xt75736m351d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt75736m351d/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-02-17 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 17, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 17, 1975 1975 1975-02-17 2020 true xt75736m351d section xt75736m351d lol. L\'Vl No lll
Monday February 17. 1975

KENTUCKY

21‘

(Ht independent student ne wspaper

2] University of Kentucky

Lexington. Ky. 40506

Congressman views Red River gorge area

By RON MITCHELL
Managing Editor

A Republican congressman from Ohio
and about 150 opponents of the Red River
dam hiked and caiioed the Red River
gorge Saturday.

l‘reshmaii Rep. Willis (iradisoii .lr . IR
()hiot. led the group consisting of two
busloads of eiivironiiientalists from tiliio
and members from numerous Kentucky
eiivii'oiiiiieiital groups
l-‘UR (iR.\l)lSt).\. an avid outdoorsiiian
and cave explorer. it was his first \‘lSIt to
the gorge although his four daughters
have been there several times

.\t a press conference to begin the day's
activities. (iradisoii explained that the
current (ieneral Accounting Office itlAtit
audit of the proposed dam's justification
raises serious questions concerning the
benefits and costs of the project. (At) is an
investigative agency of (‘oiigress

There are “significant differences” in
the monetary benefits as outlined by the
l' 8 Army (‘orps of linguieers and the
benefits fotind by the (L-‘H i, (iradisoii said

RY
show

l.\\\. \l.l.
that the benefits will exceed
costs Although the corps has estimated
that the Red River pmject will yield $1 70
on every dollar spent. (iritdlson said
(;.-\()‘s tentative findings have reduced
that amount to $1.10.

(iradison said his staff met with (Mt)
officials about 10 days ago to discuss those
tentative findings.

Following the Dress conference.
(iradison walked across Sky Bridge. a
natural rock formation 1.100 feet above sea

federal projects must
the

Dog dsoy

A quiet Sunday afternoon and nothing for
these two poor soles to do. not even around
the University plaza at the corner of
Woodland and Euclid Avenues.

AS THE (‘UNGRI‘ISSMAN stood atop the
bridge and looked down upon Swift (‘reek
and the surrounding area. l'K biology
professor Dr Robert Kuehne explained
the impact of the dam on that area

Although the normal pool elevation of
Ttiii feet would not affect the vegetation and
w ildlile. Kuehue said there would be "mud
flats. trees killed and scenic and biological
wipeout” when the area is flooded.

(tiadison and the rest of the entourage
then boarded two buses and went down a
tw istmg incline to the concrete bridge. 759
feet above sea le\el

ti\ Till: Bl's‘ it ”Hi. Kuehne pointed out
to (ii‘adisoii the variety of vegetation along
the way and how it would be affected by
the dam

\t one the ride, two corps
representatives Rrig (len Wayne 8
Nichols. engineer of the (lhio
River division of the corps at (‘incmiiatr
and Don \\illiams.
pulled out a topographic map ot the gorge
"misuit'oriiiation” about

point lll
division
a corps staff member

to counter some
the effect.\ of the dam

Williams said the pool level of the dam
would be a! 70:1 feet most of the year and
that it is erroneous to tfiiiik areas above

that level would be damaged

'l'lll-I Bl‘Sl'IS unloaded at the concrete
bridge and (iradisoii led the group on a
two mile hikeovera much used river bank
trail lt was the same path that ['3
Supreme (‘ourt Justice William 0 Douglas
took when he visited the gorge in 1968,

(tradison. a 46 year old f‘inciniiati
represenuitive. was dressed in a dark
flannel shirt with a yellow turtleneck shirt
underneath. a blue vinyl parka. worn jeans

Rep. Willis B (Eradison of Ohio tforegroundi and Sierra Club member Ron Stokely
paddle their canoe down the Red Riv er in the gorge area. liradison and about 130 other
opponents of the Red River dam gathered in the gorge to show their discontent for the

\rmy (‘orps of Hiigineers' plans.

and hiking boots The congressman swiftly
trudged along the narrow path of mud and
rocks

Shortly after the hike began. (iradison‘s
party including several aides. several
Sierra (‘lub spokesmen. a corps
representative and two reporters - was

Zumwinkle offers opinion

University will not collect

By BRYCE WINUES
Assistant Managing Editor

The University has made it clear that it
will not act as a collecting agent for the
Kentucky Student Public Interest
Research Group tKYSPIRG).

