xt7tx921gd00 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tx921gd00/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-04-18 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, April 18, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 18, 1978 1978 1978-04-18 2020 true xt7tx921gd00 section xt7tx921gd00 Early harvest

The thk-d and final UK buketball
scholarship stgnee was announced
yesterday, and it appears that the past
season’s first-place NCAA finish had a
conide‘able effect on the recruiting
strength of tire Cats. .

Clarence Tillman, a Hoot-7 forward
from West Philadelphia High Sclnool,
signed a natiornal letter of intent as an
ehted coach Joe Hall leaked en.

“Tillman is the finest shooting forward
in the conmtry,” Hall said. “(.‘larence
played against the toughest conpdition a
h'gh school player could meet, and to say
we're happy with him joining us is the

- ’1 so 2‘0} ('

1 :31

unthrstatement of the year.

“We feel both fortunate and lucky to be
associated with a program like Ken-
:gcky’s where we can attract players like

is.

Specifically, the players Hall was
talking of are Tillman, 6-3 gmrd Dwight
Anderson and 6-6 forward Chuck Ver-
derber.

Tillman is the nation's No. l prep for-
ward, while Anderson is the No. I-ranked
higln sclnool gnnard. Verderber was the
second-ranked player in Illinois.

Hall said the signirng of all three felt
“absolutely great.”

‘.

3.7.}

UK completes great recruiting season
with signing of forward Clarence Tillman

“Andtothhkfheadbdflallthreewill
be in the Derby Classic in larisville, April
”It

Called the finest shoodng forward in the
country by many college scents, Tillman
bra-nod the nets for a 61.6 career per-
centage, hitting 739-119 from the field
and 279352 at the clnnl'ity line for 77.8
pecent.

Tillman is the only player from West
Philly to make “City and All-Public
league three years in a row.

He played in as games in high school
and holds school records for most career
points (1,752, a 20.9 average) and single

seasonhightszt in MI). Hiscareertoud
was 102 points higher than that of Gene
Banks, a freslnnnan senmtion at Duke thb
year.
His h'gh sclnool coach, Joey Golden-
berg, said this of his latest product:
“For his size and bnlk, Clarence is as
gooda slnooteras l'veeverseen. I had
nothing to do with his shooting touch. He
wasthdwaywhenhecamehereJtis
vey difficult to change a kid's style
anyway, but in his case, there was no
reasonto.Heslwotsbetterthan6t)percent
gram the floor and he doesn‘t take bad
is.

“llistntnch'uenraetlythewayyou’d
tcachsomeone else toahoota juniper—
Ifile’s pncture' th perfectegml had to make a
n m on e proper ique of shooting
jumpes, I‘d use Clarence Tillman. He’s
gtning to make Kentucky one heck of a bit
p ayer."

"With four seniors leaving Kentucky, I
felt I would haven goodchlneeefcoming
in and taking over Jack Givem’ spot,"
Tillman said. “I feel like I can follow in
his footsteps with my outside shooting and
tom luokingforward tobeinga part of the
Kentucky program."

Volume LXlx, Number 138
Tuesday, April 18, 1978

K3?”

an independent student newspaper}

Classroom chicken

Artistic compositions can be experienced. not just Environment"aprojectinArtSMJ‘he work includes

seen. Sophomore Steve Roszell’s walk-in frame of
reference is his answer to "Designing a Classroom

a blackboard. a cardboard person, a stool and a live
chicken (on ground, in front of blackboard).

cl

'Won’t stick out' semester

Decision expected soon
on Evans’ resignation

By JIM MCNAIR
Copy Editor
and
DEBBIE MCDANIEL
Staff Writer

With less than a month to go in the
semester, the decision affecting the
resignation of Dr. Robert 0. Evans
as director of the Honors Program
lies, according to Dean of Un-
dergraduate Studies John
Stephenson, “in the near future.”

“A decision is going to be made
shortly,” Steplnernson said. “Several
students have said that I’m delaying
it until after the semester, but that’s
not going to be the case. I plan on
doing it well in advance of the end of
the semester.”

Evans, upon learning of the
Honors Program Evaluation
Committee’s recommendation to
rotate him out of the director’s slot,
submitted his resignation on March
22 to Academic Affairs Vice
President Lewis Cochran.

He said at the time, “I’ve worked
too hard and put too much into this
program to be embarrassed and
fired.”

