xt7c862bc49q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7c862bc49q/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701130  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 30, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 30, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7c862bc49q section xt7c862bc49q Tee Kentucky Kernel
Monday, Nov. 30, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXII, No. 59

SG Results
:

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Still Are
NotOfficial
By DALE MATTHEWS

Kernel Staff Writer
The fall 1970 Student
elections are over, but
the official results of the Nov.
19 polling will be known only
after the Elections Board hears
all contestations of the election
Dec. 1.
Five candidates who were defeated in this fall's Student Government elections filed a total
of 14 charges against 17 defendants, including the Student Coalition Party (SCP) and the Elections Board, by the 5 p.m. Nov.
24 deadline.
John Stainback, an independent who lost his bid for election, charged the SCP with overspending and using his name
without consent.
Cov-ernme-

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Horse Of(f ) Course

A horse on campus is a rare sight But Susan Brewer
gave her horse
a look at the campus Wednesday before all the students had left

for the Thanksgiving holidays. Community blacksmiths and used

car dealers were unavailable for comment on the return of the horse
to campus,

Richard Anderson, Persis

Program Expansion Possible

Pilot Teacher Evaluation Planned
A Student Government pilot
program in teacher evaluation,
being conducted in 80 Arts and
Sciences college classes this
week, could aid students in selecting classes during future p
periods.
Wendy McCarty, a member
of the SG Academic Affairs Committee, said that a three-pag- e
survey of teachers and courses
would be distributed on a trial
basis to 80 classes this week.
If the response is encouraging,
the committee may undertake a
larger survey in the future to
cover the entire College of Arts
and Sciences.
The results of that survey
would be used to guide students
in choosing the most interesting
and informative classes in their
fields.
"We don't think it's too much
to ask of a student to fill out
the questionnaire," she said. "We
administration
the
thought

would interfere, but they didn't. an awful lot of money if no class would be thrown out, she
said.
They were disappointed when one's really interested."
The questionnaires will be
Miss McCarty said the pilot
they were told it couldn't be
distributed throughout the week
done immediately."
program had the support of Dr.
to students in the 80 classes A. D. Albright, Vice President
The Academic Affairs comselected. Scoring of the surveys for Institutional Planning, and
mittee asked 90 teachers for the
will be done by computer, and sociology professor Dr. John
use of their classes for the trial
the results of surveys of specific Stephenson.
survey. Only six turned the comclasses will not be disclosed.
mittee down.
If the pilot survey is successMiss McCarty said the comn
ful, a
promittee was "very pleased" with gram for the entire A&S college
the program's progress, but that could be tried as early as next
its success would hinge on stusemester. The Academic Affairs
Lexington and Vicinity: The
dent response to this week's
Committee would publish' the
forecast for today is partly cloudy
results of that survey in a bookquestionnaires.
"We hope the students will let, which would then be made and mild tonight with a low
temperature of 50 degrees. The
take time, and that the average available to
stuhigh for this afternoon is prostudent is interested," she said. dents.
to be around 70. PreWhile about 40 persons aided
Miss McCarty said a future jected
cipitation probabilities are zero
in the pilot survey, Miss McCarty evaluation program would profor today, 10 percent tonight and
said a "tremendous amount" of bably focus on the "hard" sc30 percent tomorrow. The forecast
manpower would be needed to iencesmath and chemistry the for
Tuesday is increasing cloudundertake a survey of the entire social sciences, and the humaniness with a chance of showers
Arts and Sciences college.
ities. Any survey which was com"We'd need a minimum of pleted by less than 70 percent in the
."
she said. "That's of the students enrolled in a
teacher-evaluatio-

Weather

n.

