xt7jdf6k3s28 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jdf6k3s28/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1994-04-21 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, April 21, 1994 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 21, 1994 1994 1994-04-21 2020 true xt7jdf6k3s28 section xt7jdf6k3s28 ..s......-..

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By Perry Brothers
Staff Writer

A UK student said yesterday he
intends to plead guilty to two
felony charges of trafficking in
LSD on campus.

Lexington-Fayette Urban County
Police, working in conjunction with
the UK Police Department, arrested
Clark Tauson, of C109 Haggin
Hall, on April 15 for possession
with intent to distribute 28 hits of
LSD.

Tauson, an undeclared
sophomore, allegedly sold 12 hits
of the drug to an undercover
Lexington narcotics officer from
his residence hall room, police
reports say.

Tauson could face a minimum of

 

 

 

 

 

 

five to 10 years for each count of
first-degree trafficking, which is a
class C felony.

UK police chief W.H. McComas
said his department sought the help
of Lexington police after receiving
a tip that Tauson was selling LSD.

“Based on information provided
to us," he said,“we sent in an
undercover officer from the
(Lexington) narcotics department,
he made a buy, and we went up
there and arrested him."

McComas said the city detective
and two UK police officers then
obtained a search warrant for the
residence hall room and

confiscated an additional 16 hits of
LSD.

Officers also impounded four
combat-style knives — which

 

 

 

 

By Terence Hunt
Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON — President
Clinton declared yesterday that
Serb forces responsible for the
carnage in the Muslim enclave of
Gorazde “must pay a higher price"
for their unrelenting attacks. He
called for more aggressive NA'PO
air strikes to stop assaults on safe
havens throughout Bosnia.

Acknowledging that the situation
in Gorazde is increasingly grim,
Clinton urged NATO to ban all
heavy weapons from Gorazde and
. . , other designated areas, as was done

4 EH.
Mostly cloudy - ,
between 65 and
uA 70 percent chance
tonight; low around 50.

, ‘ Mostly cloudy tomorrow; k _. k
W... high bemoan as and 70.

 

“DEX:

Sports ................ ,
Diversions. ‘

 

  
  
      
    
    

“Mermaid!

Student Government Association candidates stationed outside
Margaret l. King Library urge passere-by to head to the polls.

last month to break the siege of
Sarajevo.

Clinton, at a White House news
conference, said the Sarajevo
approach was best despite
apprehension among some allies.

“Under the Sarajevo model you
can say, ‘OK, here's the safe zone,
all the heavy weaponry has to be
withdrawn or put under U.N.
control and if there's any violation
by anybody, there can be air
action," the president said. “It is a
much clearer thing."

Clinton’s plan represents a shift
in policy after months of indecision
and takes the Uniwd States and its

Tauson later identified as two
quarter sabres, a Buck knife and a
butterfly knife — a set of numb-
chucks and an undisclosed amount
of cash.

All of Tauson's personal
property, with the exception of his
clothes, were seized under the
Kentucky forfeiture law. McComas
said.

The statute allows law
enforcement agencies to
permanently confiscate all property
belonging to anyone convicted of
drug trafficking within 1,000 feet of
a school.

No deadly weapons possession
charges appeared on Tauson‘s files
as of yesterday.

Following Tauson’s arraignment
Monday, during which he pleaded

not guilty to both charges, the
student was released from the
Fayette County Detention Center on
a $5,000 cash bond.

In front of Haggin Hall yesterday,
Tauson told a reporter that he had
received notice of his suspension
from UK.

Student  darreste for drug trafficking

Haggin Hall resident’s property confiscated
by police under Kentucky forfeiture statute

Tauson, 21, said he intended to
plead guilty at his April 27
preliminary hearing because “it
would be stupid for me to do
anything else."

