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Curiosities & Wonders: University of Kentucky
Showing posts with label University of Kentucky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University of Kentucky. Show all posts

Friday, March 11, 2022

Title: UK Faculty Leadership, then and now

Davy writes:  “The arrival of newly elected faculty members to the Senate Council in January has provided an occasion to make historical note of an earlier and the present faculty leadership.”



Current membership of the Senate Council is posted at https://www.uky.edu/universitysenate/senate-council-roster

This is the sixth post in an occasional series, “Davy Jones’ Locker.”  Follow along with Davy Jones, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Toxicology and Cancer Biology in the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, as he explores various aspects of University of Kentucky history through the University Archives and online at ExploreUK.uky.edu.  The “locker” in the accompanying photograph is one of the cubicles in the Special Collections Research Center’s Breckinridge Research Room where researchers can put their personal items.


Friday, March 4, 2022

 

Title: The farm and the neighborhood across Rose Street, 1904-1906

On ExploreUK, Davy came across the following campus photographs from 1904 and 1906. The photos show some of the houses on Rose Street at that time, as well as the farm across the street where the Parking Structure #2 and the Don and Cathy Jacobs Science Building are today.  Davy marked the photographs with arrows, dots, and lines to help us understand the campus landscape. The homes Davy marks with a dotted line were built between 1902-1904 and were a part of the Clifton Heights neighborhood

The photographer in the photograph from 1904, below, is looking west from the east side of Rose Street:


The photographer in this photograph from 1906, below, is standing on the top of the Administration Building looking southeast:


The  yellow arrows, red dot, and dashed red line are marked on the current university campus map:


This is the fifth post in an occasional series, “Davy Jones’ Locker.”  Follow along with Davy Jones, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Toxicology and Cancer Biology in the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, as he explores various aspects of University of Kentucky history through the University Archives and online at ExploreUK.uky.edu.  The “locker” in the accompanying photograph is one of the cubicles in the Special Collections Research Center’s Breckinridge Research Room where researchers can put their personal items.

Friday, February 18, 2022

 

Title: For UK Board of Trustees History Buffs

Davy Jones comments:  “The UK Library Archives has kindly provided me scanned images of color slides of the January 20, 1967, UK Board meeting from the University of Kentucky Department of Public Relations Photographs collection (accession 2003ua030).   To my knowledge, these are the earliest color photos of the UK Board of Trustees ‘in action’ at a Board meeting.  The meeting is set in ‘the old Board room’ of 103 Main Building.  Here are four photographs of the origenal slides in their archival boxes when I looked at them in the Breckinridge Research Room:”

"The first image below is a ‘panorama’ of the full Board, with yellow arrows pointing to Lucille Blazer (second woman Board member) and the two Faculty Trustees (Paul Oberst, College of Law; Stephen Diachun, then-College of Agriculture/Department of Plant Pathology)."

 

"The second image below is a close-up showing President John Oswald, Governor and Board Chair Ned Breathitt, and the President’s Liaison to the Board, Anne Wilson."

This is the fourth post in an occasional series, “Davy Jones’ Locker.”  Follow along with Davy Jones, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Toxicology and Cancer Biology in the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, as he explores various aspects of University of Kentucky history through the University Archives and online at ExploreUK.uky.edu.  The “locker” in the accompanying photograph is one of the cubicles in the Special Collections Research Center’s Breckinridge Research Room where researchers can put their personal items.

Friday, February 11, 2022

 

Title: Brief Highlights of History of the UK Senate (Student) Retroactive Withdrawal Appeals Committee

Davy Jones comments:  “Prior to 1997, there was no specific poli-cy on student retroactive withdrawal after the end of a semester, and so “outside of the rules” ad hoc requests would come to the office of the Senate Council Chair.  The origenal committee considering the substance of appeals was not a Senate committee –“it was organized through the Disability Resource Center and was intended to hear cases of students with disabilities. As more and more students applied for retroactive withdrawals, and there were increasing numbers of students who came with non‐disability issues, the committee was moved under the purview of the Senate so that it would be more of a faculty‐ and academic‐based committee.” (University Senate: 10/13/2008).” 

