xt7b8g8fj70s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7b8g8fj70s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-12-06 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 06, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 06, 1972 1972 1972-12-06 2020 true xt7b8g8fj70s section xt7b8g8fj70s Kel II UCky Vol. LXIV No. 67 an independent student newspaper
' Wednesday, December 6, 1972 University of Kentucky
Eight Pages Lexington, Kentucky 40506
M i
\ b ’
Student Code revisions ' *
. d i i . st ‘ t, ‘
By MICHAEL CARR the University Senate, and Rona -. . m —
Kernel Staff Writer Hopson, graduate student. - *‘Q s" _ -
The Advisory Committee on Howell Hopson said the 3i;* i '
Student Code Revisions met with Presidential appointment would i“ ”is
interested students for the second allow less student input into the J- 3"" . hfi '
time yesterday to discuss proposed Board. Flickinger also objected to a h . - ' “W -
changes to the Student Code. The the proposal. He said if the hearing ' 6K; '
first meeting was held Nov. 21, officer is appointed by the -. Va 9 '
while many students were away 0; President, the officer may not be _ 4 . " i ~ ‘
Thanksgiving break. objective, knowing his job may be ' , . .. ._ _
Much controversy at the meeting affected by his decisions. . _ ' 2h , .
centered around Proposals eight, Also speaking against realign- ' .x, 3;; _
12, and 11, realigning the ment of the J-Board, Rona * . - ‘1‘; ‘ i; -.
University Judicial Board and Hopson said, “I would prefer we 2:, ' . ' =
allowing the dean of students to stick with the status quo. When you . _ . . '~ . ,
contact a student’s parents con- choose students at random, I don’t 3% . I -
cerning disciplinary matters. think they would be knowledgeable 3‘? _ ~
Howell Hopson, A&S senior enough for the job.” Herb Kaplow. a commentator for ABC news. spoke In the Student Center
speaking for the University Student Proposals 21 and 22, concerning Grand Ballroom last night. Kaplow was with NBC news for 21 yea“. and
Advisory Committee, said, “It is residence hall operation, also came switched to ABC about six months ago.
time for the administration to stop under fire. Proposal 21 repeals the ’
tampering with the J-Board. Ihave present system of dorm govern- ' '
heard no complaints from students ment while Proposal 22 defines Sirange eIGCfion
about the J-Board.” residence hall rental agreements. .
H0950" said these proposals Pro sal 21, Ho on said, would K I
attempt “to mold the J-Board into abolis‘lioresidence Ilisall government a P ow cove rs c a m P a I 9 n
the opinion 0f the University,” without ex lainin how it would be
Proposal 11: allowing for 3P‘ recreatedeopsorgi said this leaves By Mle YORI.‘ Kaplow, who covered the McGovern
pointment 0f the J-Board hearing the reformation at the discretion of '.“?"‘°' Staff Writer campaign during its final weeks, termed
officer by the President and ran- the dean of students. ABC POhttcai correspondent .Herb the election “a rather strange one“ in that
dom selection of J-Board members, Concerning Proposal 22, Kaplow last night outlined his experiences ”three days after it was over there was
was also attacked by Hopson, Dr. Flickinger said its proposed con- covering the 1972 election campaign to a nothing about it in the papers."
Garrett Flickinger, chairman of Continued on page 4. Col. 4 sparse Student Center Ballroom audience. This lack 0f election f0"OW'UP was Odd.
Kaplow said, and he cited past races after
. which there were “all sorts of post mor—
Reco rd c rowd expected to View
THE ABC CORRESPONDENT said the
O _ 0 American public “really anticipated the
t e m o o n I g t A P o o a u n c I n g election’s outcome" and their anticipation
was the reason for the absence of usual
- analyses. . ‘-
By GREG‘HARTMANN simulator. They have been gradually Estimates of the number of people Kaplow said Nixon’s lopsided victory
