xt7wdb7vqn0q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wdb7vqn0q/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-06-19 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, June 19, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 19, 1973 1973 1973-06-19 2020 true xt7wdb7vqn0q section xt7wdb7vqn0q Kentucky

Kernel

Almost """ it...

Vol. LXV No.

2

Tuesday, June 19, 1973

Eight pages

Stadium to be ready ‘

By MIKE CLARK
Kernel Sports Editor

The Kentucky football team will open its
1973 season Sept. 15 against Virginia Tech
in the new 58,000 seat Commonwealth
Stadium.

So says UK Athletic Director Harry C.
Lancaster, after assessing progress made
by the Huber, Hunt And Nichols Con-
struction C0. in building the mammoth
successor to McLean Stadium.

LANCASTER SAID UNUSUALLY
heavy spring showers have delayed
construction in recent weeks, but a crew of
250 men are at work to put the operation
back on schedule.

Huber, Hunt and Nichols, incidentally,
was the company which built Cincinnati‘s
Riverfront Stadium and the Foxboro,
Mass, home of the National Football
Leagig’s New England Patriots

The stadium will not be fully completed
. by Sept. 15, but most fans won't even
notice. All the seats will be available for
use, as will toilets, concession stands and
other necessary facilities.

The pressbox and elevators, deemed

“high priority” items, should also be
finished by opening day.

ABOUT THE ONLY features of Com-
monwealth Stadium that may be un-
finished are some offices and other low
priority areas.

A major problem is the approximately
7,000 end zone seats in the new stadium.

According to Lancaster, new seats
would cost approximately $125,000, and it
is unknown if delivery of these new
bleachers can be made before the opening
game.

ON THE OTHER hand. the University is
investigating the feasibility of moving
the end zone seats from McLean to
Commonwealth.

If the Stoll Field seats were moved
before the construction company vacated
the building site (and it will remain beyond
the opening game), the University would
have to pay union wages to the movers.
This expenditure would approach $100,000.

If the seats are moved after the con-
struction company leaves, University
employees could relocate the stands at a
considerable savings.

After investing most of their time

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky

Commonwealth Stadium is entering the final phases of construction in
order to be ready for the first game on September 15. (Kernel photo by

Basim Shamiyeh)

building the main grandstands that now
dominate the horizon southeast of the
campus, the company last week turned
its attention to the playing field.

DRAINS AND A calcium clay cohesive
soil mixture were installed in the field last
week, in preparation for planting bermuda
grass later this week. A full summer’s

Corporation forms to support the
President's position on Watergate

should be left up to the judiciary to try and
convict the guilty, he said.

By PRINCESS LAWES
Kernel Staff Writer

Sympathizers of President Richard
Nixon have organized a forum from which
his supporters can speak out on the
Watergate issue.

The Watergate Special Corporation was
formed in Kentucky a few weeks ago by
Louisville attorney, W. Howard Clay, his
daughter, Elizabeth Robin Clay, a senior
jounalism major at UK, and James L.
Clay, 3 Lexington attorney.

MS. CLAY SAID the corporation was
formed with the aim of providing people
with a medium to express their opinion 0 n
Watergate. She said she believes Nixon is
innocent of the accusations that have been
leveled against him.

Ms. Clay said the corporation has a
membership of about 400. Each member is
actively engaged in gathering support for
Nixon, in the form of signatures on
petitions.

Ms. Clay said she would like to see
Watergate treated like any other case
rather than being blown up into a major
scandal. She denied that her political
affiliation has anything to do with her
opinion on the matter.

SHE SAID SHE would like to see the
investigations go forward and be cleared
up very quickly rather than being dragged
out the way they are. If it is proven that
Nixon is guilty when everything has been
told, then, so be it.

In the meantime, she said, there is no
grounds to accuse Nixon of anything.
“Everyone seems to be trying the case
before the facts have been told," she ad-
ded.

Ms. Clay's uncle, James L. Clay, said he

did not think Congress should be con-
ducting public hearings on the Watergate
issue.

HE SAID THAT the judicial arm of the
government should handle the matter, and
everyone else including Congress “should
get back to the work they are supposed to
do."

