xt7f1v5bgc3v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7f1v5bgc3v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1989-11-22 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, November 22, 1989 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 22, 1989 1989 1989-11-22 2020 true xt7f1v5bgc3v section xt7f1v5bgc3v  

 

Net. Xe".- No; 75

Established 1894

University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky

Independent since 1971

Wednesday, November 22, 1989

 

Study shows seat belts save lives, money

By TONJA WILT
Campus Editor

Seat belts can save lives as well
as taxpayers’ dollars, according to a
study released yesterday by the AI-
bert B. Chandler Medical Center.

The study, “University of Ken-
tucky Traffic Injury Cost Study,”
examined physician and hospital
fees for patients at the Medical
Center who did or did not wear seat
belts at the time of their accidents.
Costs at other hospitals and reha-
bilitation centers were not consid—
ered by the study.

“It does no good for anyone to
come and ask our opinion on
something unless we can provide
that opinion based on scientific in-

Courses
on black
culture

popular

By CHRISTOPHER JOHN FARLEY
USA TODAY/Apple College
information Network

The study of black culture is en-
joying a resurgence on many US.
campuses, thanks in part to the
growing numbers of black academ-
ics teaching the courses and to
white students enrolling in the
courses.

Introduced in the 19603, black
studies courses have been allowed
by many universities to slip in the
past 20 years. But now, “There's a
tendency in many instances to up
grade programs,“ said Nellie
McKay, a professor of US. and
Afro-American literature at the
University of Wisconsin.

McKay researched a dozen black
studies departments on Midwestern
campuses as part of a Ford Founda-
tion study and found that depart-
ment officials “were all anxious to
improve what they had and make it
stronger."

Ohio State University is offering
more courses and programs through
its three-year—old Black Studies
Community Extension Center. In a
primarily black section of Colum-
bus, Ohio, the center gives stu-
dents firsthand experiences, such as
watching a civil rights group in ac-
tion or observing the workings of a
welfare agency.

“We started with only a few
courses at the center; now we have
about a dozen," said William Nel-
son, a political science professor
who teaches in Ohio State's black
studies department. “The center al-
lows students to apply much of the
theory they get in classrooms in a
practical way.”

The classes often enjoy broad
student support, according to lo-
seph Russell, executive director of
the National Council on Black
Studies.

“More institutions are seeing
increases in non-minority students
taking these classes,” Russell said.
“Part of this is due to university
policies making them required parts
of the core curriculum."

The Ford Foundation study found
that white students make up half of
many classes in black culture.

Also contributing to the resur-
gence of black studies courses is
the rise of a generation of black ac-
ademics schooled in the 19605 and
19703, a reaction to escalating
campus racism and the popularity
on campus of black women writers
such as Toni Morrison. author of
Beloved. and Alice Walker, author
of The Color Purple and The Tem-
ple of M y Familiar.

formation,” said Dr. Emery Wil-
son, dean of UK's College of Medi-
cine.

“We know that seat belts can
save lives, we know that (the use
of seat belts) decreases hospital
stays. But now we have evidence
that it also decreases the funding of
health care and it decreases the cost
of taking care of that number of pa-
tients,” Wilson said.

The study, conducted by Dr.
Marc Holbrook, associate professor
of emergency medicine, and Kathy
Liddle, a third-year medical student,
revealed that 41 percent of the ex-
penses accumulated by patients
without insurance are paid by the
govemment.

“Those patients who with a sub-

stantial, that is, a $1,000 or more
or half or more of the hospital bills
was paid for by Medicare, Medicaid
or written off as bad debts were
grouped into another category of
government share category," Hol~
brook said.

The study found that the average
health-care costs for patients not
wearing a seat belt were 4 1/2
times higher. The hospital stay for
those not wearing a seat belt was
four times higher, Holbrook said.

“When you can document that
(wearing seat belts) saves health
care cost, it is difficult not to advo-
cate this,” Wilson said.

“It may be your right to go
through a windshield, but the state
has to pick tip the cost."

“I feel that the increased use of
seat belts will substantially de-
crease both the medical cost and the
hospital utilization in automobile
crash trauma care," Holbrook said.

“In the past 10 years, I can count
on one hand the number of faces I
have sewn back together that were
wearing their seat belts at the time
of the crash."

