xt7n5t3g1v80 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7n5t3g1v80/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1995-09-22 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, September 22, 1995 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 22, 1995 1995 1995-09-22 2020 true xt7n5t3g1v80 section xt7n5t3g1v80 ”av-m»—

 

 

 

 

ESIABLISHED 1894

KeNTnCKY

ernel

UNIVERSITY OF KENIUCKY. LEXINGTON. KENTUCKY

  
      

campus this week. Q ('7‘4, page 2.

 
   
 
  

COO...IOOOOOCOOOCOOOOCCCIOOCCO.C...COOCCOCOOOCOCCOOOOICOOO0.0.U.0...0.0.0.0.0....COOOIOOOOCOIOOOOOOOOUOOO

WEATHER Light rain today,

high near 60; clear tonight, [out
in 30s; partly sunny tomorrow,

high of 5 5.

HORN 0F leTY W’ynton Marsnlis‘i

reflects on his work during his stop on

Hi.

September 22, I 995

 

 

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Sports 3

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1971

  

Second race suit tiled against UK in a month

By Jenniter Smith
.‘l lounging Editor

A second racial discrimination suit has been filed
against UK in less than a month.

This suit alleges that Eunice Beatty, who has been
with the University system for more than 16 years,
was discriminated against because she is black.

Most of the actions cited within the suit discuss
repeated alienation and discrimination by adminis-
trators at Lexington Community College. The suit
specifically alleges that Janice Friedel, president of
LCC, repeatedly subjected Beatty “to unequal terms,
conditions and privileges because of her race.”

Beatty is asking for an injunction prohibiting the
defendant from any further retaliation and race dis-
crimination, and for compensatory and punitive
damages and attorney and court costs.

The suit, which was filed in Fayette Circuit Court
on \Vednesday, says that while Beatty was taking a
sabbatical, Friedel began her tenure, and that is when
the problems began.

A week after Beatty returned as acting dean of aca-
demic affairs at LCC, Friedel told Beatty she was
going to reopen the search for Beatty‘s position.

Beatty called Ben Carr, the chancellor for the
Community College System, to express her con-
cerns. Carr met with Friedel and ave her three
options. She could either recommend: Beatty for the
dean ofAcademic Affairs, appoint Beatty for another
year as acting dean or reopen the search. Friedel
opted for the second choice.

Beatty’s suit says after that, the situation got
worse.

In July 1994, the suit says Friedel changed the
locks in the suite where Beatty’s and her offices were

and did not give Beatty a key. As well as changing the
locks, the suit says Friedel also started changing the
role of the academic dean.

Friedel then began sending her assistant, Anne
Noffsinger, to all of Beatty’s meetings. The suit says
Noffsinger was never sent to sit in on any other
dean’s or administrator's meetings. .

The suit alleges this is because Friedel “stated to
other LCC employees that Dr. Beatty could not be
trusted.”

In the middle of Beatty's tenure as acting dean,
she received her performance review evaluation and
ratin . According to the suit, she received an excep—
tionafperformance rating.

Then, the suit says, Friedel told Beatty the evalua—
tion tool was inadequate and that it merely reflected
a faculty po ularity contest. Friedel indicated that
Beatty woul be evaluated differently in the future.

“No other employee that has been evaluated by
the President has been downgraded in such a man‘
ner," the suit continues.

After Beatty’s year—long tenure as acting dean was
up, the suit says Friedel announced in a faculty meet-
ing that Beatty’s position would be re—opened for a
national search. Beatty was informed of this decision
two hours before it was announced, the suit says.

Following this, Beatty tiled complaints with Carr,
the Office of Affirmative Action and UK President
Charles \Vethington.

Less than a month later, “'ethington wrote Beat—
tv and told her the problem had been resolved and
that she would be appointed to the position.

The complaint also says that Beatty is not the only
one who reco izes racial problems at the upper lev—
els of the LC I administration.

