xt7k3j39367s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k3j39367s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-02-21 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, February 21, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 21, 1974 1974 1974-02-21 2020 true xt7k3j39367s section xt7k3j39367s The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 116
Thursday, February 21, 1974

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Ky. 40506

 

Miller plans

to revive

Student Services

By LINDA CARNES

Kernel Staff Writer

 

Revenue

committee

questions

Albright

By RON MITCHELL

Kernel Staff Writer

Student Senate members unanimously
elected a new Student Services director
Wednesday night after former director
Nancy Emig officially resigned.

Freshman John Miller said the
organization‘s main function would be to
act as an information center for local
housing problems.

Student Services will basically be a
referral service and a complaint agency,
but will not serve in the same capacity as
Lexington’s Tenant Services, he said.

OTHER PLANS outlined by Miller in-
cluded the reestablishment of the Student
Services Inc., a non-profit store operated
by students.

In other business, a report was made by
the grade point average (GPA) committee
and the senate voted to continue the

FRANKFURT —— Kentucky‘s Council on
Public Higher Education executive
director appeared before the legislature‘s
appropriations and revenue committee
Wednesday and answered questions
concerning the state‘s higher education
system.

“We need more emphasis on overall
planning to avoid the kneejerking and
political involvement that has charac-
terized higher education in the past," said
Dr. AB. Albright. He outlined the major
priorities the higher education body has
established.

“Students are becoming more career
oriented. So we need to reexamine the
curriculum and center it around career
opportunities and emerging professions,"
Albright said.

SEVERAL MAJOR problems within
higher education are controversies over
residency requirements, future manpower
needs, students aid and an alternative
financing system, he added.

“Since enrollments are declining and we
are going to have to shift emphasis in
curriculum it will be necessary to get
away from funding higher education on the
basis of enrollment," he explained.

Enrollments at state institutions have
levelled, Albright said, but will rise in
about five years.

Continued on page I0

committee to serve as a watchdog over
mishandling of student’s grades.

The committee was originally
established to investigate reports of
student’s grades being posted in several
dormitories.

A RESOLUTION on the subject was
introduced to the senate but was not
adopted because Margaret Mason,
graduate senator, told the senate they do
not have the power to investigate the
legality of academic policy.

After recommendations were made by
the Elections Board, the senate adopted
dates suggested for spring elections.
Applications will be accepted beginning
Mar. 4 with the elections scheduled for
April 9 and 10.

I

Following a lengthy discussion, it was
determined that elections would be held in
the spring for college senators and in the
fall for senators-at-large as they were for
this year's senate.

ATTEMPTS WERE made by Mike
Bewley, senator-at-large, to establish a
senate cheating committee. Bewley said
he had heard of several instances of
cheating in classes and thought the senate
should form a committee to study the
problem.

The majority of senators decided the
committee was not needed and could be
better dealt with in the University Student
Advisory Committee.

The senate also voted to rejoin the
National Student Association and pay the
$150 dues after a senate committee cited
the benefits of the organization.

um“

0

Tower of power

Several floors of the Capitol Plaza
dark. The Frankfort plaza houses

office tower remain illuminated after

various state government agencies.

(Kernel staff photo by Phil Groshong).

 

 

News In Brlet

by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
0 Cuba policy same
0 Wiretap evidence
0 License photos
0 HB 100 approved

0 Bill hits snag

OHearst freed soon?

0 Today's weather...

0 MEXICO CITY — Argentina and Peru
indicated on the eve of US. Secretary of
State Henry A. Kissinger‘s meeting with 24
Latin American foreign ministers that he
would be confronted with new moves to get
Washington to ease its hostility toward
Communist Cuba.

But State Department officials have said
Kissinger has no intention of altering the
12-year policy of trying to isolate Cuba
economically from the rest of the
hemisphere.

0 WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court
Wednesday approved the use of evidence
gathered by court—ordered wiretaps
against persons not specifically under
surveillance.

The six to three decision said the
Federal Omnibus Crime Control and Safe
Streets Act of 1970 requires that warrants
name specific persons only when the
government has probable cause to believe
they are acting illegally.

