xt7k0p0wt07q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k0p0wt07q/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-10-23 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 23, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 23, 1973 1973 1973-10-23 2020 true xt7k0p0wt07q section xt7k0p0wt07q U.S., USSR
ceasefire plan

accepted

(see stories

on page 3)

. , \\\.\“ \\\
‘\‘\\\\
\\

Murray Tinkclman

The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 54
Tuesday, October 23, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Congress,
Nixon set for
impeachment

confrontation

By DICK BARNES
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON -— Demands for im-
peachment of President Nixon or his
resignation mounted Monday as official
Washington prepared for a barrage of
formal actions in the Watergate tapes
confrontation.

Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, D-Hawaii, a
member of the Senate Watergate com-
mittee, called for Nixon's resignation.
Americam “have suffered enough” and
“must be spared this new pain and
trauma,” Inouye told a national con-
vention of the AFL-CIO.

The labor organization voted that Nixon
should resign or be impeached if he didn’t.

THE “NEW PAIN and trauma” ex-
ploded Saturday when Nixon fired special
Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox,
Atty. Gen. Elliot L. Richardson quit, and
Deputy Atty. Gen. William D. Ruckelshaus
was dismissed.

While White House aides sought to
mollify critical senators and congressmen
with explanations of Nixon’s action.
criticism of the move continued to pile
up~a significant amount of it from
Republicans.

At the White House, Nixon considered
whether to take his case directly to the

public, whose confidence in the President
was at a new low even before Saturday’s
events, according to a new Gallup Poll.

REP. MORRIS K. UDALL. D-Ariz.,
proposed Monday that Nixon agree to
resign in return for the immediate con-
firmation of House Minority Leader
Gerald R. Ford of Michigan as vice
president, and thus successor to Nixon.

Rep. Jerome Waldie, D-Calif., a
member of the House Judiciary Com-
mittee, told a news conference Monday he
would introduce a resolution Tuesday to
impeach Nixon on grounds of obstructing
justice.

Waldie said there is “a greater anger in
the country than I have ever seen before in
my public life.”

WHILE WASHINGTON officially ob-
served the Veteram Day holiday, the
offices of many involved in the tapes affair
churned with activity pointing toward
formal action Tuesday or Wednesday.

Congress convenes Tuesday and will be
presented with a number of proposals in
addition to Waldie’s.

Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., a member of
the Senate Judiciary Committee, said he
would introduce legislation to provide for

appointment of a new special prosecutor
by Chief Judge John J. Sirica of the US.
District Court in Washington.

SIRICA IS the judge most closely
identified with Watergate court action.

“If this last option fails,” Bayh said, “we
have no alternative but to impeach the
Presidentand to replace him with one who
recognizes that even presidential power
must be controlled."

The Senate Judiciary Committee
scheduled a meeting for Wednesday. One
member said it will consider holding
public hearings later thishweek to examine
the adequacy of Nixon’s compromise with
the Watergate Committee on the tapes and
to consider whether Nixon broke a pledge
when he fired Cox.

COX LIKELY would be the first witness.

The hearings would both air the issues
and lay groundwork for legislation such as
Bayh proposes, a member said.

Other resolutions expected in the Home
would call for impeachment or provide for
an investigation of whether impeachment
should be considered.

Continued on page 11

 

News In Brief

by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

eHiiackers surrender
OUAW set to strike
OFord names Singletary
eCaIIs for impeachment
e Extra police ready
eGovernors rap Nixon

0 Today's weather...

0 LA PAZ, Bolivia — Four guerrillas
who hijacked an Argentine jetliner in an
attempt to get to Cuba surrendered to
Bolivian authorities today and released
their five hostages, a radio station
reported.

The report by Radio Panamericana in
La Pax did not mention the condition of the
hostages or the hijackers.

The Tupamaro guerrillas had forced the
plane to land in the tropical Bolivian town
of Yacuiba, threatening to kill the hostages
unless they got a smaller plane to take
them out of the country.

0 DEARBORN, Mich. — The United
Auto Workers authorized its 185,000 Ford
workers to strike the auto maker Friday if
a new national contract hasn’t been
negotiated by 10 am. that day.

