xt7d513txb7g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7d513txb7g/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-09-18 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, September 18, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 18, 1973 1973 1973-09-18 2020 true xt7d513txb7g section xt7d513txb7g The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 29
September 18, 1973

an

independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

 

'Already picked'
Bryans to be

By STEVE SWIFT
Editor-in-(‘hief

TIIE APPOINTMENT of Dr. J.T.
Bryans to chairman of the department of
veterinary science is expected to come at
this afternoon’s Board of Trustees
meeting.

The meeting will begin at 2 pm. in the
Trustees room on the 18th floor of the
Patterson Office Tower.

Reliable sources said the appointment of
Bryans has been approved by Dr. Charles
Barnhart, dean of the college of
agriculture, and forwarded to President
()tis A. Singletary.

ONE BOARD MEMBER said, “It is my
impression that the gentleman has already
been picked." However, “I am going to
speak to the issue. but just how much
discussion will come about I can’t say."

Last week, a letter sent to the Kernel
with a Grayson Foundation Inc. letterhead
threatened to “seriously reduce" its
research funds to the University if Bryans
was not named to the post. The letter was
signed by L.P. Doherty, president of the
foundation.

The selection of Bryans has been op-
posed by the Kentucky Veterinary Medical

I” News In Brief

from The Associated Press

 

° Hank hits 71 Ith
oAgnew case to House?
0 Segretti pleads guilty
0 Chrysler, UAW agree
OUN opens 20th session

0 Today's weather...

0 We gooted...

named?

Association because he is not a
veterinarian and his work has been limited
to equine research.

A May 27, letter signed by D. L. Proctor,
D.V.M. and president of the KVMA, said,
“The Executive Board of the Kentucky
Veterinary Association feels it imperative
that the head of the department be a
veterinarian with nationally recognized
expertise in disease control."

AFTER THE business session, the
Board will listen to an hour-long presen-
tation dealing with the community college
system. Dr. Stanley Wall, vice president
for the community college system, will
give a 20-minute report to the Board
followed by an 18 minute slide presentation
which gives an overview of the community
college system.

Wall said. “Basically, I will be providing
the Board with general information of
what is happening in the community
college system.”

Following the slides, the Board will have
an opportunity to question Dr. Wall.

THIS IS THE first of what may become a
regular feature for Board meeting days.

The Great Student Center Bathroom

Massacre (in two-part harmony)

Everything was running smoothly for a Student Center
custodian one day last week until he noticed a pair of legs in a
restroom 24 hours after he had seen them the first time. After
regaining his composure and sending for help he found out it
was only a trick played by a University practical joker.

(Kernel

 

o .\Tl..\f\"l‘.>\—llank Aaron blasted his
711th career homer. mov‘iig him three
short of Babe Ruth’s career mark. Dave
Johnson smashed his 42nd homer of the
year two batters later to tie Rogers Horn-
sby‘s record for homers by a second
baseman in a season and the Atlanta
Braves smothered the San Diego Padres 7-
0 Monday night.

Aaron led off the eighth by stroking Gary
Ross‘s 0-1 pitch just inside the left-field
foul pole for his 38th homer of the 1973
baseball season.

0 W.»\SIIIN(;TO.V — A federal grand
jury investigating allegations of political
graft in Maryland may send its findings on
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew to the
House of Representatives. it was learned
Monday.

Such action could be a prelude to im-
peachment proceedings against Agnew if
the evidence warranted it.

0 WASHINGTON — Donald H. Segretti,
an underground political operative for

President Nixon‘s re-election campaign.
Monday agreed to plead guilty to violating
federal election laws and to cooperate with
federal prosecutors.

o lirl'l'lml'l‘ — (‘hrysler (‘orp, and the
l nited Auto Workers union reached
tentative agreement Monday on a new
contract covering 117.000 production and
maintenance workers.

The settlement came 03 hours after the
union struck the nation's .\'o. 3 automaker.

O [\I'I'I‘TI) NATIONS. NY. — The UN.
Assembly opens its 28th annual meeting
'l‘uesday under increasing criticism that it
is a debating society habitually bypassed
by the major powers.