The investigations should not be spread
out among so many different bodies, but it

Clay blamed the news media for making
Watergate into a sensation. “What we
have is not a good press but a sensational
press. This case has been tried in the
newspapers and on television." He said the
media has passed the stage of informing
the public. He described reporters as

Continued on Page 6. Col. 1

Summer session rolls
total record increases

By KAYE COYTE
Copy Editor

Enrollment for the 1973 eight-week
summer session is a record 5,296 students,
an increase of 200 students over last year,
reports Dr. Elbert Ockerman, dean of
admissions and registrar.

“We had 965 students sign up for classes
on Monday, which means 81 percent of our
students registered during the spring
semester,” Ockerman said.

ABOUT 275 STUDENTS have ad-
vance registered for the six-ween: session
beginning June 27. The six-week session
may not be continued, Ockerman said,
because of the schedule complications it
creates and limited course offerings.

New student registration for the six-
week session begins June 26. Many more

students are expected to attend various
workshops, short courses and field study
classes offered this summer.

Enrollment for the four-week in-

tersession numbered 1,552 students.

THE FOUR-WEEK summer session was
first tested here in 1970 and enrolled 929
students. Last year, the enrollment had
rise to 1,230 students.

Most class offerings during intersession
were in the College of Arts and Sciences,
Ockerman said. A few classes were of-
fered in education, business and
economics, home economics and social
work, he said.

Tuition for the summer sessions is based
on an assessed fee of $20 per credit hour.
During the eight-week session a full-time
student may take up to 10 credit hours for a
set fee of $114.75. Tuition has increased
this summer to conform to, increases in
tuition last fall, Ockerman said. ‘

TO ESCAPE THE summer heat, most
classes meet in the air-conditioned
buildings on campus, including the
Classroom Building, Anderson and Dickey
Halls, and the Chemistry-Physics

Building.

growth is expected to yield a bumper crop
of grass by September.

The stadium parking lots, which will
eventually handle 10,000 automobiles, will
not be complete on opening day. Only 3,000
spaces are expected to be blacktopped, but
another 3,000 will be covered with grass
and gravel.

Testing Center
plans new
'unisex' test

By LYN HACKER
Kernel Staff Writer
A new vocational interest test
is planned for the fall semester at
the University Counseling and
Testing Center.

Dr. Robert L. Harman, of the
testing center, described the new
test as a “unisex” test, designed
to combine the old male and
female versions of the test.

THE UNISEX TEST was
developed because of complaints,
not only at UK but nationally,
that the old versions of the test
were discriminatory toward
women.

The new test might be offered
this fall, said Harman. “We will
get it the minute is is available,”
he added. “All we’re waiting for
is its publication.”

He said the test has been in the
making for the last two or three
years. But there are some bugs to
be ironed out.

THE FIRST OF these is the
validity of the test itself, he said.
There seems to be some question
as to whether the test will
measure male and female in-
terest any differently. According
to Harman, most researchers
find that interest in certain fields
is dependent on the sex of the

individual.
However, Harman added the

testing center will administer
both existing tests if requested.
(‘ontinued on Page 6. Col. 4

 

  

 

The
Kentucky
Kernel

KSU student has

A Kentucky State University
student from Indiana may have a
difficult time changing his status
from non-resident to resident at that
institution thus qualifying for lower
tuition.

His suit in US. District Court
contends that because he is a
registered voter in Franklin County
he should be granted in-state tuition.
However, he is standing on the wrong
side of the fence, because criteria set
down by the Council on Public Higher
Education does not recognize voter
registration alone.

The criteria, established to protect

Established 1”!

Steve Swift, Editor in Chief
lion Mitchell, Managing Editor
Kaye Coyte, Copy Editor

state universities from people gaining
quick residency to avoid higher
tuition rates, says a student may only
be granted a change of residency if he
obtains full time employment,
establishes a home, buys property, or
files state income tax returns.
Registration as a voter in Franklin
County can be essential in gaining
Kentucky residency but alone it isn’t
enough.

The council’s guidlines also state if
a person can prove he or she is self-
supporting and intends to stay in
Kentucky after graduation the person
is entitled to the in-state tuition rate.

Tom Moore. Copy Editor

Mike Clerk. Sports Edhor

Jay lthodemyre, Arts Editor

Editorials represent the opinion oi the Editors. not the University

The right of a state to charge
separate tuition rates for residents
and non-residents was recently
upheld by the Supreme Court. In its
decision the Court said, “We fully
recognize that a state has a legitimate
interest in protecting and preserving
the quality of its colleges and
universities and the right of its own
bona fide residents to attend such
institutions on a preferential tuition
basis.”

