xt7jsx647m8s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jsx647m8s/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1990-04-26 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 26, 1990 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 26, 1990 1990 1990-04-26 2020 true xt7jsx647m8s section xt7jsx647m8s  

Tickets Will control
future SGA elections

By GREGORY A. HALL
Staff Writer

Students likely will see more
tickets running in Student Govem—
ment Association elections, but
most SGA officials do not expect
to see the emergence of campus
political parties.

“I do see where it would be more
difficult (to win tndependently),"
said Ashley Boyd, who was the
No. 1 vote-getter in this spring‘s
Senator at Large race. “Most peo-
ple from within student govern-
ment would not run by them-
selves."

But Boyd said that a ticket's suc-
cess is determined by how well the
candidates work as a team.

“You have to campaign as a
ticket,” said Boyd, whose ticket of
Allen Putman, Shanon Smiley arid
Chris Payne was elected. “The suc<
cess of the ticket depends on how
unified the ticket is.‘

In the executive branch race, the
chance is even greater that students
will see ntore tickets running for
office rather than tndividual candi~
dates.

A referendum to elect the presi-
dent and vice president on the
same ticket was overwhelmingly
approved by voters this spring.
And earlier this month, the Senate
approved an amendment calling
for tickets to be elected.

For the second consecutive year,
the president and vice president
elected were from the same ticket.
President Sean Lohman won a sec-
ond term, and his running mate.
Sarah Coursey, was elected vice
president.

Lohman and Coursey beat the
ticket of Dale Baldwin and Chris
Woolums.

While tickets historically have
been common in the executive
branch, they have been increasing-
ly popular tn Senate races.

In this year‘s Senate race. three
tickets won 11 of the 15 at-large
$6813.

Putman. who was elected to a
third term, said that the success of
tickets in SGA clecttons is not
“traditional."

“There's usually at least one
strong ticket." Putman said. ”It‘s a
consolidation of support. I think
people are leaming that you can
push teamwork to the public.

 

 

Student leaders

elected to posts
Staff reports

Sean Coleman was elected
Student Government Associa-
tion Senate Pro Tem Tuesday
night. Coleman. a two-term
senator at large, will lead the
Senate in the event that Vice
President Sarah Coursey can-
not attend meetings or steps
down during debate.

College of Agriculture Sen-
ator Tony Holloway was
elected Senate coordinator
and Senator at Large Ashley
Boyd was elected to the at—
large position on Committee
on Committees.

Chosen to be the student
representatives on the Univer-
sity Senate Council were Hol-
loway and College of Educa—
tion Senator Christa Collins.

 

 

When you run by yourself tt’s a
big gamble."

Senator at Large Scan Coleman,
who was reelected along with the
three members of his ticket -~~
Darts McCullough, Sheryl Beas-
ley and Lea Ann Davenport »~»
also said that tickets are only as
strong as the effort the candidates
put forth.

“lt‘s unusual that two tickets
had all four arid one had three."
Coleman said. “These three tick-
ets were there (at polling sites) all
the time."

Jason Pride was the only Senar
tor at Large candidate not to run
on a ticket and win a seat tzt the
Senate. Pride said he chose not to
run with a ticket because be en,
tercd the race late.

But he acknowledged that a
ticket is almost mandatory to get
elected Senator at Large.

“i think this could be a thing of
the future." Pride said. “We can
see tnore people coming ottt and
saying I endorse this presidential
ticket and these candidates for
Senator at Large. There was a lot
of that in this past election.”

See SGA, Page 7

Kentucky Kernel

APR 26 1990

 

Park yesterday afternoon

 

SLIDING DOWN: Mieisha 3. Keshawn. 5. and and their mother. Sent na McCurtrt of trlltDQiOn go down the sad»: .

Al AN HAWSF '-'

 

Animal rights activists, upset with UK, stage rall

By ALLEN D. GREER
Senior Staff Wr ‘er

Georgia Varielt. a Jil‘yearold
animal rights .tt'lly'hl, \l()()tl trt
front of the -\lbcrt ll. Chandler
Medical Center yesterday shouting
“All right!" as passing motortsts
honked their car ttoms.

The Louisville. Ky‘., housewife
seemed to be encouraged by the
motorists' reaction to the sign she
was holding. which accused l’K

medical researcher Donald Fra/ter
of practicing “barbartc cruel. re-
dundant and useless" experiments

Vaugh was totncd by about 35
other animal rights acttytsts who
came to [K to protest the L'niyerst-
ty's use of animals in medical re-
search.

