xt7vmc8rfx33 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vmc8rfx33/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-01-20 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, January 20, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 20, 1978 1978 1978-01-20 2020 true xt7vmc8rfx33 section xt7vmc8rfx33 Volume LXIX. Number 88
Friday. January 20. 1978

KENTUCKY

on independent student newspaper:

Snow postpones
spring semester

By THOMAS CLARK
Assistant Managing Edkar

UK officals waited until today's
early morning hours before mung
a final decision on whether to
classrooms today or postpone the
Opening day of the spring semester
for a third time.

New snow begun falling yesterdunr
morning with an accumulation of
four to six inches by thk
morning. Public Safety Director
Tom Padgett said yesterday a
decision on whether or not the
University would resume classes
would be made “between 4 and 5
am, with word going cunt to the
radio stations around 6 am.”

Ifclasses are held today, students .
who have not returned to the
University will not be penalized.
James Chapman, assistant to the
vice-president on academic affairs,
said the decision is the individual
professor’s, but the UK “doesrn’t
want people putting thernnselves into
an unsafe situation by breaking their
necks to get here.”

Students will not have to make up
the two days of classes that were
scheduled for Wednesday and
Thursday. Chapman said the
University is not required to be in

murmur "r“ °‘ “in
c any vi, uanl essors
couuld schedule extra classesmif they
felt it necessary.

On Wednesday, UK‘President Otis

open Siruletary reported one-third of the

University's dorm residents had not
rebrrned.

James Wessels, director of UK’s
Physical Plant Division (PPD),
said, “The shape were in, we could
open tomorrow."

Wessels and PPD are respondble
for clearing and salting streets,
parking lots and sidewalks on
campus. Since Sunday, PPD crews
have been working one and one-half
shifts using snow plows, payloaders,
shovels and tractors equipped with
blades and bruushes.

Weasel said the equipment was
serving a dual purpow, but was still
“first class."

Busineu Affairs Vice President
Jack Blanton said that heavy snow
removd equipment was “a risky
investment” becauuse of the lack of
snowfall in the area, but said the
University would probably consider
buying additional equipment “at a
min'nnal cost."

Blanton said the College of
Agriculture had purchased “an
honest-to-God snow plow” as federal
surplus. He suggested additional

investments by the college working
in coope-ation with the University
could bring in more machinery to
deal with the snow in the future.

Blanton outlined the Univesity’s
priorities in now emergencies,
placing the Medical Center at the
head of list. “Patients have to be
cared for, fed, etc.," he said.
“Everything has to work.”

Below the hmpital rank Food
Services and maintenance
operations used to take care for
students who were able to make it
back to campus. Also on this level,
Blanton placed the research labs
that house animals.

“Millions of dollars are tied up in
research," he said, “and if we rats
die, so does the research.”

Below this, business offices
providing necessary services are
kept open.

To keep the campus running
during the snow energency is
costing the university “between
$200,000 and$250,000a day,” Blanton
said. A large portion of this cost is
overtime salaries to hmpital, police,
food service and maintenance
personnel.

Secretaries who worked overtime
in the offices, said Blanton, are not
paid extra hunt do receive vacation
compensation—which still costs the

In '78-80 budget
Carroll makes education to

From staff and AP dispatches
‘ ' Gov. Julian. Carroll’s ‘ eutecutive

‘ budget requests, anrnununced during

«mus O'Neil

Kyle Macy, shown driving past Durand Maeklin and Jordy Hultberg

of LSU. has been lnsturmental in the Wildcats’
State in Starkville tomorrow afternoon.

tucky faces Mississippi

13-0 record. Ken-

Macy helps lead Cats
to perfect 13-0 record

By DAVID HIBBI'I'I‘S
Sports Editor
and
BOB STAUBLE
Assistant Sports Editor

After he team’s slow-paced 76-50
loss to UK last Monday night,
Mississippi head coach Bob Weltlich
probably summarized most ac-

curately the sometlm'es sl ,
but usually easy, manne- in ch
Kentucky rolled through the
Christmas holidays and extentbd its
undefeated streak to 18 games.

