xt7w6m335711 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7w6m335711/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-10-04 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, October 04, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 04, 1978 1978 1978-10-04 2020 true xt7w6m335711 section xt7w6m335711 Vol. LXXI, No. 34
Wednesday. October 4, l978

K

Little rascals

EN TUCKY

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By [IND \ ( \\II'III.| I Iv'ernel Staff

Ned Yost (right foreground) finds it a difficult task to
pull Molly Dye back to school. The preschoolers, who
attend the Early Childhood Lab at UK on Washington
Ave.. were observing a turtle at Erikson Hall. Molly is

the daughter of l'K faculty members Griff and Nancy
Dye. and Ned is the son of Glenn and Katherine Yost. a
CR student and employee. respectively.

Attorneyfears move to deport Iranians

By DEBBIE MCDANIEL
Copy Editor

Four U K Iranian students may lose
their student status and face
deportment if they receive jail terms
next Thursday.

That‘s the prediction of Barbara
Sutherland. who was legal counsel at
the trial last week of If people.
including L‘K students. who
demonstrated at the Stansfield Turner
speech last April.

The Iranians are attending UK on

student visas. and must keep their
student status to remain in the US.
Sutherland said. lfthe students are not
in school they will lose their student
visas and be deported for not having
student status. she said.

After three days of testimony. the
six-member jury returned guilty
verdicts. lt advised fines of $250 for
each defendant. plus jail terms that
ranged from 45 to 90 days for If) ofthc
ll defendants.

Following a request front the
defense. Judge Paul Gudgel scheduled

two separate sentencing trials for the
defendants: Oct. 6 for the three
American citizens and Oct. II for the
Iranians. On these dates. (iudgel will
decide whether to uphold. *ower. or
probate the sentences suggested by the
jury.

l'K Dean of Students .loe lltit‘ch
disagreed with Sutherland‘s opinion.
He said the students could serve theit
jail sentences and continue their
classwork through independent study.
or other methods.

“’l‘hey' almost have to work that out

Football match against Penn State
brings earliest student ticket sellout ever

ByPAULMANN
Staff Writer

Student tickets f0i Saturday‘s UK-
Penn State game were sold out
yesterday afternoon by 2 pm.

T. Lynn Williamson. associate dean
of students. said it was the earliest he
could remember tickets being
completely distributed.

Of the |5.000 tickets allotted for
students. only |.000 were left
yesterday morning at the Memorial
Coliseum ticket office.

At noon. the remaining 800 tickets
were sold as guest tickets. They were

gone two hours alter they went on sale.
even though all were for end zone
seats.

The tickets distribution process.
which has been altered since last fall.
works like this:

Each Monday morning before a
home football game. students with a
validated ID and activity card may
pick up a ticket at the Memorial
Coliseum ticket office between 8 and
l0 a.m. Students who want to sit with
another student can bring two sets of
II) and activity cards to receive two
tickets.

Tickets for seats closest to the 50-
yard line go on sale on the same day at

b to l() pm. The remaining tickets are
distributed Tuesday morning from 9
to l2 noon. and any tickets left after
that are available for students to
purchase as guest tickets for Slll,

This distribution method is a little
different from last year when students
were able to purchase an unlimited
number of guest tickets through block
seating. Because so many guest tickets
were given out. some students were
unable to get tickets to many of the
home games. To solve the problem this
year. guest tickets are sold separately
after a majority of the student tickets
are given out.

em 21

l iiiversity of Kentucky
I evingtoii. Kentucky

Federal loan to save
students $4 million

By III-ITS" PEARCE
(opy lditoi

l,‘ K students will save more than $4
million over the next 30 years as a
result of recently-awarded federal
funds.

lhe loan of $4.3 million will pay for
student housing already under
construction behind Commonwealth
Stadium near Shawneetown.

Construction began on the housing
development several months ago and
should be completed next July. The
ZOO-unit complex will accommodate
650 undergraduate students.