See SUIT on BACK PAGE

Time is essence 0

By Jonathan Lifland
Contributing Writer

It is art. The two stainless steel cones face each
other in an hourglass shape. As the new monument
shines in the sun, casting a shadow on the amphithe-
ater, about 30 people gather for its official unveiling.

If you catch it at the right time during the day, you
can see the water dripping as the sands of time drip
like a watch counting seconds.

It is a sculpture. It is a sundial.

“(It) adds a little style to campus,” said Wayne
Place, an engineering senior.

The bronze and stainless steel sundial was made
by Jack Gron, chairman of the art department at the
UK College of Fine Arts, and his students.

It was dedicated yesterday at the back of the
amphitheater behind NIemorial Hall. It has been
standing at that location since August.

The sculpture was funded by an anonymous gift to
the University’s beautification endowment.

It will “celebrate UK as a place of character,“ said
Elisabeth Zinser, chancellor for the Lexington Cam-
pus, who presided over the dedication ceremony.

The dial and face of the sundial are bronze, cast in
UK’s metal arts building.

It bears a design to “represent the sun,” according
to Gron. The numbers run from six to six across the
round face.

The gnomon (pointer) is along the 1 pm. line.
The stand is stainless steel, with three bent legs sup-
porting the face. The entire sundial is in a rock-laden
peninsula surrounded by bushes.

The sundial runs on Eastern Standard TIme,
which starts in October. The light-driven clock
began the unveiling ceremony in style, with the long
shadow of the gnomon (the thing that catches the
light) stretching to 1 l a.m., the correct time.

Keeping the time was a concern to the beautifica-
tion committee. They said that not only should it be
attractive, it must also work. That was done with the
enlistment of civil engineering student Pete Zak to
plot the coordinates for the sundial.

 

 

.:". ‘

campus sculpture

HELENA HAU Kzrnrl staff

BITCH.“ 80Mf ““8 jack Grim, of the College of Fine Arts, stands near the sundial he treated for the rumpus.

“Creating the sundial was actually less work than
the research which went into the project to make
sure it shows the correct time,” Gron says. But, “the
most accurate sundial is only right three or four
times a year,” he said.

Gron says the hourglass design of the sundial was
inspired by the antiquity it represents.

Assisting on the project was Bill Raney, a sculp-
ture junior. He said the project took about a month
to complete.

The professional experience of “working on some-
thing big that works,” is invaluable to his aspiring
sculpture career.

“It’ll last forever," Raney said of the project.

WUKY olticials hope liStBllBl‘S tllllB ill to fundraiser

By Jonathan Lllland

Contributing writer

.The air that carries music is free. Unfortunately,
the radio stations aren’t. It’s time to put your money
where your ears are during the W UKY fall fundrais-

 

who are working for the fundraiser. The
phone number for contributions is 257-
9600.

This fundraiser is the last drive solicit-
in contributions from listeners this year.
T e average contribution is $50. There is

 

The backbone of the station is Nation—
al Pubic Radio, which provides news.
Over the years the station has evolved to
what VVUKY general manager, Roger
Chesser, calls “the great America contri-
bution to music.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

NEWShytes

Simpson trial
linally nearing the end

LOS ANGELES —~ The trial that some
thought might never end is at last bumbling to a
bitter close.

().J. Simpson’s judge set today aside to wrap up
legal loose ends and hammer out jury instruc—
tions, which he hopes to deliver today.

After a three-day weekend for Monday‘sJew~
ish holiday, the jury could hear closing arguments
beginning Tuesday — the first anniversary of the
trial, which began Sept. 26, 1994, with jury selec-
tion.

If the judge's timetable holds, jurors could be
deliberating Simpson’s fate late next week.

"33“": Jeltl “ll“ "9'" ill set-aside case

WASHINGTON -— A Hasidic Jew has won a
four-year fight to be accepted in a federal set-
aside pro yram for small businesses that is usually
reserved or blacks, Hispanics and other “socially
disadvantaged” minorities.

