xt7h18344p0r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7h18344p0r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-03-07 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 07, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 07, 1978 1978 1978-03-07 2020 true xt7h18344p0r section xt7h18344p0r Volume LXlX, Number “3

r ed M n7 1978 University of Kentucky
ue ay, are

an independent student n Lexington. Kentucky

Kerr) 2]

 

 

Officials see problems

for UK wo

men’s sports

complying with Title IX

By JEANNE WEHNES
Copy Editor

Editor's note: This is the second of a three
part series about the effects of Title IX on UK
and other institutions.

Under the Educational Amendment of 1972,
women‘ s athletic programs at UK and other
public institutions must have “comparable
equality” with men’s programs by July 21

Whether that equality exists will be
determined by the Office of Civil Rights, an
agency of the Department of Health
Education and Welfare. No one is certain how
strong the efforts to get compliance from
schools will be.

Compliance is measured in seven areas:
quality of equipment, locker rooms, medical
and training facilities, scheduling of games,
salaries of coaches, travel experses and
publicity.

Achieving compliance is mainly a financial
problem, said Sue Feamster, women’s in-
tercollegiate athletic director.

If more money was available for athletic
programs in general and the women’s
program specifically, Feamster said
problems such as staffing, equipment and
facilities would take care of themselves.

A campis-wide facilities crunch is par-
ticularly acute in the women’s athletic
program, Feamster said. Women’s basketball
has daily practice time in Memorial
Coliseum, but volleyball, which was promoted
to varsity status this year, was denied
practice time.

Feamster said the volleyball team would
accept the 6-8 pm. time slot now Open in the
Coliseum. “The Coliseum is an athletic
facility for men’s and women’s varsity
athletics. There is no scheduled activity from
six to eight. I don’t know why we can’t
practice then.”

All scheduling of facilities is done through
Athletic DirectOr Cliff Hagan’s office. Hagan
said he saw no need for volleyball to have
practice time in the Coliseum.

With some modifications, Feamster said
Memorial Coliseum could be one of the best
volleyball arenas in the South. She said

Memorial Coliseum could attract in-
ternational-level competition, and could
become an added revenue source for
University athletics.

The team played one game at the Coliseum
this year, and had another canceled. Five
games are scheduled next year, and in the
past have been played at Transylvania
University if the Coliseum is not available.

Feamster said Memorial Coliseum is the
only fully equipped competitive facility on
campus, with the ticket windows, lighting,
seating and unObstructed view necessary for
“top level” competition.

Hagan said that with promotion, any event
can be revenue producing. He questioned the
need to use the Coliseum for the number of
people who would initially attend volleyball
matches. He said either Alumni Gym or
Seaton Center could be used for volleyball.

Because of the floor surface at the Seaton
Center, Feamster said it is unsuitable for
many volleyball defensive maneuvers. She
said Alumni Gym is not properly lit, and its
ceiling is not regulation height for volleyball.

There have been thoughts to renovate
Alumni Gym, but Dean of Students Joe Burch
said plans are not definite. Even then, it would
be used mainly for campis recreation and
auxiliary purposes.

The two major funding problems for
women‘s sports, said Feamster, are the lack
Of stall and lack of scholarships.

The women’s athletic program has five full-
time staff members, compared to 50 in the
men’s program. “We just simply don’t have
enough staffers, yet if we don‘t have athletes,
we can’t have a program,” said Feamster.

The UK women’s program has suffered
since the beginning from a lack Of scholar-
ships, according to Feamster. UK was a year
later than many other Kentucky colleges in
offering grants-in-aid to its female athletes.

Many women signed with UK anyway and
“suffered” through the first year, knowing
scholarships would be given the following
year, said Feamster. “We were hOping the
girls would chose UK over the other schools
because the quality Of education is better. We
also were emphasizing a quality prOgram
here," she said.

\.

JV

Feamster said when UK established its
women‘s varsity program in 1975, she studied
the club sports and their relative strengths,
future growth potential and recruiting area
(mainly Ohio and Pennsylvania) to determine
what sports UK would elevate to varsity
status.

