xt7qjq0sv05g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qjq0sv05g/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-02-19 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, February 19, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 19, 1975 1975 1975-02-19 2020 true xt7qjq0sv05g section xt7qjq0sv05g Vol. LXVI No. 113
Wednesday. February 1.9. 19/3

Yearbook may change

KENTUCKY

81‘

on independent student newspaper

to magazine format

Ity ItItlt'E WISHES
Assistant Managing Editor

The possibility of changing the Ken-
tuckian. the [K yearbook. into a quarterly
magazine is being explored as a solution to
the yearbook's and staff
problems,

The Board of
which is directly
Kentuckian. recently approved
ploration of proposaLs to change
yearbooks format to a magazine

economic

Publications.
the
ex

the

Student
responsible for

THE KEN'I'l't'KI\\. yyhich has been
published annually since 1394. mm faces
problems \Hlll spiraling printing costs
and a lack of staff to produce a quality
yearbook

“Since January. 197%. the [)l‘lllllllLl cost
for all publications has gone up almost an
per cent." \ancy student
publications ady'is'or “\M- did not forsee

said (it'et‘ll.
that the economic situation of the country
y\ as goini.V to be as bad in ltOTTias it is "

'l'he Kentuckian is on a 1973 price con
tract \yitli printers til't't'ti e\plained This
contract expires \\llll the printing of the
ltlTsl :3 )t‘dl‘lulik “till ‘1
comes the possibility of it t.) per cent in

neyy contract

trease ltl pi iiitini: costs
”Hi In] \I.

tllckianytas $l7‘tltlff \
\lollltl burst the cost ol the yearbook to

(fist of the NH hen-

"; percent increase

s‘JL-tooo. accordion to t‘a'eeii
'l‘lie Kentuckian
itually from tliet niyersity

i'eceiyes sllooo .tt‘
.\ny difference
between liiiyersity subsidy and pl'llltlllL’
l-e ad

yerstising. (ilt‘t'ti said

costs must made in sales and

ft is difficult for students and advisors to
pay' fora publication at the beginning of a
semester they WIII not receive until one
year later. she said

Sth'E 'I'IIE _\I)\'EIt'I‘ISIl\'(i does not
pl‘thtIt‘ much m come the sales price must
be raised. Green said "We‘re turning
away sales by increased costs."

"Yearbooks dying across the
country because of financial problems,"
said Beth Ann Jewell. Kentuckian t'dltt)!‘
in chief "Higher printing costs are
causing a llljlllt‘t‘ sales price "

.leyyell said the Kentuckian is having

are

problems in keeping an adequate staff
because a yearbook offers no practical
yournalisiii experience

".\|\( I:
practical

'I'III",
Job

\'I-.\Itlt .ll\
e\perieiice.
students are ykllllllL'. to work on it "

offers no

yery feyt
(ireeii
said ‘Wliat happens is you em a siiiall
eroiipof dedicated students putting out the
yearbook
«in .t campus of some ll has to be a
larL'c yo tit’lvlmk and this \years the staff
“lit, tit‘et'ti salll
'l'lie keiituikian afford to

its \tl tiers and pliotim’tk‘ipl‘mrs~ .leyyell

also cannot
lbi‘.

sa‘tl used to yyork oii 'l.e yeat

lamb foi

pay Vllt‘ t‘tlllltt'\

l’t-opli

tree she said lttft iioyy ~.\ I‘ t all

"I llll\l\ l-Xl’lzltlI-\t'lf is a
reyyanl than iiist money

better
btit money is a
factoi ' .leyyell saltl

t oiitinued on page It;

Costs doubled in the last 5 years
University construction planned deSpite inflation

tEditor's note: This article is the second
in a series concerning inflation and its
effects on the l'niyersitya

Ity “XI/Halt IIIXS()\

Kernel Staff “riter
Despite inflated labor and material
costs. $203 million in planned campus
said

he completed.

l'niy'ersity

construction \\lll
f’lifton Marshall.
design and construction
'l'here five major
protects hem): planned or underway 'l‘hey

director of
are construction

are

a 332’. million building for further

tobacco and health research to be located
on (‘ooper Drive.

a $6 million facility for I,(*.‘(ln;.{lt)n
iifl‘li. a ("K

'l‘eclinical Institute com

munity college

a $2 million structure for study of
Biology of the Aging.

a $2 million fine arts lflllltlllltl to be
constructed at the former site of Mcliean
Stadium at ltose and Euclid. and

a $7 _’ lIllllltlil (‘ollege of Nursing and
Health N'iences Learning ('enter yyhich
yyill be built across from the l'K Medical
('etitel'

