xt7b8g8fj947 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7b8g8fj947/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1993-08-30 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, August 30, 1993 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 30, 1993 1993 1993-08-30 2020 true xt7b8g8fj947 section xt7b8g8fj947  

,.-AW‘~> _ ,

 

Ke ntucky Ke rnel

AUG 3 0 1993

 

University to retain se

Consultants reject provost

 

By Brian Bennett
Senior Staff Writer

 

UK‘s sector system will remain
intact with more responsibilities
given to the Chancellors, thanks to
recommendations ntade by outside
consultants and accepted by UK
President Charles Wethington.

After weeks of interviewing more
than 60 administrators. faculty. stu-
dents and staff. the consultants con-
cluded that no major change is

Recruitment
effort adds 12
black faculty
to UK campus

 

By Don Puckett
Senior Staff Writer

 

UK‘s effort to recruit more black
faculty brought many new faces to
Kentucky this year. More than 20
blacks joined the UK faculty this
fall. including l2 on the Lexington
Campus.

Chancellor for the Lexington
Campus Roben Hemenway said the
goal of the recruitment effort is both
to increase the number of blacks at
UK and to attract the nation‘s top
biack scholars.

“I don't think you will find very
many institutions in the country that
have hired 42 tenure-track African-
American faculty in the last four
years.“ llemenway said.

“ln that sense. we‘re competing
well."

UK faces stiff competition for top
minority candidates because schools
across the nation are trying to diver-
sify their faculties.

“The faculty whom we have hired
come from excellent universities.
and we compete against the Ivy
league. Duke. Berkeley. to get
them." llemenway said.

“The people we‘ve hired are peo-
ple who have degrees from Har-
vard. Berkeley. Michigan. Arizona.

“You can go through the list of
where these people have been
trained and see a profile that is char-
acteristic of a good university," he
said.

llemenway also said UK‘s com-
mitment to research is one of the
reasons that many blacks are com-
ing to UK.

“In the order of universities that
are generating a demand (for black
faculty). the University of Kentucky
is at the high end of that order.

“We are one of only 70 universi-
ties that have been designated by
the Carnegie Foundation as a major
research university."

Lauretta Byars. vice chancellor
for minority affairs. said UK‘s re-
cruiting efforts reflect “the tremen-
dous commitment of the University
toward reaching its diversity goals
at a time when we‘ve had budget
cuts and the available pool of Afri-
can-American faculty members is
solimited."

Hemenway said many people de-
serve credit for the increase in black
faculty.

“Results of this sort are the prod-
uct of a coordinated effort." he said.

"The people who do the hiring
are the faculty at the department
and college levels. They should be
commended for these results.”

Hemenway said credit also is due
to UK President Charles Wething-
ton. whose office funds the first-
year salary of any newly hired black
faculty member in a tenure-track
position.

English department chairman Da-
vid Durant. whose department has
two new black faculty members this
fall. said the money from Wething-
ton's office provides a powerful in-
centive for departments to hire
blacks.

Soc FACULTY. Back Page

needed in University structure.

“We found the whole campus and
the whole system a very high-
quality system," said Robert Ber-
dahl. one of the two principal inves-
tigators for The Institute for Re-
search and Higher Education at the
University of Maryland.

The 66-page report. issued in
June. contained five recommenda-
tions for improvement. Those in-
cluded strengthening the chancel-
lor's roles with more duties.

Universityjotkentuek'

creating a President's Assistant for
Academic Affairs and slimming
down vice presidential duties and
salaries as opportunities permit.

Last week. Wethington an-
nounced that positions formerly lo-
cated in the Central Administration
would be transferred to the chancel-
lor sectors. Those positions includ-
ed public relations. development
and minority affairs.

UK currently divides administra-
tive duties among three sectors —
the Lexington campus. the Albert
B. Chandler Medical Center and the
Community College System. Each
sector is headed by a chancellor

 

 

who reports to the president.

