xt7zw37kt42d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zw37kt42d/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1988-02-09 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 09, 1988 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 09, 1988 1988 1988-02-09 2020 true xt7zw37kt42d section xt7zw37kt42d  

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NEWSPAPER
BELONGINGING

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S 0R i’iiRlOUiCALS
To rum lC

LIBRARlES

 

 

Sports

 

Lady Kat basketball player deals with
career-ending injury.SEE PAGE 2.

 

Viewpoint

 

 

Student support for rally
needed. SEE PAGE 6.

 

30°-40°

Today: Cloudy with flurries
Tomorrow: Partly cloudy

 

 

 

 

Kentucky Kernel

Bob Dole, Richard Gephardt score Iowa

Vol. XCI. N0. 104

By DAVID ESPO
Associated Press

DES MOINES, Iowa — Sen. Bob
Dole won a convincing victory in
Iowa’s Republican presidential cau-
cuses last night while Pat Robertson
bested faltering Vice President
George Bush for second place. Rep.
Richard Gephardt led Paul Simon
and Michael Dukakis in a tightly
bunched Democratic field.

Bush conceded defeat in the first
big test of the 1988 presidential cam-
paign and vowed to work harder in
New Hampshire’s first-in-the-nation
primary next week. “I‘m a fighter

. I‘m not going to be slinking
around,” he said.

Dole, who urged Iowans to regard
him as "one of us,“ said his victory
demonstrated “1 can be elected in
November.“ Robertson said his
showing was a victory for voters
“who wanted us to restore the great-

Greeks
sponsoring
tournament

By JUNE CAUMMISAR
Contributing Writer

For the first time, non—greeks can
take part in the Kentucky Campus
Classic Basketball Tournament.

The threeon-three basketball tour-
nament will include teams from
greek and non-greek 0rgani7ations
and teams of unaffiliated individu-
als. The tournament is divided into a
men 's and a women’s division.

This marks the first year non-
greek teams can participate since
the tournament began 10 years ago
as the Theta Chi 3-on-3 Classic.

The tournament is hosted by
Theta Chi Fraternity in conjunction
with Alpha Xi Delta Sorority. Pro—
ceeds will benefit Cardinal Hill Hos-
pital.

“It‘s time the independents got to
be involved in campus activities that
greek people put on, and it helps
raise more money for the philan-
thropy," Dee Dee Bootze, chairman
for Alpha Xi said.

“Theta Chi and Alpha Xi would
love to see a lot of independent orga-
nizations get involved in this,"
Bootze said.

Preliminary games will be played
on February 13-14 at Alumni Gym
and the finals are at half time dur-
ing the UK-Georgia game on March
2 to determine the all-campus cham-
pions. Trophies will be awarded to
the winners and runners-up.

The games are played on a half-
size court and preliminary games
will have a 15-minute limit and will
be played to a score of 10 (one bas~
ket = lpoint).

Finals will have a seven-minute
limit and will be played to a score of
5.

Entry forms are available at the
Alpha Xi House, 321 Columbia Ter-
race, and at the Campus Recreation
Office in Seaton Center. All forms
and a $10 fee per team is due at the
Alpha Xi house before 6 pm. Feb.
10.

Games and opponents will be post-
ed at Alpha Xi by noon, Feb. 11.
There will be a kick-off party Feb.
10 and a victory party on March 2.

“This hasn’t been done before and
as far as off campus participation, it
will open the greek community to

as its been isolated in the
past," said Steve Elzey, chairman of
Theta Chi.

“It brings so many groups togeth-
er that normally don’t meet," he-
said.

For additional
Elzey at 258-8154.

information call

 

For more coverage of the
Iowa caucus and a look
ahead to New Hamp-
shire. See page 7.

 

ness of America through moral
strength.“

Gephardt, Simon and Dukakis
fought their battle while Gary Hart‘s
comeback bid was failing dramati-
cally. He had scarcely one percent
of the Democratic total in the state
that catapulted him to national
prominence in 19821.

With 89 percent of the Republican
precincts reporting, Dole had 37,703
votes, or 38 percent. Former TV
evangelist Robertson had 24,303 for
24 percent and Bush — the nation-
wide front-runner who scored a dra-
matic triumph in Iowa’s caucuses in
1980 —— had 18,699 or 19 percent.

