xt78930nvw34 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt78930nvw34/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-12-11 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, December 11, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 11, 1973 1973 1973-12-11 2020 true xt78930nvw34 section xt78930nvw34 'Reputation'

another factor

in publishing

By SHELIA WISE
Kernel Staff Writer

The reputation of the University is also a
factor in the “publish or perish" issue. The
university's reputation is based upon the
collective reputations of its faculty
members.

These in turn are based largely upon
their contributions to their respective
disciplines in the form of published works,
said John Via. assistant English professor.

Asked if there is a place at an institution
the sizeand type of UK for a professor who
wishes to devote his time to teaching and
advising, doing no research, professors
agreed that such instances are rare.

vxsfiw a ----
Editor's note: this is part two of a series
dealing with the issue publish or perish.

VIA SAID A professor looking for this
type of post should investigate the
possibilities of the smaller liberal arts
colleges and denominational schools.
These schools are usually engaged
primarily in undergraduate studies and do
not have massive undergraduate
programs.

“In a very real sense,‘

v

said Via, “a

professor shouldn’t come to UK or a
similar institution with the mind set of a
smaller school."

Concerning the professor who is a good
teacher of undergraduate studies, and a
fine advisor, Dr. Daniel Reedy, acting
dean of undergraduate studies, said there
“ just isn’t enough money to keep teachers
at the University merely because they
teach well.

“IT IS NECESSARY." added Reedy,
“to have that peculiar renaissance man,
who can fulfill both teaching and research
functions.”

Professors were divided as to whether
refusal to publish at UK was equivalent to
“professional suicide," though most
agreed that such refusal is rare.

Concerning the “professional suicide”
question, Via and Reedy said “yes,” they
both considered refusal to publish
“professional suicide.“

DR. WIMBERLY ROYS'I‘ER,, dean of
graduate studies, said while one wouldn't
be fired if he didn’t publish, “if people
don‘t write something their colleagues
judge to be of some value, they‘re not
going to be retained.“

Asked about the pressure on professors
to publish, Via said “there is always
pressure to publish.”

He attributed the constant pressure to
the University’s custom of judging each
faculty member on his contribution to the
functions of the University.

DR. PAUL STREET, chairman of the
Senate’s ad hoc committee, said he felt"
there was a great deal of pressure upon
young, assistant professors. He said the
emphasis on tenure, which is being
granted with greater and greater reluc-
tance, "‘puts a real squeeze” on the young
professor without tenure.

The objection to publishing, said Via,
“comes down to the feeling that there has
been an imbalance in the way the three
areas of a professor’s activity are
judged."

He clarified this statement by referring
to research as the “overwhelming
category" on which decisions are based,
and calling the other two dimensions
(teaching and service) a “poor second and
third to tax the first.”

Continued on Page 6

The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 87
Tuesday, December 11, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Senate passes
recommendation

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

College of Education's controversial
selective admissions proposal was
overwhelmingly passed by the University
Senate Monday.

The vote came after only 45 minutes of
discussion in which it was explained that
the reason for submitting the proposal was
not based on increasing enrollments but a
need to improve the program.

THE ORIGINAL PROPOSAL was
presented to the Senate Nov. 12 but no vote
was taken after a quorum count indicated
a vote was impossible.

Various material pertinent to formation
of the proposal was distributed to Senators
between Nov. 12 and yesterday’s meeting
to further explain Education’s position.

The new regulation will be effective Fall
1974 but will not directly affect students
until Fall 1976. The regulation gives the
College the right to limit enrollments for
students entering the Teacher Education
Program at the junior level.

TIIIS WOULD INCLUDE students who
have completed their freshman and
sophomore years and Educational
Psychology and Counseling 202.

To enter the program the student must
apply and meet admissions criteria to be
established by the program faculty with
the approval of the college faculty. In-
cluded in the criteria will be the student's
cumulative grade point average in un-
dergraduate courses prior to applying for
the program.

