xt776h4cpp6d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt776h4cpp6d/data/mets.xml Lexington, Kentucky (Fayette County) University of Kentucky 1976 yearbooks  English University of Kentucky Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. University of Kentucky Yearbook Collection The Kentuckian Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1975-1976 text The Kentuckian Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1975-1976 1976 2013 true xt776h4cpp6d section xt776h4cpp6d Gl l ’> Y K
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        iii miiii  EEATEEEE
  .  ,   /·  1, , *"‘·~` "The Big O" by Jack Koeneman p_ 11
5   Qi, Y,  , 1   ~    4 · ` \ Clui: Summer Abroad by Lynne Funk p, 8
  1* _\" l\, ~ 1       { I \" .    _ _. \
l * .      J' ,`   / \»  'L Q   5/ Building Blocks by Byron West p, 38
] Y. \ \‘ " i  /// V. ` [ I/It _ Chow Down p'  
2     A 1E11 < i   / *¤illll·i"""!’!
é        `iii/i / ` ` ARTS
  i  as ,1   E  ii"   I   ’ Profile: Vassar Clements by Pam Parrish P- T3
‘   1 l"7“,;/ ex Acme Dances by Mark Bergesen p. 34
g p/ T I.  a_\_$ _f__,,,w . Jamboree by David Perry p, 40
  " t   9   id  
lg   if  SPORTS
    O rg " Agp Football Follies by Walter Hixon p. 24
E1 4* in Superfight Ill by Scott Payton ,32
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lg   Coaches: They’re people too by Jim Mazzonl p. 72
    DEPARTlvlEl~lTs
FE 0 0 El
1}: Underwraps p· 7
QQ edller.ln.cnlel; Greg G. rlarellen $"Ea‘“"$ "‘ 22
"’ Associate Editor; Kay Coyte Comix: Alf (in Angst)Meets the End of the World P- 52
E Photo-Editor: David Cronen Notes from the lrlnerground P- 64
  Living Arts Editor: Pam Parrish Fashion: Oh, Wicked Weekend P· 57
[ Sports Editor: Dick Gabriel Gallery: Paradise p. 80
EQEQ Yearbook Editor: Gail Berti Out of the Blue: Dinky McKay by Linda Carnes p. 78
  Creative Writing Editor; Normandi Ellis Jimmy Conyers by David Brown
  Fashion Editor: Marty Baldyga
  Advertising Manager: Pamela Sears FICTION
  Illustrators: Hugh Findlay Millville by Normandi Ellis p_16
  William Fugate Wedding by Dean Crawford p, 30
ZQZQE Paul Olson Star of the Cosmic Cocktail Party by Peter Taylor p. 48
Egigi General slarl;
  Vicki Knuckles, Mary Connelly, Jo Lux, pOE—|·RY
  Hugh Findlay, Kathy Sweeten, Bob Lynch
;&;E;E Susan Noel, Glenn Larson Make lvleuser and Bald Phases ¤fth¤ M¤<>¤ By R. Reuei Karp n- 68
fiiiii Jack Koeneman .. ` \ Greg G. Hofellch
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Noah Kinney s Stars
If you drive six miles ouf from Vanceburg, Ky., Turn counfry farmer — horses, chickens, caTTle, squirrels,
0hT0 a blackfop Thaf Takes you up The "holler", gp |gfT ,3 buggy, and plow. l-le’s also done a parrof, of which
over a bridge and all The way back on a gravel road he says, "| never seen a parroT, buT my wife has.
you come nigh To Noah Kinney’s place. l-le’s The man When l was making iT, l’d ask her whefher l was doing
who [carved The wooden figures picfured on This iT righT." All his carving is done wiTh a pockeT knife.
