xt7sbc3sxx03 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7sbc3sxx03/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1976-02-06 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, February 06, 1976 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 06, 1976 1976 1976-02-06 2020 true xt7sbc3sxx03 section xt7sbc3sxx03 Vol. LXVII No. 108
Friday, February 6,1976

Judge rules

board may deal

with bargaining

By MIKE M EL’SER
Assistant Managing Editor

The University Board of Trustees has
the power to deal with collective
bargaining efforts of non-faculty em-
ployes. Fayette Circuit Court Judge James
Parks Jr. has ruled.

A UK unionization leader said the
decision may help the four-year effort of
some University workers to organize
collectively for bargaining purposes.

But, Parks said, the board is under no
legal obligation to recognize employe
groups since there are no provisions for
collective bargaining with public em-
ployes in Kentucky Statutes.

In last Tuesday’s 13-page ruling Parks
gave the board the authority to decide
whether to recognize, meet with, or enter
into collective agreements with any
organized union of non-faculty employes at
UK.

However, Parks also said such en-
deava's are limited by “conflict with any
statutes regulating the University of
Kentucky."

Dr. Linda A. Krefting, UK business
administration professor and a specialist
in labor law, said the decision basically
gives the board a free reign. “The main
thrust of the decision is that the power lies
with the trustees,” Krefting said.

The question of the board’s authority to
deal with a possible union developed in
1972 when a Cincinnati-based union asked
to be recognized as agent for “a sub-
stantial number of employes” at UK.

The trustees then requested a
declaratory judgment, saying they were
uncertain about their power to enter into
collective agreements with a union or even
to grant recognition to such a body.

The effortwas made by a representative
of Public Employes Council 51, American
Federa tion of State, County and Municipal
Employes, AFL-CIO, in February of 1972.

Margaret Roach, a UK employe who
was active in the initial organization drive,
said she considers the ruling at least a
partial suecess‘since the board will now
have to respond to any organized union
demands, although it can reject them.

“We understood its (the board’s)
request for a ruling to be a delaying tactic.
We’ll begin another membership card
drive and resubmit our requests to the
board," she said.

Parks ruled in his decision the employes
have the right to organize collectively and
submit their requests to the board, butthat
they may not engage in “strikes or other
forms of work stoppage" to advance their
cause.

The problem now seems to center
around the lack of guidelines for collective
bargaining for public employes in Ken-
tucky, a problem which Parks referred to
as “issues which should be addressed to
the legislature, which can properly
provide an answer."

Continued on page 8

KENTUCKY

an

Unloving embrace

independent student ne

er 2] Uni versity of Kentucky
wspaper

Lexington, Kentucky

(

UK wrestler Steve Linz grimaces as Florida' s Paul Schmidt
grapples him to the floor. Schmidt, winning by decision, helped the

‘Gators pull off a 21-18 victory over UK last night. Story on page 5.

in the pink

Constituents steal spotlight at ERA hearing

By GINNY EDWARDS
Managing Editor
and
PEGGY CALDWELL
Assistant Managing Editor

l-‘RANKFORT—The legislators got the
floor Wednesday, but their constituents
stole the spotlight.

Coming in from all over the state,
supporters and opponents of the move to
rescind Kentucky’s ratification of the
Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) were
clearly the stars.

It was 8:15 am. and the basement halls
of the Capitol building were deadly quiet.
But the more than 200 people gathered
there were quite alive and wide awake.

These persons had been unable to get
into the small room used for the house
Elections and Constitutional Amendments
Committee’s final hearing on rescision,
but they were straining to hear every word
the committee's six witnesses had to say.

The room, which opened into two
corridors, was only large enough to ac-
commodate approximately 30 people.
That was about enough for press, wit-
nesses and committee members. The size
of the room angered the anti-ERA faction,
which was wrapped around two sides
outside the room. One man, wearing a
stop-E RA button, a minister from Liberty,
said, “I‘m really concerned about the
legislature’s lack of consideration, holding
the hearing in such a small room. That
stacks it in favor of the other side."

He may have been right. Only about 40
of the demonstrators there carried pro-
ERA placards.

Each faction had staked out its own
territory. The anti-ERA people managed
to fill two adjacent hallways, while ERA
proponents blocked only one door.

At one point during the testimony of
former Secretary of Commerce Katherine
Peden, the pro-E RA band sent up a small,
but solid cheer. The answering boos from
the ladies in pink were met with ad-

monitions from their leaders.“Keep your
cool, ladies,” one shouted.

