xt7mcv4bs16t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mcv4bs16t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-11-12 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 12, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 12, 1974 1974 1974-11-12 2020 true xt7mcv4bs16t section xt7mcv4bs16t Search committee appointed

Lancaster requests advisory position

Kernel stat! photo by Dnan Harrmn
HARRY LANCASTER
l'K Athletic Director
requests change in status

By RON MITC HE LL
Managing Editor

Athletic Director Harry Lancaster
notified the Athletics Board Monday that
he has requested his last year of service
with the University be in an advisory
capacity.

Lancaster told the board, meeting in
special session, he made the request
because of his physical condition and so
the transition of the duties of the office be
made easier for his replacement when he
retires in 1976.

A TEARFl'I. Lancaster. who will reach
the mandatory retirement age of 65 on
Feb. 14. l976. read the board a letter he had

Vol. LXVI

No 69
Tuesday November 12 1974

U- Senate sends prOposal
back to rules committee

By LYN HACKER
Kernel Staff Writer

The University Senate sent back a
proposal to the rules committee Monday
which wouH bring UK into compliance
with the Southern Association of Colleges
and Schools rules change known as
“Standard Nine."

Standard Nine is a “series of regulations
that requires new policies and procedures
at each member institution engaged in
‘special activities‘ essentially those
involved in continuing education.
extension. and correspondence work.“
according to the Senate agenda
memorandum.

DEBATE AND subsequent motions for
amendment of the proposal started when
several of the senators noted the wording
of the proposal would allow a student to
complete 90 hours at another school. take
30 hours extension credit from l'K and still
receive a degree from l'K.

It passed. Standard Nine will eliminate
"all distinctions" between residence
course work offered at UK and extension
course work offered by l'K. according to
the proposal.

Presently extension courses, those
offered for continumg education. are
affiliated with correspondence work and
are not regarded as equitable to residence
course work, although they are taught bv
I'K instructors.

DR. MH‘IIAEI. Adelstein, senator. said
correspondence work was not necessarily
inferior. but just different from residence
or extension course work.

“There is no student or professor
interaction in correspondence work," he
said.

Standard Nine would affiliate extension
or continuing education work with
residence course work instead of with
correspondence work.

AN .»\.\1ENDB.VIE.\"I‘ by Dr. Paul Sears.
faculty member from the Board of
Trustees to the senate. required the last 30
of 36 credits taken at the University to be
non correspondence work was defeated.

Rebecca Westerfield. Senate member
and law student. told the Senate the

amendment would make it difficult for
those who had done the bulk of their'course
work at UK, but who had to movefrom the
area to be able to finish their degree at UK.

The proposal was sent to the Senate
rules committee for clarification and will
beacted on by the Senate at the December
meeting.

IN OTHER action, the Senate passed a
motion to abolish the Social Welfare
Research Institute because its extramural
funds are “no longer available.“
according to Senate chairman Stanford
Smith.

The lnstitute was originally established
by l'niversity Board of Trustees action in
1969 to address “certain interdisciplinary
research problems" in social welfare and
to ”utilize large amounts of external
funds" then available for research.

Board of Trustees
to meet today

A report from the finance committee
and recom mendations from President ()tis
A . Singleta ry are on the agenda for today's
Board of Trustees executive committee
meeting.

The recommendations from Singletary
deal with faculty appointments. said
William B. Sturgill. Board chairman.

Agenda items to be reported by the
finance committee include: interim
financial report. financial reports and
report on internal accounting controls.
audits of affiliated corporations. audit of
{K credit union and write~offs of
uncollectiblc accOunts.

The 2 p.m. meeting will be held in the
Board Room of Patterson Office Tower
and will be mainly a routine meeting,
Sturgill said.

Announcement of committee
appointments and a quarterly report of the
investment committee will also be
presented to the executive committee.

Members of the Board's executive
committee include: Sturgill, Albert G.
(lay. Richard E Cooper, George W.
(lriffith Jr .Lucile T. Blazer. and William
R. Black.

sent Oct. 30 to Dr. Al Morris vice
president of administratrion and his
immediate supervisor.

