xt779c6rz828 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt779c6rz828/data/mets.xml Lexington, Kentucky University of Kentucky 19720719 minutes English University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Minutes of the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees Minutes of the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees, 1972-07-sep19. text Minutes of the University of Kentucky Board of Trustees, 1972-07-sep19. 1972 2011 true xt779c6rz828 section xt779c6rz828 












       Minutes of the Meeting of the Board of Trustees of the University of
Kentucky, Tuesday, September 19, 1972


       The Board of Trustees of the University of Kentucky met in regular
statutory session at 2:00 p. m. (Eastern Daylight Time) in Room E on the
18th floor of the Patterson Office rower on the University campus on Tuesday,
September 19, 1972 with the following members answering the call of the roll:
Mr. Jesse M. Alverson, Mr. Thomas P. Bell, Mrs. Rexford S. Blazer,
Mr. Stanley Burlew, Mrs. Robert 0. Clark, Mr. Albert G. Clay, Mr. Richard
E. Cooper, Mr. Eugene Goss, Mr. Jacob H. Graves, Mr. George W. Griffin,
Mr. Garvice D. Kincaid, Professor Paul Oberst, Mr. Zirl A. Palmer, Mr.
James H. Pence, Professor Paul G. Sears, Mr. William B. Sturgill, Dr. John
R. Woodyard, and Mr. Floyd H. Wright. Absent from the meeting was Mr.
Scott Wendelsdorf. The University administration was represented at the
meeting by President Otis A. Singletary; Vice Presidents Alvin L. Morris,
Lewis W. Cochran, Peter P. Bosomworth, Stanley Wall, Lawrence E. Forgy,
A. D. Albright, Glenwood L. Creech, and Robert G. Zurnwinkle; Mr. John C.
Darsie, Legal Counsel; and Dr. Donald B. Clapp, Director of the Budget.
Representatives of the various news media were also in attendance.


      A. Meeting Opened and Oath of Office Administered

      Mr. Albert Clay, presiding officer, called the meeting to order at
2:00 p. m. Following the invocation pronounced by Mr. Clay, the oath of office
was administered by Mr. John Darsie to the two faculty members, Professors
Paul Sears and Paul Oberst, who under recent legislation became voting
members of the Board, and to the following new members:

      Mr. Jacob Graves appointed for a one-year term expiring
           on June 30, 1973
      Mr. Garvice Kincaid appointed for a two-year term expiring
          on June 30, 1974
      Mr. Zirl Palmer appointed for a three-year term expiring
          on June 30, 1975
      Dr. John R, Woodyard appointed for a four-year term expiring
          on June 30, 1976

      It was noted that the student member on the Board, Mr. Scott Wendels-
dorf, had also become a voting member and that the oath of office would be
administered to him at the October meeting.

      Mrs. Blazer, Secretary, reported a quorum was present and Mr. Clay
declared the meeting officially open for the conduct of business at 2:05 p. m.




 







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       B. Minutes Approved

       On motion by Mr. Cooper, seconded by Dr. Sears, and passed, the
reading of the Minutes of the August 8, 1972 meeting of the Executive Com-
mittee of the Board of Trustees was dispensed with and the Minutes were
approved as published.


       C. Election of Officers

       Mr. George Griffin, Chairman of the Nominating Committee, presented
the following slate for officers of the Board of Trustees:

           Mr. Albert G. Clay, Chairman
           Mr. Thomas P. Bell, Vice Chairman
           Mrs. Rexford S. Blazer, Secretary

and moved that their names be placed in nomination. Following a second to
Mr. Griffin's motion, Mr. Clay requested that Mr. Bell assume the chair. Mr.
Bell called for nominations from the floor for the office of Chairman. There
being none, on motion duly made, seconded, and carried, the nominations for
Chairman were closed. Motion was then made, seconded, and passed that
Mr. Albert G. Clay be elected Chairman of the Board of Trustees by acclamation.

      Expressing his thanks fox the confidence shown in him by his fellow
members, Mr. Clay assumed the chair and called for nominations from the
floor for the office of Vice Chairman of the Board. There being none, Mr. Goss
moved that the nominations be closed and that Mr. Bell be elected by accla-
mation. His motion was seconded, and passed. Mr. Clay asked for nominations
from the floor for Secretary of the Board and Mr. Goss moved, seconded by
Mrs. Clark and passed, that the nominations be closed and that Mrs. Blazer be
elected Secretary of the Board of Trustees by acclamation.


