xt7jq23qzb80 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jq23qzb80/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-11-28 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, November 28, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 28, 1973 1973 1973-11-28 2020 true xt7jq23qzb80 section xt7jq23qzb80 The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 78
Wednesday, November 28, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Ford

receives

overwhelming

approval

By CARL P. LEUBSDORF

Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — The Senate over-
whelmingly approved Rep. Gerald R. Ford
Tuesday as the nation’s 40th vice
president.

House approval, expected next week,
would complete congressional confirma-
tion as required by the 25th Amendment.
ratified in 1967.

The vote was 92 to 3 in favor of the
Michigan Republican. All the opponents
were Democrats.

THE SENATE vote had been scheduled
just less than seven weeks after Spiro T.
Agnew resigned the nation's second
highest office and pleaded no contest to a
single count of income tax evasion.

Two days later, President Nixon chose
Ford. a 25-year—H0use veteran who has
been the House Republican leader since
1965.

In what members said was probably the
most searching scrutiny of any presiden-
tial nominee in history, Senate and House
committees sent hundreds of investigators
looking into Ford’s background and
studied 2,000 pages of raw FBI files.

FORD SPENT six days before Senate
and House panels, answering detailed
questions about his financial dealings,
handling of campaign funds and
philosophy. winning congressional praise
for openness and candor.

Continued on Fast 12

 

Senate
discusses
limited

enrollment

By LINDA CARNES
Kernel Staff Writer

LIMITED ENROLLMENT in colleges
and departments throughout the
University was the major topic of
discussion at the Student Senate meeting
Tuesday night.

A committee was formed to study the
criteria to be used and problems which
would go along with limited admission.
The committee will report back to the
senate at the Dec. 11 meeting.

Student Government President Jim
Flegle said students should be concerned
with limited enrollment because it would
affect them for at least the next decade
and decisions made now will chart the
course for future students.

FLEGLE WILL appoint another com-
mittee to study life-style dorms. A
recommendation was made by David
Mucci. SG administrative assistant, that
the Senate adopt a definite stand so
various bodies now considering proposals
on housing will be aware of SG's position.

“7M

x

A Bluegrass homecoming

Triple Crown winner Secretariat shows off his prize winning form at his new
home. Now retired to stud service at Claiborne Farm. Paris. the thoroughbred
enjoys his limited public appearances. (Kernel staff photo.)

A resolution presented to the Senate
suggests students be allowed to choose a
residence hall environment that most suits
their personality. The committee will
study the resolution along with a housing
survey taken by 86 that will be completed
this week.

In other areas of business. a proposal
was submitted and a task force selected to
study the possibility of student imput in
tenure and promotion decisions.

I-‘LEGLE SAID it was important the
students be included in the selective
process. He added the proposal did not
suggest putting students on committees.
but would allow them to write recom-
mendations and appear before com-
mittees.

The task force to study faculty
promotions and tenure will also report at
the next meeting.

Some discussion was held on whether SG
should continue to be a member of the
National Student Association (NSA).
Flegle told the senators that the $150 dues
to the organization have not been paid and
said the information and help 86 has been
receiving from NSA has not been useful.

86 HAS BEEN A member of NSA for
four years. but Flegle said within the last
one and one-half years the organization
has crumbled. He suggested the senators
make a decision at the next meeting
whether to stay in NSA.

Nominations for persons to fill several
vacancies on the University Judicial
Board were discussed and will be received
at the next meeting.

The 15 new at-large senators attended
their first Student Senate meeting and
were told their responsibilities. The at-
large senators have. the same power as
college senators but cannot vote at the
L'niversity Senate meetings.

 

News In Brlet

I, the Associated Prue
end the Kernel flat!

e Oliver speaks

OFiash floods hit

0$ex discrimination?

e House passes DST bill
0 Hearings postponed

e radars“ weather...

0 THE SOCIALIS'I‘ WORKERS Can-
didate for mayor of New York City will
speak tonight on “Watergate: A Socialist
Strategy for Fighting Back." Norman
Oliver. member of the national committee
of the Young Socialist Alliance (YSA) and
activist in the Black Liberation movement
will beintheSCTheatre at7:30p.m.

OLOUISVILLE. Ky. — Flash flood
warnings were issued throughout Ken-
tucky Tuesday and evacuation was
reported in at least two communities
because of incessant rains.

Adding to the discomfort was the threat
of tornadoes and severe thunderstorms.
particularly in Southwestern Kentucky.

