xt7mcv4bs221 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mcv4bs221/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-04-14 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, April 14, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 14, 1978 1978 1978-04-14 2020 true xt7mcv4bs221 section xt7mcv4bs221 Hard to sleep with

Ghost haunts student’s home

By MARY ANN BUCHART
Kernel Staff Writer

Wher Samdra Ford moved into her apartment last fall, the
journalism senior was warned: “The is a weird place.”

She said the apartment’s previous tenant, a woman, told her
she and her roommate heard strange noises and that often
times, they would return to the apartment from outings to find

things moved

Ford, who has been living in the Alexandria Drive complex
since fall, admitted that she has experienced several unusual
occurrences. Her next-door neighbor, Clara Magura, a
chemistry graduate student, alleges they are all caused by a

ghost.

Magura said she has known about the ghost since October,
when she was awakened by it one night. “I was Just about
asleep wher I suddenly awoke with fear. I didn’t see anything,
I was just full of fear. I felt that it was Satan, so I said a prayer

and went back to sleep."

The following night the same thing happered to her visiting

Me:
We: Mm’tN ANY

“At about 4 am. I awoke, because my sister was screaming
for me to come into the living room. I experienced a tingling in

my back,” Magura said. “The apartment was sudthnly very

cold and the heat kept conring on and going of .”

Magura said they both felt the same way and that they could
feel a presence. “We never saw anything but we both had
impressions of an ugly man's face in our minds."

Afterwards, they described the face to each other and the
descriptions matched. Her sister said that she hadn’t heard a
voice but that he sent thought waves through her head, saying
that he would never leave.

Magura said they could tell where he was and that he would
pass through the wall with a swishing noise. “We chased him
around until we had him cornered in the living room. He then

went outside through the wall and came back in through the

bedroom. While he was there, my clock went crazy and kept
making a ‘plinging’ noise.”
She has yet to plug the clock back in.
A priest has sinced blessed the apartment and, according to

Magura, she has had no more trouble. “I can feel him outside

sister and brother-in-Iaw, who were Spending the night.

KENTUCKY

21‘

Volume LXIX, Number 136
Friday, April 14, 1978

Down in front

A grassy meadow and some refreshment can help bring contentment
to an outdoor concert audience. Beth and Patrick Chorpening. Hor-
ticulture and Law students, respectively. enjoy the Appalachian music
of ,Wry Straw during yesterday‘s community concert at Woodland
Park. Sponsored by the Office of Undergraduate Studies and the Ap-
palachian Center. the program will have a second concert today in the
Botanical Gardens and tonight in Memorial Hall.

Politicians haggle

By JACK WAINWRIGHT
Kernel Staff Writer

An even match of two Repiblicans
and two Democrats filled the bill for
the final round of the political forum
held last night in Room 206 of the
Student Center.

Unlike the Wednesday night
speakers, only one from last night
was seeking election. Sen. Tom
Easterly (D—Frankforti had
announced that he was seeking
election as a US. congressman in
the 6th District against current
Congressman John C. Breckinridge.

Legislative independence was
again the key issue of the forum.

According to Sen. John Berry
(D — New Castle). until there is a
majority of senators who desire so,
an independence movement would
nd be effective.

Berry. 3 member of the Black
Sheequ uadron (the movement that
does not totally follow the wishes of
the governor), said the in-
dependence movenent has gained
some momentum, but not enough to
be totally effective

Easterly said. however. that the
legislature should realize its

limitations as people do. Easterly
stressed that the legislature should
attempt to get the work it needs to
finish in 60 days.

According to Sen. Walter Baker
(R — Glasgow), a definite need
existed for piggy-back legislation.
“It is often necessary at the close of
a session to tack on legislation to
another piece of legislation in order
to get it passed."

Both Baker and Sen. Larry
Hopkins (R—Lexington) com-
mented on the effectiveness of
Republican legislators and a
possible Republican govenment.