Wethington also pledged to carry
out in the coming year another of
the consultants recommendations
— to explain the revised structure
to students. faculty and staff.

“I think there was not a good un-
derstanding of administrative struc-
ture in the past. and there won't be
a good understanding now unless I
take action to explain it to the Uni-
versity community." he said.

Wethington hired the consulting
firm in March after an exhaustive
Self-Study and various restructur-
ing committees offered their recom-
mendations for improvement.

 

©UDHII‘IG

SGA leader

says duties
replace sleep

 

By Caroline Shively
Staff Writer

Lance Dowdy paces up and
down his office. talking rapid-
fire on his cordless phone. As he
speaks. he jots appointments
down on his oversized desk cal-
endar. pins things on his bulletin
board and waves a student into
his office.

The school year barely has be-
gun and the Student Govem-
ment Association president al-
ready has logged in long days
and nights representing UK‘s

 

student body.
“lt's a crash course in time
management." Dowdy said.

“You have to be twice as disci-
plined as other students. You
don't get much sleep and a lot of
nights you have to stay up bum-
ing the midnight oil instead of
doing things with your friends."

Dowdy. a sixth-year business
management senior. was elected
in April with his running mate
Amber Leigh. a fifth-year soci-
ology senior.

He now is leaming how to
balance holding office as student
body president. representing the
University and a being a student.

“I'm just a student taking
classes." he said. “I‘m in the
same situation as other students.
I go through the same struggles
— paying bills. studying. I‘m
growing and learning as I go
through this."

Since aniving at UK in the
fall of 1988. Dowdy has been in-
volved in several organizations.
He has served as an SGA sena-
tor. the Alcohol Policy Revision
chairman of the Interfratemity
Council, a Bible study leader in
Campus Crusade for Christ and
a member and former president

 

Tflf MIDNIGHT Oll

Student Government Association President Lance Dowdy
says his office is ‘a crash course in time management.’

of Pi Kappa Alpha social fraternity.

As SGA president. Dowdy serves
with a young senate and 27 execu-
tive committees. He praised the
senators and other SGA members
for their work so far.

“You're only as strong a leader
as your followers are." he said.

Making strength a requirement of
the members of the organizations
he heads is something that separ-
ates him from other leaders. Dowdy
said.

“A lot of people don’t like strong
people around them because they
fear the competition." he said. “I
thrive on it because I ultimately
want to make myself better and the

 

KENNEL FILE ”0070

University better."

Strength is not the only re-
quirement Dowdy has for those
that follow him.

“l don‘t like yes—men." he
said. “I want people to improve
on my ideas. I think that atti-
tude breeds enthusiasm and gets
people more involved. It‘s a
God-given gift I have. People
come to me and sound comfon-
able talking to me."

Dowdy said he wants to
change the course that SGA has
been following for the past few
years and bring it back to its

See DOWDY. Back Page

ddebéndemsggpe” "97‘

ctor system

 

 

   

INSIE;

WEBSIOID: ;
Wt Jail Bart-a m
renowned talamhpta
University each ”8m 5 '-
go on sale today. flay. M
6

Fishbone's latest Manna ,
doesn't quite compel!“ the
Reality of my Surrounm. 7
Review, Page 6. ‘ .'

  
    
 
 
 
  
   
 
  
   
  
     

' e

SPORTS:
Dr. Produce answers all your
pressing sports questions.
Column. Page 3.

WEATHER:
Mostly sunny today; hi -_‘.
between 90 and 95. P
cloudy tonight; low .
70 and 75. Partly a ‘ ‘
tomorrow with a 3
chance of thun-

    

 

,u
3

One of the major tasks of the con-
sultants was to determine whether
UK would be best served by the
current three-sector system or by a
provost, a single academic head for
both the Lexington Campus and the
medical center.

A Lexington Campus task force
last year recommended the provost
system, as did several of those in-
terviewed by the consultants.

