xt7cz892bx32 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7cz892bx32/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-01-18 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 18, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 18, 1974 1974 1974-01-18 2020 true xt7cz892bx32 section xt7cz892bx32 The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 92
Friday, January 18, 1974

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Community

colleges
consider

cutbacks

By PAUL CURRAN
Kernel Staff Writer

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ALTHOUGH THE energy crisis has had
a minimal impact on most of Kentucky,
UK officials are now trying to determine
what effect a severe fuel crunch could
have on University operations. Possible
alternatives are still sketchy, with most
departments adopting a posture of “wait
and see.“

Gasoline shortages. rising prices and the
specter of rationing are already casting
long shadows over many campuses.

Dr. M. Stanley Wall, vice president for
the community college system, said class
cutbacks in community colleges have been
considered but no final decisions have
been made. Wall said a severe fuel
shortage might cause a decrease in
enrollment if students are faced with gas
rationing and higher fuel costs.

WALL IS waiting for final registration
figures to assess the impact of the fuel
shortage on enrollment. He said con-
sideration has been given to creation of
student car pools but that most. students
are now reluctant to commit themselves to
such an arrangement.

In another part of the country, “the long-
range implications are really significant

for the two—year colleges," said Lloyd E.
Messersmith. executive director of the
California Junior College Association.
W“We deal with a mobile commuter
population. it there is rationing with an 8-
to-ltl gallon per week limit, students will
have to decide whether to work or stay in
school.“

IN TEXAS, two of the 47 public junior
colleges are seriously considering a four-
day-week to conserve both energy and
gasoline California is expected to follow
suit with a more stringent three-day-week.

Student admissions may also feel the
effects of a fuel shortage Dr. Elbert W.
Ockerman, dean of admissions, said he
has considered cutting back some forms of
student recruiting if the energy crunch
worsens.

In the past UK has sent representatives
to various areas of the state to recruit
students through "college night"
programs. Briefly, these programs in-
volve representatives from 10-40 colleges
andluniversities who visit individual high
schools to talk with students.

OCKl-ZRMAN SAID this type of
recruiting represents 50-60 trips per year

for UK. “We do little out-of-state
traveling,“ he said, “only four or five
states and merely as a matter of cour—
tesy."

lf fuel supplies decrease. Ockerman
plans to eliminate the “college night"
programs and focus recruitment at 16
regional meetings around the state. He is
also considering the establishment of a
“hot line" between high schools and the
University to help answer prospective
students‘ questions. A third pr0posal now
under consideration, said Ockerman, is
greater use of mailings to promote UK.

Ockerman voiced concern about the
future of night and summer school
programs if a real fuel shortage develops.
Although he emphasized it is too soon to
make accurate predictions,

Ockerman voiced concern about the
future of night and summer school
programs if a real fuel shortage develops.
Although he emphasized it is too soon to
make accurate predictions. Ockerman
feels these two programs would be most
affected by the energy crisis. particularly

continued on page to

 

Israel and Egypt reach Mideast compromise

See page lb

 

  

The Kentucky Kernel

WbymI-umm..mmm.umu.aomu
then-unified wow cuflnuouly u no “not, Inn-lamina.
The Kernel Pro-I Inc. Mailed 1m. First ell-m mat M, Ky.
Adverdltnlpubltahdmtnhm tohabthenuarbuy. Anthea
misleading adv-rm abound be reputed to the antics.

Edlta'hh mouths (plate. at the claim. not the Uilv-Itw.

 

Administration straddles

line on meal proposal

The administration is in a precarious position. It is
straddling the line once more between student opinion and
financial necessity. The dissent is over a proposed meal

plan.

Under the plan dorm residents would be required to buy a
$250 food coupon book each semester. This is less than most
students now pay for board. The catch is that under the new
plan students would be required to pay for each food item

separately with the coupons.

Some think this is asking too much. In a recent survey 46
per cent opposed the plan, 25 per cent favored it and 29 per

cent were undecided.

With the price increases for the existing meal plan
already announced we find this opposition hard to un-
dersta nd. Yearly prices would rise to $658 f or the three meal
plan, $534 for any two meals and $493 for breakfast and

dinner.