The University's policy is not to act as a
fee~collecting agent for independent
organizations, according to a statement
released Friday oy Dr Robert G. Zum-
winkle. vice president for student affairs.

KYSPIRG. a consumer advocate group,
started a petition drive last Monday to
obtain majority student support. If the
drive is successful. KYSPIRG will ask the
University to collect a $2 per semester fee
from students to support KYSPIRG'S
operations.

Under a negative checkoff system
proposed by KYSPIRG. students could
choose not to pay the fee by filling out a
special form during registration.
KYSPIRG would reimburse the University
for any expense involved in the fee-
collecting process.

Zumwinkle's statement raised two
specific points concerning whether the
University should act as a collecting agent

for student organizations. One was the
possibility of other student organizations

particularly those opposed to
KYSPIRG‘S objectives attempting to
use the University as a fee-collecting
agent.

THE OTHER POINT was whether the
University's participation in fee collecting
for KYSPIRG would be interpreted as an
endorsement of KYSPIRG.

The statement also points out that the
state attorney general has said
KYSPIRG's proposed negative checkoff
plan is legal.

“What the University is saying is that it
has not done this (acted as a collecting
agent) for other independent student
organizations." Zumwinkle said. "And
from my talking to other administrators if
is unlikely the University will do so."

THIS STATEMENT is not a judgement
of the merits of KYSPIRG. Zumwinkle.
said. It simply addresses itself to
KYSPlRG's proposal that the University
act as a collecting agent for the
organization. according to the statement.

“There are probably other fund-raising
meats they can use,“ Zumwinkle said.

well ahead of the other hikers.

AS (ift.\l)ls‘(i.\' walked along the trail,
('arroll 'l‘ichenor. of the Sierra Club. ex-
plained that the dam would have
significant impact on this area because of

('ontinued on page 6

for K YSPIRG

“My purpose in this statement is to alert
potential petition signers that the
l'niversity's current policy is not to act as
a collection agency for student or other
oganizations," Zumwinkle said. “What
I‘m doing in a sense is predicting that
regardless of the petition. the Board of
Trustees will not change its policy."

“IT IS NOT new to anyone that the
University will take this position," said
(‘arlton Currens, KYSPIRG organizer.
(‘urrens said this will not effect
KYSPIRG‘S petition drive for majority
student support in any way.

KYSPIRG is waiting to see how suc-
cessful the petition drive is before
presenting itself to the University. Currens
said.

"We have not talked to the Board of
Trustees or administration in any length
or depth yet." he said. “I'm hopeful that
discussion will have an effect."

ALI. ()F KYSPIRG‘S efforts are being
directed toward the petition drive to obtain
majority student support. Currens said.
He said results ofthe petition drive will not
be known until Thursday or Friday.

 

 Editor in1l~l i

\o'l ii\‘1.Y does this help explain the
tact of the theoretically impossible
combination of inflation and recession. but
it underlines how much our economy is
actually two or more economies running
by different rules a rid powered by different
dynamics Government action. however.
proceeds from the erroneous conviction
that ll LS possible to operate on one set of
programs and policies for a nationally
hornogcnous economy. all of whose parts
will react in a uniform way

We could make the economy the con-
sistent. acrossthe board free market one
that the Treasury Department thinks it is
It would demand antitrust action of ii
scope and force we‘ve never demonstrated
we can summon up. however.

()r. we can acquiesce to the fact that this
is at least a two tiered economy. the app”
layer of which is controlled by certain
major corporations and the m0”
muscular of the big unions. and go ahead
on that basis What is inexcusable is to
continue periodically to throw millions of
people out of work in obedience to a
metaphysical economics that rt‘pt‘fllf‘d
cxpcricncc has shown to be wrong.

Nicholas \‘on Hoffman is a columnist for
King I‘caturcs Syndicate.