Other protesters carried posters
that said such things as “Altema—
lives. not atrocities.“ and “Their
cries shall be heard.“ Another stgn
said, ”Imagine having your body

left to science .yhii. . '1: ' "rll ='
It."

Yesterday‘s l‘rt‘l.’\i , '.'Ll
iii/ed it‘. part by The 1 mi for ‘tm
mals inc . a nattortal ,rztr-:.ti»r't.:ltt~
group, the protest. tttmsd to .‘tlll‘t
ctde yytth "World ‘ tbt-t‘.;tor'y .‘\rll
mal liberation Week "
ed at research being ..ittd:t.'tcd by
Framer arid several l h .oltcaeues.

The research is ttttenilcl to help
humans yttth rssptratory problems
by studying how .trtztnals' ,.rttr;tl

i .
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PEOPLE BEHIND THE SCENES

 

 

people.

 

By KlP BOWMAR
Senior Staff Writer

While actors and directors for a
UK theater production may garner
the attention and acclaim, the suc-
cess of their ventures is helped by
the efforts of Elisabeth Ford.

“l have to make sure everyone
knows what's going on at the right
time,“ she said. “And that can be
nerve wracking because you have
to know where everything is and
be able to direct people where to
go. I enjoy when I get to meet
people and get them to their per-
formances. l like making things
flow smoothly.”

Ford, who works as the publici-
ty director for the Theatre Depart-
ment and is a graduate student in
theater, does everything from
graphics and design to publicity
and marketing. She also serves as
a go-between from students to fa-
culty and is house manager and
technical assistant with the shows.

Those responsibilities show Ford
has come a long way from when
she began working in the Theater
Department in 1984.

“She started with us as a work
study with no background in thea-
ter and has progressed very far,“
said James Rodgers, head of the
Theatre Department. “It’s been
very exciting to watch her growth.
I think she'll be able to go any-
where and do anything.“

Ford went many places growing
up as the daughter of a Presbyteriv
an minister. She lived in many ctt-
ies throughout the South, ranging
from just outside of New Orleans
to Ewtaw (pronounced “Utah“).
Ala.. and Mississippi.

Ford graduated in communica-
tions with a concentration in pub-
lic relations in 1988. Her first job
was working tn the box office, but
now her duties entail a little bit of
everything. And most everyone in
the Theatre Department appre-
crates her versatility.

“I couldn‘t do my job With out
her," said Pati Marks Ray, admin-
istrative assistant to Rodgers. “Be-
cause we are a producing office

Ford keeps the show going strong

Editor's Note: This is the last part
of a four-part series about unsung

instead of a strictly academic one,
we have a lot more work It’s
good to have somebody like Eli-
sabeth who knows how to deal
with everything. She‘s more like a
co-worker than an asststant."

ln addttton to her duties tn the
office, she produces a newsletter,
Backstage. about UK theater, and
she serves on the Theatre Depart-
ment‘s Student Advisory Council.

“I think tt's good that she's a
student because it gives her a
good perspective." Ray said. “It
also gives the faculty and staff a
good perspective when we're
thinking about doing something
that tnight affect the students."

But recently she has branched
out even further. In UK‘s last
Main Stage production, “Pump
Boys and Dinettes," she ran the
light board

“1 never krtew about everything
that went into the techrttcal part of
the show. and it can be a ltttle tn-
timidating." Ford said. “There‘s
so much to do and I'm not sure if
I want to do much rrtore of the

See FORD, Page 7

\

STEVE SANDERSMomot Statf

Elisabeth Ford's duties include producing a newsletter for the

Theatre Department .._

 

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Staff reports

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Correction

Because of a reporter‘s er
ror. Craig \fasste's name
was misspelled tn yesterttty‘s
Kernel.

 

 

 

 

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Viewpoint "

Reflections on

1989-90 year.
Editorial, Page 8.

, _ Sports .,

Bat Cats end
losing ways.
Story, Page 4.

 

 

 

 

 2 - Kentucky Kernel, Thursday, April 26, 1990

Chamorro sworn in as new president

By DORAUSA PILARTE
Associated Press

. ‘MANAGUAt'Nicaragua —— Vio-
leta Barrios de‘ Chamorro took the
presidential oath yesterday, ending
11 years of leftist Sandinista rule in
Central America’s largest country.
She immediately proclaimed a po—
litical amnesty and ended the mili-
tary draft.

