xt7zkh0dzg3k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zkh0dzg3k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1988-03-22 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, March 22, 1988 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 22, 1988 1988 1988-03-22 2020 true xt7zkh0dzg3k section xt7zkh0dzg3k  

 

 

Sports

 

 

Carwell Gardner quits UK football
squad.SEE PAGE 3.

 

Viewpoint

 

 

Candidates need to debate the
issues. SEE PAGE 4.

 

Today: Sunny
Tomorrow: Sunny and warmer

55°-65°

 

 

 

 

Kentucky Kernel

Vot. xci. No. 129

ECW361894

WW6 Kentucky. Lexington. Kentucky

independent since 1971

Tuesday. March 22, 1988

 

By THOMAS J. SULLIVAN
News Editor

raduate student Vi ji
Jeganathan has faced
many changes in her life.

In the past six years she has
adjusted to living in a foreign
country. living with leukemia and
living with the thought that she
may not be able to afford the
operation that could save her life.

But Viji has faced all her
setbacks with spirit. said Syham
Manns. a foreign student adviser.
Vi ji is a ”very determined
person. . . (she is) very cheerful
in spite of her disease. "

“She has not let herself get
depressed. It ‘s remarkable."
Manns said.

Vi ji's only chance of getting
that operation depends upon the
generosity of the UK student
body and the Lexington
community. They are being
asked to help her raise the
necessary funds for a bone
marrow transplant.

The changes in Vi ji's life began
in August of 1982. She left the
walls of her parent‘s home in Sri
Lanka. an island nation off the
southeastern tip of India. for the

Donaflons

Donations to help Viji
Jeganathan pay for her
bone marrow transplant
may be mailed or delivered
to the "Viji Fund," SGA
office, 120 Student Cen-
ter, UK, Lexington, Ky.
40506.

 

 

first time to travel to the United
States and study statistics at UK.

Viji came to UK alone. A
different country. no friends and
a new lifestyle made life difficult
for the first five months.

“Almost everything was
different,“ she said. “people.
food. . .climate."

But Viji adjusted.

She earned a masters degree in
statistics from UK in 1984 and
chose to remain at UK as a
teaching assistant while doing
doctoral work.

Then. in November 1986, Vi ji
was diagnosed as having
leukemia. a disease that is
characterized by an abnormal
increase in the number of white
blood cells in the body.

‘ ‘ was feeling very weak
and I had shortness of
breath; I found it very

difficult to teach.“ Viji said.
“That‘s when I went to (UKi
Student Health and they did a
blood test and found out that I
have leukemia."

The 34—year-old grad student
said she had only one hope for
improvement — chemotherapy.

The treatments meant a
radical change in her lifestyle as
a student and a teaching
assistant. Each treatment meant
that she would have spend four to
five weeks in the hospital. but
Viji adjusted.

She is not a typical patient.

While Viji lay on the hospital
bed awaiting her chemotherapy

Sec ()PI‘LRATIOV. Page 6

Viji Jeganathan, a UK graduate student. is fighting a battle with leu-
kemia, a battle she could win with the help of the UK student body.

UK student adjusts to life with deadly disease

\ V
mum (EROF Kernel Start

The Student Government Assodation is accepting donations to help
Viji pay for her bone marrow transplant

 

Conference examines racism on campus

By HEIDI PROHST
Staff Writer

UK is joining almost 150 institu-
tions of higher education today for a
video conference to discuss “Racism
On Campus: An Agenda For Ac—
tion.”

“This tthe conferencei is going to
be vital to the campus community."
said Anna Bolling. in the dean of
students office. “It‘s geared to the
campus community to see what‘s
happening at other's institutions and
how we can relate to that.“

The conference will be shown live
from the Johnson Foundation‘s

Wingspread Conference Center in
Racine. Wis. and from Governors
State University in University Park.
Ill, [1 will be held from 11:30 am. to
3:30 pm. a with a break at 1:00 for
meals and discussion # in the Stu-
dent Center Theater.

