xt7pg44hqn2x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pg44hqn2x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1984-12-05 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, December 05, 1984 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 05, 1984 1984 1984-12-05 2020 true xt7pg44hqn2x section xt7pg44hqn2x  

 

Vol. LXXXIX. No. 79

K

Established 1094

KENTUCKY

2111

University of Kentucky. Lexington. Kentucky

cl

independent since 197!

 

By LINDA HENDRICKS
Staff Writer

The new director of admissions
views his position as an opportunity
to implement specific goals in re-
cruiting outstanding students

G. Kendell Rice. currently serving
as the director of enrollment serv-
ices and the summer session at the
University of North Carolina at
Asheville. was named last week to
the post.

“UK is a grand school with a
great tradition and I look at this as
a great opportunity to continue the
development goals of the admissions
office," Rice said. “We will strive to
meet particular goals. There will be
different recruitment procedures
and publications to tell the story of
UK to prospective students."

“He'll be just fine." said Joseph
T. Burch. dean of students. “He‘s a
knowledgeable. working and under‘
standing individual. and he‘ll work
well with the students."

“We're very enthusiastic about
him." said Donald Sands. vice chan-
cellor of academic affairs. “Admis-
sions is a critical area. and we
thought that he had the leadership
that was needed."

c f Recruiting goal

5}: of new director

The search to fill the vacant posi-
tion began last spring when a com-
mittee was formed to find someone
suitable for the spot. The committee
advertised nationally and received
more than 50 applications.

The committee was composed of
officials representing various de-
partments from the University. The
search committee was chaired by
Burch and faculty members rep-
resenting the colleges of Agricul-
ture. Business, Dentistry and Edu-
cation and the Admissions Office.

“The committee looked for the
best person in the country,“ Sands
said. “They did a very thorough job
of checking ref erences."

In a phone interview from North
Carolina. Rice said he was “looking
forward tocoming to UK

UNC, with an enrollment of 17.000.
also has a selective admissions poli-
cy. It bases its admission on the
Scholastic Aptitude Test scores and
high school grade point averages.
whereas UK bases its selection on
high school grade point average and
American College Test scores.

Rice also was director of admis-
sions and registrar at Tulsa Junior
College in Oklahoma and assistant

Sec RECRl ITI.'\(i. nice (i

Food Services caters
to variety of needs

By FRAN STEWART
Senior Staff Writer

Editor‘s note: This is the first in a
two-part series.

The food at UK may not compare to
Mom's home cooking. but the Uni-
versity Food Service program tries
to cater to the needs of students —
at a cost they can afford. according
to Allen Rieman. food services di-
rector.

The food service department is re-
sponsible for maintaining the nu-
merous campus cafeterias and grills
and providing a system of meal
plans to satisfy the needs of stu-
dents.

Students living on campus can
choose from four meal plans — 19.
15. 14 or 10 meals per week. at a
cost per semester of $593. $511. $538
and $450.50. respectively.

UK also provides a special one-
meal-per-day plan for offcampus
students. This plan. however. is not
offered to oncampus students be
cause the cost of the plans are based
on the operating expenses of the res-
idence hall food services. Rieman
said.

"if we offered the one-meal plan
to residence halls. the cost (per
meal) would have to be increased."
he said. “They would end up paying
almost as much as they pay now.
They would end up saving (only)
about $100."

The 10—meal plan is the most popu-
lar choice among students and
amounts to a student cost of about
$2.75 per meal. Rieman said. For 19
meals per week. the student pays
about $1.94 per meal.

The difference in the 10-meal and
15-meal plan is $60.50 per semester.
“but you're getting two-thirds as
many meals,“ he said.

Although students can eat as
much as they want in the residence
hall cafeterias. the food service sets
dollar values on each meal to allow
students a cash option at the grills.

Rieman said the food service de—
partment tried to set a cash alloca—
tion so a student could get an aver-
age breakfast. lunch and dinner. "If
they want a cash option. they can
eat." he said. “but (the cash allot-
ment) is not to support the cash
units."

The meal plan system at UK is
based on averages. and as everyone
knows there is no average person.
Riemansaid.

“The mealcard system is an ad-
vantage to someone who eats regu-
larly. who uses up all the meal card
punches.“ said Mark Denomme.
food service manager for the Stu»
dent Center Cafeteria and Equinox.
“because the amount charged is
well below the normal retail value of
what lunch would be.

“The value is there."
“For someone who eats.
value."

