xt7ksn012s1r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ksn012s1r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1983-04-06 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 06, 1983 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 06, 1983 1983 1983-04-06 2020 true xt7ksn012s1r section xt7ksn012s1r l ‘ l .
, Afltflngflnllo
l ‘% F0! North Carolina State fans, it must
“* _ . have indeed been a "dream game." For
E f I i all followers of basketball, however
, * WW'OWmdtheNCM «WW—~—
i ,- a, taurnoment was a fitting end to a sea-
“ son of surprises, See pageo
Vol. txxxv, No, 145 Wednesday, April 6, 1933 An independent student newspaper UniverStty of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
I rustees to ask for annual U K-U I. contest
l d e e e
_ Boar votes to raise iun‘ion costs rscsscusouu
» (Effective Fall 1933)
7 W Geary was the only Trustee to vote against Coach Joe 8. Hall, said to oppose the mat- (Increases In Parentheses)

) Editor-in-Chief the resolution. saying it “does not go far chup, reportedly had no objection to the pro- PertJI’Im and

, g“ enough. " p053]. Elam-Week Four-weal:

I Departing from a long-standing tradition, After the meeting, Geary said he had Athletics Association Director Cliff Hagan. Semester Summor mien hump“

l the Board of Trustees yesterday approved a planned to introduce a resolution calling on still in Albuquerque, N.M., where North Car- 'F"”'“"‘e 0“"9‘9? 1‘0””"9 Ch°'9°l‘ “Per Cred" HOW

resolution calling on the Athletics Amocia- the Board to support the proposed UK-UL olina State University won the NCAA - ....-_amya‘wumhwa,1,,1,1,,,1,__,‘~_b1___w_-_mv1,_-11

. tion to consider a proposed regular-season game and directing the Athletic Association championship Monday, could not be reached Undergraduate

matchup between UK and the University of to intiate negotiations with UL‘s Athletic for comment, (Includes L‘I’I)
Louisvillebasketball teams. Board. Singletary also noted that. under NCAA Resident 5484(6ll 5246(30) 541(5)
The proposal, long discussed by Kentucky “I think the Board of Trustees Should go rules, the Wildcats cannot add a game to Non-Resident l4i8 (183) 714 (96) 119/16)
Sports fans. re-emerged in the state's news- on the record as Officially desiring the their alreadyfull regular-season schedule _,___,,,
papers last week after UL beat UK 80-68 in game."he said. for next year unless another is dropped, He Graduate School _*W— MM him”— "T __,,,.. ”"7
overtime during the March 26 NCAA Mid— Before the vote. Geary, responding to a said he expects no pressure from any groups Raddy" 53} (67) 295 35 59¢ ,
1 east Regional final. It was the first time the question from student Trustee Jim Dinkle or individuals opposing or favoring the N R id ' 15 ‘2 . ( ) 7 ‘7’ \
1 two schools had played each other in 24 Student Government Association president. game. but added he would ”talk to any- on- 0' en 58( 01, 870015) "A (23»
years. said the Board could review the Athletics body“ before the Athletics Association board » ,_,,___,_,,,-___A, 1, -- .y .. 1W_1_hflfi___%__*__~m ,. _ 11, 1
1 Although UL coach Denny Crumm has Association‘s recommendations if it is not meetg College 0‘ LGW
supported an annual meeting of the teams satisfied with them In other business. the Board approved rou- “”hhfl' 709 (72) 355 (35) 7l 57)
for a dozen years, UK has consistently re- “The reason i asked the question is that tine tuition and fee increases for the 1983-84 Non-Resident ‘759 “87) 880 (90) Wt) (l8)
fused to play other Kentucky basketball the chairman of the Board is now on record academic year. ,1, ,,,.___ ,__ 1 1, ,_ 1k, ma ~_,1____,k, ,g
teams. 1 . , . assaying it can he I‘eCOHSiGCI‘Ed." Dinkle Under the new schedule. approved by the Collgg. of Pharmacy ‘
The resolution says “the time is right for said after the meeting. Council on Higher Education in 1981, full- Resident 658 (69) 330 (30) 55 /5\,
a formal review of the situation" by the Ath- “It may be healthy to study a little more" time in-state tuition and fees for undergrad- Non-Resident 1527 I162) 768 (84) 128 L];
letics Association and asks that “they spe- the possibility that the game could generate uate students will increase 144 percent to ‘ l )
cifically address the scheduling of a basket- additional revenue for the universities he $484 a semester. Full-time outgfgtate un~ C‘Vfll‘wmf—hgd—I‘W; rr—v-»A*—~—~——~fih____-m he-
ball competition with the University of said. dergraduates will pay $1.418. a 14.2 percent 0 09° o M. cine
Louisville as an exception to the established President Otis Singletary. chair of the increase. In~state graduate students will pay Resident 2683 (284)
practice." Athletics Association. said he would call a $531. a 14.4 percent increase, and outof~ Non-Resident 5358(568)
It said any agreement for the two teams meeting of the association‘s board of direc- state graduate students will pay $1759, 1219 W11_*____7_1_7__1g _,_,,-_a,,_,1, _‘___M_N~_
to play should “result from negotiations that tors “as soon as possible“ to follow up on percent more. (For other increases. see College of Dentistry *
are mutually acceptable to the parties and the Board‘s recommendation — perhaps as chartl. Resident 2392 (252)
that neither program suffer a financial loss early as Monday. The Board also approved the changing of Non-Resident 4592 (488)
asaconsequence.“ He expressed displeasure. however. over the Commerce Buildings name to the “Col— , g _ _*,__, 1
"I think the time has come when this the public uproar about the game. lege of Business and Economics Buildin 12 cred" no 15 fiofiftm—TTU“ "—7“_ y , V _,--, " ”,7;
Board must react by asking the Athletic As- ”1 continue to yearn and pine for the day The resolution said the change was madegto students " ( S U es U "“9 mdy or unde 9 www and (allege 0‘ PM my

