xt7hhm52jr0f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hhm52jr0f/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-04-23 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, April 23, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 23, 1974 1974 1974-04-23 2020 true xt7hhm52jr0f section xt7hhm52jr0f _ The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 154
Tuesday, April 23, 1974

Three new colleges

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

A85 reorganization plans to be presented today

By SUSAN JONES
Kernel Staff Writer

PLANS T0 reorganize Arts and Sciences
(A & S) administratively and to realign
units within the college will be presented to
A & S faculty members today.

“The proposal could not possibly go into
effect until Fall 75," said Anthony Colson,
A&S associate dean for program
development and evaluation.

REORGANIZATIONS WOULD create
three new semi-independent colleges
through realignment of departments now
under A&S, including:

r-the College of Design, made up of
the Art and Architecture Departments;

—the College of Performing Arts
composed of the School of Music and the
Department of Theater Arts, and;

-—the College of Communications which
combines the School of Communications
and the College of Library Science.

“THE SIMPLE reality is that here, as
everywhere, the tremendous size and
diversity of arts and sciences is not
manageable if one is to have high quality
programs for students and accurate
evaluations," said Colson.

Departments to be realigned were
chosen on the basis of their relative
distinctiveness and their amount of in-
volvement in a general liberal arts
education, he said. The new colleges will
maintain administrative links with A&S.

Reorganization would also create three
administrative divisions within A&S. ”The
division of basic studies will basically
serve undergraduates, helping un~
decideds, advising and encouraging people
to consider alternatives," said Colson.

The second division is a reorganization
of the current Office of Program
Development and Evaluation so it will deal
primarily with the upper division,

Senate passes prOposal to allow

student input in tenure process

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

A PROPOSAL toallow student input into
the tenure process and several changes in
the Governing Regulations concerning
final examinations were passed by the
University Senate Monday.

The student input recommendation was
one ofsix suggestions by the Senate ad hoc
committee on tenure and promotion which
passed Monday. Four other committee
proposals were favorably approved at an
earlier meeting.

UNDER THE new regulation, written
judgments or written material submitted
by student groups (undergraduate student
advisory and graduate or professional
student group) shall be included in
materials submitted in support of a
recommendation for promotion and
tenure.

“We were really pleased with its
passage, we had been working on it for a

long time," Student Government (SG),

Vice President Bob Clement said after the
meeting. A SG special committee
originally drafted the recommendation
and submitted it to the Senate ad hoc
committee for consideration.

Another important recommendation
from the committee which was passed
defined standards for tenure, including the
quality of teaching. Under the regulation,
departments or individual educational
units shall establish reasonable standards
of performance in accordance with the
Governing Regulations.

SOME POINTS which shall be included
in those standards are normal balance
between teaching, scholarship, creative
productivity and service; quality of
teaching; and the minimum research
requirements for promotion or tenure.

Reasons for non-renewal of a faculty
member’s contract were passed.

(‘ontinued on page 4

disciplinary undergraduate and graduate
programs growing out of these areas.

“The final division, concerning in-
dividual, interdisciplinary and in-
dividualized programs is an effort to en-
courage individualized use of
curriculum,” said Colson.

Reorganization is now expected to in-
crease funds. ”Our basic assumption is
that there will be no major increase in
costs," said Colson.

“Our concern is with getting programs
together in an administrative sense,” he
added.

The proposal must be approved by the
University president in order to be im-
plemented.

“This plan is the result of two years
work," said Colson, “We’ve studied the
programs of over 100 universities, learned
their successes and applied them to UK."

...and the sparks flew!

Employee Mike FiedIer grinds a metal rod at the mechanical engineering
building. (Kernel staff photo by Brian Harrigan.)

 

News In Brlet

by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

0 Betts lectures

OAshland income rises
0Would push investigation
0 Nixon still undecided

0 Endorses tax cut

0 Robin replaces Meir

OToday's weather...

