Out In the cold “ 3
looks with a flare
Put away the shorts and sunglasses. The (N .
warm weather enioyed yesterday is gone. ' A librarians hand dwarfs it“; book iust . - .
It will be cloudy today With highs in the an example at M. l. Kings Special Collet ’
mid 305- lONQh' "‘0 5'0" will “WW tions. With an air of a sanctuary these
through because it’s scheduled to be dmrtments maintain a VOtle'y oi books
clear, but it will also be cold. The laws will papers and other printed matter worth
._. be in the up er teens to low 205. millions ol dollars See page 4 - '.
p
VOLLXXXIV NO- ll‘lhursday. February 25 1982 m:;:;eniutky le-ingion Kelllu(ky Thirtiepohiiom “My”. WWWUW, NM My. —‘—_ _W-_._,,_._. ,. ~ w , » . y
i . l l
“A Former grad student sues UK; ~-
sui c ar es iscrimination «—
“it“ .. ____._. ._____ ' ,._, , - , '5. 2 .
. «5 By JAMES EDWIN HARRIS $anmintlglie (affect 0‘ Dunlap S hhn- students, and made a B average in his ‘rectify' the alleged ‘deficiencies‘ “ ’3 1 '3‘ ‘J
“hummus,“ Editor him Iiith epartment. In denying coursework. Leinbach.c0ntacted last night,sald ‘~
& 5 th e Ogmltmuty to appeal at On Feb. 27, 1981, however, Dunlap the letter was written in accordance "f .
'- ., y y . ———"— 05" mee rigs, Dunlap alleged he received “an intimidating, threaten- with departmental policy. He refused ,"f‘
. - . g ,. was deprived his procedural and due ingand coercive letter" from Thomas t tf th 3 ’
\. . A former geography department process of law rights." R Le' ba h di t f ocommen ur er. ‘. ‘
, H. 2 ' graduate student filed a $1 million Dunlap, who entered the Univer- StudiesnThceletteli-eaccfusgd gmimfi Because of what the complaint call- i.
55:: , lawsuit Monday alleging the depart- SltY’S doctoral prog‘am in geography having sub-standard grades “as Sell ed Dunlap‘s “hyper-sensitive ‘ i "
» . ment in early 1981 forced him out of in Augmt, 1979' also accused 3mm as other nebulous and un- psychological susceptibility, caused ..
' ..' \ the program because Of a plinical and others 0f forcing Dunlap out of substantiated allegations." by negligence 0‘ Defendant Universi- 5‘ 5"
. -. tilt , ‘ handicap. _ the program through “concerted ‘3' ~ ~ - in causing the handicap." he if?
.3 meg,“ ' Clarke Dunlap, who filed the com- aux-$51", means." was unable to withstand the depart- 5 "
.; 3"!” plaint Monday in US. District Court Dunlap also accused the depart- ment’s intimidation, resulting in his 1’ >
till i. ”It m_1.exmgton, 81.50 has a $.15 mum“ ment of negligence in directing his -. resignation from the progam laSt -’ ‘
iris: l ‘ 31mm? “Sam‘lfuméersi‘lil‘ retum to study in 1980 after he was ' ' . 1 February or March. .. ’- ' '

' 3% “ii .. f.“ arges e mverSi y an “5 ’ stricken the earbef 'th ‘ ‘ 1 1‘1" ‘ ~
- ' a this dent Health Service Clinic with Barre’ syndrbme. 0” w‘ Gmna‘" 1 4:1 The complaint also said that after
“W - Q We nesiigenceinadministerinsa flu shot The complaint in Dunlap’s first Mao’s migration he “learned of

. ‘ . ._ ‘ " ~ . that .he alleged caused him to suffer suit, filed Dec. 15, 1980 in Fayette Cir- the discrimination had been illegally ;

c k ‘2 ' - , _‘ ““h- “serious and probably permanent in- cuit Court alleged “That defendant’s ., practiced against tum by the secret ,-

- - as“: ' I 4‘ .. ’ imam!“ Guillain Barre' syndrome agents did not warn the Plaintiff of faculty committee actions." j
. -. . . . .Wlth rpsultmg quadriparosis." the adverse effects from said drugs “ ‘ Dunlap subsequently reapplied to
m 0 -. l ' edDmthaflap Siro'tllday complaint charg- and medication, not providing Plain- s; the department on March 13, 1981. “ y' I .
. ,. or 1-... » . - . i .t from?“ anti the in the interaction necessary to . - . and to the Graduate school on March ..
.- ‘ 'g .. '1 x ..: ‘ Uhlvel‘Slly .conspiratorlall’y, allow him to give his informed con- c , s 30, 1981. His applications were both _ ,“ ;
. 1 _.._5 . '. __ . . recklessly. _Willfully and With sent to said injection." $1.: ‘ . rejected on May 22, 1981. A letter of ~ .
N I i . " V g; ‘ malevolent "It?” ’ ‘ ' convened Dunlap was stricken with Guillain .25" l ’- ' rejection written by Leinbach cited

