xt7tdz032c0g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tdz032c0g/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1989-08-25 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, August 25, 1989 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 25, 1989 1989 1989-08-25 2020 true xt7tdz032c0g section xt7tdz032c0g  

 

 

By BEN WALKER
Associated Press

NEW YORK — Pete Rose was
kicked out of baseball yesterday,
and he may never be back.

Rose, the very symbol of the
game for a generation, was
banned for betting on his own
team. He says he will return —
maybe as early as next season —
but none of the 14 others who got
lifetime penalties ever did.

“There is no deal for reinstate-
ment," Commissioner A. Bartlett
Giamatti said emphatically at a
news conference in New York.
“He has been fired by me.“

Rose, who continued to deny he
bet on baseball, can apply for re-
instatement after one year. Even
if he‘s turned down, the game‘s
most prolific hitter will still be el-
igible for election to the Hall of
Fame in 1992.

“My life is baseball. I hope to
get back into baseball as soon as
I possibly can,“ Rose said in Cin-
cinnati, where he was born and
where he broke Ty Cobb‘s all-
time hits record of 4,191 in 1985.
“I‘ve been in baseball three de-
cades and to think I‘m gonna be
out of baseball for a very short
period of time hurts.“

The Cincinnati Reds named
coach Tommy Helms as interim
manager and said they would
begin a search for Rose‘s perma~
nent successor. In his last game,
Rose, who liked to boast that he
played in more winning games

 

."F

ROSE GIAMATTI

than anyone, guided the Reds
past Chicago 6-5 in 10 innings on
Monday.

The ban prohibits Rose from
appearing at old-timers’ games,
wearing a major league uniform
or working in any capacity for a
big league club. He can‘t even
step on a field.

Rose's contract runs through
Oct. 30, 1990, and calls for him to
get an additional $604,166.67. The
Reds, however, are no longer ob—
ligated to pay him.

“One of the game‘s greatest
players has engaged in a variety
of acts which have stained the
game and he must now live with
the consequences of those acts,"
Giamatti said.

Rose and Giamatti signed a
five-page agreement on Wednes-
day that ended two months of
legal wrangling. Both sides said
the agreement was “fair.“

Rose's lawyers first ap-
proached baseball in April and
expressed “a desire to talk,“ depv
uty commissioner Francis T. Vin-

 

Little Leaguers say
Rose no longer their
idol. Story, page 5.

cent said. The two sides met
again in late July and made a
tentative settlement last Friday.

“There really wasn‘t a negotia-
tion," Giamatti said. “It is not a
compromise.“

For Rose, the agreement was
an opportunity to save face with-
out risking the possibility of
being convicted in court. For Gia-
matti, it was a chance to end a
“sorry episode" that became
public during spring training,

Giamatti said he had concluded
from evidence compiled by spe~
cial investigator John Dowd that
Rose bet on baseball, including
the Reds to win, but he said that
was his own personal conclusion,
not an official finding. Rose had
sought to hold a hearing with
Rose, but a series of court deci-
sions prevented that from hap-
pening.

“In the absence of a hearing
and in the absence of any evi-
dence to the contrary, I am con-
fronted by the factual record of
Mr. Dowd and on the basis of
that, yes I have concluded that
he bet on baseball,“ Giamatti
said. “I was letting the legal
course run its course. I was confi-
dent we would win."

Giamatti bans Rose from baseball for life

 

By cums HARVEY
Senior Staff Writer

When UK graduate student
Roxanne Gaul was young, Pete
Rose was her idol. She followed
him almost religiously as a
youngster growing up near Cin-
cinnati.

But yesterday morning, Gaul
saw the clay feet of her idol
smashed when Major League
Baseball Commissioner A. Bart-
lett Giamatti banished Rose
from baseball for life.

“I hated to see it happen,”
said Gaul, who is in the Martin
School of Public Administration.
“I idolized him; my whole fami-
ly idolized him.”