Editorial Editor shifting their sleep cycle, and will rise at pouring into the Cape Kennedy area for the raised questions which are still unan-
and noon today and suit up later this afternoon historic launch range from 300,000 to one swered, among them:
RONALD 0- :AWliUNS for the scheduled 9:43 pm. liftoff. million. Officer Charles Autrey, of the —Has Richard Nixon forged a new base '
Kernel Sta Wr ter Cocoa Beach olice de artment, - 9 .
CAPE KENNEDY—The APOUO 17 NASA officials here said they expected estimated half a mFillion people? would be diff: rt :2; medZZthmlssan ‘32:]... 2:: '
astronauts will have a few surprises up “better than 50 percent chance” 0f clear there. traditionally Democratic ethnic groups
their pressure-suit sleeves during their skies for the night time launch, which may going ‘0 be permanent”
three day stay on the moon, fellow be visible for up to 500 miles. However, “There appears to be more people than Ka low said althou h. the President had
astronaut Alan Sheppard hinted Tuesday. they said a cold front moving in from the for past launches,” he said. noting that the donep“an excellent gjob in his foreign ‘
Sheppard, the first American into space, west and due early Thursday morning influex started earlier this time than for lie “his domestic ro gr am“has been a
made the remark at a press briefing as the could create overcast skies, depriving other moon ShOtS. Sisasier .. p '
countdown for the last scheduled U.S. much of the Southeastern United States of THE hlEWSM AN said Nixon apparently
manned moon shot of the century ticked the spectacle. His comment was supported by hotel believes his mark on history will be
on. and motel personnel in the area. A clerk at determined by h ow he handled foreign not
“You might expect something out of the At T-l days pre-launch procedures were the Cocoa Howard Johnson's said all their domestic affairs And Kaplow also ixai d
ordinary at the end of the third EVA, moving relatively smoothly, but there rooms had been reserved a year in ad- foriegn affairs are often easier to handle
(extravehicular activity),”Sheppard said, were problems. A defective bolt in a vance. The Cape Kennedy Chamber of Kaplow who worked for NBC 21years
' adding that the surprise had been cleared- battery mounting cost ground crews 35 to Commerce is even referring tourists to before cdmin 8 to ABC 6 months ago
with NASA authorities. 40 minutes and the computer in the firing private homes for lodging. covered the Nixon administration during
MEANWHILE THE THREE Apollo 17 control system began providing erroneous its first 3% years Many journalists believe '
astronauts—commander Eugene Cernan, data. A planned nine hour and 53 minute Among the VlP‘s attending this final his break with NBC was caused by deep
rookie Ron Evans and geologist Jack Sch- hold was due to begin at 2 am. allowing mission in NASA's Apollo series are Don disagreements over how certain govern-
mitt——spent Tuesday night practicing time to deal with these and other problems Rickels, Spiro Agnew, and a 130-year old ment events should be han del ed .7
launch procedures in a command module that may arise. former slave. '
fl
ff“ Old Man Winter is back on the track.
Take a look at the editorial page. UK , '3’ \ Today‘s high will fall to the 30‘s this af-
blacks and their problems are pointed out 'y i‘ ternoon, and will drop to a low of 20
‘ the lead editorial. Also included is a -' - _ .‘ O - ht. Th chances favor rain toda
Inside° "‘ . ' , Outstde- “"8 e. . y,
0 response to the Leader s charge of moral i “ o s . a possibly turmng to snow later in the day.
degeneration concerning proposed coed no 0 ° OJ‘ Button up your overcoat. Tomorrow, more
dormitories. L 0 ' \g of the same, with a zero percent chance of
. _ reci itation.
.. jay;- . S“ p " -

