xt7pnv999203 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pnv999203/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-12-12 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 12, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 12, 1973 1973 1973-12-12 2020 true xt7pnv999203 section xt7pnv999203 The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 88
Wednesday, December 12, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Trustees
authorize
community
coHege

bonds

By STEVE SWIFT

Editor-in-Chief

56 Vice
President

resigns

By LINDA CARNES
Kernel Staff Writer

APPROXIMATELY 85.5 million in
additional bonds were authorized Tuesday
by the Board of Trustees to finance
facilities at the Jefferson and Ashland
Community Colleges.

The bands will have a term of 28 years
and will provide construction of a
technical-vocational institute a nd a library
at the Jefferson school and an academic
building as well as expansion of the
student center at the Ashland location.

William Sturgill, finance committee
chairman, presented two lengthy
resolutions to the Board; one outlining the
additional bonding the other clarifying all
previous resolutions dealing with the
Community Colleges Educational
Buildings Project of the University.

LARRY FORGY, vice president for
business affairs and UK treasurer, said
the second resolution is an attempt to lump
four previous resolutions into one text for
clarification of the record.

The opening of bids for the projects is
scheduled for the Jan. 8 executive com-
mittee meeting.

In other action Dr. John P. Wyatt was
named director of the state’s Tobacco and
Health Research Institute. He will assume

STUDENT GOVERNMENT Vice
President Peggy Pearson submitted a
letter of resignation to the Student Senate
last night and a committee was appointed
to make nominations at the Dec. 18
meeting.

Pearson stated her reason for resigning
was because she is not returning to UK
next semester. The SC constitution calls
for the Student Senate to elect a student to
fill the vacancy.

Two senators were also purged after
they missed four meetings and did not
show cause for their absences. Both
senators. Tom Weber, architecture, and
Willie Gates, medicine, are no longer
members of the Student Senate, but will
retain their voting privileges in the
University Senate.

THE PURGED senators, according to
the constitution, should be replaced by the
second-place finisher in the previous
election. Bruce Kennedy, if he is still in the
College of Architecture and is willing to
serve will replace Weber. Gates ran
unopposed so the College of Medicine seat
will not be filled.

responsibilities of the post April 1 but
intends to become oriented with his duties
before then.

WYATT. CHAIRMAN of the University
of Winnepeg’s department of pathology,
said the institute has tremendous poten«
tial. “I think it's a unique situation that has
been created here, and the very
uniqueness of it gives Kentucky and the
University of Kentucky the opportunity to
be a world leader in research on lung
disease, heart disease, cancer in-
vestigations and associated fields."

The focus of Wyatt’s research has been
aimed to lung conditions and chronic lung
diseases. He has an international
reputation for his research.

The native Canadian indicated, in an
Associated Press interview, University
officials have given approval to a new $3.2
million building for the institute.

ALL CORE services, a division which
produces standard measures of control
like reference cigarettes, administrative
office space and facilities for animal ex-
perimentation will be provided for in the
new building.

Continued on page 5

PEGGY PEARSON

JOHN P. WYATT

I

The senate voted not to purge Chris
Boerner, graduate school, after he ex-
plained he had not attended previous
meetings because he was not notified.

In other business, an interim committee
was appointed to study and report at the
next meeting on the proposed food plan.
SG President Jim Flegle, on recom~
mendation of the senate, said he would try
to persuade the Board of Trustees not to
act on the proposal at the Jan. 8 meeting.
Flegle added he thought there should be
more time for student input before a
decision is made by the Board.

THE SENATE upheld the Judicial
Board decision stating the coin toss used to
determine thewinnerof the 15th at-large

senate seat was valid. The loser, Tim

Cunningham. asked the senate to overrule
the J-Board and form another seat.

