xt766t0gxb3s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt766t0gxb3s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-09-19 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, September 19, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 19, 1975 1975 1975-09-19 2020 true xt766t0gxb3s section xt766t0gxb3s ‘5‘ .-..I"

 

 

Bach‘s dream

Wall to wall pipes surround Alice Church. graduate organ student
in Memorial Hall. The organ cost over $100,000.

Blue Grass Trust saves

local historical sites

By PETER KEAM
Kernel Staff Writer

When Lexington's historic
Hunt-Morgan House was about to
crumble beneath the wrecker's
sledge in 1955. a group of citizens
united to save the famous old
structure from being leveled for a
parking lot.

The concerned citizens suc-
ceeded and. as a result. formed
the Blue Grass Trust for Historic
Preservation. The Trust. a
private, nonprofit organization.
now operates a museum in the
Hunt-MorganHouse at201 N. Mill
St.

Since inception, the Blue Grass
Trust has initiated the
restoration of Shakertown and
the Adam Rankin House
(Lexington's oldest house).
supervised the restoration of
Henry Clay's downtown law
office and promoted the

preservation of the Mary Todd
Lincoln House.

Caroline Mayfield was ap-
pointed executive director of the
Trust last year and is the
organization‘s first full-time
director.

Mayfield said that one of the
Trust‘s recent projects has been
the installation of black. oval
"BGT" plaques on over 200
historic houses.

“The plaques mark those
houses that are 100 years old or
older and many of those that are
architecturally or historically
important in Fayette County."
she said. “They put no restric-
tions on the owners of the houses.
we merely ask for the owners‘
permission to put them up.”

Another project is the
establishment of historic
districts. Lexington presently has

Continued on page It;

 
 

Vol. LXVII No. 33
Friday. September 19. 1975

KENTUCKY

' an independent student newspaper}

DHEK— P (CTUKE

el

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Ky. 40506

   

 

Red River dam proiecf
still under consideration

By RON MITCHELL
Kernel Staff Writer

Another chapter in the continuing saga of the
controversial Red River dam will be written in the
next several weeks as Congress considers funding
for initial construction.

The immediate fate of the $34 million project will
be decided later this month when the Senate ap~
propriatjons subcommittee on public works acts on
a 1976 fiscal year funding request of approximately
$1.3 million.

“At this pointl don’t think it would be possible for
funds to be appropriated. It is essentially dead.“
said Chuck Schumann. assistant public affairs
director for the US. Army Corps of Engineers
Louisville district office.

Options available to Congress, which originally
funded the project in 1962. are deletion of con—
struction funds. complete de-authorization of the
project or a deferment of action.

Since funding for public works projects are
considered annually. the project could continue, but
without funds, until Congress allocated the
requested money. If the project were de-authorized,
it would be permanently halted.

The funding became uncertain last week when
Gov. .lulian Carroll announced his opposition to the
dam and an assistant secretary of the Army said the
Corps may withdraw the funding request.

“The. possibilities are practically unlimited at this
point." Schumann said. “They could keep the
project authorized but defer it for a while."

The funding would be reinstated if there was a
“demonstrated need" for the dam. such as a major
flood or severe drought. citing the need for flood
protection and additional water. Schumann said.

Funds could also be appropriated at a later date if
there was a change in the political climate in the
state, specifically election of a different governor.
he said.

Schumann said there is one case where funds
were allocated by Congress for construction of a
dam but the appropriation was frozen by the
president at the time.

“There was one case where there was a lot of
local opposition to the Campground project at Salt
Lick Ky., originally, and the project was de-
activated." Schumann said. “After a large flood
they requested the project be revived."

He said there is also the possibility that an “en-
tirely different“ project be recommended after
additional study by the Corps.

De-authorization of the Red River dam would be
inappropriate at this time, according to Victor
Veysey, assistant secretary of the Army for public
works projects. Veysey had said the Corps would
request deletion of funds or de—authorization
following the announced opposition by Carroll.

“1 don’t think the Corps is ready to recommend
deauthorization immediately before they do fur—
ther studies or investigate other alternatives,”

 

REP. WILLIS GRADISON

Veysey said Thursday. “If deauthorization is given
the Corps would have to start all over again if they
decided upon a suitable alternative.”