 The Established ll" Anisianimnaglno Editor, Katie McCarthy 0 .
Editor iii-Chief Mile wines Assistant Managing Editor. New Morgan Ed r I
Kentucky 2:333:33: £.'.".".22t§.';"... :::::::2: mm: 2:33;: 3:: I ONO 5
Kerne' Campus Editor Mlle Tiernev Editorials represent the opinions o! the editors. not "to University
__._.____—______ i
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Blocks of UK. Making progress, u s 0
There are almost 20,000 un- studies courses that there are at UK. seling, and cultural identity It should be obvious, then, that the
dergraduates on the Lexington Try asking around. You will find, as workshops for blacks. The office is University isn’t sitting around
campus of the University of Kentucky we did, that no one really knows how also the headquarters for the twiddling its thumbs at the black
this fall. Two hundred and twenty- many there are. As Dean Anthony C. federally funded Educational Talent problem. But the programs recently
three of them, or only 1.4 percent, are Colson pointed out, “One answer is Search project which tries to reduce begun by UK won‘t change the
black. The same situation is true at that there are none and another an- the drop-out rate among blacks in situation overnight. UK still has one
the graduate level. Of 2,683 graduate swer is that there are hundreds.” It local high schools. of the lowest percentages of black
students, only 49 are black—some 1.8 all depends, he explained, on how you UK also holds a two-week summer students of any state university, and
percent of the students. define a black studies course. In orientation session for minority is lower than most universities across
This 5,101“an be surprising to short, no one knows. stutients tph oregare thegnl for the the cpuntry. So we still have a long . .
anyone. We’ve all experienced large And itwould seem, at least at a first Eggntz‘n; aaneartlay): $131th: 8:11;: way 0 go.
classrooms With only one or two black glance, that no one cares. It would And only this year UK added Don But the programs started recently
students, and the classes that we ve seem that the University is content , ’_ _ . . ,y
- Byars Jr. to its admiSSions staff as a by the UniverSity are, at least, a
had Wlth "0 blacks at all are too with its all-white image. It would full-time black recruiter beginning. j .
numerous to count seem that the administration ought to _________-_'________.________...._4_.__-._..4__—-_ '
be condemned for its outlandish -' m 5 s7 -
. g . . .
Five of 1.300 mom, I e1 93,? 1,» . go
. . . w 63 ~( g; l _ .5 7»
And we‘ve seen an extremely small However, hrSt ImPFe§51°“S, are l W ’ '
number of black administrators and often wrong: The administration ‘5 l . \ . \ ,
' faculty members, too. In fact, there doing something about the Situation-of ‘ \
are only five full-time black faculty blacks here at UK- And Whhe “5 an
members on the main UK campus out actions have hOt yet produced COh' . . .. ,' .4 4; ,.
of 1300 faculty positions. And on UK’s crete results, it expects results in the 3 5m 2 85 6 5 2g?) a]
community colleges across the state, future. :34 ell-l ”\e. . 351;. E." . .
there are only three blacks out of 400 For example, just last year an , 2'3 V'ln " n ‘v ' .‘ w " ' ' g‘
full-time teachers Office of Minority Student Affairs 3 ., 4,
- was created to help deal with black \ \'\- ’
There has also been some problemsTheoffice, headed by Jerry ’ Nix ‘,‘ C1!)
. . . . p /_. .4,
discussmn as to the number of black Stevens, prOVides tutoring, coun- Stenfiml _,._._.________-____- _H-____..._-___-._____-._._. 5
l
“\‘i‘. f h *1“ 5f??- g
. o
. t .. The Leader finds a bed under every bed
\- 123‘s: ~
ll lath; ’ 1 “UK IS ASKING FOR TROUBLE.” would be damaged by the ex- “UK President Otis Singletary '
vfi' a That’s the headline of the latest perimental experience.” they sagely should act swiftly to terminate this
' . reactionary pronouncement from the warn, ignoring the fact that students foolhardy venture in modern
[N'- C!“ .' l7 editorial page of The Lexington have long had apartments, backseats morality,” they pontificate’ 39-
e, t _( ‘K . Leader, and the subject is, of course, (ugh) of cars, and Sunday afternoon parently forgetting that the details of
. ‘ I, ’1‘ Ey'Vr'vtEss ’5 coeeducatlonal dormitories. “open dorms” for that sort of thing. plans for co-ed dorms haven’t been
r ‘,.\ is ‘ .
, . ‘ g gist: “Such a program would provide . made public yet—and that when they
a?! a' ‘sz .4 nothing but trouble for the state’s “We do “0t believe that the are, they re hardly likely to advocate
’ A y : 1': /\ gli~\: 1:, largest educational institution,” say majorittly 9f parents Wtho scriénptghd boys and girls sharing beds. ‘
. :7". .2 "‘- ”‘7‘” the L d editors, oblivious to the save 9" money 0 sen e"
. "1* hf'jfig fact thaterboth the University of children to college would want them Journalists call such unresear-
/\. 1;, ., 1!"? -: ‘9“ v Louisville and Centre College have livmg in such an environment where ched, lunch-hour epistles “fanny
~ ~ 4.34] ’ ' 4 . “’s 4.4;-» “\k -- long tried co-ed living without a hint the sexes are mixed m dormitories, pieces. Even the most conservative
3“ I _ . .. - of a problem. they glower, conveniently bypassing editorial opinions should be backed
. ' ‘ J studies showing co-ed living fosters with fact before they‘re published, 3
Th. WW0 ebb. "'d M." “Promiscuity would increase on the close brother-sister relationships credo The Leader has apparently
.Mr_ Kissinger will see you mm “L. campus, and many youthful lives instead of debauchery. forgotten.

