xt7v416t1t1p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7v416t1t1p/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-09-26 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, September 26, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 26, 1973 1973 1973-09-26 2020 true xt7v416t1t1p section xt7v416t1t1p Vice-President
perilously close to
indictment or
impeachment.

Agnew asks

for House

investigation

By JEAN HELLER
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — Vice President Spiro T. Agnew asked the
House of Representatives Tuesday to investigate accusations
that he was involved in political corruption.

Agnew denied wrongdoing in a man-to-man meeting with
President Nixon. then took his case to Congress.

The vice president acted after Atty. Gen. Elliot L.

Richards on

announced he had

authorized federal

prosecutors to take their evidence against Agnew before a

grand jury in Baltimore.

AGNEW MADE his request of the House in a letter to
Speaker Carl Albert. Agnew personally took his letter to
Capitol Hill, where he met for more than an hour with Albert

and other House leaders.

In the letter, the vice president said his lawyers had ad-
vised him the Constitution bars criminal proceedings aginst
a vice president while he holds office.

He said he therefore could not acquiesce in any criminal
proceedings, or look to them for vindication.

“IN THESE circumstances, I believe. it is the right and
duty of the vice president to turn to the House." he said.

Agnew’s letter did not mention impeachment proceedings
as a forum for the full inquiry he requested. Nor. said Albert.
did Agnew mention that possibility during the meeting.

Continued on page 12

Santi Visalli-Photoreporters

The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 35
Wednesday, September 26, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Politicians
maintain
'wait-and-see'
attitude

Ry RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

KENTUCKY‘S political leadership are

maintaining a wait~and~see attitude for the .

most part before taking positions on the
proposed Red River Dam.

All of the elected officials except one—
Representative Carl Perkins—claim they
need more information on the $30 million
project which has been the subject of
numerous battles between cone
servationists and proponents of the dam.

The project was authorized in 1962 as
part of the Flood Control Plan for the
Kentucky River Basin but it was several
years before final plans could be
developed by the Army Corps of
Engineers.

WHEN THE final plans were presented
it was learned that opposition had begun
on the basis of possible damage to en-
vironment of the gorge. The area has been
a favorite spot for nature lovers and
conservationists as it abounds in natural
beauty.

Gov. Wendell Ford has maintained that
the final decision over whether the dam
should be built is up to Congress, since

JOIIN SHERMAN COOPER
Former senator reaffirms position
appropriations for the project must be
approved by both bodies. It is on this
contention that he has refused to issue any
statements or let his feelings be known
publicly on the subject.

. Governor's Conference

H\owever. after meeting with Corps
representatives last week. Ford was
convinced that his position would weigh
heavily on the outcome of the project and
requested more information from the
Corps on the impact of the dam on the
environment and facts on the cost.

FORD‘S PRESS secretary Tom Preston.
when contacted Tuesday at the Southern
in Alabama.
conceded the governor's position will
probably be made known after he reviews
the new information.

“Ford wants the gorge preserved but
wants water control for the area also."
Preston said.

Perkins could not be reached for his
feelings on'the matter. but a spokesman in
his Washington office said the Seventh
District representative bases his “strong
support for the project solely on the basis
of the flood control benefits for the area."
The gorge area is located in Perkins'
district.

(‘ontinued on page I:

 

News In Brief

from The Associated Press
and The Kernel Staff

0 Dr. Weaver dies
. Hunt drops hint
. EPA battles loom
o Skylab is home

. Boyle near death

. Today's weather...

0 Dr. Ralph H. Weaver, professor of
microbiology at UK since 1926. died of
cancer Tuesday afternoon at Good
Samaritan Hospital.

Weaver retired from the University in
June.

Graveside services will be held Thur-
sday. 2 p.m.. at Lexington Cemetery. The
family requests no flowers be sent.

0 WASHINGTON
—- (‘onvicted con-
spirator E. Howard
Hunt tossed the
Senate Watergate
committee a quickly
questioned theory of
betrayal by a double
agent and then threw
out broad hints
’l‘ucsday of CIA
domestic activity
and other planned
political operations.
The committee. in
second day of
public testimony
trom llunt followng
a seven-week recess. did not immediately
pursue the veiled ('IA or political
operation references.

its

[-1. HOWARD Hl'NT

o FRANKFURT. Ky. —— The stage
seemed set Tuesday for future legal
battles between environmentalists and
coal operators on new federal regulations
on discharge of waste water into streams.

