xt7jdf6k3f7p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jdf6k3f7p/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700204  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February  4, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  4, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7jdf6k3f7p section xt7jdf6k3f7p Tie Kent ucecy Eemmel
Wednesday, Fcl.

, 1970

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

Vol. LXI, No. 82

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Moving Towardl A Crisis

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- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Wednesday, Fc1. 4, 1970

Air Pollution
The Question Of Life And Breath Noiv Faces A World Population
A radio disc Jockey used to end his
program
each dy by tellinghis listening audience, "Keep
looking up, you'll see more."
This bit of homespun philosophy is just as
true today, but holds a much more serious and
urgent connotation.
The "more" that one sees when he looks up
into the "deep, delirious, burning blue" are the
macabre results of an eon of neglect by man of
his environment.
Man must suddenly awaken to the fact if
his smarting, reddened eyes haven't already
warned him that the very air he breathes may
soon be incapable of supporting human life.
"Bosh," one might say, "This is another
in a long line of figments of an overactive imag-

Florida has been found to be a major cause
in the mysterious crippling of cattle in the state.
Air pollution doesn't single out any one location; it is all encompassing; it is no farther
than your own back door.
Local health department officials say that
there are sev eral days during any given year when
Lexington's pollution rate far exceeds that considered safe by state ambient air quality standards.
0
Although some
percent of Lexington's
air pollution is caused by automobiles, according to Harry Marsh of the Lexington-Fayett- e
County Health Clinic, UK is listed as one of
the city's top pollutors.
The University has been the object of much
ination."
criticism by nearby residents who claim that
An overactive imagination?
buildings still using coal for fuel are overloadWhen one reads that Tokyo, Japan, the ing already foul air.
world's most polluted city, now sells gulps
The presence of a huge laundry smokestack
of pure oxygen in its corner coffee houses; and tobacco plant
just outside the university
When citizens of Chicago, 111., are warned perimeter combine with UK pollution to make
not to go outside on certain days, especially the campus air covering among the dirtiest in
if they are subject to respiratory or heart the city. The close proximity to downtown
disorders;
Lexington does little to help the growing probWhen 168 persons die in New York City of lem.
diseases during a
respiratory and heart-relate- d
The depressing point in all of this is that
one-da- y
of smog;
siege
air conditions here, according to Marsh and
When a similar situation in London led to UK Prof. Orville Skewart, a resident expert,
4,000 more deaths than normal during four days are actually better than in most areas of the
of sulphurous fog;
country.
And when pollution over the great smog city
"Lexington is lucky in that it is located in
of Los Angeles kills pine trees 60 miles away. a kind of weather trough through which winds
Nor is the contaminated air restricted to the from Canada and the Culf of Mexico conlarger industrial complexes. Pollution in balmy stantly blow," Marsh explains. "Polluted air

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such as wastes from automobiles and factories are polluting air so
badly in some cities that the simple act
of breathing becomes a chore. In Tokyo,
oxygen is being sold in coffee houses.
Smog-produce-

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docs not have a chance of stagnating here
for very long periods of time."
According to Stewart, who was a member of a
smoke abatement committee in Lexington as
far back as 1947, air pollution isn't the problem
it was 25 years ago.
"Then, coal was a major source of fuel,"
he said, "and open burning was much more
prevalent than it is today."
"The problems today," Stewart went on,
g
coal is so hard
"are that good,
to come by, the fuel is not bum ed properly
and the cost of converting coal furnaces to gas
is not financially expedient."
Both Stewart and Marsh agreed that the prevalent use of natural gas was a big factor in
lessening air pollution problems in the city.
Stewart added that the growing need here,
and nationwide, is a stringent regulation controlling automobile pollution.
Stewart said he expected passage of such a
measure within three years, due to the evergrowing concern of a breathless citizenry.
"Pollution will have to get better; I really
don't think it will get much worse," he stated.
"Air in Lexington, compared tothe rest of the
state, is in good shape," echoed Marsh, who
added, "But that doesn't mean we don't have
air pollution, because we do.
"All of our problems are soluable," said
Marsh, "but it will take a much greater awareness on the part of the public."
These statements by local experts are reassuring enough from the standpoint of Lexington but certainly they can not be extended
across the rest of the nation and the world.
If conditions are fairly well under control
locally, they are reaching the crisis stage virtually everywhere else.
As Stewart and Marsh advise, awareness
is the answer, awareness the likes of which
we have never demonstrated.
clean-burnin-

Perhaps, as one observor sees it, a nationwide air pollution conflict could go a long way
toward unifying a nation long severed over
racial and economic problems.
One thing is sure, air pollution knows no
bias, a point which should move its cure a
little higher up the ladder of priorities.

