xt754746sx8t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt754746sx8t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-02-13 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, February 13, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 13, 1976 1976 1976-02-13 2020 true xt754746sx8t section xt754746sx8t KENTUCKY

er

an independent student newspaper

' Vol. LXVII No. 112
Friday, February 13, 1976

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

'ID 9 a me
liquor enforcement differs
between lexington, Richmond

By MIKE MEUSER
Assistant Managing Editor

Racky visits

the Bluegrass

Vice President Nelson
A phenomenon that has come to be known to many UK
students as “Thursday night in Richmond” has ap-
parently gained some of its popularity because Lexington
and Richmond officials enforce state liquor laws dif-
ferently.

Kentucky Alcoholic Beverage Control regulations
- provide that lB-yearolds may enter premises of an
establishment that serves alcoholic beverages if the
establishment also offers live entertainment or food,
according to Porter Collier, director, field division of the
Kentucky Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission
(ABC). However, sources in the State Attorney general’s
office said bar owners are not compelled to admit 18-year-
olds.

“Minors who enter such an establishment cannot be
prosecuted,” Collier said. “However, they must not loiter

and the bar owner is liable if there is a violation (if the
minor is loitering or liquor laws prohibiting sale of
alcoholic beverages to persons under 21 are violated).”

Collier said the law stems from a ruling handed down
years ago by the state attorney general which allowed
minors to enter the dance hall at‘Joyland, an amusement
center in Lexington which was popular with UK students
and Lexington residents before it was closed in the late
sixties.

Althauflhangattorney general's opinion is only advisory
and carries no force of law, the regulation regarding
admission of lB-year-oldsis now listed in Section 451 of the
state ABC’s regulations.

Guy C. Shearer, an assistant attorney general, said the
regulation is limited in scope. “They (the minors) can sit
down and eata meal or dance, but they can’t loaf or loiter.
They (bar owners) just don’t want barflies,” Shearer
said.

Stephen Driesler, Lexington ABC administrator, said
the area of violation is difficult to define. “Obviously, a
licensed establishment that is primarily a restaurant
faces no real problems. The problems you run into occur
when minors go into a club where the only real business
conducted pertains to the sale of liquor,” Driesler said.

' . . Continued to page 7

Rockefeller landed at
Lexington’s Bluegrass field
yesterday (below)en route to a

‘ Bourbon COunty form. In the
inevitable confusion surroun-
ding a visit from a luminary, a
Metro policeman was stranded

on the terminal roof (right).

Story on page 16.

c- .

Burch denies
gay students
organizational

status

By DAVID BROWN
Assistant Managing Editor

The Gay Student Coalition (GSC)
application for student organizational
status has been denied by 'Dean of
Students Joe Burch.

Burch informed GSC President
Joanne Johnson of his decision in a
letter dated Feb. 9, which she received
Thursday.

“I have concluded that, in my
opinion, registration of the GSC, with
its inescapable implication of tacit
approval, would not be in the best in-
terests of the University and its student
body; in addition, such approval would
be contrary to the expressed policy of
the Commonwealth of Kentucky,"
Burch stated in the letter.

Bunch, who was unavailable for
comment yesterday, based his decision
partially on precedents concerning
applications of other gay organizations.
"It is clear to me. on the basis of your

application. that the aims and purposes ,

of your organization, asexpressed in its
constitution. are substantially the same
as the Gay Liberation Front (GLF).
whose application was previously
rejected by this office." his letter
stated.

The GLF applied for recognition in

the fall of 1971. After receiving an
opinion from the state Attorney
General in May 1972, Jack Hall, then
dean of students. denied recognition.
The GLF followed the appeals
procedure and the case was heard in a
US. District Court in 1973 and in the
US. Court of Appeals in 1974.

The final decision in Singletary v.
Gay Liberation Front was that UK
officials “had not exceeded the per-
missable limits of their administrative
discretion in denying the application,"
according to Burch‘s letter.

Bunch’s decision came as a “very

definite surprise” to Johmon. “Frank
Harris (associate dean of students) told

us what to do, step by step, and really '

gave us a lot of help. We just expected
approval."

