xt7c862bcd5s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7c862bcd5s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-04-21 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 21, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 21, 1976 1976 1976-04-21 2020 true xt7c862bcd5s section xt7c862bcd5s Vol. LXVII No. 135
Wednesday, April 21 1976

KENTUCKY

an independent student ne

2 I e I University of Kentucky
wspaper _

Lexington, Kentucky

Student increases cause problems for intramurals

I'I'Il{.\. \RI)JOII.\S()\

Ity Itlt‘KtiABltll-Il.
Kernel Sports Editor

The UK intramural program has been
growing by leaps and bounds over the past
several years. but it wasn‘t until this
spring that the students participating
began to feel the growing pains.

The office of Jim Daopolous director of
intramurals. has been swamped with
students from independent. residence hall
and fraternity teams demanding to know
why the intramural softball tournament
has been changed from round- robin
divisional play with a tournament to one
gigantic. single elimination tournament
for each classification.

Daopolous cites an increase of 10 per
cent in the numbers of teams entered
ttotal of 175) as well as other [M events
overlapping into softball season. The

weather is a constant factor.

"We didn‘t want to overlap with
wrestling and basketball.“ Daopolous
said. "When I started planning the softball
schedule. _I wanted to start playing on
April 5. But we ran into wrestling. so it
looked like we would have to start on the
l2lh."

lM softball did. indeed. start on April 12.
leaving to nights for play and allowing two
open dates to compensate for rain

At first I tried to schedule for three
games. in a four-team division with a
tournament.“ Daopolous said. ”Because
of the number of teams. we‘d be playing
until the middle of May.

“Then I tried a three-team division with
two games per team and a tournament.
but there weren‘t enough days available.

t'ontinuml 1111 page It:

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Hello? Operator?

‘Campus information'

By KEITH SHANNON
Kernel Staff Writer

Some students apparently take the heading “campus
information” in the UK phone book a little too seriously.

The primary purpose of campus information is to
provide students with directory assistance for on-campus
numbers But it has been used to get information on
everything from birdhouses to crab lice

Velva Mattingly, chief operator for the system said she
has even corsidered writing a book about the unusual
calls she has received.

Some of them, she said, are all but obscene.

Ma ttingly told of the time someone dialed information
to find outwhether he should builda bird house in a tree or
in his yard. Another student dialed “O" in an effort to
learn how he could rid himself of crab lice.

Upon receipt of such calls, the operators try to figure
out what UK department might assist the caller Mat-
tingly said (The bird house call led to the animal science
department; the crabs were sent to the medical center.)

Holed up

Dennis Rhodus, an employe of
U.K.‘s physical plant division, is not
doing an ad for an insurance com-
pany. Actually. he stands partially
submerged beneath Washington Ave.
while feeding sensor cables to other
workers below. The cables which
come from a Delta 2000 computer.
located in the Thomas Morgan Hunt

Bldg. are being connected to various

buildings on campus.

has unusual meaning for many callers

Sometim6 figuring out where to send the calls can be
quite challenging.

For example a man once called and asked the operator
to providehim with the true meaning of Thanskgiving.

The opera tor stumped for a minute finally routed the
call to the history department.

Anaher day. two separate callers needed birth control

advice.

One caller a woman was wanting to know if she could
get pregnant after having her tubes tied The other a
male was looking for a way to undo a vasectomy. Both
callers were given numbers to the medical center.

Ma ttingly said the operators are usually able to provide
numbers to help the callers Operators who are new on
the job are sometimes baffled but Mattingly said they can
usually get help from one of their more experienced
colleagues.

Of course the job rs not all just answering amusing calls.

Jam6 A. Pelphrey J r manager of UK communications
services said the operators sometimes help people in
emergencies

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He said one of the most serious cases involved someone
who had swallowed some sort of poison. the antidote to
which was written on the bottle in Swedish. The operators
called all over campus until they could find someone who
could read the language.

But the job also has its advantages. according to
l’clfrey. lle even rcla ted how Aristotle Onassis once tried
to reach someoneat UK to extend an invitation to a party
in New York. In the course of transferring the call to the
right place. the operator was invited also.