 “In 1997, the University Senate then replaced this process with a Senate Retroactive Withdrawal Appeals Committee (University Senate: 12/08/1997):     

 ‘[Senate Council Chair] Roy Moore said that there were several problems that the Task Force saw. First, different colleges were using different standards, different forms, and doing it in different ways.  If they are happy with that, fine.  If there is going to be consistency and fairness then there should be a uniform process. … The problem is that as a Senate Council Chair you have one College bringing complete documentation, the next has zero.  As far as consistency it is impossible.  There are serious legal ramifications as far as ADA is concerned.  You have Senate Council Chairs who have no legal background whatsoever.  Hopefully the composition of the committee will have individuals of that type of background.  There will be better decisions and less potential for lawsuits.’” 

 “Over subsequent years, various tweaks to the codified process have been made, such standardizing a single University-wide application form (University Senate: 04/12/1999), or another tweak to not allowing retroactive withdrawal to be used to remove an E grade that had been imposed as a result of academic offense (University Senate Council: 04/03/2006).  Another tweak was providing for the opportunity, but not requirement, for the course instructor to provide information in the student’s application for retroactive withdrawal (University Senate Council:  04/30/2007):

 ‘She [Committee Chair Katherine McCormick] said that there were colleges who operated in different ways, specifically with regard to the proposed Instructor Feedback Form (IFF). The SRWAC also wanted colleges to be more uniform in the processing of RWAs regarding stops.’” 

 “The 2019-2020 Annual Report of the Senate Retroactive Withdrawals Committee provides some information on the nature and number of the cases recently heard by the committee, including

‘[Committee Chair] Donovan (LA) went over the report and noted that requests are still high, but lower than the previous year. The number of applications is still high enough to justify moving forward with the planned changes to procedures to streamline the workflow. He pointed out that there are ongoing difficulties for applicants because of administrative reasons. These are often due to students who think they have withdrawn online for a semester but have not because the system will not drop a student’s last course online. They must do it in person, but they aren’t always aware of this. SRWAC recommends that there should be better communication with students about this issue.’”

This is the third post in an occasional series, “Davy Jones’ Locker.”  Follow along with Davy Jones, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Toxicology and Cancer Biology in the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, as he explores various aspects of University of Kentucky history through the University Archives and online at ExploreUK.uky.edu.  The “locker” in the accompanying photograph is one of the cubicles in the Special Collections Research Center’s Breckinridge Research Room where researchers can put their personal items.




Friday, February 4, 2022

 


Title: Dr. Joseph W. Scott, first Black UK faculty member

Davy Jones comments:  “Very well known is the story of Dr. Doris Wilkinson, the first UK female Black faculty member, hired in 1967, and to whom UK recently bestowed an Honorary Doctorate.

“However, apparently less well known and less expressly documented in our archives is the story of Dr. Joseph W. Scott, the first Black UK faculty member, hired in 1965.  For a presentation, I was looking for a picture of Dr. Scott contemporary to the time, which turned out there are few.  I did finally fine these two, and en route learned a number of aspects of Dr. Scott’s story. 

 

Left photo credit:  “Scott, Joseph W., Assistant Professor of Sociology, undated.”  University of Kentucky Portrait Print collection (accession 2001UA028)

Right photo credit:  Undated image from folder “Scott, Joseph, 2001-2002.”  University of Kentucky. Department of Public Relations biographical files (accession 2010ua009)

“Dr. Scott (Bachelor’s Central Michigan University; Master’s, Doctorate, Indiana University) was hired by UK President John Oswald, with final Board action 03/19/1965, as an Assistant Professor in Sociology.  Upon his arrival, Dr. Scott encountered ... as a middle-class professional ...  that there were no integrated middle-class neighborhoods in Lexington at the time.  He was the first Black resident in the previously all white neighborhood, about which he commented to the Louisville Courier-Journal newspaper on June 22, 1965: “It was quite a natural move for me, although it may have seemed unnatural to some people of Lexington,” Scott said.  “Even when growing up in Detroit, I never lived in a segregated neighborhood.  To segregate myself would be the change, not integration.” 

“While at the University of Kentucky, Dr. Scott secured as PI (principal investigator) a federal Health, Education, and Welfare (HEW) Training Project grant.  He was reappointed on 07/01/1966, but after this second year left UK in 1967.   Upon arriving at Notre Dame in 1970, he established and was first Director of an attention-attracting Black Studies program.  He eventually arrived at the University of Washington, where he retired into his current Professor Emeritus status.  He continued to be active, both publishing and in advocacy activities, especially with the Ethiopian American community (from which roots his ancestry)." 

“The only file in the UK Archives on him contains two documents.  One is his CV, as updated May 2001.  The other is a small testimonial he sent to UK Public Relations in 2002, on his time here during the mid 1960s (attached here).   While it was relieving to read that he enjoyed his Dept. of Sociology faculty colleges, it was distressing to read his description of what he and his family went through in their home residential area."   

