xt7sj38khb7x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7sj38khb7x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-03-10 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, March 10, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 10, 1975 1975 1975-03-10 2020 true xt7sj38khb7x section xt7sj38khb7x Six iailed on contempt charges

Ry RUN .\ll’l‘(‘lll‘3|.l.
Managing Editor
Six persons were jailed Saturday after
they were found guilty of contempt of court
for refusing to answer questions before a
federal grand jury

The six were jailed until they decide to
answer the grand jury questions or until
the jury '5 session ends in April 1976.
Presiding LS. district Judge Bernard 1‘.
Moynahan .lr. also refused a request by
attoniey Robert Sedler. a [K law
professor defending the witnesses. for a
stay of execution or bail.

.s‘H)l.F.R FILED \.\‘ immediate appeal
after the verdict The appeal must he
heard by the sari District (‘ourt of
.~\ppeaLs within :to days

The six handcuffed prisoners were led
from the federal building and transported
to three different federally approved
county jails around the state Witnesses
.lill Raymond and (itlll t‘ohee w erc sent to
the Bell t‘ounty jail in l’ineville. Linda

\ol I\\l
\fl. [’6'
”food

”(in h 10 107')

(Ht inde pe ndent student news

Link and Marta Seymour went to the
Franklin (‘ounly jail in Frankfort while
.lanies (‘arey Junkin and Debbie llands
were transported to the Madison (‘ounty
jail in Richmond.

.lunkin is currently a UK student and
president of the UK (lay Coalition. The
other five are former University students.

If\ Ills Rl'l.l!\‘(; Moynahan said he had
“never seen a case where a group of
witnesses have shown greater contempt
for a federal grand jury.

"l have never seen more total lack of
responsibility for a federal court. If it
could be done that way it would mean the
end of the grand jury system," Moynahan
said

The judge cited two instances where the
witnesses refused to answer the grand
jury‘s queries concerning the name of
their attorney and. when asked another
question. responded witli a history of the
grand |llt‘_\ system

oi Rl\(. 'ini-;
Scdlei‘. co counsel

l'\\tl days of
.l udy

hearings
l’ctei‘sen of

EN TUCKY

[fer

Kentuckian

Experiment changes yearbook to magazine

ty ltRl‘t'li“ IMJZS
\ssistant \lanaging liditor

.\ proposal to make the lft7.370 Ken
tiickian into a on an e\
pcrimcntal basis rcccncd support from
l’i‘esident Htis .\ .\iiiglctary Friday
The Board of Student Publications
for

lllilgil/Jllt'

the
will

which is directly responsible
Kentuckian
probably approve the proposal said llt

\tiidcnt

meets Tuesday and

Lewis lloiiohew toard of

l’iiblications chairman

Sl\(il.li'l‘\lt\' \ll‘l'l' “I'l‘ll Student
Publications .\d\ isor \ancy (irccn l' riday
"l'y'e agreed to
Singletary

to discuss the proposal
support the experiment.” said
“l "H help thi.s mall the ways l can '

The idea to transform the lyentiickian
iiilo a inaga/Jne is the result of economic
and staff problems January 107.;
printing costs of the yearbook have in
creased almost 80 per cent The hen-
tuckian's staff problems stem from the

Since

fact it offers no practical job experience
for journalism majors

Last month the Student
l’ubhcations approved an investigation of

l oaid of

proposals to change the yearbooks for
mat

“[H'RING Till“. im-
Kcntnckian will become an experimental
quarterly or more frequent publication."
the proposal states “The experimental
approach is in line with the l'iiivcrsity‘s
aim to encourage experinicntation_"

l'nder the proposal. the Kentiickian
would retain its present l'niversity con
nections including financing $11,000
annually 1. space and accounting The
projected cost for a student subscription to
the magazine is $4, the proposal states.

1975—70 fiscal year

'l‘he proposal also calls for the use of an

'optional tee card" for sub
scriptions The optional tee card would be
the tall 197.3 l'niyersity

the proposal states

iiiaga/ine
included “with
lillltltfl. process."

“H I'. ll \\ l‘.\' l‘ \UHKKICI) the optional
the l 111\ crsity.“
"l'licl nivcrsity will not serve

tcc tanl out yet with

Mteeti said
.l\ the tee collector.