“First and foreman, Ken
doesn‘t allow anythhng to bother
. “i think Joe (Hall)
shouldbepleased.Hedirhn'tletundo
anythhgtothen unoftineordinary.
“Kentucky has obviously dealt

with a little bit of eve'ything through
13 games and that’s the mark of a
good team. if you play linen fast,
they play fast. If you play then slow,
they can play slow. if you play a
power game, they'll play a power
gene. That's what you’ve got to
havetohavea clumpiondnip team."

Kentucky hue had to run—agilnd
Portland State in a 114-88 in a UKIT
semifinal shootout. And the Wildcats
have had to show their plience on
offense and defense—agdnu lowly
Vanderbilt and Ole Mia.

The full houuse in Freedom Hall,
alorng with a national television

lucky audience, on New Year’s Eve could

not have asked for a more complete
power gene than UK‘s comeback
73-00 win over the Notre Dame
Fighting lridn.

Continued on back page

his televised speech Tuesday night,
call for greatly increased spending
in eduucation at almost all levels.

Included in the record $7.5 nuillion
two-year plan for state government
is an additional $275 million for
elementary and secondary
education and a request for $06
million more for higher education.
Those proposals make up the bulk of
the increase over the previous
buslget.

The executive budget,
the most important bill

probably
before the

state legislature, is now under study he

by the House and Senate joint ap-
propriations and revenue com-
mittee.

Carroll’s budget for higher
education closely follows the
recommendatiom given by the state
Council on Higher Education that
were prepared last year. The
governtr recommenubd about 90

8

University of Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

r“

—{)avld O'Neil

The UK campus has been paralyzed for the past week by more than 15 inches of snow. More is on the way.

University.

Nurses at the Medical Center have
taken to staying in the owl] areas
of thehospital and sleeping in empty
mourns as an alternative to the risk of
going home and becoming strantbd.

The hospital has acquired a four-
wheel drive vehicle to ferry doetuurs
and errnployees between the hmpital
and their homes.

UK police have also helped
transport doctors to the htspital.

percent of the couuncil’s requests.

Under Carroll’s budget, state
speidng'for threw Kentucky
universities (which provides about
half of each school’s bulge) would
rise from $241.4 million to $282.8
million next year and $311..“ million
in l97s~30.

“We’re pleased that the governor
was able to fund the schools at close
to the levels recommended by the
council,” said UK President Otis
Singletary in an interview Wed-
needay.

Singletary said the University
administration was generally
satisfied with the executive budget.
If appoved, he said, progress could
made in crucial areas at the
University suuch as raising faculty
salaries to levels at comparable
univrsities.

“The governor has recommennbd
essentially everything that the
courncil hm recommended for higher
education,” Donald Clapp, vice
president for admin'stration, said
yesterday.

Chief Pauul Harrison reported his
department has experienced “only
routine problems, slow moving
traffic and a lot of pushing, sluoving,
and cussing.”

Harrison said contingency plans
had not been drawn up prior to the
snow, “but I will have some in the
future.”

He also said his department was
towing cars parked illegally, but
only when absolutely necssary.

‘In preparing it’s recom-
menddions last year, the Council on
Higher Education was careful to
keen in mind what funds would be
available.

The council’s executive director,
Harry Snyder, frequently told
members of the council that it would
be futile to ask for money that
wasrn’t there, even if some lost
projects were vital.

Lodring back, Clapp said the

council had not sacrificed it’s role as »

an advocate for tlnesafety of winning
some small gairus.

“i think they (the council) did
both,” he said. “The council took
into considerations the state’s
resources and was still a strong
advocate for the needs of higher
education.

Under the govemor’s proposals,
the state schools’ allocations would
he 18 percent larger in the first year
of the biennium and 10 percent in the
secornd year, well below what they
wanted, but in line with what the

“We‘re trying to be as lenient as we
can.”

