xt7d251fn455 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7d251fn455/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1971-04-19 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, April 19, 1971 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 19, 1971 1971 1971-04-19 2020 true xt7d251fn455 section xt7d251fn455 Vt rather 2.
Lexmgton and vicinity. Partly _-.-1>' . ,1? “
cloudy atid warm today and i1 . ‘ '1 " '
Tuesday. lair and mild tonight. f Vt, é
High temperature today will be i: l. .-
near 80. low tonight will be 50,
There is no chance of rain today 1 .
. or tonight. but tltere is a five , J . "
Monday, April 19, l97l University of Kentucky, Lexington Vol. LXII, No. l‘_’-t percent chance of rain on i .
_—————_—_—————-————-—— Tuesday. i .173} ; 4'
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set". . 2” _1'-‘__V,__” _,.,_ ‘ ’7‘ “l vv ottld ask f. in. tn it-tttett'lu‘t tftt? ‘ itit _ ',_ . i
~4 ‘ 1 rights. . . . Students pa) their way tn this. wt tet‘. .liltl Jr. : ' 4-. 191 .V -.
.‘ ...... ' is? . _1 relegated it) ll‘tc‘ Sld‘t'us Hi lllll\l \lti\\ kill/K'l’\ : y t’. ‘\._ .Ki " :‘ .' “,1 .1 ‘ I” 1‘. if
1 1. '1. cases. have contributed les~ to our well-twine that; static: ‘ . '. :. ‘ .' 1»
: “ ' i xi f Will.” lie added. ,4. ‘ 5 .
. , “What haunts me." Wettdelsdot‘t mnttnued, “is that l J"? ..ititzag at; f... .171 ‘ . .
. 1' . to see a state which generated these excellent statements Interim: >1: {.‘1‘1
Kenny Reichel (far left.) and-PaulHIennessey (far tighttcongratulat‘e to the state constitution) concerning the rights ot the intlzvmat. 1),) I
P0 k . Dennis Butler, 3 Winning bicyl‘e. rider fori‘the Plhes m Saturday‘s produce such a repressive document as the student code.” ' 1311?
1 es top blkes Little Kentucky Derby competition.ITh‘e Pikers won the over In a conversation with a Kernel reporter later in the ijf f1_
team competition in the annual actiVities. (Kemel photo by Ken . ~. . . . , . . V , . .. . “j” .r
Wendclsdorf said he didn I. think the "anel would do amtlaita ; .‘ -- -- .
Weaver) ' ‘ ‘ : -" ,‘ ' A.
W Continued on Page 3‘ (‘01. l 2 :12 ‘ .1 .1:
o o o -V -'
I an arts Laotian 0 mm mdus tr
‘. ’g. '1 1'.
' . spread out into Middle America, becoming as much a army subsidized by the Nationalist Chinese to such .- .-
LaOIIan economy bdsed 0" part of suburbia as the Saturday barbecue. This has familiar names 215 Madame Nhu and “CC t’n‘mlt‘ht :- " .‘
. w . gained it the attention it otherwise never would have Nguyen C‘dO K)’*"W'tl() 8” the creations 0t [35- W‘ht‘} in 1 i» 3'
Oplum, LIA prOtCCtS It had. President Nixon himself says it is spreading with that part ofthe W0f1d- .
. . “pandemic virulence.” People are becoming aware that The story of opium in Southeast Asia is a strange one t' q}, ‘1'."
EDITOR’S NOTE: The followmg article has been made teenagers are shooting up at lunchtime in schools and at every turn. But the conslusion is known in advance r K' .. *
available to subscribers of College Press Service prior to returning to classrooms to nod the day away. But what this war has come home agajn~ in a silk} gre} powder A} ‘. 5:: ‘ ’
its release nationally because of CPS’s involvement in the they don’t know—and what no one is telling them~is that goes front a syringe into America‘s mainline. V] , _‘
.. .. S‘°’_Y'S inception. that neither the volcanic eruption of addiction in this Most of the opium in Southeast Asia is grown tn :1 ’ ’
MIC“?! Aldrich, professor or psychedelics at the country nor the crimes it causes would be possible region known 35 the “Fertile Triangle."an area COV't’TtnS -1' '1’ .5
California IhShthte 0f the Arts and a free lance writer, without the age-old international trade in opium (from northwestern Burma. northern Thailand. and Laos. It is ‘3 ,_ .‘14? . j," 11.:
began piecmg together_ the picture 0f the CIA’S which heroin is derived), or that heroin addiction—like a mountainous jungle inhabited by tigers; elephants. and :.' 4.1-1. 3 t I
involvement m the Laotian opium {hdhfi‘y two years inflation, unemployment, and most of the other chaotic some 0f the most poisonous snakes in the world Tht‘ .9 5~ h .1 .
