xt7ksn012r5j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ksn012r5j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-10-25 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, October 25, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 25, 1978 1978 1978-10-25 2020 true xt7ksn012r5j section xt7ksn012r5j Vol. LXXI. No. 49
Wednesday, October 25. I978

81‘

an independent student newspaper '

Unappropria ted travel funds
result in so budget loss

ly BRIDGET MeFARLAND
Staff Writer

An apparent misunderstanding
about travel expenses with Western
Kentucky University‘s Student
Government has resulted in a $575 loss
in mm Student Government's
budget.

Billy Bob Renner. SG vice
president, said three SG senators
traveled to Boulder. Colo. with
representatives from WKU for a
National Student Government
Conference August 5-12.

Plans for the trip were initiated in
early June before June 30. the end of
the SG fiscal year. A $360 early
registration fee for the conference was
appropriated at the June 7th 86
Senate meeting.

But. Renner said. a misunderstand-
ing with WKU resulted in the failure of
a $6 bill which would have
appropriated $575 to cover airfare
with Braniff airlines scheduled for

June 2|. the last Senate meeting of the
fiscal year.

That money had to be taken out of
this year‘s budget. leaving an unspent
balance of $603 in last year‘s budget.

In accordance with state policy. the
unspent money cannot be carried over
to this year's budget.

“In essence the airfare cost 80
$I200. $600 from last year‘s budget
and $600 from this year‘s budget."
Renner said.

Renner said several factors
prevented the initial appropriation
from appearing before the Senate at
the June 2| meeting. He said at that
time 56 was not cenain it was going to
send representatives to the conference.
If no representatives were sent. the
$360 registration fee would have been
refunded. Also. SG had not yet
decided which senators would be sent
on the trip. (Gene Tichenor. Buzz
English and Mark Medcalf were
eventually chosen to make the trip.)

There was also confusion about who

should be paid forthe airline tickets
WKU or Braniff Airlines. (As it turned
out. WKU had purchased the tickets
and was later reimbursed by UK's
SG/.

Renner said SG‘s secretary.,Fran
McFaIl. and representatives from
WKU had determined the least
expensive airline to travel with before
the June 2| meeting.

“We had all our information
available. and we knew how much we
were going to spend. But we didn‘t
know who to send it to." Renner said.
"By the time we got a bill from
Western. it was too late to submit it to
the (1977-78/ budget.”

The budget loss was not discovered
until last week.

“We thought we had spent
everything. we make a point to.”
Renner said. “Our last computer
printout showed a balance of $603.07
in last year‘s budget but this balance
expired at the end of the fiscal year. we
thought the budget was down to $20 or
so.”

Job market possibilities look good
for technical and business graduates

By GIL LAWSON
Staff Writer

College students think of many
things while in school. but one thing
usually takes precedence over all
others — getting a job after
graduation.

The Department of Labor‘s
Occupational Outlook Handbook for
College Graduates projects that
certain jobs. especially those in the
technical and energy related fields will
have plenty of room for college grads.

Overall. the government predicts
between I976 and I985 approximately
l0 million college grads will enter the
job market. It predicts there will be
only 7.7 million job openings in the
fields the grads want to work in.

James Alcorn. Placement Service
director. said jobs will be available for
graduates. but not all will be able to get

jobs they want.

Alcorn said students with certain
majors are pursued by recruiters more
than others. “The engineers are
pursued. the liberal arts majors have to
do the pursuing.” he said.

And because of the tightness of the
job market. more students are entering
the business field instead of liberal
arts.

Government figures show the area
of business to be the fastest growing
job markets. They predict a 20 percent
increase from l7.l millionjobs in I976
to 2| .3 million in I985. In I976. one in
every IO college graduate had a job in
trade. UK‘s Business and Economics
College enrollment increased by 7.9
percent in the past year to 3.072
students. second largest only to
College of Arts & Sciences.

But the labor statistics also show
jobs for‘ teachers and agriculture-
related work will decrease.

Agriculture jobs. which have been

declining steadily for the last few
years. will see a 29 percent drop in its

work force by I985. the handbook

states.

Agriculture Dean Charles Barnhart
said the school‘s enrollment has been
increasing by I0 to 20 percent each
year. The enrollment is now I.225.

“For the last several years we‘ve
placed all of our May graduates by
April.“ Barnhart said he anticipates no
problem in placing students in the
future.