The Dole camp crowed about the
magnitude of the defeat suffered by

“A I

RICHARD GEPHARDT

the vice president. “This is going to
help" in New Hampshire’s first-in-
the nation primary next week, said
Sen. Warren Rudman, R-N.H., a
supporter of the Kansas senator.

Robertson's support was hard to
figure before the caucuses —~ pun-
dits referred to his backers as “the
invisible army." His second-place
finish followed strong showings in
Michigan and Hawaii caucuses,

The rest of the Republican field
trailed far behind -— Jack Kemp
with 11 percent. Pete du Pont with 7
percent and Alexander Haig, who
didn't compete, had a smattering of
support.

The Democratic vote was slower
to tally but with 60 percent of the
caucuses reporting. Missouri Rep.
Gephardt had 21,971 votes for 28 per-
cent. Illinois Sen. Simon had 19,137
for 24 percent and Massachusetts
Gov. Dukakis had 16,095 for 20 per-
cent.

BOB DOLE

W/"lcmu,

FEB 9 3353

“My?
9, 1988
FEB 9 1388

wins

CBS and ABC projected Gephardt
to win wrth Simon second

The Rev. Jesse Jackson was win-
ning the battle for fourth place, with
11 percent to 9 percent for former
Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt. Sen. Al-
bert Gore Jr,, had abandoned his
Iowa campaign and criticized the
process here He was running just
ahead of noncandidate Mario
Cuomo.

The Democratic race ran true to
forecasts er a close race among
three rivals. Gephardt. a congressio-
nal insider who campaigned as an
anti-establishment figure. spent
more time than anyone campaigning
in Iowa in a bid to establish his can~
didacy. He and Simon run a poor
second to Dukakis in New Hamp-
shire polls.

Iowa had relatively few national
convention delegates to bestow. But
the prospect of political momentum
for next week's first-mthe-nation

Sci: IOWA. PageS

 

Overhead

ALAN asylum Sh"

Brian Sharp, a finance sophomore, goes up for a layup against Richard Jones. an undecided freshman, last night at the Blazer Hall basketball courts.

 

 

Staff reports

Most polls of the nation‘s Re-
publican voters have showed Vice
President George Bush with a
sizeable lead over Senate Majori-
ty Leader Robert Dole.

In a straw poll conducted by
the UK chapter of the College Re-
publicans last week. Bush also
came out as the favorite among
UK students, but with a much
smaller lead.

Bush received 38.1 percent of
the vote with Dole finishing in
second place with 34.3 percent.

According to UK College Re-
publican President Vaughn Mur-
phy, one reason Bush and Dole
fared so well was because of the
media coverage their infighting
received last week.

 

George Bush wins in UK poll

The other four Republican
presidential hopefuls all checked
in with less than 10 percent.

Former Delaware Gov. Pete
DuPont and former Sec. of State
Alexander Haig tied for third
place with 8.6 percent; New York
Rep. Jack Kemp was fifth with
5.7 percent; and former tele-
vision evangelist Pat Robertson
finished last with only 4.8 per-
cent.

For a while, Robertson was one
of the more popular GOP candi-
dates within the College Republi-
cans, Murphy said, but when
Robertson remarked that he was
against federal subsidies for to-
bacco farmers his support began
todiminish.

Several of the Democratic pres-
idential candidates have tried to

appeal to the nation's college
voter, but Murphy said he has yet
to see any of the Republican can-
didates attract a large following
of young Republicans.

The poll was conducted Feb. 4-5
in the Student Center and open to
all UK students. Murphy said he
had hoped about 200 students
would participate in the poll, but
only 105 ballots were cast.

Bush also came out on top in a
poll conducted by the College Re-
publicam of Northern Kentucky
University. but he enjoyed a
much greater margin than at
UK,

Bush polled 61.8 percent and
Dole was a distant second with
only 23.2 percent. No other candi-
date received more than 5.7 per-
cent of the votes cast.

 

 

Archives presented to
University’s libraries

SHARRON MAIIONEY
Contributing Writer

The Junior League of Lexrngton
Archives were presented to the UK
Libraries at the league‘s monthly
meeting last week.

Paula Pope, a member of the
League, said “the collection is a
piece of Kentuckiana — it highlights
Kentucky history as well as local in-
terest in the state."

The league heard from Claire
McCann, the assistant director of
Special Collections. and Bill Mar-
shall, head of Special Collections.

The Junior League is an organiza.
tion of women committed to promot-
ing volunteerism and to improving
the community through the use of
trained volunteers.