...Autumn is near

Autumn will descend upon us today as
temperatures only reach the upper 60$.
Partly cloudy and cool weather will
continue tonight as temperatures dip to the
low 50s.

staff photos by Bruce Singleton.)

 

Misrepresentations of the Open Door
Program were made in Monday‘s Kernel
story.

It was not stated by Sandra Schenkar,
director of the Open Door Program, that
the primary objective was student par-
ticipation.

The overall objectives of the program
are threefold:

—To provide transitional living facilities
so the mentally retarded residents can
learn skills in independent living,

—» To provide a facility where students of
many colleges can be exposed to the
problems the mentally retarded face in
trying to reach the goal of independent
living,

---1To research and document effective
and different approaches used in the
project.

Karen and Rick Paul, who are now
ending their period with the program,
have been primary in helping to achieve
the over-all objectives.

 

 

  

 

The Kentucky Kernel 1‘

llJ Journalism Building, University ol Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky 40506.

QI 733.3%
Hie lethal] kernel?

Established l894

Mike Clark, Managing Editor
Charles Wolte. Practicum Manager
Blll Straub. Sports Editor

(arm (‘rnnner Arts Editor

John Ellis, Advertising Manager

Steve Swilt, Editor in Chiet
Jenny Swartz News ECViOf
Kaye Coyte, Nancy Daly,and

Bruce Winges. Copy Editors
Bruce Singleton, Photo Manager

The Kentucky Kernel is mailed tive times weekly during the school year except during
holidays and exam periods, and twice weekly during the summer session

 

 

PxiOllShed by the Kernel Press Inc, l272 Priscilla Lane, Lexington, Kentucky. Begun as
the Cadet in MA and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel since 1915. The

Kernel Press Inc founded l97l First class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky
vertlsing published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or misleading
advertising should be reported to the editors.

if

Editorials represent theopinion at the editors and not the University.

Ad

 

 

Nixon tax scheme
isn't a bargain

Lame duck President Richard Nixon has come up
with a lame brained idea which would hit the
American taxpayer with a 10 per cent increase in
federal income taxes.

Nixon‘s theory is the increase will give the taxpayer
less money to spend and, therefore, will slow down the
inflation-ridden economy.

Nice in theory, except for some very
problems:

—Taxpayers have the idea now, however unin-
formed they are, that they have little enough money to
spend as it is.

—Nixon talks of refunding this “enforced savings"
to the taxpayer at some future date. (That date. you
can feel sure, is sometime after Nixon leaves office.
Who. then. is to guarantee the next administration will
feel like repaying these “enforced savings?”

—Nixon, as a lame duck, can propose tax increases
until he‘s blue in the face, because he doesn’t have to
face the voting public again. But the Congress, those
members of the houses of government who face
election every two years, are surely not going to seek
reelection after having voted in favor of a tax increase
and expect to stay in office. Since the primary duty of
a politician is to be elected, you can bet your last
dollar the Congress will look coolly on any tax in-
crease.

—What is to make us believe this man, he of the
bungled economy, mismanaged staff and questionable
political ethics?

He said Phases 1, 2, 3 and 4 would heal the economy.
Each has failed. Is a tax surcharge capable of
resurrecting Nixon from his economic failures? We
think not.

Is Board of Trustees

large

a 'rubber stamp' group?

The Kernel was surprised to learn from a member
of the Board of Trustees Monday night that the
selection of a chairman for the department of
veterinary science has been finalized before the group
has met to discuss the matter.

The member, not satisfied with the information
supplied. by University officials, conducted a quick
investigation of the issue over the weekend.

By finalizing decisions of the University‘s governing
body before it meets, the Trustees position is reduced
to that of sheep rubber stamping the whims of their
shepherd.

From the beginning, the selection of this particular
chairman has been a shambles. One search com-
mittee member had a conflict of interest while he
served on the panel. L. P. Doherty. as president of the
GraysonFoundation Inc.,a nationally known equine
research group which has given the department of
verterinary science almost 26 per cent of its funding
over the last 10 years, Doherty had no business on the
search committee.

