xt7hmg7ftq5n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hmg7ftq5n/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701201  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  1, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  1, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7hmg7ftq5n section xt7hmg7ftq5n Tie Kentocky Keenel
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Tuesday, Dec

1, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Firm Withdraws
Basketball TV Bid Iff!!
FRANKFORT (AP)
A Lexington firm headed by Joe E.
Johnson III has withdrawn from
a proposed state contract under
which it would handle closed
circuit television of University
of Kentucky basketball games.
Officials indicated they would
consider the only other bid
from a New York company
but time is pressing because the
first UK game away from home
under the proposal is next Monday with West Virginia.
Purchases Director Nicholas
McCubbin sent a letter Monday
to Johnson which said in part:
"You have been previously advised that a contract would be
awarded to you if you furnished
us with $50,000 performance bond
and met other conditions.
"The purpose of this letter is
to confirm our telephone conversation Nov. 25 in which you
advised me that in order to obtain this bond it would be necessary for you to make a $50,000
cash deposit. '
By Cameras
"In addition, you would have
to buy a $100,000 color TV camera to meet the requirements
for closed circuit telecasting of
home games for viewing at the
student center ballroom
McCubbin told Johnson the
bonding firm had notified the
state of Johnson's pending withdrawal, that "I requested you
advise me in writing that you
were withdrawing your bid but
as of this date such letter has
not been received
The Lexington-base- d
firm of
which Johnson is president is
Closed TV of College Sports,
Inc., and has solicited ticket sales
for the past couple of weeks
through newspaper advertisements.
The competing company is

..."

..."

Management Television Systems
Inc. of New York City. The basic
difference was that the Lexington firm offered UK's Athletic
Association 55 cents per ticket
and the New York firm only 52
cents from the operation.
Second Bid
Lawrence Forgy, the UK vice
president for business affairs, said
the next step is to consider whether the University will recommend
acceptance of the second bid to
the state Finance Department.
"If awarded, it will be in
strict conformance with specifications and terms," he said.
The New York firm qualified
its offer to this extent: If after
two games there is not an average of 4,000 tickets sold, it can
cancel the entire operation for
the remaining seven games away
from home.
Memorial Coliseum has more
than 12,000 seats and tickets
would be $2 for students and $4
for
The piped-i- n
TV for home games would be
on a delayed telecast basis and
students would not be charged.
"What has the University lost
in any contract?" Forgy said.
"We would receive $2,000 rental
for each game plus at least 52
cents per, ticket sold."
Continued on Pare 6, CoL 1
non-studen-

Vol.

id

(m

'Peace, Love'
New Theme
At Christmas

This year, UK's Christmas
season will have a new focus.
The traditional Hanging of the
Creens will be replaced by a
Peace, Love and Brotherhood
Day.
At 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 6,
a candlelight march will begin
at each dorm and residence house.
The march will continue across
1
3
campus and end at the Student
Center Ballroom where a program
will be held.
Damon Talley, Baptist Student Union president, will serve
as the master of ceremonies and
Dr. Cene Mason, UK political
science professor, will be the
guest speaker.
The informal program will
also include folk and group singing. Following the program, a
3
af
mvs
party will be held.
i
i
as
Karen Mitchell, one of the coordinators of this year's program,
said the reason for not continuing
the Hanging of the Creens was
because it had become "stagnant." She said that students
. m ittn
JL
1
M
and members of the religious
advisory staff had planned the
new program in the hope of havBilly Patrick, a UK freshman, probably couldn't believe the weather ing more student participation.
"The Hanging of theCreens,"
as a warm streak provided students with a pleasant surprise compared to last week's freezing temperatures. Taking advantage of it said Miss Mitchell, "really did
while it lasts, Billy managed to find a comfortable position in his not offer anything. This year's
open Boyd Hall window to catch up on some studies. Who says Christmas program will not be
VOU need a Shirt On in the Winter?
Kernel Photo By Keith Moaier" traditional, but will be relevant
to the student."

fL

-rf'

ft

7

-Xr

A Winter

Suntan?