Two Congressmen opposed to construction of the
dam said Thursday funding would not be approved
and that deauthorization is not feasible.

“It‘s inconceivable that funds will be allocated
for this project now,“ said Walter “Dee“ Hud-
dleston (D-KyJ, a member of the Senate Ap—
propriations committee.

Huddleston‘s administrative aide Bob McQueen
said it‘s pollible the project “is being put on the
back burner again” to be revived later. “De-
authorization would be hard to get past Rep. (Carl)
Perkins (I)-Ky.)," McQueen said, “and I‘m not sure
we want that at this time anyway.”

Rep. Willis Gradison (R—Ohio) said it is “unlikely
that funds will be appropriated or that it would be
brought up again.” Gradison said de—authorization
would be an “added assurance that the dam won’t
be built."

Continued on page 5

 

Legislature

may decide
SCB beer

question

By TERRY McWILLlAMS
Kernel Staff Writer

 

The possibility of the Student Center
Hoense
probably will not be decided until the

Board obtaining a beer

gave an opinion on campus beer sales to
John R. Hill former assistant to the
president at the University of

Kentucky Legislature meets next year.

The possibility of Fayette County
government modifying the statute
through “home rule“ legislation is
nonexistent, because “home rule for
the counties cannot supercede or
weaken state statutes,” said Jim
Costano, of the Lexington Alcoholic
Beverage Control (ABC).

However, there are no state statutes
governing the consumption and
possession of alcoholic beverages in a
school building according to a Jan. 4,
1974 letter written by Carl Miller.
assistant attorney general. But school
buildings are public buildings and state
laws govern alcohol use in them, ac-
cording to Miller‘s letter.

Another letter from the Attorney
General's office. dated Jan. 16, 1974,

Lou'sville. .

Hill had requested information on
specific laws that “prohibited a student
from drink'mg alcoholic beverages on
state college campuses,” and if any
state statute prohibited a “state
assisted institution from selling
alcoholic beverages on campus.”

Guy C. Shearer. assistant attorney
general. and author of the letter to Hill,
wrote “a state university campus is a
public place and the school buildings
are public buildings. Drinking on the
campus or in the buildings is a violation
and punishable.”

The opinion also said “state
universities are “prohibited from
obtaining a license to sell alcoholic
beverages on campus."

Continued on page 6

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

ink

 

editorials

Lette's and Spectrum articles should be ada'essed to the Editwial Page Editor,
Room "4 Journalism Building. They should be typed, mublespaced aid sigied.
Lettas should not exceed 250 words and Spectrum articla 7!) worth

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

 

 

Burger is neither

garbage nor food l

In his remarkable new book "Hum,
boldt‘s Gift,” Saul Bellow makes the quite
irrelevant aside that America’s garbage
would grace the delicatessens of many
poorer countries.

This brings me to the institutional or
basic Burger staple diet of millions of
Americans which is neither pure food nor
pure garbage but has pretensions to both»-
depending upon age and quality.

Emblematic of American food, the
Burger’s unique qualities do not include
tasting delicious. Few people would claim
that the Burger is a gastronomic tour de
force.

 

onfnony
peorce—
batten

   

 

 

Far from it, the Burger (USDA ap
proved) is a prime example of the
mediocrity of modernity. Burgers are
consumed in the same way they are
produced-quick ly, in predetermined sizes,
enormous quantities and with little evident
enjoyment. Burgers are as endemic to
industrial life as ulcers, and perhaps the
two are causally connected.

Time and little else favors the Burger.
Americans live a pressured life, fighting
inflation and grabbing gusto. Americans
haven’t time to taketwo hours off for lunch
and two more to sleep it off like those in-

digent, hedonistic Europeans. In our goal~
oriented purposively rationalized lives we
become hungry and we want to eat imr
mediately. We seek not gratification but
refueling. We feed not out bellies but our
adrenal glands.

There is nothing hedonistic about a fast-
food restaurant. You walk in and a nubile
employee leans out like a cuckoo from a
clock with that servicewithasnarl, ”Can
l help someone!”

”Yes, l’d like a-” and whammy, it
arrives instantaneously. it remains only to
sit at one of those charming little plastic
fables breathing air thick with vaporized
grease and enjoy your meal!

