xt7q833n0b6k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7q833n0b6k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-11-29 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, November 29, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 29, 1973 1973 1973-11-29 2020 true xt7q833n0b6k section xt7q833n0b6k The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 79
Thursday, November 29, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Campus adjusts to nation's energy shortage

By DAVID CARPER
Kernel Staff Writer
and
STEVE SWiFT
Editor-in-Chief

SIGNIFICANT adjustments are being
made on the campus regarding the energy
crisis, report Larry Forgy, vice president
for business affairs and UK treasurer and
James Wessels, director of the physical
plant.

“An organization the size of the
University of Kentucky can make a
significant contribution,” to conserving
fuel during the crisis, Forgy said. :‘We're
the second largest customer of the Ken-
tucky Utilities Company and the largest of
Columbia Gas in this area.”

Forgy said this is an opportunity for the
University to “offer leadership for the rest
of the community.” He added any elec-
tricity cutback the University can make
will aid the national reduction effort
because all electrical systems in the
country are directly linked to one another.

BOTH FORGY AND Wessells agreed if
present commitments are honored the

Coalseen
as long-range

energy source

By TERESA ZIMMERER
Kernel Staff Writer
WHILE THE oil reserve will supply our
nation for approximately 10 years at the
present rate of consumption, and the
uranium supply is adequate for 13 years,

the United States will have to depend“

more on coal, which can provide us with
energy for almost 500 years, said Birney
R. Fish, executive assistant for the energy
resource management, Department for
Natural Resources and Environmental
Protection.

Fish told a‘meeting of the UK chapter of
the American Association of Civil
Engineers that “underground mining is
more hazardous to human health than to
environmental health, but all underground
mines will settle somewhat anywhere
from 30 to 50 years after they have been
excavated.” Because of this settling, the
importance of strip mining cannot be
overlooked.

News In Brlet

lumen-mm
“them“

‘ Fire at Blanding lV

' Saxbe eligible

' index drops
' Recession near?

0 Today's weather...

University will be in no danger of running
out of fuel this winter.

“If the existing allocations of fuel, that
we expect, are made to us," Forgy said,
“and if we are allowed certain relaxations
of the air pollution regulations, this
University won't have to close.”

Forgy outlined three capabilities the
University uses to power the University.

-—THE PRIMARY capability is natural
gas. UK has recently received con-
firmation of its natural gas contract with
Columbia Gas Co.

—A secondary capability is fuel oil.
Forgy said UK has a reserve of 180,000

l
i.

 

 

 

Before 1966, rehabilitation laws in
Kentucky for stripped land were weak,
said Fish. As of 1972, there were 38,000
acres of unclaimed barren land caused by
strip mining. The Department for Natural
Resources now reclaims these “orphan
lands.”

MORE THAN 33,000 acres of orphan
lands have been rehabilitated in the past
few years. The restoration project has
shown that it is possible to improve the
land with engineering knowledge, he
explained.

“We had a real problem catching up on
all the rehabilitation," Fish said. “The

DA small electrical fire about 10:30 pm.
last night caused about 8500 damage to a
third floor room at Blending IV.

The dorm was evacuated for about one
hour after a hairdryer in room 322 caught
fire. Jim Wessels, physical plant director
said damage was limited to the closet
doors, vanity, hairdryer, carpet and
personal belongings of the residents.

The desk attendant said no fire ex-
tinguisher appropriate for electrical fires
could be found and the blaze was ex-
tinguished by the Metro Fire Department.
A fire emergency diagram on the first
floor indicated the building’s only ex-
tinguisher is in the basement, although
there are two fire hoses on each floor.

The basement extingu’nher is water, but
a carbon dioxide extinguisher is needed for
electrical fires.

gallons of fuel «'1 and a contract for 300,000
more gallons that will conceivably carry
the University through the winter.

—The final fueling capability the
University will use is coal. Stockpiled at
several locations on University property is
5,200 tons of coal.

