xt7m3775xd70 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7m3775xd70/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-02-08 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, February 08, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 08, 1982 1982 1982-02-08 2020 true xt7m3775xd70 section xt7m3775xd70 W
KENTUCKY ”o *
No hlt Squeezing on Orange 4
~ 5 .-
m... mov b. no ex" lor lhose who .s ' Effiioi’lhféill.mn.§72332“.lt2°fépii -.
hate snow and rain as we may 509 some fl olive WIth 0 77-67 wm over Tennessee "
”4““ "4'. ."d 0‘ today. lemperatures .. Saturday. "to win leaves the Cats one
wall "mm “mm." 35 and ‘0 during the ‘ game behind three different teams len-
ddy °"d ”" the I°W3°3 0' "'9'" "‘9 W'"ds v \ nessee. Alabama and LSU . all who are
w'" b. blowmg about ‘0 mph. A rerun 0‘ ' tied for first in conferente standings '.
the some is expected for tomorrow. l. .4 44 4 5,04,49,44 pages 5 and 6 4
Vollxxxw. No.l0l Monday. Febrwryd, I- unwomiy olKonlutky iexmgvon “mod” An mdependenv sludcfil nempape: smre 1971 _ ._ - y
.g ' n .l ’25. a' “‘- a '
. -._';':'..'.'..' 4. . 4’ 74 ‘14 1’ ’74 sat . 4'

‘ ., .. ; ,4. ,, ,. . , .4 , 0 p0 my a 008 runs u e ;
444w ’44 ”’4, 4444444 1'? ' 4; ' ———_——By NANCYE DAVIS unagllocated funds figure is policy on budgetary procedures," its lobbying effort — $2.000 for the
4 4.4.4 . "j " ‘4 4: ' 4 .‘ " 4. 4., 4 . 4 ' a . ' . . “mi eading,"noting other income— Dinkle said. “All through the year, UK/University of Louisville coalition 47‘
4 . $43; .4445. «4i ’ -' ~‘?*444 g - Assrstant Managing Editor from earlier fundraising projects — when they should have been sending and $1,000 for miscellaneous ex- '1 'l
-4 4% i. .z-4: ' 4. .2-‘4' 444 a 4 l ""l‘ —————-———— W41“ berealiaed once theexact expen- funding bills through the proper chan- pensos. SA then planned to lobby in 2

. 4.44 4 :. 4» ‘fi ~44 4 44.44.44 3,444 4 1- - .- £4 4‘ , ;. 4 4 ditures are in. He estimated the total nels, namely theA&Rstanding com- Frankfort with the Student Govern- 4a 4

. 5 ‘ . g 4.3V, 2"” ”Y‘" 71*- 4" .4” 339:5 ' . yesttugegmmuged at 41:485t unallocated funds remaining in the mittee, they are only now beginning merit Association of Kentucky, but

_' 4 - 4% ' n w ’s n we on me ng SAbudgetatabout$5,ooo. to." laterdecidedtolobb onits own.
”l 44 , S? *3 l‘ " '» 4 ~ W ~ 7% show theSAhas allocatedmpercent He said another source of money Dinkle is expected to introduce a “we didn‘t expeit SGAK to be ,". .
4 44' i :44 an" M5 3 . 44 ~ ’5 of its 1&1-8‘2 appropriations budget, not accounted for at present may be bill at tonight‘s senate meeting that viable (when the budget was drawn ,—4 4r. .. .

' ' 4. 4;. l ’thmfi‘é‘ 4‘. 4 leavmg only about $1,000 in unen- returns on projects over-allocated by will put a two-week spending freeze up i," Dupree said. “So we paid SGAK i -'
,4..Q.._4.4 44. #4. i 44444 44 4 4 j? M V; Y “9,4444 cumbered funds. the sentate or cancelled. Once the ac- on SA “to give the comptroller time to dues out of (the lobbying funds ) -'~. _-' .~
'4. it SN. 44 ' 444444444 34 This is especially significant counts are brought up todate, Clark review student government expen- SA has allocated 314525 of the ._, " 4".
film gnaw 54.4442: ”44 " because during the current fiscal said they will have those leftover ditures through this date." original 324000 for lobbying expenses: 4‘24'44'4
44.4 4 '4; " ' ' ‘ .5 @4444 44s,}? . year, SA fetal: ftor thefirst mtg: 481 funtk tto add to the unallocated Exactly where all the money went $275 as an emergency bill passed by
<'.‘.~~ .4. r... 4 : 4'49“.“ cw»); “4 4- = F v.“ rom ea 5 n per semes in amoun. to is difficult to ascertain. Comp the Senate Review Committee (a ' 4'
444.4 . 44444 4 if“ ‘44 ’ Ml 4.4 " l .41 student activity fees, bringing the What projects were over-allocated troller Will Dupree said the senate's group of senators and members of the '

4. 4 4.4 44 :44, g.“ _.M3‘ 44 " ' v 4’ 444 organization’s total budget to $57,200 or cancelledisnot known, butalist is priorities may have resulted in the executive branch that acts on ‘.

