xt7stq5rc05q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7stq5rc05q/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-03-13 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, March 13, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 13, 1975 1975 1975-03-13 2020 true xt7stq5rc05q section xt7stq5rc05q Vol. [.X VI No. 13‘)
Thursday, March I}, [975

KENTUCKY

81‘

an independent student newspaper

Student oriented

Acting dean ofstudents sees his role as an administrator,
someone to maintain 'personal contact' with students

By BRUCE WINGES
Assistant Managing Editor

The dean of students must be both an
administrator and able to maintain close
personal contact with students, according
to Acting Dean of Students Joe Burch.

"l ant attempting to provide a method
of operation with which the dean of
students staff can work," Burch said ”A
lot of work With students is questions
through student organi/atioris."

BURCH WAS appointed acting dean of
students by President (Mrs A. Singletarv

 

Thanks

The ls'l-RNll wrshes to thank the
(‘YNI‘HIANA DPMUVRAI~ tor allowrng
us to use their tacilities
Wednesday night. A taulty underground
transformer caused a power failure in the
Journalism Building Wednesday
afternoon. Because ot this. all the
ls'l'RNl'l's production rriachrrien could
not be riscd. Workinen said the problem
should be corrected by b' .i in today

ptodiiction

 

Jan. 3 after former Dean of Students Jack
Hall was granted one year's leave ot
absence. Hall is currently servmg as (Boy.
Julian (‘arroll's administrative assistant
for internal attairs.

Programs and areas that the Dean of
Students Office is responsible for include
residence halls, the Student (enter. the
Human Relations Center, traternities and
sororities, and discipline cases concerning
non-academic offenses against the
University.

Burch said he conducts weekly
meetings wrth the Dean of Students staff
to exchange information and ideas,

S|N(’l~
the fifth

BllR('l|'S ottrcc is located on
the ()ttice
Tower. he said it is have
daytorday comrriumcation statt
members located there.

“lhey Work mainly as my assistants,”
Burch said. “t Associate Dean of Students
l-‘rankl Harris has administratne budget
responsibilities and is also responsible tor

tloor ot Patterson
('tlSlt'l in

wrth

all strident organi/ations ”

llr‘ dtltlt'tl lltal Assistant Dean of
Students lyrin \\illi.imsoii \sorks niarnl\
tll\tll\llll.ll\
”.tllrl‘vttilnms‘ dean lll all areas.“

with s.tst‘\. biit is also an

Telephone, law officials

discuss 'nuisance' calls

By LIBBI POWELL
Kernel Staff Writer

Almost everyone has at some time
received a “nuisance call.‘ the telephone
company‘s designation tor any unwanted
annoying to obscerte calls.

Last year in Kentucky.
Telephone (‘ompariy received
complaints of nuisance calls.
Approxrmately 37 per cent of the
complaints requested that steps be taken
to arrest the caller.

(leneral
094

FEW riuisarice calls are reported
because they usually occur only once in a
while to one person. That person seldom
becomes aggravated enough to request a
trap, said Joe ('att. metro police media
liaison.

If a person does get aggravated enorrgh.
he must supply the police wrth a pattern
of the calls arid file a complaint. The
police then arrange With the telephone
company to set up a trap. ta devrcc
enabling them to trace the relays of a call
to a line) and deterrntne the origin of the
call.

Once the trap locks in on the line, the
connection cannot be broken except by
the telcpltone company. The telephone
company tells the police the location of
the call. Often the police can arrest the
culprit while he is sitll on the line.

lllk'
said
telephone

JULY AND seem to be
peak season for nuisance
Dorothy Schrerriser ot the
company. last year nearly I‘x percent of
the calls reported were in that period
(tbsccne phone calls are not the most
common type of harassment. Must ottcri

the unwanted caller hangs up rrglit after

August

calls.

saying hello.or simply makes tunny noises
St hremser said.

“Prank calls will otten go through the
area and tadc out again like a lad.” she
said. “Bomb threats are on the
downgrade no longer the ‘in‘ thing."