Senators refused on the grounds that it
would be retroactive to the last election,
but a committee was appointed to make a
constitutional a mendment to deal with ties
in case they occur in future elections;

Continued on page 5

 

In Brief

ly’l‘beAuoeietedProu
“enemas-n

News

' Rockefeller resigns
'Jury investigation

o Ford plan

' Executive loopholes?
° Soviet trade stopped

'Strategy discussed

0 Car pool incentive

OToday's weather...

0 ALBANY, NY. Nelson A.
Rockefeller resigned as governor of New
York Tuesday after 15 years in office and
insisted the decision was not part of a drive
for the presidency.

“I have concluded that I can render a
greater public service to the people of New
York and the nation by devoting myself to
the work of two bipartisan national
commissions," Rockefeller told a news
conference.

0 WASHINGTON The Justice
Department will take the renewed in-
vestigation of the 1970 Kent State
University slayings before a federal grand
jury in Ohio next week.

Asst. Atty. Gen. J. Stanley Pottinger
announced Tuesday night that a grand
jury will be convened in Cleveland Dec. 18
“to receive sworn testimony and act in its
capacity as an investigative body."

0 FRANKFORT. Ky. — Gov. Wendell
Ford is going to Washington today to
present an energy research and
development plan involving gasification

and liquefaction of coal in Kentucky.

He will offer the program to Interior
Secretary Rogers Morton and the Ken-
tucky congressional delegation.

.WASHINGTON -— Sen. Lowell P.
Weicker Jr., R-Conn., charged Tuesday
that President Nixon failed to meet the
legal requirements for taking a $570,000
income tax deduction on his pre-
presidential papers.

Weicker, junior member of the Senate
Watergate committee, announced he had
turned his findings over to Internal
Revenue Commissioner Donald C.
Alexander and said the responsibility for
determining their validity rests “solely
within the jurisdiction of the Internal
Revenue Service."

0 WASHINGTON — The House voted
overwhelmingly Tuesday to prohibit more
than $5 billion in US. credit loans for
Soviet trade until the Soviets permit freer
emigration.

The amendment by Rep. Charles A.
Vanik. D~Ohio, was approved 319 to 80 over

the objections of the Nixon administration.
Later the full trade bill was passed by
voice vote and sent to the Senate.

0 WASHINGTON — President Nixon
and Republican political leaders held
their first formal 1974 campaign strategy
session Tuesday. Participants said there
was no mention of Watergate’s potential
impact.

0 FRANKFORT. Ky. — The state plans
a car pool program for employees in the
Frankfort area with the hope of reducing
gasoline consumption by 10 per cent.

As an incentive. the car pool par-
ticipants will be able to obtain priority
parking facilities.

...heat wave?

Old man winter is going to sit back, relax
and allow some warm air to return. The
high today should be in the upper 4th with
the low tonight somewhere in the 305. The
outlook for Thursday is a chance of
showers with the high in the 505.

 

  

The Kentucky Kernel

Published by the Kernel Prue be. 1171 Prbcllle Lone. bungled. Ky. Begun u
the Cadet In an and published continuously as he lent-shy lone! bee 1115.
The Kernel Press Inc. (minded 1171. first clue poets. paid at Lem. Ky.
Advertising published herein b intended to help the reader buy. Any take a-
mleleedlng advertising should be reputed to the edlttre.

Edita'lele represent the «platen of the edita's. not the Unix «rslty.

 

History repeats itself

Old man winter has carried a contagious disease in his
winds these past two Decembers. Its effects, however, are
felt only by Student Government vice presidents.

Peggy Pearson, elected to that post last spring on a slate
with Jim Flegle, officially resigned her post at Tuesday‘s
Student Senate meeting. Her action follows, almost to the
day, a similar move by another former SG vice president,
Brenda Hamer. Hamer left her position after being elected
to the seat w ith Scott Wendelsdorf in the spring of 1972.

Hamer, if you campus humorists can recall, stepped out
to lunch one day never to return to the abode of SG’s offices.
Pearson, too, several sources say, left the offices early in
the semester and has put in only guest appearances since.
Her reason for leaving was briefly explained in a letter to
Flegle: “Dear Jim, I am not returning to UK next year,
therefore, I am resigning as Student Government vice
president for next semester."

