xt7g1j979g6n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7g1j979g6n/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-10-30 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 30, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 30, 1975 1975 1975-10-30 2020 true xt7g1j979g6n section xt7g1j979g6n   

Vol. LXVII No 63
Thursday, October 30 1975

KENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper}—

 

l ‘1‘ *L
2 University of Kentucky

~ at

Lexington Ky. 40506

\l

Athletic Association apparently
gulation

in violat

By MONTY .\'. FOLEY
Kernel Staff Writer
tllltl
W.\l.’l‘i{R lilXStiN
Assistant Managing Editor

Capyriqht, The Kentucky Kernel, l975

The t'niversity of Kentucky Athletic
Association apparently has violated a
National Collegiate Athletic Association
tNCAAi regulation by providing off-
campus entertainment for a prospective
UK football recruit.

During an official campus visit on Oct.
11. Tom Jordan. a Fort Walton Beach.
Fla. high school football star. was
escorted to Keeneland race track by a UK
athletic department representative.

Transporting prospective recruits to
offcampus entertainment is prohibited by
an NCAA rule. according to 'an NCAA
official. “The rule is so clear that most
schools adhere to it." said NCAA attorney
.l. Brent Clark in a telephone interview
l iiesiiay.

Article one. section live. paragraph lei
of the 1974-75 NCAA manual states: “An
institution, or representative of its athletic
interests. may provide entertainment for a
prospective student~athlete. his parents
for legal guardianSi at the institution's
campus only. Transporting a prospective
student-athlete to any other site for any
purpose is not permissible.

Ion of NCAA re

Clark said the rule had not been changed
for the 1975-76 year.

Jordan. a senior tight end for the
(‘hoctawachee High School football team.
attended the Keeneland races prior to the
t'KAuburn football game. Sheila Leigh. a
Kentucky Kittens member. said she
escorted Jordan to Keeneland.

The Kittens. a promotional group for the
athletic department. assist prospective
recruits during campus tours. sit with
them at football games and show
them around campus. according to Dan
Lea]. an assistant football coach. who
supervises the Kittens.

According to Leigh. Leal “took us
(Jordan and Leigh) out there (Keene-
land). It was before the Auburn game.“

Informed of Leigh‘s statement. Leal
said: “I won‘t say anything about that."

Leigh said Kittens often accompany
prospective recruits to home football
games and parties. Acknowledging that
she went to Keeneland with Jordan. Leigl
said: “We weren‘t supposed to be off
campus."

Jordan. an all—regional performer as 2
junior. confirmed that he attended Keene
land races with Leigh when contactec
Wednesday night at his home,

UK Head Coach Fran Curci. declined to
comment about the incident. President
()tis A. Singletary and Atletic Director
Clifford t). Hagan were unavailable for
comment Wednesday night,

 

'l‘om Jordan and Sheila Leigh at Keeneland Oct. ll.

 

Article 1, section

(Revised: 8--.172 8|— 73)

 

1974- 75 NCAA Manual

(e) An institution or representatives of its athletic interests may provide entertainment for a prospective
student- -athlete his parents (or legal guardians) at the institution‘ 5 campus only Transporting a prospective
student athlete at any other site for any purpose is not permissibile. Further it is not permissisble to entertain
other relatives or friends of a prospective student athlete at any site. A prospective student- atlete visiting a
member institution“ 5 campus shall live and take his meals as regular students normally do. If campus
facilities are not available, local commercial facilities may be used but at a scale compareable to that of
nirmal student life. His entertainment shall take place on campus however. if on- campus entertainment is
nd available and it is necessary to entertain a prospective student- -athlete off-campus. a student host may he
provided with a maximum for $10 for each day of the visit to cover the cost of actual and necessary
enertainment expenses. No member institution may arrange for or permit excessive entertainment of any
pmspectivc student athlete on the campus or elsewhere The institution (or representatives of its athletic
interests) shall not provide cash to the prospect for entertainment purposes and shall not provide an
amomohilt for the use of the prospect or a student host

5, paragraph (e):

 

FRANKFURT t.\l’) lfp to :30 new
housing units for low income persons
will be built in the l’ralltown area of
Lexington undera program financed by
the Kentucky Housing (‘orp iKllCi.

