xt779c6s1s22 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt779c6s1s22/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1993-09-16 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 16, 1993 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 16, 1993 1993 1993-09-16 2020 true xt779c6s1s22 section xt779c6s1s22  

 

1

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lambda Chi gets socia

Three other fraternities
cited for Rush violations

 

By Tammy Gay
Senior Staff Writer

 

One UK social fraternity has
been placed on full social probation
and three others have been repri-
manded for violations of lnterfrater-
nity Council bylaws.

The IFC’s Judicial Board placed
Lambda Chi Alpha on full social

probation Sundays through Thurs-
days for the rest of the semester.

The action means the fraternity
can hold social events only on Fri-
days and Saturdays.

IFC also fined the fraternity $2
permember.

The action came after the judicial
board found the fraternity guilty of
violating section 10 of IFC bylaws.

which states
that social fra-
ternity parties
must be invita-
tion-only af-
fairs.

All non-
members also
must sign a
guest list. an
executive offi-
cer of the fra-
ternity and a
security guard provided by the IFC
must be at each entrance to the
house. and designated driver lists
must be maintained .

 

WAINSCOTT

 

 

 

 

By Jennifer Wieher
Contributing Writer

 

A college degree now is con-
sidered almost a necessity for
getting a job, but many students
already are working long hours
simply to pay their tuition bills.

The combined costs of tuition.
student fees. books. room and
board are so high, some students
can't afford them.

At the same time. cuts in fi-
nancial aid also are hitting stu-
dents' wallets. Only about 52 to
55 percent of UK students quali-
fy for federal or state aid.

While some students work to
make a little extra spending
money. a growing number find
it an economic necessity.

Biokigy junior Mike Taultis

 

 

Carey Gunning. e 22-year-old fashion merchandising senior from Chililcothe, Ohio, gains
career-related experience while working at The Limited in Fayette Mall.

Economic necessity forcing
more students to find jobs

says his reason for working is sim-
ple: “i need the money to pay for
school.“

Searching through the classifieds.
going to a placement agency or
walking into a store for an applica-
tion are just a few ways that stu-
dents find jobs.

UK‘s Student Temporary Em-
ployment Service also helps stu-
dents find jobs. Counselors at
STEPS place students in jobs on
campus. as well as refer them to
employers off campus.

Most students visit STEPS be-
cause they need the money to stay
in school. said Sharon Bruce, coor—
dinator of the service. She said
most students work an average of
10 to 18 hours a week.

The UK work study program also
is an option for students.

To apply for work study. each

PETER MOONEIKemei 51“

student must fill out a financial
aid form. Jobs are awarded to
students based on their financial
needs.

Once an applicant is deter~
mined eligible. the financial aid
office will find a job for the stu-
dent on campus or in a public or
private non-profit organization
off-campus. Students generally
are placed in jobs that relate to
their interests or majors.

“We feel at UK that we can
offer meaningful work experi-
ence in (the student‘s) area of
interest." said Bobby Halsey.
director of the Office of Student
Financial Aid.

He also said work study gives
students the experience they
need to compete in the job mar-

See JOBS. Back Page

 

 

Social fraternity parties also must
be registered with the lFC execu-
tive board by 4 pm. the Tuesday
before the event, and no parties
may be held the weekend prior to
Rush week.

The judicial board ruled tint
Lambda Chi did not register a party
held Aug. 2] — which was before
Rush week began.

in addition. the board found that
the fraternity did not have an execu-
tive officer or a security guard at
each enhance. nor did it maintain a
designated driver list.

On Sept. 3. after Rush, the frater-
nity did not register a second party,

 

  

SEP161993

 

probation

the board said.

lFC President Mike Wainscott
said this was an oversight, and that
officers of the fraternity mlled lFC
before the party began. so a security
guard was present.

Lambda Chi‘s president refused
comment. but Wainscott said
Lambda Chi received a fair hearing.

“i think it is a fair punishment."
he said. “i think it fits the viola-
tion."

lambda Chi and three other fra-
ternities also received punishment
for advertising Rush activities.

