xt7j3t9d817q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7j3t9d817q/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-11-29 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, November 29, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 29, 1972 1972 1972-11-29 2020 true xt7j3t9d817q section xt7j3t9d817q mmuCky Vol. LXIV No. 62 .
an independent student newspaper
r Wednesday. November 29, 1972 University of Kentucky
Eight pages Lexington, Kentucky 40506
5
‘ ' o o o
More open Visnafion
‘ Wait»:
westtewe
geese
sec/“Whitest O " e O r m S e X p e C t e n e X f a
(fit: By DAN RHEA The commission recommended that within the same time limits. But freshmen
fiytéfvg Kernel Staff Writer senior applicants be given priority for dorms would have to apply each week for
‘ mag”? President Otis A. Singletary s Housmg placement in the co-ed dorm. It was also their open houses. presently all dorms are
. - Commissmn has recommended that recommended that the co-ed dorm remain only allowed 12 hours per week of open
Blanding I, presently an upperclass under the visitation rules of the other visitation
.. ii" women’s low rise dorm in the Complex, undergraduate dorms. ' '
:3. house both men and women un- The commission recommended that
‘ dergrtadiiates 0“ an experimental basis If the commission‘s recommendations :Clthletyr‘e‘s the dtorlntis m‘n-i318 ogen houses
t "a: a ' ed . . b , are accepted. Blanding I will become the rather th 9°": ”dy ° e. °"“ 5‘3.“ -
- j _ 3 f “63mg?“ commissmn mem er .m' first undergraduate coeducational dorm a: re orm residents. This
" orm ed Kernel 0f the commissmn at a state-supported institution in Keii- :ecom‘itnenfg ion would eliminate. the
.. . gecommsi Patiocns Tuesgafy after the tucky. Centre College is presently the only fleceSSi yko arm gogernments recruiting ‘
:5” . ssocxat ress reporte . rom another other Kentucky college to have a co ~ed 00r wa ers or eac floor for each open
unnamed source that UK Will have a co-ed dorm. house.
. ' _ dorm next year. .
- The commisswn wasformed last Spring Another major recommendation of the Also the commission’s report stipulates
to make PT0P0531§ t0 Singletary to change Commission’s would give upperclassmen the responsibilities of both dorm staff and
. present open “Shanon ' rules in the dorms 30 hours per week of open visitation students are to be spelled out by the
reSIdence halls. The commissmn members automatically, without having to apply for University, giving the University broad
C . g , ‘ included students, staff, and trustees. it every week. power over the requirements for an open
The commissmn’s recommendations, house.
I . which are not binding 0“ Singletary, were The hours for open visitation in up- , .
Blanding One could soon be a co—ed Trustees at an informal luncheon before am. on Friday,s from noon to 1 am. on mendeu the COStS for security for the In-
, dorm should President .Otis Singletary its regular meeting Tuesday. The report Saturdays, and from noon to 10 pm. on greased, visihtation and the co-ed dorm be
~ _ approve the committee 8 report. has not been officially released. Sundays. Freshmen dorms will be able to orne y t e reSidents In the form 01'
. . higher room and board payments.
0 O
HEW concludes on-sfle in i g i - mmm
ves I a 'on ' would open one lounge facility for both
0 O O 0 sexes at each of the three geographical
eva UO'I'IOI‘IS on ecmons ori com i ng n a
Blanding II, a graduate students co-ed
By RON MITCHELL Otis A. Singletary. Singletary told the ficials and results of the on—site review. dontnat'in hits Pritht co-edulcational. '20
- . . - - . VlSl ion ourss us;sexua se ae
Asmstant to the Managing Editor investigators they could _1°°k at any files After they decide whether the University h C t t 3; greg -
only ‘f they had permissmn of the person is in fact uilt of discriminator rac- t e oopers own appar men s y ap
involved , g _y . . y p partment rather than building, in effect
Seven investigators from the regional ' tices, the regional office W1" draw UP making them co-educational- and
' 'del'nes the Universit can follow to - - - - '
StifcléhhaEguffiflcifiaeiin2113:1512;(:31va ”They “he “mum“ team) were Stereo: any hiring irregiiviarmes ma'ma'" '" the" present mm ”9"“ f"
v . . . . . able to achieve their goals without the file " freshmen women before Thanksgivmg.
phase of their investigation into alleged issue coming up ,, Dr Alvin Morris vice s rv o f d f
discriminatory hiring practices at UK' president for the administration, said. u ey g 'ves s u en 5
A topic of earlier controversy, that of h o o .
