xt7vmc8rfx1x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vmc8rfx1x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-04-13 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 13, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 13, 1976 1976 1976-04-13 2020 true xt7vmc8rfx1x section xt7vmc8rfx1x Vol. LXVll No. 149
Tuesday. April 13, 1976

2] University of Kentucky
an independent student newspaper Lacifion, Kentucky

Cites housing shortage

Relocation center solves

no problems,

lty t'llAltllIS I.. SMITII
Kernel Staff Writer

While some South Hill residents
resignedly made preparations to leave the
neighborhood last month. and others
resolved to fight to keep their homes. a
mobile home moved into the area.

Located behind the fire substation at
Merino and Maxwell Streets, the trailer
serves as the headquarters for the South
Hill relocation assistance program.

Barry Donaldson. project coordinator,
said in an'mterview last week that the
relocation program is “making progress.
but anyone who says it solves a problem is
full of it."

Relocation. he said. is “slow and dif-
ficult. Each family has its own problems
that need attention. It is not assembly line
work.

“To the best of our ability, we are trying
to relocate people as the need arises."
Donaldson said.

That need. if the Lexington Center
Corporation tLCC) realizes its plan to raze
homes in the South Hill neighborhood to

make way fer a 16.3-acre civic center‘

parking lot. will arise for an estimated 130
families.

“We havecrea ted by virtue of this whole
thing «the civic center parking lot) a
housing problem.“ he said. “but we cannot
quit remembering that we still have un-
derlying social problems that are going to
affect the relocation effort. and they
cannot go unanswered or unattended."

DonaldSon acknowledged his office's
inability to deal with the social and

Animal science junior Steve Tamme hol
guest—a pig—as the f raternity‘s bluegrass be
.\nnual (hi Omega (ireek Sing. At left is John McKinney.

Prize pig

senior. Farm House took top fraternity hono
sorority division and Phi Sigma Kappa fratern

director says

psychologiwl upheavals stemming from

‘the planned destruction of the neigh-

borhood.

“This is by no means the Renaissance
center that can handle anything that
comes up." he said. But the office refers
many people to other agencies “to make
sure they get assistance that is beyond the
scope of this office.“

Citing Lexington‘s 2-3 per cent housing

vacancy rate. compared to an optimum,

rate of 5-7 per cent in a community of
similar size. Donaldson said. “We
wouldn‘t need a relocation program if
there was plenty of cheap affordable
housing. We wouldn‘t need it because it
wouldn't be a hardship for the residents to
relocate. except for the fracturing of their
community style.

“Whatwe have done is bought two years
of time to try and produce new housing
that the residents of South Hillcan afford.
To call the program anything 'else is
a mistake. It‘s not meant to solve any
problem." he said.

The relocation service has adapted
federal guidelines stipulating that owner-
occupants must have owned their homes
for at least t80 days. and tenants must
have established residency 90 days prior to
LCC‘s announcement of intent to purchase
the property.

The Urban County Council established
the guidelines to eliminate the possibility
of speculators seeking profit from the
relocation funds.

On Nov. 19. 1974, LCC announced it in-
tended to buy eight and one-half acres of

ds Farm House fraternity's special
nd performs at Monday‘s Second
an aninmal science
rs. while Alpha Xi Delta won the
fly won the sweepstakes award.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In the above map of the South Hill area. the gray-shaded area will be the site of
the proposed civic center parking lot. and represents property affected under

l'hases I and '3. of the Lexington (‘enter (‘orporatlon‘s land acquisition project.

land known as the Phase I area on both
sides of lirown and Spring Streets and
small lots in that block facing Maxwell and
High Streets.

The corpa'ation announced last January
that it will purchase an additional seven
acres on Kilmore Court and on Patterson.
Poplar. Maxwell and High Streets. That
land constitutes Phase 2 and it is the
residents of that area. according to
Donaldson. who are encountering special
problems.

The standard housing required by the
city relocation ordinance was not difficult
for the Phase I residents to find. he said.
but he chose to reserve comment on the
availihility of standard low-rent housing
for Phase 2 residents.

