xt74tm71z99s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt74tm71z99s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1985-04-16 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 16, 1985 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 16, 1985 1985 1985-04-16 2020 true xt74tm71z99s section xt74tm71z99s ___—________________________—_——————————————————
r”? “reliefs 3"th " .. -. « 2 ., »
Student challenges ‘ Polish and Chinese '
ttt l'k'n'r 4 tb ff d' fll '
saue,lns13uy V? , O CO ere ma .,
t H 11 Ct at U ,. (I .- High demand prompts department _. -
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\ if to offer new slavzc, oriental languages ., r, . '- ,,
By FRAN srswmr a result of the inoculation. Guilhln- . - .
SeniorStaff Writer Barre, a nerve disorder character- 3,» By KAREN MILLER should be of interest to several ~ .« . . - .

i ized by muscle weakness progres- ” Staff Writer groupsofpeople, . _ -,

At 50, Clarke Dunlap compared sing upward in the body trail the “Peo le who are 'nter t d n - .- ,' ‘ . '
his physical condition to that of a legs, can result in paralysis or A In response to numerous requests F t P . ‘ lee 9, l 4 . . ,
man lulf his age. He was a private death, and the Center for Disease .. from Stt’dehtsi “‘Stmet'e“ 1“ the P01‘ .as ern Europe. Sowet p0 mes be' . , .. ' . '
pilot, and on the days he wasn't jog- Control in Atlanta, Ga. has linked ' ish and Chinese languages will be of» Sense, the “WW m°Vement ‘5 a .' ,. - - ..
ging three to five miles, he rode a thedisease toswine flu injections. , fered next semester. _ ten. interesting phenomenon in the i . = ‘ . 1
lo-speed bicycle for six to eight Dunlap filed a $1.5 million mal- , . Gerald Janeeek- chairman of the 50”“ S'tuatw“ and 0‘ “”59 ‘t a . . : - _
miles. practice suit againstthehealth serv- ' ‘3 s - a. Slavic and oriental languages de» StUdent..haS 50m". ”"5" “act" _ , . ' ,

But now, five years later, Dun- ice on Oct. 10, 1%, but his suit was ) ’ ‘ partment. said he was able to 80 to ground. Janecek sa‘d' ' _
lap's legs are paralyzed, and be thrown out of the Circuit Court of , ~ the dell" 0‘ the C°he8e 9‘ Arts 5‘ SC" “It also might be of some interest .‘ _ -
blames UKforhisdisability. Fayette County on July 13, 1933. A -- "'-' ems and is“ ‘0.“ P0115“ ‘0 be 0“ to linguists because it allows a per- - - ‘

Dunlap sought restitution for his month later, Dunlap attempted to ' ‘ I I fered onatnavlbaSis. son to compare two slavic language . ‘ p

I injury through the court system. But have the ruling overturned, only to ‘ , . - . " Janecek said the course was the“ es. Russian and Polish, for example , -. . .

. a state statute with roots dating have the Kentucky Court of Appeals . approved and Wlh be taught under . . . For someone interested in lan- ' ~ .
back to English common law has dismiss his case on the grounds of ' ' - - the course number A535 100 Monday, guages or language groups. it‘s a . . . .
denied him an opportunity for com- sovereign immunity. Wednesday and .Friday at “00“ valuable Opportunity." . . I . ' .-
pensation. The sovereign immunity statute CLARKE DUNLAP under the ‘hsm’a‘on 9t Lucym Ch" . , ‘ , .

Dunlap‘s suit results from a flu in- protects the state and its subdivi- , , . . . . lowmzexorneckaanative 9t Poland. Janecek said he hopes that a stu- ‘ - '.
jection he received at the University sions from lawsuits. UK, as a state leap 1°" {We-month Socral Secu- type‘everytiung. lm a cripple for He added that the difficulty 5“" dent who takes Polish will come . '
Student Health Service. He said he institution, qualifies as a subdivision nty dlsablllty stipend. life. dents may have learning P0115“ de‘ away with "a broader appreciation ‘ f ' ‘
paid ‘1 for the shot °h NOV‘ 14' 1979‘ ofKentucky. Dunlap said he must sell blood .It. Dunlap had gone to a federal pends 0" several th‘hgs' of the significance of Eastern Eu- 5 "
Thirty-three days later, he said, his 0“ Feb. 21' 1&5, Dunlap was plasma twice a week to “have chmc for the injection, he might al- ”It is a fairly difficult language to rope and all ability to maybe Study > - ‘
legs buckled underhim. given another chance when the State enough foodioeat," ready have money m the bank. He learn- it helps i0 have had some one of the less powerful languages." ' . ‘

