xt779c6s1q1c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt779c6s1q1c/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-01-30 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, January 30, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 30, 1973 1973 1973-01-30 2020 true xt779c6s1q1c section xt779c6s1q1c The

Kentucky

Kernel

Vol. LXIV

No. 82

Tuesday, January 30, 1973
Eight pages

Sex education
course is also most popular

Experimental

By KAYI‘I ('DY'I‘E
Kernel Staff Writer

Are you tired of the same old “F's“ and
"M’s" in sex'.’ Now the (‘ollege of Arts and
Sciences offers grades from "A" to ”E" in
an experimental class. “Perspectives on
Human Sexuality". i.-\ & S :ititii.

tine of the l'nivei‘sity ‘s most
requested classes. :tut persons registered
tor the course during preregistration. The
course committee limited attendance to (it)
to keep groups small and
flexible

The course has been given temporary
home as an A&S class for only two
semesters. with experimental status lf it
proves to be a worthwhile course. a ”more
permanent inclusion in the curriculum
may be made through the proper chan-
nels.”

'I‘HF lll'MAN SFXl'ALI'I‘Y course has
been in the process of organization since
September. 1971. when a group of six
students started a committee to explore its
feasibility. Several students and faculty
joined the group and proposed to John
Stephenson. dean of undergraduate
studies. that he appoint a team of students
and faculty to conduct a seminar during
the fall of 1972. The team would prepare an
experimental course to be offered in 1973.

Dr. James Gladden. sociology professor.
chaired the committee, which consisted of
15 students and three faculty.

“1 want to emphasize this is unique as a
student~faculty project," Gladden said in
an interview. ”Everything has been
processed through by vote.“ Other
questions in the class will be decided this
way. he added.

A SIMILAR ('()l'RSE was offered in
Free University. but the committee
thought the course ought to belong in the
l7niversity curriculum. said Gladden.

()\'(‘l"

discussion

Michigan State and Stanford University
also have human sexuality courses.

Topics of each week's lectures will ltl-
clude: psychosexual development in the
infant and child. interpersonal relations.
conception. pregnancy and childbrith.
birth control. variations in sexual
behavior. marriage and other life styles.
and a concluding session of developing a
new personal perspective on human
sexuality

The class will meet once a week for a
lecture by one of the faculty members.

Slow sledding

then divide up in groups of It) to 12 for a
discussion period led by a student.

“By the end of the course. we plan to
have 2t) persons participating in the
plenary session." Gladden said. The
speakers will include six specialists. and
several others representing

homosexuality and alternative life styles
class

FIRST

\‘u’lS it

meeting.
“special

Dl l{l\(- 'I‘III‘I
Gladden stressed it
privilege" for those to be included in the
class He said the success of the course
depended upon the interest and research
bv the enrolled students.

With almost one inch of snow on the
ground and Fayette (‘ounty Schools
dismissed for one day. these three
youngsters decided to do some
sledding Monday on ('lifton Avenue.
From left to right are: Lee Yeary.
10; Brent William. 8. and Eugene
Robinson. ll. (Kernel photo by
Barry Hurst)

Student Center employe beaten
during Friday night dance

By DAVID FRIED
Kernel Staff Writer
A Student Center employe was beaten up

and two persons were arrested for
disorderly conduct in separate incidents
connected with a Kappa Alpha Si frater-
nity sponsored dance at the Student
(‘enter ballroom Friday evening.

Frank Harris. Student (Yenter director,
said there were a number of non-students
milling around in the area outside of the

Inside:
UK upsets

Alabama

ballroom attempting to gain admission
without paying for the $1.75 tickets.

AFTER THE group allegedly damaged
some property. including three doors.
Student (‘enter employe David White
asked the people to leave the area. Several
of the would be freeloaders “beat the hell
out of him." Harris said.

White was treated and released from the
Medical (‘enter emergency room with a

The UK basketball team scored an upset
over sixth ranked Alabama Crimson Tide
Monday night at Alabama. The final score
was 95-93 and was the first SEC loss of the
season for the Tide and their first home
loss of the year. The play-by-play details
as written by Kernel Sports Editor (‘harlie
Dickinson can be found on page 5.

broken nose and other facial damage.
Later that evening. William and Betty
Logan were arrested by l'K police and
charged with disorderly conduct. The two.
who are not (’K students. appeared before
Lexington Police (‘ourt Monday.