Bookstores on Alert for Shoplifters

By MIKE MILAM
Kernel Staff Writer
If you're a would-b- e
shoplifter, any of the three major book-storon the UK campus poses a
danger for you.
According to William Eblen,
the University Book Store mana- es

I

mm
.J
i
I

t

i

?

ger, those that are caught in his
store will be prosecuted to the
full extent of the law. The other
stores report they go along with
Eblen.
Although Eblen wouldn't
speculate on the amount of merchandise he has lost to shoplifters, he said shoplifting is on
the rise. "This sort of thing ceases
to be funny after a while," he
said, citing a circumstance where
one shoplifter had sent back to
the book store a $5 "cover charge"
on an item he had stolen.
To dismay a thief, the University Book Store has installed
a hidden TV camera and a forbidding sign that reads in dark
red letters, "SHOPLIFTERS BEWARE, VIOLATORS WILL BE
PROSECUTED UNDER KENTUCKY LAW." Eblen noted that
anyone who is caught could spend
as much as 30 days in the city

fee ted as either Wallace or the
University Book Stores," referlayout of
ring to the two-levWallace and the cramped space
of the University store.
Wallace Book Store on the
other hand lacks a complete protection system. According to Mike
Land, manager of the first floor,
e
Wallace lacks the
personnel to watch for shoplifters.
"We have no real gadgets or
machinery to catch the thief in
the act," Land related, "so that
leaves it up to the employes to
watch when they get the time."
Asked what item is taken the
full-tim-

By JOHN M. CRAY
The same sort of over-a- ll
Kernel Staff Writer
protection against shoplifters is emAt the end of this month,
ployed by Kennedy Book Store. Purcell's, one of Lexington's
said that a
Kennedy's manager
will
largest
series of thefts has hit his store close its department stores,
doors.
but would not mention his apAlthough there is disagreeprehension methods, saving only
that the store was well equipped ment about what the closing of
Purcell's will mean, it may be
with devices and deterrents.
"Our type of store," the mana- a sign of the deterioration of
downtown Lexington as a shopger said, "is not as greatly af- ping district.

Wcallier

Bergman Fan

Dr. Birgitta Steene, a professor of English at Temple University,
pole before a UK Film Criticism class Monday night and described
the style of Swedish film maker Ingmar Bergman. Dr. Steene described Bergman as a structured and regimented director. (See Story
On page 8)
Krnl Photo By BiU Crl

Forecast for Lexington and
vicinity: Mostly cloudy, windy
and warm with a chance of rain
today and early tonight. Partly
cloudy and cooler late tonight.
The high temperature today in
the low 70s; high tomorrow, near
60. Precipitation probabilities today and tonight, 30 percent

most at Wallace, manager Land
said anything that could be concealed under a shirt or coat ranging from books to soap and candy.
"We even caught a man trying to
make off with $S5 worth of text
books and supplies," Land mentioned.
Land concluded that the three
bookstores are going to have to
start to work together and find
a means that would be beneficial to all. He said that the
University Book Store perhaps
has the best idea: to start to prosecute every shoplifter that is
caught.

'Lack of Business'
Hurts Downtown Area

jail.

A

LXII, No. 60

The store is closing, Manager J oesph Kirkland says, "simply
due to a lack of business." Kirk-lan- d
cited the store's location at
320 W. Main, which he termed
"poor," and a lack of parking
space as reasons for the closing
but said the major reason was
"the refusal of the people of Lexington to support us."
Kirkland said he is trying to
place his 115 employes in other
Lexington department stores be

cause "most people don't want
to leave their home."
The economic effect of the
closing will be important for
downtown Lexington and the
whole community, Kirkland feels.
The store, which is owned by
the L S. Cood Company of Wheeling, W. Va., had a monthly
payroll of around $30,000. The
store also paid about $12,000 a
year in property tax, Kirkland
said.
Kirkland said that most of
his store's business has fallen off
in the last year. "Before then
we were making some profit,"
he said. Kirkland is not sure how
large his loss will be but is sure
it will be "sizeable."
Kirkland feels that the closing
of Purcell's, which has been in
Lexington for S3 years, is "just
another example of the deterioration of the downtown shopping

area."

Continued on

Pf

7, CoL 1

* 2--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Dec.