Researcher says many leaving state, going south for work

By AMY HECKRO’I'I'E
Cmtrlbutlng Writer

A UK researcher has found in a
recent study that more people are
migratiru from Kentucky and head-
“earth.

“In past years Kentuckians would
My move toward more indus-
trialised areas," said m Ford
of UK's Center for Developmental
alone. But Mutation recently
compiled indicate "that more Ken-
tncktall were movir‘ into W“

regions, particularly Tennessee, trend could prove to be troublesome see received the most migrants

Florida and Texas," he said.
According to inter-ml Revenue
Service records for 194-85, 90,535
taxpayers and their dependents left
Kentucky compared with 77,215
moving in, leavim the state with a
net Ioeeof13,n'ipeople.
Hesaidmostmoveeareforeco-
nornic r'easorl: either you are tram—
ferred to a new location or looking
foranewjobaltogether.
Glenn Blornquiet. of the College of
and Ecmnios. said the

for students who want to stay in
Kenmckyaftergraduating.

“Mien students do their job
search. they can expect to go
south."hesaid.

The most likely prospect for jobs
in-etate Its in the education field.
"the demand for teachers is grow-
ing in Kentucky," 31mm said.
"You may not have the nicat condi-
tinn'butyou’llbeabletofinda

’I‘helmrhtaehowthatm-

from Kentucky with 11,028 people.
Ohio, Indiana, Florida and Texas
followed.

This population loss isn't unprece-
dented. During the 19505 and 19”,
Kentucky lost a tremendous amoimt
of population through migration,
Fordsaid.

"Intheperlodofthelm.wehad
this strange occurrence were for the
first time in more than a century
more people moved into Kentucky
than movedout." Ford said.

The energy and economic crises of
the decade were main reasons for
this, he said. Kentucky's coal fields
were booming and there were more
jobs to be found.

Many of those returning were ac-
tually Kentucky natives coming
back became they could now find
jobein theirhomestate. Ford said.

"Times turned had again for Ken-
tucky in the rm." Ford said, “and
the flow started out again, but this
timeit moved tothesouth."

The first Junior League was
founded in New York in 1901. Lex-
ington joined the League in 1924 and
comprises 633 members of the na-
tional total of 170.000.

The archives were presented to
UK to document the role of the
league and women in the commu-
nity.

Since the UK libraries take a keen
interest in collecting and preserving
manuscripts and archival collections
that document Kentucky's history,
the League Board approved the es-
tablishment of the Junior League‘s
Historical Collection in UK's Depart-
ment of Special Collections and Ar-
chives to collect, preserve and cata-
log the league‘s historical materials.

At this time the collection includes
material dating from 1924 to 1987.
but the league hopes to periodically
update the collection,

The collection includes materials
documenting the founding and devel-
opment of the league, with a signifi-
cant portion detailing the 51-year
history of the Lexington Junior
league Horse Show. the organiza-
tion's sole fund-raising project.

Projects include the Baby Health
Service. the Opportunity Workshop.
and the Neonatal Unit at the Chan-
dler Medical Center.

The Junior league of lexington
Exhibit will be on display W
Feb. 19 in the Peel Gallery. King u.
brary North.

 

 

 2 - Kentucky Kernel. Tuned-y, February 0. 1m

Sports

Pennieless

Lady Kat senior deals with the end of her basketball career

By TOM SPALDING
Staff Writer

UK senior guard Michele Pennie
sat on the bench as usual Friday
night during the Lady Kats’ home
game against the UAB Lady Blaz-
ers.

Yet when the game ended, it
wasn‘t a a basketball that Pennie
carried off in her arms. It was a
pair of crutches.

For the 5—foot-11 Clearwater, Fla.
native, this is how it will be for the
next six weeks to eight weeks. UK‘S
top reserve tore the anterior cru-
ciate ligament in her right knee in a
game against Marshall on Jan. 10th.

Pennie collided with a Marshall
player on a fast break and fell to the
floor writhing in pain.

“This is how I think it happened,”
Pennie said. “A (Marshall) girl
picked off a pass and tried to lay it
up. but I was down to defend her."

Pennie said she planted her foot
awkwardly. causing her to fall into
the Marshall player and then into
the ground.

“It hurt a whole lot," she said. “I
knew right then I did something to
(my knee.) I just didn‘t know
what."

