xt7s7h1dnp9p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7s7h1dnp9p/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-04-24 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, April 24, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 24, 1978 1978 1978-04-24 2020 true xt7s7h1dnp9p section xt7s7h1dnp9p Art Still may have signed too soon

Investigation starts after violation charges

According to a story in The Miami
News last Friday, UK All-American
defendve end Art Still is under in-
veslgation for alleged violations of
National Collegiate Athletic
Association rules prohibiting the
acquisition of agents by college
football players.

However. UK Athletic Director
Cliff Hagan told The Courier
Journal's Patti Borden that in “no
way can the University he held
responsible for something like this.
We can verify the facts in the matter
and that’s about it."

Volume LXIX, Number 142
Monday, April 24. I978

The investigation, which follows
the probation of the football team by
the NCAA last year, will determine
whether Still signed a contract or
agreed by handshake to acquire the
services of agent Matt Snell in
return for a loan.

“Snell was the only person I
checked out at the time," Still ex-
plained in Borden's accarnt of the
story in The Courier-Journal.

“During the season I ain’t had no
money and it’s always nice to have
money, especially if you’ve never
had nothing.

Ker

an independent student newspaper

'Book by UK officer
offers religious guide

By STEVE MASSEY
Kernel Reporter

“We are living in the last days of a
confused world,"

So warns Robert C. Stoudemire in
the opening line of his recently
published book. A Confused World.

Stoudemire is UK’s first black
campus police officer and has been
with the force since 1965.

According to Stoudemire, the
national as well as campus activism
of the late 605 and early 70s served
as a major stimulus for his writing
the book.

“Back in 1970, during the riots and
social upheaval, no one seemed to
know what was going on,” he said.
“It was a confused world. This is
when I decided to write the book.”

Stoudemire worked on the heck
during evenings at his home. It was
completed in 1976 but consulting
editors were not able to produce a
finished product suitable for print
until this year.

Living a loving, Christian life is
Stoudemire’s answer to the com-
plexities, turmoils and pitfalls of
everyday life.

“No one has any respect for each
other. Love is lacking among our

fellow men. It’s going to take all of
us together to pray and ask God for
guidance through this troubled
world,” he said.

Stoudemire, whose book was
published by Vantage Press of New
York, is a deacon of the Pilgram
Baptist Church in Lexington. He is a
native Alabamian.

To Stoudemire, the book's
messageis clear and simple. “I hope
the book shows people that the way
to cope with all the confusion is
through seeking Jesus Christ,” he
said.

By doing this, he said, people will
take time “to look at each other ——
feel each other out and see what is
happening in the world today.

“Things are getting worse, but it's
always darkest before the dawn. I
believe there can, and will, be a
brighter day.”

His theory on man‘s relationship
to man is simple: “Step on nobody‘s
toes; no one is perfect...try to
learn to accept people for what they
are.”

The book will be available at all
campus bookstores soon. It also can
be purchased at both Fayette Mall
bookstores and the Berean Church
Supplies store on Versailles Road.
The price is $4.95.

“Snell said any time I needed
some help to call him. So I signed
with him. It’s always been in the
backofmymindthatth'nmightleak
out,” Still said.

The loans to Still were broken
down into three or four interest-free
transactions totaling $3,000 to be
received by Still after the season.

“He wanted to sign with me before
the season became he wanted some
money," Snell said. “He said hrs car
blew an engine and he also wanted to
buy a big old dog, which I thought
was stupid. He said he needed a dog

to run with while he worked out. So
we had a handshake agreement.

“i felt at the time Art Still was a
manofh'mword,soltoldhiml
didn‘t want any paper floating
around with h'e name until after the
last game. I said, ‘Art, look. You
don‘t want to screw yourself up. Just
shake my hand and we’ve got a man-
to-man agreement."'