'I‘ he most frustrating call an operator can receive is one
in which the caller wants the operator to supply both the
name and the number of the party to he called. Mattingly
said.

She recently received a call from a woman who was
trying to get in touch with one of the contestants in the

'raw11y Babes contest. She didn' t know his name but he
had hormwed a (.— -string to wear in the contest and she
liadnt seen him since.

The operator after thinking awhile finally admitted

' (lt'lt'ul and told the taller that she just couldn‘ I help her.

 

  

1w }.,

'ees‘ - .

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.~

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chie]

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

 

 

 

(Scott Payton is holed up somewhere
in Montana this, week, working
feverishly on hisfinal, 5,000-word in-
stallment of f’Ten Years On”—a
column he says ”will bring the roof
down on my head if those waterheads
don't edit it out of existence.” Well,
we'll see. But out of consideration for
him, and because we know he tends to
get violent when he’s working on a Big
Proiect, we decided not to bother him
for a column this week. Instead, we
sent an intrepid young staffer up to the
English department to pilfer through
their files and drag out some of
Peyton’s writings from his long-ago
days as an English major—”critical"-
type work he felt sure would establish
himself as the enfant-terrible of
modern literary criticism. . .and maybe
land a Rhodes Scholarship or two. . . .

 

Yea h, well, we all kn0w what became
of that pipe dream. Lionel Trilling's
last words were, ”Keep that lunatic
Payton out of the field!” But it may be
interesting to havea look at some of his
saner, more scholarly writing.

Especially in light of the manic
gibberish he usually spews out here.)

The first thing we ran across was an
enormous ZOO-page term paper entitled
”Some Nonteleological Observations on
the Innate Nature of Man as Elucidated
in the Later Short Novels of Steinbeck:
An Approach." In it are such gems as:
“In Steinbeck's view, menare basically
rotten; life is a hopeless and
meaningless struggle. When Santiago
finally catches the fish, the reader
weeps with the realization that it really
doesn’t mean a fucking thing." And
later: "The reader can be pretty damn
sure that Caddy’s underpants are
symbolic—a nd never m ind the fact that
they’re muddy."

Near the end of the paper, the
methedrine was obviously getting to
Payton, aswe find him indulging in this
very speedy whimsey: ”Ann turned to
me and began undoing her blouse. I

kept right on thinking about 'Cannery

Row,‘ and grinding my teeth." (This
passage was underlined in red, with a
question mark in the margin beside it.)
No final grade was given to the paper.
but the professor did have one com-
ment: "Whose later short novels did
you say, Mr. Payton?”

What is apparently an unfinished
master’s thesis wasfound in the back of
the file cabinet, bearing the strange
title ”Jethro Bodine: The Final Em-
bodiment of the American Dream.” In
the introduction, Payton declares.
”With his uncle's vast fortune behind
him (an OlL fortune, mind you) Jethro
lives out every wildfantasy availed him
by modern culture. He is, by turn, a
brain surgeon, a secret agent, a movie
director known as Mr. Show Business, a
psychiatrist, a knight errant and a fry
cook. . . .He is the All-American in-
nocent (in the venerable tradition of
Hud< Finn and Holden Caulfield) who is
freed by great wealth to run amok in
the toy store of our collective fan-
tasies.”

Payton was apparently dissatisfied
with this, however, since ”shit” is
written in huge purple letters across the
entire paragraph. But we can report,
without going into detail, that he con-
tinues in much the same vein through
500 pages of single-spaced typescript,
finally peter ing out with the unfinished
sentence "As for Jethro’s sexuality. . ."

The rest of the papers are in an awful
jumble, crumpled up and wine-stained,
but some titles capture the eye: "Cat
Symbolism in Hemingway: A First
Manifesto for a Gay Interpretation of
Papa's Anguish." And: "Textual
Evidence ThatMailer Has Undergone a
Sex Change Operation." Neither of
these remain intact in a completely
legible form, but the fragments that
survive indicate that Payton was
working at the heights of his critical
powers when he wrote them.

