xt7kwh2dbq70 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7kwh2dbq70/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19701124  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 24, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 24, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7kwh2dbq70 section xt7kwh2dbq70 Closed Circuit TV Experiment

'Candid Camera' Connects Tower Lounges

By NANCY E WHITE

Kernel Staff Writer
By way of closed circuit television, a bit of one UK men's
dorm is being brought into a
women's residence ball, and
vice-vers- a.

television system has been
set up, temporarily, in the twenty-thir- d
floor lounges of Kirwanand
Blanding Towers. In each of the
lounges, video and sound equipment provide the basis for
between residents of
A

the towers.
Cables extending from the two
lounges up the stairways and
across the lawns connect the
system.
Unusual Experiment
This unusual experiment in
telecommunications is being conducted by three seminar teachers
from Yale Art School. It is being
sponsored by the UK Institute
of Environmental Studies and
the UK Architecture School.
The three men are members

ofPULSA, a group of artists from
Oxford, Conn., who work with
light and sound. They have been
together for four years.
The Towers were selected for
the experiment because they are
"good" examples- of isolated
spaces men aren't allowed in
the women's lounge and women
aren't allowed in the men's.
Bill Duesing, one of the men
involved in the experiment, said
"We are trying to get away from
people just sitting around watch
-

ing things which come from nowhere."
He added that closed circuit
TV is often used in theaters for
prize fights and other special
events but "this is real,
movement."
'Public to Public
The television is similar to
the video telephone of the future
by which people will be able to
see those to whom they are talking
"However,"
Duesing said,

"this

is not from private rich
person to private rich person.
It's from public to public."
Equipment for the experiment
has been supplied from several
sources. Monitors w ere lorrow ed
from UK television studios, the
Student Center loaned the sound
system, and the cameras are rented from Barney Miller's, a local
music store.
The closed circuit television
will be in operation until Tuesday night.

TUB KENTUCKY

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Tuesday, Nov. 24, 1970

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John Nelson, chairman of the Ad Hoc
Tripartite Committee, speaks before the University Senate in an
attempt to get their approval of the committee's recommendations
to include students in the Senate.
Kernel Photo By Bill Craig
UK political science senior

University of Kentucky, Lexington

Vol. LXII, No. 58

Appeals Board Acquits
Bright of Code Violation
an earlier decision by the UK
By MIKE MILAM
Kernel Staff Writer
Judicial Board convicting Bright
The University Appeals Board for "violation of rules regarding
reversed a previous ruling and the use of University property."
acquitted Student Government
Bright' s lawyer, Sheryl Snypresident Steve Bright of violat- der, argued before the Appeals
Board that Bright was protected
ing the student code during camunder Section 3.4 of the revised
pus disorders last May.
The board, composed of six student code. This section guarfaculty members, and three stu- antees the right to demonstrate
dents, unanimously overturned peacefully.

Senate Poll Demonstrates
Disapproval of Student Vote
Kernel Staff Writer
The recommendations of the
Ad Hoc Tripartite Committee
were disapproved in a voice vote
by the University Senate in Monday's meeting.
Since the Senate Council will
have the final deliberation on the
issue whether to give students
representation in the Senate
the floor was open to the faculty senate representatives only
for discussion and a "straw vote,"
mostly to give the Senate Council itself an idea of where the
senate stood on the matter.
In the report that resulted
from the Tripartite Committee's
work, the proposal was made that
the senate be reconstituted to
form a "true University Senate,"
one consisting not totally of faculty members and a few administrators, but of perhaps a faculty-studeratio of about 4 to 1.
Such a body would be empowered
under the Coverning Rules and
Regulations of the University as
the University Senate is now
for the deliberation of matters of
academic policy.

'Individual Rights'
"The brilliant defense

of my

counsel, Sheryl Snyder, and the
resulting decisions of the Judicial Board and Appeals Board
have preserved basic individual
rights, to which students are
entitled, just as Lexington citizens are entitled to them," Bright
said.

