xt7g7940vx2h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7g7940vx2h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-05-03 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, May 03, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 03, 1972 1972 1972-05-03 2020 true xt7g7940vx2h section xt7g7940vx2h U
, I I I -
The Kentucky l . . t .
By FRED MAYNE felony," Hancock reported. “and l I ‘
VOL anl ”0' ‘37 LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY Wednesday ' May 3’ “"2 Kernel Staff Writer KRS 435.105 condemns as a felony
. Citing “the present state of law any indecent or immoral prac- \. .
lh Kentucky," Attorney General tices by a person 17. . .or older."
? Ed Hancock advised UK to reject What Hancock maintains—and ,
um I e 0“ es Gay Lib‘s bid for registration what Gay Lib denies—isalogical
. ”unless and “hhl there '5 a transition between the illegality '
clearcut decision ofacourt of last of homosexual acts and the . I
.° .' resort directing otherwise.”I illegality of registering
Controversy clouds Ohio primary .Hancock s opmm gm m an homosexual groups. »
eight-page brief, reached UK ”My opinion," he said, . .is
By MIKE YORK The Alabama governor, who which he began in his strong offiCials Tuesday neagly IItW‘; based upon a thorough search ”
. Kernel Staff Writer was In HOUStOh SOhC'hhg Texas debut in the New Hampshire months after they sent etai 5 0 for. and analySis of, cases I
Sen. Hubert Humphrey scored delegates. said he was very primary. tslledcale 3° Efflml‘lfortilefan oil touching upon the legal and . ‘: 3
a significant victory in Tuesday‘s happy With hls Indiana vote . George Wallace has shown fll' ”enlls ac weraGasalGib: Vhlid constitIutional questions in-
Indiana Democratic Presidential totals. ahd ‘0 many, he seIemeid again that he can command a 203213 y ans y volved. . .
primary. and Tuesday h‘ght elated. Wallace haderIeVIousI y large segment of the Democratic ’ T . t t t illegal ads .
a eared to be the eventual said he Whlhd be 53‘5th Wlth . . - - “0 5 a u es The prevailing theme in
PP . . _ . . vote. seemingly at his Will. Th 1 l t r 's r ted , . . . ..
winner in the Ohio primary Wlhhlhg 30 0f Indiana 5 76 , . . -. - e ega con rove 53" 0° Hancock 5 opinion is that any
- . ' Wallaces second-place finish ml in two Kentuck statutes for . . I
In Ohio where Humphrey was delegates. . . . . . y organization Whose purposes are
‘, . qummyq Indlana. Whlle Stlll not a Wln. lS biddin certain forms of . .
engaged in an important race "“"'"“"' . . . g to encourage or condone illegal
With Sen. George McGovern, the finalySls thern state .. I acts is entitled to no aid from
primarv returns were muddled ‘ ' KRS 435950 makes the official state sources. . .(Tlhe ”
by voting irregularities in parts Late wallace common law crime of sodomy 3 Continued on Page 7. Col. 1 I
. of Cleveland. - - . . °
3 3 _ was leading in races for 27 3 0 enln S lef
Ohm 5 largest county kept ”5 delegates. with the remaining 49 p g t
polls open until a minute before going to Humphrey. -
midnight amid Charges 0‘ We (in the basis of the Ohio and t t
fraud from the McGovern camp. lndiana primaries, a few ob— or names rus ees '
. Humphrey said he was “damn servations can be reasonably
mad about the mlqu' While drawn: G0V~ Wendell Ford has appointed an that Ford will fill this year. Three more ”
McGovern “we.“ uncovered .Hubert Humphrey is on the Owensboro businessman and a Hazard positionswill become vacant this summer.
cases 0f districts w'lh large youth way to becoming the Democratic corporation president to new positions on 3
. registrations running short of frontrunner. although it is vir- the UK Board of Trustees. All h fth . t e raduates . I
. ballots. . tually impossible for any can- Stanley Burlew, a resident of Ford‘s t reeo eangom eesIar g l ,
”h“? "me? close didate to receive a first ballot home town of Owensboro and a major 0f U}; who hilVIe ‘EhaChYeBufie: “'32;
. - 30th candidates chances Of a nomination. contributor to the governor’s election the dmveIhS‘ :15 a. :"S' ‘ati “,5 board
’ Victory m 0h“) hinged 0" the late . George McGovern is ex- campaign. was named Monday to succeed 5:39 on t e d‘Srtnm “5500:9460 business
returns from Cleveland 5 periencing at least a momentary Dr. N.N. Nicholas. also of Owensboro. '0 (ijrectorslan d urgbk: cham ionshi
GuyahOga “um” because they lull in his campaign momentum. Ford named William H. Sturgill, oil and W “ate—I P aye 3 02946 P P
represented 25 percent of the .. gas executive and owner ofa Perry County basketbal team in . - I 3
Ohio total and voting throughout Here are the late results from coal mining {mm to the seat held by for_ Ford. who will leave the board next ,
the rest of the state was very Tuesday 5 primary elections. mer Gov. A.B.“Happy” Chandler. Both month whenanewly-passed law removing
. close. . lléfil \V\ Chandler and Nicholas were appointed by him goes into effect has indicated no .
