xt7bg7373n96 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bg7373n96/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1973-10-05 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, October 05, 1973 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 05, 1973 1973 1973-10-05 2020 true xt7bg7373n96 section xt7bg7373n96 The Kentucky Kernel

Vol. LXV No. 42
Friday, October 5, 1973

an independent student newspaper

University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY. 40506

 

Child Care

Center closes

By SUSAN JONES
Kernel Staff Writer

THE CLOSING of UK’S Child Care
Center marks the end of university at-
tempts to obtain funding for the establish-
ment of a child care service for faculty,
staff and students for this fiscal year.

The Center, which closed Sept. 28, was
formed in Feb. 1973. In addition to ob-
taining federal or private funding for a
child care service, the center was to plan a
child care program and direct the service.

Although the funds cannot be obtained
for this fiscal year, there is a request for
funds to support an instructional and
research day~care program in the
proposed biennial budget.

OFFICIALS WOULD not comment on
the amount of the request because the
proposed budget has not been approved by
the Board of Trustees. The Board is
scheduled to consider the proposed budget
at their Oct. 16 meeting.

In Nov., 1971, because of concern on the
part of an adhoc Committee of Concerned
Women and Student Government, the
University committed $25,000 to day-care
for the preparation of facilities. The
$25,000 has never been used. “The com-
mittment is still good,” said Tom Duncan,
Director of University Information Ser-
vices.

In Aug., 1972, the University authorized
specific planning for a University Child
Care Center and formed the Child Care
Advisory Committee to choose a director
for the Child Care Center. The University
agreed to provide an office, and pay a
director‘s and secretary’s salary for a
year.

”IT WAS apparent from the start that,
with the growing cost of day-care, $25,000
was only a start and outside funding was
necessary,“ said Nancy Ray, Chairperson
of the Child Care Advisory Committee.

Sylvia Smeyak, director and planner of
the Child Care Center, estimated that it
would cost $96,444 during the initial year of
operation to maintain a child care center
for 60 children. A poll, circulated by the
Child Care Center in 1972, indicated that
475 families, including students, faculty
and staff, would be interested in a
University-operated child care center.

Smeyak found it impossible to obtain
funds because of federal cutbacks made by
President Nixon in social services. Private
funding was also unavailable.

“I FELT THAT the University offered
half-hearted cooperation from the
beginning," said Georgia Collins, student
representative on the Child Care Advisory
Committee.

“It’s a matter of priorities again,” she
added. “it's ironic that the University
doesn‘t respond to the need indicated by
the poll.“

 

Go, Cats, go...

to Jackson

This UK student leaves

no room for doubt
when it comes to

his favorite football team.
Kentucky will need more than
fan support, however, when

it travels to unfriendly

Jackson Miss, Saturday
evening to meet improved
Mississippi State. For a

detailed preview

of the game, see page 13.

(Kernel staff photo by David Jackson)

 

News In Brief

by the Associated Press

0 UFO 's sighted

. Nixon falls again
- Withdrawals stop
. Talks suspended
. Search continues

. Today's weather...

0 BOWLING GREEN, Ky. — Uniden-
tified flying objects, bright red in color,
have been reported in the Bowling Green
and Franklin areas.

State Police said they logged two calls
Wednesday, one from a man who reported
seeing four objects about 10:30 pm.

Another report came from several
southwestern Warren County residents,
who told of spotting a bright red object
which did not emit any sound as it moves
through the sky.

. PRINCETON. N.J. — Approval of
President Nixon‘s performance in office
dipped again in the latest Gallup poll.
Fewer than one-third of 1,505 adult
Americans surveyed Sept. 21 to 24 voiced
approval when asked, “Do you approve or
disapprove of the way Nixon is handling
his job as President?"

The approval rate was 32 per cent, which
compares to 35 per cent in a poll Sept. 7-10
and 38 per cent in a poll in late August.

0 WASHINGTON — The Pentagon is
reported to be suspending US. Air Force
withdrawals from Thailand until it sees
what Congress does about ordering an
over-all reduction in US. troops overseas.
In this way, officials hope they can credit
already planned withdrawals from the Far
East against any quotas set by Congress.

