xt73r20rtz4j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73r20rtz4j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1990-04-18 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 18, 1990 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 18, 1990 1990 1990-04-18 2020 true xt73r20rtz4j section xt73r20rtz4j  

Vo'i. XCtil. hits"!

' Established 1894

University of Kentucky. Lexington; Kentucky In

dependent since 1971

Wednesday, April 18,1990

 

 

EX-trustee Forgy
given Zumwinkle
Award by SGA

By TOM SPALDING
Executive Editor

Lexington attorney Larry Forgy.
whose criticism of Gov. Wallace
Wilkinson cost him his seat on the
UK Board of Trustees, was hon-
ored last night for his defense of
student rights.

In a break with tradition, Forgy
became the first non- student, staff
or faculty member to be awarded
the Robert Zumwinkle Honorary
Award —— one of the Student GOV-
emment Association’s highest hon-
ors — which was presented at the
Hyatt Regency Hotel last night.

SGA Vice President Paige Fos-
ter, who chaired the selection com-
mittee, said the rules were suspend-
ed to allow Forgy to be nominated.

Forgy, who openly criticized
Wilkinson last semester for not
supporting former UK President
David Roselle and who was one of
five trustees who voted against
Charles Wethiiigton being named
interim president, was not re-
appointed after his term expired
Dec. 31.

Wilkinson appointed Robert P.
Meriwether to fill the vacancy.

“Anything having to do with UK
is important to me. Very impor-
tant," said Forgy, who is a UK
graduate. It‘s especially sweet
coming from the students. By and
large, students are l don't want
to say cynical, but they take a pret-
ty hard look at people and I know
that”

Forgy donated the S300 he gets
for being a recipient to SGA's child
care fund, according to SGA Presi-
dent Sean Lohman.

Lohman, who nominated Forgy,
said the award was “made for him."

“Most (trustees) that come up for
re-appointment wouldn’t have
stepped out on a limb," Lohman
said. “But Larry Forgy never com-
promised himself."

Lohman said Forgy told him that
“to be favored by students is more
important than being favored by a
clique on the board."

Forgy said that he was pleased
“to have the good opinion of the
students at UK" for his service as a
trustee. “After all," he said, “the
University only exists because of
the students."

Also receiving a Zumwinkle

Brereton J ones

Staff reports

Lt. Gov. Brereton Jones will be
the featured speaker at the UK Stu—
dent Bar Association's “Noon F0-

is

rum.

The speech begins at 12:15 pm.
in the College of Law's Court
Room.

David Hale, a member of the
Noon Forum committee, said Jones
will speak for about 15 minutes and
then answer questions from the au-
dience. J ones‘ speech is open to the
public.

“He hasn’t indicated anything to

 

Mike Bowling,
Paulette Sides
outstanding
UK seniors

Staff reports

Paulette Sides and Michael
Bowling were named the Otis
A. Singletary seniors at the
Honors and Recognition ban-
quet at the Hyatt Regency
Hotel last night.

The two each receive a
$1,000 scholarship with the
honor.

Sides is a nursing senior
from London. Ky., and Bowl-
ing is an electrical engineer-
ing senior from Madisonville.
Ky.
About 400 students were
recognized at the ceremony
for their outstanding academ-
ic and leadership achieve-
merits.

Sides helped develop a pro-
gram is Jessamine County,
Ky., for Hospice patients and
health-care workers. She also
was active in the UK Student
Government Association in
establishing a day—care center
for UK employees.

She also fornted the first
UK chapter of the Kentucky
Association of Nursing Stu—
dents.

Bowling has worked as a
member of the UK student re—
cruitment team in the Visitor
Center and on the Summer
Advising Conference staff.

See AWARDS, Back page

 

 

 

award was Vishwesh Bhatt, a polit—
ical science senior who chairs
SGA‘s Ethnic Concerns Commit-
[06.
Foster praised Bhatt for his work,
especially on behalf of international
and graduate students. Bhatt also
received a $300 prize.

