xt7hhm52jr11 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hhm52jr11/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-06-18 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, June 18, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 18, 1974 1974 1974-06-18 2020 true xt7hhm52jr11 section xt7hhm52jr11 The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXVI No. 2
Tuesday. June 18, 1974

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Ky. 40506

 

Litigation probable

Red River Defense Fund leads effort to save gorge

By NANCY DALY
Managing Editor

ACTIVE OPPOSITION to the Red River
Dam will continue during the summer
months, followingan impressive march on
Frankfort in April and in the midst of a
hotly contested US Senate race.

Dam opponents from various
organizations. including the En-
vironmental Action Society, UK Student
Government and Save Our Red River,

have pooled their resources to form the
Red River Defense Fund (RRDF).

ORGANIZERS OI" 'I‘IIE April 20 march
in Frankfort felt there was a need to form
one group to avoid duplication of antidam
activities.

Mike Wilson, Student Government vice
president, said RRI)!“ will concentrate on
five areas: litigation, information and
research, publicity and education,
political channels and formation of

Summer figures increase

There has been a modest increase in UK
summer enrollment over the past three
years, according to Elbert Ockerman,
coordinator for the summer session.

Pre-registration figures for the eight-
week summer session are 5,395. This in-
cludes 4,278 in—state, 1,038 out~of—state and
79 foreign students.

to four hundred
during late

ANOTHER TIIRI-ZE
students will enroll

 

registration, said ()ckerman. He cited the
reason as various education and home
economic workshops and seminars that
begin later in the semester.

A six»week session, offered the past two
years, was dropped this summer because
of limited enrollment.

()ckerman also said there will be no
increase in tuition for the coming year or
the following summer session.

 

A‘d-—-

Paint for the belfry

Memorial Hall gets a fresh coat by painter Seldon Kreech. This is the season
reserved for sprucing up l'K buildings. (Photo by Michael Koenig.)

chapters in other areas of Kentucky.

A May 22 benefit concert with the Lamay
String Quartet at Central Christian Church
raised over 36m. said RRDF member Tim
Murphy. Money raised from concerts.
contests and donations will primarily be
used for possible Red River Dam
litigation.

DAM ()Pl’UNENTS have demonstrated
at several of Gov. Wendell Ford‘s cam~
paign appearances. Ford‘s support of the
dam is expected to be a major issue in his
U S Senate race with Sen. Marlow Cook
tit-Kyi.

The Ashland Young Democrats (YD)
organization petitioned Ford to oppose the
dam and a similar resolution was passed
at the state YI) convention in ()wensboro.

More than 20 dam protesters held
banners and signs Friday at a Fayette
(‘ounty Democratic Party rally at the
courthouse where Gov. Ford spoke to
promote the National Democratic Party
Telethon,

The Army (‘orps of Engineers Louisville
District office said Tuesday the Red River

Dam environmental impact statement will
be released in a few weeks.

ROBERT WOODYARD. environmental
resources branch spokesman, said recent
changes in the corps' water supply for-
mulation must be reflected in the
statement before it is sent to the Council on
Environmental Quality for final approval.

RRDF plans to encourage Congress to
de-authorize the project and ask the
General Accounting Office to conduct an
audit.

THE HUL’SE Appropriations Committee
added $300,000 June 3 to the Nixon ad-
ministration budget request for the $27.6
million dam project.

The committee action boosted to $500,000
the amount earmarked for construction of
the project in fiscal 1975,

Wilson said RRDP. which hopes to
eventually expand to a statewide
organization, will meet 8 pm. Sunday at
Alfalfa Restaurant on Limestone.
Organizational literature can be obtained
at Student Government's new offices on
the first floor of the Student Center.

UK College of Pharmacy
establishes Honor Code

B) HON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer
A voluntary system of students who
resolve cheating incidents on exams
among themselves without faculty in-
tervention has been approved by the
University Senate for the (‘ollege of
I’hariiiacy
At the May 6 Senate meeting, an Honor
(‘ode was passed 35-26.

THE CODE outlines certain procedures
which should take place if a student
suspects a fellow classmate of cheating or
if he is actually caught. When cheating is
suspected, the student noting the in-
fraction has several options available.

