xt7fn29p5m55 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7fn29p5m55/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-11-18 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, November 18, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 18, 1974 1974 1974-11-18 2020 true xt7fn29p5m55 section xt7fn29p5m55 V0 1. LXVI No 72
Monday November Is. 1974

KENTUCKY

21‘

an independent student newspaper

2] University of Kentucky

Lexington, Ky. 40506

 

UK receives
Watts papers

The papers of the late John C.
Watts. a member of the House of
Representatives from Kentuc-
ky‘s sixth district for 20 years,
were offically presented to the
l'niversity Friday.

Although the processing of the
papers began in the summer of
1972 by the LR libraries. 180.000
items in 243 boxes were not
officially the l'niversity‘s pro-
perty until they were accepted by
President this A. Singletary in
Friday's ceremonies.

WATTS. .\ Democrat from
Nicholasyille. died III a Lexmgton
hospital on Sept, 24. 1971. at the
age ot 09 He was still a member
of Congress at the time of his
death,

ln a speech during the
ceremony. l'. S District Judge
Bernard '1‘ Moynahan. said he
remembered Watts as a “great
lawyer.” He added Watts had
worked hard during his youth.
particularly after the death of his
father in 1913. to help his family
make ends meet.

WHILE SERVING in Congress
during the terms of five
presidents —- Truman. Eisenho-
wer. Kennedy. Johnson and
Nixon —Watts had “walked with
presidents but never lost the

Included in the materials,
which cover Watts’ career from
1951 until 1971. are information on
public works, taxation, Social
Security, welfare legislation and
foreing affairs.

Benefit dance
nets lOO toys

A benefit dance at the Complex
Commons Friday night netted
$445 and about 100 toys for
children of welfare families in
eastern Kentucky. according to
Dreme Wire. head resident at
Blanding lll.

The dance, sponsored by the
residence halls. featured Xan-
thus a band from Paris, Ky.
Wire said toys were still coming
in and the number collected “will
about double what we got last
year "

She added this week the
residence halls are sponsoring a
"wrapping party" in which they
wnll attempt to get donations of
Christmas wrapping paper from
Lexington merchants. “We hope
to get the toys wrapped and on
their way before Thanksgiving
break." Wire said.

UK has a shot
at Liberty Bowl

Officials of the Liberty Bowl
announced last night that the
winner of next Saturday‘s

Exuberant l'K fans surround kicker John Pierce

DARK PICTURE

The Weekend

Kernel "a" photo by Phil Gram

questioned from the ABC-TV broadcast booth

(95). quarterback Mike l-‘anuzzi (l3) and nose
guard Tom Ranieri (58) as they were being

Knoxville will receive a bid to the
Liberty Bowl to meet Maryland
on Dec. 16.

The bowl‘s committee appar-
ently leaned toward Kentucky
and Tennessee by virtue of the
teams' victories on Saturday.

Kentucky upset ninth-ranked

Florida.

41-24 while Tennessee defeated
MiSsissippi 29-17.

The two teams emerged from a
list that last week carried as
many as six teams: Pitt.
Georgia. Baylor, Arkansas (and

UK and Tennessee i.
It‘s been a long climb for

after the Wildcats 41-24 win over ninth ranked

record after seven games before
reeling off three impressive
victories in the last three weeks

“lt‘s amazing." said head
coach Fran Curci, recalling the
Cat‘s heroics in the past three
weeks that allowed them to

common touch.” Moynahan said. Kentucky-Tennessee game in and Sugar Bowl-bound Florida Kentucky.a team which had a 3-4 remain in contention for a bowl.

Coming up this week:

Abernathy discusses

 

 

Saturday's story

 

'Nation in Crisis'
The Reverend Ralph Aber-
nathy will speak on “A Nation in
Crisis" 8 pm. Tuesday in the
Student Center Ballroom. The
Student Center Board is sponsor-
ing the speech which will include
such topics as racism, poverty,
militarism and violence.