Dunlap laid spent only one semes- Supreme Court granted his case a said dedthgsl fefleralt gmrgaegé Russian, for instance. because of .
ter In the graduate program at the writofdisc'retgonary revlew. _ “I was in perfect physical condi~ 3:851)” mfilslga) 89:91? injured certain similarities." Janecek said. “Russian. of couse, is of interest - ' .
UK Department of Geography be A lawsuit gives only one Side of a tion. now I’m a wreck.“ he said. afterreceivingswine flu shots “The one advantage over Rugs,“ is because ".5 the other superpower . . ~ .
fore WIVIDS the ShOt- He spent the legal action. “I’m “0t gotng to get any better. I Instead he tto tatetf ~11 that it uses the Latin alphabet but but Poland does represent a rich
next elEht months In Cardinal H1" After more than four years. Dun- can walk distances With crutches ‘ - wen - a S - am I y with different sounds for some of the culture with a long historv closelv ' t'

- - . - - . and now his case is contingent at ,. _ . - - » '
22:?ng for treatment and rehabill izgst::dng;pelecondsveonre: antlegechgirmt: bug”: E.P1"?fitéetwrh£:: ir'iom: best letters. bound to Europe. so its one further . .

l . w c ir. Sl c ‘ , y , g . . . ,4 . ~_

Dunlap contends that be can get around. He said he survives in upper body. 1 have tremulous hands. According to Dunlap, Wyeth Labo Janecck said the class wtll cover step 3“?!) from the Pl‘mlhelet dtt' . .
tracted Guillain-Barre Syndrome as “extreme poverty, extreme hand- 1 can’t even use a pencil. l have to secSTATLn. page6 both written and spoken aspects and See LANLI Atlas. page 6 . .

e ..=: _ ,
banquet, chapter prizes . _
for variety of activities ' '

By JIM DOWNEY campus keep records of all the ' '
Reporter things they do in these areas and , ,
submit them for judging each
In its 30 years of existence. the spring. A team of five members in— ‘ . A
' Greek Activities Steering Committee volved with the UK greek commu- . ~ _ . .
hasn't altered its purpose — to sanc- nity, but not college students, judges .
tion and spomor greek campus these entries and grades them with .
events, grant points on the events the winners being determined by \ .
and award chapters accordingly. points. "5 N _ .

The committee began as a sub Pustinger said the purpose of the .
committee of the Interfraternity and change in award criteria was to get . ~
Panhellenic councils. but later be the greek: more involved, ”the en- ‘ , , .
came an independent organization tire purpose of the Chapter Achieve- . ' . -

— the only campus group combining ment Award is community involve- ‘ V '
fraternity and sorority members. merit and campus service,"hesaid. - > , » ,

The current chairman of GASC is A second reason for the change, ' 'I .
Jim Pustinger, a member of Alpha Pustinger added. was to help the , . ,
Gamma Rho fraternity. Pustinger greeks become more versatile by - , . ' .
was named Outstanding Greek Man giving points in categories other ‘ - j . '
of the year at the greek banquet Sat- than scholarship and activities. ‘ _ ,
urday night. “Hopefully, it serves the purpose of . , "_

The committee is composed of 18 making organirations more well , - , ' ’ . .
members of the greek community rounded,"hesaid. ' . . ',
selected by a panel of seniors who Pustinger also said the new award , ' _ _ ' . - - ~‘ _ -
have previously served on commit- would help fraternities look better in . , .‘ ' ‘_ .
tee, one IF C representative. one their national chapter's eyes he- _________________._#____.._,___#___d_____hg_¢_w h, ___, ,, W, ,__ _ ,__ ,_._._._.‘___ '- . -
Panhellenic representative. the dean cause a lot of national organizations nuiiu Minimum Lr’oetSIJI‘ . . I ' '
of students and an assistant dean of give awards on this same type of re Fly balls '- ~ - . ' -
students. ' . cord keeping. ”It's going to force ' ‘ ' . .
, Pustinger said °he 0‘ the ’h‘St V‘S' themto(keeprecords),”hesaid. A helicopter hovers over the Patterson Office Tower plaza Derby week. Some of the balls had invisibly written numbers . ' ,
'ble. "mares: $3sz does '5 to.or— Pustinger ”with“? that any yesterday to drop 2,000 ping pong balls. The blizzard of balls which may be redeemed for prizes. But the wind carried many '
gannriozeugtht the weekevéiyscszrgngl gafirbzzauugecifig mggefl kicked Off the Student Activities Board’s Little Kentucky of them onto Miller Hall‘s roof. , . . ..
sors events such as Greek Driveln centage of participation rather than . - '
andthegreekbanquet. number of participants. And more . . . '. "

