xt7gth8bk831 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gth8bk831/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1983-11-29 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, November 29, 1983 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 29, 1983 1983 1983-11-29 2020 true xt7gth8bk831 section xt7gth8bk831 I ac S on arlne ase Splll' . . alf SOI’thS
2 9 By StaffandAPrepoi-ts ets slammed into the harbor area In Damascus. Syria. municipa" ian refugee camp: near hipoli months. the position of mm l.\ (mi in “lawn: la'tuiml‘ .. ion.
, abouta mile east ofthe US. Embas- leaders of Tripoli joined talks on the which they captured from Ararat rial." hrsaid inniu mum ihc- in... Min-r

BEIRUT, Lebanon —~ U.S. jets syonWestBeirut’sseafront. evacuation ofwarring Palestine Lib Col Saeed Mousa insisted the camps (llsm predicts suhstantial l' .\ ls omit: has iii-o: m.- uh! Y‘. tum“.

thundered over Beirut in reconnais- “Nothing fell close enouidi to oration Organization forces Ni are noipanoiinenipoliam raeli attacks on small [Initials in trim! W or lsrar. 12W Links ..2.
, sance sorties yesterday after two alarmus." said embassy spokesman agreement on an evacuation timeta , , Lebimon The goal would he in n- luf‘vifln um- .l “rim; 2n it.”'."l"
’ overnight attacks on American Ma- John Stewart. blehflsmn announced. LK “‘5'“? ”am W" duce the influence of the Syrian sup “mac and t'N‘istini. iiiilitiniuri‘ i."
; rines, while unidenitified gunners The artillery and rocket-propelled While inspecting his troops in 'l‘ri- Ol5°,"- a 59?“th m M’d‘ue Eastern ported Shiites in a source at lrti la'tmllim i «hold “Militants -. tin,»

Shelled the capital‘s hart)“ for the grenade attadts “1 the US. Marine P0“. PLO leader Yasser Arafat re~ ”tau-5' sud. The PLO has been nurse nationalism directed against lighting li-ttmmr H‘tlitti‘t\ :: 5hr

firsttirnesincethesummerof19m. contingent at Beirut’s international fined to say when he planned to WEI” weakened and ‘5 '" dial" the Gemavel Christian gnwniim-ni MN“...

The shooting caused no casualties airport came before midnight and at leave. He also claimed Syria had ray ‘ "5 ”mm has deten‘x‘ted and man-(cut m dam“, in" , ll"
to the Marines and only minor dam- daybreak, said a Marine spokes- moved one parachute battalion to 5m“ the 1982 summer “at and we“ Simon A (ii-{oat or _\\na “mid “in.
age to the Beirut airport where the man, Maj.DennisBrooks. new positions north of 'Iripoli late more "to“ last t7“ “‘9‘“ he “‘d plaui me “an; al mad unwrnnnm ”WW”... N”, ”M. '3‘“... W,
Marinea are stationed. However. the A grenade and some small arms Sunday and had redeployed about 40 “9 "gm“ 0““ a “M“ "e" “"d m jeoparm and ptmlbh lead in tail“: drum ..n.-. in.» id...» in...
15-minute bombardment of the port fire hit the southern perimeter of the tanks near villagestotheeast. 0t 901'“?! structure for the P315. ltbamn-llht‘lragme-ntatititi \(‘ntlllll Afln‘li liiiliiwi“. in“ in“ it

