xt763x83n383 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt763x83n383/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1977-11-18 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, November 18, 1977 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 18, 1977 1977 1977-11-18 2020 true xt763x83n383 section xt763x83n383  

Vdu me LXIX. Number 66
Friday, November 18. 1977

 
 

an independent student

Student Center Board
needs more room, money

By JEANN I-Z WEHNES
Kernel Staff Writer

Days Of Our Lives and As The
Vitrld Turns are causing problems
fir MaryJo Mertens.

If tie Student Center had one more
TV lounge, there wouldn't be any
fights over which soap opera to
WdCh. There would be one TV for
tadi station.

Martens, Student Center director,
said additional funding proposals,
mently before the Council of
Higher Education in Frankfort.
wuild allow another TV lounge so
sic wouldn’t have to solve such
poblems. In addition, more space
fir other activities will be added.

The space at the SC is currently
mod to capacity, Mertens said The
Student Center lacks meeting
rooms, game rooms and lounges.

The is the area where UK falls
furthest behind other major
in'versities such as the University
d Tennessee and Indiana University
tbdh benchmark institutions). UT
its I) student lounges, IU six. UK
its (1in me.

Both benchmark schools have

thiee’l‘V lounges, thus avoiding the
witchchannel-towatch problem.
['1‘ and IU have arts and crafts
cutters and bowling lanes. UK has
ru'ther.

Mcrtens said if the new building
imposals, to be funded by in-
(leasing student activity fees from
dis-current $12 per semester for full
time students, are. not approved in
i‘l‘dhkioi‘t, plans will be drawn up to
alter one of the rooms in the SC to
include an arts and crafts room.

The Student Center Board (SCB)
at UK is operated by appointed
stiidmts who decide the programs to
be presented for students in the
tuning year.

John Herbst, programming
(hector, said actual programming
capacities vary from year to year,
(kipending on the number of full-
time students enrolled at the
University. The programming board
is allocated $1 of the $12 student
activity fee assessed students each
semester. The $11 balance is used
i'oropcrating the actual building and
paying wages, utilities and main—
tmance costs.

Despite inflation, the programs

sponsored by SCB have increased in
amber in the past few years
without an increase in student fees.
The movie series has expanded from
five to seven days a week and an
increased number of lectures and
inncerts have been added.

iierbst said he believed part of
SCB‘s ability to add more programs
is because of a more business-like
attitude of recent SCB members in
porgiamming activities and events
that are better supported by
students. The movie series of recent
years has been especially good, he
said. with good student turnout.

At 1U, the student center collects a
70 cent fee per full-time student to
turd its various student activities.
These activites include lectures, art
ethibits, a discoteque, “fire-side
diats" with university professors
and the “I)usk-til~Dawn“ festival of
contests, such as sundae eating.

Other activities programmed by
the student center include movies,
(tricerts and performing arts. A fee
is usually charged for these events
for participation, but the fee is

Continued on page 7

Council on Higher Education
vetoes construction funds

By JACK WAlNWRIGIIT
Kernel Reporter

The Council on Higher Education
(CHE) voted Wednesday not to
appropriate funds for construction
projects at state colleges until 1380

Kentucky colleges originally
proposed 100 construction projects
at an estimated cost of $240 million,
but that figure was later cut to $167
million and only 72 top priority
projects were proposed.

UK proposals included a $6 million
pharmacy building, a $7.5 million
research and animal care facility, a
$6 million hospital addition, a $1.1
million music department
classroom annex and a $6.6 million
art-architecture building.

 

 

- Student ticket distribution for
basketball games begins Sunday
from 2 to 6 pm. for the SMU and
Indiana games at the left front
windows of Memorial Coliseum.
Students can at that time pick up
only one ticket for each game at
that time with a validated II)
and activity card.

Students can pick up a
maximium of two student
tickets, with two validated ID‘s
and activity cards, on Monday
from!) am. to 4 pm. at the same
place.

If any student tickets remain

 

ketsticketsticketsticketst

Here’s how to get student
tickets for basketball games

tetsticketsticketsticketstic

The total list of priorities for UK
“as” in (including numerous com-
munity college prejects and a
chemistry physics building ad-
ditioni but only three were stressed.

