xt769p2w6j40 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt769p2w6j40/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-04-01 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, April 01, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 01, 1976 1976 1976-04-01 2020 true xt769p2w6j40 section xt769p2w6j40 Candidate wants
no votes in

56 election

Vol. LXVII No. 1141
Thursday. April I, 1976

UK professor

By anvil) arrows
.\ssistant Managing Editor

A third student has entered the cam-
paign for Student Government iSGl
president. but unlike it's opponents. he
does not expect to win: he doesn't even
want to.

Mark “Bones" Chellgren. a BGS senior.
said “my goal is to not to receive any
vols.

“If elected. I will not serve. but I do have
plats tor the $10,000 (annually budgeted to
SGL I will split it upinto “H.000 dimes and
pursue man's last great goal in the en-
vironment. that of man versus machine.
I'll play pinball."

Chellgren. who received his nickname
when someone saw him walking "in the
buff” to the shower and said “My god. you
can count all his bones:" said he is the
candidate of the Surprise Party.

"There hasn‘t been a really good goof
party in three years, not since the Banana
Party. I felt the need.” .

Chellgren 's not running on any plat-
form. “I ‘m not running. I prefer to walk. .
And I don't like walking on platforms.
they‘re too unstable. Really I did have a
proposal but I wrote it ona napkin. Thenl
went to dinner and forgot and used the
napkin.“

Pressed. Chellgren managed to
remember several of his campaign
promises. He said he would work against
the apatria tion of penguins in Antarctica.

"The other major issue on this campus"
concerns the office tower plaza fountain.
he said. "I‘m appalled that at this late
date they haven't turned the fountain on."

Seriously. Chellgren said "SG doesn‘t do
anything anyway and I see no reason to
change things. though I do plan to have all

KENTUCKY

may sue

to enter Florida school

lty MIKE MEUSER
.\ssistant Managing Editor

A UK asistant professor gin Veterinary
Science who was denied admission to the
University of Florida medical school
because she is deaf, says she will fight the
action if present negotiations fail to secure
her admission.

In a press conference Wednesday,
Judith Ann Pachciarz said she will fight
the actions of the University of Florida
withlegal action that “could have national
implications for the handicapped.

“There is recent legislation for the
handicapped that has never been tested in
the courts." Pachciarz said. “My case
would be somewhat analogous to the
Brown case' of 1954."

Pachciarz said she is undertaking the
action as a fight for the rights of all han-
dicapped persons. They were recently
afforded minority group status with the
passage of the 1973 Rehabilitation Act.
which prohibits discrimination against the
physically disabled.

"I feel I have more empathy to offer the
handicapped. I want to prove that I can
make it and that others can make it. I am
speaking up for all of us," Pachciarz said.

The first University of Illinois deaf
graduate. Pachciarz earned a Ph. D. in
microbiology and instructed medical and
dental students in microbiology lab here.

Since her sophomore year in college,
Pachciarz has made repeated applications
to medical schools. Most have asked her
not to apply. but Pachciarz said she could
not trove discrimination without applying.

In 1W4 she applied to the University of
Florida for admission in the fall of 1975 and
was denied entry on the basis of her age
and deafness (She is now 34.). Pachciarz
said the age factor was only an excuse to

avoid the real issue-the fact she is deaf.

“I was turned down with the same
reason when I was 22. so it is a spurious
reason to use as an excuse now," Pach-
ciarz said.

Pachciarz said she is seeking support
both locally and nationally since her legal
fees in future court action could be
enormous. She said she knows of no
similar cases pending in the courts and she
is probably in more of a position to pursue
the action than most handicapped persons.

”1 have a very good job. most deaf

people do not. That rs part of the reason I
have undertaken this action‘ ‘she said.

Asked if she thought her efforts would be
succesful. Pachciarz said she is always
optimistic.

“I have always had to fight my way
through. But you must realize that the
medical establishment has tremendous
power which has been brought to bear on
the side of injustice,“ Pachciarz said.

She also noted the irony in the fact that
the medical profession is responsible for
the discrimination against her.