Rape workshops
offered at YWCA

Two rape workshops will
be held Saturday, Nov. 23 at
the YWCA, 161 North Mill St. The
first workshop will be held from 9
am. to 12 noon and the second
from 2 to 5 pm. The workshops
are sponsored by the Rape Crisis
Center committee of the Lexing-
ton Women‘s Center.

Brady hearing
begins tonight

A civil service commission
hearing on “misconduct"
charges against Terrance Brady.
suspended Urban County Govern-
ment personnel director. begins
tonight at 7 pm. at the Municipal
Building.

Mayor Foster Pettit charged
Brady with misconduct for
statements made to the press in
September.

KAZIMIERZ KORD
Orchestra conductor

Poland symphony

performs tonight

The Warsaw (Poland) National
Symphony Orchestra will per-
form tonight in Memorial Coli-
seum at 8:15 pm. The 106
musicians are making their first
United States tour. Conductor
Kazimierz Kord is known in this
country for performances with
Detroit and Chicago symphonys.
Students may hear the perfor-
mance sponsored by the Central
Kentucky Concert and Lecture
'Series. by showing their II) and
activities card.

 

 

Women discuss future

By NANCY DALY
Associate Editor

The portraits of nine past Lexington
mayors —al| male—lining a wall of the
Commissioners Chambers adequately
explained the purpose of the "Women in
Politics" conference Saturday in the
Municipal Building.

The former mayors‘ eyes gazed
impassively over the room where 50
women participated in a day-long series of
speeches and workshops sponsored by the
Kentucky Women's Political Caucus and
League of Women Voters.

ENHANCING THE status of women in
the electoral political process dominated
the discussion. with no debate over

political philosophy. The conference was .

geared towards forming a Lexington
Women's Political Caucus.

Brownie Ledbetter. chairwoman of the
National Women's Political Caucus'
political action committee. spoke of
overcoming "cultural feminization" to
break down male-dominated political
barriers.

Ledbetter said separate women‘s
organizations are necessary to develop
solidarity in building political power.

in local political process

SEVERAL SPEAKERS said the time is.
ripe for female candidates in local
elections. Pam Miller. councilwoman
from the fourth council district, said now is
the ideal time for increased female
representation because of the growth of
local government.

The increasing number of boards and
commissmns makes the potential for
women appointments very good. said
Miller.

She also said the large number of
districts and frequency of elections give
women an advantage in being elected.
“Now would be an ideal time for women to
run for office ——except in the fourth
district.“

MILLER ALSO said the nature of
women makes them good candidates.
“Men tend to be pompous and easily
threatened by criticism." she said.
whereas women can better listen to their
constituents.

“Women are especially suited to politics
above a lot of other kinds of endeavors
because of our place in society." said
Wanda Cranfill. Fayette County Republi-
can Pary chairwoman.

Continued on page 5

 

 

 

   
   
 
  
  
  
   
 
  
 
  
  
 
   
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
 

Editor-within, Linda Carnes
Managing editor, Ron Mitcnett
Associate editor. Nancy Dalv

Features «that, Larry Mead
Arts editor,
Sports editor, Jim Mauoni

Editorial page editor. Dan Crutcner Photography editor. Ea Geratd

Greg Notation

iditorials ruins-M the opinions ot the “INIL not the University

editorials

Law students protest exclusion of courses

It is an uncommon sight these days
to see students get together on their
own initiative to protest anything, as
happened in the College of Law last
Thursday.

The point of disagreement which
brought about 100 law students to the
law school courtroom and initiated a
petition which was signed by over 175
students was the exclusion of two
courses —workmen‘s compensation
and insurance law ——from the law
school curriculum for the spring

semester.
The exclusion of these courses upset

some law students because they are
considered “bread and butter"
courses. Translated, this means they
concern areas which are financially
of prime importance to practicing
lawyers. Third—year law students
were particularly concerned because
some of them had planned to take
these courses during their last
semester and would be unable to if

they are not offered during the spring.

it appears that the meeting and the
petition may be partially effective, as
College of Law Dean George W.
Hardy indicated he would try to have
at least one of the courses —
workmen’s campensation — included
in this year‘s spring semester
curriculum.

