xt7dbr8mgw10 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dbr8mgw10/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1995-11-01 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, November 01, 1995 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 01, 1995 1995 1995-11-01 2020 true xt7dbr8mgw10 section xt7dbr8mgw10  

 

 

 

ESTABLISHED 1894

 

Students push recycling plan

 

Group hopes to increase support

By Stacy Schilling
Staff Writer

Plastic bottles, cans, newspa-
pers and paper can be recycled on
a daily basis if students and staff
take the time to de osit these
items in their proper p ace.

That’s the message the Resi-
dence Hall Association is using to
help expand its (in—campus recy-
cling program.

“It doesn’t take a special gifted
person to do this; every person
can do it,” said accounting junior
Wesley Crick, who is also co-

recycling coordinator for RHA.

“There are those students who
are really into recycling and then
there are those who do not under-
stand what we are doing.”

Crick and hospitality manage-
ment sophomore Marsha Over-
street hope to expand the current
recycling program, which was
established in 1993 by former UK
student Scott Razzino.

The program has been gaining
more momentum Since its incep-
tion, but the progress has been
slow. Although response has been
mostly positive, the organizers

WEATHER Cloudy today, high
near 80; chance ofrain tonight,
low near 70; rain tomorrow,
high near 70.

TYNE THE: The UK men ’s soccer team

tied Bowling Green yesterday to finish third
in the MAC Conference. Story, page 5.

 

 

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY. LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY

said the hardest part is getting
large numbers of peo le involved.

A plan is being eveloped by
RHA to romote recycling to a
wider au ience in the residence
halls.

Crick and Overstreet are the
only students who currently are
involved in the pro ram.

Crick oversees t e north side of
campus and Overstreet keeps a
close eye on the south side of cam-
pus.

“\Ve need help," Overstreet
said. “It takes more than two peo-
ple to do this project.“

Crick and Overstreet ho e that
new students will get involi/ed to
help their expansion efforts.

 

Well

November I , 1995
0 Classifieds 7 Diversions 2
ZN _(.'omic 4 Sports 4

(.‘rosmord 5 Viewpoint 5

 

 

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1971

 

“Our school is a ood place to
start because it cou d affect us in
the real world,” Crick said.

(Erick became involved in the
program because of an interest in
the environment and the improve-
ment of the quality of life.

Overstreet said recyclin had
always been a part of her amily
life and this seemed like a perfect
fit.

“It’s important to recycle,”
Overstreet said, “because even
though it may not seem like much,
you’re saving the environment.”

Students interested in becom-
ing involved with recycling in the
residence halls can contact the
RHA office at 323-1919.

\

 

    

 

‘1; .

MATT BARTON Kernel sir/f

T088 IT “joumalimfi‘eshman Amy Fadool (left) and Emily Ragan, an
undeclared freshman, use the recycling facilities in Donovan Hall.

O'COOOOUOIOOCIOOOOIIO..000......OI.0....O...0.00.0000...00......0..00......O....0.00.00...OOOOOOOOOOOIOOIOIIOOOOC0......00000000......0000000000.0.0.0000...

Ball for a good time?

 

 

By John Abbott
Senior Staff lVriter

Have you ever wonder if you really
could have a good time with Jenny at 555—

4573;

Or maybe you’d have better luck with

Bruce?

As it turns out, it’s not so easy to find

OUT.

A recent survey of the stall walls in the
men’s rooms of 12 UK buildings turned up

only four useful examples.

Or, you don’t have to be gay to write
graffiti.

So what, ifanything, does such a prolif-
eration of homosexual markings prove?

In “Graffiti: Two Thousand Years of
Wall Writing,” author Robert Reisner sug—
gests a connection between the number of
gay references and the general preoccupa-
tion of a society with homosexuality.

The less accepted it is as a practice, the
more often such thoughts will show up in

the private confines ofa restroom.
Reisner cited a study in

 

It also made one thing clear:
what a lot of guys have on their
minds when they're on the can is
other guys.

The vast majority of the
markings —— some in pencil,
some in pen, some carved right
into the metal — consisted of
anonymous, graphic descriptions
of gay sex or virulent condemna—
tions of it.