IF ()Nli receives a
phone company suggests
quietly Vs ith no response.

“It a caller doesn‘t get the use he
wants. he's not likely to kit” back."
Schremser said. ”Nine times out of ten
total disinterest Will do it.” It harassment
continues, changing one's phone number
is suggested.

l he offered dittercut
recommendation, “.r'ks soon as the caller
starts in on what you don't want to
hear.“

nuisance call. the
hanging up

police

('att said. “blow a cheap whistle
into the receiver and hang up.

“Single women should list their names
in the phone book by first initial and last
name to avoid calls from those browsing
tliroirgh a phone book." ('att said.

THERE ARE those who receive series
of calls and these are usually harassrricrtt.
the taller who repeatedly annoys the
same number rrsiially knows who the
receiver is. He is trequently a neighbor.
relative, business associate or one member
ot a romantu triangle harassing another
member.

Siiitc the caller is known to the \hlllil
ltt tltr‘sc
prosecute.

It a
l‘llt'ltr

\.I\t‘s li‘\\ \tilllti\ ilttitist‘ lt‘

person ts trittVttlt‘tl til ltttsthlttg

l.icrlitic~ in this wry. he is stibiect
to .i line ot Sail to Sltltt and/or
irriprisonment tor not than

lltt‘lt‘ tillt‘

year.

“l'l‘ Slil‘MS that in all these vast areas
of the University, students who don't feel
something is right or have a problem tend
to turn to the Dean of Students Office,"
Burch said. “Individual students see the
Dean of Students Office as the persons
who see that rules are complied wrth."

The Dean of Students Office does not
make the rules, it them, he
explained. “lhe main difficulty is in
interpretation and implementation of the
rules."

But Burch said
disciplinary

eii torces

there are not many
cases on a day-to-day basis.

“Sl‘llDl‘N'l‘S ARl' usually saying ‘help
me' through student organi/ations most
of the time.” he said. “But our role is not
doing something for a strident
orgaiii/atiori but assisting them."

Burch cited the Student (‘enter ltoard
tS(‘llt as an esarnple. He said the dean of
stall Sell with
concerning things as

pro\ ides
\tth

sl titlr'llts
assistance

Kernel statt photo by Chuck Combos

21 University of Kentucky

Lexington. Ky. 40506

contracts wrth performers and
distributors.
“SOIIIClllliCS
wrth students
sometimes the

movie

staff members working
may offer assistance or
students may ask for
assistance," he said. “But we don‘t
impose ourselves. Many times our
assistance is referral we know what
resources are available."

BURCH SAID he also meets with
students on an individual basis.
“Sorrietimes they ask to see me," he said.
“There may be a problem or
misunderstanding or they want
information."

Burch also attempts to go out and meet
students whenever pt)\s‘lhlt’, “I don't want
to be insulated trom students’ ideas," he
said. Burch added that he enioys getting
out of the office to meet students. “I
don‘t like to drive a desk."

Continued on page 8

Needahand?

These four Physical Plant Division workers appear helpless to
their fellow worker in this manhole iii the parking lot ne\t to
Fiiiikliouser Building The workmen were attempting to locate an
underground transformer which failed Wednesday afternoon. The

problem caused sev eral

campus

buildings to be without

electricity. A Physical Plant Division spokesman said the problem

should be corrected by today.

 

 Editor-inchiei. Linda Carries
Managing editor Ron Mitchell
Associate editor Nancy Daly
Editorial page editor. Dan Crutcher

 

L

Features editor, Larry Mead
Arts editor, Greg Hotelrch
Sports editor, Jim Mauom
Pnaography editor, Ed Gerald

Editorials represent the opinions at the editors

editorials

 

 

 

Cambodia: Why bolster unpopular regime?

There has been much talk in recent
years about Congress asserting its
budgetary control over military affairs.
The first step was in limiting the
President‘s power to dole out money and
men to Southeast Asia.