§ 4 n..." f 4 44 . :344449f‘4ns' K 4 4 ' —moreth4anfour timestheamount it expectedtobe presented at tonight’s money being spent faster than ex- emergency bills between senate ‘, ‘.'
4444;! a fix ..".""*- ‘ .4: 4 ~ . has had in the past. Of the total, senate meeting. pected. “They're the ones who passed meetings) and $1,250 at last week‘s
I '52-. a! W " ' 4 . 'i ' a. ~"" ' $412,500 came from state appropria- One reason exact figures are not $2,000 and $3,000 bills and then argue senate meeting. Some senators are Vs;
' 1” *1 444 44 - g V . :5 . tion, $37,500 from student fees and known is because Comptroller Will over $20and$30bills." concerned not with lobbying itself. .. f
4 4 , 4 44 44 ‘ 4444'; $7,” from earned revenue. Dupree, who was charged with keep- But, according to Dupree‘s own but with the way the money is being -'
~ 4 44 a.“ 4 4 ~:» -—""—_—- ing close tabs on SA‘s money, ap- budget figuresbills originating in the spent in Frankfort. ; .
. ." " ' " 44 . . 4' - ’ = I parently didn’t. As of the first of this executive branch, of which he is a "You can‘t tell where the money { .‘
444 {.44 44:;4 anaIYSIs year, however, he is required to give member, account for at least one- went to and when,“ said Engineering f ;
' ' .44 . M ‘2' ”.444 44.444, ..-4 '. 5 amonthly report tothesenate. third more in actual expenditures Senator Malvaria Smith. “( The lob» . f, .
I 44 ‘z ‘2 " ' ,4”, ~ at g _ .;4 4 9 ——_—_—_ Former Senator-at-Large John4 than bills originating in the senate byists) don‘t have to account for '
.f 4 . ‘ 44. 4 ” in. ‘ 4 After taking out $6,075 for office ex- Fullam said he informally requested Although it appears that much of anything." 4. ; '.
.4 .4 4 ... .- .. .z . 4 .444 *» at!“ perms, SA allowed itself $48.95 for at the first senate meeting Aug. 31 SA's money is already tied up. in Smith also objected to the way the "
44 '4 3‘” ma. 7.. 44 w“ 23 policy appropriations. As of Jan. 25, that the comptroller or chairman of terms of actual money spent, it ap- first bill was handled. “They railroad ., 4.
. w — . ..; , . . ' mm” 44444444444" SAhad allocated“7,923.95,or%per~ the Appropriations & Revenue Com- pears tobein goodfinancial shapeAs these (bills) through the SRC and ,f .
Off and running cent, for past, future and current pro- mittee “give us a list of all the ac- of Dec. 31, it spent $15,204.85, mostly grant it emergency status. That way 4 4 . .
UK cemen Melvin Turpin, 5mm one of Kentucky's many fast breaks Jects. Only $1,001.t5 remains in counts we have, what money can be on advertising ($1,736.06). fees to at- the Senate never sees it and probably ’4 .4
during Saturday night's 77-67 romp over the Tennessee. unallocatedfunds. 4 spentandforwhatpurposes.erlsaid torney Keith Baker ($3,200) and won‘t know about it. (The executive 4‘ ‘ 4.
. thVice4 Pregsédlent Bobbylclaatsasf ‘fine' and then nothing ever came of unspecified “other services" ($3.742) branch) doesn‘t have the balls to take 'l
ere is n 'ng unusua a it." Baker was allocated $5,500 at the (the bi115)t0 thesenate_“ .'
UK pr Of 9830’ discovers making most of its policy appropria- Fullam said he requested Dupree beginning of last semester for his (Every bill is supposed to go ' ;
Id t A n b .l . tiors in the first semester. “Finan- give a financial impact statement at semi-weekly visits to the SA office to through three committees, beginning 4‘4 ’ 4
0 es merlcan u, dlng crally, we’re in sound shape because each senate meeting, “but he never give free legal advice to students. In with the Committee on Committees ~4 4 —‘
of the fact that the majority — about did seem to know how much money addition, he was allocated a total of and then passing through a standing 4 :
W Although Dillehay did not offer any 80 percent — of44the expenditures are we had.4 4 $600 for services rendered in SA’s committee and the the Calendar Com- '4 4
83444044 Staff Writer-MM“ suggestions about how the structure spentinthefall. 4 4“lt’s insane. (The senate has) this case against General Telephone of mittee. which decides if and when the g 4