880- AbOUt ten college editors, mcludmga representative forces in American society today—is directly related to sources of the opium that shares the area with these :- :1
from the Kernel, flrSt heard the “my two months 380 at the us. war in Indochina. exotic animals is the poppy, and the main growers are .1 .’ z . '
an editor’s conferencein Hollywood. The connection between war and opium in Asia is as the Meo hill tribespeople who inhabit the region. The f '- j ..H
We “"thheld pUblication 0f the story at the time ld - - l - h- h b Meo men chop back the forests in the wet season so that "' “ ’,'-‘ '1.
because there were 3 m l h l h h o as empire itse f. But the relations ip as never een , . . , . . ‘ . x' .1, .‘ .
. . o e arge OCSt at ad tobefilled so 5 mbiotic so intricate in its networks and so vast in tht crop “an be planted m August and September. w ‘ ’ ' ' ‘
m before It could be published. To help, CPS introduced its iiln licaticins Never before has the trail of tragedy Poppies produce red. White or PUI‘Ph‘ hIOSSomS between 3i 1~ . i
AldNCh T0 Frank Browning, 3 senior editor at Ramparts been 83) clear] .marked as in the present phase of U S January and March, and when the blossom withers. an J. '2 : 3 7 i.‘ 1
and former Kernel editor. . l -y S h A 4 F th - t 't' 1 l egg-sized pot is left. The women harvest the crop and ;.f,1
- Browning took Aldrich’s report and worked on some lI‘lVOYflI‘iTCHt 1.“ out east 518‘ .or e m ema iona k 11 ‘ ‘ ' ' th' d vith h “-1 l‘ d ‘d ~ 4 f " ' ‘
. - - - - traffic in opium has expanded in lockstep With the ma e a sma ”101510” 1" . ‘ po Y‘“ 3 t “L ‘ ‘1 _‘ . j. .-;
additional facts W‘th Banning Garrett, Southeast A513 ex andin U S militar resence there 'ust as heroin knife. The pod exudesa white latex-like substance which -_ ;
expert at the Pacific Studies Center, using sources there, has stalkfd the. same yguri) eople in U’SJ hi h schools is left to accumulate and thicken for a day or two. Then ; ’ I. ft 2, ‘f' ., 1'
in Paris and in Southeast Asia. Poet Allen Ginsberg, who will also be called ongtopfi ht that war 'lghe ironies h is carefully gathered. bOth‘d t0 WmOV“ £3055 ’ “ “-1: )
Adam Bennion, Joan Medlin and Peter Scott also aided that- have accompanied the wir in Vietnam since its impurities, and the sticky substance is rolled into balls ‘ ‘5 ' I 1'1 -
1n the research. onset are more poignant than before At the very weighing several pounds. A fraction of the opium ' ‘
Sandwrched between the President’s State Of the moment that public officials are wringing their hands remains to be smoked by the villagers. but most is sold 1 V: - .' '» ”.1:
World message, in WhiCh he announced an all-out over the heroin problem Washington’s own Cold War in nearby rendezvous with the local smugglers. lt l\‘ the ,' _. .. 7,. .'."V ‘
campaign to halt the world's opium traffic, the Laotian crusade replete with clahdestine activities that would M905, only C35h CTOP- The hth tribe growers C3“ t‘t‘ht‘t‘t 1' . 1 it .‘ J
invasion, and this spring’s growing anti-war protests, the seem fat-fetched even in a spy novel continues to play a as thh as $50 Per kilO. paid in gold. “MT “”10““ ." ‘1 5' .
story is an explosive one. Sen. George McGovern and major role in a process that has already rerouted the commodities. or local currency. The same kilo will bring I 3 '
Rep. Ronald Dellums are both pressing for hearings in opium traffic from the Middle East to Southeast Asia 5200 in Saigon and $2000 in 53" anClSCO- 1‘ _ V '1 .» .