We suspect the students‘ indifference to cost can be
traced to who pays the bills. Since most parents pick up the
tabs students choose the easiest plan for selfish reasons.

And who wouldn‘t?

But this is where the University enters. With rising food
costs and the present plan‘s inefficiencies they have to find

an alternative.

Now cafeteria food is wasted two ways. Students not
finishing second and third helpings and non-resident
freeloading students who sneak in through unguarded
doors. These are examples which cost the University and
students extra money. The proposed plan would eliminate

this.

Students now are paying for meals they eat and meals
they miss and coupons are not transferable from day to day.
The proposed plan would eliminate these problems.

Intuition tells us this plan is a stepping stone to a strictly
cash and carry operation in the cafeterias, something
Western and Eastern Kentucky universities have had for
years. This lends support to the feasibility of the new plan.

When the Trustees meet Jan. 29 we urge them to approve

coupons.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

A brief look at Nixon's Operation

\\ .\SIIIN(ET().\' —— Bebe Rebozo
talking to Walter t‘rnnkite about
his friend. Richard Nixon: ‘He's
got a great sense of humor and a
very unique sense of humor that
people don’t see. . .But it‘s so
quick coming . and if you try to
repeat it. it doesn‘t have the Zing
that it has with him, .We had one
time somebody gave me a
couple of these Ladies Legs It
looks like a real leg ’l'hey'rc skin?
colored and all. and they ‘re
blown up And so .\hplanalp was
going to come oi er to \ isit Us. so
we decided to play a trick on him
. .we borrowed a w ig put it into
bed with. . .the legs sticking out
from under the sheet

“And I hid while the President
was going to show Abplanalp
through the house Well. Bob
ca ne in, and when he saw that

he dluii t , tic ditlii . Allow

w hether to act like he didn‘t see it
or what. . .It was quite a riot. . .I
was hiding around the corner
with a flash camera and took a
picture of Abplanalp hovering
over this tigure in bed. . .lt’s hard
to recall the incidents. but he
really has a rare and quick sense
of humor “

THE ABOVE “AS aired on
December 21 and it may be the
only moment of honesty in this
justeconcluded period that some
other White House wit has named
Operation ('andor. Refreshing as
is this cameo of a giggly
l'l't‘sltlt‘lil entertaining his
millionaire friends. the manner
in which Operation ('andor's last
two documents concerning the
milk and l'l‘l‘i ases w ere released
may tell us more about what the
man is up to

'l'lie .\i.\oii explanation oi ms

 

Letters to the Kernel

Recommends a clean sweep

The management of the “lost
and found” repositories on
campus leaves much to be
desired. So much, in fact, that I
am recommending a clean sweep
of the prevailing system that will
not leave hapless victims
frustrated.

There are two repositories for
lost and found articles that I
know of. One is in the checkroom
at the Student Center. and two,
one is in the Classroom Building
basement. Articles found, rest on
open shelves in rooms with open
doors through which people come
and go. rarely finding anyone in.
One has to wait indefinitely to
describe the lost article and even
if it were on hand on those open
shelves, can one just take it and
walk out? This is awkward with
no one present in charge. In three
years I have sought to recover
books, notes. a muffler or two,
and a glove or two, and have
never found these on open shelves
in “lost and found" offices.

But I saw a variety of other
found items, and wondered why
no notice is ever posted on
bulletin boards sothat the owners
may know where the go to
describe lost items after
describing or identifying them.

What happens to these articles
is that they are turned over to the
campus police who in turn, turn
them over to the city police for
auction in less than two weeks, as

part in these two curdled affairs
had been promised since last
November. Nevertheless. he or
lion Ziegler released these two
controversial documents 21.5
minutes before the major nightly
TV news programs were to go on
the air There was no way the
reporters and researchers
working on the story could cross-
check his assertions with the
statements and testimony of the
many other people involved in the
cases,

The next night, while ABC
omitted any mention of the story
and left their viewers with a
slanted, Nixonized version, its
two competitors broke with
tradition to come back without a
“hard news peg" and do a tough
analysis. NBC's Carl Stern and
Fred Briggs had pieces
suggesting perjury and bribery.

in my recent experience and if
one can‘t get to the auction,
because of more pressing needs,
it means more frustration: so
near and yet so far.

