xt7z610vtk0q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7z610vtk0q/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-05-03 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, May 03, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 03, 1978 1978 1978-05-03 2020 true xt7z610vtk0q section xt7z610vtk0q Blood business

Editor'snote: Thislsthesecondlna
three-part series about ”blood
banking" in Lexington. Yesterday's
story dealt with the non-profit
Central Kentucky Blood Center and
the difficulties it has competing with
two commercial banks. Plasma
Alliance and Plasma Derivatives.

By JENNIFER GREER
Kernel Stall Writer

A recent check with Lexington’s
commercial plasma banks and the
non-profit community blood center
showed that many UK students
would rather sell plasma than
donate blood.

Plasma Alliance, at 2040 Oxford
Circle, appears to be the most
popular place for them to make an
extra $20 by giving twice a week.
Although the center is only five
months old, Manager Tony Patton
says it averages 600800 donations

Volume LXIX, Number “9
Wednesday. May 3, 1978

weekly and that 70 percent of them
come from UK.

At 3t3 E. Short St., Plasma

Derivatives, in operation for nearly
four and onehalf years, gets only 20
percent of their plasma from
studaits. “We get, on the average,
from 300 to 500 donations per week,
bu dQend mostly on local and
downtown people," said Phil
Lapinski, manager.
‘ That leaves the Central Kentucky
Blood Center (sole supflier of
hospitals in this area), whichdraws
about 000 units of whole blood in a
week, with only 5 percent of its
donors UK students.

The plasma commercial banks'
draw is frozen and sold to large
pharmeceutical companies like
Armour and Parke-Davis for
fractionalization.

From it, these companies
manufacture a variety of life-saving
products used in the treatment of

an independent student n

hemophiliacs. leukemia patients,
bran and shock victims and people
exposed to diseases such as rabies,
measles, tetanus and mumps.

Both plasma cutters, which ad-
vertise regularly in this newspaper.
have made the financial incentive
for selling plasma an attractive one
to students. By law, you can give
plasma twice a week. Plasma
Derivatives pays $10 per mit in
cash. Plasma Alliance pays the
same for normal plasma—but by
check—and has recently began
giving $25 for any unit of plasma that
contains Rhogarn, a rare agent used
to produce “anti-D."

(“Anti-D” is an antibody that
prevents the blood cells of someone
with Rh negative blood from at-
tacking those of the fetus with Rh
positive.)

in addition, Plasma Alliance of-
fers its donors a :10 home if they
donate, as they’re encwraged to,

EN TUCKY

Kern 21

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

 

Contest winners' solutions
could help security at library

By MARY AN N BUCHART
Kernel Staff Writer

There may be fewer stolen books
at the King Library next year
became of suggestions that were
made in a contest to improve
security.

The contest, conducted by the
library last semester, offered a

$1,000 prize for a plan to cut down on
the number of thefts. Many people
entered with a wide variety of dif~
ferent ideas, said Larry Greenwood,
a member of the selections com-
mittee.

“Parts of every one of the plans
will be used,” said Greenwood. “We
received some very technical and
expensive plans, but we were

For 3 handicapped,

it was a new start

EDITOR‘S NOTE: This is the last of
a three-part series about han-
dicapped students at UK.

By BETSY PEARCE
Copy Editor

it was a hot August afternoon in
1971 when it happened.

Brian Shaffer, then 18, was
swimming with friends when he
dove into the pool‘s shallow end.

“i was a good swimmer and
diver," Shaffer, BGS junior,
recalled. “I thought I'd just knocked
myself silly."

For the next two hours, Shaffer lay
by the side of the pool while friends
walked on his back, attempting to
restore his movement. Finally, the
emergency medical squad was
summoned.

“It neva occurred to me that my
neck was broken,” he said. “I
thought it was like breaking an
arm—l asked how long i had to
wear a cast.”

Doctors told Shaffer that if he
made it through the night, he’d
never move again from the nedr
down. “i told them it was a lie the
first 30 days i was in the hwpitai,”
he said.

Shaffer was so convinced he would
recover that when put on a tilt table
(to aid circulation), he unstrapped
himself to prove that he could move.
“1 literally fell on my face a lot of
times.-" he said.

“But We always been a fighter
andl decided i wouldn't give up," he
said. Through determination,
support of parents and friends, and
the help of a “hard-nosed therapist,“
Shaffer went through several years
of rehabilitation.

