xt73r20rtw51 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73r20rtw51/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-07-26 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, July 26, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, July 26, 1973 1973 1973-07-26 2020 true xt73r20rtw51 section xt73r20rtw51 The Kentucky Kernel

July 26, 1973
Vol. LXV No. 12

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Lawyers file appeal

Cambodia

operation

must end

By BOB MONROE
Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK —— A federal judge ruled on
Wednesday that the US. bombing of
Cambodia is unconstitutional and he en-
joined further military operations in that
country without congressional approval.

“There is no existing congressional
authority to order military forces into
combat in Cambodia or to release bombs
over Cambodia," declared US. District
Court Judge Orrin G. Judd in Brooklyn.

He stayed the execution of the injunction
until 4 pm. EDT Friday to allow the
government to appeal.

U.S. ATTORNEY Robert Morse, after
consulting with the Justice Department,
filed a notice to appeal late in the day. He
said papers for the appeal were being
prepared and he would seek a stay of the
order before it goes into effect Friday.

The ruling came in a suit brought by
freshman Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman, D-
N .Y., and three Air Force fliers based in
Guam. It sought to have the Cambodia
operations declared unconstitutional on
the ground that the President had usurped
Congress‘ power to declare war.

The plaintiffs pressed the suit even after
both houses of Congress voted to cut off
funds for the bombing and, in a' com-
promise, the President agreed to halt the
air war by Aug. 15.

IN ARGUING THE case on July 6, the
goVernment held that the Cambodia

operations were “part and parcel of a war
that has continued for many years. Now
one phase of that war is continuing.”

In his 36-page memorandum on the basis
for the decision, Judge Judd took issue
with that argument:

“The question here is not the o‘ne posed
by the government, whether aerial action
in Cambodia is the termination of a con-
tinuing war or the initiation of a new and
distinct war; but whether Congress has
authorized bombing in Cambodia after the
withdrawal of American troops from
Vietnam and the release of prisoners of
war...

"THE CONGRESSIONAL action before
and after the beginning of hostilities in
Cambodia does not include authorization
to bomb Cambodia in order to achieve a
Cambodian cease-fire or even to protect
the Vietnam cease-fire as urged by
defendants...

“The extent of the power granted by
Congress depends on the language used by
Congress, not on the President‘s
statements to Congress. An emergency
does not create power unless Congress has
granted it.“

Ms. Holtzman, who prefers the feminist
designation, said at her Washington office
that she was “extraordinarily pleased" by
the decision.

“IT REASSERTS the constitutional
requirement that no American lives can be
sacrificed, that no American lives can be
risked, and that no American taxpayer’s
dollars can go to a military effort that has
not been approved or authorized by
Congress," she said.

Burt Neuborne, assistant legal director
of the American Civil Liberties Union,
which represented the plaintiffs, said he
was “delighted" and that he thought it was
a ”significant opinion.“

“I think it means two things,” he con-
tinued. “First, that unless the Court of
Appeals extends the stay, the bombing
has to stop this weekend.

“SECOND. IN A MORE important
sense, it is judicial recognition that the
President simply cannot commit forces to
combat without congressional approval.
It's the judiciary telling him in no un-
certain terms that that's not the way an
American President acts.”

Neuborne also said that one effect of
Judd’s order would be that persons facing
courts-martial for refusing to bomb
Cambodia may have their cases
dismissed. He cited the case of Air Force
Capt. Donald E. Dawson, who is under
charges for refusing to fly bombing
missions over Cambodia on June 19 and 20.

 

Kennedyk
ceases
distribution

of pamphlet

By TOM MOORE
Copy Editor

News in brief

from The Associated Press

0 is Ehrlichman a liar?
0 President, Shah visit

0 Lansky is innocent
OSenate names panei
0 St. Laurent dies at 9i

0 Today's weather...

Kennedy’s Book Store has stopped
distributing an advertising pamphlet that
was described as “sexist” by the Council
on Women’s Concerns.

The Council has called for a boycott of
the store because of the pamphlet. The
boycott will be supported by Student
Government (SG) until Kennedy formally
apologizes to the student body, said Jim
Flegle, SG president.

