xt7wh7080v42 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wh7080v42/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-11-14 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, November 14, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 14, 1973 1973 1973-11-14 2020 true xt7wh7080v42 section xt7wh7080v42 The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 70

Wednesday, November 14, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Small group
airs views

on Code

By LINDA CARNES

Kernel Staff Writer

Energy crisis

dampens

outlook

By BILL NEIKIRK

Associated Press Writer

News In Brlef

By the Associated .l‘rass
and the Kernel Stall

'Gulf pleads guilty
OAshlond fined
“Suicide attempted
' israel refuses

o LTA lowers fares
o Wohner tiles

0 Fuel crisis
OTodoy's weather...

THE STUDENT (‘ODE Revisions
Committee heard evidence for and against
published proposals from only 10 persons
Tuesday.

The 39 proposals for Code changes were
released by the University’s advisory
committee last Thursday. After further
committee meetings, recommendations
will be sent to President Otis Singletary
who in turn will submit them to the Board
of Trustees.

The hearings, open to all interested
students, faculty, administrators and
staff, were sparsely attended and last
four hours.

ELIMINATION OF Article Six, dealing
with interference, coercion and disruption
in the University, was mentioned as a
priority by several speakers.

Mike Wilson. student affairs director for
Student Government, said the section of
the Code was intimidating and repressive
in nature. He added the same ends can be
achieved through the courts

At the last SG meeting the article was
considered top priority and 17 Student
Senate members voted for its elimination.

Mike Fallahay, graduate student, and
Mark Paster, University staff member,
said the article was enacted as a hysterical
response to the uprisings in the early ’705
and is no longer needed in the Code.

WILSON ALSO discussed a proposal to
eliminate disciplinary offenses. He

WASHINGTON —- The energy crisis has
suddenly chilled the Nixon ad-
ministration‘s hopes of bringing the US.
economy to a “soft la nding" next year and
increased the danger of a recession.

Government economists, busy trying to
assess the impact of the Arab oil cutoff,
said they expect temporary job layoffs in
some industries and sharply rising prices
of products that depend heavily on
energy.

"M'vs's

News

The situation could develop into a

recession if the administration bungles the

job of allocating fuel supplies and the

consumer decides to buy much less, said

one highly placed economist who asked
that his name not be used.

“IF IT CHANGES the psychology of the
consumer, and is badly enough handled,
the economy could lose momentum,” he
said.

The administration had been banking on
the economy slowing this year and in 1974

. WASHINGTON Gulf Oil Corp.
pleaded guilty Tuesday to illegally con-
tributing corporate funds to the 1972
presidential campaigns of Democrats
Wilbur D. Mills and Henry M. Jackson, as
well as to President Nixon‘s re-election
.effort.

0 (‘ATLETTSBURG, Ky. — The
chairman of the board of Ashland Oil Co.,
Orin Ed. Adkins, and a company sub-
sidiary, Ashland Gabon Corp., have been
given maximum federal fines for an illegal
$100,000 corporate contribution to
President Nixon‘s reelection campaign.

. LEXINGTON — A suicide attempt at
Stoll Field was prevented Tuesday mor-
ning by University Police Captain
Harrison. The victim, a patient at the
Veterans Administration Hospital, was
caught by Harrison after attempting to
jump off the top oi the stands.

Jerry Stevens was one of 10 persons to testify before the Code Committee. (Kernel

staff photo by Ed Gerald.)

contended the University should act as an
educational institution and not a law en-
forcement agency.

He charged several sections of the Code
as being duplicatory of state and federal
laws making it possible for a student to be
prosecuted locally and by the University.

David Mucci. SG administrative

to about a 4 per cent growth rate. a level
considered normal. This is the so-called
“soft landing" from 1973’s high growth
rates. It was supposed to mean a lower
rate of inflation and little or no increase in
unemployment.

“How much impact there is on
aggregate economic activity depends on
how long the oil cutoff is and how deep it
is." said Edgar Fielder, assistant
secretary in charge of economic policy for
the Treasury Department.

Flt-ELDER SAID, however, he does not
see a recession developing.