What a loss! You have to wonder at
the gems of insightful scholarship that
were lost to the world when Payton
decided to give up the literary life for
more worldly pursuits.

Indeed. And you have to wonder:
What was old Lionel trilling about?

 

Scott Payton graduated from UK in‘
"73. He is a former contributor to
Rolling Stone magazine'and a retired
boxing promoter who currently listshis'
occupation as "speculator." His
column, "Ten years on," appears
weekly in me Kernel.

One strike
and you're out

Intramural softball

The main purpose of intramural
sports is participation on the basis
of desire rather than physical
capabilities.

In light of that fact it seems
ridiculous to limit participation in
intramural softball through single
elimination tournaments—one
strike and you’re out.

Director of lntnamurals Jim
Daopolous says the softball in-
tramurals were changed from
round-robin divisional play to
single elimination tournaments
because of the number of teams
participating in the program.

Why set up an intramural
program it increased student
participation is rewarded with a
cut-back in the opportunity to
participate?

The answer is money. The games
were limited because there is not

sufficient funding to provide fields
needed for the intramural softball
tou rna me nts.

A maximum of 12 games can be
played in one evening four nights a
week on the four fields available
now. Only two of the fields are
lighted.

It is obvious the University is not
serious about providing students
with a viable intramural
program if it is willing to spend so
little for facilities.

Director of Campus Recreation
Bernard ”Skeeter" Johnson
estimates 60 per cent of the
student body is interested in in-
tramural sports.

If that many students are in-
terested, surely the University can
come up with the money to make
the program what it should be.

 

 

 

 

Smear

I
campaign
Editor:

I am writing this letter because the
new poster being put out by Mike
McLaughlin and Hal Haering, can-
didates for Student Government (56)
president and vice president should be
titled, "We Claim the Glory from Other
People’s Work.“

For example:

——The USAC reforms they claim to
have supported have nothing to do with
academic repeat options. The reforms
all dealt with changing the pass-fail
System for the advantage of students.
Haering would have known this if he
had ever attended one of the Student
Senate Academic Committee meetings.
He was a member.

—The restructuring of the deans of
students' off-campus housing office is
coming about in July because Carlton
Currens, 56 presidential candidate,
and other students have worked with
the office for the past year to bring the
change about. McLaughlin and Haering
had nothing to do with this.

L—The off-campus handbook,

published by the dean of students' of-
fice, is totally inadequate and the
revision of it was one of the charges of
the Off-Campus Housing Committee.
The needed changes were brought
about because of the hard work of the
committee members, not because of
McLaughlin or Haering.

—Haering and McLaughlin ought to
check their voting records in the
Student Senate before claiming to have
supported the Council on Women's
Concerns —bolh voted against funding.

—They have not worked to support
the physical environment. Haering
always complains that the Red River
Dam is a finished issue and let's forget
it.

—-Currens and Linda Welch, can-
didate for $6 vice president, have not
said they would use $1,500 for salaries it
they could get adequate help withOut

Letters

 

money. SG President Jim Harralson
tried that this year —.the 56 office has
not been run in a manner that aids
students and it only confuses those
students who do come in for help.

I ask that Haering and McLaughlin
stop running a smear campaign and get
their facts right. Then they can run a
campaign on real issues and needs, not
by grabbing the praise other students
deserve.

Marion Wade
A&Siunior

Labe Young

Editor:

I would like to publicly recommend
Labe Young, a pharmacy student who
is a candidate for senatorvat-large. He
has been on campus for four years and
with this background, he would be a
real advantage to our Student
Government. With him, we can expect
sound and honest representation.

David V. Midkitf
Biology senior

Dropout

Editor:

This letter is to inform all of my non-
supporters out there in Disneyland that
l have dropped out of the race for
Student Government (56) president.
Some bumbling idiot over in the 56
office refused to give me my $5 back
until after the election was over so I
figured I'd fuck 'em up real good and
stay in the race.

It's true, I did say that l_was dropping
out. But I iustdid that to make all the
other candidates lose their shit. I
certainly hope that my little iaunt into
seriOusness didn‘t upset any of my
supporters or old girlfriends, I know it
did my pet piranha.