The student can inform the entire class
he suspects cheating and that it should
stop. He can also consuit privately with the
student he suspects or can report the in-
cident to the Honor Codecommittee, which
would be composed of the Student Ad-
visory (‘ommittee (SAC).

“Each student is obligated to take
whatever action, as described above (in
the codei, he believes to be most effective
to stop the cheating or to prevent its
recurrence," the code states.

FAt‘l‘LTY responsibilities under the
code include: support of and abidance with
the Honor (‘ode, placement of students in
situations where infractions should not
occur; and. indication of conditions for
carrying on the exam. including use of
extra materials.

Faculty members report infractions to
the code committee or the assistant to the
dean for student affairs. who is a non-
voting committee member. During the
exam, the faculty members serves as
resource person, not a proctor.

Fifteen procedures for action under the
code are outlined, including exactly how

the committee will operate. A secretary
will take notes at code committee
proceedings. but minutes will be kept
confidential to protect the innocent

'I‘HF. (‘().\l.\ilT'l‘EE will meet following
the report of a suspected infraction to
determine the student's guilt or innocence,

An advisory Honor (‘ode committee,
consisting of a chairman and four other
members of the College of Pharmacy
faculty. will serve to provide faculty
representation.

They will interview all parties con—
cerned and will obtain as much in-
formation on the incident as possible. A
two-thirds vote is necessary to convict.

IF THE student is found not guilty, the
assistant to the dean of students is
responsible for destroying the proceedings
records after one year.

When a student is found guilty a written
report of the proceedings, with names
excluded, and a recommended penalty will
be submitted to the advisory Honor (‘ode
committee.

The advisory committee will review the
Honor (‘ode committee's recom—
mendation, and. in the event of a
disagreement as to the penalty, the two
committees will collaborate to resolve
indifferences.

.‘\l.’l‘ll()l'(;ll the student committee will
have major power in the process, the
penalty must be approved by the advisory
committee before they know the name of
the student.

Also if the student is found guilty.
written records. including the violator's
name. will be kept on file in the dean‘s
office. but will not be a permanent part of

('oiitinueil on page it

 

 Editorials/Letters

 

Concrete crazy

Newtown Pike Extension serves as a microcosm for
problems afflicting the entire community.

The road is a product of the 1964-1990 Urban
Transportation Plan, a study which tends to ac-
commodate our dependence on the automobile at the
expense of people and the integrity of their neigh-
borhoods. The trend towards construction of major
highways in the central city threatens whatever
sense of neighborhood pride remains and exacer-
bates an already critical housing shortage in
Lexington.

Gov. Ford‘s cancellation of Newtown Extension
remedies an immediate problem, but a permanent
solution cannot be achieved until the system of
transportation planning is thoroughly reevaluated.
The decision appears to be a political maneuver
geared towards improving his tarnished en-
vironmental image.

There is something wrong with a system that raises
the ire of the community with every highway
proposal. Direct input from local government in
transportation decision-making is long overdue. The
welfare of our community should not be dependent on
the “goodwill" of a United States Senate candidate or
a concrete-crazed transportation bureaucracy.

The $6.5 million expressway would have destroyed
more than 140 homes in Irishtown, doing irreparable
damage to a neighborhood with a strong sense of
community and an average residency of33 years. The
smaller Davis Bottom community would have been
literally obliterated and plans for five-laning the
Avenue of Champions would increase traffic through
the University, divide the campus and endanger
pedestrians crossing Euclid.

One favorable by-product of the Newtown Ex-
tension controversy is an increased concern for
predominantly sub-standard housing in Irishtown.
Pressure from the Irishtown Neighborhood
Association, Councilman Joe Jasper, civic groups
and state legislators have sensitized city planners to
the plight of inner city residents. A redevelopment
program is now highly probable whether or not the
road is built.

Hopefully an alternative route can be drawn up that
would displace as few homes as possible instead of
by-passing business interests in Irishtown. Tran-
sportation planners must consider improvement of
existing arteries before recommending new roads or
take a serious look at mass transit alternatives.

All GOD'S CHILLUN GOT N-POWER

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Letters policy and Viewpoints

Students are encouraged
to let the editor of their
newspaper know what
impressed, angered or
irritated them in certain
Kernel articles. Also,
editors and reporters
make mistakes and rely on
student input in this letters
forum to set some matters
straight.

