xt7qrf5kdf09 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qrf5kdf09/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-06-14 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, June 14, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 14, 1974 1974 1974-06-14 2020 true xt7qrf5kdf09 section xt7qrf5kdf09 The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXVI No. 1
Friday. June 14. 1974

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Ky. 40506

 

Appointment approved
by Bo'ard of Trustees

By KAY COYTE
Editor-in-(‘hief

AN ADMINISTRATIVE vacancy was
filled Tuesday when the Board of Trustees
executive committee approved the ap-
pointment of Bernard L. “Bernie" Von-
derheide as University Information
Services director.

The former Louisville Times columnist
will succeed Tom Duncan on July 1.
Duncan resigned in December, 1973. to
become president of the Kentucky Coal
Association.

VONDERHEIDE. 42, began work with
The Courier-Journal and Times in 1964 in
the public service and promotion depart-
ment. He was named department director
in 1971 and began his own Times column in
January. 1973.

Before his work with the Louisville
newspapers. Vonderheide worked as a
reporter for the New Albany. Indiana.
Tribune and as editors of the weekly St.
Matthews’ Sun. Rural Kentuckian
Magazine and Kentucky Farmer
Magazine.

The Louisville native has an A .8. degree
in journalism from Indiana University. He
nears completion on work for a master's
degree in business administration.

OTHER administrative positions ap-
proved by the executive committee in-
clude the appointments of William Y.
Adams as chairman of the Department of
Antrhopology and Robert H. Spedding as
head of the Department of Pedodontics.
Their appointments will become effective
July 1.

They will replace Lathel F. Duffield and
John R. Mink. respectively.

David Mucci. 1974—75 Student Govern-
ment (SG) president. was sworn in as the
Board's newest member during Tuesday's
meeting by John Darsie. University legal
counsel. Previous SG representatives
were not admitted to the Board until the
end of the summer term.

IN OTHER Board action. the executive
committee approved the establishment of
the College of Education's Center for

(‘ontinued on page 12

$5 million Fine Arts Building

Clap 'n

Tag ?

No. ('aptain Tag Veal has not boughta new helicopter. The Good Year Blimp was late
in arriving in Lexington for last weekend’s air show. but it did appear Wednesday
over I'K. (Kernel staff photo by Phil (lroshongJ

Planning for five new UK buildings begins

the
Lexington Technical Institute‘s new $6
million building. to be located on the south
side of Cooper Drive. adjacent to Com-
monwealth Stadium.

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

Progress is being made toward actual
construction of five new buildings and
expansion of two cooling plants on cam-
pus, including the $5 million fine arts
building.

Architectural contracts were awarded
recently by the state for the projects‘
preliminary planning. all of which were
approved and funded by the 1974 state
legislature, according to Joe Burch,
assistant t0 the vice president for business
affairs.

MOST OF THE construction would take
at least two years to complete. Burch said
and noted architectural plans are only
the first phase of any construction project.
The second phase consists of design of the
structure, with actual construction
following soon after.

The University is currently seeking
advice from several firms concerning the
bidding for demolition of Stoll Field, at the
corner of Rose Street and Euclid Avenue.
where the fine arts facility will be located.

Stoll Field demolition is an unusual
project, making the bidding specifications
more difficult and technical. Burch said.
He added the wrecking firm awarded the
contract would probably begin before Aug.
I.

THE FINE ARTS BUILDING will be
used primarily for the music and art
departments' teaching and display and
will contain a 2,000 and 400-seat
auditoriums. music rehearsal and practice
rooms and an art gallery.

Dramatic arts, brass and percussion
instruments and art production will
remain in the old fine arts building, next
door to the planned structure.

(‘ontracts were also awarded for
planning of two medical-related buildings.
which will be located in the proposed
Medical Center triangle. at the junction of
Rose and Limestone streets. The former
Jefferson Davis Elementary School and
Henry Clay High School‘s abandoned
football field currently occupy the

property.

THE UNIVERSITY purchased the
school from the Fayette County Board of
Education several weeks ago at a cost of
over $500,000.

Other medical-related buildings will be
constructed on the five-acre site later. but
the biology of the aging research center
and the health sciences learning center

will be the first facilities to be build. Burch
said.

The geriatrics research center will cost
$2 million. half of that was donated by
John Y. Brown Sr. with a matching sum
from the state.

