xt7z8w383r8j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7z8w383r8j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-03-29 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, March 29, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 29, 1974 1974 1974-03-29 2020 true xt7z8w383r8j section xt7z8w383r8j The Kentuc

Vol. LXV No. 137
Friday, March 29, 1974

an hdependent student newspaper

ky Kernel

University of Kentucky
Lexington. KY. mes

 

'While The Cats Away' ruled
'not obscene' in circuit court

By BRUCE SINGLETON
Kernel Staff Writer

“WHILE THE CAT‘S AWAY" was ruled
“not obscene" in Fayette Circuit Court
action yesterday.

The film, seized after a midnight
showing on Jan. 11, was the first to face
trial since the June 1973 Supreme Court
ruling which said local communities must
determine what is obscene.

 

Commentary

 

The trial began Wednesday morning
with the selection of the jury. The original
twelve candidates included nine women
and three men. Both the prosecution and
defense asked them questions in an at-
tempt to ascertain their biases.

ONLY ONE was dismissed from the
jury. He said he had never seen a copy of
Playboy and that he hadn’t been to a
movie theatre in over four years. He was
also the most conservative in appearance
of the jurors.

When he was released, he went back to
his seat. “I didn’t think you’d last,“ the
man sitting next to him whispered.

Questions posed by defense attorney
Tom Osborne centered around bias
against obscenity.

”Do you belong to any organization or
have any religious affiliations which have
prohibitted you from seeing certain
movies or reading certain books?“ was
one of the questions he asked each of the
prospective jurors. He also asked each
about their normal reading material.

WHEN HE GOT to one of the male
prospects, he asked, “Have you ever read
Playboy?"

“Only about once a month,” was the
reply. The whole courtroom broke out in
laughter. Even stately Judge N. Mitchell
Meade cracked a smile at this and shook
his head, as if to say, “Oh boy, it's going to
be another one of those days."

Attorneys for Esquire theatres, owners
of the downtown Cinema, were two of the
best.

William Sims made his reputation as an
obscenity prosecutor when he was a US.
Attorney; now, he’s on the other side of the
fence.

Continued on Page '6 .

Spring cleaning

A l'K student. taking advantage of the warm weather. launches into spring
cleaning. It doesn't seem to matter that his window is a long way from the
ground. (Kernel staff photo by Pinkie Foster.)

 

AAUP votes
for rule

to support

prior service

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer
THE UK CHAPTER of the American
Association of University Professors
(AAUP) Monday overwhelmingly voted to
support the prior service rule segment of
the University Senate tenure and
promotion report.

In a 17-1 vote, the professors went on
record in support of recommendation No. I
of the ad hoc committee on tenure and
promotion (the Krislov Report). The 10

recommendations, complete with several
amendments and remarks by the Senate
Council, will be voted upon at the April 8
Senate meeting.

The prior service rule, as proposed by
the committee, would establish criteria for
deciding whether prior service at other
institutions can be applicable to promotion
and tenure policies of UK.

APPLICABILITY of prior work to
tenure criteria at UK will be reviewed on
an individual basis by the prospective
faculty member, the department chair-
man and the dean. the proposal states.

Prior service determination will be
made on the basis of the following:

~~lf the institution of prior service had
similar expectations regarding formal
criteria for promotion and tenure as at
UK;

»If teaching and service loads at the
previous institution were arranged in
order to assure faculty members adequate
time for investigation and scholarly or
creative productivity;

—lf the measurable achievements at the
previous institution are such that they can
be counted as part of the achievements to
be evaluated by UK in considering tenure
and promotion.

~.. . EN.WM

If the faculty member utilized the
same skills and had the same career goals
at the institution of prior service which he
will be applying at UK.

TllI-I REPORT also states that all or
part of the prior servicemay be eliminated
from consideration in determining the
period of review at UK.

If it is determined that all or part of the
prior service shall be eliminated. a
specific period of employment prior to
tenure review shall be agreed upon. A
specific date for review will be stipulated
in writing by the faculty member,
department chairman, the dean and a
committee composed of the chairmen of
the area committees before being reported
to the appropriate vice president at the
time of the faculty member‘s initial ap-
pointment.

(‘ontinucd on Page :-

 

News In Brlet

by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

e Plenty at gas

0 Written report unlikely
o No word

0 Additional $4 million

0 Minimum wage raised

a Hardly effective
0 Today's weather...