$4,000-$5,000-

Krampe, Mark Paster and Jim
Williams, also candidates, charged SCP and its candidates Jeff
Cumer, Mary Lawson, Detlef
Moore, Pat Morrison, Jerry New-lan- d
and Marty Webster with

The remainder of the charges
were filed in 11 separate complaints by losing candidate James
D. Williams. Williams charged
the Elections Board, SCP candidates. ACT candidates, independent candidates and candidates who both won and lost
with everything from
to not filing the necessary $5 fee.
The Elections Board will hear
all cases in the Law School court
room Tuesday at 7 p.m. The
"semi-final- "
results of the election will be announced after the
Board has heard and considered
all of the evidence.
The decision of the Elections
Board can be appealed to the
Student Government Judicial
Board, however, and the final
official results of the election
will be known only after the
SG
rules if there are
any appeals.

Free Land Acquisition byUniversity Questioned

College Press Service
EUCENE, Ore.
Why is a private university in
California acquiring public land in Oregon for free?
That question keeps popping up in this state over
the transferal of the abandoned Adair Air Force base,
nine miles north of Corvallis, Ore., to United States
International University, a private institution based
in San Diego. What makes the question more serious
is that a number of other people want the land.
One group of such people is the Oregon Council of
the Poor, which has been picketing the base every
weekend. Students from the University of Oregon and
Oregon State University have Joined the picket lines.
. Another Private Campus
While USIU plans to add another private campus
on Adair's 204 acres, in a state which has the highest
per capita ratio of private colleges in the nation, the
poor people's Council proposes to use the land for
vocational training facilities, housing, and a center for
the study of racism.
eduit
Under the federal properties law, a
cational institution can get public land on what is
known in federalese as a "public benefit allowance."
As long as the property is used for educational purposes, the institution receives it scot free.
Both USIU and the proposed Council of the Poor
it
educational institutions,
can be classified as
as can a number of other agencies who have placed
bids on the land. When property such as the air base
is up for grabs, then, it appears that he who gets the

-

--

non-prof-

non-prof-

free land is he who has the most money and the most- political clout.
In those departments, USIU has all other competitors beat. Just how much influence this university has
can be shown in the chronology of events after Adair
became available in September, 1969.
Federal Property Surplus
When one federal agency declares some of its property surplus, first crack for the land goes to other
federal agencies. When this was done in the Adair
case, the Navy fleetingly considered using the base
as a meteorological site, but just as fleetingly abandoned the idea.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture also considered
using the base. A federal agriculture official, who requested anonymity in recounting the idea, said he requested his superiors in Washington to acquire the land
for a pesticide disposal and research center.
"We had the cooperation of Oregon State University,
the state agricultural people and others," he said. "For
a while everybody was excited because a center like this
is needed, but then the quietus was put on the plan by
someone in Washington. It seems tome, although I have
no proof, that someone wanted USIU to have Adair
land awfully bad."
After the Agriculture Department nixed the idea, the
next step was to ask public agencies at the state or local
level if they had any use for the base. The federal government's Ceneral Services Administration asked the
Department of Health, Education and Welfare to seek
out possible users. After notifying the governor's office,

state and local agencies, and various religious and educational groups in Oregon, CSA and HEW reported
no one had any interest in it.
Definite Use Proposals
But Dale Parnell, theOregon superintendent of public
instruction, and Boy Lieu all en, chancellor of theOregon
system of higher education, say different. Both had expressed considerable interest in the site, and both had
definite proposals for its use. But Oregon Cov. Tom
McCall did not seem to find either of these proposals
attractive.
Recently McCall commented, "We knew it looked
attractive, but there's just no money in the coffers to
do anything with it. In fact, there's less than no money.
And, though it looked like a gift, those kinds of gifts
often end up costing a lot of money."
Parnell, however, wanted to use the land for a state
environmental center, which could be paid for by user
fees. Lieuallen asked for the land to provide married
student housing for OSU students, as well as to house
OSU research facilities. With the 204 acres available
at Adair come 36 buddings in immaculate condition.
Both Parnell and Lieuallen claimed their proposals
were concrete, necessary, and inexpensive, but the
governor says they weren't. Both Parnell and Lieuallen
applied on their own to HEW, but somewhere between
the state and federal bureaucracies, those applications
got lost. Mel Summers, in charge of dispersing surplus
properties on the west coast for HEW, said, "We got
only one application for USIU."
Continued on Page J, CoL 1

* 2--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nov. 30, 1970

TIIE

Lt. Calley Still Not Linked to My Lai Killings
FT. DENNING.

