xt7rv11vht5f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7rv11vht5f/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-07-12 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, July 12, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, July 12, 1973 1973 1973-07-12 2020 true xt7rv11vht5f section xt7rv11vht5f lL
July D, 1973
Vol. va No. 7

Welcome anytime

Alumni

facilities

available

for all

By TOM MOORE
Kernel Copy Editor

an independent student newspaper

The imposing colonial structure on the
corner of Rose Street and Euclid Avenue is
trying to be not so imposing to students.

The Helen G. King Alumni House is open
to anyone affiliated with the University,
students or faculty members. The facility
may be used for wedding receptions,
dinners and meetings. However it may not
be used for parties or dances, according to
Leigh Fleming, assistant director in
charge of programs.

THE ALUMNI HOUSE was dedicated
October 26, 1963, just before UK’s
Homecoming football game with Georgia.
It was named for Helen G. King, Director
of the Alumni Association. Ms. King
originated the idea for the house and
supervised much of the work.

Although it was built primarily for
alumni, the house is also used by student
groups and individual students, Fleming
said. The facilities include: two large

meeting rooms, a library, a lounge, a‘

ballroom, two motel-type suites, a kitchen
and offices.

Fleming said organizations must
reserve the portion of the building they
want to use but individuals are welcome
anytime during office hours, which are 8
am. to noon, and 1 to 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday.

THE HOUSE PROVIDES a quiet, cool
place to read, listen to records, or watch
television, Fleming said.

The Alumni Association is planning
some activities in the fall open to students
and alumni. Fleming said a series of
seminars on continuing education will
meet. In addition, exhibits of student and
alumni art will be shown.

Since the building was built for and by
the alumni, most activities are geared to
alumni. Fleming said that most people
don’t know they are alumni though.

A view of the Helen King
Alumni House from the
outside is given in the top
photo while the bottom
picture shows the library.
(Kernel photos by Nick
Martin.)

Completion of 12 credit hours qualifies one
for membership in the Alumni
Association.

MANY ALUMNI activities are struc-
tured around athletic events. The Alumni
House is a gathering place for alumni
before football games. A luncheon is given
prior to every home game. Fleming said,
“Hopefully, there will be a shuttle service

The Kentucky Kernel

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY 40506

to the new stadium, if it is finished,” so the
luncheons can continue.

The Alumni Association serves its 14,000
members by helping to obtain tickets to
athletic events when they are available,
and locating classmates of its members.
The association keeps a computer file on
all of UK’s alumni it can find, and makes
the list available to members.

 

ROTC

welcomes
women

By CHARLES WOLFE
Kernel Staff Writer

Army ROTC will become available to
UK women this fall due to an expanded
enrollment program, according to Maj.
Arthur Peter, Army ROTC Represen-
tative. Formerly open to women on only 10
campuses in the country, the present goal
is to enroll 10,000 nationwide.

Peter said the program is open to all
women including married women and
those with dependents. He also stated the
new cadets will not have to major in
military science. Instead, they will be
encouraged to pursue fields of study ac-
cording to their own interests.

WHILE THEY ARE excluded from
combat arms training, Peter said the
women will be eligible for scholarships
and all other benefits now accorded men.
After one semester, they may apply for a
one, two, or three year scholarship which
pays full tuition, book and lab fees, and
any related approved academic expenses.

Scholarship recipients also receive a
$100 monthly allowance, tax-free, for the
length of the school year. He also said
students not receiving scholarships are

still eligible for the monthly allowance
during their junior and senior years. “That
totals approximately $2,000,“ he said.

Peter said uniforms are furnished, but
are actually worn only approximately one
week per semester.

WOMEN DESIRING TO enter the
program may do so during registration
and drop-add, said Peter. At that time they
register for Military Science 101, a two

hour introductory course. “The course
subject involves not only the military, but
also the economic and political aspects of
world history," he explained.

Peter also expressed concern about
public misinterpretation of ROTC‘s
purpose, adding, “We‘re not trying to
teach them how to fight wars, but how to
become competent leaders within the
military and civilian communities.”

