xt70vt1gmm2j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70vt1gmm2j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-04-06 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 06, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 06, 1978 1978 1978-04-06 2020 true xt70vt1gmm2j section xt70vt1gmm2j Notranslatlonneodod
Professor to be published. in Russian magazine

By GREGG FIELDS
Copy [idler

If the Soviet Union eva- destroys
theUniedStates, atleast at of Dr.
-Jim Brennan' 8 will be
That’s became Brennan, of
K's math departmers, is soon to
have an article ed by the V.
A. Steklov I in Ien'lig'ed,
U S S. R.
Although many American
educators sell articles in foreign
countries, very few are published

Volume LXIX. Number 130
Thursday, April 6, I978

Russia. What makes Brennan’ 3
article unique Is that he wrote it in
Russian himself, although he only
began studying the Ianginge three
years ago.

Neccesity led Brennan to learn
Russian. “iwas doin research in an
area that req me to read
Russian," he said. “I found that I
couldn’t do it just by WM words
up in a die ' .’

He eniolled in . Boris Sorokin's
first semester Russian course. When
that was finished he took another
course.

According to Sorokin, it's II'IIBIIII
for someone to the skill
neoesary to write an article in
Russian after just one yearof formal
training. “You have to be dedcated
to do something like this," he said.
“But Jim Brennan ves it can be
duie.,Students th' Russian is so
hard to learn It’s not hard. ”

Well, probably not for Sorokin.
He' 5 a nativeborn Russian.

Prior to learning the langge,
Bremai had met several vret
mathematicians while on a working
vacation in Leningrad in 1974. He

theI became acqininted with the
journal he’ll soon be published ii.
”Russian journals are kind of
different from American ones, " he
said. “When I returned to the United
States I thwght maybe the library
might be interested in getting the
journal. So I wrote a letter to the
editor and asked him how much a
subscription would be. He wrote
back and said he didn't know how
much the magazinecost, btl he’d be
glad to send us all the back Issues to
see if we liked it. ”
In January, 1978, Brennan was

an independent student n

invited to submit an article to the
magazine. “I had worked on a
'nllllbel' of problems that had been
worked on by Soviet
mathematicians," Brennan said in
referent: to the invitation. The topic
of the paper unsolved
mathematical Iproblems. The title:
The lntegrabilt of the Derivative
of a Conformal Mapping.

“It' s not exactly the kind of thing
you’d read unless you had some
professional knowlede 'he said

Preparing the artic e in Russian,
Brennan said was not as hard as he

Kerr) 2]

Senate Council approves
dentistry faculty shifts

By DEBBIE MCDANIEL
Kernel Staff Writer

The University ‘Senate Council
unanimously apiroved the College
of Dentistry’s intradepartmental
pasonnd transfer yesterday after
learning that all faculty involved
“appeared favorable” to the
shuffling.

The proposal transfers six dental
auxiliary personnel from the
restorative deitistry department,
which is composed of 18 persons, to
the community dentistry depart-
ment. After the move, both
departments will have 12 members.

The council also acted on old
busines that was held over from
last week’s meeting. At that
meeting, psychology professor Dr.
Jesse Harris asked for a Senate
Council recommendation that a'
special faculty committee be

created to oversee and interpret the
University bulge.

“The major focus (of the faculty
budget committee) will be on
tracking the changes in categories
from year to year on a percentage-
wise basis,” said Harris last week.

Yesterday, Senate Council
Chairman Pail Oberst said Ad-
inin'stration Vice President Don
Clapp warned him that ad-
min 'strative interns often work for a
whole year before fully un-
derstanding the budget. Clapp also
told Oberst that a misting faculty
conunittee wouldn’t have enough
time to fully grasp the complex
budget.

The Council voted to place the
proposal on the University Semte
agench as a non—action discussion
item, and Oberst said copies of the
report and proposal could be made
available at the April to meeting.

In other bisiness, the Council:

V sent Undergraduate Studies
Dean John Stemenson’s proposal
concerning the grading policy of
undergraduate practicum courses to
the Special Teaching Program
Committee:

.g__returned Graduate School
Dean Wimberly Royster’s proposal
for change in the Graduate Council’s
composition to his office for
clarification.

./ returned another proposal to
Royster that would give graduate
faculty members the right to
recommend dropping graduate
students who are performing poorly.
The Council reqmsted that the

. proposal be rewritten for editing and

clarification.

