xt7mcv4bs294 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7mcv4bs294/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1984-02-23 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, February 23, 1984 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 23, 1984 1984 1984-02-23 2020 true xt7mcv4bs294 section xt7mcv4bs294  

 

Vol. LXXXVI, No. 120

K

Established t894

KENTUCKY

8111

University of Kentucky, lexington, Kentucky

21

independent Since I9?)

timothy, February a, {”4

 

Agriculture college receives pledged $188,000

B) SHEEN} 'l'llt).\l.\S
Stall Writer
The t‘ollege oi Agriculture was
presented a check tor 8188.000 ’l‘ues
day night lroiii the ltJ Reynolds
'l'ohaeco (‘ompany litc. the lourth
largest agribusiness corimration in
the Western lteiitisphere

(. liee Smith ('Xt‘t'llith‘ \‘It‘i' pres
tdettt ot the corporation. presented
tlte check to t‘harles if Harnhort
dean ot the ('ollege ot -\gl‘ll'llillll’t‘
during a banquet at tlte Marriott lie
sort littlllll‘llltl young lai'tit ltlllllllt'\
lroiii across the state

The l? tobacco lill'lll couples were
iii Lexington Tuesday and yesterday

to learn about better tobacco pro
ductton aitd how to ttitpro\e their
crops. said tieorgt- Herbs! area tit
rectorloi‘coopei'atnee\teitstoit

'l‘he llltmt’) is part of .t lltlll'}t'ill'
pledge ot $1 iiitlltot. made to the (bi
lege ot \grtcultttt-e by ll .J Reynolds
Ill 1981 iii ('ttlllllllllllg‘ support ot to
bacco produittoit lll Kentucky
.\ccoi'dtng to \lllllt') tin
agroitoiit) protessoi and chatrtnait
oi the Reynolds .tppieitttt t‘ pi'out'aiit
the money goes to tittaitt‘e toliatt'o
well its

.ltlilt'\

research tn the college .t\
sponsoring tohaci o scholarships and
ttppi‘eiittceships .tgrzt ttlftti'e sill
dents

l

"l‘hts tittet'ttstttp t~ toe lilrlL’QNi kc}.

 

“This makes me constantly more aware of
relationships between various agri—bttsinesses

and our college. "

Dean ( 'harles Barnhart.
( 'ollege of Agriculture

*

to ill) success in getting .1 toll
'l‘httt's what people were looking lot
because my grades wereitt all that
good. said Richard \latttngly .t w
ittor in accounting and agricultural

(TUNUHHL'N

\latttitgly who has been an I; .l
Reynolds apprentice tor two years
secured a tot: earlier this year with
l'erdue Inc a poultry
based tit Maryland

Since 106:, Reynolds

business

has made

 

Light work

Jim ( atitcrott tlcttt .tittl “011g llatm . . .
day morning at the [.iitdalc Shopping (cttzev pawn: ..:

t

, i
will: it It; A

\lc‘llt‘id\\liik‘ Road
( ontractors tit l c\.t.'tctoit

Butt: at:

iitt hsllHRs hw-

 

cniployccs iii Rcct: ltcctrtcti‘t

 

 

By ALEX CROUCH
Features Editor

Blue and white balloons —» 119 of
them — floated along the balus-
trades of the Great Hall in the
Student Center, one for each of
the University ’5 years.

Gov. AB. “Happy" Chandler.
and Betty Dickey, the wife of for-
mer UK praident Frank Dickey
blew out the candles on the blue-
and-white birthday cake with
gusto; the crowd sang “Happy
birthday to you. happy birthday to
you. happy birthday dear UK.
happy birthday to you."

A crowd of 60 to 70 students and
faculty gathered for yesterday's
celebration of UK‘s 119th birthday
and to hear Chandler and Dickey
reflect on the occasion. “Nobody
can object to a birthday party,“
said Jenny Dorsey, Student Activ-
ities Board vice president.

“I've always had a feeling that
birthdays are important and sig-
nificant events." Frank Dickey.
67. said. "Institutional birthdays
are more important than individu-
al ones —~ (institutions) affect so

many people.“

 

Big blue birthday

UK celebrates its 119th year with balloons, speeches and a cake

. y

av

 

lek Fl Kl“ kctncl \tt't

Betty Dickey, wife of former UK president Frank Dickey. blows
out the candles on the birthday cake while Jenny Dorsey, Student
Activities Board \ lkk' president, looks on.