THE WOMEN‘S GROUP protests the
booklet because it “offers a blatantly
offensive image of women," according to
thei leaflets. Their main objection con-
cerns the first page of the advertisement
but they also claim the rest of the book is
written as if women don’t buy any books,
said Nancy Tomes, co-chairperson of the
Council.

The first page reads:

“There are two kinds of students. The
soft, lumpy ones are called coeds. If you
are not a coed yourself, you will want one
of your own. Only the priviledged (sic) few
ever acquire their very own coed. The
winning. care, and feeding of a coed takes
lots of money. If you don't have lots of
money then you must appear to have lots

0 WASHINGTON — After questioning

John D. Ehrlichman Wednesday, Sen.
Daniel K. Inouye muttered softly to
himself, “What a liar.“

His words were picked up by
microphones at the Senate Watergate
hearings, and on newsmen‘s tape recor-
ders.

Asked about his comment later, the
Hawaii Democrat said, “I can’t recall
saying that. If I did, it wasn't relative to
what I had just gotten through."

0 WASHINGTON — President Nixon
and the visiting Shah of Iran, Mohammad
Reza Pahlavi. met for an hour and IO
minutes Wednesday in what the White
House called “frank and friendly“ talks.

The White House would not say whether
the two men had discussed the Shah's
quest for F14 fighter-bombers.

of money. To do this you will need to use
many wiley (sic) stratagems, summon up
all your financial acumen, and employ the
most diabolically clever economic

. MIAMI —- A federal court jury found
underworld figure Meyer Lansky innocent
of income tax evasion charges on Wed-
nesday.

The ailing Lansky, 71, was not in the
courtroom as the jury returned the verdict
after nearly four hours of deliberation.

Lansky. a reputed financial brain in
organized crime, was found not guilty on
all three counts in the government in-
dictment accusing him of evading taxes on
gambling profits.

. WASHINGTON — A special nine-
member panel of the Senate Judiciary
Committee has been set up by Chairman
James O. Eastland. D-Miss.. to keep tabs
on the FBI‘s operations.

Eastland, it was learned today, named
himself to head the subcommittee on FBI
oversight.

measures. To wit: that is what this primer
is all about. Read it, and get the edge on
your competition.“

THE PROCEEDING pages tell the male
student how to save money by buying
books. supplies and gifts at Kennedy‘s.

Joseph P. Kennedy. the store owner,
said he “had no desire to upset one student
much less a group of students." He
apologized saying, “We’re sorry we have
upset anybody.“

THE STORE is withdrawing the pam-
phlet because some students and groups
were offended by it, he said.

Tomes said yesterday the Council on
Women‘s Concerns intends to be in front of
Kennedy‘s Thursday morning to make
sure distribution has stopped.

The pamphlet was to be given to in-
coming freshmen at the summer advising
conference and at the beginning of the fall
semester.

Kennedy said he hopes those who
disagree with the pamphlet “will be as fair
with their criticism as we were in
discontinuing the pamphlet. It was with-
drawn in respect to their objections.“

. OTTAWA -— Former Prime Minister
Louis St. Laurent of Canada died Wed-
nesday. He was 91.

Paul Martin. government leader in the
Senate, made the announcement in that
body, which immediately adjourned.

...hot day, wet night

Today should be a scorcher--a good day
to go swimming or hide behind a large fan.
Temperatures will near 90 today and
drop to 70 tonight. You can expect thun-
dershowers Thursday night ending on
Friday. Following the rainstorm cooler
and less humid weather should prevail.
Chances for precipitation are 50 per cent
for Thursday and 70 per cent for Thursday
night.

 

  

 

The.
Kentucky
Kernel

Established 1094

Steve Swift. Editor in Chief
Mike Clark. Managing Editor
Kaye Coyte. Copy Editor

Tom Moore. Copy Editor
Jay RhOdemyre. Arts Editor
Editorials represent the opinion of the editors. not the l‘niversity.

Editorials

Disagree with Council's boycott proposal

In case you haven‘t noticed the
posters on campus bulletin boards
promoting a boycott of Kennedy's
bookstore you haven’t missed much.