The judicial board said all four
social fraternities broke a section of

Rush bylaws that states social fra-
ternities are not allowed to adver-
tise Friday and Saturday events as
Rush events.

The fraternities placed several
signs around campus billing Friday
and Saturday events as Rush activi—
ties.

Wainscott again said the viola-
tions were “an oversight."

He said the fraternities crossed
out the Friday and Saturday events

on all the signs they could find after
they were informed of the violation.

See lFC, Back Page

Peace plan faces challenge

Split in PLO
deepest Since
group formed

 

 

By Salah Nasrawi
Associated Press

 

TUNIS, Tunisia — Palestinian
opponents of Yasser Arafat's fledg-
ling peace deal with lsrael pursued
their campaign against it yesterday.
hoping to ovenum it by democratic
or violent means.

Arafat. facing the deepest split in
the Palestine Liberation Organiza-
tion since it was formed nearly 30
years ago. returned to his headquar-
ters and called immediate meetings
on how to rally supportand heal the
leadership rift.

His return came two days after he
signed the landmark peace treaty
with lsraeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin in Washington. The accord
grants limited self-mic to Palestin-
ians in the lsraeli-occupied Gaza
Strip and the West Bank town of
Jericho and sets up a timetable for
expanding autonomy to other areas
and negotiating a permanent agree-
ment.

Opponents consider it seriously
flawed, complaining that it does not
guarantee the creation of an inde-
pendent state or the return of refu-
gees and ignores the critical issue of
the status of Jenisalem.

Arafat scheduled meetings with
senior aides to discuss the crisis.
PLO officials said.

He also was to cell meetings soon
of the PLO Executive Committee.
which has suffered five defections
because of the accord. and the 18-
member ruling Central Committee
of his own mainsueam Fatah fac—
tion.

"God willing, (the accord) will
pave the way for similar peace ac-
cord on all Arab fronts." Arafat said
on his retum.

“it started with Palestine. (Tues-
day) it was Jordan. and later on it
will be Syria and Lebanon.“ be pre-
dicted.

Two of the pact‘s staunchest op~
pments. George Habash and Nayef
Hawatmeh, met in Tripoli with Lib-

BeaVis, Butt-head have soulmates at UK

 

By Amy Bernee
Staff Writer

 

“Heh. heh. Tim's, uh, cool."
“Yeah. Heh. heh. Heh. heh"

Since their debut last September. MTV's 0!)-

UK students Kris Alfred and Dave Kasanofare
die-hard Beavis and Butt-head fans who say they
haven‘t missed a single episode.

Kasanofsaidthcshowhtnbecomcsopopular
because “it’s stupidity that we can all laugh at.

“They're the worst-case scenario bumouts on a
funny level. They're both profusely ignortmt. in-

Beavis and Butt-head offer their own version
of insight into everything from nosehaiis and
vomit to fashion and music.

Each episode contains a completely absurd
story of abnormal occu'renccs. So far, the duo
has invented frog bmcbelL gone couch fishing.

rodebikcsinetrxnado.servedadeep—friedrat

 

 

noxious cartoon duo. Beavis and Butt-head, have tense s---heeds."

become at Alfred
naional ~ 'd the
mm?“ Maybe its popular with young adults because :0“ ap-
lflfmffi" they would like to be cmde but they're not. “$333 ‘3, a
PW? me“ There's something attractive about getting mwlkdual y“
junkies . . . , pursuits.

spend half away With dorng things that you shouldntdo. w col-

of their 30 lege stu-
minute “VJ dents. they
WW" 1'08! —Thomee1entell, give our
333.5. a“: UK psychology teacher $32.5“;
which Beavis and
mu they Butt-head.

gettobemdenotcnendoomplctelyobnoxious.

They hold nothing beck: The two elweys tey
wim‘eontheirmhds. Thcydiecueseubjecte
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III.

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e dunbe--."

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“After coming homefromelong thyofclasses.
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Andthekfevaitetopicsueveryerbleecent.

V

at Burger World lid visited a nudist colony.