Donaldson said No families in the Phase
I area and one in the Phase 2 location
moved to the neighborhood before the
cutoff dates. He said those families are in
"a very unfortunate situation,“ but that
there is nothing his office can do. ’

continued on page 8

Two 56 seats vacant
as campaign begins

Candidates filed for all but two Student Government (SG)
seats by the Monday afternoon deadline and campaigning
officially began this morning for more than 100 candidates
running in the April 20 and 21 elections.

The first of four candidates’ forums will be held tonight at 8
pm. in the Delta Delta Delta sorority house. 468 Rose St.

l-‘ive candidates filed for SC president. Student Senators
Mike McLaughlin and Hal Haering form a ticket for
presidenta nd vice president as do Carlton Currens and Linda

Welch

Mark Chellgren. B .L. Schuler and Dan Kelley Ward are the
other presidential candidates. RA. Pinkston is a vice
presidential candidate.

The two seats with no applicants are in the College of
Medicine and the Graduate School. Mark Hall filed for one of
the two graduate school seats while there were no applicants
for the lone medical college seat.

“About all we ca‘do is count the write-in votes for those
seats." 86 President Jim Harralson said.

There were eight colleges with only one candidate for a
senate seat: Allied Health, Architecture, Home Ecmomies,

Law. Library Science, Pharmacy,

Professiors.

4K“

Nursing and Social

The most hotly contested seats are the two in Business and
Econanics where nine candidates are registered. Seven
candidates applied for two Agriculture seats and lo filed for
the five Arts and Sciences seats.

Four canddates are running for two Education seats. four
for the two Engineering seats and two for one Dentistry seat.
Forty-nine candidates filed for 15 at-large seats.

.

 

  

editorials

-

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

 

 

Drop the cloak of bigotry

 

By Roger M. Moore

 

I've read most of the recent com
mentary in the Kernel concerning the
attitudes of the inhabitants of this
University over Josh McDowell and
other matters. This commentary is
addressed to the students at this
University in general, and it’s about
you and my opinion of you.

I wouldn’t know a prophet if he came
up and thumped my Bible, but with a
little probing I know a bigot when I see
one. I don’t mean Josh; I mean you, the
Educated Assholes of Tomorrow.
Bigots run wild over this campus
disguised as intelligent people. Kernel
staff members are as bipartisan in
their newswriting as the staffs for
Pravda and National Review.

A good many people got their rocks
off reading the Kernel’s dismem
bermentof Josh, and you can’t fool me
by saying the gleam in the people's eyes
as they threw their verbal stones was
from their natural enthusiasm for
correcting a social ill the way educated
people should. I saw a photo taken
somewhere in the South in the early
part of this century of a lynch mob.
Beneath that spreading oak tree in the
night were people who had that gleam
in their eyes, having iust corrected a

social ill and left it swinging gently on
the end of a rope.

Bigots. Almost none of you are any
better than a face in an educated mob,
and you‘re prepared to descend on the
world and cut its'heart out in the name
of humanity. You pull your ideas from
TV screens, from FM rock stations,
from movies, paperback books and
magazines, and you don’t bother to
question what you see any deeper than
what Time magazine had to say about
the subject. Most of you don’t give a
goddamn what the consequences of
what you do happen to be, iust so long
as you get that degree, get through that
test, get your head together for class
tomorrow. And above all, you must act
educated.

Do you know what the results of your
advances into the field of social
relations have done to some people? l
know a young woman on campus here
who barely mentions religion because
she's been put down for it too many
times, and the beautiful religion she
carries around inside her gets pounded
every week. The counseling center has
to deal with students every semester
who cannot take the beating their own
beliefs havetaken from other students.
I know a lot of Christian students at UK
who act the same way the post-
apostolic Christians must have acted
during Roman persecutions. They hide

what they believe, they meet for Bible
study in unadvertised places and they
recruit new members by work-of-
mouth. They’ve gone underground, and
thereby guaranteed their survival
indefinitely. You’ve made some people
very careful about expressing an
opinion, except for those wonders who
rise up against you and go down under
your feet as you and the rest of the mob
howl.