issue s cover. Ellsworfh Taylor, producfion manager for The UK
The figurines were parf of an assemblage of prlnfing division, spenf abouf six or eighf monfhs
Kenfucky GrassrooTs’ arT recenTly shown in The UK collecfing and documenTing KenTucky Grassroofs Arf
Fine Arfs Oallery, and sponsored by The KenTucky for The exhibif. A long-Time devofee and collecfor of
/—\rTs Commission. such arf forms, Taylor explains why figures such as
Kinney, who lives on a 35 acre farm wiTh his wife These are imporTanT To us, bofh culTuraI|y and
l-lazel and brofher Charlie, carved his noTion of whaf arTisTica|ly. "The innocence is refreshing. Kinney’s
Nashvi|le’s Grand Ole Opry sfars musf look like when arT, and Thaf of oThers like him is being creafed nof for
They’re' broadcasfing. Since his farm has no money, buT ouf of a basic need To express himself
elecfricify, and since he has never seen TV, he relies (Themselves)."
on his impressions from a small fransisfor radio ThaT Taylor adds, "The ideas are as grand in Theme as
remains his main link To The world ouTside The any ThaT classic or formal arfisf Tackle, Though They
holler . O _ are closely relafed in scale and experience To The
/\/\osT of Kinney’s subiecfs are Those familiar To a Iocafions These people work in and call home.Li.§)
 
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EES     { 
  V   Steal This Book
    The U. of lowa student newspaper re-
_ gg . . :;:5 vealed the details of a campus fraud
          which had been swindling the campus
    bookstore for an undetermined time. A
    reporter first bought a book, left the
    store with it and returned later with the i B
QE} ZQEQE sales slip. He then picked up a second
  LOUISVILLE   copy of the book, inserted the sales slip t U
      ·   and walked to the rear of the store where I
E};   he claimed a refund. The newspaper was (G 
_     criticized for printing the "primer on how and
    to commit theft" as one bookstore DHS
{Eg gg; official put it, but the bookstore appar-
  LEXINGTON   ently did appreciate the tip since the pro- S
    cedure for refunds was immediately
      changed. A
  PAY ETTE   Pedalmg Gold gu 
      A number of lost or stolen unclaimed Oct
    bicycles have been placed around the East U3
    Carolina U. campus for the temporary use IFN
    of anyone who needs transportation. The mt 
H   bikes were painted gold and identified by Sam
decals as ECU bikes then returned to ser- A
. ‘ vice by the campus police.
§ f  ~ Q ,
 ig     . · Gav Time
` 0     ·.»_ `“)lj¤, A ° The Gay Student Union at the U. of A
. l   .1 j   gs- \\) Southern California gained official recog- Hr;]
ggu   9       _ nition last month after five—years’ resist- wer
`. •_ is - _ , /‘  · Q     ance by the USC administration, CCU
`/   .   ¢ /T L     _  rin
A , · —1_¥_ .     _ . One Toke cit 
.   O r   x `_ ` iil. ` · » 3
/   E Over the LIDB oth 
j _ •   "V The National Organization for the Re- fam
_ f ° form of Marijuana Laws (NORML) has Cen
/   _ had some notable successes in recent
° ‘ months but has lost half of the annual
• $100,000 contribution from its major
•~·•'C L S benefactor, Playboy Foundation. Play- I
° boy’s financial belttightening will report- NB
• E A R P O edly require NORML to rely more heavily HH 
— _ ' O on member dues and other fundraising F10
. projects such as sales of tee—shirts and the QUB
W B K Y - F M 9 I 3 sponsorship of entertainment events such the
• as the film "Reefer Madness." VW 
IO·3O PM- EVE RYNIGHT

 l
.i:iE_      
/ ` Students Deserve
_ °’  A Break Today
1 J / , Ohio State U., a pioneer in the on-
S campus fast food franchise trend, now
5* ®, l has incorporated a Burger King restaurant
B . { into the residence halls meal plan.