To allow for equal ac—
cess to publish student
replies, letters to the
editor should not exceed
250 words. Editors reserve
the right to edit, for space
purposes only, longer
letters. All material should
be typed and triple-spaced

and must include the
writer‘s name,
classification, major,

address and a telephone
number where he or she

can be reached. Letters
can be sent to the Ken-
tucky Kernel, 114 Jour-
nalism Building, CAM—
PUS.

Longer letters con-

cerning more serious
issues should be sent as

“Comments". The
C o m m e n t p a g e
student and faculty
opinion. Editors reserve
the right to edit, for space
purposes. material over
750 words. Comments

should be returned with
the same information
about the writer as letters.

Comments soliciting
funds or attendance at
meetings will be referred
to the Kernel’s “Memos"
column.

Peace of mind

I hope you won’t deny me the
avenue of finding some peace of
mind. I am confined here at the
London Correctional Institute in
London, Ohio. I am a lonely in-
carcerated man who would like
to communicate with concerned
persons outside of these gray

walls. lam 38 years of age. 5 feet
6 inches tall , 150 pounds.

Mail is uncensored. and we are
allowed to write to whomever we
wish. I would like to receive mail
from anyone. young or old,
female or male, who would like to
write to me. I will answer all
letters, I would like to create
relationships which are sincere
and very lasting,

Anthony Aliarano
.Vo. 136-932
P.(). Box 69
London. ()hio 43bit)

Rights of man

Why doesn't someone teach a

class in the American
Revolution? Not the Socialist
revolution or the Fascist

revolution or the capitalist
revolution or the Communist
revolution, but the real American
Revolution that has to do with the
inalienable rights of man.

You know, the one that Jack
Kennedy and Martin Luther King
wereinto, the one thatwe are into
and that Jesus Christ was into:
thesquare one thatworks. Maybe
if we study it we can get better at
it. ,

Edna Urie
Lexington

 

    
   
 
     
 

Published by the Kernel Press lnc., Begun
as the Cadet in it" and published cont
inuously as the Kentucky Kernel since ms.
The Kernel Press, Inc., founded in 1971.

Kentucky
Kernel

Editor-in-chiet, Kay Coyte
Managing editor, Nancy Daly
Editorial editor, Larry Mead
Photo editor, Phil Groshong

Arts editor, Clark Terrell
Sports editor, Jim Manoni
Copy editor, Oruce Winpes
Copy editor, Clare Dewar

  

Editorials represent the opinions ot the editors, not the University.

 

  

Comment

 

Army Corps of Engineers meets its match

By JOHN BASKIN

NEW BURLINGTON. Ohio —- When the Army Corps
of Engineers, thinking reservoir thoughts, announced
intentions of eradicating the small taming village of
New Burlington. Ohio, from the face of its tillable
ea rth. Lawrence M itchner said quietly to his neighbors
that he would not move.

The seven widows who lived up the street (and
across) said: that is like Lawrence. And strained by
premonitions of their own displacement. they turned to
face moving deadlines. forgetting him.

In the fall of 1972. all but four buildings had been
bulldozed away the old cobbler‘s shop. the Quaker
church and two houses. ()ne of the houses was deser-
ted The other. a small frame building that was once
the \ illage tindertaker's parlor. belonged to Lawrence
Mitchner

l'l‘ S.\'I‘ IN the middle of the empty bulldozed lots of
the \ illage \\lllt’ll. like a garden in late summer. were
tilled with weeds and vines. By summer's end. the
\ mes had snaked across his yard and made tentative
probings onto the porch That was as close as anything
seemed to get to Lawrence Mitchner.

He refused to see reporters. (‘orps appraisers and
some neighlmrs

He took the (‘orps' letters from his postman and tore
them up with no other acknowledgment,

Ill'l \\.\'l‘t‘llH) the househyhouse falling of his
\ illage. and shuttered his own house. as if to stave off
the future itself He protested. and he paid the price of
protest It occurred in the loss of the reference points of
his life at least those points outwardly visible and
III a growing isolation

\Ian} \ illagers remembered Lawrence's first
protest A Quaker. he refused induction into World War
I I‘nlikesome pacifistic Quakers who found marriage
and agriculture a healing poiiltice for the ambiguities

of conscience, Lawrence Mitchner went to prison for
his proclaimed beliefs.