0 AN INFORMAL history lecture will be
given Wednesday at 3 pm. in the rare book
room of the library addition.

Sponsored by the History Graduate
Student Association, the lecture features
Dr. Raymond Betts, whose topic will be
“Scraps out of the Past; Personal
Reflections on the Historical Process."

0 ASHLAND. Ky. -- Ashland Oil Inc.
reported Monday its net income for the six
months ending March 31 was $53.8 million,
an increase of 40.5 per cent over the same
period a year ago.

Orin E. Atkins, Ashland Oil chairman
and chief executive, said the company
realized the increased profits ”despite
lower profitability from the petroleum
division caused by reduced refinery runs,
the purchase of foreign petroleum
products at prices above market . . . and
major increases in the cost of crude oil.”

0 NEW YORK —— Vice President Gerald
R. Ford said Monday he would have
pushed the Watergate investigation harder
if he had been in the White House when the
scandals first broke.

In a question-and—answer session at the
annual meeting of The Associated Press,
Ford also called President Nixon to “do
anything reasonable" to clear up the
Watergate controversy, including
maximum cooperation with the House
Judiciary Committee's impeachment
probe.

0 WASHINGTON — President Nixon is
still undecided on “the content or form" of
his response to a House Judiciary Com-
mittee’s subpoena for tape recordings of 42
presidential conversations, a White House
spokesman said Monday.

Nixon must respond by Thursday to the
committee subpoena for material it seeks
in its impeachment inquiry.

O I-‘RANKFORT — Gov. Wendell Ford
has asked the nation’s Democratic
governors to endorse his proposal for a
federal tax cut.

He spoke Monday at the governors’
conference in Chicago on behalf of
granting relief to those he said are most
adversely affected by inflation.

o TEL AVIV -— Israel’s ruling Labor
party today named Yitzhak Rabin, former
chief of staff and ambassador to
Washigton, to replace Premier Golda Meir
and try to form a new government, party
officials announced.

0.050 so

Partly cloudy and cool weather is
forecast today with a high temperature
near 60. Tonight should be fair and cooler
withelowinthetOe.Wedneedaywillbe
fair with a high in the mid all.

 

 editorials represent the opinions of the editors, not the university

EdllOl‘lGlS

 

The Kentucky Kernel

Published by the Kernel Press Inc. Begun as the Cedar In 1094 and published continuously
as The Kentucky Kernel since ms. The Kernel Press Inc. mad 1m. Thlrd clue
pateoe paid at Lexlmton, Ky. Business ottices are located In the Journallsm Bultdlna on
the University of Kurtucky campus. Aavertlslno, room "It“ News Depenmmt room
114. Advertlslno publlmed herein I: intended to help the reader buy. Any false or
mleleedlng advertising should be reported to thaEdlbre.

Steve Swift, Editor-in-(‘hief

An alternate choice

Students needing an educational change of pace yet
wanting to remain in school may want to consider
enrolling in the University Year in Action (UYA)
program.

Persons in particular fields and eager to apply
formal learning with experience can find numerous
position in the UYA program. Participants in the
program work for community service agencies but
receive University assistance and a full semester of
credit as well as a living allowance. Medical and
travelexpenses may also be provided in the program.

If you think a semester away from the campus
working in a community-related project sounds good
you may want to drop over to the Office for Ex-
periential Education and give the program a look.

A nice innovation

English professor Frank Burke, the Office of Un-
dergraduate Studies and the Office of the President
deserve commendation for their efforts which
brought the week-long film festival, “A Week with
Arthur Penn" to campus.

According to Burke, one benefit of the film series is
to promote several recently initiated film courses.

Besides presenting 10 of movie director Penn’s
films, the program includes two appearances by Penn
in which he will offer criticism and explanations of his
works. >

This approach to education has been successful on
other large campuses and with University support
there is no reason it should not be popular here.