      D. Committee Appointments Made

      Mr. Clay announced the following appointments to Board committees:

           Finance: Mr. Garvice Kincaid
           Student Code Revision: Mr. William Sturgill
           Hearing: Mr. Stanley Burlew, Professor Paul Oberst
           Medical Center: Mrs. Rexford S. Blazer, Chairman; Dr. John
               Woodyard; Mr. Zirl Palmer
          Investment: Mr. Jacob Graves

      The Secretary was asked to update the committee lists by these appoint-
ments and to send copies to'all members of the Board of Trustees.




 






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       E. President's Report to the Trustees

       President Singletary briefly reviewed the items in PR 1, President's
Report to the Trustees, and recommended more careful reading of the report
by the members after the meeting. In connection with Item 5 reporting the
receipt by the Editor of The Kentucky Kernel, Mr. Mike Wines, of Sigma Delta
Chi's Bernard Kilgore Memorial Award, the President introduced Mr. Wines,
who was present at the meeting, and commended him not only on the award but
on the solvency of the Kernel after its first year on an independent basis. The
new members of the Board were informed that because of the Kernel's inde-
pendent status, it would be necessary for them to subscribe if they wished to
receive copies of the Kernel.

       Mr. Clay accepted the President's report with thanks and it was ordered
filed.


       F.  Recommendations of the President (PR 2)

       President Singletary, after first requesting that the leave of absence
recommended for Dr. Roger Eichhorn be corrected to read "one-half time
leave of absence for one year without salary, effective September 15, 1972",
recommended that PR 2, Recommendations of the President, be approved as
a whole.

       There being no questions, on motion by Mr. Sturgill, seconded by Mrs.
Blazer, and passed, PR 2, Recommendations of the President, was approved
as a whole and ordered made an official part of the Minutes of the meeting.
(See PR 2 at the end of the Minutes. )


      G. Degree Candidates Approved (PR 4)

      Stating that the degree candidates whose names were presented as part
of PR 4 had completed their requirements in August, President Singletary re-
quested that he be given authorization to confer the appropriate degree on each
individual recommended at the commencement exercises in May 1973.

      On motion by Mr. Alverson, seconded by Dr. Sears, and passed, the
recommendation in PR 4 was approved. (See PR 4 at the end of the Minutes.


      H. Amendments to Governing Regulations (PR 5)

      President Singletary explained that amendments to the Governing Regu-
lations must lie on the table for a month prior to adoption and recommended
that those proposed in PR 5-be accepted and tabled pending final action in
October.




 






4



       Dr. Sears called attention to the amendment relative to officers of the
Board of Trustees which included the addition of an Assistant Secretary and a
change in the date of election of officers from the May meeting to the September
meeting, and moved that the Board of Trustees accept for consideration and
action at the next meeting the amendments to the Governing Regulations as
proposed in PR 5. His motion was seconded by Mr. Pence, and p-'socd, with
all members voting ''aye" except Mr. Goss, who asked that the record show his
abstention. (See PR ' at the end of the Minutes.)


       I. Regulations Governing the Use of Memorial Hall and Adjacent
Amphitheater (PR 6)

       Without discussion, on motion by Dr. Sears, seconded by Mrs. Clark,
and all present voting in favor, the proposed regulations governing the use of
Memorial Hall and adjacent amphitheater were approved to become effective
immediately. (See PR 6 at the end of the Minutes.)


       J. Regulations Governing the Use of Memorial Coliseum Adopted (PR 7)

       Noting that the only significant change made in the regulations governing
the use of Memorial Coliseum was the granting to the Student Center Board of the
exclusive right to use the Coliseum for the purpose of producing and promoting
concerts with the sole exception of those sponsored by the Central Kentucky
Concert and Lecture Series, President Singletary recommended approval of the
proposed regulations.

       On motion by Dr. Sears, seconded by Mrs. Blazer, and passed without
dissent, the regulations governing the use of Memorial Coliseum were adopted
to become effective immediately. (See PR 7 at the end of the Minutes. )


       K. Student Rights and Responsibilities--University of Kentucky
Community College System (PR 8)

       The code of student conduct as proposed in PR 8 would bring the code for
the Community College System into conformity with the code now operative on
the Lexington campus and President Singletary recommended its approval. Dr.
Wall, Vice President for the Community College System, indicated that the
document presented for approval had received input from students, faculty, and
administrative personnel in the Community College System and concurred in
Dr. Singletary's recommendation for approval.

