xt73bk16q16n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73bk16q16n/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-10-26 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, October 26, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 26, 1978 1978 1978-10-26 2020 true xt73bk16q16n section xt73bk16q16n vol. LXXI. No. so -
Thurshy, October 26. I978

From Sound Company

Owners can get
lost equipment

By BRIDGET McFARLAND
Staff Writer

Stereo owners who left their
equipment at the now-closed
Kentucky Sound Company for repairs
will eventually be able to retrieve their
equipment.

The Sound Company‘s two stores in
Louisville and one in Lexington (on
South Limestone Street across from
UK) went out of business last month.
allegedly leaving no instructions as to
where customers could pick up- stereo
equipment left at the stores for repairs.

According to an article in the Oct.
20 Louisville Courier-Journal. a
lawsuit was filed last week in Jefferson
County Circuit Court charging the
Sound Company with violating the
Kentucky Consumer Protection Act.

The lawsuit. which was jointly filed
by the Jefferson County common-
wealth‘s attorney and the state
attorney general, charges the Sound
Company with “unfair, false.
misleading and deceptive practices”
under the consumer act.

According to the Courier-Journal
article. the suit has been assigned to
Judge Charles M. Leibson. It asks that
he issue an injunction ordering the
firm not to do business in Kentucky
until all the property received for
repairs and any allegedly missing
equipment has been returned. It also
asks for civil penalties of up to $2000
for each violation.

(A lawsuit gives only one side of a
case.)

Mark Dobbins. assistant attorney

general. told The Kernel that at a
hearing next Monday. the judge will
be asked to appoint a receiver to take
control of the stereo equipment.

“We are sort of waiting on some
determination from the judge. There
are no immediate plans for
distribution.“ Dobbins said.

There are an estimated 53 pieces of
stereo equipment at the Louisville
stores and 30 at the Lexington store.
Dobbins said he was not sure if there
was any equipment at the Sound
Company‘s Lexington warehouse.

Robert Bullock. assistant deputy
attorney general. said the Sound
Company is considered to be an
“orphan company“ because no one is
claiming responsibility for it.

“There is a dispute over who
actually owns the company. The
original owners claim they sold the
company to a company in Cleveland.
The Cleveland company claims they
never bought it.“ Bullock said.

Bullock said the process agent (the
person who received the lawsuit
summons) is “nobody I can tell
you...he’s not in the state."

The Kentucky secretary of state‘s
corporation clerk’s office said the
process agent is John Donnelly. The
address they gave for Donnelly is the
same as the Sound Company’s
Lexington warehouse l0|0
Nandino Blvd.

Anyone who believes they may have
equipment at the Sound Company
stores should contact Mark Dobbins
at the Consumer Protection Division‘s
toll-free number. l-800-372-2960.

Kernel won’t join

the toga hype parade

a'y RICHARD McDONALD

News Editor

(Editor‘s note: The writer directs the
land’s news operation.)

Let‘s get this straight once and for
all. There will be no stories about or
pictures of toga parties in the Kernel
this year.

Don‘t misunderstand. I think
Animal House is a very funny movie
— saw it twice as a matter of fact. But
too many publications are carrying
stories about “the latest craze
sweeping the nation‘s ca'mpuses."

Time did it. Newsweek did it three
times. The Associated Press and
United Press International have done
it repeatedly; for God‘s sake. even the
New York Times and The Chronicle of
Higher Education have done it.

Ordinarily. there wouldn't be any
problems with this. After all. it is of
some interest that hundreds of
thousands of otherwise sane young
adults are going to parties wearing
bedspreads and shouting “Toga!
Togal" And if all this were a

spontaneous reaction to a low budget.
unadvertised movie. it would be a
great story.

But that‘s the point. It‘s not a
spontaneous reaction. Universial
Studios. the movie's distributor. has a
$3 million-plus budget devoted to

 

comment '

promoting Animal House. primarily
by sponsoring toga parties on college
campuses.

And the movie only cost $2.7
million to make.

 

Universal has been making offers to
campus groups. primarily fraternities
and soroities. to help “coordinate and
promote” toga parties. according to a
studio spokesman quoted in the Oct. 2
issue of Newsweek. The company is

“helping" a UK fraternity. Lambda
Chi Alpha. have a toga party this
weekend. About $500 worth of help is
forthcoming. according to one
member of thc‘fraternity.

