xt7kd50fxv99 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7kd50fxv99/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1975-09-10 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, September 10, 1975 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 10, 1975 1975 1975-09-10 2020 true xt7kd50fxv99 section xt7kd50fxv99   

Vol. LXIV No. 10
Wednesday. September 10. 1975

 

KENTUCKY

81‘

an independent student newspaper

   

 

ouisville busing

Disruption of routine leaves bitter distaste

 

Kentucky State Police guard buses at Southern High School Tuesday afternoon
(above). Anti-busing sentiments are displayed at a storefront (bottom left) and
on a truck (bottom right) a block away from Valley High School.

Photos by Jack Koeneman

 

By WALTER HlXSON
Assistant Managing Editor
l.()l'ISVll.LE—A drive through
southern Jefferson County Tuesday
revealed in tense bitterness and frustration
over court—ordered busing.

Anti-busing sentiment is expressed in all
imaginable forms throughout this
predominantly bluecollar area which has
been victim to the most biting realities of
Judge James F. Gordon‘s desegregation
order.

At no place are these feelings of bit-
terness and frustration more acutely
evidenced than the area surrounding
Valley High School.

For nearly 40 years, students at the
county's oldest school didn’t resent the
now-ominous yellow buses which now
dominate the streets of Louisville. Now,
however, desegregation has ended those
days.

The community is now bitter with
distaste for the disruption in its routine.
Tense mothers now accompany their
children to bus stops in the morning and
are there, pacing nervously, awaiting their
return in the afternoon.

The people remember the violence of
Friday night in which their neighbors and
police were injured and are now forced to
resist only with anti—busing signs, hateful

I

‘ A

.A 5; '

el

 

D98 K PIC ('UCF

 

University of Kentucky
Lexington, Ky. 40506

 

glances and the blaring of their automobile
horns upon sight of a bus.

Signs and posters cover the entire
southern section of Jefferson County.
Some are crude — busing spelled with a
double 5 — simple scribblings on card-
board while others are carefully arranged,
a product of organized mass production.

They appearin front yards, gas stations,
chain restaurants, liquor stores, pet shops,
furniturestores and quick-stop food marts.

Some associate Gordon and county of-
ficials with Nazi‘s and Communists while
others are more basic — “busing is for the
birds, not our children.”

Some threaten —— f‘stop busing...or do
you want blood," scratched in dripping red
paint. Others warn — “your children now,
your home next" and “freedom is dead.”

Perhaps with more vigor and bitterness
than anywhere else, gas stations protest
court-ordered busing. Several station
windows displayed the sign “No gas for
buses."

One southwest Jefferson county station
attendant said he‘d turned down two bus
drivers and would continue to do so.
Another told ofhis boss, 3 man who he said
“don't take no shit off nobody” turning
down a “nigger“ bus driver.

Continued on page 4

 

SCB seeks
beer license

By TERRY McWILLlAMS
Kernel Staff Writer

The Student Center Board (SCB) is
looking into ways to legally serve beer in
the Student Center or at special social
events on campus.

Georgeann Rosenberg, SCB president,
said the present law prohibits possession
or consumption of alcoholic beverages and
drunkenness in a public place. “But
‘public place‘ is open to interpretation. If
we opened a pubin the Student Center, and

checked student ID’s and age, that is
certamly private, like a restaurant or
bar."

Rosenberg said the beer issue is “wide-
open“, because no specific law governs the
distribution of beer at the Univeristy.
However, six years ago, the issue was
taken to the Kentucky legislature, which
took no action.

The University of Louisville (U of L)
receives temporary beer licenses for
special events, such as its “Oktoberfest”.
Rosenberg said “it's a political thing. They
are much more lenient toward U of L
because it‘s not fully state-supported."

Also, officials are reluctant to grant
licenses because the drinking age is 21 and
many UK students are minors, Rosenberg

said. “But they forget the other side, the
students that are over 21, the staff, faculty,
graduate students and others."

But if SCB were licensed, Rosenberg
said, “I think it would be good to have the
older students and the staff intermingle in
a social atmosphere.