.lack Blanton. vice president of
business affairs. said lTK officials
originally planned to finance the $5.3
million project through the sale of
revenue bonds. The interest rate on the
bonds would have been between 6.5
and seven percent.

However. the federal funds. under a
new program from the l'.S.
Depaitmcnt of Housing and l'rban
Development. carry an interest rate of
less than three percent. Blanton said.

“lhis will save students a lot of
money in the long run." he said.
"Otherwise. in order to retire the

with each individual class." he said.

"‘Some students are able to lay out. It

doesn‘t affect the total status of the
student."

Burch said the Iranian students also
violated l'K's Student Code of Rights
and Responsibilities during ltirner‘s
speech.

I he codc‘s relevant section defines a
punishable offense as "the prevention
of the convening. continuation or
orderly conduct of any l'niversify
class or activity or of any lawful
meeting or assembly upon l'niversity'
property "

"We‘ve already done what we‘re
going to do." Burch said. “We‘ve
charged the stttdcnts with violations of
the code and ielcrred the matter to
legal counsel."

Although he discussed the situation
with each student last summer. Burch
said l'K's legal counsel has not taken
action yet. "I‘m sure the request ofthe
defense attorney is not to thave the
code violation hearing) comc tip
before they‘re done downtown."

He said that punishment for the
code violations will definitely not
tnclttdc expulsion.

In a press conference last Friday.
defendant .lohn (irecn said the
prosecution had twice offered light
fines to the ll defendants in exchange
for entering guilty pleas.

Continued on page 3

higher-interest botids. housing and
dining fees would have to be
increased."

Although construction will cost
more than the allotted funds. Blaiiton
said the remaining million dollars will
be sold on the bond market to private
investors. “But that interest will be
between si.\' and seven percent." he
said.

Approximately 300 colleges and
universities applied for Hi i) loans
totaling $85 million. Of those. about
50 loans were approved. including a
$4.7 million one
Kentucky l'niversify.

for \orthern

( ombincd. the two Kentucky loans
comprise more than It) percent of the
national total.

"In terms of need. [K was near the
top of the list." Blanton said. ““c‘rc
very grateful to Sell. Wendell I‘Oltl
and his staff. who were qunc helpful tn
processing this in Washington."

He also said the l'nivcrstty is
obligated to officials tn Frankfort w ho
have provided [K with housing funds
on an interim basis.

Blanton said his office hopes to
receive the federal money within 30-60
days.

SUpp/y ’bargains’
raise SUSpiCion
from UK officials

By JACK WAIN“ RIGHT

Stat “the!

Con men are increasingly trying to
talk lK officials out of l'niversity'
money. and in at least one case they
have succeeded.

'lom Fields. l'K purchasing
director. says that although the
number of fast-talkers is increasing.
the story they 'rc telling is an old one.

“We always get a fantastic story and
a fantastic price to match." he said.
“They tell us about a disaster which
created a surplus and say they want to
sell supplies at one-third off the
regtilar price."

Carolyn Wilson. management
operations director at the College of
Agriculture. said solicitors led her to
believe they were part of the (ieneral
Services Administration ((iSA . a
bureau in charge of supervising office
supply operations for the l'.S.
government.

The solicitors probably tried to
make her think they were (iSA
representatives because “we are
allowed to purchase through the (iSA
in some instances." she said.

Wilson said one agriculture
administrative office made a purchase
of $500 from such a solicitor last
school year. "lhcy did receive the
goods they purchased. but it is hard to
estimate their quality because they
were not standard supplies." she said.

Martha Rtidd. office manager for
the College of SoCIal Professions. said
she spotted a recent con game at the
outset. "They never left a number
where they could be called back." she
said.

"One man said that he was calling
on a “A IS line and couldn‘t becalled
back unless he was called back nest

door.“ Rudd said. Rudd added that
she believes some of the solicitors arc
illegally distributing actual (iSA
supplies. (See related story on page (it

Fields said all departments must go
through his office to make purchases
unless they have prior consent.
"Purchasing here is done on the state
level. in which companies make bids
and the products with the lowest bids
are used.