In my own experience lately, it
was only by accidential en-
counter with the Student Center
attendant that I learned that
several items I had checked there
for a period, for rainy days, had
been taken by the campus police.
She recognized my coat and held
it for me, but all my books were
taken away, except for one from
the Margaret King Library (for
me to return). I rushed to the
campus police office and found
that all had been sent to the city
police for the auction.

No sign is ever posted, large
and clear in front of the check
room advising of deadlines for
checked items, yet other signs
are posted, on accasion, as one
sees. No sign appears advising
where to go and when, stored
items are removed by campus
police. Auctions are mentioned in
the Kernel lasting one hour—but
it sometimes happens that one’s
program does not require daily
attendance and one misses the
Kernel, the issue of the day.

For all of these persons
wouldn‘t it be better to have a few
signs up in the check room, and
on the DB (classroom building)
bulletin boards explaining what

But CBS was rougher. Phil Jones
pointed out that Nixon’s
statement on the Milk Fund
directly contradicted his October
26 statement that “I have a rule.l
have refused to accept con-
tributions myself; I have refused
any discussion of contributions."
Fred Graham went further,
suggesting that the ITT
document failed to explain “why
two years ago President Nixon
permitted the Senate to confirm
Kleindienst as Attorney General
on the basis of testimony that
may well have been perjured."

'l‘llIS l’R I‘ZSII)I"IN'I' looks on all
the media, but television par-
ticularly. as the enemy. Nor is his
the passive dislike of his
predecessors. Were that the case.
the neutral role would still be
possible. But no, he's out, to use a

happens to the lost and found
items, and how long they may
remain to be claimed, and how
long the campus police will keep
them before disposing of them?
In the CB offices shouldn‘t
“found" itmes have better
protection than open doors
leading to open shelves. Who, for
instance. would want to use
someone else‘s used hairbrush?
Yet, when I reported my loss, and
later went to check in the “lost
and found" in the CB, it wasn't
there. And the woolen glove I
went to claim had been seen on
the shelf. the day before, I was
told. but it was no longer there
when I came. hopefully, to claim
it, Who would want one single
glove, even if it were brand new.

From all I have detailed, and
perhaps too many words you can
see that students could and
should be spared unnecessary
frustrations like these. May I
hope you will condense this letter
into some concise form for your
next issue, stating the problem,
and getting a better system
underway. as a first priority for
1974'? I have written complaints
to the Student Government
director, but receiving no
response, I was advised to write
to you.

Eve K. Ross
12] Warren Court

Candor

White House word, to screw
television news, and to the extent
that the news people cling to the
old ways they make it easier for
him to knock them off.

Against his hated media enemy
he uses the large threat of the
Justice Department and the petty
harassments of sneaking off to
(‘alifornia on a half-empty
commercial jet that could have
accommodated the press en-
tourage if he hadn’t ordered
Ziegler not to tell them. If such
behavior is beyond belief in a
President. remember that we
know he spends his idle San
(‘lemente hours playing practical
jokes and blowing up balloons.

2:2292-222:Z:::::::::1:1:3:2:2:Z:1:1

Nicholas Von Hoffman is a
syndicated columnist for
King’s Features Syndicate.

 

 Martin Luther King's dream:
bring an end to white racism'

By ANDREW YOUNG

WASHINGTON — He would
have been 45 years old today but
he never reached his 40th bir-
thday. So much could have been
different had not the Rev. Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr.‘s heart
been stilled by an assassin on that
infamous day in Memphis, April
4, 1968.

He would have never allowed
this nation to forget its calling nor
to delude itself into thinking that
there was little or no difference
between Richard M. Nixon and
Hubert H. Humphrey in 1968. He
would have refused to interpret
the death of more than 45,000
American sons in an immoral
war as “achieving peace.“ The
years of revolutionary rhetoric
and frustrating politics might
have been spent better, and
perhaps we would be much
further down the road toward
realization of his dream of only
ten short years past.