According to Baker, a Republican

governor would be more effective
became a system of checks and
balances would not exist as it does
under a majority Democrat
government.
1 “Republicans don't get as much
credit for legislation as they
deserve.“ Hopkins said. “When a
Repiblican presents a bill it is
considered political. but when a
Democrat introduces the same
legislation, it‘s substantial."

Also discussed last night were the
fair tradelaws. the ERA and the call
for a constitutional convention.

Continued on page 6

an independent student newspaper]

sometimes. but he'll never come in here again,” she said.

Continued on page 3

Lexington. Kentucky

21

University of Kentucky

Tau—YA' M
GOODMa/ies,
as

 

 

 

 

Ordinary people

Federal prisoners meet UK communications students face-to-face

By M. TIMOTHY KOONTZ
Kernel Reporter

“After a guy gets used to making a
million dollars a year dealing
cocaine,” the man said, “it’s hard to
adjst to a heavy labor job when you
get out of prison.”

A girl in the audience asked,
“What happens to all the money you
make dealing drugs, though?” The
man did not answer. He only smiled
and bowed his head, as if he were
laughing at some amusing private
joke.

The above exchange occurred
during a new program that brings
inmates from the Federal Correc-
tional Institution on Leestown Pike
into UK Communication 101 classes,

where they talk about
homosexuality, the American
jistice system, “snitches” and
meal] aspects of how to survive in
prison.

“Bringing prisoners into the
classroom turns a lot of students’
heads around,” said Tom Housal, a
visiting communication professor
from the University of Utah, who
initiated the program.

“This allows students to fill the
blanks in their stereotypes of prison
that are based on television. It shows
students different cultural aspects of
communication that can’t be
learned with books or regular
classroom procedure.”

A federal minimum security
prison, FCI confines felons charged

Zrth‘IISKT" " ‘ " '

mainly with white-collar crimes
such as embezzling and drug
dealing. FCI is the final step for
many prisoners awaiting parole.

“Men and women can interact at
FCI, but any type of physical contact
is heavily frowned upon,” said one
visiting inmate convicted of tran-
sporting 25,000 pounds of marijuana.

“Homosexuality runs rampant in
American prisons. Two guys share a
cell, fall in love and start a
relationship. Guards will overlook
the homosexuals, but you can get
shipped (transferred) if they catch
you with a girl.”

According to a female inmate,
there is a dual firstice system in
America. “When I went to court, the
indictment said the US. versus me.

OKEVELI

 

Man, that meant the whole United
States government against me.
Sometimes I think about the crimes
our gove‘nment has committed
against other countries and ever its
own citizens. It makes me sick.

“I’m in for five years for a con-
spiracy charge. Conspiracy coves a
category this wide (she stretches
her arms as far as possible). You
can get busted for being in a room
where a dope deal is going down,
ever if you didn’t have any idea
about what was happening.”

One visiting immate said that the
prison grapevine was so effective
that prisoners often learn in-
formation days or ever weeks before
guards and employees.

(‘ontinued on page 3

Business department seeks new unit

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the final
segment in a three-part series on
small business development and
UK‘s Center for Business
Development.

By CHRIS BLAIR
Kernel Reporter

In light of growing demands by
local businesses for operating
assistance, the UK business ad-

*“"—‘ today

ministration department has
requested approval from the Small
Business Administration in
Washington, D.C., for additional
funds needed to create a UK branch
of the state's Small Business In-
stitute.

There are presently two Small
Business Institutes in Kentucky,
opeating out of Murray State
University and Eastern Kentucky
University.

The institute will supplement the
Center for Business Development by
relieving part of its research load.

According to CBD Director David

Victor, the institute’s program is
designed for senior and graduate
business students and will require
them to do coursework as counselors
for existing brsinesses.