'Pleasant Surprise'
Bright's case was brought before the Appeals Board when the
When the Appeals Board
Judicial Board ruled that the
granted Bright a new hearing,
rev ised code did not apply.
"The decision of the Univer- it was generally expected that he
would be granted acquittal.
sity Appeals Board is a most
Bright said
pleasant surprise,"
In his press release, Bright
in a press release.
concluded by saying that "the
"The Appeals Board, made hearings have made the truth
increasingly clear: demonstrating
up primarily of conservative
members of the faculty, is to be students conducted themselves
in an excellent manner within
commended for unanimously retheir fundamental constitutional
the Judicial Board deciversing
sion and upholding the student rights."

Many of the professors present
"They don't seem to care wheseemed to be against the idea of ther or not they have a chance
students having any kind of to initiate their ideas they'd just
"say" in academic policy as like a chance to voice them. They
one facul ty member put it, "Some seem to feel that if we tell them
of us feel that students should their ideas are all wet, that's
not have much determination in
Continued on Page 3, Col. 1
academic matters because they
will only be here for a short
time and w e would have to live
with it longer than they would."
Dr. Stephen Diachun of Plant
Pathology led the section of the
committee making a minority report.
Diachun' s view was that the
senate should either remain as
it is now, or that there should
be a separate, advisory-typ- e
board created which would consist of faculty, students and administrators.
Ombudsman Speaks
The senate overwhelmingly
approved the latter Diachun proposal as an alternative to the
Tripartite Committee's proposalsfavoring, in other words,
the creation of a board of students, faculty and administrators, in an advisory position only,
for what was tenned "input at
lower levels."
On a second issue the adoption of Undergraduate Student
Advisory Committees for each
college the professors again apLexington and vicinity: partly peared perturbed at the idea of
cloudy and cold today, fair and students giving them "advice"
until Dr. Carrett Flickinger, UK's
cold tonight, increasingly cloudiness and warmer tomorrow. High newly appointed academic omHard-to-Believ- c
temperature today in the low 20' s, budsman, rose to speak.
"One of the main complaints
low tonight 15, high tomorrow in
the mid 30'i. Precipitation pro- I've heard from students this As most students walked as fast as they could to
babilities: no chance today and year," said Flickinger, "is that get out of the below freezing temperatures Montonight, 20 percent tomorrow. they have no place to go to tell day, these two UK freshman coeds took a second
how they feel. to climb Into the fountain in front of the Office
the higher-up- s
By WENDY WRIGHT

code, despite the possible personal reluctance of some board
members to do so," Bright stated.

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Weather

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Weather
Tower to look at icicles. What happened to those
hot days when everyone jumped in the fountain
to "cool off?
Kernel Photo By Keith Moeier

* 2--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov. 21, 1970

T11E

'Goof-U-p'

Operation

raid into North Vietnam fails to free American prisoners

Commando-styl- e

-

A
WASHINGTON (AP)
small task force of Army and Air
Force volunteers staged a commando-style
raid deep into North
Vietnam last Friday in a fruitless effort to free American prisoners. Secretary of Defense Mel-vi- n
R. Laird announced Monday.
Laird told a news conference
the rescue team found no prisoners when they landed in helicopters inside a prisoner of war
camp at Son Tay about 23 miles
west of Hanoi in
darkness. The camp recently had
been vacated, he said.
The daring raid, first ever
since North Vietnam, was approved by President Nixon several Iiours before it was mounted.
Many earlier efforts to rescue
individual pilotsdowned in North
Vietnam have been made but
this was the first camp raid.
Laird said he recommended
post-midnig-

:

the operation because of "new
information we received this
month that some of our men
were dying in prisoner-of-wa- r
camps."
White House Warning
At the White House, press
secretary Ronald L. Ziegler issued what amounted to a warning to North Vietnam against
taking reprisals against American prisoners because of the unsuccessful rescue effort.
"I think," he told a questioner, "it is apparent that the
prisoners would not have had
anything to do with the rescue
operation and it is inconceivable
that there would be any reprisals taken against the prisoners
of war. But if there were reprisals, the United States would hold
the leaders of North Vietnam
personally responsible."
But he said he was unpre

time, about the time some 230
U.S. warplancs were hitting at
antiaircraft missile and gun positions in the panhandle further
to the south.
Laird said those "protective
reaction" air strikes were not
intended as a cover for the attempted prisoner rescue operation. However, they may have

pared to take a question as to
what this country' would do in
the event of reprisals.
Ziegler said the answer was
"No" on whether this country
intends to conduct activities in
North Vietnam with U.S. ground
personnel.
Air Strikes
The press secretary said he