“Personal problems, largely physical,
make it difficult for me to carry out the

 

J
The UK Athletics Board announced
Monday that ABC-TV has made
arrangements to out another UK
home football game on regional
television. The [YR-Florida game will
begin at l:20 p.m. Saturday.

 

duties of my job. Lancaster read.
“Because it took at least two years for me
to get the hang of the many duties of the
athletics director‘s job, I would like to

KeKENilBClK’Y

propose that for the remainder of my
service to the University —- I'm used
primarily in an advisory or special
assignment capacity."

Lancaster said he thought it was time for
!a “younger man with the strength,
ambition and drive to' make this (athletic)
program, with my (Lancaster's) advice
and counsel, gq."

LANCASTER WILL officially retire
after he turns 65 in 1976, either on his
birthday or on June 30 of that year. “l‘m
not asking for early rethement —— that’s
not within the rules. And I’m willing to
assist the program in any way you feel I

can help," he said.
University of

21 Kentucky

Lexington. K y 40m

Continued on Page 8

Kernel 503" photo by Lee Thomas

That's my boy

Alfred Collins. Sr.. Madisomillc.
Ky. ardent fan and supporter of his
son. shows concern as he looks over
Sonny‘s shoulder Saturday after the
LR star running back was taken out
of the Vanderbilt game with a
fractured left leg. Sonnv had just

scored on a 33-yard burst up the
middle when a hard tackle at the
goal line put him out for the rest of
the season. The senior (‘ollins
attends games wearing a sweatshirt
saying “That's My Boy" across the
back.

 

 Editaroincniet, Linda Carnes
Managing edtor, Ron Mitdietl
Associate editor, Nancy Daly
Editorial page editor. Dan Crutcner

Features editor. Larry Mead
Arts editor, Greg Hotelich
Sports edi‘or, Jim Mauoni
Photography editor. Ed Gerald

Editorials represent the opinions of the editors. notthe University

editorials -

Red River dam burden shifts to Carroll

Now that the political wars are over
for the year, there is hope that the
Red River dam question will receive
some new consideration by the
powers-that-be in Frankfort and
Washington.

The election itself can and has been
read two ways regarding the Red
River issue. Proponents of the dam
argue that Ford’s victory shows that
opposition to the dam is not so
widespread as some would like us to
believe. Conversely, those against the
dam cite the relatively small margin
of victory as evidence of the public’s
dissatisfaction with the project.

Neither argument can be conclu-
sively proven by election results
alone. There are too many variables
involved in election politics to
determine the impact of any one
issue.

It may turn out that opponents of
the dam made a tactical mistake by
concentrating so much effort on the
senatorial election because of the
ambiguity of the results. However,
their efforts undoubtedly increased
public awareness of the value and
importance of Red River Gorge.

With Wendell Ford packing his bags
for Washingtqi, the political question
that most intrigues the state now is

what his successor, Lt. Gov. Julian
Carroll, thinks about the desirability
of a Red River dam. Carroll has so far
indicated he has no plans to reveal his
position until Ford vacates the
governor’s mansion.

If Carroll upholds the spirit of a
speech he gave Saturday night in
Louisville at the Governor's Conser-
vation Achievement Award Program.
then there is some reason to believe
he will oppose the dam. He issued
some “warning signs“ of our
deteriorating environment. such as
“polluted streams. foul air, denuded
and eroded land, mountains of litter.
people congestion, deafening noise

and wanton destruction of flora and
fauna."

Politicians, of course, have been
known to say one thing and do
another, but Carroll must realize that
environmentalists are watching his
words closely to determine how he
stands on the Red River issue.
“Wanton destruction of flora and
fauna“ sounds like a perfect
description of the Red River dam
effects.

Opponents of the dam deserve
praise for stalling the dam thus far.
We hope Julian Carroll will reward
their efforts by halting this senseless
project.

