xt7cc24qnm73 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7cc24qnm73/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-09-23 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 23, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 23, 1974 1974 1974-09-23 2020 true xt7cc24qnm73 section xt7cc24qnm73 Vol. [XVI No. 33

Monday September 23. 1974

l.eslie Jacobs. a l K It‘eshiiiali.

KENTUCKY

21‘

an Independent stuueiit newspaper

is missing alter the boat she and tour other

students \\ ere riding in \\ as swept oyer Lock Vo. ti on the Kentucky Ri‘ er one»

lialt iiiile domiriier lroiii Valley

Sunday night liiil resumed at 7 a.ni.

\ ie“.
today .

Dragging operations were halted

Swept from boat

e1 tItI (‘I's’ti'y Hi
K\

“it:

hentuc by

ley. nylon 10 06'

Freshman missing

A lT—ymr-old lreshnian. Leslie Jacobs
lroni ('enter Reach. N Y. is missing after
the boat In which she and tour other
persons were riding uas swept over Lock
\o 9 near Valley \'Ie\v on the Kentucky
Itiver Sunday. said liean ot Students Jack
llall

Dragging ellorls continued tor three
lltiltl‘S alter the I; p in accident Members
ol the Jessamine ('ounty Fire Department
and ltescue Squad and the \‘l'oodlord
('ounty ltescue Squad resumed the search
at T a in today

‘l‘llll Eli S'I'l lierl‘S in the boat escaped
Injury and one. lreslinian Michael
ScliinItt. was treated at the [K Medical
l'enter tor a knee laceration. Hall said

tither studean imolved In the accident
.\iistin Kinnatrd. Meredith Sue
lhriniiighani and ltobert .lohnson lll.
tll'l\ er ot the boat All but .lacobs are lrom
l.oiiis\ ille

\\l‘l'('

The live students launched the boat at
t illtp lit. at ('lay"s Ferry and were headed
ior lhgh Biidgc. said lockmaster Charles
tallman

Lock ., Is located one-hall mile
(lti\\llll\t'l‘ troni the Valley View terry.
Mailman said the students did not know
there aas a lock ahead and it “as too late
tor them It) turn the boat around \‘tllt‘ll they
saw the lock

.ll-..s‘s\\ll\I-i ('til \'l‘\‘ lireman Hansel
House sand .lohnson told him he tried to
Iiirn back

'I he boat was sytept broadside over the
lock and overturned u hen it hit the water
3o teet below Johnson told House.

'l'hi'ee students syvani to shore alter the
accident \\ hile Birmingham held onto the
boat until rescue workers arrived

"\\e did e\ ery thing he could to lind her
‘Jactilis' until alter dark and then we had
'o quit because it is too dangerous to
search the river at night." House said

Pettit accused of influence in hiring practices

lly lttl\ \ll'l‘t‘lllfill
\Iaiiaging l-Lditor

l.c\ington l rban Government 's
director. 'l‘errence lirady. vyill tile lornial
chaiges today against Mayor Foster l’ettit
tor ptissible \ iolalion oi the l't‘bati ('ounty
hoveriiinent‘s code ol ethics tor public
tilllcitils

In an Intervievy Sunday night. Brady
said the charges are the result ol l’ettit ‘s‘
attempts to use his ol‘lice to influence
hiring practices ol city employes. l’ettil
could not be reached tor a response to
llrady 's latest claim

Section “3.02 ol the charter of the
l.e\ington l-‘ayette l'rban (‘ounty
(itIH't‘tillll‘lil stipulates several possible
areasot conl‘hct ol Interest which apply to
all li'ban (iti\(‘rllllit'lll ollicials and
employes It us under this section that
hath s tomplaint against Penn “in be
tiled u ith the (‘Ivil Service t'oiiiiiiissioii.
\\litt'll serves as the board ol ethics
lill\li\ ‘S (ll\lltir1 is the latest
development In a dispute between Pettit
and the personnel director which began
last 'l'hurs‘day .\t that time Brady
claimed l’ettit's appointment ot Stephen

Faculty eligibility question
delays trustee election

By LYN HACKER
Kernel Staff Writer

The election of a Board of Trustees
faculty representative has been held up
until the University Senate Rules
Committee decides whether department
chairmen are eligible to be nominated to
the position, said Kathryne Shelbum, an
official in the Registrar’s and Admissions
office.

