xt7gf18sfc8v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gf18sfc8v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1983-04-13 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 13, 1983 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 13, 1983 1983 1983-04-13 2020 true xt7gf18sfc8v section xt7gf18sfc8v j _ .
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Vol. LXXXV, No. ISOWednesday, April 13, 1983 An independent student newspaper UniverSIty oi Kentucky, Lexmgton. Kentucky
I
, a to argue against regular UK-UL game
By MICKEYPA'I'I‘ERSON Hall said he inherited the policy when he became
l Sports Editor head coach and it was “evidently initiated for a rea- ‘
son."
__._____,_ ____ _M-.M._ “I see that tradition has served 15 well in the past."
he said. “I understand its reason as far as keeping Ken- .
Information for this story was also gathered by Assis- tucky as a national power. international prominence. of . »
tarit Sports Editor Dan Metzger. acceptance throughout the United States. and of the bor- ,r gum .-
der-to-border support that we have here in the state of .x’" l :5
If great athletes and coaches perform at their best in Kentucky. I see that being damaged by going to an in- l “ a. ‘3.“ ‘N ,
-. tough situations, UK head basketball coach Joe B. Hall state schedule not playing the inter-sectional powers we . .. j s
’ may well need to be at his best at tomorrow‘s UK Ath~ played in the past.“ “‘2; ,
‘ letics Association board meeting. UK regularly schedules national powers such as In- " “a. i ,
‘ The board is meeting to discuss the Board of Trust- diana. Notre Dame and Villanova, along with a tough. i ..
' ees‘ request last week that it consider scheduling games 18-game round-robin SEC schedule and a conference _ g ‘
the basketball Wildcats and other state schools‘ teams, tournament at the end of each season. Hall said games .6» t I .. "a ' .
particularly the University of Louisville Cardinals. between schools in other states draw little national in , ‘ ’ ~' it ' ~ ‘ , . ’-
Since the glory days of the late Adolph Rupp. UK‘s terest. although they may carry great weight in their ‘- r y ~ W M
‘ ”policy" has been to exclude state schools from the respectivestates. ,.
1 schedule. But. following UL‘s 80-68 victory over the “I think the policy or the tradition of not playing state ‘ 5 ‘
l Wildcats in the NCAA‘s Mideast Region final last schools has been very good to the University of Ken- , .3 .
month. newspapers and fans across the state have been tucky," Hall said “If I felt that we would be bencfitted " ii b
clamoring for UK to schedule an annual game with the by playing state schools I would have scheduled them a . _ y»
Cardinals, long time ago, but from where I sit it’s never been eX» ‘2 :5: : .. ‘
Hall. however. has upheld the policy since he became plained to me how it would help our program here at \ i ’
head coach in 1972. In an interview yesterday. he said Kentucky to play state schools, and all the arguments T
he will present his reasons for opposing a regular game for playing games have not been arguments that would .
WithULat tomorrow‘s meeting. bebeneficial to the University of Kentucky.“ ( . ' ‘
“Basically. I will present the operation of the basket- Because the revenues generated by UK‘s basketball '
ball program as far as carrying out the duties and re and football programs pay for a great deal of the
sponsibilities. making schedules, recruiting and the se- school‘s minor sports. Hall said he has to consider “op- . .