Now, with the Lon Nol government in
Cambodia apparently on the verge of
collapse. Congress is confronted with its
first real opportunity to exercise its
reasserted power. President Ford has
asked Congress for $333 million in
additional aid for Cambodia with the
hope of enabling the Cambodian
govemment to hold off the Khmer Rouge
forces until the rainy season begins in
June.

The House and Senate both have
committees studying the request.
Congress has sent a “facffinding”
committee to Southeast Asia to further
appraise themselves of the situation. and
various intelligence officials have testified
before Congressional subcommittees.

It is certain that Ford will not get as
much as he requested. A Senate Foreign
Relations subcommittee has voted to
grant $l35 million and a House
subcommittee was deadlocked on a
prOposal to recommend approval of
about half the $333 million requested by
Ford.

Curiously enough, American officials in
Cambodia and even CIA Director William
E. Colby rate the Lon Nol government’s

chances of survival as poor, even with the
additional aid.

Perhaps the reason for Ford's
requesting the additional funds is that
Lon Nol rose to power and has
maintained his position largely as a result
of American support. The question never
seems to conic up of whether Lon Nol is
popular in Cambodia (though one can
assume that if such had been the case he
would have had no trouble staying in
power.)

What the Ford administration is doing
is playing the foreign policy game of
supporting the strongest ally to the HS.
regardless of the wishes of that country‘s
populace. The same has been true in all of

Southeast Asia and this basically wrong
approach to foreign policy has
continually misdirected U.S. efforts
there.

It is natural that the U.S. should want
allies in foreign countries. but the present
policy of massive support for one ntan
risks losing all hope for future allies if
that man is unable to muster the support
of his country, as is apparently the case III
Cambodia.

There has to corrre a point when the
US. can do more for a foreign
government. If that government is unable
to succeed In gaming popular support it is
useless for the US to try to substitute
military aid in its place. That point has
been reached in Cambodia.

 

Oil hysterics

Proposed energy programs will only benefit oil companies

By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN

WASHINGTON ~ At long last
President Ford has succeeded in
driving the Democrats into
coming up with their own
energy program, thereby
involving them in the blame
when the government-induced
fuel price rise throws another
million people out of work.

The Democrats had a great
program going, which was no
program at all. The program had
been working very well. Not
only was the oil glut beginning
to force the price down, but the
famous OPEC oil cartel was
going the way so many cartels
go. In general, cartels have a very
hard time sticking together
because the needs and greeds of
their members seldom coincide.
This one shows every sign of
breaking up, but it’s possible
that quick. resolute and timely
action by the United States can
save it.

THE DEMOCRATIC
proposals to create a government
agency to do our foreign oil
buying will go a long way to

restoring unity among the
oil-producing nations. The
various suggestions emanating

out of the State Department and
the Treasury that. for a variety
of economically indefensible
reasons. we guarantee an oil
floor price should help. The

a :u- mtfli‘g 9 «4:14;?

Mimi!
0" fl
_ : {if/r . _ ~
7””1'5/4" ‘ “
I] r‘
4,?‘

'SIDDOWN, SCARPEllI!

capper will come when we send
the incomparably competent Dr.
Kissinger to the negotiating table
to have him do for oil what he
did for wheat.

However, short of making
every highly placed person in the
government go to the
blackboard and write, There is
no oil crisis, 1,000 times, no way
exists to restrain ourselves from
enacting a program that will
benefit nobody with the possible
exception of the oil companies.
and not even that is certain. The
confluence of anxieties about
employment. defense.
international finance, ecology
and a misplaced messranic itch
for self-sacrifice has robbed us of
the power to understand our
self-interest.

Not that there aren’t people
who’re trying to explain it to us.
The most recent attempt comes
from a group of right-wing,
free-market economists.
Through the auspices of the
Institute for Contemporary
Studies, they’ve recently issued a
series of essays on the subject
that everyone. regardless of their
politics, ought to read. (“No
Time to Confuse,” by Morris A.
Adelman, et al. 260 California
Street, Suite 8| I. San Francisco,
(73., 94111.)

