xt7gqn5z919d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gqn5z919d/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1984-11-30 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, November 30, 1984 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 30, 1984 1984 1984-11-30 2020 true xt7gqn5z919d section xt7gqn5z919d  

Vol. LXXXIX, No. 76 ‘

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5

KENTUCKY

21‘“

University of Kentucky. Minion. Kentucky

University task force searching

By STEPHANIE WALLNER
Managing Editor

The search for asbestos in UK
buildings will involve the inspection
of more than 400 buildings at the
Lexington campus, community col-
leges and the UK Medical Center,
according to Bernie Vonderheide, di-
rector of information services.

The survey will cover 9.7 million
square feet on the Lexington cam-
pus (including the Med Center) and
an additional 1.7 million square feet
at the community colleges, Vonder»
heide said. Asbestos, which was
found in four University buildings
earlier this semester, has been de-
terminedasacauseof lung disease.

A special University task force,
chaired by Gene Williams, assistant
vice chancellor for business, has
been assigned to coordinate the
search.

Williams said the search is tar-
geted at finding potentially harmful
areas and moving immediately to
remove any harmful asbestos. “The
main function (of the task force) is
to coordinate the information across
sector lines," to include community
colleges and the Med Center along
with the main campus, Williams
said.

The task force was formed “offi-
cially about the first week in Sep-
tember," Williams said.

Task force members anticipate

Student tickets for
football games cut

Athletic Association offers ‘premium ’
stadium seats to season ticket-holders

By JOHN VOSKUHL
Editor-in—Chief

Student Wildcat football fans will
no longer be able to sit in section m8
of Commonwealth Stadium — “the
premium student seats," according
to the student member of the Athlet—
ic Association‘s ticket committee.

More than 3,000 tickets in all were
taken away from students last week
as a result of “the lack of student at-
tendance" at football games, said
Neal Hardesty, a senator at large in
the Student Government Associa-
tion. Hardesty was appointed to the
committee by SGA President Tim
Freudenberg.

Figures from the Athletic Associa-
tion show that. while about 14,000
seats have been allotted to students
in the past, student attendance has
never been high enough to require
that number.

Only about 7,000 students attended
this season's games against North
Texas State University. Vanderbilt
University and the University of
Florida. The highest student atten-
dance in the past two years was
about 11,000 at 1983’s game against
the University of Tennessee.

Hardesty said the request to re-
duce the amount of student seating

came from UK Athletic Director
Cliff Hagan. Hagan was not avail-
able for comment this week.

Hardesty said 594 student tickets
were taken from section 208, while
66 were taken from section 210. Both
sections are located in the upper
level at about midfield. An additio-
nal 1,526 tickets were taken from
sectiom 114 and 115, located on the
lower level near the endzone, and
902 were taken from section 123 be-
hindtheendzone.

The seats will be offered to season
ticket-holders, Hardesty said. The
seats from sections 208 and 210 will
be offered to people who donate
money to the Athletic Association
through the Blue and White fund, an
athletic booster fund. After donors
have contributed a certain level of
money, they are eligible for seating
at home football games.

Hardesty said the seats had to be
taken from the two sections because
Blue-and-White fund seating is
grouped together in a block. The
ticket committee had to add to the
block from adjacent seating.

Although attendance figures show
that seats from the upper-level sec-
tions are the most popular among
students, Hardesty said taking away

See TICKETS, page 5

Tempers flare in SGA
after senators’ criticism

By ANDREW DAVIS
Senior Staff Writer

Senators in the Student Govem-
ment Association are criticizing
their colleagues for not understand-
ing their job responsibilities or tak-
ing their jobs seriorsly.

That criticism was made public at
the last SGA meeting of the semes-
ter Wednesday night as two senators
aimed sharp criticism at committee
members for failing to attend meet-
ings regularly.

Senator at large Brad Dixon as-
sailed his fellow SGA members dur-
ing the senator's privilege part of
the meeting, charging that they
showed a “lack of commitment to
the student government. "

He said he was upset that the SGA
committees were having such a
hard time getting together and doing
the job they were elected to do.