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 —_‘II‘

 

h

The ecology of death:

 

 

Recycling our bodies

By D. W. Peabody

AKRON, Ohio—Recycling has always
been a part of the schetne of nature,
anti it probably always will be; it may
even be considered to be a law of
nature. The world consists of finite
amounts of the various elements, and
aside from the radioactive decomposi-
tioii of some, these quantities will re-
main constant The elements do not
w ear out and they are just as effective
after many iises as they Were origi-
nally.

l-‘or example, carbon, an element
found in all living organisms, is con-
\erted to carbon dioxide by oxidation
other in the body of an animal (from
starch or other vegetable product), or
as the btrrning of wood from a tree.
lhis carbon dioxide, added to the
atmosphere, is again taken tip by trees
or other vegetation, and is thus re-
tytled. (‘arbon has other cycles, and
other elements, too, have their cycles.

'l'he process of photosynthesis con-
verts the carbon dioxide of the air
to a form of potential energy, as wood
to burn or food for animals. In this
way \egetation acts as a storehouse
of energy. If this process continued
indefinitely, all of the carbon would
e\entually be locked tip arid not be
a\ailable for reuse.

In the past, nature has turned vast
quantities of vegetation and formed
our great coal deposits for later use
by inhabitants who learn to tise them.

lhe human Inhabitants of the earth
lia\e learned to use the stored re»

sources, and finding them in such large
quantities have been profligate in their
exploitation. As a result many of the
resources have come to be in short
supply. They have not been destroyed
but just scattered to such an extent
as to be almost impossible to collect
again.

The recycling of our bodies is some-
thing that few want to think about but
it may become necessary at some time.
Plants and wild animals .lie in their
natural habitats and their bodies soon
disappear, being eaten by other ani-
mals to sustain their lives, or by feed-
ing bacteria that convert them to a
form readily used by plants, thus
maintaining the cycle.

We are tending to upset this cycle
by having our bodies embalmed, sup~
posedly to preserve them forever. or
until the day of resurrection.

One of the nation’s largest insurance
companies has recently said that in
500 years every acre in America will
be taken up by cemeteries, More and
more of our land is being used for
superhighways, shopping centers and
housing for our growing population,
which will reduce our burying ground
acreage still more, and the land to
raise food will disappear.

When the pinch really comes for
land to bury the dead, we may build
"skyscraper" vaults in which to store
the bodies without taking up more
land. ('onceivably, although it. is per-
haps unlikely, all of the elements
needed for human life would be locked
up in the preserved bodies forever.
Then there would be nothing left to
sustain future life.

Folkloristics?

A way to add some humanity to the humanities

By Richard M. Dorson

lll,(i().‘\llN(i'I().\, Ind ~~ll:eit- is a
sad iiiisaiidui'stmidnig in \i‘ierita'i
lugmi' edaiatioi: .iiiout tiie teatiiiiig
and study of folklore, \v'iie folklore
titllf'tl by .i lughfalufiii itanit- .,(”‘ even
by folklorisiits, a term now making
la-aduav . it would ('llttltllllt'." lt'ss
sir-.pa ion and tlt'l'lsllill from university
.idnuiusti'ators and tar ‘Illll's,

",3”- you it professor of tlli‘l)’
jokes tolleagues sometimes ask. And
uideeI dirty Jokes do provide the stu
dent of Ameruan folklore with some
ll.l\‘(' data, since they are a mate:
iolktale term, and should be (tillt't'ltd
and sci'taiiii/ed with tlit- same attenv
iion the t.rimni Brothers gave to Ger
man peasant fairy tales.

'I'tie folklorist is intirested in all
forms of what might be called the
uiidei'tultuie, in contrast With the
elite, the uppercrust, the official, the
formal culture. He studies folk lllCltl‘
ture as compared wttli art literature,
folk history as against documentary
history, folk arts and ll.ll the fine arts,
folk religion rather than theologies,
folk medicine and belief as against
medical science-the list can be ex-
tended to all spheres of human activi-
ties.