Also on the selection committee
that chose Forgy and Bhatt were
Cara Waites, Frank Harris, Barry
Stumbo and Paulette Sides.

to speak today

us in particular" that he is going to
talk about, Hale said. “He's sensi-
tive to the fact that there are a few
issues special to (UK) students."

The “Noon Forum" is a regular
event sponsored by UK’s Student
Bar Association.

Jones is considered to be one of
the early front-runners for the 1991
Democratic gubernatorial race.
Jones, a former West Virginia Re-
publican, was elected lieutenant
governor in 1987 in what was his
first political campaign in Ken-
lucky.

 

 

A MATCH MADE ON STAGE

0
w
‘c s" (i

STEVE SANDERS/Kernel S‘a?‘

Is this love or just confusion? Denise Pyles is embarassed by a question last night at the Dating Game an event in UK's Little
Kentucky Derby. This was the first year of the game as part of the LKD.

LKD Dating Game
provides humor, prizes

By MICHAEL L. JONES
Editorial Editor

So here is your plot: three eligi.
blc bachelors competiting for the
heart of one lovely Vice-
President clcct. In the hands of
Sidney Sheldon or Danielle
Steele the story would probably
involve poltical intrigue and be-
trayal. The prospective suitors
could be from any walk of life —
one could be a spy, another a fel-
low polittcan and the last the
King of a third world country
whose name only Dan Rather
could pronounce.
But the scene at
Memorial Hall
last night was less
complicated, if
only a little less.
No it wasn‘t Rage
In Eden or Wash-
ington Wives, but
it was the Dating
Game done UK
style as part of
this year‘s Little
Kentucky Derby.

Student Government Associa‘
tton Vice President elect Sarah
Coursey was one of to bachelors
and bachelorettes who competed
in the contest. One questioner
asked questions to three would be
promours for sometimes hilarious
results.

Coursey asked her three suitors
what instrument they would like
to be and why.

How the bachelors answer?

Bachelor number one, John
Tranter: “A Tuba, because I want
to be blown on."

Bachelor number two, Charles
Saylor: “Bagpipes. you can
squeeze and blow them at the

“I’m just glad I was
the questioner and
not the questionee.
I’ve always wanted
to go to France.”

Sarah Coursey,
SGA vice president
_

same time."

However both of them lost as a
blush Coursey choose Sean Smith
who answered, “A Trumpet...You
can use your hands and month on
that"

Ah ti budding rotitttnt'c‘.’ l’robzi-
bly not. said Coursey. but she did
have fun.

“I’m JUSI glad I was the ques-
tioner and not the questionee."
she said. However Coursey did
say that the answer that won ll for
Smith was when he said his
dream date would include taking
her to France.

“I've always
wanted to go to
France," ('oursey
said.

Jennifer Brett/cl
the LKD chairper-
son tor the Dating
(lame \‘Ltltl that
even if the ro-
mances aren’t per-
manent she’d like
to see the game
continue.

"They've had
the Dating Game before. but not
as a part of the little Kentucky
Derby." Brcnzcl \‘tlltl. "I‘d like to
see it become an annual event."

Bren/cl said that the to pall’llch
pants were picked from over 30
applicants who submitted ques-
tions to the LKD Committee and
were interviewed.

“We picked the contestants
based on their personality and
their questions," Bren/cl said.

Donavan Tavar, who got to
question three bachelorettes, said
“it was everything I could have
wanted."

5 I'EVE SANDERS/heme» blah

John T'ranter as he IS asked a question by SGA Vice president
elect Sarah Coursey as the LKD Dating Game.

One female contestant told
Donavan that ll he was a quilt at
the end of the night he would
“end up :ust t'rtiitiplcd up beside
me.” Another told hint that Plas-
tic th Atls her tttttiritc cartoon
her because you can mold him
irtto .tmthtng you want."

The Master of t‘ereiiionics tor
lllls t tr. us of loose hormones V\ as
UK \ ironomy professor l‘ro-
land itt‘tdlitl gate away lootbttlls
and intskt-thalls autographed by
UK mi. in \ Rick l’itiito and Hill
(‘tiiiy \‘\lili.' the tittcsttoncrs made
their drutxtwtts and acted as all
.ttouttd iiisttgn‘tot.