As for profitability, Rosenberg said,
“the SCB is checking various distributors
for cost ratios, and there is no problem. At
VPI (Virginia Tech), the money brought in
from their pub built a new student center”.

She said she anticipates the drinking age
lowered to 18 within a couple of years.
This, with possible Sunday beer sales in
Fayette County, will help change the at-
mosphere regarding beer sales at the
Student Center, she said.

In other action, SCB passed a proposal to
change the name of the Student Center to
“Student Union”. The change must be
approved by the Board of Trustees,
Rosenberg said.

The name change will tentatively take
place next semester.

“When you say ‘Student Center’, you
think of a pile of bricks. But when ‘Student
Union’ is said a fusion of people comes to
mind,” she said of the change.

SCB also d'Bcussed revamping the Little
Kentucky Derby (LKD) because of
lagging popularity in recent years.

“It’s turned into a blood-and guts thing.
The competition is just not fun anymore,"
Rosenberg said of the bicycle race which
involves Greeks and dorm residents.

  

Editorials do not roprvsvnt the opinions oi the l'nivvrsity.

editorials

Susu n Jones
Editorial Page Editor

Bruce \Viilgi's
Editor—in-(‘hir'f
.luck Kni'nomzm
Associate Editor

Letters and Spa from articles should be addressm to the Editorial Page Editor
Rmm lid Journalism Bunldma They should iX‘ typi'd, double spat 0d and slant-d
Leno's should not exceed MO words and So“ trum articles 750 words

(tinny Eiluurits
Managing Editor

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I
Felffer .
(.
667 Si
Student Senate to “it a tea
SE ILL AND HAVE pt
I LL (M Lot/5 i095. E 3
pomt of order ,
_. m
This year‘s version of the Student amendments to the motions, called j 2
Senate held its first meeting for a point of information and j ‘ cr
Monday night and, as always, proceeded to give personal views i @"7‘4 mm 74 W
there were a few fresh young faces on the subject and further moved 19
in the chambers as yet eager and with a prior motion on the floor. d‘
unburdened by the pressures of Seemingly fresheff-the-farm Pf
state. Agriculture Senator Charles d‘
First-of-the-year activism was Masters topped the evening With es
running high and everyone seemed his remark: ”What does table (as FEEL 2:
to take turns sounding like in tabling a motion) mean?” Well, 9- so
Diogenes— motions, amendments ”'5 all hOQWBSh anyway, Charlie. MD WV i
to motions and amendments to The senators seemed to know 0 “gel—76L SC
amendments rang out. about as much about the Univer- Oil/TV W:
Student Government President Si” community as they did about I . th
Jim Harralson, who also seemed a parliamentary procedure. Several ex
little nervously green behind the said they had never heard 0f the tw
ears, managed to successfully National Student Coalition Against Er
wield his gavel through an hour of Racism (NSCAR)' WhiCh spon- we
confused debate on a resolution sored the Louisvilleresolution.The ‘30
concerning busing in Louisville. Student Senate lent ”5 support to :18;
NSCAR last year after the coalition ‘
As a matter of fact, throughout . .
the entire meeting Harralson wasorganizedata nationalstudent j i-
. . . . convention in Boston.
exhibited a fairly extenswe But never mind, the year is
command 0f parliamentary young, asareseveralsenators. The MO ILL HATE
procedures T that’s definitely a senate did have the good sense to RUIMIUG
“’5‘ for 56 presidents. pass a Harralson-sponsored (I LIFE!
It was obvious, however, few proposal to adopt a set of by-Iaws fl IS (UH? ,
senators had even so much as been aimed at clarifying the procedure TE$0 L
in the same room with a copy of by which legislation movesthrough wt) Up
”Roberts Rules of Order.” They the senate. Clarification is ’
discussed motions when they something this senate definitely
should have been discussing needs.
r...

 

 

Down, set, hike!

Editor:

Since the number of bicycles on
campus has come close to a sell-out, i
feel that some signals should be called
about the proper attitude of cyclists at
the University.

DOWN: We must all realize that the

HIKE: Now that we’ve got the right
spirit about biking, let’s move down the
field, carefree yet cautiously. Use the
bike as it should be, as a safe and
economical method of transportation.

