xt7cvd6p2p9f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7cvd6p2p9f/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-11-21 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, November 21, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 21, 1973 1973 1973-11-21 2020 true xt7cvd6p2p9f section xt7cvd6p2p9f EDWARD A. CARTER
UK Budget Director

Vol. LXV No. 75
Wednesday, November 21, 1973

. i_}_ Trustees

budget director

at short meeting

EDWARD A. CARTER was appointed UK Budget Director
Tuesday by the five member Executive Committee of the

appoint

Board of Trustees in a speedy 15 minute meeting.

Carter, who will replace Dr. Donald B. Clapp, executive

assistant to the President, assumed immediate responsibility

of the position. He has been serving as Fiscal Affairs Officer
for the community college system since 1971. Before that, the
33-year-old Lawrenceburg native was assistant budget

director and was Manager of Payroll.

In other business the Board approved routine budget
revisions and accepted audits for University affiliated cor-

porations. The audits were completed by Coopers & Lybrand.
Copies will be sent to the respective boards of the cor-
porations and also to the state Council on Public Higher

Education.

THE BOARD accepted financial statements for the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1973 for The Fund for Advancement of
Education and Research in the Universty of Kentucky
Medical Center, The University of Kentucky Research

Foundation, the

University of Kentucky Athletics

Association and the University of Kentucky Credit Union.

Expected authorization of a recommendation giving Larry
Forgy, vice-president for business affairs and UK treasurer,
the right to lease Univesity property with the City of Cum-
berland was not given today because the Board’s finance
committee did not meet this morning. Forgy said approval
would probably be given at the December meeting and the
delay would cause no problems.

Kentucky Kernel

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

36 I50
account

cleared

By LINDA (‘ARNES
Kernel Staff Writer

THERE IS now a balance of $1.50 in the
Student Government 150 account after an
audit was made and a $650 deficit was
cleared

The audit. conducted by the Office
of Business Affairs, was requested by SC
President Jim Flegle and revealed that SG
had accumulated $650 in unpaid bills
charged to its 150 account.

The audit showed several accounting
errors were responsible for the deficit.

TIIE ERRORS include $300 that was
authorized and paid to former SG
President Scott Wendelsdorf, but due to
bookkeeping mistakes there was a conflict
in SG and University records. Wendelsdorf
was contacted after the audit was made
and has repaid the $300.

Wendelsdorf said he paid back the
money because he was convinced the error
was made by his administration when they
failed to send an amended invoice through

the accounting department. He also said
the 150 account was in need of the money

()ther mistakes revealed in the audit
include a $78 flight ticket paid for twice by
SG. The ticket was paid in advance and
was also paid in an expense account
reimbursement to Skip Althoff. former SG
vice-president. Altboff was also con-
tacted and paid back the $78.

A duplicate payment was made by SG
for $225 to Frank Page. This occurred.
according to George Ruschell. assistant
vice president for business affairs. when
one check was written for Page and, while
waiting for the advisor‘s signature.
another check was made and given to
Page. Page returned the additional check.

TIIE Al'DIT which found the mistakes
was made for the 1971-72 and 1972-73 fiscal
years. Ruschell said the errors they found
looked like honest mistakes and he added
he thought a thorough job was done.

It‘legle said President Singletary told
him before the audit was made that the
l'niversity would take care of the debt. It
is customary for the l'niversity to un-
der write the account when a student
organization fails to pay its 150 bills. but
stipulates that it be repaid.

Since the money was returned by in-
dividuals after the audit. SG will not have
to pay the $650 bill.

“ENDELSDORF SAID the mistakes
made in his administration were made
because SG does not have a bookkeeper.
He said the student Senate was supposed to
have a committee act as bookkeeper but
added that it never exercised that
authority.

In an effort to alleviate bookkeeping
errors in the future. Ben Jones. SG
director of finance. has been appointed to
take care of all bookkeeping personally.

 

News In Brlet

I, the Associated Press
and the Israel Stat!