Continued on page to

 

DARK PiCTURE

EN TUCKY

21‘

an independent student newspaper '

Nigt

21

moves

University of Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

By TOM MORAN/Kernel Staff

A lone motorist wends his way through deserted downtown Lexington. The view is from the Harrison Avenue Viaduct. looking west on Vine Street.

—today

agreed yesterday.

two-day meeting.

inflation.

 

 

local

THE PROBLEM OF ENFORCING laws prohibiting liquor sales to
minors is bigger than enforcement officials can cope with. participants at the
National Conference of State Liquor Administrators. Southern Region.

Illegal sales ofalcoholic beverages to minors was one oftbc major topics of
discussion as representatives of eight Southern states gathered here for the

state

THE STATE BOARD FOR ELEMENTARY and Secondary Education
has decided not to take any immediate legal action against an Arkansas firm
that had failed to meet two deadlines for the delivery of school buses.

The Board voted yesterday to direct its staff to continue negotiations with
Ward Industries of Conway. Ark. for the delivery of 374 buses that were
originally due in Kentucky by Aug. l.

nation

FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD CHAIRMAN (3. William Miller called
for the nation to support President Carter‘santi-infiation program last night
and promised his agency would take “a prudent role" in tightening credit.

In a speech to the Aluminum Association. Miller said that Carter has
committed himself to a balanced. concerted and sustained program to fight

THE SENATE ETHICS COMMITTEE declared yesterday that it has
found no evidence that Sen. Edward Brooke. R-Mass.. was responsible for
withholding or altering documents sought by the panel in its inquiry into his

finances.

The committee‘s statement. after I" days of hearings. followed demands
from Brooke that the panel pass judgement on charges that his lawyers tried
to delay the investigation as Richard J. Wertheimcr. former special counsel

to the committee. has alleged.

PRESIDENT CARTER. unwilling to give up hope of completing a
strategic arms limitations treaty by the cnd of the year. is planning to send
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance to Geneva next month for talks with Soviet

Foreign Minister Andrei (iromyko.

world -

POPE JOHN PAl'I. II. making his first important executive decision.
yesterday reinstated French Cardinal .lean Villot “for an initial period"in the

key post of Vatican secretary of state.

The temporary appointment signaled that the pontiff may be planning a
shake-up of the Vatican ('uria.the administration of the Roman Catholic

Church. later on.

weather

OCCASIONAI. SHO“ ERS and thunderstorms. diminishing tonight.
Highs in the low 60's and lows tonight in the upper 40‘s.

 

Travel Committee can help dream come true

by DALE MORTON
Staff Writer

Imagine laying in the brilliant
sunshine aboard a cruise ship in the
middle of .the Caribbean. splashing
down the Colorado River in a rubber
raft with several friends or hiking
through one of the mny trails
throughout Europe.

If any of these are your dream
vacation. there is an group on campus
that can help make the dream come
true - and it‘s free.

The Student Center Travel
Committee provides its services to
students. faculty and staff members at
no charge.

Becky Francis. a junior. is the head

of the 32-person committee. “We act
as a resource center. and promote
other agencies' trips. If given adequate '
time we could develop a packet of
information for any trip.” she said.

The committee differs from a travel
agency in one basic aspect: it does not
book trips. but rather it, makes
suggestions about travel arrangements
and accomodations. The group.
therefore. does not get any
commission for sponsoring a trip.

“We work on a small budget."
Francis said. She said money provided
by the Student Center Board is used
for advertising.

The committee compiles a list of

what it hopes will be popular trips and
sends it to approximately 25 travel
agencies throughout the United
States. These agencies are asked to
compile itineraries.

From these selections. the
committtee picks a trip package.
attempting to get the most for the least
amount of money.

Travel agencies are sometimes
considered for more than one trip. “A
lot of agencies that we have worked
with in the past know what our groups
are like." Francis said. “We get trips
offered at greatly reduced prices.
We‘ve established rapport."

She added. however.

that the

committee does not refer individuals
to any travel agencies.

The committee uses travel agencies
only to arrange major trips. Francis
said. Several trips which are now
scheduled include excursions 1)
Hawaii. Europe. Fort Lauderdale and
the Caribbean. Also offered are “mini-
trips" such as ski weekends.

Short trips within the region taken
by small groups are planned by
committee members. These members
work with resident hall advisers.
fraternities. sororities or anyone who
wants information on possible trip
locations.

One group arranges outdoor

programs. Hikes to the Red River

Gorge. canoe expeditions. and
spelunking (cave exploration) outings
are some of the trips that are offered.
Larry Harmond. the coordinator of
the outdoor committee. said these
trips are geared toward novices. “We
can‘t allow people to take any
dangerous trips.“ Harmond said.