The Rules and Regulations of the
University Senate say every faculty
member with associate proiessorship or
above or equivalent and engaged in full~
time teaching or research is eligible.

However. College of Agriculture Dean
Charles E. Barnhart, who asked for the
ruling. said the duties ol the department
('llilll‘lllt‘ll \H‘l't' il(lll‘illllSll‘illl\'(‘
rather than acadennc He questioned
\\ hether thisadministrative lunctioii made
the department chairmen eligible.
Shelburn said

COMMUNITY COLLEGE
PROFESSORS will be eligible for the first
time for Boa rd of Trustees nomination. the
result of a fall University Senate ruling,
said Shelburn.

Shelbum said because of the ruling
about 330 pmfessors will be added to the

mostly

listof nomina tions, which totals about 1650
nominations.

THE DEADLINE for Board of Trustee
nominations is Wednesday, she said. After
the nominations are counted, ballots will
be sent out until a majority vote for one
faculty member is received, she said.

“ltusually takes about three ballots. but
I think we‘ll get done before the fall
semester ends,” she said. The ruling has
delayed the elections slightly. she added.
but “we needed the ruling to be sure."

The University Senate Council is also
holding faculty elections this fall to
replace three of its members whose terms
have expired.

Results of the nominating ballots. sent
out last week, will be available Monday.
The first election ballot will go out
sometime this week, said (‘ouncil
(‘liairman Stanford L. Smith.

Smith.whose term expires in December,
will be ieplaced by Joseph Krislov.
Krislov isa labor economist in the (‘ollege
of Business and Economics

Student representatives to the (‘ouncil
Will be elected in the spring. at the same
time as the Student Government elections.
Smith said

Who .ohc beverage control
adnnnistiatoi at.» political
llllll SI I'll J»

ltIl'llItl

llt‘It'slei‘ .is

a practicing attorney.
Is l‘ettns Iainpaign ante and
adiiiiana‘atn c assistant
lirady tldllllt‘tl that the mayor
attempted to get liricsler appointed to
se\ eral t'iv il Service ~iobs llriesler‘s nevi
appointment is a part time. non~('ivtl
Sery ice pub that pays $7.3m) annually
tither charges by Brady included that
l’ettit attempted to get l)riesler apponited
position at assistant corporate
attempted to use the personnel

also

‘1) il

counsel.

ottice loi‘ political appointments:
attempted to bend Hr” Service rules and
attempted to hamstring the personnel
tilllt't' could not lunctioii. by not
pro\ iding sulticient stall

so it

i’t'llll.\\liti \\ asout ol town at the time ol
lti'ady 's charges. admonished the
personnel dtrectoi‘ Friday tor making his
Ioniplautts public and said Brady should
haw lolltmed administrative grievance
procedures He then requested Brady's
lllllttt‘dlillt‘ resignation

( oiiliiiued on page l2

Pickin' in the park
\ lolk lestiv at Sunday at .lacolison l’ark attracted a viide range ot‘ perloriiiers.
(Kernel

The music ranged lroiii bluegrass to l'olk to country and \iesterii.

stall photo by t'liiicL t'nmlu-si

 

 Editor induct. Linda Carnes
Managing editor, Ron Mitchell
Assocute editor. Tom Moore
Editorial page editor, Steve Swm

Features editor Larry Mead
Arts editor Greq Hotelich

Spov's eduio:
Photographv editor Ed Gerald

J int Mauom

1

editorials

Editorials represent the coupons 00 the editors. not the Umversntv

J-Board appointments are overdue

Appointments to the L'niversity
Judicial Board tJ-Boardt are long
overdue. 'l‘he .l-Board should have
been selected at the beginning of the
semester. but so far no nominations
have even been submitted.

