xt7k9882nd51 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k9882nd51/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19700209  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February  9, 1970 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  9, 1970 1970 2015 true xt7k9882nd51 section xt7k9882nd51 Tunis

ECmtmcy

Monday, Tcb. 9, 1970

emmeil

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY, LEXINGTON

'

"

r
4
f

"

Futrell Vetoes Voting Bill

..

JIM FUDGE

Futrell also cited "financial
k
and academic" costs of a
election, plus "the fact
that no rematch, in case of a
contestation, would be possible"
as added reasons for his veto.
Following his announcement
of the veto of the bill, Futrell
The bill, passed at the Jan. made a plea for unity in the
25 meeting of the Student GovStudent Government Assembly
ernment Assembly, provided for in support of the proposals for
election period to be reform in the University's
a
for
held during
structure.
the fall semester.
He suggested that he and
of the measure the assembly "think, work and
Sponsors
claimed it would widen student talk together" to achieve a
participation in SG elections.
"greater role in shaping the polFutrell, speaking at the Stu- icies of this institution."
dent Center Sunday night, gave
Futrell then announced that
two major reasons for the veto he would not be a candidate
of the bill. Futrell said first that for
to the office of
he regarded the bill as "unconStudent Government president in
stitutional" according to Sections order, he said, that he and the
6.01 and 6.02 of the Student assembly could "work better toGovernment Constitution.
gether" to achieve unity in the
Said Futrell, "the Assembly, reform proposals.
in the opinion of this executive,
Not Unconstitutional
does not have the right to legisFollowing Futrell's peech,
late ons the conduct of the elecSG Representative Steve Bright,
tion prior to . . . the report of
the Board of Elections."
By

Kernel Staff Writer
After what he termed an "agonizingly thoughtful 14 days," Student Government President Tim
Futrell has vetoed the controversial SC voting bill-tit- led
"That All Might Participate."

two-wee-

two-wee-

k

decision-

-making

i

OIV
ft H

1

1

1

O

y

c--

?

Unnecessary

Kernel Photo by Dick Ware

Mary Ann Kluemper, a sophomore sociology major, was one
of approximately 20 sociology undergraduates who staged a mock
protest Friday calling for more

Sociology
Mini-Prote-

"meaningful dialogue" between
faculty and students. See story
and pictures on page six.

st

Human Relations Workshop
Features Former Olympian
By

GRETA

GI11SON

Kernel Staff Writer
Former Olympic gold medalist Ralph Boston was the guest
y
speaker of an
Workshop
In Human Relations in the Complex Commons Saturday.
Boston, who won the gold
medal in the long jump event in
the I960 Olympics, addressed
some 50 students on the subject
of 'The Black Athlete In Higher
all-da-

heighten their powers of

com-

munication.

The participants broke into
small groups of four or five to
discuss such subjects as their
happiest and saddest moments
and what they had expected of
the workshop when they first
arrived.

Futrell termed one reason for
the veto a "combination of philosophical reasons." Futrell said
it would be "unneeded and unnecessary to open polling places
k
for a
period" as
it would be to place polling
places "in every nook and cranny of this country in presidential
elections."
The SG president also said
that UK students are "not only
responsible enough to accept the

...

two-wee-

privileges which we are seeking
for them, but reciprocally they
are responsible enough to participate in student elections."
In further support of the veto,
Futrell said he had discussed

the matter with other student
presidents in Kentucky and
learned of election reforms
enacted on their campuses
"which have guaranteed every
student a convenient right to participate in student elections."

black-whit-

Environmental Crisis:
'Action' Only Solution
RON HAWKINS
Kernel Staff Writer
Sporting short hair and conventional dress, Jerry Thornton
fails to fit the stereotype of a
person seeking reform. Only his
thickening mustache could give
him away.
Founder of the Environmental Awareness society at
UK, Thornton arrived at UK
after growing up in Lexington
and graduating from Lexington
Catholic High School.
A
senior
zoology major,
Thornton became aware of the
crisis "of the environment
through books.
"For a long time I have been
thinking green thinking ecology, I guess," Thornton says,
By

"The first book which got me
interested in ecology was Pearl
Buck's little

The Good

book

Earth!'"

