xt7ttd9n655v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ttd9n655v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-10-01 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 01, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 01, 1975 1975 1975-10-01 2020 true xt7ttd9n655v section xt7ttd9n655v um - to

Experiential Education

Students can gain credit through 'almost anything'

By LYNNE FUNK
Kernel Staff Writer

Students who want academic credit but
don't enjoy classes or exams can find a
variety of opportunities through the UK
Office for Experiential Education (OEE ).

Practical experience of independent
study in almost any discipline can be
tramlated into credit hours through an
internship or arrangement with a faculty
advisor, said Barbara Hofer. OEE
assistant director.

“Almost anything is possible,“ she said.
“Students are not used to the idea that they
can choose what they want to study.“

()r not study.

One of the reasons that Cindy Good, a
joumalism senior. applied for an OEE
internship is she doesn‘t particularly enjoy
studying.

In addition to classwork. Good works
about 20 hours a week for the metro public
information office. She receives six credit
hours and is paid minimum wage each of
the two semesters she has the internship.

“As tight as the field is, this is a good
way to get experience. I meet people, they
remember my name because they’ve seen
my stories. It will be a help when I look for
a job,“ Good said.

Covering metro government meetings
and assembling the employe newsletter
"or the public information office helps
Good with ideas and sources for class story
assignments. The internship also has

 
 

Vol. LXVII No 41
Wednesday, October 1 1975

 

 

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At

CINDY (BOOI)

made her more tolerant of city govern-
ment.

“Rather than sit outside the system and
criticize it, I came to see why it works as it
does. Now I understand what city officials
have to put up with." she said.

Internships with various metro or state
government agencies are one way to ex-
tend learning experiences beyond the
cla$mom. Students may also draw up
their own plan of action to correspond with
a trip or special interest.

Donald Ringe, a classics senior, spent
six weeks last summer on ”an ar-

KENTUCKY

81‘

on independent student newspaper

 

DONALD RI NGE

cheological stint" at the American School
of Classical Studies in Athens, Greece.

A classics professor acted as his advisor
and Hinge received credit for exploring
the “physical remains of ancient Greek
civilization as they relate to the Greek
culture."

After six weeks of studying temples,
making excavation reports and reading
manuscripts. Ringe returned from Greece
to fulfill his experiential education lear-
ning contract. An oral report to his advisor
and a statement from the Athens program
leader gave him six hours credit.

   

   

Frazier commands middle rounds

Ali retains title: scores TKO in 14th round

By MARK BRADLEY
Kernel Staff Writer

IDI'IS‘VILLE — A near sellout crowd at

Louisville Downs watched on closedcir-

cuit television as the heavyweight champ-
ion of the world. Muhammad Ali. success—
fully defended his title by scoring a
technical knockout over Joe Frazier last
night

The fight. which took place in Manila.
the capital city of the Philippines. was
dominated by Ali virtually throughout and
the crowd at the I.ouisviflc racetrack
cheered their native son to one of his
greatest victories

Ali. coming on strong in the late rounds.
battered Frazier almost 'll will. lie twice
knocked out Frazier‘s mouthpiece and
seemed only a punch away from a
knockout on several occasions. The ring
doctors stopped the fight following the ch
round after examining Frazier in his
corner

The fight w as close for the first to rounds
as Frazier relentlessly pursued the much
faster \li .\li. constantly scoring with his
left jab and straight left hand. built up an
early lead. but saw Frazier whittle It away
in the Middle rounds before the champion
regained command

Frazier took a teai seine pounding III the
tight. and ill thi- tun. fir-ion. his face was
sadly swollen and he sustained a had cut

Ali is too mayabang?

Muhammad Ali was about a 2—] favorite with Las Vegas
. oddsmakers and also was the favorite of Gloria Diaz, a 1969 Miss Universe. who “
always has been for Ali. I find him unique in so many ways.“

But Ali was a "beast" to some Filipino beauties. ()ne. fashion model Lynne Estacio.

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said. "I hope Frazier wins because Ali is too mayabang (loose translation: big

mouth» I can‘t stand him."

below his right eye S‘ :mehow the dogged
former champion from Philadelphia man
aged to not go down before Ali‘s onslaught;
but in the end. the fight clearly belonged to
;\ll.

'l‘he vocal crowd at Louisville Downs
was solidly behind Ali and cheered lustily‘
at Ali‘s combination of punches. The
crowd roared when Ali stated in an
interview after the fight that the trophy he
received as the winner of the bout would be
presented to a Louisville junior high school
wluch he had attended . formerly Madison.
now Park l)u\'allei.