“This blessed Nicaragua. instead
of burying its sons in a fratricidal
war, will bury its weapons forever,
so the cannon will never roar
again,“ Chamorro told a crowd of
20,000 inside a Managua baseball
stadium.

Despite the conciliatory words.
the atmosphere at the downtown
stadium where the inaugural was
held was often rowdy and divisive.

Spectators on the Sandinista side
hurled water balloons at Chamorro
as she entered the stadium, and one
splattered her skirt. Outgoing Presi-

University

Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — The Uni-
versity of Louisville Board of Trus-
tees authorized increases in tuition,
studentnactivities fees and housing
costs for the 1090—91 academic
year.

For Kentuckians, the fee for un-
dergraduates will go tip 8 percent to

dent Daniel Ortega and his wife.
Rosario Murillo. were pelted with
watermelon rinds tossed by United
National Opposition partisans as
they made their entrance.

The transition follows nine years
of a U.S.-backed insurgency in
which 30,000 people died. Chamor-
ro inherits a legacy of suspicion
and distrust, a nation of 3.5 million
residents that resembles an armed
camp and an economy shattered by
the US. trade embargo and rampant
inflation.

The inauguration of Chamorro, a
conservative elected in February,
brought immediate resumption of
US. aid and trade assistance.

Ortega lashed at the United States
- which backed the rebels, kn0wn
as contras — for supporting an
“unjust and cruel war." He prom-
ised to lead a constructive opposi~
tion and said if civil war broke out
again, “the elections would have
been for nothing.”

Chamorro said that Gen. Hum-
berto Ortega. former President Orte-
ga's brother, will head the army but
that she would assume the post of
defense minister to “direct personal-
ly the processes of demobilization
and demilitarization and to put an
end to the war."

She said she would order Gen.
Ortega to establish a plan to reduce
the size of the Sandinista army and
got her biggest cheer when she de-
creed an end to the extremely un-
popular draft. She added that draf-
tees already in service would be
released early.

Chamorro also said she would
grant “a wide and unconditional am-
nesty" to those responsible for po-
litical crimes.

The Ortega appointment drew ob—
jections from Chamorro's allies in
the UNO, a coalition of 14 parties,
and in the contra movement.

At least two top prominent anti-
Sandinista leaders said they

wouldn't serve in Chamorro’s Cab-
inet because of the Ortega appoint-
merit.

Gilberto Cuadra, president of
Nicaragua's most influential busi-
ness organization, had been slotted
as minister for construction and
transportation; Jaime Cuadra, unre-
lated to Gilberto, had been designat-
ed agriculture minister.

Dignitaries from 83 countries,
including Vice President Dan
Quayle, and nine international or-
ganizations attended the inaugura-
tion. Also present were members of
the Sandinista Cabinet and high-
ranking officers of the Sandinista
army.

Envoys of nations that had been
on unfriendly terms with the Saudi-
nistas entered the stadium to eat-
calls, boos and insults. El Salva-
dor’s rightist president, Alfredo
Cristiani, and Quayle were greeted
with chants of “Assassin, assas-
srn.”

of Louisville raises tuition, fees

$1,620 while graduate students will
get a 9.3 percent increase to
$1,780. Law students will get a
13.2 percent increase to $2,500,
7.9 percent for medical students to
$4,940 and 8 percent for dental stu-
dents to $4.230.

Non-residents’ tuition will rise
8.8 percent for undergraduates to
34.620, 9.3 percent for graduate

students to $5,100, 6.2 percent for
law students to $7,400, 0.8 percent
for medical students to $17,090 and
0.1 percent for dental students to
$15,810.

Tuition fees are set by the Coun—
cil on Higher Education and the
trustees are required by law to adopt
them.

University President Donald

Swain said, after Monday's deci-
sion, that students with a docu-
mented need for financial assistance
will not suffer greatly because of
the new rates.

After extensive consultation
with student leaders, Swain said he
decided to recommend that dormito-
ry fees increase 16 percent.

 

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No strings {attach ed?
Not "with ‘Combs’ will

I! I.“ ”IV
Associated Press

Hus: breeder uslie Combs II
bequeathed most of his millions
to a cancer foundation; But their:
were strings attached: The foun-
dation must tire its director.

And there are conflicting ideas
about why he did it.