Hardy explained that the courses
were originally dropped because
there was no one available to teach
them.

Though the protest meeting in the
law school courtroom centered
around efforts to reinstate these two
courses, it was evident that the
student’s dissatisfaction with the law
school went deeper than that.

One student said after the meeting
he was “concerned about trends in the
law school.“ Specifically. he
mentioned the increased number of
“peripheral" courses in the curricu-
lum, (such as social legislation and

poverty law), the decreased number
of “adjuncts" (downtown lawyers
brought in to teach specific courses),
and the decision by Assistant Dean
Joseph Rausch to remove a letter
from a law school bulletin board
which advertised for a “bright young
man" to join a law firm. The letter
was removed because Rausch and
others thought it discriminated
against women.

The “trend” that the student feared
is a trend toward the sort of social
relevancy that was widdely publi-
cized in the late 60‘s and early 70's.
The students at the Thursday meeting
equated the exclusion of workmen‘s
compensation and insurance law
courses with this trend.

Also associated with this trend was
the hiring of Rausch as assistant
dean. Rausch, a young professor out
of law school only a short time. was
described by one student as
“consumed by relevancy.“

The protesting law students have a
valid complaint over the two courses
which were excluded. If indeed a
trend toward “relevancy" exists in
the law school, it should not replace
the more practical courses, but
should supplement them. If these
courses are to be dropped, students
should be notified well in advance so
they can plan their schedules

accordingly.

The complaint about trends in the
law school is difficult to substantiate.
There are many law students who
welcome such trends toward “social
relevancy.“ and much of the dispute
seems to be grounded more on
personality differences than real
issues.

Perhaps the most beneficial result
of Thursday‘s meeting will be a
greater commuinication between the
students and the law school adminis-
tration.

 

Letters to the editor

  
   
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
    
  
  
  
   
 
   
    
  
  
  
  
   
  
 
    
  
  
 
  
   
  
   
 
   
   
  
 
   
 
   

VWW

’ER. THIS IS NOT EXACTLY A FLOOD .

 

. . HIGH WATER. PERHAPS, BUT WHEN I SAY HIGH
WATER, LET ME MAKE ONE THING PERFECTLY CLEAR . . .’

Zooming commuters
ignore crosswalks

Something must be done with
regard to the way Lexington
motorists largely ignore the
crosswalk area in front of the
Student (‘enter on Euclid Avenue,

Nearly every day this semester
someone has come close to being
struck by a catatonically in-
considerate. blindeeyed. un-

deserving - of — driver's - license

type beefwit who has neither the
time nor no“ the decency to slow
down for said crosswalk.

Perhaps a flashing yellow
caution light can be installed
above the intersection to slow the
flow of traffic a hit ()r perhaps
the l'niyersit) could appomt a
traffic policeman to the area for a
while to throw around his weight
and intimidate the looming
commuters

Besides. an accident happening
so close to the cafeteria might
give term in people ideas

l’hilip \lct'onath)
,~\&S-fresliinan

Federal Reserve Board deserves poke around ioints

By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN

WASHINGTON —-— It tells you
something when Sears, Roebuck.
the nation’s largest retailer,
announces a personnel layoff
eight weeks before Christmas.
Times are getting harder and so
is the pressure to do something.

Many of the proposals — like
public service jobs — which get
pushed forward at moments of
such distress don‘t do enough
good to be considered more than
demonstrations that Your
Government Loves You. These
gestures of symbolic affection,
however, turn people from
thinking about structural
changes in the way we run our
political economy. The need to
break out of our pattern of ad hoc
improvisation on the peaks and
valleys of the business cycle has
never been greater because these
hastily contrived measures v
price control, emergency loans
and the forced feeding of enor-
mous amounts of money into the
system ~ are becoming
progressively less effective.

