xt73n58cjr4g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73n58cjr4g/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1994-02-22 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, February 22, 1994 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 22, 1994 1994 1994-02-22 2020 true xt73n58cjr4g section xt73n58cjr4g  

 

 

 

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50, 000 free paperbacks available
at three-day Student Center event

 

By Lance Williams
News Editor

Hundreds of students climbed
over and under tables in the Student
Center Grand Ballroom yesterday,
blissfully rumaging through hap-
hazard piles of paperbacks and lay-
ing claim to as many free books as
they could cart off.

Yesterday was the first day of a
book giveaway sponsored and the
Christian Appalachian Project and
coordinated by UK Student Gov-
emment Association.

Doors opened at 10 am. and al-
though crowds were sparse at first,
the room was packed with people
for much of the the afternoon.

The first day of the three-day.
50,000-book giveaway had been set
aside for students, but as the word
of free books spread across cam-
pus, faculty and staff soon began
crowding onto the book-strewn
floors of the ballroom.

Jeff Worley, associate editor of a
journal published by the depart-
ment for Communications and Ad-
vancement, described the mood as
“ebulient.”

He said it was as good a collec-
tive spirit as he had seen since at—
tending a rock concert 25 years
ago. “It's just that here they are do-
ing it without artificial stimulants,"
he said.

Marian Moore Sims. a UK Board
of Trustees member and teacher at
Morton Middle School, arrived at
the giveaway late in the afternoon
and described the event as “a big
mmmage sale."

“(UK) is a seat for leaming and
these people have a thirst for infor-
mation," said Sims, who was hold-
ing a handful of books on manners.
“I don‘t see a negative from it. Any-
thing extra we can do for students. I
love it."

Barry Stumbo, assistant director
of student activities for Student Ac-
tivities Board, said students were
euphoric about the book giveaway.

“There seems to be a feeling of
disbelief that those books are actu-
ally free," he said.

SGA President Lance Dowdy
said he could give no specific esti-
mates about the number of people
at the event, but said he expected
the number to be much more than
1,000.

“It shows that students don‘t just
sit around and play Nintendo and
watch TV," Dowdy said. He added
that this is a reminder “that we need
to keep costs low.

“I feel fortunate that we were
able to work with Terry Harmon
and the Christian Appalachian Pro-
ject to make this happen.“

The Project has conducted give-

Kentucky ’s education ‘lighthouse’

Boysen: KERA must deliver

 

By Stephen D. Trlmble
Assistant News Editor

 

Kentucky‘s $3 billion public ed-
ucation system demands not just
mediocre results from the 1990
Kentucky Education Reform Act.
but dramatic increases in student
learning, Kentucky education com-
missioner Thomas Boysen said last
night.

“The issue is the right to succeed
in school," Boysen said of the edu-
cation reform he is responsible for
implementing statewide.

A focus of KERA is to bring
equal opportunity for education to
children in both the cities and
smaller communities. Boysen said
during his speech at UK's Memori-

al Hall.
“We're at the beginning of the
second revolu-
tion in educa-
tion," he said.
The first revo-
lution, Boysen
said, started in
the 18303 as a
result of Massa-
chusetts voters
asking their state
government to
provide educa-
tion for all chil-

d“- BOYSEN

This was a
bold view at the
time, Boysen said.
KERA is the beginning of a sec-

 

  

First-year law student Anthony Skeans and Russian
See BOOKS, Back Page dent Center Grand Ballroom. The books are free, and

0nd revolution for Kentucky’s more
than 640,000 public school stu-
dents, Boysen
said, and is de-
signed to put the
states students
“on top of the
world."

Despite sharp
criticism of
KERA from
some lawmakers
and educators
across the state,
he said the that
the “lighthouse,"
as United States
Education Secre-
tary Richard Reilly described
KERA, has not dimmed.

KERA‘s curriculum strategies

 

UK group publishes
social theory journal

 

By Byl Hensley
Design Editor

pect the concept to continue to exercise any
force in the civic realm."
Tomorrow both students and faculty who

 

mocracy finds itself today.

“Fin-de-Siecle Democracy“
is the focus of the third issue of
disClosure, a journal of social
theory published annually by
the Committee for Social Theo—
ry and edited by UK graduate
students.