In Indiana. Humphrey bed I. '1 ‘ ‘ . former GOV- Louie 3- NUhh- preference for a board chairman. Albert .
hoped to do better than his slim Vlith 67 percent of Indiana‘s 4,480 Clay Mt. Sterling banker and tobacco .

. victory over Alabama Gov. precmcts reporting: 5“".ng 47. is president of East Ken- grower. now serves as chairman. 3
George Vlallace. Nevertheless, Humphrey 225,235 46 percent tucky Investment Co., 3 Hazard oil and Griffin. Chandler and Nicholas have
the Minnesota senator said he Wallace 203.149I 24 percent natural gas firm.BurleW also has interests technically been off the board since Dec. . . .

. was pleased With his Indiana Muskie 58.124 12 percent in several apartment complexes in the 31. when their positions expired. But all .
showmg and he .thOUght hisIIwm OlllO Lexington-UK area. except Chandler have attended the : .
there was 3 “Why for the With 25 percent of Ohio‘s 12,648 Ford also reappointed George Griffin. meetings and Ford has said he was waiting
progressive center or the polling places reporting: London. to his position on the board. until the General Assembly‘s biennial I
Democratic party. 3 Griffin, 45, currently chairs the board’s session had ended to make new ap-

IWallace, who has yet to W1“ a Humphrey 91.623 41 percent Student Code Committee and is president pointments.
l‘iorthern primary, spent much McGovern 86.316 39 percent of the Laurel Grocery Co., London. All new trustees will serve four-year
time m Indiana working for Muskie 22,250 10 percent The positions were only three of the six terms. ‘ - .
. another of his respectable but Jackson 17.345 8percent
second-place, showings. ' .
3“" 1.: .3 a 3 ”3 *- ;.._3.. a ‘a . ‘
"I. .‘ 3 W . . FOI' demonstratlons _
.3 .. 3 ‘ ¢ agmsswag‘»¥wo;;hdhg 3, h 3 .33.“? $W»WWM I
-- - ~ a ’ Administration rejects . -
A; 2;.- : I 5‘ a,” .- ' ‘ 9 l O
3 com plex regu atlons
9 3 l e ova-ream» ' Bytiltl-ZGIIAH'IMANN com lex the roposal that went ti
.3. _ - .3 _3 _ . 3. p p
we», V 3* '_”3_' ‘ ”' ‘ * I' . a» ” Assistant Managing Editor UK President Otis Singletary
91W» . 3 """" “ WW4?“ T‘s..- " fl 3.» I . I
'33th 3;. lei .3 i .‘ ’”‘ UK's continumg efforts to draw Legal Counsel John Darcie am
a” ” ' " J i " regulations for handling student was. The orginal committei ”
”‘ f . . , 3 demonstrations ran into a snag produced lWO drafts
~ “ '.~ AK last week when administration reflecting different viewpoints oi
" ’1‘ . officials rejected a formula that the students, administrators, an( 3
3 H l K \ had been six months in the faculty members on the com
. ;' Ii 5 . . It ‘V o I
Q, 3 m, making as too complex. mittee. Seventy-five percent 01
so . . Mia-.- . 'n .. “The biggest concern was the the n and 13-page drafts was
“‘5‘“ ‘ '. ."I -"' ' .5 ' 3’ *-1'”».3 complexity of the document." identical. the differences lying ii ‘
-, 3I a.“ My! ml "91“”..- 3 II .. I my? a I said Dr. Robert Zumwinkle. vice how to handle marches and how . ,
5’ “ . - , ”j :” $13.33.; ' president for student affairs and much discression the dean oi .
3’35““ ‘ nemesis“ "'5 3:3,. 7" 3:5?» .. it.» ' head of the thirteen-member students should have.
