xt7n2z12rj74 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7n2z12rj74/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-12-01 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, December 01, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 01, 1972 1972 1972-12-01 2020 true xt7n2z12rj74 section xt7n2z12rj74 '(Q' II UCky Vol. LXlV No. 64 , d
K Friday, December 1, 1972 an In ependent “”9“" newspaper
Umversuty of Kentucky
ernc Twelve pages Lexington, Kentucky 40506
W.
o ' ‘0' ‘ 4'"
~ . ,
The Paddock closin 1’ ‘ ‘- + *
C \\ l
| e l o g ' ByGILARNOLD . :‘xa, ,3 . 3 .\
T ey a," f te ar'n Kernel Staff Writer " 3 , z‘
Amid rumors of impending destruction, the 60- g ‘ i A .
d h yearold Paddock Club is still alive and well. “ ‘ ‘ ‘ Q-
“They ain‘t tearin‘ us down. honey." said
us O W" I on e y. 0 0 Ellen Taylor, one of the amiable Paddock eme pAD'D-o * I- . p.
ployees. “Not for a long time anyway." CK CLUB ‘N" ‘ V
"Of for a Ion time \‘ARIOL'S RL'MORS circulating among . . if... 1; ~
g I students and within the businesses lining the g i ; -
corner of Rose Street and Euclid Avenue .;_33 ,
h I claimed the Paddock, a restaurant-bar and I 2'33 3‘ .
an y 0 w. traditional haven for UK students, was about to 33‘ 3 3 - , 2
fall to progress. ?..:..:3 342%”! : ~~ »
_ Wm “33 Also destined for destruction, according to g3“ 3‘ L: ' “PH“. ‘ 3
- ., . rumors, were the Student Services Store, RESTAURANT fill-mm “
w" yea? . . "“43 " . 3‘ Devereux Liquor Dispensaries. 7to7 Market and WW
“3 . the De-Boor—Lexington Laundry. 3 3 » _.
.V . ' - iii“ Visions of banks. supermarkets and sprawling - . .,
MM , ; . Sea; g, t '9‘” HOWEVER. T” [2 prOperty has not beenlsold 3 v)“ as -- .
m ligmmtg '" QMLW- ' according to Charles Bausch. partowner of the $2 2
fl ' = ' at. ro rt . - , -
2:: .V ,__’j'j;‘; ‘ 2. , .. ., N} P “Ipielonxt know where these rumors started but . h . (kernel Photo I)" Jlm ROSS) 4
I J Kernel Photo by2VllJ Chill) ' they have no basis in fact,“ he said. “There‘s $izm:s:r?:’:ii center was recently built.
' ' nothing, there‘s nothing on the board. There‘s no Another cause of the mixu m 'h , be th
3 . plans for remodeling, no plans for tearing it sale by Bausch and Michaellm: 2‘0: then] 3 .,
Wagner W'ns Senafe seat down, no plans for a shopping center." ‘d' ~ . ' 00' e an
Asked if the property was for sale, Bausch a Jacent 19 the Paddock. A Burger. (hef
f I, f . said, “I‘d sell everything but my wife and restaurant is currently under construction on
ram CO 69 e O N U r 5' n 9 children if the price was right.“ that prol’er‘?‘ “’h'Ch ”.5 ”We“ f5” Sl’s‘w”
' . 3 . “I‘D SELL THE property for the right price, . Howeier. l‘hompson did say the 4 to 1 Market
A vacant seat in the Student The election m“ be certified on obviously,butl‘m not actively seekingabuyer." '5 for sale. but not the property on “mm R
Senate was filled by a special Wednesday. McCarty is the Richard Thompson a salesman for Story and stands. . . - . . ~. .
. . . . . * Owner WA. Fredricks confirmed this. and
election dlll'lllg preregistration m second person to leave a Senate Story Realtors, said the owners had not set 8 added the business had not yet been sold
the College of Nursing. 9051“” thl's semester. price on the property and were not seeking bids. Bl'T TIIF P-\[)l)()('K is not for 5:81: said
Lenore Wagner beat Margaret The election of Wagner returns Anyone who wants the property would have to . P' llB' 2k _ It f t d d‘ ‘ " .
