xt7rbn9x3q8n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7rbn9x3q8n/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1974-01-21 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, January 21, 1974 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 21, 1974 1974 1974-01-21 2020 true xt7rbn9x3q8n section xt7rbn9x3q8n The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 93
Monday, January 21, 1974

University of Kentucky

an independent student newspaper Lexington Ky, 40506

 

 

Possible unmined gas and oil reserves
for commercial purposes were recently
located in southeastern Kentucky by state
and federal geologists.

Portions of Bell and Harlan counties
have been mapped over an extended
period of time; these maps indicate
geological structures which contain a high
potential for yielding gas and oil, ac-
cording to Dr. Wallace Hagan, state
geologist at UK.

Geologists

discover

oil reserves

A REPORT by A.J. Froelich was
published last month by the Kentucky
Geological Survey. Froelich’s report is the
result of geological mapping and surveys
completed in that area in June 1973 and
point to potential source beds, reservoirs
and structures complimentary for oil and
gas accumulations.

Prior to completion of the mapping,
seven seven-inch holes were drilled in the
Harlan-Bell area which produced seven

Lex "16‘le

By NORMANDI ELLIS

Kernel Staff Writer

Continued on page 8

Mums... e

 

Ruckelshaus
to address

Focus Forum

By LINDA CARNES

Kernel Staff Writer

Former Deputy Attorney
General of the United States,
William D. Ruckelshaus, will be
keynote speaker at a day-long
seminar, Jan. 30, at the Student
Center.

Ruckelshaus will speak on the
topic, “Ethics and Morality in
Government” at 8 pm. in the
Grand Ballroom to conclude
several workshops and a debate
scheduled throughout the day.

NOMINATED T0 the post of
Deputy Attorney General by
President Nixon last July,
Ruckelshaus was dismissed on
Oct. 20, 1973, for refusing to
fire Special Prosecutor Archibald
Cox.

He was Acting Director of the
FBI from April, 1973 until July,
1973 after I- Patrick Gray had
stepped out of public life. From
1970 until 1973, Ruckelshaus was
Administrator of the US. En-
vironmental Protection Agency.

Ruckelshaus will speak as part
of a Focus Forum sponsored by
Student Government. A grant of
$5,000 was appropriated by

President Otis Singletary for two
Focus Forums to be held this
semester.

“THE PURPOSE of the forums
is to involve students for one day
on a pressing issue in the coun-
try," said Focus Forum chair-
woman, Karen Greene.

A committee was selected by
SC president Jim Flegle to
choose the topic, make
arrangements, and obtain the
speakers.

Others contacted to speak
included Archibald Cox, Ramsey
Clark and Howard Baker, but,
according to Greene, were unable
to speak on the scheduled date.

RUCKELSHAUS' SPEECH
and all other activities during the
day will be open to the public.

Also scheduled for Jan. 30 is a
panel discussion dealing with the
same topic. The panel will in-
clude State Senator Joe Graves, a
judicial authority and a jour-
nalist, neither of whom have been

confirmed at this time, Greene
said.

The panel discussion and
question and answer period will
be held from 10-11:30 am. in
Room 245, Student Center.

A FREE documentary film is
scheduled for 2 pm. in the SC
Theatre. The film has not been
selected yet, said Greene, but it
will also she related to “Ethics
and Morality in Government."

To end the day‘s activities a
debate will be held between UK
varsity debaters, Jim Flegle and
Ben Jones, for the affirmative,
and speech graduate assistants,
Norm Sims and Robert Valen—
tine, for the negative.

The debate is scheduled for
3:15 pm. in the SC Theatre with
the topic; “Resolved that
Richard Nixon should be im-
peached."

SG ASKED FOR the money to
sponsor the forum last summer,
but there was a problem getting
speakers and someone to head
the committee, Flegle said.

WILLIAM RL'CKELSHAUS
Will speak at UK Jan. 30

The date or topic for the next
Forum has not been chosen,
Flegle said. The committee is
considering a topic concerning
the energy crisis or possibly the
obscenity law, he added.