O('INN(‘INNATI. Ohio -— A federal ap-
peals court is trying to determine whether
a woman who wanted to work at Louisville
Downs race track was turned down
because of her sex or because of her
previous work record.

The 6th US. Circuit Court of Appeals
heardarguments Tuesday ina suit filed by

Linda Moore. Louisville. Ky.. against

Louisville Downs. Inc.

J. Stanleton

0 WASHINGTON “The House today
voted to put the nation on year-round
Daylight Saving Time.

The bill approved by a vote of 311 to 88 is
one of several pieces of legislation
President Nixon has said he needs to deal
with the energy crisis.

Year-round DST could reduce electricity
and heating demands by as much as three

per cent. according to the White House.

e WASHINGTON —The Senate
Watergate committee acknowledged
Tuesday that its investigations of the milk
fund and the Hughes-Rebozo money
weren‘t going well and postponed further
hearings at least until January.

Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr.. D-N.C.. and
vice chairman Howard H. Baker Jr.. R-
Tenn.. attributed the delay to witnesses
who have failed to appear under com-
mittee subpoena. White House refusal to
turn over some documents and an ad-
mission by the staff that is simply wasn‘t
ready to proceed.

...deiuge nears end

Nature should begin to settle down today
with an end to these heavy rains. Today's
weathershould be clearing and cooler with
temperatures in the low 605 dropping to the
low 305 tonight. Precipitation chances are
60 per cent. Thursday‘s weather should be
partly cloudy with temperatures in the low
308.

 

  

(The Kentucky Kernel-

us Journalism Buildu. Universiw of Kentucky. Lexington my. use
Established 104

Mike Clark. Managing Editor
Bill Straub. Sports Editw
Carol Crmper. Arts Editor
Kay Coyte. Nancy Only and
Bruce Winges. Copy Editors

Steve Swift. Editor-in-Chief

Jenny Swartz, News Editor

Bruce Singleton. Photo Manager
Charles Wolfe. Practicum Manager
John Ellis. Advertising Manager

The Kentucky Kernel is mailed Ive times weekly during the school year except
on holidays and exam periods. and twice weekly in the summer.

Published by the Kernel Press Inc.. 1272 Priscilla Lane. unngton. Ky. Begun as
the Cadet in ms and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel dnce 1915.
The Kernel Press Inc. founded 1971. First class postal paid at Lexingttm. Ky.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any fake a
misleading advertising should be reputed to the edita's.

' Editorials represent the quinion of the edita's. not the Universiw.

Blood drive practical

A blood donation drive, beginning today and co—sponsored
by the Student Health Advisory Committee (SHAC) and the
Student Health Organization, is one of the most practical
and worthwhile programs offered students this year.

Because students insure themselves and four others of
emergency blood anywhere in the nation through donations,
we think more than the expected 2,000 units will be collected
by the program sponsors. The prospect that all UK students
will be insured blood (if the goal is met) is an offer few will
want to pass up.

We question the need of a free coupon for a hamburger,
french fries and soft drink given to each donor. This strikes
us as another form of paying donors, a practice the Central
Kentucky Blood Center alleges it is eliminating.

Support of this program by all students is urged. The 20 to
25 minutes you will spend donating blood today in the
Student Center will be well worth the wait in an emergency.

Recount is a mockery

Monday's recount of the recent at-large Student Senate
election results was a complete mockery of any election
system.

Not only did the top Elections Board officials—chairman
Mike York, and David Mucci and Mike Wilson, Student
Government officials—fail to notify all candidates of the
recount, but also failed to contact the rest of the Board
members until after the task had been completed.

The Board‘s decision to break the tie with a coin toss was
another major mistake added to a long list of blunders. The
committee should have done no more than recount the
votes. The Senate, then, would settle the tie. The Senate will
now have to add a clause to its constitution providing a
system for use in the case of future ties.

On top of all this, we weren’t too surprised to learn not one
candidate had the same number of votes after two counts.

To allow the tied candidates membership in the Senate
wouldn’t be too far fetched. Who will notice one more voice
(or empty seat) when the already bulky group next con-
venes?

 

Lifestyle dorms attractive alternative

"1

 

J

  

  

{,r 1 7/
' ‘ / . .

