xt7j6q1sj84k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7j6q1sj84k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-11-10 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, November 10, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 10, 1976 1976 1976-11-10 2020 true xt7j6q1sj84k section xt7j6q1sj84k Electrifying

Winter heating brings on those nasty shocks

By KIM YELTON
Kernel Staff Writer

Have you been shocked lately?
That is, after walking across a room
and touching a door knob or
something metal. did you get a
shock? There is a scientific reason
for that, according to Dr. Joe
Starley, assistant professor of
physits.

“It has to do with the way surfaces

Vol. LXVIII. Number 63

react to each other," he said.
“Whenever two dissimilar things
come together and then pull apart,
one comes away with a positive
charge and the other with a negative
charge."

A good example, he explained,
occurs when someone wearing wool
pants slides across a car seat. The
seat ends up with a charge and the
person ends up with the opposite
charge. “That‘s where the trouble

Wednesday, November 10, 1976

begins.“

The small charge will make a
large vdltage and a large charge.
Once you pull the two apart, a
charge stays with each one. “And
once you get electric charges. you
have them till you get rid of them by
touching something," he said. “So
when we pick upanother charge, we
will lose it." That is what happens
when you touch a door knob or some
other conductor like another person.

KENTUCKY ‘

er

Newspaper/Micron"

NOV 10 1975

.iversity of Kentucky
library

Yourbody is getting rid of thatextra
charge.

“This is a dry air phenomenon
that usually occurs in winter,"
Starley said. Summer air is wet
enough so the air conducts the
tstatic) electricity away tout of the
body! before you get a chance to
touch anything. “You‘ve already
discharged before you touch
anything. Our static electricity
demonstrations (in physics classesi

an independent student newspaper

Dorm residents learn greenery secrets

in lecture by UK horticulture professor

By Kl.“ Yl-ll.T().\
KernelStaff Writer

Overwatering and lack of enough
sunlight are the most common
mistake plant growers make when
trying to raise houseplants, Dr. Bob
Anderson told a group of Blanding
Tower residents at a meeting there
last night.

Anderson is extenSion specialist in
floriculture at UK and assistant
professor of horticulture. The ex-
tension service is a federally and
statefunded continuing education
program that provides information
to agents working on problems
farmers and others employed in
agriculture may have. Anderson
specializes in plants grown in hot
houses such as mums, snapdragons
and other plants that can be sold to
the public.

During the two hour session.

Anderson explained methods of
caring for plants and then en.
tertained questions from students
about problems they were having.

Most foliage plants today came
from the tropics, Anderson ex-
plained. They are plants that are not
easy to kill. “That is why we have
them today. If they were easy to kill
we would not have them."

While plants need the basic
nutrients like carbon dioxide,
oxygen, moisture and temperature,
one of the most important factors is
proper sunlight, he said. “This is the
most difficult to control," Anderson
said. Contrary to what commercial
books say, "most plants should be
grown in nearly full sunlight." That
is the way they started out, An-
derson explained.

l’lant growers should also be
aware of the type of light they set
their plants in such as afternoon or

Picture window

Tim Wygal. an employe of White Sign ('o.. paints the window of a
newly-opened restaurant on Main Street in l.e\iiigtoii.

morning light and the amount of
time they keep them in the light.
They might get burned if left
toolong.

When you control for light you
also should be aware of the tem-
perature of the light so that it is not
too hot, he warned. There should be
variation in the amount of heat the
plant is exptsed to during the day,
just as if it were living outside.

Temperature is the key factor
because it controlls humidity. If
there is not enough humidity the
plant will dry out and wilt. To help
create more humidity, Anderson
suggrsted placing flower pots on an
aluminum or wooden tray with
gravelspi‘ead over the bottom. “Put
gravel on the bottom and the pots on
top," he explained. “This will add
humidity to the room."

flow much water plants need is a
question that has plagued owners.
evidenced by the excessive amounts
people put on them, Anderson ex-
plained. The plants should not be
watered until the soil is dry. To
check this, owners should dig far
down into the soil to check for
moisture. Merely feeling the top is
not a sufficient enough test for
moisture.

“The best way to water is from the
top," hecontinued. “Let it go all the
way through and then empty any
excess water."

Drainage is important. he con-
tinued, so the roots do not rot. Air
must also be able to get into the soil.