A recession occurs when the broadest
measure of the economy, Gross National
Product, declines for two straight quar-
ters. The last recession was in late 1970
after Nixon tried to cool inflation with tight
money and a tight budget, causing
unemployment to go up to six per cent.

The energy crisis also will make it
difficult for the administration to shed
wage-price controls, as it hoped to do next
year. said the unnamed economist.

. WASHINGTON — Israel refused to
relinquish its checkpoints on the Cairo—
Suez highway Tuesday and Premier Golda
Meir declared she would not pull Israeli
forces back to the Oct. 23 cease-fire lines
as demanded by Egypt.

0 LEXINGTON, Ky. -— The Lexington
Transit Authority said Tuesday it plans to
lower bus fares effective Dec. I when it
takes over the operation of city buses.

The fares will be reduced from 40 cents
to 25 cents for adults and from 25 cents to
20 cents for children.

In addition. the authority said,after Jan.
I senior citizens will ride for half price—
two rides for a quarter.

0 LEXINGTON — Lester Wahner, an
engineering sophomore, has announced
his availability as a write-in candidate in
the Student Senate at-large elections,
which conclude tonight at 9 pm.

assistant, supported six proposals dealing
with a change in the University Judicial
Board.

.\Il'(‘(‘I SAID there was no need for
separate judicial boards and if accepted
the appeals process would change so that
the J-Board, Appeals Board and the ad-

(‘ontinued on page 12

HP: SAID THE administration needs to
talk calmly about the situation and avoid
scaring the people. “I think everything is a
little hysterical now.“ he said, noting
government reaction to the crisis.

In other energy-related developments

—The Beirut. Lebanon. newspaper Al
Anwar reported Tuesday that Saudi
Arabia has decided to demand im-
mediately a 51 per cent share in the oil
companies operating within its borders.
The report was based on an interview with
King Faisal‘s son, Prince Saud al Faisal,
undersecretary of the Oil Ministry.

—Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz
strongly opposes gasoline rationing,
saying it should be “absolutely the last
resort."

SIIl’I.TZ SAID Tuesday he was con--
cerned that many Americans. including
some administration officials. are over-
reacting to the country‘s energy problems.

Shultz said that to save energy. the
government should lower speed limits and
”arrest a few people when they go over 50

miles per hour.“
Continued on page I2

0 LONDON — Prime Minister Edward
Heath declared a state of emergency
Tuesday to meet Britain‘s menacing fuel
crisis. He also launched an unprecedented
credit squeeze to head off any run on the
nation's currency.

The initial reaction was dismay at the
depth and extent of the crisis. "Full blast
of power and trade crisis hits Britain,"
said the Evening News.

Prices plunged on the London stock
exchange. wiping billions of pounds off
market values.

...continued

Seasonal weather shall continue through
Wednesday evening with partly cloudy
skies and highs in the 605. Thursday we
will see a bit of rain with the temperature
soaring into the 70s

 

      
      
      
     
   
    
 

 

: The Kentucky Kernel

r In Journalism Building. University ot Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 40506.

  

Established um

Steve Swnt, Editor in Chiet
Jenny Swartz, News Editor
Kaye Coyte, Nancy Daly,and

Bruce winges, Copy Editors
Bruce Singleton. Photo Manager

Mike Clark, Managing Editor
Charles Wolte, Practicum Manager
Bill Straub. Sports Editor

Carol Cropper. Arts Editor

John Ellis. Advertising Manager;

The Kentucky Kernel is mailed live times weekly during the school year except during
holidays and exam periods. and twice weekly during the summer session.

Published by the Kernel Press Inc., l272 Priscilla Lane, Lexington, Kentucky. Begun as
the Cadet in 1894 and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel since Wis. The
Kernel Press Inc tounded l9“. First-class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. Ad"
vertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any talse or misleading

  
  
 
  
   
  
    
  
   
  
   
  
   
    
 
    
  
 
  
   
    
   
    
 
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
    
    
   
 
   
  
   
  
  
 
   
  
  
  
   
   
  
  
  

 

 

 

 

advertising should be reported to the editors.
' l Editorialsrepresenttheopinionotthe editorsandnot the University.

