xt7f7m041h45 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7f7m041h45/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19690114  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 14, 1969 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 14, 1969 1969 2015 true xt7f7m041h45 section xt7f7m041h45 second in command of the University of California system,
has not been "secured," as distiguished from "found."
Dr. Otis A. Singletary, vice chancellor for academic
affairs at the University of Texas, apparently was chosen
by the UK presidential screening committee (it has been
denied by the chaiman) and offered the job. After sleeping
on the offer and giving some indication that he might
accept, Dr. Singletary chose to remain at Texas.
What with Dr. Single' ry's selection having been
leaked through the Louisville
the other
candidates being considered found themselves faced with
the
prospect of getting the offer on the
rebound.
Hence, after five months of intensive effort and after
having narrowed 125 names to eight, UK remains without a permanent president and without a vice president
for student affairs or athletic director, who are to be
appointed by the new president, if and when.
There is much confusion now as to when a new presi- Continued on Page 5, Col. 1

For prcxy recruiters at
If really in fact, such there may he,
The jol) is not easy, it's a tcee hit hairy
And truly complex, not Simpletary.
From a poem sent to tlic Kernel
by an anonymous UK professor
Kcn-tuck-c- e,

The

lly GUY MENDF.S

Managing Editor

Have you noticed it?
It's been right smack in the middle of Lexington for
over half a year now (and may continue for several
months more) purporting to be the University of Kentucky.
In the midst of a progressive and controversial transition period when its president resigned last April 3, the
actual University has become the Acting University.
This interim conglomerate, an uncomfortable concept
in higher education, has men filling in for three of its top
officers: president, vice president for student affairs and
athletic director.
A new president to succeed Dr. John W. Oswald, now

Acting
University
rrn

us Kentucky

Tuesday Evening, Jan. 14, 1969
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Kernel Photo By Howard Mason

No, it's not a crummy photograph, it's just that they've speeded up the
registration process these days ...or at least, that's what the Registrar's
Office keeps telling us. Some students, however, may still find a few
hassles like the people who aren't moving in this picture.

Black History Course Offered
Offering black history courses
has been a growing trend across
the nation.
"Most colleges or universities
are offering it now or are getting ready to offer it." Dr. Cone
said.
He added that until this year
the History Department did not

By LARRY DALE KEELING
Assistant Managing Editor
A black history course was

have anyone who was qualified
to teach such a course.
"Until Dr. Channing came,
we didn't have anyone in the
department who had had special
work in the area."
The IBM cards for the course
are available in Memorial Coliseum during registration today,

approved last week and will be
offered this semester by the"
History Department, chairman
Carl D. Cone said yesterday.
History 260, 'The Negro in
American History," will be a
three-hou- r
course, "a study of
the lTcgro experience in America, involving an examination
of the African heritage, slavery,
the rise of segregation and the
ghetto and aspects of contemporary race relations," accordBy TERRY DUNHAM
ing to a course description from
Assistant Managing Editor
the department.
At a fraternity meeting in October, the members present voted
The course will be taught by
overwhelmingly against accepting the task of cleaning up the
Dr. Stephen Channing and consist of two hours of lecture and basement of a campus church as proposed by the chapter's service
one hour of discussion each project chainnan.
Disappointed by the failure of his brothers to suppoit what he
week. The discussion sections
will be conducted by Hanford
thought was a worthwhile cause, the chairman asked if the chapter
would vote on whether it wanted to accept any project at all.
Stafford, a black graduate teachHe was surprised when they voted, unanimously this time, to
ing assistant.
Dr. Channing said the course accept a project.
One of the more ambitious
Discussion revealed that the frl.prnfv
would be open to about 100
students or possibly a few more dissatisfation with the initial sugbers of Lambda Chi Alpha fratergestion existed because it re- nity and the cripple children at
if they could be accommodated.
The course will be open to quired a group action on only Cardinal Hill Convalescent Hosand could then be forhistory majors as a service one day
pital. Familiar with the needs of
course, to other students as an gotten until "project time" rolled the hospital because a member,
around again the following year. Bill Marshall, works there, the
elective and to students worktoward teaching certificates The members urged the chairman fraternity men offered a variety of
ing
to find a moie meaningful,
in high school history courses.
services for the children.
project for them to underT1h prerequisites for the course
Trip to Keeueland
take.
are History 10S and 10! J.
Similar incidents could have,
The pledge class took a doen
Pi. Cone said he believed
and may have, occurred at any of crippled members of t lie hoshistory education m..,ors would
a laigt number of (J reek houses pital s Teen and Young Adults
take tlu cotiFse in order to pre.
e Tia
this s'ii.v. t,r as major seivue Club to Ktvuvland
pare for black history units
vvvr.4 undertaken.
C
en liie 4, Li5. 1
school.
pmj'vts
taught in high

