xt7ghx15qk6t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ghx15qk6t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-09-29 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, September 29, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 29, 1976 1976 1976-09-29 2020 true xt7ghx15qk6t section xt7ghx15qk6t Pointed ears, ducktails

Trekkers and ‘Happy Days’ fans flock to SC for television treats

By KEI'I‘II SHANNON
Kernel Sta ff Writer

It happens about 10 times a week.
The television rooms in the Student
Center get crowded to the point of
overflowing with people eager to
watch one of two Student Center
“television highlights" —“Star
Trek“ and “Happy Days."

During the showing of the two
programs, attendance in the
television rooms shoots up so
drastically that latecomers are
forced to sit on the floor or stand in
the rear.

Justin Byrn, a night manager
there, said the crowd for “Star
Trek" averages between 40 and 60

persom. Katherine Latham, the
information desk hostess, said the
room gets so crowded when “Happy
Days" '3 showing that people can’t
walk through the aisles. “The people
are just crammed in," she said.

“Star Trek," a science fiction
seria, brings crowds to the Student
Center three afternoons a week.
Those who watch “Star Trek” view
it almost as quietly as they would
attend a sermon.

One curious aspect of this
phenrmenon is that the programs
being shown are all reruns —they’ve
all been shown at least once, some
maybe several times.

Mark Shaut, a mathematics
senior, said he has seen just about

81‘

Vol. LXVIII, Number 34

Wednesday, September 29, 1976

_ 4

all of the “Star Trek” series, but
sometimes comes to the Student
Center to watch anyway. “I just
come in to see which one is going to
be at," he said.

David Klein. a telecom-
munications junior, denied that he
watches the program “religiously”
in the Student Center. “The only
reason that I am watching it here is
because my television set was stolen
and I can't watch it religiously at
home,” he said.

Klein also said the show is “more
creative" than most others he finds
on television. “The show had a lot of
innovations for its time," he said.
”It is more competent in the
mechanics of the special effects.”

KENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper 1
University ofKentuchy

Lexington, Kentucky

IM director finds room for change

after one month with the program

By BE'I‘SY PEARCE
Kernel Staff Writer

The intramural (IM) sports pro-
gram is undergoing some changes
with the help of its new director, Dr.
Ron Violette.

Violette, who has been director for
a little over a month, was IM
director at the University of North
Carolina before coming to UK,
replacing Jim Daopoulos.

One of Violette’s main projects is
to upgrade the [M Council, because
he sees it as an “excellent sounding
board" for new ideas.

In a Kernel article earlier this

year, Violette said he gave the
impression that few changes were
needed in the intramural program,
but that he has changed his mind
since then. “From whatI heard, the
council has been pretty non-func-
tional in the past,” he said.

“A council such as this is very
much needed, because it formalizes
student input into the intramural
program. It helps to be a little bit
structured," Violette said.

This year’s council took shape
after Violette’s first meeting with
intramural athletic Chairpersons. “I
expressed hope for an IM council,

 

The change of seasons brings
dreary weather with partly
cloudy skies today and a high in
the mid-60's. There's a 20 per

 

Weather

cent chance of showers today
and tonight with tonight’s
temperatures expected in the
mid-50’s.

 

 

-Iill Kl."

Chiselers

LewisHall [left] and Robert Shelby.
of the Physical Plant Division,
behind the Student (‘enter to make
way for a wheelchair ramp. The

reconstruction is part of the Univer-
sly's plan to make campus bulld-
ings architecturally accessible to
people in wheelchairs.

and asked that interested people
contact me,” he said.

Several people responded im-
mediately, and Violette appointed
others. The Panhellenic and Inter-
fraternity Councils found interested
Greeks wishing to participate, al~
though the sorority representative
has not yet been named, Violette
said.

The 10-member council consists of
six residence hall representatives,
three Greeks and one dental student.
Although the council has no decision-
making power, Violette says they
will “give the program a lot of
direction.”