Barnhart said many graduates are
able to get jobs in education.
agriculture business and government.

Fewer teaching jobs will open
because of the decrease in the
population of school-age children.
Iabor officials say. And student
knowledge of the teacher surplus is
evident in the 45 percent drop in U K's
College of Education enrollment since
I972.

Continued on page 7

’ x...

.

i
g.

University of Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

TWist 'n turn

It‘s all in the wrist and legs
and arms and head. Brenda
Popplewell. telecommunica-
tions freshman and I978 state
champion baton twirIer,
practices with the UK
marching band for her
performance during football
half time shows. Popplewell
twirls well enough to impress
more than UK fans. She placed
fifth in August at the Grand
National Baton Twirling
Championships in Milwaukee.

Computers and other problems plague SG directory

By BETSY PEARCE
Copy Editor

Because of problems with the
computer center and delays in
compiling information. students won‘t
be seeing this year‘s directory for
several weeks.

“I‘m optimistic that they‘ll be out by
the second week in November.” said
Scott Moffitt. chairman for SG's
student sen'ices.

“People are always complaining
about not getting their directories

soon enough.“ he said. “They don’t
realize putting the book together is a
long. frustfating process.“

Assembling the book is not as easy
as most people think. because of the
number of University organizations.
Moffitt said. The pages. including
everything from Student Health to the
Physical Plant Division listings. are
prepared during the summer.

However. Moffit said the focal
point of the book is also one of his
biggest problems — accurately
compiling the names and addresses of

students living on campus. That
information was not available from
the registrar‘s office until the third
week in September. due to changes in
addresses and enrollment figures at the
beginning of school.

“We had more time this year to
check with the registrar about
listings." Moffitt said. “There was
more of a push this year to get off-
campus listings. also.”

In addition. cross-checks with
General Telephone for new student
listings were made to include some of
the off-campus students who failed to

register their addresses and phone
numbers with the dean of students‘ or
registrar‘s offices.

After this information was

' gathered. it was taken to the computer

center where a tape of all names and
addresses is made.

Unfortunately this year. so many
computer classes were scheduled at the
center that it was overloaded. Moffitt
said. This further delayed directory
production.

Even after the tape was made.
however. other conflicts kept it from
being sent to the printer.

For instance. approximately 30
students made requests to the 80
office to have their names excluded
from the directory.

“It‘s unconstitutional for us to put
names or addresses of students (or
faculty) in the directory if they express
the desire to be deleted." Moffitt said.
In addition to the 30 requests directly
to 80. he said an unknown number of
students requested ommission
through the registrar‘s office.

After the final changes were made.
the tape was sent to the printer.

Once the approximately 19.000

directories reach UK. they will be
distributed to dorms and Greek
houses. and will also be available at the
80 office. Moffitt said.

“We sent everything to Promotional
Enterprises in Indianapolis (who also
printed last year‘s directory) Oct. 6.”
he said.

“But the way things have been
going. I‘m not going to say anything
definite." Moffitt added.

Carter’s plan

 

——tcdayL

state

KENTUCKY'S TOTAL LONG-TERM DEBT at the end of the

nation

other doctors and a conspiracy of the prosecutor. Farber and the
New York City medical examiner. Jascalevich never testified.

IN WHAT SCIENTISTS SAY IS A MAJOR

world

 

 

I976 fiscal year was higher in relation to personal income than in
any of its seven neighboring states and significaltly higher than the
national average. according to data submitted yesterday to a
legislative committee.

The caIcIuIation of the ratio of total state and local long term
debts to personal income was given to the Interim Joint Committee
on Appropriations and Revenue by University of Kentucky
ecomomics Professor Richard E. Gift. in response to a committee
request.

KENTUCKY CHIEF JUSTICE JOHN PALMORE
YESTERDAY ILASTED THE I97! General Assembly for
raising most traffic fines by SIS. and a legislative committee voted
to look into repealing the unpopular increase.

The Interim Joint Committee on Appropriations and Revenue
aueed to ask the Interim Highways and Traffic Safety Committee
to review the state\ entire fine structure with the idea of repealing
the SIS increase in I”).

BREAKTHROUGH against viral diseases. the Food and Drug
Administration approved yesterday a new drug to treat a deadly
infectious brain ailment.

The drug. Vidarabine. was developed by Parke. Davis & C o. of
Detroit. which plans to market it under the trade name Vita-A.

