xt71ns0kwc80 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt71ns0kwc80/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1989-09-29 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, September 29, 1989 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 29, 1989 1989 1989-09-29 2020 true xt71ns0kwc80 section xt71ns0kwc80  

Vol. XClll. No. 37

Established 1 894‘

Unlverslty of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky

Independent since 1971

Friday September29 1989

 

Restructuring schOols lawmakers’ job, Rose says

By MARK R. CHELLGREN
Associated Press

FRANKFORT, Ky. — 'Ihe Ken-
tucky Supreme Court has left no
doubt that it is up to the General
Assembly to create a new school
system which ever way it wishes,
Senate President Pro Tem John
“Eek" Rose said last night.

In a clarification of its June land-
mark decision that declared Ken-
tucky's entire school system un-
constitutional, the court said the
legislature has the obligation to
create, finance and supervise the
schools.

“I read that to mean it removes
all doubt the General Assembly is
to monitor and supervise the
schools on a day-to-day basis,"
Rose said.

In the new opinion released yes—
terday, the court granted a request
for an extension of time for the leg-
islature to comply with the court
and build a new education system.

The court also said local school
districts may impose higher taxes
for education than the state, assum-
ing the legislature even creates such
school districts.

Rose said that language in the
new opinion makes it clear that

Legislature is responsible for
schoolsysunn,courtsays

everything having to do with the
elementary and secondary education
system in the state “ceases to exist
90 days after" the 1990 General As-
sembly adjoums.

The extension of time clears the
way for a special session of the
General Assembly to begin after
the end of the regular session.

The other issue raised by legisla-
tors was whether school districts
could levy additional taxes beyond

 

By PAMELA MITCHELL
Staff Writer

1990 will bring a new decade,
new themes, new ideas and a new
format for the Kentuckian, UK's
yearbook.

That format revolves around
people ~ getting more people in
the yearbook and making more
people aware of the yearbook,
said Jeff Murphy, editor in chief
of the K entuckian.

The 1982 Kentuckian was
named one of the nation’s top an-
nuals, receiving the coveted na-
tional Pacemaker award.

But since receiving the award,
the Kentuckian was beset by
small staffs, poor direction and
weak leadership.

Murphy, who is in his second
year as Kentucktan editor in

 

Secondyear 'Kentuckian' Editor in Chief Jeff Mur
appeal to a broader range of students.

New Look

‘Kentuckian’ hopes to revive tradition

PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BV "CHAEL CLEVENGER/Kornol Std"

chief, said he hopes to change
all of the that.

“The biggest necessity you
have to have with the staff is not
to alienate them," .said Murphy, a
four-year veteran of the yearbook.
”Before any of the actual physical
labor starts l have to make sure
the staff gets along."

And his staff says that he is
heading in the right direction.

“He puts in the effort as well
as the staff," said Carol Gowin,
student life editor. “He just
doesn‘t sit up there and tell peo-
ple what to do."

Spons Editor Tracey Boyd said
Murphy motivates the other edi-
tors, which creates a good deal of
unity.

“He‘s really been able to raise
the staff and the morale," she
said. “He gets you excited about

phy says he hopes to make the UK yearbook

working which gets the whole
staffexcited."

Murphy said he was pleased
with the 1989 yearbook, but he
said there were several things he
would have change.

“Sometimes I think l‘m crazy
for (being editor in chief) again,
but there were a lot of things I
wanted to do different and
most people don‘t get that sec-
ond chance," he said.

One improvement Murphy
hopes to make on ‘89 Kentucki-
an is to make it more “bright,
noticeable and very loud.”

“Very few students on campus
have ever seen a yearbook or
even know we're here,” he said.

Michael Clevenger, Kentucki-
an photo editor, said much of

that responsibilit falls on his
See YEARl 00K, Page 4

 

those imposed by the state. The ad
swer from the court was yes, but
the decision expanded the scope of
the issue.

While the court specifically said
it was not ordering legislators to
raise taxes, the justices said it re~
mains a state responsibility to pay
for an adequate education for all
students.

“Such local efforts may not be
used by the General Assembly as a

substitute for providing an ade»
quate, equal and substantially um-
form educational system through-
out this state," the court said.

In fact, the court said that it
property taxes are used to partly ii~
nance education, the legislature
must establish a uniform tax rate
for all property. in the original
opinion, the court said only that
tax rates must be uniform, thereby
leaving it open to interpretation
who should set the rate.