TIIE

1, 1970

Douglas Survives Impeachment Investigation
Celler set up the special comThe chief House opponent of
mittee to head off demands by the
Justice is the Reuncover any additional evidence more than 100 congressmen for publican leader, Gerald R. Ford
that might be available. But it an investigation of Douglas by a of Michigan, who touched off
is unlikely such hearings will be select committee composed of the Investigation with a speech
members at large, not the Judi- - last April accusing Douglas of a
held.
The special committee was
created by the Judiciary Committee. Its findings are purely
advisory but the Judiciary Committee is expected to concur in
them.
That should end the controversy over Douglas for this ses- clary Committee. It is normal, wide range of misconduct that,
sion of Congress, but opponents however, for the Judiciary Com- in Ford's view, disqualified him
of the justice are certain to re- mittee to conduct impeachment for service on the Supreme Court.
new the battle in the 92nd ConFord's charges dealt mainly
Investigations and Celler's move
with Douglas's outside writings
sidetracked Douglas's foes.
gress next year.

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A special House committee investigating the conduct of Supreme Court
J u it ice William O. Douglas has
cone laded that no grounds exist
tor impeaching him.
The five-ma- n
panel based its
findings on evidence collected
from the government and other
sources during an inquiry that
began last April.
In the view of a majority of
the committee, the investigation
has not turned up any creditable
evidence that would warrant preparation of articles of impeachment against Douglas. No breakdown of the vote was made available.
The committee's findings are
contained in a draft report of
the investigation prepared for
submission to the House Judiciary Committee. All five members of the special committee
are members of the Judiciary
Committee, and both panels are
headed by Rep. Emanuel Celler,

the Judiciary

Committee

may

want to hold public hearings to

1

WASHINGTON

Pi

(AP)

qued over Sen. J.W. Fulbright's
assertion that he misrepresented
the facts about recent U.S.

DENNIS

257 N. Lime

mid-197- 2.

Laird said the reason he didn't
mention the air strike near Hanoi
in his description of the daring
but unsuccessful attempt to

Near 3rd

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rescue American prisoners was
becau se that particular question
was not asked" during his two
and a half hours of testimony
last Tuesday before the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
chaired by Fulbright.
The Pentagon did not disclose
details of the air strike until
Friday after President Nixon let
word slip at a White House dinner for wounded servicemen on
Thanksgiving day that U.S.
planes escorting the commando
raiders fired on targets near the
Son Tay prison camp near Hanoi.
Misrepresent Facts
In an appearance Sunday on

E.

MAIN STREET

Special Sale

for:

Kentucky Kernel Readers
THIS WEEK ONLY

entire stock of

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Denims Cord u roy Wool Ac rylic s Sol ids
Stripes Plaids Tweeds Flore Bottom;
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Bang This Ad Into The Store Or We Will
Honor Your ID Card

the CBS
program "Face
the Nation," Fulbright, one of
the Senate's most persistent
critics of the Vietnam war, said
he "wouldn't ever call anybody
a liar in public except by inadvertence." But, Fulbright continued, Laird and Pentagon officials in previous administrations, as well, "misrepresent the
facts. Obviously he did, and they
do it all the time."
Laird contended he was "as
forthright as one could possibly
be in answering all questions"
by the Fulbright committee, but
added that committee members
"were not as prepared as they
might be . . .
TV-rad-

io

"It's easy to be a

question-aske-

r

but you have to be prepared, and that particular question was not asked."

He said the question was
asked during closed hearings before the Senate Armed Services
Committee prior to his appearance before Fulbright's committee, and that he answered it in

detail.

Answering Fulbright's assertion that the Pentagon has taken
over the primary role In formulating U.S. foreign policy, Laird
said it isn't his intention or the
intention of the Defense Department "to deal in the foreign-polic- y

area."

Retraction Requested

Group Denies Plotting Kidnapping

anWASHINGTON (AP)-- An
tiwar group of Roman Catholic
priests, nuns and laymen denied
Monday plotting a kidnap and
other accusations by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, and accused him of trying to set the
stage for more pressure on leftist
groups.
The eleven members of the
East Coast Conspiracy to Save
Lives said a law suit for defamation of character or libel is
being considered.
Hoover, testifying before a
Senate appropriations subcommittee last Friday, said the group
was plotting to disrupt capital
utility lines and kidnap an unidentified White House official.
Ransom would be an end to
bombing in Indochina and release of "political prisoners."
Hoover said the principal
leaders of the group were brothers Daniel and Philip Berrigan,
two priests presently serving sentences in a federal prison at Dan-burConn.
The Berrigan s issued a statement earlier denying Hoover's
assertion and saying he should
"either . . . prosecute us or publicly retract the charges he