The first meeting is planned for
Oct. 18 at 4 pm. in Seaton Center’s
room 206-207. Violette said that after
the first meeting he’d like to have
other meetings at his home to put the
group on a less formal basis.

One departmental change Violette
has initiated is a new scheduling
form. Instead of the flimsy paper
that has been used in the past, a
thicker paper is being used.

“We got money for printing the
forms from the Dean of Students
Office,” he said. “It makes the
program look more professional."

Another change is to have mail-
boxes in the Seaton Center for every
organization participating in IM.
That way, Violette explained, week-
ly schedules for the different sports
events could be distributed, rather
than the current single seasonal
schedule.

“It would give us a lot more
flexibility,” he said. “In case some»
thing comes up, we could change the
schedule if we were notified a week
in advance. As it is now, there is
almost no provision for altering the
schedule."

Violette said that with a weekly
schedule, “we can disseminate more
information. This will help students
out and let us run the program more
efficiently."

A change that will go into effect
next fall is the transition from [M
flag football to tag football. "There
was a general feeling running
through the athletic department that
it would be safer, since there is less
contact," Violette said.

“The equbment (belts and flags)
problem would be reduced, and
since there is no blocking, we could
get kickoffs and punting back into
the game," he said. In addition,
teams would consist of nine people,
instead of seven. (Five people in the
line of scrimmage and four in the
backfield.)

“The majority of people I’ve
talked to (about tag football)
haven‘t given me too much negative
feedback. I think some people are
sort of afraid to play the way it is
now," he said.

Continued on page a

“Star Trek" didn‘t appeal to him
when it was originally a network
program. "But when it first came
on, lwasa lot younger," Klein said.

One architecture senior said he
plans his schedule around the
showings of the program. "It just
seems like I‘m more interested in it
this past year,“ he said. "It‘s just
that more people talk about it or
seem to be more into it than last
year.”

He said that although he had seen
nearly every episode, he never gets
tired of it. “it‘s the concept of
visiting other worlds and not
bothering them, just observing, that
I like," he said. “I guess it‘s kind of
an idealistic approach."

Another architecture junior said
she tries to work out her schedule so
that she will be free during the show.
"Some people have their soap
operas, I have "Star Trek," she
said.

"Happy Days" is a comedy show
that deab with life in the ‘50’s.
Although the “Happy Days“ crowd
didn‘t appear to be as massive as the
"Star Trek“ crowd, it was just as
attentive.

A music freshman, Keith
McGregor, said he has seen most of
the episodes before. "But as long as
they come up with a new one every
four or five programs, it‘s okay," he
said.

He said he likes the show because

it reminds him of the old “Dick Van
Dyke Show.’ The fact that “Happy
Days" is set in the 50’s just serves to
“'add flavor," he said.

Mickey Ward, an accounting
freshman. said he likes to watch the
show because it shows the dif-
ferences “between now and then."
Ward, like McGregor, has seen most
of the shows, but he continues to
watch it.

Another regular watcher, a
biology sophomore, said he thinks
people watch the show because they
can “relate to it." He said he watch-
es the show because he finds the
humor "the type that everyone
likes."

Ali ’5 the greatest...

By JOE KEMP
Sports Editor

In perhaps the most con-
troversial fight of his career,
heavyweight champion Muham-
mad Ali won a 15-round decision

over Ken Norton last night at New

York‘s Yankee Stadium.

Ali was named the winner by the

three official judges who each
scored the bout eight rounds to
seven for the champion.

New York Times sportswriter
Red Smith, however, saw it dif-
ferently, giving Norton 8 10-5
advantage.

The challenger refused to talk to
reporters after the fight, because,
his aides said, he was upset with
the decision. Ali, too, was
unusually quiet.

There’s a reason.

Norton was robbed.

)3

(” ...but Norton sulks

about judges ’ decision

Ali tried ail of his tactics against the
31-year-old Norton but none worked.
In the first four rounds, the champ

fought straight up against Norton as he
promised to do. All Ali would do was
flick a left jab and connect with an oc-

casional right.