“til It l’l. \\\l'.l) projects are essential
and yyill have the go ahead regardless of
increasing costs." Marshall said Average

oyerall construction costs liay'e risen 18
per cent in the last year and lime almost
doubled in the last the years. Marshall
said

"We planned on a one per cent inflation
rate the past two or three years but it rose
to about one and one half per cent in lttTt."
Marshall said

He cited fabricated structural steel as an
example of l‘lslllfl costs The material noyy
t'tts‘ts betyyeen $Too and Sttoo per ton
compared to about Shoo last year "I can
remember \yhen It yyas around S 20o a

ton.” Marshall said

lltm li\ ER. material prices “appear to
be leyeling off because of the slowdown in
building actiy'ity Marshall said Design
and construction officials pay close at
teiition to market trends. he said

“l“ast track” construction has helped
reduce the cost of building The method
inyolyes beginning construction on less
complicated areas of a building before
total littlltllllLi plans are completed

This method saves time yyhich "saves
money in inflatioiif' Marshall
said liscayahon. foundation L'lass. doors.
\yindoyts and are among the
uiicoiiiplic.‘ited items yyliich can be yyorked
on first

times of

eley ators

Swing into spring

I” \S'l‘ 'I It \( K
construction of

building used in
tlie l.’l‘l building and
\\a.sliington Street ltesearch Facility .\'o
Marshall But the "biggest
“as at Jefferson t‘oniiiiunity
marrow was
l.ouisy'ille

by the

\R US

'l'liree. said
success"

sayed in
Vocational

fast track

yy here
the
Institute

t‘olleylt‘
ltll‘lltl in i:
'l‘echnical
method

61 (iriiy'ersity‘ of Kentucky

i. .
ll.»
l

Lexington. Ky. 40506

~‘

Kernel staff photo by (‘hurk (ombes

Leslie Reynolds. fit. the “arm

\\t‘.lll|t'l‘ at “oodland Park during recess

enjoys

from the Bluegrass Baptist School,

Hf the major construction projects. only
l.’l‘l is underyyay The facility yyill house

faculty
for technical programs
l.'l‘l classes are held in
.‘t\'dll.‘tl)l(‘ classrooms all over campus

tlassrooms. offices and
laboratories

( urrently.

continued on page Hi

Moynahan denies motion
to quash subpoenas

I‘.y \.\T\'(‘\‘ l)\l.\'

\ssociate Editor
is Federal ltistrict Judge
Moynahan denied a

Bernard
motion to quash sub
poenas Tuesday for fiye past and present
t'K students under iiiy'estigation by the
Federal l’nireau of liiyestigation FM!
and a federal grand iui‘y

ltobei‘t bedler. t‘K layy professor and
attorney for the subpoenaed \yitnesses.
argued duringa hearing on his motion that
the basis for the motion to quash the
subpoenas is an abuse of the grand jury
system

.s‘filillfilt ltl'IQl l-ZS'I’l-ZI) an eyideiitiary'
hearing to produce ey idence that the I’ltl
is attempting to coerce those persons to

periui'e theiiisely'es

Sedler '.tl(I the involved had
been approached previously by the FBI as
part of an myestigati'on He said they
refused to talk to the FBI. as provided by
Ian. and ywre then threatened yyith sub
poenas to testify before a grand jury

Sedler said the purpose of the subpoenas
yyas ' manifestly improper” in that they
\H'lt‘ not userl to obtain ey'idencc but iii
stead to harass indiy'iduals \ylio \yoii t talk
to the I’lll

persons

Al9'l‘lilt .s‘l-lliH-lft argued that the
subpoenas should be quashed. the federal
distritt iudge denied his motion

(otitintietl on page 7

 

 Editor in(hiet Linda Carnes

Features editor Larry Mead

Managzrtq editor Ron Mitchell f" """l Gaga u:Welich

Associate editor Nancy Da|v 5pmis editor.

Jim Manoni

Fditorial page editor Dan (FU'y'ICt Photography with)! Ed Gerald

Editorials H‘Dleseni the OpIHIOIi\ ot the t-ddor

editorials

 

Equal Rights Amendment long time coming

The struggle for ratification of the
Equal Rights Amendment tERAt is
still underway and hopefully the tour
states needed to make the amend-
ment become law will do so before the

have been a setback for supporters of
the ERA. The Georgia General
Assembly rejected the amendment
Monday and the t'tah House of
Representatives is expected to vote

 

end of the year.