The first day of a public hearing by the
US Environmental Protection Agency
yielded complaints by conservationists of
continuing blackening or damage to
waters and indications by some coal
spokesmen that the new rules need to be
clarified.

Even the ES. Corps of Engineers. which
occasionally has been criticized by en-
vironmentalists. testified about adverse
effects in the Huntington district from coal
operations.

0 ABOARD ['88 NEW ORLEANS — The
men of Skylab 2 returned to earth Tuesday
from history‘s longest space mission. 3
59tg~day odyssey of science.

They splashed down in the Pacific Ocean
after a voyage of more than 24 million
miles.

.-\stronauls Alan I. Bean. Jack R.
Lousma and Owen K. (Iarriott smoothly
guided their partially crippled Apollo
command ship to a 6: 20 pm EDT landing
at sea. 2‘25 miles southwest of San Diego.
(‘alif

0 WASHINGTON — Former United
Mine Workers boss WA. “Tony“ Boyle lay
near death Tuesday after a suspected
suicide attempt within hours of a
scheduled court appearance on murder
conspiracy charges.

Dr. Milton Gusack. said blood drawn
from the comatose Boyle showed large
amounts of sodium amytal.

4

‘3.

If we can trust our local weatherman,
there's a 30 per cent chance of rain today.
Partly cloudy and warm weather will
continue through tomorrow with tem-
peratures in the upper 805 today and upper
60s tonight.

 

   

    
 
 
    
 
   
   
   
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
    
  
    
    
   
    
  
  
     
    
  

  

 

The KOMUCKY Kernel

liJ Journalism Building. University at Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky 40506.

Established \894

Mike Clark Managing Editor
(Manes We'lc. Practicum Manager
Bl“ Strauo Sports Editor

(arm (rnnner Arts FdliO'

John Ellis. Advertising Manager

Steve swm. Editor in Chief
Jenny Swartz. News Editor
Kaye Coyte, Nancy Daly.and

Bruce Winges. Copy Editors
Bruce Singleton Photo Manager

The Kentucky Kernel is mailed live times weekly durinq the school year except during
holidays and exam periods. and lWice weekly during the summer sesSion

VJ'NISHCO by the Kernel Press Inc . I272 Priscnla Lane. Lexington. Kentucky Begun as
the Cadet in 1094 and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel Since l9ls. The
Kernel Press Inc lounded l97l First ciaSs postage paid at Lenington. Kentucky. Ad

au~.ertising should be reported to the editors.
L Editorials represent theopinion ol the editors and not the University.

 

 

vertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any talse or misleading)

 

Liquior at games
may be prohibited

Students who have been taking liquor to football games
without interference from University officials may be in for
a surprise at the next home game.

At each of the first two games, several incidents of bottle
and can throwing were reported to campus police and the
Dean of Students office. One arrest has been made, and the
possibility of another exists.

These incidents have prompted several meetings this
week between certain administrators; an announcements is
expected at the end of the week informing the public that, at
future games, coolers and containers will be checked for
alcoholic beverages.

Because of the actions of a few, many will now suffer the
loss of an unwritten privilege. However, there is one
solution that could solve the problem of flying glass and
metal. The University could sell beer at the games and put

it in paper cups.

According to KRS. 244.020 “(2) No person shall be under
the influence of alcoholic beverages on any public or private
road, in any passenger coach, street-car or other public
place or building or at any public gathering.”

Commonwealth Stadium is a public place, but we
question how Freedom Hall can sell beer when it, too, is a
public place and the property it’s on, The Kentucky Fair
and Exposition Center, is owned by the state. Seemingly, if
an alcoholic beverage can be sold in one public place,
nothing should keep persons from selling it in other public
places. such as Commonwealth Stadium.

It is unfortunate that students may lose one of their un-
written privileges but in the meantime maybe we should

 

 

 

     
   
   
  
        
         
    
    
   
     
 
       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

   

'Beer's to ya'

 

Letters

 

Beg your pardon

Dear ”Answer to apathy." I beg your
pardon.

The Kernel does exactly what it is
supposed to do. American newspapers, no
matter if the paper is The New York Times
or The Louisville Times. has one distinct
priority. This priority. over all else, is to
report the news.