As students who live on campus
must know by now. participation in
one of UK's meal plans is mandato-
rv.

What most students do not realize.
however. is why.

The mandatory meal program is
not a way of assuring parents that
their children are getting well-bal-
anced. nutritious meals during their
college stay.

Although this requirement does
allow students the opportunity to eat
properly. the real reason involves
bonds. buildings and money.

According to Rieman. students
housed on campus are required to
have meal plans because of the way
bond issues were devised for the
construction of residence halls. “As
a way to make sure the dorms paid
for."hesaid.

Rieman said UK's Food Service
program is “a break-even operation.
Basically. we're completely self-sup-
portive.“

He said the department‘s only rev-
enue was generated by students'

he said.
it is a

See FOOD. pace 6

 

 

 

STEVIE cans/Km Graphics

 

 

i .......7

 

 

Towering Tannenbaum

Dean Haney. superintendent of the Physical Plant Division,
decorates a 32-foot tree in front of the UK Medical Center

yesterday. The official ceremony of lighting the tree will begin

at 7 pm. today.

IRI'I'KEMITHER hernri‘ it.

 

 

SAB revises display case rules
following recent controversy

New policy fixes display times, reservation deadlines

By KAKIE l'RCll
Staff Writer

Student Activities Board unani-
mously passed a revision of the poli-
cy governing the SAB display cases
in the Student Center during its
weekly meeting last night.

The policy revision presented to
the board by SAB President Louis
Straub. will allow student organiza-
tions to reserve a display case for
two one-week periods each semes-
ter

An organization can opt to reserve
two consecutive weeks. or use the

SGA throws holiday

Hy KAREN MILLER
Reporter

Student Government Association
members say they want to return
some favors.

SGA will throw a Christmas party
today from noon to 4 pm. at the
SGA office in 120 Student Center for
administrators and student organi-
zations

"We'ie tried very hard to work
mot‘t‘ closely with the students this

two weeks separately. The cases
must be reserved in the SAB offices
in the Student Center no more than
four weeks prior to the date request-

SAB also will require that an orga-
nization remove its display materi-
als by noon the Monday following
the week reserved. Materials not re-
moved by that time will be removed
by SAB.

The revised policy also states that
the SAB will engage in no
censorship of materials posted by
student organizations.

The display cases will be closed to

year and want to give them this op-
portunity to meet their university
student body officers and give us a
chance to get to know the students.“
Tim Freudenberg. SGA president,
said. “We expect people to come in
and out on a rolling basis.

“in the past we‘ve just had sort of
an office party at lunch where ev-
eryone just brought in food.“ Freud—
enberg said. "This year. because of
Chris Greenwell‘s suggestion. we de-

organizations other than SAB for
two weeks prior to any campus.
local. state or federal election.

The board decided to re-examine
the display case policy after the Na
tional Organization for Women chal‘
lenged SAB's request to remove a
political poster from the NOW dis-
play.

The controversy that arose from
the challenge of SAB‘s objection to
materials in the NOW case
prompted the SAB executive com-
mittee to evaluate the equity of the
display case policy then in effect.

 

Adragqueen’slifeisahappyone
according to a local entertainer. For
details,ueDlVEISIONS,me2.

mmwoppedtheirseoond
gameinamwtoSMUlmnight.
Forthegamestory,seeSPOll’l‘s.
9-323-

Naflaa goes wild over cerebral star.
. . . Maybe? See VIEWPOINT. page
4.

 

WEATHER

Aminmoffreaiograimsleetor
snowchuigingtorainorwetsnow
bymid-day.Someaoeumubtioaof
snow possible late this morning. The
highwillbefromthemidtouppc
30:.

 

 

 

party for students

cided just to make

house.”

“The atmosphere will be very in-
formal and we welcome people to
just come in to say hello and get
some refreshments." said John
Cain. SGA senior vice president.

Decorations are being provided by
various SGA members and those af-
filiated with SGA

it an open

“We have the senators. executive
branch people and ”Mice emplovees

helping with decorations for the
party.“ Freudenberg said.

"We're planning to have eggnog
and Christmas cookies with all the
decoration trimmings so that we can
personally thank those who have
helped us throughout the year." said
Greenwell. SGA public relations
chairman.

“We also welcome everyone else
to stop in to see us and join us in cel-
ebrating the holiday season.“ Freud-
enberg said.

