xt7m639k6m2p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7m639k6m2p/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1972-12-08 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, December 08, 1972 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 08, 1972 1972 1972-12-08 2020 true xt7m639k6m2p section xt7m639k6m2p . .. ' 1'
The (ROM-
NEWSPAPER 5' M!
A “A ”Yr?! LXIV No. 69 an independent student newspaper
. . 4‘ .I- \\ , . .
erne “ht-WEN“. Friday, December 8, I972 Unnversuty of Kentucky
.. .. 535"?“ Pages - _. i._ . ”Lexington, Kentucky 40506
seateeaeesemeaaehwwas .
F i r 5' Sk I a b basis or the program is “to gather Representatives of the British Planetary
y scientific information. APO'IO program Society stood aghast at the program. Not
. _ u only were they impressed by the program
ShO' w"' be We hope to learn about how oceans . but also by the openness of the shot.
work thermal patterns, and weather sym O '19 s (_
. .l l 9 73 patterns among other things. We know “1 really couldn’t believe it," said one
' n A r, virtually nothing about oceans ona global A 0 d observer, “they showed us all over the
p basis.” mer'can ream place. I thought it would have been much
more difficult to see the things we saw. I
By RONALD 0- HAWKINS Skylab officials said the program should By RONALD D' HAWKINS can‘t wait to get back and tell the people ‘
Kernel Staff Writer also provide an ocean weather service and Kernel Staff Writer what we saw “
t. 00d f th 1 n CAPE KENNEDY—It took a little '
CAPE KENNEDY—In the wake of the a 8 map 0 e 33 “3’-
longer than most people expected, but
, last SChedUIed moon Shot 0f, the century 333:5:g5:§;§:31,‘_:gzg;§§§;gig3333;;:552;5:3:3:§:E:{:3:3:;535;;:5:5:335:53;:33;§;g~:;:;:;:-:;:;:i -;-~-g:;-,',<-:-zs-':'i-:"H -.-.. . - . .
the people at NASA are looking forward to >ev3’exve‘fihw eventually It happened. lee surrealistic A JOURNALIST from South Africa W a S
. , . early morning sunrise, Apollo 17 lifted t k" t . t fth U S d
the first Skylab shot set for A r1130, 1973. See related stories a "‘g a“ 9" ens‘ve °‘" ° 9 ' - a" -
p 4 from. the launch pad early Thgrsday had visited Las Vegas (“The most
The Skylab program is an earth orbiting on page ' morning In what may be America 5 135‘ amazing city I‘ve ever seen“) and planned
laboratory which is designed to gain a * greatest expressmn 0f ego of the century. to continue his tour after the space shot.
better understanding of the requirements Raffaeli said, the program should - as ‘
for permanent man-made platforms in “forward feed into a shuttle program.” He “This has to be the highlight of the tour.“
space. The project will include stationing added, however, that there are “no direct Commentary he said. “It's probably the highlight of my '
men In space for Up to 28 days. military implications in Skylab. Defense . _ . ,. . __, whole life." , _
The April mlSSlon Will begin With the implications would only be a result of ' H ' ' . .
launch of an unmanned Saturn vehicle and indirect benefits in the program.” Apollo 17 set emmaculate at the launch Novelist Tom Woolfe, representing the
cargo from the Kennedy Space Center. “The knowledge we hope to gain in pad like the star of some great movie. It controversial bi-weekly Rolling Stone. was - _
Three other launches will follow within the Skylab.” he said, “is a better un- was the ultimate example of what radiant at the spectacle. Unsure of what ‘
five month program. BOb Raffaeli, chief 0t derstanding of the universe around us and America has been saying throughout the 50” 0t story he is going to do for RS. he
the Skylab vehicle center, said in an in- man’s capabilities in space. Part of Skylab space program. “Anything you can do I 531d he was. “impressed by the spectacle“
terview with the Kernel that the primary is deciding what the earth is.“ can do better.“ and “surprised“ thatthe prices in the area
weren‘t skyrocketed for the event.
Start December '5 Th” 135‘ great ml‘vssm" to the my?" ': DESPITE EFFORTS of the Office of
‘ sad in many ways. 8V,” 358‘" (a eas Economic Opportunity a lot of people will
Ba rn Sta b I e f 1 01" that swhat they tell “5) 1" this century WI“ lose work as a result of the curtailment of
s 0 our WI Hope Americans set foot on the moon. Never the moon shot program.
again Will such an effort of creative _ . -
By TIM STRAUS On the tour, they will have their own solo American know how be used to further the The end 0f the program '5 a tragedy in
Kernel Staff Writer act. Plans call for them to do a dance duet. pioneer spirit of man. many ways. Hopefully America w‘h
_ . _ They were picked for this routine because - , . . ., . reawaken to the 5mm that has created
UniverSity cheerleaders, Trish and Cyb of their identical appearance. Wasn t It swell America. If you thlnk 5° whatever good there is in the American
Barnstable will leave this Saturday to join The twins first learned Hope was con- you re not alone. .It was a great dream._ continuing to travel to the moon
Bob Hope on his 22nd annual Christmas - - symbol Of what America can do When It and initiating other planetary travels.