After Lawrence Mitchner returned from prison, he
became a farmer. His neighbors remember his as a
good one. Here, he began his second protest: he
refused to use the developing components of
mechanization. He was perhaps the last horse farmer
in the county. There was no moral or esthetic question
concerning agriculture; he simply did not understand
the intricate modern equipment, and chose not to.

t. . ..,~ ., . 9-

WIIEN HE and his Wife became too old to farm, they
moved into thevillage. Although the farm on Cornstalk
Road was less thana mile away, he refused ever to see
it again. Soon after. his wife died. At Christmas, he
placed a photograph of her against the glass of the
front door. facing out. Frequently. he drove his ancient
automobile into Xenia, seven miles north, where he
visited the funeral home that buried his wife, sitting
through long afternoons in those wide, quiet rooms and
their sense of ungovernable resolution.

The village children occasionally saw him on his
porch in his green underwear. They found it an in-
congruous image. One called him “a spook," but the
tone was more frightful than mischievous.

When the villagers tried to name the possession of
Lawrence Mitchner, their vocabulary became dull and

stunted. No one speculated grandly about his
resistance. Their words were not unkind, rather they
were . . meager.

Everyone asked questions. Everyone offered
opinions. Lawrence himself did little talking. He told
his relatives that God created the village, and Satan
was destroying it. The relatives said Lawrence was
“bitter."

Across the bottomlands. Quaker farmer Don Haines
has moved but still commutes 25 miles each day to
farm 320 acres under a Corps deadline. “I was com-
bining oats one night and looked across the creek to
where the village was and there was nothing. No
landmarks. no house. nothing but Lawrence's light in
all that dark space. I saw a Corps appraiser not long
afterward and I asked him about Lawrence. “We‘ll
leave him as long as we can“ he said. And I said.
"What you mean is. you know he's almost 90 and you
hope he‘ll die before you get ready for his house.” And
the appraiser said. ‘Well, yeah....‘ I said. ‘I expect he‘ll
outlive that. then what?‘ And he said, ‘Well. we‘ll have
to go in and takehim out. take him someplace.‘ "

ONE THING about Lawrence Mitchner asserts it
self: his privately unpolitical protest is more than
mere obstinance (his neighbors would say, “con-
trariness").

In the first false days of spring. the newly-turned
farmland lies in‘great coils outside New Burlington,
Ohio. On warm days the fresh, sweet smell of earth
pervades the one remaining house with the easy but
false security that the outside world is far away and
inaccessible. Inside, Lawrence Mitchner has nothing
to say.yethis persistence isa reminder of a tragic fact
of the national life: how hard it has gotten to say “no.”

 

John Baskin is a reporter for The Wilmington News-
Journal in Wilmington. Ohio.

The ugly depths of oppression

Hy DANA TACKETT

Simultaneously with a societal
revolution. there must be innumerable
personal revolutions. Without the former
there will be many liberated individuals
living in an oppressive. frustrating en—
vironment; without the latter there will be
numerous individuals who can't handle a
free environment.

What then. are the directions women
must take in order to free themselves
personally. Of course. complete personal
liberation is impossible without societal
liberation but to begin any revolution at
all. the individual must at least begin a
personal one.

What then, are the dynamics of the
“personal“ side of a feminist revolution? I
often hear the argument that women don‘t
have to be oppressed if they don't want to
be. That is, that they consciously want to
be in the oppressive situations they are in.
If it‘s not a conscious choice. then how do
women get into the oppressive situations
they find themselves in?

OF (‘til'RSl-I. women from the first day
of their livesare taught in some degree or
another the roles and responsibilities they
are to assume in our society. But there is
an aspect of that socialization process that
has. up until recently, only been touched
upon. Does a child blindly accept
dehumanizing rules to follow?

Each child is born with at least the
emotional capacity to react to oppression
of all kinds. The immediate response of a
child to rough handling or a strict feeding
schedule is complete organismic rage. So
eventually to be able to live by the op-
pressive rules set for women, she must
leam somehow to simply not get angry; to
control that spontaneous outburst of rage.