University files was not mentioned. ' Dr. Anthony Colson, assistant dean of C ance to express OPINIONS '
The group ‘5 presently ‘h the process 9‘ the College of Arts and Sciences, said the In an effort to determine the Reason for the survey is to give
COWP'hhg results 0‘ the" three-day V15" m investigators were looking at “recruiting attitudes of students on students an opportunity to ex-
Whlch they talked to students, faculty and practices, how vacancies are filled, University life, the Dean of press their opinions, Hall said. _
administrators. whether open positions are widely ad- Students Office has sent out a 14- Although the survey contains
“Everything was exceptionally ac- vertisedin trade Journals andwhere hiring page questionaire to 946 ran- the student‘s social security
. . . ,, . deCiSions were made and reasons for domly selected students. be - bo h f
commodating for us in our reView, said h' . t . 1 d toth r .. t' th num r m a X 0" t e ront
HEW team member Louis Bryson. iring cer am personne an no e s. Ques ions on e survey range page, Hall said the intention of
from . Student . Government. to the survey is not to find out what .
During their visit the group looked at Institutions receiving large sums 0t publish or perish. D'V'ded "“0 any particular student is thinking
“all policies and practices of employment federal money are required by law to sections the 5"“er hasgeneral on a certain subject. ‘ '
as well as services and benefits open to advertise nationally when openings exist, questions, a section dealing mm A 40 percent return on a survey
students,“ Bryson said. he added. ”tied npn—acdademic life. oftha is considereda ”good return" but
. The ultimate goal of the investigation, 5 u en an one concerning e th fl. . t‘ .
While on campus. the team never asked Colson said. is to make sure certain adequacy of campus facilities. if of itche is expec ing Lo rlecgze
to see any files of faculty, students or - ; a 0 e surveys w 'e e
_ _ _ . . elements Within UK conform to HEW bo t 20 m'n t s to m l te
administration as many administrators . . . a u ' u e co pe '
standards concerning the hiring of The number of students -
had expected . .. . , , Any program the survey in- .
- minorities and females. selected to partICipate in the - ~ - -
. . . . . . . , , _ dicates is lacking Will be looked
Prior to coming to UK, the regional The regional office is now evaluating all questioning is 10 percent of the into to see how it may be im-
office had asked for complete access to all the information received from fulltime student enrollment, Jack .
f] b t f db UK’ P 'd t preliminar forms subm'tt d b UK ‘ ‘ , proved and find out exactly what
_ ies u were re use y S reSl en . y l e y of- Hal-, dean of students said. is wrong, he added.
!
\.
UK football coach John Ray talks of the years Today will be a good day for Christmas ,.
In Si d e . gone by on page six. His future and the future of OUfSide . shopping. but that will be about all as oid Man
observations concerning his contract not being reach the low 40's, and you can be sure tonight‘s
renewed. His h0pes are for victory for UK and a low will make it into the 20‘s. The bright spot?
800d coach to take his place. Chance of rain is near zero. .

 I'
h. I‘.-.-.. ..' tax-.m-:l i-‘;-.~Il""'i-"i'-
The Eslabhshl‘d Inn Assastam Managing Editor, Kane McCarthy 0 I
Kentucky 22:22,.-::2::.'..."'::.':~2::,... ::::::::: $3332:5.33.37'0’32'c31‘13’012 EdltOl'IOlS
Editorial Edi." G". Honmum Ass-sum Managing Editor. Mike Board
Kerne' Campus Editor Moire homey Editorials represent the opinions oi the editors. not the University
. i
UK football. ~ -
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e po lines o priorities ”w .
