xt7ksn012q9b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ksn012q9b/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-03-05 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, March 05, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 05, 1974 1974 1974-03-05 2020 true xt7ksn012q9b section xt7ksn012q9b The Kentucky Kernel

Vol- LXV No. 124 Untvcrdty of KM
Tuesday. March 5. 1974 ll m “It w

 

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to half Red River Dam

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 The Kentucky Kernel

Published by tha Karnal Press lnc. Begun as the Cadet ln II" and publlshad contlnuwaly
as The Kamucliy Kunal slnca "15. The Karnal Frau Inc. Wad 1971. Ther cla-
putaga paid at Laxlmhn, Ky. Business attic. are located In no Journalism Bullaho on
tha University of Kunudly campus. Aavarilalno, room mm News Daparimmt room
"4. Advertising publlmaa naraln ls lnlandad to help the reader buy. Any talaa or
mlslaaalno swarming should be rational b the Elihu.

Steve Swift, Editor-in-Chief

Here come the iudges

Liberal admissions policies and affirmative action
programs used by college and universities to benefit
minority students may be drastically affected by an
upcoming Supreme Court decision.

The Court recently heard arguments in a case filed
by a University of Washington student who claims the
university’s law school discriminated against him by
admitting 36 minority students with lower academic
records than his. Attorneys for the student argued
different admission standards for minorities and
whites is in violation of the “equal protection” clause
of the 14th Amendment to the US. Constitution and
several federal statutes.

Many famous legal figures from around the country
have filed briefs on the case which involves a conflict
between two schools of thought. As reported in The
Chronicle of Higher Education March 4 the con-
flicting thoughts are: “The idea that minorities
discriminated against in the past should have spe—
cial help to overcome the effects of past inferior treat-
ment and the notion that everyone should be judged
on his own merits.”

Although the current Court has disappointed us
with its conservatism we feel it has only one choice in
this case — to uphold the constitutionality of the
special policies. To rule otherwise would be a direct
smack at recent civil rights legislation allowing
minorities the same privileges as the white ruling
masses.

Too often we fail to consider how our actions today
will affect those living tomorrow. A court decision
favoring special admissions policies will help ease
future burdens and give us reason to believe
Americans of all races and origins will someday be
equal as citizens.

Nicholas von Hoffman

editorials represent the opinions of the editors, not the university

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PREDATOR CONTROL

letters to the Kernel
A campus need for black unity cited

In January of 1973, I came to
UK to attend the College of Law,
I’ve been here for a year and
have often times felt a need to
express myself on the problems
of black students. Heretofore I
have conveniently suppressed
that urge by categorizing the
black situation as an under—
graduate problem. Now I must
stand and be counted; I must
recognize that “whatever you do
to the least of my brothers, that
you do unto me." For those of my
readers who can’t deal with
biblical rhetoric, Brother
Malcolm X expressed the same
ideal when he said, “You catch
hell 'cause you’re black.”

I look around and see people
like Robert Pass and Jerry
Stevens, and I realize that there
are some concerned black people
here. No man can live the life of a
cocoon and hold on to his
manhood.

Perhaps the remainder of this
letter will seem inconsistent with
my introduction; to me it is not.
Although we need to be about the

business of changing the status

quo, we need to keep one eye on ,9

self survival. The most beautiful
word in the English language is
“perspective." Perspective is a
proper evaluation with propor-
tional importance given to the
component parts. Draw your life
into perspective.

Most of us are here for a period
of four years; place these four
years into perspective. Black
people leave college campuses
everyday without degrees and
business goes on as usual. If
anyone reads an implication that
we should stand by and be polite
while we become eunuchs; he is

Most forms of growth cost ever_yo

NEW YORK — Leon N. Weiner
is the head of his own con-
struction company; he‘s a major
figure in the industry, but he still
looks like he could pour cement
or frame a house. His is a
specialized, robust attack that
builders get from years of trying
to come out even against union
business agents, gas line in-
spectors and bankers. '

On this occasion, Weiner was
talking to 300 builders, planners,
bankers, engineers, academics,
local elected officials, ecologists
and architects. They had
assembled for two days of
discussion about “managed
growth,“ and Weiner was
fighting against the idea, or at
least what he would consider its
indiscriminate application.