Ga

(AP)-T-

he

has taken the

headed by Calley

of Lt. William witness stand. Ten members of

court-marti-

L. Calley Jr. resumes Tuesday

with no indication yet of when
the prosecution will attempt to
link the Miami soldier to the
killings at My Lai.
Only 21 of a possible 79 witnesses testified during the six
days of the trial thus far. The
court-martiwas recessed for
Thanksgiving.
Only one witness has testified he saw Calley at' My Lai
and no one has testified he saw
Calley shoot anyone.
However, no member of Charlie company's 1st platoon
al

102

the platoon are on a list of 79
entered in the court as persons
who may be called as witnesses
or whose names may be mentioned. Some may testify for the
defense.
soldier is on
The
trial for his life in the red, white
and blue courtroom red carpets,
white walls, blue drapes at this
infantry post.
He is charged with the murder of 102 My Lai inhabitants
while leading his platoon on a
combat sweep of the little ham- -

MAIN STREET

E.

Special Sale

let near the South China Sea
March 16, 1908.
The prosecution so far has
been trying to establish that a
mil ssacre occurred.
Again and again, Army prosecutor Aubrey Daniel III has
lifted the cardboard flap over(
an enlarged color photograph to
show each witness.
The photograph shows bloodied men, women, children and
babies sprawled in death on a
dirt lane.
There was no enemy resistance that day, witnesses have
repeatedly told the court.
Thus far, legal proceedings
have been almost ritualistic, unfolding with restraint. The witnesses volunteer almost nothing.
There is little spontaneity.
Much depends on the course
taken by a Mormon lawyer from
Salt Lake City, Ceorge VV. Latimer, who represents Calley.
Latimer, a former judge on
the Court of Military Appeals,
scored one success when the military Judge, Col. Reid VV.V. Kennedy, refused to restrict the scope
of the trial to the acts of Calley

on March 16, 19G8-t- he
the alleged massacre.
At a

day of

hearing arguing
against the restriction, Latimer
said, "somewhere along the line,
somebody's got to realize these
men were given orders to search
it means to deand destroy
stroy everything there. If these
boys were given orders to kill
everything, includingwomenand
children, 1 think that's relevant."
pre-tri- al

...

19 S. Viet POW's Freed
SAICON (AP)-- A combined
U.S. -- Vietnamese raiding party
attacked a Viet Cong prison camp
in a dense bamboo grove deep in
South Vietnam's Mekong Delta
and freed 19 Vietnamese captives,
the U.S. Navy announced Monday.
The Navy said the raid took
place eight days ago, about the
same time U.S. troops made a
daring helicopter sortie into
North Vietnam in a fruitless attempt to free American prisoners of war.

Kentucky Kernel Readers

Drycleaning Special

THIS WEEK ONLY

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The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506. Second class
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during trie
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Published by the Board of Student
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Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any

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A spokesman said the Mekong
Delta assault team escaped without casualties and took two Viet
Cong prisoners.
woman
He said a
and her
daughter were
among those set free. Thewoman
was taken prisoner four years ago
because she had two sons serving
in the South Vietnamese army,
the Navy's account reported.
The raid raised to 48 the
number of South Vietnamese reported set free in similar operations this year involving U.S.
air and land
Navy Seal-seteams the Navy's equivalent of
the Army's Creen Berets.
a,

for:

JEANS

The course of what Daniel, a
meticulously prepared prosecutor, plans has yet to emerge.
And it may take some time.
Sitting in judgment on Calley, who has been a silent figure
in the courtroom, are six officers-- all
combat tempered. They can
convict and the verdict could be
death by hanging or firing squad.
They can convict and reduce the
charge to voluntary manslaughter. They can acquit.