.............................. m... can esmmm- ome test aval a e in ru s ores . .
given to individual chapters for ev- ers, because the award is not so I . ’ "
erything from scholarship to alumni much weighted to athletics any- . , ’ , _ , _ ,
relations. These awards are being more, an area in which large frater- By COR] SHEETS chael Sicherman, president of Medl- though he would not speedy how annually in the diagnoms, treatment, - - ‘ .l ,
given on a new system this year nities are traditionally Sm. Reporter cal Frontiers. The person simply many kits have been sold, he did say drugs and lost wages for gonorrhea _ . ,
with the new Chapter Achievement According to Pustinger the GASC picks up the kit at the drugstore, ad- that the product was selling .very sufferers alone. For gonorrhea and . . .
Awardbeingthetophonor. also sponsors it’s own events like A new test for a common venereal ministers it in his home, mails in the weu and sales are continuingtonse. syphilis, the cost to society lS esti- _

According to Pmtinger, the old Rent-aGreek, which benefits the disease can now be administered in sample, and within 48 hours calls “We have had a very good re- mated atnbillionamually.‘ «
award only took into account two Kentucky Special Olympics held in the privacyof yourownhome. the toll-free number to obtain the spome. .we are beginning a. much Studies show that 10 million Amer- . -
factors: scholarship and activities. Lexington. He said they also lave 'I‘hetest kit, designed for theearly testresults. wider distribution and the kits are icans currently have a venereal dis- . ~
The new award is comprised of nine fund—raisers to pay for their own detection of gonorrhea, was devel- “The test is 95 to 99 percent effec- now available in395tates,“he said. ease. Of this amount, 55 percent
categories: campus individual lead- projects and, this semester, all the oped by Medical Frontiers, inc. of tive for men, but only 30 to 65 per- Glass said that sexually trans- don‘t even know they have it. or 3
ership, scholarship. community newawards. Centerville, Ohio. It is only for men cent effective for women which is mitted diseases spread very rapidly. have not sought treatment, Glass ‘ - .

service, pledge retention, activities, Although scholarship is worth 20 and is selling in area drugstores for why we recommend. this product and in cities With universmes they said. . . ' .
intramural sports, campus partici- percent for the chapter achievement $17.99. strictly for men." said Tom Glass, seem to be more prevalent. Some Sandy Joseph, public health advis-
pation, fraternity education and award, Pustinger said chapters Each VD test packet contains in- marketing manager for the compa- statistics say that VD is also more er for the Lexmgton Health Depart-
alumni relations. Awards also were shouldn‘t concentrate all their cf. struch'ons. testing equipment, a ny. prevalent in the Southeastern states. ment on Newtown Pike, said “We di- _
givenintheeeindividual categories. forts on one thing; that would be de- mailing box and a confidential iden. Glass said the product was intro- hesaid. . . . . agnosis 20 to 30 people a week with

The fraternities and sororities on {eating the We of the change. tificatlon number, according to Mr duced to the public August 15 and 31- He estimated $1.1 billion IS spent Seamus“,