The hospital addition would have
included a pre-ambitory care
facility. consisting of offices for
doctors who would have provided
increased services for the med
center

The prc-ambitory care facility
could have enabled the medical
center to expand its services and
include service for spouses and
children of students.

The addition would have brought
the College of Medicine up to the
standards of the top six medical
schools in the Southeast.

 

on Tuesday, a student can pick
tip a maximum of two with
validated 1D and activity cards
at the Coliseum ticket office, or
a student may present only one
set of cards and receive one
student ticket and also purchase
one $4 (cashi guest ticket.

On Wednesday from 9 am. to
4 pm, all rcamining student
tickets will be sold to the public
on a first come. first serve basis.

In case of bad weather, ticket
distribution will be done inside
Coliseum.

 

 

—to¢lay

“The hospital addition would
primarily be of benefit to the College
of Medicine and would include the
addition of seven beds and a
relocation of psychiatrics,“ Dr.

Peter Bosomworth, vice president

for the medical center, said.
According to William Romano,
special assistant to the

available for the allied health
program and the med center as soon

as the College of Nursing building is

completed.

“The second floor of annex two
will be empty as soon as the College
of Nursing is relocated," Bosom-
worth said.

Continued on page 7

em 8

vice
president, more room will be

KENTUCKY

 

”Wm wwWa.,....,. A

 

  

 

Gallery spectator
as she puts it, “copying and evaluating“ a
painting. Gillct was doing her study in the
Fine Arts building art gallery.

Although she appears to be to be lost in up-
preciation. interior design sophomore Ber-
nadett (lillet is actually hard at work. She is,

 

.
t D I
“34(1); .

t
-L -;J

University of Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

 

 

 

4,.“ id ii'Si-il

UK students should consider
new relative grade transcripts

By CHARLES MAIN
Kernel Staff Writer

[The writer has conducted ex-
tensive research on relative grade
transcripts. This story contains his
observations and conclusions]

Announcement of the Arts &
Sciences Faculty Committee's
impending decision to try volunteer
relative grade transcripts for A 8: S

 

news analysis

 

students next fall has already
prompted some mixed student
response.

The most characteristic reaction,
however. has been: “If it‘s only
voluntary, we don‘t have to worry
about it.“ Many students apparently
feel that they only need be con-
cerned with policies that are forced
upon them.

The UK version of the relative
transcript will add to the student‘s
transcript. at his requeest, the
number of students in each of his
classes and the number who got his
grade or better. as well as the
average grade point average iGl’A;
of the. students in each class.

Students at the Ifiiivcrsity of
California at Berkley successfully
fought a similar proposal that cann-
before their University Senate last
spring. The basic difference in the
Berkley proposal was that it was to
be mandatory.

An article in the Berkley campus
newspaper,The Berkley Graduate.
denounced the planned change. in
grade reporting, saying it would
have a “profound and detrimental
effect on the Berkley campus en-
viornment."

The article went on to state that
the new transcripts would increase
competition and cause students to
stay away from group projects and

motivational courses. ”all because a
student's grade will now be
cvtluatetl in light of the per-
formance of the entire class.“

The Graduate concluded that the
relative transcript would put an
unfair stigma of “below average" on
half of Berkley's students when in
fact “our students are from the top
12 percent in the nation.

"Also, making the average grade
it) the class public record will act as
implied pressure on nontenured
tatiilty. forcing them to give lower
grades."

The, relative transcript, in
whatever form it is implemented, is
an attempt to halt the. runaway
inflation of grades, which has been
causing great concern among many
of the nation‘s educators and college
administrators.

The obvious imbalance in the
college grading system is pointed up
by the siiiiiillancous rise in median
iil’t‘s in the nation‘s colleges and

drop in ACT and SAT scores in the
nation‘s high schools. The relative
transcript is perhaps the most viable
solution to that imbalance.

Much of the criticism of the
relative transcript is based on
misunderstanding of its purpose.
Students at Berkley voiced fears
that the relative transcripts would
put them at a disadvantage in
competetion for positions in
professional schools.

