xt72804xkn0b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72804xkn0b/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-10-13 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 13, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 13, 1975 1975 1975-10-13 2020 true xt72804xkn0b section xt72804xkn0b Vol LXVll No. 49
Monday. October 13. 1975

 

Ker

EN TUCKY

an independent student newspaper} Lexington, Ky. 40596

   

 

Kirwan dorm council poll
opposes support for gays

By DAVID BROWN
Kernel Staff Writer

A Kirwan Tower Dorm Council (KTDC)
poll has shown Kirwan residents strongly
oppose Student Government ( SG) support
of the Gay Student Coalition( GSC) effort to
receive University recognition.

The KTDC resolved last Tuesday to take
and then submit results of the poll to SG at
its Monday. Oct. 20 meeting, said Robert
Stuber, KTDC secretary.

According to Stuber, the poll shows 320
oppose and 46 favor the SG action to
support the GSC effort. Portions of two
floors are not yet polled, he said.

Although the council only resolved to
submit the results of the poll for SG’s
information, Stuber said he would, as an
individual, ask SG to rescind support of
GSC.

The poll “would almost have to be
campus wide“ before a resolution to
rescind approval of the GSC effort would
be presented for SC action, said Alex
Christine, SG senator-at—large, and Kir-
wan ‘I‘ower resident.

Stuberhad asked Christine’s opinion on
asking'SG to rescind its approval. Chris-
tine was one of the 14 senators who voted
no? to support the GSC effort.

Stuber said he has appointments with
several other dorm councils this week to
encourage institution of similar polls.

“I‘m not doing this on the basis of
religion, and not on law; just on what the
people want,” Stuber said.

Floor representatives initiated the poll
which asked: “Do you approve or dis-
approve of the action taken by SC last
Monday concerning GSC recognition,"
said Mark Feather, sponsor of the KTDC
resolution.

“I don’t feel that they (GSC) are an
organization that ought to be recognized,"
Sam Thomas, KTDC president, said. “I
don’t feel they are mentally fit."

Feather said, “SC is supposed to
represent the feelings of the students. It
seems those members who did not poll
their consituancies" supported the GSC
effort.

“I think the majority of students are not
in favor“ of the action, Feather said.
Those representatives “voted on their own
personal feelings, and not truly as repre-
sentatives of the campus."

SG President Jim Harralson and GSC
President and SG senator-at-large Carey
Junkin were unavailable for comment last

night.

 

Students living off—campus will have
the opportunity to voice complaints at a
tenants‘ rights forum tonight. Spon-
sored by the Student Senate committee
on student affairs, the forum will be
held at 7 pm. in Student Center room
245.

Sherry Allen, Kentucky Student Pub-
lic Interest Research Group
(KYSPIRG) representative, and Mark

 

Tenant forum tonight

Kleckner, Student Government consul-
tant on tenant affairs, will provide ,
information on tenants‘ rights.

Information on landlord abuses will
be discussed by KYSPIRG and the
student affairs committee for prepara-
tion of a fact book on tenant rights and
to direct action for solving problems of
offeampus residents.

 

 

l

 

 

Defer. etch/eff

University of Kentucky

emmwetmx :sa

~—Ron Midtel

Frustrated Fran

l'K llead (‘oach Fran ('urci throws his program in frustration after ah
Auburn touchdown Saturday night. The visiting War Eagles shocked the
('ats IS-Ei. scoring all their points in the final six minutes. See game story on

page 3.

Administrators see improvement in Adopt-A-House

By LYNN SIMMONS
Kernel Staff Writer

Last year‘s Adopt-A~House program
"was not particularly successful” accord-
tilt.‘ in Mike Palm, assistant dean of
st: (Iv- s, Palm worked with the project
war

5 year‘s Adopt—A~House program is
going to be a heck ofa lot better than it has
been in the past,” said Bill Papania, Greek
Actiwties Steering Committee chairman.

