xt7cfx73xt8w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7cfx73xt8w/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-01-31 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, January 31, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 31, 1973 1973 1973-01-31 2020 true xt7cfx73xt8w section xt7cfx73xt8w The
Kentucky
K met ?

Nixon budget

may tie up
student grants

Hy l’llll.(ill.l.l|l.\\
Kernel Staff Writer
The speculation surrounding whether or
President .\'i\on will continue to fund the National
llli‘t‘t'ini'} Loan Program is apparently inst tfiat

not

speculation

.lim higle. director of student financial aid. said
Tuesday on one knows ~iiist how tfie various student
.iid programs will be managed this year. Nor will
anyone else know, he said. until the new ('ongress
takes action on the funding of the proposed student
aid programs

.\('('Ultltl.\G TO THE Higher Education Bill of
1972. provisions were made for funding three major
student aid programs the National Directory Loan
Program iformerly the National Defense Loan
Programi. the current Educational Opportunity
Grant. and the (‘ollege Work Studies Program.

These three programs are supposed to be for-
ward-funded by the preceding congress each year.

The hitch. however. is that last year's (‘ongress
neglected to appropriate funds for this year‘s
student aid programs leaving the funding of these
programs up to this years (‘ongress

'l‘t) (‘UMPLHZ-Vl‘l—I matters even more. a totally
new program. the Basic Aid Grant Program. has
been initiated. It. too. awaits congressional action.

As a new program. the Basic Grant Program has
yet to clear the miles of red tape that the three
established student aid programs have already
hurdled.

Even if this new program received full
congressional backing. it is doubtful if govern—
mental wheels would turn quickly enough to im-
plement the program in time for this year's
students. lngle added.

Barring the chance that (‘ongress decides to
initiate the new Basic Grant Program, with its
corresonding delays. at the expense of the three
already existing programs“ and if things go ac-
cording to the Higher Education bill of 1972~~the
three already established programs will be funded.

Just how much in funds will be allocated. and just
how they will be divided between the various
programs. will rest entirely with the Congress. And
the final decision will rest with President Nixon.

Vol. LXIV N0.

Wednesday, Ja
Eight pages

M "

'Af‘ihé

i:

.- ‘.' ' y 1.6» '
£3 ’ on“ (In. l ‘2" ‘ ‘
__ ”q . . u

83
nuary 3], 1973

King's men...

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky 40506

Work on the 83.7 million addition to the Margaret 1. King Library progresses toward a scheduled completion
date in August. Indications are the addition will not be ready for use by the beginning of the fall semester due
to problems involved in moving books and offices. ‘Kcl‘m‘l photo by Ed Gerald)

Court bans WKU 'ny' swatter

('l\('l.\'\s\'l‘l. (thio (AID—Th0 tith
l' S (‘ircuit ('ourt of Appeals was told
Tuesday that cancellation by university
officials of a film showing a fly walking
on a nude woman's body violated
student constitutional rights.

()ral arguments were heard by a
three-judge panel in an appeal brought
by the Associated Students of Western
Kentucky l'niversity, a student
governmental body. The case was
taken under study.

At issue is cancellation a year ago of
a campus showing of films entitled
“The Films of John Lennon and Yoko
()no.” and “Genesis 4."

The student group argues that
(‘harles Keown. Western's dean of

student affairs. unconstitutionally
cancelled a planned showing of the
films

The university. on the other hand.
contended that Keown asked only that
only one segment of "The Films of John
Lennon and Yoko Ono.” titled “The
Fly." be cancelled.

The film portion at issue consisted
solely of scenes showing a fly walking
over all portions of a nude woman's
body The film had no dialogue.

The films were brought to the
campus through the cooperative efforts
of student and administration
representatives. as part of a university
program.

Keown told Judge Rhodes Bratcher of

i' S. District (‘ourt in Bowling Green.
Ky . home of the university. that he had
privately viewed the films only after
seeing a leaflet which described their
contents.

He said he found “The Fly” “gross."
"offensive.” “lewd” and of “no
educational value."

Bratcher conducted an evidentiary
hearing on the case last May. and in
June dismissed a suit in which
Associated Students asked that the
university he enjoined from cancelling
campus movie showings.

The student group. represented
Tuesday by attorney Thomas A. Hogan.
asked the appeals court for reversal of
Bratcher's order.