"A department can buy. outside of
purchasing. up to a certain amount.“
Fields said. For different types of
supplies there are set dollar limits.

It is difficult to estimate how many
people have purchased from such
sources. “With about l()().()()(l
transactions each year it's hard to keep
track of w ho purchases what.“ he said.

Fields said that he has sent a memo
to departments warning them about
such solicitations. “'l elling
departments what they can purchase
and what they can‘t is an ongoingjob."

Many of those who purchase these
types of supplies believe they are
saving money. Fields said. “Each
department has a set amount to
operate with each year."

.lack Blanton. vice president of
btiisness affairs. said departments are
not allowed to hold money from the
general fund from one yearto the next.
unless it's a gift, '

“You can't really say that this is an
incentive for spending." he said
“Certain deans may give brownie
points to those who return money
remaining in their budgets. having
spent only what they needed." he said.

He pointed out it could work the
other way if a department gets more
money after depleting its funds. “In
this instance there is an incentive." he
commented,

 

—today

 

local

Five persons were killed last night when their twin-
engine aircraft crashed and burned shortly after takeoff
from Blue Grass Field here. according to state police and the
Jessamine County coroner‘s office.

The plane was described as a Piper Navajo.

Dispatcher Ralph Murphy at Kentucky State Police
headquarters in Frankfort confirmed that the plane went
down about three miles south of the airport in neighboring
Jessamine County. midway between lettington and
\icholasville near Military Pike.

According to reports from the Blue (irass I-ield control
tower. the plane lost an engine shortly after takeoff and was
attempting to return to the airport when the crash occurred

l'nofficial repons from the scene indicated that the plane
was carrying four adults and a child

state

THE REPl‘ILICAN CANDIDATE for the Sixth
District Congressional seat invaded his Democratic
opponent‘s turf yesterday. calling the Democratic nominee
"a radical liberal” who is “advocating things that would
destroy this country "

State Sen larry Hopkins.R lesington.was addressing
about 10 members of the Frankfort Franklin County

Chamber of Commerce. His opponent. State Sen lom
Fastcrly. I) Frankfort. spoke to the same group last week

Hopkins said he supports a 30 percent federal income ta\
reduction and right to work concepts. He said a labor reform
bill that failed to pass Congress this session tilted too far on
the side of organired labor

AN ATTORNEY FOR the l.otiisville Board of Aldermen
yesterday argued that a Circuit grudge was in error when he
granted a temporary injunction barring the board's
investigation of Mayor William Stansbtirv's conduct in
office '

However. Stansbtiry's attorney. .loseph
Frankfort. countered “lhcrc can be
erroneous in this restraining order "

nation

“II.I.IA.\I AND EMII.‘ "ARRIS. who .i month ago
said they were proud they kidnapped Patricia Hearst. were
sentenced yesterday to lily-cars to life in prison for the crime

Deputy District Attorney Ales Selvin. who prosecuted
the kidnapping case and negotiated the plea bargain. said he
believed justice had been served. the county saved S‘tlttltttf
in trial costs. and Hearst saved the ordeal of testifying
against her captors

Harris. U. and his ll

lcarv of
nothing clearly

vcar old wife smiled bioadlv .l\

the sentences were read lhcv had plea bargained Aug. .‘l.
and officials said they could probably be released from
prison in five years.

JAMES EARI. RAL the convicted murderer of Martin
luthcr King Jr. will marry a courtroom artist within the
nest two weeks. his brother and lawyer said yesterday

Ray. serving a 99 year term for the Whit slaying oi the
civil rights leader. confirmed his wedding plans alter a
Knosville newspaper disclosed them. hl\ brother .lerry said

