xt7dz02z6384 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dz02z6384/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-10-04 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 04, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 04, 1976 1976 1976-10-04 2020 true xt7dz02z6384 section xt7dz02z6384 Vol. LXVIII, Number 37 K

Monday, October 4, 1976

Bring in the new

Different, “hard nosed’ UK upsets
Penn State before record crowd

By JOE KEMP
Sports Editor

“The old Kentucky would have
made critical mistakes in a game
like this. either by fumbles or some
stupid play. But we didn't make any
critical mistakes today. We're a
hard—nosed football team now.”

—-Fran Curci
Oct. 2. 1976

With that statement Curci
eulogized two decades of bad
piziyi-r: hid luck and even worse
rec-outs .it'ti-t his team whipped 20th
ranked Penn State 2213 Saturday. A
record 57,733 saw the game at
Commonwealth Sta diu m, the largest
non~l)erliy crowd cw er to witness a
spmtmg event in Kentucky.

No typographical error here. In
fact. UK had an opportunity to
SllI’T Ht."l‘ Penn State until a
disputed pin-ts interference penalty
in the final period erased that
possibility. The bookies. who had
installed lht \‘ittziuy Lions as ten
point favorites. \xouldti t have
believed it.

The days of Bernie Scruggs and
Houston llogg are over. In a way,
that‘s sad, because they made us
laugh. Not many people will laugh at
Kentucky no“.

Curci said the upset was his
greatest moment as a coach and one
of the most important wins in
Kentucky history. It must have
been. because the coach was han-
ding out game balls to everyone.

“We‘re going to give every player
who suited up a game ball. It might
cost the I'niversity something
(about $1.200; but we feel the team
deserves it." he said.

“I don‘t know if you will ever seea
more dedicated effort. out of a bunch
of young people if they really layed it
on the line.

“This win wasn‘t a fluke," (Iurci
added. "Penn State fought to the

end, like the great football team that
they are, but we played a sound
football game. There was a lot of
good hitting out there.”

Penn State quarterback John
Andress could tell you about the
hitting. lie was assualted by
defensive tackle James Ramey on
the second play of the game. If the
hit had occurred anywhere else but
the fooball field, Ramey would have
been book ed. Andress, who received
rib injuries, paid a visit to the UK
Medical Center. Ramey smiled.

Kentucky noseguard Jerry
Blanton was a busy man Saturday
with nine solo tackles and three
assists. He had fun running down
Lion backup signalcaller Chuck
Fusina.

“We did a lot of slanting on
defense,” Blanton said, unable to
hide his happiness. “We really didn’t
care what they did as long as they
did it. After they got behind, they
HAD to pass.”

Kentucky's secondary, often
criticized for its performance in the
team‘s first three games, was ef-
fective Saturday, setting up two
scones. Safety Rick Hayden in-
tercepted two passes and defensive
back Dallas Owens recovered a
fumble.

“We expected Penn State to
throw,” Hayden said, “because they
are a passing team. I thought our
defense was the difference today.
But Penn State is a physical and a
finesse team. That record is
misleading.”

Penn State is 1-3. After winning its
season opener against Stanford 15-
12, the Lions have lost to Ohio State
(12-7), Iowa (7-6) and now UK
It’s the first time in coach Joe
Paterno‘s 11-year regime that Penn
State has dropped three in a row.

Continued on page 6

 

Watch the sky

Sunny and mild, high in the upper
70's. Partly cloudy tonight, with 30

per cent chance of thundershowers.
Low in the upper 40‘s.

EN TUCKY

81‘

an independent student newspaper

That's the way things went for Penn State Saturday. The ground game
was swamped by a gang-tackling UK defense. Penn State halfback Kevin
Thrower [20] is shown here covered by Dave Fadrowski [56], David

Foreign

There were two different exhibitions
of foreign culture on campus yester-
day. Above. Mrs. Rama Kalyanara-
man gives a recital on the veena in
celebration of Mahatma Ghandi‘s
birthday. Ghandi died in 1948 and his
birthday has since been an Indian

culture

holiday. Below. Nigerians celebrate
16 years of independence from Great
Britain with an Ekpo dance. The
dancer wearing the mask is the
Ekpo and the actual dance is done
only on special occasions.