In a library restroom, a
GVVM (gay white male, in per-
sonal ad-speak) begs the reader
to give him a call, although the
number has been scratched out.

 

A presumably talented indi-

which graffiti from the Philip—
pines — where homosexuality
. . isn’t so controversial — was
com ared with American
A great deal of “angles.
grafiitz may The Philippine sample con-
bave little to do tained fewer homosexual refer-
with an engcs- , ”
individuals “ Homosexuality, he wrote,
he.” seems to preoccupy Ameri—
P9,“ cans to an inordinate degree, as
V if it were some exotic disease.”
I985stud So, do any guys out there
5W0?“ still think about girls? One
Em aria State does.
mversity ACcording to his scrawl in
White Hall, he thinks you

 

 

vidual advertising in the base-

ment of Pence Hall wants to know if any—
one would like to sample his oral abilities.

should “throw her down,
knock her out, rape her and tatoo (sic) your
name on her forehead.”

 

Messages in both White Hall Classroom
Building and the Business and Economics
Building announce sexual escapades to be
held in the Seaton Center sauna.

Finding an abundance of homosexual
references doesn’t necessarily mean there is
an unusually large population of gay men

In B&E, one can find “Get a haircut.
Get a job,” arguably an appropriate topic in
a building full of business majors.

Anderson and McVey bathrooms were
nearly unmarked, but Patterson Office
Tower was an unexpectedly rich source of
material.

 

I" "IE 81!“: Graffiti lines the stalls in bathrooms throughout buildings on

campus.

on campus.
5

SIM MVEBSTICK Kernel staff

As a 1985 study by researchers at Empo—
ria State University noted: “A great deal of
graffiti may have little to do with an indi—
vidual’s psyche.”

Here, one author declares that “Malv

colm X was a racist.”
Another offers a crude rendering of two

See GRAFFITI on 4

KB debate gets ugly

lobbyists win
battle to vote
down aiil outs

By Danielle Dennison
Staijriter

Under immense pressure from student
lobbyists, the United States Senate
a proved an amendment last week which
eliminated several budget cuts to federal
student aid programs, but student lobbyists
said the battle has only begun.

The reconciliation bill, sup-

Although the 99-0 vote in the Senate is a
major gain in the fight to keep student aid,
Ross said the battle is far from over.

Under the Senate budget proposal, the
relatively new Direct Lending Program
will be capped at 20 percent, while under
the House’s bud et proposal the program
will be eliminatetIcompletely.

UK implemented the Direct Loan Pro-
gram last year and has found the program
to be extremely beneficial to students

“It’s a good program,” said Judy Mar-

' shall, assistant vice chancellor for Adminis-

tration. “It’s more work for us, but it’s such
a good deal for students that we entered it
in its second year.”

If the pro ram is capped at 20 percent,
Marshall sai UK could lose the program
and would have to go back to the older,

more complicated system.

 

ported b many of the same
individua 5 who created various
cuts in student aid, eliminated
provisions made in the Senate’s

66

“Telling people who are in
the program to get out of the
program is devastating,” said
Jack Blanton, vice chancellor

first bud et ro osal which It’snwavim'y for Administration”
amounte to £55.?! billion dif- but a big “9?. Although the DH?“ Loan
ference in the amount of stu- Min definitely Program is still at risk some

dent aid set to be eliminated.
The bill cut the .85 percent

tax on all student loans (which

would be paid by the universi-

moving in the
right direction.” step.

say that the elimination of
some cuts is at least a small

“It’s not a victory, but it’s a

ty), restored the six month More Boa big Sfep.” said R985. “We’re
grace period on loan interest The National gsfimtelynmovmg in the right
afte d t' d id Association irection.

an iris-:5: 1:031:65 (12$? e Students-formalin President Bill Clinton has

The victory came after stu-
dent groups spent large

 

Eromised that he will veto any
udget that calls for cuts in

 

 

amounts of time making phone
calls, writing letters, e-mailing decision
makers, and personally speaking with influ-
ential senators, said Marc Ross, director of
legislative affairs for the National Associa-
tion of Students for Higher Education.

“If it wasn’t for the large amount of
effort we put forth, it (the cut) probably
never would have been changed,” Ross
said. “Lobbying is very important.”

