xt705q4rn33r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt705q4rn33r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-06-25 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, June 25, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 25, 1981 1981 1981-06-25 2020 true xt705q4rn33r section xt705q4rn33r i J
VOL LXXXIV. N0-03 er 2 University of Kentucky .'
Thursday, June 25, 1981 an independent student newspaper Lexington, Kemuck‘ . :2 1 '
f M. ,' I.
,1: p“ a , s. ‘ I ‘ . e , ,."|
3w, x E i Stngletary says, Bare bones nothing else i v,
e ! Board approves budget
' ”a U . I > By CHRIS ASH for any new type of programs," up about $800“ this next fiscal f ,
it , , ' Editor-inchief hcsald year. ’-
V ' ' Faculty and suiffcost-of-living Benchmark institutions alrt- '
The University Board of and merit raises on the ch- the ulllVel‘SlthS in nclghliorilig .. .7
' ‘ ‘ Trustees approved a $301.6 ington campus will avcrdgc nine states whose sizes and pi'ogl'allis v .'
t , ‘ million budget Tuesday for the percent Faculty in the UK (‘om— arc comparable to those at l‘lx _, ‘. '
1981432 fiscal year‘ following munity College System will Singletary agreed Wltll Fit _ .
” President ()tis Singletary's ex- average nine and one~half por- zgcrald's cstilniltc. saying. "-.
\\ planation that much of the 11 cent costof—l'iving increases with "Aftcr you act OlllhlS budget. we -- "f
f , « percent increase over last fiscal the new budget which was will have gone halfway closmg .- " '
“ , year will be used for faculty and adOpted without discussion or the gap between ourselves and ‘. i.
,2 ‘ staff salaries at the expense of dissent by the trustees, what we see as our competition : f
’ .,, _ otherareas. ()ther funds gained through "The important thing l0r .VOU «-
i “I hope the faculty and staff the budget increase will be used to remember is that this target
' will understand that all the other to meet inflationary pressures figure is not to match their best -'
f , ’ problems we had built into it - no on operational expenses and fix- rate that‘s the median of these .-
. ’ new equipment,no new positions ed costs, such as maintenance, other institutions. We‘ve always -
k a — have been generated out of utilities and increased Social set our target rate to be com; ~. *'
. ’ ' . our very serious desire to do security and health insurance petitive at the median level," he ' .
l. ‘ ‘ everything we can to improve obligations. said. , l -
' ‘ their salary problem," . _ ln allocating funds for salary _ '
' “ ‘ Singletary said. “This budget is 'Peter Fitzgerald, PSSOCWC increases, the UniverSity le' ‘ '
~ ‘ asalary budget. "We preSident 0f administration ministration has dealt with the 7
"w. \ ' .. , . . for planning and budget. em- needfor higher starting salaries
, 1- i . i . . . .. M, ,_ lm-very pleased W‘th ”“5 phas'lzed the difference between Fitzgerald said the L'nlverSlt} ,
’. ‘ budget in terms of what it does to the average faculty salaries at has set a goal of having salaries ‘3 - , _:
. in}; 3'_ “5 m the salary average. “'5 UKzindthose at the University's 95 percent competitive with the , , ’
I bare bones '— there's nothing benchmark institutions. which local labor market to reduce . '
By DAVID COOPER/Kernel Staff else in it. There‘s no money in it Fitzgerald estimated to be $1,600 losses of personnel to the privatc 2 ‘ _
UK President Otis Singletary refers toa graph during Tuesday '5 for cxpandi ng 01‘ improving PTO' higher. He said that. under the sector_ -‘ '
_ Boardof Trustees meeting. grams. There‘s “0 money i" it new budget. "We expect to catch Continued on page 1 ~ _ I}
S 0 o .
torm damage estunated at $1 0,000 as cleanup continues . ,
By LINI KADABA $4,000tocontents, said Durbin. No one was wFallen antennae at the Service- University has over 200 buildings. so it "
Staff Writer injured. Building, Keeneland Hall and Blanding does take quitea lot of timei"Wessels said i .1,
Other damage tocampus includes: Tower. all University buildings and property will 1 _ " ,
University cleanup crews are still cop- .zA blownoff roof at the main building wBroken windows at the University he resurveyed for damage. i 0,
ing with the aftermath of Sunday’s of the Albert B. Chandler Medical Center. Hospital and Taylor Building. Crews began cleanup efforts at 2:45 Sun- ' v'