IT \\'()l'l.l) pay us better to
spend less time debating illogical

schemes like the gasoline tax,
and instead poke around Joints
like the Federal Reserve Board.
With the zero publicity the Board
gets. many people may think the
Federal Reserve has something
to do with administering
government reservoirs, when. in
reality, the Fed has more to do
with good times or the lack of
them than any other single
agency in Washington. The Fed
controls our money supply.

You must consult such
recondite, business publications
as Fortune magazine (July issue)
to lear it is there at the Fed that
much of the blame for our double
digit belongs. Specifically. the
magazine charges the Board‘s
chairman. Arthur Burns, with
creatinga false prosperity for the
'72 election by flooding the
country with a torrent of in-
flationary currency.

This isn‘t the first time the Fed
has been suspected of playing
such dangerous games. The man
who preceded Burns in his job did
the same sort of thing for the ‘68
election and with similar results

an upward surge in prices
followed by unemployment But

Burns’ critics, who are numerous
and growing in business and
economiccircles, aren‘t accusing
him of doing anything improper,
only of pursuing mistake policies
for erroneous reasons.

PART ()F that goes to how
Burns and his fellow Federal
Reserve governors think as
economists and politicians; part
goes to the nature of the Fed it-
self. The decisions on monetary
policy —- decisions which weigh
so heavily on how much you‘re
going to pay for bread, milk and
rent, or whether you’re going to
have a job or be laid off —— are
made by an arcane group within
the Fed called the Open Market
Committee.

Its members are Burns. the six
other governos, and, in rotation.
five of the 12 presidents of the
regional Federal Reserve Banks.
'l‘hese gentlemen meet monthly,
decide what the monetary policy
of the United States is going to be
and thentell no one about it. They
keep it secret. only issuing iii-
structions to another gentleman
in New York who executes their
orders. Ninety days after each

meeting they routinely release a
summary of what they talked
about. but in language so darkly
Delphic that even men who‘ve
put in a lifetime of learning about
our monetary system have
trouble figuring out what the Fed
has said it is doing. As a con-
sequence. a whole profession has
been created of people who try to
divine what-tbe-Sam Hill the Fed
is up to. They‘re the domestic
Kremlinologists of American
economics.

The reasons for the secrecy
aren’t sinister. It‘s supposed to
discourage sharp traders from
cashing in on the information;
but the rumors, tips, speculation
and purportedly inside dope
swirling about the Fed would
seem to have exactly the opposite
effect from the one intended.

HOWEVER that may be, the
nation‘s prosperity is still hugely
affected by 11 guys who nobody
has ever heard of, operating as a
committee that everybody is
ignorant of. (‘ongress can
struggle to balance the budget.
and the fruits of its fiscal
responsibility can be canceled
out by polieydecisions that aren‘t

even announced until three
months after they're made,

in this clandestine nonsense.
Burns is but following the ancient
traditions of his organization. He
isn‘t the first man to orchestrate
disaster in a closet. History
teaches us that the same kind of
secretive, well-intentioned
madness brought on the massive
bank closings of 1932-33 and the
recessinary collapse of 1937.
which prolonged the Great
Depression another dreary.
unnecessary four years.

Even now it‘s suspected
nobody outside the Fed can know
for sure ,, that our monetary
policies have been turned around
180 degrees, that the Fed is
building the foundations of a new
inflationary rush. it‘s possible
that. if the Fed made its decisions
out in the open. they‘d still make
the same mistakes. But, since the
citizenry must pay the con—
sequences. the least the Fed can
do is go public and thereby give
the rest of (is fair warning.

Nicholas \‘oii Hoffman is a
columnist for King Features
Syndicate.

 

     

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fia...n.o.... *Aqfiv

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opinions trom

inside and outside the university con-wumty

 

  

comment

A quota is a quota is a quota

 

By Sidney Hook

STANFORD, Calif.——No one can
reasonably deny that shameful dis-
crimination on grounds of religion.
race. sex and national origin has oc-
curred in the past. To a lesser extent
it exists in the present.