., sociation to review a popular subject among when really truly serious important matters reflect “significant changes in the curric- chedit hours constitutes full time study for Graduate School students

; the people of this state." Board Chair Wil- of the University of Kentucky will get some ulum (of the collegel that had taken place lOcredithours constitutestull time Study for College at Lawstudents

l ham 8. Sturgill, who introduced the resolu- kind of attention.“ over the years.“ Lexmgton campus charges include 522 StudentCenter Fee and 5m 25 Student Activities Fee

' tion,said. "My personal preference is that we go Singletary told the Board that the Univer—
" Gov. John Y. Brown last Wednesday said ahead and play,“ Sturgill said. "My only sity‘s development office had raised $7.8 ' 6 credit hows constitutes to" time study for undergraduate and College of Pharmacy Stu
‘ he would ask “friends" among the trustees concern has been that it be done through the million for the year ,_ “the best year in dents

i at each university to introduce resolutions proper channels by the proper officials. I UK's history." Scredtthows constitutestulltime study for Graduate School and College of Laws'udents

f calling for an annual game between the think the Board of Trustees has more impor~ Gifts and grants in the final quarter of ”3“”9'0"(OmPUSChO'geS't‘f‘Udesll StudentcenterFee

: schools, tant things to do than schedule basketball 1982. he said, amounted to $213 million. ap.

I State revenue commissioner Ranald G. games “ proximately 30 percent of the total. ' Charges are annual and include 544 Student Center Fee and $26 50 Student Activities Fee

l e , . . _. Efi

I '1
l From Associated Press reports " ' g, . ~,

. Bishops alter weapons-freeze call 1' . 1, '

' WASHINGTON — Months after a White House outcry, ‘ '- ‘ t” .. if " g .

Roman Catholic bishops yesterday softened their call for 1- M}? "i: . l . .

. a nuclear weapons freeze and added a warning against . “my . ‘1 , . :

' negotiating "naively" with the Soviet Union. But on ad- ,3‘ "“- 1
-‘1 ministration official still labeled as "wrong-headed" their .' "“r‘: :
‘ attempt to set church policy on war and peace. 7’ ' " w fix l

1 3 Two earlier drafts of a ground-breaking pastoral let- - - '- - ' f 5' 3 _

' ter — a departure from customary Catholic hawkishness , -. (V...-

l on national defense issues —— called for bilateral I, ., ”V
agreements to "halt" testing, production and deployment 1 - ’ " .
of nuclear weapons — a nuclear arms freeze. .