THI-Z 85.3 million health sciences learn
ing center will house medicine, dentistry
and allied health classrooms and lecture
rooms.

Johnson~Romanowitz and Associates. 3
Lexington firm. was granted the contracts
for the fine arts buildings. the aging
research building and the health sciences
center. James Rossand Associates. also of
Lexington will assist in the planning of the
health center.

(‘onstruction on the Thomas IIunt Morgan Biology Building is nearing completion.
Most of the construction on the other new l'K buildings —— which are still in the
planning stage — will take at least two years to complete. (Kernel staff photo by

(‘huck (‘ombesJ

Also in the planning stage is

HEALTH. ENGINEERING. business
and science technology program
classrooms. seminar rooms. laboratories
and an electronic library will be housed
there.

A $140000 greenhouse. the ninth of 12
planned for l'K. is being planned by the
Mason & Hanger Co. of Lexington. The
gretnhouse will be used by the ent
omology. agionomyu and plant pathology
departments and will permit expanded
studies of fruit. vegetables. forage and
tobacco.

UK‘s two cooling plants will have to be
expanded extensively to provide air
conditioning for the new buildings. A 82.3
million expansion is planned for plant no.
1. ltcated on University Drive. while 3
3700.000 addition will be made to plant no.
2. on t'pper Street.

.IOIINSON-Itt).\I.-\NO\\‘ITZ was granted
the cooling plant construction contracts.
The firm also designed the Patterson
Office Tower. Whitehall Classroom
building. Anerson Hall (engineering) and
the (‘ommerce building.

All of the contracts were awarded by the
state department of finance and admini—
stration. No estimates on planning costs
could be provided by state officials. but
they explained fees would be based on the
state standard fee schedule for such
services.

l'nder that arrangement the amount will
be determined by the cost of the con-
struction contract.

 

  
  

Honor and ethics

Henry Kissinger recently threatened to resign if
charges concerning his involvement in ad-
ministration wiretapping aren’t cleared. One so im-
mersed in the political scene should be able to
distinguish between accusation and observation.

Kissinger has never denied the wiretapping. What
is questioned is the extent of his involvement.
Whether he initiated or merely approved wiretapping
to stop information leaks concerning national
security needs to be answered.

If this impinges upon Kissinger‘s self-styled
“honor“, one would have to assume he means the
kind of honor associated with the Nixon admini-
stration. We recal peace with honor that included
secret bombing in Cambodia. Now we have the
world’s peace maker who allows the wiretapping of
his own aides.

One former Kissinger aide, Morton Halperin, is
suing him. Halperin’s home phone was tapped for 21
months under the guise of national security. The
catch is that Halperin was Kissinger‘s aide for only
the first four months of the surveillance. The
following 17 months, Halperin worked outside the
government circle. He wants a full public hearing to
find out why this was deemed necessary for national
security.

Wireta ppin g has been considered acceptable within
the government for too long a period. Working for the
government shouldn’t include the individual’s loss of
his right to privacy.

That Kissinger considers himself above reproach,
insisting the Senate Foreign Relations Committee re-
open hearings on the wiretap issue and clear him,

51w \tnu r’ \ \
WEE

Viewpoints

EASY RIDER

Editorials/Letters

 

Urges campus rape protection

Recognizing the fact that rape
and attacks against women have
taken a sharp upsurge in cities
and on campuses across our
country, the women of the
University of Kansas at
Lawrence have launched an all-
out campaign called
“Whistlestop” based on several
similar projects which have
resulted in a 20 per cent drop in
attacks on women after the
program was initiated. Women

sold on campus and at various
stores. Lighting and police foot
patrol have been increased.

But most important is the wells
lighted information booth at the
center of the campus, From 6:30
to 11:30 pm. students can wait
for a bus or call a taxi. obtain
directions or report any in-
cidents The phone provides im-
mediate communication with the
Traffic and Security office.

There has been a positive

where a “Whistlestop” program
was credited with a 275-person
decline in the number of “on the
street‘ crimes during a six-month
period.

Let's make the [7K campus the
safest in the country.

