xt79gh9b8g7z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79gh9b8g7z/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-02-22 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 22, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 22, 1973 1973 1973-02-22 2020 true xt79gh9b8g7z section xt79gh9b8g7z The
Kentucky
Kernel

Vol. LXIV No, 98
Thursday, February 22, 1973

an independent student newspaper

UniverSIty of Kentucky

Twelve pages Lexington, Kentucky 40506

Newman

Center:

Multi-Media
Mass

Shirley \'ei‘ini integrates a slide into the
liturgy announced by Father Larry
llehnian at the ".\lulti-.\ledia Mass" at
the ('atholie \ewman ('enter. last
Tuesday at 3 pin. Media represen—
through
whieh

musie.
tapes and liturgies all
eoinhined into a spiritual awakening.

lations eame slides.

\\ O'I‘I'

The program ends Feb. 27 with another
mass at 3 pm. \n will
determine whether or not the program

evaluation

will continue until (iood

th‘l‘llt'l photo by l-Id herald!

Friday.

University voids registrations

lty nos \ll'l‘t'llHJ,
\ight \ews Editor

The total number ot students
negleeted to pay registration tees belore
the Feb 15 deadline and will have their
registration voided is now 356. aeeording
to Henry ttwen. university eontroller

The list ot students tailing to pay the tees
will be sent to the registrar's ottiee where
the student‘s spring semester registration
will be voided

llut. Hwen said. the 7.54; number does not
represent the miinber ot students at
tending elasses but ineludes pre-registered
students who tailed to eonie. some who
dropped out ot and diiplieate
assessments,

“\VI‘I I’I‘ZI'ZI. the
delinquent students
walk~olls." he said.

who

sehool

the
and

large bulk ol
are no shows

l ni\ersity poliey eoneerning
registration tee payment. is sueh. that ll
tees are not paid by the lirst day ot elasses.
then the student is tinaneially delinquent.
and ll alter .ttl days iron) the lirst day ot
elasses the tees are still outstanding the
student‘s registration is \oided

Students who were not able to pay the
tees betore the l"eb l3 deadline but had
they eoiild pay in the near lllllll‘e
were allowed to sign promissory notes

t)\H-I\ SUI) lTit students took ad
vantage ot this outlet only atter going
through a with a
eonti'ollehs ott’iee stall member where the
student must prove he ean pay within a
short period ol time The promissory note
method

pi‘ool

strenuous interview

is the oiily way to have tee

payments delayed. he said
”The

promissory note proeediire was

Adminstration closes

By STEVE SWIFT
Night News Editor
“The Progress." l‘lastern Kentueky
l'iiiversitys student newspaper. has been
shut down lor one week by the Eastern
adminstration
Robert Babbage. editor ot the weekly
paper. said the pubhe reason given by the
.‘idminstration was that the paper '3 editors
had tailed to meet eopy' teadlines
However. the newspaper was known to
be lit administrative dist'avor beeause ot

Inside:
Flash
and fees

its iiiei'easingly liberal poheies. and had
eome under some eritieism trom within
and without the university eommiinity
"\Hi It \\ l‘.’ It \I) deadline problems
belore.” Babbage said “The holiday.
Monday. eaiised mereased problems but
we had ample eopy to prepare this issue
and we eoiild have eome out "

ltabbage said the editors were intormed
that
'l‘hursday ‘s edition would not be sent to the

by the administr.’ition Wednesday

printer

"The l‘itth Dimension" and "Flash
('adillae" are eoming to l K See page it
Page 3 explores why dorm

raised while page it asks what

tees were
well do
the

debate team eaii be also loiiiid on page ..

without \ietnain hitormation on

established by the l nivei'sity eabinet tor
the benetit ot the student who has a real
need. Hwen said. “and is not designed tor
students who have the money but just want

to put otl paying the lees ”

'lill'
llseti lry
theeks
r.e\t

I'IHHIISSUIH
who

note proeediire is
expeetmg
within the

it i’(‘

\eterans
the government
month and trom students who
reeeiving sehol.‘irships but have yet to get

tl l‘t‘

trom

the money. he said

"It there is any slight possibility he ean
pay we suggest he go ahead and pay the
lees without going the promissory route.”
”well said

The length ot the promissory note below
ll matures. depends upon the individual
ease. although all notes mast be paid
betore .\lareh 3.:

EKU paper

tiirther explained The
l’i'ogress has perientage deadlines with
the ltiehmond ltaily Register. the printer
tor The Progress. and that these deadlines

Babbage

had not been met

Babbage said he “wouldn‘t want to
speeiilate at this time" about any aetion
the paper might take against the
iini\ersity ler halting operations

“Quite apparently the paper will resume

publieation on Mareh t.” he said

Outside:
Frigid
and foul

KET attacks
problem of
illiteracy

My \llKl‘I .\I)KI.\S
kernel Staff \\ riter

.\ new series at educational tilms
designed to aid those adults without a high
.sehool diploma shown before the
approXimately Bo representatives of the
.\ppalaeliia Region t‘ommission yesterday
at the Hit eenter on (‘ooper Drive.

The prototypes are part of a series being
developed by the Kentucky Educational
'l'ele\ ision i KET to help those adults pass
a (ieiieral l‘ldiit':ihtiii;il Development

(it'll) high sehool equivalency esam. say
the direetors ot the proieet

“HS

'l'lll-i l’ll \IS. whieh have been under
ii(‘\t‘lt.pl!lt'lll smee March. 1972. eover the
tields ot grammar. math. science and
literature .\tter the tilm program Ken
warren. tilfll proieet direetor tor KET,
answered questions lrom the bi‘oadeast
and ediieation personnel lrom the Lt state
\ppalaehian region

the tirst tihn segment dealt
grammar or. as tiriltealls it. “eoi‘reetness
ot e\pression ” It was done by KET as
were all the other llltiis in the series

\I \.\ \lttlt H“. a piano player was the
eentral eharaeter in the grammar seetion
lle inti‘odiieed a “grammar phone” to aid

with

the \iewers
toiitiiiued on Page t. (‘o|. :t

'I'oday is going to be eolder but with little
ehanee ot l'.llll or snow the high will lie iii
the mid :o‘s. low in the mid thl s. with a to
ltt'l'tt‘lll ehaiiee ol pieeipitation through
tonight

 

  

 

me
Kentucky
Kernel

Mlkt‘

tslatit-styeo l59.)

wines. Editor in chief
Mike Yierney. Managing Editor
Larry Kielkopt Asset-ate Editm

Katielvt t I '

Joel lakem cut. [a ‘c

.. “utcht It sit .e Swi" Night News Fditors

Dan Rhea, Day News Editor
John Hicks. Photography Editor
Charlie Dickinson Sports Editor

Editorials

E ditoriaIs represent the opinions of the editorial board, not the Umversnty

Lean days for the farmer

ls the senior vice president of the
Bank of .\merica suited to be an
assistant secretary of agriculture'.’
Richard Nixon obviously thinks so.

“.-\ group investigating t'S farm
policy said yesterday «Feb. 18) that
President Nixon has chosen a "kingpin
of agribusiness finance‘ for a sub-
(‘abinet job in the Agriculture
Department and called on the Senate
to fully probe the nomination."
reported The Coitrier~JottrnaI on

Monday. Feb. it).
This group. the Agribusiness .A\c-
countability Project. contends that

italph \V Long “has the narrow vision
of a financial technician” and has not
previously shown a concern for small
farmers.

In rebuttal to these charges. Long
hedged. answering that "You could
spend all day defending yourself
against these types of allegations.”

Even if it does take all day. we think
Long should take the time to defend
his suitability for the position or else
face the charges which we. and no
doubt others. plan to level at him and
the Nixon administration.

Nixon‘s plan for filling top spots
with administrators instead of those
with a background and working
knowledge of the area brings to mind
the “spoils system” of days gone by.
The old story of" political favors being
given out. although probably in
evidence in the past few ad-
ministrations. has not been quite as

"iii I all

  

  
  

.“llllItI iIiijiiiiIi “my;

blatant as this one of the tentative
Nixon nomination.

Perhaps this is not the reason
behind the soon»toebe»announced
nomination. but remarks made by
then l.ee Staley of the National
Farmers tirganization adds credence
to our judgement.