lection of players.“Hall said yesterday in an interview timalincome“when scheduling games. " ' - , j ‘
“Most of the operation that doesn‘t affect policy is A major consideration of those calling for an annual ‘4 ‘
handled by the coach with the supervision of the athletic UK-UL game. however. has been the potential profit it
director. I‘d very much like for it to stay that way. could generate. which they say could amount to millions
“I have been allowed to make those decisions and evi- of dollars, Hall. however doesn‘t agee with their esti— ;
dently they've been good decisions to this point.“ he mates. . f
said. “If anyone has fault with the way I‘ve directed the “All of the statements of that kind have come from ‘ I
program. then they should bring it to my attention or to parties who have something to gain.“ he said. “I really . . .. .. ,. .M.,.,. . ,.. . , , . , . ,
my su riors’ attention and somethi should be done think those figures are unrealistic and should not be . irks“ " "-'~- ‘ “"1" ** ‘ W“
about i? ng used as an argument. I see it only as a way to solicit Joe 8‘ H.°”’ Who lus’ com' 5 .. a. ”use“... / _
However. he said. “If the tAthletics Association) support from an uninformed public that has no other ple'ed h'5 ”m 59°5°n ‘35 ' .. i-«flii? imam-N“ '
board makes a decision that instructs me to do some- way to weigh the truth of these type of decisions —- of head b°5kelb°ll C°°Ch °l 'he "‘ ~> " 5??
thing. they‘re my superiors. They have a right to con- hopes ofmillion-dollar gates and things like that.“ KemUCkY Wildcats, has “11“"; ”5 " , “W '
trol in any way what they see fit and I would abide by Hall said the latest uproar to play state schools is lOUnd himself in the middle tiff-“Tl ‘ ' . L ;
their decision 100 percent.“ nothing new. He said that. wherever he speaks in the of a controversy of which a 3. a: t; 'fj‘i W.“ a
Although UK‘s policy of not including state schools on statehe receives pressure to play other state teams. UK-University of Louisville % l ’ a. ‘ ’ " 23‘ '- - .
the schedule has never been made official. it has with- “It arises ever so often." Hall said. “It arose as far regular series is the subject. 5a? “_ m 1 :‘ 4:92;“ ,. . b .,
stood years of criticism. Hall said a decision by the ath- as Western Kentucky is concerned after they defeated Hajj, who is against the :3” ‘_ " 1": '_ ~§f*“7‘f§i§§gi”7 . h a“ ,,~ ‘ ‘
letics board to schedule other state schools would be a us in the Mideast Regional by 24 points in 1971. They game as par, of the regular 5;,fr "is: s , i‘Vh 1 '2. 1:: ~ 1‘ “x, _ .
surprise. had a valid reason to claim credit to equal status in the season schedule is shawn “is "1 ,. a: " '
"I can understand that if there was a policy that the state — they were a basketball power that went to the b d'r 1. h h as)” ‘ ‘ ‘ y‘ -_. g 4
University not play in-state schools. that would be Final Four and had a great basketball team as raw a we 'ec mg, '5 C urges _ . is. "x _ .
something that I would have to abide by." he said. "If denced by their lopsided win over us — and they had dur'ng the UK’\’"ll°"°V° con‘ ~ ‘I‘-~§ 3’ . Q '
there is no policy. then it‘s left to my discretion as to just as strong a case backed up by a great basketball '95' 0' RUPP Areho l°5l 09' f ' ’
who to schedule and who twei should not . . . Now, if tradition to force themselves on Kentucky‘s Schedule." cember and yesterday in his l , a
there is an order from a body that says to play these The controversy. he said. has been fueled by the office atMemoriol Coliseum.
schools. then naturally I would abide by it. but I would state's media. _
viewflit as an unusual act by a board to assume that ”I think it‘s a crusade by The Courier-Joumal to 5,," Ph°'°! by J_D_Vunum [flag ‘
I‘O e. See HALL. page 6 ,. . a} £35m”
Founder of UK StudentAgencies resigns 'd
By JOHN VOSKUIL corporation's profit for the first profitable venture has been its ad- in bartending. “We wanted to start Stoltz said he and Reynolds. in tnbuting posters to working at SGA
Senior Staff Writer quarter. ended March 31. was only vertising .agency. which. among that last summer. but some compli- particular. have learned from their polling places during elections.