Birthdays of institutions “rep-
resent a kind ol growth in
strength and vitality which is not
so true of us mortals." he said.
Unlike humans. "insitutions are

supposed to improve in strength.
vitality and influence. That's ex-
actly what’s transpired with this
great institution. "

Dickey is ”confident that this in-

stitution is in the best shape of its
119 years." UK has grown in stat-
ure tn service. instruction and re-
search. he said. and also in world-
wide influence.

"The way this institution will
grow is through the support of in-
dividuals and groups like those
who have put on this program."
Dickey said. "They're very impor-
tant in the continuing life of the
institution."

Chandler spoke next. saying.
“Most people think l've been here
since the time tL Ki started,

“Sixty—eight years have passed
since I stood on the steps oi the
Administration Building and saw
nothing." Chandler recalled. “1
perhaps know more about the Uni-
verSity than any man living or
dead." Chandler said he became
chairman of the Board of Trustees
50 years ago and has been person-
ally acquainted with all UK presi-
dents.

“Opinions die. records live.“
Chandler said, “The record shows
that I’ve made modest contribu-
tions to the University ‘ I wish l
could have made more.

See BIRTHDAY . page 2

 

 

Korean Zen master says thinking can clutter life

H) .\.\T.\l.lI-I('\l'l)ll.l.
Staff Writer

Seung Sahan. a Korean Zen mas»
ter. told of a life that is and that IS
not during a recent presentation at
the Student (‘enter

Rick Ncy. a professor of theater.
defined Zen: “It is and it isn't." he
said “That's it. Life ethts and life
doesn't exist That's the secret
There is a Zen chant that says that:
Life extsts and it doesn't exist, You
exist and you don‘t exist. It is and it
isn’t. It‘s not and yet it is.

“For every good. there is evil.
There is not one without the other."
Ney said. Ney. who studied Zen for
Kabuki theater. 3 form of Japanese
drama for two years. currently
practices Zen,

According to Webster‘s Diction~
ary, Zen is “a Japanese school of
Mahayana Buddhism that teaches
self-discipline. deep meditation and
the attainment of enlightenment by

 

My:

 

direct intuitive insight into it self-
yalidattng transcendent truth be»
yond all intellectual conceptions and
characteristically expresses its tcae
chings in paradomcal and iionlogtcal
forms.”

Author of the book Dropping
Ashes on the Buddha. Sahan tries to
offer direction to becoming the
"true self" through Zen

“Zen means to become clear." he
said

“So what is death" What am l'.’

. Don't know" Zen means teach
mg ‘don‘t know‘.‘ " Sahan said.
“What am 1" Don‘t know'.’ If you
can attain ‘don‘t know" then you can

attain freedom from life and death

"Keep mind away from thinking.
open to action and complete things
That is the Zen mind." he said

“You study. study. read many
books. the newspaper thinking.
thinking. complicating. understand»
ing too much. understand too much
May get good job. money. maybe a
nice car but you are not your true
self."Sahansatd

“They say ‘l think. therefore i
am." so. if 1 am not thinking. then
what""hesatd

Sahan also has taught Zen in P0-
land “They very hungry for food In
stomach and they are also mind-
hungry.“ he said

“In the United States. many crazy
people. but in Poland. no crazy peo-
ple," Sahan said

“Many suffering people. many
hungry people . . how do we help
them?" he said, "People don't think
about that."

Bill Gordon. a member of the

Dharmadhatu Buddhist group ot
lcxtngton. said. “i think it was a
very interesting talk

“He uses the Zen message of cut;
ting through dtscurstye mind." (tor
don said "The discursn'e mind is
what distorts our experience in
order to make us feel safer and
more secure So that instead of deal
mg with things as the way they are.
as the raw materials of our experi-
ence. we are constantly checking out
the world from our standpoint of
preconceptions

“The Zen master presents a meth‘
od which helps us cut through those
preconceptions and he was very
good." he said “He did an excellent
job of making people think about
who they were and challenging them
and their ideas about themselves
and the world."