The anterior cruciate in her right
knee could have been replaced with

an identical one in her left knee. The
problem was, she didn‘t have one
there either.

“Michele had a torn cruciate (in
her left knee) in high school," UK
coach Sharon Fanning said. “So
when (the injury) happened to her
right one she was in a position
where she couldn't make it on just
one knee."

Making it on one knee was what
Pennie had done in 312 years as a
Lady Kat. After blowing out her left
knee in high School. Pennie had sur-
gery performed in her hometown
and a few months late enrolled at
Kentucky.

“We knew she had the Operation
but thought it would heal pretty
well,” said former UK coach Terry
Hall. “When she came up here we
rehabilitated it and performed more
surgery on it. "

Pennie was in and out of the line-
up her freshman and sophomore
seasons at UK. Despite the pain.
Hall said Pennie fought hard.

”I think it took a lot of determin-
ation and hours of hard work on her
part,“ Hall said. “Her desire to play
and rebuild the knee as much as she
did said a lot about her character."

Pennie enjoyed her first full sea-
son last year as a junior. The 21-
year-old business major averaged

4.6 points in a strictly off-the-beneh
player.

And heading into this season as
one of only three seniors, Pennie
was expected to regain top form.

At midseason. she had done that.
coming off the pine for 4.1 points a
game and a team leading 58.1 field
goal shooting percentage. She even
got the starting call for three gama
as UK ran its early season record to
8-3.

“I don‘t know if I was playing my
best but I was playing really good,”
Pennie said. “I think I was gradual-
ly building up and playing better. It
was really a shame. ”

The absence of Pennie was one of
the main factors the Lady Kats
stopped winning. 8-3 with Pennie in
the line-up. UK has been only 3-8
since.

“When she got hurt at the Mar-
shall game she was really playing
well," UK guard Jodie Whitaker
said. “Losing her hurt us a lot, I
think, because she was coming in off
the bench and giving us a lot of
points.“

“I think she was an excellent
passer and a good shooter," UK se-
nior forward Bebe Croley said.
“Losing her really hurt us and was
very detrimental to us. Losing her
around as a person meant a lot."

 

 

Sports Monday

 

 

Rose Connection Valentine’s Day Special

Dozen colored roses boxed for $37:
in a vase $42
Dozen red roses boxed for $42; in a vase $47
Halt-dozen roses (no red) in CI vase $20
Dozen Carnations in a vase $30

All prices include delivery
and all orders must be in by Feb. 9

Call 273-4749

 

 

 

 

Camp Counselors Needed

Summer employment at Tripp Lake Camp. Female and
male. Outstanding girls camp in Maine needs instructors
in the following activities:

*Tennis, swimming (WSI), waterski, sailing, ca-
noeing, kayaking, horseback riding, costume
director, potter, nature arts & crafts, photogra-
phy, copper enameling, fine arts, arts & crafts,
newsletter, gymnastics, dance, lacrosse, field
hockey, basketball, softball & soccer*
ALS required for all waterfront positions. Good salary,
travel allowance, room and board, laundry service with
uniforms, and linen provided at no cost. Meet with a Tripp
Lake Camp representative on February 10th, at the Sum-
mer Job Fair in the Student Center.

For further information see STEPS

 

 

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Assistant Sports Editor

Philadelphia
gives the axe
to Guokas

By RALPH BERNSTEIN

, Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA — The slumping
Philadelphia 76ers fired Coach Matt
Gu0kas yesterday for failing to win
with the team they said he designed,
and replaced him with assistant Jim
Lynam.

Lynam takes over tonight when
the sub.500 team that has lost seven
of its last nine and 10 straight on the
mad opens the second half of the
NBA season in Atlanta against the
Hawks.

Owner Harold Katz blamed Guo
kas for the 76ers‘ slide from the
league’s elite.

When reporters suggested at the
news conference that Katz‘s trades,
not Guokas’ coaching, were respon-
sible, Katz said:

“Every single trade we‘ve made
was recommended by Matty Guo-
has. This was Matty Guokas' team.

“Moses Malone, Roy Hinson,
every single trade was recommend-
ed by Matty Guokas. And his recom-
mendations almost always were
taken. Yes, I made the final deci-
sions. I could have vetoed. So I am
ultimately responsible. I take that
responsibility."