.FRANKFORT — A bill that would
require motorists' pictures on their
drivers licenses was approved Wednesday
by the House Committee on Counties and
Special Districts.

0 FRANKFORT -- A compromise open
meetings bill endorsed’ by the ad-
ministration, civic groups and the Ken-
tucky Press Association has been ap-
proved by a House committee.

The House State Government Com-
mittee voted 1H) Wednesday to report out
favorably a substitute version of House bill
100.

0 WASHINGTON — Emergency energy
legislation Wednesday ran into still
another legislative snag, which threatened
to kill the bill already facing a promised
presidential veto.

Reacting to controversy surrounding the
bill‘s proposed oil price rollback, the
House Rules Committee voted to allow
members to challenge several of the
provisions in the compromise measure
when it reaches the House floor.

. O IIILLSBOROUGH. Calif. — A massive
volunteer effort to give away $2 million in
food got under way on Patricia Hearst’s
birthday as the FBI agent handling the
case predicted her kidnapers soon will free
their young victim.

...dampened spirits

Thundershowers and warm tem-
peratures are predicted today with a 60 per
cent chance of rain and high in the upper
505. A chance of rain continues tonight, but
Friday will be cloudy and cooler.

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
    
  
    

The Kentucky Kernel

Published by the Kernel Press Inc. Begun as the Cadet ln 1094 and published conllnmusly
es The Kentucky Kernel since 1915. The Kernel Press Inc. toonded 1971. Third clue
postage paid et Lexlngten, Ky. Boelness otticee ere loceted In the Journalism aolldlno on
the University ot Kentucky cempos. Advertising, room mm News Depertmmt room
114. Advertlslnq publlmed herein is intended to help the render boy. Any telse or
misleading eovertlslng should be remrted n the Edlbn.

Steve Swift, Editor-in-Chief

Council, Assembly at odds

Kentucky’s General Assembly is the type of outfit
which will bake a cake with one hand while burning it
with the other.

During the 1972 legislative session, the Council of
Public Higher Education was given expanded powers
to “engage in analysis and research to determine the
overall needs of higher education in the Com—
monwealth.”Through these expansions, the Council
was given the authority to review and approve new
professional and graduate schools at each of the
state’s colleges and universities.

Last Friday, the senate’s State Governement
Committee gave unanimous approval to SB 50, which
would once again expand the Council’s power. This
measure would allow the body to review and
authorize new undergraduate programs.

Ideally, all of this authority would remove politics
from higher education and leave decisions to
competent and professional educators. This idealism,
however, is currently being overshadowed in Frank—
fort. One of the largest feuds between the Council and
legislature had developed over the desirability of a
state veterinary school.

The Council has released a survey which states the
school is not desirable. Students are now able to at-
tend established outof-state institutions at a lower
cost than would be possible with an in-state school.
Legislators disagree, and have recommended
establishment of the school, with money to be ap-
propriated during the 1976 session.

Legislative tempers began to flare again Monday
when the Council issued a resolution asking the
General Assembly, “to refer the question of the
creation of a school for veterinary medicine in the
Commonwealth to the Council of Public Higher
Education for thorough examination, with recom-
mendations to be made to the 1976 regular session.”

We have stated our opposition to a school in
previous editorials because of insufficient need. We,
however, welcome a thorough investigation by the
Council to determine exactly what the state should do
on the matter. We also think the legislature would be
acting in the best interest of the state to endorse the
request.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

America has this

 
  
  
 
  
    
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
    

WASHINGTON — Americans
have always had a quirky thing
about comparing themselves to
the Romans. Traditionally our
preachers have. adjured us to
learn from the Fall of the Roman
Empire and conduct ourselves
accordingly. But lately we‘ve
switched parallels and we‘re now
comparing what we‘re going
through with the last, grotesque
years of the Weimar Republic.

