xt7sf7667418 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7sf7667418/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-02-05 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, February 05, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 05, 1973 1973 1973-02-05 2020 true xt7sf7667418 section xt7sf7667418 Vol. LXlV No. 86
Monday, February 5, 1973
Eight pages

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky 40506

Kentucky

Kernel

t

Committee chooses
dean for law school

By DAVID FRIED
Kernel Staff Writer

(ieorge Vl' Hardy 11!. a forty-yeareld
professor of law at Louisiana State
l'niversity. will be recommended to the
Board of Trustees to fill the vacant dean's
position of the 1K Law School said Paul
()berst. law professor and chairman of the
search committee for a new dean.

If approved by the trustees at their
February meeting. Hardy will take office
late this summer

"l‘,\l DELIGHTFI). it's a wonderful
opportunity." Hardy' said in a telephone
interview "Kentucky has a fine law school
and a vibrant faculty. 1 am looking for«
ward to becoming a part of it "

Hardy seemed totally optimistic about
his nomination. "In terms of a general
range of opportunities fora man my age

ldon‘t think I could have done any better
than l'K' "

He said he was looking for a new job
when he was approached by [K officials
with the offer. “I think its a very good
school with a lot of potential I wouldn't be
coming here as a dean if I didn't ”

"This is a challenging opportunity to
implement some of my own ideas as to
what legal education is all about You have
a very able student body. and l was very
impressed with all the faculty I met."
Hardy said

HARDY (‘l'RRENTLY teaches law
courses relating to mineral and natural
resources at [51‘s Baton Rouge campus

where he has been on the faculty eleven
years

ll\l{l)Y RHFIVFI) HIS BA from
Virginia Military Institute He was then
awarded a Rhodes Scholarship to UXford
t'iiiversity in lingland Earning a JD
from LSI'. he was first admitted to the bar
in 1938 He taught at the l'niy'ersity of
\orth (‘arolina from 19:38 to 1960 before
coming to LSI'
a model code

Among his publications is
regulating Louisiana's
natural resources

Hardy dismissed any contentions that
[K could not find a dean because of a
"faculty split "

"Any law faculty I‘ve ever been
associated with has a wide divergence of
news which may be misconstrued by

some ”

Hardy says he thinks the so-called splits
are simply the result of interactions of the
“2:3 or :to very bright minds” on such
faculties

Hardy said he had never been to [K
until last month Despite the fact that ['K
President (His Singletary has been
associated with both the t'niversity of
North (‘arolina and LSL'. Hardy stated
that he met Singletary for the first time at
a recent l'K-LSL' basketball game
Singletary was unavailable for comment
on Hardy‘s selection by the search com-
mittee

Information, please
NEXUS begins campus

By BILL l’lNKSTt).\'
Kernel Staff Writer

You know the old saying about
the Yellow Pages “Let your
fingers do the walking . The
Yellow Pages help you find in-
formation quickly. efficiently.
and conveniently; all you have to
do is pick up the phone and you’re
in business.

Wouldn‘t it be nice if you could
Just pick up the phone and in one
simple. easy call find out exactly
when spring vacation [and
Florida. and sunshine and no
chemistry) begins',’

Not only would it be nice. but it
will be nice: Nl‘IXl‘S has arrived
and will begin operations Wed-
nesday Feb 7.

Inside:

\lin'S IS .\ l,\Tl\ word
meaning ”to connect” and it is
also the name of a telephone
system that was scheduled to
have begun today but will be
postponed until Wednesday so an
electrical unit can be installed.
said Jon Dalton. director of the
Human Relations (‘enter iHR(‘i

.-\ tape index will be printed in
the Kernel Wednesday with
numbers to call for NFXI'S in-
formation.