Resignation not a shock

While the resignation didn’t come as a complete shock,
we regret seeing another top official of the organization
leave for peronal reasons. She ought to be commended for
the move though maybe, she, like us, is hoping an
aggressive person will assume the vacant spot.

Karen Beckwith, a former UK student and Kernel
columnist, ressoned after the spring elections that Pearson
would have the opportunity to weild a strong hand in SG
affairs during the 1973-74 term as Flegle merrily criss-
crossed the country with the debate team. She was partially
correct: Flegle has been absent quite often while debating.
Pearson’s influence in SG concerns, however, has been
woefully weak. ‘

Recover lost activism

The lack of student interest in those elections was a valid
indicator of apathy which would greet the nation’s cam-
puses in September. More importantly though, it was a
predictor of the general laziness on this campus.

Although some students and administrators claim
student activism hasn’t died—they say it’s just been re-
channelled as the decibel count has dropped—we think it
has. Pearson’s resignation and Flegle’s frequent absence
from the UK scene only support our thinking.

What is needed now—and it can only come when the
Senate choosesasuccessorto Pearson—isagoodsbotinthe
arm. An agressive vice president willing to bare his elbows
arxlexertnewideas andinfhencelnSGaffali-swillbelp
rebqu at least some (I thatloststudent activism.

 

 

. » .
VIul hm,“ \ ‘ ‘

'WILCOME To THE 100V

Letters

 

Neill's razzamatazz

Concerning Neill Morgan’s write up on
the John Mayall'Goose Creek Symphony
concert we feel his comparison of the
groups expressed poor taste and lack of
knowledge of the various types of music.
His attempt to compare a contemporary
bluegrass band with an English blues
group was ridiculous! His appraisal of
Mayall and his description of Goose Creek
as "razzamatazz garbage" reflects his
one-sided taste in music. In opposition to
his statement that “the good stuff was the
type of music that you just lay back and
take in“, Goose Creek proved that good
stuff is also for getting out of your seat,
stomping, clapping and hollering. This is
why the crowd “bought the garbage by the
shovel-full." The crowd’s reaction to the
music proved the group‘s success as en-
tertainers.

As for the John Mayall part of the
concert, they were out of hand! We regret
that approximately 1,500 left during his
gig, apparently because they couldn‘t get
into his music. We regret also that Neill
Morgan couldn’t get into Goose Creek‘s
music. The two bands’ music were ob
viously incomparable. We enjoyed them
both and if Goose Creek‘s music was
garbage, we are proud to be known as
garbage collectors.

Steve Hagaman

Business Administration-junior
Mike Dixon

Business Administration-senior

...more razzamatazz

Once somebody gets through all that
comic book jive, and begins to take
reading seriously - they will quickly find
there’s been a lot of experimentation going
on in the last few years.

In journalism, thatcomes out two ways,
either some very good together com-
munication or a bunch of razzamataz
gibberish with hardly anything in between.

There‘s room for both styles, and the
Kernel had a fine example of each Mon-
day. I'm of course referring to the great
classified adds (sic) and Mr. Morgan’s
crummy critique of the Mayall concert.

Sadly enough, as usual, I’m sure the vast
majority of the Kernel's readership was
impressed by Morgan's garbage. The
“Arts" heading coupled with a flashy
photo is enough to suck many of the un-
sophisticated in. If that doesn’t do the
trick, then Morgan‘s detached coolness
and claim to be “through all that top 40
jive" will certainly grab those wishing to
identify with something greater than
themselves.

“So what’s wrong with that—it sounds
like fun?" the unsophisticated fool might
blurt out. Fun ain’t what we’re into—we’re
into communication, remember? It’s when
you compare Morgan’s slop with the
straight stuff—the classifieds—that the
obvious innate difference between what's
good stuff and what’s bad stuff is exposed
for the discriminating reader.

