xt7h18344q80 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7h18344q80/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1994-01-27 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, January 27, 1994 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 27, 1994 1994 1994-01-27 2020 true xt7h18344q80 section xt7h18344q80 M ““er

,.. m--...

.'.{_.

.,. . . ._..,.-1,.*-p~q._..__‘

. ._ n.-~..._.... ,

, . .g»...."..._.'._, . . . . .

  

 

 

Kentucky Kernel

JAN 27 i994

 

 

By Melissa Bosenthal
Staff Writer

 

 

 

 

The Student Government Associ-
ation Senate unanimously passed a
resolution last night calling on UK
police to open a criminal investiga-
tion of the misuse of funds by offi-
cials of the Office of Residence
Life.

A recent UK audit of the office
found that University funds were
repeatedly used to make private

 

 

purchases. One UK official com-
mitted suicide after the audit began,
and another has resigned and prom-
ised to repay the school for any
funds he misused.

Evan Reynolds. SGA's executive
director of academic affairs, said

SGA needed to support the investi-
gation as an expression of the will
of all UK students.

He said UK’s Residence Hall
Association already has begun its
own investigation.

Although the resolution was
passed by the Senate, the Senate's
Student Affairs Committee had rec—
ommended last week that it not be
approved.

“I looked at the resolution and
how. in the past SGA and RHA
haven't always agreed. and decided

to vote the bill down (in commit-
tee)," Senator at large Beverly
Coleman said.

Senator at large Laura Luciano
did not agree with Coleman’s out-
look on the resolution after review-
ing it.

“The way that we look at this res-
olution should have nothing to do
with what has happened between
RHA and SGA in the past," she
said.

See SGA, Back Page

 

 

 

\y‘

 

CATS IN THE CRADLE

ti”

 

Three-year-old Sarah Tipton, of Corbin, Ky., cheers on the Wildcats last night during her first-ever UK basketball game. The
Cats defeated South Carolina 79-67 at Rupp Arena. See story, Page 3.

 

VICTORIA “OVER/Kernel Sta"

 

 

UK Hospital ranked in top 100

University has 18 of best doctors
in nation, new publication says

 

By Amy Barnes
Staff Writer

 

UK Hospital has been named
one of the top 100 hospitals in the
nation, according to a survey of
medical professionals by Modern
Healrhcare Magazine.

The survey divided the nation's
5,600 existing hospitals into five
categories to narrow the list The
categories were urban hospitals
with fewer than 250 beds, rural hos-
pitals with fewer than 250 beds,
non-teaching hospitals with more
than 250 beds, teaching hospitals
with more than 250 beds, and aca-

demic medical centers.

UK hospital was placed into the
academic medical center category.
a division from which only 10 of
the 100 hospitals were selected

“We were placed in the same list
which included places such as the
Johns Hopkins and University of
Michigan hospitals." said Barbara
Greider. spokeswoman for UK’s
Albert B. Chandler Medical Center.

The survey rankings were based
on the high value provided to cus-

tomers, efficiency of patient-care
operations and investment in opera-
tions.

The ranking system began with
all of the nation‘s hospitals and
consistently eliminated the hospi-
tals that did not score better than
the median.

In addition to the success of the
hospital, 18 UK physicians were
named in the new edition of “The

See DOCTOR, Back Page

Pediatrics facilities to be expanded

 

 

 

By Trent Knuckles
Contributing Writer

health care needs to be updated to meet the ’903

mode of are.”

 

Vanderbilt University engaged in a similar

 

 

By Stephen Trlmble
Contributing Writer

 

Residents of Kappa Alpha
Theta social sorority house are
considering filing an official
complaint against the UK Police
Department because of what
they call “unprofessional" treat-
ment.

UK police received a phone
call at 2:15 Monday moming
from a Theta house resident af-
ter an intruder woke her by
brushing against her back and
then fled the room. House moth-
er Mary Joe Fischer placed a
second phone call a few minutes
later.

Fischer and Theta president
Page Bendel are asking authori-
ties why it took almost 30 min-
utes and two more phone calls
for police to actually enter and

Thetas threatening
official complaint
over response time

formed a police dispatcher the
man who allegedly broke in had
already left the building, leading
police to search the surrounding
area.