The Foundation also put undue pressure on the
Trustees when it informed the group it would reduce
funds to the department if the foundation's selection
was not chosen for the post. This is preposterous,
especially if the organization thinks it can buy
positions from the Trustees.

Before the Board makes its finaldecision, we hope it
will study the facts as a group. if some doubt remains
in the minds of particular members, the appointment
can easily be tabled for further investigation.

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Really...” cost you a thing

 

 

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LCHCTS]

 

Why force it?

If Vicky Heston really wants to insist on
her right to be judged entirely on the basis
of “grooming” and whatever “per-
sonality“ is,l suppose that's her business!
hope, though, that somewhere along the
line she asks herself Amiri Baraka’s
famous question—Who wants to be in-
tegrated into a burning house?

Connie Mahaft’ey
English Department

Fantasy world

UK is indeed a world of fantasy.
Mythological ideas are firmly woven facts
for freshman women arriving on campus.
In the Garden of Eden it was the woman
Eve, the perpetrator of inherent evil, who
plucked the forbidden fruit. In recognition
of this knowledge, young women are put
through an adjustment period of
restrictive hours to purge them of these
evil tendencies before they are grudgingly
set loose in the “garden.”

An amusing analogy is lodged in the
minds of many on campus and that is that
the protection to be found within the dorm
walls after the fancifully fearful hour of
12:00 is like unto that which we find after
apssing through the pearly gates of
heaven. Outdoors, with all its tempting
evils and treacherous pitfalls reminds one
of the bowels of hell, to be avoided at any
cost.

Really. these misguided myths are
amusing but they are also impractical,
unjustified and unreasonable. Let us place
the campus back in the realm of reality.

Viki Dennis
Economics-freshman

Stuck on ‘wrang side?’

This letter is in response to Paula
Biggerstaff‘s column “Bad Side of the
Moon Ii“ which appeared in the Sep-
tember 13 issue of the Kernel. it is too bad
she is stuck on the “bad side"; if she is
willing to get unstuck she might come into
contact with her own biases as well as
learning something about journalistic
reporting. How she can report or. the
Counseling Center without interviewing

any of the professional staff is beyond my
scope of understanding. If she can
document one case of racism among our
counselors, I invite her to present it to me.
One of the most serious of all the in-
justices done by activist leaders to their
following is to convince them that only one
of their “kind" can be helpful to them. It is
absurd to say that only blacks can counsel
blacks, Chicanos can only be counseled by
other chicanos, etc. Every person is
unique; no experience is ever the same for
any two people. Ms. Biggerstaff’s black
experience is certainly different from that
of Bubba McCollum or Harry Sykes If
there were simply one black experience as
Ms. Biggerstaff implies, counseling would
certainly be easy; all counselors would
have to learn would be that experience.
Naturally it is not that easy, counselors
learn to work with people, not color.

It might be enlightening for Ms.
Biggerstaff to examine the budgets of the
two agencies she mentions in her column.
It should be looked at on a percentage
basis. For the potential users of the Office
of Minority Student Affairs there is ap-
proximately $ll7.00 allocated for each
student. For the potential users of the
counseling Center there is approximately
$5.00 allocated per student. Quite a dif-
ference. Also, the Counseling Center does
not receive any HEW funds.

Finally, after reading Ms. Biggerstaff’s
column I wonder—who really has the
problem of racism?

Robert L. Harman, Associate Director
Counseling and Testing Center

Spread the blame

I believe that Ms. Heston is absolutely
correct in her charges against the UK
sororities. However, Ido not think that the
blame should be confined to sororities
since there are 20 fraternities on this
campus that practice the same code of
ethics. 1 only regret that what ever hap-
pens from here on in probably won’t
change a thing.

William Wassmer
President. Sigma Pi Fraternity
Business administration senior

  

a page ofopinion from inside and outside the University community

Pagej

‘l was misquoted, misinterpreted, used'

By EILEEN CORRIGAN

In response to Vicky Heston’s article in
the Kernel on Friday, Sept. 14, I would like
to comment on being quoted by Hilda
Bailey. It is my belief that Hilda quoted me
because she sincerely believed that is what
I said. I respect Hilda for her honesty and I
hope to receive the same respect in return.
I must honestly say I was misquoted,
misinterpreted and used to prove the
existence of segregation in the UK
sororities.