* V

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb 4,

1970- -3

Water Pollution
Oceanographcr Predicts The End Of Sea Fishing Expansion By 1980
"The affluent are the greatest producers human waste from both Cincinnati and Louisnow serve the city. These are both publicly
of effluent," a local health official joked. He ville, is listed as one of 10 most polluted rivers and privately owned. This, plus the unorganized
didn't smile.
use of both sewers and septic tanks on the part
in the country.
America is the most affluent nation in the
In Lexington itself, which has only a few of residents, has resulted in constant drainage
and the effluent of its occupants is the small streams to pollute, West Hickman Creek problems and polluted water.
world,
Marsh claims that a consolidation of treatprimary reason why water pollution exists in is virtually gone from siltation and partially
this country today.
ment plants under public control and a
e
treated sewage and South Elkhorn Creek is alto sewer systems would go a
Daily, Americans dispose of millions of tons most sterile, says UK zoologist Robert A.
changeover
of what we have long referred to as "garKuehne.
long way toward solving local water pollution
bage." The eventual and most natural receptAdding to the catastrophy is the fact that problems.
acles for all of this collected crud are rivers, these streams have long since lost their picturesDr. Kuehne goes one step further by stating
lakes and streams, which serve to decompose que beauty, as well as their life forms.
that Lexingtonians and Americans in general-a- re
the material into a more useable form.
going to have to undergo a complete change
Perhaps the only local body of water which
The only problem with long accepted practice remains virtually unspoiled is Elkhorn Creek, in values.
is that modem technology is now producing which receives only periodic pollution from near"We must stop thinking in terms of waste
materials which streams are unable to wash by Bluegrass Army Depot.
and disposal and start recycling what once was
Such groups as the Fayette County Health waste material into a reuseable form," he said.
away. Thus, the nation's water supply is fast
"We must come to the realization that some
collecting a backlog of dangerous toxicants,
Board, the League of Women Voters and the
which have and will continue to have fatal Sierra Club have begun concerted campaigns of the products of modern technology have not
effects on thousands of Americans. That is, to combat the problem locally. The question been for our good, and begin a program of
unless something is done.
which then arises: Are they in time?
control," Kuehne concludes.
Unlike polluted air, polluted water is exEcologists warn us that halting water polHow, one might ask, can a world covered
lution is something we can ill afford to hem tremely difficult, and sometimes impossible, almost entirely by water ever run short of drinkand haw about. Some see the end of our to reclaim once it is contaminated. Local auing water and seafood?
drinkable water supply not by the end of the thorities agree that the situation is not hopeThis, Dr. Kuehne explains, comes from the
next century, but within the decade, if we do less but that the answer must be quick and ex- mistaken assumption that the oceans are chock
not take strong measures.
full of living organisms. In reality, says the UK
pensive.
Already effects are evident. Lake Erie is
CounMarsh of the Lexington-Fayett- e
professor, virtually all sea life is concentrated
Harry
void of all organic matter after ab- ty Health Clinic thinks that the consolidation on the coastlines, which are fast becoming as
practically
sorbing wastes of huge industrial plants for of the area's sewage disposal systems is in order. polluted as the rivers, lakes and streams.
Ocean conditions are so critical now that
Over 18 different sewage treatment plants
years.
Seals are dying off the coast of Alaska as
Dr. John H. Ryther, head of the Woods Hole
e
oil spills polluting the
a result of
Oceanographic Institution, predicts that the
ocean itself a tragedy which may eventmarine fishing industry can not expect to exvery
the native Eskimos.
Water
ually destroy
pand after 1980.
Drinking
As in the case of air pollution, one doesn't
It is no wonder then that scientists are telling
Bucolic Kentucky is the sight of many of
have to travel to isolated spots throughout the
the nation's worst water pollution probus to act now not next year or even next week.
lems. The camera of journalist John Fetworld to find water pollution. He merely has
Regulations and control legislation are coming
e
ter man catches this
to look over his shoulder.
but far behind the pollution rate.
sight at the headwaters of the Kentucky
The vacation is over; now the work begins.
The Ohio River, which receives factory and
River on the Letcher-PerrCounty line.
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-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 1970

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The photograph at the top of
page four
is a slag dump in Perry
County. Slag
is the refuse of a coal
mining operation
and burns continuously for a number of
years. The picture at the bottom of the
page was taken near a Western Kentucky
coal field. It is a former woods area that
was destroyed by acid seepage. The
at the right is a reclaimed area in photo
Perry
County. Although nothing has been done
to the land save grading, force seeding
and scattering straw over the area, the
Bethleh em Coal Co. rates it as a "show

piece."

