xt7wdb7vqn5n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wdb7vqn5n/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1977-10-12 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 12, 1977 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 12, 1977 1977 1977-10-12 2020 true xt7wdb7vqn5n section xt7wdb7vqn5n : WW ...« -A‘.

Fire inspection crackdown closes down local bars

By (‘IIRIS BLAIR
Kernel Reporter

In the aftermath of the Beverly
Ilills fire disaster that killed about
X65 persons, local fire marshals are
cracking down on campus-area
bars, closing several for code
violations.

Local bar owners and ernploycs
said marshals usually inspect the
bars twice a year. But they are now
averaging two inspections a week.

Volume LXIX, Number 39
Wednesday, October 12,1977

Major James Fallce of the
Lexington fire department said that
although spot-checking nightclubs
was a normal safety procedure,
more frequent inspections were a
“response to the Beverly Hills fire.
We‘re going to be more on top of
things.“

The (‘hevy ('hase Inn. a bar on
EuclidAveneue. was closed Sept. 19
for fire code violations. As explained
by Fallee, an inspection disclosed
that electrical wires were hanging

   
 

K

near the front exit and a double
booth was blocking the rear exit.

According to Fallee, an employe
at the Inn refused twice to move the
obstructing booth. However, “the
owner was very cooperative,“
li'ailce said, “and after quick ad-
justments of the hazardous
situation." the Inn reopened the next
day at ti p.m.

Stingle's liar. also on Euclid
Avenue, was subject to a short-term
closin g Sept. 22 when there were too

K

2

an independent student newspaper

 

ENTUCKY

many patrons to be seated.

Rar owner Gary Stingle said these
patrons refused to leave, causing
fire marshals to close Stingle‘s until
compliance with their request was
met.

Stingle said he didn't have any
complaints about the frequent in—
spections, butsaid, "They need to
get together on their policies.
They‘re doing now what they should
have been doing in the past. I hope
the inspections are more con-

  

el

sistent."

Nightclub owners aren't given a
code book describing specific
violations of fire laws and many
bar 5 have been closed without prior
notice.

Ili-nry Harris. coowncr of Two
Keys on South Limestone Street,
said during the ownership change at
the bar, fire marshals closed it
lit‘CllllSO offaulty wiring and failure
to use exit lights.

“They had let the problem go for

 

three years, then cracked down all
at once.“ Harris explained. “We
asked them to give us a few days to
make neededrepairs, since it was a
Friday night, but they were un~
sympathetic.“

Harris said he informed fire
marshals about plans to remodel the
bar so “they're waiting for com-
pletion before they inspect us. If
they know that a bar owner is trying
to commute. they‘re not hard to get
along with.“

University ofKentuchy
Lexington, Kentucky

 

 

ress freedom v. fair trial

'Grandstanding' seen as pitfall of television

By MARIE MITCHELL
Associate Editor

Editor's note: This is the second
article of a two-part story about the
impact of television coverage in
courtrooms.

Last week, as part of a year-long
experiment by the Florida Supreme
Court, a murder trial involving a 15‘
year-old defendant, Ronny Zamora,
was televised.

Although legal proceedings have
been televised before. this is
believed to be the first time an entire
murder trial had been videotaped
and edited, and subject to two or
three hours of nightly viewing on
Miami public television station
WPBT.

In other states, television cameras
have also been allowed in courts.
The Georgia Supreme Court and

circuit judges in Mobile. Ala., and
Jefferson County. Ky, allow
cameras.

The basic question arising from
this decision is the conflict between
press freedom and fair trial. Just
how far does the public's "i ight to
know" extend when the fairness of a
trial is atstake?

Past cases in the 1960’s, where
cameras were permitted in the
courts, proved to be chaotic. In
Estes vs. Texas. the courtroom was
described as “a forest of equip»
ment" and Billy Sol Estes. convicted
of swindling. was given a new trial
because of media disruptions.

The televised Sam Sheppard case
(a doctor accused of murdering his
wife‘ was absolute confusion. A
majority of courtroom seats near
the jury were reserved for the
media.