Dr. George Denemark, dean of the
College of Education, noted the exact GPA
for admittance to the program would be
determined for the students at the fresh-
man level, two years prior to their exact
entrance into the program.

SEVERAL governing regula-
tions were passed and one was sent back to
committee for further consideration.

Among rules changes passed were:

—once a student is enrolled in a specific
program, and changes in the degree
requirements for that program are made,
then the student would not be affected by
the new requirements.

—REQUIREMENT OF the dean of the
college to warn students on their way to
probation of the impending danger.

Continued on Page 4

Hello, snow!

this
dwarf? waves to passers by on Rose St.

I

Sniuting with a soft drink can't pull top

four-sectioned snowman—snow

(Kernel photo by Bruce Singleton.)

 

News In Brief

I, The Annotated Press
and The Kernel Stuff

0 Fuel shortage estimate

0 Pipeline contested

0-Obscenify guidelines?
0 Death penalty denied
0 Gasoline prices rise
0 US support lustified

0 Today's weather...

0 NEW YORK — A major petroleum
economics research group estimates the
shortage of fuel due to the Arab oil em-
bargo in the first quarter of 1974 will be
somewhat less severe than the govern-
ment‘s forecast.

The Petroleum Industry Research
Foundation, Inc., said Monday it estimates
the Arab shortage at up to 2.8 million
barrels a day, while the government‘s
figure for the total shortage is 3.5 million
barrels a day.

° WASHINGTON -— The government

and an environmental group are con-
sidering separate suits asserting the
Alaska pipeline will give oil giants an
unfair monopoly.

At least one suit could seek to halt
pipeline construction, scheduled to begin
within weeks. Completion of the line,
which will tap the rich oil fields of Alaska’s
North Slope, is expected in 1977.

. WASHINGTON—TheSupreme Court 0 MIAMI BEACH. Fla. — Gasoline

may be ready to offer more definite
guidelines to states and local officials on

what is punishably obscene.

The court issued a routine order Monday
agreeing to hear arguments in a case from
Georgia involving a theater operator found
guilty of violating state obscenity law for
the critically praised movie

showing
“Carnal Knowledge.“

0 LEXINGTON, Ky. — A state judge
refused Monday to allow the death penalty
to be called for in the trial of two men
accused of killing a Lexington minister
and his two children.

Fayette Circuit Judge L.T Grant also
delayed trial of the two until April 8 and
noted that would give the prosecutor time
to appeal his ruling against the death
penalty.

retailers, feeling the pinch of the energy
crisis, said Monday they want Phase 4
price controls lifted so they can hike prices
by at least one to three cents a gallon.

O BRUSSELS — Secretary of State
Henry A. Kissinger warned the European
allies Monday they and the United States
face the choice of closing ranks or flying
apart into two competing groups during a
period of mounting Soviet military

strength.

...outlook warmer

Thar she blows—the first real snowfall
of the season! Cloudy skies will continue to
cover us today and temperatures will
reach only in the low 30s. Tonight and
Wednesday may be a bit warmer, and no
more snow is predicted.

 

      
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
   
   
  
   
   
  
   
   
  

 

The Kentucky Kernel

Published by the Kernel Press inc.. 12:4. Pris- lllu Lune. Lexington. hy. Mexun as
the Cadet In 1894 and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel si me 1915.
The Kernel Press Inc. founded 1971. First class postage paid at Llwlngtoa, Ky.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or
misleading advertising should be reported to the edlttrs.

Editorials represent the (pinion of the edlttls. not the Universiw.

 

 

Is it worth the effort?

The defiant fist on the cover of the new student directory
is accompanied by a cliche, “Student Services—Moving
towards Student Economic Power,“ a slogan reminiscent of
the late 1960‘s. Power to the people. anyone?

The original inspiration for the cover was Student Ser-
vices Inc., a student run bookstore, which ironically closed
in August because of so little business. The cover then
became a general plea for student economic power, sym-
bolized by the $100 bill clinched by the fist. The $1 note
behind the $100 is probably a more accurate symbol.