The case could open the program's door wider
to other whites ifthey can prove that their beliefs,
appearance or social standing produce a disadvan-
taged status, according to some legal observers.

These experts say the out—of—court settlement
is an apparent Clinton administration reaction to
a Supreme Court ruling that severely limited
affirmative action programs that appear to be
based solely on race.

Clinton reveals national Internet plan

SAN FRANCISCO -— President Clinton pro—
osed yesterday that every school in the nation be
linked to the computer Internet by 2000, a gov-
ernment-industry venture be likened to “a high—
tech barnraisin .”

Clinton cal ed the initiative “an enormous
effort” com arable to building the nation's net—
works of rai roads and highways. He said that for
schoolchildren it was “just as essential as teaching
them to read and write and the new math.”

Administration officials said 5 ecifics of the
plan would be announced later in t e fall.

NAMEdropping

louuanls says Stillllll should accept gays

SOUTH BEND, Ind. ——(1'regI.ouganis says
Notre Dame needs to face the reality ofgay stu-
dents.

The

Catholic university‘s

  

 

 

 

ing drive. no minimum contribution. The grand The programming for VVUKY is a administration refused to recog—
It starts today and runs until next Friday. prizes, determined by a drawing from lom'us combination of UK programming, some nize a .Cam In a and lesbian
The station hopes to raise $100,000 this fall after a daily contributors, are a $1,000 C from (1 segments that are assembled at UK‘ and group and hgfinfd 2; from ,,,,.e,_
| record-breaking 5 ring drive that raised over Bank One and a $1,000 gift certificate 4/184 satellite programs that are PUt directlyon in ron campus
$100,000, said Gai Bennett, WUKY’s public rela- from J. Peterman’s. The station also is V the air. It’5 unaffected by the UniVCISIIF"5 E-"‘I’m not nlitical but (Notre /
tions director. selling coffee mugs, T—shirts and CDs to The WUKanIl other radio station, the student-run alter— Dame's polify) is a very narrow-
Located at 91.3 FM, the oldest University-owned support PUbliC ra iO- findraiser begins native, WRFL- minded view ”5 the' former
:. station in America runs a on a $1,000,000 budget WUKY’s other fundraisers were toda and will The station’s goal i5 ‘0 “supply P‘ml’le ()lvrnpic diver said before a cam- ‘
’2 with the majority of that coming from private contri— “Blues, Brews, and Barbeque,” a beer and run through next with what they can’t get from other sta- pus speech Tuesday Louganls
‘ butions from listeners and buSinesseS. blues fest held this spring and “Heard it Friday. tions,” Chesser said. . In February, he announced he
M0“ 0f the money goes for Pro .amm'."g: 1" ‘hmugl’.‘he G'aPCV'mv” a W” “5“"8 WKY CPF’C'Ft'Y ”Pk-i fight“ 9‘" 0f has AIDS. Notre Dame officials have said that ifit
return, contributors, as well as the pub Ic, are mv1ted and "111510 event 135! fall. 27 radio stations m Lextngton for listen— worked with the group it would appear it was
to tell the station what they want to hear. The station has a 100,000-watt trans- ers. In the future, listeners can look ff” 3 sanctioning a lifestyle the church opposes.
_ The phones are answered by about 150 volunteers mitter that reaches throughout central Kentucky. more contemporary approach to programming. Compiled from 7”" reports.
00......C.CIOCOOOCCCOOCODCCOOCIOOOOOOO0.0.0.000....0...’.............IIOOOOOO0.0...................I.OICCOICOOIIOCOOOOOCOOC0..0.....0.......IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
Committed Convert captures achievement award lrom ll. Magazme
By April Hollon He had to compete with thou- apply for everything I can.” tucky, Province Seven student
Campus Fdim sands of other applicants. Throu h his methods, Coovert director for Omicron Delta
In order to win this award, has raise enough money to pay Kappa, co—chairman for UK
Most college students barely Coovert was required to submit a for all of his education. He hopes Senior Challenge, co-chairman 7
find time to do all of their home- list of his extracurricular activities, to continue his streak long enough for United Way Student Cam- ,
“it" work from all of their classes, two letters of recommendation to achieve his career goals. pai , works at the visitor's center a . I
,'_ 7 much less participate in extra and an essay. “I want to go into international an O'Charley‘s. 5
. ,. , activities. “I basically said I didn’t feel I law,” Coovert said. “I’d like to In addition to all of this, s:
2 2‘31 But UK political science senior was any more dedicated than an work as secreta of state or an Coovert started a new student '
' Scott Coovert does not seem to other student,” Coovert saidi ambassador or a diplomat to a for- organization through the Alumni
' 0... have this roblem. In addition to Along with the $1,000 scholar- eign nation.” Association called the Student
' "‘- 13 credit ours, Coovert partici- ship, Coovert will be featured in a Coovert's extracurricular activ- Alumni Connection last semester.
4* ’ '- , pates in 12 outside commitments. U. Magazine article. ities include: Student Develop- A busy lifestyle like this may
* /‘- ‘ For Coovert‘s overwhelming Coovert applied for the schol- ment Council, Collc 'ans for Aca- seem unusual to most, but it is 2
mt ' involvement on the campus and in arship because he said he always demic Excellence, tudent Gov- way of thinking for Coovert. ,1
9- . — ‘ - the community, as well as keeping tries out for everything he sees. emment Association, Golden Key “I don't have enou to do,” he ;
"IIme n in academics, he won the 1995 “Students don’t take advantage National Honor Society, Mortar said. “In my mind i I have idle
; SIM I‘ll. Scott Coovert, winner flu Magazine scholarship, is (i) Magazine GEO Individual of scholarship opportunities,” Board Honor Society, student time, then something's wrong.
involved I"! 12 different 0111513! activities We! dimes. Achievement Scholarship Award. Coovert said. “I research and coordinator for Kids Voting Ken- This is my whole aspect on life.” 1 ~ ”V -
_ ”New \ s y 9 ~ a s
‘M-‘-.-.—— .. .,. _ - — . -- . ~ I 4... “ ‘5‘”, RN, we