Mark "Bones" Chellgren
865 senior

 

 

 

 

 l L

 

spectrum

Opinions from inside and outside the University

 

 

\v" '
‘ ~I/ / ‘l’

’

Currens, Welch employ ambiguityia

 

By Richard Schweitzer

 

As' I returned from classes one af-
ternoon, i found a piece of paper had
been slipped under my door. Trying to
remain abreast of the events that shape
my educational environment, I began
to read this sheet which was entitled:
CURRENS-WELCH ON CAMPUS
HOUSING.

What I discovered in its content was a
rather unenlightened attempt to sway
residence halls voters in the upcoming
Student Government (SG) elections by
the use of ambiguity, ignorance and
promises impossible to keep. As a
corridor adviser i n a campus residence
hall, I also viewed these statements as
an attack upon the system that I work
for and believe in quite strongly. I felt
compelled to reply.

The essence of the flyer was that
Canton Currens and Linda Welch
(candidates for SG president and vice
presid ent, respectively) were
cha Ienging the present residence halls
policies, set byt he Board of Trustees on
the recommendations of Dr. Robert
Zumwinkle, vice president of student
affa'rs, and the University residence
halls programming. Currens and
Welch are promising, with the aid of
sufficient SG ”pressure” on the ad-
ministration, that new policies will be
enacted to ”reflect the differing tastes,
desires, and needs” of students in
residence halls. A noble endeavor, I
must admit. In most cases, however,
their specific goals leave much to be
desired or are nonexistent.

Currens and Welch seek to enact a
program of "lifestyle” residence halls,
with all students able tochoose tolive in
coed or single-sex halls, and various
visitation hour options. I, too, believe
that present visitation policies should

be expanded to provide the residemts
with a more natural living atmosphere

in the halls. The Board of Trustees, in'

1973, designated Blanding l to be used
as coed housing for upperclassmen,
and this past fall added Blanding It to
be coed for sophomores, juniors and
seniors.

Even with the admission of
sophomores, though, there was not
enough interest to completely fill the
hall with students requesting ad-
mission. ltseems, then, that this is not
the great issue that Currens and Welch
inflate it to be, but a minority of
stucbnts clamoring for attention.

Yet, perhaps, it istheir complete lack
of any effective and concrete means of
action that prompts me to challenge
heir statements, When has SG

"’pressure" on the administration ever

served any purpose but to further
divide the two bodies? When has 56
ever ”pressured” the University into
decision the administration didn't want
to make? Currens and Welch’s
QJixolic attempt to ramrod "housing
reform“ through the Board of Trustees
is unrealistic and virtually impossible.
O'ily hrough working with the ad-
min'stration will any ”reform" be
enacted.

Currens and Welch also seek ”the
development of new programs that will
add b the social, cultural, and in
tellectual environment of the residence
halls.” Such a nebulous statement
sounds appealing but means nothing
without documentation of proposed
programs by the candidates. l per-
sonally challenge Currens and Welch to
come up with any unique and
significant programs that have not
already been implemented by present
residence halls staffs.. in my mind,
such ambiguity greatly lessens the

credbility of the candidates.

Finally, Currens and Welch call for
"significant student input into the
selection of head residents and area
coord'nators." An asinine statement
like this one leads me to believe that
Currens and Welch know very little
about the proposals they circulate.

The administrative capabilities
necessary for the positions of head
resident and area coordinator are
beymd the comprehension of the

' average student living in residence

halls. To suggest that students should
choose head residents and area coor
dinabrs is to invite chaos. Do Currens
and Welch propose that students could
elect all head residents and area
coordinators? Or maybe a student
board could be set up to appoint them
from a list of applicants.

And does it follow, then, that students
should also elect the University
president (whose decision on policy
daily affectthe lives of all students, not
just these in residence halls) and that
apartment residents should have input
into the selection of their landlords?
Such a wild-eyed and pretentious claim
insults the reasonableness of the
residence halls programming staffs.