“We already have more clients
than we can handle,” Victor said.
“While our consultants continue to

 

work with new businesses, the
students will do research for
businesses that are already in
ope'ation in the Bluegrass. area."
Students who are accepted into the
program will step into the
businesses’ management. In doing
so. the student must study all
elements of the operation and search
for rough spots which could lead to

profit loss.
(‘ontinued on page 3

 

L ._

inside

RECORD SIIOPS IN TOWN SIIOULI) HAVE A LOT TO OFFER this
spring. says Arts and Entertainment Editor Walter Tunis. Watch for a
rash of jazz especially.

nation

AMERICANS HAVE AN EXTRA TWO DAYS to struggle with their
taxes. but the Internal Revenue Service is still expecting a big crush of
last-minute returns.

Because April 15 falls on a Saturday, taxpayers have until next Monday
to get their returns in the mail.

By last week. 30 million Americans still had not filed returns, an in-
crease from 27 million at the same time last year.

Taxpayers who can't make the deadline can send a form 4868 to the IRS
and get a 60-day extension for any reason. The forms are available at IRS
offices.

llowever. if they think they owe money, they must also send along a
check for their estimated tax. Thecheck must be for at least 90 percent of
the amount the taxpayer ends up owing.

TIIREE AIINERS WERE TRAPPED BY A SLATE FALL in a coal
mine near Grundy, Va. yesterday. and a spokesman for the mining
company said all were presumed to have died.

Mike Muslin. a spokesman for the Island Creek Coal Co, said the ac-
crdent in the firm‘s Beatrice minejust east of Grundy in Buchanan County
“appears to have been a roof fall."

 

world

PRESIDENT ('ARTER'S DELAY IN DECIDING 0n the neutron
\iar'head has intensified criticism of his foreign policies in the West
European press and among government officials. Some even express
doubts about his grasp of foreign affairs.

This questioning of Washington's actions seems to be getting louder as
('arler‘s first-year honeymoon fades into the past and major European
allies feel disappointed on critical issues.

“The time for realities has now arrived. and it‘s a difficult period,“ said
a French official. who asked not to be identified. "People are talking
about inconsistencies and vagueness. and at the same time absence of
pragmatism."

'l‘llE l'NITED STATES llAS DECIDED T0 RELOCATE the ”2
residents of Bikini Island against their will because of radioactivity on
the Pacific Ocean atoll. the site of hydrogen bomb tests 20 to 30 years ago.

John DeYoung, an Interior Department official. told a House ap-
propriations subcommittee Wednesday that the level of strontium 90 in
the resrdents‘ bodies was reaching dangerous levels.

The move could take place as early as next month if tests on the
llikinrans show an increase in the radioactive material. DeYoung said.
.rddingthat Bikini Island "will beofflimits for 30 to 50years."

weather

\NOTIIER SETBACK l-‘OR BLANDING BEACH Bl NWARMERS.
Temperatures will hover in the mid-605 under mild and sunny skies. so all
Is not lost. but l-‘riday deserves warmer weather Slowly increasing
cloudiness tonight (iood chances of showers on Saturday

(‘ompiled from ,\I' wire dispatches

 

 

  

 

[£33662]

editorials 89 comments

Steve ttullmger
Editor in Chic]

Dick Gabriel
Managing Editor
Thomas Clark
'ASSlStfl'lf Managing Editor

Charles Main
Editorial Editor

' Nell Fields
Assistant Art: &
Entertainment Editor

llavrd Hibbitls
Sports Editor

llob Suitable
Assistant Sport: Editor

Walter Tunis
Arts t Entertainment Editor

Greg F“
Richrd W
Jim McNeir
Mike Mei-er
Betsy Pearce
Copy Editor:

David O'Neil
Photo Manager

Jeanne Wehnes
Photo Supervisor

 

 

'Outside agitators' drew
the attention they desired

The visit by Admiral Stansfield Turner on
Wednesday included a little of everything that
has happened in the last 20 years in the fields of
protest and free speech.

