xt7c2f7jsz8b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7c2f7jsz8b/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-10-08 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 08, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 08, 1975 1975 1975-10-08 2020 true xt7c2f7jsz8b section xt7c2f7jsz8b 5F. .4“ ; r
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Gable addresses students;
discusses campaign issues

By JOHN WINN MILLER
Assistant Managing Editor

“Hi, I‘m Bob Gable and I‘m running for
govemor."

The startled students in the Student
Government office looked up from their
desks as the Republican candidate swept
into the room Tuesday afternoon.

Like a true politician Gable shook hands
with each person and engaged in casual
small talk. “Don‘t I know your uncle,“ and
“It‘s too bad you joined the wrong party,"
were frequently repeated by Gable.

Once the social amenities were over the
41-year-old Gable plopped wearily into a
couch. The effects of a strenuous speaking
schedule were beginning to show. It was
only 2 pm. but he had already completed
two speaking engagements and was on his
way to a newspaper interview.

For the last hour Gable had been ad-
dressing more than 50 students in the
Student Center. Clad in a conservative
dark suit, he briefly presented an ex-
temporaneous speech and then answered
questions from the audience.

  

Vol. LXVII No.46
Wednesday, October 8 1975

N ‘W‘m...

 

Now. slumping in the couch, his voice no
longer had the round, pear-shaped tones
of a public speaker. His tone had changed
from the jovial politician to the cautious
candidate talking to the press.

“I‘m definitely against busing,“ he said.
“Even if there are no better alternatives,
busing should be eliminated.“

During his speech, Gable was
challenged on busing by a black student in
the audience. It had been the only tense
moment in an otherwise calm and passive

talk. Not losing his composure for ‘—Ron Mitchell

second, Gable justified his stand by saying
busing wasn't worth the trouble.

“Busing is counterproductive because it
detracts from the quality of education. I
personally favor neighborhood schools so
kids don’t have to be bused,“ Gable told
the receptive audience. “The real 5 lution
is to increase financial support for schools
and not to have the students spend eight to
10 years busing to different schools.“

In the quiet of the SG office he
elaborated further on how busing is
counterproductive. “The state is spending

  

 

  

 

m.- -mwufi‘mm Rg§m
Mwnm~mwxu ‘

   

Precarious perch

The fear of heights apparently does not bother two workmen as they repair an
antenna on top of Anderson Hall Monday.

KENTUCKY

81‘

an independent student newspaper

b GK V. PiQT’t/E 5"

 

Republican candidate for governor (right) Bob Gable addresses about 50 students

in the Student Center Tuesday.

over $3 million on busing which could be
better used to improve the quality of
schools. Plus it wastes gas which we are
supposed to be conserving."

Hungrily eyeing a student’s hamburger,
Gable repeated his recent attack against
Gov. Julian Carrol’s “rule by fear and
intimidation." Gable said if he was elected
he would “replace paranoia and egomania
with reason and a sense of humor."

   

 

When a student asked bluntly what
positive programs he would instigate if
elected, Gable said: “I put out five white
papers this summer which clearly outline
my suggestions for programs and
legislation.”

Attempting to be more specific, Gable
said he believed excess state funds which,
according to him. total over $300 million —-

(‘ontin ued on page 3

e] Universitv of Kentucky

Lexington. Ky. 40506

 

Board of Trustees approve
biennial budget request

By BRUCE WING: ES
Editor-in-(‘hief

A budget request of nearly a half billion
dollars for the 1976-78 biennium was ap
proved by the Board of Trustees Tuesday.

The 1976—78 biennial budget request of
$402.5 million represents a $108.1 million
increase over the 1974-76 biennial budget
request of $294.4 million.

The increase is necessary because of
current inflation and enrollment in-
creases, President Otis A. Singletary said.
The budget request is approximately 60
per cent less than original University
college and department requests, he ad—
ded.

Under the biennial request, the total
University budget for 1976-77 is $191.5
million. This figure is a $49.1 million in-
crease over the 1974~75 budget request.

