University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY)

 - Class of 1970

Page 1 of 368

 

University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) online collection, 1970 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 368 of the 1970 volume:

University Archives Margaret I. l'ilng Library - Nail Univcniw o! Kemuclw iwlngton, Kentucky 40506 The editor and some of the staff of the 69-70 Kentuckian assume full re- sponsibility for the choice of pictures, theme presented, language used and total development of the Kentuckian. The content of this book had not been developed with the knowledge or approval of the Board of Student Publications. It is our desire to assume complete responsibiiity for the 69-70 Kentuckian. K503 NPMJ- puke WM, m I do . 74x01 42H VS bacl w; Fm 3L Disclaimer J S 7 The University's Code of Student Conduct contains the statement that che editors shall have the right to editorial freedom without the prior approval of copy . . . This book is being published even though the editorial comment, pictures and graphic design contained in this edition of the Kentuckian were found not to be representative of student activities and therefore unacceptable for publication by the Director of Student Publications for the University. The responsibility for the editorial comment, pictures, and graphic design is solely that of the editor, AIex Soteriou. Charles A. Reynolds Director of Student Pubiications KENTUCKY 69 INTO 70 This is very simply intended . . . The matter of Life is controversial here . . . Kentucky people . . . . game; n .4 .5 i :f .- a There is this fantastich-and more-place Just a few minutes away from campus tincredible. tGreen Mansions A stream cuts a narrow piece through stone- the stone is cut into endless Iayers-h and all flowing downh down as into the center of the earth. There are caves-w rock ledges with water falling over them-h green and more green than green- jungle soundsh trees so tall they force the sun into shafts of light. We here that A mystical kinship with nature comes into full meaning- -. v ... n 0...... - O... I i More and more it seems that the ordering of nature is an art akin to musice fugues in shell and cartilage, counterpoint in fibers and capillaries, throbbing rhythm in waves of sound, light, and nerve. And oneself is connected with it quite inextricablye a node, a ganglion, an electronic inter-weaving of paths, circuits, and impulses that stretch and hum through the whole of time and space. The entire pattern swirls in its com- plexity like smoke in sunbeams or the rip- pling networks of sunlight in shallow water. Transforming itself endlessly into itself. the pattern alone remains. Alan W. Watts Sound adds a whole dimension to an already vibrating nature it echoes the rhythms of life processes the hum of interactions. It creates a flow a movement a harmony with all with nature Qii . 92.. 3s .31, WOODSTOCK NATION is built on ELECTRICITY. It is our energy, music, politics, school, religion, play, bat- tleground and our sensuality. Abbie Hoffman Yasgur tthe farmer who owned the land where it an happenedt addressed the crowd and told them they had proved to the world that a half million people could assemble on a hillside and get along with one another. Life We made our Music We brought life to our Park We dug the Spring We were Woodstock We didn't do as much music this year- We were busy with social issues revolution and thingse .1 . The best stuff is when we come offstage and everybody crowds around and welre all so emotionally high that all we can do is smile. Thatls my favorite thing, lt just goes beyond words. You're all tight and close and grlnnlhg from ear to ear and people come by and some of them can : even say anything. It doesn't happen everytime because Were not as open and as free as we could be all the time and neither are they. We keep on trying. Jesse Colin Young of the Youngbloods This place was too good to be true We played our own music wildly We danced on the tables We all sang together We all reified each other it was like a communitys it was a community. This Paddock was incredible. Paulethe guy who ran it was timide but intrigued by our beautiful antics. Then there Wasn't enough room for all of us and the cops would come every night and ' now we canlt play our music at the Paddock eat least not instrumentally . . . The feeling of community is so great- and music helped pull it together so much :1 111:11 1.1. 1.3. ,3 s 4.41.4, ......13, 343.3134; gaunt A group of Indians calling themselves The White Roots of Peace, came to our university and rapped with us. They got into the beauty and sense of COMMUNITY that they feel by living a one-to-one relationship with each other- with the earthheohoes of McLuhants tribal village? COMMUNITY IS A GOOD FEELING. WI - l In becoming close with nature new sensitivities develope feelings for the life essence-w hints of archetypal symbolism-relationships . . . a kinship a mystical kinship with nature a sense of harmony with all the motions and workings of the cosmos a simpleness eand yet a feel of hidden ageless complexities a primitivenesse a community with the earth and with mane In the tribal world, painting lives on the body, sculpture is something you use or worship, architecture you do yourself, and literature you recite or dance. Fashion is language: it structures the abyss of darkness. Speak that I may see you. In the tribal world, art belongs to ordinary day-to-day experiences: the way a father addresses his son, decorates his house door, butchers a pig, dances, puts on his loihcloth in the morning or addresses his guardian spirit. When art becomes inseparable from daily livihge the way a woman prepares a meal, speaks to her children, decorates her home, makes love, laughsithere is no Hart , for ail of life is art. Marshall McLuhan Imqu-a-s- wt... 4h.'-f v. 'vmmmP fr... 1 A H.?.qm4 Dress is becoming more and more of an expression of arth in tune with a more casual, direct and active relation with lifehwith the environment. V y 3;;W34: V VJ :w'?' r mg q Life is art art is life it's as simple as that; you can understand that because you are that! and the relationship between you and all is so beautifully pulled together with environmental art without disrupting but rather by extending; and all in harmony ali in harmony and people are into that herea some of thema Hugh Burton's sculpture here is part of the art which flows through X with his farm. t a h LL 8 VI 8 U 0 y . 4.999? ...9.. 3 x ix... :9: a .9199 ..11 31.3.3.3! N m w. 9 u u 4. .. m .m and our Kentucky; that place where we're beingi being art just grew a little -- We've embraced eons of space; We've extended ourselves further than ever and after how many thousands of years? We've actually walked around on that that moon THE MOON how incredible we've looked up at it for so longi solong And what now? HWe came in peace for aH mankind And what now . . . What kind of peace Hfor all mankind can we give to our home planet? 11 I We have little bits of the moon alsoe A lot of lucky people do. Some bits were used as gifts. Ours were for researchi 3w- : agar uxpn um '. In an age in which men have begun to explore outer space, a more fantastic space odyssey awaits us: An exploration of social space-between man and man- and a journey into inner space-between a man and his self. Paul N. Savoy ,yal' Strange life lines these are expansions of our heads ? Strange expansionsa if they are that. THE 360 computer weWe got them on campus, theyWe programed to teach, more efficient than a wive, prof . less likely to err than an individual probably much less of a hassel 1 w U C a .T h .6 d. n E O t O m e M O 7 9 1 7 y r a U n a J . . . as a working rule we may assume that re- ' search and teaching are the primary factors considered, that of the two. research is the more important, and that service would gener- ally be considered as a subsidary factor to the others. another extreme at a different level- but very Kentucky, was during the state-wide teachers strike . According to one of the churches in downtown, Lexington, the solution to the problem was a twenty-four hour revival to which the students at Asbury, who were always getting into some very heavy revivals, were warmly invited . . . So Spud and others pulled together our free university a university concerned with the LIVING! x to have lived is education 6 WHAT IS HFREAKING OUT On a personal level, freaking out is a process whereby an individual casts off outmoded and restricting standards of thinking, dress. and social etiquette in order to express CREATIVELY his relationship to his immediate environ- ment and the social structure as a whole. Less perceptive individuals have referred to us who have chosen this way of thinking and FEELING as iiFreaks , hence the term: Freaking Out. On a collective level, when any number of Freaks gather and express themselves creatively through music or dance, for example, it is generaliy referred to as a Freak Out. The participants, already emancipated from our national social slavery, dressed in their most inspired apparel, realize as a group whatever potential they possess for free expression. The Mothers of Invention Freak-out means sensory chaos McLuhan Todayis television child is attuned to up-to- the-minute adult newse inflation, rioting, war, taxes, crime, bathing beauties-e-and is bewildered when he enters the nineteenth- century environment that still characterizes the educational establishment where infor- mation is scarce but ordered and structured by fragmented, classified patterns, sub- jects, and schedules. It is naturally an environment much like any factory set-up with its inventories and assembly lines. Marshall McLuhan . A v -..