The jury was unsequestered and
pictures were constantly flashed

Alarming: pranks

By DEBBIE MCDANIEL
Kernel Sta ff Writer

Many UK students underestimate
the seriousness of fire alarm boxes,
but the warning ‘False Alarms
Kill—use for fires only‘ is no joke

Malicious false alarms are a
violation of state law. and depending
on the judge, offenders may get a
jail sentence, a large fine plus the
S25 residental hall fine. and in rare
cases suspension or dismissal from
school.

UK safety officer Garry Beach
said only 24 of the 79 false alarms
last year were malicious. and when
considering the University
population of about ‘21),000, Loon

-..o.+-'~

daily visitors and the large faculty.
these alarm numbers were
relatively low.

Beach believes irresponsible staff
members. weekend visitors, im-
mature students playing games. or
people with no business on campus
are responsible for the malicious
alarms.

Most malicious alarms set oft in
theacadcmic buildings occur during
exam weeks when tensions are high
and students panic about their
grades.

For example. Beach said. "Some
character doesn't study for the
exam so he pulls the alarm and goes
outside. expecting to learn the
material in to minutes."

during recesses. In addition. with
reporters coming and going so often.
it was difficult to hear what was
being said.

As a result. cameras were barred
from “notorious trials."

Jay Rayburn. L'K assistant
journalism professor who teaches
courses in communications law. said
he thinks there is a situation
somewhere between absolutely no
coverage and an Otto Preminger
production that could be agreed
upon. However, “Care needs to be
taken to handle it properly," he
warned.

UK Law Professor (ierald Ash-
down agreed with this. “It scents to
me that the publrc‘s right to in-
formation is stronger and better
served when a common. everydayi
usual typetrial is televised rather
than one that is unusual and sen-
sational ilike the Hearst trial or
Zamora casei."

But, as Rayburn pointed out,
ordinary trials don't seem to get the
publicity. People seem to be more
interested in sensational events, he
said.

Yet, “A sensational and ab

normal—type trial is likely to distort
reality rather than aid the public‘s
understanding." Ashdown said.

"The US. Supreme Court has
consistently affirmed that a trial is a
public event and has upheld the right
of the media to attend and report on
the proceedings,“ he added.

Previously this applied to all
media abut cameras and tape
recorders were seldom aIIOwed
(some exceptions were made for
educational use. such as in law
classes) . The electronic media could
attend, but usually without their
equipment.

The advantage of cameras, Ash-
down emphasized, is the difference
between a reporter‘s own words

versus actual events. “You can't
relate to them the same way," he
said.

“By seeing the actual event, it
adds an extra element of un-
derstanding so viewers can form
their own impression of what they
saw rather than what was
desc ribed ."

Whether an nnscqnestered jury
might accidentally or purposely
watch a televised account of the trial
during its session is no different than
asking them not toread a newspaper
story about theevent, Ashdown said.

Rayburn agreed. "There is no
such thing as a sterile en‘
vironmcnt." he said. “You've just
got to trust t he jurors to use common
sense and not watch the news,"
since very few people can sit on a
jury sequestered for four to six
weeks because they have families
and other commitments

continued on back page

irk firemen , students

During the last two or three years.
nearly every residence hall reported
malicious false alarms and.
although most offenders escaped,
Dick Jones. Holmes Hall head
resident, states the "chances of
being turned in are good."

“We have two or three alarms
pulled eachsemestcr, and usually
the people on the hall see them
(persons pulling an alarm i and turn
the name in,“ he said.

Last year a Haggin resident pulled
an alarm late at night, was caught
by some students and prosecuted
through the courts. Head resident
Rob (,‘lay said the students didn't
think it was a joke to be awakened
late at night and made to stand in the

a a

Harare Miles. I2. run a football strategy all worked
out. and imparts it to fellow pet-wee “(‘hlefs" James

rain waiting for the building to be
checked for fire.

Ixeeneland RA Ann Reed said the
majority of alarms Ill her building
are accidental and students come
dOwn to the desk and report them
immediately.