McComas said police discov-
ered footprints in the snow lead-
ing to the Chi Omega sorority
house, where another call had
been placed by a resident who
observed a man peering in the
house‘s dining room windows.

Noticing a “suspicious indi-
vidual“ in the area, McComas
said, police tried to question the
man. but he fled and officers
were unable to apprehend him.

In response to Theta house's
charge of unprofessional treat-

ment, McComas said, “No one
has called me and said they did

not like the attitude of the police
officer."

The Theta house joined a
group of sorority houses that

search the house. They are also
say they angered by “unprofes-
sional treatment" of responding
officers.

“(Theta residents') safety is of
prime concern to me —— even
more than my own,“ Fischer
said. “We needed some help
right then and there."

have been broken into within the
past three months. Alpha Xi
Delta president Nicole Eve said
more than $100 was stolen from
a resident's purse in the first in-
cident. Theta residents reported
S8 missing in the latest break-in.

Police believe one man is re-
sponsible for the break-ins, and

UK Police Chief W. H. McComas said “significant"
McComas said, however, that a steps are being taken to appre-
caller from the Theta house in- hend the individual.

 

 

J“. Wm W

Frank Butler, director of UK Hospital.
says the plan would bring UK pediatrics
into the '00s.

« - ,. ~. sinsvcamvu—wm nu r

 

UK Hospital officials are hoping to expand pe-
diatrics facilities in the near future.

The hospital’s board of directors agreed Mon-
day to a plan that calls for expanding pediatric
care into unused floor space on the fourth floor
and adding state-of-the-art medical equipment.

The plan would add only two beds to the facil-

ity's capacity, but several beds would be moved
to private rooms, which officials say is necessary
to care for children who have communicable dis-
cases.
The pediatric ward currently has no private
recurs. and a child with an infectious disease
must be placed in a double room. As a result. the
secondbedcannotbeused,andbedspaceis
wuted.

“We want to make a major contribution to pc—
diatrics," said Frank Butler, director of UK Hos-
pital."lhehospitalis$4yearsoid.andpediatric

venture 10 years ago when its pediatrics facilities
were upgraded. Butler said the improvements
UK is pursuing are quite similar.

“Vanderbilt developed the hospital-in-a-
hospital concept and did considerable fundrais-
ing in the name of pediatrics. and we are emulat-
ing their model,“ Butler said.

The plan, if approved by the UK Board of
Trustees. will be carried out in two phases. The
first phase involves renovating the empty portion
of the fourth floor and moving most of the porti-
atriccaresectiontothatspacesothatthesecond
phase of the project, renovating the old portion
of the pediatrics facility, may be completed.

The critical care section of pediatrics will be
the last to be renovated.

“Phaseoneshouldtakeabouttwoyearsto

See HOSPITAL, Back Page

 

 

Clinton sends
GOP scurrying

By John King
Associated Press

 

 

WASHINGTON -— President Clinton’s seizing the initiative on crime
and welfare reform has knocked Republicans off balance — suddenly on
the defensive on issues that have been dependable GOP weapons against
Democrats for a quarter century.

Clinton’s efforts are causing considerable worry within a Republican
Party already at odds internally over how to position itself in the coming
health care reform debate, and concerned that GOP hopes for gains in this
year‘s midterm elections could be undermined.

With Clinton promising to push three popular issues through Congress,
Republicans find themselves in a
quandary not unlike last year’s North
American Free Trade Agreement de-
bate: They can help Clinton to victo-
ry and watch him get most of the credit, or try to block the president and
run afoul of voters anxious for action on crime, welfare and health care.

For now. with Clinton still basking in favorable reviews of his State of
the Union Address. Republicans promise to be partners provided Clinton
sticks to the proposals he outlined Tuesday night.

“There‘s a potential, if this speech was sincere, for a remarkable coali-
tion that could pass a lot of stuff," House GOP Whip Newt Gingrich admit-
ted.

Behind such kind words is a belief in many GOP comers that Clinton's
ambitious agenda will fall victim to liberals in his own party.

“He can try all he wants, but the Democrats in Congress are not going to
let him take the issues of crime and welfare away because their special in-
terest constituencies won’t let them go in the direction the public is de-
manding," said GOP pollster Robert Teeter.