The uncertainty Of Title IX’s effects
hampers UK recruiting, said Feamster. UK’s
efforts to comply with the law may bring an
increase in scholarship grants, but that
change isn’t certain. Until more scholarship
money is definitely available, it is difficult to
actively recruit “t0p level” athletes,
Feamster said.

The coaches Of women’s teams now can only
Offer the current amount (maximum $1,500)
to any athletes they hOpe to sign. By com-
parison, men's varsity full scholarships are
$2,800 for state residents, $3,800 for out-of-
state residents.

Feamster said with publicity, she can
deveIOp a program where revenue pays all the
bills. For example, the recent LadyKats-
Tennessee game had a large turnout became
of the publicity it received after the men's
game was canceled.

Continued on page :1

 

Hours reduced

-_

Coal crisis spurs
Food Service cuts

By LYNNE FUNK
Kernel Staff Writer

Mandatory cutbacks in electricity
use have forced some changes in UK
food services Operations.

K-—Lair and Complex Commons
grills now close at 8 pm. rather than
at midnight, and Donovan and
Blazer cafeterias do not Open for
Saturday meals, said Food Services
Director Allen Rieman. .

Only about 200 people used both
grills between 8 and 12 pm. when
straight cash sales are made, he
said. Since meal tickets are not
honored during these hours, the
early closing does not constitute a
cut in service to customers with
meal tickets, said Rieman.

Explaining the Saturday closing of
Donovan and Blazer cafeterias,
Itieman said Donovan usually
serves Saturday breakfast to only
about 20 or :10 students. Sixty-one per
cent of students who buy meal
tickets suscribe to the five-day meal
plan, he said.

Throwaway paper plates and
plastic utensils have replaced
washable tableware in all the
cafeterias to save the electricity that
powered dishwashers. Only one
baked dessert is served each day,
compared with two per day before
the current fuel shortage, Rieman
said.

The temperature in freezers has
been turned up from minus 15 to zero
and refrigerators have been set at 40
degrees, Rieman said. All cafeterias
have curtailed electric lighting.

Blazer cafeteria has cut lighting

by one half said Ilelen Spears
assistant food production manager
Infrared lights that warmed dished
food on the serving counters have
been turned Off, with food dished as
each person goes through the line,
she said. Employees used the stairs
instead Of the elevator at Blazer
now, said Spears, and one
refrigerator has been turned off.

At Donovan cafeteria, lights in
restrooms, Offices and the kitchen
are being turned off when the rooms
are vacant, and the electric con-
vection Oven is not being used, said
manager Ann Anderson.

One serving line has been cut out
at the Complex cafeteria. and two
refrigerators have been turned Off,
said manager Carol Itaitz.

“If anything is not necessary,
we've asked that it be cut off,“
Itieman said.

(‘urtailments at some colleges
have been more severe (‘afeterias
at Ash land C Ollege in Ohio now serve
only one hot meal each day, making
do with cereal at breakfast and
sandwiches for lunch, Rieman said.
This sort of menu change is a
possibility at UK, said George
Ruschell, assistant vice president
for business affairs

“At this point we have not
discussed what to do if further
cutbacks are required," Rieman
said. “But if essential services are
exempted, we may not be required
to cut back again."

“We have no intentiOn of cutting
back On food service, no matter what
the crisis,“ Ituschell said. “As long
as UK stays open we will prOvide
food service."

Carter

acts

Taft-Hartley law invoked as coal supplies dwindle

WASHINGTON (AP) — President
Carter, declaring the county
“cannot afford to wait any longer”
for a coal strike settlement, invoked
the Ta ft-Hartley Act yesterday in a
first step aimed at forcing the
miners back to work.

Carter said negotiations between
the striking United Mine Workers
union and the coal indistry were at
an impasse. The presidmt said he
was directing Attorney General
Griffin Bell to make preparations
for seeking an 80-day back-to—work
order under terms of the Taft-
Hartley Act.

The strike by some 160,000 UMW
members, which enters its fourth
month today, has forced power
curtailments and job layoffs in the
Midwest and is threatening more
harm to the economy.