Christians caroling for hospital patients

Student religious groups gather together tonight for ministry, fella wship

By D0l'Gl.AS [-2. PITTENGER
Staff Writer

A bit of Christmas cheer will come
early to UK tonight as members of
campts religiom organizations gath-
er together to go caroling at Good
Samaritan Hospital and at Maxwell
Place. the home of President Otis A.
Singletary.

The caroling is sponsored by the
Newman Center. a religiom organi-
zation for Catholic students. it will
start with all the students from the
various organizations meeting at 0
pm. in the Newman Center. said
Judy Donahue. coordinator of the
event. The carolers then will go to
the president‘s house. then carol for
an hour at the hospital. then return
to the Newman Center for skits and
refreshments.

Donahue said caroling is a way for
the different Christian groups to
unify. have fun. celebrate Christmas
and create communications within
the different groups. Invitatiom
were sent out to religious groups in-
cluding the Newman Center. Baptist
Student Union. Wesley Foundation.
Campus Crusade for Christ. Chris
tian Student Fellowship. K-House
lntervarsity and the Navigators.

Mia Greene. campus minister
from the Baptist Student Union, said
her organization is caroling because
it is a good way for the students to
get together and minister to the hoa-
pitalpatlents.

“I think pretty much why we‘re
doing it is the same reason many
otherpeoplearedoingit—isjmtto
involve madam- in a ministry men
a slum to hapital pattaita there

and also just for fellowship together
and meeting one another and getting
to know one another a little better as
far as the religiom organizations
are concerned." she said.

According to Greene. about 20 or
30 students from the Baptist Student
Union will participate in the carol-
ing.

Nancy Newby. student associate
member from the Wesley Founda-
tion. said about 15 to 1) students will
represent her organization. She said
her group got involved became it
enjoy: getting together with the
other religion organization. and it
provideaawayfortherntoaervethe
community as a united gram of
Ctristianaonoampu.

Donahue said she expects about 60
to 70 students from all the organiza-
tions to participate. “Last year was
the first year we did it on this big a
level.“ she said. “We had 50 people
last year. and l anticipate about 70
people this year. it went over won-
derfully well. it was a hige suc-

As they did last year the group
will make a stop at the Singletarya'
home. Donahue said the appearance
there last year went over well al-
though the president wasn't at
home. “He was out of town. but his
wife jut loved it to death and in-
vited us in and thanked us so
much.“ she said. “We stayed and
sang about five afferent songs for
her. She was jut so hospitable. typ-
ical 1 would think of a president‘s
we.!!

 

 2°KENTUCKVKERNEL My, ms, nu

DIVERSIONS

‘Exercising my right’

Drag queen and entrepreneur Bradley Picklesimer

By NATALIE(‘.»\l'l)ll.l.
Staff Writer

When Bradley Harrison Pickle-
Slmf‘f‘ was a little boy. his father
called him his little oddball.

Some people might call him that
today I'icklesimer is manager of
t‘ate LMVUP. a Lexmgton night
club. he also is a drag queen.

"My general attitude is to live
your life for yourself because you're
not the people at work. you‘re not
he people at school and you‘re not
your family.” PickleSimer said dur‘
mg a recent interview "I believe
that ll there‘s something secret in
side of you that you want to do and
it you don‘t do it and you don‘t get it
out. it's going to eat you apart. "

Picklesimers look is all his own;
the only characteristic average
about hiiii is his height His hair.
which falls below his shoulders. is
blond around the hairline while the
longer tresses are coal black. Pick-
lesimer achieves an androgynous
look with startingly pale makeup
and dark blusher and lipstick which
is oddly seductive.

He is very proud of his vast collec-
tion of high heels the has 150 pairs
of them» and he has been seen in ev-
erything from women's dress to
jeans and a T-shirt

"All I‘m doing is exercising my
right as a human being." Picklesim~
er said “Iwant to look this way.”

