xt7pk06x0t8h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pk06x0t8h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-02-28 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, February 28, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 28, 1978 1978 1978-02-28 2020 true xt7pk06x0t8h section xt7pk06x0t8h UK claims

SEC title
outright

Information for portions of this
story was taken from the WVLK
game broadcast

UK clinched the Southeastern

Conference championship last night .

witha78-67win at Georgia. The next
step for UK’s seniors is their fourth
straight pOSt-season tournament
appearance.

As freshmen, they shared the SEC
crown with Alabama and in the
NCAA Mideast Regional upset
highly-regarded Indiana before
bowing to perrenial power UCLA in
the championship game.

As sophomores, the Kentucky
group slugged its way to a 10-10
record before winning its last 10
games and the NIT championship.

And last year, UK shared the title
with Tennssee, but fell victim to
North Carolina’s fourcomer offense
to lose in the NCAA Mideast
Regionals.

“We’re not sharing the title this
year,” forward James Lee said.
“That’s a great feeling for us.”

The win over Georgia last night
raised Kentucky’s slate to 23-2
overall and 15-2 in the SEC.

UK didn’t give GeOrgia any breaks
as the first-half curtain rose. The
Wildcats hit their first nine shots,
capped by guard Kyle Macy’s shot
from the top of the key for an 18-12
lead. »

The Cats adrbd to that margin on
the strength of guard Truman
Claytor’s outside shooting and the
smooth baseline work of forward
Jack Givens. Both had 12 points to
lead UK at intermission.

Kentucky hit eight of nine free
throws to help their effort, while
Georgia made only one free throw in
five attempts.

Despite the team’s influenza
epidemic, UK played a sound first
half. Reserve center Chuck
Aleksinas hit a Shtl't jumper with 20
secontk remaining in the half to give
Kentucky its biggest lead at 46-27.

“We lost our legs in the second
half," Hall said. “We came out flat
and missed our shots. But we got a
17-point lead in the first half, and
that proved to be plenty to get us
over the bump in the second half."

The second half Opened with UK
falling victim to the flu. After
Open'ng a quick zopoint lead, UK
just plain tired.

UK led 57-37 early in the second
period when the Bulldogs began
their tempered assault. UK’s lead
shrank to 14 points when the Wild-
cats got stuck at the 60-point mark.
Baskets by forward Lucius Foster
and guard Walter Daniels, the
game’s leading scorer with 25
points, fueled GeOrgia’s offense.

But Kentucky was frittering away
even more points. Hall rested Macy
and Claytor, as well as forward Rick
Robey and center Mike Phillips, in
the last half.

As they did in the second half of
the Alabama game in Lexington, UK
went to Robey on the low post to
keep the game competitive.

But when Robey and Givens
missed front ends of bonus free
throw situatiors, Kentucky found
itself mired with a tenuous 71-63
lead.

Four consecutive charity tosses by
Macy put the game on ice for UK,
though.

The Folding Five? No way, says
Hall.

“ltgot the adrenaline flowing,” he
said about his statements about the
team two weeks ago. “We had to
throw that at them. They understand
that. This is a very dedicated
group."

Damp drive

KEN?“

an independent student newspaper]

Volume LXIX, Number 108
Tuesday, February 28, 1978

Don M24"

Ileadlights will glisten on Lexington streets for a long time.
with all the snow that still has to melt. This line of autos is
filing down Broadway, but the drivers are probably more
wary of chuckholes than damp pavement.

For muscular dystrophy

Research gives new ideas,

By HELEN SARGENT
Kernel Reporter

University professors are often
criticized for doing research on
trivial and often moot topics. But.
one UK professor is involved in a
research program that could affect
the lives of many.

Dr. Allen Butterfield, a chemistry
professor, began his research into
muscular dystrOphy at Duke
University, where he studied
myotonic dystrophy for his doctoral
degee. After coming to UK. he
began research on Duchenne,
andha' type of the disease, and
continued study on myotonia.