The last Focus Forum was held
in 1965 as a part of the Univer-
sity’s Centennial celebration.

 

News In Brle

OSAIGON - A Chinese amphibious
force of up to 500 men backed by four MIG
bombers seized the last of the disputed

" n‘ M'” m Paracel islands in the South China Sea on

nan-wean

0 Islands stezed

OAssad softens
OFord gets zero
OTranscripts prepared
OBroad form deeds
eOtl monopoly?

0 Today's weather...

Sunday, the Saigon command reported.

It said the Chinese overran 150 South
Vietnamese troops and apparently ended
the two-day air, sea and ground battle for
the strategic islands, claimed by both
sides and prized as a possible jumping off
point for off-shore oil exploration.

.0 TEL AVIV —— A high American official
said Sunday that Syrian President Hafez
Assad has softened his refusal to turn over
a list of Israeli war prisoners held in Syria.

The refusal has been a major barrier to
Israeli-Syrian negotiations. Its removal
could signal a breakthrough in Secretary
of State Henry A. Kissinger’s efforts to get
a troop disengagement accord between
Syrians and Israelis similar to the one he
got last week between Egyptians and
Israelis.

OWASHINGTON — Americans for
Democratic Action gave Vice President
Gerald R. Ford a zero Sunday in its annual
rating of voting records of members of the
House of Representatives.

ADA said Ford was one of 47 House
members who failed to vote for what it
considered the liberal position on 25
congressional votes last year chosen as the
basis for the annual rating.

OWASIIINGTON — The White House
prepared detailed transcripts of President
Nixon’s conversations with John Dean in
an effort to refute charges Nixon knew of
the Watergate cover-up but decided
against releasing them, an informed
source said Sunday.

.Ol-‘RANKFOR'I‘. Ky. — A Republican
state legislator has secured a favorable
Kentucky attorney general's opinion to
back up his renewed effort to remedy the
primary complaint against broad form

deeds.
tate Rep. Raymond Overstreet, R-

Liberty, asked the attorney general's
.opinion on the legality of his House Bill 9.

That measure would require the ap-
proval of a surface landowner before the
state could issue a surface-mining permit
to a coal operator

OWASHINGTON — The head of the
United Mine Workers said Sunday that
coal reserves owned by oil companies have
gone undeveloped because the oil industry
seeks to keep petroleum dominant in the
energy market.

Arnold Miller, the union‘s president,
called for a congressional investigation
into the financial practices of major
energy conglomerates and possible an-
titrust action to separate oil and coal in-
terests.

...posstble threat?

A 20 per cent chance of rain threatens
the weather picture today as temperatures
hover around 50. Tonight and tomorrow
partly cloudy skies and cooler tem-
peratures are expected.

 

    
  
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
  
    
 
    
 
 
  
  
  
 
  
   
 
 
 
  
    
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
     
  
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
    
 
  
 
  
  
  
 
   
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
      
  
  
    

 

editorials represent the opinions of the editors,

not the university

Edltorlals

 

The Kentucky Kernel

We, bluntle the. 1m Priscilla Lane. Datum. Ky. loan as
the Cousin 1.! and published continuously as no “not: lend clue ms.

 

Carpools ioin long list
of fashionable fads

Carpools are now included on the long list of fads that
once featured white socks, men with long hair and the three
car family. As argyle socks slip on to more feet and barber
shops report a marked increase in haircuts carpools begin

to grace more parking lots.

Officials are now encouraging UK parking permit

holders to cash in on an oppo
But because of poor planning,

rtunity to conserve gasoline.
we wonder if the UK attempt

isn’t just a plan to cash in on promotional gains from
wealthy, enviromentally-concerned alumni who applaud
the idea of a carpool. They may not care to know the
University’s plan isn’t practical.

Two severe restrictions accompany this alternative to

higher prices and fewer parking spaces:
—A1though “A" permit holders will save $12 when

purchasing the $24 carpool per

mit, they will have to forfeit

the original permit, and be forced to use the Cooper Drive
parking lot and shuttle bus when emergencies keep them

from coming to campus with
——“B“ permit holders wi

the pool.

ll pay the same fee for the

carpool permit as they did for the original sticker and will
have the opportunity of landing a better parking space.
However, if the majority of “A" permit holders decide not
to use the carpool system, “B" carpool users may end up
with the same spaces they previously frequented.