Formed tor the benefit of students,
the .l-Boa rd has appellate jurisdiction
over the decisions of" any residence
judicial body atid original jurisdiction
over cases involving alleged student
violations of the l‘niversity
disciplinary offenses listed in the
Student (‘ode

'l‘he .I~Boaid which was most
active alter student unrest in 1970.
consists of a hearing officer and 26
student members.

.-\ccording to the Student Code.
appointment of the hearing officer is
to be made by President (his A.
Singletaiy. The 26 student members
must be nominated by student
senators and appointed by the Student
Government IStlt president.

The hearing officer is to be
appointed each year. with the term
expiring Aug. :tt. Singletary should

have selected the new hearing officer
by Sept. 1. but so far no name has
been released

St; Picsidcnt David Mucci set Sept.
Ztt as the deadline for names to be
submitted to him by student senators.
but he has as yet received no
applications.

Becattse of the lackadaisical
attitutde on the part of student
senators and l'niversity officials. the
.eroard does not yet exrst,

Since the .1 Board is supposed to be
in existence at the beginning of the

Letters. to the editor

Raps reporter's poor research

()h. howl wish reporters at all

levels

advertising the

(‘0!) cert lll

tall semester. student senators should
submit nominations to the SG
president soon after they are elected
in .-\pril Then we would not have to
wait several months for a judicial
boanl

liven though there were no cases
lteard by the .l-Board last year. it is
unwise to stall the appointments.
Selection of members should be tnade
before atty situation arises in which
the .1 Board is needed This would
avoid the awkward necessity of
making ex post tacto appointments

every Saturday night' Please Ms
l.u\. make a phone call or ktiock

 

”wouwwbu asuMON A base wuss‘ BASIS ...?“

would simply research
their topics thoroughly before
pointing a critical finger at
someone. My reference this time
is .lo Lux’s unfounded comments
mthe Sept. lt‘ith issue that the FR
Alumni Association “forced” the
selection of Doc Severinsen as the
opening fall concert.

The facts are:

1t I personally was aware of
the Severinsen concert as early
three weeks ago simply
because my son ta senior at l'Kt
told me that the trumpeter had
been signed,

2t ()n September 3rd. Ms.
Helen Hughes visited me in my
office to ask if the L'K Alumni
Association could assist the
Student (‘enter Board in

US

The press mistreafs Ford

By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN

W.-\Slll.\'(iT().\' — Monday
night prime-time television gave
us a new quiz show: Jerry Ford
playing 20 Questions with the
White House press corps. a
group which seldom distin-
guishes itself for its acuity. Yet
even this body of high-status. town
enterprise journalists ought to be
able to discern the difference
between a Jerry Ford and a
Richard Nixon

It was these same reporters
who. but a month ago. tired a
skeptical nation with their bad
writing about what a good guy
Jerry Ford is That apparently.
went out the window when Ford
did something they disapproved
of by panloning Nixon

ON THE BASIS of that single
act. a number of reporters not
all by any means telt entitled.
tlttlt't‘ llit‘ guise of
..sl-;iiig. to attack Ford‘s honesty
.:i:d probity.

