xt7prr1pk789 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7prr1pk789/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-09-29 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, September 29, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 29, 1972 1972 1972-09-29 2020 true xt7prr1pk789 section xt7prr1pk789 y Vol. LXIV No. 22 an independent student newspaper
|(erne| Friday, September 29, 1972 University of Kentucky 3
Twelve pages Lexington. Kentucky 40506 —
”

Hall questions Go L'b ca ’
New move by People '5 Party #
may violate their constitution a! fl

U
By MICHAEL CARR Such drastic amendments to the con- —
Kernel StaffWriter stitution may be needed that a review of " . 4' . .

The acceptance of the Gay Liberation the party’s status as a campus f"; , t ‘t“ ‘ -, ‘» ‘

Front (GLF) as a caucus of UK’s People’s organization may be in order, Hall said. N 3“ " “ t \ -. . ‘ ' #
Party has been questioned by Jack _. “ ‘2. a; 11;; 1* g- , z w j"; i 7
Hall, dean of students. Howard Stovall, chairman of People’s “ ... ‘ -«_”‘_3:;:- "x , .‘ “7" ‘ . ”t .. - "‘ —

Hall questioned two aspects of the ac- Party at UK, took issue with Hall’s stand. 33’ -e. in. f .. 14' ‘ . = s, §f “
ceptance by People’s party. First, But, as requested by Hall, he will submit l P . a i "y ' fi’ 3‘
whether or not the party is “providing a an amended version of the constitution ““"“ ' M
from for an organization not registered on next week. The new document will allow It appears as if some members of the GLF caucus are about to stick their :__
campus.” Secondly, Hall said the for_ any group of five or more persons the right necks in the noose. People’s Party is attempting to form a caucus for GLF ,_ —
mation of the caucus was not in ac- to form a caucus and elect a represen- and it is being questioned by Jack Hall. dean of students. People's Party and
cordance with the People’s Party con- tative to the party’s steering committee. GLF met to determine what action to take in the event Hall rejected an _ ’
stitution on file in his office. amended constitution. (Staff photo by Linda Beatty.)

The constitution states a member of At a rap session last night, the GLF
People’s Party must be either registered caucus decided to confront Hall if he caucus voted in favor of a confrontation rejected. it would go to UK President Otis
to vote under the party banner or be on a rejects the new constitution. with Hall, if necessary. Singletary, whose decision is final. “- ,
list of people supporting the People’s Stovall asked, the group whether such a GLFmotion According to the GLF caucus president
Party. These members then decide on the confrontation would jeopardize a motion The GLF motion will be taken up by the Jenny (she refused to give her last name),
make up of the UK chapter’s steering going before the University Appeals Appeals Board, headed by law professor court action will be taken if Singletary ‘
committee. This committee,in turn makes Board, which could make GLF an official Dr. Paul Willis, Oct. 6 with a decision turns down the appeal.
up other committees, like the GLF caucus. campus organization. The majority of the expected by Nov. 3. Should the motion be Continued on Page 6
UK Med School orders controversial anatomy text

By JOHN SCHENKENFELDER the publisher which means it will notbein None were available to express their women. indeed the men practicing
Kernel Staff Writer the b°°k stores. reactions. medicine."

Soon to be on the shelf at UK’s School of The Lexington Herald reported earlier A5 a result this reporter 00““ determine If the book could actually be considered
Medicine is a new text book that has this weekhhat Ug’s medicalbschool would little about the exact nature of the text. denigrative in nature the school‘s
aroused much national controvers _ not pure ase e text, ut a school Charges capitalism . ‘

The text, “The Anatomical 3:535 of spokesman said yesterday the article was Quoted in the newspaper story was Dr. shakesmen do}: ‘ fem too d concerned
Medical Practice" has drawn fire from wrong. The b°°k Wt“ be available here. Estelle Ramey, president-elect 0f AWIS. a out It. One U spo esman a mitted that