“The biggest problem here is
people putting the metal lever up
next to the glass so when someone
walks by or accidently brushes
against the alarm, it goes off," she
said.

Elevators are considered potential

deathtraps dining fires, so those in

both Kirwan and Blanding Towers
are brought to the ground floor. and
power cut off.

Residents are aware of the rules,
and evacuate the building by
descending the 22 flights of stairs,
and a Kirwan RA said that after a
few drills no one wants to go through
another fire drill unless it is
scheduled.

Although firemen or city police
can disengage the alarm, UK
physical plant workers must come
and reset the alarm. Beach pointed
out that firemen get irritated, too,
and perhaps the long waits stret-
ching from in minutes to two hours
come from angry firemen taking
their time checking the building for
fire and hoping to teach the unknown
offender a lesson.

6.

 

iii:

4-: light

I‘-
(a. o“. .

Barron. l2, Eddie Simpson. I2, and Kevin Guy. 10. The
boys were practicing near Versailles Road.

 

May—

local

_.\ szsoamo 8111‘ is pending in Fayette
(‘i rcuit (‘ourt against the Medical Center.

Spence ’l‘. Dunn of Lexington contends
in be suit that medical officials and
personnel were negligent in their duites
causing the death of his wife. Sandra, last
year. Mrs. Dunn was in the center for a
kidney transplant in October, I976.

state

TIIE KENTUCKY DEPARTMENT
FDR NATURAL RESOURCES and
Environmental Protection has 20 days to
appeal a court order permitting strip
mining in Daniel Boone National Forest.

The order was issued by Franklin
(ircuit Judge Squire Williams, who
refused to nullify his Sept. 22 judgment
overruling the state’s denial of a strip
mine perm it to Stearns Coal and Lumber
(‘0.

The Department for Natural
Resources, in rejecting the permit
request on Jan. 19. said state law forbids
issuance ofa stripmine permit on public
property.

MARIJUANA CULTIVATION has
grown in popularity to the point where
Kentucky State Police intend to ask the
legislature to make it a felony, officials
said yesterday.

Lt. Ernest Bivens said current laws,
which make cultivation of marijuana a
misdemeanor, are not severe enough to
discourage the profitable trade.

Marijuana cultivation yields a per-acre
profit of 10 to 100 times that of tobacco,
Bivens said, depending on the quality of
the crop and the amount planted per
acre.

world

T\H) l'N‘IFORMED AIRLINE EM-
I’LM'ES brandishing pistols hijacked a
t'zechoslovakian airliner on a domestic
rlight yesterday, and surrendered a few
hours later in Frankfurt.

Police said the pair. a man and a
woman dressed in blue Czechslovak
Airlines uniforms, asked for political
asylum.

Police ('hief Knut Mueller said they
would be held on charges of “en-
dangering airline transportation.“

It was the sixth time since 1970 that
Czechoslovakians have defected have
defected to West Germany by diverting
commercial airliners from the Com-
munist-ruled country.

A 78-YIMR-0LD AMERICAN known
as the “father of modern magnetism"
and his former stduent at Harvard
shared the Nobel prize for physics
yesterday with a Briton. A Russian-Dom
Belgian was awarded the prize for
chemistry.

The Swedish Academy gave 1977 Nobel
awards to John H. Van Vleck, 78, of
Harvard University. Philip W. Anderson.
55. of Princeton University and Bell
Laboratories, Sir Nevill F. Mott, 72, of
England‘s Cavendish Laboratory, and
llya Pn‘gogine, 60, of the Free University
of Brussels. The physicists, who will
divide a 3145.000 prize, were cited for a
research on the electronic structure of
magnetic and "disordered" systems-
work already applied to development of
the laser, new industrial mes of glass and
copper spirals for birth control devices.

weather

Sl'NNY AND (‘00L TODAY. High in
the mid 505. Clear and very cool tonight
with a chance of scattered light frost.
lows in the low and mid 3t). Sunny and a
little warmer tomorrow. High in the
upper 505 to low «is.

compiled from
Associated Press Dispatches

  

V

 

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Double Standard - u I Should journalists moonlight as agents?

