xt7b5m628140 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7b5m628140/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-01-24 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, January 24, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 24, 1978 1978 1978-01-24 2020 true xt7b5m628140 section xt7b5m628140 Volume LXIX. Number 85
Tuesday, January 24,1978

K3?“

an independent student newspaper:

Performing art

Poise and concentration are important to the performer, and John Lind-
say shows both as he performs “Lucinstark. " Lindsay‘ s violin recital was
given in a faculty recital last night at Memorial Hall.

Burning out

Classroom cigarettes are no longer a major issue

By JIM McNAIR
Copy Editor

Smoking in certain public areas is
often a fiercely argued subject in
national, state and local circles. As
an issue in UK classrooms, though,
it no longer stirs the loud complaints
heard on campus two years ago.

At that time, lighting up in class
was “a volatile issue” denounced by
anti-smoking factions. Opponents of
smoking urged that it be banned
during examinations, seminars and
other academic meetings.

The original resolution, however,
was trimmed to read simply: “The
University Senate establishes, and
requists that the Administration
enforce a no-smoking policy in
classrooms.”

To many students and professors,
the new regulation appeared suc-
cessful. Offenses declined and the

issue largely died out, though
complaints are still sometimes
heard about classroom smokers.

No complaints have been officially
registered with the University
Senate since the rule was passed
During the 1976-7? school year,
Academic Ombudsman Frank Buck,
who hears smoking grievances
based on academic disruptions,
received only one complaint.

Generally, classroom smoking
violations are rectified by the in-
structor without further con-
sequence. Faculty members are
supposed to ask violators to put out
their cigarettes So far, there have
been no notable incidents, according
to officials.

Connie Wilson, immediate past
chairwoman of the University
Senate, said the nosmoking rule has
eased the problem of cigarette
smoke, but the problem hasn‘t been
solved.

Alabama stuns
Kentucky 78-62

By BOB STAUBLE
Assistant Sports Editor

TUSCALOOSA, Ala.— What
everyone expected in last night’s
clash between Alabama and Ken-
tucky was for the Crimson Tide to
roll in and then wash out. But this
ime, it was High Tide for all of the
game‘s 40 minutes as Alabama
handed Kentucky its first defeat in
15 games, 78-62.

“We just didn’t play well,”

Kentucky coach Joe Hall said.
“Alabama was ready to play and we
really never did get into gear. We
got beat all night."

Nevertheless, Kentucky hangs on
to its Southeastern Conference lead
with six wins against one loss.
Alabama remains tied for second
with Mississippi State, which
defeated Vanderbilt last night, at 5-
2. ‘

Continued on back page

 

Inflde

Suns

STATE AL'DITOR GEORGE

years.
Ca not].

them," the auditor said.

11m.

 

WHAT DOES THE NCAA division I split mean to
major college athletics? Should the major schools
separate themselves from colleges with smaller
programs? See today‘s editorial on page 2.

yesterday he will ask the legislature to restore the 96
percent cut in his office appropriations for the next two

lie said in an interview, that only if he fails in the
General Assembly will he consider court action to
block the proposed new arrangement by Gov. Julian

“I'm sure there‘s an indepaident legislature, and
such a divergence in funding, particularly when
designed to rip th'n office, will not be accepteble to

INFLUENZA HAS HIT KENTUCKYearly this year.
with about 20,000 cases reported to the state Human
Resources Department during the first three weeks of

Wilson said cigarette smoke in-
terferes with learning, especially for
thtse with poor health. “They
(smokers) don‘t look at it as an
imposition on other people," she
said. “Smokers don‘t understand
that smoke IS bothersmne to others
It never occurs to them."

Enforcement, she said, is left up to
the integrity of the faculty member.
She pointed out though, that if a
grievance goes beyond the
classroom to the University Senate,
there is no policy on dsciplinary
action has been set for smoking
violations.

Wilson said most student smokers
have obeyed the regulation.
Violations can also come from the
faculty, she added

‘When a faculty member smokes
in front of the students, who 5 going
to say anything?“ she said. ‘There
is no colleague or peer around, and
the students probably will be too
timid to complain.’

In such a case complaints should
be made to the Academic Om—
budsman, said Wilson. The single
case last year arose when a
distraught student could no longer
bear the daily chain- smoking
practices of his instructor.