The student, who transfened to
UK last year from a New Jersey

community

 

suspension,
Tauson said,

took

we havejbur incidents
effect me “five drug use,
bars jiiat'not as

college, said
a n o t h e r
Haggin Hall
resident lead

 

immediately police to him.
“i" h" “m prevalent as it was 10 “There 18.3
with Dean of narc in Haggm
s t u d e n t 5 years ago. Unfortunately, Hall by me
We?” {lurid LSD’s coming back, and name or John
ear rer In t e . ' "
day, that stuff IS scary xi“ be
He) also said —W.H. new John E.
the niversity . Wise, 3
has ordered UK ponce Chm Lexington
him to leave Community
the residence C o l l e g e

hall. Hazard was unavailable for
comment.

student who lives in Haggin Hall,
refused to comment during a phone

interview yesterday.

McComas said he thought a
student informed his department of
Tauson's alleged activity's because
of the “high traffic“ in and out of
his room. '

He added that drug-related

incidents, aside from those
involving alcohol, are rare on UK‘s
campus.

“I'm surprised," he said of the
low number of arrests involving
narcotics.

“We have our incidents where we
have drug use. but it's just not as
prevalent as it was 10 years ago."

He mentioned another drug-use
case, involving two students, that
occurred last December, but said
there has been no significant rise in
recent drug arrests.

“Unfortunately," he said, “LSD's
coming back, and that stuff is

as

scary.

Phone system glitch causes

 

By Liz Lobert
Staff Writer

 

Student Government Association
elections got off to a slow start
yesterday after the
election office
e x p e r i e n c e d
technical difficulties

 
   

 

Where & When You
May Vote Today

telephone lines that were run to the
SGA office for the verification
process did not work.

UK's Communications Division
workers had failed to connect the
lines to SGA’s
computer.

Shrensker said an
extra phone will be

 
   

 

 

with the phone muggy"; 9am-2pm added to the library
system. . site today to speed
Poll workers were BLAZER. 43)pm.-7pm up the process and
supposed to call in DOWNS: 9am-7pm accommodate more
the names students . students.
wishing to vote to 00mm“ 43mm 7pm Another cause for
verify the validation “53 Balm-33mm long lines at the
oftheir student IDs. mum"; 11am-5pm polls was the
But undeclared _ unavailability of the
freshman Lane W“ loath-20m master list for
Harvey, a poll we. 9am-2pm. College of Law
worker at Margaret “4330"1'70'“ students.
1. King Library, said KING UBRAHY: 9 arm? pm The SGA Election
he and all other ll Board requested a
workers 32d NURSING: mam-311mm list of all full-time
diffiCUItY Setting STUDENTCENTER: 10am-7pm and part-time
through. students from the
As a result, busy signals caused Registrar‘s Office.
voting delays front 9 am. to noon, The list given to the board,
when the problem finally was however, was inadequate,
corrected Shrensker said.
SGA elections board chairman He said this problem also was
Brian Shrensker said two of four taken care of yesterday.

allies deeper into Bosnia’s two~
year civil war, which has left
200,000 people dead or missing.

Farlier this week, United Nations
Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros-Ghali asked NATO for
authority to call in air strikes
“against artillery. mortar positions
or tanks" determined to be
attacking civilian targets in all six
safe areas.

NATO signaled it was willing to
go along with Clinton‘s proposal
but delayed final approval to give
military advisers time to consider
the best way to plowed.

Clinton also urged tightening

Yesterday's long lines caused

Clinton toughens stand on Serbs

sanctions on Serbia through stricter
enforcement.

The president said the United
States, Russia and European allies
planned “a major diplomatic
initiative" to end the strife in the
former Yugoslavia. He did not
provide details, saying they remain
to be worked out.

“Air power alone will not settle
this conflict," said Clinton. “This
conflict will have to be settled
through negotiations."

Before speaking, Clinton
conferred by phone with Russian
President Boris Yeltsin, French

See BOSNIA, Back Page

Achievers receive UK honors

 

mil-port

Joanna G. Booher was named
outstanding senior last night at the
University's annual awards
mm-

The Burksville, Ky., native is
majoring in vocational home
economics education and mintsins
an active schedule in UK's College
of Hum-t Enviromral Sciences.