The Kernel does exactly that.

The problem lies in not what The Kernel
should do for the future of UK, but what
you should do.

nothing but cause despair and apathy, then
you should take a step further and you will
realize The Kernel only reports the news.
I should hope by now that surely you do
not think no news means everything is
going fine, for it doesn’t. It only means that
newspaper reporters and editors are not
doing their job of reporting the news.
The Kernel does an outstanding job, and
I commend them for a great college
journalism performance. The reason so
many students attack The Kernel is
because The Kernel is the only
organization around UK with the guts to
show them what clowns they really are.

 

  
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
   
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
  
   
  
 
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 

think about this solution.

If you insist that The Kernel does

 

Nlcholas Von Hoffman

King Features Syndicate

 

(‘ontrols have been off beef for a few
days and the prices haven't shot up yet. so
we can expect John T, Dunlop. director of
the (‘ost of Living Council. or another one
of the losers that Richard Nixon has
lighting inflation to congratulate himself
on the TV. If the prices haven't gone up
since controls were lifted. it‘s only because
they were so high when the controls were
applied.

.-\ tremendous number of our fellow
citizens can't afford to eat beef any more.
But beef is a prestige item. beef gives you
the what-tors to defend your country. beef
makes you manly. beef makes you sexy.
beef gives you status and courage. beef.
not Wheaties. is the food of champions for
red-blooded and raw All-Americans. Nixon
cats beef and John Mitchelldid before they
pulled his teeth out.

.\l.\lt\'l-II.(ll'S Stll'ltf'l‘l 0F protein and
patriotism that beefis. it is not an absolute
good. The fat-lade. gross chunks of almost
bleeding meat that we call a steak would

make a more cultivated people retch.
Worship of steer meat may also drive us
individually into debt and ruin our
agriculture. ()n the average. each of us
cats 212 pounds of meat and poultry a
year—about 30 per cent of the world
supply.

If we could satisfy our everexpanding
appetite for meat by grazing livestock on
land unfit for any other use we wouldn‘t
imperil our agriculture nor face the rising
prices that have come upon us. but it
doesn't work that way.

“Enormous quantities of the highest
quality food sources are fed to animals.“
writes Frances Moore Lappe in “Diet for a
Small Planet“ «Ballantine Books. 31.25).
"Fully one-half of the harvested
agricultural land in the US. is planted
with teed crops. We feed 78 per cent of all
our grain to animals."

l’l'T .\\ll1‘lll2lt way. a steer must be
led 21 pounds of vegetable protein to
produce one pound of meat protein for us

to eat. The amount of protein which we
teed to our livestock. and which was lost to
human consumption because steers are
inefficient protein factories, is the
equivalent. Lappe informs us, of ”90 per
cent of the world protein deficit.“

But African kids suffering from
Kwashiokor,,a disease caused by protein
deficinecy. aren‘t going to cause most of us
to do more than cluck in sympathy.
Kwashiorkor has been identified in kids
here in the states and that didn‘t change
anybody‘s eating habits. People probably
wouldn‘t give up eating beef even if they
knew that the higher you eat in the food
chain the more likely you are to be
poisoned by the pesticide residues which
accumulate in the cells of the meat we love
to eat.

No. it‘ll be the high price of meat that‘ll
get most of us off beef. if anything does.
Besides, most of us don‘t have the foggiest
idea how we can eat well or healthily
without consuming large amounts of flesh.

    

Vicky Heston
Journalism-sophomore

Beefin' about price controls

We red. white and blue carnivores
wouldn't know how to get our protein
except by whacking it off the flank of a
steer.

FRANCES LAPPIC can help us here.
Her book will tell you about how much
protein you need and how you can get it
without eating meat.

\‘(ll' DON‘T HAVE to become a chemist
to try this kind of cuisine. Frances Lappe
gives what the basic high protein com-
binations are, i.e. bread and cheese. and
some recipes to get you started with good-
tasting. low-meat cookery. She doesn‘t
recommend that you become a Hindu and
turn your life upside down. Move into it
gradually without going all the way.

Think of the money you could save it
your family had four healthy, high-protein.
meatless days a week. And if you do, the
next time Earl Butz gets on the tube to tell
you meat prices are going up again. think
how good it will be to tell him to take his
meat and stuff it.