 

4

Election troubles cited

In terms of voter response, Lexington’s recent election
was a success. Approximately 55 per cent of eligible voters
turned out. The mayor‘s race, still undecided, and several
of the urban-county council races were close and exciting.
Yet in this particular election, the mistakes offset any
smoothness which may have been present.

Many troubles can be pin-pointed to the massive
reregistration drive, conducted throughout the state, which
began early in the year. Help from civic and student groups
definitely made registration more accessible to a larger
proportion of the people. But, in may cases, irresponsibility
on the part of these volunteers deprived many voters of a
guaranteed right.

Some voters, denied the opportunity to vote through
registration foul-ups. argue the persons they signed with
gave them inaccurate information which inevitably led to
the invalidation of their registration form. Others claim the

groups just didn‘t return the forms to the County Clerk’s
office.

Future mistakes in these areas could be avoided if:
—The County Clerk’s office insured that all groups

registering voters knew exactly what information to include
on the form.

—The Clerk ‘5 office maintains an inventory of how many
forms go to specific groups. The Clerk’s office could also
request these groups to return the forms a given number of
days prior to the official registration deadline. This
measure would insure voters that their forms would be
returned and would not be discarded carelessly.

Other election problems concern the counting of ballots
and a reversal of names on one voting machine. The latter
mistake will put the decision in the mayor’s race in the lap
of the Kentucky Court of Appeals.

Counting the ballots certainly is the most tedious task
facing the Fayette County Election Commission. As the
procedure stands now, the official tabulation of votes is
handled by a member of the two major political parties
and a member of the Commission. When the results from
the machines are given. each keeps a record.

The trio tabulates each precinct, one race at a time, until
all the precincts have been tallied. A quicker method of
tabulation, one that may make the counting of votes a one
night job rather than a two day assignement, would be using
two groups of counters. Both groups would be authorized

and together could handle the same number of votes in half
the time.

Another measure that would at least drop the suspense of
waiting for absentee returns would be to count these ballots
at 3 pm. on the day of the election as provided by law.

The reversal of names was a human error. Although the
County Clerk’s office readied 150 voting machines at a rapid
pace of 50 per day, errors like this are inexcusable. The
County Clerk is required by law to check both the front and
back of all voting machines before they are delivered to the
precinct. The Aylesford machine. in which a reversal of
names in two rows was found, did not receive the required
treatment.

      
  
    

 

Letters

 

Two recomendotions

In the current campaign for at~large
positions in the Student Senate two can-
didates stand out—Greg Hofelich and
Roger Massengale. I have had the
privilege of knowing both gentlemen
through much of their respective careers
as students. Roger and Greg are informed,
responsible and independent. The Student
Senate requires this kind of leadership. I
highly recommend their election as your
representa tives.

Kasper Abney
Topical: Demography
Honors Program

Kernel credibility

For a long time I‘ve assumed that the
Kernel was mildly conservative and, all
things considered, relatively harmless.
Unfortunately, though, because it has a
monopoly on campus readership and holds
that readership because it is free, I‘m
beginning to worry that the Kernel might
actually begin to affect some of the change
it is advocating—and actually turn the
clock, as far as its limited credibility
allows, backward.

It was not enough this year that valuable
printed space was thrown away on tributes
to Otis Singletary’s birthday, the per-
petuation of the Homecoming Queen Game
(degrading not only to those women in-
volved but to everyone registered at the
school where such nonsense still goes on),
and in addition offered us an entire
Comment page (I thought there was a 750-
word limit?) of more blurb from Mike
Wines, whom we all hoped we were
through hearing from. The law of in-
creasing costs, I might add, tells us that
the more print space devoted to the
childish stuff the Kernel seeks from out-
side the University community, the less
input can students have to the Comments
page.

But to top it all off, we have today still
another full-page editorial “Having
Children Not an Anit-sociai Habit”
devoted to reinstilling in us insatiable
cravings for the rewards of motherhood!
Within this (I can‘t resist) appears this
little pearl. among others:

“One of the great vitues, for me, of
having children is that they prevent me
from being idle.“ l!)