Jerry Ray and lawyer Mark I lint” identified the bride
to be as Anna Sandhu. .‘2. of l(noitville. a free lance
artist who has done work for two local television stations

lln-i said the wedding would take place inside the
pcnit.ntiary

-\\ INDK TWENT RELEASED yesterday charged
former FBI informer (iary lhomas Rowe Jr. with first
degree murder in the killing of a civil rights worker the night
after the historic Selma to \Iontgomcry voting rights
march in Nb.‘

lhe indictment. sealed Sept Ill alter being handed down
it llavncvillc. \Ia. by .i lowndes (‘ounty grand itirv.
charges Rowe with the fatal shooting of \ iol.i (iregg I iii/Io
on .il S highway on \I.Il\ll 3‘. NM

llic investigation was lt'v'l‘t'llt‘ll .llIl'l lctov “ilkiiis It

and lugcnc lhonias. both serving ltl years in prison for
violating \lrs ltii/Io's civil rights. said in a television
interview that Rowe shot \frs lut/ro lhcy testified before
the grand iury

world

POPE JOHN PAI I. Is physicnin said yesterday he told
the pontitf a few days before his death that he could not
continue such a strenuous pace And an ultra conservative
Roman Catholic group has demanded "a itidtciai inqtiirv"
into the cause of the pope‘s death

Dr Antonio da Ros. Pope .lohn Paul’s personal physician
when he was Cardinal Albino l Uctani. patriarch of \cnice.
told the Associated Press in a telephone interview that the
burden of the pontificatc and the sensitivifv of luciani
possibly were contributing factors in his heart attack

weather

( I I ARI‘G’ AVD (OOI. today with highs .n the upper
Nts Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow lhe low tonight
will be near ‘0 the high tomogrow near ’0

 

 

  
 
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
  
   
 
 
   
 
  
 
   
   
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
 
   
 
 
    
 
   
    
  
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
   

   
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
   
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  

                       
 

 

0. What made you decide to run for
the school board?

A. It was at my wifeinsistancethatl
pratice what I teach. lts okay to work
with teachers. that's really a very
important way of influencing change.
but if you have some ideas about
public schools. why not do something
about it.

Mike: People in our daughter‘s
school put the idea in our minds. There
were lots of problems going on then. as
now. a different kind. but it still
concerned people. The city and county
school systems were merging then. It
made no sense to have an independant

@iii'iel

editorials 8: comments

emphasis on the basics?

A. I'm all in favor of basics. In the
society we live in I think people need to
write with some facility and deal with
the mathematics of the world. lhere
are some other basics you need. like
values. a recognition of values. I think
that we have to look upon basics as a
sense of work. a sense of
responsibility. and a sense of
recognition that we are social beings as
well as individuals. We are educating
the whole person. I think we ought to
caution ourselves so that we don‘t look
to education as being only or even
essentially a means for getting a job.

Steve Balliuger

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Betsy Pearce

Richard \Iclloiialil
\i'tis Ii/Iliil

just makes sense to have that all in one

program.

I don't think there is anything yoti
can do to the organizational structure
to guarrentee success. We need to
work with people‘s attitudes and get
them motivated in order to reorganize
the schools.

Q. Would it take a long time and
cost a lot of money for this
reorganization to take place?

A. It would takea longtime because
we are talking about a reorganization
of the curriculum.

 

by mary Iou hymel

('opyright 5 I973. The Kentucky Kernel

Photos by [INDA (CAMPBELL/Kernel Staff

 

school district .ompletely surrounded
by another school district. You run
into all the problems about tax
support. about where should the tax
money go and where it was coming
from.

Q. What have you accomplished on
the school board?

A. In very general terms. I feel like I
have brought an atmosphere of
moderation and an attempt to foster
mutual respect for teachers and a
recognition that the board of
education listens to the people and
must act in their behalf.

Q. Have most of the people on the
school board taught?

A. Typically. a board of education
has not been made up of educators as
far as I know. There‘s nothing wrong
with professional educators being on
the school board. but I would not want
the board to get itself in the situation
where it focuses only on one segment
of the population. I think the schools
serve all the people primarily the
children. but it is concerned with all
the people.

For instance. the business people
are concerned about their inability to
use the high school diploma as a good
measure of literacy. This is a legtimate
concern.

Q. Do you think there should be more

The rest of this century people are
going to be changingjobs all around.
Some jobs will go out and new ones
will come into existance.