Recently the Council on Women‘s
Concerns alleged the bookstore was
distributing a “sexist" advertising
pamphlet to new students and fresh-
men here for the summer advising
conference. The group contended the
pamphlet presented a “blatantly
offensive image of women." After
reviewing the pamphlet we have to
agree with the Council.

However, we disagree with the
Council’s boycott proposal. Nancy
Tomes, co-chairperson of the Council,
admitted no one from the group has
talked to Kennedy‘s management
about the problem. Joseph P. Ken-
nedy, the store owner, told us he
would have stopped distribution of the
pamphlet earlier had members of the
group contacted him.

The first page of the pamphlet was
the major concern of the Council
because it depicted a woman as an
object every man should have. The

“primer" also inferred women want
loads of money spent in their behalf.
The pamphlet also didn‘t mention a
woman’s need to buy books.

The group has a legitimate gripe on
all three counts. The pamphlet was in
poor taste and rates a zero on a one to
10 scale of cleverness-in-advertising.

Hopefully the next time the Council
has a gripe it will confront the source
of the problem before taking action. If
it isn‘t satisfied after a discussion
then it can take the necessary action.

We also find it difficult to continue

the boycott, as the Student Govern-
ment intends until the store “for-
mally“ apologizes.

Kennedy, has agreed to take the
advertisement off the streets, called
the Kernel offices two days ago and
apologized and in today’s page one
story, his apology seems to be quite in
order.

SG President Jim Flegle however
isn’t satisfied and thinks the store
should print an apology to students in
an advertisement.

Enough is enough.

 

Letters]

 

'Literature is sexist'

During the month of July, new students
go through a process known as Summer
Advising or Orientation. They arrive in the
morning, are informed about the
University, register for classes, and leave
in the late afternoon.

As the students come on to the campus in
the morning, two of the local bookstores
pass out literature concerning textbooks.
One of the bookstores, Kennedy’s, is
passing out literature that is sexist and
insulting.

Essentially, the pamphlet says that
there are two types of students—the
handsome, virile male and the “soft and
lumpy“ coed. All men either possess a
coed or want “one of their own.” The best
way to get a coed is “to havea lot of money
or appear to have a lot of money." If one
gets himself a coed, one can really “L-I-V—
E”. Then comes the lead-in for saving
money by buying at Kennedy’s, and
therefore attaining happiness by getting a
coed.

Being a former patron of Kennedy’s, I
am dismayed at such a display of sexism
by the store. I hope such an action was
made in ignorance or is an oversight, for
the values that such a pamphlet

Cmmenl

By JANNA W. SMITH
and
MARK MANNING

On Monday, July 22, at 6 a.m., around
1,000 Gen Tel workers, members of the
Communications Workers of America,
went on strike. A contract was presented
to the workers and voted on by July 10.
According to representatives of the union
bargaining committee, this was not a
particularly good contract, but was the
best thing to be hoped for without a strike.
The contract was turned down, bargaining
was bogged down’, and the strike began.
What are these people striking for? Three
main things: maternity benefits, a pay
increase, and a union shop.

Maternity benefits: At present, a leave
of absence for illness is a paid leave—a
leave for childbirth is unpaid. In addition,
women returning to work after a baby ‘is
born find that they have not gained
seniority (this determines hours worked.

 

propagates are a slap in the face to the

dignity of any sex. I urge students and

citizens of Lexington to shop elsewhere

until Kennedy’s stops passing out this
insulting literature.

MIKE WILSON

A&S Soph.

Didn't like
record review

[disagree with Jay Rhodemyre’s review
of Santana-Mahavishnu’s Love Devotion
Surrender (July 24). It’s undoubtedly an
excellent album, which is a real exception
to the top-40‘s, back-to-rock-’n-roll slop (if
I hear “Monster Mash” one more time-)
that seems to be in vogue these days, but is
nonetheless flawed.

First, McLaughlin is a great jazz
guitarist, but his recent albums,
culminating in Love Devotion Surrender,
have been progressively more dazzle and
less emotional depth. Second, Santana is a
great rock guitarist, but rock is not jazz.
His is a style that is very simple, being
propelled by its emotion. (A jazz riff in
“Black Magic Woman” would have stuck
out like a sore thumb.)