The consultants decided that a
provost system would not be effec-
tive because of the unique needs of
the medical center.

“It is simplistic to believe,“ the
report states. “that placing the deans

Monday. August 30. 1993

of the medical center under the au-
thority of a newly created provost
with llniversnywide responsibilities
will strengthen the health sciences
of the Lexington campus."

The report also stated that many
of the complaints heard were not
factually based.

“The discontents go beyond ques-
tions of organization to personali-
ties. to the style of leadership. to the
culture of the University. and to
simmering jealousies and conflicts
between the medical center and the

See SECTOR. Back Page

RHA continues
recycling effort

Last year’s program ‘successfal’

 

By Rachel Farmer
Contributing Writer

 

The Residence Hall Association
is sponsoring a recycling program
to reduce campus waste and in-
crease environmental awareness
among students.

Tracie Diamond. spokeswoman
for the program. said last year's
program was “very successful“ be-
cause overall student response was
greater than anticipated. As a re-
sult. expectations are very high this
year.

The program’s ultimate goal is to
be financially self-sufficient. Dia-
mond said. Currently. each student
pays about $2 in fees to subsidize
the effort.

Despite optimistic outlooks. or-
ganizers fear contamination of the
recycling containers. Last year.
some people mismatched recycla-
ble products in collection cans.
placing. for example. plastic and
paper in compartments for alumi-
num.

Trash also was found in some of
the bins. which cost the recycling
program extra money for sorting
fees.

For these reasons. collection con-
tainers. which are located both out-
side and inside residence halls. are
labeled. Outside bins also are
locked.

The program is not held responsi-
ble for items placed outside these
containers. Diamond said.

ltems that can be placed in the re-
cycling containers include

-White bond paper without dyes
and no more than 10 percent recy-
cled paper (some paper companies
provide this infonnation on packag-
ing). and notebooks without wire
spirals or other metal

ONewspaper without staples.
plastic bindings or colored glossy

pages

 

Recycling:

. White Bond Paper

. Newspapers

. Aluminum Soda Cons
. Plastic Drinking Bottles

OUT

. Dyed Paper, Notebook
Spirals. Fox Paper.
Envelopes

. Staples, Plastic
Binding. Colored and
Glossy Pages

. Rings and Tabs

 

 
 

 

 

“ARK TARTER/Kamot Staff
-Empty. trash~free aluminum
cans. preferably crushed

'Plastic uansparent drinking con-
tainers without plastic rings or lids
(Labels and black b 'n supports
may be kept on the Chimilncr.)

°Glass (collected only at Jewell
Hall).

See RHA. Back Page

Hurricane Emily headed for South Carolina

 

By Bruce Smith
Associated Press

 

CHARLESTON. SC. — Waves
along the shore weren‘t big enough
to interest surfers yesterday. but
Hurricane Ernily was on a blustery
path toward land. and coastal resi-
dents mshed to stock up on food
and supplies.

Late in the afternoon. the Nation-
al Weather Service declared a hurri-
cane watch from Cape Romain.
about 20 miles north of Charleston.
to Fenwick lsland on the Delaware-
Maryland line.

North Carolina officials also or-
dered an island campground evacu-
ated Sunday.

A watch means hurricane condi-
tions pose a threat.

A warning means hunicane con-
ditions with sustained wind of more
than 74 mph are expected within 24
hours.

Some. remembering 1989‘s dead-
ly Hurricane Hugo. made plans to
leave.

“I wouldn't want to go through
the tea again. It‘s easier to get out
lhll to stay." said William Holden,

who left his North Mynle Beach
condominium to return to his home
in New Jersey.

The storm smashed into Charles-
ton in September 1989.

From the Caribbean islands to the
Camlinas. it caused at least 55.9
billion in damage and killed 85 peo~
ple.

At 5 pm. yesterday. Emily was
located near latitude 3l.2 north and
longitude 70.l west. or about 420
miles southeast of Cape Hatteras.
N.C.