. $647. other proyects. Publishes an enter- cations arose.” Stoltz said. "Now mistakes. and “we've made a lot of Stoltz said The number of students
, _ _ ._ -,c.c._,,-.,._ “A.” Beginning this fall. however. the tainment and dining guide every six were ready to move onii.” mistakes" on the payroll varies from month in
, corporation ”is really gOing ‘0 take weeks. . . Reynolds said his worst mistakes month. he said. but “we write
l Rayvon Reynolds. president of UK off."he said. ”We‘ve been working In that area ' The distribution Of a student have been hiring students who were checks every week to at least 50 in
l Student Agencies. announced his Reynolds said he has been pleased the longest. so it's had more of a discount card ITKSA worked with “not of the right caliber“ and his dividuals " A
l resignation as head of the student- with many of UKSA‘s ventures. es- jump than the other agenCies.“ he the Student Government Association failureto‘plan hard enough." “(gs began operations in April
run 00'1””!th at a meeting 0f the pecially its photo—processing. typing said. in put OUl a diSCOImI card this year. "We‘ve learned that vou can‘t re— 1982 with an initial capital invest-
Agencies' board of directors yester- and babysitter-listing services. He Reynolds said the corporation has but “next year we will definitely be search anything too 'ihomughjvg- ment of about $13000~ RemojdS
day. also said "students have responded recieved donations of about $18500 putting out our ovm.“Stoltz said. Stonzsajd.’ ' said The money came from i{v0 $7.-
Reynolds. an economics and agri- well" to L'KSA‘s recently started in cash from various sources this The corporation also has an cm 500 bank “01% backed by L'niverSitv
cultural economics senior who laundry service. year. Most Of the donations came OThe distribution of a “finals sur— plovment serVICe that finds work for Trustees William B Sturgill and
founded UKSA in March 1982. told But he said the corporation‘s most from individuals. he said — “entre- rival kit." which Stoltz described as students in areas ranging from dis RonaldG Geary
the board the corporation “didn‘t preneurs who have made it them- a box of snacks delivered to students Although L'KSA is panng off the
get as far as we would liked to have _ selves.“ during the week of final exams interest on the loans. it does not plan
in the past year." . _ ' Stoltz said UKSA will use the do; , i(, pay Off the princjpaj in me fore.
_ ”Bl“ we established quite a {SW . nated funds to expand "5 operations 0A photocopying shop seeablc future.Stoltz said
800d businesses."he added. h next semester. “Over the next year. In his reSignation speech to the
He said after the meeting he is re- ~ " were going to implement quite 8 Another goal for UKSA will be '0 L'KSA board of directors. Reynolds
signing to pursue other business in- . .. a G ., feWDrOJ'ects.”he said. achie"? "OH-Profit corporate slam» challenged the corporation to. work
terests and to “take a few classes ' . ' V Among the ventures the corpora Wthh Will allow ll [0 operate tax- in closer cooperation with the Stu-
I‘ve always wanted to take." 5 ‘12:; I ‘ tion plans are: free.Stoltz said " dent Government Assomation and
Immediately after Reynolds‘ res- ' a. l 0 A student-run miniature golf "It’sa realslow process." he said. ' If ‘t ' the Student Activities Board. ‘
. ignation. the eight-member board. » » - course on or near campus. although "YOU have 10 have a "30k record Ol % “it‘s time for us to move on to
which currently has two vacancies. , ‘ no location has been selected yet, non-profit activity to gain non-profit " V, greener pastures.“ he said. “There‘s
elected UKSA Vice President Lenny ‘_. * . Stoltz said. status." _ ' _, no telling what we could accomplish
Stoltz. an accounting junior. presi- ., ' Stoltz said working at L'KSA can ’ .. ”we were to worktogether ~-
dent of the corporation. Stoltz said ‘ I . 0 Refrigerator rental to students be an educational experience for The board ajso elécted Brent Airs
UKSA ended its first year with a ‘ . _ "We will have to wait a couple of students. “We encourage students to " - [m‘ a bustness and economjcs se»
loss ofover $9.600. \ g years to do it." Stoltz said “It's a try to get credit for working in our 2. nior. vice president of the corpora.