  

 

opinion from inside and outside the university community

Page III]

 

Sexist stereotyping one
of several ‘tresh-' woes

By K.S. KIERNAN
All egalitarians are heartened
to see how carefully the Kernel
and people who write for the
Kernel make distinctions bet-
ween men and women. No one

seems more aware of these
distinctions than the author of

“Freshwomen‘ victims of sexist
stereotyping“ (Sept. 19 page 2).
The writers sense of awareness,
moreover, produces some
valuable new words: “Freshmen
have self-regulated hours.
Precedent has been set, not that
freshpeople need hours. but that
only freshwomen need hours."
We witness here the births of two
crucial words. Freshmen
Orientation. one hopes, will never
be the same.

Ironically, the writer shows in
these distinctions just how deeply
engrained our sexist attitudes
are. “Freshwomen” will not do,
for the word, “woman“ is derived
ultimately from the Old English
word. wifmann. a masculine
noun! A simple solution to this
thorny problem is to coin the
word. “freshwo.” Its plural,
however, would be “freshwoes,”
which raises new problems. So
does “freshwoperson.” This
sounds nice enough. but “wo”

derives from Old English wit, a
neuter noun, of all things. We are
forced to look for another word
entirely.

“FRESHFEMALE“ is a
possibility, but the “-male" part
of this word is not likely to meet
with favor, even though it doesn‘t
derive from “male,“ the way
“woman" derives from “man."
Still, there are some
etymological objections to the
word, for “female“ comes from

the Latin, femella, which in
Classical Latin means tun-
fortunately), “little woman." and

in popular Latin is used to denote
the "she-ness“ tsic) of lower
animals. Clearly, then, we must
reject “freshfemale.” “fresh-
feperson.“ “freshwoman.”
"freshwo." and ‘freshwoperson."
“He“ and “she" should be ac—
ceptable distinctions, except for
the appearance that "he" takes
on an ”s prefix to form the
opposite of the masculine
pronoun. I suggest we throw out
”she" and use instead “sa.”

Fortunately. the solution to all
of these problems is as simple as
it is in the case of the personal
pronoun. We need only adopt
inflections to designate natural

For the Chile coup

Who bears responsibility?

genders. We might just as well
use the ready-made inflections of
Latin for this purpose. Hence.
when we wish to indicate that a
person is a male. we merely add
the inflection -us to the word.
“person." and an «a if we mean
the type of person who is not a

male.
WE (‘AN NOW return to the

unintentionally sexist statements
quoted above and rewrite them:
“I“reshpersonuses have self-
regulated hours. Precedent has
been set. not that freshpersons
need hours, but that only fresh-
personas need hours.“ Since
modern English plural forms are
nondiscriminatory. we can
continue to use the familiar -s and
es inflections—after the new -us
and —a ones—to pluralize our
words. We will have to learn
“english” all over again. of
course. but we will have
something to look forward to. For
when the world stops making
distinctions between personuses
and personas. our inflections will
level. and we will all be people
again.

Sincerely youruses and youras.

K.S. Kiernan is an assis-
tant professor in English.

  

In the wake of the rightist coup in Chile,
many are asking, “Who bears the
responsibility?“ Most obvious to most
people is the role of the US. After all, the
US. all but destroyed Indochina in order to
protect American business outlets there
from seizure and nationalization by the
Indochinese people. So what’s another
Latin American country. more or less?
The New York Times reported that
“reports of the coup caused copper futures
to rise about 3 cents on the New York
Commodity Exchange.” The Government
denies any part in the coup (Didn‘t they
also deny any part in the coup against
Diem? And didn‘t they deny any military
action in Cambodia outside of the short-
lived invasion?). But whether they ac-
tually funded the coup per se is not the
point. The US. government carried out a
systematic economic blockade against
Chile for three years in an attempt to
strangle Chile’s economy and undercut
Allende‘s popularity. But this wasn’t a
total blockade: $10 million in military aid
was granted this year, while Chilean of-
ficers were allowed to train in the US. all
along.

