xt77d7959z0x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt77d7959z0x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-08-25 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, August 25, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 25, 1976 1976 1976-08-25 2020 true xt77d7959z0x section xt77d7959z0x V0.LXVIII,N0.116

Wednesday, August 25, I976

Homeless

Housing shortage puts students on waiting lists

KENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper ————_____——_1

despite purchase of Hollytree Manor apartments

BY DICK GABRIEL
Assistant Managing Editor

Business is booming at UK, which
means there are more students to be
taught. It also means more people
are scrambling for places to live.

Last year, 109 students were stuck
withurt places to live. Dormitories
filled quickly and off-campus
housing was scarce. Many students
stayed at the Phoenix Hotel.

This year things haven’t changed
much There is still dormitory
waiting lid of 400, 110 people live at
the Phoenix and there are few
apartments to be found in
Lexington.

Larry Ivy of the housing office
pointed out that the original waiting

list stood at 1,300 people. After it is
determined how many people who
were assigned dorm rooms are not
going to show, the 400 figure is ex-
pected to shrink, Ivy said.

Spaces opened in the dorms when
UK bought the Hollytree Manor

'75

qfii’tQK-il; ‘

Last year‘s Kentuckian magazine [seen above] was
a near disaster. This year seems to be the perfect

aprtment complex this summer. The
complex will house graduate
students, allowing Blanding II to
house freshmen women. Since
graduate students lived alone in the
dorms and undergraduates doubled
up, this mears an addional72 people
can be accomodated on campus.

But according to Vincent
Pulskamp, administrator for
Lexington Tenant Services, buying
Hollytree Manor will help UK very
little in finding homes for students.

“Everyone who was living in
Hollytree Manor was a student
anyway,” Pubkamp said. “UK now
has more units (rooms) that’s true,
but they aren‘t supplying more
housing. That didn’t improve the
situation at all.”

Pulshkamp said the purchase of
the aprtment complex throws more
students into the already crowded
market for off-campus housing.

“My understanding is that the
University can offer 4,500 units. That
puts a significant number of people

within the comminity looking for
housing,” he said.“Students without
money really compete with families
with low incomes.”

More and more students are

turning badr to campus housing,
according to Ivy. “With the state or

the economy, the costs of living off
campus, the costs of food and gas, a
student living on campus already
knows how much he’ll have to
spend.” The fact that costs will not
increase this year, plus, Ivy said,
liberal rules such as co-ed dorms
and increased open hours, make
campus housing more appealing.

“The combination of the two
seems to have brought students back
to campus,” he said.

Even with the movement back
toward campus, places to live off-
campus are few and far' between,
Pulskamp said.

“The Housing Assignment
Planning Committee says there is a
1.8 percent vacancy rate,” he said.
Last year’s rate was near three
percent. “The FHA (Federal
Housing Administration)works
under a rule of thumb that a healthy

-—Stewan lawman

time for a comeback and the staff has several new
additions. including a new business staff to im-
prove circulation.

Kyian staff hopes to recover

from 7 5-7 6 financial disaster

By MIKE MEUSER
Assistant Managing Editor

After struggling with financial and
mamge'ial problems in its first
year of operation, the Kentuckian
magazine may be on the road to
recovery, according to Pam
Parrish, this year's editor-in-chief.

The Kentuckian, published con-
tinuously for over so years as a
yearbook, was changed to a
magazine format in the fall of 1975.

Parrish. who concedes that last

year was somewhat of a disaster,
sees her new business staff as the
key to success this yearar.

“Writers generally don’t have
much business sense,” Parrish said.

“This year we have a full-time
business manager while last year we
only had one for two months.”

Parrish said most of the
managerial problems centered
around poor control of wages, a
failure to meet printing deadlines

and budget overruns in many areas.

“When we went to hourly wages
second semester we lost track of the
salary budget," Parrish said.
“Then we had printing overspending
due to not knowing what we needed
until the last minute."

Na my Green, student publications
adviser. said she hopes the
magazinewllldo well since this year
wil be the deciding factor in
continuing the project.

Cartilage". M [‘ng ‘1

market places the vacancy rate at
seven per cent.”

Pulskamp is not very optimistic.
“I don’t see anything that makes me
think things will improve this year
and I don’t expect it to improve in
the future,” he said. “The latest
projection I heard was that UK ex-
pects to have 25,000 students in 1980.
When that many students are
thrown into the market that has to
inflate prices.”