Poole, 107-100, for the seat for- the Student Senate to its full pay a premium price. he said. on“: at: d5 ext. S U ure 9P9" 3 0" d")
merly held by Wendy McCarty. roster of 26 members. But he said he knew of no one seeking to buy 0 :husorforetlgzolifirnlediate future. the pinball
the property and the owners were "0t actively machines will continue to clang. the jukebox will
trying to sell it' play and the beer will flow. And the creaky
THE RUMORS ()F a shopping center probably floors. the saggy ceiling. the smokey but unique
resulted from a mixup with another area. the atmosphere and the tradition itself still stand.
corner of Woodland and Euclid Avenue, where a hopefully for a long time.
All rolls purged
I ‘ . 0 0 f 0
Re-reg Isiraiion 0 vote rs beg I ns -
.. 3: 3 By PAT HENSON registration day to be set up by “The staffs of the county clerks -
“as: $2.. We ' 3 Kernel Staff Writer the governor; No definite are not extensive enough to '-
6 y . Statewide re-registration of decisions have been made yet, conduct a registration day
I x : voters will be required by new said Thelma Stovall‘ Secretary of alone, she 88101. ”If the help of
. legislation effective today. State. organizations like the Jaycees —
_ ; . and the League of Women Voters
> ’ . “All voters will bepursed from ACCORDING TO Stovall, a is offered. the plans may be '
the rolls and must re-register. seminar for county clerks is feasible.“
3% ’ This is to bring the purgation °l being planned for the last two The last re-registration in
. voters up-to-date and to prepare weeks in January to discuss the Kentucky was in 1932, according
As_bulges of Steal? rise from the UK the rolls which will be placed on a re-regjstration of voters and [he to the Secretary of State's office.
In “93"“3 plant 0" Limestone. the wat- centralized computer at Frank- feasibility of holding a statewide Since that time, officials said
clitower at?!) the building “ands my fort," said Fayette County Clerk voter registration day. Whether purgation boards in many
by. watching them pass. But those Charles Baesler, Jr. the day is held will depend upon counties have failed to meet.
h ea, Clouds may be ha.“ onuthed grou:d the help obtained from local and the names of people who " '
before long—snow ls predicteb '03 tDe One proposal to aid in voter re- service organizations, said have died or moved are being left
“'"kend' (Kernel photo y ' ' registration is a statewide voter Stovall. on ”19 r0ll5~
Beatty)
—
. . Surprise! The weekend approaches and it ma
. f ll 3’?" thought :3“ Tclifggblgll‘esckgeélll‘gvgln . notrain. (1f course thereisa 20 percent chance 0);
I" s I de orma '0'“ on co ac p ' . . OU'SI e snow. Friday it will be cloudy and cold with a -
Hoffman 8 column on page 3- Seems 3'" Baird high in the low 40‘s The low will be near 30
keeps getting arrested on “Crimes Against Saturday’s high will be in the mid-40‘s ‘
Chasity“ charges. ' '

 The Establishi‘d ll?‘ AssnslantManagmg Editor Katie McCarthy Ed.t a |
deVOI In ('1in Mike Wines Atsisldnl Managing Edilo' Neill Morgan
Kentucky :‘xx:;:.°.::‘.°.::':;:'gamma. :::::::::x::::::::::::: stagger“ l OrlO S
Kerne| (.imom (di'or Milie Yievnov Edilonals iopreseni the opinions oi the editms not in.» Unwi'l'ulv
- ° d 't H
Withholding UK salary data oesn pay 0
Every now and then an ambitious resent “snooping into private af- University officials are in a different EsrtIaet‘igtiiScsngllloryheoc:“viva;y Smilanlgmt::t
w high school sociology teacher decides fairs." position than private citizens, and ‘t t niversities so that a dean (5
to do a class survey to find out the that makes this case more than a b‘da ‘3 lion at one school ma be
range of family incomes. Even when UK‘s top administrators have just question of prying into family secrets. (r it‘ll $7 000 more than a manyin a
the experiment is done without names had themselves subjected to the same ’1‘" ,' g ' . _

. . , , similar posmon at another. Such
the result is usually a barrage of exposure, and the re not too happy In the beginning discrepancies may be of interest to
angry phone calls from parents who about it. But to our way of thinking It all started when a Herald-Leader potentialadministrators,butaretobe

‘..______..__ "WV—QM“ “h— ““‘l reporter began preparing a story expected when salaries are set by
i 5 - \ ~.~ l comparing the salaries 0f top UK each individual board of trustees or
’1 1' Q l administrators to those of peOple lfl regents.

