xt751c1thq62 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt751c1thq62/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-09-30 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 30, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 30, 1975 1975 1975-09-30 2020 true xt751c1thq62 section xt751c1thq62   

Vol. LXVII No. 40
Tuesday. September 30,1975

Moshe Dayan

Dayan calls
peace accord
‘unsatisiactory'

By JOHN WINN MILLER
Assistant Managing Editor

The current peace agreement between Egypt and
Israel is unsatisfactory, according to Israeli Gen.
Nbshe Dayan.

Speaking before about 3,000 persons in Memorial
Coliseum Monday night, Dayan said, “I’m not very
happy about the last agreement. As a matter of fact I
don’t think this agreement brought us any closer to
peace than we were before. I don’t think it’s a good
agreement.”

Dayan, who voted against the agreement in the
Israeli Parliament, said there can be no real peace
until Egypt ends the state of belligerency. After four
wars in 27 years, Egypt should end the war, or nothing
substantial can be accomplished, he said.

Even this would only be half way towards a lasting
peace, Dayan said. “In order to get real peace the
parties have to sit down together and get normal
relations.”

There also has to be concessions from both sides, as
there were initially after the end of the 1973 war, Dayan
said. “The first step after the war was a real step
towards peace. We withdrew our forces and in return
the Egyptians agreed for the first time... to reopen the
Suez Canal and to help the people moving back to cities
along the canal.” The current agreement does not
involve mutual concession, he said.

Any peace talks should also include the Palestinians,
he said. But, not now and not as a seperate entity.

Demonstrators belonging to the Iranian Student Association.

Pro'es' the Young Socialist Alliance and other groups make their
way down Avenue of the Champions to protest the coming of
Gen. Moshe Dayan to speak at Memorial Coliseum.

KENTUCKY

81‘

an independent student newspaper

      

2] University of Kentucky

Lexington, Ky. 40506

 

 

 

-—Rai Michel

“I believe the Jordanians speak for the Palestini-
ais... because more than half their mission is made up
of Palestinians.”

Palestine should be represented later in the talks
when they evolve past their present stage, he said. The
Geneva conference “is not a peace conference but just
the end of the war. After we end the war, the
Palestinians should come in.”

While discussing the Palestinian refugees, Dayan
was very adament about the fact that only 600,000
Arabs lost their homes after the 1948 war. But, he said,
more than 800,000 Jews were forced to emigrate to
Israel from their homes in Arab countries.

(‘ontinued on page 8

 

Demonstrators
peacefully protest

Dayan lecture

By JACK KOENEMAN
Associate Editor
and WALTER HIXSON
Assistant Managing Editor
'0 mm. Kantian! Kanel, ms

Approximately 60 demonstrators protested the
appearance of Gen. Moshe Dayan at Memorial
Coliseum last night.

Members of the Iranian Student Association, the
Lexington Communist Collective, the Young Socialists
Alliance and other individuals carried pro-Palestine
signs and chanted against Israel’s former Minister of
Defense.

Demonstrators circled a small area on the sidewalk
directly across from Memorial Coliseum on the
Avenue of Champions. Three protestors held a banner
which read “SUPPORT P.L.O.” while others chanted
in un'son “U.S. out of Middle East,, “Stop another
Vietnam, Dayan is a US Puppet” and “Palestine yes,
Israel no.”

The demonstration began just before 8 pm. when
about 30 pmtestors walked to the Coliseum from
Limestone Street. It continued for over an hour with
the group increasing to about 60 persons.

John Roach, of the Lexington Communist Collective
and spoktsman for the demonstrators, said the group
“has been working for about a month” in preparation
for the protest. “We tried just to get some general
organization and protest his being here,” Roach said.

(Xntinued on page 8

Singletary allocates funds
for improving bus service

By BYRON WEST
Assistant Managing Editor

review them. I don’t know where the
money would come from, but they will be

 

Beginning Oct. 6, an extra bus will be
added to the stadium shuttle run for an
hour and a half every morning, Public
Safety Director Tom Padgett said.

In addition, campus buses will go into
Shawneetown every hour and will remain
in operation for an extra hour and a half at
night, he said.