UK psychology teacher Thomas Zentall said
Beavis and Butt-heed may have become popu~
lar because they conflict with the norms of soci-

“lt‘s basically a matter of rebellion." Zentall
said. “Children get very excited about crude
wordsendusethemelottogetariseoutof
adults. lid they think it's very funny.

“Maybe it’s popula with young adults be—
cause they would like to be crude but they‘re
not There's mining attractive about getting
away with doing thhgs tha you should“ do."

Zentalllidedtlmtheleveiofhumrxliesin
the indivirh-l.

By Scarlett Coneelvi
Staff Writer

 

UK faculty have positive but
uncertain reactions to the histori-
cal peace agreement made Mon-
day between israeli Prime Minis-
ter Yitzhak Rabin and PLO
chairman Ymir Arafa.

The agreement eventually will
bring Palestinian rule to the Is-
raeli-occupied West Bank and
Gaza Strip. and -— more funda-
mentally —— marks the first time
in 30 years that the two
have recognized the other's legit-

imacy.
John Stempcl. director of the
Patterson School of Dipkxnacy
and a former diplomat to the
MiddleEnstsaysheis‘fiuarded-
ly optimistic” about the develop-
ments, and that the egreanent
has a better chance of survival

 

Ex-diplomat says he
is cautiously optimistic

then any previous ageements
becauseitismorefa-reaching.
He said. however, that inevi-
table violence from both sides
willbeamajorobstacletothe
successoftheplanAbout62to
65percentofthcpopulauon’ fa-
vors of the agreement. but at
least30percentopposetheplm.
Theouly'way fortheagree-
merit to take hold is for “both
Arab Ameriuns and Jewish
Amermns' bmkedeertothcir
co-reiigmst‘ ' in the area tint
theyfirllysmomhermoem
ccss,”Sunpelsa'd.
RobertOlmfaculty adviser
forthcAmbStudentUMdis-
agrees with Stempel's conclu-
sion.
“Palestinianoppositionlslam-
ics inve been overestuna' ted by
themediaandwillnotpresenta

See DIPLOMAT. Back Page

 

 

yan leader Moamrnar Gadhafi. Gad-
hafi has harshly criticized the pact
and has said in a nationally tele-
vised speech that Libya “will not
keep quiet about this mockery."

Hawatmeh. a Jordanian. heads the
Marxist Democratic Front for the
Liberation of Palestine. Habash. a
Palestinian Christian. leads the Pop-
ular Front for the Liberation of Pal-
estine.

The two Syrian-based groups are
the biggest in the PLO after Ara-
fat’s Fatah.

Hawatmeh was reported to have
been in Tunis two days earlier.
seeking to forge an alliance with
Arafat's opponents in the PLO hier-
archy.

The two leaders already are allied
with eight non~PLO factions in or»
position to the U.S.~backed Middle
East peace talks.

Hawatmeh and Habash also were
expected to plead their ease in Syr-
ia. it was unclear what kind of re-
ception they would get.

Yesterday. President Clinton and

Syrian President Hafez Assad
talked by phone and pledged mutu-
al cooperation in advancing the
peace process. according to Assad
spokesman Jubran Kurieh.

Kurieh quoted Clinton as having
“underscored the importance of
continuing endeavors to achieve
progress on all tracks."

Although there have been break-
throughs in Israel's talks with the
PLO and Jordan. which signed a ne-
gotiating agenda on Tuesday. there
hasbeennoprogressinSyrianand
Lebanese negotiations.

PLO sources said Arafat emissa-
ies have been sent to various Arab
capitals to persuade opponents of
the accord who have left Tunis in
recent days to retum and make up
with Arafat.

The sources said a key figure Ar-
afat wants to woo back is Khaled
al-Hassan. a veteran Fatah leader
currently in Morocco.

He and his younger brother liani
were staunch Arafat associates until

See MIDEAST. Back Page

 

mm

CLARIFICATiON:

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Kernel. ummmmmcm‘um meeting wee
incorrect in yesterdey‘e newcomer. The cut more tonight.
Because of a reporter’s error. the location of the new Student
Health pharmacy was incorrect in yesterday's Kentucky Kernel.
The pharmacy will be in the Student Health clinic,

Because of an editor'e error, an article in yesterday's Kentucky
Kernel contained incorrect information about the Student Health
Service‘s HIV testing policy. The eervice formerly offered only
confidential testing. it now offers anonymous testing.