You might say that like us that
generation of Germans had just
lost a war. they had inflation,
political violence, unisex, or at
any rate a kind of pushy and
unpleasant organized homo-
sexuality. plusa mass media that
may have been to the left of the
population in general. The dif-
ference is that they got Hitler and
we got Nixon; or, to put it another
‘w'ay; may gdt' frantic. hysterical
and bloodthirsty, while we have

turned dour, accepting and
apathetic.
Hitler had his storm troopers;
Nixon has his plumbers, and
that‘s more than a difference in
degree. The storm troopers beat
people in the streets; the
plumbers couldn‘t do diddly—
squat. Germany readied the
concentration camps, but in
Texas and California, masses of
straights are murdered by
homosexuals and buried in
graveyards unlicensed by the
health authorities, psychov
sectarians turn the homes of
glamorous Hollywood stars into
abattoirs, and the Symbionese
Army declares war marching
through schools killing with
cyanide bullets and stealing the
daughters of millionaires.

WE MAY FEEL like we're
living at the end of the Weimar

editorials represent the opinions of the editors, not the university

,_——-—_

'WE JUST GOT A MESS

”tall-rt in. “one

AG: FROM THE TAXPAYER!» — FROM NOW ON YOU CAN CARRY

  

Edltorlols

   

YOUR OWN * * * ~k * ~k * GOLF ClUIS!’

Letters to the Kernel

Blanding-up against the wall

“Up against the wall," say the
CA’s at Blanding Tower —- or at
least that is what it's coming to.
This weekend new open house
procedures were initiated at
Blanding Tower. The male
visitors are now compelled to
present their ID’s while a CA
signs them in (because college
students are incapable of writing
their own names). Another in-
novation at Blanding Jail is that
prison guards are posted at roped
off stair wells that lead to the
basement. Last week a big stink
was raised about men being in
the girls restrooms; this week
they must ride the elevator to the
basementeven though they're on
the first or second floors. For
those who have had to ride the
elevators in the tower, you know
what a hassle this can be.

Another point that should be
made here is that policy of open
house being cancelled during
basketball games. Not all
residents of Blanding Tower
attend these basketball games, so
why should they lose their
privileges since we have so few
hours as it is?

thing about Rom

Republic but we‘re really living
in Symbia. In the cabarets there
Liza Minnelli sings no evocative
songs. In Symbia there‘s precious
little singing at all, only the
feeling that Bob Dylan‘s best
days are behind him and us too.

In Symbia we look forward to
the past. Why not, in a country
where the escape entertainment
is a young girl vomiting green
slime and masturbating with a
crucifix? In Symbia, while it‘s
not exactly true our nervous
systems have been shorted out,
the thrills only come now at the
end of a high energy jolt, and
energy of all sorts is in short
supply.

If you back up a few years,
you‘ll remember us all on the rim
of the apocalypse. Some of us
were calling the fire balls down
from the sky in infuriated joy,

Who is living in the Tower —
upperclass women or seventh
grade girls? Society expects
college women to be mature, but
the dorm rules stifle our
maturity.

If the University wants these
rooms to be filled next year, then
the rules have to be changed.

The situation at Blanding
Tower is really sad and em-
barassing. If the guards would
treat us like mature upperclass
women, then maybe we could
show them our maturity.

Oz Kucukcetin
Psychology-sophomore

Gwen Foster
Liberal Arts-sophomore

And others

Ever cheat?

Have you never cheated on a
test? Many students do cheat on
tests here at the University. That
hurts the individual who cheats
and his cheating hurts his

and some of us were putting on
our life jackets and swearing
we'd go down with the System. In
Symbia we have fear without
trembling, apprehension with
resignation, as though we had
made our peace with the worst
and we now await bank runs,
unemployment, and starvings
out. Men talk about the day the
dollar bill will be worth nothing,
and how when it happens people
will loot the Safeways and the
A&P‘s and it won‘t be like 1929 at
all. Men talk about these things
all the time now, but they do it
calmly without apocalyptic
enthusiasm.

HERETOFORE, when we’ve
predicted the end of the world,
we‘ve rather gotten a tickle out of
the idea, but this time we're
waiting but not' ba‘tlng our
breaths. Every day the Dow

classmates who do not cheat.
Because of large classes, many
teachers use standardized tests
and grade curves. When students
cheat, the curve is affected, and
the honest students suffer as a
result.

