xt747d2q7z9w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt747d2q7z9w/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-10-29 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 29, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 29, 1975 1975 1975-10-29 2020 true xt747d2q7z9w section xt747d2q7z9w   

Vol. LXVII No. 62
Wednesday. October 29. 1975

 

Campus police enter
Taylor investigation

By (tl.\\\' I‘Il)\\.\RDS
Managing liditor
and
RD\ .\ll’l‘(‘lll£l.l.
Kernel Staff “riter

a" (up/right. Renoir-Ry Kernel. i975

The t iiiversity Police Department il‘K
P!) has entered the investigation into the
.illegul kidnaping and murder of Luroii
l'iiigene 'l‘aylor

"At the request oi the Lexington Metro
Police Department. we _|tilll(‘(l the iii-
\estigation Friday." said l'KPD ('liiel'
Paul Harrison.

Previously. he said. the [‘KPD had
assisted Metro Police only in obtaining
students for questioning.

“This will be an open investigation."
llan‘ison said. “We will try and reveal all
criminal activities involved with this case
even if it includes point shaving. gambling
or any other violation of Kentucky law ”

Asst Metro Police (‘hief Frank Fryman
said the “I‘KPD is doing no more than
coordinating ottr efforts" concerning
student involvement.

'l'aylor. who was allegedly kidnaped
troiii his apartment Met. 1]. was lotitid
tloatiiig dead in the Who River to days
later

t'liarged w itli k tdnaping and murder are
l‘.iIlltil't‘ Stephens. lit. and John Bishop. 32.
both wt l.titil.\'\'|ll('. Robert (‘hannels 32.

and Noble Leroy Butler. 23. have also been
charged with kidnaping

Stephens was an All-American tight end
on the 1974 Kentucky football team and
Bishop is a tormer Wildcat team manager.

'l‘hroughout the investigation Metro
Police have questioned l'K students
including star tootball ruiiiiingback Alfred
”Sonny” (‘ollins

t'olliiis has said that Stephens. Bishop
and t ‘lianiiels \ isited him in his dorm room
at t a in He! 13. approximately one and
one-half houis after the alleged kidiiaping.

(‘ollins said the three only stayed 15
inmates and discussed the Auburn football
game.

Preliminary hearings on the murder and
kidnaping charges against Stephens and
Bishop have been continued to Nov. 18.
(‘hanneLs’ hearing has also been continued
to the same date

Butler waived his preliminary hearing
Tuesday in Fayette (‘ounty Quarterly
('ourt. llis case will now go before the
grand jury

A spokesman for the (‘omiiionwealth
.\ttoriiey's office said the grand turv would
probably review Butler's case during the
second week of November

In other quarterly court action. Butlers
bond was lowered ti‘oiii Sitittooti to slittioo
Bond tor Stephens and Bishop iematns at
slotttlio while ('liaiinels is beiiig held on
stooooo bond

Telephone directory is out;
corrections not included

By DAVID BROWN
Kernel Staff Writer

The 1977776 student directory is out. but
listing corrections attempted by Student
Government tSGi are not included in the
telephone book.
St; ‘iccen‘ ’ ‘Esting corrections from
sttide' ~ t.;" ‘u pt 1;") to allow them to
titake sure ‘tieir addresses and phone

'w‘lwrs were properly listed in the
director} .

. tie Sept. I5 deadline. however. was too
late for corrections to be incorporated in
the directory. SG President Jim llarralson
said.

llan'alson said he was approached by
two senators at the beginning of the
semester and asked if SG could collect
listing corrections for the directory.

The senators said the corrections
deadline was Sept. 15. llarralosn said. “I
just never checked," llarralson refused to
identify the senators because he said he
didn‘t want to blame them. He said he is
not sure \\ ho was really responsible for the
error.

The last date corrections could have
been made was Sept. 1.

SG will instead submit a list of all ad
dress and phone number corrections it
received to 'l'niversity operators so the
correct listings will be available.
llarralson said.

"To my knowledge this is the first time
any effort has been made to correct the
listings iii the directory.“ he said.

llarralsoii aLso said this was the first
time he could remember that the directory
was out before November.

Attempts were made by the directory
committee to make the directory non~
political. said Dennis George. business and
economics senator and directory comv
iiiittee member.