“Zen is life." Ney said. “Basical~
ly. when you understand Zen you no
longer need meditation because life
itselfbecomes your meditation “

grants to the l'iiiverstty totaling $1 "
iittlltoit tor research extension and
education said Ellen Merritt public
relations represeiitatite lor H J
Reynolds litc

Merritt 'diSU said the company has
made similar donations totaling
about $3 million during this period to
H other landrgrant colleges tn tohat
I’ll producing states

lsarnharl said that since he first
became associated with the ('oilege
ot \gi‘tetiitui'e. the college had less
than itooooo annual income in pr:
vloitattons For 19mm Barn
bait and the college had private do
totattiig more than S‘r.

\m’i‘

lirilltlt'l‘

tittlltot

This makes llir tlt.’;\'11.’.'i:. liltilt‘
aware o! l”‘lri'.t|l1.\l.lp\ Tl".\t~‘l. .a
ritiu.K
lege
\iitttl.
tilldlt'mt' that '.’.t
wtgl be
tartett.

(‘Ji\t‘\

.igt‘. bus itesse» on? on:
he said
\tittl .:

L's t-ltll't'\~ 't We

H.434 'tiluit t 4/ tltit

’iiint‘ if

it"at'm-tl .c ‘lio-
“)l ltt'itl'l.
l' Altl ln- .t'lttt he“. A
no? min .5. .lllllfl’llltil‘
Hindi» who pit-lei tgoxo

and t‘i'tiii‘i. 'lit' ‘Jl- ~

All lllt- t", ,lii‘lul e

ilthl’lt‘l‘ .ile In
T! s'..‘.‘

tics

.i"" r’

‘lllilli ttl‘li \d.‘: '.’.r
tjvfetttli'tl l”. '.’o‘
t'Ull'Jtli'
“Ho‘s Io 'l.e~-t- sets/tic titws'. if.‘

sm ( til I It.l at.»

tltII AUNT?
'Ulllitl'. l'l_t-"

ti‘ uh“ . si‘Lilt' ltil

Replacement sought
for senator at large
after his withdrawal

B) ELIZABl-JTlH \RAS
Senior Stall Writer

lirew (.iatnes‘. a Student Govern-
inent Assoetation senator at large.
ttnaltzed his plans yesterday to with-
draw from the Senate by submitting
a written restgnatton

Gaines said his reSignation Wlil
take etfcct upon the election of a
new chairman of the political affairs
committee The committee should
elect a new chairman at its next
meeting he said

In .tn earlier internew (James
said he was resigning because ot a
schedule conflict and 15 looking tor
ward to a change tn duties it 5 my
second year in the Senate and [in
looking tor a change in pace he
said "Its a good opportunity to do
somethingdilferent ‘

Although Gaines said earlier that
he would be taking a place in the ex»
ecuttye branch. David Bradford.
SUA president. said there are no po
sittons open at this time

Gaines said that he will be concenr
trattng instead on trying to tncreast
stiA s' lobbying power by getting
more students to register to vote He
said he will have a major role tn the
upcoming campusw'tde voter regis-
tration drive

Because ot the combined demands
ot a new Job and his classes. Gaines
said he probably will not be able to
work as much as he had tn the past
‘l in going to work mainly when 1
tan. he said

Both Bradford and Tim Freuden-
berg. SGA vice preStdent. are
looking to till the vacant posttton
with the candidate who ran second

in liitdti's .l. 'ltt' o‘.H’tti!. HTtitlI'il’J
said

Brad Hobbs engineering senator
has also resumed a new posttzor. of
assistant director oi tntergover’:
mental relationsdirector oi lobby
mg The change was neceSsar} t: he
wanted to continue his lobbying e:
forts. he said

According ‘o the Ni \ L‘UllrLILLYJIL
it would be a L'ttlilllt‘ tit :ntez‘est :‘
Hobbs were to concentrate oi. :obb)
tng while he was a senator kr.
\'lll oi the bylaws states iba'
student. may stiruttaneousl} Um". no
more one branch 1,!
the Studei’.’ ‘mh-iniixen' kssoc a
ttoi‘.