 ‘9‘ THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. December 0. "72—3
Nicholas 9
mm“ ‘g 808 BAGERIS PRESENTS IN LOUISVILLE
\ M
I l 0 l
Volunteers : City of God 5 slaves “M, “g
. . . . . o,
WASHINGTON—Every week millions of pro- started thinking that a lot of people are working
football TV fans are socked with a commercial in companies who might want to volunteer so I, d“
thatends with a red arrow turning into a heart as they went to the companies rather than wait for
they’re told, “We Need You—you’ve got the companies to come to them. There’s another WED” DEC . ‘| 3 - 8 P. M .
something money can’t buy." group in San Francisco but I can’t for the life of CO N VEN TIO N CENTER
The intro for this plug for the National Center me think what it was they were doing.”
for Voluntary Action is a short spiel by somebody Julie Hirsch, the center’s vice president, says PRICES: $5 advance, $5.50 day of show
like Jim Marsalis of the Kansas City Chiefs it another way: “It’s hard to point to something all 5“” reserved
telling you how you can fight drug addiction, the we do. We spin everything off. We’re just a MAIL ORDERS: Convention Center, 525 W. WIIMI':
loneliness of old age or juvenile delinquency. catalyst, and, of course, if you’re a catalyst you Loulsville. Ky.
‘ THE IDEA IS TO HOOK YOU into writing the don’t have anything left when it’s all over.” '
the National Center for Voluntary Action, an NOTHING LEFT but the bills, which can be __ -, ,_
organization that is presented as an unexplained considerable. In the lastyear or so the center has gar V2.3 , I ‘ . 't‘e' V
media deus ex machina for good. The center will raised and is spending almost $3 million. The H. .
give your name to a local voluntary agency, dough comes from unnamed private people, a i f; o I
which will put you to work in your spare time small group of foundations and a large chunk , l a r 1 a S
building the city of God on earth. from the government—in spite of Nixon‘s / . . . ”A
This description, however, doesn’t do the statement that this would not be. / \
center justice, and certainly doesn’t suggest its That contradiction is probably explained by ’ ITALIAN - \ ‘
mighty political sponsorship. In fact, its creation saying that Washington cannot start anything it ‘ .
was announced by President Nixon, who said at doesn’t run. The level of stridency may be lower 1 .
the time, “It will be established by distinguished here, but Nixon cannot, any more than Kennedy, 5‘ R LSTAUR ANT j ’1’
private Citizens working With government of- foster local voluntarism—and least of all by *3 347 South Lime , -_ v‘ g .i
finals and usmg private funds.” commandeering the mass media, the mass it Ki ‘3ij 41"", a
corporate power and the rest of the apparatus of :94 (Across from "ff-‘k' ’J 4
The social register centralism- _ , Holmes Hall) ' ~ 3
Even though Nixon and the people working for e -
It follows that W. Clement Stone, who gave _ him in the center may "0t Wi5h_it~ the only thing . v 2‘24 .
more to the Nixon campaign than any single they can. accomplish through-this kmd 9f SPF"? 15 .' mg? "5'" " i ‘3’) .
individual is known to have ever kicked in the regimentation 0f charity and indiv1dual " I is? ‘0wa I”: 1
before, should be chairman of the board, and alturism. That’s brought out clearly enough by . S - ‘ ' ‘ I e‘
that he should have such other heavyweight another centerexecutive, Pave Jeffreys, who ; ‘
social thinkers sitting with him as Henry Ford 11, says, We re gomg t_° mobilize volunteers to help 63 7’.
Richard Kleindienst, Melvin Laird, Mrs. government agermes to do the Job they re I $1.00 0": lARGE 5' If i
Jeannette Rockefeller, Leo Perlis of the AFL- mandated to do. _ [J t