Since then, Thornton has
read Wendell Berry's "The Long
Legged House," Edward Abbey's "Desert Solataire," and
numerous other books dealing
with mans reckless treatment
of the environment.
Thornton adds, "Oh, I also
read Stewart Udall's book "The
I think Udall's
Quiet Crisis"
book is probably what convinced

me

to get

something

started at UK this fall."
It Just Grew
Just exactly how did the
vironmental

Awareness

start?

En-

Society

'You all come.' Somebody came
and it just grew.
I got a lot
of encouragement
from Dr.
Wayne Davis and Dr. Robert
Keany," says Thornton.
Thornton is hoping his group
will keep growing.
In a protest against
g
sponsored by the Environmental Awareness Society
today, Thornton presented a
petition to recruiters from Bethlehem Steel Corporation asking
them to stop their
g
operations in Eastern Kentucky.
Says Thornton, "Of course the
whole thing we are building for .
is April
on the
Environment. We hope to draw
the whole campus to that if we
can. This thing is going to be
on, essentially, all the major
college campuses around the
country."
"We are hoping Environmental Teach-i- n
Inc., the organization sponsored by Sen.
) and
Caylord Nelson (
Sen. Alan Cranston
.)
will be able to build this to the
scale comparable to the war
moratorium hi Octolxr," says
Thornton.

...

e,

e,

tinued. "Therefore, as a black
man, he has unwillingly postponed his day of reckoning with
this society."
Boston, who is presently a
special adviser to the Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs at the
University of Tennessee, eagerly endorsed the workshop.
"The idea of the Human Relations Wprkshop is an excellent one and I hope I have
helped it," he said.
The remainder of the afternoon session of the workshop
consisted of slide and movie
presentations.
In the morning session Dr.
Maurice Voland of the Sociology Department led the participants in a number of sensito
tivity exercises designed

sponsor of the vetoed bill, commented on the action taken by
Futrell.
Bright stated that there was
no truth to the charge the bill
was unconstitutional, since during the meeting in which it was
passed, he said, it was questioned and subsequently ruled
as constitutional by the speaker
of the assembly, Jerry Legere.
Bright said "the president is
not given the power to rule on
the constitutionality of a bill."
The representative also said
he felt Futrell was being hypocritical by calling for increased
student "participation in Student
Government and at the same
time closing the door to these
students by limiting their ability
to participate in Student Government Elections."
At the next Student Government meeting, Bright said, there
will be a move to override the
veto and "bring the bill back
for the students."

"Well, I put up a sign on
the wall in the Funkhouser
Building one night and said,

Education."
"There will never be
until the
earth is burned," he said. "There
will always be someone in the
crowd dedicated to keeping the
fires of prejudice burning."
"White society has brainwashed the black athlete into
believing that he cannot think
for himself, that his physical
prowess is all he has," he conblack-whit-

LXI, No. 65

Action Called Hypocritical

j
"

Vol.

7
A

X

strip-minin-

V

strip-minin-

A

s

r
Environmentalist
Emphasizes Crisis

Jerry Thornton, founder of the Environmental Awareness
Society, cites population as the most serious problem facing
mankind today. Environmental Awareness is sponsoring
on April 22 as part of the national movement
a Teach-ito arouse concern about the environmental crisis in America. Thornton expressed hope that the movement would
develop as an issue just as the Vietnam War Moratorium
Kernel Photo By Mike Walker
did in October.
n

22-Tea-

c.

(D.-Calif-

Fleae Turn To Page

8

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Feb. 9, 1970

Musical War Parody
Ridicules Militarism
By DAN COSSETT
Arts Editor
If you are the type of movie
viewer that likes to go to a film
arid just sit there and be inundated with images and verbiage
that don't force you to think
very much, you should avoid
Richard Attenborough's "Oh!
What A Lovely War."

To begin with, "Lovely War"
to as a musr
ical
movie. That in itself is pretty heavy for a
oriented audience. The

land.
armed, through
They exchange drinks of liquor
and a few disrespectful comments about the King, the Kaiser
and the war, wish each other a
Merry Christmas and then swear
that they are never going to shoot
at each other again. When somebody's artillery starts lobbing
shells into the area, both groups
scramble into the trenches.
no-ma-

is sometimes referred

Playing Leapfrog

anti-wa-

another sequence has the
British General Staff holding inspections of some raw replacements and a troop of
Australian Marines.
TheAussies begin singing a song
about staff officers playing leapfrog, and sure enough they begin
to play leapfrog up and down
between the ranks without ever
changing their deadpan expresYet

movie opens in what is apparently a European palace. All of
the heads of state of the various
countries are in attendance as is
a photographer who later turns
out to be a modern equivalent to
Charron, the Creek usherofHell.
Someone gets assassinated, the
Emperor of Austria is conned
into signing a declaration of war,
and PRESTO, World War One.