Norton would retaliate by slamming a
right overhand to Ali’s head or hitting

the Champion's midsection at will.

Then Ali used his famed “rope-a-dope”
strategy in round five, but Norton kept blasting
body shots. And unlike George Foreman, Norton

did not punch himself out.

Ali began dancing in the ninth round, sending
jabs into the challenger’s face. But Norton hurt
Ali with a right and left combination to the head.

The champ danced and led his own cheering
section in the tenth (”Norton must fall”). He
stunned Norton with a left, and had him swinging
wildly. Itwas Ali’s round easily and it seemed he

had the fight won.

In round 11, the two combatants traded a
barrage of punches. Ali connecting with left-

right combinations, uppercuts and
rights.
Norton, though, refused to give in,

with wild hodrs and a pair of lefts to
Ali’s head.

Norton continued to stalk Ali in the
next round and unloaded a flurry of

KEN NORTON

punches sendhg the Louisvillian to
the ropes.

The challenger bore into All with
rightuppercuts. sirnilarto those that
were med by now-retired Joe
Frazier.

All seemed punled by all this.
Round 14 was al Norton’s thoulh
Ali managed to get in some solid

punishing

blows. Norton ended the round with
a vicious shot to Ali’s head, putting
the champion on his heels.

Muhammad Ali’s corner said
nothing goim into the final round.
They figured their man may be in
deep trouble. At the other end of the
ring, Norton’s people thought that if
be avoided a knockdown, the title
was theirs.

Norton took the offensive in 15,
just as he had done in the previous
four rounds Ali was now doing his
shuffle, hoping to score points with
the jab However, the underdog sent
a right to the champ's jaw, and a
right-left to the face.

 

commentary

 

Ali tried to sneak in a jab, but
Norton picked them off. The out-
spoken Ali managed to salvage the
triourli, though, by shots to Norton’s

sad.

The fight ended with most people
at ringside thinking Ali was
dethrmed. At least, Norton tliought
he had won the fight, jumpingup and
down in his corner.

But when the final decision was
:Ihi‘nounoed, it was All who was still

g.

\
\.
1,.

Those who saw the bout at
Memorial Coliseum, mostly Ali
rooters, cheered the outcome. But
even some of the champ’s most
ardent supporters felt Norton
deserved the win.

And Norton did deserve it.

 

“Norton was

robbed. ”

 

He took the champ’s best shots,
particularly in the later rounds, and
Norton was able to deliver some
damaging blows, too.

Norton, without doubt, carried the
fight to Ali, bobbing and weaving
until he found an opening—then
BOOM.

It was the second close call for the
powerful Ali. Last May, he
decisioned Jimmy Young, but
barely. In fact, the Associated Press
had Young as the winner 00-66.

The victory was Ali’s fifty-third in
55 prdasional fights (he lost to
Frazie- and Norton). Norton’s pro
record is now 374.

Neither fighter was a loser
financially. Both will receive over 81
million.

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

editorials 8: comments

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University

Bdlisr-ln-rhlsl
Ginny Edwards

Fdlisrlsi Editor
ii‘:l’;' !!'.'.".;-r.

Msnuiu Editor
John “in Miller

Lam. and con-menu should be addressed Is in Ediisrisl ssitsr. Iss- lii. Journalis- Islldisg. ‘l'lsy asst Is incl. trials-
spaced and signed u in name. address and telephone number. letters ran-st "end 180 words and urns-nu on restricted is '15.

u ark.

\w- tut Dis-aging ldtsrs

mm ....... «um-m
am saw ““ m
c nu."
Sus:::s Durham I“. Sinus Milo- Islagsr
Dick norm cam maps. W “WM
Steve lailinger Stewart lawma-

locum

 

 

 

 

IAN SMITH

 

HENRY KISSINGER

 

JOHN VORSTER

. . . Decision-makers in southern Africa—must work to avoid all~out war

Southern Africa, powers

must join to avoid war

Rhodesian Prime Minister Ian Smith took a
major step in unifying the African continent
when he agreed to the principle of majority rule.
But clearly, a peaceful solution to the intense
political differences is not near.