Yet after Tuesday night’s speech, many Republicans were clearly wor-
ried that Clinton might somehow pull it off, and Clinton loyalists pledged
that he would.

“It won‘t be easy, but we’ll get there,“ Democratic National Committee
Chaiman David Wilhelm said. After a White House meeting with Clinton,
Democratic congressional leaders made similar predictions.

 

ANALYSIS

 

See ANALYSIS. Back Page

INSIDE:

~Cioudy and turning cooler tonight with a 90 percent chance
showers; low around 40.

UCioudy and cooler tomorrow with a 60 percent chance of
showers; high in the lower 40e.

 

* ' :1 E}: '

 

(N

    
 

   
   
   
 

2 - Kentucky Kernel. Thurerhy, January 27. 1004

Positive signs emerge from PLO-Israeli talks

 

By Elleen Powell
Associated Press

 

CAIRO, Egypt — Signs of opti-
mism emerged yesterday from
PLO-Israeli talks on achieving Pal-
estinian autonomy in the occupied
lands. with the PLO reporting
progress and both sides breakfast-
ing with Yasser Arafat

The delegations resumed talks
unexpectedly Tuesday night, a day
after announcing that negotiations
were being suspended pending a
meeting this weekend in Switzer-
land between the PLO leader and

Sherman’s Alley by

Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon
Peres.

Statements by the two men after
their meeting last week in Oslo,
Norway, indicated there was room
for optimism that a plan could be
reached for carrying out the Israeli
withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and
the West Bank town of Jericho.

Nabil Shaath, the chief Palestin-
ian negotiator, described Wednes-
day‘s seven hour-session as one of
drafting and redrafting proposals.
suggesting the two sides were get-
ting down to minute details.

“I think we are making progress."

GODS "\P V0.3:

. . .“D~0>-~.¢‘~.—'-- -. ,,,,,, _- . ’

he said as he left the Cairo hotel
where the talks are taking place.

“We will continue tomorrow
(Thursday) and we hope to pro-
duce results."

Still, he said key issues remained
unresolved, and officials in Israel
also said the negotiations had a long
way to go.

Israeli negotiators in Cairo did
not talk to reporters Wednesday.

The Palestine Liberation Organi-
zation and Israel signed an accord
Sept. 13 calling for Israel to with-
draw frorn Gaza and Jericho.

Meanwhile, In Brooksland

 

 

 

 

  
  
   

   
  
   
   
  
   
   
 
 

After VHS word. we'll be
back With more of “Not
With. My Aardvarx.
You Don'tl' here on Fox.

  
 
  

When your lungs ache
for a gaseous element.
why not try cool.
refreshing Oxygen?

  

 

 

 

 

Forget those fad elements.
like boron. cobalt, molybdenum
or tin. Four out of four humans

surveyed agree: they can 't Ill/C
wrthout Oxygen' s zesty blend
of prawns and neutrons.

 

 

     
   
   
   
    

 
   
  

Whatever you
say. bossl

What wout
nOIqum?

 

 

     
  

Mt look for the atomic

rmber 8 on your Periodlc
Table. Give those billlons

of body ce‘ls what they
hunger for. glVC ”err- nygenl

  
 
   
 
      

     
    
    
      
  

Oxygen...It's a gasl This has
been a ptbllc service

amouncement from the

National Oxygen Cornell.

      
   

   

That Is one
funny aardvark!

  
  
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
  

 

 

 

  
 
 

 
 
  

Business
Hours:
Mon-Thur
;‘ 7 a. In.- 1—1 p. m.
Fridays
7 a. m.— —7 p. m.
Sat 8- Sun

a.nI.—5 p.m.

   

9

ll lllll Wllll I’ll llll lllllll

Earn IIII 108160 Per Month By urinating Plasma
Donate Twice A Weelt To Be fligltle To Win

Exeit'ng New Bonus Plans Available
For tst line And Inactive honors
llisit 0tl' Center Or Call For Details

plasma alliance Repeat

Committed To
Being The Best

2043 Oxford circle
lexlnuton, KY
(808) 254-8047

a new donor is.

