xt7fbg2h9z3k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7fbg2h9z3k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-10-19 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 19, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 19, 1973 1973 1973-10-19 2020 true xt7fbg2h9z3k section xt7fbg2h9z3k The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 52
Friday, October 19, 1973

independent 1 student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

Squa

Oil fields may be closed to the U.$. if American support of Israel continues, say Arab leaders

Raging tank

battles may
be decisive

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ISRAELI AND Egyptian tanks fought
fiercely along the Suez Canal Thursday in
what has become the biggest and perhaps
most decisive tank battle in the 11-dayold
Middle East war.

The Egyptian military command said
the fighting was “the most ferocious of all
since the war began" and claimed its
forces have “encircled the enemy and
served an ultimatum on him to surrender
or face destruction.”

But the Tel Aviv military command said
its armored forces battling with support
from Israeli warplanes and artillery had

knocked out about 110 Egyptian
tanks and broken the Egyptian momen-

tum. Neither side has said how many tanks
are involved.

THE ISRAELI military command said
the Syrian front was relatively calm. It
claimed its commando task force
opera ting inside Egypt on the western side
of the canal for the last two days had been
reinforced with tanks and artillery and
was smashing at targets in the rear.

The Israelis said their Sinai ground fire
shot down two Soviet-built MIG warplanes
and two Egyptian helicopters. Cairo said

its defenses shot down 12 Israeli jets and
captured four Israeli pilots on the second
day of the crucial Sinai clash.

Egyptians said the toughest battles
centered around the Bitter Lakes near the
middle of the 103-mile~long canal that had
served as a cease-fire line since Israel
seized the Sinai Peninsula in 1967.

”IT LOOKS AS if it will come to a head
soon," said Maj. Gen. Haim Herzog,
former Israeli military intelligence chief
and now the state radio’s top com-
mentator.

The Israeli command claimed its forces
were still in positions about three to six
miles east of the canal but the Egyptians
did not pinpoint how far they have ad-
vanced since they stormed across the
waterway when the new war erupted Oct.
6.

The jagged battle lines around Egyptian
beachheads on the eastern bank have been
reported to range from two and a half
miles inside the Sinai Desert. Israeli
spokesmen told newsmen Thursday night
that their forces had the upper end in
fighting on both sides of the canal,

suggesting that. according to Israel,
Egypt‘s hold on the eastern bank had been
loosened in places.

l'.S. OFFICIALS SAID in Washington
that the United States and the Soviet Union
have progressed in their contacts aimed at
a settlement but have not yet agreed on a
public peace proposal.

Talk of their efforts was fueled by un-
confirmed reports in several world
capitals that Societ Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin was heading a Russian mission in
Cairo. The British foreign secretary, Sir
Alec Douglas-Home, said in London that
he believes Kosygin is in the Egyptian
capital on “a mission of peace."

Sen. Jacob K. Javits, D-N.Y., told
newsmen in New York that a cease-fire
would come “in a period of time numbered
in days rather than weeks or months. He
reported no specific developments to
substantiate his prediction.

THE PENTAGON claimed Israeli
fighter planes ran into Soviet-made MIG
jets piloted by North Koreans in a brief dog
fight south of Cairo.

 

News In Brlet

by THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

o Meany blasts Nixon

0 Whitney to testify

o Backing to continue

0 A.l.M. leader slain

' Woman hilacker killed
0 Pleads innocence

0 Today's weather...

0 MIAMI BEACH — AFLCIO President
George Meany said today the Nixon ad-
ministration “has lost the moral authority
to lead, either at home or abroad."

In a blistering attack on the President’s

domestic and foreign policies, Meany cited

the abuses of Watergate, the resignation of
the vice president and the indictment or
resignations of several top administration
officials.

“Never in history has a great nation

been governed so corruptly," he said in the
keynote address to the AFL-CIO's biennial
convention which opened today.
0 LOUISVILLE. Ky. — Cornelius
Vanderbilt Whitney, owner of Greentree
Farm in Lexington, has been called to
testify in Washington, DC, Friday before
the Watergate grand jury probing con-
tributions to President Nixon‘s 1972
campaign.

Whitney was listed as donating $250,000
in June, 1971, to the Nixon campaign on a
list of secret contributors made public as
the result of a suit filed by Common Cause.