O
. Crib notes mans
Symposrum to address cheating polwzes and punishments ,
1h w , elfie M
By JOHN MCGARY on a paper or exam related to the And somewhere in life. they will XW‘
Reporter offense to recommending to the de- needthateducation." hair h. on I. Mal-
' ‘ pertinent chairman a more severe Although Burch is not often in- h“~“.~“.
A~ Administrators hope to clear up sanction. volved in cheating and plagiarism mum").
it L some problem with UK's cheating Only if the imtructor chooses to cases. he said "the University‘s in- - _
a ( ,d u andplagiarlsmpolicleetomorrow. followupwiththeproblemwill the terest should be whether the stu- ...., ~ 2 ., A
d -‘ Jflellh Burch, dean 0' m. case be reviewed by the department dents can learn from their mistakes we?“fli
& framedtheproblermastwoquee- chairrnan.thedeenofthecollegc —-whetherthesituationcanbeben- “h , *0”
tiom: Why do people cheat or pla- wiiere the offense occurred, the eficialinthelongnm." “mflfi‘
sinrueihndwhentheymaiaht, dandtheahldent'lcollegeendthe nieworlishopwiilnuiniycomist M , ._~:-
) why is there such a disparity in the apprepdatechancellor. of six position papers by various . g ‘ “
s ptnielunent? According to the Student Rights ombudsmen from other-schools. The. ‘ “
\ 11.. lympaium, organised Dr, and Responsibilities inndbod, a chairman of the Senate canicil, the
c . a"... Ellimer, my, mm seldom tot-id guilty of canmitting hearing dficer of the appeals board WEATHER
\..- % Mn, will address then an academic offeme may behnbject and a UK student also will attend.
r] , n will he'll! at g .m. .i to forced withdrawal from clan After the position papers. there will ., . : -,> “34“.»ng -...
', -' l.“ a: 19" Alumni Home .33 mg or, if the case is midered serious be a light dinner. small group dis— . fig "" " ’ ‘ .
lulu-mum \‘l III-II“ mhmgmpm, mill. expulsion from the Univer- custom, the reports from thug _ , “Egret. .
—- ‘ ._.__.‘_ I my ”millennium-m. *‘iw‘fifi‘t‘m T“ ~,
7 .' =7 ‘ tlndt amt condition, individ- AIM a chasm might cite Althuiui there is no guarantee 5 “‘ ssh” e '
Himmdetactchatlu mbMQamfor that themtahopwillawply the " “is“ ‘W " T
V may ll. M on dbcretlon I!- chadqawchealbcheatingaee- mmanyoftheprohlerm,eotne “* ‘ {"g’;
5- ~ , - ’ " =' m the ama-nut. which an riot- adieu! problem 'm new light ihoiud be plied, w first: ,
meflwm cmfwanefimtial,notagnde. laid.
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Realistic ‘ Legacy ’ has dramatic lessons to teach about rape
“Rape and sexual assault are _—_—_—_—_— Dupre), the lubian lover d are d l ' I 3 5
~ "in? i" which, :9 Wt?" fgi'tif‘ Ferrell has crafted Press ’s work into a dramatic "nonhuman. » .m-
ano er person in sexua ac vry , . . ‘.
through violence or the threat of vio— success With hard lessons to teach. "Legacy” is tors-t «Tangier gamed dirt}: “ti“ .
'9'“ 8mm" compelling, angry and determined — a cry of up Theater stage to trial sides and '
minute-i Rape Crisis Center outrage at the senseless violence of rape and a ‘Wr‘ghmmgnmfig‘mh: ‘
The regional:l premiere of ‘fiwd cry of hope for the crime ’s victims. 3311 as two jail cells at either side of
' cy." a power-i ook into the e ‘ - stage — one for Patsy and one '
rape and incest opened last Thurs- lfanythmg: theplay may try to say ’00 for Roxanne. The crisis center oper- h
' day evening in the Lab Theater d much. ates in what mice was a culnty jail,
the Fine Arts building. The play has and Holloway has designed a sturdy _
‘ been the su-bject of several fm — !m met “I! With mny of an . fé
0" campus, including one at the Stu- outrage at the semeless violence of Zingg offers both a hard-edged, 3“] sbarsstilllnplace.
de’“ Center and “"0 “men were rape and a cry of hope for the angry woman and a warm, ded- From the “Mondale /Ferraro"
conducted followmg the production 5 crime's victims. icated servant of humanity — al- poster to the barred windows to the
firsttwoperformances. . If anything, the play may try to ways maintaining a determined water fountain Holloway’s set is
““5 ‘5 Pamp‘m‘lly _ appropriate say too much. There are 13 charac- stanceandaready wit. realisticandeng’agingtotheeye.
‘ ‘ for a play meh ‘5 itself a dls‘ ters, all of them important. In its de— Also noteworthy is the perfor-
cussronofrape “’88th”. l sire to cover all the bases. “Lega- mance of Lisa Wethington as Jennie, ”Legacy" strives to show both the
. Legacy d‘S 591“" an”? candismee- tcy" asks us to remember a lot of who begins the play as a counselor male and female perspectives of the
"‘8 center, 8:31 "‘8 nd V5: ' names. but soon becomes a client. Wething- rape problem. The play is so busy