Participants may call in questions
or comments via telephone to
panelists at the conference.

The conference will have three
major segments: a historical and
comtemporary perspective. case
studies and a look at successful ap-
proaches to taking action against
racism.

Jerry Stevens. with the vice chan-

cellor for Minority Affairs Office.
said the conference will take a di~
rect approach in helping UK deal
with racism.

“People need to work to eliminate
existing problems. We want to make
faculty. staff and students aware of
implications and the patterns of rac-
ism that are increasing across the
country so when these patterns
emerge on our campus we'll have
the mechanisms to deal with partic-
ular student affairs and minority at!
fairs.“ Stevens said.

Stevens said that he has been
working with students to inform
them of the “need for a better un»

derstanding of different cultures and
the concerns of racism."

Stevens said that. while racism at
UK isn‘t rampant. “we do have
problems.“ He cited incidents of
name calling and racist graffiti on
campus and said that some faculty
have been accused of racist re-
marks.

Stevens said the conference is not
only to make the people at UK
aware of the dangers of racism. but
to encourage people to learn how to
deal with racism.

“We're doing this so we can be
proactive instead of reactive." Bol»
ling said.

Debate for SGA vice president post held tonight

Staff reports

Students will get a chance to tiear
how the candidates for the Student
Government Association executive
branch stand on the issues this week
in two debates sponsored by the
Kennit lei Kernel and ()micron Delta
Kappa.

Vice presidential candidates Ken
Mattingly and Leah McCain will dis-
cuss the issues tonight at 8:30 in 106
Classroom Building

ELECTIONS

Mattingly. an English senior from
Springfield. Ky. is a senator at
large and current president pro tem
of the SGA senate. He is running
with presidential candidate Susan
Bridges.

McCain. a social work junior from
()wensboro. is a first-term senator
at large and is running with David
Botkins.

At 8:30 tomorrow night in 118
Classroom Building. the three presi-
dential candidates will talk about
their platforms.

Bridges. who is currently senior
vice president. is a mathematics ju-
nior from Lexington; Botkins. a two-
term senator at large. is a graduate

student from Ashland; and James
Rose. who is running alone. is a two-
term senator at large and business
senior from Shelbyville.

Each candidate will have a five-
minute opening statement. The can-
didates will then answer a series of
questions asked by three panelists
from the Kernel.

Each candidate will be allowed a
three-minute closing statement.

Parents win school redistricting battle

By DAVID ROGERS
Staff Writer

The children of UK students living
in Shawneetown will be able to at-
tend the same elementary school
next year. thanks to a motion ap-
proved by the Fayette County Board
of Education last night,

The motion. proposed by board
member David Chittenden. altered
an earlier plan to redistrict several
Fayette County elementary school
districts to relieve overcrowding. In-
stead of redistricting the Glendover
school district to make room for stu-
dents from Landsdowne. a portable
classroom will be moved from the
Julius Marks elementary school to
copewiththeovercrowding.

The Shawneetown and Greg Page
student housim developments are a
part of the Glendover school district.

”There are numerous configura-

 

“It seems to me that by moving a portable
(classroom) that houses 20-25 students and be
able to keep from moving 150 students just

makes sense to me.”

Davld Chlttenden.
board member

 

tions of how students could be ar-
ranged and which students could be
left" in their districts. said Edythe
Hayes. deputy superintendent of
academic affairs. “We‘re just trying
to distribute students over atten-
dance boundaries using established
traffic corridors." she said.

The many possibilities. however,
were not always evident. Board
member Marilyn Daniel said “I
can‘t make the numbers add up. It

just doesn't make sense." A floor
plan of the schools was often re-
quired during the board meeting so
that available space could be found.

But to many board members. the
numbers did add up. “It seems to
me." said Chittenden. “that by mov-
ing a portable (classroom) that
muses 20-25 students and be able to
keep from moving 150 students just
makossenseto me."