“Are you a member of student
government or are you just sitting
there?" Dixon asked rhetorically.

John Cain, SGA senior vice presi-
dent, said “the real work is done" in
committees. “This is the body where
you have the final debate." He
warned the senators to attend meet-
ings regularly or risk being expelled
from the senate.

SGA is “more than a line on your
resume," Cain said. “You were
elected by your constituents."

A senator can be kicked out of
SGA for excessive absences; more
than two unexcused or 50 percent
total. Taylor Hoover, ex-dentistry
senator, has been the only senator
whohasbeen purged this year.

Judy Stephenson, library science
senator, continued where Dixon left
off, saying a lot of the senators were
not performing up to par. She said

See SGA. Pale ‘

‘Head first’

Many dry-docked Kentuckians are getting wet behind the ears over scuba diving

By JOHN honor-ms
Reporter

Although there are only a few
places to scuba dive in the area.
hundreds of Kentuckians are diving
"head first“ into the sport.

“Most people would consider div-
im in Kentucky boring, but anyone
really interested in the sport would
enjoy diving in a mud puddle," said
Wilhelm “Bill" Schmidt, 41, owner
and Open Water Diving Instructor at
Aquatic World Life Support in Innis-
ville

The standard equipment for scuba
(selfcontained unda'water breath-
ing spparatu) divlm includes a
mask, fill. snorkel. buoyancy corn-
psnsator, me and
sunset. bro-0m Insulator, misfit
belt. and a wet suit for cold water-s.

on how fast a fiver
breaths a tank of air anally lasts
about a half-hois- raids-vats. and
the dving runs is from about tom
set.

In order to rent scuba equipment,
or to obtain an air-filled tank, the
diver must possess an individualized
Open Water Diver certification card.
A classroom course, a written exam,
water exams and check-out dives
mint be completed before this card
canbeissued.

Schmidt's students spend one
night a week in class for six consec-
utive weeks. The class includes lec-
tin-es, films and pool diving. Once
the classwork is completed, the stu-
dent mut make at least four check-
out dives. Schmidt malty takes his
studentstoDaleHollowortosrock
quarry in Mitchell. ind. for these
dives, which tat thestudents‘ water

Schmidt said the best diving spots
in this area are Serrelian Springs
Owes-bum, Lake aunties-land, Dale
Hollow, Lsurd Lake in London, Ky.
‘11:. some rock marries in Mitchell,

"Primarily, mover, people get
eutified whte they live and than go

finding asbestos in nearly every
building, however, “we’re rarely
finding it to be hazardous," he said.
Only friable, or crumbling asbestos
is hazardous and causes health prob-
lems particularly when inhaled, he
said.

The only danger lies in disturbing
the asbestos for renovations or
maintenance work. However, Wil-
liams said it “shouldn't cause any
stir to check for it. "

Common sources of asbestos are
mechanical rooms, pipe insulation
and ceiling tiles. The task force will
also coordinate the prompt removal
of harmful asbestos and schedule ei-
ther removal or re-sealing of the
non-harmful material.

“We want to have a data base of
everywhere where there is asbes—
tos," he said. “That way we can get
it out before renovations“ that may
bescheduled.

Asbestos was found when recons-
truction began on the Pi Kappa
Alpha fraternity house which, sus-
tained damage in a fire last sum-
mer. Vonderheide said the type of
asbestos found was “not of the
harmful variety," and was in the
form of pipe insulation.

The potentially harmful substance
also turned’up in the furnace of a
building on Washington Avenue,
according to Vonderheide. The as-
bestos there also was not harmful.

Asbestos found in the dental wing

el

Independent since 1971

for asbestos

of the Med Center again, was not
hazardom. “In our own work — as
we have been remodeling over the
last few months — we found that on
our own,“ said Reed Polk, special
assistant to the chancellor of the
Medical Center.

“None of the friable type has been
found in the Medical Center. We are
in the process of getting that (re-
sealed)," Polk said.