3 Bambn Goes ` Under a new program there, students
may elect to grab a quick lunch at the
D to College (   I \ ori—campus Burger King rather than return
€ , Deer outnumber students at Berry College to the dorm dining hall. Students on resi-
S ((321.). At last count there were 1,700 students dence halls meal contracts may pick up a
” and 3,000 deer on the 30,000 acres that com- special ticket from the dining hall checker
Q prise the campus and surrounding woodlands. each morning and use it for $1 credit at
" . ] L , Burger King. The student’s meal ticket is
’; Sacred Mystery   ,   I invalidated for that day’s lunch, lof
V { ‘ ‘ course, and since the U. pays Burger King
A student is suing Catholic u. cr America I \ only 80 ¤entS—tiie actual cost eta dining
(Washington, D.C.) in small claims court be-  gg)  hall lun¤h—f0r_each $1.00 ticket re- ‘
cause he allegedly didn’t get a "steak night" in Q I » , { deemed, the dlnlng hall will lose no
d October as promised in his dorm board con- ] \ g {  > m00€Y 00 these 0PU¤8 fer the burger and
_t tract. He also charges that the U. food contrac- \ 4 Shake l°3V€·
6 tor failed to provide a promised special "spirit `
W; lifter" meal and did not prepare food under ‘ `V   gf Our
y sanitary conditions. ‘ U'
r_ A I D Q 1 t \ Forgotten
n Cl
ee a {WIS- • ’S Some Opvelliah sebblvdvseek l
plague of mandatory dorms, get ready for   v signed a few years ago, again from a ‘
W the trial by tenancy. With the possible N; { standard lease: "This lease and the obliga-
~` exception of students purchasing an edu- _/ I tion of the Tenant to pay rent here-
cation, no class of consumers are more   under . . . shall in nowise be affected, im-
oppressed than tenants. In 25 states ten- * paired or excused because the Landlord is
ants must still pay rent even if their land- -· unable to supply or is delayed in supply-
` lord doesn't provide them with a livable ing any service expressly or impliedly to
r apartment. ln 30 states a tenant can be you may also be asked to unwittingly give be supplied or is unable or is delayed in ,
evicted in retaliation for rcportinga hous— up other legal rights. Buried in the fine- making any repairs, additions, alterations
· ing code violation. print legal jargon may be clauses which or decorations .... " Translation: you
For info about the specific dearth of give your landlord the right to enter your must pay rent even if the landlord doesn’t
rights in your state, see your local ten- apartment at any time, to lock you out, provide heat, electricity, repairs or any i
ant’s union (or start one: write the or to seize your belongings and throw other service he promised—quite aswitch
{ National Tenant’s Organization, l346 you out for late payment of rent. Under from the universal consumer axiom that
Connecticut Ave., Room 202, Washing- many brave new leases you also agree to you don’t pay for what you don’t receive.
ton, DC 20036). ln the meantime, here pay your landlord’s attorney ’s fees if he 2.The insecurity deposit. To prevent
are a few basics for your next lease- sues you or allow him to appoint an at- your security deposit from becoming
signing ritual. torney on your behalf to plead guilty. Cominwd 0,, p_ 7,,
ts

 ; ’ V ‘ *-··%
l. Lions , tigers and bears , ·At the U. of Arkansas, funds are being
l. · raised to fulfill the cravings of a new
/l razorback hog mascot. About $1,000 to
Oh   1// L cover one year’s upkeep must be in hand
l i before one of the beasts can be trapped in
; Maybe it’s a sign of the times that on Q y The Wlld and bmught te €3mPU$·
l several campuses the biggest current con- r,t( l r ` This fall $0010 Ol'll0 $t3t€ U- t30$ W€V€
troversies involve the football team mas- `\\  céutragecé w:en they Iearnedhthat thje old
eee V rutus uc eye mascot, a c eer ea er in
Some students at the U. of Houston 1 v l s 3 l3V8€ Smiling bU€l<€Y€‘$€€d m35l<» had
have protested the cramped living condi- ji,  2 been replaeed bY 3 fearaeme-leeking
tions of the school’s cougar mascot, r , .\t//tl m3$l<- Tl1€ 0€W m3$l< W3$ Hll< (31%), R€3€l€Vl$ Digest (28%)-  
·     recent survey into the media and buying and N3tl0¤3l l—3mP00*1 (27%) T
, l -:ll..il l habits of today’s college students. Of all The $30006 P3Vt ef the SUVVBV V€V€3l€d ‘
I {     students surveyed, 88% said they had Student buying habits. That part has not  
i.' rr!    read their college newspaper within the vet been released l·l1 ltS entirety b lt $0rne  
, I I 1 ’|   ` past seven days. The figure was more than 3€lV3i1€€ l"•l8l1ll8l3t$ ¤n¢l¤de¤
l lll  j   __  93% for students in the "traditiona|" col- The 9.1-mllllon student market has`a .