How else can this inquiry be
“Do you tiitd any
ionflicts of interest in the
decision to grant a sweeping
pardon to your lifelong friend and
your financial benefactor with no
consultation for advice on
judgment tsict or the legal

question

't ‘S('l’l bed‘.’

fallout " "
insult‘.’

ls that a question or an

(tr what about this inquiry.
flung at the good-natured
unfortunate trying to overcome
his handicaps in the White
House: "Last month when you
assumed the Presidency. you
pledged openness and candor.
Last week you decided on the me
President's pardon tn virtually
total secrecy llespite all you've
said tonight. there would still
seem to be some confusion. some
contradictions Are your
watchwords ‘slct of your
Administration still openness and
candor‘” How is .lerry Ford
supposed to answer that" Is he
supposed to say. tio. l've reversed
my policy. I‘m going to lie. sneak
and goveni by stealth"

'I'IIFSF \Rli not questions
asked to elicit information. They
are statements by self-righteous
journalists whom can
evcit claim to have been early
public Richard
\ivon. but who now, because of
the fall of the former President
aitd tltc part the press played in
it. accidentally citjoy a power and
a prestige few of
earned

few of

opponents of

them have

In fact the behavior of some at
the Ford press conference gives
rise to the surmise that the
qucstioners were giving free
reign to an almost Nixonian
demagoguery. It was as though
they were cashing inon the public
i'eation to the Nixon pardon. as
though they were grabbing their
chance to cop some cheap votes.

That they were motivated by a
concern for equal justice is
improbable. given their failure to
ask a single question about what
Ford might have ‘in tiiitid for the
FBI. The more so. since on the
very day of the conference a
Federal judge iii St Paul had
dismissed the Wounded Knee
lndtaiis. while charging the
Haitian with "misconduct" for
what amounted to iiianufacturtng
evidence and framing the
Sarah .\lc(‘lendon
was tltc only reporter to gct into

defendants

this general area when she asked
about protecting the privacy of
people‘s income tax returns
ttiily otic question was asked
“I wonder
how you feel about whether we
are heading for a depression "
Ford replied tto. we're not. and
that was that .\'o followup
question And this was the
eieiiiiig of the day the Treasury

about the economy

question

.tt Sittiply because Severinsen
may appeal to adult audiences
and . the
.\ssoctattoiiiattcinpt to assist
campus groups whenever
possible. I agreed to mail out. at
:\SS(K'lilllttn expense. a number of
announcements to be designed by
SCH.

it The advertisement designed
and prtn ted by S(‘B was mailed to
over 9,000 metitbcrs of the l’lx'
Alumni .—\ssoctatton living Ill
Kentucky on September it

This Association
consulted about a tall concert of
any kind and we certainly plead
innocent to coercing S(‘B in
signing Severinsen As for
Lawrence Welk. he's for free

because we

was not

on tttll' door before "blasting off”
the llt‘\l time

.lay Brunifield
\ffairs

Director of \luiiini

Letter's policy

lite l\i t‘tit-l .ll\|lt‘\ its readers
tll i-stm' if ’t. 'lli’lttl'lti It! lt‘llt'l‘s lti
ioti:t:.eiits

he . tlt'nl tit
\\i ask ‘li.t‘ it"

‘i'l's 'H'lii-i-tltltil‘
lii- ft'S'l if 't'tl 'ii_ .tl Lyi-[iis til lI'\\

ioti.t: t’l'lil.\ 'It .itt wtittis ot less

\lt it"it'l
itlt'ltttlt‘ ‘ltt'

. mi tttlllll i-iits slittllltl
wiiti-t’s le‘llflltll't'
tl.t\sillt il'i‘tli .ttltlll'\\ and phone
:lllliltt‘l

I'iiase pr .ittil ‘i iple space .ill

~llltt‘.!' 't-tl ititix

in 20 questions

Department had hiked the
minimum denomination of its
notes to Slttttoo

'I‘HF FFFH'T of
depnve working people of the
chance to get the liiglriiitct'est
rates a lid tit vcsttncnt security tltc
rich people get The reason for
the decision has to do with an
attempt to save tltc savings aiid
loan associations savings banks.

this is to

whose situation is deteriorating
:o seriously that Milton
Fricdm an is advocating
government subsidies to
tlieiit