“ASlllNGTth— Watergate
reporter t‘arl Bernstein has per-
formed the laborious but useful job
of assembling all the known in-
formation, plus some nev unknown
facts. on journalism‘s cooperation
with the CIA. All in all. Bernstein
reports in an upcoming issue of

 

nicholas
von hoffman

 

Rolling Stone. the agency files
contain the names of too journalists
who cooperated with the great
haunted house of a headquarters in
Langley. Va.

There appears to have been a
great variety in what services these
people performed. A minority were
on the CIA payroll and can be
regarded as illll‘iillit‘ employes;
others seemed to into swapped
information with the agency as
reporters will do with news sources
and some appeared to have gotten
into the files merely by having a
drink with an agent and chit~
chatting about some country they‘d
lust vzsncd

A lot of people in journalism and
out think it is wrong to have doubled
as a reporterand a CIA agent. They
don‘t buy former syndicated
columnist Joe AlSOp, whom Bern-
stein quotes as saying, “l'm proud
they asked me and proud to have
done it. The notion that a
newspaperman doesn‘t have a duty
to his country is perfect balls."

Dots that duty include taking
money from an employer and
ostensibly giving loyalty and first
preference to an employer, while
actually doing the bidding of a
clandestine government agency?
Does the duty of citizenship go to
serving two masters. one public and
one secret?

The ‘witting' masters

But who are the two masters?
when Bernstein asked William

t‘olby about th's, the former CIA
threttor said, “Let‘s not pick on
some poor reporters. for God’s sake.
let‘s go to the managements. They
were wilting.“

Print and broadcastjoumalism‘s
prestige corporations seem to have
been the. most heavily involved—the
New York 'limes. CBS and Time-
l.ife, the Eastern liberal establish-
ment media. With the exception of
the Copley newspaper chain, the
most active and enthusiastic support
for the use of news organizations as
inteliigence, and even espionage,
auxiliaries appears centered in
outfits regarded as liberal. While
lime. and to a lesser extent,
Newsweekcooperated with the CIA,
it was the rightwing US. News and
World Report that ordered its staff
to have nothing to do with the
agency.

Thus with occasional exceptions
the reporters stand innocent of
playing a double game with their
bosses liven though the Louisville
(‘ourier-Journal is the only news
company that has gone completely
public about its role in these matters
\(‘BS has done so to some degree,
but how much is disputed), enough
evidence now exists to suggest that,
if there has been dishonesty prao
tit-ed. it‘s between the management
of the news companies and the
public, their customers. The explicit
pledge news corporations make is
that the news andopinion which they
print may be wrong but is their own.

Forbidden to accept

Has that been true with foreign
news or is the collaboration between
the government and news
executives in the gathering of in-
telligencealso reflected in decisions
about what to print and what not to
print andhow to slant it? The 0ft told
and true story of how the New York
Times suppressed an article telling
of the the: upcoming Bay of Pigs
operation has always been offered

as a one of a kind, extraordinary
incide nt, precipitated by a telephone
call from President Kennedy no less.

Now, how many years later, we
learn from Bernstein that the late
Arthur Hays Sulzberger, long-time
New York Times publisher,
promised Eisenhower's secretaty of
state, John Foster Dulles, that none
of the newspaper’s employes would
be allowed to accept an invitation to
visit Red China. When an invitation
did come. the publisher's nephew
and foreign affairs writer, C.L.
Sulzbeige r. was f orbiddcn to accept
it. “It was 17 years before another
’limes correSpondent was invited."
Sulzberger told Bernstein.

Alrnosta generation, during which
that newspaper, the most influential
organ in American journalism,
contributed to the general public
impression that Red China was a
faceless, hostile anthill anxious to
seal itself off and stew in its
animosity towai'd America. What,
then, is the difference in the
relationship of the New York Times
to foreign policy officers of the
United States government and that
of Pravda to the commissariat of
foreign affairs in Moscow.

To Americanize the difference is
that we know the editors of Pravda
are subservient and not permitted to
exercise their independent
judgement, if they have any. The
’Iimes, however, as the standard
maker of American journalism has
repeatedly asserted it's not the
official voice of the orthodoxies of
power. .