“Harris never said .we would be
recognized; it was just the impression
we got," Johnson said.

Harris, who said he knew the request
would be denied as he. helped the of-
ficers reapply, said he was “upset" that
Johnson had gotten the wrong im-
pression. (The GSC had filed for
recognition in November, but had to
reapply listing new officers when

DEAN OF STUDENTS
JOE BURCH

former GSC President Carey Junkin
did not return to school this semester.)
“I don't think there was anything I
could have said that would have led
them to believe one way or the other,”

Harris said.
Continued to page 7

 

 editorials

Levies-Id

wmmumemm P.
mmmmummmummu

mmmmmmummmm

Elk,
m

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chie]

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Susan Jones .
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

 

 

 

 

~Burch’s decision
is disappointing

Dean of Students Joe Burch’s
refusal to grant the UK Gay
Students‘ Coalition (GSC) student
organizational status was
somewhat surprising.

UK gay students have been
trying to gain such recognition
since I971, when the Gay
Liberation Front’s application was
turned down by then Dean of
Students Jack Hall. Even though
Hall’s decision was undoubtedly
wrong, it was at least somewhat
understandable in the sense that
the idea of a gay students’
organization was new to UK ad-
ministrators at that time.

But Burch is expressing today
many of the same fears about gay
students Hall expressed five years
ago, even though such fears have
been proved unfounded by the test
of time.

In a letter explaining his action
to GSC President Joanne Johnson,
Burch stated, ”There continues to
be a conclusion on the part of many
medical experts that
homosexuality is ’learned
behavior’ and that the
psychosexual identity of many
persons continues to be confused
into late adolescence and,
therefore, subiect to en-
vironmental factors."

In other words, the presence of a
recognized gay organization on
campus might cause the disease to
spread, which has been meeting on
campus under the auspices of Free
University. Although the GSC is not
recognized it is a fairly well-
organized student group. So if
Burch’s fears of ”learned
behavior” were well-grounded the
GSC would have been growing in
size all year. It hasn’t been.

Burch also gives the continued
prohibition of homosexual acts in
the Kentucky penal code as a
reason for his refusal to recognize
GSC. There has been no evidence of
a GSC member ”committing” a
homosexual act while on campus.
It should be clear that the goal of
the group is not to commit acts, but
to promote understanding.

Finally, Burch appeals to an old
court and attorney general’s
decision to support his reiection of
the application for recognition.
These decisions are simply excuses
for his action, not reasons.

Burch’s decision, on the whole, is
disappointing because it belies a
simple prejudice and a refusal to
tolerate an organization which has
proven itself responsible and of
interest to a sufficient number of
UK studa'itsto make it worthwhile.

 

 

Ellison fan

Editor: '

Asa Iong-timefan of Harlan Ellison, I
am always eager to read anything he
has authored. For the same reason, I
am usually able to recognize anything
he has authored. (It must be admitted,
he has a rather distinctive style.) I
was, therefore, mightily surprised, as I
glanced across the editorial page of the
Feb. 10 Kernel, to see Ellison’s work
under someone else's byline.
Smitherman’s ”comment“ (”Right to
life mly insures right to die”) is
derived in no small part directly from
two specific columns Ellison wrote in
1968 and I969, and additionally from
various of his other writings. I refer
you to “The Glass Teat," published as a
weekly column by the Los Angeles Free
Press, and, as a collection of same, by
Ace Publishing Company.

I am frankly amazed at Smither-
man’s lack of conscience in using
Ellison’smatefial, and also at the fact
that the Kernel somehow allowed
plagiarized material to be published.
The latter can perhaps be excused on
the grounds that no one on the Kernel
staff has read ”The Glass Teat,” but
Smitherman's actions warrant ex-
posure and appropriate disciplinary
measures.

Megan Shelton
Anthropology senior

Conception

Editor:

I am writing in reference to Robert
Smitherman’s commentary in the Feb.
10 Kernel (”Right to life only insures
right to die”). I have but one thing to
say: Smitherman should have been
aborted as soon as he was conceived.