The biennial request sets the 1977-78 UK
budget at $211.1 million. This figure

represents a $58.5 million increase over
the 1975-76 budget request.

State appropriations in the biennial
request are less than half of the total
budget, Singletary said. The rest of the
budget comes from sources other than
state monies, he added.

“There is an important difference
between the total budget and how much
the state puts in," Singletary said.

State appropriations for the 1975-76
budget were $81.3 million. The 1976-77
budget requests $93.2 million in state
funds, an $11.9 million increase over 1975
76. The 1977-78 budget requests an ad—
ditional $12.7 million in state funds, for a
$24.6 million state appropriations in-
crease.

A 10 per cent average salary increase for
University employes is included in the
budget request for each year of the

biennium.
Continued on page 8

Senate Council ranks
proposed grad programs

By NANCY DALY
Assistant Managing Editor

The Senate Council Tuesday ranked by
priority five proposed graduate programs
being considered by the state Council on
Public Higher Education (CPHE).

The priority list, with the first con-
sidered to have the highest priority, is as
follows:

1. PhD in philosophy

2. masters in forestry

3. masters in teaching (mathematics)

4. PhD in health, physical education and
recreation (HPER)

5. masters in planning

The list will be forwarded to President
Otis A. Singletary, who will send CPHE his
own ranking recommendation.

CPHE requested prioirty rankings to
determine which programs are most
essential or expendable in case any must
be rejected becuase of financial con-
straints.

The Senate Council — the University
Senate's administrative arm —~ ranked the
programs at a luncheon meeting which
had been postponed last Friday because of
lack of quorum.

Continued on page 3

  

 

z)!

MK V/LWJ/(qgs

 

editorials '

Letta's and Spectrum articles shwld be aortased to the Editorial Page Edi",
Rum m Journalism Building. They should be typed, douUespaced aid SW.
Lettes Md not exceed 2! words and Spectrum article 1!) writ.

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

 

 

 

Farming deserves
better treatment

This week's column is about farmers
and the work they do. I know, I know, the
subiect is as dull as dish-water to most
people. In fact, the blandness of the trade
can be equated in most people’s minds
only to the inherent boredom associated
with activities like watching the grass
grow and reading legal treatises on cor-
porate securities regulation, or anything
else that tends to similarly bedraggle the
spirit and stifle the imagination.

But that’s why l picked farmers and
farming for this week’s topic. The subject
does, after all, deserve better treatment
than it usually gets in the media ——if you’ve
ever suffered through Channel l8’s daily
evening farm report, you unfortunately
probably know what i mean. It’s dull, dull,
dull! So what if feeder calves had a good
week at the market? Who cares if shoats
have gone up a nickel over the last half of
September?

 

 

Most farmers are concerned, of course,
but I suppose that the rest of us aren’t.
Hell, we don’teven understand, much less
care about, tobacco price supports, the
Chicago Board of Trade, rural land-use
planning and the risks involved in a
possible nitrogen shortage, or any of that

farm stuff for that matter.
Which is exactly the point. Agriculture is

the forgotten endeavor of America, the
misplaced metaphor of a nation‘s great-
ness. Once considered the backbone of a
sound society, farming is now relegated to
an obscure importance in the collective
consciousness of the country. In fact, not
only do most of us not give a damn about it
any more, many of us also sometimes give
in to the temptation of thinking of farmers
as being no more than dirt-daubing semi-
illiterates who work the land because they
haven’t got enough sense to do anything
else except provide us with our bread
daily.

Which never has made much sense to
me; I’m too scared to think such a thing.
Why? It’s easy. Farmers control the
ultimate source of the world's basic
energy source, food! I mean, where does
your food come from after all? The
cafeteria and the supermarket? No,
wrong, wrong, wrong! Food comes from
farms! It seems to me that too many
people in this day and age forget the true
source of their energy. They forget to look
past the store counters and the meat
lockers to the origin of their nourishment
-—farms.