Margaret Borders. depicted in e photo in yeeterdey‘e Kentucky.
Kernel. was not visiting the Student Heeith Service for HIV teem“ .

Moetfycloudytommhztthelawerme.
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thefirsthalf.

 

 

BytlaaeaAlamndar
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off as team traded fouls during

Neither team was fluid on of-
fense. as the aggressive defense
both teams played took its toll.
Marshall and UK ind only five
shots combined in the lmlf.

UK's first goal came during
the 36th minute of the fust half
when senior striker Greg Kotz-
bauer made good on a penalty
kick opportunity and UK went

Cats rope Herd, 2-1

hmhalttimehadthlshall

1-0.

Nahum-Mylar
theiSminutehtenflnioawas
over. so neither can hit a
chancetowarnitq).

The Wildcats kept lp their
srnotheringdefenseinthesec—
oodhalfmdbeuibgeloaof-
fensemanagingmoreshotson

goal.

UKreachedthegoal once in
the half when sophorncre mid-
fielder Tim Fisk bftedasurpris—
ingkickovatheheadofo—
shallgoalieRyanPaynetomake

thescore2-0.

“I didn't expect it to go in.”

Fisksaid.

Coach Sam Wooten stated
freshman goalie David Muse in
place of junior goalie Matt Stan—
ley. Muse responded with near
perfect play, holding Marshall
scoreless until the 88th minute

ofthegame.

During that minute. Muse lost
his footing as Mashall’s Rytm
Lapointe clmrged the goal. La-
pointe lost control of the ball,
and Muse slipped and fell.

UK‘s Chad Holloway. a jun-
ior fullback. rawd to the ball be-
fore it rolled into the goal.

Holloway also fell to the turf.
knocking the ball into the goal.
That trade the final score 2-1.

 

 

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TOD

AY’S

cnosswgu) PUZZLE

 

 

SPORTS
Gordon great guy, great goals

 

By Brett Dawson
Contributing Writer

 

Donnell Gordon nisbes off the
practice field in full pads. probably
looking forward to nothing more
than a shower, something to eat anti
a change of clothes.

Instead. he is greeted by a report-
er from the student newspaper who
wants to ask him some questions.

Athletes who have grown accus-
tomed to this ritual may look upon
it with some degree of monotony.
In fact. some would see it as an op-
portunity to be hasty and even rude.
Barry Bonds does so on a daily ba-
SIS.

Not Donnell Gordon.

Remember Saturday night? Mo
Williams rushed for 109 yards on
nine carries. becoming the first UK
freshman to rush for 100 or more
yards since 1984. He blew away the
formidable Florida defense for 70
of those yards on a single carry.

Meanwhile. Gordon watched and
cheered from the sidelines. To
some. being the runner-up for Mr.
Football in Kentucky and being
confined to the bench for a big
game would be reason to complain.
Emmitt Smith probably would do it.

But not Donnell Gordon.

Gordon. the 6-foot. 185-p0und
freshman from (of all places) Pee-
Wee Valley. Ky., is not the type to
be nide to a reporter. He's also not
the type to get jealous of a team-
mate’s success.

He is simply the type to work as
hard as he can to become a great

 

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football player and help turn around
a less-than-dorninant UK program.

Gordon claims his transition from
all-state tailback at South Oldharn
to a backup at UK hasn't been as
difficult as one might think.

“It hasn't been a big difference,"
Gordon said after practice Tuesday.
“All you have to do is come in here
and work hard. and ljust try to push
myself every day."

Despite the fact that Gordon lit up
high school defenses for 6,336
yards mshing and 62 touchdowns in
his career. his playing time at UK
has been limited to a couple of se-
ries against Kent State.

Still. he doesn't feel any pressure
to compete with fellow freshman
Williams. In fact. he insists, each
has tried to make the other a better
player.