The plan calls for the corporation to
loan money to a private firm to build
units. which will be apartments or
townhouses. I

Kllt' would finance construction with
bonds and would retain the mortgages.
(‘onsti‘uction of .30 units has been
estimated at fit llllllltlll. More units
could be built later '

 

Pralltown gets federal aid

,\ second part of the plan involves
subsidization by the l'S. Department
for Housing and t‘rban Development of
’l‘cnants' rental payments after the
units are built. 'l‘cnants would pay 15 to
25 per cent of their income for rent and
thc federal government would pay the
l't'Sl.

l’ralltown is on area adjacent to the
l'iiivcrsity of Kentucky. and the land
involved in the program is owned by the
l'iiiversity of Kentucky and the
Lexington l'rban Renewal Agency

 

 

Grad school
candidate
may be
disqualified

Ry DAVID BROWN
Kernel Staff Writer

(me of the two candidates elected to
represent the (iraduate School in a special
Student Government iSGi election held
two weeks ago, will probably be
disqualified today.

Rob Mallow. speech graduate student.
w on the second SG graduate seat. but may
now be disqualified because he is a part
time student. said .lim llarralson. St}
president.

llarralson said he was asking the special
committee that was csta blished to conduct
the election for a ruling on the matter.

The election was conducted under the
same miles as the regular election held for

l‘iiivcrsitv Senate tl'SI members last

spring line of the rules for eligibility was

that candidates be full time students.
llarralson said.

The time limit for challenges to the
election. however, has passed.

The question is can Mallow be
disqualified. even though his ineligibility
was not discovered until after the time for
challenges has passed. llarralson said.

’l‘m‘hnically. Mallow is not ineligible to
serve on the Student Senate (SS). he said.
The SC constitution does not require SS
members to be full time students.
llai‘ralson said.

”The cleclioii was purely for our pur»
llarralson said. “but naturally we
want the representatives to serve on the
l'S "

l'liich spring. rcpi‘cm‘ntativcs are elected
to the IS 't‘hc SG constitution states that
these representatives are automatically

poses. ”

SS ttlt'ttlltt‘l‘s

The University governing regulations
stipulate how elections for US represen-
tatives will be conducted. The regulations.
however. make no provision for special
elections.

If a vacancy occurs. the “administrative
head of the group represented shall
declare a vacancy and designate that
member from the eligible student body
who at the last regular election received
the next highest vote..." states section
2.22c of the regulations.

Records of the regular election wort
lost. however. and no record oi v lie:
received votes from the grad scbou:
llarralson said.

He said the election was coiiziiictcz' .
the sonic rules as the election lilSl 53.: .2»
so that S(} could then say to the (lean ,

(‘oIitiIIui-d on l" .-

  

 

 

 

‘7

 
 

editorials

Letters and Spectrum articles should he messed to the Editaial Page Editor,
Roan "4 Journalism Building. They shoutdbe typed, Mespaced aid sigted.
Letters should not exceed 250 words and Spectrum article 7!) words.

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Jack Koeneman
Associate Editor

 

 

 

articles 750 words.)

(Editor’s note: Because of the number of letters and commentaries received by
the Kernel, there is no editorial today. In cases where a number of letters and
mmmentaries are received about one or several subiects, more space will be
tbvoted to readers’ views. All letters and Spectrum articles should be typed,
ibuble-spaced and signed. Letters cannot exceed 250 words and Spectrum

 

 

'New heights’

Editor:

While the Kernel is always a ioy to
read, your recent issues have achieved
new heights, with one hilarious lam-
poon following on the heels of another.
First we read ”reports" of the deliberr
ations of ”Student Government (59), a
putative governing agency, caught in
the throes of agonizing decisions
shouldthe homosexuals be recognized,
or should they not? What a wonderful
evocation of the past! What a scintil
lating recreation of yesteryear! The
synthetic imagination of your writers is
astonishing.

In addition to these bits of ”report
age,” we also find terrific spoofs
written in a variety of editorial styles.
Charles Turner, for example, gives us a
merciless Garner Ted Armstrong imi
tation, replete with biblical quotes, dire
warnings of potential corruption of the
youth and other such bombast. Rarely
has such a rapier wit been turned
loose on the vestigal remains of
fundamentalist primitivism. With sa»
tarists of Turner’s skill adorning your
pages, surely no sacred cows are safe!