THE FIRST POINT that
comes clear is the need to
distinguish between imaginary.

   

, lift: ’4 ’1’
Q33 , ',. .61

YOU CIA GUYS GET SO DAM' NERVOUS . . . '

short—run crises and possibly
very real long-term ones. The
nonexistent short crisis is that
the world is about to run out of
oil. Apparently six trillion years
ago there were an incredible
number of palm trees and snails
obligingly dying and turning
themselves into oil and coal for
us, for the more fossil fuel we
use, the more is discovered. “In
1945. it would have taken 3]
years to exhaust known reserves
at current rates of production; in
I973, it would have taken 30
years. Over this period world
production has somewhat more
than tripled, but known reserves
have increased more than
fourfold," writes Thomas (iale
Moore, director of the Iloover
Institution, in “No Time to
Confuse."

Thus, we‘d be doing ourselves
a favor if we‘d refrain front
mixing up ultimate supply and
ecological problems with the
immediate question of dealing
with OPI:("s faltering cartel.
Likewise With the oil
independence business. If. in
spite of the fact the last one
didn‘t work, we’re afraid of
another boycott. the proper
response isn't to tax ourselves
into a depression, but to
stockpile whatever we may need
to outlast a repetition of an
Arab oil embargo.

Over in the Treasury
Department they’re having oil

~\\\V

<§V¢¥N\\W§§\\\\\

\\\\s\

A“,

  

hysterrcs for another reason. It's
those foreigners getting all those
dollars which spooks them.
Again, events haven’t sustained
the gloomy predictions of
immense prleups of dollar
obligations abroad. ()il producers
buy as well as sell, and the
Treasury has had to revise its
original scare statistics radically
downward.

WHAT THE TREASURY
hasn't been addressing itself to is
what may happen if America,
the world’s largest oil producer.
stops buying foreign oil, while
liurope and Japan, both of
which are currently Virtually
oil-less, continue to do so. The
resulting change in the dollar
vis~a~vis other currencies may so
increase the price of exports that
we will further depress business

and employment here.
Maintaining a free market in
oil, or even deregulating the oil
industry where it is now
controlled. won't solve all our
problems, especially the
long-range ones. but it is an
infinitely better approach to our
present difficulties than
anything the politicians are
proposing. Indeed, if they want
to help the orl situation, they
might take themselves and their
foserr/ed. old~tashroncd ideas on
government intervention and
emulate the snails and the palm
trees. That is the only way they
can materially contribute to
increasing our energy supply.

 

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a
columnist for King Features
Syndicate.

Letters to the editor
FBl's intimidation
has effect on everyone

The city of Lexington has
finally made its mark in legal
history. And it has notlrrng to do
with horse racing or bourbon.
Six persons are now scattered in
various jails across the state
serving terms for contempt of
grand Jury because they had the
conviction to stand up to threats
and harassment by the I‘Bl.

The FBI. frustrated by the
silence of these persons, used the
grand rury to try to rntinndate
them. This has enabled the FBI
to get around ('ongress’ repeated
refusals to grant the Bureau
subpoena powers.

This could eventually have a
very real effect on every
rndivrdual. How many others of
us will have the courage to go to

jail in hopes that somehow.
some way this erI stop the
encroachment of federal

agencies on our Constitutional
rights?

Most people in Iexrngton are
wrretully ignorant of the
situation. No one seems to
reali/c that it could very well be
one of thcrrr who is next
subrcctcd to threats and invasion
of privacy.

Some who have not read past
the fact that these persons are
homosexuals are happy to hear

that “the queers have been put
away where they belong." For
those of you who feel this way,
may you next be interrogated in
this manner. Will you stand up
for your rnalrenablc rights. or
will you allow the system tor
those who would corrupt III to
take advantage ot you"

Remember. I984 is closer
than you tlrrnk.