I’ held over .until next week a
proposal from the Graduate Council
for a rules change, involving a
second bachelor’s or master’s

digree.

Freshman composition
workshops offered again

By STEVE MASSEY
Kernel Reporter

Experimental workshop classes
initiated last semester by the UK
Freshman English Department in 25
of the 90 sectiors in Freshman
Composition were successful and
will be offered again in the fall,
according to Freshman English
Director Ken Davis.

The experimental classes were
offered after Davis had the
workshop’s format app'oved and
funded by UK’s Undergraduate
Studies office through a UK Summer
Improvement Teaching Grant

Davis said the classes, which are
being ised by other collegs and
universities across the nation,
helped to serve two primary func-
tiom.

First of all, the new classes were
seen as an alternative to the so-
called traditional appoach, which
Davis broadly defines as “reading
from one or two books, discussion of

today

assignments done mainly out of
class.

Secondly, the workshq; sections
emphasized writing in class with
immediate criticism levied at that
writing. Said Davis, “The premise
beh'nd the workshop format is that
people learn to write best by writing

material and a series of graded
and receiving immediate feedback.
So, in general, workshop classes
spent most of the time writing in
class and receiving immediate
feedback.”

(‘ontinued on back page

Bunny hunted at UK

By BETSY PEARCE
Copy Editor

Is there a woman in Lexington
with ii $25,000 body? Playboy
magazine is in town to find out.

A team of three staffers arrived in
Lexington Monday in search of the
January 1979 Playmate who will
grace the centerfold of the
magazine's 25th anniversary
edition. In addition, the woman
selected for the spread will receive

$25,000 for her efforts, as well as

other playmate privileges such as
traveling and public appearances.

Why Lexington?

“We’ve always had good response
in the South, although we’ve never
positioned ourselves in Kentucky,”-
said Janice Moses, assistant
photography editor for Playboy As
of yesterday, dozens of applicants
had contacted the agents, while
many more are anticipated

Moses is one of three Playboy
representatives at the Hyatt
Regency and will be conducting
interviews until Saturday; maybe
longer depending on the number of
applicants.

continued on back page

thought it would be -with one
exception. “Trying to type it in
ROSSIBII on an American typewriter
was a disaster. I finally jmt wrote it
by hand as neatly as I could ”

Before he sent it off he gave it to
Sorokin for proofreadin “I found
hardly any mistakes at a ," said the
Russian professor.

Being published in the Soviet
Union doesn't appear to have
changed certain asic American
attitudes of Brennan s. “I won ‘t get

paid for this," he said, in true
capitalistic fashion

. University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

Kennedy’s child

Theatre arts sophomore Tommi (‘heuvront
vigorously portrays a radical anti-war protestor

in the UK Theatre production about the 605.

Kennedy‘s Children. The play was held in the
Music Lounge of the Fine Arts Building.

 

 

inside

WILDCATS TAKE DOUBLEHEADER FROM
LOUISVILLE. The road to turning this season around is still
untrodden. See Page 5.

A l-ORME R PRE SIDE NT AND BOARD MEMBER of the
lexington Humane Society has been fined 3500 upon his
second conviction' In 10 years on cruelty to animals charge.

Charles J Wade 58 denied neglecting horses on his 620-
acre farm duriig the winter.

Hank Davis, executive director of the humane society, took
out a summons March 2 saying Wade was starving livestock
on his farm. Davis testified he visited the farm Feb 24 and
found some 25 horses “all' In various stages of starvation."

The rib cages and spinal columns of some horses could be
seen while others had skin hanging loose, Davis said. He
added there was no water in the barn and that the horses
were licking smw for moisture.

state

NINE (‘OMMUNITIES WERE NAMED ALL-KENTUCKY
(‘ITIES at a state Chamber of Commerce luncheon Monday
in Louisville.

The winners were Ashland, Bardstown, Carlisle,
Covington, Elizabethtown, Hartford, Henderson, Richmond
and Shelbyville.

The cities are judged on numerous factors such as in-
dustrial development, advances in medical and other ser-
vices, recreation opportunities and comprehensive planning.

Elizabethtown received a special Presidential Citation
Award this year.

nation

A TOP OFFICIAL OI" THE UNITED MINE WORKERS
UNION said Wednesday he will personally investigate a coal
mine accident that claimed five lives Tuesday.