In addition to its uniting cover, the directory offers many
incorrect addresses, phone numbers (if they’re listed at all)
and inaccurate listings of majors. One of the most curious
mistakes is the creation of a liberal arts major, something
at this campus which exists only in the directory.

The Registrar‘s office, from which this information is
obtained. denies its computers are responsible for the
mistakes. Student Government, likewise denies fault for the
errors. The blame it seems lies mostly with students who
fail to give correct information to the proper channels.

So. until students are willing to submit correct in-
formation to the Registrar‘s office, we wonder if it is worth
the effort to assemble a directory which doesn’t appear
until the end of the fall semester anyway.

Sinister force fouls up

In many ways. testimony in the Watergate Tapes con-
troversy is bringing out the true colors of the Nixon ad-
ministration.

Gen. Alexander Haig, White House Chief of Staff. testified
last week in Judge Sirica’s court “some sinister force” was
responsible for an 18 minute tape erasure. The tape is a
recording of a Nixon-HR. Haldeman conversation three
days after the Watergate break-in. ‘

Presidential secretary. Rose Mary Woods claims to have
accidentally erased the tape when she allegedly spent a few
minutes on the phone.

Placing most of the blame for the foul-up on Woods, Gen.
Haig said after the hearing, “I‘ve known women who think
they talk for five minutes and then have talked for an hour.”

Such a gross generalization from such a high ad-
ministration figure casts doubt on the sincerity of White
House rhetoric on equality for women. It appears a sexist
myth. definitely a “sinister force", is being exploited as
another Watergate scapegoat.

 

 
 

All OF ME PEO’PLE AlEOE lHE Ell/1;?
[KNEE SOME OF THE PEOPlE All
or THE TIME .2 . EE, No, .. HOW

ABOUT 39% or THE PEOPIE
98.? OF THE TIME.7..

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Er...

 

Letters

 

Skafing anyone?

As winter descends upon us once
again, one‘s thoughts turn to sleigh riding,
skiing. and ice skating and I am reminded
of an idea that was put forth to the
University this time last year. Why can't
we have an ice skating rink? Nothing
elaborate ofcourse, in fact I think it could
be done for under $100.

First you would need a level patch of
ground like two adjacent tennis courts. Set
up 2x4’s in a square around the perimeter
of both courts and then cover the area with
a large sheet of plastic. Just add water and
let Old Man winter do his thing. Even if
there was a warming trend in the weather
the water would be contained and allowed
to refreeze when it got cold again. Just this
little expense in time and effort by the
University could result in hours of
recreation for the students and faculty.
Maybe an intramural ice hockey program
could be started.

William Wassmer
Business administration—senior

Letters policy

Letters to the Editor may concern any
topics as long as they are not libelous.
However, so everyone has an equal op-
portunity to respond, we ask that you limit
letters to 250 words. We also ask that they
be typewritten and triple-spaced for the
convience of the typesetters. All letters
must be signed, including campus ad-
dress, telephone number and
classification. Each letter will be
restricted to two authors; those with more
than two signees will be signed “and
others."

Comment policy

No comment may exceed 750 words. In
such instances where copy exceeds the
maximum length. the editors will ask that
the comment be rewritten or that the
writer come to the office and edit the copy
for them. Contributors are also expected to
triple-space copy and include address.
telephone number and classification.

 

Causes of vaginal infections

By BETTY MOTT

r

 

      
  
  
  
 
  
  
 

   

 

 
 

   
 

   
 
 

 

  

QL'ESTION: Is it normal to have a
vaginal discharge?

ANSWER: Yes. Normally there is a
clear secretion from the cervical glands.
As this secretion proceeds down the
vaginal tract it joins with discarded cells
from the walls of the vagina, becoming
whitish and cloudy. This type of discharge
is normal.

Ql'ESTlON: When is vaginal discharge
considered abnormal?

ANSWER: A vaginal discharge is ab-
normal when it causes itching, swelling,
irritation. unpleasant odor, or if it
becomes so excessive that it is annoying.