PS. I am 73 and in Graduate
School as a Donovan Scholar. l
carry a big hatpin and whistle. l
was accosted by a teen-ager at
high noon in (iratz Park on

  
 
 
 
 
 
  
    
   
  
   
 
 
  
  
  
  
    
  
   
    
    

 
 
    
   
  
    
  
   
    
  
  
  
   
   
 
   
  
   
 
   
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
   
  
  

   
 

   

reeks of an elitist attitude prominent throughout the
Nixon administration. Public officals seem to have a

way of forgetting who they are obliged to serve.

wear whistles

Nicholas Von Hoffman

Discrimination and the Golden Arches

WASHINGTON — At age 75 and with a
pacemaker in his chest. Supreme Court
Justice William 0. Douglas may have the
courage ofone who is ready to check out on
short notice. For while eight of his
colleagues went mute by declaring the cae
moot, Douglas laid out a full opinion about
the first “discrimination in reverse" suit
to goall the way up to the Supremes.

This was the famous De Funis case in
which a white plaintiff was refused ad-
mission to the University of Washington
Law School although his college grade
point average and Law School Admission
Test scores were higher than some of the
minority group people accepted. The Law
School freely conceded it had one standard
of admission for whites and another for
minority group members.

WHILE THE rest of the Supremes were
wrangling over why they should duck the
case, Douglas wrote a wise and clever
decision which doesn't stand a chance of
eventual acceptance. Nevertheless, since
he is the last of the great liberal judges, it
is worth studying what the man has to say.

He rejects picking one person over
another on racial grounds. He will not buy
the idea that this generation of whites
must make restitution for the deeds of
whites now in the graveyard, “The equal
protection clause (of the (‘onstitutioni
commands the elimination of racial
barriers. not their creation. in order to
satisfy our theory as to how society ought
to be organized," he writes. thereby
suggesting that many affirmative action

 

plans in school and on the job are going to
be offed by the courts.

On the other hand, he doesn't see what‘s
wrong with having two standards of ad-
mission, one for whites and one for blacks.
Indeed, that. he concludes. is how a school
can pick students “in a racially neutral
way."

THERE‘S NOTHING cockeyed about
that. ifyou acceptthe judge's premise that
selecting applicants on the basis of grade
point averages and test scores is culturally
slanted against many blacksand members
of other minority groups. A lot of whites
don‘t. They have been brought up with the
noition there is only one right answer to
every question, and only those who can
spit it out, when asked, should be per-
mitted to move their counter up a space on
life‘s Monotony board.

Careful interviewing of applicants,
trying to see who has gone farther under
the greatest handicaps or who might make
the larger contribution upon becoming a
lawyer, that is how thejudge would like to
see people picked. The old Supreme is
right. The only thing that those who score
high on aptitutde tests demonstrate is an
aptitutde for scoring high on tests as, in
much the same way. consistently high
grades are suggestive of overly amibitous
mediocrity.

White or black. our custom isn‘t tojudge
people but to process applications. A
country that calls its hamburger joints
Golden Arches is unshakeably married to
the proposition that merit is discernible

to be used to
summon help and to remind them
to be alert always. Whistles are

there was in

through civil service examinialion.
Douglas would have every applicant be
considered as an individual. an im‘
possibility among a people who feed their
stomachs billions of precooked. mass
produced Big Macs.

SINCE THE whites will continue to
make their own lives miserable by judging
and rewarding each other on the basis of
their proficiencyat multiple choice, blacks
and others must decide whether they will
take a two-standard system if judges
like Douglas prevail. Not that we haven‘t
always had one, but in the past the double
standard has meant that blacks and
women, or whoever, had to be twice as
good as the whites to get in and get ahead.

To the whites, however, the new double
standard will mean that a black only has to
be half as good, and those who take ad-
vantage of it may have to suffer the stigma
of being considered second-raters. You‘re

 
     
    

Memorial Day.

response in Lawrence much as
the Hyde-Park-
Kenwood Community of Chicago

Mrs. l'lrna Sorg
Donovan Scholar

already beginning to hear expressions like
"quota bums,"

It‘s unfair. but one of our most dearly
held social myths is that America is a
meritocracy. For all our incantations
about tests, grades and rewarding ability.
the best predictor of how much money a
kid will make is still how much money his
old man makes. High-income parents
begat high~income children. Either the
game is fixed or some people are born with
dollar signs in their genes.

So. Mr. Justice Douglas is right to scoff
at claims of unbiased racial neutrality.
But few will listen, because in America
every man gets what he deserves; the
proof being all those black major league
baseball managers and star pro football
quarterbacks.

 

Nicholas Von Hoffman Is a columnht with
Kings Features Syndicate.