Evidently we are to conclude what we‘ve
always known all along, that a woman

    

without children is doomed to staring out
windows. hand-wringing, and a lot of
sighing. right? I mean really ..... I can
imagine reading this in a campus paper 20
years ago. but today? Apparently, the
Kernel longs for a return to the good old
days.

None of this is as important as that, what
space is utter waste in the Kernel could be
put to such productive use. But when the
editors could be alerting people in their
editorials to critical but little-probed
issues, such as the thousands of political
prisoners held and tortured in South
Vietnamese prisons with American
finances, they give us instead a salute to
Fran the Man. And now this—this entreaty
to embrace the virtues of motherhood once
again! All I can think is, what a waste;
what a goddamned waste.

Jill Raymond
English-junior

Editor‘s note: The article ”Having
Children not an anti-social habit" was an
opinion piece delivered to the Kernel by
the New York Times News Service. It
appeared on “Page III" and does not
reflect an editorial stand of the editors.

Stop the dam now

Judging from the apathy around the
University community, people here must
think Foster Pettit’s eloquent statement
against the Red River Dam scotched the
whole project. Not so. There is only one
man who can stop that dam: Gov. Wendell
Ford. And unless there is a last-minute
outpouring of public opposition, political
realities may lead him to acquiesce to the
Corps of Engineers.

Veto power over Corps of Engineers
dam foolishness is a rarely exercised
prerogative of state governors. Recently
Governors Carter of Georgia and Gilligan
of Ohio have stunned pork barrel
proponents by vetoing ill-considered
reservoirs. Governor Carter went on to
call for a congressional investigation of
Corps bias in favor of dams. That our own
governor also 'has the courage to stand up

to the Corps is not in doubt. But does he
have the motivation?

Friends, you don‘t have to ply the
governor with fancy arguments. That has
been done already, and his delay in ac-
cording the project final approval in-
dicates he has been listening. What is
needed is raw opposition from as many of
you as possible, now.

Gary DeBacher
Clinical Psychologist
UK Medical Center

 a page of opinion from inside and outside the University community

..............

..............

Page Ill

  
  

Shouts of do-gooding glee ring loudly

By TERRY TUCKER

Last June, when the Supreme Court’s
radical alteration of its obscenity policies
was announced, the occasional moans and
groans of suspicious critics were lost
among the shouts of glee from local
moralists and dogooders.

Suprressed for years by the Court’s
national pornography standards, these
former members of the Society for
Goodness and Purity now renewed their
memberships and, armed with a sermon in
one hand and a District Attorney in the
other, marched into the strees to rid their
community of the plague of indecency.

To date, the battles have been one-sided
almost to the point of disinterest. Caught
unawares, the smut-mongers have fallen
swiftly under the onslaught of the New
Uplift. From New York to San Francisco,
from Detroit to Atlanta, movie houses
have closed, books have been burned,
films have been seized, stage shows have
been raided, waitresses have put their
clothes back on.

For most of us, this recent effort at
cleaning up society seems harmless
enough and, probably, just as well. And
yet, the on-rushing wave of righteousness
does pose a rather curious question.

That is, where will it end?

A’re scenes of sexual intimacy to be
allowed to remain in movies? In novels?
Will medical books retain their realistic
representations of nudity and worse? Can
the zealous crusader consider his job well
done so long as profanity remains in our
dictionaries? In our speech? In our minds?

It will be interesting to see what new
restrictions the future will bring down
upon us. I shall watch with great interest.

It is useful, in attempting to predict the
direction of the present attacks, to recall
the days of their predecessors. Once
before in this century the Moralists have
staged an Uplift. One result was that such
corrupted writers as James Joyce and

Unification

By MIKE WILSON

Although the title of this weekly Student
Government column is “Harvest the
Revolution“, implying that the ground-
work for change has for the most part been
laid by past Student Government efforts,
there seems to be a new more unifying
attitude among students which will add to
the degree of student power exerted at this
University. The essence of this unfiying
attitude is cooperation among students for
a common cause. Two important exam-
ples will illustrate how cooperation has
and will have an effect on student con-
cerns.