QL'ESTION: What are the most common
types of vaginal infection?

ANSWER: There are three common
types of vaginal infections. First there is a
parasitic infection due to an organism
called Trichomonas Vaginalis. This in-
fection produces a greenish-yellow foamy
type of vaginal discharge.

Second, there is a fungus infection due to
a yeast like organism Candida Albicans.
This infection produces a thick white curd
like vaginal discharge.

Third. there are various bacterial in-
fections. These vary and cause a vaginal
discharge that is yellow and watery.

QL’ESTION: Can a woman have more
than one type of infection and how is she
sure which type she has?

ANSWER: Yes, a woman can have a
“mixed infection“ where you have two or
all three types of vaginal infections. Only
by pelvic and microsopic exam can the
physician or clinical nurse determine the
type of infection. Then the specific
treatment can be prescribed...

QL'ESTION: Are there other causes of
irritation and discharge besides these
infections?

ANSWER: Yes. for instance:

Diabetes can cause vaginal irritation
with or without vaginal discharge.

Birth Control Pills may cause increased
vaginal discharge and irritation.

Antibiotics often kill off normal bacteria
found in the vagina. Fungi can then grow
unchecked.

Venereal Disease may look like any
other bacterial infection.

Nervousness may cause an increase in
the amount of normal vaginal discharge.

  

QUESTION: Do vaginal infections af-
fect the sexual partner?

ANSWER: Yes, particularly infection
with the parasite Trichomonas Vaginalis.
In men this infection may not produce
symptoms although the organism may be
present in the urine and semen. Medical
attention for both partners and abstinence
from sexual intercourse, or protection by
condom during intercourse, is advisable.
Yeast infection in the female may also
cause some itching in the male partner.

QL’ESTION: Are vaginal deodorant
sprays or vaginal douching a necesary
part of feminine hygience?

ANSWER: Many women have misun-
derstandings about vaginal douching. The
fact is that normal vaginal secretions are
the chief requirement for good hygiene
and the prevention of infection. Too-
frequent douching removes the normal
fluids and strong chemicals can actually
destroy protective substances thus leading
to a vaginal infection. This is not to say
that douching is always harmful or un-
necessary but only that doucliing should
not be a part of routine feminine hygiene.

Your Health]

Using deodorant sprays increase the risk
of harming tissues. Then there is the
difficulty of spraying the vulva without
introducing the chemical into the vagina
and urethra where tissues are sensitive.
Also, sprays should not be used as a
substitute for bathing.

Simple hygiene centering on comfort
and cleanliness is the best protection
against vaginal infections.

QUESTION: What should a woman do if
she is concerned about discharge?

ANSWER: She should call the Health
Servrce (233-6143) and request an ap-
pomtment with one of the clinical nurses.

QUESTION: What is the cost?

ANSWER: A student who has paid the
health fee will not be charged for the
examination or laboratory tests. If a
prescription drug is necessary, the student
must pay for that. A student who has not
paid the health fee will be charged $5.00 for
the examination.

Betty Mott, R.N. is a clinical

nurse with the Student Health
Service

 

  

 

 

opinion from inside and outside the university community

 

 

Dogelll

 

"—

Nicholas Von Hoffman

Two different energy themes
surface as crisis continues

WASHINGTON — We’re getting two
different themes in the public pronun-
ciamentos about the energy crisis. The

Johnny Cash crowd keeps talking about
what we should do “during the energy
crisis,“ thereby suggesting it will not
always be with us. Then there are the
others who repeat that “things will never
be the same.“

In a sense, both are right. Since there is
an incalculable amount ofoil under ground
and water, we can look forward to a time
when there will again be plenty of fuel for
our cars and furnaces, but we‘ll never be
able to buy it at the same price again.
Thus. it‘s accurate to say that things will
never be the same.

