xt7c2f7jt03g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7c2f7jt03g/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1979-03-15 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, March 15, 1979 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 15, 1979 1979 1979-03-15 2020 true xt7c2f7jt03g section xt7c2f7jt03g . KENTUCKY
\
: Vol. LXXI. N0. .26 ~ University of Kentucky
Thursday. March 15. I979 an independent student newspaper Lexington. Kentucky
~ Q -~ he 7
Abuse of UK elevators ‘ -- i
.fi V 1.. m s3 . . .
raises r epalr EXPENSES he s
. in. . ..1 s \h . V: . .
By TERESA YOUNG had a legitimate reason to leave. and to traction elevator are the governor and 3E: 1 '-11.11‘ ' ‘ 1'1 f 3‘ . . “1 -
Staff Writer call the desk every hour during the governor cable(inthe penthouse atthe t g ‘ éf ..1 ‘ ’1 \ , 1
evening until he was going to bed. top of the shaft) and the safety on the 1 t f1 3 11 " 111.
You‘ve been out drinking and Most ofthe elevatorabuse problems bottom of the elevator. When the .1 ‘ g g ' e1 . ,‘
having a good time. Playingajoke on are handled by resident assistants and elevators‘ emergency buttons are . t ‘ g. ‘1
your friends. you push all the floor the head resident, said Pond. "Ifthere pushed it puts a tremendous amount fig: .1: 1 . ' " ' 1 . - ' " ‘
‘ buttons on the elevator. Your is a real problem case or a repeated of pressure on the generator and - ti ts ' : ,‘. p -
aggravated friends jab at the offense. I take care of it. When the motor. :11 1‘1 1 11 1 '61
. emergency button to stop at their person repeats the offense.they willno Dover has repaired four of the . . 1; , 1 11 1
' floor. longer be a resident." generators that operate UK elevators 3 .N- 1 111 1 "to... ~
. Maybe this doesn‘t seem abusive to Pond said if the damage to an in the past year. he said. C hancey said [(31.11 = _ ' ' 1. ,
most students. but over 50 percent of elevator can be assessed. the student it cost over $3.000 and takes about two 1‘1 iii ‘ ’1 _ 111111'1" 1-
the elevator trouble comes from that wiil be required to pay for repairs. weeks to fix each generator. “This is a fi 11 \ . .. -
type of abuse. according to Norman Bob Akers. building operator for cost we have to cover. because our ‘ 1 . . l 9;» ' .1 '1
Chancey. service manager of the Patterson Tower and the Classroom contract with the University covers i“ 11 1 ‘ fit 1 '1'
, Dover Elevator Company. Dover Building. said the majority of the fixing the generators.“ 3 i m“ 1:1
currently holds the maintenance abuse to elevators in his buildings The Housin office fi ures show I ‘ 11 . ’ ' --,'
R contract. ending in June. on all UK comes not from students. but people that $6.600 isgspent pergmonth on By RItK PARKER/Kernel Staff
elevators. visiting campus. especially children. elevator maintenance. When From the expression on Pulaski (‘ounty cheerleader Fran '1 ,, ‘
Most of the abuse to elevators “Kids visiting campus play with the maintenance costs go up. as they may , . . Burton‘s face. it‘s hard to tell whether her team won 0' not - bl" . '
happens In the dorms. said Chancey. elevators." in June when the new contract on I can t belleve rt you can bet it was exciting. She's being hugged by Renee Steele 1 '1’
He said movmg in and out of. the Most of the elevator problemsinthe elevator maintenance is awarded. just after their game against Hazard in yesterday‘s openingaction 3
dorms. the days before spring break office tower are minor electrical officials say the students will in the Sweet Sixteen basketball championships. Pulaski won in
and exam weeks as the times when problems like a relay burning out or ultimately have to absord the cost. overtime. 76-73. See page six for details. ;
abuse is heavy. But abuse happens the elevator not stopping evenly with .
constantly throughout the semester. the floor. said Akers. There have been 1 . ‘
he said. times When people have been stuck in m I I .‘ 1
Assistant Dean .of Students the office tower elevators. but the Ou ng e ocra S e eCtlon conteSte 1 ‘
1 Rosemary Pond blamed some of the instances are few and are a result of " 11‘
abuse to the pressures of being a electrical problems. he said. ~.
student. ht" Sa'd that. was "0 excuse. Senior StCPhCh LU” remembered By NANCY GWINN pay their dues during the nomination adjourned. However. slightly over a was a partial list of 25 past members of
'11 dOht think kideust come th and WC tlmC he was trapped "1 an OthCC Staff Writer meeting. which is held one week before hundred votes were cast in the UKYD. These names were added to 1. "
tear UP thC elevators. Pond said. tOWCt elevator. "1 got stuck between the election. Because this meeting election. the role ofvoting members.said Clark. ' 7 1
_——-—_——————————— A member of the UK Young ended early. students who wanted to In addition to lichenor. about 44 However. this would bring the f 1
Democrats has filed an official votethe following week hadtosignfor students paid thier dues immediately number of eligible voters only to 70. '1 . y
0 d - complaint at state Democratic Party their memberships after the meeting. after the Feb. 8 meeting. making the But there are currently 106 SIUdenIS
”E OI'm I'ESIdEnt got headquarters questioning the Clark said. total membership 45. registered as voting members of the .