UAW Vice President Ken Bannon made
the announcement today at Ford
headquarters shortly after he served the
nation‘s second largest auto maker with
the deadline notification.

O FRANKFORT, Ky. — Hoover Jack
Neel of Bowling Green has been named to
replace J.M. Ripley of Lexington as a
member of the Kentucky Authority for
Education Television.

Gov. Wendell Ford also reappointed Dr.
Richard Van Hoose of Louisville to the
authority.

Ford also renamed University of Ken-
tucky President Otis Singletary to the
Southern Regional Education Board.

0 MIAMI BEACH. Fla. — Delegates to
the AFL-CIO convention approved a
resolution Monday urging President Nixon
to resign and said Congress should im-
peach him if he does not leave office
voluntarily.

O FRANKFOR'I‘, Ky. —— Public Safety
Commissioner Ron Johnson said Monday
he was prepared to move extra State
Police into a trouble spot in the Harlan
County Coalfields “to maintain order
there."

. FRANKFORT. Ky. — Gov. Wendell
Ford and National Democratic Party
Chairman Robert Strauss declared
Monday that President Nixon “has
abandoned the process of law ..... and his
oath of office."

The joint statement released here and in
Washington maintained that Nixon's
recent actions “constitute the gravest
threat to our system of constitutional
government and the republic that the
nation has faced in peace or in war.”

Ford took part in issuing the joint
statement as chairman of the National
Democratic Governors Caucus.

...warm and sunny

Warm, sunny days and cool nights will
continue through Wednesday. The high
today should be near 80 with a drop into the
upper 403 tonight. It will be a little warmer
Wednesday with a high in the low 00s.

 

  

The Kentucky Kernel

‘th Journalism Building. University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky 40506,
Established Is"

Mike Clark. Managing Editor
Charles Wolte, Practicum Manager
Bill Straub, Sports Editor

Steve Swift, Editorin-Chiet
Jenny Swartz, News Editor
Kaye Coyte, Nancy Daly,and

Bruce Winges, Copy Editors
Bruce Singleton. Photo Manager

Carol Cropper, Arts Editor
John Ellis, Advertising Manager?

The Kentucky Kernel is mailed tive times weekly during the school year except daring
holidays and exam periods, and twice weekly during the summer session.

Published by the Kernel Press Inc., 1272 Priscilla Lane. Lexington. Kentucky. Begun as
the Cadet in ms and published continuously as the Kentucky Kernel since ms. The

Kernel Press Inc. founded 1971. First-class postage paid at Lekington. Kentucky. Ad;
vertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or misleadin'
advertising should be reported to the editors.

Editorials represent theopinion of the editors and not the University.
1

Time for citizens
to speak their piece

According to Abraham Lincoln, this country’s govern-
ment was founded “of the people, by the people, and for the
people.”

It seems appropriate, therefore, in these times of national
duress that America look to the individual citizen for
guidance.

Since Saturday’s firing of Watergate special prosecutor
Archibald Cox, the resignation of Attorney General Elliot
Richardson and the dismissal of Deputy Attorney General
William Ruckelshaus, calls for President Nixon’s im-
peachment have surfaced.

Many newspapers nationwide, including the Louisville
Courier-Journal, called for the President’s impeachment as
the only way to save the country further woes over
governmental scandal.

Several Congressmen and Senators have already voiced
their approval of motiom to begin impeachment
proceedings today in the House of Representatives.

Despite their collective feelings of preeminence, it isn’t
enough that newspapers and elected officials are calling for
Nixon’s impeachment or resignation. The American citizen
must speak for Congress to accurately gauge the nation’s
mood on this critical issue.

We urge all readers, regardless of feelings concerning the
President and the possiblity of impeachment, to send a
letter or a telegram to your congressman and Senators. Tell
these men your thoughts, and ask them to act in a way
deemed approriate by the majority of the comtitutency.

It would also be a good idea to phone the home office of
Congressional representatives. Representatives and
senators regularly check with these “grass roots” offices to
learn of local public opinion. And, believe it or not, public
opinion weighs heavily on a representative when it is time
to vote on an issue.

This is a bizarre and demeaning period in America’s
history. It is of utmost importance that the American
citizen shoulder the responsibility of returning the country
to normalcy.