Because of this factor, Anderson
recommended using only clay
flower pots. “They are easier to
use." he said. "Plastic pots are

more difficult because you are
unsure about how much you are
watering," Anderson said.

Clear and translucent pots are
also had to use because the soil is
always explosed to sunlight and the
roots will not grow outward. Fur-
thermore they get no aeration.

Anderon included over-
fertilization as another common
problem with the inexperienced
plant grower. Most any type of
commercial plant foods are good, he
said. But they should only be used
once or twice a month.

People should be looking for
problems in their plants like leaf
drop, he added. “This is due to some
kind of shock like excessive change
in temperature, light or fertilization.

Yellowing of plant leaves also
indicates a problem -> usually
overwatering. However, leaves do
yellow and fall off as a natural
process of aging. he pointed out.

Most books one can buy in the
stores give advice about how to stop
these problems. Anderson said. The
agriculture department is also
preparing a free booklet available to
students explaining plant care. “We
just started, so we do not have
everything together yet.” But
eventually they will be available in
the bulletin room in Seoville Hall,
the agriculture experiment station
on Limestone Street. ,

‘We are also going to start a long
series of articles and television
programs about plants,“ Anderson
added,“for public information."
Also “if thistpublic lectures of
plantsigoes over well. we can have
many more sessions.

 

The frigid temperatures of the
past few days were just a teaser
as skies will be sunny today. with

 

Sun control

a high near 50. Tonight will be
clear and cold. temperatures in
the low to mid-20's.

 

 

alway work better in winter because
that is when the air is dryer,” he
continued.

Starley offered a few suggestions
to avoid this problem. "i learned to
carrry a key in my hand. if you
touch the key to a surface first it
seems to help. You spread the
charge over the key and it doesn‘t
seem to hurt as much,“ he said.

Another solution is to drag a chain

21

r"

behind you, he suggested smiling.
"Gasoline trucks used to do this."

Or if you wear something of
similar texture as what you touch,
you might alleviate some of the
friction such as cloth on cloth.

But Starley could not offer many
more suggestions to avoid the
shocks. “So long as it is cold," he
said, “yai‘rc going to have the
problem.“ That is, unless you want
to drag a chain behind you.

University ofKentuclzy
Lexington, Kentucky

~9

JIIMIE WOM‘QS

Wait a minute, Mr. Postman

Melinda (iraiiies, 4. who lives on Prall Street, looks like she got caught
with a hand in the till. Actually. she‘s checking the morning mail.

Red, white striped pole

beckons both sexes now

Today there‘s a new breed of
harbors cutting hair for both men
and women in a different kind of
barber shop.

Nancy Cooper, 25, would look out
of place behind the red and white
striped pole, yet she's a natural in
her own shop downtown.

Cooper not only manages The
Barber Shoppe on South Limestone
Street, she puts in a 40-hour week
cutting and styling hair.

“That's all we do here; no setting,

coloring. perming or any of that
stuff. l‘m a barber, not a
beautician," said Cooper, who at-
tended Lexington Barber College for
two years before going into business.
Before she opened her shop in
January, 1974, Cooper worked in
another barber shop. “I was the only
girl there," she said. “At first, men
were leary about having a girl cut
their hair, but they grew ac-

customed to it."
(‘oiitinued on page 6

SCB rewrites its constitution for ‘needed’ changes

The Student (‘enter Board (SCB)
unanimously appmved a rewritten
constitution last night that makes
needed changes in the board‘s
structure, amording to Tom Gaston.
SCB president.

Under the revised constitution. the
SCB executive council no longer has
the authtrity to impeach a com-
iiiittee member of the programming
council. Another change in the new
constitution was to clarify a section
that requires fulltime students who
are on SCB to relinquish his or her

position after requesting a change in
status to less than full time.

In other action. the SCB voted to
release the miniconcert committee
from a policy which prevents them
from selling tickets off campus.
Mini-concert chairman Malvern
Burnett, who complained of a lack of
support from his committee, said he
expects a loss of about $1,000 from
the David Bromberg concert this
Saturday. According to Burnett,
only 150 a“ 1,000 tickets have been
sold..Burnett said he expected to sell
Tilt) tickets.