As unconventional as his lifestyle
is. he came from a well-to-do Ken-
tucky family

"\ly ii.iii r'raiicis Marion Pickle-
simer gay e iis everything." he said
"Vie had a horse farm with Tennes-
see Walkers. a swimming pool. (‘a-
dillacs. a cocktail lounge. restau-
rant. a fabulous house , . I never
had to do anything or worry or want
for anything. and that can spoil you
rotten w hen you re little ”

His life drastically changed after
the deaths of his parents. His moth-
er. Mary Lynn s‘tone. died of a brain
tumor when he was 7 years old and
his father died of unknown causes
when he was H

"When my parents died. I thought
I had a bunch of relatives I thought
I cared about and who cared about
me," he said. "Bulls—--I They are a
bunch of vicious vultures preying
down on a iresli host '

His grandfather‘s first act as ex-
ecutor of the estate was to take him
to the barber shop. he said

Picklesimer. who had a bleached
David Bowie hairstyle and marcel
curls at the time. remembered it
vividly "I had to walk 15 paces be-

M Mono
Arts Editor

 

“If you ’ve done LSD and. . . dressed in drag
at the age of 14 and then you get sent to Hazel
Green Christian A cadem y, it ’3 like saying,

‘Hello.’ Good Morning! ’ I thought I had died

and gone to hell. ”

Bradley Picklesimer,
entrepreneur

#

hind him to the barbershop." he
said. “They cut all my hair and
marcel curls off. I had a perfect
littleburr."

He was then sent to the Hazel
Green Christian Academy for Young
Men and Women in Hazel Green.
Ky

“If you‘ve done LSD and
dressed in drag at the age of 14 and
then you get sent to Hazel Green
Christian Academy. it's like saying
‘Hello! Good Morning!‘ I thought I
had died and gone to hell." he said.

High school has some painful
memories for Picklesimer. and it
also was the time that he first went
public as a drag queen.

“I think I started wearing makeup
iii high school because I was so ugly.
Horribly. horribly ugly. High
school's bad enough because you
have to go everyday. and between
getting called "pizza face” and
"queer” eventually you either suc-
cumb and let it destroy you or you
survive. . . . I thought if these girls
can wear makeup. so can I and I
can make myself look better.

His worst memory of those years
was when friends stopped doing
things with him because they sus-
pected he was gay, Picklesimer said
the people who used to taunt him in
school act differently today.

“They act like they‘re my best
friends now that I run a fashionable
club."he said.

Despite others' fickleness. Pickle-
simer said he was always true to
himself. At the age of 7, Picklesimer
began to dress in drag with his
mother's ermine and red velvet
bathrobe.

"I would walk down our spiral
staircase and make my little sister
bow tome.”hesaid.

Lexington artist Henry Faulkner
helped Picklesimer become serious
about drag.

“We were just good friends," said
Picklesimer. who once lived with the

painter in his Third Street home.
”He was the first person who really
took time to talk to me about drag
because he was a drag queen him-
self. I had been dressing wildly and
showing up at parties, but Henry
took me off to the side and told me
what I should be doing — more eye-
lashes. bigger hairdos.“

Picklesimer, who met Faulkner at
The Gilded Cage. an old Lexington
gay bar, went into full mourning
drag when Faulkner was killed in an
auto accident.

“I'd like to see someone erect a
statue to Henry in Gratz Park." he
said.

Picklesimer said he also admires
Belle Brezing, a former Lexington
madam: James “Sweet Evening
Breeze“ Evans. a recently deceased
Lexington transsexual; and Sue
Monday. one of John Hunt Morgan‘s
raiders who dressed in Civil War
drag.

In addition to the tales that he
tells about his heros. Picklesimer
himself has had several adventures.

He has been arrested about seven
times “Mostly for being drunk and
in drag," he said.

He said he feels being arrested is
normal. “Anyone who hasn‘t been
arrested by the time they are 18 is
headed for a serious mental col-
lapse."hesaid.

He has been to Europe twice and
has a chaotic resume.

“I've done charity benefits for
Kentucky Educational Television. I
was with the Thrusters. a local Lex-
ington band, for three and a half
years. I‘ve owned two night clubs —
Cafe LMNOP and Club A GoGo. I
have a drag show now called the
“Exotic Bluegrass Gender Blurr Re—
view."

“I‘ve costumed for a fully pro-
duced ballet at UK called ‘The Hea-
then.‘ which was all original; the
music was original. the choreogra-
phy was original, the costumes were
original.“ he said. “It was by my

Director Coppola thrives on chaos

NEW YORK APi , Francis Ford Coppola. director
of such blockbuster movies as “The Godfather" and
“Apocalypse Now.“ sees himself as "the ringmaster of
a Circus that‘s inventing itself” and is quite willing to

and the actors. and the direction of the picture often
changes in midstream because he is “following the in-
stincts of the individual artists.“ he said. . . It looks
like chaos. but it‘s actually a logical process."