       On motion by Mr. Cooper, seconded by Mr. Griffin, and passed, the
document dealing with Student Rights and Responsibilities in the Community
College System was approved. (See PR 8 at the end of the Minutes. )




 








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       L. Admission Fee Deposit for the College of Law Adopted (PR 9)

       During the past admission period, the College of Law had cancellations
from 73 applicants who had been accepted with 53 of these being made after
August 1. In order to avoid the resulting confusion, the College of Law has
requested permission to levy a nonrefundable fee deposit of $100. 00 of all
students accepted for admission, effective with the 1973-74 year. Similar
fees are charged by many Law Schools throughout the nation, and both the
College of Medicine and the College of Dentistry at the University of Kentucky
have authorization to charge admission application fees to discourage persons
who are merely "shopping around".

       Mr. Bell moved approval of the recommendation in PR 9 authorizing
such a fee. His motion was seconded by Mr. Burlew, and passed unanimously.
(See PR 9 at the end of the Minutes. )


       M. Budget Revisions for 1972-73 Authorized (PR 10)

       There being no questions, on motion by Mr. Alverson, seconded by
Mrs. Clark, and passed, the budget revisions were authorized and approved
as recommended in PR 10. (See PR 10 at the end of the Minutes. )


       N. John Sherman Cooper Scholarship Fund Established at Somerset
Community College

       President Singletary announced that the University of Kentucky had been
presented a check for $4, 000 from the Somerset Chamber of Commerce to es-
tablish a scholarship fund honoring Senator John Sherman Cooper. The Chamber
of Commerce expects to receive additional money to be deposited in this fund.
It is their intent that the principal be invested and scholarship aid be provided
for worthy students attending the Somerset Community College from the income
earned. Mr. Clay expressed the thanks of the entire Board for this fine tribute
to an outstanding statesman who has done so much for the state and the nation.


       0. Policy Relative to Financial Delinquency Explained

       President Singletary said that the University had not previously had a
policy relative to collecting delinquent fees and consequently the number of
students who did not meet their financial obligations to the University had
reached sizable proportions. In an effort to remedy this situation, the Uni-
versity has adopted the policy that any student who does not pay his fee at the
time of registration is considered delinquent and is given a 30-day grace period.
If a student has not paid by-September 29 this year, his registration will be




 







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cancelled unless he is able to receive a temporary waiver of the deadline be-
cause of extenuating circumstances. Every effort has been made to publicize
this new policy, including personal notification of all students who were
delinquent as of September 15.


       P. Letter from Mrs. Robert H. English

       President Singletary read a letter addressed to the Board of Trustees
from Mrs. Robert English expressing thanks and appreciation for the Board's
action in naming the arts and sciences building on the Henderson Community
College campus to honor the memory of her husband, Dr. Robert English. The
letter was accepted and ordered filed.


       Q. Summary Audit Report for 1971-72 Accepted (FCR 1)

       Since the members of the Board had already had an opportunity to ex-
amine the summary audit report submitted by the firm of Lybrand, Ross Bros.
& Montgomery for the University of Kentucky for 1971-72, Mr. Griffin moved
that the report be accepted as submitted. His motion was seconded by Mr.
Alverson, and passed. (See FCR 1 at the end of the Minutes. )


       R. Lease Agreement with City of Somerset Approved (FCR 2)

       Mr. Griffin moved that the Vice President for Business Affairs be
authorized to execute a lease agreement with the City of Somerset which would
place certain designated streets and parking areas on the Community College
campus under the jurisdiction of the City of Somerset, thereby enabling the
City, through its Police Department, to provide enforcement of applicable
traffic and parking laws and regulations. His motion was seconded by Mr.
Wright, and passed. (See FCR 2 at the end of the Minutes.)


       S. Authorization Given to take Necessary Action Regarding Penn
Central Transportation Company Commercial Paper (FCR 3)

       Noting that the members of the Board of Trustees were familiar with
the need to protect the University's interest in connection with the commercial
paper of the Penn Central Transportation Company, Mr. Griffin moved adoption
of the recommendation in FCR 3. His motion was seconded by Mr. Alverson.
Before the vote was taken, Mr. Graves questioned whether the Finance Com-
mittee of the Board would make the decision or whether it would be left up to
the administrative officials of the University. He was assured that the Finance
Committee would be consulted before the University officials took any action.