 

  

: 2 Friday, September 22, 1995, Kentucky Kernel

Marsalis a IIIIB IIBI‘IOI'IIIBI‘
With many IIIIIBI‘EIII laces

By Brian Privotl
Arts Editor

\Vhen the Lincoln CenterJazz
Orchestra came onsta e W'ednes—
day night at the ()tis . Sin letary
Center. the crowd ap Iauded
loudly. When VVynton Marsalis
came out, the crowd blew off the
roof.

Marsalis was the consummate

rformer. Everything he said in
ligtween the songs was funny. He
knew when to stand up in front of
the band and dance alon and
when to move off to the si e and
let the players shine for them-
selves.

Antl shine they did. The band
was tight. So tight and so swingin’
I thou ht they would bust the but-
tons oh‘ their tuxedos.

But it was when Wynton was

up front leading the band, pound-
ing his fists down in the air to the
beat, stomping his foot on the
ground to start the song and
grooving along, bouncing to the
eat, that the band was most on.

Earlier that day, I sat in on the
sound check. There I saw not the
performer, but the artist.

Marsalis looked like a re lar

y. He was dressed in fade red
fiznim pants, a bag ' shirt and
tennis shoes, probab y the same
clothes that he wears when going
to the grocery store or any other
everyday errand.

And that’s what sound check
seemed like for Marsalis: like an
everyday chore. He stood in front
of the group, firm, staring at his
stack of scores on the stand in
front of him and cutting the band
off with a swing of his fist in the

 

     

 

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Internet:

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Lance Williams ................................................... Editor in Chief
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Brenna Reilly ........................................................... News Editor
Jacob Clabes ...................................................... Executive Editor
April Holion ........................................................ Campus Editor
Matt Felice ......................................................... Editorial Editor
Jason Dattiio .......................................................... Sports Editor
Brian Privett .............................................................. Arts Editor
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Copy Editors .................... J ohn Abbott, Scott Gordon, Lindsay

Hendrix, Mary Madden, Beth McKenzie,
Eric Million, Jeff Vinson and Tiffany White

 

 

 

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air. He was a man at the office.