However, friable asbestos was
found in the Funkhouser Building
when renovations began there this
summer. Asbestos will have to be
removed from a 4,800—square-foot
area of the building‘s total 107,784
square feet.

Bids are being accepted from out-

 

Jigsaw puddle

 

 

 

Joanna Hall, a fourth-year pharmacy student, is reflected in a puddle of water as she walks through
the Kirwan-Blanding Complex yesterday.

MICHAEI LAMI/ Kernel Staff

 

side contractors for the removal in
the Fimkhouser building, and all ap-
plications are due Dec. 5, Vonder-
heide said.

The removal of asbestos from
Funkhouser is currently in “phase
one," according to Vonderheide.
Work is being done in the areas
where there is harmful asbestos.

He said phases two and three,
which will take place over spring
break and after the spring semester
respectively, will concentrate on re-
moving asbestos that is not in a
harmful state.

“I‘d say in most cases it will be
removed. There will be much more

See ASBESTOS, page 4

Ceremony
recognizes
the disabled

By DARRELL CLEM
Senior Staff Writer

Two handicapped students in
wheelchairs were honored for per-
sonal and academic achievement
last night in an awards ceremony
held in the Student Center.

Jean Wingate, 29, an English
major, and Leslie Turner, 27, an ac-
counting major, both of whom are
UK teaching assistants, received the
first Carole S. Adelstein Outstanding
Handicapped Student Award. Ad-
elstein, who was left handicapped by
polio, died in 1%3 and was the wife
of Mike Adelstein, a UK English
professor. She worked for Kentucky
Educational Television.

Jacob Karnes, director of Hand-
icapped Student Services, said the
awards were based on academic
achievement, leadership, extracurri~
cular activities, personal and social
qualities, and the ability to over-
come disabilities. About 50 people
attended the reception.

Wingate, who came to UK from
Owensboro, Ky.. in 1W6, said of the
award, “I didn‘t think I'd get all this
attention. It makes me realize that I
really have done something out-
standing. All of a sudden, it seems
like, ‘Hey, i have done something
good.‘ "
She said her mother, Frances, was
“very proud“ of the award. “She's

See DISABLED, page 4

 

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to their places of enchantment to do
most of their diving," Schmidt said.

Schmidt, who has been diving
since he was seven and teaching
since he was 16, said he has had peo-
ple of all ages interested in this “ex-
cellent form of escapism." His old-
est student was about so and his
youngest, Jim Kaiser of Louisville,
was eight when he started diving.

Now working at Aquatic World,
Kaiser, 15, first met Schmidt when
he was swimming on the Plantation
Swim Team in Inuisville.

“Bill saw me swimming when l
was eight and wanted to teach me to
dive," said Kaiser, who has since
had about 135 hours of experience
underwater. “He wanted to see me
divirg in order for both of u to
learn something new. He talked to
mypsrents,theyagreedtomyhk-
in the course. and so we began.
Bill’s the best and safest iratmetor
I‘ve ever seen in all the trips I've
taken

n

Scmnidtssidthstsafetyishistqs

priority in instruction. He warns
prospective divers to keep away
from classes with very large num-
bers of students and from stores
more interested in ling equipment
thaneducatingthe 'vers.

“All diving agencies want and
stras safety," said Schmidt, who
sports the same military haircut he
had when he was awarded the Naval
Master lnstmctors Award, the high-
est award ever given in the military
for diving instructors. “But, what's

happening is that diving is getting so
popular that some of the instructors
are letting the elements of safety
and pride be replaced by the big
buck."

Schmidt said whether or not the
student passed the written test, he
would not certify anyone he felt
could not handle himself in the
water.