And, as it these hi jinx weren’t
enough, we also find a ”news item”
describing life threatening telephone
calls made to some fool who’s running
for homecoming queen. Now here the
comic skills of your parodists truly
exceed the limits we expect in a mere
college rag this is the stuff of Punch!

 

 

Who but perhaps Woody Allen could
conceive of something so utterly ludiv
crous as the notion that there remains a
living soul who could give a shit about
the homecoming queen? And this caller
you've dreamed up gives enough of a
shit to spend the rest of his life in the
slammer! And what of the candidate?
If the caller is a Woody Allen fantasy,
the candidate must be due to Mel
Brooks. ”Here I stand! I’ll be
homecoming queen, or perish.” Now
there’s an issue on which to take a
stand! Some years ago, the University
of Arizona elected a cow.

In Summary, you are all too funny.
Reading the Kernel is like entering a
time warp, so let me say, and i know I
speak for many of your readers, let me
say, thank you for this wonderful ride
on your literary Wat Back Machine.

James C. Norton
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry

'Smoke screen'

Editor'

Student Government President
Harralson is once again throwing up a
smoke screen. In Oct. 23 edition of the
Kentucky Kernel, Harralson is quoted
assaying: ”I don’t want tokill Free U."
But Ha rralson knows, as we all do, that
without funding Free U is almost
certainly to (-nllanse

Harralson said, ’it should be able to
fund itself. Certainly Harralson knows
that funding independent organizations

(.etters

 

is not like funding 56 where activity
money flows in freely.

l assert that if Harralson is what he
says he isthen he would be helping Free
U find ways to become self-supporting.
And two, that if he truly does not want
to ”kill” Free U, then he will not ride
rough-shod over our senate whom have
shown their support.

Charles Davis
Accounting sophomore

Clearing

Editor:

I feel that there are a few points that
need clearing up, so I have written this
letter, even though l’m sure that it will
be enthusiastically greeted with a flood

.of rebuttals.

The first issue is the Kirwan Tower
poll. Although I do not live in the tower,
l have many friends that do, and l have
talked to many of the other residents.
The insinuations that the poll was run
unfairly were completely irrelevant.
because the tower residents, as a
whole, are so completely against the
Gay Students’ Coalition (GSC) that the
results would have been the same no
matter what the procedure.

My second point is that don’t you
(GSC) think that your propaganda
campaign has been carried far enough?
It seems to me that you are trying to
force yourself onto a campus where you
are not wanted, and yet you advocate
that it is unfair to force anything on
anyone. What a contradiction!

My final point is that since my
original letter, I have been referred to
(either specifically or generally) by

gay supporters as sheltered.
prejudiced, closed-minded, ignorant,
aristocratic and rednecked. I ask your
readers to compare my letter to some
of the rebu ttals, and see who they feel
has a more open mind.

- Mark Anderson
A85 sophomore

Response

Editor:

I feel that I must respond to Jon
Murgino’s Spectrum article of Oct.2
(Kernel, ”Naivete fills bus defense). In
that article Mr. Murgino accouses Mr.
Leverenz of “naivete and incredible
simplemindedness” in connection with
Mr. Leverenz’s Sept. 22 article
(Kernel ”A defense of the UK bus
cutback”). It should have been obvious
that the ”defense“ was farcical; I, too.
questioned some of Mr. Leverenz’s
reason ing— until about midway through
the article. At that point, I realized the
true nature of Mr. Leverenz’s prose.

My compliments to Mr. Leverenz for
a fine piece of writing, which, in reality,
pointed out ”the utter absurdity” of the
bus cutbacks rather than the absurdity
of complaints from Shawneetown
residents. May 1 suggest that in the
future, Mr. Murgino, that you read
Spectrum articles with a bit more
objectivity? Apparently your my
dignation over the cutback of a very
useful service prevented you from
appreciating a witty and well written
article. Mr. Leverenz is on your side.

Russ Croley
Third-year law student

 

 

TV suc

Most thinking people hate TV or at
least profess to and for good reason; the
true flavor of mish mash America is lost in
the Great Leveler of television. It sucks
the life outof the American experience like
a cancer sucks life from the patient.
Ethnic minorities and wierd subcultures
are either ignored or, worse, ”cutenedrup”
beyond all recognition. What a sorry state
of affairs!