He says that farm programs are
either being terminated or cut back.
grain stocks are being released into
the market and the stops are being
taken out of production. risking

surpluses but not undergirding the
program with price support

These new plans. plus the addition
to the .-\griculture Department of a
bank executive. paint a rather dreary
picture for the small farmer. Perhaps
this Nixon nominee won't be approved
by the Senate. if that body does
conduct a probe. But chances of that
are slim. and chances for the small
farmer a lot slimmer if this latest
Nixon fiasco comes through.

State's apathy hinders
rehabilitation program

Vocational Rehabilitation has not
solved rehab students‘ woes. as a
story by Floyd R, (livens showed in
last Wednesday‘s Kernel.

The number of rehab students
mushroomed during the past three to
four years. Funds for the program
stayed at virtually the same level.

The result was that less funds were
allotted for individual students. And
adjustments were made on the lives
of individuals when adjustments were
made in the rehab budget.

Students. are caught between

eating and getting an education. They
are expected to
counselor
budgets go to
sometimes

what a
feels they need. but case
supervisors who
discriminatory

live on

make

IMPOUNDED

decisions in terms of facts and figures
about the students' needs.

Human factors also enter into the
decisions. counselors and students
may establish a rapport that leads to
(littering definitions of students‘
"needs" with one off-campus
rehab student who received $13!)” a
month to live on while another
received only some $1.3 i

iitS

Rehab policy for out~ot-town
students encourages them to live in
dorms. Room and board are supplied
to out—ottowners tree who apply
early. Those who are Lexington
residents may be forced to tighten
their belts and live in a smaller
allotment.

It is a complicated fight for a rehab
student. depending on the individual's
will to battle the yards of red tape. to
overcome individual differences and
the impersonality of the bureaucratic
hierarchy.

The Director of Handicapped
Student Services. Jake Karnes
brought about many improvements at
[K for rehab students. This makes
LIK more attractive to them and
provides more incentive for im-
provement of vocational
rehabilitation.

But this important program needs
further support of its own before the
advancements at Kentucky go to
waste.

 

Letters

 

Says deserters
should pay

Now that there has been a settlement in
the Vietnam issue. President Nixon has
clearly stated that all draft dodgers and
deserters must pay for their crimes.

('crtainly many proamnesty groups will
now begin their appeal to the American
people. These groups will be hoping to
create a gloomy picture of the demand of
duty in the minds of many Americans
This will not change Mr Nixon‘s opinion

liven though the war is over. how can
Mr Nixon possibly forget all of the men
who have fought and died'.‘ These men
were laithtul when they were called on to
serve our country To give amnesty to
draft dodgers and deserters would only be
disrespectful to all those who did tight and
die during this or any other war

The President is not denying the man
who conscientiously objects to any and all
wars. He is only concerned with punishing
those men who were simply unwilling to
serve when called upon.

What kind of government would we have
it we allowed everyone. who did not ap-
prove ot the way the government was run.
to break off and form their own retaliation
group“

.\lr Nixon must stand steadfast on his
y iews ot amnesty to keep our democratic
way of life striving

Daryl It. (trayes

Some new
bumper stickers

Although it is gratifying to note the
preoccupation of Lexingtonians with the
l K faculty. as evidenced by their bumper
stickers it is unfortunate that the names

exhibited so far have been confined to a
hackneyed tew— ltupp. Ray. and Hall. 1n
the interest of nurturing this com-
mendable enthusiasm. I suggest that
bumper stickers be distributed which
proclaim the names of other great coaches
drawn from a wider spectrum of (K
scholarship,

The imagination
possibilities:

boggles at the

"Ilotik your horn if you love I‘Iichhorn.”
“Lean harder. Lienharil.”
"(lone mail for (‘onradf'

\oui t‘é‘t‘tllt‘lS can probably add to this
list 1 he tiansformation of eyery

classroom to a ltupp-arena in terms of
attendance w ould doubtless follow

.\.ll.P. Skelland
t hemical Engineering Department

Was a rise
in dorm fees
necessary?

Now that students in dormitories
have been saddled with another rise
in their rent. it‘s time to reflect on the
motives and rationales for this annual
boost in fees.

Nobody likes higher rent. least of all
the l'niversity‘. It drives students
away from dormitories. gluts the off
campus housing market. and angers
the parents who usually foot the bill
.\nd the latest rise is. at least in part.
unnecessary

Some it; percent of the new fee is to
go toward security and renovation for
the proposed coeducational dor
mitory m the ('omplex and much of
that is to go toward more corridor
advisers atid night watchmen

The facts are that "tighter"
security has no [x'rceptible benefits in
coed dorm situations. and ad
ministrators and students alike know
it It's a waste of tens of thousands of
dollars. all spent to placate nervous
parents and to assure the state that
this l'mversity is not engaging iii
legalized prostitution.