Classed as a quadriplegic, Shaffer
can now swim and drive a car (with
hand controls). “People associate
qmdriplegic with from the neck
down, but that’s a misconception,"
he said.

After overcoming physical ob-
stacles. Shaffer must still cope with
attitudes of able-bodied people. Lack
of understanding is the main
problem, he said. “Until people get
to know a physically handicapped
person, they don‘t know what to
expect.

For instance. Shaffer said, people
get “hyper“ and uncomfortable
around people in wheelchairs, and
hesitate to help them. “If you see
someone struggling, it's okay to
hdp,” he said. “Especially in bad

weather."

Despite the elements, Shaffer
missed only three days of classes
and work last winter. “It was a
challenge to my disability," he said.

Such challenges are probably
what has made Shaffer “perhaps
more emotionally stable than most
able-bodied people — We had to
cope with a lot."

One person who has helped him
cope is his wife, Susan. They met at
Cardinal Hill, where she was
working when he was rehabilitating.
The Shaffers have a two-year-oid
boy who is “a whole bundle of joy,"
he said.

Looking back, Brian Shaffer said
he is not resentful of able-bodied
people becatse of his accident. “I
had 18 years ——iife’s been good to
me.“

.0

Dick Cambron, BGS senior, was
“almost 17" when he had a crippling
motorcycle accident. He was driving
fast when he ran off the curve of a
road to avoid another car.

“it was silly, immature,“ Cam-
bron now says of the incident.

He said he remembers “bits and
pieces" of his first week in the
hospital, but mostly recalls lying on
his back for a month.

“Sure, i thought about giving up,"
he said. “But there’s no future in
that.”

Cambron’s accidmt left him with
full use of his arms and shoulders,
but little feeling in, or use of, his
legs.

After months of rehabilitation,
Cambron went back to high school
and graduated. Since then, he has
been to Elizabethtown Community
College, L.T.i. and UK, with various
jobs in between.

His philosophy now, as well as
before the accident, is that “you’ve
got to do the best you can with what
you've got.“

Cambron seems to have little
trouble applying that approach,
althmgh he said he's encountered
attitudinal problems with able-
bodied people. “i‘m out to change
that." he said.

One thing Cambron‘s had to
charge is his “modis operandi”
associated with social life. “I don‘t
go skiing in Aspen or to bars or
dances to pick up girls." he said.

“i‘ve had to revamp my thinking
on women, partly because i‘m
getting olde. i guess," he said.

Continued on page 5

looking for simple and inexpensive
ones.”

There were two winners, both of
them UK students, and they will
split the $1,000 because their ideas
were similar. Steve Rosenberg, a
chemistry senior, and Bill Harting,
an Arts & Sciences sophomore, were
chosen by an ad hoc committee
consisting of a cross-section of the
faculty and administration.

Both plans basically call for im-
provements and modifications to the
existing book inspection system,
according Director of UK Libraries
Paul Willis.

Rosenberg requested that his
specific plans to cut book thefts not
be announced. in researching his
plans, he said he spent considerable
time counting the number of persons
leaving the main library and ob-
serving the inspection procedures as
people left.

Harting got a lot of his information
from a friend who works at the
check point. He calls his plan, “a
simple, effective and inexpensive
way to reduce the .”

Continued on page 5 '

eight or even nine times a month.

Like all other blood and plasma
centers--- paid or volunteer—Plasma
.Aliiance and Plasma Derivatives
are regulated by the FDA and
routinely inspected by the ad-
ministration's Bureau of Biologics.

Local l-‘DA investigator John
Thompson stressed that federal
policy with regard to both com-
'mercial and non-profit banks ”is
directed mainly toward the safety of
the donor. These places operate
‘under stringent selection and
collection procedures or not at all.

"The bureau has some of the
strongest legislation of any
government agency; it could write
one of these centers out of existence
with one quick letter,“ said
‘Thompson.

This was recently done in Florida,
he said, where two commercial

.-'¢ i“

The “Flying Ghee."

a difficult skateboarding
maneuver requiring a [80 degree moving turn, isn't
enough to daunt Shawn Remacle. who invented the

plasma banks were closed down and
their managers jailed for a variety
of abtses.

Thanpson said that centers are
most likely to ga in trouble with the
law if they aren‘t discriminating
enough in their selection of donors or
draw too much blood or plasma.
"Much of the profiteering comes
from double enrollment—people
donating at one place and diving
across town the next day to donate
again at another."