‘ a ' t a Re ulations not ublic
I-rom lefttorl to T a Mills. committee that met abou g p
There were a I“ 0' spills 8" re l0 dozen times last fall to draw up Zumwinklecombined these two
Tuesday night at Buell Armory Ah“ Carpenter. Winnie “€09. . . . . .
' ‘ . . proposals for dealing With drafts plus “information derived
“6 . where a crowd of predominantly Larry Martin and ( arla Osborne. d trations “I m w ches" into
Keeneland students skated. (3‘3" photo by 03"? llerman). emons 3 , ' 3 3 0m y 0 n resear .
It is difficult to tell lust how Continued on p", n, Col. 1

 .\ W.
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i
2—TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday: May 3. I972 S. l t k ] arter
ME 6' f g t d 131' t" ns board
I is) (mm; IIAHTMANN responsible for fiscal lSection. 31-i-
'. Phone 254-3496 Assistant Managing Editor management. editorial policies lsumwmkle. stressed that the
~ g ‘ . . l'K President ()tis Singletary and appointment of the editor. only publication 0V” Wthh the
_ , . For IllfOl’lflfl‘l’lOfl flfld Reservahons Tuesday approved revisions in l'ntil January 1972 the Kentucky hoard WI” have actual P‘HIC." '
. ‘ the Board of Student Publications Kernel was also under the WNW] 15 the KCNPCKIQH. chlCh
. . . ' charter that will give that body a board's control. but the Kernel's IS supported b)" ume-‘I'Slty HmdS‘
' i . 5 " new role as journalistic om- move to independent operation The reVIsed charter also lowers .
‘ '1 -. ‘ . " . budsman to the campus while at deprived the board of many of its the board 5 membership from 14 .
. g , , the same time reducing its duties. to to voting members. 0: whom .
1 ' . , _ .5 -——— membership. SerH‘S as forum t'ive will be students, three
a ._ y ‘ 5” GENE MEATYARD . “I tl , b , d . 't' . . The revised charter empowers faculty members. and two
~; ' . ' "‘ r . or ouronlzmlmatsat W “ 0‘" d‘ ”‘3 d5 “ . . ~ f . _. -' ~ . - »
, . -, . J / y . press council or ombudsman- the board to heme as a orum members at large. lhe editor of
Q. ' . g ‘_ type body ,. said Dr Robert and advisory body with respect to the Kentuckian and the
y " ; e. ‘ ,. @Ygel- A SSES lumwinkle‘, vice president for any. publications edited and University. student publications
.1 . . ‘ student affairs. Zumwinkle. who piiblished by students (section agvisor Will also serve; as ex—
. ' . . ‘ ’ re ared the charter revisions ' . 0 100‘ non-v0 ing mem ers,
. _ u . , 0F KenfUCkYI lnC. F p.. , , . Although the board Will have no 1
g . , . or Singletary. said the changes d‘ _ . ‘d' t' ver such 7' l d . 1
' ‘, I Imperial Plum Shopping Center were prompted by the board's in.” Jung 'C ion 0 0 ay 3
' . ‘ ' . - . - this car and the shiftin publications as the Kernel. the :
‘ . '” w°”" “3"“ L""‘9'°"I KV' inaction 3 - - g law school‘s Commentator or 1
y _ - ' nature of campus Journalism. ‘ . . . ' and ‘ :
'» 3 '2 ‘ At resent the Board of Student Student Mobilization Com- '
‘ y ‘ . . . . ~ Remember to ask Gene about the SPECIAL CONSIDERATION given P blp at'ons has direct mittee's Diatribe. the board :
‘ ,, _ ,- g. to all U.K. STUDENTS U W l ‘ .. . . . , - 3
5 _ . y Tele' hone 255-5506 responsibility only for UK‘s mg: studyd and dlSCUS: 3‘2; tOmOrrOW 5
1' . .I . ’ _ ‘_ 9 ' yearbook. the Kentuckian. It is pro ems an purposes 0 TODAY . E
g ., . - ' .’ . _ HOURS: 8:30-5:30 Mon-Fri. —— Sat. 8:30-l2 p.m. complaints about such JOHNNY APPLESEED ROSE” will speak :