(tn the other hand. we cannot agree
with the contention of student trustee
Scott \Vendelsdort that the t'niver»
sity's general fund. which pays the
academic bills here. should help foot
the cost of dorm life. Everyone pays
for ati education. but dormitory living
is a choice which should be borne by
those who choose it. Robbing Peter to
pay landlord Paul doesn't do anyone
any good.

Wendelsdorf also delivered another
scatter-shot at athletics funds. which
have become a scapegoat for
everything from bigger Student
Government allocations to lower
bookstore rates.

Athletics is indeed overfunded. but
the paltry few hundred thousand it
robs from students are not the
panacea for a $250 million biennial
budget. Better that students should
push for reform of the ”security"
system and a through study of
dormitory costs and operations than
propose blue sky answers to very real
and serious problems.

Kernels

“The way to prevent these irregular
interpositions of the people, is to give
them full information of their affairs.
through the channel of the public
papers. and to contrive that those
papers should penetrate the whole
mass of the people.”
Thomas Jef arson.
1787
that the politicians are permitted to
carry on the same old type of
disgraceful campaign from year to
year is as insulting to the people as
would be a gang of thieves coming
back to a town they had robbed.
staging a parade. and inviting citizens
to fall in and cheer."
Edgar Watson Howe

 

  

'l‘IIH KHN'HTKY KI‘IRNI‘IL Thursday. February L2. lflTIi—vlt

 

Cmmenf

 

 

\ick .\lartin

Stennis, NRA, Nixon, hypocrisy

Hy FR \'\|\ BIHDHNING

“'f‘liey sfioot congressmen. don‘t
they"" asks .\lr tiliphant. esteemed
political t‘fll’ltigl‘itpllt‘l‘ for the Kernel
and other prestigious dailies. “So why
not Senators" he implies in silent
soliloqliy

liideed Why not shoot .lohn Stennis"
there remain. even in Lexington. a few
slltll nosed hippies who have escaped
the 'l‘alniiidic tenets But surely shallow
thinking should be taken as such. It is a
harsh but simple JUSllt'O that calls for
the butcher to be slain on his own blade.

And as butcher. John Stennis suffers
little competition. There was no un-
common concern from Richard M.
.\ixon when .\ledgar livers fell from the
Mississippi sunlight. just as their was
no outcry from ole John himself on that
black day to years ago.

For John Stennis is tht sort of man
w fio understands how searing lead feels
as it rips through the soft lining of the
lower intestine. He. like his poor pupil
.\lilhaus. have been buying pellet
bombs to disembowel Vietnamese
babies for years. A hard~headed
customer. .lofiii is a man who knows
what he‘s paying for

He is also consistent. He knows. for
example. how dangerous it is to com-
pare the number of public officials
lincluding copst killed by citizens with
the number of citizens killed by cops.

\nd he figures v with an irony shared by
many Southern Senators! that the
t’onstitution means something when it
states ”right of the people to keep and
bear arms shall not be infringed."

The hero in all this frothy debate. of
course. is the National Rifle
.\ssociation. which controls one of the
nation‘s most powerful lobbies. NRA
claims that if someone wants to commit
murder. he‘s going to anyway. whether
or not a gun is available. ()r as one
meaty San Francisco law enforcement
officer expressed it three years ago.
“Goddamn. I want me a nigger so bad I
can taste it?”

Senator John Stennis knows all this
even if strict constructionist Richard
.\ixon does not Senator .lohn knows
how vicious our social order can be or.
the outsiders. and he has been just
close enough to an outsider himself
through most of his life that he and
those people he represents know they
may sometime have no alternative but
armed self-defense. .-\t its barest
reduction the black denizens of
Mississippi know that Senator .loliii
would drop all those pellet bombs on
them if it ever came to it. But what's
more important Senator .lohn knows
that if the tables are ever turned he is
himself piime cut. (tr as someone else

who dines with Nixon once said.

“l’ow'er grows out of the barrel of a
gun."