Before the main event the crowd sat
patiently through a heavyweight bout
which saw Larry Holmes knock out
{odney Bobick and also saw a world
heavyweight championship contact karate
battle

The karate match had the spectators
various

 

laughing and cheering at the
iii.iiiei.uei's attempted by the fighters In
the bout. .leff \initli retained his heavy
\N‘t‘ltiht crown aver Kai‘i‘ieiu Allah

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The largest cheers of the evening were
saved for the main event as the Louisville
crowd joined the Manila ringside audience
in chanting “Ali. Ali" on several occas~
ions. The 13th and 14th rounds saw the
fight fans on their feet roaring their
approval as Ali buffeted Frazier around
the ring.

Frazier had more supporters at ringside
in Manila than he did at LoUIvalle but he
wasnot without backing from several fans
at the racetrack. They viewed the battle on
:26 closed-circuit televisions.

()ne Louisville writer said in the press
box before the fight. “I hate Ali so much
that I hope Frazier will kill him.“

Smokin‘ .loe. clad in blue denim trunks.
put up a great struggle for the first to
rounds. but under constant fire from Ali‘s
lighteningfast punches. he fired badly in
the 12th round Frazier had made a rally in
the middle rounds of the fight to drag
almost cum on points with Ali but the
champion seemed to grow stronger after

am: a. . 2. . . i.

l
i

A trip to Mexico last summer with the
Experiment in International Living gave
Veon McReynolds, a psychology junior,
the chance to study the structure of the
Mexican social system. He observed
culture difference and customs, chose
several books to read, and wrote a paper
on Mexican family life, for three credit
hours.

“Experiential education is one of the
best programs in the university,” he said.
“It gives you the freedom to research your
area of interest, from religion to bicycles."

All undergraduate and graduate
students who are interested in off-campus,
out of the classroom learning are eligible
to set up programs through OEE.

“There isa huge amount of flexibility for
students who want to take advantage of
it," said OEE director Robert Sexton.
“The real focus is on learning many
places.”

Anything that fits into a student’s
academic program can be worked out
through ()EE, he said. About 2500 students
from all colleges of the university are now
involved in some type of experiential
education through OEE, which was
established in 1973, he said.

“Whether you want to lobby in
Washington, or travel through Europe
making a photographic journal, credit is
granted on the basis of your reflection on
what you‘ve done."

61 "MVP/“Sit o Kentuclev

Lexington l ,. 40506

 

the ninth round and carried the fight 'r'
Frazier from then on.

The fight began with All scoring wuh
quick shots to Frazier‘s head and he won
the first four rounds by keeping Frazier at
bay with his left jabs. Frazier began
boring into Ali‘s body in the fifth round and
landed several of his famous left hooks
whichsecmcd to affect Ali.

Ali assumed command of the fight in the
later rounds and began landing punches to
Frazier‘s head almost at will. The left and
right combination of Ali was successful in
buckling Frazier‘s knees on two occasions.
but the challenger would not go down.

The normally loquacious Ali was sub»
dued before the fight but he did provide the
fans with a moment of humor when he
grabbed the trophy that was to be
presented the winner and carried It off to
his corner.

The announcers at ringside and the
press corps assembled at Louisville both
proclaimed the fight as “one of the
greatest bouts of all times.” It was in
every respect the ”thrilla in Manila" that
Ali had predicted.

For Ali it was his 49“] win against twt.
losses. Frazier suffered his third loss in 35
lights.

The Louisville crowd left the racetrack
in high spirits singing the praises of
Louisville's own Muhammad Ali. still the
heavyweight champion of the world

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editorials

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief
Letta's and Spectrum articles should be addressed to the Editorial page Editu',

Room m Journalism Building. They should be typed, mutalespaced aid sigma.
Lettas should not exceed 250 words and Spectrum articles 750 norm.

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Jack Koeneman
Associate Editor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

To the point
Dayan descends

 

peacefully on U K

The Lexington Communist
Collective,the UK Iranian Student
Association, the Young Socialist
Alliance, campus, metro and state
police, members of the U K Dean of
Students Office, a crowd of ap-
proximately 3,000 bystanders and
Moshe Dayan descended upon
Memorial Coliseum Monday night
and nothing happened.

Dayan spoke, was questioned,
was booed a little and applauded a
lot. But there was no confrontation
as some members of the protesting
groups had feared.