A few years ago, Schmidt had a
student that was not satisfied with
his slow speed of teachim. She quit

his class and wrote a letter to the
Professional Association of Diving
Instructors, the largest diving agen-
cy and the one Schmidt operatu
under. She complained that he had
not done his proper job wi

when he refined to certify

cause he said he didn

 

 2-Kmrxmmmn 1"

SHORT

all lee

By WILLIE HIA’I‘T
Staff Writer

The Cats' narrow win over Toledo
Tuesday night has increased aware-
ness that this program really is
punctuated by inexperience. 'I‘hOugh
Coach Joe B. Hall is none too opti-
mistic about his young squad. Pur-
due coach Gene Keady chuckled at
the suggestion that UK is in the
midst of a rebuilding year.

“You‘ve got so much talent you
never have to rebuild," Keady jok-
ingly said about the people in the
Bluegrass. “Maybe (UK is) down
from Final Four expectations, but in
other people's minds they‘re good
because they recruit so well.“

it seems he hasn‘t spoken with
Hall lately.

“We‘ve just got a long, long way
to go to correct all the phases of our

aiwbfix H I i ~ ::.;-:»'

’3’ about Cats’ pm

game that need correcting,“ Hall
said about the same team that
Keady praised. "Some of it isn't
going to be corrected except by ma-
turity, and that's going to take a
year and a half.”

And what about the play of the
freshmen?

"A year and a half,“ Hall said
again. not curtly. but matterof-fact-
ly.
Meanwhile, UK will grapple with
the Purdue Boilermakers tomorrow
at 4:05 pm. in West Lafayette, 1nd.
It will be the sixth meeting between
these two teams, with UK holding a
4-1 advantage in the series. UK beat
Purdue 86-67 in Louisville a year
ago.

Purdue. under fifth’year head
coach Keady, is coming off of a 22-7
record and a Big Ten co-
championship season last year. it

its season against Tampa
last Saturday night and came away
withanarrow‘lo-n win.

Yet Purdue's shooting for the
game was torrid. “In one stretch.
they hit 22 of 28 shots from the
field." Hall said about the Boiler-
makers. ”That impressed me. They
shot 68 percent on the night against
Tampa, which was a phenomenal
openinggameontheroad."

Hall added that the Boilermakers
are strong, physical and agressive
defensively.

Senior guard Steve Reid, who av-
eraged 12.3 points a game last year,
hit 10 of 15 shots to lead the Boiler-
makers with at points and seven as-
sists against Tampa. Reid and se-
nior center Mark Atkinson are the
only starters from last year’s squad.

Six lettermen are back this sea-
son, along with a recruiting class

Lady Kats overcome fatigue
to rout Miami of Ohio, 76-60

By ANDY DL'MS'I‘ORF
Sports Editor

OXFORD. Ohio — After starting
out slow in the first half, the UK
Lady Kats stormed back in the sec-
ond half to defeat the Miami of Ohio
Redskins 76-60 last night.

The Lady Kats. who are 5-0 on the
year. built a 33-27 half-time lead be»
hind junior forward laslie Nichols'
13 first-half points. UK hit 45 percent
from the floor in the first half.

The Lady Kats stormed Out to a
4921' lead in the opening three min»
utes of the second half on senior
guard Diane Stephens' three jump-
ers and a lay-up and sophomore
Debbie Miller's two-foot shot in the
lane.

Nichols had 26 points for the game
and Stephens. who had only six

points at the half, finished with 22.
Miller finished with 10.

Lady Kat coach Terry Hall was
able to insert her bench into the
game as her team jumped out to
leads as big as 18 points for three
consecutive times in the later part
of the second half. At the 15:42
mark. the Lady Kats appeared in
control as Nichols hit an eight-foot
jumper to put UK up 43-31.

After Miami of Ohio’s Arlethia
Porter converted a fast-break lay-
up. Stephens and Nichols connected
on consecutive baskets which built
the lead to 16. 49-33, at the 13:13
mark.

Miami threatend at the 10:24 when
it cut the lead to eight, 49-41, but
would come no closer.

“i thought we were kind of sloppy
in the first half and we didn't do a

real good job of execution,” Hall
said. “In the second half, I thought
our intensity picked up on defense
and I thought we had real good help-
side defense. We started running the
ball a lot more in the second half.”
Hall said her team basically domi-
natedtheboardsinthesecondhalf.
The final rebounding margin was 42-

27.