('oiitinued on page 3

KENTUCKY

81‘

an independent student newspaper

   

6] University of Kentucky

Lexington. Ky. 40506

     

\latt Robinson. engineeringjuniw'. and hi
pet dog (irendel indulged with i r cream
cmes during a recent warm d1:

ln cone-junction

Candidate forum
Election hopefuls split over ERA

By JAMIE l.l'(‘Kl‘I
Kernel Staff Writer

The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA;
stands about a 50-50 chance of being
rescinded by the Kentucky General
Assembly if rescission proposals reach the
legislatures‘s floor. State Sen. Michael
Moloney tD-Lex.i said at a candidates‘
forum Tuesday night.

“I dm't believe it (ERA) should be
rescinded. Whether it will be depends on
the makeup of the Elections and (‘on-
stitutional Amendments Committee. If it
gets out of committee there‘s a 50-50
chance it will be rescinded,“ Moloney said.

Moloney and eight other local can—
didates for the state legislature responded
to quesitions from an audience of about 60
persons at the Student (‘enter Ballroom.

Support for ERA. which Kentucky
ratified in 1972. among the other (an

didates was divided. (iene Farley.
Moloney‘s Republican opponent in the 13th
District Senate race. supported ERA.

Steve Beshear tD-Lex.), 76th District
state representative. also supported the
amendment. “It makes women equal to
men under the law It has nothing to (’o
with abortion, mixed rest rooms. rape on
campus, or the right of privacy. l'm for
it." Beshear said.

Republican candidate Ernest llar-
daway. 75th district. said he would support
ERA rescission although he said he was
neither completely opposed to or in favor
of the amendment. “I haven't reau it all
the way through. but there are phrases in
it I don‘t like.”

American Party candidates Anthony
{\lct‘ord. 77th District. and Charles
('hristopher. 78th District. were opposed to
BRA. (‘hristopher said he was at a Frank—

tort hearing this summer when women
demonstrated in favor of rescission. He
predicted tough opposition to the amend—
ment.

Several candidates said they would
support lowering the drinking age to 18.
but it ‘s unlikely such a cha ige will ever be
enacted.

”I‘d have no problem with lowering the
drinking age), but there‘s no way the bill
would get out of committee or signed by
the govemor.“ Moloney said. “So why
beat your head against the wall?"

Rep. Larry Hopkins tR-Lex.). 77th
District. said he has “no qualms“ about
lowering the drinking age. but he “doubts
that it will ever see the floor of the house."

llnrdaway and Dan Moore. Republican
ca \t‘lltl'deS. said they favor such
It‘lJtslHlltrn. “If citizens can vote. go to war.

(‘ontinued on page I2

  

 

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editorials

Lettas and Spectmmarticles should be messed to the Editaial Page Editor,
Room "4 Journalism Building. They slmldbe typed, doublespaced aid sawed.
Lettas should not exceed 25) words and Spectrum articles I!) worm.

Editorials do not represent the opinions of the University.

Bruce Winges
Editor-in-Chief

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Jack Koeneman
Associate Editor

 

 

 

SG directory offers one-sided view

Some people might have ap«
plauded if the Student Government
(56) Student Directory Committee
had stud< with phone numbers and
kept the University phone book
free from political comment.

The ommittee, however, did not
do that.

The phone book's cover is in-
nocent enough. Certainly no one is
going to find political overtones in
a picture of the fountain in front of
the Office Tower.

But on the three inches at the
bottom of page 16 ,, headlined
"Bicentennial Thought l975-76“

all ideas of a simple, informative
iJniVi-rsity phone directory
disappea r.

"We filler lists ’what would be
r-uiuired to match Russia's record
utter its more than half century of
.01 :ai-sm,“ with the achievements

7 'he ’ American system of
.,~ l‘.‘l’i:SE'ntali\/e government and
art‘snnai enterprise."

It states: "We would have to cut
our paychecks by more than 80 per
cent; move 33 million workers
back to the farm; destroy 59
million television sets; tear up 14 of
every 15 miles of highway; iunk 19
of 20 automobiles; tear up two
thirds of our railroad track; knock
down 70 per cent of our houses and
rip out nine out of every 10
telephones."

This rationale, however, simply
is not valid. It would be more
revealing to consider the progress
made by Russia as compared with
the United States’ progress when it
was only 56 years old.

Perhaps it would be better to
compare the progress made by
each country during the same time
period, considering the economic
and social factors with which each
nation began the period.

Also disturbing is the mere fact
that this commentary made its
way into the directory.

