xt7b8g8fj78g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7b8g8fj78g/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-09-05 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, September 05, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 05, 1978 1978 1978-09-05 2020 true xt7b8g8fj78g section xt7b8g8fj78g Tuesday. Sew-bet 197'

0n the edge of control, Timm Foster, 14. of Lexington.
whirls a “Backside 180” at the Inland Surf Skatepark.
The skatepark. near Nicholasvllle and New Circle roads,

Two new complexes
may ease crowding at

Law, Fine Arts schools

a, SAIT TARHAN
and NELL FIELDS
Staff Writers

Two multi-million dollar complexes
under construction at UK will
hopefully case some of the growing
pains recently felt by the University
community.

Clifton Marshall. UK‘s director of
design and construction. is managing
and supervising the construction of the
new Fine Arts Building and the
addition to the Law Building

He said plans for both buildings
have been around for a while and the
contruction of the fine arts buliding “is
very near and dear to Dr. Singietary‘s
heart.“

To celebrate the opening of the fine
arts building in the fall next year. Fine
Arts Dean Robert J. Wills hopes to
have a major dedication performance.
No specific plans have been made. but
Wills said he hopes the performance
will attract national attention.

Both buildings are tentatively
scheduled to be completed by the
summer of next year. But as Dean
Wills said. “it all depends upon how
much snow we get.”

Assistant Dean of Law Paul
VanBooven said space problems
haven‘t yet caused classes to be held
out in the halls. but new facilities were
always needed.

T he new building will house a larger
law library as well as microfilm
services. Moot Court. law board and
expanded areas for faculty.

Even though the total facilities of
the law school will be enlarged.
Van Booven said the law school does
not anticipate enrolling more students.

Wills said a popular misconception
about the new Fine Arts Building is it
will solve the faculty-space crunch in
that college.

“It will solve some problems but no
teachers or faculty are being moved
from one building to another.”he said.

Continued on page 8

By TOM MORAN/ Kernel Staff

was the first built in Kentucky. Foster and his fellow
skaters have been riding the banks of the SI. million
facility since its opening in early July.

~tcday

21‘

an independent student newspaper '

. KKENTUCKY
/~  - cl
mm... ”3

First jo b

New sorority adviser plans goals

By MARY ANN BUCHART
Copy Editor

She‘s ready and willing to tell her
ideas anytime. She‘s fresh out of
school. emphasizes her youth (she is
24). and wants all to know of her
future plans and hopes for UK‘s
Panhellenic.

Margey McQuiIkon. UK‘s new
Panhellenic advisor, took former
advisor Sarah Jenkin's place this
summer after completing her graduate
work in student personnel in higher
education at University of Georgia.

UK‘s Greek system has the
reputation of being “cut throat.”
according to McQuiIkon. And she said
it is often used to explain the difference
in size between many of UK's
sororities.

“As the advisor. I hope to get every
sorority up to equal potential.” She
said she felt size disparity effected the
way the sorority system is currently
operating.

“The system is strong here at UK.
but I want to strengthen it." She said
Tennessee (where she was an
undergraduate) and Georgia‘s systems

were strong but in ditterent ways.
“UT‘s Panhellenic held a yearly event
that included the whole campus. It was
more of a total student organization.
Georgia‘s Panhellenic is strong in that
all of the sororities look out for each
other.”

“I also hope to better each
individual chapter by helping them in
any way I can. I will have to avoid
playing favorites.

“The Panhellenic delegates and
officers here are great. They are
wonderful to work with.” she said.
Panhellenic Council is the governing
body of sororities on campus and is
composed of representatives from
each.

McQuiIkon heard about the job
opening through the Panhellenic
advisor at Georgia. She was assisting
the advisor on a work-study program.
while working on her degree. “I wasn’t
exactly sure about what I wanted to
do. but I knew that I enjoyed working
with the Panhellenic at Georgia and I
was tired of living in the residence
halls.” She had lived in a dorm since
starting her college career and worked
with students in residence halls

Tichenor looks at term

86 legal, tenant services

programs while at Georgia.

“I came down for the interview in
April and just loved the dean of
student‘s (Joe Burch) staff and the
school. I knew that I wanted to work
for a big nationally known state
university with a good Greek system.
similar to UT or Georgia. I was also
looking for leadership potential. This
school has it all.

“When Dean Burch called me to tell
me I had the job. I said yes before he
could finish his sentence.”she added.