Since the potential for the exists
in Lexington, both Plasma Alliance
and Plasma Derivatives have a
system for identifying donors. Each
center stains a different finger with
fluorescent ink, which fades in about
three days, so the other center and
the CKBC will know to refuse an
individual who is already enrolled in
one program.

A donor giving whole blood has a

1

Surf City, UK

Selling plasma for money is an offer
that many UK students just can’t refuse

unit (just under a pint) removed
from a vein in the arm while lying
prone at a table. it's about a 15-
minute procedue and can only be
undergone once eva'y eight weeks.
The body needs that long to
replenish the blood that's been lost.

The plasma donation process,
called plasmapheresis, takes two
units of whole blood «me at a time—
from a donor who sits in a reclining
easy chair. For about 45 minutes, he
watchs TV, studies or just con-
centrates on keeping his arm per-
fectly still so as not to move the
large needle in it.

Red blood cells, white blood cells
and the platelets are separated from
the plasma in a centrifuge and then
pumped back into the donor. The
plasma is normally replaced within
24 hours.

Continued on page 5

Tom Moran

stunt. A food science sophomore. Remacle was riding
yesterday afternoon near the Complex.

 

'— today

on page 6.

inside

”(‘8 DEFENSIVE END ART STILL WAS PICKED yesterday by the
Kansas City Chiefs in the first round of the NFL drafts. Read about it inside

state

 

STATE POLICE OI-‘FICALS SAY THE LENGTIIY coal strike and earlier

trouble at the strike-bound Stearns Mining Co. increased their expenses by

$2.8 million this fiscal year.

The extra money will come from a special appropriation in the current
state budget to handle unexpected governmental emergencies, said state
Finance and Administration Secretary Russell McCuiure.

During the national strike. extra troopers had to he sent into the coalfields.
Extra troopers also were sent to McCreary County last fall when violence
erupted in the Stearns Strike.

Gail iiuecker, commissioner of the Bureau for Social Insurance. said there
were some increased overtime and travel experses for bureau staff mem-
bers handling striking miners' food stamp requests.

She said the total costs have notbeen computed yet. but noted that half the
overtime costs will be paid by the federal government, which fully funds the
stamps.

nation

SMALL ('OAI. OPERATORS WOULD RECEIVE MORE FEDERAL
.VlONl-lt‘ to meet new strip—mining requirements under legislation repor-
teted to the Semte floor yesterday.

The bill. sporsored by Kentucky Sets. Wendell Ford and Walter Hud-
dleston. was reported out by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources
(‘ommittee

It would herease funding for such assistance to $25 million for the
following 13 years.

(Tong-e55 originally authorized $10 million annually for a 15-year period to
assist small operators in meeting certain hydrologic and test-boring
requiremets of the new law.

PRESIDENT ('ARTER'S NEW BUDGET RULES resulted in 25 jobs being
cut from the federal job-safety agency and led the Coast Guard to eliminate
a boating program which had served its purpose, the White House said

yesterday.

Those were among the benefits claimed for the first year of zero base
budgeting. which Carter has ordered the federal government to rely on
exclusively in preparing spending requests for next year, a report by the
Office of Management and Budget said.

The report said that despite some start-up problems, the technique is off to

u good start after a one-year tryout.

The idea of zero base budgeting is to justify all programs, even those that
have been around for years. from scratch. More importantly. agency of—
ticials are supposed to assign each spending alternative a rank, from the
most important to the least important, to determine which programs can be

cut first.

world

FROM DAWN‘S FIRST LIGIIT TO DAKNESS’ FALL. the sun will be in
the spotlight at home and abroad today for the celebration of “Sun Day," an
effort to focus national and international attention on solar energy.

The activities are organized by a coalition of groups and are being coor~
dinated by Solar Action inc.. a non-profit, Washington-based organization
that has its roots in such similar public-interest events as "Earth Day" and

“Food Day.”

The celebration has the support of the Deparment of Energy and the ex-
pected participation of President Carter, who willspeak at the Solar Energy

institute in Golden. Colo.

 

weather

SOMEONE IS SENDING IN TIIE CLOUDS AGAIN. There will be in-
creasing cloudiness this afternoon, with a 50 percnt chance of rain tonight
tligh today will be in the uppersos Low tonight in the low 40s Tomorrow the

high will be in the low 60s

(‘ompiled from Associated Press dispatches.