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4:

 

By MARY SEDOR
Associated Press

JERUSALEM — A Gaza Strip
teenager was beaten to death
and crowds of Palestinians fought
with Israeli soldiers after his fu-
neral yesterday. Israeli gunfire
wounded 10 people in the occu-
pied territories, hospitals report-
ed.

Relatives and UN. officials
said soldiers beat 15-year-old
Iyad Mohammed Aql to death.

Army spokesman confirmed
Aql died of head injuries soon
after midnight, but said an inves-
tigation showed he was not beat-
en by soldiers. They said the
cause of the injuries was not
clear.

Soldiers had 11 Arab towns and
refugee camps in the occupied
West Bank and Gaza Strip under
curfew yesterday, confining 245,-
000 people to their homes. About
1.5 million Palestinians live in the
territories, which Israel captured
from Jordan and Egypt in the
1967 Middle East war.

Arab riots began Dec. 8 and
according to UN. figures, 49 Pal-
estinians have died at the hands
of Israelis, nearly all of them
shot by soldiers.

In Arab east Jerusalem, riot
police commandeered a Palestin-
ian bread delivery van and used
it to advance on rock-throwing
Arabs in the Silwan neighborhood
as they flung tear gas canisters.

Soldiers opened fire on Arabs
who rioted after Aql‘s funeral in
the Bureij refugee camp, wound-
ing an lldyearold girl and a 15-
year-old boy, an rarmy spokes-
man reported. He said the army
was checking rgports of wounded

 

elsewhere in the occupied territo-
nes.

Officials at the Ahli Arab hospi-
tal in Gaza City said soldiers
wounded two other Arabs when
the protest spread to neighboring
Nuseirat camp. Among the
wounded was a 17-yearold shot
in the chest, they said.

Khalid Ali Aql, 18-year-old
cousin of the dead youngster,
said soldiers entered the house
for no apparent reason Sunday
evening and beat both of them.

“I was in the house drinking
tea with my cousin Iyad when
about eight soldiers broke in and
started to beat us with clubs,” he
said from his bed at Shifa hospi-
tal in Shifa hospital.

Bernard Mills, director of the
UN. Relief and Works Agency in
Gaza, said Israeli troops search-
ing for stone-throwers dragged
the youths into an army jeep,
according to reports from U.N.
field workers who spoke to Bureij
residents. .

“The soldiers beat the boys in
the house. took them outside into
a jeep and drove them away,"
Mills said by telephone. “One of
the boys ended up in hospital.
The other boy‘s dead body was
found by a neighbor six hours
later. As far as I am concerned
the army is responsible.“

An army spokesman said Israe
Ii soldiers had nothing to do with
Aql‘s death. He said no autopsy
was performed because the fami~
1y took the body from the hospital
without permission, and “there-
fore we are unable to clarify the
cause of death. "

Army units questioned said
their men did not beat the youth,
and “there were no riots, no dem-

Arab boy’s death causes riots

onstrations, no reason for army
units to intervene at the relevant
time," the spokesman said.

The army said it was investi-
gating the death of a 23-year-old
Palestinian who was shot in the
head at Kafr Qaddum near Nab-
lusinthetheWest Bank.

A military spokesman said sol-
diers discovered him in a taxi
they stopped at a check point,
and he died later at Rafidyeh
hospital in Nablus. He said sol-
diers did not appear to be in-
volvedinthedeath.

No Arabs from Halhoul, a vil-
lage near Hebron, were admitted
to Mukassad hospital in east Je-
rusalem with gunshot wounds in
the groin and jaw, hospital offi-
cials said. Spokesmen at the Ra-
mallah hospital said three Pales-
tinians from Deir Omar, a
nearby village, were treated for
bullet wounds in the leg and ab-
domen.

In Washington yesterday, the
State Department said it was
concerned over stepped-up vio-
lence in the West Bank and spo-
kesman Charles Redman said the
US. position on any new Jewish
settlements there “has not
changed. We believe that they‘re
an obstacle to peace."

Riot police fired tear gas to dis-
perse Arab protesters who threw
stones and set up roadblocks of
burning tires at several sites in
east Jerusalem later yesterday,
Israel radio said. The broadcast
said 10 people were arrested.

West Bank residents of Qalqi-
liya broke curfew and protested
in the streets after mosque loud-
speakers blared that Jewish set-
tlers were damaging property in
town.

 

 

ODole wins big in Iowa, Gephardt hangs on in Dem. race

Continued from Page l

primary in New Hampshire and
later contests turned the state into a
multimilliondollar battleground.