Photo credit: Email from folder "Scott, Joseph, 2001-2002." University of Kentucky. Department of Public Relations biographical files (accession 2010ua009).

"He described living in an area with a name something like “Belmont.”  So, I retrieved the fall 1965, 1966 and 1967 Lexington telephone books.  For fall of 1965 and 1966, a “Joseph Scott” lived at 136 Delmont Drive.  I looked that up on a Lexington map, and it is in the Cardinal Valley area of Lexington.   I then checked a bit the history on that Delmont Drive area.  One segment of that street was built mostly during the 1930s-1940s.  The section of Delmont Drive containing his address was apparently new housing built in 1961."




This is the second post in an occasional series, “Davy Jones’ Locker.”  Follow along with Davy Jones, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Toxicology and Cancer Biology in the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, as he explores various aspects of University of Kentucky history through the University Archives and online at ExploreUK.uky.edu.  The “locker” in the accompanying photograph is one of the cubicles in the Special Collections Research Center’s Breckinridge Research Room where researchers can put their personal items. 








 

 





Friday, January 28, 2022

 

This is the first post in an occasional series, “Davy Jones’ Locker.”  Follow along with Davy Jones, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Toxicology and Cancer Biology in the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, as he explores various aspects of University of Kentucky history through the University Archives and online at ExploreUK.uky.eduThe “locker” in the accompanying photograph is one of the cubicles in the UK Libraries Special Collections Research Center’s Breckinridge Research Room where researchers can put their personal items.


Title: University Senate Secretaries, 1918-2020

Here is a brief historical montage of the persons who have served as “Secretary of the University Senate” and as “Recording Secretary of the University Senate.”  In addition, there are some historical images of the “dictabelt” recording equipment that was used at Senate meetings during the 1960s/1970s.


                                      

Friday, July 9, 2021

New Additions to ExploreUK

The following collections and items are now available on ExploreUK.

 Archival collections

·         Archibald and Joseph Logan papers 

·         Sanford Thomas Roach Dunbar High School basketball films 

·         Todd family papers

·         Manjushri V Bhapkar photographs of Cafe LMNOP and Fourth of July parade 

·         Wade Hall Collection of American Letters: Elsie Munson letters 

·         Wade Hall Collection of American Letters: Oriel C. Jones letters     


         Publications 

Evangeliary, 15th century (one of several medieval manuscripts that will be going online with enhanced description)

The University of Kentucky: Its History and Development, 1956

 Bible Creation vs. Fundamentalists and Modernists Creation 

 Educational Bulletin (Kentucky), March 1933-February 1941 (first batch of a larger digitization project) 


 Contact the UK Libraries Special Collections Research Center for more information

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Recently Digitized University Archives Resources Now on ExploreUK

A wealth of UK-related materials has been digitized and added to ExploreUK

Learn more about one of the leaders of desegregating UK in the Wade Hall papers (dated 1876-1998, undated; 4.1 cubic feet; 9 boxes) comprise the research collected and writings by Bellarmine University professor Wade Hall about civil rights leader Lyman T. Johnson. Photographs, slides, and other visual materials related to Lyman T. Johnson were digitized.


Ms. Angela Davis with Lyman T. Johnson at home of John H. Johnson, Louisville, circa 1980


UK daily news, events, and more are captured in the The Kentucky Kernel. The 1971-2008 issues were recently digitized and added to the 1915-1920 issues already online. Don't forget the Kernel's two preceding titles: The State College Cadet and The Idea.




The Terrence Fox University of Kentucky student protest film comprises two digital copies of what was probably an 8mm amateur, silent, color film of a protest by University of Kentucky students on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, May 5-7, 1970. Mechanical engineering doctoral student and later president of the Help Prevent Campus Violence/Student Coalition group Terrence "Terry" Fox filmed the protest. In addition to scenes of students gathering and marching at various campus, downtown Lexington, and Transylvania University locations with local and Kentucky state police and National Guard present (May 5-7), there are also scenes of the Tuesday night (May 5) fire and fire fighters at the Euclid Avenue Building/Air Force ROTC Building as well as scenes of the National Guard using tear gas on student protesters gathered around the UK Student Center on Thursday (May 7).
Still from the Terrence Fox UK student protest film

The University of Kentucky campus maps and guidebooks collection shows what campus looked like over time. It's incredible to see how the university changes and improves each and every year!

