xt779c6s1r9m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt779c6s1r9m/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-03-22 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 22, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 22, 1976 1976 1976-03-22 2020 true xt779c6s1r9m section xt779c6s1r9m Wildcats overcame mousey beginnings to win NIT

By DICK GABRIEL
Sports Editor

New York—Somebody hoisted a banner
in .\iad'son Square Garden yesterday
which bore the message "Cinderella
makes mice out of Wildcats." lt referred
to the University of North Carolina at
Charlotte (UNCC). the Cinderella team of
the National invitational Tournament
(NIT).

The 49ers. a relatively unknown squad
from a state more respected for its
Atlantic Coast Conference members.
arrived 10 days ago and quickly captured

Vol. LXVII No. 133 ,
Monday, March 22, 1976

 

 

the hearts of New York City basketball
fans. This is no small feat. because finding
a heart in New York is like finding a sober
Irishman on St. Patrick‘s Day.

Cinderella. er...UNCC almost turned
Kentucky into a pumpkin at the finah of
the MT at the Garden yesterdey. It took
two free throws by Larry Johnson with 22
secmds left and a follow shot by Mike
Phillips in the last five seconds to secure
the championship. which came 30 years to
the day after UK captured the title in 1946.

While UNCC tried to turn the Cats into
mice. the referees succeeded in turning
L'K intoa skeleton of a team. All three UK

KENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper}

 

 

Springtime spruce-up

Kathy Neil. a UK animal science graduate student. watches as Mike Forbes, a
L niversity of (ieorgia animal science major. grooms lord Chancellor at Loch

3055 Farm in Bourbon County.

frontline players—center Phillips and
forwards James Lee and Jack Givens—
were saddled with four fouls as was senior
guard Reggie Warford.

Givens and Phillips both picked up their
fourth personals inside the first minute of
the second hat.

The sudden shrinkage of the UK squad
(there wasn‘t a Wildcat on the floor over 6-
4) enabled Charlotte to gradually widen its
:7-34 half-time lead. Lee. Warford and

Johnson tried to keep Kentucky close. but '

when Lee was tagged with- personal
number four with 12:50 to go. Charlotte
moved out to its biggest lead of 55-49.

“It gotto a point in the score where I had
to takea gamble,” said UK coachJoe Hall.
So he put Givens and Phillips back out
onto the flow. The result was a Givens 15-
footer nine seconds later and that, Hall
said, was the turning point.

“As soon as they came back off the
bench they went right down the floor and
scored. That had to be an important play
for us,” said Hall.

Givers said the long layoff did not cool
him any anti hecameout firing. “I wanted
the shots whenI went in,” he said. “I felt it
was my job to pick up the slack both of-
fensively and defensively.”

continued on page 8

e] University of Kentucky

Lexington, Kentucky

Committee will determine

law student's

Hy MONTY N. FOLEY
Kernel Staff Writer

An eight-member Council on Public
Higher Eduation (CPHE) committee will
meet Tuesiay to determine if UK second-
yesr law student Bill Davis should be
granted in-state tuition status.

Davis. who has said he will sue the
University if he isn’t granted the in-state

rate of $240 per semester, is one of three-

UK studeits who have petitioned the
CPHE for the lower tuition rate.

UK students classified as non-residents
now pay $605 in tuition fees each semester.

For Davis, the Frankfort committee
hearing represents the last administrative
recourse in his attempt to receive the
lower fee rate.

He was originally denied in-state status
it 1974 prior to his enrollment at UK by
Assistant Dean of Admissions Robert S.
Larson.

Davis subsequently appealed Larson’s
ruling three times before the 10-member
University Non-Resident Fees Committee
which Larson chairs as a non-voting
member.

All three appeals, the last occurring on
Dec. 15, 1975, were rejected by the Com-
mittee.

Larson said that Uavrd has been aemea
in-state status because he fails to meet
CPHE guidelines, used by all eight state-
supported schools, which require that an
'ndividual who moves to Kentucky must
reside in the state for 12 months as a non-
student before he can be granted the lower
tuition rate.