Dennis George, business and
economics senator and directory
committee member, said the
"committee itself didn’t know that
(commentary) was going in the
directory.”

Education Senator Julie
Watkins, who was responsible for
most of the type-setting of the 56
pages, said the committee did not
approve the commentary.

”I iustthought it would be nice to
put in a bicentennial filler,”
Watkins said. Watkins did not seek
approval of the committee, she
said, because at thetimeshe was in
Louisville composing the pages.

It was the iob of the Student
Services Committee to review and
approve the pages for the Student
Senate. That committee let the
commentary by.

”We tried to make sure the
directory was as correct as
possible,” said David Howard,
architecture senator and Student

Services Committee chairman.

The committee, according to
Howard, wanted the directory to
”be as a-political as possible.”

Watkins claims she showed the
commentary to the Student
Services Committee and they
approved it. Howard denies he ever
saw it and said it is ”unfortunate
it’s in there.”

Indeed it is.

There is no way any reply to the
statement can be made. Students
Ni” see for an entire year an
3ditorial statement that may be
:onstrued as nothing more than
*heap propoganda.

Prime books have not been
Ul7§ldered a part of the media. If
hey are to be considered as media
t-en ”10‘, should assume media
i-spons-biiities.

()nc i-t the most important media
'QSDOHSlhl-llles is that of access.
KJI‘ft’rliTg viewpoints have no ac
cess to the SG directory.

 

 

 

Blind justice

L(t Mr

I .er .t Uke to take this opportunity to

(Oll’lrttf' pl the firm and resolute stance
taker iv Chuck ’urner (Kernel, Oct
20 Big-iii. gay . illegal, immoral")
agains‘ ‘f‘e \Dl’f‘ldlnq evil of homo
scx-mli', li um” and evocative prose
he has '1'.” mod for al' who are willing to
see "10' progress of the alarming

‘utbreat f‘i‘. homosexuality on campus
”His is not to say that homosexuals are
inherently interior I am a firm
or-"ever that iustice is blind. Impartial
though she may be, she runs not
counter to the will of God.

If homosexuals must have equal
rights, let this be so. If they are to be
recognized by the University as a
legitimate student organization, let
them recognize our rights in turn. I
have the right to recognize homo
sexuals in a crowd. Let the Gay
Students’ Coalition (GSC) provide its
members with armbands, jewelry and
little white poodles so that the innocent
may shun them.

Christians also have the right not to
lunch with homosexuals. The cafeteria
must be partitioned so that the 278,000
gay students and faculty on campus
may socialize as they wish, hidden from
the view of young children.

We have the right to avoid close
physical proximity with homosexuals
m crowded buses and other means of
transport. Let the University take the
burden upon itself to provide homo~
sexuals with equal but separate means
of transportation. (This is not to say,
however, that i am in favor of
homosexual busing. I firmly believe
that homosexuals can walk to school
like everyone else. The boards of
education of this c0untry nave enough
to do without having to perform the
distasteful task of calculating gay to

straight student ratios in our public
schools.)

In summary, l as an American have
not ”got it in” for anyone. I believe that
the tumor of homosexuality on campus
can be isolated so that it will wither of
its own accord. Let us remember that
the price of freedom is eternal vigi
lance.

W.J. Kearney lll
A&Ssohpomore

Representation

Editor:

it is not often that we’tind ourselves
well represented in government
Therefore, students, faculty, and other
members of our University community
who live in the fourth council district
are quite fortunate to have Pam Miller
serving for them on the Urban County
Council. in her first term on the new
Council she has become one of its most
active, perceptive and dedicated
members. She has worked more than
full time in the underpaid, part-time
position —~basically doing those things
she said she would do. She got bike
paths installed, was instrumental in
stopping the extension of Rosemont
Garden and was the only member of the
Council to have a perfect voting record
on policy, zoning and growth matters
according to The Kentucky
Organization (TKO).

She has a strong interest in the
University, which lies within her
Council district, and in its people. In
fact, she is really one of us —married to
Dr. Ralph Miller in the Pharmacology
Department.

With such a person working for us we
can really relax, right? Wrong! Nov. 4
is election day. And to paraphrase
Edmund Burke, ”All that is necessary
for the triumph of mediocrity is that
good persons do nothing." This is not a

ietters

 

good yearfor incumbents generally and
Miller could be swept away in the
general resentment of the times. The
fourth district could wind up being
represented by a man who works in
Versailles. We need to continue the high
quality of representation on the Council

and that means we must support and
vote for Pam Miller.