Though the proposal did not help
parents from other districts. UK stu-
dent parents were happy with the
decision.

“That‘s great.” said Parvaaneh
Jahed. who has two children in the
Glendover district. "I know we
would have tried to find some way
to stay. either by moving or finding
some excuse to keep our kids in
school here."

Jayant Deo. a graduate student in
sociology. said “I have two kids in
school. one already through elemen-
tary school. It would have been a
big problem with them going to dif-
ferent school districts."

A resident of Shawneetown. Deo
thought that the school board was
discriminating against college stu-
dents in their choice of which school
districts needed to be altered.

 

Staff reports

Raymond C La (‘harite. a
member of the faculty of the De
partment of French Language
and Literature at t'K. was hon»
ored yesterday by the French
government for promoting
French culture in the academic
community.

La Charite. known internation-
ally as a leading scholar in
French Renaissance studies. was
awarded the rank of Chevalier in
the Ordre des Palmes Academi-
qua.

He has written books on Raba-

 

ALAN HAW“ KW Staff

UK professor Raymond C La Charlie receives an award
yesterday for his work in promoting French culture

UK French professor
wins national award

lais. Montaigne and the storytel-
ler Bonaventure Des Perriers.
edited numerous collections of as
says on Renaissance literature.
and produced a critical bibliogra-
phy assessing scholarship in the
field.

La t‘harite is a native of Wenni-
peg. Canada. He is a naturalized
US. citizen. earning his bache-
lor‘s degree from Wayne State in
1962 and his doctorate from the
University of Pennsylvania in
1966.

HehasbeenintheFrenchDe-
partment at UK since 1909.

 

 

 

   

     
  
   
    
   
   
     
   
       
    
  
  
   
   
   
  
  
   
    
   
    
  
   
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
   
 
   
   
  
   
   
   
  
  
     
    
  
      
  
   
     
      
        
   
     
   
  
    
 
   
   
   
  
  
  
   
   
  

    

2 — Kentucky Kernel. Tucsday.March22.19u

America hedging on treaty, Soviet says

Associated Press

MOSCOW —- A Soviet official yes~
terday charged that US. negotiators
are jeopardizing prospects of sign-
ing an accord to cut long-range nu-
clear weapons at the next superpow-
er summit.

The remarks came in an interview
with Alexi A. Obukhov. the Soviets'
top arms negotiator. published yes~
terday in the Communist Party
newspaper Pravda. They coinCided
with the first day of talks in Wash-
ington between Soviet Foreign Min-
ister Eduard A. Schevardnadze and
LES. officials.

“l have the impression that the
Americans began to hesitate and are
not sure now whether it is worth-
while to have an agreement on strat-
‘ egic offensive arms ready by the
> designated date. that is by the time
Ronald Reagan visits Moscow,"
()hukhov told Pravda “Today. the

Americans are slowing down the
pace rather than increasing it."

Shevardnadze and US. Secretary
of State George P. Shultz have been
holding monthly meetings to work
out differences in a 200page treaty
to cut long-range missiles by 50 per-
cent.

President Reagan has been ex-
pected to go to Moscow later this
spring. on a date to be annonced. for
his fourth meeting with Soviet lead-
er Mikhail S. Gorbachev. Both sides
have said they would like to sign the
treaty on strategic weapons at that
time,

Shultz said in Moscow last Feb-
ruary that the two sides had agreed
to tell treaty negotiators to draft
verification and other key elements
by the time Shevardnadze came to
the t'nited States. He also said nego-
tiators should speed up progress in

order to ensure a treaty would be
ready to sign at a Moscow summit.

But Obuhkov said Americans were
dragging their feet with the idea of
turning lack of progress against the
Soviets. “Our partners think that,
with this kind of action, they can
spoil the term for working out the
agreement and place the blame for
this on us.“ he said.