FORGY SAID UK has been stockpiling
fuel for many years. Many reasons were
given for stockpiling, including the
possible closing of coal mines, a tran~
sportation strike and extremely bad
weather. _

Both men are impressed with the
cooperation already received from

 

entire citizenry of Kentucky let these lands
stay like that until the laws were en-
forced.” Miners must now reclaim their
own land after strip mining and must also
rehabilitate one acre of orphan land.
Kentucky produces 21 per cent of the
nation’s coal, and 60 per cent of this
amount is obtained by strip mining. “The
United States is counting very heavily on
coal to take up the slack for lack of oil from
the Middle East," Fish remarked. “One-
sixth of the country’s coal supply will be
cut out if strip mining is abolished in

Kentucky.”
Fish explained that, if we would have

0 WASHINGTON — The Senate Wed-
nesday passed, 75 to 16, a bill intended to
make Sen. William B. Saxbe, R—Ohio,
constitutionally eligible for appointment
as attorney general.

President Nixon has held up submission
of Saxbe’s nomination awaiting passage of
the legislation, which now goes to the
House.

0 WASHINGTON — A government
index that forecasts future economic
performance took its biggest drop in over
13 years in September, then increased
slightly the following month, the Com-
merce Department reported Wednesday.

But a government economist warned
against concluding that the September
decline of 1.8 per cent in the socalled
composite index of leading indicators
heralded a business recession.

members of the University community
concerning energy conservation.

“We've probably received greater
cooperation on this matter than any
similar matter since I’ve been at this in-
stitulion," Forgy said.

WESSELS SAID 18,575 lamps have
been turned out representing 873,000 watts.
“We‘re removing about one out of every
three lights in each corridor,” he said.

Maintenance personnel are also turning
off all aesthetic lighting on campus. This
includes floodlights shining on office

Continued on Page 15

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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invested 30 years and billions of dollars in
any research besides nuclear, the United
States would be prepared to meet an
energy crisis with more than one per cent
from that investment.

BY 1985, nuclear power will supply only
10 to 12 per cent of the nation's energy
supply, a quota far below what the Atomic
Energy Commission predicted in the early
1950’s.

Fish said engineers should take a
responsible look at coal mining, as
technologists are between the en-
vironmentalists and the non-
environmentalists.

0 WASHINGTON — A high-level
government assessment of the fuel
shortage’s economic impact concludes
that a recession can be avoided next year
with proper fuel-allocation policies.

Nixon administration economists see the
unemployment rate going up from its
present 4.5 per cent but falling short of the
6 per cent rate forecast widely by private
economists.

...old man winter

Old Man Winter has decided to stay
away from us a little while longer. The
outlook is clear and partly cloudy today,
with a warming trend continuing through
Thursday. Today's temperatures should
reach the mid 40s, and dip into the lower
30s tonight. Friday's highs will be in the
508.

 

 6—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. November 29. 1978

 

 
  
     
   
 

 

 
  
 
  
 
 
   
  

 

 
    
     
 
   
  
 
   
  

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EPISODE 117: AS We LEFT on: LAST TIME,
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 Forced to go first-class

No zips mean less for UK

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

Although an annual savings of $5,000 would be
realized, the University is forced to send out
four 20,000 mailings as first-class mail rather
than bulk-rate.

The first class mailing is necessitated by the
fact that many studentzip codes are missing and
the importance of the mailings would make bulk-
rate mailing impossible, said admissions and
registrar officials.

“We send grades and schedules two times a
year by first-class mail because we want them
returned and they are not accepted in bulk-rate
mail without proper zip codes,” said Dr. Larry
Craft, associate registrar.

SINCE BULK-RATE mail is divided by zip
code, staff would have to take the time to look up
zip codes for the some 40 per cent of the students
who fail to include the information in their
University admissions information, Craft said.

First-class mail is forwarded to the student
until he receives it, while bulk mail is returned to
the sender.

Due to the time element involved in schedules
and grades, the University finds it more feasible
tosend information first class,Gerald Greene,
assistant University post office manager, said.

CRAFT NOTED that only some 200 to 300
mailings are sent back because of incorrect
addresses each time, and added bulk mail is not

Every piece of first-class mail weighing up to 2
oz.-—this includes most three and four page
letters—cost eight cents while bulk rate is only
1.7 cents for the same size.