i” _' ' 1' ' publications. may offer advice to :1 '|’|The Spirigelgéu" 7-30 p'm "‘2"? Grand :
. . ‘ . . . a room, U en en er. ver one '
' .‘ U ‘ . _- 1 _ g _‘ . _ _ TERMPAPER the edIIOI‘S 0f SUCh publications, welcome. Sponsored by UK People‘s Pyarty 4 E
. , ‘ . ARSENAL, INC. may advise the administration SKY-'1’g'sfcdct‘c’a'meeg"? 7:30. fi-mi ‘" - i
. . . 5 CI 3100 y d jp'i e . .' ‘ 7 . room , U en en er. usmess-s 088C? :
a. - . : g ._ Now 0 en for catglnoqot1,3000duglauyfteriicprapeyys dnd Idculty concerning student new officers ;
;. ‘, ' '~ ; ' P 5I96LENROCI< AVE, SUITE 203 publications' problems and :NYO'": gmtya'gs ’° ”'9" 'hf7summe' ' :1
_‘ ‘. , . ' erne a,a en ameeinga p.m,in 2;
‘ 2 _ - . . ; I. Loizfigisiseago Sgt-£24320“ nQQdS‘ and may recommend the newsroom. Journalism Building. :1
-, ~, , 3 . , , i ,, ., . '- - ' “ TOMORROW 1:
. _ . I . . _, . '05? De Ivery . we ”eedamca'sa'esmar‘ appropriate courses 0f action PEOPLE'S PARTY meeting at 7:30pm, in - E:
_. . _ , .' , y~ —————————-— room 245, Student Center. Open to all UK :1
' - , . ' ‘ . . , students, faculty and staff. :2
. . ’ . . - Phone MCAT\DAT: Summer home study COMING UP
‘1 .. ’ ' ‘ . ' review and testing program for the SUMMER SCHOOL IN MEXICO—Take Six :1
' , _ . - ,7 Medical \ Dental Admission Tests. hours of various courses. Contact the Office I I;
'. ' I V‘ Stereo components Am-Fm stereo For intormation write: Graduate ‘0' international Programs in Bradley Hall, :1
. _ ‘ radio 2 speakers and separate Iull- Studies Center, Box 386, New York, 0’ C3“ 758 35‘“ bV Friday, May 5' 2
2‘: w size tuiiy automatic Garrard NYIooiI AUDITIONS for three chamber operas 4 :1
1 . - . _ - - changer with dust cover _ $39.95. p.m Friday in the Laboratory Theater, Fine :1
I , . i.‘ ’ ._ ——-——-——- Arts Building. Roles involve five sopranos, :
' 3 . , ' t‘ sunny ditterent unitwmlbum-MI- ‘ ' one mezzo, three baritones, and choral :1
' ' , y track and Garrard changer . . . §$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$3 ensembles. . z.
-‘ - ,. V ‘ . ‘ 0 $129.95. THE ECONOMICS 0; MISCELLANEOUS 2'
_ i. . .- . . Mom-Thur. 5-12 pm I‘m-Sat. 5 Pin-l am 13 THE COLD WAR 3 VENERAL DISEASE intormation and
:_ ’ . . ~. . 4 s a By Robert Smith a reterral. Call Operation Venus at 255-6484 '51
.« .. . . _ y _ I HT SALE 51.25 Mondays through Thursdays from 1 pm. t .-i
\- .1 , . . ‘ _ . Sundfly 4'12 Pm UN‘TED FR: 6 g of Your Bookstore gt: ll pm. and Fridays trom 1 pm. to 9 pm?
. >1 . . a . .‘ ~ 2123 mfoyd Cigde : or : PROBLEM PREGNANCY and abortion 2:
. . . a - 1 : H a R up counseling. Call 257-4005 M d d :21
fl . j . . = Romany Road Hours: Monday-Saturday, 9-9 § 13,332,.3'; 5.3:: § Thursdays trom 7 p.m. to Zn iii/us, 22d 3:3
_ ‘, a Monroe,N.Y. 10950 a Thursdays from 1 pm. to 3 p.m. 5:;
_ . . . . _ I Emergencies call 253 2284 or 254 9855. $1
: f 1 ’ . $355S$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$SSSSSS FOR ANY INFORMAT'ON can the SG :1:
y . . Referral Service at 258 853i weekdays from ' 2:1
. _ 2. l0am.t08pm. . ::
.. 8 LOCATIONS ‘
' " ’ . LANSDOWNE PARIMUUNltlLi‘um- ~
.1 y s : . . 7 ‘s WINCHESTER ROAD 5;
., _ , y @l 0'“ HOUR NORTI-ILAND The
;.U\ I: . . SOUTHLAND itiy. i
~ . , ' : i , i DRY CLEANERS TURFLAND
"t . - J "a . . in l :\ you cl ailing rill/t m 0 row 4 VERSAILLES ROAD ‘ n a 2;
,c. -_ . _ .. ' - Hl-ACRES . , .