»% / -\\"• lggiate age g[·Oup Of   FO[· Students disposable lnCOlT]€ of more than   bll' l
{ I"' l over 21, college newspapers were less im- lien-
— l / . portant with only 76% saying they had 50% ef eellege Students have a part I
/ I read one within the week. tlm€ OF l°dll·Um€ 10b- '
_ _ l Only 58% of the students had read a 60% either owned or had access to a r
. ;· ~   ~ cit news a er, 83% had watched televi— €3V·
    sioh, andp9l;% had listened to a radio 40% had purchased record albums,
`nun ‘*•l|F·*" Within thc wcck Of thc SurVOy_ tapes or cassettes within 30 d&YS.  
_ mntinued on p. 77 l
I
7

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Mention of summer school had always made me wince, It   L l ¥ ;j_ W,  \  
but I thought a change of scenery might help the academic   "gigér,     W _ Y _
juices flow. For me, the change of scenery proved to be , · U  A * ‘ ‘ . _
drastic —- UK’s only European summer program travels to     r   I
Cluj. Romania.   °‘ `Y,` V  
Romania was, well, different. Cluj is not your typical   _____   __ V5 :
tourist trip. It’s one of the places in Europe that - (   L · ‘ ·
commercialism hasn’t (yet) swallowed up. Part of the K"       wx   "
reason is the country’s status as a member of the Soviet  ___5fl\       ` ·     lx  [ .
bloc, though it remains a comparatively independent ` °"\\ if   M   `   i T  r _V T
member. Iejlhr,   i`}; "   ` if il > _
Luxembourg, Germany, Austria and Hungary were ¤`  I,  Yu; §l·»_   1    
among the countries we visited during our Volhswagon bus jalhlv Illtipm .  .. .,   4     »  
route to Cluj. We stayed in the dormitories at the University ..<.  a,.,"·_   l     ii  "°-ll
. .     ‘ · E 'r» , K .· s .· *"
of Clu] and attended a month of daily classes taught by UK A     —     »,_?% \ /_ Z; (
Professors lg  ` I A` N me " ` vm  »··¥¥· T L  ‘ 1
I . . . v  •_.-¤>· » aa rl) ·       ·
Some of the 14 students, from universities all over the   1, - ,az.;e...... _~····=·>·h@: —i   — ’— r '
( United States. tooh two hours of Romanian language each , 4~ » · , r . A »i»-$ Qt   · $~._=  A =¤;   L (
day. The ethnocentrists among us studied comparative r"  ‘°“`
literature. Collrse offerings were determined by student
démflfld. eastern European culture is still well-preserved. MQl.i
ACtU¤llY· W9 W€T€ lucky to be Perlnltmd te Stud)? in travelers miss, or rush through, the peasant village. S
ROm€ml¤· The EOVQWWQM is VUV €ll0$Y Qbmit Wlw is medievalcastles andpainted monsteries. Because we mail ll
allowed into the country. But through the diplomatic talents Our Own time schedule, we spent out time ag We Wann., Ji
Of Rvrnanian-born Dr- Curtis Hcrrveyl cl UK economics whetherit was talking witha village wood carver, aralmr tl
pT'O_f`€SSOT`, tl"l€ CIT`f'Gl'lg€7Tl€l'ltS WQTQ l'T`lClCl€. in a Cgn[uy·y-Old CaSinO_ _
The opportunity to tahe off alone is also provided for