Congrm on the U-5- govemment’s complicity With and is every day opening new channels for its shipment There are hundreds of routes. and certainly as many .. f .. ‘1 .
world opium trade. Details on those and other to the US. At the same time the government starts crash methods 0t transport by WhiCh tht’ smugglers Ship - 1. ' 1t .
subsequent developments Will followin other StOTiCS- programs to rehabilitate drug users among its young opium-Asome of it already refined into heroin~through , . -' V' ,1 V.1.t
—- - ‘ i ‘ en ' t Vie n m re and out of Southeast Asia. But there are three major 4 . 5 -'
By FRANK BROWNING and BANNING GARRETT :gggrigliggkhguanngd ailing; 2:310:13: tohe rateaof :ne networks. Some of the opium from Burma and northern -‘ .1 1 '
Copyright Ramparts, 197‘. . . . a dav. While the President is declaring war on narcotics Thailand moves into Bangkok. then to Singapore 811d ‘ - 1 '1 ‘ -‘
“Mr. President, the specter .Of .heroin addiction. Is and on crime in the streets he is widening the war in Hong Kong. then via military aircraft. either directly or . 1 i . I ".‘
haunting nearly every community In thls nation." w‘th Laos whose principal product is opium and which has through Taiwan. to the United States. The second. and I, 11 . 1 1. ,. ~ t
these urgent words, Senator Vance Hartke spoke up on now’become the funnel for nearly half the world’s probably major, YOUtC is from BUTmfl 0f L305 t0 Saigon 1' -, . ' ‘ -
March 2 in support 0f 8 resolution on drug control being supply of the narcotic for which the U.S. is the Chief or to ocean drops in the Gulf of Siam; then it goes either ’ -~ ' . ‘t
considered in the US. Senate. Estimating that there are consumer ‘ through the Middle East and Marseille to the U. S. or _ - _ » ‘ _
500,000 heroin addicts in the U.S., he pointed out that i . . . through Hong Kong and Singapore to the West Coast. A ‘ - . ' . ‘ .‘1
nearly 20 percent of them are teenagers. The concern of There WOUld have been a blUOftthUStY logic behind the final route runs directly from out-posts held by . . ’ . , . 1 »
Hartke and others is not misplaced. Herom has become expansron of the war into Laos if the thrust had been to Nationalist Chinese troops in Thailand to Taiwan and . ‘ -. _
the major killer of young people between 18 and 35, Still8 'SUPPlY centers Oh opium the communists were then to the u, S. by a variety of means. ‘V .' ’ . . '
(”“133th death from accidents, suicides or cancer. h hoarding up to spread “he a deadly “ms into the free One of the most successful of the opium entrepreneurs ‘1 ~‘ 1 .
has also become a major cause of crime: to sustain their world. But the communists. dld' not control the opium who travel these routes. a Time reporter wrote in 1967. ‘ . . ,
habits, addicts in the US spend more than $15 million a there: processmg and distribution were already m the is Chan-foo, a half-Chinese. half—Shan (Burmese) I" . ‘ 1 ,
day, half of it coming from the 55 percent of crime in hands of the free W0fld- WhQ are the pnncrpals 0f thlS modern-(12v warlord who might have stepped out 0f 3 .
the cities which they commit and the annual $2.5 billion new. opium war? The lubiqunous CIA, whose role in Joseph Conrad adventure yarn. Chan is a soft-spoken. , ‘ '
worth 0f SOOdS they steal. . gffllmg met-1.8mm Vietnam is well known but whOS’e mild-mannered man in his late thirties who. it is said. is ‘ .
