xt7vx05x9j52 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vx05x9j52/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-04-03 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, April 03, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 03, 1972 1972 1972-04-03 2020 true xt7vx05x9j52 section xt7vx05x9j52 t . WM as... k
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Monday April 3. l972 LEXlN(iT().\'.KE.\'TL‘CKY yon. LXlll x0. “6
-- ‘t‘ s, . Ol'llle CI'lSlS I‘BSll tS
. - f: “w o 0
1n Easter Day evacua 1011
t”: By MIKE YORK chance of the chlorine leaking to leave home by noon Saturday,
Kernel Staff Writer was extremely remote. the mayor said. Police patrols
LOUISVILLE—A nearly Nevertheless, Burke designated and National Guard units moved ,
. disastrous barge accident two the neighborhood immediately into the area in large numbers
’ weeks ago forced almost five surrounding the dam as a Saturday morning to make sure ,
. thousand residents of Louisville’s “mandatory evacuation area.” the residents left and to prevent -
. , Portland neighborhood to spend Everyone living in the area had Continued on Page 3, Col. 1
part of the Easter weekend away , , ,
. from home. ,. _ . . ,
__ . War _..
t ."=..: A barge loaded With 640 tons of ’ . ' . "‘
t; V w potentially deadly chlorine broke .
' "*3; loose from its tow March 19, and EV, . . ,. 'W . .. f
‘- became lodged on the McAlpine .. f“
Dam. Since then. city officials 7 a ‘
.. and army engineers have pon- f
. J and ”5 dangerous cargo. ’ a ' '
" Mayor Frank Burke announced .. .. .. .3 3 .. "
W @ftn‘ . Capt. John Beatty would use a ' ‘ . ' . a 5% ,
' ‘ ‘sa catamaran (a twin-hulled ship) ' at» r ‘1 ..
I I to Stabilize the barge at the dam' W ’ «New
Nobody Pays more attention to a ball game than and then pump the chlorine to it ans.
_ . UK's new-head coach. Joe Hail. The man who will another barge nearby. Six month old Sherry Young amuses herself at Louisville's
replace wmnmg Adolph Rup p lsa wmnerm his own All these procedures were Westport High School during Saturday‘s chlorine crisis
. right. Fora look at Hall. see the story below. critical, the mayor said, but the evacuation. (Kernel photo by Mike York.) ,
C ’1 J0 Hall Wlll stress ‘team d8 1 81188 9
By CONRAD FRANCIS “I don’t think this comes as a Kentucky basketball forever. I 1951, he went on a tour of Europe Aside for coaching, Joe B. Hail
' Kernel Sports Writer surprise to anyone, we believe we also plan to take full advantage of and Africa with the world famous holds an AB. from the University
March 31, 1972, President Otis have the best man.” Coach Rupp’s offer of Harlem Globetrotters. of Kentucky and a MA, from ‘
' Singletary: After very little speculation, assistance.” Hall has good record Colorado State College, both in .
. ' “You do not replace a man like Coach Joe B. Hall was namedto a The background of Coach Hall As a coach in the nine years physical education. Coach Hall
Coach Adolph Rupp, you just four-year tenure as head goes something like this. As a before he came to UK he posted ranks as an assistant professor of
name a successor. With this basketball coach at UK. There player he was a three-year a fine 126-75 worksheet. Coach physical education at UK.