So the question now arises, if we
look back over the decades of

bipartisan foreign policy, of the.

decades of absence of debate, who
tied" Was it only Lyndon Johnson
and Richard Nixon? It never was
very plausible that a president with
a few collaborators could have
pulled such a thing off by his
lonesome.

 

(c), 1977, by King Features Syn-
dicate, Inc.

 
    

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With nothing happening, scion talks about; everything

BY ”\ltRY B. \llLllZR III

A few random commentaries are
appropriate for this week I just
can t think of anything earthshaking
to write about this time. Next week‘s
coltunn. however. wfll affect the
entire social order of the world
Don't. miss it.

Ronald Zamora was convicted last
week in Florida. for murder. Good.
Zamora and his attorney. Rubin
Ellis. claimed that it was "l‘V lll-
toxic ation ‘ which caused him to rob

 

growing
up rich

 

and murder an 37yearold woman.
The judge allowed the pleading to
stand. This case. by the way, is the
one that has attracted quite a bit of
national attention An edited versron
of each (hy's court activities was
televised on commercial TV This is
a first in the [S

The jury took about two hours to
convict Zamora. There was :ip»
parently little controversy among
the jurors. The jury foreman said
that the “TV intoxrcation“ defense.
in affect. was ridiculous l agree. it
was bullshit and the defense at-
torney apparrently didn‘t respect
the legal system very much by
trying it. As appeared in this column
earlier this year. TV does not cause
murder.

Fortunately. the jury agreed that
TV, for all its faults, can only have a
limited affect on those who watch it.
lfthejury had ruled in the reverse, a
crazy precedent would have been
set. Defenses in r‘rizriaial

proscecutions would likely have
gone to theabsurd. (“Honest to God.
\our Honor, the Fonz said it was
cool“) Society would likely have
gone into revolt. People would begin
enforcing theirown justice.

it's like the David Berkowitz
accused of the Son of Sam mur»
dersi case. Various New York
citizens have prromised in TV irr-
terviews that they will personally
St‘i‘Vt? justice on Berkowirtz if the
courts let trim off on an insanity
plea

()n a different subject, what has
happened to the Beatles? Not
collectively. but individually. They
ha ven‘t released an album in quite a
while. One unnamed source, who
really isn‘t in a position to know,
reported that the last Beatle to put
out an album was McCartney, who
released Wings ()ver America last
year. At any rate. it‘s been quite a
while.

it just isn't characteristic of the
music industry to have hot acts that
aren‘t producing for a long time.
Paul McCartney and George
Harrison particularly after their
last albums. were hot stuff.

So what is happening with them?
Who knows? ldon‘t, but l'm willing
toguess Maybe I‘ll start a bona fide
rumor:

The Beatles have gotten back
together and are working on an
album. Remember, you read it here
first. Of course, there have been
hundreds of Beatle reunion rumors
in the past. None of them had a hint
of truth. But i have lived on the edge
of my seat waiting for them to come
true.

The album will
Christmas.

Whooin. Correction. Ringo. 1 am
now told. released an album two
weeks ago. But l‘ll stay with my

be out for

original contention. I‘d rather start
a rumor than be right.

Oct. 15, allfunnies fairs can breath
a collective sigh of relief. That day,
the lastoriginal Lil' Abner cartoon
will appear in newsprint. And it's
about timeAl Capp was, to say the
least. losing his brains, if he hasn‘t
lost them already. He was the
cartoonist. His l.il' Abner lost all
sense years ago. The trivality of his
daily cartoon approached that of
Nancy.

Cartoons. The only reason for
getting up most days is to get to the
comics section. That is the only
reason [1] never subscribe to the
New York Times. They refuse to to
carry comics. A day without Beetle
Bailey is no fun at all.

By far the best and oddest cartoon
strip is Doonesbury. Creator Gary
Trudeau expresses more in one
panel than most cartoonists,
writers, or political columnists can
doona page. It‘s an odd cartoon in a
number of ways. Michael
Doonesbury, the strip‘s namesake,
has become a minor character—
appearing about once a month.