 

Letters to the editor

 

VG‘W

six ‘ ‘I

'I'M WITH YOU . .

. .1.
i4, .

Nicholas Von Hoffman

Television fogs inflation

By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN

WASHINGTON — The only
light spot in the economic news
these days is the way television
covers it...when they bother to
cover it.

Most of the problems of
covering the economy for a visual
medium are solved by avoiding
the subject altogether. Inflation,
however, is too big and painful to
ignore. so TV tackles it by
running the same story over and
over again on days when they
don’t have anything else to fill up
the network news shows. At CBS
this repetition takes the form of
sending correspondents to the
supermarket every month. where
they are photographed
discovering what everybody else
knows, namely that the prices
have gone up.

THE OTHER two networks
seem to favor those 38-second
interviews with a farmer — cow
or corn in the background —~
during which the reporter asks,
“Would you please tell us why
prices are going up?“ The victim
or interviewee then has a
microphone shoved in his face as
he explains that fuel and
fertilizer cost him more this
month than last. The viewer is
left with the impression that
prices go up because other prices
go up in an endless.

unexplainable, tautological
spiral.

The third stock TV inflation
story is the interview with the
Jones family in suburban
Memphis in which they tell us
they're coping by doing with less,
anitem that hardly rates as news
since the viewers are also coping
by doing with less. That takes
care of inflation and or
unemployment, which gets
handled the same way except,
perhaps, for those occasional
pieces that show a trading floor
full of screaming, apparently
insane brokers on the New York
Stock Exchange.

They Like Dow Jones

Aside from 20-second bursts of
government officials reading five
lines from a press release, the
only other information we get are
occasional numbers read to us by
various anchor men. The number
they like best is the daily Dow
Jones industrial average.

Why, of all the dozens of
different stock market averages.
this one should be played up and
glamorized is seldom explained.
For people with little knowledge
of the stock market. this can be a
highly misleading number.
although stockbrokers may like it
because it can give the
impression that things are much
better than they really are.

. THE lORD WILL PROVIDE!’

 

ANOTHER NUMBER they‘re
fond of using is the Gross
National Product. If it‘s up, it‘s
good, and if it's down the Ted
Baxters tell us that we're in a
recession. In fact, the GNP is a
tricky number. difficult to
calculate in ordinary times and
even more so in this period. Some
of the key figures fed into the
equation used to derive the GNP
have been doing wild strange
things they’ve never done before.

The GNP could be larger or
smaller than what is currently
being advertised. This isn‘t any
big. fresh news. Nobody‘s
covering up. The gentleman in
the Department of Commerce
who puts all these data together
is happy to explain the ranges of
error he must work with just so
that people won‘t be misled, but
there is nothing he can do if the
disseminators of news don't care
to enlighten themselves.

Announced vs. Real (‘ost

Another number that‘s been
getting a big play lately is the
prime interest rate. which our
Ted Baxters dutifully tell us is the
rate of interest a bank‘s best
corporate customers will have to
pay for a loan. How many, if any.
firms really do secure a loan at
this rate is another matter which
doesn‘t get aired when the
anchoritcs announce in heavy
voiced words that the prime has

 

'Holy Hubert' show
hurts Christian aims

I just tiiiished seeing "Holy
Hubert" today at the Student
(‘enter I caught his show last
Thursday too So he's here at the
request of (‘ampus ('rusadc for
(‘hrist. eh‘.’ Well, l can't help but
feel that his presence here is only
hurting their cause. About all I've
seen him accomplish is alienate
students.

H. H. didn‘t seem interested in
conveying any message to his
audience. but rather to only
provoke the listeners. He
stereotyped the whole crowd into
one large group of sinful. lustful.
whoremongers who had nothing
but contempt for Jesus and his
teachings. H. H. seldom listened
to what anyone had to say. but
preferred to out-shout anyone
who spoke. The only response he
could get was a lot of wise cracks.
profane remarks. and general
laughter and ridicule, He seemed
to enjoy the ridicule.