“YOU CAN‘T SAY, ‘Bosun,
pull up the ladder. I‘ve already
come aboard,‘ “ Weiner was
telling them, but the building
industry is full of horror stories of
people who did just that. There is
the legend of the 17-yearold
California Boy Scout who is

supposed to have gotten his Merit
Badge by successfully filing a
class action suit to stop a multi-
million dollar. project; and there
is also the New England Ia dy who
blocked an equally large
development to protect what the
builder referred to as “a puddle
full of fornicating frogs.”

More and more American
communities have found out that
most forms of growth may
benefit the people in real estate
and retail business, but
cost everybody else money in
higher taxes. Neat, modern one-
story research labs employing
only Ph.D.s are naturally
welcomed everywhere, but free-
standing residences are such a
drain on the taxpayers that new
ways are being found all the time
to keep them out.

Sewer moratoriums have
become very popular in
California, around the District of
Columbia and in" New Jersey.
Other places are relying on new
kinds of zoning ordinances, the
most famous of which was
pioneered by the town of

Ramapo. NY. The Ramapo
approach, which has been upheld
by the courts, ties the issuance of
zoning permits to an 18—year
program of streets, sewers, fire
houses, etc. This isn‘t as ex-
clusionary as the towns that are
trying to set a simple numerical
limit on their population. But it’s
all headed in the same direction
as Dade County, Fla, where, a
conference participant reported,
the voters recently turned down a
bond issue for rehabilitating low-
income housing while approving
one to upgrade the zoo.

A G A l N S T S E W E R
moratoriums, zoning and the
constraints of ecology, Weiner
fought with the humor and
energy of a crew boss: “The
answer to your sewer problem
may be massive doses of
Kaopectate . . What do you stop
when you create a moratorium?
Do you stop excrement? They
still do it, don’t they? . . . Zoning
is not a contraceptive . . . I submit
to you it’s good to keep the air
clean, but what about racial
discrimination?"

Weiner is right from‘his per-
spective of the last 25 years in the
housing industry. Let us into
enough communities, let us build
enough and we‘ll get to those
houses for black folks eventually.
Eventually they would have. For
a good while the quality of
housing for everybody, poor
folks, too, was going up — but not
now.

We're running out of
everything; earth, air, water,
building materials and energy.
With or without the zoning there
can’t be any suburban housing
for the poor people. It will take
longer for the truth of it to hit
than it did with the big car — the
Impala and the Caddy and those
big Fords and Chryslers -— but
the single-family, detached
house, yea, the one with the lawn
that we’ve been taught to think if
as a VA-FHA mortgaged bir-
thright, well, it’s a done-in dodo
too.

THE PRICE OF everything
makes the single-family home
prohibitive. The price of gas to

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misinterpreting the message
intended. Let no man insult your
integrity but be careful to avoid a
fight on the way to the ring.

Perhaps this is easier for me to
say because my graduate status
does give me a somewhat dif-
ferent vantage point. I don‘t
expect all my brothers and
sisters to agree with me, but if
you can find my philosophy
alleviates the pain and maintains
your integrity, I urge you to adopt
it.

Jerry Stevens, assistant to the
vice president of student affairs
for minority students, has time a
remarkable job. We neeJ to
remember that Stevens is only
one man and he too has obstacles
to face. The same holds true for
Robert Pass, president of the
BSD, and many others. Let us be
not unmindful of their efforts. If
there is one thing I would urge
blacks to adopt from the state of
Kentucky, it‘s her motto.

Bill Shelton
2nd year Law

I19

get to it, the price of fuel to heat it
and‘ the price of pipes, wires,
streets and drains to service it
will make it increasingly ex—
pensive to own. The one-child
family of the future will live in
apartments and look at the
procreative mobs of the baby
boom as we look at
daguerreotypes of 19th-Centeury
Mormon familial tribes.