 

 

 

  

 

    

  
  

 
 

 

w “emii’i'iel

editorials 8: comments

Steve Ballinger David liibbitts
Editor in Chic] Sports Hm I w W
Dick Gabriel fiance":
Managing Editor Bthtaible Betsy Pearce
Assistant Sports Editor Copy Editor!
Thomas Clark '
.Assistant Managing Editor wan“ m
‘ Charla Main Arts & Entertainment Editor Pfizgglhiir
Editorial ‘Editor _ "a‘
Nell Fields
Assistant Am 4' Jeanne Wehns
Entertainment Editor Photo Supervisor

any out

 

  
  
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
  
 
 
  

 

 

  
  
  
   
   
  
  
   
   
  
 
 
  
  
   
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
   
    
   
  
    
 

 

    
     

le rn-Cleode Suares

 

 

 

Great guns . . .

I thought last week that now might
be a good time to look back over the
files and try to pick out some of the
literary highlights of what has been
a bumper year for film and
l_iterature.

 

: chafles
main

 

 

lloweva', good judgement got the
best of me, so I’ve decided to turn at
least a portion of the column over to
the reknowned critic and, of course,
dear friend of mine, Grover Scrodd,
for an insightful though sometimes
unique look at the state of the
University.

9

Dearest readers of the Kernel;

I am utterly delighted with this
chance to address you, and I am
grateful that you might read my
writing; there is so much I’d like to
pass along to you —so much you
have to learn.

I want to tell you first off that I
was shocked over your autumnal
failure to respond to what i thought
was to be the literary fuse for a new
breed of protesting youngsters. I am
talking, of course, about Dr. Glanz
Peence’ revolutionary treatise on
civil disobedience, his glorious essay
on “sonism.” Now there is a new
approach, a bold attack. Great guns,
kids, don’t you see?

Sigh

Ah, me; listen! You are jaded
children in a jaded society. Your
parents don‘t care who or what you
do; that’s why they keep pumping
that green into the university. They
want you out of their hair, at least
until they can legally say “It‘s not
my job to mind thees one!" Your
rights don‘t exist; they never did.
Your parents saw to that early in
life, when they took you to those
institutional brainwashings they
called Sunday school.

There, they sadded you with all

kinds of excess mental and
emotional baggage: a sort of
samsonite morality with no other
purpose than to make you so
damnned paranoid you wouldn't
dare talk back to your elders, let
alone demand of them to know why
you duinave basic rights.-

Non'th'ough, all that can end
Take the bull by the hams, read Dr-
Peenoe’ treatise again. You have the
oppurtunity now to take a bold, new
direction in the fight for freedom:
murder. That's right, murder. It
works for the CIA and all those
Cubans, doesn’t it? I beg of you, read
his book! You’ll never have such a
chance again; soon, you’ll all be
walking around with your eyes
glazed over smoking legal dope and
munch'ng soma-chip cookies, and
you won't know the difference.

If, perhaps, you do get involved,
there are other texts you can read:
Throw away those old copies of “The
Fountainhead,” kids, a new text-
book-novel for radicalism has hit the
stands. Try Walter Tunis’ gripping,
piognant Boatmen From Taiwan.
His is a remarkable story, a book so
packed with fresh insight and so
compelling in its plea for social
justice that it must be on every
cinder-block-and-cedar-plank
bookshelf on Maxwell Street.

Tunis’ book was also responsible
for one of the great cinema events of
the year: his book was turned into a
fourhour motion picture of in-
credible power, produced by Big
Time, Inc.,and released in early
March. Filmed entirely in secret, at
a cost of millions, the film has been
banned from the US. parding
pomegraphy litigation. Many people
say that the CIA is spreading con-
siderable time and money around in
its attempt to keep this socially
explosive piece of film history out of
the country.

Write your congressman. Ask him
why the movie version of Boatmen
isn’t being allowed in the country.
Tell him you want to see it.

In a similar case, local author and
orator Dr. T. A. Steele has debuted
this week in the FBi’s “hot 100."
Steele, known in literary and

 

Is the pen
mightier than
the court?

 

buy their books.