“Based on preliminary information that we have received,
it is inconceivable that an accident of this nature could have
occurred," UMWA Secretary-Treasurer Willard A.
Esselstyn said in Washington.

Three miners and two would-be rescuers died, apparently
overcome by carbon monoxide, 280 feet underground in a
new mine being dug for the Clinchfield Coal Co. near this far
southwest Virginia community.

A company spokesman said the tragedy took place when a
group of miners presumably broke into a minedout chamber
filled with what miners call “black damp“ _. air that con-
tains no oxygen.

world

ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER MENACHEM BEGIN
“should be more flexible" in peace negotiations, President
Anwar Sadat said Wednesday. He added that Defeme
Minister Ezer Weizman, seen as Begin‘s growing political
rival. is welcome to return to Cairo "whenever there are new
ideas."

weather

"LANDING III-3.\('II MIGHT HAVE TO SIIUT DOWN if
the weather man is r'ght about partly cloudy skies, showers

and thunderstorms today Although highs will be around 70.
and chances of prmipiiation are 50 percent, it looks like
anything can lizipirn

t'onipird from .\I' and National Weather Service dispatches.

 

 

 

  

 

Kémdi'iel

editorials 8: comments

Steve liallinger
Editor in Chief

Dick Gabriel
Managing Editor

Thomas Clark
Assistant Managing Editor

Charles Main
Editorial Editor

Nell Fields
Assistant Arts 0
Entertainment Editor

David llibbilis
Sports Editor

Bob Slauble
' Assistant Sports Editor

Walter 1w
Arts 1 Entertainment Editor

Gregg Fielt
Richard lie-Donald
Jim McNair
Mike Memor-
Betsy Pearce
Copy Editors

David O'Neil
Photo Manager

' JesnneWehna
Photo Supervisor

 

 

SG’s trustee objection
raises major questions

Student Govemment’s recent objection to the
appointment of William B. Terry to the Board of
Trustees raises some good questions about the
new appointee’s interests, and about how his

selection was made.

In a resolution that was passed Monday, the
Student Senate noted that Terry’s position as
board chairman of Blue Grass Coca-Cola Co. was
a conflict of interest because of contracts bet-
ween that firm and the University.

More importantly, the Senate calls into
question the political maneuvering in the state
legislature this year that was needed to un-
dermine a law which made such conflicts of
interest illegal. Terry, who missed Tuesday’s
Board meeting because of illness, still has not
been sworn in yet and has refused to comment on

the situation.

The Senate’s resolution, sponsored by Arts &
Sciences Senator Jim Lobb and student Madison
Simpson, also observed that Coca-Cola was a
major lobbyist against the state legislature’s
“bottle bill.” The appointment of the company’s
chief officer, the resolution accurately con-
cluds, shows a marked lack of concern for the
opinions of many UK students, probably a
majority, who supported the bill which would

have helped clean up the state.

When Gov. Julian Carroll appointed Terry to
the Board late last year, the potential conflict
apparently went unnoticed. Carroll evidently

decided that it would be better to change an old
law than to finda new man, and tried to get a bill
pushed through that would throw out the conflict
safeguard completely.

Fortunately, the legislative committee that

ding.

saw that little horror decided not to accept it.
Instead, a bill was settled on requiring that “no
trustee or regart having interest in any contract
with a state university (may serve on the
university’s Board of Trustees) unless such
(interest) has been subject to competitive bid-

With the new bill, it’s unlikely that Terry will .
ever have a conflict of interest in a UK busines
matter. And after all the attention his ap-
pointment has received, it’s doubtful that there
will ever be sinister motions to run Coke through

all campus water machines, or fill swimming

pools with carbonated water. In any case, Coca-
Cola’s contractual obligations measure only in a
few thousand tbllars, which is trivial by UK
bisiness standards. .

But the process by which his appointment was
secured is, to say the least, questionable. Any
time the govema- and the state legislature send
a bill through for the benefit of one person, there
is nothing to be proud of. Granted the old policy

of “no conflict, direct or indirect,” was un-

workable and unrealistic, but violations and
potential violations shouldn’t just be regulated
out of existence.

 

 

 

Tedious trekking

Florida fallacy is means
to an imperatii/e end

I have, of late, been intrigued by
the phenomenon which Marcel
Crottin so aptly titled the Florida
Fallacy. It was first mentioned in
his controva'sial book, Secondary
American Myths and Their Am-
bient Tautology. He continued to
speculate about this fallacy
throughort his career, culminating
in the famous third chapter of The
Cosmology of Condominium
Living.