appointment we hope we are were no other applicants for the starter at Cynthiana High School Hall came to UK on July 1, 1965. Changes ahead? _
' starting a new era. job, a testimony to the ability of in Kentucky. In college he played and became Rupp’s number one Much thought has been given to
“By a unanimous vote of the Coach Hall. freshman ball and one year of man on Feb. 1, 1969, when he took the changes Coach Hall might
- committee I appointed to find a A humble man varsity ball with UK. He left UK over the freshman team from make during his tenure as head
. coach and the Athletic Board, Joe Very humbly, Coach Hall ac- in 1948 to play for the University former coach and now athletic coach. About that, Coach Hall
B. Hall has been named the new cepted the honor as he an- of South at Sewanee, Tennessee, director Harry Lancaster. Since had this to say: ”I won’t make
head basketball coach at the nounced, “I will make no attempt where he set a new school scoring taking over as coach of the fresh- any announcements until July 1,
- University of Kentucky, effective to replace Coach Adolph Rupp, record in his second outing. After men, Hall has guided them to a but for the most part we’ll stick
July 1, 1972. because he will be a part of his college career was over, in record of 60—16. Continued on Page 6. Col. 1
V ' 7.? ' ': i .. E II' - 3. 2:35;. t? g u e P
. i -‘ 2 . : -: :s _. : (30110611 SC e 11 ng
*3: ' {‘3' 80!} ERNVEST particular lecture.
. as . > ‘ 59m“ Nil” Vt “t" Ms. Burton Milward. executive
. f ., On March 21 the Vienna secretary of the CKCLS, said the
_j' » . s; ,. ' Symphony presented a concert scheduling for the series is donea
. tin. . for Central KGMUCRY Concert year in advance and must not
V. ‘ " ‘3 3‘" " ' . “a . ,_ 1 and Lecture members and full— conflict with any basketball
. V'_‘ I " ' m it" ., ' ‘ 5' i V ,3?" ~ time University Of Kentucky dates. She said that it was known
.' «V _ 3* . , " ' "it? » . .533. i§ students. that the concert date fell during
5 ., V; .V y I. . V § Many students were upset that spring break, but this was a
- V . a :3 i:.V ~. 1" . sent? the. concert was scheduled “prestigeous” concert and
V . “a fi . h . yaw during spring break when most March 21 was the only time it was
5 . 3‘ _ a '__V V, " ' ’ . students were off campus. available.
,_ I is; so i3 ~ ' Joseph Houlihan. chairman of Booking handled in New York
" , s 3 ' " 1/52; : .-. . _.fi' ' the Concert and Lecture Series, Milward wenton to explain that
,5. ' a . .,, , said he didn‘t know why the booking is done through the
John Breckenridge. center. giving the state attorney general concert was scheduled during Community Concert Service, a
Democratic candidate in the power to crack down on over- spring break. He explained that It New York talent agency.
Law Day sixth Congressional District race. weight coal trucks. See Law Day '5 very dlmctltt to schedule and The agency has a “St 0f-
talks to students after Friday's story on page 5. (Photo by that the Series has very little performers and books them
Law Day events. He suggested Cynthia flood.) control over the date of any Continued on Page], Col.1

 I
2—11“: KENTUCKY lil-IRNl-IL. Monday. April 3. I972
Better than booze .
O
. o o o o nvate use
. National comm1ss10n- favors legallzmg pot for p
By TIM BALIARI) recommendations were: police chiefs was one of strong Two recent Gallop 9011§_have 1969~ released earl‘efr th's..yeari 2
V V ' . - ' ' ‘ ' ' . 0 Sition. shown an increase In marijuana found that the use 0 marijuana
‘ . . , .\sslsldlll:\ldlldglllg luditoi —Repcal of all state and PP0 did not significantly affect F
- ‘ ' , Followmg a prevzlentffitr'enld federal penalties for anat" use Police chiefs Lewis Mutters of usage. - grades. Only in two cases in- ii
, ._ among doctors on _o icta.s or possessmn ofoneounce or less. Ashland, Wayne Constant of One poll, taken in November volving drugs—the use of alcohol li
~ . _ calling. ff”. {he‘libfzalizlgtiton 21f . fSentences OfUP to one year m Bowling Green and Paul and December of 1971, claimed once a week or use of