That phrase—things will never be the
same a gain ~considerably understates the
vastness of the change in store for us.

r m: Mow $5M

:6

 

What it means is that a society put
together not only on the assumption of an
infinite supply of gas, but ofcheap gas, will
still be able to get all it wants but at very
high prices.

PEOPLE HAVEN‘T gotten used to that
idea yet. They think that if we can undo
Nixon and Kissinger’s amazing diplomatic
coup of alienating the world‘s most anti-
Communist monarch, the King of Saudi
Arabia, cheap oil and plenty will flow
again. No way.

The Arabs are getting much more
sophisitcated about their oil marketing.
Because they’ve had master corporate oil
cabalists teaching them, you can be sure
they‘re not going to dump crude oil on the
market at depressed prices. In addition,
even if we win our struggle against the
international oil cartels domestically—an

unlikely supposition—the big boys will still
be able to hover off the 12-mile limit and
hold us up for high prices.

Moreover. since we‘ve lost our own
world—wide trade dominance. other
nations and other economies are com—
peting with us to buy that oil. Their
currency is every bit as good as ours and
better. and they too now have large
middle-class populations with the
muerican purses and appetities for the
profligate consumption of energy.

IF WE LOOK only to our own resources
at home, we probably can find the fuel, but
it will be expensive. Atomic energy and the
other exotics are as costly as they are
potentially dangerous to ourselves and our
physical surroundings. There will be no
more cheap gas for the society that was
built on it.

That verdict falls first on the
automobile. People who bought expensive
Polluter 500 models already know what
that means. In a space of a few weeks the
resale value of many of their cars has
dropped as much as one- or two-thousand
dollars, a lot of money for families whose
only other realizable asset is a half-paid
mortgage. But what it will do long term to
the economy will be worse.

Reference here is not being made to
temporary shortages of petrochemicallv
made plastics but to permanent changes in
the automobile industry, one of the major
hinges of our prosperity. It is this fear that
must be driving men like Secretary of the
Treasury Shultz up the wall.

WEDDED TO AN early-20th-Century
technology, the automobile industry can‘t
make money selling small, gas economy
cars. The reason that guy on the television
keeps informing you that the power
steering, the air conditioning, the power
brakes and the vinyl roof aren‘t optional
any more but “standard“ (included in the
price) is that the profit from automobile
manufacture now comes from loading
extras on to the cars.

Even with the extras that they‘ve been
making and we've been buying, the in-
dustry‘s return on investment or on sales
has been dropping for 20 years. Nor is
there any way to reverse it. There is no
known way to make Henry Ford's car—
which is essentially what they‘re
producing—any cheaper. (For more sad
facts see Emma Rothschild‘s excellent
book. Paradise Lost: The Decline of the
Auto-Industrial Age. Random House. 1973.
$6.95) In short. don‘t look for the men
furloughed off theirjobs making Cadillacs.
Buicks. Chryslers or Mercuries to go back
to their old jobs.

The average family was spending about
10 per cent of its income on its car before
the gas shortage. At a dollar a gallon or
better, it can‘t go on driving big cars. What
that means is that Detroit and tens of
thousands of spin-off jobs from the auto
industry have been given a shot they won‘t
spring back from. But it also means
everything else, all the hundreds of billions
of dollars of investment in homes,
supermarkets, motels and cities built on
the confident assurance of cheap gas and
cheap fuel of all kinds.

EVEN ()l'R METHODS of construction
depend on it: the thin-walled homes. the
glass-walled office buildings. There has
probably not been a single large business
structure in 20 years that has had windows
you can open. Our cities of egotistically
impractical skyscrapers weren‘t earning
what they cost prior to this jump in fuel
costs. llenceforth, however, they will
hemorrhage red ink, and the suburbs with
their diffuse and wasteful land-use pat-
terns can offer us no economies.

No. things will never be the same.

University
is stifling
competition

By JILL RAYMOND

l have a response to the debate being
waged over more selective admissions
standards in the College of Education that
I can't keep suppressed. I feel the issues
here strike at something very fundamental
in the way university education has a grip
on our growth and can determine in what
directions it can go.