“The question of democracy
at the end of the century de-
served rel'lection." said Wolf-
gang Natter, UK German pro~
fessor and co-director of the
committee.

guaranmd.

 

With the end of the century approaching, at
least one campus group has begun to take
stock of the social environment in which de—

 

ties.

' scale.“

“Democracy is something that we must be
willing to commit ourselves to fully if we ex-

have contributed to the journal's production
will hold an “unwrapping" of their work.

This open house. held in conjunction with

- .. Arts and Sciences Week, is

‘ , scheduled for 5:30 pm. at the

Gaines Center for the Humani-

. , Students from a spectrum of

f disciplines have worked with
‘ ' disClosure, giving the journal
a unique identity.

“Ours is a journal.“ Natter
said. “which wishes to bridge
social theory in the humanities

and the social sciences.

' "This is what makes our
joumal unique on a national

By no means a uaditional
academic journal. disClosure includes poetry.

say that children can learn at much
higher levels, and the family also
must be engaged to help a student’s
learning for KERA to be success-
in].

Also, because the quality of the
America's social climate has slid
downhill in the past three decades,
Kentucky's level of education has
been surpassed by students in Eu-
rope and Asia, Boysen said.

Boysen often refers to KERA as
the Kentucky Economic Revitaliza-
tion Act for its intention to develop
“human capital."

Labor has uprooted land and cap-
ital as a prime economic boost, he
said, and Kentucky students must
now be competitive internationally,

See KERA. Back Page

Two men arrested
in connection with
fraternity incidents

 

 

month.

See DISCLOSURE, Back Page them.

 

 

-.o.

4

--—‘..-.-o.—u.-r-~~~

Staff report

With the recent spate of prowlers reported
along Columbia Avenue. residents of UK sorori-
ty houses are exercising extra caution.

But the sorority houses are not the only cam-
pus residences to be touched by crime this

UK police have arrested two suspects linked to
separate incidents at the Phi Sigma Kappa and
Sigma Alpha Epsilon social fraternity houses.

Jay M. Hayden, a 23-year-old Lexington na-
tive, was anested earlier this month and charged
with two counts of first-degree criminal trespass-
ing for unlawfully entering the Phi Sig house,

police say.

Another incident led to the arrest of Demitri
Dedmon. 32, also of Lexington. Dedmon was
charged with second degree burglary in an al-
leged incident at the SAE house.

Dedmon also was ciwd for misdemeanor theft
after allegedly taking books from both Kennedy
and UK book stores and then attempting to resell

Kernel

FEB 221994

 

' Tuesdavl‘mwa *994

at giveawy

.‘w '3'; My

\
A n , .‘. k

W»
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e' '*

JAMES FOHIUSHIKemel Staff

professor Gerald Janecek peruse a pile of paperbacks yesterday in the Stu-
the giveaway continue from 10 am. to 8 pm. today.

 

 

 

 

Program offers
overnight stays

 

By Alan Aja
Staff Writer

 

College life can be a big ad-
justment — especially for those
straight out of high school.

But a program called UK
Overnight helps ease that culture
shock while giving prospective
students an idea of what it's like
to attend UK.

“We want high school recruits
to come and experience what
UK has to offer. It has been an
effective program and we hope
to get more high school seniors
to participate in it," said Rob
Mathews, an admissions counse-
lor at UK.

This is the fourth year of the
program, which is sponsored by
the Office of Admissions and the
Student (iovemment Associa-
tion.

Four sessions are offered dur-
ing the spring semester. bringing
45 to 50 high school students
from across the state and the na-
tion to UK's campus.

The visitors arrive on a Sun-
day and are treated to free pizza
and drinks as they meet their stu-
dent hosts and settle into their
temporary residence hall homes.

“I love the dorm life." said
Christina Desuiter, a prospective
student from Grand Island High
School in Grand island, N.Y.,
during her recent visit “Every-

one knows everyone and seems
to have a fun time together.“

On Monday, the guests attend
various planned activities. UK
Food Services gives the students
a meal card worth $8 so they
can experience on-campus
meals. The parking office also
gives them a temporary parking
permit for use during their stay.

During this time, the students
attend classes. take campus
tours and meet with academic
advisers. Some of the students,
like Tina Broaddus, a senior
from Madison Central High
School in Richmond, Ky., even
reach a decision about attending
UK.