g ‘ marijuana deWM .9. a “Zinnd Jall‘ fines _UP ‘ t0 ' $13000 and Williams of Winchester said the that 51 percent of all. college hallucinogens prior to entering d
' ' Eommiitsion 0 l argugnae ort suspenSion 0’ driver .5 license for report was illogical because, as students had tried marijuana at college—were grades adversely l
. . ’ “‘8 use re ease. p drivmg under the influence or Constant said, “It‘s silly to least once. affected t
u i calling for liberalization. marijuana. _ . _
- . . . permit someone to smoke that Th end 01] conducted
. .‘ -. I The commissmn, a Iii-member _(‘0ntlnued felony charges for . . . e Séc P - Th ”Sters found that more
, . _ _ _ stuff in private but make it a 1’ this month showed that 1L" e p0 h
” . ' group headed by former Penn' “Ultwat'onv 59”"‘g for 9mm or crime to grow it." ear [er f h iilation 13 years non-users than users had definite a
' ‘ '- ' Sylvama governor Raymond J‘ POSSESSIO“ With intent to sell. . . . . - ’ percento t epop career plans. that twice as many c
., . . . Shafer. released its findings —The setting up among states The commissmn s finding that of, age. and older have used pot, users had seen psychiatrists and g
' . March 22 after a year of of uniform penalties. marijuana usage does not lead including two pencent of those 50 80 percent of intermediate users
. - .. . research. The commission also reported necessarily to harder drugs 15.0r over. Fifteen percent Said they had had heterosexual in-
‘ . The report concluded that the following findings: supported on a small scale by a 'favored the legalization .of tercourse Less than half of the t
g t . . marijuana is apparently bar-L -—There is no reliableevidence study publishedin the Nov.8, 1967 marijuana, a three percent in- non—users had had intercourse
-, ‘ mless when used less than nce a that marijuana causes birth issue . of the dournal of the .crease Since 1969. while 100 percent of heavy users V
. . g i . day, and that dangers of defects. The commission, AmefiiXan Medical Assoc1ation 0f the1,513 people polled in the had. _
> _ . frequent. long-term usage are however, cautioned pregnant ( ' . March survey,79 percent thought - _
, . .. . *V v, . less than those of alcoholism. women not to use the drug. Another JAMA article usage was psychologically or Homosexual experience was
‘~ According to a ”COT: “Evidence indicates that reported that“, ft £01305? con- mentally harmful. Sixty-one found almost excluswely among
. , _ . . .‘ . . prehenswe national survey marijuana does not cause crime, secutive hospita a misswns in percent thought it was physically the heaViest male users.
. j .' , chartered by the commissmn. but it may even calm violent Los Angeles between 1961 and addictive, and three-fourths H
. . ‘ . . . some 500‘000 Americans use pot tendencies. 1969, only nine cases were believed the use of marijuana led A The researchers concluded, It
in " - ,~ f ' . d3t1Y~ 24 million have US€d it at —Use of marijuana doesn’t thought to be reactions caused by to the use of harder drugs. is not the drug that determines
. If ‘ 1 l ' ‘ least once and 8.3 million still use necessarily lead to use of harder foreign substances, and a sixtlh" the use. bUt the personality 0f the
' _‘ " it occasionally. drugs. patient was found to have beena Researchers polling 500 user that determines the drug
V ' ' :- V I Among the commission‘s The reaCtion from Kentucky chronic paranoid schizophrenic. Harvard seniors in February and the use to which he puts it.“
'   _’ Bl ‘ ' orms
' ‘ .____.____— ack sorority
T" ' flicflcnlusk Herncl N t '
’ _ . The Kentucky Kernel. 113 Journalism t t t
' ' , ' ” . : '“""“"U"“'°"‘"" °”‘°“.‘"°"." ”"m‘mn' Here are the figures on how new voters registered or “III y, ac 1V1 les
' 3 i ‘ M " ‘ “may 40506. mu“ me "mes weekly b t in Fa ette Count between last Novem
- ' o ' , ' ar ' ' - . . .
’ , _ ' . . . - 2:;lngx‘a'zsiiz‘:lids.refitlciit'i‘cirndluzril:gld:h: bir: “idiom and March y23. “Black women do not want to UniverSity family because the
; : ' “mm" mm"- d m becomeapart of white sororities. activities are purposefully not
3 , ,i' ' . " ' ' pomse midseacgiexcmzton. Kentucky. De ti 2 535 They have never been en- geared to needs of blacks.