In studies sponsored by the National Institutes of Health. the
drug siashed the death rate cause by Herpes encephalitis from 70
percent to 28 percent and substantially reduced the brain damage
often suffered by survivors of the rare disease.

DR. MARIO .IASCALEVICH WAS FOUND innocent
yesterday of killing three hospoital patients in the mid-I960‘s. while
New York Times reporter Myron Farber was freed after spending
40 days in jail for refusing to give up his notes on the case.

The jury that acquitted JascaIevich deliberated for only about
two hours over two days after a 34-week trial. He had been accused
of giving the patients fatal doses of curate. a muscle relaxant.

JascaIcvieh‘s defense maintained that the surgeon was framed by

PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT HAS INVITED Pope John
Paul II to visit Egypt and pray on Mount Sinai after the signing of
an Egyptian 5 Israeli peace treaty and the pope has “expressed a
great interest.“ Egypt‘s ambassador to the Vatican said yesterday.
Shaffie Abdel Hamid. the ambassador. declined to give any further
details.

In the Cairo newspaper Al Ahram. Egyptian Deputy Premier
Fikry Makram Ebeid was quoted as saying “the pope has accepted
the invitation.” A Vatican spokesman. however. said the press
office had no information about the report.

weather

SINNY AND WARMER TODAY. High in the upper 60‘s.
lonight. increasing cloudiness with lows in the mid ‘0‘s.
Tommorrow. mostly cloudy with a chance of showers. High in the
mid 60‘s. Winds southwesterly at I) to 20 miles an hour today.

will 'guide’

wages, prices

President Carter prepared yesterday
to unveil the administration‘s long-
promised. second-step offensive
against inflation. telling the Cabinet
his nationally broadcast swch “is one
of the most important I'll ever make as
president.”

But Carter said his new program of
largely voluntary wage and price
guidelines is doomed unless it wins the
cooperation of labor. business.
government and the general public.

Business. Iabor and political leaders
were generally unimpressed by
President Carter‘s inflation messas
last night. saying that voluntary wage-
pricc controls were only a first step
toward mandatory standards.

 

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CIA campus recruiting a dangerous precedent

Pardon us for being altruistic. but we thought
universities were intended to promote research. ser-
vice and the search for knowledge not serve as a
recruiting ground for spies.

CIA Director Stansfield Turner disagrees. In his
opinion. universities apparently are a logical and
fertile source of operatives. especially foreign
students.

That's the position he took in responding to a
question last weekend about a new policy at Har-
vard University.

Harvard President Derek C. Bok had complained
to a Senate committee this summer that the CIA
.covert recruiting threatens “the integrity and inde-
pendence of the academic community." Bok said
'Harvard would allow the CIA to recruit in the open.
like other corporations. but not covertly.

Turner. though. said the CIA would ignore the
ban. “If we were required to abide by the rules of
every corporation. every academic institution. it
would become impossible to do the required job for
our country . . . Harvard does not have any legal
authority over us."

Turner said it was unfair forthe CIA to be singled
out for special restrictions. "I think its very danger-
ous for our country when a particular segment of
our society. in this case the intelligence community“

But the CIA deserves special treatment. because
by its nature it is a special organiration. No other
firm recruits employees to do the same kind of work.
and no other organization has the ability to harm
students through involvement in clandestine activi-
ties and potentially dangerous intelligence work.

What is more. universities are fundamentally dif-
ferent from corporations and the business world in

general. They‘re concerned with profit. certainly.

but not to take priority from education. service and
research.

For recruiting purposes. students should not be
considered the equivalent of employees in private
industry. To permit surreptitious recruiting ofClA
operatives would be to invite in a whole host of
activities and influences that should not exist at a
University. By working out of sight. how long could
the agency he expected to refrain from using coer-
cion to recruit agents. or from expanding
intelligence-gathering work on the campuses
themselves?

Enough horror stories and allegations about CIA
activities. both foreign and domestic. have been told
to give us good reason for suspicion of CIA actions
and motivation. Safeguards should be taken to
enforce restrictions against the C IA's covert recruit-

 

 

is singled out for discriminatory action."

ing of students on American campuses.

 

 

  

 

Letters to the Editor

  

 

’I hope I have done something to redeem the American reputation for fair play'

My name is John T. Smiley.