Although Gaul is a die-hard
Reds fan like many UK students
interviewed yesterday, she said

 

Rose’s punishment fit his crime,
some on Lexington campus say

she thought Giamatti’s sentence
was fair.

“I think it was fair," Gaul
said. “My gut feeling is that
Pete is guilty. I think the gam-
bling comes from his fame and
themoneyhehas.”

Mickey Campbell, a second-
ary education senior from Lex-
ington, saw the Rose dilemma
as a no-win situation for the con-
troversial Reds skipper.

“I think Pete knows he’s
guilty and he knew he couldn’t
win," Campbell said.

“The evidence was too over-
whelming. Besides, if Giamatti
couldn’t judge him, then the
commissioner‘s role would‘ve
been diminished," he said.

“The rules were specific, and
Pete Rose knew what he was
getting into," said Brian Stover,

a business management sopho-
more from Winfield, W.Va.
“Just because he’s Pete Rose
doesn‘t mean he should get spe—
cial treatment.”

Others felt that Rose‘s life-
time banishment was too severe
because of the contributions be
made to the game.

“They should let him back in,
that‘s too harsh for any-
body," said Fred Jones, a busi-
ness management sophomore
from Franklin, Ky.

“Everybody makes mistak-
es,“ said Carolyn Ellery, a so-
cial work staff assistant. “He
was just doing it on the side."

Many people said they think
Rose probably will be elected
into the Baseball Hall of Fame

See SOME. Page 2

 

 

Countered Rose: "Despite what
the commissioner said today, I
didn't bet on baseball. I have too
much respect for the game. too
much love for the game. "

Rose said he regretted only
"that I won‘t have the opportuni-
ty to tell my side of the story "

"Peter Edward Rose acknowl-
edges that the commissioner has
a factual basis to impose the pen-
alty provided herein, and hereby
accepts the penalty imposed on
him . . . and agrees not to chal-
lenge that penalty in court or
otherwise.” the agreement
stated.

tosc also ugi‘r-cri not to contest
or appcal any rlccision by thr-
t’UHIl’I‘llSSltil‘rt‘I‘ on rcrnstatmcnt
Giamatti adnirttcd thcrc was
no prcccrlcnt for reinstatement
and would not socculzite on what
liosc must do to pct hack into fhc
game
Ky. (.l\\1\l’l'l, “:ch

 

 

State’s student leaders say
they will oppose tuition hike

By C.A. DUANE BONIFER
Editor in Chief

The student government presi»
dents of the state‘s eight universi-
ties say they want to send a strong
signal to the state that tuition
should not be raised in the next
biennium.

The student presidents plan to
send letters to university presi-
dents and the Council on Higher
Education urging them not to
change the formula that sets tu-
ition at the state’s eight universites
and 14 community colleges.

The move is a reaction to a
speech given by Jim Hill, the coun-
cil‘s student member, at an Aug. 12
meeting of the Board of Student
Body Presidents.

Hill. a UK third-year law student
who was appointed to the council
by Gov. Wallace Wilkinson, told the
student presidents that the univer-
sity presidents had asked the coun-
cil to come up with alternatives to
the tuition-setting policy and might
want to raise tuition significantly.

During his speech, Hill lashed
out at the university presidents for
requesting tuition alternatives, ac-
cusing them of “higher-education
cannibalism” and trying to “bal-
ance their budgets on the backs on

those least capable of paying _ the
students.“

“This plan is the child of budget
crisis. And certainly that is not the
proper mode to be in,” Hill said
this week. .. When the coffers
are low, the institutions of higher
education will go after whatever
they can get and they will literally
feed off themselves.“

UK President David Roselle said
the university presidents have dis-
cussed tuition-setting alternatives,
but he said, “I’m not anxious to
raise tuition."

“It‘s just been said that we need
to look at all sources of revenue for
higher education," Roselle said.
The idea “may even be pre-embry-
onic."

And Cox said that he does not
sense "a groundswell of support for
changing the formula."

The university presidents re-
quested the tuition alternatives at a
June 6 meeting with Mike Harreld,
the council’s chairman.