.. Sidering them less than two weeks ago. . .
tour of military bases around the world. C 1 ed gets Its head together. People from around Until then. however. we can only hope for
“I“ on‘ nu on pageié’ C0" 3 the world have come to recognize this, and new avenues for the Creative spirit to ‘
" ' 1- . " ' respect America ‘0’ the em”- travel.
> A Man disputes discovery .
w , N ”AM :.;:._;5‘vii-iii?"sit-"”15" f
. 1...... .......... at, 0 new cave passageway _
1 is- " ' t M _ - Editors note: This is the last in a series The discovery. which took place Nov. 9. ‘ ,
a. ' ' ‘ ’9 . .' . from Kernel Staffers Ron Mitchell and was disputed by Ellis Jones of (‘ave City.
~ .3 A“ . A t ;_.wa g, ’ $2,} Frank Yarbrough. The two traveled to He said the passage was originally _. , g .
, _ _ Vi “(a)”, ' he“; 2 2;! 'th. «it Mammoth Cave last Friday after the discovered by Floyd ('ollins over 50 years
. .. ”A: ._ g “A. 2?... w. 3 MM, discovery of a connection between Floyd ago. . t .
. E _> A x ' ”use " ‘_ . § 3 ' '- . Collins Crystal Cave and Mammoth Cave. -
, -> ’ H I . ., V =59. ... I ' ' - , (‘ollins was a guide at Mammoth (‘ave
- am e g . . . . .
1%th er " ‘ -- WW _ B" R05 “I“ "h‘l'l' . , until he died trapped under a rock during
. - «sea, mm Assmtant to the Managing ladltor m (“A Ioration tri in 1917
treaties ;.'= ,A _ m, . ‘p p ‘
i/h’ .i' l“ 'W l‘ R'ANK ‘ )RBRQ? (1" When the first dlSCOVOl‘)’ was made there
”fe‘m‘” iii; ' ' hem” Md” “ "m was not any publicity. Jones said. and only
. A Bouncing. balancing and bowling through the The recent discovery; .of a. missmg ten people knew about it, Of those ten. SIX
Bounc'n air. these three clowns performed for the passage connecting the Hint‘Ridge cave are dead. two could not be locatedantz‘one
Troupers Benefit Show at the Excepticon Home system and the Mammoth (ave system man. Vii. Handy still resides in ave
Around for Older Retardates in Lexington. (Kernel has been discounted by a retired cave (‘ity The tenth person was Jones. _
photo by Harry Baeverstad) guide. (‘ontinued on page I 3 ('ol. 1
weseaeieseeeaseieeweemMsmwmaaeW‘ewsia ‘
Nicholas Von Hoffman, page three. tells of a The weather today will be cloudy and cool. .
I 'd 0 man who was sued by h'5 neighbors for allowmg Cu ’5 ide o with an 80 percent chance of rain. The high will -
n s' e o h'5 lawn to grow over one {00L The neighbors ° be in the upper 40's. and the low tonight will be in
wanted him to conform his lawn to the lower the upper 20's. The chance of rain tonight will be _
middleclass standards 0f the neighborhood. 30 percent. Tomorrow will continue to be cloudy
and cool.

 Th“ :.i.1i: .... 2>::‘::::: “31.133433::2?.'..“:::;.?“.::.'.::: Ed l iOl' IO IS
Kentucky 2:33:11:z::::::::::::::::: 2131.14.23?”
Kerne' k"""“ “"m’ M'“ l“"""i (’dl't‘lidls mun-sun in.» ou.n...m oi the Q‘GI'OIN uni liii' Unm-iaii
A promising start for UK veterans
. ,, . . _ . _ . . , .I I/l/rr/I/ I /, /. "I .