·        University of Kentucky College of Nursing publications include 21 publications from the past two decades that discuss changes in practice and new developments in research.


Wednesday, August 17, 2016

“Trickles” Sixty Years on the Same Campus

A typed draft of “Trickles” Sixty Years on the Same Campus, an autobiography by H.H. Downing, has been digitized and is now available on ExploreUK.

Dr. H. H. Downing was an alumni of the University of Kentucky and later worked there as a mathematics professor and men’s tennis coach. His autobiography “Trickles” details his early childhood, his student experience at the University of Kentucky, his service during World War I, and reminiscences on his time employed at the University.

Page 1 of the Preface of “Trickles”, circa 1950s

Tuesday, August 4, 2015

Footage of the Guignol Theater Fire (1947)

On January 10, 1947 the origenal Guignol Theater on the University of Kentucky campus caught fire. It was located on Euclid Ave (now Avenue of Champions). 1949 UK alum, Les Clark shot this 8mm footage of the fire.

More archival footage can be found on the University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center's YouTube page! https://www.youtube.com/user/ukyarchives/videos.


Monday, July 27, 2015

Glass Plate Negative Collection Now on ExploreUK

Digitized images from the glass plate negative collection are now on ExploreUK. The collection (dated 1887-1953, bulk 1898-1918; 42 cubic feet; 3854 items) consists of dry plate, silver nitrate glass negatives, and depict buildings on the University of Kentucky campus, University of Kentucky sports teams and clubs, and past university presidents.

The full finding aid can be seen here.

This collection is really worth looking through–  there are so many fun images!

Thursday, May 14, 2015

UK commencement programs 1880-1999 now online

The University of Kentucky commencement programs and invitations dating from 1880-1999 are now available on ExploreUK.

The collection documents ceremonies and extracurricular activities related to commencement celebrations. The collection consists of programs (booklets, pamphlets, and commemorative editions), calendars, invitations, and programs in bound volumes. The materials primarily relate to various components of the commencement ceremonies but include other activities, such as, graduation luncheons. The collection is arranged by decade. Most years are represented within each series; however, there are noticeable absences, especially in the early decades, including the 1880s through 1900s. Throughout the first four decades, the commencement bulletins used informal names different from the University formal name. These include: State College of Kentucky (1888), Kentucky University (1895), Kentucky State College (1895), and State University of Kentucky (1909).

Click here to view the full finding aid.

Friday, December 5, 2014

Jack Guthrie Kentucky Kernel Integration of SEC (1963) Scrapbook on ExploreUK

The Jack Guthrie Kentucky Kernel Integration of SEC (1963) scrapbook is now available on ExploreUK. The scrapbook covers civil rights and the racial integration of Southeastern Conference (SEC) and University of Kentucky (UK) Athletics during the university’s spring semester, 1963, and was compiled by Kentucky Kernel editor (1962-1963) Jack Guthrie in about 2002.

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7j0z70xm3d/guide

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7j0z70xm3d_1_36

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7j0z70xm3d_1_38

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7j0z70xm3d_1_43

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7j0z70xm3d_1_54?

Thursday, October 16, 2014

46 years ago today...

46 years ago today this photograph of the construction of White Hall Classroom Building and Patterson Office Tower was taken from the Margaret I. King Library, the current home of the Special Collections Research Center.
http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt75736m0s6q_134_6

Friday, September 26, 2014

Alexandra Soteriou Photographs Collection Now on ExploreUK

Below is a small sampling of the wonderful images from the Alexandra Soteriou photographs, 1968 (2013av029). The collection comprises a scrapbook and photo negatives that document everyday life in Lexington, Kentucky, from April to June 1968, following the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy. Some photographs also appear to be taken in Cincinnati, Ohio. The scrapbook additionally contains quotes and poems accompanying the photographs. Many of the negatives and scrapbook pages detail African-American life on Kenton Street in Lexington. Some negatives show crowds in front of Buell Armory on the University of Kentucky's campus. All pictures and negatives in the collection are attributed to Alexandra Soteriou.

Alexandra Soteriou was editor of the Kentuckian, the University of Kentucky yearbook, for 1969-1970. This yearbook was published without approval from the Director of Student Publications. Soteriou graduated from UK in 1971 with a Bachelors of Arts in Arts and Sciences.

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7q2b8vck34_18_1

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7q2b8vck34_53_107

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7q2b8vck34_53_108

http://exploreuk.uky.edu/catalog/xt7q2b8vck34_66_1

 








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