\M- tccl tliata n optional tee card w ill be
an inducement to sales.” she said
will be
subscriptions and
bookstores and the
l,c\ington a rea . (ireen said She said there
are also plans to contact the t'K Alumni

\ssot iation to solicit alumni subscribers

the
distributed

nentiickian
through
stand sales in

lllitflil/lllt'

llt“.\\

\|)\ l'.l€'|‘l.\l\(- I51)“ 'l‘lll“. first issue
“w ill be sold during the summer w ith the
tontracted help of the Kernel advertising
department," "Since
the Kernel has a professional advertising
he in
the

the proposal states

manager. his could

‘aluable in

expertise
getting this
operation well planned "

part of

l ndcr the proposal the first issue. w liicli
will appear at the beginning of the fall 1975
semester. “w ill contain many of the types
of stories and pictures which could be used
the

prospective students "

for promotion of l'mvcrsity to

"l‘hc first Issue is the most important."
said kentuckian l‘Iditor in-(‘hicf Reth \nn
.leyvell “lt ha s to be something that people
would want to read "

'l'lll'l l’lRS'I‘ ISSl'I') will contain stories
concerning dormitories, students living in
apartments. rush and “a little bit of

(‘ontinued on page 1

ellw Kentiu ls.
paper

Tampa. Fla, and the six witnesses con—
tended that the grand jury was being used
to obtain information for the FBI coir
cerning the location of tWo alleged
fugitives who supposedly lived in
Lexington last summer

The fugitives Katherine Power and
Susan Saxe are sought in connection With
a 1970 Boston bank robbery in which a
policeman was slain. Both are on the
r‘ltl's “Ten Most Wanted" list.

The Fltl has alleged that the two women
lived ui Lexington during the summer and
fall of last year under the names Lena
l’auley and May Kelley

IN .\ S'l‘.-\'ff2.\lPIN'l‘ read by Sedler
following the verdict. the witnesses said
they did not know the present whereabouts
of the women they knew as l’aulcy and
Kelly

"Because we believe that we have just
for the refusal to the
questions propounded to us by the grand

cause answer
jury we must respectfully decline to an
swer those questions and must appeal the
statement said

decision," the witnesses'

{\t‘ tstf

—i'~ him to proeeed
\one tit these strithiotit‘ relation

particular iiidi\'idual “ill be found questions FBI agents toldthem they FBI and subsequent grand ItlI'}

properl) subject to accusation of \kouldbeealledbeforethegrandjur) subpoenas. despite .\Io_\‘nahan's sths are iIi Iltt'ttist'lH's unusual
erinie The identification of the of— FBI requested ot I'S Attorney refusal to allon It‘s'illlldtl} on man} “mm M; {Lethlwt’s hemp un
te ider and the nature of the offense. if Eugene Siler that the} be sub erueai points taniihar '»\ uh 'he ld\\\, are naturall}

there he one. are normall}~ developed
at the eonelusion of the grand _IUI‘_\"S
labors. not at the beginning "

poenaed. The} appeared before the
grand tur} on Feb. ‘3 and refused to
ansix er questions At the same grand

It \Kould
.\Io_\nahan's iinding of

appear then that
eonteinpt Ill

dependent ‘tl‘i amei IiIIit'Ill attorney
the FBI

xtth 'hi-I .\ atturne} is also

'l‘IliIi "I‘vlillll t‘sli’tlillsll ti
Itiltltitl’l

a tetlet'al

iur) hearing an FBI agent gave t'llt‘ticifll‘lllt‘tl the FBI‘s right to use llIitlt‘l‘UttI‘itlttllt‘ likewise.
So said the L' S Suprene Court in "background" information to the the grand inns subpoena ttti'At'l‘ tor gauge :t..:_'~ .H'lt‘dilt' ti t't't‘tdtt: s)!“

5419 case Blair \'s F S ,\\ hieh xx as
rmed tins Febriiar} in I' S \‘s
I' S District Judge Ber-

the ‘.
reafti

‘Vs l'
lwie‘Ct‘gi‘ia

grtnd iur} prior to the \xitnesses‘
appeti‘attee Un Feb 21. at the
request or the [‘5 attorney “II-