If this last sounds ominous in retrospect
to you, it didn't to the leaders of Allende's
Popular Unity coalition. On these people
falls a major part of the responsibility for
making the coup possible. The Stalinists
and Social Democrats in the leadership of
the coalition argued that it was possible to
attain socialism in Chile by gradual stages
in a bloc with the nationalist sectors of the
bourgeois. In this transition, the old state
apparatus including the armed forces.
could be preserved intact. In 1971, one of
the founders of the Young Socialist
Alliance. Peter Camejo. warned that
“while the bourgeois armed forces

remain intact....the workers and

   

peasants have no organization. no arms.
and no leadership." The armed forces
were so trusted-and the Chilean people so
mistrusted--by the coalition that Allende
allowed the passage of a bill last January
to give the military the right to search for
and seize arms throughout the country.

MARX .-\.\‘l) LEXIS believed that the
army and police. as well as the state ap-
paratus as a whole. were instruments of
capitalist rule. Marx wrote in 1871 that the
task of the social revolution is not "to
transfer the bureaucratic-military
machine from one hand to another. but to

smash it."

Marx's perspective has been lost by the
Stalinists of the Communist Party--Young

Workers‘ Liberations League. whose
theoretical journal. POLITICAL AF-
FAIRS. termed Allende‘s election a
“transfer of power from the old ruling-
class groups to the workers. to the
peasantry and to the progressive sections
of the middle class of the city and country.

The experience of Chile not only shows
that Marx's analysis of the state and the
need for social revolution is correct. but
demonstrates yet again that this per-
spective has been abandoned by the
(‘ommunist and Social Democratic parties
the world over. And it underscores the
need to build genuine revolutionary
parties to replace these Judas-groupings.
who have (again!) led the masses to
slaughter.

Mark Manning is an organizer
in the Young Socialist Alliance
and'is a senior working on a
topical major in Personality
Change and Adjustment.

 
    
 

THE KENTUCKY KERNICL. ii'i-dnesday. September 26. 19%....
a}.
. STUDENT and FACULTY

CAMPUS SPECIAL

Prices Good Thursday Only

   
 
 
 
   
  
  
  
   
  
 
  
    
   
 
   
  
 
  
  
 
  
  
 
 
   
    
  
 
    
 
  
   
   
   
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
              
     
    
    
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
  
 
  
  
  
  
   
 
 
    
     

Register for

1" RE E
marches

2-26" 3 Speed Bicycles to be given
away September 29. 6 P.M.

No purchase necessary.
You must be 16 or older.

Short Garments
¢o
each

Sport Coats, Skirts.

Sweaters, Trousers,
etc.

One HOUR
DRY CLeanens

* Crosssroads Shopping Center
* Chevy Chase )1 Lansdowne
* Iurlland Mal! * Hi Acres
fir Village Square
* 137 East Picademe * Neithlnnd
* 942' 2 Winchester Road

 

 

 

 

Check the buys in the
WANT ADS

resets. . . >" 3

 

  
 

 

 I—TIIE KHNTl'CKY KENNEL. Wednesday. September 26. 1973

r-_ A Reminder From
The Student Health Service

Melon

Friday,
September 28th
is the last day...

to pay the $7 fall
semester health fee.

The fee is paid at:

The Billings and

Collections Office,
Room 220,

Service Building

To enroll in the
Standard Blue Cross/
Blue Shield plan, come

to the Insurance Office,
Student Health Service,

orcall 233-5823

 

ATTENTION:
SPRING SEMESTER 1 973

STUDENTS

If you have not received

a premium due statement
to continue your coverage
under the U.K. Student
Group Blue Cross/Blue
Shield Policy

 

 

 

 

 

Please contact the Health
Service (233-5823)
Deadline for payment to
continue coverage is
September 28, 1973.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE .

 

 

 

NSF sets deadline
on proiect pmposals

Students interested in
researching environmental
problems must submit project
proposals to the National Science
Foundation before November.

Each proposed project is
problemoriented. coiiiiiiunity—
related. and poses unanswered
scientific or technological
questions on which the group
collects data.

I) \'I‘.\ IiIiSI'IXI‘S will be
submitted to the Foundation after
to to 13 weeks of investigation. It
liiidiiigs are noteworthy. they
may be published at the Foun
(latioii‘s expense

Fach studies project consists of
f» to 12 undergraduates. who are
loosely linked to a taculty advisor
ol their choice.

The non-credit Student~
Originated Studies. geared

around the physical, biological
and social environment. are
completely conceived. directed
and executed by its student
members.

