xt7nzs2k9h6r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7nzs2k9h6r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-10-27 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 27, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 27, 1975 1975 1975-10-27 2020 true xt7nzs2k9h6r section xt7nzs2k9h6r  
 

Vol.1XVll No.60
Monday. October 27.1975

 

All smiles

\thens‘
liowex er

The l'niversity of Georgia's personal bulldog
seems relaxed during pre-game activties in

Sanford Stadium lle fired up later.
. as his team defeated l K ’I- l.l

KENTUCKY

an independent student newspaper ”I

   

e] University of Kentucky

Lexington, Kentucky

 

 

At law school

Rep. Holtzman urges
state ERA ratification

By NANCY [)ALY
Assistant Managing Editor

()ne of the House of Representative‘s 14
congresswomen urged a gathering of
Kentucky women to ward off efforts to
rescind the state‘s ratification of the Equal
Rights Amendment (ERA).

Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman tD-N.Y.) said
the ERA is the “answer to the legal limbo
in which all of us as women find ourselves"
during her keynote address at Saturday’s
“Women and Law“ conference at the
College of Law.

“The fight for ERA has made women
across the country learn to reach out to
each other and that what happens in other
places affects each one of us.“ Holtzman
said.

“If ERA is repealed in Kentucky it will
affect the battle for ERA throughout the
country. We know that if the state effort in
New York to enact an ERA is unsuccessful
it will set back the momentum on a
nationwide scale."

Kentucky ratified the ERA in 1972 but a
movement is currently underway to
rescind the amendment in the 1976 state
legislative session. Approval of four more
statesis required before ERA becomes the
27th Amendment to the Constitution.

“This country‘s bicentennial will be a

University gas allotments cut back
35 per cent by Columbia Gas Co.

By BYRON WEST
\ssistant Managing Editor

Natural gas allotments for the
l'niveisily will be cut back 35 per cent.
beginning Nov. 1. according to .lim
Forrest. industrial engineer for (‘olumbia
tins of Kentucky.

"l'K volumes. other than residential.
hospital. and cooking facilities. will be
subject to a 33 per cent curtailment
beginning in November." Forrest Silld.
"The Public Service (‘ommission  \_ escaping while he sleeps." a contemporary news account ex~ ll
// \L plained. u
r~ ,' \ a“ But just a year later. nine prisoners escaped from the facility. sa
and the honeymoon was clearly over. A few weeks later. the local d‘
grand jury pointed out the jail's inadequacies. re
The new jail is designed to hold about 47:3 inmates The present a
: jail. along with an annex on the outskirts of Lexington. is crowded ~ _ L.
,7 0. at :tso. w
‘ t' / YOU CAN REACH THE DREAM i
h \' of learning to read Spanish in l l cit w
‘ “ through the Independent . erne p]
SlUdY Program. Learn atyour , The Kentucky Kernel ltd Journalism . ol
Bu:'ding, Universuty of Kentucky the Cadet in 1894. The paper has been _
own pace. Lexinaton, Kentucky. 40506, IS mailed tive published tontinuously as the Kentucky ‘ . .ll
Spanish l4l, 142, 24] , 242, available l gfiyflgddugggimpgzgfxcm alt/'22. Kansersdls‘icrfqlzsintended only to help the ‘ If
, Inquire now weekly during summer sessuon. J’hurd reader buy and any false :5 Esteadinoeq Vt
6 c- "ass'°°"a9°~°°-"”' %°*'"?L°';iil“""”‘i“uti $21.33;??? as: imam .5
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Experiential Education offers
alternative internship studies

By LYNNE FL'NK
Kernel Staff Writer

Opportunities to study ethics involved in public
decison-mak ing are available to students interested
in semester~l0ng internships and team-taught
seminars.

Coordinated through the Office for Experiential
Education (DEE), the program is open for ap-
plications from all students. However, only 15
students will be selected to participate in the spring,
1976 intemship program. The program is scheduled
to operate for three semesters. -

()EE directors said the program is designed to fill
a void they say exists in University curriculums.

“All universti

"All universities assume they are educating
people who know how to make moral decisions, but
they're probably not." said Robert Sexton, ()EE
director.

"Watergate is the perfect example.“ said Bar—
bara Hofer. ()EE assistant director. “A liberal arts
education should prepare citizens to make ethical
decisions. Yet some of those involved in Watergate
had the besteducation the country has to offer."

Preparing students for principled judgements has
usually been attempted in large universities
through a fragmented mix of liberal arts courses.
llofer said.

“This is a new educational device to deal with this
fragmentation. she said. “We hope to draw an
exciting mix of students from all disciplines.“

"The l'niversity catalog states that a student.
through the University. should come to better un-

derstand his role as a citizen who participates in
decisions on issues and policies,“ Hofer said, “We
want to meet those traditional objectives in new
ways.“

Students will participate in the program on a
fulltime basis for one semester of academic credit,
Sexton said. They will be placed in a nearby agency
related to their field of study. The students will work
approximately 30 hours per week, he said.

“Through an internship, a student has direct .

experience that can be applied to seminar readings.
Sexton said. “Until faced with actual dilemmas, all
readings a student does may have no context."

A related seminar will be taught by three UK
professors: Dr. Clinton Collins, College of
Education, Dr. Michael Bayles, Department of
Philosophy and Ernest Yanarella, Department of
Political science.

The seminar will focus on duties and respon-
sibilities of citizens in an advanced industrialized
society, Yananella said.

“The seminar is crucial in promoting political
and moral education. he said. “The students will

probe and reassess the political and ethical issues ‘

involved in public decision-making."