NHXl‘S IS \ I’RUIHTT of the
Htfice of Student Affairs in
general. and HR(‘ in particular
The idea for NEXI'S. borrowed
from a similar program in use at
the l'niversity of Wisconsin. was

Progress was reported Sunday as the
peace agreement provisions begin to take

Kentucky's Jim Andrews
sweeps his way to the basket
around \‘andy's Steve Turner
in Saturday night‘s game. For
the details about the ('ats loss
see page S. (Kernel photo by
Bruce Hutson.i

information service

first discussed and researched at
[K last spring

HRt'. with Dalton spear-
heading the project. sent
questionaires to secretaries in
Student Affairs offices. asking for
the questions students frequently
ask and came up with a list of 1200
topics felt to be of interest and
concern to (K students

The system utilizes telephone
lines. an operator to take in-
coming calls. a couple of tape
recorders and a selection of more
than To tapes to bring accurate.
iipto-date information to
students on the tmics they're
concerned with

All you'll have to do is scan the
printed NEXI'S directory for the

is

Outside:

tape concerning the subject
you're interested in. dial the
XFIXI'S number. tell the operator
the tape you want. wait for her to
pet the tape into a play-back
machine and listen

The system can handle two
calls simultaneously: two tape
playback units are coupled to two
separate lines. and both are
accessible via one telephone
number It's even easier than the
Yellow Pages.

NEXI'S is a product of the
(iffice of Student Affairs in
general. and the Human
Relations t‘enter iHRt'i in
particular The idea for NEXL'S.
borrowed from a similar

(‘oiitiniied on Page ti. ('01. t

t'hances for a nice day will be a bit

clouded

Today's weather will be partly

Peace

takes hold

hold in Vietnam See page 7 (lot a
nominstion for the Nobel Peace Prize? The
Kernel has its nominations on page 2

Cloudy
but warm

cloudy with the expected high in the upper
30's and the low tonight in the upper 30's
There is a 20 percent chance of per

cipitation both today and tonight

 

  

 

The
Kentucky
Kernel

ES'dblished l894

Mike wines, Editor in Chiet
Mike Tierney, Managing tdt'Of
Larry Kietkopt. Assoc-ate Editor

Dan Rhea. Day News Editor

Joel Zakem. Afts Editor

Katie McCarthy, Ron Mitchell. Steve Swm, Night News Editors

John Hicks, Photography Editor
chariie Dickinson. Sports Editor

Editorials

Editorials represent the opinion at the Editorial Board. not the UriiverSitV

 

Fair play needed

on code revisions

Once again. a controversy between
President ()tis Singletary and Student
Government President Scott Wen-
delsdorf has arisen over the method of
proposing revisions to the Student
Code.

The first disagreement arose last
year when Vice President for Student
Affairs Robert Zumwinkle proposed
code revisions to the Board of
Trustees after the deadline set by the
Board. A similar attempt to make late
proposals by Wendelsdorf was not
allowed.

To prevent a similar awkward
situation this year. Singletary ap—
pointed an ad hoc advisory committee
on Student Code Revisions (ACSCR).
This committee was to review all
student code proposals from the
University community and send its
recommendations. through
Singletary. to the Board of Trustees.

Made amendments

The problem is that Singletary
passed judgement on the ACSCR‘s
recommendations. disapproving
some. amending others and sup-
porting the rest. He even suggested
another possible revision to the code.

Wendelsdorf claims Singletary
agreed last year not to do this. but to

They shoot
congressmen,
don't they?

forward At‘St‘H‘s recommendations
to the Board without comment.
Singletary denies he made any such
agreement.

We can't try to judge who is being
truthful in this case. Probably the
matter of comment on the com-
mittee‘s revisions was never brought
up.

However. Singletary has taken
away any advantage the ACSCB may
have had over the old system of code
revision. Every member of the
University community had to take his
revisions to the code through the
committee. which was made up of

representatives from the ad-
ministration. faculty. and student
body.

Trust opinions

Singletary should be willing to trust
his opinions on how the code should be
changed to this committee as well. He
would not have been surrendering the
mandate for student discipline given
him in the code since he appointed the
committee. Members of his ad
ministration responsible for en-
forcing the code serve with the group.

When the committee asked for code
revisions. and later for open public
comments on those revisions.

  

 

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liliSl'tt\S||l|I.|'l'll-IS

IIII\II~II\ ut kiiiliitLv

I l‘\|ll'_’ltb|| kn Him in

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Singletary. like everyone else. could
have appeared and commented on
them. And since he would be speaking
as the president. his opinions would
have been evaluated as such by the
committee.