An investigation is being made by
llarris's office on the night's events. The
Kappa Alpha Si will be accessed for the
property damaged. which is estimated to
be at least one hundred dollars.

Outside: fair
and warmer

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky 40506

Former Matrix
director tells
of charges

By('lll‘IBlESMlTll
Kernel Staff “Titer
The former director of Matrix
llouse. .lon Wildes. spoke last
’l‘hursday to a meeting of the
Kentucky Political Prisoners
('oniniittee. outlining the charges
against himself and fellow em~
ploycs.

Matrix House. a shelter for
drug addicts. was closed down in
March of 1972 after an FBI raid.
Wildes. Michael ('larkson. Danny
”Ill. and Ridge llofmeyer. who
have become known as the
Matrix Four. are being tried for
federal charges ranging from
possession of firearms to assault.

Matrix House was started in
January. 1970. and in its two and
a half years of operation. the
Matrix directors claimed an 85
percent cure rate as compared to
an alleged two percent cure rate
of Lexington‘s (‘linical Research
Center.

“We are not criminals at all.
The only thing we are guilty of is
that we love humanity. We felt we
had a right to become politically
involved." Wildes declared.

“We would try to get a person
into changing the society from
which addiction stems.“ added 3
Matrix spokesman. .

Wildes replied to the firearm
possession charge. "We
possessed firearms which we
bought legally and without
criminal intent." Regarding a
charge of illegal and immoral
practices. the former director
replied “We do not know what
they are talking about. They ithe
prosecutioni'have not told us.“

Also speaking at the meeting
was Ben Simmons. national
secretary of the Black Panther
Party and one of the Louisville
seven defendants. Simmons and
his coworkers are trying to get
Lexington—area residents active
in the Kentucky Political
Prisoners Committee. which is
part of a national committee
started by Angela Davis.

The Matrix Four will be‘ tried
here in Lexington around the end
of March or beginning of April.
According to Wildes, . .there
will be picket lines outside of the
trial and nationwide publicity."

The snow is over and warmer weather is
in store. Today‘s skies will be partly
cloudy and the temperature will reach a
high in the low 40's. The low tonight will be
in the 20‘s with probablities of pre-
cipitation of five percent both today and
tonight.

 

  

The . ....
Kentucky
Kernel

Mike wines. Editor In Chlet
Mike Tierney, Managing Editor
Larry Kielkopl, Associate Editor

Katie Micarthy Riv" Mitt hell, Steve Swuft, Night News Editors

"i‘d 1694

Joel Zakem, Afts Edl'Of

An uphill climb
in urban elections

While it may be too early to endorse
candidates and present the major
issues of the May primary Urban-
County Government elections, it's not
too early for student awareness.

The new government will have two
of 12 districts in the UK area—~the
third and fourth. it‘s likely a number
of candidates will emerge from these
districts, largely populated by
students, but presently only two
names have surfaced. Pamela G.
Miller has announced her intentions
from the fourth district while Student
Government president Scott Wen-
delsdorf said he might run for the
third district post. announcing late in
February. .

Both would intend to campaign
intensively on the campus and both
would plan massive absentee cam-
paigns. If they rely solely on student
support both sill face a tough cam-
paign.

The upcoming elections mark the
first time local government has
opened up to its public. For a long
time, (‘ounty Fiscal Court and the
(‘ity Board of Commissioners have
been representative of select groups.
Now. with a lS-member council
coming from 12 districts. the new
government will be forced to open up,

 

 

or as Wendelsdorf says, “become
more responsive to the people."

What Miller and Wendelsdorf are
likely to find in their districts, though,
is apathy. True, some people in these
two districts will be active par-
ticipants in the campaign, but for the
most part students will have to
become involved in the local govern-
ment over a period of time.

The second hurdle for candidates
seeking student support in the UK
districts will be getting interested
students to vote. The primary election
day, by both an ordinance of the new
city charter and a state statute, will
be held the first Tuesday after the
third Monday in May. ()ut-of-town
students will be long gone by then.

