xt7d513txf1m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7d513txf1m/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1994-10-07 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, October 07, 1994 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 07, 1994 1994 1994-10-07 2020 true xt7d513txf1m section xt7d513txf1m  

 

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today, high in upper 70s; clear
tonight, low in mid— 50s; sunny

tomorrow, high in upper 70:.

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UNthHSIlY Oi KLNIUCKY. LEXINGION KENIUCKY

 

[SlABl lSllfD 1894

All. THAI M Cuban jazz great

Arturo Sandoval will perform Sunday at
Memorial Hall. Story, page 5.

SAB w' I vote on Liddy proposal

By Jennlter Smith
Staff Writer

The Student Activities Board will vote Tuesday
on a proposal to bring ex-Nixon aide G. Gordon
Liddy to speak at UK

Liddy won by a narrow six-vote margin over the
other proposed speaker, former Vice President Dan
Quayle.

SAB Vice President Jason Martin said he thinks a
speaker like Liddy will be very good for the Universi-

“If (Liddy) can tailor his speech to the students on
this campus, then there is no reason he should not be
brou ht here,” he said.

T e Contemporary Affairs Committee approved
the Liddy roposal last night, but questions arose
over whet er Student Government Association
would co-sponsor Liddy’s speech.

During the debate over possible speakers, College
Republicans President David Samford, who support-
ed bringing Quayle to campus, said SGA President
T.A. Jones would support his grou ’s proposal for a

 

SGA bad publicity.
“Basically, T.A. said we would get help from h
if he got help from us,” Samford said.

However, Scott Coovert, chairman of the SGA

Speaker’s Bureau, which aids UK organization

SAB downed the Buchanan Ipro osal Tuesday

im night, saying it would be too muc

o a financial loss

for the organization.

Jones said College Republicans asked for his and

in SGA’S support on Buchanan, and he told them

 

bringing speakers to campus, said he

since they were students, their concerns

doesn’t know which side is telling the were important and he would do what he
truth. ‘ . could to hel them.
“I don’t know who to “I told t em if the Student Activities
believe,” he said. “I feel Board endorsed Pat Buchanan, then I
the College Republicans If“, [I]? College would help,”Jones said.
are dirty, but I also feel Republican!!!” “I don’t know what I could have
(Jones) might be as well.” dirty, but Ialso brought to (College Republicans),” Jones
Coovert said Jones feel Gones) might said. “I am not really in the position to
told him not to be pres- be as well n bring in a conservative speaker for them.”
sured by the College V ' Jones said he thinks the Colle e
. Republicans’ demands. Republicans give Republicans in generaFa
Liddy Jones denied Sam- Scott Coovert bad name.
ford’s claims, saying he Chairman aft/It “(UK’s) Young Republicans are on a
made “no such deal” and said the meet— SGA Spat?” power trip,” Jones said. “They are bully-
ing was to clarify comments the officers Bureau ing campus organizations into their con-
had written about him. servative point of view.”

 

 

 

“I met with them because I was

Samford said College Republicans are

conservative speaker and present a ill to the Senate

to get the event co-sponsored.

Samford said durin a meetin between Jones and
Fast week t at Jones offered to
support a speaker if the group would stop giving the

College Republicans

offended by the misinformation they had brought to
students in their (guest opinion in the Kentucky Ker—
nel) about me,” he said.

Also, Jones said he spoke with the officers about
the SAB’s first proposed speaker, well-known conser-
vative Pat Buchanan.

not out to “bully” groups on cam us. He said they
just want to get a conservative spea er brought to the
University.

“The only thing we have done is encourage our
members to get involved,” he said. “We are just one
student organization. We could not bully anyone.”

0.0.0.000...0.0.0.000...OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOIOO.IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00.000.000.000.