He also said that new students wishing to
enroll in the program should do so as soon
as possible due to quota limits. “We‘re
limited to 21.“ he said, “but if there are
more who wish to participate, I‘ll make

every effort to include them in the
program.“

ALL SCHOLARSHIP recipients have a
four year active duty obligation upon
commissioning, and cadets without
scholarship are obligated for two years.
Peter said that the obligation can be
delayed, however, if the student desires to

work toward an advanced degree.

“In fact," he added, “if you‘re in the
upper five per cent of your graduating
class, and are pursuing a master's or other
advanced degree in a discipline of par-
ticular interest to the Army, you can
probably do so at our expense.“

Concerning the status of women officers
after commissioning, Peter said they
attend the Basic Officer‘s Course, usually
at Fort McClellan. Ala.

BENEFITS INCLUDE free medical and
dental care. housing, travel pay, longevity
pay increases every two years,
educational and advanced training op-
portunities. Peter added that the starting
salary for a second lieutenant is ap-
proximately $9,000 per year.

 

 

inside
synopsis

Long ride

No Student Center dishwashers have
recently returned from a bicycle trip

 

 

through the US. and Canada. See the
story on their ups and downs on page 9.

Summer rerun

Today‘s weather should be a repeat of
yesterday‘s with a high temperature in
the mid 80's and a low in the mid 60's
tonight. We'll have partly cloudy skies
today followed by thundershowers
tomorrow.

Cheerleaders
on display

if you haven't visited the Seaton Center
this week you missed a golden opportunity
to watch nearly 1,000 cheerleaders do their
thing. The group is at UK for a clinic
under the auspices of the National

Cheerleading Association. Pictures of
some of the girls appear on page 8.

Hemingway
remembered

One of the world’s greatest writers,
Ernest Hemingway, is recalled by his first
wife in a story on page 7.

 

     
     
  
   
  
   
 
   
   
   
  
   
  
   
  
    
  
     
    
  
   
   
  
   
   
   
  
  
  
   
    
  
  
  
  

The
Kentucky
Kernel

Nixon up to old game .

When President Nixon took the
cover of executive privilege from his
staff and special prosecutor Ar-
chibald Cox promised a thorough and
complete investigation of the
Watergate scandal, we hoped we
might get to the bottom of the whole
mess.

Not so, at least not yet anyway.

Last week Nixon flatly stated he
would refuse a supoena issued by the
Senate Select Committee and fur-
thermore wouldn‘t let the members of
the group see his papers. Yesterday,
in another backstep move consistent
with his policy of several months ago,
Nixon, via Deputy Press Secretary
Gerald L. Warren, announced per-
sonal papers of former staff members
would no longer be open to the in-
vestigation.

Both Cox and the Committee have
given up hope of supoenaing the Chief
Executive, yet they realize some of
the papers may show White House
involvement in Watergate.

Established it“

Steve Swift. Editor in Chief
Boa Mitchell. Managing Editor
Kaye Coyte. Copy Editor

stated that he would publicly
denounce Nixon if he refused to
cooperate by not releasing his papers.

Nixon’s whole policy of secrecy is
supspicious and we just don’t buy
Warren’s line that the President is
trying “to protect the confidentiality
of presidential files, not just this
President, but all presidents."

The public understands some

-Presidential papers must be kept

secret for national security reasons
but citizens have a right to know when
criminal indictments have been
leveled against White House staffers
and suspicions of complicity surround
the President.

Concerned Americans should urge
the Committee and Cox to demand the
papers from Nixon and continue to
back these requests until metlby the
President.

Though he said he wouldn’t appear
before the televised hearings, Nixon

Food shortage looms

Fear of food shortage or possible
food rationing has created quite a
nationwide stir. Some housewives are
even now stocking large quantities of
food, in case the shortage becomes a
reality.

Food Services Director, Allen
Rieman, in the June 28 Kernel, said
should a food shortage become acute,
the University would buy less ex—
pensive items eliminating delicacies
like shrimp and roast beef. The use of
soybean additives could even be
supplemented in meats.

We agree expensive foods should be

the first to go but what happens when
vegetables, fruits and canned items
become scarce? What can students
expect to find on the dinner table?

Another question we’d like an-
swered is will there be a possible
monetary reimbursement for
students with meal tickets in case a
shortage affects the amount of
available food?

An acute food shortage shouldn’t be
a topic University officials 0p-
timistically pass over. We think the
problem serious enough to warrant
development of effective plans for use
if a shortage ccurs.