' legitimacy and constitutionality ofthe He said there was actually just one Clark said names were added to the club.
- I . . club‘s Feb. l5 officer elections. legitimate voting member of the list of the 45 who joined Feb. is when The remaining 36 names on the list '
a week 8 SOC/a/ prObatlon Bobby Clark. Business and organization. Student Government Billy Patrick. state YD president of voting members appear to be a
Economics junior. said he filed the President Gene Tichenor. who mailedaletter from Frankf’orttoJohn combination of past voting members _ -
. . complaint because he believes the registered before the meeting was Hutchings. then-president. The letter and those who signed up much later .. 4'
for play/n9 With elevators sleuth procedures . . . . that the meetths teatime. Stephahte
. impartial. Tomorrow IS SG flllng deadllne Hurst. club secretary. said there is no
_ "This whole thing needed to be W h l d l f Th 1 p h b record of dues payment by any ofthe
.. . aired.“ he said. it on y two ays e t to e e ections. too. ave een you” members oth . -
They get UP?“ about thC elevators thC SCVChth and C‘ghth “90‘3” 3b?“ Clark contends a group of club register as a candidate for Student moved up and will be held April4 signefi up after ihzhaleiingg -1 -,
not working right. and take‘ out their 20-minutes. l wasn‘t afraid. it WEISJUS‘I‘ members wanted to maintain control Government office. 80 President and 5' meeting. ~
frustration on the elevator. . irritating because I was late for class. of the organization and sought to do Gene Tichenor has reminded llChChOr said he fears many Hutchings refused to comment on ‘19"
The elevator maintenance 'S‘hOt “P ‘ Such CXPCTlChCCS may be a scary 0‘ so during the election of officers by interested students to apply soon. students Will leave town unaware Clark's complaint which was sent to 1, ,1;
”the level we WOUId liketo see. Pond '"lmmg' bl" the 91°,”th are safe. padding the list of qualified voters. in thC past. 50 has used a “‘0‘ 0i thC deadline. ”C said there are Frankfort. Clark said that a board of ~11»
saidtHer vie]? was sgared by Lezident said Chancey. State inspectors check A stipulation in the club's week filing period. This year all several college senate seats for Democratic party officials will review $.11"
Clay said students abuse elevators elevators each car as well. 5-,. ‘
because they sometimes don‘t work Chancey said there were two kinds To Stady language! calture .11} ' _' '
and are inconvenient. of elevators on campus. traction and ' ' ' ‘1.1 .
"All the elevators never work at one hydraulic. The hydraulic elevator. summer Span/8h Class WI/l travel to MEX/001331“
tiva” said RCStant Assistant Steve used in buildiings with seven or less 1;}. 1 -
' Williams. “The residents get mad.“ floors. operates on a shaft that pushes By CINDY MeGEE 313$}, '
StUdChtS who ring emergency bells it up. Traction elevatorsare usedinthe Staff Writer situations. such as in Iran. it is individual projects on which they will teaching assistant accompanying 1':
’ . are another problem Williams said taller buildings and are on cables essential to understand foreign be graded. He said a term paper is them.Atrain or bus willthenbetaken 32f} - ' -
’ he‘s encountered. “Every night guys which pull them between the floors. To most students summer school cultures." said Dendle. “I don‘t expect normally required. to Mexico City. Other places visited 3;; 1. .
hit the emergency buttonstwo orthree About 40 percent of UK elevators are means slaving over books. studying in miracles in three weeks. but at least the Dendle said expenses for thetrip are are the Pyramids. Puebla. Vera CFUL “-15
times. and it is usally around 2am. or traction ones. the rest are hydraulic. the library and eating at the grille. students will reali/e Mexicans aren‘t kept to a “bare minimum" with Cuernavaca and a few smaller cities. ”,7:
3 a.m." He said the hydraulic elevator really But not to students in Spanish 2l4- Americans in disquise.“ StUantS being responsible for DChdlC stressed thC importance 0t ‘31.? ' .