Armed Services chairman Stennis shot

WASHINGTON (AIM—Sen. John (‘.
Stennis. D-Miss.. was shot during a holdup

police said.
Stennis was admitted to the

hospital sm

An aide said Stennis was robbed of a

all amount of cash and his watch,

in front of his Washington home Tuesday
night. police said. An aide said the
senator's condition is “really serious.”
Stennis. 71. was shot a short time after
leaving a National Guard reception near
the (‘apitof He was taken to Walter Reed
Army Medical (‘enter with one gunshot
wound in the stomach amt one in a leg.

shortly before 8.30 pm. and was taken to
surgery immediately. The hospital said its
”first team" of surgeons is treating the
senator. but offered no details on the
senator‘s condition.

Police Sgt Edward Jones said officers
have descriptions of Stennis' assaliants
and have posted a lookout for two persons.

_.¢

Stennis‘ brown leather briefcase was
found ly‘ing next to the curb directly in
front of his home. a white twostory brick
house in a well-to-do northwest
Washington neighborhood. His coat was
lying on the curb.

Stenms. who has been in the Senate since
ISHT. is chairman of the Senate Armed

Services and a strong supporter of the
military. He fought for support of the
Nixon administration‘s Vietnam war
policy as fiercely as he opposed federal
civil-rights legislation.

Another neighbor of Stennis was telling
iiewsmen that she had seen two men at the
scene when she was escorted away by a
FBI agent

Inside:
Parting
shots

Although there is an official cease fire.
on page Lt. Nicholas Von Hoffman fires a
few parting shots in the war of words on
\‘ietnam And in the Letters to the Editor
page '3. KYSPIHG strikes back in
response to a Kernel editorial

”ll

Outside:
Warm and
windy

The weather it is a changin‘. for the
better let‘s hope. Partly cloudy. windy and
warmer is the forecast for today Tem
peraturcs should range from a high in the
mid .‘io's today to a low near 40 tonight
Precipitation probablities will he to
percent today and :to percent tonight

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
    
    
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
   
  
 
  
  
 
  
  
   
  
  
  
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

The
Kentucky
Kernel

E atah'mwo
Mike wines, Editor in Chiet

Mike Tierney, Managing tailor
Larry Kielkopf, Associate Editor

Katie McCar'tw. «on Mm 'lPli,

, >w Editor
‘8“ Dan Rina. Dav NC S

Joel Zakem, Arts Editor

Steve Swm, Night News Editors

John Hicks, Photogiapny EOO'OF
Charlie Dickinson. Sports Editor

Editorials

Editorials represent the opinion 01 the Editorial Board. not the UniverSitv

More swipes at the eggheads

()h-oh. It looks like the egregious
eggheads. long a target of the Nixon
administration. are about to get
theirs. And this time. the Nixon bite
will come where it hurts worst din the
pocketbook .

While asking for a modest $4.7
billion budgetary increase for the

Department of Defense in fiscal 197-1.
the President has apparently decided
higher education merits only a
piecemeal lI‘lCI‘CaSOflpCI‘hEIpS $150
million. and maybe not that.

One hundred and fifty million
dollars sounds like a lot of money. But
the increase. which will shore up
some admittedly important
programs. is deceptive.

Fund new program

The Nixon budget would fund a new
program of “basic educational op-
portunity grants" to the tune of $1
billion. The money would give a boost
to needy students lacking the cash to
make it through school.

But in the same package. Nixon
would destroy the three foundations of
student aidi-the old National Defense
Student Loan program. the current
Educational Opportunity Grants. and
the (‘ollege Work-Studies Program.

College libraries would get no
money for books and equipment.
['ndergraduate instructional
equipment would also get zilch. No
funds would be allocated for con-
struction of educational facilities.
although the loan program for such
buildings would be stepped up.

Stay the some

Special programs and programs for
the disadvantaged would stay at their
current meager level of $70 million.
New and developing institution grants
would keep their $100 million pittance.

A whole raft of new programs
authorized by Congress last year.
ranging from community college aid
to incentives for state scholarship
programs. have gone down the
financial tubes. Mr. Nixon doesn‘t
intend to give them'any money.