About one month ago. I spoke with Hilda
Bailey in the Student Center cafeteria. To
be honest. I cannot remember verbatim
what I said yesterday, much less a month
ago. But I distinctly recall the essence of
what I said and the context in which I said
it.

I had met Vicky Heston, a 22-yearold
Navy veteran, during Rush. Her Naval
experience, her ease with conversation,
and her bubbly personality really im-
pressed me. Black-white, rush or not, if I
like someone I have a tendency to bring up
his or her name in conversation.

Well. when Isaw Hilda. I did just that. I
thought Vicky was a neat person and I
wanted to know if Hilda thought the same.
I asked Hilda if she knew Vicky and she
said she did. I took Hilda's casual “yes” to
mean she knew of her but she didn’t know
her personally. I wanted to know if Hilda
thought as highly of Vicky as I did, and if
so to let me know. I apologize to Hilda
because it was my fault for not making
myself clear. I’m especially sorry she
misinterpreted the intentions behind what
I had said. However. Ido deny the quote. I
truthfully believe it is not what I said. I

was misquoted. Furthermore, what I did
say was misconstrued and taken out of
context.

As I told Vicky Thursday night. and
Hilda after the article came out, if you do
strongly oppose or question what someone
says, you should have the integrity to
confront them directly. To me, being
quoted a month later and not informed
until the night before the article is
published is just not fair. This, however, is
my own personal opinion.

Well, I found out Thursday night, the
hard way, that Vicky Heston was indeed
the neat person I was impressed with
during rush. After a long conversation, I
think I understand how she feels. Vicky
believes she was cut from rush because
she is black. Thus she questions sorority
practices, as the title of her article states,
”Do UK Sororities practice segregation?"
I cannot speak for another sorority, but in
my house this certainly was not the case.
Vicky Heston was rushed and evaluated on
an individual basis, like every other
rushee. No more and no less.

Perhaps it was my mistake for treating
Vicky like any other rushee. During one of
my trivial, “pass the time" conversations,
I brought up her name. I liked a rushee, I
personally inquired about her, only to find
out a month later I can inquire about a
white rushee but not a black rushee
because that would be racial
discrimination. It doesn’t make sense to
me. My inquiry had nothing to do with
racial discrimination. So why am I being
used as an example? Perhaps racial
discrimination at UK is a two-way street, I
don’t know.

Some accounts are true,
but ZTA portion ‘false'

By SUE NOLTE

I am writing this to further clarify the
article on racial segregation in UK
sororities. As a senior and an officer of
Zeta Tau Alpha, I have been through many
rushes and can accurately report the facts
pertaining to them. Vicky Heston’s story
does have a point; however, while the
various accounts she gave were true or
partially confirmed, the story about Zeta
Tau Alpha was entirely false. Let me give
you the facts:

1. Vicky Heston stated that “the house
had spent three hours arguing whether
they should give a black a chance in their
house.” Zeta Tau Alpha never spends
three hours discussing any rushee. While
our time limit is confidential and
irrelevant, I can assure you it is no more
than several minutes.

2. She also said, “After three hours of
heated debate, a vote was taken. and I was
voted completely out by only a few votes."
Discussions do not get heated; if they are
headed in that direction a secret ballot is
automatically called. In Vicky‘s case, a
secret ballot was called and the outcome
was, as always, determined by a simple
majority. The particular numbers in her
vote are known only by the person who
counted them, and this fall all votes were
tallied by a national officer.

3. “I was later told by a Zeta pledge that
all the girls. after voting. had to say in
front of the president, they did not vote me
out because of my color," Our pledges do
not take part in these votings. so a pledge
cannot truthfully verify anything. We

never have to present a reason for the way
we vote. As stated before, it is a secret
ballot and it remains so.