’NOW, lET ME EXPLAIN (IN All CANDOR) EXACTLY WHAT I MEANT WHEN I TOLD THE
GOVERNORS (IN All SINCERITY) THERE WERE NO FURTHER IOMISHELLS. . ‘

 

 

LCIIBI’S

 

Thanks Dr. Krogdahl

My gratitude to Dr. Wasley Krogdahl for
continuing public and media discussion of
the South Vietnamese political prisoner
issue with his letter of Nov. 20. Dr.
Krogdahl, in his rebuttle to my previous
comment: “Hideous Troubles Continue
Due to US. Foreign Policy“, remained
consistent, as I have always known him to
be, with his philosophy as a prominent
member of the John Birch Society and the
American Party in Kentucky.

One has to respect his principled con-
sistency, even if his views on civil liber-
ties, American motives in Vietnam, and
his lack of conception of the difference
between imperialistic war, puppet
governments, and a people's collective
national struggle do make much of his
argument an anachronism. And, while his
letter does reveal some short-sightedness
(he is critical of me for lacking sympathy
for the “utterly revolting atrocities in-
flicted on American prisoners of war” but
you know, when you compare the fact that
American POW’s came off those planes
healthy, smiling, and walking upright,
while those released after years in Thieu’s
tiger cages move themslelves along, a few

inches at a time, on flat wooden benches,
their legs having been long since
paralyzed. it does seem appropriate some
how to be critical of Thieu); still, I ap-
preciate the need that his letter filled in
keeping this critical issue in the public
mind—I was afraid that my comment and
Jean-Pierre Debris’ presentation two
weeks ago might be forgotten quickly here
at UK. Thanks to Dr. Krogdahl for this,
and for his articulate and interesting, if
regressive, views.
Jill Raymond
naive Junior in English

Hurray for the band

Well another football season has passed.
Unlike others this was successful—at least
for Kentucky. The loud huzzahs for our
victorious gladiators should not over-
shadow the accomplishments of another
fine group of young people. I’m referring
to the marching band which has done such
a splendid job at halftimes of our games.
In particular I would like to applaud Kay
Nelson as she is a baton twirler ex?
traordinaire. Hurray for the band.

D.F. Medwich
G.G.S.—-—senior

Harvest the
REVOlUllOI‘l

  

 

By DAVID MUCCI

Lifestyle dorms are residence halls
geared specifically to the needs and
desires of their residents. Such halls allow
the student to choose the residence hall
environment most suited to his per-
sonality. For some individuals, the study
dorm serves best; others prefer the non-
coed, non-visitation dorm; another may
find the coed visitation dorm the most
suitable arrangement; etc. Non-coed
visitation dorms, coed-non-visitation
dorms. social halls and interest halls are
other options that could be available
should students indicate a strong enough
interest to make the organization of such
halls feasible. In having the chance to
choose his lifestyle, the student is more
content, first because the institution has
allowed the students to select the en-
vironment most suited to his-her needs and
secondly because the institution has
responded to those needs by providing
lifestyle options.

In addition, the lifestyle dorm
arrangement, permits the student to ex-
periment, to find the environment which

facilitates . his growth intellectually,
socially and culturally. Considering the
amount of time an individual spends
within the halls and by the fact that they
are his-her “home away from home” the
atmosphere surely has a considerable
effect upon its residents and their per-
formance at UK.

THE UNIVERSITY will miss a valuable
opportunity to provide for a student’s
growth, while failing to make the in—
dividual feel as though he-she is significant
to the University, if it does not adopt the
“lifestyle dorm" concept.

Lifestyle dorms may solve or at least
ease the present financial problems now
plaguing the University housing system.
Twelve hundred individuals in excess of
the maximum capacity filed for ap-
plications to the residence halls in 1971-72.
This number dwindled to 72 in the fall
semester of the 1973-74 school year. Should
this trend continue, the University will
soon be forced to invoke mandatory
residence requirements or make the
dormitories an attractive alternative to
off-campus housing.

Lifestyle dorms across the nation have
proven to attract the student to campus
housing. A recent study of dormitory
vacancies by the Legislative Audit
Committee among Kentucky institutions
shows that the University of Kentucky
system is the only system in the state with
a 100 per cent occupancy and attributes
this to its liberal policies. If the University
is to stem the offcampus exodus, it must
utilize innovative programs such as
lifestyle dorms.

The University can join the many
universities of the nation who have formed
lifestyle dorms to battle the financial
problems of falling enrollment and student
rejection of residence hall living.

Parental, alumni and community op-
position to such proposals are cited as
major stumbling to their implementation.
If the University community feels such
innovations are proper and desirable, it
has an obligation to support such
measures and those in opposition of their
merit. The University must not shirk its
responsiblity to acquire what’s best for the
student or to attempt to enlighten the

surrounding community. It has done so in
perhaps its boldest move—the im-
plementation of the coed-dorm. The
University has weathered that storm with
no substantial losses. The University must
continue to support enlightened housing
policies.