But why did the crowd ridicule
him and also why is he hurting
the Christian movement'.’
Because he only reinforced the
negative feelings that each
person had about (‘hristianity
About being told that they are
damned in hell if they don't
repent. About being told what to
dowithout an explanation of why.

About not being litcned to About
monologue instead of dialogue
About beingclose-iiiinded H H
scryeil to reiiitorce these
tceliiigs

There is probably a better

place besides a university for
"'llt'll'lll'f'illld damnation”
preacherslikell it Perhaps that
place is in past history

Harry Hurst
('iyil Engineering senior

Was he there?

I'm not sure if Ron Mitchell
was present for all of Hubert
Lindsey’s preaching Thursday.
but his statement that Lindsey
centered his comments on
homosexuality was a flagrant
misrepresentation of the event.
The heart of Lindsey‘s remarks
was clearly Jesus as God and this
campus‘ denialof and indifferent
attitude toward that fact.

I believe it's legitimate to say
that the rhetoric concerning
homosexuality was initiated by
surrounding students attempting
to discredit Mr. Lindsey.

John Da La utre
History sophomore

 

 

been raised or lowered. Devices
like compensating balances and
commitment fees can make the
real cost of money significantly
different.

If you're in the business of
broadcasting fictional numbers.
there's no need to check them out
and see if they correspond to
anybody‘s actual behavior. The
theory of fictional numbers
permits you to accept the
politically announced price of oil.
not the one the commodity is
actually being sold for. You can
give out that the wholesale price
level is such and such. and you
don‘t have to say you‘re quoting
list price. not necessarily market
price.

l'Nll.\l’l’ll.Y. all ofthis comes
about not through the eastern
media conspiracy. but the
eastern media complacency.
Dishonesty demands knowledge
and understanding. but
television's failures are due to
ignorance. incompetence and
indifference. The most
powerfully informative medium
we ha v e d oesn't know and doesn't
care. and so the citizens of the
largest. richest and most
important capitalist nation on
earth haven‘t the toggiest idea of
how their own system works

 

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a
columnist for King l-‘eatures
Syndicate.

 

  

Tom Ward outlines

campaign

Hy DAN ADKINS
Kernel Staff Writer

With the announcement of a
unique plan to finance his
campaign, State Senator Tom
Ward tlH’ersailles) opened his
Fayette (‘o campaign
headquarters for the Kentucky
Lieutenant Governor race
Thursday night.

Speaking before an audience of
admirers and campaign workers.
Ward outlined his campaign
issues: honesty about political
contributions, environmental

issues and his active
participation in state
government

 

Kernel st)" photo by Dan Adkins
TOM WARD

“.Uil) DESCRIBED his
campaign financing plan, saying.
“We are the first statewide
campaign that will not accept
contributions over $100 per
person. that will report all
campaign contributions and will
disclose publicly our campaign
budget "

‘We are not going to give any
lltillll.ltltl11 of being obligated to
any Mit'iillt‘d special interest.”
\Lanl continued. "I believe the
time is right and the people want
.1 part in politics. that the people

Open house

issues

want to finance it and the people
want to own it."

('alling the financing plan
“8,000 Shareholders in
Kentucky,“ Ward said he hoped
to raise a campaign budget of
$226,000.

('AMI’AIGN LITI‘IRATLYRE
stated the 8,000 contributors were
divided into eight groups of 1,000
persons each. the first
contributing. $100. the second
group $50. the third group $25, the
fourth $20 and so on down to the $1
contributors.

Ward also commented on
environmental issues.

“We stand for strict control or
strict enforcement of strip-mine

_. reclamation laws,“ he said. “We

are for the coal industry, and
economic development in eastern
Kentucky."

But after talking to persons
from the area, he said he had
found they had grown tired of
coal industry‘s abuses of the
laws. (‘oal officials had also
wearied of the “political
football" made of the stripmine
issue.