was used, he said the association “It doen’t bother me,” said Frank thing where they keep saying, ‘We Kentucky anda related suit challeng- bill comes before the Senate.) .
———.——-..____.___ between the foundation and the Harris, director of the Student have to spend (the money) or we ing the constitutionality of Gov. John “I object to two things. One, the 4'.‘
modified wood and stone tools make Center. “If they want to spend all might not get it again," Fullam said. Y. Brown's formation of the Public way it’s being done. taking the bill to '. ’
A Uelfl ”$093128! professor an- the Monte Verde site important scien- their allocation in thefirst semeter, “They’ve gone overboard and they Service Commission. the SRC, and two, the way they‘re ' . ,
“mug: knFn y hi tegltSCO‘lerty 01'4““? tif4i4cally. 4 4 4 4 that’s fine, as long as they don’t didn’t have the maturity to (allocate SA‘s lobbying effort has borne the spending the money,“ Smith said, 4.
. .4 34 Ll'e mitiga— datiurabas Egg There 18 nothing like this violate University policy." it properly). They’re like a kid with brunt of criticism by some senators “All this money is being poured into 4 .
’ to 14' 000 4 ng c . assemblage of4r4natenals anywherein But Clark said the large amount an allowance — they get $5 and they about the money it has spent enter- (lobbying) and it‘s similar to the GTE :49: .'
Thegtrucemsture located near Monte the Americas, 01411341337 §ald- This spentinthefirst semester may mean have tospenditright away." taining leg‘slators in Frankfort and at (suit) and the rally," Fullam said. ',
Verde Chile was described b an ‘squomfi‘; intan-SiteinChile ”30:2: some belt-tightening in the future. “It’s one hell of a way to run an the December Pre-legislative Con- “No senator in his right mind will _.
I 408454 Tom D Dill ehay yas a oAm 4° 044 5 man-Sites ".1 “horn now on, only emergency high- organization,” said Communications fercnce, but members of the lobbying vote against it — it looks like you‘re , . '
“wishbone-shaped fohndationn made “8:344“ ~ ts “alwa s sus ted priority bills can be done,” he said. Senator Jim Dinkle, “when you don‘t committee are quick to defend it. for tuition increases and rate hikes 4
of om ted d d bbl The ogis y 9°C “We tried to tell the senate that for even know what the account balance President Britt Brockman, one of The senators are afraid it will be used
c pac 58." an pe 5- early man used wooden l°°15 1“ the eve dollar (the ) s d toda is I don't understand wh the SA‘ thr ' t ed lobb ‘ ts ‘d ' ”
foundation contained the remains 0f Americas” but none had been found ry y . pen . y, ' , . . y y s ee regis er4 “5 ,‘ 5m ' againstthem. , _ " .
imbedded wooden stubs, probably us- before the Monte Verde discovery be there may be4something more impor- haven t kept an itemized expense ac— “The effects of the issues (we re lob- Another sore spot in the allocations . .
ed to form cross-hatched walls and said. , gigttx‘geiiditm twoorthreeweeks co4t4i4rli4t4 up (t; nowk.4n444l 4 dm' 4 t 44 Ehying fort-4)44may rig: be felt now, but controversey his than, issue of the .
thereof. Thesite was discoveredwhenastu- ' . . e ”F. n a "us ra 1.0“ €37.35 impor n issues. Emergency C air. 9“ Brockman
Twoburn-stainedclay hearths were dent at the Univeridad Austral de Clark also said the $1,001.05 is now admitting its wrong in its Originally, SA allocated $3.000 for See SA poge3 .4
found at what is thought to be the en- Chile m ValdiVia, where Dillehay . . - . 4. -
. - taught from 1976 to 1979, gave '
trance of the structure, he said. , . 4
4.... 4.4.4.44... [88! n m e 13 re am
. and fractured-stone tools were found large cow 5 tooth4. . ' ,‘ ,
at the site, he said. After further in- out tomb: 304:;ng 44:“; 3:1“ . '
vestigation of the area, the architec- . _ . n . . ' - z '
- - - abouthalfthesrzeofahuman skull. G ' ' . '; .
Smith?” was nscoveren n _ m4 4,, ,4 4,4,4... 44,44, ov. Brown preserves spirit of CHE recommendation for unwersrty funding a