My wife Louise and I put up
8125.000 cash bail for eight Iranians
and one American. Since we signed
these bonds l have found out quite a
bit about the case and I want to pass
it on to you. They were arrested April
l2 for allegedly disrupting a speech at
the University of Kentucky by CIA
Director Stansfield Turner. At that
time. each of the Iranians put up a
$200 cash bond and was released.

Before the trial. Pam Goldman
talked to the prosecuting attorney.
who agreed to let them pay a SIS fine
if they would plead guilty to
disrupting a speech. This was refused
by all of them. On September 26. the
day of the trial. the prosecutor
lowered the fine to SIO. This was also
refused because they didn‘t think
they had broken any law by their
peaceful picketing. They honestly
believed they had the right to picket
this speech.

They did not realize then the hell
they were going to be put through by
not paying the Sl0 fine.

The jury found them all guilty of
the same crime: “disrupting a
speech." but set different sentences of
.45 to 90 days injail. Here is two kinds
of justice. Before the trial each had
been free on $200 cash bond. but
after they were sentenced District
Judge Paul Gudgel raised the bonds
to Sl5.000 cash for the eight Iranians

ts

 

    
   
  

(75 times greater than pre-trial
bonds) and $5.000 cash bond for the
two Americans. Here again is two
kinds of justice for the same crime.

In the upper 405 l was in the
restaurant business in Charleston.
West Virginia. 0n the side I signed
bail bonds for my customers and
friends. It did help my restaurant
business. which was not good in
those days. I did make some money
and I did learn a lot about criminal
law.

When I read in the paper and saw on
TV where this Judge Gudgel had set
Sl5.000 cash bond for these eight
Iranians to appeal this minor charge. I
felt that a Sl.000 cash bond would
ihave been a large bond for this minor
offense. I felt something was terribly
wrong. I had never in my life seen a
case handled like this one. So I knew
we had to get into this case to keep
these young men from being crucified
by this Judge.

Last Saturday my wife called the jail
and got the name of their lawyer. Ms.
Pam Goldman. I talked to her on the
lphone Saturday night. She outlined
some of the case to me. She told me
that Monday was the last day to file an
appeal. and that she was going to see
Judge Gudgel to see if he had a change
of heart to lower the bond. I told her to
get it lowered if possible. but if he
refused to go ahead and make
arrangements for me to put up the

 

“25.000. I told her I would bring it
with me.

Judge Gudgel refused t6 lower the
bonds or change the sentences. Then
the lawyers Pam Goldman and
Barbara Sutherland had a lot of
,paperwork to get out before I could
.sign this bond. Judge Gudgel agreed to
take the bond later in the afternoon.
After he accepted the bond. Judge
IGudgel asked Pam Goldman whether
Iranian terrorists came to my home to
coerce me into paying the bond. This is
ridiculous. No one pressured me. No
one contacted me before I called Pam
Goldman.

I feel that Judge Gudgel violated
these people's civil rights by setting
excessive bond. If my wife and l hadn’t
made the bond. the Iranians would
surely have been sent out of the
country for being out of school too
long while they were in jail. If they
were sent back to Iran. they could have 4
been murdered by the government;
there. If my wife and I hadn
hadn't paid the bond. they would
already have served their sentences by
the time the appeal was decided. These
people served ll days in jail. thinking
the whole time they would be deported
and that they wouldn’t be able to go
back to school. They had no hope of
being bailed out because they couldn't
have known we were coming. I think
they have suffered enough. and that
their sentences should be dropped.

 

I urge the people of Fayette County
not to vote for Judge Gudgel again.
I hope that our act has. in the words
of a Courier-Journal editorial. ”done
something to redeem the American
reputation for fair play.”

John T. Smiley
Louise P. Smiley
Mt. Sterling. Ky.

Expenence

I would like to point out issue in the
6th District US. Congressional race
which has not been raised. but should
be considered by all the voters and
especially those in the University
community.

The problems which a member of
the US. Congress face are indisputa-
bly more complex and far-reaching
than the problems faced by a member
of the Kentucky General Assembly.
One of the“ criteria which a voter
should consider is. which of the candi-
dates for congress has the best educa-
tion and background to help him face
these complex problems.

In looking at the background of the
candidates. undoubtedly State Sena-
tor Tom Easterly has the best back-
ground and education of any of the
candidates for the 6th congressional
seat.