When one toiitcstant was asked
to coiitpare her ideal titan with a
sandwich she said it would be a
Big Mac. ’l'roltmd smiled and
asked “is it the \[X‘L‘lal sauce?"

Trolaiid intonncd the audience
early in the game that he was
“one of the world‘s experts on
dating." He said that he knew all
about “getting to first hase...;tnd

 

LITTLE
KENTUCKY
DERBY
SCHEDULE
Wednesday

Carnival
o~ ll) p.m.
Ct’itttmonwealth Stadium

 

stealing lust s

He said that he .ytts asked ivy
one of his slUtlc‘llb to MC lltc
games because he tan Militt‘llllic‘s
be off the wall. Contestants won
“dream dates" to .‘titalta‘s. t'haw
lic Brown‘s, lX‘Shac'x and l lo—
rcnlz's.

At the end of the show lrolatid
reminded all the contestants to be
careful because he didn't want to
see them on the l Kl) ‘ Hate to
Get Newlywed Gaittc" new year.

 

 

 

Home for mentally ill homeless struggles to keep doors open

By TONJA WlLT
Campus Editor

The Canaan House. a non profit organr
lation which houses tip to sewn residents
at a time, has helped more thttn 3H people
since it began as a pilot protect Ill July.

Up to one-third of Lexmgtoii's lltilllt‘lk‘.\\
population is estimated to lld\C a chronic
mental illness. according to (‘aitaaii House
statistics.

monthly rent and various other costs :1 ben-
efit will be held at Breeding‘s, 509 W.
Matti St.. at 8 pm. today. The benefit. “A
Celebration of Hope," Wlll feature music
by Velvet Elvis, Shophar, and Edison‘s Re
vengc. All proceeds from ticket sales will
go to the Canaan House.

“I believe there are ti lot of people who
are willing and wanting to help homeless,
but don’t know how." Schrocring said.

those of six other Canaan House residents,
is unccnain because a lack of funds.

We are “$6,000 in the deficit basically
because we have people staying who can't
pay (the rent), and we‘re not going to kick
them out," said John Schroering, a Canaan
House staff member. “We‘ve got four staff
members who need to be paid. The money
is not the issue. The house is the issue."

In order to raise money for the $230

naan House, 379 South Broadway Park, a
place that provides safe and affordable
housing for persons with chronic mental
illnesses.

”Everybody here knows what you‘re go-
ing through. Our goal here is to get our
own job and our own house," Herndon
said. “We can come and go as we please.
We are very much individuals."

However, Herndon’s future, as well as

Last March Marsha Herndon did not ap-
pear to have a very promising future —— she
was homeless and did not have much hope.
But since she moved to Lexington, Hem-
don's hope has been renewed and she has
been given a chance for a new beginning.

Herndon found her new hope in the Ca- Sec (,‘ANAAN. Bud, D824?

 

Sports

Vil/ildcats still have
0 W3. t0 0.
{gouge/m 5.g

 

 

 

 

 

 2- Norm Kernel, iii/echoed», April 18, 1990

Bush says global warming study needed

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President
Bush called for more research “to
sort out the science" of global
warming yesterday, but he ran into
a storm of criticism at an intema-
tional White House conference
from Europeans who argued for ac-
tion.

“Gaps in knowledge must not be
used as an excuse for worldwide in-
action." declared Klaus Topfer, the
West German environmental mini-
ster.

Bush said he hoped the confer-
ence, attended by delegates from 19
nations, would prod international
research and inject economic issues
into the debate over whether there
is a global warming.

The president called for resolving
some of the scientific uncertainties
and economic implications before
making a commitment to specific
pollution controls to deal with pos-
sible gradual warming of the Earth.

“Environmental policies that ig-
nores the economic factors — the
human factors —— are destined to
fail,” he said, maintaining anew
that some scientists are in wide dis-
agreement over the impact of man-
made pollutants on the temperature

of the globe.