The council‘s staff prepared
three tuition alternatives and Gary
Cox, the council’s executive direc-
tor, sent the alternatives to council
members and the university presi-
dents in a July 14 memorandum.

“Recognizing other than state
appropriations, tuition is the uni-
versities‘ largest revenue source,

and in light of the state‘s revenue
outlook, the consensus of the presi-
dents was to take a preliminary
look at alternative tuition-setting
policies and the fiscal impact of
these alternatives," Cox said in the
memo.

All of the alternatives would
raise tuition more than the formula
would, Hill said. Higher education
tuition at the state‘s school is de-
termined in part by comparing
Kentuckians' ability to pay with
the average tuition price at bench-
mark schools.

The data sent to the presidents
were preliminary, and in order for
any of the plans to be implemented
it would take action by the council,
Cox said in the memo.

The council will submit its bud-
get request for the next biennium
to the General Assembly and any
recommended tuition increase by
Nov. 15, Cox said.

Hill sent a July 31 letter to Cox,
requesting that the council draft a
resolution that would not change
the way tuition is determined dur'
ing the 199092 biennium.

Rep. Ernesto Scorsone, who rep-
resents UK and sits on the House
Education Committee, said he had
not heard of any plans to dramati-
cally raise tuition.

Scc SI [1)le I'S. Page 5

 

 

main; ::
«Honours:
- .

.. ..
”mu

STEVE SANDERS Kernel Sta“

BACK TO CAMPUS: Two students return to Blanding Tower
last weekend. Students settled into their dorms this week

 

 

Moves taken to improve campus safety

By ELIZABETH WADE
Associate Editor

In an effort to improve campus
safety, UK has taken a number of
measures, including installing a
campus emergency phone system,
improving lighting and increasing
the number of on-duty walking po-
lice officers.

"Incidents on the UK campus are
not such that we have an unsafe
campus." said W. H. McComas,
UK chief of police. “However, we
are being proactive — trying to
create an environment that every-
one is aware. . . , We looked at the
campus as a total entity, to see
what we could do to improve cam-
pus safety."

Ten single-button emergency
telephones will be installed by the
end of the academic year.

The phones automatically con-
nect the caller to the UK police sta-
tion. The officer can determine the
exact phone from which the call
was placed, McComas said. A light
also will come on when the phone
is used so those nearby will know
that a person needs help, he said.

McComas said the campus
needed another safety feature in
addition to expanded lighting and
the Student Government Associa‘
tion‘s campus escort service.

He said UK compared itself to
other universities and what they
were doing to improve campus
safety.

Although UK was comparable to
most universities, it lacked emer-
gency phone systems, he said.

The University decided to install
the phones after researching what

other schools have done to improve
campus safety, McComas said.

The phones will be installed on
Funkhouser Drive near the Funk-
houser Building, in the rear of Tay-
lor Dickey. in the (‘ollege View
parking lot. at University and C00-
per drives. at Hugulet Avenue and
University Drive, at Pennsylvania
Avenue and Columbia. one in a
parking structure. One at Gate 1 on
Administration Drive and two in
the Clifton Circle area

The project, which will cost
$18,000 for the first 10 phones, is by
the vice chancellor for administra-
tion‘s office, McComas said.

The inititial cost includes a re-
ceiving device for the police sta-
tion, which the University won‘t
have to purchase again.

The University also is spending

about $80,000 improving the light
mg around campus.

The Student Government Asso»
ciation conducted a survey last
year to determine areas of campus
that were not well lit.

Funding for the lighting was pro-
vided by UK‘s administration and
Kentucky l'tilitics

()ther safety measures the Uni-
versity is taking include:

IImproving lighting along the
sidewalk between Maxwell Place
and thc Chemistry/Physics Buildv
ing. Walking space also is being
added.

OThc University also has in
creased the number of walking po-
lice officers on campus to improve
safety. A minimum of four officers
will walk the Lexington campus 24
hours a day, McComas said.