4 ' 4 - was provided by the National Science ?
4The “disarticulated skeletons" of Foundation, the National Geographic m ding of the Council‘s previous two. Some increase for the two was He may yet. for another part of the X454!)
“V9 04" 5” adult mastodons were 5004'“! the Uruvendad Aistral de Assistant Managing Editor with a few added wrinkles. Brown necessitated by Brown‘s recalcula- governor‘s compromiseis to havethe Hank
found In one location “mm" the foun- Chile and UK. he said. 4 began by guaranteeing each universi~ tion, but the bulk of the money was us- national consulting firm of Price '- «,
dation and the remains of a baby Dillehay said he wrll personally m ty a 3 percent across-the—board in- ed to guarantee UK and UL the fun- Waterhouse& Co. study the universi- :" '-
mastodon were foundmanother area, superVise further excavation at the Th it 4 if her educ tion crease in appropriation, then ding they would have received in the ty system and make recommenda- "‘ 'r .
“3.3"" 4, ,, S'te' He plans to return to Monte e wr er cove s rg . a . dispensed the remaining funtk accor- Council‘s January compromise. tions as to what duplicative or non- .'- "
Eighty-two work bones (bones Verde next January for the Kernel. This article contains . . . . . .- ,,
used 4 ti di . d 4 4 hisobservatlonsandconclusions dingtothemissmnmodel formula. Brown saw thisasnecessary to allow productive programs can be 4,
- milling 4ve 581128 a: gang; [A book coglm'gg‘ebedmglfld ' The mission model was used eritire- UKand UL to begin approaching full eliminated. His goal is to have the 4.4.44 ..
woodmg tools hzv?eb::n tall'lscovefed :3nc4tu454410rtisheoft 4:4in ‘ pu ‘she 'l‘hehigh' ereducation funding' battle ly in the Council’s November pro- funding according to the "“3510“ the analysis done 500" 50 the savings can 172'“
Dill ehav sai d l .24" n nex ive srx years, a rs 440 have ended Fri da with posal, and a “floor" similar to Council developed for them in 1977, beturned back into the system before
; . “ ' ‘ '. .. . l i w- (4143,?me Brown’s a 4 )ement Brown’s was a part of the Council‘s The other six universities are already the 1983-84 academic year. '. ~‘. "
3m; 2 m . 4.4 , . .. . ' . .' ' . . . Januarycompromise. closetofull funding. President Otis Singletary was s . "
4 ”(44%”; ‘44" ff 345.411" :2: ”W4435‘g‘t33‘gfmg £437 ll: fixaggzgpegtqfamsfiwg He then sweetened srx of the seven Overall, Brown found a way to give pleased with the governor's decision . . )7
,t§;‘:ga44444~;w§4:”§€§4:.T'§"-}44.'.:44 states rted’ universities in lm- totals. splitting $400,000 in increases each university an allocation it could to retain at least part of the mission . '. "
4443:444et" Vi‘fi‘l‘”‘*?¥fizgk4 84 uppo among the so-called regional univer- live with, and he also managed to find model proposal. “The comments of .
gaf’t‘4’igfifl guhggfl '——————— sities (Eastern and Western Ken- nearly $2 million more to make the the governor and the legislative
W I - lucky Unlversllles. and Morphead plan more palatable than any leanersnlp represent a strong
44%44-4n 4' ' ’41‘ 4'45 ana YSIS and Murray State Universities) for previous one. dorsement of the mission model can - "
, » 4f, 1&2-83 and dividing another $1.4 “I feel we‘ve y'ven higher educa- cept as adopted by the Council on .1"
4 4 ‘4 ——-——-———-—-——Bmwn ended a month of wranglin—g million between UK and the Universi- ti4on good support under the financial Higher Education, he said. .. 4 4 . , 41
2:44 4444 . 4 44, ' Friday with his news conference an- ty of liouiswlle over both years of the circumstances, he said Friday. I Singletary labeled the nussron 4
@3444 44 - ' . . ' ‘ 4 nwnce'nmtof a final compromise on biennium. Wishlhad more money. See MISSION MODEL, page 3 44 4‘
“'%f*a*$ei 4 4 ; ' ‘ »4 the Council on Higher Education’s ‘ r
. 4» “2-“ n . 4 n - .. - ' " . "
Z figie ' , 4,4 :Sfimmvuslfg proposalnm gm: How the mlsslon model compromise will work - J .
l? . "'. .44 t . . 44444 attheconference thatthetimeandef- 0° 4 4 “4 - l .1 -'