- I . . ' Published by The Kernel Press. Inc.. 113 nlocra c 9 couraged or invited to j0in, OI‘
‘ ' I 7‘ Journalism Building. l'niversity of Ken-
. . . . . - made to feel welcome at any of T
,v .. .. . -,L .K'.4006. -
; .* ‘ ‘ .- tucszyguhca:l¥:glz‘adzt in :894 and published Repllbllcan 1,065 the houses.” ViCki Jones, 0d
, . g . . , igrginuously as The Kentucky Kernel since member 0f the graduate chapter ay
. ' 've'i 'iidii 'l'lddt I
_. = -» ...‘:..:‘::.i::’::';?:.,airs... Independent 324 of Alpha Kappa Alpha (.AKA)‘
i ndierlising should be reported to the editors. sorority, gave this as the primary an
.. . - 4 reason for the formation of an
. , ‘ KERNEL TELEPHONES Peoples Party 17 AKA chapter here at the
' . Editor, Editorial Editor . . . 257-1755 ' ' to m OrrOw
.. -. ' ’ . Managing and Associate Editors . . . . UniverSIty of Kentucky.
,- , W .. - -----.-.------:-'---:--25.7'1740 New Party 4‘ Jones, in collaboration with
. .; . ‘ - _. Advertismg, Bustness. Circulation . . . TODAY
, . , . - .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258-4646 several other black women. has nary amuse TOURNAMEanm m
' - -_ r . M been striving to extablish an room 363, siuoem Center today and
~. h ' 1 ._ . ._ I undergraduate AKA chapter. $§§¥°Y123§59W$$2no Politics”
, g Mimi Henrickson, dean of $5313; agegggoom mismdent Center.
’_ _ - . students, gave permission for the Y TOMORROW
' V j , . eetabliehmeet 0f AKA, the f£$§i%3"cifii2§35*&ii°§e%2'Zmz'i'n‘é ,
.‘ . , . ’ . ._ stipulation being that all the gals changer to operate. Fiscal court meeting 2:30
. 4 - an I q es in the Sorority must maintain at Eamon ii’ffé'Zyspi‘l's'Lré‘a 33°?x3°1'n§°é’7i§
‘ . I . I least a 2..0.grade point average. GREEKMAN 15:: $313; banquet 5:30
‘ ' ‘ t The limited “untber 0f 30' pm. Wednesday in the Grand Ballroom.
, . ‘. g .1 , ffi of Preside“, tivities offered for blacks is Student Center. Barry Segal guest speaker.
_ ' ‘ " " . . or o ‘e ' another reason given by Jones for women interested in working 'on the
. _ . . . . , grunge?“ fAccording to her. swarms sisters “remit:
. . . ' ~ ‘ a ’ 109 Student Center.
- .. " Vi .Pr n an c ‘ ont eel part Of the vgoi'lnEREAi. DISEASE information and
. . . . . . . ‘e es 6 referral. Call Operation Venus at 255-8484
. . v ., _ . _ OVERSEAS JOBS FOR STUDENTS Mondays through Thursdays from 1 pm. to
. . . , 11pm. and Fridaysfrom lp.m.lo9p.m.
~ -' ' _ . Au§t”"" EU'W‘" S-Am°"€°r PROBLEM PREGNANCY and abortion
‘ _‘I , . MTIC.,.e'C. A“ prmiw 8M counseling. Ca" ”7.“ Y3 and
- nufor mus I e mm W... m «w
j | . “ Expenses DOIU, wartime, slght- Thursdays from 1 pm. to 3 pm.
.- I. . , . ‘ seeing. Free information . Write, Emergencies call 252-3417 W.
. _ . , Jobs Overseas,Dept. Bl, 9.0. Box son ANY int-caution all no so
. . . . Eli: i I I sl I ' 15071. SanDieoo, CA. mis fiegflnzlltfivpgfl “MM
, Government ce . ..