Moot as the topic might be, a

etsticketstic

A limited number of student
tickets for the Tennessee and
Georgia bmketball games will be
distributed today at Memorial
Coliseum' 1n the west concourse from
9am. to] p.m. if any are left after 1
pm. they will be sold to students,
one pa‘ student, on a first come, first
serve basis for 81 cash.

21

Conflict questioned
Legal opinion sought
on trustee's appointment

By JEANNE WEHNES
Copy Editor

The state’s attorney general will
receive a request this week for an
official opinion regarding the ap-
pointment of William B. Terry Sr. to
the UK Board of Trustees.

Terry is board chairman of the
Blue Grass Coca Cola Bottling Co.
His appointment to the Board by
Gov. Julian Carroll has been
questioned because of a possible
conflict of interest between the two
positions Coca Cola supplies
Univa‘sity dining facilities with soft
drink syrup.

Timothy Cone, Terry‘s attorney,
said a statement about the facts of
Terry’s appointment will be
delivered to Attorney General
Robert Stephens Stephens’ opinion,
expected next week after the
statement is presented, is only

sampling d student opinion shows
the issue of classroom smoking is
still important to many at the
University.

Lauren Levi, junior medical
technology major: “I’d just as soon
they didn‘t (smoke in class) because
I don’t like cigarette smoke. It
irritates me when I try to take notes
and someone in front of me is
smoking."

Steve Goldstein, junior Ar-
chitecture major: “I personally am
against it. I don’t smoke, and it
irritates me. It interferes with
taking notes, especially when it’s
nearby.“

Doug Lee, junior business ad-
ministration major: “My opinion as
a non-smoker is that it should be
banned and enforced. In the older
buildings, it‘s really a bother."

Mark Vanderwerp, junior
Pharmacy major: “I’m against it. I
think they can wait an hour to go
outside the classroom."

Gladys Mosby, sophomore
English major: “I think it’s all right
became it helps me concentrate.
After an hour I start getting restless
and really feel like having a
cigarette. What makes me mad is all
this about non-smokers’ rights. Just
because they don‘t smoke doesn’t
make them right.”

Gerardo Saenz, Spanish and
Italian professor. “I suppose a
studmt would be inclined to smoke
in a class where he felt tense.’

Arthur J. Nonneman, associate
psychology professor: “In general I
prefer not to see it because it‘s
disruptive to those who don’t smoke.
I rarely come out strong against it.
Unless I get a complaint, I let
students smoke only during exam
time.

persuasive in future legal
proceedings and is not legally
binding.

The state law relating to UK
Board of Trustee appointments
says, in part, that no trustee “shall
be directly or indirectly interested in
any contract with the University for
the sale of property, materials,
supplies, equipment or ser-
vices . . .”.

UK has two separate contracts for
the supply of Coca Cola products,
one for the University and another
for the UK Medical Center. The
larger of the two, according to Tom
Fields, director of purchasing, is
with Coca Cola USA. of Atlanta.

“They supply five gallon syrup
containers used at University
cafeterias and grills. However the
contract does not specify the means
of distribution,” said Fields. He said
the contractor determines how to
supply the product to UK.

The second contract is with Coca
Cola Blue Grass Co. to supply can,
bottle and “pre-mix" products. (Can
products do not include those bought
from vending machines on campus.)
In the fivemonth paiod from July
to November 1977, UK spent $4,800
under this contract.

Both contracts were first ap-
proved in 1974 for one year with
optional renewal each year. There is
one year left in the renewal option.

William B. Sturgill, a member of
the Board of Trustees, said he had
mt seen enough information to
create a conflict of interest.

John Darsie, UK legal counsel,
could not be reached Thursday for
comment.

Terry has not officially been

University 0] Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

sworn in yet. Under normal prac-
tices, a newly appointed member is
sworn in at the first meeting he
attentB. The next meeting of the
Board of Trustees is for the
executive committee on March 7.
(The January 24 meeting was
canceled because of bad weather
and lack of pressing problems.)
Donald Clapp vice president for
administration, said only those on
the executive committee are
requested to attend. However any
member of the Board may attend. lf
Terry should decide to attend this
meeting, he will be sworn in then.

The next genaal meeting is April
4. Terry would normally be sworn in
at this meeting.

There have been at least two other
occasions when questions about
conflicts of interest have concerned
the Board of trustees.