Torn Moore. Copy Editor

Mike Clark, Sports Eliot

Jay Rhodernyre. Arts Editor

Editorials represent the oplnlon ol the Editors. not the University

    

   
    
   
  
    
   
   
   

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Editorials

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

can still meet in private with the
Committee. This should be a
voluntary appearence. Former At-
torney General John Mitchell ad-
mitted in testimony yesterday that
silence from the White House is
suspicious and allows Americans to
draw an inference that the in-
formation would be unfavorable to

 

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Nixon.

Senator Sam Ervin, chairman of
the Committee, pinned the President
to the wall by quoting a 1968 Nixon
campaign statement urging a
national committment to truth in
government. Only time will tell
whether Nixon will level with
Americans.

 

Letters

 

Disagrees with Corps study

The Environmental Impact Study of the
Army Corps of Engineers‘ planned
damming of the Red River states: “From
the standpoint of visual contrast and
diversity, the landscape lacks the
aesthetically pleasing water-land contrast
(which the lake will provide).”

Rather than the construction of a $60
million dam, I propose a tilt in the earth’s

movement, thus carving out a lake at
great savings to the taxpayer. The Corp
will entertain further suggestions at their
public hearing in Stanton on July 14,
Saturday, at 10 am. in the Powell County
High School. If you wish to save the gorge,
attend the hearing and say so.

Bob Ashford
195 Kentucky Ave.

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a page for opinion from inside and outside the university community

  

 

 

Student Senate endorses boycott

By David Muccl

The University of Kentucky Student
Senate at its July 5, 1973, meeting passed a
resolution expressing its support for the
United Farm Workers Union’s boycott of
scab grapes and iceburg lettuce. The
Senate’s belief that workers should
possess the right to collectively organize
into a union of their, choice, and its
awareness of the benefits the United Farm
Workers (UFW) has won for west coast
farm workers prompted this endorsement
of the boycott. An understanding of the
situation is necessary to realize the
justification for the boycott.

The west coast farm workers are among

the most oppressed workers in the United
States because the racist growers view

these workers, many of whom are migrant
Mexicanos, as a source of cheap labor to
be exploited. Their wages average $2,200
per year, and their working and health
conditions are deplorable; their average
life expectancy is only 49 years.

In .1965, the United Farm Workers
Organizing Committee, led by Cesar
Chavez, began organizing against their
oppression through numerous actions and
demonstrations, including a mass
nationwide grape boycott. In 1970 three-
year contracts were negotiated which
gained important, far-reaching reforms in
working conditions, higher wages, and
recognition of the United Farm Workers
Union.

Wage and

By Stuart Greenbaum

Price and wage controls have become
socially acceptable, if not widely popular.
Advocated by political liberals and im-
plemented by conservatives, hardly any
voices are heard questioning these
precedent-setting policies.

(1) Can such policies work? Consider the
following analogy: A rubber ball floating
on water in a partially filled silo is the
price level. The water level represents all
those forces giving rise to determination of
the price level. For example, government
spending is a faucet at the top of the silo
and tax receipts are an out-let valve or
drain at the bottom. Monetary policy
would be represented by both a faucet and
a drain.

Price and wage controls are analogous
to tethering the rubber ball so as to fix its
vertical position while we adjust the water
level. It is argued that the floating ball
must be tethered because policies that will

reduce the rate at which the water level.

is rising are politically unacceptable. It is
also argued that 2, 4, or 6 months hence we
plan to sever the tether. (This is
presumably the meaning of temporary.)

What can we expect to happen 2, 4, or 6
months hence when we find ourselves with
a higher water level and release of the
tether is being contemplated? The in-
flation following upon the termination of
Phase II is suggestive in this regard.

(2) Doesn‘t the act of tethering provide a
false sense of security that diverts at-
tention from policies needed to control the
water level? During 1972 the federal
budget was heavily in deficit and the
money supply was permitted to grow at an
unusually high rate, presumably in the

Those contracts expired in the Coachella
Valley on 14 April 1973; on April 15, the
growers announced they had signed new
contracts with the Teamsters. The Farm
Workers responded by declaring a strike
and a boycott of scab grapes. The United
Farm Workers Union did win new con-
tracts with two companies in Coachella,
the Freedman ranches and K.K. Larson,
which represent about fifteen per cent of
the grape industry in the valley. The
sweetheart Teamster contracts Were
signed behind the workers’ backs and offer
no meaningful improvements for them
while at the same time restoring the hated
exploitative labor-contractor system. The
Farm Workers are demanding can-
cellation of these agreements signed by
the Teamsters and a secret ballot of the
workers involved to decide Which union
they want to represent them. The Farm
Workers are still attempting to win their
first contracts with the west coast lettuce
growers.