0 PARIS — The political talks between
the Saigon government and the Viet Cong
were indefinitely suspended Thursday
after Viet Cong State Minister Nguyen Van
Hieu walked out of the 28th session without
waiting for the other side to speak.

Hieu said his walkout mlrked a protest

against what he termed Saigon's “conv

tinuous and flagrant violation" of the
cease-fire signed in Paris

0 LEXINGTON, Ky. — Police continued
a search Thursday night for one of three
inmates who escaped from the Blackburn
Correctional Complex here Thursday
morning.

Lexington Metropolitan Police said the
other two. James D. Cress, 27, of Cum-
berland, and Ollie J. Slone, 25, of Lackey,
were captured on Georgetown Road north
of Lexington.

Still being sought was James Means, 19,
of Paris. Means was serming a one-year
Man for grand larceny.

For those looking for cooler and more
fall-like temperatures. look no more. The
high today will be near a cool 70 with a
fall-like evening of near 50. For tomorrow,
temperatures could reach the 70's.

 

     
   
   
 
    
    
    
   
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
  
 
   
 
  
   
  
  
 
  
  
  
   
    
    
  
  
    

 

'The Kentucky Kernel 1

”3 Journalism Building, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky 40506
Established 1894

Steve Swift, Editor in Chiet
Jenny Swartz, News Editor
Kaye Coyte, Nancy Daly, and

Bruce winges, Copy Editors
Bruce Single'On, Photo Manager

Mike Clark, Managing Editor
Charles Wolfe, Practicum Manager
Bl" Straub, Sports Editor

Carol Cropper Arts Editor

John Ellis, Advertising Manager

The Kentucky Kernel is mailed tive times weekly during the school year except during
holidays and exam periods. and twice weekly during the summer session.

Published by the Kernel Press Inc, 1272 Priscilla Lane, Lexington, Kentucky, Begun as
the Cadet in 1894 and published continuously as The Kentucky Kernel since Wis The

 

 

Kernel Press Inc tounded l97l. First class postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky. Ad,-
vertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any false or misleading
advertising should be reported to the editors. ‘

Editorials represent the opinion of the editors and not the University.
.-

Agnew's contribution

Spiro Agnew has recently made his greatest contribution
to the Nixon Administration.

Agnew, Vice President and erstwhile buffoon since 1968,
has been the subject of a Justice Department investigation
into charges of alleged graft and corruption while he was
Governor of Maryland. This probe has taken center stage in
Washington's Theatre of Scandals, and has, at least for the
moment, pushed Nixon and Watergate to the wings.

An outraged Agnew has finally begun to defend himself,
since it is obvious Nixon isn't going out on the limb to save
him. After all, Nixon can even now hear Archibald Cox
sawing that limb off behind him.

Agnew's case can give the President some valuable aid in
his own fight to protect his controversial secret tape
recordings. Nixon claims executive privilege precludes
judicial investigation of these recordings. Agnew is using
the same doctrine, saying he can't be indicted by a Grand
Jury while still in office. The judicial settlement of this
issue will give Nixon a good indication as to the limits of
executive privilege, (in judicial terms, at least).

Another Agnew problem is the Justice Department.
Agnew claims Assistant Attorney General Henry Peterson
is responsible for news leaks that supposedly prejudice his
case. But Agnew is whistling in the dark if he expects Nixon
to remove Peterson and speak out against Department
procedures Nixon is still sensitive to Justice Department
critics, and would only be playing into their hands if he
joined Agnew’s attack.

After all, a central thrust of the Watergate scandal is the
alleged involvement of former Attorney General John
Mitchell in political dirty tricks and coverup activities In
an effort to appear a forceful leader, Nixon appointed Elliot
Richardson to the post and bragged of Richardson’s
honesty. Support of Agnew at the expense of Richardson’s
department would reopen flood gates against Nixon.