 

 

HIRRIHIK l\' 1'” VVAsHl\4.th l’tist’

 

 

 

  

“You're going to time to thin down.“

Somewhere among 100 senators.
George McGovern is reiterating his
claim that defense expeditures could
be cut by $20 billion without hurting
the country‘s readiness for enemy
attack. In a country with one of the
world‘s highest percentages of funds
devoted to the military. Mctlovern‘s
cry is lost.

Mr. Nixon's disdain for higher
education was to be expected. but it
means hard times ahead for
universities already struggling to

stay alive. And the $402 million for a
single ABM site in North Dakota is
more than double any boost higher
education can expect for next year—w
or. for that matter. any of the next
four years.

What makes the disappointing news
doubly bad. however. is Nixon’s open
dismantling of social welfare
programs built since Roosevelt the
llillslturton Act funding rural
hospitals and the (Nice of Economic
tipportuiiity‘s (‘ommunity Action
Program. for instance.

Uther programs. such as Medicare.
will be forced to pick tip more of their
own bills at the expense of the
pocketbooks of the elderly and
disadvantaged.

President Nixon has already an-
swered the outcry from an impotent
(‘ongress ”The cost of maintaining
our strength.” he said. “continues to
be substantial. but far less than the
cost of allowing our defenses to
deteriorate.”

 

Finding a
permanent

law dean

We can do no more than gently
rebuke the (‘ollege of Law for its
failure. after 27 months. to find a
permanent dean

finding someone to handle the
underpaid. thankless post of dean is
excuse enough for the tardiness of the
t‘ollege of Law‘s selection committee.
Literally dozens of universities are
hunting for law deans now. without
success. and I'K is only competing for
its share of the market.

But we urge the selection coin-
iiiittee to consider the rumors such a
long delay gives birth to. especially in
light of the case of one applicant who
turned down the job after his ac—
ceptance had been announced.

Amid the charges and denials of
“factionalism” in the college. the
conclusion is bound to arise. sooner or
later. that any group which can't find
a deal in over two years is either very
ti'iicky in its selection or very un»
popular among its propsects.

Judging by the latest rumors that
an announcement of a new (lean may
come soon- the former is un-
doubtedly the case. For the sake of
the selection committee which had
once felt certain it would find a
qualified applicant by (‘hristmas ~we
hope so.

 

Letters

 

KYSPIRG views

an editorial

In response to your editorial of Jan. 29,
we feel some comments are necessary. A
full explanation of the objectives of Public
Interest Research Groups would take far
more than the available space. We hope
members of the campus.community will
reserve judgment until there has been a
more complete elucidation of the concept.

Admittedly. obtaining the signatures of
10.000 L'K students for any one cause is
unprecedentedhere However. we believe
that upon full exposure of the facts this
support will be forthcoming.

We don‘t propose to be “just another
campus organization." The objective of
the Kentucky Student Public Interest
Research Group (KYSPIRGI is to support
the public interest in areas of en-
vironmental protection. race and sex
discrimination. corporate responsibility.
and consumer protection. To achieve this
objective. KYSPIRG would incorporate on
a statewide student‘directed.
studenttuiided. and student—controlled.

The $2spei‘rstudent per semester
refundable fee would support the hiring of
a professional 'staff. office expenses.
research and'litigation costs on a con-
tinuous year-round basis

Funding by means of endless money-

basis

raising projects and contribution drives
would drain energy necessary for support
of organization projects.

The precedent for KYSPIRG has
already been extablished. Successful
petition drives have already been con-
ducted on 100 campuses supporting 14
statewide organizations similar to the one
proposed here.

This brief letter does not. purport to be a
complete explanation of KYSPIRG goals.
We anticipate that subsequent articles in
this and other publications along with
information provided in discussion groups
will allow each student to make a cogent
choice.

Richard E. Peyton
tttraduate. Law)

Dennis Duvall

(Graduate. (‘omputer Science)
Ruth Anglin.

(Graduate. Microbiology)

The right choice
on abortion

The Supreme (‘ourt decision on the
legality of state abortion laws is perhaps
one of the most humanitarian court rulings
in IS history. My antagonism. therefore.
does not fall on the qualifications of the
legal abortion. But. in the Jan, 24 Kernel
editorial. your comments on the increased
responsibilities and rights of women.

portray a naive view of “woman‘s issues.”
I refer directly to this passage: “this gives
each woman a very important right and
even more important responsibility—her
own determination of the rights of her
child, her right to decide.“

By this comment I am associatively
reminded of a religious concept taught in
my parochial elementary school. that of
immaculate conception. Surely you are not
disposed to this concept in your thoughts of
pregnancy. Yet. you refer to “her child"
and “her right to decide."