--+ w. k . , + . tx. Surwd U. Survival U. . . . 1!!y11l.1!1a,:1 i111 Unity Through Pollution Once upon a time a young man named Irwin gave up protests. He gave up pro- testing Vietnam, the draft, sexually segregated rest rooms and pigs on campus. ttEcology is the one true cause! said Irwin nobly, just like most young people of the time. l'l shall devote mysehc to making a more beautiful world.H HOh, my beamish boy, cried his happy mother, like mothers everywhere. Hl knew yould give up those silly demonstrations and settle down to doing good. Everybodyls for ecology, son, said his proud father, like fathers everywhere. tAt least welve found a common cause that will close the gen- eration gap. And it did. lrwin joined the Students for Delightful Sur- roundings. He spent his days spearihg litter with a pointy stick. And his evenings circu- lating petitions. The older generation final- ly approved of the younger generation. Everybody was happy- But after a year or so, lrwin and his young friends discovered that spearihg lit- ter seemed somewhat joy- Iess. And Circulating petitions seemed somewhat pointless. Nothing much got done. Oh, Congress passed a few bills. The corporations talked about Hcorporate re- sponsibility. The President said the local communities must do more. The local communities said Washing ton must do more. So the air got smoggier, the waters fouler, the litter deeper and the supermarkets more crowded. HThese things take time, son, said lrwih's father ner- vously. HAt least you're doing good, deanl' said lrwinls mother uneasily. At 5:14 om. the following Tuesday, the SDS staged a Iie-ih on the Pasadena Free- way. The resultant traffic jam, extending from Ana- heim to Azusa, eventually had to be paved over. The Nation was outraged. Editorial writers thundered: HNo little band of radicals, no matter how just their cause, has the right to . . . The next day, the SDS blew up 16 dams to create wild rivers, toppled 42 oil derricks to promote clean beaches and booed every passing baby carriage ih Cen- tral Park. The following week, they dynamited every sewer in Decatur, N.J., sabotaged the No Deposit bottle factory in Billings, SC. and tried to burn down the heart of Los Angelesebut they couldn't find it. Young Irwin, home on the lam, was confronted by his tearful mother. HWhy don't you quit that radical SDS, dear, she pleaded, Hand join the nice, respectable Sierra Club instead? HThose Uncle Smokeys! , snorted lrwin. HThey just want to conserve the wilder- ness we've got. But we're going to make the whole country into one big wilder- ness! But. son, pleaded his father, chink of the innocent people you're hurting in this cause of yours. HThe great thing about ecology as a cause, said Irwin happily, His that every- body's guilty. And with that he pro- ceeded to set fire to the family car, tip over the family barbecue and smash up all two-and-a-half toilets in the family's two-and-a-haIf-bath house. When he'd gone, his parents ruefully surveyed the wreckage. l'l think I liked it better, said his mother with a sigh, 'lwhen he was only mad at the President, the university, the police and the Army. Art Hoppe S. F. Chroh. The Environmental Awareness Seminar brought in many speakers and has the potential to really do things perhaps a little morek,spirit-more people- more revolution- e.gw swam ? 1 I 1 1 :1 1 3 i E We pleaded with Hrecruiters from Bethlehem Steel Corpora- tion. Bethlehem strips all over Kentucky and is owned by the Mellon family, one of the richest families in Amerika. 40H in the flat country of western Kentucky, where thousands of acres had already been devastated by strip-mining, the coal seams lie only thirty to sixty feet beneath the surface. The overburden is scraped off and the coal is scooped out. Inevitably such topsoil as the land affords is buried under towering heaps of subsoil. When the strip- pers move on . . . the level meadows and cornfields have been converted to jumbled heaps of hardpan . . . this hellish landscape is slow to support vegetation and years elapse before the yellow waste turns green again. In the meantime immense quantities of dirt have crept into the sluggish streams, have choked them, and brackish ponds have formed to breed mil- lions of mosquitoes . . . After the coal has been carried away vast quantities of the shat- tered mineral are left uncovered. Many seams contain sub- i stxim stantial quantities of sulphur, which when wet produce toxic sulphuric acid. This poison bleeds into the creeks, killing minute vegetation and destroying fish, frogs and other stream-dweilers. Only 20 per cent of the coal in a virgin boundary can be recov- ered even when both strip and auger mining are employed in unison . Strip-mining destroys the land and eradicates the eco- nomic base on which continued residence within the region is predicated . . . The rights of thousands of mountaineers to house and home is adjudicated. The surface land is destroyed totally insofar as any known 'system of reclamation is concerned . . . The coal corporations hold the present estate and future heritage of the landein effect an op- tion to preserve or ruin present and future generations. Harry M. Caudili FEE: a I'My children have not been going to school and nobody wants them to go more than I do. I've been out of work now for four years. I've been all over this coal field and over into Virginia and West Virginia looking for work . . . I drawed out my unemployment compensation over three years ago and the only income I've had since has been just a day's work now and then doing farm work for somebody . . . I'm dead-broke and just about ready to give up. I live over a mile from the schoolhouse and I simply donlt have any money to buy children shoes or clothes to wear. I own a little four room shanty and twenty acres of wore out hillside land. Last spring the coal company that owns the coal . . . teetotally destroyed the land . I . Me and my oldest boy have one pair of shoes between us, and that's all. When he wears them, I don : have any and when I wear them, he don't have any. If it wasn't for these rations the govern- ment gives us, I guess the whole family would have starved to death long afore now . . . If you think putting me in jail will help my young-uns any, then go ahead and do it and I'll be glad of it. . . . Speech of a miner who had been arrested and brought to court for not sending his children to school in Harlan County, Kentucky. i Don Gibson Dan came to campus during our strip-mining plea e he had stood up to the stripping machine - and won. He is a legend in the mountains and it was so good to feel his strength - his simpatico and spirit with us. and in Kentucky style there are ballads to Dane THE BALLAD OF DAN GIBSON by Gurney Norman The foreman of the 'dozer crew Told old Dan he was comini through To scrape away his trees and earth And strip-mine coal for all he was worth. Dan looked at the 'dozer and then at the fellow, And said buddy you're wrong if you think I'm yellow. Don't think that because i'm an old man I'm afraid to defend my piece of the land. The driver of the 'dozer had a second thought. He began to wonder just whether he ought To tangle with as fierce a looking man AS the one before him they called old Dan. 80 he said to Dan, now listen mister, I drive this 'dozer for my wife and sister. i ain't drawing a big enough pay To die for no boss and the TVA. So let me tell you what I'm gonna do, I'll