020% loss

0 Public comfort suffers
' POW airlift

' Worldwide drive

0 Saxbe's eligibility?
'Ford cleared

oToday's weather...

0 WASHINGTON — Independent
gasoline station chains are taking the
brunt of the impact of tight gasoline
supplies and by one estimate may have
lost as much as 20 per cent of the business
volume nationally.

One recent survey said members of a
national independent retailers group have
closed nearly 3,200 of their 20,000 stations
this year. almost half of them~
permanently.

o MEMPHIS. Tenn. -— John A. Love,
President Nixon’s energy adviser, told
Republican governors Tuesday the
current oil shortage is “the worst problem
we have faced other than wartime."

Rogers C.B. Morton, secretary of the
Interior. who appeared on the energy
panel with Love. said public comfort and
pleasure will suffer the most, regardless if
the ultimate step is gasoline rationing or
voluntary cutbacks.

0 WASHINGTON -- The prisoner of war

airlift shuttled more Egyptian and Israeli
POWs home Tuesday, and the United

Nations announced plans to add
Americans and Russians to its cease-fire
observer force.

A UN. spokesman in Cairo also said
observers had reported three violations of
the Middle East cease-fire over the

weekend.
0 WASHINGTON -— President Nixon's

nominee to head the Council on En-
vironmental Quality said Tuesday the
United States should lead a worldwide
drive to reach zero population growth as
quickly as possible.

Russell W. Peterson. former governor of
Delaware, also urged a national effort for
full employment. terming ”ridiculous“ the
economic view that some unemployment

is necessary. .
0 WASHINGTON —— Without making a

recommendation, the Senate Judiciary
Committee turned over to the Senate a bill
intended to make Sen. William B. Saxbe,
R-Ohio. eligible for appointment as at—
torney general.

Saxbe's nomination has been held up
because the Constitution prohibits the

appointment of a (‘ongress member during
the term for which he was elected. to an
office for which the salary has been in-
creased in that time.

0 WASHINGTON — The nomination of
Gerald R. Ford to be vice president
cleared its first congressional hurdle
Tuesday and headed for an early con-
firmation vote in the Senate.

All nine members of the Senate Rules
Committee voted to recommend approval
of the nomination to the Senate. where a
vote is set for next week.

...November?

Rain should bring more November-like
temperatures to those few of you who stay
in Lexington. The high today should be in
the low 605 with an 80 per cent chance of
rain. Rain should be ending tonight with a
low near 40. The outlook for Thanksgiving
Day is cooler with a high near 50.

 

  

The Kentucky Kernel

11: Journalism Bulldog. Universiw «Kentucky. Lexingtm. IQ. mos
Established 1.4

Mike Clark. Managing Editor
Bill Straub. Spats Edita'
Carol erwer. Arts Editor

Kay Coyte. Nancy Daly and
Bruce Winges. Copy Editors

Steve Swift. Editu-lnuChief

Jenny Swarts, News Editor

Bruce Singleton. Photo Manager
Charles Wolfe. Practicum Manager
John Ellis. Advertising Manager

The Kentucky Kernel h mailed Ive times weekly duriu the school year except
on holidays and exam periods. and twice weekly in the summer.

Published by the Kernel Press Inc. 127: Prbcilla Lane. Lem. Ky. legu- as
the Cadetin 104 and published continuously as he Kentucky Kernel since 1015.
The Kernel Press Inc. {minded 1m. First class posts, paid at be”. Ky.
Adverdsing published herein b intended to help the reader buy. My take a
misleading advertising should be reputed to the editcs.

‘ Editorials represent the «pinion of the edita’s. not the Universiw.

 

 

A need to support TKO

We‘re sorry to see that the Temporary Kentucky
Organization (TKO) will have to cut back the number of
operating hours at its recycling collection center this winter
because of a lack of volunteer community support.

Besides providing Lexington‘s only center of this nature,
TKO offers some of the money collected through the
recycling project to charitable organizations.