——Stovo Muir

 

Weekend festivities

The Seaton Center fields were the
site of the annual Sigma Chi Derby
yesterday. In the photo at left.
John Brian. sophomore political
science major. crosses the finish line
by I nose to win the Egg Roll event.
Brian was the coach for Delta
Gamma sorority and therefore had
ioporticlpotc In the wild event. John
Dhncy (wearing SX baseball cap).
Am and Sciences sophomore. pro-
vides vocal support. Approximately

200 people flocked to the Rose Street
parking structure after the Derby to
participate in the Campus Celebra-
tion sponsored by the Kernel and the
Inter-Fraternity Council. Lee Sou-
ueine (left), bass player for Spectre.
was one of the musicians who
provided the music. Two other
bands, The Hatfield Clan and The
Joshua Cooley Band. alternated with
Spectre during the four-hour mlnl-
cmcert.

University of Kentucky

Lexington, Kentucky

-Sicw art Bowman

Stephens [82]. Mike Siganos [44]. Lester Boyd [till and .lim Kovach [50],

as Rick Hayden [ltil looks on.

Voter registration lists

handled by election boards

By SUZANNE DURHAM
Copy Editor

Despite concern over the federal
government‘s increasing infringe-
ment on private lives, voters don't
have to worry about national control
over their registration for the No-
vember elections.

Registration lists are controlled
by the 6,300 individual county and
township election boards across the
country, said Gary Greenhalgh,
director of the Clearinghouse of
Election Administration of the Fed
eral Election Commission (FEC).

When asked for the current nation-

al registration figures, Greenhalgh
said his office didn’t have any and
won't until about a week after
registration closed.

He said it is up to local election
boards to send their lists to the state
election boards. which eventually
send their figures to the FEC.

Even then, Greenhalgh said. these
state figures are usually “inac-
curate,” because “most states don’t
keep state totals. and if they do, it’s
only a guess."

“Contrary to popular belief, elec-
tions in this country are highly
decentralized,“ Greenhalgh said.

Continued on page 6

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

editorials 89 comments

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University

Idiot-bolls!
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laugh. “or
John Winn Miller

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Diet Don. at“ “0'0” Lucite Clutch:
Stove Bantu-t Stewart Iowan

 

 

Community gets shaft

from elevator ‘falls’

It sounds like they’re falling, and it feels like
they‘re fa fling, but the elevators in the Patterson
Office Tower are safe, says James Wessels,
Physical Plant Division director, and Jim Miller,

of Dover Elevator Company.

After several complaints about the elevators’
operation, PPD got around to reprogramming
them in August. While the new program sup-
posedly has shortened waits in the lobby, it also
has resulted in inadvertant tripping of safety

devices, causing sudden stops.

At least three University employes have
sutie red minor pains from the jerking halts.

The situation has been brought to the attention
of President Otis A. Singletary. But like Wessels
and Miller, Singletary seems satisfied that the
elevators are safe. They say it’s impossible for

the elevators to free fall

Wessels and Miller can ‘t expect a victim of the
“shifting shafts" to take their word that the
elevators aren't dangerous— especially now that

stairs.

the elevator company is conducting a noisy
safety check. The loud crashes produced by the
testing procedures
imaginations of those aware of the “falls.”

have only fed the

Those using the elevators have a reasonable
right to feel safe. But neither Wessels nor Miller
hasgone to great lengths to say when the public
will be rid of a phenomenon that is at best a
fright and inconvenience, at worst a serious
threat to safety.

The inadvertant malfunctions of the elevators
have already resulted in three injuries. The fact 9mg?”
that officials say the problem is temporary
doesn't excuse it.

The elevators in the office tower are essen-
tial— people aren‘t disposed to walk 18 flights of
Therefore, the
sophisticated enough to run efficiently with no
sacrifice to safety. And its passengers shouldn‘t
have to fear every ride they take.

system should be

     
  
 

   
 

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Le tie 1‘8. 0 o Reactions to article on Carter’s divine relationship

Bob Baird claims that because
Jimmy (‘arter is a Christian, he is
the obvious choice for president
tSept. :io Kernel God‘s candidate).
l'nfortunately tor fortunately as the
case may bet. President Ford also
claims to be a Christian. Is Mr.
Baird. then, declaring that Mr.
(‘aitcr is a better (‘hristian than Mr.
Ford‘.> It so he is judging andt ,t is
condemned iii the Bible in Ma ew
I I I.