go and get the boss of this stripmine crew. Then if you two are bound to fuss Why that'll be better than the two of us. The foreman went to Hazard and got the boss, Told him he was scared, their cause was lost. If we don't do something about old Dan We'll never get to strip-mine any more land. The stripper could hardly believe his ears. For how could a man of 70 years Defy an industry powerful as coal? The stripper couldn't see it to save his soul. But 80 c Afr: If he It WI Dan The He c Novx it wi It we Tha' But The Hey Corr For Whil The: To a The: To a A de Som The The But I Lay 80 h To fi Till t And But still old Dan had him sort of worried, So out to the mine site the boss man hurried, Afraid that he might lose some face If he didn't put Dan back in his place. It won't be easy the foreman said. Dan's got a strange notion inside his head That just because the land is his He can keep out the strip-mihe biz. Now you couldn't say the stripper was a cowardly fellow. It wouldn't be fair to call him yellow. it was just to keep peace in the mountain tops That he took along with him twenty-one cops. But when he arrived with his well armed band, The stripper strutted out on old Dan's land. Hey Dan, he yelled, are you up there? Come on down, we'll settle this fare. For the next few minutes everything was still, While the cops and the boss man stared at the hill. They were looking for the man they called old Dan, To arrest him for trespassing his own land. They waited for a while and then fanned out To assault the hill and tried to rout A dangerous criminal who had defied Some powerful men how after his hide. The hill was steep and to the big boss The surface of it was a total loss. But he knew that under the rugged soil Lay a seam of coal worth more than oil. 80 he urged the cops with their Clubs and guns To find old Dan and make him run Till he was off the strip-mine site, And not worried too much about his legal rights. Old Dan wasn't hard for them to find. The cops could have found him if they'd been blind. For Dan wasnt the kind to cringe and hide, He figured the law was on his side. But the boss said Dan that's where you're wrong. The law's on the side of him that's strong. That's why us coal men are so lucky, To mine in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Dan could hardly believe his ears, And his bright Old eyes filled up with tears. He wasn't afraid to go to jail, But he couldn't stand to think that freedom had failed. The strip-miher said, Now dont cry Dan Let's make a deal for this here land. it you'll let me strip this worthless hill, Me and my partners will pay you well. Dan looked around him at all the cops. Then he gazed awhile at the mountain tops. He saw the ugly stripemine bench, Then frowned at the boss like he smelt a stench. Said, you got this coal through a crooked deed To satisfy your lust and greed. You Cheated my father of his mineral rights, But youlll never get the surface without a hard fight. 50 they took old Dan to the Hindman jail. But he got out on a sudden bail Put up by his neighbors and all his kin So he could fight the strip-miners again. Hels fightin' them now with a thousand others, To win this as are all blood brothers, Bound to defend each other's land From the ruin of the evil strip-mine band. were pretty much a tobacco state 500A of our crop income - 14:55.. , , ,7 w..- aw A $.33 eevery smoke is one minute or some such bit of time off your life We have a tobacco and health research institute here at UK the federal government gives us a half-ceht per pack of cigarettes sofd to get into this- ! and at the same time 4 many people here live off j their tobacco sales- We rapped with Rachael about her experiences- She and her ten broth- ers and sisters grew up on a tobacco farm There's been a bunch of disagree- ment over the ill effects of tobac- co. And this has effected tobacco prices. They've gone down. The people that are really going to be hurt are the small farmers . . . the ones who have two tenths acre' 2 acrese l aoree . That's their money crop right there? you don't make money off of com and soy beanse You make a little bit; but the money that pays for the up keep of the machinery, to buy new machinery, to keep the farm going. to pay off loansi Comes from your tobaccoieCole Iege education for your sonse a lot of boys in school: that's the way they pay for it-e Well it's twice as bad now tooe There's floodinge I don't know what its like at homee except from pic- tures I've seen in the home papers ethe flood looks like its pretty seriouse bottom lands, especial- ly. Bottom lands your best iandu but it's also easiest to flood; and it's going to be hardi if we don't have a relatively dry summer-e with rain when needed. . . . you've got to cut off the bios- soms in July or so. And you also cut out the suckers. The sucker is the heart to the tobacco. And you have to go in and dig that oute the tobacco is gummey, dirty, nasty, wet. Early in the morning is the best time. That's when they usually work in it be- cause it's hot. It could kill some- body if it's exceptionally hot. ZIOWXITHDA ?CC'X'hO :rstmt m4: There's a lot of work involved in gettin' tobacco out. July or the beginning of Auguste end Of Auguste the beginning of Sep- temberh each year it varies. You cut ite and it's hot worke it's heavy worke it's hard work- But it's always been kind of heat at our place because our's is a family farmk and we all get out, you knowl My sister and l we took turns washing dishes in the morn- ing and worked cleaning house. Whoever washed dishes of course got out before anybody else and we'd race, fight over who's going to get that job because we'd want to get outside. I usually lost and ehded up doing the house. But you'd get to ride the tractor i l . and little kids get to drive the tractor because as long as you can drive a straight line and you're going pretty slow it's not hard to do . . . my little brotherse first time they did it they were 10, 11 e and they're still children but they've got enough sense-- It was a big thingafor our family anyway. We always had fun out there, especially when we were little. All your uncles are around and they may be grumpyabut they're funnyethey really are. lt's like a family reunion. When my grandfather's house was still standing I can remember it, they were all out there doin' it and all my aunts and uncles came in, even my uncles who wereh't farmers All my aunts cooked up a storm. It was really great. We had good times, And at 10 and 3 o'clock in the afternoon, or there abouts, Daddy brings out the Cokes and the peanut butter and crackers, and it's really a lot of fun Course my daddy's a unique man too he takes life as it comes, course he worries, but he site back and enjoys life tooefarminl ehe loves it. My daddyls a smart man. He can be doing anythinge but you get him inside and he goes stir Crazy. He's got to be outside. That's the way he grew up and that's the way he wants it. Now he doesn't want his sons to farmu Because it's a hard life. We've got 1 1 children. He's got eleven of us to educate, and he plans on all of us going to college. And it's hard on himeyou know, but it's something he wants to do a he's just a fantastic person. lt hangs in the barn for a couple of months And it dries out and turns that rich golden good lookin' brown. lt smellsebut I think it's a beautiful smell. Now this year was bad, Daddy said he could feel the tension. You could feel it in the warehouse. It gets to be a very personal thing with you-you know? Last year my daddy never got called down on the price he set. He got called down all the time this year. They aren't paying the prices. Well if people are going to cut down smoking-there's no other use for tobacco. My Daddy quit smoking. People are scared. Doctors have done a good job scaring people. The small farmer is really having a rough time. i :UfKV'E-w'v So many of our beautiful trees get wreckedel meanewho wants to look at scenic Kentucky advertised in magazines, and politics and beauty queens advertised on trees? You wouldrft believe the tons of staples stuck in some of the trees on campus. Hopefully, people are becoming more sensitive about things like trees. We even had a few more planted on campus- vmmmm The campus became a home for starlings at least for a while-- then we began seeing the starlings dead all over campuse - some of them had been blown aparte We observed university personnel shooting into the trees on dusky eveningse and during the day a clean-up man would skewer the bird corpses and bag theme Some of us were pretty upsete rumor has it that it was dangerous to walk around near the president's house because those awful birds were always excreting and put important people in the line of firF and then came the ordere the order to get rid of those hazards. It's strange that the university concerns itself with such unusual hazards- such unusual clear and present dangers , in light of our total situation. Lexington water isn't all that goode some of the outlying areas have no public sewers and bad drainage. After two cases of typhoid the board of health investigated one area and found raw sewage floating in the stream that runs by homese A four-year-old boy contracted typhoid. But these communities don't want to take care of their sewage problemse it's all a plot. They cant afford to pay for sewers-e so if the city tells them to pay for sewerse that's only because the City wants to annex them. And they want to be left alone. The mother of the boy who contracted typhoid hardly feels the same waye but then again maybe she's one of those communists. eAnd the water problems go one SAFETY PAYS IN EVERY WAY When :1 Illlx'lblll' humh m' 111i$x'ih5vxlthdUS. Ilw lmillygnggj IHWhIr'ml um immw ligln tHu11M.hc:u,hlgxsifzmtl radiation. 