Assuming the University is serious with its plans, why not
consider practical methods of carpooling?

The best incentive for this plan is the $24 cost of the
permit, combined with a privilege of parking in spaces on

main campus lots.

Choice lots for carpools are

between the Chem-Physics

Building and Kastle and Pence Halls, the lots in front of the
Funkhouser Building, behind McVey Hall and the Jour-
nalism Building. The drive in front of the Administration

Building should also be used.

Reclassification should take place when only new permits
are issued. For this reason, we propose that no one be
allowed advantages of carpool permits until April 1. In the
meantime, “A" and “B“ stickers will still be honored in
respective lots and campus officials can accept applications
for carpool permits, effective April 1.

After implementing a plan which is practical and will
benefit the University community, campus officials could
claim their efforts with a carpoolsystem were sincere.

Nicholas Von Hoffman

Celebrating th

WASHINGTON —— We are
coming up on the anniversary of
the Paris cease-fire agreements,
a birthday worth celebrating
because this leukemic child of
international diplomacy may not
be with us a year hence.
President (formerly General)
Nguyen Van Thieu, democracy’s
standard bearer in Southeast
Asia, announced on Jan. 4 that,
“as far as the armed services are
concereed I can tell you the war
has restarted." In other words,
he has denounced the central
proposition of the Paris accords,
which is that both sides would
forsake a military resolution of
their struggle in favor of a
political one.

Two weeks later the world has
learned that Thieu‘s people have
begun large-scale bombing of the
Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
posi’ions. As always these acts
were described as defensive, as

nescessary to forestall an of-
fensive by the other side. To
date the other side has not at-
tempted an offensive, but it takes
no great analytical brain to
figure out that some day it will if
Saigon thinks it can break the
cease-fire agreements merely by
imputing the intention to do so to
its opponents.

In reply many will say that
Thieu is entitled to respond to
many cease-fire violations on the
part of his enemies throughout
the whole year. That can’t be
convincingly denied. However, it
would be amistake to think that
Saigon, after showing saintly
patience for a year, has been
forced to step 'up the level of the
fighting. Both sides have broken
the terms of the agreement. We
are more aware of the Viet Cong
and North Vietnamese violations
because it has been diffucult for

 

letters to the Kernel

Criticizes Von Hoffman column

Nicholas von Hoffman’s recent
column criticizing the Bell
System (Kernel, Nov. 26) con-
tained a number of charges
which discredit all of the nation‘s
regulated telephone utitlties—
Bell and Independent companies
alike. We believe the charges are
unfounded.

 

He first criticized the in-
dustry’s efforts to charge for
excessive use of directory
assistance. This charge was first
introduced by the Cincinnati Bell
Company on Jan. 1 with
regulatory approval. Studies
showed that a minority of
customers (22 per cent) made a
majority (87 per cent) of the

our newspeople to report on
Saigon’s infractions.
Nevertheless, violations by
Thieu‘s armies were reported
starting a year ago with a Wall
Street Journal dispatch about an
attack against An Hoa; a
Baltimore Sun description of air
strikes on Tay Ninh; a Dallas
Morinig News story about an
artillery barrage against Cua
Viet, and so on and so forth
through all of 1072 adding up to
scores of indicents. If Americans
think in’s only the Communists
who are breaking rules, it is
either because they are blanking
out what they don’t want to know
or because Saigon and
Washington are at great pains to
depict the other side as villains.
None of this would matter
except to the dead wounded and
homeless if South Vietnam were
moving toward a political
resolution of the differences that

information calls. They did this
without paying a premium for
such abuses as 1,000 calls a
month by some businesses and
200 calls by some residences,
because directory information
charges have been averaged
into each bill.

In Cincinnati, the first three
calls for directory assistance any
month are now free. The
customer then pays only for the
service he uses, no longer sub-
sidizing the heavy user of
directory assistance. Exemp-
tions are granted to handicapped
persons, pay phone users,
hospitals, hotels and motels.