~ . ‘ ' L "' 7 HhLD OVER 61h"
. .- » . . ' BEECH!“ BIG WEEK! l
.- - . Specrals for UK Students my" -
_ y , . iii . itti liaicisliitfliiiilt 5::
' . . _ . _' ' scaunruvoy :-.'
: .. a and Faculty l autumnal: is
; '," . ‘ @625 NOW snowmen . 553
' T ‘9 GOOD ON TH URSDAYS ONLY ' '
g. . ‘ .' ‘ ‘ ' "760?. rURnAND MALL
, ~. U ‘ ~ . ‘ NAuoosauac. Ioaoaum 1mm 1::
_ g . DRESSES I ,
., 3 . . . _ . SL A C KS I The Kentucky Kernel
. . . . , t g .. _ 1 2-PIece SUITS The Kentucky Kernel, ”3 Journalism ‘ \ 23:
j " ' . . Wilding, University of Kentucky, 2-:
a: . , . . SWEATERS Fexinston, Kentucky 40506 Mailed Iiye 35:
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-' . ’ .' g , SKIRTS except during holidays and exam :2;
' , periods, and twice during the summer 2::
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g . , postage paid at Lexington, Ky. 1:3
' . . Published by The Kernel Press, Inc. 3::
, . - :23 :ournalism Building, University at :2:
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, y , TROUSERS AND sucxs 3 for $1.00 (OFFER GOOD AT CHEVY CHASE AND lANSDOWNE “a" as T... we ... m. m 2
" . . . . :Ubllsred continuously as The Kentucky :1:
.. : . erne since lyls. 2:2
. 7 O [OCATIONS ONLY) A‘Vef'iflnfl published herein is in- y 252;
. Irts- aun ered
. . mIs ea in d n‘ '
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. . ‘ . ‘ :3
’ . g , Ed :(ERNEL TELEPHONES :zi
. , . _ _ i or,EditorioI Editor - 2574755 3:3:
' ” ' ‘ “we" 0' O" "we" 5 for $1 00 “"
' _ . . . . . Advertising, Business, C'rculation - 2:2:
. ‘ Never any Inn" on quantity ”Hm ' z,
. . ‘ Newsroom - 257-1000 3.?
t ‘ ‘ .

 ) I _v ‘ 5 ‘ I ‘ I v I V
. - . , l I . ' , _ , . 1 4 .
‘ . I . . '. '
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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, May 3. 1972—3 . .‘I ' ' ‘
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0 v ~ - .

 EDITORIALS
. O
o o c
_ . t nt leran ce
. ‘l'he Hancock deCISlon. Perpetua mg l o .
' - ' 1
-_ "Nothing dies so hard. or rallies so long as intolerance.” We find Hancock’s decision shoved In a dark corner, bUt as l
—Henr.\' Ward BeeCher disappointing for several reasons. another part tOf an] extremelg ‘
' ‘ . , , - , ex reme varie
. - ,- The long-fought battle of the We have little doubt that the In one fell SWOOPIhe has Upheld tomplex y I
. ' ' , University‘s Gay Liberation University will rely on Hancock’s the right of the UniverSIty t0 deIny wile) )live in a state which still 1
‘ , f ' . '- ' Front for recognition as a decision in making its ruling a group the freedom of assembg, l kt thomosexuality with both f
' ' ‘ -' . registered student organization against recognition of Gay Lib. merely because it IeXists outISiIIe 0o S :crewed shut Our state I
' ‘ , » ' has suffered another in a string of From there the issue will go to the the bounds ofIIwhat Is now 50013 y 9395 h ' mis uided t