“in?” empptzefhea . l 3):" Yet, to its credit, this is not so ton shows strong commitment in that it takes some time to assuni
~ eac copada‘fl’l . ".0 eace y hard. Press’s characters are sharply perhaps the play’s most demanding late, but once you Imow what’s going
- face on a 1y basis. 3:" (81”):me drawn and do not tend to blur. The role. onyoucannothelp butbeinterested.
“no" takes place m ce. 3 cast strikes an effective balance be- .
1 black slave named Posh m the tween the horrible tragedies of rape Then there is Kevm Kennedy, as Yet with a play of this sort, there
year 1840 The play links Patsys victims and their own characters’ Rachel’s son Travis. Kennedy is is more involved than drama. Press
- _ ohsht to that of Roxanne, a black etiortstolead normal lives. quite believable as the high school has chosen the incidents of rape do
, woman'who comes to the center for Ramona Joseph immediately wins senior and is another audience fa- scribed in “Legacy” from actual
' counseling. _ over the audience as Patsy. Alone vorite, possibly because Travis dis- cases. Above all else, this play lh'
AW“ Tm“ ””5 “5‘5 “mm with an imaginary minister in one plays something few others in the tendstoteachywsomethins.
With rape VlCllmS for eight years, corner of the stage, Joseph displays play can: innocence. In any case, . ' . s"
and above all her script is authentic. a variety of finely tuned levels. Jo Kennedy 0395 some 0‘ the PTOdUC‘ And 't ‘5 something we all need to '
Director Joe Ferrell stressed that seph also makes extensive use of tion’s bestcomic relief. learn.
the play was not “antionlale,” but her limited playing area. Lisa RO- . ' TOMWAVMAN/KemelSlali
- - ' rather ‘ianti-rape." thel is also strong as Roxanne. Pat- 3’09 Montgomery ls exceptional as “Legacy" will be performed again Thr 111 t t m to t 'th th h f , h UK
. This is certainly the case. Ferrell syts modern day counterpart. Michael, a former rapist who must at 3 pm, on April 21. 24 and 25 and ec en ry o CO e CI'I'nS.WI e orror o rape in t c
has crafted Press‘s work into a dra- deal with his own acts of violence. at 3 pm. on April 23 in the Lab The- Theater production of the Tom Press play, “Legacy.” The play
, _ - matic success with hard leesom to Jo Crockett Zingg turns in an Montgomery allows Michael’s anger ate, ofthe Fine Arts building, Will be performed at 8 pm. on April 21, 24, and 26 and at 3 pm.
teach “118830)" is compelling, lIISPil'lhs Performance as RaCheli an to surface during a confrontation on April 28 in the Lab Theater of the Fine Arts Building.
angry and determined —— a cry of almost stereotypical angry feminist. with Diane (played by Leigh Anne JAMES Asmu,
, l e . .
JohnsonLP l .‘- r--. 1— 'P G t p k (1 ltyIV
, I 7 . 7 7 7 -
. w, it by ]0 leOHS \( l» Lit rass ['00 S gl'Oll see S ua l
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Offers great i 2,, ByJERRY BUCK “Dorothy read about me in a De dist supporting actor. drama —
: AssociatedPress troit newspaper when I was conduct- Bruce Weitz, "Hill Street Blues."
dance tunes ing a campaign to boost the ratings oBest quality comedy series —
.. he - .. DOS ANGELES — In a totally of ‘St. Elsewhere' in 1933," said NBC's“TbeCosbyShow.“
J . John on’ n ue ' ‘ ~.. umcientific poll. CBS’ “Casney & Been in a telephone interview. “00- ~Bost lead actress, comedy — Shel-
A213: Recois-ds s W h ‘ " ‘ Lacey” was named the best quality rothy sent me a letter of encourage ley L0n8.NBC's “Cheers.“
it '23; ‘ drama series and NBC’s “The Cosby ment and told me about her cam~ 'Bfil lead actor, comedy — Bill
, . . '2 ' , . q _ Show" was named the best qua ity paigntosave ‘Cagney&1.acey.’ " Cosby, “'l‘heCosby Show."
There S. m; dglbtgtcabout llt'he— Em' l‘«§\ . , , U comedy series. The results of the First Annual 080$ supporting actress, comedy —
{leabZOf‘s ‘5 1:5 0% k p kcet 5;, e . . ~ The poll was conducted by View- VQTAwards: RheaPerlman,“Cheers."
‘ 'othe 331'“ ¥°‘.‘ 3a“ 5 yr°° e ., he ‘1. ‘ :.. . era for Quality Television, a grass- oBest quality drama series _ CBS‘ oBest supporting actor, comedy —
mPris mllstlciemffify half of the '1’“ 3K 1 « we; roots organization formed last fall to “Cagneyazlacey.” Nicholas Colasanto, “."Cheers (Co~
Twi néii'egsuon the may in 1982 with g? .. _ I " i. . .e star}: encourage better television. oBest lead actress, drama — Sharon lasanto died earlierthis year.)
then i1 d lassic p1999 which J ‘ ' ' i“ mm? was Putwsether by two Gloss.“Casney&Lacey-" In some categories the vote was