”is «M n purposes To realize how that
er.d;.ngers en ‘:i rights one need with

tontsmplate the tate oi the si\ \‘-iI

he

to: ’tmse Anti: shunt

path).
ti’edtien’l'. ‘l"t:i\

I' s ”1.; :1" \ '.' ti' ' 'li!\ \.t\(' Illt‘

nard T Moynahan Jr cited this iiesses‘ \\ ere ;.ZI\'t’lI "use :mmunny" messes lli this ease \iti'mtts putts ‘YH' w\"t‘!1!!tt‘HI >
passage Saturda} tn tinding six uhieh meant the} could not refuse to At the eontempt hearing one eouid atrial and ','.es";_;' 2e mitt-s have
subpoenaed grand fur} ‘~‘-linOSS€S In test::_\ under the Fifth Amendment not help but notiee the rapport aihzth ULIEt'Il : tuna] tit «ml

contempt of court :or refusing to The} appeared again before the seemed to exist between the FBI ':;'\ -.. 2‘ "a \Ian. m
answer questions before a tederal granti _‘.th'_\ on March A and again age: ts. the I' S attorney the grand Map in' , lit d .ieaizs‘ the '-\ll
grand jtll‘) :‘ettised to atlS“ er questions. gum and the distrit: judge FBI »ss« ~ It'iit' s w .tse'hentiieIim

As a praetieal matter. there are whereupon the} were eited tor eon- .igerts sat titl‘t‘t‘li} nehi id the I s s ranted-tuiti- ziv its prat'tzeal
deiinite dangers to L‘lVli rights 11‘; tempt ot court Mn Mart-h 8 attorne} andsexeraltiniesdiiririgthe apt-imitate :t' l‘ i imam-ti an uniust

giving grand juries these broad

.\Io_\nahan round them in eontempt

hearing eonterred \\Illl him

i’esaI'

  
  
   
  
  
   
  
      
  
  
   
   
   
     
      
   
       

\§\1 .

Nicholas Von Hoffman
Public Opinion poll
is instant plebiscite

l§\\l(llHl \5\H\lltll‘il* \l\\ It . ‘fitfi’s

 

   

      

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Capitalist crisis
Inflation up, employment down and the leopard hasn't changed

B) Itl'SSEIJ. l’l‘IIJJ‘I

'l‘hc capitalist world has plunged into the
first international recession since the
limos Although unemployment is still
much worse in the l'nited States than in
the other major capitalist nations. there is
in) leading capitalist country where the
ranks of unemployed are not growing and
where industrial production is not slowing
down

()ii top of this. as the plants close. prices
are spiraling upward around the globe.
Inflation rates in France (14.65 per cent),
Britain (17 per cent ). Italy (20.8 per cent)
and Japan (23.4 per cent) are worse than
in the l'nited States (11.6 per cent).

MURHUVER. there is the danger that
the deepening ITS. recession and the in—
flationary expansion of credit could
combine to throw the capitalist world into
an economic crisis on the scale of 1929-32.
Leading capitalist experts in the United
States. I‘Iumpe. and Japan are the first to
admit that such a danger exists.

None of this was supposed to happen.
The more sophisticated capitalist
economists such as Paul Samuelson of
MIT. whose texts are almost universally
used in undergraduate economics courses

admitted that the ups and down of the
capitalist business cycle could not be
eliminated.

But the effects of the business cycle
could be ameliorated. Here is how
Samuelson put it in the most recent edition
of “Economics". published in 1973, and
more widely distributed than any other
college economics text:

“Many people do believe that the
business cycle has finally been tamed. And
indeed. study shows that the American
mixed economy has reduced recessions in
the postWorld War II period to brief and
infrequent punctuations in the progress of

sustained gmwth. It used to be the case,
under historic capitalism. that the charts
showed the shadings of recession half the
time...

"“‘II AT (‘AN be said scientifically about
the outlook for business fluctuations? Most
economists would pretty much agree with
the following formulation: Although
nothing is impossible in an inexact science
like economics. the probability of a great
depression — a prolonged. cumulative and
chronic slump like that of the 19305. the
limbs. or the IXTOs — has been reduced to a
negligible figure." (p. 266. emphasis in
orig.)

Samuelson is wrong on all three counts.
In the first place. the present US.
recession is the second in three years, so
that the frequency of recessions has not
slowed down. It is increasing.