In the same decision the Court also
made it clear each state has the
responsiblity to allow non-resident

fe iffe rfeiffe rfeiffe rfeiffe rfeiffe rfeiffe rfe iffe rfeiffe rfeiffe rfeifferz,“

WHATE'V R — WHATEVER {HWOWQ
M Agpfim ACTH/WES MACK 85
HAVE r— QSCOVEREV _

 

SOROID

   
 

 

  
 
 
 
 

THAT {06 —

   

   

IMPE HHEIUT
mic .-

PDUOE.

 

“may.“ i

""I'Ms nvn

“rustle”!allalliwamayau

Editorials

no grounds for residency

students the opportunity to change
status by adhering to guidlines set by
the law making bodies of each state.
The Court did not deal specifically
with any requirements states should
follow when establishing such
guidelines.

The Council‘s guidelines for Ken-
tucky universities are fair and their
stiffness towards out-of-state students
guarantees Kentuckians, whose

parents have paid tax dollars for state

institutions, a well-deserved
priority over those who are new to the
state and have contributed little in the
way of support. '

 

Letters]

Editors reserve the right to edit, for
space purposes, any letter over 250
words. Send viewpoints to“Letters”,
The Kentucky Kernel, 114 Journalism
Building, CAMPUS. Letters not
accompanied by name, campus
address, telephone number,
classification, and major will not be
printed.

 

High sheriff interrupts peanut butter party

HIDE AWAY HILLS. Ohio-On a quiet
evening, the high sheriff of my remote
Ohio county knocked on my back door.
With him was a deputy of the private
guard service hired to patrol the secured
2,000-acre complex in which I reside with a
hundred other families.

. With the high sheriff, known as Puffy
Hartman, was a special Hills guard who is
a retired construction worker. But there
they stood in the early evening light. At
first I thought they merely sought direc-
tions to someone’s house in these beautiful
rolling hillocks. Naturally, I opened the
door.

Luckily for me, my wife stacks all the
old magazines and newspapers at the back
door. When I saw those uniforms, I
dropped my copy of The New York Times
and picked up The Logan Daily News we
keep around for appearance‘s sake.

“Mr. Chenoweth, I’m Sheriff Hartman
and I want you to understand that I do not
have a warrant...but we have information

‘ there is a party going on here with some
hard stuff."

Hard stuff? Bootleg whiskey? In my
house?

With two teenagers in the family, I am
way up on drug-cult terminology. I finally
realized he meant heroin. Besides, I still

remember “The Man With The Golden
Arm.” But other than the basic education
given me by Frank Sinatra when he was
shooting up, my real contact with drugs
isn't much more than what Bayer supplies.
Frankly, grass to me is still Scott Seed
Company. I am so law-abiding that I still
close cover before striking. I honestly pay
my income taxes. If this country ever went
into a declared war, I would probably
volunteer.

So what goes through the mind of a
father like this? That beautiful, bra-less,
blond—tressed daughter of mine, a doll who
would dress up anything Women’s Wear
Daily ever hoped to publish, was down-
stairs in our living room right at that in-
stant and plotting to blow up the Ohio
University R.O.T.C. building.

That kid she’s dating has hair longer
than mine. Come to think of it, her “date”
of the evening did arrive in a T-shirt. And,
too, she did tell me her bunch was coming
to the house that evening because no one
had money enough to buy gasoline.
Probably spent it all on pot? Or hard stuff?
A party? That takes more than two kids.
And in my downstairs living room, all this
is going on while I sit up here laughing at
Archie Bunker. What the hell kind of
father have I been, anyway?

Panic! Closing the cover before striking,
I told the sheriff to go around the house and

cut ’em off at the pass. Enter at the pation
sliding doors. I told the private guard to
come with me, we’d bust in from the in-
side. If there was a crime on my premises,
it would happen just one time.

All of us reached the crime scene at the
same moment. It was a clean hassle.
There they sat: four girls and five boys.
And five of them were smoking. Marlboro.
The laughing and lighthearted at-
mosphere died quickly. Two of the boys
who had been flopped out on the floor,
since there is a limit to chairs in my house,
sat up.

Puffy Hartman, like Joe Friday,
opened: “I understand there is a pot party
going on here?” The kids looked at one
another. The law-and-order father, more
ashamed than anythinng else, took over
the interrogation.