For 1983. he projected total sales _ , largecapitalinvestment." office." he said. ”Everything you do tion Bob Cundiff, an engineering
of $131,280 and a net profit of about me in that office is an education People sophomore. was ejecied secretary-
318,000 for the full year. although the RAYVON REYNOLDS 0 The stablishment of a course might as W9“ get credit for ll" LENNY 51°": treasurer. .
Sloane called yesterday for a three~tiered state corrections duty to never let the world forget the attempt four decades
WEDNESDAY system with no new prison construction. (:90 to exterminate every Jew in Europe ~- 0 goal two-
meAP IDdSMMPOm "Throwing more tax dollars at the problem is not the thirds fulfilled before allied armies liberated the occupants
answer," the Louisville mayor said in his position paper. of the Noziconcentrotion comps
. SAW ”'CC‘. V.“ chairman "We need alternative methods of sentencmg to bring 0 Of 0 pre Hitler Jewnsh population of 8 8 million 5 9 mil-
' more common sense approach to the way COnVIcled crimi! lion were killed.
Student Activities Television has selected Louis Straub, busi- nals are dealt with."
ness and economics saphomore, as vice chairman for the Under Sloane's plan, the first tier would include commu.
remainder of the semester. A new chair for the SATV com- nity-bosed facilities for indwtduols sentenced to a brief \
mittee has not been annOunced, but Straub seems to be in term. The facilities would be financed by a correction facili-
the best position to take over, according to Doug Kennedy, ties authority set up by the 1982 Legislature __
Student Activities Board Public Relations chair. The second tier w0uld consist of probation and restitu
Frank Solvino, communications junior. and David Combs, tion centers built across the state and w0uld be meant for WEATHER
business and economics junior. will run the SATV produc- persons who are not dangerous but requure a restricted
tion department. environment, " according to Sloane
The first filming of an SATV project took place Friday
night and featured an interview with the English Beat, who HOIOCQUOC .urViVOfS' children meet ‘
performed at the StudentCenter Grand Ballroom. partly cloudy today wlth a 30 percent chance of thun-
Room 209 of the Student Center Addition, originally des- WASHINGTON - The children of Jewish concentration 4.7.90"... undo M... In on. low to null 10.,
ignated the video equipment room. has been assigned to camp survivors _— a generation Adolf Hitler never intended Cloudy tonlght with a 50 percent M thunderstorms
SATV for equipment storage and office space. to exist -. pledged yesterday to keep alive the memories of and a low In 9... low to mld 50.,
8'00". .nmm. corrections pl." 9°"0Cld9 in 0 WWW lhOl l°°k9d "‘9 °lher WOY Cloudy tomorrow with a chance of thunderstorms
The second generation took Over at the American Goth gm]. M... In eh. mld to upper 00'.
FIANKFOI‘I’ — Democratic gubernatorial candidate Harvey ering of Jewish Holocaust Survivors. asserting a solemn

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ll“ Mellon Animu- Oman John Orluln HIGH-v PIN“ Uni 8. lot.- J.D. Von“...- DOII ("Nerd
him»: In (nun Mm htin" Am taunt Spam :dno- Swlol moi-u. (duo. Photo Edna: Graph-n Editor
Managing ”I”, t.l i w iii tiliiw Aumoni Acn Educ: AuutuntSpovtl [dl'ul 59.00: 9.0.x" Aumom (mammogmw‘m low 0..“ i ., ,4 ,
SGA alienates organization
h'l d' ' t' “V
W I e ISSGI‘ISIOD GOI‘I mues / 9 AT LAST... ' t
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Recently, some foreign student organiza- the ISC and SGA was a constant concern , « NUCL \
tions have made accusations concerning the with council members, and a solution, in the EAR W£TE ,1
less-than-adequate treatment and represen- form of an amendment written by Jack Dul- \ DUMP]
tation their groups have received from the worth. senator-at-large, was to make the ISC _ m-
Student Government Association, and rightly president the director of the SGA interna- \ /_ j I
so. tional students department. \ Q . .-
SGA President Jim Dinkle had become lax The Senate defeated this proposed amend- . 7 (“94‘ ‘ ,, l
in his pledge to communicate with foreign ment. Dulworth again submitted an amend- .\‘\ t
students After his victory. he sought the ap- ment asking for the director of the SGA in- Q‘ ‘ K i If: ‘ g
proval of the Senate-elect to divide the SGA ternational students department to be an " g4 .' - l
department of minority Third World affairs individual recommended by the ISC. If the Q . I
into two departments — the department of council ceased to function, the SGA presi- \' ( n ).