As a result, the problems of farmers are
often lost in the shuffle of the multiplicity
of problems that face all of us daily. We
are iust not farm-conscious ar all, not even
that least little bit.

As a result, we tend to forget (or never

discover) some of the difficulties that
beset farmers —things like the rising costs
of land, machinery, fertilizer, labor,
storage equipment for grains and fuel. And
then we bitch because wheat goes up two
cents a bushel. Or we complain about the
price of meat and blame it on the farmers
when often they are at the same time
losing as much as $100 per head of cattle
and the middlemen are splitting a $250
profit on that same cow (and l have the
figures to back that up). Things have
gotten awful tough for the small farmer,
folks.

“Agriculture is the
forgotten endeavor
of America:

Sometimes I don‘t wonder if the Arab
countries’ oil cartel might not pale in
comparison to the potential havoc that a
large group of farmers, angry at the lack
of public understanding of their problems,
could wreak on the country and world by a
militant withholding of their commodities
from the consuming market.

Consider this: well over one-half of the
food produced in this country comes from
less than ten per cent of its farmers. It is
not irrational to speculate on the muscle
that could be employed by farmers who,
convinced that politics in America have
forsaken them, decide to return the favor
by bringing their complaints on the
agricultural issues to the very real forum
of the dinner table in order to get more
positive action out of the political process.

If you understand farmers at all, you
will understand that such a drastic
measure isn’t likely to happen simply
because they are such an independent and
individualistic breed of people. But
imagine the energy crisis that would result
from a food embargo by the agricultural
industry! What a plethora of possibilities!
A carbohydrate shortage could be in-
stigated by the potato farmers; dairy-
products producers might start a calcium
crisis; meat people could scare the protein
out of everybody but the vegetarians by
refusing to send livestock to the market
(the vegetarians might get theirs, too, if
produce wasn’t sold); and finally, tobacco
growers could drive the remaining
vestiges of unsympathetic Americans to
the brink of frenzy by creating the biggest
nicotine fit that the world has ever seen.

All of this is fantasy, of course, but
unless the consumers of food in this
country (i.e., everyone) begin to re-
achieve some sense of understanding of
the true source of their human energy, we
can expect some degree of unhealthy
economic, social and political polarization
to crop up between those who grow and
those who eat, food.

 

 

 

Dick Downey is a hopelessly ambitious
writer who is currently disguised as a UK
law student. He has had some experience
in the Real Worlds of iournalism land
disaster~area insurance adiusting. His
column appears weekly in the Kernel.

 

 

 

Student senators came all too
close to burning a cross at the
Monday night senate meeting out
of the fear and ignorance which
cause people to react emotionally
rather than rationally.

The senators were asked to pass
a resolution supporting efforts of
the Gay Students’ Coalition (GSC)
to gain student organizational
status — which they did, by a
narrow 18-14 margin. But the hour-
long debate preceding the
resolution’s passage was a lesson
in the kind of oppression which
grows out of fear of the unknown.

Senators quoted the Bible, read
sodomy laws, predicted orgies and
pulled every trick to prevent the
resolution ’5 passage. But, now that
we’ve all caught our collective
breath, it might be a good idea to
takea cooler look at the arguments
used and the fear and ignorance
they portray.

Senator-at-Large Mathew Welch
asked whether the GSC would try
to recruit heterosexuals if it ob-
tained organizational status. As
someone pointed out at the meet
ing, GSC is not looking for a ”few
good men,” as are the Marines. And
nobody has to fear being attacked
in the bathroom or whistled at on
the street it GSC were to become a
student organization.

Janet Patterson, B&E senator,
quoted KRS 510.100: "A person is
guilty of sodomy when he engages
in deviant sexual intercourse with
i another person of the same sex.”