Carter announced creation of a
three member board of inquiry, as

required under the Taft-Hartley Act,
and the panel made plans to hold a
public hearing on the strike
tomorrow.

Board Chairman John N. Gentry,
a Washington lawyer, said about
5,000 Mailgrams had been sent to
union and industry officals as well as
other interested parties inviting
them to appear at the hearing.

Gentry noted that under the law
the board must prepare a report for
the president before the government
can go to court. Carter said he ex-
pected the board to issue its report
quickly, and one administration
official said the president expected
it within three days.

Beside Gentry, Eva Robins, a New
York arbitratOr and Carl Warns, a
professor at the University of
Louisville are serving on the board.

In resorting to Taft-Hartley,

Carter said he wanted to make sure
the country did mt fall victim to
“total breakdown Of the collective
bargaining” process.

Reaction to Carter’s an-
nouncement came swiftly from the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association, the industry-wide
bargaining group.

“We are extremely disappointed
that the UMW members have
rejected the contract their
bargaining council had agreed to
and that the gOvemment also con-
sidered favorable to the miners,”
the BCOA said.

UMW President Arnold Miller had
said in advance of Carter’s
nationally broadcast announcement
that he would comply with Taft-
Hartley even though he doesn’t like
it. He said that if a back-towork
injunction is issued, he will Observe
it.

Carter made the announcement
after the striking miners voted
overwhelmingly in weekend
balloting against a proposed three-
year contract that would have
settled the protracted strike.

Miners cited a contract proviSIOn
requiring them to pay deductibles of
up to $700 for health care that has
been free as one reason for their
rejection. Opponents also didn't like
a provision giving coal companies
the authority to fire wildcat strike
leaders and pickets.

Normally under a Taft-Hartley
injunction, strikers return to work
under the terms of their expired
contract. But Carter said he would
“seek to permit any company" to
offer the wages contained in the
rejected contract.

The proposal called for an im-
mediate $1 an hour increase for
miners now making $7.00 an hour.

Spring Fever

One day Of slightly warm weather is enough to cause a bad case of
spring fever. Don Aicklen, left, and Johnny Jones showed the symp-
toms yesterday by practicing golf in the snow. Practicing on makeshift
links next to the Complex. the two weren‘t planning on finding the
halls.

 

“today

inside

The UK Wildcats prepared for the NCAA tournament
last night by defeating the Vanderbilt Commodores in
Nashville. and Sports Editor David Hlbbltts was there.
See story on page 4.

state

THE HOUSE JUDICIARY-STATUTES Committee
killed by one vote yesterday a bill that would ban the
display or sale of pornographic material to mind's.

The sponsor of House Bill 379, Rep. Claudia Rincr, D-
Louisville, said it would prevent other sex-related
crimes by “getting some of thb stuff off the shelves.“

Seva'al committee members agreed that minus
sharld be protected from pornographic material, but
they questioned whether the state strand attempt to
legislate such protection.

WITII NO END TO THE COAL STRIKE IN SIGHT,
the Kentucky Public Service Commission will
reconsider mandatory electrical curtailments.
executive director Eugene Mooney said yesterday.

The PSC will meet later this week to assess utility
coal supplies and consider drawing up a new cur-
tailment order, Mooney said.

A new order would be based on individual utility
stockpiles rather than setting forth a blanket cur-
tailment schedule for all utilities, as did an order set
aside last week, he said.

nation

AS PRESIDENT CARTER SOUGHT TO FORCE
striking coal miners back to work, the Midwest and
Appalachia braced yesterday for drastic new power
cutbacks that could throw tens of thousands out of jobs
by the end of the week.

Officials in Maryland. Virgina and West Virginia

were considering imposing an immediate 30 percent
cutback on indrstrial customers of two utilities.

In Ohio. :1 major utility serving the Columbus area
asked state officials to allow a 50 percent cutback to
indrstry next Monday. And in Indiana, officials
decided this was no time to lift 25 percent cutbacks
already in effect for businesses there

So far. the Labor Department has said that layoffs
related to power cutbakcs have been limited to about
22.000 nationwide.