Viith 2.200 armed seivice \etelans apartment. laying in a dorm with // .II, Ira/“v. . .._/, II / ' .,/I_
i“ ['K ”“5 Will‘- som“ WP“ 01' guys several years younger usually '1 . 43.5111; 17' “4:77 ,. ,,/’. t 3
organization seemed to be in order. doesn‘t suit them. fifty/51!; I-' I cyd‘y/jfigf IzyII/‘I/I’ly/ iI/Ii /I 13/ II
The organization of anygroup with a Veterans here. as in Washington. Ia" , - a, IV II/f III I .\ III/III; I‘I . a'w.’ . ” '. ’I’IIXS‘
common bond can provide a number receive a flat $220 a month from the III/I ,’ I «II/I .‘I . II/IIA/ gs II , II, "// In,“ I 't- , I
oi advantages to members. .\ow that government. With this. they are to ‘ I/I . ', II III i III. /I I / III/I I .‘ 4 ‘9‘. .I
the VOL? have formed d campus pay for their tuition and living ex— 'M’Z%i / ' 1'73“,“ V/X , *2, [NI/{lithe i ’:I
association. the "9.5““ 1.1 "0t iar- penses. In Washington. however, the p, " W’Ijt‘n ; 713/ '23. R (1’3; {hf/74" ,/.2;/.,.9f.'!) ,/
reaching. may b? interesting. . college's$1-15 tuition is reduced to $120 1 it If; I I, . ”i ll " i /[ 7"V’//’“/ til/f” " “77/
An example 01 what thls type 0t l'or vets. Veterans in some states are ‘ ’,"‘.‘/ ill " [A ’3 hart” ,‘ .33, 147/ /"‘/'l/%/‘ .—/, .
organization can bring about can be not even responsible for their tuition. )I '1‘! ”gill [If it , ,1, ’I',‘ ‘l "7 i. [35‘ / 7/ " 'II//' . ,i
. found. on the campus of Eastern Obtaining state benefits to cover III/Iii III I]. I7. ,I,I I/rI ,. H. i ”(é/clay?!” I. "’L/ i‘ 'i I
“a§h"‘g.‘°" btate LniverSity. tuition will be one of the goals of the //; " 1,}, ' 73 7“ i Q'./,”:’ .. . ,7; , 7711/4“; " ,I' ”7/ i . 7/
W hen it was learned that oneof the campus group. and likewise, the state I . ,I If, . I I it ‘II/éIsII/x ,’ ~I I; /{/’ i’k’i/I/"d’J/I/V/fl /.‘ ,
dormitories would be empty m the group. the Kentucky Collegiate ./ / flit}? ’Ie- é,“ it"théés/‘I/I “12.". 7";AQI'I‘, if . /’¢////I///( «I 3/
fall. about 60 veterans were brought Veterans Association. They also hope 13.3, '9,“ 2,” kit's/14¢“ V47 595M, 4 y/ I ; ,7}I{/I "‘1
together and formed a co-op. The to get some sort of cash bonus based ’-/ " "I" ’ _ \V‘ w” ‘ ' “_ " / ‘j‘sx “w”..-
expense for each 15 only $20 a month on the number of months each has i
for the room—and this more than . .
spent in Vietnam. _ .
COVeI‘S the fee the college charges for ~A newsletter, to be made handling the increased numbers of
rent. I available in the spring. The sheet will veterans more effectively than in
Thus far, the vets have been able [0 He ps ex‘vets explain changes which have been 1946, when 40 percent of all students
hire janitors and are "OW planning to effected in veterans-connected laws. were vets.
have vending machines installed. The University has helped these ex- —A planned financial assistance Even with little more than 10
With their extra money. they may servicemen by establishing a program which would, if enacted, percent of UK‘s enrollment made up
also buy a pool table. separate Office Of Veterans Affairs benefit the married vets. by vets, the interest the ad-
Besides being a way to live cheaply, this fall. A few 0f the things this office Now. as after World War II, men ministration has shown in the Ken-
the dormitory arrangement provides has done or Will be doing to aid the returning from the war zone are tucky veterans is commendable.
these ex-servicemen with the type 0f vets include: entering or re~entering college. (In Moreover, if they really want their
companionship they are used to. It —-A “tutorial assistance program." 1966 UK had only 250 vets enrolled.) organization and are willing to work
has been pointed out, for instance that If a veteran is having problems in a This time however. not being faced with it and for it, having the
it is difficult for vets to come back to course, he can receive upto $50 to hire with the massive numbers returning University behind the vets, can only
schooland find old friends to share an a tutor. at once, universities appear to be be an asset.
0 death of its chairman, Prof. Evelyn Black. sincere] ' a reciated b the committee,
M°L' ng Fund this year‘s campaign has been dedicated and mdst pgspecially. yby the student Kernel erred
. to her memory. Thus members of the recipients.