Although "confrontation poltics”
is not exactly an everyday occur.

rence here, Dayan’s appearances
at other universities have been
plagued with protest not altogether
peaceful.

At the University of Arizona a
man was arrested and charged
with carrying a concealed weapon
before entering the speaking hall
where Dayan was scheduled to
appear.

Everyone involved should be
commended for making their
respective points, while allowing
others to speak as well.

Hopefully--with the possible
exception of future efforts to
secure a speaker for the “other
side"--the issue has now closed.

 

 

 

Observations

Editor:

I would llkf' to iust state some of my
observations (About the actions of the
Palestinian group present at Gen.
Moshe Dayan's lecture on Sept. 29
First, l feel that during the lecture it
self. the group was very orderly and
respectful of the speaker. But when the
student question period started, they
greatly discredited their cause By
giving their questions in such a long
drawn out fashion, they showed an
immaturity that I thought they would
try to avoid.

There was one certain point brought
up that interested me greatly. One
y0ung man asked about Jewish
terrorism in 1947 as a rebuttal to
present acts by the Palestine Liberr
ation O'ganization. I will grant that
there may well have been such acts, but
they only affected the people in that
area of the world. Palestinian groups
however, have terrorized the people of
other nations. Who can forget Munich
1972? lf, in closing, the Palestinians had
gained any influence here on this
campus in the last few weeks, it was
totally destroyed by their questions
Monday night.

Isaac Scott
Freshman Accounting

Expression

Editor:

John Roach, a member of the
Lexington Communist Collective
(Kernel, ”Demonstrators peacefully
protest Dayan lecture," Sept. 30)
recently criticized a comment I wrote.
(Kernel, "Outraged at Spectrum Ar-
ticle,” Sept. 15) The comment was
written in response to Roach’s initial
essay.

instead of factually rebutting Mr.
Roach’s most recent accusations,
which l find unworthy of any comment,

i suggest that the Kernel consider
republishing my comment side by side
wrth Roach’s initial article. Students
can then utilize the Margaret l. King
I -hrary to reach their own conclusions.
i am confident that a maiority of
students will find my comments to be
factually correct as well as moderate in
tone, especially in comparison to either
7f Mr. Roach’s articles.

fit all sincerity, I would like to
,ompliment all of the individuals and
gr0ups who did take the effort to ex,
Dress their opinions concerning
Thyan’s recent visit. The right of
expression is a precious liberty which
serves to perpetuate our democratic
way of life, but we should never
tolerate a careless disregard for the
truth, My motive im publishing my
(omnient was not to try to change Mr.
Roach‘s beliefs, but merely to present a
well-reasoned statement asserting the
facts of the Israeli position to other
students a students who are far more
disinterested than either myself, fellow
Jews, Arabs, or Roach.

it is a sad commentary that as a
result of my genuine efforts to write an
unemotional and factually accurate
statement, and as a consequence of
expressing my opinions, I have on
iustitiably and indiscriminately been
tabled by Roach a "racist zionist
fascist". Are you satisfied Mr. Roach?
Do the ends iustity the means?

David Cooper

Third-year law student

Hot issues

Editor:

Well, now that the Red River dam
project has been scrapped, what does
the Student Government (56) have in
store for us on the cover of their next
issue of the Student Telephone
Directory? No, we couldn't be blessed
with a simple picture of the countryside
or some horses grazing, we have to be
slapped with the SOS comments on a
hot political issue.

“Letters

 

 

 

In the last few years we have seen
comments and pictures on both the
Commonwealth Stadium and Red River
dam constructions. It’s not that we’re
for or against these proiects, it’s the
fact that we have to look at the same
silly protest every time we make a
phone call. It used to make us so
damned mad to pick up a directory and
see the same iunk that the media has
driven into us that we would rip the
rovers off our directory and burn them
in disgust.

Now it we were psychics, we would
predict that the ”issue of the year” in
the 56’s mind will be the busing

problem in Louisville. So folks, don’t be
alarmed if you see a picture of black
and white teenagers breaking out the
windows of school buses on the front of
your telephone book.