Data were collected for the pro-
ject Jan. 3i through May 31 in
which the following criteria were
considered: age. sex, hospital bill,
doctor bill, length of stay, whether
the patient was wearing a scat belt
and whether tlic patient came to the
(handler Medical Center first.

Data was taken from 25‘) of the
294 obscrvcd cases,

 

 

 

BATTLE FOR THE BARREL

 

Wildcats
prepare
for UT

By CHRIS HARVEY
Senior Stall Writer

When UK meets the No. 8
Tennessee Volunteers in Satur-
day’s 3:30 pm. finale in Corn-
monwealth Stadium, the circum»
stances surrounding the game
will be all too familiar.

Once again. UK (6-4, 2-4
Southeastern Conference) is out
of the running for a bowl bid and
is sputtering. And Tennessee (8-
1,4-1 in SEC) is in line for a
bowl (Cotton Bowl) anti is a sol-
id 7-point favorite to give the
Cats their fifth loss on the sea-
son.

UK quarterback Freddie Maggard looks over the Florida defense last Saturday in Gainsville, Fla.
UK lost the game 38—28. The Wildcats close the season Saturday at home against Tennessee.

Johnny Majors is worried about
his team‘s chances for a victory
in Saturday’s game, which will
be televised on ESPN.

“I look for the Kentucky team
to be at their best against us,"
said Majors, who has won eight
of the last 10 games against UK.
“This is going to be a whale of a
ball game. They don't give up a
big play very often, and you
must execute extremely well on
offense against them.

“You better be ready to tighten
your chin straps real good and
play tough against Kentucky,
particularly with the hard-nosed
football that Jerry Claiborne and
his staff teach."

When talking about UT, Clai»
borne is not at a loss for words,
either.

“They‘ll be the second best
football team that we’ve played
this year. right behind Alabama,"
said Claiborne, who is 1-8
against UT in his career as a head
coach. ”They are a solid team in

 

CHUCK PERRY Kerrie- S'vi“

big challenge tor us."

On offense, UT presents IJK
with the challenge ol stopping
sophomore quarterback Andy
Kelly and freshman running back
Chuck Webb.

Kelly, who replaced former
starter Stcrling licnton in mid-
season, has thrown for blih‘ yards
on 5‘) of 07 passing.

“The big difference in the team
that lost to llama (4730i and the
team tlicy have right now, is
Kelly." (.‘laibornc said. “lie has
done a super ,lt‘l‘ of running their
football team. llc‘s coitiplctcd
ovcr (ill percent of his passes and
is a good .iihlctc."

Kelly will sometimcs linc up
iii a shotgun and thcu \l.ll\l\*lek
llic‘ l‘iiiillitill.

Kelly has a talented stable of
wide rctcivcrs ill seniors 'l‘errcncc
Cleveland and l‘homas “TD"
Woods. Woods has caught 32
balls for 383 yards. Wllllc‘ Cleve-

 

BELTED

 

Treated and Released
UK Crash Injury Cost Study

79%
\

NOT BELTED

 

 

Cupboards are bare
at food agencies

By MITCHELL LANDSBERG
Associated Press

There will be a big spread this
Thanksgiving at the soup kitchens.
homeless shelters and food pantries
where many Americans now spend
their holidays. For those in need. it
truly may be a time to give
thanks.

But it is a time of worry for
many of those who serve the
needy. This has been a year oi red
ink for the nation’s food banks.
whose generosity has not been
matched by the corporations or
government agencies that supply
them,

Second Harvest. the Chicago—
based distributor of surplus food
that is the largest single supplier
tor the most food banks, expects to
distribute in percent lcss food this
ycar than the last _. the first tlx“
. line iti its history.

lhe dcclinc would bc even larger
were ll not for a spurt ot corporate

charity follow'ing Hurricane Hug»
and the Northern California carill-
quake, Second Harvest oilictals
say.

Food bankers blame part of 1’ c
decline on a ircn/it-d pace oi .orpo-
rate takeovers that h;:\ i-flt lwd in-
dustry CXCCIIII\'L‘\ glued to the b
tom line and less ct'likk‘fii ‘.l
the needy,

‘l think Ci.‘l'l‘0.'lllli\:"-\ n m t ::s
generous as they ’ ' " '
;‘.tsl." said Rodnex . ,
tivc director ol tbs til Eamon xii .
l‘ood Bank, where c t1tr'ib.;t: i.»
were down by about ~‘l p l',""‘. 'w
the end oi Scptenibt‘r.