Community Service Is
Part Of Greek Life

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Vol. LX, No. 73

Nunn Names Trustees,
Excludes Angelucci
By DANA EWELL
Assistant Managing Editor
Gov. Louie Nunn filled the three vacancies on the University's
Board of Trustees Jan. 3, ending Dr. Ralph Angelucci's 16 years
of trustee service and returning a fomier trustee to the board.
The governor's appointees
were James Pence of Louisville, dletop Research Corp., the Fedreplacing Dr. Angelucci of Lex- eral Reserve Bank of Cleveland
and the Burley Auction Wareington as an alumni representative on the board;. Albert Clay house Assoc. (a group of 200
bur-leof Mt. Sterling and FloydVV right warehouses in the eight-stat- e
of Lexington, replacing Sam
belt).
trustee froTh
Ezelle (two-terClay has served as director
Louisville) and Smith Broadbent of the K entucky Independent Col(three-tertrustee from Cadiz) lege Foundation for almost seven
whose terms expired Dec. 31. years and has been a member
Pence was the second choice of UK's Development Council
of the Alumni Association, which Board for the past two years.
"I think the University is
held an election this fall to nominate three alumni one of whom going through a period of great
was to be selected for the trustee transition and progress, and there
post by the governor. Dr. An- is a lot of work to be done,"
gelucci defeated Pence in the said Clay, fatherof three children,
two of them students at the Unielection by about 750 votes.
The positions Dr. Angelucci versity.
held vice chainnan of the board,
Wright, a tobacco warehousechairman of the executive com- man and farmer, will be seving
mittee of the board and chair- his third term as a trustee. He
man of the presidential screening previously was appointed to the
committee are now vacant and board in 1958 and 1962 by former
will remain so until Gov. Nunn governors A. B. Chandler and
sets a date for the board to elect Bert T. Combs.
Wright is a former UK footreplacements for each office.
a mortgage broker, is ball and baseball star and atPence,
a 1927 graduate of the University tended the University until 1915,
and is president of the Pence although he did not graduate.
Investment Company. He is Wright was a member of the
chairman of the Louisville Com- athletic
screening committee
munity Chest drive and is a which recently selected Notre
past president of the Louisville Dame's John Ray as the UniYMCA. He founded two boys' versity's football coach.
clubs in the Louisville area.
Wright is the only Republican of the governor's three apa graduate of Duke UniClay,
versity who received a master's pointees, which brings the podegree from Harvard Business litical composition of the Board
of Trustees to seven registered
School, is president of the
Co. He also serves as Democrats, seven registered Rechairman of the boards of Spin- - publicans and one independent.
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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

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Here a Phi Sig coaches two
youthful
sprinters who partivlpated in a two du
truck uuet sponsored by Phi
Sigma Kappa
fraternity .;ul Kappa Kappa Cwuma
soronty m conjunction with the Lexbijj
ten R? nvition Commission.
r

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a Set . .

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Jan. M,

2

1000

The Sound Of Dissent': Painful But Rewarding
THE SOUND OF DISSENT,
Mercury IVcord Corporation,
Jack McMahon.
By LE E B. BECKER
Editor-in-Chie-

f

"The Sound of Dissent," released recently by Mercury Records, is not relaxing.
Instead, it hurts. Hut it hurts
in a way that the 19G0s themselves hurt. It hurts in a way
that we should all know. It hurts
like Chicago, like Washington
and like Memphis and Los Angeles.

of Al Capp, Hubert Humphrey,
George Wallace and a variety of
anonymous members of the right.
The album is an amalgamationthe amalgamation of the
sounds of protest in the IIXjOs.
In making the record Jack McMahon has drawn from that period of time, placing tidbits of
protest here and big hunks of
protest there. Some of the parts
do not fit; others do.