CAMPUS AREA LOCATIONS

Euclid

at Woodland

Imperial Plaza

UK SENIORS:

Your 1971 KENTUCKIAN is being planned right now these plans include a separate Senior supplement to come out in May, in addition to the regular September issue.
This supplement will include senior interviews concerning campus issues, pictures and other features during the past four years, the purple mushroom, and of course your
senior pictures (approximately
in size).
We're looking forward to putting this paperback supplement together we don't mind taking the extra time to make two yearbooks.
4,
Won't you take the time to make an appointment for your pictures by calling
it won't be muth of a yearbook without your picture.
2--

258-482-

Sincerely,

Susan Crimsley
1971 KENTUCKIAN

f

Editor

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7977 KENTUCKIAN

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nor. 30,

1970- -3

Free Land Acquisition by University Ques tioned Diamonds

Continued from Page 1
As these state and federal
agencies Quietly bowed out of the
bidding, the Oregon Council of
the Poor noisily entered. At the
Oregon Poor People's Conference
last month, a resolution was approved to acquire Adair Air Force
base, a belated move, but a determined one, according to Rafael
Pablo Ciddio Abeyta of the poor
people's council.
"Our interests are basic we
want the site for vocational train

ing and housing for the poor,"
Gddio said. Later, the council

Cor-vall- is

expanded their proposal to include on the air base headquarters for the council, an institute
on racism, a coordinating center
for all food programs for the
poor, and an office to lobby
within the state for the interest
of all "oppressed people."
"We asked the governor's office and Robert Davis (executive
assistant to the governor for human relations) to help us when

Rights' Desk Established
Barbra Ries, former Student
Government Representative, has
been appointed to head the newly established Student Government Student Rights Desk.
Steve Bright, Student Government President, announced the
new post, and said it and the
appointment are "effective im-

mediately."

Bright listed the immediate
responsibilities of the new head
of the Students Rights desk
as working with the Student
Affairs Committee of the Assembly on revision of the Student
Code of Conduct and as being

responsible for involving other
students in research and investigation into "possible violation
of student rights and other serious inequities within the University which affect students."
Miss Ries will also be respon-ibl- e
for investigating and answering questions raised by students
about these "inequities." The
formulation of any desirable proposal necessary for action by
the
legislative or excutive
branches of Student Covemment
or other appropriate groups or
agencies will also be the Rights
Desk's responsibility.

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the citizens committee in
Others have charged that
said they had already deUSIU has connections with the
cided on the California school,"
CIA, the Pentagon and ILL.
said Ciddio.
Hunt. So far, no conclusive proof
He added that the poor peohas been exhibited to sustain
ple's council went unintroduced these assertions. But it is clear
and unrecognized at various
USIU has plenty of infiuencewith
meetings concerning the transfer the government, and (urticularly
of the base. "The governor's of- with the Defense Department,
fice was not too responsive to under which the Adair base was
our request for help," he claimed. originally held.
A San Diego journalist has
"It's another example of government's indifference to the poor. called USIU's trustees "one of
n
and most power-packe- d
They could have at least let us the
know that Adair was being deboads in this area."
activated. We had to find out
from the newspapers."
Oregon officials, from the beginning, have not shown much
favor toward the Council of the
Poor. It was Davis who charged
that the Oregon Poor People's
conference had been taken over I
O
C.RFETINGS IWI
by "radical students" at the September meeting. Ciddio replies
SAY
that out of the 2,000 participants
MEIIIIY IIIUSTMAS
in the conference, possibly 50
WITH
were students.
IIUIST.M AS SEALS
As for USIU, Ciddio said,
"The only poor people who will
IT'S A MATTER of
be able to get into that school
LIFE and BREATH
will be maids and janitors."
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* The Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

Iernel

University of Kentucky
1894

MONDAY, NOV. 30, 1970

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Frank S. Coots III,
Bob Brown, Editorial rage Editor
Jean Renaker, Managing Editor
Mike Ticrnry, Sports Editor
Dahlia Hays, Copy Editor
David King, Business Manager
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Jane Brown, Ron Hawkins, Bradley Jeffries, Jerry Lewis, Mike Wines.
Assistant Managing Editors
Editor-in-Chi-