“Not one of you will leave here until
these officers know the full story. If any of
you have pot on you in this house, I want to
deal with you first,” I said in my best
fatherly tone.

Puffy said,“How about the heroin?”
Nine kids with cooler heads and longer
hair broke into laughter. First one boy,
then all of them, stick out their arms as if
to display their golden needle marks. The
arms were soft and clear.

Then the thought hit me, I had been
upstairs. This party was going on
downstairs. My booze and beer are kept
down here. The sheriff probably thought

about the same thing. Juveniles drinking it
up. “What you drinking there?” he said
pointing to one lanky boy with a plastic
glass of clear liquid between his knees.

This cool cat who probably doesn’t believe
in closing cover before striking, handed up
the glass to the law.

Puffy sniffed. Being odorless and
colorless, he had to ask again. “What is
it?” My brainy kid, somewhat more
irritated than I, gave a classic reply:

“We call it water around here.”

Then the experienced eyes of the law fall
on a small saucer on the floor. White
powder? H? All he had to do now was
locate the needles! One of the boys,
knowing the mind of the high sheriff,
calmly handed the plate to The Man.
“Salt. From the crackers,”ihe explained.
Sheriff Hartman, still searching, looked at
an empty jar.

“What you got in there?”

My kid, who has been taught to totally
respect law and men who are charged with
enforcement, was openly hostile with her
unladylike tones of reply:

“We used to call it peanut butter.”

The Chenoweth house in Hide Away Hills
is now known as the scene of The Great
Peanut Butter Bust.

 

This is essay from Doral

an
Chenoweth’s forthcoming book. He is
an Ohio writer and publicist.

 i a page for opinion from inside and outside the university community

 

 

 

 

America: From 1776 until 1973

By RICHARD B. MORRIS

That we have a leadership crisis today,
even a leadership vacuum, hardly needs
spelling out and uderscores the contrast
between 1776 and 1973.

Surely the appearance at the birth of the
nation of statesmen of first-rate ablilities
prompts the query as to why such a cluster of
leadership talents has never appeared again
in America. Talented individuals, to be sure;
but as a group even the remarkable team of
Webster, Clay and Calhoun pales in com-
parison.

How can one account for this phenomenon?
It has been suggested that the America of 1776
was an intimate and relatively homogenous
society, that it was possible in a young nation
counting just 2.5 million people for a man with
political ambititons to have a personal impact
that seems inconceivable in a nation grown
almost a hundredfold in numbers and three
fold in territory.

Theirs was a society where the spirit of
deference still prevailed, where an in-
tellectual elite, a “meritocracy,” could rule.

Neholas

By NICHOLAS VON HOFFMAN

EL PASO-Some things about Texas have
changed since the last visit. The new
governor is decorating the sides of the
Houston freeways with signs admonishing
the public to “Drive Friendly.” The art of
the bumper sticker has been advanced
with such affectionate offerings as “Honk,
If You Love Jesus," “Cowboys Love It
All,” and “Goat Ropers Need Love Too.”

But the old Texas isn’t being entirely
swept away by the torrents of social
change. People are still wearing orange
University of Texas shirts and blouses to
baseball games in the Houston
Astrodome, where they sit on red
upholstered chairs and clash so badly it
makes you want to grind your teeth. High
school football is still big, with the
Pflugerville Panthers expected to play
their annual game with the TaylonDucks;

When 2,000 Chicano workers walked off
their jobs a year ago, they caught their
boss and the Amalgamated Clothing
Workers of America (AFL-CIO) by sur-

prise. The union hadn't had time to finish
its organizational drive, so when the un-
planned walkout occurred Amalgamated

 

 

Still, the picture of alleged homogeneity has
its flaws. The identity of ethnic origin and
religious persuasion of the Revolutionary
Americans has been exaggerated, nor was
place found in this meritocracy for a half-
million blacks.

Homogeneity is unlikely to spawn creative
individualism, which is what we do find in the
Revolutionary generation. On the contray, it
would be unrealistic to expect that an age
which places as much value as ours does on
conformity is likely to spawn the creative
individualism that marked the leadership of
the American Revolutionary era. Nor is an
age of materialism calculated to encourage

young people to abandon lucrative and'

prestigious “career opportunities” and
dedicate themselves to public service, as did
the Founding Father. Public service has lost
much of its former prestige. A society that
regards intellectuals seeking public office
with suspicion would hardly provide a
congenial climate for the Founding Fathers,
save perhaps for Benjamin Franklin, who

was faced with the unpleasant tactical fact
that about three-quarters of Willie Farah’s
workers were still on the job.