minority affairs and the International Stu- dentcould appoint anyone. : ;
dents Department — to better serve the All of it sounded fine, but what happened ‘ ‘ i
needs of both student populations. since the amendment was submitted Feb. 15 . i
At the beginning of the Fall semester. a is an outrage. The amendment, which has to - “ 1
group of students saw a need for a group to be voted on at two consecutive meetings, has " t
advocate the interests of international stu- since, been tabled after successfully passing \~- 3
dents. The presidents of the foreign student once in the Senate. \ ' . 1
assoc1ations attended a 581.1% M or ganizatio- The amendment, which, according to Dul- . / E i
“31 meetings to define the new group s .pur- worth has received very little argument, has , ‘ ,, [IROPE ‘
poses. determine "5 compel?“ and write a caused quite a controversy. He sees the ta- . , 1
59;)0f gylaws for the Oggamfzt‘ogd , r bling of the amendment as a form of purely ,/.'___._.._-_—— ~ - ' t.
ro ems appear e 0" e ”2°“ as u- litical in-house fi htin and in a wa it ' 3
. t v 9 t \ \ ‘
mors began Circulating that the SGA Inter- F: g g y I ) W\ 3
national Students Department director was . . a __I Q , ”flaw ' l
forming his own group. Dinkle was asked to . One WOUId have to 35k that if the organiza- 1
mediate this apparent conflict. The “prob- tion in question agreed With the amendment *
lem" was eventually resolved with the cre~ and supported It for the 800d 0f the group, .
ation. in the Spring. of the International Stu- why wouldn t It pass.
dents Council. with the presidents of every Petty dissent, at students’ expense, is an
foreign student association as voting mem- outright slap in the faces of those who are organization that it doesn't deserve serious questionable, but where will it end? Will the
bers. . _ supposed to be represented by SGA. Is the treatment? benefits offered students be waylaid for
The problem of communication between ISC conSidered such a small. insignificant Certifiably. the treatment of the ISC is other reasons? Where will itend?
——————.__—_.—____—____—__—_
Foreign st den ts become latest unwanted cam o
The “good old days" are gone. Presently. we are faced witha sit- bill sponsored by Senator—at-Large interest in foreign students. Whatev~ ficiency in English. But for engi- gives the impression that foreign
The "good old days" refer to when uation that. instead of the Student Jack Dulworthtothe SGA Senate. er is said about foreign students are neering. with its language more in- students are a liability; anytlung un-
students within a university campus Government Association fighting or My rationale for this is that by ac- those things that will make life more ternationalized, to require a 550 American is bad, questionable or
fought to restore the rights and dig. pressuring the administration to cepting the supposed compromise difficultfor them. score in TOEFL is very difficult to worth ridicule, Th058 With ethnocen-
mty of one another as a result of ad- make life better for all students. bill. ISC was indirectly admitting Within the last three weeks. there explain. tric feelings look for ways to make
ministrative policy changes and/or helps attenuate the rights of foreign SGA has the right to minimize for- was an article in the Kernel showing In Graduate School. departments life diftiCUlt for foreign students.