The columnist also praised the
new competition that permits
nonregulated suppliers to sell
telephones and other com-
munications equipment,
primarily to business firms. Mr.
von Hoffman noted that the
telephone companies may charge
higher rates to residential users
as a result.

This is correct, but only
because the new competition
sanctioned by the Fedderal
Communications Commission

divide the country—if the fighting
were dying out as the decision-
making was being transferred to
the mechanisms envisaged in the
Paris agreements.

That is not happening. Saigon
has refused to have anything to
do with the setting-up of the
National Council of Recon-
ciliation and Concord which was,
according to the deal signed with
such empty solemnity, to oversee
elections in South Vietnam. By
April of last year Thieu was
already saying North Viet-
namese troops would have to be
withdrawn from the South before
there could be elections, thereby
attaching a new condition not
included in the Paris
agreements. By the year‘s end
the hope of elections in which all
factions could take part vanished
with Thieu’s December
statement that “I assert that
there will be no general election,

\ \3;

\

  

may force many telephone
companies to reprice each of
their services to reflect the actual
cost of providing them. Hist
orically, business firms have
dpaid more than residences
because service was worth more
to them. This has resulted in a
subsidy for residential users in
the interest of extending com-
munications to as many people as
possible. In the future,
residential users are likely to pay
rates based on true cost.

This may prove distressing to
homeowners, but we consider it
an inevitable resdult of the ar—
tificial competitoon introduced
into our industry by the FCC.

WILLIAM C. MOTT
Executive Vice President
U. S. lndepent
Telephone Association

e cease-fre anniversary

and I am sure peace is not
coming. . .”

The Paris
recognized that there are three
major political elements in
Vietnam—Thieu and his people,
the Reds, and everybody else, the
plague-on-both-you-houses peo-
ple who get lumped under the
designation of neutralists.’ They
are being wiped out.

Twenty years ago when the
Vietnamese Communists were
blocked out of the political
process, they went to war; they
will go to war for the same
reasons now. Then Thieu will get
his much-predicted offensive and
we, with out lndochinese ob-
sessional neurosis, will get it with
them.

'25:::2:15:2:2:::::::i-2-2-'-‘-2-:‘2-:-

Nicholas von Hoffman is a
columnist with Kings

Features Syndicate.

agreements .

Zena-.-

m. *- :4

     

 opinion from inside and outside the university community

Vlewpolnt

 

Theodore Roosevelt amulenlno In not

Maybe there is a silver lining
hidden behind this dark cloud

By CHARLES W. COLSOIV
me new you rmes news snvnc:
WASHINGTON—Perhaps
some of us who have been in the
eye of the Watergate storm can
be forgiven if we look for a silver
lining—if we suggest that out of
the public turmoil and personal
agony, there has emerged an
historic opportunity for long-
overdue political reform.

I do not mean to excuse
Watergate and the activities that
have become associated with it
by blaming them on the system
or suggesting that they were no
more than politics a little worse
than usual. What I do suggest is
that thecure is not simply to put a
few well-intentioned—and some
not so well-intentionedvmen in
jail, destroy the careers of a few
dozen others, or even, God forbid,
impeach a President, Retribution
without reform will not restore
the health of American politics.

Whatever may ultimately be
determined about the guilt or
innocence or moral worth of
individuals, cannot we all agree
that the time has come to take
private money and private gain
out of politics?

Ironically, those who talk most
piously about restoring public
confidence—who decry the
“sins” of the Nixon Ad-
ministration—are at the same
time doing very little about the
more fundamental problems of
American politics. Those who
must perform the major surgery
required, that is members of
Congress, know that the scalpel
will strike very close to home.
For openers, I have these
suggestions :

(1) Public financing of political
campaigns: No half-way
measure like that now pending in
Congress will suffice. Those who
seek to corrupt will find loopholes
in any purely regulatory statute
Congress can draw. What is
needed is a complete substitution
of public for private financing. I
know—and have made—many of
the arguments against public
financing. The most frequently

heard is that it is un-
constitutional. The answer to that
is simple: amend the Constitution
if need be.