There was a high government figure—a
member of the Military-Industrial Complex, no
less — being attacked for supporting a corrupt
government. There were marching demon-
strators carrying signs outside the building;
inside, the protestors tried to shout down the
speaker, and delivered long, oratorical
questions.

Helmeted campus police with billy clubs were
determinedly visible. As the protestors held up
signs and tried to drown out Turner’s address,
they were arrested. Reporters and cameramen
did little to defuse a situation that could have led
to many injuries.

But the protest of Tumer’s visit wasn’t exactly
a resurrected Strawberry Statement. Although
the plight of Iranian political dissidents is real
enough and that country’s record on human
rights is horrid, the demonstrators have never
aroused a great swell of opinion on their side.

It’s difficult to line up support behind what
seems to be another nation’s problem: foreign

students denouncing injustice in their homeland,

and doing it from another country.

Granted, the US. support of Iran is nothing to
brag about from a humanitarian viewpoint, but
if a country’s legal system were the dominant
factor in international alignments, there would
be very little world stability or cooperation
toward peace. Certainly it is absurd to imply that
the United States supports, for example, the
torture of prisoners during interrogation, just as
it is absurd to claim that America’s alliance with
Great Britain condoned an ancient policy of
corporal punishment for misdemeanors.
recently outlawed on the Isleof Man.

How much better would it be to withdraw
support of Iran to favor that country’s enemies,
all of whom affect similarly ugly trappings of the
police state (a condition that is possibly the norm
today)? Many of the organizations who denounce
the crimes of the Iranian government support
terrorist groups who massacre civilians, take
and kill hostages, and threaten the population of
a country, Israel, with extermination.

Locally, there are features of the protest which
are questionable. Attempts to prevent a lecturer
from speaking by drowning him out, and
preventing an audience form hearing his ideas,
are utterly abhorrent. The right to speak freely,
especially at an academic institution, should be
protected whether the subject is racial in-
feriority, the advantages of fascism or the
reproduction of insects.

Another disturbing feature of the UK
demonstration is that all of the protesters who
were arrested are evidently from out of town.
“Outside agitator” is a loaded term, and has no
derogatory sense when the person is trying to
persuade people to accept a point of view by
educating them to what he or she believes to be
the truth.

But when the “outside agitators” are merely
bused-in hecklers who try to be everywhere to
hide the paucity of their numbers, they are
carrying out a deception.

The arrests of the protestors Wednesday night
fulfilled their fondest hopes. They could hardly
have asked for more attention. University of-
ficials were justified in protecting Turner’s and
the audience’s rights by having certain
protesters in the Student Center Ballroom
removed. Denouncing the support of civil rights
violations in a foreign land doesn’t give a group
the right to infringeon people’s rights elsewhere.
Sadly, though, it gives them the attention that
was the demonstration’s real goal.

A Lexingtonian...
’I hate what you have done

yet I am glad you are here’

 

 

By HUGH FINDLAY

I am a native Lexingtonian. I hate
what you have done to my city. Yet I
am glad you are here.

When I went to California, I told
them where I was from and they
looked at my feet, expecting to see
no shoes. They laughed at the way I
spoke. They called me a hillbilly.
But if that is what I am, then I am
proud of it. Proud to be a hillbilly.

 

comment

 

There is something about Ken-
tucky that breeds beautiful people.
Perhaps environmental conditions
play a large part. Yet our unusual
weather symptoms (harsh winters,
killer tornadoes, humid summers)
have produced the most striking
landscape I have ever seen in my
travels across the country.

Perhaps we are credible solely
became of folklore. The “redneck”
customs of farming tobacco and
marijuana, hunting and fishing,
racing cars and drinking PBR. Or,
perhaps, getting married and living
in small towns, loving bluegrass and
basketball. even tearing up airports

could all be reasons why we are
what we are.