She knows she has a lot of work
ahead of her. but she feels she has
crossed a high hurdle already. That
hurdle is rush. “The sorority rush here
is not like others We been through.

“It was a good rush. but I'm glad it‘s
over. Then again. it really isn‘t. Open
rush started last week on pledge night
and there are a lot of girls wanting to
join a sorority."

As Panhellenic advisor. she will
attend the Panhellenic meetings and
advise them. McQuiIkon also wants to
attend the Greek Activites Steering
Committee meetings “to add new
ideas.“

may be combined this year

By BRIDGET McFARLAND
Staff Writer

Student Government is planning to
improve. hopefully expand and
possibly combine its Legal and
Tenant-Landlord Referral Services.
Gene Tichenor. SG president said in
an interview.

The plans are tentative until the first
80 meeting for which a date has not
yet been decided.

Tichenor said 50 plans to expand
its Legal Referral Service which
currently has only one attorney
advising students with legal problems
for two and one half hours a week. In
the past these hours have usually been
solidly booked.

Billy Bob Renner. SG vice-
president. said 50 is working with
UK's College of Law in an attempt to
get third-year law students to work
with the SG legal service.

“We haven‘t worked this out yet

with the SBA (Student Bar
Association/. We may have attorney
licensing problems." Renner said. The
problem arises because Kentucky law
states legal advice may not be given by
anyone other than a licensed attorney.

Renner also said the Tenant-
Landlord Referral Service might be
combined with the Legal Referral
Service because of sporadic student
use of the services in the past.

New services SG is working on are
teacher evaluations and the joint
Student Government-Student Center
Board publication Focus.

Tichenor said students should have
access to results from teacher
evaluations. He said SG has
considered distributing its own teacher
evaluation forms if the University will
not make its teacher evaluations
available to students.

Focus is a monthly newsletter
promoting SG and SCB activities and

services. Focus was published once '

during freshman orientation and
needs SG Senate approval to continue
publishing during the school year.

Two services provided last year will
also be discussed at the first 80
meeting. although Tichenor said he
did not know when the first meeting
will be scheduled. The Student Buying
Power Cards will once again be
distributed this year. Tichenor
admitted the cards are of little value to
students. but said 80 is under contract
to distribute them.

Tichenor said 86 would like to
provide a similar service in the future
rather than working with an outside
company. Under the current card
system. L&B Marketing. Inc. finds
stores that will honor the cards and
then pays SG to distribute them.

The book exchange program will
probably be discontinued Tichenor
said. He said financial and labor
problems. as well as lack of student
Continued on page 8

 

nation

world

 

PRESIDENT CARTER ARRIVED at the Marine-guarded Mideast
summit site in Camp David. Md. yesterday. pleading for compromise and
saying chances for complete success are very remote.

He confirmed that the summit. which has no time limit and could go on for
a week or more. will be held in extraordinary seclusion.

“My hope is that this degree of personal interchange. without the necessity
for political posturing or defense of a transient stand or belief. will be
constructive.

Caner praised Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menachcm Begin for “their willingness to come when the political
consequences of failure might be very severe. and when the prospects of
complete success are very remote.“

He said he is convinced both men want peace. but he offered a guarded

outlook for the meeting.
state

AN EASTERN KENTUCKY COAL company official testifed yesterday
that it was necessary to fortify a coal truck. substituting a steel box with
gunports for the normal truck bed. to escort non-union employees
unharmed to a mine where the United Mine Workers union is on strike.

Doug Shackleford. one of the owners of Jericol Mining Inc.. said Jericol
had the armored truck made after violence flared followingthe employment
of the non-union workers.

Shackleford testified at a hearing in Harlan Circuit Court in which both
Jericol and the UMW requested temporary restraining orders. Jericol
sought to bar the union from engaging in threats and violence. and the UMW
asked that Jericol be forbidden to arm its employees.

No injuries were reported following the gunfire last week. but Circuit
Judge Sid Douglass has termed the situation-at Jericol ‘almoet a war. and
certainly a battle.”

POLICE IN MOSCOW and at the White House in Washington broke up
almost simultaneous demonstrations yesterday by Americans demanding
U.S.-SOVIET Disarmament.

Soviet police seized four of seven Americans who unfurled a banner and
handed out leaflets in Red Square. but released them. Elevenwerearrestsd
on the White House lawn. The Secret Service planned toturathetnoverto
Washington metropolitan police. Both groups said they belonpd to the War
Resisters’ League.