'I‘ne Adopt-A-House program organizes
greek students into groups that paint and
“fix up" houses owned by elderly people
who can't physically do the work them-
selves or afford to have it done.

Palm and some students who worked
with Adopt-A-House last year said they
encountered problems. Mark Davis, who
worked with Adopt-A-House for one week-
end last year, said “it seemed pretty
disorganized."

“It gets kind of discouraging when. as
you paint. the house is falling apart."
Davis said.

Sarah Jenkins, newly appointed Pan~
hellinic advisor, said she had heard that
one or two of the houses worked on last
year had been condemned. Jenkins is
working with the greek students on
Adopt-A-House o. year.

Dr. P.S. Sabarwahl, said Adopt-A-House
coordinator and University ombudsman.
said some of the houses had been
condemned but that painting the houses
would keep them from being condemned.
He cited one case where the city changed
its mind about condemning a house after
Adopt-A-House workers had painted and
repaired it.

Sabarwahl also corrected a previous
statement he made in the Sept. 25 Kernel
(“Adopt-A-House" ). The story quoted him
as saying “that it was time to let the
University come through with something
too.” He said the University has been
working with Adopt—A-House since it
began and what he meant was he had
made a “renewal request“ for assistance.

Palm also mentioned problems with
supplies. such as paint and paint scrapers,
which were not at the licuses when the

students were. He said last year things
“got all screwed up.”

A major problem the students had last
year, said Palm, was some houses
required major repair work that students
were incapble of handling.

Sabarwahl said he would “still call it
(last year's Adopt—A-House program) a
successful project" and as for the dif—
ficulties encountered, “I don‘t even call
those problems."

Sabarwahl said that although Lexington
Major Foster Pettit had promised to assist
the project last year, “the help never came
through.“ This year Pettit has appointed
Bob Babbage, assistant to the mayor, to

handle the job.

Although the students were scheduled to
begin work Oct. 12, some paint and two of
the four buses needed for student trans-
pottation were delayed. Babbage attri—
buted the delay to a “problem of
blsinesses having to get approval from
regional offices” or, in Jenkin‘s words.
“red tape.“

Jenkins said she “was disappoi-“t- l" at

the delay, but Babbage had assured her
everything would be ready for Oct. 19.

Babbage said three of the buses that are
transporting students are from Lex Tran.
[ex Tran has provided a donor for one bus.
the mayor‘s office is absorbing the cost of
another bus through a contingency fund
and is currently seeking a donor for the
other bus.

Jenkins said part of the delay problem
was the project had not started early
enough this year.

The fourth bus is being provided by the
Police Department, which will absorb the
bus cost and provide a driver.

A three-student committee chose 12
houses from a list of 30 provided by the
mayor‘s office. The committee examined
the houses and picked those which
“weren’t too big a job," Papania said.

The criteria the mayor's office used ir
selecting the houses were: they be ownec
by the resident; the resident be on a fixec
income, such as social security, and there
beno one physically or financially capable
of making the repairs.

  

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

editorials

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief
Letters and Spectrum articles should be addressed to the Eiditu'ial Page alitor,

Rinm 114 Journalism Building. They should be typed, Mespaced aid slated.
Lettas should not exceed 250 (Alerts and Spectrum articles 750 was.

Jack Koeneman
Associate Editor

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

   

 

 

(Editor's note: Because of the number of letters and commentaries received by the
Kernel, there is no editorial today. In cases where a number of letters and com-
mentaries are received about one or several subjects, more space will be devoted to
readers' views. All letters and Spectrum articles should be typed, double-spaced and
signed. Letters cannotexceed 250 words and Spectrum articles 750 words.)

 

 

 

 

 

 

l
Ihe FBI got their (wo)man
By Michael Krumer g.