 
 

Kentucky
Kernel

 
   
   
    

Published by the Kernel Press Inc.. Begun
as the Cadet in 1894 and published cont
inuously as the Kentucky Kernel since I915.
The Kernel Press, Inc, tounded in 1971.

 

 

  
     
   

  

 
 

Editorvin-chiei, Kay Coyte
Managing editor, Nancy Daly
Editorial editor, Larry Mead
Photo editor. Phil Groshong

     
          
   
 
  

  

 

  

Editorials represent the opinions oi the editors, not the University.

Arts editor, Clark Terreli
Sports editor, Jim Mauoni
Copy editor, Bruce Winges
Copy editor, Clare Dewar

  

  

  

Comment

 

Retrospective: Money will not buy peace

By Ill'HI‘IRT II. Ill‘MPIIREY

WASHINGTON — The signing of the
Paris peace agreemnt in January, 1973.
marked the official termination of direct
American combat involvement in Viet-
nam. Since then, the United States
Government has committed ap-
proximately $2.3 billion in economic and
military assistance to Vietnam.

It is clear that the Nixon Administration
has failed to develop any rational plan for
economic disengagement from Vietnam.
In the absence of such a plan. the Congress
is faced in fiscal 1975, which begins July I.
with Administration requests for military
assistance to South Vietnam totaling $1.6
billion and economic assistance of nearly
$750 million.

THE HUL'SE has cut the military-
spending ceiling back to $1.126 billion -—
the same level as that for the current fiscal
and the Senate Armed Services

year
('ommittee has recommended $900
million

These spending requests both distort our
aid priorities in other places around the
globe and go beyond our proper obligation
to assist in the rebuilding of a war
shattered Indochina

The question to be faced by the Admini-
stration and the Congress is whether our
economic and military aid helps South
Vietnam come to grips with its political.
economic and military problems

'I‘IIENIHNEYmaybuysonietime.Butit
“I” not buy peace. Nor will it solve
Vietnam‘s raging inflation, balance-of-
payments problems and other grievous
economic ills In fact. our billions will not
assure South Vietnam military victory in
its struggle with the Vietcong and the
North Vietnamese in the absence of a
political settlement

Members of (‘oiigress are asked to vote
for these large sums without being told
when this large-scale spending will be
phased down or terminated. There seems
to be no plan for long-time economic
recovery anti rehabilitation. But I. and
many other members ‘ Congress, will
find it difficult to support the Admini—
stration‘s economic-aid proposal for
Indochina in fiscal 1975 until a specific
plan is developed for economic
rehabilitation and development a plan

Student views

that gives us a timetable for ending our
economic assistance and some idea of the
total cost.

The fact is that American aid dollars
flowing to Vietnam, though officially
committed to “postwar reconstruction,"
do little in directly rebulding and
rehabilitating that country.

(IF THE more than $300 million provided
to Vietnam this fiscal year in the category
of Indochina postwar reconstruction, over
$200 million went to a commercial import
program that provided Saigon with
commodities to keep the economy afloat.
At least a third . ifnot more * of the local
currency generated by this import
program went for military purposes
rather than development.

Although a healthy Vietnamese
economy is surely a key ingredient of
postwar recovery and political stability,
the American people should realize that
the vast majority of their aid is going for
general economic support — the purchase
of supplies and commodities * and is not
directly alleviating human suffering or
rebuilding industiries, homes, schools.
hospitals or improving agriculture.

In a similar fashion. $250 million in
American food aid to South Vietnam in
fiscal 1974. under the terms of our Food for
Peace program, was resold by the
Government to its people and the local
currency generated was used for military
purposes. This type of transaction shows
that American aid priorities in Vietnam
are overwhelmingly military.

IN 1973. 42 per cent of the entire Viet-
namese military budget was provided
through local currencies generated by
sales under the Food for Peace law and the
American commodity-import program.
Statistics for fiscal year 1974 show that
nearly 4:3 per cent of our total Food for
Peace program goes to Indochina. It is not
sound policy to have nearly half of our
much—diminished food-aid supply com-
mitted solely to this one region while other
areas of the world are experiencing
widespread famine.

In a similar fashion, our foreign-
economic—assistance program to Africa.
Asia and Latin America is being cut an-
nually while assistance to Vietnam grows.