. - ‘ . - While UK administrators will not censor who 'd “ ' the bOOk was ordered because the
the Assoc1ation of Women in Seience _ _ . sai the new two" was OhVIOUSIY ublisher had recalled it
(AWIS), who contend the book contains the book, it Will not be Circulated to the intended to make a lot of money by p 'l‘ext rejected
illustrations that are obscene and public and cannot be checked out of the gingering up a rather dull subject with the UK received the text in October 1971 on a '
denigrative. library. fun and games of leering, naked women in standing order basis. It was returned _
_ _ . Onlyafew of the school’s administrators seductive poses.“ however because the book “didn‘t add

In fact, because Of the objections raised had seen the publication when it was sent Ramey claimed the text promoted a an thin ‘ to the current literat r -
by AWIS, along with many leading doctors out by the publisher for consideration for “lascivious” approach to the study of anZtoms .. u e m
m the country, the text ls being recalled by ordering. anatomy that was a “denigration 0t Later the decision was changed after the

. . . book was considered a keepsake. Ad<
N ew a d d If I o n co m I n g to Med Cenfe r ministrators claim that the possibility of .Lw
obscenity had nothing to do with initially
rejecting the text. __
By ROGER DRURY The two floors of the building will have a total of 20,000 M The authors 9t “The Anatomical Basis 0t ,
. . . edical Practice are. Dr. Frederick
Kernel Staff Writer square feet of floor space. The first floor Will house a new Becker of Michigan State Universit and
A new building is soon to be added to the University department—the Department of Family. Practice. The D , y
. . . . . . rs. James Wilson and John Gehweiler of
Medical Center complex according to Dr. Michael Romano, second floor Will house the Student Health SerVice (SHS). Duke Universit Medical Center -.
Medical Center vice president. The new building is specifically designed to care for the Th 1 . y . ‘ —‘
_ .. . ,, H . ,, . . . e comp aints issued by AWIS are not
The new $734,000 structure will have two floors primary or outpatient cases. These are the clinical concerned onl w‘th illustrations Rame
parking lot underneath it at ground level. The building will be cases. the type handled by both SHS and the family practice h r th t yn ‘ l ' y _
structurally similar to the Medical Center Annex Two and doctors. c .a ges. a 0 near y every page are
_ . . .. Witty quips referring to the nudes.
Will be located at the present Site of the parking lot near the One caption reads “We are sorry that ,
Annex. The building will be a great improvement over present I bl th ddr f ——
Bids on the building will be taken in two weeks. Con- facilities since Dr. Frank Cascio, director of SHS.and Dr. the cannot make avai a e ea ”5°50
. , . . . . . . _ e young ladies who grace our pages. Our

struction is slated to start on the building in December or James Burdette. chairman of the family practice depart wives burned our little address books at

January of this year. The completion date is sometime in ment. made suggestions and helped in its deSign. our last barbecue get-together.“ _

July of next year. Continued on Page 3
F

INSide *he Kernel Chili tonight and cool tamale.
- . According to University policy today is the last day Taday: That‘s the weather forecast. not
V0“ Hoffman gives a ”we to students may pay registration fees. Under the the menu at the cafeteria. _
the other side 0t terrorism on regulation students who actively attend classes have Ch ' I ' d There's also a 60 percent chance '
page 3- Pt5t°t Pete returns. see within 30 days after the first day of classes to pay fees. I I an of rain today. Today's high will '
the sports page. Spirits, UFO‘S That day for the fall semester happens to be todav. be near 80. with the low in the
and other freaky things are 0“ According to Lawrence Forgy‘. vice president for coal mid-50‘s. The high for
page 7- It you happen to be freaky business affairs. any students who have not paid their tomorrow's game will be in the
yourself. see the classifieds. You lees by Sept 29 will he considered delinquent and have upper sin
may find a friend their registration cancelled