Not only is the service fast, but the
Burger is immediately ingestable. Since it
has been partially masticated by huge
mechanical jaws, it is possible to eat a
Burger without any teeth. You might have
trouble with the pickle, but jiggle it around
in your mouth for long enough and it will
melt, like a lozenge.

The prospective consumer has a
multitude of Burger purveyors from which
to choose. The almost-food prize is
awarded to MacDonald’s (despite the
vivid recollection of one repulsive ”Big
Mac” consumed at the four billion mark
and obviously put together long before).
The Student Center burgers, limpid gray
patties that look as if they’ve been
marinated in formaldehyde, are among
the less palatable.

But by far the most revolting are the
vending machine variety. Encased in a
sarcophagus of cellophane the vitriolic
VendeBurger awaits in its metallic
chamel house for two quarters to come

 

Baby crops

Editor:

We are swamped with record num-
bers of new freshmen, total University
enrollment is at an all-time high,
classes filled and closed, making it
impossible for many students to get the
courses they need, and the dormitories
filled and the overflow is being housed
in a downtown hotel. This came as a
surprise to many because with the state
of the economy and the death of the idea
that everyone must get a college
education, they expected enrollment to
fall. But before the powers that be get
carried away with this year’s plight and
start building dorms and expanding
faculty, let me point out some basic
facts that strongly influence the picture
today and in the future.

The largest baby crop ever produced
in the U.S. was the 4,310,000 of 1957.
That is this year’s freshman class. This
puts special strains on all public
facilities including the University. The
class of 1979 can expect their unem-
ployment problems to be worse than the
class of 75 faced as industry and
government tries in vain to expand job
opportunities enough to accommodate
them.

During 1974 there were 3,166,0(1)
people born in the U.S., a continuation
of the nearly steady decline in the birth
rate since 1957. Thus, unless there are

 

really drastic changes in college at-
tendance patterns, the enrollment at
UK will fall steadily over the next 20
years from 21,000 to about.15,000. We
must use these facts in our long-range
planning.

Incidentally, although the birth rate
has fallen dramatically, it still exceeds
the death rate. There were 1,933,000
deaths in the U.S. in 1974. Thus the
natural increase was 1,233,000 persons.

Wayne H. Davis
Zoology Professor

Mountain people

Editor:

This is in reference to the Scott
Payton article on busing in the Sept. 11
Kernel.

How can Mr. Payton be sure that the
”geeks" in the junk pickup truck were
from the mountains? Did he ask them?
Or, does the use of mountaineers for
such situations make better copy?
Busing is not an issue in the mountains.
There are few Blacks and the great
majority of mountain students ride
buses many miles to school anyway.

I am weary of seeing mountain
people portrayed as rednecks, morons,
sexual perverts, freeloaders, etc. It is
true that some mountaineers fit those
roles, but so do some people outside the
mou‘otains. Why do we see so little in

letters

 

(Editor’s note: Because of the number of letters and commentaries received by the
Kernel, there is no editorial today. In cases where a number of letters and com-
mentaries are received about one or several subjects, more space will be devoted to
readers‘ views. All letters and spectrum articles should be typed, double-spaced and

signed. Letters cannot exceed 250 and Spectrum articles 750 words.)

 

Cg @\

clanking down. Those quarters might take
days to arrive. Whereupon the putrescent
package moves ponderously through the
Stygian depths of the vending machine and
after microwave resuscitation, is
presumably eatenvbut hopefully not. To
continue the ecological cycle of the Ven-
deBurger further would be in bad taste.

The variety of quality notwithstanding,
the Burger has conquered the United
States. There are more people in fast food
restaurants at lunchtime than there are in
church on Sunday. When you eat a good
one, it’s possible to see why. It tastes as
good as the MSG it contains. One may
deride those flavoured cellulose sticks
they call french fries but the texture is
great.

Which is probably why the Burger
revolution is now being proselytized in

Europe by corporate Che Guevara’s. Even
the French, generally regarded as the
most fastidious about what they eat, may
now ”mangent le Big Mac“ on the Champs
Elysees. In Britain MacDonald's Golden
Arches Restaurants (as they are known)
are about the only investment brightening
up the London Stock Exchange. This will
save British Burgervholics from the much
detested Wimpy.