The story in the Miami papa went
on to say that Still later signed with
Mike Trope of Los Angeles before
dropping Trope and signing with

EN TUCKY

. __- V~_ 4.“.-.L. ..

Bob Miller of the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity cycles through the
first lap of the Little Kentucky Derby Bicycle Race Saturday on the
{K track. Miller. a sophomore horticulture major from In-

Graduate student casts
his only vote, and wins

By GREGG FIELDS
Copy Editor

It‘s probably quite common for
Student Government candidates to
vote for themselves. It is quite rare,
howeva', for their vote to be the
marg'm of victory.

For Mike Carozza, his vote was
the one which gave him the victory.
It was also the only vote he received.

Carozza, 25, is a graduate student
in public administration. The
graduate school is alloted two
senators to SG. But there was only
one declared candidate this time.

“I voted for the other candidate
(Kevin Brown, who received 16
votes) and decided not to waste my
other vote,” Carozza said Friday.
He voted for himself as a write-in.
He was the only person to receive a
write-in vote for the graduate school
seat.

“It was strictly a oneman, one-
vote show," he said. “I knew the
turnout would be low and i knew I
had a good chance of getting my

MIKE ('AROZZA

name in the Kernel.

“Several people offered to vote for
me but I told them not to." Carozza
said. He also claimed that it took
him more than five minutes to vote
because the person working the

Smile, you're on...

UK subject of several local television spots

By ANITA STURGILL
Kernel Reporter

ln'the fall of 1976, UK was con-
tacted by a local television station
with an opportunity to air public
service announcements.

"These announcements are free of
charge because they offer a service
to the community," said Bernie
Vonderheide of the UK Information
Services. “Public service an-
nouncements let the citizens of the
Commonwealth know what is
happening at UK," he said.

Film and developing are the only
costs incurred by the University.
said Pete Manchikes of UK In-
formation Services. This cost ranges
between 875-8100 for each com-
mercial.

One of the announcements is a
tour of the UK campts on “Old
Blue" (the Alumni Association‘s
double-decker bust with two
cheerleaders serving as guides.

()ther spots tell about dormitory
life. art exhibits. the Guignol
Theatre in the Fine Arts Building,
and UK's contributions in the

voting booth didn’t know how a
write-in vote was cast.

Carozza‘s political background
includes being president of UK’s
chapter of the Communications
Graduate Student Association and a
member of the North Hall Student
Association at Penn State, where he
received a bachelor's degree in
communications in 1974.

When asked how effective he
thought 80 was, Carozza answered
like a true politician. “I think SC is
as effective as the procedures by
which it conducts elections.” he
said.

What does that mean? “It allows
people to gain office who’ve done no
campaigning and who are not
responsive to a constituency," he
explained. When asked if he con-
sidered himself such a senator, he
said, “Unfortunately, yes."

Howeva, he added, “I feel that I
do represent a certain con-
stituency—those students who
don’t care enough to vote."

Continued on page 6

medical research of cancer.

“We‘re just lucky enough in
Lexington to have television stations
which have the interest of UK at
heart." said Vonderheide. “We don‘t
have any control when the stations
run these announcements.

Larry Neuzel. chief of program
traffic at Channel 18. said there is no
set time when the announcements
are run. From sign on to sign off,
and whenever time is available. the
spots are run.

Continued on page 6

 

Harold Daniels of Bevaly Hills,
Calif.

A third loan from Daniels was set
uptorepayasecondloanirom
Trope.

Regardless of the outcome of the
investigation, it appears that coach
Fran Curci’s team will not be held
responsible for Still's activity.

A spokesman for the NCAA told
the The News that since Still has no
more collegiate eligibility, it would
leave any action up to the
Southeastern Conference.

ART STILL

 

‘today

 

University of Kentucky
Lexington. Kentucky

It’s no horse, but...

dependence. Ky., made his run during the first heat of the com-
petition. The event, which helped close out the week-long LKD
Festival. was won by the Sigma Alpha Epsilon.