When asked whether she thought
the defense was lacklmter as com-
paredtowhatithasbeeninthelast
couple of games, Hall said,“Not
really, because I think we’re getting
alitle tired."

The Lady Kats have played five
games in nine days. The next game
is tomorrow night against South
Carolina at Memorial Coliseum. The
game will be televised live on
WLEX-TV Channel 18 at 7 pm.

Schnellenberger is apparently close
to signing with U of L, Olson says

LOUISVILLE (AP) — Howard
Schnellenberger. a candidate for
L'niverSity of Louisville head foot-
ball coach. indicated the chances
are 50-50 that he‘ll take the job, the
university athletic director said.

Bill Olsen, who returned from a
visit with the former Miami college
coach in Florida. said Schnellen-
berger is carefully weighing the
offer

“He analyzed the situation. he cre-
ated his own list of positives and
negatives it's very difficult to as-
sess whether he‘s leaning one way
or the other." Olsen said Wednes-
dav.

“After the first meeting I felt it
was 50-50. and I feel it‘s 50-50 now."
Schnellenberger said.

The committee searching for a re-
placement for Bob Weber. who re-

signed at the end of a 2-9 season,
will continue looking, Olsen said.

“if Howard hasn't made up his
mind by about (Christmas). we‘ll
ham to make up our own minds,"
he said.

Schnellenberger, who was head of
the Baltimore Colts until 1979,
launched Miami to its first national
championship. which it accom-
plished with an Orange Bowl victory
over unbeaten Nebraska last Jan-
uary,

Since a multimillion-dollar coach-
ing job with a United States Football
League franchise in Florida fell
through. Schnellenberger, 50, has
been considering offers.

Under Schnellenberger,
was 4-0 against U of L.

“He has a definite love for Louis-
ville — that‘s one of the strong at-
tractions." Olsen said. Schnellen-
berger, who played for a Louisville

Miami

high school and UK, visited mus-
ville earlier this month for tours,
parties, dinners and meetings.

Schnellenberger is the university’s
first choice, Olsen said.

“His pro experience and national
championship puts him in a unique
position," he said.

Schnellenberger indicated he had
some requests about various im-
provements in the football program,
shouldhetakethejob, Olsen said.

“He would only need assurances
that that would be a possibility in
the future. But he was pleased with
the complex, with the stadium,”
Olsen said.

Another coaching candidate is Roy
Kidd, of Eastern Kentucky Universi-
ty, which made it to the NCAA Divi-
sion l-AA playoffs this season. Olsen
has declined to reveal the names of
other possible coaches.

 

 

BU Y KERNEL CLASSIFIEDS, THE YBRING RESUL TS

 

 

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thatsomesayisamongthetoptive
in the country. Freshman guard
Troy lewis, who was Indiana's co-
Mr. Basketball last season, scored
14 points against Tampa.

“They've got a lot of character,"
Keady said about his team. “But
they need to play several more
games to get where they can com-
pete,likeinRuppArena."

But tomorrow they play in Mack-
eyArenaanditwillbcthefirstof
tiuee pro-Christmas road trips for
the Cats. The other two, at Louis-

ville and lndiam, loom even to“
for UK; and tosome, that's scary.

When Hall was asked if Purdue
wasinapositionsimilartoUK’s,he
said, “No. I’d say they are much
betterthanus."

Hall formd few tlungs' to rejoice
over in UK's 63-54 win over the
Rockets in which UK was actually
down by five points early in the sec-
ondhalf.Butiftherewasonebngh‘ t
spot, sophomore guard James
Blackmonwas it.

Blackman. who missed UK’s pre-

season scrimmage because of a
calcium deposit on his knee, came
offthebenchtohitelghtofiomots
and give fans visions of the indiana
andlllinots' ' gameslastseason.

But Keady can understand Hall’s
feelings about his team. “We
coaches are all pessimis' ' tic early in
theseason,"hesaid.