From its first project (raising objections to the can-
cellation of Lexington‘s bus system about three years ago)
TKO has been a community-oriented group. And, come
January, it will be pushing another project deserving
community attention.

A bill to be introduced to the Kentucky legislature
proposes the banning of throwaway bottles and cans and
would cleanup Kentucky‘s countryside considerably.

Although TKO representatives realistically point out that
the bill has a slim chance of passing during the 1974 term
(because of a powerful lobby sponsored by the bottle in-
dustry) public support of the bill could help pass this
beneficial measure. According to one TKO official a
similar bill passed by the Oregon lawmaking body last fall
has helped reduce litter by 81 per cent.

Book exchange reactions

After predicting and then watching a summer failure of a
Student Government-sponsored book exchange
(remember the Student Services Store?) we weren’t sure
how to react when another project of this nature was
presented in 56’s column “Harvest the Revolution” last
week.

The Kernel is definitely in favor of an exchange that will
offer cheaper textbooks to students than the commercial
bookstores around campus. However, we also realize until
a group is willing to accept an initial financial setback a

book exchange won’t work. _ . .
SG’s plan doesn’t offer this. All the organization IS Wilhng

to do is act as a middleman, a function in which it has no
worry of being hurt while some students willing to par-
ticipate may get nothing for their efforts.

So, until SG, or any other group, promises to sponsor a
book exchange 100 per cent, watch out-you may be getting
high on hot air.

 

 

 

 

’I HOPE ONE OF YOU REMEMBERED TO TURN DOWN THE THIRMOSYAT BEFORE YOU

lIFT HOME.’

 

LCIICIS

 

Violent assualt

On Friday Nov, 16 at approximately
10:40 pm. when quietly passing the
fraternity house at 232 E. Maxwell I was
repeatedly and violently verbally
assaulted as “a fucking nigger" by at least
one if not several young gentlemen just
outside its front door. Being white and
alone, I was neither impressed by the
accuracy of their vision nor inspired by the
range of their vocabulary. Such behavior
does little to allay the worst suspicions of
many that such institutions are all too
often the kindergarten of the future
fascists of America. A proper house
cleaning that would enforce the most
rudimentary standards of human decency
might best put such suspicions to rest.

Donald Nugent
Associate Professor

A belated thanks

I have been meaning for some time to
write to the Kernel and to the student
voters in the 4th District to tell you how
much your support helped me on Nov. 6.
But I have been waiting to find out what
happened in Aylesford precinct.

As most of you know from the
newspapers, Aylesford precinct results
gave 150 votes to George Summers and 55
votes to me, a complete reversal of the
prirnary results last May. My reaction to
this count was one of disbelief combined
with deep disappointment that the
students had not bothered to vote.

A few days later it was discovered that
the Aylesford voting machine had been
loaded backwards and therefore the
results were an exact reversal of the will of
the voters. But this discovery was not
accepted by the Board of Election
Commissioners.

Recently I have been engaged in an
effort to reconstruct the vote in Aylesford,
and we have gathered 96 affidavits from
citizens in that precinct who have sworn
before a notary that they voted for me on
Nov. 6. This has convinced me, even if it
does not convince the courts, that the
machines were really in error, and that in
fact, my supporters were out in force. I am
grateful for that.

I want to thank all ofyou for voting, and
especially voting for me. Please call me at
277-0930 if I can help you.

Pam Miller
4th District Councilwoman

 

TVN enters network competition

Nlcholas Von Hoffman

Kine Features Syndicate

 

 

WASHINGTON— Carolyn Lewis, one of
this city‘s best reporters, was running so
fast she was risking taking a header off her
high heels. The film processor had broken
down so that Carolyn had to fly herself
back from the Capitol to do her piece live
from the television studios.

This was the first time the film
processor had broken down since May 14,
when Television News (TVN), television‘s
fourth network-or fifth, if you count
public TV-went on the air. Operating an
established news network is stressful
enough. but starting a new one more than
justifies having an exercycle called “the
sanity machine" in the Washington
bureau‘s small newsroom.