WARD ALSO explained his
part in the cancellation of the
Cumberland Falls Chairlift
project. “I went to the Parks
Department and personally read
through the audits ofthe (Natural
Bridge) chairlift records. I
revealed the fact that principals
in the chairlift deal had made
approximately $150,000 net profit
while the state had gotten about
$15,000.“

Ward. who announced his
candidacy last June. faces two
other announced candidates in
the Democratic primary in May.
1073. State Att. Gen. Ed Hancock
and Secretary of State Thelma
Stovall have also revealed their
plans to run for the state's second
highest office

kicks off

Campus Women's Center

.-\n open house to mark the start
of the (‘anipus Women's (‘enter
was held b_\ the (‘ouncil on
Women's (‘onccrns ((‘Wt‘t
l"rida_v at 0.38 S l.iine

TIII‘I (‘ENTI‘ZR will provide a
place for women to meet other
women, have a cup of coffee and
check out books from the lending
library. Counseling is also of-
fered. The Center will be open
several afternoons and evenings
weekly, beginning next week.
Hours will be announced.

A coffeehouse will be held one
evening a week in the Women‘s
Center attic. Featured will be
women reading poetry, playing
music and leading rap groups.
Any women interested in per-

 

forming should contact chair-
woman Gail Cohee through
Student Government.

(‘W(‘ IS presently drafting a
letter to the Fayette County
School Board to protest in-
fringement of the right to free
speech of members of the
Lexington Gay Coalition who
were forbidden to speak to a
Tates Creek High School class.
The organization is also working
to incorporate a nonsexist day
care program at UK.

CWC will present a panel
discussion on “Alternatives to the
Weekend Dating Game"
Tuesday, Nov. 12, at 7:30 pm. at
Patterson Hall Dormitory. All
women are welcome.

CHEVY CHASE
3I4‘ 2 ASHLAND

 

 
   

Summer Placements In 38 Countries

Knowledge OI A Foreign Language Not Necessary

' LESSTHANACAREER!

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday, November 12. 1974—3

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ALL CINEMAS'BARGAIN MATS.EVERY DAY‘TII. 2:30 P.M.' $1.25

   

IAESTE. . . A CAREER VACATION ABROAD

ON THE-JOB TRAINING ABROAD FOR STUDENTS OF
ARCHITECTURE, ENGINEERING, AGRICULTURE
AND THE SCIENCES

 
 

  

Traineeships Include Maintenance Allowance While Working With Experts In YourtFieId
Deadline For Applicatighipe’ce‘mberé .
For Morailnformation And Application Forms Contact:
IAESTE — International Association For The Exchange
OI Students For Technical Experience
Office For International Programs
104 Bradley Hall
Telephone 258-8646

IT'S A LITTLE MORE THAN A VACATION. . . AND'IT’S'ALITTLE ‘

 
  
   
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

This week only at
PONDEROSA

Regular $1.29 Lunch includes a sizzling Rib Eye
or Chopped Steak, tossed salad, and warm roll
with butter.

Monday thru Saturday, 11 AM to 4 PM

   

__ titll t

Ponderosa Steak House
2 Locations

1316 Russell Cave Rd.
286 Southlond Dr..

 

 

 

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday. November 12. 1974

 

Terrariums at
Green Leaves

‘1

We

Plant Terrariums to Order

846 East High Chevy Chase

 

 

 

FM name "

iiifl.9

(: 03m (.1) 1 carat!
Ill : Ltll um

SCOEE BOSS SHOE
11.30 vm

C.S. LEWIS

(on tape)

"The

LOVES"

Nov. 13 and 20
Dec. 4and It
8:00 p.m.

CANTERBURY
HOUSE

472 Rose Sf.
Discussion and
Refreshments After

HIGH AUTO
INSURANCE
PREMIUMS?

CALL

YOUNG &

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INSURANCE AGENCY,

INC.