CIO H.I. Romnes chairman of AT&T, and other That s how Mao Tse-tung looks on hls volun- ‘
. ’ . ’ . teers, too. " $.75 OFF MEDIUM SIZE ‘
nice, dull, rich, safe, uncreative people who , , . .
». . never get arrested and seldom get in the papers . But get what D 0‘18?“ K' Ignséy’fhe center 5 \ I
3:! unless they‘re announcing a stock split. "hyo: gchgiehé;write51n his organization 5 November \ $.50 OFF SMALL SIZE / / ,
,,;. brou ht ’em allhome to mother for dinner, 5 e’ .. ‘ . , ‘
fall agsleep and her head would plop in her soup. ' ' ‘THE MQST CRITICAL pr 9”“ facing the . .‘ Offer good Wed. Dec. 6 o /
... voluntary action movement is recrtutment. i . \4 . .. /
4: - THIS lNSlPlD BUNCH of socially responsible Cohfronted with the alliternative t:Jf forced ‘us% 6-H p.m. ; 4‘
- _ - ' cts wh t ou mi ht call the mi itary service—an a ternative t at many _,
Isfl‘iifjitilsgsiindyf‘ethe Jacl:l Kinnedy geace Corps young find abhorrent—great numbers WOUId A A." . ‘ . I . ‘3‘“ a
vision. Although they lack the dash and doubtless choose to do work they consider useful
coruscation of the Kennedy bunch, they do and positive. We would welcome their help.” .
possess the same do-gooderish vagueness. VOIUI‘I‘I’OOI‘S? WO" BE DOLLARS AHEAD
Vee Tinnin is the woman in charge of keeping '"
in contact With nearly 200 Voluntary Action Conscripted volunteers? “We would have to
Centers around the COUNTY These are merely broaden our definition of voluntarism,” con-
the same old volunteer referral offices that have cedes Mr. Kinsey, “but I believe that in the long , 1 [/b ..
been around for yeaI‘Sr bUt what she says about run we will be strengthened by the adoption of 5 a", _\ / ' , t ’
her job reveals the velocity of movement around this proposal.” 4 V , , “1%) t
the National Center for Voluntary Action: \ 4/5 ' _. ,. ‘ q
“We’re not reinventing the wheel. We’re That’s also how they run the Chinese Red 7 i ’V; ~-~ j'f’ '3]
putting a new tread on the wheel. We’re asking Army. But they mustdo itor eatworms and bark 4‘, ’ :7}. .e “ -- 7"" ”’13? 'i
‘local groups to expand their services. . .Many for their suppers. What’s our excuse for this new , f ' *‘b‘sy ‘% ,l 2”"
still aren’t looking at the whole community. As sacrifice of the citizen to the state? Till that ‘ C“ r 2' . _ '
an example of our work, let’s take Topeka, question’s answered, just watchthe ball game
f Kansas. They were talking there about the and don’t sign up for nuthin.’ -
i library. It struck them that they could go into the Copy right, 1972, The Washington Post—~King
i parks and the hospitals with books. Then they Features Syndicate
Top Cosh
Letters for
' ° homosexuality is not an antisocial activity, Books
Christian reply the courts. _
If homosexuals feel they can better
to GLF critics come to terms with this world, and, I hope,
the next one, by uniting in GLF, Christians
As a lifelong church member and a are acting contrary to the teachings of
. struggling Christian, I am well aware 0‘ Jesus by standing in their way. Fire and V
V Leviticus 20:13, which states that brimstone may well rain upon this cain-
' homosexuality is an abomination to the pus, but if it does, it will come because of
Lord. our fear, hatred and intolerance, and not 800 K
. However. lam not the Lord, and neither, because we recognize that gays exist and
I think. is Dave Jarman, Tom SChOll. 01' have a right to do their own business with
Pastor Gerald Smith. Every person's God in whatever way it needs to be done. 510 RE
moral life is a matter to be determined by No one has the right to interfere.
the individual and the Lord, and not by me, Bev Cubbs
the president of this university, or, since Sophomore—Anthropc. 6y