"They took us in and lectured us for two minutes saying Red Square isn't
the place to do this and then let us go."said one American correspondent ta
Moscow. “They told us they had nothingagainst the War Resisters’ League"

A SEX SCANDAL involving color photographs showing a 66-year-old
Greek Orthodox bishop with an unidentified woman has shaken the church
in Athens. Greece. The bishop claims the pictures are forpries but _a
govemment investigation says otherwise.

Greek bishops are forbidden to marry and are vowed to eternal celibacy.
Church officials said the bishop will ultimately go before a church tribunl
and be defroeked if found guilty. The religious char, against him is
“scandalizing the conscience of the Christian faithful“

weather

MOSTLY SUNNY WARM days to continue throu' Wadnmday with
'nerally clear and mild nights. High Tuesday and Wednesday in th low
00‘s.

 

 

 

     
    
   
    
   
    
   
   
 
   
 
  
   
    
  
   
   
  
   
    
   
    
 
   
    
    
    
    

 

 

 

We!

editorialsdtcenmsetrts

 

, Steve Iaflnger
Editor in Chief

Charles Mala
Iz'dltortal Editor

News Editor

Richard McDonald

Toes Clerk Mary Ann lash-rt Janie Vaught
Jar... We.“ Debbie Men-kl Associate Sports Editor '
Astra-iatr- Editors My Pearce
F. Jenny Tate Wales Tide
M 0“ Copy I'llt'tors Arts Editor
Director of Photography
Nell Flew Gregg l-‘Ielfi Cary Willis

Images Section

Sports tidimr

Assistant Arts Editor

 

Easterly,Hopkins sho

For a while, this November’s race for 6th‘District
U.S. Representative looked as though it would be a
memorable campaign, matching two hard-working
candidates who would fight it out over their
contrasting stands on major issues.

if that’s going to happen, both state senators Tom
Easterly and Larry Hopkins need to clean up their
acts.

The battle for Lexington‘s U.S. Representative
reached new levels of absurdity last week when
Easterly characterized Hopkins sis a “rich
stockbroker” while refusing to reveal details of his
own income. . '

“Tom and his slingshot versus the rich
Stockbroker,” declared the ad, saying that Tom’s
“honesty, integrity, ability and eagerness to serve”
outweigh Hopkins’ “Wall Street riches.”

Actually, Republican Hopkins' income was
reported to be $27,355 in l977, something less than
the Daddy Warbucks-size take that the ad implied.
And, added Hopkins, he spends none of his own
money on the campaign.

Easterly said his income was $15,000 to $20,000a
year, but would give no more information other
than what was required by law, saying that it wasn‘t
of public interest.

The senator‘s right about that. Of course, there
was no need to tr 'e foolish allegations about

Hopkin‘s “wealth,” either; particularly when there
was no evidence of wrongdoing. In this campaign
though, inane debate has been the rule rather than
the exception.

Earlier this summer, Hopkins charged that
Easterly would be a puppet in Congress for
organized labor, a heavy contributor to the
Democrat‘s campaign. Of course, Hopkins himself
had received $5,000 from the American Medical
Association and $2,000 from the Kentucky Medical
Association, strong support from another
concentrated lobbying interest.

Before that, Easterly caused a sensation when he
charged that money was secretly raised to induce
Mary Louise Foust, the GOP‘s original candidate,
to get out of the race so that Hopkins could run.

Easterly has since refused to substantiate the
charges. The Fair Campaign Practices Committee,
a private, non-partisan panel, is investigating the
matter. (The committee may have a problem
keeping the candidates straight, as Hopkins'ads and
press releases have not identified him as a
Republican. /

Finally, there’s the Joe Califano Lynching
Contest. In Kentucky, anti-smoking HEW secretary
Califano would probably be criticized by a
candidate with terminal lung cancer.

If Califano “engages in one-more anti-tobacco

maneuver,” said Easterly this summer, he will call
for the cabinet member‘s resignation. Not strong.
enough, charged Hopkins, who claimed that meant
Easterly supported everything Califano had done.
“i want his resignation right now . . . He wants to
take our tobacco farmers off the farm and put them
on welfare.”

An absurd statement, but that's the level of debate
the public has been getting. It‘s a game of trying to
put the other guy on the defensive, and with two
stubborn, truculent candidates like Hopkins and
Easterly, there are only losers. The Democratic or
Republican parties could have done just as well by
nominating Don Rickles.