y,

102

has concluded are insufficient
grounds for impeachment.
The central issue in the controversy, however, is the differing view Ford and the Celler
committee hold on what constitutes an impeachable offense.
In his April speech Ford said
it could be conduct that falls
short of violating the law if it is
of a nature to cast doubt on the
Justice's integrity and to discredit the entire Judiciary. In the
last analysis. Ford said, it is
whatever a majority of the House
decides it to be.

Laird Defends Senate Hearing Action
-

bombing near Hanoi, Secretary
of Defense Melvin R. Laird said
A Whitewash
Monday the Arkansas Democrat
asked the wrong questions during
Already accused of conducting a whitewash of Douglas, the last week's Senate hearings.
Laird's defense against Fulspecial committee suggests that
bright's criticism came during an
unscheduled news conference in
Ccatrol KeBfocky's Largest
which the defense chief anUSED BOOK STORE
nounced the United States would
(OnW Than Text)
maintain its present military
strength in NATO at least until

BOOK STORE

and associations. It was Ford's
charges that the Celler committee investigated and which it

made."
A Jesuit priest, Peter Fordi,
32, Jersey City, N.J., said in the

Monday news conference many
of the members know the Berri- gans socially and through church
work, but that there is no connection whatsoever between the
group and the priests.

Dominican

Sister

Susan

Cordes, 32, said Hoover may
have them confused with other
antiwar groups. However that
may be, she said she would welcome any official investigation
which she hopes "would uncover
what is happening in this coun-

try."
Categorically denying everything, iimer city priest, Father
Joe Wenderoth, 34, said about
such plotting: "our philosophy
and our tactics would not allow

it."
Why the accusations?
"I hope this is
Fordi said, but Hoover may have
been trying "to induce the public

to believe all groups acting to
counter the status quo are subversive, careless of human life,
and not careful of the commandments of human life."
Also, Fordi said, "just the
forum he used indicates he is
trying to create a need for greater
surveillance by the FBI for all
kinds of .leftist groups
He
wants to make the FBI a perpetual part of American life."

....

Hoover was asking the committee to approve increased FBI
funding.
"We are a militant group, but
a militant group respecting human life, taking every precaution
known," Fordi said.
Last February the group
claimed responsibility for destruction of draft files in Philadelphia and disruption of General Elect ric's Washington offices.

British Black Militant Quits,
Aims for Racial 'Friendship'
OXFORD, England (AP) --

Britain's most prominent Black
Power leader Monday quit the
movement and said his new aim
is friendship between black and
white.
Michael Abdul Malik, otherwise known as Michael X, said
he is resigning all his posts and
handing over to their occupants
all buildings and enterprises
owned in his name.
These are reported to include
Black House, a building which

Ford Wants Care
On Cumberland
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)-- Lt.
Cov. Wendell Ford urged the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
and
Monday to "promulgate
adopt whatever regulations are
necessary to prevent any commercial activity . . . which enof
dangers the real purpose
Lake Cumberland."
Aides to Ford said the lieutenant governor has sent letters
to the Corps, Cov. Louie B.
Nunn and Kentucky's congressional delegation asking the
Corps to deny the Becknell-Crac- e
Coal Co. a permit to construct
a barge loading dock on the lake
near Albany.
Becknell-Crac- e
wants the permit in order to barge coal 56
miles across the lake to the East
Kentucky Rural Electric Cooperative Corp's generating plant at
Burn side.

...

mem ben of his Black Muslim
movement have been converting
into a commune.
Militant Group
Malik, 39, was leader of the
Black Muslims and president of
the Racial Adjustment Action
Society, which is supported by
the Muslims and by the still
more militant Black Eagle and
Black Panther groups.
He said in a speech at Oxford University that he had come
to the conclusion that black people in Britain no longer needed
the sort of organization typified
by the Black Power movement.
He recalled that during the
past decade he had shifted his
philosophy from "get a gun" to
"get a brick and build."
Avoid Bloodshed
He added: "I now feel that
my personal usefulness can no
longer be directed within forms
such as black organizations as
we have known them.
"Those people whose interest
is the avoidance of the polarization of races and its inevitable
consequence, bloodshed, I will
continue to serve."
He said the Black Power
movement in Britain had been
produced by a series of social
factors which dominated the
1960s.