Hugh Findlay
Journalism freshman

Thinking

Editor:
The following question is in reference

tetters

Robert ‘

 

to the Feb. 10 commentary by Robert
Smitherman, “Right to life only insures
righttodie." Smitherman, does Harlan
Ellison do all of your thinking for you?

Daniel Martone
Engineering freshman

Boycott

Editor: ,

A short note to remind students and
faculty that everybody’s support is
needed Feb. 13 in the boycott of the
Second National Bank, Coliseum Plaza
from 4-7 pm. A large public demon-
stration is essential for showing people
like Jack Graves, the president of
Second National and chairman of the
Lexington Center Corporation (LCC),
that there are people willing to help the
people on South Hill keep their homes.

Influential people like Mayor Foster
Pettit and Graves stand to gain much
from the demolition of South Hill since
their downtown properties are likely to
rise in value. Unfortunately, private
gains for Pettit and Graves means
disaster for the people on South Hill.

By picketing the bank and removing
our money from Second National we
can show Pettit and Graves that people
do have the power to cut off their
profits. Please join us in picketing the
bank Friday afternoon and remove
your money from Second National to
show the council and the LCC that the
South Hill issue is not dead.

James Dean
Psychology senior

ERA

Editor:

A Bluegrass Pro-Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA) forum will be held
in the Student Center Grand Ballroom
Feb. 22 from 443 pm. Speakers will be
addressing themselves to the
arguments put forth by the anti-ERA
factions (the ”pink ladies”).

Mary Stephens
865 senior

 

 

 

Oversight ‘

A commentary printed on Tuesday’s
editorial page (“Right to life only in-
sures right to die," by Robert
Smitherman) contained some direct
quotations from £05 Angeles Free

Press columnist Harlan Ellison without
attributing the statements to Ellison.
The Kernel regrets the oversight of
Smitherman not attributing the
statements to their rightful author.

 

 

 

There will always be sex and abortions

 

By Marvin Todd ‘

Let's talk about sex. Then, let's talk
aboutwomen’s lib. And then, let's talk
abou ta butlon. Has anyone noticed the
relationship in these three items of
discusion? They all go hand in hand.

First, we should think about sex and
its results. Sex is primarily and
foremost a means for prepagatlon for
society. Right? And if children are
unwanbd at the time of intercourse
there are many means available for
birth control. Right? The ”pill" is
supposedly ”per centeffecttve. That's
great! But, what about those women
who cannot take the "pill?" The other
methods are not so effective, and an
unwanbd pregnancy may be the result.
Of course, there is always celibacy, or
a hysterectomy, or a tubal ligation, or a
vasectomy. That leaves the field of

 

birth control wide open for any woman
who may not wish to get pregnant. _

Now, let's be serious about this
mathr. Sex is here to stay. And the
probability of gettingpregnant is also
here to stay, barring any permanent
defects such as the aforementioned
operations. Therefore, we can talk
about women's lib in this context, and
say hat to declare the "right to life" to

an unba'n fellas ls, or may be, denying '

the mother the right to life In so far as
her other rights to liberty and the
pursuit of happiness if concerned. '

tee, but the baby can be put up for
admion, you say? Think about thatfor
a while. Think about the life of that
child in an orphanage. And, even if
adopbd, think about the other child
who may have been adopted if that.
baby hadn't been born!

In this respect, by declaring the right
to life to an unborn fetus, we are, or
‘may be, denying the mother’s rights, in
addition to again putting women under
the thumb of the government, and
subiugating her to the inadvertent will
of he man who made her pregnant!

We are also, in probability, denying
the baby, when born, the happy home
life to which any child is entitled, or, we
are denying 'many rights to hose
children who are already in society.
and withholding possible happiness
from them.

Now, we can talk about abortion.
How manywornen in the past have died
or suffered permanent damage at the
hands of an undkilled, unlicensed
surgeon in the attic of a dirty, dimly lit
garage in the heart of the ghetto?
Granted, this may be an extreme

example, but the realization that such-
practices did occur, and probably will

recur if the ”Right to Life” campaign

has its way, is enough to make any

decent person see to it that abortions

are performed in the safety of a

hospital by a qualified surgeon.