It really isn’t very fair for former government
officials to make enormous profits for writing
about the evils they were thrown out for com-
mitting From Richard Nixon to the lowest
“unindicted co—conspirator,” ex-bureaucrats are
cleaning up at the bank with their varying versions
of what really happened.
Many states have laws that commandeer profits
from ventures based on felonies, when they are
produced by the convicted felon. That’s too much
too ask with the Watergate principals, of course,
but the principal is still appopriate. Nixon, Dean,
Ehrlichman, and others are profiting from
misdeeds they were involved in while in office.
The campaign to ignore the endless string of
“Final” Days has been getting more and more
publicity, and there’s even a chance that it might
dent the massive profits coming in to book
publishers, movie producers, and eventually the
culprits. So if you’re tired of Watergate and would
like to get back at the crooks who started it, don’t

 

 

Don't you see,
you jaded people?

 

 

political circles as “the Disco
Sheik,” has been on the lam from
federal authorities ever since the
local release of several thousand
bootleg copies of his factually-based
novel That Manic About Town.
Manic is the biography of a fic-
tional disco guerilla who dared
challenge the very foundation of a
powerful, provincial system of
government in “a small, affluent
American city.” Set in the present, it
is a shocking expose of the real

By Cooper and Bradley

  

 

 

oppression in this country's discos
and universities, and one man’s
fight to change it.

There is much speculation as to
who the real-life hero of Steele’s
novel is; Steele’s nu saying. He is,
however, very anxious to talk about
his forthcoming book, The Real
Guerlllas, a Burroughs-styled
examination of the madness and
depravity on the nation's dance
floors.

There’s change in the wind

Marshall Arisman

children! Pick up your three-piece
suits and your high-heeled boots and
get out there and let them hear you.
Read these books. Talk to your
friends. Time is, literally, running
out.
Thank you so much;
Dr. Grover Scrodd

Charles Main. journalism
sophomore. is the Kernel Editorial
Editor. This is his last column.

 

   
 

 

  

fl“."‘:!91!“_"!_"§‘_4m’
I _
0" M m" ‘1'" @9151 /

 

Holding the my for ransom “1
work out. They midn‘t raise the no
som.

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Sol‘m lotngtonnhea Willi-M
Midde East. 17.. PLO Just made me Its
number one in choice.

  

     
    
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 

 

 

Number one tart choice?

Yeah! And they uttered me a no-cut
contract! ,

 

 

The Kentucky Kernel welcomes
letters and commentaries sub-
mitted for publication. Articles
must include the signature, ad-
dress and phone number, year
and major if the wirter is a
student.

Commentary authors must
have expertise or experience in
the area to which their article
pertains;

The Kernel editors have the
final dec'sion m which articles
are published. The editors
reserve the right to edit sub

 

LeuensPoficy

   

missions became of grammatical
errors, libelous statements or
unsuitability in length.

All letters and commentaries
become the property of rthe
Kentucky Kernel.

The best-read letters are brief
and concern campus events,
though commentaries shoulb be
shatessay lengh.

Letters and commentaries
should be mailed to the Editorial
Editor, Room IM, Journalism
Building. University of Ky.. 406“,
or may be delivered pa'sonslly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 "val-U” nus-um.

 

 

comment

 

 

This semester's progress

Socialist reviews the year

For my last column this
year, I would like to review
some of the evaits of the
semester and coming 1;) to
that point to the prospect for
powerful and independent
movements of the working
peole, women and oppressed
minorities.

bronson
rozier

The most important
discussion facing the social
movanents today is about the
need to independently
mobilize the strength of the
movements and to fight
uncompromisingly for their
rights and opposition to the
independence of the
movernment by the labor
bureaucrats,and leaders of
the anti-racist, women’s and
left or socialist movements
that rely on an alliance with
the liberal wing of the
democratic party. In one
degree or another this
discussion is taking place in
the fight for social change.

The Young Socialist
Alliance unconditionally
supports the move toward the

 

 

 

 

KERNEL

CLASSIFIEDS
WORK!

 

 

 
 

LEXINGTON
DRIVE IN

[IIINLIDI Rtlntlllvrtlil fin

   
  
 

   

 

 

DIGGIN'THE Girls
RAISI‘N HELL.
WIN iur. the

  

A Pmemom nonunion
Writer m Produced by Ilsa c. Mu
Isimd hill!“ mm, inc.