 

nation

VETERAN .\ (TOR WILL GEER. the wrinkled
grandfather of television‘s “The Walton‘s," has died of
respiratory arrest at a Los Angdes hospital, a CBS
spokeswoman said yesterday.

(ieer, 76. who died Saturday evening at Midway
Hospital. had been hospitalized secretly since March
25. said Janet Alston of CBS.

A (laugh ter, Ellen Geer, declined to say anything but
confirm her father‘s death.

“He didn't like publicity and he wouldn't want talk
about his body." she said.

(leer had been the white-haired patriarch for six
years on “The Waltons.“ a highly rated show about a
family living in the Depression and during World War
II. based on Earl llamner‘s book, “The Homecoming."

Two \‘UL’NG NORWEGIANS riding a tandem bike
from Anchorage to Miami say they averaged between
Illtland 150 miles a day on their way to Seattle.

"One day we ran off the road in a rutty area." said
Tore Naerland. who IS 95 percent blind due to an optic
disease he suffered in his youth. “Our bike was badly
damaged. but we weren't injured."

Nilf‘l‘lilnd. 23. and his partner. Rolfe Berge, who
steers the bicycle. rested in Seattle over the weekend.

During their three-week ride from Anchorage. the
two encountered temperatures 10 to 15 degrees below
zero

They say they get energy by eating sardines they
carry with them, The trip is sponsored by the Nor-
wegian sardine packing industry.

SOME RETIRED PERSONS who have substantial
income from parttime jobs will no longer receive
monthly payments due to a change in the Social
Security law. which took effect yesterday.

The new law ends payment this year of monthly
benefits to about 250.000 persons who began to receive
Social Security payments last year but who still work
part time. the Social Security Administration an-
nounced.

Previously. people who applied for benefits but
planned to work part of the year —- such as teachers,
farmers and seasonal workersflwere considered
retired for each month they did not work.

They could keep their Social Security benefits
although their actual income exceeded the annual
amount the law allowed them to earn and still receive
benefits.

According to the new law enacted last December,
persons who plan to work part of the year and earn
more than the law allows would not be sent benefit
checks for the months they did not work.

world

ITALY’S CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC PARTY
yesterday seemed to soften its nodeal stand with the
Red Brigade kidnappers of party president Aldo Moro.
But intermediaries reported no contact with the
terrorist abductors more than 24 hours after.a death

- deadline for More passed.

For the second day, hundreds of Italians gathered in
vigils outside Moro's Rome apartment and in front of
the Christian Democrats' downtown headquarters,
where leaders of the ruling party were meeting.

Party Secretary-General Benigno Zaccagnini said
afterward that Christian Democrats want to find out
through intermediaries “a reply to questions on the
fate of Aldo More and to ascertain . . . possible ways to
achieve his liberation.”

TIII-I (‘O-PILOT OF A SOUTH KOREAN JETLINER
downed in northwest Russia said yesterday the crew
received no warning from a Soviet MIG interceptor
before it opened fire, blastinga hole in the fuselage and
killing two persons. Ten were wounded.

Cha Soondo, 43, of Seoul, said the Russian plane had
been visible to him for about five minutes before it
fired. He said he received no radio communication
from the interceptor, although Soviet authorities said
they tried to contact the jetliner.

Passengas on the Korean Air Lines Boeing 707,
which had 110 persons aboard when it crash-landed on
a frozen lake. thought at first the fighter was an
American jet welcoming them to Alaska.

They said the pilot told them he apparently went off
his polar-route course became of a malfunctioning
cockpit compass and strayed into Soviet air space.