Two weeks later, Cochran
removed the resignation from his
desk and sent it to Stephenson on the
basis that Evans did not use the

proper channel of authority.
Stephenson’s officce incorporates
the Honors Program and he is
Evans’ immediate superior.

Evans, meanwhile, is runninng out
of patience. “I’ve been willing to
accept this mainly for the students,"
he said, citing preregistratiorn as one
of the functions his presence is
needed for. “Someone has got to run
the show, bit I’ve no intention of
sticking it out until the end of the
semester.”

Stephenson defended his position
of delaying the decision on Evans’
directorship, saying such steps take
time and consultation. He said he
plans to meet with each faculty
member in the Honors Program as
well as Evans, and will not make a
final decision “until I‘ve weighed all
of the arguments for and against Dr.
Evans’ appointment."

“The best time to make a decision
this important is when emotions are
not this high,” he said. “I also want
to hear whatever people have to say
on all sides of this issue — and not
all of it is on one side.”

Although Stephenson lnas not of-
ficially reacted to the committee’s
March 22 report, Arts and Sciences
Associate Dean Donn Sands, who
chaired the evaluation committee,
said the report is final. and none of

Handicapped seating problems continue at Arena

By MEL HOLBROOK
Kernel Reporter

Handicapped students at UK have
filed complaints with UK and
Lexington Civic Center officials
about lack of handicapped seating at
Rupp Arena This is the second year
that such complaints have been
made about inadequate or
nonexistent seating at the facility.

When the students protested early
last year, platforms were set up in
the four comers on the arena floor.
The students were satisfied with
this, but at the UK-Alabama game of
that 76-77 season, the platforms had
disappeared.

Last season, students in
wheelchairs sat behind Sections 22
and 23 in an area reserved at the top

me."

May 28 disaster.

 

“today

inside

IT'S ELECTION TIME AGAIN, and campaign statements from
candidates for Student Govenment President, Vice President and
Semte-at-Large positions are on page 3. The statements of can-
didates for college seats will appear tomorrow.

of the lower deck for them.

In a memorandum to the Student
Affairs Office during the season,
Dick Cambron, president of the
Handicapped Student Union, said
handicapped students have com-
plained that the view of the floor is
blocked when people seated in front
of the section stand up.

UK officials say they are meeting
with civic center officials to seek a
solution to the problem. But Han-
dicapped Student Union members
have said they are losing patience
with what they say is a lack of ac-
tion.

In fact, Cambron has said that
unless progress is soon made, a
lawsuit may be filed. He said he will
probably call a meeting of some of
the handicapped students to see

what they want to say to officials
about delays in positive action.

Jake Karnes, director of Han-
dicapped Student Services, said a
1973 federal rehabilitation law
directs federally supported in-
stitutions to accommodate the
handicapped He said UK “may be
in violation” of that law, according
to a lawyer‘s opinion he had
requested.

Kentucky State Law (KRS 56.493.)
states that the standards and
specificatiors to all buildings “. . .
shall take into consideration the
needs of hanticapped and, as far as
is feasible and financially
reasonable, make such buildings
and their facilities accessible to, and
usable by, handicapped persons.”
discussed the situation.

In February, Minter met with
Student Government represen-
tatives. “Minter said they were
making plans for architectural
changes that would take out the first
two rows of seats in sections 22 and
23. A platform device would be
elevated high enough for the han-
dicapped students to see over
people’s heads when the people
stood up," said Gene Tichenor,
student affairs committee chair-
man.

Minter said architects have been
consulted recenntly and several
mock-up platforms have been
designed. He said the problem is still
being studied, bid will be solved
before the next basketball season
begins.

Cambron said handicapped ser-

vices officials were given a pre-
openirng tour of the arena. They were
shown an so-seat block which was to
be reserved for the handicapped.
When they arrived for the first
game, all seating reserved for the
handicapped was located at the back
of the end zone, on the upper level.

“In the near future, long before the
summer, we hope to nneet again and
discuss what progress has been
made," Burch said.

Under the state and federal
regulations, one percent of the
aren a’s seats should be accessible to
the handicapped. Under such
regulations, Rupp Arena should
have about 230 seats for the han-
dicapped or those with ambulatory
problems.

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

the recommendations will be
changed.