This is not to say that the visible
figures in history or the power tlllt‘
a“e separated from folklore. Lliltliln
used folk anecdotes adroitly to make
a pt)lll|(.’ll point. When Agriculture
.‘s‘e retarv Iaarl Ilut/ repeated the story
about Pope Paul VI circulating at the
wt ild I ood ('oniereni t »— "He no playa
d.i paint, be I‘ll niiki da ruics"-—-tite
taliinei oi.iter \vai .ellmg .i laminar
kuui of folktale. ttie lillllltvl‘lills dialett

st'uy, ispei tally congenial to America
".ith its iiii.\ed (llllllt populatioi.

Suddenly cluated irom the folk to
the media culture, liie story caused
consternation. Much oi what the ioi‘k-
lorist studies is [Litt'nllttllfy tillt‘ll.\1\t
because he deals with the tree. on
censored (‘Xlllt’\slitll ll p.-ople-._ .\id
for the -ame reason .iuica is noble,
lciidt'i ali'l Lt’t'oli.

l'nlilo the established subjects to
history, Inglish. anthropology, «(ni-
ology and so on, folklore coniui‘es up
nonacatiemit images. Ilie word sugr
,ics. - ;,r.in if, \..i. .. . Aura i;.' tiltlrtilix
‘ballads" in the holier, gr'ix/iedmoun-
taineers carving straight—backed
chairs. peasants in gay costumes
dancing in the village plaza.

For the commercializati..n of [radii
trons I have coined the terai “fake-
lore." (‘oiitrary to the general notion
that the folklorist deals with the long
ago and the far away, and in tie
l .utcd .st tss is pre;;cca}iet Will] A,»
palachia or the Mississippi Delta, to»
day he is moving into the city and the
contemporary scene.

Folklore mirrors the world of its
own day, not that of a time long gone,
and it throws a broad shaft oi light
on too preoccupatrons and fears, the
dreams and desires of the pcople——the
folk ~—— whom the social scitntists
quantify and computerize.

Yet if folklore deals with humanity
it can produce hard data, in the form
of recorded texts and documented
artifacts, wha'li iuiorm us about offer
purples, our countrymen, otir llt‘lgllr
la . ;, ourselves.

l-Zach historical era generates its
own l)’l(l_\' of folklore. indebteil to
earlier lllt‘lllt‘s and models but reflect
ing its our) outlook. In tl‘c colonial

 

 

So what do we do with the bodies of
the deceased? The ideal thing would
be to bury them immediately after
death, without embalming them, in
places where they could disintegrate
naturally and the elements return to
their respective cycles. For sanitary
and esthetic reasons, this method is
not feasible. Who wants to think that
his body will go into a common grave
with hundreds of others. although this
has happened during wars and great
epidemics.

We next best solution would be
cremation. In this process, the vola-
tile component. would go into the air
for reuse, and the ashes be scattered
on a favorite piece of ground, or by a
beautiful tree so that the body would
nourish and become a part of it.

Although the morticians do a won-
derful job on a body, some people do

ultrii !.i :\l .t anti l‘.so ‘\. the '.v'it.“i
and the de\'.l harassed settlers «on
H rned with the salvation of [l‘l( .r
souls and fearful of succumbing to
e\il.

In the later decades of the twentieth
century our most per mitt‘ legends
fasten on the .‘iutomobile, cl‘iitt symbol
or American affluence and monilitf'.
“I'lte eiil cenQus oi in tune is the
tar." Studs 'I'trkel was told in an iri~
ter\iew by someone who was later
k;lled by an auto.

Believed as true happenings. just as
the presence of the devil and the
magic of the “llt‘ll were once believed,
are the legends of the Death t'ar, the
Killer in the Back Stat, the Vanishing
Hitchhiker, and the Stolen Grand—
mother (whose corpse was strapped
to the luggage rack of the heneymoon-
iiig couple's car).

Historians ucavily emphasiie pal ti»
cal elections in their analyses of the
Amnit an mind, bttt the average pet-
son spends little time thinking about
t: liii s. V‘Viiai they are thinkin; .b i.
finds expression in sayings, sup.i'.sti-
tions. anecdotes, jokes, graffiti. jingles‘.
tpitliets. v.ho",pers. char its r aeii. is
—-th.‘ in. icrids of folklore.