 

   
 
 
 

IIOIIIII‘S
can Ill‘illfl ill

 
 

and earn an
extra 35

 

llEL-SOGG

 

 

 

EL- 5066 Advanced Scientific
Calculator
07 storage memories and last answer
memory 0 Direct Algebraic Logic (DAL)
to simplify entries

 

KENTU

1048 7 93 t. On Canvas Productions All Rights Reserved

UNIVERSITY OF

BOOKSTORE

\mrlmrl ("writer Armor

Scientifically Speaking. . .

Save now on Sharp’ 5 best selling
Student Scientifics!

REG 519”

SALE!
51699

 

EL- 5096 Student Scientific
Calc with Statistics

OFractIons calculations
OSIngle variable statistics

 
 

(KY

     
   

 

Under the Washington accord, ls~
rael was to begin withdrawing on
Dec. 13 and begin turning over day-
to-day running of the areas to Pales-
tinians as a test for a wider peace
agreement later.

But after repeated meetings by
various negotiators, the two sides
have failed to agree on who will
guard borders to Jordan and Egypt
and how much land Israel will cede
around Jericho.

The border crossings seem to be
the main sticking point. Israel in-
sists on keeping its army at the bor-
ders for security. but the PLO says

the presence of Israeli soldiers
would mean Palestinians would
have no real autonomy.

Shaath said the issues of border
points and the size of Jericho still
must be resolved.

He suggested that unless some
consensus was reached in Cairo. the
weekend Arafat-Peres session in
Davos, Switzerland, might not take
place.

Officials in Israel also said the
negotiations may take time. Yossi
Beilin. the deputy foreign minister,
told state-run radio the Davos meet-
ing would be “important but not

necessarily the last one."

Shaath and other Palestinian ne-
gotiators looked worn out by the
end of the day.

One PLO delegate. Ahmed Qu-
ria’a, shouted at reporters who tried
to question him.

The three Israeli delegates did
not appear at all before reporters.

Earlier, both sides breakfasted
with Arafat at a nearby Egyptian
govemment guest palace, present-
ing the unusual scene of the Israelis
sitting down to eat with the man
who was their chief enemy until
only months ago.

Pentagon plans to place
missiles in South Korea

 

By Robert Burns
Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON — The Penta-
gon is planning to send Patriot air
defense missiles to South Korea as
“sensible, rational defense prepara-
tions" for a potential North Korean
Scud rocket assault, a senior offi-
cial said yesterday.

The move seemed likely to raise
the level of tension on the Korean
peninsula, where a million-man
North Korean army stands just

VOODDO PIE

cw tear/emu: ?
M am am Myer mm

    
 
    
   
      

 
    
 

across the border from a South Ko-
rean force bolstered by 36,000 US.
Army and Air Force troops.
Tensions have been inflamed in
recent months by a standoff be-
tween Washington and Pyongyang
over international inspections of the
communist nation‘s nuclear pro-
gram, which the United States says
is covertly pursuing nuclear bombs.
North Korea denies its nuclear facil-
ities have any military purpose.
Frank Wisner, the undersecretary
of defense for policy, told reporters
at a breakfast meeting the Patriot

   
 

demarcate/u“

S w ”(ft/i7“

/ mwav

Mam: Wartime V“
M M!

 

 

 
 

  
     
   
 

   

    

 

n 4‘“ \1

9‘77 75:!” l7'xfi‘flvf‘

deployment would go ahead, al-
though he said no tinal decision had
been made and details such as tim-
ing had not been set.

“We will proceed with the de-
ployment," Wisner said.

“It doesn’t mean we’re proceed-
ing with itonacrashbasis,that
they have to be out there tomor-
row."

Later, the Pentagon press secre-
tary, Kathleen delaski, said Wisner
“didn't mean to say that in the
present tense," and meant instead to
highlight the fact that Clinton had
not yet given the go-ahead for the
Patriots.

White House press secretary Dee
Dee Myers said, “The only thing
we can say is it's moving in that di-
rection, but the operational deci-
sions have not been made.”

At the North Korean mission to
the United Nations in New York, an
aide said Ambassador Ho long was
not available to cement on the Pa-
triot plan. Ho has been heading his
government’s side in nuclear in-
spection talks with Washington.

The Patriot, originally designed
as a replacement for nuclear-tipped
anti-aircraft missiles in Europe, was
used in the 1991 Persian Gulf War
to defend Saudi Arabia, Israel and
parts of Turkey against Iraqi Scud
missile attacks.