student victirnization by faculty. students lof which there are few on eign students' participation in SGA. the administration‘s intentions to re- require a language. an area in Foreign students are against the
This position was so strong among this campus It keeps them from But the majority. for whatever it's quire foreigi student teaching assis- which most foreign students should T_0_Wer 0f Babel in Amencfil 0ft Spe-
students that the numbers involved having equal participation in the worth.carried thefloor. tants to take special oral and com- be ahead. Yet. the University still Cifically, at UK. The universality,
in the grievance was inSigiificant or student life on campus and from It should be known that what Sen- munication skills exams in English. requires the foreign student to go to from Wthh the nature er a umversr
out of the question, being able to present the plight of ator-at-Large John Miller and SGA besides the normal Graduate Record class and sit for four months with ty evolved, means a different thing
It was not unusual to see a univer- foreign students to the SGA. did is not strange to anyone aware Examinations. before such TA's are beginners t0 learn a language they on ““5 campus. . . . . ‘,
sity campus paralyzed because stu- ___________ of what foreign students go through allowed to teach. have spoken all their lives, It would appear the U'niverSity s
dents wanted to redress a specific at UK, Foreign students on this The Test Of English as a Foreign Thus. foreign students in Graduate goal is to clone Americans and
issue they considered to be in the lIl' campus are the most mistreated and Language, another requirement for School are discriminated against not make a nonentity 0f foreign stu-
terest of one or more of their breth- most discriminated group of stu- admission. is discriminately used to only in English. but in their own lan- dents. There are many other areas
ren At certain times. aSSistance GUBSt dents It would be surprising to find limit the admission of students in guages as well. ‘ the foreign students unduly suffer in
was sought from neighboring univer- OPINION any school worse than this in its different fields. For example, the As for campus jobs. foreign stu- on this campus because of a set-up
sities to bring pressure to bear on treatment of foreign students. College of Arts & Sciences requires dents are given the meanest and in which they have httle or no rep-
the university authorities concerned To start with. there are very few a minimum score of 500 for admis- lowest-paying jobs on campises. resentation, Q .
Today. this role has been given no foreign students enrolled at UK sion into any A&S program. but the There are few foreign native spe- The ISC was aimed at changing
attention by students In fact. it can «compared to the size of the Univer- College of Engineering requires a cialists in the faculty here. even this bUt it appears SGA'S ‘Q‘Petlt POI"
be crudely described as a "dog eat \‘incent Yeh and Maher Abukhat- sityi. There is hardly any adminis- minimum score of 550 (with new those on sabbatical. If foreign stu- tics“ Will make this an imposs1ble
dog” Situation where student rights er last week addressed one of the trative policy that gives equal treat- stipulations still in considerationl. dents want to put up an informatio- thing to do
are abridged left and right It isn't systematic blocks for foreign stu- ment to foreign studentsas students. One can understand A&S‘ requir- nal program to enlighten the Univer-
being shown by the administration dents on campis. let alone better. In the last three ing 500and engineering 550; there is sity and its surrounding
and faculty only. but also by fellow As nce president of the Interna- years I have been on this campus. some logic in this. A&S students ma- communities. they are all set back. Zama Kimbi Ndefru III is a politi-
students — spec‘ifically. those sup- tional Students Council. I strongly there is hardly anything positive in joring in English, history. political Foreign students get token support cal science graduate student and
posedly elected by the student body disagreed with ISC‘s acceptance of the Kernel showing the administra- science. literature. etc. have more from SGA and the administration. vice president of the International
to address student concerns what was considered a compromise tion. faculty or American students‘ reason to prove some degree of pro- By and large. this University Students Council.