He added: "Now our organization, along with other groups
of the same pattern, must recognize that social evolution has,
In effect, processed this pattern

out."

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Dec.

Record Review

1. 1970- -3

Muehleisen: Slickly Promoted Little Musician
("Cingerbreadd"t
posed by
Capitol

All songs com-

Muehleisen.

Maury

ST-644-

.)

By S.M. WINES

Assistant Managing Editor
BoyOboyOboy.
Misguided
teenyboppers and Madison Avenue fans, do we ever have an
album for you.
It's called "Clngerbreadd"
(that's right, with two "d's"),
and it's a
d
little
album composed and sung by a
d
little musician
by the name of Maury Muehleisen.
The record consists of eleven
k
tunes in the
genre. It
is being released at a time when
softer rock seems to be making
a comeback, and Capitol Records
slickly-promote-

slickly-promote-

folk-roc-

has pulled out all stops to make
.
,.. me
uic L yuuiigergenerauonnears
about it.

Muehleisen and his dulcet
melodies we can dispose of quickly enough. In the grand tradition
of
of most composer-singer- s
the past five years, Muehleisen
couldn't carry a tune in a dump
truck.
The main strength of his songs
lies in some excellent guitar and
keyboard work, most of which is
performed by an array of accomplished musicians (at least 11,
not including Muehleisen himself).

The album might have been
able to pull itself from the depths
k
of
inanity if Muehleisen
had quietly bowed out and let
folk-roc-

the guitarists work by themselves.
As it is, he destroys most of his
tunes with a crackly falsetto that
is more reminiscent of Tiny Tim
than of anyone else.
The songs range from mildly

funkel's guitar technique in an every promotion gimmick known
effort to give his songs some to civilized man, including some
blank verse about the composer
weight.
In short, innocuous is the on the back ("a traveler west
best word for "Cingerbreadd." through imagination . . . dropThe composer is
ping college to get an education
and perception") and a plastic
daguerrotype of Muehleisen himself bordered by a gold frame.
The front cover, oddly enough,
hides the album title amid a
still life featuring a cow, a horse and a
nude. Muehlei sen's name is emenough, but the songs roll off, blazoned across the top in three-inc- h
letters.
one after another, without many
Future plans, rumors say, may
bright spots to attract attention.
The fine arrangements and guitar include Maury Muehleisen Fish
work are its only saving graces. 'n Chips stands and Maury MuehAll of this is bad enough, but leisen cigarettes.
Now you know what to look
Capitol has chosen to give the
for. Avoid it like the plague.
album the big publicity push with

km JPkr?.
interesting ("A Song I Heard"
and "Love Is Just a Passing
Thing") to nearly unlistenable
("Mister Bainbridge" and "I
Have No Time"). Muehleisen
shows no hesitation in borrowing
everything from Dylan's overworked harmonica to Art Car--

Record Review

Immaturity Hurts 'Sky'
("Don't Hold Back" by The Sky.
RCA Victor

LSP-443-

By R.D. HAWKINS
Assistant Managing Editor
The sky falls victim to immaturity and lack of direction In
their RCA release "Don't Hold
Back." It is unfortunate for the
group shows signs of great potential throughout the album.
Sky stumbles through the
album going from soft ballads
to hard rock to rock'n roll and,
finally, back again to hard rock.
The group never seems to realize
anywhere near their full potential
and drifts from misplace melodies
to meaningless mediocrities.
The abilities oi Sky are apparent throughout the album.
Rob Stawinski is more than adequate as a drummer. Doug Fie-g-er
delivers some tremendous
bass lines. John Coury provides
some beautiful acoustic guitar
work.
However, the talents are only
evident sporadically and the versatility of the three is limited.