A second aspect to this problem is
the registration of students. Many
might have claimed local precincts
for last year‘s presidential election to
avoid sending an absentee ballot to
their home towns. but just how many
will feel strongly enough about
Lexington’s government to file ab-
sentee votes before they leave for
summer vacation is questionable.

Miller has already slated sessions
with a number of campus groups to
learn the wants and needs of the
students.

Dan Rhea, Day News Editor

John Hicks. Photography Editor
Charlie Dickinson, Sports Editor

Editorials

Editorials represent the opinion of the Editorial Board, not the U'NVWS'W

 

 

  

Sbltrlft

Wendelsdorf said he would do the
same if he throws his hat in the ring.

Miller says the development of the
city is presently her main issue.
\l'endelsdorf says the most obvious
issue is getting the government to be
more responsive to the people as a
whole and not the select few as he
feels it catered to in the past.

Any candidates running from
either of these two districts will have
an uphill climb which will be in‘
teresting to observe during the course
of the campaign.

.’ 1-.“
“6:933,
. . .. “

[ Letters Religion, pro and con

 

Quotes Twain

to back belief

“A man got religion, and asked the
priest what he must do to be worthy of his
new estate. The priest said, ‘Imitate our
Father in Heaven. learn to be like him.‘
The man studied his Bible diligently and
thoroughly and understandingly, and then
with prayers for heavenly guidance in-
stituted his imitations."

“He tricked his wife into falling down-
stairs. and she broke her back and became
a paralytic for life; he betrayed his
brother into the hands of a sharper, who
robbed him of his all and landed him in the
almshouse; he inoculated one son with
hookworms. another with the sleeping

sickness, another with gonorrhea; he
furnished one daughter with scarlet fever
and ushered her into her teens deaf. dumb,
and blind for life: and after helping a
rascal seduce the remaining one, he closed
his doors against her and she died in a
brothel cursing him.

Then he reported to the priest, who said
that that was no way to imitate his Father
in Heaven. The convert asked wherein he
had failed. but the priest changed the
subject and inuqired what kind of weather
he was having. up his way.“ Read Mark
Twain, Letters From the Earth (last
paragraph of letter VII quoted above) and
ask if (‘hrist is the answer to this troubled
world,

Wolfgang (iurr
('lass of '72

Keep up
the good work

We‘d like to express our appreciation to
the Kentucky Kernel and its editorial staff
for the serious, well researched editorial
on campus religion appearing in the
Wednesday January 24, edition. Keep up
the good work.

Karl Merchant

A818 Senior

Bob Valentine

Graduate Student—Communications

(Editor‘s Note: The “editorial“ referred
to was a comment on religion from a
Kernel staff member and does not
necessarily represent the opinion of the
Kernel‘s editorial board.)

A time
for war...

When the impending cease fire in
Vietnam was announced last week.
the nation was wild with joy. Peace no
longer appeared to rest gingerly in
the hand, but now seemed solidly in
the pocket.

Even before Saturday‘s cease fire
violations we weren't so sure peace
was imminent. To us, the 60 days
within which all troops were to be
withdrawn and all prisoners returned
seemed to be a long time for people
like Nixon, Thieu, or l’ham Van Dong
to go without doing something stupid.

But even we were surprised to see
how quickly the truce was violated. In
fact, as the time for the cease fire
came and went. soldiers in the field
didn‘t even stop firing long enough to
toast the event.

The establishment press remains
optimistic. but manages to look only
ridiculous. as evidenced by the story
of "The Last American to Die in
Vietnam”. “The Last American" was
l.t to]. William Nolde who was killed
in an artillery barrage barely ll hours
before the cease tire was to go into
effect This ironic tragedy was
tollowed 12 hours later with the death
of “The First American to Die Since
the (‘ease Fire."

()ur question is basic: What cease
tire'.’

Last week‘s fighting was described
as being as savage as last year‘s
(‘ommunist offensive. Bombing still
goes on in Laos and (‘ambodia and no
immediate truce is foreseen for those
countries. Less than half of the LS.
MlA‘s and l’ttW‘s have been ac—
counted for by North Vietnam. and
there are already grumblings at home
about that. Finally. several members
of the International (‘ontrol (‘omr
mission have expressed something
less than total enthusiasm for their
project. (‘onsidering who they have to
work with. who can blame them.