After having a friend tell me of
cheating that occured in one of
his classes, I investigated some
other cases of cheating that I had
heard about. These are classes
where cheating was reported by
teachers and students:
Economics 260, Accounting 201,
Introduction to Sociology, Music
200, Accounting 301, and
Statistics 391.

These are a mere sampling of
the wide spread cheating on this
campus. If students must take
tests, the tests should be ad-
ministered fairly. Because
cheating is hurting many
students’ chance of a fair
education, students on this
campus should combine together
and speak up for their rights for
fair evaluation.

What can the individual do?

(‘ontinued on page 3

ans

Jones drops even with the cheap
money prices. This is not 1929 and
people thinking it can go on
forever. In Symbia we know it‘s
over and we're surprised it’s
lasted as long as it has.

In this impasse some of us are
looking for leaders, but what
we‘re finding is elected officials
and they don‘t have any more of
an idea than we do. In Symbia we
have run out of fuel, energy.
inspiration, analysis and un-
derstanding, and are therefore
thrown back on the hope that a
leader will manifest himself.
With out luck, if he does he will
turn out to be some kind of
'I‘uparamaro general, but we
may still have the resiliency to
lynch him.

 

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a
columnist for‘ King Features
Syndicate.

   

 

 

 

   

 

  
 
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
  
  
   
   
 
 
 
  
    
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
  
  
     
    
  
 
  
  
   
   
  
   
  
  
  
    
     
    
   
  
  
   
    
  
    
     
     
      

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opinion from inside and outside the university community

Viewpoint

 

 

The days when women returned to the
dormitory from a Saturday night movie
and fountain soda, only to be greeted by
the sounds of “Home, Sweet Home" on the
gramophone, have long since disap-
peared. But I fear a worse fate has
replaced the nostalgia of past years. Upon
entering Blanding Towers’s lobby on a
typical weekend, one is bombarded with
barricades and signs which insinuate that
the male sex is somehow incapable of
restraining itself from amassing the
building.

I realize that an aggregate of ap-
proximately five hundred girls in one
building necessitates some restriction
upon individual freedom But does that
restriction warrant unnecessary in-
vasion of privacy? Is it necessary that
employed dormitory personnel know the
identity of open house guests? Why should

a man of legal responsibility be subjected
to the embarrassment of signing a grade
school register in order to visit a friend?
Why does a corridor advisor have access
to the academic records of thirty other
students? And what is the purpose of
searching refrigerators during room
checks? Certainly not for fire hazards, I

of the academic community. I think it
pathetic the degree to which an institution
established for the purpose of fostering
individual growth attempts to interfere
with the personal activities of its students.
Instead of fostering the awareness of its
residents, university housing continues to
perpetuate the demoralizing attitude that
women are merely social objects who
must be restricted from the hazards of
social freedom. Why must a male guest be
considered harmful? Why must both
women and men be subjected by dor-
mitory regulation to the sexist system that
restricts interpersonal relationships to a
boy-girl, sweetheart-heartthrob concept?
And last but not least, why must a guy be
forced to ask permission at the desk to use
the downstairs bathrooms?

1 think it's time the University—and the
Blanding Tower house council and em-
ployed personnel in particular—became
aware of the fact that university
students—men and women—have a right
to personal privacy and the freedom to live
their personal lives without interference
from petty and inconsequential restric-
tions resulting from a reactionary sexist
attitude towards women.

. .~r..--'u-

'Home,sweet home' has disappeared

PRRANEJIA...

4:. féltmafi YE Fifln/RL-S thV/

A

 

 

presume.

 

Letters to the Kernel

Support committee investigating the problem

(‘ontinued from page 2

First, you can support the student
senate committee that is in-
vestigating this problem. Then
you should inform your teachers
of cheating in your classes. This
problem can only be solved
through collective student in-
volvement.