Kernels -

If a man has a talent and cannot use it, he has
failed. If he has a talent and uses only half of it, he has
partly failed. If he has a talent and learns somehow to
use the whole of it, he has gloriously succeeded, and
won a satisfaction and a triumph few men ever know.

Thomas Wolfe

Nicholas Von Hoffman

   

 
   

"DETEN‘I'E...DETENTE...’THE ART Of GETTING AMERICANS TO

(42.4.4, , ,

win/mm. '
IE RIDICUIOUSLY NICE To

YOU WHILE. YOU KICK THE Hill. OUT OF THEM'..."

Letters to the Kernel

A continuing basketball saga '

Re: The recent letter
promoting Gil Thorpe, en-
couraging the University to hire
him as an assistant coach.

Sune, he‘s been pretty suc—
cessful at Milford High School.
True, he can communicate with
his players and always seems to
solve his problems.

But hiring Gil Thorpe as an
assistant for UK would be a
major mistake. You see, Gil
Thorpe is a racist.

He's been successful at Milford
with his all-white teams, but
notice that Dunbar won the state
title this year, led by All—Stater
Ed Knox, who is black. Knox
thoroughly outplayed Jerry
Pulver before fouling out,
probably on prejudiced calls;

Pulver was sick, that’s true;
but Knox is better overall (he
DID, after all, make first team
all-state.)

Thorpe’s luck has just about
run out. He was lucky to get Joel
Frost last year, and Jay J. Judd
should’ve flunked out by all

rights (a few points given by his
teachers kept him enrolled) and
Lonnie Baylor just happened to
make it back from his knee injury
just in time.

Thorpe is the Adolph Rupp of
high school basketball. But as UK
found out this season, the days of
the lily-white teams are gone.

Henry Kerlin
Psychology-freshman

In a corner

Dear Mr. Rawlings:

How can you say that a white
man cannot relate to a black
man‘s problems, when in the
same article you mention Al
McGuire, whose Marquette
teams are mostly from the ghetto
and are nationally ranked almost
every year?

True. Joe Hall was not brought
up in the streets, as was McGuire,
but he did have all black lineups
at Regis College, and continually
took a lot of flak about it.

You’ve really written yourself

into a corner this time, Gary
Rawlings.

Larry McCormack

Sociology-senior

Thanks

As a member of both the En-
vironmental Action Society and
the Save Our Red River
Organization, I have a personal
thanks for Ron Mitchell's articles
supporting us in our fight to save
the Red River Gorge. The fate of
Red River lies in the ef-
fectiveness of Saturday’s
demonstration. If you haven't
seen the Gorge, visit it this
spring. It isjust now coming alive
with the colors of the season. If
you have been there, wouldn‘t
you agree that it‘s worth
preserving? One more person in
Frankfort could make a dif—
ference.

it is a good feeling to know that
so many people now care about
an area that I have known and
loved all my life.

Iris Skidmore
Forestry-freshman

Ray Dirks: another unknown second place finisher

stockholder’s
question academic;

WASHINGTON — Ray Dirks
uncovered the second-worst

reproachful
but Dirks

 

scandal of this period and thus,
like many another second-place
finisher, he is less well-known
than he ought to be. Dirks is the
security analyst who flushed out
the Equity Funding scandal
which has resulted in the in-
dictment of 22 officers and em-
ployees of the now-bankrupt
insurance company and the loss
of $288 million dollars to the
stockholders.

But Equity Funding has been
blotted out by Watergate, which
is a shame because that means
there is no one to answer the Long
Island, N.Y., investor who
recently asked a Wall Street
Journal reporter, “Where were
the men who were supposed to
watch out for us little people?
They tell you it‘s all safe, all
regulated, so they can get you to
invest. Then you find out it’s still
nothing but a big crapshoot, and
you‘re marked for a loser."

The 74-year-old widow, who
worked for 55 years and then put
her savings into Equity Fun-
ding, may find her fellow

does try to supply some answers
in a new book he has written with
Leonard Gross (“The Great Wall
Street Scandal," McGraw-Hill).