“(Williams) is a great running
back. and we both just try to push
each other‘ he said. “We‘re real
good friends. and we try to just
keep each other going. We cheer
each other up and try to motivate
each other to do the best"

Gordon was all-state his senior
year after posting some pretty in-
credible numbers: 2.342 yards rush-
ing. 25 touchdowns and an average
of 8.6 yards per carry.

He also was named to the Dixie
Dozen. a team that honored the 12
best high school football players in
the South. Gordon received scholar-
ship offers from schools like Geor-
gia Tech, Clemson and Louisville.

He chose to play for the Wildcats
despite the fact that he was a U of L
fan in his younger days. Some still

w"... .. . .,

question his decision. but Gordon
knows he wound up in the right
place.

“I still get a lot of questions. Peo-
ple always ask me why didn't I go
to a big (football) school and stuff
likethaLbutthisismyhomeandI
wanted to stay here." he said.

Despite a tough loss on Saturday.
Gordon has some fond memories of
the Florida game.

“It was pretty exciting.” he said.
“Everything was so much faster
than the Kent State game.

“It was real exciting how we
were up on (Florida), and we just
kept driving on them."

UK head coach Bill Curry has
womised that Gordon will see ac-
tion on Saturday when the Cats take
on arch rival Indiana in Blooming-
ton, Ind.

Gordon knows the Indiana game

is important coming off a loss like
Florida, but he stresses that the Cats
aretakingthisseasononegarneata
time.
“I think (1U) is a big game. Every
game is a big game. though. You
can't look at one game as bigger
than the other. We're gonna get pre-
pared this week. and I think it‘ll be
an exciting game."

Gordon has big plans for the fu-
ture of UK football and for his part
in it.

“I see us winning it all one year."
he said. “It might be this year. or
we might do it four years in a row.
but I think we're going to win it
all."

And individually?

“Right now. I just want to break

 
   

some records and make it to the
F08."Gordon said.

After amoment's thought he add-
ed: “And keep my grades up.“

He added the last part as though
he was just supposed to say it. but
somehow it came across a very
sincere. That's part of what makes

talkingwithGordonsuchagreat,

conversation.
He keeps you interested in every

word. His voice is nowhere near in- .
dicative of his powerful body. It is .

soft and tmassuming. conjuring im-

ages of Jamal Mashbum. a former .
UK athlete who is doing quite well ,

for himself these days.
Like Mashbum. Gordon enjoys

talking about his teammates and his 3
sport. but when the talk tums to ‘
hint. the responses are short. sweet '-

and to the point.

“I bring a little jukin' action and ..

more power to the backfield." he
said with a smile. “And if I don’t
juke you, then I'll try to run over

Certainly some athletes, the Chris
Webbers and Deion Sanders of the
world. could have put it in more
colorful terms.

They could speak of their value
to their respective teams. and they
could badmouth opponents and
even teammates.

And they certainly could mn off'

the field without giving their time
andcounesy toareporterfrom the

student newspaper. Of course. they .

could.
But not Donnell Gordon.

Hiles hopes to help Wildcat Van
down the road with speed, tackles "

 

By Doe Purcell
Contributing Writer

Ask Van Hiles what he wants to
be remembered for when he leaves
UK. and he‘ll laugh hysterically.

"That's too far down the road"
he says. “I'm a freshman."

Indeed, it is far too early for
Hiles or anyone else to predict what
may happen during his time in Lex-
ington.

But. as things look now. the 6-
foot. l75-pound free-safety from
Baton Rouge. La, should have a
star-studded four years in the Cats
football program.

A three—sport star at Episcopal

 

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High School. Hiles lettered in bas-
ketball and led the Fighting Knights
trackteamtothel992classAA
state title by placing in four events.

While his basketball and track ca-
reers have been impressive. football
is where he‘s found the most suc-
cess, earning all-state honors for
both his junior and senior seasons,
and ultimately signing on with the
Wildcats‘ program.

“I believe football’s going to be
my sport here." said Hiles. who
passed up an opportunity to com-
pete for the UK track program this
spring.