 The i 'il‘ ,. .1, van Lsnxtant Mmmqmq Editor Kahr M(Ca"hi Ed It I
ltt‘li“ my (me! Minu- Wines A‘\"""" M‘"“‘°'"° eonov mm Mmq'm rIGIS
K¢ntUCky w u; t i; (040. Lynn Martin A- mutant Mao-Hams “MW “in": UJW'U"? I O
in 't"i| tmto: Git-q Hartman. Assistant Mnnaqmq Emtoi Mm BUn'U
Kernel ("'"V‘ “’"0’ Mme “WNW EdilOItals tepn-wnt 1m ”pinnin‘i .it thi- .miou not in. tinww it.
_ “’1' 7’1?!” EL
Anti GLF move H PM l Effllgw
I
WELCOME OME, s.‘ . WW
' ° m.———-—-—-‘—-—~“"i ;' J
a big mistake » — xi
, at; ' 1/ ‘ » ' ' . .
' "’ .” ../ ‘ t .1 g\ -~ - 5,
Only last Wednesday the UK Gay 7: @ ‘ , . x“- , :5: M ,. . D
‘ Liberation Front won a partial vic~ "- - 0 x s! '£'¢§.'.~’.lft-.u,‘f_g 9 “C '
tory in its battle for recognition as a ’ ’34.; ‘ . 2".7b§.‘§ fl’ . \
campus organization when the ‘t ‘ 5-: ‘ w, ,"i7g§“i’$ei";‘®?‘i.l - qf‘ 7/ 7 ,/ l J , w
People’s Party voted to allow the GLF ‘ ’5‘ my} ’ Na J%.x,‘3‘3’f}§)gi¢€; . J ' t l J” E 5' ' .
toforma“caucus"within the party. i Y I} ' 1 {$3. %‘,;~::)JI'$‘.~T"‘ ’ ’ ' W» ' ‘7‘
But even this is endangered. , §Cl ' .‘ " ”a. “‘3‘va V I . .
Dean of Students Jack Hall has .‘g. i (0.: f ' Z$ y - ‘
objected to the move on two - , ,. ‘7' (J , 3
somewhat specious points: that it 5“ J ’ , \ at
violates the People‘s Party con- ~’ ’ “ 'r x" ; J
stitution and that the People‘s Party _ ‘ '5;- " '“ ‘ ‘“ , ‘\ \
is acting as a “front" for another 9/ -, . ‘7», :' L .
organization. r t- ' ' ‘ {n . / 5- f -1
The first carge is but a technicality. @227???) gilt, I I”??? 'ff - \ 1.. cf “'
Campus organizations are not bound i 'lllEtliSUES’l' ‘ /7 f/{fiji .// “ l 1t\ t“ , \ \\ \Z' \ '. ‘. «(1“ -
. to their initial constitutions for ‘ 3 i ‘5‘ ,1 % ' / ,. ,4 g" $‘ 3; 1' ft \ i7 - 1“\~“«“‘
eternity; amendment procedures ":‘g/ I, K ‘2',”- ”if; V t l \.\\ 2“ .1. ‘\ \~\0 >--.._;“..“..
. exist and can be followed (as People's % 7 ,323// / / {W351i} \ \\ ‘ :2 “tee-3.3;; \ \ ‘ . ""‘ ~
. Party chairman Howard Stovall says ' ’ ' '
he will d0). 0 o 0 I
The second charge is also fUdenOm'cs 's a '9 ea
questionable. Activist groups
customarily embracea wide range of Lexington has never been cursed According to Forgy. UK payrolls. In addition to economic stimulation,
political and social issues. Alliances with the intense town vs. gown rivalry student expenditures and related UK provides Lexington With social
and coalitions between different that has plagued some communities institutional purchases pump some and cultural input lacking in many
organizations come and go. . If the with large university establishments. $150 million into the region‘s economy backwater Kentucky towns. This
People‘s Party chooses to include Still,aglance at the letters column of annually.Students'personal spending ranges from politicans and artists
homosexuals W‘thm ”5 ranks. SUCh ‘5 the local newspapers shows that not alone—on everything from ham- who appear 0“ campus to a class in
its right. all citizens are happy with the social burgers to gasoline—totals $8 million. urban problems that includes several
We fear Hall's actions are un~ and cultural presence of our in- members of the City-County Planning
necessary intervention in the affairs stitution in their town. Local businessmen who complain of Commission.
of a student organization. If the political activities centering on the _ .
Student Affairs Office is about to SO we hope they were listening last University should consider the $5 AS weadd upiall that our UmYerSltY
begin policing the internal operations week when UK’S Larry Forgy, Jr., million students cough up for room has given the C'ty‘ we. wonder If those
of campus clubs, who will be next? vice president for business affairs, and board, the $35 million spent by Cltllens Who complain would really
We feel the addition of the GLF as a {Old 2? Chamber Of Commerce UK on equipment, goods and fOOd e‘xpellus, given a chance. For w'thOUt
caucus is a matter best left up to the gathering JUSt what the‘ UniverSity supplies and the $30 million in campus L‘K,‘ ”imgmn W911” beoa small, du‘ll
People's Party, not the UK ad- means to theicommunity 5 economy. construction scheduled for the next town. Withit.Lex1ngtonis Kentucky 5
ministration. It made fascmating listening. two years. second City.
AffaCkS SChOll :éifgigcagélnEzgigts‘tgftfgg”Selig?x233]; . I congratulate'the first officers of this