Muscular dystrOphy is a
hereditary disease that
progressively deteriorates the
muscles in the body. It often causes

 

UK tops AP
rankings

Team Record Points
. KENTUCKYlasl
UCLA (13)
. Marquette (1)
. Arkansas

. Kansas

. DePaul

. Notre Dame
. New Mexico
. Michigan State
. North Carolina
. Florida State

. Texas

. Illinois State

. Syracuse

. Duke

. Detroit

. Georgetown

. Providence

. Utah

. Louisville

22-2
22-2
22-3
27-2
23—3
23-2
19-5
22-3
21-4
23-6
21-4
22-4
23-2
214
20-6
23-2
21-5
22-6
21-5
18-6

1,044

(2)

 

 

 

death. Butterfield said there is
substantial evidence that muscular
dystrophy isn‘t simply a muscle
disease. that it also involves cell
membranes of other tissues.

“We've been studying red blood
cells, which have nothing to do with
muscles at all." said Butterfield.
who teaches general and graduate
courses in chemistry. Blood is taken
from a patient with muscular
dystrophy and studied for physical
changts in the proteins and fats.
both major constituents of cell
membranes.

“Through chemical and physical
studies. we are trying to find out
which protein has been genetically
altered. If we find the abnormal
protein and know what it does. it‘s
possible we may be able to un-

derstand the physiological basis of
muscle wa sting."

Butterfield said the hypothesis,
supported by current evidence, is
that if the problem can be identified
in red blood cells, a correlation can
be made to the problems of those
with muscular dystrophy.

Butterfield is the only researcher
in Kentucky who is funded by the
National Muscular Dystrophy
Research Foundation. Recently, a
clinic in the Medical Center was
established to assist his research.
This clinic cnablcs patients to
receive medical care and aids
Butterficld in his research.

“We know more about muscular
dystrophy now. 10 times more, than
we knew three years ago." he said.
“It is important for patients to know
I am concerned about them and
their disease. It‘s important that

Fewer enroll

Picture brigatens
for teaching jobs

By EVE IIUTCHERSON
Kernel Reporter

The outlook for prospective
teachers in Kentucky is usually
considered one of the dimmest.
Because of fears of great com-
petitiOn for jobs. the number of
education majors has steadily
declined.

But the picture's really not that
bad. according to a recent survey by
researchers at Western Kentucky
University and the opinions of local
profesionals in the education field.

According to the survey, which
was published last December, the
total number of teachers graduating

2]

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Kentucky

hope

thcy know somebody is doing
something.”

Dr. William Marksbery, a
neurologist at the Medical Center,
helps Butterfield by confirming
diagntses and assisting in-patient
interaction. In addition, the
research group has four graduate
students. three senior thesis
studmts and three technicians.

Butterfield said those with the
disease. along with their families,
have been very cooperative. “I think
they recognize that it‘s only through
cooperation of people who have
disease that any progress can eva‘
in made. It isn‘t something that
happens in a vacuum.”

Butterfield stressed optimism
about the disease and the work that
is being done. “People shwldn't be
discouraged.”

High steppers

This was the scene early this morning in the
parking lot of the new basketball players‘ dorm on
Lexington Ave., where hundreds of CK students
and Lexington residents gathered to welcome the

Wildcats back from their weekend road trip. The
occaision for the celebration was the Cats‘ illst SEC
championship. which they won last night by
whipping (imrgia 78-07.

from 13 private and state institutions
in Kentucky dropped by 35.4 percent
between 1972 and 1976. By
educational levels, the breakdown
looked like this:

The number of graduating
elementary school teachers dropped
from 1.786 to 1,313— a decline of
20.48 percent.

The number of graduating
secondary school teachers (in-
cluding middle and high school)
dropped [mm 3,168 to 1.892. a
significant dr0p of 40 percent.

“The undergraduate enrollment in
the College of Education is still
dropping,“ confirmed George W.
Denemark of the College of
Education. “Although the rate of
decline has lessened. We expect this
trend should stabilize shortly.“

Dcnanark said his school was now
stressing, in general, programs of
continuing education and in-service
education. Those programs are
designed for teachers who are
already employed.“ He said the
policy reflects the College of
Education‘s graduate enrollment
increase, not necessarily a turn
away from undergraduate courses.

“The percentage of UK Education
graduates obtaining jobs is
relatively high," Denemark pointed
out. The latest figures available
placed UK well above the national
avtragc, with about a 72 percent
placement rate, he said.

Studmts are enrolling in par—
ticular areas of need, said
Denemark, such as kindergarten
teaching and special education for
handicapped students. The growth
of elementary-kindergarten
programs in Kentucky has spurred a
new program at UK for that area, he
said.