But the new proposal calls for agreements to “curb" via}; '. l

testing, production and depl0yment * a change that may 1* .. t

1 be hotly debated when the document is laid before the SIP ‘ ,A . ' i

I nation's 285 Catholic bishops in Chicago May 2-3. Adop- . ‘2: “1,1 1" _, . V'

. tion by a two-thirds vote w0uld make it official policy of 1-" , _ ‘ t “ It ‘ V
‘ the American branch of the church. f ' " ‘ -- '" »' .1, - » ‘ ., . 1 d' ~ 1 ‘ t
L: ”Admittedly this document is more flexible than the ‘e H ' ' H y ,

y previous documents but I submit that the document as a m9: , ,. . -. 1 ., 1, .. .1 ,_ -~ it: in . Wye-ts
’ : whole has not really lost its prophetic character or its ‘J‘Ettfifika, _ my"
: bosic moral thrust," Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, archbish- ' f: ' ' I; 33;“ 11 1 .1 . ,1., _, . .. . ., _ .‘1 mod
op of ChicogO, told a news conference. _ ~ » " flwfis‘wtm
. - . I JilVANm’KeMe S's" !
; Aid 0f NIcaraguan guerrillas StUdIOd The weather may not be spring-like yet, but that hasn’t stopped the beginning of l
! Spring training the intramural softball season. Jewell Hall‘s team held practice yesterday and l
3 WASHINGTON -— Two Democratic senators charged yes- third baseman Linda Durham, business freshman, took her turn of bat with coach l
terday that the Reagan administration may be violating ' Blaine Adams. architecture senior. on the mound. l
; US. law and a 1948 international agreement by support- W
' ‘ ing anti-Sandinisfa guerrillas in Nicaragua.
3 "What we are dealing with here is not a partisan
l issue of whether the administration's Central America . . . .
I policy is right or wrong," Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., told tlmls la a l u e
. the Senate. “The question is whether it is within the let-
! ter and the spirit of the law."
‘ Leahy and Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihon, vice chair-
: man of the Senate Intelligence Committee, said the od- 0 . I b' f I e d d . d
I ministration may be violating legislation restricting co. Fl no ”C I 0 pro ems 0C9 new y C pPOI n te E UCOTI on ea n
vert activities in Nicaragua.
' l The intelligence Committee, of which Leahy is a mem-
: ber, has heard testimony behind closed doors on U.S. in- -_—-——_-ByMARIAJOHNSON . "1 think ilknemarkt resumed "replan in a way that our faculty
. g _ _ SeniorStaffWriter ‘ partially to protest what was hapr Wiliget more researchtime
, volvement '" the Central American C°”""Y‘ Moynihon t. ‘ t 't pening to the college," Sagan said A subcommittee of “Six or seven"
2 said the committee would take the matter up again April 1, ' ‘y 4 Since Denemark's resignation. five members from the College of i-Zdu
121 Edgar L. Sagan. approved yestcr- 3 fi ‘ posmons have been reinstitutcd. he cation. Faculty (‘ouncfl has been
day as dean of the College Of Educar 5 y Vt said. and the College of Education formed to help chart the course for
tion by the Board of Trustees. said ‘ . f} has no“ filled all but seven of its the collegehesaid
”‘ he has an optimistic attitude about I aboutfiifacultyposmons He also said he would like to see
1 working with the college‘s low finan- ‘ ’ Although the college's faculty SllU‘ the college adjtst to meet the grow-
cial and faculty resources t‘ } ation has improved slightly ox er the ing demand for educators. especial-
‘ Sagan, 8" 855003“? [FONS-‘9'” "l " a last year. its financial status is still 1} in the corporate sector and elr
higher education at ['K- had “Ned " . , « trying. Sagan said “I think that in ementary education
' WEATHER as acting dean Of the (“”999 51"?“ .1 . terms of the finanCial picture for the Sagan holtk a bachelor‘s degree
former dean. George Denemark. l9“ '" s c ‘ college. it is not better.“hc said from Hartwick College in (tneonta.
the )0b l85l JUL" 1- PFON‘S‘IHR that § , _, 1 , t The College of Education's budget N Y He received a master‘s degree
thecollegewas understaffed -‘1 . ‘i 2. ~_ .13}. -f for 1983—1984 is "a little over $4 mil from the University of Wisconsm
. “Sagan was our first chmce.“ said \ l1 1 g, g, lion." about the same as the budget and a doctorate from Ohio State
Art Galiaher. main campus chan- - :‘_\\ . . ' jif‘ ‘ for ism-m3. he said The :4 million University.
Tattle? aft: the 308;: meetinigdgial» budget, however. is less than the He came to UK in 1969 as an asSts—