 

' lll't Ill the matter

 

GREG [ANS Kernel staff

This sculpture, part of the Sculpture on Campus program, stands behind the Fine Arts Building on Central Campus. But several UK students are vying for a
chance to put their sculptures in its place. Last night, the Student Center’s Rasdall Gallery opened an exhibition of works by associate art professor jack Gron his
students. A reception was held to showcase more than 20 designs of sculptures, which will remain in the gallery until Oct. 31.

till doctors advancing ,
in battle on AIDS virus

 

 

 

October 7, 1994

0 Classifieds 7 Diversions 5
[ Crossword 7 Sports 3
Comic 2 Viewpoint 0

INDEPENDENI SINCE 1911

NEWSbytes

WORLD M388 suicide
leader Still ”Bill! 80ll9llt

CHEIRY, Switzerland — One cult member
wrote her family that she had come to Switzerland
to die, and another said the cult was “leaving this
earth” to escape “the hypocrisies and oppression of
this world.”

Investigators struggled yesterday to explain the
mass deaths of 48 followers of the mysterious
Order of the Solar Tradition, amid revelations that
some victims had been injected with a powerful
drug and the discovery of more bodies at a house
in Canada owned by cult leader Lchouret.

There was still no sign ofJouret, and authorities
said they did not know if he was dead or alive.

cem‘a: Feasting II'BSSIII'G to leave

PORT—AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitian strong—
man Raoul Cedras is resisting intense pressure
from the United States to not only to step down
next week, but to leave the country, close associ-
ates said esterday.

U.S. mbassy spokesman Stanley Schrager
repeats at nearly every ress briefing that the army
chief is not obliged to cave Haiti under an agree—
ment signed last month. But he stresses Cedras‘
departure would ease the process of bringing back
exiled PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide.

Georgia county labels nuns

ATLANTA — Georgia’s biggest county wants
gun buyers to know that firearms can be hazardous
to their health. Beginning Nov. 1, all guns sold in
Atlanta and outlying parts of Fulton County will
require a warning label similar to the one on
cigarette packs. The label sa 5 that a gun in the
house increases the likelihoo that the gun owner
or a relative will be killed.

m Sports Spectacular is Sunday

United Way’s Sports Spectacular will be held
on Seaton Field Sunday at 10 a.m. Registration is
$30 for a four—person team. All UK students and
faculty are invited to participate. Teams can com-

ete in three-point contests, three—on—three bas-
lzetball and two-on—two volleyball. Call Jay
McCoy, dean of students, at 257-3151, or pick up
a registration form at 5 75 Patterson Office Tower.

NAMEdroppz’n g

Tomei yearns tor domesticity

NEW YORK — Marisa Tomei has it all fig-
ured out. The roud new owner of a one—bedroom
Greenwich Village apartment that’s accessorized

, , 1 down to the cheese Spreaders,
Tomei said in November’s issue of
Redbook that she’s yearning for
even greater heights of domestici—

  
   

 

Five years from now, the Acade—
my Award—winning actress said,
she sees herself living in a “really
big New York apartment” com-
plete with a “nice, big, round din—
ner table with eight chairs where
everyone can see each other and talk together.”

One thing, though, is missing so far from her
life.

“Being married isn’t important, but being com—
mitted and in love is,” Tomei said. “If he's the
right one, there’ll be room for him at that table.”

Compiled from staff wire reports.

Tomei

SGA senator calls for
executive's dismissal

 

lly Jolt Vinson
Staff Writer

Although AIDS was discov-
ered more than 12 years ago,
prospects for preventing and
treating the disease have
remained grim. The disease has
managed to stay many steps ahead
of potential vaccines because of
its deceptive ability to mutate,
rendering the vaccines useless.

But a team of researchers,
including two UK doctors, say
they finally may have closed the
S‘P- .

In a paper published in the
October issue of Immunology
Today, three doctors, includin a
husband and wife team from
document how the virus eludes
treatment by constantly changing
form.

Dr. Heinz Kohler, director of
research at the UK Markey Can-
cer Center, and Dr. Sybille
Muller, an associate research pro-
fessor at UK, along with Peter L.
Nara from the National Cancer
Institute, described their findings

“What we clearly discovered,
which was confirmed by investi-
gators, is that the immune
response, really, is tailored to
attack the virus at the time of
infection,” Kohler said.

Kohler said that with a normal
infection like the flu this immune
response action is sufficient to
clear the infection before it
becomes chronic. A chronic
infection is marked by a long
duration or frequent reoccur-
rence.

By contrast, HIV causes every
infection to become chronic.

“In other words, the immune
system makes a very vigorous
attack, and somehow the virus
escapes this attack and continues
the infection,” Kohler said.