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....
ri

was not prepared to say when
Nixon approved the mission, and
that he did not know whether
the President had taken any members of Congress into his confidence beforehand.
The commando raid took place
around 2 a.m., North Vietnam

served to somewhat confuse the
North Vietnamese as to what
was happening.
Laird said the U.S. Navy undertook a small diversionary air
mission, dropping flares over the
North Vietnamese coast above
the 19th parallel to help carry off
the rescue attempt.
The defense secretary made
his startling disclosure about four
hours after a Pentagon spokesman steadfastly refused to say
whether U.S. warplancs operated
above the 19th parallel during the
"protective reaction" strikes
which were billed as retaliation
for North Vietnamese downing of
a U.S.
reconnaissance plane
more than a week ago.
U.S. Disadvantage
The spokesman's refusal to
say anything about operations
above the 19th parallel left the
United States at a distinct propaganda disadvantage in light of
North Vietnamese claims last Saturday that U.S. warplanes had
hit a prisoner of war camp,
wounding a number of American
captives, and struck in the vicinity of Haiphong and Hanoi.

Combs Attacks Nunn KEA Action
LOUISVILLE

(AP)-For-

executive officers of our Commonwealth. The governor avoided
and I must
the lieutenant governor
say
showed no greater courage."
Nunn, a Republican, and
Ford, a Democrat, refused to appear before an NEA investigation committee to determine if
sanctions should be imposed
against the state because of inadequate educational facilities.
Combs also called for a new
approach in taxation, "one in
which the federal government,
the state government, and local
governments will join in a sensible scheme of taxation and share
the proceeds as the need

mer

Gov. Bert T. Combs lashed out

at the state administration's failure to appear before recent
hearings of the National Education Association Monday night,
terming actions of both Gov.
Louie B. Nunn and Lt. Gov.
Wendell Ford "almost unbeliev-

able."
Speaking at a
g
dinner for his Democratic gubernatorial campaign,
Combs said, "It is almost unbelievable that very recently
within the last two weeks the
school system of Kentucky, into
which so much of our energy
and resources have gone, would
be undefended by the highest
$100-a-pla- te

fund-raisin-

ft
Z

si

The former federal judge also
said that, if nominated, he would
"be running against the Republican Party and no one else."
"My complaint with the present lieutenant governor is that
or unhe has been unable
willingto stand against the
Nunn administration," Combs
said. "On more than 250 occasions during the last three years,
he has served as governor of
this state. At no time has he
done more than place a pebble
in the path of the Nunn steamroller."
Ford also is a candidate for

the Democratic nomination for
governor.

Laird previously denied that

any American prisoners had been
banned in the bombing strikes

and the Pentagon had spoken
only of retaliation against the
North Vietnamese air defenses
and "related facilities."
At his news conference, apparently designed to dispel the
cloud, Laird present cd two officers who he said had arrived in
Washington early Monday after
playing key roles in the prisoner
rescue attempts.
They were Air Force Brig.
Cen. LeRoy J. Manor, 49, of
Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. and
Col. Arthur D. Simons, 52, an
infantryman whose family lives
at Ft. Bragg, N.C.
comManor was in over-al- l
mand of the operation and Simons, known as "the bull," led
the actual raid into North Vietnam.
Neither Laird, Manor nor Simons would discuss such details
as the number of men taking
part, the number of helicopters
used, or the origin of the mission.

Crash Landing
said onehelicoptercrash
They
landed inside the POW compound at Son Tay and one man
was slightly wounded by AK47
fire during the raid.
Asked if his group had killed
any of the North Vietnamese,
Simons said "I imagine so," but
he said his men did not stop to
count bodies.
Simons said there was no indication at all that there had
been a security breach tipping
off the North Vietnamese in time
to empty the camp.
"We caught them completely
by surprise," Simons said.