Michael S. Jarrell
Telecommunications senior
Pamela J. Parrish
Journalism junior

and one other

Only a test

This is a test of the l-rnergency
Red River Anti—bulldo/er
System. Beeecep. llad tlns been
an actual emergency, all
members ot the Antr-bulIdo/er
league would have
immediately to their operation
commanders for further
instructions. Repeat this was
only a test.

reported

Ray Dickinson
English senior

      
   
   
 
   
  
  
 
   
  
 
  
 
   
  
   
   
  
  
   
   
  
   
   
 
 
   
  
  
   
   
  
  
 
  
  
    
       
   
     
      
     
   
     
     
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
   
  
  
 
 
   
    
 
   
  

 

 

 

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\

campus

Town meetings to explore
police- community relations

Police services and
community needs will be the
subject of a series of five
Lexington town meetings
beginning March 3|.

The meetings will be held on
successive Monday evenings at
various locations around
l.exington. The meetings are
sponsored by lillSlL‘Tlt Kentucky
University‘s tliKll) (‘ollege of
law Itnforcement in
cooperation With the Lexington
league of Women Voters and
the l.exington Metro Police
Department.

l‘lll‘ SliRll‘S will contrast the
law enforcement community's
new of the dimensions and
priorities for police service to

Tickets
to be sold

by lottery

It the LR basketball team
\lltilllil ilelt'al \IJHJUCIIL' In Illt‘
first round of the Mideast
Regional louinaiiient Saturday
in luscaloosa. -\l.i.. student
llt‘lst'l\ tor the Mideast Region
linals Manh 3033, in llayton.
llltl‘l. \Hll be distributed by
lottery at 5’ pm. Monday. March
l7, in Memorial (‘oliseuin

lhe University of Kentucky
has been allocated a total ot 7S0
tickets for sale, Willi 350M that
number to be sold to students.

PULLTIMF students With
\alidated II) and actiVities cards
are eligible to participate in the
lottery,

l he llorlt
Avenue) to the (‘oliseum Will
open at 7 p.m. Students
participating in the lottery must
be present prior to S p.m., when
the doors Will be closed~ and
they must remain tor the
drawrng.

lickets are priced at Sift tor
the lhursday and Saturday
sessions combined and may not
be purchased singlely.

tl'uclld

doors

EACH STUDENT who is a
Winner in the lottery Will be

limited to two tickets, which
must be paid for in cash.
The remaining 400 tickets

allocated by the
Ticket (‘ommittee to coaches,
players, athletic department
staff, Board of Trustees, and the
Board of Directors of the
Athletic Association.

have been

the community with citizen's
expectations in the same areas.
liven though police are not

elected, they are responsible to
community members, said
('harlotte Zerof, Lexington

League of Women Voter's action
chairwoman. These town
meetings present an opportunity
for citizens and police to discuss
the issues, she added.

Lexington Mayor Foster
Pettit, Police (‘hief James
Shaffer. U K Law Professor,

Robert Scdler and UK
Economics Professor Don Soule
are among the panelists
participating in the series.

llll’. MEI-WINGS are funded by a
grant from the Kentucky
Humanities ('ouncil. The public
is iiwited to attend and
participate,

Dates, locations. and topics
for the live meetings are as
tollovw

March '31, 7 p.m., First
Security Plaza. “The Dimensions
ot the problem as the

Lexington Metro Police see it; as

the Fayette Public School
Security Police see it; as one
member of the EKU law

enforcement faculty sees it."

April 7. 7:30 p.m.,
(‘restwood (‘hristian Church.
“The Tradition of the Police as
Public Servants and the
(‘onstitutional Responsibilities
of the Police as Agents of (‘rime
and (‘ivil Disorder Control.”

Bryan
“The
Real or

April 14. 7:30 p.m..
Station High School.
Public View of Police
Unreal?"

April Zl‘ 7:30 p.m., Trinity
Baptist (‘hurch. "The Ethics of
(‘rime ('ontrol and the Politics
ot Police SerVicc."