In other situations, he said, the
immune system is able to catch up
with the virus, but then the virus
mutates, causing the immune sys-
tem to fall many steps behind in
its attack on the infection.

“We have discovered that the
immune system is not changing,
the virus is mutating,” Kohler
said. “And this e lains how this
disease and the in

    

at

GREG EMS Kernel staff

lttll "I'll: Dr. Heinz Kohler, Dr. Sybille Muller and postdoctoral fellow
Dr. Quan-Li Want discuss recent research on HI V yesterday.

essence of a hypothesis that the
doctors’ term as “deceptive
im nntmg.”

ohler and his colleagues use
the term to describe the inappro-
priate attem ts of the immune
system to de end against a rapidly
mutating virus and the system’s
inability to attack the virus
mutants.

Their discovery provides an
ex Ianation for recent failures of

S vaccine trials.

Kohler said research should be
directed toward avoiding the
system’s deceptive
imprinting and unlocking the

 

 

on the immune response in HIV— 'on can con-
infected chimpanzees and tinue.” immune
humans. Kohler said his discovery is the

. 1 a ..-- T AX . v

im rinted immune response in
in ected individuals.

Kohler has been working on a
vaccine that may hold the solu-
tion to the deceptive imprinting
challen .

Unti a cure is discovered,
Kohler said, the only combatant
against the AIDS is education.

”Absolutely by far the most
frequent transmission of the virus
comes from sexual transmission,”
Kohler said.

“The gay community got edu-
cated, and they now practice safe
sex. But these young college kids.
they don’t,” Kohler said.

 

By Sara Spears
Senior Staff Writer

Ted Lahren knows he may
upset people, but he says it is only
because he does a good job.

“I realize that I probably get on
people’s bad sides,”

for SGA President T.A. Jones.
Hyland said she proposed the
motion to relieve Lahren of his
duties because he simply was no
longer doing his job.
“I would like Ted Lahren to be
removed from his position
because he is no longer

 

said Student Govern-
ment Association’s
executive representa-
tive, “because I’m effi-

E6

performing the ser—
vices he was approved
for,” Hyland told the
Senate.

cient, and people don’t [would like Lahren spent yes-
like efficiency.” 75d Lahren t0 terday afternoon draft-
So when Senator at b d ing a letter to every
Large Wendy Hyland e may“ , senator defending his
introduced a motion from “Spa-‘7' role in SGA.
Wednesday night to tion because he The motion to
fire Lahren, he said he is no longer rempvle1 him wafizfiasbled
was unha but not ‘ unti t e next 'en-
sur rised. ppy {gngufzg ate meeting on Oct. 19
yland's motion ,, because Lahren was at
claimed Lahren was Wfi’r the Wednesday night's
not doing the job for V meeting.

which he was approved
by the Senate.

H land said Lahren
shoul’

 

Wendy I'Mlml 1"

Senator at large

the letter,
Lahren said his job is
to serve as “liaison
between (VVeitzman)

 

 

d be serving as a
coordinator between
Amy Abernathy, SGA’s executive
director of student services, and
Avi Weitzman, SGA’s executive
director of academic affairs. She
said he has become a chief of stafi'

* ".1.-.“

 

and (Abernathy), as
well as assist in any capacity
(Jones) and (SGA Vice President
Benny Ray Bailey)"

In the letter's final sentences,

Samoa!
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2 Knmaky ham/,1...1.y,o.mln 7, 1994

,,. a.~.“M-. on . , .

 

 

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Stop by the Kentucky Kernel, 035
Grehan Journalism Building, today!

 

 

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1102. Steve!
Who do you thirk you are?
MARCIA CLAR K?!

Or JUDGE ITO?!
Did anyone mention
TONYA HARDING in the
last: few minutes?

     
  
 

  
  

 
   

 

 

 

 

 

The drdn’tion the
Bobbitts. Shem.
Have Ham'n 6. Eggs lost 1:?

Face facts. Brooks.
Time has passed
the Bobbitts by.