Secondly. even if the present recession
ended today and the US economy started
to turn up , which it isn't going to do *
this recession will still end up being longer
than the previous upturn of 197273. (The
period of recession is generally measured
from the beginning of the slump until
production again reaches the pre-slump
level.) The 1972-73 upturn lasted only 18
months. The present recession is more
than a year old and still on the downslide.
A month ago President Ford assured us
that unemployment would level off at 7.5
per cent. Recent figures set unem—
ployment at 8.2 per cent (the highest since
1941) with unemployment in the auto in-
dustry at 24 per cent and in construction
22.6 per cent. Now the President tries to
console us by saying unemployment will
not hit to per cent. The period of crisis is
longer than the previous period of
recovery.

'I‘hirdly. there is a real danger of a
banking collapse.

Opinions from inside and oumde the university community

 

ACCORDING TO MARXIST economic
theory. crisis is the inevitable consequence
of contradictions of the capitalist system.
Today‘s plague of spreading unem—
ployment (and outright famine in many
semi-colonial countries) is not “ac-
cidental." It is the result of production for
private profit.

The fundamental causes of the crisis can
be singled out for special attention. These
are the overproduction of goods and the
falling tendency of the profit rate that
makes over production inevitable. For it is
precisely in order to overcome the falling
tendency of the profit rate that monopoly
saturates markets, that it produces too
many goods considering the available
purchasing powier, and thus provokes
crisis.

The prices on the cars in Detroit
stockyands are obviously-not determined
by the socalled law of supply and demand
as Samudson would have us believe.

THERE IS A lll'GE supply and many
millions of workers need cars. But the
prices don't come down enough. General
Motors doesn't reduce prices, keep
production rolling along, and keep workers
at 'pbs. It fires workers, reduces
production. and keeps prices up. (The
current muchApublicized “cash rebates"
cover only a tiny fraction of the full price
of cats, are temporary, and have un~
doubtedly already been planned into the
automakers' long term profit schedules.)

Capitalist crises confront us not with too
little, that is, anabsolute incapacity of the
economy to provide enough ~as, say. in
the Middle Ages. when plagues decimated
the population and crops were destroyed
by blights but with too much. Too much
plant capacity has been constructed.
markets have been saturated. goods
cannot be profitably sold.

Anita Slesal

There is no better indication of the
irrational and inhuman character of the
capitalist system than in the fact that
millions of women. men and children are
gravely undernourished and threatened
with starvation while enormous resources
in machinery, raw materials, and labor
remain unutilized «resources with which
tractors, fertilizer, irrigation canals and
electrical pumps could be produced to
rapidly increase food pioduction and thus
feed the hungry.

Tlll'S FROM USE end of the capitalist
world to the other, economic crisis is
deepening the problems facing working
people and heightening the class struggle
as a result. The crisis is rooted in fun-
damental contradictions explained by
Marx. It canonly be eliminated, in the last
analysis. by ending the system based on
exploitation of wage-labor.

The generalized recession is dealing a
grave blow to all reformist and gradualist
illusions about the allegedly infinite
capacities of “adaptation" possessed by
the capitalist system. It confirms what our
movement has been proclaiming
ceaselessly throughout the years of the
strongest expansion.

The leopard has not changed his spots.
(‘apitalism is still capitalism. Its internal
contradictions remain insoluble. If a
retum to unemployment, to graver and
graver recessions. to galloping inflation. to
famine throughout the semi—colonial
world. to misery that can reappear on a
grand scale even in the imperialist
countries is to be avoided. the capitalist
system and the bourgeois state must be
overthrown The regime of the workers
must be established.

 

Russell I’elle. a junior in Arts and
Sciences, is a member of the Young
Socialist Alliance.

     
   
    
   
   
 
     
  
 
 
 
    
  
  
  
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
   
   
 
   
   
   
      

   
  
    
  
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
    
  
 
 
  
  
  
    
   
 
  
 
   
 
 
  
   
 
   
 
  
 
  
  
  
   
      
   
   
       

l—-—TIIE KENTI'CKY KERNI‘IL. Monday. March It), I975

 

 

 

CENTRAL KENTUCKY CONCERTS 8. LECTURES

ROBERT PENN WARREN

DISTINGUISHED AUTHOR AND WINNER OF TWO
PULITZER PRIZES WILL SPEAK

MONDAY, MARCH IO, 8:15pm.
MEMORIAL COlISEUM

Admission: All full-time UK students by ID and ACTIVITIES CARDS. All others by season

membership card

 

A SEMINAR on ncnou BY MR. WARREN
TUESDAY, MARCH II, l:30p.m.
SEAY AUDITORIUM, AG SCIENCE BLDG.