The Patriot's Gulf War perfor-
mance initially was hailed by the
Pentagon as an unqualified success,
but later inquiries raised doubts

about whether it actually intercept- _

ed any of the Scud missiles
launched by Saddam Hussein's
forces.

Wisner said the request for Patri-
ots mine from Gen. Gary Luck,
commander of US. forces in Korea.
There currently are no anti-missile
defense systems in the south.

Wisner said a Patriot deployment
in Korea had been under considera-
tion “for some time" as part of a
broader assessment of evolving de-
fense requirements there.

BSU holding campus revival

 

Staff report

 

The Baptist Student Union is
bringing singers and a visiting
speaker as part of a campuswide re-
vival to be held next week.

“Back to the Basics" will be the
theme of the revival, which will be
held at 7 pm. Monday through
Thursday. It will be held in the Stu-
dent Center Theater on Monday,
Wednesday and Thursday; and in
the small ballroom on Tuesday.

 

groans

 

 

5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS

 

 

   
 
 

Super
Semester
Rules

121

2100 Oxford Circle
affVemlleslld.

 

    
   
   

  

(Ercnt
Stutlt-nt
Rules

276- 1151

ofleZdIolasVlle ltd.

   
 

 

 

l

  

Steve Ayers of Hillvue Baptist
Church in Bowling Green will be
the revival’s guest speaker. Music
and drama also will be contributing
to the activities.

BSU officials said they have tried
to make the event open to the entire
campus. Students of other campus
religious organizations, affiliations
and denominations were invited.

“We'd like to see the theater and
ballroom filled to it‘s full capacity,"
BSU campus minister H.K. King-
cade said.

“True Vine," the BSU's music
ensemble, will be promoting the
event by singing on the Student
Center Lawn Monday afternoon.

 

 

”mm
council Trad
409 E. 4th St. 0 Blooml IN 47408

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

j.-

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

.--q‘.

350
by “I
see

0 Stuc
o Frier
e FREE
0 Wot

 

 

 c-
be

u-
ed

id
ed

It-
[is

)r-

tist

sic
ing

ms

nd

Y.
lg-

sic

:nt

 

 

 

 

 

 

T
‘ ;

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

  
 
 

 

3.“. "a. an... A... . . ,1 a

Kentuc Kernel, Thu

   

,Jenue '27, 1094-3

  

 

 
 

 

 

By Brett Dawson
Assistant Sports Editor

During the announcement of the starting lineups before UK‘s 79-67 win
over South Carolina last night, Ray “Rock" Oliver was announced as UK's
strength coach.

Oliver, who left UK two seasons ago, now sits on the USC bench.

But that was just the beginning of some serious confusion.

Those were indeed Eddie Fogler's Gamecocks, not the Vanderbilt team
he coached last season, hanging right with the Cats for 40 minutes in
Rupp.

And no, that wasn't last year‘s Jared Prickett in the
starting lineup. The old/new Prickett scored 8 points and
hauled in a career-high 17 rebounds in a distinctly Dennis
Rodman-esque performance.

And by the way, that also wasn't the pre-knee surgery
Jeff Brassow hustling for loose balls and knocking down
three-pointers.

Brassow, healthy at last, tied his career high 25 points
to lead the Wildcats (15-3, 5-2 Southeastern Conference)
past a determined USC (5-10, 2-4).

Adding to the mind-boggling oddity of the game was
the fact that, while throughout much of the game South lawn-u
Carolina was more efficient on offense and defense than
was UK, the (hts used overwhelming rebounding strength to pull away.

UK, a team that had of late been crashing the glass with the ferocity of
Spud Webb. outrebounded the Gamecocks 46-33.

Carolina kept the game tight by getting easy mnaway baskets, tough
driving layups and key three-pointers. And UK coach Rick Pitino said he
wasn‘t baffled when the Gamecocks, 27-point underdogs, ended up within
12.

“We did not expect to blow them out tonight,“ Pitino said. “People do
not understand what this conference is all about.

“At this time of year, we should not be blowing teams out."

Prickett, who replaced Walter McCarty in the starting lineup after com-
ing off the bench in Sunday's game at Mississippi State, was keeping
South Carolina's post players befuddled by hitting the glass with new-
found intensity.