A pregnancy entails obvious physical
changes and adjustments to the woman.
yet. there are psychological changes and
adjustments encountered by both the
man and woman involved. A decision to
terminate a pregnancy by abortion. is not
only a responsibility of the woman but also
of the man. in lieu of his psychological
involvement.

To speak of abortion in terms of women
exclusively is to misinterpret “woman's
issues." Granted. feminism and the issues
related. often affect women more
dramatically than men. as in abortion.
Yet. feminism does not strive for disposal
of responsibilities and rights of men.
Rather. feminism and its issues are
humanistic and strive for coordination of
rights and responsibilities. The feminist
movement will gain nothing if men's
responsibilities and rights are eliminated.

Meg Hash
Senior—Arts and Sciences

   

 

 

  

 
 

Nicholas ..,
VonHoffmon ~

 

 

 

We didn't win war—
it just 'sh’d away'

\\ \SIIINti’I‘UX—l'ntil the man got on the air and said
the words. until he made the announcement that on the
ltith hour ol Jan 27. the guns would fall silent, there was a
black. joking suspicion that he might have one more
doublecross in him He could have gotten on the tube to
tell us North Vietnamese torpedo boats had attacked our
destroyers in the (iulf of 'l‘onkin.

He didn‘t. so take the peace and run. He said it is peace
with honor, but by this time the rest of us know that peace
is honor. Yet for many who hated this war the most. who
fought the fighting the most. the great and green fact that
the war has stopped doesn‘t elicit joy,

Part of it is him. Nixon. After what he and Henry
Kissinger have done. there are some who retch at the
notion that they should be thought of as peacemakers. It
will take time for us to learn to moderate our feelings
toward our officials.

The real heroes

ltl'T Nlultli THAN that, for many who found war and
the men who made it despicable, the smug assumption in
his speech that he was ending the war- -must have been
infuriating In truth. he was forced out because he had
next to nothing left to fight with. The war slid out from
under him as it once slid down on top of us.

The Army had quit on him a couple of years ago He
claims he pulled half a million troops out—~as though he
had a choice. Had he left them there, by now they would
have been in an open state of opium addiction and naked
mutiny.

Next came the fleet, Sabotage. race riots and desertion.
The Pacific fleet was beginning to resemble the last days
of the Imperial Russian Navy. with the carrier Kitty
Hawk as the American version of the cruiser Potemkin. A
seagoing Watts.

THE LAST T0 (‘RACK was the Air Force. They‘re the
moral robots, the fly boys who tell you, "Look. I don‘t kill
anybody. All I do is read these little dials and put numbers
in this little book.“ It finally got to them. and they started
cashing in their pilots' wings.

In his speech the other night when Nixon was thanking
people for being patriotic and sacrificing, he didn‘t
mention the fliers. But the deserters, the draft dodgers,
the refusers, the defiers and the disobeyers served their
country better than those of us who got drafted and went
overseas and fought or who stayed home and paid our
taxes. It also takes more guts. A man like Captain Howard
Levy, the Army doctor who was court-martialed for
refusing an order to train Green Berets, has as much
going for him as any POW, more maybe because when
Levy went to his Federal prison camp here he had no
President of the United States swearing he'd move heaven
and earth to get him out. He was alone.

Nothing left

This war should not vanish on us without it being written
somewhere that the real American heroes were not the
ones decorated by this government but the ones detested
by it. The marchers, the protesters, that rabble, they're
the ones who served honorably. It will be a long time
before you hear anyone in the White House say that.

LIKEWISE, THE late-joining, more conventional anti-
war sorts will say that it was your Eugene McCarthys and
George McGoverns who made the difference. McCarthy
lent the Movement respectability, is how the thought is
usually phrased, Actually, it was the other way around.
The only respectability in politics is power, and men like
McCarthy got it by hitching on to the peace movement.