\ 0

education or health care;
therefore, some say that the real fight will
come after the bill is considered and
refused by the President.

“We’re acting out a drama and the
script calls for Republicans to reconcile
their budget and send it to the president,”
Blanton said. “Then the script calls for the
the President to veto the budget. It’s mean-
ingful playacting. It’s a political dance.”

\

 

By Stephen Trimble
Senior Staff Writer

On Halloween night, the can-
didates for governor tried to
expose each other’s tricks and
also throw out some treats to
voters during their last debate on
Kentucky Educational Televi—
sion.

Lt. Gov. Paul Patton, the
Democratic candidate, narrowed
next week’s election against his
opponent, Republican Larry
Forgy, to an issue.

“Yes, the real question in this
campaign is who you can trust,”
Patton said.

At various times during the
hour—long debate, Patton point—
ed to Forgy’s failure to disclose
his business transactions and not
disclosin a possible conflict of
interest orgy, an attorney, had
in the Big Rivers Electric Corp.
scandal.

Forgy was an attorney for the
troubled power company based
in western Kentucky. Now it is
in bankruptcy court with a $1
billion debt, although it is
unclear if Forgy had any involve-
ment.

But Porgy said he isn't releas-
ing the section of his income tax
records that show his business
deals because he has made some
poor investments that he doesn't
want Patton's attorneys to dis-
tort.

“You can trust Paul Patton to
make the most vicious charges
against me in this campaign,”

\

Forgy said, calling his oppo-
nent’s campaign the most nega-
tive he has witnessed in Ken-
tucky politics.

Forgy argued that voting for
Patton elects the “same old
thing” back to Frankfort. The
Democratic Party has won each
election for governor the past 24
years.

“I haven’t been there in 24
years — almost 25,” said Forgy, a
Lexington attorney.

Kentucky’s six-year old
sweeping education reforms
became a significant duel in the
debate.

“I want to make this clear
because of all that the media has
distorted,” Forgy said. “I have
never said that KERA needs to
be re aled. It needs to be per-
fectedis

For called for a review of
the RA system led by Ken-
tucky teachers and parents, who
he said were left out of the
reform process in 1989.

In addition, Forgy targeted
the ungraded primary 5 stem,
and mandatory portfolios or sci-
ence and math classes as reforms
that need reform.

Patton promised no specific
steps, but also called for a com-
prehensive review of the entire,
roughly 960-page reform law.
The evaluation could be con-
ducted like when the initial
reforms were made in 1990 —
led by the General Assembly,
Patton said.

 

NEWS'hytes

m Separatist vote
tails by narrow margin

MONTREAL -— Stun by defeat in the seces-
sion referendum, Queiec Premier Jacques
Parizeau said yesterday he will resign as head of
the bitterly divided province at year’s end.

He also voiced regret at the way he had blamed
the loss on non—French immigrants. but he
stopped short of an outright apology for a diatribe
that drew a firestonn ofcriticism.

Parizeau underscored his continuing support
for the separatist cause that has been at the heart
of his long political career. He said his separatist
Parti Quebecois would choose new leadership
capable of achieving independence for the mostly
French-speaking province.

Parizeau, 65, was elected remier last year after
promising to hold a referen um on secession. His
side lost Monday, but only narrowly -— 50.6 per—
cent to 49.4 percent.

But at a time when the separatists could have
been taking heart at their strong showing,
Parizeau shocked even his allies with a incendiary
speech at campaign headquarters, blaming the
defeat on immigrants.

“It’s true we have been defeated, but basically
by what?” Parizeau said. “By money and the eth—
nic vote."

m Stage set tor historic talks

DAYTON, Ohio — A somber President Clin-
ton, hoping to set the stage for a settlement,
warned the leaders of Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia
'esterday that they were undertaking what could
be “the last best chance we have for a very long
time" to end Europe’s deadliest conflict since
\Vorld War II.

Delegations headed by Presidents Slobodan
Milosevic of Serbia, Franjo Tudjman of Croatia
and Alija Izetbegovic of Bosnia were arrivii g .epa—
rately last night for the U.S.-run talks opening
today at VVright—Patterson Air Force Base.