But even in death Martin
bequeathed his humble con
tributions. He gave more to this
nation in 39 years than many men
of equal talent would ever en-
vision. In Montgomery, Ala., in
1955 he broke the terror of silence
and gave voice to the plain-
tive longing for justice in the
hearts of ten million Southern
black Americans. He taught us
how to live and pointed us in the
direction equality without ever
giving in to hatred. 1

He advocated a method of
change that thrived on an
organized aggressnve goodwill
that confronted evil and refused
to be drawn into its web of
complicity. He demonstrated
that “truth“—a deep un-
derstanding of man‘s conflicts—
and “love"—a systematic attack
on specific injustice while
forgiving all those involved by
tradition or weakness—can be
mobilized into beautiful, world-
changing forces.

He never despaired of his
commitment to nonviolence, but
he would despair of his inability
to overcome the violence to which
this society is prone. He dared to
confront a nation whose total
orientation had been programed
toward violence—cops and
robbers. cowboys and gun—
slingers, a $70-billion Pentagon
budget—with the notion that soul
and mind were more powerful
than even atomic weapons.

His organization and message
never had more than a few
hundred thousand dollars yet in
Birmingham he turned around an
entire nation with only a staff of
14. Had it not been for those ef-
forts, the Southern states might
have been a bitter and bloody
battlefield that would have made
violence in Northern Ireland pale
by comparison.

Today his thought cries out to
us. His warning, “nonviolence or
nonexistence," has been heard by '
millions who are now ready to
say, “I ain't gonna study war no
more.“

One would think that such a
man would have been
unanimously acclaimed by his
fellow men, yet his life and works

were constantly harassed by
those who veiled themselves in
the authority of Government. The
F.B.I. spread malicious gossip,
tapped his phones and begged his
places of residence and work long
before such acts became
fashionable. He was informed of
this surveillance by both
President Kennedy and Attorney
General Robert F. Kennedy, but
he did not protest, and seemed
more concerned about their fear
than his own vulnerability.

The Internal Revenue Service
had him indicted for tax evasion,
only to see his case rejected by an
all-white jury in Alabama.
However, Martin‘s tax problems
were with him until his death.
His difficulty was that he gave
away too much of his earnings.
His Nobel Peace Prize in 1964.
about $54,000, was divided among
movement organizations—with
the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference receiving
the smallest portion. He had to
borrow money to pay taxes on
money he had given away. No
tax~shelter or charity-depletion
allowances were available to
him, and he donated his early
papers to Boston University with
no consideration of a deduction.

Through all the trials and
tribulations. his was a
beautiful life, the life of a man
who belonged to others, the
“least of these" in our society.

He would have been proud of
the progress we have made
politically. The election of black
mayors in Atlanta, Los Angeles,
Detroit, Raleigh and more than a
thousand elected black officials
in the South alone are a
fulfillment of an important part
of his dream.

It is not generally realized that
his movement stressed gaining
the vote: “Give me the ballot."
Martin spent more time mar-
ching on behalf of voting rights
than any other issue. The most
important civil-rights legislation
of the century was the product of
his 1965 movement in Selma, Ala.
The election of those of us in
white majority districts indicates
not only a growth of new black
voting strength but also white

progress beyond the heritage of
racism.

The big-question. the economic
question, that he raised in the
Poor People‘s Campaign on the
eve of his murder, is still con—
fronting America. Martin knew
that it did little good to open up
public accommodations if a man
had no means of paying for goods
and services.

Before the campaign. few
acknowledged that widespread
hunger existed, and even fewer
discussed the notion of some form
of guaranteed income. Today,
many more Americans have
experienced unemployment and
declining purchasing power.
Sometime in the not-too-distant
future. we have got to face
squarely the questions of income
distribution and United States
economic policy, for the fabric of
our society is being torn asunder
by the corruption and greed of a
few.

“The people who sat in
darkness have seen a great
light," Martin said. “Our only
hope today lies in our ability to
recapture the revolutionary
spirit and go out into a sometimes
hostile world declaring eternal
hostility to poverty. racism and
militarism. With this powerful
commitment we shall boldly
challenge the status quo and
unjust mores and thereby speed
the day when ‘every valley shall
be exalted, and every mountain
and hill shall be made low, and
the crooked shall be made
straight and the rough places
plain."