I've come down on you for your
comments on religion in particular, but
what We said applies to other things as
well. Be it religion, abortion,
economics or race relations, you’ll grab
a position and hold on to it if it’s a
socially acceptable thing to say at the
lime. You've been so brainwashed
(with your own loving permission) into
believing that you are doing your own
thing, taking your own stand and
marching to your own drummer, that
you can’t even see that you’re doing
exactly the same things everyone else
is. You wouldn’t have been fit to clean
the shoes of Dr. Martin LutherKing or
Malcolm X. You’re the kind of people
who mumble "nigger” under your
breath when you have a disagreement
with a black. You‘re the kind of people
who wish that pro-abortion students
had been aborted themselves. You're
the kind of people who would have
Christians who voiced their beliefs put

 

in prison or fined because they came
out and preached a while in front of
your precious fountain. You’re the kind
of people whose concept of brotherhood
is a noose on a cottonwood, even though
you’d never know it for what it was.

I don't believe that Jesus will come to
earth in 1984. I don’t believe in fun-
damentalism. i can see situations
where abortion would be the best
course of action. I know that as much
as I hate racism, my thoughts can run
in thatdirection when l least want them
to. I believe that what gay students do
is theirown business. And I know that l
am a lousy bigot, because I hate bigots.
Hatecan makeyou sick. l’mtired of it.

The only consolation I'll get from
writing this commentary will be seeing
my name in print. I don’t expect to
change any minds, but I hope to get
some of you to take a good look at
yourselves the next time you open your
mouths or take out your pens to write.
There are some people who believe that
if we try. we may someday find our-
selves in the midst of a thousand
thousand other brothers and sisters
besides the ones you knew as children.
At worst, we’d love each other enough
to accept each other’s viewpoints and
drop our cloaks of bigotry.

 

Egger M. Moore is a psycholgy senior.

 

 

 

Brawny
Babes

Editor:

Therearea few points thatneed to be
cleared up concerning the Brawny
Babes Contest. Transvestism is not
primarily a gay community
phenomenon. -The maiority of tran-
svests are, in fact, members of the
heterosexual community.

in the gay community, however, we
find there is a greater acceptance of
trasnvests, even though many gays do
not approve of it, nor are they involved
in it.

The Brawny Babes Contest is not an
affront to gays, but to transvests, the
maiority of whom happen to be

hetermexuals. Transvestism is no
more representative of the gay scene
than the straight scene, and by rights
should itself be considered ascene or
community.

The Brawny Babes Contest may have
been cruel, bitter satire aimed at the
transvest community, or perhaps. in
their ignorance. participants equated
transvest directly with the gay com-
munity to cop a few bucks off slan-
derous, repressive drama.

The only other explanation is that
those who participated in the Brawny
Babes Contest are really seeking
recognition in their presumably
heterosexual, Greek world of them.
selves as true hetero-transvest seeking
to enjoy personal freedom and ex-
pression in a world which has denied

ielters

 

them an identity.

In the latter you have our full sup-
port. Under these circumstances we
demand a public apology from the
Kernel and lend you our support
against any obiecting elements in the
Greek scene.

The struggle for freedom of ex-
pression is long and agonizing, as you
will learn. Butiust remember, the fight
isnotonly for you, but for all oppressed
minorities—sexual, racial and political.

Central Kentucky Gay Artists and
Writers Collective

Supreme Court

Editor;

it was interesting to read (Courier-
Joumal, April ll, Sec. D, pg. 1) that the ,
U.S. Supreme Court upheld a Virginia
ruling prohibiting homosexual
behavior, even among consenting
adults in private.

Apparently our nation's highest court
ignored the Kernel’s stand on gay’s and
our beloved Student Government’s
recognition of them. Mark Perkins

A&S sophomore

 

(Editor's note: Because of the number of letters and commentaries received by

 

the Kernel,there is no editorial today. All letters to the editor and Spectrum oom-
mentaries should be typed, double-spaced and signed, including classification, mater
and phone number. Letters should not exceed 250 words and Spectrum commentaries
should not exceed 750 words.)