She is president of the college's
Student Advisory Council, a
Dean's Ambassador and president

 

 

 

of Home Econanists in Education.
Booher also is a member of several
academic honor societies and
performs community service work
in the Lexington lea.

Four Otis A. Singletary
scholarships, valued at $10,000
each, also were presented last
night. The recipients were social
work senior Marie R. Fellows,
communications senior Sheraton L.
Keith, accounting student Kara L.
Kirby and pharmacy student Betsy
Mashed.

The W.L. Mathews Fellowships,
also valued at $10,000 each, were
awarded to communications and
history senior Bryan H. Beatrrnan,
and environmental law major
Pamela]. Ledford.

UK‘s outstanding junior award
went to education student Mark
Fmgstrom, who cmently serves as
president or the Student
Development Council.

Em S. Reynolds. a history and

See STUDENTS. Back Page

  

 

problems at start of elecron

  

L

,«

 

 

JANE. CHIP/Kernel all

Biology sophomore Jon Henton marks off voters’ names as
they place their ballots yesterday in the first day of Student
Government Association elections. Voting continues today.

many students to give up before
they got the chance to vote.

“1 went to vote and the line was
so long, I left," said Tim McAdoo,
a communications senior.
“Tomorrow, if the lines are just as
long, I won‘t vote."

Shrensker said he did not think
the election results will be
influenced by the delays.

He said “a little over 1,000
students" voted yesterday.

He added that a larger voter
tumout is expected today.

 

Assistant News Editor

Curry says battle
of sexes still on

*
By Stephen D. Trimble

 

Women can stand up for their
rights and still be friendly --
even happily married — to men,
said Caroline Curry, a UK
family studies professor and 30-
year wife of UK's head football
coach.

Curry, speaking
at the Women‘s
Studies Forum
yesterday, said
co-habitation with
men still is
possible for ‘-
women seeking to
improve their
social standing.
Change will
occur, she said,
only if men
increase their

problems.
“We're all in this together,"

Crury said. “We need to let the
men in so that they can
understand what we’re going
through.”

 

 

awareness of women‘s CURRY economically

Curry cited domestic violence,
teen pregnancy, fundamentalist
religion, education and politics
as big obstacles facing
contemporary women. To
overcome these problems, she
encouraged women to study
them.

“Knowledge is power —
know what you
believe." she said.
“In the 19th
century, it was a
struggle for legal
identity. in the
20th century, it is
a struggle for
legal equality."

Curry called
domestic violence
an “epidemic"
that leaves a large
number of the
world's women
and

socially trapped.

“i know that there has always
been violence tow-d women in
every society," she said.

See CURRY, Back Page

 

 

  

.4 a... momma-um; .5... -

Mew» -

 
  
 
   
   
  
 
 
 
 
  
  
 
 
  
  
   
 
 
 

 

      
 
 
   

 

oer

Group of seasoned veterans

hope to ofiset senior losses

 

By Brian Bennett
Senior Staff Writer

 

Something seemed missing from
Saturday's UK football scrimmage
at the Nutter Field House.
Something not quite right, a piece
missing from the puzzle, a face
absent from the crowd.

Wait. There he is. over there on
the track. But what‘s this? He's
wearing street clothes.

Marty Moore. the signature
stalwart for the UK football team
for the past four years, can only
watch nowadays as he prepares for
a professional career.

Moore‘s departure. along with
those of Duce Williams and Darryl
Conn. leaves the Cats' current crop
of linebackers as one of the major
question marks for next year.
Question marks not necessarily
about talent, but about experience
and leadership.

“As good a player as Marty was
and all the good things he did for
this program, his leadership is the

hardest thing to replace," defensive '

coordinator Mike Archer said.
“Somebody on the football team
has to step up and be a leader."

Some of the candidates at the
linebacker position are:

~Matt Neuss. a 6-foot-2. 223-
pounder who is still rehabilitating a
torn knee. The junior from
Bellport, N.Y., was called the
“natural heir" to Moore‘s spot by
Coach Bill Curry. If he returns
healthy in August, he will be first
on the depth charts.