. MIAMI BEACH — Secretary of
Defense James Schlesinger said US. arms
shipments to Israel “can be expanded to
whatever level is required" to preserve
the military balance in the Middle East.

Addressing an AFL-CIO convention.
Schlesinger said the immediate U.S. ob-
jective was to bring about a settlement of
the war. “But it should also be noted that
supply of consumables or equipment can
be expanded to whatever level is required
in order to prevent a serious imbalance in
the region," he said.

O PINE RIDGE. S.D. — Pedro
Bissonette. an American Indian
Movement leader in the seige of Wounded
Knee, was shot and killed Wednesday
night by police seeking him on a fugitive
warrant, authorities said today.

Stanley Lyman, superintendent of the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, said the
shooting occurred after two police officers
making a routine check of a car found
Bissonette inside.

0 MARSEILLE. France — A woman
identified as 35-yearold Daniel Cravanne,
wife of a prominent French public
relations executive, attempted to hijack an
Air Francy plane to Cairo and was fatally
shot by police trying to stop her.

0 WASHINGTON — Former White
House plumbers‘ boss Egil Krogh Jr. has
pleaded innocent to charges that he lied to
the Watergate grand jury. Krogh said he is
confident his trial will bear out his plea.

An indictment issued last week charged
that Krogh lied about the activities of
Watergate conspirators E. Howard Hunt
and G. Gordon Liddy, both later linked to
the Ellsberg break-in.

...rain, rain stays away

There's still no rain in sight as Lexington
can expect generally fair weather with a
slight warming trend through Saturday.
The expected high temperature for today
is in the upper 705, with a drop to the upper
40$ tonight. The high for Saturday will also
be in the upper 70$.

 

  

  
 
     
  
   

The Kentucky Kernel

113 Journalism Building, University ot Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506,

  

Established “94

Steve Swift, Editor in Chief
Jenny Swan. News Editor
Kaye Coyte, Nancy Daly.and

Bruce Winges, Copy Editors
Bruce Singleton, Photo Manager

Mike Clark, Managing Editor
Charles Wolte, Practicum Manager
Bill Straub, Sports Editor

Carol Cropper. Arts Editor

John Ellis, Advertising Manager"

The Kentucky Kerm‘l is mailed live times weekly during the school year except during
holidays and exarr periods, and twice weekly during the summer session.

Published by the Kernel Press Inc , 1272 Priscilla Lane, Lexington, Kentucky Begun as

the Cadet "'1 m: and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel since Wis. The

Kernel Press Inc founded I971. Firstciass postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. Ad;

vertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or misleading

advertising should be reported to the editors.

Editorials represent the opinion of the editors and not the University.
I

  

 

Some sense from Oslo

Finally, a sensible decision from Oslo, Norway, home of
the Nobel Committee.

Two members of the Committee resigned in protest over
the awarding of the Peace prize to Henry Kissinger and
North Vietnam‘s Le Duc Tho. At the same time, left-wing
socialists called for the resignation of the remainder of the
five~man group to clear the way for a complete
reorganization of the committee and a broad review of its
mandate.

Kissinger and Tho were awarded the prize jointly for
reaching a negotiated settlementwhich ended, officialy, the
Vietnam War.

The committee‘s selection raised a few eyebrows here in
the US. and evoked criticism from several quarters that
these men, who represented governments responsible for
thousands of war deaths, would be awarded a Peace prize.

It also seems ludicrous in view of the fact the fighting in
Southeast Asia isn’t over. Kissinger managed to extricate
U.S. ground troops and prisoners of war from the conflict,
but didn‘t keep American planes from bombing neighboring
Cambodia. Congress, not Kissinger, finally ended that
assualt.

The Nobel Committee said its award to Kissinger and Tho
was in keeping with Alfred Nobel’s philosophy that
negotiation was the best way to settle a conflict. It would be
interesting to see if Nobel, were he still alive, would have
agreed with the Committee’s selection.

It's entirely possible, when one considers that Nobel’s
claim to fame during his lifetime was the invention of
dynamite. The United States and North Vietnam used tons

 

Letters’

 

receptive ear in the new municipal
government should give her their support.

Supports Miller...