Dean Denemark. in his rebuttle to Jim
Flegle‘s criticism of the proposed new
standards. defends them by perpetuating
the myth of professionalization, which has
already all but censured American
thinking.

“(‘AN WE (‘ONTINL'E to view open
admissions to a professional school like
Education as a ‘democratic' obligation but
consider the calibre of students and
resources available for a quality ex-
perience as bases for restricting
enrollments in Law. Medicine, Dentistry.
Nursing and Allied Health? Is the impact
of incompetent teachers less critical than
incompetent professionals in these other
areas?“

But professionalism. “competence",
hierarchies. and competition are what
make our wonderful little ecomonic
system work and perpetuate itself. It won‘t
have to support us all at any level of
“quality“ if it wakes us spend our lives
“getting ahead" of each other. It has a
particular interest in not supporting these
who may advocate theories which actually
challenge its legitimacy, which don't fall
into some well-defined category of
"normal" or “competent", and which are
net supportive of its method of control.
Certainly the colleges of Medicine, Nur-
sing. etc. have closed for the most part for
people whose “innovativeness” falls
outside of the reals of what will benefit
privatized. profitable medical practice as
we know it.

Education never been particularly
encouraging (contrary to the way it
would view itself) to radical analysis of the
basic concepts of what education, or what
a genuine student-teacher relationship. is
or ought to be. But comparatively. it has
probably been much better than other
“professions“ and has enabled American
schools today to create genuine at—
mospheres of ”free inquiry" to the degree
that they de-which is. indeed, limited to
begin with.

CLOSING OFF this channel in the name
of “competence” and “quality" is a very
sinister development. What determines
the standards of “quality" is and “com-
petence" is necessarily, no matter how
Dean Denemark would kid himself
otherwise. what is profitable, reinforcing,
and contributing to the dominating
structures of society. Yes—innovation is
definitely solicited—to determine, for
instance, better methods of behavior
modification so that people will learn what
they‘re supposed to learn; or on research
of the brain, which continues to pursue
ways by which people can be surgically
”cured“ of their aggressive t “abnormal“)
behavior. Better methods of controling
people are always a worthwhile in-
vestment—neither mace nor the electric
chair seem to be able to do thejob.

I suggest that we analyze all such
“quality" arguments critically for the
purpose of finding what motivations might
lie beneath them.

Jill Raymond is an English
junior.

    
   
 
   
   
   
   
 
   
   
  
    
  
   
   
  
     
  
   
   
 
   
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
   
 
  
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
      
       

 -l—TIIE KENTl't‘KY KERNEL. Tuesday. December It. 1973

CHARLIE'S

Foreign Car Service

Moved To New Location
10 per cent on Parts and Labor
Students and Staff Only

Now at the Texaco Station
at 27mm

2275 Nicholasville Road

     
      

 
 
    
 
  
  

  
  
 

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THE IMPERIAL SHOPPE
PRESENTS:

Beautiful Christmas Gifts

Winners of national tournament

UK all-stars are trivia kings

By RON MITCHELL

Kernel Staff Writer
History was made at the University of Illinois at
Urbana over the weekend and four UK students
had the distinction of being the center of attraction.
The four—William “Jersey“ Straub, Ray
Foushee, Joel Zakem and Dave Cronen—took top
honors in the first annual National Invitation Trivia

Tournament (NITTl.
Competition was tough, said team captain Straub,

although only six teams were present out of a total

100 schools invited to the competition. The energy

crisis was listed as the reason for most of the teams’
absences.

l'K'S QL'ARTET made easy work of the op-
position in the three games they played.

In the first game against Indiana State. UK found
itself behind after the 10-minute first half 70-5, but
came on strong in the final lOminutes of play to post
a 95-70 victory.

The questions presented to the champs were of a
different variety than those faced by the players in
the UK Trivia Bowl regular season. UK has had
trivia bowl competition for the past three years.