KAI. president Cho (‘hoon-hoo said earlier there may
\ave been a Soviet warning, but the question could not
be answered became the pilot was still in the Soviet
l'nion. detained along with the navigator.

weather

HANDY WITH A ('HANCI‘I 0F RAIN through
tomorrow, Highs both days In the low 60s. Lows tonight
around 40, Precipitation probability is 50 percent today
and ton'ght

 

 

 

  

 

Keene s

editorials 8: comments

Steve Balhng' er
Editor in Chief

Dick Gabriel
Managing Editor

Thomas ('lark
Assistant Managing Editor

t'harles Main
Editorial Editor

Nell HOUR
Assistant Arts 0
Entertainment Editor

David Hibbitts
Sport: Editor

Bob Slauble
Assistant Sports Editor

Walter Tums
Arts 1: Entertainment Editor

Gnu PM
Richard McDonald
Jim McNair
Mike Mercer
Betsy Puree
Copy Editor:

Davtd O'Neil
Photo Manager

Jeanne Wehnis
Photo Super visor

 

 

U.S. part in Paraquat]

spraying is

There was probably considerable delight in
some places when the report about the dangers
of Paraquat was issued last month.

Law enforcement officials at all levels couldn’t
have felt too much remorse to learn that the
marijuana they had little success keeping out of
America was frequently poisoning people who
used it. “Potheads” who smoke paraquat-laced
grass deserve no sympathy, declared an
editorial in one of the local papers last week.

Paraquat, a herbicide supplied by the United
States to Mexico in an effort to stem cultivation
of the marijuana crop, was determined to be
extremely dangerous in the report. Those who
smoke grass that has been sprayed with it can
get permanent lung damage, even severe enough
to cause death.

Evidently, the Mexican Paraquat spraying
program has been extensive. A California survey
reportedly found the chemical in 24 percent of
more than 2,000 samples.

That the United States should take an active
role in the poisoning of many of its citizens is

'disgusting'

disgtsting and appalling. Whether the act in-
volved is illegal makes no difference. The people
being poisoned have not been charged and have
had no trial for what is a minor offense. In fact,
they may only be in the same area where
someone else is smoking, yet still breathe the
substance.

The use of an additive in the chemical that can
be easily noticed by smell is no solution; there is
no guarantee that the Mexican government will
implement it completely or that all marijuana
smokers will be averted by the additive’s un-
pleasant odor.

Mexico should replace the chemical with
another herbicide, or should abandon the
program. Until the use of Paraquat in curtailing
marijuana ends, an excellent step would be to
abide by a recently announced boycott of
Mexican products, sponsored by local
marijuana-legalization groups. Granted that pot
is illegal, but the use of it is no reason to kill
indiscriminately.

 

 

Letters to the Editor

 

 

Concerned

regardless
weekends.

If one is cited then all should be. Fitzgerald and the author of the
of

weekdays 01‘ Mar. 16 editorial on gay rights a few

interesting facts. In a study done by

We are concerned residents of
Cooperstown. Due to the
unavailability of parking spaces for
R2 stickers, we are forced to park on
Woodland, Oldham and sometimes
Columbia streets. If we do, we take
the chance of receiving a parking
violation or being towed by the city.
To avoid this, we park where we can
in the spaces supposedly provided
for us.

Recently, it was our unfortunate. .

experience to park on a yellow line
outside our apartment building.

Usually, those who park there are'

not given a parking violation
became of the fact that most of the
police force “realizes" that there is
nowhere else to park.

Unfortunately, we parked there on
the wrong weekend and received a
ticket. Now, if the police force of UK
would carry out its enforcements on
a regular day-to-day basis, we would
not have anything to complain
about. But, due to this inconsistency,
the police department does not feel it
necessary to ticket on days when we
are unable to find parking spaces
due to various fans watching the
UKK baseball team (as well as other
incidents where parking spaces
have been filled by non-residents of
Cooperstown).

We feel that this is very unfair to
the people who live in Cooperstown.

‘OH BYWEWAY... WHWKW
WEUSED T0 HER

POPCORN

We also believe that this in-
consistency is not due to lack of
policemen on the force. They do
“cruise" the area daily, but do not
do their job of patrolling 24 hours as
posted on signs around Cooper-
stown.