That may be the only useful lesson Vietnam has to
teach. (‘ertainly there are millions of us who will be just as
marked by it as men like Nixon were marked by Munich
and appeasement. Vietnam has gone on for so long that we
have come to regard the war there as a species of nor-
mality. The thought of an America at peace is almost
unnerving. (‘ount up the number of people whose adult
lives have been taken up with the fury and weeping of
Vietnam. How much easier it is for them to see “another
Vietnam" everywhere than for the Nixon crowd to be

seeing new Munichs.

1c) I973. The Washington Post

 

 
 

 
  

     
   
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
    
 

STARTING SALARY:
$10,266.96

AFTER 4 YEARS:
$16,770.96

Benefits;

Free medical and dental care for you.

 

Free medical care for dependents.
World travel.
30 days paid vacation per year.

$15,000life insurance policy

 

    
  
  
 
  
 

for 3 dollars per month.

RETIREMENT:

$761.00 per month for life after 20 years
ADVANCEMENT:

Unlimited, depending on your performance.

POSITION:
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EMPLOYER:

US. Navy

 

  
 

 
 

 
 
 
 

TALK TO THE NAVY INFORMATION TEAM

MONDAY THRU WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5—7
STUDENT CENTER

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEIM Wednesday. January 31, l973-—3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

     

     
    
   
   
 
 

  

  
 
 
  

  
  
 
  

 
 
  
 
 
  
  

  
  
 
   
  

  

t—TIIE KI‘INTlTKY KERNEL. Wednesday. .lanuar) 3|. ttti'it

increased

at l,l\ll\( \n\l:s
Kernel Stall \h'ltel
ltue to uleleasnn; national
tnterest and lndnldual eoneern
about the present energ} erlsls
the l-‘.n\n'olnnent.‘ll \\\;n'eul
Soelet} [CNS at l'l\'1se\peetln;1
more student partlelpatlon
l-Imn'omnental interest has
deeluled steadll\ \lllt't' lts surge
ttl tlttitt. sald .\llan llet/el. lorlner
llt‘es‘ltlettl ol l“..\.\‘ "More people

9

\\lll ll;t\'(‘ m beeolne eoneerned
no“ beeause It Is :ltteetun; e\er_\
ttttll\t(lll.‘tl Instead ol a seleet
area.” he sald

‘1-\t present our mam goal ls to
gather all the taets ol the
problem and edueate the
people," sald lleul) eleeted
presldent ltennls Huber.
nteehanteal enunneernmt student

'l‘llt“. t-Z \8 Is planning to obtain
its goal b3 otterlng a series ot

 

The Kentucky Kernel

plv'_..-trr. Int.

‘ v: v p -
>--r‘ -, 1"» ‘,‘. 1‘ l“
O“ Nov-I , '1; ' , ". * '2" ,v o' n. 91'
’ ."’V tn t'\‘~ln" :w' (“3‘ .w "w e
mmx‘ ' (tt,’ n; m“ , .ytn ,u new. Ur
t n wad n, . mm I’m-w. m 17‘?
"I ‘.' 'tt _tg'tt‘ ,eung'yv‘ Fo-rt'utlly

Hen-m as the (300” v WM and puttttsnl‘tt
,H ~ V‘L)O‘w\‘¥ 3.‘ Te,» ju_o-"‘1,1u , :- PV'er a WWI;
'3'! t'.- Kl'no‘ Pvt-gs, lnt toundeo 'v’l
8w and \ lass OOS'GQ‘ pa *1 a' ten nu'or
-' w' 'tlt k v

7‘ 1«"" 3 “<1 Dut')‘ Shed "enurv a uterus-g n,
‘w-‘L: the reader huv l‘my ‘a'se or '. mm rw‘
ad.ert s m; would he 'eoev 'ea '0 N e eu-Mrv,

KERNEL TELEPHONES

 

 

 

 

8 lOCATIONS

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[J t”)r Editor'al th'm 25/175“
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tune" svm Hts new. V v'ulm (w
15F 46.16
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EAS anticipates

interest

sllt'.tl\t't\ otl sut'h topn's .ls
\lt lpnnnun: nuelear energy and
\(tllll \taste Qualltled nulnlduals
\\lll present the problems and
\tttitlt'\l possible .letlons to be