Once safely isolated 35 part Of the dCSh'UChVC pivotal posrtion m the opium trade '5 not;and a rogue S totally ruthless. He has tremendous knowledge of the . ‘ ,
funkiness of the black ghetto, heroin has suddenly gallery 0f organizations and people—from an opium (‘onttnued on Page 4. (‘oLl »' ’

 EV IR TH WEEK A focal period for practical, symbolic
- . attacks on the ev1]s of pollution
in dozens of ways both ‘ ‘ E ndangered Animal” while levels of exhaust wastepaper on Saturday for ) About 8,000 persons joined C
obvious and ingenious, tens of surrounded by garbage; a beach pollutants are monitored. recycling. The latest count on Saturday in a fund-raising rally
thousands of Americans join cleanup sponsored by the Plum Indianapolis will witness a Sunday was 200 tons. at Hartford, Conn., that 0
Monday in opening Earth Island Surfcasters’ Association “survival walk” designed to )1n the Beverly Hills-Morgan produced an estimated $15,000 re
. Week~a fiscal period for of Newbury port, M3554 a emphasize the need for mass Park area on Chicago’s South for the Connecticut Earth
I . practical and symbolic attacks citywide bottle pickup in St- transport to reduce the number Side, about 800 participated Action Group. A policeman
. - . on the evils of pollution. Louis; transformation of a of autos on streets and Sunday in a tour of architectural described the crowd as “the h
, , . . vacant two-block area in highways. landmarks. It was part of a happiest, cleanest and best” he W
. Earth Week 15 a conceptof Sacramento, Calif., into a park Others will ride bicycles and year-long series of activities ever had seen. t
‘ ‘ concerned conservationists planted With donated grass. trees even an occasional horse to work conducted under the heading } Soft~drink companies provided d-
I . , ,' seeking to dramatize the and shrubs. to reduce the emission of “Your Environment—Endure It free drinks to 1,500 delegates to l st
. . I P manifold menacesof pollution. New Yorkers will leave their hydrocarbons and carbon or Improve It.” the White House Conference on
t I And’. above au’.” 15 intended to skyscrapers at the Monday lunch monoxide, which combine with ) Rep. Mario Biaggi, D-N.Y., youth at Estes Park, Colo. The I o
. convmce individuals that they hour to find Madison Avenue sunlight to form noxious smog. called Earth Week a theatrical, emptied bottles are to be used in , pr
‘ ' can do something about It' free of automobiles from 42nd In some preliminary activities safe, one-shot gimmick for a recycling project. of
' ’ To these ends there will be St. to 57th St. The traffic ban Saturday and Sunday: politicians and said “every week in
‘ such things as a display at the from noon to 2 p.m., EST, will 9 Des Moines school children set should be Earth Week—in action T
' ., Atlanta 200 showing man as an be in effect through the week out to collect 80 tons of not words.” E
’ , , ump ixon move egun y uskle, others h :{i
, ' P R OV I D E N C E, R. l. Muskie, considered by many the the “dump Johnson” move in _ Lowenstein said he planned car C anges i co
. " . _ (AP)~~Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, front-runner now for the 1968 and a leader in the similar similar rallies throughout the W A S H I N G T O \J b;
D-Maine, asked a crowd at a Democratic presidential effort against Nixon, said the country. An aide said the next (AP)—Consumer advocate Ralph t '
. . “dump Nixon" rally on the lawn nomination. two-hour rally had “given a one might be either in Nader said Sunday the American 3 '
' of the Rhode Island Statehouse Allard Lowenstein, the former torch to all the country. The end Minneapolis or Indianapolis. auto industr ’5 annual model
. ‘ Sunday to join “in a coalition New York congressman is in sight. We are about to Lowenstein worked to set up h eyte a mono 01 su
' for peaceful change." generally credited with starting reclaim America." the rally with the Rhode Island C atngesbucreras as much as $600 “