We hope that in the future the UK-
PD will take note of this in-
consistency and see that proper
action is taken.

,fl . .

Donald B. Brangers
Comp Science junior
Frances B. Brangers

Dead horse

While Anita Bryant may have
gone a little off her rocker, and I am
certainly no fan of hers, I object to
the sweeping generalizations made
by Mr. Fitzgerald on the subject of
Ms. Bryant's crusade, and
homosexuality in general.

I don't believein beating the Anita
Bryant issue like a dead horse,
because neither she nor I have the
right to dictate the lifestyles of
others. Besides, weak, one-sided
Mickey Mouse pseudo-intellectual
type editorials are a dime a dozen.

I would like to point out to Mr.

oY

 

Okay. everybody, listen up “r all

know 'hl we‘re here.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NW 1 T «war Erratum
MucuABour?’ AX 3

Dr. Charles Winick, professor of -
Anthropology at the City University
of New York, 55 out of 2,000 cultures

He comes clean

studied were characterized by
sexual ambigu‘ty. Not one has
survived Both he and Dr. James
Dobson, a Ph.D. in psychology and
author of several books on
behavioral studies. agree that

unisex attitudes have preceded the
disintegration of cultures. They feel
that the future of this country is at
stake in this issue. ‘

It is on this basis that I object to
the advocation of recognized gay

Confessions of a coke

Don‘t ask me how, but it hap-
pened. I thought I could handle it;
thought I knew myself. I figured,
“Ah, so it happened to him and to
her. It’ll never happen to me. I can
take it. I know when to quit."

 

dick
~gabfiel

 

But I didn’t, and now I’m hooked.
I‘m an addict -— a coke freak.

I didn‘t start on it like most people
ordinarily do. . . at a party, after
almost everybody else is
gone . . . somebody hands you a can
and you try it and oooooooohhh,
brother.

No. I first tried it on a rubber raft,
floating down the Colorado Riva‘

(105.0?“
‘00th /
.t ”

l

with a psychotic headwaiter who
thought he was an artichoke and an .
Armenian midget named Herb.

“Here, try this," Herb said,
holding the container as high as he
could. I reached down for it.
“Thanks, you worm. Now, sit down
before you tip the damned raft." I
don‘t like Herb. He plays the har—
monica in his sleep.

But I tried the stuff. It was okay. I
had heard about coke before and
didn’t think much of it until then.

Soon it occurred to me that more
and more of my friends were con-
suming large amounts of coke. At
the time, though I didn’t realize it, I
was. too. It seemed like the thing to
do, the natural thing to reach for
when you got bored.

It became vogue within my circle
of friends to joke about it, as though
the stuff was life’s blood itself. “Oh,
I‘m lost without it:" “I just can’t
function unless I have some every
day, ha-ha-ha.”

I laughed right along with them,
but secretly entertained the smug
notion that I’d never be that way,
that I didn’t NEED it every day. I
just liked it, that‘s all. I could stop
whenever I wanted. I just didn't

. want to, that's all. Really.

/

But then came the hard times, the
days the sun would be shibning but I
wouldn‘t know it. The days when I‘d
stagger for the container, open it
clumsily and take it in as fast as I
could, just to get that one special
rush — when it feels like your head,
nose, throat and eyes have been
turned inside out and sprayed with
dry ice.

I couldn‘t function unti I had ex-
perienced that feeling. After that,
everything was right with the world.
Problems were more easily faced.
Nothing seemed too important.
Smiles came easier.

And then even that wasn‘t enough
oncea day. Soon I needed it once in
the morning and again in the af-

By Cooper and Bradley

 

A student in this departmem ls
rowan-ring to blow up the rumpus with
.l homemade atomlr bomb if he "LI an
cum grade lower than 5 So Irlut are
\u' nIn

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ollie.
00950
Icon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

How about giving him A N or 9! Just to
be m the sale side?