Punch amounting to about $6,500 were
identified for bus service improvement by
President Otis A. Singletary in response to
proposals made by the Public Safety
Division in cooperation with LexTran,
Padgett said.

He also said one campus ~run bus will be
replaced in mid-November with a
specially-equipped bus designed to serve
handicapped students.

Acca‘ding to Dr. Donald B. Clapp, vice
president of administration, money had
been set aside for improvements in bus
service.

“The problem this year has been the
rate increase. The same service we had
last year would have cost us about 50 per
cent more. We set up a basic bus system
until we could identify the trouble spots
and beef it up with the additional fund,”
Clapp said.

Lex'lran increased the hourly rate it
charges the University for bus service
from $9.50 to $11 this year.

Singietary’s action depletes the reserve
fund, Clapp said. “If new problems in bus
service arise, we will certainly continue to

reviewed.”

Padgett said the bus situation is still
“not ideal. We noted in attempting to
review the bus crunch that the critical
period was in the morning.

“Ideally, it would be nice to have
another bus on the shuttle run all day. But
we just can’t afford it.”

The extra bus will operate from 7 :30 to 9
am. weekdays, he said. The shuttle will
continue to shut down at 5:30 p.m., but one
campus route bus will operate until 7 pm.

Padgett also said one campus bus will
now be able to go into Shawneetown every
hour on the half hour.

He said the Public Safety Division and
LexTran had been working on a way to cut
waiting time at the bus stops, but Lex'l‘ran
officials felt it would not be possible to cut
the time by much.

“The drivers have it down to an exact
science,” he said. “They know the average
miles per hourat any given point, and they
feel itwould be posing a danger to students
to have buses whipping around the campus
at higher speeds. But they do plan to have
the drivers spend less time waiting for
stragglers at each stop and to stay more
closely on schedule."

The Public Safety Division is concerned
withh making the Commonwealth Stadium
parking lots more attractive to students,
he said. “A good reliable shuttle service
can solve most of our on-campus parking
problems,” he said.

  

 

9",,
.,\

 

 

 

editorials

Lettas and Spectrum articles should be add'essed to the Edtu'id Pm Edit,
Room 114 Journalism wilding. They should be typed, Wanted aid Siam.
Lettes should not exceed 250 wont and Spectrum articla 750 mm

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Jack Koeneman
Associate Editor

 

Rebuttal

lacks

documentation,
generalizes

 

By John Roach

In my comment of Sept. ll Kernel,
”Dayan should not take part in SCB
lecture series”, I assiduously tried to limit
my remarks to the 750 words for which the
Kernel policy allows. Unfortunately this
meant I had to make a number of general
statements which could not be fully
documented in the space provided.
Thereforea number of facts, statistics and
references were cited in hopes that
thoughtful readers would look into the
questions raised themselves.

The bankruptcy of the rebuttal by D.
Cooper and R. Jaffe is evidenced by the
fact that although they used twice the
number of words I was allowed they
nowhere make the slightest attempt to
document their sweeping assertions of
generalizations. For example, the authors
dismiss as ”pathetically shocking,
outrageous and appalling" my reference
to zionist collaboration with the Nazis.
They go so far as to accuse me of ”com-
placency, callousness beyond our com-
prehension” and "nonchalance” about the
murderof ll million Jews. Had the authors
taken the slightest trouble to find out what
they were talking about they could have
looked up the following reference in the
New York Times Index of I955 (P. 608):

 

 

“...racism manifests
itself in its
Zionist form”

 

”Je 29, 5:1 —lsraeli court finds Israeli
Mapai party official R. Kastner
collaborated with Nazis in ’44 while
managing Jewish Rescue Committee;
clears M. Greenwald on three of tow
counts of libel in libel suit brought by
Kastner; case will cause Israeli cabinet
change. Je 30, 1:2 —Cabinet changed;
court found Kastner negotiated with Nazis
for release of 600 Jews, agreed to mislead
Hungarian Jews into thinking they were
going to labor camps when destination was
Oswiecim gas chamber. Jl l3, 2:4 —
Kastner case seen top issue in Israeli
elections.“ (I also cited the book ”Per-
fidy” by the former Zionist Ben Hecht,
which gives an account of Zionist com-
plicity with Nazis.)