Michael Kennedy
Associate professor Architecture

Regret

Editor:

The members of Phi Alph Delta
(PAD) fraternity, who nominated fel-
low-member Daryl Driver for home-
coming queen, would like to express
regret that our candidate was not
selected by the Homecoming Com-
mittee.

The non-selection of Driver, coupled
with the hostile reaction to the nomina-
tion by PAD alumni and PAD members
not present at the meeting, only serves
to demonstrate how fixed are the
externals of this homecoming tradi-
tion—a tradition that future genera-
tions will lightly dismiss, in much the
same way present generations dismiss
the antics performed in Egyptian
fertility rites

Why do so many people regard the
selection of a homecoming queen as
something so important that it should
be restricted to one sex alone? What
function does a homecoming queen fill?
Hompmminc has customarily been
thought of as a time for an alumnis to
return to the old alma mater and relive
old times with former classmates. In
addition, the University has a stake in
the festivities in that if everyone has a
great time, it should increase the
number and amount of alumni contri
butions. ls that what. a homecoming

queen does~increase contributions? If
so, she is reigning only as a vicarious
whore, if you take all this homecoming
hoopla seriously.

And that was our purpose in nomi
nating Driven—to puncture the myths
surrounding homecoming. Not to try to
set up a countertradition in the
homosexual sense of the word ”queen",
but to allow people to look at and laugh
at their own foibles. Unfortunately it
seems that more people than the
”women’s libbers” can be fairly ac-
cused of having lost their sense of
humor.

't .
5°' 9°95 H. Regina Cullin

PAD treasurer

Michael Flowers
PAD clerk

Who cares?

Editor:

"Who cares?” Idol And so do many
more people on this campus. I’ve had
enwgh of your one-sided reporting
(”Person - on - the - street, Student
reaction is divided on _’njo”"smoking’
request,” Kernel, Oct. 7.,I‘Ihat did you
do —--interv iew every student strolling
by with a cigarette?

i suppose it depends on who is doing
the reporting, because everyone i
polled stoutly and even vehemently
disagreed with your "who cares" at-
titude. Contrary to what the Kernel
wwld have me believe, there are
thousands of us waving our 5.0.5. (sick
of smoke).

There are definitely two sides to this
issue. But I don’t like being told that
nobcxty'cares —-—because I know better.

Danielle Hurn
Agriculture junior

“"' “ strung M w»...

 

 

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spectrum

 

 

By John Fields

Mr. Herbert Harry Bushong, in his Oct.
27 (Gays lack morality,” Kernel)
massacre of fact and decorum has done
something that few commentators on the
gay issue have yet to do. He has splattered
his -prejudices~—ugly and mindless—all
across the Spectrum page so that those of
uswhomightagreewith him maycontinue
to foster such hates and fears in an at
mosphere of legitimation, while those of
us who might disagree may continue the
posturing all-too typical of the gay com
munity and its sympathizers.

Bushong has ”clarified” the issue by
striking at our most prized possessions,
our emotionally socialized preconceptions.
In other words, rather than the high flights
of Biblical rhetoric or the impassioned
humanism that partisan straights and
gays respectively espouse, he has given us
something we can all understand‘on the
gut level. hatred sprung from ignorance.

His formula for explaining
homosexuality is: "Different equals
depraved; abnormality equals im
morality.” Thanks to his affrontery, we
can now get to basic issues and to
examining some of the interesting notions
(like Chinese puzzle boxes) implicit in
many of the salient concepts which he
introduced.

(Bushong spoke of the “common
sense” which perceives homosexuality to

 

Homosexuality

Spectrum article employs

ugly, mindless prejudices;

fosters hates and fears

be abnormal. Certainly common sense
reveals that there are fewer gays than
everyone else, but to make the abnormal
the unnatural (as he does in the next
phrase) is a leap of faith from statistical
data to moral inference which I’m sure he
does not wish to take in regard to other
biological deviations, (i.e. color blindness
or left handedness).