C‘mon 86, now that everybody is in a
better mood with the end of the Red
River controversy, let’s see a telephone
directory cover portraying the more
enjoyable things in life rather than hot
political issues; we’re running out of

matches. Labe Young

Third-year pharmacy
Mike Armstrong
Special Education iunior

 

September showers?“

An editorial comment on Kentucky’s September weather with apologies to
Bob Dylan. (Tothe tune of ”The Times They Are A-Changing”).
Come gather round students wherever you roam
And admit th at the waters around you have grown
And accept it that soon you’ llbe drenched to the bone

if yo; try to cross Euclid

Then yw’d better start swimming or you’ll sink like a stone

For the campus is a-floodin’

Come writers and criticswho work for the Kernel
You can’t see the daylight,itall looks nocturnal
When you walk ’cross thePlaza thew ind is internal

What good’s an insideout umbrella?

ltrains nite and day andin fact it’seternal

For the campus is a-floodin’

Come Alumni and Faculty please heed the call
Don’t stand in thegutter,don’tdripinthe hall
For he who gets drownedwi ll be he who did fall

Keep your feet away from the sewers

For the waterpours downthem l ikea great waterfall

For the dra'ns they aren’t a‘drainin'

Come mothers and fathers throughout the land
Don’t send us into what you don’t understand
For whatis now ocean, lastweek itwas land

And Rose Street is rapidly fading

And today it wiped out the U K Marching Band

For the campus is asinking

The lineit is drawn, the l iteboatsarefast
The Office Tower will serve as our mast

We’ve lived thru the first but we ain’tseen the last

All hands to the deck and start bailin’

Pleaseg ra bfor yourbrother as he goes floating past

For the campus is a-tloodin’
Joan Lattimore
A85 |unior

Elizabeth IveY
Education iumor

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spectrum

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The spectre of political assassination would be for the President to live a

 

 

:4 by Assassination affects :12?B::'5;$:::,:(::.';t:mt:
political, moral fabric

ventional wisdom of North American
political observers as being no more
than a mutant byproduct of the normal
and usual workings of the American
system of society and government. Be
that as it may, and whether or not such
an assumption can be said to be valid
any more, the recent attempts on
President Ford’s life prompt one to
consider anew the ramifications of
. assassinationand the threat of it--on
l the political and moral fabric of this
nation. The ensuing outlook is un
l derstandably grim.

 

 

More often than not, an assassination

I has measurable, direct political effect
i only when it occurs at a iuncture with
‘ other developments that have already
‘ created the groundwork for a poten
tially explosive situation. In such cases,
the political killing serves as a catalyst

to set off a greater chain of events, such

as in I914 when AustrianAHungarian
Archduke Ferdinand was murdered
and the secret alliances of Europe

1 exploded into World War I as a result.
‘ The I973 murder of Chilean President
Salvador Allende also serves as a case

latest attempts at killing Ford. Who
would deny that the thought of his own
safety plays a maior role in Kennedy’s
abstention from the race, even taking
Chappaquiddick into account? What we
have here may be, for the first time, an
authentic Politics of Assassination
playing a determinative role in a
Presidential election. A Politics of
Assassination w random in method,
direct in effect.

The immediate results of high
echelon political killing and attempts at
killing may not be as broad and en:
compassing as are the more indirect,
and sometimes subtler, impacts of such
a tragedy-impacts which are more
societal than political in scope. When
President John Kennedy was shot, it

   

~ . 3
again within the foreseeable future.
Thus the mass contusion of the early
’60s succumbs to the mass withdrawal
of the ’70s.

Demoralization, breaks in the
political order, negative expectations, a
hardening of attitudes already made
cynical by years of Vietnam,
Watergate, racism and (admittedly)
even busing -how much umpleasant
news can a society be expected to take
before its morale flags to a point of
hopelessness? (It is hard to say:
America has absorbed a lot of disapr
pointments in the past few years, but
Americans seem to persevere now as
ever.)

Another question nags at the harried

and we all know how much good that
did for America. Not much. Because he
is a busy man the President is already
cutoff from the public to an undesirable
extent; let’s hope he doesn’t have to
make it worse.

In a way, the sudden surge in at-
tempts to kill Ford seems to dovetail
nicely with the recent disclosures by
the Senate Select Committee on In-
telligence of exactly what the CIA has
been up to in the past several years.
And we have, afterall, been living in an
atmosphere of violence for a long while
now, as seen every night on the news.
There is lots of killing-Vietnam,
Salvador Allende, Ngo Dinh Diem, Bay
of Pigs, Charles Manson, Richard
Speck, and Kent State. And the quoted
murder rate in the Metropolitan Area of
your choice all come to mind without
too much coaxing. Hopefully, both the
government and the private sector will
make some progress in this area before
many repeats occur.

Postscript For those of you who have
chosen to stick this column out to the
end, there lS an interesting footnote
regarding the subject at hand. The
word assassin is derived from the
Arabic word used to describe members
of an Ilth713th Century politic0»
religious Islamic sect who considered it
their sacred duty to kill their enemies.
The hashishi (hashish-eaters), as they
were called, used to eat big chunks of
the stuff before they went out on their
raids.