This land is special. It is the heart
of the nation. It is the home I love. I
fought bitterly at first in California.
Then I learned to adjust. Now many
Californians write to me saying they
wish they were here. But they will
never be Kentuckians, nu will they
be capable of appreciating its
fullness.

I hate what you have done to my
city. Every fall Lexington is in-
vaded. Traffic clogs, trash piles up,
students crowd bars, and
Lexingtonians are smitten. During
the summer, life is slow and easy. A
handful of friends and I take the best
of times at a leisurely pace. Then it
hits. 20,000 new faces enter the city,
stay nine months, and leave without
a “thank you," “kiss my foot" or
“goodbye."

It grieves me to think you will
leave Lexington in a few years to
find a new life in another city,
leaving your scars behind. I sat in a
hamburger joint last August with an
older friend of mine when a half-
drunk sorority sister began shouting
and giggling uncontrollably. My
friend responded with a quote I have
heard all too often, “God damn
college student." I hear this line in

Air.)

traffic jams and in bars.

Once, I found myself uttering this
line. During spring break last year I
was abandoned by a “God damn
college student" in Red River Gorge
when my car broke down. He drove
back to Lexington while I toiled with
a flat tire in the dead of night.

Ironically, the next day I was
picked up by two “rednedt hicks”
from Nada who drove me to a gas
station, replaced my tire with a
rubber hammer and a lot of hard
work, and hunted down an air
compressor from another native of
Nada to pump my tire and send me
on my way. They asked for nothing.

But still, I am glad you are here.
UK offers many great things to the
Lexington community, the greatest
of which is progress. As UK grows,
so will Lexington. Here, progress is
needed. Businesses thrive, from
hamburger joints to concerts at Rupp
Arena. Money flows. hopefully to
City Hall where someday the blue
laws will be repealed. Medical
services expand, a necessity to
preserve our people. And education
is, supposedly, improving.

Here lies the problem. Is
education really being achieved? If
we all come to UK to become
learned then why is there so much
emphasis on other aspects of college
He. sports, beer, getting laid)? And
the biggest question is: are those
who are educated merely using the
university to plot their courses
elsewhere? If this be the case, I and
other Lexingtonians would rather
UK did not exist so that we could get
back to that leisurely summer pace.

Only when we graduate and stay
in Kentucky do we ingress. For

. now, I am content with to spend my

relaxed summers with other

. Lexingtonians and enjoy the

Lexington I've grown to love.

Someday I may be able to look my
California friends in the eye and say
“I am proud to be a hillbilly," and
they will truly believe me.

um emu, to on English jutor.

Stripping away his facades

My God, this spring is beautiful!
Trees are just exploding into bloom,
the grass is as green as the face of
a first-time airplane passenga',
and the air is alive with the sound
of birds singing, flies and bees
buzzing, and the obnoxious roar of
motorcycles with modified muf-
flers.

 

kagan

 

But it‘s bad for my image, the
one I’ve so carefully cultivated
here at the Kernel over the space of
the last year-and-a-half.

You‘ve seen the headlines and
the little kickers above the
headlines and the little slugs in
boldface at the bottom of my
columns. They all refer to the
bilious attacks that rack my poor
frame.

My risen bile is my trademark,
my raison d’etre. Other than bock
beer, there has been no more ef-
fective fuel for my diatribes than
the acidic, putrid taste of bile on
my tongue.

But I woke up the other morning

with a smile on my face because
the sun was shining through my
window, and a horrible realization
hit me. Like a wet kiss at the end of
a hot fist (thanks, Proctor and
Bergman). I’m not mad at anyone!
I don’t feel any indignation at all!

Immediately I knew that my
chances for writing a meaningful,
hard-hitting column were shot to
hell. I felt too good, that’s what it
basically comes down to.

Every writer eventually has to
confront his or her weaknesses.
There comes a moment of truth at
some point in every writer’s career
when the facades, gimmicks, and
pretenses must be scrutinized and
stripped away. It’s a painful
process if you’re honest about it.