In reality, the transcript will only
provide evaluators with more in-
formation about the meaning of each
grade. Students who have high test
scores and who have scheduled
good, difficult courses throughout
their college careers can only be
helped by the relative transcripts.

if they have A's, the As will carry
that much more. weight; if they have
B's and C‘s, the value of those
grades will be increased. Students
Continued on page 5

nation

A MlS’l'RlAL WAS DECLARED yesterday in the obscenity
trlIl of A1 Goldstein, pubisher of Smut Ind Screw mIgIzineI,
when I federIl court jury said it was unable to agree on I
verdict.

The jury of seven women Ind five men had deliberated
neIrly 14 hour: over three dIys before deciding it could not
much In Igreement in the case involving the New York
publisher, I former partner and their publishing company.

Alvin Goldstein, 41, Ind former partner James L. Buckley,
33. of Stockbrldge, MIII., hId been chIrged with illegally
mailing into KInIII 11 copia of the Illegedly obscene
thloib.

AlIo turned in the chIrgeii was their publishing house,
Milky WIy Productions Inc., which is bucd in New York.

A GROUP OF SCIENTISTS opposed to nuclear power
chIrgod yeIterdIy thIt serious reIctor IccidentI In 20
timoI more likely thIn the government's basic estimate, Ind
me kill thmnIndI in the next few decIdeI.

The Union of Concerned Scientists shIrply criticized the
more optimistic “Rasmussen Report," which has been the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission's fundamentIl safety study
since 1974.

The government study, headed by Normm C. Rasmussen,
I professor It the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
concluded that the chance of being killed by I nuclear power
plant accident was only one in 300 million—about 150 time
less likely thIn being hit by lightning.

The scientist group ind its own “correction" of the
government study lead to forecIItI of me 14,400 «near
death: due to nuclear power plant IccidentI within the next
23 years if the prongm grow: rIpidly.

A FLIGHT ATTENDANT! UNION uld yelterdly it ll
prepIring to strike United AirlineI It midnight tonight in I
dispute thIt could ground the nItion'I blunt Ilrline over the
Thanksgiving holldIy.

Patrick D. Robertson, prolident oi the Association of
Flight Attendants, IIld there “hII not been enough prognII
in tIlkI It this point" between the union Ind the compIriy to
Ivert I wIlkout.

A strike "appears likely," Robertson said, advismg that
"people with reservations on United may want to make
backup Irnngements on other airlines."

A spokeomIn said the airline has booked 440,000 reser~
vations over the four-day Thanksgivmg holiday. traditionally
a peak travel period.

world

PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT 0F EGYPT Will visit
Jerusalem for 30 hours starting tomorrow night and will
Iddrou the lone“ parliament on Sunday, israeli Prime
Minister MenIhem Begin announced today.

But SIdIt will mIke the visit. which he has described as I
“sIcred duty,” without the support of Syria and apparently
Iinnst ijor opposition within his own country

Shortly Ifth the viIit wIs Innounced in Jerusalem,
Egypt's officiIl Middle EIIt News Agency said Foreign
Minister IImIil FIhmy hId resigned. SIdIt named FIhmy'ii
deputy, MohImmed mm, to replace him but several hours
lIter he Ilso quit, the Igency ind.

..~._.

LIFE ON EARTH COULD HAVE COME FROM OUTER
SPACE and major epidemics like influenza and the plague
may still be coming from there, two distinguished British
astronomers said yesterday.

Sir Fred Hoyle Ind Prof, ChIndrI Wickramasihghe
presented the theory in In Irticle in the weekly magazine
New Sclentlot.

They speculated that the essentiIl building blocks of life
were formed in the core Ind tIilI of comets.About four
million years ago, their Irticle suggested, I comet could
have crash-landed on truth, bringing the primitive
organisms from which Ill life in: evolved.

weather

SUNNY AND COOL TODAY with I high in the lower 50'I.
Fair and cool tonight, with temperItureI in the low 30‘s.
Pleasant mother for SIturdIy‘I gIme-mOItly sunny with
highs in the mld-50‘I.

Compiled from Mounted ProII dinItcheI Ind the Milan!
WeIthcr Service.

 

  
 

LL

Council’s budget requests ~‘i'ediiiy says many disparities
exist in criminal sentencing

 

 

editorials «8: comments

should be approved

 

The requests for state funding of higher
education during the next biennium show a
determined effort to temper needs with the
reality of little available money.