Trips are always attended by people
on the committee and at least one L‘K
staff member. (This is required for the
trip.) Groups for regional trips are
limited to 24 people.

When asked about trends toward
vacation spots. Francis said that
Florida. the Caribbean. and skiing

spots are very popular

Francis said trips with unusual
destinations are also becoming
popular. These trips venture to places
like New Zealand. South America.
and the Orient.

People who attend these trips
generally want to be free to “do their
own thing." Francis said. The
committee only holds pre~trip
meetings to give the participants a list
of ideas and suggestions Thetravelers
are giv en maps and guides to the places
they will Visit.

The committee IS now considering
the formation an athletic committee
which would arrange trips to UK away
games

 

 

   

 

   

 

i

.Kémiii'iel

editorials a comments

To. ”art “It“ Holds
m We.” 51mm Izdttur
we I An’tu'iate Editors Janie V

Editor m ( 'hkf/

Associate Sports Editor

Mary Ann Buchart

Debbie McDaniel
Richard MCDOIIIH M5, Pang
News liditur I". Jenny Tale

( ’upi' Edi/rm

Wales Tunis
Arts Editor

('ary Willis
Assistant Arts Editor

David O‘Neil '
Director at Photography

Tom Moran
Photo Manager

Nell Fields

Images Editor

 

 

Questions on PPD operations
bear some investigation

Questions have been raised about the operations
of the Physical Plant Division that need to be

answered.

In informal discussion last week, members of the

University Council found they had

common. All knew of instances where they had been

charged outrageous prices for corn

repair and construction jobs done by hysical Plant
personnel. Here are some of the experiences that

were related "at the meeting:

on such high costs to support inefficiency and poor
service. But it‘s unfair for University departments to

suffer because of the inefficiency of maintenance.

something in

tively simple
some departments

is in jeopardy.”

—A bill of Sl9l for an hour‘s work putting up

bookshelves.

.—.The repair of a roller and spring on an office

chair cost $56.8I.

—Adoor which cost $500, with the person who
requested it saying it could have been done for 8100.

—An estimate of SISO, for the construction of a
suggestion box for Student Government.

It’s been speculated that Physical Plant depends

As one college dean pointed out, the budgets of
academic sections are severely strained by even
minor jobs, if the examples above are representative
of normal operations. “It is getting to the point that

can no longer afford these

services, and the quality of our academic programs

The Senate Council has said it will investigate the

situation, with assistance from the Vice President

for Business Affairs and Physical Plant Division

staff. Let’s hope the investigation shows that
outrageous repair bills are the exception, not the
rule, for University maintenance work, and that
procedures and communication are improved so
that they don’t happen again.

.o..-....
”fivrw‘.’

PLAYERS

 

  
        
   
 

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Letters to the Editor

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chelsea

Well what do you know? Can you
believe the Kernel actually trying to
justify baby beer? Uh, I wonder if the
guy that wrote that near-beer editorial
fell in the vat or got closer to
something a lot stronger than near-
beer?

If Anheuser-Busch wanted Chelsea
or their near-beer marketed for the
young adults and not children, then
'they would have had the Alcoholic
Beverage Control place the same age
requirement on it as their regular beer
and wasn‘t it funny how they only
gmarketed it in the states where the
iAlcoholic Beverage Control had no
jurisdiction. A person or child with a
low resistance or on prescribed
medication can easily become drunk
or die when mixed with medicine and
when you buy a pop out of the pop
machine or store, you should get the
pop and nothing more. Your good
points on booze leave a lot to be
desired. I bet you would even have
(justified Coca-Cola before the
government made them take the
cocaine out of the pop or discontinue

the drink. ‘

Yes, like you said, booze and dope is
available to kids, but the dope pusher
and greedy bar owners break the law
by selling it to them.

Sugar is sugar and where you come
up with no tooth-decaying sugar in
Chelsea, I’ll never know. Or did you
get that phrase at the same place you
got the editorial?

You better pray to God that groups
like the Kentucky Nurses Association
don‘t stop becoming excited over
things like Chelsea. You should quit
trying to justify Chelsea or any other
alcoholic drink cause the slick trick
that is done on campus and in this
paper by the liquor stores and bars has
done enough damage by tricking or
encouraging UK students to drink.
For instance, we provide a bus so you
can bar hop. Or my favorites are the

 

trier

uEeW-ryfi's‘w K I
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one’s that only list their cheap prices
for a glass of beer and mixed drinks. I,
guess we UK students are so hard up
for a drink that we need a bus to hop,
from bar to bar and a cheap price to
get more booze for our money.
Booze, pills and too much money
are destroying this country and your
editorial tries to justify the worst two.