“1 received a good impression
of the attitude of campus." she
said. “i think I would like to at-
tend UK next year."

The success of the program
has helped it grow over the
years, Mathews said.

“Around 65 percent of the stu-
dents who attended the program
enrolled at UK the next fall,"
Mathews noted. “I am very
pleased with the outcomes."

Graves County High School
senior Laura Elam said she also
was pleased with the program.

“Seeing what the classes are
like and staying in the dorms
lets a student feel true college
life while still in high school."
she said. “I think it‘s great."

 

 

 

 

Heavy rain likely tonight; low in the 40s.
oThunderetorme likely tomorrow; high between 55 and 60.

 

 

 

   
 
 

 

  

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.‘- - - uwfi"’*-'w*'@v . -

2-Kentucky Kernel,Tuoedoy. February 22. 1004

Woman fights ordinance
banning signs in homes

 

By Jim Salter
Associated Press

 

LADUE. Mo. —— At the height of
the Persian Gulf War, Margaret Gil-
leo taped a notebook-size piece of
paper to her bedroom window: “For
Peace in the Gulf."

To her. it was a simple war
protest. For Ladue. a St Louis sub-
urb with tree-lined streets and state-
ly brick mansions. it was a blatant
violation of a sign ban.

By that time, Gilleo already had
sued the town once. after she re-
poned an anti-war lawn sign was
stolen and police told her the sign
was illegal anyway.

A federal judge ruled the law vio-
lattxl the First Amendment, but La-
due tightened it and recast it as a

matter of “aesthetics. safety and
property values."

After she was forced to take
down the window sign. Gilleo chal-
lenged the revised law. The city
lost again and appealed. This time.
the matter has reached the US. Su-
preme Court, where arguments are
scheduled for tomorrow.

The core issue is whether a city
can prohibit signs on private prop-
erty. But attorneys for both sides
say much more is at stake.

“It would have disastrous ramifi-
cations for free speech principles if
we were to lose this case,“ said Gil-
leo's attomey, Gerald Grimen.

Jordan B. Cherrick. who repre-
sents Ladue. puts it this way: “Peo-
ple who are concerned about pro-
tecting the landscape and nature

 

 

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DEADLINE: March 4, 1994

 

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and beauty of the cities ought to be
very concerned about the outcome
of this case."

Political signs are illegal in la-
due. So are garage sale signs. signs
seeking lost pets, bake sale and
school picnic signs, happy birthday
and welcome home baby signs.

Among the handful of signs that
are allowed on residential property
are real estate “for sale" signs and
signs warning of burglar alarms.

Attorneys from both sides esti-
mate Ladue has spent about
$200,000 defending the sign ordi-
nance.

Ladue isn’t just another wealthy
suburb. It is to many around St.
Louis the epitome of the upper
class, the home of bankers. CliOS
and Old Money.

linton: N ATO threat helpful

 

By Ron Fournier
Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON — Scizing a
limited foreign policy success yes-
terday. President Clinton said
NATO‘s air strike threat bought
breathing room in Bosnia, allowing
for an intensified United Nations
effort to negotiate peace.

“The challenge for all who have
been touched by the fighting in
Bosnia is to build on this week‘s
progress and create a lasting and
workable peace for all the people
of Bosnia," Clinton said at a hastily
called news conference at the
White House briefing room.

The NATO ultimatum opened
the Bosnian Serbs to air strikes if
they did not withdraw their anil-
lery from the hills of Sarajevo or
turn them over to United Nations
troops. The UN. verified compli-
ance at all but a handful of sites
and reported that the Serbs cooper—
ated fully.

“As a result, air strikes have not
yet been necessary," Clinton said.

The president warned the Serbs
not to backslide. “Any shelling of
Sarajevo or the appearance of
heavy weapons in the exclusion
zone will bring a certain and swift
response from the UN. and
NATO." Clinton said.