And when the shooting finally does
stop‘.’ Well. again, three of the world's
most irrational leaders have two
whole months to blow the whole thing
wide open.

If such action strikes you as im-
possible, or at least an expression of
unmitigated gall. just remember that
it has happened as early as 1954 with
the Geneva convention~and as
recently as last Saturday with the
Paris agreement.

So while we‘re happy that a step
forward has been made, we'll hold off
on our celebration until the last
prisoner is back home and the last
troop transports have landed in
(‘alifornia In the meantime, we won't
hold our breath.

And should that glorious day come.
we‘ll try and brace ourselves for
whatever foreign foolishness the
White House next has in store. Israel,
anyone?

 

 

 Working the

By RICHARD RAQUIER

It has taken us two weeks to recover from the
startling developments that marked this month‘s
Board of Trustees meeting.

Student Government President Sc0tt Wen-
delsdorf and Lexington financier Garvice
Kincaid teamed up to lead a dormitory fee in—
crease into limbo.

Wendelsdorf‘s has long been a lonely voice on
the UK governing board. On more than a few
occasions his motions have died for lack of a
second, a condition that precludes even
discussion. To note a heavyweight like Kincaid
buttressing Wendelsdorf‘s motion to table the
$100 or so room rate increase may mean parents
and students caught in the economic crunch of
soaring higher education costs have an unex—
pected ally.

Kincaid. the kind of man not likely to get
caught with his pants down, had a money-saving
alternative to burdening just plain folks with yet
another fee increase. Never mind that UK‘s
bureaucratic tangle would not permit the fruits
of frugality to be used to offset increased housing

THE KI‘INTI'CKY KERNEL, Tuesday. January 30. l973—3

graveyard shift at UK

 

[ Ommenl]

costs. The Lexington multi-millionaire is on the
right track.

UK, like most other universities, is a swarm of
fiscal inefficiency, and a watchdog with a bite to
back up Wendelsdorf‘s bark bodes well for local
pocketbooks.

The University physical plant, for instance, is
a brightly lit, reasonably well—heated complex of
buildings 24 hours a day. But too much of the
space and the people who man it enjoy banker's
hours for Kentucky taxpayers and others to be
getting a fair return on their investment.

Space utilization figures are hard to pin down
but a couple of early morning and late afternoon
walks give the distinct impression that UK’s
tempo is muted before 9 am. and not much cf
anything goes on after 3 pm.

 

 

()n Saturdays and Sundays nearly all
classroom space is idle. And except for the
(‘lassroom Building and a few isolated spots
elsewhere. not much teaching takes place after
the sun goes down.

Neither students nor faculty are likely to
groove on 6 am. or 10 pm. classes. but if the
costs spiral is going to be checked, people around
here are going to have to forsake stuffed chairs
for hard benches.

There‘s no reason why this place can‘t gum for
18 hours a day. 6 to 7 days a week. If hiring a few
more teaching professors is what it will take to
cut down the size of classes, eliminate closeouts
and make optimum use of the plant, chances are
UK will still be penning their ledgers in black.

Maybe Kincaid can do something about that
before the spokesmen of waste kick him off the
board.

contributor to the Kernel, is a
communications graduate
student.

Masturbation isn't a crime,

 

 

Your health

1 .0’C’o

 

By ARVIL (‘. RBI-EB. ACSW
(‘hief (‘linical Social Worker
l'niversity Health Service
Q. "I know it's not harmful or wrong
to masturbate but I still feel guilty.
What do you think—am I abnormal?"

A. For some masturbation is still a
taboo subject surrounded by myth and
misunderstanding. As recently as the
late 1800's drastic medical treatments
such as amputation. restraining
devices. miniature chastity belts and

even surgery were used to “cure“
female masturbation. While slightly
more tolerant of male masturbation.
our ancestors tried all sorts of home
remedies and drastic child rearing
practices tocurtail this activity in boys.

As friendly a source as the Boy Scout

 

Manual until recent years referred to
masturbation only indirectly as
“certain unmanly practices“ which if
not harmful were at least immature.