Hobbs new piiSiH’tl
the exec uttve oranti.
the legislattxe brain. .ts
Atlthough he was 'molxed 1r
planning stage- n:
tort Hobbs said he
concentrate his irzfor‘s somt‘. or
bying

He said he spends .tppioxtiint'ely
two days a week ti‘. Frankior'. tobnf.
ing mostly 'or :ncreased :undxtg i r
higher eduLattor. He has Lori
btcd tor some utility :ssues

Hobbs mad he is pteased «or. ti»
new position l entoyed the Senate
but one of the reasons i ran was '-'v
get Ill‘. oived tr. the lobbying eilor'.

'l titid this xerx graittytiig he
said 'Betng .r. the atmosphere .1‘
l-‘rankiort is gtx'tng me good expo
sure to the legislatzxe process and a
good comparison between the ct...
dent goternment and the legzslatmi.
in Franklor!

John Snyder who Zillisllt‘d third tr.
last year‘s clecttot: u~ 'tow eng.
necrtng senator Hobbs sat-.1

‘lllttl‘m ft ”Lil.

pilot.“ t’lill.
He: sewed

ti st'ltiftit
the
’.'.i' lobbying e!
.>‘ . t
o...t ,.

it’ll:

Ili'w

alMi

Army selects area depot
for electronics mission

H) \\l)ltE\\' OPP.“ \.\ \'
lidt tor-tn-(‘htef

Lexmgton Blue Grass Army Depot
at Avon has been selected as the site
ot a mayor communications electro~
ntcs facility. which w.ll eventually
bring 2.000 new Jobs to the region.
Rep Larry J Hopkins announced
yesterda}

Hopkins. Roth District. said at a
press conference that the new as-
signment will produce a SS—mflllon
annual payroll beginning in mid-
February 1985. climbing to more
than $60 million when employment
goals are met

“What this mtsston represents ”11‘
ttally and potentially. is a tremen»
dous boost for our local economy."
ltesatd

The depots m1$SIOn commu-
nicattons electronics maintenance
and repair - will be a "govern-
mentowned. contractoroperated"
proyect and companies such as Boe-
ing and Pan American will compete
for the contract. Hopkins said

inspection of the depot will begin
immediately as a step toward pre-
paring bid specifications. he said In
April. interested contractors will be
invited to Avon for a pre-bid inspec-
tion of the Site and facilities.

The Army's decision is a reversal
of an eight-year trend of manpower
reduction at the Central Kentucky
facility. which has seen employment
dwindle from 2.552 in 1976 to a low of
1.079 in 1979. he said.

The current civilian employee
strength level is at 1.210.

“This announcement does more
than simply break the cycle of de-
spair that has enveloped Lexington

Blue Grass Army Depot ior too
long. he said "it launches The
depot onto the high technolog) tratk
that is the w at e of the future

“The Auto iactltty takes its right
ful place on the leading edge ot the
evolutions that has taken Amerzca s
military establishment troin an age
01 mechanization to one of electron
tcs ‘

Lexmgton \layor Scott} Baseier
who attended the press conterence
said he was pleased with the Army's
dec'tston to revamp the regional ta
Cility

"I'm very pleased he said "The
dectSion will have a rippling ettett
upon the Central Kentucky region

 

INSIDE

WHY radio is conducting a fund-
raising effort to continue it! pro-
mmming.5eemes.

muyhuclaimedeb‘uvictory
mmthmnu cm .su
"Equal

 

WEATHER

 

 

 

 

 2 - THE KEN‘IUCKV KERNEL Thunday, February 23, 10.4

 

  
   
  
 
 
 
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
 
   
      
   
    
   
   
  
 
  
  
  
  
   

 

    

OBirthday

t oiiiinued tioin page one

"If I had to try to prove I am
devoted to iL'Ki I wouldn‘t know
how to start.“ Chandler said

He urged the audience “to make
a lllaleum contribution to your
generation May the spirit of God
be withus ”

Chandler led the audience in a
spirited singing of "My Old Ken
tucky Home "

After having his cake and
punch. Dickey said. “It has been
difficult to keep up Wllh the Pin»
yersity i. but I'm still very inter
ested ‘ After being president of
l'lx' trom 1956 to 1963. Dickey
seryed as executive director of the
Southern Association of Colleges
and Schools and then as executiy e
director of the National k‘tti‘llnllS'
sion oi: Accreditation

Now "for all intents and pur
poses retired." Dickey spends halt
a year in Lexmgton and halt a
)‘t’dl‘ at his home in North t‘aroli

 

tuchy. a special volume for the
centennial celebration.