 

/ /-)

s‘
' " \ . s --
..A \ ‘\). . .
§ . . A V /4‘ V

s - - . ,

’BUT, MRS. MEIR, IF THE AUSTRIA

NS HA9! 5’! GONE ALONG WITH THE TERRORISTS . . . ER

    

    

"Q

I

WHERE WOULD THAT lEAVE fl}?

 

Letters

 

He's Metro mad

Yes, I’m mad, but not insanely mad—
l‘m Metro mad. I’m mad about Lexington
having one of the most hazardous airports
in the United States, about the Metro
Police making use of their government
vehicles when off duty at the citizens‘
expense, about the Metro public schools
finding it necessary to hire security guards
to make “children" behave and about
junkies caught with a couple-a-thou in stuff
and allowed out on bail in order to sell
more crap to pay their fines whenever
their cases come up.

But I‘m exceptionally irate at the way
the “Hotels Metro" are being run—
especially the one on Short Street—yea,
the place that Buchignani manages. Of
course, I’m referring to the federal and
city-county calabooses (or is it calabeesel
that seem to allow prisoners to check in
and out atwill. Ieven go so far as to accuse
this establishment, its owners and
managers of malfeasance of office and
moreover recently accessory to murder on
six counts because I believe that they are
as guilty as if they killed the Rev. Barnes,

his son and daughter and the three others
in Falmouth themselves last Monday, Oct.
1.

Yea, dammit, l'm mad and you other
citizens should be also, if not at the way
these jails are run then be mad for your-
selves because those six innocent people
could have been you and your family.

Alfie J. Lipshultz

(Editor’s note: Fayette County Jailer
Harold Buchignani has no jurisdiction

over the federal holdover from which the
two men escaped.)

Letters policy

Letters to the Editor may concern any
topics as long as they are not libelous.
However, so everyone has an equal op-
portunity to respond, we ask that you limit
letters to 250 words. We also ask that they
be typewritten and triple-spaced for the
convience of the typesetters. All letters
must be signed, including campus ad
dress. telephone number and
classification. Each letter will be
restricted to two authors; those with more
than two signees will be signed “and
others."

Those ol' homesick blues

    
  
  
   
  
  
    
  
   
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
   
   
 
  
  
  
 
 
    
   
   
   
   

[Your health

By LOWELL S. HUSBAND, M.D.

 

“What he had once hoped for the Flock, he
now gained for himself alone; he learned
to fly, and was not sorry for the price he
had paid.“

Bach, Jonathan Livingston Seagull

Finally! You‘re away from home. This is
the time you’ve been waiting for for so
long: the chance to be on your own, to show
that you can run your own life and make
your own decisions, to demonstrate that
you’re truly an adult and can take care of
yourself. Besides, maybe home wasn’t
such a hot place anyway with your father
always talking about money or how tough
it was when he brought himself up by his
own bootstraps or how you ought to be
grateful and your mother forever bitching
about one thing or the other and your sister
tying up the bathroom forever. At any
rate, when you left for UK and your first
year away from home you felt excited over
the prospect of more personal freedom
than you had ever known, and so far it has
really been great.

So why is it that you feel so strangely
miserable? You can hardly sleep at night.
You think constantly about home or about

strike everyone this time of year

how huge and impersonal it is here. A
lump comes in your throat at the oddest
times such as when someone has spoken
kindly to you. You find yourself avoiding
people and becoming short-tempered and
grouchy. You treasure writing letters to
and getting letters from home as if
correspondence were the most deeply
satisfying of all human activities.

The answer: you are probably suffering
from the healthy and normal phenomenon
of homesickness. This nearly universal
and surprisingly painful reaction warrants
some discussion, especially at the
beginning of a school year when many of
you are in the throes of its anguish.