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, December 6. 1972
I
n. mu 0......m... on College conducts study 1
~6l00
W The..." MS
ON THE MALL 0
\ for architectu re students
Mild Quartet . By JOHN MCFERRIN for factors common to good ar-
l- 3' 50". Showtlmes Only Dec. 6. 7, 8, 9,. 8:30 pm. j Kernel Staff Writer chitecture students. '

. 5115: 7:25: 9345 The College of Architecture “It’s for the student’s benefit as 1
O'NO DE LAURENT“ P'”‘"l3 ' Dec. 10 - 7130 pm. and the UK Counseling and well as ours,” Spaeth said. “It’s a C
.CHARLES BRONSON 3 Testing Service will conduct a waste of time fora student to take P
JOSEPH W'SEMA“ J'LL'HEU‘ND 0 - . . t d t he] students con» it five hour course findin out h t

— - _ Fine Arts Bulldln s u y o p g e
GERALD 3' ° LOUGHUN J g sidering a career in architecture. doesn‘t like architecture.” C
"5“?“ “"""“i 80 ff' The study will attempt to find a While Spaeth says he does not P
AMEDEO "um" x 0 me Open correlation between student know what the study will show, he t‘
No Matinee ” E} _ noon . 9 p.m. performance and scores on hopes it will provide enough data
Sat. or Sun. various tests. Scales of student to advise students before they t
S , . . PM”: 2534630 performance will be based upon make up their minds. - "
pecual Ch'ldre" s faculty ratings. The test scores He said he hopes to “make
show. Boxottlce Location: ouignol Theatre will be the academic and student student choices easier by giving V
Lm’y' F‘" ”'3 W'G'W- profile of the ACT as well as other them more information based on 5
tests as yet undetermined. As our experience.” t
with other studies by the Own According to Dr. Harriet Rose, :
seling and Testing Service, only director of the Counseling and
scores will be released. No in- Testing Service, the college of
dividual names will be used. Architecture study is another a
The goal of the study, ac- attempt to make available more A
cording to David Spaeth, information and more a
assistant professor and College of knowledgeable advising. It is F
Architecture advisor, is to limit part of the Counseling and o
CLASS|CAL MU$|C enrollment to maintain faculty- Testing Service’s overall goal of
, student without arbitrarily “better equipping students for
BY ANY OTHER NAME WOULDN’T SOUND THE SAME refusing students. ' their place in the world,” she
ANGEI. To do this the College is looking said.
0 0
MASTER WORKS BY THE FINEST CONTEMPORARY ARTISTS Report on SC rev's'ons '
e .-
Otto Klempner and the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra n e ar'ng comp'e f, o '1
John Barbirolli and the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
Yettudi Menuhin and the Bath Festival Orchestra Continued from page 1
Christopher Parkening tractual arrangement implies Zumwinkle, vice-president for
equal bargaining power. student affairs. said the com-
A“. $5.98 ANGEL RECORDINGS — $3.89 “This is not the case," mittee was going to work on the
, ’ Flickinger said. “The proposal is proposals immediately.
l'+2555353355533555535I:-.~. 35153535251513- IEIEIEIEIEI 53133553353535?" ..:.-:E§1315535551:""' an attempt toimpose disciplinary “We Win 80 into a private
measures within a contracturai working session tonight
' arrangement.“ tiuesday ) Zumwinkie said.
'3‘.» ~ l, Howell Hopson supported “President Singletary has asked
§:5;53555:55§5§3§§55:;;;.;.._,""-'2};- Q '3253:E:5:5555§;§3535:3555332;:33353353:*,:,.;.;:g:355§3§§§§§5§55=55===3"" Proposals 28 through 31, which for our report by Dec. 15. We’re
' . ': .- £- ' 5:. : '3:§_ .. . ' ' . a 55.; would maintain privacy of a aiming for completion tonight
g. as -- . is or . on student's personai records and although i don't know it we’ll
.-: . .-: :-:-:-.. ..-. ,.;.;.;.;.;.;._ .-:-:-:-. .:-:-:-. . . give students access to all such finish.“
387 Rose Phone 252-9459 records. “Our group is only advisory to
the President, who, in turn,
“"3 professor Will comment in submits his recommendations to