(‘ontinued on Page 3. Col l

 

56 Housing Committee findings

By MIKE WILSON

Student Government's Housing
Recommendation Committee held
hearings on Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thursday of last week and came up with
some very interesting results. There
seems to be three main problem areas-—
confusion over rights and procedures
involving offenses and the type of penalties
dealt out; physical or janitorial problems;
and a desire for a more liberalized housing
policy.

There seemed to be some confusion as to
the rights, procedures and penalties for
various housing offenses—mainly on the
north side of campus. This calls for in-
creased communication between the Dean
of Students office and dorm residents, a
published handbook of rights and
responsibilities in the residence halls, and
more student im put into determining what

the rights, procedures and penalties will
be.

STUDENT GOVERNMENT intends to
publish a handbook of dorm rights and
responsibilities sometime next semester
and intends to work with the dorm
governments to achieve dorm resident
input on all rights, procedures and
penalties. Although corridor advisers
discussed rights and procedures with
dorm residents at the beginning of the
semester, some students seem confused
and frustrated with present procedures.

The second problem area consisted of
complaints on physical problems such as
heating, lighting and adequacy of cooking
equipment. Sadly, the Commission on the
Quality of Student Residential Life
recommended elimination of some of these
specific problems in May of 1971. The
recommendations were forwarded to the
Vice-President for Student Affairs, but

apparently some of them were not acted

upon. The final area of concern was the
present visitation policy. Recom—
mendations ranged from giving freshmen
the same visitation hours as up-
perclassmen (30 hours) to open visitation
coed dorms.

Students wanted to be able to choose
their own lifestyle and advanced a variety
of lifestyle options that they would like to
see in operation, including language floors
or dorms for language majors. Life-style
dorms seems to be an issue on which
students (88 per cent according to Student
Government’s housing poll), Student
Government and the Kernel are all united
on. Many students noted that a lot of
universities have lifestyle dorms
already—particularly in the Northeast and
West. The question everyone seemed to be
asking is, “Why can’t we have them
here?“

AT ALI. THREE hearing sites, con-
versation often shifted to the new meal

Harvest the
Revolurtlon

plan. Many students do not understand
how it works, how it affects them, and
what the alternatives are. Student
Government will publish an information
sheet on the new meal plan—its ad-
vantages, disadvantages and alter-
natives—and distribute it at all the
cafeterias sometime next week. Student
Government will also try to gauge student
opinion on the proposal early next
semester. As it stands now, more dorm
residents are opposed than in favor, but a
sizeable number are still undecided.

 

“Harvest the Revolution” is
Student Government’s weekly
column. Opinions offered herein
are those of Student Govern-
ment and not the Kernel. Mike

Wilson is SG’s director of public
relations. , _

| u

 

 

  

 

opinion from inside and outside the university community

Pogelll

 

U.S. involvement in Viet Nam continues

By (iABRiEL KOLKO

THE NEW YORK TIMES NEWS SERVICE

TORONTO—The Senate Armed Serv-
ices Committee and House Appropria-
tions Committee hearings on the
Pentagon budget until July 1974 are
now out. and the traditionally diligent
censors released alarming new infor-
mation on the Nixon Administration’s
plans for Indochina.

The facts shatter its claims to have
ended the Vietnam war, much less
to bear no responsibility for the Thieu
Government's violations of the Paris
Agreements. And if the Administration
implements all the contingencies for
which the Pentagon has budgeted, as
it often did in the past, at the very
least it has assured that the existing
bloody conflict will drag on—and the
worst we can expect is an escalation
to direct U.S. participation in the air
war.

Last Aug. 1 a Pentagon spokesman
disclosed to the House that it had
put aside $275 million for the direct
use of U.S. airpower, including B-52’s,
through June 1974. Bombing in Cam—
bodia until the Aug. 15 cut-off con-
sumed $50 million, but the rest was
“to keep the area established,” and the
censor “sanitized” out the number of
possible sorties.