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What Is Fallout? 11'111i'11 11 111113111111 111111111111 ex11101t1es 1111111' 1111' 54111111111. 1:111:1111111111111111.4111 11111191121111 1'111'111 111111 1111101 11011115 1110 S111'1i01'1 1111 1111111'1111111111-11-111'1'1111111. 11111110 1111 1'1111111111-111'1' gases 111'11v 11111'1'11 111' 1111' 11x11111$11111 condemn 1111 111111 111111 11115 11011115, 11111111101111: 1'1111111111'111'1' 13111101111 11111110105. XVithV 111 115111111 111110, 11111511 111111111115 11111 back 111 11111111, 1111' 11111401 011135 11151. 11111 5111111111 111108 111101. 011 11111. way 1101111, 111111 after they 1'1'111'11 1110 1110111111, 11111 11111101111111: 111111191115 11110 1111' 111115111111 151111111111 1'115's--1111'1' X-I'uysm 11111111111111.4111 which. 1111111711111 111' injure. 11111011111. Those 11111110103 , 3'11! W 1111' 1:110 Oll' 1111151 111 1111111' 11111111111111 1 .' Ilhamduyjl 1111101111: 11111111010 1110 111'31' 1'1'11' 1' ' 1111111's'r11'1111151111111'111111111111 111111111 111'1111' 1111151 111111;:1'1'111151111111111. LEXWGION BLUE. GRASS ' ARMY DEPOT 'rglluc: 1m Dims: Una Busmzss Emma: Oun Gum.- Bluegrass Depot is second among Kentucky's industrial employers trailing only General Electric. Operation at the depot is triple shift around-the-clock. The storage depot at Richmond is one of the largest in the world, covering 20,000 or more acres There are 900 underground storage units known as igloos scattered over the Installation Re cently 720 tons of lethal nerve-gas, 1100 car loads tthe depot has Its own rail statlom were scheduled to be shipped out of the depot. Because of the controversy the Shlp ment was delayed. The depot is very much involved In chemo-biological warfare storage. Kentucky's earth is storage for many un- usual things-much more than just coal. 330 acres called Maxey Flats is the largest privately operated nuclear grave- yard in the nation. Under Atomic Energy Commission regulations, the land was donated to the state of Kentucky by Nu- clear Engineering Co.. Inc., which. in turn, leased it back for their burial operation. Kentucky, always in the market for new industry. decided seven years ago to enter the nuclear field. The administration under former Gov. Edward T. Breathitt discovered that more and more of the U. S. governmentis nuclear waste was being consigned to private industry for burial on state land. At the same time' authorities in the nuclear field had de- cided that burial at sea, the common method, was undesurable and dangerous Nuclear Engineering concurred in that opinion and helped pioneer land burial Taking an early initiative, Kentucky en. tered an agreement with Nuclear Engi- neering to 'build this faculty. Located 'Kabout 70 miles northeast of Lexungton, Maxey Flats today Is the major atomic burial ground for the eastern half of the nation. The area's 50 residents have not really accepted the unusual cemetery which disturbs the serenity of Maxy Flats. Many refer to it as the nuclear slop-lar of America. The atomic graves are sev- eral hundred feet long. 60 feet wude and 60 feet deep. Shipments arrive at the rate of about four per day. UPI and Couner-Journal AND WHAT OF THE GOOD EARTH? ICHEN java fi F?! o l a .m 9 o grapple I he is ecql .. . m . m v And how do we house all these cars? These cars which are taking up more and more of the land We build a home for themk some communal- some not Can you dig actually building homes for cars getting into design over it? .mmwuv Putting all those cars some place is a problem. We'll have to knock down some housese the university expandse it expands to accommodate the increase of cars; and the community decreasese A student recaiise i signed a years lease for the eleven room white stucco house in June, 1969. At that time, it was owned by a Lexington optometrist who assured me that even though the university wanted the land for a parking lot, the house would be standing at least for a year. I called the owner and he came to show us through the house, It was filthye maggots in the refrigerator. He said he would give us a bargain: we Clean the house and the rent is $200 a month, or he cleans the house and the rent is $210 a month. We took the $200 option and spent the rest of June and July cleaning the house with a rented rug shampooer and other expensive cleaning equipment and soaps. And we went to summer school classes in our spare time. in August the university called me to say they had just bought the house from the owner. They agreed to let us remain in the house until the end of the fall semester. Then the parking lot camee the neighbors were alt frightenedh it's a drag seeing your home or place torn down for a parking lot. .v S V a r: We are another problem . . . vii??? i Lexington in the heart of the bluegrass still hasn't done the best it could do for its people and its Iand We have our own little inner-cities our own extremely high crime rate our sixteenth century jail house our political garbage our ecological problems not to mention ideological problems :wauunm- Environment becomes social . ,J: g :. 14:11 31:: ,x 1' V , a .. Ea ,uuz?,..,.w: mu: 3A3; 55;...va Kentucky Village ls like a lot of places that are supposed to pull things together they just donlt. How can we single out this place and tell you Its corrupt rrwhen there are hundreds of KV'S all overiwhat concern is it of yours if these kids get memtally twisted and beat upirif some of the people who work wlth them consider them trashgthem niggersi? What concem is it of yours? We had a picture of the kids at vabut we can't use it? They look pretty much like these kids i Many UK students work at KV-one of them recaIIs-a It was less than two years ago that KV was nothing more than a penal institu- tion for young kids. The people who worked there then are still penalvminded in essence. Most of them are older people . . . the kids can't leave KV and look like old mother hubbard, they have got to be socialized to go back into society and maintain themselves . our capacity is two hundred. Right now I think we have about three hundred kids at KV. Since I have been working there hasnt been one month that we haven't been overcrowded. KV has been sort of a pot for the kids that they didn't have anything else to do with. Usually KV gets all the runaways from boys camps, girl's institutions, they get all of the hard-core juvenile delinquents. It's sort of a melting pot of the child welfare institutional services. nun m! 13.? vi. vaax-ar- redevelopmehte perhaps with a real sense of COMMUNITY . . . These five students are into a program which will redevelop the Pralltown section of Lexington. Redevelopment that will get into levels of relationshipsee hopefullye Redevelopment in terms of housing which will in turn be related to family structure and income. Redevelopment that excludes university ownership and slumlordse COMMUNITY will perhaps feel its meahihge former resi- dents are being encouraged to returne a co-op is planned which should pull the residents together politically and eco- nomically. There will be new stores, facilities, and streetse and in relation to the motion and feeling of the communitye And all this can maybe even be organic? if the individuality of the resident isn't overlooked- if a one to one relationship and understanding between all those involved can be basic- and seems to belle