. a [1/ ! similar positions at other state-
”; Nr‘x’r“ / 3 /. i supported institutions. UK refused to We‘re more concerned with UK‘s
i g -. l‘ /" If. 5 release the information, forcing the defensive attitude towards releasing
- "a,“"i‘i (7” ‘ reporter togo to the Kentucky Council the information. According to the
@ i? l on Public Higher Education and the 1971-72 Financial Report some 54.1
‘NVM? I - L F. / i state treasurer, which readily SUp- percent of the University‘s funding is
. fill“ : 00 i [l K 4 l plied him With the data. coughed up by state taxpayers. As a ,
‘N M ‘ i .\ '1 ‘5- I l The figures which eventually ran in member 0f the Council on Public
, , , 4.1 \ 3 . . . .
l 6 8 §mx -"" ‘ i f Sunday‘s Herald-Leader are only Higher Education pomted OUt’ this
i t' >’ W '&’ a“! f approximations based on 12 times gives the public a stake mknowmg
[ha '- VT. 9) (:3 ' $525,117; ‘ the administrators' monthly salaries, how the” money 15 being leled up.
! - A? _ 2“ a? ‘ fig but even so they are interesting. UK‘s
7 I,“ , (i J- ,, 1;- _1‘ e" f Dr. Otis Singletary ranked highest, up Wrong move
’7 12"" pg . \ ’4" 3'. - ‘ ' there with congressmen With an Protecting an employee’s con-
} “i ‘ 1'"! 1'"— : annual compensation of “149992 fidential records is good, and we
I , l {’7‘ . % gang; 1 The next highest univerSity preSident supported the University when it
«’, / A 53,53 1 i was Eastern sDr. Robert Martin, and . . . _

i ~ J ‘3‘ ”VIM?" "l wwwflt“w“g 1 ft h‘mthe salaries trickled down to refused to divulge private m

[ ."th ,1 ‘ thy ‘ “fell-.3”, '2. i a er 1 . , formation to HEW investigators

‘ .. ,," fl ; h ~ " 7: " C i the mere $20’000 5' earlier this year. But in this case we

i 'ii' " ‘ , . i' 3": £1 :— " i g . think UK only hurt itself in the eyes of
ii “if t l'. .15 i " Mn N ' Few surprises . . the public by refusing togive out data
; (lake .1)“ v; “Willi-"xi There 5 no real dynamite m' readily available at a state office.
, ”gr ., 1;" , — fi .. . formation revealed here, although
“"g’fih- " "L‘ ._ ,’. 3 ,I' one might speculate on how it was After all, does the administration
% ' - ‘ ‘ * “ “it.“ ,t- received by the average citizen in a expect to hear students taunting each
mErJ ’ "_‘ - : "_ county where the 1969 median family other with “My president makes
__________.--__~_-_*____ income was only $9,597. What the more than yours." ???
P ll tion suit may be a case of overkill
The recent announcement by Commission asked the attorney government can override local ones, necessary. .
Kentucky Attorney General Ed general‘s office to obtain the in- even if the result is higher levels of If Nixon is sincere in his stated
Hancock‘of a suit'agamst several formation on the federal facilities air pollution. Will it be in this case? desire to promote cleaner air by
federal agencies for violating Ken- which should have been in their setting a good example with federal
tucky‘s air pollution standards may original ahplications to the] C0”; ls hope gone? atgenCieis, file; the pgllution Wlll bi
‘ i i t 'nl'ast in the mission. T e attorney genera ‘s o- . ‘ s oppe . a e nvironmenta
hfghuticherzhitiéns cer a1 y ep fice. feeling it had sufficient evidence ‘ “Maybe not. The chief fed, PreSident Protection Agency been as active as it
of unlawful action, filed suit against MX,°.“,h'mself' has 0rd???“ all federal should be, the suit would have been
The suit. filed against TVA's the offending federal agencies. faCilities to comply With the laws of unnecessary.