 








7



The question was called for and all present voted in favor of Mr. Griffin's
motion. (See FCR 3 at the end of the Minutes.)


       T. Meeting Adjourned

       There being no further business to come before the meeting, on motion
duly made, seconded, and carried, the meeting adjourned at 2:40 p. m.

                                          Respectfully submitted,




                                          Lucile T. Blazer, Secretary
                                          Board of Trustees




(PRs 2, 4. 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and FCRs 1, 2, and 3 which follow are official
parts of the Minutes of the meeting.)




 
















                PRESIDENT'S REPORT TO THE TRUSTEES

                        September 19, 1972



1.  ENROLLMENT ON CENTRAL CAMPUS OVER 20,000

     The Fall enrollment is 34,216, with 20,325 at Lexington (19,434
last year).

     A breakdown by colleges show Agriculture with 957; Arts and
Sciences, 6,679; Business and Economics, 1,902; Education, 2,365;
Engineering, 1,015; Graduate School, 2,734; Law, 500; Pharmacy, 266;
Medicine, 386; Architecture, 497; Lexington Technical Institute, 539;
Social Professions, 475; Allied Health, 537; Home Economics, 566;
Nursing, 694, and Dentistry, 213.

     Evening and Extension class programs have 2,322 students. En-
rollment in the community colleges and Jefferson's new Southwest Branch
shows 12,108, compared with 11,060 last year. Individual college en-
rollments are: Ashland, 1,171; Elizabethtown, 729; Hazard, 201; Hender-
son, 610; Hopkinsville, 740; Jefferson, 4,323; Jefferson, Southwest,
239; Lexington Technical Institute, 812; Madisonville, 350; Maysville,
333; Paducah, 1,162; Prestonsburg, 450; Somerset, 687, and Southeast at
Cumberland, 301.

     On the Lexington campus, 29 per cent are new students and 71 per
cent returning students. A breakdown by classification in Lexington
places 15,848 in the undergraduate colleges, 1,099 in the professional
schools, and 2,726 in the graduate school.



2.  STUDENT FINANCIAL AID OFFICE CAN HELP STUDENT IN SOME WAY

     Although there never are enough funds available to provide loans
and other financial services to students who need assistance, James
Ingle, director of the Student Financial Aid Office, reports that most
students who apply for aid are helped in some way.

     There are more students in the work-study program this year than
previously, he said, and funds for short-term emergency loans will be-
gin to become available in the next few weeks as earlier loans have
been repaid, but money for outright grants will continue to be in-
sufficient for some time.

     Employment on campus and in Lexington stores and industries, se-
cured through Ingle's office, enables students to earn about $1 million
a year. Another $2.7 million was available this year for the loan
program.




 




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3.  LAW INFO SERVICE IS POPULAR AGENCY

     The Kentucky Criminal Law Information Service at the College of
Law has received queries from attorneys, judges, sheriffs, police, and
probation and parole officers from across the state since its inception
last April. The Service operates on a 24-hour day basis. After office
hours and on weekends messages are recorded. In emergencies, the person
seeking information can get it.

     The Service is under the direction of attorney Kay Alley. Assis-
tant director is librarian Judy Woods.  Law professor Paul Willis, who
is director of the College of Law Library, is project director.

     More than 250 calls have been processed since the Service was es-
tablished under a grant from the Kentucky Crime Commission.

     Since Kentucky's information service was begun, several other
states have become interested in offering it and have made inquiries
to the College of Law.



4.  SOCIAL PROFESSIONS PROGRAM RECOGNIZED

     The two-year-old graduate program of the College of Social Profes-
sions has received accreditation.

     Dean Ernest F. Witte said accreditation of new programs takes two
years from the time of inception. At the same time, the team re-
evaluated the already accredited undergraduate program and reaffirmed
its accreditation.

     Dean Witte said the team commented:

     "Team members highly commend the innovative nature of the graduate
program which tries to prepare students for more effective service in
getting at the causes of those needing help." The dean said the team
suggested "our development of Teaching-Learning centers was quite unique.
If we can develop them along the lines we have outlined, we would be
making a contribution to professional education of national import."



5.  KERNEL EDITOR WINS TOP SDX AWARD

     A student who serves as editor-in-chief of the student newspaper,
The Kentucky Kernel, has been honored by Sigma Delta Chi, national
journalism honorary.