There have always been abortion,
and there will always be abortions, and
making them illegalwill not make them
happen with any less frequency.
Therefore, I have this to say to those
supporters of the ”anti-abortion"
clique: start thinking about those
members of our society who already
playa part in our world, and give them
the benefit of the doubt when deter-
mining whose rights are being violated.

 

Marvin Todd is an English sophomore.

 

 

 

 

  

spectrum

Opinions from inside and outside the University.

 

(This columnist recently contacted
presidential hopeful Wallace Wallace
concerning his views on the blackbird
problem in western Kentucky. The
issue is bound to create quite a flap in
this state’s upcoming primary.
Wallace’s comments show that as
usual, he will be more than willing to
add further fuel to the Tergitol that
alreadv surrounds this controversy.)

 

 

DD —Good morning, Gov. Wallace.
My first.

WW —You can iustcall me Wallace if
you want to.

DD —-Thank you, sir. My first
question about the blackbirds....

 

WW—l notice that you refer to these
birds by the color of their feathers.
That’s something that I never notice
any more. I don‘t care if a bird is blue.
red or orange with little brown spots on
its breast, I Iookat'em all equally. Now
these ’yella draft-dodgin’ birds, they’re
another story. They all oughta be
locked up in cages without any paper.
’Course then again, you can tell the
folks bed where you live that I’m
awful fond of cardinals. Whenever I’m
in St. Louis or Kentucky, I'm real
careful to mention that. Cardinals got
red feathers, don’t they?

DD —-Yessir, they do. Now ab0ut
these blackbirds. By the way, I call
them that because that's what they’ve
been called ever since they were ac-
cidentally imported here from
England. Do you Support the Congress’
and President Ford’s approval of the
blackbird kill down in Russellville and
Hopkinsville?

WW—No sir, I don’t. Blackbirds are
a matter for states rights. But I don’t
support them pointy—headed in-

cremen talists from N'Yawk trying to
tell these good people in Kentucky
about what they can or can’t do with
their black popu...blackbird population
either. If I lived in Hopkinsville right
now, I think I’d be ready to putall those
damn birds againsta wall and mow ’em
down with a machine gun. That’d teach
’em to move into a town and expect to
be treated iust like ever’body else right
off the bat. All them birds is doin’ is
bringin’ down prOperty values, makin’
a racketand hatchin’ eggs all the time.
ldon’t think that one of the six million
in Russellville now even has an honest
iob.

DD —You mention ”pointy—headed
incrementalists.” Don’t you mean
”environmentalists?"

WW ——Naw. Just look at the way they
do things. The bureaucratic method —-
one pitiful step ata time. What I mean
is, they oughta be concentratin' their
efforts at home —that’s where the real
bad treatment to animals is anyway. I
have people up there who tell me every
day, ”Wallace, you wouldn’t believe

Birds of a feather flock together

what those N’Yawkahs are doin‘ to the
rat population up there in The City.
They’re killin’ em off like civil rights
workers in Philadelphia, Mississippi.”
ltain’t right, I don’t think. Them rats
areiust tryin’to eke outan existence up
there in Harlem and what do they get?
Kicked in the ass by some funky nl’
health department! Things in this
country are all backward these days;
I’ll never understand the logic of some
people.

DD ~Wallace, you have been quoted
as saying that your opponent from
Georgia is "soft on blackbirds” and
that the very existence of the birds is a
threat to law and order. Could you
elaborate?

WW ~Well, I didn’t say that they was
a threat to law and order. That’s a
typical media misquote. I said they was
a threat to lawn order. You ever seen
whata million birds can do to a lawn?

DD —Don’t you think that there’s a
possibility the bird lovers of the South
will turn against you because of your
stand on this matter?