Donations have patio-d u;- «glit-
is since then but are tar tr. ~: Hitch
t'ig Oklahoma‘s Thin; donors! t< '
l‘t‘in, BH'L‘IH \Littl ”i l’t.‘
litc‘ agencies Ill;ll ‘Ac
giving out lcs~.".‘ ‘ 1'

lirtce. ti poor timid "
pct-it able tt‘ tr l’. ,i .
bread with shunts ,3 '

~. .‘ \l\\\

.il‘u ‘li!

rl'lllt"\

\'C .t' l 'l.”

Galbraith announces
his gubernatorial bid

By GREGORY A. HALL
Stall Writer

l‘roclaimtng that the time tor a
change III attitudes toward marigua—
na has come, lesington lawyer
(iatcw‘ood Galbraith ollictall) an-
nounccd his candidacy lor the i‘l‘ll
Democratic gtilk‘t’ttatorial pi'itiiary.

(ialliraitli told about 5ft support“
crs at the l.c‘.\lllL‘lt)Il (‘ivic (‘cittcik
Heritage Hall that he tavors lcgalv.»
ing the sale and taxation of mari-
juana to adults to raise new tax rcv-
cnucs for education.

Galbraith's only other political
campaign was an unsuccessful bid
for Commissioner of Agriculture in
1983.

lutii‘ldiili s ::.: t: _;:
allitttltl l‘t‘ “Li‘a‘ti ,tlni timid”
cash crop ' in tlic statc i:
it should be g‘ltmt. til i..:.
Les and sold to u;
would act
il‘liiti) In'r P

a t: ..:‘_: s: .. .;
l i

‘tliiu t..

Ll\

;‘l;iccd i‘li train] . in;
\lltl.

\r.

nttltlttttlnt ltt\.
loud ctlticatioii .i: :1'
not be sold to llliltx‘l‘ : and
Dccriitiiiitiltriitg mainland at .~
would help the natntzi s war \'
drugs. Galbraith said
“The most cllcctivc tilill'iiltlgi
program possible i~ to ruin».
marguana smokers as a butter A me
See GALBRAITII, Page 5

STEVE SAWMW SM

And once again, UT coach Gatewood Galbraith announces his gubernatorial candidacy last

night at Lexmgion‘s Heritage Hall.

Scc WITH, Page i

 

 

See BLACK, Page 2 every area. It will definitely be a

 

Book on Miles Davis

reveals stormy career.
Review, Back page.

Lady Kat basketball

opens season Friday.
Story. Page 3.

 

 2 - Kentucky Kernel, Wednesday, November 22, 1989

 

Black studies
are popular

Continued from Page 1

“Black studies and women’s stud-
ies have found common ground in
black women‘s fiction, thereby ex-
panding the market, the readership
and the student interest for all of
us.” said Henry Louis Gates, a sen-
ior Andrew W. Mellon fellow at
the National Humanities Center.

The new interest in black studies
differs from the upswing in the
19605 because “there is now a gen-
eration of scholars in black studies
who have the right credentials for
getting high-powered faculty ap-
pointments." said Sheila Biddle,
program officer for the Ford Foun.
dation. “When black studies first
took off, it was very much a pro-
test movement and programs and
departments were conceded as a way
of keeping the peace or restoring
the peace," Biddle said.

Proponents of black studies say a
college experience is incomplete
without at least one class in the
discipline.

".-\s long as we teach American
history without the perspective or
involvement of blacks. we‘re going
to teach a very skewed and biased
American history that is only par-

'3’
9. . e f"'

 

at «(2..

- ”x" ’ ‘*'?w

MARCHING PROUD: The UK Marching Band plays during Saturday's game at Florida following a
bus trip that included a three—hour traffic delay on Interstate 65 and a broken-down van.

~n

CHU ' 'T'K'lrnel all

 

 

tially true." said Darlene Clark
lline. a history professor at Michi-
gun State L'iii‘.ersit_\.

GOOD LUCK ON FINALSB E T T E R

 

The Kentucky Kernel

Editor in Chief
Executive Editor
Assoerate Editor
Campus Editor
Editorial Editor
Sports Editor

Arts Editor

Assistant Arts EditOr
Photography Editor

Adviser

Advertising Director
Assistant Advertising Director
Production Manager

weekly during the eight-week summer sessmn

Third-class postage paid at Lexmgton, KY 40511. Mailed subscription rates
are $30 per year.