Eli Simpson
Cynthlana, Ky

Understanding

The anti-intellectualism, racism,
and dehumanizing xenophobia that
has been expressed in the lettersto the
editor and personal columns of the
Kernel is appalling, and cause for
alarm. ls this typical of a university
campus, an institute of higher
learning? Or a rare ethnocentric
exception?

Does “Go home” mean that foreign
students may stay here only if the
experiences and information they
communicate are pleasant and
enjoyable? Or does “Go home” mean
that only students who are born in
Lexington, Ky. have the right to
attend school here? Alas, to a great
many of us, Lexington, Ky. is home
right now, this moment.

For nine months I experienced
“home” in Iran. I lived as a member of
an Iranian family and was treated with
great kindness. warmth, and
hospitality. I discovered a culture rich
in history, art. music, and philosophy,
which has existed long before this
entire continent was even conceived of
or imagined.

Next Sunday, Oct. 29, there will be a
Persian Culture Exchange. Hopefully,
those who attend will enrich their
understanding and broaden their
vision by momentarily glimpsing into
a Middle-Eastern realm of art,
lifestyles. and culture. There will be
photographs. crafts, rugs, and
clothing on exhibit. Many of these
articles will be on sale. A Persian

buffet of traditional dishes will be
served. Films and slides of architecture
and lifestyles will be shown. All the
proceeds from this event will benefit
the Committee to Defend the Eleven
and help pay the expenses of
registering an appeal, which costs $500
to file.

I, personally, welcome our Persian
visitors and feel grateful to them for
sharing their experiences, knowledge,
information, insights, and humanity.
Long live the solidarity of the Iranian
and American People! Together may
we live, learn, and grow in greater
harmony and understanding.

Janice Carter
Art education junior

Persia

On Tuesday, the Kernel published
an appeal from us asking that people
who have admired the Smileys’action
in freeing the eleven jailed protestors
move beyond admiration and come
themselves to the aid of the eleven. The
Kernel saw fit, however, to delete all
our specific suggestions of just how
people might do so. Some follow (let’s
try again):

The defendents are of course out of
jail only for the time being, unless they
are able to win an appeal.
Contributions are urgently needed to
carry that appeal forward, as well as to
pay for the considerable legal costs
already incurred. As one example, the
fees for merely filing the appeal will
total $550. Checks should be made out
to the Committee to Defend the
Eleven and can be mailed to the
Committee in care of PNP, Box 275,

Barr St. Station, 40584. Or they can be
brought to our table on the first floor
of the Student Center.

More than money is needed,
however. We need the time and energy
of people willing to help in preparing
for the appeal, raising funds, gaining
publicity, and developing a strategy to

expose and combat the collaboration
of the university administration with
the CIA and the courts. Subcommit-
tees are carrying on work in all these
areas. Thursday at 7 pm. in room [07
of the Student Center, the Committee
will hold‘its next full meeting. We urge
all concerned people, both those of
you who have already been involved in
some way and those who have not, to
attend (or to come by our table or to .
call 252-3298).

One major, immediate concern is
preparingg for the Persian culture
night scheduled for this Sunday
evening. This event is designed to raise
funds but also to introduce interested
people to the way of life of the Iranian
people. There will be exhibits of
Persian crafts and cultural artifacts,
some of which will be offered for sale,
a Persian meal, and cultural films and
slides. Tickets are $5 at the door, $4.50
in advance, and are available at the
Committee‘s table in the Student
Center.

Committee to Defend the Eleven

‘Bland soul'

In a small town in Kentucky,
Poland, and Iran; an out-of-state
police force (British, Gestapo, and
CIA) taught the local police how to
intimidate, harass, suppress, and even
kill local citizens who dared to oppose

the powers that controlled the town. ,

The oppressed people had sent their
children into the other country to
school and as the home situation
worsened, to protest. They did protest
and the courts of Britain, Germany
and the United States cleansed their
hands of such complicity in murder
and said,“To interrupt the public
relations campaign of our secret police
in our state or to confront our lies is a
crime far greater than legalized human
slaughter."