Arguments for lifestyle dorms are ex-
tremely compelling. Institutions having
adopted such policies are many and are
growing in number. The prestigious in-
stutions such as Harvard, Yale, Cornell
Stanford, Columbia, Berkley and Amherst
are among the many adopting such
programs. The University of Kentucky
must look at lifestyle dorms and decide
whether it can afford not to implement
them on this campus.

 

David Mucci is administrative
assistant to Student Govern-
ment. “Harvest the Revolution”
is a weekly Student Government
column. ideas expressed herein
are those of SG and not
necessarily the paper.

 

  

  

 

 

9

opinion from inside and outside the university community

 

UK salaries: who gets
the money and why?

By MARK NEIL FASTER

This is an open invitation to the
entire University community
(faculty, students, staff and any
human being (or reasonable
facimile thereof) interested in
this institution) to see, study and
do with what you will the salaries
of the entire faculty AND STAFF
,of the University. Now available
for those who care enough to ask
is the answer to the question of
who gets what in the University
(the question of WHY people get
what they do will be dealt with
shortly).

As last year, there are those
who refuse to accept the
University’s contention that the
spending of taxpayer’s money is
confidential information. We
therefore have gone to the Office
of the State Treasurer in Frank-
fort and obtained the salaries for
the entire University payroll.
Unlike last year, however, the
facilities and personnel
necessary for compiling and
typing all of the information as
we did last year are not available
to me. So rather than making it
available on Library reserve and
other central locations, anyone
wanting this information is going
to have to send a self-addressed
stamped envelope along with
what departments (number as
well as name if possible) to Mark
Neil Paster, 265 Lyndhurst Place
Apt. 1, Lexington, KY. 40508.
Depending on the volume and
size of requests received, it may
take some time to answer all of
the inquiries because the staff is
very limited. Please be patient...
very patient.

SOME MAY ASK what the
significance is of making this
information public. That depends
on who you are and what you
care—and don’t care—about.
Last year a study of one depart-
ment of the University showed
that 63 per cent of all of the
students taking courses in that
department were taught by
faculty and graduate students
receiving only 15 per cent of the
salaries in that department. The
higher paid facultty taught fewer
students and yet did not have
appreciable higher research
productivity, during the past five
years, than did the lower paid
faculty members. There is
nothing in my experience at this
institution that leads me to
believe that this is unique to this
one department and it therefore
seems only appropriate that each
department be examined to see
where it is putting its resources.

in a situation such as we have
here it would be safe to say that
the priorities of the University
can pretty well be determined by
where it puts its money. For
example, last year. the Dean of

the Graduate School was paid a
full one-half more than was the
Dean of Undergraduate Studies.
Get the idea?

What I hope will happen is that
groups would get together in
every department of the
University to see for themselves
if the distribution of money is
appropriate to the distribution of
the workload. Hopefully, they
would also look at whether the
values as represented by where
the money goes are appropriate
for that department.

TT [8 IMPORTANT that this be
done on a department-by-
department basis because there
are some situations unique to a
given department. The faculty,
students and staff of a depart-
ment know best who is doing
what in that department.

There is another aspect of this
that was entirely omitted last
year and should not be forgotten
this year. Last year the staff
salaries were not included in the
disclosure. This year they are
available. Some of these people,
without whom the institution
could not function, are paid
horribly low wages. There are
full time employees of this in-
stitution who are paid less than
$4,000 a year——a difficult wage to
try to support a family on.

These statistics are being of-
fered to help the University
community gain a realistic
picture of the distribution of
resources and the relationship
between salaries and work
performance for the employees
of the University at Kentucky.
Salary figures are based on the
September, 1973 (for monthly)
and the Sept. 7, 1973 (for bi-
weekly) payroll available by
request in the Office of the State
Treasurer in Frankfort, Ken-
tucky. Figures are estimates of
annual income generated by
multiplying mo'nthly salaries by
12 and bi-weekly salaries by 26.

1N MAKING this information
available, the possibility and
perhaps probability of having
made some mistakes is fully
realized. Where they have oc-
cured they are regretted and will
be corrected as soon as possible.

it is my hope that out of this
disclosure and investigation will
come a new sense of where we
and the University now are so
that we might better be able to
figure out not only where and
what we want to be but also how
to get there.

 

Mark Neill Paster is a
former UK student.