"That is why the deaf community needs
deaf physicians.“ she said.

Pachciarz said discrimination against
deaf people is similar in nature to that
against other persons. “Deaf people are
not mute. Deaf people are not dumb. If
deaf people are called deaf and dumb. it is
like calling a black a nigger.“ Pachciarz
said.

Should her efforts succeed. Pachciarz

feels she will have secured a personal
victory as well as worked toward the
elimination of a social injustice.
— "I do not remember a time when I did
not want to be a physician. I believe
everyone should reach their full potential
and have their opportunity.“

arm!

86 standing committees sit down.”

The candidate said he had no opposition
and refused to comment of the present 86
administration claiming he would be sued
for libd if his comments were published.

“The greatest boon to my campaign is
the historical lack of UK student interest in
elections. so I will achieve my goal,” he
said. _

Chellgren said he is running without a
vice-presidential candidate because he
didn't want to embarrass anyone else.

Among his quaifications for office,
Chellgren listed:

“—I‘ve never been involved with SG
becaum my Mom doesn’t approve, and

—-I‘ve never been involved with a
fraternity bewusemy family is of Swedish
extraction."

Chellgren is currently public relations
director for the Student Center and is a
Kernel sports reporter.

University of KM”
Lexington, Kentucky

.Fishing fever

\tayne .\ntrim, at Lexington resident. takes advantage, of a break in the weather
to test his angling skills in Jacobson Park Lake.

NIDA response pleases UK sociologists

By MONTY N. FOLEY

Kernel Staff Writer
Four UK sociology professors are

pleased with the response that the
National Institute on Drug Abuse t NIDA)
has made toward a national non-medical
drug use study they completed six months
ago.

Dr. Gerald Slatin said Wednesday he
hopes NIDA, a Health Education and
Welfare agency, will use the drug study
findings as a basis to evaluate current
legal policies for dealing with drug of-
tenders.

Dr. Harwin L. Voss said the data
produced by the drug use survey should
lead authorities to the conclusion that non-
mediml drug use is a social problem that
cannot be solved by “putting all of the
users and dealers in jail."

The results of the 2,500 respondent
random sample survey, Voss said, show
that non-prescribed drug use is a
significant problem. “The country’s jails
and prisons, which have never held more
than 250,000 persons, coukl not possibly be
used to isolate drug users from the rest of
society,” a policy advocated by many
people in the country, Voss said.

Utilizing Selective Service records to
obtain a sample base, Slatin said, “the
study was designed to amwer some
questions that were missed in a previous
study of drug abuse by Vietnam veterans.

The professors. who were two years in
deigning, conducting and evaluating the
survey. posed 240 questions to the
respondents, all mabs between the ages of
20 and 30. ‘

“Specificafly, the study asked detailed

questions about how the individual started
using drugs, how much of the drug was
used, and requested a comprehensive
listing of the person’s economic and social
characteristics,” Dr. Richard R. Clayton
said

In addition, individuals were asked
questions designed to elicit their attitudes
toward their habit, toward drug laws, and
whether or not they held liberal or con-
serva tive orientations, Clayton said. “And
they were asked about any drug treatment
they had received,” he added.

“We found some of the usual patterns,”
Clayton said, referring to results showing
that blacks within the age group use more
drugs than whites within the grouping.

“But young blacks, those between the
ages of 20 a nd 22, had a lower incidence (of

Continued on page 7

 

 editorials

mammmmmmmmmmm.
mmmmummmumwum

ii .. Y Z! l ~
Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief
Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

 

 

Professor
deserves
equal
treatment

UK Assistant Professor Judith
Ann Pachciarz’s deafness should
not hinder her acceptance to
medical school.

Pachciarz is threatening to sue
the University of Florida medical
school because she says she has
been barred from entering the
school because she is deaf.

Pachciarz has a doctorate
degree in microbiology from St.
Louis University. She has held a
number of high academic posts at
such schools as the University of
Florida, the University of Miami
and St. Louis University. It is
therefore obvious that her deafness
has in no way hindered her
a ch iev eme nts.