The US. is “very concerned that
the Serbs may be moving their ar-
tillery from the Sarajevo hills to
other battlegrounds," Clinton said
at a six-minute news conference.
He said the allies “are doing all we
can to discourage it," and said pre-
vious NATO resolutions give the

  
 

 

 

 

 
 

  
   

 

 
    
 

 
 

 
   
   

  
 

 

 

.-~v¢l~tv¢ow~rc~~aa--. .s

 

STEP IT UP

 

 

 

ADDY LAWRWE/Kemel Stall

Physical education senior Greg Dunn, an avid mountain bike racer, rides his bicycle up the
steps to Shively Field recently.

 

 

UN. ground conunander authority
“to call in" close air support if pea-
cekeepers are under attack.

About 250 heavy Serb weapons
have been placed under UN. con
trol and 45 others will soon be un—
der command of the world body,
Gen. John M. Shalikashvili. chair-
man of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
told reporters. The Scrbs said they
were withdrawing another 300 or
so heavy weapons, Shalikashvili
said, while 46 Muslim weapons
have been placed under UN. aus-
pices.

Clinton promised renewed U.S.
efforts to help “reinvigorate the
peace process.

“A workable. enforceable solu-
tion, acceptable to all parties is the
only way to ensure a lasting solu-
tion for Sarajevo and for all of Bos-
nia." Clinton said.

The president said he and his for-
eign policy team have discussed
the idea of extending the NATO ul-
timatum to other pans of Bosnia.
Suggesting that US. allies have
scuttled Clinton’s tough-on-Serbs
plans in the past. the president said
NATO must be careful not to draw
the line elsewhere if “it is not fully
capable of performing.“

Clinton said Russia should be a
partner in any diplomatic efforts.

Perry said the prime objective “is
to secure the gain we’ve already
made" before “seriously consider-
ing“ extending ultimatums to other
areas of Bosnia. “Those options are
certainly weeks away; they‘re not
days away,“ he said.

Meanwhile. Secretary of State
Warren Christopher met with Bos-
nian Prime Minister llaris Silajdzic
as part of US. efforts to forge an
agreement between the Muslim-led
government and (‘roal separatists.

 

 

Saraj evo, unsure
about peace plan

 

By Tony Smith
Associated Press

SARAJEVO, Bosnia—
Herzegovina -— A! best, the
UN. peace plan for Sarajevo
could lead to a settlement across
the rest of war-torn Bosnia. At
wast, Sarajevans fear it could
partition their city like Cyprus or
Cold War Berlin.

UN. officials are encouraged
by 12 straight days ofpeace in
Sarajevo and want to apply the
plan elsewhere.

 

The plan, devised by com-
mandcrofUN.forcesirrBosnia
LtGen.SirMichaelRose,has
twocornerstones: theclearance
—-eitherhywithdrawalorsur-
render to UN. control —— of
heavygunsfromalZ-mileratli‘
usarotmdSarajevo,andtheusc
ofU.N.peecekceperstoceplate
thewaningBosnimgovemnent
andBosaimSerbforccs.

Sofar.backodbyaheavyar-
scan! of threats by the United
Statesmdhelpedbyeggreuive
diplomacy by the Serbs' Mar.
Russnkomhasscoredunprcc-
edentedsucoess.

Thebiggunsthatmaimedand
ldlledfor22monthshavegone.
Yasushi Abram. head of the
UN. mission in fainter Yugosla-

via. has
named em—
battled Mo-
star in the
south, north-
eastern Tua-
la, western
manner Bihac and
I UN. desig~
hated “safe havens” in eastern
Bosnia as other sites where we
Rose plan could work.
Russian'Deputy Foreign Min-
ister Vitaly Chm-kin. key to per-
suading the Serbs to withdraw
suns around Sarajevo, said the
Rose plan and greater involve—
ment by Russia aid the Unlwd
States could “make things hap-
pen in Bosnia-Hummus.”
“We have a good combination
ofimpetus and me clear in
tendon of major international
players to work closely togeth-
er,” Churkin said before leaving
Smjevo for talks with senior
American and European diplo-
mats in Bonn, Germany, today.
But inhabitants of this war-
wwy city point out that it is
still not clear the plan will work
in Sarajevo.
UN. officials almost seem to
invent the plan as they go along.
'I'hcysaymenextstepsareto
openmainroutesinandoutot‘
the city -- first for UN. mili-
tary use. then for humanitarian
aid convoys. and ultimately for
civilian.

 

 

 

 

ii

 

W

 

 

ARE!