Due to these circumstances, the Senate
was moved to adopt a resolution in support
of United Farm Workers Union. The
resolution reads:

Be it resolved that the UK Student
Government, recognizing the right of farm

workers to collectively organize into a
union of their own choice, expresses its
support for the striking farm workers and

for the national boycott of scab grapes and
iceburg lettuce.

We therefore urge the university
community to support and personally
abide by the grape and lettuce boycott.

We further demand that the UK Food
Services immediately cease all purchases
of non-union grapes and iceburg lettuce
and it limit its purchases to United Farm
Workers Union grapes and lettuce.

Furthermore, we authorize the cir-
culation by Student Government of a
campus wide petition calling upon the UK
Food Services to abide by the boycott of
non-union grapes and lettuce and to limit
its purchases to United Farm Workers
Union grapes and iceburg lettuce. To this
end we hereby grant the use of Student
Government resources to implement this
petition campaign.

The Senate also calls upon the com-
munity to boycott scab grapes and iceburg
lettuce and to demand that the UK Food
Services stop buying non-UFWU grapes
and iceburg lettuce. Buy only grapes sold
under these brand names: “Lionel,”
“Travertine,” “Desert Diamond,” and
“Primo,” labels of the two growers under
UFWU contract.

David Mucc: is a 8.6.8.
sophomore and the recording
secretary of UK’s Student
Government.

 

 

 

 

 

price controls: a second look

interest of moderating interest rates.
Would such policies have been tolerated
were it not for the dubious sense of
security provided by Phase II?
(3) Are there other costs attendant to
price and wage controls?
--Black and gray markets develop. The
besources devoted to circumventing
controls are wasted and illegal behavior is
encouraged.
--Non-price rationing is required in order
to distribute available output when
demand is excessive at a fixed price.
Typically, the methods employed, e.g.,

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queues, rationing stamps, tie-in sales, are
unpopular with consumers and producers.

In summary, temporary wage and price
controls offer little pormise of successfully
restraining the rate of inflation. Indeed,
the false security they foster would more
likely result in greater inflation than would
otherwise be the case. On the other hand,
the potential costs of such policies are
likely to be formidable, subtle and in some
respects irreversible.

The queues, the shortages, the product
adulteration may be bearable and perhaps
fall into the category of minor nuisances,

Susi mum's:
\timum.)

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for many. However, the precedent of price
and wage controls represents a new and
significant restriction of individual
prerogatives and this implication of
controls has been largely ignored. Both
logic and history would appear to argue
against such controls, temporary or
otherwise.

 

Greenbaum

Stuart is an
associate professor in the
College of Business and
Economics.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

a.

   

     
   
   
   
   
   
   
    
   
  
 
  
 
   
    
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
  

 4—TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. July l2. [973

Sis boom bah!

Nearly 1.000 high school cheerleaders from seven states gathered
on the UK campus this week for the National Cheerleading
Association’s clinic. The girls were housed in the Complex Towers.

in the top photo members of the Northwestern High School squad
from Springfield. Ohio perform a stunt while a girl jumps for the
sky in the middle right picture.

NCA staffers Kathy Forgarty. Linda Burczak and Helen
Langenbacher kill some free time demonstrating the don'ts of a
stunt.

Head staffer tries to gain the attention of the whole group during
a session in the Seaton Center in the lower left photo while Forgarty
and Langenbacher demonstrate the Horseplayers Handshake in
the photo below.

 

Kernel photos by Charles Wolfe

 

  

Plan approval sought;
academic success is goal

By PRINCESS LAWES
Kernel Staff Writer

Administrative approval and
acceptance is being sought for
Action for Academic Assistance
(AAA), a tutorial program born
out of a University Year for
Action (UYA) project which was
started last fall.

