Hang on everyone! He's talking about screw-mount, not K-mount lenses!
Mark (I assume) - look at your screw mount lens on the side that mounts to the camera. You'll see a little pin that protudes. Push that in and the aperture iris stops down. The old Spotmatics etc have a flap that pushes against that pin when you fire the shutter. The DSLR cameras don't have that, so they can't stop down the lens.
You can still use them! It's just that you have to stop down the aperture manually.
Most of your Takumar screw-mount lenses will have an Auto-Manual sliding switch on the lens body. Set that to Manual. Now when you set the aperture to f/8, the lens aperture will be stopped down to f/8. With the lens stopped down already, you will find that the viewfinder is a little dim, but you'll only use the smaller apertures in bright light anyway. Stick to f/5.6 and it's no problem.
Now (with the aperture stopped down manually) you can shoot in Aperture-Priority auto exposure mode. You can also shoot in manual exposure if you prefer, but you'll have to press the green button to meter (the camera will set the shutter speed to something close to correct).
I think I have that right - I'll play with a lens or two and get back if I've missed anything critical!
Edit to add: don't forget that you can also set exposure compensation if you find that the camera doesn't meter accurately with your Takumar lenses. They all seem to vary a bit; some of mine need half a stop under, and some need a bit over. Also - remember to set the focus mode switch (on the front of the camera) to MF - manual focus. If you don't, the camera won't release the shutter until it thinks you have it in focus.