Sen. Mike Moloney. [)~
Lexington, said that could mean
the state would set a rate or the
state could order local school risen-

cies to lay .l \;- i .:

'l'herc l\ alw.‘ tie. .
opinion that rqiii! :.. ».
lUl'C'\ role ”I [itt‘

lllc‘ (t:"..'f.:.
carefully su;-~i.. .
is no
niisintinaceii..:21. .
court said a

lit the (t;"_‘
pcrvtsory
state," was :' 2.3,1’ “
executiyt- lira:
Iht‘ Dt‘de-Hit':

”In my
the tiuthortt. '
tigenm

unit.

Local social activist is charged
with criminal trespassing at U K

By MICHAEL L JONES
Editorial Editor

Chris Bush, a local social acti-
vist, was arraigned yesterday in
Fayette County Court on charges
of criminal trespassing and disor-
derly conduct on the Lexington
Campus, UK Police said.

UK Chief of Police W.H.
McComas said that the court of-
fered to reduce Bush's $1,000 bond
to $100 on the condition that he
stay off UK property, but McCo-
mas said Bush told the court that
he “could not comply” with those
coniditions.

McComas arrested Bush Wednesv

day in UK President David Ro
selle‘s office on charges of disorder
ly conduct and took him to the
Fayette County Detention Center
after Bush refused to leave Ro-
selle’s office.

“He was asked to leave as the ot-
fice was being closed up," McCo»
mas said.

Vice Chancellor for Administra-
tion Jack Blanton said that Roselle
was not in his office all day on
Wednesday.

University officials said they did
not know why Bush was in R0-
selle‘s office. Bush's attorney could
not be reached for comment.

Bush was arrested by UK Police

 

 

STEVE SANDERS Kernel Start

WHITEWASHING: Dave Voit cleans the fence at Shively Field
yesterday afternoon to prepare it for a fresh coat of paint

 

 

Professor reflects on Chinese student protests

By ALLEN D. GREER
Staff Writer

UK anthropology professor Wil-
liam Y. Adams told about 60 peo-
ple last night that the students he
observed protesting in China earlier
this year had little fear of g0vem-
ment rcprisal and seemed to be pro-
testing because of a feeling of duty,
not to attain goals.

Adams, who observed the pro-
tests while teaching archaeology at

Peking University from March to
early June, shared his impressions
of the protests at the meeting co-
sponsored by the Bluegrass Chapter
of the United Nations Association,
the Patterson School of Diploma-
cy. UK lntemational Affairs and
Transylvania University.

The speech was the first of three
sponsored by the groups to address
Chinese issues.

Adams said that the students
seemed to be “demonstrating for the

right to demonstrate. They clearly
had a sense of participating in an
historic moment.

“Given the well known totalitari-
an nature of the government, we
could not imagine what practical
end the movement hoped to gain,"
he said.

Adams, who traveled to China
with his wife, said the students
never clearly articulated their goals,
and he said many of their objectives
wemed to change each day.

Baseball hopes

Adams said the student protesters
weren‘t occupied with a growing
sense of alarm about the escalation
of conflict with the govemment as
he was; they told him it was “irrel-
evant."

The students considered the pos-
sibility of violence, Adams said,
but they felt that “the demonstra-
tions were a duty nonetheless."

Adams said that even though he
was at Peking University during
the protests, he had less knowledge

of the events than people in the
United States because Tiananmen
Square was several miles from cam-
pus and government news was
tightly controlled.

Following the Tiananmen Square
incident, Adams said, “We saw
only two grim-faced (TV) commen-
tators reading government procla-
mations, giving almost no detail."

Adams left Beijing in early June
and retumed July 21 to find a differ-
ent City from the one that he left.

..'\ v‘.‘v)r-‘ it
...i ;,; ‘2: rii f l‘ ~'
thi.‘ "t irari'r‘ Jr :th 1‘!
of‘tht- Student ( sitar
Harri»
the incident.
lsush '31” appear 1'
:1]. l K ”it". iLlls \(1it‘!
Bush l~ not .i[ is -
has been llt‘vt'l'i"il u :f.

'il".\‘ V;

pilllllt‘lll} Li.ll\t,' ~12:
most notably S. ria‘l‘. (
Students.
Bush has ,i;
protests on the i 5r
including o": it: {l' w‘ ..
ing a \'l\‘,l h.
tice Anthonx \ .l'i,i

Juli/wf 3 21...,

\ .,\Y,\,,,.