thunderstorms, said James Wessels, coor- .aDamaged roofs at the Medical Center wGutter and other minor damages to day afternoon, Wessels said, and worked "
dinator of design, construction and Annex 2, Fine Arts Building, Keeneland McVey, Agriculture Science-North untilap.m.placing temporary roofs on the 1 j ,
physical plant. Hall and Boyd Hall. Building andtheSeaton Building. Reynolds Building and Med Center, and if"
“The single, most concentrated damage “Numerots fallen trees throughout the “We‘re still looking for damage to win- .‘ .
was at Reynolds Building l,"Wessels said. University area. dows and gutters," said Wessels. “The Continued On pagi‘ti ,
High wintb caused the roof, undergoing . ’, .,
construction, to be blown off and damage I .-
adjacent buildings on South Broadway. SA 1- h l b - f d ,
wees some the damage a $70,000. estab lS es 0 u summer assmtance un --
He estimated total damages, including the a .
cleanuplabor,at$100,000fornow. 11f" ~
Triangle Fraternity, located at 251 E. By BRUCE WALTERS The Senate created the fund at its Junel semester to approximately $17,000 per . ~ '
Maxwell St., suffered “fairly extensive Reporter meeting, according to Scott Hisle, a semester,Clark continued. This was made i; ,
(fire) damage to the building,” said Bat- member of the SRC committee, for the possible by a 51 increase per semester in 7‘9 V
talion Chief Ralph Durbin of the Lexington The Student Association has established purpose of “helping the greatest number student activity fees Clark estimated that ,' t‘,‘ ’1
Fire Department.Chief Durbin said the a $500 Summer Student Organization of students, and student organizations.“ the money wouldbedeposited in the fund‘s ,
causeof the fireisstill under investigation Assistance Fund to aid student organiza- Clark said the authorization for the fund account in late September or early 0c. '2 ‘
andhasnot been determined. tions during the summer. came last spring, when the University tober, but that the incoming SA ad- i ,.‘~ '
The Umversitydoe‘ notownmebui'ding The Senate Review Committee controls Board of Trustees approved a one-year ministration could budget the monev ac; 7 1'.
or tbeland and therefore is not responsible the fund and decides which organizations trial for the fund, which was proposed by cordingly, beginning in early Septomnor, ‘ 3 3
for repairingthedamage. Wessels said. will receive grants, said Bobby Clark, SA then-SA President Brad Sturgeon. A ‘ d' t C! k . t' ‘- '
However, Assistant Dean of Students vice president. Upon recommendation of a Money from the fund is available for all t' c?” 1318 5) ar ‘ {organihza (ion: wan; f r) j ,
Michael Palm said it is believed that a tree five-member SRC committee, the Interim registered campus student organizations. mi 0 ta?“ mm“? Lo"; (“UH m3: .' l , -‘" ',
fell on power lines and pulled the electrical Senate has the power to overrule the SRC However, Clark said the money cannot be :3": lg) app lfcart'ionss ”(lit 0 ‘5‘ ° “9' 0" m0 I"; 1.,
wiring out of the fraternity house wall, decision on whether to grant money to an used for the purpose of charity. “Because f'rSt oorro e t" ent at"; 9'} he ‘ “,I‘;
causing the power to go out. When Ken- organization, Clark said at the June 22 of the limited hints, we (the interim ““3” "33"“ "‘WS‘a‘e d9 “5“" ‘ e ‘-.
tucky Utilities restored power, the surge of meeting of the Interim Senate. Senate) did not feel that it was appropriate money and the benefits to St" em‘" ; " .
electricity caused the circuit box to “Because the Senate Review Commit- for the money tobeused in this way, since So far, SA has allocated $150 from the f. _ 1’ T
overheat and settheinterior wallsonfire, tee has most of the expertise in dealing the charities are usually more able to fund to the local student chapter of the a ‘, 7 ..
hesaid. ~ with this type of thing, we (the Senate) will seem-e funds through other channels," American Society Of Interior Designers fOr V .
Damage is estimated at several thou- rarely overrule their decision. It is an Clark said. an October symposium for interior .. , ' ,
sand dollars t0 the building and $3.000 to unisualcase,“ Clark said. The fund will be increased in the fall designers and architects. ’.
r - ' ‘ -. . ‘ . \ _ . , L . iv 2 "