In my clinical experience most young
men and women answer “too much" or
“more than I should“. in response to
questions about masturbation. Its
actual frequency among students
answering in this way has ranged
anywhere from four times a day to once
in their life time. This indicates the
considerable amount of confesion
common in this area.

Most recent studies of college youth
indicate that by age twenty about 90
percent of men and 30 percent of
women have masturbated. These
figures rise gradually so that by age

By REV. FRANCIS SWEENEY
The New York Times News SerVice

CHESTNUT HILL, Mass—I am an
enthusiastic singer of national an-
thems. Possessed—I am not going to
change that word—possessed of a
sturdy baritone which some have found
too self~indulgent but in which the
more thoughtful have recognized a
Cremona timbre, I have home my gift
through the heedless marketplace.

As a freshman at Holy Cross, I
tried out for the glee club and was
rejected. I report this fact. which my
friends find hard to credit. without
rancor. Others who applied at the
same time. some under the impression
that they were trying out for working
beagles on the Myopia Hunt, were ac-
cepted. I was reduced by nameless
prejudice to singing in boisterous
quartets and despairing church choirs,
even to competing with the bell-
ringers on Beacon Hill on Christmas
live.

My priyate sorrow has not burked
my pleasure at joining in national an~
thems. I remember (‘oronation Day in
1953 when hundreds of well-wishers
crowded Symphony Hall to watch a
re\'iew of a hastily assembled com-
pany of veterans of the Queen's seryice
parading 1n the beautiful slow march.
Then we heard Her Majesty speaking
from overseas to "my people," and
responded by lifting the coffered
ceiling with “(iod Sme the Queen."

thirty more than 95 percent of college
educated males and 50 percent of their
female counterparts have masturbated
to orgasm.

Masturbation serves many purposes
and its meaning varies from individual
to individual. As a substitute for coitus
it is almost universal where men and
women are deprived of heterosexual
contact. More generally it provides
relief of sexual tension build ups and is
a way of giving comfort to oneself.

Masturbation is also used to
discharge non-sexual tensions like
those experienced in states of anxiety
and depression. If this elicits guilt the
person may only feel more tense and
take this as added proof of their in-
feriority or defectiveness.

and. for good measure. “The Maple
Leaf Forever."

I remember Lily Pons, like a girl
from Domremy on a white horse. sing-
ing “The Marseillaise" in Rockefeller
Plaza the day Paris was liberated. I
was in the new Abbey Theater for its
opening in July, 1966, and sang to all
the suffering and glory that had made
Ireland a nation again. That was “The
Soldier‘s Song" (rather wide-ranging
for the voice. and rough terrain for
the bagpipes):

“Soldiers are we whose lives are
pledged to Ireland;

Some have come from a land across
the wave."

Indeed we had; half the audience
were Americans.

I remember when Pope Paul VI
made his fourteen—hour \‘lSli to New
York to preach. like Paul on the Areo-
pagus. to the General Assembly of
the United Nations. it was an incred—
ibly crowded day. climaxed with a
moxing liturgy in Yankee Stadium. For
(‘atholics of the old school and the
old parish, like myself. it was a time
as historic as the naming of a new
planet It seemed to bring America's
infinity of neighborhoods together, to
make Us one fold for an hour. knowr
mg one shepherd.

When before his departure. he had
czrcled the stadium with arms litted

but it does upset the Boy Scouts

Even in the absence of conscmus
guilt, feelings such as being let down,
depressed. or sad are sometimes ex-
perienced following masturbation. For
some people this reflects a basic
discomfort over allowing themselves
pleasure or “self—indulgence“. Others
suffer “social guilt“ such as the lower
class male who feels he “should be able
to find a woman instead”.

Concerns over masturbation may be
reflective of severe emotional conflicts
over sexuality. symptomatic of
depression. or represent a turning into
one's own private world. Evaluation by
an experienced mental health
professional can deffierentiate between
“normal" and “abnormal" guilt.

nation silences its song

to the crowd, and the Dunwoodie
Seminary choir had sung "Now Thank
We All Our God." and Archbishop
Sheen. announcing for teleyision. had
said with pardonable sentimentality.
“Good night, sweet Prince,"—then the
choir did a stunning thing. They sang
”The Star-Spangled Banner.”