Farah, which, with its many plants, is
one of the largest companies of its kind,
isn’t an oldtime sweatshop operation. The
factories are immaculate, they have
Mexican Muzak, and Willie, the son of the
founder and controlling stockholder, does
really give everybody a turkey for
Christmas. The wages are low, the work is
hard, and the foremen don’t take any sass,
but a look across the river back at those
adobe slums is enough to keep many of the
workers on the job.

Right after the strike started there was a
little tough stuff with some mass arrests,
but now the hand-to-hand combat is being
carried on in front of National Labor
Relations Board hearing officers where
the union wins the legal points while the
strike goes on. In these circumstances
Amalgamated has had to resort to the
boycott. Men across the country are being
urged not to buy Farah slacks, and friends
of the strikers are asking stores not to

carry them.
Without Willie Farah the boycott might

knew how to mask his genius and take on the
coloration of the common man.

The Founding Fathers recognized that in
the final analysis the republican system for
which they had fought so long and so hard
must secure the endorsement of an informed

public in order for it to prove durable. They "

did not believe in concealment of unpalatable
truths or place a premium on deception.
Deeply committed though they were to the
principle that governments derive their just
powers “from the consent of the governed,”
they did not keep their ears to the ground for
every minor seismic disturbance, nor would
they conceivably have approved national
policies shaped by» casual political polls.-

 

Richard B. Morris, Governor Morris
Professor of History at Columbia
University, is the author of the for-
thcoming book, “Seven Who Shaped
Our Destiny: The Founding Fathers
as Revolutionaries.”

Another cry from Texas

not have amounted to much, but he put it
on the map by unaccountably unloading on
Sidney Metzger, the Roman Catholic
bishop of heavily Catholic El Paso. The
bishop had come out in a quiet way for the
sttrike when Willie accused the elderly and
decidedly non-militant prelate of “lolling
in wealth" with “the rotten bourgeoisie.”

Strange language for a struck factory
owner to use on a member of the Catholic
hierarchy. It had the predictable effect of
legitimizing the fight, solidifying the other
Roman Catholic bishops behind Metzger
and stimulating the old man to lead the
charge for social justice.

While this fight means a lot to the bishop
and to the union, which is chasing runaway
manufacturers escaping to right-to-work
states, it means most to the Chicano
community of the West and Southwest.
Cesar Chavez is in deep trouble so that
nowhere do Mexican-Americans have that
kind of organized labor base which has
helped other ethnic groups build political
and social power in so many areas of the
country.

(c) I973. The Washington Post

 

 
  
 

  

You should

know more
about

Army ROTC

Ifll

Army ROTC

______ ....__...
llIIIlIIIIlIllIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII mum

24 HOUR

BICYCLE
REPAIR

 
   
     
  

 
 

Barker"
Hall ‘

  

All Makes

Call 277-6013

New 3, 5, and 10 Speed

Bicycles from $59.
Rent-a-Bike, too.

 

at

DODD’S CYCLERY
4958 Harrodsburg Rd.

WHY RENT
A
Refrigerator

?

When you can purchase
a 2.cu. ft. refrigerator

for
$30 or $35

Call
27 7-5782

 

Thousands of people

RENT FURNITURE

Low monthly rental pay-
ments will save you big
money on the latest
styles and colors.
'Call or come in today
and see how you will
save money the renting
~way. Be sure to ask
’about our famous Op-
tion-to-Buy Plan.

 

afl‘

\
MM FLRNIIRE REMS

Carrico Furniture

2919 Nicholasville R'df

 

 

 

 

  

4-THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. June 19. 1913
r---------------

FURNISHED 8

[ Campus Wrapup

APARTMENTS College of Nursing
"35"“ to host workshoP

10 min. Drive
From Campus A three-day workshop for community health nurses

concerning family planning will begin June 20 and is being
hosted by the UK College of Nursing.

 

REGISTERED NURSES:
This coupon can lift you out of ordinary
nursing and into. . .