The recision proponents knew their
script well. A pink sheet they circulated
directed their supporters to “act like
ladies and gentlemen at all times,
regardless and to smile, smile, smile all
the time.”

Not all adhered to the guidelines,
however, as exemplified by one Mason-
ville woman who sat in a chair with a
poster reading “I don’t want my grand-
daughter drafted” and glared at everyone
whowalked past her. She looked up at one
smiling reporter and snapped, “What are
you sniggering at, little girl?”

Another lady in pink who led a small
child, (also dressed in pink), by the hand
proclaimed, “If I was that ugly, I’d want a
man's job, too,” apparently referring to no
one in particular.

“Me, too," piped up her daughter.

But more than half the women were
sedate and over 60, sporting spanking-new
polyester outfits and red stop-ERA
badges.

These women, who leaned against the
sterile tile walls, gave reporters no more
than a glance until the notebooks came
out. Then they were more than willing to

i I Commentary

Sue Johnson of the Okolona Christian
Church in Louisville said, “We’ll never
have complete equality between men and
women. God has fixed that.”

“Amen,” said the woman next to her.
“Just look at Genesis, chapter 3 and
Ephesiam, chapter 5.”

It was hard for some of the women to
sort out the issues. Several went on
tangents about busing, revolution, abor-
tion and religion. One lady in pink
displayed her arsenal, with buttons
against the ERA, against abortion, against
busing and for George Wallace.

Of this apparent confusion of issues,
Rep. Gerta Bend] (D-Louisville) said,

 

 

“W hen you get motherhood and apple pie
and the flag and God into the issue, reason
goes out the window."

Rep. Larry Hopkins ( D-Lexington), one
of two committee members voting against
throwing the recision resolution out of
committee, said, “1 think a lot of things
have been brought into the issue that didn’t
need to be. People have spoken of rights
and not respmsibilities.

“I want to thank these people for
coming. They are good people. They are
God-fearing people. They talk of
Christianity.

“But sometimes people are so heavenly-
minded they are no earthly good,”
Hopkins said.

Several anti-ERA groups had been
bused to the Capitol from their churches in
Louisville and western Kentucky. Many
said they had been “converted” to the
cause by literature distributed to their
churches from Owensboro, a stronghold of
both Kentucky Stop ERA and Concerned
Women of Kentucky, another pro-recision
group. Many of the women also said they
had never been involved in politics before,
but, in the words of one, “this (ERA) just
got their backs up. ”

Virginia Farley of Louisville said,
you study the issue and find the leaders
and isues endorsing the ERA, and you
look at their backgrounds, you wouldn’t .
want to be in their movement. Some of
those groups are NOW (National
Organization for Women), the League of
Women Voters and Business and
Professional Women. 1 am proud to say I
am not a member of any of those.”

“WeL, the John Birch Society in favor
of it?” asked her companion Sue Johnson.

“No, they’re conservative and they’re
against it, and that’s good,” Farley
replied.

Meanwhile, the less organized and less
intimidating ERA supporters were
growing increasingly annoyed, realizing
the momentum was against them.

Continued on page 3

 

  
  
 

 

 

 

 

editorials

I

mmmmafiynmmfim.
mmmmum.mm¢ mm m
mmmmmmummnm

 

Bruce Winges
Editor-imChief

Ginny Edwards
Managing Editor

Editorials do not represent the opinion: of the University.

    

Susan Jones
Editorial Page Editor

John Winn Miller
Associate Editor

 

 

 
 

 

 

  
   
    
    
 
 
 
  
  
   
  
  
 

 

 

Bar hour extension

makes sense

The proposal to extend
Lexington’s mandatory i am. bar
closing time makes sense on every
level.

Stephen B. Driesler, Lexington
alcoholic beverage control ad-
ministrator, said when Louisville
bar hours were extended until 4
am. the accident rate declined
because people left bars in shifts.

In addition, extended bar hours
will make for better business and
will help the civic center can
vention trade.

At a press conference yesterday,

Lexington Mayor Foster Pettit said
he feared premature publicity
would hurt the probabilities of the
extension’s passage by the Urban
County Council. And Driesler said
he expected a conservative
backlash to the extension, although
he said he has no evidence of such a
backlash to date.