.o rcent chance of reln g“ lth a sai two of r can i tes. Hill-1982 budget because of the de- tant dean for administration. served
“P: 30!. High 0...“. 9' ref: :M,':u::::h';:';:: bOth from 00t5|d9 Kentucky. “"9 "’0‘. SAOAN crease in the number of faculty mm as a part-time assoctate dean of the
recommended for the Job by a tions Graduate School from 1978 to 1930
with e few In the mid 40'. . ~ , . . .
search committee bdmaho" “"9 \arant Wall-‘9 Of a Sagan said the college needs to re From 1976 to 1932 he was associate
At the time Denemark resigned. l'm‘f‘r-“KVWGP hlnnil "90743 Sagan assess its priorities and restructure dean for radiate studies in educa~
_ 20 faculty positions in the College of said. as program. including an effort to tion
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How best to serve t e City: geez, I Keep ammo As mgr A: z aw, ear
_ _ _ WHl/ (5 THE (some 60 51pm.) ,
Willa house diVided fall? ° °
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Many times in the past. this newspaper UK than people living on Long Island are of t", ° ° 1 ,
has referred to L'K as a community. sepa- New York City. 4 '
rated by its residents. their interests. its di- Students who commute here are not at- l l
versity and its needs from Lexington and tracted to UK‘s beauty or verve. but to times .
Fayette County. printed on their class schedules and to work /( ‘ \l l t
L'K is a city. with an annual budget well they must do in the various libraries. When 1 9 /,
over $300 million. It has its own governing their days are over. they retreat to their Q,‘ ;
bodies. police force and hospital. Between 8 cars. bicycles or Lex'I‘ran buses and leave. L -
am. and 4:30 pm. nearly 35.000 people only returning when the bell next rings. V l b
gather here to work and play. A newspaper More construction isn‘t necessary for the l ,- \ ‘ .
serves its residents five days a week for 32 city of UK to flourish. It needs no more . .I . \ l
weeks annually and weekly during another buildings to replace the few trees and green . . ' - ‘ t
, eight Two lucrative sports franchises. which areas that remain. What UK needs is an in- \ , ' 1
together attract more than 750.000 fans to fusion of strength. energy, imagination and ’_" \ 1
their home gamesare based here. old-fashioned hard work from its resxdents. I . 1
CK. however. suffers the urban decay that and a little guidance from those who are _ y ‘ ‘
plagues nearly 9"91‘." American Cit}? SPQCif- older and wiser. to create an excellence be- , w i _. . t.
ically. the city of CK does not have a heart. fitting an institution that is struggling boldly ~ " 2 . ‘3.
where people can meet for dinner. come to a to build academic prominence. ‘ l 1';
movie. play. concert or lecture. or cap off a And it needs a central student organization ‘ .. 4 I ‘:
hard night in the library or at a job. in which to channel that vitality. The organi— v f g g
Contrary to opinion. the Student Center zation would combine government. enter- t
and its neighboring Center for the Arts do tainment. services and responsweness to ad- ‘ p /\ . M it
not constitute that heart. The Student Cen- minister to the needs and Wishes of those . /\ \ , 3, 3 /' Q 1
ter‘s major dining facility closes at 6:30 35.000 workers. , n 6}! as," s . (, 9 _ t
. . t - - - \ 3 - 3 ' . . 1
pm . leaving patrons the option of hamburg- The time has come for the consolidation of s, .'l 3 , . a] . r1.! , I‘
ers or pizza lts rooms are more often dark the Student Government Assoc1ation. the living 9\ ' 60?. ‘3“: y i
from lack of use than lit with the activity Student Activities Board and UK Student vi.) Lt” g
that should be a major by-product of univer— Agencies. The three. with their combined in- t
sity life. The films shown in its seven-month comes and warehouses of supporters and speakers and entertainers and promote their And full-time students. each of whom will f
old movie theater are poorly attended. The ideas. could turn UK on its ear and make it appearances. Less would be spent to achieve involuntarily spend $45 next year. will get
Center for the Arts has life only during day- a city all who work here would clamor to more enthUSiastic response to its programs. what they pay for — aware, community-cen-