Not only is it a brainwashing sort of
process. but it is more. It is a denial of self.

A (‘lllLD is totally dependent upon its
parents to supply those natural needs of
survival. But if those parents. say, don‘t
allow tbelittle girl to run and play because
she‘s supposed to stay clean and always
wear a dress, then. she must deny
somehow those natural needs of play and
bodily exercise in order to survive: in
order not to invoke the anger of her
parents. upon whom she is totally
dependent for her happiness.

Gradually she learns to control more
and more of this natural response to op-
pression. until finally she does find herself
in oppressive situations. She comes to live
in two worlds ofa sort. one is that behavior
she must exhibit in orderto gain a parent‘s
love. the other is her inner self. which she
knows deep down is really her.

ONE WOl'LD THINK that once a
woman reaches the age where she can
take care of herself, this denial would stop.
But it's not that easy. Every woman in the
feminist movement knows that the process
of admitting to oneself how useless and
destructive her past life has been is an
extremely difficult and painful process.

Awareness becomes fuller as a woman is
able to look deeper and more closely at the
sickness she has been forced into ac-
ccphng.

This process of self denial must be. then.
terrifyingly traumatic. Everytime a child
has to control that anger to oppression it is
stored in the memory of the whole body.
The most obvious example of this is the
child whogoes blind from seeing his or her
parents die in a fire. _

TlIIS SAME TYPE of bodily reaction to

trauma has happened numerous times to
men in a war. My point is that every time a
person is forced to deny needs. the a nger to
this coercion is stored in the body in
various degrees of tension.

Everyone has experienced the situations
where he or she is literally shaking with
anger while trying to control themselves.
How. then, does a woman. who has been
forced to deny her needs recover that lost
part of herself?

Can she say to herself — well. I‘ve been
trying to live up to that female stereotype
for solong and now I‘m going to stop, start
over and be myself? How can she when
she’s got years and years of anger stored
up in her body?

To LIBERATE herself totally and fully
she must relieve that tension, that denial
that has been her lifestyle. Liberation is
impossible unless she does. Liberation
must be total not just intellectual.

There must be a catharsis between what
that woman now knows as true about her
oppression and her body's storehouse of
past tension. In short there must a
unification of the body with those ideas
about liberation. Otherwise it is partial.

Intellectual learning is only part of
changing oneself. Often when men are
faced with a personal problem they will
revert to that comfortable world of
rationality in order to “solve" it. It‘s much
less painful but it's not total. complete
organismic change.

TIIIS ISA male world. and male means
rational. Emotionality has never been
given true equalstatus with the rational. It
must be. That is the only way toward true
humanization of society But emotionality
can‘t be bastardized.

Talking (solely) about a problem is often
granting the assumption that crying is
weakness. (Emotional women are often
accused of weakness.) Crying is a way of
relieving tension of an : pressive
situation. Relieving tension is a health
maintenance device. and crying or anger
is natural.

Without the emotional response to an
oppressive situation. tension is stored in
every cell of the body and consequ y
robs the physical being itself of v i
strength to fight oppression. Ev onal
response to oppression is indeed t..e most
painful way of truly knowing oppression.
But knowing oppression to its ugly depths
is the first step towards total organismic
liberation.

 

Dana Tackett is a BUS senior and a
member of the Council on Women's

Concerns.

 

  

l—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. June 18. 1974

 

VOLUNTEER

Js.

June 19-20, 10 a.m.-4 pm.

‘ Student Volunteer Office
Phone: 258-2751

 

 

It makes you feel so GOOD!
if you care and want to help

FIND OUT HOW!

V Drop by the Student Center, Lower Level

Room 9, Alumni Gym

“”me

  
   

 

 

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Earthbound

By CLARE DEWAR
Kernel Sta ff Writer

A Rape Crisis Center is being
planned by the Women's Center
of Lexington. said Pam Elam.
coordinator of the Women's
Center.

According to Elam. the Crisis
Center‘s purpose will be to
“provide a compassionate place
where a woman who has been
raped can come or call."

THE CENTER is still in the
planning stages with funding
being sought from various
agencies. Elam said she hopes to
at least have acrisis phone line in
operation by fall,

“Of course we’d like to start it
(the Crisis Center) tomorrow."
Elam said. but added time was
needed to train women how to
handle victims' calls.