In this case. however. the president
violated the spirit of the committee
altogether. By Singletary's action the
administration still can propose code
revisions after the ACSCH has made
its recommendations.

It the Board decides to make A(‘-
SCH a permanent committee. it would
be wise to require that all recom~
mendations and comments on the
code come from the At‘SCB.

After all. A(‘S(‘H holds public
hearings on its recommendations.
whereas Singletary makes his
decisions in the cloister of his office.

It‘s not too difficult to see which one is
the fairer and more open method of
revising the code.

1' C 7 _ t,
V ' ;-. "=uitit
_ ,./' .- \' “I .Jl‘l
A ""le
"' T- , '9 1- :-

ti

 
 

‘.\.'.?-.

 
 

Dick Nixon?
The Nobel
Peace Prize?

As you probably know by now, one
of the more prominent nominees for
this year's Nobel Peace Prize is none
other than President Richard M.
Nixon. We don‘t know who made the
nomination. but we‘re not going to
cast any shadow of doubt on it by self-
i'ighteously reviewing Mr, Nixon's
qualifications. No nasty low blows
about more bombs being unleashed
over Vietnam than all those dropped
during World War H. or anything like
that.

But we do feel that if it‘s thateasy to
nominate Nobel Prize winners. than
we should make a few of our own.

The Nobel Prize for Literature: To
Xaveria Hollander, authoress of The
Happy Hooker. for her sensitive and
probing autobiographical study of the
.-\ll-American girl next door.

The Nobel Prize for Medicine: To
the as yet unnamed Med (.‘enter
physician whose pioneering efforts in
the field of surgical sex alteration
have made lasting changes in the
lives of many emotionally distressed
patients.

The Nobel Prize for Science: To E.
(iordon Liddy, H.l., Hunt and others
for their ambitious undertakings in
electronic communications.

The Nobel Prize for Applied
Pyschology: To the directors of
()peration Homecoming for their
plans to gradually reorient returning
prisoners of war to American society
by subjecting them to stockpiles of
Playboy magazines and lavishly
perfumed nurses.

The Nobel Prize for Journalism: 'l‘o
.lack .-\ndcrson for his “Swiss cheese”
story ilt was full of holesi on Tom
l‘laglcton. Our thanks to .lack for
making a reporter‘s already difficult
job so much the easier.

We could go on. but we think the
point we’re trying to make is crystal
clear. and as we look back over our
list the most humorous nomination
strikes us as being the first one:
Richard Nixon for peace.

So how come no one‘s laughing?

The military: Noble Experiment II

By Kl'RT VONNEGL'T JR.
The New York Times News Serwce

The prohibition of the sale of alco-
holic beverages in this country was
called “The Noble Experiment," among
other things. It did a lot to destroy
our respect for policemen. who were
expected to enforce laws which Were
stupid and unpopular. The war in
Vietnam might aptly be called “Noble
Experiment H." since it is a similarly
narrow-minded adventure in virtue. It
has left us with a secret and unjust
contempt for our soldiers, especially
our airmen.

People think unthinkable things and
speak unspeakable things in the pri-
vacy of their homes. meaning no
harm when hunting this or that. And
a reasonable woman said to me in

such privacy a few days ago that she
couldn‘t really care what happened to
some of our prisoners of war. She
pitied the captured ground soldiers and
the captured fliers who had flown in
support of troops.

I reminded her that the fliers could
be given prison terms for refusing to
bomb this or that. “They could have
resigned." she said. We had seen films
of recently captured airmen on tele-
vision the night before. and she didn't
think they were noble or anything.

So, in the privacy of her home. she
was no longer able to believe in a
romance which in the past has made
us so energetic when defending our
soldiers—the romance of our innocent
soldier boys.

We have made our soldiers ghastly

by giving them ghastly things to do.
Too bad.
Some experiment.

Noble Experiment I, which was Pro~
hibition. gave us a hardy and heartless
new class, the gangster businessmen,
who can be expected to sicken our
society for at least another hundred
years. I am curious to see if Noble
Experiment 11 will leave us with a
similarly persistent disease. We en-
couraged and admired the gangsters
when they were getting their start,
and it seems possible to me that we
may now encourage mercenary war-
riors in our midst. That is how I
would write it, if I were writing
science fiction.