Riot." And the sound of the Wisconsin delegate calling for a susbepension of the convention
cause of the bloodshed outside
given us "Dissent."
and the sound of a reporter
Chicago's Two Sides
blinded with tear gas is also
The way McMahon handles
thrown at us at one time.
Chicago, the only exception to
The effect is superb. Chicago
the above, is masterful.
comes alive again.
With a stereo, the nominaIn adding the background
tion speech for HHH is blaring
music (base, guitar, drums, and
from speaker one while speaker
instru
two is the sound of the "Police various other percussion

The album is divided into six
cuts. Side one is made up of a
three-paIntroduction, the Poor
People's Campaign,
Remarks, Peace March (Washington and New York), and the
Loyalty Day Parade.
r
The second side offers
M arch ( Wa sh in gton and New
York), the Democratic National
Convention, Campus, Women's
Protest, Martin Luther King and

The album itself is all of these
things. It begins with cuts of
Eartha Kitt and it ends with a
speech of Sen. Robert Kennedy,
the late, and it includes speeches
of Dr. Martin Luther King, also
the late, and Sen. Eugene McCarthy.
In between w e have the words
of Dr. Ralph Abemathy and
Stokely Carmichael. Dr. Spock
has his say, as does the Rev.
William Coffin. And there are
many anonymous voices and
sounds.
And The Right
But there are also the voices

Anti-Dra-

ft

Anti-Wa-

Eulogy.

By GUY MENDES

Managing Editor
CHICACO-T- he
spotlight reman
a bearded,
veals
dressed in a denim workshirt and
service station-blu- e
pants. He's
standing centerstage at a starchy
attention, staring into the balpony-taile- d

McMahon claims (on the
jacket) that he has not added
anything to the original sounds
but the background music, that
the cuts are real, and that he
has tried tomaintain a continuity
of theme.
He has, he claims, taped re

cony.

For minutes he does not move,
but the crowd at the University
of Chicago's Mandel Hall doesn't

seem overwhelmed by his muscle
control.
After approximately five minutes of this
performance, a voice bellows from the
rear, "Louder, louder."
From the stage comes a blink
or two perhaps, nothing more.
The audience then begins filling in the lack of dialogue:
"Why don't you put a pretty
one up there," came from one
side; "Go on up there," from
non-verb-

al

"Whose hook?"

"Hey, do you

fellows

re-

hearse much?"
And the inevitable, "It's more
like the DEAD theater."
But it came to life soon
enough, (after the
stare-jowith members of the
Living Theater troupe those
theatrical anarchists who advocate audience participation running, screaming and stomping
through the aisles.
After they performed "Mysteries and Smaller Pieces," one
of their four productions, the
main mystery was the question
of just how much audience participation is solicited by the Living Theater?
For if the audience's diatribe
is the ultimate in spectator involvement, as it was that eveng
minstrel
ing,
show crowds could be considered
quite hip to today's "new theten-minu- te

b)

1

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re-ru-n.

It adds flow, movement, continuity. Suddenly the whole thing
happens at once.
"Dissent" is more than just
something to listen to and forget.
It is something to worry about.
It hu;ts where it hurts most
themind.

How Much Participation Does
Living Theater Really Want?

theothei.
"Get the hook."

a

ments), McMahon has added
something the album needs to be
more than just a tidbit news

The Main 'Mystery'

rt

ality, as his recorder picked it
up, thrown that reality together,
added that background, and

...

Here it is. The sale that really means something
Graves, Cox sale. This is the sale that knowledgeable
Kentuckians watch for. Impressive reductions on a
selected group of fine clothing, furnishings, sportswear,
outerwear, sweaters and shoes. Right Now, and all

I

tliis week.