Howey er the actions of two state

against ratification today.

legislatures in the last couple of days is such strong opposition

Dorm residenis' grades
should nof be released

The minor controversy over
should receive copies of dormitory (‘omniittee's recommendation.
residents grades sometimes seems should not be too long before

who t'ouncil passed the Student

blown out of proportion. Maybe that‘s l'niversity Senate votes on it

just because it is taking so long to
settle the issue. so it keeps cropping

up every month or two.

Rack in ttctober. the I'niversity
Senate Student Affairs (‘ominittee
voted in favor of releasing grades to
('orridoi‘Advisors (‘Ast only with a grade—point standing without

student's, pennission. In the past. (‘As from the l‘iiiversity.

were given copies of grades for
students on their floor. Some students
complained after grades were posted

on several dorm floors

On Monday the I'niversity Senate sideration.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

Truckers, like railroads, want government regulation

By \l( "()1 AS \(l\ lltlF F .\l \.\

SAN DIEM) — The California
Trucking Association had their
annual meeting here a few days
ago. These aren‘t the drivers.
They‘re the owners and trucking
executives. the sort of men we
associate with bedrock. free-
enterprise faith. the kind who‘re
fun to twit when you can catch
them running to the government
for favors

l twitted them the other night
as they listened with audible but
reasonable polite disapproval to
the idea that the Interstate
(‘ommerce Commission be abol»
ished and that they be liberated
to graze on the green grass of the
free marketism “You‘re com—
pletely impractical Your kind is
gonna put us out of business.” one
gentleman said after the speech.
“We can't compete unless we're
regulated "

HE MAY BE deregulated
whether he likes it or not.
(‘hopping the ('ommission‘s
pricesfixmg powers is endorsed
by a leftvright coalition that
includes Ronald Reagan. Fred
Harris and almost everybody in
between l‘lvci‘y'one‘s for dcrcgu
lation. apparently. but the rcgu
latecs, who‘re dismissed as e\
parte gluttons

History. however. is or the
gluttons' side The standard text
book explanation of the origins of
government rate fixing is that tllt'
farmers and other shippers. oiit
raged at the price-gouging. moii
opohstic railroads. demanded
protection and the (‘ommission
was born Subsequently. as the

story is usually told the rail of totaltrackage we‘crcfoie lttst d lllt I iilioios '::co
roads and the truckeis captured including that of

It seems hard to believe that there

The aigumeiit for releasing grades
to t‘As is tenuous Supposedly t' \s are
better able to advise students if they
ai‘e'given the grades lliit their ady ice
must first be sought and the seeker
can quite easily divulge liisor her ow ii

Admittedly . most students probably
don't caie one way or the other it ('As
see their grades But the few who do
care should be given i’irst

amendment since it only calls for an
end to sex discrimination The l‘IRA
states that "equality of rights under
the law shall not be denied or
abridged by the timed States or by
any state on account of sex "

Opposition to the amendment iii
l'tah has come mainly from members
of the (‘hurch of Jesus ('hrist of
Latter-day Saints tMornioiii. who
fear it would lead to a breakdown iii
families.

The ERA is not intended to interfere
with moral ethics but rather is geared
toward the legal aspects of society in
hopes of granting equal rights for men
and women The amendment is by no
means radical and has even recciy ed
support by Betty l‘ltit'tl Hopefully. the
first Lady 's' lobbying of legislators in
states faced w " i i';i’itic.-.tioi.
decisions and her y t‘l'lttll support \t. ill
persuadi- some coiiscryatiycs to \ otc
fot the l ll.\

In order to become law ‘lic l‘.l.’\
llill\l be ratified by 3.“. of the w stairs
before March 1070 ’l hirty lttllt' shitcs
liaye approved it although two of
them have voted to rescind llit‘1!'
i'atiticatioiis

There is a question w hetlicr states
can rescind their ratification so the

matter may have to be decided in the
courts ll the tit states approve the
.iiiicndiiiciit

’l'hc ISRA w as passed iii Kentucky in
1072 iii a special legislative session
There was an attempt to rescind that
ratification iii the lttTl (icncral
\sscmbly but thankfully the proposal
received no support from the l‘Ilcc
tioiis .iiid constitution Amendments
committee