Obukhov also said the Reagan ad-
ministration's position on the Strate-
gic Defense Initiative, better known
as “Star Wars." still stands in the
way of an agreement. The Soviets
say the program to deploy a space
shield against nuclear attack vio-
lates the 1972 Anti«Ballistic Missile
treaty between the superpowers.

In a separate dispatch, the official
Tass news agency said the US.
“military-industrial complex" has
become wary of Star Wars because
of the program‘s cost may preclude

spending on other types of military
weapons.

“The prospect of enormous funds
being allocated for SDI at the ex-
pense of other military programs
has caused obvious concern to indi-
vidual members of the military-in-
dustrial complex, who are beginning
to see the Star Wars project as two
birds in the bush that can make
them lose the bird in hand,” Tass
said.

Vladimir Chernyshov, the agen-
cy‘s military writer, said the fifth
anniversary of the Strategic Defense
Initiative is being widely celebrated
in the United States although “there
is effectively nothing left of the SDI
‘dream’ as conceived five years
ago.“

“While then they were talking
about an ‘impregnable shield,’ they
are now talking about a ‘first phase'
of an ABM systerm with very lim-
ited capability," Chernyshov wrote.

Blacks protest, strike in memory of massacre

It) liAlTRlNllA KEYS
Associated Press

JOHANNESBIIRG. South Africa
~ Hundreds of thousands of blacks
yesterday defied emergency regula
tions and joined a national protest
strike commemorating the 28th ans
miersary of the Sharpeville mas
sacre.

The strike occurred despite a ban
on major opposition groups that
usually coordinate such action.

The demonstration was wide-
spread in the JohannesburgPretoria
area. in Durban and around the
eastern (‘ape province city of Port
Eli/.alwth. But there was no specific
call for a strike in the (‘apc Town
area. and major mining companies
reported little or no disruption of
their operations.

Police estimated 40 percent of the
black work force around Johannes"
burg stayed away from their jobs.
Labor experts say there are about
800.000 full-time black workers in
the area.

A South African court. meanwhile.
denied an appeal by one of the coun
try's most outspoken anti—apartheid
newspapers. clearing the way for
the government to shut it down.

Home Affairs Minister Stoffel
Botlia had intended to close the New
Nation in January. but delayed the
move while the newspaper sought
temporary protection from govern-
ment action.

After the cou " denied such protec-
tion yesterday. Botha‘s office de-
clined to reveal when it would shut
the periodical.

After the court decision yesterday.
the New Nation's acting editor.
Gabu Tugwana. said “We are pre-
tending we don‘t face any suspen-
sion. If the deadline (for the Thurs~
day: edition comes and we are
printed. good luck to us.“

Yesterday‘s protest commem-
orated the death of 69 black people
killed in 1060 when police fired on
thousands of demonstrators protest-
ing South Africa‘s pass laws.

The laws restricting blacks‘ free-
dom of movement were repeated in
1986.

In Sharpeville. the scene of the
massacre. residents placed flowers
on the victims‘ graves.

Winnie Mandela. wife of jailed Af—
rican National (‘ongress leader Nel-
son Mandela, attended one of the
services in the township south of Jo-
hannesburg.

Several hundred black youths
jogged alongside Mandela‘s van,
chanting freedom songs.

In Durban. police in a helicopter
fired tear gas to disperse boycotting
students who rampaged through the
campus at the predominantly-Indian
University of Durban-Westville. The
boycotters chased students out of
classes, then assaulted them when
they sought refuge in the library.

Police reported two unrest related
killings of blacks overnight, one
near Durban and one in Soweto, but
gave no indication whether they
were linked to the protest.

Four buses were fire-bombed in
Durban yesterday and service to
black townships was canceled when
drivers refused to work.

The United Democratic Front. the
country‘s largest anti-apartheid co-
alition. had coordinated previous na»
tionwide protests during the 21-
month«old state of emergency.