The Kernel is pnnted at Standard Publishing and Printing, 534 Buokman St,
Shepherdsville, KY a0165

Correspondence should be addressed to the Kentucky Kernel. Room 035
Journalism Building, University of Kentucky, Lexington KY 405060042. Phone
(606) 257-2871,

C.A. Duane Boniter
Brian Jent
Elizabeth Wade
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Barry Reeves

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Evelyn Quillen

The Kentucky Kernel is published on class days during the academic year and

 

 

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I One large single topping of your chokx,
I original crust pim. Dina in or take out.
Coupon may not be used with any other
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Coupon expires 12/31/89.

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268-14.“

Many food agencies
are facing shortages

weekly food bag from a charitable
organization. Now, the bag may
contain two leaves of bread —— but
no meat, Bivens said.

“The ultimate loser is, obvious-
ly, the most needy of all,” said Ke-
vin Fagan, director of development
for the Greater Philadelphia Food
Bank, where donations are down at
least 15 percent from last year.

The Philadelphia organization is
fairly typical of the 200 food banks
that have sprung up around the na~
tion since the first one was esta-
blished in Phoenix in 1967.

About half the Philadelphia
bank's food comes from the Second
Harvest, which collects products
that are considered unmarketable by
major corporations. Such food
might be mislabeled; underweight
or overweight; too close to its ex-
piration date; or an item that has
been discontinued or repackaged.

The other half of the bank’s do-
nations come from local sources:
supermarkets, local manufacturers,

charitable organizations or private
individuals.

All the food is distributed to a
network of local organizations that
are involved, in one way or another.
with feeding the needy.

The federal g0vcmment used to
supply a Substantial portion of the
food given out by private organiza-
tions, but that amount has been
shrinking. Second Harvest officials
say they have received 172 million
pounds of surplus government food
in 1987, but half that amount the
following year and this year.

The US. Department of Agricul-
ture said that it will distribute about
239 million pounds of food to cha-
ritable organizations this year, down
from about 272 million pounds the
year before.

The main reason for the decline,
USDA spokesman Phil Shanholtzer
said, is a sharp drop in the amount
of surplus dairy products. is partly
because of a change in federal price
support payments.

Blood test on driver involved
in accident to be studied

Staff reports

The blood sample analysis of a
driver involved in a fatal accident
near UK’s campus last Saturday
night won’t be completed by the
Kentucky State Police for at least
two weeks, according to Officer
Omer Cowherd, an accident investi-
gator for the Lexington-Fayette Ur—
ban County police.

UK student Thomas Michael
Goeghegan, 22, was struck by a car
while crossing the intersection of
Euclid and Woodland avenues Sat-

 

 

the
Kentucky Kernel

we
mean
business

call 257-2872

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

urday night. Lexington police Offi-
cer Joseph Carr said Goeghegan was
crossing the intersection against the
traffic light.

Goeghegan was pronounced dead
at 8:52 pm. at Good Samaritan
Hospital, according to Fayette
County deputy coroner Charles
Howell.

Blood samples taken from the
driver of the car, a 17-year-old Lex-
ington male, were sent to the Ken-
tucky State Police Crime Laborato-
ry for analysis.

Kernel
Personals

keep in touch

 

r

 

The Kentucky Kernel...

 

Wishes our advertisers,
niversity stud

& staff a

ents, faculty,

Happy Tflanfis‘givin‘q.

—————g=l

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

  

 

7 SPORTS

WWW. main-s

Bury New.
Sports Editor

With bowl picture fading, UK seniors look to Tennessee

Continued from Page one

land has caught five for 78. Junior
Alvin Harper, freshman Carl Pick-
ens and senior Greg Amsler also are
targets that Kelly goes to with ef-
fectiveness.

Webb, a 5-10, 197-pound fresh-
man, has rushed for 1,112 yards and
has established himself as one of
the best backs to play for Majors.

“Chuck Webb has unlimited po-
tential as an offensive back and has
already realized some of the that po-
tential," said Majors. “He has ex-
plosive speed and acceleration, as
well as a change of pace in the
open field."