The idea of a “fantastic Over-
supply of teachers is more a myth
than anything else,“ said Jack R.
Wyrick. director of secondary
personnel for the Fayette County
School System.

“In many areas, probably a half
dozen or so," Wyrick continued.
“we've had some serious difficulty
linding people."

Wyrick named the areas of
reading. mathematics, Earth and
physical sciences. agriculture, in-
dustrial arts and distributive
education among those with a real
shortage of qualified instructors.

“Social Studies and English are
the areas with an oversupply of
teachers, if indeed any exists." said
Wyrick. That oversupply is roughly
equal at all grade levels. he added.

Guarded optimism was the
outlook expressed by several 1.7K
education majors. Most mentioned
the normal counts of any graduate
on the job market. But, as one
r~lcmcntary-kindcrgarten major put
it. “Everybody I know has got a job.
and I feel pretty good about it.“

We goofed

Somc details of the l'niva‘sity‘s
efforts to curtail use of clectricty
were reported incorrectly in a story
yesterday.

Portable clcctric heaters are not
the only source of heat for corner
rooms in Rlanding and Kirwan
towers. as the rooms are also cen-
trally heated. The heaters are being
returned to students who request
them for health reasons, said Jack
lilanton. vice president for business
affairs.

Also. Steve Williams is a resident
assistant in Kirwan Tower, not
Kirwan IV. and Mark I’ritchctt's
name was spelled incorrectly.

'l‘hc Kernel regrets the errors

 

-today

 

inside

DAVE MASON AND BOB WELCH will be at UK March 7. Read who they are
and what they‘re about on page 3.

nation

(‘OAL OPERATORS AND UNION representatives returned to the scene of
their negotiating skirmishes yesterday to preview the new contract aimed at
settling the extended coal strike.

The groups met separately in Washington. Members of the 130member
Bituminous Coal Operators Association met to hear the terms of the tentative
three-year contract outlined in an hour-long session.

Althmgh the coal operators refused to talk about the proposal. their approval
seem assured. Union representatives. however, were less certain about the
reaction of the UMW‘s 160.000 miners, whme strike enters its 35th day today.

THE SUPREME COURT. DENYING an appeal from Kentucky. said
yesterday the federal goverment does not have to help pay the costs of court-
ordered braing to achieve racially desegregated public schools.

The justices rejected without comment an appeal by Kentucky Gov. Julian
Carroll seeking permission to ask for federal help in paying for busing in the

Louisville area. one of hundreds of school districts across the nation carrying
out court-ordered busing.

THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION uses
“manipulative and corrupt" tactics to investigate allegations of wrongdoing by
its 800 university and college members. a former staff investigator for the
NCAA said yesterday.

Brent Clark is a lawyer who worked for the NCAA‘s enforcement division for
2' _. years. He described a pattern of arbitrary investigations based more on
politics and whim than on ending recruitment and other types of violations.

Clark said in at least two cases. athletes interviewed about alleged violations
were told they would gd help in tryouts with professional teams if they
cooperated with NCAA investigators. He said his boss at the NCAA told him to
tell one athlete the young man would get a tryout with the Kansas City Kings
pro basketball team as “bait" for providing information against his school

WITH HEARINGS SET TO OPEN IN WASHINGTON Tuesday on the 34(1)
mrIIion-a-year problem of cigarette smuggling. Penmylvania is taking one
solution into its own hands ~ offering Southerners rewards for tips about the
smugglers.

The state has taken out an ad offering 50 cents per carton of confiscated
cigarettes in editions of the Raleigh, NC. News-Observer The ad will also
appear in other Southern states.

Yesterday. one day after their ad began running in the Raleigh paper's
Sunday edition. Pennsylvania el‘ficials said they had five tips that they were
tracking down The ad will arn nrough Wednesday

world

(THAN SOLDIERS HAVE ENTERED combat for the first time against
rebels in Ethiopia's northern Eritrea province, the insurgents said yesterday.
Cubans already had been reported fighting along-side Ethiopian troops in their
(lg aden war against Somali secession ists at the other end of the country.