Maybe Hall is overly so. Perhaps
not. Make no mistake though that
Purdue is the first of a season of
tests for this post-Final Four UK
team.

 

 

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EBSITV TOTE ,KENTLIC W

DENISON UNIVERSITY

BIG RED

This Friday & Saturday
8:30 pm. Each Night

GENERAL CINEMA THEATRES

NIGHT
OF THE
COMET

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NEIVKVN C(NYWV IOI

amaosus (P6)

(

Lexington Ice Center And Sports Complex

560 Eureka Springs Drive

 

CHURCH
DIRECTORY

 

 

 

 

Esme Worship With Us:

 

ASSEMBLIES OF GOD

mos l02Mo.m. ................................. Sunday School
9.00 I l0:3) o.rn. ............................. Morning Worship
6:“) p.m. ........................................ Evoning Worship
Wodnosdoy Family Night ................................. 7 p.m.
Kon Groon - Pastor

Martin Jacobson - Associate Minister

27m Clays Mill Rood 276-1458

606 269-5681

"For where two or more are gathered in My

Name, there will i be also"

CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST

A ost ir
l I :45 o.rn. Sunday Morning Worship
Bzm p.m. Friday Evoning Worship
Ronald Dixon - Pastor
A “A“ “I! JISUS IS IIAL

Nowmoflontor
Roso lono 255-8566
Moss ‘I’ rnos: Saturday ovoning o p.m.
Sunday: Bo.m., lOo.m., ll:l$n.m.. 5a m imply;
Spoghom Suppor
Sunday oftor 51m p.rn. Moss
All tho spoghotti and salad you can

 

PRESIY‘I’ERIAN

CHAPEL Hill. "ISIMAH CHURCH
3534 Totos Crook Rood
Loxington. KY ram seem-mi
9:45 o.m. - Sunday School I Izm om. - Worship
Drop-in Nursory Wookdoys 9-12 o.m.

 

CHRISTIAN

“SHAH W mouse»
Columbia oi Woodond Avo.
10:45 om. - Worship 6:“) - Dinnor

 

Chnpol Sorvico 0:45
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METHODIST

UNITID MST STUDINT CINTI.
lSl East Moxwoll St. 254-37“
0:00 pm. Monday Night Worship
szoo p.rn. Thursday Night Iiblo Study
Call tor Information or ridos to any activities
CHRIST UHI'I'ID METHODIST CHURCH
ml Horrodsburg Rood
"Wo hero is ploco for you"
"No hovo o oollogohlonhy adaool cl-

Mott Friodrnon. lorrnorIAll-Arnorioon discus throwor

IrornthoUnivorsItyolKonsos.isthotoochorlorthis

class. Cornoioin inonagroatloorningoxporionco.
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opportunltios growth
Ministry (working with poor. nursing hontos, otc.)
Activitios (rotroots. skiing, trips. otc.)
Opportunitios tor Growth (personal disciploship pro-

 

 

  

KWYKM mum... 1.0-8

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

frArSrT'I'MZ'E ws—

 

 

 

AROUND AND ABOUT

 

NIGHT SPOTS

 

 

Anetta Ctty Soloon — 2350 Woodhill Shopping Center. Grog Austin land
(country rock), tonight and tomorrow, 9 pm. to I o.m. 82m.

I.C.'o Iootourollt and Lounge —— 395 S. limestone St. Hiiynx (rock 'n' roll).
tonightond tomorrow. 9 pm. to i am. 52 cover.

Iottorn lino — set w. short St. Usual Suspects (original), tonith and tomor-
row. 9p.m. to l a.m. 33cm.

Livery lounge -— sea Woodland Avo. Trondolle (Motown) tonight and tomor-
row, 9p.m. tot o.m.

Splrltl W —- Radiuon PlaIa Hotol. Good Nutt (Top 40), tonight and to-
morrow. 9pm. to l a.m. No cover.

“I W Club -— 5539 Athens~Boonesboro Rood. Stampede (country), tonight
and tomorrow, 9 p.m. to l a.m. Tonight, 53 cover; tomorrow, 54 cover.