A. ' " ‘ . getbacks Board of Trustees, then the state acceptable. He has destroyed the believes,h oweveit) g t .
. ,I k . . u r
%. -' ' i The latest disappointment, one courts, and perhaps further rationale for the eXistence of that t it em atr atssmen t
4 , I that was much expected, came before the ruling is overturned, if literally dozens 0f campus 81‘ 0UPS, homosexua lIy presen S 0 some j
‘I‘I ' .. - from the office of state Atty. indeed it ever is. from Environmental Awareness can be legislated away—that i
f " g I ‘ I, G eneral Ed Hancock in the form Scoiety to Student Government, homosexuality Will vanish, or at 1
~ , . of a non-binding legal “opinion”. While Hancock says in his who have lobbied for and sup- least be restricted to beady:eyed 1
" . ' Hancock‘s brief takes account opinion that he supports the right ported changes in eXisting habitual criminals on the fringes :
, ~ ' 4 - . . 0f the fact that homosexuality of citizens to assemble for the legislation. 0f sIoc1ety . If someone makes 1t I
.. . ‘ ' ' ' among any persons 17 years old or purpose 0f changing laws, he against the law. . 5]
_ : ; , I I older in a “crime" in Kentucky, claims a UniverSity Is not the And Hancock has perpetuated . (I)f course, that 18 not true, and O,
g . I . . and adds: proper place for such assembly— the dark history of intolerance in it lIS time that the state and the b
‘ " .' ,_ " w] believe the governing of- and by association, not the place thls state one step further by UniverSity offic1aIls stop treating tl
" : ficials of the University are for a “legally and socially refusmg to recognize Gay leI35 a P011tlcal hot potato ,"
,I II . . . obliged to take recognition of the unacceptable" group suCh as Gay homosexuality not as a crime, not and realize they are dealing With
w' .‘ ‘ law and deny registration to any Lib. as some horrible sickness to be human beings.
. ~ . . . I a.“ .’ 197 j} 5' 7' \ ~ / x ' e ‘ 1
, . II I organization whose purposes are sailing/Klim- r l“ ” I .\ /l.r"‘" , \ ' » \(// . , , \
., I to encourage or condone Illegal 4'. J I/ / t ' / \_ ,./*\‘\\.,_ \\ " /
5 l . ' 9 acts.” a i / ,f _ // , . \\\ I \\_ ,/‘
I, .- ‘ l: ' v I l ' « / \~ I / \_ /,-—\ ‘\\ (new > "’ \
a - . , \\ ' _ 3:;
l i: x, - Established i894 LEXINGTON KENTUCKY mtgg‘ %§ ‘ a I‘M-m ’i 'V m _
" ,. 4 V \ L\ ' - “’;"”"I’I:‘j‘_"_‘::jym.;;~ a, ,__,M:-I WIWW"WH- .
. . ' ' i. ’ V A». noependen' newspaper pub spec n. students \V. I I \\\ .‘::.-,,V,,’,';::-'-'Jim-I-I-I.. IZZEL:Z:ZL:WWJWZM—-Ar..,,”ammmmm/M/m/I
I' .- . I I I- I . a' we or ters ty oi Kentucky §\ . I .' BAXW I “My... . w,“ ,,""”"’”’ .
5 Ir ‘ ' u' '. Mike A. nes Editorin (the! N i\ ‘57,," -. f ,‘"r’”.:”'";c/ \,_ 4 ‘ . \ \I I %
.v _ , . : Jane Brown ManagingEdnor «it [5.7 E. ( I EK . I _I_4 O I
'- - ' ‘ John Gray EdnoriaiEdnor "V {5'5 '- K t:
I "w l . V l ' . Jerry w L9WlS,A$SOCII'e Editor W "Jfitjgzb'. ,flfl .
~ '. I, ‘ j " -' Tim Ballard Bonn Brockman. George Gibson. /% -_ A‘- ‘ __ r. _h_‘* ‘ ' ‘ ,, e __ __,,__ A \ -. ,
C ' _ ,I I s . ' , : Greg Hartmann Ralph Long . ‘ , ’33, / I ti.“ .I‘
3 I_ I’ . I _. AssistantManaging Editors ’ ' \4 ,5 '3 2 ' . V , ' _ ,I, " , I“ -
.’ ' ' I , Michae‘Tiernev Sports Editor ‘\ x l/ ’ A, k ‘ ""'""":"'3‘ I ’l
,- II DichhOYniOn Ans Editor N\§ n (J './ , ’ < \ t "i [.43 ‘ ~\
. V '_ l , ‘ Dale Matthews NationalAHairs Editor \\ \‘\\ , ‘ \ \v g t; “ .ex ,, '
. ’ ‘ " , JohnEHs Production Manager ‘5 ‘l.“i\\ \ I \/ ii -- 15‘ 7/ f , . I . —’ “ \
- .- \ . an .\ ~ ., -.\ r s = 4&3?!»
. . . \ _..\ I»... ,-._,_____ , ..,.“\ .....\¥ 8/; 6' tin \\
,- ' . ‘35. A: \ . ,I x f ,_ F — ~ " \ \I \Y/ b“. ‘.