And the intensity earlier in the
day aid off.

'lPhe show was perfect. The
trumpets were blastm , the saxes
were swinging and t e rhythm
section was bumping. Every now
and then a soloist would stand and
blow out his lines, a lone voice
speaking for the rest of the band.

Marsalis onsta e was jazz per-
sonified —— loose, Buid, intense, all
at the same time. When he
bounced around to the swin beat
of the ni ht’s songs, his lack
jacket and3 slacks flowed loosely
with the beats as if the rhythm
from the drums was his heartbeat,
as if the blast of the trumpets was
coursing through his veins.

After the show, when most of
the crowd, except for the man
autograph hunters, were gone,I
snuc backsta e and found
Marsalis in the ressing room that
he shared with about half the guys
in the band.

The room was loud and alive,
with band members squeezing
around each other to et to their
bags and clothes. ome band
members were taking trips to the
little pint bottle in a brown bag
and pouring swigs into their blue
plastic cups.

Eve one was excited and talk-
ing lou ly, and Marsalis, now back
in the clothes he wore at the
sound check, joined in, throwin
out verbal uppercuts and playfufi
jabs.

When he was finall ready to
answer my uestions,I saw two
other sides 0 Marsalis, the person
and the teacher.

I first asked him, nervously,
what he was trying to do with the

DilIeHSz'oNS

 

Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra in
terms of creating a jazz canon,
because I had read in a press
release

“Don’t be talkin about no
press release," Marsalgis interrupt—
ed.

He then gave me a lesson on
how to ask questions of big stars.

“You’re a student, right,"
Marsalis said. “Don’t be asking
questions to get a quote. If you

 

know something you’re interested
in, ask questions, but if you don’t
then don’t be asking nobody no
questions.”

After that, I talked to him for
about 15 minutes. Once we got
into a groove, Marsalis was
answering uestions like he lays
his horn. e stares intense y at

our e es, never breaking his gaze.
h/Iarsalis was animated and talked
fast as some points and slow and

OO0.00.0000COO0....OOOOOIOOOOOOOOOIOO0.000.000...0.0.000...

I IMII ”PINE W ton
Marsalis took a break om conduct-
ing long enough to thrill the audi—
ence with his mm ct playing (left).
Marsalis, back in is place before the
Lincoln Centerjazz Orchestra, led
the group through several Duke
Ellington songs (below).

PHOTOS IV JAMES CRISP Kfl'fltl mfl'

 

strai htforward at others.
er the interview was over

and after Marsalis had signed all
of his autographs, I stopped in in
the hallway to et a picture. When
it was done, I 5 00k his hand.

“Thanks for the lesson,” I said.

“Hey, I wasn’t preaching to
you,” he said.

Well, ou may not have been,
Wynton, but I took it to heart like

gospel.

Jazz artist prefers true American music

By Brian Privetl
Am Editor

This is an interview with Wynton
Marsalis conducted Wednesday night
uS/1er his pezfonnunce at the Otis A.
. ingletury enter.

0: I have a cat quote from the
liner notes of]os%irua Redmon’s album
Moodswing. He said “Great jazz,
like all great music, attains its value
not through intellectual complexity
but through emotional cxprcssivity. ”
What do you think about that?

W.M.: Something that has
tremendous emotion to it, in
terms of jazz as a fine art, will be
put in a context of great intellec—
tual complexity, but the spirituali-
ty of the music will be so great
t at it overshadows the intellectu‘
al complexity of it. Like the music
ofJohann Bach, like that music of
Duke Ellington that you heard
tonight. This whole thing of sepa-
rating the intellect from the emo-
tion, that’s impossible to do in a
great work of art.