Many of the European partici-
pants, especially the West Germans
and the Dutch, said the conference
agenda was narrowly arranged to
prevent open discussions of policy
aimed at dealing with global wann-
ing.

Topfer suggested the German del-
egation would pursue such discus-
sions, adding, “The gravity of the
situation requires immediate, deter-
mined action."

Similar views were expressed by
members of other delegations, in-
ciuding Dutch and French officials.

Discussions about further re-
search and economic considerations
should “not distract us from taking
action on carbon dioxide stabiliza-
tion now," Hans Alders, the Dutch
environmental minister, told the
conference during a closed working
session.

“We needed Love Canal before
hazardous waste was tackled. We
needed a dying River Rhine before
waste water was treated. My
country has decided to learn the les-
sons from the past and act on glo-
bal warming now," Alders told the
delegates, according to a transcript
made public by the Dutch delega-
tion.

“1 know there's a debate raging
out there.” Bush said in his wel-
coming remarks to the delegates.
all Cabinet-level ministers involved
in environmental, economic and
science issues. But he said he was
confident that more research and ex-
amination of economic factors be-
fore action to curb “greenhouse”
pollutants such as carbon dioxide
“is the way to go."

Scientists, including Bush's own
science advisers, generally agree
that manmade pollution, especially
the release of carbon dioxide from
burning of fossil fuels, is causing
heat to be trapped and will result in
a warming of the globe.

Many say that the Earth’s tem-
perature could increase by as much
as 4 degrees to 9 degrees Fahrenheit
by the middle of the next century,
causing coastal flooding and a shift
of weather and agriculture patterns.

Environmentalists have urged
immediate action by industrial
countries to curb carbon dioxide
emissions by 20 percent and many
of the European countries have
called at least for a stabilization of
such releases by 2000.

Such a commitment would re-
quire new efforts at energy conser-
vation, development of more fuel
efficient automobiles and more effi-

 

 

YOUR CAREER REQUIRES
MANAGERIAL EXPERIENCE,

BUT WHO’S GOING TO GIVE IT TO YOU?

I Can’t Believe It’s

Yogurt!

Positions Available in Summer Management Program.

Lexington resident a must. Apply in person at:

I CAN’T BELIEVE IT’S YOGURT

ZANDALE SHOPPING CENTER
2202 NICHOLASVILLE RD.
277-7001

 

 

Spring
is here...

...and

in the Kernel’s
Spring Coupon Clipper.

Coming

you can find savings

...Thursday, April 19th
for savings through

finals and spring.

cient use of energy in homes and
businesses.

Meanwhile, U.S. environmental-
ists accused Bush yesterday of
abandoning his leadership responsi-
bilities on the global warming
question by not joining the Euro-
peans in a call for firm commit-
ments to reduce global-warming
pollutants.

“Bush is using the conference as
a smoke screen to hide his inac-
tion. He's using economics as a
weapon against environmental pro-
tection," said Daniel Becker of the
Sierra Club.

Rafe Pomerance of the World
Resources Institute chided Bush for
suggesting that scientists are at op-
posite poles on the global warming
debate. He said there is widespread
agreement that the earth will be-
come warmer if pollution curbs are
not implemented.

At a luncheon address to the con-
ference, William Reilly, head of
the Environmental Protection
Agency, maintained that the Bush
administration has taken actions to
combat global warming.

He cited the push to phase out
chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs,
which are another major cause of
global warming; a call by Bush to
plant 1 billion trees a year, and ef-
forts to toughen federal air pollu-
tion laws, as well as a $1 billion
global change research effort.

W'DDJIiI‘iA/M
Sif il'i [AT [2 If

The
Big
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gunmen

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Admission $1.95
for more info
call 257-1287

. m ______
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fifififiwmwfimfifimmfififin—ufi

u
-l—Ll-l

 

Read the
- KENTUCKY KERNEL-

 

 

 

Associated Prone

WASHINGTON .. President
Bush warned “appropriate re-
sponses” if Moscow imposes
announced cuts in fuel supplies
to Lithuania. but also said he
does nor want to damage supcr~
power relations.