It makes sense that Santana would seek
to learn from McLaughlin, whose style has
hit the music world like a broadside. But
when the two styles “collide” the results
are a little saddening.

McLaughlin’s sheer virtuosity seems to
overwhelm Santana. Santana tosses out a
riff, McLaughlin builds on it and tosses it
back, expecting a further variation. But
Santana seems unaware of this jazz
convention and seems to grope for what is
expected of him.

In places he seems stiff or intimidated.
Occasionally the tension explodes in some
of the most emotional phrases he has ever
produced. Mahavishnu seems to get his
best ideas from these (one might suggest
that the none-too-emotional McLaughlin is
feeding on whatever the Chicano
equivalent of “soul” is).

Rhodemyre also neglects the organ work
of Khalid Yasin, who is years ahead of
anyone else I know, and the powerful and
subtle drumming of Billy Cobham. These
people are more, in this album, than just
sidemen. For shame, Jay.

Mark Manning
Topical Senior

Who gets
the money?

Perhaps you can tell me who gets the
money deposited on Housing when cir-
cumstances prevent the student from
attending the school as planned. My
daughter deposited $100 toward her
housing; was then informed she was
rejected at the College of Nursing; not
knowing what to do at the moment she said

to enroll her in Arts & Sciences.

After much consideration she decided to
work a year and then perhaps continue her
education. (She has to pay for it: I am not
financially able.) When she made this
decision it was past the June 1 deadline to
cancel. She did not pay heed to the
deadline.

I have written several letters to Mr. Ben
Black and Mr. Larry Ivy. Mr. Black was
most considerate and forwarded my letter
to Mr. Poison Ivy, who gave me many good
reasons why I cannot get my money
refunded.

He said they will keep it for her to use in
the future if she comes to the University.
At the moment if she does continue her
education it will probably have to be at
Jefferson Community College here in
Louisville, because that looks like the only
thing she will be able to afford. Also she
may decide not to go back to school at all. I
never know what the girl is going to do
from one moment to the next.

Because of her indecision I am out $100.
So I guess I'll have to chalk it up to ex-
perience. But could you please tell me
where that money will end up? A down
payment on a new TV. for the rec room, or
maybe some new athletic equipment.

God maybe knows, I wish I did. Then
some nice Sunday I could drive to
Lexington and look at my hundred dollars.

R.J.Forsting
227 Fairfax Ave.
Louisville, Kentucky

Striking workers deserve a raise

among other things), while people
returning after illness find that they have.

Pay increase: The pay increase
proposed by Gen Tel was 6 per cent—but

since the last contract, the cost of living
has risen 8 percent (according to The
Courier-Journal). The workers are asking
for a 10 per cent increase. One might
imagine that, inflation being what it is, the
other 2 per cent may be eaten up by the
time the contract is settled! Note here that
the workers are noteven demanding a cost
of living increase. These people aren‘t
being grabby or petty(as some have
suggested). Their demands are scaled
down, if anything.

Union shop: Only around 75 per cent of
Gen Tel's employees are currently union
members. This has meant in the past that
the workers could never get enough
organizational strength to substantially

improve their working conditions. Under a

union shop, all employees would be union
members. This would enable the workers

to achieve such long overdue im-
provements as a cost of living increase in
pay to counter the effects of inflation, or
arbitration in case of unsettled grievances
(at present. if the company treats an
employee unfairly and refuses to set things
right, there is no higher, “arbitrary"
authority the case can be appealed to). In
addition, there would most likely be a
sufficient strike fund to take care of the
financial problems of such people as are
now crossing the picket line on the grounds
that by not working they would be unable
to pay their rent or whatever. The call for
a union sh0p is in many ways the central
issue of the strike.