No questions on any of that or

('\ (‘ll

\ith‘

on the major collateral issue of
housing. although you can safely
assutne that tltc llllllltllls
watching tiitght have a passing
interest in these frttolous topics
All} reporter needing to vent lits
angiy spirit could have done so
legitimately by asking Ford why
he left the labor section of the
reccnt White House ecoiiotnic
conference to dedicate the World
(loll Hall of Fame They might
have asked littn it that symbolic
act teflects liis judgment of
labors bargaining power or the
importt‘incc of tltc subject

In a ha lf-hour press conference
there was tttiie

for only go

questions. and a lot morc hands
were raised Maybe Ford was
unlucky with his picks. and ltad
he called on other waving arms
he wouldnt have had buckets of
moral t'\t't‘t'l.i dtittiped on his
hope btit the
left by tltc

t'ttllit'l't‘llt't' is that it |\ easier to

head Lets so,

impression press
ptifl tip and play tltc t'onsctcncc
nt \llit'l'H a and certainly more

than to tltc
hotiii-work needed to ask ttsclltl

satistfytitg do

qttt‘sttoiis \ssttititiig a posture of

high beaded moral outrage
demands little thought attd less
study

It IS \ bad pose to strike near
Ford This man of limited

gills and bleakly narrow

.lt‘t't'\
Talent
understanding is an easy target
when Prestdciit.
llc's wrong on
nearly everything. but hes not a
ltlllll .\ll(l it the high tlyers who
t'o\t'l' htiii make that
distinction. Ford w ill be justified
in abolishing the
coiitei eiice as an itisttttttiott that
has no only grown to be archaic.
but as an (tlit‘it)Xlt)llS intrusion on
the tely ision quiz shows where at
least they give away money.
“—

attacked as a
but not as a titan

can't

press

\icliolas \ on Hoffman is writer
for the king l'cattti'es Syndicate

 

  

An elastic economy

Taking a second look at corporate profits

By JILL RAYMOND

Phil Shewmaker‘s essay. incredibly
titled “Corporate Profits: the truth"
requires a more prolonged and compre-
hensive response than 1 have the time or
space to come up with. But in case there is
anyone who read the article (Kernel 9-17)
who was even vaguely enticed to swallow
his argument. I would like to offer an
alternative way of looking at each point
raised in his analysis

To begin with. he refers at the outset to
the degradation of the word “profits" and
suggests that few people would commit
their “hardearned” money to enterprise
were there not some specific promise of a
return. The implication of his writing is
such that he seems to be basing his
argument on a vision of a stage of
capitalism that died long ago: the era of
free enterprise. individual eiitreprenuer»
ship and free trade It is important to
understand why it died.

The explanation does not lie in the
conception that evil men suddenly
happened to take over. in the middle of the
ltllh century. the functions of commerce
and production. (Although they were
indeed men. and it is true that the “robber
barons" of that period. who first
monopolized major 1'8. industries ._
Rockefeller. Morgan. etc. were not
charming people to work for. as the
massacres at Harlan. (‘ripple Creek. and
elsewhere remind us.)

it rather stemmed from the develop
ment of industrialization. and from the
fact that production was bound to change.
bound to become consolidated. standard-
ized. and specialized on a massive scale to
a) produce a large quantity of goods
cheaply and b) to develop progressive
technological applications to this produc-
tion that would make it more and more
efficient (qualitatively and quantita-
tively). For this process to occur under
private rather than popular ownership
meant the inevitability of monopolization.
The day of the small. independent shop
craftsman and competitive trade is gone:
there is no way to bring it back. nor would
we if we could. for that system in no way
could meet and satisfy the needs of the
modern world‘s population.

 

  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
   
    
 
  
    
  

comment

 

10.6 per cent. and in the period I just
mentioned. (1972-1973) they rose by 15.6
per cent. All this happening as Nixon’s
wage and price controls were supposedly
in effect! (Statistics are from the Wall
Street Jounral. The Commerce and the
U.S. Labor Department. compiled by
URPE — Union of Radical Political
Economists).