Despite students’ heirng idled by
the snow for several days, Harrison
said there has been no great number
of complaints corneerning students.
"We’ve had several complaints of
students snowballing vehicles and
peolespecially on Monday and
Tuesday~but nothing real big. it
may get that way if they (students)
don't get back in class."

p priority

council asked for them. ,

Like public school teachers, the
faculty andstafl of state universities
would receive salary increases
wnder the proposed executive
buuiget.

Faculty members would he
brought to thelevd of certain bench-
mark institutions in other states
identified by the council, while the
staff employee salary levds would
be adjusted to coincide with com-
mercial salary levels where the
schools are located.

Carroll also provided help for
students, expanding financing for
various grant and tuition p ams
under the Kentucky Higher
Education Assistance Authority.

The increases include $2.2 million
for the Kentucky Tuition Grant
program, which provides grants to
studernts attending privule colleges;
$23 million in bond revenues for the
student loan program and $800,000
for the state student incentive grant

program.
Continued on back page

 

inside

Hodaye

Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant near Athem, Ala.,
on Sept. 18, five days after the unit was shut

down for refueling

world

 

KISS BLITZES RUPP ARENA, but at least
you know where your children are.See Charles
Main's and Ted Steele’s review of the demonic
rock group‘s Wednaday night concert on Page 4.

state

THE STATE ATTORNEY GENEF-AL'S
OFFICE said yesterday married h'glu school
students under 18 are responsible for their own
conuhct, attendance and achievenent and not
their parents.

However, Assistant Attorney General Robert
Ouenoweth said a federal law still give their
peents corntrol over the student's school

records

“Although Kentucky lacks a statute which
provides that a minor urpon marriage becomes
emancipled. we believe by considering general
principles, a married minor is no longer under
the care and control of a parent,” Chenoweth
said

nation

A TENNESSEE VALLEY AUTHORITY
atomic reactor whae' restart was dehyed more
than two weeks because a worker's galosh fell in
began generating power min yesterday.

The black shoe car from a
worker’s foot and iuuto Unit 1 at the threereactor

Officials of the seven-state government utility
blame the galosh for a 17day restarting delay.
They estimate the incident cost about $2.3
million because more expensivecoal-fired plants
had to make up the balance.

THE CONGRESS THAT adjiurned With
energy disputes unresolved came back to them
yesterday, but with tax cuts and job bills com-
peting for its attention.

And a major item on the Senate agenda is the
vote on the Panama Canal treaty giving control
of the waterway back to Panama by the year
2000

As the 95th Cong-ess gathered for its second
and final session, House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill said “I am taking the liberty" of
assigning first priority to legislation for
eeoruomic stabilization and reduction of unem-
ployment.

That would include, he said. a tax cut dsigned
to stimulate the economy as well as public works
and other jobcreating measures.

PRESIDENT CARTER yesterday named
appeals couurt Judge William H. Webder, a
Republican form Missouri, to become the third
director of the FBI.

“i think he will bring a levd of intellect and
imaginsion to his new role mat will help it
perform its duties better than ever." said At-
torney General Griffin Bell, who announced the
president‘s choices.

Webuer, 5:, in. been a cbcuit jut in St.
Innis since um, sewn; on the 8th Circuit Court
of Appals. He will succeed Clarence M. Kelley,
who is retiring Feb. us.

PRIME MINISTER MENAHEM BEGIN
lashed out at Egypt yesterday for "chutzpah" -
brazenness - in its peace demanth, and he
rejected for the momernt Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat‘s proposal to resume miliitary
negotiations in Cairo this weekend

Israel stands ready to reopen peace talks.
Begin said, but the inert move is "up to Egypt.”

Secretary of State Cyrus Vance met with Begin
and is to fly to Cairo today to try to revive the
Jerusalem negotiations, which were suspended
abruptly hy the Egyptian leader Wednaday.

THE LAST VOLKSWAGEN Beetle sedan, Nazi
dictator Adolf Hitler’s legacy that helped West
Germans beef up their post-war ecmomy, rolled
off a German assembly line yesterday.

Since Daimler-Benz made the first (I)
prototype Beetles designed by Ferdinand Por-
sche 40 years ago, VOIkswageru built 19.: million
Beetles to surpms the previous production
record of 15,007,034 set by Henry Ford“: Model T
in the late um.