Crottin was quite taken by his
theory. He devoted nearly as much
study to it as his “The Breasts as
the New God" concept, an idea
which brought him to a prominent
position in his field where everyone
couldn’t help but notice his
trag'cally tiny feet. Not wanting to
fall prey to an ad homlnen
viewpoint, I would haveto say that
Crottin was close to the truth, or at
least he correlated a group of
pizzling sociological data into a
lucrative hypothesis. Also, his feet
were quite sufficient; he didn’t
often fall forward when he walked.

Certainly a srirprise to no one,
Crottin chose to spend the last few
years is his life in Florida. He
pirclnsed a pleasant little duplex
in Del Ray. There he resided with
his ova-sized shoes and a girl not
quite a third his age who bore an
uncanny resemblance to God. I
understand they were a fine pair
inched. Crottin died in 1969 of
complications stemming from sun
porsoning.

Many have labelled him a
hurnorless sensationalistic dilet-
tante whose work could not stand
up to the ravages of time. They
said the same of Wilbll' Futz and
noonecan deny his profound effect
on Western thought. But, enough
background

The Florida Fallacy is easy to
understand. Anyone who has made
the tedious trek down to America's
phallus hm an intuitive grasp of it.
Why would anyone take their
holiday there?

Its crowded and dirty beaches,
high rates with low class, choked
with retired accountants, inun-
dated with discos and Holiday Inns
and unbearably flat. True, it may

 

be as American as Charmin or
gunracks, but it is undeniably dull,
dull, dull. The claim that one wants
to slip down south to “get away
from it all” is nolonger valid. How
can one escape the pressures of
home when the entire Eastern and
Midwestern United States follows
you? The only things which Florida
has over Poughkeepsie are lethal
levels of sunshine, an ocean, and
thousands of desperate young
people far from home. That may
sound appealing, but at $60 a night
plus food and drugs, it soon wears
thin. If you want to hang out with
nerrotic profligates, go Greek and
let daddy foot the bill.

True, there are some beautiful
spots in Florida, but no one goes
there except the AAA, skin
magazine photographers, and
sharks.

Of course, to many, Florida is
only a means to an end — the Tan.
It is essential that one return from
the South with bronzed skin. If one
does not, the trip is a failure. No
one is envious, and you don’t get to
wear a bronze badge of leisure. The
effect of the Tan is awesome, ever
when you start to peel, leaving
little flakes of yourself everywhere
you go. However, it is a bittersweet
victory became the Tan soon
fades, and when the summer
comes, all of your friends are no
longer pallid and s‘ckly. All you
have left are memories and
damaged skin.

Well, I thought there was as tight
a case against America's
vacationland as the one against
Roman Polanski. Last week,
however,the entire thing collasped.
Perusing a recent copy of

Barometer, a meterological
journal, I found an article which
dealt with the atmospheric effects
of sunbathing, an effect which
Crottin and I neva' considered.
According to a ten-year study by
the National Weather Service, it is
imperative that vacationers make
the migration to the Sun Belt. The
heat radiated from their bodies
when they return to colder climes

is responsible for the charges of

spring and summer. If the process
were to cease, so would the
seasonal changes

The reason for the severity of our
last two winters is due to a sup-
pressed ecorromy—people have
been travelling less. They have not
brought back the precious heat to
warm up their home. An America

on the move is a predctable
America.

Well, the life work of a great
man, Marcel Crottin, has come to
naight. I still support ht neo-
polytheism, howeva', andI would
like to meet his concubine to
discuss this perplexing subject.

I, myself, can no longe- jmtify
my anti-Florida stance. I can not
bear the thought of another set of
winters like the last two. You can
bet I’ll pack off to Lauderdale next
year to do my part to maintain the
balance of the temperate zones and
I hope you will, too.

John Cooke is an English junior
who hasn't been to Florida In 12
years. Look for him next spring hr
Del Ray where he will be combing
the beach In search of God.

 

 

 

 

that

 

Letters to the Editor

 

 

Greek bias

I always enjoyed bein a Gredr
I’ve had a lot of fun, mgt a lot of
fieople, and acquired several
'felon friends. It is an experience
would never trade for
anything.