Davis admits that since he came to
Kentucky in September 1971 he has not
sperl 12 months here in a non-student
status. But he believes he has clearly
demonstrated through other actions that
he is a Kentucky resident.

Another CPHE guideline states that the
12 month residence requirement may be
waived only if there is “a clear demon.
stration that he (the student) has
stablished domicile in the state.”

Dav's claims a “clear demonstration”
that he has established Kentucky
residence (an be provided by the following
facts:

~While attending Berea College (a
private institution' not subject to CPHE
tuition guidelines) he married a Berea
student within the jurisdiction of Ken-
tucky and later had a child by that

tuition status

marriage;

-- Davis‘s marriage was later dissoly ed
under the jurisdiction and order of the
Madison County (Ky.) Circuit Court since
he was deemed a resident of that county
for the purposes of marriage dissolution by
the court;

- His Berea College transcript lists his
residence as being in the Commonwealth
of Kentucky';

— He attended Eastern Kentucky
University (EKU) as a transient student
with resident status during the summer of
1973;

—Kentucky is the only state in which
Davis has been granted a driver’s license
and permitted to vote;

—Since September 1973, he has held
three jobs in Kentucky and has been of-
fered a job in Kentucky upon graduation;
and,

—Davis is totally self-supporting.

Davis and his legal counsel, Assistant
UK Law School Dean John Leathers,
presented the above arguments when he
last requested in-state status before the
University Non-Resident Fees Committee
on Dec. 15, 1975.

Commenting on Davis’s arguments
before the University committee, Larson
said, “We’ve got a committee that is
capable of making mature decisions.”

“The decision about what has to be
convincing rests with the eight (voting)
members of the committee, ” Larson said.
“If they had believed him (Davis) they
would have voted that way’

Asked why EKU had granted Davis in-
state statm. Larson said, “The same rule
(CPHE oneyear residency requirement)
applies to all state public institutions, but
its application depends upon the amount of
information that a student volunteers and
the amount d information that an in-
stitution requres.” .

Regarding Dav's’s possible suit against
the University if the CPHE committee
refuses to change Davis’s status, Larson
said, “I don’t want to discuss it. I think
that too much has already been said about
it.”

Leathers has recommended that Davis
sue the University if the CPHE fails to
grant Davis resident status, citing three
grounds upm which to sue.

The first charge would be that the
University has denied Davis due process of
law as guaranteed by the United States

continued on page 5

 

    
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
   
  
   
  
    
   
  
  
 
   
   
    
   
  
   
  
  
   
 
   
  
     
    
   
  
  
 
 
   
    
    
   
  
 

 

 

editorials

 

    

Bruce \Vmges‘
Editor-in-Chie]

Ginny Edwards

Managing Editor

Mbnotroproaentflleophiomolthe University.

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

 

 

Law student
deserves
equal

treatment

When considering UK second-
year law student Bill Davis’ ap-
plication for in-state tuition, the.
Council on Public Higher
Education (C PHE) should proceed
carefully.

A council committee, which will
consider Davis’ case tomorrow, is
Davis’ last administrative
recourse in his two-year attempt to
gain the lower in-state fee rate. If
Davis is not granted in-state tuition
he has threatened to sue UK.
Applications for in-state tuition
are handled by UK Assistant Dean
of Admissions Robert S. Larson,
who denied Davis’ request in 1974.
Davis subsequently appealed
Larson’s ruling three times before
the io-member University Non-
Resident Fees Committee, which
Larson chairs. All three appeals,
the last occurring on Dec. 15, 1975,
were rejected by the committee.

There are several circumstances
surrounding Davis’ case that make
it special.

Davis admits he cannot meet a
CPHE guideline requiring one live
in Kentucky )2 months as a non-
student in order to qualify for in-
state tuition. But that requirement
can be waived if there is a clear
demonstration the student has
established domicile in the state.