Opens fhls week campuscommunityhaveanopportunity to Michael E.Adelstein on PS profs
. . . . contribute to a cause that was close to the Acting (‘hairman
Omitted from your fine Dec. 6 editorial heart of this inspiring. incredible woman, King Scholarship Fund On Dec. 4 The Kernel incorrectly
aboutblack students at UK was mention of Professor—English reported that teaching assistants teach a
thh'mhaiitm LhtIh‘: Kinhg‘ Scholarship FunId, Donations, which are taxdeductible, majority of undergraduate classes in
‘ W1C aseXise ont is campus sincet e should be made a able to Kin 0 political science.
death 0f the great black leader. In its Scholarship Fund ahdymailed to 66% Alum gr'eves Our freshman level American govern—
SOhChahOh drives, a faculty committee Patterson office Tower. Pledges and cash merit course combines televised lectures
has annually raised between $2,000 and contributions are equally welcome. for the GLF taught by faculty and discussions led by
$3,000 to help deserving black students at teaching assistants. Almostallof our other
UK. most of whom would not have been In view of rising tuition fees and the Igrieve with members of the G.L.F. on lower-division courses and all Of our UP'
able to attend otherwise. requests for more money than we ever campus and other enlightened alumni who per-division courses are taught by faculty I
The Kernel editorial was incomplete but receive. donations are vitally needed. sorrowfully view the stagnation of their members, not teaching assistants.
propitious because the King Committee‘s Whether you givea dollar or more,you can beloved alma mater. ‘ .
drive started this week. Due to the recent depend on it that your contribution will be I inda ] Wilhelms '63 . . Malcolm h. JPN)"
. ‘ ' - . (hairman, Dept. of Political Science
li
gr’afib/ di
.-Hah! The Administration ‘/ ’vv' v.
must be sleepinguusually by this ' ' it
’97“ s:
lflll’li it
time workmen should be :%\.\ 5‘
-¢:¢ m' .’n \E\ m
erecting the inaugural stage Waffle 3 h‘
”hr/332 ~ *~ - s \ i. a'
. u/jvfirrf-g-r’i 21:15 **-~.\._‘ ~
on the Capitol steps!" In, 3% I“ Mai—uh
. a tie a»;.t->~~«-—---- -. ..
c. ‘4 N «W g , .._- - "We.
- 30 “ 1" ‘— "h’hh'r‘mill‘i. '5‘“ 'o' 4 di
' - -" -~ . . is, ' .
. _ _ noun-cum- l . -“’ "n r- “(ONGRBS . qrh'tglrv-nhgégé. u- E Sq
._;'t_ _, ;_ _,,_ 12.2“ ‘W “NH 0 . . (98"? Si
_ ‘ “MK . ‘ fc
c1

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. December 8. 1972—3
.- O
9.... Brooke Hunfer friend of nature
8 l9 I I
VonHoffmon finds few friends in the suburbs
“YATTSVILLE, MD.—“IS it such a \ V 7””, .I'W'I/a‘ their nests,” Mr. Hunter CXplainS and
nuisance to justify a criminal Ijrgi‘lfn :iirilflt/ii/I/ifl- tells you he can remember when there
- i I l ' n i. < 'n. -flIi-‘Il! were hawks and owls in the once wild '
prosecution? We re here today on a éflii'tfi't'II— gW—‘lumw l" laces next to downtown Washin ton
criminal case! the defense lawyer V 1 4 Iiil‘l.. I'I'I)”’“,“’.v",',';. - H” P 8 -
said to the judge, his voice rising in a “i. I 5'1".”5' “fill/1' 4h: ’ As he talks. you can hear the birds
most respectfully quiet apostrophe. . /_-,//,,fv‘,35‘/- . . ' W); and see them coming and going. “Those
They were for a fact in a courtroom . // ”'2‘ 572.22 :7 liiééé;1555;::_- I, are doves. They stay m‘erried for hie." .,
where criminal cases are tried in this ‘ “ 3 . fly??— -titiiiiiiiiittit'ai':$395535! Mr. Hunter tells you. but the people
suburban town just outside - hi . :._—l!§=-=e=£;5::lm.fgghtggish here think they‘re bats."
. . , ‘ ”—- -f_—"‘;“:‘ f—r . ‘t’ . .