In 1972, Jacob Graves Ill and
banker Garvice Kincaid, who is now
dead, were questioned by the Board
because of deposits the University
had in their respective banks. In a
formal opinion, then-Attorney
General Ed Hancock said there was
no conflict of interest.

Kincaid was again involved in a
possible confict in 1974 when UK
renewed its employees’ group life
insurance package. The University
accepted a low bid from Com-
monwealth Life Insurance Co. of
Louisville. Kincaid owned stock in
the company.

Hancock said the stock ownership
represented a conflict of interest and
jeopardized his seat on the Board of
Trustees. Kincaid said he sold his
issues of stock. resolving the con-

-EIII Matthlv

The real thing

You usually expect snow to come from the sky, but not
after it‘s already fallen. The unexpected happened
yesterday to Jim Habbas. owner of the New Super
Market at 407 S. Broadway. The combined weight of a
snow- -cov ered roof and a soft drink sign brought this
debris crashing down on llabbas' Cadillac.

 

today

That compares with about 300 cases during the same
period last year, according to Dr. Carolos Hernandez,

director of preventative services for the Bureau for
Health Services.

Flu outbreaks have been reported in most states with
death tolls from flu and pnuemonia running higher

than usual according to the National Center for
Disease Control in Atlanta
The bulk of the Kentucky cases have been reported in

ATIKINS said

districts.
programs."

Gov.

local districts.

Western Kentucky. Hemandez said.

DR. JAMFS‘ GRAHAM, STATE SUPERIN-
TENDENT of piblic instruction, told a legislative
committee yesterday that elimination of the so-called
bonus unit in the minimum foundation program could
create serious financial problems for many school

“I think it will seriously hurt the qmlity of the
Graham said
difficult for some districts to make up their budget."
Julian Carroll has proposed in his 1978-80
budget elimination of the bonus units, which count
some students who attend vocational and exceptional
classes twice in compiling the amount of state a1d to

“I think it will be extremely

Graham said much of the increased financing for
local school districts under Carroll‘s proposal is
restricted to specific uses and will not offset the money

lost from the bonus units.

Nafion

PRESIDENT CARTER SENT CONGRESS a 1979
budget yesterday calling for $25 billion in tax cuts,
higher spending on defense, energy and education but
no big outlays for wholly new programs.

Even so, the magnitude of the proposed spending,
$500 2 billion brought critical comment from some key

members of Congress.

The budget estimates $439. 6 billion in receipts
against the outlays This would leave the govemment
operating in the red by $60. 6 billion, only a little less
than the estimated $61 ti billion deficit for the present

year

warning.

On Sunday, the 20member Board of Trmtees
decided the financial problems were insurmountable,
and voted unanimously to close and try to place the 300
students plus faculty in other schools.
news statement
enmllmetns, spiraling costs, deteriorating facilities
and a long term debt "have limited the school's

A formal

flexibility.’

(alter reiterated his commitment to a balanced

budget bin acknowledged that the target date of 1%1,
which he set during his presidential campaign. might
be mimd if the economy needed more tax-cut tonic

(firing the intervening years.

AI- Tl-. R i EARS ()l- l-‘ IGHTING financial problems
had piblicily and conservatives, Franconia College in
Conmrd. N. H. an avant- garde school born in the
tumultuous 1960‘ 5, closed yesterday with hardly any

Since 1968, about 75 colleges in the United States
have closed but it is unclear whether there is any trend
in the direction The number of colleges open has
increased. and officials at two other experimental
collegssay most of Franconia 5 problems were unique

VWmnher

1.111111s1vow (‘IIANGING to freezing rain today. high
near 40. Rain tonight, with a low in the upper 30s High
in the 90s tomorrow, with rain changing to snow,
becoming colder tomorrow night.

said decreased

 

 

 

  

 

Kathe]

editorials a comments

Steve Balllngc
Editor in Chis!
Dick Gabriel
Managing mu»

‘l'homas Clark
Assistant Managing Editor

Chutes Iain
Edited-t Editor

Jennier Garr
SW] Artlst

David mum
Sports Eater
Bob Shi‘ite
Assistant Sports Editor

Walter hints
Arts 0 Entertainment Editor

Nell m
“it”!!! Am 0
Entertainment Editor

Gregg Fiela
Jennifc Greer
Jim McNair
Betsy Pearce

Copy Editors

David O'Neil
Photo Manager

Jeanne Wehnes
Photo Super visor

 

 

NCAA realignment questionable

Couege s rts, especially million-dollar
operations ' e major college football, are big
bmines.