Anybody who looks into the facts will
find that in my comment l merely
repeated findings that were substantially
confirmed by the highest court in the state
of Israel.

l am glad, however, that Cooper and
Jaffe were alloted so much space for their
article because in it they provide us with a
very good obiect lesson concerning the
nature of Zionist logic. Let’s take for
example the authors' assertion that Israel
is a ”democratic" or ”social-democratic”
state. Surely being law students they are
aware of the defense laws to which the

masses of Arabs in the Israeli state are
subjected. These laws (which also
technically apply to Jews living in certain
areas) have been denounced by a number
of distinguished Israeli jurists as being
worse than the legal code of Nazi Ger
many. Nor is anything said about the
systematic discrimination practiced
against the Arab population in Israel. True
Israel is a democratic state for the oc—
cidental Jews who live there, in the same
sense that South Africa and Rhodesia are
democratic states for the white settlers.
Israel is not, however, a democratic state
for the Palestinians who still live there and
that is the point.

According to the comment ”To assert
that Zionists are...racists is totally un-
true.” In the same article it is written
”...the re-establishment of the Jewish
state (is) the best means to preserve
Judaism and provide security for the often
persecuted Jew.” ”Best means” for
whom? Surely not for a million or so
Palestinians who were driven out of their
country by force of arms to make way for
the state of Israel in I948. They are forced
as a result of the Zionists activities to live
in refugee camps where they have a total
lack of ”security.” “We are told that
Israel provides the ”best foundation upon
which to perpetuate Jewish culture.”
Don’t tw° million Palestinians who ac-
tually lived in Palestine for over 1,000
years have as much right to have a
foundation for their culture in what is now
called the state of Israel as Jaffe and
Cooper wholive over 10,000 miles away? If
Israel issoimportant to our Zionist friends
because it is the "epicenter" of their
traditions ”site of refuge” and so forth
then they should certainly sympathize
with the plight of the Palestinians who
have been forcibly deprived of their
”epicenter” and their ”site of refuge.” For
all we know from reading this article the
Palestinians who have been struggling to
regain their national rights fora quarter of
a century might not even exist.

As long as Jaffe and Cooper have what is
important to them. As long as they have a
"democra tic state for their fellow Zionists,
as long as they have an ”epicenter” and a
”foundation” for their traditions and their
own site of ”refuge” from persecution
that is all thatcounts. They can completely
ignore the means that were used to obtain
those th'ngs and their cost in terms of
huma n suffering. The suffering of the Jews
is everylh ing, suffering and tribulations of
the Pa lestin ians do not even rate a men
tion. This is precisely how racism
manifests itself in its Zionist form. I doubt
if I cwld have found a better illustration.
Jaffe and Cooper are truly the type of
people who pick up stones only to drop
them on their own feet.

As I pointed out my article suffered
greatly from the fact that l was trying to
deal in a general way with topics about
which whole books muld be written.

 

John Roach is a UK alumnus.

 

‘I DON'T THINK SHE’LL TRY ANYTHING ——

 

SHE SAYS SHE’S BEEN CLEARED BY THE SECRET SERVICE."

 

Second
coming

Editor:
All you have to do to be saved is
believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. ”By

faith,” thus says the Lord, "I am
willing to do all you would have me to
do” -- ”willing,” meaning why he will

save you. | ask the Lord to save and he
saves me. It is wonderful to be a real
dedicated Christian. I wish Americans
would accept the Lord Jesus Christ as
their personal savior.

The Second Coming of Christ is near.
We just better be ready for his coming.
I am a member of Calvary Baptist
Church in Lexington and I want to be
very active in the church and par»
ticipate in church activity. I want the
devil behind me--not in front of me. I
put God first in my life. I fully run my
life over to him the Lord. And I am
happy that I can say I am really a
dedicated Christian. It is wonderful to
be a Christian.

Wake up Americans, before it is too
late. I am willing to do what the Lord
would have me to do, whatever it might
be. And print this letter in the "Letters”
section of the Kentucky Kernel, an
independent student newspaper, and I
would appreciate it a lot and thank you
very much and thanks again.

Joseph Orbin Beck Jr.
Lexington

SC lunch

Editor:

Have you heard the complaints staff
members have been making about
services rendered in the Student Center
Cafeteria lunch line?