Washington. The two prevmus cases . I _ ”gr 'éf‘é';:i;iiii::= .. Mr. Hunters lawyer calls. him a
had involved some FBI file clerks in a , -_ xix-55:33:1—“zzn-5FI; suburban St. FranCis of As5i5i, but _
Saturday night fracus (not guilty) and .il ‘ , '.f.’.‘.'..".3?" ¢'-.'~;5-'~'~T7-7-‘-?'37"-‘-" St. Francis merely talked to the birds;
an armed robber caught riding around ‘ _. 2-..: ' ‘ _; . '_ Mr. Hunter struggles. to keep them
with a loaded revolver (one year in the 7") jiiiiiii' . i iii-31’ E555; t 5;; alive. Thus, beSldeS givmg the buds the
slam). iktiti‘ittk ., Egg: .—.—---= ifliit E... f/ , natural cover they need, those illegal _
\ h“ ! if“ 333;; , , ‘ liiill {'fl"; 3 *9 weeds. briars and brush are so difficult ‘
The present defendant was unlike Kg,” Eta}! ‘ . 17,333 zifii iii]? to move through that they keep the
these. The threat of fines and jail hung ~ ’ , '55:}, 333551» . ,, i I: 13;, ‘25??? ‘ 15‘ 19f: hunters out, which means nothing to
over him because the municipal , ,;gt;u"//£ffl‘- _ i iiiiiojfiiflwfiiiiliiiiui3W” m ilhh’i one of the neighbors who told Mr.
Edmonston, where he owns four acres / .:<.::9'}""“ “I“ . 'JW' f.-— *'”i better you keep your property the
and a house, had accused him of 94%;,‘11 é; , t I!‘ I5!!! ‘4 higher the price you‘ll get for yours and
keeping “on his property, weeds, briars a t / €4,373” h :7? ,a‘ we can get for ours, but you come here ‘
and brush more than one foot tall.” 1' e ./ 1,, 555' =—=,:____ -' 4'; " I' i ‘i every day and then you leave and you
This was the ultimate case of \x I I” /’// ‘i' “r“,m‘ [244"; h i» “i don't care about the community."
whether the neighbors have the right to ‘3 l / [A iwttmy I? s 9;. t" The community doesn't care much
make you mow your lawn. Brooke 7:, with I tilt-2,7 ‘\ ’_, \I about Mr. Hunter either. The parts of '_
Hunter, the accused,has Whit? hair and . =7 ‘ lift ”I’M, if?! 7.7;: c 'y R < his land you can get at are used as a
the delicate, pink compleXion 0f _3 ' \ J" "2' . U. ‘ ; "1W , 1/; l ., I dumping ground. There has been .
healthy old age and he w‘on’t clean his ‘u . ‘W, l, ii [Ht/“t, vandalism, and Mr. Hunter says people .
property out and make it like the drab . 7;; I”; \ t ‘ .; :r -, “i,” it It . I. have tried to hunt it. but nobody‘s been
small t°tS that characterize the rest 0t ' l '1 " (-11-. I M '9»; 96"" . ' arrested, although the Police station is . .
lower middle class, suburban Ed- A 1““ N “'b ' I right across the street.
monston. the heavenly bamboo, the splendid jungle,” says Mrs. Margaret Sullivan, Putting aSide the smlSter speculation
He won’t do it even though the neigh- cryptomeria tree, 40 feet high, and the a town councilwoman. “I like the old that somebody may be stirring the
bors say there are rats and bats in precious live oak that stays green all man, but he’s bullheaded.” Bob Cline, 2.90:” ‘1“) to to": hm: to sell, thtrethsv
there, snakes and ‘possums. A possum, winter. the police officer, says, “He has van- It s, rees an na ure or "0 . ‘9
one of the neighbor ladies told Mr. He doesn’t have to _point out the dalism in there,” referring to the old CODStltUtlohai question Of Mr? Hunter's
Hunter, is a dangerous? animal, SO magnolias, immense, robust and shiny house that Mr. Hunter’s mother bought property rights. Ifa mancan theave :“S
heedless that most people have to go to standing as high as the cryptomeria 74 years ago. We’ve taken juveniles out house unpaihnted 10" diet titho {“2252
the 200 to see one. Mr. Hunter won’t of that place.” row on is an w . u 1
clear out the underbrush despite the tree and higher. Mr. Hunter is harassed by the community and per-
petitions out against him and the something of an expert on magnolias Actually the house doesn’t look so secuted by the authorities under the
authorities using every clause in the and the other wild, growing things. He bad. It’s just that he doesn’t live in it. color of law, then What does private
municipal code to catch him and make tells you to hose the magnolia leaves “Twenty-on years ago," Mr. Hunter property mean?
him suburbanize or sell out. and that horticulture classes from the says, “I married a city girl, so we live At some cost to himself in legal fees,
university visit his property regularly. in Washington, but I come out every Mr. Hunter beat this case, but. as he
“These are giant azaleas,” Mr. The trees, the neighbors have no day.” He does too, not only to look after said. “They'll come at me again about '
Hunter, who is 75, says as he takes you quarrel with, if they grow straight up the plants and trees but also the birds, the house and that can run into
around his place, “and this tree, this is from a properly tended lawn. It’s the which are the reason for the dense thousands of dollars. They can just
the tallest redwood in the state of underbrush. underbrush. “All the parks around here keep at me till they get me out."