Secretary of State Henry Kissinger recently
returned from a diplomatic gallop across Africa
where he met with Smith. South African Prime
Minister John Vorster and five black African
leaders. Soon after meeting with Kissinger,
Smith announced his acceptance of majority rule
for Rhodesia within two years.

Kissinger was lauded for yet another success
in his patented brand of “shuttle diplomacy.”
Though the secretary won’t say so, “peace is not
at hand" in southern Africa.

Developments in Rhodesia represent the most
acute tensions at this timerbut in no way reflect
the magnitude of the continent’s problems. South
Africa is another sensitive nation in which the
racist policy of apartheid threatens world peace
and denies human decency.

Politics is another factor in southern Africa.
Kissinger wants to make President Gerald Ford
look good in an election year so that he can keep
his job.

And the US, China and the Soviet Union are
converging on southern Africa to spread political
propaganda, placing secondary importance on
the primary need ~ avoiding all-out war.

In Rhodesia, the inevitability of majority rule
(the country‘s black population is six million to
270,000 whites), has been accepted. Provisions
for the transition, however, are not near
universal agreement.

The Rhodesian blacks, under pressure from
the five African presidents, seek total
assurances that a true black rule will be in-
stated. Black Africans, with historial

justification, doubt the intentions of self-avowed
racists like Smith.

Conversely, Smith and the Rhodesian
government are terrified by the thought of being
subjected to the rule of the people they have spit
on for decades. Consequently, they seek
assurances of peaceful transition, and aid for
whites who wish to resettle elsewhere.

Smith also seeks assurances that black leaders
will call off guerrilla warfare and that in-
ternational trade restrictions against Rhodesia
are lifted. The trade restrictions against
Rhodesia are lifted. The bush warfare is
sporadic and undoubtedly impossible to
regulate.

South‘ Africa’s Vorster pressured Smith to
accept the majority rule principle. Vorster hopes
this position will help his racist regime by im-
pressing on Kissinger and Britain the idea that
South Africa‘s whites cannot be ignored in any
future actions there.

South Africa and Rhodesia surely will be
centers of revolution in coming months. Fallout
from the divisiveness there will affect southern
Africa.

The five black leaders in southern Africa -
from Tanzania, Zambia, Botswana, and Marxist
nations Angola and Mozambique —will be in-
fluential in the revolutions.

These leaders and blacks in South Africa and
Rhodesia will no longer stand for segregation,
denial of property rights, unfair taxes and
constraints on mobility.

Kissinger, Russia and China should join with
the bladr leaders in formulating the govern-
ments, establishing new political ideals and
restoring basic freedoms. The world’s powers
must work for change without violence, rather
than infiltrating Africa for purposes of
disseminating propaganda.

Letters from the editor

Does the Kernel hate UK sports? Don’t believe it

By DICK GABRIEL

After spending my first three
years on the Kernel staff as a sports
writer (capping them off last year as
sports editor). I've finally made the
big jump to the news department as
an assistant managing editor.

I always got a kick last year out of
the letters received commenting on
our so»called crusade devoted to the
downfall of major college athletics
at UK.

But after a while. i got tired of
seeing them because they usually
appeared after any article that
wasn‘t an outright public relations
piece about UK sports.

[can‘t really go into why we don't
cover sports that way without going
into the “objective reporting" song
and dance everybody's heard a
million times What I can do is at-
tempt to explain the Kernel‘s
position in regard to UK sports,

First of all, let’s get something
straight. When Kernel staffers
aren‘t busy leaping tall buildings at

a single bound. they‘re just like
anybody else. And a great majority
of them like to sit up in the stands at
L'K sporting events and get rowdy
and act like degenerates and all that
good stuff.