It is apparent not only in hiring
people but in rewarding, promoting.
and retiring them.

Wherever such practices exist they
are morally wrong and should be abol-
ished. What makes them wrong is the
violation of the merit principle and
the injustices that result.

Individuals are punished for no fault
of their own but merely because of
their membership in a group. which
has nothing to do with the qualifica-
tions for the post in question and their
specific capacities to fill it.

What is the remedy? Surely not
another kind of discrimination. No one
would argue that because many years
ago blacks were deprived of their right
to vote and women denied the fran-
chise that today blacks and women
should be compensated for past dis-
crimination by being given the right
to cast an extra vote or two at the
expense of their fellow citizens or that
some white men should be barred from
voting.

Take a more relevant case. For
years. blacks were disgracefully barred
from professional sports. Would it
not he absurd to argue that today in
compensation for the past there should
he discrimination against whites?

All that black players want is to be
judged as players. not blacks. Would
any fair and sensible person try to
fix the ratio of whites and blacks on
our ball teams in relation to their ra-
cial availability?

We want the best players for the
open positions regardless of the per-

 

ccntag.‘ distribution in the general
yopulation or in the pool of candidates
trying out.

Whv should it b(' any different
when we are seeking the best-quali-
fied mathematician to teach topology
or the best medieval philosophy schol-
ar'.’ Why not drop all color. sex and

religious bars in honest quest for the
best-qualified for any post—n0 matter
what the distribution turns out to be?
Of course, the quest must be public
and not only fair but seen to be fair.
There are effective ways of doing this.
But how can we drop all extraneous.
discriminatory bars and still strive
to achieve “numerical goals" required
by guidelines of the Department of
Health. Education and Welfare?

 

 

What are involved are enforcement
procedures that the Labor Depart~
ment's office of Federal contract com-
pliance delegated to H.E.W.’s office
for civil rights. These procedures re-
quire that “numerical goals and time
schedules"———how many to hire, and
when—be established to guide hiring
of members of minorities and women
wherever their underutilization is
shown.

Indted, if we succeed in abandoning
all discriminatory practices in recruit-
ing, promotion, retirement, pay for
equal Work, why do we need “numeri-
cal goals”———unless it is asserted that
the only real proof of the abandon-
ment is the achievement of these nu—
merical goals?

The representatives of H.E.W. shy
away from the taboo word “quotas"
because they know that a quota sys-
tem is incompatible with the basic
norms 0f merit and individual justice.
They insist that a “numerical goal"
is not a quota. This is a transparent
semantic evasion. For a “numerical
goal." when selections are guided by
anything but merit, is precisely what

A poem with one

By Donald Hall

"At pet stores in Detroit, you can buy
frozen rats

for seventy-five cents apiece, to feed
your pet boa constrictor”

back home in Grosse Pointe,

or in Grosse Pointe Park.

while the free nation of rats

in Detroit emerges

from alleys behind pet shops, from
cellars

and iunhed cars. and gathers

to flow at twilight

like a river the color of pavement,

and crawls over bedrooms and
groceries

and through broken

school windows to eat the crayon

front drawings of rats—

and no one in Detroit understands

how rats are delicious in Dearborn.

If only we could communicate, if (ml)?
the boa constrictors of Southfield

would slither down 1-94,

turn north on the Lodge Expressway,
and head for Eighth Street, to eat
out for a change. Instead, tomorrow,

a man from Birmingham enters
a pet shop in Detroit

 

 

fact:

 

we normally mean by a quota. In
Europe. the Latin phrase numerus
clausus was used to set religious
quotas for entry into universities. It
set numerical goals.

My argument on this crucial matter
rests mainly on two simple points:
one logical, the other ethical.