This does not make me particularly
sympathetic to business‘ troubles. and
neither does Shewmaker’s argument that
corporations pay away their profits to the
government in taxes. They simply don't.

The information detailing this is
voluminous. but for openers. the following
corporations paid zero dollars in profits

 

 

‘tn the United States, of the 213 major

manufacturing industries,

the top four companies

control an average 42 per cent of the market.”

 

 

SECONDLY. Shewmaker says we
should “never discuss profits in mere
dollar amounts." which is true enough ~
dollars mean nothing except when they are
in relation to something else —— so be it; so
let‘s also. however. not discuss wages in
dollar amounts. but in statistical
percentages showing their relationship to
changes in profits and changes in cost of
living expenses.

Between October of 1972 and August of
1973. while gross weekly earnings rose 4.6
per cent. real earnings actually fell by 3.3
per cent. meaning that wage earners were
not making enough to cover the costs of
inflation. This was during a period. l'd
interject just for interest‘s sake. when food
prices rose a tremendous 18.7 per cent.
Corporate profits. meanwhile were on the
increase by a margin of (from 1971-1972)

taxes in 1971: Alcoa Aluminum (net profit.
$50 million). Gulf and Western (profit $51
million), Continental Oil (profit $109
million). McDonnell Douglas (145 million),
And so it goes. The Federal budget for 1974
is being financed by the following sectors:
42 per cent income taxes. 35 per cent
payroll and excise taxes. 14 per cent
corporate taxes and the rest from various
other sources. (Congressional Record.
July 19. 1972 and "Who Pays Taxes?" by
the Political Education Project).

SHI-ZWMAKI‘IR adds to his case the fact.
if it is a fact. that over 15,000 businesses
will told this year. I suppose to make us
assume that business is taking the brunt of
inflation harder than any of us. But what.
assuming his figure is correct. does this
imply'.’ Well. what it certainly does not
imply is that the public has taken over

Met Furukawa

 

 

‘The high standard of living in the U.S. still
applies only to the privileged.’

 

 

control and operation of those businesses.
as we all know.

He may be suggesting to us that
consumers did not spend enough in 1973.
that prices were not high enough to sustain
each enterprise as a profit making
venture. Even if one is wealthy enough to
believe that and not be horrified by it. a
more complete way of analyzing that
circumstance may be to. say that
undoubtedly someone is continuing to
produce and distribute those goods. or
offer those services. that those 15.000
companies sold. And it takes little
research to discover that this someone is
the monopolistic corporations.

1n the United States. of the 213 major
manufacturing industries. the top four
companies control an average of 42 per
cent of the market (source House
Judiciary Committee). This point in turn
reveals the meaninglessness of his
statement that “in 1971. about 31.9 million
people owned stock in U.S. corporations".

Tllli FM‘T that it 1: popular for the
American middle class to own a few
shares of stock makes it only that much
eaSier for large stockholders to control the
companies involved. For instance. if 80 per
cent of the stock in one corporation is
distributed over many small holders. one
may have control of the enterprise. in
effect. by retaining the other 20 per cent.
whereas if there are only two owners. one
of them needs to control at least 51 per cent
of the stock. The statistics are that less
than 1 per cent of the population does own
over 80 per cent of the stock in American
corporations.

The final absurdity of the article was the
implication that without private ownership

of productive forces for profit. there would
be no production or consumption! It seems
obvious enough that as long as human
beings have material needs to be filled that
the activities of producing and consuming
will continue. Shewmaker argues for our
particular system of producing because of
a) our high standard of living. b) the large
choice of consumer goods it presents to us.
and c) the individual freedoms it provides.