Leon Weiner had the right idea,
even if he doesn't want to face it.
People are saying, “Bosun, pull
up the ladder, I've already come
aboard.” You don’t have to argue
the merits of zero growth
anymore. But whereas the people
who first propounded the notion
throught the end of growth might
bring us some quiet for our
grasping spirits, we show signs of
turning into frightened misers.
Don’t let strangers in here;
they’ll buy our gas, drink our
water and overload our sewers.

Bosun, bosun, see those hands
coming up out of the water onto
the deck? Step on their fingers.

Nicholas von Hoffman is a
columnist for King Feature
Syndicate.

 

 

 

  
  

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Your health

The big E for sex

By FRANK S. CASCIO. M.D.

Every year Americans spend
more than $300 million
swallowing massive doses of
vitamin C to cure their colds,
taking vitamin E to im prove their
sex lives and trusting in vitamin
B complex vitamins to wipe out
their hangovers. Can vitamins
perform the many miracles
attributed to them?

Vitamins are indeed essential
to human health and well being.
The absence of vitamins can
result in serious illness. But how
many are enough? How many are
too much?

IT IS WELL known that an
adequate diet will supply all the
nutrients needed by the normal
individual. When large vitamin
doses are self prescribed and
unneeded, they can be
dangerous. The toxicity of some
of these substances, particularly
vitamins A and D has been
proven. Effects of large doses of
other vitamins remain unknown.

What are the functions and
potential hazards of these
vitamins?

Vitamin A is vital to overall vis-
n, growth and bone development
in children and to the health of
skin and mucous membranes. It
is most widely known as the
preventor of so called “night
blindness". Vitamin A has been

-used to correct skin and eye

problems. A severe deficiency
can indeed cause eye problems.
Vitamin A is a fat soluble
vitamin. This means that itis
stored by the body and not
readily excreted, hence the
rarity of deficiency.

This Is also the reason for its
potential toxicity. Huge doses
over a period of time can create a
hazardous buildup. Massive
doses of vitamin A can cause
thinning of the hair, baldness,
mouth ulcers, extreme fatigue,
anemia, inflammation of the
optic nerve and symptoms which
mimic a brain tumor.

THE “VITAMIN B complex“ is
made up of 15 different sub—
stances. Six of these have been
clearly tagged as essential.
Deficiencies of vitamin B rarely
occur in healthy individuals.

Since the vitamin B complex
vitamins do work in concert, they
need one another. Also,
certain B vitamins are known to
interact with other drugs which
can in certain instances lead to
an undesirable increase or
decrease in the activity of these
drugs.

Vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is a
water soluble vitamin which
cannot be stored or synthesized
by man. Marked deficiency of
vitamin C results in scurvy, a
disease causing exteme
weakness, disintegrating gums
and severe joint pains and
delayed healing. Such a
deficiency would be extremely
unusual.

MUCH OF THE recent con-
troversy concerning vitamin C is
related to its possible effect on
the common cold. In 1970, Nobel
prize winning chemist, Linus
Pauling, published a book in
which he said that massive doses
of vitamin C could actually

L

prevent the common cold.
Following this publication, a
number of studies have been
conducted to determine what
effect, if any, ascorbic acid has
on the cold. The results of these
studies have been somewhat
contradictory and far from
conclusive.

In short, the jury is still out.
There are studies by respected
individuals which support both
sides of the controversy. Should
you then take a chance on taking
large doses of vitamin C on the
possibility that it might work in
combating the common cold?
Most physicians advise against
it. You may be wasting your
money. Even more important is
the fact that long term effects of
massive doses of vitamin C are
not yet known. Unneeded
quantities may simply be ex-
creted; however, high doses may
build up in natural body reserves

with unforeseeable future
results.
Vitamin D aids in the

metabolism of calcium and other
minerals essential for proper
bone development and in
maintaining proper calcium
metabolism. Like vitamin A,
vitamin D is fat soluble. It is
stored by the body and can be
highly toxic when consumed in
large unneeded doses.