°David Snardon, a 6-2. 230-
pound junior who saw a lot of
playing time last year and is first on
the spring depth chart at inside
linebacker.

rDonté Key, a 6-3, 220-pound
converted defensive end from
Franklin, Ky.

The junior is listed tops at
outside linebacker.

'James Tucker, a 6-2 junior from
Arlington, Texas. Tucker was a
prospective wide receiver when he
first arrived at UK but was moved

 

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REVIVAL
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH
April 24 - 27

College Emphasrs — April 24
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to linebacker because of his size
and skill.

-Sophomore Mike
Schellenberger, 3 Louisville St.
Xavier graduate who will compete
with Neuss for the middle
linebacker job. Archer said
Schellenberger “has taken it upon
himself to show some leadership"
during spring practice.

-Eric Wright. a sophomore from
Massillon. Ohio, who has been
playing well in spring practice,
Archer said.

“They are gifted players," Curry
said of his linebackers. “They are
going to be good. but they are just
very young. We really need Matt to
get well, and we need some young
people to grow up in a hurry."

Fortunately for the Cats, the
young linebackers are not totally
devoid of experience.

Because of injuries and Archer's
liberal substitution patterns, players
such as Snardon, Schellenberger
and Key saw many minutes last
season.

“We're not really concerned
about learning the position because
we all know what it feels like to be
in combat," said Snardon, a product
of Louisville Male.

This year’s players tip the scales
more than last year‘s well.
Williams started at outside
linebacker in ’93 despite weighing
under 200 pounds. a miniscule
figure in the hefty world of the
Southeastern Conference.

“That was scary." Archer said. “I
think we're going to better on

VS. Xavier’

 

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FIGHTING FOR A SPOT: UK sophomore linebacker Mike Schellenberger and a slew of other
Wildcats will be competing for the sizeable spot left by the departure of Marty Moore.

defense this year because we run
better. We don‘t have the
experience, but we have better
athletes."

Moore isn't worried about how
his successors will succeed.

“Somebody will step up and play
well," Moore said. “It always
happens."

The players can’t wait to make
Moore right.

“We have a lot to prove," said
Schellenberger. a 6-0, 235-pounder
who is nursing a leg injury and
won't play in Saturday's Blue-
White Game. “Everybody‘s eager
to get in the game and show we can
play.”

 

  

For sure, there will be much
competition for playing time at
each spot this year. .

But Snardon says there will not
be any infighting.

“We decided as a unit that we
were going to stick together,"
Snardon said. “You mess with one
of us; you mess with all of us."

Abbott, Jones make potent duo
comedy of errors

 

 

 

 

By Brett Dawson
Assistant Sports Editor

 

JUGS CHSPIKernel Staff

HURLING HEAT: UK freshman Curtis Whitney fires to home
last night during the Cats' 18-2 win over Xavier at Shively Field.

And the hits just keep on coming.

Junior centerfielder Jeff Abbott
had four of them and junior
rightfielder Pookie Jones had a pair
of them to go along with four RBl
last night as the UK baseball team
(21-17) mugged Xavier University
18-2 at Cliff Hagan Stadium.

Abbott's four-for-four
performance came a night after
hitting for the cycle in UK’s 12-5
win over Western Kentucky on
Tuesday. The junior has a l4-game
hitting streak and is batting .569
(33-for-58) over that span.

included in Abbott’s four hits
last night was his 14th home run of
the season. That would give him
the Southeastern Conference lead
in that category, provided LSU's
Russ Johnson went without a
dinger last night.

Xavier (13-28) didn‘t have an

answer for Abbott, or just about

any of UK‘s hitters. for that matter.
Nine different Wildcats combined
for a total of 17 hits in the game.

Abbott and Jones, who also
homered, were among four Cats
with multiple hits.

Already on top 5-1, UK caught
fire in the bottom of the fourth.
Abbott hit the first pitch of the

 

 

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inning over the fence in right
center. The ball sailed past the wall
and hit the chain-link fence
surrounding the UK football team’s
practice facility.