Q. What kind of changes do you
think need to be made in the schools?
And what about the idea of a middle
school?

A. A middle school is needed. I
could give you a long discourse on the
failure of the Junior High School
part ofthe American school system
it has to do with the staffing. Most
Junior High School teachers were
disappointed high school teachers w ho
were interested in their subject matter
and had to settle for the adolesent who
was frequently not interested in that
particular teacher‘s field of study.

The administrators were v'Ery
frequently coaches and that gave them
an attitude that to do the bestjob they
had to be like the Senior High Schools.
They organized them the same way
and it just didn‘t serve its function. It
got out of hand.

lhis idea of a middle school is a
chance to do it again. A middle school
would be better because kids are
growing tip earlier and the whole
adolesent physiological division is a
little more natural one.

By the time you get in ninth grade
the kids are pretty mature and also it is
in the ninth grade when you start
accumulating units for graduation: it

Q. How many years?

.A. ()h. I suppose we could make
some'changes next year and some
others would take five years.

Q. How do you feel about parent-
teacher relations?

A. I think that we have real
problems in our world; there are more
and more people. no more resources
and the conditions are going to get
tighter. As the circumstances tighten-
up we‘re going to need a higher degree
of social conformity. of social
understanding. That is going to havea
tendency to minimize individuality.
thus we‘ve got to be aware of that and
be sure that we don‘t let individual
freedom start eroding in the name of
all of our survival. The public schools
may be the the last best hope we have
of coming 'up with some survival
solutions.

In order to build public public
education you've got to get the
cooperation of the parents. ‘l he racial
problem is not one that can be solved
in the schools alone and the schools
are going to have to be helped and the
help will have to come from the
parents.

Q. I read in the Wall Street Journal
that parents are not as interested in
going to PTA meetings. especially
since more mothers now work. Is that
true in Levington?

(ii/'1 I‘ll/t‘l\

I . .lenay late

A. It is true in levington; its true all
over the country. Why should busy
people go waste their time talking
about raising money at some
Halloween affair'.’ lhey must become
vital organizations. interested in
serioiis affirs and then they can get
people to take part in them. l’lA’s
have been too docile in letting the
administration tell them what they
want and how to do it, I think l’l A‘s
are a wonderful place for citizen
activism in the schools.

Q. What about collective bargining?

A. It isjtist one of the minor ways of
dealing with our present problems, At
the same time the best vehicle of all for

“alter lunis
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(ary “illis
fun/tun lllv li/l/ill

the kernel interview with james
’we are social beings as well as individuals’ l

 

uplifting teacher moral is by getting
them to believe that they are respected
people and ask them to do the best
they can. You can‘t make teachers
teach; they decide to do that and it is
one thing collective bargining can do.
('olleciive bargining is only one
narrow segment of the whole picture
of improv ing the quality of education.
l he school board has a new committee
that is trying to work out some way
that the local schools will have more
opportunnity to help in the decision‘
making. We believe in individual
differences - why not let local schools
make some of their own decisions.
We are trying to find a way to

I
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encourage greater autonomy for
decision making in local schools. That
way people know that espressingtheir
opinion makes a difference and I think
we can get people more involved.

Q. Do you think that court-ordered
busing has hurt the schools?

A. .\'o. after seeing evidence holding
that we‘re really past this situation.
But. I am afraid that the problem and
the logical solution that we have made
toward school integration. forced
busing. and it contributed greatly
tothe problems we have today. The
schools were called upon to essentially
solve a problem that is the whole
society‘s.

 

Broadus is ’an educator, not a politician;'

Wife Mike the ’political one in the family’

Dr. James M. (Jimmy) Broadus. chairman ofthe
Fayette County Board of Education. is seeking his
fourth term on that board in this fall's election.

Dr. Broadus works closely with his wife. Mike.
who is his campaign manager and advisor. His

campaign slogan. ‘l‘m not in Politics; I‘m in
Education.‘ is quite true. said Mike. 'I‘m the
political one iii the family.‘

Dr. Broadus. chairperson of the Department of
Education and Physical Education at Transylvania

 

l'niversity. has been a member of the school board
since I967 and chairman for two years.