Many women don‘t report
rapes, partly from fear of having
to testify in court, said Elam. She
said the Rape Crisis Center will
put victims under no pressure to
prosecute adding, “we just want

to be there.”
ANOTHER ASPECT of the

program will be prevention, said
Elam.

“Not only do we want to be
there after the fact. we want to
try and prevent rape," Elam
said.

 

Neil Armstrong. first man to walk on the moon. signs
autographs following his speech Sunday at Harrodsburg. The
former astronaut was guest of honor at ceremonies com-
memorating the town‘s bicentennial. (Kernel Staff Photo.)

Crisis Center being planned
to assist area rape victims

Detective Bill Allen of the
Metro Police Department is one
of two officers specially trained
to handle sexual offenses. Allen
said the number of rapes in
Lexington has nearly doubled
this year over last.

He agreed with Elam that
many women do not report at-

tacks, but said even if women
would not prosecute their
assailants, the police department
wanted to be informed of the
crime.

“If we can just get crimes
reported. we’ll work on it from
there." Allen said.

Free U outlines schedule
of summer films, courses

By El) RILEY
Kernel Staff Writer

Free University (Free L'i
catalogs. including course of-
ferings and a schedule of their
summer film series are available
in the Student Government office
and in most Kentucky Kernel
boxes.

Free [I courses offered this
summer include modern dance.
camping, women's literature.
fantasy fiction and bartending.

KEN ASHBY. Free U co-
coordinator. said problems could
arise over the ba rtending course.

“The coordinators of the
bartending class were at first
afraid of the legal problems that
might arise over Kentucky's
drinking age statutes,“ said Ash-

Excess cash? Or even a meager
sum? It’s bad news lying around
your apartment or dorm room.
Good news banked with

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However after talking with Lyn
Williamson. a law student who
advises student organizations.
Ashby said a solution was found.

“THERE IS A rock bottom 18»
year‘old age limit to attend the
course.” he said. “People bet-
ween the ages of l8 to 20 may
make drinks but am not legally
allowed to drink them. People
over 21 may consume what they
make."

The Free l? summer film series
will offer comedies and classics
including the Man Brothers
Room Service. The Mouse That
Roared starring Peter Sellers
and The ('aine Mutiny with
Humphrey Bogart.

Movies will be shown twice
each Wednesday night in
Classroom Building Rm. 118.

 

 Academic Common Market
lowers out-ot-state tuition

Hy RUN MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

Kentucky and 11 other states
have entered into joint
agreements which enable
students in those states to enroll
in selected graduate programs in
other participating states and
pay in-state tuition.

States enrolled in the newly
organized Academic Common
Market for the 1974-75 school
year are: Kentucky, Alabama,
Tennessee. Arkansas, Florida,
Georgia, Mississippi, Maryland,
North Carolina, South Carolina.
Virginia and West Virginia.

('OURIHNATIUN 0f the
schools and the 188 selected
programs which would be offered
during its first year of operation
was accomplished through the
efforts of the Southern Regional
Education Board (SREB).

SREB attempts to provide for

more regional concepts of
education, and, whenever
possible. avoid program

duplication.

Purpose ofthe common market
is to improve the quality of
higher education and conserve
the region's limited resources
through cooperative efforts.

Although the program was
initially intended to include only
southern institutions, North
(‘ai‘olina. Virginia. West Virginia
and Maryland have tentatively
been invited to join the program.

KENTlt'KY has made
arrangements for graduate

students to enroll in 23 programs
in other states. The areas are
diverse, including subjects such
as actuarial science (Georgia
State University), plasma
physics (University of
Maryland) and theatre art
(Florida State University).

West Virginia seems to be
getting the most use of the
program, having made
arrangements for that state’s
students to enter as many as 84
programs in other states. On the
other-hand, Maryland is only
offering five out-of—state
graduate programs through the
market.

Before students enroll in the

program they must be certified
as residents of one of the
members states and make ap-
propriate admissions requests to
the institution offering the
desired program. A certification
for enrollment in the program
must also come from the state's
coordinator of the common
market.