0%wmm i

ewes i

After nineteen months of headlines, the world. In the last 18 months, we have been ‘ 5
search is over. Welcome back to the real beseiged by reports of a Patty Hearst I
world, Patty Hearst. During your ex» sighting, often in three places at once. I it
tended absence we were fascinated by From San Francisco the search moved up Let S IOOk at the record i.

your adventures. Although there were no
letters to home, we had plenty of reports
from the American mass media about you.
It seems like your story was so wellsuited
to their needs. My interest is in the soap

opera like quality 0' the saga Of Patty evening news report. Early one evening, Iranian Student Association(lSA) ask, in which two persons were killed. ‘5
tHearst. Ft: hlere zlvas a newskstorky Wit: (air (Lttentiton wasLdivirtedlto allious: lfr'l‘la ed someone to answer ”the real HSeptember, 1970. PFLPsimultane- .; ‘
m prover la carymorning noc on e ‘ac 5“” iono _OS,’ nge es. n a '9 y question”raised by Maher Abu-Khafer ous skyiacking of TWA, BOAC and "-
door, the frantic parents, the taped Visual, live teleViSion spectacular , we (Kernel “SCB should invite PLO SwissAir,later blown up in the Jordan-

demands, poor people rioting in the street,
lots of drama. a tWIsf of plot, the long
chase scene and an extended
courtroom scenario.

Your background was impeccable, a 19
year old student With all American looks
and aspirations, iust like any young
college sophomore at the University of
Anywhere. Only an accident of birth into a
newspaper i-inpire, served to give you any
notoreity. No Wonder that Americans were
shocked by the early morning abduction
from your off campus apartment and the
arms of your teacher (the new American
Yet . nother
proclaimed band of revoutionaires had
i-ntered upon the American political scene.

finally,

value 'wvstem). sell

For those first few days, we were over
Whi lrnid Willi ,our story. Cover story for
loth national HM.“- niagalines, lead Item

the network newscasts, brief biographical

' V l " ’ l, ‘. c . . . . . . . Z.
25%;: Ind} 'T'er'tws from H": Sf": 2W?!“ :0: th: “0?qu her ‘bdzd'o: the phrase ”drivmg the Jews into the attempted assassmation of Jor “

ic iospi a ed Side were e ig ii n a y cars isappeare , 5 e sea.” The PLOorganizations as of Nov. dan’s ambassador to London. '
'ights Ul innumerable news reports. The prowded the American public With a

members of the Symbionese Liberation
Army (SLA played to this new audience
by tapii g ‘iommiiniques” which they
knew would be featured as lead items.

'Nho ian forget those first ransom

_ , . tion for the Freedom of Palestine gium and two American diplomats in
demands? Simply stated, only $500 million nave been more than .15 kidnappings of the (PFLP), Dr. George Habash, founder Khartom. Q“
Vf'o‘t'd be needed ’0 feed the. poor m “(hand powerfulinfhet975 calendar year of the PFLP wanted to replace lsrael 1974: terrorist attack on Israeli
California. After frantic negotiations, a alone. MUCh 0‘ the world’s‘press has with a secular Palestine; 4) The town of Nahariyeh, three guerillas
Randolph Hearst "People m Need” 52 turned ”8 attention to the ”"9” Of 900 PDFLP, an offshoot of the PFLP. kil'ed, four lsraelis.
million free food give away was set up it‘llllOn of (is peoples, who SUbSISl on less

Within a tax shelter, in order to distribute
surplus groceries to a disorderly crowd of
poor people. The SLA was making
headlines by reallocating resources,
leading some members of the American
viewing public to wonder whether the ends
justified the means.

Until the day that the romantic "Robin
Hood” legend died. Here was Patty Hearst
and her newtoundl?) friends on the
evening news, starring in a marvelous
medium— the freeze frame bank movie, as
perpetrators of the heinous ceime of ar-
med robbery. New communications to her
parents, characterized the newspaper

to the Pacific Northwest, over to Canada,
down to Mexico, from Pennsylvania to
New York City, all the way to Hong Kong,
a new national game had evolved, with
each new ”apparition" duly noted on the

oarishly sat back to watch a shoot out in
which the Los Angeles Police Department
shot it out With six members of the SLA
until they had been systematically
destroyed.