HUSTLER MAGAZINE OWNER LARRY FLYN'T
was shot in the stomach, and one of his attorneys was
also wounded yesterday by a gunman who fired at
them urtsidea courtroom in Lawrenceville, Ga. where
l-‘lynt is on trial for allegedly distributing obscene
materials, authorities reported.

Flynt, 34, was receiving emergency treatment at
Button Gwinnett Hospital where he was listed in
critical condition. I-‘Iynt was expected to survive the
attack.

world

Ill'A Kl'O-l-‘I-ZNG. NEWLY CONFIRMED AS
('IIINA‘S supreme leader, has told the national
parliament in Peking that the American attitude on the
Taiwan issue remains the chief obstacle to establishing
lull [LS-Chinese diplomatic relations.

Hsinhua, the official Chinese news agency. said in a
dispatch received yesterday that Hua also outlined to
the fifth National People‘s Congress an intensive 10-
year plan for modernizing China‘s “backward" basic

mdrstries.
weather

RAIN POSSIBLY MIXED “IT" SNOW TODAY.
highs in the upper 305 to low 405. Lows tonight in the
low ‘10s. Tomorrow rain shwld be enting wrth highs
near 40

(‘ompiled from .\P dispatches.

 

 

  

 

KKeEi‘i'ieI

editorials d: comments

Stove llallinger
Editor in Chief

I)l(’k (iahricl
Managing Editor

’l‘luunasClark
Assistant Managing Editor

(‘harlcs Main
Editorial Editor

Null Fields
Assistant Art: I:
Entertainment Editor

.Icnn Ifer (larr
Sta/[Artist

Navrd IIrbbrlts
Sports Editor

Hob Staublc
Assistant Sports Editor

Walter Tunis
Arts dr Entertainment Editor

Gregg l-‘ields
Richard McDonald
Jim McNair
Mike Meuser
Betsy Pearce
Copy Editor:

Davrd 0‘ Neil
Photo Manager

JcanneWehnrs
Photo Supervisor

 

 

After Supreme Court decision

But university officials shouldn’t forget due process

The Supreme Court’s decision last week that
prblic colleges and universities should have wrde
discretion in dismissing students for academic
reasons is well justified.

It’s discouraging, however, that the court’s
dmision did not carry a strong urge to use clear
guiddines and provide advance warning to
students who are in academic jeopardy.

At issue was the University of Missouri at
Kansas City’s refusal to grant a medical degree
to Charlotte Horowitz. Although the school
conceded that Horowitz’ grades and test scores
were adequate, officials claimed her clinical
work was deficient. In an unusual twist, there
was also a question of whether Horowitz’ ap-
pearance and personal grooming was acceptable
enough for the medical profession.

The court ruled that the University of Missouri
had given enough warning of academic jeopardy
to Horowitz. And even if there was evidence that
due process had been violated, said Justice
William Rehnquist in writing for the 6member
majority, that would be immaterial. .

Schoob should have wide discretion in making
acadanic judgements, argued the majority. It
ruled that students have less protection in
academic affairs than in disciplinary or
misconduct matters, where court-style hearings

and otha' trappings of due process have always
been urged.

Decisions about academic performance should
be kept out of the courts, apart from judicial-
type processes. The awarding of grades and
degrees is a value judgment, and should be the
province of professors and university
academicians.

By taking such a strong stand against due
process, though, the court’s decision may cause
univasities to de-emphasize procedures and
regulations that keep judgments fair and keep
students informed about their status.

If school officials receive the wrong im-
pression, there’s a danger that academic
decisiors could become too arbitrary. Charges of
cultural and racial prejudice may be made by
students who are dismissed or flunked, and
affirmative action efforts could be sidetracked
by fears of unfair treatment.

Colleges and universities should continue to
provide students with as much information and
advance warning about acadanic matters as
possible. Despite the court’s decision giving wide
discretion, the procedures and criteria for
acadenic decisiors Sharld be made easily un-
derstandable for all students.