.\S JAMES Y. McININALI),
executive director of the UK
Research Foundation. put it.
"This is an excellent opportunity.
It gives the student an op»
portulnity to test in a real
situation what he has read and
learned with respect to en-
vironmental problems."

.-\ proposed date of studv
comiiiciicement is to be sub-
mitted with the project outline.
l'roposals are selected atid
budget l‘iiiances awarded at the
beginning ol the spring semester.

For additional information.
contact the UK Research
Foundation staff in Kinkead Hall.

We goofed

Because of a reporting error
the Kernel reported in Friday‘s
issue that students purchasing
block tickets for the Student
(‘enter Board's Sly and The
Family Stone Concert would be
required to have “ID cards for
everyone he is purchasing tickets
for."

The story should have read,
“The student buying block tickets
should have the exact money for
the number of tickets desired. his

ID and the name of the group he
is buying for.“

Under the new SCB rules one
student may purchase up to tour
tickets with one ID card.

After Wednesday. tickets will
also be available at Barney
Miller‘s downtown and
I)awahare's in Gardenside.

Floor seats are still available
and can be purchased by students
desiring one to tour tickets. ()nly
side seats are available for
students wishing to sit in blocks.

 

ROSH HASHANAH

TEMPLE

124
North Ashland Avenue

266-3251
September 26, Wednesday
7:00 and 9:00 P.M.

September 27, Thursday
10:00 A.M.

October 5, Friday
7:00 and 9:00 P.M.

October 6, Saturday
10:00 A.M.

2:30 P.M.-Atternoon Service
4:30 P.M.-Memorial and
Concluding Service

277-6570.

 

L

JEWISH STUDENTS INVITED FOR

and YOM KIPPUR

SERVICES

ALL JEWISH STUDENTS ARE CORDIALLY IN-
VITED TO EITHER SYNAGOGUE. FOR HOME
HOSPITALITY, CALL MRS. SAMUEL MILNER,

OHAVAY ZION
SYNAGOGUE

West Maxwell Street
252-3101

September 26, Wednesday
7:00 P.M.

September 27, Thursday
9:00 A.M. and 7:00 P.M.

September 28, Friday
9:00 A.M. and 6230 RM.

October 5, Friday
6:30 P.M.

October 6, Saturday
10:00 A.M.

 

Kernel Ads

258-4646

 

 

 By SUSAN JONES
Kernel Staff Writer
The Hunter Foundation is a
non-profit corporation which
provides low-cost. com-
prehensive health care for its
members. i
The Foundation. which opened
in March, now has an enrollment
of approximately 3,000. Anyone
can enroll in the program.

”WE REALLY feel that we
have something that could be
very beneficial to students," said
(‘huck Mason. health educator at
the Foundation.

Enrolling in the Hunter
Foundation, unlike paying the
UK Student Health fee, entitles a
member to a complete, pre-paid
health care plan, including
medication. examination,
laboratory work and surgery.
The Student Health fee covers
only some medication and does
not cover surgery or
hospitalization expenses.

The amount of monthly

payment which an individual or
family pays is determined by
family size and income. The
maximum amount anyone pays
is $16 per month.

The Pertwlllaby Papers

   

$l6 monthly maximum cost

Hunter Foundation provides health care

“'III‘IN .\ I’I‘IRSUN is accepted
into the Foundation he is
assigned a health care team
consisting of a physician.
primary care clinicians (nurses
and pharmacists), and a family
health worker.

"We‘re family-oriented.
because if something happens to
one member of a family it affects
the entire family. Statistics in-
dicate that around 60 per cent of
all health care problems are
caused by social or en
vironmental factors.“ said
Mason.

The Hunter Foundation also
provides transportation for
people who have no means of
getting to the center,

'l‘llli I"t)l'.\l).\'l‘lt).\“S center.
located on L'pper Street. is

equipped to serve 10.000 mem-
bers. "There are four more
centers planned for the

Lexington-Fayette County area."
said Mason. ”and six more are
planned for surrounding coun-
ties.

The Hunter Foundation was
originally funded through the

by don rosa and ray foushee

 
 
  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday. September 26, '

Office of Equal Opportunity. It
was recently transferred to the
Department of Health. Education
and Welfare. “Presently there is
some movement on the federal
level to provide national health
care.“ said Mason. “so I feel sure
that we‘ll be staying."