Paradise and Shawnee power plants, _ . .. . . H . . the states in which they are located.
the state‘s three military reservations Thls '5 d'reCt 30m" at ”5 mOSt In February of 1970 he wrote an Since both sides of this battle say
and the Atomic Energy Commission’s blatant, and may be the wrong way to executive order which gave federal they want cleaner air, we hope that
gaseous diffusion plant at Paducah, go about ll- The ABC has already agencies three years to meet state the problem can be solved regardless
asks that the federal facilities be proven itself Wllllng l0 llght court pollution standards. and even set of the outcome of the suit. If neither
required to apply for state permits battles against Sll‘lCler local pollution aside $359 million to aid in carrying side is merely engaging in vocal air
and comply with the state‘s pollution standards, as shown 1“ a famous out the task. So there’s at least a pollution, then the public will be the
laws. Minnesota 0359- Kentucky might chance the suit really wasn’t ultimate winner.
have gotten better results had' it
Pollution Up negotiated with the offending federal 3 . . ”m
agenCies out of court instead of -- '39? \,
This doesn‘t seem extreme. Ac- forcing the issue. Why '. ~fi .
cording to Hancock‘s suit TVA‘s ‘ _ 3",!“ P/ Q ‘-
Shawnee power plant is emitting 2.3 Hancock 5 .Su't WOUId force ’ I . if (3
times the limit of soot and dust. The federal agenc1es to follow state , . AfilL
Paradise plant is 3.85 times over the pollution standards. by asking that . I - ’ i ’ \
allowable amount of suflur dioxide they be reqlt'réd to file applicatitins ,/ ‘. 33/ .
emission. The Commonwealth had for permiSSion 0 opera e. . 7 I
one brush with high air pollution Presumably Kentuffl‘y COUId refuse /\/. _ ~23; ); '4); ‘ .
during this summer‘s large East permits for potential polluters and 0‘ vag‘ ' _ . ./: 1/: \ .
Coast inversion. and we don't look thus keep the Commonwealth free of it: is": ——_% (:1? L M \3¢;\ .
forward to another. Trying to keep enVironment-degl‘adlng faCilities. .” j ‘ 2:3; : ’ h? R ‘\\\\\ ,
pollution down is commendable, but This battle spills over into the old I I. T -. , -- 7- ’f—E‘.\" A M. Q \
the way in which the state went about states rights vs federal authority f . , " I "—4 ';\ 1;; k T . ’
it may not prove the most effective. controversy, with victory usually L ' 3' Tl‘ll ms: Wk \ . \\.\\ \ HE (OURIS
The Kentucky Air Pollution Control going to Washington. The national 4"? ‘ ~ l i ‘ ‘ -
'ON! MOI! TIME—ARE YOU IEADY TO REVIAI. YOUI NEWS SOURCES?

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. December 1, 1972—3
0 0
Nicholas 7‘. Harried birth control crusader
VonHoffmon <3 finds life is full of hard knocks
WASHINGTON—“It I pushed that cop, a 14-month-old baby sitting on its mother‘s Baird doesn't shout when he says these “i‘ve done the David Susskind show.
he’d still be flying,” said Bill Baird about lap. Baird says they took him and the things- He talks quietly. dipping into his which is 3 network Sh0W~ and the Cavett
the accusation leading to the latest of his mother down to the police station and attache case and producing ancient ShOW‘Whteh was not viewed With affection
eight arrests. This time Baird got busted interrogated them for two hours while they magazine articles which he tenders as by the Roman Catholic Church. . .i just
outside an Arlington, Va., motel room let the baby crawl around on the desk and proof that he was fighting for ondemand. can‘t get on the Johnny Carson Show and
where the Roman Catholic bishops of the play with his demonstration diaphragm birth-control abortion before the rest of they‘ve had my brother on three times.
United States were having their annual like a rubber mouse. them. three times...l'm probably one of the most
meeting. “Where was she back in ’67? But I‘ve stubborn people you‘ll ever meet and
At least one neutral observer says that Punch him 00' never seen one editorial that said, ‘Bill some day that will put me in conflict with
Baird, a long-time stumper for abortion Baird. thanks for getting the laws changed one of the most brilliant physicians you'll
and birth control, hadn’t been doing Still» you can sympathize With the in 26 states.‘ “ he complains in the same ever meet. my brother Bob. Buckley did a
anything but standing quietly. So he’ll arresting officer. Even when you agree civil. conversational tones he uses to tell column on my brother. The headline on it
probably get off as he finally did after he With Baird 3’0“" fir 5t impluse 0“ meeting you of the various occasions he “boxed in wa DOCTOR SAINT. Bob's been on his
was arrested in Boston in 1967 and “sen- him t5 to arrest him or PUhCh him in the the Roman Catholic Church." Baird is the show but he won‘t let me on it."