The subjects Trudeau deals with
aren't common to the funny pages.
Could you imagine a cartoon about
Nancy and Sluggo going to bed?

Newspapers tend to deal with the
cartoon in weird ways. They seem to
be undecisive as to whether
Doonesbury is a comic or a political
cartoon strip. So. it appears in
different newspapers in different
places. Some put it on the comics
page. Some put it on the editorial
page.

The lrxmgton Herald has been
totally confused and has it on its
“Tempo" (campus news) page,
which hm nothing to do with either
funnies or editorials. Strange.

Another odd thing about

 

Doonesbury again concerns how
newspapers treat it. Sometimes, the
content scares them so they chose to
not run it for a day or so.
Doonesbury is probably one of the
few cartoons that has been censored
in this way. A Boston paper refused
to run onestrip, which is often called

the “Guilty, Guilty, Guilty" cartoon.
In it, Trudeau practically convicted
Watergate conspirator John Mit-
chefl.

Many newspapers refused to run
the Joannie Caucus-Robert Redfern
series, which ended with the two in
bed.

Doonesbury is fun, even in-
formative tPanama Canal series).
\ Read it.

 

Harry B. Miller fl! is the self-
confessed scion of a well-to-do
family. “Growing Up Rich" appears
every Wednesday.

———Letters to the editor————————

UMWA

The Brookside strike in Harlan
Country is one struggle that made
the news. (See Harlan County,
U.S.A. tonight in Student Center
theatre.) But Brookside is not an
exception to the struggle that Ap-
palachian coal miners face—it is
more akin tothe rule:

Coal miners are still being killed
on the job—one every other working
day. Thousanch of organized miners
are still without union protection.
Coal miners still must fight at the
bargaining table for a fair share of
the wealth they produce.

Today in Stearns (McCreary
Comty) Ky., a strike against the
Stearns Mining Comapny's Justice
mine is about to begin its 16th
month. This strike has lasted longer
than the Brookside strike and, ac-
cording to organizers for the United
Mine Workers of America (UMWA).
has been more violent. But no film
company happens to be around
McCreary County and the media has
shown interest only in the violence.

Nevertheless, 151 miners and their
families have decided that coal at
Steam: will be mined safely or not
at al.

Tomorrow night an organizer
from tin UMWA, along with several
striking in inen and their wives from

Stearns will appear at the Univer-
sity to talk about their struggle to
gain a UMWA contract from the
Knoxville-based Blue Diamond Coal
Co. »
The program will provide a rare
Opponunity for the UK community
to hear firsthand what its like to be
on strike for 15 months and why
people are willing to make such
sacrifices. Questions will be
welcome.

The forum will begin 7:30
tomorrow night in the Student
Center (small) ballroom.“ is being
sponsored by the Student Center
Board's Contemporary Affairs
Committee and is endorsed by:
David Walls, assistant professor of
Social Professions; Charles Abner,
(Kentucky) American Federation of
State. County and Municipal Em-
ployes (AFSCME); The Bluegrass
National Organization of Women

(NOW); and The Militant
newspaper.

Bronsonllotler

UK employe

Chuck Shufford

UMWA

No tickets

it seems that once again the
students at UK have been screwed.
if one is fortmate enough to belong

_-- .- -.

to an organimtion related to UK or is
an alumni, then the person should
read no further. But if one happens
tobe a student who goes to collegeto
attend class, then that person will be
able torelate to this topic.

Not only did students get screwed
by notbeing able to bring a guest to
the Mississippi State-Kentucky
game, some students likely did not
even get to go themselves!

Then again, what the hell, they
only go to UK. Whyshould they be
allowed to purchasea single ticket?
After all, alumniare far more im-
portant. What could i have been
thinking of when l was disappointed
that i could not get a ticket?

i only pay for an activities card,
while alumni dish out thousands a
year to support this democratic
institution. And by damn, it's my
fault that! failed to get in a sorority
sol could request a ticket and be
"block-seated" with all the social
organizations.