Where does that leave me? As it
turns out, I don't really have the
courage yet to strip away every
facade and gimmick, to denude
myself in front of the entire UK
student population.

But what I have realized, and am
willing to admit, is that anger,
indignation and rising bile have
been a crutch, without which I’d be
piteously feeble as I make my way
down the tortuous path of
creativity.

I guess what I’m trying to do
here is pass off a little blame on

you all, became here it is, the third
or fourth week of this space being
intended for consumer complaints,
and damn it, I have not gotten one
call. Not one letter, either.

I know you’re thinking that I’m
lazy, thatI don’t want to go out and
histle my own stories. That’s an
unfair accusation and I deeply
resent it, but it’s essentially true.

I plan to spend the summer
stripping away more of the facades
and stuff, but-it has nothhg to do
with the Kernel. I'll probably hole
up with a lot of raw rum, and
pretend I’m a well-known writer
suffering through an identity
crisis.

The hell with checking the
Kernel mailboxes every day
praying for correspondence, to hell
with waiting for a phone call to
send me dashing out the door to
pound the mean streets of
Lexington. I’m just going to go
about the business of enjoying
spring’s beauty, and if anyone
wants to complain about getting
hassled or ripped off, I’ll get to it
when I'm good and ready.

Ken Kagan is a Political Science
senior. His column, normally
consumer oriented, appears every
Friday.

 

 

Letters to the Editor

 

 

 

Toosnxnne

I usually like Tom Fitzgerald’s
column, but I think his defense of
Rupp Arena’s concert ”security" is
pushing sarcasm to the extreme. Or
are you really serious, Fitz?

If you really find Rupp Arena an
okay place, I bet you‘d love ROTC.
There, you get to dress alike and
take orders from people too often
inebriated with their authority. Yes,
what we need is more order. more

4 EXPERIMENTAL LAB

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discipline. Right, Fitz?

After my first concert at the civic
center, I swore it would be my last.
The atmosphere created by the
zealoussecurity personnel made it
as much fun as boot camp. But, the
Grateful Dead are playing there, so
I‘ll try to tolerate it one more time. I
imagine it will be the least enjoyable
Dead concert I’ve seen.

I find your column of Apr. 11 quite
paradoxical. You speak of petty
injustices and then exclude Kagan's
outrage at Rupp Arena's in-

 

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OUT! NON YOU'RE RWY eons FAR."

timidating atmosphere as totally
unimportant.

You can find a hell of a lot more
important things than Ken Kagan’s
remarks on Rupp Arena. Sure, so
can I. I also find your “ass on the
line" philosophy somewhat un-
deserving of banna' headlines. It
sounds like some acid-inspired
revdation that loses impact when'
one is straight again.

Phil Adkins
Public Administration major

6% "it 3::

 

   

 

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I Adkins
ill major

Haunting specter makes life miserable

Continued from front page

“i believe in ghosts became
wehadoneinourhoue who:
Iwas young, so I’ve had a lot
(i expeience with them.
Plus, my family has ESP."

Ghosts, according to
Magura, are spirits of
unhappy souls who haven’t
completed their life’s
mission. As a result, they
have to roam the earth to

calm themselves.
“They’re afraid of God
because they’re more

susceptible to either have
or hell than we are."

They get their energy from
human beings, she said.
“That’s why they big us,

became the more we get
upset, the more may they
get outofus.” Shesaid she
isn ’t bothered anymore,
because she isn’t afraid. “It's
the feeling of fear that kicked
it off in the first place.”

Ford said a lot of weird
things have happened to her,
too, “but I’d have to see it to
believe it."

This past winter, Ford
heard a lotof noise on the roof
but never did anything about
it. “We never called the
police, became there isn’t
any way that anyone could
get up there and it was icy,"
she said. “it sounded like a
loud pounding noise, not any

natural contractions. "
Magura also heard the noises.