 

Relating to the soccer article
(Kernel, "Soccer bites the dust,” Sept.
30), I feel that some good points were
brought forward. Soccer, in past years
has become one of the best well known
sports played around the world. If you
think about soccer in depth, you’ll
realize that the highest paid player of
any sport is soccer, and the person
is Pele, a Brazilian soccer star. i feel

i that UK should let the UK soccer team

go varsity instead of being a club. Not
every player can afford $15 for a
uniform and $20 for a pair of shoes and
pay their own expenses for away trips.

The school only gives each driver $5
for gas which doesn't cover very much
for driving it and from the away
games. During one weekend the soccer
team has to drive 600 miles round trip,
which means each soccer player would
have to give :5 for gas out of their own
pocket. The soccer team also has to pay
for their meals during the weekend, and
this could cost aroundSIS for a weekend
trip.

At the present time the situation is
ridiculous, and I hope the UK

 

recreation department looks into this

Gay resolution brings
emotions forward

Although the actual sexual act as
outlined in the above law, is a
misdemeanor the state of being
homosexual is not illegal. But up
until July, 1974, anything but sex
between married couples in
Kentucky was also illegal — so let
any of those pure among us cast the
first stone.

What’s more important is that in
a great many states archaic
sodomy laws are being struck
down and there’s nothing wrong
with Student Government sup-
porting such needed change.

And, finally, several senators
cited their religious beliefs when
explaining why they could not vote
for the resolution’s passage. As
Arts 8. Sciences Senator Mary
Duffy said: “This is not a moral
issue, it's a political issue. The GSC
is trying to work within the system
to change the law.“ Whatever
happened to the separation of
church and state?

in the future when dealing with
gay students or any other
minorities, student senators should
remember their own moral codes
and preiudices should have no
effect upon the way they vote. Law
Senator Jerry Thornton was
overwhelmingly right when he
said, ”The federal constitution
guarantees free association, and
guys are being denied their first
amendment rights.” Hopefully,
students will never burn crosses at
UK.

and makes a fast change.
Kent Hytken
8&5 Freshman

Life's origin

Editor:
It is now known we can recover life of
sterile origin from boiling

carbohydrates, but not from boiling
water.

The origin of life requires a new
concept: carbon-oriented biocrystals,
that can induce crystals of their own
image in complementary substrates.

Salines will complement crystals of
salt, but not of sugar. Human ova will
complement biocrystals of human
sperm, but not of canine sperm. Sterile
molasses will complement crystals of
active charcoal. Specific areas of a cell
will complement nucleic acid bio‘
crystals in complementary regions of a
cell.

Life will appear on any planet that
complements biocrystals.

Searching Mars for the origin of life,
which has been solved in a bowl of
molasses, is like swinging a sledge-
hammer, to drive a tack.

B.M. Osowitz

New Jersey

 

 

 

 

 

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DQKL TNCTUKL’:

 

 
 
 

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campus

Senate council ranks
proposed grad programs

Continued from page I

Ranking graduate programs
was delayed by the Senate
Council three weeks ago because
of procedural confusion and a
desire for additional background
information on the programs.

At that time, the Senate Council
asked the Graduate Council and
the Senate Academic Programs
Committee to suggest priority
rankings.

The Graduate Council‘s
ranking was: l.PhD in
philosophy; 2. masters in
forestry, 3. masters in teaching
(mathematics); 4. PhD in Com-
munications; 5. masters in
planning; and 6. PhD in HPER.

The PhD in communications
was not ranked by the Senate
Council because the program
hasn‘t yet been approved by the
Board of Trustees and sent to
(‘PHE

The a cademic programs

committee ranked the programs
somewhat differently.
The committee assigned the

highest priority to three
programs: philosophy. HPER
and forestry. The masters in
teaching was ranked fourth and
planning fifth.

The committee further urged
that forestry, HPER and
philosophy be implemented
immediately because indefinite
delays could adversely affect
faculty morale and lead to
erosion of the programs‘ support
vhich has already occurred in
one case.

The case in question is the
master in planning, which has
awaited CPHE action since
approval by the trustees in 1973,

CPHE delayed consideration
because of a moratorium placed
on graduate programs in 1972.
(‘PHE has made only three ex—
ceptions to the moratorium,
which is the prime reason for
priority rankings.