SLUTUTIQT 1975 WCIS {HQ S€COHCl y€ClffOf‘ {HQ pl‘Ogl‘CU’T1, WlllCl'l the prggran/;_ Thg Romania [Oar gndg in Bachay-QSL and `
costs $652 for i¤Sf<1f€ students and $751 f0V 0L¢f·0f·Sf€1f€ wouldgofrom there wherever our visas (and money) woll
StttCl€V1fS. This COVQFS OVlQCl1f€€-Cf€ClltCOLtFS€ and FOOFH Grid [glee z,l3_ Wg all mel Ong weglq lalgr {O Catch Our ghartl
b0<1l'd during UW month in ClL¢j· flight (charters are cheaper than regular flights) baclz r l
A week-long tour of Romania directlyfollowing the month New Yer};
in Cluj. is also included in the cost of the program. Air travel arrangements are flexible. Program partil -
Because we were a small group, we escaped the tourist pants can talze advantage of the charter flights, or meet tl 0
stereotype and visited some out-of-the-way places where rest of the group in Luxembourg or later in Romania. —
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`I    ' ·.r   l . _1 · “‘*&· ` New York and across the ocean 7 July 1975
Z  s   _     " A Y l   _ ·- Suitcases bulging, our group hit New York today. I only
" .  , ~ _   · ; ` packed half of what I wanted to bring, but it was still too
A · , A . rr r     much I found out later I could`ve lived without the tennis
g   _ I J     "  * dress and racquet and that the three halter dresses for
l __ \ . .. l - _ _ sultry evenings were wishful thinking. First lesson: pack
_ ; ....~ F11}: ··*·;L· , ,;,_;_; nn rr::_‘__ h __. nothing when you go to Europe. After a standard United
\ M re  ul A     , "`     ’;;;I Nations tour. we walked through Central Park. eating giant
K   ’ g} · . ii ,3*, " J·   ‘   n¥#i;j:...¤ pretzels.
it    ··     - , ` I
»   I  rh ` rr   ·.2!"‘i  me err 8 Mr
3 T   __* L.       ._     The dinners Icelandic serves are a lesson in efficency. Pre-
  ; gf _ · ·‘t· '   fe   V °   *°s‘ fab chicken sandwiches, jello, melba toast; looks great but
   j H   '* "`¥!·*’·.'· " Y 5- " 3 { .. `=4,_; who could keep it down'? Jan, a UK comparative literature
  — , * ,,,   J " , ‘»;-v¤_____·‘= `       major, amuses us with plane crash stories.
l·  j l Luxembourg to Germany 9 July
4;    , T ` Nine hours of night flight. and we’re in Luxembourg At
“·" ` first it looks like "the States", but as our VW bus takes off
for Trier, Germany, I notice the differences. The flagstone
na,. The progrom will run from July 5 until August 13 this (not asphalt) streets are sweptclean, and there are gardens
jgr, summer. Thats or week in touring western Europe. cr month and flower-filled windowboxes throughoutTrier. Most of us 7
mn in Cluj, and G week touring Remunie- Helen Stevens Office are suffering from jet lag (from which we’re all sure we`ll
me fOT‘ 1FlfGl‘HC1flOH(1l Programs. 118 Bradley Hall. will dlI'€Ct ngvgy pgggvgp) but wg visit [hg gld city Rgmgn ruins I
mn the 1976 trip- anyway, then eat pork and sauerkraut for supper, with
  Tuborg beer flowing like water, .