Hopkins said the main thing he
leamed from his research “was
that the University had a hard
time aboming. The situation was
far different than it is now. There
was no precedent for continuing
state support.“

The New Deals Works Projects
Administration was one of the
groups that gathered important
material on UK during the '305.
Hopkins said. "It had done a great
deal to provide material for a
foundation ifor the book); the real
foundation were UK documents.
Some things we didn't find; that
always happens.“ he said.

"Some day somebody may start
from the beginning and put it all
in one volume "

WWW

Muwl

VLMIoth-MQWWMMWMQWW

 

4.HowmyuudwmhflnWIl-Ifl
Ewmmmmmdmoflflfl
emumnummumum
[Win-romtafilflmflcld?
th-Uk'ummww?
B.Hownmynmhavooorvodnpudd-RMUK?

 

 

 

on He still does educational con-
sulting work a study in Idaho
ne\t month. for example

Dickey said he thinks "there
has been increasing recognition on
the part ot the public that higher
education is one of the most ini~
portaiii factors in society ” He
said he sees .i greater attention to

a spate of books on University his-
tory In particular were James F.
Hopkins" The University of Ken-
tucky — Origins and Early Years
and Charles G. Talbert‘s The Uni
versity' of Kentucky — The Matur-
ing Years. Both were history pro-
fessors who are now retired

Helen Deiss Irvin also wrote

 

     

 

quality and money than '35 years

dtlii
l K s centennial years produced

According to Hopkins the period
since Dickey has been of tremen»
dous importance

Hail Kentucky — A Pictorial HlS'
tory of the University of Ken

 

 

  
  
    
   
   
   
   
       
    
  
  

 

 

If It’s Happening
In Electronics

It’s Happening At Harris

' GENERAL CINEMA

BARGAIN MATINEES- EVERYDAY

$2.00 a‘l‘rbflgfi

“mnfillllulflfll

sntxwooo in)
2miw7w9x

..FaE.E........$RE.E§

      
    

   

ARCADE
6

     
 
 

 

 

Hk‘l" S \ .1 ’
Me beams ;
'as! grain " ‘ ‘

O r 0 \y- » v
C ’Y‘dit. t

   

HARRIS WILL BE INTERVIEWING

TUESDAY (MARCH 13)

sumnonnioirii
'153 455A57 ASQAS

FAYETTE "All.

uuoumuuull (um I03. 271-

IIOADWAV DANNY .03! (P0)
‘30] 305 307 30° 30

 

  
 
 

  

0 FREE TOKENS

with this ad and purchase of our.
regular 8 tokens for $1.
Good through Feb. 29th

Open till 2AM Friday 8 Saturday .
207 Woodland Ave
. (Down From the Library at Maxwell) .

 
 

   

UN'AIYNIULLV VOUIS (POI
'103105 40‘ 40° ‘0

"I! IIOH" STUFF ['0]
l 45 5 l5 8 £5

 

 

 

 

 

“CAMPUS Surf's Up Again!

Come on out to Lexington's

 

*1 Thursday Night

All you can drink
Draft $4.00

 

MUST PRESENT

 

l D WITH PICTURE

 

aiamearmammmm , ~

 

t- ether with friends for an adventure above a b67035:
~osdinary You'll JOlri in the year-round celebration of
. -~ test. Be a part of a street theatre comedy Explore
,lpolms of imagination. Play leapfrog with a fountain

Add sample the cuisine and spirits of nine nations.

This year. take a break from the beach for an adventure
that‘s out of this world Walt Disney World Epcot Center.

\I \\ I .‘\|(r he

i Sn."

R.J. Reynolds Tobacco ('o. l‘\L‘Ctlll\C Vice President (i. Dee Smith
presents Dean (‘liarlcs Barnhart (right) \\llll 5188.000 grant.