‘en b_\ the l: \.\ .lnd ttl
Mlduals. llubel‘ \ttltl

lteeause ot laek wt lnone_\ .llltl
lllttll[)(t\\t'l the lf.\.\ has been
\Hlt lulu; \\llll other orumu/atlons
\\tlll slnlllal Interests 'l‘he
l'h_\s|e.ll lin\1l‘onlnent (‘onl
nuttee has alloued l'i.\S to use its
supplles and eqlnplnent and “I”
donate some tunds to help mth
the edueatlon ot students eon
eernnn; the emn'onment

lit-\S has \mrked ulth Student
(loH't‘tttttt‘tll St; ‘ to tn to make
a park Hi the ell} and also
suggested to the t'nlx'erslt} a
possublht) ol tuning lndlan Falls
ltoth Ideas \H't‘t‘ dlsntlssed
ltlttlttl} tor tulanelal reasons.
llet/el sald 'l‘he explanatlon
un'en “as the lttl\‘t’t‘.\ll}‘ had
been erltlel/ed tor buying land
\chout unmedlate Use. he sald

’l‘lll‘l [its ls planning se\‘eral
held trips to plaees sueh as In
dlan Falls and lted ltn'er (iorge
An adusor m geolog) and botany
would aeeompany the students to
proude educational mlormatlon.
lluber sand

National Tree Planting hay ls
seheduled tor April 28 ()n this
day the lit-\S hopes to plant trees
It] some ot the local parks Last
year Woodland Park was the
target of the soelety

lluber lelt part ol the deehne ltt
Interest ot the li;\.\‘ was due to
poor plannlnl,l and laelx' ol
'organl/atlon He hopes to
edueate the students and get the
(annals |n\'ol\'ed It] the so‘elet) 's
aetn'ltles

 

 

Ld‘

(atrnlatlons A arlthmntm rakutatuons,
( ham multtpm atlon 8- dons-on, (onstant
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(alrutatunn, muted ralsulntlon, on
(alrutatton speed 0 2 smonds
(maxumum‘

Thus :8 one ot the many available
ralrulatms tor SALE and RENTAL No
protessor 0mm ttons Good tor STA, MA,
(ME, "N Saves valuable tlmel' CIM
Elmtronms us a student owned and
operated bosmess on? to save you
money Call us and we’ll wo'rk something
out tor you and us

Contact:

Marc or Steve
Phone 252-5046

We'll meet any Price!

 

 'I‘III‘I KI‘IN'I’lTKY KI‘IRNICL. Wednesday. January 3|. 1973—5

 

  
     

SPRING SEMESTER
BOOK REVIEWS

The Human Relations Center will begin its second series of book
reVlews on February 6th. The sessions will involve a review of
contemporary fiction and non-fiction and their implications for
student life. The series will be open to all students, faculty, staff
and townspeople who wish to attend. The schedule follows;

Spon

 

 

  
 
     
    

Three players connected with Curci
picked early in NFL college draft

       
   
    
   
    
     

, ‘ D 3 .t , ,. - - . n ..
.y litlltttllll l.l{ pit IN (I in II.t last round ”t (all It somebody ye IltllkillL’, tor a
. 1.. ~ . .‘ , . . . . . . .|. , , _. . .
\ssoi iati ill II ss Spoils “litii bi ii lllltlltlltl bat k. a It (i l\(l oi (twivth-p hgfi-k‘ I knew m. (t L”) as 3309"”; House Five by Kurt The Coming at Age by Simone do
I.I'I\I\("l't)'\ '\ I ’lm" ; x s - , .. ~ i " .. °""“9” , 3" Beauvour
. . I\_ . ‘\I ‘IVHI t. (It It llsiyi liat k lot Hit in. one ot the "it” m the country. pmmwed b, 0, Tom Bums pwmwod by Dr Earl Kautlman
‘)l”-\(|[‘_\‘ l'llilt'IH‘tI In I‘ III” ( ”n" ( lll'l‘l \(IHI ('lII‘t'l Mind ASSO( Prolessor Director OI Council
. . .. . , , . .. t ,. . ’ Enqhsh Department on A
.llll o e e e - . . A . ~- l ‘- 9mg
l ll h l (llllIt d loi wh tI ll\\l.\.\ l\l.l.\ Is all llitllt ‘ pmmaw 6, i973 April 2, 1973
later became a toe were snapped llllllted to detenslve work. (‘urci IIH‘ (MUN? ”1‘ ttt‘l‘hilltb 30° 4 3° 9 m 300 4 3°
.t . ‘ . Facult Club Loun e Faculi Club Loun e

up lilesday It! the National said. but his "man to ”tan triple honor was very tlattermpI V g Y' q