Also, the fact that Carter is a
('hn‘stian does not necessarily mean
he will always make correct deci-
sions. His recent interview in Play-
boy shows that, being the mortal he
is. he can and most pi‘pbably will
make mistakes. If Mr. Baird insists
upon claiming that Mr. t'arter's
(‘hiistianity gives him inherent
powers of decision making. we must
remind him that the English kings at
one time claimed their l‘lllC was God
inspired and God directed.

Let us consider some of the
implications of Mr. Baird‘s position.
If God exclusively hacks Jimmy
t‘arter. then according to the Bible
Mr Ford must be of Satan. The
Bible states iii Matthew 12:30...“He
that is not with me is against me.“

Since Mr. Ford obviously does not
support Jimmy Carter he couldn’t
ptssibly be supporting God’s will.
We are sure that neither Mr. Ford
na‘ his many millions of supporters,
many of whom are undoubtedly
Christians, appreciate that infer-
ence. According to Mr. Baird’s
appraisal of Carter, if Ford wins,
this would indicate that Mr. Carter
lost God’s favor or if allowed to be
cynical never had God‘s favor. Now
that the polls indicate Carter‘s lead
is beginning to slip substantially
does that mean God is having second
thoughts? We sincerely doubt it.

Basil D. (,‘hildress
Randal G. Riley
Business 81 Economics sophomores

I couldn't agree more with Bob
Baird's article concerning Jimmy
“IIalleluiah” Carter. Baird makes
the valid point that the American
public is “gullible." Imagine a
nation of people so “gullible“ that
they would vote for the leader of
their country on the flimsy basis of
what he plans to do when he attains
office

Brodier (‘arter‘s solid political

platform of believing in God is ob~
viously a much firmer basis for
selection. Everybody knows that
solving problems such as inflation
and unemployment and heading a
huge bureaucracy do not require
any stands on any issues, just a
belief in God.

Baird also faithfully says that
“Christianity asks for the highest
ioral standards known to man."
The history books graphically
illustrate this point. I suppose a
skeptic would bring up a minor
incident like the Spanish Inquisition,
but look at all the peasants the
Church saved from the temptations
of wealth by taking all their money
in tithes.

In an age of fa ncy, mixed-up ideas
about our political process, we could
all leam a lesson from Bob Baird.
Ile‘s getting down to nice,
traditional American ideas like
divine right, for instance.
Professors~burn your heretical
books! The presidential election is
obviously a simple case of a lot of
(‘hristians praying for another
(‘hristian to lead their country, so
God sent Brother Carter. Besides,
Jesus was really into politics. Didn‘t

he say something like “Render unto
God what is God’s and render unto
Caesar what is Caesar's as long as
you vote democrat"— or something
like that. .

If only all of us would turn our
hu mble lives over to our ever-loving
God and Brother Carter, then we‘d
have a nifty set-.up—y‘ou know, like
the Dark Ages. Anyway, Christian
brothers and sisters, vote for
Brother Carter and God in ‘76 and
have eternal salvation. Amen.

Paul Kinny
Psychology sophomore

I‘d liketo givethanks to Bob Baird
for his excellent satire. Humor such
as his is a real god-send these days.
Not even as imaginative a satirist as
Mark Twain could have come up
with the hilarious concept that the
president of the United States rules
by divine right.

Divine right~ what a scream!
This man has a creative genius that
has to be admired. Can you picture
the political science majors swit-
ching to theology? Or can you
imagine the chagrin our founding
fathers would have felt bad this been

revealed to them; all that time they
wasted developing an elective
process.

Perhaps it. wasn’t a total loss. In
fact, with divine right a lot of
money could be saved. Everyone
could pray for their candidate and
God could tally the votes. Then, if
the people are, blessed, God might, if
he felt like it, select their candidate.

During the debates, perhaps
President Ford and Jimmy Carter
could argue who is most pious. Then
the winner of the debate would
become president and the loser get
blasted by a thunderbolt from the
heavens.