2. Healso bandies about the notion of the
”unchangeable instincts of the normal
human animal” and precedes this by in
troducing stigma as the natural weapon
against homosexuality (one which he
assumes we defeat by excessive "per
missiveness”). If he feels all stigma
againstbiological deviation is an inherent
right of humanity as derived from some
unexplained instinctual heritage, then,

indeed, Adolph Hitler was right and it is
perfectly proper to eliminate the non
Aryan because the non-Aryan is not in
possession of the biological and social
norm. An extreme example, no doubt, but
the result of believing people to be
necessarily alienated (the stay withryour
"own kind” of Bushong) from the main?
stream of a human society is to consider
them as subrhuman. in considering the
reasons why societies repress the dif
ferent, Bushong appeals to the animal
kingdom which is odd if he knows
anything about the incidence of
homosexuality among the higher
animals and to the gang instinct, and
thus seems to consider society as basically
a herd, rather than a conglomeration of
rational individuals. But that’s another

question.

3. There is allusive reference in the
article to whatconstitutes ”normal sex” in
Bushong’s universe when he speaks of
Homo Sapiens depending upon each other
for ”propagation.” Not that I think he’s
dragging out the old Victorian idol of
missionary-style sex, but he hasn’t an-
swered with such a definition how we are
to classify monks, nuns and secular
ascetics who deny "normal sex drives”
e‘ntirely. Lifelong chastity requures a
different attitude toward "normal sex"
than does temporary abstinence; is this
different attitude a difference which
culminatBS in abnormality? ls denial of
propoga tion a wrong in the same sense as
is denial of sexual relations with the op-
posite sex? Both are subverting the "in
stinctual” desires of the human race, and
should, on Bushong’s logic, be regarded
with equal "revulsion” by the rest of
society.

In sum, I think we could say that the
extremism voiced by Bushong should be
more deeply analyzed in the volatile
dialogues of Spectrum commentaries,
rather than the Biblical injunctions which
spring from it. When the emotionaI
preconceptions gay and straight ”are
evaluated, then perhaps we can hear the
words of each other rather than merely
mouthing catch all symbols of our own.

 

John Fields is a philosophy sophomore.

 

 

Imagine, if you will, that you are a
student in a postgraduate professional
school, and that being enrolled in the
school means thata great deal of your
life IS intertwined with the process of

Most of your external energies and a
good deal of your internal ones are
riveted on mastering a complicated
series of subject matter. The com
pletion of your course of study, the
piece de resistance, means the strong
possibility of an affluent future mode of
existence, replete with some of the
appropriate trappings of success in
America status, position,
recognizance in the community, and
power. Some would say: ”You have it

of getting through it successfully.

 

 

Attaining those means of living,
however, means that you must
sacrifice some things. A few sacrifices,
like giving up a great deal of spare
time, can be made without much tur-
pitude. But there are other oneswfor
example, yaJ stand the chance of
reaching he Top of the Heap butat the
same time take the risk of leaving
behind a wake of enjoyable former non»
professional pursuits and relationships
in the swirling dust of past life-styles.
You can get to the point where you feel

guilty whenever you aren’t studying
(ie. working) and the fun is thus taken
outof the spicier parts of life. Variety is
destroyed. Thework-or feel guilty ethic
is firmly established.

But it hasn’t always been that way.
Yes, undergrads, it’s true! Why, I can
remember those days of Thursday
through Wednesday weekends, wat
ching a little tube now and then,
reading some good literature when l
wanted, studying Katherine the Great
of Russia (just lucky, I guessw
seriously). But those times end for a lot
of us when we get into grad school.

We get uptight. And we spend a lot of
time burying ourselves in the
professional posture of our discipline or
else we come to feel guilty about not
achieving, doing, competing, winning!

Winning. Oh Lord, there is so much
competition in the higher stages of
learning and in the professional world.
There is an unhealthy degree of it here
in thelaw school at UK, and my God, at
the Ivy League schools and the
University of Chicago and Stanford and
at other powerhouse law schools, the
rivalry evidently must just be simply
vicious. Reports proliferate of ”lost,’
and subsequently burned class
notebooks, ripped~off court decision
report vdumes, and wildly maniacal
facial expressions among students
during exams (see also ”The Paper
Chase”). Some' of this type of stuff
occurs atUKasa matter of c0urse now,
and has been for the past yew years.

Let‘s face it-—~such an unhealthy
degree of competition has to indicate
something about the effect creahd by
such stress on the student after a few
years. In fact, the law school ex.
perience has in the past been compared

$ucce$$ means strain, sacrifices

to a submission to some sort of weird
moral lobotomy wherein
easygoingness, compassion, and
sometimes scruples, are sacrificed in
return for a full thrust power drive to
success American style.