 I i
e d ”'0" a I s & cums ASH SCOTT ROBINSON , LESLIE DAVID COOPER
‘ Editor-in-chief Managing Editor MICHELSON Sports Editor
" -‘L - ’ Arts Editor
CO m me nts mxmutyxndMammmw-Ion. mmmmhfihlndmflo- ANNE CHARLES DAVID COYLE
' .. . ,, ‘_ 3;: “Jam“. 3.31:3." mmrmrmmfl Copy Editor Photo Editor
’ ’ '11 h d ' d ° (1 '
. 8 l - 82 budget 1 ustrates c ange attltu es In e ucatlon
. Tuesday’s meeting of the University Board of Trustees was sur- L .4 5“ =. —L~t.m
prising, not for what actually happened but what did not occur. 3 x I, ‘ I) ' new H842) 322%] 3:
_ , The $301.6 million University budget adopted Tuesday by the d“): was :11" 1;, 509:. gr
Board of Trustees contained no surprises in content. The 11 percent in! °” ”‘6 ll“ \\ rm."
g I increase in the new budget was mostly devoted to raising faculty 4 v ’ \
' and staff salaries as part of an ongoing attempt to lessen the dif- (
' . ference between salaries at UK and at its benchmark institutions. {
, This is vital — the relative quality (or, in this case, quantity would - Jp“
- . " be more appropriate) of salaries paid at this University is the 1
. primary factor which determines the success of attempts to hire .. ___.__.__.._.- ,_._
. - proven faculty members and also of the efforts made to keep in- "'_"""'——
. r . structors now at the University. I. ‘
. The surprising element of the meeting was discussion of the pro-
. posed budget by board members —— there was none. ‘ ,
After President Otis Singletary, Vice President for Administra— -
” tion Donald Clapp and Vice President for the Med Center Peter xflg;
, . Bosomworth elaborated on UK’s financial position -— comparisons Q . ‘
with other public universities in the state and throughout the i ‘
, . . . Southeast in regards to funding and faculty salaries, not one board
- ’ member expressed an Opinion, questioned any of the administra- /
' . , _ tion’s statements or did anything except voice the customary ‘
.‘ T “aye.” BARN Buoorr cum! 1- ovum 'o D A
, Areas that suffered in the budget are, among others, building and GRAD. STUDENT; $0 THEY GOTA GUY FROM THE C1055 3m 05-
new programs. Both are non-existent at the University of Kentucky
' . > , , and will be for some time. “This is a bare bones budget,” President
. ,‘ = , ()tis Singletary told the trustees and representatives from the news University’s revenue from student fees is expected to rise 2.8 per-
media gathered on the 18th floor of Patterson Office Tower. That cent, thatis it; these fees must notberaised substantially, if at all. '
tells the story. Politicians, business, education, students —— the very special in-
' . . ' ' State appropriations amount to about 49 percent of the new terests represented on the Board of Trustees —— should be well
. . budget, but this must be explained. The increase in appropriations aware that higher education has reached the breaking point in this
i. , . . ' for the upcoming fiscal year is devoured, in fact is less, than the in- area.
' ' . crease in money allocated for salaries. If any interested parties look Any tuition increase in the near future will force many students -
5 . ' " to state government as the savior of UK’s finances, they are not only racial minorities, not just those of the lower-class — to
. _ ' . . mistaken — the past years of budget shortfalls are taking their toll. change their plans for post-secondary education. In most of these .
. ' ' As preregistered students found when looking at their bills for the cases, this may be not merely postponements, but cancellations of
' _ . upcoming semester, tuition has been increased again. Although the their hopes for self-improvement through education.
' P t ' ° e on ac
-' rOposal O permlt brlbery abroad not has d f t
. By JAMES GRIFFIN As Reagan promised, they intend to take embodied in the new law they would likely The Reagan administration hears
. ' ‘ _ Contributing Columnist us back to a simpler time, like whe n the never know what was going on in, say, the loudest the shouts and pleas of lobbyists