\\’ii i':‘ follzlc‘c ('1‘ .“se ._rc rhl.
they ha\e proved l‘ig.‘ ly attractive to
students At Indiana llll'\'(‘ls‘llf,'. t‘e
first United States unhersity to will
a PILI). in folkloree—theri- are (‘ll‘f
two others. the l'i‘. ver it); oi I’en. 3\l
\ama and the l'ui\ei'sity of lt\.is»—-
mm ISO students ste‘t liigi ct ileum:
in folklore, the annual enrollment ll‘,
till (Hurst‘s t'\'tt‘c(ls 3.000, Mill lllt‘
ratio of students pe" faculty inrm'w
is the highest of any depirtinert "i
the college of arts and s. ("‘t .

 

~—- and he!“

not wish to see a loved one after his
death, but would rather remember
him as he was, alive and happy. If
the body is taken directly to a crema-
tory on death, the survivors would be
spared the expense and anguish of
embalming.

Many ideas will have to be revised
if recycling of bodies is ever to be
accepted, and any proposals will meet
with opposition from religious groups,
morticians, and many other people.
But it may have to be done sometime,
and if we consider all aspects of it
the acceptance of it may be less ob-
jectionable. If recycling is so necessary
for natural processes, why should we
try to inhibit them?

 

 

D. W. Peabody is a retired research
chemist.

\k'ltile otlcr departmtnts are l.strg
faculty p: .‘slllitllm folklore is .ttltliii" to
:ts number. Student are draw;1 Ii-
folklore bttau-‘e they find in it liu‘n. n
\‘iilues‘ end an opportunity to mutt suit
themscbes‘ with the cultural trad;
tions of the ordinary man and woman.
In today‘s climate of opinion. with ll‘t'
intense interest in ethnics blatks.
Chicanos. native Amtricans and other
left-out groups in Ameruan history.
the role of the folklorist in rerottliiig
information about these culiurc~ is
crucial.

Slowly tlte wird is getting a‘oi iul
The other day a professor of El‘i,‘.'.i!:l‘
at a remote uni\ei'sity called me l int:-
distance with some urgency lie v. 9
going into a d:partna.nt nicei'ne tr
sell the hiring of a folklorist. at e
means of strengthtning the 'hru blot,
enrollment, and he wanted to knov. in
a hurry what a folkiorist (lid. ("ould
l‘e teach a course on balladQ “Yes.”
How about science i'ic‘ion‘.’ "No."

Actually my caller kne.v enough to
ask reasonable questions and pick my
bra'ns sele‘tiwly. The hritfing rnust
h.i\e succeeded, for within :: fortn‘ght
that university was advertising for a
toll-tor st

I-‘c‘ldoxe Pal). ; who lune nt‘en an—
poaited to aruersuies i'.- afidi .l
'i.asiii‘i'ilv' ‘o flit .ica 't 'illt‘ connivi-
titty. Hetv liie‘i! ark (-ili("'t sh nit’
l. \c oii.‘ or more utifcwcn 'l'
tiainet’l lolkloi‘is'i cn Its in ..fy Oilie'
wise our s Ldenw .i'i- ‘1‘ill;: :l: lll‘l't
cf .‘ truth ll'ti_\' with .i in ll; r ;‘,..;' of iii.
world s cultural icritzi 't.

Reiko/V ,\1_ ”His it ill ilo ii} ‘ .

’ltflrll'tl to it ' at irt'lo re In .’
1']‘ III 1;, tw, to [it Il.‘:l'l’

l»,‘i,‘l1ii ll‘ilil 'lt' (‘Ilt ‘tl l'i‘thif
'l(v [liin‘pif

 

 i—Tlllf KHVI‘l (‘KY KHRNI‘IL Manda). February 17. I975

LUN'CH
SPECIAL

'09

 

. A

M ‘0 news briefs

Senate Democrats deal
with energy program

\\ \s|||\i.‘|'ii\ ,\l' l“.tt'i‘(t \\llll iiioiiiilini: ei'itit-isni about .‘t
"do nothing" (‘oiiui'i-ss. Senate Denim-rats are preparing to do

 