 

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Criminal code sets dangerous example

At the risk of being ignored as a
doomayer, I want to warn you that
as you read this column, a group of
pe0ple is attempting to strip you of
your most basic constitutional

rights.
fitz

lid -

 

They don‘t'carry guns" or” ex-
plosives, and they aren’t masked, or
trained in torture. In fact, most of
them are pa mchy and overfed. Yet,
if the House of Representatives
passes House Resolution 6869, you
will be left with as little as if Or-
wellian police had dragged you off in
the night.

Last year, a bill entitled the
Criminal COde Reform Act was
defeated after overwhelming public
protest. The act, known as S. 1, was
drafted by John Mitchell, at the
request of Richard Nixon, in an
attempt to curb protests against
administration policy regarding the
Vietnam war and other government
policies. During this Congressional
session. a revised version of S. 1,

Senate Bill 1437, was introduced by
Senators McClellan and Kennedy.
Through a handy bit of ramrodding,
the bill was rushed through the
Senate before Opposition forces
c0uld introduce amendments and
organize to defeat the bill. It is now
in the House Committee, and will be
on the House floorsoon, if Senate
tactics are any‘ipdicationh ,,,,_ .

SB. 1437, the updated '_
received only cursory treatment in
the Senate, hardly proper con-
sidering its 600plus pages covering
over 3,000 criminal offenses. It
retains far too many of the most
repressive provisions of the old S. l
to be acceptable. A look at a few of
the more intolerable features of the
bill will illustrate:

-~~ Obstructing a Government
Function by Fraud, a new crime,
could be applied to prosecute a
person who gives a post Office
employee wrong directions to a
house, or a political activist who
attempts to “duck” FBI sur-
veillance.

—~0bstructing a Government
Function by Physical Interference,
another new crime, would punish

rim;

any interference of any government
function under any circumstances,
such as a demonstration partially
blooking a post office or courthouse,
refusing to Open the door to a
marshal serving a suprena, or
continuatiOn of picketing after an
invalid court injunction had been
served.

~~A person making noise at an
official proceeding would be guilty
of a criminal offense.

~—Journalists who reveal in-
formation that the government
wishes kept from the public would be
liable under a broad c0nspiracy and
“Official Secrets” section.

—<—Any informatiOn on abortion
proeedures, availability of abor-
tions, books or pamphlets, the
shipping of equipment to abortion
clinics, etc., would be prohibited
under criminal law.

~- —Pe0ple could be ordered to
disperse any time that a federal
officer believes there is a risk of
injury or damage to federal
property, including parks, buildings,
and Indian reservations.

-—-Broad espionage provisions,
similar to those used against Daniel

Ellsberg when he released the
Pentagon Papers, would punish
unauthOrized disclosures of
government information and compel
journalists to reveal confidential
sources, thereby cutting off in-
formation to the public on govem-
mental activities.

There are numerous other
provisions which are equally vague.
The greatest dange‘ in this bill is
that there are no limitations on its
scope. Breaking from the traditional
view that criminal laws are strictly
defined and applied, it calls for
broad interpretation of the statute.

Federal criminal provisions are
often used in times of crisis, and
have recently been employed to
disrupt and destroy legitimate
political dissent in this country. To
allow the government such broad
powers as HR. 6869 (SB. I437) on
the theory that th (Be who enforce the
law will be wise and judicious in
their application is too risky a
pr0position.

We must be aware of the potential
dangers of such comprehensive,
restrictive legislation, and act to
minimize that risk.

Senate Bill 1437 and its House
counterpart, HR. 6869, are too
dangerous and too riddled with
broad repressive measures to be
allowed to become our criminal
code. Yet, unless public Opposition is
heard immediately, it will become
law.

That‘s where you come in.

(let in touch with your

The Kentucky Kernel welcomes
letters and commentaries sub-
mitted for publication. Articles
must include the signature, ad-
dress and phone number, year
and major if the wirter is a
student.

Commentary authors must
have expertise or experience In
the area to which their article
pertains.

The Kernel editors have the
final decision on which articles
are published The editors

 

Letters Policy

reserve the right to edit sub- or may be delivered personally.

representative. care of the House
Office Building, Washington DC.
20515, and urge trim to vote no to
HR. 6869 It‘s probably the most
important letter you will write for
some time.

Tom Fitzgerald is a first-year law
student. His column appears every
other Tuesday.