Dr. lra Gessner, Florida
selection committee chairman,
said the reasons Pachciarz was not
accepted ”had nothing to do with
her handicap.”

If Pachciarz
discriminated
University of

has been
against, the
Florida should
reconsider. The medical
profession, of all professions,
should understand the ability of a
handicapped person to overcome
handicaps.

 

 

———-—-Letters—————

Winning
Editor:

O.K., so we won. The Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA) was not rescinded
in Kentucky. That does not mean that
we can afford to sing Thelma Stovall’s
praises a few times and forget about if.

It is absolutely essential, both for the
ERA and for Our waning civil liberties
in general, that we get some momen-
tum going for ratification, beginning
with the rally planned for May lo in
Springfield, Ill. Getting together a
large group of people from Kentucky to
attend the rally is going to take a lot of
work, and the handful of us who show
up at the ERA Alliance meetings can’t
do it all without help. What one person
does on a part-time basis does make a
difference.

Come to the next meeting at 7:30
p.m., April 7, and we’ll put you to work.
Otherwise, Kentucky may be going
through the same song and dance in
1978.

Carol Dussere

German graduate student
Letters policy

The Kernel welcomes any and all
reader respmse through letters to the
editor or Spectrum commentaries.
Because of space limitations, please
limit letters to 250 words and Spectrum
commentaries to 750 words. All letters
and commentaries should be typed,
double-spaced and signed, including
classification, maior and phone
number.

 

 

Keep the buses

 

SCAR

Desegregation of schools is again
being threatened in Boston, the “Cradle
of Liberty." A campaign against the
right of an equal education and the
rights of us all is being carried out by
the racist organization called Restore
Our Alienated Rights (ROAR).

The overtly racist nature of this
attack is becoming apparent and is a
direct threat to us in Kentucky with the
anti-busing forces in Louisville taking
the lead from Boston. The collabora-
tion has gone so far as ROAR and
United Labor Against Busing (ULAB)
iointly sponsoring an anti-busing
march on Washington.

The Student Coalitions Against Rac-
ism (SCARS) around the country are
trying to break the news black-out that
has occurred about events in Boston
and keep everyone aware of the racist
threat. People who favor desegrega-
tion and democratic rights in general
should support the April 24 demonstra-
tion called in Boston to support busing
and to call for a half of the racist
attacks against Black students.

As we have seen, the new racist
campaign of intimidation includes at-
tacks of Black school children by
organized mobs of white students.
These occur on signal after a ring
leader blows a whistle or yells
“Nigger!” at the top of his lungs. The
sworn affadavits of Blacks in South
Boston and other high schools show the
particularly grave situation of the
police standing idly by or intervening to

 

arrest the victims of the attacks rather ~

than the attackers.

Other manifestations of the increas-
ing campaign to stop desegregation
include the firebombing of the Boston
NAACP headquarters. Several Black
families living in neighborhoods that
are predominantly white have been
threatened. Some were told that
niggers have no right to live in the
neighborhood and have been given a
week to move out. One home was
firebombed. "Students," including
many parents of East Boston High
School, blocked traffic tunnels leading
to the city and turned over cars. Racist
leader James Kelly of ROAR. made
statements alluding to a “long hot
summer.“ Other leaders cited a threat
from Black culture because of desegre-
gation and said they would never give
in.

it was in this atmosphere of increas-
ing racism that nearly 1,000 members
of the South Boston Marshals Associa-
tion, a group that is involved in ROAR,
attempted to march on South Boston
High. This took place despite the court
order protecting students and the
school by not allowing a demonstration
within 100 yards of the school grounds.
The vigilante group coordinated its
assault with walkie-talkies and was
armed with baseball bats, sawed-off
hockey sticks, tire irons, and rocks and
bottles. They even came with their own
tear gas cannisters.