The stru lglc for the tilt \ beg'in iii
10 t ' \\llt n it w isoi igiii illy iiitiodutcd
in tongrcss It took ltt years for
congress to pass the proposed
.iinciidincnt and three years have
elapsed slllt‘t‘ \‘iiti's bcgan to t';tltl_\
tlic liii\ lt .it‘itt'.\l1t'l‘illlt'Jlllt'lltllllt'lll

tyitrttcd by ttic ::1 states it is c\

. , , ~. - ‘ l ‘
ltt‘t'lt’il ‘t- firxt‘ l A“ ll-“l' .\“”\1H|l“l‘|

i

“Mi V..1ll:t‘t,‘lll:t‘li' ;'ocs tiitoctfcct
gr.‘ unis will to' Ylt't'tlt‘tl tut”
~‘..'i' '. tl!.1ll.1t'.tl‘.\l.t"~‘-"lltll\Ktlllltl
itl'll‘y‘ Jill v"'lll\

l' f.1' :1ft‘i‘l- 'tt‘t'l' ;' lylull“ \lllllil
‘f l ll \ u first 1iiti‘odtict'd ‘o
tog-york -.'2<‘. ‘Ii..i‘. 'o‘ si“.t't'.il !!.ttl't'

.p. 1’ 'l‘it' litii: ll‘t‘tll'tl *sldlt‘s tllt not
l.ft"t'li‘t‘ :.iti:'. 'lit‘.iltit'lttlillt‘l2l How
2:. i'1‘. !I.'ilt‘ It‘d!“ tin-t women wait

.it.', 'llt'l‘t‘ ?\ ti ii:\\ iii t‘Htl \t‘\

l l ‘:;‘l.' \,t.i' t . H l’H'wititit"‘il‘.t""ttttl s
such famous back tlg’tlllh' do big \ltlltlttl\ ;-. .i .wigraimi :tgioi: would
Tole-id'i .igicv if aft up m.ii kc’ sliaics

the Commission and used it to liiiesastlieBaltimore&Hhio thc usingtacticsm-wouldn'

screw the public with yet higher I'nion Pacific.

charges. The truth is a mite more Topeka & Santa Fe

Sometimes this brought won-
The railroads begged for regu. derf‘ully low prices to the consuni discriminatory ircigi.’

lation from day one "I have for iiig public.

complicated.

and the Atchisoii. today l’irs‘ lltt'y ti'ictl to

their losses by oyc'tliai'gzitg :ettl'. grwtl or fiii.ii:ci.ii iiccd

:‘ccoiip .f'.ilil.£',:t t.:.:torii; r.i'cs liiy.ii'

small slitl'ltt't‘s :liioiigl. the ow ot xyoiitil dryc ‘hc roads to tiiik ttl‘.

r.i'cs t'.ltl'i otln-i bu st-cri-tly i'csiinimti

it was always 'l‘liat didiit woik lit-caiisc 'f..- 't‘li.tlt'\ futon ttmv (tillllt‘ll
. l

several years believed that the highly profitable levels against (‘Utlipt'llltttt‘iy\.is too i'til’ht'ttd? to s hack tin-original tltittt‘llls

national government. through demands
the Interstate (‘ommerce (foni- General

corporation like to use a favorite .idiccttyc

which can do tinii-s

mission. ought to be in a position what even Standard Oil couldn‘t

to fix railroad rates." said do then. and that is put their own
Alexander Cassatt. the president trucks on the road to force every
of the Pennsy in 1906. "Let the body‘s rates down

government regulate us." cried

this early and unlikely advocate l'NLIiSS FIRMS like GM are directoratcs and othcr
broken up by antitrust action of which are noy' illegal not t-yci; it by stagcs with some protection

of price control.

competition was another
tempted solution llowcycr

ot ‘fw bch.n-l ’hc lcgisliitioii that civ-
.i‘cil 't t'oitiiiiission was thc

tiopc 'h.i' 'lic government could

Merging l'ttlllltittls 'o oiliiiiiii.i?n- prop up flicsc tccble cartels and

at rimkc then: work
cyci: l'biis dcicgiiliitioii may not do

with watering stock interlocking wha‘ wc hope llut it it is to

tricks saiccccd, i' will have to be phased

the sort we've never had. they incn like J l‘ Morgan had thc given smaller companies against

IN THAT PERIOD the rail will have to be kept out of the
road industry looked something trucking

business even under to make a dittcrcncc

like the contemporary trucking deregulation. Their kind of con—

industry. With more than 1.500 centrated purchasing power will
separate railroads. many of always decimate a decentralized,
which ran parallel to each other. unprotected industry, cartcl or lllt' "pool” as

the industry was characterized
by desperate. toe-to-toe competi-
tion. “When all lines are taken
into account. it is the diffusion
rather than the concentration of
the American railroad system
that is of greatest significance to
the political behavior of the
mayor railroads." writes the
economic historian Gabriel Kolko
’lll "Railroads and Regulation:

3771010 ' Norton Library par
pcrback. 1070:

(Mr present day trucking in
dustry is likewise deconcentrated
with thousands of independent
firms. large and small. The
consequences for the railroads of
such fragmentation in the late
l‘tth and early 20th centuries
\\t*l‘t' i'lnsc to devastating Rank
riiptcy was endemic In the 1800s
alone. ltboo miles or 1.3 per cent

 

resouiccs to buy up enough roads the itioiiopolistic giants vamping

on them

\\(l'l‘l|l-IR Illi\lt l-i that was \icliolas \oii Hoffman is a
li‘lt‘tllllllt‘illttlllillt'iltlélllt wasthc columnist for King Features

it was \\ “1“! ate.