THE UNRAVELING of this
momentous fraud is as good a
mystery story as the discovery of
watergate. This tale of coun-
terfeiting securities, forgery,
misrepresentation and swindle——
in what is supposed to be a highly
regulated, highly supervised
industry—shows how little
protection the small investor has.

In theory the insurance
departments of three states. the
New York Stock Exchange and
the Federal government‘s
Securities and Exchange Com-
mission all had the responsibility
of keeping Equity Funding
reasonably honest.

The quality of all this
regulating is suggested by G.
Bradford Cook, the SEC‘s im-
mediate past chairman, who
admitted he was a perjurer the
other day when being questioned

as a witness at the Mitchell-Stans
trial. The state regulatory
agencies simply weren’t big
enough or sophisticated enough
to catch what was happening at
Equity Funding.

BUT WHAT about the New
York Stock Exchange, that oak-
paneled fortress of waspish
retitude‘? A company whose
stock is traded on the Big Board
is supposed to be among the
biggest, best and most stable. So
what was Equity Funding doing
among the great blue-chip
stocks?

It had been turned down once
for listing because its auditors
were too small and obscure; an
objection, Dirks tells us, that was
gotten around by having the
same auditors merge with a
larger firm and continue to in-
spect Equity's books.

By being listed among the
GM's AT&T‘s and IBM’s, the blue
chippedness and respectability
rubbed off on Equity Funding. A
great deal for the stock jobbers.
A hot go-go stock with all the solid
dependability of US. Steel. Te

only difference was that US.
Steel actually does make steel,
while Equity Funding was in-
venting fictitious assets and
putting them on its books.

STILL, PEOPLE bought it and
bid up the price to absurd levels,

while grave and gray gentlemen.

members of the New York Stock
Exchange recommended it to
their customers.

Dirks quotes this amazing
report from the brokerage firm of
Wertheim & Company, shortly
before the end came: “Equity
Funding’s inherently con-
servative approach to business
may be viewed as a strong
defensive weapon in the hands of
a group of uncommonly able
executives aggressively seeking
and obtaining a share of the
financial services market.“

Whether stockbrokers en-
couraged their customers to buy
Equity Funding out of greed,
dishonesty or congenitally bad
judgment can never be settled.
They will do the same thing the
next time because they can‘t
make money suggesting to their

customers they buy a safe stock,
which pays fat dividends, and sit
on it.

THE PRICE of a stock is only

related to what people think its'

price will be in the future.
Almost nobody buys a stock for
its dividends, but rather for the
gamble that it will go up in price.

This is no game for 74-year-old
widows. It would be fine for them
to play, if we could at least
promise an honest game, but we
can’t. With all that regulation,
the Equity game was still fixed.
Maybe we provide people with a
false sense of security by having
all these regulatory agencies.

Compare the stock market to
the commodity market which has
a terrible reputation. The saying
is that only pirates invest in
commodities, but that does keep
the widows and all of us other
orphans from playing.

Nicholas Von Hoffman Is a
columnist for King Features
Syndicate.

 

 

 

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”lava-rm -w.’ s.— .

 

Abortion laws

Sedler to contest new legislation
for Kentucky Civil Liberties Union

By WALLY HIXSON
Kernel Staff Writer

Kentucky’s new abortion legislation will be
contested by the Kentucky Civil Liberties Union
(KCLU) on the grounds that it is un-
constitutional.

The suit will be filed by “one or more
physicians” on the grounds that their rights and
the rights of their prospective clients would be
violated if the law took effect, said UK law
professor and KCLU m ember Robert Sedler who
will represent the group.

DR. PHILIP S. (‘R()SSEN. who directs the
only office for a legal abortion in Lexington, said
that he would be a plaintiff in the suit.

A group of physicians is now studying the
legislation to determine specifically what
provisions will be attacked. The suit will be filed
prior to the laws enactment on June 21 in the
hope that it will be “declared invalid," said
Sedler.