LOUISVILLE — Service station hours
will be longer and more gasoline will be
available in the coming week, a survey
indicates.

The Louisville and Blue Grass
automobile clubs said Thursday their
weekly survey showed 96 per cent of the
stations on Kentucky‘s major highways
expected to end the month with adequate
supplies.

Of the stations polled only seven per cent
expected to be limiting sales.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — A Justice
Department spdtesman said Thursday it
is unlikely a federal grand jury will
produce a written report on its probe of the
1970 shooting deaths of four Kent State
University students by Ohio National
Guardsmen.

» The jury, still undecided on what action
to recommend when it returns its findings
to federal court, will resume Friday the

' closed-door deliberations in which it is to

reach its decision.

IIERMOSILLO, Mexico —— The wife of
kidnaped American diplomat John Pat-
terson has attempted to follow instructions
in a ransom note but has heard nothing
from her husband, a US. official said
Thursday.

lllLLSBOROUGIl. Calif. — Two
alleged members of the terrorist Sym-
bionese Liberation Army said in a letter
from their jail cell Thursday they believe
Patricia Hearst will be released unhar-
med.

The letter from the two men charged
with the cyanide-bullet assassination of
the Oakland schools superintendent was
made public as Miss Hearst‘s father told
reporters his family‘s corporation is
guaranteeing an additional $4 million in
free food to the poor.

WASHINGTON — Congress sent to
President Nixon Thursday a bill raising
the minimum wage from $1.60 an hour to
$2.30 and bringing seven million more
persons under its coverage.

It would be the first increase in eight
years. The raises would begin in steps on
May I and be completed by I978.

FRANKFURT — The controversial
abortion bill passed in the closing days of
the I974 legislature may make little dif-
ference in the actual practice of abortions
in Kentucky.

At least that’s the tentative conclusion of
some doctors and lawyers who followed
the tortuous course of the bill through the
General Assembly. While some
proponents of abortion say parts of the
bill may be unconstitutional, most agreed
it will have little effect on current practice.

...wet and warm

Springtime weather remains, with
today’s temperatures expected to rise into
the 705. There is, however, a 60 per cent
chance of rain today and tonight. The
weatherman predicts a mild, clear
weekend with temperatures in the mid 70s

'.
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‘l‘lorlflll "present the opinion: a! the editors. not the university

Edltorlals

 

The Kentucky Kornol

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Steve Swift, Editor4n£hid

Captured by a phantom?

"He was whisked off one day by a phantom.“ they'll
no doubt say about Victor Gaines in the future.
Gaines. you remember. was given a special three-

pronged. six—month assignment by

UK President

Otis Singletary March 1 concerning blacks and their

relation to this campus.

Well. after three weeks of studying attitudes in and
around campus. Gaines said in a Thursday Kernel
article he has finished the first segment of the task.

However. aboutall we've heard from Gaines is that
racism on campus doesn't come in concrete forms
and is more like a phantom. We don‘t find this hard to
believe because two weeks before the Gaines ap-
pointment Jerry Stevens. assistant to the vice
president for student affairs for minority students
forewarned. "It tracismi is never verbalized."

Instead of worrying about "concrete" evidence we
recommend Gaines record each piece of information
given him by University community members but
hold off his assessments until all phases of his
assignment have been completed.

His defense of present L'K policies. while possibly
sincere. implies racism is simply in the minds black
students Denise Vivian's Viewpoint article Thursday

points this out.

Because of this unnecessary defense we have to
agree with Vivian that the Gaines appointment was
simply a move by the administration to listen to only

what it wanted to hear.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

The Cubs: Early 20th Century relics

SCOTTSDALE. ARIZ. — The
plump lady in the print. with the
blue hair and the earrings which
say CL'BS. explains that even
though the earrings cost only a
dollar they attract more attention
than her expensrve pieces of
jewelry She says that she is not
retired but her best friend is This
friend. dressed :n the style of

J;-_,Jl «are -.
UHIIUA Gnu u

_- esiei’day—a
peasant blouse with machine
made lace trim —— disagrees in
angry good humor "We re not
retired. We're gust tired

They and a number of other
older people from die lower end
of Lake Michigan move through
the gates and enter The Winter
Home of the Chicago Cubs a
modest-Sized. homey. wooden

structure where the team is
preparing for its 99m consecutive
year of National League play.

lose by in Sun City. where
the Milwaukee Brewers prep
themselves. they say the old
people drive right into the
ballpark in their motorized
wheelchairs.