’0 9“ e o o e v. v,‘ e v. o e o o v I v o e o o v v o ,0, o '0, v, e 10”.“; v, e, e. v ,0 v e .v V', e ‘9 such a way to affect a Student’s the Board Of Trustees," Zum_

’ ‘ future,” HOpson said. “the ‘ kl 'd. “He ma forward all

. Ell ITY OF KENTUCKY SYMPHONY . W1" 953‘ y

. uu|v s ORCHESTRA . student Should have access to our proposals to the Board or only

. FVOSOIIYS . these Judgments.” the one he supports. It’s up to

, . Committee chairman Robert hjm_"

. 4:15 p.m., Memorial Hall, December 7, I972 . r

. Program: Symphony No. 1, Op. 6 by John Barnes Chance " 9‘ f c /
i Rhapsody for Viola and Orchestra by Joseph Baber . / - . I k [I g
’, ”Don Giovanni”, excerpts from Act I - Mozart. . , e
i. , t

l. cast: Don Giovanni eleeeeeaeeeeeaeee Romrt LaFontaine : l! I ‘or
5. I , . ‘ ~ bedl
. zerlinaoeeeeeeeeooooeeeoeooeeeooeooeoeoo Kim Adams J ‘ g"
. .1» Featuring m
- Donna Elvira----------------Melissa Kelley Rush .l ""5”
i- ‘ Ku zu it”:
l. Donna Anna eeeooeee-enee-ooceooeeeee Jean Rudloff ‘l ‘".
4‘ ! Atlanta's No. I Rock Band top,
l: DOD OflaVloI-oeooo-aooooeoeooooooo. Hunter Hensley :3 m".-FrI.-“', ' co:

4

. .i

e Leporello Oeeeeooeeeoeoeoeeeeeeeeeoe Kenneth carter .l 30".r Brown 'mwvr:
’ 146 East Short 3‘“
° msetto eoeoeeeeeeoeeeeoeeeeeeeoeeeeee man Haynes s. \ I VF:
. .1 ‘ v ‘ to!
. .. r

. ,, "" «‘5'
_ Next event: Collegium Musicum, Christmas Concert 2| - —
.. aligns rDeceEmber 13', 1:12 .; .9 you have: Cell The 3%:
' Ll“! cn lsco ' .t ,

. P 98 . xmgton .i a. complaint? Kcntucxy

. ? Kernel 4'3
, :1 'a "Cw: 'Ip? an
"““‘lill0..l0lilaasoonanosoaoaaaaeoaa-l n.w.|.:257.‘74o 507