There would be this jaded, cynical

country. see. where romance was dead
as a doornail. and it would create this
ferocious, highly paid warrior class.
And so on. And the next thing the
people knew . . . .

I don’t really think that will happen.
i do think, though, that we will con-
tinue to elect priggish. ignorant, stuh-
born people to high office. Their
blind enthusiasms. commonly learned
at their mothers’ knees. will lead us
into more noble experiments.

The experimenters Will again force
our policemen and soldiers to disgrace
themselves in public. Sorry about that.

Kurt Vonnegut Jr.. novelist, is author
of “Slaughterhouse Five." He was an
American P.().W. in wartime Germany.

 

  

 

Qmment J

Cease-fire a sham

By MARK MANNING:

It should be apparant by now that the present “cease-fire" in
Vietnam is a failure. The failure of the treaty as well is
inevitable. The Vietnam accords can not bring peace!

To understand the inadequacy of the treaty, we must un-
derstand the historical perspective~the history of deceit and
betrayal perpetrated on the Vietnamese people since 1954 when
the “Big 4“ powers (US. France, Russia, and Britain) negated
the victory won by the Nationalist forces under Ho Chi Minh.
Pressure exerted by Russia and China at that time forced the
Vietminh to accept the dectates of the Geneva accords even
though it meant giving up half the territories they had won, and
placing their trust in capitalist powers to administrate elections
to unify their nation.

The l'.S. recreated Diem government in South Vietnam
cancelled those elections. The result of that betrayal has been
some 1:3 years of civil war with increasing US. military in-
volvemenl. resulting in the heaviest bombing assault in the
history of warfare — an attempt at genocidal destruction of the
peoples of North Vietnam.

Once again (‘hinese and Russian pressure as well as tens of
thousands of tons of bombs have forced the Vietnamese to
accept a “peace accord“. Once again the Vietnamese people are
asked to trust capitalist powers to unify their country. Once
again we have a "cease Iire”~ a“cease-fire" that has failed to
stop the killing as the fighting in Vietnam rages at an intensified
rate.

The failure of the accords is also imminent as they do nothing
to resolve tl_e social. economic. and political problems that have
been at the roots of the civil war. The Vietnam accords an-
nounced Jan, 24 simply signal a new stage of Vietnam’s civil
war. and of Washington intervention!

 

These 8752s continue the bombing of Indochina even now as
bombs fall on Laos and Cambodia. Thousands of "civilian
technicians“ from the [S remain in Vietnam to “advise“
’l‘heiu's forces. The l'S. continues to pump massive economic
aid to the Saigon regime.

In several news conferences. Kissinger has mentioned free
elections to unite the peoples of Vietnam. But the fact is that
there are no provisions in the treaty guaranteeing such elec-
tions. Rules governing any elections would have to be “worked
out” by a “national council of national reconciliation and con-
cord." Thieu has full. unconditional veto power over any
provisions agreed upon by this national council.

While a major concern of the treaty involved the release of
American P.().W.s ithey are to be “unconditionally" released
within 60 days) there is no mention of the estimated 200,000
political prisoners held in Thieu‘s prisons.

The Thieu regime would not survive a day without this
massive aid and coercive political maneuvering of the US. Yet
Nixon keeps the Thieu regime in power in the name of “self~
determination"! Selfdetermination for whom? For the
Minority if) ruling-class clique who maintains a dictatorial
grasp on the Vietnamese peoples

NOW MORE THAN EVER it is necessary to demand that the
l'.S. withdraw completely and unconditionally from all of
southeast Asia nowl?!

Mark Manning. a junior topical
major in personality change and
(lef'elopment. is a member as the
Youn’ Socialist Alliance.

ALL GRADUATE AND
PROFESSIONAL STUDENTS

are invited to the

G.P.S.A.

Wine and Cheese

Tasting Party

Friday, Feb.'9
8:30 P.M.