Amde Michael Kahsai, spokesman for the Eritrean People's Liberation
Front. said in Rome that 1.000 Cubans joined Ethiopian defenders in the
Eritrean capital of Asmara for an unsuccessful attempt to end the five month
rebel siege of the city,

IZS intelligence has reported more than 10,000 Cuban soldiers. several
thousand Russians and other foreign troops are inside Ethiopia. with the
(‘ubans directly involved in fighting the ethnic Somali rebels who seek to unite
Ethiopia‘s southeastern ()gaden desert to Somalia.

weather

\NOTIIEH “INTER STORM WARNING for Lexington today Snow. then
rain and then snow with accumulations one to three inches. Highs today in the
mid tr; upper 30‘s Lows tonight about 20. Tomorrow‘s high about 30.

Compiled from AP dispatches.

 

 

 

 

  
   
 
  
  
 
  
   
   
  
   
  
   
    
   
 
  

    

 

 

Kémhcfiel

editorials 83 Comments

Steve liailnlgel‘
Izditm in (‘liieI

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Managing l’rlitnr

’l'lioluas t‘lai'li

I‘sthllnl Managing II'iiilor

t'haries Mani

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Jennifer (larr
Stall Artist

1 David llibbifls
Sports lfdllm

Gregg Fields
Richard McDonald
Jim McNaIr
Mike Mouser
itetsy Pearce
Copy Editors

lioh Staulile
Assistant Sports liditor

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Arts &' f’niertumnienl Filltor l)u\'tdtl‘Nell

Photo Manager
Nell Fields
Assistant Arts £-
I’nlerfuinnlenl Fditnr

Jeanne Wehna‘
Photo Supervisor

 

 

Basketball ticket distribution process is unhealthy

Bad weather, the demand for UK basketball
tickets and an inadequate distribution process
have created an unhealthy situation this year.

To get the few good seats that are available to
students, it’s necessary to camp out in front of
Memorial Coliseum many hours before the
tickets are given out

The standing, self imposed policy of “snooze-
lose” IS hardly fair to students who camp for two
days and miss arbitrarily scheduled “roll calls”
while getting a bite to eat.

If the Umversrty officials who have taken upon
themselves the responsibility for distributing
tickets are genuinely concerned about the health
and safety of the studaits, then they should take
a more responsible position with regards to the
policing of the ticket lines under the present

system or devdop a new, better system.

Last weekend, hundreds of students had
gathered bylate Saturday night, although tickets
were rid tobegiven out until 2 p. m. Sunday. Two
hardy fanatics had been there since late Friday
night, living out of a tent tied to the ticket win-
dow.

It simply wasn ’ta healthy situation. A raging
flu epidemic found it’ 5 perfect medium: tired,
cold students packed together like sardines.
Huddled over unsafe trash can fires and
shivering on the pavement, the students looked
like prisoners in Auschwitz or Buchenwald.

The Univa'sity administration should not
allow such self-abuse to continue next year. It
might take an entirely new system to alleviate
such unhealthy situations, as basketball fans
cannot berelied upon to take care of themselves.

There will always be some who risk health, study
and sleep to reach the front row.

There are several alternatives available to the
present system, alternatives that don’t en-
courage masochism. Tickets could be given out
all at once, lotteries could be used, or
distribution could be done in a place where
students could wait indoors.

But the best system is this: Keep the
distribution place a secret until about twelve
hours before tickets are given out. Then have the
location announced over campis radio (a dif-
ferent location sh add be designated each time).
A safety officer at the scene could solve
squabbles over who arrived first.

The fanatics would still have a chance to prove
their devotion, but the time limit would keep it

within reason. There would no longer be any
marathon vigils in sub-freezing weather.
Students could stay healthier, better-rested and
would have more time to study.

University officials could also'help by stan-
dardizing the rules for waiting in line. Ticket
seekers have policed themselves well this year
(most often by a sign-when-you-arrive list), but
there needs to be a definite set of regulations
governing things like amount of time for
restroom and meal breaks.

It would, of course, be impossible to determine
how many students contracted colds or the flu
during this most recent ticket madness, but even
one is too many. The University should be able to
recognize the potential danger of such situations
and take steps to insure the students’ welfare.

   
     
 
 
    
    
  
  
 
   
  
 
   
   
 
 
  
   
   
 
 
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
   
  
  
        

Office Tower Blues

Grade inflation: a contagion on the body academic

Grade inflation is a little like your
Uncle Joe's venereal disease. The
family knows about the illness, but
discourages talk. It may notbe fatal,
but your mother is embarassed and
Uncle .loe suffers quietly, waiting
for the penicillin to cure.