All of which brings to mind a rather tired
cliche,- you are what you eat; tell that to
the Marines and please pass the preserr
vatives.

 

Anthony Pearce-Batten is a graduate
student in the Patterson School of
Diplomacy and International Commerce.
His column appears weekly in the Kernel.

 

 

print and on the screens of the gentle,
shy, honorable mountaineer who
wishes to avoid controversy whenever
possible?

Mr. Payton is quick to note the racial
bigotism of others but is unable to see
the class prejudice he exhibits toward
the Appalachian people. Like too many
Americans, Mr. Payton would probably
call immature any reference to Blacks
as "niggers", yet he refers to the people
in the truck as mutants, androids,
crackers, okies and geeks. Grow up,
Mr. Payton.

L. Dail Haney
UK alumnus

An old issue

Editor:

Busing is an old issue. It was at one
time used to promote segregation.

in the town that I live, children were
bused for a radius of 22 miles. They
bypassed schools that were no more
than 10 miles from their homes on the
way to school. The reason they could
not attend these schools was because of
the unchangeable fact of being black.
This was up until 1963, nine years after
the 1954 Supreme Court decision.

Now that white children are being
bused, white parents are acting very
negatively. Schools that had inadequate
facilities and inadequate curriculum

were fine for blacks but are a sub-
standard tor whites. One particular
school in Louisville, which was
predominantly black before busing has
been fixed up to accommodate the new
students.

It busing can be used for a negative
cause, why can’t it be used for a
positive reason? Twenty-one years
have already passed. It is time we
adhere to the Supreme Court ruling.

Georgenna Riley
A85 junior

Good season

Editor:

1 disagree with your sport‘s editor’s
assessment of the University of Ken-
tucky football team. He stated that they
were on a Hari-Kari mission. When he
made his predictions he obviously just
looked at who the Wildcats were
playing and decided that they could not
compete with them. He should have
considered who Kentucky had retur-
ning to the team and not just the
players that graduated.

It is true that the football team‘s
schedule is a lot tougher this year but I
feel that the Wildcat’s are up to the
challenge. They will have a successful
season and will probably receive a bowl
bid.

John Zeitz
Engineer sophomore

 

 

 

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spectrum

 

 

 

By Enrique Pantoja

I read with disgust your editorial
entitled, "The South shall rise again.“
You attacked the Lambda Chi Alpha
Fraternity for having ”lace panties"
anda gobletondisplay as an emblem of
our organization in the lntertraternity
Council (IFC) sponsored rush display
at the Student Center. The display
which offended you so much was placed
in the case by the IFC. While i agree
that it did not illustrate every facet of
Greek lifeon this campus, it did portray
some events that students enjoy as
social activities. Obviously, those of
you who toil until the wee hours of the
night sothatwe can ”enjoy” the Kernel
each morning oppose social activities.

The display was not intended to be a
social commentary. It could have
pointed out the service projects and
money-raising endeavors for charity by
a chart illustrating the number of
person-hours given to charity during
the past year. It could have noted that
Greek house averages for scholarship
are superior to overall student
averages. Greeks are not the snobbish
elitists you attempt to make them. I
dare say you made no effort to contact
any Greek house or Greek represen.

 

 

 

Kernel reports
'negative tripe’

tative for any clarification before
commencing your diatribe.

Small-g roup living among friends is a
life-style many students prefer over
dormitories or apartments. Friendship
among brothers is the essence of our
fraternity and We pride it highly. I
suppose your illustrious editorial board
cannot understand that. Your
preconceived notions about what you
think fraternities are about is
erroneous. You wear your biases on
your fingernails and your objectivity in
reporting Greek activities (if you
choose to report them at all, which is
not often) is less than ethical jour<
nalistically. You seem to continually
choose to criticize the minute and in»
consequential on your editorial page
and l suppose that is the product of
biased, little minds in their small
fairyla nd of the ivy-covered journalism
building.