‘Vegeuuians
celebrate
eryvhlunn
anyrneat

By TONJA WILT

Campus lid '7"

‘» CiClttl'lull‘ .«m
«it down t«- .i l“ 3
clay it. cult: -'.it. ~'
tartan l/‘Lls

In some we'd“
i‘i'Llllt‘lis' xiii: “v
vyill attend ~.‘t:i::..ir-
mars [‘Ilz'fli‘s-J
cdlc‘ ti": [uli'aje i
the wee tartan me:

"It's a'Httit tun: '.i
the public tartan.) .;
what you i of. ii. .

.‘llCilth‘t i'it‘t'it'f. ;: i it. it'
er in the t «lies-c it \2 ~ x
Cs.

l-oglcr. who :i.i-. taker. .i i
.in for three \ :.irn.
up meats tltk‘\ '\ ~t ilit‘dli szi. i';ri. ._.
nutrition.

“Nothing is tltl‘mlllg,
thinks protein and calcium i~ ii::-
ing," he said. “J here I\ more i:..;
enough protein (._‘alciutri i» in a :
ple supply l'l green lealy \egth
bles. l don't supplement iy iLlllilli
on a daily basis. l belieye .i pint».
diet ought to be enough."

Vegetarians should he as in i
\y hat they eat to ensure they team
the daily rcqmrcnient of \ itaniiin

“You need to be catctul that y
are getting tertain litllilcilix l" :
right combinations," said \‘a‘
Brinitman of [K health scryitcs
uould caution people us ho .ii; ;
eating .1in meat that they .i:c .
ting protein of some kind.”

Fogler said the human lint,
not designed to \Ull\lllilt‘
quantities of meat because . . :
small si/c of human teeth and t
thin, long design of the iiituhr.

”It you study anatomy \ »
humans are atomically llc‘li‘tii‘l.
Our teeth are not designed to: t i.
neither are the intestines,“ lit “in!

The cholesterol content iii ;:...;.

tn. . . ..
\iti\i ii iii Lin.

t“vLi_\i'>ii«

Sec V l-IGl-l'l‘ARl A N5, Page

Local club

fall streak continues.
Story, page 2.

offers diversity.
Story, page 5.

 

   
    
   
   
  
   
    
    
    
   
       
    
   
    
     
    
    
  
      
   
    
       
   
   
   
    
    
     

  

2 — Kentucky Kornol, Frlday, September 29, 1989

 

 

   
  
  
    
   
 
   
   
  
   
    
    
   
  
    
   
  
   
  
    
 

STEVE saunas/km sun

    

Bat Cat outfielder Bob Rouse, a sophomore, takes batting practice
recently. The Bat Cats open their tall season Sunday at Morehead.

Football and men’s basketball players

By ALBERT M. WITTE

and ERNIE CHAMBERS

ilSA TODAY/Apple College
fa'mahon Network

Should college athletes get an ex-
tra stipend in addition to their
scholarships to offset normal living
expenses because they don't have
the time to work part-time due to
the work load involved in playing
bi g-time sports and also studying?

Why not pay college athletes a
fair wage? Add up all the money
generated by ticket sales. televi-
sion-rights fees, bowl games and
post-season toumamentsand inter-
collegiate athletics has become a
hillion-dollar—plus business, funda~
mentally indistinguishable from
professional spons except that pro-
fessional athletes are rewarded for
their services in sums far beyond
the dreams of avarice while college
athletes, by comparison, are uncon-
scionably exploited.

There is enough force in this ar-
gument to make it understandable
why someone somewhere is likely
to be repeating it. Before we aban—
don the principle that intercolle-
giate athletics should continue as
an integral pan of the educational
process, before we ask the presi-

dents of our colleges and universi-
ties to adopt NFL and NBA models
for their athletic programs, let's

 

ANALYSIS

contemplate some of the probable
consequences of that transforma‘
tion.

1. Who will get paid? No one
seriously contends that all of the
268,000 athletes at NCAA member
schools should be compensated.
The focus is solely on NCAA Di-
vision I-A football players and Di-
vision I male basketball players,
for it is those athletes whose skills
help generate virtually all of the
money earned by intercollegiate
athletics.

Clearly any formula that mandat-
ed paying athletes in revenue sports
and excluded all of the athletes in
non-revenue sports would raise
troublesome legal and moral con-
cems. Consider only one — under
this formula, few (if any) women
athletes would be paid despite the
undeniable fact that women athletes
are as dedicated and committed to
achieving excellence as their male
counterparts.