I

TO ALL UK SENIORS:
Your 1971 KCNTUCKIAN is being planned right now these plans include a separate Senior supplement to come out in May, in addition to the regular September issue.
This supplement will include senior interviews concerning campus issues, pictures and other features during the past four years, the purple mushroom, and of course your
in size).
senior pictures (approximately
We're looking forward to putting this paperback supplement together we don't mind taking the extra time to make two yearbooks.
4,
Won't you take the time to make an appointment for your pictures by calling
it won't be much of a yearbook without your picture.
2--

258-482-

Sincerely,

Susan Grimsley
1971 KENTUCKIAN

Editor.

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov. 2i,

1970- -3

fimatcurs 'Grow Their Own'

Police Train to Locate Kentucky 'Grass'
-

FRANKFORT (AP)
While
the "grass" in Kentucky really
may not be blue, more and more
members of the growing drug set
are finding it is good for turning
on.

Marijuana is far and away
the most common type of drug
used by those people who choose
that route in search of a "high",
experts and authorities in Kentucky agree unanimously.
Trailing some distance behind
in drug popularity are LSD, amphetamines also referred to us
"pep" or diet pills, the other
hallucinogens and barbituates,
they say.
And heroin, or the "hard
stuff," is only a spotty problem
primarily in the metropolitan
areas of Louisville and across
from Cincinnati in Northern Kentucky, according to those same

experts. However, heroin has
cropped up occasionally in some
other cities.
Many Kentuckians may remember that hemp, from which
marijuana is made, was raised
throughout the Bluegrass region
Lii
Central Kentucky during
World War II as part of the war
effort. But most of them probably did not realize until recently
that it has been growing wild
in those fields ever since.
Late In Coming
Despite its availability, the
illegal smoking of marijuana apparently was late in coming to
Kentucky. Or perhaps it was
just that law enforcement authorities were late in recognizing it
as a problem.
This all has changed drastically in the last year or two.
The use of marijuana seems to

Senate Disapproves
Of 'Student Members'
Continued from Page
all right
too.

1

they want toknowthat

"But as

it is, all they can
do even now is to dump them
on my desk and I, working

alone, can't really do much about
them."

Agreeing with Dr. Flickinger,
another professor added, "This
all kind of goes along with a
problem we know exists the fact
that, for instance, our advisory
system is not what it could be.
You know the kind of thing
where a student may stop by a
professor's office day after day

alter day, and always find that
professor gone."
It was still another professor's
opinion that the student doesn't
necessarily want or need a

"vote".

"I think, or at least it was

the feeling of the students on
the committee that was set up in
our department," said theprofes-sor- ,
"that as long as the students feel that those with some
say in academic affairs care about
their concerns, and as long as
the students have some trust that
we are genuinely trying to work
for them, they don't really feel
they need to participate in the
decisions."

be spreading like or perhaps
along with air and water pollution.
And police records bear that
out as much as anything else.
State Police handled a total
of 23 dangerous drug or narcotic
cases in the first six months of

Because this shift has been

elementary school teacher in
Eastern Kentucky, who gave a
Lexington address, was arrested
for transporting marijuana for
sale to students at Morehead
State University.
McKinney also said it appeared that some people now
are processing Kentucky-grow- n
marijuana here and then taking
it north to trade it for heroin, a
narcotic.
While some of the persons
processing marijuana here are
in large groups of 10 to 13 people, McKinney said, most seem
to be small operations of three
to four persons. And many of
those obviously are amateurs who
do not really know how to do
it, he said.
"What really hurts law enforcement on drugs," McKinney
asserted, "is to have prominent
people advocating and supporting it.

so recent, the bulk of manhours
so far has gone into training

special State Police troopers and
acquainting them more with the
problem. As more troopers complete that training and begin
working in the field, arrests
should multiply.
Misconceptions
Maj. Robert McKinney, head
of the State Police Investigation
Division the one which handles
the drug cases sought to clear
up some misconceptions in a
recent interview.
"Some people tend to think
that just students are usingdnigs,
but that isn't the truth," he said.
"Some of the names of people
involved would shock you."
In the past two months, State
Police have arrested a physician
and his nurse in Eastern Kentucky on a charge of illegally
selling dangerous drugs. Also, an

1969.