The Beetle continues to be produced in Mexico,
Brazil. South Africa and Nigeria. Models sold in
Germany from now on will bear a "made in
Mexico" tag.

weather

SNOW ENDING TODAY with a hth ammd
30, ('learingandcold tonght. low near uo. Mostly
sunny tomorrow with a hill in the n. Snow
likely again Sunday, endng Monday. Partly
cloudy Tuesday. with h'ghsand tows until then in
the zoo and in the teens.

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

SteveBallinger
Bdltortnaue!

DickGahriel
Managinglditor

'l‘homas Clark
Assidant Managing Editor

Clnarles Main
Editorial Editor

Jenn fer Garr
Stall Artist

Davidilihhitb 6mm
3mm Jennchreer
Jim licNair
Bthtailnie BetsyPearee
WM!“ JenneWehnu
wuw m Copy Editors
Arts & Entertainment am
David O’Neil
Nell Fish Photo Manager
Assistant Arts 0
Entertainment Editor JeanneWehnes
Photo Supervisor

 

 

 

' Ollphant looks at the Carter trip

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Budget gives education a big chance

Kentucky’s educational system will have the
chance to make landmark advances if Gov.
Julian Carroll’s proposed budget for education in
the 1978-00 biennium is app-eyed.

Tine budget, announced earlier tints wed,
would spread addtional funis through almost all
levels of pnblic instruction. The governor seds
to increase state appropriation to state
universities by 46 per cent over the amount two
years ago. Also, the extra money would amount
to a $275 million increase ova- the last two years
for elementary and secondary education.

Carroll‘s requests were a leasant surprise to

request, and agreed to try and bring
schoolteachers' salaries into the top 50 percent
among states.

Bytakingthesesteps, Carrollhasmovedto
correct problems that have made a K
edncation one of the in the nation.

Kentucky’s state v-rsities have ed far
behind comparable institutions in criti areas
such as faculty salaries, employee salaries,
student-teacher ratios.

In one gross example, UK’s agricultural
county extendon ants lnave salaries that are
lowerthunanyo steteandPuertoRico
(Carroll’s budget would provide 81.9 million to

teacha’s salaries rank 38th among states and
compare poorly with surrormdng states. The
proposed budget would raise thine salaries
dramatically, and serve to kemood teachers
and professors in the state, make thdr
positions much more competitive.

The brdget would also fund other sound
edmational projects: full funding of a state
kindergarten system by the 1m school year,
state payment of all textbooks and student fees
and testing of basic skills for students in the
tlnird,'fifth, seventh and tenth grades.

The interest shown by Carroll in the long-

ag’bject Kentuckians are historically apathetic
a t.

Spendng money on edmation, provided the
projegsbanduses tingemonley is pm mgmd’
can move to a ong-term A
po tion that is betterinbrmed and educated

be an advantage to Kentucky. If only viewed
ineconomic terms, abetter-etkncated citizenry is
more productive and will pay correspondingly
hi income taxes.
tlortsasthanghtbeschoolsandteachersof
Kenhrcky will finally get a chance to bring
rneeded ement in the state’s educational

those who have been plead for more education
money during the last several yearsfiiie granted
almost all of the Council ‘onfliiglfd * Education‘s

For Fat Thomas...

Illusions survive catastrophe quite well

New York—After breakfast
yesterday morning, Fat Thanas
watched the-ow whirling out of a
mournful sky and (bcided that he
had to take action immediately.
“Winter is for poorpeople,” he said.
He was broke for so many winters
that the condition seemed per-
manent.

Then last fall, Fat Thanas shook
the Eastern Seaboard with
professional football betting that
was so precise that many purple felt
he was part of a coup. lie im-
mediately brushed off poverty as if

you're broke, you got on an over-
coat, a jacket and tlnree sweaters
and you’re still shiva-ing."