Michael Bewley
Student Senator

Compelled

Seldom, if ever, am 1 com-
pelled to write any periodical for
any purpose. But I feel compelled
to congratulate Mr. Wells
(Kernel Feb. 18) on assembling
the finest piece of satirical
writing to ever appear in the
Kernel,

If large groups of people really
thought like him, there‘s no
telling what would become of this
country. I bet we‘d become in-
volved in senseless political
ballgames in the vicinity of
Southeast Asia. Then large oil
companies would devise means
to dupe and victimize the
populace to further their own
interests. And on and on.

Only a person with the
awareness to establish balling
and fraternity affiliation as
criteria for manhood could have
written such a piece.

Incidentally, although it is
quite irrelevant, my hair is in
close proximity to my collar and I
have never owned a bedpost. And
I know exactly what band Jesus
plays for. It‘s the one that‘s the

opiate of people like Mr. Wells.
God bless all the people with
open eyes and hearts.

Ernie Sangiulians
Psychology-sophomore

Impressed

l was very impressed with
Mike Well's philosophy of
America. I was equally im—
pressed with the Kernel‘s wit in
the “Crimefighter's " cartoon.

What really angers me is the
number of letters sent knocking a
fellow student, and making
a mockery out of him for exer-
cising the First Amendment.

True, he knocked the Kernel,
but Mike Wells is one student,
bearing the influence of one.
What made the whole situation
unique was, the staff realized the
validity of Mike’s charges.

I never felt the cartoon was a
reflection on Mike, but an in-
terpretation of his article in the
eyes of the Kernel staff. It may be
argued that a man cannot be
separated from his philosophies,
but a line does exist.

I commend Mike for faith and
pride in our country, and the
courage to speak out on the
behalf of these.

It was more than apparent that
Mike criticized no one. He
criticized an establishment,
ideals and philosophies, which
are all vague abstractions.

Ironically enough, if anyone
would have taken the time and
effort, they would have realized
that Mike’s charges were

University housing is by far the most Rosalie Ashcroft is a junior English
sexist, reactionary, and degrading aspect major.

similiar to our own. They simply
were presented in exaggerated
form. In time, education and
daily dealings will corrupt his
innocent mind.

If only we could stop and take
the time to attack wrongs and not
our fellow man with unwitted and
bitter attacks, we will learn one
of the finest subjects, college
could ever teach.

.Vlctorla Heston
J ournallsm-sopbomore

Biased

Apparently Mr. Wells desires
replies to his extremely biased
article (“Bewarez Journalists
are out to get you!" Kernel, Feb.
19, 1974). Far be it for me to
disappoint him.

Yes, Mr. Wells, I am a jour-
nalism majorand I’ve worked for
the Kernel. I was unaware,
however, that this disqualified
me for membrship in the All-
American Club.

The American Heritage Die»
tionary defines journalism as
“The collecting, writing, editing,
and publishing of news in
periodicals." The same reference
gives editorialas, “An article in a
publication expressing the
opinion of its editors or
publishers."

Nowhere in these definitions do
I find going to church, singing the
national anthem or finding Jesus
asa prerequisite. I‘m not arguing

c .

33w can saunas m
(‘ WHAT is in?!

whether or not these are virtues
or vices — they merely have no
significance to publishing a
newspaper.

Criticism is a healthy, normal
thing. Through criticism, this
University as well as anyone else
can see what others think of it
and perhaps reevaluate its
values.

Ineedn‘t remind Mr. Wells that
the press’ criticism of England
was a major factor in the
beginning of this country he
wouldn‘t trade for any other.
Tom Paine’s “Common Sense“
caused many people to think
more of freedom. etc.

As for journalists‘ morals
the only ethics the reader should.
be concerned with are our writing
ethics _, how factually do we
report the news. And Mr. Wells
wasn't particularly concerned
with those. He was interested
only in our sexual morals.

There is one thing all jour-
nalists know how to do. however.
It is how to write a story in such a
way that there is very little room
for argument. Most journalism
people are fully capable of
writing an article with facts to
back them up. It is this which
separates the journalism
students from the rest of the
university.