 

 

Letters

 

 

Thanks expressed

I appreciate the printing of my ex-
periences in South Vietnam. Much serious
politicaldiscussion has resulted from their
publication. However, I would like to
correct one error. I did not travel in
Southeast Asia in 1972, but rather in 1973,
in July and August, following the June
cease fire accord. The quiesscent military
situation enabled me to travel much more
freely than any previous time.

Madame Ngo Ba Thahn was freed by the
Saigon regime in late September. Sources
in Saigon report thatshe plans to teach law
at Columbia University in New York while
continuing her campaign against the
totalitarian Thieu regime.

Additionally, I would like to call the
attention of the American people to the
following fact:

The infamous tiger cages of Con Son
island that have left so many Vietnamese
unable to walk are being built by an
American firm. On January 7, 1971, the
United States Department of Navy gave a
$400,000 contract to Raymond, Morrison,
Knudsen-Brown, Root and Jones to build
384 new “isolation cells” to replace the
tiger cages. Colgate Prentic of the US.
State Department wrote that these cells

.“are six feet by eight feet, two square feet

smaller than the former tiger cages”.

If anyone would like to have any
discussion around the struggle of the
Vietnamese people, I would be willing to
send any information that I have
available.

Mary Elizabeth Branaman
Box 760

University Station
Words inoperative

During his reign as Vice President, Spiro
Agnew spoke out in favor of a strict
standard of law and order, public
morality, and against permissiveness in
our criminal justice system. His words
sound rather inoperative now.

A few months ago, President Richard
Nixon pledged that the Justice Depart-
ment and the independent Watergate
Special Prosecutor would be allowed to get
at the bottom of the scandal and cover-up.
His words also sound rather inoperative
now.

A few years back, vice , president-
,designate Gerald Ford said that an im-
peachable offense is whatever a majority
of the House of Representatives (and
later, two thirds of the Senate) considers it
to be at a given time in history. I would
suggest that his words are very operative-
now more than ever.

Robert Shimer
Political Science-senior

Your health] Pot may lead to personality change

 

By Dr. LOWELL G. HUSBAND

requirement of reality is seen as an un-

i" {FOSl individuals, to some degree 01‘ frequency of use is substantially

 

Question: What are the chronic effects
of frequent marijuana use?

Answer: There is now a fairly con-
clusive body of evidence, both from ac-
cumulated clinical experience and from
controlled clinical and experimental
research, that frequent use of cannabis
over a period of time leads to a rather
characteristic personality change often
referred to as the “amotivational syn-
drome” or “drop-out phenomenon.”

The people so affected become
apathetic; they lose their ability to care
about things or to want to do things. They
appear listless or lazy. Their level of ac-
tivity drops steadily to the point that
practically all they do is sit around and
SMOKE (I had one patient who got to the
point that he wouldn't even go to the
trouble of fixing and lighting his own bowl
of hash, waiting instead for someone to
come around who would do it for him).
Though overt aggression is extremely
rare, they tend to boil silently with
resentment and hostility; every

welcome position, a “hassle.” Sometimes
unrequited violent urges or impulses are
reported. They withdraw from all but a
few friendships and eventually may shut
out even these few. Interest in personal
appearance and hygiene fades away. They
lose effectiveness, cannot concentrate,
and cannot endure frustration. Com-
municative verbal facility in both
speaking and writing diminishes; their
thinking is often fragmented and is not
infrequently characterized by magical,
supernatural, or even blatantly psychotic
notions.

it is important to note that these changes
are ego-syntonic; that is, they are not
experienced by the one so involved as
being the result of the drug use. Rather, he.
understands his changed life-style as
resulting from enhanced self-awareness,
or as his unwillingness to “play the games
of the establishment,” or as legitimate
disengagement from clearly excessive
frustrations or hassles.