The cunent policy prohibiting off-
campus ticket sales was outdated,
Gaston said, and was a remnant of
the early days of the mini-concerts.
(‘oncert mordinator Helen llughes
would have to arrange contracts
with local stores before off-campus
sales could begin, (laston said, and
the action would have to be ap-
proved by the Dean of Students
office

If Saturday's concert is a severe
failure, according to Burnett, the
mini concert budget would start at

less than $1,000 next semester and
the commutee would have to work
on a smaller scale, probably relying
on local acts.

Also approved last night was a
new policy mgarding the use of
display windows in the Student
(‘entcl‘. Under the new policy,
academic departments must make
their requests to use a window
before the SCB. Under the new
policy, no remiests for window space
maybe made until six weeks before
the week requested.

 

    
 
   
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
   
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
 
 
   
    
 
     
        
      
     
   
    
     
 
  
   
    
   
  
 
   
    
    
     
      
  
     
   
     
   
    
   
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
   
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
    

 

editorials 8: comments

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University

 

Ellter-ln-cllel
(:lnny Edwards

Editorial Elltar
Walter Hlxsori

Managing Editor
John Winn Miller

Letters and comments should be addressed to the limited
spaced and signed w ith name. address and telephone In

\ssislant Managing Editors

Mt w Mouser Joe Kemp
Dick Gabriel “""H'C W
Am nun “'1 M
(”on Editors Mike Stranu
Sulanne lurhani "“"“°' '0'."
Dirk ”mm-r (‘Ilel Photographer L““' "Nth"

Stew llalltniter

Sports Editor

Stewart Bowman

at editor. Room IN. Journalism lulldlu. The, must be typed. it”
usher. Letters unset on.“ us weed- and comments are restricted to M

   
  

 

 

Mining rules, inspectors
need to be tougher

Establishment and control of state mining
regulations, chiefly in Eastern Kentucky, have
been great concerns over the past decade. And
many positive steps have been taken.

But the immense power of coal operators, and
questionable state enforcement programs, still
preclude adequate control. Needed regulation,
particularly in the area of strip-mine reclamation,
has been established over the years, but en-
forcement failures have continually been un-

covered.

Many lapses in state enforcement have oc-
curred in the Department for Natural Resources
and Environmental Protection. Lax enforcement
mainly has resulted from hiring regulatory of-
ficials from within the mining industry.

Similarly, some coal operators are able to in-
fluence inspectors. engineers. strip mine
supervisors and other regulatory officals who are
considered “tough“ in upholding mine safety and
reclamation standards. ()perators‘ power has
been especially effective around election time.

The Louisville Courier-Journal reported
yesterday that two state engineers, considered
tough reclamation inspectors, resigned because
they thought state enforcement was slipping.
(‘ourieruJournal interviews revealed that state

News analysis

The Kernel on Nov. 4 ran a front
page. yes. a front page commentary.
or as luck Gabriel. an assistant
managing editor, prefers to call it, a
“news analysis.“ criticizing Ford's
record and his political strategy.

I truly don't believe Mr. Gabriel
has achieved any academic
enlightenment during his stay here
at I'K Although he states he is not
responsible for placing the com-
mentary on the front page. he
detends the Kernel‘s actions by
calling Walter Ilixson's com-
mentary a “news analysis."

The front page of any newspaper
should be rescn ed for the exposure
of objective news reporting. not
personaljudgment writing I call on
(iabnel to define "news analysis"
and justify why the commentary
was on page I rather than on page 2.

It Ilixson w as in Washington. why
didn't he attempt to prolessionalize
his standards by writing an ob-
jective news account rather than a
news commentary“? Just
bwause ilixson was in Washington
doesn't justify the publishing of his
material on the front page of a

biased

riewsparx-r ll it is not an objective
news account
The Kernel is responsible for

cheap journalism by performing
such a deed because it was pro»
t‘arter and merely wanted to
illustrate to the campus population
that its choice for President in 1976
had won and state the reasons why
behaduon mthiscasebyrncansof
a biased news commentary on

“Was-w

 

'1 1‘ Iii-jg:
t,/

reclamation.

Division of Reclamation officials are divided on
the question of the engineers’ effectiveness.
The charges should be investigated. But they
just add to the roster of enforcement questions. A
large number of enforcement employes from the
highway department also deserves evaluation. It
has been charged that although the highway
department employes understand earth moving,
they are unfamiliar with strip mining and

In addition, the power of coal operators remains

evident.

produced.