“He (Stephenson) can’t make nns
rewrite anything. We presented an
honest report,” said Sands. “The
committee is not going to rewrite the
report just became there’s been a
pnblic uproar.”

Sands said the review committee
wrote the report in an objective
manner, and followed the normal
procedure despite the lack of
precedents.

Evans met yesterday with the
dean, but reportedly now for routine
office busines. Evarns said he left
Stephenson‘s office with no more
assurance of remaining on the job
than before.

Evans has stopped short of
packing his belongings and moving
out of his Patterson tower office. He
says he is uncertain whetlner he
would continue as an English
profesor if he had to leave the
Honors Program, bra says that he
tnas been drained by the experience.

“The way I am presently disposed
to feel, I will pull out of here at the
first opportunity," said Evans.

The other hot issue in the review
committee’s report is the recom-
mendation that it be made man-
datory for Honors Program faculty
members to be jointly appointed to
the Honors Program and to the
department of their academic
discipline. There is general
disagreement over the effect such a
move would have on the program.

Stephenson defenthd his belief in
the program, countering remarks
that he wants it disbanded. “I
believe strongly in the importance of
the program and would do
everything I can to keep it strong."
The recommendations in the
evaluation report aren’t abenlute
though, and are still open for
negotiation between the evaluation
‘committee and Stephenson.

Evans believes that joint ap-
pointments will dilute and possibly
devalue the program. But it is the
recommendation that he be
rcnnovcd by ”rotation" that he says
he disputes the most.

“If i were asked to rescind my
resignation and l were given the
recommendations of the committee,
I'd do it all over again." he said.

 

state

NEWSMAN RICHARD E. Wlll’l'l’ OF THE COURIER-
JOL‘RNAI. said that ha Pulitzer Prize, won yesterday, represented
"an awful lot of dead ends and dry holes that finally paid off for

Whitt, 33, won the Pulitzer for general local reporting as a result
of he coverage of the Beverly Hills supper club fire at Southgatc.
Ky., that killed I65 people last year.

Whitt, who at the time was a reporter for the Courier-Journal in
Northern Kentucky, spent the entire summer investigating the

Other Pulitzer journalism awards went to the Philadelphia
lnqu'rer for pnblic service reporting showing abises of power by
local police; Gaylord D. Shaw, of The Los Angeles Times for
national reporting in a series exposing unsafe construction of some
major dams; llenry Kamm, of the New York Times, for in-
ternational reporting on the lndochirna refugees.

The special local reporting award went to Anthony B. Dolan of
The Stamford Advocate, Stamford, Conn. for a series on municipal

corruption.

'l‘lll'I KU KLUX KLAN (,‘AN RALLY on the grounds of the Jet'-
ferson Davis Monument at Fairview in June bu won't be allowed
near the concrete structure became of repair work, State Parks
Commissioner Ilruce Montgomery said yesterday.

Montgomery said persom are not allowed near the base of the
:iSt-foot obelisk monument while repair work is beirng done became

of insurance consideratians.

The Ku Klux Klan has announced plans for a rally in Hopkinsville
June 34. including a ceremony to lay a wreath at the monument 10
miles east of llopkinsville. The 22-acre park is near the Todd Conty
birthplace of Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy during

the ('ivil War.

nation

ONE MONTII 'I'tl 'I‘lll'l DAY Al-‘Tl-Ill POLICE cut Off food and
water supplies to the headmnrters of a radical group, the first of
the 25 persons holed up in the three-story brick house has surren-

dcrcd.

'l‘hc surrender of lshongo Africa, 28, marked the first break for
police in their utmost year-long confrontation with the group that

calls innsclf MUVE.

Police said last month when they set up the barricade that they
hoped the radicals, who term themselves a back-to-nature group,
would surrender when their water and food ran out.

weather

SHOWERS ANI) TIIUNIH‘ZIlSTORMS LIKELY TODAY
diminishing tonight. 'l‘huntk-rstorms possibly becoming heavy
today. with highs in the mid to upper tits. Lows tonight in the low to
nuid 4405. lkcrcasing clouincss tomorrow, with h'ghs in the low 8th.
llain chances are fit) pn'ccnt today. 50 percent ton thl.