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pattiififi 4 3!». _ ‘ :‘4cfé’f4fiv by the m0] and m Richard School workman recommend-Non recommend-"on uppropnolmn in"... Iwwhfloo '
.- . ~ . ~ in Committee were: naught" lune —_—— . '
‘92s. 1‘ 4 I" .g ' m 4 ti proposal is not “imbedded in con- —-_——_—-= a
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. ‘fnLme £5244: '8 '40 co' ‘ WWW-III.“ .
»» surname in the next two years. n... m- n we ————-
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caveat was part of the mum-faceted Inn—mm:- mom mum—mm ,
proposal Brown, Home Speaker Bob- _
_ by Richer-then, D-Glasgow, and 4 ,
4 Senate President Pro-Tom Joe o...u..n-....m.... ' '
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This map eplcts t oyout o a recent architectural finding near lncreueinstate awhtionlnthe 4c "44""w'm4m
Monte Verde, Chile. UK anthropology professor, Tom D. Dillehay, Wynnofdlelfl-Otfluudun. ““1“"; 2""... "0......" M.....,,...,.,,,.m.., h... w...
who discovered the site, believes it to be the oldest known architec- The famula Brown M M h“ . - 24:33:: xxmfimn'h'fkmt M'M‘MMW" ‘
turol structure in the American continents. W W insane m ' N“ H44 4 .
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' ‘ . ' I U c ' I
O I Brown 3 decision to approve HE s funding proposal was overdue;
w l . _
‘ ' compromise distribution plan provides positive step for future
‘ “ ' Gov. John Y, Brown‘s endorsement Friday In the past month he endured fierce lobbying
. . . . . . ’ . . -, l
, , .3 - of the COUI'iCIl on Higher Education 5 con- from univerSity presxdents, legislators, alum- HMMM ‘l'Hl’S CROP S START‘ N’ TO LOOK AS
- ' ‘ 7 9 _. troversial mission model funding formula ni and others trying to get the best piece of the "I TE OI A 0T .T.‘ ’ I o
. . ' " '. should be highly commended. With his support pie. BEIL D ASAA p Y R BEAR tN A H BO I D
. . - of the plan now a matter of record. Kentucky . _ l TER~ H SA " ' TT lVfi '1' SOME.
.‘ - T can begin to build a quality system of higher A"? on Thursday, he spent 90 ininutes with I D B E- ER G /
. '- ,_ -, education the commonwealth can be proud of. the ueneral Assembly 5 leadership hammer- ' RELIEF ”.5 UC COR, I HAT ls, ‘
. ‘ - ‘ . y . mg out a method to dispense the money that ,
‘ . _~ Th9.$0Vef'h0F_5 (190510“ to abide by the wouldbeacceptable to the universities and the , \ ‘ \\
. . ,- . Comm] 5 guidelines represents the deSire to legislature. That plan was announced Friday, \ v. . .
.- - , ‘1 . allow two years Of work by the LounCil and 3 and immediately garnered favorable reviews i . ‘ )1
. . g V, select panel of consultants on higher education from all involved. '
.1 - _- to come to fruition. It also represents the end , , . _ d
I ' ' of the jnternecine warfare the university Brown's plan fOUOWS the COUUCII S intention “ ’ l'
‘ 1'. ' _ presidents were bracing for, a war which t9 ensure adequate funding for quality educa- 5? ’- (a,
: _ . , could have boiled over into the General tion at every state univerSIty. and his commit- { ' y ,7 4 ti
. , .. . Assembly before the issue of higher education ment to it is enforced by his Willingness to find é l g / $
. . funding was resolved. nearly $2 million extra dollars to sweeten the j i f y 5/.”
1, .- ‘ 7 . . ot. For that he should be congratulated he ‘-
. - . . h I p . . ' f « . .
At the Rally to Save Higher Education e d has proven that his promise last October I 7 fi‘ (1? (It) . ~ 4
. here last fall, Brown admitted he had created wasn‘t in vain ., .; J $8 , ‘ K
' ,- ' . a hardship for higher education with the fun- ' k l , 4 g (3/ - 2 .2 r4
It ‘ , ', ding FedUCtiOHS he called {Or in 1931- He asked Brown, however, could have saved himself ’ ‘ ' , ;, ‘ T- ‘, eff-fifth
. . . . . . . . - , .- .7: '/;- ca
.1 at that time for patience and time to correct and all of higher education a lot of tail and Rh : I ‘ . ’ \m/k. ‘ ' gas-7’1" ”4/4 "“-
higher education's budgetary woes. sweat by delineating as quickly as possible W 7059’) W 7/"2' ' ‘