tenced to three months in prison for nose. He 100k5 all right, a short, copper- kind of political prankster who will dress
violating a law called ‘Crimes Against haired 40-year-old father 0t four, some of his women follwers up in sweat- Maybe it takes these battering-ram
Chastity’ because I gave a package of presentably dressed, his tie knotted jUSt shirts with a letter on their chests, have types who, to PM it charitably. lack self-
contraceptive foam toa22-year-old college so, but he’s like an Al Capp character. them go to church. sit in a row. and then insight. to break down old beliefs. It‘s not
girl.” You can’t like him. You want to hit him jump up. fling off their coats and spell out your ordinary view of reality that can say.
with a chair—and he knows it, too. “FREE ABORTIONS." as Baird does. “I don’t think anybody
. “I try to analyze what I‘m doing wrong. who‘s consistent is a fanatic. I think it‘s
Wild GITGSfS Planned Parenthood made $16 million. . Pope Joan ? my consistency that makes people around
His arrests are always outrageous. In .,$16 million last year to mouth what I’m . _ . me fanatics."
1965 he was traveling about in a van giving doing," says Baird, who says he made 3 But whether he 5 posmg tOOIISh
birth control demonstrations when “I was bare $12,000 from lecture fees and such questions like. ”Why has there never been Ah. sometimes it's easier to love your
dragged out by three burly detectives, last year. “I somehow turn people off. I a woman Pope? oi‘ sehSibte ones about opponents than you allies. Still we must
handcuffed, and charged with indecent don’t know why, but 1 do.” church tax exemptions and tObbYIUE. he give Baird his due. or let him claim it for
exposure of obscene objects. . .a coil, a makes you grind your teeth and want to hit himself: “I recognize my worth, but I‘d
diaphragm and a pill.” The wildest of all , him—and then hit him again when he talks just like for once for somebody to say it.
his arrests occurred during a birth-control cathet'cs Upset about the mass media and his older You heard Free Angela Davis. you heard
lecture when he was busted for corrupting Does he ever. The Catholics are so mad brother 30b, a well-known New York Free Doctor Spock. but you‘ve never heard
the morals ofaminor,who turned outtobe at him they want to fricassee him at an physician Who runs 8 drug clinic in Free Bill Baird.“ No, and we never will.
inquisitional auto-da-fe. Harlem- tci 19762. The Washington Post
“At St. Anne’s at Brentwood, L.I., they
TAXWHH ‘ dared to hold a public mass for the . I
_ i . E . salvation of my soul,” he reports, but he’s U .S . p res 5 co u n c I
° ° . ' ° ’ in no better shape with Women’s Lib.
, ' “They won‘t let me go to any of their u
. I ' meetings any more,” he says, going over b t p
i i the details of his running quarrel with may soon 9 se
i ‘ Betty Friedan, the author of “The .
l ' Feminine Mystique." “She told the New . . ByLOUSE COOK _
i 1/7; ,_ .,., I York Post it was rumored 1 was a CIA REY: YORK- (A:)—;Plans fordthe establishment of a press
3%?” “31/51/577, 7/7,, __// agent and she won‘t appear on the same counCi to monitor t e airness an accuracy of the national news
MAY/‘3’ / fié’ng/éz l tf 'th e She sa s she‘s the media—both electronic and print—were announced Thursday by a
.ng/a; £— -_/£f -1 p a orm M m J - y- Twentieth Century Fund Task Force.
"Ki/j /\§/W\/\//__ :¢;-;I,‘é_;” mother of Women s Liberation, so I told . , . . .
0:25 >p~//E5fi_/§g/1, Efl/ her if she’s the mother. I’m the father.” The councxl is expected to begin operations early next year, said
. M.J. Rossant. director of the fund, a nonprofit research
. organization.
The task force report said the purpose of the group, to be com—
cmmenr posed of 15 members from journalism and the public sector. is “to
. receive. to examine and to report on complaints concerning the
accuracy and fairness of news reporting in the United States. as
well as to initiate studies and report on issues involving the '
F. R as ViC'im of in.USfice freedomof the press." .
'gures see ay I Hartford N. Gunn Jr.. president of the Public Broadcasting
System and one of the 14-member task force that first proposed
By DON KISER One simple analogy doesn’t give concrete the press council. described it as “an instrument of education.