“I want to be sure anything
we do is productive," Bush said
yesterday. "There‘s been drmnat-
ic change in the world and I
don’t want to inadvertently take
some action that would set it
back. "

The Saviet government said
it had ordered drastic cuts in nat-
ural gas supplies to Lithuania
yesterday, followed by cutsin
oil and gasoline today. US. of-
ficials said they could not con-
firm any slowdown.

Senate Majority Leader
George Mitchell. D-Maine, and
Minority Leader Bob Dole, R-
Kan., met with Bush at the
White Reuse and said later that
the United States has an array of
economic steps it could take
against Moscow.

“1 think it’s a very serious
matter a very serious, delicate
situation,” Mitchell said after-
ward. Based on what happens in
Lithuania, Mitchell said that
Bush should review whether the
United States proceeds with
closer cooperation with Mos-
cow on trade, tax matters and
the environment.

Dole, who briefed Bush on
his trip to the Middle East. said
any steps that Congress takes
on Lithuania should be done in
consultation with the president.
"So far he’s made no specific
recommendation,” Dole said.

Lawmakers have warned that
Congress might act on its own
with economic pressure against
Moxow if the Soviets escalate
efforts to block Lithuania's
drive for independence.

Bush took a two-pronged ap-
proach of warning and concilia-
tion as the administration wait-
ed to see if Moscow carried out
threats of economic sanctions
against the breakaway Baltic re-
public. Responding to the latest
news, .Bush said the United
States was monitoring develop-

 

Bush warns Soviets
on Lithuania issue

ments “very, very closely, and
we are waiting to see if the So-
viet announcements are imple-
Mm."

' “Clearly those announcements
are Contrary to the approach that
we have urged and that others
have urged upon the Soviet Un~
ion,” Bush said. “We are consid-
ering appropriate responses if
these threats are implemented.”

He refused to elaborate, say-
ing, “I would simply repeat that
what we need is dialogue. discus-
sion and a peaceful resolution of
this great difficqu there."

Bush made his comments dur-
ing a picture-taking session in
the Oval Office with visiting
President Rafael L. Callejas of
Honduras. Separately, the White
House released the transcript of
an interview conducted Monday
with foreign journalists.

On Lithuania, Bush said in the
interview that any US. reaction
to Soviet economic pressures
against the Baltic republic should
be productive and should not risk
a setback in reforms championed
by Gorbachev.

“And yet." Bush said. “I don’t
want to be seen as one who is
not interested in the peaceful
change and in the self-
determination for Lithuania.”

In recent weeks, high-level
US. officials have been meeting
to consider what steps the admin-
istration might take in response
to various Soviet actions against
Lithuania. Most of the options
apparently involve economic
measures, such as denying Mos-
cow improved trade status or
blocking its entry into intema-
tional economic organizations.

State Department spokeswom-
an Margaret Tutwiler, asked if
the administration had compiled
a list of options, said, “If there
were, I w0uld not be prepared to
answer that question.” She said
Bush’s five-day summit with
Gorbachev is planned.

A US. official said privately
that the United States probably
would not try to make up the
fuel losses for Lithuania, since
the Soviets would have to give
permission for US. deliveries
and that would defeatthe purpose
of Moscow’s sanctions.

 

 

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DIVERSIONS

Author escapes social influences, flees to Walden Pond

By DANA KMDY
Associated Press

LITTLETON, Mass. — When
John Hanson Mitchell’s marriage
ended in 1986, he abandoned the
modem world and moved alone to a
cabin in the woods to live like his
“mentor,” Henry David Thoreau.

But during his year without elec-
tricity and running water, Mitchell
discovered what he calls a timeless
truth that may be more suited to
this generation.

In an upcoming book based on
his experiment in the woods,
Mitchell decries the materialism of
modern times and advocates a return
to the simpler values of Thoreau's
mid-19th century.

“The essence of civilization is
not the multiplication of wants,
but the elimination of needs.” said
Mitchell, 49, standing on his land,
just 16 miles from Walden Pond.