A total of 80,000 pieces of mail are sent out
annually at a total cost of $6,400 for first class.
The same literature could be sent bulk rate for a
total cost of $1,360. Bulk rate permits cost about
$30.

JEAN COX, student health service ad-
ministrator, confirmed that it is better to mail
important information first class while less
important material should be sent bulk rate.

Since the health service does a lot of mailing
annually, Cox said most notices and related
information are sent bulk rate.

Dave Stockham, assistant vice president for
student affairs, said mailings in the past were
sent first class, but now only important material
is sent that route.

“NOW ONLY MAIL that we want returned or
need to keep record of its final destination are
sent first class. Most other mail is sent bulk rate
when the volume is large enough,” said
Stockham.

When student organizations have large
volumes of mail to send to students, a computer
printout of all addresses is obtained. In many
cases, the student’s zip code is not listed, which
means the staff must look up all zips to send the
material bulk rate or just have it sent first class.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, November 29, 1973—1

 

 

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Sundays, 11:00 8. 7:30
Wednesdays, 6:30

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L. Reed Polk, Jr.
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Sunday School - 9:45 am.
Church Training ~ 6:15 p.m.

 

 

Time to renew

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returned.

Alternative heating methods
may bring home safety crisis

By DUDLEY LEHEW
Associated Press Write

That spare gallon can of
gasoline you’ve stored in an-
ticipation of an emergency is a
“liquid bomb" equal to 14 sticks
of dynamite.

Those charcoal briquettes can
keep you warm—but they also
can take your life. So can that
antique stove you’ve dusted off
and set up.

With the reported increases in
gasoline hoarding, and as people
try alternative energy and
heating methods, the possibility
of personal danger has soared,
experts say.

“WE .EXPECT a great in-
crease in fire deaths this winter
because of this,” said Richard
Peacock, director of public af-
fairs for the National Fire
Protection Association in Boston,
“There have been deaths
already.”

“We expect that more people
will die trying to keep warm than
ever before,” he said.

The most immediate potential
hazard concerns motorists who
have been reported flocking to
gasoline stations for spare cans
of gasoline since President Nixon
announced energy-saving steps.

“THE EXPLOSIVE POWER of
one gallon of gasoline is ap-
proximately that of 14 sticks of
dynamite,” said Phil Dykstra,
manager of the National Safety
Council’s home department in
Chicago.

Peacock agrees: “If you put it
in your car and someone hits you,
there‘s just one hell of an ex-
plosion. You‘re really carrying
around a liquid bomb."

“Any kind of an impact from a
car, even from a sharp tool in the
trunk, can puncture these
cans,“ he said. “Gasoline vapors

come out of gasoline cans, even
at cold temperatures. It’s not the
gasoline that explodes, it’s the
vapors.”

“ANY SMELL of gasoline in a
storage room or an automobile
trunk is good evidence that
there’s a vapor leak in the con-
tainer,” Peacock said.

“Never store it in a room with
hot water heating equipment.
You set off an explosion with
accumulated vapors.”

Many states forbid storage of
gasoline.

OFFICIALS ALSO are con-
cerned over potential dangers
involved in increased usage of
fireplaces and substitute
methods of heating.

Many people have been buying
wood and coal~burning stoves.
Some dealers have reported a run
on charcoal briquettes.

“Cast iron stoves are par-
ticularly dangerous,” Peacock
said. “They get hot and people
don’tknow how to adjust the flues
and gases collect in the flues and
they blow up. The way to enstall
one of those stoves is to get ad-
vice from an expert."

“VENTILATE THE HOUSE
enough to get a good supply of
fresh air if you’re going to use a
charcoal burner or a hibachi,” he
said. “It can cause death by
asphyxiation.”

He said his office had received
a report on the recent death of a
family ofsix, caused by improper
use of briquettes. “They had a
brazier in their living room. They
never woke up."

“Briquettes in themselves are
not dangerous, no more
dangerous than burning wood or
coal, or any other type fuel, if you
have proper ventilation and
proper equipment to burn them
in," said Dykstra.

"ONE OF THE things we are
worried about is that people will
begin to use inadequate heating
equipment.”