A judge and a university president in
Lexington have done this. Paul
Gudgel has shamed the law he had

 

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sworn to uphold by exercising his
judicial perogatives in a petty and
vindictive manner. Otis Singletary has
shown a complete lack of intelligence
of world problems and social
psychology by flexing his “police
force” muscles so hard it exposed a
bland soul.

Don B. Pratt
Lexington Resident

’Give—away’

Joseph Pasinosky seems to be either
in a fog or living in some other place in
time.’ If we examine his little plan using
U.K.’s population of approximately
22,000, it would cost taxpayers I32
million dollars to educate us for four
years. (I realize U.K. doesn‘t cost
$6,000 a year, but some schools cost
that much a semester). This is just
UK. and the state of Kentucky. Surely
the government can‘t have that much
money stashed down in Fort Knox.
Where does he propose this money
come from? I quote the Lexington
Herald-Leader (Oct. 24 page E2), an
article entitled “American Dream
going down the drain?"(by Karmin
and O'Brien of Knight-Bidder
Newspapers).

Though family incomes have risen
over the last ten years. the costs of
housing, medical care, college
education and other essentials of the
American Dream have climbed at
about the same pace. According to an
analysis by the Congressional Budget
Office, the cost of housing rose 92
percent between 1967 and 1977, the
cost of medical care nearly 85 percent.
the cost of gas and motor oil nearly 77
percent.

Therefore we can assume
approximately the same rate of
inflation for the cost of a college
education. I don’t know about Joseph,
but I abhor giving Uncle Sam 20

percent as it is. Would he like even
higher taxes? “

I have no proposal for an alternative
plan, but if his opinion was worth
printing all the way from WVU, surely
it is worthy of some justified and
asked-for criticism. He sounds like one
of President Carter‘s “give-away“
program directors. I hope for all our
sakes he is not an economics major
with political aspirations.

Maureen Shea, R.N.
Arts & Science Sophmore

 

john
oooke

 

The gentleman pictured above is, we
are told, John Cooke.

Actually. we’re not sure because
we've never seen him. All of his
columns are delivered to us by a
brown-shoed square in thedead of
night — and usually on a Sunday.

This week, an unfortunate accident
prevented the delivery of his column.
The square was attacked in our
parking lot and‘forced to remove his
shoes by two masked horses, who later
contacted us and demanded an
inordinate and outrageous sum of
money as ransom for the safe return of
the shoes. As we could not meet their
demands, the horses destroyed the
shoes, along with Cooke’s column,
which the square was using in place of
his Dr. Scholl's odomte'rs.

Cooke's column will appear next
week in its usual spot, provided he can
raise the money to buy the square
some newshoes.

 

r

Letters

The Kentucky Kernel welcomes
contributions fl’flll the UK corn .unity for
publication on the editorial and opinion
Fl”-

Letters, opinions and commentaries must
betyped and triple-spaced. and must include
the writer‘s signature. address and phone
number. UK students should include trait
yeat and major. and University employees

’ shald list their position and depannient.

The Kauai may condense or rein
contribution, and frequent writers may be
limited. Editors reserve the right to edit for
correct spelliq. gramnlr and ehrity, and
may delete libelous statements. '

Contributions should bedeliveredto tic
M that. learn! Jew-h.
UM d M. In“. Ky.

 

; Policy

Should be 30 lines or less. 60 characters

per line. .
Concern particular issues. concerns or

"events relevant to the UK community.

Shouldhem hsorlessJOc-h'ecten
per line. '

GM and explain a position pertem to
topical issues of hterest to the UK
Mummy.

CW
ShouldbeMNmsorlestJOeMtten
perhne.
Anruervdformtdeswhwanhon.
the editors feel. have special credentials
experience. ”~me
townemm-

 

 

 
  
   
  
    
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
   
     
   
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
    
   
 
   
   
  
   
   
   
  
  
  
     
  
  
  
  
   
  
   
  
  
    
    
   

.-.~“‘~

 

 

     
 

l‘lll It'l\ll ( I“ KENNEL. Thursday. October 10. "Tl—3

EIGHT CHAPTERS OT,
‘ BABYLONIAN HISTORY TOR
TOMORROW'S EXAM
AND CATHY'S WAITING.

 

 
   

 
   
    
       
     
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
     
 

 

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You CAN O IT!