Yet, t ere is one aspect of Greek
life at UK thatlde iseand regretl
always believe that racial
discrimination, with its malice and
social in' tices, was on the decline.
But evi ently that is_ not the case
here

potential

I have twice frag
fraternity membe for mer
racial reasons. If they ha been
white instead it black they would
have made it. In these situations the
bigotry and racial prejudice was
clearly evident in the ignorant at-
titudes of my friends and fellow
Greeks.

Thus I am truly ashamed of being
a Greek as far as this articular
uestion is concerned. I ope that

is discrimination will eventually
cease and the lily-white fraternities
at UK will shed their stupid racial
snobbery and act like educated
gentlemen instead of the poor white
igoted sharecroppers they
emulate.

T. Louis Sams
A & S senior

With Evans

I quite a ree with Professor
Evans that onors should retain a
handful of professors dedicated
solely to the welfare of their
program. This gives Honors a
cohaence, a character and an esprit
de corps other programs do not

possess.

J .A. Thompson
Department of History

Fans' carnage

I am shocked, a palled,
disgusted - but mostly a amed —
'of my miva'sity’s “fan conduct”
after our well-earned win of the
NCAA championship.

It is really sad that some students
have man ed to besmirch the
University 0 Kentucky’s repuation
as a re ectable, sportsminded
schod. e have now gone down in
sports annals as "redneck fans” who
managed to marl an airport and
damage the ked cars and lawns
of Lexingtomans.

The irony in it all is that Joe Hall
and his team have the image of
bein cool, calm, confident etc. I
sim y cannot lmagirre any of them
going mad after a arne. I also
suspect that some of c more rabid
fans are those who cried out for
Hall's blood every time one of our
men fouled or missed, or when we
lost to Alabama and LSU.

My husband and I could not spare
the time or money to play camp
followers to the team, bit we were
with than in spirit, win or lose.
However, since we labor uncbr the
delusion that a univa'sity’s primary

urpose is education, not sports, we
did not allow the thrill of victory to
interfere with our jobs as students
and teachers.

Althou we all did not rip phones
from wa s, slash tires, tear down
plants, bang cars, etc., we are all to
some extent responsible for the
damage. We have failed to honor a
fine coach and his splendd team in
the manner they deserve

For those of you whose drunken
(or lucid) sprees resulted in
damage, I suggest that you
reevaluate your morals and row

Fraternities and soronties

u .
should discipline their offendng,

members. Roommates and friends
can speak frankly to their 'grn'lty
corrrrades.
Concerning the “holiday” Wed-
nesday — I was not at the infamous
rall , bit I hope that I would
me ha more sense than to believe
an athletic director’s off-thecuff
remark. Dr. Sin etary is the only
one who can ma e such decBions,
and I a aud his refusal to in-
tirnidat y a maniacal crowd. I do
sympathize with those of you who
based your final gullibility on the
radio announcement, bit since there
were rnidterms scheduled all week,
you were crazy to hit the booze
before the weekend
I realize that some of you are
innocart, but so were those
Lexin ton residents who lost trees,
cars, 5 eep and peace of mind during

your two-night ramp e No one
proh bited you from celaghrating, but

you didn’t have to damage private
and public pro a'ty.

Our basketba l team has class and
is undeniably number one, bit some
of you fans are real losers.

Mary Kathryn Tri
Graduate T.A.
Department of English

For report

I am writing in regard to the ar-
ticle printed Monday, Apr. 3, con

cernirrg the Honors Review Com-
mittee Report. I think several people
incorrectly feel that the in-
vestigation was not sufficiently
publicized, that Honors personnel
and students had no prior chance to
make their feelings known, and that
the Committee acted ‘vindctively
toward the resignation of Dr. Robert
Evans.

After the Review Committee
began its study, it actively solicited
suggestions from anyone comected
with the Honors program. An article
appeared in the Kernel on Feb. 1
asking for recommendations andor
criticisms; the Committee placed
the letters of those who responded on
file.

In addition, the Honors Program
Student Advisory Committee
(HPSAC) was interviewed collec-
tivdy. and several students and
faculty talked personally to the
Review Committee.

Obviously, the Conunittee made
efforts to use this input when it
compiled the report. Decision were
also based on information gathered
from Honors files and from ob-
serving the present system of
operation. The recommended

changs could be made over a period
of years, to case any strain that
might occur.