The theory seems to be that when things
get too much for the three reporters and
three camera crews they can take turns
leaping on the machine and peddling off
their anxieties. They ought to have
anxieties. They’re competing against the
three other commercial networks, which
have three times the number of film crews
and even more reporters in their

Washington bureaus. Still, as Carolyn
Lewis says, the opportunity and fun of
helping to build a new network induces a
feeling of intoxicated zest.

IN ADDITION TO Washington
Television News has two camera crews
each in New York, Chicago, and Los
Angeles. For foreign news, which arrives
here both by satellite and airplane, the
network has a swapping arrangement with
Visnews, Ltd., an operation owned by
Reuters; the Australian Broadcasting
Commission, the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation, and the BBC. With 400 or so
cameramen, Visnews, and therefore
Television News, is fully competitive with
any American broadcast news-gathering
operation.

Unlike the reporters from the three
larger nets, TVN personnel don‘t identify
themselves by network. At 4:30 every
afternoon their stories are fed through
telephone lines to subscribing stations
where they are taped and edited so that
they fold into local news shown with their
own anchormen. Viewers watching

Carolyn in Miami or Oakland assume she
is their local station‘s Congressional
correspondent in Washington.

This should be a godsend to independent
stations without network affiliation
because until TVN came along they had no
way to compete with the stations in their
areas carrying Howard K. Smith or Walter
Cronkite. Now, however, they can have
national and international news, which is
just as fresh as anything their network
affiliated rivals can put on the air. In fact,
on a couple of occasions the larger nets
have borrowed film from TVN, a courtesy
the three biggies sometimes extend to
each other also.

TVN ISN‘T AN inexpensive service. The
new network’s budget is estimated to be $5
million a year, so that a subscribing
station has to pay its share of that cost plus
the telephone line charges to get the five-
times-a-week feeds which include 20 or so
stories.

An independent television station which

isn’t interested in providing its viewers
with news may find it much cheaper to do-
without the service. In fact, taking TVN
might be considered a measure of judging
the quality of your local non-network af-
filiated stations. Thus, it‘s good to be able
to report that big independents like WOR
in New Yorkand WGN in Chicago are TVN
subscribers. Four Metromedia stations
willjoin the feed in January, but what may
be as important for the viewer is that
several network affiliated stations (KSD-
NBC, St. Louis and WBEN-CBS, Buffalo)
also subscribe.

The reason may be that while the big
nets do feed what is called “B matter” for
inclusion in their local news-shows, TVN
gives them greater variety, especially in
areas like sports. Bob Frye, the TVN
Washington bureau chief, says he hopes
the new kid on the block will also supply
more political feature material when the
avalanche of Washington news lets up and
the feed is extended to six days a week
some weeks hence.

  

 

opinion from inside and outside the university community

Page |||J

 

Limited budgets make UK uncomfortable

By JIM FLEGLE
The University of Kentucky, much like
most other institutions of higher education
in the 1970‘s, is in a very uncomfortable
position. Not since the middle 1950’s has
higher education felt such pains of limited
budgets.

The pains are hitting in several ways.
The most obvious is the inability to move
freely into innovative programs. Exam-
ples at this University are numerous:
daycare, women's athletics, handicapped
services. This is not to say the University
has not moved in crucial areas. It has. But
there are a multitude of needed services
and programs which cannot be funded
with the budget which UK receives at this
time.

(‘utbacks and curtailments have led
some at UK to think seriously of limiting
enrollment. Our institution is too large,
some say. Others argue that the physical
capability to handle so many students in
specific programs is non-existent.

One example of these arguments was
presented to the University Senate last
week by the College of Education.

I am certain at the outset that the
College of Education has serious problems
with the quality of education its students
receive. I have been persuaded that some
action is necessary in order to maintain a
program deserving of existence within this
University. But the method in which this
program has been presented and the
university-wide setting in which it must be
placed, lead me to believe that this is not
the appropriate time for this program—

and the proposed action is not the ap-

propriate route to take.