Maryland, and these are pink “Why can’t something be done about and in Washington are cleared up so Copyright. 1972. The Washington Post-
dogwood.” He shows you the hollies and that jungle? That’s what they call it—a there’s no place for the birds to build King Features Syndicate .
mm V ' f ° d d '
0 ant one 0 experience on co-e orms
As a five semester veteran of dormitory The question is, what does differentiate “Ti—gt it [i- _.f:",‘--i “i bers of the opposite sex that one would ‘ ,
life, I would like to answer the bulk of co-ed from segregated dorms? From what i: -~ ' r ’I’ ’ 1 have dated under former conditions. Then
objections expounded in the media to co-ed Ihave observed Icontend the difference is g hum/,4; , Q .. _ i when a sexual relationship is established
dorms at UK.To do this Iwill deal with the manifested in more responsible attitudes :3 g‘iiriim‘ui _ {if}; -- !' ' , in the coed structure. it tends to be of a
subject in a solely sexual context, despite toward contraception and in deeper E Eafiiig 2353.- ?- longer term.
the fact there are numerous other ad- relationships between sexual partners 5‘ $- ’ "“sz 2):" '
vantages to coed living. within the coed dorms. The most common 3 i 3. i “iii a'. _ 7 The longer term relationships are, from
means of contraception among segregated i, j i I 4‘, tr:- 5. ; ; 7| my point of view. clearly conducive to . '
I have attended two universities other dorm residents seemed to be condoms, :53 ii .1 E! 1 . il more responsible attitudes. while
than UK The first like UK had spermacides, and coitus interruptus. it ; Iggigi‘ilggi — i segregated dorms tend to produce more
n 9 ,A- . t --; " hi i - '
segregated-by-sex dormitories, while at hearse El 5 ,lil (higtggjyi; . i i careless, 0" the SPOt sexual relationships.
the second it was possible to live in the . "'.- {that}! ii ‘ gfiéiili'. a '—
same room with a member of the opposite courad SZYMONSkI a. {“3}; it '1'.- = In light of the above conditions I see no
sex. I became aware that Students for- is (I 'unior g 13' ‘ _~ : valid objections to the establishment of co- _
nicated at both universities; lcould not, i jg;- ll‘t‘i'i'iii'iii - ‘ ti ’ i educational dormitories except that it
however. discern an increased frequency zoolo mg or 2 Efi'li-iiiiimt- '- Ti. t. E : ! might cause a slight depression in alumni -
at either. 9y i ii iiiii'iii'iiigiizii'l i. ,' it .‘9 3 donations. This is because, to middle class
“aware >3: fzii'l'itiliiittttll’ig'iii tutti-1 f morality. such a change uncovers what
3 ~'“'"""' . llll'i : i I . th h t d Even the donation
_ _ , . . _. ._,,,.........uglmu ‘ i _ . . ey c oose o eny.
Whereas institutions such]. fed the “0." theheothleler 38%: more 3’32??? é iii’gttiiliiiiiiit‘iliifiiiiii3 - _ i depression can be overcome by informing
UniverSity of Florida have pubis in- Vices. pi hanthin ra-‘ieiderine tie , ,3- roguig'iiiiiiiitiit 'Ii't'ti ' those alumni of the realities of the
dications of slightly decreased were employed in e co situa on. g .=- tiifl'w“ main...” i i situation—provided they are willing to
promiscuity in association With coed . . . 335:; in. 7 ; , . i - ; listen
dorms. i believe the matter to be more The difference arises frorln a base 3 ..‘ ..?'~‘_'“f;,.. f .I '
s ulation; but what is important is that change in the univerSity some structure. é we i
{mication does and will occur under both In the co-ed dorm, one tends to form non- " '7». ' Conrad Szymanshi
conditions. sexual relationships with many mem- 4;. '~ " --- \- «'12 Junior—Zoology

 4—11“: KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. December 8. 1.72
Osmonds may go along
BE DOLLARS AHEAD Barnstables 1-0 four with Hope
A, Continued from page I t -wgé‘t _ 2
g / Hope wasaguest on the Merv Griffin Show ] W e .. . i '
,.- ’l,\ /', “t . and was discussing his tour's personel. On ‘ < .23; it“; ,.