Kentucky
faces losing
faculty

Associated Press

FRANKFURT. Ky Kentucky
Ul'lth‘I‘SlllOS finri thcnisclyes at a
disadvantage in retaining quality
faculty because of \HliiI‘IPS that
have failcd to kccp piicr- with the
regional ratc in recent years. edu-
cators say

“We (‘OIlllIlth‘ to know of individ
uals who lcuic fiascd on salary. '
said Gary cox. executive director
of the Kentucky ('ouncil on Higher
Education. Ilc said “you tend to
lose your best profcssurs because
of thc pay disparity

A report from the Atlanta based
Southern licgronal Education
Board says sincc 1978-79, the salary
of thc awragc full’tinie faculty
member at public universities in
Kentucky hti> risen 78 percent The
average faculty member in the 15
states scrycd by the board has had
a 95 pcrccnt pay incrczisc during
the sumc lllllt‘ pcriod

Hf the H othci‘ states in thc rc»
gion. 12 boosted faculty pay at a
higher ratc than Kentucky

The faculty salarics (it public col
lcgcs and uniicrsitics in Kentucky
arc cycn furthcr bolou the national
uyci‘zigc. thc rcport showed

‘t‘t?‘l \ll"\ l’iiut ‘

SAFETY TIPS

from the UK Police

enter.

Car Safety

Sexual Assault Prevention

you will return.
Never take short cuts

Harassing Phone Calls
ignore harassing calls

 

Residence Hall or Apartment Safety
Lock doors when you lmvo your room 0' (11“
Don‘t loan your keys or ”do them
Don't prop open outside we" ‘0' me- r “w

Close windows and Or A doc"- nu‘o'c .24.
Lock all valuables rr‘ We fuck
it you think you‘re being followed change pan: zinc. an an the 0000

Site direction It persrsted, go to nearest phone son ml! the police

Do not go out, work or travel a‘o"e at ., Ll"!
Let someone know where you are where you l'P gou‘g and when

Keep your keys ready to enter your room, apartment or car

If they become threatening. mil the DOM»

q ‘ifins.},».t

i c. , \m
»r‘o_r,"fn"jji,,§v,. k

 

 

IRISH HARPRING Rumor (raptors

 

 2 — Kentucky Kornol, Frldoy.Auguct25.1989

SPORTS

Rose deserved banishment

"Any player, umpire. or club or
league official or employee who
shall bet any sum whatsoever upon
any baseball game in connection
which the bettor has a duty to per»
form. shall be declared permanent»
ineligible."

Section 2! (d)
Major League Rules

Pete Rose knew the rules, and
the punishment for breaking the
rules. but he broke them anyway.

Hose thought he was above base-
ball. He thought he could not be
caught. He believed that if caught
betting on baseball, there would be
no harsh punishment because he is
baseball’s all-time leader in hits.

Well, Pete thought wrong.

There is not a player. a coach, a
manager, an owner or anybody
that is bigger than baseball. With
no respect for the nation‘s pastime,
Rose believed he was bigger than
the game because of his accom-
plishments on the field.

Rose deserves everything he is
getting. Rose gave baseball a lot
during his playing days, but he has
since forfeited everything baseball
owes him when he bet on baseball
and the Reds.

With his actions. he has broken
the hearts of millions of baseball
fans. young and old. especially the
thousands of Reds‘ faithful.

Based on the findings of John M.
Dowd. special investigator for
Major League Baseball, Rose bet
on baseball games, including on his
own team. And that is the biggest
of all sins in the baseball commu—
nllV.

A manager betting on baseball is
horrible. A manager has total con-
trol of his team, except the man-
ager of the New York Yankees.

A manager can keep a bitter out
of the lineup, knowing that he hits
the opposing starting pitcher ex-
tremely well. He can leave a strug—
gling pitcher in the game too long.

Barry Hooves
Sports Editor

 

 

W
REEVES

“The integrity of the game," has
been damaged, no doubt about it.
So Major league Baseball Com-
missioner A. Bartlett Giamatti did
the only thing he could do —- ban
Rose from baseball for life.