people are digging it; getting into the worke getting into the people involvede and together residents, students and faculty have made an incrediblee a really togethere playgrounde to starte and people, agencies and government who are funding it seem to dig it-H it will be inter- esting to see what happense ?AML v?.?awi iv 14min: playing is a lot of fun- and has the potential to bring people together it can easily be an extension of yourself- an extension of nature and this way has an integrating harmonizing effect by relating energies . . . flows . . . elements into one subtle motion at the same time playing that goes counter-grain to naturet?t essenceCH can get heavy and disruptive We have a new fountain and we can dig it! All day, in wave after wave and from all directions of the mind's compass, there has repeatedly come upon me the sense of my Original identity as one with the very fountain of the universe. I have seen, too, that the fountain is its own source and motive, and that its spirit is an unbounded playfulness which is the many-dimensioned dance of life. There is no probiem left, but who will believe it? Alan W. Watts Water- 1,, to splash and wipe across your face . f? to mix barefeet and grass with to gulp down and sigh I to submerge yourself in l l TO FEEL TO DRINK almost as a primordial life substance containing the molecular ancestry of everything. and all very simple simple rain simple to drink and also very simple not to pollute 3r .3va This is Sam and Bi l. lill ,Luii .uszim g .m h t a n O .+I... O m e n a h C U S e b n a C e m a g a h; 5 . M mu M r. .. - ' wLFm games can be such an emotional thing . . . Footballx It's hard to understand how one couid get into something that's so physically dangerous but perhaps it's less dangerous than getting involved in an anti-war demonstration Dig football for what it's worth it must be something if you can dig it. Perhaps it's the best release for some kinds Of feeiingS or some kinds of thingsn Other Offenses -taken from the University Code of Student Conduct The threat of, or commission of, physical violence against any mem- ber of the University community or any person present on Universi- ty property except while engaged in authorized sports activities. v. v a e h N. .a e r t e 9 n a c S e m a g And perhaps as a shelter from the horrible reality games that the politicians and all sorts of mysterious people playa some of us get into the simplicity of kid-dom againa so much funa so simple while the problems that we,re responsible for pile upa pollute upa blow up-aa And some of us still play kids and forget that it all has anything to do with us and laugh at those concerneda and then go and play grown-up housea games with unfathomed complexities and relationships . . . Be empty Watch quietly while the ten thousand forms swim into life and return to the source Do nothing Return to the source Deep repose is the sign That you have reached The appointed goal To return to the source is to discover the eternal law of seed He who returns to this eternal law is enlightened Being enlightened he is serene Being serene he is open-hearted Being open-hearted he is beyond social games Being beyond social games he is in tune with seed Being in tune with seed he endures Uhtii the end of his life he is not in peril. Timothy Leary Thelma Pat Nixon flew into Lexingtone we were one of the points in her tour. She was selling the merits of volunteerism . She dropped by Kentuckyws Eastern State Mental Hospital and told an inmate that- This is a good place to bef- There were mixed feelings- of course. A girl had a brother in Viet Nama she wanted to ask Thelma about her brother- Some women wanted to just SEE Thelma and on- Pat didn't actually have all that much to say to anybody- Women's Liberation wasrft big on Pat-I heard some guy say Now there's a woman after my heart-she sets her own hair every night !!! Women are pulling more and more things together all over. We had a big WOFYIGFVS lib conference here; I mean, can you believe that the amendment to the US. Constitution which would provide that Hequality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States, or any other state, on account of sex, has been so long in cominge! Black women here are realizing their own beautiful identity Vigil!!! ildq. 135151 mniddwulwnIaxJi- 4 A, .AA.. Y .. 1:: 'x.. 4: g.guka; . a; Black Student Union Queen Cherry Swint got into the question of Black women's FOIF and what of all this? There has been a venus for every ageh what kind of symbolism goes into it aII and why? Why represent many by oneu or by a few? and why? Ah, but some were queens of kingdoms . . . and now is the age of the electronic queen- the image that'the media forces on its audiencee- the imagee the form. and what of essence? and womah-ness? how is that touched? and warmth? this is a camera agee this is an image of people timee and the depth of field is relatively limitede but not in essence. in essence. .a. .3 m by mud: ..... ,3 W! and what has electronics done for us . . . for us the PERSON? in relation to other personse to the earth under use and technologyethe child of goda- What has it, all totaled, brought us? And what of the earth? that earth, the lande that we have funneled into termse terms of COUNTRIES Countries and all that go with ite In 1969 they began to assert themselves They were discovered first by politicians and the press, and then they started to dis- cover themA selves. In the Administra- tion's voices eespecially in the Vice Presideht's and the At- torney Genere al'siin the achievements and the char- acter of the astronauts, in a murmurous and pervasive discontent, they sought to reclaim their culture. It was their interpre- tation of pa- triotism that bought Rich- ard Nixon the time to pursue a gradual withdrawal from the war By their silent but newly felt presence, they in- fluenced the mood of government and the Course of legislation, and thus began to shape the Course of the nation and the nation's course in the world. The Men and Women of the Year were the Middle Americans. Time, January 5. 1970 EC; .6, ity jOf' lent ma 33. taut We marched for peace in what was the start of a long series of marches We began the moratoriums- the marches against death- It was a time when this country saw the largest anti-war demonstra- tion in its history. 3000 of us marched in Lexington- e and mourned the war dead. d O G f 0 n e r M .m C e h t d b m C e b a h S V. e h t m f Blessed are the Peacemakers ..I.rwml.rlKr....L...r:rr::xtlt..rrxrr. . SE: L 5.1.51.1: : : 3: Eat. . .55., 1 It's incredible that we could pull together a war situation when we are we and there need be no problem of any kind ever and none of these games ever. I r Ef-WirW iva gA7 , i; b igr : $ k .VIETNAM V ETERAN MICHAEL LANE a: REARED IN VIOLENCE LEARNED'THE GAME : 'KILLED FOR. PEACE THAT. NEVER CAME Li: M WAKE UP wORLD ., :1?! ' ea WEJRE;ALL ' INSANE 1; and Kentucky . was there in force We went to Washington Thousands of people opened their homes to us . . . there was always a place to stay Washington became a mobile city again 4w I We carried symbolic coffins x h K; I saw these in an airportw I was incredulousw but I knew what they wareh- they were being shipped home from Vietnam like piecesof luggage. The stewardess saw the commotion I was making and asked what was wrong-w when I pointed to the coffins she said, uOhwthosewl thought somebody had gotten hurt or something. and walkeg awayw HOW CAN MIDDLE AMERIKA SIT BACK WHILE HER CHILDREN ARE SENT HOME LIKE THIS? AM.'..-..v,;,. And what of our children? u: K And in Frankfort we reminded middle kentuckians of the sons they had lost. V ; :.:.4i....:nuas:9 V.:::3,..31...; I113: 111:. 33: i .2 31.2.? . u: nitihl. :1. .i 3:35: 11143.3:uilliliu:. .313. nL 11.1l!2.14u.n!i! iw . 1 We marched again in April- the war was still going on and worse We were sick with it all . . . is: $5.39.. $1 WW: 1 v ,5! L! .1 14.: 311.131.11311131 1w 34313.. M . 