U

basebal. is for grandparents
and grandchildren. a game being
played out. a pastime passing
like a way of life almost
remembered. an etiquette in
desuetude that no one is exactly
sure how to observe. Spring
training itself is an anachronism
“hat dates back to when the rich
went to Florida for winter sun
male

 

 

'NOW, WE'RE NO? GOING TO BE TOO SUCCESSFUL, ARE WE?‘

Letters to the Kernel

Sorry about that,

ATTENTION"
Community
The Department of An-
thropology presents:

L'niversity

MAN‘S OTHER FACES: an
exhibit of masks from around the
world. Located in the foyer of
Lafferty Halli

Wondering why this ad-
vertisement appears in the let-
ters to the editors section" The
reason is simple: the Kentucky
Kernel has refused to allocate a
single column inch to cover the

lamps and gauged the coming of
the good weather by the progress
of the teams as they played their
way North behind the retreating
frost line.

THE ([85 are as much of a
throwback as the people wat—
ching them They know nothing of
the modern sports training
camps of professional football:
men living in secular
monasticism. eating at training
table. players in hours of pained
exertion. coaches grim with
strategy and hard intent.
xenophobically absorbed thh the
making of the new model team.

The Cubs know nothing of this.
Other teams may have taken to
emulating panzerized armies.
but the Chicago Cubs have played

 

l

 
 
  

‘ans. and the rest of
America faked with electric in the same stadium Since 1915.
ASK ME ABOUT THE CIA lNVOlVEMElll 1

IN WATERGATEI’
500M... 1

  
   

exhibit. Initially. the Kernel was
notified near the end of February
that the exhibit would open
Sunday. March lst. Ap«
proximately two weeks ago the
Kernel was again notified of the
existence of the exhibit. During
the period from March ist to
Marth 27th. not a single word has
appeared in the Kernel con-
cerning this exhibit. While
several other art exhibits have
appeared in the MEMOS section
and Campus Calendar of Events.
coverage of MAN'S OTHER

They are owned by Phillip
Wrigley. a benign millionaire
manufacturer of chewrng gum.
who maintains them as early
20th Century relics in much the
same way as the Rockefellers put
their money into Colonial
Williamsburg

The Cubs get to the park
around 10 or 10:30 most mor-
nings. They suit up and walk onto
the field to do their short round of
calisthenics without that virtue
the coaches of other. more
mamacal sports like to call
concentration. Baseball has no
brute heroes like Vince Lom-
bardi. the father of the modern
football injury. or George Allen.
the Washington coach. whose
prayerful. monochromatic
fanaticrsm has made him the
Richard Nixon of his sport.

\FTER A bit of exercrse. Billy
Williams. the Cubs most-famous
player. srts in the dugout. studies
his colleagues strolling and
throwing balls. and smokes a
Cigarette. Baseball men do not
burnish the icons of sadistic body
culture They celebrate past
Yankee outfielders who hit their
longest home runs immediately
after puking from the debauch of
the night before Baseball still
believes its greatest moments
were given it by men who
couldn't passa Breathalyzer test.

The Cubs headquarters is at the
Ramada Inn. where the lobby
smells of a melange of stale
cigarette smoke and plastic

Wes

FACES has been nil.

Is this a typical example of the
Kernel‘s coverage of worth-while
campus events"

Wesley Cowan
lst year grad student

iEditor's Note: The Kernel
ran a short article and two
photos yesterday. However.
we are sorry for
procrastinating and apologize
to .\lr. Cowan.

chairs. and you can't even buy a
toothbrush. It‘s very un-Big
League. but then the Big Leagues
aren‘t big league anymore. even
if Bob Richie is at the Hammond
in the cocktail lounge. Bob Richie
is aSo at the piano and the
trumpet. all three of which he
operates simultaneously when he
plays Malaguena. and the guys
and gals from Ray‘s Bleacher all
the way up in Chicagoland love it.