Homesickness is a variety of the grief
reaction which is the response to the loss of
something or someone on whom you‘ve
become dependent or extremely ac-
customed. It‘s the same sort of thing that
happens when someone you've loved or
known very well dies or suddenly leaves.
He‘s gone from your external reality, but it
takes a bit longer for him to leave your
internal reality your being used to him
always being there. In Freudian ter-
minology: you must gradually disconnect
emotional importance from the internal

representation of the lost loved one. This
does not mean that you lose respect for
him or that fond memories are washed
away; merely that his actual presence is
no longer necessary for the sustenance of
your emotional balance.

It‘s important to bear in mind that you
will miss (feel grief for) anything you've
been extremely accustomed to when you
lose it, even if it was a predominantly
negative factor in your life. Indeed, it is
often even harder to be homesick when
your home was full of strife and misery,
because at the same time you’re doubly
glad to be rid of it. Similarly, people grieve
for lost sweethearts even when they
caused more pain than anything else.

What should you do if you’re in the
middle of this painful and perhaps puzzling
upheaval of homesickness? First, don't
fight or deny the feeling; admit, even if it’s
just to yourself, that you miss the hell out
of home. You may break down and cry like
a baby, either walking alone at night or
buried in you pillow. So what? Everyone
knows what homesickness is like. Now that
doesn’t mean that you should pack up and
run home or that you should bankrupt your
parents with longdistance phone calls.

 

After all, you are grown up now and you
have to learn to do without your parents.
But there‘s nothing shameful or weak
about feeling homesick; to the contrary, it
is evidence that you are a sensitive and
loving human being. Second, remember
that homesickness, like grief, is a tem-
porary state. Usually the hardest pain is
over within four to six weeks. It’s not going
to last forever, kill you, or drive you crazy.
Finally, don’t give into your tendency for
withdrawal and isolation. Make a con-
scious effort to meet people, to make
friends and to control your irritability.
Now is a time when you need human
contact very much; don’t deny yourself
this.

Homesickness can cause trouble if you
refuse to face it and live through it. It can
either fester inside you into a clinicéll
depression or it can drive you back to the
home away from which you need to grow-
But if you embrace your homesickness
bravely and even eagerly, it will prove to
be a warm and satisfying—albeit painful-—
experience.

Dr. Lowell S. Husband is a

psychiatrist with the Student

Mental Health Service.

 

  

   
 
 
  
  
  
 
 
  
  
 
  
  

"H-r-‘fi.’

u“ U1

By KENNETH CLARK

THE new YORK TIMES news ssavucs

LONDON—The first reference to a
portrait of a woman by Leonardo is in
the account written by Antonio de
Beatis of the visit on Oct. 10, 1517, by
Cardinal Louis of Aragon to Leonardo
when he was living in the Manor of
Cloux, near Amboise.

He says that “Leonardo showed the
Cardinal three pictures, one of a cer-
tain Florentine lady, done from the life
at the instance of the late Magnificent,
Giuliano de’ Medici, the other of St.
John the Baptist as a young man, and
also one of the Madonna and child who
are placed in the lap of St. Anne, all
of them most perfect.” The next men-
tion of the ‘picture is by Vasari in
1550, which I must quote at length:

“Leonardo undertook to paint, for
Francesco del Giocondo, the portrait
of Mona Lisa, his wife; and after he
had lingered over it four years, left
it unfinished: which work is now in
the possession of King Francis of
France, at Fontainebleau. In his head,
whoever wished to see how nearly
art is able to imitate nature, was
readily able to comprehend it; since
therein are counterfeited all those
minutenesses that with subtlety are
able to be painted: seeing that the eyes
had that luster and watery sheen
which are always seen in the living
creature, and around them were all
those rosy and pearly tints, together
with the eyelashes, that cannot be
depicted except by the greatest
subtlety.

“The eyebrows, also, by reason of
his having represented the manner in
which the" hairs issue from the flesh,
here more thick and here more scanty,
and turn according to the pores of the
flesh, could not be more natural. . . .

“He employed, also, this device:
Mona Lisa being very beautiful, while
he drew her picture, he retained those
who played or sang, and continually
jested, that they might make her con-
tinue merry, in order to take away
that melancholy that painters are often
used to give to the portraits which
they paint. And in this picture of
Leonardo’s, there was a smile so
pleasing, that the sight of it was a
thing more divine than human; and
it was held to be a marvel, in that it
was not other than alive.”