4" ”‘ l; camera he held upa picture of the Barn- y .44 :24? . ' 2 I
4 . \‘7/22” . 52‘ 2 ‘. - di , $2: "4 . 7“" -~~
: , \ ‘ “I’M“, - stable twms and said that he hope 0 .: .an .fl WW ....t
1 .1 . .A u___.__ (.9 include them. ‘ E . . f 5r b
£2,‘j;. __\\-\ - " IVM“ , 51 Three hours later, the still unknowuig 2 ; k . f ‘
Ei‘ ~" ”fa%\‘j_ a a» , 6,! Barnstables received a call from Sid . xx 2 f, '
t ‘ \€?$‘fifi : ‘ tie ,_' 1’ Sussman, their agent in Washington, DC. 2 ft - ,
t 1' I ‘ ‘ He said that they had three hours to make f ”a, i
it to Washington for auditioning. After the {t ‘1 l M
audition, they were included in the troupe. I t: i :.
Hope has asked them to use their * l ‘%
cheerleading skills by leading a response a”.
Top Cash , . - . . -
ype cheer during each show for the ser . ”fl
vicemen. He told the twins servicemen w“ '
\ far “S"a‘ly ““9 ‘0 ye“: scream W E“ .m' ' ' ... :: .
volved, but seldom get the chance. With v
B k this in mind, the cheerleading will be p a
00 s conducted by the twms. . . “1,, tt§fi§hfih
()THER PERFORMERS going on the , _, {g aw
tour are uncertain right now. Because of , ts.
. the recent presidential election, and 2 '- = M mm .4
speculation about the Wars end, Hope
KEN N E DY waited until a late date to contact per (3") and Trish Barnstable
formers. The Barnstables said that he was , . , , , . .
_ t considering Joe Frazier, the ()smond t'ttrt'ttt‘. a L'b‘ .l\avy communications
BOOK Brothers. and either Miss World or Miss station tn the tndttitt Ocean. .
['niverse. Eastern Kentucky l’niversity 4 After the entertaining of the serVicemen
- coed, Frances Adams will also be on the '5 over, the troupe. plans to stop for .3
_ STO RE tour with the Barnstables. couple days of rest in Spain. After that, it
is homeward bound and a welcoming
On December 15‘ Hope‘s troupe Wt“ reception at the White House.
leave the states for the tour of American On January 17, the Bob Hope Christmas
military bases in Southeast Asia. Stops Show will be seen on television. On this
scheduled for the tour include Thailand, show. the highlights of the tour will be
Guam. Korea, Vietnam, Japan and Diego shown.
lEXINGTON DRIVE-IN THEATER .
O
JUST A sworn omve scum o~ LIME Astronaut Schmitt begins
ADM. $1.50 a“ STARTS 7:30— . . .
NOW SH°W'~G-E~°S SUN- to talk like space disc Iockey
'BY POPULAR DEMAND' SPACE (ENTER. Houston Schmitt, a 37-year-old ..\’l‘ ANOTHER point, Schmitt
I Two APES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE . (MM—Scientist Jack Schmitt geologist, is the first professional said he wished he had 8
came through with the expected scientist to make a space trip. geography book and a map of
anARTHURP JACOBS production scholars descriptions as Apollo Previous astronauts were mostly Antarctica to expand his 0b-
11 sped to the moon Thursday. test pilots trained by speCial servations of the earth.
CHARlTON HESTON BE E AT" 5:: “siesta: '"525522123 122153325,;dili‘i‘ié‘frf’ififis“'t° 4: we
- ARTHUR PJACOBS “Wow! Fantastic!" t S(‘HMITT DH) not even khow feltstséhatgt:§ :aitigcoifigrgljofihagtht:
”Ann I ‘ . ' . i ' s ronaut control. “I really wish I knew
2 Sometimes he sounded like he in 1966. .
‘ AN“ was laving the first space disc “I‘m not easil im ressed b t that geography, I WISh I had
OF THE . p ' . . y p. u thoughtofbringmgagood map of
20 of: Jockey. Im impressed by this one, he Antrarctica."
APE (lawn-ox Tl-lE “STAY TL'NED for the next said.
. ' installment on earth," he told Schmitt and Apollo com- . _ .
, ' . ‘ Mission Control after voicing mander Eugene A. Cernan are Some Of hts descriptionshwere
. 2 \ reflections on his maiden space scheduled to touch down on the far from the textbook variety.
[A flight. lunar surface Monday for three “I“lltellyou,if thereeverwasa
- , w ‘ Other times his chatter was days of exploration,while the fragile appearing piece 0f blue '2
I“ \‘ -' aboutsuch things as “interfaces" third crewman, Ronald E. space ttts the earth right now. ' ‘
1» , | {it .1 4 and “oceanic currents" and Evans, orbits the moon in the tut: SAW THE sunrise as a
’ ' "'35. ”t" um“ “pack ice.” command Ship. rainbow.
if“ " I M ‘ tt'\
1, 5:2 " ,, If: .2, «, Man vs. machine
. ' ‘ 2 as.