UK defensive tackle Oliver Bar-

 

UK-Tennessee

Records: UK 6-4, 24 SEC,
Tennessee 8-1, 4-1.
When: 3:30 pm.
Saturday.

Where: Commonwealth
Stadium.

Radio: Live on
WVLK-AM/FM wrth
Caywood Ledlord and
Dave Baker.

Television: Live on ESPN
with Tim Brando and Vince
Dooley.

 

 

nett said Webb’s talent is compara-
ble to University of Florida run-
ning back Emmitt Smith.

“He's bigger and stronger than
Smith, and Enirnitt hurt us last
week, so we know what he's capa-
ble of doing against us," Barnett
said.

On defense the Vols line up in a
4-3 defensive formation, spear—
headed by ends Marion Hobby and
Tracy Hayworth. The two have led
a defense that‘s been giving up
18.9 points a game and 383.2 yards
overall.

“Those two are fine football
players," Claiborne said. “They do
a good job of blitzing the quarter-
back. We tried to recruit them."

To counter UT's defense, Clai-
borne said that he’ll continue to do
what he does best — mix the run-
ning and passing games up.

The secondary, which has inter-
cepted nine passes, is led byjunior
Preston Warren.

If UK can pull off the upset,
many streaks will be broken.

-UT has not been beaten in the
month of November since UK
squeaked out a 17-12 win in 1984.

-No UK team has beaten the
Vols on TV.

oUK has not beaten Tennessee
and received the Beer Barrel, which
is given to the winner, since 1981.

To bring the Beer Barrel back to
Lexington, Claiborne said UK

Race for the Heisman Trophy is between
Ware and Thompson, according to survey

By MIKE LOPRESTI
USA TODAY/Apple College
Information Network

The Heisman Trophy apparently
is a two-man race to the wire.

Houston quarterback Andre Ware
and Indiana running back Anthony
Thompson, record-smashers of dif-
ferent stripes, appear to be neck and
neck with only nine days before
Heisman ballots are due at the
Downtown Athletic Club in New
York City.

A Gannett News Service survey
of 146 voters, more than 15 per-
cent of the Heisman electorate,
found that Thompson with 43 first-
place votes and 210 points overall,
and Ware with 48 first-place votes
and 197 points.

The poll results were determined
by using three points for first, two
for second and one for third.

Fighting for a distant third were
Notre Dame quarterback Tony Rice
with 23 first places and 107 points
and West Virginia quarterback Ma-
jor Harris with 11 first places and
102 points.

Rice, 27-2 as a starter for the
No. 1 Irish, has the best chance of
making up ground this week with a
strong showing at Miami in a na-
tionally televised showdown.

But it may be too late for Rice
because deadline for votes to be re-
ceived is 5 pm. Nov. 30, and
many voters may mail their ballots
this week.

So it likely will be Thompson.
Or Ware.

Much could depend on the deci-
sions of East Coast voters, many
of whom professed to be undecided.

Neither Indiana nor Houston has
ever had a player finish in the top
five of Heisman voting.

“1 don't even think about things
like that," Thompson said when
told about the poll results. “All I
think about is winning games, and
if the Heisman comes along, that's
fine.”

The closest finish in Heisman
history was 1985 when Auburn
running back Bo Jackson edged
Iowa quarterback Chuck Long by
45 points.

Thompson has set NCAA career
records this season for touchdowns
and points. He has 25 TDs, has
rushed for 1,696 yards and caught
31 passes. His NCAA Division I
record 377 yards rushing against
Wisconsin two weeks ago may
have pushed him into a narmw
lead.

Ware has made Houston’s run-
and—shoot offense into the nation‘s
most prolific attack, with 40 touch—
down passes and 3,824 yards. He
has broken 15 Southwest Confer~
ence records and has a chance of
breaking 15 NCAA marks.

One of Ware's best statistics may
be largely unknown -- only 12 in-
terceptions in 464 pass attempts.

Both players clearly have strong
cases.

But Ware has some unique draw-
backs that may be hurting his
chances: Houston’s probation and
banishment from television.

That apparently has put some
bias in the minds of some voters,
who are refusing to vote for Ware
in any position. Thompson had
fewer first-place votes but was
named on eight more ballots.

Thompson (lid better in the Mid-
west, as expected. Ware did better
in the Southwest. as expected.
What may decide it is the Far West,
where Thompson took 14 first-
place votes to Ware’s five.