Gable covers wide range of topics

(‘ontinued from page I

should be used to improve
education in Kentucky. He also
proposed tax reductions in five
areas which would total over $110
million.

Some questions asked by the
audience didn‘t seem unexpected
or particularly spontaneous. The
inquisitive students usually
began by complimenting Gable
and asking specific questions.

Cwering a wide range of
topics, Gabb said he strongly
opposes gun control. collective
bargaining, raceing dates for

Latonia and lowering the
drinking age to 18.

“Why shouki we lower the
drinking age to 18‘?" Gable asked
after the speech. “I‘m personally
Opposed to all alcoholic con-
sumption. And, I don‘t see why
there should be beer sales on
LYK's campus."

Looking at his watch an aide
reminded Gable of his pressing
schedule. Noting there were no
more questions. Gable grabbed
his brief case and hustled to a
waiting car —- smiling and
waving all the way.

The stage attraction of the
decade becomes the greatest
entertainment event in history!

was"

BI." 90W presents
JAMES mm

as Harry S. Truman in

GIVE 'EM HELL. HARRY!

Aanu Into-v

run-urn: rurvmm mum-r Technicolor'

oar—oi; minimal ~ow rvmueu

ON IWIIID ARIISIS PICORDS MD MPI f»

NOW SHOWING!
EXCLUSIVE FIRST RUN!

Times:

2:00, 3:45, 5:35, 7:35, 9:30
"”5 HURRY!
LAST 7 DAYS!

.18 IUCUD 160-3170

 

 

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday. October 8. 1975—3

‘31, :’v %]
These are COACH bags. ~‘(fiigvé’a
‘ You can get them at “I A?

\S .
B.Altman, 3i
Garfinkels, p "‘
Bonwit Teller, O'PPQQOQQO
.\ Bergdorf Goodman,

Lord & Taylor,
or

right here
in Lexington
at the Shop for Id

Pappagallo. ’36
,‘ng

I q

’ ”0‘

 
 
 
  
  
 
   

 

E‘IMA
“sig‘ - .
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$.93], ‘ gwo‘ In the Lansdowne Shoppes

AUTHENTIC
GRECIAN CUISINE
—

5=OO PM - I100 AN\
MONDAY - SATURDAY
II‘OOAM-q'vOO PM SUNDAY

:07 EAST MAIN FOR RESERVATIONS
LEXINGTON , KY. CALI. 255—42¢7

FLU SHOTS

Will Be Given to UK Students and Their Spouses,
Faculty and Staff at the Student Health Service

(Medical Center Annex 4 - Across Rose Street from
University Hosptial.) NOTE: THE PARKING LOT
IS TORN UP -— THERE IS NO PARKING NEAR THE BUILDING

TUESDAY, OCT. 14 and THURSDAY, OCT. 16
9 a.m. to noon 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
ONLY ONE SHOT IS
NECESSARY THIS YEAR

CHARGE: Student with the health fee $1.00
All others 33.00

IMPORTANT:

 

Annual influenza vaccination is not routinely recommended for healthy
‘ adults.
Flu shots are recommended for individuals with diabetes, chronic
heart, lung, renal or other debilitating conditions.
Older persons and persons providing essential community services are
‘ also advised to consider annual vaccinations.

._ .

 

  

 

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. October 8. I975

INTERNATIONAL
LUNCHEON

Mexican Cuisine

Wednesday, October 22, 12:00 noon.
Alumni Gym Lounge

Fee: $2.00. To make reservations in advance.
call or stop by the International Student Office,
258-2755.

 

at“ ruronme ”Pa-
for STUDENTS IN PRE Or

PROFESSIONAL PROGRAMS in
ALLIED HEALTH. NURSING.