And it’s rsually the students,
rather than the low-income family,
who win, according to Pulskamp.
“When it comes to competing, a
student will pay more than a
family," he said. He added,
however, “neither group ever really
wins.” Students don’t get good
housing and families don’t get
anything.”

The University is preparing a
feasibility study that will be com-
pleted Sept. 30. It is designed to
study housing and enrollment
trends, and determine if new
campus housing should be con-
structed, so students will not be left
without a place to live.

"We always hate to lose students,
Ivy said “ but when a student
can’t attend the Univeristy of
Kentucky because he doesn’t have a
place to live, well, that makes it
worse.”

21

University of Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

 

Dale “The Mole" Rich,

 

Balloon ball

takes time out from his referee duties to swat at an
oversized volleyball during Wildcat Potpourri
festivities at the Seaton Center. Officials and
Seaton (‘enter employes were encouraged to
participate because of a slim student turnout.

vaamimxww

79' «Ms-1.3m.“ ' .~...,.«o-

--Stewart bwman

a senior business major,

 

 

New gay organization to stress

counsel, service, not identity

BY STEVE BALLINGER
Copy Editor

After being snubbed by the Dean
of Students Office last year in their
attempt to be recognized as a
campus organization, some
members of the Gay Students
Coalition (GSC) have created a new
group to counsel and aid gays with
legal and personal problems.

The Gay Student Organization
(GSCO) is modeled after the Gay
Community Services Center in Los
Angels, according to the local
group's present chairperson, who
asked not to be named to avoid
harassment.

Services to be provided include,
legal and personal counseling, a
telephone holline and a chance to
unite with other gay organizations in
the country, the chairperson said.

Dean of Students Joe Burch
rejected the GSC application for

organizational status Feb 9,
saying in a letter that an official gay
organization “would not be in the
best interests of the University and
its student body." Burch also said
recognition would be contrary to the
expressed policy of the Com-
monwealth of Kentuccky.

“I think it’s a waste of time trying
to get recognition in this com-
munity,” said Audie Price, a
founding member of the new Gay
Services Organization (GSO).

“We spent the last two years
draining our energy trying to get
recognition said another founder,
who also asked not to be named
Although the new organization’s
services will be available to all gays
its priorities will be on campus he
said.

Price said he plans to meet with
StudartGovernment (SG) President

Mike McLaughlin to discuss possible
SG supptrt for the new group. There
is little chance that the G50 will
apply with the Dean of Students
offce for recognition , Price said.
Legal services provided by
GSOwould asist gays charged with
loitering, soliciting and other crimes
that are frequently used to harass
gays, accading to one member.
There was also the possibility that
some of the group’s activities would
be conducted with the Metro
Community Church , he added.
About thirty people are involved
int the new group.the chairperson
said, . He added the GSC will be
fundai with member’s dues and
fund raising events and will hold
elections to select leaders soon.
“We expect to have problems in
finding a building to have offices
in,” he said, “but if everything
works out, we should be providing
some services in about two weeks".

 

Drop-add and drop

Once again, the weather was
perfect for those who decided to
make that last-minute class
change in the heat and fury of
the Coliseum. For a glimpse of
some of this year’s victims, see
page 11.

The longest line

If you think you've been
standing in line this week, don't
worry. Football season is just
starting and no one is promising
your tickets will be any easier to
get the year. See page 17.

 

What’s Inside

Can he do it?

This year’s football team has
a wall of bulk on defense and
together they can probably do
the job. Offensively, the Cats
will rely heavily on junior Derek
Ramsey. Joe Kemp,. Kernel
sports eidtor gives you the
details on page 14.

Feathers and fur

A UK professor has been given
3 $5M!) grant to study how
birds and animals keep warm.
Find out why on page 7.

New games

Willing, and a few unwilling
participants, try out the latest in
intramural games at the Seaton
Center field No one was wat-
ching, everyone was playing.
See page 17 for Wildcat pot.
pourri.

The new rush

If you think rush is still just a
big party, you may be a bit
suprlsedthisyear. It’s serious
business. On page 6 IFC rush
chairman Bo Bollinger and
Assistant Dean of Students
Michael Palm tell why.

 

 

  

 

Editorials do not represent the opinion: 0! the University.

 

 

Your opinion counts

While it is understood that the major obligation
of the press is to report the news accurately and
objectively, a forum for interpretation, analysis
and commentary abo is essential.