v Such hijinks don‘tsit well with dorm needed no safety devices. because the 010 who will be spending three weeks The trip will be from May lbtoJune individual expenses. The major cost. Americans knowing about the culture it .- '
officials. One Kirwan resident found machinery‘s oil pressure limited it toa in Mexico studying the county’s l5. Eighteen students. mostly Spanish Dendle said. is gettingto Mexico City of the Mexican people because ofthe {fi- , ‘ 1
abusing an elevator W88 pm on a certain. and safe. speed. Elevators will culture and civilization. students. have signed up for the class. where the students will meet on May United States‘ recent interest in the fig: . ' '
week‘s social probation. The not work if one of the safety devices Spanish Professor Brian Dendle Others interested should attend a 4 l6. vast oil reserves there. ~,jg _1
. PUhiSthhtl’CqUth himtostayinthe are broken. said Chancey. who teaches the class. said students p.m. meeting on April 5 in ”45 Most students will form car pools “I think if the United States is to 7,}: "
dorm at night for one week. unless he The main safety devices on the will receive three credit hours for Patterson Tower or contact Dendle. and drive to Laredo. Texas. with a avoid getting into disastrous 1;; '
. ..
, .
oday————\“1 , .
y nation and then the other.“ said .loseph (‘annatella. superintendent Carter. paving the way to the long-sought peace treaty" 5:111 ‘
of the New Orleans harbor police. between Israel and Egypt possibly as early as next week. . s5 .
1 r , . "It's like taking an automobile at say l5 miles an hour.. “The last two outstanding issues were resolved today.“ said it" ‘
state DISGRLNTFED AF‘TOMA.KER§ TOLD CONGRESS putting iot in gear and letting it run down the street by itself." Prime Minister Menachem Begin as he emerged from the six- g ' =
.‘ yesterday that impending gasoline mileage'standards could hour Cabinet meeting. He refused to outlinethe substance of ,
i NATIONAL nesovacss SECRETARY EUCENE Etiiivrcaiiaionisi: “rigid: ii1i1ei11e moon111111d111g 11108111111 111111 the compromises‘ 3%
.g MOONEY said yesterday the “Valley of the Drums" site At issue areth: Transportation Department‘s requirements EX PRESSING ”PARU‘SM.‘ PRAIS.“ F 0“ Begin. “110::przrfdlwzm 351%”? 11¢ haddic:t:|g1.1;::::1:e1 ‘fii .
i where thousands of barrels of halardous waste have been for raduall doublin the fuel econom of vehicl s f PRESIDENT Carterssuccessful ""5530" tothe Mlddlc E88" told'reporters eua e ep- one ar #1111111": .. 1‘ '11.
.~ . . . 8 y 8 _ ‘Y C ~ roman . d word of what they session and that the president was very glad. 3.;-
i found in northern Bullitt County actually is “an excellent average of lessthan I4 miles per gallon in I974 to 27.5 mpg by Members Of Congress Wednesday awaite - f
location" for such storage. I985. might be asked to do to shore up the agreement. . _ A MAJOR PREDAWN EARTHQI‘AKE AND n a; . .
’ 1, He hinteduthat the site might be used as a permanent waste 11T.° accomplishall this."tcstified S'l” Terry. Chrysler’s Vi.“ H "mm ad“: retrrTLZEIi-STrb: 1b'it1i‘tiftj1‘11zi1reiise1s(ttairifire”iii/iiict‘: AFTERSHOCKS JOLTED viast areas of Mexico yesterday. i;
dump in an elegant solution he saidis beingdrawn up by his president for consumer affairs. the American automobile ouse an ‘flias - p killin one “on and dcstro ing buildings in Mexico City g“ ‘
‘ agency in coordination with federal environmental industry will invest nearly $80 billion in new plants. tools and House for a briefing 0" theltentative accord. . . th guntr I: a ital The1Red Cross said ‘2 Mexicans were 1. _
authorities. equipment. Many went to the executive manston expecting (arter to _ C C d _ )h C P k h t felt from near the American .