. important assoctation. African Students
anything but “midnight-riding” Afr'cans meet Association in Kentuck and I challen e
.I‘m afraid Tom Scholl has quite some Republicans. where does Tom get his them to work very harg‘and diligentl gto
‘ distance to go before becominga reputable information? Perhaps he got the story The number or African students in alleviate the objectives of this bona lide
balance to Nicholas Von Hoffman. from Spiro T. who tossed out the same different colleges in Kentucky is terribly association 1 also challen e them durin
Attacking from a Republican stand. fantasy, with the same usual lack of small when compared to other states. The their first {tiw weeks of oftgice t0 0 aheag
Scholl first tried blasting McGovern‘s substance. in one of his recent speeches. total number of African students m this and r) at .. l" . .. - 4 g »
personality. That is quitst a dangerous Bart Sullivan state may be 85 to 90 and most of them are ‘ cg” C‘ “h association m U,“ .
thing to start when one is supporting 3 Journalism Sophomore l“ colleges under 17K 07‘ are in l'l‘i‘r: lllogflscéenru”
President that has all the attraction of at Lexington campus. The above number is. (-raduate MUM“
rust spot on a new car. however. very important in that ii
Scholl next related McGovern‘s sup— represents “Udell“ from must (it the
posed inability to discuss the issues with African states. {.¢.._—_—___‘]
the voters. The? is a singularly large. Bafid bQOSier Out .t the ’ll)() L ”088th m m” m u . p
---i H; ..,,..,...,. .--,_x ' . 'x“ in “(of .0 .
:);::::\\3:l,jn:f:(21:12:32,2117;:;:(i':tig\::i|i {titer readim the article in Tuesday 5 TH .‘ii'ricans met on. tit-Witt tin/the lis’ l n Chew]! on Heifers i
the DTt‘SEf. has refused to debati- m min ‘1‘”??- Ltii; .xcrncl about'the Lit-Alabama "it'lilptts tltitl creates Hit~ .riti‘it'an student; : lli (ii‘tlci‘ that ovum/(mu ”.13). have ~
“My; and now: come. close to rizsv W; Li}: 7..., 10313.15 Lil the iron: page {if the ,t\.\M)t'!r’tl-t'i"i. in ht-ntticy; (AS \i-i i. Thu: l “tillttittt'cess to this forum. letters lti !
s .. .Us.. . . . .. . . . .
:invthinq With am average “Mm. “ -: t 2‘ l was reading the Alabama a‘ssotiatitiii isimpttitant and unique in thit t the “in“? should not exceed 250 :1
instead.HMSehioxsmouth;1.?iit‘alitit'u‘ 1M6”)! instead oi the Kentucky Kernel. N IN N anthtlal association and l “‘“V‘lr‘ lSSU‘W I‘(‘ Ull‘ll“; more 9" .
rehearsed rhetorie that or iiitleutziaifirz-: There W” nothing said about the superb {ll-WéTer H m ”1? mg: m m kH-m :m the l lcm'ltvl (lix‘cuss‘i it? sit l‘fjl) * 'ls l
appears einntv, or contenttm; liimsrgiz to l‘z'zll‘WXm‘Lfm made by the UK band. Tl”? A campus and in the state m “my f “outwith ..:i (A h dint it rlln (:1 i
let i’at. the ‘2‘“). or denmm whim: rtrtmiu i‘E'lliSPt’l tho Alabama band ll‘ The aims of the association arr» Sun-{fin g t ' j?” W‘ “n.“ h ”9 C no? CV'XCCLG l
Puppets (‘zn‘rvtnt- DOllllCal bait saying that lacy brotitzh. the crowd to its and prolessionttl ill view (me,- of its aims. {0’ Atom?» A” submissions ShOUld
in stating iticii (it‘Sll‘C’ to die for thy “"1 l' “"1“ V7“ “3 "SI-"l ”'7” 55‘” the 1”? example. is to i'llSSt'XillllHlt‘ correct no twcd and triple-spaced, and
Vietnamese. Pat and Tricia niav have standinganti-tum 'l'l‘c ptiliiicit} the Kernel information about Africa. Thu: is) llll- tmu‘” l'lCIUdO lh‘} writer's "am“-
reached a new low, however. considering lily” 0"” band 5” practically nonexistent portant. I think. because mam Students in ' Classification 91ml an address and '
they can‘t even get their husbands on the Tim t'ix' hand it: one of the best t‘ix’ and other colleges do not have correct telephone number where she or he
front lines. The old phrase now seems to organizations representing the University information about Africa. can be reached. Material to length
read. “way behind every good political and a change ”1 the Kernel 901le towards I hope that this continental association Will not be edited except for
wife. there‘s a politician." lh" band “0”” be m0“ WGICOmC will he a vital link between African grammar spelling and libel
Finally. Tom SChOll insinuated 7*“ Mary Lou Frank students and UK including its communitv ‘ '
Democrats werethe real people behind the .~\&S.lunior colleges and other colleges in Kentucky,

