end to discrimination

UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. tAPl — South Africa told the Security
Council today it would do all it could to rid itself of race
discrimination.

“Discrimination on the basis of a man‘s skin cannot be
defended," South African Ambassador Roelof Botha said.

“We shall do everything in our power to move away from
discrimination based on race and color,"

Court upholds Gov. Ford's power

to spend surplus state funds

FRANKFURT lAPl , Both Franklin circuit judges agreed
Thursday the authority given to (lov Wendell Ford to spend
surplus state funds now estimated to be around $200 million this
biennium was constitutional

Neither has Ford abused that authority. given him in the 1974
Budget Act. (‘ircuit Judges Henry Meigs and Sqmre Williams said
in a two-page memo opinion.

The ruling thus went against the two Republicans who filed the
suit. They were State Rep. Larry Hopkins. R-lexington. and Albert
Christen. state finance commissioner in the preceding Republican
administration.

Hopkins maintained previously that only the general assembly
could allocate the surplus funds and said Ford should call a special
legislative session to do so.

The court opinion released Thursday said: “We find the section
of the hudgetact in question is not an unconstitutional delegation of

legislative authority nor is it so vague. ambiguous or indefinite as
to render it void..."

Population increases 155,000

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Census Bureau estimated today that
the nation’s population as of Sept. 1 totaled 212,216,000.

This was an increase of 155,000 over the previous month and 1.5
million over the same month a year earlier.

9

 

 

fifififiQQQQQOOO.

%

Sorry. No Passes
NOW ShOWEng ! to this Engagement!

CROSSROADS (LEXINGTON)

 

LEEDS ' TOWN Cinema UNIVERSITY Cinema

(WINCHESTERl

lRICHMONDl (MOREHEADI

fl@fiflfififififififififififififi$fifififiafififl$fiflfififlfiflfiOOOGCOOOOOOOOOOOfifififi@fi

 

 

 

See Directory or nttone Theatre for Feature Times'

 

 

  
 
   

 

 

llHuAh\l(Lkl KERNEL
The Kentucky Kernel, ltd Journalism Balding, University of Kentucky,
Lexincton, Kentucky, 0506, IS mailed five times weekly during the school year
except during hotidaysand exam periods, and twice weekly Mina the surnme'
session. Third class postage paid at Lexington, Kentudty, 10511.
Published by the Kernel Press, Inc founded in 1971, Begun as the Cadet in 1894
and publishedcontintouslyas theKe'itucky Kernel since 1915,

Advertising published herein is interned to help the reader buy Any lalse or
misleading advertismq should be. remrted to the (anus

Kernel Telephones
[:(jltOf. Editorial fdllOf' 757 1755 Advertising, business, (irculation 238 646
Mnnaqrnq editor. Nrw rlmk 757 lldt) Sports, Arts )5) moo

 

 

w

 

 

  

  

 

66 draft evaders report for

alternate service: none from Ky.

As of Thursday 66 draft
resisters reported for alternate
service under President Ford’s
clemency plan.

No evaders have reported from
Kentucky, according to US.
District Attorneys Gene Siler of
Lexington and George Long of
Louisville. But Siler said he has
received questions concerning
the procedure of the clemency
plan from several attorneys for
evaders,

BILL PANKRATIUS, military
counselor of the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU), said the
figure of 66 is way below one per
cent of the total draft resisters.

0f the 26 draft evaders
receiving alternate service
assignments. 21 received the
maximum term of 24 months, two
received 18 months, two received
15 months and one received 12
months. according to the Justice
Department.

As of Oct. 23, 1.419 military
deserters have reported to Fort
Benjamin Harrison where they
were given their alternate
service committments by four
colonels
branch. i’ankratus said

0!“ THOSE 1,198 were from the
Army. 180 Marines. 33 from the
Navy and eight from the Air
Force, he said.

Pankratus said as of Oct. 21
1.099 men received 19 to 24

  
  
  
    

   
  
    

Leather Coats
$l60.00
Suits

   

$125.00

Sport Coats

 
     
  

$60.00
Winter Coats
$75.00
Assorted Sweaters
$12.00 to $25.00
Pants
$l5.00

  
  

Sport Shirts
$15.00

, one from each service,

GUYS

months, 109 received 13 to 18
months, 156 received terms of 6 to
12 months while four received one
to five months of alternate
service.

The Justice Department’s
claim of 964 deserters voluntarily
returning from alternate service
is questionable Pankratius said.
“Many of those men were
apprehended or turned in from
other bases,“ he said.

Pankratius said the ACLU will
analyze the service record of a

deserter before he turns himself
in to see if the military violated
laws.

HE SAID they have found
several cases where men had a
legitimate disqualification from
the service and yet the military
took them in.

Pankratius said the ACLU
could help many men with this
problem but there is a problem in
reaching them before they turn
themselves in.

Rape lecture to provide
'realistic' understanding

Rape will be the subject of a
lecture by Frederic Storaska. a
national authority on rape and
assault. at Student Center
Ballroom Oct. 29, at 8 pm.

The lecture, entitled “To be
raped..or..not to be raped," will
attempt to provide both men and
women with a realistic under-
standing of rape. In addition, it
will explain physical and psycho-
logical techniques to stop rape or
assault.

TIlE LECTL'RE will challenge

the present myths among men

and women that promote rape.
Avoiding scare tactics. it will

create an atmosphere to allow

Now

'119”

   
     
   

$8990

$3990

$4990

0890 To 01 ‘90

  

the touchy subject to be discussed
freely and effectively.

Storaska has carried his
lecture to more than a million
students at over 4,000 colleges
and universities in the US.

His interest in the problems of
assault has led him to establish
the National Organization for the
Prevention of Rape and Assault.

Located in New York city, the
center supplies a hotline for

women who wish to report or talk ‘

about an assault. it also
researches rape and lobbies to
change laws governing assaults.
Data gathered by Storaska will
soon be released in a book
published by Random House.

‘ WV“.- "

Anniversary sale Still In Progress

DAWAHARES

  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. October 25. 1974—5

J.D. CROW/E

And The New South

Contempora ry Bluegrass Music

in the
Red Slipper Lounge

from 9