It was as if they were saying thanks
to the great Pope who had called the
world to a higher cubit of dignity. No
more feuds between the nations. No
more plundering of colonies for gold
and copper and oil. No more bullying
the weak and enforcing honor by
mallard-fleets of bombers staining
the sky. “If you wish to be brothers,
let the weapons fall from your hands

. No more war, war never again!"

Peace was no longer a pedantic
illusion but a future We could plan
for. as a man plans security and ed—
ucation for his children. So the creaky
old patriotic words of the song rang
like a carillon, and we thought what
a dawn it indeed was, and how that
early light would enlarge and flood
like the morning of the world. That
was Oct. 4. lfitifi.

Oh, my country.’ I cannot sing your
anthem now.

The Rev Francis Sweeney. SJ. teaches
English (ll Boston College.

 

  

t—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. January 30. I973

Rib Eye Steak

Restaurant

0 Fresh Cut Top Choice Rib Eye
0 Pick Out Your Own Steak (8 Ounce 8. Up)
0 Cooked on Real Charcoal
OGourmet Salad Bar

0 Home- Baked Bread

oMixed Drinks oOpen 5 p.m.

94] Winchester ltd. Phone 253-0750

 

Search continues

Law School still without dean

By DAVID FRIED

Kernel Staff Writer
The (‘ollege of Law has been
without a dean since William 1..
Matthews resigned some 27
months ago. A search committee
has been looking and its chair-
man Paul ()berst. a law
professor. is cautiously op~
timistic that a new dean will be
found soon. There are presently
several people that the law school
is interested in but as yet none
have committed themselves to

l'K
Matthews, who is still a
member of the law school

faculty. was dean for 16 years
before resigning in October. 1970.
Since then numerous propects
have visited the [K campus

CHEVY CHASE COIN lAUNDRY

312 South Ashland

SELF SERVICE WASH AND DRY

New and Modern Equipment for Every Fabric
Do Your Rugs (up to 9x12) In Our Big Boy Washers

Your DRY CLEANING Done by
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4 pounds $1.75 - 8 pounds 52.50 - 10 pounds s3.00

 

 

 

 

 

(me. Dr. Thomas P. Lewis, ac-
cepted the position but four
months later turned down the job.

There are several possible
reasons for l'K‘s difficulty in
finding a law dean. There is some
speculation of feuding among
faculty factions. Donald ”J.
Hermann. an instructor who
resigned the law school last
spring after being denied tenure
and promotion. and now at
Del’aul l'niversity in Chicago,
said. “It‘s become known nation
wide that there are problems at
lTK

”One group was national
oriented and concerned with
publication and research on a
national level. A second group
was bluegrassoriented and tried
to exist without publishing and
creating issues or controversy.

ldealogical disputes became
submerged by personal feuding."

liberst. the committee
chairman. said he does not
believe this factionalism exists.
or that it ever has. ’l‘o back up
this claim he said the faculty has
several times unanimously ac
cepted dean prospects.

Many of those offered the
position declined because they
had "it too good" in their present
positions ()berst said. Many law
professors shyed away from the
deanship because of the strains of
administrative duties it presents.
he added.

The fact that a number of other
law schools are without deans
and that l’K's salary is not the
highest does not help matters .
()berst noted.

 

 

 

'—For Sale

Sell Firealarmsr—(ompany training 3‘00
(omniissmn unit Apply 7504 Larkin
Road No 207 Wednesday 1 6 NBC

1972 Mustang 900) miles. A C power
steering & brakes. green 25? £878 25J3l

Old Fender Twm Revert), lilelime speakers.
excellent. $300. Marshall Cabinet 4 12’s S200
278 7554 29F?

Panel Van. 1962 Chevrolet good condition.
Richmond Road Exxon. $42500 24J30

Glendo/er Road Owner transterred and
selling 3 bedroom home. large kitchen
separate dining room, screened In porch,
finished basement lireplare, l'i baths.
Garage. lull attic (all 277 5518 tor ap
pomtment $38000 29F?