Those who criticize the report
have been generous in their praise of
the program and faculty. Do they
not think that the Honors Program is
flexible enough to not only survive
changes, but to grow and benefit
from them? Do they want the
program to stagnate? Possible
strain might have been eased or
alleviated by Dr. Evans, his his
'opinion of the report is evident from
the letter concerning his resignation
sent to studarts and alumni.“ {9,

Since t emfinal rep w
publicizedhseveral persogrg hail}:
protested the recommendations,
both in writing and in person. It is
possible that they may exert enough
influence to sway the final decision.
But outside pressures, such as the
bequest from Dr. Dan Crabb, should
have no bearing on the decision.

I feel the Committee did its best to
prepare an impartial report, and its
suggestions should be awarded the

same dispassionate consideration by
the Honors program members.

Sarah A. Sharp
A 8: 8 Senior

Light needed

The other night after finishing a
night exam, I left the Commerce
Building to walk to my car. I was
very much surprised and shocked at
the lack of lighting around campus. I
was quite frightened and I’m sure
that there are a number of women at
the University who feel the same
way Ido. Especially after hearing of
the rapes that have been occurring
at Eastern, Kentucky University.

Doesn’t the administration realize
that the safety of the women here is
much more important than saving a
few dollars on energy?

Also, the weather is getting a lot
warmer now, and it scares me to
think of all the crazy men who have
been cooped up this winter who will
feel the need to get their ya—ya’s out.

I hope that some thought and
consideration will be given to this
problem.

Kris Kerwin
Economics senior

Sorry reader

I am sorry to see that the Kernel
would publish a letter as slanchrous
and insulting as appeared in the Apr.

3 edition under the heading “Faggot
Five?".

Vernon R. Wiehe
College of Social Professions

Edkor's Note - It is the editorial
policy of the Kernel to print any and
all letters submitted for “letters to
The Editor." providhg they are not
libelous or defamatory.

 

 

  

 

CHICAGO —0ne of the
hidtbn cornequnnees of basic
economic changes in the
Unked States ha been the
deaeasing significance of
race, and, therefore, the
growing importance of class
in determining blacks’
chances in life. ~

In our advanced industrial
society, access to higher-
payins jobs is mammal)!

based on educational criteria.
and nowhere are the im-
plicatins it this cluange for
(Afferent human experienws
seen uruore clearly than in the
black community.

In other words, a con-
sequence of the rapid growth
of the corporate and
Governmert sectors has been
the gradual development of a
segmented labor market that

*

LOW COST MORTGAGE?

"*"I'Honran‘oefi mewhomcbw ANo M‘ooenA'rE
.anEmKEni‘suomus .xorustcHAs; A HOME

Kittqmortgage' money is '
available through loan orig-
inators to applicants with
acceptable credit who fall
under the following guide-
lines:

0 To quality, a single per-
son may earn no more
than . . . $15,000 per year.

0 A married couple, no
children-$16,000 per year.

0 Single/married with one
child ........ $16,750.

Single/married with two
children . . . .. . $17,500.

0 Single/married with
three children . . $18,250.

O Single/married with four
children ....... $19,000.

Applicants must submit
earnings for the previous
year (preferably a Form
1040) and year-to-date
earnings if they are:

a. Self-employed

b. Work on Commission
c. Subject to lay-offs
d. Seasonal workers

Income shall include:

a. The gross amount of
wages and salaries, com-
missions, and overtime pay
and bonuses it guaranteed
or considered to be on a
regular, sontinuing basis.

1 b. Tminatinoomnfrom ,. .
operation of a business or
profession or from the rent-
al of real estate.

c. Social security bene-
fits, VA benefits (exclud-
ing educational), public
assistance payments, and
payments in lieu of earn-
ings, such as unemploy-
ment and disability comp-
ensation.

(1. Child support and
alimony—must be verified.
Please include copy of de-
cree and documentation of
stability, e.g., copies of
cancelled checks for the
past year or records from
“Friend of the Court," if
Support is paid through
the court.

e. Interest and divi-
dends.

f. if a company car is
furnished for personal use,
include $1,200 per year
as income.

The following items will
not be counted as income:

- a. VA educational ben-
efits.

b. Foster child care pay-
ments.

c. Children over 18 who
live at home and work-but
will not be counted as a
dependent unless a full-time
student.

 

Beginning with 1978 Series A
allocation of Bond Proceeds

Bond issue and subsequent
from said issue income re-

quirements for residents of some Eastern Kentucky

counties" have been changed

0 To quality, a single per-
son may earn no more
than . . . $16,500 per year.

O A married couple, no
children-$17,500 per year.