The most recent affirmation of this came at
the National Collegiate Athletic Assochtion
convention in Atlanta recently, where the big-
time football schools were able to divide
thenselves from schools with smaller programs.

In the next few weeks, universities who belong
to the present Division I must decide whether
they want to stay big time by joining a “I-A”
section (big time), or “I-AA,” a step down.

To stay at the top of competition, a school must
fulfill these requirements in the next three

ears:
y Play 60 percent of its games against other I-A
schools.

Have a 30,00-seat stadium and average at-
tendance of 17,000.

Field eight intercollegiate sports if it fills
either of the first two requirements; otherwise, it
must field 12 s rts.

UK is easi y capable of meeting these
requirements, as are most of the schools in
major conferences and the major independents.
In fact, the restrictions are not that difficult to
fulfill for most Division! schools. More than two-
thirds of the Division I schools will be able to
qrnlify.

Whether they want to make that commitment
is another matter. Many universities will not be
willing to operate the large athletic program or
to dedicate lots of money to staying big time. It
takes lots of effort and money to make the in-
vstment of going big-time pay off.

There has been much criticism about the split,
complaints that the decision will lead to more
elitism in college 3 rts, with the big programs
running amok wit hrcenous recruiting stan-
dards, leaving smaller schools with no base to
operate smaller athletic programs.

But the supporters of the proposal have good
reasons. In the old Division I format, they often
voted on crucial issues with tiny schools like Ball

State that had much smaller programs. 0c-
casionally, as in decisiom to limit coaching
staffs and rosters for football squads, the big
schools voted against schools that had no teams
at all in the sport at issue.

As for the recruiting wars, there are signs that
large schools are beginning to understand that
more escalation can only hurt thenrselves, with
schools getting hurt by trying to out-do each

other, and the prospects getting turned off in the ,

process.

If the NCAA applies strong and fair en-
forcement (though this is sometimes difficult for
them, as in the Jerry Tarkanian case) and keeps
standards at the present reasonable leveh,
recruiting abrses can be controlled.

ften, it’s not the school with the largest phme
bil and travel buget that gets the prospect. Look
at Iona College, who grabbed Jeff Roland away
from Kentucky and other basketball goliaths.

The NCAA split into three divisions a few years
ago has worked reasonably well. The schools in
each section are able to exist with new standards
and goals, and have developed their own
followings and traditions A new split is called
for to separate the largest schools from ones they
have little in common with.

Perhaps the split will carse greater elitism in
college sports, but it is an unavoidable elitism,
required by the pressure and importance placed
on intercollegiate sports.

At schools with multi-million dollar athletic
budgets, football must provide most of that
revenue. Most varsity sports operate in the red
and are sustained by those with big gates, like
football and basketball.

With the tremendous fan interest, television
ratings and value of prestige and publicity,
college football by necessity must operate at a
big-time level. Schools that don’t compete with
the large programs and have smaller ambitions
should not be involved in decisions about how the
larger schools will conduct what is, by necessity,
a very big business.

 

 

Letters to the Editor

 

 

Missouri, 3 book in the W. W.
Norton state series by a former UK
dean, is highly recommended for its
interesting facts on our sister state
with so many Kentucky ties.

Missourians have so the last laugh
because they claim to have shipped
the wrong body for Daniel Boone,
who ' deserted Kentucky for
Missouri, but was finally returned
years later to Kentucky, supposedly
for reburial.

Thomas Jefferson once wanted
Missouri left only for Indian set-
tlement, but he overlooked the many
Americans living there at thetime of
the Louisiana Purchase and was
pursuaded otherwise.

Missouri served under the French
and Spanish flags, but the Spanish
had little influence comapred to the
french.

Kansas City and St. Louis consider
themselves apart and separate from
the state, and St. Louis thought the
Chicago fire was the will of God to its
arch-rival.

In fact St. Louis had visions of
becoming a world headquarters and
the capitol of the young nation but
gave up its lofty ambitions after the
I980 census, when whippersnapper
Chicago outdistanced it.