 

rThe Kentucky Kernel, lid Journalism balding, University at
Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, ”506, is rrhilw tive times
weekly during the schrm year exced wring mtidays an!
exam periods. ma Mice weekly during the summer sesion.
Thirdclass postage paid at Lenngton. Kentucky, 405”.

 

Kernel Since I915.

Publist'ledbythe Kernel Press. Inc, tomdedinl‘m. Begun as
theCadetin 1894 and WUIM continuousty as the Kentudry

 

to the eclbr's

Advertismg published herein IS intermd to help the reader
buy Any talse or misleading advertising should be remnat

 

Kernel Telewiones
Editor. Editorial editor 257-1755
Managing editor. News desk 374740

 

Sports, Arts 2.574800
L

Advertismg. Busmess Circuatim 2534646

    
    
 
     
 
    
           
   
    
   
   
  
  
 
   
   
     
  
   
   
    
 
   
   
   
     
   
  
  
  
  
  
 
   
   

 

. Dlstlnctivo
Glasses

parmnal attantlon
by Doug Kannady

 

 

 

 

THE

TODD
SQUAD
IS

COMING

Paid tor by T W Feathers

 

 

Contact

Lenses
Kannady Optical
Company

I 757
Gardanllda Plaxa

phona
276-15“

 
  

 

 

 
   
    
    

 

I 801 Euclid

All the way in the NCAA!

Come to the (hen Store for all your party needs

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday. March l3, 1975—3

NEED A REALLY GOOD PHOTOGRAPH
Then the Place to go is

Spengler Studio

222 So. Limestone
—— Engagement Special Package

3-3x5 Glossies 6 Wallets

4 Proofs to ONLY $12.m

Choose from

  

 

   

 

 

..Sonny's learning Black Manhood

and the streets teach a ’crash’ course...“

THE EDUCATION OF
SONNY CARSON

Thurs. March 13, 6:30 p.m. 8. 9 p.m.

Student Center Theater

sponsored by Minority Student Affairs

free admission

 

     
     
     
   
     
       

GENERAL CINEMA conPonAnorii
no FAYETTE MALL Nominated for 2

11 -6662 t
W.» Academy Awards!
Starring. . ..
Ellen Burstyn , ALICE
Kris KristotfersonDOESquT UVE HEERE
NYMOR

Cinema It

  

 
 
  
 
  
    
      
     
     
    
    
   
 
   
   
 
 
   
  

Times: 1:45-3:45-5245
7:50-9:55

   

ime to R

     
  
  

         
      
       
   
     

. TURFLAND MALL
277-bt00

   

Nominated for 6
HArtRODSBURgz‘OllAggalMAedttluN Academy Awa rdS!
“Bra vo! One at the best movies ot the year!”

—Rex Reed, N. Y. Daiiy News
“A marvelously intricate whodunit! A

joyous experience! A least—in any season!"
—Judith Cn'st, New York Magazine
Times:

AGATIIA [IIRIS’IIFS W

4:45

”Mllltltflt 0H :2:
TIIIE 0ltllNT EXPRESS”

[E MANAGEMENT DOES NOT RECOMMEND
PG FILMS FOR YOUNGER CHILDREN

BARGAIN MATS.EVERY DAY ‘TIL 2302M: $1.25

 

 

 

  
    

 

‘

Let's go Wildcats!

266-4441

ta disgrace to Chevy Chase, that’s Stmgles'l

 

 

  

 4-THE KENTUCKY KERN EL. Thursday. March 13,1975

I
! BOB BAGERISPRESENTSIN LOUISVILLE

 

 

 
 

   

 

HUMBLE
PIE

Plus: GOOSE CREEK SYMPHONY

TONIGHT — 8 P.M.
CONVENTION CENTER

PRICES: $5. 50 it purchased in advance
$6. 50 on day otshow GeneralAdmission

MAIL ORDERS: Convention Center, 525 West Walnut St.,

Louisville, Ky. Enclose a self-addressed stamped envelope

with remittance.