 

 

 

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Colleges celebrate 35 years

By Aaron 0. Hall
StaffWriter

UK President Charles
Wethington helped UK’s Com-
munity College System celebrate
its 30th anniversary yesterday by

kicking off the Partners in
Pro ess fund— raising campaign
'15er event, held at UK’s Robot—
ic Center, also marked the Uni-
versity’s first media event broad—
cast to teleconferencing stations at
six Kentucky community colleges.

 

GREG Earls Kernel ruff

"THENCE”! Connected by two—way teleconferening to six community col-
leges, ofi‘icialr kick offa fund-raising campaign for the colleger yesterday.

“This anniversary is an oppor-
tunity to demonstrate the strength
of our community colleges and
our continued pledge to serve the
people of Kentucky better,” said
Ben Carr, chancellor for the Com-
munity College System.

During the ceremony, Carr’s
system received an $800,000 grant
from the National Science Foun—
dation, intended to network,
through Internet, each of the col—
leges by a state—of-the-art comput-
er laboratory.

“The cooperative effort
between the mathematics faculty
at the community colleges and the
Lexington Campus is an excellent
example of the partnership
between the two sectors,” Carr
said.

Wethington’s sup ort for the
campaign, which is K’s largest
ever, has helped to gather $14. 9
million in private donations and
another $5.4 million from federal,
state and local governments.

“We will be there to assist in
what the communi colleges have
so well establishe as important
community goals,” said Wethin -
ton, a former chancellor of t e

system

The oal of the partnershi is
to raise 38 million to $58 mil ion
for faculty and staff enhance—
ments, scholarships and techno—
logical equipment for the 14 corn-
munity college campuses.

Coordinating the partnership is
UK mathematics professor Paul
Eakin. With the help of the com—
munity colle e mathematics facul-
ty, Eakin WIT] develop four tech-
nology courses and graduate
coursework in mathematics.

However, the anniversa also
occurs simultaneously witrh the
first drop in the community col-
lege enrollment in 10 years.

Lack of legislative funds con—
tributed to the decrease, Carr said.

“We need funding to take in
more students,” Carr said. “With
less money, fewer sections are can
be offered.”

Wethington promised contin—
ued support to Paducah Commu—
nity College for an science and
en eering school.

The engineering program at
Paducah currently teaches electri—
cal, civil and mechanical disci-
plines.

Packed 1101180 hears Gates 111801188 renaissance

By Nicole Heumphreus
Senior Staijriter

Black and white, studeni and
scholar converged on Memorial
Hall last night to hear Henry
Louis Gatesjr. speak as part of the
Blazer Lecture Series.

“I appreciate seeing such a
diverse audience,” Gates said. “It
is not usual to see this.”

Gates’ lecture, titled “The
Harlem Renaissance: Then and

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Now,” highlighted the four black
cultural renaissances of the 20th
century, particularly the Harlem
Renaissance and the current cul—
tural renaissance.
“From hip- hop to the academy,
never before have so many black
artists achieved so much in so
many fields,” he told a capacity
crowd.
During the ’205, Harlem no
longer existed as a place on the
map. It had become a mythical

 

”Lord. gran! us peace/or all we have
and are has come from you. "
w [.11th 20.12

 

 

IT CAN PAY TO BE A
COUCH POTATO!

 

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Graduate School Dissertations

 

 

 

Name: Pamela Schlomann

Program: Sociology

Dissertation Title: Initiating and

Sustaining Ethical Discourse in a

Neonatal Intensive Care Unit: An

Ethnographic Study

Major Professors: Dr. Eugene Gallagher
Dr. Robert Brannon

Date: October 26, 1994

Time: 10:00 am.

Place: 1545 Patterson Office Tower

Name: Hu Hines

P ducational & Counseling
Psyglolo: y
Disserta onTltle: Parents Educational

Ex ctalions and AchievementSuworting
Be vior. and Children's Academic
Achievement; A Cross-cultural Stud of
Amaican.Chinese-American and . inese
Families

Major Professor: Dr. Emanuel Mason
Date: October 7 1994

Tlme: 2:30

Place: 109 Dickey Hall

 

 

Name: leraldine Kraver

Program: English

Dinenatlon Title: Paris South: What a
Lost Generation Sought and Found in
Post-Revolution Mexico

Major ProteIIor: Dr. Larry Swinglc
Die: October 7, 1994

Time: 2:00 pm.