Although I am personally opposed to
limited enrollment in a state institution, 1
can see the use of such restrictions as a
last resort to maintain quality and in-
tegrity in the University system. Most
likely at this juncture in our history,
restrictions are necessary.

But these restrictions must come about

in some organized manner. The ad-hoc
basis upon which the College of Education
departed last week will lead this

University not to quality education, but to
institutional chaos.
reasons for this:

There are several

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dennis Hermanson

O The first is that there is no over—all
institutional policy on limiting
enrollment. If limited enrollment is to be
established in specific areas, the other
areas of the university should be informed
of the general institutional policy and be
given opportunity to express their needs
and position. This is the only way to
maintain institutional quality.

OSecond. there is a lack of specific
criteria for admissions. The criteria
presented to the University Senate on
Monday were very vague, and were left
open for future interpretation. It is the
duty of the Senate to protect the student
body from any unreasonable criteria—this
means specificity beyond what was given
at the Senate meeting. And it means that
action to restrict admissions must be
thoroughly developed.

OThe most important point in all of this
is that administrators, students and
faculty alike must recognize that although
this is a time of fiscal restraint, it is not a
time for frantic actions to drastically
reduce anything. It is most important that
this institution act in a rational manner to
deal with these problems which can be
solved without substantial harm to
anyone.

I would ask that this institution deter-
mine its over—all policy. Then, as a policy
concerned with the totality of a Univer-
sity‘s aims and missions. we must
determine our priorities-with equal
opportunity for all views to be heard. Only
when we recognize the entirity of the
problem. and deal with it on a total basis.
can we achieve acceptable policies for the
University. Personally I am opposed to
limited enrollment in a state institution. It
is contrary to the goals and purposes set
forth in the by-laws and Kentucky
Statutes. Nevertheless, when. as a last
resort. limited enrollment must be
established in order to maintain quality in
education. Reluctantly. I find that I must
agree.

Jim Flegle is Student Govern-
ment president.

Penal system does little for incorrigibles

By WILLIAM J. TAYLOR

In Mr. Miller’s letter of Nov. 20, I
discerned four arguments against capital
punishment. Briefly they are:

1. Capital punishment proponents claim
that “capital punishment is a deterrent to
violent crimes.“ Studies have proven that
they are not.

2. Proponents of capital punishment
ignore the possibility of rehabilitation.

3. The death penalty was imposed with
racial prejudice.

4. We‘ll be in the same league as Brazil
and South Vietnam if we reinstate the

death penalty.

Let‘s sort these out and see any im-
plications.

First, many proponents have rallied to
capital punishment as an effective means
of deterrence. Mr. Miller correctly points
out that this belief has been soundly
disproven by social research. But this

research is aimed at prevention before the
fact, not with removing the possibility of a
convicted killer repeating his actions. The
two are not equitable. Obviously, at least
two slayings could have been avoided.
(That in California of two family members
by a young man who had previously slain a
grandparent, been proclaimed insane,
then released. The other in the
Philadelphia prison where two convicted
killers murdered the warden of the prison
and his assisstant.)

Now Mr. Miller would no doubt protest
that correct rehabilitation would have
prevented these later occurrences. That is,
give me any man with 30 years of hard
kicks and three years in prison with a good
psychiatrist, and I'll give you a model
citizen. The high return rate of mental
patients to hospitals speaks against this,
how much better can we expect prisons to
do? Such miraculous cures are simply

beyond social science at its present state.
Moreover, “Skinnering” a man to such an
extent seems at most dubiously better than
killing him.

Thirdly, Mr. Miller argues the death
penalty has been carried out dispropor-
tionately against blacks. At best, it would
be intellectual naivete to label this fact as
unfortunate. It is a damned disgusting
indictment of our judicial system.-
Nonetheless. this fact hardly has anything
to do with the intrinsic value of the death
penalty. The problem is obviously one of
facism in our judicial system.

To anyone still reading, this is not a cry
for immediate reinstatement of the death
penalty. Rather it is a plea not to
categorize this problem into the great
catchalls of Liberalism and Conservatism.