While Coury does some nice
things acoustically, he becomes
trite, uninventive and, generally,
dull when he turns to the electric
guitar.
By far the best cut on the disc
is "There in the Creenbrlar, a
gentle, breezy, early morning sort
of song. Chris Wood, of Traffic,
makes the song with a breath-catchin- g
flute solo. "Creenbrlar", is also the only place
where Sky's vocalist sounds appropriate.
By far the worst cut on the
album and possibly the most
exemplary is "Rockin MeYet,"
a hoaky 50' s rock 'n roll type
of tune, the song is perfectly infuriating with a phony sax sound
and a totally empty vocal. Some

nice

instrumentation

slips

through every now and then, but
the crass saxophone overpowers
everything.
The basic problem with Sky
is they, apparently, do not know
what they can do. If they ever
find out, a fine group may be
on it's way.

TODAY and
TOMORROW
The 4eadllae for aaneaaeemsnts U
1:tv p.m. tws days itUr te the first
peblleatlan it Items la this lama.

TODAY
Fres Soil Party (FSP) will show
another film from Czechoslovakia,
"Death of the Ape Man," on Tuesday, Dec. 1, at 5, 7, and 9 p.m. The
film is a satire oi civilized man. Tickets are $1.00 at the door.

COMING UP
Th Kcntacky Chapter and Student
Chapter of the Association For Computing Machinery will meet Thursday,
Dec. 3, at 7:30 p.m. In room 109 of
the Student Center. The public la
Invited.

A faealty recital will be presented
by Phyllis Jenness, contralto, at 8:13
p.m. Thursday, Dec. 3, in the William
Seay Auditorium. The public 1 invited.
Pref. Deaflas Mendel. Jr. of the
University of Wisconsin, will speak on
"Political and Sociological Survey
Research In Japan" at 4 p.m. Friday,
Dec. 4, in room 206 of the Student
Center. The public is invited.
The University Symphany OrchesMiller,
tra, conducted by Phillip directed and
by
the University Choristers,
Aimo Klvinieml, will perform Beethoven's Fidelio on Friday, Dec. 4, at
8:13 p.m. In Memorial Hall. The public is invited.
A Collegium Maslcam Concert wlU
be presented at 8:13 p.m. Sunday,
Dec. 8. at Christ Church Episcopal,
ltib Market St. The public is Invited.
The University Charas, directed by
Sara Holyrod, will present "Sounds
of Christmas" at 8:13 p.m. Tuesday,
Dec. 8, in Memorial Hall. The public
is invited.
An anderf radaaU major in Comis now
parative LiteratureInterested being ofin studyfered for students
al
basis.
ing literature on a
information, contact eithFor further
er Dr. Virginia A. La Charlte in the
departmentin of French, or Dr. John
the Department of JCng-lis- h.
Ureenway
6.
A special telephone
aauiber,
recorded message
will offer
the week't events on
highlighting
campus. Anyone with announcements
for inclusion on the program should
contact Public UelaUona, 1UO Old Agriculture Uuilduig.

Two reams in the Classroom Building are open for use as study halls.
Rooms 304 and 346 are open from
p.m. on week nights and 9
p.m. on weekends.
St. Aaf aiilne's Chapel. 472 Rose St.
Is now using Ian Mitchell's
Folk
Mass at its Sunday services, at 10:30
a.m. Evensong at 5:30 p.m. Sundays
and is followed by a supper, 73 cents
per person. Sign up for the supper is
necessary by Sunday noon.
The Latin America Ceancll invites
all University students with an interest in Latin America to participate
in its activities. Interested persons
should send their name and campus
to Prof Gerardo
address
mailing
Saenz, 1129 Office Tower.
The Air Fere Officer's Qualification Test (AF'OQT) wiU be administered in room 206 of Barker Hall, at
9:00 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 5. Students,
including women, who desire to enter the two-ye- ar
AFROTC
next fall should take the testprogram
at this
time. For more information, contact
the AFROTC office in Barker Hall.