For the American public, the image of
the SLA survivors lived on to terrorize
(mall towns, young boys and the FBI. As
time passed, we read the memoirs of Steve
Weed lit a national magazine, ioked about
l’atty‘s possible interactions With Jimmy
Judge Crater), and
giggled when an eager newsman asked an
i Ht xpokesmiin for a progress report
about the searc h. in a number of areas
around thecountry, women who bore some
slight iesemblance to the missing heiress

Hoffa ior was it

(as we now called her), lived in constant
fear for federal investigators, who in their
real to catch the desperado, might break
down their doors. Until the afternoon the
l‘iitricia Hearstwasquietly captured, only

harmless diversion from their daily diet of
war news and impeachment reports. As a
figure who out lasted Watergate, Vietnam
and streaking, she br0ught smiles to news
(‘dllOl’S around the country. In ltaly, there

than $75 each year, issues that have
largely been ignored by the American
media. Yet there was Walter Cronkite with
a special 30-minute report on the capture
of Patty Hearst.

The FBI estimates that it interviewed
over 100,0“) people and spent more than $3
million during the course of their in
vestigation. Director Clarence Kelly of the
FBI gleefully speculated on how this
capture would rebuild sagging morale in
the department. Would the news media
and this government agency have been so
obsessed with this case if it had been one
who was less famous? All I know is that

 

By Ed Kane

 

in their article (Kernel, ”Subjective
Zionists brought failure,” Oct. 2) the

speaker,” Sept. 18). They assert that
whatever the conduct was of Zionists
prior to 1948, there is no excuse for the
crimes which they allege have been
committed by Israel against the Pales
tinian people since 1948. l completely
agree with them about crimes, except
let us not fail to rember that the
Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) and its affilated organizations
have perpetrated many crimes against
the Jewish people, Israelis and the
world.

Let us look at the record of the last
10 years as documented by Time
magazine. Who are these "heroes"
whom the ISA seems so anxious to
defend? The PLO was founded in 1964
by Ahmed Shukairy, a Palestinian
revolutionist, who served for a time as
Saudi Arabia’s representative to the
United Nations (UN) and who coined

11, 1974 were reported to be 13,700 men.
Some of the affiliated organizations as
listed were: 1) the Al Fatah, of whom
2,000 were active fighters; 2) Black
September; 3) The Palestine Organize

Let us first look at international
crimes of skyiacking, kidnapping and
murder on international aircraft of
innocent people of all faiths, nationali-
ties, sexes and ages:

, July, 1968: PFLP skyiacked an El
Al airliner outside of Rome, held 12
Jewish passengers captive for" five
weeks and exchanged them for 16
convicted Arab terrorists.

7——1968: El Al planes attacked by
PFLP in Athens, Munich and Zurich
(attacks unsuccessful).

——August, 1969: TWA 707, skyiacked
by PFLP to Damascus and the cockpit

release of seven Arab prisoners serving
iail sentences for their attacks on El Al

ian desert after the passengers had
been released. At the same time a Pan
Am 747 was blown up in Cairo. The fuse
had been lit in mid-air and passengers
scrambled out iust before the explosion
on the ground. _

- May, 1971: Sabena Airlines, one of
the skyiackers killed was Abu Yusuf,
former top intelligence officer of the Al
Fatah.

1972: Luftansa 747 skyiacked, :5
million collected in ransom.

1972 PF LP andthe "Japanese Red
Army“ shot up Lod Airport in Tel Aviv
killing 27 people, mostly Puerto Ricans.

Next crimes of murder of interna
tional figures:

~N0vember, 1971: Four Black Sep
tember members assassinated Jordan
Premier Wasfi Tell in Cairo.

iiiLater, 1971 72: Murder of
Jordanians living in West Germany.

five

-~explosion in Trieste oil refinery.