. wounded four corstruction workers base, said Brooks. He said Marines A leader Of an insurgent PLO {30- timans M" have to come out Of ""5 Olson expecu events will (tr-wimp .tl'tlltt‘r\ ..nd i». iii-i n. Mimi" il..i'
shortlyafternoon. returned the fire with small arms tion continued to insist that his “Everything‘s contingent on the before Febl'uar) dnd the pres: lt'“ rigid .miiii.ii.in:~ limit. ..nd 2...
One salvo of five shells and rock- and machine guns. troops would not leave the Palestin- situation in the next three to Six dentialelectinn “Ulllltll'fl
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Bank ShOt he WOthd like t0 hold tht‘ lorum 1“ tar lel‘d'llllfl Al 7 in iii” \ all:
An unidentified bank customer walks toward the revolving yesterday afternoon. The bank is located in the Kincaid Tmt- the Lem" for the Art“ hut “”3 ””l “We 'tINm‘u‘fl “it”! “imuw Hit'
door of the Central Bank and Trust Company‘s main branch ers on Vine Street. yet requestedthesite '“ mm") ""d ”‘9'“1‘ ”' 5” "‘1
Last year GALUS presented “l’iiik (ll‘llt I "fill“! The mwtiiig l\ «pm. 2..
Triangles." a documentary concern .ili iliti-rorslul
'bl d t ct'on f ca ll '
U stu y exp ores the possr e es ru 1 o ncer ce 8 msios .
By CINDY PALORMO conn°hyi senior research biOIOSiSt -—_—_— chemotherapy kills other body cells cation must be known before chemo M " M h“ ”I M "-
Staff Writer at the Sterling Winthrop Researcher “In our study, we saw as well as the tumor cells." Connolly therapy can be used W “ 0K“ t”? m “W" 0‘
Institute in Albany. NY» Connolly - said. Macrophages kill only the An immediate use ior this n» "'9 “'0'“ “whim“ mot he

A method to destroy cancer cells worked with Kaplan in the early that m several cell tumor cells.hesaid. search is to destroy biologically m. ”MM W “lam M W
in people and animals—without the stagesofthestudy. [mes macrophages Polyanions. which are synthetic cancer cells that remain in the pa “ "" U" A" "we 5" VAN-
me of chemotherapy. surgery or X- .After dtViSiOhv the tumor cells had ’ drugs. activate macrophages and m- tient after cancer surgery. Kaplan PAIL” 3‘
rays— is being studied by a Univer- only half the amount of genetic caused tumor cells to hibit growth of the tumor. Kaplan said M, ,, ... m an ..., m ~
sityresearcher. material, thus the cells died. he - ~ said. Th are examples of biologi» Ne-nt . to 30 n have been . ' -

- dzwde equally. Yet the W . . . y pap” on "I“ 9"" W1“! ‘9‘!
' Dr. Alan M- Kaplan, department said. cal respome modifiers.hesaid. done on the study and SUV? those Mm Moldyontmfiwhh
. chairman 0t microbiology and im- “MEWS only do this to genetic material in the These modifiers are “any sub papers were published. other people ”a h";

munology. has been studying the ef- tumor cells because the tumor cells - ~ . stances which act by augmenting have begun supporting the use of '

fects 0t macrophages since W72- His divide 5° rapidly,”00nnolly said. cells dld ”at d1 Wde the host to respond to a tumor or in macrophages to eliminate tumor

work is financed through a three- Kaplan said the most common equally H fectjon rather than acting on the cells,Connollysaid

year $265,000 grant provided by the ways to remove cancer are through ' tumor itselfyhesaid, Kaplan said he became interested WEATHER

NationalCancerlnstitute. m clmiemotherapy 1:“ fine: Administered a few days before in the uses of macrophages when

Macrophages are white “00“ 038 means, sai 2 . ‘ surgery and a few weeks after sur~ "observations in "72 and W73 hy _ . ~ 11"" . , ~2~
cells, Kaplan said. “Activated mac- primary tumor is removed but some Dr Ke‘fm Connolly. gery. the biological resporse mod- other people indicated that macro Today Iii m fifi‘ifififi
rophagee km the tumor 09115," he of the cells may escape to another Sterling Wmm’OP ifiers kill the secondary tumors. phages from animals With mfectious w m m m‘ The NO
explained. partolthebody» Researcher Institute Kaplan said. This is why macro- diseases killed cancer cells " “l” *' "' l”! I“ '0 “I" 3'» 1"

“In our study. we saw that in sev- “Most people who die from cancer __ phages canbevery mfuLhesajd 11,9 study. he said. originated In lo' “I be I! the til t to too-l
eral cell lines. macrOPhases caused don’t die from primary tumour. they Kaplan also said doctors do not 1972 at the Medical College oi vir. 10- Tm" 1' 5* “III!- illit-
tumor cells to divide equally. Yet die from metastasis. or secondary therapy is that it leaves the body have to know exactly where the can- ginia at Richmond Connolly worked 7" ”it u “.3 W i.‘ “V n
the genetic material in the cells did tumus,"hesaid. wide open to other infections it cer cells are located to inject the with Kaplan on the study for three M“
not divide equally.“ said Dr. Kevin “The major problem with chemo- otherwise would not get. because macrophages. whereas the exact lo yearsasa postdoctoral fellow
T I] H k ' ' '