Davis feels he has clearly
established domicile since he
arrived in Kentucky in 1971. He
was married and divorced in
Kentucky, registered to vote, got
his driver’s license and has held
three iobs here.

More important, Davis feels;
others have been granted in-statei
tuition with less evidence of having
established domicile than he has.

It Davis sues the University he
has said one of his grounds will be
that he has been denied equal
protection under the law —-that he
has been discriminated against on
racial grounds. Davis is black.

The council committee should
take all of this into account when
considering Davis’ case. UK has
long been trying to better its image
with the black community through
many recruitment programs. If a
student has been denied in-state
tuition because he is black, much of
the progress the University has
made toward ridding itself of what
was at one timsa very racist image
will be erased.

 
 

 

Allnight Party drafts platform ~

 

 

 

 

BY John Fields

Unbeknownst to you churls, peasants
and pems (what we more sophisticated
snobs call ”Middle America"), an
organizational meeting of the Allnight

Party was held last night, all night.
The Allnight Party, a radical offshoot

of the more traditionalist Cocktail
Party, began its existence with a brief
struggle over doctrinal points (like,
how many Angels can dance on the
head of a frat brother and is genital
cancer related to party affiliation”.
but it wound up its squabbles in last
night’s meeting all smirks.

Producing a platform with little
dissent (or descent) and almost no
assent (or ascent), the planks of which
were rather like those of Elizabethan
pirate vessels (i.e., one way) the Party
vowed to congress again soon and
choose its presidential candidate.
Temporary Chairindividual Che Lenin
Trotsky Jones vowed that "next time
we meet we'll attract more people than

 

a corpse does vultures: maybe doing.

better than that twit, Krogdahl.”

Platform Committee Chairhuman,
Ms. Hildegard ("Bella, Jr.")
Baumgarten-Sneer, provided my
worthy self with the following platform
information, which you may now read,
sugar-free and without damage to the
Ozone Layer:

”Plank One. Anarchy. We believe
that anarchy is the right of every
unabated human being, but that it
should not be a lawless anarchy.
Rather, we propose an Anarchy with

Honour (yes Virginia, there is a
Spirol).
”Plank Two. Abolition of Sex. We

maintain that sex is an unnecessary
activity that screws up normal rational
processes. It causes undue anxieties,
tensions and pleasures. We would
abolish sex and thereby exterminate
the causes of problems baffled by
feminists, gays and grandmas world-
wide (those of who~should~do-what-
with-whom-when-if-ever ).

 

”Plank Three. State Figgism. We
uphold the economic doctrine of

democratic State Figgism, as
propounded by that eminent scholar,
Sir Frisbee C. McThistlerood, K. G., M.
0., B. T. U., in his masterpiece of
macroeconomics ”Marx and Your
Sumphole” (Bantam Paperback,
$1.75). Unlike the more doctrinaire
Figgists, however, we propose not only

a fig in every pot and two figs in every
garage, buta lot ofpot in every fig.

“Plank Four. Military Forces. We
advocate the unilateral reduction of
thermal bubble-gum butterscotch
unholy blip-tosser bombs and other
such nuclear boomerangs and the rapid
elimination of the Armed (at least
before was they have arms) Forces.
To effect th is, we propose that standard
uniform consist of a lavender on fusha
tutu, with pink Ieotards and sequined
epaulets. This should drastically
reduce enlistment as well as brighten
up the battlefield in Angola (or
wherever this week).

”Plank Five. University. We will
abolish deterred gratification and
prolonged adolescence.”

Asked how popular this platform
might be, Temporary Chairorganism
Mr. Jones responded, ”About as
popular as roaches in a chocolate
sunday.” Although it may seem Jones
is overstating his party’s chances,
the Allnlght Party’s platform _has
been endorsed by the eminent Catholic
humanitarian, His Eminent Catholic
Humanitarianship, the Usually
Reverend Blueiay Cardinal Wren, Sole
Archbishop of Toeand President Ford’s
son, President Ford/Jr.