Al Smith
Economics sophomore

'Sob stories’

Letters

 

who have lived in sub-standard housing
all their lives, who have "paid" by now
being victims of a fouled-up economy
and who have always ”paid” because
they are not Thieu-rich of Kywealthy,
those Americans find your bi—weekly
complaints and Bus. Ad. (U.S.
educated!) whining too much, buster,
iust too much!

Matt Harrison

again.'l can only look forward to winter
and shudder.

Greg Sparks
Business administration sophomore

Shattered hopes

Editor: .
A recent column in the Kernel’s

‘ sports section prompted me to express

bicycle is legally a vehicle. Just like a .

Editor: 800 Rose St. . . .
car, it should beoperatedin compliance It is very hard for some of US ’8)“ my opinion toward its author and
with all traffic rules. When a violation . contents. The article, by John Vogel,
is incUrred, there can be penalties, DO payers, veterans' war‘scarred Park'ng haSSIG (SpG‘tS) editor, predicted a dismal

you need legal hassles? Besides, in any
scrimmage with a car, the cyclist
looses.

SET: As a vehicle, the bicycle must
give right-of-way to the pedestrian.
This is a turning point that must be
avoided. At UK it is bicycles on
sidewalks not people on bike paths.
Presently there are no University
restrictions on cyclists. lf, however,
more accidents like the collision of two
cyclists at Funkhouser and Library
Drives last year, occur, or when the
faculty”gets tired of bump-and-run
because of all the Eviel Jrs. around, it
will be worse than the NCAA guidelines
cancer-hing campus cycling. We
might even be banned from play en-
tirely. What an upset.

Americans to be subiected to Mr. Tham
Truong’s periodic complaints about
how little this country is doing for his
Vietnam relatives. The cry-baby ar-
ticle, front page, in today’s Kernel
(Sept. 2) is iust the latest in a series of
publicity-grabbing sob stories put out
by an over-age student, Vietnamese,
who has sat out his country’s war for at
least four years enioying every
amenity in the Bluegrass, far from the
Mekong Delta, Hamburger Hill, the
slums of Sa igon and the blood-drenched
rice paddies of lndo-China.

There are some of us who fought in
his country for him and his relatives;
we believe having lost an arm or leg, or
one’s life, Mr. Truong, in that war, is

payment to you all enough! Those

Americans who are now out of work.

Editor:

Living off campusand having to park
in Commonwealth Stadium is a hassle.
For some reason this year, there are
more cars than the stadium lots can
handle. Cars are parked everywhere,
blocking traffic, so even the buses
cannot make their usual stops inside
the lots. All of these cars also mean
more people riding the buses. A wait of
is to 20 minutes is not unusual and
usually longer to ride the buses.

Also brought to my attention by
another passenger is that there are only
two buses running between the stadium
and Funkhouser. Last year there were
three buses and they could handle the
students fairly well. More people and
less buses. The University has done it

season for the Cats. What he has done in
thearticle is to shatter hopes for a bowl
bid and to destroy the morale of the
players which Coach Curci has done so
well in instilling into each player. Mr.
Vogel was, however, kind enough to
predict one sure win for the Cats. The
remaining to games left three up for
grabs (which we were given the benefit
of the doubt), and seven sure losses.
Mr. Vogel wentas far as to tell students
to lay odds against the Cats that his
predictions were correct. I call on you.
Mr. Vogel, to leave the predictions to
Emily Dickinson, the odds making to
Jimmy ”The Greek" and iust write the
sports as it happens.

Joseph Flowers
Accounting sophomore

W. ‘M

u 1.1“ .

-¢--'-.

 

 

 

- ”rm-oowip

  

Women’s Studies

Coordinator says she hopes
need for program will cease

By LYNNE FUNK
Kernel Staff Writer

The coordinator of the
Women‘s Studies Committee
(WSC) hopes the group will
someday outlive its usefulness.

“The contributions, status and
potentialities of women have
been neglected,” said coor-
dinator Chris Havice, art history
instructor. “Our objective is to
make people as aware of
women‘s contributions as they
are of men’s.”