i « ’ , ' , , how he wanted the money due higher educa- :5 ~ - =~-——-- _——‘ _. ' t / a” 94:?" ,- ' £323.81?

, - . In the ensuxng four months. the CounCil set tion to be spent 9 “" 7' F771. 5. ‘-.'« 1:15:37}:

. in motion the mission model proposal, which ' . , . . $3 “:3 w v” i. x— 51/311253

, fl ' ; guaranteed most new money to UK. the Instead or being firmly dec151ve ’ as a strong 3 "‘"' L: fi‘ ti . I’grés JfifI‘jij’
..j University Of LoulSVlne and Northern Ken‘ gOVernor Should be, Brown vaClllatedon the 3.. =2, 7 11:77;- Hz; . i‘—~€:{éf:_::;";f
. . , . _ , . . . . . $— . — ——‘-‘«—--/‘ W.» —-;=_":'_-:—‘;T.r
, , . , - 3 . tucky Universrty, refining it slightly in issue, repeatedly asking for more time to __/ - We: :7.an 7 ~13“ 7-1—23.“
' '_ . ~ ‘ January when Brown said there was not StUd-V the facts. The time he continued to buy a := ‘- 23. E g E 5” = '3' ‘4- E '3 E , 5 E322»,
' enough money available to fundit. was spent w‘th univerSity lobbyists m closed- -...“ =‘ ENEJIEVEEERL—e — 5 E E 332. E?
_» ‘3 , '. ' door arm-twisting sessions, not in formulating . é -‘ 3—. 2 7:5 as ’7 E e _. = 7:? ,5 _- '2 ‘f -
. a The governor then sat back and listened as a plan everyone could accept. The result was I ”‘1‘; _ :fi' 7 ""2" ==— -' ‘_‘ ’ "' a: 1.. "
' j ' . g . representatives from the re ional universities not firm lic but a continuous flow of slin s ’ 3' ~~ ‘“ - » —-——\ V

: . ~, » called the proposal discriminatory and unfair. and arrows. (”ME-W

. ~ ' ' I ' l
, .. paid for by students

Dorm'tor'es ha e st 'cte t 's'tat'on pol'c of be h k
‘ _. 3' .. _‘ - “Why doesn‘t [K have a 24-hour A random survey sent out last year This is where you come in. I was
. 1.”. , ' dorm?" “Why can‘t a 21-yearold up- by the Student Associationwhich was V . _ H B . k U , , , U I D . afraid that if 1 took this to the ad- _ _

.x . . perclassman bring a female to his returned by 534 students. found that iSitation oursaf enr mmr mverszties— ppcrr ass orms ministration this issue would die .3 _

_, .’ ‘ dorm room until 7 pm. during the 47 percent of those surveyed said they _.M--_____.__ behind closed doors.lostinacommit-
. 3 .- week” I would think that these are would support some sort of 24~hour [..mvwm gundd, Monday Thursday Friday Saturday tee somewhere. One person can be
If. , ,1 good quest:ons. and With your help we Visitation policy, while another 27 per snowed, but 23,000 interested people
. g . should be able to answer these and cent favored extended weekday and . _ . who are footing the bill can not. The
. other pertinent questions weekend visitation policies. That t ‘\ :ffh‘; Hm I $1.; hi"... We?“ 1:42. Tide" 13?“ student body will not let go of this
,. ‘ 3, _ totals 74 percent of those answering ( ...M. w x..." m NM. i.. m 3.0.1.3.. m \wn ljm issue until they find out the whys 0"
. . . . Guest requesting longer Visitation hours. (a, —_7\7\I:V:ll—::\ .il rmium ”a4. .i‘a IY‘ \liilnigli' Id..- m \liilnixht an "V 2a m 104 m —-‘ m this Situation.
_ .. '» percent said they were satisfied With 1 «2-... 1 r‘ w :.~ uni 'Y winim in m m \iidmm {0304 m is m in 30.. m -2a «i . . .