Tha nks again Bob, your ideas

have me laughing still.
Adrian J. Pellegrini
Psychology sophomore

Encountering the headline ”God’s
Candidate: Carter“ in the Kernel,
my expectation was that the article
would facetiously mock Jimmy
Carter for injecting religion into the
presidential campaign. After
reading the story, this impression
was not entirely erased.

To most thoughtful people, Bob

Baird‘s implied assertion that a
person’s devotion to Jesus Christ
automatically qualifies that person
to be an effective leader and ad-
ministrator is ludicrous. Even
Jimmy Carter would admit that
great divine gifts belonging to a very
few (and which, no doubt, he would
claim to possess), are necessary to
efficiently run the most complex and

demanding public office in the world.

However, chauvinistic Christians
are not the only ones who misun-
derstand religious doctrines. It is
very unfortunate that the media has
emphasized Carter‘s admission to
adulterous thought in the recent
Playboy interview.

Finally, I have yet to see anything
in the Kernel that did Jimmy Car-
ter‘s candidacy justice. Certainly
the discrepancies in his political
promises must be brought to light,
but the attack can become one-
sided. Democrats better get off their
asses and geton the elephants if they
want their candidate to be favorably
represented. And let‘s see more
cartoons caricaturing the other

candidates.
Tom Booker

Ilistory graduate student

Democratic, Republican failures show need for multi-party system

l-Tditor's note: This is the first of two
articles on the "conservative
alllt'l’litllite.”
By W. S, KRtNiDAIll.

Nicholas Martin's two-part
('t-l‘ilJ‘i'iliil'} on the presidential
iniinuilaw. oi i-xflo-iiator Eugene
.‘ilr' ai'l. i.\ a iiiastci‘piccc of in-
't"tcclii.-l contusion both on his
own part and that of ('lcan Gene.
l’t-u. would seriously disagree that

comm en tary

 

the Republican and Democratic
parties are the haven of political
hacks including l~‘ord and Carter)
and reservoirs of (ttl'l‘uplltfll and
incompetence.

Mr, Martin‘s broadsides against
the two major parties are richly
deserved. though not always for the
reasons he gives lience Americans
who undertake to chastise the
Republicans by switching to the
Democrats. or vice versa. are as
poorly advised as would be a doctor
who tried to cure tuberculosis with
small pox. At the same time. an
independent candidate per se is not
the infallible cure.

An initial fallacy in Mr. Martin's
article is the implicit assumption
that because the two major parties
are intellectually and morally
bankrupt. the fault lies in the in-
stitution of political parties. Thomas
Jefferson said our real grievance
against the two parties is that they
have for half a century or more
defaulted all ideological respon-
sibility.

Both parties proudly proclaim
that they have room in their ranks
for all shades of belief and opinion;
both boast of the breadth of their
ideological base. In the Senate. we
havethe spectacle of Republicans as
antithetical as Jacob Javits and
Jesse Helms; the Democrats in the
House of Representatives counter
with a poles-apart pair such as
Abzug and McDonald.

The truth is that the ideological
information content of the statement
“X is a Republican and Y is a
Democrat" is absolutely zero. The
Republicans and Democrats are not
political parties at all but mere
factions, which is probably the sense
in which they were condemned by
Jefferson.

Building on the foregoing fallacy.
Martin-McCarthy try to foist on us

by a bit of sleight-of—hand illogic~
the non sequitur that the renun-
ciation of party guarantees both a
correct formulation and an honest
administ ration of public policy. Both
are equally important and neither is
assured by the fact that McCarthy
does not belong to either major
party. Indeed. an independents
responsibility becomes wholly a
personal one whereas a party's
responsibility is or should be a
collecti\e one and is thus more
difficult to shrug off if not met.

“hen. however. the ideological
commitment of a party becomes so
diffuse and ill-defined as have those
of the Republicans and Democrats.
it is to all intents and purposes
nonexistent and the party can
thereby evade all blame while
claiming all praise. With two such
parties, the only significant distinc-
tion between them is that one is in
and the other is out. Each can then
attack the other on whatever
grounds are expedient and questions
of right and wrong are soon com-
pletely lost. Here lies the failure of
today‘s two major parties.