Obviously, Vicky had her goal set on
Delta Delta Delta. Many rushees set goals,
and many are disappointed at the out-
come. I am sure every girl that received
no bid can create some reason that she
believes to be the basis of her cut. and they
may or may not be true. If Vicky believes
she was cut from all houses because of her
color. how does she explain that a sorority
already having a black member cut her?

The Kernel is an independent
newspaper, and Page III is free to print
any article containing opinions. However.
what was printed about Zeta Tau Alpha
was. in the purest sense. libel. Or. if
anyone wants to argue that point. then let
me state my “opinion“: The Kernel may
be improving in some ways. but it is still
an antioGreek publication. as it always has
been. If Steve Swift will print this. we will
accept it as a form of apology for the
embarassment and degradation the
Kernel caused our chapter..

 

Sue Nolte is the corresponding
secretary for Zeta Tau Alpha.

Editor‘s note: Publication of this
comment by the Kernel editors does
not constitute an apology on the part
of the Kernel. It is. instead. in
keeping with Kernel policy of
printing letters and comments in
their entirety.

This brings me to the Monday, Sept. 18
issue of the Kernel, where I have been
accused of “dirty rushing”. If Hilda Bailey
had looked closer into her accusation, she
would realize that I did not break any
Panhellenic rules. I will waste no further
time dwelling on a comment based upon a
misconstrued quotation, a f alse accusation
and illogical reasoning. This futile attempt
to find fault is rather an immature and
unnecessary means to accomplish
anything.

I sympathize with the blacks on campus
because, as a native of Atlanta, I well
know Southern racism. I will be the first to
admit that there is racial discrimination at
UK, perhaps more so than in my

hometown. However, the prejudice here is
a deep, intangible something, within the
people. not the system. If all the time and
energy we used to emphasize the existence
of racial discrimination were con-
structively used to broaden com-
munication on both an overall and per-
sonal basis, I believe we could really
improve UK‘s black-white relations, and
we'd all be that much better off.

 

Eileen Corrigan is an Allied
Health sophomore and a
member of Kappa Alpha
Theta sorority. -

 

Your health

 

Comments on venereal disease

By ROBERT E. FRENCH. M.D.

Each year I am asked what symptoms
should be considered as possibly due to
gonorrhea or syphilis.

(lthORRHEA:

Let‘s start with gonorrhea since it is the
most common. In the male, there is
usually irritation at the tip of the urethra,
along with some pus-like drainage starting
several days (usually 3 days to a week)
following sexual intercourse. The un-
pleasantness of the symptoms are quite
fortunate, because they prompt the man to
seek medical attention quickly before any
damage can take place, such as scarring
of the reproductive tracts, or sterility.
Treatment usually cures the disease
within a few days. but some men have a
post-gonococcal urethritis which gives
annoying, but not dangerous symptoms for
weeks afterward.

IT IS WISE to have a follow-up urethral
culture just to be sure we are not dealing
with one of the rare resistant strains of
gonorrhea sometimes brought back from
overseas. but usually a single treatment is
a curative.

There are other causes of urethral
irritation in the male, besides gonorrhea,
and many of the cases we see are non-
specific urethritis, which is annoying but
usually not dangerous. It is treated dif-
ferently thn gonorrhea.

Where we get into the greatest difficulty
with gonorrhea is with the patients who do
not have any symptoms and who are
carriers of gonorrhea without realizing
it. A few males are asymptomatic
carriers. so we culture them whenever
there is any suspicion on their part that
they might have picked up gonorrhea.
especially when they have had some
minor symptoms which seemed to clear up
on their own.

I.\' FEMALES. gonorrhea often occurs
without symptoms, When a girl is for-
tunate enough to develop vaginal
discharge or irritation we are in a good
position to make an early diagnosis. but if
she is unfortunate to have no symptoms.
the disease may spread up into the
Fallopian Tubes and scar tissue may form.
These unfortunate cases of damaged
repioductive functions in females might

be minimized if all males with symptoms
were considerate enough to seek prompt
treatment for themselves and to make a
real effort to see that any female partner
were aware of need for treatment.