In the cab somebody asked hkn
about the Super Bowl. Fat Thomas
scowled. lie feet the game is too
toughtobet. Past that, hehasno
interest in it. he dislikes Dallas for
personal reasons: he once saw
Coach Tom Land-y on television
speakingataBilly Graham crusade.
Similarly, he has disdain for Denver
quarterback Craig Morton, whom
Fat ’l'lnomas one heard earneuly
discussing

correct that situation).

By JIMMY BRESLIN

station guy was such a ganhns, then A friernd in real estate, Charles U.
why wasn’t he rich horn hh own Daly, called him one night and
selections?Butifyouweretoask beued Mr. Tlnanas to put his
Fat 'l‘homas this you would be money into something that would
displaying your own stupidity. For keep him from being broke again.
thh is thesame as asking why “Isrealestateas muchfunas
newspaper racing handicappers ah— hookers?” Fat Thomas said.
ve to male deadline everyday. And beOrtnhtlne 10th Sunday, Fat Thoma?
t e New York giants against e
mt gamcmu write ‘t Cleveland Browns. “The gw has to
' . be a genius to pick the Giants,” fat
Besides, the rule always is. when Thomas said. “What a this is ,,
confronted with genius, never guy '

2“)“. as to the m.“ i ! ml decided to stay q) and watch the

neglected area of education,is\commen(hble. It

The situation in . and _ ; ~is;a‘lso fpptur'me, "as rallythe .mvemor could
,. educatidnfin' the serW

influence to_ carrse improvement in

For some reason, fat Thomas.

relight). “006 then not

splendor of which songs are written.
Now, in his livingroorn yesterdw teousn

morning he reached for some grass. film en.

He had spent most of the niglnt

at the television With In“ Self- rang in Fat Thanas’ and the go

station grey came on the phone and

Mn! my put m hm“, called out: “It’s Houston, bear the

drinking whiskey; he crutches bad when Fat Thoma won two major WW!"

habits as if he has found treasure. hell on the Patriots on consenrtive

Fat ‘l‘homas went into the street

“Only God behaves.” he says. he is ,simdsys, he stood at line b.- and “mm "lone! behemoth.

ten-ibis at rolling pass: the joint

yesterday momingcame outthesize . Wm Steve Grogm‘s mother and the afternoon. H' ""1" ” in gthe

Andso,atnoon,onSept.aoonthe giane. 305W Hammond of the

Giants scored on a screen pms. As
he went into the end zone, the
referees were jumping up and down.
Some guy from the Giants named
Hicks had committed a foul, clip-
ping, 20 yards away from the play.

system.
ml:
exectiv‘e.

The Giant collaped At 4 pm, a
television set came out of the secornd
floor window in Fat 'l‘hanas’ hate.
in the playoff guns betwem
Oakland and Baltimore, Mr.
'l‘lnonnas had Baltimore and 3 and a
half. Thegamewentintesudihn
death. 'l‘lnefirst team to some would
win the glue.
Oaklandhadtheball, secmddown
on the Baltimore 10, and obvlrsnsiy
wasgetting readytokick uneasy
field goal. Stabler, the qrnrterback,
anded the ball to the fullback, who
would dive int the line. Stabler tort
the ball back and threw it into the
backoftheendsone. Caspc,anend,
grabbed it. Fat Thomas was wat-
chirng the game in the living room,
his own television set honing in-
disposed. His Aunt Sh had to corrne

ture should support the
din the

‘ , because Kentuckians
deserve tlnl chance.

in and assist him up the stairs.

Illusions survive catastrophies
qtite well. On the street, Fat
Thomsg appeared lame after set-
tling up on the Oakland game. But
yederday,boardnn° ghisplane for the
winter, lne said: “What a year. The
guy is a gmhns."

“Wherebheiflwanttosee
him?" i asked him.

“He’s atthe g. station every day
bid Sunday."

Fat 'l‘lnomas boarded the pains for
hi winter in Florida, which might
last as long a two wears, seeing
what Casper, the end, did to hhn
with that catch But this is
sonnethkng, of course, that you do not
bring up at a time like yesterday,
when a man left triumphantly for
sonne time in the arm.