In my experience, this condition occurs

other, who smoke marijuana or hashish
more than once a week and have done so
for abouta year. There is little doubt in my
mind that the syndrome is a direct effect of
the drug (actually of any drug in the
hallucinogenic category) and is not some
social side-effect. The evidence for this
conclusion is:

—the syndrome almost always subsides
about four to six weeks after the drug is
discontinued, unless the drug has been
used extremely heavily for a very long
period of time;

—the syndrome does not occur in light or
occasional users of cannabis, even if they
are heavily involved in the “counter~
culture;”

—comparable effects are observed in
animals which are given the drug on a
chronic basis.

I would like to reiterate that these
chronic effects of frequent cannabis use
appear to be completely reversible - or
nearly so - in the overwhelming majority
of cases if the drug is stopped or its

decreased. But sufficient time for
recovery must be allowed - at least four to
six weeks. During this interval, there
often occurs what I call the “re-entry
phenomenon.” The person feels vaguely
Uncomfortable. He seems confused when
thinking of his goals, beliefs, or
aspirations. He doubts if he really wants to
rejoin the real world. He feels as if he
needs the drug in order to think clearly or
remember correctly. This is a most un-
comfortable period for many people, and
one frought with the danger of resuming
the drug. During this time he can often
benefit from a sympathetic and
knowledgeable friend or counselor who
can reassure him that the re-entry is a
temporary passageway between with-
drawn semi-existence and full
engagement with the world.
, . . . . . . . . . . .,.,.,.::,;,;:;:;:.::55:

Dr. Lowell S. Husband is a

Plychiatrist with the Student
Health Service.

 

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. October 23. 1973—3

Egypt, Israel agree to cease fire proposal

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Egypt and Israel ordered their troops to silence
their guns Monday, but Syria snubbed a UN.
Middle East cease fire appeal and fighting was
reported continuing on both fronts hours after the
beginning of the truce.

Israel charged Egyptian artillery was still
shelling Israeli positions “in numerous locations"
along the Suez Canal battle lines nearly three and a
half hours after the ceasefire in place came into
effect.

(‘AIRO RADIO denied the charge and said the
Israelis made it only to have a pretext for violations
of their own.

Spokesmen in Tel Aviv declined to say whether
the Israelis were firing back.

Cairo and Tel Aviv accepted the Security Council
truce call in the morning but Damascus said only
that it was studying it despite reported telephone
discussions between Presidents Hafez Assad of
Syria and Anwar Sadat of Egypt.

IRAQ. THE major Arab nation fighting with the
Syrians, rejected the appeal outright and Jordan,

with a small force in Syria, announced it would
accept it on condition Syria agreed.

An Israeli war correspondent reported from the
Syrian front that there was no change in that sector
when the cease-fire deadline came. “The Syrians
did not cease fire," he reported, ”and Israeli forces
carried on with their normal operations.

Both sides reported heavy fighting before the ,

deadhne.

THERE ALSO were reports of day-long artillery
attacks on Israeli positions on the western bank of
the Suez Canal as the Egyptians tried to push back
Israel’s expanded beachhead in the Egyptian
heartland.

Cairo and Tel Aviv announced they had handed
down orders to their commanders to hold their fire
unless fired upon along the Suez Canal front that has
been bitterly contested since Oct. 6. The guns were

to fall silent at 6:50 p.m., Middle East time—12:50
pm. EDT.
Both sides made their acceptance of the cease-

fire conditional on scrupulous observance by the
other side. however. and the reports of continuing
shelling underscored the difficulties of an im-
mediate halt to the war after 17 days of heavy tank,
infantry and aerial combat.

THE TRl'CE WAS jointly proposed by the Soviet
Union and the United States, the superpowers
backing the warring parties. It was voted in the
Security Council early Monday after an agreement
worked out in Moscow over the weekend by
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and Soviet
Communist party leader Leonid I. Brezhnev.

In addition to the cease-fire in place, it called for
Israeli withdrawal from Jordanian, Egyptian and
Syrian land captured in the sicday war of 1967 and
negotiations aimed at a lasting peace agreement for
the Middle East, site of four wars since the Jewish
state was declared in 1948.

The Syrian delay in accepting the cease-fire, if it
continues, could undermine efforts to carry out the
post cease—fire portions of the agreement.

 

 

 

 

_/

947 .

Zevt Btum

 

Arabs: unity in war, division in peace?