Formed in the late 60’s by
concerned faculty and students,
WSC was officially recognized in
1971 as a committee of the un-
dergraduate studies office. Their
purpose is to develop and coor-
dinate courses which will
eventually influence academic
disciplines to include information
about women’s contributions to
society, Havice said.

The humanities and social
sciences are the prime targets for
WSC. Six courses were offered
this fall: an anthropological
examination of women‘s roles,
two art history seminars, an
English class on images of
women, a human development
course on women in con—
temporary society and a nursing
unit on alcoholism.

Several dozen students are
turned away each semester from
Dr. Betty Rudnick’s popular
“Woman in Contemporary
Society" class, which has been
offered for three semesters.

Spring course offerings will be
decided within the next two
months, Havice said.

An Arts and Sciences (A&S)
topical major in women‘s studies
I's available, but the A&S faculty
council refused to establish a
degme~granting women’s studies
program in 1973. Status as a
program would enable WSC to
coordinate courses through a
central office and to list courses
under a separate heading in the
schedule book. Whether WSC will
again pursue status as a degree-
granting program is uncertain,
Havice said.

Exdiange of ideas concerning
the status of women is planned
through a series of colloquia,
which will be free and open to the
public. The first presentation will
be “Who Wants To Live in a Shoe:
An Unrehearsed Readers
Theatre on Women‘s Social
Role", by Kristin Valentine,
speech department, on Sept. 10.

The colloquium will begin at
7:30 pm. in 309 Student Center.

 

CHOW is a restaurant
located 919 8. Lime.

Potter, daily from H a

Job Openings

CHOW, opening September 13th, has openings
for cashiers, kitchen and maintenance help.

featuring Oriental food,

for information call 253-
2469, or stop by our location and ask for Donna
.m. to 2 am.

 

 

 

 
 

l‘

SUNDAY SERVICES:

lHllHHY HHPIISI

150 EAST HIGH (40507)
LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY

L. Reed Polk, Jr., Pastor

HIJHIIH

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bible Study Fellowship 9:45
Morning Service 11:00
Church Training 6:15
Evening Service 7:30
MID-WEEK SERVICE
Wednesday 6:30
Calvary Baptist Located Here
///East High Street
I . l i
o 0 pg
-3 -fi_Maayel Street
2 t DI
"‘ 93 Si
'4 Dorms ell-Coliseum
I Euclid Avenue
Student Center

 

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday. September

TUDENT GOVERNMENT
NEEDS YOU!

Student Government has several directorships
open in these areas:

. Student Affairs
* Student Services

Political Affairs
Finance

Public Relations

Applications can be picked up in Room 120 Student Center

ALSO

10, 1975—3

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Prices: Sb advance, $6.50 at door, General

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As school ends, tension mounts

(‘ontinued from page I

“One of our regular customer’s
told him to fill up that bus or_we
wouldn‘t get any more of his
business. Well, the boss said,
‘then pack up and get the fuck out
of here‘. “ The attendant laughed.

For the people at Valley, the
mood changed from one of bit«
terness to tension as the end of
the school day drew near. Car
horns honked at the Dixie High-
wayat one P.M. —— an hour before
school let out.

Troops of police cars — crty,
county and state and a National
Guard jeep also converged on the
old structure to join the
numerous officials already
stationed there.

A young boy — whose age has
yet to reach to double digits ~
bummed a cigarette and warned
there would be trouble after
school.

Police surveyed the area
scrupulously by checking
identification and running off
bystanders. They refused to
discuss the day's events inside
the school. One officer, adorned
in bandages on his left arm. said
he was injured in the violence
Friday night. With club and

 

  

STUDENTS and FACULTY

THURSDAY SPECIAL

STAGES

PANTS
SKIRTS

     

   
 
  

 

 

 

The Continuing Education Program for Women

The Continuing Education Program for Women
of the University of Kentucky requests the honor
of your presence at a reception in honor of you
who are twenty-five and older and are returning
to the University this Fall.

The President’s Room

Student Center
Thursday, September 18, I975
7:30~8:30 p.m.

R.S.V. P.
258~275l

revolver at his side, he was ready
again.