SMEERNURSMNfl

Fill in the coupon and mail it today.
We'll send you a free. no—obligation,
illustrated brochure! (Plus information

, . . 3 .
about our speCial fringe benefits.) 2 "mm ”m" "mm“

o . l
Pmramllienhmmm Jointly supported by federal and state funds, the

em" m Emmi" workshop is designed to provide community health nurses
with information on the elements of family planning and
the role of the nurse in the development of a successful
call 299-7822 family planning program.
AUGUSTA ARMS
1792 AUGUSTA CT.

Fill in and mail to:

Mrs. Alice Miller, RN, Director of Nursing
Graduate Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania
19th & Lombard Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. 19146

Faculty for the workshop include noted personnel from
throughout the nation connected with family planning and
community health.

Law books restored

A veteran book restorer has completed restoration of
some 10,000 volumes in the College of Law Library. Jack
Ankrom, a book conservationist and library consultant,
has been working on the UK collection since April 9.

 

WUUR NAME PHONE

 

ADDRESS

KERNEL TELEPHONES

Editor. Editorial Editor 257-1755
Managing Editor, News Desk 257-17 .

 

CITY

-------u-

How good a salesman are you?

Ankrom, who learned the trade from his father, has
been at the job for 17 years traveling all over the country.

A spokesman for the library said had Ankrom not come
to the campus to do the work, the books would have been
crated and shipped out of state, making the job more
expensive. '

Wilderness training
to be held at UK

The first summer course in wilderness survival training
is being held at UK this year. The seven-week course
includes rock climbing and canoeing, with the best
students being eligible to go on a two-week trip to Arizona
in August.

Rock climbing classes run from Saturday through
Thursday and other classes are held Tuesday and Wed-
nesday nights, with the same topic being discussed both
nights during a single week.

Although it is a course, the only way students can enroll
is by calling 253-3296, and there is a nominal fee to cover
material expenses.

Engineers hold meet

Delegates to the annual meeting of the American
Society of Agriculture Engineers, being held this week at
UK, will hear speeches by several businessmen and the
assistant secretary of agriculture.

The conference was opened Monday with a speech by

The

Interviews are now being conducted for
summer Advertising Salesman openings with
The Kentucky Kernel.

An automobile and approximately 15 to 20
hours time are required per week. Working
time is flexible and can be adapted to an in-
dividual’s class schedule. Ad sales experience
is helpful, but not required.

Pay is seven percent commission (some of our
sales staff earn an average of $250 monthly)

For an interview or for more details call "Ken
Stuart at 258-4646 or come by The Kernel
advertising office in Room 113, Journalism

Building.

Kentucky

Kernel

George Guenther, former assistant secretary of labor for
the 1970 Occupational Safety and Health Act and now the
vice president of a large insurance company. Guenther’s
speech concerned the impact of the act on farm equip—
ment and machinery engineers.

The keynote speech will be delivered today by James
Veltman, development director of a development cor-
poration in Houston.

On Wednesday, the delegates will hear an address by
Assistant Secretary of Agriculture Will Erwin.

Local media air
Watergate hearings

Coverage of the Watergate hearings is available to
persons living on campus through both the Kentucky
Education Television station and WBKY, the University
radio station.

KET, channel 46, is broadcasting the hearings on a
delayed basis beginning at 8 pm. on the day of the hearing
and will continue until that day’s hearings are complete.

WBKY, 91.3 on the radio dial, is covering the hearings
live daily, usually 10 am. to 12 noon and from 2 pm. to
finish.

The hearings have been postponed until next week due
to Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev’s visit and will return to
the airwaves next Tuesday.

 

 

  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday. June 19. 1973-5

WAKY AND BOB IAGERIS PRESENT IN LOUISVILLE

Sport]

 

Impressive

UK signee shines in All-Star game;
Grevey dazzles — and pays for it

By MIKE CLARK
Kernel Sports Editor

Kentucky basketball coach Joe
Hall took a breather from
recruiting last Saturday and
watched a pair of his signees in
action.

Larry Johnson of Morganfield
and Ernie Whitus of Louisville
Doss, both of whom have signed
grant in-aids with UK, were
members of the Kentucky High
School All-Star team that ram-
paged to a 103-82 win over In-
diana’s best.

Johnson scored 16 points,
grabbed seven rebounds, and was
impressive on defense as Ken-
tucky outscored the Hoosiers.

“l was very impressed with
Larry," Hall said, leaning back
in his stuffed chair and smiling.
”I think he played as well as any
guard in the game."