KENTUCKY'S coordinator is
Michael Gardone Jr., an
associate director for research at
the Kentucky Council on Public
Higher Education in Frankfort.
Itemized programs which are
offered for Kentucky residents
through the program can also be
obtained from Gardone.

Student Center reduces

summer operating hours

The Student Center has
reduced its operating hours
because of the limited number of
summer students.

Kevin Hill, Student Center
manager. said extended hours
simply aren‘t justified. By the
time the building closes, it has
long since emptied. he said.

NEW Sl'MMl-IR hours for the
Student Center are Monday to
Friday. 7:30am. to 8 pm. There
are no weekend hours.

('heck cashing will be from 8:15
am. to 3:45 p.m. on the same

days. This service is limited to
students, faculty and staff.
Students need a summer tuition
receipt and ID.

()ther Student Center service
hours are:

Recreation Room, 9 to 4:30
p.m.

Cafeteria breakfast, 7:30 to 10
a.m.. lunch, 11 to 11:30 a.m.,
dinner, 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.

Grill, 11:30 to 4:30 p.m.

Ice Cream Parlor, 11 to 6:30
p.m.

Sandwich Bar, 10:30 to 1:30
p.m.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, June is, 1974—5

Earn $ $ $ Weekly

Blood Plasma Donor Center
313 E. Short Street
Monday - Saturday 8:30-6 p.m.
252-5586

GENERAL CINEMA convocation)
n FAYETTEMALL NOW SHOWING!

272- 6662. I .
NKNOLASVILLELN(W(IR(LERDS Last 3 Days-

”BLAZING SADDLES"
weaver! UNLE GENE WILDER SUMPICKENS DAVID HUDDLESTUN

iisoStamng ME! BROOKS HARVEY KORMAN and MADELINE KAHN [1:]

Times: 2:15-4:l5~6:05-I:00-9:55

NOW SHOWING!
Times: 2:00-4:00-5:55
7:55-9:55
“DELIVERANCE” — Rated R
Starring BURT REYNOLDS & JOHN VOIGHT

n. FAYETTE MALL

’1 72- 6662
NKHOtASVILL! suiwcmcu lines

NOW SHOWING!
Times: 2: lO-4:05-6:00
7:50-9:35

TURFLAND MALL
277-oioo

ON THE MALL
«aeaoosaum ROAD 5 lANE ALLEN

“Everybody who
has ever been
loved by a dog
will adore

Benn ”
W...

 

 

 

RGCOI’ClS at Big Discounts! @3)
Save up to $3.00!

Maior label LP's! Top artists!

 

 

Hundreds of records! Come early for best selection!

TODAY

   

(I.
K,

Many, many selections in this special purchase. Classics included!

UNIVERSITY

BOOK STORE

 

 

 

  

   
 
 
 
  
  
      
   
     
  
   
    
  
  
    
  
   
  
  
      
  
    
  
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
   
    
  
  
   
     
  

 

 

s—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday. June 18, 1974

 

Passport Photos

Application Photos
3 for 45°

6 for 55°
12 for 750

SPENGLER STUDIO

Ph. 252-6672 222 S. Lime
5%:

10% OFF

For U.K. Students

 

For Expert
ENGRAVING

TANYA’S
130 N. Limestone

 

 

 

 

 

 

$4” per hour

OPEN 1 DAYS A WEEK
9 'tll dark

Horse: and Tack for sale

Richmond Rd. 89-1513

 

     
       
   
       
     
    

Coupon

   
  

Pasquale's Pizza
on campus
38l South Limestone

Pizza, Sandwiches, Spaghetti,
Ravioli, Chicken, Fish

COLD BEER -—
PITCHER 85‘

WE DELIVER
ON CAMPUS

Phone 252-4497 or 252-4498

50¢ discount on any
LARGE Pizza

(Offer good until July lst

Theatre comes in July

Movies fill summer nights ahead

Three comedy films will be
shown tonight at 9 pm. in the
Upper Lounge of Haggin Hall as
part of a new film series spon-
sored by the Religious Advisors
Staff.

The films being shown are W.C.
Field‘s The Golf Specialist.
Laurel and Hardy’s Our Wife.
anda Mr. Magoo film. Admission

is free.
TONIGHT‘S FILMS mark the

beginning of a five—week series
that will feature one or two
movies