The reaction of some members of the
public, as exemplified by Mike Clark
(writing in the Kernel, July 24), to the

strike is quite unjustified. This person
writes, “The employees have a lot of gall
to ask for raises when their absence has no
apparent effect on the operation of the
outfit.” Gen Tel ’5 notoriously poor service
is due to Gen Tel Itself. The equipment is
poor and operators report breakdowns till
blue in the face, but to no avail. “Then Gen
Tel can’t afford the pay increase?” you
ask, fearing a rate increase. Well, put your
fears to rest. In short, Gen Tel
seems to be spending money on profits
rather than on equipment. Clark should
have said, “Gen Tel has a lot of gall
denying pay raises and giving bad ser-
Vice.”

 

Janna W. Smith is 0 Lexington
resident and a Gen Tel operator; on
strike. Mark Manning is a senior
topical major at UK.

  

 

 

a page for opinion from inside and outside the university community

 

 

3096- III] ,

 

Let the courts handle

By W. HOWARD CLAY

Your article in the July 10 issue of The
Kentucky Kernel, written by W. David
Sweatt in the Graduate School of
Diplomacy, apparently hasn’t done his
homework in the practical aspects as to
why the Senate Select Committee was
formed. The letter states that the
Watergate Special Corporah'on doubts the
capacity of the Congress and the press,
and the people of the United States to deal
fairly in the Watergate incriminality.

This statement by David Sweatt is un-

true, in that the Watergate Special Cor-v

poration fully believes that the people of
the United States, through its judicial
system, “The Courts”, is qualified to deal
fairly with the principals of the Watergate
case, but that Congress and the press (all
news media) are not qualified, because of
their many self-serving purposes

If the Kentucky Kernel pretends in any
small way not to be prejudiced, then I
would hope that it would print this full
letter with attachments thereto.

The Watergate Special Corporation,
incorporated on June 6, 1973, has had
considerable communication with the
concerned public, and over 90 per cent of
those persons have respect and give their
support to President Nixon,

Enclosed find a letter from a lady who is
confined to a wheelchair, stating her
position, marked “A" and with this letter
she enclosed the following petitions,
marked ”B”.

Enclosed find a copy of a letter I
received from Senator Sam J. Ervin, Jr. of
North Carolina, on July 2, 1973, in which he
sent a form letter, apparently because
there are so many complaints about the
Special Committee on Presidential
Campaign Activities. In the third
paragraph, he states the basic purpose of
the Senate Select Committee, whiich in my
judgment is elementary, in that everyone

Nixon suffers from serious staff infection

knows that there should be legislation to
insure fair elections at all levels.

Senator Ervin is using a witch hunt
method, in trying to undermine the
government and politicians. The public‘s
lack of confidence in Congress, as set out
in the Gallup Poll of Sunday, July 1, 1973,
the public’s lack of confidence in the
newspaper, television, labor unions and
big business, shows that basically the
people are not fooled by the actions of the
news media and Congress.

If the Select Committee, as Senator
Ervin states in third paragraph, is to
determine whether any new legislation is
needed, then why are they pursuing
everything that is unrelated to the basic
purpose?

It also appears to me that Senator
Lowell P. Weicker, Jr. of Connecticut, to
use the language that he used to Charles
W. Colson, in Senator Weicker’s office
shows a great immaturity and a disrespect
for the people of the United States. (The
language that he was quoted as saying is
“I am a hardnose politician and do not use
the“crap” that you use, and now would
you please get your ass out of here”)

It also appears to me that Senator Er-
vin’s own fellow Senator, Jesse Helms, of
North Carolina, is somewhat abashed by
Senator Ervin’s actions. Enclosed find a
letter of June 29, 1973, written to me from
Senator Helms.

Does the Gallup Poll of Sunday, July 1,
1973, tell the story when the people
responded?

50 per cent had very little confidence in
Congress,

42 per cent had a great deal of con-
fidence.

58 per cent had very little confidence in
the newspapers,

Watergate scandal

{ <3

 

39 per cent having quite a lot.

61 per cent had very little confidence in
television,
37 per cent having quite a lot.

The Watergate Special Corporation still
believes that the Ervin Committee should
be disbanded. The leaks from said com-
mittee, the leaks from the grand jury, and
the leaks from the news media have made
a fair trial by the Courts impossible. The
Watergate Special Corporation still

believes that people's individual freedoms
are at stake, if any man can be tried
without due process of law.