What is needed is a set of political
parties tany number can play and
there is nothing sacred in the
number two) which define their

stands unequivocally and rest their
political fortunes squarely upon
these stands. McCarthy clearly does
not qualify as a party (Who will be
his parties in the (‘ongress and the 50
statehouses?) and therefore offers
little except an opportunity to
protest.

(‘ontrary to the tone of Nicholas
Martin‘s commentaries, McCarthy
is not the solitary alternative to the
Republicrats. ln Kentucky this fall,
there will also be the (‘ommunists
t(lus Hall). the Socialist Workers
Party (Trotskyite Communists). the
Libertarians. the American In-
dependendent Party (Maddox),
US. Labor Party, and the American
Party.

The (‘ommunist Party. Socialist
\Vorkeis Party and U. S. Labor
Party are not political parties in any
honest sense of the word but in fact
mere fronts for the various Com-
munist factions: The Libertarian
Party takes anarchists to its bosom.
The American Independent Party is
an unstable. jerry-built, johnny-
come-lately coalition of die-hard
Wallace supporters who are
providing Lester Maddox with a
vehicle to wage a personal vendetta
against the dishonesty and
hypocrisy of his one-time boss,

Jimmy Carter. One might wish him
wellw ere itnot forhis abrasive, axe—
handle segrationism which will
inevitably besmirch the otherwise
commendably conservative AIP
platform.

That leaves the American Party,
whose candidate is Tom Anderson of
Tennessee, a lifelong editor and
publisher of a number of farm
magazines and still a nationally
syndicated columnist (“Straight
Talk"). The American Party was
formally launched at an organizing
convention in May, 1969, largely by a
group of ex-Republicans and ex-
Democrats who had supported
George Wallace in 1968.

In 15772, the party held its national
convention in Lou'sville and ran
Rep. John Schmitz for President.
Tom Anderson for Vice President.
This year, Tom Anderson’s running
mate is Rufus Shackelford of

Florida. the nation's largest tomato

farmer. Mr. Shackelford cam-
paigned in Lexington Sept. 24.
“hat promises to endow the

American Party with the ideological '

responsibility so notably absent
from the others is to be found in
certain provisions of its Con-
stitution. These include a condition
that each state party will repudiate

any candidate who does not swear to
uphold the party's principles or fails
to abide by them if elected.

The principles are enunciated in
the Constitution and may not be
changed except by a vote of 80 per
cent of the National Committee and
ratification of three-fourths of the
state parties. It was the deliberate
intent of these provisions to preclude
the weathervane vacillations and
surrenders of principle which have
characterized the Republicans and
Democrats.

For candidates of the American

Party, therefore, the issue is less
whether you can believe what they
say than whether you agree with
what they stand for. Stating the
American Party Position in general
terms is simplicity itself: a private
property, free enterprise economic
system and a constitutionally
limited representative republican
form of government. This contrasts
starkly with the political and
economic authoritarianism of Ford,
Carter and McCarthy. The following
installment will consider some of the
issues.
W. s. Krogdahl Is a UK astronomy
professor. The second article.
concerning election issues. will
appear hmorrow.

 

 

 

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Let it rain

Jim Maass. 19, left, and
Randy Hermens. 18, both
unemployed college students,
collect rain in jars for their
new business: Official Ore-
gon Rain. Maass described
the enterprise as Oregon's

answer to the pet rock.

Polls indicate Carter is slipping

WASHINGTON (AP) — Two national
political polls show .limmy Carter even with
President Ford or his edge narrowing as the
fail campaign enters its last month. A third
shows ( fatter eight points ahead, but may be
revised on the basis of additional results.

The Ncwhouse News Service reported,
meanwhile, that its joint poll with the
("tiicago Daily News has found that Carter
has “fallen dramatically" in his electoral
vote edge over Ford as several key states
shifted from the Carter column to the
“uncertain“ category in the last two weeks.

The Newhouse survey found Carter now
leading in 21 states and the District of
Columbia. with a total of 114 electoral
votes- 46 fewer than the 270 needed for
victory Nov. 2. It said Ford held steady with
3t. electoral votes in it states.

l‘ollstt‘t‘ George Gallup Jr. said during the
weekend that two earlier polls by his
oreaiiirotion understated Carter‘s strength.
and with the election drawing closer. it will
switch to a larger sample.