That explained the millions of dol-
lars on television and radio commer-
cials, the massive organizational ef-
forts and the hundreds of candidate
days spent in a state where the turn-
out wasn’t expected to go much
above 250,000 voters.

Democrats began dividing up 52 of
the state‘s 58-member delegation to
the nominating convention accord-

CUSCS.

an organizational challenge

ites alike.

ing to a complicated formula de-
signed to reflect strength at the cau~

The decisions were made not in
the privacy of the polling booth but
in precinct meetings in cities and
towns from Adel to Zearing, posing
that
gave hope to darkhorses and favor-

Robertson, the former TV evange-
list, hoped his fundamentalist sup-
porters would flood the GOP cau—

cuses and produce an upset. Pre-
caucus polls had Dole leading na-

tional front-runner Bush after a

campaign laced with bitterness.

bunched field.

On the Democratic side, the polls
placed Missouri Rep. Richard Ge-
phardt and his anti-establishment
message at the head of a tightly
Illinois Sen. Paul

Simon and Massachusetts Gov. Mi-

in precaucus surveys.

chael Dukakis were just off the pace

Gary Hart, his comeback at stake.

Gore’s strategy pinned

on Southern

By BILL RAWLINS
Associated Press

ATLANTA — Sen. Albert Gore Jr.
is pinning his hopes for the Demo-
cratic presidential nomination on
the South rising again but sought
Yankee dollars, not Confederate
money, at a fund—raiser here yester-
day.
Ignoring the Iowa caucuses, the
Tennessee senator turned his atten-
tion to the South, flying to Atlanta
after picking up the endorsement of
Kentucky Gov. Wallace Wilkinson as
part of his campaign to win big in
the 14 Southern states that conduct
primaries on Super Tuesday, March
8.

Gore’s endorsement by Wilkinson
was a victory over Massachusetts
Gov. Michael Dukakis, and the sen-
ator said he hoped to win “more del-
egates in Kentucky on March 8 than
the top three finishers combined in
Iowa."

Wilkinson said, “After deliberat~
ing and considering and talking to
nearly all the presidential candi-
dates, I‘ve made the determination
Senator Al Gore is indeed the best
candidate for Kentucky and for
America."

Gore has said repeatedly he pulled
his campaign out of Iowa because
the outcome is dominated by a few
small groups who do not cast secret
ballots. He was been in the 14 Super
Tuesday states 86 days from July 1
to Jan. 15. Jesse Jackson is the only
other Democrat who comes close. at
63days.

Yesterday, Gore was with Wilkin—
son at news conferences in Washing
ton and Frankfort, Ky., before
scheduled stops at the University of
Alabama at Huntsville and Atlanta.

thanked supporters early in the day
and said. “This campaign will only
get stronger the longer it goes. “

Iowa had relatively few national
convention delegates to bestow. But
the prospect of political momentum
for next week‘s first-in-the-nation
primary in New Hampshire and
later contests turned the state into a
multimillion-dollar battleground.

That explained the millions of dol-
lars on television and radio commer-

  

Kentucky Kernel. Tuesday. February 9. 1008 — 3
O

'Weeknlte ‘

Specials!

Mon-Thurs after 5 p.m.

$399

win hopes

where the private fund-raiser was to
be followed by a downtown rally.

The Democratic National Conven-
tion will be here next July.

Gore campaigned in New Hamp-

 

shire over the weekend while his six Flame
rivals for the nomination sought .
votes in yesterday’s Iowa caucuses. Br01led
He pulled virtually his entire cam— Ribeyes
paign out of Iowa last year.

He has refused to speculate on
where he might finish next week in $ 6 9
New Hampshire‘s primary, saying
only that he would “do better than _
reoriiexpect." h d Sou h Fried

Wi inson is t e secon ‘ t ern .
chief executive to endorse Gore. The Fllet 0f
other Southern governor to back FlSh"
Gore, Ned McWherter of Tennessee.
is his second cousin and his South~
ern campaign chairman. $ 6 9

McWherter has predicted an im-
portant endorsement soon in Loui- 7 ,
siana, where Gore has lacked orga— Brorled
nization. ,.

The Tennessee governor is one of Brit “St Of
the early architects of Super Tues- Chicken"
day, convincing his state and 10 oth-
ers in the South to move their presi- $ 6 9
dential primaries to the second
Tuesday in March. Until this year. 3
the only Southern primaries on that
date were in Georgia. Alabama and Country

Florida.