628 N. BROADWAY, 301
LEXINGTON, KY. 40508

FOR STUDENT
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DISCOUNT RATES

255-0646

or

253-2686

 

, FLU SHOTS

Will Be Given To UK Students,
Faculty And Staff At The NEW
Student Health Service

(across Rose St. from The Medical Center)

Wed. Nov. 13

(Last day)

ONLY ONE SHOT IS NECESSARY THIS YEAR

Charge:

Student with health fee

.....$I.00

Other students, faculty, staff . . . . . $2.00

Flu shots are re: .,
die Mating c: ndili
are also :IdVISC‘O to cor

. ill‘tl others ,

titer. ._, .. titiiuitiijmt

illdl'Wi'Itlv‘Il" Wllit Hun-i. I‘D/vii

fund. i‘inai or :athm

,,;t /-~\yi ”.5“; q.,\‘, tic

campus

PPD administrator
recalls changes

By WALLY IIIXSON
Kernel Staff Writer
In almost 35 years of working
at UK. William Maxberry has
seen many changes on campus.
First hired in 1940 as a utility
worker at $12 a week for 50 hours
ofwork, Maxberry was promoted
to administrative assistant to
Physical Plant Division (PPD)
Director James Wessels on Nov.
1.

MAXBERRY SAID his new
duties are “to resolve all phases
of problems of Physical Plant
personnel." Maxberry had
worked in the service
department of the PH) until he
was promoted to the
administrative position.

Maxberry recalls when the
PPI) shifted pay periods from
every week to twice a month.

“The University had trouble
getting the checks processed on
time in Frankfort, and we never
knew exactly when we were
going to be paid," Maxberry said.
He said this went on for years
until all the workers “got fed up
and sat down." Maxberry said
the men refused to work all that
morning until Frank Peterson.
forn‘ier vice president for
business affairs. promised them
they would be paid that
afternoon. He remembers
reading the Herald the next
morning that [K lost Stimuli
because of the sitdown

\I\XIHCRIH' SA”) in the 3.3
years he's been here. [K has
undergone ll‘t‘lllt'lldllll>

 

Itii Kiflltldty rimt't

Editor, Editorial ivditor 37 I755
Managing editor, va desk 757 I740

 

IIII. lxl, \ II (.Al Al,li \I:I,
It: ernatism lliitainq
Lt'XI'WC’I(lI, Kmmi ky 0505, is mailed live times Wkly (tiring the school year
i-xrept durinahotidaymnd examiner-ads, and twu e Next y (II-no the
St'SSIOH Third t lass Lnstaqe paid at li-xinqtnn KmtJoiy .06”
Published by the Kernel Press, Inc tounded in 1971 Eamon as the (adef in t894
and publisher“ ontnwusly astheKmtucky Kernel since WIS

Advertising punished herein is intended to help the rem buy
iiiisteadnq advertismq should be remted to the coitus

k umet telephaies

expansion. “When I came here.
there were three or four thousand
students. Of course we thought
that was a great number then.“
he said.

The Administration Annex
used to be “the old health
building. They had the boy
patients on the first floor. the
girls on the second and the
doctors had their offices in the
basement," he said. The Service
Building “used to be called the
Maintenance Building. It was a
lot smaller and a lot less nice
then." he added,

The complex and Medical
(‘enter areas used to be all farm
land. Maxberry said. One
Sunday while working overtime,
his crew was cleaning in the old
student union when they got an
emergency call telling them a
dairy ham was on fire.

“WE “()RKEI) all day moving
calves and throwing out burning
hay, trying to salvage what we
could The better part of the top
of the barn burned and there
were quite a few dead calves we
had to pull out." he said

Maxberry said the major
change in work over the years
has been the use of machines
“Everything used to be done by
hand Now it‘s all done more
rapidly with machines." he said

Alter straining to recall other
.‘tt‘Il\ ities of the
l'iii\ersit_\'s Maxberry
\tlltl. "when you're caught up lll
.ill the Illtttlt'l‘lI da) activities it\

interesting
past,

was} Itt lose track of yesteryear '