Seventy-four police were treated for
iniuries and 13 arrests were made.
Fortunately, it was a day when there
were no Black students in the school.
But the message was very clear.
Blacks would have to fear for their

rolling!

safety it they came back to souhtie.
The next night at another high school in
Charlestown 200 people smashed win-
dows in the school and fought the police
until midnight. ‘ '

The racists haven’t stopped at at-
tacking empty buildings. They have
also been disrupting meeting by
physical intimidation. Two hundred
ROAR members packed a meeting of
the . City Coordinating Council ap‘
pointed by J udge Garrity to monitor the
desegregation Boston schools. They
broke up the meeting by throwing Afro
pics on the stage and drowning out
speakers by singing ”God Bless
America.“ The police did nothing and
it got to a point that the meeting was
called off. A member of the city’s ,
school board, ”Pixie” Passadino, led
the disrupters. ROAR has attacked
other meetings in Boston such as a rally

for the Equal Rights Amendment.
We must answer these attacks on our

democratic freedoms. A peaceful
march and rally has been called by
community leaders in Boston. The
purpose of the rally is to demand
protection for the students so that
desegregation will continue. Endorsers
include Boston NAACP board mem-
bers, Massachusetts Black Political
Caucus members, national Black pol-
itical caucus members, the Ralph
Abernathy Southern Christian Leader-
ship Conference, Julian Bond, Hank
Aaron and many others.

The National Student Coalition
Against Racism (SCAR) endorses the
demonstration and is working with the
April 24 coalition. SCAR chapters in
Lexington and Louisville are working to
send a contingent to the march and
would be interested in working with
other groups to send as many people as
possible. We must make the message
loud and clear; End the Racist Vio-
lence, Keep the Buses Rolling!

 

This commentary Was submitted to the
Kernel by the Student Coalition Against
Racism.

 

 

 

  

VT

spectrum

Opinions from inside and outside the University

 

 

 

 

 

 

The rocks we walk on will be our doom

Larry Flynt, the Academy Awards
and, verily, even Josh McDowell must
stand aside today. For I have been
provided with The Truth.

 

terrence

 

And I cannot be responsible for
withholding it from the public.

James Hunyadi, the courageous fel-
low whose bedrock determination and
volcanic enthusiasm produced the fol-
lowing report from the underground, is
my friend. We share an office. Until
recently. i did not question his past.

But in the process of verifying his
report, I discovered that he is, in fact,
the rather direct descendant of Janos
Hunyadi, the famed Bastard King of
Hungary.

Many years ago in Budapest, while
still the heir-apparent to the commun-
ist-usurped Hungarian throne, James
visited a tiny, old man in a ramshackle
house—and was told of a threat to the
future of man. Unlike "most young
Hungarians, James did not take such a
threat lightly.

instead, he relenquished his claim to
the throne and vowed to pursue the
subtle threads of that threat to the very
end of the earth.

It was a long and hard road to
Kentucky—through desert intrique and
transatlantic crossings filled with peril
—yet here he is. And he has the answer.
Allow your eyes to read...and to weep.

 

Watch out.

Keep your eyes, your ears, and your
skin in touch. Be aware; be awake.
This is no skin-flick, card-trick, flash-
man-on-the-subway routine. Just pure
essence of fact. Truth to hold, to savor,
to handle, to seek.

The stones we walk on, buy, will be
Our doom.

But wait—l'm lost. Let me explain.

Last year Americans spent SXX
million to bring rocks into their homes
and offices. They called them pets.
The realization will soon hit people that
the rocks are not pets at all. They are
the tool of our destruction, the cause of
our decline.

By November, 1976, these events will
be commonplace: rocks thrown
through - windows, rocks thrown at
people, rocks tumbled onto cars and
houses. Chaos will follow. Then the
end.

Some see this rock craze as part of a
conspiracy to destroy this nation.
Those who hold the conspiratorial (oh
it’s nasty, obscene, old whore of a
word) viewpoint present strong evi-
dence for their position.

They trace the conspiracy to Khru-
schev’s shoeless "we will bury you"
speech at the United Nations. (Evi-
dence also indicates Khruschev re-
moved his shoe because of a pebble
under his heel.)

With the proliferation of rocks in our
homes—and homes are the cornerstone
of the family, the foundation of our
nation—there will be no need for the
communist of Russia to bury us. We
will do it ourselves.