Combs, founder of Spendthrift
Farm, died ofcttrtcer April 7 Ill
age 88. He stipulated in his will
that the Emphraim McDowell
Cancer Foundation be given an
endowment worth $26 million
over the next 25 years, on condi—
tion that it replace Linda Mauk
as director.

In the will, which distributed
assets of $6.3 million and an
undisclosed amount from two
trusts. Combs said. “I am not
pleased with the conduct of Lin-
da Maul: ”

The will stipulated that Centre
College in Danville. Ky, which
Combs attended for two years,
receive most of the money if
Mauk remained in her post.

Juliette . Combs Trapp,
Combs' draught“. said in a state.
ment._’l‘uesday that her father
made the demand becauSe Maul:
allegedly told. himlas't July that
his wife's name might be re-
moved from a cancer center if he
changed his will.

“This was mdcrstandably trau-
matic to him and was enough to
cause him to include the refer-
ence to Mauk in his will,"
Trapp said.

But Mattk, 37. denied yester-
day that she told Combs his late
wife’s name, Dorothy Enslow
Combs. would be taken off one
of buildings in UK’s Lucille
Parker Markey Cancer Center.

“There was no threat,” said
Manic, who has been the feimda.
tion’s executive director 10
years. “’l‘hat's not a building for
us to take a name off of. It be-
longs to the University of Ken-
tucky. We turned the building
over to the University."

Marylou Whitney, a longtime
McDowell supporter, threatened

last week to resign as founda~
den oo-chairman if Mauk is dis-
missed. Maul: also has received
happen in an editorial and sever-
al letters in the Lexington Her-
aid-leak.

“It's nice to know that you
have supporters out there,” said
Monk. adding that she has re-
ceived flowers and numerous
phone calls from people wanting
her to remain in the post.

The foundation was created to
generate donations for the Lu~
cille Parker Markey Cancer Cen-
ter. lt has raised $27 million, all
from private sources. Combs
had been involved in the fund-
raising.

Dr. Ben F. Roach, the founda-
tion’s chairman, has told the
newspaper he would let Trapp’s
statement “ride on its own mer-
its.”

“1 don't have any comment,"
Roach told The Associated
Press. “I’ve probably said too
much already."

Brownell Combs II, Comhs’
son. declined to comment on the
controversy after meeting with
Roach yesterday.

“I'll let my sister’s statement
suffice," he said.

Roach told the newspaper that
the foundation‘s 15 trustees
would meet “very shortly” and
might issue a statement. One
trustee said the meeting could be
as early as tomorrow, but Roach
would not confirm that day.

“Nobody enjOyed living more
than Leslie Combs,” Mauk said.
“i hope people look at this and
realize how vulnerable people
are when facing death.

“There are probably a thou-
sand pieces to the pie."

Mauk confirmed that she
wrote a letter to Combs in
March “because I didn't want
him to think I was mad at him
and that I didn’t want him to be
mad at me or Dr. Roach."

Trapp's statement said Mauk’s
letter tried to mollify the re-
marks about changing the name
of the building.

 

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firm W5

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rm
and 1M miss

 

 

 

Private Consultation. Evening and weekend
appointments available.

BLUEGRASS COUNSELING

 

 

 

  

 

 

 
  

iiiiit 25 1990 3 .-

Kentucky Kernel, Thursday, April 26, 199.

 

By AME M. PETERSON
Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — In Linda
Ronstadt‘s 23-year career she has
changed from a lovesick pop cover-
girl into a soulful country crooner,
a l9405-style torch singer and a ca-
ballero-outfitted Mexican folksing-
Cf.

Now she’s re-entered the pop
scene and stolen hearts with the al-
bum Cry Like a Rainstorm. Howl
Like the Wind. The first single
from the album, a duet with Aaron
Neville called “I Don‘t Know
Much," won a Grammy award this
year for best pop vocal by a duo or
group.

Despite her chameleon-like,
seemingly whimsical career moves,
there's a method to Ronstadt’s mad-
ness: She just has to sing, no mat—
ter what the style.

“I feel pressure to make order
out of chaos and I do this with mu-
sic. I mean it. That is what I need
to do. I think that is why people
make art," she said.

“If I didn‘t make a living trying
to make order out of chaos with my
music, I would get a job selling
hot dogs, or whatever else I could
find that would do it."

Ronstadt said the songs on Cry
Like a Rainrtorm have been her
“friends" for years, and the time
was right to record them. The same
could be said for all the songs she's
recorded.