With Giamatti‘s action, Rose be-
comes the 15th player to be ban-
ished from baseball for life, the
first since 1943. No player who has
been banned for life has been re-
instated.

The Major League Rules have a
clause that allows banished players
a chance to apply for reinstate-
ment after one year. Rose thinks
he will be reinstated when he ap-
plies for readmission next year.

Should Pete Rose be eligible for
baseball's Hall of Fame?

Yes. He should be inducted into
the Hall of Fame in Cooperstown,
NY, because of his accomplish-
ments as a player. After all, he
still has more hits than any other
player in the history of the game.

Some of the Rose faithful do not
believe he should have been
banned from baseball for more
than a year. To them, I say:
“Wake up. Take the ‘Big Red'
glasses off.“

Let's take this hypothetical situa-
tion: A person working in manage-
ment of a company is found to own
stock in a rival company. Does
anyone think that person should not
be fired? No.

 

Some of the Rose
faithful do not believe
he should have been
banned from baseball
for more than a year.
To them, I say: “Wake
up. Take the “Big Red’
glasses off. ”

The people of Cincinnati should
be the ones most upset. He may
have caused one or two National
League West titles in the 1980‘s.

I do not understand their rea-
soning. Why would you want to pro-
tect a man who may have cost the
Reds as many titles as he won for
them?

Pete Rose is not the epitome of a
hero. He is everything but that.

Children, who have idolized him
for years, are forced to pay $5 to
$10 just for an autograph from Pete
Rose. That, in itself, tells me what
kind of person Pete Rose is.

It is horrible that a man who
makes more than $500,000 a year
sells his signature to kids. How can
anyone feel sorry for Rose?

Sports Editor Barry Reeves is a
journalism junior and a Kernel
sports columnist.

Continued from Page I

“The burden of proof is on Mr.
Rose," said Giamatti, who added
that the commissioner’s office
will not require Rose to enter a
gambling rehabilitation program.

“I don’t think I have a gam-
bling problem,” said Rose, who
has admitted betting on sports
other than baseball.

Rose had not been with the
Reds for two days following the
birth of his daughter. On Wednes—

Some students

Continued from Page I
despite his punishment, and may
return to the game.

“(The punishment is) a slap on
the wrist," said Dam Mackey, a
junior from Lexington.

“I think it’ll be a long drawn-
out process, but he’ll get re—
instated,” said Kevin Greenwood,
a psychology junior from Central
City, Ky. “I think he’s a rebel . . .
he really likes the challenge."

Under the guidelines of Rose’s

 

punishment, he can apply for re-
instatement in one year.

don’t think anybody will ever
take him back again.“

Giamatti bans Rose from baseball

for betting on his own team. He
never applied for reinstatement,
but attempts by “Shoeless Joe”
Jackson and others who were
banished never succeeded.

day night, he was in Minneapolis
for a television appearance on
the Cable Value Network to sell
autographed baseballs for $39.94.

Giamatti said Rose was free to
do such work, but added, “confi-
dent steps to rehabilitation should
be taken that have not hitherto
been taken."

Rose became the first person to
be banned for life since 1943.
when Philadelphia Phillies presi-
dent William D. Cox was barred

say Rose’s sentence fair

Don Biberstine, a local baseball
card collector who owns Bibby's
Baseball Cards Plus, said that
the value of Rose's baseball
cards might go down because of
yesterday’s decision.

Rose’s rookie Topps card is
worth about $650 in mint condi-
tion, Biberstine said.

“I don’t think it will go up,"
Biberstine said. “In fact, I think
it will go down.”

But Ted Williams said: “I
would let him in. The morals in
this country have eased over the
years. Look how many people bet
every day. I‘m not saying it's
right. but it‘s shouldn't deny him
something he deserves. "

Reactions were mixed about
whether Rose will be hired as a
manager again.

“He'll get a cushy job in Cin-
cinnati as a spokesman for a beer
company,” Campbell said.