battle-hardene-

v

u

c

Forces.

i

singing "Over There." The thing
is that they have changed the
last line to "And we won't come
back, we'll be buried over there."
The entire thing is fraught
with symbolism of one sort or
another. It is extremely difficult
to catch a lot of it. All of the
battlefield scenes are fraught with
little red posies, and it is not
until the end of the movie that
it is a direct reference to the
poem "Flanders Field" in which
the graveyeards of Belgium are
characterized by growths of pop-

Several feet above the crowd, The Exiles entertain amid black lights and posters of Led Zepplin
and Peanuts at "Operation Deep Freeze" a coffee
house at 150 N. Broadway, across from the Opera

UdTVy BlCacIl

pies.

...

The cast credits read like a
'Who's Who' of English movie
stars. Included are Dirk Bogarde,
John Geilgud, Jack Hawkins,
Laurence Olivier, Michael Redgrave, Vanessa Redgrave, Ralph

Richardson, Susannah York and
John Mills.
"Oh! What a Lovely War"
is showing at the Downtown
Cinema.

BECOME RELEVANT?

If you don't get involved now you never will!
Work with youngsters in the Inner City.
Tutor drug addicts.
Spend a few weekends in Appalachian
Other opportunities for those who are concerned.
TRANS-ACTIO- N

Call 3251 or

255-046-

7

House Theater. 'Deep Freeze' is a privately sponsored attempt at unifying the community's youth

through music

lO lieplaCC W OOdj Allen
to star Woody Allen, who also "Cilligan's Island" and "Dobie
wrote the play. But because of a Cillis" fame, is filling the part
tentative contract to film a movie which Bleach would play.
in Europe, Woody Allen will be
Having had previous acting
unable to perform.
experience both here and in New
last
Having auditioned
York, Bleach acted in three plays
August for the part, Bleach was while attending the Orange City
Middle-townotified just a little over two Community College,
weeks ago of his being chosen
N. Y., where he went to
for the show. If Woody Allen school before transferring here.
is unable to get out of the movie
Since coming to UK, he has
engagement, the UK student will appeared in "Three Men On A
then perform during the upcomHorse" and the "Rivals." He
also won an award for exceling summer months.
As yet, the exact dates have
lence in acting during his high
not been determined, but his school years.
run would probably extend from
Even though Bleach likes to
about the middle of June to a act and is excited at the prosterminal performance in the be- pect of appearing on Broadway,
ginning of August. At the present he says that actually he would
time Bob Denver, formerly of rather be a comedy writer.
n,

'Funny GirV Has Problem,
Mediocre Acting Mars Film
By DAHLIA HAYS
Looking back at "Funny
Girl," it seems that the moviegoer's biggest headache during
its
duration was
deciding just whose story Streisand was portraying. In short,
was Barbra playing the legendary Fanny Brice, or merely playing Barbra? In most of the scenes,
the Litter seemed to be the case.
Perhaps the fault was not entirely Barbra's, especially if we
consider the close parallels which

The Kentucky

Ov

Kernel Photo by Dave Herman

m

By BETH HEDCER
Kernel Stall Writer
Some rare luck struck the path
of a UK student when Barry M.
Bleach, a senior theatre arts major from Monticello, N. Y., was
selected for a role in a hit play
which is now running on Broadway.
The show, "Play It Again,
Sam" was previously scheduled

AND YOUR EDUCATION

JJ

-

UK Senior Gets Broadway Role

ISNT IT ABOUT TIME THAT YOU

Cd nract

...

The single most chilling scene
in the entire movie comes as
the American doughboys march
into General Staff Headquarters

Fighting and a Few Jokes." This
is where the prize attraction for
any activity is an automatic enlistment in His Majesty's Armed

Another fascinating sequence
involves a squad of English soldiers in a trench in Belgium on
Christmas Day. For some reason
or another, a few Germans and
then a few Englishmen begin
walking toward each other, un- -

;

d

sions.