 

robert Q1.
hemenway

 

Grade inflation is a contagion 0n
the body academic, something that
might be called a social disease. In
the last decade it has reached
epidemic proportions, but neither
professors nor students have had the
nerve for an honest diagnosis and a
realistic remedy.

Grade inflation means that
average school work gets above
average marks. Today at most
universities B equals average. It is
considrrcd eccentric. perverse and

unpatriotic for professors to give C’s
for middling performance or flunk
students who try hard but are inept.
All students want at least a B, and
most expect it.

Since 1972 l have been told 236
times that “I needa B in this course
for (check one: law school, grad
school, med school)."

A young man once told me that he
needed a B because he wanted to get
married that spring. His prospective
mother-in-iaw had set her sights on
an intellectual, and my testimony
was to be the clinching evidence in a
doubtful case.

But don‘t trust my experience.
(‘onsider the facts. Between 1965 and
I974 the mean grade awarded at UK
went from 2.5 to 2.8. The average
grade given in the College of
Education during the spring, 1977
semester was 33.

Nor is UK unique. Between 1962
and 1972 the University of North
Carolina doubled its percentage of
A‘s. In 1961 Harvard graduated half

of its seniors with honors. In 1974
cum laude degrees went to 82 per-
cent of the graduating class. As
everyone knows, none of this occurs
because students are smarter. In
fact, national scores have con-
sistently declined for the last
decade.

Grade inflation results from three
converging phenomena of the 60's:

«1) Student demands for better
teaching gave birth to the student
evaluation. Fear of negative
evalu ation led professors to hand out
had grades, believing that a studeit
would not express dissatisfaction
with a course that provided
unearned increments for the GPA.
There are many exceptions, but
university faculties generally
concluded that it was easier to give
cheap grades than become better
teachers.

Ironically, recent research has
shown that students have more
integrity than anyone suspected.
Itcfusing to be bribed, students have

usually assessed teachers honestly,
regardless of grades received.

(2) Declines in enrollments scared
the daylights out of faculty and
administration. After un-
precedented growth since the
Korean War. higher education
suddenly faced the prospect of being
overstuffed and underfinanced.
i'niversity vicepresidents looked
upon a superfluous future: what
would be left to administrate?
Department chairpersons felt the
sting of budgd cuts because their
departments “serviced" fewer
students. Professors faced can-
cellation of their favorite classes.
The administrators worked harder
to unearth bodies. sometimes ad-
mitting marginal students. Once
they were in the classroom, the
faculty made sure they wouldn’t be
forced to leave.

fill l'nivcrsity pedagogy, like the
rest of s0eiety, became influenced
by behavior modification
techniques. “Positive rein-

forcemcnt“ became a constitutional
guarantee. in my discipline this
meant that all that stood between
functional illiteracy and competent
writing was a warm- hearted teacher
rewarding the student every time he
stumbled onto a complete sentence.
it was a phil050phy demeaning to
both modifier and modified. Grades
became the equivalent of jelly beans
used as rewards in an experiment to
teach a chimpanzee to deal black
jack.

i don't know the answer to grade
inflation. but i do know it un-
dermines the integrity of the
student-teacher relationship. The
student feels cheap and cynical
w hen heof’fers inferior work and it is
returned with a superior grade.

The professor keeps asking
himself if he is prostituting stan-
dards and usually decides that he is.
Faculty member and student both
feel bad. but don't know how to get
off the emotional roller coaster.
Each is afraid to take the first step.

They both sense that there is no
longer any way to prize true ex-
cellence. they both know that real
learning has been captured by a
jelly bean theory of education and
they both resent the way their
responses have been manipulated.

l have no idea what the long range
effects of all this will be, but pOIls
now show that education is un-
dervalued, and this attitude can
eventually make the university
expendable in a society making hard
choices about its institutions. Which.
come to think of it, means no jobs for
professors...

Maybe Mother was right. Maybe
It‘s best to keep I'ncle Joe‘s in-
discrction under wraps. The
problem is that silence never helps
the pain. we've contracted the
disease without any pleasure and no
wonder drug appears on the horizon.