But fireplace chimneys also
can be unsafe, according to
Eugene F. O’Connell of Stam-
ford, Conn., who builds, repairs
and cleans them. ”If a chimney is
used five or six times a week, it
should be cleaned once a year.

"WE RECOMMEND that those
who have fireplaces either have
their chimneys, before they
really start to use it for the winter
season, professionally checked or
at the very least check it out
themselves,” he said.

 

ANNUAL
ADVEN T SERVICE

The Episcopal Student Center
and The Catholic Newman Center

are co-sponsoring a service of

readings. music and a homily.

Time:

Place:

The public is invited-no charge

Sunday, December 2
7:30 p.m. _.

Newman Center
320 Rose Lane

 

 

 

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Competition is stiff

Students study hygiene

By CHARLES WOLFE
Kernel Staff Writer

In the sterile, brightly-lit room
on the College of Dentistry’s fifth
floor, eight girls peered from
cubicles resembling miniature
dental offices.

Within each cubicle, a second
girl reclined in a dentist‘s chair
while her partner cleaned and
examined her teeth.

THE 16 girls, all juniors in the
College of Allied Health
Professions, are students in the
school‘s Dental Hygiene
Program and, by the spring
semester. will be performing the
service for students and the
general public.

Once free of charge, a $3 fee is
now assessed each patient to
cover equipment operating ex-
penses, according to Mrs. Karen
Cramer. registered dental
hygienist and clinical instructor.

In addition to these juniors,
Cramer said, the program has 16
seniors. 11 students from two-
year programs and three women
working toward a master of
education degree.

EACH STUDENT in the
program was selected after two
years of classroom work, and
Cramer admits the competition is
pretty stiff.

“Due to space limitations,” she
said, “16 students are selected
from an average of about 60
qualified applicants." She said
the lack of space was the only
reason for the other applicants
being turned away, but added
that, for out-of-state students,
chances for acceptance are much
slimmer than for a Kentucky
resident.

“We take about one '(non-
resident) per year.” she said,
“and these girls have grades
between about a 3.6 and a 4.0
average.”

FOR THOSE who make it, the
instruction is impressive. During
their two years in the program
they are taught to perform
services such as fluoride treat-
ments for cavity protection,
make impressions for .study
models and construction of
medical and dental histories.

 

Patsy Clark (left) cleans teeth of Audrey Sherskey. under
supervision of Mrs. Karen Cramer. (Kernel staff photo by
Chuck Combes.)

In addition, students perform
head and neck soft tissue
examinations for detection of
oral cancer and abnormalities in
lymph nodes. They also learn the
technique of radiographs for
detection of tumors and
pathology in bones and sinuses.

Taking to their dental chairs,
they also learn placement,
carving and polishing of fillings
as well as the removal of
troublesome overhanging
fillings.

HOWEVER. CRAMER con-
tends the most important facet of
instruction is teaching the
students how to educate the
public on the importance and
methods of mouth care. The
students counsel patients in the
clinic and venture into the
community, speaking to grade
school children and promoting
dental hygiene.

Two girls who did make it are
seniors Cathi Dixon of Hazard
and Beverly Chaney of Pikeville.
Neither began her training at
UK—Dixon came from Hazard
Community College and Chaney
by way of Morehead State—and
each had a different motivation

for applying.

”When I was in high school my
first two year, I was at a loss
about what I wanted to do,"
Dixon said. Then she met a
hygienist in Lexington and was
impressed by the possibility of
such a career. “I think it was the
hygienist here in Lexington that
prompted me to apply," she said.

FOR CHANEY. the decision
came in a more roundabout way.
Having changed her major four
times at Morehead, she said she
was clearly undecided about her
future “and then one day I broke
a filling."

Her roommate had a relative
who was a dentist and urged her
to make an appointment. “I used
to be terrified of dentists," she
said. After the visit, the dentist
talked to her about dental
hygiene and she became in-
terested. They discussed the
courses she had taken and he
encduraged her to apply for UK’s
program.

Both girls ran the gauntlet of
the program‘s prerequisites
which include psychology,
sociology, chemistry,
microbiology and nutrition.

NEITHER REGRETS her
decision now, and each is headed
for a bachelor of health sciences
degree in the spring.