Newman Center
Only $I.()0 per person

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. February 5. [973—3

 

 

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—------—-------------_--------—---—-----q

STUDENT-RAILPASS

The way to see Europe without feeling like a tourist.

Student-Railpass is valid in Austria, Belgium, Denmark,
France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway.
Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland.

Eurailpass, Box 90, Bohemia, New York 11716

Please send me y0ur free Student-Railpass folder Order
form ['1
Or your free Eurailpass folder with railroad map I j

Name , , W,“ .. _ -

Street

City, ‘W,,,__,, _ #._.,, ,,. A

State, _ .

192

So you plan to spend the.
Summer in Europe this year. Great.
Two things are mandatory. A ticket
to Europe. And a Student-Railpass.
The first gets you over there, the
second gives you unlimited Second
Class rail travel for two months for a
modest $135 in Austria. Belgium,
Denmark, France, Germany,
Holland, Italy, Luxembourg,
Norway, Portugal, Spain. Sweden,
and Switzerland! All you need to
quality is to be a full-time student up
to 25 years of age, registered at a
North American school, college or
university.

And the trains of Europe are
a sensational way to travel. Over
100,000 miles of track links cities.
towns and ports all over Europe. The
trains are fast (some over 100 mph),
frequent. modern, clean, convenient

  

d

and very comfortable. They have to
be. So you‘ll meet us on our trains. It
really is the way to get to know
Europeans in Europe.

But there's one catch. You
must buy your Student-Railpass in
North America before you go.
They're not on sale in Europe
because they are meant strictly for
visitors to Europe—hence the
incredibly low price. Of course if
you're loaded you can buy a regular
Eurailpass meant for visitors of all
ages. It gives you First Class travel if
that's what you want.

Either way if you‘re going
to zip off to Europe. see a Travel
Agent before you go, and in the
meantime, rip off the coupon. It
can't hurt and it'll get you a better
time in Europe than you ever thought
possible.

 

 

 

 

 

 4—:rnr: Kizsri'ciu' KliltNlil.. Monday. February 5. I973 For transportation improvement

fl ‘ . Group submitts ro osal
FREE speCIal offer Nine l'K professors Wlll work Appalachian Resfch andp(‘enter for Developmental

on atransportation improvement Defense Fund, Inc. About the (‘hange on the proposal.
SILVER To only project I" ”W “U! Sandy Area time the problems were being, The actual proposal involves
‘ *“\ U K
'DOLLARe - -
\

 

    
      

Development District it the expressed. the Department of preparing a study and report
proposal they submitted is ap- 'l‘ransportation an nounced followed by implementation of a
proyed by the [CS Department ot~ research support for Iran system of improved tran

    
       
     

'l‘ransportation sportation studies done on the sportation for rural residents
I\\\“ Studentsl The transportation problem uniyersity [pvpl with mobility problems in Floyd,
\¢ ' was brought to the attention of Deacon and cohead Ar- Martin. Magot‘t‘in, Pike. and
Dr Jack .-\ Deacon. ciyil ehiteeture and 'l‘elecom- Johnsoncounties
, . . (‘llt-Illlt‘t‘l‘mtl. UV “W concerned munications Professor Steven B.
Thats r'ghf' we“ g've YOU 0 FREE agencies from Eastern Ken- Edwins organized interested 'l‘hetaculty members will find

 
 

lucky. Big Sandy Area "interdisciplinary" faculty out it they are to be awarded the
lN‘Vt‘lenlt‘Dl DlSlrlt'l and lllt‘ [numbers to work through ['K's l‘t'qut‘slt‘tl lumls l)_\' Mill‘t'll l.

SILVER DOLLAR with ariy $5.06

pre-paid order of drycleaning. Shirts,
sweaters, trousers; anything!