   
       
       
     
     
      
    
 
  

Football League‘s lirst round ol coverage is ~lust super lle stays in him. (‘urcl said. “But all three

‘ The Bell Jar by Sylv-a Plath Jonathan LIVIngston Seagull by
the di all w ith anybody and can . run to ”l ”1W“ l’li‘Ft‘l‘b ‘It'M‘t‘H‘ Review—ea By Dr Alan Moorer Richer ac
('urcl. Kentucky's new head \ards Ill 4 .3 consistently which is (WWW ”tint: ”WV 1“ L’J‘Ulntl ASS" moms" Rev'ewed by Pam" Hume“
‘ ‘ ‘ . ‘ ' and Director at Under. DIWCIOr OI
coach. tutored IlttiIl (Itltt'k cxtretllely last tor a guy ol his because they worked hard tor graduate Stud'esr Enqhsh Can'e'burv House
.‘ ~. ‘ . ~ .- _ . . l .. Department April H! 1973
l on man and I‘Itlltlt ss 1 hit its last si/i 1! February 20, l973 3 00,4 30
3 00 4 30

season at Miami and recruited Faculty Club Lounge

Faculty Club Lounge
detenslve tackle .lohn Matuszak

Ilt'ItH't‘ he tell 'l‘ampa tor the SOIT Lake Cii'y snubs Olympics
Miami ~lob
Matuszak. a Moot? and 27:3
pounds. was the lirst player S.\li’l‘ [AKIC (‘I'I‘V l,\I’l——SZtII .\la\or Jake (iarn said he
taken in the dratt The Houston Lake t‘lty.designatcd as the ('5. notilied the International
tillers made what (‘urcl said was entry in competition to host the (”)mlm' ('ommittee in a
"41 WWI ”WW“ U “’7“ “in!” (”5'”)pr withdrew telegram ol the city‘s with
"He's just a super big tellow, its bid as a prospective site drawal.
Just a great football player." Tuesday
(‘urci said “I had him coming to
Tampa and then I accepted the
Job at Miami. but I came back

      
  

Journey To lxtlan by Carlos
Castaneda

Revnewed by: Dr Michael Everett
Ass't Prolessor,
Dept oi Anthropology

March 14, 1973

3 0H 30

Faculty Club Lounge

this year and he beat us almost
by himsell.”

I"(II(IC.\I\N ANI) OWENS. who
(‘urci said are “So similar in size
and everything.” this year
becalne the lirst players from the
same school to win the top honors
la the senior bowl

“Foreman was named the
Outstanding I’layer ot the game
and pot a new car and Burgess
was the ()utstanding Defensive
player and got $2,500." (‘urci
said

Foreman was selected by the
Minnesota Vikings and (twens by
the New York Jets in the drat‘t's
tirst round

“I’ol'eman probably is one of
the most versatile athletes I‘ve
ever dealt with." (‘urci said.

“He played running back.
receiver. punt returns} kickol‘fs
and he holds the record tor what
they call all-purpose running at
Miami.“ the coach added.

“The guy (lid anything we
asked him to do and it doesn't
surprise me at all that he was

 

STEREO
COMPONENT
REPAIR
All Components are
Solidly Repaired Here
MODERN SOUND
EQUIPMENT CO.

235 Bolivar
(2 blocks from Campus)
Phone 254-6941

  

Save up to $3.00!
Major label LP’S! Top artists!

Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included!
Hundreds of records! Come early ‘for best selection!

Sale starts today!
UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE
STUDENT CENTER

 

 

     
 
   
   
    
    

     
   
    
    

largest Dealer

for
Fender,Gibson
Yamaha, Martin

Carl’s Music

Center
255 E. Main

 

 

       
  
   
 
    
 
  
     
  
  
   
      
     
   
    
       
      

t'r—TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. January 31

Prices effective thru Feb. 6, I973

 

 

EIElD’S

FRANK’S

RC SUGAR FREE or REGULAR

son DRINKS 74c

8 lb oz. bottles plus deposit

‘69

package

 

 

 

  

ICEBERG

lETTUCE

HAMBURGER

HELPER ’““‘

3l$l

2/ $1
69‘

. Zifiiiifiiiifiiiiii

 

  

 

PRINGlES

POTATO
CHIPS

$I§I¢¢¢..###*”i C 0 U P 0 N

double

 

o‘.‘

gar:

as: italiitfi.