Photos By
John Fetterman
and. Dave Herman

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Teh.

4, 1970- -5

Who Is Really Uprooting This Country?
looks, carrying them to their new and beautiful

JOSEPHINE W. JOHNSON

By

buildings on old pasture lands. Among the thousands of things these children will hear are
words about a Man Without a Country:
"Breathes there a man with soul so dead who
never to himself has said, this is my own, my
native land?"

169 By The New York Tlmei Co.
Reprinted By Termlnalon

The wild cherry leaves arc waxy green and
bronze in this spring morning. The rain is falln
ing over the buckeye pyramids, over the
flowers and the
leaves. The
woods arc flooded with flowers. The fern-cu- t
leaves of dutchman-breeche- s
and squirrel corn,
the white hearts of their flowers, shake in the
rain. .
lime-gree-

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Polluters of Spring
From these words should flow love, patriotism, and law into the veins of the growing child.
But, busily behind the edifice, under cover of
the mighty music of the organ sound, a vast
throng of people are working night and day,
destroying all they still call their native land.
Who are these people? Who are the destroyers? Breathes there a man. . . . Try and breathe.
Who pollutes the air? Who fouls the rivers?
Who cuts down the trees, builds houses on the
stripped hillsides? Who poisons the sheep,
shoots the deer, oils the beaches, dams the rivers, dries up the swamps, concretes the countryside? Who bulldozes homes, builds missile sites,
pours poison wastes underground, poison gas
overground, slabs over mountain tops, rocks the
earth with explosions, scars the earth with strip
mines?

When the sun comes out it is as though a veil
of silver ice sheathed every living thing. A
ice where the slow rain stayed on
green-whit- e
and shoot it touched. And as far as
every leaf
the eye can see white glittering spiderwebs arc
flung on the hillside, and long strands, pearl-hunwave from the beech twigs, invisibly anchored somewhere far out in space.
g,

These are only a few hours out of a spring
woods that will unfold, flower, change with every day. The buds of buckeye have that waxy
rose of petalled sap, and then a burst of green
leaves and the rose petals falling. The great oaks
and maples and beeches will begin to leaf, begin
their giant breathing, the soundless respiration
and purifying to which our own lives are tied.
This is indeed a beautiful country, one thinks.
A land to be loyal to. One's soul expands. But
down beyond this valley, beyond the circle of
hills that ring this wild greenness, plans are being made to destroy it. Anarchic, sweeping,
enormous and expensive plans. Who is making
these plans?

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gathering up the children, weighted down with

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We are dying of preconceptions, outworn
rules, decaying flags, venomous religions, and
sentimentalities. We need a new world. We've
wrenched up all the old roots. The old men
have no roots. They don't know it. They just
go on talking and flailing away and falling down
on the young with their tons of dead weight and
their power. For the power is still there in their
But the roots are dead, and the
land is poisoned for miles around.
life-in-deat-

h.

After the first silent spring will come a short
and suffocating summer, then asphalt autumn,
and in the end, winter. Cold, clean, orderly,
concrete winter. Winter forever. And then we
will have nothing to fear anymore, nothing to be
protected from, nothing to be protected for,
nothing at all, in fact, that we or anyone else
will want to call our own.

Destroyers
Who is doing this? Who is responsible for this
anarchy and ruin? Is it the revolutionaries, the
black militants, the draft refusers? Is it the college students, the pacifists, the hippies? Who
is taking our country away from us before our
eyes?
It is the
patriotic
and upright citizens who are taking our coun- - Josephine V. Johnson, Pulitzer prize novelist
try away from us. In the name of saving us, pro- - and author of "The Inland Island" lives in Cin- tecting us, and civilizing us, statesmen and gen- - cinnati.
Law-Abidin-

A half mile away in the early spring morning,
the great orange school buses begin to roll,

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crals, scientists and engineers, businessmen and
Congressmen, arc making us into a people without a country, dead souls and exiles. And wc
arc paying them to do it.
In the name of saving and protecting us, the
Pentagon has become the symbol of the greatest power on earth today. There it sits, a terrible mass of concrete. Its power generates into
every single life. It is in the air we breathe, the
water we drink. Because of its insatiable demands we are drained and polluted. Nothing
in the world is like this concrete monster. It is
like the great god Moloch into which the children were thrown as sacrifice. It is our greatest
unnatural disaster.