Three batters later, Jones hit a
mammoth blast for his 11th dinger
of the season. Jones‘ shot landed
beyond the light tower in left-
centerfield.

The Cats continued their
onslaught in the bottom of the fifth,
parlaying three Xavier errors and a
trio of base hits into five runs. Paul
Morse rocketed a two-run single
off the right field fence to cap off
the scoring. ‘

UK also picked up five runs in
the bottom of the eighth. the last
two coming on a bases loaded two-
run single from Jones.

Defensively, the Cats posted one
of their better efforts of the season.
UK made only one error, that one
coming in the bottom of the ninth
with the game well out of reach.

“i thought the guys really
tightened up their defense tonight,"
UK head coach Keith Madison
said. “We had worked on defense
prior to the game this afternoon."

Sophomore Troy Trumbo (1-4)
picked up the win in relief of starter
Curtis Whitney. Trumbo. who
struggled much of the season.
entered the game in the third inning
and gave up four hits and one run
over four innings, striking out four.

Madison used five pitchers in all,
with Aaron Acuff, Ryan McKenzie
and Chad Bazzell working an
inning apiece.

“It was good for Curtis and Troy
to get warmed up for this weekend
(against Florida)," Madison said.
“And it was nice to pitch some of
the other guys who haven‘t pitched
as much as I'd like."

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Play garners
nationally
known prize

 

By Matt DoFoor

Staff Writer

 

Theater and its critics are no
longer focusing on the bright lights
and high-brow looks of Broadway
or the plays and playwrights from
major metropolitan cities.

The American Theatre Critics
Association has awarded Kentucky
playwright Jane Martin’s “Keely

ly and Du" isn‘t restricted to the
chaining of a woman to a bed. He
said the heart of the play is the rela-
tionship that develops between
Keely and her captor and nurse, Du.

Du (Anne Pitoniak) is a grand-
motherly, trained nurse who strong-
ly opposes abortion.

Jory, who has directed the pre-
mieres of Martin's plays, said “Kee-
ly and Du" isn't a positive state-
ment for the pro-choice movement.

“lt is a pro.choice play that gives
time to pro-life attitudes." he said.

He said that, as the women spend
four months together, a friendship
develops that discusses abortion
and the right-to-life movement in a
non-dogmatic way.

Keely and Du come to respect the

DIVERSIONS
Ky. drama wins award

has been performed in Europe and
across the nation in diverse areas,
“people see what they want to see.”
Because the audiences and their
views differ, Jory said, the play
may move from one side of the
abortion issue to the other.

Even though it is received in dif-
ferent contexts, the play won‘t es—
cape sorne emotional villainy.

“Keely and Du” premiered at Ac-
tor's Theatre of Louisville's 1993
Humana Festival of New American
Plays. It has since been performed
at the the Dublin Theatre Festival
and at regional theau'es across the
country.

“Keely and Du” was nominated
for a Pulitzer Prize and named as
one of the top ten plays of 1993 by

 

 

‘ College Guide ’ needs
student writers for book

 

By Carrie Morrlson
Staff Writer

 

When I was a freshman I had
to live in

“Yes. but this is COLLEGE
and you have to

"Being away from home. I re-
alized

How many times do these con-
versational tidbits arise in your
life? Being in college. the ulti-
mate academic adventure, you

taining to the title “The Ultimate
College Guide.” Among the works
selected to be compiled and pub-
lished, there will be first (5500).
.second ($300) and third ($200)
place prizes for the most outstand-
ing writings.

Entries may have a humorous or
serious tone. The works may take
the form of anecdotes, short stories
or essays. There is no length re-
quirement; representatives from
Avant Garde have received every-
thing fnom half-page essays to 20-
pagc short stories.

strength of the college's joumal-
ism and/or English departments.

Also taken into consideration
was the quality and popularity
of the campus newspaper. Avant
Garde has tried to include large
institutions, such as UK and
UCLA, as well as smaller liber-
al ans schools.