 

 

 

  

 

1431961321

editorials 896W

, Steve milliliter
Editor in Chic]

Dick tiahrwl
Managing Editor

“minus (.‘larlt
Assistant Managing Editor

(‘harlcs Main
Editorial Editor

Noll Fields
AIM at Arts!
Entertainment Editor

David Ilthhtlts' ’
Sports Editor

Iloh Slauble
Amstunt Sports Editor

Walter Tunis
Arts 1' Entertainment Editor

Grog PM
Richard McDmnld
Jim McNair
Mike Mower
Betsy Pearce
Copy Editor:

David 0‘ Neil
Photo Manager

‘ Jeanne Wei-10
Photo Supervisor

 

 

Darts, la‘urels and the glories of spring

I’ve been hesitant to herald the
glories of spring and with good
reason. For one thing, I have always
held a deep distmst for the whims of
nature and spring this year has been
outrageome fickle. It never ceases
to amaze me that if I leave the house
for class properly attired for tem-

peratures in the upper 70s, the sky '

immediately clouds up, the ther-
mometer drops 15 degrees and I
freeze my sweet buns off for the rest
of the day. ,

But I can take it. I can take
anythingafter this past harsh winter
chock-fun of snow, ice and black
sludge The snow which settled in
January with positive perennial

Kernel

The Kernel’s coverage of the
events surrounding Stansfield
Turner’s appearance at UK has been
outrageous. The Kernel is entitled to
its opinions, Iam sure, but I wish for
once it would at least try to get the
facts straight.

 

This comment was submitted by
George Potratz, a UK assistant
professor of English.

 

—The demonstrators at the s
were not “outside agitators” or
“bused-in hecklers” (Kernel
editorial, Apr. 14). We were also not
all Iranians. There are plenty of
Americans who are deeply ashamed
of the CIA and what it does, not only
in Iran but throughout the world.
Quite a few of us were there Wed-
nesday night, as were foreign
students from such places as Italy,
Germany and Africa.

Thmigh the Kernel has managed
to conmal the fact, three of us
Americans were among the twelve
people arrested. We were also not all
“from out of town." I, for one, have
been at UK for the last six years, but
lwould point out in any case that the
speech was a prblic lecture, not
simply a University gathering.
Turner himself, though he clearly
has close ties to the Patterson
School, is not exactly homegrown.

—Contrary to Kernel reporting
(“Arrests made as marchers
disrupt CIA chief’s speech,” Kernel
headline, Apr. 13), we did not disrupt
the meeting, which continued as
planned. We were not arrested for
denying Stansfield Turner his right
to speak. This is made clear by the
fact that half of the arrests were
made before Turner eva‘ entered
the room. We were arrested became
the CIA fears that it will be exposed
for what it is, the secret police of
imperialism, and because they were
afraid to see Turner’s whitewash
dirtied by the truth.

Free speech was at issue, but it

authrrity refused to submit to
modern machinery or even the
resolute appearance of the sun.

judith
egerton

 

 

Then the month of March arrived,
always a tricky month. I’m
suspicious of March—the month
with the cute rhyme, the month with
halcyon days back-to-back with
face-chapping cold and gray days.
What's more, I don’t consider
crocuses and daffodils convincing

harbingers of spring.

I think it’s safe now to say spring
is finally — and finely —— here. I’ve
seen beds of violets and boughs of
blooming dogwoods that make my
eyes water with pleasure. I see the
trees with their fresh, tender sprouts
forming tunnels of the finest
chartreuse lace, I see faces of
friends devoid of scarves and collars
and those faces are smiling.
Keeneland has opened and it’s tax
return time. Lace on those Adidas,
became the living is easy once
again.

If this is, however, a false
spring — merely a teaser — I’m in
trouble. I was counting on spring to

help me retrieve the sanity I lost
somewhere in February. I know
positively that a sudden severe drop
in temperature will came me to run
amok. You will probably read about
it in the papers: RAVING, BIKINI-
CLAD MANIAC APPREHENDED
TRYING TO HIJACK JET BOUND
FOR VIRGIN ISLANDS.

Because of finals in May, this will
be my final column this semester. I
wish to extend a few personal darts
and laurels ......

LAUREL To the University
Senate for protesting the ap~
pointment of William B. Terry,

President of Bluegrass Coca-Cola
Bottling Co., to the University Board
of Trustees, citing conflict of in-
terest.

DART To the Kentucky General
Assembly for taking a step back-
ward by voting to rescind the Equal
Rights Amendnent and a LAUREL
to Lt. Gov. Thelma Stovall for
having the courage and conviction to
veto that resolution.