VITAMIN E is perhaps the
most mysterious of all of the
essential vitamins. It has been
heavily promoted, generally to
the sole benefit of its exploiters.
There is little evidence that extra
quantities can be helpful. A
multitude of claims have been
put forth for vitamin E. Among
them—it will combat angina,
prevent heart attacks, soothe
aching feet, avert miscarriage,
relieve constipation, cure
cirrhosis of the liver, stabilize
blood pressure, stren'ghten
muscles, reverse mental
retardation, improve vision, heal
wounds, stave off aging, smooth
wrinkles, vanish body odor,
relieve arthritis and boost sexual
prowess. None of these claims
have been proven.

Are there dangers in continuing
large doses of vitamin E? There
is no firm evidence of specific
toxicity to vitamin E. However,
vitamin E, like vitamin A and D,
is a fat soluble chemical stored
by the body which means that
cumulative toxic effects are
entirely possible and even
probable.

Physicians and nutritional
authorities agree, except under
special circumstances, and then
on medical advice, there is no
need to feed yourself and your
family vitamin supplements.
There may well be dangers in
doing so. If you find yourself
succumbing to promotional
pleas, if you suspect your diet
may be inadequate, if you know
symptoms might stem from
deficiency, discuss the question
with your doctor and let the
doctor’s decision prevail.

Frank S. Cascio, M.D. is
Director of the Student
Health Service.

 

  

 

  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday. MarCh 5, 1974—3

CHEVY CHASE COIN LAUNDRY
312 SOUTH ASHLAND

Lexington's Most Popular Self-Service Laundry

For UK Students and Faculty

Dropoff
laundry

Self-Service
laundry

Dropoff
Dry Cleaning

modern equipment
phone 266-5721

courteous attendants
' hours 8:00 am-lO:00 pm

U.K. Office for International Programs
CI‘IHOUIICOS
6 Week Summer Trip in Monterrey ”‘
-June 30th to August 9th ”(Y K
-6 semester hours of credit

-Courses offered in English 8. Spanish

   
  
  

Total cost of $485.00 includes:
Tmtion, room (maid service).
Board, Excursions, Fiestas, Con-
certs. Recreational facilities at the
Institute include. 2 large swimming
pools, 5 tennis courts, tully—equiped
sports center. Transportation negoti~
able with director. Average round

trip about $50.

-Anthropology, Archeology, Art,
Folklore, Geography, History, In-
ternational Marketing, In-
ternational Trade, Spanish (all
levels), Sociology, and others.

Courses in Spanish fulfill one year of
U.K. Language Requirement.

Classes end by l:00 p.m., leaving
plenty of free time for individual
interests.

 
   
   
   
  
   
 

    
 

For more informatinn can or call

VV‘

 

Antonio A. Fernandez
1106 Patterson Office Tower or
Phone 257-1531

David R. Kelch
Bradley Hall 105
Phone: 258-8646

  
     

 

 

Kentucky Colonels
Basketball

March 9:

Colonels vs Indiana Pacers

8:10 pm MEMORIAL Coliseum
March 16:

Colonels vs New York Nets

8:10 pm Memorial Coliseum

Special Rates For Students Staff and Faculty

East Nita seen
only 92.00 with
1.0. «regular $.00)

Purchase Ticket at
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Saturday 9 -12

 

 

    
  
    
  
  
   
   
      
  
     
 
  
  
    
  
   
 
 
   
   
  
   
   
    
     
    
  
   
 
   
  
   
  
  
   
   
   
   
    
   
  
  
  
   
   
 
 
  
   
   
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
    

  

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. March 5. 1974

Craft and Art Obiects

JunkArt

Wire Sculpture
God’s Eyes
Brass Jewelry
Pillows
Paintings
Prints

Photos

Harry Thomas
Dave Westbrook
Dee Amyx

Jim Thornbury
The McKays

Ken Phelps

Elsie Dalia Piazza
Mike Koening

The Paint Pot'n Putter Shop
884 East High - Chevy Chase

5" 5 Limestone

25379010

Across from't‘ommerce Building
rflGHTLY SPECIALS-

Tues
Mariarom Tokany (Beef Stew)
Fri
Beet Burgundy

Kitchen Hours

Braciola

Thurs
Chicken Marengo
Set
Scallops eu' Brochette
Tues Sat. Ba.m.r9p.m.