-- September, 1972: Eleven Israeli
athletes murdered at the Munich
Olympic Games.

~March, 1973: slaying of one Bel

. iMay,1974: PF LP attack on a school
killing 21 children at Ma’alot, lsrael.

r—Spring, 1974: PFLP General Com-
mand, led by Ahmed Jaboreal raided
an apartment house killing 16 occu
pants at Qiryat Shemona, lsrael.

Of course the above is iust a partial
list. For example, there was the Arab
terrorist attack in Beirut, Lebanon Oct.
4, 1975 attempting to skyiack an
international aircraft. And this list does
not cover the years of Al Fatah and
Fedayeen and similar Arab terrorist
raids on lsraelis which were a daily
part of life prior to 1967.

. ,, . ,, blown up. If the ISA truly is outraged by violent
publisher as a pig. Subsequently there Sept. l8 will be a watermark date ‘0' all ——Feb. 1970: SwissAir airliner en crimes against innocent people then it
was an alleged sporting QOOdS store rob- serioustrivaplayers '0 recall. For the FB' route to lsrael blown up in mid-air will have to reassess its support of the

bery and kidnapping by Hearst and her
comrades. The television networks
reacted by bringing in pyschiatric experts

got their (wo)man.

 

killing 47.

~Spring, 1970: PFLP fundraising

so called Palestine Liberations groups.
Could it be that the ISA does not dare do

 

'0 explain this aberrant behavior, for Michael Kramer is a political science stamp printed commemorating Arab that, however, for fear of having its

Pafiy Hearst was now wanted by the student in the Patterson School of h'laCkers' funds CU? off? A . al Sciences
. ‘ n nim

Federal Bureau of Investigation ”:3” Diplomacy. i—July, 1970:0lympic Airways jet, 47 Ed Kane '5 a

The scehewas set for a chase around the

 

u m..- ”are. .s .

held captive in Athens airport, to gain

graduate student.

 

.._A may... umfiwwwu ..._..... _ _ ,

' izm"b:oe"wr“ Lino—fl

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Cheofing

 
 

Sfi'II thriving on campuses

By JOAN Gl'DGrEl.
Kernel Staff Writer

The age-old art of cheating.
Educators say it has been around
as long as school itself. Students
continue to write answers on
their shirt sleeves and eye neigh-
bours papers.

A survey, analyzed in the
Winter 1974 edition of “Impro—
ving College and University
Teaching," found that as many
as 53 per cent of students at a
private, medium-size college said
they saw at least one clear
instance of cheating during the
academic year.

What is the ratio at UK?

“It would be nearly impossible
to determine the amount of
cheating here,” said John Mad-
den, former academic ombud—
sman, now assistant dean of the
College of Business and Eco-
nomics.

“The majority of cheating
cases are resolved between
teacher and student,” he ex-
plained adding that a failing
grade on the particular test or for
the entire course is usually
decided.

 

KERNEL
CLASSIFIEDS

luncheon
specrals

MONDAY
Chicken
Chow Mcin

TUESDAY

Sweet & Sour

FRIDAY
Shrimp
Egg Foo
Yung ,"'

MUNCHIE
MAGIC
till
2 A.M.

 

The ombudsman normally
handles appeal cases when a
student denies cheating or thinks
the penalty received was too
severe.

Should a case not be resolved
by the ombudsman, the Uni-
versity Court of Appeals would
make a determination. The ap—
peals board has not handled
academic cases since 1972.

Current Ombudsman Dr. P.S.
Sabharwal said he has had no
cheating cases this semester. “If
the problem has been common,
it’s been hidden from me."

But Sabharwal agreed that
most cases are resolved between
the student and instructor. “A
student will only come to me
when they are sure they didn’t
cheat. But if the professor thinks
they did cheat, sometimes they
want to get tough,” Sabharwal
said.