Sure this pattern of change is
sometimes just a function of growing
older, butthe imperatives and demands
of professional.

Sure this pattern of change is
sometimes just a function of growing
older, butthe imperatives and demands
of professional training seem to in
tensity these traits. Their ultimate
manifestation, of course, came during
the Nixon years when the nation wit
nessedandfinally passed judgementon
a group of men who had lost all vestiges
of human compassion and who were
totally absorbed in winning at any cost,
morality and the Constitution be
damned. Their’s was a logical result of
a lifetime of power-craving, power
seeking, and loss of contact with their
own souls, thanks to their total at,
tention to...$ucce$$.

A professional education can be
achieved, despite what I have said,
without incurring such disastrous
personal loss. The student can make the
rise to self-fulfillment in this area
withoutforgetting that there are other
objects of living that require more
sensitivity than does the mastery of a
subject involving complicated
reasoning or technological expertise or
intimab knowledge of the human
biological and chemical systems. Some
medical schools, l understand, make
efforts to insure that the med student
doesn’t forget that he-she is attending
not mly the needs of a human system,
but also the needs of a human being.

Little comparable effort can be noticed
at any given law school. In fact the
opposite is sometimes enc0uraged.
Here at UK, firstyear students are
scheduled so thatclasses are spread out
over the entire day, thus insuring that
they stay around the school and that
they don’tgeta chance to do much else
There are heavy overtones of in
doctrination as to whata lawyer S‘tOUid
perceive his role to be; innovation of
this role is not encouraged. lrtense
competition is promoted (it makes
better lawyers); personal lives are
ignored. The American dream is
realized.

The final touch to this scenario is the
one most worthy of note. Those who do
best at high level legal learning and
practice are those who swim with this
current of philosophy. Those who buck
it can do it, but with added mental
hardships; it takes an inordinate
amount of mental and emotional strain
to stay in touch with black-letter law,
hopeless professional ambition, and
one’s own peace of mind all at the same
time. Nixon, Mitchell, and Stans
couldn’tdoit. Ford has been terminally
compromised by it. A lot of
professionals have become alcoholics
because of it; in fact, it’s a rampant
syndrome. Changes are needed in our
theories of higher education before
things will ever be any different.

 

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 jour-
nalism and disaster-area insurance
adjusting. His column appears weekly
in the Kernel.

 

 

 

 

,.,.__.u.....__, 1, I. til “I l M‘aw as.”

  

 

 

l—TIIE KEN'I‘l'(‘KY KERNEL. Wednesday. October 29. I975

 

 

Don’t just sit there,

write a
Letter to the Editor

WHERE

THE GOOD

tin DAYS AIIII
STILL HAPPENING

PROUDLY PRESENTS* STONEY CREEK

LEXINGTONS K ‘ a Man,
,-- , ~ ., lues. thru Sat.
BEST . ,. a S B
' -» ‘ Li». at» . teve anio .
BLUEGRASS ,. , _ - . ,, w]: John ‘Bass 9. P..M.
. \ Paul goitar T1]!
Barty Mandolin 12A.M-

 

 

233 South Iar'd Drive
Phone 27 Sr 1029

AUTHENTIC
GRECIAN CUISINE

5:00 PM — l=OO AN\
MONDAY — SATURDAY
ll’oOOAM- ‘7100 PM SUNDAY

IO7 EAST MAIN FOR RESERVATIONS
LEXINGTON , KY. CALL 255—42‘77

IF MC IS comma

NDI’EMBEII 5, 1975

 

  

Our Recruiter will be on campus
to interview Seniors and Graduates in

 

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING

  

 

FMC C 0 R [’0 It A'I‘IO N

l.\l)l 'S'I‘RIAI. CHEMICAL [)IVIS‘IUV

An Equal Opportunity Employer

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7'
1‘ news briefs
Fighting steps up

in Lebanese capital

lll~2lltl"l‘. Lebanon (Al’i Moslem and (‘hristian gunmen
battled outside Lebanon‘s Parliament on Tuesday as convoys of
Americans a nd other foreigners sped to the airport for flights out of
this strife—torn capital.

Marine guards at the (KS. Embassy changed from dress blues to
combat latigues and flak jackets when stray rounds from a nearby
combat zm e began hitting the building. Rocket-propelled grenades
and machine gun bursts slammed into three of Beirut‘s most ex-
pensive hotels.