In other quarters. however. the
apologists for supreme t'apitol punish-
ment are marching the streets of
America's guilty conscience. pleading
that before another national leader
crumples on the sidewalk. the (‘ongress
take action and crumple up instead the
citizen's final measure of self-
protection against the state.

No such appeals for clemency came
when lead filled up the bodies of Mark
('lark. or Bobby Hutton. or Fred
Hampton. or the students at
tirangebiiig. or the others at Jackson.
or any of a thousand others. Ask the
Blacks or the browns or the reds or the
yellows to give up arms‘.‘ Better yet.
ask them to send their infant children
to play or the Santa Monica freeway at
rush hour. At least when Mr. Stennis
starts the engines of genocide against
his brown. diminutive opponents half?
way around the world. he doesn‘t hide
behind the shipcrcam of apologetic
social progress

Frank Browning. lecturer in jour-
nalism. was a Kernel staff member in

the mid-1960's.

And now, a word about words

By JIM FLICULIC

Alas. the dissemination of information
about l’niversity of Kentucky debate
activities has hit a snag. As Mr. .lames
(forgol observed in Monday's Kernel. few
people have received much information
about the debate topic and about the
structure of debate tournaments.
Following is some pertinent information
about l‘K Debate:

l The squad is composed of varsity
members. two years of experience or
more. and novice members. up to one year
(“\[K'l'lt‘llt‘t‘

3 The program consists of two regular
class meetings per week. several weekly
special meetings. and individual research

and practice sessions.

:t Debate tournaments are held on
weekends The l'K team travels to such
places as Northwestern. l‘urdue. Indiana
State. l'Imory. Wake Forest. and l'Nt'
('hapel llill. .-\f a tournament. as Mr
(forgol noted. a two man team w ill debate
both sides of the proposition during the
tournament‘s eight rounds four debates
on each side

t The debate resolution this year is
“l{l‘l.\‘tll.\'l€l) That the federal goyern
iiieiit should provide a program of com
preheiisivc medical
.\mericans " This topic is debated for the

care for all

entire academic year

.i In J W l’atterson is the l'K llebatc
('oach His office is I423 Patterson tllllt't‘

'l‘owei'. phone 338-4370 Hither he or one of
the debatei‘s‘ will be glad to answer any
questions about the team The program is
open to any l’K student

ii The l‘ni\ersity of Kentucky Forensics
student organization on
campus which promotes intercollegiate
'l'he l'nion is composed of the

lmon is the

debate
members of the [K debate team
I cei'tamly appreciate Mr
interest Ill debateat 1K. and I hope that at
least a few of the questions about the

tiorgol‘s

program haye been answered

.Iiin l-legle is president of the (K

forensics L'nion

0

Whot'll we
do without

Vietnam?

By FR.\.\K|.I\ 0“ EN

[t is difficult to think of America without
thinking of Vietnam at the same time. It's
like the two entities are one. That is why
Vietnam is as American as Apple Pie. The
war has gone on for so long it‘s become a
fact of life to live with People generally
have become accustomed to listening
Walter t'ronkite on the evening news.
report how many we killed or how many
they killed The war became a daily
thing like a diet of bad The
government. as in 1984. kept telling us that
the troops were winning Well. I guess
we've won and are number one again

ll(‘\\'.\

The war has been termed a cancer that
needed to be done away with before this
could forward with new

society nioye

I'ranlelin Owen

is a law student.

\alues and goals Maybe the war is over.
but does anybody really know" We are still
bombing Laos and t'ambodia Isn't this

w ar“

(‘hanging the name of a territory that
you utterly destroy is not peace But
whether the war is really over or not. the
effect that it has had on peoples’ outlooks
is depressing. 'l‘he cancer has
nietastasized and caused other parts of our
culture to rot. We are more materialistic
than ey er .\nd that's hard to believe for
scientists are now finding plastic in the cell
structure of fish in the ocean This has
come from the plastic toys you and I
played with when we were children

Industry iust flushed everything down
the riyers. never thinking it might all
settle to the bottom of the ocean and mess
up the life that was existing there But we
never worry about other life Why should
we. when we can mass produce what we

stomp on"

l reali/e this isn't necessarily a healthy
outlook as some patriots night feel But
one gets this attitude merely by looking
around and observing what is t‘appening
We are sliding back into an era of Rock
and Roll There is nothing wrong with this
in itself W itfi things the way there are. it is
about anything

insane to be serious

anymore It got to be useless to be con
cerned about the war. and this apathy has

affected other things

It's not that people aren't concerned
they .\nd
were too st‘l'ltllls two or tfiree years ago

anymore are maybe some
.\omc were sei'iou.s enough to kill for their
idealism Hut killing isn‘t idealistic and
buildings aren’t being blown up anymore.