'OK, THAT'S FAR ENOUGH—THAT’S FAR ENOUGH~THAT'S FAR ENOUGH~THAT’S FAR

~.__.._.

  

Opinions from msde and outside the university community

comment

 

Swlpture b, Nick Home

On redbai'fi'ng, Jim Crow
and the racist offensive

By MARK MANNING

I would like the chance to reply to the letter by
Shewmaker and the column by Langsdon in
Friday‘s Kernel:

Slit-w maker makes the point that busing
money should instead be spent on Improving the
facilities of Boston schools But quality
education is not at all the issue. The recent
conference which launched the National
(‘oalitioii Against Racism iNSCABi adopted a
resolution demanding drastically improved
facilities in all Boston schools The real issue in
Boston is the right of blacks to go to any school
they wish in safety

 

ll. \\ l.\'(. ”Illl'S confused things. Shewmaker
proc er (Is to iedbait the Young Socialist Alliance
’lhe l SAM he says didn‘t really support the
conference. No. he says. they really wanted to
comert people to socialism What about other
groups behind the conference? Should white
supporters of the conference quake in fear lest
the Black Student Union arrange for them to
wake up one morning with black skin? Red-
baiting is more than just ludicrous. It is in
essence the use of fear to paper over the flim-
siness of an argument.

This is reprehensible. but the real shocker was
Langsdon‘s piece. Liberal race relations (Cosby
and (‘ulp rooming together on “I Spy") is in
v ogue among starryeyed idealists searching for
the Holy Grail. he smirks. He then soberly
iiifonns us that racial mixing is inherently
unequal. The history of the US. provides a
wealth of experience of the results of a non-
integration policy

This experience is called Jim (‘row, a system
which (lid not a nd could never in any way protect
the rights and equality of blacks. Irangsdon
quotes a court dicision on (‘harlotte N.(.
liolsterliiscase But in the real world busing has
worked so well in (‘harlotte that the Boston
school board banned a group of ('harlotte
students from addressing Boston high school
assemblies on the grounds that no pro-
integi‘ation propaganda should be allowed in the

schools

I.,\N(;Sl)0N ADMITS that most Americans
support school integration. But he says most
oppose busing. (me would think that if you want
integration. you need to use something to get the
kids to school. be it buses, catapults, or roller

skates. Anti-busing sentiment is largely the
doing of demagogues who make the bus into a
rallying point. Buses were never a threat when
they hauled kids with freckles to all-white
schools.

At one point. Langsdon says that the neigh—
borhood schools issue isn't mask for racism. This
he explains by saying, “If one accepts the
premise that black schools are inherently in-
ferior and that busing will equalize opportunity
for blacks, it is understandable that whites feel
threatened,“ Anti-busing whites in Boston aren‘t
upset by the tragic fact that segregated black
schools are inferior. What really threatens them
is the conviction that blacks themselves are
inherently inferior. and will lower the quality of
formerly all-white schools. The only way
liangdon's sentence makes any sense is if he sees
no different between the two ideas.

Langsdon would certainly have us believe that
blacks are inherently criminal. A 2(Hine
paragraph details the crime rate in all-black
Boxbury. while a six—line paragraph is all we
hear of the all-white mob violence against black
schoolchildren, the central issue in Boston. And,
by the way, Mr. Langsdon, the rocks thrown at
the buses don ‘t have little tags saying, “We want
neighborhood schools.“

 

SIMILAR MOVEMENTS are building in
Pasadena. Louisville, and Detroit, where events
in Boston are carefully watched and imitated. In
the last two years, police shootings of innocent
blacks have increased dramatically in Port
Arthur. Atlanta. New York and many other
cities. The most prominent foes of integration,
the Klan and the Nazi Party. have grown
enomiously in the last two years in size and
influence Both have sent teams of organizers
into Boston. Mr. Langsdon. there is a very real
racist offensive in America. not just in the
fantasy world of the members of NSCAR.