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UK Placement Service
Dec. 1. Kenton County Schools.
Check schedule book for late Information.
Dec. 1. Rex Chalnbelt Inc. Chemical ., Electrical
Metallurgical E.
., Mechan(US); Accounting, Civil
ical E. 4BS. MS). Locations: United
States. May graduates. Citizenship.
Dec. 1. General Motors Corp. AcBusiness
counting,
Administration,
Chemical E Mechanical E.. Computer Science, Mathematics (US). Locations: Indiana. Michigan, Ohio. May
graduates. Citizenship.
Dec. 2. Consolidated Freightway s
Accounting, Business Administration,
Economics (BS). Locations: Central
United States. December graduates.
Dec. 3. Hartford Hospital Nursing
(US). Location: Hartford, Conn. December, May, August graduates. Citizenship.
4.
Dec.
Ly brand, Ross Bros. St
Montgomery
Accounting
(BS, MS).
Locations: Kentucky. Will interview
for summer
seniors in Accounting
employment. December, May, August
graduates. Citizenship.
National Life & Accident
Dec.
Insurance Co. Hukiness AdministraEconomics IliS). Locations: Kention,
May
tucky. December,
graduates.
Citizenship.

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* The Kentucky
ESTADLISIIED

Iernel

University of Kentucky

1894

TUESDAY, DEC.

1, 1970

Editorials represent the opinions of the Editors, not of the University.
Frank S. Coots III,
Bob Brown, Editorial Vage Editor
Jean Rcnaker, Managing Editor
Mike Tiemey, Sports Editor
Dahlia Hays, Copy Editor
David King, Business M onager
Don Rosa, Cartoonist
Jane Brown, Ron Hawkins, Bradley Jeffries, Jerry Lewis, Mike Wines.
Assistant Managing Editors

g

Kernel Forum:
the readers write

Editor-in-Chi-

New Teacher Evaluations

Promise Greater Benefits

Electronics and Journalism
To the Editor.
Dan Cossett's review of the Johnny
Winter concert was good, I suppose, but
I'm not a journalist.
,
Likewise, it seems strange to me that
he would devote eight lines to describing
what happens when the bass gain on
Kenny Henry's guitar is turned to maximum:
This causes the pickup (microphone
inside the guitar) to magnetize and
pull the strings in toward the pickup. Then when the strings are slightly tapped, the magnetic attraction
causes them to vibrate faster than
they ordinarily would.
Having in the past designed some
electronic effects for bands, I wish he
would explain this to me. It would greatly
simplify the design necessary for the effect
if Mr. Cossett's prattle were true.
DAVID S. POWELL
Electrical Engr., Junior

Tower. From there I was sent to the
second floor. Upon Investigation it was
uncovered that I owed money for a ticket.
I was then sent to the Safety and Security
Office once again.
At the S or S Office I explained my
problem, told of the past history, and
finally obtained a slip of paper to take
to an office in the Old Agriculture Building. At that office I was sent back to the
O.T. Finally I was given my IBM cards
and sent back to the Classroom building
to register. I certainly got enough exercise.

What kind of excuse can the S

fit S

Although student evaluation of teachers and courses should rank
office offer for this? It certainly must have
high on Student Government's list of priorities, it has been a neglected
a very bad records system if this is just
a mistake. According to the secretary
item. A few meager attempts have been made in past years to supply
in the transcript office there were a cona student guide to courses, but the superficiality of the approach has
siderable number of these kinds of misdoomed previous efforts.
takes. I almost question that it was an
This year's evaluation may be different, due to the outstanding
error because S fie S had to turn it in as
being delinquent. Is this some kind of
efforts of SG Representative Wendy McCarty. McCarty has spearheaded
attempt to frighten people into not placing
the Academic Affairs Committee's drive to provide the
analysis
an appeal? I know of a number of inlacked by former evaluations.
stances where a person receiving a ticket
thought it better to pay it than fight
semester's effort is a miniature survey, encompassing
Although this
it (it's just two bucks).
only 80 classes, its preparation promises that it will begin to fill the gap Ilarrassment of Car Owners
I don't know if this harassment has
student body. When the To the Editon
in communications created by a
been done intentionally or not but it is
evaluation is exploited to its fullest potential students will have a major
Whether it's intentional or accidental very unpleasant to the person subjected
to the process, and undoubtedly a change
lever of influence in dealing with university policies. When a teacher's it's harassment all the same.
car sat in the Complex parking lot is necessary either in the records system
My
performance in class is an open book for the campus population perhaps from 10570 until 10870 without
or in policy. With the attitudes I met,
he will be a little less complacent in his conduct of a poor course. If moved. On 10870 I found two being I wonder which it is.
parking
ALAN E. SEARS
students boycott a class on the basis of