‘ ' : V '. Puotvsneo by The Kernel Press Inc \‘ l" s) ,1: i ' "Vii" ’ \ ANIMALS mu) \— \ , ___, A/ ~ -'
i 'r * l ; .' a non orotrt Corporation composed 0' JV¢ : r '7 ; [EVEK WATCH $2: ‘ ‘2‘ ~ ‘ K I :-—I
V ' “ students faculty and administrators __ ;;__~{L _ /l-—-' 6 ~~~-~—'\:~If f .I .c I .
. I . , »I .I , ‘I- II , I ' 31mg Universityot Kentucky ‘ ~ Ih—A‘ V CAKI‘MSJ Qy—’ , _‘: .L- ,___ __ “._ / .
~, . I. . FOUNDED 1971 I’ . ‘ ‘F’OPWT _ « - w. ___‘__“‘ K I“
- - , . I :I "°"""U""m"' TV CARTOONS CONTRIBUTE TO NATIONAI- VIOLENCE.- SAYS STUDY GROUP . . .
._ . . K ERN E L F 0R 1 lM. the readers write J
  ff ° ' d bl k hl
, , on o -campus lwmg an ac at etes
. I' ‘ ' ' Grounds. buildings, and structures must against you by your landlord. This is your concerning i.e., ”QUiCk. agile and black”,
‘- . .. 'I . EDITOR’S NOTE: All lawn to the edi- be maintained free of insect, vermin. and chance to improve the housing situation he has merely subjected Kernel readers to
I. 'I ‘I I . . . . [01‘ must l)(' typed. doublespaced and not rodent harborage and infestation. for students. Please take advantage of it. more ancient, ignorant and simplistic
_ . more ihun 250 words in length. The Bathroom walls, toliet room walls, or attitudes and stereotypes Wthh insult my
. ‘ . -I writer must sign the letter and give (lassr bedroom walls must be free of holes or (‘hesterAbell intelligence.
II: ,- .I. f It I ficallon, address and phone number. Send excessive cracks. Soph—Math At fix-5L Mr. Tierney, you ask the
- '. , I I- or (lelixer all l(‘[l(:l‘sIl() Room IllflA of All plumbing fixtures must be operable. question “Are black athletes better than
. ‘_ , 2. int-Journalism Building. The kerIneI: re- Heating facilities must be capable of Ray Payne White athletes?" The rest of your article
. I ~ . - " ,I SfrIWSI ”‘9 lighf ‘0 Cd" mm“ “" out heating all habitable rooms at a tem- Fresh—Architecture then deals With proving that blacks are
. . . Hanging mmmns- perature of 70 F with an outside tem— Indeed» better by questioning two coaches
_ . . , .' perature of 0 F. , :lim Ivy of Louisville high school basketball teams.
. f I , , I Walls and ceilings have no loose plaster, 5°ph—Ar0h'tecm'e ObV'OE‘Sly you tuned in heavily to Mr.
_' - ,‘I ' ” . - _ loose boards. or other loose wall materials. . I Hm" S raCISt generalizations, concluding .
. 'j . , Houstng Standards Roofs must be free of leaks causing , AliceIllarIris that “for the black man, it (athletics) is
_' I, I II , I damage to structure or to rooms. Soph—Nursmg the best way of life". Your article
'. . I ll . . . I . . I Yards and courts must be kept clean and . suggests that since all blacks have the
I _ you are d student livmg m on ape”. free ofphysicalhazards,rubish,trash, and Jim Open mherentability to excel in athletics, this is
I : . ment and you feel that your rent is to high garbage. Fresh—Journalism the natural, logkcal place for them
.'. I , 22%”),ngizzrscjlfijilogs Gigi/1:"?Zlitsh25 If any of these violations apply to your AIR h hone Prominent Black leader said this of
I I l 5 ' ' yourself or (if ou are movi‘ii out) others apartment, we urge you to take action by s Pul ‘Jr' llmself‘ [was trying to play basketball.
, . . I .. . lrom being gugjected to ”Mir or ”III a] filling out the Tenants Union Ad in the J" 0 5°" WES ganglmg and tall. but I wasn’t very
‘ ' .' housing nextkyear The Lexin ton Housig Kernel and sending it to the Tenants Union goo at ”5‘00 awkward."