' secret extra-judicial committees for Barre' syndrome in December 1979 ‘\‘\ " -' :- “mar 'nal rformance” in re‘ectin " V'

' l i the of sub'ecti Plaintiff - - - ' ’ is ' .1 15.41:;«53 8]. pe‘ . J g ' f

4.0. VANHOOfl/Kemel Sta“ purpose J "8 and was hOSPllallzed for 81$“ months . ‘3 ‘ 5... 1 its Dunlap 5 application. -i '
(Dunlap) to deprivation of his with the illness
Sing it again. Chuck phones” and immunities under the He reamed“ me University for CLARKE DUNLAP Brunn, when. reaClied last night. 1'

, _ .. ConstitutionoftheUnitedStatos." memo fall semester, carryingafull 59‘; 3f “’37“ d‘S.°“,ss‘“8 the .matle" .-

3K 5 Ehuck Verderber mouths a 'few lines of My Old Kentucky Theconiplaintcharged that depart- load Ofyaduatecoursesand teaching Leinbach's letter “concluded with M e UniverSitys legal office. He
ome to an amused Bo Lanter during ceremonies before last night 5 ment chairman Stanley Brunn and GEO 151 El . also refused further comment. ’ -
' ' ' ' .1 5, i ements 0‘ PhySICal the statement that the Defendant .-
game honoring the pair of graduating seniors. Lanter had plenty to department members held secret Geo aph H 'd h - ed . . . . . . . -

'l b taller lh me Is h r d a sea n-hi h ei hi . . 81' y- ‘9 531 {3 recelv all Department would dismiss Plaintiff Lawsuits present only one Side of a - L .-
Sml e o co e 90 a o, as e sco e so 9 9 meetings during 15m and 1931 to “outstandi , evaluation from ms . . . . , .
points in UK's 71-54 win over Mississippi State. Story, page 7. ng from the Program, if Plaintiff did not case. : ' ‘,
Legislat'on co Id save Un' 'ty b' b k
___________.. .He said the proposed decentraliza- jects, but (the Board of Trustees) is tho cause of many delays in Pill“ strict adherence to the state’s model by denying universities and other '
3313th SlellDEN lion would ehminatetheneedto setup would execute the contracts," he chasing. . procurement code for purchases_ public institutions the ability to make , g .=
Editor-mCluef meetings With state officialstosecure said,addinghewould recommendthe Right DOW. it takfi anywhere f0m Blanton said UK already follows “Overnight“ investments — large ,.

_-_ __ ._ ._____.__. approval for each phase of planning Trustees make the architect selection three weeks to sut months tocommete these procedures, however, so no mo. sum checking accounts into which the .5 , ,
for capital construction, eliminating processpublic. a purchase," said Blanton. “We can jor adjustments would berequired. University makes deposits on a daily y .-

A bill that could mean significant lengthy—andcostly—delays. Blanton said the legislation would cut that time In half under this “We already do over More“, own basis
savings for the University on capital As an example of the losses also mean considerable time savings system." purchasing," he said. “Under state The money is literally invested _-
construction by accelerating purchas- resulting from state-caused delays, in day-today purchasing operations He said although the University law, we‘re not authorized to make overnight, and the University can ,.- .
ing operatiom was scheduled for in- he cited the Primary Care Center, by eliminating the Frankfort “mid- sometimes saves money purchashing purchases, but the state can delegate make withdrawals at any time _ a ,1
noduction to the General Assembly under construct“ Opposite the UK dieman.” “trough the state because of price the responsibility, and ithas,” system Blanton compared toa "giant
yesterday. Medical Centersince lastyearl “Presently,weget allotments from breaks on mass orders, the decen- The billwouldauow the umversitia NOW account" He mommy over. '.
If passed, the bill, sponsored by “We were originally given tliestate,lxitoin'offidalreca'chare h'alized system would be no more to insure the mselvesa ainst fire and night deposits will earn the Universi-

Rep. Jody Richarcb, D-Bowling $12million for the Primary Care kept in Frankfort. Itnequlres hourly costly became it would allow the toma (106 which Blantgon said would ty almost $45 million in interest this