The Kentucky Kernel is now accepting appIcations for Account
Representatives. This is a goat opportmlty to get what you
are looking for— experience!
ImmmmMManmmdmm
to "Ire Air, 026 Journals"! Bldg, Lexingon, KY W2
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DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS
MARCH 1, 1994

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10.

25.

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The bumpy road has been
‘cleared, and the finish line is in
sight.
‘ The UK Wildcats have emerged
from a murderous stretch of sched-
ule battered and bruised, for sure.
but more importantly poised,
primed and tough. They hit a
couple of potholes along the way —
including their lowest point of the
season — but now are running full
:speed ahead.

7 Just a week ago, the Cats looked

ready to crash and burn. Heart—
breaking losses to Arkansas at
home and at Syracuse were bad
enough, but a 31-point second-half
deficit against a mediocre LSU
squad had even die-hard fans ring-
ing this team‘s death knell.

But we all know what happened
next.

Instead of curling up and dying,
the Cats showed the heart and de—

KENTUCKY
KERNEL

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Me 144
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Ilcom 116
Ketrtnclty 114
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12.PtI-tlte 65

12. ucur 35
14.lotisvie 64
15.IlMass75

16. crilmia 56
17.8yracuse 55
18.Hor-irla 54
13.6t. lotis 33
26.Niltesota 32
21.6eorria Tech 25
22.6'Itc'mati 26
22th 26
24.611613
25.Ma'ylatrl 6

Others receivltu votes:

Wanamm
5,Newlvlexho3,llostat
MezMrn-ayaz,
TM].

 

flamPCflN—I

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ERIC IOIOLOOIKomOI Gllphlco

 
  

   
 

Brien Bennett '-
Senior Staff Writer

 

sire that everyone had been waiting
to see. They followed that perfor-
mance with a solid. if not spectacu-
lar Saturday win at Vanderbilt in
Memorial Gym, a glorified sweat-
shop where UK had dropped five of
the past six to the Commodores.

For the record, the Cats finished
3-2 in the stygian stretch.

Now it's once again fashionable
to talk about a March run for glory
for this group. It‘s once again fash-
ionable to call up Winston Bennett
on Cat Calls and predict national
championships.

It‘s once again fashionable to
taunt Louisville fans.

And it's all because of The

 

Comeback, and the confidence and
ccrnradery that ensued.

    

He hasn't talked like that since

starting center Rodney Dent went

“It really brought us togetherasa down with a knee injury Jan. 4.

team a lot more because _,
everybody contributed,"
guard Travis Ford said.

“It gave us a lot of mo-
mentum and a lot of confi-
dence," Jeff Brassow said.
“We showed we can play
in front of a hostile crowd
and win and that we can
come back from any defi-
cit and win."

Even Coach Rick Pitino.
who chided his team for
childishness after the Arkan-
sas game and admitted he thought
at one time this team wouldn‘t do
too much this year. has started to
come around. So happy was Pitino
after the Vanderbilt game that he
called it “one of the more special
wins of the season."

 

DENT

And with good reason.
Foul trouble, boneheaded-
ness at the end of games
and absent-minded defense
left this team looking like a
NCAA first-round upset
waiting to happen.

Not anymore. Endless
hours of individual instruc-
‘ tion for players like Andre

. Riddick and Jared Prickett
have helped, as has the
sheer toughness of schedule.

“I think we're coming
around once again to being a real
good, solid basketball team." Pitino
said yesterday.

At 20-5, the Cats should be fa-
vored to win their last four, includ-
ing tomorrow‘s game against Ralph
Willard‘s future players, the Ten-

Team USA advances
with Ita 'an crushing

 

By Mike Nadai
Associated Press

on," forward Mark Beaufait said. “We wanted to put

them back on their heels."
Italy (1-4), made up mostly of Canadians and Ameri—

 

LILLEHAMMER, Norway — The US. hockey
team earned a medal-round berth by beating Italy 7-1
last night, the Americans‘ first victory of the Olym-

pics.

Looking for its first medal since 1980. the
United States (1-1-3) finished fourth in Pool B
preliminary round play and will meet Finland
(5-0), the top Pool A qualifier, in tomorrow's

quarterfinal.