 

  
  
  
  
   
  
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
   
  
 
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
   

 

Senator Ervin, as Chairman of the
Watergate Select Committee, is a prime
example of why seniority is passe, and that
abilities should take precedence over
seniority. Senator Ervin‘s little joke on
television that his former indiscretions
were outlawed by the Statutes of
Limitations. and his physical capacities
were outlawed by old age. in my judgment,
gives the people a complete understanding
of his chairmanship.

W. Howard Clay is (1
Louisville attorney and
president of the Watergate
Special Corporation.

By ROBERT BENDINER

By one of those twists that enliven history, the most
self-consciously American of all our Presidents, down
to the flag on his lapel, has come a cropper by
dispensing with that most American of all institutions,
the “old pol." If Richard Nixon had staffed the White
House and his party with politicians instead of fanatic
devotees and zealous amateurs, his Administration
might now be purring along with no more than the
normal partisan opposition—and probably less.

But such were his own needs and nature that instead
of surrounding himself at the very start of his Ad-
ministration with the likes of, say, Melvin Laird—a
man attuned to the tolerances of the electorate—he
picked people who had never had the humbling ex-
perience of facing the voters on any level, much less
experienced the give and take of Congress. Com-
promise and concession, moderation and a feel for the
political amenities—these indispensables of the
democratic system are as alien to people like
Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Colson and Dean as they are
to the far-out ideologues of the left. Given to scheming
in ways more appropriate to the politics of Iraq or
Croatia than of Wahington, they were committed to
meet fancied plot with fanciful counterplot, and never
mind the means or the violence to constitutional
niceties.

The men so recently around Mr. Nixon appear to
share two of the least attractive attributes prevalent in
their generation—a total indifference to American
historic tradition and, almost in consequence, an
openness to the cheapest iconoclasm about the country
and what it will stand for. Only a man deeply infected

with the belief that anything goes here, anything can be
bought and the “big interests” control everything
anyhow could draw up lists of the Administration’s
“enemies" and write memos about using the agencies
of the Federal Government to “screw“ them. Big in-
terests have in fact tried often to buy the favors of
Government and from time to time succeeded—it
would take a fatuous innocence to be unaware of that——
but for a party in power to go from corporation to
corporation inviting bribery with threats and promises
requires a new dimension in cynicism.

Congressional reaction to the Watergate affair and
all its ramifications is a measure of the shock produced
in even hardened politicians by this gross overstepping
of the bounds, this closing of the wide gap between
human weakness in government and systemic
corruption. It is this shock, quite evidently, that unites
conservative Republicans on the Senate Watergate
committee with liberal Democrats, who for partisan
reasons might be inclined to exaggerate their sense of
outrage—this and perhaps a natural irritation at the
failure of the Nixon staff even to conceal its scorn for
the equal power on Capitol Hill.

President Nixon's immediate predecessors
depended to a far greater extent on advisers who had
either faced the electorate themselves or had managed
normal campaigns and learned the trade. Kennedy‘s
councils included three former governors (Freeman.
Ribicoff and Hodges), ex-Congressmen like Udall and
the pros of the “Irish Mafia.“

President Johnson drew on some of the same talent
in addition to Vice President Humphrey, no mean

professional himself. as well as such experienced
political hands as Clark Clifford and Joseph Califano.
In addition to this collection of men steeped in the
mores of the American voter, Mr. Johnson himself was
among the greatest experts in the art of politics the
country ever produced. True. disaster overtook his
Administration. but it was a disaster in which much of
the country shared the frustration of its leaders.

But what of Mr. Nixon himself as politician? He has
gone through the test of the polls as often as most
Presidents and oftener than many. Why didn‘t he know
the ordinary give and take of his occupation and the
limits of tolerable deviation from national standards?
Perhaps he did and is deeply shaken by the deeds of his
subordinates. as Richard A. Moore described him to
the Watergate committee.