“It becomes kind of your best
friend and you think about it and
talk to it every day. And then you
have to record it," she said. “It‘s
just thoa songs became ripe, in

their way, and they became current,
and I needed to sing them.”

Sitting in the office of her long-
time manager and friend, Peter Ash-
er, Ronstadt does not look like a
veteran star. Her face remains un-
lined, and she wears playful cow-
boy boots adorned with multicol-
ored designs.

In the two decades she‘s been in
the business she's learned that the
songs are the important thing, not
what people think. “The singing
that I do with my hands in the dish-
water is just as meaningful to me,
and maybe a little bit more, than
the singing I do in front of 40,000
people.”

Her new LP gave Ronstadt the
opportunity to work with Neville,
who is one of her idols.

Neville, an angelic-sounding
singer who had a Top-10 song in
1967 with “Tell It Like It Is," is a
part of the Neville Brothers, a criti-
cally acclaimed band known for a
contemporary New Orleans sound.

Ronstadt first met Neville when
she went to the World’s Fair in
New Orleans several years ago to
perform with Nelson Riddle. The
members of the orchestra all wanted
to see the Neville Brothers, so they
ventured out to find them.

“We found them playing at this
club and Aaron found out somehow
I was there and dedicated a song to
me," Ronstadt said. “I was certain I
was the only female on the planet
and I was sure I was the only per-
son in the room listening to him
sing. Just me and him. It was one
of those moments —— those trans—
cendental moments."

Later in the evening, Ronstadt

 

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STUDY ABROAD SERVICES - 105 Bradley Hall ' 257-8139

 

 

“If I didn’t make a living
trying to make order out
of chaos with my music,
I would get a job trying
to sell hot dogs, or
whatever else I could
find that would do it."

Linda Ronstadt,
singer
—

and Neville sang a duet, and their
voices “clicked."

“I thought, well, maybe this is
really happening," she said. “Then I
thought maybe every singer in the
world would just like to think their
voice sounded good with Aaron’s,
because Aaron sounds so good."

For years the two tried to find a
project together, but the opportuni-
ty didn’t arise until Cry Like a
Rainstorm.

Ronstadt envisioned the songs on
the album as stacked orchestral ar—
rangements recorded in a huge, nat-
ural-sounding studio. Unfortunate-
ly, she discovered, there aren’t
many of those around. Still, she re-
fused to give up.

“ljust kept thinking BIG. I need-
ed a big room because I wanted big
sound and a big orchestra and a big
choir and I wanted big voices and I
wanted big guitars and big drums."

Ronsradt got her wish. She re-
corded the album at Skyw'alker
Ranch. a compound in California's
Marin County owned by filmmaker

George Lucas. She also got a 100-
piece orchestra, an authentic gospel
choir and the haunting voices of
Neville and former Beach Boy
Brian Wilson.

The Cry Like a Rainstorm al-
bum is a definite departure from her
past work, but Ronstadt admits
she’s never been content to sit still
with her career.

In 1967, Ronstadt first surfaced
with the group The Stone Ponies,
a sort of country-pop-folk group
that landed their sole hit with “Dif-
ferent Drum." The Stone Ponies
were the forerunners of the Iaidback
Southern California sound captured
by the Eagles, Jackson Brown anti
Fleetwood Mac.

Ronstadt went solo soon thereaf—
ter and scored hits with songs such
as “Heatwave," “You’re No Good"
and “When Will I be Loved." She
was so well known she sang at the
1977 inauguration of President
Jimmy Caner.

Then in the early 19803 Ronstadt
departed from her pop roots and
took on a role in the musical “The
Pirates of Penzance."

Though it wasn't much of a leap
of faith for fans to accept her part
in the musical, Ronstadt then took
her craft another step beyond and
became a 40s-style torch singer and
recorded with the Nelson Riddle Or»
chestia.

The songs, the orchestra and the
prom-style 40s dresses were unex-
pected but not rejected. The album
gave her maturing voice a new to.
rum and gained new respect from
critics who dismissed her in the
'70s as just another pretty lace.

From there she mmcd into coun-

' I'hcbeotpinammfi—Ifl

 

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Linda Ronstadt places her diverse career in perspective

try music with the “Trio" album,
teaming her with Emmylou Harris
and Dolly Parton and featuring
17th-century Appalachian folk
songs.