——ALSO—

 
 

 

             

 

   
    

2 0 DISCOUNT a... 0 _ . . .
5 /° , ‘p . av 1C1“ Ont“ “69‘ ii ," Vista Peace Corps .‘..t" Va. warp, l‘
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Given to UK. Students Vow...“ n , . . . .. .. .. ..
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F01 Sate - ".‘t I- ";L‘in .,_\ w’tt',l'?"t". .:' .r~‘ ‘ t "' 'w' ' l 'l“"‘ " l". l i ‘ ' "
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Now under new management it x. h. 3 ' 4" CAR BARN

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SALE OF SAVINGS

All Posters and Art Prints
Buy One Get One Free

. sale $19.95
Post Versulog Slide Rules reg. $29.9 5

0
All Smith-Corona Typewriters regglfir (gr-ice

   

     
 

   

 

    
   
       
  

  

All Cloth Bound TradeBooks 30% off

  

 

 

 

 

  

Sport]

 

Four into Ist won't go

Fourth SEC loss sinks UK's title hopes

It) ('II.\I{I.II‘I DICKINSON

Kernel Sports Editor
Having come abruptly to life
last Monday with a win over
Alabama. the Kentucky Wildcats
_|tt.\l as abruptly died Saturday
night with an 8376 loss to the

\ isiting Vanderbilt
tiiodores

('oni

l-iiilitiyyiiig the 9340:; tripping of

previously Slit‘ loss tree
.\lab.‘iiiia. the ('ats looked iii
prime shape. with a friendly

schedule ahead of them. to take
the coiilei‘ence title

\O“ \I.I. OI" 'I‘II.\’I' is gone
Hiiiy aii iiiiiiieiise amount ot good
liil'ltlllt‘ \Hll enable [K to men
sal\age a llt' out of this season
that pi‘oiiiised so much in the
beginning

Vandy was iii the same position
[K was either put up or get out
I‘Iarly it seemed like Vandy was
the one that would have to leave.
as l'K ran out to a 6-1 lead.

The (‘ats tried to shake up
Vandy‘s guards early by
throwing a press out right from
the start. The Commodores.
however. handled it easily and
the press was pretty much junked
for the night.

“Our press didn‘t work.” said
head coach Joe Hall. “There's
nothing worse than a press when
you aren‘t hustling.”

Like the game played January
22 at Nashville, which UK lost by
a point. there was a wicked,
violent intensity to the play.

lm'l‘ll TEAMS ran their pat-
terns and threw their picks, not
set but threw, amidst a constant
hail of elbows and lists.

.hiii Andrews. who managed 20
points despite being beaten up
inside. played an erratic game
that \aried in quality depending
on whether Steve Turner was in
the game or not.

'l‘iii‘nei'. \'andy‘s 7'4" center.
and Andrews staged a fierce duel
that produced the best detense
Andrews has played all year.

Three times in the first half
\ndrews sprang over Turner and
devoured his shots. finally forv
ciiig Vandy coach Roy Skinner to
replace 'I‘ui‘nei' with Ray Mad-
dux

Against Maddux Andrews was
considerably less aroused
Maddux out fought Andrew's for a
team leading 7 rebounds.

As the half wound down \'an-
dy's 'l‘erry (‘ompton began to hit
from the outside, forcing L'K out
of a zone and into their man-to-
man defense.

ONLY .-\ SPINNING hook by
Mike Flynn off a pass from Kevin
(lrevey gave UK a 35-34 halftime
lead

(lrevey played another solid
game. hitting 9 of 15 shots for 19
points, but he fouled out late in
the game, opening things up for
Vandy.

When Grevey left Vanderbilt
was up by three and from there

One that got away
Compton returns to

By MIKE TIERNEY
Managing Editor

As you may guess, Horse Cave,
Ky. cannot yet be classified as a
booming metropolis. About 200
miles equidistant from Lexington
and Nashville, the town‘s
mothers have struggled to supply
it with a scant 2100 persons.

Well, Terry Compton is not
even from Horse Cave. The son of
a farmer, he calls Horse Cave his
hometown simply because it‘s the
biggest around. “I‘m just a
country boy,“ he says bashfully.

Yet it‘s guys like Compton who
make Kentucky famous for
country-boy basketball players.
In 1970, the 6‘ 5" Compton, at
guard, and 5‘ 10" leaper Jerry
Faulkner, at center, spearheaded
Hart County High School to an
incredible 35~i record before the
country boys caught cold feet in
the state tourney in Louisville
and passed out in the first round.