2. How would salaries be deter-
mined? More than a decade ago.
James Michener, in “Sports in
America,” recognized that if college
athletes were professionalized, they
would inevitably form unions, bar-
gain collectively over working con—

 

 

 

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Sept 29 7:30 pm Sept. 29 7 & 9 pm.
Sept 30 9,1030 am. & 7 pm. Sept. 30 10 a m.
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Temple Adath lsrael

 

By GREGORY A. HALL
Staff Writer

The UK Bat Cats take a 35-game
fall winning streak into this exhibi-
tion season, which begins Sunday
with a double-header at Morehead
State University.

“On paper it has to be called a re-
building year," UK coach Keith
Madison said. “I think the approach
we‘re taking in the fall is that these
are exhibition games. The players
that are hurt are our most experi-
enced players. We‘re not going to
be playing with a full squad for a
couple of weeks."

The Bat Cats are coming off of a
28-25-1 season, plus they lost
Scott Sutton to the Minnesota
Twins' farm system and second
baseman Billy White to the Chica-
go Cubs' system.

“He’s (White) the best shonstop
that has played for me," said Madi-
son, who is beginning his 11th

ditions and benefits, draft high-
school seniors and so on. From my
perspective, this is not an idea
whose time has come. Are we real-
ly ready to embrace all of the ele-
ments present in professional
sports collective bargaining: high
school athletes with agents, sign-
ing bonuses, strikes and all the
rest?

3. What are the costs? First,
what is a fair salary? One former
NFL great believes that a $1,000
monthly stipend w0uld be accepta-
ble for today's football players.
Cenainly that is not an excessive
amount given the hours spent in
yearlong training, conditioning,
practicing and playing. With 95
players on a squad and a nine-
month academic working year, the
salary costs for football alone
would exceed $850,000 annually.
Tack on salaries for other athletes,

 

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year as Bat Cats skipper, “Not only
that, he was a good hitter.”

Injuries decimated the Bat Cats
last spring, but Madison feels his
squad was lucky to win as many
games as they did.

“Looking back at the injuries and
the people that we lost, we're prot»
ably lucky to have had a winning
season,” he said.

Vince Castaldo, who missed the
entire spring season. is recovering
from reconstructive knee surgery.
but is ready to play in the fall.
Castaldo will be moved to third,
according to Madison, because of
his knee.

“I just got a screw taken out this
week," said Castaldo, who is a ca-
reer .363 hitter. “My knee should
be as strong as it was before and
maybe even a little bit stronger be-
cause I've been working harder. It
wasn't too much of a tough transi-
tion getting back into it."

Missing from the lineup, at least

payments for workmen's-
compensation benefits and uncalcu~
lated tax liabilities — there is no
money available now nor will there
be new money available in the
forseeable future sufficient to ab-
sorb these costs. It already is abun-
dantly clear that transferring exist-
ing funds to some athletes in the
form of salaries would result in
draining or eliminating other sports
entirely.

4. Are NCAA athletic scholar-
ships inadequate? Under NCAA fi-
nancial-aid restrictions, athletes are,
in general, limited by the institu-
tions’ normal “cost of attendance."
Translated, this means that athletes
may receive the value of the
school’s charges for tuition, books.
fees, housing and meals. For red-
shirt athletes, this value probably
ranges from $25,000 to $75,000 or
more during the period of eligibili-

 

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Personals

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Bat Cats hope fall streak continues

for the first part of the fall season
will be first baseman Mike Harris
and center fielder Anthony Morrow.
Harris is suffering from a ham-
string pull and Morrow has a stress
fracture.

The Bat Cats hit .294 collective-
ly last season, but lost their hottest
hitter to graduation, Mark Blythe
who hit .346, from last year.

“Mark was our MVP last year,"
the UK coach said. “We're gonna
miss his leadership and we're gonna
miss his clutch hitting."

The losses from last year’s squad
and present injuries will force Mad-
ison to put younger players into
key roles.

“This is the youngest ball club
I've had since 1982," said the UK
coach, who has 331 career victories
at a head coach. “We're high on
Steve Casey as a pitcher/shortstop.
Billy Thompson is looking good
behind the plate he's got a really
good arm. All the freshmen have a

 
  

Barry Hooves
Sports Editor

lot to learn. And that‘s what this
fall is all about."

If Thompson is to start, he will
have to beat out junior Rick Nor-
ton, who had the team’s second
highest slugging percentage last
season (.527).

The team's pitching staff is com—
ing off a shaky year. The staff ‘5 era
was a staggering 6.69.