It‘s for that reason many people
fail to understand why the Kernel
every now and then runs an article
or an editorial which is in some way,
shape or form. critical of the athletic
department. But somewhere along
the way we have to draw the line at
being a fan and being impartial.

It‘s difficult to explain the
relationship between the football
team and the Kernel staff. Head
coach Fran Curci. who had his
problems with the press before he
came to Kentucky, had more than
his share last season. He had to
spend so much time fighting off
rumor-mongers that he had little
time to coach football.

He was as curt with the Kernel as
he was with everyone else and even
said he urged a player to sue the
Kernel over certain articles.

However, in the same breath, Curci
admitted that he doesn‘t read the
Kernel and that he was speaking
with hearsay knowledge.

But all that is history. Curci and
his team have started over this year
on even terms with the press and. so
far. everybody is concentrating on
football.

Basketball coaches treat the press
in a somewhat different way, but
then, they are not under the same
kind of pressure. UK football
coaches must spend their time
striving for the top of the heap;
basketball coaches concentrate on
staying there.

The latter is definitely a more
glamorous proposition. As a result,
Joe 8. Hall and his assistants don‘t
have to put up with as much and,
therefore are a bit easier to get
along with, as are the players.

Non-income sport (wrestling,
baseball, swimming, etc.) mentors
are constantly clamoring for more
coverage, which brings us to the

 

 

Immature attack

I am writing because I found Bob
Armstrong‘s commentary ex-
tremely objectionable. In my
opinion. what started out as a sen-
sible reply to Lt. Roten, turned into a
narrow-minded,- irresponsible, and
immature attack on the Marine
Corps.

I felt that Armstrong's
stereotyping of a potential Marine as
a macho body-stomping, face~
smacking killer was childish. to say
the least. He reminds me of the
people who call all long-hairs dirty
hippie slobs. He spoke of the Corps‘
fondness for bayonets, when ac~
tually that is sometimes one man‘s
only hope for coming home alive.

The Marines don‘t force a man to.

use it.

I believe, along with others, that
the Marine Corps was misused in a
war that was totally wrong. But to
put down an organization, and the
people in it, that helped to give us an
opportunity to express our views is a
cheap shot indeed.

From his comments, I get the
impression that Armstrong didn't
get along too well while in the ser-
vice. It’s no wonder, because his
immaturity stands out even now.

Mark T. Fallon
A & S Junior

Outrageous article

Yesterday the Kernel published
the most ridiculous, outrageous, and
“red-necked" article we have ever
read.

l,’»
J
uiflélt‘:&7"r~ 1W4

'In'. <‘\ v.26 f

Letters

We are talking about Bob
Durham‘s totally astounding
philosophy he expressed in his
political statements about Jimmy
Carter. How can anybody with even
a limited intelligence and Christian

 

upbringing be so naive, simple-
minded and blind?

Durham lists several

“qualifications” for why Carter is
the best man for President. He says
Carter reads his Bible and prays
often. Since when does Bible
reading and prayer give a man the

tools to battle inflation, unem-v
ployment. foreign affairs, taxes, and
bureaucracy?

This country needs strong
leadership from a man that is
realistic about his political beliefs
and dos not promise everything
under the sun. [f you think welfare.
unemployment compensation, and
foodstamp programs are excessive
now. these programs are minuscule
compared to the huge give-away
programs Carter would instigate as
President.

He states that Carter‘s ex-
periences as a nuclear physicist,
businessman and governor qualify
him for president. The only thing
Jimmy Carter is really qualified for
is teaching Sunday School at the
Southern Baptist Church in Plains,
Ga. (where we wish he would have
stayed).

Where does Durham get off even
remotely hinting at any connection
between Carter‘s statements on the
Bible and Jesus Christ and the
Pharisees? Any connection between
the two would be totally
preposterous.