 

uiiyivxity I-t Mhtiir ky

SUMY

Any talse (1

Advertising DUSIN'A (iriutatim new
sports. Arts 287 1&1)

 

 

 

1

UK THEATRE. Auditions tor A DAY FOR
SURPRISES. Nov IA MUSir Lounge, Fine
Arts Building, 3 5p m IQNIA

NORTH CAMPUS WOMEN: A panel on
"Alternatives to the Weekend Dating Game"
will be presented at 7:30 Tuesday evening.
Nov. 12, in PattersOn Halt lobby t2NI2

PHILOSOPHY CLUB meeting Wed Nov,
I3 4 p.m. C8 346. Paper and discussion.
Topic: "Forms 0t Lite" UNI}

VETERANS!!! Important meeting, Wed
Nov. 13, Rm. Its, Student Center, 6 30 p m
Report on Ky Collegiate Veteran's Assor
Convention held this past week, and other
upcominqstate nationalevents I2Nl3

CHEMISTRY SEMINAR — Prot Herbert
A Laitinen, Universny at Florida
Gamesvulle, on “Conductive Tin Oxide
Electrodes in Electroanatytical Chemistry“
at 4 pm, Tuesday. November 1?, (P I37
8NI2

BOGDANOVICH'S "TARGETS" Will be
i-hcwn by the Enultsh Department on
Wednesday November I} in ( 8 up} A. 6 30
ands 309 m AdI'Y’ItSSri)” islrii.» lei

PHI UPSILON OMICRON initiation
luf“.dav, Navemhev I7, eighteenth tlnor
Otlii I' Tower ()Htff‘r‘. trim"I b 10 Mnnlllt‘f‘)
" l'(" 6 4')

UCM LUNCHEON FORUM t""‘i"’l'S Di
swqtit Teeter, Ii . 'Li'oa' v it Fviivesr, tin
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tin-i‘i'inia Hiiiso No. I; i.‘ "ill - ‘
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BIOLOGICAL SCIENCE; SEMINAR :
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THE HISTORY UNDERGRADUATE
ADVISORY will be givmq adwce to those
are registering history courses tar next
Spring Come to Room ms P O.T tor
advice UNI]

YWCA PUBLIC AFFAIRS FORUM,
"Focus on Racism," Wed Nov mm, It 30
lunch in cafeteria, I200 program. at
Mt“ Street YWCA Public INVIIeO Panel on
implications ot raCism in society. I2NIJ

LATIN AMERICAN COUNCIL sponsorinq
a panel discussion on Latin America
Economic and Political Implications of
a World Crisis, Faculty Club, Rm 365, S C ,
WedNov 13.noon Everyoneinvited I2NI3

CLUB LATINO OE LEXINGTON inwles
YOU to attend a nanel discussion on the
impact at a world crisis on Latin America‘s
future. Wednesday, Nov 13. noon, Facutty
Club,Rm 365,5.C I2NI3

UK AUDITIONS Audi'ions tor RIDERS
TO THE SEA N0v l'l lWednesdayi Musi'
Lounge, Fine Arts Building 3 S p n’: Part ol
UK Theatre's All Night Theatre Festival
lINI3

DISCUSSIONS ON THE Bah'a'i Faith,
Mondays 7 'IO 9 ()(I [I m 671 E High Street,
Apt no t ltNI3

THE MONTHLY MEETING of the
Volunteers tr. (orrdc'ions will he held
Linunny NUVI‘I'IT‘I" t7tti at 7 30 p m at "‘9‘
Mir. : i'nrt'ei’."l',‘( Rt>‘.1‘lil"l‘ IINIP

KENTUCKY STUDENT F’UBLIC Intnre"
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arts STUDENT CENTER BOARD

. . . . TRAVEL ADVENTURE .
Old Times director
bridges Pinter's gaps

By JOE STONE
Kernel Staff Writer

To attempt to interpret Pinter would be pure and
polyunsaturated folly.