The cabal hunters pile up fact after
fact:

—our vice president’s name is
ROCKefeller, or ROCKy;

—Rolling STONE has a circulation of
some half million;

—insurance ads tell us to “own a
piece of the ROCK”;

—the Rolling STONES are still at it;

—-in the 60’s large numbers of people
started getting themselves STONEd;

—ROCK'n’roll has maintained its
dominance of the music industry;

—people at religious services still
sing ROCK of Ages;

—anthropologists have recently dis-
covered the Tasaday, a STONE Age
people; and,

-—ROCKY Marciano. ROCK Hudson.
ROCKS in your head, ROCKy road to
Dublin, ROCKing chair, ROCKing
Horse, STON Ewalling, even rocks from
the moon.

These facts, and thousands of others
that could be presented, seem to
indicate a large-scale conspiracy to
have us accept rocks as a normal part
of our lives. Once they’re accepted, the
rocks can do their. dirty work:
smashing windows, crushing bones,
pounding away at the very fabric of our
society.

But investigative reporters must look
beyond the mere surface of the facts.

even when that favorite newsroom
delicacy—conspiracy—presents itself
for digestion.

If we look beyond the surface
appearance of conspiracy we find that
rocks are not, in fact, a recent danger;
they have played an important role
throughout the history of man.

Prometheus, the founder of civiliza-
tion, was chained to a rock on Mt.
Caucasus. There a vulture plucked at
his liver every day until Chiron
consented to die in his place. Sisyphus
spent his time in Hades rolling a rock
up a hill. Jesus did not rise from the
dead until the imprisoning rock was
rolled back from his tomb. And Peter
was the rock upon which the church
was built.

These are the facts. They point not to
a simple human conspiracy to destroy a
modern-day nation, but to immutable
laws of nature which determine the
coming end of the human race.

These laws are fixed, stable. Rocks
are a solid and the atoms in a solid
move but cannot pass one another.
Each atom stays in one place—on the
average—and its motion is a vibration
about that place. The placement of
atoms in a solid is an ordered
arrangement.

To combat this epidemic of stability.
some people have suggested that a
massive worldwide effort is needed to
change the atomic order of rocks in
order to preserve humanity. Yet war
efforts, space- and flu-shot programs
would be small compared to the energy
and commitment needed to disorder

.. -.__.-_...

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v "Illa" I'l IMJ'
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t a |~ v- ‘u
t‘ .

. .
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it” . HIM ."

rock structures.

Indeed, the National Science and
Theological Institute estimates it would
take every other man, woman and child
in the world three lifetimes to make any
noticeable change in the atomic struc-
ture of the rock population.

Even if we had the time, energy and
organization to run such a program, the
outlook for the human race would not be
improved. Because any change in the
atomic structure of rocks would also
change the nature of the surface of the
earth...and destroy the platform on
which humanity exists.

What must be undertaken, therefore
is an effort to change the way in which
that inevitable outcome is .to be met,
rather than trying to change the
outcome itself.

Toward that end i present a recipe for
growing sodium nitrate crystals in the

NaNO3 colorless hexagonal system:
l. Supersaturated solution:
a. One pound sodium nitrate in 412
cc. (14 02.) water ,
b. no grams per 100 cc. water
ll. Add to saturated solution
a. 12 grams sodium nitrate

b. 3 grams per original 100 cc. water
Seed at normal seeding temperature.

Individual stores of sodium nitrate (salt
peter) will not change the natural laws
bearing down on our existence. They
may, however, help us to achieve an
end which is not rock-hard.

James Hunyadi and Terrence Tucker
are both communications graduate
students. If you see them, please call
their mothers.