The Americans led 5-0 before the game was
15 minutes old, Peter Ferraro scoring twice, and 1. .3. '- ’ '
were never threatened. It was their first lead of '- ()0 one. . “ .

k“; \{‘ \ “We outqurcked them, Sacco said. “We won
all the races to the loose pucks. We wanted to
play an up-tempo game and we did. that. We'll
have to do the same thing against Finland."

U.S. goaltender Garth Snow was barely tested in his

more than one goal in the Olympics.

“We played with a sense of urgency in the
first period," U.S. captain Peter Laviolette said.
“We’re a team that has responded better to pressure, to
having our backs against the wall. Tonight we had to

do it and we came out flying."

The US. team, which also had a third-period lead
for the first time in the tournament, snapped a six-
garne Olympic winless streak dating back to the 1992
semifinals. It outshot the Italians 47-16.

“We just didn‘t want to give them anything to build

cans of Italian descent, could have made the medal

round with a win.
David Delfino, a Boston-area native whose grandfa-
ther was Italian, lasted only 8:58 in Italy’s net

and left trailing 3-0 on goals by Peter Ciavaglia,

'\.,/

Ferraro and David Sacco.
“They came out hard," Delfino said. “We had
to be prepared and I guess we weren't."
David Roberts and Ferraro then scored
against backup goalie Bruno Campese before a
r ’ goal by Italy‘s Emilio Iovio made it 5-1 after

third Olympic start. The Americans didn‘t even need a

seven goals.

goalie to lead after the first period; they had more goals
than Italy had shots (four).

Brian Rolston added one goal in each of the second
and third periods, tying him for the Olympic lead with

NCAA reforms still in place

 

Associated Press

 

BOULDER, Colo. — The NCAA
will address the concems of the
Black Coaches Association, but
will not derail planned scholastic
reforms, NCAA Presidents Com-
mission Chair Judith Albino says.

“The concerns that underlie what
the BCA has been doing are impor-
tant for all of us in higher educa-
tion," said Albino, University of
Colorado president. “We‘ve had a
breakdown in communication and
we need some help in getting that
going again. That’s why we‘re go-
ing to mediation.

“But I think that on behalf of the
Presidents Commission, my mes-
sage is very clearly, ‘We're not
backing away from the reform
movement.”

The BCA has been at odds with

 

   
  
  
   
   
  

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lk'S #1 (‘ll()l('li

252-5121

2100 OXFORD CIRCLE

- BOXERCISE

 

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276-1151

ZANDALE

 

 

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the commission and the NCAA
over plans to tighten student-athlete
eligibility standards, the availability
of scholarships and advancement
opportunities for blacks.

Three weeks ago, the BCA
threatened to boycott basketball
games to draw attention to its con-
cerns, but called it off when the
Justice Department offered to medi-
ate talks with the BCA, the NCAA
and the Presidents Commission.

One of the BCA’s biggest con-
cerns is the NCAA's plan to tough-
en student-athlete eligibility
standards in 1995.

The current standard for incom-
ing athletes is a score of 700 on the
Scholastic Aptitude Test, or 17 on
the American College Test, and a
2.0 grade-point-average in a core
curriculum.

The NCAA Convention has ap-
proved legislation that would
change the standard to an indexed
scale beginning in August 1995.
Athletes who have a 2.5 GPA
would be required to have a 700 on
the SAT or 17 on the ACT. Those
with a 2.0 GPA would be required
to have a 900 on the SAT, or a 21
on the ACT.

 

 

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2524 Nicholasville Rd. 0 276-4673

 

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color, IS 1t?
When you want to add life to a project, add color. At Kinko’s,

you’ll find everything you need to present your favorite photos,
slides or artwork in attention-getting, true-to-life color.

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for just 99¢ each. Resizing costs extra. We cannot reproduce copyrighted photos.
One coupon per customer. Not valid with other offers. Good through 3/15/94.

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nessee Volunteers.

'Ihat. coupled with two wins in
the Southeastern Conference Tour-
nament next month (they won't
beat Arkansas in Memphis, the
Hogs'll be bigger than Elvis down
there), would give them 26 wins,
six losses, a No. 2 NCAA seed and
chance to do something special.