College poll results

More than 80 per cent of college editors
agree in varying degrees that President
Nixon should be impeached based on what
has been made public about the Watergate
scandal. However. only 59 per cent said it
would be better for the country if the
President resigns if impeachment is forth‘
coming. These are among the findings of a
poll conducted by Newsweek. Inc. and the
Associated (‘ollegiate Press. Some 148
college and junior college editors from all
parts of the United States responded to the
survey during April and May of 1974.
Under Newsweek supervision. the findings
were tabulated by Beta Research Cor-

poration.
Eighty per cent of the editors agree the
press has been fair in reporting

Watergate. And they say that the main
reason Watergate hasn‘t induced campus
demonstrations like the Vietnam War
protests, is that apathy has replaced acti-
vism on campus A second strong factor
was that students doubt demonstrations
would have any effect on the situation in
Washington.

The three areas of concentration in the
survey were: political terrorism. sexuality
—- specifically bisexuality and
homosexuality — and court reform. Other
questions covered a wide range of topics
including gun control. tenure for
university professors. Watergate and
inflation. Here are some of the highlights:

In varying degrees. 85 per cent of the
editors agree political terrorism (kidnap-
pings. bombings is not an effective means
of social change and the same number say
that yeilding to terrorists' demands will
only encourage further acts of terrorism.
A like percentage agree that political
terrorism in the United States will in-
crease in the coming years.

Bisexuality and homosexuality are here
to stay. said a vast majority of the editors.
Threequarters of them said
homosexuality Wlll become acceptable in
tomorrow‘s society and 60 per cent said
bisexuality is not a passing ”fad" but will
remain an important part of tomorrow's
society. Almost 00 per cent say
homosexual students are more likely

()ur foreign aid dollars would be much
better used to increase food production
and help eradicate abysmal poverty and
disease in the poorest countries. This is
what the Congress and the country want.

I know that the American people would
support humanitarian assistance to the
people of Indochina who have suffered
through years of war. We have a moral
obligation to help. But the peacetime
reconstruction of Vietnam and Cambodia
is a world apart from the general
economic support we now provide to
governments locked in unending political
and military struggles with insurgent
forces.

1 A.“ NOT unmindful of the guerrilla
warfare and open attacks of the Vietcong
and the North Vietnames. We assured
South Vietnam in the agreements that lost

weapons would be replaced on a one-to-one
basis. But these agreements also com-
mitted all parties to a political settlement.
This part of the agreement seems to be
getting too little attention.

I am not proposing that we abandon
these nations. But I am proposing that our
Government give Congress and the people
a plan of action ~ a program with
priorities defined, goals to be attained and
a timetable for accomplishment. Until the
United States develops a rational plan for
economic disengagement from Indochina,
much of our aid will only delay the
inevitable political settlements that must
be negotiated if true economic develop-
ment is to occur.

 

Hubert H. Humphrey is junior
Democratic Senator from Minnesota.

 

 

 

 

 

 

A7"

. . bi,“
Val'l'llll l
. “ i].

s

 

 

today to admit publicly their
homosexuality. Seventy~five per cent of
the editors disagree that homosexuality
and bisexuality are the result of per—
missiveness in society.

A slim majority (58 per centt agree the
IRS. courts have not leaned to strongly in
favor of the legal rights of criminals and
potential crimials while making it more
difficult for law-abiding citizens to win
their cases. About tiltpercent of the college
editors said Americans are losing faith in
the judicial system which in turn encour-
ages disregard for laws. Ninety—one per
cent agree judges found guilty of accepting
graft or in any way defrauding the public
should be disbarred for life, _

Ninety per cent of the editors agree in
differing degrees that academicians like
William Shockley twho says he believes

blacks are inferior! should be allowed to
present their views at college-sponsored
events.

Tenure Is not the best way to insure
professors have full academic freedom to
teach what they believe. said 60 per cent of
the editors.

(her so per cent said records of gun own-
ers should be kept as thoroughly as auto
licenses. and 40 per cent feel that no person
should be permitted to own a hand gun
unless heis a law enforcement officer or in
the armed forces.

Regulation of gun ownership is not a
\ iolation of the Constitution said about 80
per cent of the editors,

 

(‘oiirtesy of Newsweek Magazine and
Associated (‘ollegiate Press. Minneapolis.

Minnesota.