" ‘ .' l federal government kept its nose out of middle management of the foreign branch they have welcomed into the White House
I - . “I have found." said the prince on his other people’s businesses. Specifically, ofamultinational corporation. hallways, and they hear them say, in their
, . return to Imlac, “a man who can teach all “Foreign Corrupt Practices," or the art of In fact, if a corporation is privately own- own three-pieced pin-stripe language, that
’- ~ ' j that is necessary to be known; who, from winning friends and influencing people in ed, the law’s accounting provisions do not American companies are losing business
. ‘ ‘ the unshaken throne of rational fortitude, business. apply. The SEC has no authority over cor- to competitors who will bribe, and that the
. looks down on the scenes of life changing There was a time, they will tell you, porations without public stockholders. record-keeping requirements are too str-
. ' beneath him. He speaks, and attention when there weren‘t so many forms to fill ingent, toocostly.
, - * . watches his lips. He reasons, and comic out, and government men didn’t show up These whimpers are not based in fact,
' - ' tion closes his periods. This man shall be asking questions about precisely how a however. Arecent article in The New York
1 my future guide; lWill learn his doctrines, business contributed to the balance of The SEC announced last Monday, June Times concluded that “testimony and
' and imitate his life." trade. 22, the censure of Arthur Andersen and studies have shown few documented ex-
“Be not too hasty," said Imlac,“to trust In 1977, though, things changed. They Company. one of the nation’s largest ac- amplesof lost trade.”
' _ ' or to admire the teachers of morality; they were no longer simple. counting firms, for numerous alleged defi- John R, Shad, the new chairman of the
‘ . ‘ discourse like angels, but they live like Congress enacted the Foreign Corrupt ciencies in audits of two multinational SEC, announced June 15th that key provi- '
* melt" Practices Act, a law designed to outlaw the public corporatiom: ~18th Inc. and Geon sions of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
: . ' Samuel Johnson, Rasselas immoral act of bribery and the unethical Industries (now GI Export Corporation). are in fora change,
" . ' : accounting procedures that inevitably go And in 1976 Merck and Company charg- They are extensive changes, but only a
- - ‘ . with it. No public company may engage in ed Arthur Andersen and Company with few need be listed here. One proposes to
‘ ' " “Foreign Corrupt Practices,” and an even failing to follow up on information about leave to companies the luxury of deciding
I , greater sin is not reporting “Corrupt Prac- foreign payments made by some 0‘ Mel‘Ck to increase “internal controls" based on
, , , . The latest discourse from the “angels" tices" (suchaclean title fora dirty act) to and Company’s officials, despite their self-assessment of whether the
, . ' calls for easing antibribery restrictions on the Securities and Exchange Commission. knowledge that some of the transactions “economic benefits will ‘significantly’ ex-
. ' '. 3 American companies doing business The SEC is involved because, ironically, were agairst the law. ceedthe costs."
_ overseas, where bribery is not uniformly the cries of corporate stockholders, the These incidents, others that were Shad also suggested SEC enforcement
V. ' " frowned upon. real owners of the companies involved, disclosed in congressional hearings and records be exempt from the Freedom of
, . ‘ ‘ The angels, of course, are Ronald called out for the 1977 law. The owners courtrooms around the country, and, Information Act, a move Senator William
. . . Reagan’s California Angels (not the wanted to assert some control over the doubtless, others that have and never will Proxmire termed “an extraordinary re-
‘ baseball team), the men in charge of moral direction of their companies and be made public, are clearly jtst the tipof
- : America‘s rebirth and spiritual revival. without the strict accounting procedures theiceberg. Contllluedonlnl03 '