HI—C

DRINKS 5/$l

limit 5 with coupon 8. $5“ or more order

0.

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9

IIiiiiiiifiiéiifiiifiiifiiiéi3:13:13 Valid 1hr" 2/6/73 $132323133131323: 3:.
I40 New Circle Rd.
2524 Nicholosville Rd.

STORE HOURS
Mon. — Sat. 9:30 —9:30
Sunday IO:OO—-6:OO

        

Sports in spurts...

i\ii:.\ieiiis. 'l‘enn. me)—
Kentuek} (‘oaeh .loe Hall has
been named eoaeh ot the
Southeastern t‘onterenee all
stars tor their seheduled clash
\\lIIl an all star squad trom the
Missouri Valle} (‘onlerenee

The benefit game is seheduled
tor Memphis April 1. and \VlII be
the seeond III the series The .\l\'(‘
“'0” the tirst game.

Intramural seol'es'
Dells Htrd team 39 Milt 32
Rod's Itaiders 53 l’ushers 47
llilltoppers 42 llaekers 31
The Kentucky handball team
lost to Mai‘yville (‘ollege ot'
'l‘ennessee last weekend. 3-2
The singles teams lost while the
doubles team of Jerry Ruth and
Jon Arem won,

neil
youngy

In Concert

CONVENTION
CENTER

Louisville

THURSDAY
Feb. 15th

MAIL ORDERS:

Convention Center
525 W. Walnut St.,
Louisville, Ky.

  
 

Sing-A-Long

Live

Entertainment

Nightly

M-mm

Al: SHAKEY’S
-> BUNCH 0’ lUNCH
All YOU CAN EAT!
PIZZA, CHICKEN, SALAD
$1.39

2I97 Nicholosville Rd.

(Across From ZondaIe)

'l‘he Kentuek} polo team uound
up their lirst year ol eompetition
\\lIIl a 9 I record

Imd Ii) Itel‘keIe} IIoIIlllgs
\iorth. Mark Dean. Keiidell Stone
and Mar} Leonard I'K posted
\\lll.\ o\er Ilarxard. Valle} I’orge
and (‘ornell o\'('l‘ ('hristmas

\ aeation tm lose out t'ieir season

We goofed

line to reporting and mental
errors the \irong shooting
statistics tor Kenn (Irerey were
given in Tuesdays story about
the I'K Alabama game (irevey
was 13 tor 2:3 and not [it tor 2:3 as
reported Also. the halftime score
“as «llHtt lll favor ot Kentueky
and not 46-44 as reported

AAIV

In Assm “9.0,. W‘"‘

Bot) Raw ms
D’t‘Sei‘K

keimy buttrey
tim (lrummnnd
hen keitli

jack iiitzselie

TICKETS

$5.50 Advance
$6.00 Day of Show

 

277-5774 or 277-5775

k~~m~~ ~~-~~~~w~~~v~

hf'mfiéffi-{dfi' -; ._ L A ‘:~

  

4‘

it I.

‘95???» "‘ {‘3'.

a

{33:5

. A w t AAA. my ». Aww:e*«
* a ... ., 1.":-stfé’te.zf€feé%~7€4@~i;~é$. 2» « .. ~ +

A”). 'fi'; -,~ ,

      
  
  
   
  
  
   
  
 
 
   
    
  
    
   
  
  
  
   
     

<- s...
, \-

7 s.”

    

     
  
   
  
  
   
   
    
       
 
 
     

  
 

  

 

«mew/5:” 331*“?

World Wropup]

 

Nixon predicts boom

for nation's economy

\\.\Slll\(l'l‘()f\' i.\l’i——l’resident Nixon
'l‘uesday predicted a very good year.
perhaps a great one. for the American
eeonoim and called on (‘ongress and the
(‘ountri to prepare for the end of wage and
price controls

Nixon said this means supporting his
toremost economic p0llt‘)‘. the restraint ot
teileral siwnding. so that big (let'ieits do not
turn “a healthy expansion into a leverish
lioom tollowed Irv