WW ——Well, I don’t really think 50.
Ever heard of Jim Crow? Well, Jim
Crow supporters have always been
behind me —they probably always will
be. I could putall those blackbirds on a
boatand ship ’em back to England for
all they care. In fact, they probably
wish I would since those birds started
migratin’ back down South again. The
pests left once, thinkin’ they could find
somethin’ better up north. Now that
they found out life is tough up there,
they come hightailin’ itback down from
where they left. Some birds ain’t never
satisfied. Next thing you know, they’ll
want us to bus 'em back down instead of
lettin’ them use their two good wings to
fly.

DD ——That concludes the interview,
unless y0u have something to add.

WW —How about, ”Birds of a feather
flock together” (laughs). I always try
to wind up on a hu-morous'note.

DD -Thank you Governor. it’s been
most amusing.

 

Dick Downey isa UK law student. His
column appears weekly in the Kernel.

 

 

 

The phiIOSOphy of the King Cotton region

 

BY ROY. FUOM

Not long ago I ran into a man that I had
not seen since my' ole high school days.

 

The gent was well. into the prime of his
life, he delighted in the partaking of the
chewable brand of tobacco and hewas well
indoctrinated with‘the philosophy of the
region where King Cotton resides.

Myself: Weir. what have you been doing
since last we talked?

Man: I have not done one thing in the
last four years because I am iust totally
disgusted with everything today: the
economy, the court and the war.

Myself: The war? The war's over!

Man: Oh yeah, that‘s right. I keep
getting confused every time I hear that we

might send hoops over into the African
iungles.

Myself:
sure that doesn’t happen.
beefs with the courts about?

Man: Well, ldon't understand how them
ole men in powdered wigs and black robes
can tell you which school your children
have to go to.

Myself: I take it that you’re against
busing?

Man: Busing my foot! They're iust
Iettin' them Negroes take over
everything. Besides, that busing deal
wastes gas. -

Myself: You're wrong on your
statement that blacks are taking over.
The courts are trying to make upfor all the
inlustlces and discriminations the blacks
have suffered in the past.

Naw, the Congress will make
What’s .Your

Man: What are you taking about?
What discriminations? We liked them
ingrates. Why down home, we even went
so far as to provide them with separate but
equal facilities because we knew that they
valued their privacy.

Myself: I never looked at it from that
point of view before. But you will have to
admit that the blacks are discriminated
against in the iob market?

Man: Whatare you talking about? We
don't discriminate against them Negroes
when it comes to huntin' tor a iob. Can I
help it if all the labs are taken before the
Negroes get their applications filled out?
Of course not. But deb you think en-
courages them to go out for sports? Who
do you think owns the pro teams andbuys
the tickets that pays for their salaries.
You must admit that we’ve been really

good to them there. Can I help it it they’re
not smart enough to be a pro quarterback
or if they're so lazy that the coach fines
them for not hustling. No,we’ve been good
to them beautiful folks. They iust don’t
realize how we've tried to shelter them
from all the cruelties and corruptions in
the world.

Well, the man kept on telling me now ne .
and his peqale (I have no idea who "his
people” are.) have been good ‘0 "‘9
blacks.

When we finally parted, he was saying
something about Wallace and Byrd.
Something like, "They're not supportin'
the cause anymore. They have watered
down their ideas." Something like. I
didn't understand it. ~

 

Rof‘Fugitt’g is' ‘3' iournalism gunner.

 

 

  
  
   
 
   
   
  
   
 
   
    
   
 
   
 
   
   
   
  
 
   
  
  
   
  
    
      
     

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. February 13, ms"

  

' Maya Angelou
will speak
Tuesday, February 17

 

on

 

“Black Americans' Contributions
to the American Way of Lite."

  

3:00 p.m.. 106 ca

sponsored by Dean of Undergraduate Studies 8. Office of Minority Affairs

 

 

   

 

 

NOTICE TO All
UK. WOMEN STUDENTS

THE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICES CLINICAL NURSES
. (Betty Mott, RN and Pam Woodrum, RN)
WILL PRESENT AN INFORMATION SESSION ON WOMEN'S

HEALTH CONCERNS

(contraception, breast examinations, venereal disease,
pregnancy, vaginitis,‘ etc.)