The Kemelwill meet that responsibility on this
page. Daily editorials will be written on campus,
local, national and international issues. An
editorial board composed of the editor,
mamging editor, editorial editor and two
assistant managing editors will meet daily to
discus ideas and to determine the paper’s
position. An editorial’s purpose as two fold; it
enables the Kernel editors to comment on issues
and events and it provides a service to readers
by offering information and analysis.

At lea st 135 Kernels will be published this year,
and, whether you want to disagree, agree,
condemn or praise, we want to listen. Letters
should not exceed 250 words and comments
should not be longer than 750 words. Letters and
comments on any topic will be printed unless
there is a possible legal problem.

When submitting letters and comments, in-
clude your name, address, telephone number,

major a nd classification. Letters and comments
must be typewritten and triple spaced. The
editor reserves the right to correct spelling and
syntax errors.

Besides your own opinions and our editorials,
there also will be a column, written by Kernel
editors, that we hope will help explain the paper
and the problems we encounter while producing
it. As many returning students probably have
noticed, the Kernel pages are approximately
twice the size as they were last school year.
Today’s “Letters from the editor“ column ex-
plains the transition.

In addition, we will have several columnists to
write weekly and bi weekly pieces for the
editorial page. These columnists will express
personal viewpoints that don’t necessarily

reflect the views of the editors.
Finally, the editorial page will containcar-

toons and graphics. Art is obtained from syn-

dicated services and staff artists.
We urge readers to respond to the newspaper’s

content or to submit views on whatever topic
comes to mind. The forum is provided on the
editorial page. It should not be wasted.

KETl‘iiel

 

Drop-add

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Kédfiel

 

City to rebuild Prallfown Snowballlngu
whet? housing plan accepted

reaps getting ('ilslt’l‘

 

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Letters

 

Pro Socialist

Our generation lives under a
shadow (f uncertainty. No longer
can we count on America’s
prosperity to provide a secure
future.

What are the chances of finding a
job? Is a new round of layoffs
around the corner? For young
people who are in school or would
like to be: Will a college degree be
worth anything in four years? Will
tuition hikes and higher admission
standards keep more and more out
of school that would like to go?

For the first time in history ad-
va nced technology makes it possible
to meet the basic needs of all of us
including meaningful steady work
and a decent education. But the
capitalist private profit system
continually sacrifices those needs
for the enrichment of the few.

This gap between what working
perple and students know can be
achieved with society's resources
and what is actually delivered by the
capitalist rulers is growing wider
and more obvious every day.

Instead of a decent standard of
living for all, the Republicans and
Democrats gives us cutbacks and
laydfs. Along with this assault on
our standard of living they are at-
tacking our basic democratic rights
to organize and protest their
policies. This can be seen time after

A $1}? ' :'\-.' ‘. a“ ‘3
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v~

 

time in the revelations of the
Socialist Workers and Young
Socialist suit against the FBI and
CIA.

The gairs in rights for Black
people and other minorities and
women are under attack. Twenty-
two years after Brown vs. The Board
of Education, schools are still
segregated and attempts to
desegregate come under brutal
racist attacks. After decades, the
two ruling parties have yet to pass
the ERA saying that no one should
be discriminatedagainst because of
sex.

What can be done? We can fight
back! We need broad, democratic
coalitions to fight for the ERA,
school daegregation, and jobs for
all. But beyond this we need a
politicalparty to stand with us in our
struggles not against us like the
Republicans and Democrats. A
labor party with the strength of the
unions could do that.

There is a party that supports
these ideas now and candidates
campaigning on this platform:
Peter Camejo and Willie Mae Reid
running for President and Vice
President with the Socialist Workers
Party. A vote for them is a vote for
organizing the movement to change
society around to be run in our in-
terests.

Vote Socialist Workers! Join the
Socialist campaign. There will be a
YSA meeting in room 116 of the

 

 

 

 

 

Student Center Sunday, August 29 at
7:00 pm. If interested call 233-1270.
Bronson Rozier

Young Socialist Alliance Member

Shoulder to shoulder

On Thursday night, in com-
memoration of Women’s Suffrage
Day, August 26, 1920, there will be a
“Shoulder to Shoulder" rally in
Louisville. This is part of a national
'action planned in cities across the
country to demand ratification of the
Equal Rights Amendment.

The rally will begin at seven
o’clock at the Belvedere Plaza and
will be followed by entertainment by
Kristin Lems of the National
Women’s Music Festival, for which
a two dollar donation is requested.