But last month. it was banned,
along with 16 other organizations,
from participating in any activity
not approved by the government.

Several affiliates of the front took
out newspaper advertisements an~
nouncing yesterday's “national day
of protest.“ And anonymous pamph-

lets calling for school and work boy-
cotts appeared on doorsteps in the
black townships.

It is illegal under emergency regu-
lations to call for boycotting of any-
kind.

Police had said they would ensure
the safety of blacks who wanted to
go to work, but they reported no in-
timidation in Soweto. the township
of 2.5 million black outside Johan—
nesburg.

Schools and shops were closed and
there were virtually no passengers
in commuter buses or taxi-vans.

One of the largest stayaways.
more than 90 percent of the black
workers, occurred near the Eastern
Cape city of Uitenhage, where police
shot dead 21 blacks during a funeral
precession on Sharpeville Day in
1985.

The Port Elizabeth Evening Post,
after carrying reports of the strike
in its early editions, received a tele-
phone call from a police officer who
noted that emergency regulations
prohibit news reports about the im-
pact of illegal strikes,

225 arrested in Central America protest

B) J .\(‘|\' SC] IREIBM.\\
Assix'iated Press

SAN FR.~‘\I\'('lS('() Riot-ready
police moved iii quickly yesterday.
arresting 2:25 demonstrators among
a yelling crowd of more than 300
people protesting LS military pres
ence in (‘entral America,

Arrests for blocking entrances to
the Federal Building and the streets
around it began within minutes of
the start of the protest at T a m. The
main entrance was closed. and for
about a half-hour the protesters
blocked the rear entrance. More
than 5.000 people work in the 20-
story building

Shouts of

“No contra aid" and

”LS. (‘l.-\. out of Nicaragua," filled
the aii Some demonstrators. surg-
ing from one intersection to another,
hurled newspaper vending boxes
and debris into the street. disrupting
trallit'

tltl Friday. about 250 people were
arrested when they encircled the
Federal Building.

And on Saturday. at least 5.000
people rallied in the streets. Bottles.
wooden crosses and bags of garbage
were thrown at police. One person
was arrested for felony assault on
an officer. and four others were ar-
rested on assorted charges.

Demonstrations have been held in
several t‘S cities since President

Reagan sent 3,200 US. troops to
Honduras last week after Honduras
said 2.000 Sandinistas had crossed
the border from Nicaragua.

Yesterday. officers with visored
helmets and batons marched on the
double from one street to another as
protesters harassed them with quick
moves. Some protesters went limp
and were dragged screaming to po-
lice vans. A young man was hit in
the mouth with a baton and blood-
ied.

At times. as many as six police
vans and a sheriff‘s bus lined up to
receive those arrested. They were
photographed and booked on the
street before being taken to the Hall

 

 

  

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of Justice for citations.

“We‘re not going to stop these pro-
tests because we want people to
know we are seriously committed to
stopping U.S. intervention in Central
America,” said Bill Nygren, a
spokesman for Pledge of Resistance.
one of several gruops sponsoring the
demonstration.

:Pree

I Socks
(up to $3.50 value)

I with any

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Return of serve

 

 

Ben Rao practices volleyball outside of the Lambda Chi Alpha
house yesterday afternoon in preparation for a fraternity 'todr-
nament. Yesterday was a good day for being outside, com-
pared to the chill Lexington experienced over Spring Break.

ALAN HAWSE Kernel Stall

 

 

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Kentucky Kernel. Tuesday. March 22,1988 — 3

 

Sports

Todd Jones
Sports Editor

Jim White
ASSISlanI Sports Editor

 

Gardner
quits UK
football

By CHRIS ALDRIDGE
and T0.“ SPALDING
Staff Writers

Junior defensive end Carwell
Gardner has left the L'K football
team for "personal reasons." coach
Jerry Claiborne announced yester-
day.