Born in Mobil. Alabama. Dr. Broadus grew up in
a small rural town in southern Alabama.

“Only four people in my graduating class went to
college. I went to the l'niversity' of Alabama and
played the trombone in the Million Dollar Band
there."he says. Dr Broadus still play'sina band. this
one made up of a retired insurance salesman. an
architect. the chairman of the Board of Directors of
Home Finance Savings and loan Association and a
member of the l esington Philharmonic.

’l he band play's‘big band‘ music and performs for
numerous engagments around town. I was treated
to a tape of their music; it was easy listening music
befitting a creative man such as Broadus. They have
played for the levington Philharmonic Ball. the
opening of the lhrce Day Vt orld [Event and the Blue
Bash after the l K-Baylor football game at the
lansdow ne Club.

This musician-educator feels that his music is
from a century when music was mostly for
background and that today‘s music is more totally
involving, He believes that the last decade.
beginning with This. the Beatles.the electronic age
and the whole search for individuality that began in
the late l9bfl‘s. is one of the most productive periods
in the history of music.

Dr.Broadus' interest in music didn' carry over to
his studies in college. majoring in psychology and
education ‘My senior year was when my life began.
that was w hen I found out that there wasa wholelot
more to life I met \likc. my wife. We were married

 

on my graduation night; Mike had one more year so

we went right back to school.‘ They were only one of

about ten married couples on campus. ‘We were an
oddity and people gave us strange looks.'said Mike.

Mike completed her degree the next year and Dr.
Broadus one year ofgraduate school. He got his first
teachingjob which paid $65 a week. barely enough
to keep them hot“ in school.

The Broadus‘ moved to Lexington in I962 and
bought their now renovated house on West Third
Street. Before coming to Lexington. Dr.Broadus
attended .lohns Hopkins. where he earned his PhD.
and then worked as a school superintendent in
charge of the personnel division. An offer from
Transylvania gave him a chance to do what he had
always wanted to do - teach in college

Dr. Broadus and Mike like lexington. and
believe the move here was good for their children.
Jimmy teaches a class at Transylvania that is listed
as Human Growth and Development. but he calls it
“Human Growing and Developing." reflective of his
belief that every human is constantly doing both.

One of the activities that the couple share is film
making. They have made quite a number ofmov ies.
one of which won an honorable mention in a film
festival in California. I was priviledged to sit back
and enjoy the film. which was an abstract set to
music by Pink Floyd.

They don't use an expensive camera. but their
results look quite professional. The Broadus‘ enjoy
many forms of art and many of their friends are
“arty" students who come over frequently to talk
and view their creative movies.

  

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Carroll says Atkins’ charges

won’t change airplane policy

(AP) ~ Gov. Julian Carroll
said yesterday that criticism
will not change his administra-
tionn‘s use of state-owned
airplanes.

“As long as I'm governor and
have the schedule I have to
keep. George Atkins be
damned. I‘m going to fly
anywhere I want to. Many time
to represent the people of
Kentucky." Carroll told the
state AFL-CIO convention
here.

The delegates applauded.

Atkins. the state auditor, will
be a candidate in the
Democratic primary next
spring to succeed Carroll as
governor.

He has criticized the Carroll
administration. both as auditor
and as a candidate
particularly its use of state
aircraft for vacation trips and
other non-business uses.

Also in his speech. Carroll

told the delegates Kentucky has
one of the six lowest
unemployment rates among
the 50 states.

“I always like to ask my
union friends if there are men
sitting around the union halls
waiting for a job. And for the
last year. my friends are telling
me the union halls are empty. .
. Most every'body‘s working."
he said.

On Monday. the AFL-CIO
endorsed candidates for the
November election. and one.
Democratic Congressman
Carroll Hubbard. said
yesterday he believed his votes
against a “common situs.“
picketing bill led to the AFL-
CIO‘s decision not to endorse
him.