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. June 25. 1981-3 '4 ' ‘

F 'l l f d t' “n public schools overdue ' ' '
ByJOllN F. CROSBY girls under 16." The average age for the ment on just what Christian values are. ly taking full responsibility for the total . - ,
Director of Family Studies first sexual experience is 16. Whenever someone or some group wants personal psychosocial-sexual education of _ g

, The Guttmacher Institute says that the to oppose sonmething. as does the so- its own. But “what ought to he" hasn't .‘
. 1981. John F. Crosby/ overwhelming majority of Americans called “Moral Majority,“ the favorite worked. In fact the track record is ‘
Kentucky Kernel favor sex education intheschools, but only technique is to paintapicture of something miserable. Even the SO-caued “good old

four in 10 teenage students get any kind of in a bad light and then righteomly con- days of the past“ weren't what we are led

We appear to be living in a society filled sex education in schools, and just three in demn those who have any affinity to the to believe. The historian Demos states that . ' "
with paradox and irony. 10 are taught anything about birth control. maligned category. Thus, the claim that in one New England town in 1720, one-third - ' .

A Philadelphia-based study revealed the People oppose the teaching of sexual sex education and the family life education to one-half of the brides were pregnant on , ' ‘ . . '_ ~
bedroom to be the most dangerous single development,personality development, in- movement are the work of “humanists” their wedding day. . . _ '
scene inasmuch as more homocides occur terpersonal relationships, marital and and “unbelievers" is a modern day ver- The modern day family life education -
there than any other single location. family development for a variety of sion of McCarthyism: guilt by innuendo and personal development emphases in

An eight year nationwide study by reasons. Many claim it is an invasion of and guilt by association. the public school are long overdue. “What ’. ' ‘
Strauss indicated that one out of every six “domestic privacy,“ stating that it is the The irony and the paradox is then that ought to be“ must be tempered with “what ' '
couples experience some act of violence responsibility of the family to teach these the so-called pro-family, anti-sex educa- is.“
between husband and wife each year. Most things. Of course it is! Hardly anyone tion, anti-birth control people are so con- “What is“ is that there are hundreds of - .
of these acts were classified as minor. Six would disagree. cerned about everybody else’s morality thousands of very young people who will ,
out of every 100 reported were classified as But that‘s not the issue. The issue is who that they seek to prevent sound educa- grow up in guilt, ignorance and poverty '- .
major. is going todo the education in the seven out tional programs from taking hold. Their because they learned their so-called facts ‘ - - '

Fourteen out of every 100 children exv 0t 10 families or domestic units wherein alternative is to do nothing. And it has on the streets and in the back alleys; And '. . _
perience attacks serious enough so as tobe young people are taught nothing about been the doing of nothing that partially ac~ some of these are from “good" homes ‘ ‘ - . .

classified as child abuse. Six and one-half birth control? counts for the sad state of affairs describ- where sex is such a taboo that the word is : ‘ ‘ p
million children per year are victims of A second major objection on the part of ed in the opening paragraphs. . never mentioned! ‘ ‘ "
child abuse. those opposing the teaching of sexual Paradoxically, our schools teach What are the Opponents of sex education * ,

According to the study of the Alan Gutt- development are those who claim that by science, math, physics, chemistry, afraid of? Instead of pitching in and ' ' »
macher Imtitute,by age 19, four out of five teaching this kind of curriculum we are en- language, arts, music and all kinds of helping with the tremendous challenge ' .
males and two out of three females have couragingourvery young people to experi- highly important material related to beforeusall,their energy is invested in op— ‘
had sexual intercourse. Fifty-one percent ment. Suffice it to say that there is not a future careers: Yet, where is it written posing — judging—tearing down —throw—
of the sexually active girls said they did single peice of empirical research to bear that education in health, human develop- ing innuendos and brick—bats. self- ‘
not think they could get pregnant. Almost this out. This argument is fallacious in- ment, including sexual development, righteously demonstrating their imagined . ‘. '
two-thirds of teenage girls who were sex- asmuch as education about one's body and human sexuality, interpersonal develop- moral superiority, ' .
ually active did not use any form of con- one's physical and psychological develop- ment, marital and family development are The ethical imperative to teach human ' - '
traception orusediterratically. ment is the very best means of discourag- not part of the total educational respon- sexuality is born of the mental, physical, . ' ‘ >