OPEN TO PUBLIC

 

o o ~l tones for teaming o .op‘tions {be learnin 0 option: to; 1.3
2" o OP+\OV\S for learninq 0 Opt ions for learning op 85'
.E q 3
5
33-? Federal Government 3-3.
"' b 1
a 0 , __
332 Internships 0:3;
in (, . O ‘0 -.
a: In Washington (3:3
*6.
0 ‘n o
Summer, 'I 975 3.51
+' 1 ,.
2‘3" Youth Counselor __9
E e 8 “‘
g 2" Research Psychologists Civil Engineering 3?
4‘2; Journalism Agricultural Economics 3 g‘
was Budget Analysts Computer Specialist ° 3
.3" Mechanical Engineering 133
°‘3 Deadline March 21 g
. I
E? Office of Experientol Education 4,
O a . .
f; 303 Administration Bldg. 3
3 g. lnu UJD’D‘ 2573632 6 (g—
_' -‘ ”a SUOHdo .10 d
403.. 9Uotxdo . bUIUJ‘D’aj 103. wowdéu:b§tlfumg{ “Ergon‘j; . unfuflo

.. Anthropology, Archeology, Art, Folklore

Geography,
Marketing, International Trade, Spanish (all
levels), sociology, and others
Spanish fulfill one year of U.K. Language
Classes end by
leaving plenty of free time for individual in-

Requirement.

U.K. Office for International Programs

announces

6 Week Summer Trip in Monterrey

MEXIC

-June 22 to August Ist

-6 semester hours of credit
-Courses offered in English 8. Spanish

terests.

History,

Total cost of $585.00 includes: Tuition, room
(maid service), Board, Excursions, Fiestas,
Concerts. Recreational facilities at the In-
slituto include: 2 large swimming pools, 5
tennis c0urts, fully equiped sports center.
Transportation negotiable with director.
Average round trip about $60.00 (one week in
Mexico City and 5 days in Veracruz——
optional).

International
Courses in

I100 p.m.,

For more information see or call anytime

Antonio A. Fernandez
1106 Patterson Office Tower
Phone 257-1531

3

  

 

l 403. Sumac o

    

Six jailed for contempt

('ontinued from page I

'l‘lllIlClC li‘lil .\(il£\'l‘.\'
Mct‘auley, a senior resident
agent in Lexington, John W
(iill. a specialageiit in Lexington.
and Wayne A M cl)onald. another
special agent testified about
several aspects of their iii-
vestigation into the case.

MCDONALD TESTII’II‘ID ”H
was present in the grand jury
room on Feb. 5, the first day the
witnesses appeared before the
grand jury and refused to answer
questions, McDonald said he
gavethe grand jury "background
information" prior to witnesses
testimony and that he. one other
FBI agent and three agents of the
tobacco. alcohol and firearms
division. sat in the grand jur)
room anterooin

He said the agents were just
“sitting" and that no attempt was
inadeto hearan} testimon} 'l'he
anteroom is a small room with a
hat and coat rack located bet
ween the jur} room and hallwai
on the fourth floor of the federal
buildmg

Dunng Saturday's
two students. Meridith Moore and
Robert Benedict. testified that
.\lcl)onald had gone to \liitit't' s
ldt‘lt \ ltiltl

"sure that no one

John

test iiiioiii

.ipanmeiit on .iiid
them he was
knew who the} were while the)

were heic

lil'l‘ \\III~I\ ()I l—IS'I‘II)\I£D bx
.s‘edlcr about the statement.
McDonald not
answer as part of the testiiiioii}
llis
allowed into the court record for
consideration by the appeals
court McDonald replied that he
did not remember making the
statement

McDonald said he came to the
that there were
persons in Lesiiigton who did
know the real lflt‘IIUI} of the two
women w llllt the) were here

Sedlcr attacked McDonald's
appearance before the grand thI‘}
on the basis that McDonald was
not sworn in on Feb 3;. the first
day he appeared to provide the
background information

was allowed to

answer was. howeu-r.

conclusion

“'I‘Ill‘l l’ltliSIC\(lI ()I” .\lc
Donald totally taints the grand
jury and made it impossible for
the grand jur) in

to issue

dictiiients iii the case under
consideration.," Sedlcr said

McDonald said he appeared
before the grand jury before and
that he was sworn at that time
:\.s a result. he argued. there was
no need to reswear