The move is designed to shift the
spotlight from Iowa and New Hamp-
shire and give the South more clout
at the nominating convention.

A recent Roper poll showed Gore
generally running third in the Super

Fried Steak
with Gravy"

$129

Tuesday states, leading only in 'I‘en- / -,
mm. .Specmlly

The poll gave higher support to l’I‘ICL‘d Kid's
Gary Hart and Jackson in many DIUHCI‘S

states, but McWherter said this
would change with Gore‘s Southern
television blitz.

'lncludes Potato,
Roll Salad Buffet
and Sundae Bar

 
 

 

 

 

 
 
  
  
   
 
 
 
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
   
  
 
  
 
    
 
   
  
   
  
 
  
  
 
 
  

 

Kids 5

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. , . . eat FREE!
crals. the massive organizational ei-

forts and the hundreds of candidate Free
days spent in a state where the turn

out wasn‘t expected to go much Beverage

above 250,000 voters. With UKID

Republican Rep. Jack Kemp of
New York and former Delaware
Gov. Pete du Pont vied for standing
among conservatives. hoping to use
Iowa as a springboard to challenge
Bush and Dole next week in New
Hampshire.

powdfiitosA

l‘mrilh i‘."‘\'.it." '

 

    

 

up to 11

 
  

252-8822
exp. 2/14/88

 

Mr. Gatti’s is Back!
toppings

Large regular crust pizza

$7086

South Lime Location only

 

 

438 S. Ashland Ave.
Chevy Chase

The “Faulconer”

Named after WKQQ‘s own
weatherman, Frank

FREE 'DE

Faulconer. Turkey, ham and
I cheddar cheese on a bed of

lettuce. tomatoes and onions.

A shower of Italian dressing

to top

it off.

| 75¢ ofi' The Faulconer

reg. $4.74

exp. 2/14/88

 
 

269-4693 '-

Limited Delivery Area hangar. ulifi‘i'; ,.... I
Mint. 1 1:30 e.a.-12:30 nan.
Dun. 12 p.m.-11:80 p.m.

GULF OF MEXICO
presented by: STUDENT ACTIVITIES BOARD

Monster Mix

(The Italian Sub)
‘Potato Chips‘Drlnk‘

$3.84 eoqa. 2/14/88

 

    

March 11 - 20, 1988

PACKAGE INCLUDES:

. 7 Nights Deluxe Condo Lodging with Kitchens At SUNSCHASE BEACHFRONT

. Welcome Pany with DJ, Music and Activities

e isabeila Queen Afternoon Sightseeing Cruise or Single usage of

Island Club featuring Windsurfing, Hobiecat, Trimaran Sailing, Surf Jets
Fioundtrip motorcoach transportation

2 Voiiyball Tournaments with Prizes to Winning Teams

1 Sandcastle Buildiing Contest - Prizes to Winners

Special Prizes Awarded for Activities

All Taxes

OPTIONS:

. Only Mexico Shopping Trips

. Daily Windsurfing/Sailing or isabeila Queen
Sightseeing Cruise

$292

on or before FEB. 15m

$302

AFTER FEB. 15TH

For SIGN-UPS contact:
SAB OFFICE 257-8867
Outing Center Rm 101
Student Center

I

f)

 

J
J

 

 

 

Member: Port Isabel/South l’adrelsiand
Chamber of C ommerrc

"w:

greet destinations inc

\J

PRE-MED

 

STUDENTS

MC AT

Review Class to prepare for April tcst
Tuesdays Feb. 23-April 15
6:30-8:30 p.m.
$100
Sponsored by
Transylvania’s Community Education Program
Call 233-8124 to register

 

 

  

81‘ a’ 7‘. '7' . Hesse Cave RF.

‘g

{33:15 31‘:

ntgtfis

)

'Vou bought hm iinir. rs

you bought her illitltf‘i

you taught her tirinL-e films

you bought her ML. 1:. ”3:22

' So when are you going to buy fer
a personal”

Kernel Class;lieds:
Cosr so little — Sav so much

 

   

Summer job

 

February 10, 1988

Wflufi'flu
1'4“! Swans:

openings for Camp counselors at Camp Sea Gull (boys)
and Camp Seafarer (girls). Serving as a camp counse