The abortion bill (SB 259), which passed the
General Assembly on March 21, was essentially
a confrontation between conservative groups led
by the Right to Life anti-abortion group and
liberals led by Sen. Tom Easterly (D-Frankfort).

In 1973 the major objective of Right to Life was
to a constitutional amendment to reverse the
Supreme Court decision of freedom of choice on
abortion.

THAT AMENDMENT. submitted by Rep.
Lawrence Hogan (R-Md.) to the House and
James Buckley (C-N.Y.) to the Senate is locked
in the House Judiciary Committee which is
currently investigating impeachment
proceedings.

Right to Life eventually decided it was futile to
go directly against the Supreme Court decision
and made its major goal to invoke a law “as

 
 
  
  
   
 

*_Ta

  
  

   
 
   
   
  
 
  
   
   
   
  
  

senior yea rs.

ROTC during their first two years:

struction is available.

programs are the same.

     
  

See us at
Barker Hall

No Obligation

This man

. has a good
. n ' 3 deal for you.

He's not a
used car
salesman

The United States Army offers college men the op—
portunity to by commissioned as second lieutenants after
only two years of oncampus ROTC instruction. You can
take advantage of this opportunity by attending a six-
week ROTC Basic Camp after your sophomore year and
completing the ROTC Advancec Course in your junior and

The two-year program is designed specifically to fill
the needs of community and junior college graduates and
students of four-year colleges who have not taken Army

Students who plan to earn a baccalaureate degree at
one of the colleges offering ROTC Advanced Course may
qualify for commissions by completing the two-year
program at that school. The student at a four~year college
which does not offer ROTC may be able to enroll in the
program at a neighboring institution where such in-

A six-week Basic Camp substitutes for the first two
years of the four-year program. Except for this. the two

call 258-2897
Army ROTC

restrictive as possible”, said Ronald Wheat, vice
president for the Lexington chapter and member
of the Kentucky Board of Directors.

Wheat said Right to Life was ”satisfied" with
the final bill.

ONE OF THE major changes in the Kentucky
law regards consent. The bill states both the
father and the pregnant woman must give their
consent for an abortion if the pregnancy exceeds
three months.

The original Right to Life proposal (that the
father‘s approval must be given during the first
trimester of pregnancy) failed.

Another aspect of the new law is that the
parents of a woman under 18 years old must
approve an abortion if the pregnancy exceeds
three months.

THESE TWO POINTS‘are among those which
have received the most criticism and may be
contested in the suit.

The conscience clause, which states that no
hospital, doctor or nurse is compelled to aid in
abortion, is another addition to Kentucky law.

This clause also provides that government
assistance cannot be denied to a woman who has
decided against abortion solely for that reason.

THE NEW BILL also outlaws saline abortions
(salt poisoning) after a group of physicians
declared them to be unsafe for the mother.
Saline abortions had been one of the most
common forms of abortion during the second
trimester.

Under the new law it is the duty of the
physician to protect a child in the case of live
birth and provides emphasis on policing abortion
laws to ensure that no abortions will be per-
formed after 25 weeks of pregnancy.

   
   
  

   
 
  

summer.

  

  

INTERSESSION

  

   
 

3 credit hours- McCormick

 
  

SUMMER SESSSION

    
 

   

Holmes

  

We lford

   

12:00- 3 hrs. - Knlpplng

    
 

Wed. LOO-3:1) -3 hrs.- Knlpplng

   

  

 
  
 

Graduates:

 
 

 
  
 

  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. April 23, 1974—3

 

  
 

Diners ' Playhouse

   

N. Broadway at H!»

Otters
Faculty. Students and Friends

$2.00 OFF

regular price

With This Coupon
Pay Only $6.50 for Buffet and Play
Friday Nite April 30

QharlegfiAun‘l'

Reservations Necessary-299-8407

 

 

 

 

 

Everybody’s
Selling
Something...

We're giving it away.