The Campus Alliance for the
E.R.A. is forming a contingent for
the rally. Interested persons may
call Carol Dussere at 255-9851.
Although it is preferable to attend in
groups, it may be more convenient
for some to attend as individuals.

In Louisville, take I-64 totheend of
the highway, turn onto Third Street
and then take the first possible right.
Belvedere Plaza is next to the Galt
House Hotel.

Carol Dussere

German graduate student
member of Campus
Alliance for ERA

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in third day of kidnap trial ~ _' 3 no»... .i.....- .«arlirr

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Letters from the editor

The full-size broadsheet:
why we made the change

By Ginny Edwards

Surprise. The Kernel may look a
little different, but it’s not. It’s a lot
different. It’s a full-size newspaper
now. We decided to make the change
after eight trial summer issues were
published. A surbey was conducted
to determine student reaction to the
“big" paper.

Although the response was too
small to be conclusive, we decided to
begin the fall semester using the
basic format established over the
summer.

Another poll will be conducted

. around med-terms so we can

- snot.

THE COMING ADVENrURES or JERRY IN ELECTIONMNDr- Gums TWO

evaluate reactions of students,
faculty and staff. We’d apprec'urte
any thoughts you might have in the
meantime.

Summer rea ders complained most
abort the difficulty of reading the
larger paper in class. But we think
that there are many advantages that
outweigh the one inconvenience.

For students working on the
Kernel for practical experience, the
large format affords the opportunity
to work on a paper that is the same

size as most professional
newspapers. It gives these students
a chance to design and layout a
paper that is similar to those they
will probably be working on after
graduating.

And, speaking of layout, we think
the Kernel is better desinged in its
new format. Larger pictures and art
work will illustrate the pages. In
addition, we have changed the
headline style toadd to the new look.

Economic reasons also entered
into or r decision. We hope to be able
to increase advertising revenue with
the most professional-looking
newspaper possible. Ads will get
better play in the larger Kernel and
are less likely to be buried on a
P8986-

Our printing costs also will
decrease if we are able to average
papers slightly larger than last
school year. Since all our expenses
are paid through advertising
revenue the Kernel is not funded by
the University—we pay close at-
tention to costs.

If all goes according to the game
plan, we should have a larger
amount of space to run news, sports,
feature and art stories. One thing for
sure, three stories usually will run
on page one instead of only two, as
was the case last year.

Inside space should also increase.
We hope to be able to run more
announcements in a campus briefs
section, and abo increase coverage
of previously neglected campus
organizations and events.

But, to take ywr temperature on
this experiment, we need your
response. The editors welcome
suggestions and opinions on the
change. Please feel free to write a
letterto theeditor or just stop by and
talk to staff members.

 

Ginny Edwards is the new editor-in-
chief. Letters from the Editor will
appear every Wednesday and
discuss production and coverage of
the paper. The letters will be written
by Edwards and other staff mem-
bers.

 

The Kentucky Kernel, 114 Journal-

began as the Cadet in 1894. The letters and comments should be

AAARIA wx—nr‘ 6(1)“:

_n~——-_Ap—A

AA‘AA—_~—~A

ism Building, University of Ken- paper has been published continu- addressed to the Editorial Page
rocky, Lexington, Ky., m, is only as the Kentucky Kernel since Editor, in Journalism Building.
mailed five times weekly during the 1915- They should be typed. double spaced
year except during holidays and and signed. Classification, phone
exam Mom. and once weekly Advertising is intended only to number and address should be
aging the summer session. Third- help the rsaderbuyand any false or included. Letters should not exceed
class postage is pm at [gxinflm' misleading advertising should be 250 words and comments should be
Ky.,4osn.s..b.¢npnm rates "em reportedand will beinveotigated by no longer than 750 words. Editors
pain“ yen-muzmm, the editors. Advertising formd to be reserve the right to edit letters and
Published by the Kernel Press. falseor misleading will be reported comments.
Inc. and founded in m1. the Kernel tothe Better Blaine“ Bureau.

Editor-in-chief

Assistant Managing Editors Production Mlflllfl'
Ginny Edwards

Mike Mouser Leslie Crutcher

Dick Gabriel (1|le ”mm
Sports Editor Stewart Bowman
Joe Kemp

KENrI’UCKYe

Managing Editor
John Winn Miller

Copy Editors
Suzanne Durham
Dick Downey
Steve Ballinger

Editorial Editor
Walter Hixson

Advertising Manager
Alex Keto

 

 

 

  

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Marijuana:

 

editorials 89 comments

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Laws, views
must change

By Gatewood Galbraith

If you smokers have had no suc-
cess in talking with your parents
about marijuana, or if you come
from a farm family, insist that they
read this. Then talk to them. Real
communication is a two way street.