Across from the high school,
merchants remembered the
Friday night violence A texaco
station owner whose business
was locked and partially boar~
ded, left a sign for onlookers. It
read: “The proprietor of this
station is hospitalized at the
hands of our law enforcers?.“

Down the way, the manager of
a Kentucky Fried Chicken outlet,
totally worried and afraid as two
p.m. approached, told of the
violence and how the restaurant
was teargased.

Like a woman who commented
earlier. he said the Louisville
(Tourier-Joumal didn't print the
whole story. “They didn‘t tell the
half of it," he said.

He told reporters to “call ‘em
like you see ‘em, don‘t be like
them. And run over and tell me if
anything happens so I can close
up." But nothing did happen.

Blacks who last year were
students at Shawnee High School,
left Valley first, in four buses.

“We wanted to get them out
first — it could get confusing if
they all went together," said a

 
 

 
 

    
      
     
   

DRY CLeaneHs

 

 
        
 
      
      
 
 
    

  
  

Valley teacher who has lived in
southwestern Jefferson County
all his life. He said “it went real
smooth today."

As the buses carrying the
blacks departed, horns blasted.
One and sometimes two guard-
smen and-or police accompanied
each bus while police cars, some
unmarked, mingled between the
buses. Horns blared — one old
car sported a Confederate flag.

The school‘s white students
remained on it's north side as the
bus superintendent, police and
faculty slowly organized the
boarding of buses — a process not
yet totally organized by Jefferson
County school officials.

Many area residents and those
studentsnot being bused watched
from the school grounds and
neighboring back yards and
porches as the students were
shuffled into buses. Finally, at
2:50 p.m., the big yellow buses
began to pull out. Enforcement
officials were again on board and
in cars spaced between the buses.

The students on board and the
50 or so who were forced to wait
for a bus that somehow failed to
reach the school, cheered as the
last buses pulled out. It was all
pulled off smoothly — any trouble
would be after school — but by
then students would be gone.

Many students and community
residents said the trouble was
over. “They got it out of their
system Friday night," said one.
As many, maybe more, said it
was just beginning.

“I believe and hope everything
will be okay...they‘ll settle for
honking their horns,” said one
Valley faculty member. Added
another teacher. “The lid’s on
now...but how long no one

knows."

  
     

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sports

 

 

‘Super salesman' says
departments are helpful

By JOHN VOGEL
Sports Editor

Perhaps the best salesmen in
the world are coaches. Like their
counterparts in the business
world they fight each year to
meet a quota, to satisfy their
bosses and boost their product.

Swim Coach Wynn Paul is one
of those super salesmen and his
job entails many aspects, one of
the more important being to
satisfy his prospect's academic
hunger. Paul must not only
convince a recruit that his swim
program is worth getting into.
but he must also persuade the
swimmer that the academic area
the prospect is interested in will
be good enough for him.

’ Vogel

“I try to emphasize that this is
THE state university of Kentucky
and that we‘re going to have a
good academic program in just
about everything we have." Paul
said. “The fact that we have
graduate programs is a good
example.“

Paul does not handle recruiting
duties by himself, though. His
cohorts include representatives
of every department across
campus.

“If you call the department up
a couple of days in advance and
ask them who they have that can
help me talk to potential
students, they are very
respondent," Paul noted.

“They‘re always looking for
people for their own depart-
ment," Paul said.

While the cooperation between
University departments and the
athletic department is buddy-
buddy, you rub my back and I‘ll
rub yours. Paul must have
several departments he
especially feels comfortable
taking a recruit to visit.

 

“I think the medical school and
dental school are a tremendous
attraction to our school,” Paul
said. “The dental school being
ranked third in the nation speaks
for itself. When we walk over
there with a recruitand he sees a
freshman, sophomore and senior
dental student working as a

 

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team, this is really quite im-
pressive to the recruit.“

“Every school I have taken a
recruit to for an interview with a
professor has, 1) been very
helpful in attaining somebody to
talk to and, 2) been
knowledgeable and straight-
forward." Paul said.

“I can't think of a time when
someone hasn‘t given a good
sales pitch."

There are two sides to
everything and Paul admits to
losing recruits for one reason or
another which are related to the
University.