The people who live in the 4th council
district have the uniqug opportunity 0f Asst. Professor of English
voting for the finest candidate running for
$5]::ban-county government Pamela BaCks Joe Graves

She is an energetic, intelligent and At every level of government in
imaginative woman in tune with the needs America. politics, in everything but name,
of her constituents and the needs Cl is monarchical. And special interests sit
Lexington. Many students and faculty on the throne—or, more accurately, stand
members live in the 4th council district. behind it. It takes more in time and
Don't miss the chance that many Of US in resources than most of us have to get the
outlying districts wish we had. Vote for “king‘s" ear.

Pamela Miller on Tuesday, Nov. 6. On occasion, however, we get an op-
Katherine R. Lewis portunity to put a “lion before the throne"

First Year Law who is on our side. Such an opprotunity

arises on election day, Nov. 6. Joe Graves
is running for the State Senate in the 12th
district. As State Representative from the
79th district, he maintained continuous
contact with all his constituents. And he is
virtually the only political candidate I‘ve
metwho talks with, rather than at, people.

1‘. Walter Herbert. Jr.

...onother for Pam

I write to urge members of the
University community to vote for PAM
MILLER and to support her candidacy for

of his invention, or derivatives thereof, which could have :Sresgggigefounc” (4th dlsma pea/91:; th f l t t f
. . - l in e orma sruc ureso govern-
endAeafed hlmhto Te “7,0 'negotlatoi‘js. h' d k l d' , t . MS- Miller has an imaginative and ment, he is the closest representation we
5 ar as l e s1ver thing 31'0“" t ‘5 ar cou - 1 ‘5 sophisticated awareness of urban needs. are likely to get of participatory

fortunate the committee didn’t choose another individual
who had been nominated for the Peace Prize—Richard
Nixon, the man who authorized the bombing.

In addition she understands the concerns
of the University, so that members of this
academic community who wish to find a

democracy. Vote for Joe Graves.
L. Michael Lewis
1041 Fontaine Rd.

Reflections from a pale green cell in the Tombs

~~N
M

 

By MICHAEL DROSNIN

me new YORK TIMES news SERVICE

I am writing this in cell 5 on the
7th tier of D wing in the Tombs. My
cage is about 4 feet by 7 feet, painted
institutional pale green, and hot as
hell. The steel-barred door slides open
and shut with eerie regularity, con-
trolled by some unseen jailer.

Next door, in cell 6, is Abbie Hoff-
man. I am new at this; Abbie has
been locked up before, in places like
Chicago and Mississippi. We are both
in what they call “administrative seg—
regation," probably to keep us alive
and well until paraded before the
press again in court.

We were arrested three days ago,
charged with involvement in a drug
sale to police undercover agents. The
judge set bail at $200,000, for us the
equivalent of r. ) bail at all. That puts
us in the same bind as most of the
other inmates here, jailed without a
trial, guilty until proven innocent.

I can't write now about what hap-
pened on the outside. The lawyers say
it would be a mistake, there being a
difference between proof and truth,
between law and justice.

But I can write about what it’s like
on the inside, and while I wouldn't
want to live here, the education I‘m
getting is almost worth the pain of
the visit. There are some realities

revealed only by direct experience.
Prison is one of them.

There are two levels to that reality:
what you feel and what you see. The
former is of course the more intense.
Loss of freedom is an incredible shock.
The ease with which others can take
it away is frightening. The difficulty
in regaining it—a process seemingly
unrelated to guilt or innocence, at
least in the early stages—is truly
horrifying.

But the second level is perhaps the
more meaningful. What I am witness-
ing in the Tombs is teaching me more
about our society than it was possible
for me to learn from my privileged
position as a free white man.

You need not pass judgment on the
culpability of the inmates to recognize
instantly that something here is ter-
ribly wrong. Abbie and I are virtually

integrating the jail. Almost all the
other prisoners are black. The Tombs
is as much a ghetto as Harlem, and
there are thousands of respectable
people who make and administer our
laws who have made it so.

If the simple fact that there is a
building in this city to cage human
beings convicted of no crime does not
appall, consider the nature of that
building.

It is not a pleasant place. The
Tombs is antiquated and overcrowded.