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

i—TIII‘: KENTl'CKY KERKEL Thursday. ;\pl‘il l. I976 FT
' g' LADIES' DAY :1 YOUR HAND . I ‘ WW5 ‘3me
EVERY SATURDAY 0" A 70'0“ . .
FROM 2 . 7 AND YOU'LL QUII‘IIOH may dle

MALE "m" ‘" °°' says NJ high court
A'GO'GO TOYOTA ‘ll:l£.\'l‘(i.\. .\..l. nin— The New Jersey Supreme Court ap-
of

YeS, it’s real live go-go pointed Karen Anne Quinlan‘s father her legal guardian \t'ed-
, . ' .. . H’, boys live every nesday and said the comatose young woman may be allowed to die
ll competent medical authorities agree with him that there is no

Bin-h ects Saturday. LEXINGTON reasonable ptb‘SlhllllV of her recovery.
ev = = . The court said that in cases like Quinlan‘s a medical point is
are for er. 630 New Circle Rd' reached where the individuals rights to privacy and to choose

Unless you help, ' 254- 5751 neath take precedence over the interests of the state in preserving

human life.

 

 

 

uuinla n. :2. has been kept breathing by a mechanical respirator
since shortly after she fell into a coma almost a vear ago.

f h I d "\t e think that the state‘s interests weaken and the individual's
Be 0 re t ey rU n at Keene an , right to privacy grows as the degree of bodily invasion increases
and the prognosis dims." the court said. "Alternately there
comes a point at which the individual’s rights overcome the state‘s

Run for the Chevy Store ‘
Bork urges Supreme Court

 

801 Euclid Ave. - Chevy Chase

to limit death penelty use

\t.\s‘||l.\(i'l'ti.\ (.\I'i~* Solicitor General Robert H. Bork Wed-
neSda y urged the Supreme (‘ourt to overturn its 1972 ruling that the
death penalty may not be inflicted by juries which are given little
or no guidance for its imposition.

Bork. the lawyer responsible for presenting government cases
before the high court. saidthe 1972 decision required states to adopt
"second choice” systems to preserve capital punishment.

. “’f‘hey ought to be permitted to go back and choose the system
We've added something new thatthey thinkis best andfairest." Bork told the court.

Racing Forms in contrast. Stanford University law Professor Anthony G.

. . Amsterdam argued that even a life term in solitary confinement
Stop by and ple your Winners with no chanceof' parole is constitutionally preferable to the death
penalty.

Amsterdam's assertion came after Justice Lewis 1“. Powell Jr.,

I . breaking a silence he had maintained since the death penalty
Don t forget — BUY If here‘ arguments beganTuesday. said that ifcapital punishment is to be

Brown bag if 01’ Stingles abolished "society must have some effective alternative.”

Perkins urges continued work

 

 

 

on Paintsville dam, resevoir

Helplng YOU SOlVe your University \t.\s‘lll.\(;'l‘ti.\ <.\l'i»- Kentucky Rep. Carl Perkins (D) and a
p information problems of Kentucky delegation of'citizens\\’ednesday pluggedf'orcontinued work on the

. _ l’aintsville. Ky.. dam and reservoir project at a hearing of the
IS our bUSlness. Houw subcommittee on public works appropriations.

The delegation. which included Paintsville Mayor James
'l‘rimble and County Judge James Whitten, was seeking an

appropriation this year of" some $33 million.

 

 

 

Perkins testified that the flood control project would protect the'
t‘hessie System rail bridge over the Big Sandy River.

Without that bridge. Perkins told the panel. the trains would not
fun. the coal would not be shipped or mined and the people in Pike
Libraries and neighboring counties would lose their mining jobs.

" NBC Today Show will feature
’\J ’ \ THE NEW many facets of Kentucky lite
r O 000 I-‘It.\.\Kl-‘ti|t'l‘ t.\l'i--- The NBC television show "Today" will be.

dedicated to Kentucky Friday.
ACADEMIC ASSISTANCE CENTER The program. beginning at 7 am. will feature a long discussion

with tiny. Julian Carroll.

1/ Free tutorlng ‘ .\fso featured will be many facets of Kentucky life. The Carroll
. o . interview was conducted on Claiborne Farms in the Lexington
wAcademic information um
and referrals

0 K‘l'\lt‘(K\
i/Course exams on file rner‘

20] KING LIBRARY SOUTH . _ . ,?u§‘:“’"'".'«:m
call 258-2684 ‘ ' ' ‘

(9,01% WW/
dea/I Qfl/HZ /5.J,' 2-4pm.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

V
L

 

campus briefs

'l'lll‘l Kl'lk'l‘l'l‘KY KENNEL. Thursday. April i. lino—5

 

 

Ashland Community College

dedicates new facilities Friday

Ashland Community t‘ollege
«At‘t‘». will dedicate its new
science and tine arts wings and
auditorium Friday.