2 . his", -‘ 33%

”f M g Computer delays Apollo launch
the...” " ’,t .1-1 3* i: T I . SPACE CENTER, Houston lT (‘Al'SED 2 hours and 40 is programmed to halt Operations
RODDY MCDOWALL .‘t 1 / tAPl—A balky computer won the minutes of delay and anxious when it gets an indication that

MAURICE EVANS , ' . sits-it: f 4' first two rounds, but man finally moments for launch personnel. It preparatory steps were not
' ' 9w» Won the tight to get APO“? 17 on could have caused a month's followed one after the other in the

“PLUS BONUS APE—SAME PRICE \ ”5 waytto the moon by t00hhg the delay in launching and cost $10 planned order.

. 2 . compu er. ' ' - -
Fll'St EEG—tine” Beneath. HOW . . . g A combination of teamwork mkll’litenn tttltiesiimnpillzi‘tstopped the Oxygen tanks in the rocket had
20th Centu F m : . - . 2,; i and sometimes a bit 0t “shade countdown 30 seconds before not pressurized automatically
, (y, or i owns 4 ,- tree engineering“ go into solving liftoff, an intricate network of and even though technimans did
ME l w problems SUCh as the one Which communications began humming the jOb manually the messagetdld
FROM 4;? g2 . _ delayed the Apollo launch between National Aeronautics "Ot get through to the compu er.
THE E ’ Wzdnedsdady nigfht. ' and Space Administration in- Technicians and engineers at
OF 38‘. m [e hun‘re s o k :ngmeers and stal‘lations and contractors‘ Marshall Spaceflight Center in
THE ‘ s 4. c nicians wor e oggedly and personnel. Huntsville where the Saturn
: a yr i) g a‘nonymously‘ at Cape Kennedy, WHAT STOPPED THE rocket was developed set to work
_ FiANAVISION COLOR 8v DELUXE“ 7. ‘ ' Fla. Huntsvtlle. Ala., and countdown was an automatic with their socalled breadboard
N 2 -- 2 2 Houston space installations to sequencer which was just doing to simulate the problem and find
solve the problem. its lob. The automatic sequencer the solution.
‘ K

 It's I THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. December 8. 1972—5
’ a t ' kle b J
"c r uf... JOHN COOKE
o
blacks are returning to the South USED CARS '
EDITOR'S NOTE—Improved politiul, thousands of Poor and uneducated blacks who 68 MERCURY §$L£§£Zf°fattl¥°zt '
economic and social conditions in the South have poured 0Ut 0f the Smith each year, spilling into MONTCLA|R . ' ~ $1090 —
lured numbers of blacks back from the North, Northern cities.
beginning what many observers see as the “We’ve n ' ' Cam m b"
_ . _ oticed a return among people in the 70 vw .9 ° '°.—
Egifiioéeiarggraéfg 9:" has lieen 5311-8 on sociology field with a good sprinkling of lawyers Pop “9' ”a 0 $2595
_ . - l a repor on is new and doctors,” said a bureau spokesman. He said
Situation. the trend had been spotted by census canvassers 69 TOYOTA COROLLA $895
but no figures were available to document it. 2 d" sedan s' M rd r ‘
By WIPLIAM L'CHA?E ONE OF THE best-known returnees was c, monk
Associated Press \lVrIter James H. Meredith, 40, of Jackson, Miss., whose 69 vw pimp I $2295
ATLANTA' Ga. (APl—Once it was a one-way integration of the University of Mississippi in
. {fighIE—Thinions 0f blacks leaving the 500th for 1962 spawned bloody riots. 69 FIAT m 2-Dr. Sedan. Tape Player $1695
e or .
_ . After graduation, Meredith spent six years in
Now‘a reverse migration seems to be under New York before returning to Mississippi in 1971. . 7] NOVA COUPE vsautomatlc, "a... $2445
way With numbers 0f blacks, mostly the better- He was motivated in large part by the desire to -
educated, returning to a changing SOUth- enter politics. He losta primary race for the US. V
It is only a trickle thus far, and no solid figu'res Senate this year. 68 PORSCHE "2' "d“ $3395 ,
are available, but civil rights leaders and other “Changing conditions have made it possible
observers, both meek and White, agree there is 8 for us to come back,” he said. “More people are 68 VW Bus, 7-passenger $1895
return movement. inclined to notice you going into a ‘white’ dining
.. , room in upstate New York now than in _ '
[HTHTNK THE number IS probably. small Miss