Is John Ray the third victim in a series of UK evidence to any theory. but the following listing education of the public. . .education of the press." . . .
administrative injustices? Many factors in- of SEC coaches records may bear out the point, The task force. composed of journalists. public offlClals,
volved in college football indicate a strong yes. educators and jurors, was appomted by the Twentieth Century
A close look at vital statistics of other suc- Alabama Fund more than 18 months ago “to examine the feaSibility of a
cessful coaches across the nation reveal some Coach years overallrecord press counc1l in the United States.” Rossant said at a news con-
interesting facts on football programs. Frank Thomas 1936—46 98won-21lost-7 tied ference. ‘
B°b Devaney, head coach of the Nebraska Harold Drew 1947‘54 54‘W0h'29105t'7 tied In its report. the task force said. “The concentration of nation-
Cornhuskers for the past eight years, isranked J.B. Whitworth 1955-57 4W0h-24 losto2 tied wide news organizations. . .has grown increasingly remote from
asithe top college coach 1" the nation. Th‘s '5 the Paul (Bear) Bryant 1953-71 199W0h'23105t'7 tied and unresponsive to the popular constituencies on which they
paint whereby an analogy can “be drawn when Georgia depend and which depend on them. . .Until now. the citizen had no
considering the amount 0t time needed _ m Harry Mehre 1933-37 32 wonolslost-3 tied place to bring his complaints. .
buildingawmning program. Devaney’s hr“ five Joel Hunt 1938- Swan-4 lostel tied The council will have no enforcement powers; it will rely on
years at the UniverSIty _°t Nebraska could "0‘ be Wallace Butts 1939-60 140won-86108t-9 tied publicity about its findings. No employe of a national news sup-
conSIdered worthy Of his talents. It was. only In Johnny Griffith 1961453 10 won-16lost-4 tied plier-including the major news services, the largest supplemental
the SlXth year that the efforts 0t Wilding and Vince Dooley 1964-71 59w0n.24]os[.4tied wire services, the national newspapers, broadcast networks. the
recruiting paid Off‘ Recognized for the pastthree Kentucky national news magazines and public radio and television—will be
years as one of the hheSt college teams ‘h the Harry Gammage 1933- Swon-slost-O tied permitted to serve on the council.
nation, the-only problem facing the Universuy of Chet Wynne 193437 20 won-1910st-o tied .
Nebraska 15 a demand for tickets is larger than A.D. Kirwan 1934.44 24 won-28 lost 4 tied A working committee chaired by Roger Traynor, former chief
the average football stadium. Bernie Shively 1945. 2“,“, lost _0 tied justice of the California Supreme Court. was set up more than a
Paul (Bear) Bryant 1945.53 60won-23 lost-5 tied month ago to implement the recommendations of the task force.
_———_— Blanton Collier 1954-61 41 won_36 lost-3 tied Traynor also will head the proposed press council, Rossant said.
. Charlie Bradshaw 1962-68 24 won-41 lost—4 tied
. Don KISOI' IS a luntor John Ray 1969-71 7won-25lost-0tied D. YCII hCVCS C0” the
These figures may or may not present the total I complain f ? Ken'UCky
, majoring in IOUN‘IUHSM. picture of the time factor involved in preparinga , H ? Kefnc'
winning football program. but it is offered as a news P "OW: , 257-1740
_ food for thought in contract renewals. . '

 4—THE KENTUCKY KI‘IRNI‘II.. Friday. December 1. I972
‘A '1' '
NGCGSSI Y Vietnam troops try drugs
UK prof defends use of pesticides b t f become addict
' ,.\. .) ). .' 'S t“ ’I X ‘ l I "‘ I ,,,‘ . i . '. '. - .
B) Rt \: l‘ l ffll \ttkh St hcibncr defends the usc of (nuioniiiuit. . LICXINh ION. “L h“. ,_ American Medical ASSOCiatlon,
l :QIIH ktsta f“liter ‘ pesticides as an economic Is it worthwhile to lose three Many American troops in Now a resident of Colorado
n t i “W I ) )‘ rlctlons ,.,--' - t ‘ c' , ' c . ' t , t. t, . 4 - s c . . ' s
1 d c ”a c ( (“Sin d mu ssity in somt situations. iobins and saw a to acrt or Vietnam have tried drugs. but Springs, he spoke here Wed~
i i ) x S l ' .. g ‘ ‘ - . t , \ . - ‘l ' i ‘ 4 " ‘ ‘ t t i i '
p act on . c u ( o . an Although in pcst iiiaiiagcmtnt c hard. \\ c don t ban cal s most m tliem aren t and won t nesday to staff‘ reSldents and
other pesticides. agriculture ml n. ”yum to (“comphusiui the because i'oblns have been killed become hard core addicts a patients at the center the
. i ( t t
(‘X erts (”‘0 l‘ecommendln ' ' i- '-' \‘ " i .. - .. -i ‘ '\ - \' - ' ' . ‘. . - -
.P . ‘ . .. ~ .. ll use ' ot pcsticidcs. . h: said. by cats. ll wt bannerything that former head of the (linlcal National Institute of Mental
piograms ln pest control, "we re not totally ruling it out." gets incriminated as a hazard we Research (‘enter here says Health‘s major facility for drug
' ‘ . . i - - H > ‘ K ' ‘
ln kentucky the use of DDT has Schelbner contends that the would be crippled. "There were many many of research.