The guys and gals. maybe 10 or
1'3 of them. call themselves the
Bleacher Bums arxi they come
down every winter They nurse
beers. go out to the park and hope
to get friendly with one of the
coaches who can tell stories. like
about the time Charlie Dressen or
some other manager of yore
trapped his curfew-violating
players by paying the hotel
elevator boy 10 ddlars to get
every drunk who came in after
one o‘clock to autograph a

baseball

SEPIA PHOTOGRAPHS of
10.000 men in black Sunday suits
and derbies watching the Cubs
play the Giants; it is no longer the
summer of 1908. The players
have college educations. and
even the laveable Cubbies are
trying to get out of the Pullman
car. but the guys are still fellas
and the gals are still broads.

 

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a
columnist for King Features
Syndicate.

 

 

 

  

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Vlewpolnt

 

Press involved in several important battles

By MARY ELIZABETH BRANAMAN

The press has become involved on the
battleground of constitutional freedom.
privilege of me executive. and con-
comitantly. the press. and ineVitably. most
importantly. the public‘s right to know
Who in the society has access to in-
formation. who has restrictive authority"

Facts eXisted prior to and independent of
reportorial discovery and disclosure in the
Watergate crisis. Whether the press
should pursue. in fact seek out. the facts
was initial contending point in the
government's criticism of the coverage.
"lndiscrtmmate use". critics cried. "leaks
and sources unrevealed". were other
allegations.

As OFFICIALS go through grand jury
indictments. leadings. and further judicial
processess. those critical of press
disclosure through anonymous sources
are now conditioned by that same
protective desire for secrecy. ln following
the events of Watergate. the press has
placed a heavy reliance on confidential
sources and neutrality of information. This
is in the best tradition of the American free
press. the basic assumption of the public‘s
right to know

Abuse. as events have led us to see. has
not been on the Side of the reporter. The
reporter. as representative of the press in

America. has witnessed a new era of
credibility The veracity of the news
media. as well as its unique function as
historical and practical precedent builder
has been confirmed by Circumstances

Many times the lawyers involved in the
case stood behind the compleXity of the
law. the repository of the nation’s moral
stricutres. Without the tenaCious free
press. the IaVish technicality of the law
could have hidden the unjust mechanisms
employed in the debacle. There IS no exact
solution to the government media problem
in the current historical period. for the
conflict will exSt merely by dint of its
framework.

THE FOL'NDING fathers when writing
the Constitution drafted The First
Amendment for a largely unaccountable
free press. and evolved a system of checks
and balances for a more accountable
government. The fledgling democracy and
its division was postulated in the ABth
Federalist Paper by Madison stating "that
the powers belonging to one of the
departments ought not to be directly and
completely administered by either of the
other departments."

Any institution or individual has the
right to defend information from random
demands. but the great body of the
American people depend on the news
world for the hidden information. Without

 

the free press. this country would be one of
clogged communication. with summary
disposition of information and secret
policy-making abuse on every level. The
education function of the press cannot be
denied.

Privacy is a quality that has its place in
both the media and government. and
analogously. the private Citizen. But at the
heart of the matter is the undisputed
knowledge that the probing. inCisive free

press makes all realms of this somety
more responswe. The time is one of travail
and attack on the institutions of the press.
but the Watergate reporting has demon-
strated that the press is alive and well and
providing the American people a window
to the larger world.

 

Mary Elizabeth Branaman is a 2nd
year law student.

Bill would overturn Supreme Court decision

By LINDA JENNESS

The Senate Subcommittee on Con-
s!:[utgonal Amendments headed by
SenaturBirch Bayh D-Lnd. recently held
two days of hearings on proposed con-
stitutional amendments that would
prohibit abortion.

The prmCipal amendment debated was
that of Senator James Buckley ‘C-R-
N Y 4. which states that the word ”per-
son" as used in the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments that no person shall be
deprived of life. liberty. or property
without due process of law shall apply to
"unborn offspring at every stage of their
biological development...“ The amend~
ment would outlaw abortions except "in an
emergency. when a reasonable medical
certainty exxsts that continuation of
pregnancy will cause the death of the
mother."

ANOTHER AMENDMENT. Offered by
Senator Jesse Helms iR-N.C.‘. would
extend constitutional guarantees to a fetus
“from the moment of conception“ and
make no exceptions.

These amendments. if passed. would
actually go beyond overturmng last year’s
L' S. Supreme Court deCision legalizing
abortion. Even before the Supreme Court
ruling. many states made exceptions on
the basis of rape. incest. mental or
phySIcal dangers to the woman. and other
medical reasons. These amendments
would remove the basis for those ex-
ceptions by granting constitutional rights
to the fetus.