, - I “Let us make this day in Coalition for Alternatives Now, gocsaing y W
. Providence, R. I.. the beginning 0 headed by State Sen. Harold C. ’ . re
_ of another period in our history Agneu7 Okay-S CapitOI rally Arcaro Jr., D-Providence, and YaIiI: sizdwhesacrliggegigirzsf tall: su
- ' in wh.ch the people prevailed Malcolm Farmer 11], a ur in the Federal Trade on
. ' because they were right, because WASHINGTON (AP)—Vice Against the War, Inc., Agnew Republican who practices law in Cofinmgission to break up the pr-
. they did hOt grow tired and President Spiro T. Agnew, acting granted permission for use of the Providence. industr or at least declare 3 Pt-
' . . 3 - . because they worked together as president of the Senate, has Capitol grounds for a Lowenstein estimated the m tollium on the annual style de
. ' ' until the job was done,” said granted permission to the demonstration April 19, but he crowd at upwards of 25,000,but chili! es int
. ‘ National Peace Action Coalition denied permission for another city police said it was 5,000 to “Tie“ automobile industry’s stu
' I for a Capitol-grounds antiwar on the 23rd. 6,000. Most of the persons I st 1e chan e has had its Ar
, , HOW to use rally that may draw up to The people’s coalition has attending were college age antnuai d yff t' All c etitors J
' ‘ « 50,000 people. warned of trouble housing many youths. Ln er} e :1 cc b ompd f Un
. ' '. 'I . th t , participants. It asked for, but “This is an amazing crowd of “t our. ave. een ex1 e . rom C
. e SYS em Agnew noted the group s l t F 'd d . d N . l l . P v‘dence .. the American industry, while the 0
, , assurances it would provide over 35k n all was enie ’ ationa peop e . In. “r0 1 ’ impenetrabiy high cost barriers th
h 2 000 marshals trained to handle ar Service permiSSion to allow Lowenstein said. When you get created by frequent restyling
, ' 0 lg l ’ . camping m Rock Creek Park. 25 000 people at a rally, it .
the expected crowd at the April Rennie Davis a s okesman h d h, the mood of the countr have excluded lasting new
, . ' . 24 demonstration. .’ p ’ .a .8 ows . ,, y entrants for almost 50 years,” ’
. . . . g , the system asked for waiver of the camping is against Nixon and the war. said Nader in a letter to FTC
In another letter Thursday, rules “to av01d another In explaining why Prov1dence . . . . -
. this to the D. 0 Veterans Chicago.” was chosen for the first Chairman Miles W. Kirkpatrick. F3
- V , " anti-Nixon demonstration, The style changes'also ”err?" sta
~ 4 ' » . » ‘\ awn» "m we a. Arcaro and Farmer had said that the "mum? to avmd pouut-lon
_ ‘ y f" ,. a. 52% a... .l the Rho de Island capital is not 3:“ Sgiigmgflggofrgtergfglelgld juv
. £59335 "3- . ‘ V
. a; OUR STEAKS ARE k known as a demonstration town. on the replacement parts market the
f . « - / ‘ | l | and reduces the consumer’s basis p“
' . l/ 3 Y vsg UK. Department of Theatre for buying a car to the cosmetic 6’“
- .. . ) é: | I 3’ Arts’ Presents level, said Nader and the Yale , ‘
. . . . §§v .. % students. d g g:
_- ~ 1 x .c / ,. Georges Feydeau’s General Motors issue a g
. . _ " ‘ fl 0 21:, "'8’"! COO/(ED 70 ORDER "2‘3: , statement describing model 1 tel-
’ ' . " u : 'W~mees° WW Wkwmw W and? A Flea In Her Ear changes as “an example 0f for
. o u \ 7‘/ ,' .1 .5.;.».-:;.;.~..I,:.:.:-:-:.: 3:;:;$~~:?-v . ‘ . “3100‘— SC“00\.S “3““ I Ly OPEN ll a.m. to 9 p.m. changest. Suchtfehtahnges habvee m;
. .. ‘ ‘ /— .. “\“G .\pgs‘.t“ met A ril 2] 22 23 24 25 clonnec ion wi e num Ir 0
. _ . . “it" “fies,“emgal g / 10( ,,,,~,,~,,,~-,- p I I I I firms in the industry and in no
f 3 (39“ «’ /I§<§ '7 ORDERS TO GO! Curtain 8:30 p.m. yoifrolgonflrms monopoly
_ ~ . Now at your bookstore I V“, (3 u................ sunday mo p.m. Ford and Chrysler declined '
. . Delta paperback $1.95 P- &} H1 8 Off‘ 0 0° da‘l comment until they can study é
, ' - Delacortehardbound$4.95 -- ‘ 2467 NICHOLASVILLE RD. °*‘ ‘C" ”"5 " " 'Y the fdlocumer}11ts,hwlh'ilcéi hire ddue .