“The addition of these taciltties
means greater convenience for
our students and faculty and
greater effectiveness for our
programs." said Dr. Robert
Goodpaster. college director.

"All of our programs will
benefit. but of particular im-
porta nce is the expansion of our
engineering technology
programs, be'caUse of the
heavy concentration of industry
in. our area. and of our nursing
program.“ Goodpaster said.

The new live-story science
wing houses laboratories for
chemistry. physics. biology,
microbiology and home
economics. The wing also
provides space for drafting
rooms and laboratories for the
engineering technology
programs and offices for
student government and the
student newspaper.

The new fine arts wing in-
cludes a music room. a fully-
equipped ait laboratory, faculty

ottiees and a lecture-

demonstration room.

Also located in the line arts
wing is the new auditorium which
seats 384 people.

t'K President Otis A.
Singletary will participate in the
dedication of the $3 million

tacilities. to be held at 11 am. in
the new auditorium tioodpaster.
l'lx' vice president for t‘oni-
munity t'olleges Stanley Wall.
l’aul Urumhles and Opal (‘onley
ot’ the .-\cc advisory board and
Mark l’orter. .-\t‘t‘ student
govemment president. will also
participate in the ceremonies.

Aging center provides
funding for research

The Sanders-Brown Research
Center on Aging is offering
money to support meritorious
research in the biological prob-
lem of aging.

Members of the UK faculty
interested in applying for these
funds should submit an applica-
tion including the title of the
project, a general statement of
aims, pertinent background in-

formation and a vitae. The
application should also outline
the project‘s design. significance
and a detailed budget.

Applications must be submit-
ted by April 12 to David R.
Wekstein. Medical Center on
Aging Committee chairman,
Room MS-571. Medical Science
Wing, A.B. Chandler Medical

 

 

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Ragout of Beef Barbecued Pork
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Beet Bordelaise
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537's. amnion.— 253-0014

The Jimmy Carter Campaign at UK presents

DALE FARABEE

former Ky. Commissioner of Mental Health

speaking in support of Jimmy Carter

THIS_ THURSDAY NIGHT, 7:30 pm

Student Center, Room 245
All UK Community Invited!

paid tor by the UK Jimmy Carter W91. Paul Whale»
Coordnabr

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International Week focuses”
on students' cultural differences

Ity Lyssa i‘t'xk
Kernel Staff ll riter

An International Week
workshop that will focus on
coping with cultural differences
between foreign students and
Americans will be held April 7.

"Cultural Pluralism and In-

tegration: How Are They

Possible in a l'niversity'.’" is the
title of” the day-long cross-
cultural event which will involve
foreign and American students:
faculty and administrators.

“Foreign stu dents often

complain they don‘t understand.

the American way of life." said
Syham Manns. assistant director
for International Student Affairs.

Wile“

has chronic
respiratory disease

USE
CHRISTMAS
SEALS

___§_AVE LIVES

I.------------------- -----

“This workshop will con-
centrate on the relationship of
minorities to majorities at L'K."
Manns said. ”The majority
seldom realizes that the
minorities isolate themselves to
find strength.“

The informal atmosphere at
American universities often
makes foreign students uneasy.
.\ianns said Several of L'K‘s 450
foreign students have been
d'stressed by the informal dress
and manner of both students and
faculty here. she said.

Some foreign students in-
terpret American mannerisms as
insults. Manns said. adding that
an Indian student became upset
when he saw a professor sitting
with his feet on his desk during
his lunch hour.

“Therea re differences like this
that people in key positions need
to be aware of." Manns said.

The workshop, which will in-
elude 20 minority students, 8
white Americans, and I2 faculty
and administrators, will study
cases of typical commu