   
  
  
  
   
    
      
     
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
 
   
    
 
  
   
 
 
  
   
   
  
  
 
  
 
 
  
   
  
 
  
 
  
  
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
   
   
     
   
      

  

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for closin

By RON MITCHELL

Kernel Staff Writer
Another landmark campus-
area restaurant, Kampus

Korner, has been forced to close
because of the building‘s condi-
tion and age and will be razed
sometime this summer.

Located at the corner of
Columbia Avenue and Rose
Street, the Korner has been an
institution for years to students
who have suffered from insom-
nia. stayed up late studying or
just wanted to play a little
pinball.

TllI-I RESTAURANT stayed
open 20 hours a day for many
years. but was forced to cut back
operation hours last year, be
cause of a severe labor shortage.

Although the lease on the
building does not expire until
Aug. 1, Tom Simpson. proprietor,
said he closed the business after
spring semester, rather than
operate at a loss during the
summer months, which has been
the case in the past.

“I requested a year-tovyear
extension on the lease from the
vice president for business af-

Former medical student denied damages

Former UK medical student
William H. Depperman Jr. of
New York has failed in his
attempt to recover $150,000 in
punitive and compensatory dam-
ages in a suit against four UK
faculty members after a year of
litigation.

A ITS, District (‘ourt jury
announced Monday. following a
weeklong trial, that Depperman
was not entitled to recovery in his
suit challenging the medical
school's right to suspend him for
reasons of “bad attitude"

NAMED AS defendants in the
case were Dr. Peter

  

  

The Kentucky Kernel

Bill Metcalf 258-4646
Room 210 Journalism Bldg.

fairs (Larry Forgyl but I was
notified that it could not be done
because of the condition of the
building," he said. “I had already
made plans to go into another
business venture so I just decided
to go ahead and terminate the
lease,"

SIMPSON EXPLAINED that
the University had been very
cooperative in allowing him to
continue business when UK
bought the property several
years ago. He said he was not
very optimistic that his request
for an extension would be
granted.

”I feel it (the restaurant) was a
service to students, but I admit it
was an eyesore and had to go to
make way for progress,"
Simpson said.

Joe Burch, assistant to the vice
president for business affairs,
said it would not be economically
feasible for the University to
renovate the structure or expand
the adjacent parking lot. He said
the building will be demolished
this summer and the lot will be
landscaped.

Bosomworth, vice president for
the UK medical center; Dr.
William S. Jordan, dean of the
medical school; Dr. Roger O.
Lambson, medical school assis-
tant dean for student affairs and
Dr. David B. Clark. professor of
neurology.

Depperman transferred to UK
from the Bern Faculty of
Medicine, Switzerland, in
August, 1970. He was dismissed in
April, 1972 because of what was
termed a “bad attitude“.

A major contention in the suit
was that on May 10, 1972
Lambson wrote a letter to
Depperman stating he would be

$4.1m

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Frflly. June 14.1.14—6

Building condition cited as reason

9 of the Kampus Korner

The final step before razing the Kampus Korner — auctioning all
the furniture and cooking paraphernalia — was taken Tuesday by

Auctioneer Vernon llatton.

Destruction of the former den of

delicious delicacies is due to begin soon. (Kernel staff photo by Kay

('oyte.)

eligible for readmission provid-
ing he receive thorough psychia-
tric evaluation and therapy.

DEPPERMAN returned to
New York, began working as'an
electrocardiograph technician
and began therapy with Dr. Leon
Pomeroy of the Institute for
Advanced Study in Rational

Psychotherapy.
On March 7. 1973, upon
completion of the therapy,

Pomeroy wrote Lambson, “I
have absolutely no reservation in
recommending that your invest-
ment in his medical education be
renewed and that he

per hour

      
       
 
 
 
  
   

  

(Depperman) be given the oppor-
tunity to distinguish himself as a
student of medicine and thence as
a member of the medical
community

Despite the recommendation
however, the Third and Fourth
Year Promotions Committee of
the College of Medicine unani-
mously voted against
Depperman’s eligibility for read-
mission.

DEPPERMAN CLAIMED the
move effectively prevented him
from attending any other medical
school and deprived him a
six—figure income.

FULLER a“

 

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6—11“: KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. June 14. 1974

Common ailments

New Student Health Center continues
to provide service ands adds publications

Selected
BOOKS

Anything worth doing
Is worth do‘nq wrmq

Orders s Suggestions Akkt‘p'f‘d

A

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KERN EL

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