The surprising remarks were made in Frankfort at a news “That‘s more than double the amount the industry spent in by 0‘." measures. reqmred. to buttress the peace treaty. L111“: {mtth e‘quph:nt1 :io‘iiriitsains
./ conference called by Gov. Julian Carroll to announce the previous eight years. even after adjustment for inflation. including economic and military 31d to both "31101111 and oh” g2“: £11.“. Institute in Mexico (‘ity registered the ' ‘
’1‘. formation of a 22-member commission to survey hazardous It‘s three times what it cost to put a man on the moon and it‘s Pofs'b'y a mum“ “fen“ comm'tmcm .w'th [SW]? - I emjr1a‘117 000,18 m o n-ended Richter 1m]: and put the ‘
, waste problems and make recommendations to the I980 more than the combined profit of all American corporations Senate Democratic Leader ROM" (' Byrd Syd 111111 111 1- 1 t jog 'lcs sogichwest of the ca ital city near the
, 3 General ASScmbly. of I975.” Terry said. achievmg the long-sought peace breakthrough. (arter has CPICCn 6" "(1| I Af h k P. t r'n 1as hi has
31! earned himself a permanent place in the efforts of PaCific resort 0 Acapu Ct; fttfrs hOC sregis Ci 3 g
it THE STATE inrcnvsnm YESTERDAY in a case AT LEAST as HUGE BARGES RIPPED our or “a"mal‘"? '" “um" '"Sm'y'" . 5°" W 551“" “7mm 0' 0‘" 9m - . . . . '
1 1 1 1 ’ . . ~ - - A d be said whatever costs the United States is called onto rhf! U-h- National Earthquake (ChtCt 'h (JOIdCh- (°'°-~ , . ‘
~_ . is involvmg a proposed Ohio ban on purchases of eastern THEIR MOORINGS on the swollen Mississipipi Rover and n , . _. . d th uake at 79 That readin would make the '
j. .' p ' ' Kentucky coal. carened 25 miles downstream yesterday. smashing nto docks b‘?’ m“ be worth " because "be mm of peace 11a“ 10 be measurleh : iij's stron estthis ear 8 1 1 -
. E 50v. Julian Carroll. seeking a friend of the court status. andx ships and wrecking Property worth hundreds of weighed 383mm the C05! of war. qua c e W11 1 1 g 1 y 1 ‘
', . - .‘ ‘ said he wants to speak for all coal suppliers in the mountains thousands of dollars. 1 1 1 1
. ‘ _' . whose ability to sell coal in Ohio would be adversely affedted Coast Guard spokesman AJ. Wolf said the barges started weathef 1
u "f.’ - by current negotiations between the state and the US. breaking free about2a.m. in the strongcurrents of the flood- world 1 . -
:‘ i ’. Envrronmental Protection Agency. swollen river. “It was kind ofa domino effect.“he said. “It has 1
';: ,. , I The EPA is considering a ban on purchses of low sulfur happened before. but it‘s pretty rare that it reaches into the SlTNNY AND COLD TODAY With highs in thC “PP" 1 y ’ A ' '
. . ' ‘ eastern Kentucky coal. under pressure from Ohio interests port like this, THE ISRAELI CABINET YESTERDAY APPROVED 30's (‘lear and not as coldtonight with lowsinthe 20‘s. Sunny .
.' ' . who fear loss of coaljobs in Ohio because ofthe competition. “The barges were bouncing down the river. hitting one side TWO ”HTML COMPROM'SES proposed h)’ PTCt‘tdCht and warmer tomorrow with highs near 50. ‘ 1
. ‘5‘. ':. W1. . ‘__. <~ - _1‘11 W- 4...- . .. . . . - - . .. . .. .. ‘. .. u in. .MMWMTWWww-t. - . x . . \a ,k . W . . I ..'
.111‘ ' ' i » 1 . ‘1 ‘ 1' .1 l \

 .. ._ y , ,. ... ~ - .» V" “ \"‘ A . . s 4-. ,_ . . . , ‘ . A
4 I ” . I
; s I
KILNTUCKY ” . .,
' Steve Bailing" Lisa Dousslrd Thom-s ( llrlt “alter Tunis Jung. Vaught Tom Monn \
[ill/tr! III ( hit" l'ililuriul Illtlor Jl) “IN" 45’. hill/t" Spurn hilt/or [Miami 41/ Phirlugra/iln h
Debbie McDaniel -.
Steve Massey .
Richard McDonald (.‘rcu Fields Ruth Mnttingly (”.ry Willis John (1., Linda ('Impbcll fl ;
”alldk’lllt' Illm: Jeanne “dines I-. J9'“) Til! 4\\l\llllll 4d} lit/um Brian Riekcrd Pllt'll' Mariam" in t
, . tum/air lillltll\ (it/H li/Ilim .4\\l\lulll S/turli Liliturs « ;
editorials 8;, comments i? :
Wm t j
l ’ ’
- Backwardness and enslavement
W ' I st'll fighting the t
_ , ‘ themselves on a collision course with Moslem leaders want women to wear and left unresolved major issues in this clothes were turned away from “We want [0 be amply rewarded for
3." PHI”? DOPOI [-05 the new conservative Islamic the traditional chador. head-to-ankle revolution-torn country: resuming government offices until they put on our role in bringing down the hated
. \ssilc‘ldled mm writer government of the Ayatollah black robes and veil. education. reducing unemployment. the ancient style dress which they shah and the system.“ said one leftist '
- Ruhollah Khomeini. The ultimate issue: the status of repairing the economy and shaping consider a symbol of backwardness feminist.