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it WOUld be a Simple matter to Kentucky athletics is the bailiwick _ “/3; .\~ 5:??? ‘33. \ gifl 313m
dismiss the plight of UK football and of an independent corporation, E f . 53'3" :1 33.53.3513, n:
3 coach John Ray as a quadrennial operating on a $2-million-plus annual 3 ' 0/ ,5"? , 2% 33,3, , S
headache this university has endured budget, and making a healthy profit .; ' ' Mr {3.} " . {I}: / “if"
before and will undoubtedly endure off a now-failing football team. M,-I.{:I;Lg'::}‘§l3i5>' I fli’é‘ _ ‘ 0',
again. Athletics coaches have been The corporation draws a $12.50 fee ‘ ‘ ”3'” 97 fni
“fired,” or not renewed, in the past. from each student at t its institution. 2-8 L 1969 2- 9 3 1 ‘ 1
‘ We have a great deal of sympathy None of the corporation’s profits are / " " 10‘
for Ray, a man who stepped into a returned to academics, despite the jor
notoriously bad situation and did his fact that educational costs are rising M ‘ he
best to improve it. We wonder, by nearly six percent per year and , . <-;:‘ Rt
although we do not know, whether state appropriations are tailing off. ’5” ‘ ' \ .3 0 - ba
anyone placed in similar surroun- UK athletics doles out hundreds of ‘ f“ 3 ba
dings COUld have performed any thousands of dollars in scholarships. it // E '. _".‘:.'i""fe 0'
better. Nearly allthe money finances football ” " 3"? t v 2“ {ilk/5:33“ ‘1} R4
. But the circumstances surrounding and basketball programs. None of it {h 3' t I”, 3 ,3 . i ’fi? ~ .
UK athletics remain notoriously bad, goes to women’s sports. ,1 ,_ r-zf ' : // 6 y 9 ("":3' fix
in more ways than one, and this In the midst of it all, an athletics 4 '7' WI. / ’ 3a,? “ R‘
seems an especially 800d time to board raises a statewide furor by i “W"? /‘\s /: -. ’ ;% 2;," ' ,l 5"
examine those circumstances and dismissing a football coach, while 3," ‘ 3.3;; 332.2% /’ . \\ M’s _ ”,3 0°
whatthey hOid for Kentucky students. professors in the English depart- .33" '4'3‘§?'. \ - ‘\i' 3‘."
, ment—to name one example—are ' 197] 3'1972 Si;
' At a land grant university such as being turned away for bust it 3" 8 3" 8 ‘ wi
Kentucky—an institution dedicated to A football coach is turned away, __ ._ .. . .( .- Skafiw Y3
the quality education of its students and there is a statewide furor. In the FOOl’ballt four more Years‘P n,
and to service to the stategathletics English department—to cite one
is steamrolling its way to un- example—some of this University‘s stadiumsand recruiting, haven’t preparing a select group of young ' S
precedented prominence. most promising young teachers are erased any benefit the University or men for athletic greatness—

It‘s a prominence we have long being turned away for far less reason the state could hope to accrue. especially when so few of them ever d3
believed is unwarranted. We are the than JOhh Ray, and With barely a College football, after all, has failed make it past their college glory. 5i
first to admit the worthiness of a whimper of dissent. so far to make Oklahoma into an g3
balanced athletics program to 5119' What is the object? M0heyi say the educational mecca. Basketball did’t The time passed long ago to restore b3
plement academia. professional educators. AdOiPh RUDD give UCLA its prestigious place in the that balance between brains and st

But the state has sunk nine million and Bear Bryant have brought in far educational world. brawn. But the time for reform within ‘ 3]
dollars intoa football stadium, hoping more than any academician. Nobody With the “athletics benefits Kentucky athletics is just on the 0]
against hope thata miracle team Will pays to watch a chemistry ex- academics" rationale shot down, we horizon. And perhaps, within a few sl
please enough people to pay 0“ the periment. wonder what is left to prop up the years, we will see a fairer, more p1
structure’s debt service for years to Money? We wonder if the millions immense pressure and enormous equitable way of properly mixing ti
come. in student fees, plus the millions on sums of money pumped yearly into athletics and academics. (3

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IA 0 l l 0 i. E
ccephng homosexuals doesn t preclude Iudgem en

by STEVE BOESEN Yet too often of late this right to express cannot be “immoral"; only men are both must be reverenced as such; that F

The GLF-Jarman controversy ap- ideas seems to be taken as including some capable of that particiular dissolution. But howevermuch we abuse these principles or F
pearing in these pages recently threatens sort of “right" of “acceptance"—the right precisely because there must be a relation feebly attempt to formulate or refor--1 5
casus belli. becomes a sign of the times, to have ideas accepted, apparently, as between ideas and behavior some ideas mulate them, we are bound by them, for d