Last August and September, some fresh-
women expressed dissatisfaction with
freshwomen dorm hours policy and with
Student Government acting as an advisor
and centralized communication center,
several things happened. The freshwomen
organized themselves into an “Ad Hoc
Committee to Abolish Women's Hours"
and began petitioning for an immediate
end to women‘s hours. They sought and
gained help from the Council on Women‘s
Concerns.

 

Theodore Dreiser were prevented from
fostering their nasty work upon the public.

Of course, the hope is that the Moralists
will be satisfied with only the cessation of
overtly pornographic practices; those that
don’t restrict the normal habits of the rest
of' us. Surely we have progressed beyond
pervasive Puritanistic nit-picking.

That is the hope. Yet the reality is much

closer to an observation made by the
Association of American Publishers. In a

33-page brief requesting that the Supreme
Court reconsider its June 21 ruling, the
Association said the justices have
“reduced the rule of law to a matter of
taste”. It is even more significant that the
Court has ordered each community to
apply its own ideas of good taste.

From an abstracted point of view, it
appears quite agreeable that the members
of a community be allowed to decide what
is properly sold or presented as ‘en-
tertainment within its jurisdiction. Such
an arrangement resembles true

V/

 

democracy at work: the reign of the mob.
If most good citizens view a particular
work as offensive, then said movie, novel,
magazine, is not permitted to come into
town. Period.

In the context of the subject at hand, I
question specifically the taste of the
“average citizen". For under the present
scheme of things it will be the taste of the
jury (comprised of those average citizens)
which decides the opportunities for artistic
availability for all of us. Thus, I fear for
the life of free expression.

Chief Justice Burger presents the op-
posite opinion. In the majority opinion of
Miller vs. California, he reassures the
suspicious, saying that such “doleful
anticipations assume that courts cannot
distinguish commerce in ideas, protected
by the First Amendment, from com-
mercial exploitation of obscene material.”

With Mr. Burg‘er’s calming words firmly
in mind, I pass along this news: Last
week in Drake, N.D., the school board

and student power

TOGETHER. THESE two groups (along
with various friends and concerned
students) acquired 2,362 signatures for the
cause. The Committee submitted a formal
request to Dean Jack Hall for an end to
hours along with the petitions and a five-
page document refuting all arguments in
favor of hours. The freshwomen also
initiated an intensive letter writing
campaign towards the President, Dean
Hall. the Board of Trustees and the
Housing Committee.

Dean Hall has now publicly stated he
will recommend the elimination of fresh-
women hours and the President has
assured the Ad Hoc Committee that hours
will be eliminated next year. As a result of
these administrative steps, the fresh-
women decided not to appeal the question
of this year’s freshwomen hours to the
Appeals Board. The successful efforts of
the freshwomen in eliminating hours is to
be commended.

A few days ago, several students got
together with Student Government to

investigate the possibility of establishing a
book exchange coop for next semester.
This is how it would work: during finals
week of this semester, a pick-up center (or
two) would be established to take text-
books. Students would set their own price
and the Book Exchange would act as
middleman. selling the book next spring to
whoever would pay the price asked by the
student. A small charge might be levied to
help pay for necessary bureaucracy and
labor. During the first two weeks of school
a selling center would be established
where books could be both taken and sold.

SEVERAL PROBLEMS are expected.
()ne is labor—can enough students be
persuaded to work in the Exchange for
free?The larger the scale of this operation,
the more cooperation that will be required.
A second problem will be publicity—can
students be informed and persuaded to
deal with book exchange? Although the
normal media devices will be exploited to
their fullest. wordof—mouth will be an
important method of advertisement.

The final problem will be bureaucracy.
Keeping track of all the books, money,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

.473

burned about three dozen copies of Kurt
Vonnegut‘s novel. Slaughterhouse Five.
The book was judged profane and unfit to
be read by the local high school students.
The teacher that assigned the book will not
return next year. (She is luckier than her
colleague in North Carolina whom. I hear,
was arrested for teaching the book). The
Drake school board also has decided to set
the torch to James Dickey's Deliverance
and an anthology ofshort stories by Ernest
Hemingway. William Faulkner and John
Steinbeck.