Vasari had not been to Fontaine-
bleau, and so had never seen the pic-
ture, as is evident from his description.
He describes a realistic picture of a
beautiful woman, with various addi-
tional touches which make it almost
more like a Fragonard than the sub-
marine goddess of the Louvre. . . . But

a page of opinion from inside and outside the University community

he had evidently been informed that
the sitter was smiling, and provides
an unconvincing explanation. Nothing
could be less likely to produce the

‘Mona Lisa’s expression than a series

of funny stories. He mistakenly as-
sumes that, like all Leonardo’s work,
it was unfinished. But what about his
identification of the sitter with Mona
Lisa? There is not a shred of evidence,
either way, any more than there is
evidence for de Beatis’s identification
of the sitter as a friend of Giuliano de’
Medici.

But we may record that the An-
onimo Gaddiano, from whom Vasari
drew much of his information about
Leonardo, says that Leonardo painted
a picture of Francesco del Giocondo,
but does not mention his wife. This
could conceivably be the side door
through which the Giocondo crept into
history.

The first unquestionable description
of the picture is by that most in-
dustrious and reliable scholar, Cas-
siano dal Pozzo. It dates from 1625,
when Cassiano was recording his im-
pressions of the picture at Fontaine—
bleau. He says “A life~size portrait,
half-length of a certain Giocondo, in
a carved walnut frame. This is the
most finished work of the painter that
one could see, and lacks only speech
for all else is there. It represents a
woman of between 24 and 26 years
old, seen from in front, but not entirely
full face. . . . The hands are extremely
beautiful, and, in short, in spite of all
the misfortune that this picture has
suffered, the face and the hands are
so beautiful that whoever looks at it
with admiration is bewitched. Note
that this lady, in other respects beauti-
ful, is almost without eyebrows. . "

[It is] my belief that the “Mona
Lisa” was painted between 1506 and
1510; but of course she was based on
a drawing or cartoon which had been
executed in Florence about 1504, and
may conceivably have represented the
third wife of Francesco del Giocondo.
After all, the “Mona Lisa” would have
been only about seventy when Vasari
was collecting the materials for the
1550 edition of the “Lives.”

In the end, was the sitter a real
person? Or did Leonardo develop his
first cartoon of 1504 by studies of the
head of an anonymous lady whose
mysterious expression had taken his
fancy and allowed him to release cer-
tain obsessions? I doubt if we shall
ever know.

........ a tee

Sir Kenneth Clark 18 an art
historian and authority on the
Renaissance. These are extracts
from a lecture at the Victoria

and Albert Museum.

 

 

 

America, freedom no longer synonomous

By LUCJA SWIATKOWSKI
THE new you rmes news same:

There is an image of the Old World
immigrant getting off the ship at Ellis
Island, gazing at the Statue of Liberty,
and kissing the soil of America with
its promise of liberty and democracy.
This image affects official as well as
popular behavior toward the new-
comers, but few people realize that it
is no longer valid.

People who emigrate from Europe
to America today are no longer peas-
ants from Italy or Poland seeking
bread and land. They leave their coun-
tries for political or family reasons.
Second, after Watergate, the Pentagon
Papers, My Lai, Watts, and Newark.
America is no longer a synonym of
freedom and equality of opportunity.
Nevertheless, immigration officials are
still caught up in the simplified per-
ception of eternally grateful foreigners.

How can I be probed for my belief
in or support of Communism in a
country of freedom of Speech and
belief, where the daughter of the
bloodiest Communist tyrant is assured
the political asylum from her own
father’s cronies, while a Lithuanian
sailor seeking protection is kicked out
of the country? Where her father's
successor is invited by the President
of the U.S.A. and given a King’s wel-
come on his recent visit?

Why should I be asked whether I
was treated for nervous disorders,
when such people sit in the Senate of
the United States? Why should I be
suspect of adultery, prostitution, or
trafficking in drugs, as a matter of
course, just because I am a foreigner?
Are Americans less prone to such
behavior than others?