In competition with St. Louis,
Kansas City allied itself with
Chicago to connect for coast-tocoast
rail shipments.

Missourians are stubborn like
their well-known exports—mules~
and the state's only president.

Author Paul C. Nagel said harry
Truman epitomized the typical
Missourian with his'distrust of the
eastern establishment, banks, taxes

and privilege, calling him the
“quintessence of Jeffersonian
Missouri."

Dr. Nagel’s book is full of facts,
figures photographs and historical
condusions that give one a good
understanding of the ”show me”
state. Professor Nagel now teaches
history in the University of Missouri,
Columbia.

The Nagel book, like Steve
Channing’s Kentucky, was financed
mainly by grants from the National
Endowment for the Humanities,
administered by the American
Association for State and Local
History, Nashville, working with a
distinguished editorial board under
editor gerald george.

Fred A. Woodress
I353 Office Tower

 

 

 

 

 

A plea for humanity. . .perhaps

I had a short-lived career as a
columnist once. I was replaced by a
record review column. My words got
a mere 42 percent from Dick Clark
became no one could dance to them.

Charlie Main and I talked about a
cohmn. Here it is.

 

Tom

.1 '- Fitzgerald

Apologie first. I speak in
tangents. y synapses are a filing
cabinet of half sentences that don‘t
always match.

I have lived for a while, and am
still amazed and befoggled corr-
stantly. I would like to show you an
idea that I’ve danced with a lot.
Maybe there’s some sense in it.

I am treated like a senile grand»
father by friends, who look at my
political activities with pity and
disdain. Or maybe like a child who
will outgrow plastic pants someday.
Everyone I talk to “used to be
political, bra oh man it got no
where..." I knew a lot of men who
attended rallies solely because it
was easier to “make it" with “hippie
chizks” without all the trappings of
courtship. And other such sad
outgrowths of the past decades.

We are an instant people. Our
attention spans dwindle—the basic
freedoms; the hard fought rights of
eqml educational opportunities for
minorities, of freedom of choice on
the abortion 'ssue, that were won
through hard effort, are challenged
and thwarted by an hysterical,
highly-organized minority. The idea
of treating others with respect and
being a bit less warlike, less greedy,

 

 

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0‘ .a \\
“6".

‘

Ml.

 

«was me; am
0m an

 

 

 

are cast off as uneconomic burdens.
We seek gratification—plastic
romances that leave us with a
mouthful of ashes; we find solace in
the pablum of systems that provide
instant answers.

True to my apology, I ramble. My
mother said I was vaccinated with a
phonograph needle. That might
explain it. Maybe what I am saying
is that we have, each of us, our
politics. Whether they be the politics
of hedonism, of denying all that is
unpleasant, of treating women as so
much meat to be usedand disposed
of, whatever. We make constant
choicesl That the world seems
hellbent on consuming the planet it
was spawned from, that things are
confusing around us doesn't relieve
us of control ova- our lives.

We live in an illusion. The
worldview that interprets what is
outside colors what we precieve. We
tend to adopt a we-they position...we
all define the world into the right-
thinking people (funny how they
always think like us!) and the
OTHERS. The others who are
somehow less than human.

I guess this column was going to
be a plea for some humanity. If they
don‘t cart me off, it may fall
together somehow.

We have to regenerate ourselves-it
is up to us, all of us, to bring some
magic back into a world that has
grown too big, too mature to play.
Some Radicals and their foes
struggle to power—talking about
“the masses" and “the people.”
Confrontation politics reign.
Violence results, in favor of those
who control the instruments of such
power, and who have ruled much of
the world by perfecting such
weapons and using such power.
An other violence results. A violence
more subtle and corrosive. The
violence we do to each other. Con-
stantly. Stripmining that leaves our
land gutted and bleeding; police
attacking miners and brutally
beating them; the dehumanization
of women (and men) fed by skin
magazines and singles bars (where
everybody s:ores!)—all symptoms
of an underlying alienation—an
estrangement from ourselves and
others around us.

I reach for the word “quality" and
wonder if it fits. Tom Merton, a
Trappist Monk, talked of fighting
intolerance, racism, envy, jealousy
within, and through that, helping
others to deal with it. Che once said
that, although it sounded ridiculous,
revolutionaries must be guied by
feelings of love. Stewart Brand said
that we were as gods, and had better
get used to it.