By HOLGER JENSEN
Associated Press Writer

BEIRL'T, Lebanon — War brought the
Arabs together. Peace might pull them
apart.

The Arab unity which emerged in the
first 16 days of the Middle East war
seemed to be coming apart Monday, the
17th day. within hours of a UN. Security
Council call for a cease—fire. Allies in arms
against Israel, they found themselves at
odds over peace policy.

IRAQ, A combatant on the Syrian front,
rejected any cease-fire or negotiations
with the Jewish state. Syria was
“studying" the cease-fire proposal. Egypt
accepted it and Jordan was expected to
follow suit, apparently hoping the
superpowers might force an Israeli with-
drawal from Arab lands occupied since
1967.

Palestinian refugees and their guerrilla
fighting arm, which has been a main cause
of Arab-Israeli friction for the last quarter
century, were not consulted.

But the executive committee of the
Palestine Liberation Organization made it
clear that it would not accept a cease-fire
abrogating the 25-year struggle to
recapture the Palestinian homeland.

"THE REVOLUTION is not affected by
the UN. Security Council resolution,” the
group said. “It will carry on the armed
struggle to complete the liberation of the
occupied land without any condition."

A cease—fire in place apparently leaves
Egypt in the most favorable position of all
the Arab fighting states. Although Israel
reportedly captured 475 square miles of
Egyptian territory on the west bank of the
Suez Canal. Egyptian forces claimed to
have seized a bigger chunk of the Sinai
desert and occupied the east bank of the
waterway.

If President Anwar Sadat can hold on to
this and reopen the Suez Canal to in-

Negotiations next

Mid East peace hinges on

By GENE KRAMER
Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. — UN. 0!-
ficials said Monday the success of a U.S.-
Soviet-sponsored Middle East ceasefire
and peace plan hinges on good faith by the
Arabs and Iraelis, and on further action by
the Security Council.

Hopeftu awaiting a halt to the 17-day
war, the officials admitted the U.S.-Soviet
resolution adopted by the Security Council
in the post-midnight hours carried no
specific provisions for enforcement or for
imitating peace talks.

l'l‘ SAID merely that negotiations toward
a just and durable peace should start
"immediately and concurrently with the
cease-fire . . . under appropriate auspices.

ternational shipping, he would enhance the
prestige he won in the Sinai campaign and
offset any domestic criticism of his
decision not to follow through with his
initial military success.

.\ (‘EASIi-I‘IRE in place poses more
problems for President Hafez Assad of
Syria, who might have to explain to his
countrymen why he decided to stop
fighfing.

It will be up to the lS-nation Security
Council to define “appropriate auspice," a
UN. spokesman said when asked whether
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim was
undertaking this role.

“The resolution calls for a cessation of
hostilities, but it says nothing about the
observation" of the battle areas to insure
complaince, the spokesman said when
asked about the future of UN . observation
teams in the Middle East.

OBSERVERS OF the Israeli-Egyptian
front were pulled back to Cairo at Egypt‘s
request soon after the war broke out.

“The UN. role was not defined in the
resolution and the world organization has
not really begun planning it." the
spokesman said.

Despite initial successes early in the
war, Syrian forces have largely been
pushed out of the Golan Heights by Israeli
reinforcements and only a small area on
Mt Hermon was still contested Monday.

.\'ot only have the Syrians failed to
recapture the Golan Heights. they have
also retreated on the road between Al
Qunaytirah and Damascus. and lost an
extra 300 square miles of territory, ac-
cording to Israeli claims.

good faith

The implication was that the UN. role
would await clarification by the United
States and the Soviet Union, the same
powers that achieved a 14-0 passage of the
cease-fire resolution. The breakthrough at
a dramatic midnight session followed
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger‘s
weekend trip to Moscow.

THE WASHINGTONHMoscow
agreement to urge an in-place cease-fire
represented a change in the positions each
power had originally taken.

The United States at first had suggested
a cease-fire based on Arab and Israeli
withdrawal to positions held prior to the
start of the fighting. The Soviets said any
cease-f ire resolution would have to provide
for Israeli with withdrawal to the borders
preceding the I967 war.