Many
curiously “relocated" to areas beyond those of
operators. Other engineers and inspectors have
received their state jobs after listing coal industry
personnel as references.

Many factors point out the need for still greater
state control and maintainence of mining and
reclamation regulations. Gov. Julian Carroll has
promised strict enforcement, but hasn’t really

tough state inspectors are

The greatest step toward mining control,
however, could result from national legislation
similar to thatwhich President Ford vetoed twice.
Perhaps Carroll and President-elect Jimmy
Carter, who Carroll may be working for in
January, can work toward that goal.

 

Letters

(‘arter‘s opponent. the incumbent
President Ford.

I am sorry. Mr. Hixson and Mr.
Gabriel, I just don't buy your gar~
bage. I haveenough faith in Hixson's
news reporting ability to be able not
to expect the-.same grotesque
mistake again?“ . .

We. the Citizenry. must unite
behind Presidentelect Carter, not
because heis President, but because
of respect due the institution of the
presidency of the US.

Political divisions must be put
aside. Ionly request that the Kernel
realize the role ofobjectivity in news
reporting and cover such
newsworthy stories such as the
presidential election with a much
more professional attitude in the
future.

Lowell Wainwright
History junior

Shoddy

I feel it necessary to comment on
the shoddy journalism practices
tollowed by your newspaper. As I
viewed the main headline for last
Thursday‘s edition, I felt that ap-
parently an editor had mislaid some
copy. for we find editorial material
on page I.

Not only was this article inap—
propriately placed, but I found it
contradictory in one sense. From
paragraph three on, we find the
reporter picturing President Ford as
"a bumbler.“ Bumbler. bumbler,
bumbler. that‘s all we read until the
next to last paragraph when he is
described as “spry."

 

 

Ts; some Kittie sac-3mg: ARE FLOCKING tthASHNGlDN u.

According to Webster‘s Dic-
tionary. spry means agile; and a
bumbler is described as clumsy.
Only in the Kentucky Kernel coud
we find such ignorant contradiction
as describing the President as both
agile and clumsy.

Par for the Kentucky Kernel.

Regarding Walter Hixson‘s Letter
from the Editor. Friday, Nov. 5, I
feel that now for the first time we
really see the bias he holds against
President Ford. It would seem to me
that a person who is so obviously
slanted would not be permitted to
“report“ from Washington about the
election.

I also don‘t understand Hixson’s
sick mind and his cruel comment
(Robert “I Lost My Arm In The
Democratic War" Dole). But I guess
he fits in well with those people over
at the Kernel.

Robert Stuber
Education junior

Letters policy

The Kernel recognizes the
obligation to provide a forum for
reader resonse. Submission will be
accepted in the form of letters to the
editor or comments.

Letters cannot exceed 250 words.
They must be typewritten, triple-
spaced and signed with the writer's
name, classification and major.

Comments cannot exceed 750
words and the above information is.
mandatory

  

' .

C .

  

 

The ties don’t bind

Divisiveness undermines family

By IIERBERTHENDIN

The family is having increasing
difficulty in caring for children and
in raising children who can care.
The evidence is clear: the suicide
rate for young people 15—24 has in-
creased 250 per cent over the last 20
years. Drug abuse, alcohol abuse.
minor and violent crimes are in-
creasing problems not just in poor
black families, but in affluent white
families, not just in broken families.
but in seemingly intact families, not
just when mothers work, but also
when they stay home.

 

commentary

 

The American family is being
undermined by the divisive forces at
work in society, forces that are
making harmony, cooperation and
affection more scarce in and out of
families, forces that are as much
psychtsocial as they are economic.
The family reflects the cultural
trend toward replacing com-
mitment, involvement and ten-
demess with sclf-aggrandizement,
exploitativeness and titillation.
Stimulation of unlimited ex
pectations and the impossible need
to validate oneself by fulfilling them
have helped change individualism
into egocentrism. In a culture in
which anything done for another
person must result in some im-
mediate, personal gain. young
children are, often seen as a
pleasureless burden. ()lder children
become extensions of the need to
validate onc‘s life.