The latest Gallup poll, released on Friday,
gave (‘ai-tei {t .30 to 42 edge, with eight per
cent l:l\'|il iiig other candidates or having no
opinion Hut Gallup said late revisions which
he expects to be made. would alter the out—
come peiliaps .9 point or two one way or the
other

Both the New York Times and Time
magazine said the latest findings in their
polls indicate that the Nov. 2 election will be
close.

The Times said the survey it conducts
jointly with CBS showed Carter holding an
advantage in enough states to win a majority
of electoral votes, but his edge is narrow in
most of those states and is dwindling in some
of the most important ones.

It said 11 states appear even, and in none
of the important states does Carter’s lead
exceed five or six percentage points. By
gaining a few points nationwide inpopular
support. the Times said, Ford conceivably
could tip the election in his own favor.

The Times said Carter has a solid lead in
10 states with 84 electoral votes and a shaky
lead in 16 states with 210 electoral votes. By
carrying all of those he would have 294 votes.
24 more than needed to win.

It said Ford leads comfortably in eight
states with 46 electoral votes and is narrowly
ahead in six others :\ ith :iti. a total of 84 votes.

New York. Pennsylvania and Ohio, with 93
electoral votes. ai e .iniong key states where
Carter's edge has eroded, while California,
Illinois and Texas are so close that neither
candidate can claim an edge, the Times
reported.

Time magazine said its September poll by
Yankelovich, Skelly 81 White. showed Ford
and Carter in a dead heat among 1,308
registered voters sampled, 43 percent unde-
cided.

Gallup, reporting on his organization's
September poll, said the 50-42 pro-Carter
finding, with eight per cent undecided, was
correct but may change when fuller returns
from the poll are available.

 

 

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Theta Chi

'llll'. lvl'IN'l‘l't'KY KERNI‘IL Monday. October 4. 1976—3

    
 
   
    
   

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Complete quality maps for ‘l.25 per
county. 6 or more $l each

Write to: MAPS Box 4416 Dept. 9
tex. Ky. 40504

  
       
   
   
      

ELECTION FORUM ’76

Thursday. October 7th 7: 00 p.m.
Student Center Ballroom

(Iome and hear and question
representatives of the various .
presidential candidates who Will be

on the November 2 Kentucky ballot.
sponsored by Student Government

A

ssertiveness

ing

Trai

 

Vo ational
Counseling

lnterper onal
Awareness

Short Term Groups for Students,

Faculty, and Staff.

Cll'nsellng and Testing Center, Top Floor Old
fin tildq. or call 2588701 or 2588702. initial

Little Sister Rush

wtnrviews will be held all day WED

NESDAY

 

 

Elections

Patsy Mink loses bid for Senate seat

HONOLULU (AP) — Rep.
Spark Matsunaga defeated
Rep. Patsy Mink in the
Democratic US. Senate pri-
mary, ending the chance for
Hawaii to send a woman to
the all-male chamber this
year.

Daniel Akaka, who could
become the first native Ha-
waiian elected to Congress,
won the Democratic nomina-
tion for Mink‘s seat and will
face advertising executive
Hank Inouye in the general
election.

Matsunaga polled 105,721
votes, or 51 per cent of the
total. to defeat Mink in Satur-
day‘s primary.

Matsunaga, 59, will be pit—
ted against former Republi-
can Gov. William F. Quinn,
57, in the race to succeed
retiring Republican Sen. Hi—
ram l.. Fong Quinn swamped
Spencer (‘abral by about 15-1
in the Republican primary.

Matsunaga, a member of
the famous allsJapanese 100th
Infantry Battalion of World
War it. helped engineer the
Denim-initi- sweep of the
islands in mm and end the
Republican dominance of the
then territory. He was elected
to the House in 1962.

' “W'” '1 t'It‘" "J """'lvl"'~"‘ "uniting. ilro. INlKV‘ at K‘ ninth l~ .wgr ., --.

“There are more Demo-
crats than Republicans in
Hawaii, and I'm counting on
that," said Matsunaga, pre-
dicting victory in Novem-
ber. Democrats had a 5—1
registration advantage going
into the primary.