“It won't be that this year," Mad-
ison said, “First of all, we're going
to have more depth in our pitching
staff and we‘re going to have a
smarter pitching staff. We just did
not have the depth in the starting
rotation that you need to compete
in the very tough Southeastern
Conference."

The Kentucky coach expects Lar-
ry Luebbers, Billy Vanlandingham
and Rod Bolton to be among his
starting hurlers come spring.

”To me, (Bolton) is one of the
premier starting pitchers in college
baseball," said Madison.

should get paid

ty. Further. athletes have their way
paid to summer school if they wish
or the school will find them sum-
mer jobs.

5. Much is awry in the universe
of big-time college football
(BTCF) where money is the sun of
the athletics solar system around
which all else revolves. Athletics
establishment profiteers counter
this truth with the big lie that
BTCF is an amateur adjunct to edu-
cation. Venal are the hypocrisy and
exploitation that force impover-
ished, first-class players to travel
coach while wealthy, third-class
coaches travel first-class. Paupers
subsidizing princes, players are
viewed as veins of gold to be mind-
ed for the enrichment of others.

6. If, as the Bible says, "The
workman is worthy of his hire;" if
“regular" students (and penitentiary
inmates) are paid for work per-
formed, why are BTCF players de-
nied a share of the millions they
generate? Because of a self-serving
NCAA definition of “amateur" and
“compensation" that restricts them
to making millions for the athlet-
ics establishment but not a nickel
for themselves.

7. At the level of Nebraska, No-
tre Dame, Penn States and other
football factories, BTCF is not
merely an amateur game or extra-
curricular activity. It's a deadly se-
rious, high-octane, ultracompeti-
tive entertainment business whose
stars get nothing.

 

 

 

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Senior to lead volleyball Cats’ trip to Florida

UK to see no sunshine as they
try to snap three-game skid

BY CHRIS HARVEY
Senior Staff Writer

Fun and relaxation will not be
the priority this weekend as the UK
volleyball team heads to Florida to
challenge the University of Florida
and Florida State University with
one thing in mind — to get back on
the winning road.

UK (10-3) is coming off three
consecutive losses to eighth-ranked
University of
Nebraska, fifth-
ranked Stanford
University and
the University
of Pittsburgh in

the Nebraska In- UK,” DeBoer said. “They really match. In the fifth game, Mary her personal favorite game, Jones

vitational Tour- seem to look forward to playing killed every ball that she hit. She said, “The win against lllinois my

nament. us." was passing, she was active, she sophomore year was really a great '1,
“Even though Headliners for the Gators are sen- was digging and she was talking." game.“ lllinois was ranked 6th na- ‘

we felt positive . .
about our lay

at Nebraska? we 09305“
were disappointed with the results,"
UK coach Kathy DeBoer said. “We
definitely want to get back on the
winning track."

The one bright spot in last week-
end’s losses was the emergence of
senior Mary Jones as a force on the
team. The play of the Greenville,
lnd., native earned her a spot on the
All-Tournament team.

“She really asserted herself this
past weekend," DeBoer said. “She
really became a leader.”

Flatness could have been one of
the main reasons the Cats dropped
three matches in Nebraska, but that
should not be a problem in Florida
as there is not much love lost be-
tween UK and the two teams from
the Sunshine State.

“The Florida-Kentucky rivalry
has always been an intense one.”
DeBoer said. “We always feel an
extra level of competitiveness when
we play them."

While both Florida and Florida
State get the Cats’ adrenaline flow-
ing, it seems that the Florida State
Seminoles evoke the most emotion
— revenge.

“The last four years every match
has gone five games," DeBoer said.
“Florida State beat us at home in
the finals of our,tourney last No-

    

UK gets its chance tonight, but
to get a win they must stop Mag-
gie Philgence, the Seminoles' lead-
ing outside hitter. Philgence aver-
ages almost 3 1/2 kills per game.

“She’s a really great leaper and a
seasoned veteran," DeBoer said.
“She's the player we’re definitely
keying on."

The Florida Gators may not own
an impressive record (7-6), but De-
Boer said that Florida possess
enough bite to pull off an upset
against UK. In last year’s match
UF had the Cats on the ropes with
a 2-0 lead until UK won the last
three games to take the match.

“Florida always gets pumped for

iors Lenae Hill, Roni Armada and
Jenni Patterson. Hill leads the
squad in kills per game.

“Hill is a very versatile athlete
for them," DeBoer said. “Armada
and Patterson are two very seasoned
veterans that will block your
shots."