which is probably good

The rcyoltition is history l‘robably all it
influenced was fashion Hut .\merica fias
had enough celluloid heroes and hopefully
all the peace taiiipaigns bayeii't gone for
If there is nothing more to be

' other than

naught
gleaned from the
lock stars there sure was .ilot of wasted

‘tfioyctttt'fit

are
desperate energy crisis But who cares
Rock and Roll

human eneigy \lltl we nearing a

man the war is ti\i't‘

 

  

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Serviced by Edger Sales, Inc

    
    
     
  

 

News Hot Line 257-1740

 

Avoided conflict of interest

Senator hints he was ‘set up'

It) \I-iII.l. \ltIlH- \\

Kernel Stall “riler
I)i\id .\littinglv {MS .Stii;'itoi
iaist d the [ItISSIlIIlll) at last
night‘s Student Senate meeting
that he had been nominated tor
the spring l‘ilt‘v‘iltIIIS Board in
order to ereate the appearanee ol
a eontliet ot interest it' he decided
to run tor a Student Government

ot t tee

In what he called a "quasr
warning." Mattinglv said he had
been told there had been a eon
spiraev within Student Govern-
ment that had plaeed his name in
nomination tor the board at the
Feb 7 Senate meeting. However.
he also withdrew IIIS name from
nomination at that
meeting.

Sitnlt‘

KET attacks illiteracy

t'oiitiniied I'roin Page I

He also brought out a sehool
iiiarin named Miss Rule. She
was kept busy spouting rules on
subjeet -verb agreement Another
eliaraeter resembling a general
"Troops had better
learn these rules 'l‘hev may save
tour grammar someday.“

The grammar sequenee
seemed to be geared toward third
or tourth graders instead ol those
that never tinished high school
.\tter the showing ot the him.

said. viiii

 

 

LIVE}.
IN PERSON

SATURDAY
MARCH I7

Frankfort Sports
8. Conven. Center

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FORT. KENTUCKY AObOl

 

The Kentucky Kernel

AN ARTICULATE CHRISTIAN WITNESS

central baptist church

I644 NICHOLASVILLE ROAD (AT ARCADIA LIGHT)

 

II \S III'IIC\
eoiisideriiig

\l\'|"|'|\t.l.\
rumored to be

running tor St: president this
spring. but he denied aiiv sueh
ambition in an interview alter

last night's meeting llowevei',

eomment on

he i'ellised to
.urvthing other than what he said
in the meeting

He also said.
that was sure
delsdori. St: president.
involved in an}
.spll'étt'} 'I‘Iie intormation
given to him. Mattmglv said. bv
some trieiids who had been told
b) an unamed student Senator

In a telephone interview last
night. Wendelsdort that it
eommon have

III the meeting.
Seott Wen
was not

be

possible eon
was

said
was praetiee to
senators to serve on the I‘Ileetioiis

Itoard Ile knew ot no possible

several eomplaints eoneerning it
were brought up

II\I'i I’ \II'I'lt‘II' \\'I‘ S \III the
program seemed more eii
tertauiiiig than
\Iarren said the seetion would be

edueat ional
ehanged

’I'III-Z |.I'I'I£It \’I‘l RIC
was narrated bv Simon Seott. a

segment

veteran lIoll} w ood eha raeter

aetor Headings and

tll'dlllltlI/itllttllS ll'IIIII \ itI'llIll.S

authors were used to illustrate
the

’I‘his segment seemed
tlllllt’ttll to the
than the other tilius lt diseussed
and

IIIIISH'

varied st_vles in literature
slightly
more .iiidieiiee
ttd‘st'
’l‘lie

these

sueh terms as
aphorist ie
behind

li‘oiit

sl} lt's
[ille‘tl
ranged
SlillS.