Marijuana has been smoked by
man for over three thousand years.
Today, despite countless laws and
law enforcement resources designed
to bring about repression of its use,
marijuana is enjoyed regularly by
30-40 million people in the United
States. They spent $4-6 billion in 1975
to procure their marijuana via the
underground market, whose source
is primarily Mexico and Soputh
America. These countries received
hundreds of millions of U nited States
dollars to supply our population with
a plant that could be grown outside
our back doors. Given our
technology, growers in the US.
could produce a better product.

Frankly, the laws against the use
of marijuana are repressive, totally
unrealistic in their portrayal of its
dangers and obviously unen-
foreceable. They are widely abused
by our law enforcement agencies on
all levels, being naturally conducive
to graft and selective enforcement.

 

Commentary

The United States spent hundreds
of millions of dollars in taxpayers
money last year in salaries, man
hours, and court costs to punish the
marijuana user . Yet their number
rose considerably because of several
reasons. S’immarily, they
discovered that marijuana was not
only enjoyable but also did not have
the revulsive side effects of
alchohol.

The actual effects that
marijuana does have on its users are
well documented. The most widely

 

referred to study is that entitled
GANJA IN JAMAICA. In a nutshell,
scientists tested a group of native
fieldworkers who averaged smoking
6 joints of very potent weed a day
over a period of 17 years. At the end
of this period, the scientist could not
detect the smokers from a control
group if non-s mokers in either work
performance or appearence. Other
studies have also completely
devestated the now familiar
government scare tactics.

That present marijuana sup-
pression is based on bias,
dyscommunication, no com-
munication an ' ignorance IS
evidenced by the fact that hundreds
of federal and state Public Health
officials have publicly advocated
complete decriminalization. An
attitudinal survey conducted at the
1975 Kentucky Public Health
Association annual meeting showed
that the majority of respondants
favored marijuana’s complete
legalization. They were not isolated
in their opinion. A task force ap
pointed by President Nixon also
favored the complete legalization of
pot in the District of Columbia. Their
recommendation was hastily
shelved by such intellects as Nixon,
John Mitchell et. at

In the face of these events, it is

logicalto assume that..the.mood of

the United States is changing
rapidly. Whether an individual
ever decides to give marijuana a try
is stricly a personal choice. But use
it or not, I believe every citizen can
recognize that this country must
bring an end to the present use of
repressive, viscious and much
abused laws. In addition to landing
out own sons and daughters in jail
their main impact is to preclude our
farmers from supplying an already
existent maritt which may well
gross $15-20 billion by 1985. At that
time, over one~half of the dult

population of this country will
recreate with marijuana regularly.
Its controls, then will probably
parallel those now used on tobacco
and alcohol.

The rise of the marijuana
market from its present black
market status might well take place
within Gov. Carter's Presidential
tenure. He has recommended
decriminalization. The next logical
step is to legalize pot and to allow
our growers to benefit from their
fair share of the market. However,
if we leave this movement to
change. it will be a very familiar
story in that thos interests with large
sums of money to spend will control
the rules as usual and. just as

Push to publish

Emphasis on writing, research cuts effectiveness

BY DON llARRELL

ITTLE ROCK, Ark.—I resigned
recently from the English depart-
ment of a large state university. A
part of my reason for quitting was
that I wanted to work with a friend
having some real success in state

politics. The idea of a job with new
faces and duties is appealing, even
to one late in his 30’s who has a
family and, according to custom,
ought to stay put.

Another factor in my decision was
the unsettling awareness that as big

English departments go there is no
longer a place for teaching. i like
teaching, and I‘m proud of a
generally good rapport with
students. In my experience they
respond favorably to the attentions
of faculty members and tend to like
professors who have read in their
field. who can express themselves.
and who spend time with students
outside of class.

Deans and adminstrators have
other ideas. They find a professor
effective according to the research
projects he's engaged in and the
number of articles and books
published, papers read, and
manuscripts under way.