Green, could savetheUniversity “not Center. but in the meantime, con- communications with office people, University to take advantage of .. r u Increase" the Universit .5 year.

thoisands, but hundredsofthousands structi'on costs went up about 18 per- keyboard people. accounting people Specials and lOWfost offers bef°re 3,23, ye ‘1, also reaffirms the fight Under the O‘Daniel bills, he said, 1' =

of dollars” in capital construction cent a year, and as 8 result we lost . . . they expire. of the igndividual universities’ boards all idle money would be sent to the j

costs, said Jack Blanton, UK vice thOusands and thousands of square “We have people here who spend Blanton said the proposed system of trustees or regents m administer state. “While it‘s probably a good

president for bminess affairs. feet in {1001‘ space. We had to 00h' almost half M Wm“! trying to would increase the workload 0‘ his their own investment ro ams for idea for the state,itwould costusalot .51. .

- . . _ structamuch smaller building than it get the bureaucracies to mesh," he staff, bill he 1106 not believe an lh' universit funds rathgr gtlhan ar- ofincome." j"
. Blanton said the legislation would wasoriginallyintendedtobe.” said. “Time is money, and this creaseinpersonnelwillbenecoosary- t. . tin y. m {at . r m p Blanton said the idea for Richards'

speed up‘purchasing — under Which Blanton noted the bill also would legislation will cut back on the very, “1 don’t mind the extra work, as mm g m es e S p ogra ‘ bill came from a similar system at In- I, 5

construction serum fall —by allow allow the University to be more com- very cumbersome administration we long as we have the authority." he “We’ve been miles ahead of the diana University which has “worked .i .'

ing each university to independently petitiveinselecting projectarchitects prosentlyhavetogo through.” said.“The problem now is that we state for years and years in in excellently" ”,1", ‘,
administer its share 0f the state and construction companies, avoiding He said allowing the universities to don’t havetheauthority." vestments," said Blanton. Richards, contacted yesterday, 7'? ‘

allocation for higher education in- the favoritism that sometimes occurs make their own purchasoswillreduce The legislation would require the He said, however, that bills in» said he expects to obtain as many as t' 3.5:.

stead of waitingonapproval for each onstatelevels. some of the workload on the universities to hire accounting firms troducedtothe General Assembly by 50 cosponsors {or his bill, and 1,14,“,

expenditure from the state finance “(The state) would still have apt understaffed Finance Department, toaudit their purchasing accounts on Sen. Ed O'Daniel, DSpringfield. predicted it will be approved without

Department in Franfort. proval over capital comtruction pro- adding the oversized workload there a semiannual basis and mandate would endanger part of the program difficulty, 1‘ ‘ ‘.

Curse enrollment gowing .-

Students earn classroom credit b y watching tele ision “”

_————B PATTY E STLE Programs can also be viewed on Williams saidhehopes “to increase Mostare part-time students who work tary School, watches Teaching The working with gifted children M
V G R UK-TV or telecable of Lexington. the utilization of television courses in during the day and find it more conve- Gifted and Talented at her home. However one com laint Liddle said " ' 3 ‘.

Reporter - - ' p ' '
Besides TV, students can watch evemng class programs, off-campus nient to go home to their television H she had about TV com-$5 is that she ;

video tapesofprograms attheLearn- and independent study." sets rather than to drive to campus. I have. 50m? (“Well“) th?‘ I would like to meet for class more .l'i.‘

ing Center in the Scott Street Building This semester, for the first time, six he said. would conSider gifted, Uddle said. often than five times a semester. - ' .
Some students watchTVinstead of onweekdayS. of the 14 TV courses offered are , . . _ . “len'o discussing and excha in
studying. Some study while they Students inTV courses also meet in available to military personnel and They 93“ also 3° ‘0 the ”arm‘s .. She defines ”Sifted" .Chlldrhh as ideas.“JH)owever. there isn’t mg? 0: ii"? ‘._.‘

watch TV. And some watch TV to class with their instructors fourtosix others at Fort Knox. There are 45 Genter,like someUKemployees,dur- bright, talented, creative children portunity for that in the present set- .~. '7

study. times per semester for two hour ses- students enrolled. mg the" lunch “095’ to watch “deo who “of?“ up With new ways of doing up, she said. ~- 5' l
tindecideddunior David Vantreose, sions, in which they discuss, turn in Though courses are open to anyone, tapes. "““85- Liddle. like other students, said she ,' .