“Yes. I'm from l'K. and I went to Boston to
help lay the foundation for a long-term fight to
eradicate the filth of racism. Anyone who takes
even one step towards this goal has shown that a
human being is something more than an animal.
See you in Boston May 17, on the 21st an-
iiiversary of the first school desegregation or-
der'."

 

Mark Manning is chairman of the UK branch
of the National (‘oalition Against Racism.

      

 

TIII‘I KI‘INTI'CKY KERNEL. Wednesday. February l9. I975r—3

 

 

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 t—Tlll’. KI‘IN'I‘l't'KY KENNEL. \\'ediiesda_\. Februar) 19. I975 0
news briefs

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FA n A
f! V‘ ‘M u. M. rAnrnMAu.

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muonsvuiumwcixulos. meuu (minus

HELD OVER'
Held over! Illnt‘s 1‘45 3 ‘5 ItInk\ _ w

WALT DISNEY

Supreme Court rules f
Nixon exceeded authority

\\ \hlll\t;'l‘t)\ i\l‘\ ltulini: lot the ltl'\l time on the

ON "I! MALL
unuoossuso none s um Adm

Now \I‘YWH'IQ

PAUL .i . t-i l-‘l v.1'r.- .

. . mt- 511mm“ lint.i ilk at: l llt sdm that

STEVE NEWMAN Alan James ltlipiiutttllilt Ill l>~lii. I ‘ ’ . .\
A inc an former I'ruxlilt'm Illt‘ltill‘tl .\I \I\t‘Il i'\\‘i'i‘tli'tl IIIN .tllllliii'il} In

rk ‘:a t'lll

inwmALuu-s \iithholdinu pullllllUH WWW" “l“‘l‘ 1m
~ The tlt't‘it~l(tll \xiix one ot \I\ handed. din”! l‘_\ Ill" hHill court \\llll

uni

WE Bea I onlx seien ol |l\ tiit'lltlli'i's on thi- lu‘lltll '1
Justice William H Dongle \\ rote wliiari lll.\.\t‘lll,\ in three ol the

T'" #36 t‘;i.\(‘,\. despite lll.\ alm-nce due to .i \ll'tlkt' I‘muizlax has been doini; Illll
E court \tork in a hospital room .
“MES ‘00 J 00 B‘"q“”‘ Mame“ Justici‘ 'l‘huruood Marshall, lioxpitali/cd \Hill peiiiiiiionia. \\';t\ "l
I 15 m 10 (”mm H only the author ot tun ot the opinions The tIt't‘lNlltllN. uritten helore he ';‘
hecaine ill, \\ere read tor hini l’.‘ ('lnet .lll.\llt't‘ \\.irren 1'? Burger ltItl

 

Mississippi governor “1:
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DON’T BGTCH fl" UP)
( ._ _ V . _ I \t' \Slll\t'.'l‘tt\ ‘.\l' \ iellou Southern umernor questioned pri
h. ’2‘ .§ 3 Tilt-ML!) whether theme (‘ “JIIJW‘ l‘ I'I‘FW'i‘ll.‘ "”Wl’l“ “I "‘1 I
- ' alloul lttTti pl't‘Mtlt‘llllztl hid and \tlltl the parti.ill_\ paral_\'/eil i‘l

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support m he hax had in the pet

BOSCH @ "l peixonall} teel right non that h:\ ixiniliilac) l\ reinotef MIMI
Hm \\illi.iin I. \\.iller l)\1i\\ H.- iltlllt‘ll that ltl.\ \lt‘\\ \\.i\ .-

  