_—-—-———___________.—_
i - .-_._ . I
I, '-- -'\\
0' ‘ 5" / 7
t” \ ‘. ‘t //
/ t . -- ., « OUR NEW ASSIGNMENT [8 To
I attended the “dream" game in why I had to write my first Kernel - J t v \' ‘NVETIME A GNP d. MEN
UK versus UL Knoxwlle and. even though we lost. letter. but I am still without one ra- (’ ' \,I \ l I'
the atmosphere was unquestionably tional answer why we don‘t play UL. . f ‘ m1 WANT8 m MIEVE
As I near graduation. I felt it was the greatest of any I have ever wit- It seems our top people shy away V ‘1‘ .
time to write my first letter to the nessed, from the camera when asked this 8, ‘ ' f ‘ ‘ ' POL‘TICAL
Kernel Kentucky basketball means The Kernel said an annual game question. I: ' ' Q I ‘ m T W"
pride to a. great many people. and would “tarniSh the luster of what Kentucky students and taxpayers - ‘ t n!
this pride is the only thing being tar- PreSident Otis Singletary called ‘a deserve to start hearing answers 1“ 6) 0 © “\ \ E USE d VIOLEM
nished by not having an annual L'K great, mysterious event.‘ " With this from you “top people.“ Why are we ‘ © : ‘ \ n"
University of Louisville matchup reasoning. think how lustrois the shying away from this awesome en- ' , l . \
Besides being a finanCial gold Kentucky Derby would be if it were counter? Because without us, your \\ i {“0 - 5h M9 l 'R- _ .._ . . ' ‘
mine. this would probably be the runonlyonceevery24years! lustrom jobs would surely be tar- " d /'— ‘ “#1; —.- 3’24”
greatest nvalry in college basket- As this matchup appears to be a iiished. ,’ '
ball The managing editor of the quarterof-acentury event. I am 7"} t
Kernel said an annual L’K-LL clash perturbed I will witness this game Danny Wahl ‘ I ~ 1
“would turn out to be ho~hum, an only once more before senility sets MBA candidate 1 't
other game." This sounds about as in' . ‘
logical as “Honestly. dear. it‘s only It seems it is always up to the few ‘ ' ,
a COId sore? " t0p Wople" “Vho make the dec“ Wooden are encouraged to wbmn their letters and —- ? #1: -'
In college sports there are many sions for everyone else. To spruce oom-omiovmu-m-i 0 § 13““- __ 1
great rivalries tNotre Dame-I'CLA. up the atmosphere at Rupp Arena. “grifhxfixgnt":‘m:"".dl‘j:"“’:|’";dv‘,’o‘f“: I ”an I] l i. a a t
Pitt-Penn St. Oklahoma-Nebraska. Cliff Hagan made a "brilliant“ deci- m. lame! H. MW...“ MM, "we.” K, '3 V r (g j i 9" ll ' T". i ‘ t
UCLA~USC. i. both intra and in- Sion by moving the band into section “fix? I H d. ' W“ ' \ ,‘ 4 g, Q _ ‘ .- f‘ 3.--J;L~ - l
terconference Can you imagine 31 votherwise known as the best w..." 1:22:33. 0.9.3:; 34:32:" .an5. Q 9 ‘ ' . ’ ' fl: . .
What it would u t‘0 cones? Swrts 1f group of fans in America). "VS a "‘0” names oddveuu tehpbone numoeu and ‘ u.‘ A }
these and other schools acted as UK shame he couldn‘t move the band to 333;: :L‘::f,'fj;°(“;mf;.:?:'f:‘;fia:2:03;; :3; 9 Q I
has? We blew a great basketball ri< where some of the 838 fans actually mamdwmm. ‘ t 9 O ‘
valry with Notre Dame because L'K knit during the game or leave with exits'fxfrhb'ogxg 3‘33? Wt" °' '°“ ‘ BE - v , t‘
wanted to play this game at Free- five minutes to go during a tie ball- my. ,....,. m. “9... to .4” 60’ mm. ..,.. t \ I "l , / W
dom Hall. a “neutral" court With 95 gametoescape the traffic. ""9, °'°""“°' "W" W '° ""“'"°" "5"” Q 0 g l /’ Mum
percent Bill Blue fans. New I hope everyone understands “m" [a
neon COUNTY by Berke Bmthed
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i. CI b Ils bluesy after Koko’s visit
Somewhere on the outside of New A blind gentleman walks by gently for the “Queen of the Blues” to walk one of Godzilla‘s uglier relations pov
Circle Road — “Section one, vortex tapping his cane. At the bar, Frank down, and strut down itasshe did. litely informs us that we can't dance .