 

 

  

independence of these
movements. The YSA and the
Socialist Workers Party, with
wchich we are in political
agreement, has long sup-
ported the call for a labor
party based on the unions
with a program supporting
the unorganized, women and
oppressed national
minorities. “Towards a Mass
Feminist Movanent” is a
document of the SW? which
calls for building a mass
movement of women relying
on their own movement to
fight for women’s rights
independently of the
democratic party which helps
maintain this sexist system
before, during and after a
socialist change in society.
The YSA has supported the
growth of La Raza Unida
party, a Chicano and Mexican
party and supported Malcom
X’ call for a Black movement
indepaident of the racist
Democratic and Republican
parties

If the only people fighting
for the political independence
of the working class and
oppressed movements were
socialist, the idea of self-
relianoe to the oppressed

August 27.

might seem Utopian. Short-
cuts to the neccessity of day
to day struggle to build mass
movements might appear
more viable. This attempt at
a shortcut can take two
toms: substituting the ac-
tions of small bands of
radicals for a real movement
of the working class or on the
other hand not relying on the
potential of working people,
women and Blacks to be able
to fight for their own needs.

Reliabnce on the govern-
ment or its two parties is
being increasingly
challenged these days In the
last month, for example, tens
of thousands have been
relying on their movement
through demonstrations:
thousands participated in
rallies and marches for the
United Mineworkers and
members of the union that
defied the Taft-Hartley Act
invoked by the Democrat
“friend of labor” Carter.
There have been marches
against US. support of
apartheid and the racist and
sexist Bakke dec'sion. There
have been demonstrations for
a gay and lesbian rights
ordinance in New York and

mum .4 ;

   

If there are questions about the Summer Health Fee please call Mrs. Vivian Smith
at the Health Service (233-6465) or the general information number, 233-5823.

there will be demonstrations
against unsafe nuclear power
at Rocky Flats, Colorado and
Barnwell, South Carolina.
And in a very important
development a national
demonstration for the ERA
has been called in what could
be the beginning of a massive
show of the strengh of the
women’s movement and its
allies that could gain an
extension and victory for the
Equal Rights Amendments.

In the labor movement we
have seen the lessons of the
coal stike are spreading and
the workers in (ther- unions
are asking why they should
accept contracts that are not
acceptable. An example of
this is the militancy of the
City Transit Workers in New
York. Recently 4,000 mar-
ched to demand “Jobs for
Youth" in Washington and in
the last couple of weeks there
has been a conference held by
the United Auto Workers and
22 other intematinal unions to
demand a 30 hour week at 40
hours pay to spread available
jobs around Several of the
local union leaders took the

floor to point out this demand

could not be met by relying on
labor’s “organized" strength.

The power to win Equal
Rights Amendment and
abortion rights, to defend
affirmative action and defeat
US. support of apartheid,
and win the 30 hour work
week and jobs for all at union
wages, is there. The potential
power ios beginning to
show —» the job of

socialistsand activists is to
develop it. From these
movements will come the
power to develop a truly
independent socialist
movement like the one Debs
agitated for that will be in-
dependent of the capitalist
class and itsparties and
leaders in our movements,
the movement of the working
people and oppressed.

ltwill take this slow process
of building the independence
of the social movements not
shortcuts to build the society
we need, a socialist society,
the YSA hopes all socialists
and militants in the social
movements will unite to
transform the movements
into fighting movenents thta
will win the rights we need
today and urge people who
agree with our perspective of
building a socialist society
free of racism, sexism and
exploitation to join us in the
YSA.

May 2 we are having a
commemoration of May Day
and picnic and this summer
we are having educational

seriesand discussion of the ‘

strategy and theory nec-
cessary to build a socialist
movement. If you are in-
terested in either of these
please call 269-6262 or write
box 952 University Station,
Lexington, 40506.

Bronson lluzier is a
member of the Young
Socialist Alliance. This is his
last column for the semester.

 

 

 

Good Morning .
5 Reader !!!
§THE WORD FOR TODAY
E is CLASSIFIED

SUMMER 1978

0The Spring SemeSter Health Fee Card is good thru May 14.
eThe Health Service will be open all summer

Hours:
8-5 M-F until June 30
8-430 M-F after July 1
No Saturdays

OStudents enrolled in either the 4 week session
or the 8 week session may pay the summer

Health Fee. One $10 fee covers the entire summer.

There is only one fee for the entire summer. It is $10.00. It covers the period from May is thru

The $10 summer health fee is paid only once when tuition Is paid for the session in which the
student is enrolled. if a student is enrolled in both sessions the health fee should be paid when
tuition is paid for the 4 week session. if the health fee is paid at the beginning of the 0 week session,
thecoverage is retroactive to May 15th. Payment of the health tee is subiect to the same deadlines
asthe tuition deadlines for each session.