In the first six months of
the number of cases worked
shot up to 132. Each case could
have a number of suspected violators involved, up to 20 or 30 in
some instances.
Greater Emphasis
But since then there has been
a much greater emphasis on drug-us- e
even to the extent that the
entire State Police force was reorganized so as to focus more effort on that problem.
That reorganization was carried out by Public Safety Commissioner William Newman not
quite three months ago.
1970,

BARGAIN
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Mon.-Sa-

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FIU1NH SIIUITIUI
GEORGE KENNEDY

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232 EPWlain
OPEN EVERY WEEKDAY NIGHT FROM NOVEMBER 27 'TIL CHRISTMAS
5:30 ON SATURDAY

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Let Us Be Thankful
For the abundance that aDows the vast majority a freedom from poverty
That our poor are not completely ignored
For the reluctance of a free people to relinquish freedom
That 46 percent of our population still holds dear the ideals of the Bill of Rights
For the chance that the South will sometime reconstruct itself
That Blacks in America have the brightest future ever
For the opportunities offered most of our youth
That the young are not always regarded as the enemy
For the human talent that can make our country great
a
That the
War will end eventually
Indo-Chin-

For the politicians who are sincerely trying to help us live together
That our patriotism does not always blind our rationality
For the desire to unselfishly benefit others
That even those of other nationalities may soon fulfill their basic human needs
For the few remaining unpolluted minds and acres
That we can retain some element of individuality in a world of identicals
For what humility remains
That "love" can still be conceptualized
For the opportunity to cause change
That we can dissent

AM

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov. 21,

Play Review

1970- -5

'Hair' Older But Still Fresh
"Hair" opened Monday at the
Shubcrt Theatre in Cincinnati. It
will play until Dec. 19. The
evening performance is at 8:30.
Matinees Wednesdays and Saturdays at 00.
By JANE BROWN
Assistant Managing Editor
It's acid. It's music. It's four
years ao. It's today. It's fun.
It's fantastic. It's Hair.
Fill in your own adjectives.
You've heard most of the songs
and you probably know whatever
plot there is to know.
But there is more than the
music. Hair is watching theolder,
opening night kind of people at
intermission. It is seeing some of
them sneak out shortly thereafter.
It is seeing others begin to tap
their feet and clap and stand
when the cast sings "Good
Morning Starshine." Hair is also
being young and wondering. Hair
is asking questions and seeking
answers.
Hair has been all that and
more for four years. Ever since
it first shocked New York with
its nude scene and unstructured
musical technique. Now it is international and grosses millions
a year. But somehow its freshness remains.
The tribe that has come to
Cincinnati is called Pakalolo.
There are 26 members . . . they
complement each other. But they
are working. As one actor (?)
said as he passed out daisies before the performance, "I've been
with the show for four weeks,
and it's still fun to me, but it'll
get to be work pretty soon."
And it is work. Maybe they