Levi McCullers, accounting
professor who was academic
ombudsman last academic year,
said “the nine or 10 cases of
cheating I handled can hardly
represent the number of cheating
cases at UK."

 
  
 
 

  
  

  
 
  

 

Madden and McCullers agreed
that cheating usually occurs in
lower level courses in which the
student is not majoring in the
subject.

Michael Adelstein, director of
freshman english courses, said
an average of 25 students per
year are caught plagiarizing in
freshman composition courses.

Adelstein said plagiarism is
easy to spot. “Since two in-class
papers are required, it is simple
to see any stylistic changes
between those two and a stu-
dent’s other work,” Adelstein
said.

Out in other cases, cheating is
not so easy to prove. “Sometimes
a professor will suspect a student
of cheating but will not be able to
prove it,” McCullers said.

Faculty and administrators are
not the only ones worried about
dieating. “The students are con-
cerned with cheating," McCul—
lers said. “At one point last year,
a student organization from one

You can do rt, too So far over 550,000 other pmplr- Ilrivt‘llllllt,‘ it People who

have different robs, different I05, different rntr-rvsis, drllr‘rorrt tf(Ill('bill)TIS have
completed the course Our graduates are people from r.rr walks of Irfe These
people have all taken a course developed by Ivrlyl' Wood, a prominent
educator. Practically all of them at least tripled lht'ir rt-trdrrrri speed wrth equal or
better comprehensron. Most have increased rt even rYier'

Thrnk for a moment what that means All of tlwm w. r! 'lw alr .vr-st now read
an average novel In less than twrr hours Tl’H'y rr: rrr ll wtrr.» .rm .4 lime t.r
Newsweek In 35 minutes. They don’t Skll) or smn Thu, rmd l‘vl’ly Jv'rttl They
use no machines. Instead, they let the mammal truly “I rmrirrm 'lvtr-rntirw how
fast they read. And mark this well they actually understand more, remember
more, and enjoy more than when they read slowly That’s rrqhtl They

understand more. They remember more They errrrry more Yrru rtrn (Ir) the same

SCHEDULE OF FREE MINI-LESSONS

 

  

school approached me with wor-
ries about cheating.

Madden said he was also
confronted by a few students
about cheating. Their concern
may grow from the possibility
that more students are cheating
to get into the already tough job
market. These students are try-
ing to get jobs and want to stop
cheaters from getting ahead of
them.

McCullers said, “I think it
would be interesting to hear the
students view. There is definitely
a lack of information about
cheating at UK. That aspect is
important but no one seems to
know the full story."

 

Kernel
classifieds
pay
258-4646

 

 

 

\

\

\ If Sounds
Incredible

'I'III'I KENTUCKY KERNEL. Moonday, October I3. I975—3

Give a girl
a hand.

ire a palmisf for your
party.

Madame .
Rebecké
299-6114

      

  

      
   
 

INQUIRERS
CLASSES

FOR THOSE WHO
ARE INTERESTED
IN THE
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
TUESDAYS
7:30-9:30p.m.
(Beginning Oct. 14)
ST.AUGUSTINE'S
CHAPEL
472 Rose St.
254-3726

 
   
    

  

 
       
   
   
   
   
   
     
  
  

  

  

 

BUT EVELYN WOOD GRADUATES CAN READ

 

 

 

THE EXORCIST IN 58 MINUTES

 

 

thing the place to learn more about it IS at a free speed reading lesson.

At That Speed, The 403 Pages Come Across
With More Impact Than The Movie.

    
   

  

This Is the same course Presrdent Kennedy had hrs Jornt Chiefs of Staff take.
The staff of Prosrtlent Nixon completed this course in June 1970. The same one

Senators and Congressmen have taken.