“We lost one boy because of the
art department,” Paul said. “I
think he was interested primarily
in the graphic arts and our
particular art department does
not get into graphic arts on quite
the scale that he wanted.

“The head of the art depart-
ment was quite frank in that he
said they needed new facilities.“
Paul said. “I do think the
Reynolds Building leaves
something to be desired. The
prospect ended up going to Kent
State which is strong on graphic
arts. so it was my tough luck."

Another department that ended
up not satisfying a prospect's
academic hunger was jour—
nalism.

“We had a fellow who came
down last year interested in
journalism.” Paul said. “I don’t
think we lost him because of
anything he saw here and this
was before the story broke about
the school‘s accreditation
problem.

“This fellow did point out to me
that after he talked to a couple of
people in the department it didn‘t
seem like we had a big program

in creative writing," Paul said.
“But, then l‘m not sure which
colleges do have big creative
writing programs."

The state of Kentucky does not
have a veterinary school. This
has lost Paul probably six
recruits in the past few years.

“We've had a half-dozen
fellows in here the past few years
who wanted a pre-veterinary
major," Paul said. “Of all the

states that don't have a vet,

school, Kentucky, unbelievably
doesn’t have one. We have lost

some good people to Auburn and .

Ohio State where there were vet
schools.“

Overall, Paul said he couldn‘t
gripe much.

”I can listen to what my guys
on the team say. If they said ‘this
department stinks‘ or ‘this
department has graduate
assistants teaching upper level
courses.‘ I‘d hear it.

“But, I don't." Paul smiled.

O

The other day at the Shivley
Sports Center the K—Men's
Association, a varsity alumni
athlete organization, presented a
live 12-week-old wildcat to the
University.

Football Coach Fran Curci
suggested, “Let’s put a turkey in
there and see what he‘ll do."

UK plays the Virginia Tech
Gobblers this Saturday.

Bill Spivey, who represented
the K-Men, had an even better
suggestion. “Let‘s hang a big
orange in the top of his cage
during the Tennessee game and
lethim rip it to shreds. The crowd
will love it," Spivey laughed.

 

John Vogel is the Kernel sports
editor and his column appears
weekly in the Kernel.

Earn $$$ Weekly

BLOOD PLASMA

DONOR CENTER

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Monday - Saturday 9:30 a.m. - 4:45 p.m.

 

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Field Jackets
Book Packs
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Combat Boots
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Flight Jackets
Camping Equip.
Flannel Shirts
Bike Packs
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We Carry All Types
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254-7013

THE KENTl'('KY KENNEL, Wednesday. September I0. [975—5

 

 

 

 

IMMANUEL
Baptist Church

3100 Tates Creek Rd.

Bus Shedule on Campus Every

Sunday Morning

8:45 a.m. Haggin 8. Donovan Halls
stop at Huguette Dr.

8:55 a.m. Blazer, Boyd 8. Homes Hall
stop at basketball courts on Euclid.

9:00a.m. Sorority Drive 8. Columbia Ave.

9:05 a.m. Blanding Tower & Complex Halls
stop on Complex Drive by Basketball courts.

 

 

 

 

HEADWAVES ROCK... WKDJ STEREO 100

Best Regressive Music ll p_m nightly
r—teature albun's i am.

WED. The Blackbyrds
THURS The Troqgs

FRI. Masha" Tucker,
Searchin tor a Rainbow

SAT. Jean Luc Pontz

Upon the Vifinqs of Music

SUN. John Prrine Common Sense
MON. Ritchie Blacknore’s Rainbow
Tues. All Jarreau

We Got By

Conflict: Wed 8. Thurs, 62w-9‘IXTAblbum at 8.

WKDJ HEADWAVES JAZZ

2—4 am Sat. & Sun. morning
Sponsored by O’Keefe’s

HEADWAVES QUARTER NIGHT
AT O’KEEFE’S
EVERY WED. NIGHT
357 W. SHORT

 

 

 

 

ennui. me man-
wmmwnaao'M-sus

FAYETTE MALL .ilow,
........3.23-.°:e.2........ summ- w
_ _,;. .

 

The terrifying motwn' picture
from die terrifying Mlbatoefler.
TIMES:
2:” 4:50

TURFLAND MALL

NAHEQOSFUH'. a:
A .ANI Atria.