If the Cats plan to come back to
Lexington with a pair of wins they
must serve at Nebraska, DeBoer
said.

“You‘ve got to be able to serve
the ball tough and do it consistent-
1y," she said. “We did that at Ne-
braska and we must carry that over
(into the matches in Florida)."

The Cats‘ middle attack also will
be a key to the squads success.

“Every outing the middle block-
ing has improved," DeBoer said.
“The middle attackers must contin-
ue to carry a greater share of the
load.”

If the serving, middle attack, and
the team's overall attitude are not
in sync, then UK will be staring at
two more losses.

“Anytime you lose, it's a set-
back, but you have to not make too
much of a big deal out of it,” De-
Boer said.

Freshman Angela Salvatore feels
a little bit differently. To her, a
loss would be devastating.

“A loss could hurt us a lot men-
tally,” Salvatore said. “It would set

 

  

'5" , ,“WW

STEVE SANDERS/Kernel Stall

Team captain a nightmare to
others but a ‘dream’ to coach

By JONATHAN MILLER
Contributing Writer

The UK volleyball team possess-
es a player whom Wildcat coach
Kathy DeBoer describes as “a
coach’s dream.”

That player is senior Mary Jones,
a team captain.

Jones was named to the All-
Toumarnent team at the Nebraska
Invitational last weekend. She re-
corded 53 kills and 25 digs in the
three-game tournament, including a
career high 23 kills against Stan
ford on Saturday.

“Mary just played great.“ DeBoer
said. “Particularly in the Stanford

DeBoer said that Jones' attitude
toward the game and her work ethic
make it easy for her to he coached.

“She's really come into her own,
as a player, this year," said DeBoer.
“It can be attributed to the effort
she‘s put into becoming a stronger
player since she first came to UK.”

Jones, a New Albany, 1nd,, na-
tive, said she decided to come to
UK because she liked the program
and it was close to home.

“I attended UK's volleyball camp
before my senior year in high
school and I knew this was the
place for me," Jones said.

Jones has been playing volley-
ball since 7th grade, but only be-
cause it fit into her schedule.

“I really liked basketball when l
was younger. but volleyball is
played in the fall and didn't interfere
with any other sport, so l took it
up." said Jones, who will soon turn
2].

When Jones first arrived at {K
four years ago, she didn’t think she
would get to play much. Jill Acker-
man and Lisa Dausman were the
outstanding players on the team
when she was a freshman. But
Jones used her early years at L'K
learning from the experienced
players.

“Jill and Lisa really helped me
adjust my first year,” said Jones.

in the world of women's college
volleyball.

"Mary is an example of that tran-
sition." DeBoer said. “We’ve played
her at every position on the court,
which may have kept her from
breaking scoring records.

"But Mary has always been a
team player, who concentrates on
the team‘s perfomiance more than
any personal accomplishments,"
DeBoer said.

The senior‘s goals include to win
the SEC Tournament and receive a
berth to the NCAA Tournament.
She also hopes to help defeat the
University of Texas later this year.

When asked to give an account of

tionally and made it to the NCAA
Final Four later that year.

Joncs‘ roommate, Laura Linder.
who is an All—Conference setter for
the Cats, said she knew Jones
would be a star.

“When l first came to UK, Mary
was a sophomore who wasn’t play-
ing any particular position," Linder
said. “But she worked everywhere
she was placed and always put the
team above everything.”

Linder described her roommate as
a relaxed person who isn‘t your or;
dinary senior. Linder said: “She's
real patient with the freshman and
is always encouraging them."

Stephanie Green, a sophomore
outside hitter, said she thinks that
Jones sets a good example for the
younger players

“She‘s always slapping our hands
and telling us to keep our heads
up," Green said. “i think Mary is
the most consistent player on the
team.”

Defense is one part of Jones'
game that she hopes to improve
on. “l‘m trying to get my strength
back after my injury and. I am try-
ing to concentrate on being better
defensively." she said.

in preparing for a game, Jones
denies any special routine that may
aid her performance.

“Our coach always provides Us
with a scouting report of all our

 

 

vember, so we feel like we really us back. The main thing is to UK volleyball team captain Mary Jones serves during a recent match Since her arrival at UK, the Cats opponents‘ weaknesses,“ Jones 743‘"-
owe them a loss." keep up our level of intensity.” at Memorial Coliseum. The Cats are 5'3 heading t0 Florida. have fast become a dominant team said. ',
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