 

WEEKEND
CINEMA

 

am — The story of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, tho rowdy. brash child
prodigy who never grow up. Rated PG. (Turllond Mall; 4:45 and 9:30.) KERNEI.
RATING: 9

Tho Adventures at Indiana Ionxol — Rated PG. (Fayette Mall; 1:30, 3:35.
5:40. 7:45. 10:00.)

Mt" Story — Just in time for the holiday season. Remornbor . . . It is
hotter to givo than receive. (Northpark: l:50, 3:40. 5:3), 7:25, 9:25, II:I0.)
Rated PG.

Country - "when the land is your life. you fight for your life." Jessica tango
stare. ROM PG. (Fayetto Moll; km, 3th, 7:30, 9:45.)

PM - From the author of "Death Wish." (Northpat‘k; 2:“, 3:55, 5:45.
7:50. 9:50. ":35.) Rated R.

“til-ton — Yos, it has returned. (Fayette Mall; 2:00. 4:30, 7:“, 9:”.
Spocial 1:30 showing at "Micki and Maude." Stars Dudloy Moore and Amy
irvlng. Rotod PG-la.) Rated PG.

Joet the Way You Are— Stars Kristy McNichol as a girl who rocoivoe a new
strength in life. (Northporll; 2:00. 3:50, 5:40, 7:35, 9:35. "215.) Rated PG.

M In ActIott —- A Chuck Norris karate thrillor. Ratod I. (Northpork;
I55, 3:45. 5:35. 7:40, 9.50, ”250.)

m at tho Carnot — whore teenagers rule tho world tor ono night. Rated
P643. (toxington Mall; 2zl5, 41X). 5:45, 7:40, 9:3), 11:20. Also at (Turtland
Mall; 1:00. 2:50. 7:40.)

at a“. You Doom -—— Tho otornal duality of good and evil lo rodocod —— or
enlarged depending on your religious politics —- to a George Dem vehicle in
which ho portrays both God and Satan. Rotod PG. (Southpartt; 2:“. 3:55, 5:45.
7:35, 9.”, ":30. Also at (Turfland Mall; iz45. 3:45, 5:45, 9:45. Special 7:45
showing of 50m — Rated PG. Stars Jott Bridgos.)

'Ioeoo In tho Hoort - Effectively sentimental tale of depression-ore hard~
ships and triumphs. Sally Field stars. Rated PG. (Northpark: 2:20. 5:15. 7:30.
9:35, 11:35.) Also at (Southpark; 2:20, 5:l5, 7:3). 9:40, "250.) KERNEI. RAT-
ING: 9.

‘lho w —- The story of a family in conflict, from the film company at
Illly Graham. latod PG. (Southpark: 2:00. 3:50, 5:45. 7:40. 9:95. ":0. Ratod
PO.

A We Story — the Army sends a block military-trained attomoy‘to
lnvoetlgato the murder of rho loader of an all~black platoon in tho final
month at World War II. Rated PG. (loxlngton Mall: 2:0. 3:55, 5:50, 7:45.
9:0. Ilzfl.) m RATING: 3.

W—W'sminbreakslntothomwiomwhhhorawn
Illdt. Stare Faro and newcomor Helen Slater. (Northpork: 1:45. 3:45.
5:“, 7:6. 9:45, "240.) Also at (Southpark; 1:45, 3:45. 5:45. 7:45, 9:45. ":0.)
lotodPG.

m—tthowmoducatonmnbopooplotoo.hotodl. (Southpork;
M“. 3:55. 5:”, 0:”. IQN, 12:00.) KERNEl RATING: 3.

“odor tho VoIooltoo —'Ono cannot live without love. (Southpork; 2:)5. 5:20.
7:50, 9:55, ":55.) Rated R.