The award ceremony further in-
creased my feelings of unreality. The

main speaker lamented over the ma-
terial comforts and conveniences of
contemporary American life and lack

of concern for ethical and moral
values. Then he called upon us, the

newly arrived, to recapture the
strength and courage of the old fron-
tier America.

But the characteristics thought nec-
essary for such an endeavor were old-
fashioned ones: individualism, patriot-
ism, revival of the American challenge,
selling of an American dream. They
served the young country well in the
past, but it’s doubtful if they will

serve it well in the future.
In the standard letter to his fellow

citizens. President Nixon reminded us:
"As an American, you now have the
opportunity to engage in the most
rewarding activity of free men: full
participation in the democratic proc-
ess of a self-governing people." It is

an ironic comment from the man who
systematically disregards Congress, in-
timidates the press, who is suspect
of hiding the misconduct of members
of his staff and maybe his own.
Although I was happy to receive
my citizenship certificate, I resent
being treated like a vacuity. How can
one preach democracy, and then talk
down to people as if they didn't see
what is happening around them. The
American dream is gone. In this new
spirit, Americans should re-examine
their attitudes toward foreigners in
general. and the immigration proce-
dures in particular, to catch up with
the present.

 

Lucja Swiathowshi is a
graduate student at Columbia
University.

    
 
  
   
  
   

 
   
     
   

  
 
 

 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
  
   
  
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
    
   
   
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
  
  
   
  
 
 
 
 

 

 

4—THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Friday. October 5. 1973

...-.-------- .................................

Worship Service

Our Redeemer
Lutheran Church

2255 Eastland Parkway
Oct. 7 - 10:45 a.m.

Transportation Furnished From
Lutheran 5mm Center
447 Columbia Ave.
10:20 a.m.

R. L. Bentrup, Campus Pastor

e

l-i
5
z‘/

‘ 1

Do an automatic fade
in our

guaranteed-ta-tade ieans

100 per cent cotton Crompton cor-
duroy ieans start blue and get paler and
paler, automatically, with each washing.
Gorgeous. In iunior sizes. . .

Of exclusive Indicord. .to give that faded
worn appearance after five home

launderings.
$ 1 6

Downtown

New Guitar Setting of Eucharist

 

  

 

 

MW» ‘

Ivan Nagy executes the glittering finale of Hamid Lan-

Glued

 

der’s “Etudes." Nagy and the American Ballet Theater
appear on “Special of the Week." at 8 p.m. Monday. Oct. 8
on Kentucky Educational Television.

The upcoming TV weekend and
week promises to be one of music
and horror—if the comedy of
Watergate doesn‘t put an end to it
all.

Roberta Flack presents a half-
hour concert Tuesday. Oct. 8,
starting at 9:30 p.m. The show
will be seen on KET‘s channel 46
in Lexington. Roberta’s famed
voice will lend itself to such oft-
heard numbers as “Let It Be”
and “Save the Children".

Hosting this Friday night‘s
(Saturday morning‘s) Midnight
Special will be Gladys Knight and
the Pips with blues singer BB.
King as special guest.

The Artfi

incidentally, David Bowie is
scheduled to make his American
TV debut later this year before
the cameras of “Midnight“.

 

At dance company tryout

Frogs and

By JOSEPH STONE
Kernel Staff Writer

Some would describe dancing
as body movement-the swaying
of human limbs like leaves in the
wind—while others would con-
sider it afrontal attack on every
fiber of muscle in one‘s body.

To this reporter, the latter
definition of dancing applied to

from Atlanta

Last 2 Nites

S ‘I .50 cover

butterflys

the UK Dance Company‘s
auditions held‘ each Thursday
night for the past three weeks at
the Forestry Building.

ONE DOES not expect to
flutter about the floor like a
butterfly with one’s only previous
dancing experience being half—
polluted with the forbidden
liquid, doing the funky chicken.