A quick scene change brings
you to a beach in Brighton where
everyone is following a military
band into an amusement park
entitled "World War One." The
marquee boasts of "Battles,

Skimpy Plot
What little plot there is, involves the progress and deaths of
the male members of the Smith
family Kenneth More turns in a
remarkably credible performance
as Harry Smith, a fresh sensitive!
youth who gets sucked in by the
romance and adventure myth that
accompanies any armed conflict.

J;

Iernel

Th Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 4U5O0. Second cUss
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Mailed five times weekly during the
school year except holidays and exam
periods, and once during the summer
session.
Published by the Board of Student
Publications, UK Post Uifice Box 4Utti.
Begun as the Cadet in 1UU4 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since litis.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

SUBSCRIPTION HATES
sa 45
Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files
$10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
2321
Maiiagintf Editor
Editor,
Editorial Paf.e Editor.
Associate Editors, Sports
2!)20
News Desk
2447
Business, Circulation 2J1V
Advertising,

marked the early careers of both
entertainers. Like Miss Brice,
Barbra's early "sense of
was a peculiar blend
of
and misery.
The misery shared by both
stars resulted largely from their
relatively late emergence from
the ugly duckling stage. The
was their own, and
nothing could destroy it.
While Streisand's performance as Fanny is undeniably
convincing, it is wise to withhold
judgment on her acting ability
until we see how she handles a
role in which she must create,
and not merely identify with, the
character she portrays. I am eagerly awaiting the arrival of
another Streisand flick ("Hello,
Dolly," for example) before making a final evaluation of Barbra
as an actress.
Meanwhile, in the singing department, there's no doubt that
"Funny CuT' shows Barbra at
her usual Super-Nes"Don't
Rain On My Parade," for example, gives Baibra an excellent
opportunity to prove her uniqueness as a sonnstrrss, and woe
betide the rival who attempts
to match her inthatpeiiorinaiue.
differ-entnes-

t.

s"

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Feb. 9, 1970 -- 3

(

MOW:

O

J

MjDW1EaD1TV
Stodeot

Cenutier

* Ml

Subpoenas On The Press
If the press is to fulfill the independent role guaranteed to it by
the First Amendment, the line of
separation between it and the
must be kept unmistakable. That line is jeopardized by
the subpoenas various news magazines, television networks and
newspapers, including The New
York Times, have recently received
from Federal authorities for notes,
files, film and other material.
Much of the data on which the
press relies in discharge of its function of informing the public comes
from confidential sources. It is the
responsibility of the press to check
out this information, discarding
that which proves unfounded or
immaterial and utilizing what
seems relevant to public understanding and knowledge.
Demands by police officials,
grand juries or other authorities
for blanket access to press files
will inevitably dry up essential
avenues of information. People
whose jobs, associations or reputations are at stake cannot be expected to speak freely onanoff-the-recor- d
basis if they have reason
to fear that both their identity
and the totality of their remarks
will be turned over to the police.
The attendant and even more
serious danger is that the entire
process will create the impression
that the press operates as an investigative agency for government
rather than as an independent force
dedicated to the unfettered flow of
information to the public. That
danger is not eliminated even when
subpoenas such as the one served
on a reporter for The Times are
limited to demands for notes or
tapes "reflecting statements made

each encroachment on freedom of
the press is an opening wedge for
further erosion of that freedom.
The breadth of the information
sought by the Government in the
constantly expanding list of subpoenas for unpublished data on
the Black Panther party and the
Weatherman faction of Students
for a Democratic Society is an
ominous indication of the speed
with which that erosion can take
place.
This newspaper and all the mass
media have the same duties as
other organizations or individuals
to cooperate in the processes of
justice. But neither justice nor
democracy will benefit if the subpoena power is misused to abridge
the independence and effectiveness
of the press.
Defense Department explanations of why four "Government
investigators" were issued press
credentials in Saigon are confused,
incomplete and evasive. In the absence of a more credible accounting, it is hard to escape the conclusion that undercover informers were
used to try to spy on reporters
and their news sources. Such a
practice would constitute an intolerable threat to press freedom.
By way of corrective, the authorities talk merely of "admonishing" those who issued the press
credentials to the infiltrators. This
bogs the issue. The question is not

for

rence.

Gov-ernme-

nt

publication."

whether the accrediting authorities
might have been lax or inefficient;

rather it is why and how orders
were given to spy on the press.
Full disclosure of the facts about
the whole shabby episode are
needed, together with firm assurances that there will be no recur-

The lesson of history is that

Trie New York Times

-

. . . And you viewers from all 16 states will be able to
watch as we endeavor to explore this gas bog which,
during the 20th century believe it or not was actually
a populated area known as
"Cal-if-ornia-

."