o y- o eeps on cooking as it approaches its twelfth year
By EMILY MORSE Referring to the Tally-Ho burger. time. He graduated and has his own About 10 pm. the restaurant re— T.— "— " ‘ ‘ fl 5 ”v Q; ~. 7' To
Reporter he said, “I started serving the quar- businss in Nashville. but we still sembls a scene from the '5“ Stu- ‘ , Q” is. W .. . WW , ”‘3 it
let pounder before McDonald‘s was keep in touch."Hollopetersaid. dents sit in booth eating hamburg- : ; 2 j " 2 “ e m s $134 .,

It‘s the place where UK basketball even here." The restaurant is literally home to en. listening to the jukebox or 3" i, 2 ~” “ t— :W .- . " . .
player MGM" Min 8005 0“ his Unlike McDonald’s, no sign hangs some people. Vernon Tucker. an em- playing pinballandvideo machine 3 "s a“; .. _ . .. ‘ . WW»,
diet outside the restaurant to show how ployee for the past seven years. ”W of (m M ‘ nd ~ I « ,- W ‘. e

“We have a lot of fun teasing Mel: many have been served. But there said. “One time this , man we tart d. .' °.'. Hole 5' up I'd _ 2 , 2m,“- i ' 1
Vi" about his diet" said 30" H0110— have been quite a few. Hollopeter call Snoozy came in and stayed all 'S‘But :3“ Putting; _ . . ‘t . f ' a ,' .
peter. owner of the Tolly-Ho Restau- atimatq that he orders as many a week without leaving.“ t whamkfgod r L ’ 5 ‘ > -- f .
rant and affectionately known as 800a week. The'l‘olly-Ho operates 24 Hollopeter said. “There's an atmo- 3‘ °“ 2 t ‘9‘ - i . . _~
“Papa Ho." hours a day. every thy except Sun- when here. that make! them (the “Sometimes the way they act real- . 4

"He always has a couple of Super day. mtomeni feel like they can do 1), gets to me he said. "But within -. ,-

Hos when he comes in. They‘ve got .. anythingtheywant." students 1 '. . ’ _ ,
a trainer that is supposed to follow We “we We "I“ in" teen mm um. um, man, Emu, fiwmugfim “tram m a" .. , '_ . :
him and make sure he sticks to his m in here two “d 0“ ”Hung a patient at Eastern State Hospital Him w the m- -. ...r“ a»: f v
diet When the trainer can't find him ' "5" t" t" 9"“ ‘2 mm “'d came in here one do after steal' 3“" ’9' .» ' '
' - .. . EttaBell.adIyahifternployeesince. . . V “V anaemidthevnivenity. Ive - _2 d ’
alotoftunesitsbgcamehesdown athreepiece suit outofaoar He them gm {3- g . _,
here eatirg. Hollopeter said of 'l‘ur- stood by the jukebox. took his , .
pin. “Then they wonder where he is W said: “We have . defi- cmofi‘mwtmmim" Hollopete likes the college stir * 8 “
Emmilhmswetfl‘t" ntte cllemele. They start coming A sketch of a screwy M ‘9'“; ."w' “P“mmt‘“ “ l »

This month marks the 12th year m what M“ m u the man wearing a cap with Tony-Ho mantles. l loaned my refrigerated
that Tolly-Hohas beetieervingitslo- Urivuilty and caitinue m primed across the from or it hangs truck to the (Pin Kappa Tau frater- .
cally tam Tolly-Ho. Super Hoand intll they‘re w Willie behindthe counter nity) it: their October-fat (beer 11“"?

Big Tolly burgers at ill W. Euclid school “my; been hanging m ‘ long blah." he said. Both Kama Sigma ". . i ‘
,, Ave. ' time now said. "I on every- and Sim Nu rave pou- in an m: . , l

“hemmea'lginatedvitham- “imbumtmimam bodythathe‘ethelmtda’JikeColo- WOUWMMWW W l
tamntli-edtortninnlclmaid." Lflme’Jmedfl? uamnramkymed m» “a -- 2 '
Hm laid. “ W’s .Heaid. ‘ ' e Olefin." ‘l‘hedn is «null d .. (WWWA‘ levee nu-

. name was Tony andmmine bean mmhmfioloookedthun l-lilarymmanwhoflv'izuthereltyau- ‘“ “W““fl ""“ W Marvin Colleii. an employee It TolIy-Ho. talks with one of the
with Ho." my that time and every etha- ”may. Sumo-'2 many customers at ihc local restaurant.
{ t ‘ .