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. September 29. 1972—3
I ~ 3—\ .
NICl'lOlClS ., -
VonHoffmon .-
Arabs turn to armed violence I FleN ’S
. WASHINGTON—Who drops the booby- Zionists, the same people that his generation a » ‘
trapped letters in the mail box? Who with their would grow up to practice terror on. So he F d d S t (l -
Kalashniknov machineguns murderously enters writes: “In one operation alone, on April 9, 1948, n oy an (I "r “Y
the apartments of sleeping athletes? Who has put a detachment of the Irgun (a Zionist guerrilla 59 p te m be r 2 9 o n d 3 O
the entire world under threat 0f hijack? organization) attacked the small rural com-
lt 15 US, says anazdgur:li “01le when“ we munity of Deir Yassin and killed every man, 9'P.m. '0 l 0.m.
t°°k to armed vio ence i t e “’0“ Wm ca ing woman and child of its 254 inhabitants." '
Palestinians.” Yet even now, when. they are in tattered rags hung on us like white flags of . (4-Blocks Behind Student Center)
the forefront 0f the international mind, most or surrender" and where his mother and sisters . Must be 2! with ID.
us have only the faintest idea who these were beaten up by drunken Lebanese cops, .
terrorists might be or how they get that way. where he peddled on the streets of Beirut to bring WM
Although there are perhaps two 'hllhon Of them money home to the family and where his father —SE R MON— '
they are hidden people, and that 5 what makes grew old and died listening to “the incessant .
Fawaz Turki so valuable. propaganda that Radio Cairo subjected us to.” l I
Born in Balad el Sheik near Haifa, in what was H OLY -
once Palestine, in 1940, Fawaz Turki and his .
family were driven from their home so that he Deaih Ill novel forms . BREAD"
might live in the refugee camps of Lebanon in an OUt ht this pain and. disftgurement “the -
atmosphere of “crazy sorrow.” The child of the Palestinians came to be mirror—image Zionists, ON CAMPUS AT
Palestinian Arab diaspora, he has grown up to resembling the people who came to their land _
write a book that tells us who mails those lethal and evicted them. The generation 0f Palestinian
. . . T
letters and why. (“The Disinherited: Journal of Arabs that Turki describes display the same CHRISTIAN Ss‘l'ligEN
aPalestinian Exile.”Monthly Review Press, 116 strwmg. the same capacny for sacrifice and FELLOW H
West 114th Street, New York City, 10011, $5.95.) blood, the same unbrlbeable, undistractable. . .
unmoveable determination to have their Th's Sunday: 10°15 a'm'
Y b homeland that distinguished the Zionists who 502 Columbia Avenue
00 may 9 I‘IOX‘l’ founded the state of Israel. .
. . . - (one block north of complex)
Inasmuch as Fawaz Turki’s people have This is no mob of unemployed camel drhvers. WElCOME ,
. . . . Instead the Palestinian exi es turn out to e an __ __
famed: gulf: us Sirhan 91:36:33: 21131:? energetic, industrious and educated people who ,
unic an e massacre m . l rpo ’ have the technical know-how to bring death to us
we dbest stop dismissmg them as Just abunch M in all its modern and novel forms. Couple that