The Senate hearings, however, con-
tain the air war cost data that allow‘
anyone to estimate the missing infor-
mation quite accurately: $225 million
will buy about 120,000 bombs de-
livered by 3,800 B-52 and 16,700
fighter-bomber sorties—an amount far
in exceSS of 1965 air munitions. Mean-

while, the Pentagon budgeted the Sev-
enth Flect to keep 77 ships and 331
aircraft in Southeast Asia as part of
the “less than 250,000 men” now re-
maining in the East Asia-Pacific area.

The hearings also contain much new
data on “civilian advisers.” Contrary
to far lower Pentagon claims at the
time, as of last March 31 there were
8,003 American civilians in Vietnam,
and 8,100 are projected to be there
at the end of this year. in addition,
an undisclosed number of non-Viet-
namese foreigners on the Pentagon
payroll until mid-1973, a group that

1

 

has declined only slightly since, pro-
vide 11,337 “man-years.” “I could not
put any termination date on it,” then
Secretary of Defense Richardson con-
fessed when queried about all these
advisers, but estimates of three to five
years were later mentioned despite
the fact the exact date remains classi«
fied. But contracts for such services
increased $63 million in two months
to $218 million last May 31.

Meanwhile, President Thieu’s army
is now scheduled to spend an annual
$277 million on munitions. “a continu-
ation of the level of recent consump-
tion” that the Pentagon’s officials on
Aug. 3 assured the House they fully
controlled. That sum will buy nearly
140,000 tons of explosives.

The cost of Saigon and Laotian
forces to the U.S. this year will come
to $1.8 billion in outlays, one-third

 

more than the Nixon Administration
asked Congress to appropriate. The
balance will be taken from earlier, un-
expended budgets, and the total will
include 71 F-SE aircraft for Thieu’s

aviators. This plane, which the Ad-
ministration insists is legal under the
replacement proviso in the Paris
Agreement, nevertheless costs over
twice as much as the earlier model and
is far more advanced.

Full Southeast Asia outlays for the
1.5. this fiscal year, including only
military costs for itself and its three
dependents, Will amount to $4.6 bil-
lion should the Congress approve the
Pentagon‘s requests. And what Con-
gress will not appropriate for indo-
china, provisos such as Section 735 of
the 1973 Defense Appropriation Act
allow the Pentagon itself to determine

when the “national interest" requn‘es
shifting additional funds to the war.
in 1973 it Obtained $492 million in
this manner.

Last September, when Western jour-
nalists confirmed that Saigon was us-
ing its vast supply of arms to initiate
the current upsurge of fighting in
Vietnam, the danger of renewed U.S.
air war increased as well. if American
men are also called upon to utilize
the contingency plans and equipment
the Nixon Administration has in place,
then our worst fears will come to pass.

Gabriel Kolho is professor of
history at York University.

Letters

 

Continued from Page 2
You see, communication deals with facts

that are relevant. After all, what good is a
concert to me once it‘s over? That‘s pretty
deep stuff but maybe some of you can see
where I'm at. The classifieds deal with
what‘s now—people’s needs, their most
urgent desires and longings. With the
classifieds you can just lay back and take
it in—it‘s what’s happening. The
classifieds at their most basic level say
one thing—People need people. What could
be more communicable and indeed
relevant in our day and age? You can
really feel that—right!

Still, I wonder what possesses the reader
who goes for Morgan’s trash. Perhaps the
Kernel ought to jazz up its classified ads.
Maybe they could adopt a haughty tone
and print them two days after the sale is
made or the job is filled. Unfortunately, if
these changes were made. the
sophisticated classified purist would
probably complain about the Kernel trying
to appeal to the ignorant masses at the

expense of true art. Well, I guess in the end

there‘s just good stuff and bad stuff, the
crude and the cultured.