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To OVER 35 000 , ”f 11:? . . M i ‘1'. ByPAULRECER space. Included are investigations into the
l .1 111* 1 tit-.1 : 1. g 1 , AP mince Writer Space sickness phenomena that has affected
“W; {’11 : 1.1.11.1: 1?? {‘52 1,... W: W . W WW: ‘1' nearly half of the m shuttle asmumW The
2 11311 12...... ) ... 1: w" 1 . :_ £1.71 SPACE CENTER, Hot-ton — Columbia tests include the response of human blood
a Cage/W5? 1727’"; 33%; . ‘1’ .1, {1’ blasted into orbit ycefiterday carrying six '3’ cells and 0f the immune ”Stem to zero
15mm”, W11, 1,. . : .’ eeiWrMW?* tenants who qui y put the 81 billion gravity. The astronauts will take and ana- -
I“ m $531111”; 11?: 1: , - * 1‘ , Spacelab to work. besinnlns one ofthe most lyre blood samples throughout the mission. ‘
‘,§if 11(7’2‘11 W‘ ' 'é 5535’s 111;“ ambitiom scientific expedition; ever under- Exotic metal mixes will be melted and '
3,22,11,91,, W ,, W1” m g , 11511- taken — nine (by: of non-stop experiments u-ystals will be grown in three Spacelab fur-
WITHIN HOURS 1,3115%; .2, Vat/ow - “r ' m ””1111?“ thlt Wm 3M! the heavens, the Earth and naces. These are experiments that scientists V
"I 111:” W _ . W, 9"» i " 1%.11111}, man himself. hope will determine the practicality of orbit- '
g3??? 1112?: . *“M “£3 Astronmlts Owen K. Garrictt and Byron ing factories that could produce products C
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, M W 1.1.11: .1 1.13“ 111.1: . . . ’ .. ' Muwfigjffi bay of Columbia, just three hours after they new breed of astronauts — the mission spe a
' Kimmy {21:1 ‘7- ..(.._,.WW 1. zgflwtgwfi ; ' I, ,. 1&5”): and four crewmates were launched from the cialists. They are not career astronauts, but 9
Ken ’3' " 11.11 . a“ 14:31. ..-, Kennedy Space Cents": are scientists who were trained t0 were“? p
’iW’fg, 1.11 3 ,1 WM flwfi, The launch was precisely on time. 11 the science instruments on this mission. R
giggfgw,” 1.11 V 11 .:* .. ., . a“ M . 1.. '11:.1 a.m., despite a looming weather front that Merbold, who fled his native village in East
«£34; 1 WNW .- . 1W“ .. 1- 111113?» threatened a twoday delay. Columbia car- Germany to become a scientist in West Ger- r
CLASSIFIED ADS Egéfgfs: 1111311153311: _.* '.W M " W'fl; ried into space the largest crew ever - six many, was selected for the mission by the ~ 5 P
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OUR NEW DEADUNE F0" CUSS'F'ED ADS '3 11,,WW:W,,111 la m;:g,11 Ulf Merbold. The mission is the first for Columbia in a t
3ND" BEFORE PUBLICATION g?"i’f§, ,1 315.2111 met» Then Garriott, Lichtenberg and Merbold year. The craft was renovated for the g
é‘WrWompfgigf " .: 1w; floated through the 19-foot tunnel and made Spacelab mission, with the laboratory in- g.
, W - ‘61,»31W¢;,,1,,14Wg, My ‘3 “M a joint entry into Spacelab, smiling broadly stalled in the cargo bay and equipment to m
‘ (17% / ' . 1% 1,, fifigwwwpi , 3.3: ,W d h, ,Wa, and shaking hands all around. They turned accommodate the large crew installed in r
if / r441“ 1315‘1111 W in” tho-tor; 1 on the llshts and quickly set to work acti- theeabin. 1
li/ —- insiio flow not“ on! 1 veins the expenmeno- Yong 815° void 8 s cel b i - t' - 1 b the
.‘ , l ,“,“12W :1 » 3..., ,. 11:1 brief visit before returning tothe cabin. P“ a ‘5 a °°°Pera ‘Ve.m‘ss'°“ y w
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a, ‘ W: , 1111.111“, “1" "1 if N “my“, * robe the lie and death of di tant stars and up the European Space Agency. ESA gave w
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, i Ms“, K ll -..1 1 ”Km. «1; “a, gauge the energy exploding from the . . a
41/) 5 5P 1 113,121: swifluf 'WM' Mfimwfit Earth’sownstar the sun. the ”W‘memss Other experiments are e
- .. .. “/ "‘1' ' V K' " ‘ a 1,141?“ 1;,a3112g 'j 11: the Earth, mapping the land surface and ' .
: If s/ 1/ N W 3:.. 1m i electronically sniffing the planet's atmO- The mission will fly over parts of the in