.‘n

missions because of grammatical
errors, libelous statements or
unsuitability in length.

All letters and commentaries
become the property of rthe
Kentucky Kernel.

The best-read letters are brief
and cencern campus events,
though commentaries shoulb be
short-essay length.

Letters and commentaries
should be mailed to the Editorial
Editor, Room I14. Journalism
Building. University of Ky., 40506,

 

 

Garden Plot Registration
for U.K. faculty, staff & students

March 6-17

 

FEDERAL SUMMER INTERNSHIP PROGRAM

The following summer internships are available in federal

 

8a.m.- 5 p.m. daily outside rm. 208 Service Bldg.

There are 300 plots 25 x 50 ft.

The drawing will be March 22 in the Taylor
Educations Auditorium at 9 am. For further
information contact Ramona Stofer at 257-3875.

PRE-LAW STUDENTS
The pre-Iaw honorary society,
Societas Pro Legibus, is now
accepting applications f0r membership.
SPL seeks to honOr academic
achievement and provide helpful
information to pre-Iaw students.
application 271 P.O.T.
deadline Thur, March 6

agencies. The internships carry substantial financial

All WEEK compensation and academic credit.
729 s. LIMESTONE 254-3893
FORMERLY PERKINS CARRY OUT

0 National Institute of Mental Health, Rockville, Maryland. Students from public health, sociology
orpsychology.

 

 

'0 US. Forest Service, Washington, DC. Recreation Management staff position.

0 Social Security Administration. Baltimore. General Administration. Juniors in business or public
administration.

OSocial Security Administration. Baltimore and Washington. Research position for social science
student.

0 Health, Education and Welfare. Atlanta. Public Information Intern. Must have strong writing and
communication skills.

eDepartmenl of Agriculture, Science and Education Administration. Washington. Student in
agricultural economics required.

0 Federal Aviation Administration. Department of Transportation. Washington Internship with
aerospace engineering division.

 

_-
r

 

What's Wrong? No fun, excitement
or adventure in
your life?

MAYBE WE CAN HELP!

0 Food and Drug Administration. Division of Oncology and Radiopharmaceutical Drug Products,
Rockville, Maryland. Graduate student in chemistry or biochemistry required.

.. I eSecretary of Defense, Research and Engineering. Washington. Technical research student in
electrical. computer, mechanical or civil engineering required.

Dave Mason
Bob Welch Concert

Tues. March 7, 8:00 pm.
Memorial Coliseum
Reserved seat tickets $6.50 & $5.50

Beginning on Tuesday, Feb. 14, I978 tickets will
be on sale at the Student Center Ticket Window
on weekdays from 10 a.m.-4 pm. and at Barney
Miller’s, Record Smith in Richmond and All
Dawahares locations.

ODepartmenl of the Navy. Naval Ship Research and Development Center. Annapolis. Maryland.

. Graduate student in physics required.
Jorn the Kentucky Babes

attend the Kentucky Der-
by-work together as a
team. Represent U.K.»
Come to our informal get-
bgether.

March 9. 7: 30 pm
:09 Student Center.

TRY IT-YOU’LL LIKE IT!

ODeparlment of the Navy. Naval Ship Research and Development Center Graduate student in
chemistry

0 Veterans Administration, Washington Research position for business or public administration
student with background in statistics

Office for Experiential Education
303 Administration Building

257-3632 _—_J

Apply as soon as possible to:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

  

Clearly

 

fragile

Hiccups were an occupational hazard at this kind of job a
long time ago, when you blew with your lungs. But today
technician Larry Harmon uses machinery to shape glass
instruments at his Chemistry-Physics Building shop.

Deadline due

Problems

seenin

Title lX compliance

Continued from page 1
Hagan agreed women’s
basketball does have revenue
potential, but it will take time
to deve10p. “SomeOne doesn’t
hand you ‘x‘ amount of
dollars and you are a success
. . . it takes time to build up
fan support. It won’t come
because of equal funding.”
The Athletic Assoeiation is
a separate corporation
funded through private
donations and gate receipts.
Because it is not funded by
public money, UK cannot
allocate money from the
men’s program to help the
problems in women’s
athletics. However, it is the
privately funded Athletic

Assciation with which the
publicly supported women’s
program will be compared.