If someone says to universities, “In
your hiring practices aim at a quota
of X per cent of blacks, Chicanos,
Puerto Ricans, women for your staff
within the next three years,” the
cognitive meaning of the expression
is the same as this: “In hiring, set as
your goal recruitment of X per cent
of blacks, Chicanos, Puerto Ricans,
women within the next three years."

The representatives of HEW. cons
fuse themselves and others by insist-
ing that numerical goals are not quotas

because “good-faith efforts" to achieve
the goals are “an adequate substitute
for evidence that goals have been
met.”

But this is logically equivalent to
saying that sincere, good-faith efforts
to achieve quotas are an adequate sub-
stitute for evidence that quotas have

to buy a frozen German Shepherd
for six dollars and fifty cents

to feed his pet cheetah,

guarding the compound at home;

and a woman from Bloomfield Hills,
with a refrigerated Buick

wagon, buys

a frozen police department Morgan

for thirty-seven dollars

for her daughter who loves horses.

Oh, they arrive all day, in their
locked cars. buying

schoolyards. bridges, buses,
churches, and Ethnic Festivals;

they buy a frozen Texaco station

for eighty~four dollars and fifty cents

to feed to an Imported London taxi

in Huntington Woods;

they buy Tiger Stadium.

frozen. to feed to the Little League

in Grosse ”9;

they buy J. L. Hudson's. the Fisher
Building.

 

Eugene Mihaesco

been met. The emotive meaning may
be different but the intellectual con-
tent is the same.

The ethical point follows from the
admission by all and sundry, including
H.E.W., that quotas are wrong. For
if anything is morally wrong, then
sincere efforts to bring it about are
also wrong. If quotas are morally
wrong in filling posts in education or
elsewhere, then “sincere good-faith
efforts" to achieve them are wrong.

The best way to overcome dispro-
portions among different groups in
the \arious sectors of employment Is
to expand the opportunities and facili-
ties of education, and if necessary to
provide subsidies for those willing
and able to learn. Where persons are
evaluated for fitness to fill specific
posts. one standard for all must pre-
vail.

 

Sidney Hook. professor emeritus of
philosophy at New York University, is
currently Research Fellow at the
Hoover Institution on War. Revolution
and Peace.

frozen rats

the Chrysler Freeway, the Detroit
Institute

of the Arts, Greehtown,

Cobo Hall, and the Tri-City

Bucks Roller Derby

Team. They bring everything home.

frozen solid

as pig iron. to the six-car garages
of Harper Woods, Grosse Pointe Woods,
Farmington. Grosse Pointe

Farms. Troy, and Grosse Arbor—
and they ingest‘

everything, and fall asleep, and lie

coiled in the sun, while the city
thaws in the stomach and slides

to the small intestine, where enzymes
break down molecules of protein

to amino acids. which enter

the cold bloodstream.

6 I974 Donald Hall

 

Donald Hall. a poet, is professor of
English at the University of Michigan.
Ann Arbor.

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
  
 
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
   
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
 
  
   
 
   
  
   
 
   
  
 
  
   
  
    
 
  
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
  

 t—TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEI" Monday. November Iii. I974
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_—_— . ——————-~ - __..______ ..

 

news briefs

 

Documents indicate IRS
spied on political groups

WASHINGTON (AP) ~Newly revealed documents identify 99
political and activist organizations investigated by a secret
intelligence gathering arm of the Internal Revenue Service during
the Nixon administration.

The IRS has refused for more than a year to name the
organizations, which include such nationally known groups as the
Americans for Democratic Action, National Student Association,
the Urban League and Unitarian Society.

The groups were named in more than 200 pages of documents
made public Sunday as a result of a Freedom of Information Act
suit filed against the tax agency by Ralph Nader's Tax Reform
Research Group.

The documents reveal that, contrary to repeated public denials
by the IRS. the secret Special Service Staff was set up as an
intelligence-gathering unit within the IRS as a direct result of the
White House influence in 1969.

It began as a project to identify activist organizations and
individuals for possible income tax audits and collection of unpaid
taxes.