IFHR AN. Iran Iranian women ‘M‘MW—D—i ._._._.,..._..._____~ new foreign policy. and enslavement. Pe h ‘ th h b
have again ripped off the veil and I Amid hurled rocks and shouts of _ . . _ r aps e. women ave een .
taken to [ht 51mm shedding the [Mg anaIYSIS "prostitute.“ [5.000 woman have been a Ironiihilly, in the closing days of hgartti‘. Some religious leaders now say
black robes ot tradition and donning marching this week in Tehran to Shah ohammed Reza Pahlevis I ec ador should notbcamandatory
the contentious dress of liberation — as-.-” , ~ ~— -————i— 'i « ~— A**~——— protest calls for mandatory wearing of reglt‘he. many Western-thinking but a voluntary form 0f dress.
Considered among the most And they are not giving ground women in this male-dominated the chador. Four"uncovered“women Iranian women defiantly wore the The women who are protesting
Westerni/ed ot Middle Eastern without a light. Persian Gulf nation. were stabbed during a march. chador 3“ they "13”th m th‘? streets. today‘s restrictions made significant
women. Iranian women now find Ihe immediate issue: their dress. The dress furor has overshadowed Women civil servants in Western h became a symbol 0f opposrtion. headway during the monarchy they
Today it is anathema to many. 0n helped to overthrow.
iDST THO" NAT /N W th‘SDOM DlD 1 NOT THEN DO THY .. AND lDI NOT WEN WT Monday. under the protection of Iranian women'sliberation beganin
ngD ME TO ESTABUJH THE ‘ .’ BIDDING AND DRlVE THE K m BAKHT/Ak hmmzh ”900 women poured into a I936 when Reza Shah decreed the
5 TRUE FA/m ’ / 2 R /. l WE SHAH soccer stadium ‘0 demand freedom 0f lifting of the veil. Reza. father of the
ONE [A 7 / //. / ( Q» . lNTO ? / dress. They wore blue jeans. Western deposed shah, also wanted women to
”V PERS '/ 1/ 7/ 3. ‘ 7 clothes. even the chador. be more active in public life and
é/ {3‘ EXILE \ / “When shall we force the men to attempted to break their domestic ?
c t "\ / .' throw away their suits and put on chains. .
x “J h 'l \ / " ’ traditional sardari and aba (knee- But it took 27 years for women to g .
g , l‘ .t') h , . length overcoat and robe?" wrote get the right to vote and actually to
1 . l , . ‘ \\ . ”A 4 ’ .i Iranian newspaper columnist Janet hold public office, That was part oflhe ,i
. \ 1 :4. \li , 7‘ “'4 .._ l Lazarian Shaghagi. shah‘s I963 “white revolution" that 3?
\~ “.t ‘ ‘ ‘r, . : ‘\‘|* ‘ " ,- 1 “To veil or unveil.“ she said. "is an stripped Moslem clergymen of vast 3;
'3 W , . .\ .. \i ‘ \\;§\\\\\\\. 1, individual right to be judged by a land holdingsandsomesecularpower. f5}:
_ 9 ~ ' i i‘ _\ l \\ ‘. §\\\\si \ person‘s 0W" beliefs and knowledge." The Family Protection Law of I967 if“
i I: r . p \ L ‘ . “~- \ ~ The chador is only the most gave women protection against legal
‘ \ - i ' ~ ‘ ' ' ‘ ‘ b scs b' their husbands ‘5
‘1 h l l v emotional symbol ofwomen Sissuesin and soc1al a u y . .
' MD SLAY Y OF TH/NENOT WHY WLL‘ST m%mWI Iran. The new government also has .and offiCially ended the keeping of '
.. . WES ,9 AND Dlg I Y TH‘S WESTERN ‘ PE dissolved a woman‘s right to divorce. concubines. '3
1 EN STlmTE A M DEST TRICK 0V ME? v 1 contest divorce 'and restrict her The government also sponsored the h
I! E‘IN HAVIOUR AND , jNvl. ‘ y \ husband [0 one wrfc. $20-million-a-ycar Women‘s f} ,
/ CW 0: & RESS m , i’ a , ' l 1%» . \C‘ Women insist that equal rights be Organization of Iran which provided _
l D EN 07 / V ‘\ NATl Milo" 33(3); part of any constitution and they child care. taught womentorcad.gave 1
WM ‘ ‘ ‘6 X W 0% wow demand a role in government. as they legal aid and job training and helped I
. . i ' / j \ ' § M (Y , \ had under the shah. with family planning. . . g
h I, ,. 59“? g v—h .} .6 ,. .1 . . .*M
t" . qsi“ , " h — en. . .