. o _ or iing wit t e on ay.
‘ ' ' Dell Publishing Co., Inc- . MR' STEAK Phone 277-15l5 CO” 258 2680 Nader and the students l
, ' , ‘ ' requested the FTC to investigate ‘
‘ I, under its powers to regulate
‘. ' ,' . I unfair methods of competition.
~ They noted that the Big
' , ' ' . Three—Ford, General Motors
i. ' ‘ I f S I ’ and Chrysler—accounted for 97
. ' . as e u a e . percent of the autos produced in
,. " ———__—___________ this country and 83 percent of
' -_ - all sales last year. ,
y ' , Nader noted also that
imported cars, whose share of
.I ., the market rose to 15 percent,
- offer buyers some chance to buy
" ' ,- cars with minimal style changes,
, , ' but he said the imports are .
, either cheap or expensive luxury
models.
. . 5070 off on all clothes ———‘—
' , THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
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’ Begun as the Cadet in 1894 and .
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, CLOTHING FOR NAKED PEOPLE pififlzifiioaaihgffio
Editor thifiilzgixhgwgld‘illoproxqtifl I755
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Advertising, Business, Circula- ,
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' r

 _ THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, April 19, 1971—3 .'
Trustees panel hears proposed COdC changes ‘1 7t. .
:1“ Continued from Page 1 drooped or that wortiins be office. where this responsibility d a ngerous drugs were new left.” He added that he felt "1 ‘
t; “They (the panel) look at the added Which would clearly hes under the present code. . unenforceable by the University. he could trust the board with _; - " . r, ,
a code oncea year but they aren’t state that this section WOUId. be The argument for this Also testifying was a the responsibility of “protecting _' ,vs ., ".' q
00 really sincere n hl: said. applicable only when ’there is a suggestion was that many 3 p o k e s m a n fr om the me from the threat of the new '2 7 .
th W l t u , mass 0t confrontation. students now View the dean 0t Interfraternity Council. He Nazis. . . . I do not fear you (the if, ”7 t'
an h and; sdoi‘f ridged, .1 ve The student affairs committee students as the campus asked that the dean of students board).” 3,! . - “
he “ht .t at t Ems“ commits: made several recommendations prosecutor, that the man who office be empowered to “Interference coercion cannot ."-,-’ .5
he mm give astyt gexcept¥ha concerning student rights, sets the rules should not be the withhold the diploma of anyone be tolerated," he continued, “1 . ‘1 g 2‘
d e, oar wants. ‘ ‘3 ey suggesting that the University man who enforces them. owing money to a fraternity or want you to protect my rights. I I: 1‘.
ed mat “53"“ t° 3“": 1" t° prohibit discrimination with The °°Wmittee sugge‘ted that sorority. He said that since think you will." * T:
to ‘ stu ents. regard to race, religion, ethnic all organizations 0f students, Greek organizations are subject Rebecca Westerfield, SG Vice t .' I, g a
h The student affairs committee origin, and political beliefs inall taehltyi_ and staff be given to University visitation president, spoke next and said =_',-“1 ‘
he of Student Government also facets of University life, Umversrty te°°8mt1°h as long as regulations, must support a “most students are concerned ;
"1 presented its proposed changes especially in admission and they are legal. _ ‘ house director in each case, and with law and omen” She added i, ‘ - .' j. ,' . .
of the student code Friday financial aide. The committee The student affairs committee owe the University money from that she thought there was no ff
, morning to the Board of also recommended that the also suggested that the bond contracts, the University valid reason for section 6 of the .2
Trustees committee. University guarantee all civil Universrty J-Board. meet at the should aide the Greeks in Code of Student Conduct. t
Many of the proposals rights to students and give the end °_t the ,SPUhg term to collecting money from those Steve Schwartz, graduate .' 1
S concerned Article V] of the student the right to review his getermine Whlch members “’1” students who are financially candidate for the Student Senate - 2 ‘.
i code, which states, “No student own academic and disciplinary edprtesent ‘1}:me the sJugnme; delinquent. ‘ and onetime candidate for the r: =
l shall engage in interference, records. :hlrou 1030‘s}; Sicihtmier- $1: In the afternoon sessron, C. SG presidency, told the i
; coercion or disruption.” The The student affairs committee su egsted that one studenh Allen Muncy, law student and committee that. “The last thingl t, . '
basic issue was concerned with warned the trustees that it might ggb b dd former editorial page editor of want to see 15 Violence,” : , g: I‘ ~' . ,' ., 'i .