There is always a business con-
vention, fire convention or other groups

F Letters ‘fi

 

going through the lunch lines.
Therefore, when staff members arrive
to eattheir lunch they must wait almost
one~half of their lunch hour to get
through the line, sometimes we feel as
if we have done a day's work waiting
for lunch.

It seems to me one of the hot lunch
lines could be left open and labelled for
staff members only between 12-1245
p.m.

lpersonally would likea poll taken on
campus to see if other staff members
agree with this problem and then
present the results to the Student
Center Cafeteria.

Linda H. Hensley
U K student

Minor sports

Editor:

In the past years, minor sports have
never really seemedto make the paper.
It’s always been football and basket-
ball. I know they're the money sports
and that they help keep the University,
but there’s some dedicated people that
work hard and sacrifice a lot and are
rarely heard about— swimming, track,
cross country and the rifle team.

I’m not saying that you’ve neglected
minor sports totally but you never seem
to forget to report outcome of the latest
football or basketball game. You never
miss a one. But how many minor sport
activities do you overlook? Athletes are
proud of what they’re doing and want
other people to know iust as much as
the larger sports. The only difference is
they iust don’t get the recognition.

I’m not knocking your paper or your
staff, but just suggesting that a little
more attention be paid to some
deserving people. I‘m sure it would be
greatly appreciated.

Joseph Fiter
Business sophomore

 

Spectrum articles 750 words.)

 

( 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 commentaries 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 cannot exceed 250 words and

 

 

 

 

...~» t ‘

 

  

 

spectrum

 

 

 

 

 

Richard Daley
for saint

the Catholic
few saints to

Several years ago,
Gturch demoted a

”blesseds,” including Christopher and
Patrick. Like almost every contempo~
rary institution the Church has been
tainted by the social sciences; hence,
the explanation, in essense: ”lnsuffi~
cient Data.”

peggv
coldwell

__________J

Not too long thereafter, the latest in a
lmg history of religi0us civil wars
broke out in Northern Ireland. I point
this out not to show causality, but it
should be remembered that the English
still have Thomas a Becket on the
Vatican rolls, even though they broke
away from the Mother Church a few
centuries ago.

The Irish are really going to be mad
now. Joining the lengthy list of Giovan-
nis and Marias on Sept. 14 was an
American, Saint Elizabeth Ann Bayly

Seton.
.ueulllCl 38H)" 5 canonization was the

culmination of an effort that lasted
half a century. Normally, one
needs four miracles attributed to
his-her intercession in order to join the

    

 

communion of saints; Pope Paul,
perhaps in an effort to salve the
relatively progressive American
branch of the Church or to prove that he
is not such a bad guy, exercised a sort
ofexecutive clemency in waiving one of
the required miracles on Mother Se-
ton’s behalf. He could at least have
waited to see if Notre Dame wins the
NCAA basketball tournament this year.

The new saint is vulnerable to attack
from many sides. She was a convert
from—God forbid—Episcopalianism
and the widowed mother of five when
she founded the Sisters of Charity. The
Church has generally favored virgins.
Nether Seton was also the founder of
the American Catholic school system—
a dubious achievement in the eyes of
those who have lived through it, and all
the more dubious now that thousands of
Imsed Catholics (and non-catholics)
are flocking back to the fold trying to
get their kids out of public schools. The
National Association for the Advance-
ment of Colored People (NAACP) and
Judge Gordon must love her.

So now the United States has its own
underqualified saint, and Ireland, the
home of suffering and catclysm, has
none at all. This is hardly an equitable
state of affairs. Bernadette Devlin is
out for obvious reasons, as is James
Joyce. Both too controversial, and
besides, the Irish Republican Army
hasn’t won yet. That would be only one
miracle for Devlin.

My own choice is a uniquely uncon-
troversial man. Nobody likes him,
which puts him right up there with
Saint Paul the Hermit. If canonized, he
can be claimed by both the United
States and Ireland. No matter if he
hadn’t set foot in a church for 20 years
until his son’s recent wedding; I think
Richard Daley would make a fine saint.