We seriously doubt if any reporter
went scrambling for his New
Testament to prove Carter wrong,
since anyone with any sense knows
Carter has been totally wrong from
the start, anyway.

We feel religion can be a source of
faith for everyone, it is a shame that
it must be twisted and misused to
make such a distorted argument.

DE. Maines
BE. Moore
Business and Economics seniors

 

that TH om WAYTPLEAYE — —I HAVE A FEW mm more: TO ATTEND to."

topic of space: a newspaper has only
so much, and it‘s up to the sports
editor to decide which sport gets
what.

He has to make a decision
regarding reader interest. Is cross-
country more important than water
polo? Ask the two respective
coaches and you‘ll get two different
answers.

But a common denominator
among coaches of non-income sports
is the need for recognition, which
keeps them interested in the paper
and the paper interested in them.
The coaches and sportswriters can
only hope that the other guy un-
derstands his position, but they'll
constantly be at odds.

You can‘t examine UK sports
without mentioning the big guy —
Athletic Director Cliff Hagan. He
ranks as the toughest man around to
contact on short notice, sometimes
requiring a week‘s notice for an
interview. But when he‘s finally
cornered, Hagan is civil.

i think the best testimony against
the “Kernel Hates UK Sports" case
is the track record of our staffers
who have covered sporting events
and what they have had to go
through. For instance:

—Three Kernel staff members
paid their way to cover the National
invitational basketball tournament
in New York. One flew (she was
mugged as she stepped off the plane
in Newark) and the other two drove
up in a 1965 Rambler. (The Rambler
died on E. tnrd Street.)

—While covering a basketball
game in Nashville, Tenn. several
staffers had their luggage stolen
when somebody broke into their car.

—Five gaffers spent 18 hours
driving 1.00) miles to and from the
Penn State football game last year,
with a brid tour of Pittsburgh in-
cludal when the driver got lost.

-Last season, Kernel staffers
traveled at their own expense to
Baton Rouge, La.. Athens, Ga.,

Oxford, Miss, and Knoxville, Tenn.,
to cover the Wildcats.

~And the clincher, five staff
members in a pickup truck drove
1,500 miles in 30 hours to and from
Lawrence, Kan., last week to cover
a football game. One staff
photographer got a guided tour of
the Lawrence Memorial Hospital
emergency room when he was
assaulted outside a bar and suffered
an injury to his spine (he is
currently considering a lawsuit).

1 may be slanted just a bit, but
somehow, when I was trying to sleep
in the back of that pickup truck with
four other people in the parking lot
of a hotel in Columbia, Mo. (enroute
to Kansas), I just didn’t feel like
someone who is devoting his every
waking second to the downfall of
Kentucky sports.

 

Dick Gabriel is also a broadcaster
for WBKY-FM. Letters from the
editor appear every Wednesday.

 

 lancer
Ichar

I. MOI.-
ld to '15.

 

_-.—I

on, unem-
, taxes, and

ls strong
In that is
lcal beliefs
everything
nk welfare,
lation, and
e excessive
sminuscule
give-away
nstigate as

rter‘s ex-

physicist,
10f qualify
only thing
ualified for
tool at the
l in Plains,
would have

et off even
connection
ents on the
t and the
in between
2 totally

ny reporter

his New
ter wrong,
anse knows
vrong from

a source of
shame that
misused to
rgument.

.E. Maines
H). Moore
Iics seniors

i

‘

§

ID TO.”

lie, Tenn,

live staff
ick drove
and from
k to cover
ne staff
Id tour of
Hospital
he was
ti suffered
a (he is
IWSIIIU.

a bit, but
rig to sleep
truck with
larkalg lot
I. (enroute
: feel like
his every
nvnfaII of

 

'oadcaater
from the
leaday.

I

 

 

news briefs l

 

Disruptions continue

Mine workers walk fine line
between democracy and disorder

CINCINNATI (AP) —-Delegates and their
leaders at the United Mine Workers con-
stitutional convention now under way here
are walking a fine line between democracy
and disorder.