But Mackey was not so opti-
mistic about Rose’s future. “I

 

 

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Place?

find one in the
Kernel Classifieds

 

 

 

 

 

 

Welcome Back Students

\ Start the year off with a strike!
\

Open Bowl for $1 per Game
, -Every day until 6 pm. at Southland Lanes

CLOTHES ’N’ SUCH

Discover Quality and Value
Beyond Your Imagination!
Accepting top—quality adult winter
fashions and accessories
208 ROSEMONT GARDEN
278-5151
Open Monday-Friday IO o.m.-5 pm.
where you is paid to clean your closets

C
d}

20% OH

Grow in your faith at UK!

I
0
-Every day open to close at Eastland Lanes S‘hOOI supplles :

offer 900d throth AUQUSt 27’ 1989 I Bring this coupon into I participating Kinko‘s Copy Center and receive 20% off your

0As always, $1 per game Monday-Thursday I purchase of School Supplies (55 minimum). Not valid with any other offer. One cou
after 11 pm. pon per customer. Expires 9/30/89.

Ask about all-night bowling on Friday and Saturday Nights I‘inl(01si

Leagues now forming
the copy center

 

 

If you met us during the week —
don’t forget us over the weekend

 

( coming attractions 3
Meet-A-Church Night

This Thursday, 8/31; 6 Denominations;
7:30 pm; New Student Center.

Lexington ’s Finest Bowling Centers
EASTLAND LANES SOUTHLAND LANES

Small Group Bible Studies
starting next week!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

MM] InterVarsity Christian Fellowship

llllllllilllllllllll

 

 

Chris Shahan's

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Editor in Chief
Executive Editor
Associate Editor
Campus Editor
Editorial Editor
Sports Editor

Arts Editor

Assistant Arts Editor
Photography Editor

Adviser

Advertising Director

Assistant Advertising Director
Production Manager

are $30 per year.

Shepherdsvillo, KY 40165.

(606)257-2871.

 

The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel is published on class days during the academic year and
weekly during the eight-week summer session.
Third-class postage paid at Lexington, KY 40511. Mailed subscription rates

The Kernel is printed at Standard Publishing and Printing. 534 Buokman St,

Correspondence should be addressed to the Kentucky Kernel. Room 035
Journalism Building. University of Kentucky. Lexington, KY 40506—0042. Phone

C.A. Duane Boniler
Brian Jent
Elizabeth Wade
Tonia Wilt

Michael L. Jones
Barry Reeves

Kip Bowmar

Charlie McCue
Stove Sanders

Mike Agin
Jeff Kuorzi
Judy Furst
Scott Ward

 

 

-------1

With UK ID

F riday, August 25 - 6:30 pm.

I
I
Spaghetti Dinner I
I
I

Calvary Baptist Church

includes salad, garlic bread, iced tea, & dessert

I
-—------------J

It's a Get—Acquainted
Dinner just for college

students! Come to

Calvary at 6:30 Friday.

Come hungry -- till your .

empty stomach with

Chef Sam's delicious
spaghetti, then fill your

heart with the love

of Jesus Christ.

Calvary Baptist Church
150 East High Street - 254-3491

Open 24 Hours Open 7 Days

253- I 360 276-4673
40! So. Limestone 2524 Nirholasville Rd.

.I

 

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old college try.

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4 - Kentucky Kernel, FrIday, August 25, 1989

The Bluegrass Collectors exhibit opens Sunday at the UK Art Mu-

STEVE SANDERS/Kernel Sta"

DIVERSIONS

Kip Bowmar
Arts Editor

Exhibit to show private collectors’ art

By KlP BOWMAR
Arts Editor

A new exhibit at the UK Art Mu-
seum is bringing the work of many
diverse artists out of private collec-
tions and into the spotlight.

The Bluegrass Collectors exhibit,
which opens Sunday in the Sin-
gletary Center for the Arts, is com-
prised of works from the private
collections of central Kentuckians.

The exhibit has “both range and
depth," said UK Art Museum Di-
rector William Hennessey.