Once the most distinctive form of
envy was the desire for material
possessions, but now the most
rapacious greed is often for ex-
perience. The egocentric consumer
of people wants to get more and give
less. Attitudes toward being in a
fa mily ha ve changed accordingly: A
husbandor wife is all right as long as
he or she gives all and requires a
little in retum; a child is all right if
his or her success is great enough to
firstily the sacrifice one has made to
raise it. The family becomes the

center of concern for the ever-
retreating prize of self-fulfillment

No wonder so many young people
today see their families as jails in
which everyone is in solitary con-
finement and no one is happy. No
wonder so many young women
dread children as the seal on a
marital trap. Given the unhappiness
of so many parents and the ap-
prehension of so many young people,
it is not surprising that the family
itself is cited as the cause of all our
woes.

The warover the family‘s survival
is often waged between feminists
and psychiatrists. Psychiatrists too
often seem to be arguing for a return
to the past out of a concern for the
fate of children. They often do not
see that women were expected to
pay the price of the family’s survival
and to drown all their unhappiness in
being mothers. Radical feminists
see the family as the enemy of
women and too often rationalize
away the needs of young children.
They elevate the value of work in a
way that ignores the fact that for
most men and women being parents
will be the most creative and
original part of their lives. There is a
need to reconcile women‘s
aspirations and children's needs.

Instead. asa culture we encourage
the forces that are pulling the family
apart. Psychoanalysis is misused to
justify the development of an age of
sensation. Freud could not have
imagined the extent to which his
ideas are offered as proof that it is
harmful not to act on all sexual
fantasies and aggressive impulses
and dangemus not to be open about
everything. If is emphasis on the role
of sexual repression in neurosis has
been distorted to fit the current
idealization of the momentary kick.
Ilis techniques for treatment have
been used to advance the unreal
promise of unlimited personal
fulfillment and perfectibility.

Feminism is misused to justify the
end of pmtectiveness between the
sexes: Feminists feel men protected
women to infantilize them, or
wanted women who would mother

 

 

and protect them. Women are in-
creasingly not asking for protec-
tivenes from men and not giving it,
facts which make many men feel
justified in abusing them even more.
In a culture that is making caring
synonymous with losing, we are
forgetting how much mutual
protectiveness is part of love.

We are forgoing the effort to make
families work for everyone in them
by embracing the myth that sexual
inequities can be abolished by
abolishing the differences between
the sexes. We tamper with sexual
identity and sexual roles as though
they were costumes. We do not
consider the real impact of sexual
confusion on the human capacity for
affection and cooperation.

The evidence is overwhelming
that the family is not disposable,
that even the best alternatives do not
equal a reasonably good family‘s
power to raise responsive people.
The rising numbers of young people
who abuse alcohol and drugs, who
drift in a numbed way unable to find
any sort of life that pleases them, the
increasing numbers of young
suicides, and the anguish of parents
who have dme their best only to
suffer from the misery of ,their
children are human proof of what
even the present degree of the
family‘s decline has created.

We need a social policy that will
encourage the viability of the
family. A well-functioning culture
can tolerate many individual
alternatives to family life. But our
efort should not be to institutionalize
such altema tives; rather, we should
help men and women to make their
families work. It is in the interest of
feminists, psychoanalysts and
society to recognize that the
maja'ity of people do form families,
have the greatest claim on our at
tention, and are in urgent need of
help.

Ilt-rhert llendin, M.D..jis director of
psychosocial studies at the Center
for Policy Research and is on the
faculty of the (‘olumbia l'niverslty
Department of Psychiatry. Ills most
recent book is “The Age of Sen-
sation.“

       

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any men feel
m even more.
aking caring
sing, we are
uch mutual
of love.

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abolished by
nces between
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.. We do not
pact of sexual
». n capacity for
tion.
overwhelming
ot disposable,
mativesdo not
good family's
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. unable to find
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uish of parents
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proof of what
egree of the
created.

ilicy that will
bility of the
ioning culture
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i life. But our
institutionalize
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to make their
the interest of
nalysts and
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form families,
irn on our at-
rgent need of

    
  
  
  
  

    
 
        
   
     
       
     
     
    
       
  
 
    
   
  
  
     
    

  

   
   

    
 
 
   
  

 
  
 

   
 

  

         
     
       
    
    
      
  
    
   

  

  

  

  

    
 
   
 
   
   
  
  
   
  

 

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and is on the
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Age of Sen-

  

     

 

news briefs

 

 

 

Sloane in running

Metro mayors considered
for Carter Cabinet posts

WASHINGTON (APl—The names of
several big city mayors are being tossed
around the Jimmy Carter camp, prompting
speculation that for the first time in 14
years one of them may be named to a
Cabinet pmt.