-College

(Ulllillll‘d troiii page one

will be defended by research and not by rhetor-
ic The tobacco industry has. and will continue to
spend. more money in healtherelated research than any
of our non-governmental critics,"

0W. Stokes. associate dean for the College of Agri-
culture. said in his introduction. RJ Reynolds‘
sponsorship will "create new knowledge and tell new
people about that knowledge" through education. re-
search or extension programs

Warming trend ends
skiing at state park

(‘AHRULLTUN AP There may have been too
much snow at various times during the wmter Olympics
at Sarajevo. Yugoslavia. but spring-like weather in Ken-
tucky has melted the snow and ended the ski season

Ski Butler. at (ten Butler State Resort Park near
Carrollton. had good winter weather for ski enthuSiasts
during the early part of the season. but last week's mild
temperatures brought an abrupt end to the skiing

Phil Janke. Ski Butler‘s manager. said the ski area
had to close for the season Saturday because of the un-
usually mild temperatures

"That's the whole reason.” Janke said. noting that Ski
Butler had planned to operate for 65 days and actually
was open for 6-) days

Nevertheless. Ski Butler. which opened Dec 17. had
enough adequate skiing weather to enable the faCility to
finish in the black for the first time in its three—year his-
tory

Gross income for Ski Butler \ias $600000 during the
1983-84 season. almost triple last season's gross earn»
ings of $202000. Janke said The estimated 28.000 skiers
who skied the slopes nearly doubled last year's 12.500
The area was open for skiing all but one of the planned
65day season

 
  
   
   
  
   
  
 
 
 
 
 
  
 

   
   

 

- . 9‘

Thursdays and Fridays oi“. you:

Wherever you are in Florida during Spring
Break ‘84. you'll be just minutes away.

 

‘ .AaliQRDAil
. 'Vif‘i

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 SPORTS

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Thursday, Fobruary 23, 1984 - 3

Mldioy Patterson
Sports Edt'O'
Andy Dunner!
Assistant Spot's Editor

 

Kats set records in win over N

lh .l \Nt)\ \\ll.l.| \\I.\
.seiiioi Stall \Iil'llt'l'
'lln- game \Itas not a pretty sight. but at least the
Lailj. Kats hall a little tun
t'k was expected to blow out National College of Edu
cation. owners oi a 1: 1.3 record and ranked fourth of 15
learns lll the Illinois National Athletic Intercollegiate
-\llllt'llt’lil\l\ltll‘
*\llti the Kats (ltd not disappoint
'l'he intuit. final scori- set two landmarks The 109-
ptltll’ total was the most ever scored by a Lady Kat
teaih .ll‘ti the M point \tt'liit‘j. margin also was a new
[‘t't Hi ii
so why did head coach Rich Bolinder bring his Lady
Lasers into \li‘lt‘tit‘ttti ('oliseum last night to face H12.
\t \ '\ ltitision ll Kaiid 74.3 highly partisantans"
the l't'Lixtll, '.\e play Kentucky and also play Lotus
\ lit‘ is that I think the “Ulilt‘ll on the team should see
what 2' takes to hi- om- oi the top teams." Bolinder said
in: itoi.’ haw any idea what it means to them to
piay against a team like this
\laiiy might lull hate an idea what a “in like this
means to the Kats “on only one regular season game
it'll t K is asstii‘ml of being o\er the 501) mark going
into the Niutheastei'ii t'oiiterenee Tournament next
\H‘t'k at the l iiiiersity ot timrgia
\lost teams would rather not be playing weak compe-
tition lllll l'K is .’i special case
Normally Id rather not
Jerry flail lint as rough
can use a game like tlii.s
l' was .. game 111 \'~lltt'll the Kats never trailed. never
were tied and it'll by as llllltll as 3:934 Aggressive LK
man to that; defense toreeil :4 National turnovers while
the Katx liait 111st nine Three of those came in the first
halt .i tine \atamai was coiiimiting lfiturnovers

but; Lad} Kat including senior Lynnette
has been \lti'tttii by a nagging knee injury
l'K shot 36 percent from
The Kats won the

said Lady Kat head coach
a season as new had. we

\ttll't‘tl
i.t".\l~ ant.
and tas iio' piaywt recently
the tie-Ht ‘1» the Lakei‘s :0. percent
l't'lri‘tlllflllip‘ Mattie W a.’

most oi the night
ll't'\llll1ul. point guard Sandy Harding llar

-\tli1 tiit'
spatkptth.’
tilllL‘ Lspiaii:

they did it without tlie.r

ti llt'l ankle trailing a tastbreak and lett the

game with 11.49 to go in the first half. Team trainer Sue
Stanley said Harding could have played later in the
game it needed. however, and should be ready for the
Kats' game against the University of Louisville on Sat-
urday night at T 30 in Memorial Coliseum.