_ _ — — — - — — — _ {mm-d .ii; Ill,\ [terminal peziep'ioi. of \\.lllitt «‘ when he \\;l\ the onlx
Buy 3 BOOCII .9.“ plugs, get the 4th one me. umernor .if llh third teiri. unnatural 1.:x' izwiztl; K
Coupon 900d thm 5/31/15. In rim-y:~ ih.- \I|\\l\\1}l}ll tLHH'Y l‘wl' iIl\t ll\\t‘tl piililielx \\li.it lllilll} v
'op Ih‘lilm'l‘alti' pnlstntii'x- Liv \Hl.\l’I|'ll"l pi:\.itel\ uhelher ,
I I “Alla” “will! lie vainlil: H' ':. 4» '.; ”I," Ilv HAN! HA Illt'\lllt'llli.ll “
tlzil IN“ I\ lt'liirtli' llf. llldlll " ".i‘ ‘-' iilxi H’ 'liv' I" f i\\.i\*~‘ti.itiur
l'l‘ll'l‘. lliit' ll‘l‘ l_‘~ t“'.'-' .- ‘ “kl“ \‘ 1" F
I I Ilii'\i‘_.' lti{"iv._":"i ,- ii 1".i‘. rile: 'll‘tI ",i‘
liliit‘? ",_ 'H' \\.‘. iii \ '._" ;"'* W" i ' Z r.‘inf._' tn! in:
I’ \t f \ ' t it tail ‘-
I I . . 1 c». ~ i x i i i. "
Italy liberalizes abortion law
I located at 411 East Vine (several thousand miles I “m” w l, a! W} . W, “, W “W“ w, <
H,\,HH\ U “to x ; .
from HOIIWOOd and Vine) (FOWTIV B|ueliorse) \d‘ny: lilit'i [tie-«Iii: ‘...“ iiH ".Ivh .v.‘iil it; ’l|t~ I\'«rl:i.:7
h - - _ _ — - — — _ - d (lulu-lit i'ivlir‘m 1! ltl'ig'nfi‘. ':.:«,i’i-: MW»: ~he.il't:
I'lzt' \ii“i.:" H‘m’i'il 1 ii lit-vii'li ,1 *«i 'I‘: ill’H‘ ttili!’:.‘
‘ll‘V‘I Ir? iiiiir‘ ii: 1W "\‘W "i “I 1. '. "*1 xi' ", u- r. r..1ii‘i W? "‘
MAKE " E Rs F Ht‘it‘ ill lit lililf H
ASIER FOR You El 'I'he It;l!l.,; tv: "w :w-rx' ‘ii'wrg‘ mm?‘ toxin. ,im,‘ «it Ilio‘ t \
Nipremet oti!’ vaim- ..i?!.‘|l .i :: l' ixe i «1".Ililltllt ti}. lt'llillll\l\ and H
WIN THE BOOK. iiiox' poli'ii .tl p.ir':r~ fw: ,: ti ti wt l' 11'. l u-i :0 I'l.i .itmifm',
. Ian
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\peciinaih it "t'tiiil ‘ Ili‘t tillt"l tan Ill‘dllli'itilldl \l'li lo- ittmt tl.~
Il.ilt.ill penal .mlo- I‘lir Ian. l».ii:epottt ltjtv-ai' t'\t‘\lt‘l‘.i'i‘ oi \p'mllelnp Ill'\t‘.ilt'l| Illt' .i'
l.e\1nuton

In .i letter relinixml I'm-«lat he notitied [maid chairman (leoruc
titans Jr the \tate no longer will proiide tinancial support

In an .‘lt‘t‘tllllp;llt_\'lllt1 ~tatenient the umernor MINI such aid \«Ill

 

 
  

 

 

   
 
 
 
    

1 day after we receive your order, and we
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for any reason, you may return Lhc-book
within 20 days after you receive it, and
we will give you a full refund.

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day free trial offer.

Name ................................. I
Address ................................ I
City ........ . . . . . i ............. . |
State ................................... '

 

 

 

buy Any ‘atse or misleading advei‘tiuna sh I i
In "’N -1'1itnr'i V “I d h‘ rpmfi‘d

Kurw-l TI li-phnm“

Editor Edltoual editm 237 2755

Mmmqmq editor Newt. (teak 257 mm
LAdw-rtisinq. Bus-newt Circulation 758mm

,E ,7», M.,,,, '

 

500118, Art; iv moo

 

finding SOIUIIOI'IS ‘0 prObIem" stop both as a financial underwriting and a guaranteed le\el oi "
. . research work
Lacsligg‘eezeovfgvgfi:'e:;?nb:em tha. Mlghl be (‘arrollasked Evans toliqmdate the facilitiesof the organi/ation.
- which started operations in 1961 on a tritiacre tract with high littpi'x
. Every problem WOW“ 0‘" In step-by-step detail. offeing basic and applied research for industry and business
\er the years Spindletop was partly. then mainly Stil).\'l(lllt'tl in
. PfObIOflIS ate arranged In om, 0' comp'exny’ some form by the state and its research eventually was confined to
trom elementary to advanced. ”‘9 50““ sc'enmv “
“In fact the state became such a principal client of Spindletop ‘ ‘
0 An eggenflfl supplement ‘0 any c|333 text that Ihf‘ original Concept of a private independent research 'r_
organization operating under a corporate structure has heen
0 Over 1.000 P0905- fatally compromised." (‘arroll said
He added the state does not need an outside research group on :I
o Fufly Indgyed '0' |mflng .mlflc problems ('titllllllIInL! standln hams, especially it it has to conlrihute funds to .
rapidly. keep the organization alive .1
---------------------, l4
33235:ng gEDUCNATIgN gssgwgg; ; Gamma uiair'aa.';da.;"rsgim
a man ve.o ew or , .Y. .‘ ' ' ’ ' ,' '
20-DAY FREE TRIAL OFFER Phone: (212) 490_3222 : :fi'géfigqgfilgmlvam x'finmfigi’:
If the bookstore is out of stock, you Please mail a (‘opv of "THE CALCULUSI posempiidatl_m:iqtfm,Kentucky.40511“_M
can obtam the book quickly by completing PROBLEM SOLVE-3R. .. Enclosed is $12. 95" milzlggfgvlg'mm Pf('ss,ln( Inuidedint‘nt Bequnas tt i
the coupon and returning‘it to us With pay- If not satisfied. I can return the book for I Km“ (Him 16"?“ WNW“ Continuouslv as the Kentucky
ment of $12. 95. We mail the book within . ‘ _ . . »———~~~ «__M_._,v_ _W M ‘ .
a full refund in arcordance With your 20- Ami-mama; plihllxlwdll‘ielli Istntevxiiltoti-lpthi- ”on: V i ' ‘l i I