&

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tomato-throwin-

ater."

to himself, and then finally
sauntered back to his scat.
Two others appeared during
one of the troupe's gymnastic
undertakings, picked up one of
several prostrate actors, moved
him a bit and sat down in the
center of the stage. They were
quietly asked to move to the
side and after doing so remained
seated for several minutes. Then
after finding that the Living Theater didn't have many plans for
involvement lined up for them,
they too quietly left the stage.
It would seem then that the
audience participation alluded to
is mostly mental which is not
unlike the conventional theater
and any number of plebeians
prancing around the stage, getting physically involved, can interfere with the few plans that
may have been made.
The major difference between
this version of the "newtheater"
and t'ie conventional seems to be
merely an extension of the stage
to include the aisles, the balcony,
even the lobby on occasion, which
can give rise to some interesting
things, including this paragraph
refrom a somewhat
view in the Chicago Tribune:
"The performers, a hairy
bunch of hippies, more than two
dozen in number, are given to
stomping or mincing up and
down the aisles, a practice which
made it possible for this correspondent, for the first time
n
in his career, to review a
with his nose."
right-win-

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thes-pia-

One hears conflicting tales
about the dimensions the participation takes on in different
Actually, there was one ocplaces and how it is looked upon casion, other than the diatribe
and a few
by the troupe. There's the story
of the en masse scene at Yale
chants such as
when some 300 people joined "Stop the war" and "End the
the thespians on stage. Then draft," when a member of the
there's the story of the editor of audience participated.
New York's Drama Review who
An actor was writhing, wigjoined in when the troupe began gling, grunting, crawling on his
disrobing only to be stared at or belly (like a reptile, as it were)
ignored by the actors.
up the center aisle while those
During the Living Theater's lucky patrons in the aisle seats
first of six productions in Chileaned dangerously over their
cago three people attempted to arms to see the action on this new
join the troupe on stage and extension of the stage.
were either ignored or politely
After much suffering, the actor
moved aside.
finally collapsed in a heap.
One tried to join in a circle
A student seated on his imof chanting actors at one point mediate left casually reached
but wasn't allowed entrance indown, picked up the actor's arm
to the circle. He strolled around and oh, the medical metaphor
the staj;e for awhiL humming of it all took his pulse.
n,

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AND COMPANY INC.
POTAJIUOHMO 1BBB

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Both convenient locations
c)

$

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downtown

at

126

West Main

just a short walk from campus
the great Turfland Mall on Harrodsburg

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The Supremes

for your celled needs (it
7

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JANUARY 17th

MJATYATiD

or Kentucky, inc.

MEMORIAL COLISEUM

$2.00 advance; $3.00 at tho door
On Sale Central Information Desk, Student Center;
Barney Miller's, Downtown; Dawaharo's, Gardcnsido

Imperial Plaza Shopping Center

TICKETS

Waller Avenue
Remember to

ak

Cene about the SPECIAL CONSIDERATION
ghen
to all U.K. STUDENTS
Telephone

Sponsored by Student Center Board
O'JPS:

Lexington, Ky.

8:30-5:3-

Mon.-Fr-

i

255-550- 6

Sat

8:30-1- 2

p.m.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Jan. H, l9--

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-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,
Tuesday, Jan.

14,

19

Greeks Undertake Major Service Projects
he can. We want him to discover project, observing that the hospital patients "are pretty well
just how capable he is."
Another group actively in- confined here unless we get help
volved in a continuing project like this." Including the Lambda
with Cardinal Hill is Kappa Delta Chi's work, he said "it's pretty
are
sorority, whose members donate essential things these groups
time and money to operate a doing."
Other groups have also conBrownie troop for the younger
tributed to better the lives of
girls confined to the hospital.
Every Wednesday afternoon children at Cardinal Hill.
Delta Delta Delta sorority
several of the sorority girls visit
the hospital to hold meetings, members held a Halloween Party
and they've sponsored several for about 40 of the young hosprojects in order pital patients, telling stories,
to buy books and uniforms for the playing games and singing songs
with them.
youngsters.
Earlier this semester Alpha
Pennie Moore, Kappa Delta
social service chairman, says the Gamma Delta sorority andTheta
sorority hopes to keep the pro- Chi fraternity also held parties
In for the crippled children.
gram operative
addition to the Brownies in the
Members of Theta Chi fraterhospital, the Brownie leaders are nity held a Christmas party for
bringing in otheryoung girls from 24 children, underprivileged
from the local Head
the district who are not patients
H
to join the troop.
Start Program. They showed two
One member of the hospital films-"T- he
Night Before Christstaff complimented the sorority's mas" and "The Christmas
Deer" -- and a Creek Santa presented each child with a gift.
Theta Chi's also built a
"barn" to house stuffed animals
made by a Lexington woman's
club for, children in Harlem,
many of whom not only have
never seen a farm animal but have
never seen grass.
Pledges of Chi Omega sorority
and Delta Tau Delta fraternity
are planning improvements at
Christ Center. First efforts are to
raise money for supplies, so that
after Christmas both groups may
build a recreation room in the
center's basement.
June Vandiver, Chi O pledge
The Lambda Chi's are helping rehabilitate
Danny Stout,
trainer, said present plans include
a paraplegic confined to his wheelchair, by hiring him as a houseboy
and floors,
painting walls
and encouraging him to spend some of his spare time around the
lowering the ceiling, and hanging
Lambda Chi house. Proceeds from the Lambda Chi Pushcart Derby
curtains. "People there are withheld during the fall semester were given to Cardinal Hill Convalescent
out recreation space right now,"
where Danny is a patient
Hospital
Kernel Photos by Dick Ware
she says. The sorority is raffling a