Senator Tom Easterly received his

bachelor‘s degree Phi Beta Kappa. was

 

 

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a Fulbright Scholar. earned a JD. or
Law degree and received a Master's
Degree from UK‘s Paterson School of
Diplomacy.

- In looking at Mr. Hopkins‘s resume.
I see that he has attended many differ-
ent colleges and universities but
nowhere do I see where Mr. Hopkins
ever earned a college degree.

I feel that it would be beneficial for
the voters of the the 6th Congressional
District to take advantage of Senator
Tom Easterly‘s background and ex-
perience by electing him their next
US. Congressman.

Paul Whalen
UK Alumnus

Players?

Otis Singletary's quoted remarks
concerning the Stansfield Turner
arrests (‘We should take seriously the
right of a speaker to be heard...the
heart of every university is the open
forum‘/ Oct. l8. I978 Kernel leads one
to wonder. Does the president of this
university consider the possibility that
students are also ‘speakers' or does he
regard them exclusivly as ‘players.’

Jonathon Friedman
Assistant Professor of Architecture

No dorms

I read with interest about the plan to

  

 

 

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build a student housing project and
your editorial in support of this plan
(October l0). Although the record
enrollment. record freshman class and
tight housing problem suggests a need
for more dormitories. I believe that
building dorms svould be a serious
mistake.

The largest baby crops of all time in
the US. were in the late I950s. peaking
at 4.3 million in I957. Birth rates have
fallen steadily since then. bottoming
out in about I975. The crops are now
coming along at about 3.3 million per
year. Thus. we can expect a steady
decline in enrollment at UK from

22.000 to less than 17.000 in I998.

The percentage of high school
graduates entering college has about
peaked. and it seems unlikely that
plder people returning to school will
have a significant effect on dorm
occupancy. Idle dorm space will be a
major problem in the future; we
should avoid actions which would
nake it worse.

Wayne H. Davls
Professor of Blology

Correction

A letter in last week‘s. Kernel
concerning military supplies to the
Iranian army did not bear the name of
one of its authors.

The name of Guy Tirk. an Arts a
Sciences senior. was omitted.

 
 

 

 

   
      
    

   
      
     
      
     
      
    
      
     
    
      
     
     
     
     
     
    
   
    
    
     
       
      
     
    
   
   

   
     

  
       

 

  
  
  
     
    
 
 
  
  
   
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
 
  
   
    
   
  
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
 
   
   

 

  
  

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President's voluntary controls
are bad business, says Ford

Continued from page I

“Voluntary controls don't
work." former President
Gerald R. Ford said. “Once
you start down that road you
wind up with government wage
and price controls.

“It may be good polities
temporarily. but it's bad
economics. It won't work. And
I condemn the president for
starting us down that path.“
said Ford. considered a
potential 1980 Republican
presidential candidate.

The president chose the
White House Oval Office as the
setting for the address to the
nation scheduled for f0 p.m.'

While reporters listened.
Carter told the Cabinet that
“very formidable“ opposition
was beginning to arise from
unnamed special interests even
while he put the finishing
touches on the address.

“We‘ve got to be prepared to
meet it forcefully and
effectively." the president said.

The new guidelines would
take the government one step
beyond the administration‘s
initial anti-inflation effort.
which involved pleas to
business and labor earlier this
year to restrain wage and price
increases by holding them to
below the average increases of
the preceding two years.

The new program will be
aimed at limiting wage
increases to seven percent next
year and price increases to
about 5.75 percent. If
successful, the program would
reduce inflation to between six
percent and 6.5 percent by the
end of I979. compared with a
rate of about eight percent by
the end of this year.

Carter briefed Cabinet
members after returning to the
White House yesterday
morning from Camp David.
the secluded Maryland
mountaintop retreat where
he'd been working on the
address.

“I think the speech that I will
make tonight...is one of the
most important that I‘ll ever
make while I‘m president."
Carter said.

“The inflation pressures on
us are getting increasingly
severe. and of course they‘ve
been bad for the last l0 years."
the president said. adding:
“Unless we can unite not only
the government officials at the
federal. state and local levels.
but also private industry. labor
and other elements of the
American economy. the effort
is not going to be successful.“
said Carter. who opposes
mandatory wage and price
controls.

While briefing a handful of
members of Congress later.
Carter said he would try not to
arouse any “unwarranted
expectations" about the
possible success of the
program. He said the goal is to
make inflation “level off and
hopefully go down."