Tracy (iantz
Journalism-freshman

Tired

I would like to say that
everyone has opinions of things
and one should not agree with all
he hears. The Kernel gets to print

1

\’ GOD 1
HERVENH THAT

‘ SLIMY HIDEOUS
HING 15
SLIPPiNQ INTO--
YouFL... YOUR...
CHRISTI RUN
ETHEL, RUN

'Michael Jo

 

its opinion (which mostly is all
they have to say) all of the time
and they also give others like you
and me a chance to do so. But
your opinion is wrong.

The Kernel generally does not
like the government and uses its
press power to push its own ideas.
I don’t like all they say, but we
have freedom of speech and of
the press, so they say what they
can get away with. If you are
“tired of reading" the Kernel,
don’t read it.

Now you talk of stereotypes
and use their effect strongly. I
am sure your “impression is a
little harsh,“ and it even gets
down to petty name calling.
Many people can have negative
comments about something and
still like it well enough to say
something and improve it. It is
not un-American to speak out;
Our whole basis of government
runs on the power to speak.

Journalism majors have many
different areas. You can‘t judge
the entire profession by news
writing or by reading what a few
people write. If you could, I
would have a very low opinion of
sociology majors.

I love my country also, but
nothing is perfect. And by the
way, Mike, last Sunday I went to
church with a journalism major
and they are able to pray as well
as anyone else and sometimes a
lot more sincere.

It is good that freshmen speak
out, but many times they speak
before thinking as you have done.

Robert W. Nutter
Mechanical Engineering-
sophomore

  

   
  

 
 
 

4—THE Kentucky Kernel. Thursday. February 21, 1974

 

      
    
 
  
 

OPEN—7 DAYS A WEEK
Daily 6 am. to 12 pm.
All Night Friday and Saturday

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the Plauback Policy

PLAYBACK TRADE-IN POLICY

Playback will take your old equip-
ment, regardless of age or condi-
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offer toward any new equipment
we sell.

 

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MNKAMEIICARD AMERICAN EXPRESS

Fayette Mall
Lexington

, Moloney, Graves tell APA

ERA rescission improbable

By DAN ADKINS
Kernel Staff Writer

The Equal Rights Amendment
(ERAl will not be rescinded in
Kentucky, state senators
Michael Moloney and Joe Graves
said Tuesday night.

Speaking to a meeting of the
Assembly for Political Action,
the senators both voiced the
opinion that the bill would not
make it out of committee to the
floor for a vote.

Graves and Moloney are both
members of the Elections and
Constitutional Amendments
Committee which is currently
considering the bill to rescind the
ERA.

“IT (SENATE Joint Resolution
24, ERA recission) might be
taken up as special business in
the committee on Mar. 22, which
is the last day of the session,“
Moloney said. “That will be the
only chance it will get to get out
on the floor."

Asked if they supported or
opposed the resolution, Graves
and Moloney quickly made their
opposition clear. “I was going to
make a motion to table the
resolution, and Joe was going to
second the motion," Moloney
said, “but the sponsor asked us
not to on the first day it was

Pclaubak

BEFORE YOU SHOP FOR A MUSIC SYSTEM. YOU SHOULD SHOP FOR A STORE

Oxmoor Center
Louisville

 

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Louisville

before the committee. You have
to live with people."

Moloney (D-Lexington) and
Graves (R-Lexington) agreed on
most issues, but parted company
on the governor’s budget issue.

DISAGREEMENT (‘ON-
(‘ERNED Gov. Ford’s ability to
change the budget by calling a
meeting of the Joint Ap—
propriations Committee in the
interim for authorization to make
the adjustment.

“I feel that any major change
should be approved by the Joint
Appropriations Committee, or
even by a special session of the
legislature," Graves said.

cMolony said he felt the
governor should be able to
prevent under-allocations in
some areas and over-allocations

in others.
“The General Assembly in the

last eight years has come a long
way with the interim (period
between legislature sessions)
committee system," said
Moloney.