I‘ ‘. ‘ ...: ._ I I current Visitation policies and 6 per, tit-W! in MI \‘liw - lp (v. lip m '. U» ”I ll? n- RP m l1 .ii‘a m ' ll‘ I" l2 “)4. m " Those 0f you llV'lng In doms Who
.' .- ._:..;»~ 2 o (-enttijdnotrespond.i , 55:: rag“... m: .31.“. wouldhkemseea changesmd S‘?‘
t 1". ‘ 1W7. ., plnlon I thought this information alone —.__—‘“"’—”— A__ together' meet m your house COUHCll

. . _ . MU] d False “nous questions. but the 31 .ii.. . Z... Winn... meetings, write letters to the Kernel
’5 . . ’ 7 . . matter became increasingly con« t :.f.‘,.1.,.,j t" tt'vt‘i” #:5113353 or get in touch With me at the SA Ot'
.' ; 3 . . i irst i would like to make four ma- troversial the further I looked. l ... in ~. -. mi regulated fice. You have the tools. (Before you
W?.!t':‘-l pi )or points \‘ t Y b (SA . 't f f ———.—— ——~————————————— freshmen feel excluded. remember

3. 1"; - . .zlhere Is a large group of students , ”teenf e ed; segdtorm'or' tn" ”.3, ”on“............m..n..-.i..m ‘ no changes would take effect until
2-: .. .. . _ desiring a change in current Visita- 59‘"? m orm me a ‘5 issue C,“ CL“‘;§“"‘;',,F,‘."‘,’,‘{'l‘mffid , , . H. _ , next year, when they W00“ apply ‘0
‘. . ‘ ... . . “on thleS' Comes up every two years or so \Vlth t it \t ii» .i t m min unavaia i upiinrtquisl you )

;‘ .- - -‘. .xL'K‘s VlSitalion policies are much very minor changes. Britt Brockman. ' ‘ .

...: .3 _. more conservative than that of Its SA presidenl‘ added, ”This has beena i would disagree for two major pus area coordinator, there are peo- nessee, the “heart of the Bible belt," If there 15 “0t Widespread support
’.“ , benchmark imtitutions major issue for the past five years, reasons First, by merit of their age, pleat the front desk atall times in all has 24—hour visitation open to up- on this issue, then I Will 18! it quietly
; ' .zDorm residents have the right to however. the results have been only nearly 100 percent of upperclassmen dorms (paid for by the students) so I perclassmen upon request! die and pursue it no 10118911 Iam nota
f‘i“ 4, t demand longer ...Snanon hnum‘ symbolic in nature and have not are legal adults. Second. Jack Blan- do not see where any added expense The final argument is that forces “bleeding heart" "0" d0 1 see myself
p. -. .zThough the”, (10%,” appear to be resulted in any real action I feel like ton. vice president for business af~ would come in. But even if it did, the outside the university exert indirect as one radical StUdEht trying to drag
‘ 5,. a good reason why. ViSltation pohcfi most students would favor some sort fairs. said the dormitories "by and 1979 poll established that 36 percent pressure to keep things as they cur- the University administration kicking
‘_ .1 , ._,_ '-- remain more or legs unchanged. of longer visitation policy “ i would large are paid for by the students." I surveyed would pay a nominal in- rently are. In that case my question is and screaming into the 20th century.I
",1-.. .' ’ . Together we can investigate these agree Last year every candidate for trust that I would not appear out of crease in room and board costs for Who are these people, and why are am merely keeping the only cam-
pmms and find out what the real Sn)”. SA president and vice president voic- line assuming that due to these facts longer visitation hours. their views more important than paign promise l made last year — t0
1': 3 ,‘3 "I' , is ' ed support for longer hours students have every right in the world A third argument is that we are in those of the students? investigate, pursue and publicize the ’
Stet-['17. 2'."- ' Many students would like to see a Perhaps our dorms‘ visitation to have some sort 0t say over the rules the “Bible belt" and that it is accep- The reason that I have not visited possibility 0‘ 3‘9 extension 0f visita-
, 3-. . change A survey taken h). the Dean hours are comparable to those a. and polic1es that govern them. table to want more freedom to visit. I with the university administrators ho" anileges 1" the upperclassmen
: ' j, of Students Refildma, Hall “sham". other major universities Wrong! A Finally, there appears tobe no real- will merely pomt tothefact that the yet is that I have been informed by dorms. .