showcgsr: YES musical, ems ,~ _ “he ' ’ '77": ’ . ,9; women who have never met. Donna oBest lead actor, drama —-Daniel J. very close, she said.
through suggestive lyrics andghigh- . «:_ 'W ' 53m Deen hints in Plano, T1385, and Travanti,NBC's“l-Iill StreetBlues.” Deen said the group’s aim was to
er ed em we funk Last u,‘ f, ‘ 'r works in a real estate office. Doro- oBest supporting actress, drama — encourage viewers to write letters to
ngmmerls Purge Ragiop-though infe- Wn: C» .- ~ V ,._. thy Swanson is a housewife who Veronica Hamel, “Hill Street thenetworks and advertisers in sup
rior in quality to 1999, did nothing to ' keen; t - . j.~ livesml-Iillsdale, Mich. Blues. portof Quality televrsron.
' slow his rising popularity. ' ' ‘5 —————
Following in Prince’s footsteps . .-. .» a l
was The Time, an infectious sextet 3' g _ . t‘ The Kentucky Kernel,
that combined raunchiness and mu- .i ‘ x~ n, " A ‘i 210 Journalism '
sical elegance to fuel their albums. > , _, ’ " ~ , ’ - - - - Y t h
Ice Cream Castle, which contaim ‘ ' } " . 3:::$:;E;wcrsny 0“ VB 90 our num er
the smash “Jungle Love," cashed in s i 9 . '
on The Time‘s success in the Prince JESSE JOHNSON S REVUE LCXInSloni KY- 40506‘ “mm”.mm. mm. 'MFinunis Hohsaionfl- _
. film “Purple Rain" and propelled tage of the driving rhythm sectim lackluster “Special Love." They 0042. (606) 257-2871, nm,mmmmurmgm \ M'WWD"
them to the forefront of commercial and a contagious keyboard melody; aren’t totally wasted efforts, but is published class days MW student 00W in 0t" CH ”7 H
soul. this track has the hit potential of they succeed only in slowing the during the academic MthgSm-(LWS? me,
‘ The thriving Minneapolis tradition The Time's “Jungle Love." without manic pace set by Johnson on the dweckl my. - lormotallloutlsstuc- m u
- goes on: Jesse Johnson, lead guitar- the redundant background cater- dance numbers. year an y lionsmounsdmmmmn-
ist for The Time, has assembled his wauling duringthechorus. . . during the summer m Wig Prom. is a Mmmun.
' own Revue, and the result is an _J0hhS°h may 803 bit overboardm session. mainly. ° CPA
. . ‘ eight-song dance disc that unaba- Johnson does not let up on the his effort to sing and 100k like ———-——-——— ‘mmH-M'WII REVIEW
‘ ' shedly borrows from his hometown other dance cuts. The same high-in- Prince, bl“ he does know how to .m‘mgm
predecessors. temity charge powers these num- craft a mean dance .LP. If .he could 6% GENERAL CINEMA oh-hI-H-mm Medical Home Suite re
‘ But who cares? This is a hot lava bers, particularly “Just Too Much" expgnfd his songwriting honzom 3 mm manuals-warn? 3-me “zl'uuwvfie .3340:
, bed of energy, erupting with John- and “Let‘s Have Some Fun John. yon ive minute exercises in sex m - “In“ x noten. on y
. son's searing guitar, Gerry Hub- son and the Revue manage to avoid licentiousness, Jesse Johnson could ’2._5_O“FO”°RM1 -mw~:wm (mln‘sn’
. bard‘s pulsating _bass. and Mark sounding monotonous, which is, un- "01“ ““0 one 0‘ the WP 3001 acts Wlmm'i ATTENTION ACCOUNTING SENIORS
t * ' %Ed?:an:tsion flglgfewsinoflnffier; :mumglcyi'énssoflgflng tottlilgt most Egg“??? gAfiggcafe eulooswrr. no i [All lull in...“ ; Iogln your etudloe for Novombor This eununor. Coll NOW
force the listener onto the dance - gm forlnformotlon about our1 . Fm Trlol.
floor, nothing more. Not unexpectedly, Johnson has . 1-- =§3
' - “Be Your Man,“ the first single trouble with the slower serenades “I 3ng
. ‘ from the album, takes full advan- Want My Girl" and the particularly WESLEY MILLER if}; .
' ‘ . *—MAWVPO~II) ;}
“ Graduate student work on dis la ' .................. ‘5
. . = . p y FAYETTE Mill 5‘
‘ Staff reports Master of Fine Arts degree from the reception are free and open to the t”"“°|“"“”"""‘“ '°‘ "7"“7
. . UK art department. The exhibit is in public. j. m
‘ . ' . The paintings and sculpture of partial completion of the degree re- The Center for Contemporary Art ,fzé I
' ' Caren Cunningham will be on exhi- quirements. is located in the Fine Arts Building, new...“
' ' , ' ' bition in the Center for Contempo— There will be a reception for the and is open from noon until 4:30 Ii; “'m'mm'm 55; ' ' '
' - rary Art today throwsh Arr“ 24’ g3; "m" ,6 P-‘"- “m“ t? P-Fh- this pm daily- For more information. E°inm£$°i§uéop3°§£i§fnw§§ glflflpm 12:3 plt'lera‘l
, Cunningham is a candidate for the y, April 19. The exhibition and call 257-2727. IIOIMIM'IllltM g you'll ‘5’ . one ofthe tastiest II. 1' _sausage.You’lllovegen-
' ‘ mealamtownfiomyourhome mmPthut’Panleour
' . fl , me W! town Pizza Hut0 restaurant. non-stop) salad bar—and the
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I .-' i