l)” -'-. a 'ontrol -‘ ‘ ... '. ).“" . .i .. ‘ " ' - - . .
ctn itstilttcd to i gt ‘ Lost ol bioccoli would be $40 per I le .\l.\x.\(.l..\ll.\l is as . , g . were unha v While 0 mm smokln is an a
of termites bats and mice of j'f t' 'd d l h'l h “l“ “00” “ 0 PP. . ge
.. .t . - is - ., . _~ g i - i “ g - 's 'l - - .
“(fling g'lv I)I)T Is no! regtricted p0ull( l p( Kl L\ “(r( not [158 “U( l l __ p l 050p“) ' cl ‘4 “1‘0“,01‘9 bored, W'ho “,ereangry‘ 01d practice in fdr eastern
in tgt;séctl.rmgbee-m“) 1t (toes no! line aiea merchant currently :uhnlque. he said. Vte dont who experimented with anything countries like Vietnam, Dr.
)Oge a threat‘to th‘p environment {Huh d pound and one half Of MW d“ the answ ”5' bu: “5 m“ that was available." Dr. Robert ltasor said. the drug problem
i [tum] P“ \ sonFmVHc )l;:(;()lll tit\ltllfty cents. andl lllcl‘tte}: metlhtlids ductomc W ltasor said. changed considerably with the
i . . t t . . . 5'3 . { 3 J 5 , ' . “t. ‘. , i- wt )0 a 0 H. . . ~ -
. .. t ) f‘ ,. . h ) l l part 0’ d .‘ f“ “ ).( 1 Q p “But my feeling is that most of introduction 0f large number 0f
assocla c pro cssor in t c larger management program Schelbner says pest them were not what I would call Americans
de 'irtment of entomolo v. said .. ' ‘- i' v ~' . ' . . - ~ - i ' . ' . i - . -
in pfi i‘ecc nt lntuvic w g. “I"est :lznicliinM lliilhm'lu' t ills: It0 :3: lndhm'gulm'lnldm: mum“ 5m htd hard core addicts and I think the As EAR!“ as 1968‘ he said, the
t l v . : x v ' s mcs x- .. - .-. . ..
. . . . ‘ g .J H mm “C “at um “I n vast majorltvofthem.when they problem was largely marijuana
management is not an entirely weeds and diseases as well. n]\' Phi). in bugs l‘m not ,. ’ . ,- -
. . . . . , . - , leave \letnam. will not become and Within a year or two there
. new idea. Actually. it is a \\ e re not so much concerned qualified to run a program. \ et. . ., . , b .
H -t' ld d" g _1 ' I, _ . . . ‘ ‘ _ . ‘ ’. _ , ‘ hard core addicts. he said. was some a use Of barbiturates
icsuricc ion 0 l (as wlti new with contiolllng insects as with we re asking the farmer to do DR “NOR who retired from and heroin
ideas. Now we are concerned the disease the insect carries." m ‘h m . ' , ‘ ' ‘ K . '. '
with the cost to the environment H) aid ‘t , t UL. l' otre Tgus. wEhave to us: federal serv'lce in 1970. spent four Although the drug use was
' ‘ ' L S l is necessary 0 S €Cla IS 8 an “'OI‘ more an . . . . - .
'15 well as the control of pests" sacrifi e to om l t .f th 11:)01‘ t am " 1 months m Vietnam earlier thls Widespread, Dr. Rasor said, not
s ‘ . ‘ ‘ C S eeemenso 9 98538 . - - -
year as a representative of the many American seercemen
became physically dependent on
SENATE COUNCIL ACTIONS 3credit hours to be selected from. drugs.