Lady Kats tip off
season this weekend

Start reports

The Lady Kats take the basket-
ball floor for the first time as a unit
this weekend in the 13th annual
O’Charley’s/Lady Kats Invitational
Tournament at Memorial Coli-
seum.

UK will play at about 8 pm.
against Kentucky State University
following the Missouri-Evansville
game at 6 pm. The consolation
game will be at 7 pm. Saturday,
with the championship following
at about 8 pm.

The Lady Kats have won 10 con-
secutive LKlTs after losing to Ala-
bama in 1978 and Dayton in 1979.

Missouri looms as the biggest
threat to UK’s reign, as the Tigers
return three starters from last year’s
17-12 squad. Senior Marcia Brooks,
a 5-6 guard, averaged 8.7 points and
4.3 rebounds and will be counted
on for leadership. She earned All
Big Eight honorable mention last
season. Junior Lisa Sandbothe, a 6-
1 post player, averaged 12.2 points
and 6.5 rebounds finishing the sea-
son by being placed on the all Big-
8 tournament team scoring 43
points in two tournament games.

Kentucky State is the only team
in the LKlT to have previously
faced the Lady Kats. The Thoro-
brettes were beaten 92-53 last year
at the Coliseum. KSU lost three
starters, but return senior forward
Marjorie Creswell, 12.2 points and
2.8 rebounds, and senior center Tra-
cy Thomas, 12.1 points 8.5 re-

bounds.

Still, third—year KSU coach Oscar
Downs said he is looking for im-
provement on last year's season.

“We have a lot of talented people
returning, and hopefully our new
people can pick up the slack from
what we lost," he said.

Evansville is looking for its
fourth consecutive winning season,
but it must cope with losing four
starters. Five freshmen are on the
IO-player roster, which is headlined
by Diane Starry. A 6-foot junior
forward, Starry averaged 8.2 points
and 4.4 rebounds last season, de-
spite having a bout with mononu-
cleosis and a sprained ankle.

UK also has a freshmen-
dominated squad, with six first-year
players on its I4-mcmber roster.
Leading the UK attack will be soph-
omore guard Kristi Cushenbcrry,
whose 12.9 point average led the
team in scoring last year. Also re-
turning for UK is Vanessa Foster-
Sutton, a 6-foot senior center, who
led the team last year in rebounding
with 6.1 a game and averaged 8.5
points a game.

The Lady Kats return eight letter
winners.

“An important aspect to any team
is chemistry," UK coach Sharon
Fanning said. “Our seniors want to
win and should be good leaders for a
relatively young team. But look for
some surprises from our freshman
class. They expect a lot from them-
selves and they came to Kentucky
to make a difference."

 

the Kentucky Kernel

   

we are students

 

Thompson and 5-5 Indiana finish
the season Saturday at home
against Purdue.

Ware and 7-2 Houston host Tex-
as Tech (ii-2), then finish Dec. 2 at
Rice, the same day the Heisman
winner is announced.

Florida running back Emmitt
Smith, probably hurt by the shad-
ow of scandal over the Gator pro-
gram, was fifth in the survey with
41 points. Rounding out the top 10
were Air Force quarterback Dee
Dow-is with 27, Notre Dame receiv-
cr-retumcr Raghib Ismail with 19,
Colorado quarterback Darian Hagan
and Brigham Young quarterback Ty
Detmer with 16 each and Michigan
State linebacker Percy Snow with
10.

A sampling of voter opinion:

-Buck Turnhull, Des Moines
Register: “Andre Ware is the only
player among the top candidates
who has consistently racked up
Heisman numbers."

oBiII Jauss, Chicago Tribune:
“Thompson does everything that
can be asked of any player."

-Charlie Smith, Tulsa World:
“Ware has more numbers than a 60-
year-old madam."

-Mike Bianchi, Florida Today:
“Anthony Thompson could run
through the Berlin Wall."

~WaIly Hall. Arkansas Democrat:
“A bad game for Ware is 258 yards

through the air. Most of the other
candidates would declare a 258-yard
game a career.”

-Dave Newhouse, Oakland Tri-
bune: “I feel Thompson has the
fewest horses around him than any
of the other Heisman candidates.
Anthony Thompson wasn’t play-
ing for a football factory. So I gave
it to him.”