To complicate matters. most girls with
vaginal discharge or irritation do not have
gonorrhea. Most of them have monilia
(Yeast). trichomonas. or a bacterial in—
fection other than gonorrhea. Some may
have irritation from some chemical agent
in soap or commerical vaginal
preparations. But we must obtain a
specimen and do a culture before we can
be certain.

SYPIIIUS l'SL‘ALLY shows up as an
open sore or ~“chancre” at the point of
sexual contact. One problem obviously is
that the sore may be hidden in the vagina,
and it is often painless. Another problem is
the "incubation period" between the time
of sexual intercourse and the time the sore
develops. Usually there is an interval of
1': to 3 weeks. but it may be over a month
or longer. If there is an open sore,
diagnosis may be made by a special
microscopic examination called a “dark
field microscopic examination“. The
\'.D.R.L. blood test may not become
positive for even longer. Therefore, when
there is a suspicion of syphilis. it is best to
do more than one blood test. because a
negative V.D.R.L. may be misleading if it
is obtained too early in the course of this
disease.

CONFIDENTIALITY OI“ RECORDS:

As with any student medical records.
information concerning the treatment of
venereal disease at the Health Service is
strictly confidential. The Health Service is
required to report only the total number of
cases of diagnosed gonorrhea to the Health
Department. No names or identification
numbers of patients or contacts are ever
reported to anyone. Health Service
physicians tell students to urge their
contacts to see a physician. Kentucky has
a law permitting physicians to treat
minors for venereal disease without
notification or consent of a parent.

Robert E. French. M.D. is
chief. Medical Service at the
Student Health Service.

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. September 18, 1973

City-county merger survives court fest

By MARIA BRADEN
Associated Press Writer

LEXINGTON. Ky. — The
merger of Lexington and Fayette
County has survived its first
court test and will become ef—
fective Jan. 1, 1974.

In a ruling Monday Fayette
Circuit Judge George Barker
upheld “for all practical pur-
poses" the charter providing for
merger of the two governments.

l'NDER THE CHARTER all
governmental and corporate
functions of the city and the
county would be merged in to a
single government with

jurisdiction over the whole,
county.

The new government will be
the first of its kind in the state—
and the only form of government
in the state not drafted by the
legislature.

Judge Barker‘s ruling is based
on three suits filed earlier this
year to test the constitutionality
of the charter.

“ALMOST EVERY SECTION
of the charter has been
questioned....discussion of each
individual issue would extend this
opinion beyond understandable
bounds.” the judge wrote in his
70-page ruling.

THE FIRST PARTof the ruling
gives an overview of the charter
provisions and analyzes the new
form of government.

“It is unique in that there is no
authority for, nor mention made
of such a form of government in
the constitution of Kentucky,” he
said. “The quest-ions is whether
such a form of government may
be said to be prohibited by the
constitution.”

by don [050 and ray IOUSI'ICG

THE JUDGE RULED that the
new government will be con-
sidered a city government,
regardless of whether it is known
as “urban-county” or “metro”
government.

He also upheld the charter‘s
right to dissolve fiscal court,
saying it would be a duplication
of effort under the new govern-
ment.

 

o~ m5 OTHER HAND, Ir':
mPRosAeLE mar ANr
MEMBER or THE I89?
EXPEDIT/ON mar PROCURED
Til/s COLLECTION will ”or:
THE ABSENCE OF THIS

    
 
   
 

 

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To TARN/SH MY IMAGE.

    

 

 

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Health Insurance?

g/flgYou Do!

Everybody Needs It.

   
  

To pay the medical and surgical expenses that aren't covered
by the health fee:

 

 

 

. Hospital admissions
- Accident care
. Surgery

Nobody should be walking around
without health insurance!

Are you in one of the following groups?

Students no longer covered

 

 

Students no longer covered by a family policy
(be sure to check!)

Married students

Students With individual plans who might benefit
by joining a group plan like U.K.'s

What have you done about Health Insurance?

To enroll in the U. K. Student Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plan
or continue coverage for the next six months , come to the
insurance office of the Student Health Service before

the Friday Sept. 28, deadline.

The Student Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plan was designed
by U.K. students for U.K.students.