Before condemning such an
extension, Lexington residents
should remember the positive
experience in Louisville and the
potential for an increase in
business at a time when most
business is slowing down.

 

 

    
   
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
  
 
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
   

‘\\\‘:

A REN OF

 

  
  
   
  
    
  
 
  
 
  
   
  
  
   
  
  
     
  
    
    
   
  
   
   
  
 
   

 

Book; _ prices

are frustrating

Editor:

It is always frustrating to see the
prices that we must pay for the books
we need for the new semester, but more
frustrating is the unfair practices of the
bookstores buying our used books

back.

, i recently took to books back to one of
our bookstores to sell and received the
large sumof$25. This sum may seem to
be fair to some people, but considering
thatevery book was well taken care of
and in very good condition (no torn
pages or underlining) and that the price
I originally paid was over $80, $25
seems unfair!

The person empIOyed in the bookstore
quickly humbed thrOugh the books
without possibly being able to tell the
condition of the books and quoted the
offer price. Of course, I must
trustra tingly accept the price, knowing
that I cannot go elsewhere for better
offers and knowing that they will resell
the books for at least twice the amount
that they paid me.

I think thatthe bookstores could raise
their offers for buying used books by

 

Lawn

   

Z :_\
‘\

WEEDS

 

 

checking the condition of the books
more carefully and giving higher (and
fairer) prices for the better condition
books.

Susan Ruschell
Merchandising i unior

Dorm plumbing

Editor:

As a concerned and suffering student
of the University of Kentucky—and
residentof Haggin Hall— I would like to
be the first to step forward and voice a
complaint which sh0uld have been
made longago. This complaintpertains
to the lack of sufficent plumbing.
Imagine if y0u can, stumbling into the
shower room early in the morning only
to be scalded when a fellow resident
flushes the toilet in an adjoing section.
This has been not only a personal ex-
perience, but one regretfully shared by
fellow residents. Surely the ap-
proximakd $1,400.00 per year we pay
for room and board atthe University of
Kentucky should include a decent
plumbing system. Is that to much to
expect?

Jeff Wilson

Business Administration freshman.

  

 

 

Men
and the
ERA

The Equal Rights Amendment
(ERA) is not a burning issue to many
men in Kentucky—the male approach
to it is pervaded with ambivalence.

The same goes for me. I believe in
the ERA and most of the motives
behind it. Buta number of factors deter

me—and I suspect a number of other ,

men with similar sympathies—from
becoming verbal abOut its passage.
First and above all, peer group
pressure on the subject is always
present, even if unspoken. The idea
that a man could actually be a

feminist—in the strictest sense of the .

word—is not readily acceptable on this
campus.

The further one gets from these‘

hallowed halls, the more ridiculous the
idea scunds to the unwilling ear. And in
Kentucky’s smaller communities the
emergence of the liberated woman is
usually thought to carry the im-
plications of uncooked meals, unkempt
children and uncleaned homes. These
implicationsareunfortunate. The ERA
will not mean that all women will be
liberated, any more than a woman’s
being libera ted necessarily means that
she will forego the pleasures and rigors
of homemaking. Those who want or
need jobs will get them. Those who
don’t won‘t.

But for a man to advocate that
women be allowed the opportunity to
escape the more mundane aspects of
house slavery is often not too welcome.
It's no wonder. If the little woman
doesn’t do that work for us, who will?
The answer is that either we or hired
help will. Support the ERA? Why, it’s
traitor0us! Some men seem to think
they know a good thing when they have
it.

 

 

 

But is it really so good? Another
reason for our timidity in expressing
support for this amendment'is that its
benefits don’t go to us. Hoivever, it
seems the better view reveals that in
the long run men would benefit from the
passage of the ERAand the acceptance
of the line of tl10ught behind it.

Those of us who marry for reasons
beyond a woman’s ability to wield a
skillet and a vacuum cleaner look for
qualities that transcend homemaking

 

 

    

skills. We look for a woman who is
perceptive, sensitive, imaginative. The
effectofa long forced tenure behind the

stove is often a flattening of

imagination, a limiting of perceptions
and a lack of fulfillmentand potential.
Even the man who wants little more
thana' maid—not to mention the woman
who is the maid—is baund to become
bored with this arrangement.