The outlook is that Gov. Julian Carroll will
accept the recommendations. and include them
in his state budget. If the governor does include
them. they should be passed by the legislature
so that universities can begin to solve the urgent
salaries and

problems of low
facilities.

in its recommendations to the governor and
the state finance department,
Council on Higher Education ii'HE‘.» acted With

great financial responsibility.

University operating budget requests were.
trimmed by about $100 million.
council denied recommending state funding tor
any of 72 construction proposals. Together. the
projects would have cost $167 million.

The importance of the governor‘s approval of
the recommendations is crucral. Urging the
council members not to ask for any construction

inadequate

iunds, (‘1115 Executive Director Harry Snyder
said yesterday “The importance of it (the
budget) far outweighs the importance of these
1 construct ion ) requests."

Carroll's attitude toward funding higher
education is considerably better than two years
ago. when be accused the council of not
examining proposals closely enough. This year
he continues to assert that the schools have not
trimmed enough fat from existing programs in

their budgets. The governor's tentative approval

:51 the

the Kentucky .
legislature.

recommendations
guarantee that he will take them to the state

is still no final

Ultimately. spending dollars for education is

investment.
Yesterday. the.

granted.

Would forego football

Kovach may tackle Med School in ’78

if there was ever a time 1 thought
the world had stopped turning, it
was then.

it was me of the most miserable
days of the fall semester: one of
those gray. cold. nastv rainy days

f”) dick

~ gabfiel

 

 

that usually keeps tropic :ndoors
paying Yahtzee

But 36,0011 shivering souls had
(rammed themsclws into Coin-
rmnwealth Stadium. looking for a
salve for the wounds suffered all
seasm. They didn‘t get it

The record books will show that on
Tov. 22. 1975. ”l’enessee beat Kerr
ucky 17-13 at Lexington. What they
won't show is the acctiunt of THE
day ~the most dcwrstanng blow
o'er administered on the (cm
rmnwealth Stadium turf

it was late in the game when

Tennessee runningback Stanley
hhrgam moving silently. fluidly.
gacefullywvtook a pitchout and
started to sweep left end

Morgan had already run for an 80-
jardtouchdown during the course of

the afternoon and Kentucky fans had
become all too familiar with his
«pen-field :uiinnig exploits. Ten-
iesste's fleet corps of runners had
nniiaged to pick up acres of yaids
running outside on a tired Kentucky
tl‘l‘l'flt‘ that had .--pent most of the
st’ftStll on the field. thanks to a
put teriiig offense

As Morgan took the ball. he slid
h‘hllfl two blockers and UK par-
tisans wondered how much he would
it“ on this one But. almost
irngtctili,. tht :wo oiockers melted
atay. Morgan. who .i scant moment
tef'ort- ltKikttl llkf‘ a fat cat in an
emit: c-i car. mi. in trouble. And he
ddn'l even know it

\i'iih the sheer. brute force of a
.innts twedun‘x shot. t‘K linebacker
.jiri Km ich shot arms the line anti
exploit-d lr'lil' \iorgan SMASH.

With That one lit-rculean blow.
HlVLK'll st’t'l'ut’d to channel all the

.llL‘t't' [rid frustration of the 2-8-1
What» and ::‘i the rumors and
unitii that \l't‘lli with it. into an
Ul;~‘.i~p‘.'i'il.'lt.' halfback

For a iii-intent that seemed like

tier ml; the crowd fell silent They
timid?!" believe it .105! were in-
l‘i't'Slel an Hrt'iilyi it Morgan were
411i alzve alitl. if so. would it be
pissililc to peel turn off this young
iiielititki‘r'.’

.‘iliilll‘ rtttirili tlit- irrestibic force.
\lir'taiii had met the .niinovable

one of the best ways to get a good return on an
Al the bottom line, improved
education means improved economy and quality
of living throughout the state.