These candidates have attacked the
"inadequacies" of residence halls.
They promise that with ”the deter
mined and perceptive” leadership they
offer, ”reform" will begin with their
election. Yet Currens and Welch don’t
even live in residence halls and
therefore know very little about the
actual conditions of this living at
mosphere. They attempt with slick
‘rhetoric and purposeful ambiguity to
dupe the residents of these halls into
voting for a team of candidates who
promise what they obviously cannot
hope to achieve. They have lost my

@

_-
.—

vote, and hopefully, those of other
discriminating students.

 

Richard Sdiweitzer is an economics
junior.

 

 

 

 

Inactivity plagues Student Government

 

By Joe Wright

What is the problem of ,Student
Government (SG)? The problem is
inactivity. 56 has failed to take the
initiative in representing students
bebre the University administration.
inactivity has led to the situation where
$2.500 remains in SG’s account that
coukt have been spent on innovative
programs that could, have benefited
studenlsf As a result students lad<
interest in SG and apathy grows.

What are the possible solutions to this
situation? SG could continue as it is
presently doing. This only increases
the problem. SGhasentangled itself in
bureaucratic mess. Sure, it‘s nice to
have by-laws that make it easier to
file bills before the senate. Reliance on
procedure, however. is a superficial
probbm. Whatgood is a bureaucratic
tool it the substance of the bill which
uas that tool is valueless?

SG should act ast he organization that
representsa ndacts on student interests
before the administration. SG is not
just a provider of student servies.

 

Students may want things such as bus
shelter. Instead of spending its own
money out of a limited budget,
however, SG should act to procure that
service from the University.

The preamble of SG's constitution
establishes the prime focus of the in-
stitution—decision making by the
students for their own benefit. It states
56 should ”...create meaningful
student control over students at-
fa'rs...increase student influence over
academicx policy...to protect and
expand student substantive and
procedural rights...” and "to build
effectivestu dent economic and political
power ”It the community and Com-

monweatth...”
Are there any objections to this

philosophy of Student Government?
Themaiorcriticismisthat suchastand
is tooidealistic anddoes not bring about
"concrete,' reSults that students can
readily see. .This accusation is simply
not true. Past activities by student
government, which acted by this
phiosophy, obtained many "concrete"
results for students.

Because of efforts on the past of

Stu dent Government, the passage of the
confidentiality bill, which protects the
privacy of studens, was greatly in-
fluenced. Student input into academic
affairs has been increased by the use of
the various departmental student
advisory committees. Dormitory
policies and hours have been liberalized
to allow the student more freedom.

Essential student services such as legal
aid and tenant referral have been

established.
What is the answer? 56 is not

cmdemned to oblivion as many stud-
ents believe; but, it can only function
effectively if the right people are placed
into office. Students must elect a
president and vice president who will
actively pursue the above-mentioned
orientation of SG.

Carlton Currens and Linda Welch are
such people. They believe 56 must act
as the leader, the innovator for student
interests. They understand that it 56
does not become this type of institution,
then SG. for all practical purposes, will
be an obsolete institution.

They do not propose lofty or
unrealistic goals, but want to be the

force which sees that student needs are
met. For example Currens and Welch
propose a restructuring of the off
campus housing office to better meet
the needs of the more than 75 per cent of
UK students who life off campus. They
will actively work for the' establishment
of a book exchange program in order to
combat the high prices of local book
stores. They seek the building of bike
paths and pedestrain walkways on
campus. Currens and Welch want to
see a liberalization of dormitory policy
which allows the student a greater
freedan in selecting their living en.

_ vironment.

Other candidates cannot solve the
crisis of Student Government. Only
Currensand Welch offer the manner for
SG to become the means for effective
student representation with the
University administration, as well as
provide the ”concrete" results that
other candidates promise. On April 20
and 21 vote for Carlton Currens for
president and Linda Welch for vice
president.