Emily was moving west.
northwest at 9 mph. lts top sus-
tained wind speed was about 80
mph with some strengthening ex-
pectcd.

A National Hurricane Center ad-
visory projected the storm could
make landfall tomorrow. possibly
in North Carolina or even much far-
ther north.

North Carolina officials ordered
the evacuation of the National Park

Dare County. where much of the
chain of fragile bmicr islands
called the Outer Banks is loomed,

said an evacuation would probably
be ordered overnight for all or pan
of the county.

“Right now. you wouldn‘t even
know if anything is going on." said
Andy McCann. owner of the Nags
Head Pier.

“The ocean is flat. There aren‘t
even any surfers out there."

Some appeared not to heed the
advice of Dare County officials.
who asked vacationers with plans to
visit the Outer Banks in the next
few days to reconsider.

Liz Koester of Atlantic Realty in
Kitty Hawk said people continued
to check into beach cottages.

Meanwhile. Kellogg Supply
Company in Kill Devil Hills. nor-
mally not open on Sunday. opened
at noon to sell sheets of plywood.

The population of Dare County is
at its peak right now. more than
100.000 including summer resi-
dents.

The Federal Emergency Manage-
ment Agency sent several trucks
with emergency supplies from Mb-
rni I) Thomasvillc. Ga.

They will be dispatched when it's
cleu which areas are most affected
by the storm, said FEMA spokes-

man Monic Goodman.

ln Charleston. South Carolina
Electric & Gas Co. made sure its
generators and supplies were in
place.

The Navy said 16 ships and sev-
en submarincs from the Charleston
Navy Base were ready to head to
sea if necessary to avoid the storm.

The (‘oast Guard reminded boat-
ers not to try to ride out the stonn in
small craft.

A dozen people died dunng Hugo
trying to do that. the agency said.

The Yugoslav freighter Kapetan
Martinoyic was also ordered to
weigh anchor and leave the harbor
to ride out the stonn.

The SOD-foot freighter has sat in
the harbor since last fall when it
was detained by the federal govem-
ment. which froze $450 million in
former Yugoslav assets.

Mary (‘onnclly of R&B Croa-
tiorts. a T-shin printing company.
had given scant thought to a Hurri-
cane Fmily T-shirt.

“l’ve passed around a few
droughts in my head.“ she said
“But right now I‘m more concerned
with whatlnoedtodotogetpreu

pared.”

 
    

    

 

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CAMPUS CALENDAR

A AIIAtA AA A

I'lllIll

AAA ‘llLI tl AppA At AAA "AAA Monday edition of lhe Kenluclty Kern AI All organizations wtsliimj to publish nieelIIAg..
AAA- A AA AA VAA III AIAu spurtmg events must have all AnlornA than to \A8 room 203 lweelt pm)! to publication

 

Anniversary
march marks
a crossroads

 

 

IA_RT & MOVIES

Monday 8/30

~Tickets on sale for
Student Activities Board
Spotlight Jazz. Tickets
for individual shows are
on sale at TicketMaster.
For more information,
call 257-8427.

oTickets on sale for
Student Activities Board
Next Stage Series at
TicketMaster. For more
information. call 257-
8427.

°Exhibit: Joseph Mal-
lord William Turner
works from Liber Studior-
um. UK Art Museum
through Oct. 3. For more
information, call 257-
5716.

 

Thursday 9/2

-Auditions for Dance
Emsemble, 4-6 pm.
Barker Hall

 

INTRAMURAL
SPORTS

 

 

 

Tuesday 8/31

-Tug 'O War entires
due, 145 Student Cen-
ter. For more informa-
tion, call 257-2898.

Wednesday 9/1

~Tug ’0 War competi-
tion, 4 pm, Seaton
Field.

Thursday 9/2

vFlag football manag-
er’s meeting, 5 pm,
Worsham Theatre.