Some legal questions are raised by these
amendments. If a fetus is a "person".
would women who we contraceptive
devices thatdislodgea fertilized egg. such
as the intrauterine deVice IL'D .be guxlty
of murder? Could a pregnant woman be
sent to Jail if this would incarcerate the
presumably innocent fetus “person" "
('anthefetus "person" inhentproperty"
Should it be included in the cencus" Does it

need a passport to travel" The questions
themselves show the absurdity of the
proposals

ML'CH MORE important. however. is
the Vicmm anti-woman character of the
proposed amendments and those who
support them. Some of these attitudes
were unwittingly exposed at the hearings.

Representative John Zwach R—Minnu
came to the hearings to give his "expert"
opinion that life begins when the egg is
fertilized. But he apparently neither knew
nor cared about the question of life. When
asked if in his "expert“ opinion life ac-
tually begins with fertilization or five to
eight days la ter when the fertilized 8g is
implanted in the uterus. he became
flustered and blurted out his real opinion.
There is a “Sickness of Americans.“Zwach
said. "They have to have intercourse." He
added that "Virtue is selfdiscipline."

Then there were the four Catholic
cardinab for whom the Buckley bill isn‘t
reactionary enough. They testified that
there can be no exceptions to prohibiting
abortion—not even to save the life of the
woman. When asked about making an
exception in the case of rape. John Car-
dinal Krol of Philadelphia replied. "the
Victim of rape sun'ivos The victim of
abortion does not."

SENATOR BL‘CKLEY outdid them all.
A week after the abortion hearings he
showed how real his concern fa" life is by
voting in favor of restoring the death
penalty Then. in what must be one of the
most hypocntical moves of the year.
Buckley added an amendment to the death
penalty bill barring the execution of a
pregnant woman in order to protect the
fetus' '

These men have a warped. reactionary
sense of justice. In weighing the life of a
woman against a fertilized egg. they
choose the egg. Rape to them is a )oke.
after all. the woman “survives." The

 

 

medieval practice of execution is
"necessary” Sex is a "Sickness" and
abstinence a 'Virtue "

Nobody is keeping these characters
from following their own conscxence lf
Representative Zwach thinks sex is dirty,
he is free to abstain lf Buckley 5 soul
twitches at the thought of abortion. he
needn't have one. The cardinals may
snicker and preach whatever they like

BL'T THE abortion rights movement
fought for and won the right to have
medically safe abortions We also con-
vinced the overwhelming maionty of
people that that as our right. and we will
fight to keep it

Linda Jenness writes a weekly
column. "Women In Revolt" for the
Militant newspaper.

     
   
  
   
  
   
 
   
   
  
   
   
 
   
  
  
  
  
    
   
    
   
   
  
    
   
  
    
   
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
   
    
  
   
   
 
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
   
   
   

  

 

 
  
 
   
  
    
   
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
   
   
 
  
  
 
   
 
 
     
      
    
  
 
 

t—TIIE KENTL'CKY KERNEL. Friday. March 29. i974

desserts

W

 

   
    
       
   
       

‘F—'——'——

 

 

SEAFOOD
TONIGHT!

ALL you can eat

Dinner
From 4:30

Fresh had breaded oysters, catfish fillets, shrimp newburg, clams, fish.
fries and hush-puppies; and a variety of vegetables, salads and delicious

$2.1 9
KING’S TABLE

American Smorgasbord Restaurants
2013 Regency Rd, 1424 Aiexana‘r
Frankfort Plaza Shopping Center. U

plus tax and
beverage

ta
.5.

D
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Special Announcement
IMPORTANT

-—-——-SERVICE DEPARTMENT—i

Monday thru Friday 7 a.m. until it p.m.

Open Sat. 7:30 a.m. until 3 p.m.
More Service Hours

21 percent

in Lexmgton

r.,
0, West, Frankfort

 

  

 

 

 

._SALES DEPARTMEN'L___

Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. until 9 p.m.

Open Sat. 9 a.m. until 6 p.m.
20 percent More Sales Hours

 

 

BODY SHOP

Monday thru Friday 8 a.m. until 5:3) p.m.
Closed Saturday

 
     
   

 

 

   
     
 
 
 
 
   

   
 

We
Kentucky

  

 

automobiles.