a film techmaan for the Royal Film homeworkand take tests. Williams said a large percentage of Virginia Liddle, a first grade Liddle said that through the TV feels the best part of taking a TV '

processtude tgng lab, leaner:-11 (if mt :85UI: hlgstid-eugtzrs aigwfacultgogembedr; the students are over 25 years old. teacher at Garden Springs Elemen- course she is learning new ways of course is its convenience. _~

s n earningcr ‘ ywa - w ' m tex , stu For the first time this fall, cor- 5.‘

ching television. guides and the number of tests to be respondence courses will be available -' 5' ,
“It’s a 800d Why to take a course," given. They are alsooncall anytime a 5 .- _1 .- to Kentuckians who can receive KET - r

Vantreesesaid.“lcan gowhenlwant student needs help. Their salary is .3;£55.,1.,.,:_.;,_j:,:_,__._ .. . on t,heirTVsets_Prospectjve students s: '

andldon't have tobeatalecture." lower than those teaching “regular" 5,155,321; ,gsgzl-fi'i? 31-1: 3315335 3' - - - ~333- ' -- ~ - - - , , can register and turn in homework . ' 5'
Focus On Society is his first televi- courses,however. 1.5253? if q q . i ' -' through the mail and take exams at " .

slon course, and he said he plans to Millard Allen, director of the even- 712-1552;; 2:23? I : Cm’ Q - (. b, 9 / supervised testing centers near their ' ..

takemore. ing class program, said the salaries iiilffifiégi: I F - : a--. l r___‘ ‘- 1’“ 7 / - {/5}. (1’4 . homes. ,‘
Vantreese said he likes being able for TV course imtructors are “ap- g;,;_;;;;§g;§ ' “j A i [:3— ‘~ L Williams said TV courses are ‘

topace himselfmndsincehecan view proximately 15 to 20 percent less" 35533;; [11% g ‘4‘ 77‘ ,~( becoming more popular. “We can ex- 1 - _ .

the 30 required half-hour programs than for regular part-time faculty. :§;;:,,i;i;;;; 353g ‘ \' pect growth during the coming

when he wants to, he is able to work “(University Extension) Dean gfii§53;§:§;- §§i§§ A years." f

ahead. (Stephen) Langston is working 5352i" . we}. (Le-LQ- I The number of students has grown ‘ ~ i
TV courses were first broadcast 25 toward increasing the salaries," he gjfif" 3 {EL ,‘ * - "~ «A from 50in the Spring semester of imi :

years ago on commercial telewsion said. . f; 33% ~51 \ l9 ' 7% ‘ \ to 385 this semester, Williams said. I‘

earlyinthemomlngthroughSun Rise Nofflet D. William, media educa- ;; .33. .5; J ‘ \ - She said she expects 500 students for ‘ 5'

Universitylnthenortheast. lion director, said there is very little §;;;j.§; , . 1 j .5 i the Fall semester-M1982. ’ -
Since 1974, UKhubeenoffering ac- difference between classroom andTV i3}: j r _ _ ‘ .‘i‘; 7 «N , L H - , The most popular course, Williams

credited courses on the Appalachian courses. He said they demand the 555;: it] ,_ A} 7. . 1‘ 7 J . said,iscomputer science. ‘1 .

Community Service network, a same levels of effort and re- gift gggg ' \ Though it depends on the in- .

- mm mm “3“ "ii the Wet" and ii” cot M "r , "r ~ - and». ionic stiies- rum -'~

“m“ “mm" “mm" "°" “"‘i' “M said “my Mn“ '“m “'1'“

m wt 1‘ cm offered “Seventy t0 seventy-le wt of 3:325:51:3:L:3‘:'3:E'E:E:i:il31~tiZ..§‘;EIfi-II "5’2 . I" z" T731. .;:'.E‘E':-».L'....',.. -. . . 5 ' - q . I television“ and save WV” time

thoughUK’Ievailngclaupi-ogram. the coin-sea (xi a college campus can gii§§i§2§z§§§i§s;., ~ ‘ ‘ and money in unmportation by not
Coin-Ia include Understanding betaught using telarlsion." havlngtobeoncampus. a '

Human Behavior (Psychology 100N), Exceptions may be couna lnvolv- ‘ :' " '\ Students interested in TV courses 5

Coemoc (Elementary Astronomy incl-battery experiments. Williams g3;gggiggg;gggggggggggggiggggfgf.15., _ ll." all can get more information from the

INN) and Family Portrait (The In- said he advocate till: the “mdi- . I Office of Media Education or the 0f-

dlvldual, Marriage and Family tiomi approach" of coins ”eh“ m ' I ll” °' “W" Cl“ mm -

h ' ‘ p " ‘ ’ ‘