“When someone picks up 17 rebounds and 11 of them are offensive,
he's working his tail off,” Pitino said.

While Prickett and Brassow were the stars, UK had just enough balance
to keep the Gamecocks off guard, particularly in an 11-2 run midway
through the second half.

Five different players scored during the outburst, with only Brassow
scoring more than once.

The run, which was capped off by a Prickett free throw and featured a
ferocious two-handed dunk from McCarty. pushed a 47-43 UK lead to 57-
45 with 10:35 remaining in the game.

South Carolina looked more like North Carolina in the first half. The
Gamecocks shot 45.2 percent in the first half and hit 5 of their 11 three-
point shots in the frame.

It took McCarty's one-handed 8-footer at the buzzer to put UK on top
35-34 at halftime.

That was despite big first-half numbers from Brassow. The senior for-
ward/guard replaced Tony Delk early in the half and proceeded to score 13
points by halftime.

“l was just on tonight," said Brassow, who hit 6 of 12 three-pointers.
“When you’re a shooter and you're in a rhythm like that, you just want the
ball every time down the court."

Notes:

oRodrick Rhodes had an off shooting night, but continued to rebound
strongly. The sophomore's 11 points and 6 boards gave him 75 points and
42 rebounds in his last five games.

~UK extended its Rupp Arena record winning streak to 32 games. The
Cats’ streak is the second longest current home winning streak in the na-
tion, trailing only Indiana.

 

DAMAGING DUO:
Rodrick Rhodes
(above) and Andre
Riddick (below)
make strong moves
inside last night at
Rupp Arena.

The ninth-ranked
Wildcats defeated
Southeastern Con-
ference opponent ;
South Carolina 79-67 .
to better their record
to 15-3 and 5-2 in the
SEC.

The 0225 play at Au-
burn Sunday. [1

She wants Todd

  

UK gymnast Niles tagged by former walk-on ’s marriage proposal

 

Michael Montgomery played over
the loudspeaker. Svoboda said the
song will be a pan of the couple’s
wedding. That will happen some-
time in mid-August, Svoboda said.

By Brian Bennett
Senior Staff Writer

It’s official: She wants Todd.
Former UK basketball player

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

T0dd Svoboda PTOPOSCd ‘0 his girl- Tuesday was the couple's five-
friend -— UK gymnast Franci Niles month anniver-
—— Tuesday sary.
night. Niles ac- The two saw
cepted. ., -s-_, .1 each other in
The betrothal I g. the weight room
took place at ,. .« it " in Memorial
LaserQuest, ‘-. f Coliseum and
where Svoboda * 3 had a class at
had everything ' = the same tirnein
prearranged . " White Hall
With the owner, V / Classroom
rurlgeht down to ' Building last
musrc. ear. Soon the
While Svoboda SVOBODA NILES gamed talking _>’
hid in his spot anddating.

before a game began, a worker told
Niles to follow him because her la-
ser gun wasn‘t working.

“She came around the comer,
and there I was on one knee," Svo-
boda said. “She knew what it was.
She hugged me. She was crying,
and she said yes. Boy, 1 was so hap-

“I had been planning on doing it,
and I just couldn’t wait any longer,"
Svoboda said of his engagement. “it
was a perfect day."

Svoboda, 22, is pursuing a chemi-
cal engineering degree. That degree
program brought him from North-

er: was really cute,“ Niles said. “I

 

em Kentucky University. where he
starred for three years on the bas-
ketball team.

He persuaded UK coach Rick Pit-
ino to let him walk on, and he in-
stantly became a crowd favorite.
Fans would shout, “We want Todd"

The IMPERIAL SHOPPE
397 Waller Ave. . 252-8941

VISIT OUR BEER BAR a
50¢ POOL GAMES

$1.25 BEER

Keg Natural Light 1/2 barrel $39.95 + dep

Seagrams Seven 750 ml

New Ice House Beer 6pack $4.55

Jim Beam 750 ml
Miller Ute btls. case

We accept Visa, MasterCard, American Express

whenever the Cats built a big lead
last year, and Svoboda became the
team's human victory cigar.

Niles, 21, is a senior from Fairfax
Station, Va. She competes on vault
for the Gym Cats.