evokes for me fears and frustrations viable or respectable merely because must be condemned, even as the worth of they are in us and beyond us, arising from 1 it
becoming ever more constraining in my someone chooses to offer them as ex- the self and the right to the expression that which is beyond our knowledge and d

' daily life as a member of the academic pressions of his individuality, chooses to which gave them birth are affirmed. our wills. 5
community. We grow continually less identify them with this source of his worth. And so I say to Alfred Hougham—or, . — 1‘
able. it seems to me, merely to focus on This mentality is revealed in such com- more importantly, of the mentality which '0'3. 0‘30mpnons a
first principles. . .continually less willing monly heard expressions as, “This is my his statements evoke for me—there are My heterosexual behavior may be more ‘

.. to set up frameworks in which meaningful opinion! How dare you criticize it—it’s “inside lines” enabling men to determine perverse and destructive of my very self
communication about ultimate or even true for me, just as your ideas are true for what is natural and what is not. It is just than anyone’s homosexuality eye,- could
significant issues can occur. you!" Q.E.D. A universe of prophets, each because they are inside that all men have be; I do not know; we cannot judge for one
The “acceptance" of the homosexual with his own hypostasis for a people! them; and simply because they are lines of another, and Imustcount up only my own
cannot be the issue, if by acceptance we 'd 08 and 8." direction that we so often get entangled in sins. But your ideas are to be condemned:
mean the recognition of his intrinsic worth . them. your assumption that there is no source of ,
as a human being. No man can pass This is dangerous, this blurring of self human value except what might be ac- -
judgment on the incomprehensibly in- and self-expression. I do not suggest ideas "Chiral law cidentally erifranchised by “science”;
dividual, unknowable human substance of bear no relation to behavior or to one’s Agreed. there is no natural law inscribed yourassumption that any attempt to make
another; he cannot know the extent of deepest, most individual self. 'There can on stone tablets for all men to read for the judgments about, not just one‘s own ex-
twhat lffills that sacred space in even and mist be such reIlationshlp if thf wogd price o‘fla reading lesson. But the phrase perience, but human experience, devolves
Imse . . ean mere e I u H. '
, Lici‘édnié’srof 3‘33..." $11 the right oi set. Rf??? 1.33;??? 53333.2?53112‘3 3.255.; L;:’3,ng“a:fc:piagu§"fs8:“Zfliflpfhij
Who, " OCCOP'CRC. expression do not, should not protect the are creative forces in the world beyond the “force those views” on others Ly the
3 But it “acceptance". should refer to ideas expressed from themselves being power of our manipulation, our in- “intolerablyignorant."These are the very
ideas about homosexuality. as the context evaluated, judged, approved or con- citement, our invention; that the world is a assumptions that threaten the intellectual
m, Wthh the word appears. so often 1m. demned. Of course, ideas themselves mystery to “5 and we t0 ourselves, and life of the modern liberal arts college and l
plies, we have an entirely different issue. the human life 03 modern man, the life our .
No question arises here of the right of the ———'———-————————— university is meant to “pure and enrich 3
homosexual or others to express these and uarantee 1
ideas: in our country such self-expression S'OV. .008." '8 on g ' i
is protected by civil law, and encouraged The self and self-expression must be
m the university community by the liberal English graduaf. gfud.nf. affirmed, but they cannot exist humanly
arts tradition of free discussion of all withoutfaith in truthand faith in value, for 1
ideas. ——"—"'—————— that is our nature.

 A.
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. November 29. 1912—3 7
Nmbs V 3" . -— / if
I ' .9 .;
a; l‘he'Pnnce Edward FORMAL WEAR RENTAL _ ,
VanOffrnOn ,, t IS OUR SPEC!ALTY
/ L ‘ TRY ON YOUR
f
The worst mistake ever made ‘5 55mm"
.4 ‘ ,/ BEFORE YOU RENT IT
" t
WASHINGTON—This city has other e The reason is that at last count there were 293 I , MEN'S
. . Dec *1
like Josephine Roche, very old peo le who 0 locals of the UMW composed entirely of retired * FORMALWEAR
. . P 8 \ .
back to the time of the giants. Infrequently, their coal miners. All 70,000 Of these men are on 4" (‘E’VTFR
names are mentioned. Did you know that pension, they all vote and they’re all afraid Tony V , ' ' ’
' Senator So-and-So is still alive and in Boyle Will take their pensions away from them. ., -.._m __ "ml ‘ w"
. Washington? Didn’t he lead the fight against the Miss Roche is also on pension from the same 9 0 . W t lw r
copper interests during the Coolidge Ad- Mine Workers Fund. She should be: she ad- in I SS wages” rzzzei’f‘otrlrlneawogicd.