Given the political climate this year,
and the Allnight Party’s recent
challenge to Art Linkletter’s now-
defunct House Party, it may shape up
to be a pretty boring election.

 

John Fields is a sophmoric philosophy
sophomore.

 

 

 

 

 

  

Opinions from inside and outside the'University.

 

 

 

Brilliant phrases turn inane in print

kind of dmpler effect governing com-

 

BY Herbert Kaufman

 

Nev.- York films Ms Service

WASHINGTON—There must be an
art to giving reporters statements that
can be quoted without making the
quotee sound like a silly, pompous ass,
but I certainly haven't mastered it. Not
that I've had a lot of practice.

The circumstances that provoked a
number of reporters to telephone me
arose very recently and suddenly and
have already—l fervently hope!—
subsided.

l'm therefore not likely to acquire
more experience at handling such in-
terviews. Nevertheless, my em-
barassment in the brief interval of
iournalistic attention was sufficiently
painful to arouse this plaint.

I’m not blaming the iournalists, you
understand. Indeed, I have complete
sympathy with them. When there‘s
nothing to report, or when the real meat
of a story is in the headline, they have to
file something to separate the brasslere
ads from the earnest essays by the oil
companies on the inside pages. What
easier way than some choice selections
from the invited remarks of a few
alleged sages or experts or even
passers-by?

No doubt I myself am responsible for
muchofmv embarrassment. There's a

munication: Phrases and ideas
brilliant when you send them forth
often tum inane when they come back.
indeed, I have a dictating machine that
transforms my Churchillian eloquence,
elocution, and modulation into the
rasping tones, idiom, and dialect of Al

"Smith the instant I press the playback

button. So I must sharethe onus. Fair
is fair.

But I can’t totally exculpate the
ioumalists. They tend to extract the
most banal, pretentious fragments
from any half-hour of conversation—
just the rev Essa of the authors of puffs
about films and plays who can, by the
adrolt useof omissions, find in the most
devastating reviews spanking tributes
to abominable turkeys.

I don’t believe they're mean or
maliciouswhen they choose the phrases
to quote. Rather, they seem to be
gove med by some mysterious canons of
their profession.

For example, you‘re totally im-
mersed in a problem engaging every
neurm in ywr cranium—trying, say, to
get the transparent tape started after
the free end stuck on the roll, or sorting
paper clips by size—when the phone
shatters the silence and your con-
centration so violently that you iump

and restidt the nearly conquered tape-
end or spill the clips all over the floor.

You mind is still fixed on these
disasters as an imperious voice
demands to know whether the defeat of
a proposed bond issue in Worland,
Wyo., marks the collapse of industrial
society or merely the decline of
democracy in America.

Stunned by the startling suddenness
of the intrusion, the calamities it
caused, and the staggering scope of the
inquiry, you're nevertheless expected
to provide a iuicy tidbit for the caller.
You've been identified as an expert, by
God, and you ought to be thinking about
such questions all the time and have
comments on them ready in a trice.

You’re list if you protest that you
haven’t the slightest idea. That merely
whets the caller’s appetites; the words
of the uninformedare especially prized.

You'll be urged to discuss the query. If
you’re einnocent enough to oblige, the
trap has been sprung!

Suggest that socieities don't
”collapse" all at once and you’ll find
yourself credited with the observation
that the voters of Worland have started
the Western world down a long, for-
tuous road to extinction.

Say that the number of people who
vote on bond issues is frequently a

small fraction of all the potential
eligible voters and the quotation will
appear beside the reporter’s assertion
that some experts believe the public is
alienated from our system of govern-
ment.

Muse that you sympathize with the
dilemmas of the voters in the bond
referendum and you'll be quoted in a
context implying that the public debt is
too high, lament at the same time the
effects of the defeat on public services
and you'll be cited in a way that ‘acitly
denounced the voters.

You‘re like the employe who is called
anxious for arriving on the iob early,
hostile. for arriving late, and com-
pulsive for coming on time. You can't
win.