__~

,fi“*‘
‘ w

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

L I

Douclas Florian

and the new drug laws will soon make
conditions infinitely worse. It is in-
fested with roaches and rats. Unlike
regular jails where people are sent
only after found guilty, this jail filled
with men not yet tried makes not even
a pretense at rehabilitation.

There is no yard, no fresh air, virtu-
ally no recreation, hardly even a place
to congregate. There are no windows,

save a few small vents which afford
no view to the outside. The inmates
here never see the sun. The noise is
loud and unceasing, day and night.
It is unbelievably hot.

The guards are not all mean; a few,
in fact, are friendly. Most are. merely
indifferent, feeling as trapped, as
bored, as isolated, as hot as the in-
mates.

One would expect men confined
in these circumstances to be brutalized
beyond reach. Some are. And yet one
of the few pleasant surprises of my
thus far brief stay has been how well
I—a stranger from another world—
have been treated by alleged and often
admitted felons. Far better, in fact.
than I was treated as a free man by
the average New Yorker.

Perhaps there is a need for jails.
But not like this one. Perhaps there
is in some cases a need for pretrial
detention. But not here. Because pun-
ishment before conviction is totally
inexcusable. And incarceration in the
Tombs is not only punishment, it is
cruel and unusual punishment.

 

Michael Drosnin is a former reporter
[or The Wall Street Journal and Wash-
ington Post. After Mr. Drosnin wrote
this article, hail was reduced to
$50,000, which he was able to meet.

  

 

 

 

a page of opinion from inside and outside the University community

 

Michael Mathias Pradm

 

M

P0993

Did this man deserve
the Nobel Peace Prize?

By PETER seam

Before we indulge ourselves in that historically recurrent
American pastime of self-congratulatory pats on the back,
this time for producing a Nobel Peace Prize winner in Henry
Kissinger, and certainly before we allow this occasion to add
to the already ubiquitous illusion of peace, a few con-
sideration should be raised.

The first is whether or not Henry Kissinger, repraenting
the Administration, pursued peace within the connotation
that the Nobel Prize carries. This proposition appears
dubious given the flow of events constituting the American
involvement and the growing domestic pressures which
culminated in a mandate for disengagement.

IN THIS CONTEXT, Kissinger can be viewed as the tail-
end of a long p‘ocess. One that began with a group of students
and eventually evolved into a massive anti-war movement
with sufficient pressure to force the Nixon Administration,
thus Kissinger, to abandon the long held goals in Vietnam
and to seek an honorable way out of the Vietnam quagmire.

The absurdity of the paradox was manifest by the increase
in destruction during the latter stages of the war, by the
United States, in an effort to achieve "peace”. The essence,
then, of the peace negotiations was to achieve a perceived
balance which would give the Americans that distinct Asian
concept of “saving face”, or as transfered into American
Rhetoric “Peace with Honor”.

There is, nonetheless, a moral distinction between seeking
peace for its inherent value and being pressured to
disengage. A distinction which was further obliterated by the
increased intensity of the war while pursuing peace.

THIS, HOWEVER, was lost on those who awarded
Kissinger, thus the Administration he represented, the Nobel
Peace Prize, and perhaps reflects the degree to which the
moral fibers of the international community have been
numbed, as well as our own, by this war.

The delicate negotiations which were required to extricate
us from Vietnam is indicative of Kissinger’s skillful han—
dling, and profound knowledge, of the art of international
diplomacy and should be recognized as such.

However, if one feels there should be a peace award, it
would seem that there were many others who dedicated their
minds and bodies to the ideal of peace by bringing pressure
on the Adminstration to stop its incessant devastation of
Vietnam, or who sacrificed their futures by refusing to be
used in the perpetration of the war. Their sacrifices have

‘ ultimately resulted in Kissinger’s award:

WERE THESE NOT the true aspirers of peace? Peace,
based on larger questions of a moral and ethical nature,
rather than on the pressure to disengage.

The second and most important consideration is the tragic
reality that there is no peace in Vietnam. The destruction has
been so pervasive so as to abrade, possibly for generations of
Vietnamese, the meaning of peace. The narrow and amoral
definition of peace, cessation of hostilities, has not been
realized. The deeper connotation of peace, state of
tranquility, appears to be equally unrealizable.