 

 

 

 

tem00n. And finally‘it came down to
needing it once every three hours or
so.

The sad fact is that I didn’t even
realize what coke was doing to my
life. It directed me, toyed with me,
even began to affect my emotions.
I‘d snap at somebody, really chew
him out, and five minutes later
(after my blast, of course) I
wouldn't remember doing it.

In retrospect, I can only think that
I was lucky. Yes, lucky — lucky that
I caught myself in time and realized
what was happening to me.

I’ll never forget what happened
the day I came to my senses and
realized what this stuff was doing to
me: I cut myself on a pop-top can.

I looked down on my finger, much
the way I look down at Herb (and I
dare say there's as much talent and
personality in that one finger as
there is in all of Herb), saw the blood
and finally realized: “Man, I sure
drink a lot of this stuff. And I used to
be part of the Pepsi eneration."

Photonnotmt in the (armor

activities on this campus. “Rights"
do not extend to ”just whatever I
want to do."

Lynne Beaty
A 8; S freshman

freak

'That was only'the beginning. I
knew 1 had a problem, sol im-
mediately enrolled in a 7-Up with-
drawal program.

Oh. I still get cold shivers
whenever I pass a machine with that
gauiy red emblem screaming at
me. but then I think of that bloody
pull-tab, and my finger, and Herb
(did I mention that I don’t like
Herb?) and I keep walking.

If you have that problem; even if
you use a lot of coke and think you
DON'T have that problem, take my
advice. Get off the stuff. Clean up
your act. Live life from day to day
with T-Up or grape juice.

And stay away from Armenian
midgets.

Dick Gabriel is the Kernel Managing
Editor and this is his final column. A
journalism senior. he will he
graduated in three weeks,
whereupon he intends to pursue a
career in aluminum siding.

Motel, (ambridee, [Y IDuane Mirhati

 

The Kentucky Kernel welcomes
letters and commentaries sub-
mitted for publication. Articles
must include the signature, ad-
dress and phone number. year
and major if the wirter is a
student.

(‘ommentary authors must
have expertise or experience in
the area to which their article
pertains.

The Kernel editors have the
final decision on which articles
are published. The editors
reserve the right to edit sub

 

Letters Policy

missions because of grammatical
errors, libelous statements or
unsuitability in length.

All letters and commentaries
become the property of rthe
Kentucky Kernel.

The best~read letters are brief
and concern campus events,
thOugh commentaries shmlb be
shortessay length.

Letters and commentaries
should be mailed to the Editorial
Editor, Room IN. Journalism
Building. University of Ky., 40600,
or may be delivered pesonally.

 

 

 

 

  
 

 

if
0“
I ly
“P
ay

 
   
   
  
  
   
  

it hats

  
 

 
 

 
 
  
 
 

 

  

 

arts

 

 

They’re fresh and still are the Dead

By Kl-IN KAGAN
Kernel Staff Writer

“Lately it occurs to me
What a long. strange trip
it's been..."

The Grateful Dead finally
made it to Lexington Friday
night, and for awhile there,
you could kick back and
almost forget it was Rupp

A rim 9

review

 

Ah, the Dead. 12 years and
the licks are still fresh.
'l‘housands'of gigs and the
lyrics are still gripping.
Countless bands have come
and gone, musicians have
died, wars have been fought,
governments have toppled,
but we still have the Grateful
Dead.

The Dead (Jerry Garcia,
Bob Weir, Phil Lesh, Bill
Kreutzmann, Mickey Hart,
Donna and Keith Godchaux)
have gone from desperately

lean times in the mid-60’s, to

high times in the mid-70‘s,
when they toted around the
country the world’s most
expensive and sophisticated
sound system.

Opening with the Chuck
Berry classic, “The
Promised Land," the Dead
played two hour-and-a-half
sets, with material ranging
from “Dire Wolf" from the
Workingman‘s Dead album to
“Samson and Delilah" and
“Passenger" from last year’s
Terrapin Station album.