  
  

Come to a Mini-Lesson and find out. It is free to you and you will leave With a
better understandrng of why it works. One thing that might bother you about
your reading speed lS that someone might find out how slow it is. The
instructors at the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Free Speed Reading lesson

wrll let you keep your secret It's true we practice the first step to improved
reading at a Mrnr Lesson and we will Increase your reading speed on the spot, but
the results wrll remain your secret, Plan to attend a free Mini-Lesson and learn
that it is possible to read 34 5 times faster, wrtn comparable comprehensron.

     
     

 
 
   
     
     

     

 

 

 

 

 

 

You’ll increase your reading speed

SU to IM% on the spot!

Today and Tomorrow
of 4 p.m. or 8 p.m.

of the RAMADA INN IMPERIAL

525 Waller Ave.

"LAST WEEK"

  
      
    
 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS

  

 

 

  

 

 

t—TIIH KI‘INTlTKY KHRNEL. Monday. October I3. I975 r
Take time for God I‘

 

Attend Bible Preaching
October 1319 - 7:30 p m. (Mon.vSat.)
iO:4Sa.m.;6p.rp. (Sun)

Dick Blacktord, preaching.

University Heights Church of Christ
328 Clifton Ave. (beside parking bldg.)
Meet God and your friends in Church.

BY Sl'ZANNE [HRH-i.“
.\rts l-Iditor

Amateur film makers inter-
(sted in winning prizes and
gaining recognition for their
work can enter the Student
(‘enter Board iSCBl film com-
mittee‘s Amateur Film Festival.

(‘lark Buttner. festival coor-
dnator. said there are four
categories in the contest: 8mm
with or without sound. (‘ontes-
tants have the option of black and
white or color film.

  

EDUCATION MAJORS
The
Student National

Education Association
Meeting and Registration
October 14th (Tuesday)

7: 00 Dickey Hall Faculty Lounge
Refreshments Served.

   
    
     
     
 

BY MARTY BALDYGA

9.000000000000000.oooooooooooooooooooooooooo Kernel StaffWriter

Entry forms can be picked up
in Room 204 of the Student (Tenter
and entries must be submitted by
Nov. 11, The winning films will be
shown Dec. 3 and all films will be
run Dec. 12 and 13 with an
admission charge.

A $25 prize will go to the best
film from each of the four
categories and an overall best
film will be awarded $100.

Judges for the contest will be
picked by the film committee.
Buttner said he hopes to get some
faculty members to judge. as

woman married to a diplomat she
loathes.

Her younger sister. Maria (Liv
Ullmanni. an extraordinary
beauty. is also married but
minhibited enough to have ex-
tramarital affairs that help pass
the time.

Anna (Kari Sylway). the stolid
maid with a round. expression-
less face. is the only one who
responds to Agnes when she tries
to draw her sisters to her.

During Agnes’ last days the
sisters remember and relive
their childhood memories of deep

arts

SCB film committee sponsors
contest for film makers

well as people who do profes~
sional processing.

The film committee reserves
the right to copy any film it
especially likes in order to show it
in its regular film series in the
future.

Buttner. a film maker himself.
said he wants to give exposure to
the work of amateurs who other-
wise might not have any. He also
said the contest will provide
incentive for film makers who
usually shy from the expense of
making a film.

Bergman's ‘Whispers’ attempts fiction

bitterness and unresolvable ri-
valries. They touch yet torment
each other.

Fears. wishes and suspicions
rustle through the house like
wind. Sequences begin and end
with close-up portraits of the
character being considered.

These are some of the methods
by which Bergman dramatizes
states of mind that have seldom
been attempted outside of written
friction.

“Cries and Whispers" will be
shown tonight at 43:30 and El pm.
in the Student (‘cnler theatre.