For those “benefactors“ of peace, possessing mutilated
bodies, grieved by the death of loved ones, and enduring
personal suffering beyond the capacity of Americans to
comprehend the concept of peace embraced by the ad-
ministration, Kissinger, and evideniiy the international
community, has no meaning. The increased suffering they
experienced during the course of peace negotiations does not
lend itself to their acceptance of that illusion.

FOR ALL PEOPLE who came to understand the war and
accept it as tragic, the illusion of peace holds no more
strength than it does for the victims of that peace.

Many American veterans who experienced the war
realized that peace was another of those concepts designed to
justify or redirect attention from American policies They
rejected one other such concept, “heroes", by discarding
their medals for heroism on the Capitol steps; likewise they
find the concept of peace equally absurd and consequently
reject it as effacement of the tragic reality and enhancement
of the delusion 0! peace.

For diose who have suffered the war, for those who have
experiencsdthewarmrforthosswhohsvscometom-
derstsnd the tragic moral, physical and cultural devaststhm
of Vietnam, the absurdity of a Nobd Peace Prize winner
emanating from this tragic episode in history is eviibnt.

Peter Berres is a political science senior and
Vietnam veteran.

  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
   

  

4—'I‘HE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. October I9. 1973

 

 

Unitarian
Universalist
Church
Sun., Oct. 21
10:30 a.m.
Topic:
“Poetry for the Family"

Speaker: Max Ellison

This coupon is worth

10% off

Rt. I Clays Mill Rd.

 

 

after our settled price on

 

 

 

UK Theatre
presents

THE DEATH
AND LIFE
OF SNEAKY FITCH
This week
Wed.-Sat.-8:30p.m.
Sun. . 7:30 pm.

GUIGNOL THEATRE
Box-Office now Open
noon - 4:1)
noon - curtain on performance

days

(turntable , receiver.

speakers) Friday and
Saturday only

STEREO
WAREHOUSE

30‘ South Limestone 252-4994

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L..._..______.._

Guignol Theatre Lobby
Fine Arts Building)

COUPON ____________

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
     
       
     
    
      
    
        
    
      
       
      

‘Igist‘zangomw

is a genuine masterpiece of staggering proportions.”

. ——Edward Behr, Newsweek
‘Igist‘lc’mgo itLWS

was presented for the first time October 14, 1972; that

date should become a landmark in movie history. A film

that has made the strongest impression on me in almost
twenty years of reviewing.” —Pauline Kael, New Yorker

‘Ifist‘lfivgoim’l’afis

is n_c_>_t a ‘dirty’ movie. The film is stark, sensitive and
completely shattering in its intensity. Yes, by all means,

I”

see ‘Last Tango .

‘Ifist‘lfiftgom‘i’afis

is not about sex and it is not about inhumanity. It is about the
things that a man lives by. There's just nothing to compare
with it in recent experience. It is very much worth seeing.”

—Judith Crisf, 'Today’ Show
"Iast‘lfingoim‘i’afis

is not prurient. Rather, it uses sex to study human pain,

failure, loneliness, despair and at moments even love.”
—Ethel Whitehorn, PTA Magazine

'Ifist‘lingom‘Pafis

is a rich, resonant film . . . a magnificent one.”
—Bruce Cook, The National Observer

   

—-Aaron Schindler, Family Circle

no out won
‘x "acumen

Exclusive! Ist Run.

llnrtnd Artists

Now Showing

  

     
   
 

.II IUCUO 800-1174

Study results in
visitation Ior Greeks

Sororities and fraternities may
now officially have up to 30 hours
of weekend visitation under
guidelines issued Wednesday by
the dean of students’ office.

In issuing the guidelines, the
office noted that each house has
the option of establishing less
than 30 hours or none at all and
that the rights and privacy of
each member residing in the
house should be considered in
making the decision.

ALL FRATERNITY and
sorority houses are required to
complete a form listing the week-
end hours they prefer visitation.
The nours must be approved by
the chapter alumni advisory
board, house corporation, the
chapter president, local chapter
and the national chapter.
Visitation will begin upon receipt
of the completed form in the dean
of students office.

Dean of Students Jack Hall said
some houses may vote to have the
visitation on special occasions
such as homecoming and special
ballgames while others may take
advantage of the entire 30 hours.