Accused of starting the war in Bosnia 42
months ago, Milosevic was the focus of US-
peacemaking efforts. And as he left Belgrade, the
ardent Serbian nationalist called for “a spirit of
impartiality and objectivity," saying an accord
should treat all sides fairly.

At the height of his eight—year reign of a
shrunken Yugoslavia, Milosevic is thought by
American officials to be capable of arm—twisting
Bosnian Serbs to accept a peace treaty.

Clinton 9818 II'IIISIIIII'IaIlIIII, GIIIII‘IY lllllS

WASHINGTON ~ Con ress sent to Presi—
dent Clinton yesterday spentfing bills for trans-
portation and federal energy programs that would
cut funds for mass transit and Amtrak subsidies
and renewable energy research.

The president has indicated he will sign both
bills, two of 13 appropriations measures that will
fund the federal government in the 1996 fiscal
year that began Oct. 1.

The $37.5 billion transportation spending bill,
approved 87-10 by the Senate yesterday after
bein passed 393-29 by the House last week,
woufil provide $1 billion more than the adminis-
tration requested.

NAMEa'ropping

Brown charged with assault clam

AIKEN, S.C. —— James Brown is in trouble
again over an alleged assault on his wife.

Brown, 62, was charged with criminal domestic
violence after his wife, Adrienne, called 91 l asking
for medical help, sheriff’s
spokesman Don Bicrrnann said.

He was freed on $940 bond.
His wife of more than 10 years was
treated at a hospital and released.

Brown's lawyer, Buddy Dallas,
wouldn’t comment, except to say
“it’s just another story in the con-
tinuing saga of James and Adri-
enne Brown.” an“

Brown served nearly three years in prison after
he was arrested in September 1988 for leading
police on a car chase between South Carolina an
Georgia.

Cmpiledfim wire reports.

\ x

 

 

 

  

«ant'I‘M1AMmmmeW’m.‘tfi‘W.w‘ V?“ “ft “ m, . _. 9‘. fin.“ ». , g“ .

k
. _ 2 Wednesday. November I, I 995. Kenneth Kernel

érlilllroclrlage is going Nubile

By Matthew DoFoor
Senior Staff W'riter

Versatility is everything for the
Nubile Thangs.

Their unconventional rap sheet

includes appearances on every-
one’s favorite benign crime-stop-
ping show “America’s Most
Wanted” and a moment of patrio-
tism singing “The Star—Spangled
:Banner” before a White Sox game
3t Comiskey Park.
, The members also served as a
(reincarnation of Buddy Holly and
3he Crickets in a national tour of
'the Truman O’Rourke Theatre’s
production of “Buddy: The
Buddy Holly Story.”

Singer and bassist Lindsay
jones and drummer john Noyes
‘played Crickets while guitarist
_Chris Rudy fulfilled his childhood

dream of playing Buddy.

The Thangs will be playing
tonight at the Wrocklage. The
group’s latest tour is in support of
Tough Lurk, Fathoy. Fathoy is a six—
song CD produced on the Nubile
Thangs’ own record label, Full
Size Hut.

The Thangs came from the
ripe picking ground of Winston-
Salem, N.C., but had to move to
Chicago because of the limited
exposure to the music scene in
VVmston-Salem.

Self—described as a mix between
the Replacements and James
Brown, the Thangs provide an
ample amount of slop rock and
knee pumping funk to live up to
the claim. Chunks of slabby guitar
fall over their songs that make
most bands appear to be taking it
easy.

Effective for some, but awk-
ward for most, the “We’re not
trying too hard” attitude and
sound works marginally.

Tough Lurk, Fatboy features the
unlikely “Supermodel of Dayton."
Another song, “Perfect Perfuncto-
ry Pants,” gets the alliteration of
the year award.

“Kill and Kill Again” is a quak-
ing assault of guitar skronk and
snaring drums.

The title of the politically cor-
rect, irreverent “Prayer for the
Easily Challenged” offers a respite
from the intensity, if only for a
minute, until the carnage starts
again.

Don’t be fooled by the appar-
ent grueling attack of the music.
But then, don’t be suckered by the
group’s “unalternative alternative
to the alternative,” either.