- 'l ' '5' I Rum-204 THE LEX
. . . ' INGTON SINGERS ANNUAL
f :4 , . SPRING CONCERT WILL BE PRESENTED
- Student Center. ”55°“ “’“L 4'" AT PM '"
_ g. , 3 V MEMORIAL HALL ON THE UNIVERSITY
_ . . OF KENTUCKY CAMPUS. THE CONCERT
. ’ . '5 UNDER THE DIRECTION OF PHYLLIS »
- ‘ Deadline: 5 pun. ‘5"“55- ""5“ '5 ~° CHARGE AND
. ~ _' , THE PUBLIC IS INVITED TO ATTEND.
4 April 1, 1912. ¥
, ', . l i V
8' .
’ , s D

 , THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday .April 3, 1972—3 . - . ' .
Derby City escapes tragedy -' ,3 ., ~ V
Th tb b ' ldh b
By MIKE YORK “P as a shelter for the evacuees. During McAlpine Dam, Louisville was headed for could not have assumed a more favorable , .1 : T I, I.
. H K‘ernel Staff Writer their 24~hour stay at the shelter, the almostcertain disaster. position. (‘ivil Defense Liason Officer , .' ‘ '
LtOLISHLLla—Rev. H-L~ Ellegood, “(:30 Ellegoods spent most of. their time There was almost no chance the barge John lieggs said “it was almost as if . '- _. ' '.
a 87 has no trouble remberlng Te y reminiscmg and agreeing With others on could strike the dam without being broken someone had picked it ithe bargei up and , -. ' .‘ .'
Bosevelt s presidential campaigns, has the general undesirability of the situation. apart and 59m crashing through the dam put it the“, ..it‘s unbelievable.” . ‘ . " - - '
lived m LouiSVille all .h15 llfe' MOSt of his Everyone at the shelter—and everyone gates to disperse its dangerous contents ‘: I. " .. 3" I .
life, he says, he has lived near the river. in Louisville for that matter—seemed to g -h . d hl . "l! y ld According m Beggs. the barge has not ' ,. . t. , 2 , .K
Rev. Ellegood lived near the river think the evacuation was necessar .uc an unexpecte c orine Sp] “0“ ed " in" .1 d d d , j ' V '
. y h' , k'll d h d d h 5 th us ds mint sinct it name 0 ge on the am , . ..
durin'theOhi Rivrfl db k' 1937 b ' d‘e ‘9 unrest" 3P 0 a“ ,. .. - u 2:
8 o e 00 ac in . ecause something had gone wrong. f , . . h' . . d Match 19. dtbpllt the constant 30 mph . . _
Heownedaboatat the time and he used it The Louisville d' 0 people, dnd would - dve tnjure - . -- ~ ‘ . -‘ .- -» ‘9
. . ‘ . papers, ra '0 and thousands more. Frightening as it may (urrcnt ‘UShmg by ’ ' a
to rescuehis neighbors from their homes. television stations, even the national seem this situation was verv likelv wheh So Louisville narrowly escaped a , 3 '. " ' 7 ‘;~ .
His neighbors were forced from their networks and the Associated Press had the free-wheelina bar e was on its way tragedy. What might have happened was -' ' , “‘
homes last weekend, too, but there wasn’t told people that something had gone wrong toward the damb g ' obscured by the excitement of the ' . . , ' ~ , ~ ‘
any flood. Rev. Ellegood left his home and a chlorine-laden barge had come to 0 l . . - .I l . ld h , . , d evacuation and the possibilities of looting, : I ,_ _'-
Saturday because a chlorine barge was rest on the dam h 3. d .mlrdc e to“ aw saw and [her distasteful CO 59 u g fth I. ‘ . ', ' -
‘ [omsville from the im endin d' ‘ 0 ‘ n q ence. 0 e .- . ~ .,
. tuck on the d . - . A p g isaster. , _ . , _ _‘ ‘
S am. Sure, something went wrong, the barge And the miracle ha ened' the barge bargt s becoming lodged on the dam. ,_ . R
l Sheltered. in high school broke loose. But after the barge was loose, didn‘t o crashin :vper the dam It But when it’s allover and people begin to ‘- ,1 .. ‘ '5,
The retired minister and his wife everything went right. becameglodged ongthe sill ‘ think about what might have happened. _ " ‘ T -
boarded a bus Saturday morning, a bus When the barge, trapped in the swift ' March 19 will probably emerge as the '3 ._'
Which took them toacounty high school set current of the Ohio River, headed for the Engineers at the dam said the barge luckiest day Louisville ever had. '_ : ‘ ' »‘ " 5 ’
o o o h . _, .. ‘ .