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-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 1970

Ecology
After Centuries Of Recklessly Upsetting Nature's Balance,
Man Must Noiv Save His Environment To Save Himself
Ecology is a term which has suddenly crept
into our vocabularies and is rapidly becoming
an everyday word. It is defined by Webster
as "the totality or pattern of relations between
organisms and their environment."
What this implies is that all forms of life
are interdependent and that the life cycle is
just that, a cycle.
Basically there are four major classifications
of matter which interact in the cycle of life.
One includes such nonliving materials as water,
chemical elements, simple chemical compounds
and sunlight the primary source of energy,
without which there would be no life.
A second classification contains the forms
of plantlife which convert the materials of that
first classification into carbohydrates which are
needed to sustain life both by themselves and
other forms of life.

In the third classification are the higher forms
of animal life which feed on plantlife and on
each other. The final classification encompasses
such forms of plant and animal life as bacteria
and insects which feed off the dead bodies of
the higher organisms, and in so doing free
chemical compounds for reuse as the cycle continues.
Where does man fit into this ecological

cycle? Well, until just recently, man didn't accessible coal and leave behind a wasteland
envision himself as being a part of the cycle which is incapable of supporting life.
at all, and this is the primary reason for the
No, we all do our part. We drive around in
ecological crisis he has created.
our cars, filling the air with exhaust fumes,
Man has always considered himself the mas- we use chemicals like DDT whose toxins spread
ter of his own destiny, far above all other forms to all forms of life, and we dump our garbage
of life and not affected by such things as ecology wherever we feel it won't be in our way. But,
or ecosystems. He could shape his environment most importantly, we make demands.
as he saw fit, and everything else merely
We demand the output of an endless stream
existed to make life more convenient for him. of materials and
equipment from our technology,
For hundreds and thousands of years man has things designed to make our lives easier, more
adapted his environment to serve his wants satisfying and more interesting. But the greater
and needs, and in so doing has tampered with our technology grows filling these demands,
the balance which nature trys to maintain the greater grows our assault on our environbetween all living, nonliving and dead matter. ment and the more we move toward extinguishing life altogether.
With the industrial and technological adMan is just beginning to realize this, that he
vances he has made over the last 100 years,
man has greatly increased his assault on nature is killing all matter involved in the ecologito the point where he now is capable of causing cal cycle, including himself.
irreversible damage to all other forms of life,
Finally he is giving some thought to ending
and, indirectly, to himself as well. He does so his assault on his environment and to working
toward the restoration of the ecological baldaily.
The damage is not all being done by rich ance he has upset.
He may be able to rectify the crisis he has
corporation owners who hire thousands of their
fellow men to fill the skies over the nation's created, but he must act quickly. He will have
cities with black, poisonous smoke, or to dump to adopt an entirely new set of values, values
millions of gallons of chemicals into our rivers, almost completely in opposition to the ones
or to strip our coalfields to get out the easily he has always known.

Why don

it

you get Involved?

Why Don't YOU Do Something About Air and Water Pollution?
Wild River and Wilderness Preservation?
Strip Mining Abuses
GO WHERE THE ACTION IS ON KENTUCKY ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS!
The Sierra Club is a national leader that meets Environmental Problems Head-O- n
its Cumberland Chapter is confronting the many challenges in Kentucky.

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Sierra Club

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Why don't YOU participate in an Active
Studqnt Group that is aware of the
Environmental Questions of Today?
For

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information contact these Sierra Club leaders

at the

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University:

FACULTY MEMBERS

STUDENT LEADERS

Dr. Jean Jaros
Political Science Department
U.K. Eit. 3840
Home:
6
278-492-

Dr. Wayne Davis
Zoology Department
U.K. Est. 279S
Home:
0
277-433-

Dr. Robert KweKne
Zoology Department
U.K. Est. 2793
Home: 277-2363

Gerald Thornton
Environmental Awareness
Society
1816 Courtland Drive
Phone
9

V

299-837-

'

Roger Wtitmin
Air Pollution Representative
417 Pyke Road
U.K. Est. 211
Or Write Mrs. Robert A. Fay, Membership
1204 W. Main, Shelbyville, Ky. 40065

dir.