A few things have to happen first.
Ford has to shoot like he did against
Vanderbilt, but he can‘t dribble the
way he did (six tumovers). Riddick
has to stop his occasional disap-
pearing act (zero points against a
small Vanderbilt team). Walter
McCarty has to continue his im-
proved play.

  

Rodrick Rhodes has to stay in
control. Somebody has to teach
these guys how to shoot free
throws. (Shouldn't that be part of
Kyle Macy‘s contract as radio ana-
lyst?)

And the Cats have to pray that
North Carolina, the one team with ,_ .
the size and depth to demolish '
them, doesn't end up in their re-
gion.

If all those things happen, watch
out. Don't forget, this team has
done the seemingly impossible be-
fore.

Senior Staj}r Writer Brian Bennett
is a journalism junior and 0 Ken-
tucky Kernel columnist.

      
 
    

.51, :1,,'

 

 

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CHEERLEADER
TRYOUTS

Anyone trying out must:

1. Attend the cheerleading clinics
being held in the Seaton Center
Gymnastics Room at 8:00 pm. Sun- {
day, Monday and Tuesday, March 6,

2. Have earned 12 credit hours from
UK or a Community College.

3. Have attained a 2.0 GPA.

N 0 EXPERIENCE
IS NECESSARY!

Attend clinics and learn about UK Cheerlead-
ing Program. For more information call
257-9080. Tryouts will be held April 17 and 18
in Memorial Coliseum.

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Saturday. February :(1

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PHOTO COUNTE’V OF UMVERSAL PICTURES

Troy (Ethan Hawke) and Leilana (Winona Ryder) discuss the future of their relationship in the
romantic comedy, ‘Beality Bites: Directed by Ben Stiller, the film focuses on the lives of a
group of friends struggling to find identities after their graduation from college.

 

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éI gI éI

“Reality Bites"

Starring Winona Ryder and
Ethan Hawke

Universal Pictures

 

By Nina Davidson
Arts Editor

 

“Reality Bites" succinctly cap-
tures the flavor of discontent among
college students today. With a tal-
ented cast and a
sharply funny I
script, the Ben
Stiller film illus-
trates the restless-
ness of Generation
X.

Ielaina Pierce
(Winona Ryder) is
an aspiring film-
maker who sets out
to capture the lives
of her friends as
they struggle to find life after col-
lege. She works as an intern at a lo-
cal TV station. but her creative out—
let is her trusty camcorder.

Tbe people she films include her
roommate. Vickie (Janeane Garofa-
lo) and her friends Troy (Ethan

 

\

Hawke) and Sammy (Steve 7ahn).
Leilana meets a producer. Micheal
(Stiller) who offers to use her film
for the local M'l V-clone station.

Leilana must choose between
compromising her artistic principles
for commercialization or remaining
poor but true to her vision. Leilana
must also choose between the affec-
tions of the steady Micheal or the
unstable yet charming Troy.

Ryder turns in her usual luminous
performance as Leilana. She man-
ages to convey a mixture of deter—
mination and vulnerability without
resorting to doe-eyed pouting.

Taking a break from her serious
dramatic roles in “The Age of Inno-
cence" and “Dracula." she returns
to the genre of teen romance that
made her famous.

Hawke also takes a break from
his usual earnest roles in “Dead
Poet's Society“ and “White Fang"
to portray an obnoxious grunge
drifter. Hawke manages to make his
character likable despite his insta-
bility.

The script. written by Helen Chil—
dress. is fresh and original. The dia-
logue sounds true-to-life and un-
forced.

However, the references to ‘70s
trivia are overdone. After the 10th
casual remark about “The Partridge

Soundtrack offers hearty
mix of musical morsels

J'J'J'

Reality Bites
Various Artists
RCA Records

highlight on “Spin the Bottle." An ode to the teenage
kissing game. Hatfield imbues her soft voice with a
touch of adolescent humor. “Spin it around again/Spin
it around again," she sings sweetly.

In a voice eager with anticipation, she croons, “He is
going to kiss me/If he doesn‘t miss me/Five minutes in
the closet with you."

 

By Nina Davidson

In contrast to the light humor of “Spin the Bottle."

 

Mon-Sat 11 a.m.—10 p.m. 269-9593
Sun 1 1‘30 a.m.—9 9"“ Taréiifihé'fligflsi'

 

 

 

 

 

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