Each entry must include the
student’s name and address, the
school‘s name and and the stu-
dent‘s telephone number. En-
tries must be postmarked by

and Du” its top prize, the New Play each other’s convictions and their Time. are full of anecdotes, wisdom and Avant Gar de does not even rc- June 1. Winners will be contact-
Award. , reasons to defend their positions. ATCA's New Play Award honors advice. What if your particular quirc that the submitted work be 0“ by June 15-
Jane Martin is a pseudonym for 10W said "EL throughout the play, outstanding SCUPlS PTOGUCCd out- story was made available to new typed. The only rule is that the Sum“! entries to Avant

the anonymous author or authors
who wrote the emotionally charged
award winner. “Keely and Du" is a
what-if play that details the kidnap-
ping of a pregnant woman by right-
to-life extremists.

Her kidnappers, a militant Chris-

 

Du is not portrayed as a monster.
The two sides of the volatile
abortion issue are represented by
the relationship of Keely and Du.
The play reinforces the humanity of
life and death decisions.
Jory said that because the play

 

side of New York City.

Martin’s other playwright credits
include “Talking With,” a collec-
tion of monologues that has broad-
ened women’s roles on the stage;
and “Cementville,” which has been
performed in Australia.

 
   
   
 
  
 

college students all over the na-
tion?

Avant Garde Publications of
New York is sponsoring a writing
contest for college students. The
subject matter is anything per-

 

works are completely original and
have not been published previously.

Avant Garde Publications has no-
tified about no U.S. colleges and
universities about the contest. The
selection process was based on the

Garde Publications, 104 Labur-
nam Crescent, Department 1,
Rochester, NY 14620,- Atten.
tion: College Talent

Questions may be directed to
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other tian organization, “Our Lord’s Un-
. derground,“ hold Keely (Julie . . . .
much i 310),?) um: iih is too lateftpdabgrt PACT: Today abortion 1 S a safe, ,
me at C CIUS. S 6 Story U" 0 S. C 0, 1 d i
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m m, 32.43"“; $2.0m... midi... Experlence The p p t
. . a At EMW Women's Clinic we know that one of our .
w$°$£$igrfifig said that “ch G labal CIassroom : primary concerns with having an abortion is safegy. i
m we . 3 That’s why we wanted you to know that a first trimester x?
the r," . . ‘ . ‘ _ tr abortion is one of the safest surgical procedures performed in i
th one i : : :1 5 America today. As safe as a penicillin shot. Safer than a 3
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3 easy one, B W has specially trained staff to discuss
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3 t :: DlVCrSlonS 1 : Athens $455 ‘2 pressure. Abortion and o . er women’s services are , .
t t t e e . 3 performed by physrcsans in EMW's safe and private clinic.
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t t . Five Star t t MW... at... ...... Re ease . EMW Women s Clinic g
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t t + Coverage + + cal 1 m Mon°4I25°CATAWAMPUS . 161 Burt Road .’
t t 4* f * IKI Tue504l26-Crown Electric/Placebos/Pra rs ‘1 278‘0331_P hone answered 24 hours a day. 'I
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* f * W Y : : ' Thur-4l280The Zioniteleiving l 3‘ Th f .
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9 Call For A Free . ecause ou have a n ht to know.
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4- Micky Kernel. Thereby, April 21,1004

 

 

 

TODAY’ 5

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ACROSS 6‘ — "‘0 PREVIOUS PUZZLE SOLVE!)
1 Trick Terrible
5 M 23 Pig‘s:
10 Thick carpet as '
14 Esrring's letter
64 Captain ot the
is 32?" om --~.........--
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Waless °'“°
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Prostitute Meg Long (played by theatre graduate student Glenna Flanne
Matt Brown) In UK theatre's production at

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JA MES CRISP/Kernel Stall

ry) teases ottlcer Ralph Clark (played by theatre senior
'Our Country's Good,’ a drama about the Australian prison system In 1789.

Strong cast saves ‘