~ ' , / :1: . . 1. ' 11111 sphere and causing its numeric fields. . Earth not seen trom previous shuttle flights. a
Ag “wasp“, .... '- ’- 1- " :. » * . 0f 1 A keen-eyed German camera, capable of The launch carried Columbia north, parallel $95
. Jfi '9 :13 QW,1,}&& “WWI W WW mm ,1 capturing views with a resolution of 32 feet, to the US. East Coast, and then over North- ; m
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71'7“"? ‘ ‘ ’- \ 11;.” - ' ‘5 ‘ forms from Earth, including man himself, the United States except Alaska, and most y-
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i:- 1.371 $""_[ my business more than anything was about four years Hollopeter said he thinks it is getting harder for small to work with me at night and they always called lx-sr CO
\‘1 E 3_~_ 7 7. 1 'W ”a / , ago somebody from the Kernel went to all the hamburg- businesses - mom and pop operations —- to make it. “It “Mama Ho,“ he said. She no longer works because of PT
‘5 f g; i, _. \ " j .fi - FE} er places and declared the Ho burger the best,‘-‘ he said. used to be you could start a restaurant without a lot of her health. m
\f , 3 " *fi -; “I think the fact that we get our hamburgers fresh, money," he said. “The milk suppliers gave you a refrig- Most of the employees have worked there long enough an
3 7/ not frozen, from Louisville everyday makes the differ- erated milk box for using their product. Suppliers car- to be considered family members. Vernon Tucker, in
" 1' ence," he said. “We cook everything to order, instead of ried bills for a month. Now, they want to be paid every his 205, has worked from 6 am. to 6 pm. for the past .
Li _, cooking it ahead and setting it underaheat lamp." week. You can't just start up, especially in a place as seven years: cooking hamburgers and going home at
Hollopeter says he doesn‘t feel threatened by the com- big as Lexington." night smelling like grease. .
petition from Hardee’s and McDonald‘s. He sees him- He has also run a catering service at Gainesway He explains, “It‘s like we really don’t have a boss .
Let the KERNEL self as having his own little niche among hamburger Shopping Center with his brother-in-law for the past during the daytimes. The people I work with are a little
places. The menu offers everything from a Super Tolly- three years. Before entering the restaurant business he crazy. It’s fun to work here.“
Ho burger for $1.25 to a complete breakfast of ham and was in the army, sold advertising for the Yellow Pages, Most of the students who go there agree that it's a fun
Help YOU reaCh eggs fora$1.94. was an insurance investigatorandworkedinafactory. place. “I go there to see people," Lori Cessna, an ad- ‘ \
He says his menu is based on Frisch‘s old menu Originally from DuBois, Pa., he said, “I’m probably vertising junior, said. “And the hash browns are great
ALI- 0f the where he worked for seven years as a supervisor. the only Hollopeter in Kentucky, but the name is quite with cheese melted over them."
“Mainly I try to give the customer a good amount of common there." Melvin Turpin said. “Yeah, I go there all the time. .
food at a fair price. It seems to work. I've never had to At one time or another, all the Hollopeter family The food is always good and the people are always
U K Campus advertise." he said. members have worked at the restaurant. “My wife med friendly." ‘
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ion By(iARYW.PlER(‘E ardo work. claiming the identical the Art Museum is generally consid . .
ted and Assistant Arts Editor wood panels indicate that both paint ered to be the one sent to Paris as ”*1“; .
lab fur- ings‘ supports were oi the same type the basis tor the first printed edi ‘J‘ v '4' . .
_ ientists The exhibition “Leonardo da of wood tion The manmcript has been ap " “ \
oforbit- Vincii The Comtesse de Behague Snow=Smith also argues that the perlmr’ilt’l) dated at 1635 and in ‘ \\
products Collection.“ which is currently on pigments and the use oi thin layers cludes quotes from Leonardo ~ -