Technically,l have no reason to
bitch. I'm only a student who wishes
to see my college football team play.
I'll be an alumnus in a comic of
years and then l'll get to see all the
games I wish to see by puchasing
season tickets which willsistain me
for life.

What a damn pitiful farce!

Jeny Miler
Am a. Scleces Sophomore

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rilh'll’f'KY KffRNl-Il.. Wednesday, October 12, l977—3

 

 

 

 

'Unrestrained' Cavett
returns to television

Popular talk show host Dick Cavett
returns to the world of late-night television
this week as the Kentucky Educational
Television tKETl network premieres The
Dick Cavett Show.

The program, which began this week on
Public Broadcasting System networks
across the country, will be aired nightly at
11 on KET, Channel 46 in Lexington.

Cavett will be doing what he did for ABC
several years ago. interviewing celebrities
and people in the news. At that time, he had
a reputation for being able to attract the
”ungettables" and was honored with an
Emmy Award for his program.

There will be differences in the public
television version of the show. Cavett will
only be interviewing one person in each of
the half-hour programs. There will be no
commercial messages.

“ Public television is the best place for The
Dick (‘avett Show.” said its host recently.
”The show can be unrestrained and unin—
terrupted. I‘m getting the best and the most
interesting people and intend to provide a
setting and atmosphere in which my guests
can be provocative. amusing and at times
surprising revealing.“

During the remainder of this week.
(Tavett's guests will be Harry and Jimmy
Ritz of the famed Ritz Brothers Trio. ar-
chitect Phillip Johnson and, on Friday.
singer-composer Carly Simon.

The program's guest list for the future
includes Washington Post editor Ben
Bradlee; skipper of the America Cup winner
"Courageous" and controversial sports
figure Ted Turner; and Marina Oswald.
widow of Lee Harvey Oswald. alleged
assassin of President John F. Kennedy.

Cavett. wholately has been starring in the
Broadway production of Otherwise
Engaged. is co-producer of the program
along with WNET of New York.

 

 

Illt'K ('.-\\'PI'I"F

Harlan Co. subject
of SCB film tonight

(lne ofthe few films to capture the essence
of Kentucky's coal miners and their way of
life will be presented tonight in the Student
Center Theatre.

llarlan County. l'.S.;\.. which chronicles
the contract fight between the l,‘nited \line
Workers and the Brookside Kline. ‘Alll in,-
shown at T and 9 pm. Admission is open to
UK students and staff for $1.

Awarded an Academy Award for Best
Documentary last spring. llarlan tells the
story of 180 mining families in their dispute
with the Duke Power Co. who owns the
Brookside Mine. Periodically erupting into
violence and bloodshed. the fight has been
going on since 1974.

 

 

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27 CBS NEWS wrll provrde live coverage of the drought at Parartrse Ranch
46 AS WE SEE IT 'New World‘ second game of the World Series forces Mitch Fears to mount a
explores San Francrsco schools from the City of the American costly effort to save the cattle
through the eyes of Asian- LeagueChampion andthe sugar cane
American students. Pontiac. 3:30 @ BUSTING LOOSE Trying to 11:00 @‘NEWS
Mich , students recommend that live up to a childhood pledge to DICK CAVETT SHOW Guests
restrictive school rules adopted help his friends. Lenny tells his any and Jimmy Ritz, lWO-ll’llRiS
alter 1971 noting be changed in buddies about a vacancy in hrs of the zany Ritz Brotherstrio
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_ BRADY BUNCH roommates who don‘t want to 11:!) THE TONIGHT SHOW Host.
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27 MYTHREESONS 8:57 18 NBC NEWSUPDATE Rivers Phyllis George, Neil
46 MACNEIL—LEHRERREPORT 9:00 18 THE OREGON TRAIL Simon
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Grizzly Adams loses his memory NIGHT MOVIES 'The Girl alled confidant Huggy Rear IS marked
after suffering a head inrury and. Hatter Fox‘ Ronny Cox. Joanelle for death after being robbed of a
pursued by a bounty hunter, Romero. Dramatization of the fortune he. had nio'nised to
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