“I don't think I‘m going to have
enough time to concentrate on track
like I did in high school."

Although his track plans are on
hold. Hiles said he believes the
training he received in the sport
throughout high school has en-
hanced his football career tremen-
dously.

“Track has helped a lot with the
speed, endurance and flexibility,"
he said.

Surely Hiles and his freshmen
counterparts will need all three if
theyhopetomakenoiseinthepo—
tent Southeastern Conference the
next several seasons.

Hiles is anxious to see how the
group. ranked 3 the l3th-best re-
cruiting class in the nation by one
publication, progresses. He wants.
however. that little has been proven

   

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ANEVEN

1w,"

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VIP Ticket 0 Reception $25

606/ 257-4929

Sponsored by
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WLEX-TV and WUKY-FM

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yet.
“We won't really see how good

we are until a couple of years down ‘

the mad,"he said.

Although Hiles insists the crop‘s .
abilities barely have been touched. .
he already hm begun to make his _

markontheUKprogram.

In his first two collegiate games.
amodest Hileshas been in on four ..

unassisted tackles. while seeing

time at both free-safety and on the ,,

kickoff team.

“I really didn‘t expect to come in
and play that much." he said. “Ac-
tually. I‘m playing a lot so far. so
its kind of surprising."

Naturally. for Hiles. it's a very ‘

pleasant surprise. as he is anxious
to gain the same sensational form
he so often exhibited in high
school.

But his individual stats on the
field seem to reflect what he be-
lieves is important in the UK foot-
ball program: clinching an SEC ti-
tle before his graduation day.

Jones sprains ankle
Staff reports

 

 

UK starting quarterback Pookie ~-
Jones sprained his left ankle in~

practice yesterday.

According to UK Sports Commu-
nications, the junior will be exam- .
ined today and an announcement ..

will be made afterward.

B INC wrm F
The Twenty-Two Cities, Twenty-Two Causes, "I
One Good Reason Tour

to benefit Lexington Habitat for Humanity

Robert Fulghurn, til bestselling author of All I Ever Needed to Know I

, will conduct a benefit readin celebrating the
release of his new book, Maybe (Maybe Not): Second Ting”: Ems A

    

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Prints etched into history featured in show

Seventy-one works form rare retrospective at UK Art Museum

 

By Dawn Wilson
Contributing Writer

 

The complete collection of mez-
zotint prints by 19th-century British
artist Joseph Malkird William Turn-
erisondisplayattheUKArtMu-
scum.

The exhibit. titled “Liber Studior-
um" (Latin for “Book of Studies”).
consists of 71 mezzotint etchings
by Turner that took nearly 10 years
to complete. Several of Turner's
paintings also are on display with
the prints.

“Turner was one of the greatest
artists England produced" said
Harriet Fowler, an director for the
museum.

Turner was considered a forerun-

ner of impressionism and is most
famous for works like “Peace. Buri-
al at Sea" (on display in the Tate
Gallery in London) and “Rain.
Steam, Speed" (housed at the Na-
tional Gallery in London).

The scope of vision and exquisite
skill shown in the “Liber Studior-
um" exhibit makes it easy to see
why Turner is considered one of the
best artists of the 19th century.

The collection of landscapes is
done in brown sepia. which gives a
warm. yet somber. glow to all of his
prints. The technique brings to
mind old family photographs from
the late 1800s and early 19005.

When he began the project, Tum-
er wanted to create a guide to show
the themes and explorations of

 

DIVERSIONS

landscape painting. Turner explores
six different classifications , of
themes: historical, mountainous.
pastoral, elevated pastoral. marine
andarchitectural.

His technique involves using a
sharp tool to etch an acid resistant
substance onto a copper plate. The
plate then is covered with acid so
that the exposed areas of copper are
eaten away.

A tool called a rocker later is ap-
plied to the surface of the plate to
create tone, shadow and light. The
final results are intricate details and
expressive conuasts of light and
dark that make Turner's landscapes
both brooding and breathtakingly
beautiful.