Footnote 2' From I9I8 to 1968, 39
heads of established governments were

3 0f the voters, faced bY a badly slipping was an overhwhelmingly demoralizing observer. How much can the man at the assassinated in the world. During that
g } economy, and opposed by the forces of event, at once both ludicrous and awful Top take before it all begins to get to same period, there were also 223 at.
)r the U.S. and lTT (through the CIA), in its effectand range. The occurrence him? The President of the U.S., no temptsonthelives of chiefs of state.All

 

 

.v .<- - g r 1 . a ‘ ‘ .

 

   
 

c 3'.

Allende’s death by coup d'etat marked
the doom of socialist government in
Chile. However, without comparable
attendant circumstances, most
assassinations have no marked direct

I effect on the framework or policies of a
given country; at least, this is usually

1 true in the U.S.

t

l

i in point. Elected by less than 40 percent
|

l

l

l

l

Except, maybe. for one exception.

Ted Kennedy, the strongest Democrat

l in a field of weak candidates, is
probably more hesitant than ever to run
i for President next year because of the

of such a murder caused an ex,
cruciating snap in the continuity of
normal life in the republic, and in the
minds of most of its citizens. But when
we face a continuing persistence of
assassination (in I968) and attempts at
it (in past weeks), additional negative
effects are more than likely created
upon a sizable portion of the citizenry,
namely: I. a selfimposed hardening of
sensitivities regarding the subiect, and
2. a general aura of tired resignation
that the tragedy will probably happen

matter who it is, is faced with more
daily pressure as a matter of routine
than possibly any other individual in
the world. And this is all with0ut the
ultimate and impinging pressure of
facing the possibility that his life could
end the first time someone managed to
aim a .38 at him with any accuracy.
The latter thought alone would be
enough to drive the average healthy
person to distraction, even without the
worries of the world to think about.
An alternative to facing this threat

told, that’s 5.24 acts per year. This is
according to The Politics of
Assassination” by Havens, Leiden, and
Schmitt.

 

Dick Downey is a hopelessly ambitious
writer who is currently disguised as a
UK law student. He has had some ex-
perience in the Real Worlds of tour
nalism and disaster-area insurance
adjusting. His column appears weekly
in the Kernel.

 

UK bus service proves inadequate

 

By Marc Cloypool

 

In the words on the back of the campus
bus service brochure: ”It (the bus ser
vice) assures transportation to any point
on campus in a minimum of time." Who do
they think they’re fooling? Last year the
bus service proved adequate. Whenever
the bus was needed, it was there, or would
be shortly. This year, though, one can
easily spend less time walking between
two locations on campus than waiting for
and riding on the bus

For example, one can walk from the
Complex to the Classroom Building in
twelvp minutes or oven .1 little less (traft7c

‘ ,' ".,“!“:val‘.mi;~;mflNews“ 4»- ~
is: - .

on Rose Street permitting). Waiting for the
bus can take fifteen minutes by itself, not
to mention the five-minute ride to the
corner of Columbia and Rose Streets plus
the four or five minute walk the rest of the
way to the Classroom Building. In other
words, one can walk the distance in about
half the ime.

So much for the campus route. The
express r0ute gets awfully frustrating, too.
Several times I’ve ridden it from the front
of Funkhouser to the Med Center. The bus
IS always packed fullvaisles included and
even at that about a dozen or so people
walk away because there’s no room left to
even squeeze in the door. The pamphlet
states. "You are encouraged to leave your
vehicle parked and either walk or use the
bus (when ,ou desire transportation ‘rom

one location to another. This will simplify
your parking problems, as well as those at
the University, and we solicit your
cooperation in using the bus system.”
What more do they want?

Another gripe needs presenting. This
year the buses don’t run past 5:30 p.m.,
whereas last year they ran (at a lesser
frequency, thOugh) until about 9:30 pm. I
have a 5 pm. class that meets every day in
the Fine Arts Building with well over two
hundred other people. Most of us, h0wever,
live on 50uth campus. On pretty days the
walk back to the dorm seems to drag on
and on, on rainy days the walk gets
downright miserable and dreary. The
middle of November can take its time
getting here.