-Bill King, Gainesville (Fla.)
Sun: “If Houston weren’t on proba-
tion, Andre Ware would be Doug
Flutie."

~Tom Kubat, Lafayette (1nd.)
Journal & Courier: “Put Thomp-
son on Notre Dame’s roster, and
people would go ga-ga.”

~Mike DeCourcy, Pittsburgh
Press “Major Harris is clearly the
outstanding player in the country,
and I don‘t even think it‘s close.
Major hasn‘t had a lot of help.
He’s done it on his own."

doe Tybor, Chicago Tribune:
“Rice continues to get the job
done, week after week. Whatever it
takes, Tony Rice does it. You can't
ask for any more than that.”

-MaI Florence, Los Angeles
Times: “I‘m not big on numbers.
Rice is a winner. Without him,
Notre Dame is not unbeaten and
(not) No. 1. Andre Ware has the
numbers, but who’s be beaten?"

 

BETTER

STUDY

must force things happen — not
wait for UT to make a mistake.

“We’ve got to make our own
breaks," Claiborne said. “The
players have got to get theirselves
fired up, too.“

In fact, it is that last idea that
UK is banking on for momentum
in hopes of making up for the loss
of a bowl game.

Although UK probably will not
receive a bowl bid. UK's seniors
are hoping to put that behind them.

“It‘s (no bowl) our fault,” UK
senior defensive back Ronnie R0-
binson said. “We basically put our-
selves out of it but we deserve
to go out winners."

“This is a real important game
for the seniors since it’ll be our last
games in Commonwealth," UK
senior running back Alfred Rawls
said. “I'm sure all the seniors will
want to go out on a good note."

“We‘ve never beaten UT,” UK
senior linebacker Craig Benzinger
said. "It’s definitely a big game for

u

US.

According to many of the
players, beating UT will make
them feel better from a won-loss
standpoint.

“The Tennessee game is impor-
tant to us because we want to be a
7-4 team instead of a 65 team,"
Barnett said,

“It’s a lot better to end up 7-4
than 6-5. We haven't beat UT and
it would be good for the program
for us to go out with a win over
them," Robinson said.

Wildcat Notes:

-This is the 85m meeting be—
tween the two teams on the gridi-
ron. Tennessee leads series 52-23-
9.

-I.'T leads in games played at
Lexington. 24-153.

~UK senior offensive tackle Mike
Pfeifer was named to the Football
News All-America Team.

~About 2,000 seats are left in the
Student Section for Saturday's
game.

 

 

 

   

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 i \

4 — Kentucky Kernel, Wednesday, November 22, 1989

VIEWPOINT

Mlchael L. Jones
Editorial Editor

C.A. Duane Bonner
Editor in Chief

Brian Jem
Executive Editor

Elizabeth Wade
Associate Editor

Jeny Volgt
Editorial Cartoonist

Julie Eastman
Special Projects Writer

Tonia WIIt
Campus Editor

01! are ‘

 

 

MCHAEL CLEVINGER/Kernel Stall

Two~thirds of the homeless are single men. One-third to one-

hail are veterans

 

 

 

 

STEVE SANDERIKornel Stall

Since 1980, Budget Authority for all federal housing assis—
tance has been cut from $32 billion to $7.5 billion.

 

 

 

 

STEVE SANDERS/Kernel Stall

Evrdence shows that by 2003 there will be at least 18 million
homeless people. a 600 percent increase.

 

 

 

 

‘ Rememberjust how lucky y

It would be nice to think that everyone’s Thanksgiving
will be filled with family, friendship and food. It would
be nice to think that each UK student can go home this
weekend to greet a tearfully joyous mother and celebrate
the holiday.

For some, it might be pretty easy to think that way.

But for many others, reality presents a starkly different
picture.

There are many families without the means to have a
decent holiday meal —— or any meal, for that matter.
There are those who come from broken homes.

And there are those who have no home at all.

According to the Lexington Chapter of Housing Now,
there are at least 800 documented homeless people in
Lexington-Fayette County, and for every documented
homeless person there are two undocumented homeless
people.

Between 1986-87, there was a 26 percent increase in
the homeless population in Kentucky, and as of 1987,
35,837 people were without homes.

There are an estimated 3 million homeless adults in the
United States —— the land of opportunity -— and 500,000
ho