This kind of campaign was hardly the one

envisioned in the spring by most observers. It was

assumed that incumbent Democrat John
Breckinridge would survive the primary against
upstart Easterly and easily win election in the fall
against a weak Republican candidate.

But Easterly campaigned hard, organized well,
and knocked off Breckinridge with heavy support
from his state senatorial district in Frankfort. A

light turnout at the polls also helped. Breckinridge.

did not campaign hard, and had not taken his
opponent seriously until it was too late. The
congressman has been criticized for being too
wrapped up in Washington business to pay

uld campaignon issues

attention to Bluegrass developments, especially his
quixotic mission of stuffing pro-defense articles into
the Congressional Record. He had not taken his
opponent seriously until it was too late.

Soon after the upset, Mary Louise Foust.
Easterly's GOP opponent, withdrew from the race.
Foust, who had served as state treasurer and
auditor, would have been at best a caretaker
candidate againstBreckinridge, to show that the
state GOPwould still go through the motions.

The motivation for her leaving the race may not
be economic, as Easterly charged, but evidently
someone decided that the time was ripe for a
Republican breakthrough in the 6th District, and
that the 68-year-old Foust was not the right person
to do it. The at-first-reluctant Hopkins soon eagerly
joined the battle against Easterly. And a real mud-
slinging, old-fashioned fight it has been, too.

Easterly and Hopkins should begin campaigning
on the issues. They have valid disagreements in
areas like inflation and tax cuts, and the public
needs to hear more about their positions on defense,
international relations, the ERA amendment,
energy and abortion. One of the two will be elected
in November, and his future constituents need to
know where he stands.

 

     
     
   
     
      
     
     
   
   
 
    
 
   
 
 
  
   
   
  
  
 
 
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
   
   
  
   
  
   
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
     

English 101, theme 1, Laramie, Wyoming

For years Freshman English
teachers confronted the fall semester
with a standard assignment. Assuming
that even the most lethargic freshman
could wrest one memorable
experience from the previous three
month of breathing, knowing that
interesting theme topics would soon
diminish in the face of atavistic
fratgrnity- rites,‘ mind-numbing
foot all weekends, and ear-damaging
rock concerts, the composition
instructor always asked for an initial

mountain ranges, happens to be 7,000
feet above sea level, leading to cool
nights and consistent day time
temperatures in the mid-seventies.
When you add an average humidity of
l0 percent (yearly rainfall is only l0-l5
inches), and a western sky of limitless,
deep blue crystal, it becomes a
delightful place to hang your hat.
Laramie‘s character, howeVer,
resides less in its climate than in its
institutions, as truly Western as its
mosquitos are mammoth. For

 

robert hemenway

 

theme entitled, “What l Did Last
Summer.“

Frequently it was the student‘s most
Vivid writing of the semester, even
though later efforts might be better
organized, punctuated correctly, and
on paper with proper margins.

The pedagogical sophistication of
the Kentucky faculty makes this sort
of assignment unlikely today, but it is
an idea with considerable merit, and in
its memory, l offer a report on my
summer activity.

I spent the summer, with my family,
in Laramie, Wyoming, described by
the local Chamber of Commerce as the
“gem city of the plains.” it takes no
imagination to think of Laramie as a
plains town— the topography is that
of a table top— but whether it is a
precious stone is open to question.

The summer weather is not in
doubt. The particular plain on which
Laramie sits, squarely between two

 

example, you can drink beer in one
Laramie tavern while staring at a two-
headed calf. The animal perches atop
the antique gun case on the side wall of
the Buckhom bar, on lvinson street, a
stuffed hereford, four feet high,
spindly legged, with two perfectly
formed heads attached to one body.
The fascination is not in the accident
of nature, but that someone went to
the trouble to skin, mount and display
it. It is an act of soaring taxiderrnical
imagination, executed without

concern for commercial image.

The calf illustrates why Laramie is not
your average community. One either
loves Laramie or hates it, usually on
first encounter. l happen to love it,
mostly for its tolerance of
eccentricities. Laramie is the kind of
town where the Chinese restaurant
specializes in chicken fried steak, a
place where the homecoming parade
includes a lot of new farm machinery,

 

 

 

 

 

the combines chugging along directly
behind the marching band, ten yards
ahead of the matched palominos. The
daily paper is the Laramie
Boomerang.