There are some practical
objections, for example: How to
handle minority candidates? Or
what about primaries in one-
party states? While these are
legitimate questions, the British
and other Western democracies
have found answers—and so can
we. In fact, one result might be
stronger, better disciplined party
organizations—not necessarily
an unhealthy development. The
biggest obstacle, not often openly
disucssed, is that public finan-
cing would lessen the advantages
of incumbents. Since the 535
members of Congress are all
incumbents, it is difficult to ask
them to deny themselves their
present advantage. Unless the
public really demands it, it won’t

happen.

(2) Full-time elected officials:
A person elected to high office by
public funds (if that could be
enacted) would have no excuse
for realizing any personal gain
while holding that office. Many
Congressmen today are part-
ners in private law firms; the
member’s name, if not his actual
participation in the practice of
law, is of value. In reality,
however, he is simply trading on
his office. With or without public
financing, any Officeholder
should give his entire service

only to the public. By simple
legislation, any Congressman,
any judge, any Presidential
appointee could be forbidden any
outside earned income and
further required to put any
capital assets in a blind trust.

(3) Complete financial
disclosure: To assure that public
servants respect their public
trust, why not require that they
make public their tax returns?

(4) National “sunshine" law:
In 1972, Congress enacted a
statute requiring that the
proceedings of executive com-
missions: beimade public, an
important safeguard. But that
only scratches the surface. Why
not require monthly publication
by each member of Congress of
all contacts with executive
departments? I think it ab-
solutely proper for Congressman
Jones to contact the General
Services Administration on
behalf of a constituent, albeit a
nonlegislative function.
Sometimes, however, it happens
that the constituent is a heavy
contributor and the. call was to
“lean on" the agency for a
contract. A disclosure statute
with teeth would discourage
abuses on the one hand, and on
the other would protect members
against unwarranted criticism in
the normal situation when their
inquiries are legitimate.

I do not suggest that had these
or perhaps other reforms been in
effect, Watergate wouldn’t have
happened—or that future
Watergates could thus be
avoided. I do suggest that out of
the present constitutional crisis,
we can salvage something of
lasting value: We can seize upon
this moment and overcome en-
trenched resistance to con-
structive change. We can make
the system less vulnerable to
special interest pressures and the
excesses of campaign money. If
we do not, the same things—or
worse—are sure to recur
somewhere down the road.

was-:-:-:-:-:-:~:-:-:-:-3-:

Charles W. Corson was
special counsel to
.9 resident Nixon.

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday. January 21. 1974—3

 

 

802 Euclid - Chevy Chase

WINTER SALE
l/ZOff and more ll

Come Early for Best Selection

up to

 

 

Open Mom-Sat. 9:00‘5200uPh. 266-7631

 

 

 

 

PONDEROSA

LUNCH SPECIAL
S 1 .25

STEAK
SALAD

 

ROLL

286 Southland Dr.-13lb Russell Cave Rd.

 

Bothered by Cold Feet

in the morning?
Stop by Regency Carpets
for the right medication.

REMNANTS ‘2” and up
REGENCY CARPE'I'S

852 E. High St. 269-4371

 

 

 

 

UNIVERSITY
PLAZA

I'
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

 

Kernel Advertising

258-4646

 

 

 

 4—TIIE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. January 2|. 1974

Hit
. A Personal Valentine! 9

Your Portrait in

Shortly after Dr. Martin Luther
King‘s death in 1968, a scholar-
ship fund was initiated at the
University by Dr. Michael
Adlestein and five other

In the first few years of
existence the fund sometimes
helped as many as 20 students a
year from some $4,000 in con-
tributions.

The fund aided 16 students last

aid from other sources. “It‘s a
matter of trying to add to what
they already have," said Meyers.

“Though we aren’t binding in
terms of repayment." he noted,
“we do encourage students to

scholarship

professors to aid black students.

The fund has seen better days,
but nonetheless it continues to
function.