Chlorine gas scare prompts W omen voters learn Intricames ~ ,: 2
° 0
pamal Louisville evacuation of conventlon delegate selection . _. g - . »
(‘ontinued from page I verted two high school gyms int The women met and exchanged “It is a dereliction of our Political Caucus and the ; n: : -
looting of the otherwise un- temporary shelters for the tw information, information “men citizen‘s responsibility it we fail Women‘s Alliance 0f the - ' ' 1':
defended homes hundred evacuees who ha feel they have to protect US to exercise our rights in the Unitarian Church. and was ’~ I ‘ " ., ‘
The Louisville Mayor also nowhere else to go. from,” according to Nancy Ray, upcoming party conventions,“ designed to help women un- ' :‘ _ ‘ ' .“
outlineda “voluntary evacuation Success Sunday in her opening remarks to the she added. derstand the delegate selection ‘ .-. ? g
area " surrounding the man- The Portland residents bega group. The women are potential More women at conventions process. » _ j, ._ _'
datoi‘y zone and advised people to return to their homes Sunday delegates to the national political This is definitely the year for Lots to study « . ' ; . .
living in this section to seek as Capt. Beatty succeeded i conventions, and the occaSIOn women to exercise their rights, Party rules and convention and . ‘
another home for the night. stabilizing the barge. In what we was the“Women’s Roundtable 0" Ray said. Both the Democratic parliamentary procedures were ~ : - 1 .' 1
City helped people move considered a critical maneuver Delegate Selection," a WOI‘RShOP and Republican parties have set examined, analyzed and , , .
Most of the displaced families Beatty inched over the barg for women’s education on the guidelines for delegate selection discussed in the morning session. ' : ' i . *

I spent the night with friends or at with his twin hulled catamar Kentucky delegate selection to the national conventions. The afternoon was devoted to , . . . .

t a motel, and most of them left in and secured it with steel cables. process. . These guidelines require each questions {Ind answers on the . '. ,3; " '
their own transportation. But for The stabilization process wa Ray, aSSlStant dean ofstudents state delegation to be 50 percent political intricacies of this 1 , _ - .
those who had no place to go and necessary for salvage opera at UK, urged the women to women. It remains for the women political process. ; ‘_ _ ._ _ , . -
no way to get there, the city to safety rid the craft of its become politically active afld to gain the knowledge which will , . j ,
provided buses to take the tons of chlorine. Officials sai force candidates to speak to and enable them to secure positions Pam Elam, a member ofthe . * .3 -
evacuees to suburban high Sunday the pumping of for women. Women compnsethe on these delegations. Lexmgton Women’s Political . . .r .. 1,,-
schools for the night. chlorine should begin thi majority 0‘ the V0tet‘5 in Fayette The conference was held Caucus, made this evaluation of .- , _ _ . ' 1;

Red Cross volunteers con- morning. County, she said, and “the days Saturday in the Unitarian the conference: “Conferences , , _ I» . . _
that we will be forgotten after Universalist Church on Clays like theseare invaluable for those ' .. _- . '
, . ’ election day are gone forever." Mill Road. It was sponsored by of us who are determined to be a . I,

I the Lexington League of Women part of the deCision-making , .- " _ .=

fig] 16 5XQWM‘QWWfimm.':-.l-.::::.-513111;.iftf'337-"4éEIEI-J‘5II-"-’:-‘“59-5453;3:353".I}:"..;?"§i:.;’~g;I35,4".- _ ,. Voters, the Lexington Women’s process in this country." 1‘: . .I . 1 . .'

d - . .- , . . _ .

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