... , (‘ommittee two years ago. found that survey of each of our 11 benchmark ly good reason why we do not have major state univerSity in each state former SA senators that in the past
1 g-‘u. 38 percent (,3 those polled fen that unl\.e;sitles- Visitation policies prov- longer Visitation hours in the dorms. surrounding Kentucky has more le- this quickly led to no substantial David Bradford is an accounting
‘.l r s Visuation “enhanced the academic ed tobevervintertsting (see chart». The firslargument is that students do nienthourstsee chart). change. and no clear-cut explana- junior. He is a Senatonat-Large for
3 - if; environment“ 80 percent felt that in- The weekday hours are markedlv not want them. This one I have Every single one. Why even Ten- tions. the UK Student Association.

i ' " ' " ‘, 5 creased Visitation would have a less at L'K Why the big difference in alneady adiresiedh behath: enfuses

‘.‘.‘ 1's" “posuive effect upon the atmosphere poliCIPS between UK and its sister ge worse. '0 eriis ' wr cos . e

_, , ,,,,,,, ... m... ,,, W, 0, Sm ,, We“, .00 3...... b... a... ... equal. Team deserves more posrtive fan support _
' ,-‘ . C‘ those surveyed had previously ex students desrre a Chan 9. ma be it wea - , . .

v": pressed a desire for increased vrsrta~ must be assumed they (its) not haze the 1 Win point to the fact that accor- I am a Wildcat basketball fan. I cover the" faces while the w‘.“’.°.‘“s meant in a jesting manner, do Mt
H. I' . -; ._ 1 , “on privileges “gm t 0 one dmg to Glenn McKenzie, South Cam- watch every UK game that is on are demolished by a talented Visiting paint a very flattering picture of UK

i. ' 3 . . . . .

! ; . . ,f teleViSion, I listen to the radio broad- team who can take advantage of a UK students and are contrary to the
My f. ('1’ BLNM COUNTY by Berke 3W casts of the games and I read the slump. description of the mentality of in-
. .. . ; .. newspaper articles (now decorating dividuals that many of us believe at-
.' - Etta/some, was A some on (my... I'M mp I’M part of my dorm room) which follow —————G t tend this university.

3. j .. ‘ ' WOULD m; :53szng %m my A FRATERNUYI tax... I'M muons each game. But. as much of a fan as I use Although some true-Blue fans must
~ , ' ' . (mater? m ween ° Tl-tl5 me DELTS survey. mg m MKS. Marlena? W! 3 F at am. I cannot condone the me of the . . freeze and fight for basketball tickets,
f ’ ’ COMINGTD A . SNOW. »\ “was?" I MN m . ‘ Rage Page at the beginning of UK 0 Inlon this is not always the case. The last
‘. ., It NUCLEAR 015- ; ~ , , , f m] .-.‘ home games. time i went to ticket distribution for
- ; 5 - W RALLY "a ; ~. 3’ 9 \ ,, . *3 Appalled. I read Dale Morton's coi- -————-—————— UKhome gameslarrivedwminutes

. . - ,j ,- / “1v ' ~' 1.3 \J; \ ‘33. umn in the Feb. 2 Kernel concerning before distribution began. and 10
-_ . ,1 ._ f V. 1 ,~ .r V' . an the Rage Page and [was shocked that The search for an effective uniform minutes after it commenced —a total
' y- . ~- ,. / ‘Vs ttgt ‘ AQ. fi/ ,f I ' ‘ t 2 the action (students covering their showof spirit by UKstudents has fail- of only 40 minuta — I left with

... .5 , , \ 3 ,4 ”We. \v’ AJ , 4 c ”1,, 432;, y :3th . ’ n.“ faces with the Rage Pages dun'ngthe edin thepast few years. It is nosur- seventh row seats — in the lower
3 . .. . \ a LA. - 3 ; ‘3, 5333‘: , ‘ tigi: "I . . ;;;;:‘ introduction oftheguest team‘s star- prise then. that Greg Medly, the in- arena! The closest I came to a fight
-. ., , ‘ \‘¢ 1 I: ' . ‘. Hg; ‘