Breck Morrison

UK graduate

Attention Neill

Attention, Neill Morgan! I'm writing
aboutyou—or at least aboutyour review of
the Mayall-Goosecreek concert. And read
it as constructive criticism.

First of all, who are you to say the en-
coring audience of 6,000-plus were ap-
plauding “a bunch of razzmatazz gar-
bage" as you seemingly referred to
Goosecreek Symphony. I do agree with
you; Goosecreek has produced a more
clear and together sound in their past
performances, but that does not take away
the fact the crowd loved their music last
Friday night. You see the crowd as the
exception and not yourself.

And, how can you possibly compare the
wah-wah pedaling of a “country blues
group" with the Duane Allman sound (that
is who you were referring, isn‘t it, Neill?).
Duane would only turn over in his grave
laughing at your comparison—and the
unicycle-riding clown who so thoroughly
bummed you out.

Apparently, you’re obsessed with
making incomparable comparisons. You
attempted it again using the saxaphone
players of both groups.

You wrote a review on your own
emotions and not on objective observation,
Neill; and, if you can't enter a per-
formance with an objective mind, let
someone else write the review. Art is only
as good as its interpretation, and you
downgrade 6,000 other persons’ view to
make your‘s appear gospel.

Sure, i feel Mayall and company are the
quality artists, but Neill . . why do you say
it with such carelessness?

Lee 'nnomu
Journalism-inlet

Comment policy

No comment may exceed 750 words. in
such instances where copy excena the
maximum length, the editors will ask that
the comment be rewritten or that the
writer come to the office and edit the copy
for them. Contributors are also expected to
triple-space copy and include address.
telephone number and classification.

letters policy

Letters to the Editor may concern any
topics as long as they are not libelous.
However. so everyone has an equal op-
portunity to respond, we ask that you limit
letters to 250 words. We also ask that they
be typewritten and triple-spaced for the"
convience of the typesetters. All letters
must be signed, including campus ad-
dress, telephone . manner and
classification. Each letter will be
rontrlctod to hawthorn; than with man
than two slain. will be w “and
m."

  
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
    
  
   
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
   
      
 
 
   
  
   
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
    
 
  
   
  
 
  
   
  
  
  
      
      
       
    

   

  

\/

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. December 12 1.73

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Government vs. Wallace 's

Charges claimed to be false

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer
Two suits filed last week
against Wallace's College Book
Co., Wallace’s College Book
Store, Inc and the corporation‘s
president, Wallace Wilkinson,
are not true, according to
Wilkinson.

The US. Department of Labor
filed suit Dec. 6 charging the
company failed to pay certain
employees one and one-half times
the regular wages for work above
40 hours per week. The suit also
contends the corporation refused
authorized Labor Department
personnel review company
records.

THE SAME three defendants
were sued Nov. 31 by a former
officer of the firm who contended
he was fired without basis and
sought $108,000 in damages.

“Although we don‘t know
exactly who filed the complaint
with the government,” Wilkinson
explained, “it was done by
someone on set salary, not a
time-clock employee."

7 ._

 

 

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Wilkinson suspects the com-
plaint was filed by supervisory
personnel in the wholesale
division of the corporation.

Wallace’s operates bookstores
at various college campuses
across the nation and also owns
its own wholesale division.

WILKINSON ADDED that if
supervisory personnel had filed
the complaint, it would probably
be without basis, as they work on
a set salary and are paid extra
for overtime work.

Labor Department officials
were denied access to the records
since the date established would
not give the corporation ample
time to get the proper records
together, said Wilkinson.
Wallace‘s also requested that
auditors and company personnel
be compensated for time spent
reviewing the records.

Neither Wallace's nor
Wilkinson received any response
from a notice sent to the Labor
Department allowing federal
inspectors access to the records
on Dec. 18.

“WE GAVE them time at our
convenience but we heard

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nothing from them until we were
presented with a summons Dec.
6," he said.