The time periods for visitation
are regulated. Visitation may be
held during the following hours:
4 pm. Friday to 1 am. Saturday;
1 pm. Saturday to 1 a.m. Sun-
day; and , 1 pm. Sunday to 10
pm. Sunday.

HALL SAID the regulations are
the result of a committee study
and were originally planned to
start at the beginning of the
current semester.

The visitation pertains mainly
to members of the opposite sex in
non-public areas of the houses.
The current policy on use of
public areas will remain in effect,
although the hours established
for the use of public areas should
be consistent with hours of
visitation.

“Guests of the opposite sex will
be escorted by their hosts at all
times they are in nonpublic
areas and are not permitted in
the non-public areas except
during the approved visitation
times," a statement from the
dean of students office said.

Tight fuel supplies

may cause rationing

By STAN BENJAMIN
Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON — Ad-
minstration officials say they are
discussing ideas for forced
energy conservation if necessary
to stave off the threat of allout
fuel rationing.

But they say mandatory
conservation is just in the talking
stage and there has been no move
to start drafting any standby
regulations.

Faced with the prospect of tight
fuel supplies this winter, the
administration launched on Oct. 9
a public appeal for voluntary
energy conservation, and im-
posed distribution controls at the
wholesale level on home heating
oil, diesel fuel, jet fuel and
propane gas.

\It hoped to get through the
winter with those limited actions,
but it may not be able to hold that
line.

The administration's campaign
stresses such measures as turn—
ing down the home thermostat
three or four degrees.

Charles J. DiBona, deputy
director of the White House
Energy Policy Office, said in an
interview that mandatory con-
servation—rather than requiring
individual actions by the public—
would seek to cut back energy—
consuming activities that can be
isolated and controlled.

Gasoline could be saved by
reducing highway speed limits.

The Interstate Commerce
Commission could alter the
traditional regualtions that force
many trucks to drive hundreds of
miles out of their way to touch
base in “gateway cities" before
going on to their real
destinations.

The Civil Aeronautics Board
could consolidate airline routes
and reduce the number of flights

which duplicate the service of
other airlines.

DiBona also suggested that the
operating hours of large com~
mercial establishments and
electric signs could be curtailed.
Homeowners and businesses with
outdoor gas lamps could be
required to shut them off.

The House passed Wednesday a
bill to require mandatory
wholesale allocation of all types
of petroleum products; the
Senate has passed a similar bill.
Enactment would extend the
present wholesale allocation
program to include the products
that affect every American—
gasoline and crude oil itself.

Energy Crisis
subject of
conference

The “energy crisis” and the
steps being taken to combat this
problem will be the subject of a
press conference for news media
editors and directors at 9 a.m.,
Oct. 19 at Carnahan House.

George Evans, president of
Beaver Creek Consolidation Coal
Division of National Mines.
Corporation and Dr. James E.
Funk, mechanical engineering
professor and director of the
Institute of Mining and Minerals
Research, will be the guest
speakers.

“The only thing the public
knows about the energy crisis is
what they read in the
newspapers." said Dr. 0.]. Han.
mechanical engineering
professor and host of the press
conference.

“In most cases the newspapers
leave the wrong impression, so it
is our duty along with that of the
press to give the public the
correct information," he said.

 

   

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. October 19. 1973—5

 
  

 

FELLOWSHIP CHURCH

Universalist Unitarian

320 Clay Ave.

 
   
   
  
  

  

Family Service
Sunday, Oct. 21 10:30 am.

 
 

Dr. Peter Lee Scott,
Minister

 
 

“OLD MISTER WORLD
AND THE HUE—MANS”
Gilbert Wilson

Slide show prepared for UNICEF

 
   
 

266-2449 278-6259

   
   

 

    

 

 

MANAGEMENT III PRESENTS:

LIVEllN CONCERT!

the

New threads

 

Gatekeeper Frank R. McCabe
displays the new uniforms recently
issued to traffic guards by the UK
Division of Safety and Security.

 
   
   
   

 

- a , -,

”1.5%..

(Kernel
Singleton.)

photos by Bruce W.

For a 'haunting' experience--

try Lexington's Haunted House

By MIKE CUNNINGHAM
Kernel Staff Writer

Do your city a favor. Spend ten
minutes in a Haunted House.