     Mike Wines, Louisville, received the honorary's Bernard Kilgore
Memorial Award and cash prize of $2,500. The award is named after a
former president of the Wall Street Journal who also was honorary
national president of SDX.

     To be considered for the award, nominations were to be presented
from the UK SDX Chapter, its adviser and professional journalists.   In
addition, Wines was required to write an essay. Wines believes a journa-
list has a "double obligation" to be fair and to recognize both the good
and evil of society.




 








6.  VETERANS AFFAIRS OFFICE IS RE-ACTIVATED

     The Office of Veterans Affairs has returned to full-time status
after several years of activity only as an adjunct to other departments.

     President Otis A. Singletary said a steady increase in the number
of veterans returning to college in the last three years necessitated
the change, and he has named Mrs. Linda W. Anderson, who previously
served as liaison to returning veterans in the Office of Student Fin-
ancial Aid in addition to her other duties, to head the new office.

     Mrs. Anderson, a native of Pike county who has been at the Univer-
sity since 1966, said the number of returning veterans has grown from
approximately 250 five years ago to 2,200 last year. About 2,500 are
on campus this fall. A bill currently under consideration by Congress
could double that number.



7.  LAW COLLEGE CONDUCTS PREPARATORY COURSES FOR 28 STUDENTS

     Twenty-eight disadvantaged and minority group students interested
in studying law recently completed a six-weeks preparatory course at
the College of Law.

     The program, funded by the Federal government in cooperation with
several colleges of law, is a part of the Council on Legal Education
Opportunity program, and serves primarily as a "head start" exercise
for students who already have been accepted for admission to colleges
of law across the country. Cooperating schools in addition to the
University are West Virginia, Cincinnati, Tennessee and Ohio State.

     Students learned reading comprehension in the context of legal
material, criminal law, evidence, and legal writing and research. They
received free tuition, room and board, a weekly expense allowance and
a stipend to replace earnings that may have been lost during the insti-
tute's six weeks. They also were given a travel allowance.

     The grant of $27,000 was supplemented by the colleges cooperating
in the program. Each of the participating schools contributed approxi-
mately $1,800 each, according to Prof. Robert G. Lawson, acting dean of
the College of Law.

     The Council is funded by the U.S. Office of Economic Opportunity
and the Ford Foundation.



8.  UNIVERSITY-ORIGINATED ART SHOW CURRENTLY ON U.S. TOUR

     Graphics '72: Japan, an art exhibition originating at the Univer-
sity and first shown in the University Art Gallery last February, has
been on tour since March and has shown at institutions in Wisconsin,
Pennsylvania, Michigan, and New York. This month the exhibit is being
presented at Murray State University, and next month it will be at
Colgate University and State University of New York. It has solid
bookings until March, 1974. Prof. Richard B. Freeman, who is direct-
ing the tour, said a recent request for a showing came from a museum
in Haifa, Israel.



J -




 




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9.  WATER RESOURCES INSTITUTE TRAINS POLLUTION CONTROL ENGINEERS

     The Water Resources Institute, directed by Dr. Robert Lauderdale,
porfessor of civil engineering, is now in fits eighth year of training
students for careers in water pollution control. About thirty are
active in the field and 12 currently are being trained for work with
state and federal agencies. Nine are graduate students, six in civil
and three in chemical engineering.

     The Institute recently received another $35,159 grant for fiscal
1973 from the Environmental Protection Agency. The Institute has
sponsored seminars in planning and management of water resources, and
has studied the migration and forced resettlement of persons whose
homes have been disrupted by the building of dams and flood control
reservoirs.

     Studies also have been done for urban planners designing recreation
areas.



10. KERNEL DOING WELL AS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER

     The Kentucky Kernel, student newspaper, began the new year with
$12,000 in the bank, another $13,000 in accounts receivable, and opti-
mism for a successful year, Nancy Green, publications adviser, has
announced.

     Last year, the paper's first year of independence, advertising
revenue jumped 68 per cent over the previous year. Current circula-
tion is 11,000, distributed free on campus to students, faculty and
staff.



11. SEVERAL STUDENTS NAMED TO RECEIVE SCHOLARSHIPS

     Several students recently have been recipients of scholarships
from various organizations and business firms. Stephen Michael Akers,
Russell Springs, is the winner of the first Minor Clark Scholarship
Award, given by the Kentucky Wildlife Federation Foundation. He is a
University sophomore.