The president has said many
times that he opposes
mandatory wage and price
controls unless there is a
national emergency. and in any
case Congress has not given
Carter the authority to impose
them.

Then-President Richard M.
Nixon. using authority that a
Democratic-controlled Con-
gress forced on him over his
own objections. imposed
mandatory wage and price
controls in l97l when inflation
was running at about six
percent a year. The rate
dropped to 3.4 percent in l97l
and I972. but shot up to 8.8
percent in 1973 after controls
were lifted. and 12.2 percent the
following year.

Labor Secretary Ray
Marshall. speaking to reporters
after the Cabinet meeting. said
the president would propose a
“standard“ rather than a
“guideline" for wage and price
increases. '

Football tickets
for UK-Georgia
on sale to public

A large number of tickets
still are available to students
with validated l.D.‘s and
activity cards. Associate Dean
of Students T. Lynn
Williamson said students can
purchase guest tickets today at
the right windows in front of
Memorial Coliseum 9 am. - 4
pm. Stadium seats are SlO cash
each and end zone seating is $6
cash.

Due to the large number of
tickets remaining, tickets will
be sold to the public, including
faculty and staff. starting at
noon today at the ticket
window inside the Coliseum.
All sales are cash and will
continue until 4 pm.

If there are tickets remaining
Thursday. sales will continue 9
am. - 4 pm.

 

IT’S COMING THIS
WEEKEND FROM

PLAYBACK

WATCH FOR
THURSDAYS PAPER

 

Marshall confirmed the
seven percent figure for wage
increases and said. “If you get
above-average increases in
wages. above the seven percent.
you want to figure out why.“

As for prices. company-by-
company guidelines are aimed
at holding down increases to a
national average of 5.75
percent a year. officials said.
Each company would be asked
to hold its increases to 0.5
percent less than its own
average for I976 and I977.

Marshall said. however. that

“this is not a purely voluntary
program."

He said the federal
government could enforce its
guidelines through refusing to
contract with businesses that

violate them. He pointed out
that the government influences
prices through federal
regulatory actions. farm
programs. and import cont rofs.

Administration officials said
the president probably would
announce steps to reduce the
federal deficit. cut government
employment and name an
administrator for the complex
system of guidelines.

There has been much
speculation that Alfred E.
Kahn. the chairman ofthe Civil
Aeronautics Board. will be
chosen by (‘arter to head the
new program. The ol-year-old
Kahn has presided over the
partial deregulation of the
airline industry a move that
has resulted in sharply reduced
air fares.

’l'lllt Isl-N ll ( lt\ lsHt\l l.. “ednesdiiy. October 25. l97ll—J

 

Harry Snyder. executiye
director of the state Council on
Higher Education. said federal
ciyil rights officials will find fess
problems with Kentucky's
efforts to desegegate its public
universities.

Officials of the [KS
Department of Health.
Ed uaction and Welfare‘s Office
of Civil Rights will sisit the
state in January. Snyder said
Monday.

"I don‘t know what we‘ye left
for them to force us to do,"
Snyder said.

1 he council was notified by
telephone last week of the \isit
and will be notified later of the

 

exact date. he said.

CHE director says few problems
in state school desegregation effort

Kentucky is one of eight
states w hose education systems
\sill be scrutini/etl by the curl
rights office by Witt). according
to an announcement earlier this
year by Hl'“ Secretary .Ioseph
(‘alifano

lhe reueys is to tleieriiiiue
whither any yestiges of a dual
education system ieniain in
states that once
separated black and
higher eduaction sy stems

Alabama and fetus already
haye been yisitcd. Snyder said.
South (‘arolia. West Virginia
and Kentucky lace \isits ill the
near future. Visits liaye not yet

legally
\yhile

been scheduled for Ohio,
Missouri and Delaysaie
Snyder said notification of

the yisit included a request for
information on enrollments.
degrees conferred and mission

statements of Kentucky
uniy crsities.
Court guidelines on

integration in higher education
included establishment of new
missions that would help
attract white students to
preyiously all-black schools.
Snyder said

lhe council adopted new
mission statements for all eight
public uniyersities last year. he
said. lhe statement for
Kentucky State Uniyersity. the
state‘s onetime black school,
includes a leading role in public
affairs education.

 

 

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 d—THE KENTUCKY KENNEL.

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