The
were also diseussed

e\tttttple.s
taeh to t'rosbv.
\ash. and Young
various tones in literature
.\ segment
on satirieal writing. direeted bv
Tim Ward. a KI‘I'I‘ (lii‘eetoi‘.
impressive (‘Iiristmas earols
were plaved III the baekground
while seenes ot war. murder and
pollution the
sereen

"I‘IIIS IIIII \II'I~ impress some
ol the viewing audienee however

\\£I.S

vvere show n on

One representative thought it
relied too heavilv on visuals
Warren agreed and said the
portion would probabl} be

removed

What are the viewers ol these
programs expeeted to know‘.’
\Veaver said thev were expeeted
to have a sixth grade reading
level as well as being able to add.
divide. subtraet. and multiply
vvhole numbers.

eoiispiraev and lound the eliarge
Irv Mattiiiglv grouii
tlless He had torgotteii who had
put together the original list ot

basieallv

nominations to the board, he said

.\ possible eonlliet oI interest
would have arisen it Mattiiiglv
served on the board and also ran
beeause the
eharges ot the the
eounting ot' the eleetions ballot
The St; eonstitution does allow a
student to sit on the board and

tor otliee one ol

board is

run tor an mine in the same
eleeltoii
ltut this eould be ehanged

beeause \I'endelsdort announeed
at last night's meeting that a
Senate eommittee on eon
stitutional revision would make
reeoiiimendations at the Mareh 7

meeting

problem

It a person eaniiot eomprehead
the lea'l'
reeommended to an adult basie

programs. he will be

t‘tlll(':tlItIlI eoui‘se

\(t'ttl<|)I\(i 'l‘o liiek Kim
nu ns. [IlIllllt'll_\ direetor tor
hi-I'l' adult basie edueation is

designed basieall) tor illiterates
"It helps bring them up to the
level taking this
KIIIIII'IIIS said
\Miilxbooks \till be given to
lluisi' llu' lite}
eoiitaiii e\amples ot problems .is
"'l'he workbook
tlie

eapable ot
t'otll'se.“
taking eourse
wellaseu'i’eises
Is essential to eourse.”
l\tIItIitlltS s.lltl

The

people

iuaior eoneern

interested in

is getting
the broad
easts said llill “llSHII. assistant
Iil‘lll pi‘oieet tlii‘eetoi‘

\tilson is responsible tor mueb

ol the Kl‘l'l' pi‘oiei'l He spent
manv months talking with
representatives trom other

states He also diseussed the
utili/atioii program ot the (il‘Il)
proieet \\IllI the regional
representatives

\I\I“. III" 'I'IIIC l.’. slates
present at the meeting eurrentlv
use some t_vpe ot (iI‘Il) series

Several ot the programs used are
old. dated high
shows

slightlj. seliool

'l‘he partieipants in seven ol the
states must pay tor the serviees.
usiiallv Stu per set. Warren said
Kentuekv partieipants would
probably not have to pay.

The discussion will elose today
at the Ramada Inn Imperial
where small group discussions
will be held throughout the dav

STUDY GROUP —— 9:IS A.M.
MORNING WORSHIP -—— I0:30 A.M.
VESPER SERVICE — 6:00 P.M.

TRANSPORTATION FOR UK STUDENTS:
9:00 AT KENNEDY BOOKSTORE
9:05 AT COMPLEX CAFETERIA

 

  

Math grant

neafing
exphafion

It) .\.'\'.\ S('()'l"l‘
Kernel Staff Writer

A 3974.000 grant from the
National Science Foundation has
"significantly improved the
quality" of tTK's mathematics
department.

The grant allowed the
department to achieve the
growth in five years that it would
have taken 15 years “under
natural steam” to accomplish
said Dr. Raymond (‘ox. chairman
of the math department. This
growth involved the hiring of 20
new faculty members.

l'K was awarded the grant
under the special science
development category in March
1908. to upgrade the math
department.

In addition to salaries for the
new faculty. the funds have been
used for conferences. including
an international conference to be
held at l'K this May.
colloquiums. seminars. graduate
fellowships. equipment. yisting
lecturers and four visiting ap-
pointments to professors.

When the grant expires this
semester. the growth will end.
The department will undergo
little change. except that the
lniyersity will pay all the
salaries

'l‘his w as one of the conditions
of the grant. that t'K would
support the department “at the
level the grant built it up to “ The
\ isiting professors will leave but
the other faculty members will
remain.

 

 

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