3.8;... ., !!?5 :1: 1:7 : , We had met before when we heard of Nixon's decision to go into Cambodia eto kill more. We had to do something. Monday three days later we were stunnedawe learned of the murders of four fellow students at Kent State- We were RIPPED APARTe they can't do this to us- :23 s . .5 ankizmv. We crowded up in the tower where the board of trustees was meeting We wanted them to feel about the deaths at Kent State- We wanted them to forbid guns on campus They didn't want to be inconvenienced by us. Our facese these two looks continue to haunt mee em; all the thousands of emotions we felt that afternoone these two these twee Our president conceded to rap with usa but told us that he didn't think such raps got any piace It would be nice if they could. The police Hprotected the board of trustees from our questions . from our requests We got exactly w what we were requesting I not to getH I What students all over were getting- are gettingi the absurdity is beyond belief but it only witnesses the strategy of a militant nation- Imagine a response like this to requests for peace for peace at home for peace on campus for peace in Cambodia. And what has happened to communication to people to AMERIKA? :55; $3 I .. . w . h . .x . ?;??iiti in kg; ;. as , m III only disbelief HWe shall have to look after Ourselves. HAnd another thing. We cant have everybody talking at once. We'll have to have hands up like at school. llThen I'll give him the conch. 'lConch? UThat's what the Shell's called. I'll give the conch to the next person to speak. He can hold it when hels speaking. Ralph waved the conch. HShut up! Wait! Listen! I've got the conch, said Piggy indignantly, UYou let me speak! The conch doesn't count up on the mountaihf said Jack, Hso you shut up! Hl've got the conch in my hand. Sit down! HShut up! Take the conch! HShut up! Ralph shouted. HHear him! Hels got the conch? There was a moment's struggle and the glimmering conch jigged up and down. Ralph leapt to his feet. Jack! Jack! You haven't got the conch! Let him speak. Hl'm chief. l was Chosen. llPiggy's got the conch. Hl had the conch, said Piggy simply, HI had the right to speak!' HHow about us, Ralph? HYou havent got the conch. Here? HI meanehow about us? Suppose the beast comes when you're all away. I cant see proper, and if I get scarediw Jack broke in contemptuously. 'lYou're always scaredf' I got the conche llConch! Conch! shouted Jack, Hwe dont need the conch anymore. We know who ought to say things. What good did Simon do speaking, or Bill, or Walter? Its time some people knew they've got to keep quiet and leave deciding things to the rest of us. Ralph could no longer ignore his speech. The blood was hot in his cheeks. I'You haven't got the conch, he said. l'Sit down. Lord of the Flies, Golding A l.n. .m t a .m n U m m 0 C We have a BIG problem with communica- tion- lack or failure of it- in HUMAN terms- it's very frustrating- and destroys any potential for unity for peace . . . This is the remains of one of the ROTC buildings on our campus. Who burned iteor why it burned we dont know. Nation-wide protest over the war machine has changed during the past few years. There has been an increasing assault that ranged from boycotts on goods to destruction of related war materials. Middle Amerikans are feeling the same fears they felt in the 60's when there was a surge of Black and Civil Rights related assaults, only this time the assault is from their own sons and daughterse ...i.;. L . i . nf$ggn u. . U. ., . n.; r n! .1 . It has been only five years since the first draft card bUrnings. . . 5 E l 5 i- Kentucky, Bill of Rights Sec. 4. All power is inherent in the people, and all free governments are founded on their authority and instituted for their peace, safety, happiness and the protection of property. For the advancement -y law .. II, It of these ends, they have at all times an inalienable and indefen- sible right to alter, reform or abolish their government in such manner as they may deem proper. Sec. 26. To guard against transgressions of the high powers which we have delegated. WE DECLARE that every thing in this Bill of Rights is excepted out of the general powers of government, and shall forever remain inviolate; and all laws contrary thereto, or contrary to this Constitution, shall be void. . . . the response the day after the burning AMERlCA LOVE IT fon LEAVE in the town newspaper U.K. CAMPUS RIOTS! ! NOW ARE YOU READY TO FIGHT COMMUNISM?? Let's restore Americanism and help keep America Strong Join the JOHN BIRCH SOCIETY Write P. O. Box 7075 Lexington, Ky. 40502 uWe are very much alive and well. YIP pie! We're yippies! m... , 4...... 4m: We kept meeting to try and pull something together. We were outraged by the war, the killings at Kent State, Jackson State College, and our own campus problems. The only way to change this incredible situation was to DO something about lteahd before it was too late. We felt an incredible sense of urgency-the administration, however, was into the ritual of final week and apparently saw no reason to be alarmed by the national situation. They were more alarmed by useahd reacted hostiley. They llrevoked our constitu- tional right to assemble. They declared curfews. They called on local and state policemen who arrested and beat us. Our governor declared the campus in a state of emergency and called on 250 National Guard with live ammunition and fixed bayonets. They broke up our gatherings and chased us off campus. They guarded the campus from us, the students. Forced off the campus we marched in mass through the streets till we came to Transylvania College where the ad- ministration welcomed our peaceful assembly. The next night hundreds of us spent the night on the grounds of the Lexington Theological Seminary while the national guard held up their guns across the street from us. They were Hguarding the campus from us. At another time we were gassed and arrested for being on our campus. And conflicts continued for an incredible week!hereeand all over the nation. lt became Clear that college students all over were not going to sit by while things continued. The whole nation finally began to feel the importance and power of student unrest in a new way. some time ago it might have been a sign for victory . . . now it's for peace agm: 11, 41 :4. HI. . r 3 1 2,2. 5 . .. I , lvlru xixw .Ar 1.1.3:: ,I.nuw.lilnu....lHI.x .ii 1. , .3 IsiquiNL x. , 31H K I then came the trials . . . 1 : Oil wit. .1! J.l..v.. . lfqhnnuuybwll... :1! : , . A LENEII WI ! 3, 31M K and there are good people into law over here- Bob Sedler Bill Allison Ken Guido and some studentsh some students who pulled together a summer program for Black pre-Iaw students some students who aren't AFRAID to follow the dictates of their personal convictionsh some EFFETE SNOBS FOR PEACEH BI KUHS 8F f FEHHWEMA x1 .K 3:4? 1...? I We are in a resistance pos- ture. This fist which I wouldn't have raised on any platform a year ago means resistance to iIIegitimate authority-it's a strange day for me to be 50 and a lawyer for 25 years and to raise a fist in front of a crowd. I don't do it with the aplomb and the assurance that may- be I appear to, because I wonder why I'm doing it. And I guess I understand why I'm doing Itabecause I do think it is resistance now-e-and not protest. I think the 60's were the heyday of protest in the U.S.ewhen people marched and prayed-in and sat-in and waited-in. And there was the march on Washington. And we had battlefields like Albany, Georgia, St. Augus- tine, Birmingham, Jackson and so on. But those days are gone. Bill Kunstler Among all the Changes, all the revolutionethe law and the lawyers are also becoming ihte- grated into the totalhess of humanity-Jhto the essence of civil libertiesaihto the cause of the individual into an exciting involvement eThe Constitution is being forced to life. People are applying artificial respiration to the smothered code When someone gets busted for the words he spoke we run to the men in the black robes and scream HThere is to be freedom of speeche-ahd we will no longer settle for ANYTHING less. We will not compromise our freedoms any longer. Kunstler has tied the theater of life into the courtroomathe realization that a poet or a culture has as much to do with the case in question as does a pile of specific facts about a specific evente We are approaching the edges of understand- ing in whollstic termsgof seeing the inter- relations and connections that exist in every- thing. and perhaps the absurdity is so great that the only thing that can be done is theater- but the stages have changed . . . - $bm I1 . u.il:llmrlfz 1 Ell, iii! 1:? . tl al 2.. 1.. ::'. 5!. i 1' A .... J .k JFI i. A ' 'iitntdlm: Guerrilla theater attempts to get into the real situation but is still staged WAKE u : WV: 1 THEATER?!!! The streets are the real theater! a A: .71; 7mm ' ,- a: '7- ,r j, . W VIETNAM VETERAN MICHAEL LANE. i REARED IN ViOLENCEx LEARNED THE GAME 'KiLLED FOR PEACE THAT, NEVER CAME P VORLD u INSANE , p I You are the stage. You are the actor. Everything is for real. There is no audience. The goal is to turn on everybody who can be turned on and turn off everybody eise. Theater has no rules, forms, structures, standards, traditionsait is pure, natural energy, impulse, anarchy. The only role of theater is to take people ml+ NC H udituy iu... and into' the streets The role Of the revolutionary theater group is to make the revolution. Jerry Rubin Let me say, at the risk of seeming ridiculous, that the true revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love. ,wg-m gt This is the situation- the lande the people- the problemse and these are the people who are going to have to deal with it . . . 