Single student 35.10
Coverage:

Student and spouse (without maternity) 50.10 on and off campus

Aug. 26-F0b. 26 '1‘
Family (with maternity) 80.10

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. September 18. 1073—5

 
    
  
     
       
 
     
      
     
    
     
   
    
  
 
 
  
   

 G—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. September 18. 1973
e. - No more reruns--

 

WE’DE A Cop shows raid new TV season

LITTLE HADD
TO leD-BUT SD
IS A GOOD STEAK

And that‘s exactly what you’ll get
from us — USDA choice Western
beef. Fresh and corn fed. Cut daily
right on the premises. At family

prices.
& I I :00-2 :00

$1.35....-..

Ranchhouse Gabe Steak or Chopped
Sifloin Steak P'atter Includes Potato—

Solod -- Texas Toast

The'MAVERlCK

STEAK
HOUSE

ALL DAY
WEDNESDAY

 

 

 

2420 Nicholosvllle Rood -Nexi to Mr..nggs

 

September 6, 1973
Members, University Senate
Senate Council
Course-Program Actions: Effective:

Unless Otherwise Indicated
The Senate Council circulates for your approval the following curricular actions listed
below. Obiections will be accepted from University Senators and faculty members and
must be received within ten days of receipt at this notice to the appropriate Council
designated below. All other requirements for offering the courses or programs as ap~
proved below must be met.

Spring. 197‘

Senate Council

College of Education:

New Program: 8.5. degree with a maior in VocationaHndustriaI and Technical Teacher
Education

The Collegeof Education, the Undergraduate Council and the Senate Council recommend
and submit for your approval a proposal for a baccalaureate degree program for teachers
of vocational-industrial and technical education. The following curriculum is recom-
mended tor the degree:

General Studies Component ................ 37 semester hours
it isrecommended that Areas I l, V, VI,Vll. Vlll,be
considered in order to shorten the students' time in the
program.

Professional Education ............. 25 semester hours

EDV loo (2) Occupational Analysis

EDV 109 (2) Instructional Materials in Industrial Education

EDV HO (2) Principles of Industrial Teaching

EDP 202 (2-4) Human Development and the Curriculum

EDF 301 (3) Education in American Culture

EDV 224 (3) Techniques of Teaching Industrial Education

EDV 352 (9) Student Teaching Ior Industrial and Educational
Training Directors

Special Studies Component ............ II semester hours

HPR 126 (3) Conceptsot Health, Fitness and Leisure
or equivalent
ENG 101 (3) Freshman Composition
ENG 102 (3) Advanced Freshman Composition
SP 101 (3) Basic Public Speaking
ENG 262 (3) Survey of Western Literature from more Present
or equivalent
PSY 2w (3) General Psychology

Area of Concentration .............. u semester hours

IND 222 (13) Occupational Internship tor Industrial Teachers
IND 226 (3) Basic Competencies in Industrial Occupations

mo 22! (3) Advanced Competencies in industrial Occupations
IND 525(3) Supervised Work Experience in Businessor industry

I2semester hours in appropriate colleges to meet specitic needs

0’ "19 occupational teacher.

TOTAL I20 semester hours

 

 

 

ByPETERJONES
Kernel Staff Writer

Finally, no more reruns. The
new television season has arrived
with a set of fresh shows
basically in the action, comedy,
suspense films and variety
categories.

POLICE SHOWS make up a
large part of the action. ABC has
come up with “Griff”, the story
of a former police captain turned
private eye. Lorne Greene, in the
starring role, investigates crime
in areas ranging from computer-
dating to murder. The show first
airs at 10 pm. September 29.

NBC offers an anthology called
“Police Story” starting 10 pm.

October 2. The‘ show deals with
what it‘s like to be a policeman in
any one of a modern depart-
ment‘s branches Unlike other
police shows it features no
regular cast.

“Chase". also an NBC police
show (starring Mitchell Ryan), is
the story of a handful of Los
Angeles policemen who take on
the impossible jobs which no one
else wants. With a helicopter, a
motorcycle and a car, they deal
with crimes from auto theft to
dope pushing. T