Maybe that's it. A sense of
stewardship, of responsibility for the
productive, the life-affirming, the
positive and humane forces within
us and others. A shift from product-
orientation and a half-assed
bookkeeper mentality that barter:
for sex and love for a return that
would make it “profitable," to a
mindset that embraces the process
of becoming more humane and
dealing with others with integrity

and honesty. No one ever said it
would be easy. It’s scary, and it
hurts a lot sometimes. But the joy in
the process is so special, so full, that
it balances out well.

I constantly return to a sexual
theme, possibly became it is here
that the majority of personal ex~
ploitation and dehumanization I see
around me and in myself manifests
itself. Recently it occurred to me
that all too many of the women I
have known had been raped
sometime in their past. Incidencas
of gang rape, that one reads about
occurring during wars andglibly
dismisses, had occurred on a college
camprs in a toWn where I lived. A
christian'college. I sit in a bar and
overhear young men drooling and
reducing women there to objects,
and it scares me to put the two
together. A spectrum, possibly,
from seemingly innocuous com-
ments to the culmination of a
twisted, violently dehumanizing
mindset.

Again I ramble. Maybe what it all
means is that we need to readjust
priorities—to learn that, out of the
raw junk of our lives, we can become
more gentle, more understanding,
more caring for others. An author
said that we all needed pretty much
the same things—respect. a sense of
meaning to our lives, love, and
such—and that it was a shame that
we put each other through such hell
to get them.

I tried to fit Kyle Macy's name in
here somewhere. The threat of
another record review column, or a
pizza advertisement looms above
me. A thought then, and a wish from
a songwriter named Si Kahn:

May whatever house you live in,
have flowers round the door
and children in the bed to keep you
warm
may the people there accept you for
what you really are
and help you find some shelter in the
storm
and morn ing rain, to ease the pain
that comes from being free
may this new year bring you
freedrm peacefully.

 

Letters Policy

The Kentucky Kernel
welcomes letters and com-
mentaries submitted for
publication. Articles must in-
clude the signature, address,
phone number and year and
major if the writer is a student.
Commentary authors should
have expertise or experience in
the area their article pertains to.

The Kernel editors have final
decision or which articles are
published and when they are
published The editors reserve
the right to edit submissions
because of unsuitability in
length. grammatical errors, or
libelous statements. All letters
and commentaries become the
property of the Kernel upon
deliva'y.

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

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86 passes insurance policy

BY DEBBIE MCDANIEL
Kernel Staff Writer

After heavy debate. the
Student Senate pmsed a bill
last night adopting a new life
insurance policy to offer
students.

The senate suspmded its
prior support for the Ken-
tucky Central State premium
in favor of the benefits
provided by the Bankers Life
instrance policy, which they
now recom..end to UK
students.

By mailing information
about the insurance policy,
Student Government (86)
will receive a $3,000 ad-
ministrative costs fee from
the company.

in addition, Senator Mark
Benson reported continuing
labor problems at the 86
Book Exchange A lack of
workers forced inciting the
doors and admitting only one
customer at a time yester-
day, he said. Benson made an
appeal for volunteer staffers
to work at the exchange.

The senate also passed a
bill allotting $75 to adve'tise
how to make use of Kentucky
small claims courts. a
measure which SG president
Jim Newberry introduced.

Other btsiness discussed
included:

For plasma

2000xford Circle

 

@piasmaaiiianoe

Possible piacemerd of a
student representative on the
Comet] of Higher Edmation,
an issue that Newberry ha
may «sported

Home Economics Senator
Steve Petrey’s announcement
that the fail semester's 810-
pint blood donation total was
a good step toward at-
tainment of the moo-pint goal,
and he schedtied a blood
drive for February 6-10.

Arts it Sciences Senator
Don Prather suggested in-
vestigation into violations by
some faculty members' last
semester's final exam
rescheduling without ad-

Unassertivef
conFused about

ministration appovfl.