 

 

Well, a writer is all powerful. He is free
to crea te his own world, and inhabit it with
people and events of his own choosing.
Swell. to that spirit, I offer up for your
consideration these possible TV shows,
more representative, I think, of the vast
strangeness of Life in America —shows
I've never seen but would sure like to.

For starters ——and this hits close to home
A—l’d like in see a show called ”The
Drinking Game,” in which two lucky

ks the life out of America

contestants Will be required to polish off a
quart of l51 Rum apiece during the first
few minutes of the program. Then, when
the booze has taken effect, one of the
drunks will stagger off the stage and the
remaining one will try to guess which one
of them left. If he guesses right, he and his
partner will split $50,000, a case of Chivas
Regal, and a gift certificate for a liver
transplant.

In that same spirit, l’d enioy a show
called ”The Hangover Game.“ Again, two
contestants , possibly the same two who
appeared on ”The Drinking Game” ~ -will
compete, ideally on an early Sunday
morning as an alternative to the mental
novocaine of the religi0us shows. The
participants will be required to moan.
shriek in agmy, flinch at rememberances
of wierd and possibly dangerous things
they did the night before, wonder where
the hell they are, retch violently, drink
gallons of water and, finally, shave their
tongues onstage. This will be an audience-
participation game: an "Audience
Sympathy Meter” will be used at the end
of the game to determine the winner, who
will get a beer, a lifetime supply of Alka-
Seltzer, and a gift certificate for a head
transplant.

How abait"The Hippie Game?” Whata
possibility! Potential contestants will be

carefully screened. Only those truly
burned out, inarticulate souls whose
vocabularies are limited to "like,”

”,’wow ”Youknow,man,” and "Whatbag
is your head comin’from?”wi|l be allowed
to participate. Contestants will all dress
alike, talk alike, and think alike. They
must be 'stoned on mariiuana (pot, grass,
boo, tea, joy sticks, Mary Jane, reefer).
They must have no ideological or
philosophical basis for anything they do.
The obiectof the game is to be ”Groovy.”
At the end d one hour playing unbearably
loud music, staring slack-iawed at each
other, smoking dope and (maybe!) nod-
ding out, a panel of impartial acidheads
will award one lucky hippie the "King
Groover Award" ~which will consist of a
Hippie Lifestyle Packet containing a
scum crusted apartment, a dog, two cats
(all a nimals guaranteed not housebroken),
apair of Earth Shoes, a waterbed, a pound
of really good stuff, a hippie vocabulary

guide (a fourpage pamphlet), and a
lifetime subscription to Zap Comix. Losers
will receive two Hippie Lifestyle
Packets...

I can feel the crank in me rising —once
ya; get out onto this sort of tast‘track
thinking the ideas come too swiftly to
transcribe. Some thing for everyone, that’s
the ticket. The blacks? How about ”Kung

Fu Jones,” a guaranteed winner ab0ut a
Kung Fu master in Harlem who pimps and
sells cocaine on the side you know, a
spokesman for his race. With George
F oreman playing the lead. Or "A Finger in
the Dike A Bull in the China Shop,” a
women’s lib oriented show about a shy,‘
selfeftacing store clerk who emerges
after dark as an avenging lesbian angel
who swoops down upon despicable male
chauvinist types and castrates them, or
worse. And for those of you with kinkier
tastes, l’d offer up a sex-cum
superviolence epic called ”Chainsaw
Stewardesses.” (If successful, this show
could have its spinoffs: ”Chainsaw Nur-
ses,” say, or ”Chainsaw Cheerleaders.”
The Chainsaws and the girls would be the
same in every show “only the uniforms
would change.)

Indeed, indeed. I see itall so clearly. TV
could be the saviour of us all. If only those
nervous drones who run the networks
would get off the dime. What a helluva
culture we could have...

 

Scott Payton graduated from UK in W73.
He is a former contributor to Rolling Stone
magaline and is now working as a tree
lance boxing promoter in Frankfort. His
column, “Ten Years On," appears weekly
in the Kernel.

 

phleghqp-i . - .~ 7.