Best of all, he comes with his own
four miracles: he was elected mayor of
Chicago three times and he helped
defeat Dick Nixon in 1960. If that’s not

, 32

 

divine intercession, I don't know what
is. And the nicest thing about a saint is
that he’s always there when you need
him. Like 1968 and 1972.

 

Peggy Caldwell is a graduate stu-
dent in the Patterson School special-
izing in international relations. Slt'e
isinterested mainly in getting some
sleep. Her column appears weekly in
the Kernel on Tuesdays.

 

 

 

 

 

Soccer
bites
the
dust

 

By Gregg Maxfield

 

I usually am a person who would
rather sleep than write letters but I
figure that I had better get this one off
in the wake of your latest article con.
cerning the soccer team and its
problems (”Soccer team beset by
problems,” Kernel, Sept, 25).

In its progress to have a great
athletic program, | feel that the UK
athletic board has left someone behind
in the dust. This someone is the UK
soccer team. For over five years the
team has tried in vain to get varsity
status. Each year they present a
substantially strong case to the athletic
board on why the soccer team should
get varsity status. These cases argue
that the soccer team: A. Has gotten too
big for the recreation department to
handle properly; B. Is one of the few
colleges in Kentucky without soccer as
a varsity sport; C. With varsity status
could participate in NCAA competition.
But each time the board rejects it,

saying that there is not enough money.
Well, it seems to me that a school like
UK which has a football team with

nationally televised games and a
basketball team that goes to the NCAA
finals should have some extra money
floating around somewhere in the
athletic department. I realize that most
of this money goes back to the team
that earns it, which it should, but the
athletic department must receive some
of the money for other sports.

I again realize that all the other
athletic teams, men and women alike,
are feeling an economic crunch, butthe
soccer team is being driven into the
ground.

For its existence, the soccer team has
been getting money from the UK
Recreation Department. With an
expenditure of $975.00 per year, the
team is draining the recreation
department of its money. If the soccer
team would become varsity, the
recreation department would be
relieved of this burden and be able to
improve all campus recreation which
includes tennis courts and the in-
tramural program.

Since $975.00 is enough to pay for the
referees and lime on the field, the

soccer players are having to pay for
their uniforms and supply their own
transportation for away games each
year. In most cases, unless the game is
at Transylvania College, the players
must pay for the gas on the trip.

I did not realize that it would cost me
$25.00 to play soccer at the largest
school in Kentucky. It did not cost
anything in high school. I would hate to
compare the athletic department at U K
with that of a medium-size high school
in Ohio iust because it cannot support
its soccer team, but atter a c0upIe at
years it gets kind of expensive. As a
matter of fact, it was not until this year
that we got our own first-aid kit.

In closing, :| strongly have athink‘
thatwhen thewomen's golf coach, Betty
Gordon, made that statement in the
Sept. 18 issue ofthe Kernel, ”...that now
the tea ms, all the teams are getting the
support from the University they
need/’she wasobviously not including
the UK soccer team.

 

Gregg Maxtield is an A&S sophomore.

 

 

 

  

 

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday. September 30. 1975

 

WE ll!
THE GOOD
Olill DAYS ARE ‘

S'l‘llii. HAPPENING
2 FOR 1 Good Wed.

 

10-1-75
Only

Come Early

OPEN SUNDAY l2:00-9:00
PHONE 276-l029

A robust portion at tender :ulcy
chaice meat individually Drailed
to you! lilting Served on our

E trash-bakearye bun withcnsp
trench tines creamy coleslaw
2 25

 

 

 

OPEN DAILY 11:30
233 SOUTHLAND DR.

NEXT TO SOUTHLAND BOWLING LANES

 

 

 

 

I1

 

news briefs

 

 

 

 

 

Need a Pad?

Check
the
Classifieds.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It took 17 hours and 57 people
to publish a Kernel that will take
you 35 minutes to read.

We think our job is
important enough to
work at it. no matter
how long it takes.

A lot more time and energy
goes into your daily Kernel
than you may realize.

   

It takes writers, editors.
circulation staff, production
people, layout and graphic
artists, salesmen and a u ’
host of others to assure ‘-
the Kernel will be on

the stands for you to

pick up in the morning.