The internship-seminar program also includes a
ten-day visit to Washington, D.C.. where students
will talk with federal officials and research
questions thhat have risen in internship and
seminar.

“The program is concerned with the moral and
political. as well as intellectual development of the
individual..' Yanarella said. “It will bea success to
the extent that it provokes students to reexamine
their notions of citizenship."

Holtzman urges ERA approval

(ontinued from page I

said the impending default of ,,,.-

Womtu ant. haw” con-

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday. October 27. 1975—5

.7

 

Cordially invite

Kappa Delta

Sigma Chi

Kappa Kappa Gamma
Simma Phi Epsilon

Pi Beta Phi

Sigma Pi

Zeta Tau Alpha

Tau Kappa Epsilon
Tfiangb

To The Fall. 1975
“All Greek Blast ”

 

 

 

"Dis newgroup
called

”Oh, La we . . . Let‘s

dance . . whata ya

"JIVE TURKEY”

member of the
('omntittte.

Holt/man. a
House Judiciary
it"lected on her involvement in
the 1974 impeachment
deliberations. “I think the im-
peachment process was an ex-
tratrdinary experience for the
country. It brought us together as
a nation by renewing our com-
mitment t0 the constitutional
process and the rule of law.“

But she said little has been
done to correct the abuses
discovered in Watergate. "l was
disappointed with the report by
the special prosecutor. It left me
unaware of whether President
Nixon actually ordered the
Vt'atergatre break-in.

"I think (‘ongress hasn‘t fully
appreciated the need for
following up on some of the
problems we discovered during
Watergate,” she said.
“Something needs to be done
about examining the executive
process of de-politicizing our
system of justice.”

In response to questioning.
Iloltzman said Congress should
consider grand jury reform. She
said several residents from her
district had been jailed for
refusing to talk to grand jury in a
case similar to that of six
Lexington persons held in c0n~
tempt of court.

“Many representatives are
very concerned about this
problem and I think we have an
obligation to look at the grand
jury system. the power of con-
tempt. whether that system
works fairly and effectively and
is not directed at political
dissenters but is directed at
rooting out crime." she said.

During a press conference
following her speech. Holtzman

New York (‘ity will have a
”ripple effect“ on the country.

".\Ilowing New York (‘ity to
detauit will be felt in pocketbooks
of taxpayers across the country.
whereas providing a federal
guarantee for New York (‘ity
bonds will not cost the federal
taxpayer anything." lloltzman
said. She said President Ford is
“Playing politics" by refusing to
support federal guarantees for
New York bonds.

lloltzman said Ford is doing a
“terrible job" as President and
should be voted out of office in
1976. She said she hasn‘t yet
decided which Democratic
presidential nominee to support.

ference and Holtzman‘s speech
were scheduled in tonjunction
with last week's international
Women's Year celebration in
Lexington,

 

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The nation’s no. 1 life-risker. . .

Evel

By JOHN “INN MILLER
.\ssistant Managing Editor

"V’t'elcome ladies and gen»
tlemen to the greatest show on
earth where Evel Knievel, the
world’s number one professional
""e risk-3r. um attempt a world
teen/(l jump over H (Ireyhound
'iUSt .\ "

Would you believe ‘3 and one
t It!” How about 12"

Last 9attii‘day at Kings Island
Evei and his lin't‘at-Old son
Robert ""tel Hired 35,000
spectators tine eromoters were
anticipa .ag timo- vith feats of
daring dt ”fined to tl rill the less
adventu' . s multitude.

The d»: of the longest jump
started (.l ' 'iadly mo proceeded
to get Wm'St‘. (‘owj winds swept
across the threatening sky as the
eager (‘I‘( " “It t'er the main
event. Uet'l'eti .m' in $5 Evel
Knievel c p. . Mutt hing their
Knievel posters tne restless
crowd passively watched the
preju mp warmup show.

I..ife~size cartoon characters
paraded around the jump site
waving at the children on parents
shoulders. A small, colorfully
dresst a marching band strained
to be ht .irt‘ .-‘ ei Knievel‘s theme
St)!‘;' iltt‘ll biared from the
pub « ‘wss system Waves of
pol e ‘inett the jump area
watching for trouble in the
“spectator arena". touted as the
largest temporary seating arena
ever built in the [7.8.

Attracting the most attention,
however. were the ABC television
cameras. W't'ne‘ r -i'.y panned

the arena ' ' ‘ l
as one. wave :i .oticlv and ramp
up and down ..t. ..ofi IIIL 'ie

cameras v we not turned on.
Everything about the event
was the biggc- t. the 'ongest. the

takes a

greatest. the urstest, and the
most expensive all for the

paltry sum of $12 a head. Even if

there was uily ore ting, I’.T.
Barnum would have loved it.

While all 'his confusion was
happening on the ground, a
helicopter iltfhl though the
scuddling clouds :mrl landed next
to the jump site l‘lvel Knievel
had arrived two “outs early to
tumultous cheers from the
audience.

Dressed in a blue jump suit
with red and white stars and
stripes. the 37-yearold Knievel
strolled majestically into the
arena. The band played the
theme from 200]. In front of him
were 10 (Ineyhound buses parked
side by side with a ramp running
up each side. Knievel walked to
the top of the buses. grabbed a
microphone from the announcer
and spoke to his fans.

“I would like to thank my
sponsors Chuckles candy, Harley
I)aVidson. Greyhound, Kings
Island and especially ABC for
making this possible.

“I wasn‘t able to practice
yesterday because of the rain
and wind, so today I‘m going to
give you an extra show. I‘m going
to jump over these 10 buses a
couple of times for practice and i