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. December 6. 1972—5
Two premieres highlight
. . - .: I e. .1. 13"" ‘ ~ - ’ ..
final theater production - it. ~- i -- sea mum in. Currant - ... .
3W2
The UK Department of Angles”,by Notis Peryalis,is the av ‘ ' ‘~ ' f _ . - '_ L;
Theater Arts will close their other non-premier play. It -- x; 5 ea 1 DA- “Lg, ‘
current season with four short features a cast of six; Pat ‘ '+ i \
plays from the contemporary Atkinson, John Davison, Hugh 0 a u d T h \
theater entitled “The Mad Duncan, Jeanne Ross, Richard Wt k N 0K 6 A “y '
Quartet." Included in this Valentine and Diane Weeks. W a! —
presentation, which begins me 9+h Student antEtB
tonight,are two world premieres. THE TWO PREMIERES are 8'00 p.171, I
both by Kentucky playwright _ ‘1 ' ‘
These four plays were selected Benjamin Bradford. Entitled h
- toF m Wit: Mm: departtfients “Touch and Go” and “Losing ’ICKe-rs 0“. Sale D80. 8 , qGM“ 4pm.
.. aces 0 a ness eme, Things”, they ,are from a '
“"1”“ has been used ““5 collection called “Little Plays for 01' Shad CW CMCkVOOW-
semester. All the plays are under a Dark Theater” and are per \
the direction 0f Raymond Smith,‘ formed in complete darkness. k. “A . M... m , ,- '6
an associate professor of Theater The cast, John Davison, Hugh _ . -
Ar ts. Duncan, Val Reiter and Diane
Harold Pin ter’s “The Lovers”, Weeks, Will be heard but not seen.
a humerous production featuring The plays will be presented 5" s J c T c s I
Alan Smith and Kathaleen Foley until December 10. Curtain time, PER TAR A KE AND PAN' OAT ALE e I
as a married couple, with Val in the Fine Arts Building, will be
Reiter as their milkman, starts 8:30 p.m., except for Sunday
off the production. “Mask of when it Will be 7330 p.m. -
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G—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. December 6, 1972 f I
o : 0 .
~ , Wildcat Ills: Crossed eyes, flat feet
‘ ’If you’re looking for a .'

. 4 way to say who you a By MIKE TIERNEY ballhandlers. But, lord have early. Then the pressure caught
. really are’ ' Campus Editor mercy, it could always shoot. Up w1th4us, he explained. ”It got
' Bring him to the new : Despite a tonsilitis epidemic Somewhere along the line, worse:

- look of the 4 within the team last week, UK everybody else caught up. On Kevin Grevey4 had no 8"-
‘ College Sho e . was able to slip by Michigan Monday, Iowa canned 57 percent planation for his 5“f0!“15 ac-
' pp . State in its opener. of its shots, while crosseyed CUI‘SQY- “We Pad the open Elliot."
’ . Well, Monday night the Cats Kentucky managed just 41.4 he said. “We JUSI couldn’t hit It"
. - were struck by a much stranger percent from the field and a mere Frustrated Ronnie Lyons, who
'— ' illness. It ranks along with 8-for-15 free throws. Particularly must have felt like punching 7'1
: ° Hodgkins Disease, African in the second half, a UK basket Kevin Kunnert in the knee after
. Free gift wrapping ‘ sleeping sickness and VD as one was as scarce as an Iowa fan in missing his 20th shot in 27 tries
. look for our ad for ' of the more baffling inflictions of the coliseum. Monday, was even briefer.
. ' - “Can’t explain it ” he said.
. _ m S sa|e 4 the day to doctors. And basket Coach Joe Hall, somewhat ,
, huge pre Chns‘ a , ball coaches. embarrassed in his home debut, Connor is probably closer than
. (Starts Thursaay) . It is called sophomoritis. blamed poor shooting above all anyone to the answer with his
- And from this point of view, it else. analysis of the loss. “After we
' . contributed heavily to UK’s “When you don’t shoot, beat Michigan State, we got to
- . pitiful 1055 to Iowa. everything falls apart,” Hall thinking we had a pretty good
~ .' Symptoms of sophomoritis said, following a stern lecture to team,” he sa