WEDNESDAY EVENING. 7:30. FEBRUARY TO
HEALTH SERVICE LOBBY

film, “Hope Is NOT a Method", will be shown, followed
by a discussion and a question and answer period.

ALL WOMEN ARE INVITED

 

 

 

 

STEREO EXHIBITION

El-
SEMINAR

Sponsored by: SCB Contemporary Affairs
S.C. BALLROOM

FEB. 17 ROOM 200 FEB. 10 ROOM 200

12 noon OPEN HOUSE

1 p.m. STEREO
ACCESSORIES
B- MAINTENANCE

3 [MIL HEAD PHONES
4 [MIL AUDIO SERVICE

12 noon OPEN HOUSE

2 [MIL TURNTABLES
3:30 prm. SPEAKERS

0:30 me. RECEIVER &
COMPATIBILITY

 

 

Courtesy of the Sound. Company

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

H . . news briefs

 

i»

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—l§é‘i*n‘et~ ‘

Ford says he will not use
military in\Angolan war

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Ford said Thursday that if the
SovieS or Cuba tried to make a colony of Angola, he will ask
Congress to “meet the challenge without the utilization of
American military personnel.”

Ford made the statement in a taped interview at the White House
with 17 radio station representatives in New Hampshire, where he
will face Ronald Reagan in the first election-year primary on Feb.
24.

Ford said the Soviet Union and Cuba “are now the dominant
force in Angola.” He continued:

“We don’t think the Soviet Union or Cuba under any cir-
cumstances should move in and make such a country a colony of
either Rusia or Cuba, and if they try then I will certainly ask the
Congress for help and assistance so that we can meet the challenge
without the utilization of American military personnel.”

Ford did not elaborate.

China reports struggle
against Soviet intrUders

TOKYO (AP) —China on Thursday reported “face-to-face

- struggles against Soviet armed intruders” in China’s rugged north-

westfrmtier, but gave no details on these developments in the long
and sometimes bloody dispute over the 5,000-mile Chinese-Soviet
border.

There was no immediate comment from the Kremlin, which last
week called reports of clashes in northwest Sinkiang province ——
home of important Chinese nuclear testing facilities —“a lie from
beginning to end.”

In a repa't on the militia in Sinkiang, a 660,000-square mile
province consisting of mountains, desert and grazing land, China’s
official Hsinhua news agency said:

“The Khalkhas nationality militia in Ahochi County has
frequently had face-to-face struggles against Soviet armed in-
truders’ wanton provocations and obstruction of Chinese herdsmen
in their work. The militia has been a strong force in frustrating the
criminal plots of the Soviet revisionist new czars.”

South Africa is preparing for war

against Communist-backed forces

JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AH—South Africa is openly
seeking an accommodation with victorious Communist-backed
forces in Angola but is also preparing for the possibility of a major
war.

Officials have repeatedly declared in Parliament and privately
that South Africa is willing to seek a peaceful compromise with the
Soviet-backed Popular Movement—MPLA—in Angola.

But the nation is also girding itself for war by increasing troops,
increased military training schedules and a major buildup of forces
along Angola’s southern border.

Jittery South Africans watch developments in Angola with a
sense of foreboding and many fear an eventual confrontation with
the MPLA in the former Portuguese territory.

Explosion damages Hearst castle;

family requests police protection

SAN SIMEON ( AP)—A bomb exploded Thursday and damaged a
guest house at the famed Hearst Castle built by the grandfather of
Patricia Hearst, the heiress now on trial in San Francisco,
authorities said. No injuries were reported.

The family asked for police protection immediately after lear-
ning of the explosion.

The highway patrol said it had stopped someone for questioning
north of the castle, but no other details were immediately
available.»

Miss Hearst’s father, Randolph A. Hearst, left the federal
courtroom where his daughter is being tried on bank robbery
charges and angrily declared:

“It's a stupid and vicious thing to do to the people of California
becaus it (the Hearst Castle) belongs to the state.”

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r .
fl campus briefs

 

 

 

Local company submits
lowest nursing center bid

C. E. Pennington Co., of Lexington, has submitted the low bid of
$4.9 million for the new College of Nursing Health Learning Center,
Jack Blanton, vice president for business affairs, said Thursday.