Itobert llemenway teaches
engiish at l K and drives a VW bus
with ”2.000 miles on it. His column
appears monthly. on Tuesdays.

 

 

Letters to the Editor

 

 

In the name of Allah. the an-
nihilator of oppressors:

The organization of Iranian
Moslem Students will hold a
demonstration in Lexington to
protest the recent massacre of
Iranian Moslem people in Tabriz in
which hundreds of people were

killed and many others wounded by
soldiers of the dictatorial regime of
the Shah.

To support the just struggle of
Iranian Meslem pe0pie and in
solidarity with our martyred sisters
and brothers in Tabriz we the
organization of Iranian Moslem

Students in Lexington are fasting
this week to condemn the oppressive
and anti-islamic regime of the Shah.
Our demonstration will be held on
Thursday. March 2, at 11 am, in
front of the Fayette County Cour-
thouse. organization of Iranian
Moslem Students

 

The Kentucky Kernel welcomes letters and
commentaries submitted for publication. Articles
must include the signature, address, phone num-
ber, year and major if the writer is a student.
Commentary authors should have expertise or
experience in the area their article pertains to.

The Kernel editors have final decision on which
articles are published and when they are published
The editors reserve the right to edit submissions

Letters policy

because of unsuitability in length, grammatical
errors. or libelous statements. All letters and
commentaries become the property of the Kernel.

The best-read letters are brief and concern
campus events, though commentaries should be
shirt-essay length. Letters and commentaries can
be mailed to the Editorial Editor. Room ”4,
Journalism Building, University of Ky. 40506, or
may be delivered personally.

 

 

 

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LOCATED JUST OFF NICHOLASVILLE RD.— $1.00 OFF ON use 0F BATTING CAGES WITH THIS COUPON

TURN BETWEEN STEAK 8. ALE AND WENDY’S

ly/ Sound Guard

Record Preservation Kit

flflEZZWV reg. $6.99
$4.99 with coupon
423 Southland Drive 278-0536 expires 3-22-78

1/ ________________-______________

IDI 40 watt auto
flflgflflfy

 

1

Power Booster

reg. $29.95

with coupon $23-00

expires 3-22-78

THIS COUPON GOOD FOR

200/0 off all items in stock

 

p23 Southland Drive 278-0536

WE HAVE A FINE SELECTION OF

an WALLETS. BRIEFCASES, BOOKS.
v+ HANDBAGS. SANDALS. CAPS. BELTS
gfig ETC. WE ALSO CARRY HANDMADE
~~':,,m BELT BUCKLES AND DO LEATHER

something sold at a price favorable to the buyer,

bargain lbar' g'nl n. I 0F r. bargaignier. hagglel
esp. from the Kernel (Ioupon Issue

 

100/0 off custom orders and repairs

REPAIR WORK.

Offer expires 318-7 8

__—___--____J-_-_--_______L

504‘: EUCLID AVE. 253-3121

WITH
THIS
COUPON . . .

 

With this coupon and the purchase
of one BIG MAC you receive one . . .

-—-—-—- L-—--—---—d p——-———-——-——‘ P

FREE BIG MAC

'offer expires mar 20,1978 limit one per custorrer per visit
[offer good only at 15 w vine st one block from rupp arena.

-—----——J - -———

A supplement to the Kentucky Kernel. Tuesday. February 28, 1978

L.

 

 

 I CAME. I SAW. I LEFT.
said Julius Caesar after
viewing outlandish prices
at the Roman forum.
Shown giving the bird to
greedy merchants. the
First Citizen shopped
exclusively with coupons.

The Kernel presents

More famous uses of the coupon

THE SL'BLIME BLISS of meditation
needs a practical side to be economical.
the Indian gurus discovered when they
got into mass marketing. The Serene
Perfect Master Hawal Orsipindi now
offers lessons in tranquility at a 20
percent discount on the three-month
plan with coupon. Cash in advance, of
course.

ONE SMALL STEP was taken by Neil
Armstrong on that great journey to
Earth's satellite. No one is sure exactly
how Armstrong used coupons. but as
some have speculated about how
astronauts use the bathroom. what about
where they get toilet paper?

(‘IIAIN MAIL IS DIF-
FI(‘l'LT to keep in repair.
discmered Sir Lancelot
after one of England‘s wet
seasons. Annoyed with
rust. Lance used coupons
to buy aluminum armor at
a kinky S 8: M shop in
‘ Dover.