Place: 1343 Patterson Otl'Ice Tower

Name: Susan Marie Krause

Program: Physiology

Dissertdim Title: The Contribution of
lnspirattry Muscle Allerents in the
Percepion of Breathing

Major Panesor: Dr. Donald T. Frazier
Date: October II. 1994

Time: I 1:00 am

Place: M8505 Chandler Medical Center

 

 

Name: James Mark Prathcr

ngr-n: Communication

Dlnertatlon Title: An Evaluation of a
Sensation Seeking-Based Public
Communication Canpaign in Kentucky:
The Prevention of Substance Use During
Pregnancy

MajorPnte-or: Dr. Robert N. Bartram
M: Octet. II, 1994

1': The: 2' mp .m

 

 

 

Phoa: 223 Orchan lornalilm Bldg

Name: lun Yang

f Place: IOIF Morgan Bulking

 

Program: Biological Sciences
Disrertlion Title: Exmssion of the llllQll
Gene During Gmtogenesis in W

Mm

Malor Manor: Dr. ldin Rawls
Date: October 12. 1994

M: 9:30 I. m

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

ebonyle paradise, said Gates, chair
Afro-American studies
department at Harvard Universi-

However, the idea of Harlem’s
being a paradise was just that, a
myth. Harlem was the worst shim
in the United States, he said.

Then the renaissance died
when the stock exchan e crashed.

But Gates said he elieves the
current renaissance will be self-
sustaining because “black writers

have black editors and they write
books for black readers who buy in
black bookstores.” There is now a
black middle class that can sustain
the renaissance, he said.

But he reminded the audience,
while this was the largest black
maddle class In history, the 19903
also are the time with the largest
black underclass. “This African-
American renaissance blooms
against the backdrop of a desper—
ate socioeconomic backdrop.”

Senate tables motion
to dismiss Lahren
From PAGE 1

Lahren issued a challenge to the
senators, asking. “Who would
have the best understandin of my
job performance? You or ...A 3”

Hyland, however, said she
thinks Lahren causes more prob—
lems than he solves.

“I feel Ted is a blockade and
perpetuates the confusion between
executive and legislative branch-
es, ”Hyland said.

Weitzman and Jones spoke on
Lahren’ s behalf Wednesday night

“Everybody in the executive
branch ultimately works under
T..,A and Ted is still working
between T..,A (Abernathy) and
myself,” Weitzman said.

 

WKSWOWKIW‘ - W

LEGISLATIVE

ELECTION FORUM

 

 

CANDIDATES INCLUDE:

La'ry Brandsteller
Ruth Ann Palurnbo
Ernesto Scorsone

 

 

Dcn Todd

0:?9'510 be announced .

 

 

 

Sly/l Vlillll

lillil

 

 

0 C T 0 B E H 1 0

6:30 _—

- STUDENT CENTER
Rece ion

with candigalles SMALL BALLROOM
7:30
Forum 0 8. A
with panelists
and audience
members

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 .t

 

 

ler

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

UK plays host
to Florida and
South Carolina

By Doc Purcell
Senior Stafl Writer

During the UK volleyball
team’s extensive early season
struggles, Wildcat head coach
Fran Ralston-Flory said inexperi—
ence and an inability to fit into
roles hurt the Cats.

Once the players mastered their
positions and gained valuable
playing time, Ralston~Flory
promised her team would
improve.

Now, after more than a month
of play, the Cats are beginning to
show signs of life. UK has won
three ofits past four games head—
ing into this weekend of pivotal
Southeastern Conference
matchups.

On Friday night, the Cats play
host to South Carolina at 7:30,
and the team takes on Florida at 2
p.m. Sunday. Both games will be

.3.--

 

 

 

 

JAMES CRISP Kernel Ira/f

Illa ll Outsider bitter Molly Dreisbach, who was named SEC player of the week Wednesday, will lead the Cat: into

action this weekend.