One result of the pressure to
publish is a wild proliferation of
journals, reviews and newsletters.
Several years ago, I’MI.A, the of-
ficial organ of the Modern language
Association a nd the most prestigious
journal in the humanities. called a
moratorium on the submission of
munuscripts while its editors dug
through what they had already
received. Before closing down they
published a study tracing the native
huekleberry to Missiouri and
suggesting appropriate reasons for
Mark Twain‘s use of the
name »’\n article of this kind mav

 

usually.the small landowners will be
left to fight among themselves for
the leftovers.

This does not have to be the case.
We do have a choice as to how we
want this issue to unfold. Personally
I feel that the legalization of
marijuana may be utilized to greatly
benefit thousands of our small
Kentucky agrarians and thousands
more in our cities.

The dynamics of change and those
who oppose it have a very discon-
certing habit of flailing out at all
those around them, making tragic
victims of innocent people whose
only act was to disagree with the
status quo. When that change comes
about. the next step is usually for a

secure temre for its author on the
basis of joumal placement alone.

A more serious effectof publishing
pressure is what it‘s doing to the
teaching profession. Many scholars
in the United States are doing
brilliant resea rch in their field. most
of them at major universities. They
should continue reading papers.
receiving grants, and publishing
books and articles.

But the bulk of what passes for
scholarship in the bush leagues does
not need to be written. underwritte.

 

Commentary

 

published, or read. It isn’t helpful to
the teacher in the classroom and it
doesn't advance the state of
anyone's useful knowledge. Most of
all. it fails research and publication.
alany of three doing the work will
admit they‘re involved not out of
commitment of the topic but
because of the dean‘s policy of up or
out. Either they receive a promotion
based on their publishing record~
and in most cases this includes

tenure or they get a terminal
contract

Attempts have been made to
devise a system of advancement
that mlim limp the fundamentals of

privileged few who did not enter the
battle to come in and reap huge
profits amidst the carnager.
Marijuana and its assimilation into
our~culture-does not-have toadhere
this old and dispensible story line.

If we apply reason and concern for
our fellow human beings to the facts
as they now stand, we might well
avoid needless individual and
societal anxiety and strife. Who

knows, we might even do the sen-
sible thing for a change.

I have a plan that is solely
designed to benefit the most people
in the greates way after
marijuana‘s inevitable legalization.
' would much rather see lots of

of teaching

teaching and not strictly the number
of published items in a person‘s
bibliography. But the going is rough.
It's hard to know what makes good
teachers and even harder to define it
in a resume.

The only uselful means of gauging
classroom effectiveness is through a
set of two or three maneuvers. First
study the enrollment figures in a
teacher‘s class and determine
whether the subject matter is the
popular rage or not. Then see
whetherit‘s consistently being taken
by bright and dedicated students or
by those only wanting to get by.
(When failing sophomores continue
to draw A's from a senior course on
the Puritan Sermon in America
something is wrong with the in—
structor). The problem with this
method is that years of study and
attention are required to yield
helpful results, and most depart-
ment chairmen can‘t spare the time
away from research.

New areas of research are bound
to appear as long as success in
academic life depends upon
ferreting them out. But how useful
will they be? I‘m not sure we need
any new light on Captain Ahab, or
Daisy Miller. or Beowulf. or
(‘laudius and (iertude - at least not

 

people make $15,000 a year from
the growing of pot than let a few
people make millions because of
their already privileged status.

With this goal in mindia second
article in tomorrow's Kernel will
examine why marijuana
continues to be vilified by our
govemment and why they have been
negligent in charging their so ob—
viously distructive attitudes and
statutes.

In my third article on Friday. I
will set out my plan for growing
marijuana as a cash crop in Ken-
tucky after its legalization.

I am interested in everybody‘s
reaction. critical or otherwise.

:57 1' x
E’ C
C '
b/
\t» ,
§:

the strained half-light that's likely to
be shed by much to today‘s
scholarship. The time and effort
going into yet another view of the
gnat‘s wing might better be spent
teaching and suting off desregarded
copies d Fowler or Strunk and
White. Otherwise the person with a
terminal contract is finally the
student who gets by the basic
English requirement unable to write
a sentence.

i may one day go back to
university life, but it will be to school
with an emphasis on teaching.
Academis publishing has become
another crowded tied] in an over-
crowded civilization. and Huck‘s Ant
Sally has hired on as an academic
dean. She wants to sivilize me, but
like Huck I can‘t stant it. I been
there before.

 

 t—Tlll'l KI‘IN'I‘l'l'KY KENNEL. Wednesday. August 5. I976

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