Hubbard pointed out that
the lack of an endorsement
would not affect his re-eleciton
this fall. since he is unopposed.
but added. “I naturally would

Testimon y criticized

Move to

Continued from page I

Green said' the first offer was
made about five months ago.
when defendants were told the
line would only be SIS each if
they pleaded guilty. T he
prosecution made a second
offer of a SIO line with a guilty
plea on the day of the trial.

“They were fools not to take
it." prosecutor Don Todd said.
although he said he had offered
it “in a half-jesting manner."

Defense attorney Barbara
Sutherland said “I told them
(the defendants) what the offer
was and they discussed it and
decided not to plead guilty.“
She informed her clients of
Todd‘s second offer. but after a
lengthy diSCUssion they decided
they still wanted ajury trial. she
said.

There was some disagree~
ment between each side about
whether Sutherland. who
attended CIA Director
Turner‘s speech. acted as the
demonstrators counsel during
the actual protest.

Todd said Sutherland
advised the demonstrators not

I.
l
l

 

Eleven people face a total of
two years in the Lexington jail
and fines of $2750 for the
“crime" of holding up anti-CIA
signs and banners at a speech
by the CIA director.

The Iranians are in danger of
iosing their student visas and of
being deported if they spend
time in jail.

The only thing which can
assist them in combating this
repression is a show of public
support. The Committee to
Defend the II has been formed
to help organize and articulate
that support. In the very short

time which remains before the
sentencing hearing on
Thursday morning (when the
judge may reconsider the

deport

to put down their Signs. and
Burch said he and Sutherland
had a disagreement on whether
he had a right to ask the
protestors to remove their
signs.

“She conferred with me and
them (the protestors).“ he said.
"I do know that she indicated
to me that she represented
them. but I don‘t know if she
was there for a purpose that
night.“

Sutherland denied that she
had been hired by her clients
prior to their arrest. “It‘s not
true. I had represented Mr.
Potrati on another matter. He
asked me what his rights were
(at the speech)." she said. UK
Engish Professor George
Potratz was one of the
defendants.

She denied that she acted as
mediator between Burch and
the protestors. and said she
answered Potratz‘ question
about his rights. "My exact
words (to Potratr) were ‘I
believe you have a right to hold
that sign. and I believe if you
continue to hold that sign you

have appreciated being
endorsed.“

He said he had been
endorsed by the labor group
when he ran for election. and
that the current issue of the
“AFL-CIO News" listed him as
having voted on the side of
labor on I4 issues and opposing
labor on only six.

“What they want by my
name is 20 right and Iero

wrong." Hubbard said in a
telephone interview

lhe common situs pickcting
bill. which would have allowed
one union out of several at a
construction site to picket the
entire site. halting thcjob. was
passed in the 94th Congress but
vetoed by (icrald I‘ord. then
president. It was rejected by
Congress again last year.

GMAT will be offered

The Graduate Management
Admission 'I est will be offered
on Oct. 28. I978 and onJan. 27.
March l7 and July 7. I979. The
GMAT is a test of academic
aptitude designed to estimate
an applicant‘s promise to
succeed in a program of
graduate study leading to an
MBA or equivalent degree.
About 530 graduate schools of
management require their

applicants to submit GMAT
results.

Registration materials for
the test and theGMA I Bulletin
of Information are available
from the Counseling and
Testing Center. .‘IIMA Mathews
Building. or by writing to
GMAT. Educational lesting
Service. Box 966. Princeton.
NJ. (IRS-1|.

Airbarne

Iranian students seen

will be arrested.” " Sutherland
said.

Potrat/ was arrested and
tried with the other defendants
for disrupting the speech.
During a press conference
Friday he described his trial as
"a travesty of justice" and "a
blatant case of political
oppression.“

Immediately following the
trial. Potratz said the
prosecution's entire case was
based on the testimony of Dr.

Vincent Davis. director of the
UK Patterson School of
Diplomacy. which sponsored '
the speech. Bu