four,“ as Rodney Hatfield so pro- Schaap. a guitarist for the Metropol- Koko and her guitarist. with his in the aisles. Fortunately, good 0"
roundly remarked —— Doug Breed- itan Blues All Stars, softly remarks Es 335 slung oddly over his right sense persists and the dancing man- . '
ing‘s establishment glows in the “I wear my best shirt and they shoulder, bring down the house. She ages to prevail anyhow. ‘ ‘
} night. For outsiders, the club name bring insomeblindguy.” could start a fire by rubbing two _ . | .. . W.
i can be a startling one, evoking All the members of the MBAS are notes together. She is bad and beau- BUI’YS‘PFWWU speakin folks. m? .. 1
3 images of a bar where people go to here tonight. They're here to pre- tiful,andtheaudience loves her. blues ls an emotion. U you‘cant pm:
i breed. empt Koko Taylor and her blues ma- During an extended guitar solo, m0V€l01t.y0u can tappreciateit. ’1
Inside, the crowd is two-think ca- chine. one of the more inebriated custom- , . , "
i pamty and restless as hell. All the Koko’s band enters soon after the ers, not having noticed that the b "Ry? re: egferéhcruismg (down the A: r 5
l teeny-boppers sit clustered together MBAS dos. You can tell they are bands have changed, sticks his head alc d5 fee 5 ed K iEago ta" yo: tsefi -. / I -
l in the back. Two or three customers the band. They walk and the aroma out and blubbers, “Play that thang : a y nlam h 0 0d 5 OP baen h t?“ v .
sit in the comer watching TV, where of blues follows them. there, Frank Stump,” then adds, al- Ser Y2)“ 0V2" elikanh mdag M snde ~
E they remain throughout the evening The MBAS, with Nick Stump on most as an afterthought, another “1:31:37 u a s g e S e 0 ay 7
5 stubbornly watching “The Love guitar and Rodney Hatfield on har- blubbering, “There," before popping ' l - '
i Boat." while the cream of Chicago monica, sound as good as they ever his head back out of sight. ‘ 1 ‘3“ .
l blues kills itselfon stage. did. They burn a blazing red carpet Things are going pretty well until REMY SIMPSON - ‘ t
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. . Violence the theme of forgettable Bad Boys . Jew, .
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3 Prison films have long been apopular and suc- types and psychotic kiUers, it leaves little room thal. If his message were to condemn violence by . 3/
.; cessful form of movie entertainment, changed for positive accomplishment of any kind. With an means of exploitation, he has failed. The only ten-
: only since “Birdman from Alcatraz" and “Cool array of characters of this nature, it becomes sion created in this grim prison is whether its in- 0..., .m... ..
l Hand Luke“ by the style and level of Violence ex- doubtful that any semblance of innocence remains mates follow the stringent rules placed upon KOKO TAYLOR t 3 3 J A
5 '5 hibited in such films. With the arrival of “Bad in adolescents today. them. One can discern very quickly that the peo-
l Boys," we can begin to ask ourselves if the youth The spaced-out, continually wasted Spicoli char- ple involved will do everything possible to elimi- .
, of today has actually changed that radically from acter from the degrading “Fast Times at nate civil law and order, which is why they are Tomlin to appear on DObe EVB
. l whaht we know of our priedecessotrs. h Shdgemont High" is perhaps the one type of teen there to begin with. The filmmakers could have
; 'I‘ e answer, if “Ba Boys" as anyt ing to say egradation that isn‘t present here. Sean Penn, gained a valuable lesson b ivi us a more ~ - . 5 ,,
l abo