AS GEOGRAPHY WOULD

have it, Horse Cave would play a

strategic role in determining
(‘ompton‘s future. UK in
Lexington and Vanderbilt

University in Nashville became
engaged in a tug-o-war for

Compton's services.

Vandy won.

And as UK‘s luck would have it,
Compton would come back to
haunt the Wildcats three years
later.

For, on Saturday night,
Compton played one of the best
games of his life on the hallowed
floor of Memorial Coliseum. With
3:30 left, he fouled out with 23
points—tops for the game~and
his inspired teammates went on
to dash the Cats” dreams of a trip
to the NCAA tournament in
March.

Compton joins an elite club of
Vandy mate Joe Ford from
Mayfield and Tennessee’s
Rodney Woods from Four Mile as
native Kentuckians who have
contributed heavily to three key
UK defeats this year.

Why did Compton
Vandy?

“First of all, I thought I‘d get to
play more," he recalled. “Also,
Vanderbilt's a better school
academically. And—" he
hesitated—-“l liked the coaches
more."

Ford, Woods and other
escapees might offer the same

choose

widened it out to as many as 11
points.

THE ENTIRE l'K TEAM shot
well from the field, amassing a
final 35.2 percent'rten percent
higher than Vandy. But as in the
last game between the two teams
Vandy won the game at the
treethrow line.

The (‘ommodores. apparently
displaying more finesse with
their punches. allowed UK only 12
of 17 freebies while Vandy shot 24
of 31

With l'K leading 64-60. Vandy
went to the line for seven straight
points to put them ahead of
Kentucky for good.

Mike Flynn settled the starting
guard issue with a team leading
21 points and nine rebounds.
Flynn‘s nine rebounds, and the
disquieting fact that they tied
Andrews for team high, raised
another issue though—the
nonexistence of any rebounding
from the forwards.

Grevey. Bob Guyette and
Larry Stamper only claimed
eight between them.

It was the second game in a row
that Flynn has led the team in
rebounding.

The loss was history making in
a sense. It was the first SEC
game that UK has lost at home
since a 77-72 overtime drop job to
Mississippi State in 1967.

Now UK must meet Auburn
Monday night, facing the
possibility of a second division
finish in the conference.

haunt UK

reasons. Who can blame them?

—The way UK shamefully bills
Grevey, Flynn, Connor and
Guyette as the top players from
their respective states, other
prospective stars may be scared
away.

—Though no worse than most
of the SEC schools, UK ain't no
Harvard of the South. Vandy is,
however, which helps to attract
book-minded guys like Compton,
who majors in civil engineering.

—In his waning days, Adolph
Rupp wasn‘t the world’s most
appealing coach.

The first two conditions remain
today. The third may not. Joe
Hall is a nice guy to play for, but
today he is also a confused man.

“I guess they (Vandy) wanted
it a little more than we did,” Hall
muttered Saturday. “I just can't
understand that."

Today Joe Hall understands
only one thing—he‘ll be watching
the NCAA Mideast Regional not
from the bench, but from a seat in
the stands.

And, for that. he can thank a
few good ole country-boy Ken-
tucky basketball players who got
away.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. February

 

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(“y—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. February 5. 1973

 

The Warehouse The "“7
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open. lam Student Center
SOSSIOI‘I TODAY
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U.K. Office of International Programs
announces
6 Week Study Trip to Monterrey,

        

—July Ist to August IOth
—6 semester hours of credit
—Courses offered in English and Spanish

  
        
        
     
        
 
    
  
     
   

 

Total Cost of $435.00 includes:
Tuition, Room, Board, Excursions,
Bull-fights, Dances, Concerts, Two
swimming pools (1 Olympic size)
and Assorted Recreation facilities,
etc.

Anthropology, Archeology, Botany,
History, Geography, Art, Folklore,
Spanish (all levels), Sociology, etc. .
Courses in Spanish fulfills 1 year of
U.K. language requirement.

For more information see or call

   

Antonio A. Fernandez

1106 Patterson Office Tower
Phone 257-1531

Office of International Programs

or
Bradley Hall, Phone 258-8646

9 Days
ONlY $289

$309 Tax and Service included, based on Full
Aircraft of 250—350 Deposit Balance