One fourth of American teenage girls, ing random and/or premature experimen- sibilityof public institutions of learning? economical and emotional suffering of '
according to the Surgeon General’s report tation. It remains one of the great ironies of our those who, for whatever reason, become '
for 1979, “have had at least one pregancy A third major objection has to do with age that we can go to the moon employing sexually involved while still in a state of 1 - '
by age 19. Every year about one million values. Certain groups of people think any our technological know-how, but we still misinformation and/or ignorance. It is . . ' . - .
adolescents under the age of 19 become value other than their own is wrong or bad have touble forming meaningful intimate likewise born of the supreme folly of ex-
pregnant, including perhaps 300,000 under or sinful. While these people supposedly relationships: We can orbit the earth via pecting responsible decision making on the ‘ ' 4 . j

15—which represents an annual rateof 10 know that the schools cannot teach 50- space shjgtle, but we still think good mar- part of the younger generation while
percent of all teenage girls. Two—thirds of called “Christian "values, they then claim riages, s‘und families and healthy sex- withholding the very means of their ac- . . ‘ ' ' .
them are unmarried. that the values taught in public schools are uality “just come naturally." quiring the essential knowledge and ' ' - ,

Birthrates for teenagers aged 16 to 19 “humanistic." Suffice it to say that We confuse “what ought to be“ with perspectives necessary for personsible , ‘ .‘
are declining, but they are increasing for historically there has never been agree- “What is." What ought tobe is every fami- moral decisions. ' " ' . - ‘

' ' e _____——_—__—_____—._—————-——-—— ' , . .
Bribery proposal isn’t ‘ . .
founded on the facts M4 . .
continued from page 2 / f ,7 ‘ —- k .

‘ quest from an agency devoted to full ’ ‘ « ‘ -
disclosure." The effect would be to deny f 5 xx ‘ ' , .
information to the very people, corporate ‘, ' I .
stockholders, that called for the Foreign ‘ “Bi ‘ f . . . . ,,
Corru t Practices Act in the first lace. ' ‘ 1 ‘ ‘

P P T Y em “ ). . . '4

“Morality,“ philosophized Immanuel 5A5 A j l—\ A ' '
Kant, “is not properly the doctrinehowwe . B ‘ - ’ l 3 , . : ‘
should make ourselves happy, but how we ', “A I - ’ ' ’
should become worthy of happiness.” l .7 , /'” _ y '

That is precisely wherethediscussion on | V k ‘ .13; i. 6 E x/ m ' 4 '
bribery has crossed the line: throughout I V) 1}}? ' ,2 X‘ “ I '
all the commnttee meetings attended, com- I' . k R 035: f“ .~ . g . \) / ‘ 9‘ 4 f , 1 .

- promises forged and legislative language \ w. J My,“ up 4 , d 1 i , ‘ ._ J:— . -
proposed. the goal has been to make " —-7£ h’h “9:. M h. " We . r . ,
businessmen "happy" with fulfilling their “gum ,‘B’fifgps 2&3“. ‘ ~* 4 \_ 5‘." r. 4 f .

. . . H g . l l ‘1‘ .,‘_' . . I ‘ ,‘ .
social obligations. u ”fl". i =7 - . .

And so Nestle continues to peddle infant , /__/ 1 ‘alffij'l'fi § ' , y‘ ’
formula to Third World countries. Arms \ ; / '4’ - flair?" Q \L ‘ ‘ -
suppliers still keep pay sheiks and monar- ,‘gl‘w‘m I,“ as; 5’ng § \ v . -‘
chs stiff kickbacks from foreign munitions “‘ .135). 2:?) ~ ~ l . . ~ .
sales. Companies have not stopped the ‘ , , ' lit / _‘ ' " .
foreign marketing of drugs, insecticides ’ ' ’ , » f
and even cancerous sleepwear for W ' " - y ‘ .' ‘ -' '
Children, although, and probably because, (77/ um ' I . - ‘
they were banned for use in the United ' , _ . l ‘
States. , .

It will go on as long as the money flows l . ‘
that way and the government refuses to \ j ’ 1 \a\ . I
turn off the tap. Itwillgoonaslongasself— - . \_ ‘ ' - ,
proclaimed angels live like men when the “‘~ ‘ . ‘is‘,% if. , o p“ p - ‘ C“ ‘/' ’ i ' ' '.
camera is turned, only to don their halos ng‘g‘) . «A»; 53‘; {55:60. ’ y ‘y ‘ ‘ i ’
once again when the national attention is , , ‘ ~‘ .. , , ,
turnedtheirway. ' ' .' >5 '.