 

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sfltflfll = WEBB erase;

. . ins done before IS likely to

: : [repare the audience for “Cries
V ‘ ' ' O'and Whispers.“ As in all Berg-

; Whlte Palnter BIbS 0‘ man films. the premise is meti-

: Pants : culously simple. .Agn'es. in her

a : late 30‘s. unmarried is dying of

: 0 cancer. Attending her are two

5 Screwdriver Flannel Shirts Emmi 3“” ”‘9 "’ya' ‘3’““3'

SCrV'dn .

o o

:. Pants : Agnes‘ older sister, Karin (In-

: : grid Thulinl. is a drawn angry

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: :

3 361 West Main St. Phone 254-7711:

:C...........................C...‘..........:

 

Suzanne Durham needs arts writers
call 258-1800

 

 

FLU SHOTS =

Will Be Given to UK Students and Their Spouses,
Faculty and Staff at the Student Health Service
(Medical Center Annex 4 - Across Rose Street from

University Hospital.) NOTE: THE PARKING LOT
IS TORN UP — THERE IS NO PARKING NEAR THE BUILDING

TUESDAY, OCT. 14 and THURSDAY, OCT. 16

9 a.m. to noon 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

ONLY ONE SHOT IS
NECESSARY THIS YEAR

CHARGE: Student with the health fee $1.00
All others 5300

IMPORTANT:

Annual influenza vaccination is not routinely recommended for healthy
adults.

Flu shots are recommended for individuals with diabetes, chronic
heart, lung, renal or other debilitating conditions.

Older persons and persons providing essential community services are
also advised to consider annual vaccinations.

  

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MOST COMPLETE LKPIDARY SHOP

 

Curci perplexed

Auburn stuns Cats 15-9

BY MARK LIP'IAK
Kernel Staff Writer

If anybody knows of a reliable witchdoctor for
hire. please contact football coach Fran (‘urci at
the ('ommonwealth Stadium offices. Any fee will
be paid.

As impossible as it is to believe Kentucky won
its fourth game in a row. stastically; L'K lost the
football game where it counts-on the scoreboard
to Auburn 15-9.

A masterful defensive effort was wasted when
in a span of 1:28 Auburn scored all of its points.
With 6:15 left in the game.(‘lyde Baumgartner.
better known for his punting. came in and threw
a 72-yard pass play to Jeff Gilligan for a
touchdown. It was Baumgartner‘s only pass
completion of the night and it was caught by a
man who was supposed to be out for the season
with a shoulder separation.

Immediately after the score. Sonny Collins
fumbled a kickoff and three plays later fullback
Kenny Burks ripped off tackle for a 17-yard run.

Auburn went for a two point conversion and got
it as Phil Gargis hit Ed Butler with a short pass.

The comedy of errors continued as usually
surehanded Steve Campassi fumbled the next
kickoff.Auburn recovering.

Afterwards. Curci said, “We are a thirty
second disaster club and the fact that we can‘t
score when we get inside the twenty hurts."

“I thought we played another pretty good
game. Somebody must have something against
Kentucky because were playing good enough to
win," Curci said. ”I just don‘t know what more
we can do: we played this game exactly the way
that we should have. Our defense held them and
we scored enough to win. Then all of a sudden the
botton falls out in 88 seconds."

sports egressraeasiesgaaaeg
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33 IN THE BLUE GRASS EC

mg FINISHED JEWELRY AND GIFTS

o SEMIPRECIOUS STONES .

‘ MINERAL SPECIMENS AND CUTTING MATERIAL Va

' FROM AROUND THE WORLD (
EQUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES

. . % o
(‘urci was asked to explain what happened on UGLEXINGTON cu... $1.0"! MARBlE & ."li coBéz

Auburn's touchdown pass. '
“Tony (lray was not there. I don’t know what 'Dé 276 MIDLAND AVE‘ 255-2496
—"‘3

happened. Maybe he tripped or fell but a
cornerman was covering that play and Iltayi
(‘arr almost made a super defensive play.
Baumgartner had to make a pinpoint pass to get
the score and he did it.

Right end \'in Hoover was perplexed. “I just
don't believe it. These things just can‘t keep
happening." Hoover said.

He had another fine game five catches for 37
yards and has now caught 13 of I’K's 23 pass
completions this season.

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INTERNA