It gets down to what you want to do and what you have used Reading Dynamics. It's the way to read

 

 

ve is, we have to do. Take the free Evelyn Wood Reading for today's active world—fast, smooth, efficient.
Dynamics lesson and you can do it—handle all the D . .
be“ . '. . on t get left behInd because there was too much
of uh: :3": (3:32 demands and “I" have tIme to enjoy to read. Take the free Evelyn Wood Reading
3 by a , ’ 3 ' Dynamics lesson today. You can dramatically
dead of You can dramatically increase your reading speed increase your reading speed and learn about
nday. today and that's just the start. Think of the time, advanced study techniques in that one free
accident . the freedom you'd have to do the things you want lesson. Make the college life the good life. With
column. to do. For twenty years the ones who get ahead Reading Dynamics you can do it.
In our
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PM a en mg 9 ear Ies esson you can...
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LAST 3 DA YS!!

:3 TODAY, 2:30 p.m., 5:00 p.m., 7:30 pm.
FRIDAY Oct. 27 11:00 am. 1:30 p.m., 4:00 pm.

I
SATURDAY Oct. 28 12:30 p.m., 3:00 pm.
m, 'Lessons will be held at the RAMADA INN SOUTH in Lexington (525 WALLER AVE.) .

$5; located 1 mile west of the UK. campus across from St. Joseph’s Hospital.
(Between Nicholasville Rd. and Broadway - Free Parking Available)

lumen

mm The Seven-Lesson Evelyn Wood reading course. to be described in
m the tree introductory lesson. will be conducted in the near future at
m a location near to the UK. Campus beginning the week of Oct. 30.

    

 

 

 

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4-THE KENTUCKY KI'ZRNI'LI.. Thursday. October 26. "78

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Throughout its years of
service the University of
Kentucky Student Govern-
ment has often been criticized
for various deficiencies in
services and communications
with the student body.
Students often feel distanced
and separated from the variety
of activities the SC is engaged
in.

The present administration
realizes the existence of this
lack of communication.
Indeed, the implicit meaning in
the term 50 sigirfi'fies a need
and the responsin ty of the SC
to openly communicate the
affairs of the student’s
representative body. The SC
sponsors many activities that
directly effect the students’
academic and social lives.

In an aim to correct this
undesirable situation the 50
will submit a series of
commentaries, newsletters. and
letters throughout the year
informing the students of the

 

    
   
   
  
     
   
  

    
  
   

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various projects and activities
the $6 is pursuing.

By this method. the SG
hopes to open up new avenues
of communication whereby
student desires and energies
may be more effectively gauged
and employed than ever before.

Perhaps the biggest project
currently under $0 scrutiny is
the proposed construction of a
student center expansion. '

The expansion would be
situated next to and connected
with the present SC. Proposals
include the possibility of
building the new center on stilts
in order to preserve the present
parking lot.

New facilities in the
expansion would include a
bookstore, a 500-seat theatre, a
TV and videotape room,
meeting rooms. student
lounges. an arts and crafts
center, and student offfices.

The present bookstore
would be converted into
student office space, while the

 

   

'opinieifl
SG asks student opinion on

old theatre would maintain its
present status by housing
meetings. forums. and films
shown by minorities and small
organizations.

At an estimated cost of S“
to $4.5 million for 62,000
sq. ft., the expansion would be
paid for with a proposed 310
increase in the studth activities
fee to support a bond issue. The
state would incur no costs
whatsoever.

Currently. the use of the
student activities fee breaks
down accordingly: Sll for the
retirement of the current bond
issue on the Student Center,
56.25 to the athletic
association, S3 for women‘s
athletics, and $1 to the student
center board.

In order to properly assess
the value of such a proposal, a
look at the pros and cons seems
necessary.

Critics of the project contend
that students who would pay a
negotiable part of the project
cost would never realize any of
the benefits of a new center, as
the completion would not come

before January of l98l. By the

same token, faculty and non-
students would have access to a
facility paid for by the students.
Finally, the SC expansion
would not be centrally located.
making proper access and

proposed Student Center expansion

usage in the south campus
difficult.

In contrast to this supporters
of the project feel that the
student services eventually
offered would be greatly
improved and expanded. The
larger theatre would relieve the
inadequacy of the present one.
a common complaint among
students. An expanded
bookstore would offer a more
thorough selection of
textbooks and sundries for
student purchase. More
student lounges would relieve
the cramping and lack of space
in the present SC.

Ultimately, this issue must be
decided by the students, and
here is where the relationship
between the student and his
representational body begins to
grow. The 80 is the voice of the
students, a medium through
which the desires of the
students are communicated to
everyone in the decision-
making process.

The SC encourages any and
all voices, for every student is
involved in a decision which
will effect himself, his peers,
and the students for many years
to