The lesson, lthink, is to keep at hand
a line suitable for any occasion, such
as: ”They sky will not fall, but the
slope could be slippery." It isn’t as
wise as Chicken Little's famous
remark, but no reporter would give you
a bag of gold even if it were.

 

Herbert 'Kaufman, senior fellow in
governmental studies at the Brookings
institution, was recently in the news
because of remarks on New York City‘s
financial crisis that were solicited from
him.

 

 

 

 

   

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a news briefs

 

 

Kelly wants okay.
to use FBI wiretaps

\\.\SIII.\(3'I'U.\ t.\I’l-I“BI Director Clarence M. Kelley
suggested on Sunday that Congress ought to authorize the.FBI to
use wiretapsand bugs to gather intelligence on suspected domestic
terron'sts. .

“If we are to have any degree of success in solving the cases now
confronting us in terrorist. espionage and other major security
matters. we must have all the tools available to us—including
electronic surveillance." Kelley asserted. _

His remarks were in a speech prepared for the Palm Beach. Fla.
ltound 'l'able. a civic group. The speech was released in
Washington.

Kelley privately has said he wants legislation extending the
I’ltl's authority to use electronic surveillance in some domestic
intelligence operations. But he has sot't~pedaled that position in
public in View of the probable opposition in Congress and among his
bosses at the Justice Department.

The trend in both places is in the direction of tighter controls over
electronic s urveillance. instead of the expansion .Kelley wants. The
Ford administration is preparing legislation which would require
court warrants for the Foreign intelligence-gathering taps and bugs
now permitted without court warrants.

Israel tries to calm
rioting Moslem city

'I‘I‘ZI. .\\'l\' tAPi—The Israeli army ordereu .;. . .ups out of the
occupied Jordanian town of Hebron on Sunday in a bid to restore
calm in the riot-torn area one day before the UN. Security Council
debates anti-Israeli unrest in the West Bank territory. ’

As an uncertain quiet spread through the Jordanian West Bank
after weeks of violent demonstrations, the Israeli military

gavemment also banned a prominent rabbi and Jewish nationalist .

leadert'rom the Moslem city after he allegedly inflamed riots there
last week.

Defense Minister Shimon Peres announced the withdrawal or-
ders after meeting with Hebron Mayor Sheikh Ali Ja’abri, who
resigned Saturday in protest against Israeli handling of demon-
strators in his town. Despite the troop pullout, Ja’abri did not
immediately say whether he would retract his resignation.

Humphrey says nomination
would be ‘a challenge'

WASHINGTON (AP) —Despite persistent rumors that he’s

ready to jump into the fight for the Democratic prisidential

‘ nomination, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey says he has no intention of
entering any primaries. _

"There‘s no chance I‘m going to be in any of the primaries,"
Humphrey said in aninterview in his Senate office.

At the same time. Humphrey admits he’d consider it “a
challenge and an honor" to be the Democratic nominee.

"And I think I’m well equipped to take on Mr. Ford if it becomes
my opportunity,“ added the Minnesota Democrat who was his
party‘s nominee in 1968 and narrowly lost to Richard M. Nixon.

“And it'll be a good clean hard-hitting campaign," said Hum.
phrey.

Wallace and Reagan end
Carolina campaign tour

CHARLOTTE. N.(‘. (AP) -Underdogs George Wallace and
Ronald Reagan. whose campaigns have tattered in every primary
race so fa r. will wind up week-long tours of North Carolina on the
eve of the nation’s sixth presidential primary.

President Ford, who has defeated Reagan in four consecutive
Republican primaries, left North Carolina on a confident note late
Saturday night after making appearances in Charlotte. Asheville, '
Hickory and at a mountain rally near Spruce Pine.

“1 ca n‘t wait to see those results when they come in because they
are going to begood." Ford said as he neared the end of his 14-hour
trip. It was his second visit to the state in as many Saturdays.

f on t can .