Mayors Moon Landrieu of New Orleans
and Kenneth Gibson of Newark are among
those most often mentioned. Henry Maier
of Milwaukee is another name in the hat.
One of them could be picked for Secretary
of Housing and Urban Development;
Health, Education and Welfare; Tran-
sportation, a- perhaps a Cabinet-level job
at the White House.

Others named, but thought to have lesser
prospects, include Detroit's Coleman
Young, Atlanta’s Maynard Jackson, Los
Angeles’ Tom Bradley and Harvey Sloane
of Louisville.

The mayors as a group are actively
seeking Carter’s attention, as evidenced by
their emergency meeting of the US.
Conference of Mayors in Chicago this week.
But individually, that would be bad form
and might well eliminate one from con-
sideration.

Horsefeathers

A free lunch of scattered oats attracts pigeons at New
York’s Central Park. The horse has a meal interruption
each time it raises its head from the feed bucket.

Speed spurned

Mayor Neil Goldsehmidt of Portland,
Ore., was reported by a newspaper as high
on Carter‘s roster of prospects. He reacted
as if he had been named to ti ? FBl's most-
wanted list.

“I don‘t know a thing abort it," Gold-
schmidt said. “I‘ve had no contact with
anyone on Carter‘s staff. We never met
any of the people who are on his staff. As
far as I know, they have no idea who I am."

Carter has often spoken of bringing new
talent into the federal government, and
observers suggest Goldschmidt would fit
that category.

It is unclear whether the President-elect
has been given any mayors‘ names to
consider or whether they are simply being
floated by supporters inside the Carter
camp.

One source, describing himself as “fairly
far down" the totem pole of transition
people, described the scene as “everybody
trying to get his favorite names on the list
going to Carter." Once assured the name
would be considered, the aide said, sup
porters then mount a subtle campaign to
boost their candidate's chances.

FEA says

reserves
sufficient

WASHINGTON (APl—The
Federal Energy Ad-
ministration reported
Tuesday that the nation in
general should have enough
fuel to make up for expected
natural gas shortages this
winter.

But the agency said North
Carolina may run into fuel
shortages even in a normal
winter, and unusually cold
weather could result in
shortages of energy in that
state and eight others:
Georgia, Maryland, South
Carolina, Tennessee,
Virginia, Kentucky, West
Virginia, and Arizona.

In scattered local areas,
said an FEA draft report,
there could be shortages that
might force temporary job
layoffs if alternate fuels are
unavailable or cannot be
used.

“In North Carolina and
Iowa," the reportsaid, “some
brickyards indicate that
unavailability of gaseous fuel
supplies, or the higher price
of propane or emergency gas,
could cause them to lay off
some employes."

Physicians recommend that government ban

amphetamines, other drugs as weight-loss aids

WASHINGTON (APl—Five physicians
mommended Tuesday that the govern-
ment ban the use of amphetamines and
similar drugs as weight-loss aids on
grounth they are unsafe and ineffective.

Three of the five told a Senate panel that
abuse of amphetamines-generally known
as uppers or pep pills—is so widespread
that the drug should be prohibited
altogether, even though they are used to
treat overactive children and narcolepsy.

The doctors cited research indicating
amphetamines also may be responsible for
birth defects.

Dr. James J. Nora, professor of
pediatrics at the University of Colorado
Medical Center, compared questions about
amphetamines with those raised about
birth control pills.

“The point is,“ he said. “the world needs
‘the pill‘ or some agent that can perform its
function equally well. I am unable to
identify a similar need for amphetamines
and related drugs."

Dr. Lester Grinspoon. associate
professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical
School added: “There is no question that
there is far more harmfulness from the use
of amphetamines than benefits."

Dr. Thomas E. I’rout. associate
professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins
University, agreed that amphetamines and
their cousins should be banned for weight
loss but said all-out efforts to control the
drugs should be made before they are
removed from the market.

 

 

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TV- Kennlehy Kernel, m Jeernelleln helldlne. university at “ ,, L. .. “ * 1. uses. tI
neehty during the veer except holidays and exam perleds. and twice neehty durlnd the summer eeselen. Third steel
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