Record Review

are "hippies" in "real" life, but sex. Tlie nude scene we've all
the kind of life they portray was heard about is still there but
essentially doomed with the fall doesn't seem that important or
of Haight-AshburIt's too bad, shocking when taken in context.
but Hair almost looks historical And the other references, gestrather than commentary.
ures? They could be shocking,
They've tried to update and and probably-coulconvince you
localize the "tribal love rock to leave if you're over 40, or some
musical" but somehow it isn't other arbitrary age limit, but it's
quite as believable now as it cool to stay and not be grossed
once was.
out. So, if it offends you, you'll
probably stay and giggle with
The problems are still pretty
much the same: little old women the rest of the audience.
asking if you're a "hippie",
That audience will probably
friends getting drafted, problems be
young, either because the
about who to go to bed with, oldies have sent their kids to
etc. etc. However, things seem
check out where they can
more serious now and the real
or else they have already
flower child is almost a thing of heard about it and would rather
the past.
not say, "What is this world
In some spots, the seriousness
coming to?" one more time.
does show through. One instance
seemed to be
Cincinnati
is when one of the strong characters, (there are no real "leads",) ready, though. The Hair cast got
Berger, played by Gregory V. a standing ovation. And one
Karliss, becomes pretty hostile father who came along with his
towards Shelia (Patricia Keene)
daughter said at intermission,
who has just presented him with "I'm enjoying it, I'm enjoying
it. All you have to do is sit
a satin shirt. He doesn't like
yellow. He rips it up, and runs back and let it wash over you."
out in a huff. Shelia sings "Easy
It's total. It's almost conto be Hard."
vincing. It's exciting. It's here.
There's a lot of talk about
It's Hair.
drugs. And the second act is
A strobe light scene
is unbelievable, as Claude, the
guy getting drafted, hallucinates
("pretty heavy grass") about war.
Everybody kills everybody else,
from buddhists to slanteyes. But
it's done in strobe-tim- e
and the
reel spins back. We see it frontwards, backwards, forward "Closely Watched Trains" played Sunday and Monday at the
again. If all your hallucinations
Student Center Theatre,
like that
were
There's a lot of doing about
By LARRY KIELKOPF
Kernel Staff Writer
All too often, the Student
('enter Theatre plays host to any
one of a number of poor films.
Most of the ones that are enemotional response on the fans'
If
joyable are usually
part. Simmonds own tune, "Sunyou've ever walked out of the
day Night", has Kim showing S.C.T. vowing never to return,
us what he can do with his guiit is understandable. If, however,
tar following a very mellow begi
you chose '"Closely Watched
Trains" as your first film to
Kim and Lonesome Dave team
pass up well, you blew itl
up on "Take It Easy" and
"Trains" is a thoroughly en"Money Can't Save Your Soul." grossing story about a young
These numbers come off extremeCzechoslavakian worker in a train
ly well, though they can't really
whose forestation (Milos)
be described as conventional
fathers have all amassed family
blues tunes. Youlden's prophecy
legends for him to live up to.
in "Savoy Brown Boogie" gets
His job as a platform worker
extended treatment on this LI'. at the station is no
problem.
Savoy show themselves to be In fact, it is generally considered
one of the most versatile blues as
prestigious within the combands on the scene today. More
munity.
than ever, blues bands, both EngWhat is a problem, though,
lish and South Side Chicago is a sex hang-up- .
Milos is young,
styles, ure reaching beyond the inexperienced, and shy. Actually,
limitations of the blues form in he is scared to death. A young,
which they have been reared. uninhibited conductress, who is
(Now we find Buddy Cuy playing in the station one minute and
acoustic guitar on a new LP with out the next, dosen't help his
Junior Wells containing some situation. Nor does his
very moving and innovative
Hubicka, who is more familiar
tunes: "Buddy and the Juniors," with the intricacies of sex and
"Blue Thumb").
If you don't have Savoy
Brown's other albums, they come
highly recommended. They are a
solid blues band who are just
beginning to gain the recognition
that they deserve.
y.

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A tribe member, Woof, and Berger, dance as they sing "Don't Put
It Down" in the Cincinnati version of "Hair" which opened Monday
night The cast is called the Pakalolo tribe and will be performing

in Cincinnati until Dec,

19.

e.

Movie Review

'Trains': Not One to Miss

....

More Blues With Brown
"Looking In" by Savoy Brown
(Parrot 71042).
DISPATCH NEWS SERVICE
Savoy Brown's "Looking In"
(Parrot 71042) has the blues and
boogie appeal that makes Savoy
one of the top electric blues
bands around. Their progression
into new trends of modern music,
as expounded by You Id en, has
opened up new areas in the blues
field.
While Youlden's loss is notable, the band has not lost their
ability to push a powerful sound.
The band is necessarily tighter
without him and Lonesome
Dave's vocal abilities adequately
fill the gap left by Youlden's
departure.
'
The good old Savoy Brown
sound sticks right in the groove.
Led by the driving, bitter lead
of Kim Simmonds, the group's
repertoire is one of unique innovation. They have transcended
the limitations of the traditional
blues form into new realms of
modern music (South of the Border style).
Simmonds' use of his equipment reflects a skill that few
other musicians can claim. The
bitterness of his licks in"Leavin'
Again" can't help but force an