Q: What about, I think they're
calling them “revis‘ionisrs” or
“rcvivulists? " W rircrs and critics are

saying young jazz musicians today
are just taking from old jazz and not
bein innovative?

W.M.: Here’s what you have to
understand — when you read
what jazz writers say, you go
through the history of jazz, if

ou’re interested in knowing.

’herever you take the viewpoint
of what is commonly held by a
group of people who
are a ways wrong, then
you have the ignorant
point ofview.

Q: So you’re saying
ulljazz ‘u'rrr’ers are igno— \_
runto/ :3?

“n 1.: Not all, I
don't know all of them. The
majority, yes. They’re ignorant of
music. They’re ignorant of jazz
music. They’re arrogant. So
they're unreachable. They’ve writ—
ten for decades things that are
incorrect and they are unchal-
lenged because they have an effect
on eo )le’s careers.

8: l ouldyou say then, tharjuzz.
in say, rhc past I 0 years has gotten a
lot better than it has been?

\V.M.: I think there's more
people playing it. Jazz is an art

form, it doesn’t go year-by-year.
There are more people laying
now because it’s receives more
publicity. If there ever is an
investment in jazz, then the whole
nation will be better because jazz
is in American mythology, more
successfully than any other art
form.
0: If it does that, then why isn’t it
more opular?
.M.: Because it

/ was invented b the
US. negro. hat’s

_/— why.
__| Q: So it’s been
—’ labelled black music and

W.M.: Well, it hasn’t been
labelled anything. It has the values
inherent in the music that have
not been deemed by the powers
that be as suitable to be taught to
the ublic, as something that
shou d be used as the basis for an
American school of music, but
that’s what it is. So what do we ut
in its place, rock ’n’ roll, whic is
not designed to do that. The drop
from George Gershwin to EMS
Presley, that’s a long drop.

0: What about composers like

Aaron Copeland? He used blue notes,
didn’t he?

W.M.: Aaron Copeland played
European music. American music
is blues, swing, domestic rinci-
ples, improwsation, cal and
response, mutual dialogue, deci—
sion making. That’s democracy.

Q: that about your classical stufl,
thou h?

.M.: It’s classical music. You
can do whatever you want to do.
But classical music is nothing like
playing jazz. Jazz music addresses
the same thin s as the Constitu-
tion, the Bill 0 Rights. Jazz music
objectifies American identity. The
form is desi ed to do that. Clas-
sical music 15 not designed to do
that.

Q: So jazz is your more favored
firm, then?

W.M.: Of course, I’m Ameri—
can, why wouldn’t it be? Jazz
reminds me of myself. I don’t
mind oing to Germany, though.
Hey, Iglove it there. I love Haydn,
but Ellin on, that’s like bein at
home wit the red beans and rice.
Weinerschnitzel is cool too, but
gumbo, you know what I’m say—

ing.

 

 

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NEW FACES Kick return

 

Photos or mm mm ram/mg

specialist Kio Sanford (above) and quarterback Billy
jack Hashim (No. 7 at rig?!) made tbeirfim start: of the reaion 1111 week-
end against Indiana. For askim, it was~ bisfim rareer start.

By Brett Dawson
Senior Staff Writer

I don’t wanna tome bark down
from this cloud

If you’re tired of hearing Bush
sing that line on MTV, tune in to
the Southeastern Conference game
of the week tomorrow at 12:30
pm. and watch the UK and South
Carolina football teams live it.

Forgive the \Vildcats and
Gamecocks, both 1—2, if they’re
sharing space on cloud nine. After
all, each team is coming off win
one.

Following a painful opening air
of games _. South Caro ina

 

allowed 93 points in two losses
while UK tacked on two to the
nation’s longest losing streak ——
both teams turned it around in
week three.

The Cocks woke up and blew
out Louisiana Tech 68—2 1, and the
Cats broke their slide with a 17—10
win over Indiana.

But now

“It’s back to business as usual
and the Southeastern Conference,"
UK coach Bill Curry said. “VVe’ve
only taken a very small step.”