.Students who are in legitimate Academic Programs
during the summer, but are not enrolled in courses

  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Wednesday. May 3. 1978—3

  

  

 

styles

 

 

 

and Fine Photography

A wide variety of album plans and prices”,
baturing romantic. artistic, and misty mood

HOllFlElD PHOTOGRAPHY

   
 

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Cardinal Valley Shopping Center

UP TO SOD/cairn i

32.“) EXTRA WITH THIS AD
FOR YOUR 1ST DONATION=$12.(Xl

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254 8047’
Ba m. 7pm Mon Fri
.Sat 8am 3pm

 

Fish Bowl

 

Tropical Fish
Boas Pythons

1425 Alexandria Dr.

 

  
   
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
  

Pet Shop

  

   
 
  
   
 
  
  
 

Exotic Birds
Tarantulas

Specialists in Apartment Size Pets
253-1438

 

 

 
 

 

   

”Rid

 
     

2)

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$I.55

3)
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(flown!) 3 good reasons . . .

Luncheon Special

2 for i from 3 until 6 pm.

233 Southlond Drive

    
  
   
 

it

Buy
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Dinner
Get
One
Dinner
FREE!

lHour

 

 

INFORMATION ABOUT THE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE

may pay the Health Fee.

Students who can provide Billings 3. Collections Office with an authorized statement from their
department that they will be engaged in an academic program during the summer even if they are
notenrolled in classes are eligible to pay the no health fee. Authorhation forms are available at
the Health Service, the Graduate Student Office and the international Student Office.

The deadline for payment of the health fee by students in this non registered group is May 30.

 

 
   
    
      
   
      
    
   
       
     
     
       
    
 

  

OStudents attending summer sessions who do not pay

the Health Fee may use the Health Service on
a fee-for-service basis.

Tie per-visit minimum charge is so during the session in which the student is enrolled,

OStudents who are out of school just for the summer
months may use the Health Service on a

fee-for-se rvice basis.

Theminimum per visit charge is $10

A brochure describing the services covered by the Health Fee
is available at the Health Service.

         
     
   
 
  
   
  

 4 “THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. May 3. "78

{Ease

390“" MIN 8TB!!!
lEXIIGTON. KENTUCKY WT
”ION! 251-203

Bulletins

Biff.--

tEXIIBTOI. KEITH“! an
m 1“- I!“

Flyers Newstetters Resumes
Announcements

Serving The UK Conmunity

Posters

 

Tonite 8r Thurs.
Welcome

JERRY BELSAK -
& his guitars

Before finals, relax & enjoy!

Fri. & Sat.
Come see and hear

PARK AVENUE JAZZ
QUARTET

102 W.High St.

 

 

for the best in entertainment

 

//////

We bste r ’3 Ne w Twentieth

Century Dictionary
unabridged
deluxe color .
Regular $59.95 ' 5
Now on sale $19.95

Ideal giftfor the graduate.

Great dictionary for the
office and home.

UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE
STUDENT CENTER

III/III A

 

 

STEP INTI] EIUH
TITIIE TIIHEHIINE

TRAVEL BACK THRU YOUR MEMORIES. LET
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL CARRY YOU BACK
IN TIME OVER THE PAST YEAR AT U.K. THE
VEHICLE OF THE MOTION IN TIME WILL BE
THE “YEAR IN REVIEW". DEPARTURE DATE
WILL BE MAY 5. COME WITH US- ALL YOU
NEED IS THE "YEAR IN REVIEW" SECTION
FROM FRIDAY'S KERNEL.

HAVE A PLEASANT TRIP!

K'éfifiiel

 

 

 

 

 

 

/
é :

 

arts

 

 

Concludes season

All Night Theatre shows Friday

The UK Theatre Arts
department bands together
one last time this Friday
night, as the “All Night
Theatre" program is
presented.

Traditionally, All-Night
Theatre has marked the
official closing of the annual
theatre season with nearly
the entire department joining
together for one final go at the
stage.

This year. a total of 22 plays
and two dance concerts will
be presented beginning
Friday night at 8 in the Fine
Arts Building. The produc-
tions will be the product of 99
people from the Theatre Arts
Department.

The building will uses three
stages for the numerous
plays