Beautiful Oil Color
BY

semester from a total of $3,000
contributions, said John P.
Meyers. chairman.

later repay what they've been
awarded so that others can
benefit too."

Twenty-five applications for
the King scholarship fund have
been extended for the spring
semester and so far 18 have been
returned. However screening of
the 18 applicants has not yet
taken place because the total
count for the December drive
has not been completed.

SPENGLER STUDIO

222 S. Limestone
8x10 Size Only $17.50
5x7 Size Only $13.50
3x5 Size Only $10.50

Call 252-6672 For Appointment

tapers off

CONTRIBUTIONS ARE ob-
tained during an annual drive in
December among university
professors and other donors.
Because of the small base the aid
is only partial.

The fund is primarily designed
to help students that also receive

"IT GREW FOR a couple of
years and leveled off—maybe
decreased." said Adelstein, now
a member of the screening
committee for the scholarship
fund. “The success of the first
year may have been involved
with emotionalism.”

 

By JIM MAZZONI
Kernel Staff Writer

 

 

7

OWN YOUR OWN NDMEII Call Lawrence
Williams Thompson and Riley. 2.52.4677.
21J31. _

FOR SALE: ADVENT 101 DOLIY
SYSTEM. Never been used 8100. Call 253-
3100. mu. '

SHOW AND SALE ot pottery by six local

   

money retunded in tull. Poplan, Box 2556-
CL3 - 351 Chapel Hill. North Carolina, 27514.

SERVICES

CARPOOL FROM Richmond tor spring
semester. Call 623-4594 after 6:30. 16J22.
L.A.D. "MOST EXTRAORDINARY

ADDING MACHINE $37.00, Slide Rule
(Log Log. etc) S21. SR 10 Calculator SS2.
Call 255-6190 atter 5 pm. 17 J21.

CONTRACEPTIVES FOR men ~ by
mail! Eleven top brands——Troian, Conture.
Jade, and many more. Three samples: 51.
Twelve assorted samples: 53. Free

FOR SALE

FRENCN BICYCLE Ill-speed, low
mileage, best otter. Call 269-4722 atter 6:w
p.m. 21.123.

1969 FAIRLAND 6 cyl automatic 17 mpg.

No Minimum 'V-Vhile-U-Wait
Johnny Print Copy Shop

547 S. Limestone 254 6139 .

   
      

tters. Rak , saltware and tonew re. ' '
0”...“ in town, exrellentcondition; mags. $1500. amonstrationy Altalt R ' s ' 55.7 S illustrated catalogue with every order. RIain BANDIoappearin Kentucky in years." For
277.9031 21m. . ' a '5 ""n ' ' ”(“9“ ”W'“ WM" F” ”d "mm available dates call 254—5952 after a p m
' lee. 3:00 onwards. 2”“ service. Satisfaction guaranteed or your "J.“ , ’ ' '
D aaon‘nou. emu CONTROL mso a
REFERRAL - no tee. up to 24 weeks.

General anesthesia. Vasectomy. tubal
ligation also available. Free pregnancy test
Call PCS, Non-prom. 2022987995 17J31

WANTED

MARRIED COUPLE LOOKING tor Apt.
near campus. Wish to occupy about May

t8}

{'W 15th. Please call: 257-1471 or 250-4120
0 anytime. 21J25.
CLEAN. CONSIDERATE, FEMALE

ROOMMATE wanted Spring Semester close
to campus. Call Diana. 255-7019. 21J23.

WANTED: FEMALE ROOMMATE tor
comtortable, new apartment. Versailles
Road. 560. 2590157. 18J22.

FOR RENT

EXTRA LARGE ONE BEDROOM tur-
nished apartment with carpet and Central
Air. Walk to UK Utilities paid. Call bet
ween 12 pm. and 9 pm. 2665032. Only a
couple Iett 71J25.

ROOM AND board within walking distance
at campus Call 257-2461 18J24.

EFFICENCY CHEROKEE GARDEN
APARTMENTS $65.50 llcél' UK 5'43"“
refrigerator. 270-99750r 278 9551. I7J21.