These additional items
were anmunoed:

Arts it Sciences Jim Lobb
discussed increasing safety
precautions of carnptl
housing facilities in the light
of the recent Chi Omega
incident in Florida

Senator-at-Large Gene
Tichenor advocated sub~

mitting proposals to raise
fines for violating han~

dicapped parking zones to
$25

Senator Dave Kaeiin ex-
prmd his dissatisfaction
with the new Student
Directory with missing or

vocational direction
interpersOnal problemsf"'~ —

if you feel that you don’t communicate well enough with
friends and acquaintances, if you think that your interper-
sonal relationships aren't all you would like them to be; if you
believe you aren't assertive enough, if you want to explore
mknown aspects of yourself, if you want to explore unknown
apects of yourself, if you are having vocational problems
arch as lack of direction or motivation, the university
counseling center has opening in counseling groups which

might be very helpful to you.

APPIY in person anytime from i am. io 4 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 16
at the Counseling a Testing Center, 2nd floor Mathews Bldg.

Questions—call rss-sror

UP TO $IOO/MONTH

donations.

254-”47
8a.m.-7p.m. Morn-Fri.

 

__Ca.eu91¥§lisr_.5h°rm‘"9 Csi‘le'

 

209 E.
High St.

 

2581

is the number to coir for information
abort the. best read bulletin board on
carrotss, the Kernel classified section.
The deadline for classifieds is noon. one
day prior to publication.

for sale

RING RIO'I‘ SALE. $3.99 clusters. soli-
tI'as. stcitng. blrthstones. horseshoee. 130
Sloth Lime. ”J14

tifl COUNTRY SOUIRE wagon 3250 M-
IIchmond Rd. ass-5m. D426

TURQUOISE Selling out 300 rings. $3.99.
tireefor no. tisSoutb Limestone. N24
RING SALE. $3.99. 139 South limestone.
aedlt card or checks. $15 minimum. 1km
1'0 SELL electrophonic amplifier and
usher system Yashica TL-Eieciro camera
(memories) Philip err-sass. mm
RI'I‘IY OLD clothes Into nights 5!! daily
Ifmck. 631 E. Main. tom

ONE PAID AAL 12 in. 3 way acoustic
supension speaker system. Brand new.
2573232. 202'!

help wanted

TRANSYLVANIA UNIVERSITY Library.
Dvo full time positions available: Bookkeep-
er-Secretary. general secretarial duties and
my light bookkeeping in a Library setting
(trulatim-perlodicals clerk. administer
Mulalim control systems. collect and
ugantze serials 233-0159 for spot. sum

LIQUOR CLERK 21. Apply in person.
Mouglbred Liquors, zoos Versailles Rd.
work earb evenings. W24

E.0.E. CIRCULA'I’E Kernel 33.00 hour
Iledcar ask ioerrym-isto. eons

HELP WANTED: Part time salespersm
sales fl’ merchandising experience Apply
these KIM Fayette Mall. ems

nscnnronrs'rsecreury scoff-ope?

Ii'l' eye physician and surseon‘a
((Dhthalmoiogtsut office In Lexington. At
last 2 years college required with know
lnige of office management. medical lnsur~
m farms. patient courtesy. typing. and
tsamcriptitll. Salary negotiable with lots of
mate fringes. including retirement
pin. Please type and mail persmnl sum-
rnry to: Dr. W. M. thm. Ni ‘l Upper.
Drlngtnn 0507. I J 11

WE’RE [OOKING

51»
‘9‘

fall MOUSEBOYS
"if! MEALS AiiD PM
Call Mrs. Barbara Fulton
L tss-oosz

MINER sols guaranteed t' money
but. Radars largeat directory if"—

 

 

 

SAGE, School ’of the Outdoors
presents classes in:

SURVIVAL, CLIMBING, CAVINC,
“C‘ANQEINC, KAY-AKINC
Call for catalog or information

255-1547

 

46

The Kernel classified office In located in
roan 210 of the Journalism Building. on
canvtn. All ads must be paid in ad-
var-ice.

 

SUMMER JOB openings for Camp Conn-
sdors at Camp Sea Gull (boys) and Calm
Seafarer (girls) on the coast of Natl
(hroilna. The camps feature sailing, meta-
buating. all usual camping activities includ-
irgswimmingandawidevariatyoflnafc
lions. :iiat Season June o-Aegtlt ll.
Qrportunities available fu' gram-tee and
indergraduates who are looking for we
tianiuet another summer Job. Opuflnga III“
taduata mines or RNs. Gratification
lrclude excellent character references. di-
lly to instruct in one phase of the team's
trogram. and a genuine interest in m
vdth young people. Good salary. food an
kriging furnished. plus the oppwturdv of
firing in a highly purpo