TH E DEPOT

146 E. Short St.
(old Warehouse locatinn)

     

to the Tube?

by Carol Crapper

Taping of the Bowie-hosted Shows
will begin Oct. 10 in London

“Midnight" is televised at 1
am. Saturdays on channel 18.

Another KET presentation,
Rock-Folk 1970 will premiere
Sunday. Oct. 7. at 8 p.m. The
hour-long program will examine
where rock and folk music stood
when they met in 1970. Such well~
knowns as Melanie and Country
Joe and the Fish will visit the
show during its season.

Speaking of seasons....1t must
be that time of year for old

monsters seem to be out in
profusion.
The 1943 flick, Frankenstein

Meets the Wolf Man. will play one
more time in the channel 27
movie theater at 11:30 p.m.
Saturday. Lon Chaney and Bela
Lugosi star.

Meanwhile (or rather at 9 pm.
next Friday) an updated ren»
dition of Dracula will be seen on
channel 27. Jack Palance plays
the role of the famous monster.

()ther shows worth a look-into
include The American Ballet

Theater (8 p.m. Monday on
channel 46). Jerry Lewis in Hook.
Line and Sinker (11:30 pm
tonight. 27) and the comic
Western. Support Your Local
Sheriff (9 p.m. Saturday on
channel 18).

Those among you looking for a
taste of the past might want to
tune into the 1935 Shirley Temple
film. (‘urly Top (3:30 pm
Sunday. 62).

unite

Instead of a graceful butterfly.
would have a leaping bullfrog as
was this reporter's case.

Dr. Ruth Green, main cog in
keeping the dancers moving, is a
serious, conscientious, and above
all. patient woman who will not
turn down any aspiring dancer.
She said that there is room for all
varieties of talent—even
bullfrogs. But naturally the best
dancers are going to get the best
dancing roles.

When she came to UK, filling
the position vacated by Dianne
Damro, Dr. Green initiated the
practice of keeping apprentices
who would work with the more
experienced dancers.

THE UK DANCE COMPANY
will do a show in the late Spring in
the Guignol Theatre of the Fine
Arts Building. Dr. Green said
that all the choreography will be
done by students taking the
choreography class and herself.

This year‘s show will not follow
lastyear's variety recital format.
Instead. the company will either
do one or two suites or one act
opera.

Dancers are tentatively
meeting on Mondays at 7:30 p.m-
in the Forestry Building and all
prospective butterflys and
bullfrogs are urged to attend.

 

  
    

Oct. 5

Oct. 5 & 6

  

Oct. 5 8: 6

Oct 5—?

  
 
   

Oct. 5 & 6

 

Oct. 5-25

Oct. 5 8r 6

Oct. 8, 9, lo

. . .oround Lexington

Oct. 5

Oct. 5

Oct. 6 8r 7

Oct. 7

Oct. 7

Oct. 10

Oct. II

Oct. 12

Oct. 13

   

  
 

 

 

Concerts in and. . .

9:00 o.m.-lnformol Service
11:00 o.m.-Regular Service

Come join us, you’re always welcome.

Christian Student

502 COLUMBiA AVENUE ( 1 block from Complex)

  

THE KENTUCKY triangles. Fridayrgctober 5, 1913—5

1 SPEED BIKE

BEING GIVEN AWAY AT

   

   

  
 

 

Cloy Wallace's

 

 

 

 

Sly and the Family Stone—Memorial Coliseum, 8
p.m., $3.50, $3.

 
  

 

    
    
  
  
 

  

Cisco—The Depot, 146 E. Short St., 9 p.m.—1 a.m.,
$1.

    
  
  
 

    
   
  
 

   
  

Hatfield Clan—Jamf, 540 S. Broadway, 9:30 ‘ \ mice cream I
i

ENGLISH

    
 
   

  
 
   

P-mu $1. must be 21.

The Dick Baker Trio—803 South (Broadway), 9

WM no charge until midnight—then, :2, must SIRLOIN
be 21. BUTT

     
  

Christopher Robin—Rebel Room, 205 Southland
Dr., 9 p.m., no charge Mon-Thurs, $1 Fri. and
Sat., must be 21.