 KWYKWEL Tutu", 1‘4
Andyw
Sports Editor
Men’s tennis players G lft m h
sna back to thrash SEC 1" 1
P -, , .V as ina s near .
. 8- ' By Joan; way -—-——'———"— ' ' ,'
Florida Gators 6-3 ‘ , "Moesshowhw '
' "l .. ~ Heading into the final leg of the we’re beginning to put . , ~ .
By KRIS'I’OPIIER RUSSELL beat Rob Cartwngh‘ t at the fifth po- » r spring season, UK's men's golf - r ‘ r - 4
Staff Writer sition, 6-2, 6-1. . : - . coach Tom Simpson is closer to find- thmgs tagether' We re . ‘ _ r
At the No. 6 singles spot, Andrew - ' . . “"7 ing a successful starting lineup for trying tofind the right 3 ’ "
Though yesterday’s match with Varga bounced back from losing a , the Southeastem Conference . . h . , . . .
F‘ltrida started out similar to a loss first-set tiebreslter to beat Jeff 1 . Championships in Florence. Ala, in combinationfor t e .j _ . - .1
over the weekend, the UK men's Memo-7.60.52. " 2' 4/ » threeweeks. SEC n . ‘ ; . . . .
tennis team came out on top this Yesterday. Ellery tried two new K \ . In last weekend‘s Marshall lnvita. ' , . g , , I
time. doubles combinations and both w" 7 I tional in Huntington, W. Va, Ken- Tom Simpson. 3. ' '- , ~_