  
   

 
 

9;

$8.69

$8.49
$12.99

 

Bills gaining respect

 

By Dave Goldberg
Associated Press

ATLANTA — Buffalo bash-
ing is out.

Even though the Bills have lost
three straight Super Bowls, it's
politically correct these days to
note that they've made it this far
four straight years.

“Man, i went nine years with-
out getting here," Dallas’ Bill
Bates said yesterday.

“I know how hard it is to make
it. And then when you do, how

 

harditistogetback.Wehadso
much trouble this year that 1
can't imagine going through that
for four seasons."

It turned out that three other
Cowboys of lesser stature also
missed Tuesday's bus and were
fined — defensive backs James
Washington and Elvis Patterson
and linebacker Darrin Smith.

Overall, it was a day in which
people seemed to be searching
for ways to respect the Bills, who
remain 10 1/2 point underdogs in
their record fourth straight Super
Bowl.

   

 

 

 

 

  

The

o 33.“... x H'SAMQBSET

M ‘l

O

112‘»: ,W- 6
I. ‘ 8
LOCATION!

 

 

IF YOU:

—Are a healthy female or male

—Are in good health

-Are between the ages of 18 to 40
years

—Are n_o_t taking birth control pills or
any medication for contraception

—Have no medical problems
requiring drug treatment

You may be interested in participating in an
investigational drug study being conducted
by the drug product evaluation unit in the
College of Pharmacy at the University of
Kentucky.

You may earn money for participation in this
study to completion.

For more information, CALL 257-5228

 

 

 

 
    
 
 
  
   
     
   

 

 

 

took the ring and said yes right

away. it was probably the most ex-

hilarating moment of my life."
Meanwhile, “I Swear" by John

Students! "as is?

.¢,,’rr€.-Need Cash?

Earn 30 Today!

$50 this week

by donating plasma

(applies tonew orretum customer!
havebeenobeent'zmoeormore)

0 Study while you donate
. Friendly Professional staff
. FREE medical check

UNI RSITY OF KENTUCKY

   
   

 

 

 

0 Watch your favorite movies WORSH AM THEATER
I BIOMEDICAL (INTER 7:30 & 10:00 pm.‘
1070 Em - - - Center

      
    

H ‘. Hill k’.
in... a .m 31""
a n

M, 1...... .. .3,.,,., .. ' HM"
w 233-9296 1.1.

    

 

 

‘MIV MI:

"Tm: erlts'r THRIiliTR
()i‘lHlj ink.

"HW-

 
 

\\I)

ll RRll-I(T

\II .rlmuluir
Ilwli'i miss"

Admission is $212! Wb'tm/r'nls. ‘I'm'u/ti' and Stuff

 

\ 2
g; Super "Bowl" £3

3 Super "Barn" "c

 

WM"

MM’ENfl:

\ .r‘ ‘.e;’ ‘o" C/ ‘r

I

for $22.95

No Coupon r\"r'r‘r'ssrrrr/.’ Limifr’rl
rlr’liz‘r'r'r/ rll'r‘rl.

0 Catch Super Bowl XXVIII
on the BIG SCREEN
at bw-3!
0 Daily Happy Hours
3 pm-9 pm
290 S. Limestone

(Corner of Maxwell & Limestone) :
233-waw (2999) 1

Wild Wings 8: Week"

/.I

   
 
 
 
  
  

‘45:!”

/

'W‘Wi‘v."

6" 9/

2V“

I

   
  

     
  
 

'1'

\ g

3:,

i;

a;

E
\\

i
'2
i,
J
It

. -mvvv-“ueov-sg—o. ,..

. cu... -..., .V.~.,.s-..me-am-aauw .c ,

. ch... -,..g..r..s.a .4“ .. 4,. . s

 

DIVERSIONS

 
 

I Musici composes baroque splendors

JJ'JJ'J

By Michael J. Bess
Contr'buting Critic

10 million copies of their
Italian baroque music re-
cordings.

On Saturday. I Musici

performed at the Otis A.
Singletary Center for the
Arts.

 

 

Formed in 1952 by 12 music stu-
dents in Italy, I Musici is a chamber
ensemble that continues to redefine

The players assembled
contemporary orchestra

Composed of five violins, two vi-
olas, two cellos, a bass and a key-
board, I Musici retains a worldwide
reputation by performing without a

Italian house exterior.