'hmr: ,Ummx: .HJ Agra RL'HH Adams Wm! .- hmlus mm; mm mm mm :Uh'n Cullwnnu AHA : Unzrlr: ANN! Dam! :an Num' AWN wan'u'm ANN: Qmm IHIW mm; Avdamm er amm ASY: EA mm; 'Yslnmr'l 1.11M: mug Thnunn- Hm m1 Calhurmu Saw Minn 5mm, mnw numm Alum iiuk'nHls Hrrun'm 1mm I'Han mm Dmyrm 13:!er u. 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He Wunl mm mm Mm mm mm Wva Imam! mm Rn maul M'Hr vuxu Wum lurru erly mum: m-mmm erhunl lV'rsltmmd Dm'r Wmh' uulvv Wun- lelu Wmh' Rmm'd WIHlen Durn'H WIUumN Hannah WH'umr: mwm;r.- thmm 1,133va l'VWmvm. Irmlu Wdhmm mm WIVlmmcnn I'mvlg-x lelum Mm! lVylmN L'urm wmw I'm! mt; mm mm: 11mm mm: Emmy aniwr: H: hum: erth Lurw mum Rm: hum Krnm mm imam Marx mum :H'mm: IHHH' Ann mm; xhlwm mm: :hlmm Wvlhum :hlmm lurmu MAW llruy 4dr: Hum JHM L'aHn-nm- VHI'H Imm- Hm m' 'Hh'n N HIM IvH w :. Mum :le 1mm Andrvsmv 14w xht-uu m 1 m1, Cu Mu mm ih v' .me .wn 1' mm Kmm k allwnm' H m :Uvu' ilmw 1: - W mum 33$1, Who are going to have to deal with it . . . fadvertisements of sortsJ : H I v- 1, x l i : a .. 07 A. Student Athletic Committee Nanette Mershow, Donna Baker, Gale Phillips, Helga Skon- berg, Scott Wilson, James Richardson, William Shores, Roger C. White, Mark Lane. AAAAA Rip off along dotted line A A A A U Rip off along dotted line University of Kentucky Basketball Squad Coach Adolph F. Rupp, Dan lssel, Tom Parker, Bob McGowan, Larry Steele, Mike Pratt, Randy Noll, assistant coach Joe B. Hall. Standing assistant Dick Parsons, trainer Claude Vaughan, Kent Hollenbeck, Jim Dinwiddie, Clint Wheeler, Art Laib, Randy Pool, Mark Soderberg, Stan Key, Terry Mills, Bill Busey, assistant T. L. Plain, manager Doug Billips. Front Dale Balsom. Row 1 ; Betsy Welch, Barbara Wells, Karen Reed, Cyb Barnstable, Janet Cannon, Amy Bondurant. Row 2 Sandi McSpadden, Judy Thomason, Cathy Allen, Debora Maupsn, Michelle Hue, Paulette Avery, Donna Baber, Wayne Dees. Angel Flight A Rip off along dotted line Row 1 Joseph Yanek, Wayne Dees, Commander R. Bruce Telfeyan, Robert Cooper, Albert Scruggs. Row 2 Carl Hollbrook, Martin Moreman, Roger White, Larry Rogus, Robert Jones, Kenny Hamm. Row 3 - Captain Jim Rash, David Vietor, David Campbell, Stephen Spencer, Chester Stevens, Charles Krinz. F E Arnold Air Society . Rip off along dotted line 4,... Army ROTC Sponsors Peggy Kennedy, Susan Wachs, Debbi Wright, Pam Price, Nancy Martin. e Rogan, Leigh Bryant, Tevis a .E 3 11 u U u x: 2 a t O .9 II Kentucky Babes ....................... ac: Baton M503 :0 EN. 1ll:........:l....J:.....l.ll.... . . . 6:: Dntou mcgm to EN. ........................................... S r e D. O O r T Rip off along dotted line . .........4............ Chi Epsilon .D' V b Panhellenic Council - Mary Birtram, Pat Kate Elliston, Terry Boyd, B'ecky Driesler, Miller. Faraci, Vicki Fudge, Carol Hamilton, Lynn Hayes, Susan Camenisch, Bev Laisl, Sylvia Thyen, Terry mi 4' L Cosmopolitan Club Front a Viraphone Choochunklin, Afli Haji Omar, Alfonso del Fierro, Sayan Singholka, Ron Lambert, Susy Foley, Jack Clarkson. Standing Analy Scorsone. Seated Mary Taylor, Djiem 80, Nick Rice, Christine Garrigues, Jake Kames, Noel Hanna, Alan Warne, Osmin del Cid, Jan Hall, Jane Powachana, Leon Smothers. Black Student Union Cherry Swint BSLJ- Qu'een . x. . ' Rip off along dotted line . Rip off along dotted line ...V. Student Center,Board 7 Leigh Fleming, Woodford Reynolds, Susan GrimsXey, Betty South- ard, Frank Harris, Gary Eblen, Robin Lowry, Tony Smith, Jack Day, Mike McNulty, Share! Ramsey, Gene Warren. 9' Student Activities Board Janet Riggs, Jaf'rafeuton, Frank McCartney, ary Jo Mertens, Dick Webb, Sara O'Briant m v n w w This incredibly has all been a part of it too . .. TV. .NEw MATH. .ELECTRONICS . . . DYLAN . . . MERCUI . DIETS . . . IWANT TO HOLD YOUR HAND . . . CA5 SAVIO . . . PEACE CORPS . . . ECUMENICAL COUNCIL . . .'Bl CUBAN MISSILE CRISIS . . . JOAN BAEZ. . . MEDGEK EVEFS CENTEK . . , CREDIT CARDS . .MALCOLM x . . BLACK FAI NUKEYEV . . . CONGO . .U THANT . . m - GENISIS . . . KAELO T E ..N Y. WQKLDS EAIK . KACHEL CARSON . . . JACQUEs-YVES COUSTEAU . . . CHLRA MEDICARE . . . VIDEO-TAPE . . . TOLKIEN . . . WARHOL . . . DI NETICS . . . ASSASSINATION . . . LEE 3 .3 - . . . NADEK . . . M MARCH . . . BLOW-UP . . . JANIS JOPLIN . . . ALBERT CAMLS . CONCKETE POETRY . . . HALLUCINOGENIC . . . OP ARTa'. . MOOG SYNTHESIZER . . . PSYCHEDELIC . . . VALLEY OF THE KONMENT . . . HEAVY . . . JEFFERSON AIRPLANE . . . SOLL SETTE . . . DISCOTHEQUE . . . BLOOD, SWEAT AND TEARS; . .LINDSAY . . . H. KAK BROWN . . . LIGHT SHOW . . . chw BEKGMAN . . . THE GRADUATE . . . GURU . . . TERRITORIQL m3 . . . HOROSCOPE . . . HEALTH FOOD . . . BIAEKA . . . L; A CASH . . . BERNADETTE DEVLIN . . . MEDITATION . . . STHK .ARLO GUTHRIE NAPALM . . .TINY TIM . . . CZECHoau .MAO. .GOD IS ALIVE RFK . . . GRASS . . . MINI, MIEEI, FKEE PKEssm. . . MAYOR DALEY . . . UNDEKGKOUND . q.- COLUMBIA. .MAKK RUDD . . . BLACK is BEAUTIFUL. . . SijO mu gig: . .MAEIA. . . SPEED . . . WEATHEKMEN . . . METSw. CO . . . ENCOUNTEK GKOUK . . . LAUGH-IN . . . PUEBLO . . I c .JOHN AND YOKO . . .AGE OF AQUARIUS . . . YIPPIE . . . m . GULF OF TONKIN . . . BOYCOTT GRAPES . . . CHAVEEEI . GEMINI . . . MEKONG DELTA . . . TRANSPLANT . . . HANG: AGAINST THE WALL. . . . JEAN-LUC GODAKD . . . NE'm ' WOODSTOCK . , . :YCL. a . . . URBAN COALITION . ECOLOGY . . . JLLUT : . . : 2VEK p3p, EATIO . . ch K ZPG . . . MOKATOKIUM . KKOTKACTED PROTECTIVE RE; c LIB . . . GUERRILLA THEATEK . . . BLACK PANTHERS . . . EjLA LOGUE . . . DO IT! . . . KUNSTLER . . . POINTS OF KEBELLMO . . MOVEMENT . . . EEEETE SNOBS . . . ZABKISKIE POINT. . CHURCH AMENDMENT . . . KENT STATE . . . JACKSON 813A SCREAMING YELLOW ZONKERS . . . SATYRICON . . . MAIPfIE MCLUHAN . . . 1 1ERCURY . . . CULTURE. . . COMMON MARKET. . .TWIST . . . .CASTRO . . . LENNY BRUCE . . . KHRUSHCHEV . . . MARIO . .'BERKELY . . . BAY OF PIGS . . . CIVIL RIGHTS . . . JFK . . . EVEFS. . . FSM . . . POPE JOHN . . . DR. SPOCK . . . LINCOLN CKFANTHERS...I I r ...FONTEYN, :- . . HWATTS . . MCLUHAN . . . VIETNAM . . . AFRICAN AIR I . . ASTRONAUTS . . . MUSTANG . . . JUNG . . . CASALS . CHURCHILL . . . HERzoG . . . CHE . . . JAMES MEREDITH . . . DlSNEY . . . QUASAR . . . LEAKY . . . BEARDSLY . . . CYBER- . MIXED MEDIA . . . WYETH . . . EXPO . . . POOR PEOPLE'S AMLS . . . MASTROIANNI . . . MARTIN LUTHER KING . . . NEWARK ARTI. . . BURTREND RUSSELL . . .TRIR . . . LSD . . . AFRO . . F TIIE DOLLS . . . RAR . . . THE BAND . . . COMMUNE . . . ENVI- SOLL ON ICE . . . ROBERT McNAMARA . . . . . . CAS- ARS. . . , . . . VIRGINIA WOOLF . . . MAC ARTHUR PARK RIcuIE HAVENS. . . I CHING . . . sow. . . . OTIS REDDING . . ORI IL IMRERATIVE. .SHEA STADIUM . . . FLOWER POWER .- .L; ARY. , I 5 . . . BONNIE AND CLYDE . . .JOHNNY STI KELY CARNIICHAEL . . . ARAB-ISRAELI WAR . . . DIRKSEN :HOIiiLOVOKIA . . . ALICES RESTAURANT . . . Milelljz I MICI, MAXI . . . GENE MC CARTHY . . . CHICAGO . . 'I 3 . 4 . THIRD WORLD . . . FAR OUT! . . . HAPPENING. .SNCC . SMOTHERS BROTHERS . . . TRUCKING . OH wows. ETSI . . . GREEK JUNTA . . . AME .COALITION. D . .1 OCCULT . . . BMT, IRT, IND, MTA . . . ESCALATE . . . HAIR : . INSTAMATIC . . . JOE NAMATI-I . . . FOOD STAMPS . . . MOON wag; . . . MICRO BUS . . . 