ministration? ministered it for years. They could take her y
If you are a journalist you tell yourself to go pension away from her, too. BUt she is 3130 the 43657 ’
100k up 01d Senator So-and-So, but you are a last person alive who wasa close collaboratorof ggridfwge Skhgpges Mon highe‘ozyhgsa' I .
journalist, not a historian, so you don’t. Yet, John L- L8Wi5- _ a es ree oa . ._._. __.____' . '_____.__... o '
here, in a blue dress, aged 86, is Josephine . - 0 '
Roche, not reminiscing, but getting ready to go Drowmng m Slime ‘ n Tunnnno MALL
I back into the coal fields and fight one more (For the benefit of those who think social 2%“
battle action in America began with the first march on . on m: MALL - -
the Pentagon John L was the single biggest ""mmwm "mu“ “m
ROCkGfGIIeI' massacre figure in the American labor movement during .
the period of its most exciting and hopeful NOW SHOWING I
Her first battle occurred in 1914 when John D. growth. That may not mean much now when '
RockefellerI’s private army IShf’t down the we’ve seen what so many unions have turned DINO DE LAURENTIIS presents
striklndg miners in th:l bloot‘iy incident that has into, but for the men who did and do the dog’s CHARLES BRONSON .
come OWIh tqus aSIIt e L“ ow MassIIacre. She work of mining coal, he was more than a giant.) JOSEPH WISEMAN JILL IRELAND ' .
kInew LOUIS Tikas— 'f‘ lovely person and the Boyle and his friends are running on the claim GERALD s. O'LOUGHUN
first man to fall, wavmg a white handkerchief. that they are Lewis heirs, the men he chose to written CHIARI
She tried to find house room for the miners’ succeed him.The old miners who follow Lewisin AMEDEO NAZZARI 0
Widows when they were brought east to New death as they did in life don’t know that John L. Weekday "
. . _ ‘ - 9'
York to testify at a hearing and a Rockefeller called Boyle, ‘ the worst mistake I ever made, _ M E
financed settlement house turned them away. that he is quoted as saying of Boyle and his gang: Show Tin-18$ M
I, I d d 0* d “Let them drown in their own slime." 2:00 - 42.15
: Seven ecu es mur er Josephine Roche may be the only person who 7:20 . 9:40
. “From Louis Tikas to Joseph Yablonski, seven can tell them that 50 that they W1“ believe it
decades of murder,” Josephine Roche mused, strongly enough to vote Boyle OUt- At least that t.
sitting in her apartment, serving coffee to her why she worked over the phrase Of her statement
I guests as she talked of her last effort. “I have not herself and dlhh t allow somebody else to write,
i been without apprehensions about this fight,” ”I, too, receive Ia pens10n from the UMWA
. she said, her cane resting on the top of her desk, Welfare and Retirement Fund and would not
t and none of us thinking it strange that this very want to 1058 that Peh510h- BUt a penSion cannot a /
9 old and honorable lady, Vassar, Class of ’08, be taken away because one speaks out on what 18
' should not only be talking about vicierlce but right . .What John 14- L9W15 but“ 15I today being / \ g V
3 Preparing herself to mix with it. Miss Roche has destroyed: - -I(50) I 31h coIntributing $1,000 to
thrown herself into the fight to defeat W.A. Arnold Millers campaign. ‘ ,
(Tony) Boyle for re-election to the presidency of . .
the United Mine Workers of America. Nor is her Firs, pOIICOWOIflOfl "1 Ammo I 51
decision to go personally and campaign for A forward movin . - .
i . . - g old lady, but if you insist fl ~
Arnold Miller and the Miners for Democracy Miss Roche will talk about the .
‘ . . . past. She 1] tell
slate a touching qut lnconsequentlal gesture. It you about important hearings in rooms of “the Featuring
could make the difference. a. gold oak period. . .everything was shining oak,” Wed" "W‘" "L "m
't or of how she became the first policewoman in Pa padoc
Boyle digs ‘ll'OUblOS America: “They had lots of police matrons, but I from Atlanta
Despite Boyle’s conviction for violation of the was the ”St policewoman. 1_ had a wonderful . )
Federal Corrupt Practices Act, despite a time in the red-light district picking up the girls 5" "M
Federal court finding against the union of con- and taking the 14-year-olds home to their Whalefeafhers
. spiracy to misuse the UMW’s Pension Fund, mothers." She’ll speak of working for Woodrow . .