“The key aspect is that it is
drawn from the Lexington Commu-
nity," Hennessey said.

“We found all the art in central
Kentucky. . . . We didn’t go to a
museum in New York or Washing-
ton, (D.C.,) to get this. That makes
it very special indeed," he said.

Over 140 pieces create diversity
in the exhibit, spanning artistic pe-
riods, cultures, and subjects.

groupings , " Hennessey said.

“Being in central Kentucky
there's naturally equine and folk
art. Then there‘s a nice group of

Long's piece, “Three Musi-
cians," has sharp angular lines,
The musicians are close to one an-
other, making the bond between
them seem strong.

 

“The key aspect is that it is drawn from the
Lexington Community. We found all the art in

central Kentucky.

. . . We didn’t go to a

museum in New York or Washington, (0.0,) to
get this. That makes it very special indeed,”

William Hennessey
UK Art Museum Director

19th century art, impressionism
and the like“ he said.

The folk art includes work from
Frank Long and Thomas Hart Ben-
ton.

In contrast, the Thomas Hart
Benton painting titled “Waiting,"
also done in the 1930‘s, shows the
isolation of man. A faceless man
sits in the night near a railroad

track while moonlight illuminates
the background,

Sculptures included in this exhib-
it run the gamut from Frederic Re-
mington‘s famous “Bronco Buster"
(the bronze sculpture in this show
is one of approximately 100 origi-
nals) to Giovanni Bologna‘s “Mer-
cury." “Mercury" was done in
classical Greek style with a well-
defined and detailed physique.

Two of the more interesting
pieces in the exhibit are works by
Salvador Dali entitled “The Birth
of Venus,“ and modern artist
David Hockney‘s "Pablo PicaSSo
and his Blue Guitar."

0f portraits included in the ex
hibit, Gilbert Stuart‘s portrait of
George Washington stands out.

Bluegrass Collectors opens at the
UK Art Museum in the Singletary
Center for the Arts Sunday. It runs
through Oct. 22. The Museum is
open from noon to 5 pm. Tuesday
through Sunday.

seum in the Singletary Center for the Arts. “This show falls into nice little

 

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1533 Nicholasville Rd.
278-9533

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Welcomes Back Students
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Friday - Salmon Patties .

 

8:15 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
10:30 am.
6:00 pm.
7:00 pm.

1st Worship

Bible Study

2nd Worship
Evening Worship
Wed. Eve. Worship

Freshman
Representative
Council

72c 30 Freshmen will be
selected for the
Freshman
Representative
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Freshman
Senators

fr 4 Freshmen will be
elected to serve as
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Elections Oct. 4-5.

s“: Sign up in the SGA
office, Room 120,
Student "Center".

120 Student Center
Lexington, KY 40506-0030
(606) 257-3191

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Student Government Association

 

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Whole Wheat & Rye Buns Available
Extra items 53¢
Double Portions $1.00

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r---------- CLIPANDSAVE----------1‘
Prepare For Your Study Breaks

Sign Up For CABLE TV

Cable service is now available to all students. Watch
CNN Headline News, the Weather Channel, ESPN
and listen to MTV in stereo! Premium services now
available.

Ros SPECIAL

Triple meat, with your
choice of 4 meats

$5.55

WILDCAT SPECIAL

Double meat, with your
Choice of 3 meats

$4.50

All subs served with Lettuce,
Tomato, Cheese and our own
Top-Secret Dressing

 

Representatives from Telecable of Lexington will be on campus on
the foilowmg days to install your cable service:

Tues., Aug. 22, 3-8 pm.

 

 

Blazer, Boyd, Holmes, Jewell,
Keeneland, Patterson

 

 

Kirwan Tower; Kirwan I, II, III, IV Wed., Aug. 23, 3-8 pm.

Thur., Aug. 24, 3-8 pm.
Fri., Aug. 25, 3-8 pm.

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Blanding Tower; Blanding I, II, III, IV
Wildcat Special

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CHIPS AND DRINK

$555

Exp. Sept. 16, 1989

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I The Administration

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