. . . . Code states that" g ng Office at 305 Frazee Hall. 3100,? athletes l
.' '. ' - - Windows must. be screened, weather- Landlords willbeforced to adhere to the H lm y,“ Malcolm X didn‘t find his
'I ‘ . V tight, and free of broken glass. Screens Housing Code if violations are brought to I am very sorry Mr. Tierney saw fit to p ace m athletics,
: f . must be tight fittingI free of holes. and the attention of the Tenants Union, and "answerafew charges of racism made by I
.t I' . . . should not be nailed to the window frame with the semester nearly over, you won‘t Kernel readers“ in the Wednesday, April We"! Singler
I' iI or sash. need to worry about punitive actions taken 19 edition. To support his statement Graduate Student
f“ . , -

 t . , . i 1 . t .-
I . -. - : . .‘ L...
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. May 3. 1972—5 _ ' z 't. ‘
KERNEL SOAPBOX' D d. d d. '
- e lcate me locrlty a. :,
The following article is will always be mediocre tests, and more one—in—purpose. Point was found to be non-existant at even what it looks like, But “'5 I. -
dedicated to the concept of anyway. The point to be made on to be taken home: it is in a new the university and there was got to be somewhere. . , ' . ' .‘ ,' '
mediocrity as it is seen in thisis simply that mediocrity will period of flux and is looking for nothing else left to attack. in conclusion. as we plan our . t‘ , _ i ‘,
everyday life. exist as long as those large new directions and a new iden« Let metiea few points together path to the future. we must , _ C I. . .

‘ Mediocrity is that state. of mediocre classes exist. Maybe, tity. and be gone. The campus has trudge onward. doing all we can ,3 .1
mental and physical well-being and this is only a suggestion, the What a let-down from the changed. the student code has to guard against the mediocrity .r f: I. _.
characterized by averageness student senators (or perhaps previous year? changed. the student media has engendered by the system. . ' ’ “ '-
and the avoidance of those ups some canarieslcan sit in on some You see. this past year missed changed. and the old student masked sometimes as progress. ,k ,7 ' = fl , t'
and downs thoose disastrous of those test sessions in Memorial the animosity spurned on by the government assembly disbanded and venerated as another . .g‘ i: ,'
highs and lows detrimental to Coliseum. If they survive. then potential differences between two because it couldn‘t change. (‘lass resolution sponsored by some I. L . y ,
the steady existance of a person I'll admit I’m wrong. opposite poels of campus belief lectures sell. and probably well group. Keep m mind that ,‘g .‘ 5 ,
doing one thing (or perhaps 3 [am now going to characterize that occurred one year earlier. cnough [0 send t1 couple of enlightenment lS just around the _ . 3.7.: .
few, but no more) the same way student government (honesty is Thls past year'lacked the 9* students to Mexico for the corner and may appear at any .‘
as those countless other people do the best policy). It is alive, eitementofrunnmg (“It to get the summer. But that 5 all 50” 03‘" moment. but don’t hold your ' '. tyi
and have done in the past. Get moving. short of bureaucratic- Thursday edition of the Wildcat SH)’ about this campus and its breath, ‘( ~_
enough mediocrity together and ness. and still looking for that pot (a. student newspaper, 59’“? pretty mt’leCl‘e; 15" t It 50 we do ' ._ ~ ~. _ "I
you have a whole system of of gold it never seems to get each Sim“ Md seeing an artistic ht‘ed. that burning bush and no Willie Gates Ill 4, . .
mediocrity, or a mediocre year. It has lost that carnival Norseman dotting the GdItOFlal one Knows where to find it Or '- - a}
system, sense that permeated earlier page. 01‘ being turned away from I. ‘_ ; . ~.

. - . ' t the University Shop even though . = ,' . _v
fundamental to change 18 what years Of student governmen . . _ . u 600/ d . _, '. ; , _
I would like to call spirit—and when all that counted was being y0_u had forty legitimate coupons P to o “1‘ j ; t. -.
spirit is never mediocre. It grows at the Thursday night shing~ding clipped Wt from the Wildcat for 5,5351?“ éiigé‘: 'x. t ‘ . »_
on burning bushes and not on of bloated eggheads. Student lofty tree pairs of socks._ The 6"”? on /.~‘\51}}‘y , '1. 3, . ~,"-;'
biology 101 Mediocrity is buying Government is now more polemics of this Situationtfizz'led _ tiff; t ~, 77:;11€;~1 t t q . t .
those biology notes and still doing executive, distant, less frivolous. 0Ut~ hOWBVQI“ after radicalism