'

s.

the only suitable description for
the visual images.
Eroticism is another power-fil- l
ingredient in the film. It
Mar-grisn't of the JoeNamath-An- n
variety, however. Rather,
it is evoked by such scenes as Hubicka pressing an ink stamp on
a young lady's buttocks. It is
all done very subtly, which is
why it is so effective.
If readers will allow the poor

who is not opposed to letting
Milos know it. The boy's feelings of inadequacy are compounded.
Things get so bad for Milos
that he pitifully attempts suicide.
Saved from that fate he begins
to assert his masculinity. It is
a slow process, but it is complete.' His sabotage of a German
munitions train proves what
thousands of sexual exploits
would never be able to prove.
The real beauty of Trains",
however, is its photography. Jiri
Menzel's fdm, if chopped up
into individual frames, would
make thousands of magnificent
As it is,
still photographs.
"Trains" is like some sort of
slow moving Daguerrotype, and
while the movie is fairly recent
( 1967),
the word "classic" is

et

humor,
Trains"

"

Watched

"Closely

is a film worth watch-

ing closely. In the words
of Richard Schickel of Life magazine, ". . . . it has an excellent
chance of becoming a film classic
on the order of "Crand Illusion"
or "Citizen Kane"
If it is ever scheduled for
your local late show, don't go
to bed.

..."

Ireland's Restaurant
presents

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KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov. 21,

TIIE

1970

-

.

i

;

'

t

i
J

I

v
4

LAW

-

nir

mm

'

"

1

Fencing, Soccer Teams Win

4.

5--

5-- 4,

n.

. ..

'

FatricioDelgado

.

scored four

SPECIAL
ENGAGEMENT

Starts

NO ONE UNDER
18 yrs.

admitted

7:30

THIS SHOW STARTS WHERE THE X's

DONT

you

must prove
it!

OPENING THURSDAY

AT!

M.

Av

AAA

by Ron Cowen

December 2, 3, 4, 5, 6

A

Guignol, Theatre

m

Box Office open Nov. 23,
24, 25, and Nov. 30 thru

If
t-

-

the ROAD
-- "

SHOWXNiS
ISf
oTrG it

IVMYONE

By MIKE TIERNEY
Kernel Sports Editor
The University of Kentucky
football team formally closed its
1970 season Monday night with
the annual awards banquet.
Cawood Ledford, the "Voice
of the Wildcats", presided over
the dinner. He introduced such
speakers as Dr. Otis Sinnletury,
president of the university, Frank
Iloward from Clemson University, head coach John Ray, and
several UK boosters who presented various awards to the outstanding players.

SUMMERTREE

18 ADMITTED

SEE

IT...

THEN

I

.

Banquet Honors Gridders

Department of
Theatre Arts

FOR ADULTS ONLY!
NO ONE UNDER

1

and R's STOPPED.

MOSS

J

.1

.

of the five goals for UK in its
victory. Vincent Zeller tallied
the fifth.
The women's fencing team
won both of its matches, while
the men's squad split its two
matches.
Barbara Andriot, Barbara Patterson, Paula Sweeney and Anita
Ochs combined to defeat Tennessee, 12-- Then Andriot, Nancy
Finnie and Cale Cropper edged
Vanderbilt
The men's team lost to Tennbut rebounded to beat
essee,
Vanderbilt by the same score.
The rugby team was defeated
by Tennessee, 26--

S-- l,

f

Joe Fcdcrspicl and Wilbur Hackctt received Most Valuable Player awards at the
annual football banquet Monday night. Coach John Ray announced the players to
Kernel photos by Dick ware
the large audience in the Student Center Ballroom.

Football Awards
Two out of three other UK
athletic teams had better success in Knoxville last weekend
than the Wildcat football team.
UK's Soccer, fencing and rugby
squads participated in tournaments on the campus of their
southern rivals.
In the Southeastern Conference Soccer Classic, UK won one
of three games. The team fell
on Frito host Tennessee,
day; dropped a hard-fougdouble sudden - death overtime
the followgame to Ceorgia,
ing day but capped t