Because you, our reader, expect
the quickest and most accurate
accounting of what‘s happening
at UK and around the Lexington
community. and only the daily
Kernel can give you that.

 

So the next time you pick up your
Kernel before your nine o’clock
class. remember us. We're the
people who worked until two last
night so you can read it.

The Kentucky Kernel is one
of the largest independent collegiate
dailies in the nation.

K'émrfiel

Because it's our job.

Ford approves extension

of oil price controls

WASHINGTON (AP) w President Ford. signing into law an
extension ofoil price controls through Nov. 15. blamed Congress for
prospective gasoline price hikes stemming from a price-raising
decision by' Arab oil producers.

“When the price of gasoline goes up at the service station. I want
the American people to know exactly where the blame lies." Ford
said. "I'ntil (‘ongress acts, there is nothing this country can do
about arbitrary OPEC —» Organization of Petroleum Exporting
(Totmtries price hikes and there may be still another fuel price
increase next June.”

The law Ford signed retroactively extends until Nov. 1.") oil price
controls that expired Aug 31.

New drug shows promise
of curing Herpes simplex

NEW YORK (AP) — A new virus-hunting drug shows promise of
knocking our a virus that causes both blindness and a here to fore
incurable venereal disease. a Harvard scientist said Monday

The virus is Herpes simplex. also the cause of “cold sores“ and
lever blisters.

When Herpes Type ()ne infects eyes. it can cause blindness by
damging the cornea or window of the eye.

Herpes Type Two is a leading cause of venereal disease.
especially painful in women and threatening death or damage to
their babies who may become infected during birth.

l)r. Langston received the Research to Prevent Blindness-
William P‘riedkin Scholars Award on Monday. She said she would
use the $25.00() award to soon begin human trials of the new drug in
eye infections. She indicated tests for venereal infections are being
planned. too.

School bus collides with car,
nine persons taken to hospital

Lill'lSVlLIII (AP) a A Jefferson County school bus collided
with a car early Monday, and nine persons. including eight
children. were taken to a local hospital. police reported.

None of the eight children required treatment, said Bob Yates,
spokesman for the Jefferson County Police Department. The adult,
whose name was not immediately available. was treated for minor
injuries. Yates said.

Work release amendment
for state prisoners prefiled

FRANKFURT t AP) w An amendment was prefiled Monday that
would make work release programs for state prisoners con-
stitutional.

If approved by voters, the amendment would mean convicted
felons could be employed by private industry. as well as by the
state. outside prison walls while serving their time.

The commission also voted to ask the Legislative Research
(‘ommission staff to draft a bill requiring autopsies for prisoners
who die in state correctional institutions.

Coal research laboratory
to be completed by l977

FRANKFOR'I‘ ( AP) — A new $4 million coal research laboratory
in Lexington should be completed by January, 1977. according to
(iov. Julian Carroll.

The structure will be adjacent to the Kentucky Energy Research
Center. Spindletop Research Building. Its primary occupant will be
the Institute for Mining and Minerals Research.

The Coal Research Laboratory staff will explore coal mining
production and technology, including the conversion of coal to gas
and oil.

The $4 million appropriation for the new building is in addition to
$3.7 appropriated by the 1974 General Assembly for a two year
period.

é‘i‘h‘el —~—-~

The Kentucky Kernel, 114 Jou'nalism Building, Lhiversity oi Kaitucky,
Lex'ngton, Kentucky, 40506, is mailed five times weekly during the year except
during holidays and exam periods, and twice weekly during the sunrmr session.
Third class patage paid at Lexington, Kentucky, 05". Sutscription rates are
$12patull semester. Published bythe Kernel 9'55, Inc. and founded in 1971, the
Kernel began asthe Cami in ma. Thepaaer has been wblished cmtimousty as
the Kentudw Kernel since 1915.

Advertising is intmded mly to help the reader buy and my talseor misleading
advatisingshould bereported and will be invatigated by the edicts. Advertising
tomato belalseor misleading will beremrted lathe Better Bushes Menu.