Sisterhood, Friendship, Challenge,
and a chance to be all you can be.

Sorority RU 8" Registration

April 24-25 Dorm Lobby Desks

for further information

257-2651 .

 

SUMMERTIME BLUES? A

While you're trying to
make a dollar this
summer, you can be
making college credits too.
The UK Extension Class

Program is offering classes
in the following areas this

JEFFERSON COMMUNITY
COLLEGE

Registration-May 6 6:00p.m.- Room 204 J. F.8uilding

PSY 350- Intro. to Humanistic Psy. M,T,W, 8. Th. sooazao pm June 5 80011 I), 1 00-4 30

Registration June 6 - 6:30 pm. Room 006 Hartford Dulldlng
SOC ‘09- The Family- Tues., 8 Thurs. 1:304:00 - 3 hrs.
Psy su- Mental Hygiene - Mon. 8. Wed. 2:00-4:30 - 3 hrs.
HEALTH 8. PE. 3:» School Health Ed. - Men. I. Wed. 9:”
HEALTH 8. PE 5”- Admln. at Health and Safety Ed. -mn. I.

   

COST: Undergraduate:
$20.00 per hour plus $2.00 service fee "”‘Wt'im June ‘7 a' W

$30.00 per hour plus $2.00 service fee socm. The Family Mon aww 6.00330 3hrs. .McCabe

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: EXTENSION
CLASS PROGRAM. 114 FRAZEE HALL

  
 
 
 
 
     

FORT KNOX

SUMMER SESSION
Registration June 3, A 80) II 30.1 (X) 400,6 00-800

BA 341 Business Law Tues. 8. Thurs. 6:00 9.00 .3 hrs.

EDP 522 Educational Tests 8Meas. Mon. 8. Wed. 600 9:00
3 hrs.

EDP 548- Educational Psychology Tues. 8 Thurs. 6.00-
9:00 3 hrs.

LSSIO Children’sth 8. Rel Materials Mon 8. Wed. 6:009:00
3hrs.

PS 541 Foreign Policy of Soviet Union Mon. 8. Wed. 6.00 9 00
3 hrs.

PSY 507. Psychology ot Learning Tues. 8. Thu‘rs 5.000(1) -4
hrs.

P_SY540 lntro Industrial Psychology- Mon. 8. Wed. 62009.00
3 hrs.

  
 
     

ASHLAND COMMUNITY

SUMMER SESSION

   
 
   

EDP 548 Educational Psy. Tues. 8. Thurs. 6:00-8:30 (hrs. -
Lively
PSY 522. Counseling Psy. Mon. 8. Wed. 62m830 3 hrs. » Gay

SOC ‘37- Criminology Tues. 8. Thurs. 6:00-8:30 3 hrs.
McCabe

  
      
       
       
     
           
     
     
     
 
  
  
   
    
  
    
 
    
 
  
   
  
   
   
  
 
 

 

   
   
 
 
 
 
 

 
    
    
   
      
   
     
  
    
   

  
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
   

   
  
   
 
 
   

 I

——TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. April 23. I974

ROAST BEEF
TONIGHT!

ALL you can eat

Dinner
From 4:30

Choice roast beef, beef stroganoff and a variety of
vegetables, salads and delicious desserts
plus tax and

$2.59
KING’S TABLE

American Smorgasbord Restaurants
2013 Regency Rd.. 1424 Alexandria Dr.. in Lexington

Senate passes action
for student input

(‘ontinued from page 1

Two other recommendations,
one which states that reasons for
non-renewal of a faculty mem-
ber’s contract shall be explained
to the person involved, and
another which recognizes the
quality of the faculty member’s
advising, were passed as the
committee recommended.

FINAL EXAMINATION rules
were changed to state that any
student with more than two final
examinations on the same day
may have the examination for
the class with the highest catalog
number rescheduled.