Look at it this way: many women
face‘ a predetermined future of
housekeeping because they are made to
feel that they have no choice in the
matter}, As such, they become the
slaves, the ”niggers” of our culture. An
ensuing fear of inadequacy in trying to
make it in the Real World creeps into
their thinking. Dependence on the man
of the house ensues. The man becomes
a crutch, hemmed in by a wife who is
not su re of herself in any contextexcept
that of a creature of the house. The
result: a dissatisfaction thatmay brew
in both parties for years or life.

Those few women who behave like
shrill harpies when it comes to
feminism are another factor that
dampens the male sympathies. A case
in point: Susan Brownmiller (one of
"Time” magazine’s poorer selections
for Person of the Year), who articulates
that rape is the key tool that is used on
behalf of men to oppress women.
Distorted perceptions of this sort are
the most alienating of all feminist
proc lama lions.

Mercifully, militant feminism seems
to have started becoming passe so that
perhaps we will soon hear less of
Brownmiller’s type of garbage.
(”Time’s” habitual blind acceptance
and promotion of any avant~garde idea
no matter how ridiculous unfortunately
cannot be expected to subside.)

Ironically, ambivalence on the ERA
may well save it from rescission in the
senate, nnotwithstanding the possible
illegality of rescission in the first place.
The Senate Committee on Elections and
Constitutional Amendments isj'unlikely
to report the bill out to the whole senate
for a vote. For anti-ERA people, the
way arOund this obstacle is to persuade
20 of the 38 senators to sign a petition
forcing the bill Out of committee.
However, unofficial word has it that
most of the Senators are so unwilling to
commit themselves either way on the
ERA that the ladies in pink polyester
will probably never come up with those
20 signatures.

Dick Downey is a U R taw student as;

column appears weekly in the Kernel.

 

 

  

 

 

PRINT SHOWS TH

  

Specially-equipped buses aid
students in wheelchairs

By JEANNE ADAMS
Kernel Staff Writer

A glance at campus buses 60
and 61 reveals no outward
distinction from any of the other
blue and white Lex'l‘ran {buses
serving the campus. But a step
inside discloses a new look.

The buses:have no seats in the
front andjcurious red: tracks
attached to the floor. . Buses 60
and (j; m jinnoyative “han-
dicapped equipped" vehicles,
procured by. the University on a
trial basis. -

One of the buses made its
maiden voyage Jan. 29.

“We’re testing the bus now to
work out all the bugs and to

record how long it takes to
complete the route compared
with the regular buses,” said
Joseph Schleckmann, LexTran
manager.

What might be considered a
difficult task, boarding a bus
while in a wheelchair, is made
easy via a hydraulic lift. The
platform is lowered out the front
door. d the bus to the sidewalk
and the wheelchair is backed on.

Once the wheelchair is secured
on. the lift, the bus driver
manually projects it to the bus
floor level where the passenger
can wheel freely to one of the
slots from which seats have been
removed.

a». a» .

-—u Lyndi

Thedriver of LexTran has No. 60 lowers the specially-equipped
bus hydraulic lift. The lift is designed to help wheelchair-bound

students onto the bus.

The passenger then hooks one
wheel to a floor clasp, locking the
chair in place. A cabinet in the
back of the bus houses electronic
controls for hooking up the
wheelchairs.

Despite the elaborate
para phenalia, buses 60 and 61 are
not exclusively for the ban-
dicapped. Metal bars provide
space for 10 to 15 standing
passengers. The remaining

' space in each bus is filled by 24

regular seats. Schleckmann said.
Though the equipment is new,
the handicapped—equipped bus

idea isn’t, according to UK Public
Safety Director Tom Padgett.
“Years ago, the UK ad-
ministration asked LexTran
about having a handicapped-
equipped bus made. LexTran
designed two buses, one No. 60
specifically for UK."

The other handicapped-

- equipped bus, No. 61, will be used

as a backup in case of break
downs or emergencies and for
special city-sponsored activities,
Padgett said.

The new buses may allow
handicapped students more
flexibility in campus housing
accommodations, according to
Jacob Karnes, Handicapped
Students Director.

“Most handicapped students
live in Blazer or Holmes hall
instead of other dormitories
because of the lack of tran—
sportation for handicapped
students,” Kames said. "There
are about 30 wheelchair students
and 70 otherwise disabled
students who will benefit from
the bus"

The new handicapped bus
alternately shuttles from the
Student Center to the Complex
and Shawneetown.

Karnes said the bus will be
painted with a logo to indicate its
accommodations for han-
dicapped students. Until then,
the only giveaway is a hydraulic
lift and 21 missing seats.