-Flag football entries
due. For more informa-
tion, call 257-2898.

°Co-rec flag football
entries due. For more in-
formation, call 257-2898.

  

   

NEXT STAGE SERIES
1993

CATCH THE EXCITEMENT

LLA
E:
O
L)
Z
UJ

 

SPORTS

 

 

 

Wednesday 9/1

OUK volleyball vs. Mia-
mi (Ohio), 7 pm. at Mia-
mi.

Friday 9/3

OUK volleyball vs. No-
tre Dame, 8 pm. at Me-
morial Coliseum.

Saturday 9/4
OUK football vs. Kent
State, 7 pm. at Common-

1993 ART DEPARTMENT
FACULTY

&

GRADUATE STUDENT

EXHIBITION

Man Eating Soup detail: Deborah Frederick

BARNHARDT GALLERY
AUG. 30 - SEPT. 10

*******************************

 

By Sonya Floss
Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON — Two notices
were served on the civil rights
movement at the 30th anniversary
march on Washington: the young
may want to take over, but the old
aren‘t ready to retire.

“We believe this march is not the
benediction, but a rebirth," said .io-
seph Lowery, 70, president of the
Southern Christian Leadership Con-
ference for the past 17 years.

There was some talk that maybe.
just maybe. the movement‘s elders
would “pass the torch" of responsi-
bility for social change at this addi-
tional celebration of 1963 and the
dream of equality Martin Luther
King Jr. embossed on the nation's
psyche.

Yet on Saturday, fond remem-
brance prevailed, and the old guard
made it clear that fond remem-
brance will endure.

“We're going to celebrate the
march on Washington until there‘s
nothing left to celebrate," declared
Benjamin Hooks, 68, who retired
from the NAACP and resurfaced at
the helm of the Leadership Confer-
ence on Civil Rights.

The young, however, made a few
things clear, too.

“We let everybody know we will
challenge, seriously, their leader-
ship,“ said Carl Upchurch, 35, head
of the National Urban Peace and
Justice Movement and the most vo-
cal critic of Saturday's festivities.
“They're on notice now."

Upchurch, along with three other
leaders from his group of reformed
street gang members, appeared at
Saturday‘s march, even though they
had said they weren’t coming.

They stood with NAACP exec-
utive director Benjamin Chavis, 45.
who pledged his group’s support of
their efforts to curb violence in the
inner city.

“We have worked with these
gang members for over a year,"
Chavis said. “They are my friends. I
intend to work with them in every

See CIVIL, Back Page

 

 

 

 

 

Rea d the Kernel Read the Kernel Read the Kernel Read the Kernel
Read the Kernel Read the Kernel Read the Kernel Read the Kernel

 

 

 

SPECIAL EVENTS

 

 

Monday 8/30

oAmerican Marketing
Association Membership
Drive begins.

Tuesday 8/31

-Tour of Margaret l.
King Library, 5:30-6:30
pm.

Wednesday 9/1

-Student Health Advi-
sory Council Health Fair.
For information, call 233-
5823.

-Student Activities
Board and WRFL-FM,
88.1, present Afterlife in
concert, noon-1 pm, Stu-
dent Center Lawn.

Friday 9/3

Student Activities
Board and WRFL-FM,
88.1, present Living | in
concert, noon-1 pm, Stu-
dent Center Lawn.

m

 

 

MEETINGS 8: LECTU RES

 

 

Monday 8/30

~Aikido classes, 8 pm,
Alumni Gym loft. For more
information, call 269-4305.

Tuesday 8/31
~Cosmopolitan Interna-
tional Student Club meet-
ing, 7:30 pm. 231 Stu-
dent Center. For more
information, call 257-1655.