Options to reschedule must be

Since the last class meeting for
all classes will be two weeks from
last Friday, Dr. Stan Smith,
Senate chairman, said students
who act immediately will
probably be given reasonable
consideration by the instructor,
although the deadline for such a
request has officially passed.

IN CASES of undue hardships
placed upon the instructor in the
scheduling of final exams, the
examination may be rescheduled
with the recommendation of the
department chairman and with
the concurrence of the dean of the
college and the registrar.

Final examinations can be

 

rescheduled only by the in-
structor in cases of undue hard-
ship for the student.

exercised in writing to the ap-
propriate instructor two weeks
prior to the last class meeting.

How you express yourself
depends upon your camera.

’ b ‘ . 'i ' - v . .
, 2 . , , _( -~ ..
E I} 5. .3... .v" » . ~
. 5 e ' - ‘ " .. t f : '

.26; - r

Frankfort Plaza Shopping Center. us. 60. West. Frankfort

 

 

 

   
 

 

Up Jump the Devil
It

“For a South] Experience"

Cocktail Lounge
New Town Pllto

   
   

  

 

 

   
   

 

 

 
 
   

If you’re

 

  
   
      
      

Today almost everybody is getting into photography The whole F-1 system includes over 40 lenses and 900d enough,
And its not the snapshot variety. People are doing 200 accessories. lt‘s capable of doing virtually b

. . . . . you can e a
sports stories. nature stories. portraits—you may . everythingin photography. So whatever idea you
even have a friend who 5 doing photographs through have for a picture. the F-1 has the equipment to make Navy Nuclear
a microscope Or a telescope. sure you get it. Officer.

Because it was conceived from the beginning as a
system. it works as a system. All the elements are
quickly and easily interchangeable. No matter which
lens or accessory you use with the l-'-1 body you won't
have the feeling that something has been
"tacked on.“

What‘s more the F-1 is comfortable to handle.

Years of research went into the design of the F-1 body
and placement of controls so your fingers fall
naturally into place. You'll appreciate this comfort
when you're on assignment. It's also an important
thing to keep in mind if you‘re investing in a camera
you plan to keep a long time.

Canon has been in the optics industry over 37

You also know that everybody has his own idea
about which camera IS best That's why it's important
for you to know about the Canon F-1. Because it‘s the
system camera that 5 fast becoming the favorite of
professronals And the new status symbol among
photography enthusiasts

The Navy needs some
very special college graduates
who aren‘t afraid to find out
how good they really are. Who
Will conSider our extensive
and demanding training pro-
gram, the most excmng chal-
lenge of their lives. A challenge
that leads to an excrting future
as a Naval Officer aboard a
nuclear—powered surface ship
or submarine.

Find out more from yqu
local recruiter, or call toll-free
800—841-8000.

     
       
   
       
   
    
 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
 
   
 
     

   

years. We make microscope equipment. amateur and Be Someone
professional movie cameras and TV lenses. It's this Special
experience that helps make our still cameras the best in the Navy
selling cameras in Japan. In Americt. it's just a matter '

of time. See your Navy Officer

Programs Team April 22
through 25 at the Student
Center Bldg. from l0:00 am.
to 3:00 pm. to help you plan

See your dealer for more information. He'll also
show you Canon's other SLR cameras, like the FTb
and TLb, Both of which offer accurate metering, easy
film loading. a wide range of lenses and the same

 

 

 

 

   
 

standard of engineering that goes into the F-1. Your future-
limirtii USA lm it ‘ Nov iit.i Di .ve laiw burr ess New York 11040
(‘ mnn USA I‘ll -1'w’ F ‘l leilim AVl‘Vrll" Elmhurst lll-r‘ms 6l1126
(14mm ()ptir s a “li‘.l""‘i i. ., us Co inc 1." l f .ist Paulaiino Avenue Costa Mesa California 92626 CLASSIFIEDS
C mun Opti: <. 8. it . f.‘ Ii' as Canada Ltd Ontario

 
 

258-4646

 

 

 

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. April 23. 1974—5

 