“I WOULD really hate to see a
law suit filed on the legality of
the interim committee giving its
approval to something," he said,
“because I think there is a
question about whether the

   
   
   
     
   
   
  

  
 
 
  
   

 
  

    
 

     
  

 

    

  

committee exists as a legal en-
tity.”

He added the Legislative
Research Committee (LRC)
could indeed become de facto in
eight or nine years, but until then
LRC would probably not be able
to stand up to a lawsuit.

Both senators expressed
disappointment about the lack of
citizen lobbying during this
session of the legislature.

“TWO YEARS ago there was
an awful lot of activity in the
halls of the General Assembly in
terms of people working for SOK
(Save Our Kentucky) to outlaw
strip-mining, working for more
reclamation, and consumer bills.
I have been sort of amazed at the
lack of this sort of thing this
time," said Graves.

Graves advocated the
organization of a state version of
the people’s lobby group, Com-
mon Cause. “We’ve just got to get
more organized," he said,

The senators said there is a
good chance of keeping the
busing resolution from reaching
the floor of the senate.

They agreed, however, that a
mass mail campaign has been
quite effective regarding a
constitutional amendment
outlawing busing.

Christians
are on

Campus

 

 

Notice:

eOriginal Art Prints
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OMatts

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Gallery
216 N. Limestone
Going out of

Business Sale
through March 1
10-5 daily
7:30-9 evenings

 

 

 

 

 

UK THEATRE PRESENTS
Noah
by Andre Obey

 
 

  
  

  

This Week
Wed-Sat. 8:30 pm.
Sun. 7:30 pm.

 
   

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now open
Noon-4: 30; Noon—Curtain

0" days 0t performance

 
  
    
 

  
    
     

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Box-Office Location:
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J-Bo ard

Membership increased

due to code revision

By STEWART TRISLER
Kernel Staff Writer

Because of a recent student
code revision increasing the
number of University judicial
board (J~Board) members from
19 to 26, the process of appointing
members has become more
complex, said Dr. Robert
Zumwinkle, vice president for
students affairs.

Last year, the code provided
for 19 J-Board positions: eight
graduate or professional
students, 10 undergraduate
students, and a hearing officer.
This year‘s code revision
requires that it have 26 persons,
containing representatives from
all colleges in proportion to their
enrollment.

In the appointment process,
student senators from each
college submit three names of
possible candidates for a position
to the Student Government (SG)
president, who, with the approval
of the vice president for student
affairs. will appoint the 26
members, forming a J-Board
pool.

“THE PROCESS is so
lengthy,“ said Jim Flegle, SG
president, pointing out one
problem of the process. Now,
only the library science and
architecture colleges lack
members on the J-Board, 24
positions being filled.

With this arrangement. there is
some question that a student with
a case before the incomplete
board would get a fair decision
especially if the student is from a
college that is not represented.

“If reasonable action was
taken by this office, by the vice
president for student affairs and
by senators to fill vacancies, and
even though there may be two or
three names missing from the
pool, you‘ll still get a J~Board
that is a composite of the general
student body,“ Flegle explained.

CONDITIONS under which the
students live don‘t vary that
much from college to college as
far as non-academic matters are
concerned," Zumwinkle said. A
student with a case that is
unrepresented by his college

 

JIM FLEGLE
SG President

really constitutes no serious
problem, he added.

“Twenty-four out of 26 is fairly
representative,” Zumwinkle
said, “but if all you had were 13,1
think there would be substantial
questions.”

Somewhere betweeen 13 and no
vacancies, one would have to
draw the line, he added, as to the
J-Board’s ability to reach a fair
decision.

ANOTHER problem is to in-
sure that senators submit the
necessary names, and that
students don‘t leave campus
after appointment.

Carl Perkins
to speak

Kentucky congressman Carl
Perkins, House Committee on
Education and Labor chairman,
will be the featured speaker when
the Kentucky Conference of The
American Association of
University Professors (AAUP)
meets in Lexington, Mar. land 2.

Perkins will speak at the an-
nual dinner at The Ramada Inn
North Friday, Mar. 1 at 7 :30 pm.

Dr. A.D. Albright, Council on
Public Higher Education,
executive d