Wednesday 9/1
°Student Against Viola-
tion of the Environment
meeting, 7 pm. 205 Stu-
dent Center.
-Aikido classes, 8
p.m.,Thursday

Society of Women
Engineers meeting, 7:30
pm, 323 Robotics Build-
ing.

olnformation session
on Fulbright, Marshall
and Rhodes scholar-
ships, 3 pm, Gaines
Center — 2266 E. Max-
well St. For more infor-
mation, call 257-8139.

Sunday 9/5

~Aikido classes, 8
pm, Alumni Gym loft.
For more information,
call 269-4305. Alumni
Gym loft. For more infor-
mation. call 269-4305.

 

WELCOME BACK

 
   

 

wealth Stadium.

 

 

 

 

 

We’re
T Back!

PHI KAPPA TAU is not new to the University of Kentucky.

In fact, our Fraternity maintained an active chapter at UK for 70 years, from
1920 to 1990. This fall, Phi Kappa Tau is re-establishing its tenth oldest
chapter. We are looking for a group of men who would welcome the challenge

 

of becoming Founding Fathers.

As a Phi Tau, you will be respected for who you are. You won't be asked to
conform to a cookie-cutter model or a lifestyle that is uncomfortable to you.
Rather, you will be eXpected to share in a brotherhood of men with a high
motivation for excellence as individuals and as a community. You will be
asked for the commitment of your distinctive personal style, achievements,
and abilities to make Phi Kappa Tau an ever stronger Fraternity.

WE INVITE YOU TO CONSIDER
PHI KAPPA TAU.

For more information, contact:
Mark Pontrlch, 233-2167

 

 

227 East Maxwell
or stop by the Office of Fraternity Affairs

PHI KAPPA TAU

THE FORCE OF MANY
THE POWER OF ONE

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Questions?
Dr. Produce

ofiers answers

 

Wronnlo Wrontmoro
Kernel Columnist

 

 

 

New semester heady in hand and
not quite bored with classes yet.
There must be a fresh green, spina-

chy-looking professor or therapist

out there with all the right answers
to our early-season athletic prob-
lems. Call him Dr. Produce.

Anxiety attack: Will the basket-
ball team go undefeated?

Dr. Produce: Jamal Mashbum is
no longer here. So, as fans, can you
accept losing seven games? Hope
so, because you will have to.

Restlessness I: Consider yourself

lucky if, between buying books and
daily hanging out at Add/Drop, you
were too tired to attend the nail-
biting, gut-wrenching 0-0 tie in the
Blue-White soccer scrimmage Sat-
urday.

If you were there. hope you ate a
meal before all the defensive “ex-
citement." Otherwise, you had to
stomach hunger pains as well as
those of boredom.

So give me a meaningful game to
attend. Anything except this misera-
ble wait. How long must we play
the “can I count to a bajillion by
ones" game before the first official
athletic event?

Dr. Produce: Wednesday it is.
Women’s volleyball team travels to
Miami, Ohio. Ilave time, do travel.
It‘s doubtful there will be any diffi-
culty in gaining admittance to this
match without Final Four or even
baseball atmosphere.

Restlessness II: When
Ricky P. unleash his team?

Dr. Produce: November 19. Ath-
letes in Action. Now relax. you
know the date. And, yes. you can
start the countdown.

Dying to know: Speaking of the
soccer team, what happened to the
sign posted at the soccer “facility"
from last year? It said not to loiter
around the field during practice.

Dr. Produce: People must have
misread the sign. thinking it said
during practice and during games.
You know, it’s not like those well-
mannered. clean-shaven. muscular
studs from Winchestcr’s towing
were yanking cars left and right so
everyone could make way to the
blue courts ——— basketball or tennis.

To answer the question, I‘m not
sure if the sign was removed for
good or until the season begins. Re-
gardless, it‘s missing. like the has-
ketball team was from campus.

Curiosity I: What? You mean it's
true? The basketball team was shel-
tered away from campus for about a
week before school began because
Wildcat Lodge was undergoing a
$100,000 renovation. making im—
pressive to prospective recniits?