Nixon Policies and Youth, or
'Wanna buy a good used car?'
President Nixon has added a few more arrows to the arsenal possessed by youths distrustful of the administration. Last week's deceitful actions in Vietnam and the dismissal of Interior
Secretary Walter
Hickel can only result in increased frustration among youths committed
to
political ideologies.
non-passi-

ve

Nearly as bad as the bombing of North Vietnam near Hanoi were
the administration's fabrications in covering up the attack. Defense
Secretary Melvin Laird lied to Senator Fulbright's Foreign Relations
committee early last week when he swore no bombings occurred north
of the 19th parallel. However, during his Thanksgiving dinner, President Nixon let slip the information that American forces had bombed
the Hanoi area. Later the Defense Department shamefacedly admitted
such bombings had occurred.
The bombing was conducted in conjunction with a raid on the Son
Tay prison camp, an action which may have endangered U.S. prisoners
more than any other possible pursuit. By staging what amounts to a
publicity stunt (at best: starved GIs returning home to plentiful ThanksTV eye, at worst: bold headgiving dinners under the
lines about the brave James Bondish raid), the Nixon administration
has again morbidly illustrated how little value American lives have
ever-prese- nt

in

Indo-Chin- a.

Nixon's firing of Hickel removes the major hero which youths have
ferreted out of the Nixon administration. No one should question the
president's prerogative to dismiss a cabinet official on serious grounds.
But the firing itself represents the most dramatic illustration of Mr.
Hickel's recent charges. Hickel has repeatedly pointed out the repression
with which the administration is wedging America apart. Hickel has
ative, and further, I feel that the overMisleading Caption
riding importanceofthe "phonebook cover
charged, and his dismissal has validated the charge, that Nixon will To the Editon
controversy" commands it a representative
tolerate no dissent.
I feel the Kernel should be chastised place on the new, stick-ophonebook
for the caption under the front
page pic- cover offered by the SCP.
These actions, and the dozens that came before, have caused many ture of
I realize that the SCP cannot have
Jay Westbrook. More care should
Americans to expect what they once suspected of the administration -t- be taken in the
writing of captions. anticipated the importance of this issue,
Jay sent a guava bomb casing instead and therefore will not have it represented
he very worst.

Kernel Forum: the readers write!
n

of a guava bomb to the Selective Ser- on their new, stick-o- n
phonebook cover,
vice board The package he sent was not but being the concerned student-citize- n
explosive, as the connotation of the word that I am, I have arrived at a solution
"bomb" implies "explosive".
to the only problem in the SCP's well-lai- d
Such misleading captions can do much
plans for a happier, more athletic-minde- d
harm.A person not acquainted with
s
university community.
case would surely label
When you, the student, receive your
brook an attempted murderer after read- new, stick-o- n
phonebook cover, and you
ing such a caption.
realize that, because the SCP can't think
A correction note is in order so the of
everything, your phonebook cover is not
readers know the truth.
truly representative since it doesn't have
a representation of the old "phonebook
CREG WEETER
cover controversy," you need only contact
A&cS Freshman
me, and I'll supply you with a stick-o- n
representative of theold "phonebook cover
controversy" a genuine stick-o- n picture
from
From the 'Militant Middle taken covers.one of the original old phonebook
(In keeping with our AmeriTo the Editon
can Ideal, I feel justified in charging a
I s want to express my deepest ap- small
defer the cost of
preciation for the Student Coalition Party handling).
and the great job they're doing of giving
Yours for a more militant middle,
this campus back to the right people.
BARRY D. ROBERTS
I'm especially pleased with SCP's
Economics, Sr.
latest crusade that of printing a phonebook cover that is truly representative
of student life on this campus; a real
alternative to the commie-ro- t,
propaganSCP: Ultra Left or
dized cover offered by Student Government.
To the Editon
I feel that the importance of this issue
During the last few days I have read
cannot be
Every con- numerous references in Student Coalition
cerned student should be aware of the Party
propaganda concerning "Bright's
crime being advanced here, and should Brown shirts."
find out how each student government
The Brownshirts were one of the most
candidate stands on this question.
conservative groups of all time, thus acI think that the phonebook cover of a cording to the
'prudent' Student Coalland-gracollege should be representition Party, Steve Bright and his followers
ative, (at least symbolically), of all the are very conservative. However, the Sturelevant people and events on the campus dent Coalition
Party says it has very
during the past year, as well as preserve, different ideas from Bright on Student
protect, and perpetuate the American Government, therefore,
pursuing this idea,
Ideal.
the prudent Student Coalition Party must
As a concerned student of this old be Ultra Radical
or else illiterate. The
happy university and a citizen of this choice is yours!
grand old country of ours, I feci qualiNICK JENKINS
fied to make a decision as to what is
Sophomore
representative and what is not represent- Political Science and History Major
West-brook'-