LAUREL To the Wine Institute
for formulating a code of advertising
that will not “exploit the human

form, feature provocative or en-
ticing poses or be demeaning to any
individual.” Take a cue from them,
Proctor and Gamble.

DART To Cliff Hagan, Athletic
Director, for misleading thousands
of students with what he considered
an innocuous joke, but what was
believed by many to be an official
announcement that classes were
called off after the Wildcat NCAA
victory.

Good luck with finals.

Judith Egerton is a journalism
senior.

coverageof Turner's speech 'outrageous’

was our right, not the CIA's, which
was violated.

—Among other facts the press has
shown no interest in: after UK police
took one of the Iranians out of the
ballroom, five or six of them jumped
on him and beat him. The rest of us
were merely manhandled by police
in full riot gear, handcuffed, locked
up, fingerprinted, photographed,
etc. and charged with Class B
misdemeanors carrying a possible
penalty of 90 days and $250.

 

The use of the word “disrupt" in
the headline with Thursday‘s ar-
ticle on the protest was not in-
tended to presume guilt, and the
Kernel is sorry if the wording gave
that impression. A more judicious
word such as interrupt, upset or
protest would have been
preferable.

The statement in Friday’s
editorial that the arrested
demonstrators were from out of
town was incorrect, and we
apologize for the inaccuracy. Some
of the demonstrators were from
Lexington. and some may have
been arrested for activities that
should, under the law, be allowed.
The editorial's position was that
dissent which prevents a person
from having the opportunity to be
heard. or prevents people from
hearing a speaker at a meeting
they attended for that purpose.
should be recognized as illegal.

 

 

 

We Americans were eventually
released on our own recognizance,
but the eight adult Iranians were
each assessed $2000 bond (twice the
recommended amount for such a
charge) and required to put up a ten
percent cash deposit. The Kernel
may believe that “the arrests of the
protestors Wednesday night fulfilled
their fondest hopes” (editorial, Apr.
14), but I for one hope to experience
greater thrills in my lifetime. Still, I

will be content if it does indeed bring
attention to what we were trying to
say, though that sure as hell hasn't
happened so far.

In hope that it still may, however,
I would like to quote from a fact
sheet we tried to hand out Wed-
nesday night. The information it
contains should be common
knowledge by now, but many people
seem all too ignorant of it. It
chronologically surveys a few of the
highlights of the CIA’s activities
around the globe in the last thirty
years.

1948 — CIA funnels funds into
Italian political organizations,
newspapers, journals, and organizes
public demonstrations to prevent
Communist party gains in elections.
(Fortune, June 1975, p. 200)

1953 — Iran’s Mosaddegh
government institutes democratic
reforms, freedom of the press,
freedom to organize trade unions,
and popularly elected parliament.
Mosaddegh nationalizes British-
owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Co. CIA
agent Kermit Roosevelt, grandson
of FDR, organizes military coup.
Government of Shah Pahlavi
repeals democratic reforms,
thousands if progressive Iranians
jailed and tortured by CIA-trained
secret police. British oil holdings are
redistributed among Big Five oil
companies. One of the Big Five,
Gulf, hires Kermit as vice president.

1954—The popularly elected
Arbenz government in Guatemala
confiscates private lands of United
Fruit Co. and distributes them
among poor peasants in 1952. Under
the preceding Alvalo ,govemment
and under Arbenz Guzman,
Guatemalans enjoy freedom of
speech and freedom of the press for
the first time in their history. But the
CIA organizes an army in Honduras
which invades Guatemala, over-
throws Arbenz in 1954. A fascist

police state is set up. United Fruit
Co. lands are returned. All
democratic reforms are repealed.
(John Gerassi, The Great Fear in
Latin America)

1954 — CIA-controlled Air
America provides support. for
French forces at Dien Bien Phu. CIA
begins organizing Meo tribesmen in
northern Laos and Montagnards in
Vietnam to attack Pathet Lao and
NLF base areas. Meo tribesmen are
encouraged to grow opium as cash
crop and rely on CIA for food sup-
plies. Meo become completely
dependent on CIA Air America to
market opium. Ramparts and
Atlantic Monthly later disclose that
Air America is shipping herein to the
US.