light hours The Student Center is seemingly live in. Pursutt by one group conceivably could teredleadershipandservices. ;
nothing but a building that is used by far The organization. backed by hundreds of sway promoters who currently book popular Admittedly, the organization would have t
fewer peoplethan it was intended to. students and many thousands of dollars. musm acts into Rupp Arena. problems — pettiness and selfishness of .
Part of the decay might be traced to the would embody a voice not to be ignored in Rayvon Reynolds‘ UKSA has made a point members being the worst. It would demand ‘
' location of the six student housing com- Frankfort or Washington. The governmental of entepreneurship. but if Reynolds were a a new maturity and a new vision from its :
plexes. While m0st major universities clus- arm soon would find itself a truly powerful true entepreneur he would notice a caver- supporters. And the organization would like- .
ter housing around their centers. L'K has special interest group. Its activities at home nous v0id — which could contain student-op- ly depend on a professional, non—student :
seen fit to mimic the urban sprawl of the would center on leadership in both govern- erated fast food and formal dining restau- staff at its highestlevel for support.
1970s. placing five of the six complexes a mental and personalservices. rants and a centrally-located student food But the concept is worth exploring. and all i
mile or more from the center of campus. The SAB. without competition from SGA. co—operative ~— and lead the organization to- three should investigate it. A city and its res- .5
Their residents are no less suburbanites of would concentrate on its ability to attract ward that filling that void. idents deserve such consideration. if
————————————————————————-————-——————_—__ 7.
St d t S t I d f ' t d t I t' ‘
U en ena e C 0888 00’ on orelgn S U en re a IONS *
tln April 4. the Student Uovern- every foreign student assomation money for the International Students When the amendment came up for When asked why the amendment written by Abukhater appeared in %
ment AssOCiation Student Senate and mvited them toa series of orga— Emergency Fund. Among their discussion. Fine Arts Senator and should be postponed indefinitely. the Kernelon March30. s
slammed the door on a student nizational meetings, The response work. Council members remem» Internal Affairs Committee Secre~ Miller replied. "Because I‘ll vote Losers in the elections and their g
groupseeking to work with SGA was excellent. At these meetings. bered the problem of communica- tary Dan Clifford proposed an against it“ Since Miller «to the best SGA supporters expect vengeance
This story begins over a year ago they defined the purpose of their tion with the SGA International Stu- amendment written by Arts and Sci‘ of my recollection) voted against the from the winning side. They will
SGA presidential candidate Jim new group. determined its compOSi- dents Department. On their behalf. ences Senator and Internal Affairs amendment on March let. it is hard find many opportunities to particr l
Dinkle pledged in his platform “to tion and name. and wrote a set of Senator~at~Large Jack Dulworth Committee Chair Teresa Stathas. to fault him; at least. he is consis- pate in SGA denied to them. L'sually
communicate with foreign stu bylaws By the end of the fall semes- submitted an amendment to the whowasabsent. tent. this vengeance does not extend to t
dents " After his victory. he sought ter. they were ready to register SGA Constitution to make it so. The Stathas‘ suggestion required the No one brought out any reasons the individuals and groups outside '
the approval of the senate-elect to their new groupwith the University. Senate defeated this proposal on International Students Council to why the amendment was no longer theorganization. .. ;
divide the SGA Department of Mi- Feb? continue recommending individuals sunablc; yet a majority of the son The International Students Council ;
nority and Third World Affairs into . . . . . for the position of SGA International ate voted to postpone the amend- may learn a valuable lesson from ;
two departments , the Department thenfit‘ghfiiofiil”Setudrelnxtil 833:3] Students Department director until ment indefinitely. This ends the this: Either to refrain from exercis f, ‘