There is a problem of “incorrigibles“
repeating crimes which our present penal
system has done little to solve. I would

certainly hope that the death penalty can
be avoided. It is degrading to humanity as
a whole for life not to be considered
precious.

Among solutions to this problem perhaps
we can find some way of separating “in-
corrigibles" from society on a more
complete basis. That is through restricting
paroles to such people etc.

You see, Mr. Miller, our agreement is
not so much one of goals but of method.
Implicitly labelling arguments as con-
servative only blurs actual issues. And'
such statements as associating the rein-
statement of the death penalty with the
regimes of Brazil and South Vietnam is an'
“irrational and impulsive" appeal to rally
round the liberal side, isn‘t it?

William J. Taylor isajunior
philosophy major.

 

  

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. November 21, 1973

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655 South Broadway Imports

 

AAUP hears high points
of tenure committee report

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

A preview of a University
Senate ad hoc tenure committee
report was outlined to members
of the UK chapter of the
American Association of
University Professors (AAUP)
Tuesday afternoon.

The group, meeting the first
time this year, heard Dr. Joe
Krislov. chairman of the com-
mittee, outline the objectives and
high points of the report.

THE COMMITTEE favors
relaxing the seven-year rule for
gaining tenure, Krislov ex-
plained, since it is unfair to in-
structors who have taught
elsewhere before joining the
University faculty. The seven-
year rule is established by the
national AAUP chapter.

The report will suggest only
certain items be kept in a faculty
file. with the dean of the college
and the individual having sole
knowledge of its contents.

The committee decided the
annual performance review
should include discussion bet—
ween the chairman of the
department and the faculty
member about his progress.

HE EXPLAINED that when
the faculty member is hired, the
possiblity of tenure also be
reviewed. rather than waiting
until he has completed five years
of work and be told he is not in
line for tenure.

The committee also suggested
the colleges define “as precisely
as possible the standards for
tenure." Krislov said, but noted
there is some doubt as to the
success of this provision.

The most controversial
proposal in the report, according
to Kirslov, concerned the fact
that non—tenured faculty be given
the reason for non-renewal of

their contracts. He said this
portion of the recommendation is
opposed by the administration.

THE ONLY other suggestion of
significance requests that in the
promotion process, some credit
be given for advising.

Bruce Westley, AAUP
president, told the 18 faculty
members that “the task of the
committee is relevant, but not
germaine t0 the crunch that is
about to hit us."

“I think the big issue here is all
of this talk about the 62 per cent
tenure level at this University."
Westley. journalism chairman
said.

THERE HAS been a lot of
discussion within the ad-
ministration about the idea that
the tenure level is “dangerous"
and the end result could be the
implementation of tenure quotas,
said Westley. This would be done
on a departmental basis.

He added that one way to ease
the fears of high tenure would be
to provide flexibility, by putting
the tenured faculty where the
demands are.

The faculty members also
discussed the remote possiblity of
a tenure bill being presented to
the 1974 General Assembly by
way of public pressure.

Funds will be limited
for financial aid

Financiala id for next semester
will be limited as it is based on
how many students have dropped
or graduated, according to David
Prater. coordinator of student
loans.

The Education Opportunity
Grant, designed for lower income
families, has little money left, if
any. “There is a good possibility
we have spent what we have."
Prater said.

THERE ARE ALSO limited
funds available for the College
Work Study Program. Prater
predicted a few students may be
helped. but the program is on a
yearly basis, and availasble
funds will be determined by how
many students left school.

The largest financial program
for the spring semester will be
the National Defense Student
Loan, and will aid more students
than any other. Money used will
also depend on how many

 

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students have graduated or left
school.

The Basic Opportunity Grant is
available to any student who
didn't attend UK before July 1,
1973. This type of program is
applied for directly to the federal
agency. Qualifications for the
loan are determined by family
income, assets. children and
number of children in college.
The resources available are
subtracted from the cost of at-
tending school.