Continued from Pate One
for an afternoon, and the proceeds
from the Lambda Chi Derby were
donated to the hospital.
Several Lambda Chi's have
driven the Cardinal Hill bus on
trips for the children, and others
have worked in individual rewith youngsters
habilitation
there.
Currently the chapter is cooperating with the hospital's rehabilitation program by hiring
Danny Stout, a paraplegic confined to a wheelchair,
as houseboy so he may test his
ability to work and later apply
mssssmb
in
rjwi
hi
m

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e
for a permanent,
job
with a Lexington employer.
Ron Hoi linger, an officer of
Lambda Chi Alpha, says Danny
has mixed very well with the
brothers and adds "we're just
hoping he starts spending more
of his spare time around the
house."
Currently Danny works from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m., and then returns
to the hospital. Linda Munson,
a staff member in the Cardinal
Hill rehabilitation program, says
the job gives the youn man all
the duties and responsibilities of
a regular job and helps him
"to see what skills he can develop
and if he can meet regular
working hours."
"We're letting him try everything he wants," Hollinger explains, "we're hoping he'll find
e
he can handle a
job
somewhere. If he wants to try
mopping a floor, we let him mop
until he decides he can't, or finds
full-tim-

money-makin-

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Work

And Play

1969 Caprice Coupe

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bond to help finance the
venture.
Kappa Kappa Camma sorority
and Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity
sponsored an unusual service protrack meet in
ject: a two-da-y
with the Lexington
cooperation
Recreation Commission.
Bob Simmels, Phi Sig president, said the idea was spawned
by a civic events meeting. The
fraternity men became interested
and organized the meet for about
40 black boys and girls in grades
4 to 6.
University track star Jim
Green agreed to work with the
youths and gave them instructions and coaching advice to
improve their athletic ability. The
sorority girls provided refreshments for spectators and medals
for the winners, while many of
athletes
also
the fraternity
worked with the youngsters.
Council
The Panhellenic
participated in a drive to prepare
gift boxes for soldiers in Vietnam.
Local television viewers sent
in names of soldiers from the
local area, and others mailed
Each $5 bought
donations.
enough to fill one gift box, each
of which was mailed to one of
the soldiers identified by viewers.
Members of various sororities
appeared on a local station's
daily "Dialing for Dollars" show
to make appeals for contributions.
The sororities sold cookbooks
g
and held other
projects to augment the contributions, and the station guaranteed
all the boxes would be shipped,
regardless of cost.
More than 125 boxes were
packed and sent by the sorority
members. Money received after
the Dec. 3 cutoff date will be
saved and used later to fill Valentine gift boxes to the soldiers.
The quantity and quality of
service projects has added to the.
Lexington community and expanded Creek horizons beyond
their own residences and beyond
the University community.
They have also brought recognition to some Creeks whose
projects were particularly outstanding service project of any
SAE chapter last year. Another
$1,000 was donated to a University scholarship fund.
$25

money-makin-

CLASSIFIED
FOB RENT

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APT. FOR RENT Eff. furnished; S
blocks from campus. See. Mgr., 318
Transylvania Park or phone
7Ntf
2.