O Single/married with one
child . . . . . . . . . $18,250.

‘THESE EASTERN

as follows:

0 Single/married with two
children ...... $19,000.
O Single/married. . . three
children ....... $19,750.
0 Single/married with four
children . . . . . .$20.500.

KENTUCKY COUNTIES: Adair, Bell,

Broathltt, Boyd,Carter,Casey,Clay,Cilnton, Cumberland, Floyd,

Green, Greonup, Harlan, Elilo

tt, Pike, Johnson, Magottln,

Martin, Knott, Loo. Leslie, Lntchor, Owsley, Perry, Wolfe,
Jackson, Knox, Laurel, Rockcastie, Whitley, McCreary, Pulaski,

Russell. Taylor, Wayne, and Lawr

For a list of loan origination
in yourorea,enilorwrite:

Kentucky Housing

(€33.

D

F. Lynn Luatlen. Executive Director

Kentucky Housing Corporation

1231 Louusvulle Rood

Frankfort, Kentucky 40601

Phone 5025647630

COCO.

Erianger Office
ISI 7 Butte Highway
Evianqer, Kentucky 410l8
phone 606/342 6010
60
Hazard Office
325 High Street
Hazard. Kentucky 6170]
Phone 606/439 1366

Louisvulie 0"th

uoe Kentucky Towers

5th and Walnut Streets
louusvnue, Kentucky 40202
Phone 502/583 4 I 76

currently provides
significantly different job
oppurtunities for different
segments of the black

, population.

0n the one hand, the poorly
trained and educationally
limited blacks of the inner
city, among them the growing
number of black teenagers
and young adults, see their
job prospects increasingly
confined to the low-wage
sector, their unemployment
rates rising to record leves
(which remain high despite
swings in the business cycle),
their participation rates in
the labor force declining,
their movement out of
poverty slowing, and their
welfare roles expanding.

On the other hand, trained
and educated blacks,
especially the younger ones
who have recently entered
the labor market, are ex-
periencing unprecedented job
oppuurtunities that are at least
comparable to those of whites
with equivalent
qualifications.

The improved job situation
for the tnore priveleged
blacks is related both to the
expansions of salaried white
collar positions in the cor-
porate and Government
sectors and to the pressures
of state affirmativeaction
programs.

In view of these develop-
tnents, we need to reexamine
current explanations of racial

inequality in ecommic life.
'l‘heplightof inner city blacks
cannot be understood by
exclusively focusing on rac‘nl
discrimination. for in a vay
real sense, the current
problems of poor blacks are
substantially related to
fundamental changes in the
system of production.

A history of discrimination
and oppression created a
huge flack untbrclass, and
the technological and
econounic revolutions
threaten to solidify its
position in society. Moreover,
the rapid economic im-
provement of the tnore
privileged blacks would be
difficult to explain if one held
to the view that the
traditional foruns of racial
segregation and
discrimination still
characterized the labor
market in American in-
dustries.

The major problem for poor
blacks in their search for
higher-paying jobs is that our
society is na organized to
deal with the impersonal
barriers imposed by struc-
tural changes in the economy.

With the passage of equal-
ernploytnent legislation and
the authorization of af-
firmativeaction programs,
the state has helped to clear
the path for tnore priveleged
blacks who have the requisite
training and education to
enter the tnainstrearn of

 

 

’t’His is the Life

 

 

WHITEWAY LAUNDRIES

WELCOME ALL U.K.
STUDENTS AND FACULTY

2 LOCATIONS

Chevy Chase Coin Laundry

312 S. Ashland Ave.

lMuiteway Coin Laundry

398Wa|ler Ave.

6:00 AM 4 lOiOO PM

r; 1'! :H I 4hr”

7 darn permek .

Clean, modern equipment
Courteous Attendants

 

 

7“

l—‘——‘L___Y——_l
UK THEATRE

presents
Actors Theatre of louisville

un
THE LION IN WINTER
April, 6 a 7
8 pm.
Guignol Theatre

Reservations 258-2680

 

—/\\__/'- w

WE'RE (Al/6H7 mm mm Mum MfPu‘HAND/Sf

. icing
“E In:

”I! Vu'hllnd 0' '0

American occuptiorus.

However, such Govern-
mental programs do not deal
with the structural barriers
confronting members of the
black mderclass, who have
been effectively screened out
of corporate and Government
industries b