MY RESPONSES to his allegiance to
capitalism based on these premises are
these; first of all. the high standard of
living in the US still applies only to the
privileged and is made possible by our
gross consumption of a disproportionate
quantity of the worlds' resources.
Secondly. we might examine this
abundance of goods we are offered and
determine what percentage of them are
necessary and what are superfluous; how
many of them are harmful and dangerous
to us because of the way in which they are
produced. and finally. which of the
essentials (health care. a place to live) do
we have control over in any way? Thirdly.
in regard to individual freedoms. I would
only like to point out that while it's true
that fascism in America has not yet
become a reality. the mind and culture
control made necessary and made possible
by capitalism is subtle and reasonably
complete.

What Shewmaker and others are being
taught in economics courses all over the
country is just one example of how unfree
we really are.

 

Jill Raymond is an \AS Senior.

  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
   
    
   
   
    
    
    
    
    
    
   
  
   
   
     
   
  
   
  
    
  
  
   
  
   
    
   
   
     
  
      

  

l—'I'III‘I KI‘ZN'I‘l ('K\' KENNEL, Monday. Septeiiiher 23. mil

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177-llOl E

.‘.( lsC‘sS 5 ROM K MART

 

 

 
     
      
   

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477 New Circle Rd
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smai Mediunxam" (:Ian'

             
          
   
       
   
  

  

 
  
  

   

 

  
 
     

 

  

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’ aLAcx OLIVE , . ‘5" 1‘0 3 0° 3 9° -
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. . . . ’ MUSHROOM .. in ..u 3 so 455 -
» Bring this coupon and receive one DOUBLE cases; . . . v.80 2.35 1 so a 75 __
: pizza free with the purchase of one SgggERON' :13 3:?) :2: g: -
f of equal value. One coupon per Visit, “USAGE ., 23.; 3 90 J ,5 -
, ' a“. SHRIMP so 240 J as a 75 r
- pe _ CANADIAN BACON '75 235 355 us :
’- Valld through Sept. 30, W74 HOT JALAPENO us 705 300 3 90 -
' - - . -,__ ANCCHHOEVEYS , 50 2 05 3 05 4 35 -
’- ‘ E '; SAUSAGE 150 2 IC' 3 05 3 95 -
:- Open 7 Days A Week 1 CHEESE ., BEEF ,50 210 30, 395 -
'2 mun INN SPEClAL no no A 05 S 30 :
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’- New CH’ClE’ Road PEPPiQONi aMUSHROOM 190 255 m 495 -
,- NW at Russell Cave ”WHOM“ ’
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news briefs

 

 

L

Hurricane relief
slows in Honduras

SAN PEDRO SULA. Honduras (AP) —— A shortage of aircraft and
fuel slowed down relief efforts Sunday along the flooded northern
coast of Honduras, where Hurricane Fifi left thousands dead and
where many survivors still clung to trees and rooftops.

Dazed Hondurans wandered along washed-out roads or dug
through piles of debris searching for friends and relatives who
disappeared during the storm. Fifi swept through the region four
days earlier with sustained winds of 110 miles an hour and gusts up
to 130 m p.h.

Government officials said they have confirmed finding at least
5,000 bodies. They estimated the death toll may double that before
rescue operations are completed.

US. Ambassador to Honduras Phillip V. Sanchez reported there
are no Americans believed missing.

Foundation faces cuts

\I-J“ \tlltk i.»\l’i The Ford the
\H‘illllllt‘h‘l pi'ixiite philanthropic .igenc). may have to reduce
.is much iis 30 per cent hecziuse of inflation and it

li'ouiidzition. nation's,

.tllllllill til'i‘ttlls h)

depii'ssed securities market. .i spokesnmn said Sunday
l’oundiiuon l’i‘esidenl \lttieorui- lliiiid) sdld that agency mould

ll.l\’(‘ :o lll' tll.\.\til\i‘(l m distributing its .issels ll .‘I reduction in

L'rnnls \\.‘l.\ not implemented

‘.t’;ll\ l'ot‘ds ‘!’tislees iciet'li-d .i or

N-H'ii proposal

.tgt)
dissolution

'l'he loniidntions .issets h.i\ e dropped li‘oin \ l ltlllltll' !o *3 hillion
lll mnrkel \itlllt'tllll'llllllllt‘llttsl ~\e.ir !he spokesnmn \.tltl