The major goal of the program
is to increase the rate of
academic success of university
students, particularly han-
dicapped students, veterans,
minority students, students from
low-income families and students
who are on probation.

The 1972-73 school year served
as a “pilot” year for the program
which was staffed primarily
through volunteer help, said
Robert Kelley, director of AAA.

The program received aid from
various university offices in-
cluding UYA, the Office of
Minority Student Affairs and the
Center for Developmental
Change.

Kelley has proposed that the
University take over the program
so that it can be centrally located,
better funded and more ef-
ficiently administered.

The proposal was submitted to
Dr. John Stephenson, dean of
undergraduate studies, who met
with Kelley and other interested
persons last Friday to “learn
more about the program and
whether the concept should be
endorsed.”

The submitted proposal called
for a full-time director, a staff,
tutors and an advisory com-
mittee.

Although the program would be
open to any studentwho wished to
use it, the main target groups
would be those students who are
the most likely to have special

NOW OPEN

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. July 12.10754

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problems such as the han-
dicapped or the low-income
student.

In the proposal to Stephenson,
Kelley called for centrally
located offices, with a learning
laboratory, readily accessible to
physical handicapped students.

Kelley cited “a definite need
for academic assistance services
at the University and suggested
that a permanent centralized
program be adopted. Such ser-
vices would provide remedial and
supplementary learning op- +
portunities for students who need
it, he said.

Stephenson said he did not
know at this time whether the
University would implement the
program. The program must be
discussed at higher levels and
studied thoroughly before any
decision about whether to im-
plement it could be made, he
said.

Approval of the proposal is
being sought from President Otis
Singletary and Dr. Lewis
Cochran, vice president for
academic affairs.

“Some kind of program like
this is desirable,” Stephenson
said, but he could not say whether
the proposal would be adopted.

He said, however, he did not
think the program would be
rejected completely but the
proposed budget of $28,000 may
be trimmed down. He agreed
that volunteer help could be
sought on a grand scale which
could lower the cost of the ,
program.

If the administration decides to
implement the program it will go
before the Board of Trustees in
August for its approval.
Stephenson said it would proably
take about a year to put the plan
into action.

 

 

 

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6—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. July 12. 1973

Sports
FURNISHED a GO-ROUl‘ld

UNFURNISHED by Mike Clark
APARTMENTS

 

 

"35460 Secretariat replaces Roger Maris

TO Summer Sivden'S will! '0'5 , . Thanks to a decision by the Maryland Racing Commission
'0 mm' 0"" on Tuesday, super-horse Secretariat may replace Roger

. ‘ From campus Maris as the biggest asterisk in sports.
H AR V E Y The Commission ruled Secretariat’s “official" time of 1:54
2 bedroom. Laundry F-cumos 2-5 in winning the Preakness would stand. In making this

‘ —Now Playine— fimfatgfggfigcm'w" decision, the Commission tossed out Visual evldence supplied

L ‘ Opening July llth”Lady's Nightina Turkish Bath“ Except tor Elmflcny by CBS Wthh showed Secretariat actualy toured the 1 3-16

‘ - mile Pimlico oval faster than Canonero.

SPeCial Sunday “"193 Canonero holds the Preakness record with a 1:54 timing,

“9“"4‘30 established in 1971.

8? rn Dinner-5 '0 6 call 299-7821,? MS On its “Sports Illustrated” program, CBS ran comment

Dmner Theatre Show Star‘s‘fi‘w AUGUSTA videotape replays of the 1971 an; 1973 races. Starting both
"92 AUGUSTA CT‘ races at the same instant, CBS reasoned, would mean the

Offer Good Arty Night Except Saturdays first to cross the finish line would be the holder of the record.

When Secretariat flashed under the wire three lengths
ahead of Canonero, it was obvious the Triple Crown winner
from Meadow Stable had set a new record. This film
corroborated time charts kept by a pair of Racing Form
timers, who caught Secretariat in 1:53 2-5.

Pimlico’s electronic timer was fouled up during the run-
ning of the 1973 Preakness, so the track fell back on a 1:54 2-5
clocking by the track’s official timer.

In light of all the evidence to the contrary, the Maryland
Racing Commission would not change the official time. Why?

Maryland law backs 'officlal' time

A Maryland law states the official time of a race is that
time taken by the official timer. The Commission’s reasoning
for not begging a waiver of the law is the fear of a “loss of
integrity" for all sporting events.