Attholoototylhootorttflewoohondxl’oioy—imp.m."fhounto
Drummer Girlz" mo p.m. “New Vayaoorz" 9:30 p.m. ”Motrepolisf‘ W
”Term in tho Aisles." I'm — 1 pm. "The little (hammer Grit" 3:”
pan. " scan p.m. “Now Venom" 7:30 pm. "The Women In lot"
ms pm. ”‘I'ho um. Drummor out" midnight "W send-y —— mo
pm. "Term in tho Aleloez" 3:30 pm. "Tho Women in lock" 5:” pm. "Mo-
wer 7:30 p.m. "New voyoeorz" 9:45 an. “Fellini W”

aommmmemnom,m.mu

A dangerous sequel

‘2010’ cast and crew discuss the follow-up to a film classic

By GARY PIERCE
Arts Editor

Film director Peter Hyams was
more than a little nervous about
making “2010: Odyssey Two," the
sequel to the science fiction classic
“2001: A Space Odyssey."

“I wouldn't describe it as trepida-
tion. I’d describe it as panic," he
said at a recent pre-release screen
ing in Dos Angeles, where several of
the stars and principal production
people involved with “2010" gath-
ered to discuss the new film.

Hyams knew the dangers. Much of
the fascination of “2001" lies in its
open ending, which lets viewers
draw their own conclusions about
the mysterious monoliths that ap-
pear on the moon and in the rings of
Jupiter.

Carrying the story forward nine
years involves the risk of tying those
loose ends into a too~neatly ex-
plained package and trivializing
both the original and the sequel.

So Hyams — whose film credits
include “Capricorn One" and “The
Star Chamber" — had every reason
to be nervous about his sequel to di-
rector Stanley Kubrick's original.
The fact that Hyams considers Ku-
brick his “f'lat—out idol" didn‘t make
matters any easier.

On the surface, “2010“ bears little
resemblance to its predecessor. Ku-
brick's film focused on the stream-
lined machinery of space travel and
the dangers of humankind‘s reliance

on computerized intelligence, while
drawing some interesting philosoph-
ical connections between early hu-
mans' fumbling usage of crude tools
and the rapid-fire rate of technologi-
cal advancement in the space age.

In other words, “2001" is an epic.

In “2010," the mechanics of space
travel take a back seat to the
relationships between characters.
The philosophical focus is narrowed
to the shaky relationship between
the United States and the Soviet
Union as they join scientific forces
to search for the spaceship left
adrift somewhere in the rings of Ju-
piter at the end of “2001."

The drastic difference in the ap-
pearance of the technology was crit-
ical for Hyams as he as he tried to
make his film as believable as possi-
ble. He figured that for designers
trying to build a spacecraft on lim-
ited government funds in the year
2010, “their first concern would be
function. What would it take to
make the ship work? "

Hyams answer came from another
movie. “The first image I had in my
head was ‘Das Boot.‘ " a film which
takes place in a stark but functional-
looking German submarine.

Functionality found its way into
reality due to a tight production
schedule which required that “2010"
be completed in a scant 18 months,

 

PHOTO COURTESY 0F MGM/[IA ENTERTAINMENT (.‘0.

Director Peter Hyams, left, and Actor Roy Scheider discuss

“2010."

 

 

A D

more counrsv or NEW/tn [hunt-NM!“ (0.

Arthur C. Clarke wrote the novel from which “2010" was adapted.

about half as long as Kubrick spent
on his original.

“We were pushing the state of the
art about as far as it has been
pushed to date." Hyams said.

Hyams purpose in making “2010
was twofold: “I wanted to make a
film that would require no a priori
knowledge of ‘2001.’ " But what was
perhaps more difficult, he contin-
ued, “I was not trying to aim at peo-
ple‘s eyeballs but at their hearts."

Roy Scheider, the star of this am-
bitiom sequel, agrees. In fact, while
he considers the first film “dazzling-
ly original," he says he “grew a bit
tired of the conceit of making the
characters so bland.

“We didn‘t want to make a movie
that was about a light show . . . the
human story is there."

Scheider, who has starred in films
as varied as "All That Jazz," “Blue
Thunder” and “Jaws," considers
the human element the most impor-
tant tool in acting. 0f the