  

 

but we also do quality repair on

Lexington, Kentucky! 40505

have the only authorized VW Body Shop in

all

JOHN COOKE MOTORS. .N

New Circle at Liberty Rd. Phone 255-2381

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Central

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UK Focus Forum

 
 

U.S. Supreme Cmflfi" ‘
to be keynote watt?”
long forum 810$ g
“Obuenity .nd “I m .4,”

Goldberg’s speech atOpn. la
the Student Center Ballroom will
highlight several workshops
dealing with obscenity standards.

Now practicing law in
Washington, DC, Goldberg has
served as permanent U.S.
representative to the United
Nations with the rank of Am-
bassador, Secretary of Labor.
General Counsel of the Congress
of Industrial Organizations, and
legal advisor to several in-
ternational unions.

In his speech, Goldberg will
focus on last summer‘s Supreme
Court decision and the impact it
has had and will have, on the
nation.

Goldberg will speak as part of a
Focus Forum sponsored by
Student Government. A grant of
$5,000 was appropriated by
President Otis Singletary for two
Focus Forums to be held this
semester. ‘

The first forum renumbe-
mer U.S. Deputy Attorney
General William D.
Ruckleshaus.

set for April 2

The purpose of next week's
forum is to stimulate interest and
discussion on how obscenity
standards should be determined
and the effects of those stan-
dards, said Focus Forum
chairwoman Karen Geeene.

Three workshops will be held
throughout the day at the Student
Center Theatre along with an
exhibit of “banned books in
history“ in SC Room 251.

The first workshop will be a
panel discussion with Fayette
County Judge Robert Stevens,
County Attorney E. Lawson King,
Bill Barton, Accent Book Store
owner, Alan Stein, Student
Center Board president and Fred
Mills, manager of the Kentucky
and Cinema Theatre.

Discussed at the 11 a.m. panel
will be the confiscation of the film
“While the Cat‘s Away", subject
of a justcompleted obscenity
trial in Fayette Circuit Court.

Stein will talk about the can-
cellation of the movie, “Best of
the New York Erotic Film
Festival", that was recently
cancelled at the Student Center
Theatre.

A citizens panel from Bard-
stown and Shelbyville is
scheduled for 1 :30p.m. also in the
SC Theatre.

 

 

443 SOUTHLAND DR IV

   
   

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THE WINNER'S SHOE

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 THE KENTUCKY KFRNEL. Friday. March 29. 1974—5

FW.--——-———’.—'

 

Advance registration

I __R________ESTAURANT
scheduled for April 15-26: IVJW:

:ACROSS FROM u OfK. MEDICAL CENTER
.1 THIS COUPON WORTH 25¢ OFF

Advance registration for ADVANCE registration works are advantages to the system.

V,

 

 

 

 

currently enrolled students for
the Fall semester and either of
the Summer terms has been set
for April 1526.

This is the only opportunity for

such registration, according to
RayCumberledge, associate I FRIDAYS 300 RM. T0 8'00 RM.
AAUP votes to back 'I- P'TCHESS 313° ,‘,N‘2,E‘§.U:.?."’

THE UNIVERSITY SENATE
has ruled that advance
registration is required of all
officially enrolled students.
Students whose last names begin
with “A" through “L" must
register between April 15-19;
those from “M” to “Z” must
register between April 22-26. This
is also the time to notify the
University of change of major.

Any student delinquent to the
University must resolve that
delinquency before registration
is allowed.

FALL SCHEDULE BOOKS will
be delivered to deans‘ offices on
April 8.

If a student decides not to
return to UK. he must notify the
school before the term begins.
The student will be charged 50
per cent of the tuition fee if he
does not do so. Cumberledge
explained the student is charged
because he is “taking up space"
in classes that could have been
used by someone else.

No one can register except
during the designated period
because of the complicated
computer system involved Once
the “3M cards ar e processed, the
disorganization caused by ad-
ditional cards “would be un-
believable.“ Cumberledge
stated.

better than the previous method
of Coliseum registration, said
Cumberledge. The ability for the
Registrar to see what classes
need more space and. what
classes need additional sections

“There is an opportunity for
advance planning," stated
Cumberledge. “The system
works fairly well....if a student
follows the steps. it really isn’t so
complicated.”

prior service rule

Continued From Page 1

AAUP professors William
Wagner. chemistry, and Alvin
Goldman. law, offered an
amendment to the prior service
recommendation which was
approved by the Senate Council.
The amendment stipulates that
the determination be made “as
early as possible in the con-
sideration of an applicant,
preferably before and-or during
the interviewing procedure.”