 

"EMESMY l’lGlli runs The Nubile Thongs, a punk
Holly and the Cricket: in a stage production of

 

 

 

Photo fumirbrd

-pop group from Winston-Salem, N.C., once played Buddy
‘The Buddy Holly Story.’ The group play: at the Wrotklage tonight.

 

. k

LS AT

 

Attention Pre-Law Studentsll

PREP

Weekend

Friday, November 17th 6:30-9:30 p.m.
AND
Saturday, November 18th, 10:00 a.m.—1:00 p.m.

Workshop includes:
0 Test taking strategies
0 Preparation for the writing sample
0 A mock testing of the LSAT under timed 8:
simulated conditions

COST: $30

Registratlon forms at Central Advising,
:09 Miller Hall, or call 257-3383.

REGISTER EARLY”

 

 

 

      

‘i .
i, ‘

A car.
An apartment.

(g3; Ajob.
\"" Lost&found.

1" 4‘ _

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asessofih- oullfrndrt
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in the Kernel
Classifieds.
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CLaSSil=ieDS

Call 257-2871 to advertise.

‘1

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'3" 4"
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‘copyoats' apes other popular thrillers

By Dan O'Neill
Contributing C ritic

“Copycats,” the most recent
production in film’s serial killer
genre, is a clever, intriguing
thriller with few noticeable flaws.

Void of excessive Hollywood
action clichés, “Copycats” scores
high on the entertainment scale.
The film’s underlying pessimistic
message and fascinating murders
iprevail to make this movie a suc-
'cess.

The film even made my pathet-
ic moviegoing experience worth-
while. Although the movie theater
was packed, forcing my friend and
me to sit in the front row, I was
later reassured that the last few
dollars I used for admission were
spent well.

It’s a commentary on the film’s
success that the woman I sat next
to (who felt it was necessary to
predict every scene aloud) wasn’t
right on any of her forecasts.

With my neck bent back as far
as possible to view the entire
screen, I enjoyed watching the
intelligent “Copycats.”

Sigourney

take to the bi screen to play mur-
dering pschopath Darryl Lee
Cullen. Imagine the charming,
romantic musician in a role that
has him resembling

 

Weaver, coming off
two atrocious perfor-
mances in “Death and
the Maiden” and
“Alien 3,” redeemed
herself with a fine
portrayal of the lead
role. She plays crimi-

fl‘

MllIlEreview
V

 

Ned Beatty’s inbred
friend in “Deliverance.”

Filling out the cast is
Academy Award winner
Holly Hunter, who
shows us wh she was a
mute in “T e Piano.”
Aside from her overly

nal psychologist annoying voice, Hunter
Helen Hudson, *** is good as M._]. Mona-
whose expertise lies in han, an ambitious
the field of serial ‘Comcm,’ detective investigatinga
killers. stars Sigourney series of local murders.

She develo s a o— Weaverand Monahan and her
rafphobia — the ear Harry Connirlz partner (Dermot Mul-
0 open places — fr roney) recruit Hudson

after a near—death

 

out of retirement for
assistance with the case.

 

 

encounter with one of
her crazed subjects (Harry Con—
nick]r.).

No, that’s not a misprint —
Connick and his choirboy looks

The doctor and the detectives are
drawn into a cat-and-mouse game
with the m sterious figure who is
imitating t e murders of notori—

ous serial killers Son of Sam, Ted
Bundy and Jeffrey Dahmer.

Borrowing from “Silence of the
Lambs,” Hudson’s imprisoned
attacker, the animated Cullen, is
consulted for.- help in finding the
elusive assassin.

However, instead of Cullen
asking for a prison cell with win—
dows, he goes for the more con-
ventional offer of a pair of
Weaver’s panties.

The ensuing ending, along
with the rest of the movie, has sur-
prising, ingenious moments, yet at
times is listless and dreary.

With all of its surprising plot
twists, the script is played out with
Hunter’s conventional—ending
heroics.

The film’s final scene doesn’t
quite achieve this goal like other
serial killer thrillers “Seven” and
“Natural Born Killers.”

These few blemishes keep the
commendable “Co ycats” from
fulfilling its potentia greatness.