  

  
   
  
 
    

    

PLAYER OF THE WEEK

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Mike Fanuzzi is the Kernel player of the week.
The junior quarterback from New Jersey ran for 160
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in dominating the Vols in the second half of play.

 

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 4—THE KENTUCKY KER

NEL. Wednesday. November 28. 1973

 

i—Eow

4

 

mike and maryann

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Home front

SG plans committee
to evaluate housing

By LINDA CARNES

Kernel Staff Writer
Student Government is plan-
ning to form a committee within
the next week to evaluate all
aspects of University housing.

The committee will consist of
six students and three ad-
ministrators selected by SC
President Jim Flegle, said Mike
Wilson, SG student affairs
director.

The committee was formed
after SG learned the present
administrative committee cannot
affect housing policy for next
year, Wilson said.

SINCE THE housing
regulations are published in
January and the committee will
not make recommendations until
the end of spring semester, any
changes is housing policy must
come from administrators,
Wilson added.

The administrative committee
is appointed by Vice President
for Student Affairs Robert
Zumwinkle and is assigned to
evaluate co-educational housing
and visitation, said Dean of
Students Jack Hail.

Hail added the committee will
present an interim report in
December.

BEFORE ESTABLISHING
the committee Wilson said SG
wanted to make recom-
mendations before the ad-
ministrative committee but was
told it could not be done.

“The present committee is not
a hearing body or board and is
not open to the public,” Hall said.
At this point the committee has
not decided whether they will
consult any group or individual
for proposals.

The SC housing committee will
compile a list of recom-
mendations for policy changes
and will present them to the
administrative housing com-
mittee, Hall, President Otis
Singletary and the Board of
Trustees.

80 MAY SEND a request to
Singletary asking that the
printing of housing pamphlets be
delayed or that provisions be
made to allow policy changes for
next year. Wilson said.

He added that 86 may look into
the possibility of having hearings
for housing residents to present
suggestions to the committee.

Main priorities of the com-
mittee include open visitation,
life-style dormitories, frosh
hours and corridor advisors, said
David Mucci, SG administrative
assistant.

CKCLU proposes
Nixon impeachment

Citing actions “deplored by the
directors," the Central Kentucky
Civil Liberties Union (CKCLU)
Board of Directors has
unanimously called for the im-
peachment of President Nixon.

This action follows similar
proposals made by the American
Civil Liberties Union and the
Kentucky Civil Liberties Union.

CKCLU President Arthur E.
Curtis said the impeachment
resolution stemmed from
presidential actions called
“harmful to civil liberties and
contemptuous of the American

tradition of rule of law."
CURTIS POINTED out,

although the CKCLU action
followed that of the national and
state groups, it was an action “in
line with the convictions” held by
the Board of Directors.

Curtis set several areas as
examples of presidential
misconduct:

—“The President’s obstruction
of the FBI investigation of the
Watergate break-in;

-— U S U R P A T l 0 N
Congressional
powers;

—“crimes perpetrated by
‘secret police’ (the ‘plumbers’
unit’) created by the President;

—Presidential authorization of
illegal wiretaps;

—“the illegal firing of Special
Prosecutor Archibald Cox.”

CURTIS ADMITTED the

Congressional study of im-
peachment is proceeding slowly,

“as slowly as possible. " Congress
is waiting for the people to push it
(impeachment)," he said.

0 F
war-making

Although the impeachment
issue is proceeding slowly, Curtis
sees chances of impeachment
“are very good, though it is hard
to predict what will happen.
Eventually, the weight of
evidence will be so heavy that
Congress will have to act."

Curtis thinks the celebrated
Watergate hearings have
“sensitized" the nation to
possible attacks on civil liberties.

“HE LACKS THE morality to
understand even why people are
against him. With each new
mistake being discovered—and
they’re being uncovered almost
every week—he (Nixon) is losing
support from a different group of
people,” he said.

We goofed

Because of an editing error in
Tuesday’s Kernel. Mark
Kleckner was listed as finishing
14th in original Student Senate
balloting on Nov. 14. Kleckner
actually placed 15th in the
counting.

Because of an editing error, a
story in Monday’s Kernel dealing
with faculty use of the library
was headed “Fines considered-—
Library limits faculty use." As
explained in the story, neither is
true. Fines are not being con-
sidered and the library has not
plans at present to limit the
faculty's use of books.

 

 

 An active year, I970

ZPG goal is equilibrium

By CLARE DEWAR
Kernel Staff Writer
N