2001 . . . TRICKY DICK . . . JAZZ. ANq: . . . ELDRIDGE CLEAVER . . . MIDNIGHT COWBOY . . . UP 3 : . . . MOBE . . . PRIORITIES . . . YELLOW SUBMARINE . . . xI . . . MY LAI . . . GROOVEY BELLBOTTOMS . . . APOLLO . . . . NCI-KNOCK . . . OCT. 15, NOV. 15, APRIL 15 . . . FANTASIA . . REILCTION . . . RELEVANT . . . IF . . . MOON ROCKS . . . WOMENS . I3:Asv RIDER . . . VIETNAMIZATION . . . WHOLE EARTH CATA- EELLION . . . CONSPIRACY TRIALS . . . AMERIKA . . . GREMLIN DINTL . . . INDO CHINA . . . CAMBODIA . . . PATTON . . . COOPER- xI STATE . . . CON SON . . . NATIONAL GUARD . . . STRIKE . . . VIAIIIIE . . . RIGHT ON! in relation to all this, from the Book of Changese 47. K'un l Oppression tExhaustionl above TUI THE JOVOUS, LAKE below WAN THE ABYSMAL, WATER The lake is above, water below; the lake is empty, dried up. Exhaustion is expressed in yet another way: at the top, a dark line is holding down two light lines; below, a light line is hemmed in between two dark ones. The upper trigram belongs to the principle of darkness, the lower to the principle of light. Thus everywhere superior men are oppressed and held in restraint by inferior men. THE JUDGMENT OPPRESSION. Success. Perseverance The great man brings about good fortune. No blame. When one has something to say, It is not believed. Times of adversity are the reverse of times of success, but they can lead to success if they befall the right man. When a strong man meets with adversity, he remains cheerful despite all danger. and this Cheerfulness is the source of later suce cesses; it is that stability which is stronger than fate. He who lets his spirit be broken by exhaustion certainly has no success But if adversity only bends a man, it creates in him a power to react that is bound in time to manifest itself. No inferior man is capable of this. Only the great man brings about good fortune and remains blameless. it is true that for the time being outward influence is denied him, because his words have no effect. Therefore in times of adversity it is important to be strong within and sparing of words. into . .. 58. Tui l The Joyous, Lake above TUI THE JOYOUS, LAKE below TUl THE JOYOUS, LAKE This hexagram, like Sun, is one of the eight formed by doubling of a trigram. The trigram Tui denotes the youngest daughter; it is symbolized by the smiling lake, and its attribute is joy- ousness. Contrary to appearances, it is not the yielding quality of the top line that accounts for joy here. The attribute of the yielding or dark principle is not joy but melancholy. However, joy is indicated by the fact that there are two strong lines within, expressing themselves through the medium of gentleness. True joy, therefore, rests on firmness and strength within. manifesting itself outwardly as yielding and gentle. THE JUDGMENT THE JOYOUS. Success. Perseverance is favorable. The joyous mood is infectious and therefore brings success. But joy must be based on steadfastness if it is not to de- generate into uncontrolled mirth. Truth and strength must dwell in the heart, while gentleness reveals itsehC in social intercourse. In this way one assumes the right attitude toward God and man and achieves something. Under certain condi- tions, intimidation without gentleness may achieve something momentarily, but not for all time. When, on the other hand, the hearts of men are won by friendliness, they are led to take all hardships upon themselves willingly, and if need be will not shun death itself, so great is the power of joy over men. A . . Knowledge should be a refreshing and vitalizing force. It becomes so only through stimulating intercourse with con- genial friends with whom one holds discussion and practices application of the truths of life. In this way learning becomes many-sided and takes on a cheerful lightness, whereas there is always something ponderous and one-sided about the learn- ing of the self-taught. ALEXANDRA SOTERIOU 2 EDITOR 2 all theme and flow, layout, design and copy, and photographs on pages 24, 27, 29, 39, 54, 71, 72, 100, 101, 102 background, 103, 110-113, 127, 200, 202, 209, 213, 280, 295, 300, 307 and 357. MIMI FULLER 2 help and encouragement beyond all belief. It was Mimi who went to everyone carrying so much excitement over this book 2 and who inevitably gave me so much excitement 2 and who saw some meaning in this 2 and who devoted so much time to all this 2 endless thanks. JOE HAUS 2 so much freely given help 2 and with a spirit that was very meaningful to me. DICK GIFT 2 whose seminars in inter- national conflict resolution, whose emotions, whose book, have all been directional in my underlying concern with conflict 2 and concern with many things 2 and without whose periodic exchanges and nudgings I don't know where all this would have been. PAUL MARCUM 2 silkscreen 2 pages 18, 208. REGINA COLLINS 2 HELP in many ways. RICK FALKNOR 2 business manager and other help and goodness. MIRIAM WINDSRIG 2 help. SUE ANN SALMON 2 copy 2 page 120. RACHAEL KAMUF ,2 help. 'SIDNEY 8t LYNN MORRIS and BICARDI 2 good things. RICK BELL 2 things. RAY LOVE 2 help. JACK SCHERRER 2 help. DOUG STEWART and others 2 simpatico and good vibes. BILL ROUGHEN 2 so much. CHUCK KOEHLER 2 a friend 2 and help. JIM HURST 2 help. STEVE BRIGHT and SKIP ALTHOFF 2 help 2 endless thanks here 2 for their support and for promoting the sale of this book after the university had its fill of it, and for being what they are for our uni- versity. DICK WARE 2 endless helpvand long hours making prints for this book 2 and years of photographic schooling to me. HENRY WALLACE 2 help 2 and a good- ness and encouragement which will be memorable. KEN and MIRIUM GUIDO 2 beyond words. PAT MATHES 2 help. MY PRACTICUM CLASS 2 thanks. GRETCHEN MARCUM 2 many things, all of which are beyond words. EVERYBODY 2 thanks! PHOTOGRAPHS SAM ABELL and BILL ROUGHEN 9 pages 159-165. ' BOB BREWER 9 pages 109, 130, 131, 198, 224, 225, 229, 249, 281. KAY BROOKSHIRE 9 pages 205, 207. SCHLEY cox 9 pages 66, 219. BEN CULBERTSON 9 pages 28, .79. 223, 258, 312-315. RICK FALKNOR 9 page 246. MIMI FULLER 9 pages 118, 123, 177. 206, 252. DAVE HERRMANN 99 pages 83, 298. LARRY KIELKOPF 9 pages 20, 33, 115, 146, 184, 238-241, 279, 291, 297. DICK LINDSTROM 9 pages 48, 49. RAY LOVE 9 pages 129, 136-145. EUGENE MEATYARD 9 pages 17, 30, 51, 135. . NASA 9 pages 44-46. HELEN ROACH 9 pages 7, 102 fore- ground. RON ROSENSTIEL 9 page 96. SUE ANN SALMON 9 page 121. BILL SCHWERI 9 page 104. NICK SCO'l-I' 9 page 126. STEVE TODD 9 pages 23, 74, 77, 1 17 and the end-pages. ARTHUR TRESS 9 pages 5, 9, 37, 41, 80, 85, 87, 88-91, 95, 107, 132, 178, 191, 195, 220, 243-245, 251. MIKE WALKER 9 pages 58, 272, 273. DICK WARE 9 pages 11, 13, 14, 34, 35, 42, 65, 68, 84, 92, 98, 149, 157, 167, 175, 182, 192, 197, 226, 227, 231-237, 253, 255, 258-261, 280, 281, 303, 304, 308-311, 350-359. KEN WEAVER 9 pages 81, 181, 183, 185, 187, 263, 264, 267, 286. THE LEXINGTON HERALD-LEADER 9 page 288. DICK WARE, MIMI FULLER and KEN WEAVER 9 page 268. VENUS WILLENDORF 15,000-10,000 B.C. Museum of Natural History, Vienna9page 214. QUEEN NOFRETETE 1,365 B.C. 9 State Museums, Berlin 9 page 217. Page 110-111 from IN TIME OF EMER- GENCY, Department of Defense 1with additionsl DICK WARE 9 page 13 copyright 1970. R. D. LAING 9 page 359. ALAN WATTS 9 I am not looking at the world, not confronting it; I am knowing it by a continuous process of transforming it into myself, so that everything around me, the whole globe of space, no longer feels away from me but in the middle. 713$ . $ .1 . 'Mugw V v,a.rI-- v-vwmaxm And this is all simply dedicated to life. Thanks could be endless ; and are e but especially to Bill Roughen who went over my thoughts with me and helped me get them to- gether e whose fine photography e and feeling for photography has ment so much to me. And endless thanks to Ken Guido who most impor- tantly deeply understood the feeling and flow of this book while others were glossing over it and getting into their own hang-ups. And of course for all his help when people at the university were deciding if this book could be published e when people in the state were feeling some kind of in- volvement in that issue e when legal matters became clouded, and when all this got me down. And thanks to all the beautiful photographers who helped pull this book together e particularly Arthur Tress who was so generous with his work e And endlessly to all that went before, during and after e to my parents e to those concerned e to life. Fellini might have had us dancing here . . . m a; ; l : 3 :4 M. if 4 ,I r w WV if I could turn you om, if 1 coma drive you Out of your wretched mind, if 1 could teH you I would Xet you know. -n ' . , Maw .31 5WFQ ta I :11an mmci .;45 .L.


Suggestions in the University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) collection:

University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) online collection, 1967 Edition, Page 1

1967

University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) online collection, 1968 Edition, Page 1

1968

University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) online collection, 1969 Edition, Page 1

1969

University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) online collection, 1971 Edition, Page 1

1971

University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 1

1972

University of Kentucky - Kentuckian Yearbook (Lexington, KY) online collection, 1973 Edition, Page 1

1973


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