Wed

Mon. 8am. 2pm Sunday Buffet 2 pm. 7 pm,

M. |. King Library also preserves
rare documents on microtexts

By MARIA SALCIDO
Kernel Staff Writer

One of the many functions of
the Margaret 1. King Library is
the preservation of rare
documents, newspapers, books
and periodicals on microtexts.
The availability of ' these
microtexts to researchers in-
cludes publications on microfilm,
microfiche and microcards.

Microfilm is material copied on
35 mm. film and put in movie
form. Microfiche is a transparent
cardfilm serie' which can be
duplicated. Microcards are
printed in microscopic form on
an opaque plastic card. They can
not be copied since they aren‘t
transparent.

MICROFILMING Department,
a branch of Newspaper and

Microtexts Department, has
periodicals, papers and books on
microfilm. Except for govem-
ment publications, all
microforms are handled there.

Mary A. Sullivan, head of the
microtexts department, said this
is the only state-supported
agency that keeps records of
every daily newspaper published
in Kenticky, except the larger
state newspapers, such as The
Courier-Journal and Lexington
Herald. These papers are copied
by other commercial
microfilming companies
throughout the state.

Microforms are also made of
some other Kentucky
publications not preserved
elsewhere. This service was
started in 1952.

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THE DEPARTMENT. con-
sisting of four staff members and
12 students, also keeps copies of
some international newspapers
and every thesis published at UK.

State organizations often call
upon the library for copies of the
microforms when they are
unavailable elsewhere.

“Since this is not a public
service of a private business, no
profit is cleared from these
services," Sullivan said.
“However, if any should be
made, it returns to University
funds.”

“THE BULK ofour operation is
in newspapers,“ Sullivan added.

There are 48,000 reels of
microfilm now in the Library.

 

Passport Photos
Application Photos

SPENGLER STUDIO

Ph. 2516677 222 S. Lime

 

 

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YouRsELF.

PERFORMANCE.

)Clo'l'kes “For- the.
college Sir).

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across
from the
commence

bailouts 6h
Seu‘l'k Aime.
R l Gt—I T 0N,

CAMPHS

 

 

 

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547 S. Limestone 254-6139

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 ‘Spirit of

love'

Sullivan selection

committee now

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday. March 5. 1974—5

 

AGENDA

i . .
acce tin awards nominations
)n- P 9 UNIVERSITY SENATE MEETING
2:: By DEBBIE BLACK Any individual, group or committee can contact him for
Kernel Staff Writer ' ' further information.
organs“... ..ay make . March 1 1 . 1 914
K Now is the time to nominate an nomlnatlons, sald Ann Law Commlttee members then
‘ individual who has promoted Lyons,assistantdean of students. assignsomeonetoholdaninquiry
all “helpfulness” and “the spirit of “INDIVIDUALS 0R groups “’“h the “mm“?- H Approve minutes of February n. 1974
he love" in the University com- nominate people they. feel are _ _
re munity for the 1974 Sullivan worthy Of Sin" recognltlon, said AFTER A”? nominations are 2) Chairman’s remarks.
awards. Lyons. “It 15 one of the highest made, the .Slx-member com-
“c The Sullivan Medallion, one of honors received.“ YK- . t 33:82 a§P°‘{“;d E’y ZFeS’deFfi 3) Action ontheproposed change lnthe Rules, Section m. u
no the UniverSitY’S mOSl CheriShed “305‘? _Wh° W'Sh '0 nomma e det m" "lie ry S 0 1:8 “'5 re: Elec'tlonsototflcers on'the Senate council. (Clrculateo
awards, is presented annually to an lnleldual must complete a _ er lne e wmners. war 5 under date of February 2" 1,").
59 one graduating woman and man form lncludlnga brlef paragraph W1“ be presented at the com-
d. . . . . - . - ' , mencement exercises
and to one other lnleldual who 15 indicating each nominee 5 . '
be not a UK student qualifications. Nommators may obtain forms 4) Action “Wile Am and $43th“! proposal to establish
‘ ' College Assembly; recommmendanon tor a change In too

from 537 Patterson Office Tower,
208 Administration Annex or
Room 204, Seaton Building.