Certainly, this examply is isolated and
distant. Yet it may well be the advance
notice of the full force of the New Uplift.
The question of where the onslaught will
end is still undecided.

Personally, I am not optimistic.

...............................
ooooooooooooooooooo
..................................................

Terry Tucker is a senior jour-
nalism major.

 

Harvest the
Revolutlon

 

workers. etc. will be a pain in the neck for
the core group coordinating the coop.

As everyone knows. the local bookstores
make a killing off used books. e.g.. giving
two dollars for a fivedollar book and
selling it back used for {our dollars. At a
book exchange co~op. students would deal
almost directly with other students.
eliminating the large mark-up that gives
local bookstores their profit and makes
used books so expensive.

IF \‘Ol‘ “'Ol'lJ) like to help, leave your
name and phone number in Director of
Student Services, Nancy Emig‘s mailbox
in the Student Government office.

Mike Wilson is Student
Government's director of

student affairs. “Harvest the
Revolution" is SG's weekly
column. Opinions offered are
those of SC and not necessarily
the Kernel's.

    
     
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
       
        
         
     
    
    
    
    
     
       
      
     
    
           
         
     
    
        
             
   
     
  
 
  
    
    
     
   
   
  
    
   
   
    
     
    
    
     
  
       
     

  

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday. November 14. 1973

 

Attention Pancake Freaks!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Perkins mica/re House,
Has 28 Kinds Of Pancakes For

You To Choose From

729 S. Limestone 254-3893

 

 

 

Introducing...

First Security National Bank and
Trust Co. Building.

The bank with the building that
can offer you more.

 

Horse and rider got a little “up in the air"
wilderness

over the Boonesboro‘s

 

Up and over

trials.

horse llarrigan.)

(Kernel

 

staff

photo by Brian

Difficulty arises from shortage
of secretaries in UK offices

By KAREN HOSKINS
Kernel Staff Writer

A number of University offices
are having difficulty filling
vacancies in their secretarial
staff.

“I would suspect that there
very possibly could be a shortage
of secretaries." said G. Bruce
Miller, director of personnel.
Although he does have some
trouble finding qualified
secretaries, he doesn’t think the
problem is extraordinary.

ROBERT M. BUYER, coor-
dinator and assistant to the Dean
of the College of Arts and
Sciences, admitted to having
trouble in getting secretaries.

“The marketplace is pretty dry
now. and we have turned over 40
per cent in one year,” he said.
“Some of the larger departments
need secretaries. Both math and
English need secretaries and we
are adding those now. We‘re
managing."

“We‘re hurting,“ said Bruce H.
Westley, chairman of the jour-
nalism department. “In less than
five years I have had six
secretaries."

IN THE PAST many depart-
ments advertised for secretaries

on their own. The system is

becoming more centralized now.
If a department has an opening
for a secretary, it sends a
requisition to the personnel
department. The personnel
department, which advertises in
the Sunday Herald-Leader, sends
applicants to the departments,
which make the final choice.

Waiting time varies.
“Sometimes I will have
somebody sitting here the next
day,” said Westley, “But
sometimes I have to interview
four or five people.”

“As of last Friday we had 14
secretarial openings that had
been open more than one week,"
said Miller. “But this doesn’t
mean there weren't candidates
for these positions. It’s simply
that departments haven’t made
up their minds. It‘s also possible
that there were no candidates for
some positions.“

There are now five levels of
secretaries. “The lowest two
levels are where we have the
most turnover," said Miller.

Level five is the lowest. where
only minimum skills are
required. At level six some ex-
perience is necesssary, and
supervisory ability is required in
the upper levels.

“We try on the higher levels to
encourage promotion of people
who are already secretaries

here,“ said Miller. “But it
depends. Some of the positions
are filled by promotion. Some are
filled from Lexington. A great
many spouses of students come to
us for work. This is one of the
reasons our turnover is ac—
celerated in the summer.“

Miller said the UK secretarial
pay scale is somewhere near the
middle. “Some pay more than we
do, and some pay less. We have a
normal starting rate which is
based on someone who possesses
minimum qualifications and no
more. If the secretary has more
than the minimum the depart-
ment may give them more. It's '
flexible."