 

erneg

meCamtintmtThepapcrhasboen

 

The Kmudry Kernel ltd Journalism
Building, University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky. 40506, is matted live
,tinwsunektyaxing the year except during
holidays and exam permits. and twice
véeldy (bring seam session. mm

ptblished continuously as the Kentucky
Manet since m5.

Myertismq lS internist! only to help the
rents am and any false or misleading
.idettsing strand be tenet‘ted am Witt be
mvestegateu M the (slim. Advertising
bind to b'; 3125:.”

~_—...._.. .

class postage paid at Lexington. Kentucqu . .
I495“. Subscription rates are SH. per tuil or misleading WIN be
mar. finished by the Kernu Press "Jr-I180 to the Rotter B’JSII'C‘SS Btmaau.

I Immemanwrmmxmemmaa ~

.- .._—-. v—“mw. ..-A...~~_.s... vuu—ayq‘fl m...~..-,.. ... . .

  

 

  

     
   
     
    
 
   
     
 
 
   

Trustees name new law dean:
rename agriculture building

A new dean for the College of
Law was named by the Board of
Trustees executive committee
March 12.

Dr. Thomas P. Lewis. a 1954
[K law school graduate. will
assume the post July 1. 1976.
Lewis replaces George W. Hardy
III. who announced last semester
he will resign from the deanship
effective July 1, 1976. to head the
Bats College of Law at the
L'niversity of Houston.

Lewis, who taught in UK‘s law
school from 1957 to 1965, is
presently a law professor at
Boston University. He is con-
sidered an authority on con-
stitutional law, social legislation
and laba‘ law.

The University is “delighted“
to have Lewis as the new law
dean, President Otis A.
Singletary said in a press release
announcing the appointment.

Lewis" qualifications are "out-
standing.“ Singletary added.
Lewis. an Ashland. Ky. native.
has aBo taught at the L'niversity
of Minnesota and is a former
editor of the Kentucky Law

J oumal. He was a Ford Fellow at

‘the Harvard Law School and

received his doctoral degree at
that institution.

The executive committee also
approved a recommendation to
rehire Coopers & Lybrand. a
certified public accounting firm.
for thefiscal year ending June 30.
1976. For a fee of $50.00tl. the firm
will examine the accounts of the
University. the l'K research
foundation. the medical center's
fund for the advancement of
education and research, the
athletic association. the Health

Care Collection Service and Uk
Credit Union.

The firm examined the ac-
counts d‘ the University and its
affiliated interests last fiscal
year.

In other administrative action.
the executive committee
bestowed a new name -—Clarence
\t‘entworth Mathews —on the Old
Agriculture Building.

Mathews was the first dean of
the College of Agriculture tl908-
1910). After ending his position as
dean. Mathews stayed with the
l‘niversity until his death in 1928
as head of the horticulture
department. which was located
at that time in the Old
Agriculture Building.

According to University ad-
ministrative guidelines. the
committee on naming university
buildings recommended the new
name to the executive com-
niittee.

Committee to decide student's status

continued from page 1

Constitution by placing an
“irrebuttable presumption” of
out-of-state status on him, con-
trary to a 1973 Supreme Court
ruling

Secondly. the suit would charge
that Davis has been denied equal
protection under the laws. a right
also guaranteed under the

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Constitution. The basis of this
charge would be that Davis, who

is black, has been discriminated
against on racial grounds.
Third. Davis could bring a
cause of action suit. based upon a
federal statute. which would hold
Larson and the members of the
committee personally liable for
their role in the denial of his in-

stale status.

Under all these grounds. Davis
has said he would ask the court to
award him monetary damages
based upon the difference in the
amount of tuition he has actually
paid and the amount that he
would have paid had he been
granted in-state status when he
first requested it.

   
 
   
 

  

rm: nmrucxv KERNEL. Monday. March 22. 1916—5

INTERNATIONAL WEEK

April s—April 9

: STREET CAFE. Featuring European Desserts. Monday.

Tuesday. Wednesday—April 5,6,7. I0:00 a.m.—4:00 p.m. 8.

6:00 p.m.—I0:00 p.m.