.\ proposal ‘o reduce ! he $302 in illion .ltlllll.tl huduc! is i'\pecled to
lie siihmitted to trustees .i! their quartei’li nmehnt: heie ‘liis ueek

ll .ipprmed lhecnts \ionld no! ‘.iki-etlect lor .i! lens! .i mud and

all current t'ommitmenls uonld t..- lllttliltt'd. 'he spokesiii.iii \‘lltl

Anti-freeze shortage
not expected at UK

|C\en \\ ilh tltl‘t‘tllt‘lt‘tlittlll tree/eshortgige, lt‘iltlllltl to \llllslillll ml
ineiiuises ill the price ot 'he prodiicl. the l tl|\t't'.\ll\ s motor pool

sees no 'ieed lo rzition .inli liee/e

l’i‘edictions !hiil ttllll tree/e iniuhl reach 81 70 .i unllon this month
u ere Lll\ en h) local tiiel distributors. in t'ompnrisoii to it 30.1 L'illlttll
ins! month .ind \t 20 in \l.i_\ l‘tT-l

tit-origin! ltiisi'hell. .issisliin! i. lt't‘ president tor linsiness .ill.nrs
snid 'here niigh! no! he .in linti tree/e shorhiuc "'l'here \\.t\ .t
drastic pnre increase on uiisoline Iiisl \e.ir hul l lll not quite sure
'hiil “its hecause ol .i shortage either.” he said

.\llhou;;li enii'rgeni') liiel .ind oil i’iitioinnu procedures !oi‘ the
motor pool xii're planned Iiis‘l \\|nlt‘t‘
t'll(‘('l

Kennedy to tell plans

”0511“ !.\l’ ~ hen Edward M Kennedy. l) Muss . \Alll hold it
ii('\\s('(itilet‘t'tlt‘t' Monday in announce his hilnre political plans. hi.s
olliee send Sunday

A sptiki'stttdtl .\.‘ll(l i! is presumed he \\lll he talking about \i liether
lie \\'lll mii !or presiden! in 1070.1! their ‘ttlii in conference

the} new iii-\er put into

.\sked it the announcement concerned .i possible campaign lor
the |)t'(‘sl(l(‘ll('} in 1970, the spokesman said. "You can presume that
is \\llltl he‘ll he talking about "

Kt‘llll(‘(l\ is considered ll} mos! observers .‘l.\ on oddson lit\'tlrll(‘

:o \\ in the l)t‘lll0(‘l‘ilU(‘ nomination tor president tl he should seek It
in l‘fiti

Ford pool near construction

\\ \s’lll\t.‘l‘tl\ Al’i ('onstruclion o! a new White House
suimiiiing pool is scheduled to start .‘ihou! (let. I so it (‘illl he
completed tor President Ford to use h) the end of the your

Presidential counsel William ti (‘iisselmiiir who is helping \ch
'lii- pron-ct. siiid the pool Wlll cos! gin estimated $300,000 \\'hl('ll “Ill
llt‘ pitltl lor h) it public lnnd riiismg tll‘l\'(‘

 

'I‘Illi I\I2‘\'I'l (IA) I\I'.'I{\I'.'I,

llie Kentm lty Kernel

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Itoh Kaiuinski. an offensiu- guard for the West

Mountaineer mishap

Kaminski and his teammates bumped l'K lt‘rit

\ irginia l niu-rsity Mountaineers. reeie\es the under rainy skies in Morgantown and l'K evened its
attention of the Mountaineer‘s trainer after being seasonal l-I.

shaken upon a play against the Wildcats Saturday.

t Kernel staff photo by (‘harles Wolfe. t

Energy proble