1961 — The Cuban government
nationalizes a sugar company,
holdings of United Fruit,
Rockefeller investments, and closes
down Mafia operations in Havana.
CIA organizes abortive Bay of Pigs
invasion. Later, CIA works with
Mafia to make unsuccessful at-
tempts to assassinate Castro.

1963— The Great Fear in Latin
America written by John Gerassi.
Gerassi, former Latin American
correspondent for Time, discloses
links of Peace Corps, AID, etc., to
CIA and US. corporate interests.

1963-1971 — Student anti-war
movement results in studmt oc-
cupation of administration buildings
at Columbia, Yale, Harvard, etc.
Captured documents reveal CIA
subversion of “liberal” American
universities. Documents expose
university programs that were
fronts for CIA agents and in-
strumental in training police forces
of dictatorial regimes. during same
period, National Student Association
found to be tied to CIA. Also during
same period CIA conducts massive
spy operation directed at anti-war

movement in US.

1965 — Indonesian government
confiscates holdings of Standard Oil,
Socony Vacuum and rubber plan-
tations of Goodyear, Uniroyal. With
arms and air support, CIA promotes
secessionist political movement in
Sumatra where most American oil
wells are located. CIA-connected
officers in Indonesian army stage
coup. Nearly 1,000,000 Communists
and patriotic Indonesians executed
by Suharto military government.
Indonesia currently has over 100,000
political prisoners.

1967 — Andreas Papandreou
elected head of reform government
by 53 percent majority. Papandreou
promises to close NATO bases, cut
Greek defense budget, and initiate
social reforms. Before he can take
office a group if Greek army of-
ficers, following a CIA contingency
plan, overthrow the government.
Papandreou, almost all democratic
trade union leaders, newspaper
editors and academics are thrown in
prison. (Papandreou, Democracy at
Gunpoint; the movie Z)

1968-1971 — William Colby
organizes CIA Operation Phoenix.
50,000 political assassinations
carried out in South Vietnam.

1973—J.A. McCone, director of
ITT and former CIA head, offers $1
million to CIA to bring downfall of
Allende before he is elected. But
Allende is elected to Chile’s highest
office in 1970 despite ITT, and in 1971
he expropriates ITT and
nationalizes Kennecott and
Anaconda copper companies. From
1970 to 1973, the US. spends over $18
million to “destabilize“ Chile. In
1973, Allende dies fighting a
takeover by a ruthless military
junta. (New York Times, Mar. 22,
1973, p. 42; Feb. 10, 1975, p. 1; Nov.
24, 1975, p. 35)

1975 — Phillip Agee, former CIA

agent, writes CIA Diary exposing
full extent of CIA subversion of
foreign governments, and links
between CIA and oveseas corporate
interests. US. was for some time the
only country in the free world where
citizens were not allowed to read his
book. Americans had to mail to
Canada for copies.

Vincent Marchetti, liberal ex—CIA
agent, is only able to publish his
book on the CIA after a court battle.
Publishing was delayed despite the
fact that Marchetti is a moderate
who is not against the CIA.

This is not a history of “in-
telligenoe gathering," nor is it a list
of “excesses." Liberal politicians
who want to cover up the real nature
of the CIA pretend that CIA ac-
tivities are “abuses” of the
“legitimate functions" of the
agency, the aberrations of over-
zealous bureaucracy. The history of
US. foreign policy demonstrates
that this is not the case. The CIA is
doing exactly what it was created
for: protecting the political and
economic exploitation of other
countries by US. corporate in-
terests.

Stansfield Turner himself is
reported by the local press to have
promised Wednesday evening that
the “bad old days" are over, that the
US. is dev doping a new democratic
“American model of intelligence,”
that the CIA today rarely exercises
its capacity for political action, etc.
The Kernel, while finding US.
support for the Shah “nothing to
brag about," deems it “utterly
abhorrent” that anyone should
attempt to prevent anyone from
hearing Turner’s ideas.

The only people so prevailed were
those of us who were carted off in
cuffs before Turner’s speech ever
began, and it was a pretty abhorrent
experience. But I must say that
being spared from having to listen to
that sort of drivel was the only
bright spot in the whole affair.

 

 

This is not (I test!

 

t. COURSB
PR“! NO. 3 BC.

 

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£319.22
This is your
registration form.

Talk to your advisor
I. learn how to fill
this cot—then he
sure to register
before Apr. 19.