Divide and conquer seems to be his underlying motive. In other
words, if the play is so filled with subterranean meanings and a
continual onslaught of verbal garbage, then the audience will
become lost and wander out of the theatre wondering what this man
is trying to say.

it takes guts and balls to takeon a play by Harold Pinter.

it takes a person not yet corrupted by years and years of
directing traditional plays.

DEBORAH POWELL. a young high-spirited UK graduate
student, has come face to face with Harold Pinter’s hodgepodge of
scenes filled with vast gaps of pauses and silences. And she’s
crossing those gaps well. Powell and her cast are presenting UK
audiences with Harold Pinter's play, Old Times. and an excellence
of entertainment quality that surpasses any meanings the play
may or may not have. JAN. 4'11, 1975

It isn't often that a playwright has the gumption to insert silences
into a play. Powell has directed those silences into excruciatingly

long moments,filled with things likethepersistent tapping ofa foot 0 TRIP OPEN TO STUDENTS. FACULTY

or the beat of a finger ring against a glass.

BETWEEN THE silences the actors created many moments of STAFF AND IMMEDIATE FAMILY

mirth and merrymaking. Yet at the same time there were fierce
underlying competitions between actors, and e:.derlying that.
doubt and suspicion; and who knows what else. beyond? At best,
these moods would be difficult to sustain. Powell‘s cast manages ' FINAL PAYMENT DUE NOV 15.
this overlay with skill and competence.

Russell Henderson portrays Deeley. the husband of Kate (played

3131,2333?SELLTTZ’I’SE‘.‘ “mm” as ”"8 was a" - FURTHER INFORMATION AVAILABLE

IIENDHRSUN. AS the play develops, progressively brings to
light the confusionaman faces when his ego and relationships with |N ROOM 204 STUDENT CENTER
another person are altered. He carries the tension of the play with
ease, slowly winning the audience's compassion. holding them in

”‘0 Palm "I “‘5 “and “he" “9 Well-V W’s 3‘ ”‘9 9nd ”I ”‘9 P‘ay . A‘ ‘“““““““““““““““m
intervals throughout the play he is bitingly sharp with quick vocal ‘

and physical mannerisms that bring out a kind of humor ‘ IS IhlS your CUIO InspeCIlon month? ' E
Henderson does well His ability to fill the long Silences with well
thought out transitions easily awards him the best acting job.

(‘lark possesses an unusual talent for sending hundreds of
questions into the minds of the audience every time she smiles.

Hut ('lark's firm grasp of the interpretation of her character
gives Kate control of the situations that are evolving betWeen
Ileeley and Anna in the last scene she reveals the other two
characters' true place in her life with a subdued, yet intense.
reprisal that marks the beginning oftheend of a play.

 

 

 

 

 

“‘“‘“"‘““““““‘““““‘““

CCDR J 99
and The ABA Champ
NEW YORK NETS

VS.

THE KENTUCKY COLONELS

Wednesday. November 13

Memorial Coliseum 7:35 p.m.

  
   
     
   
  
   
      
  
     
 

  

ln' FAR, (‘lark has the more difficult role. Although she has far
less lines than the others. her role was responsible for reacting to
what the others were doing. And when it is one of Pinter‘s plays —-
that's a tough assignment.

('onyers manages to find her way into the innermost recesses of
one's brain to invoke all the pleasant memories of childhood all at
once. in her character. she vividly brings to life the old times of
Anna and Kate. (‘onyer's performance lent a sense of grace both
alluring and ellusive. that added mystery and puzzlement to her
real intentions in visiting her old friend. As a duo, Conyers and
Henderson demonstrate fast and precise cue work in breaking up
the silences. Both brought delightful moments to an otherwise
painfully intense play.

Taken all together. Powell created a masterful interpretation of
nld Times that flowed with a continuance of thought and feeling.
ller competent bridging of those interminable silences with
thoughtfully directed transitions deserves “Stone's Guts and Balls
Award for 1974" n bar none.

  

 

Season Special! Nov. 13th

 

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