“HEN SI‘EDLI‘IR
McDonald had ever appeared
before this same grand jury
which was seated last Nov. 4,
McDonald repllied, "I don’t
know "

Moynahaii then warned Sedler
about continuing this line of
questioning to McDonald “This
witness has said he doesn't
I‘t‘lllt‘ltlltt‘r being sworn You
must show evidence whether he
Take your
to

ASKED if

was or was not sworn
and move on
Let‘s get on with
the judge said

In tiis Scdler
contended that the purpose of the
obtain in
tclligciicc data lead the
apprehension of the two persons

exception
soiiicthllig else
the testimon)
summation
was to

grand IIII‘)

to to
being sought and not to return an
iiiilictiiieiit of criminal actnit)

against .ii:_\ of the si\ witnesses

Ill I \Ill\ \ \ll \\ ltl'Il’lill-ZI)
that the giand llll’} was iiistilicd
Ill Ilit‘}
suppose during the

:cgaidlcss the basis
s'.iI1«*il tttt
:t“.i'sitL‘.llIttt‘. there was e\ideiicc
of .i \iolation of ci'iiiiinal codes
such .is harboring fiigiti\es
'i\lllt h iltlilil lead to indictfiieiits
against persons‘

In his ruling \Ioi iiahan cited a
ItttftsiijI-riiie I 'ourt ruling. which
was It‘t'i'lltl} upheld in a similar
.\ew Haven.
Haven case.

jailed for

thc) also

tonn-iiipt
In the

person s

i.lst' III
New

“t‘l't'

( otitt
two
ionteiiipt hecalise
refused to anseer questions from
a grand jiir} about Sase and
l'ower

(ii'and juries "tiaxe powers of
inwstigation and iiitiuisition, the
scope of whose inquiries is not to
be limited narrowly b} questions
of propriet) the ruling stated
“The ideiititicatiom of the of
tender and the nature of the of
nor

('()ll

tense. ll there he one. are

the
clusioii of the grand jur) ‘s labors.

mall} dexeloped .it
not at the beginning "
N-dler told the

confident thecourt of appeals w ill

court he is

t't'H‘I‘M‘ the ruling

Yearbook will change

I oiitiniicd fi oni page l

The
lirst issue will also "got the kids
something of an overall idea oi
what the iiiagaline is trying to

c\'ei'_\thiiig." .lewcll said

do." she said
“The last issue of the year will
carry the traditional material of
a yearbook including end of the
tear activities as well as senior
picttiies. group shots and .stiident
index.” the proposal states
The two or three issues bet
ween the first and the last issues
will features. art and
news since the last issue. .Iewell
said “In general it will not be a
newspaper type of thing "

contain

”’I‘III". IN) \ItI) til~' Student
Publications will meet next week
to officially get started on this."
(ireeii said

The first action the board takes

w ill be iii the form of a siii‘\c\ "to

attitudes
and

ilcterniiiie student

toward .i iiiaga/iiie format

its l oiitciit the proposal states
\siiiiilar slime} will be taken at
the end of the tall HIT?) semester

the \llnt'), will be a random
over the

sampling conducted

telephone lioiioliew said

"Il\l‘,

(actors

.I.\

'I'III".
whether

continue

student

determining
the

(IS .‘I

to
publication will

iiiaga/ine will be
response as gauged through the
subscription sales and the survey
during the fall semester.” the
proposal states

The will "explore the
orderly transition to financial
independence “if the Keiituckian
magazine is successful, the
proposal states “The board will
also explore ways to sustain the
traditional yearbook on campus

boa rd

it the experiment pron-s to be a

tailui‘e "

 

   

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s of
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of

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tor
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Drfi.

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and
lt‘\
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tom
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Clockwatchers

Trio offers wake-up service to heavy sleepers

is; K n coy'i‘i:
\ssisiant \Ianaging l‘:(LIIIIl'

.\i roughly »I a in Monday
through l’i'iday. three Lesington
businessmen crawl out of their
respective beds and prepare to
make a lot of telephone calls

But before the person at the
other end of the line answers the
calls. the three discard their
businessmen images and assume
new identities: the ('lockwat-
chers

“III‘IIJM. IS THIS Betty"? It's
raining outside so he careful
when you drive to work." the
(‘lockwatcher says. and after the
necessary wakeful conversation.
he‘ll sign off with something like.
"Have a nice day."

The three men are the sole
operators of the (‘entral