Constituents steal spotlight at ERA hearing

Continued from page i

Cardyn Dougherty, a UK
graduate, said, “We thought once
the amendment had been

ra tified, it was done. People have

been tunneling their energy into
other things—abortion, rape
crisis center—and now we’re
freaking out."

Sharon Calton of the Lexington

 

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Pro-E RA Alliance said her group
had done its heavy lobbying the
day before, and that she had
come with few friends because
Hopkins needed some support
from the gallery.

Calton said, “I never believed
it would come to this point." She
said all Lexington area
legislators have expressed

commitment to the ERA, with the
exception of Rep. Glenna Bevins
(D), who said her constituents
are against the amendment.

Calton attributed the high level
of support to the efforts of the
Lexington organization and the
fact that “Lexington women
simply want the ERA."

Banana Royal
71‘

regular price $.95

‘,.

Gbod only atthe Collseum Plaza Location

BASIK’IN-ROBBIN

ICE CREAM STORES
Offer Expires Feb.6

“I

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. FCbruary 6. 1976—3

Lexington‘s Oldest Restaurant
119 South Limestone Street, Lexington
For Reservation Phone 233-1511

Earn $$$ Weekly

BLOOD PLASMA

DONOR CENTER

313 E. Short Street
Monday - Saturday 9:30 aan. - 4:45 pm.

252-5586.

 

 

The $12
Spring Semester

Health
Fee

may be paid at the

Billings and Collections

Office Rm. 220 Service Bldg.
until Thurs. Feb. 12

CROSSROADS

 

 

CINEMA l
THOR HEYERDAHI’S
ACADEMY AWARD WINNING
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THE SCREEN'S MOST DAZZLING SPECTACLEI

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Rama Struchkova
of the

BOLSHOI BALLET

with
The Full Benet Company and Orchestra
of The Bolsho- Theatre. Moscow
1"
The Full-Length Ballet by Sugar Pronto! 0y
Photographed vn Mngxcotor
at the (30th Film Studio
A damn Fume Release

 

fed".
....- TM ESTitlifiTA—NDlzoo I
LATE SHOW FRI - SAT 11:30 ALL SEATS $1.50

 

 

 

 

 4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. February 6. 1916

ATTENTION :

ALL STUDENTS WHO HAVE NEVER PICKED UP
THEIR UK STUDENT I.D. CARDS MUST DO SO AT
BILLINGS AND COLLECTIONS (SERVICE BUILDING.
220) PRIOR TO FEBRUARY 12, I976. AFTER THAT DATE,
THERE WILL BE A FIVE DOLLAR ($5.00) CHARGE FOR
ALL STUDENT I.D. CARDS.

FREE SINUS CLINIC

Each Wednesday
1:30 - 4:00 PM.
Room C226 - 228 Medical Center

CALL SECOND FLOOR
CLINIC FOR APPOINTMENT

 

 

:5.

Art

arts

 

Newman Center offers Christian art

Art in Lexington, in particular,
works by old masters, is limited
both in quantity and availability
to the interested viewer. To
experience works of this caliber,
a person must travel to Louisville

 

Tlis lack of available art work
is disheartening when you con-

sider the size of the University
and that (1 Lexington. Yet, a
person can seek out various
exhibits and private collections in
this city and one such place to go
is the Newman Center.

Located on Rose Lane, the
Center exhibits a fine collection
of Christian art. Ideal in at-
mosphere, the Center allows you
to experience the works with
quiet contemplation.

Each piece of art is unified with
its surroundings, displaying the
harmony which may be achieved
between contemporary ar-
chitecture and Christian
iconography. 'l‘wo works that I
found especially pleasing were

 

 

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BACK PACKS
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Camp Trails Skyline
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the stained glass panel in the
foyer and the Anna Selb—
dritt statue.

Created by a German Medieval
artist, the Selbdritt statue is a
realistic depiction of the Virgin
Mary, Christ child and St. Anna.
This characteristic of the work is
exhibited in the figure modeling
of St. Anna, with her round face,
and folds of clothing which fall
from her form in a naturalistic
manner.

The stained glass panel of
Christ’s meeting with the women
of Jerusalem on the way to
Calvary dates from the 1500’s.
Formerly a pmsession of William
Randolph Hearst (Patty’s
father), the work exhibits various
stylistic influences from the
Renaissance and Medieval
French painting.