1

4-

Harry M. Caudill, in the white jacket, and some members of the UnKfrsirv's Fnvimn.
mental Awareness Group on a visit to strip mined land in Perry County. The cool
company completed reclamation efforts on this field four years ago and is not
Photo by dv Hwnun
required to do anything else to the land.

* -7

1970-

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Eel). 4,

Overpopulation
Affluence, Overpopulation Create Environmental Problems

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tion and the destruction of our
country's natural resources can all
be traced to the harsh demands of
an affluent and overpopulated so- fj ciety.
Make no mistake about it. The
aT people of the United States are con
suming their resources faster than
they can be replaced. Although

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The preceding pages of this spc- cia ssue have all dealt with the
uncontrolled population
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The popula
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a Population density of 4000 people
per square block. People create
carbace and New York garbage

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tmcks now must travel 30 miles
from the city before reaching a dis- posal area.

the New
and
problem
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of our country. Lexington
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times more sewage than it was de
signed to handle.
Overpopulation is already a prob- J
,em 111111 U is 'quick,y reaching crisis
The population of the U.S.
!t is
expected to increase by 100 million people within the next 30 years.
By the year 2000, people won't be
talking about garbage collection or
i?l overcrowding, they will be talking
)i 1j about survival. This is certainty
unless some measure of control is
JS employed.
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how much control is needed or,
more realistically, how much con- trol will people stand lor. Most
exnerts airree that familv nl.mninir

not an answer to the problem
since people simply want too many
children three or four on the average. For the population growth to
be halted no mother should give
birth to more than two children.
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aomimstration nas iDeen promot- ing the idea of population control
through statements which have
come through Nixon's science ad- viser and the department of Health
Education and Welfare,
What is in the offing, then, i
massive education program
signed to convince people to
trol population themselves by only
having two children. If this i
cessful there will be no need for
government restrictions. But it is
doubtful whether an education program can actually curb the population growth because of resistance
from religious groups and "others.
The degree to which this program
is successful will determine the
next step.
The most often discussed pro- posals call for legalized abortion,
government sponsored birth con- -

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to persons

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who have themselves
sterilized, and a negative income
tax which would tax people for V
they nuvu UUL1 iwf, F!while paying a bonus to families on
welfare for each year they do not
have another child.
At this point it seems that these
proposals, or something similar,
have at least a chance of being hU
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soon, then perhaps the government
will be forced into a stricter form
or control.

Many people, ot course, will

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sist these proposal
political grounds
deny another person the freedom to
conduct his private
wishes, but in this case each addi- tional child is a matter of public I?. T,J
concern Freedom cannot be per- ' i: $
mitted to the extent that it in-- 1
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fringes on another's right to sur
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- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Wednesday, Feb. 4, 1970

DON'T SERVE TEA, BUT

WE

Im

FIRST AREA SHOWING!

...

J

PH.

v

' if

m-tA- R

3

HEATERS

most

-

V

electric"

93

f.vii
RAOUEL WELCH
IN FLAREUP

We do serve you . , ,
With advertising in a college newspaper, printed
fire days a week and circulated among 16,000
students.

WANT

:

TO LOVE

The Kentucky Kernel can
boost your sales by placing your merchandise in a
market that has proven
itself to be consistent.

tnnirr

',1
I

:r-

...

Don't wait for it to come
to you
go get 'em
with regular ads in . . .

-:

tr

'

TTO Pf II I

x"
i coo

:.

-x

3ER!

i mi

present!

jajnesuarner-uayi-

THE KENTUCKY
KERNEL
UK EVERYONE

AW

b

ri

hVI

n tt ui

w

---

,

Mayer

'At

232-44-

HU-tUi-

I

A

KatAi Berne Production starring

1

uunnicuu

e

Mctrocolor

A

Carrol O'Connor

William ftanipk

"The Reivers"

is a lyrical, laughing

wonderful movie!