 

Explorers study health careers

aIIlliatL‘LI I o supply
information."
Ultlllkc‘ Illc‘

An explorer post,
Willi the Boy Scouts ot~ America,
will be sponsored by the UK
Medical Center to ot‘l'er a survey
of University health careers to
students ages 17-21.

The students will be given a
“broad base ot‘ information
concerning what's uttered in
health careers at UK and what
kind of Job opportunities are
available," said Ned I’vans.
medical It'xplorer post adVIsor.

IIUV

tind
and

Members Will
health care e rs
they are

students aIe not
glority a health carter

the

Scouts." I-Vans said.

what they want.
professionals woilxing WIIII the
L'\[K'L‘IL‘tl to

IliIeI‘qutIL

Scouts the
I \plorc rs Will riot we ai unitoi ms
or be assigned rank IVIIns said
interesting
discover it

The

Hit l \plorers post is Iiol like

structure ot the
“St udents

Boy

can work and decide what they

want to do at

“WE ARE trying to get the

the” own pace.
We're really tIying to downplay

students working with “
Professionals." Evans said. “The ”1" Boy NW” Image.
medical arm of UK has been E V A NS EXPLAIN til) the

lt‘xplorers will try to
iIIinoIity and

appointed to work With the
students and theV should be able

attract

underprivileged

LIBRARY FIRST AID SERIES NO. 3

Finding a periodical in the King Library can be an arduous
task unless certain procedures are known. The University of

Although single word titles are easy to |0( ate in the author
title card catalog, problems can arise when the title is tairly

students to IIIL health Ileld
II medical career should
be open to all not lust “white
Anglo—Saxons WIIII II 4.0 giade
point average."

“Realistically we Will probably
have It majority turnout ot small
white kids." I'vans said.

because

lle .s‘alcl Dr. Peter
BUSUIIIWUIIIL Vice president for
the medical ceiitei and a

member ot the executive council
ol the Boy Scouts of America,
has appointed a numbei ()I
blacks to the |~xplorer planning
committee so minority students

Will “have someone they can
relate to,“
I wo hundred students

responded to the lust
oIinIii/alional meeting
Invitation. l'his Will be held on
MIIIcII I7 iii the med centei's
sixth tloor auditorium.

Kentucky Libraries contain approximately 24,000 long and the user omits words when searching in the mid
periodicals. Iatalog For 2 xample lt,‘a\,|nQ out ”The" in Journal at the
A periodical a publication that is issued on a continuous Screnceot Food and Agriculture woiild throv. thi user oil by

almost a drawer in tlte (ard catalog Lonsequontiy it
exact title ot the

and regular basis . can be divided into two categories those
of general interest and those of specialized interest. Time,
Seventeen and Motor Trend are examples of general interest
periodicals. They cover newsworthy topics in many areas
Journalot Biology, on the other hand, is specialized. limiting
itself to topics in and relating to biology. When researching a
topic, this difference should be considered. Generally, the
specialized periodicals contain more scholarly, detailed
articles in the field.

Locating a periodical in King Library is easier it the exact
title is known. Simple titles like Science and Newsweek can
be tound by looking in the author title card catalog under the
title. For example

important that the :isi-r ascertain the

periodical before determining smother the llbrr‘rr has it
Ulrich‘s International Periodical Directory
periodicals AQUle check in the Directory .-.iil help the user

in figuring out the exact title Ask tor the Directory at thin

is a world list ot

ITALIANS
COOKING
ITALIAN FOOD

Reterence Desk

WHAT A
NOVEL IDEA!