l d ‘ \ ,, g ‘ \ l. \ ' ‘ " “ " a‘
.j - x - s M ‘ 4‘ t \ - 4 Ir I~— .;
v \\ y r ‘ ‘ I; - i»\ h . :
Iv '9‘ » 'gYéhi-i‘étvps 7; - 1/ ‘ii \ g ‘9 \ a V. ’ ‘
. . i “-4 l 4 ~ : ~ , ,. “ml, "Ma,“ .0. r , ________—__»—~_—H.———~—~————
2' 5‘ , - »‘ il\>\ / ' VEMSAIDI [/2 “‘ ~ § . a ‘91.? 'r"“--'-'7"JL;" 33E”? {7' - . ' '
33h ' \‘s ‘t ‘\ - ‘_ i "I“ I t " i f “x s w .h‘ ' ~j-- ; ,. Football p0" someone in this reading area Will be
‘ , I \ . § \ . \ ti .\: Q \\ * .: w i; - . . . _
n i j . t“: \‘\\ \\ . _ ‘ a . - ‘ » s .‘-:4;,, z/’ interested in helping form a national .
" i ‘ ‘» o mgfim; ‘95 \ \\ " . ~ “ ‘ f \\ I am writing in the hope that “footballfan's poll.‘-‘ This pollwillbca
l . ~—~_________—r top 29 for college football Similar to 3‘
India I" n . ‘ the UPI and AP polls but chosen by y, f
p yer ‘ Letters KQH‘UCUI 40506 For 5"bm‘55'°h5 the fansthcmselves. I need at least one 3;? i
i _ zelhli‘ "9‘3”“ onbcamorhiizsilplease 0‘" person in your state to recruit fans to hi}. i
. pee . ort num er. , . t , . I;i_- ‘2
. . | pal/0y The following requirements are gazioneam week during the college "h .
raises ISSUE 0 pr 6 err 9 : aiso enrorced l... ' .
Letters: A fan‘s poll is needed because both ‘ 3
. The Is't’nlm'li'i‘ Kernel welcomes Should be, 250 words or [m and . UPI and AP can beslanted by regional ' i
. - . t'om'ern particular issues. problems or , .
me" give" a 8 es and encourages contributions from events relevant to the L'Kt'ommunilv. blas‘ UPI has onlycoaChcs voting.and j
l the[hittcomlmuréityforpublicationon (”remarksregardingth€()perali(”lt)l ‘ thcygscc ohnly a handful (:‘fPteaLms 5%
. , . . . . T 86 Iona an 0P|n|0n Dag“ ~ . mm c t cir re ions. as .t
By JIM BHJA Which brings meto my firstpomt than the attitude of the letter writers. i Letters. opinions and Commen- ”"5 "WSW!” ‘ ' g g ,
' such visibility is not simply to feedthe We can‘t turn the publicity on when ! lanes mu“ be typed and ”hug 0 W0” sportswritcrs voting. and they can
I had hoped to make ltthroughfour athlete‘s ego: it carries with it theydo something good andturn it off I spaced. and include the writer‘s p5,“ 41d be 800 words 0,1955. GM, sometimes harbor reg‘ional . I
years without “Tll‘illll to the Kernel enormous responsibility. Since they‘ when they do something bad. i signatureadoressand phone numb” and explain alumna" pmgmmg w preferences. I propose a fan‘s poll. _.
~ __.., ~ — ,. . > H ~~—— ..,,W,_a__&§*_ - , . .. , UK students should include their year ,0 (ml issues 0/ interest to the UK screntifically .weighted by regions to i-
The Kernel dSkS‘ Is there an) and n‘a'or and l'niversit 'ern lo 'ees - p '1 ~ . eliminate regional skcwmg. n can be i
group of 350—400 young men who. ‘1 .‘ ; » ) P y - (ammunij. d g:
. . - , . ‘ should list their department and ‘ one. 5:
n - over a period of four years. arent position Commentaries" f b llf ll . h‘ i i
~ . , - . . - » - . Ifthereisa oot a o owerint IS _ ,
Opinion PM???) m_ SOT: scrfapes Withghe Letters. opinions and commentar- Should be 800 words or less. unless reading area who would like to work Q: .'
aw, at south S as I, n were w“. en ies may be delivered personally to the previous agreement reached with the 'th me in uttin the oil to ether ‘ ‘ ~
by Larry MCC rimmons mother. That Kernel newsroom. ll4 Journalism Editorial Editor. These pieces are m , p g p g ' ’ :
. rervr— . ~ ~W~~ "fix is an awfully casual shrUg-off 0f the Building Some form of identification Invented for those writers who the Please “"9 "‘e- _
. ~ ~ - - WhOIC situation. We‘re “0‘ talking is re uired Contributions ma 'alsobe editors feel have special credentials. ;
. , 1 . . . , . « . , , . q - l . . .
2:1” by"? ‘lk‘hli cpuldvnt make .h' are chonstantly in the tpuhlic EH” n ‘5 about one playercaught smokingdope mailed to Editorial Editor. Kentucky experience. training or other Rick Clarke - .