Arabs. Any 0f us may be the next Victims, and with their disdain and resentment of nations,
that s no exaggeration if you read what George Arab and non— Arab alike and you have a people
gabzfi“ the fmfmSe: o: the Popular Front for who will do whatever is required to see that no .
e l ra ton 0 a es me, says. . 1 f peace comes to the Middle East of which they a
Habbash s group is one of the circ e o are not part parcel and signatory
' organizations that pull off the hijackings and h ’ f k'. f
such, and so when he speaks we may save our Read t lese welds 0 bFaw:z Ts: 13“}; buy you; 0
skins by listening: “Has it been said that these "extalrp 3'19 he eta r03 W1 he?! ation.' Fa . nut» “all
operations expose the lives of innocent people to hated. I hated the world and the order of reality yt 1
danger? In today’s world no one is innocent, no :Zjlltlfallljeanl £35: belllghzftfdpzisosfifiggogaft , *1 r , 1 ., a
one is neutral. A man is either with the oppressor 1 Y- '- - . 4 5 -1 >1 w I. J,
or the oppressed. He who takes no interest in 2235121339; hattfid b91138 allhyhhli ah OllétCESt [1 REID (7 [[1 T [7) ) () (
politics gives his blessing to the prevailing or- d d. p 0 em. we. ”‘8 m a wor t at
der." suspen e me aloft. petrified my being and
Richard M. Nixon feels the same way when he denied mle adplace among men until the problem
declares a whole nation a free-fire zone, but he was ”50 ve - . ., \ ,
comes to his conclusions bloodlessly by staying Give me a gun (in: (.m in m.
up too late studying the trigonmetry 0f politics. \ . no (1m ( vrtilli‘ate
The other way to come to such terrifying “Give me a gun, man. and I will blow my own . -~ ' ' ~ -
opinions is through growing up in a condition of or somebody else‘s brains out. .I will write CM 0” Any OM Puma“.
violent, impoverished, estranged, stateless slogans on all the wallls of the SW houses from mmandovrr
morbidity. That‘s what happened to Fawaz here to Katmandu to tellthe world what I think of .
Turki. their gods and their angels, of their values and ‘ ‘ _
matrix of logic, of their sense of history and the ~
Learned use 0‘ terror sadness of poetry suppressed in the soul of k t k f . ‘
disinherited men. For that is where it all . I] H‘ ‘0!“ ma Ill“ our "'5‘ SIX
As a little kid he saw the English soldiers kick belongs. In the 5— house." Th“ ‘ t“
his fellow countrymen into the gutter for the fun Be careful how you open your mail. , ‘ - , , ‘1 1' ll
s ette .. 3 1e ,
of it. Then he learned the use of terror from the (c) 1972, The Washington Post IlltHllll III Fri)
.9: , - greatest ever. In appreciation, '
'7.'~.77'.v"¢.'?"v" b'
' ‘1'! . , A _.‘ \ . b ,
“th firfi “ . I; ‘1 1.: - K present this coupon for $2.00
if“ ‘ WK“? 'rt‘fii”
I t “A .t W! . . ‘ -
. . I. ,. figéil§ ' ’ t discount on any purchase of
A .« 1mm to ‘ \\t~ -.‘ ‘
Vile?" "I “I, At 1 ‘ti\\ " I - $500 and over
\‘ .t W!“ P“ . 3 , . _
x, / _ ' i'
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7 . . \ l‘rzinklorI Daliwlle
’YNAY lIWII YOU SIN? OVERSIAS CAM! BACK MARKED "NOT A? THIS ADDRESS—
IIYUIN YO SENDII”!