:‘7 («INC

 

 6—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Wednesday. September 10. 1975

classifieds

 

FOR SALE

1967 AUSTIN HEALEY MK Ill m,
eioellent condition. Cistom hardtop, real
collector's item, mo. 2.544502. 3512

MATCHlliK; COUCH AND CHAIR, good
cmdition. S654», call 546598 or 277-349
after 4:31. 5510

SRSI CALCULATCR. new, (all 25341047,
performs metric conversions. standard
divations. many otter function. 4.510

AKC BORZIO (Russian Wolfhomd). 8
month old fermlc, very reasonable, phcne
277-290. 4516

LUDWIG DRUMS and Cymbals, two
weeks old. call 26619:!) after 6. 5510

1914 CHEVY IMPALA. 2-door, air radio.
16,11!) milesexcellent, 277 -1555 after 4 p.m.

5512

PLANTS- Pooh's corner, Jefferson
Viaductand High. Year around 10 per can
student discount. 5511

1967 FURY 111, rue great, 5625, call Nlark
after 3. 2$8487. 4511

1972 CHEW VEGA Hatchback, 4speed
transmission, am-fm radio, taking best
offer, 252-5370 8512

1964 VOLKSWAGON, runs good, 2300, 16
ft. fiberglasscanoe, 2200, call 886958 local.
8512

MONTE CARLO, Landan 1974 loaded with
extras, blk blk 16,(I)0 miles, sking
$4,195“). Call 2661621 .3 272-7250. 8511

1974 PLYMOUTH scanp, air. power
steering, under 130!) mile. call 298-5116
evenings. 8512

1974 SUZUKI T5185, road aid trail, 6(-
cellent condition, helements included. 266
7278

71 FORDMACH I, needs work. sell cheap.
also western living room, 555996. 8510

1971 SUZUKI TR-185, sell or trade for
smaller. newer street bike, 277 5221. 8
511

1972 OPEL GT, excellent mndition, 32
mpg, call 2335969, after 52(1) 272-8994.
9512

'71 DODGE DEMON V-8 318, 3speed. 18
24m.p.g.,$1,450. 29966109

12 INCH COLOR T.V. Magnavox for sale,
3 years, asking 100, 257 11(0. 8512

NEW STEREO equipment at near used
prices, maior manufactures, filly
guaranteed, Scott, 252-7816. 9511

1974 ENCYCLOPEADIA Brittanica,
never used, original cmt 700, must sell,

450, 277-17w. 8513

1941 HARLEY DAVIDSON motor frat
sméssion, professionally rebuilt, needs some
reassembly, 540100, 1 312 295611. 9511

1970 650CC TRIUMPH TIGER. $90011),
1973 350cc Yamaha super fast, moo, 1974
Kawasaki NRC, 5100, 254-3526. 9511

1972 FORD GRAN TORINO, all extras,
needs transm’ssion work. Make an offer.
call 2728311 after 5:00 p.m. 9515

FUJI 10speed, almost brand new, suntour
derailleur mornings, after 5 p.m. 272-4118.
9511

SANYO STEREO system with can $110.
Call 269-5933 afte' 9 p.m. 9510

CARPET REMNANTS, lowest prices on
all styles, sizcs, colors. Renmant World, 938
Vtfinchester Road. 252 0909. 27510.

MOTORCYCLE ‘973 T5 185 Suzuki, low
mileage, mint condition, rack 8. helnets.
277-6506. 10512

MAGNAVOX PORTABLE TV, Zenith
Portable Stereo, good cmdition, easonable,
272-2132, after 60). 10516

BOYS ONE SPEED Huffy bicycle, 525.00.
good condition. 2557872. 10512

1970 ECONOLINE 310 van, insulated an
paneled. good price, inmire at $1 5. Upper.
apt. 3. 10512

63 VWF, AM+FM+5W RADIO Holley 21:11
dual of dist, fl70213 after 9pm. 10516

1965 WAC GTO, m outditim.
convu'table, call mm. 10512

6| MALIBU IMAM paws steering
brakes. a‘r, good runiru condition.