THE AAUP also included the
amendment in its approval but
rejected an amendment offered
by Goldman Damon Harrison,
student senator on the U Senate.
The last amendment would allow
the faculty member to have the
right to reinstate all or part of
the prior service which was
eliminated from consideration
when the faculty member was
hired. The reinstatement could
come as late as one year after the
date of the contract of ap-
pointment and must be signed by
the dean submitted through the
department chairman.

Many of the members thought
the Goldman-Harrison amend-

ment might violate the national
AAUP charter, but said they

' would support the amendment on

the floor of the Senate.

The association spent a great
deal of time discussing any
possible repercussion the
amendments might have to the
prior service rule section of the
report. There was also much
debate over the Universitys
current tenure and promotion
policy.

MOST OF THAT discussion
concerned whether promotion
and tenure should be considered
separately and what effect that
might have upon the prospective
faculty member.

The professors decided to take
an official stance on the prior
service rule at the suggestion of
Hans Gesund. civil engineering.

In other business, the AAUP
took nominations from the floor
for officer elections, which will
take place in April.

Classified-

 

FOR SALE

IMPORTED LEATHER and wood
directors chairs. Imported leather purses.
269 I745 mornings and evenings after 60).
28MA3.

1952 CHEVY PANEL TRUCK Zia-ton,
recently rebuilt six; very good condition.
$250.00. Call 858-3268. 26M29.

CALCULATOR TEXAS INSTRUMENT;
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26M29

SHERWOOD 1100A 20 watts per channel
rms. Almost new. 276-2959. 29MA11.

MERCHANDISE FOR Sale Living room
chair and desk and chair. 254- 4867. 27M28

1972 CAPRI 4 cylinder. Gas Saver 55, 000
Must sell best offer call collect 502- 863- 2(55,
863 1169. 27MA5.

TYPEWRITER SMITH Corona manual.
Almostnew SiOOorbest offer Call26o3351.

WANTED

FEMALE WANTED for temporary
marriage for legal purposes. Good pay. Call
John 258.4359, after 6:00. 27M29.

BASEBALL CARDS. 1960's and older.
Will buy or trade. Call 278-7558 after 5 pm.
weekdays. All day weekends. 29MA4.

ROOMATE(S) TO share three bedroomi
apartment. Share rent of 100~month. Call
Steve 253-1453 or 2582711. 28MA2.

COUPLE TO share large 3bedroom house
with us. 3/4 mile from campus, $105.00. 255-
5015. 28MA3.

PERSONAL

STUDY IN Oxford this summer. Two
sessions: June30- July25; Juiy25 August
21 Courses offered include Literature,
Drama Philosophy, History, Art and
Biology SIx hours semester credit possible.
Cost at room, board, and all fees 95500.

Write UNC-A Oxford, UNC-Asheville,
Asheville, NC. 28801. 28MA10.

MACRAME' DEMONSTRATION all day
Friday. Paint, Pot ‘n Putter Shop. 889 E.
High, Chevy Chase. 28M29.

HELP WANTED

POLL WORKERS WILL be needed for 56
Spring Elections. Anyone interested in Si 60
an hour come by 203 Student Center to sign
up. Deadline for sign ups is April 3. 27A2.

SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR, part time.
Experience preferred. Early evening hours.
Mustbeneat, clean, have nice voice Apply
in person to Joe Conrad Chevrolet, 2800
Richmond Road, Lexington. NO CALLS
PLEASE. 27M29.

BARTENDER— Must be at least 20 yrs.
old. Afternoon or evening shift. Must be
available for full time this summer. Apply
Levas’ Restaurant 119 S. Lime. 27MA2,

FOR RENT

ROOMS AND APARTMENTS reduced
summer rates. Close to UK. Call 269-1876.
26AI.

ONE BEDROOM Apt. Large llvingroom
furnished, air conditioned 8130piusllghts. 10
minute walk from campus Summer or tail
semesters. Call 2990645 afternoons 27MA2

WILL RENT rooms furnldiad to your
order. Prefer students. For vow con-
venience there is a large living room, dining
room, dining area, kltdten completely
furnished. Blockofi New Circle Rd. inquire
dailybatwaanSandi, 25