 
 
   

$5.00

 
 
 
 
 
 
  

THE HOME OF THOSE
FABULOUS, 34 FLAMBOYANT FLAVORS

   

    
   

Bobby Johns Band—Fireplace, 825 Euclid Ave.,
9 p.m., no charge Mom-Thurs, $1 Fri. and Sat.

    

INCLUDES:
0Potato or Vegetable
oAppetizer Plate

0 Salad

0 Beverage

   

  

  
  
   

 
      

DRAWING TO BE HELD SUNDAY, OCTO-
BER 7 AT 2 P.M. ENTRANCE FORMS
AVAILABLE AT THE STORE (YOU NEED
NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN).

    
 

Phil Copeland and Whisper—Jockey Club,
Imperial Shopping Center, 9 p.m., midnight
floorshow on Wed., Fri. and Sat., no charge.

     
     
  

 
 

Katy & Mary—Student Center Grill, 8-10 p.m., no
charge.

New Circle Rd. NW.

in front of Catalina Mptel

     
   

    

AT THE CROSSROADS PLAZA
(ACROSS FROM FAYETTE MALL)

     
   

29945327

     
   
   
  
    
       
     
  
   
   
       
 

 

 

 

J. (iElLS BAND. JOE WALSH, BARNSTORM
AND BACK DOOR—Louisville Convention
Center, 8 p.m., $5 advance, $6 D.O.C.

    

MERLE HAGGARD — Cinn. Music Hall, 7:30
pm. and 10 p.m., reserved seats $6, $5, $4.
Community Ticket Office.

‘Ifist‘lingoitbqhfis

is a genuine masterpiece of staggering proportions.”

—Edward Behr, Newsweek
‘Iast‘lfingom’l’afis

was presented for the first time October 14, 1972', that

date should become a landmark in movie history. A film

that has made the strongest impression on me in almost

twenty years of reviewing.” —Pau/ine Kael, New Yorker

is Q_o_t a ‘dirty’ movie. The film is stark, sensitive and

completely shattering in its intensity. Yes, by all means,

see ‘Last Tango’.” —Aaron Schindler, Family Circle
“Lastqango 112.?afis

is not about sex and it is not about inhumanity. it is about the

things that a man lives by. There‘s just nothing to compare
with it in recent experience. It is very much worth seeing.”

—Judith Crist, ‘Today' Show
‘Iast‘flingowlbafis

is not prurient. Rather, it uses sex to study human pain,
failure, loneliness, despair and at moments even love.”

—Eihe/ Whitehorn, PTA Magazine

‘IaSt‘léngo MPafis
is a rich, resonant film . . . a magnificent one.”

—Bruce Cook, The National Observer

   

LORETTA LYNN AND THE LONGHORN
RODEO—Capitol Plaza Sports Center, Frank—
fort, 8 pm. Sat, 2:30 pm. Sun.

   

ELTON JOHN, THE SUTHERLAND BROS.
AND QUIVER—In Assembly Hall, Indiana U.,
Bloomington, lnd., 8pm., $6, $5, $4, $2, IU Ticket
Office.

     
      

HANK WILLIAMS, JR.—Knights Hall,
Bellarmine College, Louisville, 2 8r 7 p.m., $3,
Ky. Model Shop, 3790 Lexington Rd.

MOTT THE HOOPLE & ARROWSMITH—
Cinn. Music Hall, 8 p.m., $4.50 advance, $5.50
D.O.C., Mail orders: Comm. Ticket Office, 29 W.
4th St.

     
    

SHA NA NA—UC Fieldhouse, Cinn., 8 p.m., $4.50 .
advance, $5.50 D.O.C., Ticketron outlets.

   

SHA NA NA—Louisville Convention Center, $5
advance, $6 D.O.C., Convention Center.

    
    

THE OAK RIDGE BOYS—Memorial
Auditorium, Louisville, 8 p.m., Box Office.

NEW WORSHIP