Or Rothenberg 10 July
'd` The fO||OWrng entries Were taker] "Kitsch" it mightbe, butthe restored city of Rothenberg is
mln / _ beautiful. 1t`s anancient fortified city, with winding streets,
2;; [1 from the author S JOU rnalr and Tudor—style houses. Medieval signs, identifying crafts- l
` kept during the Summer tOUr. men, hang outside the shops, housed in the pastel
Tm _ men. hang outside the shops, housed in the pastel "Fach- r
,,r H r, werk" buildings. The surrounding countryside is
ral geometrical and manicured, like a storybook.
9

 l
To Austria 12 July garlic tfor vampires?) and mounds of paprika. The people r
Lunch on the Danube, in true Bohemian style: loaves of are very friendly and affectionate; women walk around {
bread, cheese, wine, tomatoes. At the German—Austrian holding hands, which is hard for us to become accustomed {
border we stopped to visit a Trappist monastery to stare at to. "Dollar shops" here sell both Western goods and  
skeletons <"patrons of the church," the monks explained) Romanian folk art at good prices, because a hard currency  
dressedin gold and encased in glass in the Baroque church. like the dollar is wanted by the government. Romanians  
Trappists make Ch0C0lHte liqueur that has got to make want dollars too, to buy prohibited goods, so there is a  ·
them seriously reconsider their vow of sobriety. We gladly trenigudgug blaek market_ However, if you get caught, you ¥
handed over our German marks for their brew. spend the rest of your life in some remote Romanian region. ,
We are remote as it is, even in Cluj. An air mail stamp costs t
Vienna 12 July 70 cents and a letter from home takes a week to get here. ·
Coffee and rolls for breakfast at the Rothensteiner apart- *
ments in Vienna. The first amazing thing about the city is T0Wi¤g Remémia 7 August I
the marble fountains. The second is the statues, and the Folk dances, thatch-roofed houses, wooden churches, 1
third is the crazy drivers.Justlikein Germany, drivers aim peasant embroidery: we saw them all last weekend in a
for, rather than respect, crosswalks. Those red-faced, tour of the northern Maramures region. Face to face with 1
suspendered men drinking beer and playing accordian an entirely different and rural culture, I felt a little like an ¤
really do exist! We went to Grinzing tonight to drink "new intruder on a lifestyle that will probably soon be spoiled by ’
wine" and be serenaded by accordian players. I always commercialization. We’re on our way now through the ;
thought aging added potency to wine, but found that new Romanian countryside, up near the Soviet Union border, r
wine will knock you off your feet, the Austrians singing downto Constanza on the Black Sea. We had a final feast at
right along as you go down. Schonbrunn, the palace of an old casino on the shore, then said goodbyes and went to 2
Franz Josef (last ruler of the Austria-Hungarian empire.) Bucharest to catch our westward flights. l
was luxury beyond believability. We saw the opera "Don A E
Pasquale. " at the Imperial Theatre, then browsed the ritzy i
Vienna b0uuqu€S_ Back to the West: Geneva r
Shocked again. Glittery shops, glossy shops, glossy a
Ta Eastern Eureae 13 July advertisements, fancy clothes: it’s the West and money F
The West is suddenly anne as We approach the Hungarian again. Cokes with ice! The currency is francs, but the V
harder Armed guards and Watehtewers make ua reahre French the Swiss speak doesntshound like what I learned r
thisis serious business. The grassis mowed short to expose ln nlgn _Senee1· Geneve IS 3 eny engreet eneeelaee and a
any wauldhe expatriates We hear Whispered Sterree ef international banks.Europeans vacation here, shopping for S
Huneauana Wha tried te eeeaue, a few made rh Swiss knives and watches. Traveling alone is more difficult F
Photographs are not allowed. We smile (and gulp) at the then I expeetee Aee_emeeee_enS¤ meets arid the language S
guards and Suddenly remember eu