ONE APPLICATION IS used
for all financial aid. If a student
applies for one type of loan and it
is discovered he is eligible for
another. he may obtain it.

“No certain deadline has been
set,“ Prater said. “but it should
be no later than Dec. 1, 1973."
Applications will be considered;
however, due to limited available
funds, certain aids may have
already been awarded.

Loans and scholarships are set
up on a yearly basis and students
may try to obtain them anytime.
Prater said students interested in
funds for 1974-75 should apply
next March.

OUR PLACE

842 E. High
( in Chevy Chase )

Antiques

Crafts
Gifts

No charge for Layaway I
til Christmas

 

 'Memorial' victory

280 points decide ‘trivial' contest

By JENNIFER HEWLETT
Kernel Staff Writer

The Rise and Fall of the Eric
Campbell Memorial Trivia Bowl
Empire overcame Sigma Chi to
capture this year’s Trivia Bowl
Championship. The winning team
scored 600 points to the op-
position’s 320.

Panel members Ralph Long,
Joel Zakem, Craig Walsh . . . and
Mark Beal, who filled in for Bill
Straub, were presented gold
medals and a plaque at the event
held at the Student Center last
night.

WHAT IS trivia? Here are
some clues: What type of car
does Grandma Duck drive? Who
played Dagwood Bumstead on
TV in 1966?

If you answered Studebaker
Electric for the first question,
and Will Hutchinson for the
second, then maybe you should
sign up for next year.

Does King Tut's
curse affect
Mid East war?

(‘AIRO (AP)—Some‘ super-
stitious souls in Cairo are won-
dering whether the curse of the
Pharaohs had any influence on
the Middle East war.

One competent authority says
that’s nonsense. But the ancient
curse clearly says those who
tamper with the grave of the
Pharoahs shall suffer misfor-
tune. And after a review of the
following coincidences, who can
be sure?

THE RELICS of Tut-ankh-
amen, an Egyptian boy-king in
the 14th century B.C., were to
leave for a Moscow exhibit Oct.
7. The war began Oct. 6.

The King Tut exhibit was to
open in Moscow on Oct. 22. That
was the date of the first U.N.-
sponsored cease-fire, during
which Cairo claims the Israelis
seized a large chunk of Egyptian
land.

And then, there’s the history.

TWICE BEFORE—when King
Tut’s relics were shipped to Paris
in 1967 and to London in 1972—-
men involved in the shipment
died and were buried as it left for
the airport, according to
newspaper reports at the time.

This evening ’3
featured menu

Cream of Lettuce Soup
Moussaka
Green Beans Amandine

Rice Pilaf
Lettuce Wedges

with Louis Dressing
Honey Mousse

l {7 We~t Vine i.t‘\'lllk_1

 

Trivia, according to Don Rosa,
emcee of the bowl and question
researcher, is facts from the old
worlds of television, movies,
radio and pop music. Trivia
questions “are those bits of in-
formation that are perhaps the
least easily remembered, but
at the same time the most
worthy of being recalled,” said
Rosa.

THIS MARKS the third year of
the Trivia Bowl. Forty-six teams,
representing various campus

organizations and individuals
have been competing since Nov. 1
in this year’s contest.

A four member all-star team
made up of Joel Zakem, Bill
Straub and Craig Walsh will
represent UK at the National
Trivia Bowl. A fourth member of
the panel will be chosen soon to
attend the championship match
in Urbana at the University of
Illinois.

Twenty schools will be par-
ticipating in the national bowl.

 

 

hm Kentui ky 40507

presents .. IN

masseuse;
8:00 pm

7.60

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STUDENT CENTER BOARD

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wrrb

MEMORIAL quEuM
’fl‘éi’ng‘dfitfiasx ‘°

WNW 3501-00

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, November 21, 1973—5

Pinchback-Halloran Presents.

Forecast!

By Kernel Sports Editor Bill Straub
FORECAST

Bama 27-10

 

LSU vs Alabama

Miami vs F