April 8, Thursday, l0:00 a.m.—l0:00 p.m., Room 206, S.C.o
KEYNOTE ADDRESS. "Are Intelligence Activities

Necessary to World Stability?" Dr. William B. Bader,

Fellow, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars,

Washington. D.C., and recent director at the Foreign In-

telligence Task Force, US Senate Select Committee on

Intelligence (Church Committee).

Monday, April 5, 3:30 p.m., Student Center Theater.

: RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN INDIA.

A presentation by Professor Randhir 8. Jain, University of

Delhi and Fulbright Scholar, School of Foreign Service.

Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.

Tuesday, April 6, 3:30 p.m., President's Room, Student

Center.

; CROSS-CULTURAL WORKSHOP. WW

' - ' ' niv rsit . Co

ducted by Dr. David S. Hoopes, Executive Director of In-

tercultural Communications Network, University of vPitt-

sburgh.

Wednesday, April 7, 9:30 a.m.—5:00 p.m. 18th Floor, Pat-

terson Ottice Tower.

: TRAVEL AND STUDY ABROAD FAIR. ”taking Off ‘76".

Thursday, April 8, Io:00 a.m.—s:00 p.m. 8. 7:00 p.m.—9:00

p.m.

Friday, April 9, 9:00 a.m.-s:00 p.m., Room 245, Student

Center.

: JAPNESE FILM.

“Throne of Blood”. film version of Shakespeare‘s Magbeth.

Followed by discussion with Dr. Walter C. Foreman, U.K.

English Department.

Thursday, April 8, 7:00 p.m., Student Center Theater.

: INTERNATIONAL LUNCHEON.

Sponsored by the Cosmopolitan Club.

Friday, April 9, I2:00 noon, Human Relations Center, Alumni

Gym. For tickets call 2582755.

For more information call 258-2755 or 258-2751.

 

’lhe Program of
theYear isn’t on
x TV

It’s in the Air Force

 

ROTC.

 

Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.

Look into Air Force ROTC. And there are 4-year, 3-year, or 2-year
programs to choose from. Whichever you select, you’ll leave college with a
commission as an Air Force officer. With opportunities for a position with re-
sponsibility. . .challenge . . . and, of course, financial rewards and security.

The courses themselves prepare you for leadership positiOns ahead.
Positions as a member of an aircrew. . .or as a missile launch officer...posi-
tions using mathematics. . . sciences. . . engineering.

Look out for yourself. Look intotheAirForceROTC programs on campus.

 

 

 
 
   
   
 

 

    
  
    
  
    
  
    
 
  
   
  
  
  
   
    
   
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
    
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

  
 

 G—TllE KENTUCKY KERNEL. My. Marcia". 1016

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Emma muss

trom the people who gave you “Tho Jon Slngor”

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Regular Price
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and you can

Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority
sponsoring sisterhood week

Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA)
sorority will have a Sisterhood

‘ Week March 22 to 28.

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“It’s a whole week set aside for
special entertainment for the
sorority‘s benefit to symbolize

‘unity and sisterhood," AKA

president Charlene Hines said.

A March 2 ceremony for the 14
AKA members will emphasize
the goals and interests of the
sorority.

“A lot of the things we’ll be
doing will be to draw us closer
together," Hines said. “This is
the first time we’ve done this
since we chartered at UK but we
intend to make it an annual
event."

A black heritage film will be
shown VI ednesday, and on Friday
the sorority will sponsor a dance
for AKA members in other
colleges across the state. The
proceeds from the dance will go

 

 

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to the United Negro College
Fund.

"The big thing we’ll be having

'is a clothing drive on Saturday

from 8 am. to -t pm. in con-
junction with a city wide
program called ‘Catch Up',"
Hines said.

The clothes collected will go to
needy Lex ingtonians. During the
week the women will also be
reading to the blind at the
Handicap Center and may visit
the children at Shriner’s
Hospital.

'I‘o symbolize sisterhood, the
members of the sorority will
wear th