U R" mg t { ridd}. editorial muc more. tmpor an t'at 9m in his room. we‘re talking about Kernel. ”4 Journalism Building, qualifications to addressqparti't'ular ' BI d 5’
concerning responsetothcmdictment athletes keep inline and use discretion seventeen serious accusations University of Kentucky. Lexington. whjm' - 2276-A Bonaparte v . i g
ot eight l. l\' football players on sex In what they say and do in public, involvin ei ht layers Montgomery. Al"""‘"“”‘ ‘3. 5 f
tharges. I decided to reply. Squosedly they are representing the g g p ' “ _—_________.__“__~_______ \ j
hr“ m m M} that the Iwrne/ is :3" 0f “5‘ and surely we are more . The seriousness ofthis snd previous .' ‘.
wrrectontwocounts Wetthepublic) ayorably represented by say. Jim inCidents involving football players “\‘3_ 2.4.4445 - , / = l
are not in a position to say whether Kovachthanthe eight players recently should not belost. But it nearlyalways ‘Fi 1 // 3
mm. players are mmmm or gurltv; lhdlCled- is. because this university (and most ”\ Fl ll \ 7 ‘ .
. I , ' ‘ < ' i i/ i ‘ Hi“ ‘ - -
and it is indeed hypocritical of people The football team. by the way. others.‘ I ml‘sure) has a ‘hlhg about 7 /X\‘ ' H i —— .Jt ,
to put the players down a, ”aninmals“ h . protecting its preCious athletes. The X \ . ' il l .
_ _ s ould thank the Lord for Jim . . .. . 4 ‘ . . I! \ ___ 5
while behaving similarlt in calling ' i , kernel said. Athletes arent angels. ‘ ‘ t' I ‘1 ' - “ ~ ~ ,'
th- ‘ it ~ Kovach. If the press didnt have thev‘re human be' ., Th' l' =— l . i I . I
"m “m h ‘Cehh name under the Kovach to wave under our noses (as ' . tngs. IS app ies j ‘ i -. iii ii I l “ i
‘1‘” did the Kernel in its editorial) every not only ‘0 ourjudgment 0‘ them, hm .1- i j j . , l “ «l t ‘ y , _
However. whenever one questions time the team gets into trouble. they to the way they should be dealt Whh I . h / s / . \ \ ' . .fi/
Ah the specral treatment 8M3" IJK would beatalossto helpthetcam save when Situations like the present one , fl -\ \ l NV 3' b0 . é :
athletes .i great deal of scholarship face. For some reason. they would like arise. Hopefully. some lawyer who lha . i ‘ r . .. o ha I - ‘2. .‘
monc\ goes to athletes instead ofto usto believethatKovach makes upfor llKalumnusandfeedsthe Blue-White ‘ ‘ , J ,g’: a , $
. Pt‘tiple who only want to learn and get allthetroublemakers. Kovach is by far Fund regularly w'illnot appearand use 51*» ~ b E '3 i ' “1 '-¢ -“--—~ ‘ a fi’ .
a degree the only justification one the exception (as I‘m sure players‘ h's '"fluench ‘0 magically ”so"? the ’/ /‘ ,é‘ ‘W \ \x '
gets is "well. the athletic program transcripts and other criteria would whi‘l’h? affair. Bl" the way COHCSC ' l, 'r- ‘;-'-7 - /"”—.$~—“»—-" ‘ \
., , - , , , .. at etics aretoda .who kno .7 F‘j , 7L l i ‘
builds character (a dubious favorite) heath out). and as such cannot y W‘ it’ll. . ‘ r.‘ l i . l . l\ , (
or the athletic program is an legitimately be “53d ‘0 play down the It would be nice to go to a football 35‘ i ’ l i _ i - ~ ‘ *1 l h i l
importanty‘source‘ol income for the signilficzncc ofas many as eight players game in the future yes. I do go to // 9% , i . V hi _ _- i! g \ \ b l
university or the athletes" are InVO V8 In SCNOUS aCCUSKUOhS' football games. even the Peach Bowl. \\\ \l'"-———-—- ' “‘2‘ __ l ‘— ~—"L -' * " i '21)? 'i
important for publicny purposes and As far as hypocrisy on the part of and I used to be a sportswriter and \"flz‘W _.__,I V - . '
' ‘0 hhv letter writers. it seems to me that they talk about the dCfChSC or the kicking \\“ \i ’ R¥P ‘ w l I, ’l i. '
Certainly the latter two points are are "0‘ alone. Despite what the game and .not about WhiCh players \ WV flfi V ‘ m ' , i ‘
Valid Noboby knnwg who A a S University would have us believe, an spent the hlghl 3‘ Ch)! Ha"- / ‘gbl/i \‘b' war»
sophomore Joe Blow is; he doesn‘t 2"th '5 “0‘ "JUST like any other One finalthought it occurs to me \ ' , '01 ‘ l ‘31 glitz. ' h“ a; I" ’ i \
. display his talents in front of 58.000 “UdChh Specral meals. specml that the only thing these l001b8l| W h ‘ 'i ~‘ M“ Q)? / I \ i
. PCOPlC H times a year. "0" Is he the dorms. special scholarships attest ‘9 Players are“paid”to dois win football / l '4 ‘ " gr "
~ subject of frequent two-minute TV that. Butawc are told. they deserve It games. and they can‘t even do that. « ' s‘ h ’. f \ . "
_ spots and eight-inch newspaper and earn it. But now. suddenly. eight What a waste, Lx _ ‘ I
‘ i stories. For many people. the athletic Of them are in trouble and we want /; ‘ //\ \ \
' . ' ' teams presentmuchofthcimagcofthc them '0 be treated like any other '
' .‘ university. young men. This is no less two-faced th 39'“ h I pro-med scnlor. fi‘fi‘- ‘. . ~
. u
. .. .. DoN’T Blilrfille...l ausr lelt late...”