 

 

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Grad school candidate
may be disqualified

 

(‘ontinued from page 1

colleges with vacancws on the
LS. that every effort had been
made to tairly elect new
representatives.

“We have to rely on the deans‘
good nature."and trust that they
will suggest the newly elected
representatives for the vacant
seats, Harralson said.

The special election committee
will be asked to rule whether
Matlow‘s election should be
allowed to stand, Harralson said.

Dennis George, business and
economics senator and chair-
man of the special election
committee, said he felt the
committee would probably
disqualify Matlow, but he had not
discussed the matter with other
members of the committee.

George said he was going to try
to arrange a meeting to discuss
the situation today.

If he is disqualified, Matlow
said he would challenge the
committee‘s decision.

“I understand that grad
students who take six hours and
are grad assistants, are con-
sidered full—time students,“
MatIow said.

YOU

ARE INVITED TOATTEND
A

HALLOWEEN -

BLAST
by
Pi Kappa Phi

FR I DAY, OCT. 31
$I.00

 

390 EAST MAIN STREET
LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY 40507
PHONE 253 - 2003

Posters
Bulletins

Announcements

"The problem with $6 is that it
has not allowed adequate
representation heca use of the full
and part time qualification,“ he
said.

"This failure leaves an imv
portant segment of the Graduate
School unrepresented.“ Matlow
said.

Matlow was a writevin can-
didate in the election.

If Matlow challenges the
election, the SG constitution
states that the University
Judicial Board will rule on the
issue.

The next highest vote getter in
the special election was Jim
Libby. a history graduate
student.

Libby, however, is teaching full
time at Eastern State University.
He is enrolled in History 769, as
a doctoral student working on his
theses. lie would not be able to
adequately represent the grad
school. he said.

Brad Austin, geology graduate
student. was the next highest vote
getter in the election.

“I would be pleased.“ to
represent the grad school, said
Austin who is a grad assistant
and Ls taking nine hours.

PRECONCERT

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PHONE 254' I?“

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Serving The UK Community

 

DECEMBER GRADUATES
PEACE CORPS And VISTA

Have a ssignments overseas and U.S. for singles-couples with

no dependents.
sportation provided.
perience in: Agriculture;
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Living allowance, medical benefits, tran-
For students with degrees and ex-
Architecture; Business Ad-
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Health; Law;

Apply Now
For Programs
Beginning ln
January-March, 1976
October 28-31, 1975 - Student Center Lobby
October 28-31, 1975 - Lobby of Ag. Library
October 29,1975 - Placement Office
October 30-31, 1975 - Law School

Hours forall locations: 9:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.

 

'IHE KENTL'('KY KERNEL. Thursday. October 30. 1975—3

 

 

Don’t just sit there,

write a _
Letter to the Editor

 

 

 

 

_ 7

   

“Rudy" to wear in the rain. dear. Or in the snow
when you're on the go...in the slush when you
have to rush...in the sleet it's great for covering
‘ your feet... $22

brown

 
    
   

v'o

 

.h‘f‘p. . 75*
0t- ‘2.“ a G J‘TZN ..
Hours 6 ' h ‘
IO to6 pm 3371 Tates Creek Pike 269-342I In the Lansdowne Shoppes

 

 

 

A

Redeem Your
Saucers Now!

   
 

  
   

ON THURSDAY,

SEPTEMBER 25, 1975, THE

POINT AFTER HELD ITS FIRST
ANNUAL PEP RALLY... FLYING

CAT SAUCERS WORTH A 10%
DISCOUNT WERE GIVEN AWAY!

NOW IS THE TIME TO
REDEEM THEM FOR
DISCOUNTS!

 
     
    
    
   
 
 

THESE SAUCERS
WILL BE GIVEN
AWAY AGAIN AT
TONIGHTS PEP
RALLY!

THE POINT AFTER

IS
THE EXTRA STORE!

BEAT TULANE!

 

74c POINT AFTE

3367 Tates Creek Road

Lansdowne Shopping Center
Phone 269-6222

 

$3

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«Ir—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. October 30. I975

SPECIAL OPPORTUNITY FOR
STUDENTS WITH STRONG
CONCERN FOR PUBLIC
ISSUES

A specialized and highly selective
Internship program for Spring
Semester 1976 - is Available for
Students from all majors.