TC 325 Uraping 3:23;:
November 27. 1977 TC 328 Flat Pattern Design 85” f
TC 420 Tailoring 3 hours arms
Deans, Department Chairmcn, and Members ot the UniverSity Senate
- I
Senate Councn 6 credit hours to be selected from comfo riab'e '
TC 524 History of Costume 3 hours
COWS? pFOQram Actions Effective Spring, 1973 Unless Otherwise Noted. TC 532 Retail Job Analysis 5 hours if h
TC 534 Decorative Textiles 2 hours
The Senate C0unCiI Circulates approval of the followmg curricular actions listed TC 535 Textile Design Study Tour 3 hours co e e 0 us e
below Obiections Will be accepted from UniverSity Senators and faculty mem
be“ and "WS' be received WI'hln ten (10> days of receipt of this notice to the -Tc 592 Special Problems in Clothing,and Costume Design 13 hours
appropriate Council designated below. All other requirements for offering the ‘ TC 597 Special Problems in Textiles t3 hours BY FLOYD R. (EIVENS
courses or programs as approved below must be met
SENATE COUNCIL o by SDEClal permission only Aft Kernel lSt::f wrtltetr g t _t
er severa a emp S 0 e l
Un'verSitv Wide going, the Baptist Student Union
ACADEMIC COUNCIL FOR THE MEDICAL CENTER .
UK 300 University Course (1 3) (BSU) began a coffeehouse in
A special interdisciplinary topical course sponsored by faculty from two or College 0' ”WWW ‘
more colleges, to be approved by the Undergraduate Council, A particular course September. ~ ~ ~
"may be taught only tWice under this number Open to upper division students. Course Changes: “This IS one Christian function
su iecttolimitsor prerequisitessetbyinstructor
Prereq As set by instructor NUR 895—Elective Study in Nursing (1) Where a person can attend and
(Change in credit and prerequisite) not be asked to get down on his
. knees before he leaves or et a
UNDERGRADUATE couucu: Change 'o' - - 8 it
NUR 895_Ele ‘1 St a . N . U 4) Bible crammed down his throat,
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES c we U V '" ursmg ' said Rick Astle, an A&S junior in
. _ . An indipendent study proiect investigating an area of interest under the
3:325:32; °' c°mm”""a"°"" gUidance of faculty May encompass library study or patient care, utilizing Charge 0f the coffeehouse.
CMO 350 Language and Communication (3) aspects of scientific approach. THE ATMOSPHERE Astle
An introductory survey course covering syntactic, sematic and pragmatic rereqUiSi 8 Approval 0' sponsoreing instructor and associate dean. created for the coffeehouse IS
aspects of language as they relate to communication Language learning, sign NUR 99~-H f « »
typologies osycholmgUistics, and the nature of meaning are selected topic areas, (Change in 3:12: izgciirtignursalrilg drltirequisite) loose and comfortable' Ap-
SmphaSlS is or; a behavioral, communication approach. ' ' proximately fifty people have
'9'“ WC 0' (“M99 '°¢ attended each of three gatherings
ceases OF HOME ECONOMICS NUR 899vHonors Study in Nursing iiii so far this semester. They sat on
Department of Textiles, Clothing and Merchandising . ‘An independentstudy proiectpursued with the guidance of faculty during the carpet scraps m the basement
iuniorror se‘hi'o‘r year. The protect must include scientific approach and written speClally remodeled and painted
In the curriculum changes for the Department of Textiles, Clothing and repor "‘9 0 e protect.
Merchandising. College or Home Economics, which the Senate Como. tran PrerequiSite. Gradepomtaverage of 3.0 and enforsementof appropriate faculty. for the caffeehouse‘
smitted but through the Kernel under date of November l, 1972 and to the faculty . . “Just a place to have a good
under date of November 2, 1972, it has been discovered that incomplete copy A°°V9 “mm“ 59""9 semester, ‘973 t. H A tl Id
emanatedfrom the College of Home Economics We therefore wish to correct the lme' S e sal '
curriculum changes for thatDepartmentand Ceiiegeto supercede that particular _ The food and entertainment
portion of the above transmittals The corrected curriculum changes for the C°”°99 M Dentistry
‘ Department of Textiles, Clothing and Merchandising, College of Home were freet too-
Economics, should read as follows New Courses: All of the entertainers per-
l Pre Maior Reqmrements— ls credit hours C05 82S——~Inhalation Sedation (l) formed free of Charge. Next
PSY 2,0 or 104 3 credit hours . This course is designed to teach the prinicples of safe administration of semeSter’ Astle lS gomg to try [0
pg 151, 20,. 265' or 280 3 cred” hours nitrousioxide oxygen inhalation sedation in dentistry. Lecture, demonstration, get comedian Grady