Nor is Wyoming your average state.
Roughly the size of all of New
England, Wyoming is inhabited by
only 380,000 people. It works out to
approximately one person, five c6w‘s
and four sheep per square mile. Trying .
to control such a vast area is difficult,
and the state has arrived at a Judge
Roy' Bean style of justice that
sometimes startles outsiders.

lake the example of Rock Springs,
Wyoming. A boom town of 30,000,
three hundred miles west of Laramie,
the city has doubled its size in the last
five years, the result of miners,
roughnecks and construction gangs
arriving to participate in the energy
crisis. Housing is so tight that many
live in tents; a mobile home costs
$30,000.

Wyoming sits atop the greatest coal
reserves in the United States, oil is
everywhere, and out-of-state utility
companies rush to construct coal-
burning power plants before the street
lights of Hollywood begin to dim.

Trailing the money, as sure as water
flows downhill toward wealth, are pick
pockets, drug dealers, land
speculators, trial lawyers, politicians,
prostitutes and other advocates of the
free enterprise system. One bartender
told a reporter this summer, “the
whores are as thick as sheep out here.”

There have been many charges of
political corruption in Rock Springs—
some of the most recent on CBS—— and
a Wyoming Grand Jury began

 

investigating. Not surprisingly,
considerable animosity arose between
local and state officials.

in July one of the Grand Jury
investigators was shot. . . smack
between the eyes. . . by the Rock
Springs Chief of Police. . . in the back
seat of a police car. . . with two other
officers present. The Chief explained

'that he could see in his eyes that the-'-

other man was going for him: “it-was
either him or me." This explanation
might have earned him considerable

sympathy if only the dead man had
turned out to be armed.

The Grand Jury felt his sort of
incident might bear some scrutiny, but
the shooting inconveniently occurred
a few days before Cheyenne's Frontier
Days—v a nationally recognized,

officially sanctioned, old fashioned
Western blow out in the hell raising
tradition of a trail crew reaching
Dodge City. Reluctant to plunge into
such a messy murder on the eve of the
biggest rodeo of the season, the Grand

Jury postponed deliberations for a
week.

That kind of independent
eccentricity gives Wyoming its
special charm. . . and also makes you
wonder about the future of a state you
love.

That kind of a story, plus a two-,
headed calf, can make for an
interesting summer.

Robert Hemenway teaches English
at UK and has six children.

 

 

Letters
Policy

 

The Kentucky Kernel welcomes
contributions from the UK community for
publication on the editorial and opinion
PI!”-

Letters, opinions and commentaries must
be typed and triple~spaoed.and must include
the writer‘s signature. address and phone
number. UK students should include their
year and major, and University employees
should list their position and department.

The Kernel may condense or reject
contributions. and frequent writers may be
limited. Editors reserve the right to edit for
correct spelling, grammar and clarity, and
may delete libelous statements.

Contributions should be delivered to the
M m, loan IIJ tie-uh.

UM at leatashy. lam
OM .

Lettas:

Should be 30 lines or less. 60 characters
per line.

Concern particular issues. concerns or
events relevant to the UK community.

Option:

Should he 90 lines or less, 60 characters
per line.

Give and explain a position pertaining to
topical issues of interest to the UK
romntsnity.

Concern-lea:

Should be so lines or less. 60 characters
per line.

Are reserved for articles whose authors,
the editors feel. have special credentials.
em. m or other misfit-attain
so fliers a "this! sable".

 

 

     

 

   

K

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. September 4. "TI—S

 

opinion

 

 

    
    
   
  
  
   
    
   
 
  
     
   
    
    
   
       
   
   
  
  
   
     
    
  
    
  
  
 
 
    
   
 
 
 
 
  
   
 
  

Dy DIANA TAYLOR
Associated Press Writer

 

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. —
Marla Elaine Pitchford says
she feels bitter toward the
police and the court inwhich
she was tried on a self-induced

hi! abortion charge, but not
nto toward her former fiance who
hi. testified against her.
“Everyone has made him out
to be the big, bad villain and I
m don‘t think that‘s right,”
m‘ Pitchford said last Thursday in
' an interview. “This has been
md hard on me and it‘s been hard
k“ on him, too.”
the
not
itiy
l’ I
tnd
Ion
:rly
ud- By SY RAMSEY
Associated Press Writer
["38 FRANKFORT (AP) — Each
i In of the three most active
blic Democratic candidates for
use, governor seems bent on
em, proving a point in the early
:ted stages of the campaign.
I to
Terry McBrayer, who
resigned recently as state
commerce commissioner and is
an unannounced candidate and
favorite of the state
administration, appears to be
banking somewhat on
5 for . . bandwagon psychology.
McBrayer‘s goal, possibly to
in“!!! counter criticisms that he will
”'3 m not get off the ground in the
”3 you I979 scramble, may be to
rate you demonstrate overwhelming .
strength through the pOWer
‘ F “'0'. structure.
for an
His big move was a birthday
party last Thursday at
English Frankfort in which he proudly

. announced that 6,000 persons
were on hand.