 

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SG accepts nominations
for teaching award

It) l)\|.|‘: Iilil NI
Kt'l'llt‘l Stall \\ l'ttt‘l‘

,\lllllt‘ltl (tint-i'iIIIII-III iSII- |\
t'lll'lt'ltil) .lt‘t't'pllllL{ IiiiIIIIIIatiIiIIs
tor ll.\ set-rind .IiiIIIial "l)|\llll
LtiiishI-il 'l‘I-ai‘liiiii; .\\\:tl'tl "

’l'lii- I)I‘lilt'\\ttl'\ are indeed on
”It“ lltl\l\ III I'lassI‘IiiiIII III‘I'IHI'
lll.lllt‘t'. iiIII-i‘est lll students. Iiias
Ii-I') til sI-\I-I'al tllllt‘l't‘lll Ita'ii‘hirii.I
lI'I'lIltltIll(‘\. kIIU\\lt‘(lL’,t‘ tit ('Ilt‘t't‘tti
(lt'\l'llt])ltlt'ltl.\ IrI lllt‘ llt‘ltl aiirt
.iliilII_\ as an at'atlI'IIIit‘ athistii'.
\Qlltl .\I‘l\ and Sciences SI-Iiattii'
\l.iI‘\ IIIIIII

“'l'lll‘i I’l RI'USI‘. iit tllt‘ auaI‘Il
ls ll) \ll‘l'\\ good teat-hing." Dull)
\lltl “I’I-I‘haps II III” llt'lp the
[)l'tll(*\\tll'\ uI-I lt'lllll't‘ "

lllllt} said the IIltIlIltt’I' iit times
.i Iii'iilessiii“s Itiltllt’ Is siihiiiittiirl

has no ltt'ill‘ttltl (III the \t'lt‘t'llttll
l)l'l)(‘('\\

"II |.\ not him lllttll} IiIIIIis :I
Iii‘Iitixsiii‘K name Is inIiIiiiIIIIil.”
\ltt' \illtl ".\ttI~I‘ \H' L‘J'l a name.
we do tlii‘oiiuli several steps to
\t‘lt‘t'l .i \HIIIH'I' There Is no
lialliitiiig process III\Iil\'i-(l "

\ ('ti\l\l|'l"l‘lili Iit Silltlt‘ltl
senators and others llI\'tIl\t‘tl III
St; \\lll tlt't'ltlt' \iliri Lit'ls Iltt'
.'I\\.ll'(l “\I'hat \H‘llttIH‘ltldttlS sit
III (in Masses. ll“ Iii the teacher
i-\alIIaIiIiiI twins and iIIII~I‘\'ii~\\
IlII- I‘aiitliilaII-s.” lltlll} said.

No tlt'llttlll' IlaII- has ltt‘t‘n set It)
aiiiiiiiiiit'v lltt‘ \iIIIIIeiy l)ltl l)IilI_\
("\lllltlllt‘tl lltt' M'lt't‘tlttll pi'iit-t-ss
\iill I't'ttllll‘t‘ about a month

'l‘lii-I'I-tiii't' lllt‘ \Hlttlt’l' \‘Illl Iii‘iili
alili lH' (Illltttllllt‘l‘tl around the
t'lltl iil Mart-h “WI- plan In (to a
thorough iiili.” Dull} said

The pi‘ritI-ssrii' St‘lt't‘lt‘tl liii‘ the
award “I” lit‘ pI'I-sI-IIII-(l ‘.\'lllt a
plaque .‘ttltl a (‘t'l'tlltt‘itl('. l)iill_\'
\itlt