 

 

 

 ASS focUlty names Ulmer

distinguished professor

Dr. S Sidney Ulmer, professor
of political science, has been
named by his colleagues as the
College of Arts and Sciences
Distinguished Professor for 1975-
76, A & S Dean Art Gallaher
announced fiiday.

The distinguished professor
honor is the highest professional
recognition offered by UK’ s
largest college

A specialist in constitutional
law. judicial behavior and the
judicial process. Ulmer will be
given the 1976 fall semester to
devae full time to research.
During the coming year, he will
present a public lecture on that
research.

Ulmer, who came to UK 13
years ago, is a native of North, S.
Car. He received a bachelor’s
degree from Furman University
and master’s and doctoral
degrees fran Duke University.

He is the author of “Courts as
Small and Not so Small Groups,”
and “Military Justice and the
Right to Coursel,” and editor or
contributor to 10 other books. He
has written‘more than 40 articles
in professional journals and
numerous book reviews.

A former chairman of the
political sciaioe departments at
UK and 'Michigan State
University, he has also taught at
the University of Houston, Duke,
State University of New York at

Buffalo and the University of
Wisconsin at Milwaukee.

In 1974, Ulmer received the
Sang Award (now the Sturgill

Award) given annually to the-

graduate faculty member judged
“to have made the most out-
standing contribution to the UK
graduate program."

He pioneered in the use of the
computer to scientifically
establidi the various influences
on decisions by judges especially
those in the U S Supreme Court
and has received more than
$0,000 in research funds since
1965 from various foundations.

Ulmer has presented about 20
invited lectures at leading
colleges and universities
throughout the US. and has
served as president of the
Southern‘ Political Science
Association. He also has been
chairman of the Inter-University
Consortium for Political
Research and vice president of
the Kentucky Conference of
Political Scientists.

Ulmer succeeds Dr. Roger W.
Barbour, profesor of zoology, as
the college‘s Distinguished
Professor.

Selection for the honor is based
on umsually effective teaching,

outstanding scholarship and.

service to the University and
profession.

More students seeking
Placement Service help

By MONTY N. FOLEY
Kernel Staff Writer

“The thing I try to explain to
students is that we can’t get them
a job. But our office offers the
student another avenue” for
possible placement, James P.
Alcom, UK Placement Service
director, said Friday.

With a staff of two full~time
counselors and six secretaries,
Alca'n oversees the task of
coordinating interviews between
prospective employers and
students.

Since assuming his position
with the placement service in
1968, Alcom has seen a 25-30 per
cent increase in the number of
students utilizing the service’s
resources in attempts to gain
employment.

“Last year we coordinated
4.400 interviews with the 402
organizations that came to the
campus (looking for prospective
employees)," he said.

By the end of the spring
semater. Alcorn expects 475-500
organizations will have come to
UK this year to interview
students.

The job market is brightest for
students who have majored in
engines-lug (especially for those
in mining engineering). and in
the health fields. Alcom said.

"Engineers with degrees in
mining-related areas can expect
to receive salaries in the neigh-
borhood of $1.400 per month."
Alcom said. Job seekers who can
be absorbed into the petroleum
industries can expect similar
salaries. he said.

Of the zoos students who are
UK degree candidates this

spring, only 115 major in
engineering; 2375 students are
seeking degrees in the health
fields, a spokesman for the
registrar's office said Friday.

Though engineering and health
graduates have a more
promising employment op-
portunities, Alcorn doesn't think
employers emphasize majors.
“I'm convinced that the majority
of the organizations are'looking
for perple with skills, not with
particular majors." he said.

“You can take a degree and
mold it into whatever you want."
Regardless of major, students
can work to enhance employment
opportunities, Alcorn said.

"But. of course, such students
must realize that in developing
their own academic programs,
they‘ll eventually have to work
harder to gain employment," he
said.

In addition to coordinating
interviews with possible em-
ployers. Alcorn said the
Placement Service has other
meansof aiding students in quest
of employment.