N . he lle ed v uene f his ~ mem er e 3 ed and one The Kentucky Wildcat, He added that he thou ht the ~
t a g ag SS 0 t be dangerous to thmk of f cult b b d d . g . . .
h article. University students as fa m yth mzm er] I: dmpjf’: addressed the board saying he code was too vague and It: g" ‘. . ‘
_ _ r0 6 eas oar. lS . s - - t. , ,
n The student affairs committee “chlldrenn m the manner that roposal wdllld still leave was only presentmg his own overbroad WhlLll as rtsult makts ‘ .3. -'-.
l h h d StUdent ' 1 f p . . a Views. He added he would it difficult to work Within “the t .. .' t. ,'._- .. .~
y suggested t at t e wor . s in genera (rom faculty majority on the Appeals submit his . .. y ,, ,s, _ ' . . ‘:
.s - s. . proposals for rewsron system. . ,, s g ._ _
willfully be added to the kindergarten up) are thought of Board but would we student . . v . . .,
0 . hi] . . . . . ' g. . 5 of the code by mail. “It you want us to work .1: , -. ~ ..
w o r din g. T h e y a ls o as c dren. They said Umversrty more veice m its dec1310ns_ M w h . g , - ' .. ‘ 2 , 4. _, .
e recommended that interim students should be viewed as John Nelson testifying for . unty t eh ‘prfitteehdedilto Emh‘m the 535th” Shhwer” ' i. ‘_ .
6 suspension should be invoked citizens since Kentucky students USAC said USAC basically 3mm ”he $30.23;: 01‘? a: Cami}?! Soilf_lfhh?h‘ make ’hc ““19 " ' ' _ "32‘.
e only. by the president or the vice are of legal age at 18 and supported the student affairs anger 0 e MW ”1215‘ L 5m“ I“ . 7 .".
e presrdent for student affairs. The out-of—state students can vote committee report with a few .\-~‘ y": .
a present code also permits the for the President of the United exceptions. One exception called 1
e dean. of students to invoke States. for the amending of the section o f . .. ;
interim suspensron against. a In accord with the student’s of the code which states that e eXIn ton ( 00 g. t r ~52
5 Student suspected Of “(hating status as a citizen, the any violation of local, state,and ‘i-I'f'
5 Article VI' committee recommended that federal law is a violation of the 1050 L All R d w
s John Nelson, chairman of the the supervision of student code also. Nelson said that this one en 0° , . 3 2 , "
University Student Advisory organizations be given to the could not be enforced properly 7,‘ {,‘tv l 72.
- Committee (USAC), suggested vice president for student affairs since some laws such as those P . X .
s that Article VI either be instead of the dean of students’ dealing with alcohol and re'SChOOI through Grade 9 ‘g . » W .';_~.. ._ '-
, .. Fayette plans anti-drug program Admissions Testing—Saturday, April 24 t. ,; : ~'
. The first comprehensive anti-drug program in Regional Health Planning Council, COUIit)’ judge __ ,, I, l it. ,-
° Fayette County is now in the tentative planning Robert Stephens and various health and welfare _ . -,-. - ,- 2
stages for Lexington. organizations, would be designed to help the drug for IHformal'lon Co" 277-748] . j -. , ‘V: '
. user find himself, regain self-confidence, and make ____—____________.__ . ." j -. —
. The program, called Together, would provrde the decision to give up drugs , 4., '
; juvenile drug users the opportunity to rehabilitate The conce ° 'l ‘
. . pt and future of the Together program NORTON G. PRITCHETT, JR. Headmaster >2 a .2 , ,
themselvels) Ivoluntan‘liy, th: main thrust2 0f the depends upon the conditions of the Lexington I 7;. ;, .g-
* program teing aime at t e young (12' 4) drug City Ordinance relating to drug users and their K , ‘
exp erimen er. . _ physicians and psychiatrists. As the ordinance now , 5 ' - '- _ .