 

Robin Mitchell is a sophomore
majoring in art history. Her
column appears on Fridays.

 

Announcement

Hunter
Foundaflon

Group

Enrollment .
Representatives

Will
be on campus
This week only

To Explain
UK's
Open Enrollment
IO a.m. to 3 pm.

Daily
Thurs. MN I45
Patterson
Ottice Tower

Fri. MN I45

Patterson
Office Tower

For Questions about
Hunter Foundation for
Health Care, Inc.

Telephone 253-l66l
27! W. Short St.
Security Trust

Building

 

  

 

C—mwm

 

T
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sports

 

Gators win 2l-l8

Florida squeezes by
Wildcat wrestlers

By STEVE ARNETT
Kernel Staff Writer

There’s a legend which says
you can put a mean old gator to
sleep merely by rubbing its belly.

ltain’t so. Or ifit is,no one has
ever told Gary Schneider’s
wrestling Gators from Florida.
The Florida Gators did
everything but go to sleep last
night as they squeezed by the
Kentucky Wildcats 21-18 in what
many experts said “was one hell
of a wrestling match.”

UK’s Garrett Headley started
off the night with a hotly con-
tested decision over old rival Vic
Holloway in the 118 lb. class. This
match sets the pace for the bouts
to come.

Then came probably the most
critical bout of the night for the
Wildcats, the 126 lb. class which
was vamted two weeks ago by
Jimmy Carr because of
ineligibility. Kentucky lost by a
superior decision with Florida
taking the match lead at 4-3.

“There’s no doubt Jimmy
(Carr) would have been a dif-
ference of nine or ten points,”
said coach Fletcher Carr.

.“Jimmy would have probably

pinned Florida’s 126 pounder.”

Kentucky’s Kurt Mock (134 lb.)
and Tim Mousetis (142 lb.) won
the next two matches, but the
Cats lost the next three classes,
as Florida opened up a 16-9 lead
the Kentucky would never sur-
mount.

Then came the bout of the
night, the match-up of two un-
defeated grapplers, UK's Joe
Carr and Florida’s Tim Wor-

:9

g ‘93-“ tumRmo ”Pt.-
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tllllltlIlllltltllltllllllIlllItwill"[lullIllfllfllllllllllllllllllllllitllll'tlllllllllllllllllllltlll‘

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sowicz. Carr out muscled
Worsowicz for a 7-4 decision,
pulling the Wildcats to within
four points at 16-12.

But junior college All-
American Paul Schmidt was too
much for UK freshman Steve
Linz. Schmidt won a superior
decision over Linz .and put the
match out of reach for the
Wildcats at 21-12.

The Wildcats didn’t give up and
went out in style as freshman
heavyweight sensation Harold
Smith pinned Florida’s Nils
Strandskov.

“I was real pleased with my
boys,” said Carr. “All of them
showed a lot of guts. Florida’s a
real tough team. But the crowd
(estimated at 2,000) did a hell ofa
job. If we could get crowds here
like this all the time, we could
really do something here."

The defeat dropped Kentucky’s
record to 84 overall and 1-2 in the
Southeastern Conference while
Florida remains undefeated at
11-0 overall and 6-0 in the SEC.
Florida has now won 44 dual
meets in a row. Its last defeat
came in 1972.

UK hits the road again Wed-
nesday, Feb. 11, as they travel to
Bioomington to take on a much
improved Indiana Team. IU
stands at 9-6-2 on the season and
they sport potential All-American
Sam Komar (134 1b.). This
should prove to be an intersting
match-up for UK’s Mock, whose
season mat record stands at 9-2.

The Wildcats’ last home stand
of the season is Feb. 13, when
they host Marshall University.

    
 
   
 
  

Combat Boots
254.7613

  

  

  

   
     
  
   
     
   
   

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. February 6. 1975—5

UK vs. the Vols this Saturday!

0 Join us to watch the game
on our bjg video beam screen.

0 We’re having a B-Blast too,
from 2-6, that promises to
be better than last year’s!

 
 
      

  
  

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~, lllltlll’

l “\thl ‘

  

0 Don’t forget! B.W. Cat will

be here Feb. 10 — low cover!
a BLUE lIGHT SPECIAL —
this Fri. and Sat. night.

—— o (.

"THREE
WOMEN"

The longest running play on the Chicago stage, ”Three Women” is a collection of
relatedscenes which together form an insightful and provocative statement about
women growing from adolescence into maturity. Designed to address men as much as
women, most of the material presented in the play is drawn from the actresses’ lives.