Rupp Arena was about half
filled, but Bob Weir told the
crowd after the second tune,
“To your credit, it sounds like
there‘s a lot more of you.”

It started a little slow, but
Weir brought the crowd alive
and to its feet with Merle
llaggard’s “Mama Tried”

,.,\vhicb faded into “Mexicali

Blues.” Weir, for years one of

'the' must underrated" rhyth'm

guitarists, was playing
surprisingly confident and
competent leads, with Garcia
at times stepping back.
providing the rhythm.

0n "Ramble On Rose,"
from the Europe ‘72 album,

however, Garcia reminded

the crowd why he’s con-
sidered one of the great
American guitarists (I think
he is the greatest) with some
exciting licks.

You‘ve got to be there to
experience Jerry Garcia.

FUTURE CPA'S

LET US HELP YOU
BECOME A CPA

SA

""Lr ”tir‘rN'

LOUISVILLE 502 584-4023

CLASSES BEGIN MAY 22

BECKER?
CPA
REVIEW

 

 

 

 

Herbal

Advertising Director
Anthony any
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Ad Production Manager
Diane Marauder
ISM! 04

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James Lam
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The Kentucky Kernet, ill Jovrn
msm Building, U'werstty of Ken
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(You! (enlpfl year non "18th

 

 

 

merely play the guitar, he
strokes it, makes it sing, cry,
wail, mourn, soar off into the
clouds, whipping his audience
into a passionate frenzy. With
Hendrix and Duane Allman
gone, there is no one who can
take the audience anywhere
he chooses like Garcia. You
can take Keith Richard, take
Townshend, Peter Frampton,
Robin Trower. Give me
Garcia.

The high point was the slide
duet played by Garcia and
Weir on “Row Jimmy Row."
Slide work for Garcia is
nothing new, but I’ve seen the
Dead nine times and i can’t
recall Weir playing slide. The

crowd roared, gtit on their '

feet, and some even lit
matches and cigarette
lighters.

A word must be said here
for Bill Kreutzmann. After all

these years, he still loves his \

work. i think no member of
the Dead has been as con-
sistently enthusiastic as
“Billy the Drummer," and
Friday night he jumped
around the stage playing
several percussion in-
struments, leading the
audience in hand-clapping,
acting like a pup in a butcher
shop.

I’ve made no secret of the
fact that I despise Rupp
Arena. It is a sterile,
inhibiting arena. One of the
main reasons it’s hard to
really let go and enjoy
yourself is that with reserve
seating, standing up and
moving around is frowned
upon.

That says something for
concert-goers in Lexington.
It's possible, and this is my
own theory, that people here
are so thrilled to have a big-
name band playing, that
they'll take it on any terms.

We never seen so many
stiff, inhibited fans at a

concert. When . Kreutzmann

was up there practically
begging the fans to clap, only
a fraction of the crowd did.

I was on my feet in the tenth
row, clapping and responding
to the brilliance on stage, and
people behind me were
yelling at me and others to sit
down, and throwing cups and
ice at us.

I know that the standard
response to this complaint
will be, “I paid my $8, so I
don't want to have to see
someone’s back."

What it comes down to,
basically, is that rock con—

 

   

  

   
 
   

   
 

Augist 27.

  
  

  

   
  
 

 

' “Captain Trips" doesn't certs, and especially the

Dead, should have festival
seating, withwt chairs on the
main floor. And people in
Lexington should get off their
asses and enjoy themselves.

The second set featured
“Playing in the Band“ from
the “Skull and Roses" album,
which led into a 45 minute
jam, which then with almost

)-

ii.- a? a y 9

 

Bob Weir. Donna Godchaux and Jerry
Garcia of the Grateful Dead sing to the half
filled house at Itupp Arena. Grateful Dead

no ndice segued into “Stella
Blue," ”'l‘ruckin'," and then
back into “Playing in the
Band.” Weir thanked the
audience, and the Dead left
the stage.