"We have extensive job index
listings. or l'stings of currently
available positions that would be
helpful to any student. regardless
of career objectives." he said.
"And for stutbnts who do register
with our office. we can provide
copies of the alumni bulletin,
which lists job openings."

Besides courseling students on
an individual basis. Alcorn said
the Placement Srvice staff meets
withvalious University groups to
provide relevant job-hunting
information.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday, April 13. 1976—3

 

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Music

Weather Report‘s iazz called T
‘Space Music' by some critics

This is about the time when
things begin to pile up and the
ghus'ts of assignments past due
haunt yourevcry step. 'l‘hesame
thing is happening in the local
music scene there never seems
to be enough time to takeit all in.

Jazz tans will have plenty to
keep themselves busy this week
beginning with the Weather
Report concert tonight at 8 pm.
in the Student (‘enter Ballroom.
Space Music is the term used by
many to describe the jazz sounds
put out by this group that was
again named the best jazz group

Ask about
MONFRIED’S
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Consideration
for U.K.
Students and

Faculty!

   

' EYEGLASSES arid
CONTACT LENSES
Large selection of
todays fashionable
frame styles!

One day service on optical
repairs. Major charge cards
welcome.

Monfried
Optical

Zandale Shopping
Center
278-9497

Eastland Shopping

in this yea r's Down Heat Headers
l’oll. 'l'lleiralbum "l‘ail Spinnin"
also joined the list of best jazz

also very active as a composer
and has had 42 titles published
including works. for choral and

  

instrumental ensembles.
chamber groups and organ
as well as writing the musical
scores tor litany BBC television
specials.

album of the year in that Down
’ieat l’oll.

Today at .: p.m. Milner will
speak in 'l’uncell and the British
Tradition." The wedne‘sday
lecture will begin at it am. and
the topic will be "Beniamin
liritten's Death in Venice.”
. . toth lectures will be presented in
t the .-\rt Gallery of the Fine Arts

 

 

 

The primary forces behind this ’iuilding.
'“gh ”-‘ymg "‘PS'C are the com- Vincent DiMartinoand the Jazz
ioslng-arrangmg and keyboard linsemble will roar into

trilliance of one .loe Zztwinul and
he outst anding soprano sax work
of Wayne Shorter. ’.oth of these
men spent time in apprenticeship
it) trumpeter Miles Davis in the
late «is and early 70‘s and are
now exploring and developing to

Memorial Hall Thursday. April
'5. at 8' 15 pm. for their final on-
campus concert of the year.

There will be plenty of good jazz
sounds to wipe away the studying
blues" including charts like
'Magic Flea" by Count Bassie.

mo . WHOM many "f the Freddie Hubbard‘s "Mr. Clean"
posslbtlltles only touched on by and One for ()tis" by Don
lhe master. Menza.

The concert looks to be an
L intimate study into the per-
spectives of jazz today and the
ptb‘sibililies of sound and music
in the years to follow.

There will also be a few sur-
prises in the form of some small
combo pieces featuring the
rhythm section of the hand. If
you haven‘t taught them yet this

Today and tomorrowthe School year. be sure to keep Thursday

 

«it Music will present the eminent evening Open. I think you‘ll be
English composer and pleasantly surprised and
llltlsicologist. Dr. Anthony thoroughly entertained.

.\iilner. in a series of lectures

dealing with topics relating to

l-lnglish composers and their SH'H' ‘HWHHI is n srauluate
music. Milner is principal lec- “Him! in music education. Ilis
iurer at the t'niversityof London i't‘tl'tm "Itltt'itt‘s "It luv-“lit.“-

.tnd has authored a two-volume ' -~
series entitled "Harmony." He is

t KET airs iazz greats
on new concert show

 

Ahmad Jamal. Buddy Rich, Arthur Prysock. Taj Mahal, Mabel
Mercer. Chris Connor and Ramsey Lewis are among the jazz
greats spotlighted on Kentucky Educational Television‘s new
weekly series. "Mark of Jazz." beginning Thursday, April 29 at 8
pm.