Joe Wright is SO director of student
affairs.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    
 
 
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
    
   
   
  
 
   
  
   
 
   
 
 
 
 
   
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
     
   
 

4—1‘IIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. April 21. 1976 _

F'—

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no Nhore Dr.
Don From Stilt I. Ale
217mm:
to a.m.—5 :30p.m Tuu. it?“ Set.
Thurday until 0:30
Closed My

 

 

[BMWEBHL’JEHBMW FURNITURE LIGHTING GIFTS

 
 

 

 

{1‘ ‘ mo; briefs

 

 

 

marimekko' J

UPPER DIVISION ELECTIVES
TAKE THEM AT HOME
THIS SUMMER.

BIO 403 — ECONOMIC BOTANY

Dr. P. S. Sabharwal

BIO 404 — GENETICS

Dr. Thomas Gray

ENG. 551 — AMERICAN
L'TERATURE Dr. Joseph Gardner

PSY 540 — INDUSTRIAL
PSYCHOLOGY'Dr. John Baker
“ME“ “M'” soc 436 — orvmm BEHAVIOR

FRAZEEHALLANDLOOK _ v S
OVER THE STUDY Dr. Harwun os

GUIDE FOR THESEORANYOTHER GEO 522 — GEOGRAPHY OF KY

COURSES. Dr. Wilford Bladen

 

 

One HOUR . Eng
DRY -
CLeanens

Chevy Chase Mirthland
Lexington Mann Turtland Mall
Crossroads Versaills Road
winctester Road East Ham
bastion-m

THURSDAY IS UK DAY!
All UK Students 8. Faculty Special Values!

 

 

 

State election officials
expect no new entries

FRANKFURT. KY ( AP )—State election officials said 'hiesday
they expect no additions to the six Democrats and three
Republicans already on the May 25 presidential primary ballot.

“We’ve got ’em all, but we’ve got to give everybody until the last
minute to reply because we nominated them,” said Secretary of
State Drexell Davis.

Terry Sanford, a Democrat, had until midnight Tuesday to
respond, buthe withdrew as a contender long ago.

Jimmy Carter was the last Democrat to send his $250 and
declaration papers after an invitation by the state Board of Elec-
tions almost two weeks ago.

Potential candidates must notify the state if they want to be on
Kentucky’s presidential primary ballot. The deadline is two weeks
from the time they acknowledge receipt of the state’s invitation.

The last to reply. if he wishes, would be Sen. Birch Bayh of In-
diana, a Democrat who has until midnight Thursday. Bayh has
withdrawn from active campaigning.

One of the six Democrats and one of the three Republicans to be
on the May 25 ballot was nominated by petition rather than in-
vnafion.

Communist increases

expected in Malaysia

KL'AIA LUM I’UR, Malaysia (APl—Inct‘eased attacks by
Communist guerrillas trying to topple the pro-Westem government
in Malaysia are expected following Communist admissions of a
split within the movement and fighting for control of territory.

Each faction will want to show that it is more revolutionary than
the other to attract recruits, officials and diplomats said

They did not consider the fighting this time a major threat. But
the government is sufficiently concerned about the Communists to
have launched a grass-roots campaign called "‘rukun tetangga”—
Malay for community self-reliance—to fight subversion by
monitoring every dwelling in this country of 12 million persons.

An estimated 3,000 guerrillas of the banned Malayan Communist
pa rty——MCP —operate in the country along with the splinter faction
believed to be about: Goo-strong. Most of them operate along the
Thai-Malay sia Jungle border. The splinter group is based in what is
known as the 2nd District.

Officials say there were about 400 Communist guerrillas in the
country in 1960 when Malaysia’s 12-year campaign against Com-
munist insurgents ended. Malaysia, a country of Malays, Chinese
and Indians, won its independence from Britain in 1957 and adopted '
a government in which political power is held by a parliament and

prime minister.

Supreme Court denies
local power in housing

\\‘.\SIII Mi'l‘th ( .\l') - Federal courts can order the government
to build subsidized low-rent housing in predominantly white
suburbs. the Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.

in an 8-0 decision on a Chicago case that has been in the courts:
for to years, the justices rejected government arguments that
court orders would unduly interfere with local authorities.

The decision touched on a current presidential campaign issue
stemming from former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter‘s remark he
could “see nothing wrong with ethnic purity being maintained" in
neighborhoods. He also said he would not permit discrimination.
He later apologized for using the words “ethnic purity.“

There was no immediate reaction to Tuesday‘s decision from the
presidential candidates.