Claiborne said Gardner "will re-
main in school and work towards his
degree." Claiborne said the 6-foot-1.
225-pound Louisville native will re-
tain his football scholarship through
the end of the spring semester.

Gardner. who could not be
reached for comment. recorded 44
tackles and two quarterback sacks
in the eight games he participated in
last season.

David Johnson. a L'K junior cor-
nerback and friend of Gardner's.
said the time had just come for a
parting of ways.

”There were just irreconcilable
differences between him and the
program." Johnson said.

"It probably stems from all four
years that he's been here. You

Wildcat football player yesterday.

reer.

"A transfer is definitely in the pic-
ture." he said "He hasn't decided

 

UK junior defensive end Carwell Gardner ended his career as a

her will probably transfer to another
school to continue his football ca-

Staff reports

L'K junior Mario Rincon scored
possibly the biggest win of his ca-
reer Sunday as he led the ninth-
ranked L'K Tennis Team to a 5-4 vic.
tory over No 5 Pepperdine L'niversi-
ty.

Rincon upset No. 2 ranked .Aiidrew
Sznajder. 6-4. 6-4 Sznajder. ranked
just behind teammate Robbie Weiss.
is a member of the Canadian Davis
C up team.

Sznajder defeated top professional
Andres Gomez last summer in Davis
Cup competition

"I thought coming out and playing
aggressively was the key to the
match." L'K coach Dennis Emery
said. "This is one of the biggest wins
in Kentucky tennis history "

t» Also recording singles wins for L'K
' were Rich Benson. who downed
Craig Johnson 7-3. 6-3. and Sammy

Mp."
2534'

 

MARK ZEHOF Ke'ce- Sta“

ent." Gruneisen said. “He could've
chosen any school. "

As a sophomore Gardner was the
third-leading tackler for L'K with 96
That same season he was tabbed the
Associated Press defensive player-

Staff' reports

The road to the Final Four for the
[K Wildcats starts Thursday in the
Southeast Regional and LR fans

 

know. little things that have hap—
pened here and there . "

In April. 1987. Gardner had his
scholarship taken away when he and
two other teammates were involved
in a disagreement with an assistant
coach during spring practice. He
was allowed to walk on the team

whether to stay here or transfer. but
there are some schools out there
that want (‘arwell ”

Gardner was "recruited by hun-
dreds of schools" coming out of
Louisville's Trinity High School.
according to Roger Gruneisen. his

of-the-week for his performance in
l'K's 32-0 victory over Southern .\Iis—
sissippi.

"We've got to stop being selfish
about wanting Carwell for our
selves." Johnson said "I‘d love to
see him stay. But I think if it's going

have the opportunity to follow them.

Approximately "loo tickets for the
southeast Regional in Birmingham.
\la . will go on sale at 1 p in. today
at the front ticket windows at Me-

and regain his scholarship last fall. former high school football coach.

Johnson said he thinks that Gard— “He had natural. God-given tal-

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's‘r 's‘r “,‘r '«s‘r 's‘r 's‘r 's‘r 's‘r ’s‘r 's‘r 's‘r ‘s‘r 1k ',‘r 's‘r ‘s‘r 's‘r 's‘r 's‘r 's‘r ‘s‘r 's‘r 's‘r ';‘r ‘3:

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Vice

.( Omicron Delta, Kappa

Student Government Association

; Debates ’88

to benefit him or be better for him.
then l'iii glad to see him go. "

LISA LANE ALYCIA EREY‘

-Owners-

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Kentucky Kernel

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RESERVE

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Your n?~

Presidential Candidates

Ken .\I.ilfiiigly 0 [colt McCain

[iii-silty, \Itii‘t ii If. \ ll‘ p in.

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Presidential Candidates
IlthltI liotlxins 0 Susan Bridges

list I.l‘~‘»lltttl‘:l llitiltltiii:

Sttnnett who defeated Kevin O'Neill.
6-7. 7-6. 7-5.