 

played at Memorial Coli-

seum. ing too much rather
It appears Ralston— Ill then doing things

Flory’s diagnosis of her V8 instinctively. We

team’s problems and her

bold promise for its 80“”. Baron“:
7572i ht, 7:30, ‘
Memorigal Coliseum ranked Eighth

future couldn’t have been
more accurate. The Cats
currently are 5-10 overall

and 3—1 in SEC play and

seem to be getting‘better 30"“: UK lead:

with each match. 8-0
“We have continued

have finally learned.”
Florida (12—2, 4-

0) invades Lexington

nationally, while the
Gamecocks come to
town sporting an
impressive 12—4, 2-2
clip. Ralston—Flory

to take steps up,” Ral— “ICONS: South said success this

ston-Flory said. “We Carolina 12_4 2,.

have improved every 2m the SEC. UK
5-10, 3—1 in SEC

aspect of our game. _
“At the beginning of la
the season, we were hav- P 3'
ing trouble discovering
our roles, we were think-

 

weekend hinges on
the Wildcats’ con-
tinued improvement.

The Cats’
improved play of late
can be attributed in
part to the reemer-

 

 

gence of outside hitter Molly
Dreisbach.

The junior was named SEC
player of the week on Wednesday
for her performances against
Georgia and Tennessee last week—
end.

Dreisbach’s weekly total
included 32 kills, 29 digs, four
blocks and three service aces.

While Dreisbach is expected to
lead the team once again, Ralston-
Flory said the play of the VVild-
cats' setters also is important.

“We need to get consistency in
our setting,” Ralston-Flory said.

The team will look to sopho-
more Ainsley Grimes and fresh—
man Fiona Bolton to handle much
of the setting duties this weekend.

Ralston-Flory said Grimes and
Bolton, who saw limited early sea-
son action, both have stepped into
leadership roles for the Cats.

Ralston-Flory also pointed to
the play of senior Betsie Aldridge
as another key to the squad’s suc-
cess.

Aldridge will be stepping into
the lineup as a replacement for
middle blocker Tracy Thompson,
who tore her anterior cruciate lig—
ament.

Thompson, a freshman, is
expected to be sidelined for the
remainder of the Wildcat’s ‘94
season.

“Betsie will have to step in and
accept the challenge,” Ralston-
Flory said.

M. . e ,;m.-»-._.-_,fl

 

  

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310 pro-register, $12 at the race
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For More Information Call 323-7991
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flats to battle Vanity

By Jonell Carey
Smj] I'Vrirrr

Sunday tnay 'ust be a day to
renternber, as t e UK women's
soccer team takes on the Vander-
bilt Commodores.

Both teartts are enjo ing win-
nin seasons, and the showdown
cou d be a battle.

The \Vildcats' season has been
filled with bi r games, including a
\ictory overt e highly touted Vir—
ginia (Iavaliers. UK head coach
\Varren Lipka said maintaining a
serious attitude is key to the
team's success.

UK is on a live— lame winning
streak aml will neer to post victo—
ries over Vanderbilt on Sunday
and Arkansas next week to posi-
tion themselves for the Southeast—
ern Conference 'I‘ournantent.

“\Ve ltave to go into the (Van—

derbilt) game with the same atti«
tude as we had with University of
Virginia," sophomore goalkeeper
Amy Moxley said.

‘You’ve got to
be smart, es ecial—
ly versus ander-
hilt," Lipka said
during practice
yesterday.
‘The ’re so damn
fast, t ey'll ste )up
on every balll we
pla if they cart."

ll)espite putting
pressure on his players, Lipka does
not doubt their skill.

“I have 100 ercent confidence
in this team,” lIbipka said. “They
cart beat (Vanderbilt).”

Lipka said UK's rame plan will
focus on uick ha 1 movement,
touches and constant ball control.

Lipka said Vantly's quickness
and offensive firepower are diffi—

 

 

Moxloy

cult to defend. Strikers Sara
AICDonald and jennifer Burchet
lead the team from Nashville.

The twu strikers know what to
do with their teammates' passes.
Lipka said that if UK cannot slow
Burchet and McDonald, it could
be a long afternoon for the Wild—
cats.

“This team plays on rhythm,”
Lipka said of Vanderbilt.

UK also must dominate the
middle ofthe field and control the
ball, he said.

“We have to tome out arid play
hard and be lotuscd," UK fresh-
tnan Ali Rooney said.

The ( Iats‘ strengths tome front
strong passing abili