The key question in the case was whether the court‘s 1974
decision that judges may not ordinarily order busing of pupils
across school district lines also applies to housing.

The court said it does not. Such a ruling, it said. would erect “an
arbitra 13' and mechanicalshield for those found to have engaged in
unconstitutional conduct." -

l'nda a federal law passed in 1974. HUD can contract directly
with private owners and developers for low-income housing. Local
governments have the right to comment on proposed projects. and
to require that they comply with zoning and land-use restrictions.

———K final——

 

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.campu s briefs

 

 

Health council
meets today

The annual meeting of the
Council on Education for Public
Health begins today in the Pat-
terson Office Tower and ends
Friday.

The council. sponsored by the
American Public Health
Association tAPHA) and the
Association of Schools of Public
Health (ASPH), is the official
accrediting body for public
health graduate schools
throughout the country.

During the meeting the council
will review recent accreditation
studies of four public health
graduate schools and will plan for
accreditation reviews for four
other schools to be conducted this
year.

Reserve room
to extend hours

The UK Margaret 1. King
Library Reserve Room will
extend its hours to facilitate
students studying for final
examinations.

The extra hours are effective
April 25. when the Reserve Room
will be open from 9 a.m.-2 a.m.
Hours on Monday through
Thursday, April 26-29. will be
from 8 a.m.-2 am. On April 30,
the Reserve Room will be open
from 8 am. to midnight and on
May 1, from 8 a.m.-9 p.m.

On May 2. the Reserve Room
will be open from 9 a.m.-2 am.
and on May 3-6. from 8 a.m.-2
a.m. Finalexam week is May 3-8.

Nine engineering
students honored

Nine students in the College of

Engineering were honored
recently at an annual awards
banquet.

The outstanding seniors and
the branch of engineering in
which they excelled were Lee
Partin. Nicholasville. chemical;
Doug Mynear. Carlisle.
agricultural; Roger Thoney.
Highland Heights. electrical;

 

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Randy Tackett. Virgie. civil;
Susan Lantz. Louisville.
meclmnical and M. G. Jarhomi.
Esfahn. Iran. metallurgical.

Panin also won the Henry
Mason Lutes Award presented to
the outstanding student in the
college.

Harold Roberts. Owensboro. an
electrical engineering junior.
was presented with the H. Alex
Romanowitz Award.

Randy 'l‘ackett received the
"Old Timers" Award presented
to the outstanding student in civil
enginee'ing.

Greg McNulty. Lexington. a
civil engineering graduate.
received the A. L. Chambers
Award.

Brad Patton. Fordsville, a
chemical engineering senior.
received the Omega Chi Epsilon
Award.

The individual achievement
awards are presented on behalf
of. or in memory of. patrons of
the College of Engineering who
usually are retired faculty or
alumni.

Classics program

to be held
Thursday

“The Classics and Early
America" is the title of a sym-
posium to be presented by the
Classics department and the
graduate school on Thursday.

The free program will begin at
2 p.m. in room 214 of the Student
Center when John W. Eadie of the
l’niversity of Michigan history
department will speak on "The
('olonists' Perception of Classical
Revolutionaries."

Susan l“. Wiltshire of the
Vanderbilt University classical
studies department. will speak
on "The Classical Correspon-

dence of Jefferson and Adams." '

at 3:30 p.m. in room 214 of the
Student Center. Coffee and
cook its will be served before her
speech.

Martin Snyder of the Duquesne
l'niversity classics department
will speak and show slides on
"The Classical Tradition in
American Art“ at 8 pm. in

auditorium E of the Classroom
iuilding.

        
       

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The program is cosponsored
by the American Philological
Association's Committee on
Classical Humanities in the
American Republic with the
assistance d funds from the
National Endowment for the
Humanities.

The program is open to all
interested persons.

We goofed

Because of incorrect in-
formation supplied the Kernel.

Bill Fowler. Arts and Science ‘

senatorial candidate‘s platform
was incorrect. lt should have
read:

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