 

Melvin
Speed

firewall-JUPITER 6010! E

ban-cookie Mellow/The Tenbelenere
Ther°2I3°Rew DruideMll love Rebellion
Fri-ZIQOORO EzlllAIVele of Teen
sszs-mmwsmu Restore

THE KENTUCKY THEATRE

214 E. Main St. 231-6997 EACH FILM $3.75 UNDER 12 & SENIORS $2.50
FREE PARKING NIGHTS/SAT. 1 SUN ALL DAY
Hall Annex Gar - Next to the Police Dept.

9F; STARTS TOMORROW!
5'," It deserves comparison with such classic films as

5 3" ’TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD’ and ’MY LIFE ASA DOG.”

315 Edward Ginhmonn SAN FRANCISCO CHRONlClE

”****” ”*‘k‘k‘k"

Ml he Cum oppoli WABC RADIO Edward (Juthmunn SAN FRAN( ISUJ ( rtRONIC lE

 

      

 

 

'NG.S::..EHILL

11‘1““. at A36

Hamil" WIMPRSM v Home

conductor and selling an astounding

 

The first music piece was Arcan-
gelo Corelli' s Concerto
Grosso in D Major, Op. 6.

No. 4. Theeaseandgraceof
- the piece turned out to repre-

themselves in a crescent .
moon with a backdrop re-
sembling an old-world style IMIII: [MEI

sent merely a warm-up for I
Musici.

The second selection, Gui-
seppe Tanini‘s Concerto in
A Major. Op. 3, was written
for the principal cellist of
the orchestra at Padua, but
was honored last Saturday
night by Francesco Strano playing a

Carlo Tonini cello that was made in
Venice in 1730.

With an occasional nasal flare
and eyebrow twitch. Strano sang to
the audience, mimicking the heart
of baroque, as his cello poured out
more riffs than Slash on a bad acid
trip.

A special highlight of the evening
was Concerto in E Flat Major, Op.
3 by Alessandro Rolla, featuring vi-
olist Massimo Paris on a world-
famous Pietra Guameri viola craft-
ed in Mantua in 1697.

Assisted by the Singletary Cen-
ter's high-tech acoustics, Paris rid-
dled his fiddle as if performing for
the Bourbon court in Parrna, which
Rolla did in 1782.

After intermission. the evening
rocketed to a climax as I Musici
performed the world famous The
Four Seasons, Op. 8, Nos. 1, 2, 3,
4, by Antonia Vivaldi.

'Ihe concerto grosso is, of course,
broken into the four seasons:
Spring, Summer. Autumn and Win-
ter.

The seasons are accented with
their unique characteristics. Vivaldi
designated certain elements to vari-
ous instruments.

Soloist and first seat violinist
Mariana Sirbu performed the finish-
ing touch to Winter, the final con-
certo to The Four Seasons.

The evening ended after two
hours of perfect harmony to a roar-
ing crowd returning a thank you to I
Musici with a standing ovation.

Album benefits Greenpeace

J'J'J'J'

Various artists
Alternative NRC
Hollywood Records

 

By Chris McDavld
Editorial Editor

 

You won‘t find another album
like this anywhere under the sun.

The Alternative NRG compilation
to benefit Greenpeace was recorded
and mixed using entirely with solar
power.

For this unique project, Green-
peace designed and constructed a
mobile solar generator named Cyr-
us (Persian for “sun") that traveled
across the country recording

with R. E. M. ‘5 “Drive,” the first sin-
gle from their latest album Fans
will recognize the new, more biting
arrangement as the version they
perforated live on awards shows
last year.

James, a band that usually sounds
like a cheap knock-off of U2, per-
forms an acoustic version of its
song “Ring the Bells" that transfus-
es new blood into a previously life-
less song, producing a soaring har-
mony over passionate guitars.

Two of the world's most sought
after activist bands (as well as most
acclaimed performers), U2 and
Midnight Oil, turn in powerful per-
formances of their tracks “Until the
End of the World" and “Tell Me the
Truth,” respectively.

The lack of innovation in these
songs is made up for by

 

live performances by 16 art-
ists. Cyrus generates 15
hours of power for a record-
ing studio, enough to power
an average home for several
days.

Fortunately, this album
does not ride on its hype
alone.

Where most b