 

‘——The program will involve:
—An internship in a local agency or institution
related to your academic program.

—A one-week study-research trip to Washington,
D. C.

—An interdisciplinary seminar exploring crucial
issues in depth.

—Fult academic credit

 

 

 

Interested students should contact:

O FFICE FOR EXPERIENTIALEDUCATIO
Rm. 303 Administration Bldg. - 257-3632

APPLY NOW

 

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tor mtormatim: Ken Mirpny, concert coordinator 7.557954“! 27am

resented by
CAMPUS ACTION 8. WJNWl

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1‘ news briefs

Few persons observe

national women's strike

.\l’ Women were on the job as usual in most areas of the
country on \‘l’ednesday. apparently unaware of. uninterested in or
economically unable to support a feminist drive for a nationwide
strike.

Rallies. speeches and demonstrations drew more attention than
calls for a job action to show the importance of working women.
whomakeupmore thanone- thirdof'the l' S. labor force

'lhe. \atIonal Organization for Women tNtht dubbed the strike
‘Alice Doesn t. after the movie Alice Doesn t Live Here Any
More.” which deals with the issue of female liberation.

Some women said the event was poorly planned and publicized,
Uthers said they just didn't care. Still others said they couldn‘t
afford to stay home or were prohibited by their contracts from
striking.

Sandra l’hillips. president of'the Boston chapter of' NOW. said the
group really did not expect women to walk off the job “because we
are acutely aware of the increased employment difficulties women
as a group are facing in this time of economic depression. "

l)ee Rutledge of Nth’snational strike coordinating center in San
Jose. (‘alif'. said it was too early to tell what the response to the
strike call was She added. however, she felt the action was a
success because of rallies, demonstrations and discussions of
women ‘s rights.

”We consider the strike a resounding success because we are
trying to raise the consciousness of women." she said. “We f'eel we
will have succeeded in doing that even if noonegoes on strike.“

Hearst's lover charged
with April bank robbery

S.\(‘lt \.\ll£\"l‘tl. (‘alif. t.\l’) Steven Soliah. an underground
companion of Patricia Hearst. was indicted Wednesday on a
charge of robbing a bank in which a woman customer was killed.
('harges that he harbored Miss Hearst were dropped.

The 37»_\'earrold housepainter. who shared the house where Miss
Hearst was found and was reported to have been her lover. ap-
peared In a San Francisco federal court less than two hours alter a
grand Jury here accused him of taking part in an April 21 holdup of
a (‘rocker National Bank Branch.

The robbery netted tour ski-masked robbers Si5.tltltt and left a 42~
yearold mother of tour shotgunned to death.

Soliah sat silently at the defense table as Asst ITS. Atty, David
Bancroft asked I' S District (‘ourt Judge William H. ()I'rick Jr, to
dismiss the harboring charge. Bancroft noted that the bank rob
bery charge was far more grave. carryinga minimum penalty of It)
years in prison and a maximum penalty of death,

(trr‘ick approved the request and Soliah. the first figure in the
complex Hearst case to be charged with a crime involving murder.
was expected to be transferred here immediately.

Miss Hearst. who lived with Soliah and professed her affection
for him after their capture. was not named in the indictment
returned here. although she has been identified as having rented a
garage for a car used in the getaway.

But I' S Atty. [)w'ayne Keyes held out the possibility that ad-
ditional charges might be filed by local prosecutors.

Key es said theS Sacramento ( ounty distri(t attorney s offic e still
Is IrIu-stigating the c ase and hopes todecide within 30 days whether
It wIll bring additional charges.

Ford will refuse aid for NY

\\‘.V\Slll.\’(;’rt).\' (AP) President Ford asked (‘ongress on
Wednesday to approve legislation to ensure police and fire
protection a nd other essential services if New York (Tity defaults on
its debts.

But Ford announced for the first time he will veto any bail-out
legislation that provides federal debt guarantees or other financial
help for the nation‘s largest city.

“Why...should all the working people of this country be forced to
rescue those who bankrolled New York (‘ity‘s policies for so long ~
the large investors and big banks?“ Ford said.

In a speech to the National Press (Tlub, Ford proposed amending
federalbankruptcy laws to prevent New York (‘ity's creditors from
tying up the city ‘s finances in lawsuits if the city defaults.