 

 

 

 

 

the UK. Coffeehouse
Series has just
changed its name to

”Phreds
Place”

and proudly presents
RON WHITE 8r THE CASE

STEVE GOINS

Monday April 17th 4-7 pm.
SC East Lawn

the COllINSWORTH

BROTHERS BAND
Wednesday April 19th

Com plex Comm. 7:30-10:30

EDDIE GRADY & FRANK SCHAAP
Monday & Tuesday

April 24th &

Stud. Ctr. Patio 12-1z30

BROS.

25th

 

 

We welcome your
piece of mind

clutter

If".

 

”the

“the

N

will be held on Saturday,
May 13 at 4:00 o’clock

A pamphlet containing information about Commencement
activities was recently mailed to degree candidates

for whom correct addresses were available. Students

who did not receive this pamphlet may pick up a copy at the lst Floor
desk of the . . ._ ' '
Patterson Office Tower.
or at any College
dean's office.

 

ICE;

The 111th Annual
Commencement Exercises .

 

 

 

promise ‘

Irltt
man.
Senator-
dedcnto
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I will
attondn
student
commlt -
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stud-Its

Darrell

represe
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body. 1‘
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the st .
Govern -

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olflce 0
continue
at this
diverse
continue
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Matthew
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represen
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portant
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need
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David

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tic
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of
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SG candidates at large

All students can vote tomorrow for Senators-at-Large from the
candidates below.
Hopefuls for the top two spots are in the box below.

if”? K ffN’i'i i(‘i\' Y A ifRNEf.

. Tuesday. April l8. i978—J

 

 

Deng Balsaths—l am run-lug to
become more aware and Involved
with lines that affect UK students.
By being a senator. I will be able to
man at least some contribution to
the Unlvcsity and students indeed
of sitting back and complainhg
about afferent baues. The only
promlaelwilimabisthatlwilldo
my best—that's all I can do.

Britt Brock-an— I. Britt Brock-
man. am seeking the office of
Senator-at-Large. If elected I will
dedcate myself to the work and
extra hours required of the position.
I will represent my colltltuents by
attendng all needs: and relating
student macernl to the varioun
committed. I feel that I have the
ability. enthusiasm. time and open—
rnlndednesas required for this
pmition to be a usefirl link between
studcuts and government.

Darrell Blvias— To be a truly
representative organization.
Student Governmnt must have the
intrut and mart of the student
body. The relationship between
Student Government and the student
body has been less than enthusiastic
In the past. I would like to improve
the students' Intrest in Student
Governmnt.

Phillip Cauldy— I am seeking the
office of Senator—at—Large to
continue representing the students
of this university in their myriad
diverse needs. In addtion. I hwe to
continue with the many worthwhile
projects of the previous year and to
assist with the many more traded
programs of this coming year.

Matthew S. Cettle— Experience is
an important key to good
representation. and as two-time
president of my high schoc‘. class l
have gained thh needed expu'ience.
Beyond thh. I have a high interest
and involvement In sevu-al Im-
portant issuu which may come
before the next session of the Senate.
As an out-oi-state student I am
responsive to these who will be so
seriously affected by the proposed
tuition increase. Also. as an Honors
Program student 1 will excerclae my
Inluenoe to prunote the academic
side of proposals coming before the
assembly. I have the time. ability
and experience to make a
knowiedgabie response to these and

 

Jim Lobb— Today professionalism
is a necessity for effective Student
Government representation of
student concerns. Experience, not
only in Student Government, but in
actual administratvie dealings, is an
essential. Due to my experience as
Arts & Sciences Senator, member of
the Arts and Sciences Faculty
Council, University Senate and
University Senate Council, I can
offer Student Government the un-
matched combination of proven
leadership and extensive ex-
perience.

My platform emphasizes an open
student government, aggressive in
protecting student rights, and
responsive to student needs. My
qualifications leave me uniquely
capable of fulfilling this platform. I
ask for your vote.

Dennis Reynolds— i feel that the
effectiveness of Student Govem-
ment hinges on the individual
initiative of its leaders, and their
ability to inspire cooperation within
the organization. My broad goal is to
achieve a better, more efficient
communication
University community, benefiting

Executive candidates stress
initiative and student interests

President

the students, faculty and ad-
ministration. The University exists

to serve the students.