The present IRS commissioner. Donald C. Alexander, and other
agency spokesmen have insisted for the past year the IRS never
succumbed to the political pressures of the Nixon White “0- se

The documents show that even as the Special Service Staff was
being disbanded last year in the midst of the Watergate scandal.
Alexander attempted to conceal the true actiVities of the unit by
claiming it had been set up solely to investigate tax protesters and
people who refused to pay income tax.

Tax reform package
proposed by Democrats

WASHINGTON (AP) — A $4 billion tax revismn package has been
proposed by seven Democratic senators who say they will press for
its enactment when (‘ongress returns from vacation

The plan. which they termed a balanced tax reform and relief
package. calls for a variety of changes. including:

-~Strengthening minimum tax on the very wealthy

~An increase in the investment tax credit

—--Tax relief for low and middle income families through an
optional $175 tax credit that may be taken instead of the $750
personal income tax exemption.

-—Hepeal of the oil depletion allowance. a tax on windfall profits
and increased taxes on foreign oil operations

“Repeal of the Domestic International ('orporatioii system of
tax incentives for exports

~~A 10 per cent work bonus for low income families with children

“The revenue gains from the tax reform provisions in this bill
will fully finance the tax relief for individuals and the increase in
the investment tax credit. The bill will therefore have no
inflationary effect." the senators said iii a news release.

The package was proposed by Sens Walter I" Mondale of
Minnesota, Birch Bayh of Indiana. Alan (‘ranston of California.
Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota. Edward M. Kennedy of
Massachusetts. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine and Gaylord Nelson of
Wisconsin.

President Ford steps in Alaska

en route to summit conferences

ANCHORAGE. Alaska iAP‘ President Ford. declaring he
would “rather travel thousands of miles for peace than take a
single step toward war," stopped here Sunday en route to summit
conferences in Tokyo and Vladivostok.

Ford. about to become the first U. S. President ever to vis1t
Japan. told wellwishers at the White House before leavmg he was
“determined to perpetuate the special relationship that links our
two nations for the common good.“

As Air Force One headed for Tokyo. Secretary of State Ilenry A.
Kissinger told reporters the emphasis will be on a. further
strengthening of ties and understanding with Japan.

Relations between the United States and Japan are excellent.
Kissinger said, adding, “there aren‘t any basic decisions that need
to be made" by Ford's party and their Japanese counterparts.

The secretary of state was somewhat optimistic about Ford's
meeting in the Soviet Union next weekend with Soviet leader

Leonid I. Brezhnev. A stop in South Korea will precede the trip to
Valdivostok.

 

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Sports Arts 757 iano

 

 

 

 

 

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campus

Hear ye.
hear ye

Former UK basket-
ball coach Adolph
; Rupp introduces for-
. mer UK players in
the “Return of the
Wildcats" game held
Saturday night at
Tates Creek High
School. The Whites.
which included
Rupp‘s famous Fidd-
lin‘ Five edged the
Blues 87-85. The
game was sponsored
by the K-Wives.

Kernel stall photo
DY Phil Groshong

Women discuss
political future

(‘ontinued from page I

Speaking on "How to Run for
Political ()ffice." (‘ranfill said
women make good candidates
because they have stamina and
the ability to smile when insulted.
She also said women can better
combine emotion and intellect
and have greater awareness of
ethical considerations

.\l.\lt'r\' H.\R'l‘ll. campaign
manager for state Sen Joe
(iraves 'er.exingtoni. prag-
iiiaticall} described techniques
ofdoor‘Io-door campaigning She
gave tips on everything from
tiling candidacy to getting
supporters to vote on election
day

.ludy 'l‘ipton. Miller‘s cam»
paign manager. told the women
to watch out for “political
gi'oupies" in their campaigns.
She said some men about 30 like
to hang around campaigns and
act like they know everything
that‘s going on. But she warned
they are unlikely to produce when
it comes to working for a