Latin America situation is
'disaster area, not powderkeg'

By LES WILLIAMS
Kernel Staff Writer

“A disaster area, not a
powderkeg,” is how Professor
Kalman H. Silvert viewed the
Latin American situation last
Tuesday night in a program
sponsored by the Patterson
School of Diplomacy and In-
ternational Commerce.

Silvert explained that he used
the word“disaster" in a general
sense because much of the daily
life in Latin America is relatively
normal.

COMMENTING 0N
events, Silvert said that it is

impossible not to talk of Chile in
any political discussion of Latin
America today. He indicated that
there is a general “nervousness”

recent

in all Latin American countries
due to the Chilean coup.

Te said that in Peru last month,
a number of political dissidents
were rounded up, interrogated
and exiled by the government. It
was explained later that, in light
of the Chilean situation, the
Peruvian government felt it was
no time for people on the right or
left to start sniping at the
government.

Silvert went on to say that
rumors link Brazil, the tightest
military dictatorship in Latin
America, to the recent coup in
Chile. He said this might be in
keeping with a referral to Brazil
by President Nixon as the police
force of South America.

FOCUSING 0N Chile, he said it

was “a miracle Allende survived
for three years.”

Silvert pointed out a number of
things which led to the final
decay of the Allende regime,
including bad administration in
the Chilean civil service,
disloyalty in the opposition party
and the economic policy. He said
a major factor was the attempt to
develop a socialist regime with a
democratic structure, which is
very difficult.

Chile, for the time being, is the
only true dictatorship in Latin
America‘said Silvert. Chile now
is organized on German patterns
used in World War II, including
concentration camps. This, he
said, frightens many Latin
Americans.

 

   

Periodicals move to

new library wing

By DEBBIE BLACK
Kernel Staff Wiriter

The King Library’s periodical reading room will soon be
relocated.

Now located just beyond the circulation desk, the room will
soon be transferred to the ground floor of the library’s new
wmg.

BEFORE THE move takes place, all bindery, acquisitions,
cataloging and special collections, plus the director's suite
and the mail room, must be transferred to the new building.
This building is to be finished in approximately three weeks.

Only after its completion and the transferrence of the
aforementioned articles can the reading room be tran-
sformed into a room called the Newspaper, Periodical and
Microtext Department. This department should be com-
pleted by the spring and Mrs. M. A. Sullivan will be in
charge.

Periodicals are presently received in the Acquisitions
Department where they are checked in and sent to Central
Serials Record. Next they are sent to the Circulation room.

“FROM THERE," said Jean Graef, circulation librarian,
”we put some in the periodical room and some in the stacks. ”

Those periodicals placed in stacks contain information not
classified in a special collection. They are placed in the
general library with a call number.

The new system will be somewhat different. Periodicals
from Central Serials Record will be sorted and sent directly
to the Newspaper, Periodical and Microtext Department
instead of the Circulation Room.

STUDENTS WHO have recently visited the periodical
room may have seen such obscure magazines as Schism and
Ie nouvel Observateur with issues dating back to July. Others
include Texas Outlook, Progressive Grocers, Textile Bulletin
and Square Dancing.

In the near future the periodical room will not contain
magazines of these types The selection will be much more
limited, inscluding approximately 200 assorted well-known
magazines. Instead of collecting many current periodicals in

one area, there will be a core of popular to general interest
periodicals. These will include magazines such as Time, Ms..

 

Redbook and McCall’s.

Until some parts of the library are renovated and the
location of the periodical room is changed, the bound copies
of general interest periodicals will remain in the stacks.

Buzhardt testifies no ,
new erasures in tapes

By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — A White
House lawyer said Wednesday
technicians told him there are
other conversationless spots on
subpoenaed White House
Watergate tapes, but the spots
represented no new erasures in
the tapes.

Lawyer J. Fred Buzhardt told
a federal court that the spots
were discovered by technicians
using an oscilloscope while
making copies of the tapes for the

court.
It was Buzhardt who last week

disclosed to US. District Judge
John J. Sirica that an 18-minute
gap existed on a crucial
Watergate tape.