 

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ELAZEE
MMWM

Kernel

 

 6—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday, April 23, I974

 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

      
    

 

_ nerisms. speech and un- The Speech Department will
707 Allendele Dr. 276 2013 mistakable humor. present a Reader’s Theatre
.6“ r. a L L *0 ° DREW SAID he hopes to for- production today at 8 p.m. ..
:3. Welcome to I l7 . ‘5 “ DREW EXPRESSED his mutate his own interpretation of Everything that Rises Must
' opinionof the lecturer and writer, Twain in the future, instead of Converge by Flannery O’Conner ,
$535 ORVEN‘I A»; “leain egprelssed his views on using Holblrook’s. 11 mil; :8 dirsfleg dby Ptt‘ofejssr 1
5:33; poitics, e uman race In mono ogue, Drew wi cover 2 . ams an rama ize y
' FOOb 3'4??? anything, and I admire a man such Twain favorites as “Huck speech students. it
- who is not afraid to speak his and Jim" from Huckleberry

 

 

Spend an Evening of Fun
See the UK Theatre performances of

HOW MR. MOCKINPOTT
WAS CURED OF HIS SUFFERINGS

 
 
 
   

The AIIS

 

here in 'Mark Twain

I9fh century humorist arrives

Revisited'

by Peter Weiss
tr. by Christopher “0"" By SUE JONES with an added flair for character Earth and several selections
ThIS Week Kernel Staff Writer acting. from Speeches.

Wed. — Sat. 8:30 p.m.

Sun. 7

:30 p.m.

Box - Office Now Open

Noon

Box - Office Location:
Fine Arts Building

- 4:30

Noon - Curtain On Days Of Performance
Information and Reservations: 258-2680

Guignol Theatre Lobby

$1025

 

 

 

 

 

Through the Showmanship of
Parker Drew, a freshman at the
University of Louisville, the
infamous Mark Twain will come
alive at 8 p.m. tonight in the
Student Center Theatre.

Drew, complete with white
suit, eyebrows and moustache,
dresses and acts like the 19th
century author in his “Mark
Twain Revisited” performance.
He becomes totally involved with
the character — Twain’s man-

mind."

He first portrayed Twain when
he was 14 in Wisconsin, after
seeing actor Hal Holbrook’s
rendition of Twain on telvision.

Drew did numerous ap-
pearances as Twain at high
schools, colleges and on
television commercials around
the Green Bay area. Since Drew
has come to Kentucky most of his
appearances have centered in
Louisville and its surrounding
campuses.

Finn. “His Grandfather’s Old

The program is the first of its
kind this year at UK and is
sponsored by Hootenanny and
Buddah productions. Tickets
may be purchased at the door.

Speech dept.

dromotizes
O‘Conner tale

IT WILI. be presented in the

 

run-cm m... -

g 5 .Oriental Foods Under 70 years of make up, Ram" from Notebook, “Heaven Commerce Building Auditorium. l;
Tr Our 51 r: '"d 6"" Drew is 18 and a music major or Hell" from Letters from the Admission is free. l
y 2 E
Fresh M... 3 :- .. Comm... Classmed .
TOfu Harrodsburg Rd. r
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,, SHARE- THE RIDE

WITH US THIS
VACATION
AND GET ON
TO A GOOD

THING

Us means Greyhound, and a lot of your fellow students
who are already on to a good thing. You leave when you
like. Travel comfortably. Arrive refreshed and on time.
You'll save money, too, over the Increased standby air
fares. Share the ride with us on weekends. Holidays.
Anytime. Go Greyhound.

 

GREYHOUND SERVICE

7

$300.00 Call 255-6930.

BED, DRESSER, rug, book shelves, all
once new; Price is right. Call before Weds.
254-2418. 22A23.

RICHARDSON MOBILE 1909 Home. 12 x
47 Completely furnished and set up. Ex-
cellent condition. Call 253-1910 after 6:30
p