The J.M.W. Turner exhibit is on

 

loan from the Indianapolis Museum
ofArtandwasthegiftofthelate
lndianapolis attorney Kurt Pantzer.
who acquired more tlnn 4,1110 of
Turner's works during his lifetime.

This showing of “Liber Studior-
um" is one of the few times all 71
of the prints have been shown to-
gether.

“The Indianapolis Museum of
Art likes what we've done with the
exhibit so much that they are plan-
ningtoalsoshowalloftheprints
together," Fowler said.

The exhibit will be at UK Art
Museum. located in the Otis A. Sin-

 

gletary Center for the Arts, through
Oct. 3. The museum is open Tues-
day through Sunday from noon to 5

pm.

The trontsplece ot J.M.W. Turner's
Turner's meticulous attention to detail that is shown through-
out hls 71 prints on exhibit at the UK

PNOHJQMMTHWOFUKAIYINIUI

‘leer Studiorum' displays

Art Museum until Oct. 3.

   

 

(“Diabetes in Kentuckyn
Seminar

Pumpkins a surely smashing dish

 

 

U

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Smashing Pumpkins
Siamese Dream
Virgin Records

 

By John Abbott
Staff Critic

 

You're an eager. young band, try-
ing to make a mark on the music
scene.

You release a fantastic debut al-
bum that instantly makes you the
darling of the critics and the under-
ground scene alike.

lt finally comes time to record al-
bum No. 2, but you‘re feeling enor-
mous pressure to avoid the dreaded
“Sophomore slump," which would
erase the gains you'd made thus far.
What do you do now?

if you're the Smashing Pump-
kins, you head into the studio and
record a magnificent follow-up al-
hurn, Siamese Dream.

Bn‘uiantly produced by grunge
Ubermensch Butch Vig (who de-
serves every inch of the hype he
gets), Siamese Dream is 60-plus
minutes of terrifically noisy rave-
ups and engaging acoustic songs.

“Cherub Rock," the thundering
opening track, builds slowly and
ominously with a nervous guitar
line before giving way to the vi-
cious braying of Billy Corgan's and
James lha‘s buzzsaw guitars.

“Hipsters unite/come alight for
the big fight to rock/for you." Cor-
gan advises. a mock mil to musical
arms in which pointedly satirizes
smug alternative-types who insist
that underground music is all that is
good and pure, and anyone who
likes Top 40 radio is shallow (the
same ones who cry “sell-out“ the
minute their favorite band manages
to creep above the poverty line).

It ought to be a huge hit.

The rest of Siamese Dream is al-
most as good.

“Soma” starts out as hazy and
languid as the identically named
drug in Aldus Huxley's Brave New
World made its addicts. then rides a
wave of bruising guitar blasts to its
cathartic conclusion (Mike Mills of
REM. pops up here on piano —
don‘tmiss it!).

“Geek USA." is another keeper,
though it‘s saddled with a unwieldy
mid-section; here, the Pumpkins
tried to duplicate the wonderful
fast-slow-fast song chemistry they

exploited so effectively on “Siva,"

the second track from 1991‘s Gish.

but it didn’t quite work.

Even the songs that don‘t work
have their merits.

“Silverf---.“ the album‘s nine-
minute magnum opus (Latin for “a
lot longer than it should've been")
kicks off with a mean stutter-stun
riff, complete with Jane's Addic-
tion-style drumming. then leads you
through a sepulchral middle where-
in Corgan breathes. “Bang! Bang!
You‘re deadllliole in your head."
then winds up with more pointless
guitar noodling.

The separate elements never real-
ly gel into a song, but why the
Pumpkins chose to waste so much
time with this nonsense remains an
endlessly fascinating question to
me.

 

 

    

Arr.

One thing that the Pumpkins can
do very well that many wall-of-
guitar bands can’t do is turn it
down.

Anybody can fiddle with a distor-
tion pedal or hide behind sheets of
amped-up power chords and still
sound cool.

 

But the Pumpkins show they can
turn off their smoke machines and
Marshall stack and write a nice.
simple melody. (A skill