Pepperdine also picked up three
singles wins to send the teams into
doubles play in a tie

Weiss downed All-Aiiierica selec-
tion Greg \‘an Emburgh in the No 1
position. 6-2. 76. Adam .\lalik lost to
Pepperdine's (Brant Saar-ks. T-‘r oat
Atid Willie Laban lost to hand
WellsRoth. 6-4. 6-3

['K took two out of three doubles
matches to secure the w in

All-American team \'an rlmhurgh
and Benson downed the team of
Johnson and Snacks. 7.3. Ti» and
Laban and Skidiiiore defeated Wells‘-
Roth aitdtt'Xetll. oat. T-ti

Weiss and Sriiayder downed l K s
team of Hank and Rincon. ti-«l. ti-t
for Pepperdiiie's only doubles \it'lti»
ry.

The [K men's team is now 1th on
the season

mortal t'oliseuiii. Athletics Illl't't‘lt‘t'
Cliff Hagan said

Only upper-lewl tickets are lei'
for the contest Tickets are .tytiilaltle
for $24 each. casli only Each tickc'
will admit tin iiitlnidual to troil:
games on 'l'hursday as well as the
championship on Saturday

The Southeast ltegioiinl will tea
ture tour of the in teams still tlil\t‘
lll the 1988 Xt'.\.\ Yournaiiien'.

Tennis team aces Pepperdine

 

MARIO RINCON

200 NCAA tickets available today

Southeastern t'oniei'euce chains
pioii Kentucky will face Big East op-
ponent Villaiioya at T piti CST in
the Birmingham .letiersoit t‘ivic
t'eiiter ’l‘he utglitcap will hate 4th»
ranked (lklttllttlllrl against Metro
t‘onfert-iice chaiiipiou Louisville

'I'lie tnaiiipionship game will he
played saturday with the winner
warning a trip to the .‘mth Final Four

K.til.\i\ t'ity. Missouri

Kernel Personals

 

      

Mada _

5 visits tor $13.95

 

Keep the sun in your
life all yearlong

TANNING SPECIALS

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I"

OFFICERS' TRAINING CORPS

   

suctiss is rat: out N
rou COULD rm THIS SUMMER.

At Army ROTC Camp Challenge. you'll
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 4 — Kentuctiy Kernel, Tuesday. March 22,1908

Viewpoint

Many issues face

executive candidates

in the SGA election

Tonight and tomorrow night, students will have the op-
portunity to hear how the candidates for the Student Gov-
ernment Association executive branch stand on the issues.

Vice presidential candidates Ken Mattingly and Leah
McCain will square off tonight at 8:30 in 106 Classroom
Building. With the elimination of the position of executive
vice president earlier this semester, this year will mark
the first time in four years students will elect only one vice
president to serve in SGA.

Since there will be only one SGA vice president, we
hope Mattingly and McCain will articulate what new roles
the vice president will perform and how that will better
serve students.

Tomorrow night at 8:30 in 118 Classroom Building,
David Botkins, Susan Bridges and James Rose will try to
convince students why they are the best choice for SGA
president.

All three of the candidates have published their plat—
forms. however none of them have provided any details as
to how they plan to implement their ideas.

Here are just of few of the pressing issues we think are
facing this year‘s candidates:

/ Eliminating campus apathy: Each year it seems
SCA presidential candidates promise to stomp out student
apathy only to have it continue to permeate during their
term in office.

This year‘s candidates need to outline detailed plans as
to how they plan to cope with this ongoing dilemma.

./ Possible tuition hike: In order to make up for the loss
of funding it appears higher education is going to suffer
from the state‘s budget, the Kentucky Council on Higher
Education will probably want to raise tuition.

The next SGA president must be prepared to deal with
this issue and be willing to represent the students' best in-
terests, even if it means taking the unpopular stance of ad-
vocating a raise.

.