FURNISHED HOME tor rent at 416 Clitton
Ave Backs up to University Drive. 570 per
month and pay one-seventh ot utilities.
Home will have seven boys Wlth turnished
kitchen. llvmg room. Oil-street parking.
Have room tor 3 boys now. Call 270-3473 or
see Clark Barnett at the House. 16.122.

LOST

BOX LOST on luggage cart ‘n Complex on 12-
20 73. Call 257 2560 IBJ21.
BROWN MENS glasses Iett in Credit Unlon
Intorrnation Center, last Wednesday. Call
258 2673. 18J22

LOST DECEMBER, Chevy Chase. Male
Golden Retriever Mix, Tan-White. Jazzbo,
269-3446. Please. 16J22.

LOST FEMALE BEAGLE 4 months old.
Black and white, Woodland Park area. 255
6992. 21J23.

LOST MAN’S GOLD WEDDING BAND. .
Initials inside. Reward uttered. 272-1785 or
272-4591. 2U21.

LOST: ON CAMPUS. Female gold

A great deal for UK fans!

bracelet watch. Please return! Reward
Phone 266 3607. Nut.
Just in time FOUND
FOUND: FEMALE, BEAGLE-LIKE
for S. E.C. basketball {gram ,ggmcggganw WW

WIRE RIM glasses tound in grass around
Complex. Call 269 3873. 18J22

HELP WANTED

SECRETARY PART-TIME 1-5 Monday.
Wednesday and Friday. Typing and tiling.
Attractive and outgoing. Call 270-3494, Mr.
Thompson. 21J25.

BARTENDER, afternoon shift available.
11 to 4. Must be at least 20 years old. Apply
Levas Restaurant, 119 South Lime. I6J22.

WILDCAT SPECIAL
.75 A J-Boy Sandwich

8!.
.30 A large Q9593

served in a
1.25 UK mug

$2.30 4 9
All for .
it

You .eep the mug!

HOUSEBOYS APPLY Alpha Xi Delta House
or call Housemother 257-2163. 18J24

STEREO I. merchandise display. Need 6
students parttime. Co-ed. Work 15-20 hours.
Average $45-$65. Call 269-5253 9-2 for op
pointment. 16J22.

A SECOND GIRL FRIDAY needed at
Jerry Spry Hair Design. Varied respon-
sibilities. Interested? Stop in at our new
location. 315 S. Ashland Ave. Absolutely no
phone calls. 2lJ15.

Cdr Burn
l oreign Car Repai

9 a.m.-10p.m.
254-7912

 

41

&
Jae. .

Willi/5

RESTAURANTS

  
 

  
   
   
   

357 SOUTH LIME ONLY

       

    
    
 
       
       
    
   

  
  
   
    

  

0‘

Y test
”.12"

. Apt.
May
504120

MALE
r close
' .

' TE for
rsailles

M tur
Central
all bet
Only a

n istance

 
   
  
 
    
    
 
   
 

noes
Stove

H.121

- Clifton
$70 per
tilities.
rnished
writing,
3473 or
22,

exon 12

i! Union
ay. Call

e. Male
Jazlbo.

ths old,
ea. 2.55

BAND. .
2-1785 or

ale gold
Reward

LE-LIKE
sorority

5 around

D

Monday,
. tiling.
3494, Mr.

available.
-ld- ADD'Y
e. tun.
lta House
24

y. Need 6

-20 hours.
2 for an

needed at
.- respon
t our new
solutely no

Jan. 3] auction will
close the Paddock
doors forever.

Others too

 
 
   
  
     
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
 
 

Paddock Club to close

After several months of
speculation and rumor, it is now
official that the Paddock‘Club
will be closed and torn down.

Owner Paul Baskey said
Sunday the final business day will
come ”sometime early next
week " All of the restaurant’s

equipment will be auctioned Jan.
31 at the premises on Rose Street.

BASKEY SAID he has no plans
to open another establishment

similar to the Paddock as he
already operates another
restaurant.

All of the businesses located in
the same block as the Paddock
will be closed as the building will
be razed to make room for a
newer structure. This will include
Deveraux’s Liquors and Deer
Laundry and Dry Cleaners.