Bob Weir remembers Garcia, talks about iuture

By John Rogers

.‘Ixroemted Prev: Writer

Bob Weir recalls it as though it
were yesterday, how he andjerry
Garcia crossed paths and, in the
time it took to knock on a door,
began a musical odyssey that
would take two eerily aligned
words, Grateful Dead, and turn
them into a household name.

“It was New Year’s Eve of
1964,” Weir says, his voice wamr-
ing to the memory. “He was wait-
ing for his students to show up
and l walked by the back alley
behind this music store he was
teaching in.”

“I apprised him that it being
New Year’s Eve, his students
probably weren’t going to show
up," Weir recalls, chucklin . “We
waited awhile and they dign’t, so
we broke into the front of the
store where they kept the instru-
ments and we jammed all night
long.”“Within a week we had
thrown together a jug band,”
\Veir continued. “About a year
later that turned into a rock ’n’
roll band."

Soon after, the band
changed its name from the War-
locks, and before you knew it 30
years had slipped by. The Grateful
Dead had become an institution.

To the public it has been an
institution in flux since Garcia
died ofa heart attack on Aug. 9 at
age 53.

Althou h Garcia sometimes
had talker? of the band surviving
him, that seemed unlikely amid

the shock that followed his death.
Now, Weir says, it might be so.

“I more or less expect that
everybody’s going to want to get
together and play again,” he said
during a recent phone conversa—
tion from the San Francisco Bay
area. “I’d be really surprised if we
didn’t come up with something by
next summer.”

The first step, he said, is figur-
ing out just how the band can go
back on the road without the man
who was one of its two lead
singers, its lead guitarist and half
of one of its two principal song—
writing teams. Would it take two
people, maybe even three, to
replace him?

“There have been all kinds of
sug estions, but I don’t want to
wa e into any of that,” Weir
answers.

“For one thing,” he adds with a
quick laugh, “I’d be forgetting
some of the most interesting ones.
Everybody has an idea.”

In the meantime, band mem—
bers are pursuing various individ—
ual projects they had planned
months in advance.

“But we’ll have some time in
the next couple of months, and
we’ll just chase it around then and
see what happens,” Weir said.

For Weir, the solo projects had
been piling up for some time,
among them his new side band,
Ratdog, featuring bassist Rob
VVasserman, Grateful Dead key—
board player Vince Welnick and
others.

Meanwhile, two Grateful Dead

recording projects wrapped up in
the weeks before Garcia’s death
also have just been released.

The first, Hundred Year Hall, is
a two-CD recording that captures
the band on a particularly good
night during its 1972 tour of
Europe.

The other is The Music Never
Stopped, a collection of folk, blues,
bluegrass and early rock, by artists
Weir and Garcia grew up listen-
ing to.

For, as the Grateful Dead
forged first a musical identity and
then a new musical genre, the
band never strayed too far from
the sounds its guitarists brought
to that first New Year’s Eve col-
laboration.

Garcia had grown up in the Bay
area listening to everything from
early rock ’n’ roll to pop standards
to the Grand Ole ()pry.

As for Weir: “I used to listen to
Lightnin’ Hopkins, the Rev. Gary
Davis, Mance Lipscomb, all the
seminal blues players,” he said.

Now 48, he had taken up the
guitar in his teens.

“I think I got some money for
graduating eighth grade,” he
recalled. “Anyway, I went out and
got one. It was cheap and it was
almost impossible to play.”

He persisted, studying chord
charts, learning from records,
eventually developing into one of
rock music’s most dynamic
rhythm guitar pla ers. B the
early 19705, when t e Dea were
already a bid deal, he took his only
formal lessons, from the Rev.

Davis, the legendary street
preacher whose song “Sampson
and Delilah,” is included on The
Music Never Stopped.

With such a varied back—
ground, it was never unusual to

ear the Grateful Dead, amid its
original material and its spacey
musical jams, break into an old
Merle Haggard or Marty Robbins
cowboy song, a Chuck Berry rock—
er, a Howlin’ Wolf blues scream—
er.
Which got a con le of the
Grateful Dead’s friend; to think—
ing: Wasn’t it time more of the
people the Grateful Dead had
influenced heard from the people
who had influenced them?
“1 CW up listening to the
GrateEil Dead, and part of the
message I got from them was an
increased knowledge and appreci-
ation of American roots music,”
says musician and musicologist
Henry Kaiser, who co-produced
the recording with David Gans,
the host of the s ndicated pro-
gram “The Grate ] Dead Radio
Hour.”