1 despite yellow -dog contracts despite the union’s Wilson and Herbert Hoover when he was feeding Admss'onshmto
9 . '
I failure to fight for safe working conditions, th; BteIlgian war refugees. . 146 Eas or I I
despite, despite, despite, and despite the clinging ,u eIr memories aren t dear to her. Asked If v
suspicion that some union very higher-ups were' she S gomIg to write her ImemOirs, M‘ss Roche ‘ '- ‘
involved in the murder of Yablonski and his wife answers, Oh’ no, I m gomg to do th‘hgs now. l
and daughter people say the Boyle outfit has a only have ten minutes left and I’m afraid I didn’t
very good chance of being re-elected on Dec. 1. hght hard enough.’ _ ' - - ' ~ “' ”"' ‘ ’ ' -
(c) 1972. The Washington Post ”ll I \ \
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N-» \\ ‘ ’ 0 ”5‘ . ~’.w a... v ’ 2012 M“ Good Thru Sunday. Dec- 3

 /
d—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, November 2’. l”! ‘
e lecture: smmmmo Return to the past
Sierra Club Sponsors 0 lecture by
. 0
Rep. Ken Hechler of w. Virginia UK sophs moioring in education
Saturday, December 2 . ,
Hospitality Inn, Lexington, Kentucky help OU'I' In LGXIngton SChOOIs
2:00 Speech FR EE—-open to all UK education students need no 3 9 § .._. 9 9
. longer wait until they are student ‘ z '7 .. i: ‘
teachers in their senior year to ‘9 . “a
' " help out in local schools. ‘ " 2}.
The are now teachin as ' , s, ' T .;
, lANCES .lll. MEN'S HONORARY 50.0th 9 :9 ., .
Dr. Richard LaBrecque, I _ ’ 9 99”“ -»
Requirements: 2.3 GPA coordinator of the program, said 9 - . ’ ‘ ’*
students previously were given , :_ .. jf_
Leadership Qualities three and a half years of theories \ . ” 9 i; " ;
and principles, which often are i its ; 9" r ~. . x;
9 9 “a bunch of cliches and platitudes. 3;}. ' , " A: . i
For Applications comadi Then we dump them out as 5». 23$”: 3% fi- §1 ‘ C a?» '
Joe Moore 257-1550 student teachers, and say ‘im- ,9 ' .. A, ., .' .
. plement all these into effective .. ,1 _..__9 .. w 9;.
Ke'th Baker 2574460 practice.’ This program is a fig . .5] :9: .9 M (.3. 9 '
John Pate 233.9187 rejection of that concept” “’5‘ g - 9E 9 . 5
. . . The new program requires $3 égé §
Deadlines for Applications students to spend at least four [9,. , 9. g Q . ,‘
December 5th hours a week in the classroom, 3 ;' ”W; 9 ; 99“.;9 9; »
either at Johnson or Russell ‘ ‘ , we ., " t. ‘*
elementary schools or at Morton ' " ‘_;. ' ‘, f " a: ,
. Junior High School. ; 5,. . 3 . W ..1 . ,
“Their experiences gradually 3-99.; ; ,, "’
_ i become more complicated ._., ' a ,,
TERM PAPERS throughout the year," LaBrecque - '_'§:i .. :9 ‘ ' . tr.
_ added. “They start out observing ”W a t : f ; 9 "-... _9 \ '
Russ, a junior taking an upper-level government and the classes and getting to know i 9 949'? “M. t "9' _9 ‘K
politics course, said he received an A for a 20-page term the pupils so they have a feel for ' ‘ "" ’
paper from Termpapers Research. the class. Then they accept Becky Callahan (center), a UK education student,
Michael, a senior with a 3.0 average, said he was happy teaching responsibilities, such as helps Pamela Allen (left). with a problem at the
with the journalism paper he bought from Tempam tutoring one or two children. blackboard while David Southworth watches.
Research. “As the year progresses, the Callahan is enrolled in a new education class at UK
t Cynthia, a University junior with a 2.6 average, explained students will handle small which requires students to spend at least four hours
t that she usedia term paper service because she has to take groups, prepare and implement a a week helpmg m local Classrooms“
‘ care of her baby and home as well as go to school. teaching unit, or go on a field trip
“I don’t have the timetodopapers and stuff.” she claimed. with the children. Toward the major field of study before their Instead of turning out mere
She said she went to Termpaper Research Co., which latter part Of the year, they ac- junior year. classroom teachers, LaBrecque
completed an eight-page economics paper in 10 days. tually will teach a whole class. The students are required to said, there is a need for human-
The paper included footnotes and bibliography, she added, Throughout the year, thtfiy W11! d0 attend a weekly seminar, where development specialists, for
and she received a B-plus. somenof the 81‘"th 01911031 they are learning an innovative whom the classroom would be
work. approach to teaching. just one setting in which to help
Reprinted from The University Of Maryland Diamondback Fayette County school officials “Our job is to help the students children develop their skills.