South Carolina coach Brad
Scott concurred, but welcomed the
new attitude that a win of any
stature brings.

 

 

 

If the Gamecocks garnered enough confidence

 

SHUWstoppers

Steve Taneyhill, the Gamecocks’ flashy quarter—

Kentucky Kernel, Friday, September 22, 1 99s 3

Cats and Books on football high

“Everybody’s happy to be a
Gamecock again this week,” he
said.

Who could blame them? After
starting the season in several pre-
season Top 25 polls, South Caroli-
na was being trumpeted as the
SEC’s team on the rise.

The earthward crash began in a
42—23 rout at Georgia’s Sanford
Stadium, and continued with 51-21
shellacking at the hands of up-and-
coming Arkansas.

“1 think people’s opinion of us
was a little higher than it maybe
should’ve been,” Scott said. “I see
us trying to be a team that's trying
to make strides to close the gap
with some of the other top teams in
this conference.”

If they hope to close that gap
anytime soon, a solid start would be
playing the way they did against
Louisiana Tech. In what could be
called a grand understatement,
Scott called that his team’s “best
execution on both sides of the ball."

The key to the offensive side of
the ball is quarterback Steve
Taneyhill. The senior has thrown
for 951 yards on the season, and
has nine touchdown passes.

“He’s always had that flair that a
quarterback needs,” Curry said.
“Now he’s adding to that with the
consistency that he has to have.”

\Vhile South Carolina’s week-
three return from the dead was
brought on by an offensive out-
burst, it was a decidedly different
path to success for the Cats.

After falling behind 10-(), UK
turned up the defensive heat on
Indiana and took quarterback Chris
Dittoe out of the game, sacking
him five times and batting away
pass after pass.

()ffensively, though, UK was
about as smooth as Deion Sanders
is poor.

Though Billyjack Haskins was
sharp in his debut at quarterback
and tailback Moe Williams pound-
ed out a So-carry, 120~yard perfor-
mance, UK struggled to get in
sync.

“There were times in the first
(three) games when the other team
just shut our offense down,”
“'illiams said. “\Ve've still got
some adjustments to make.”

\Vith a lonely win in their col—
umn, don’t expect UK to look past
South Carolina to a date with
Auburn next weekend. But should
the Cats topple the Gamecocks, a
rowdy crowd likely will greet the
Tigers at Commonwealth Stadium.
And that, Williams said, serves as a
motivator.

“It‘s definitely time to er the
fans back behind us," he saitf

from last week’s 68-21 walloping of Louisiana Tech,
second-year coach Brad Scott’s squad could be diffi—
cult for the Cats’ to handle in Columbia, SC.

After beating West Virginia in last
year’s Carquest Bowl, the Gamecocks
l 1 -.. are off to a slow start in 1995, losing

. their first two games to Southeastern
KHIITIICKYstats

Conference foes on the road.
' hushlnI

back, has apparently mellowed his act while improv-
ing his all-around game. So far this season, Taneyhill,
the former long-haired eccentric, has racked up 951
yards of passing and nine TDs.

“Steve is off to a good start," Scott
said.

“He’s made good decisions for us
this entire year. He’s a leader, and a
guy that is beginnin to come into his
own as far as the dgrop back passing
game."

VUK’s quarterback Billy Jack

 

 

SOUTH CAROLINA stats

The Gamecocks’ 1—2 record out of
the ate has been a surprise to many
foot all gurus who expected the squad
to make a run at the SEC’s Eastern

    

an. “min/rm To Long k l ltt. Mil-Is mum TI! to.

 

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Moe Williams 57 211 3] 1 11 u _ , , , Scott IIaskins Will be making the second Tana 1“" 'Y
. Ray McLaurin 26 112 43 O 15 _ I thmk PCOPIC 5 013mm" 0f “5 was ” _ start of his career Saturday. If Haskins y Stanley Pratchett 31 105 3.4 0 21
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“ Obviously the fans, who turned out in near—sellout -