 

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. October 23. I013

campus
lflTERVIElUS

1

October JI
(W)

October 3)
(W)

October ill—November
(W-Th)

October ill—November

l

(W-Th)

October 3I—November

i

(WzTh)

November l
(Th)

November I
(Th)

November l
(Th)

November I
(Th)

November 2
(F)

November 5
(M)

November 5
(M)

November 5
(M)

November 5

Novem ber 5

November S—e
(M-TI

November 6
(T)

Navember 6
(T)

November s
(T)

November 6
(T)

MONTGOMERY WARD —- Check schedule book tor late
inlormation.

YORK AIR CONDITIONING — Mechanical Engineering
(BS). Positions available: Technical Sales, Manutacturing
Engineers. Geographic locations:
graduates onlv. -
ELECTRONIC DATA SYSTEMS — Check schedule book for
late intormation.

EXXON COMPANY -— Positions available: Controllership,
Headquarters Tax, Marketing. Geographic locations:
Nationwide.

Schedule): Accounting

Accounting (35, Msy

Schedule II, III: Non-Technical Marketing

Business Administration (BS, Ms).

U. S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION — Chemistry,
Physics, Accounting, Chemical Engineering, Electrical
Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Metallurgical
Engineering (BS,MS) ; Business Administration, Economics,
Engineering Mechanics, Nuclear Engineering (MS).
Positions available: Administrative and Technical Ad—
ministration. Geographic locations: Richland Washington-
San Francisco. Calilornia. Aiken, South Carolina
Washington, D C; Albuquerque, New Mexico: Chicago,
Illin0is. Idaho Falls Idaho Las Vegas, Nevada: Oak
Ridge. Tennessee Wilt interview Juniors. Seniors, and
Graduate Students in Engineering with a “B" average for
summer employment. May, August graduates only. Because
at the nature at the position a "B” average is preterred and
Citizenship is required.

BORG WARNER CORPORATION-CHEMICALS B
PLASTICS GROUP — Check schedule book for late in-

formation. . _
INDIANA STATE HIGHWAY COMMISSION — CIVII

Engineering (BS,MSI. Positions available: Highway
Engineers. Geographic locations: Indiana. December, May
graduates only.

NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL AND
ECONOMIC RESOURCES — Civil Engineering (Water
Option) (BS); Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering,
Mechanical Engineering (BS,MS). Positions available:
Environmental Engineers. Geographic location: Ashville,
Winston-Salem, Concord, Raleigh, Greensville, and
Wilmington, North Carolina. December, May graduates
onlv.

TENNESSEE EASTMAN COMPANY — Chemistry,
Chemical Engineering (Ph.D.). Positions available:
Research and Development. Geographic location:
Kingsport, Tennessee (can reler applications to Rochester,
New York). December, May, August graduates.

TEXAS INSTRUMENTS — Check schedule book for late

information.

BROWN A WILLIAMSON TOBACCO COMPANY — Ac-
counting (BS,MS). Positoons available: Accounting.
Geographic location: Louisville, Kentucky. December, May

graduates onlv.
FAYETTE COUNTY SCHOOLS — Teachers in all fields.

English and Social Studies candidates must have Master’s
Degree. Geographic location: Lexington, Kentucky.
December graduates onlv.

IBM — Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering
(BS,MS). Geographic location: Boulder, Colorado.
December graduates only.

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF NAVY-CAPITAL
AREA PERSONNEL SERVICE OFFICE — Architecture
(BS); Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering,
Mechanical Engineering (BS,MS). Positions available:
Project Engineering, Program Management, Geographic
location: Metropolitan Washington, DC. area and various
other locations in the United States. May, August graduates

only.

UNITED STATES MARINE CORPS - A representative will
be in the first floor corridor of the Student Center to talk to
interested students.

SHELL COMPANIES

Schedule I: Business (Novem- . 5 only)

Computer Science, Accounting, Business Administration,
Economics (BS). Positions available: Accountants,
Analysts, Data Processing Analysts. Geographic locations:
South. December graduates only.

Schedule II: Engineering

Chemical Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical
Engineering, Metallurgical Engineering (BS). Positions
available: Oil Field Production, Refinery and Chemical
Plant Engineering, Geophysics, Communications
Engineering (EE only), Applied Research and Development
(CME I. ME). December, May, August graduates.

FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION—
ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING BRANCH-
SOUTHERN REGION — Civil Enginuring, Electrical
Engineeng (BS,MS). Positions avaibble: Field positlilis
involving so to 95 per cent travel. Gn'aphic locatials:
Geographic locations: Georgia, Florida, Alabama, South
Carolina, North Carolina, Mississippi, Kentucky, Tennessee.
December graduates only.

LIBERTY NATIONAL BANK -— Business Administration,
Economics (BS). Positions availatde: Management
Training. Geograth location: Jetterson County, Kentucky.
It is requested that all students read company brochure
betore signing tor an interview.

NATIONAL MINE SERVICE COMPANY —- Check schedule
book for late information.

TUBE TURNS DIVISIONCHEMETRON CORPORATION
— Accounting, Business Administration, Metallurgical
Engineering (BS); Engineering Mechanics, Nuclear
Engineering (MS). Positions available: Plant Engineering,
Project Engineering, Process Engineering,Produc
Engineering. Geographic location: Louisville, Kentucky.
Will interview students trom Louisville area for summc‘
employment. December, Mav graduates only. (Community
Colleges — Mechanical Englneering Technology-l
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY — A
representative will be in the first floor corridor ot the Student
Center to talk with interested students.

 

Complete intormation regarding personnel needs at the com-
panies listed above is available in the Placement Service. Please
check schedule books, literature, and make inquiries tram any
member at the statl it necessary. An appointment is required tor
the above companies. Sign up at the Placement Service, tot Old
Agriculture Building.

 

Worldwide. December .

Say war resisters not criminal

Veterans seek amnesty

By NANCY DALY
Kernel Staff Writer

“The real criminals are not the
people who resisted the war but
the people who created it," said
Pete Zastrow. at the Lexington
People for Amnesty (LPA)
Workshop Sunday at the Student
Center.

Zastrow and Bob Moore,
representatives from the Viet-
nam Veterans Against the War,
defined amnesty and suggested
methods of organizing a
movement in this direction.

UNFORTUNATELY. said
Zastrow, amnesty has come to
mean forgiveness in the minds of
the American people. He said it
really means removing legal

sanctions from those prosecuted
for resisting the Vietnam war.
“You can’t forgive someone who
has done nothing wrong,” he
said.

Zastrow said most Americans
also confuse those who would be
affected by amnesty. Besides the
draft resisters exiled in Canada
or Europe there are:

—AWOL's and deserters, most
of whom are underground in the
United States. “They found out
that (military life) was not the
type of world in which they could
survive," said Zastrow.

“Less than honorable
discharges, those thrown out of
the military for acts of resistance
against the war. Zastrow said

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there are 750,000 of these persons.

—-Civilians arrested for an-
tiwar activities. “These arrests
should be wiped off their
records," said Zastrow,
“because there should be no such
thing as a crime for resisting the

.7

war.

ANOTHER GROUP listed by
Zastrow are those who resisted
the war legally by going to
college, obtaining a conscientious
objector status, or joining the
reserves or national guard.

Moore said the Vietnam war
ended because of mass public
pressure and because South
Vietnam was losing the war.
“What we have to do is get this
type of mass pressure for am-
nesty." he said.

Moore and Zastrow claimed
that the Nixon administration is
trying to downgrade the amnesty
issue by making it appear that
the draft exiles are the only
people affected.

THEY‘RE TRYING to
minimize the whole question of
amnesty," said Zastrow. He said
unconditional amnesty would
directly affect 2,000,000 people,
not the few hundred Nixon
referred to.

LPA. coordinated by David
Edwards of the Lexington
Theological Seminary. is a
coalition of groups that have
taken stands advocating am-
nesty.

Future LPA plans include
getting in touch with local
families of draft exiles and
holding a town meeting on am-
nesty in January.

 

 

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UK students design

parks for Lexington

Three UK architecture
students are receiving first hand
experience at parks development
while offering Lexington a much-
needed service.

“There are few professional
people designing parks in
Lexington. The city depends a lot
on students,” said Gary Soder-
man, a fourth-year architecture
student.

SODERMAN earns six
credit hour