 

 

Wanted

Wanted Live Ilt babysitter temporarily tor
professional (ouple with two yOunu r hildren
Salary 25.17990 76J30

Piano Teacher .
hnuvnn n'; atlvawi-d student"
( ampu‘, (all 299 8063 76J30

( ninth-tent uradudtp

Nightly (in

Roommate wanted, shave two bedroom apt ,
lose to rambus $60 00 month 758 5439 76J3C

Wanted ix'rt- 'er ’ual (HAD?) rs standards
000k u'wt] (ytti Pl} 7‘0" 254 3748 76:30

Overseas Jobs for Students Australia.
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Sophomores arrive

Cats upset'Bama, 95-93
to keep SEC interesting

After keeping Kentucky fans on
edge for 15 games trying to
decide whether they were really
that good, the UK sophomores
chose the biggest game of the
season to prove that they were,
indeed, very, very good.

Led by Kevin Grevey, Mike
Flynn and Jimmy Dan Conner
the Wildcats upset 6th ranked
Alabama, 95-93, to throw the SEC
race into a complete tailspin.

Going into the game UK was
faced with the task of either
beating the (‘rimson Tide or
watching their hopes, or anyone
elses for that matter, of catching
the Tide go off down the road.

RL'NNING OFF TO a 10-3 lead
early in the game UK gave in-
dication of putting the Tide out of
it early Bama coach C. M.
Newton called timeout, chewed
some egos and then the Tide
came back with six straight
points to make it 10-9.

From then on, right up to the

final gun, the game was close.‘

Wendell Hudson, who hit two
straight baskets to cut UK's early
lead to one point. was a prime
mover in keeping the game tight.
(‘ombined with freshman center
Leon Douglas in the second half,
they almost doublehandedly put
l'K away.

Right from the start, though,

UK gymnasts

lose two meets

The Kentucky gymnastics
team lost a pair of meets the past
week.

The first. held Wednesday. saw
l'K fall to Eastern Kentucky
110.07 to 91.54. UK looked
strongest in the free exercise and
head coach Jim Nance an-
ticipates his team will do better
when they meet Eastern later
this year.

Then, last Saturday UK lost
badly to Georgia. 1287-7875.

Nance said the low score, far
below UK‘s potential, was a
result of a bad mental attitude
because of injuries among im-
portant team members.

By PEGGY FUNK
Kernel Staff Writer

Practice starts this week to
begin rugby's fourth season at
UK. The team has been
recruiting players from Haggin
and Holmes Halls to replace
those players lost at the end of
last semester.

Some of the more promising
recruits are Tim Coch, Jeff
Morris and Mark McKiernan.
Said Joe Foran, “We expect them

Kevin Grevey did everything for
Kentucky. Crashing the boards
against taller and quicker men,
not to mention better jumpers,
Grevey more than held his own
on the defensive boards.

0N OFFENSE. where
Alabama consistently held UK to
a single crack at the basket,
Grevey hit steadily (16 of 25) to
keep Alabama from getting the
edge they needed to break the
game open.

With Douglas on the bench with
three fouls for most of the first
half, UK relied on a pair of free
throws by Jerry Hale to give
them a 4644 edge at the gun.

The start of the second half
brought a reappearance from
Douglas. That almost meant the
end for UK.

Going one-on-one against a
baffled Jim Andrews, Douglas hit
six of Bama‘s first eight points in
the second half.

Combined with Hudson, they
hit for all but two of the Tide’s
first 22 points in the half as
Alabama pulled out in front, 68-
64.

But Grevey came back strong,
hitting a pair of shots to tie the
score again. Following another
basket by Douglas. Grevey hit
two more free throws to tie the
score at 70—all. That was the 13th

time the score was tied in the

game,
From there the score went
back and forth, UK usually

maintaining a slim lead. On the
muscle of outside shooting by
Flynn, who finished with 18
points, and Grevey, UK went into
the final two minutes with a two
point lead.

Head coach Joe Hall threw his
team into a 1-3-1 zone at this
point.

“We went to the zone to cut off
the inside," Hall said. “They‘d
been getting too many fast
breaks."

Holding a 91-89 lead, UK
worked the clock down to 0:47
before Jimmy Dan Conner drew
a foul. He hit both free throws.

Douglas rammed home a
basket and then with 14 seconds
left Mike Flynn went to the line
and h