On Saturday, UK led Alabama 4—2 tllmedmtfu'thebetter. % ‘ .: tucky placed eighth out of 18 teams, UK golfcoach ~ . ' . ' . , i
after singles, but wound up losiig Bailey and David Keevim in . _; but their 906 team total was only , l ‘ _ _I
the match 5-4, dropping all three of clinched the No. 2 doubles match ' w «it? four strokes from a third place fin» . " -' - II I I ’ . ’ .' .
thedoublesrnatches. with a 6-4, 6-3 win over Dace and " I, ‘ I ish. tational in Montgomery, Ala, two i ' ' .' »

And yammyi the Wildcats again Holt. .‘ Sparked by a second-place overall weeks ago, the course for the Mar- '. 'I . I _
ledtheGstors +2srtersingles. 7 Verge and McGee showed their a / finish by fresth Bill Lundeen. the shall tourney “was a little bit short» . . ~

But this time, UK managed to doubles prowess. snapping back to m. ‘ . A II Wildcats as a team are scoring bet- 9“ - and a little bit tighter," U, 1 , '
take two out of the three doubles beat Tuckerand Bruce Willisaftera it“ I - 3 mgfl i} ter, something Simpson has waited Hornsheld said. " , i ‘ _ f ‘
matches, handing the Gators a 63 firstsetloss,2-6.6-3,6-4. .;_ » ' ,3" ”I 521i’3i_i;’”;1+i§3 allyeartosee. _ ' ‘ .
loss. Kentucky travels tomiisiana this Me a... . ‘;§:;t§::‘5§23§‘§i{f u" does show that we‘re begin- IAt the Montgomery tournament, _ I _

The victory raised UK’s record to weekend to take on 7th-ranked inui- F'- ‘ ‘ - ‘1?" woolen“ nine to put things together." he said. 9“ Placed 15‘“ Wt 0‘ 18 team but . V , ' ~
19-7ontheseason. siana State, 13th~ranked Northeast " in "We're trying to find the right com— Simpson said the held waSthe most . . . : . -,

“1 know it was on their minds,” Louisiana and 25th-ranked South~ _ binationfortheSEC. difficult he had ever seen» including ; . , “
UK coach Dennis Emery said about west Louisiana. //’ ' ‘ . . “Conditions were ideal, the weath- 120‘ the Topmih the nation . . '
the MN“ disaster 8881““ Ala- _1 er was excellent and the golf course . _ . ~ '. , i ‘. ~I‘.
bema. “Fortunately. we got off to UK’s highly ranked women’s team was insupershape,"hesaid. Simpson 53|d the upcoming COW . ’ 7 . .
good starts in our doubles today and had a breather of sorts yesterday as Lundeen‘s sizzling 217 was high- ference tPUaney should be even . ‘ _ - .~ ' .'
we played much more aggressive- it easily beat Ohio University 9-0. lighted by a first-round 2-under par tougher With “veg“ the SEC that?“ , ‘ 4 i .
ly.” UK won all nine matches in straight 70. After shooting a 72 and a 75 on f Florida. Georgia, 14511334155551? _ '. -., "

UK was backed by the play of its sets as Ohio University won only 16 Saturday and Sunday. Lundeen fin. pi and Auburn # ranked in the Top . . I
bottom four singles players. At the total games. ished inst two shots behind the first 20 '_ ‘ - -
No. 3 singles spot, Pat McGee re- _ Place f‘mSher- ' :
bounded from a straight set loss on Kentucky coach Mike Patrick's 23- Another Kentucky freshman. Jon Before the SEC Champiorships, I . '
Saturday with a convincing 5.3. (H 6 squad travels to Mississippi this Rubinstein. who also placed in the the squad plays in the Kentucky ln- ' ' ‘.
win overDougDace. weekend for matches with Mississip- ‘ top 20 finishers, continued his fine tercoliegiate Tournament this week - 4 -

Mark Bailey also won in straight pi State and Mississippi. -, spring showing. shooting a 225. only end. Even though his team is play- . ’ ‘ '
sets, beati Florida's Rich Holt, e . . . . nine overpar- ins well. Simpson predicts Western . ' .‘ -
4,“,atuiengojsinglesptsitjon, Patrick .sa'd his womens squad l J.R. Congdon‘s 229. Rob Kentucky will win because of the ‘ '

needs to win bIoth matches for a 908' ,{z . Hornsheid‘s 235 and Scott Eilers‘ 245 five four-year players on the WKU a ‘ '

UK's Steve Denney took advan- Sible imitation t0 the NCAA : . roundedouttheUKscoring. team. But. he added, his club best . ‘ . '
tage of the ”“4331, indoor courts, Championships in Oklahoma City. UK’s P l V t ll . , "M “"‘R,’ “m" “‘" Compared to the more difficult the Hilltoppers in two-of-three ‘ '
using his booming serve to easily May 13-21- , au arga re urns a V0 ey m yesterday 5 match against F10" course during the Southeastern lnvi- rounds over the weekend. '. -.

ida. UK defeated the Gators, 6-3. - .
Baseball team back in thick of race ’ '
O s
. . . ’ Basketball players plead innocent .. -
takes on Loursvrlle Cardinals today mam an _ as. The pins any on m ~
ketball stars David Dominique day on which the University Sen- and Craig Bourgeois. 21. alleged- ‘ ‘

The Kentucky baseball team —-——————— however. must finish their season at and John “Hot Rod“ Williams ate met to ratify President ly the c