(‘R().\'EN NOTED the national questions were
slightly different than those usually considered
trivia questions l "Anything completely useful is not
trivia" i by the fact they includeda lotof history and
Broadway productions.

"I think anything that's worth anything to
anybody or could be on a test or exam is not trivia."
the bearded Cronen said.

Two of the team players— Zakem and Straub—r
went to the nationals because they were selected as
all-stars in the local competition. both playing on
the undefeated L'K champions “The Rise and Fall of
the Eric Campbell Trivia Bowl Empire."

STRAL'B E XPI.;\I.\'EI) that Eric Campbell was a
star in old Charlie Chaplin movies, usually playing
the "bad guy." ”He was the guy with the big
eyebrows who was always beating up on Chaplin."
he said.

In three years of competition Straub has lost only

one game (local and national competition) while

Zakem is undefeated in two seasons. Straub was on
the second place team two years ago, which lost the
final game of the UK tournament to “Kernel
Knowledge."

Straub attributes the only loss in his career to the
fact that as a frosh he was ”unseasoned in the ways
of the competition." Don Rosa, who has served as
UK trivia moderator for the past two years. was a
meinber of the victorious team that year.

 

The four successful triviasters reflect their
pleasure and flush with victory. From left: Bill
“Jersey" Straub. Joel Zakem. Dave Cronen and
Ray Foushee. (Kernel photo by Dave Cronen.
Now let‘s see you figure that one out.)

Cronen and Straub noted UK team members at
the national tournament looked upon the contest
lightly, while most of the other teams spent spare
time studying.

“WE WERE probably the least serious team
there. The only studying we did was at Murphy‘s
Bar.” Straub said.

Cronen was selected because “Thursday night
Jersey called and asked me if I wanted to go," he
said. Straub explained that Cronen, who has never
been on a trivia bowl team in his life, was picked at
the last minute to replace UK all-star Craig Walsh,
who was forced to stay home to takea test.

Foushee went north with the other three because
moderator Rosa chose not to go. No reason was
given for Rosa not going.

ALL OF THE STARS will be returning next year.
Straub is a junior BGS major, Foushee a sociology
graduate student, Zakem a BGS junior and Cronen
a junior education major.

Straub, however, denies reports he will return to
competition next season, as the seasoned veteran
shows signs of weariness.

“I‘m thinking of retiring at the height of my
career and applying for trivia bowl moderator.
since Rosa is graduating this December," he
concluded in a recent interview.

South Vietnamese freeps advance

 

 

 

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Deinhard (German) $16.89
Antinovi (Italian) $15.51

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By DENIS GRAY
Associated Press Writer

GHI NGHIA, South Vietnam —
South Vietnamese troops ad-
vanced into Communist-held
Kien Duc Monday, but North
Vietnamese artillery and forces
were massing near the town,
military sources said.

Communist artillery repor-
tedly was stationed on high
ground to the north and south of

  

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said the road between the town
and this provincial capital, 12
miles to the east, was mined and
North Vietnamese troops were

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lying in ambush along the last
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In Cambodia, field reporters
said Khmer Rouge commandos
made an early morning raid on
the provincial town of Kompong
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Reports said insurgent in-
filtrators burned about 20 houses
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Directories arrive
after month delay

By LINDA CARNES
Kernel Staff Writer
The 1973-74 Student Directories
have finally arrived at the
Student Government office after
a month delay because of paper
shortage at the publishing plant.

Directories were originally
supposed to be distributed on
Nov. 16, said David Mucci, SG
administrative assistant.

He said the reason the direc-
tories did not come out sooner
is because a complete listing of
names was not obtained until Oct.
1 and the company must have
four to six weeks for printing.

NAMES AND addresses
published in the directory are
from information at the
Registrar’s office.

Copies of the directories may
be picked up in front of the 86
office or at the residence halls,
Mucci said.

The cover of the directory
shows a couple of $100 bills in a
clinched fist with the slogan,

“Student Services—Moving
Towards Student Ecomonic
Power."

ORIGINALLY THE cover’s
slogan was