The house lights came on,
but the crowd hung in there
with cheering, and the lights
went back out and the Dead
returned with Warren

 

played for over two hours for their»

Zevon's bizarre “Werewolves
of London."

It was a thoroughly
professional show, with some
of the best music Lexington is
likely to get. The energy was
not as high as in the old days
in San Francisco, when the
Dead would play for 6 high-
speed lltlll‘S, but then. they‘re
older, far more mature.

    

- —-Steve Schaler
Lexington fans last Friday. The Dead have
been touring and playing together for 12.
years.

 

 

i

 

[advance sales start:
Tues. April 18

The '78 Kentuckian contains: Complete NCAA coverage

KENTUCKIAN ’78

Yearbook

Limited number left for advanced sale
so get it while you can for only $6.00

in Rm. 113A or
Rm. 210 Journalism Bldg.

(from the game to the Airport), as well as color coverage
for Regular Season Basketball and Football plus many
other campus activities.

Books will be here for pick-up May 8th.

F“ ,

  

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Monday. April 24. INS—J

$ PER MONTH

moo EXTRA WITH THIS .
FORYOUR 181' oonanou=stzm e

@plasmaailianoe ;

3548017 .

1‘00 Oxford Circle 8a ill 7pm Mon Fri ,
(arduiai Valley Shopping Com” Sat. 8am 3pm 5
J

 

 

The University of Kentucky

PAN HELLENIC
Wants You . . .

to join us!!
Registration for the 1978
FALL SORORITY RUSH
is being held April 24-27,

4-6 p.m. daily at the

Complex, Blazer, Patterson,

, Donovan,

( and the
Student
‘ Center.

 

 
   

 

 

 

 

Ctr/O

‘9 Kentucky Concerts 429

Showplace

Kentucky Theatre
214 E. Main
presents

0N PROD”
00$?\ and

April 27
Tickets: $6.00
Two Shows
7:30 8 10:30

Tidtets sold at Kentucky theatre during mid-
night movies, or at Jefferson Davis Inn, Barney
Millers, Sound Company and Chapter 3 Records.

       
        
     
     
       
       
     
   
     
   
     
     
     
     
   
   
   
      
     
     
     
   
     
   
       
    
  
 
  
  
  
  
   
   
   
 
  
    
  
  
 
    
  
  
  
 
  
  
   
 
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tie penvisit minimum charge is :8 during the session in which the student is enrolled.

Hours:
8-5 M-F until lune 30
8-4:30 M-F after July 1
No Saturdays

OStudents enrolled in either the 4 week session
or the 8 week session may pay the summer

Health Fee. One $10 fee covers the entire summer.

There is only one fee for the entire Summer. It is $10.00. it covers the period from May 15 thru

The :10 summer health tee is paid only once when tuition is paid for the session in which the
student is enrolled. if a student is enrolled in both sessions the health fee should be paid when
tuition is paid for the Aweelr session. If the health fee is paid at the beginning of the a week session,
thecoverage is retroactive to May 15th. Payment of the health fee is subject to the same deadlines
as the tuition deadlines for each session.

OStudents attending summer sessions who do not pay
the Health Fee may use the Health Service on
a fee-for-service basis.

 

INFORMATION ABOUT THE STUDENT HEALTH SERVICE
SUMMER 1978

0The Spring Semester Health Fee Card is good thru May 14.
oThe Health Service will be open all summer

   
  
 

OStudents who are in legitimate Academic Programs
during the summer, but are not enrolled in courses
may pay the Health Fee.

Students who can pr0vide Billings 8. Collections Office with an authorized statement from their
department that they will be engaged in an academic program during the summer even it they are
notenrolled in classes are eligible to pay the no health fee. Authorization forms are availabl