HE TESTIFIED Wednesday
after Rose Mary Woods, Nixon’s
personal secretary for 23 years,
completed three days on the
stand without shedding further
light on how the 18 minutes of
conversation vanished from the
tape.

BUZHARDT WAS asked if he
knew of any new “erasure,
mutilation, alteration,
obliteration, gap, missing con-
versation or any deletion" on any
of the tapes.

“No. I do not," he replied.

“There are times that the tape
is running but there is no iden-
tifiable sound," Buzhardt said.
Tape-recording machines could
be kept running by the rumbling

of a nearby truck or a ticking
clock and the instruments on the
machine would show no voice, he
said.

ON THE question of the
prosecutor ’s subpoena, Buzhardt
said he had not believed it
covered the Haldeman-Nixon
conversation until Nov. 14 when
he read again the prosecutor’s
memorandum filed with the court
in mid-August.

The memorandum listed each
of the meetings for which tapes
were subpoenaed and described
what he hoped to find out.

But it listed a different com-
pleting time for the June 20
conversation than the subpoena
had, Buzhardt noted. The sub~
poena described the meeting as
ending at noon while the
memorandum said it was over at
12:45 p.m.

HALDEMAN left Nixon’s office
at 12:45. Earlier, Nixon met with
domestic affairs adviser John D.
Ehrlichman and the subpoena
sought that conversation.

Buzhardt was on the stand
when Wednesday‘s court session
recessed a nd he was due to testify
again Thursday. That will be the
12th day of a hearing to air cir-
cumstances surrounding two
Watergate tapes the White House
says are nonexistent and the 18-
minute gap in the third tape.

  

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Need a New Life?

into a world of paradox and pain, of confusion and contradictions,
came a man who claimed to be God. We are told that he performed
miraculous, uncanny events; decried the hypocrisy of the religious
establishment; had compassion for the neglected of a corrupt social
structure; and suggested a revolutionary value system.

Eventually he was killed, as a criminal. But it was then that the most
revolutionary things of all took place. He conquered the final enemy,
death. And he is still a live today. And he is changing the lives of hundreds
of students here at U.K. by giving them a dimension of meaning and love
and peace with God which they never dreamed possi ble.

You are invited to come to STUDENT ACTION tomorrow evening at
8:00 P.M., Room 363 Student Center to find out how Christ can give you a
new life.

 

 

  

  
    
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
   
 
 
   
 
  
  
   
 
   
    
   
   
 
    
   
   
  
    
   
   
 
 
 
 
  
   

  

The Kentucky Kernel

113 Journalism Bulldog. Universiw olKanhicky. Lexingtu. Ky. 4606
Established 1.4

Mike Clark. Managing Editor
Bill Straub. Sports Editor
Carol Crtpper. Arts Editor

Kay Coyte. Nancy Daly and
Bruce Winges. Copy Editors

Steve Swift. Editor-in-Chief

Jenny Starts. News Editm'

Bruce Singleton. Photo Manager
Charles Wolfe. Practicum Manager
John Ellis. Advertising Manager

The Kentucky Kernel ls mailed ave times weekly durtu the school year except
on holidays alli exam periods. and twice weekly in the summer.

Published by the Kernel Press Inc. 1m Priscilla Lane. Insisgton. IQ. Begun as
the Cadet in 1.4 and published continuously as The Kentucky Israel line 1915.
The Kernel Press Inc. founded 1711. First class postau paid at Lexinnu. Ky.
Advertising published herein is intandd to help tb reader buy. Any fake tr
misleading advertising should be reputed to the edltrrs.

‘ Editoriah represent the (pinion of the edittrs. not the University.

 

Party de‘lays action

The Fayette County Democratic Party has proven itself
determined to prevent the election of a new Central
Executive Committee. Reluctance to hold long-overdue
precinct elections indicates an attempt on their part to stifle
grassroots participation in the party.

In December 1972, elections were held throughout Ken-
tucky to choose party leadership from precinct and state
legislative caucuses. Former State Party Chairman J .R.
Miller postponed Lexington’s elections until Fayette County
precinct lines could be redrawn. Redistricting was com-
pleted six months ago, but precinct elections have not yet
been held.

The Assembly fo