ty Concernirg the validity of each
As set forth in an agreement nomination,Dr.MauriceA.Clay,
between the New York Southern Sullivan awards committee

Governing Regulations. (Clrculated underline of February
26, 1974)..

is Society and the University, chairman, asked that a Nominations mustbereceived hO
3d~ criteria for selection is based nominator identify himself so the later than March 15. 3 9m. 5) Action onthethree remaining rmmangaflm tromtht
0‘ upon only “the possession of such Lowllt Report (the Committee to Study the Status as

Graduate Students), (Clrculated under date or February 25.
1974).

characteristics of heart, mind Pafferson SChOO' brings

and conduct as evince a spirit of

loveforandhelpfulnesstoother Rusk as gues, speaker

men and women" 6) Action on the Recommendation to expand the Gradual-

Resldence Center to facilitate additional math.
program ettortsln Graduate Education. (Clrculated unclr
date of February 28, 1974).

be “American Foreign Policy
and the Changing World”.
Rusk served as Secretary of

Former Secretary of State
D BOTH STUDENTS who receive Dean Rusk will appear as a
the award must be a 1973 Patterson School guest lecturer
graduate August 01‘ December or this week. State under presidents John F.
—— May. 1974. He will speak Thursday, Kennedy and Lyndon B. John-

Non-student winners need not March 7 at 8 pm. at Seay son.

_._— be college or university Auditorium in the New Agri- Rusk worked in the War
graduates in” should have some cultural Sciences Building at Department and was president
. intereSt in or association With the the corner of Cooper Drive and of the Rockefeller Foundation
lnstltutlon. South Limestone. His topic will in New York.

7) DICUSSION ON! Y: Report torm'the ”ad hsc" Corn-
mmee to Study Promotion and Tenure (Circulated under
date of January to, 1974).

 

 

 

 

ROAST BEEF
TONIGHT!

ALL you can eat

Dinner
From 4:30

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

$2. 1 9 plus tax and

beverage

KING’S TABLE

American Smorgasbord Restaurants

2013 Regency Rd., ‘1424 Alexandria Dr., in Lexington
Frankfort Plaza Shopping Center, U.S. 60, West. Frankfort

 

 

is looking for an

 

Editor-in-Chiet.

 

 

'V
I .
[C The Kentucky Kernel
Au
3

  
    
   
   
       
      
      
      
      

The Kentucky Kernel is in the process ol taking applications tor

Editor-in—chiet tor Summer ’74, Fall ’74 and Spring '75. Anyone

wishing to be editor tor both Summer '74 and the coming school

year '74-'75, is asked to make two separate applications.
Applications tor Editor-in-chiet should include:

i ..A resume describing previous loumallsm experience, (ex-

cluding the Kentucky Kernel, it any) and any other general in-

Applications for Editor
of the 1974-75

Ia" tormalion about applicant, and a complete grade transcript.
lOp 2...One to two page statement ol philosophy and goals for The
Kentucky Kernel, including any specific proposals lor change.
' 3...At least three, but not more than live, letters ot recom- ,
M mendation, including at least one trcm a faculty member and KenIUCk | a n a re now

preferably me lrom someone involved in the communications
fields.

4...Samples ol applicant’s work. It the applicant has not
published anything, he or she should be able to submitsomework
which is representative olhis talent and in some way qualities
him for the lob, (example; clippings, cartoons, onwrs, creative
writing assignments, etc.)

Applications also Ivalllbl. tor W St." ”mat.

The deadline tor applications is April ist. Applications can be
picked up in Room H3, Journalism Building.

being taken.

 

it you have done some work on your high school or college yearbook, newspaper, or any other
type ol publication,we may be interested in you. The Board ol Student Publications is looking tor
an editor of the 1974.75 KENTUCKIAN. a person who has had some expericence and is willing to

work

 

Applications tor the Editor position should include:
i. A grade transcript.

2. Atwo page statementot plans and intereststor the KENTUCKIAN.
3. At least two letters of recommendation.

4. Any previous samplesol y