Why don’t you wake up and mature
joumalistically. Get out on campus
once in awhile and report some of the
worthwhile efforts that Greeks and non
Greeks are doing for charitable and
benevolent purposes. Perhaps you
could find something to write that is not
biased, negative tripe. Your newspaper
editorial page is simply a reflection of a

pack of intellectually immature
crybabies. Look past your nose-you
might be surprised at what is going on
at the University of Kentucky that is
worthy of report to your fellow
students. Of course, we don't read
much about student organizations in
the Kentucky Kernel. We re-read the
news stories that we saw four hours
earlier in the Courier-Journal or the
LexingtonHerald. I noted that you
stated that the Kernel takes 35 minutes

 

to read. It generally takes most
students about three minutes to come
plete it so far as I can determine.

i do not intend to get into a letter‘
writing marathon with you after this
letter is printed. I always believed that
is was unwise to become involved in a
”spraying contest with a pack of
skunks.”

 

Enrique Pantoja is president of
Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity.

 

 

 

’Vituperations’ deserve response

John Roach’s comment, ”Dayan Should
Not Take Part in SCB Lecture Series,”
said little about Dayan’s lecture
engagement. The Kernel and others have
amply explained the appropriateness of
bringing lecturers to campus whose
presence stimulates debate. But the core
of Roach’s statement consisted of anti-
Jewish, anti-lsraeli vituperations which
deserves further response.

Roach's diatribe asserts that zionism is
a “fascist political movement” based upon
the concept "that Jews are a chosen people
with a mystical destiny to reconquer their
ancient homeland.” He further states that
Zionists believe that Palestinian Arabs are
inferiorto Jewsand must be expelled from
their homeland.

Roach obviously knows nothing about
fascism, about zionism or about events in
the Middle East. Zionism is a nationalist
movement based upon democratic prin-
ciples and structure and a religious and
cultural identity with, and a continuous
presence in, what is now Israel. When
Palestinian Arabs (many of whom im-
migratred to the area early this century
from Syria, Saudi Arabia and Iraq) began
waging war on neighboring Jewish set-
tlements in the 1920’s and '30’s, and
threatened to toally eject the Jews in the
1940’s, the zionists accepted the in-
ternational proposal of a partition of
Palestine into an Arab-dominated state
anda Jewish-dominated state, lsrael. (For
those who are unaware of it, Arab
Palestine does not exist because it was
seized by Jordon and Egypt.)

.... J»... s.-. . .. ,V.-'-mv.m-~4 »

The Zionists transformed an imr
poverished region into a prospering land
capable of supporting a greatly enlarged
population and have thereby benefited not
only Jewish Israelis but the several
hundred thousand Arab Israelis as well.

The concept of the ”chosen people,”
which Roach asserts produces a Jewish
attitude of superiority to Arabs} is a
concept of responsibility; a national
religious mission to live in accordance
with rigorousethical standards. Zionism is
not based upon notions of Arab inferiority.
Universal brotherhood is an ancient and
central theme in Jewish prayer and belief.
Nor has lsrael expelled its Arabs. It has
made them citizens, protected their holy
places, accommodated their religious
practices-.j promoted their economic
welfare and combated the socio-economic
forces which place those of Non-European
background (Jews and Arab alike) at a
competitive disadvantage in the modern
industrial society of Israel.

Roach, in accusing Zionists of com-
plicity in the Nazi atrocities, magnifies the
thesis ofa book, ”Perfidy,” by Hollywood
script writer Ben Hecht. ”Perfidy” was
discredited by its reviewers. The book’s
subject was Rudolph Kastner, found guilty
by an lsraeli court of collaborating with
Nazis while an agent ofthe Jewish Agency,
the central Zionist organization. it was the
Israeli government, headed by the Jewish
Agency leadership, which pressed the
Kastner case to trial. Clearly they would
not have done this had Kastner’s duplicity
reflected their own policies. Nor is there

evidence of any such scheme. Rather,
Hecht’s macabre suggestion was based on
his own warped anger. Hecht had been a
key fund raiser and propagandist for the
lrgun--a small faction of extremists op-
posed to partition on the grounds that all of
Palestine belonged to the Jews. (Though
its counterpart, the lrgun was in effect the
prototype for the PLO.) But the lrgun lost
out to saner, more reasonable minds.
Hecht, thereafter, became blindly
alienated toward lsrael’s leadership.