~‘,' \h‘e', -——---—1

 

 

if?” "2:... ' f
1‘ :.
i p I
. 19 m
QVL . a r
\the ‘ Q\11\g1% °$ A
“\i 96 1 ‘ ’ ‘A
a a
O“ 00 ‘0‘;
9 ‘h 09.
9*

 

, _ Jeans,Tops &
Accessories For
‘ Men & Women

136 Southland Drive

Nicholasvllle

4 l
,
v _ .

Bring In This Ad

& Receive A FREE

T-Shirt With $10 Purchase

(SETTING BACK TO NATURE
was always difficult for Pierre
_ Rousseau. who couldn‘t resist
A ' the urge to hunt coupon bargains
‘_ all day in the big. filthy cities.

This offer is good at...

357 Duke Rd.

Just down Cooper Dr.
from the Complex
three blocks past

Tates Creek on the left.

brazier. 266-3461

“G; V
FOTO-CENTER "

8:30-5:30 M-F
IO0I WINCHESTER R0. 255-IOI2

WATSON. (‘OME HERE. said
.-\lex Bell and the rest was
history. Bell’s idea to sell phones
by coupons was rejected by
latter—day operators. who have
no reason to be nice to anyone.

”0" Get Twoi

SAY one for the regular I

BURGER . . . price and get

say i _ the second for

u . 2' 10 c
brallel.‘ Jand. this coupon.
....__-___.._..___-______e‘_°'_'e.§.'.“.22_'5'.‘.?l‘1.-

mm .. _.,. :. Ff. GI‘EII' pitfll'es
indoors-

—-::_. 2'13:
“5 mm!

ONLY I I4”

WITH COU PON

.l

'1
-

YASHICA REG. PRICE 119.95
1’ ELECTRO 35 GS” 6000 THRU 3.14-73

h---—-——--

 

8:30-4:00 SAT
1er

“(MANY RD.

Kentuc \ ~ .W
fiequ ‘ , _ ‘. “as .L:

‘ ' IWI'III
\ (I

6 'icken. . 7/;

. 4/1 0‘79 .
Rust»: s1. / ‘9 ‘
//.

»
'6

BURGER
QUEEN

\'

IIR.
I

4o

I

one regular dinner

‘_L---

. \

When you buy
50 ¢
LESS at KFC Chevy Chase,
Present this coupon.
(Ifer good during March, 2978

W'TH 1/4 Box of Chicken

COUPON

*------

J"---

Thai IS two pieces of chicken, trench
(rues. cole slaw and a roll.

$1.25

Expires March 24, 1978

Good only at the campus location 507 S. Limestone

 

 

HONG KONG
PAVILION

Chinese Cuisine
{Cantonese Slechuan
8. Mandarin)

I20 Upper Street OPEN 7 DAYS
Lexmgton, Kv.-10507 A WEEK
Phone (606) 2524747

393 Waller Avenue

(Just 3 blocks from UK)
233-1717

10% off

on all dinners

with this coupon

Expires March 31. 1978

50c OFF

“—9—...ng on any $2“ purchase!

--......L.._-__-______,L_..-_..------..

‘ W 7/

 

 

        
       
     
         
     
           
 
      
     
 
      
       
       
       
       
     
        
       
        
    
        
 
        
      
 
      
 
   
 

   
 
 
  
 
  
 
  
    
  
 
  
    
      
  

’an-.

 

 

arts

 

Mason, Welch bring past
of varied experience to UK

By WALTER TUNIS
Arts 81 Entertainment Editor

Veteran singer Dave
Mason, and Bob Welch,
former memba of Fleetwood
Mac will be coming to UK
Tuesday, March 7 at 8 pm.
for a performance in
Memorial Coliseum.

Mason’s current stardom
comes from his latest
Columbia album, Let It Flow,
which has become his best
selling album since his
musical debut in the late 605.

During that time, Mason,
along with Steve Winwood,
Jim Capalidi, and Chris
Wood, formed Traffic.
Although Mason stayed with
the group through only two
albums, his contributions
such as “FeelingAlright” has
been covered by artist Joe
Crocker.

Following his departure
from Traffic in 1969, Mason
joined Delaney and Bonnie
for several concerts, whi