The bid was $600,000 below the contractor’s estimate for the
building. “We were very pleased,” Blanton said. “Now we can.
put more equipment in and fix up the building even more.”

The building, which is expected to cost $7.2 million when fee,
utilities, and furniture costs are added in, will be located between
Rose and Limestone Streets. The six-story building will house'
classrooms, conference rooms, graduate study areas and media
equipment for the College of Nursing, Blanton said.

Final formal contract approval is expected in about two weeks,
Blanton said. A target date for the structure is completion is

February 1978.

UK films guide to library

For four hours last week the Margaret 1. King Library was
filled with lights, cameras and a little action.

The UK Instructional Services Department was shooting a four-
minute film as part of a series on the library’s uses.

Larry Greenwood, Instructional Services director, said, “These
films are designed to give students a better access to books and
materials in the library. They won’t be dull educational-type things
—we will take great care with editing. We’ve spent four hours in the,
library to produce one four-minute film.”

Oddly enough, the presence of glaring lights and knots of people
did not upset the library’s operation. Most people simply stayed
wellaway from the commotion. “We’ ve had no problem with hams
or amateur actors,” Greenwood said.

When the circulation desk employes were asked what was going
on, the response was, “I don’t ltnow...they’ve been walking through
here all day —we haven’t paid much attention to them.”

The film series will be ready for distribution when editing is
complete.

Folk dancing club offers classes
for beginners, professionals

The UK Folk Dancing Club holds dancing classes every Tuesday
night in the Buell Amory gym.
Simple dances are taught from 7: 30 pm. and an advanced

class is offered from 9-9: 30 p. m. Many of the teachers are from
dancing groups in other parts of the country and some have danced
professionally .

Each dance is walked and talked through before actually per-
formed with music so even a person who has never danced can
catch on. Types of dancing taught include Danish and English folk,
Western and Appalachian square and Morris dancing.

The club was started three years ago by Brent Comb, an
engineering graduate student. It now has approximately 30
members and anyone can join.

Club membership fees are $3 per semester. It costs a quarter to
attend a session for those who are not club members. Proceeds buy
records and refreshments.

 
  
   
 
  
   
  
  

 
 

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday, February 13. 1976—5

CHECK ms
CLASSIFIEDS! !

 

 
 
 
  

 

 

 

  

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 

LEXINGTON - after receiving
an anonymous tip. an extensive
investigation has revealed the
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6—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. February 13. 1976

     
 
  

 

 

 

 

     

       
 
   
   
    
 

    
 
 

 
 

" ‘ ‘ "‘ ‘ ‘ "‘ " ' "_ "‘ ““JWW‘
COOL WAVES BREAK . ”K “‘50”
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Our Notetakers
aren't! _

GETTING
Fl LITTLE

BEHIND?

Student Government
again makes available
classnotes for BIO “0,
BIG 102 and HIS 109
Secfiiolns l-24. Just a
11 " nic e a page, notes can
,‘éggi be purchased in the

‘43:} Student Government

' Office, Room 120

Student Center.

 

 

  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
   
 
  

 

 

*YORK-I-
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Proclamation

 

In your honor

Ro al Flamin
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Served in a mostspectacular fashion
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Served only on
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Sunday 11am-9pm.

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11a.m.-10p.m.

  
  

 

 

 

 

 

Rose says testing valuable

to students' education

By JANIE WILLIAMS
Kernel Staff Writer

A great deal of emphasis is
placed on testing at the
University Counseling and
Testing Center, said center
Director Harriet Rose. “and I
make no apologies."

Statistically, she said, “testing

has a normal distribution. It is
excellent for a few and terrible
for a very few.

“I know what testing will and
will not measure. I have respect
for what it will do and awareness
of what it won‘t do,” Rose said.

Testing is generally an ac-
curate indicator of ability in most
academic situations, she said. If
a student is predicted to do
poorly, he usually does unless he
changes his study habits, she
said.

“If a student comes to