 

\AIAI II (II I‘ll I ki-Hiel Van

Bradley Picklesimer. manager of Cafe LMNOP. strikes a pose reminiscent of sex queen Marilyn Monroe.

friend Bobby Pluckett. I‘ve created
environments. I decorated for The
Bar for two and a half years. I can
do just about anything. I do makeov-
ers. I do makeup jobs. I cut hair. I
learned to do it all by myself.’

Picklesimer said he has had every
kind of sex in the book. “There are
no boundaries." said Picklesimer,
who claims to be a hedonist.

“I've been to bed with both men
and women. It‘s like. anyone who
will have me. . . But Picklesimer
said his personality has kept him
irom being in love. ”I have to have
everything my way absolutely. I
want to make no compromises, so
really falling in love and being in-
volved with anyone is compromise
and I have no time for it.“ he said.

Although he has never fallen in
love. he likes children.

"Children love me for some weird
reason. I think that they think I‘m a
circus clown.“ he said.

“When I‘m in grocery stores or
shopping malls, kids point and
laugh.“ he said. “I love it. I don‘t
care. If I saw someone who looked
like me. I‘d probably laugh too if I
were little.“

Although he gets along with kids.
he really wasn‘t prepared for his
three-yearold niece Ashley.

"One time I was dressing in drag
and I sat her up in front of the mir~

ror and we were both looking at
each other and I said. ‘Does Uncle
Bradley look like a man or a
woman?‘ She looked in the mirror
and said. ‘Weli. I know what you‘d
like me to say but you still look like
a man.‘ “ hesaid.

Despite his love for children. Pick~
lesimer admitted that he has preju‘
dices himself.

"I'm prejudiced against Chris-
tians.“ he said. “I‘m prejudiced
against racists. I‘m prejudiced
against any form of separatism: les~
bian separatism, homosexual sepa-
ratism. black separatism.“

Picklesimer is also anti-religion.

“To tell the honest-to-God truth. I
was raised a Baptist and my father.
when I was 12 years old. told me
that I didn‘t have to go to church
anymore if I didn‘t want to." he
said. “I was very glad. No one has
come back from the grave and told
me anything. If there‘s a heaven
that can make me feel more plea-
sure than I‘ve felt on this earth and
if there‘s a hell that can make me
feel more pain and torment than
I‘ve felt on this earth. then bring it
on. I am only human. I can only un-
derstand what is capable of human
feeling and thought."

Picklesimer's first club. (‘lub .-\
(ioGo. had to be closed because the
owner of the building would not sell
it to him. He said Cafe LMMW
came about when someone ap-
proached him and wanted to contiii»
ue what Picklesimer had done with
ClubAGoGo.

Cafe LMNOP opened its doors on
March 15. Picklesimer‘s birthday.
He said the club is not as notorious
as he would like it to be,

Picklesimer. who is very patriotic.
loves Kentucky and its people.
According to Picklesimer. he is
treated very well in Lexington and
will never leave.

Several people seem to be equally
fond of him as well.

“He's always very nice and
friendly. He never neglects to say.
‘Hello' to everyone.” said Beth
Johnston, 3 social work junior.

Tony Adams. manager of Cut Cor-
ner records. said he has known
Picklesimer since high school.

"i think he’s a real friendly guy.”
Adams said.

If his parents were alive today.
Picklesimer said they would proba-
blybeaghast.

“I don't think they would under
stand but I think they would respect
the fact that at least I'm doing my
own thing,“ he said.

use the advice of others in shaping his films.

“It‘s like a violinist who responds to the pressure of
the string." Coppola said. “Is he or the string making
the note'? The answer is. both. "

In a recent issue of Vanity- Fair. Pulitzer Prize-win-
ning novelist William Kennedy detailed the much-publi~
cized chaos surrounding the production of the upcoming
film. "Cotton Club.” which Kennedy and Coppola co~
wrote Kennedy asked the director why he was so eager
to listen to the suggestions of others.

“If I were more satisfied with my vision of the piece
in the first place I wouldn‘t be as susceptible to the
other creative people.” Coppola replied.

His movies are a mix of the script. his own research

IMODEI. SEARCH.
For New York, Europe . x7
and Orient, Dec. 15 '

o N V Agent Tichko Inc.. is .
looking for females 5'2 and
taller. moles SQondtoller. i.