Dr. Produce: Yes and yes. The
athletic department put those stu-
dent-athletes up at the Campbell
House Inn while the lodge was be-
ing beautified.

Yeah, I know. The damn place is
already equipped with everything an
athlete-student could want ex-
cept maybe a wing with a McDo-
nald‘s and an Osaka Health Spa
complete with American girls.

Curiosity II: Bigger question:
Would it have been reasonable to
move the team to a different campus
location and be treated as other stu-
dents would have been treated?

SPECIALIZED
HARDROCK

$29995

expires “WI/93

does

 

PURCHASE
OF SPECIALIZED
HELMET

'II III. III IIII III IIII III III III III III. III III III III

».~ ..~ w ‘Q«-% fl-IInhmu .u .. .‘ --. -

éil

 

   

 

KERNEL HLE PNOTO

The UK women' s and men ’s soccer teams had Blue-White scrimmages this weekend.

Dr. Produce. Yes

Curiosity III: Biggest question:
Since the athletic department paid
for the team's stay, would other UK
sports teams have received the
same treatment?

Dr. Produce: Probably not. My
crystal ball of lettuce tells me the
women's tennis team would have
been sleeping in the indoor tennis
facility.

Just Wondering: Is this 3 ~—
yawn, yawn —— gender equity prob:
lem?

Dr. Produce: No. Most other UK
teams would have been placed on
campus somewhere. Period. As for
gender equity. forget about it for
now. It's indomitable. It's needed.
It‘s financially impossible to com-
plete on a 50-50 scale. It‘s another
column. For now? Watch Oprah.

Football I: Billy Reed. Lexing-
ton HeraId-Leader sports columnist.
recently suggested the Wildcats

would go 7-4 this football season. Is
he OK?

Dr. Produce: At first, I thought
he meant the first 11 basketball
games. But if his 74 football pre-
diction is a serious one, something
may be wrong with him. This learn
has been ranked 80m out of 106 Di-
vision 1 teams by Sports Illustrated
and No. 13 on the list of 20 worst
teams by Penthouse. Seven wins,
four losses? If UK played Kent St.
all season, they might go 7-4.

Football II: UK senior Many
Moore has been heaped into a pile
of 48 players that have a chance to
win the 1993 Butkus Award. denot-
ing the nation‘s top linebacker. Is he
that good?

Dr. Produce: Moore has led the
SEC in tackles for two years run-
ning. Will Moore win? Not a

chance, but he definitely deserves to

be in the select group.

Football III: Football players

 

  

IEIBTUDVI

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have been seen around campus
sporting — what else -— blue and
white shins that say: Winners Wear
Blue. Are they?

Dr. Produce: Maybe as people.
Don‘t know them all well enough to
say. As a team? Don't want to pop
the Bubble of Hope, but 4-7 is fea-
sible, 5-6 at best.

Remember that when you start
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Wrennie Wrentmore is a journal-
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LEXINGTON HERALD-LEADE
r, l .

FK files detail CIA scramble

Agency had
large dossier
on Oswald

 

By James Diamond
Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON —-- Stamped “se-
cret" for more than 30 years. the
yellowed. dogeared documents on
the Kennedy assassination tell a sto-
ry of a CIA scrambling to protect
its sources — and its reputation.

The nation‘s premiere spy agency
had an extensive dossier on Lee
Harvey Oswald. Almost from the
moment the shots rang out killing
John F. Kennedy, the damage con-
trol began.

“When the name of Lee Oswald
was heard, the effect was electric."
one analyst wrote, recounting the
atmosphere in CIA stations on Nov.
22, 1963.

In the CIA's possession was in-
formation covering Oswald's defec-
tion to the Soviet Union in 1959,
his return to the United States in
1961 with a Russian wife. and his
trip to Mexico City seven weeks be-
fore the assassination.

In the months that followed. the
agency was under internal pressure
to explain why it hadn‘t r