The 6-3 Johnson was a key in
Kentucky’s rip-roaring second-
half against the Hoosiers. Ken-
tucky le‘d only 44-41 at the half,
and by only one (58-57) with a bit
less than 14 minutes to play.

In the next four minutes,
though, Kentucky ripped Indiana
17-1 to establish a 75-58 margin. It
was downhill from there.

Indiana coach Jerry Oliver
said he was impressed with the
speed and quickness of Johnson,
Shawnee’s Ronnie Daniel and the
other Kentucky guards.

Ernie Whitus, a 6-8 forward,
played very little and failed to
score. “He didn’t play long
enough to shake off the cob-
webs,” Hall said. “We still expect
a lot of help from him."

A third Wildcat-to-be, 6-8
Robert Mayhall from Mid-
dlesboro, is nursing a knee injury
and had to pass up the All-Star
series.

“He’s undergoing therapy right
now," Hall said, “and we’re
hopeful he won’t have to have an
operation.” Complicating
matters is a past injury to the
same knee.

Speaking of injuries, Ken-
tucky’s fabulous sophomore
Kevin Grevey narrowly missed
decapitation during -a recent
practice session in Memphis.

Grevey, a member of a State
Department team that is
currectly touring China, was in
the midst of a typice‘ Grevey
performance when teammate
Rich Jones decided enough was
enough.

Jones reached out a mammoth
paw, swatted the ball from the
driving Grevey’s hand, and
helped Kevin into the basket
supports.

“I called Kevin when I heard he
had been hurt," Hall said. “HI

' BLACK OAK
ARKANSAS

PLUS SPECIAL GUEST STAR

J0 J0 GUNNE

FRI., JULY 6 - 8PM
CONVENTION CENTER

PRICES: $4.50 ADVANCE $5.50DAY OF SHOW.

said that the last thing he
remembers is driving for the
basket. The next thing he
remembered was waking up and,
seeing a lot of faces staring down
at him.

. “Grevey dazzled Jones, but

Jones dazzled him back,” Hall
laughed.

Incidentally, Grevey, who had
hit eight of nine field goal at-
tempts prior to his run-in with
Jones, suffered no ill effects from
the collision. _

FESTIVAL SEATING
Mail orders: Louisville Convention Center
525 W. Walnut, Louisville, Ky.
EDCIOS§ self-addressed stamped envelope with remittance.

 

    

 

 

381 South Limestone
2s2—4497
252—4498

    
   
 

FREE CAMPUS
DELIVERY

, ---—--- SPECIAL couPoN-------.-

50c on on l0" PIZZA
75c OFF ON 12" PIZZA
$1“ on on 15” PIZZA

Coupon good for One Pizza Only

   
  
   

  
 

Expires July 31

(Not Accepted on Delivery Orders)
Offer good at 381 S. Limestone location only.

   

  
  

FREE MONEY

/\

    
 

   
  

Kevin Grevey, shown above in action against Alabama,
has been impressive in practice as his State Department-
sponsored All-Star team readies for its tour of China.
(Kernel photo by Bruce Hutson)

Football players
raise standing

Members of the 1972 Kentucky
football team upped their
classroom performances during
the recently-completed 1973
spring semester.

The team amassed a grade
point average of 2.30 in the
spring, compared to a 1.97 GPA.

 

defensive end Roger Peterman
had a 3.54 in Arts and Sciences.
Pat Donley was the top
sophomore with a 3.20 average in
physical education. He was
followed closely by defensive
tackle Marty Marks (3.17),
defensive back Mike Cassity

(3.08). End Rick Fromm

ter of 1972. .

for the fall semes linebacker Ned Lidvall, center
Junior members 0f the team Steve Schoenbaechler and
turned In the best grades of the defensive end Jerry Parks

spring, averaging 2.411 after a
2.15 mark in the fall. The seniors
went from 2.31 in the fall to 2.366
in the spring.

Sophomores lifted their
collective averages from 1.93 to
2.197, while the fresh rose from

1.87 to 2.019.
Individually, offensive end Dan

earned 3.00 standings.

Cornerback Ben Thomas' 3.63
paced the sophomores, while
Karl Haff, with a 3.00, led the
freshmen.

Seniors Gary Knutsen, the
team‘s leading scorer as a
fullback, guard Tom Clark, and
cornerback Buzzy Bumam were

 

This Ad worth $2.00 off any Purchase.
One per Customer.
Expires June 24.

FAYETTE MALL