All the walking around makes itself a

pain in the neck or the legs or something
anyway. After a quick little walk across
campus, the muscles in the legs start
pulling tight, especially in the inner part of
the lower legs. This makes the walker
temporarily pigeontoed. Walking, ac-
cording to doctors, makes for good
exercise, but it’s highly unlikely that they
had this in mind.

I fully realize that money is hard to come
by in these inflationary times. I know that
the tuition has not been raised to com,
pensate. I know that the bus service’s
contingency fund is gone this year. What
l'd like to know, though, is why the budget
for the buses was cut from $127,000 to
under Sl00,000.

 

Marc Clavpool is an English sophomore

 

 

 

 

 

,-.. .“m‘ “a...”

  

 

I—‘l‘llF. KENTll‘KY KERNEL Wednesday October I. I975

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7
1‘ news briefs

 

 

Federal agent asked
to assassinate Ford

“'ASIIING’I‘UN t.\l’l An undercover agent of the Bureau of
Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms was offered $25,000 within the
[11st month to kill President Ford. the director of the bureau said
'Ittesdav. 5

Rex D. Davis. In a statement prepared for a Senate *
subcommittee Investigating the Secret Service. said the Individual
who approached the agent was arrested the day following the offer.
after sufficient evidence was gathered.

In his statement. Davis said onl_v~ that the incident occurred in a
Midwestern city during September.

“This was up In Belleville.” said Asst. l'S Att‘v. Mike Nestor at
Fast St. Louis. “1.. 13 miles north of Belleville. Ill.

Belleville is across the Mississippi River from St. Louis. Mo.
where the President spoke on Sept. 12.

Nestor said the Individual involved In the incident was a Inan and
that he was detained and questioned. but not charged.

Nestor said the Incident occurred on Sept. 11. the dav before Ford
spoke at Kiel Auditorium In St. Louis

It was In St. Louis that a man with a .45 caliber pistol was spotted
by a policeman on a catwalk In Kiel Auditorium an hour before
Ford was to speak The man escaped despite an extensive police
search. and the President spoke on time and without harm.

It was not Immediatelv clear whether that incident and the offer I
of monev for Ford's (I("llII were related. Neither the White House. I
the Secret Service nor the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and
Firearms would comment. 5

As Davis made public offer to kill Ford. the President asked 3
(‘ongress for an additional $13.5 million to pay for increased Secret g
Service expenses. I

o o {A
Lack of parking fails .

Bloodmobile visit

Parking a car on the central campus can be difficult. but have
ton ever tried to park a bloodmobile‘.’

'Ilie (‘entral Kentuckv Blood (‘enter tried to do this Monday and
failed

’I‘om Watts. center coordinator. said Tuesday that a scheduled
visit to the campus by the Bloodmobile was cancelled when a
suitable place to park could not be found.

\l'affs said his office and l'niversity administrators had arranged
to park the Bloodmobile near Buell Armory But some confusion
amsc. said Watts. and the Itloodmobile was .‘Iccidentallv parked on
the central plaza.

He said that people driving the Bloodmobilc had apparently

i
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t

misunderstotxl the Instructions and parked on the plaza "
“The plant was not an acceptable place to park." said Watts. "so A
we moved It ” 'I‘hc bloodmobile was returned to the lllood (‘cnteii 3::
Watts saId the day was not a total loss. however. Eight or to ::
students followed the Itloodmobile to the (‘enter‘s office on 1:}
Limestone and donated blood. 5

Iroquois students walk out
in anti-busing protest i

Ltll'lSVlLIII. K). i \I’I Six persons were arrested. five of
them Juveniles. after Boo to :too students walked out of .1 Jefferson
t'ountv high school 'I'IIesII;I_\ and held an antibusing march.

'I‘he Iroquois High School students left the building about 9:40
am. and milled around In front of the school for a while. said
Iroquois Principal Edwin K. Ilinford.

Louisville Police officer (‘arl Yates said most of the arrests oc-
curred when the students Ieft the school and marched down 'I‘aylor
Boulevard.

He said most of' them were made when students rode on top of
cars and otherwise endangered themselves.

Dennis Sherron. 19. an Iroquois student. was charged with
reckless driving. 'I‘wo juveniles were charged with disorderly
conduct and three others with reckless driving.

r Kama x,

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A(I\(V7‘\Il‘ni . «tended )Ily totietp me I> .x'w my and tiny talst‘or misumfinu »
«txer' smo .Inu' the: com turf and A t! he must noted I v the «Mom Advert sinu ,
I ‘(v Wit! '0' ' .Isr 7w stead“) .-.~ It tie l nmi ted ‘e the Potter Business Bureau:

 

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