The land and building are
owned by Michael DeBoor, co-
owner of the dry cleaners.

UK to receive largest
science foundation grant

UK will receive the largest of
eight grants being offered to
Kentucky colleges and univer—
sities by the National Science
Foundation (NSF) in
Washington.

Under the NSF‘s Institutional
Grants for Science Program, the
University will get $34,000. The
funds are to be used to maintain
and develop the insitution's
academic science program,
according to the office of Ken-
tucky Senator Marlow Cook.

THE OFFICE explained that
the amount of the grants was
based on the amount of federal
science research awards
received by the institution during
the 1972 fiscal year.

Other institutions in the state
receiving funds were:

Kentucky State University,
Frankfort, $9,850; Morehead
State, Morehead, $7,100;

clothing

  
     

W

PE RFORMANCE

-F Nonmbliv
0' “'5 Sl'ore. -For- colkjc

girls V'lflkf 0" CQMPS
at" SH; 5. Limes'l'ohe

Univeristy of Louisville, $6,950;
Western Kentucky, Bowling
Green, $4,750; Thomas More
College, Convington, $4,550;
Centre College, Danville, $4,550
and Eastern Kentucky, Rich-
mond, $1,000.

Alumni group
elects president

A 1942 UK graduate has been
elected president of the Alumni
Association for 1974.

Charles Landrum, 3 Lexington
attorney who received a bachelor
of laws degree, succeeds W. Hugh
Adcock of Atlanta. Landrum is a
senior partner in the Landrum,
Patterson and Dickey law firm.

Hopkinsville Mayor George
Atkins Jr., a 1963 graduate, was
elected vice president of the
association.

new '

 

I Love to

A noted publisher in Chica 0
reports there is a simple tec
nique of rapid reading which
should enable you to increase
your reading speed and yet
retain much more. Most peo-
ple do not realize how much
they could increase their plea-
sure, success and income by
readin faster and more
accurate y.

According to this publisher,
many people, regardless of
their resent readin skill, can
use t s simple tec nique to
improve their readi ability
to a remarkable egree.
Whether reading stories,
books. technical matter, it be-
comes possible to read sen-
tences at a glance and entire
pages in seconds with this
method.

To acquaint the readers of
this newspaper with the easy-
to- follow ru es for developing
rapid reading skill, the com-
pany has printed full details
of its interesti self- training
method in a new klet, “How
to Read Faster and Retain
More," mailed free to anyone
who requests it. No obligation.
Send your name, address, and
zip code to: Reading. 555 E.
Lange St., Dept. 94041 Mun-
delein, Ill. 60060. A postcard
will do.

 

    
   
     
   
   
    

E .

Read Fast!

 

 

 

Kernel
Classifieds
258-4646

 

 

 

ANNUAL.. .

  
     
    
  
  
  

MON.-SAT.
9 A. M. -5: 30 PM

3
AWA H A R E 5
co L. LEQE S H o P
NEED A sun' on. spas-r com FOR Toes
lNTERViEws FRATERNITY ACTIVITIES,

spams FORMALS GRAouAnou are 3051' To
(CLEAN UP YOUR ACT. THEN COME TO own,

2&1 SALE

HERES HOW IT WORKS. PICK OUT 2.

SUITS 0R SPORT com-s, PAY REéULAR PRicE
FOR THE HIGHER ONE AND GET THE 1ch

sunr- FOR $20 AND THE 2nd SPORT’ COAT
FOR ONLY $10

THlS is OUR BEST SALE YET
You CANT AFFORDTO MissTms

OPEN ONE DAY ONLYzMON. JAN 22

COME ON IN

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday, January 21. 1974—5

 

  

Lexington s Oldest Restaurant
:19 SOuth Limestone Street LPXlngtOI‘
For Reservation Phone 213lSli

  
 
 
 

SCHLlTZ

EVERYDAY
3-6 P.M.

except Sunday
2012 Regency Rd.

  
 
  

  
 
   
   

 
                 
       
      
       
     
     
   
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
        
      
 
     
       
    
           
     
      
        
 

 

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