PH A RM A C Y
Call: 233-6347
or
Come In: Room 105E Medical Center Annex 2
lllIlllmltilliltlllllltlIllllltmlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillltlllllllltli1mmllllltlllllltlttimufi

L'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE-
lllIIIIl.tllllllllllllllllIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘IIIIIIIIII

     

PEDAL
MOTOBECANE bicycles are now on SALE

Prices are lower than last years models

Check this for SAVINGS!!!
Model — Mirage Reg. s163.95
Now only ‘145.00

We Repair all makes of Bicycles

409 S. Upper 255-6408

  

i

     
     
   
       

Area requirements beginning
to put the bite on you?

if you must drop a course you can still add another through
Independent Study Program Rm. 1, Frazee Hall.
Courses available in all 8 areas
Drop in Today

 

Geological survey helps attract
Kentucky, says official

industry to

By MARY ELISE BIEGERT
Kernel Staff Writer

A geological mapping program
conducted by UK gives Kentucky
an advantage over other states in
attracting mineral industries,
according to a Kentucky
Department of Commerce 0f~
ficial.

“The sheer force of recognition
that we are receiving for this
geologic mapping program is
caus'ng Kentucky to be con-
sidered by industry as never
before." the official said.

The Kentucky Geological
Survey (KGS), a UK research
and service department, has
cooperated with the t'S.
Geological Survey (USGS) since
1960 to map the geologic features
of the state into quadrangle units
of approxtmately 59 square miles
each.

“This is the first time in the
history of the USGS that it has
tried to map a state as large as
Kentucky in this scale and time
period." said Wallace W. Hagan.
KGS director and state geologist.

The program is nearly 82 per
cent complete and should be
finished by July, 1978. according
to Hagan.

Hagan said 671 of 767
quadrangles are field completed
(sun/eyed and drawn up) and 529
different maps of completed
areas have been produced.

He said certain quadrangles in
eastern. central and western
Kentucky still have to be comr
pleted and mapped.

(‘ooperation on the project
between l'SGS and KGS is based
on a federal matching program.
[ISGS pays for and provides the
field mappers. cartographers
and technicians in the field
operations. KSGmatches this by
providing da ta and reviewing and
appmving the maps.

KGS is funded by the Kentucky
Department of Commerce, and
Hagan said by July. 1976. $8.7
million in state funds will have
been spent on the mapping
program,

By that date. the ['SGS will
have spent $17.5 million in federal
funds.

 

ARMY

 

means

ADVENTURE/TRAINING

ROTC

 

 

 

 

   

 

plontoquarium

corner of Woodland and Euclid 254-4875

There’s fish
among the
foliage at

 

 

IN_ THE NEW LEXINGTON MALL‘
King 266-2176 Queen

x

Ann-Margret Oliver Reed Roger Daltrey Elton John

A 'w W m “Hunt

Eric Clapton John Entwistle Keith Moon Paul Nicholas
Jack Nicholson Robert Powell Pete Townshend
Tina Turner t .2 The Who

 

Hagan estimates about $4
million in additional funds will be
needed to finish the program.

Hagan said the purpose of KGS
in this and other cooperative
programs, is to provide a broad
base of geological and mineral
resource data to aid in the
economic and environmental
development of Kentucky.

KGS also conducts two other
cooperative programs with the
L'SGS: a water resources in-
yestjgation and a topographic
mapping revision program.

KGS data is widely utilized.
according to Hagan. He said the
current aerial mapping would
have been impossible without the
topographical mapping of the
state by KGS in 1958.

Hagan said KGS data is also
used to determine construction
and industrial sites and to plan
roads. Louisville and Lexington
urban county planners use the
data to determine areas for solid
waste disposal.

Hagan said the aerial maps are
also a “lead-in“ for reserve
explorationists looking for areas
to drill oil and gas wells.

EXPERT STEREO
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This
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from cancer.

Have your doctor give you .1
complete liuulil‘i checkup

c\cr\ \car.
:3 If you‘re a man or woman
over 10. make sure that
checkup includes a procto exam.
3 If you‘re a woman make
sure it includes .1 simple.
easy Pap test.
4 If you‘re a woman make
sure you examine your
breasts once a month.