l :- As a non-prgfit carporatioridseparate from the stands, a doctor must report the name of a patient ' s’ '. ‘
“t governments oget er wou operate on a who goes to him for help with adrug problem. ll ' ', -' -
l 21-hglur-a-day’ seven-days-a-week basis With a According to Frank Fryman of the Lexington The GRADUATE STUDENT '_ g ,. ‘J
i. to CD one service and overnight accommodations Police Department, the 1972 state legislature will u t ’ .i' ,
To ether, in cooperation wit t e ue rass . - - ' _ . .5! .
g provrde an immumty clause for sum cases A Dinner and rap session sponsored by GPSA* ‘. ‘ " ,- g. _»
MONDAY, APRIL 26 ; . " ' i
‘1 e .1 . k Alumni House—Rose & Euclid
'c \ .’\ 4? PROGRAM “2 '
t i , . " :1.
; §‘ ’ Registration and Happy Hour 5:30 p.m.
l %‘ \‘8 . Dinner 6:30 pan. i»;- g, I. i '.
b x If? ‘ Discusuons begin 7:30 p.m. ,, .. .: _
. '. 1 "J. ;.: '_.. ‘,'.'_,
o o l I (I .. t. ' ,l l A
“ 0 Jobs, Future and Present (Including the 3. ff. » '-F 4,
a UK ossistontships) p j ‘.
. l t
o The Future of Teaching (including the r
‘ 4”- problem of "publish or perish") ‘
. 0'} ' o The Proper Role of Graduate Students 'g ‘.l i ,’
ll} 1 Ԥ, in the University ' -.._ .- -, , '- .n
Sue Drysdole, Donald Ringe, William Dennen, 'i' t l ' V 2' V, ’
Scot-t Wendelsdorf, Stuart Forth, Curl Cube, John '~ ,_ - -‘
Scarborough, Mike Boer, William C. McCrory, ‘, '_2 ‘ ' ’f
and other interesting people will be there. 5 - -' g . _' ‘
O , . .'. . .-
d t P P l P A nominal fee of $l.50 is being charged to partially s. ‘ _' ' t
tu en ower ls eop e OWCr defray expenses. All applications to attend must be made in '. . . .' '
advance and must be received by Thursday, April 22. , . , :
' ' ' I Cli and return to GPSA P O Box 817 I '- -‘ l'
. . . and we need all kinds of people for all kinds of tobs— I PU . . St . b, ho'l 22 . = : - g , .
. . . . . nlverslty ohon y prt l . ' - '
Student Affairs, Academic Affairs, Public Relations, Student
, . . Name _. ‘
Housmg, Advusmg, and others. I l . - 1 _.
Dept. ,. .. GPSA Affiliated) . . .. . ,. ‘
| Campus Address . . .. .. Phone I t ' ,' '
Local Residence . .. . .. . Phone . l >
- - tu ent l I would like to attend the GPSA dunner workshop. Enclosed l , t t ' ,
is $1.50 fee. ‘
I .. , I cannot attend the dinner mooring but am llitCVC\th In I ’ ,‘
learning more about GPSA. , g s
I .. I do not wish to attend the happy hour Or dunner, hut | i .
O‘Ierl I I I ICI It C6 would like to attend the discussion (NO FEEl
*Groduote 8. Professional Student Association '

 . 1 .
4 —THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday. April 19, 1971 _—___—______________________
W ' N 'x d
11116 1 on ec ares war on rugs . . .
Continued from Page 1 structure. And the Sananikones’ airline, Veha Akhat, leases planes and pilots from (6th :
geography and people Of northwestern Burma and iS said to move easily among them, Taiwan for paramilitary operations which lend themselves easily to commerce with saw h
conversing in several dialects. Yet he is also able to deal comfortably with bankers and opium-growing tribespeople, But the opium trade is popular with the rest of the elite, a near
other businessmen who finance his operations from such centers as Bangkok and who rent RLG aircraft or create fly-by-night airlines (such as Laos Air Charter to Lao An
. - Vientiana. Under Chan Chi-foo’s command are from 1000-2000 well-armed men, with United Airlines)