The two spoke with Garcia and
Weir, then plowed through the
Grateful Dead archive's. They
were aided by the fact that Dead
fans, like historians and baseball
fanatics, keep lists of everything.

Just before he died, Garcia
spoke with Kaiser about the pro—
ject one last time.

“He was just like he always
was,” Kaiser recalled wistfully.
“Like an enthusiastic high school
kid.”

 

     

 

 

 

    

 

 

 

 

 

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 Kentucky Kernel, Wednesday, November I, l 995 .

SPRING SEMESTER

. HBIISOII IBIIIIS realism to war story

 

 

 

 

 

‘ reflecting on his life.

 

By Lee Hysinoer

Contributing trim

based on a true story about a fami-
ly living in Kentucky at

Swiss intellectual and a bumbling
idiot.
Feelings run deep between the

the captain first is seen as an evil
character bent on

 

the time of the Civil
“’ar. The family consists
of the wife and son of a
Confederate soldier who
is fighting in the war.
The son tells the story by

 

fl

destruction, he is
seen as a person
portraying feelings
when his soldier is
injured.

The wife of the
Confederate reluc—

 

 

Their family unit "oulfrevle'w tantly is compas-

k increases in the movie V sionate and gives

when a band of Union the ca tain

soldiers, five in all, **** medicine forpthe

attempts to ransack the ‘Pbaroab’s wounds of the

house, but fall prey to Army’ young man. The

human error. One ofthe wax directedlgy captain has feelings

soldiers falls from a barn Danville, Ky. of guilt later and

, loft and ets im aled on a native Robby feels like he is home

aim/mid,“ rake. T e sol iers then Henson. with his deceased
are forced to take up resi- wife.

'dBuddy dence with the family Because of the

Wig/3t. until the injured soldier is able to captain's compassion, he decides

 

leave.

The preacher, played by Kris
Kristofferson, refers to a biblical
passage about Pharoah's Army
being crushed by the Red Sea
upon hearing about the Yankee
situation at the neighboring farm.

to relieve the son of the Confeder-
ate and plow the fields for the
family.

The movie “Pharoah's Army”
is a movie for all ages. It contains
many lessons about getting along
with people. It is a modern day

 

 

 

iam, Ted At the time this occurs in the classic for Kentuckians. The

313 movie, it is ironic because every- movie runs smoothly and is never

"33 ofthe thing is goimr sour for the Union short of action, but the best thing

.prisoned soldiers holedup in the Confeder- about it is that it is based on the

:ullen, is ate household. roles ofhuman interaction.

lding the Pharoah’s Army consists of a There wasn‘t a lot of dialogue, mom fwmthed

troo ofUnion soldiers who have but there were manv scenes of , , , . .. . . . . "

f Cullen not Fsieen action yet, but instead great tension. One such incident 281A? 9"”5” figurgabi/lrmy, all]?! “’70.!" (‘nilfuiurhfi' m

vith win— find a different type of action. was when the captain must deal ”m“ y: oar/1 me in t e carter” part of the Com,”""“""‘1h}'"

ore con- There is the commonsense with the redneck deserting the who is from Danville, had only traditional Civil \Var film. This

pair Of captain who is a widower; the squad. The penalty for desertion done documentaries before this transition has proven successful
. young soldier who is deathly ill; an is death. movie. That is probably why this because “Pharoah’s Army” is

Lb along i irrational egomaniacal redneck; a The director, Robby Henson, movie seems more realistic than a indeed a great movie. i

, as sur-

its, yet at

 

 

 

 

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lout 571th e or y In same gangs er val“ as u p In '0“ ALLERGY . NECK PAIN . DAILY HEADACHES
—en ing
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. ’ ‘ By Eli Humble Miami. He owes a lot of money to pay attention to what is going on. that mess. I k d h I
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keep the i : scene about a year ago and kingpin. The problem movie, and sometimes ducer, he is one of the funnier , ,
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