rbs‘IJ‘; X 7- i , .
E"~.-:~i j . ‘ . .‘ 2“», ,,..,‘. {.u... V... ‘.‘... :0-..“qu 9‘0- .. ,v..,,.a.‘M-QOQ“ .’ . .443 'i‘ij...‘ ._?f,..v*7~q-..“”~M.Iv YA . . .. , , . Hr» ”mun." ..._.i..-.~... . ‘5‘
i’éii‘?7',.i-'.a; :zj ' "" ‘ ‘ ' ' ‘ " ’ w: , . , - . . . - ' '
has: - .. ._ ,. .. . . . . . . .

 W
‘ ’ 'rili. kiwi ( in Kl.RNl.l.. Thursday. Much is. lino—i
: z ’
i '6 . “\3 t ; -' : v i v I d
'- ' ' ' t 'I' ‘. 1 . i' ‘ i l l l l l i ts...
‘3 s “5;":ii;‘I-:.-:;I-:‘:f':".>s:'$3531"i535;igfifgiii$5i§l§34"his;'fiisiiifi'fgxsii'” I '-' ""5""?2- . . i '
.1 i ;_ . kg§§§g§$s ....::_-;§~:;;;;;.>1 :1; 1 m . . g.
. ' vgxétt‘sieaafi ‘ ' . - ’ " /
. “‘«Wxtté’omt‘ . 3‘ " ' w ' e“ 4 i
t - tomatoes 2 F. ' . *~
- . .et‘tiitaa - = "l s , ’ .. a. . '*
' ,' ". saw ' ‘ 5‘3» 5 , ‘ w" - ' 5
y 1 -‘
N g .: .. g .. - -:.':=::‘-:--‘.;- .. g .. v} ' 1 I
’ ~ .. . V" a . .. 1! 1
at ' .. I.
' ‘ A '5 . . -» t
i 5%" ' . .. 5.. “M - "I
‘ Bi LINDA CAMPBELL/Kernel Stiff ‘ . V » . re ._
Emergency ' ‘ as
' ‘ UK's new neonatal transport system was on display on a for transferral to U K's neonatal care unit. According to :f‘ $.54 {éemi a
, blustery March morning yesterday.carrying Gov.Julian Evelyn Melnick. assistant professor of pediatrics. the - 7 ”twee ' . ‘
Carroll along for the show instead of a newborn infant. special medical team can mobilize in 30 to 45 minutes 1 ’ i a 1' . :. I, is , 163‘
‘ Above. the helicopter prepares to set down by when a Kentucky physician requests assistance. They can :1 A «*3? . . ‘
'. Commonwealth Stadium. the designated landing field. reach most spots in less than an hour by helicopter. but ' ..,. '_ are» , ,w .. . . 16*“ \
'3 At right. attendants demonstrate how critically ill babies would spend l to 2 hours stabilizing the infant before pg. ”1.6.. W t M
_ ' are quickly brought to the Medical Center by incubator. beginning the return trip. . -- . ) ' " ' :1, ‘ - 13%
., . a, _- a . . -- "r ' . f
. V I: AP and staff reports ”W? i' . dew a"
Cha les Ma' b th' 0’ dd 2‘ f S G 'd
,. Charles Main announced to read the Mime/and find out student ad\isory council; campus with ones that are students and SG. and help Formation of a Student
_ , yesterday that he would enter what students are bothered by AppOintment of commit- available. them to articulate their Tenants Union. with paid
‘_ the race for Student and say. ‘l'll fix it.‘That‘s what tee positions to non-SO Formation ofa committee grievances. attorneys on continued retainer
3 {3' Government president today. :73? most 56 candidates do, and students in a fashion that which would serve as a Compilation of a Grant t