Nonstop lighting made it impossible to accurately count
casualties. but officials estimatedthat 23 died during the ’arly part
of the night and 120 on Monday.

Premier ltashid Karami announced another cease-fire bid to end
the war between (‘hristian militiamen and Palestinian-led
Moslems. He said a nine»man "security group" would meet in his
ollice until it comes up with "effective measures to end once and
lor all the tragedy that has been gripping Lebanon." The group
represents leftists. rightist and religious groups involved in the
:igliting,

the bloody street war has slowly paralyzed government. comm~
erce and basic public services in this small Arab nation of three
million,

The gun battle outside Parliament House prevented Lebanon‘s
1N man \atioiial Assembly lrom meeting to discuss the crisis,
ltepiities had to be evacuated in armored cais

 

Egypt wants resumption
of Geneva peace talks

\\ \Slll\(i'l‘li\ i \I’i Egypt‘s President .\iiwai‘.\\ida' called lor
.i resumption ol the (it‘llt‘\'.’l peace coiilereiice \'\ ith par'icipafioii b\
'lie Palestine Liberation tlrgaiii/atioii “as an equal partner "

Railii' . at ii news coiilereiicealter a meeting ‘\llll l’resitleii' IVoi‘d
\«lltl 'l iiesilay i' was up to the l iiitetl S‘a'es to “s'ar' 'lie dialogue
ii'li \Iisii \ixila‘s group He said be had urged ‘liis l'ttlll'\t’
I‘itl‘tl

liiplitiigitii' sources saiil ligy pt was si'litllltL’ loriiial lltl'lllt‘il'l'tl ‘r
'lie I 'iii‘eil Sla'es .‘llltl the Sm iet l‘iiiiiii. co t‘llilll‘ltlt‘lt til ‘lie (Ittl‘ll..tl
peace coiilereiice Israel has \oueil iie\ei' To iiceo'ia‘c \\i it 'lii
l’l.t| while \\.isliiiiu'nii has said i' lii's‘ llill\' .iccep‘ l\'.ll'l \

"\Is’eiii'e

Judge reaffirms order
for Ford videotape

s.\(‘lt,\.\lti.\‘1‘(l. ('alif. (AP) A lederal judge reaffirmed
'l‘uesda y his orderthat President Ford give a videotape statement
in the trial of Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme. Administration of
licials said thestatement would be given later this week.

I' S. ltistrict (‘ourt Judge Thomas MacBride rejected a
prosecution request to limit Ford's testimony to written
statements.

l"roiiiiiie. 27. is charged with attempting to murder Ford as he
walked through ('apitol Park here Sept. .3. She wants the President
to countei‘testimony that a click was heard when she pointed a gtm
at him

Ginkgo fest scheduled

The liftli annual (iinkgo festival will be held 4-6 pm. Sunday at
‘he ginkgo tree outside the MI King Library. '

Featured in the celebration is a candlelight session and the
traditional "Ode to the Ginkgo."

The festival began live years ago in jest but has since become a
special event attracting ltltl participants last fall. according to Will
(iates. a member of the informal ginkgo committee which
promotes the lestival,

(iates said interested persons can request a speaking spot on the
festival agenda. Speeches usually concern “nonsense and ab-
siiitlity.“ he said. For further information. call Will (iates at 269-
11.38 or SJB'BTMi

Iil \llLIfi

erne

The Kentucky Kernel, lid Journalism ‘
.-..i."‘-nq Umversuty 0t Kentuckyi the Cadet in 1894. The paper has been
Lexinaton, Kentucky, 40506, is mailed live publishtx.’ continuously as the Kentucky
times weekly during the year except during Kernel SIDCC 1915
holidays and exam periods, and twice Advertismg is intended‘only to help the
weekly during summer session. Third reader buy and any false or misleadinu
class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky, advertismg should be reported and " a-
405”, Subscription rates are $12 per lull investigated by tho editors. onulmm
V'mmter, Published by the Kernel Press, found to be false or misleading M" be
incandloundediniWLthe Kernel began as reported to the Beth-i Bounces Bureau.

   

  
      
       
     
     
       
       
    

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Bronze
god?

One last attempt at per-
fecting a suntan'.’ Well.
maybe. .\ worker for a
local roofing company
napped on top of a Win-
chester Road department
store during a lunchli