This article appeared in
the New York Times on
January 15. Andrew
Young. a Democratic
Congressman from
Georgia, was an associate
of Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. and served as
executive director and
executive vice president of
the Southern Christian
Leadership Conference.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. January 18. 1974—8

SCHLITZ

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except Sunday
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220 t. Milli Si. 254-6006
This film was seized by local authorities early Saturday

morning. Under recent Supreme Court ruling, the theatre
can continue to show this picture until the question is solved.

JUDGE FOR YOURSELF
IS THIS FILM OBSCENE?

She loves to play.
She goes all the way.

3... SUNRRTAIlll

r,'l

 

'0' ‘NIMAYIU

 

Next fall signals Opening
of new biology building

By MIKE CUNNINGHAM
Kernel Staff Writer
Although construction is one
month behind schedule, the
Thomas Hunt Morgan School of
Biological Sciences should still be
ready for occupancy by fall
semester, said Clifton J. Mar-
shall. director of the UK design
and construction division.
Marshall attributed the delay
to bad weather and foundation
problems. Substantial rerouting
of utility lines was necessary
before construction could begin,
said Marshall.
THE :4 MILLION biology
building is one of several design

and construction projects—
planned and ongoing.
“According to President

Singletary we are involved in
some $50 million of capital im~
provements at one stage or
another." said Marshall. ”That
sounds about right,” he added.

However. the Patients‘ Care
Service addition to the UK
Medical Center is on schedule, he

said.
THE RENOVATION of Kastle
Hall in preparation for oc-

cupation by the newly formed
Tobacco and Health Institute is
progressing smoothly, Marshall
said. Even as the $285,000 project
is being completed, a new $3.5
million building is being planned
for the institute to be built near
Cooper and University Drives.

Two other local projects which
represent an investment of near-
ly $10 million are in the planning
stage. These are the new Fine
Arts Building to be constructed
where Stoll Field now stands, and
a Health Sciences Learning
Center, a new home for the
College of Nursing, to be built in

Construction on the Thomas Hunt Morgan School of

 

\r

Biological Sciences continues despite bad weather and other
problems. (Kernel staff photo.)

the medical services triangle.

Both proposals must have
legislative approval. The Fine
Arts Building was just approved
last week by the Council on
Higher Education, Marshall
said.

THE UNIVERSITY is about to
sign a contract to build an
autopsy facilities building to be
shared with the Veterans Ad-
ministration, he added.

Marshall said they plan also to
relandscape, and possibly add
new lighting to the Geology
Quadrangle.

The new look of the square
bordering the Office Tower stems
from the removal of the posts

Need a phone...

surrounding each tree.

THE POST‘S and guy wires are
no longer necessary to protect the
trees, says Dal McMahan of
grounds maintenance.

Any odor still lingering on the
square should vanish soon, he
adds. A chicken manure compost
was used to fill the holes left by
the uprooted poles.

On the community college
scene, Louisville is to receive a $7
million vocational and technical
institute, and its own $1 million
library building, the first for a
community college.

A 83 million dollar addition is to
be added to Ashla nd Community
College.

...We will be happy to assist

you

in getting telephone

service while you are in

Lexington.

Just call 252-2661

between the hours of 8:30 a.m.
and 5:00 p.rn., Monday thru

Friday.

GTE

GEI'IERAL TELEPHONE

 

 

 are
the
of

the
he
Iost
by

age
I $7
cal
ion
r a

s to
iity

 

 

 

Campus
housing
shortage

By TERESA ZIMMICRER
Kernel Staff Writer

There is no available space for
upperclass men in campus
housing this semester, according
to Larry Ivy, manager of
University housing. However,
there were 64 spaces open for
upperclass women, 105 spaces for
freshmen women, and 24 for
freshmen men.

The 30 upperclass men that
needed housing have either been
given rooms of students who did
not return to dorms this semester
or have been temporarily
assigned to freshmen halls.

TIII‘I MAJORITY 0f unoc-
cupied dorm space has been filled
with new students. leaving the
residence halls to operate with 95
per cent occupancy.

I’niversity housing was
operating at slightly less than 100
per cent efficiency during the fall
semester. Ivy explained that
during the fall. about 10 per cent
at the students move out of the
dorms for various reasons. There
are never as many new students
in the spring as those lost in the
fall.