c.

u

fee-$1.8- 2-to

Tr

f

Illiterate

d.

COLLEGE

PflESS

Death of a Salesman

SEIJCE

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Nov. 30,

U.S.

Influence, Bombing Still Trouble Laos

By JACQUES DECORNOY

Dispatch News Service
SAM NEUA, Laos-- We
had
come to Sam Neua province from
Hanoi. The Soviet-mad- e
command car proceeded hiccupping
over a road struck by bombs
and made slippery by the rain.
It took almost two full nights
to reach here, after much skidding in the mud and many dangerous encounters with trucks
on the small mountain road.
To the very end of the journey, the car had to be navi

between craters left by
and rockets. A wooden
leaning across the limerock gave access to the
cave-hotea natural hole in the
mountain, "improved" with dynamite. A tiny motor distributed
that extremely rare commodity
in "liberated Laos": electricity.
This retreat for hunted guerrillas is managed by Mile. Kem-pet- h
h
P hoi sens, an
graduate of Moscow University,
daughter of Quinim Pholsena,
the Laotian Minister of Foreign
l,

anti-Frenc-

.

Children

Inner-Cit- y

A federally funded program is are also
participating in the probringing
leadership and gram.
The program is designed, actraining to underprivileged children from inner-cit- y
areas ofLex-ingto- cording to Mrs. Harbara Carter,
a
agent working in the prochilThe program, which began in gram, to instruct inner-cit- y
January, is funded through a dren in areas which their educafederal food and nutrition pro- tion has been meager or not
gram begun nationwide two years extensive.
The program began with
ago. Other state and local groups
4--

n.

4-- H

Proposed Code Revisions'
Deadline Set by Board

However, Griffin noted that
these are not the only channels
code is Jan. 31 says Ceorge available. He said that President
Griffin, chairman of the Board of Otis A. Singletary's office would
Trustees' committee on code re- also receive proposed alterations
in the code.
visions.
The committee on the code
Students are encouraged, said
will review the proposed amendGriffin, to submit changes to ments and hold hearings on the
the code through Student Govcode in March and April.
ernment. Faculty members are
At the May meeting, a prourged to submit proposed changes posed new code will be presented
to the trustees to be accepted.
through the University Senate.

The deadline for submitting
proposed changes in the student

PATRONIZE YOUR

Affairs and neutralist leader who
was assassinated in Vientiane in
April, 1963.
Life here is very simple. On
a rocky platform which forms
the entrance to the cave, a wash
basin has been set, a dangerous
place for anyone to stick his nose
to far out; at times it is impossible to finish shaving because of
the jets from Thailand prowling
about.
Then, one lies flat on the floor
of the cave, his only view a
glimpse of the sky and a few

gated
bombs
ladder
stone

Instructs

4-- H

1970- -5

KENTUCKY

KERNEL

courses that would involve little
or no cost to the child physical
education and arts and crafts.
Now, courses are also being started in such areas as electricity.
Funds and supplies for these
and other courses are solicited
from the Lexington community.
The three
agents involved
in the program began working
children this sumwith inner-cit- y
mer. The result was a camping
program, on a scholarship basis,
for underprivileged children. The
"scholarships" were financed by
the Sears Foundation, with each
dollar donated by that group
matched by private donations
from Lexington or the surrounding county.
At the present time, five inner-cit- y
schools are involved in the
clubs have
program. Thirty
been formed having from five to
eight youngsters in each gr