 

something ahout l'residi-iit lVoril's i-iierui iirourain

Family Steak

or
Chopped Beef

It the\ get their “at. the l’rexidi'nt'x iilan. him-d oii sharply
higher tiiel mists. \\ lll ltt‘ dumped iii l.i\oi‘ ot .‘i itl‘ltLll am that [ll.|(’t'\
tar more i'llt})l'.t\l\ iitl lltllllllltl i'emwwon than on reducing oil

Pitcher of Beer

Ilititttt‘lx

Tossed salad H fb 8 'l'lll‘: lltll SIC \l.li|f \IH ll;t\ \ttlt‘ll lo liliii‘h liil' ‘JU tl.i\.\‘ l‘itll‘tll\

Hat R0” With Butter 0 row . 25 $1! per liari'el \iti‘t'ldl km on imported itll and the Senate l\ \torkinp~

ll A M t04 P M. Bwaelser 1 on a tiiiii-lalile that \\lllllll lirini: .i \ole on that lt‘LEISldllttll lit
Monday thru Saturday Michelob 1°° 'l'lllH‘Mtn

'l‘he l’ri-xident'x press \t't‘l'i‘l.tl'\ lion \t'\\t'll \tltl earlier tlllx

iiioiith "('tiiiui’e\\ ll.t\ liven lli‘l r it lllllllitl .tlltl does llttlltlllL: liiit \otp
PIZZA tiit‘ .i (lt‘l.i_\ '
P d It (Xingu-xx i|.t\\t'\ tlm lull to tlt'l.t\ the oil iiixiioil t.i\ l'i‘i-xiili-iit
0n erosa wwm'mHar-m“ l“tll‘tl l\ i'\iti‘i'li'il lt) \t‘ll‘ ll
FANDUS ITALIAN F0005 Iitllll Nllll' 5 \t-Itll tlii-ri l\ it'll: t‘ll.1l;t't'ill.tllllt'lltlll\t‘\\lll
ea ouse ”0'"? Made Lasagma Spagetti uphold the \t"ll ltll' N’lmli' mm i'Hll.’ili‘t’\ \.l\ the \ote ('iiltltl i1.)
Rav'd' Salad t‘lllli'l' \Kil‘, in .i Moo: 'liit-i- title lli.tt';'_ll. lll tlii- N-iiati-

2“ ”WW” ' ””"“'"“”“"' Conservatives consider
third political party

Southland Dr. Cave Rd.
\\ \slll\(.l’ti\ \l' i'oiwri‘..i

«'iillti‘li'itt'e t'\'.ltlli\lii'll .i \iu'iriil intuitiv‘i'i‘ \iitiil.i\ to \llltl\

Good At Rose and Euclid Only 254-0587

 

 

 

 

.i iiitlllii'Jl .tt tioi.

GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION

\Kllt'lllt'l‘ Iii Will. ,1 illilll in; '1n.i.‘ l‘.i"‘» Ii? 3.. 'I\ in t‘i-ilii View

lit-piililii'a: l’.il"_‘ 31H": at ll-V, '-~ ri-tlm‘ lllltlt‘ l‘ttll\t‘l'\.tlt\i'

, . \lt‘\\i)tllli'\
. iumANO MALL n. FAVE"! MALL A FAN"! MALI. “h.

W 27 —oo¢2 I 27—00” n Iit'lillii durum-ti Hum, .tit:,i.,tt"» li‘. llii‘ \llli'lli.lli
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WANTED: PEOPLE Blackbirds sprayed

The Student Center Board is the primary student programming o .

organization at UK. Operating on university funds derived from student W'th deadly Chem Icals
fees and occasional admissions fees to events it sponsors, the Board has
an obligation to provide UK students, faculty, and staff with the best

   
  
   
 
   
   
  
   
   
  
   
 
  
  
  
  
  

P;\l)l'(‘,\lt . Al‘» More than halt the hlaekbiids remained alive
Sunday in a roosting area that “as sprayed with chemicals In an

 

possible social, recreational, cultural, and educational programs. That is effort to kill them Saturday Night
why the Student Center Board needs sincere, interested students to head "Hy Mama" William J ”0“er Said the ('I‘nirSiirayiniz Plan“
”5 programs for the l975-76 school year. For more information about the hired for the job could only spray about tit) per rent of the 25-arrt‘
Board, or to apply for positions on next year’s Boar