She went her own way again and
moved into traditional Mexican
folk music with the album Can-
t'iones de mi l’udre. Ronstadt, who
is half German and hall Mextcan,
said the songs she sang tn Spanish
made her feel grounded.

Now, there’s work with Neville,

"When Dolly, Emmy and I sang
together there was that buzz. We’d
all sang with other people before

Hunter Hayes
Arts Editor

but when we sang together ._. tlit
three of us . we liked it. And we
felt, ‘This is special. We have to do
this.’ I felt the same way about Aa-
ron."

Ronstadt says she’s not an inno-
vator or trendsetter. She’s a singer
and that’s all she ever wanted to be.

“When I was in llI\l grade .
l‘lunked arithmetic. Since then i
have developed a great awe and up
preciation lor mathematics. But I
lirst grade it wasn‘t happening and i
remember looking at my report car.
and thinking, “it doesn‘t matter.
I’m going to be a singer.”

KERNEL CLASSIFIEDS

 

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THE COORS LIGHT COMEDY ON
BROADWAY LIVE CONCERT SERIES
WELCOMES

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AT LEX/NGTON'S (WED/l HOUSE

FRlDAY MAY 4TH
700 & 1000 SHOWTIMES

TICKET lNFO 2333565

TICKETS AVAII ABLE
RUF’FJ ARENA BOX OFFICE

 

 

 

GOOD LUCK ON FINALS

 

 

Never Choose A Hea th P an Out Of The .

   
     
  
  
  
 
 
  
     
 
 
  
   
    
     
   
  
   
     
   
  
  
  
   
  
   
   
 
   
  
    
    
   
  
    
   
  
   
  
   
    
 
 
 
 
 
 
  

 

    
  
  
   
    
   
   

health plan you can \‘klp filling out this \Ldl \
enrollment form. \\c Il automatically e\tcnd
your coverage for another year.

of Kentucky \dy antage t L Klll’ i or L niversity
oi Kentucky llcalth \laintenance Organization
tLTK-IIMOJ health plans. you can choose the
doctors. hospitals and deductible levels that feel
most comfortable to you.

And ot‘course. whatever Blue Cross and Blue

For UK employe ees, it s time to choose your
health plan for the upcoming year. \nd it s
going to be a tough choice. You must consider
how high a deductible you can afford. should
you stay with your current doctor. how far you
want to travel to a hospital and a number of

I f you want to switch to a Blue Cross health
plan, there's just one form to fill out.
For employees who want to convert to .t Blue

other alternatives. Shield health plan you choose. you receivc the (‘ross and Blue Shield ol'Keniuckv health plan. Blue Cross A")
But lot all the tough decisions you lace. one health care card recognized by any doctor. any simply complete the ippropriate enrollment Blue She'd VAv
hcaith insurance company is working hard to hospital. any“ here you go. tormflfvou need more inlormation about “U, or mine” _

make yotii choice easy Blue (Iross and Blue
Shield of Kentucky.

0m range of health plans are dt‘\lgn0d to fit
an; Iiicstvlt I‘hroughOption 2000. L'nivcrsity

health plans or the enrollment form. call our
hotline at l-800-759-4499 or tn I.Utll\\'lllc at
499-8898.

lfyou already have the Blue Cross health plan
you prefer, do nothing.

I-‘or employees who wish to continue their
current Blue ( .ross and Blue Shield ol Kentucky

(food isn't good enough anymore.

 

            
   
      
         

\ ~ .

4 -— Kentucky Komol, Thursday, April 26, 1990

SPORTS

 

Bat Cats snap losing streak with sweep of West Virginia

Bolton hurls 4-hitter to break skid

By BARRY REEVES
Sports Editor

UK baseball coach Keith Madi-
son had something in mind when
he called a special team meeting
during Tuesday
night‘s 17.10
loss to Austin
Peay.

Madison en-
visioned the Bat

 

Cats breaking \_ ‘ 1 .
out ot their 3: ,a.‘
slump ~ which . '

they didn't do ' '
that night ~— “v

and ending an
etghtgame los» BOLTON
mg streak And that's what hap«
pened as UK swept a double—header
from West Virginia last night at
Shively Field 7-0 and 8-6.

Even though his team was play-
mg hard, Madison thought they
were not playing the “right way."

“It felt like we were giving 100
percent. but not in the right way,"
Madison said. “I felt like for us to
win, we needed to play more ag-
gressive. gut-out. dived‘or—the—ball,
battling».tt