Contrary to the vicious suggestion of
Zionist complicity, it was Zionists who
smuggled out photos of the Auschwitz
death camp and presented them to the
Allies pleading that it be bombed. But the
Russians refused use of their nearby
airbases for the mission and the Allied
command deemed it too risky to undertake
from elsewhere. Although they tried, the
Zionists similarly failed to get the Allies to
destroy the other death camps. That
failure cannot be excused-nor can the
Allied- leadership be excused. But to
suggest that Zionists acquiesced in Nazi
mas murders is an atrocious and indecent
distortion. Moreover, Zionists did manage
to rescue thousands of adults and tens of
thousands of children from the net which
the Nazis closed around eastern European
Jews and others.

Roach’s final theme proclaims an oil
cartel and Pentagon conspiracy to turn
lsrael into a club against the Arabs. Yet, in
1948 the petroleum lobby almost succeeded
in withholding U.S. support for lsraeli
independence. These same companies

continue to profit by cooperating with the
Arab leadership’s tactic of distracting
their own people from internal exploitation
by focusing attention upon the drama of
conflict with Israel. Many oil companies
cooperate in the Arab boycott of
businesses which trade with Israel or
which are managed by Jews. There can be
no question but that the petroleum in-
dustry takes sides in the Mid East conflict-
-but they are speaking Arabic, not
Hebrew.

Nor is American foreign policy designed
to transform lsrael into a US. bulldog. In
every war in the Middle East, American
pressure has kept lsrael from maximizing
its military gains. In the Yom Kippur War,
American reassurances helped distract
Israel from its fear of a forthcoming at-
tack, anda Pentagon delay of several days
in carrying out resupply orders costs
lsrael tremendously in lives and strategic
positions. A strange way to wield a club!‘

Throughout his comment, Roach speaks
of ”sympathy for the Jewish people." The
Jewish people do not seek sympathy. We
seek truth, justice and understanding. We
seek, too, relief from Mr. Roach’s sort of
venomous perversion of facts and events
which tends to spread the poison of
inhuman behavior.

 

This commentary was written by Dr.
Michael A. Baer, associate political
science professor; Kenneth Germain,
associate law professor; Alvin L. Gold-
man, taw professor,- and Dr. Jess Weil,
physics professor.

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

news briefs

 

4—11“: KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday, September 19. 1975 r '

72 REASONS

FBI captures Hearst

 

 

 

 

WHY

*83.7% CF UK
STUDENTS

SHOP
REGULARLY AT

FAYE'l—I'E MALL.
YOU’VE MADE

US UK'S NO. 1

SHOPPING
PLACE.

THAN KS, U K.

Aladdins Castle

ABC Kiddie Shop
Brooks‘ Fashions
(Tamelot Music

(’ards 'N’ Such
('arousel Snack Bar
The ('arat Patch
('asual (‘orner

(‘hess King

('inderella

(‘inema I & ll
Dawahares

Dipper Dan Ice (‘ream
Embry's

Family Book Store
Florsheim Shoes
Forum ('afetcria
Foxmoor (‘asuals
Gloria Marshall Figure
Graves (‘ox
Hamilton‘s Formal Wear
Hanover Shoes
Haroldc's

llelzberg Jewelers

IIot Sam Pretzel Shop
.Icff‘s Stride Rite Bootery
.i. Riggins

.I. I’. Snodgrass

.Io Ann Fabrics
Kinney Shoes

I.eRoy Jewelers

Life I'niform Shop
l.min' Blooms
\langel's

\larianne

\lary .Iane Shoes
\Ierle Norman

\lerry Go Round
\lother—to-Be \Iaternity
\Irs. Stmers (‘aildies
\ohil Shoes

Orange Bowl

l’aritl “Big Girl"

Paul Harris

Pizza King

Playback

Regal Shoes

Richman Brothers

Sears. Roebuck
Second National Bank
Shackleton’s
Shillito‘s

Singer Sewing Center
Size 5-7-9 Shop
Spencer Gifts
Sportsworld
Stewart‘s

Stone Fence

Swiss (‘olony

S) camore Shop
'l'hom \lc An
'l‘hornhury 'l'oys

"lies +

’l‘ill'any’s Bakery

1 reasury Drug (‘enter
The Indie Box

The l'niversit) Shop
l’ps and Downs
“alden Book Store
“'ennekers'

“ilbar Boutique
York Steak House

*Source: Belden Collegiate Newspaper

Study April-June 1 975

VISIT FAYETTE MALL FOR

AT

NEW CIRCLE RD.