And when recommendations for needed ad-
dr’ional funding have been as carefully and
responsibly formulated as they have this year
for state universities. those requests should be

‘-""‘~‘i ' ." '1‘

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(”(‘rild'luyn/‘AJ nor . 3 . 'vi ‘ A," ‘3 n mun and will 00 in
Ml.‘ not” ,3 . , a» card 01 the ECHO"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ERA is response to breakdown
of the family, not a cause of it

  
   

\l’.\Slll.\'(i'l‘().\' As the the rain it“: tilt} 3~ mi; allitlit‘l‘i s e'ti.tii())lltt'lli op— iroduel statistics. lumen-r it
dilegate selection process of irtiiliiionit in “.33.. :ii_ ;n niiiiuiities, leans uomen nith no home
the National Women's is-stni'os, ;i‘ no: .n words. that tile to (line to. no hearth to
(bnterence in Houston titties “his in wt tr in e l‘.'<'\ Iinrilrnsmm-iii-ht tenil. no \vilolv (iuties ivoithy

 

(om iletesitsett‘.theanomaly tl‘i‘ turkeys with its, pro ll the name,
dthe affair is that the best- it {A people ought to wtl't‘SS ’l‘tio itiniih ll1l> him,’ since

(rganized the most M t‘ 3 l 3 3 l) d it No“. oven below the I 3 . ... ‘3‘ 3 t. ,. , . :t
3 r ‘ lllll‘t‘ ilrlil not. .uo'o is t.‘ i‘: tron su ivoi' ot. oea e a r n . - - 1. . > ‘ - *
- /2.lb. Sirtom ‘53 mi: Dinner

nailitiiiiial i‘olo its opponents

 

$31::llllligighilshurzceenéih3111: '—'-— k r" —_ nish to save for women has 0' 3 _ d 2 it ‘3 l 3
a . . .3 ' h-on so vitiated We are lnnermclu 05;; l i, ,H‘ on: Strip f'steak. piping hot
“ESP m" Nicholas Von Hoffman pkg baked pm W . W W. mu.
i! F5. it tntlioriin; :i vhild. The now

it‘s been the men who llat‘. e ____ ____ NM 35 ”A. mmmum ex-

 

 
   
 

Lfirufiam‘ fan: - .3?in ’
g "i ”33 men rem SUNDAY

been voting against this pission "parenting."

       

r

  

  

gfibeml‘g?3:ltu?;f]ggmm331$: the ill‘il‘llll'lit'lti is.: response :iomli it has been suiiiootod To all of this ERA is a 3 fig w WW 4 Thwséav
a'en'? making SW‘CIM‘5 or ' ‘3'“ l-zi ”grim-i. flu 3. - 46:19: ten to i-inhmor tii"t‘iiittt‘l‘lr~"g\' innate-tui'tot‘} It?“ JWW :k Z 3 . : M A “WWW
had ing the opposition. “-9 Siti‘llty. not .i Mi oi it routs (tuti desires that our. oJl~ tor, t‘iiii tor the moment “" “ """" ”""“““"“”

ll'iliililinltt! ii‘iaeljx .ifo is tiny; destroy it lt has been its 1“ there is.

we not replaying the sui-
t'ragttee battles of the early
wars of the century.

 

i.
tuliothioal to the successful taught to give lip service to 3
\Vil'klllg ot our t-eonoiii) at it tho tuieahty noeiledto keep it (oinrieht. ttIiT. h) King \f-
3 ‘ ligh tewt oi prosperity. 'l‘hi fll'ult'i And. at the same time, Features Siiulirale. Inr.
Relatively few “3‘10““ traditional Lilitil} cannot ilil'lltll'i thehurtloiisoiiiedebt

Fayette Matt

 

 
 
  
   
   
  
 
  
  
 

 

ml1t1c1ans0fthe ”“5“,“ka mist ma “astute: ,eeiuim» stiit'il st nits overt. able-
‘ luve come out against ERA Furh n taunt} got its eoi’iosion llKlltl‘i adult soraiiihhng out
3 and ”‘959 “ho have done W il'lillt religion. tr-iiii your it tho homo to itiltl a job
i “'0 mlite and humble about iiuiiitv tnvl ll‘tilzi being: 1i st-lt -- . ~
1. Nowiseeracks, just quietly “4333333333, ,.(.3.”U,3,3 . “mg “_ "hm” m" “"m‘ 0., mu”?
tidied reasons and su down ' " “"i‘mwr t“'“—'h“‘“"g W'“
(pick please 13 ‘m-HHHM 30,- “any 3,333 hunt. rind then comes the
iiriss i‘ii‘ottiiotioi: (it‘ll‘iilllii\' t““"-\‘ttttt l""“"~"‘l'~ to it“!
.D(.)., you know M a