Kernel Soapbox
By JOHN E. COOPER
Ph. D. Candidate
Zoology
Cigarette manufacturers, having had
the handwriting-on-the-wa- ll
translated for
them, have more-or-le"agreed" to stop
advertising cigarettes on television. Thus,
an industry whose product affects thousands of willing subjects is forced to stop
using the tube as a medium for peddling
its poisons, while other, mostly larger
industries, whose products affect millions
of unwilling guinea pigs (203 million in
the U. S., 3.5 billion in the world) roll
merrily on their cynical way. Hurray for
us. We've fired another fusillade at the
ignorant armies of the night with our
BB guns.
Now, don't get me wrong. I hold no
brief for cigarette manufacturers, whose
ads, obviously written by master psycolo-gist- s,
are some of the most insidious
examples of subversion of the young ever
devised. My point is that, compared to
manufacturers of automobiles, detergents
ss

and other laundry products, and pesticides, the cigarette industry is practically
a paragon of
virtue.
The primary polluter of our environment in big cities and their surroundings,
where most of our population lives, is the
internal combusion engine, power source
for automobiles and trucks. Despite this
fact, not exactly recently emerged, the auto
industry and its Svengalis on Madison
Avenue incessantly deluge us with propaganda aimed at selling each and every
person in this country the great American
exhaust-pipdream of owning more and
t,
more of the latest
e

r,

speed-of-ligh-

engineered-for-Detroit's-prosper-it-

Junkmobiles. Girls in diaphanous
garb expostulate subliminally that the
auto is sure
Flashing lights,
music from the spheres, testimonials from
sex-ces- s.

Superjock and other contemporary heroes,
dramatic names aimed at the Mitty of
Everyman, all combine to literally deify
before our very eyes a mode of transportation. And Henry Ford, we are told with
reverance, is putting forth what really
amounts to a pittance for research and
development of a power source which
may, some far day in the nebulous future, reduce atmospheric pollutants. He
and his ilk could better serve this nation
and the world, but not, of course, their
own myopic interests, by eliminating their
gulling TV and other advertising. Instead, they'll go on perpetuating the

devastating myth that "bigger" and
"more" and "faster" are tantamount to
"better" and "American," and that anything which contributes to the Cross
National Product, which is largely a measure of exploitation and should be renamed
the Dross National Product, is innately
marvelous. Nothing could be further from
the truth, and it is precisely this attitude
which has brought us to the brink, and
perhaps beyond, of environmental disaster.

Detergents have long been turning up
in all of our flowing waters and doing

considerable damage, primarily due to
their high phosphorus content and the
fact that they are unnatural products
which cannot be broken down by decomposers in our ecosystems. This fact
led to the attempts at development of
biodegradable laundry products on the
part of most elements of the detergent
industry. Whether they have succeeded
or not in reducing the damage engendered by their activities remains to be
seen, as does the effect of the anachronistic enzyme "cleaners." But, only too
obvious and odious are their continual
attempts to foist more and more such
products off on the public by way of

shallow TV advertising. Why does laundry have to be "whiter than white?"
By what process of overt imbecility do
we allow the equating of the
of Mrs. Dumdum's husband's shirt
(what a moron he must be, married to
any of those beasts!), with probably irreversible damage to our nation's waterways and their biota?!
Persistent pesticides, actually biocldes
in the broadest sense, and notably those
containing chlorinated hydrocarbons, are
being banned all over the world these
days. Yet we are treated to the sight,
in TV ads, of "scientists" testing
by indiscriminately spraying them
all over "Central American jungles" or
American backyards. And we are told, in
countless TV ads, that "bugs" are our mortal enemies and we should go to every
length to maliciously eradicate as many of
them, of every kind without discrimination, from our environment as possible.
Autos primarily pollute air and highways,
detergents pollute streams, but biocides
are truly democratic and pollute air, water, soil, wildlife, and people, without regard to race, creed or place of national
super-whitene-