Whether stimulated by President Arnold
Miller’s prunises of a more open convention,
by organized disruptions, or just by plain
orneryness, the convention has been
regularly punctuated by disruptions.

Miller has continued to call on all those
who daire to speak. But often his deter-
mination to let everyone have a say at the
convention has met with little appreciation.

“In the past, our conventions were totally

dictatorial and anybody who disapproved or
disagreed would have been removed,"
Miller said. “Well. I bet those leaders who
ran the dictatorial union of our past wouldn‘t
last a day at this convention.“

Miller has managed to last five days. but
there have been many opportunities when he
may have wanted to forget his promises of
an “open convention " For example, on
Friday, the convention decided to pause to
eject coal operators who might be among the
visitors. On Saturday, the delegates ad-
journed to look for communists who might be
infiltrating the press covering the con-
vention.

Irish women crusade for peace

BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) —’I‘wo
leaders of Northern Ireland‘s women's
peace movement said Tuesday they will take
their crusade to the United States next week
to plead anew with Americans to stop send-
ing money that, the women say, fuels
terrorism.

Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan, co—
founders of the nonpartisan and non-
sectarian six-week-old movement, said they
will fly Monday to Buffalo, N.Y., at the in-
vitation of the Public Broadcasting System.

Williams said that they will appeal in a
nationwide telecast to Irish Americans to cut
off the flow of funds that they claim supports
the . an Catholic and Protestant gunmen

waging terror warfare in Northern Ireland.
She and Corrigan are Catholic. but their
movement includes both Protestants and
Catholics.

“The people who give the money have no
idea about where it goes,“ Williams said.
“They are third-generation American-Irish.
They havejust no idea about what is going on
over here."

She said US. money has been helping
sustain the main guerilla amiies —~the
"rovisional wing of the Irish Republican-
Army, the predominantly Catholic guerrilla
army and two Protestant paramilit' I‘y
bands, the Ulster Defense Association and
the Ulster Volunteer Force.

Study says college enrollments
in South will decline by 1980

FRANKFURT (AP) - publishedearlierthisyearby and universities should in-
College enrollment in Ken- the Kentucky Council on crease by 7.8 per cent to
tucky and the South will Higher Education said a 135,000 by 1980, but then
nontinue to increase until declinein total enrollments at decline by 7.4 per cent from

. 930 but will begin to decline. Kentucky _spgblic institutions 1980-86 to 125,000. the report

over the nextdecade a report is not expéc't‘ed over the next said.

issued this week by the decade, although some in-

By 1990. the SREB

Southern Regional Educa- dividual institutions may forecasts a total enrollment

tional Board (SREB) indi- experience declines.

of about 109,000, a drop of 12.8

cates. Enrollments at Kentucky‘s per cent over the period from
However, a report public and private colleges 1925-90.

-' entucky Kernel, ‘14 Journalism Iuildlng, university of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, «Two, ls mailed live times

wet.» :y dur‘no the year except holidays and exam periods, and twice weekly during the summer session Third class
postane paid at Lexington, Kentucky, oosu. Subscription rates are mailed $3 per year, or $1.50 per semester.
v wished by the Kernel Press, Inc. and founded in Ifll. the Kernel began as The Cadet in It". The paper has been
led continuously as the Kentucky Kernel since ms.
.- using is intended only to help the reader buy and any lots: or misleading advertising should be reported and will
. shgdied by the editors. Advertising tound to be talse or misleading will be reported to the Better Busmess Bureau
Letters and mmments should be addressed to the editorial page editor, lls Journalism Building. They should be typed,
double spaced and signed. Classiticatlon, phalc number and address should be included. Letters Should not exceed 250
words and comments should he no longer than 150 words. Editors reserve the right to edit letters and com ments.