QOmit periodic als particularly those 0t scholarly societies
are not always entered in the author title r ard catalog under
the title For example The Journal at the American Medical
Assooation .-.ill be t0und in the catalog under

American Medical Association, Journal. A rule ot thumb is

 

drawer

ISSUES IN PERIODICAL ROOM

 

 

 

 

      
   
 
   
      

   
   
  

SCIENCE that iournals whose title contains the name ot the iSSUing
505- agency are entered under the name of the society tirst ROMA PIZZA
5‘0" Another example is the Annals of the American Academy at
ISSUES IN PERIODICAL ROOM Political and Sonal SCIence,commonly called the Annals, 2059 oxford
To find the call number of the Annals,the user would have to .
NEWSWEEK lookinthedrawer under American Academy of Potiticaland CII'CIG cen’er
05] TYPICAL Socral Scrence. Annals Cardinal Valley
When the catalog card tor the DCFIOdlCdI has been tound in
N55” PERIODICAL the card catalog, the user should not ignore the ‘IIIOFTYH‘IIIOI‘ CO“ 255'9428
TITLE CARDS givenon therard For CARRY OUT
FOUND IN CARD
CATALOG. 7 \
The above periodicals are located in the periodical area in LEX|mm
the Newspaper Microtext Room. This area contains about DRIVE IN
200 general interest periodicals. However, this is less than i NOTES INDICATE “m‘nu'mm‘wlu‘ ”-
per cent of the total periodicals that the library maintains. PUBLISHING I. 0 C A ’1'[() N ()15 "‘3‘“
The rest of the periodicals are kept either in the branch ”STORY pf; {IUDICAL
libraries or in thestack area of the main library. TONIGHT

 

   

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SYMBOLS ABOVE 3 ACTION HITS
CALL NUMBERS
DESIGNATING lSSUEm PIIIODKAI '00»
SPECIAL 2
LOCA TIONSI ’l ii.- United States “We Ii, wrirlil mm. v, 1~
May I:‘. go. that
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SPECIA LOCA to S SI'IIIICCI' ('ARI) IHII I\I(IHI,.(‘\II:‘II
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WBKY's iozz and blues show airs nightly

BY DAVID FRIED
Kernel Staff Writer

“('lear Spot", also the title
oi a (‘aptarn Beethear't album, is
the name ot WBKY-I’M's new
late—night progressive music
show.

I‘very night l'rom ll 30 pm.
to l a.m. (till 2 a.m. on Friday
and Saturday) the program will
air a collage of the latest and
best jam and blues, spiced With a
touch oi rock.

GENTLEMAN DAN I'dS'llL'I, .r
veteran rock announcer on the
air tor the lrrst time in a year, is
anchoring the program Tuesday
through Saturday l’hil Miller
programs the show Sunday and
Monday.

“I believe there is a large
audri'nte tor this I)pc ot show.
and no other in the le\rngton
market is l|l\t‘ it," \Irller said.
"l'he show I\ kllIL'le’tl at a more
lllllSIt.lll\' \I'Plll\llt.lik'tl group
Wllti tend not to be \alrsired
wrth tlic corrrrriercial rock tare
oltcred by other stations."

(‘oncerts Humble Pie wrll
appear in loirrsVIIIe's
l'nnu-ntinn I‘i-nti'r trinlglll til
7 30 pm. Thursday, March 30,
Pretty lhrngs whose premier
album “Silk 'l‘orpedoe" is

FOR SALE

NDBILE HOME DELUXE 197? Forest
l'.tfl\ .‘ inrtroorrr» wrth (tut loan ins-ant)
‘ullit'yitlldhlt' 3550918 ll'MlJ

AFGHANS 2 iror twtr‘d red Midt- blue and
"urhon Vr‘llOW Mytr- 8 S 258 7977 IWIJ

FISHER, AMFM Recover. IOO watts
turntable, Pioneer speakers 419 Aylestord,
Apt 7 arm I 1) 51w

SHAGGY AKC Old [mush sheepdcn
puppies 4011'qu lIDtBQ’ Take nappy,
make monthly paymmts 1532144 or 351
Woodlam Ave

HIKING BOOTS, VilSQUt' Hire 9.
”Miami nwvr worn must sell 757 3728

ll’V‘l3

RmMMATE WANTED Girl to share 7