of Minority Affairs and lnternational Guest . . , someone was found who was accep- year-long saga. ing its right to express support for
. 7 worked with Dulworth and the SGA . . . , .g . . .
students Department . to better . . . table to both SGA preSident and the After all the work and discussion SGA candidates or to go all out to
OPINION internal Affairs Committee to reach . . _ . . .
serve the needs of both student pop— a com romise' The director of the Counc11. Dulworth and Abukhater. to reach an acceptable compromise. ensure thosecandidatos win.
ulations He got thatapproval p .' now president of the Council. ac- why did so many senators change The biggest loser on April 4 was
SGA International Students Depart- . . . . H , .
As thetirst director ot the lnterna- ———_——-——— , 4 . ceptedhersuggestion. their minds and vote against the the S(.A. In turning down Without
. . . . ment would be an mdiVidual recom- . . g . . . ,
tionai Students Department be ap- At this time. some trouble came , - The constitutional amendment. proposal of the International Stu- discuSSion a carefully thought-out ;.
mended by the International Stu- . , . . _ . .
pointed an energetic and hardwork up They heard a rumor that the dents Council If the Council ceased With all the changes. passed the Sen- dents (.ouncil w-ithout the presenta- proposal for better cooperation be- a.
ing student trom India who was then SGA International Students DepartA to function the president can ap— ate with only one or two negative tion of any arguments against the tween one of its departments and a
the copresnient of the ('(is‘mtiptillldn ment director was forming his own pointanvone votes However. SGA constitutional proposal" group representing students with 4
('luh The department was gixcn a group. For various reasons. they ‘ ' . amendments must pass at two cone lt's true that Jack Dulworth spon- unique problems. like the transfer of
budget of 35m were unable to communicate with Dulworth resubmitted the Consti- secutive senate meetings before sored the proposal. But this is the funds. visas and acclamation to
At the beginning of the tall settles» him They asked President Dinkle to tutional amendment with the com- they become part of the SGA constir same Senate which SGA faculty ad- American culture. the SGA has ap-
ter. Maher Abukhater president of mediate this apparent conflict promises on Feb. 15. 1983. Despite a tution. viser J. W. Patterson praised for peared insensitive to the concerns of
the Palestinian Students Associa Eventually the problem was re- memorandum of disapproval from So on April 4th. the International making its decisions on the merits of those students.
tion . Jamcs Uh member ot the In! solved Senator-at~Large John Cain. the ln- Students Council was surprised at the issues and not on the individuals other students who did not sup-
ternational Students Committee. At the beginning of the spring sc- ternal Affairs Committee gave the what happened when the amend- involved. port the winners may wonder at the
which advises the International Stu’ mester. the international Students amendment its support on Feb. 23. ment. with all the changes. came up I refuse to believe that the group cooperation they will get from SGA.
dents ”thee and David Locknart CounCilwas operational Due to the lack of a quorum nec- for discussion. After some dis» which I've worked with for a year
co-preSident of the Cosmopolitan The voting members were the essary to pass SGA Constitutional cussiononparliamentary procedure. harbors any racists.
Club saw a need for a group to ad presidents of ewry foreign student amendments at the senate meetings Senator-at-Large John Miller moved Possibly the answer lies in the Vince"! Y9“. 0 PM‘SI'CS doctoral
vocate the interests of international association. The Council began work of Feb. filth and March 7th. the to postpone the amendment indefie fact that the International Students candidate. is SGA graduate school
students. on several DI‘OJGCIS. including an amendment was postponed until nitely. which would effectively kill Council endorsed Dulworth and his senator He is "0! an international
They contacted the presidents of "International Feast" to raise March 2lst. it. running mate. A letter to that effect student-
A f h carry spec' I I ' t d th I '