 4-THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. June 25, 198]
.- Summary of Increases
liSt ' i1 Expenditure
l'llStCBS en in S ence
‘ ' General Fund (millions)
. and approve 81-82 budget somes $16.9
Inflation Costs .6
Current Expenses .2
LibragsBooks
, _ . Fixed ts 1.0
Continued from from P889 Siderably below those of the other state Utlhtg Rate Increases ,1
. "Part of our problem is we’re not only universities in the southeastern United New uildings 3.8 .
lruining students, we’re training a lot of States," Singletary said. “And until that is Equipment and Renovation
, people out here for jobs who, as soon as understood in this state. that puts a slight- Income Supplements
:hey get really good, the people in town. ly different emphasis on what you can do." Agriculture Federal Programs 1.6
; hire them away from us.” The president comoared the advantage Continuigducation .3
- Singletary spoke of the relatively low realized by other schools because of UK’s Summer sions .5
. amount of funding UK receives per student relatively low funding to the competitions Evening Classes ,3
' as compared to other schools in the involved in business. “I don‘t know of a Research .6
. , southeast, described by the president as single business that isn‘t concerned with Scholarship .2
" lhc poorest region of the country. what its competition does That’s our com- Total General Fund 18-5
, “The resources made available in this petion in terms of faculty, in terms of try‘ Hospital 9.1
- » ‘ state to operate this University are con- ing to secure the research support." Auxtliaréas 3.2
. ~ ' ' Restric 1.7
. Summary 0‘ Increases Source: UK Budget Office
~ Income .
' (millions) anfg-qglgfc'l‘mmep‘ _ Starts Tomorrow! '
. , , , State Appropriation $15.9 ‘ ' ' -—-——-—-—-—
' - Student Fees 2-8 I WA You
.r Federal 1-4 ' ~ BILL
' , Fund Balances 13365 .;=,:....::=.;.:.:‘:i::é . ,N Y
' " , - Total General Fund . 15-:- fl . _ p
- . ’ ‘ Hospital g; < a W w ‘3‘
, Auxiliaries - " i” ”(are
’ ‘ , ' Restricted 1.7 - '?:- fix“
I ' . . 1 I Source: UK Budget Office Please Call Theatre For Time‘s And- Other
. , . .~ _ Information. V
. .-. j ' ,. Coliseum tonight at 803 south 1
LI uors t
_ q Now open . Ram an ,
. ' ' ‘ llllll Kentucky Arcade W
' ' I at 7-02. Cup .
‘ '- BUSCI'I 1 2Pk $3.99 Rose and Euclid ¢ .,
. ' g , NR'sbattles Coliseum Plaza 5 O ‘5’ ,
- "i Strohs 1 2pk $3.99 Featuring the my.” a
' ‘ ' "R" "°"'°' newest V
' ‘ O
, . . , . . B d | , Eveny Week
. 22 we ser 8 49 Games 'n “‘9 USA MONDAY: 25‘ Draft, 30‘ Hotdogs ,
. ‘ ‘ CC “5 WW“ S e —-—————— TUESDAY: so Vodka Drinks
p. . , . Open at 10 (I‘m. WEDNESDAY: Happy Hour All Nlte on
' ’ ’ Natural ng t P] f | THYlégljDESngne d r’s Cho'c
' 0 Cl ew on US . : n e ' e
24 cans Wm“ $8.49 Y FRIDAY: Happy Hour 'til 9
‘ . ' . Comma Attnactlons
‘ p ~ Tuesday, June 30: new yeaus eve panty.
c - 1 Dress the Part, Free Champagne at Mid-
‘ .. ‘ . night!
’ . ' . Open 9-12 Mon-thur. Thursday, July 9: hospital nlte. Wear any
_ , 9-! Fri and Sat. -----*----- hospital garb, get a drink on the house!
' - p - ‘ I I I Wednesday, July 15: Sexy Socks Contest. A
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‘ Icoiissou\m.“w‘ “33‘ IcOtlstUMK:R(-ADF 3.? I competitions! Prizes & Special Awards!
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. .-' . . 379 Rose Sireet(in Coliseum Plaza) I thtlt-nl Mum-y ‘ lldt-ul Money I
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