During three days in
November, Ford heard
scratchings in the wall and a
pounding in the comer of her
living room nearest Magua‘s
apartment. Her lights also
inexplicably came on one
night at 3 a.m. and just as
suddenly went off.

And, she said, her alarm
went off last Tuesday at four
in the afternoon, and when
she checked it, it had been set
for four. “I never set it for
four and after I turned it off,
it came back on 10 minutes
later. And nobody had been

Business school seeks new unit

Continued from front page

M.L. Spruill, business
administration department
chairman, said, ”students
who wish to concentrate on a
specific business area will be
assigned to a bisiness with
that type of problem.” Some
examples of the jobs that may
confront these students are:
adversising plans, for-
mulating business packages
and analyzing cash flow and
marketing problems, said
Spruill.

He said, “The program will
have two objectives; it will

provide an outlet for students
to practice what they’ve
learned and will benefit the
bisiness owners by helping
them with business
problems.”

Although students will do
the research, CBD con-
sultants will act as “coaches"
by reviewing the students’
improvement plans before
the plans are implemented.

Business Professor William
Baldwin will oversee the
program acedemically. It is
scheduled to begin next fall" 1n
the form of a three-hour in-

dependent study course.

“High academic standing
will not be a prime factor in
selecting students for the
program," Spruill said. “We
want students who are able to
interact well with
btsinessmen. Good grades
don’t always predict the
ability to do that.”

Students participating in
the program will be required
to give a comprehensive,
report, which will be
screened by CBD consultants,
who will in turn give Baldwin
3 recommendation for the
students' grades.

Prisoners meet with UK students/

Continued from front page

“Informers are the back»

bone of the American justice
system,” he said, “but in
prison they’re killed, beaten
up or maybe a knife gets
stuck in them.”

“FCI is a special kind of
prison,” said one in-
mate.“They let you out for
furloughs, offer recreational
acivities and you can even
wear your own dothes. It
might sound like a country
club, but it all depends on
what level you value your
freedom.

1r. [I all)! 1-.'

. W u: .‘.‘.in prison. that can strip-
Marketing

The American Marketing
Association banquet was held
Friday, April 7 for the
presentation of awards and
the election of new office1s to
serve the 1978-79 school year.

The following were elected
to positions: Beth Rudolf,

president; Dan Eckert, vice ,

president; Kathy Yorke,
secretary; and Mary Beth
Miller, secretary.

The AMA is Imdngton’s
onh' representative of the
national organization. a
professional membership

search you at any time. And
let me tell you, they look
everywhere.“

According to Housal, the
prisoner lecture program was
created when College of
Communications Dean
Ramona Rush asked
professors to get involved in
the local community. Prison
officials have encouraged the
program, also.

“I think that this is a very
healthy situation for all
parties involved,” said
Janice McCullough, director
of education at the minimum
security ,prison. _

“Students are shown that
the prisoners are just people
who’ve made a mistake. By
speaking out on certain
aspects of prison life, the
residents get a chance to
reassess their own positions.”

The prison's educational
program offers vocational
training and “tries to make it
as close to the streets as
possible,” said McCullough.
“This is also a phasing-out
program for the hard—core
felons who have almost
served their time. Everyone
here has a tremendous
amount of responsibility
placed on their shoulders."

club elects officers

organization made up of
individuals working for the
advancement of science in
marketing.

The national membership
is composed of professionals
from several countries who
share a common interest in a
factual approach to the

solution of marketing
problems.
The UK chapter of the AMA

is the only professional
organization within the
business school and, unlike
other business organizations,

has no prerequisites for
membership. The AMA has
more than 100 members,
including both graduate and
undergraduate students from
various schools around the
University.

The organizations activities
this year included several
marketing related trips,
lecture presentations by
members of the private
business sector and the
initiation of internship and
resume programs designed to
aid students planning
business related careers.

GET IT ON, HANG IT OUT,
OB BLOW IT UP!

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