The Hunter Foundation is one
of the 13 Health Maintenance
()rga nizations in the country. The
Foundation in Lexington grew
out of citizen concern over the
lack of health care facilities on
the north end of town.

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 
 

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JEANS & JACKETS OUTFITS
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'- .- PZARRO IMPRISONED EMPEROR ATMMLPA ”Rsrvsmo To War muALP/t's "PIzMRo NEVEA “+3. ’Hunsmn's MEN DIED wmmfl' EVER
E984 III/JD DEMANDED A PRODIGIOUS RANSoM HANSON, TWEY MoVED THE VAST 46L: 7:: LocATE THE REVEALING WEIR SECRET ¢ THERE,
le oF GCLD, Bur LorAusrs oF HUASCAR, sum of RE INCAN Tnasunc Now-HIDDEN TREASURE MNCELOT, Is WHERE 774E SToRY
‘2‘” THE EMPERoR We HAD BEEN DEPOSED To 172E SECRET “mine a: AND UNFORTUNATELY ENDED... AT LEAST our/L You
“E9 t BY ATHUALPA HAD OTHER IDEAS. MANCO CAP/lc—TiIE L°CATIOIJ ATHUALPA WAS MUCH; DISCOVERED Tins Cows» PLAQUE?
35 EC‘ ’ OF WHICH WAS KNawN Te RsE 9R 1. . ‘fiij-Mf‘fi‘mf‘fi") .
eras: , . Few." . ‘ .2. *5»- A. - 2
c 38 g . "(5"
gfizw
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$“s‘
k3 u
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klflgg
km N 0)
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eew=
test
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 li——'I‘IIE KENTl'CKY KERNEL. Wednesday.

September 26. 1973
Members. University Senate
University Senate Council
Course Program Actions, Etlective. Spring, 1974
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED

The Senate Council Circulates for your approval the lollowing curricular actions
listed below. Obiections will be accepted from University Senators and faculty
members and must be received within ten days of receipt at this notice to the
appropriate Council designated below All other requirements for altering the
c0urses or programs as approved below must be met.

UNDERGRADUATE COUNCIL
COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE
Proposed Change in Degree: Bachelor ol Science in Agriculture:

The laculty ol the College of Agriculture and the Undergraduate Council
recommend the lollowing changes lor the degree. Bachelor of Science in
Agriculture

1) Reduce the credit hours lor graduation from U? semester credit hours to l20
semester credit hours,

2) Drop the college requireth lor six (6) hours in communications.

3) Drop the business. science and technology options in each department at the
college and replace with a single option in each department.

The lollowing program IS approved

University requirements including freshman
composition and live (Slgeneral studies areas. . . .3443

College requirements: GEN l02, GEN 104 and
GENIOb............... .. ....l2

Department maior (may include courses from
other departments within the College of Agri-
culture) . . . . . .24

Speciality Support (outside maior department), , .2]

Electives 20 29

Total no.

W

~Aminimum otdScredilhoursmust belrom upper division
courses (300 or above)

This recommendation has grown out of a 6 month long study by a committee in
the College of Agriculture. A complete copy of the report is available in the ottiCe
of the Dean ol Undergraduate Studies, the Associate Dean for Agriculture and the
Senate Council office for those who may wish more detail and background in.
formation.

September 26. I973

 

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254-7711

 

 

 

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You need a certain touch

A speCial drive Whatever
comes up in Navy air. you have
to handle it. Jockeying a

hot pot off the deck in foul
weather, Hunting through
skyways where even the wmd
gets lost, Or bossmg the little
olack box With the big punch,
Whatever you do, you learn

to do it right. You learn the
difference between taming a
falcon and a wren

Rare
bird
handlers
wanted

If you‘re going to be some—
thing, why not be something
special.

if you think you can handle
the JOb. let us know. Our birds
are ready when you are.

The Naval Avration Program
information team will be
Visiting your campus on the
date(s) marked below; why
not drop in and find out more
about the care and handling of
our rare birds.

October 1-5
at Student Center

The Navy

Single UK students
can become good
foster parents

By (‘IIARLES WOLFE
Kernel Staff Writer

Finding homes for foster
children is often a difficult task.
but when those ”children" are
leen-agers, it can be formidable.

That. however. is the n