—Letters to the editor—————

   

of a clothespin. As he lives with his
Aunt Sis, who would explode if she
foundhirn with grass, hehad a can
of hairspray at his side to battle the
smell of grass.

Some hortewives, however, are
not appalled by ht clothesplns.
Because of his appearances on the
daytime soap ope-a “Ryan’s Hope,”
Fat Thomas is recognised by many
of the housewives in his bane area,
Fresh Pond Road in Ridgewood, in
Queers. And on seva'al morning,
Fat Thomas pmsed a few of his
large joins around to the women,
who g'ggled. tom their first p-ses
at grass, and than strolled into Key'
Food babulrng.

Yesterday morning, Fat ’l‘homas
smoked his grass and, after many
phone calls, announced tint he was
going to winter in Florida “I'll be
back here for the simmer," he said.
He had arranged for hb friend,
trainer A. Fink. to reserve a suite of
rooms near the Florida Downs Race
Track. Fat 'l‘homas linen went
stairsto pack for the 11 am. flight to
Tampa

Hewentoutintothesnowinallght
sports ficket and flowered sport
min-t open at the neck. “Rich onys
canwalkarourndinablisrardirna‘r-
shirt and they don't feel anything. if

asked for hh bdny picture." Steve
Grog-n is the New England gnar-
terback. “Here, you want to see
Steve Grognn’s baby lacuna?" fat
Thomas than mowed everybody a
holy plchn'e. Peoria tinned any,
calling it blasphcny. Fat Thunas
held the picture over hh head.
“Steve Grogan’s baby plctnn-e!" he
shouted

ltallstartedantdywhatlnthe
conne d hb travels, Fat Thanas
metaguy whoworkedina a
stationinB .“l s 't

even be bee,” said. “i
picked onepr gnneevery
Srmdayiastyearandlwonizoutof

14."

“You'll never have hick like that
again," Fat Thomas told hkn.

“Oh no, it's not hack.” the g-
station guy said “l’m a garb."

“He’s tellin the truth," a
mechanic said. "i followed hkn the
whde season. I was always cleaned

up-outwithcardsandlneverhed

enowh to bet."

FatThormsbeg-ntocultivate the -

g. station . “i got a gunk-
whdll in me out have."
he said

The mum thd sinnld have
been as here was, if the g-

 

marnrner of a presidential canddate,
take returns upon hh awakening.
His Aunt Sis sat downdairs in the
living room, hmth ckntdnkng the
arrrns of the clair. Soon, the arms
relaxed 0n television, Bethea, the
Bernstein and, pulled the” from the
sky and destroyed Jets, zoo.

Fat 'l‘lnomas won nine game in a
row. Allover theEastpm ewere
talking about the streak of “man
from Queens,” as bodrmakers
called hkn. At night, Fat Thmnss
had chnnpqne parties. This was to
been conserve hb money.

And in New York, thee were
scenes from another era. Fat
‘linomas with Nickles with a dinne-
puty of six. Fat ‘lhanas at’

One righthe had so may

withhimtllttwoofthepeeplerode

inlhelnlnkoftheear.
Theyeonidhavehalled cabs bit

The decision to close university said too late

The closing of the University cluding IBM. were able to analyse employers knew that in advance by

during Tuesday’s storm was a condtions

the announcement was that it came
too late.

earlyinthemornlng. and listenkng to the weather forecast.
sensible move by the ad- wiselydecidedtoclosebefore

minhtration. The only problem with started leaving bane.

. Onecanonlthnethatnobody was
stranrhd or injnred trying to get

Whenasked by.ndomm back horrne, and that future UK

Hundreds (maybe marsands) of about UK’s late am, Public MW“ ”e "We in “me '°

UK employees were already out on Safety Director Tom M
thedangerousroads, tryingtoget to replied that commons worsened as
M- 0"" "151°“ employers, in- the morning progressed. Other

dim prevent needless hardships.
Tom Moore

College of Engineering

 

The Kentucky Kernel
welcomes letters and com-
mentaries submitted for
pnhlication. Articles mat in-
clude the signature, add-ass,
phme number- and year arnd
maprlfthewriterisastudent.
Commentary authors should

haveexpertiseorespcieneeln

 

Letters policy

The Kernel eaters have final
decision on which artists are
prhlished and when they are
pnhlished The editors reserve
the right to edt Maiden
because of unsaltabillty in
lern‘h, grammati ms, or
libelo- statements. All leans
and memories becnae the
theareathekarticlepctainsto. . property d the lend won

(they.