The program. taped in nightclubstyle settings. focus on the
talents of the individual artist. both in performance and m con-
versation with series host. Sid Mark.

 

Center

‘ 252-3525 ]

 

312

Self-Service
laundry

  

CHEVY CHASE COIN lAUNDRY

lexington's Most Popular Self-Service Laundry
For UK Students and Faculty

courteous attendants
hours 8:00 a.m.-iO:00 p.m_.

Mark. a well-known Philadelphia jazz connoisseur and radio
personality. is a widely recognized expert in all aspects of jazz.

     

SOUTH ASHLAND

 
      

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Cleaning laundry

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7
L

 

 

Sports

 

 

Desperate Dampier
lifts Colonels 100-99

It) lilt‘K (..\liltlI-Il.
Sports Editor

l.lll'l§\’ll.l.li At this time
last season the Kentucky
(‘olonels were the class of the
American Basketball
Association. They polished off
the Indiana Pacers to claim their
first ABA title and looked to the
following season anticipating
another one.

But some wheeling and dealing
by the Colonel management.
including the trade of Dan Issel.
changed the Colonels look and
many consider it the primary
reason behind Kentucky‘s drop to
fourth place in the league this
year.

It took a last second
desperation shot by Louie
Dampier to keep the Colonels in
contention for another ABA title
as they defeated the Pacers 100-
99 here last night. It was the
rubber game of the three game
match to determine which team
would face league champion
Denver in a best of seven series
starting Thursday night.

"It was a broken play.“ said
Colonel‘s coach Hubie Brown. “A
broken play won the game on a
sensational shot by Louie
Dampier.“

Dampier drove the left side of
the lane with seven seconds left.

went up over the outstretched
ami of Don Base and threw in
more of a hook thana jump shot.
The ball bounced on the rim
twice before it dropped. sending
the crowd into hysterics as the
t‘olon els mobbed Louie.

"With that much time left you
never see a set play work to
perfection." said l’acer coach
ltobby Lemard. “It's usually a
shot somebody just throws up
there.

Dampier‘s shot was necessary
only because the (‘olonels had
managed to blow a lead which
reachedeight pointsin the second
period.

Indiana began its comeback
near halftime and cut it to 12 at
the break. The intermission
didn‘t cool them any. The Pacers
finally caught up and took the
lead at 36—54 with 6:02 left in the
third quarter.

Itwas a seesaw game after that
with both teams moving out to
five point leads and then drop-
ping badt. Indiana seemed to
have the upper hand for most of
the fourth period and was leading
by one when 6-3 Bird Averitt
drove the baseline and flipped a
seven footer over 6-8 Dave
ltobisch with 42 seconds left.

The Pacers came back
downcourt and. after Kentucky's

continued on page ti

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Give a tree
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Recycle Kernels
and other
newspapers
in the

Student
Government
Recycling
Program
April 17 and
May 1.
Complex
Commons
9—11
Blazer Drive

beside
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 e—mE KENTUCKY KERNEL.TUeSday. April 13. 1976

All Jewish Students
on Campus:

If you would like to be in a family home
for Passover Sader April 14,

call Sarah Levy 266-2858 272-7687

Temple Adath Israel
Sisterhood

 

in concert

WEATHER
REPORT

tuesday, april 13 8 pm.
student center ballroom
$4.00 tickets room 203 S.C.

 

 

 

 

he- Hum I
m , \ high

I
llynu 7. , .4 reaper-verse

Flynn scores, fights; Pacers {all

continued from page 5

- Maurice Lucas batted a rebound

out of bounds, they were awarded
the ball under their own basket.
But when the inbounds pass went
awry, Ava-itt chased it down and
went in for a layup. That’s when
Pacer rookie Mike Flynn tackled
him, trying to prevent an easy
bucket.

Flynn, who played on UK’s
NCAA runnerup team last
season, and Averitt had come to
blows earlier in the game and
many of the 5,267 fans were ex-
pecting a repeat performance.
But Flynn simply helped the Bird
to his feet. Averitt stepped to the
line and calmly sank two free
throws, propelling the Colonels to
a 98-95 lead with 31 secon