The original date requested by
the government had been Nov. 12.
Wilkinson notified the Labor
Department of the revised date
on Nov. 8.

The other suit, brought by the
corporation’s former secretary-
treasurer Robert K. Landrum,
contends the company went back
on his contract when he was
fired.

“HE WAS FIRED May 12, 1971
by a full vote of the Board of
Directors who felt he wasn‘t
doing his job sufficiently,”
Wilkinson explained. “We are
standing ready to defend any
action brought by Landrum."

He noted there was never any
contract between the company
and Landrum “written, implied
or otherwise."

The current suit by Landrum is
the third time within the past
three years the company has
been threatened with action since
he was removed as an officer.

The Leather
Shop has

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is

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University Plaza
Home of the

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Missileburger

And now
the best sandwich in town

the

BIG CAT

Ameal in itself

For take out 252-5751
Open till 10

 

 

 

 

 

and see our wide selection of leather boxes
and hundreds of other interesting gifts.

 

........

The most unique gift you could give
this Christmas.

from $900 to 82500

The Leather Shop

343 S. Limestone 252-5264

lO- 9 p.m.

 

 

  

 

9”

UK trustees authorize bonds
for community colleges

Continued from page 1

A pair of interim financial
reports, submitted by the finance
committee, reports an income of
$64,009,154 for the first four
months of fiscal 1974. This figure
is 46.8 per cent of the annual
income estimate of $136,684,281.

Figures for the same time
period indicate expenditures and
committments have reached 31.6
per cent of the total $136,684,281
approved earlier by the Board.

ROUTINE BUDGET revisions
approved by the Board in the 90
'minute session show the
Agricultural Cooperative Ex-
tension receiving a $184,500 in-

crease from general funds. The
College of Education received the
next highest budget boost with
$30,000 for its continuing
education program. The
Agricultural Experiment Station
was given $26,100 and the College
of Dentistry $10,000 for its con-
tinuing education program.

Names of the top three vote
getters in a recent alumni
election to pick a replacement for
Thomas Bell, the Board’s alumni
representative, were accepted
and will be forwarded to Gov.
Wendell Ford who will pick a new
trustee. Bell’s term expires Dec.
31.

Two senators purged
Peggy Pearson resigns 56 position

Continued from page 1

A proposal for student ian in
tenure and promotion decisions
was passed unanimously.
Senators said they would like to
have a student on the committee
for promotion and tenure, but
were told by administrators it
was not possible now.

UNDER THE adopted
proposal, students can submit
recommendations for promotions
of faculty through the present
Student Advisory Committees
and graduate student
organizations.

A committee was established to
organize a campaign concerning
bicycle paths. The purpose of the
committee will be to voice the
opinion of students to public
officials.

The senate also appointed
Shelley Griffith as commissioner
of physical environment. Griffith
is organizer of the SG recycling
campaign.

SENATORS VOTED to delay
payment of dues to the National
Student Organization (NSA).
Since the organization has had a
large decline in members for the

Supreme Court
okays search

authority

By VERNON A. GUIDRY Jr.
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — The
Supreme Court ruled Tuesday
that police may make a complete
search of anyone under lawful
arrest.

The court’s three liberals
dissented sharply.

The import of the 6-3 decision
rests in the use of evidence found
in such searches, and the
operation of the controversial
“exclusionary rule" which bans
use of illegally ga thered evidence

at trial.
“IT IS THE fact of the lawful

arrest which establishes the
authority to search, and we hold
that in the case of a lawful
custodial arrest a full search of
the person is not only an ex-
ception to the warrant
requirement of the Fourth
Amendment, but is also a
‘reasonable' search under that
amendment," wrote Justice
William H. ,Rehnquist for the
majority.

last two years, the senate voted
not to pay the $150 dues until the
future of NSA is determined.
The financial report showed
there is an overall balance of
$6,340.87 in the SG 101 ac