2 January 10. 1972 see the program as an attempt to think reflectively and in-
Termpapers, Dissertations, and These fully researched, written and be more resPOnSive t0 the needs telligently abOUt their teaChing “In the process 0f helping these
2:922:23:23.99:.-:.:‘1.::'::.z:::.:1°;%:::°.:;9'5930332335;5:35.993»? of children in innercity semis, problems.” LaBrecque mm, the student-aides are
Washington D.C.Money Order only,please. For rush order call area code (202) LaBrecque said. Also it allows plained. “Our chief role is becoming more sensitive to the
Lgéfifsgtpéfgggszgush Or den students who decide not to pursue helping students master the arts out-of—school factors that affect
9 a teaching career to switch their of inquiry.” the child’s ability to learn.”
guy 'e‘ I . \ . '5? V/
« ' y A . r 5% Ford announces changes
, ar 1as -
‘ / \ By WILLIAM BRADFORD Finance and Administration. changes.
' Associated Press Writer Ford said Bradshaw’s salary in Ford said the final form for the
’ ITALIAN . \ ‘! FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP)— that new post will be “a little less complete reorganization of state
\ RESTAURANT A I Gov. Wendell Ford announced his than the governor’s"—— government had not been decided
‘ l. = . 1’ first step in reorganizing state presumably meaning it will be yet. 'ljhatwillbeworked out now,
§ 347 South Lime x ‘ 9-— ; government Tuesday which was close to the $27,500 maximum set he said» through meetings WhICh
.3 ' :-.~;'«91i~fi«\;;;;9 g basically setting up the by the 1972 General Assembly. Bradshaw and Ford’s
tic (Across from “W3/ 4 framework for the job. Before that, the maximum salary reorganization staff Will be
. Holmes Hall) \- . The only real organizational was $20,000-a-year for all com- having With each 0f the six
‘ . ‘ change announced by Ford was missioners except in highways, program cabinets.
. 9 2‘2” . to upgrade the present post of mental health and health. _
.' 9?; $31!? ”3:” " 9 IN} . finance commissioner to also Ford also announced the Ford 531d he was "0‘ yet at the
“99-359"; . “Mgzwr'MWsSEng become a “Secretary of the creation, effective Jan. 1, of six pomt ‘0 say whether .each 0f the
; . S - *' " "‘x ' A I . Cabinet" to coordinate functions “program cabinets,” under program cabinets ultimately W111
’ ‘ of other agencies. Under that which will be distributed 52 be headed by asingle person to
:sz 3.: change, all of which will become existing state departments and cogtpritse a? actualthorth‘super
’ ’ . effective Jan. 1, 1973, the a encies. ca me H a ong “’i e en-
; '5 $1.00 OFF [ARGE SIZE 2‘ Finance Department also will gTHOSE SlX cabinets will be: vironmental protection chief.
, absorb most of the functions now Development, Transportation,
‘ $.75 OFF MED'UM SIZE ‘ lodged in the Kentucky Program Education and the Arts, Human BUT UNDER further
‘ . ‘1 Development Office. Resources, Consumer Protection questioning, he finally said that
$.50 OFF SMALL 5'1! I ‘ DONALD BRADSHAW. who and Regulation, and Safety and “probably” each of those
\ / ; has been finance commissioner Justice. The new Department of cabinets would have its own
~, . Offer good Wed., Nov. 29 o since Ford took office last Environmental Protection head. For the present, Bradshaw
h E 6-H pIm. December, will be named to the already has been created, ef- will serve as the head of each in a
2 \3 if new dual job of secretary of the fective Jan. 1, under a 1972 state coordinating role as each meets
' ‘ cabinet and head of the law, Ford noted, and therefore to work out their own
A knit. ‘ ‘ . I ‘ .%.JA\\hc-l . Executive Department of will not be affected by any of the reorganization. he said.

 ’ ' " THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, November 2!. 1972—5
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