That sentiment may sound a bit
ponderous and pretentious, but
Mitchell is not. He is the first to
tell you that his year in the woods,
titled Living at the End of Time,
involved more than just giving up
a CD player and the Cuisinart.

Though he continued work as ed-
itor of a small magazine, Mitchell
returned home to his cabin every
night. It was there that he gained a
peace and contentment he says
comes from living close to the
land. He calls it a “satisfying feel-
ing, a comfort" that he believes is
difficult to achieve in the fast—track
world.

But the hardest pan came before
Mitchell even moved into his cabin
— when his wife decided they
should separate. At the time. the
couple lived in a house on the edge
of dense woods in this rural suburb
35 miles west of Boston.

Mitchell moved to a nearby
apartment but found he missed his
land. His attachment to the land, a
square-mile of nearly undeveloped
woods of which Mitchell owns four
acres, is more than sentimental.
Several years ago, he chronicled the
15,000-year history of the land,
called Scratch F lat, in a book.

“There does seem to be some sort
of draw here, some sort of histori—
cal presence,” he said. “This place
seems more alive than others.”

Mitchell said that he and his wife
separated amicably. His son and

daughter often stayed with him in
his cabin.

“I look at these things as more
tribal," he said of the split. “Marri-
ages don’t break up. People just
move into different huts."

Mitchell also had a practical rea-
son for building his one-room gin~
gerbread-style cabin - he needed
some “affordable housing."

The Gothic-style cottage was
built by Mitchell using Thoreau‘s
shack and the designs of mid-19th
century architect Andrew Jackson
Downing for inspiration. It was
constructed on a ridge hidden behind
thick woods, about 400 yards from
his former house and the road. In
the winter, Mitchell had to ski
through the woods to get to his
house.

In the warm months, Mitchell
often spent hours sitting outside
his cottage, contemplating the sur—
rounding meadows and trees. He

took long walks in the woods and
met an assortment of characters: a
family of Eastern European refu-
gees who lived on a small farm. a
mysterious man who dressed partly
in animal skins and said he lived
in a cave.

In the winter he stoked his small
camp stove for warmth and huddled
under heavy blankets. He reread the
classics and read the journals kept
by Thoreau as well as his own fa-
ther.

Most important, he said, was
his feeling of oneness with nature,
a feeling that all the “windows and
walls separating me" had been re-
moved.

“Sometimes I would even go for
night walks picking my way
along the trail by watching the
sky. The stars had never seemed so
bright," Mitchell writes. “I became
acutely conscious of the changing
position of what quarter the moon

 

 

thirty second walk to campus.

Transylvania Park.

lraternity house.
Woodland Park.
Streets.

Arlington Ave.

Apartment and Townhouses
for Rent

Why wat tor the summer rush to lind an apartment to F:
axcp. ed for August1990 1 2 3, and 4 bedro_om _ap.: ,
-l 2 and 3 bedroom apartments and tomlt eases on T tranql anra Park a

-2 bedroom townhouses on Euclid Ave biL-it‘.

-2 bedroom apartments on Ayleslord Place across item the Sigma Pi

-2. and 3 bedroom apartments and townhouses on East Maxwell near

-t.2 and 4 bedroom apartments on Woodland A.e by Maxwell and High

-1 and 2 bedroom apartments on East Hi. jh St nea r 13‘! odla rd Park and

Ail buldngs have parking lots (No more tickets 0' g 3‘.
toys or carpeting, some with dishwashers some
Depcsts being accepted lor occupancy August ‘ 5
rash th s summer, why make an extra trip to Lex "g

 

 

Wassmer Properties . 266- 788i - lion F 9 am to 4 pm

Wa'k to School Walk to the library War 0 the bars and walk home

  
  

s'e’r’r Dupes .s now being
.4}. horses ex 'oUK.

tori Place and

, , I i.
t‘chyJBG

    

c' or. cg ha dwood
arr‘ sky ghts
:Japa M * be‘ore n‘ad

AMMWWW -

 

 

JN/VERSIT‘.’ OF KENTUCKY

proudly presents

 

 

1L

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