If that is truly his defense, however. then he—and the
country—can only deplore his failure to have leavened
his Administration with the good sense of some “old
pols." They might have taken the equivalent of a rug or
a coat here and there in exchange for a minor favor.
but they would not have kept quiet while others were
stealing the very spirit out of the Constitution. They
would have known better, It has taken the neat, cool,
ignorant young men of the Nixon era to make the
Daleys of America look almost benign.

Robert Bendiner is a
member of the editorial
board of The New Yorlz
Times.

 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
   
   
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 

 

 

 

   
   

 4—THF. KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. July 26. 1973

 

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GE'Brge Glenda
Segal A Jackson

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.1. IUCUD 8.3.217.

 

Longerseason?

Kentucky Colonels negotiate with UK
for Memorial Coliseum playing dates

Basketball season at UK may
last a bit longer next year. if the
American Basketball Association
Kentucky Colonels realize am-
bitions to play some games in
Memorial Coliseum.

The Athletic Association‘s
Board of Directors. at a Tuesday
meeting, authorized Athletic
Director Harry C. Lancaster to
negotiate terms for the Colonels
to play four games at the
Coliseum.

The Colonels had asked for six
playing dates. two prior to UK‘s
season. two during the season,
and two after the Cats complete
play. The Board of Directors
denied the two mid-season dates,

Mike Dobbs
signs letter

with Kentucky

Mike Dobbs. a two-year
baseball letterman at Owensboro
High School. has signed a
national letter of intent with UK.

Dobbs. a 6-2, 185-pound cat-
cher. played on Owensboro's
district and regional cham-
pionship teams the past two
seasons. He batted .345 and hit
three home runs during his just-
completed senior year.

but told Lancaster to work with
Kentucky on the tour dates which
don't interfere with UK‘s
schedule.

As Lancaster noted, “Our first
obligation is to our own
program," which precluded two
of the proposed dates.

Lancaster added the four dates
should be sufficient to allow the
Colonels to detemine the
marketability of the team in the
Blue Grass.

Kentucky, runnerup to Indiana
in last year‘s ABA championship
finals, has undergone quite a
facelift recently.

Mrs. John Y. Brown. wife of the
Kentucky Fried Chicken
magnate, has purchased a
controlling interest in the club to
insure its continued residence in
Louisville. Mrs. Brown then
appointed four other women to
the Board of Directors, making
the Colonels the only professional
sports team in America to be
headed entirely by women.

Soon after Mrs. Brown took
over, head coach Joe Mullaney
resigned to take the head job with
the Utah Stars. Mullaney has
stated since his resignation that
the views of the new board of

directors concerning the team’s
style of play were contrary to his
own.

BUSTER BROWN

Friday 8. Saturday Night

25::

Beer

9-l

540 South Broadwa y

Mllst lit' 3] will I 1)

Mrs. Brown wants the Colonels
to exhibit the racehorse style of
play used by UK teams, while
Mullaney favors a controlled
offense.

Bear Bryant

sees Cats
as spoilers

Alabama head football coach
Paul (Bear) Bryant sees Ken-
tucky, along with Mississippi
State and Vanderbilt, as possible
spoilers during the 1973
Southeastern Conference season.

Bryant. former UK coach from
1946 through 1953, says the three
perennial cellar dwellers “might
just beat anybody and might
determine the title.“

UK meets ‘Bama on Sept. 22 in
the SEC lidlifter for both teams.

Bryant sees his Crimson Tide,
Auburn, Florida, Georgia,
Tennessee and LSU as likely
pretenders for the league title.

Kentucky. under: first-year
coach Fran Curci. Vanderbilt
with rookie coach Steve Sloan,
and Mississippi State under
second-year coach Bob Tyler,
figure to be at least a year away
from serious title consideration.

The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, ill Journalism
BUlldlng, University at Kentucky,
Lexmgton, Kentucky £0506 Mailed tive
times weekly during the school year encept
during holidays and exam periods, and twnce
weekly during the summer session
Published by The Kernel Press. Inc, n7?
Priscilla Lane, Lexmgton, Kentucky.
Beaun as the Cadet In l894 and published
(antinuously as The Kentucky Kernel Since
Wis. The Kernel Press, Inc. lounded l97t
Second class postage paid at Lexington.
Kentucky
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Managina Editor, News