 

'I-‘lllC KIIN'I‘l'('K\' KENNEL. Wednesday. September 29, “976—3

IFREE DRIVERS PASS I

I sow PL.“ m.
,./ \\

I (lill out illIlI pit-stilt It bll\
I - -- - - - - - J

"( 'l't'Kittl'S \ICS'I'

    

LEXINGTON
DRIVE IN

”melon aanuvuraa.
712‘ 165‘

cm “In“ itilUlIIllilllIttI In

Illis ( oulloll admits Ill I\tl of I
one oi mole I’lid admissions

     

(loud ‘LL‘i—Ill-S

  

Monday—Friday Monday—Sunday
Lunch Special Dinner Served
II'3C'1.30p.m. 4:30-II‘00p.m.

Sunday
“'1 11:00pm.

Help yourself while helping others
Earn extra cash weekly

Plasma Derivatives

a blood plasma donor center

313E. ShortStreet
252-5586
Students may phonefor appointments

M on'doy-rriday 7: 30 AM-3: 30 P M.

    
  
 

c l ill E IVIA STARTS TODAY!
m I. till! it. ISi-lm (ASK ABOUT STUDENT OlSCOUNT)
THE WORLD’S
FAVORITE
BED-TIME
STORY
Is FINALLY
A BED~TIME
sronv . ..

    

    
       
     
 
   

  

From the creator 0!
Flesh Gordon,

Now

BILL OSCO'S . . .

\lVonde rIand

AN X- RATED MUSICAL COMED_

       
    

WEEKENDS I 30 7.- 45 9. 20 _ I
1 - . £515 SUN;‘339.§_-',‘.9.9545 939 5' ‘3 95.35.
NDER la YRS.—|.D h
"I 7'7 MID.NITE MOVIE FRI.&SAT.
2n E. MAIN 51.25460t0 “Jim H. ,;;,L;“Tm 3" I
”COCAINE FIENDS” 8. PLAYS BERKELEY"

        
    
    

  
  

 
    
 
   

 

.---------------

Continuing Education for Women Class
I "The Divorced Woman"
I Tuesdays Oct. 5 —— Oct. 26
7:30 —- 9200 p.m.
Fee: S‘. 5.00

For more information col? ’2‘38v275l

-O-------.’ vhpv---

   
 
  
  
  

Bob
Wood yard

CO OLH Jr of
‘Ali
Presidenz is Men’

‘The P. '

 

of Days’

Tuesday, Oct. 5 ‘97:?

Memorial Coliseun:

Tlckets on Sale, Rm. 20’.I S’ w. '11-er c 4 on
A3 Coliseum Box Oil:
3! UV. l D. 1-. Gen 6
Sponsorodby SCB

  

rr.

   

VI,‘l?<“5IgIII

   

’ LEXINGTON
DRIVE IN

mimosa” ‘lsttltl n

     

mm Tuesday

  
 

   

JAMES CAAN ”KILLER
BONUS HIT FRI, SA

,.
L

I ”E VCNY l VI “‘4 \' ~ ‘b-k'l'I-‘fli ”mi—_J

 

We promise you‘ll hear those
distant FM stations with the
Super Timers. These new units
will give you great FM music
with new features formtrly

found only or. l' istly units.
Here's a . ti.
under you _ a low l ..'e.

 

THE BEST SELLING STEREO NOW AT Emmm
PIONEER"

EAR STEREO

 

 

 

'I‘I’Illlll. Sllpt‘l‘lllllt'l lor Struck lltII\ Holm-
stereo I‘M Ilt'lllllTlllllil't‘. .\lll.' "a l .".‘,:.‘.h'\

.S‘.l‘li(‘il. ,\utnv :lvtrl manual progrmn change. ’* ‘ “. ‘3 ‘ I ‘ ‘ ‘

you thought _voud 'IllI} IliltI ll‘. .i Illll'it' 4m»

9 5 loudm ss .S\\llt‘Il. Illllllllu and \t low low
7 9 and II"'.tI)It
a

only $149.95

ON THE SPOT INSTALLATIONS (OPTIONA