.\sk your dentist to check
\our mouth w hen he checks
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6 \thn you're out in the sun
towr up and use screening

lotion.

I 7 Don‘t smoke cigarettes

l'hcsc scycn salcguards are
saving lives every day.

“my ‘rc easy to lollo“.
i‘hc next inc they saw could
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DfltlL‘r RM “We“

 

I4!

 

sports

 

 

Lady Kats win close decisions

By JENNIFER WILLIAMSON
Kernel Staff Writer

UK‘s women‘s tennis team
made an impressive per-
formance last weekend as it
hosted a tri-match Oct. 3-4. The
opposing teams were the
University of Tennessee at
(‘hattanooga and Indiana
University.

The Lady Kats downed UT at
Chattanooga 5-4 despite the fact
the visitor‘s (.‘andy Reynolds
defeated Jackie Gibson. UK‘s top
player. 6-2 a nd 6-0. Reynolds
is ranked as the number one
player in the South.

UK's number four player.
(.‘indy Keamey.set the Lady Kats
in the plus column as she won her
single match. Kearney was
followed by teammates’ Holly
Rentz and Doreen Doughtery's
victories.

ln doubles. Rentz and Gibson,
along with Leslie Fisher and
Nancy Meyer added wins for UK.
Their victories gave UK the one
point advantage it needed to put
['T at Chattanooga behind them.

Gibson started things off
against Indiana as she won her
single event. Kathy (‘assidy,
Fisher. and Kearney also
defeated their counterparts.
Their victories tied the match at
that time, but Gibson and
Keamey joined forces to defeat
Indiana‘s number one doubles
team and gain another UK season
victory by a score of 5-4.

Moore leads
team to victory

Sophomore Lisa Moore paced
UK to its second win of the season
by defeating Tennessee in a dual
meet last weekend. Moore was
clocked at 19:01 over the three
mile course, edging teammate
Janna Andersen by less than a
second. Sally Sligar, a track
standout from Louisville Ballard.
was Tennessee's best finisher at
20:24.

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‘

—- —Steve Schuter

Freshman Jackie Gibson is ranked as the top Lady Kat
tennis player this fall. Last weekend Gibson faced the South's
number one player. (‘andy Reynolds. and lost rather

convincingly 6-2, 6-0.

Student tickets go quickly

Student football tickets were
nonexistent at the Memorial
Coliseum ticket windows by
Tuesday afternoon.

Ticket Manager Al Morgan
reports that “student tickets
expired at 12:10 pm. on Tuesday,

That‘s a little earlier than usual '

Morgan said the quick sellout

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(tickets were sold for 14 hours
Monday) was “a result of this
being the first SEC (Southeastern
(‘onferencet game for UK and
being a night game. also.

"Better than 15,000 tickets
were sold," Morgan said. “Sixty
per r wt of these tickets went to
block seating."

of doors .
a Floating Theatre testival

 

 

and DEATH ”

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday, October 8. I975—5

  

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— Kuhtrrn Carroll, N Y DAILY NEWS

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Wednesday

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 6—1‘HE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. October 8. 1975

 
  

Reds and Red Sox clinch

 

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(I) Z 5200 Senator, 131:» District
Governor Julian Carroll E; JAMESRgmgfiLEfiO' 72nd 0m.
WILLIAM K NTON
80b Stephens “'1 _; Representative, 75th Dist.
E < STUDENT STEVEN BESHEAR
and other m [— ecsmfi‘fimh‘é‘“ 76th Dist.
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playoff championships

PITTSBURGH (AP) —~ Pinch-
hitter Ed Armbrister’s sacrifice
fly drove in the winning run in the
10th inning Tuesday night. giving
the Oncinnatj Reds a 5-3 triumph
over the Pittsburgh Pirates and
the National league pennant.

The third game of the National
league playoffs went into the
10th inning Tuesday night after
Cincinnati relief pitcher Rawley
Eastwick walked Duffy Dyer
with the bases loaded.