For a level five secretary the
starting salary is $43063 year. A
higher level secretary can earn
close to $6,000 a year.

“A secretary can go downtown
and work for a lawyer for more
money than we can offer." said

Miller. “But we think em-
ployment is attractive here
because of the combination of
money and benefits. But many

times the younger employee is
not interested in the benefit
package. These people are in—
terested in what they get in their

pay check. This is a particularly
sensitive year because of in-
flation."

 

   

   
  
 

 

  
 

 

 

 

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HARRODSBURG now a LAN! ALLIN
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November 5, 1973, marked First Security National Bank and Trust Company‘s ‘
official occupancy in their new lSstory bank and office building The structure. , .
which towers 206 feet ab0ve the city block it occupies, is standing proof oi the Smfl‘ )0“ W dhnul ‘0 Cll‘l‘i'rk 0“ ”"0
falih First Security has in not only the banking community, but in the future oi ot lile‘ awaits! atlwnturc‘s. \w ill
Luington itself. This beatitul building was mace possibly only through the gingiss ,. ,
continous faith oi First Security‘s customers and the fine serVice which has . L‘kt
consistently been provided by the bank since its concep ”Fwy“ 5”“ “V” should '"CU- , ,.
(Ulmlnailon oi taith, ready to otter to Central Ken lhc Ailycnlurcr, After 3" ‘ lulu“ ‘md. “mes'
tucky a superior type of banking which has thus tar o greatest triumph into groom s \wur 2:30—5:10
never belore been seen in Lexington First Security Fl rSt combines quzilit with contemporary » . .
welcomes you to IOIn With them at this time oi \L‘l's‘llllll \V'gzli \klih l'our-in-h'in-d . , , 7:45 9:50 J
(elebration and they look forward to many ‘ ) k t . . k

 

Security
National

Bank.

1
l

or ascot for .i nutty before six look . . .,
or mth how Me for lhc cpitomc of
cycning elegance. lithcr \Hl), you
can‘t go wrong.

And on your wedding (lit). that's it hit
of all right?

9 o
g I n g iss 269-3657

Dleasmable tuturc banking experiences With you in
their new bank and office burldinq

' NEWS
25 7. i 740

Kc Kernel
Lansdowne Shoppes mUCky

3301’.th Creek Road MorinFri. lo-t. Sat. 10-6

 

 

  

UK Radio Club plays
special service role

By TERESA ZIMMERER
Kernel Staff Writer

Operating the 1,000 watt
amateur radio station W4JP in
the College of Engineering,
members of UK’s Amateur Radio
Club play a special role in public
service and electronic com-
munication.

The station has been in
existence since 1923 and
welcomes any student, faculty or
staff member.

THE MEMBERSHIP,
averaging 12 per year, is
responsible for the repair and
operation of the station.

The club is affiliated with the
American Radio Relay League,
and participants are usually
electrical engineering students.

“Everyone does his part,
whether he is a licensed radio
operator or not," said P.C.
Magoun, trustee-advisor to the
club. Magoun has been the
supervisor of the electrical
engineering labs since 1959.
"EDWARD SCHMIDT is an
honorary member of the club. A
former naval officer and retired
Bell System engineer, Schmidt
has talked with English-speaking
ham radio operators in the Soviet
Union.

He has also communicated
with Ecuador and other Latin
American nations in the Ken-
tucky-Ecuador Partners of the
Americas program.

While on a Fulbright-Hayes
scholarship in Ecuador last
summer, Dean James E. Funk,
college of engineering, kept in
touch with the college via W4PJ.
Radio waves were patched into
the telephone lines, allowing
conversations to be transmitted.

ra

      
 

President
Recording Sec.

 
  

   

   

to

EGPSA
:UNiv. STATION
EBox 8l7

 

l nominate

uate an
rotessionalStudent

GPSA ELECTIONS for:

Treasurer

and 10 Representatives AT large will be held
Monday, Dec. 3.

All GPSA Departmental Representavles must
contact the GPSA Office (257-2378) by Nov. 26

Nominations are invited

nominate

Contactyour GPSA Representative

Call GPSA. 257-23780r278-4655
Or fill out coupon