A

magical mystery

...

tour."

reads the Kernel'

"A marvelous time is had by all!"
Judith Critt, N.Y. Magazine

CLASSIFIED ADS

"The Reivers" is a mighty good film .
McQueen acts as never before."
--

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
25

TTPINO

COMMISSION for coUect'lng
D. C. Cleaners.
1.
28J-F- 3
look-In-

g

for musicians..
Jazz, and
blues. Call after 17 Flk.
p.m.
or
4F8
2,

233-85-

PIANO TUNING Reasonable prices.
All work guaranteed.
Trained by
Steinway & Soijx In New York.
9.
Mr. Davies,
MJMh3

252-32-

RESORT la

THE FINGLETOAD
K

WANTED
DELIVERY BOYS. Must be 21 years
old. $2.00 per hour plus gas. Must

nave car. Apply: Foushee Florist
41 soutn Limestone.
21 ?5
ROOMMATE tn hor. I,,,,,,-- ,,
ment In Dixie. Completely furnis ifed.
One bedroom. $51 trnntnnrtatlVn
school provided. Call Sonne
ext. 229 from 4.
4F
f294-551

ef

u

HP
For details call 252VIV3175 after 8
p.m. and ask for JohiV
3F10
MOTORCYCLE
1966, foocc Triumph
TR6, custom blueretal flnke. Blue
book value $820,
yfoo.
v king 7 29 Call
F4
1958 PONTIAC

Auto. Best offer. Exi.
after 5 p.m.

sytian; PS PB
311;

J

1967 BUICK

277-84-

20J-F- 5

Skylark convertible; local
owner. Bucket seats, power
steering, radio, automatic transmis-

M itch

sion.

$1,995.

SALE

30J-F-

Used

typewriter,

Remington

y 8. Call

255-04-

.wth

& 3 LIONS
Service. Now planning PartiPlanning
for Valentine's
Day. Food, decoratfonXpossibly entertainment. Reasonjhne. Call 299-104F10

Ryder

The Detroit Wheels
SOCK IT TO ME!
MARTY'S

- Richmond
2691-904-

5

Steve McQueen plays Boon

Road

in William Faulknert Pulitzer Prize Winner

in'The Reivers"

7

Snaron FarrelL Will Ceec Michael Constantine.
Technicolor.
Ruoerr Crn

Port-abl- e

TV FOR SALE Nearly new Panasonic 21 Inch. Must sell Immediately.
Jim Bruce, 306 BlandingII. UK ext.
4F8
MOBILE HOME for sle, 10x57; 3

bedrooms; complete
washer. Call

3 HEART

and

one

FOR

,

TONIGHT ONLY!

FOB SALE,
FOR SALE: '64 Yellow Vbrvalr Spyder
Tiirbo-charge- d.
Convertible 150

y

TUTOR
WILL TUTOR French cours
104-30- 6.
Have B.A In French f rom, UK.
Reasonable. Call 299-11- 0 4d.
4F10

automatic

4F12

look Magazine

"The Reivers" is one of the year's most
pleasant movie experiences." -- n Magon.

SXHVICK8

Fast, professional, accur
ate, mm, arDon Kinoon, pica. 60
cents pp., 5 cent pft carbon. Bill
Givens,
ttffer 4 PJ. 27J-F- 9

TYPING

l

BASIC

COURSE IN THE CATHOLIC RELIGION

6 Wednesday evenings

7:30-8:3- 0

p.m., Feb.

11

- March 25

....

I

REV. LARRY HEHMAN

320 Rose Lane

KCtUSIYII FIRST RUN!

I

Catholic Newman Center
Tel.
254-154- 4;

255-046- 7

FOB XZHt
LIGHT HOUSEKEEPING rooms. Rose
ciose to cuclld. k private entrance.
l
Next to bath. Urlnm furnlnhoH
3F&

0.

PARKING,
Call 255-34-

and Euclid.
monthly 1
after
a.m.
3Y
ROOMS Kitchen privileges, access to
block
iv. wasner, tfrytr. H3 00. One 29J-F- 4
o UK.
FEMALE roommates

latre, furnished
&iX,
apartment; utilities
$6S per
month. Walking distance from campus. Call
5F5
MiacixxANtpua

COME TO the Flngleioad Resort on
Tuesdays 8 p.m.-i- a A.m. and Saturdays. 8 p.m.-- a a.m Uv enterUln-men- t,
jazz, folk, lues, and silent
flicks. Admission 33c. College
U
only. 418 wist Fourth St. 4FB

The Kentucky

Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40500. Second class
poktage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and one during the summer
tension.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK i'ost Office Box isatt.
Begun as the Cadet In lm and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1U13.
Advertising published herein Is Intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

..

roast beef sandwich,
french-frie- s
'n cold, draft
beer groovy!
you'll like
NICHOL ASVILLE ROAD
NO. BROADWAY at
1-

-75

ntmiUllniimilHliiiini

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