In order to raise money for an
addition to the Manchester
Community Center, the
Lexington Jaycees and radio
station WVLK are co-sponsoring
a Haunted House.

SPOTLIGHTS SHINE upon the
old weathered building and little
differentiates it from other
houses badly in need.of repair.

This Wednesday night a crowd
of 20 or so young persons have
congregated on the lawn. The
door opens. Half of the crowd
passes under the portal. The door
closes behind them.

The Haunted House, formerly

known as the Fiji fraternity
house, is located at 331 S.
Broadway.

THE JAYCEES. said president
Dave Williams, invested $3,000
and six weeks of work in
remodeling and decorating the
rooms.

Inside it‘s dark. Pulsing black
lights provide the only
illumination. The guide warns the
brave ten to be on the lookout for
vampires, zombies and other
things that go bump in the night.

Williams says he hopes the
project will return a profit of
about $5,000. Last year a week-
long Haunted House raised
$1,000.

THE HAUNTED HOUSE. he
adds, is just part of the Jaycees‘
total plan to raise $45,000 for a
completely new Manchester
Center.

The troop is led through a score
of makeshift rooms. Screamsfill
the air as the back of the pack is
repeatedly attacked by demons.

Properly unkempt fiends
spring from darkened, moss-
filled corners. Care must be
taken to assure that some
groveling spector does not pull
your feet outfrom under you. One
sorry lass is swept away to a mad
doctor's laboratory.

FAVORITE SCENES from
motion pictures are recreated.
those of a mummy leaving his
sarcophagus and Frankenstein
attempting to break the ropes
that anchor him to the wall.

Monsters from outer space and

inner space are present to chill
children’s blood.

The raising of a one hundred
year old corpse is the highlight of
the tour.

THEIR JOURNEYthrough the
maze of attractions completed,
the intrepid voyageurs disperse
to rest sore ears and vocal
chords.

The Haunted House runs
through October, 7-11 pm. on
Fridays and Saturdays, 7-10 pm.
on other days. Admission is one
dollar.

Committee approves
Alaskan pipeline bill

By w. DALE NELSON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON House-
Senate conferees reached
agreement Thursday on
legislation approving con-
struction of a 789-mile oilpipeline
across Alaska from the North
Slope to the southern coast.
Rep. John Melcher, D-Mont.,
chairman of the conference
committee, said the bill probably
will reach the House floor for a
final vote in about two weeks. The
House and Senate must approve
or disapprove it as written. It

cannot be amended.
IN LAST-MINUTE ACTION.

the conferees approved a plan
making each oil company using
the pipeline liable for $14 million
in damages from marine oil
spills. The firms will pay one to
five cents per barrel into a pool
for additional liability up to $100
million.

An earlier proposal for the
government to insure the liability

pool until the fund reached $100
million was scrapped.

In another final vote, the
conferees approved an amend-
ment requiring the Federal
Trade Commission to consult
with the Justice Department
before bringing any court action.
If the department does not act
within 10 days, the commission
will be free to take legal action on
its own. Under present law, the
commission must rely on the
department to initiate court
achon.

THE PIPELINE is designed to
carry North Slope crude oil to the
port city of Valdez on the Gulf of
Alaska. It will be shipped by
tanker to West Coast ports from
Valdez.

The North Slope field contains
an estimated minimum of 10
billion barrels of oil. The pipeline
will carry two million barrels a
day. The United States is ex-
pected to consume 22 million
barrels, of oil daily by 1980.

  

       
   
    

November 1 at 8 PM

Freedom Hall-Louisville, Ky.
$4, $5, $6
Tickets: P.O. Box 21179; Ky.
Fair 8. Expo Center; Louisville,
Kentucky 40221

 
        
      
 
   
   
        
   
  
  
  
 
 
    
  
 
 
  
    
 
   
    
    
  
  
   
  
  
 
          
       

Preston Webber

Appearing Monday thru Saturday in
liteMMatador Lounge 9:00 P.M. till 1:00

RA...DA‘

ROADS”)! HOTELS

        
     
   
 
 
 
 
   
 
  
 
 
 
  
      
      
  

9 Welcome home
332 New Circle Road

 
 
   
      
   
  

 fi—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. October 19. 1978

 

 

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