LARGE ROOM In apt. 9 woman facmember.
ultynrivilrcr. Hamptof Court. Kitch-- ;
ftfUft manth.
Lanehorst.
pn
14J2t
Architecture, or
2W-21-

LOST
LOST before Thanksgiving in MN563
Of University liok.iiti!. lariiB crlassa
with brown frarntZ "pearl" chain
14J5t
guard on them. 2787800.

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WANTED

FEMALBT student.

29. will share her
apattraent with one or two others

whovare close to same age.

No clowns. No hoopla. No
funny hats.
This is an event for the serious
car buyer. The man who has X number of dollars to spend and is determined to get his money's worth and
maybe more.
Come to a Chevrolet Showroom
during our Value Showdown.
Ask the man to show you, on
paper, how you can order most any

19G9 Chevrolet

with a big V8 and
automatic transmission for less than
you could last year.
Come in and spend some time.
Dig, probe, ask questions, take notes.
You owe it to yourself to be thorough.
Go for a drive.
Get a free sample of Chevrolet's
luxurious
cushioned ride.
Shut the windows and see how fresh

Ventilation. Feel the kick of the biggest standard V8 in our field.
Then go down the street or across
town and see how we stack up against
Those Other Cars.
We think you'll wind up with a

7

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ROOMMATE, male, upperclassman.
Two bedroom apt., Lansdowne Dr.,
$48.46. Phone
14J5t
5.

JOB OPPORTUNITIES

Chevy.

Putting you first, keeps us first.

MALE STUDENTS wante
for part-tim- e
e
or
work Sir Pizza.
Romany Road. Must .have car. Call
7
or
14JM

More people do, you know.
nr.

part-tim-

3H3.

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full-tim-

266-11-

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The Kentucky

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LOOKIH
FOR A WAY to meet
those eienses? Why not consider a
e
Job with Food ServicesT
to Mr. Larry
Apply immediately
Jeffrey, 213 Bowman Hall , or Ext.

full-coi- l,

the interior stays, thanks to Astro

0.

mmm os m

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 403j6. Second ci&ss
Pottage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except ho.ldays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Office Box 4Jtt6.
Begun as the Cadet In ltt4 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1913.
Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The tailors.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday,

J

in.

5

H, 9ff)
1

Acting Chiefs Can Only 'Hold Down The Fort'
Continued from Paje One
dent will be found, with most
people even declining to venture a guess.
Pledged to secrecy the presidential screening committee
has a "very firm policy" on releasing information, according
to Dr. George Schwert, a UK
faculty member on the committee.
"We're not saying anything
the press doesn't already know
and they don't know much,"
he said.
Dr. Schwert refused to say
whether the screening committee would have to start over
from scratch. For the time being "everything is in limbo," he
said, mainly because Gov. Louie
B. Nunn has yet to appoint two
new members necessitated by
vacancies on the committee.
Dr. Ralph Angelucci, chairman of the committee, was forced to vacate his position when
his term as trustee expired and
Mr. Nunn did not reappoint
him. Acting president A. D.
n
resigned from the committee during the holidays; speculation had it that if a new president were to be chosen from
Kir-wa-

personnel inside the University,
Dr. Kirwan did not want to be
placed in an awkward position.
No word has come from Gov.
Nunn on the screening committee appointments, but they
may be made at the next Bord
of Trustees meeting on Jan. 29.
(The meeting, originally scheduled for Jan. 21, was rescheduled because Gov. Nunn will
be attending a friend's inauguration on that date.)
Dr. Schwert noted that Gov.
Nunn has not publicly accepted Dr. Kfrwan's resignation
from the committee and that
the governor's silence has only
added to the uncertainty.
And so, to borrow from the
Beatles, "Obladi oblada life goes
on" life in limbo, as Dr.
Schwert put it, and what effect
the interimacting syndromes
will have on a school which was
growing from a Southern "country club" into a good university
is hard to determine.
The atmosphere was perhaps
best illustrated by the words of
Dr. Kirwan when he accepted
the acting presidency he said
his main intention was "to hold
down the fort." The phrase im

plies that the existing institutions are to be preserved until
new leadership, along with its
new directions, can lc garnered.
Acting Vice President for Student Affairs Stuart Forth described it well when asked if
any new programs in that office
were being delayed because of
temporary leadership.
"This, is the problem of the
acting university," he said, "I
just haven't thought about any
new programs.
"You tend to say, 'Let's keep
this in the framework that it
was in.
Harry Lancaster, the acting
athletic director, said there are
two main areas the building of
a new stadium and a new coliseumwhich are hampered by
the lack of permanent

the-en-

T

Room For 100
In Black History
Continued from Page One
or the course may be picked up
process.
through the drop-adThe History Department has
scheduled four sections of the
class as follows:
d

Mis.