If this is the Commission’s reasoning, how can they hope to
impress on the millions who saw the CBS tape that integrity
is shown in denying Secretariat’s claim for a record?

Having won the Kentucky Derby and Belmont Stakes in
record times, the cloudy goings-on at Pimlico are all that
stand in the way of the greatest Triple Crown of them all. The
feat of winning all three Triple Crown events in record time
surely will not be surpassed in this century, if ever.

Thoroughbred racing’s greatest hero since Man 0’ War has
brought crowds back to the track. It doesn't pay to insult this
animal, or the millions who flock to see him, by saying a
human’s one-time shot at timing a race is more accurate
than electronic filming and timing which disproves it.

I, for one, don’t accept Maryland’s decision, and will
forever know that Secretariat ran a faster Preakness than
did Canonero.

/ '0

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Hemingway
First wife looks back over five hard years with young Ernest

LAKELAND, Fla. (AP)—
Hadley Mowrer, 81, looks back
over the five struggling years she
spent with Ernest Hemingway
drinking cheap wine and living in
walkup flats and says “I wouldn’t
trade a bit of it, but I couldn’t
have lasted much longer with
Ernest.”

The first wife of Hemingway,
she was a sheltered girl from St.
Louis when she married the then
unknown 21-year-old writer in
1921.

THEY LIVED MUCH of the
time off her inheritance of $8,000,
pinching corners to make ends
meet. They traveled off season
when rates were low, walked a
lot, spent time with friends,
which didn’t cost money, and
borrowed books because they
couldn’t afford them.

They lived simply in a walk-up
Paris apartment on the Left Bank
and ate in cheap cafes until he
became rich and famous and
divorced her for cosmetic heiress
Pauline Pfeiffer.

“We lived in the poorest places
before he clicked,” she says,
adding “the poor times when you
struggle to make the best of it,
those are the best times.”

IN THOSE DAYS she believes
she was right for Hemingway. “I
was good for him. I was able to
take those lean years quite
comfortably and we had good
times.”

Despite their parting, “I could
never learn to hate Ernest,” she
said recalling their days
together. “I enjoyed life for a
while with him. But the pace was
very great. I was dead tired all
the time. Then, too, I knew I had
a rival.”

It was those years in Paris, the
years before he made it, that
Hemingway reminisced about in,
“Moveable Feast.”

“I ALWAYS THOUGHT I was
the one he wrote about,” says
Mrs. Mowrer, who was seven
years his senior. “No one ever
told me that. I just know it.”

Their friends then were people
like James Joyce, Gertrude

Overseas study
aid available

Graduating seniors and
graduate students interested in
extended study abroad may
apply for Fullbright-Hays grants
from the Office of International
Programs in Bradley Hall.

Application forms may be
obtained from Dr. William H.
Griffin, director of International
Programs at UK, and must be
returned to that office before Oct.
15.

THE GRANTS ARE designed
to increase mutual un-
derstanding between the United
States and other countries
through exchange of people,
knowledge and skils.

A Full Grant entitles a student
to round-trip transportation,
language or orientation courses,
tuition, books, maintenance
allowance, and health and ac-
cident insurance.

Additional information can be
received by calling Mara Owens
at 258-8908.

       
    
 
   
 
   
     
     
   
     
   
  

Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald and
Ezra Pound.

In their own circle, she was
chided for trying to domesticate
Hemingway, for trying to
stabilize his life style. “No one
ever accused me of it openly,”
she says. “But I could feel it.
Ezra Pound once warned me,
‘Don’t ever try to change your
husband.’ " _ «

ON THE OTHER HAND. she
said, “Some thought Ernest was

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lucky to have three square meals
a day."

Hemingway married three
more times and became one of
America’s greatest writers.
Among his most noted works are
“The Sun Also Rises," “Old
Man and The Sea,” for which he
won a Nobel prize, and “A
Farewell to Arms.”

The soft-spoken Mrs. Mowrer,
sharp witted despite her years,
divides her time between

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL.Msday, July 12. 1973—7

Lakeland and her Chocorua home
in the White Mountains of New
Hampshire. She spends her days
now chatting with friends,
playing the piano and reading.

THE MARRIAGE ended in
divo