He said that would make it possible for the city to use what is left
of its revenues. including federal revenue-sharing or special
borrowing. to provide police and fire protection and other services.

New York Mayor Abraham 1). Beame called Ford‘s proposal
“nothing less than a declaration of default by the White House a
default of presidential leadership.“

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$400 collected already
Horne starts booster program

to help support baseball team

By MARK l,ll"l‘.\K
Kernel Staff Writer

(‘oach 'l‘uffy Horne has started
a movement to bring more
support to the I'K baseball team.
It's called the “Wildcat
Boosters.” a cliih where lor $2.
the donator gets a membership
card, two bumper stickers which
say "I'm a Wildcat Baseball
Booster” and the opportunity to
become actively involved in one
of I'K‘s minor sports.

“The reason I did this was to
get a lot of people behind the
team." Horne said. “I think that
our team this year has the
capability to become
Southeastern (‘onl'erence tSE(‘t
champions and it would help
tremendously for us to have as

many people behind tl.em when
they play at Sliively Sports
t'enter

“A lot of people have t esponded
with donations of more than $2
and l was criticized for having
the ante at that low price. But I
wanted the ordinary baseball
lans and students to be able to get
involved with the program.”
Home said.

So la r. the boosters have raised
about $400 and the membership
now totals around 80. according
to Home.

"With this money we intend to
get things we may need." he said.
"For example. we always wanted
a movie camera outfit to film the
team while on the field or in
practice in order to review their
mistakes. Now we may be able to
get one,"

Horne also talked about the
1976 schedule. “ think it's a very
competitive one," he said. “We
play 3t) games 34 ol which are in
the Sl‘lt' Uutside the conference
we play such line teams as
(ieorgia Southern, Louisville, and
Indiana. I think we will have our
work cut out lor us. But with the
team we have and the fact that
through this baseball booster
program we can have a greater
attendance. 1 leel we will do
better tha n last year and possibly
play well enough to win the
conference . "

A newsletter is going out to the
club members soon. It will
contain details about the first
meeting. and will also have in
lormation about the team and
progress of the booster program.

Tolston moves one finger,
solves his passing problems

LEXINGTON t .\l') With just
the twitch ol a linger. I'K fresh~
man quarterback Bill 'l‘olston
thinks he's solved his lootball
passing problems

'l'olston. who moved into a
starting role last weekend. has
thrown only lour passes this
season. (me was incomplete and
the other three were intercepted.

When he had the option to pass.
“I Just didn't leel right about
throwing sol ran with it instead."
'l'olston said, “My arm used to
hurt when I threw because when I
lost control. I‘d throw harder."

'l'lien coach l’ran (‘urci took a
closer look this week in practice
at the way 'l‘olston was holding
the ball. the quarterback said.

(‘urcL who set school passing
records during his playing days
at Miami. “spotted what was

w rong.” 'l'olston said. "I was
holding my index lingei‘ too high
on the ball...l was

overex aggera ling,

Ill Eat the U.S.

—over 40 Million Americans—

has chronic
respiratory disease

‘Ifl

USE
CHRISTMAS
SEALS

SAVE LIVES

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l
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l
I
l
I
I
I
l
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"lie just had me move the
linger down some and now the
ball has been iust where I want II.
l can guide it better and by not
throwing so hard. my arm
doesn't ache anymore. either."
he said.

'l‘olston. who starred in tour
sports during high school in
(‘hica go. admits he was nervous
before his lirst starting assign
ment last week against (ieorgia,

"I had the jitters before the
game in the hotel room. but I got
to thinking that all I hadto do was
get the ball and operate lrom
theie

“I iust concentrated on that
and I really tell good once I got
the hall in my hands.” he said
“This week against 'l‘ulanc in the
homecoming game. I'll tee] a
little bit more comlortable."

’l‘olston. whose hobbies include
“messing around with radios and
things like that." came to Ken-
tucky with tiust one thing on his

  

mind lootball

"But now that I‘ve gotten into
school and I‘m going to major
in industrial engineering [want
to get my degree and excell in
both school work and lootball.”
be said

t‘ertatnly. he‘d
prolessional

consider
lootball alter
graduation it given the chance.
"but I‘d only play live