Memorial Hall, February 6 8. 7, 9:00 p.m. Admission free.
Jointly sponsored by Student Center Board and Office of

Undergraduate Studies.

Displays and Exhibits
entered in the 1976

Oswald Undergraduate Research
and Creativity competition

may be seen in the

Student Center Art Gallery

February 9-13

Proiects include
paintings, tabric sculptures, photography,
graphics. entomological exhibit
Contest sponsored by the Office of the Dean
- of Undergraduate Studies
Display is in cooperation with the
Student Center Board

 

 

 

 
  
  
  
   
     
   
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
 
  
 
  
  
  
   
      
    
   
  
    
    
    
  
  
 

  
    
 

  
  
      
  

 G—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. February 6. 1916

\COOL WAVES BREAK

IT\ ON THE SUNNY

‘ BEACH OF DAYTONA

. At the luxurious

DAYTONA PLAZA HOT E L

$155 double

via streamline Greyhound bus, space limited.
Deadline Feb. 13. Applications Rm. 204. Student

MARCH 13 21 $120 quad

Center

Sponsored by SCB Travel Committee

 

Michigan vs. Indiana
Kentucky vs. Tennessee

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aturday!

Wide Screen

Basketball

Cats will keep sharp eye on Ernie
when they visit Tennessee tomorrow

By JOE KEMP
Kernel Staff Writer

You can bet that UK basketball
coach Joe Hall and his assistants
will focus their bionic eyes on
cunning Ernie Grunfeld Saturday
afternoon when the Cats meet
Tennessee at Knoxville.

If you were alive three weeks
ago, you’ll recall that_GrunfeId
scored 43 points (39 of which were
legitimate) as the Vols beat UK
90-88 in overtime here.

Ernie was such a Good
Samaritan that he offered

(demanded?) to shoot his
teammates’ free-throws. Un-
fortunately, that’s a no-no with
the NCAA, college athletic’s
answer to the Supreme Court.

More than one person accused.

Grunfeld of bending the rules.

“I‘m not a cheater. Those
remarks hurt me,” Honest Ernie
said at the time.

Who says New Yorkers aren’t
sensitive?

Anyway, Hall doesn’t believe
Tennessee will employ such
tactics this time.

“The fact that this game will be
on regional TV (Channel 18 - 3

pm.) will probably keep them
from trying it again.

“There’s always intimidation
from that crowd (at UT),” said
Hall. “Last year we went down

there expecting problems, but,

they were well behaved."

Guard Dwayne Casey, a cameo
performer for UK, doesn’t see
this BlueOrange Contest as a
grudge match.

“It should be a hard fought
game, that’s all. Idon’t think the
fans will be as bad as everyone
says," he said.

Tennessee obviously has talent,
or else they wouldn’t be 15-2
overall, SEC leader at 8-1 and all
that jam. Bernard King, the
conference’s top scorer (25.6) is
the best thing to hit sooty
Knoxville since Union Carbide.

And Mike Jackson, at 16.6 points

per game is no stiff, either. So,
why then, Mr. Casey, do the Vols
occasionally engage in dirty
tricks?

“Oh, I think it’s part of (UT
coach Ray) Mears’philosophy,”
he replied. “But I think it’s bad
for the younger kids to see them
do that. It takes something away
from the game."

Enough of this morality lec-

tune. Let’s hear' some words of
wisdom from the coaches.

'MEARS—“We look for the
same type of game against
Kentucky we had at Lexington.
UK likes to play a fast paced
game like we do and I think
you’re going to see a game like
we had here last year where it
could very easily go into the
100’s."

HALL—“We’re near to being a
good ball club. We’ll need a
dedicated effort against Ten-
nessee. Our kids will definitely
be better prepared. Whether
they’ll play like that remains to
be seen.”

The UK mentor reiterated a
previous statement about the
team’s somewhat nonchalant
attitude in practice.

“We haven’t had the intensity
in our practices this year,” said
the coach, using a word (in-
tensity) that is rapidly losing its
meaning. .

“Complacency has set in on
this group, coming off such an
outstanding year.” ‘

Kentucky would be wise to
leave that complacency in
Lexington Saturday.

Passport Photos

“Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and
believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not
come into iudgement,but has passed out of death into life." --
Jesus John 5:24

 

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