     The Kentucky Press Association Journalism Foundation has given
scholarships to two first year students in journalism, Nancy Daly,
Lexington, and Linda Ellen Carnes, Richmond, to Tommy Sidwell, Somer-
set, freshman at Somerset Community College, and to Ron Mitchell, Lex-
ington, sophomore, a renewal of a scholarship first awarded last year.

     The Mason & Hanger-Silas Mason Co., Lexington, has awarded the
College of Engineering a $5,000 scholarship grant and a current re-
cipient is Harry Sterling Jr., Ashland graduate student.

     Winners of Rotary Graduate Fellowships are Satyra Ann Summerour,
Birmingham, a topical major in French area studies, and Mark Heimerdinger,
Louisville, a student of French literature, French and English. She will
go to Besancon, France, and he will study at the University of Dijon,
France, both serving as Rotary ambassadors.




 



5



12. OVER $8 MILLION RECEIVED BY UKRF IN JULY

     Additional allotments to existing grants boosted the amount re-
ceived during July alone by recipients through the University Research
Foundation to more than $8 million. This is more than half the total
received during the entire recent year for research through UKRF.
During the month there were 156 new awards. Funds to tobacco research-
ers accounted for much of the month's outlay. The total for July, in-
cluding increases to 24 existing projects, amounted to $8,253,734.72.

     COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE

     Agronomy--W. 0. Atkinson and J. H. Smiley, Field Evaluation of
Four Candidate Tobacco Sucker Control Compounds, American Cyanimid
Company, $800. G. Collins and P. D. Legg, Inheritance of Alkaloids.,
in Nicotiana Tabacum, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, $4,000. G. B.
Collins, Black Shank Disease Plots Program, R. J. Reynolds, $1,500.
J. W. Herron and L. Thompson, Weed Control With Herbicides, Chemagro
Corporation, $250 additional. J. W. Herron and L. Thompson, Weed
Science Research, Uniroyal, Inc., $350 additional. L. Thompson and
J. W. Herron, Weed Control Investigations of Corn, Gulf Research and
Development Company, $400 additional. L. Thompson, Research With Dow
General Weed Killer and Premerge R, Dow Chemical Company, $500 addi-
tional. L. Thompson and J. W. Herron, Toxicity and Selectivity of
Triazine Herbicides, Ciba-Geigy Corporation, $1,500 additional. L. P.
Bush, Nitrogen Fractions in Leaf and Smoke of Low Alkaloid and Normal
Burley 21 Lines, USDA, $51,000. D. L. Davis, Composition of Tobacco,
Tobacco Extracts and/or Fractions Thereof, USDA, $26,616. D. L. Davis
and C. H. Grunwald, Maleic Hydrazide Residues and Isoprenoid Content
in Two Different Burley Tobacco Genotypes, USDA, $76,500. Animal
Sciences--V. Hays, Multidrug Resistance as Influenced by Type of Anti-
biotic and Duration of Feeding in Pigs, USDA, $75,000. G. E. Mitchell,
Neural of Consequences of Vitamin A Deficient Pregnancy, National
Institute of Child Health & Human Development, National Institutes of
Health, $29,059. Cooperative Extension Service--D. A. Tichenor, Cooper-
ative Program With Lees Jr. College on Food and Nutrition, Lees Jr.
College, $341.88 additional. S. Phillips, Field Demonstration and
Applied Research on Farage Production Principally in Livingston County,
Reed Crushed Stone Company, Inc., $4,000 additional. Entomology--F. W.
Knapp, Use of Synthetic Insect Juvenile Hormone Mimics for Control of
Face Fly and Other Pests of Livestock, Hoffman-La Roche, Inc., $2,000
additional. J. G. Rodriguez, Research on Mites, Hoffman-La Roche, Inc.,
$600. J. G. Rodriguez, Certain Shell Experimental and Standard Materials,
Shell Development Company, $500. J. G. Rodriguez, Insect Contaminates
of Green Coffee, Maxwell House, Division of General Foods Corp., $1,500.
Plant Pathology--J. W. Hendrix, Cropping Factors Affecting Soil Popu-
lations of Black Shank Fungus, R. J. Reynolds, $4,000. M. R. Siegel,
Mechanism of Action and Metabolid Fate of Fungicides, NIH, $24,648.
Veterinary Sciences--J. T. Bryans and D. 0. Morgan, Serologica and Patho-
logic Response of Foals Infected in Utero With TC-83 Vaccine, USDA,
$15,000.

    COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES

    Anthropology--M. W. Everett, White Mountain Apache Problem Drinking,
Public Health Service, $5,907. P. Drucker, Social and Cultural Benefits
and Costs From Stream-Control Measures Phase 5, U. S. Department of the
Interior-OWRR, $10,500. Botany--D. 0. Harris, Inhibitors Produced By
Fresh Water Algae, U. S. Department of the Interior-OWRR, $10,700.




 




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Chemistry--W. Ehmann, American Chemical Society Project Seed, American
Chemical Society, $1,000. K. J. Hofstetter, Proton Excited X-Ray
Fluorescence, National Science Foundation, $26,800. G. D. Christian,
Trace Elements in Water Utilizing Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy
Measurement, U.S. Department of the Interior-OWRR, $8,525. W. T. Smith,
Pyrolytic Interaction Between Maleic Hydrazide and Tobacco, USDA,
$37,546. Geology--B. R. Moore, Hydraulic and Sediment Studies in
Relation to Suction Dredging, Ohio River, U.S. Department of the Army,
$12,746. Mathematics--R. M. Aron and L. A. Harris, Infinite Dimensional
Holomorphy, NSF, $9,800. J. E. Brennan, Invariant Subspace and Approxi-
mation in the Mean by Analytic Functions, NSF, $4,800.  E. Enoch and
R. A. DeVilliers, National Science Foundation - Science Faculty Fellow-
ship - Dr. Raoul Antonio DeVilliers, NSF, $250. D. C. Johnson, Pro-
jective Dimension of Localized Complex Bordism Modules, NSF, $4,700.
Political Science--B. Canon, Faculty Research Fellowship - Bradley
Canon, Ford Foundation, $8,565. Sociology--G. Slatin, Deviant Behavior
Drug Abuse, PHS, $58,137. R. J. Burdge and K. S. Johnson, Productive
Model of Personnel Attitude and Life Changes Due to Forced Migration
From Water Resources Construction, U. S. Department of the Interior-
OWRR, $10,760. Statistics--D. M. Allen and C. T. Hann, Stochastic
Simulation of Daily Rainfall, U. S. Department of the Interior, $6,860.
Zoology--W. J. Birge and J. J. Just, Sensitivity of Vertebrate Embryos
to Heavy Metals as a Criterion of Water Quality, Interior-OWRR, $17,000.

     COLLEGE OF BUSINESS AND ECONOMICS

     Business Development and Government Services--H.K. Charlesworth,
State Council of Economic Advisors, $35,000. H.K. Charlesworth, Manage-
ment Assistance to Minority Business Enterprise, U. S. Department of
Commerce, $100,000. C. W. Hultman, Unemployment Insurance Experience
Rating Study, Kentucky Department of Economic Security, $14,812. W.J.
Stober and C.M. Vaughan, Economic Impact of Land Between The Lakes
National Recreation Area, Tennessee Valley Authority, $16,500.

     CENTER FOR DEVELOPMENTAL CHANGE

     L. Fraser, University of Kentucky - Monterrey Program, Sears
Roebuck Foundation, $1,500.

     COMMUNITY COLLEGE SYSTEM

     Elizabethtown Community College--J. S. Owen, Title III Institutional
Support Program, U.S. Office of Education through Midway Jr. College,
$20,000. Jefferson Community College--M. A. Siebert, Comprehensive Pro-
gram in Allied Health, NIH, $56,097. J. T. Smith, College Library Re-
sources Program, FY 1972, USOE, $14,564. Lexington Technical Institute--
S. Wall, Allied Health SPE Improv - Respiratory Therapy Tech, PHS, $61,792.
S. Wall, Allied Health - Radiologic Technician Program, PHS, $19,731.
S. Wall, Allied Health Special Improvement Coordinator, PHS, $20,374.
Somerset Community College--R. B. Stanley, College Library Resources
Program, FY 1972, USOE, $7,828.

     COLLEGE OF EDUCATION

     Bureau of School Services--P. Street, Various School Systems, $400
additional. Health, Physical Education and Recreation--P. Verhoven,
Prototype Master's Program in Therapeutic Recreation, USOE, $45,000.




 



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Special Education--E. Blackhurst, Preparation of Administrators For
Special Education Resources Projects, USOE, $45,000. M. Martinson,
Training Professional Personnel in Education of Handicapped, USOE,
$172,000.

     COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING

     Chemical E