bug-bom-

bs

origin.
We hear a lot of clamoring these days
for scientists to take greater cognizance
of the u$es,of the fruits of their labors.
I agree with this, a fact which willproba-- ,
bly disenfranchise me with my scientific
neighbors. Meanwhile, however, a medium which directly influences the very
minds (if it didn't there wouldn't be a
cent spent on advertising in it) of much
of our populace, shaping attitudes and
selling values, still makes a large part of
its revenue from peddling devastation.
Other of our mass media, of course,
while not having the same impact on
"Joe Citizen" as the tube, are equally
guilty of aiding and abetting exploiters

in making guinea pigs of all of us and
fostering the cynical excuse of the manufacturers, "We only give 'em what they
want." The recent special "Into the '70V
issue of Life, for example, for all its
environmentalist concern, devoted a little
better than 12 percent of its 118 pages
to huckstering the spin-of- f
poisons of

the auto, aircraft, and laundry industries.

We need PanAm's747 like we need another
cup of strychnine. (The only bright spot
there is that we will probably become
extinct before they can turn a profit).
For some time now this marvelous
country has been going down the drain,
out the exhaust pipe, and through the
aerosol nozzle. As an ecologist I am forced
to present the indictment that this is
largely due to the irresponsible money-grubbin- g
of our
and the even
more execrable pandering of our mass
rs

media, particularly television, to the

ex-

ploiters.

The solutions to our environmental
are neither technological nor'
political, although they have components
of both of these approaches. What this'
revolucountry needs is a good
tion in ecological and economic morality,
a radically new ethic based on sound,
principles of ecology and conservation
rather than
exploitation. Unfortunately, the greenback mentality has
greatly stacked the cards against this kind
of courage in the United States. Tech-- !
nology has greatly telescoped time, andj
our dearth of this most precious com-- !
modity augurs against the emergence of
a collective conscience sufficient to combat the Mighty M'- s- Manufacturers, Madison Avenue, and the Media.
This is such a grievous conclusion
for me. America holds out sucli great
promise, if only . . .
problems

five-ce-

fast-buc-

k

nt

'

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Monday, Feb. 9,

r

1970- -5

1

1

J LrJ

JLtlJ
i

i

U3

1

U

1

1

AYS

6)j

MOf

Monday, Feb. 9 through Saturday, Feb. 14
'lyi4r'"''W

.VWWMMMMA.

..........

.

WOMEN'S
(Almost

Give-Aw-

MEN'S
ALL (THAT'S ALL)

Prices)

ay

ALL SALE

V-NE-

SWEATERS

$5.00

ALL SALE

SKIRTS

$5.00

ALL SALE

SLACKS
BLOUSES

SERO SHIRTS

..

CPO JACKETS

$5.00

S
.$5.00

SHOES
ALL SALE

X

)

DRESSES

X

ALL SALE

SUITS

SWEATERS

KNIT SHIRTS

$20.00

SALE

I

407 S.

Ml

SALE

VALUES TO $95.00
VALUES TO $75.00

..

Huairiry Oovmi

ASfl.

a

Phone

now $25.00 & $40.00

SPORT COATS

le lelfa Out'.

Limestone

$2.99

SUITS

$2.00

So

$6.50

SALE

ALL SALE

Don't

now $5.99 & $7.99

ALL SLEEVELESS

$10.00

$15.00

KNIT TOPS ,

$5.99

...

VALUES TO $30.00

SHOES

ALL SALE

DRESS COATS

$1.99

ALL UNLINED
SALE

ALL SALE

$4.99

ALL LONG AND SHORT SLEEVE

$5.00

ALL SALE

SWEATERS

CK

This

Os

....

$13.00 & $30.00

M

J

To
Jk.
1

tViEr- -

v.

in
t

255-75- 23

* fi--

KENTUCKY

THE

Monday, Teh. 9, 1970

KERNEL,

Wildcats, Issel Clobber Ole Miss 120 -85
By

JEFF IMTALLOMENI

Kernel StafT Writer
Kentucky waltzed to its 17th
victory of the year Saturday night
behind the hot handof Dan Issel,
defeating a lackluster Ole Miss
team 120-8- 5 at Oxford.
A rejuvenated Issel, shaking
off the effects of a bruised heel,
played the finest game of his
career. He shattered two UK
scoring records and set a third

set by Cliff Hagen in 1953 against
Temple University. The figure
upped his three year total to
1,780 surpassing Cotton Nash's
1,770 from 1962-GNash established his mark in
195G.
Coach Adolph Rupp had noth- 78 games for the Wildcats. Issel,
ing but praise for the 8 center, thus far, has appeared in 73
saying, he was delighted with his games.
Issel was expected to break
performance. ,
Issel's 53 points eclipsed the Nash's record at Mississippi State
old single game standard of 51 Monday night, but nothingcould
halt the blond bomber from reaching it prematurely. He was literally unstoppable and could conceivably lut the 2,000 point mark
later this year, barring further in-

record for most field goals made.
Issel hit on 23 of 31 shots
from the field for a torrid 68
percent while erasing the mark
of 19 set by Bob Burrow in
6--