2C0-- 1

Ills.

260-- 3

HI.

2U0-- 3

lilt.

260--

The Negro In Amer. Kit.
9 108 Com
Cbannlng
4 205 HI
The Negro In Amer. Ills.
1U8 Cent
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6 202 HI
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118 Cora
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257 N. Lime

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faculty

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up to

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3

9 a.m. 5:30 p.m.
--

Monday-Saturda- y

WOMEN'S

MEN'S
SUITS

SLACKS

Reg. 100.00

Reg. 10.00

now 69.99

now 6.99

SUITS
Reg. 45.00

nOW

36.00

DRESSES

SPORT COATS

Reg. 33.00

A

Reg. 45.00

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now 29.99

D

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now 1.99

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30.50

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SKIRTS

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Reg. 16.00

now 10.00

SLACKS
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USED BOOK STORE

DENNIS
BOOK STORE

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Central Kentucky's Largest
(Other Than Text)

self-stud-

Coach Adolph Rupp slices into a cake commemorating the Wildcats'
1,000th victory as Phil Argento and two unidentified former players

T Th
W

t

Dr.

soon-to-ben-

1

SELECTION!

Student
Directory supplements are now available and
n.ay be picked up in room 102
of the Student Center.
contain
The
supplements
phone numbers and addresses
which were not available when
the directory was published. It
also corrects erroneous information in the larger directory.

"Let's get on with the job,
it just might be fun; Seek out
a competitor, even a competitive
Nunn. If the prexy's competitive', our school will move on,
And we'll sit relaxed, for we've
got a new John."

The newly elected chairman

of the University Senate,

'I

i

d

Directories Available

James Oglrtree, expressed conUnicern that a
and subsequent
versity sclfstudy
evaluation by the Southern
Association of Colleges and
Schools might lc affected by
the interim period. The
is to last 18 months.
That anonymous
member (he talked to us on the
phone but wouldn't give us his
name honest) summed it up this
way in the final paragraph of the
poem previously quoted from:

Dr. Rudd also said tenured-facult- y
recruitment is "made
easier" with permanent leadership and that some professors
currently at the University "may
grow restive" during the interim
period.

.

Med Center Will Receive
Flu Vaccine In Feiv Weeks
There is no Hong Kong flu vaccine available at the Medical
Center, and there will be none for at least "a few weeks."
A Medical Center spokesman
said yesterday, however, that hospitalized at the infirmary
when the vaccine arrives it will during finals week.
be made available to University
students before any of the general
public is innoculated.
But he added that there will
be no mass immunization project
since the peak of the flu epidemic
is expected almost immediately.
Hoiig KcJng flu" .immunization
takes from three to four weeks
to complete.
Although the Medical Center
had a swiall supply of the vaccine
earlier, the spokesman said all
of it was used to immunize key
hospital personnel.
of December, the
By
Medical' Center had reported 29
HURRY
cases of Hong Kong flu among
FOR A BETTER
UK students. Ten students were

"As long as you're acting,
you're just that," he said, adding
that new facilities for football
and basketball would lc a
necessity in the near future.
According to Robert Rudd,
one of two UK facility members
on the Board of Trustees, delay
of the "forthcoming decision on
UK's relations with the University of Louisville" is the main
difficulty caused by temporary
leadership.
"It would be more comfort-abe- l
to arrive at a decision with
a permanent president," he said.

nOW 13.00

SWEATERS
Reg. 15.00

now 11.99

407

SHOES

S. Lime.

HURRY!

Reg.

I8.00

now 14.00

8

* Wally Bryan: Our
Adding to the dismalncss of the
Board of Trustees' total disregard
for stude