display at the Art Mmeum. features of paint ate stnkingly similar to delineating many oi his ideas about - ‘A
first of a artistic controversy. sketches and techniques employed by Leonardo 1” his work .
ion spe— anatomical studies. and four drap- his last years. during which time the \'iewers may note with some in -»
-uts, but ery studies exhibiting the intensive painting was allegedly done terest that on the page displayed in
operate physiognomic detail typical of the Fowler said such opportunity to the exhibit the captions for the ' .-
mission. Renaissance master. debate a work‘s authenticity is one pages two sketches were trans A .. at A
. in East According to Harriet Fowler. cu- of the more interesting and impor posed. providing both an entertain . ‘, ‘
0st Ger- rator of the museum. art students tn tant aspects of an exhibition like this my: reminder of human fallability -
by the particular should be interested tn one and a glimpse of the occasional l 3
mm the getting a close look at these famous The Leonardo exhibit also ieatures human errors which plague art ‘ . A .
y. drapery studies. which until now 75 drawings and manuscripts by scholars seeking to trace a works A' - »
big in a they have studied only in photo 17th century artists whose work was history " ‘9
for the graphic reproductions. ”There is a greatly influenced by Leonardo 1n Although an exhibit of this sort is » I ' -
tory in- great deal of detail in the draw- particular. a study of human and an heavily fraught with speculation and ' - _ '
ment to ings," Fowler said, “and you can tmal facial types by Peter Paul ltti ey en controversy, it does provide an -«-
.lled in really see what doesn‘t come off in bens ts interesting iii comparison to excellent opportunity for local art ~’ A r .
the reproductions.“ a Similar study by leonardo. copied ists and art-lovers alike to examine A ‘, .
The studies were done on linen in the 17th century by Nicolas l’ous works rarely seen in this area . ' '
n by the with tempera paint, from models of sin. Since October 1981. the de Behav r
-t make clay figures which Leonardo draped While Rubens examined the \‘lllll' gue collection has been on exhibit at _
AA gave with soft. wet cloth. and display the larities between the features oi am a handiul of other museums . . A ’ _ it- -
"‘8 half artist‘s determination to minutely mals and humans. Leonardo seemed throughout the country. including i . M ' ' 3’ - ‘ .
nts are examine the garments‘ folds and the content to study those features with such institutions as the l‘niversitv of . ' '
and the interplay of light and shadow. out attempting to relate human and southern ('alii'ornia. the l‘niversity .. e a .
Fowler also noted that such draw- ammal physiognomy Scholars are oi Michigan and Princeton t'niversi» T.»-
c of me ings were especially appropriate for consequently led to speculate that ty ' . -, ii - -
e flights a university audience, which includ~ Rubens used Leonardo‘s work as at Other museums have expressed ' A
parallel es persons with more than a passing starting point from which to pursue an interest in hosting the exhibit. ”A,” ‘ ..A . A . ~’ A
r North- interest in such studies. his specificinterests but Fowler said she thinks there is it?" ‘ - “MIA”; $31: ‘. _
11 cover ‘ Also in the collection is a portrait Several other Leonardo iigiire little chance of another exhibition w A. .fi ""' I 3' ’2‘" T e
previom 0f ChFISl tilled Salvator Mundi (“Sa- sketches and bits of his philosophy being added to the schedule "The " .‘ 3. _ * A
s of all vior of the World“). which has elic~ of painting are included in the t‘Vhlltr light is hard on the pictures." Fowl- * ' . ‘ ' ‘ .
a. all of ited controversy in the art world for it The Trottato dellu Piitiini on dis er said "and they have to rest occa ‘ ' '
nd most years: Opinions are sharply divided play is one of four versions oi Leon sionally ' ‘ ,/ . ~_ . . .
gs to whether the painting was done ardos man