Less charitable estimates
were something over l,000.
Aides said later that more than
2,000 had signed in for the
statewide affair, which was free
to all invited.

And McBrayer's supporters
announced the same night that
$122,000 had been raised for
his campaign from his home

area of Greenup and Ashland. .

Obviously, much more must
“(any
h: 32A"?
: ' I.

( l

She said the young man,
Dwight Mundy, lost his job
because of publicity surround-
ing her trial.

Pitchford, 22, was charged
with performing an illegal
abortion on herself with a
knitting needle. According to

court testimony, she had been
turned away from a Louisville
clinic because her pregnancy
was too far advanced.
Testimony placed her stage of
pregnancy at five or six
months.

Mundy testified it was his

come, because the guber-
natorial race is bound to be
expensive.

Meantime, the chief anti-
administration candidate, state
Auditor George Atkins, seems
determined to prove he can
raise money — possibly in
reaction to jibes from the
McBrayer camp that he will not
have enough funds to become a
viable candidate.

Atkins claims he has already
raised $200,000, a considerable
sum this early for an uphill
contender.

If this is true, Atkins can
counter his foes‘ often effective
observation that the campaign
will be too expensive for him.

The third contestant, former
Mayor Harvey Sloane of
Louisville, is wandering
around Western Kentucky on
his own pilgrimage— using the
campaign gimmick of a long
walk through that section of
the state to see how the people
really feel.

From all accounts, Sloane's

Pitchford denies fiance ’vi/lain’

idea to go to the clinic.
Pitchford was found
innocent on grouni. of
insanity last Wednesday by a
Warren County Circuit Court
jury. The judge had instructed

the jurors to find her guilty if
they could not believe that she

had lost control over her
actions at the time of the
abortion.

In the living room of her
sister's Bowling Green
apartment last Thursday,
Pitchford seemed relaxed
but tired.

Gubernatorial lineup
could change by May

worry is not funding— he is a
wealthy man.

The former mayor needs
most to attain recognition and

credibility, and he is going '

about it step by step,
apparently part of a careiui
plan to build his image and
popularity.

Two others seem to be in a
wait-and-watch position.

Lt. Gov. Thelma Stovall,
having formally announced—
as have Atkins and Sloanc— ap
parently is sitting back to await
developments and assess her
strength later in the year.

First District Congressman
Carroll Hubbard, who keeps
saying he ”may enter the race,
appears content at the moment
to watch the embarrassment to

the administration because of
Atkins' audits and an FBI'

investigation into activities
related to former state

Democratic Chairman
Howard “Sonny” Hunt,aclose

friend of Gov. Julian Carroll.

As the May primary draws
the tactics of the;
candidates— and even the

closer,

lineup— could change.

 

The Kentucky Kernel,

year non-mailed.

Anthony Gray
Advertising Director

University of Kentucky, Lexington, Ky. 40506, is published
each class day during the spring and fall semesters and
weekly during the summer session.

Third class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky 405“. _
Subscription rates are mailed $5 per year or one cent per

2l0 Journalism Building,

David Fitch
Circulation Manager

 

 

 

 

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Shesaidthatafter the verdict be brought to trial for giving
— and after the reporters. tape themselves abortions. said
recorders and television lights Pitchford.

WILCOMI
ABOARD.

PLEDGIS!

 

 

 

disappeared— “I just tried to

rest, tried to sleep. I
exhausted.”

“It was wrong that this
happened.” she said. “I feel a
little bitter toward the police
and the court.”

was

Pitchford said it's too soon
to judge the impact of the trial,
but she said her attorney plans
to start an effort to review
abortion laws across the
country.

She said she looks forward to
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diminishes.

“i think that in two months.
they‘ll forget my face and forget
my name and maybe just
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Focus of the review would be
to make sure that the laws are
written so that women cannot

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