The number of women living in
UK residence halls greatly ex-
ceeds that of men. Most of the
dorms must then be appropriated
for women, creating a slight
shortage of space for men.

AT THE beginning of each
June, the Housing Office
examines the housing ap-
plications and uses them for the
allocation of men’s and women’s
halls. “We also use guidelines
from previous year," Ivy stated.

This past June, the largest
demand for housing came from
upperclass women, with the next
largest demand coming from
freshman women. The majority
of dorms were then provided for
women according to the demand.

“There is no great demand for
upperclass men housing," said
Ixy. He suggests that men may
enjoy the greater freedom of
apartment living as the reason
t'ewci men live on campus

MUST lltll'SlNG space is
allotted to freshmen, as past
years have shown that 60 per cent
of the freshman class is housed
in residence halls. 'I‘he dorms
have a capacity for ap—
proximately 2,300 freshmen.

As of this fall, 64 per cent of the
students living on campus were
freshmen, 37 per cent were
sophomores, 21 per cent were
juniors, and 6 per cent were
seniors.

“I think it is more important to
have freshmen in dorms their
first year away from home." Ivy
stated, “as it helps them to get
adjusted to campus life."

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. January 18. 1974-5

 

 

    

. - a3: , ,
FIVEEHSH "
PIEEES

starving JACK NICHOLSON
Karen Black! Susan Anspach
directed by Bob Rafelson

enlistment in an advanced pay grade in the Naval Reserve.

pay grade program. To see if you can qualify contact your Naval Reserve Center.

Call 277-7272 or 278-1211

or come by the Naval Reserve Center,
Springhill Dr. , Lexington Ky.

Friday& Saturday
January 188. I9
6:30 8. 9:00 p.m.

Student Center Theatre
Admission: $1.00

Kan rbc films presentationj

 

 

 

‘Sa 0' I? I.

It‘.

ll‘

Ex-service men, have you heard aboutthe Advanced Pay Grade program of the Naval Reserve? It not.
it will pay you to hear this. The skills y0u learned in any branch of the armed forces may qualify you for

You earn a full day’s pay for a 3~hour period. You can work toward promotion and earn retirement
benefits worth many dollars. The Naval Reserve has openings for experienced men now in its advanced

 

 

 

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Will retain most uses

Coliseum won't be razed

By LYN HACKER
Kernel Staff Writer

Despite fears to the contrary,
Memorial Coliseum will not be
torn down or knocked into disuse
by the proposed new Lexington
Civic Center‘s coliseum, ac-
cording to Larry Forgy, vice-
president for business affairs.

However, plans concerning
closing the Avenue of Champions
in front of the present building
and extending the coliseum have
been dropped.

”THESE PLANS for extension
were based on crowd size two or
three years before the civic
center was even proposed,"
explained Forgy. “And there
never was a desire to close down
the Avenue of Champions
because of the traffic situation."

The new coliseum which will
seat 22.600 compared to
Memorial Coliseum‘s 11,600. will

be an additional source of
revenue to the Athletic Fund if all
the seats are tilled at each
basketball game. The added
revenue has been estimated at
$175,000 annually.

As for concerts and other uses
of the old coliseum, Forgy noted
Memorial Coliseum would still be
in full use until the new coliseum
was built. And he added UK
would only use the new coliseum
for basketball games because of
rental expenses.

“FOR EXAMPLE. we know
what the costs are for renting
Memorial Coliseum for concerts
and I would say that cost is still
far below what concert rentals
would be at the new coliseum,”
he said.

Harry Lancaster, athletic
director, said UK is still looking
forward to playing basketball in
the new coliseum because it will

 

 

 

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be larger, have more seats, and
bring additional revenue.

Lancaster explained the extra
money is needed for scholar-
ships, grants, aids, travel ex-
penses, uniforms, and to fund the
other existing sports on campus.

“BUT JUST AS important as
the money is the additional
number of seats," added Lan~
caster. “The new coliseum will
be giving the public more of a
chance to see the games, as well
as the students."

Memorial Coliseum has 4,800
seats designated for students,
while the new coliseum will
nearly double student seats to
7,500, leaving 15,000 seats still
availa