M

 

  

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sports

 

 

Humble Ali predicts
a 'thrilla in Manila'

By MARK BRADLEY
Kernel Staff Writer
Muhammad Ali, current
heavyweight champion of the
world. will meet former champ
Joe Frazier in a 15-round bout for
the heavyweight title tonight in
Manila. capital city of the Re-
public of the Philippines. The
much~publicized "'I‘hrilla in
Manila" will be shown on closed-
circuit television in Kentucky
only in Louisville at Louisville
Downs race track.

There will be no home tele—

vision or radio broadcasts of the
fight. and according to Dale
()wen, director of public relations
at Louisville Downs, the tape
replay of the fight “will not be
televised until 1976."

 

MUHAMMAD All

The telecast is being promoted
in Louisville by William H. King
and will begin at 9 p.m. Pre-
ceding the Ali— Frazier clash will
be a world heavyweight contact
karate championship bout be-
tween current title-holder Jeff

Smith of Washington. D.(‘. and
Karriem Allah of Newark, NJ,

The karate match is scheduled
for 11 two-minute rounds. Fol-
lowing the karate match will be a
heavyweight bout between Rod-
ney Bobick. brother of unde—
feated heavyweight contender
Duane Bobick. and Larry
Holmes.

Ali will be making his fourth
defense of the heavyweight title
which he won by knocking out
George Foreman in Zaire. Africa
last October. Ali became the
second man ever to regain the
heavyweight championship with
his victory over Foreman,

Frazier. since losing the title to
Foreman in 197:1, has fought four
times, winning three bouts over
Joe Bugner. Jerry Quary. and
Jimmy Ellis. while losing to Ali.

The main event is slated to
begin at 10:30 p.m. The fight is
being promoted as the largest
sporting event ofall time. both in
terms of financial guarantees to
the fighters and in the number of
viewers.

Ali will receive $4.5 million,
and Joe Frazier will collect $2
million for his effort in Manila.

This fight will serve as the
rubber match for Ali and Frazier.
as each has defeated the other
once. Frazier decisioned Ali in
the “Fight of the Century“ in
New York in 1971, while Ali won
the rematch over Frazier in 1974.

Ramsey ‘show' fails
to please the critics

By DICK GABRIEL
Assistant Sports Editor

If Derrick Ramsey's first
performance as starting quar-
terback Saturday afternoon were
compared to an opening night on
Broadway. the theater would've
been empty at intermission and
the show would’ve closed as fast
as it opened.

However, Ramsey and the UK
football team will stay in
business no matter what hap-
pened in the 10-10 tie with
Maryland. It's not a certainty
that he’ll start next week against
Penn State, but according to
coach Fran C urci, Ramsey didn‘t
do all that badly.

“I thought Derrick Ramsey did
a good job. I thought for what we
were trying to do, he did a good
job,“ Cunci said.

Ramsey was not satisfied, not
by a long shot.

“Not at all, not today,“ the 65
sophomore said. “It was just a
bad game all around. I’m not
going to let it bother me. We still
have eight games left."

Ramsey carried the ball 23
times and lost one yard for his
aftemoon‘s work. He tried four
passes and three fell to the
ground untouched. The fourth
was pidred off. Bad footing was
offered as one of the reasons for
his poor performance.

“It was bad," Ramsey ad-
mitted, “but I don‘t look at that

 

as an excuse I felt my passing
shwld’ve been better.“

Again, Curci popped up with a
different attitude.

“There was no use in trying (to
pass)," Curci said. “We couldn't
get it off.“

Ramsey was kept from his
specialty, open-field running. In
the past he has run outside and
dragged three or four defenders
along with him until he finally
was subdued. Maryland's
defenders were stacked along the
outside parts of the Kentucky line
Saturday, though, and shut
off that aspect of the Wildcat
ground attack.

“They were doinga helluva job
of containing me," Ramsey said.

Despite the sluggish Kentucky
offense, Cunci stuck with Ramsey
throughout most of the game,
replacing him with junior
quarterback Cliff Hite, who

started the week before with only
20 seconds left in the game.

“It felt good," Ramsey said of
Curci‘s faith in him. “My team
felt more cmfident with me, and
that’s the big thing."

As for the week of practice
leading up to the road game with
the Nittany Lions, Ramsey said
he'll work on “a little of ev-
erything. They’ve always said
practice makes perfect, and I’m
going to work on everything."

 

KERNEI. NEWS
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