National was actually in the game for a while. cutting
the UK lead to 1844 with 12:57 left in the half on a short
Jumper by Janine Wickman. the only significant scorer
for her team. with 17 points The Kats scored the next
15 points. how ever. and never looked back or even bare-
ly turned their heads At halftime they were up 53-21,

Sophomore Karen Mosley led the Kats with 28 points
on Hot-15 shooting. putting the ball up wherever she
pleased Grabbing five rebounds, she looked more ag.
gressive last night than she has in recent games.

“i think it's about time I started to play aggressive-
ly. ' Mosley said. “with the SEC tournament coming up
and us expected to be a pushover team. "

The Kats will not hear of it. though They believe they
can win the conference tournament and make a return
trip to the NCAA tournament Win or lose, a strong
showing is likely to earn them a bid to the National
Women‘s Invitational Tournament

The NWIT. held March 22-24 in Amarillo, Texas. con-
sists of eight teams not invited to the NCAA tourna-
ment Last year's champion was the Universny of New
Orleans. a team the Kats beat 8568 earlier this season.

The Kats‘ have grown accustomed to appearing in the
Nth-\As. but nobody will look a gift horse in the mouth.

“Naturally we'd like to play in the NCAA. but a tour-
nament‘s a tournament.” Hall said

"I think that it would be a better opportunity for us."
Mosley said. "because we'd have a good shot at Winning
it We should be one of the top three teams not inv1ted
to the NCAA

other t‘K standouts last night included Diane Ste»
phens 18 points. seven rebounds:. Leslie Nichols «17
points. 11 rebounds Lisa (.‘ollins <15 points. seven re-
houndsi. Debbie Miller to reboundsi. Jody Runge

eight points six rebounds: and Donna Martin «nine
[JOlnlh

Freshman center Melanie Warren gave the Kats their
new scoring record on a free throw with 17 seconcb re
maining. to make the score 108-44 The previom high of
to? w as scored against the L'mverstty of DetrOit earlier
this season

J\(|\|l\tk\ Kerr: \ a

\anttx Harding I\ examined by UK trainer Sue Stanley attcr the Lady Kat guard sprained her ankle in

last night‘s game

Non Jock Residents win 27-19
over 7th Floor Kirwan Tower

 

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aggi'essm- 3/, mne defense and :1
:ast paced transition game txat 7th
Floor K'l J. 19 last night at . \eatoii
t‘eiitei to pieteiit that teams earnr
iiiga playott bid

WEEK

Game of the

throws. Passafume missed two
bonus oppurtunities from the free
throw line. Mike Cox missed a bonus
free throw shot and Paul Becker
misfired on two free throws. For the
game. 7th Floor KT hit only three of
12 free throw attempts.

With 1:47 left in the game. Joe Utz
fouled At that time. 7th Floor KT

Lisa Collins drives for a scoop lay up \LLiv .;_

JAMES STEWART

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itoth ll‘.tlll>. unable to hit trom the
outside got off to slow starts Non
.liiiix Result-tits~ Ritk .\lc.\lackin hit
a t'»toot iiimper truth the baseline
lt\t' minutes into the game to make
the store only .i 3 in tavor of the Non
Jm‘k Residents .\lc_\1ack1n led the
way for the winners with a game-
high 1:3points‘

l'he \oii .Ioek Residents scored six
consecutiw points near the end of
the tirst halt to take a 12-5 advan-
tage the streak was highlighted by
a lob pass from Greg Horn to .\lc~
Mat-kin for an easy layup As the
ball went through the basket, a 7th
Floor KT player slapped the back»
board. and a technical foul was
called MeMaekin hit the technical

tree throw and the Non Jock Hesi-
dents extended their lead to 10-3

7th Floor K'I“s DaVid Passat‘ume
connected on a 12-toot Jump shot to
cut the lead to 12»? as the first 15
minutes came to an end

In the opening minutes of the sec»
0nd half. the Non Jock Restdents
scored the first four points on a
short Jump shot by Scott Kiser and a
15