NICHOLASVILLE RD.

   

Open 10 a.m. — 9 p.m.

THE ICE CLASSICS SEPT. 17-20

FAYETTE MALL

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Fugitive newspaper heiress Patricia
Hearst and three radical comrades were arrested Thursday, en-
ding one of the longest and most bizarre manhunts in American
history.

Almost by chance, FBI agents spied two of Hearst’s fellows in the
Symbionese Liberation Army jogging on a San Francisco street.
Williamand Emily Harris were taken without a struggle.

Ms. Hearst and Wendy Yoshimura, an artist linked to the radical
movement, were apprehended about an hour later, taken into
custody at an apartment in the city’s Mission District.

“Thank God she’s all right,” Ms. Hearst’s mother, Catherine,
said in a barely audible voice when informed of the captures.

Her husband, Randolph A. Hearst, was in New York on business
and said as he boarded a plane for San Francisco, “I am very
pleased that things turned out the way they did. "

Hearst said that despite the bank robbery charges against his
daughter. “I don‘t think anything will happen on that score; after
all she was a kidnap victim, you must remember."

In a crowded courtroom two and one half hours after her arrest.
Hearst was arraigned on charges that included bank robbery and
federal weapons violations.

Iler hair a reddish—brown color, cut in a shag style, the slightly
built Ms. Hearst listened as the charges against her were read by
U.S.Magistrate Owen Woodruff. She wore tinted glasses and ap—
peared quite pale.

Asked by the judge if her name was Patricia Campbell Hearst.
she answered, “Yes.“

Ms. Hearst was kidnapped from her Berkeley apartment Feb. 4,
1974 by the then—mysterious SLA. Within two months, she had
joined her captors and declared herself a revolutionary.

In addition to federalcharges. Ms. Hearst and the Harrises face
state charges that include kidnapping and robbery. Asst. Dist.
Atty. John Howard in Los Angeles said the three would be brought
[here next week for arraignment.

William Harris, 30, and Emily, 28, were arraigned after the 21-
year-old Ms. Hearst was taken from the courtroom. As he entered
the room. Harris raised both fists and said loudly, “Hey, comrades,
keep on truckin’."

Iran plans to support

modest oil price increase

WASHINGTON (AP) — Iran disassociated itself Thursday from
oil cartel “extremists" and said it would support a modest oil price
increase when the l4-member organization of Petroleum Exporting
(‘ountries meets next week in Vienna.

Iranian Ambassador Ardeshir Zahedi predicted only a five to ten
per cent price increase, saying a substantial hike “could cripple"
some European countries and jeopardize the “billion people in the
world dying of hunger and disease.”

Zahedi rejected the widespread notion that Iran will lead the
fight fora large price hike next week at the meeting of the OPEC.

“But you have the extremist group which might ask for 30 to 35
percent. I really don't know what it will be but I'm sure it won‘t be
35 per cent." Zahedi said.

He did not identify the OPEC “extremists.” but Libya is known to
be pressing for a substantial increase. There have been con-
tradictory reports as to which other countries will join in a push for
large price increases.

Jordan reiecls U.S. missiles

ANIMAN. .Iordan (AP) ~ Jordan on Thursday rejected con-
ditions set by President Ford for the sale of Hawk anti-aircraft
missiles as “insulting to national dignity“ and indicated it may buy
Soviet SAM missiles instead.

Prime Minister Zaid Rifai‘s office announced he had informed
the l‘ .S. Ambassador that Jordan would “regretfully decline to sign
the Hawk missile contract under the conditions and limitations
contained in President Ford‘s message to Congress.“

In that message. Ford assured congressional critics that the I4
missile batteries in the proposed $270-million deal would be
stationary and could not be used by a multinational force.

(‘ongress had demanded the guarantees so that the Hawks could
not be moved within range of Israel or used by an Arab alliance
against Israel. The missiles have a range of 35 miles.

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