“l risked everything for the
opportunity to serve in the
Senate," said Mink, 48, who
served six terms in the

House. She said shi intends to
remain active in politics and
some politicians have said
that she will run for governor
in 1978.

Mink had no comment on
her plans but said, “There’s
always another campaign.“

The only woman candidate
for Senate in November will
be Democrat Gloria Schaffer
of Connecticut.

Schmidt survives challenge

..BONN, West Germany
(MN—Chancellor Helmut
Schmidt, surviving a strong
conservative trend, was pro-
jected by national television
as the narrow winner of West
Germany’s parliamentary
election Sunday.

The Second German Tele
vision Network said its coin-
puter projection, based on
returns from a representative
sampling of 291 of the nation‘s
50,000 polling stations. gave
Schmidt‘s ruling coalition of
Social Democrats and liber-
als a 50.3-48.9 per cent lead
over Helmut Kohl‘s conser‘
votive Christian Democrats.

Radical parties of the left
and right and independents
would receive less than one

per cent of the vote.

The projection meant the
Smialist-l.iberal bloc would
have a slim 25140-245 major-
ity in parliament—a hefty
loss of 20 seats to the conser-
vative opposition.

Schmidt‘s Social Demo—
cratic party would lose 17
«cats and wind up with 213.
and his coalition partner.
Foreign Minister ilans‘
Dietrich Genschcr's Free
Democratic party, would lose
three and hold 38, according
to the projection.

Kohl had hoped that the
Sept iii Strollish election. in
which the Socialists were
ousted after a “year reign.
indicated a new conservatism
in Western Europe.

”in i. ii U l mwlvrl'vJ-tu-u-

wool, 'l-Irrry inu- y-Inr nut-at linllvlay. mil cum rDllOE". and twice wpriilv vioqu it". 'r‘VV‘IVVI-l .v-ui-m Yliini tan.
r -'-t Nepal» at leitnqlon krn‘ucliv. tom Subccrintlonrolei Ire‘maiied ll pm year in H in on v wvvmlm

Inbtuhid by the. Kernel Press, Inc. and lounded ln illl, lne Kernel began as the (mm In "is! lhc paper has been
published continuously in the Kentucky Kernel tlnco ms.

Advertising is intended only to not. lho reader Buy and any lotto or misleading advertising should be reporled and will
be investigated bylne editors. Advenluno loud to o. lolooor mloloodln. will be reported lo the letter Buslneu Bureou‘

Lollon ond amnion" should Io odGouod lo lno odlloridt no” odllor. til Journalism Building. They snould h lypod,
double mu- ond sifted. Cloooilleollm. on.“ number and oddron should Io included Lellon should not exceed 250
words and comments would be no lonpr llton no words Editor! reserve the rlgnt to edit tellers and com ments

  
  

_’ v, r i H1 ill!

\ Trillium?" 1'

/ ‘ [/7‘, liflli“

 

 

 

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v\\\C’/////,;> ~

ATTENTION
77,. CLUBS AND
ORGANIZATIONS

/ Advertising in tht Kernel is the
best way to assure participation
x in your programs

\\:);\C_... . ; ’1 Z

 

 

 

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.... 7
AZ

"Frat Man's Classic

Oct. 8 Once to
Jim Taylor's Disco Show

9 - l 50c/person
Rose Street Parking Structure

Oct. to Frat Mm’s Classic
12:30 Sliively Field 25c

EVERYBODY COME!
All proceeds to be donated

 

We’re Offering A SPECIAL

on Jostens Class Rings

GENERAL till ICATION

 

from Mon. Oct. 4 - Sat. Oct. 9

KENNEDY
BOOK STORE

 

to Lexington's Rape Crisis Center

 

  

PHARMACY

 

  

d—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. October 4. 1976

 

lassificds —

All clasltlectareanty cash in advmce, wiles credit has been slammed. No retails available ttr arty mellation.

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POOL TAILE, 7 x :I‘ a, level, telt good, all
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PIONEER AUTOMOBILE STEREO
equipment, new, cost plus 55. message tor
Barry 1584471. 2005

AKC REGISTERED COLLIE pups Sable
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1964 CHEVV BELAIR, Six cylinder,
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