Trackmen Impressive
In Western Michigan Meet
MIKE
UK

TIERNEY
By
Kernel Staff Writer
The UK track squad returned
from the cold Michigan climate
Sunday, after participating in the
11th annual Western Michigan
Relays, and head coach Press
Whelan couldn't be more pleased
with the Wildcats' perfomance,
which included four 1st place

.finishes.
"This is the best that Kentucky athletes have ever done at
the Western Michigan Relays,"
said Whelan. "They are improving each week. We were extremely encouraged by their showing."
"We had three kids to qualify
for the NCAA championships,"
Whelan continued, "Jim Green,
Mike Stutland, and Bill
"
Light-sey.-

Green NCAA Bound
In earning a ticket to the
NCAA, Jim Green raced 60 yards
in 6.1 seconds, good for a second-plac- e
finish. Green also set a
new school record in the special
dash with a
invitation
time of 30.5 seconds.
Stutland leaped 48 5" at the
evening section of the triple jump
for a new indoor record.
Lightsey's jump of 24' 34"
300-yar-

d

4.

cracked the school long jump
record, one that had stood since

jury.
Heel No Problem

Issel's heel bothered him only
twice during the contest when he
1931.
Green, Stutland, and Light-se- y landed on it.
"He came down on the heel
join John Stuart on the list
of UK tracksters that will per- twice," Rupp said. "He could
feel the pain when he landed
form in the national championon it." However, Rupp said that
ships.
should Issel come off this road
Stuart, incidentally, placed trip without further injury to it,
second in the shot put with a he should be as good as new.
heave of 57' 1QW, followed by
"He could shake oil the pain
teammate Tom Johnson, with more rapidly than he could three
54' 5" in the same event.
or four days ago," Rupp said.
"As well as he was doing, I don't
Weber Win
Savardi,
imagine he minded the pain."
Savardi
Distancemen Jerry
Kentucky also received an ofand Don Weber also captured fensive boost from forward Tom
first place honors. Savardi ran
Parker. The
replacement for
a 4:20 mile and Weber, a sophothe injured Larry Steele had an
more was timed at 2:13. 5 in the
impressive debut for UK, scord
run.
ing 22 points and pulling down
"Both won easily," Whelan 12 rebounds.
noted. "Each finished exceptionParker appeared nervous at
ally strong and Weber led all the the onset of the contest but came
way."
on strong in the second half.
Other performances include He missed his first four shots
Ray Sabatini's new school record from the field before settling
of 547" in the
weight down.
throw. Freshman Dale Nichols
Stan Key also was impressive
in his initial starting role for Kenplaced tenth in the steeplechase.
He broke the UK frosh record tucky. Before fouling out for the
second game in a row Key
with a 9:36.9 time.
Freshman Mark Mumford dropped in eight points and led
Kentucky on several fast breaks.
triple jumped 449".
6--

6

1,000-yar-

percent for the game, after a
47.1 for the first half. Combining
this with aggressive play on the
boards Kentucky was able to
make a nin away of it.
The Cats won the battle of
the boards 0 and continually
took advantage of their height
putting in the second and third
shots.
Another Kentucky boy also
had a fine night. Only this time
for Ole Miss. He was Duaine
Boucher of Frankfort. He was
their leading scorer with 19
points.
Kentucky's nemesis in the first
meeting with Ole Miss, senior
Ron Coleman who scored 30
points at Lexington was held to
16 points and four rebounds.
squad of 14.
Rupp said that though ColeHowever,
Rupp said, "I man has contributed a lot to
wanted to get the cohesiveness SEC basketball he "was glad he's
of Key and Parker more than my leaving. I was afraid of that Colebench. Parker is the key to it. man kid," he said.
UK managed to play a tight
"I told Parker to settle down,"
n
defense in the first
Rupp said after Parker started