A civil sot‘iety requtrcs that cvvry- leaniu>"tiirt,\‘p80ple ' ln deeper trouble. however. is He even asked assorted campus But both Dnesell and Knight un- ca. provide some of sport‘s best
one behave within reasonable lim!t> on . Maryland's Driesell. Last fall. one locks to check out the woman‘s derestimate the clout they wield. plays?)
or prttprlf‘U h\*‘r.‘”n"- that tr- W m } GLEN of Driesell’s star players was accus- "reputation" on the Maryland cam- Neither sees fit to strike a balance in any case. coaches carry a spe-
t‘epl coaches = fi ' d ed of assaulting a woman in a dor- pus and at Clemson. where she‘d between behavior and influence; cial license that we‘ll never abolish
Bobby knight and IA-tt) Driewll N i an mitory room The player. Herman previously studied. both see themselves as individuals. Firing Driesell or forcing Knight to
two ot the nation s more nttltir‘lmb : SHEARER Veal. was benched for the season by At a press conference March 8. not spokesmen. who must think be- give up his Olympic responsibilities
6011629 ha-‘KPWiU ('Uat‘ht’s haw L a student court. Just prior to last Driesell denied allegations of ha- forespeakingforinstitutions would resolve only symptomatic
been demonstrating the exte-nl‘ to weekend‘s ACCtournament. rassmcnt. Being a good sport. he lt's unknown who conferred problems. Eventually. another pair
which they play by different rules Now. as a Joke for banquet audiv Driesell then took matters into his took Veal to the ACC tournament coaches with diplomatic immunity. of clowns would emerge. insulting
At the same time the l .\ Hlympic cnces. Knight will only acknowledge own hands. according to The Di- and allowed him to practice with the Certainly the stature of athletics in opponents and fulfilling our expecta»
(ommittce which has retainwi that he bade farewell to Pucrto Rico amondback. the University of team. America's schools is one explana- tions. More institutions would be
Knight as its 1984 coach and [me by exposing his behind from an air Maryland's student newspaper He “In my mind." the coach told re- tion So too. is the nature of the job: embarrassed. but most would see it
sell 5- cupv-riors at the l mvcmiy or plane window because “that's the phoned the victim and 35sz “How porters. “Herman Veal is the vic» Wild and crazy coaches are as much asaprice worth paying.
Maryland. have shown how we lct last thing I would want them to see could you do this to me'.’ Do you tim. He‘s more of a victim than the a part of the show as the fans. ri-
thcm getaway with it of me " know what tomorrow is”” tHe was girl " Nonetheless. university offi- valries and playoffs. «Is it really so
KNEW tPChnically touled out in Not surprisingly. Puerto Rico's referring to a big game against the cials have convened an internal in- ironic that some of the winningest Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
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—_‘_—___ Rosemary Pond,- associate dean of During her stay 8! Keeneland. of University reorganization and stu- over the years is that students are replacement for her,“ she said. ‘
By 5U)" WILHOIT students for residence hall life. Royse 80! an offer to work I." the dent protest," she said now more open about what they do," “Martha has such an attractive and
Senior Staff Writer praised Royse for her work with the residence halls 0f a small liberfl ”we were {M old ways and shesaid. charming way about in, _ , . rum. .2.......
~ tower. “Martha has done such a arts college "1 Mlddlebufy. Vt. . l practices which Dean Pond and my- Royse became the first head resi- we‘re going to have to look long and
, . ,. . ”2d _ W, ______, wonderful Job over the years. She took the .Job and loved It. she said SP” knew had to be changed" she dent of Blanding Tower in 1967. “It hard tofindareplacement."
‘ . has always taken such a youthful “But i did want to return to bexmg- gal d m reference to "cl I dorms was such a mess." she said. "You if possible, Royse said she would
Martha. Royse is closmg the door approachtoherjob.“ ton. '_ . . and checkin times .. see, the building was not even com- advise her replacement to be “ex-
on an era in Blanding Tower history. Royse came to UK in 19“ Follow. While in Middlebury, Royse re- pleted when we had to move the stu- tremely