 4—1‘IIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. September 29. I972
k ' h '
M er keeps itc en gomg
Delta Tau Delta Presents
. BVJOHN ELLIS The manager estimates the The cafeterias receive no
8 X' 88 Kernel Staff Writer complex cafeterfia fifedlda‘l- money from the University.
H ow's this for a meal: 500 proximately 700 0:" breakfast. Their budget comes from the
100 {0" continenta r ea as , total board fees the student a
s.
TONIGHT! pounds 0f beef. 180 pounds Of 1200 to 1,300 for lunch and about p y
another meat, 250 quarts of corn 2‘300 for dinner
40 crates of . ' . Besides the re ular meals, the
Slade", Center Ballroom 8-12 Pd“. and green beans, ' h 600 “In relation to dinners, Mon- cafeterias tr t5 serve at 1
Ad . . $1 00 lettuce, topped on w” da 5 Tuesda s ahd Thursdays . y east
MISSIOII . gallons of milk? y , t be y . b' t d ., one“spec1al"mealamonth. The
seem 0 our 1 es a s, -
The everyday housewife Myer said g y speCial meal for September was
, doesn‘t have to prepare this ' steak, which Myer estimated
much food to feed her family, but [5st 2'30? studefnts consumed at
- . _ , e om ex caeeria.
MAJOR REFINERY GASOLINE MS-Martha An" M¥er'S“‘Y°“’ Often the estimate for how "
everyday houseWife. instead many students will be eating at a Student workers
All. Dlscouur She his ”1‘; task Of. feetding3 '13; certain time will be too high and The Complex cafeteria em-
. “fami y” 0 approx1ma e y ' the result will be left over food I - '
,. . . . . ,. _ . . , , . poys 60 full time workers and
(l\l,ll\l\(ll\)l 0“,, (-i '
, l I ” \ \l I l l “l “”113“ students daily at the Complex “We never mix the food and more than 200 students.
5H ()("l'ANlC RICGl‘LAR ...34.9 ¢ Commons cafeteria. . ' - “We couldn’t run without our
.. - ~ 1 b serve it as something else. If the
H, +i,("i~\\p pm“ 36 9 This really 15 an unusua JO . . . t d t k H 'd M'
ll .v e i . ..-.. . C d th b {00d IS orlglnally served as corn S U ell wor 91‘s, 53] yer.
when you conS‘ er e num ers - - l f - “We JUSl couldn‘t afford it any
we have to feed .. said Myer one night and some is e t over, it H
FARMER llNCOlN MERCURY ‘ ‘ will be sealed and re-heated the other way _ _
. EAST MAIN AT WOODLAND next meal as corn. not as a The student work force is paid
c I, mixture," she said. the same salary as a full-time
or 5 Board fees raised worker for a comparable job.
. The three managers of the The Foods Director met with
' MUSIC center University cafeterias meet the managers early 1“ the flea?
monthly with Allan Rieman. food and Initiated the plan of gwmg
BUY A GUITAR, service director, to plan a the students a pack 0f P135“?
. GET CASE FREE five-week menu to be used in all dishes With the purchase of their
L m ' the cafeterias. After the five mealbooks. Figures show over
i ~ «‘7 755 E M . St week period has ended, the menu $10.00l) worth of dishes and
’V‘? 1 ~‘ - am - is served over again with utensils were “borrowed" from
a “ , ‘ Phone 254 0324 corrections for seasonal food the (‘omplex cafeteria alone last
‘ s 1/ fl 3‘ changes. 5‘0“"-
/A\ A ' '
v '0- a I
“Ai- " Classmed
0 All popular sweet Wines—cold
. . ‘F r ___ willmakerespons:ble,ablebody 39 student, Male F | HI td, ‘ t i ,
0 large selection of hard to find 0 sa'e Married angle, M... W .n or p63?i211"?2.35.,"malésofi‘gi'lc‘clo'n'ai’iil
I966 Olds, “7’ lane, 31,250 1963 Chevy lm and .maintance‘ of farm machinery, at Versailles Rd 2805
o a . pala Convertable $200 25-16603, 299 0674 tractive proposvtion for part time em '
imported wmes.We Wlll stock any 25529 moment, mending .wmg Warm wine
,. —Lost-—
brand or type for ONE Customer ngglsmgggsgzkn'lggOgvrgggjgsgglm helm aid Lex ' '
Dunlop 8. Wilson tennis balls Rackets Male or Female-