Feamster said the women’s
intercollegiate program right
now is “like being on welfare,
there are so many problems
to begin with. solving one
problem doesn‘t help."

Feamster said she doubts if
300 colleges and universities
will be in Title iX compliance
by the deadline. Yet, UK
“will be in substantial
compliance."

“Being in compliance is not
my problem. it is the
University's problem," said
Hagan, "But once it is made
my problem, I will do what I
have to to help the situation.“

University offers space
for summer gardeners

Garden plots near Com—
monwealth Stadium will
again be available this
summer for students, faculty
and staff, according to a
spokeswoman for the
Physical Plant Division.

The 300 plots, unused by the
University during the sum-

mer, measure 25 feet by 50
feet. A drawing for the lots
will be made Wednesday,

March 22. to determine who
will get to use them. Those

interested may register until
next Friday, March 10. for the
lottery.

258-4646

Is the number to call for Information

about the best read bulletin board on
census. the Kerrie] classified section.
The deadline for classifieds la noon. one
day prior to publication.

The Kernel classified office is located In
room 210 of the Journalism Building. on
canpts. All ads must be paid in ad-
vance.

Career workshop aims
to help students at UK

By MEL HOLBROOK
Kernel Reporter
WorkshOps to help students
with career-planning and
evaluation of career gOals are

being offered by the
Placement Service. The
program h0pes to help
students establish and

achieve such goals.
“Students have to begin
planning for their careers so
when they get out of college
they’ll be ready to start
work,” said Lyn Hurst,
associate director of the
Placement Service and
leader of the workshtps.

“We see career planning as
a four-step process,” said
Hurst. "You have to know
yourself, explore career
optiOns, deve10p your skills
toward those Options and then
use those skills to obtain the
job you want. These first two
steps will be covered in the
workshOps."

The w0rksh0ps are to try to
get students thinking about
their reasons for being in
college and what their goals
are once they are out of
school. The groups will be no
larger than 15 people to allow
individual attention along

Peace Corps and
VISTA to recruit

Representatives from the
Peace Corps and VISTA will
be on campus today to meet
with graduating seniors who
are interested in working
with either program.

There will be an in-
formation tabie at the Student
Center today and tomorrow to
answer questions or give
more information. The
representatives will be
conducting interviews at the
Placement Office.

The Peace Corps is

requesting applicants with
skills in various major fields,
especially Nursing, Home
Economics, Agriculture,
Math or Scicence, Buisnoss,
French, Education or
Engineering.

VISTA requests liberal arts
majors to work in soccial
work or community service
work. Volunteers work with
low—income communities in
such areas as recreation,
alternative education, law,
community organizing and
community deveIOpment.

Nominations due
for Sullivan awards

The deadline for submitting
nominations of candidates for
the 1978 Sullivan Awards is
next Wednesday, March 15.

The awards are given each
year to one woman and one
man of the graduating class
tAugust 1977, December 1977
or May 1978), and to one other
person who is not a student of
the University.

in making nominations, the

Committee on Sullivan
Awards urges consideration
of the nominee's “spirit of
10ve for and helpfulness to
other men and women."
Nominations can be made
for more than one student,
and c0pies of the nominating
form can be obtained from
Assistant Dean of Students
Saundra B. Lykins, 513
Patterson Office Tower.

 

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with group participation in
various activities.

"We‘ll relate this to what
type of skills each of us has,
and then f0cus in on whether
these skills we have enable us
to do what we want to d0,"
said Hurst.

“The rest is left up to the
student,“ Hurst said. “They
will now know what type of
career they are able to
succeed in and be happy
about it too."

WorkshOps have been
planned to come before ad-
vance registration to help
students choose courses for
the fall semester. Meetings
will be heald March 13-16
from 7-9 pm. There will be
two meetings March 2731
beginning at noon and 3 pm.
Monday through Thursday
and at noon on Friday. All the
workshops will be. held in 201
Matthews Building.

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. March 7. l978—3

 

 

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