The best-read letters are brief
and concern campus events,
thagh comerntaries should be
of inert-essay lenfih. letters
and commentaries can be
mailed to the Editorial Eater.
Ree- m. Je-aahsan Banlhg.
University of Ky. sues. or may
be ddivered many.

 

 

DARK Pit.

    
  
  
  
  
   
  
   
  
   
    
   
     
 
    
  
 
   
     
    
   
  
   
     
     
   
  
     
  
   
  
   
 
 
 
  
  
   
   
   
 
   
    
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
    
      
   
    
   
 

   

 

-' AHMED-I

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 KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, January 20. 1978—3

Congressmen undecided F——_\
about Carter message

WASHINGTON (AP).-—. He said the Republicans, specifics of what he's
Congress received President who have beat messing for proposing."
Carter’s State of the Union across-theboard cuts, havea Baler said he th'nks the
message withart up better tax bill and invited amount of the proposed tax
surprise Thursday it“?! Carter to be an hmorary co- cut is about right.
reaction—as usual—was split sponsor. Carter's proposal, A one-time Republican
along party lines. hesaid, is my “a very small presidmtial candidate, Sen.

House Speaker Thomas P. step it the right direction." Barry Goldwater of Arizona,
“Tip” O’Neil said he found Senate Majority Leader said, “i made the same kind
the speech “excellently Robert C. Byrd. D—W.Va., of speech in 1964 and got the
receive! by the members." said Carter “emphasized the hell beat out of me."

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‘ O’Nefl said Carter touched
on the most pressing matters,
showing concern for farmers,
steel workers and consumers.

right things" and praised the
president’s approach to-
unemployment.

“The government can’t

Psychological
services

to tell the student body of

University of Kentucky

ab0ut some unusual career oeoorlumtres .iv..trl.itit.> in
men and women «while they stay Ill school and alter
they graduate Marine COIDS career programs '1 tum
orucessmg. telecomliittntctltlons .ivlontt’s r’ndlltt‘ .mii
bustness management. to name lust a luv. are .llllt‘tlil
the best oilered in or out of the tritltmry V ml l‘kll .it rhi-
lacts, when we VISIi your campus

tie added, ”He was on the emplogdevertyabo'dy," Byrd available
'd, 'n t _ ,

%- fifties?" m? em” sczlrte: regeated 1:885:33 .“e Psycmloswa‘ SW?“

Butiiouse Minority Leader .mitmert to a :25 billion tax “min-i c“"'?“"¥ “9999"”!
John J. Rhodes, R—Ariz., cut. partimpants tn indtvrdual,
called the speech “a The Senate Republican 5:95 and EN“? $1”;de A
collection of cliches which, leader, Sen. Howard Baker of srvilcesyar: avfigglog’g‘c“:
like the administration’s, Tennesee, said, “By and a 8 ”9°

record so tar. tacked focus large it was a good speech. Egaligail‘ieil‘éifii'stsorféimi

   

   

-o’uls O'Nsl

Cold haze

A pedestrian braves the winter wind and the nighttime

. haze during one of the many snowstorm: that have Visit Lt. Roten at Student Center in the lower

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
  

     
  

cripple '19th during the P39 “W ‘11”. and direction.” although we’ll haveto see the Kentucky. For more in- lounge between 9.3 pm. on Jan. 23, 24, 8. 25 or
formation, go to 115 Kastle ca” 2333-2446-
' ' I I F d from 8 am. to 5 pm. Monday ‘
OfflCta s ca ayette roa s wo rst 33..., me o. o-
By MARIA BRADEN highway engineer fgor the major arteries otitside New clear the snow never did the Psychology 223 ' "
Associated Press Writer multi-county district that Circle Road, and the city for job, Garner said. I cut g
State and local officials includes Lexington, also roads inside the beltline and “We’ll be smoother next c assroom C
responsible for clearing acknowledged that the non-major roads in the time,” he said, became ex- changed m g .
Kentucky roads of snow say situation is unmually bad in county. perienoe will insure that the g 33 t
Fayette County is reportedly Fayette County. However, he Gordon Garner, com- city makes firm com- _ Section 1 of Psychology 223 5 n ,
the worstin the state in terms could not pinpoint any one missioner 0‘ Public works for mitments with contractors to “Developmental ’ 4 Cal 0 '2 l
of snow removal. factor that contribtted more the Lexington-Fayette plwo the road. , Psychology n will meet “E at “Hut ,5. l
— Howeva', nobody seems to than another. County governannt, said one Asbury and Johnson said Tuesdays arid Thursdays at l , . t
know why. “I don'tknow whetherit’sa problem the city encwnters state officials are aware of 9:30 in the Taylor Education Wed Like To 0'59?!“ Yo“! T I
Of all the roads in the state, lack of any one thing such as in clearing streets is that the the problem in Fayette auditorium instead of Room l 2 mm Intervrew 100, Audrllons 2 00 g |
“most of our trouble is in equipment or personnel,” he city’s jurisdiction is now County, bitthat nooneseems 232 in the, Agricultural En— g to
Lexington and Fayette said. “It’s an accumulation of three times what it was in the to know what can be done to vironmental Science bu‘lding u: ”mgr?” ‘l’ea ' 7““- J'"- 2‘ 6
County,” said George a lot of things. 19605. improve the situation. at that time according to the 3 2520?} §;?.c“.§",a??£§,';5n;gg.,, %
Asbury, director of snow He said, for example, that He said city crews of fiveto Asked if it would always be course’s instructor Suzanne m Louisville Area - Wed., Jan. :: 2
rs removal for the state it’s difff‘tcult to fill road crew six people are on the job at this bad, Asbury replied, “i Martorano ’ Ramada inn >
' Transportation Department. positions became of com- anyonetime, and that nineor htpe not. ' a teal/31:93:: 3:32;? ICenterl' l
Asbtn'y said Thursday that petition from industry in 10 additional contractors “We’ll try to look at the Kernel seminar 9 Lawton ARLTMH km“;
a his personal experience of Fayette County; that while were hireddtringthis week’s county’s know removal plan 3 Hum" inn " ' §
5 driving on .Fayette County the county has enough snowfall to help. in a little more detail,” postponed tu l‘75«Newtoo Pike- Lex'ngton g
’ roads has been limited, but equipment, it frequently Apparently several of the Asbury said, “but apparently 2 Cincinnati Area-M. Jan. 27 r2
1 that he has heard that the breaks down, and that there contractors agreed to clear they’re doing everything they The Kernel newspaper at, tars/u giggn-‘glr‘l‘aroiwille F
1 county is the worst when it are a lot of roads classified designated roads, and then can do.” seminar scheduled for Comma“ Am- 5.,” an. 2. g
3 comes tosnow removal. top priority for snow skipped the job whert they Asbury, like Johnson, tomorrowhas beenpostponed Sheraton Motor Inn-North
r However, hesaid he doesn’t removal, such as interstatss were offered more money mentioned the difficulty of because of bad weather. 5 ”Wt I61 - Columbus I
know why that’s so. “1 know ' 75 and 64, the interstate ac- elsewhere, Garner said. attracting skilled employees Current plans are to 0 mo a, CM" Pow E
l‘ they have been working c055 roads, and the beltline That meant that one as a factor. He also said he reschedule the program for E Sat, Feb. 4; Sat, Feb. 11 g
g «to hard,” he said. around the city. The state is blocklong street connecting believes Lexington is andher date in the next few 5 WWW", A9, ,8 o
1 Russell Johnson, the state responsible primarily for two major thourough