 

 

IUDDV SVS‘I’IM: on oucngommt in which two "idly-duals or.

poirod (on tor mutual oddly in a hazardous situation)
You or. cordially invited to ottond
o social gothoring and film prountotion
tooturing
THE ”BOY SVSTIM
A program about boinq ruponsibio when you or. d! inking curd toklng
rospomrbility for your irionds
Yimo: 1:30 p.ni.
Onto: Wodnoodoy. Doc. 5 ,
Pinon: Sigma Chi Moon I
704 Woodland Avenue ’
For more Information - Call 251-6501
Sponsored and hosted by Bonnie Robinson. Inc.
local distributor for ANHEUSER-BUSCH
in cooperation with BACCHUS and Sigma Chi
___ .A .. . . ___—___.

Here's To The Start 01A Beautiful New Year

1985 ENGAGEMENT CALENDARS
8i WALL CALENDARS

French imam.- .msi

 

 

 

fill/fl

///y/7m'-///3/M}'é’

FRENCH
IMPRESSIONISI'S

Engagement
Calendar

$7.95

NOW OPEN TO
THE PUBLIC

---—-——pr-o-
i.. I-yill

rrrr

Calendar

{You MUST be pre-registered for this inter- ‘7-95
View and Video taping. by Dec. I4. '
0 No modeling experience necessary. l
0 For details mail a stamped, self-addressed g
envelope to:
Shirley Brow. Vice President
Modeling Association of America
l25 Fairfax Ave.
Louisville. KY {0207

 

NORMAN ROCKWELL
Norman Rockwell Wall

Calendar
$7.95

good Foods

k Engage-
ment
Calendar

$7.95

Wilderness
Wall
Calendar
$7.95

A Thoughtful Gilt That Will Be
Treasured All Year Long

Thou and other 1905 calendar: to dioooo tom
Now available at:

UNIVERSITY
BOOKSTORE

0
W7

W 266-3601

Woodhili Contor - Lowor Lovol
(Iohind Convoniont)

Engage-
ment
Calendar
$7.95

 

UPTO

$100

PER MONTH

For plum donations

9 plasma alliance '
2043 Oxford cmi. 254-0041

Opon Monday thru Saturday
Pius Spocioi Sunday hours

com the Mwm'
S 'i 5 . . , 8 1 2 »
22:224.; 33 2...... $20 ;:;‘.°."°"°"

’12 lstwi ‘12 7Hdvl
Ottor hpirou 12-30-04 '

Spocioi Foods for Spociol Dion
Specializing in sugar-free and salt-free foods,
bulk toas/horbs and spices, whole grain broods,
whole grains, vitamins, pastas, peanut butters,
kitchen ocossorios and cookbooks,
natural chooses

's’ doom" ‘ Ht donation

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

‘ spears

 

 

KENTUCKYKERNEL WV. WI, net-3

 

Mir Wit"
Sports Editor

Moore’s shot at :03 gives SMU win over

B) WILLIE IIIA'I‘T
Staff Writer

It came with :03 seconds left

And the last time it happened it
came at the hands of Auburn 23
games ago.

For one thing. Southern Methodist
came to town to play and Butch
Moore's jump shot Wllh :03 seconds
lett propelled the visiting Mustangs

to a 56-54 victory last night at Rupp
Arena over Kentucky.

“At the end of the game, we usual-
ly try to spread it out if we are tied
or down by one," SMU coach Dave
Bliss said. “We won three of four
games last year by spreading it out.

“We've got three pretty good one
on-one players with (Carl) Wright,
(SCOHI Johnson and Moore that we
can count on. And Moore just found

“a

a hole and penetrated to the has-
ket."

Moore and Moore.

The junior guard finished the
game with 15 points on 60H; shots
from the field. all of which came in
the second half.

With three seconds left on the
clock. several Kentucky players sig-
naled for a time out. but the refer-
ees made "the most obvious nocall

is 9 .

' iiRis’iidiiP’séstTE ‘ ’

tJK‘s Ed Daiender chases a loose ball as Southern Methodist’s Larry Davis watches during last night's

56-54 UK kiss.

Cougars finish regular season No. 1;
Wisconsin breaks into Top 20 poll

AP W The regular season is over
and the countdown to college toot-
ball‘s national championship is
under way.

Realistically. there are four con-
tenders ,. No 1 Brigham Young.
runner—up (tklahoma. No 3 Florida
and No. 4 Washington

BYL’ held onto first place yester-
day for the third week in a row in
The Associated Press‘ final regular
season poll despite last weekend‘s
AB(‘~T\' telephone poll. which
branded the Cougars as anything
but the nation's top team W 191.336
voters said they should not be No. 1
while 166.590 thought they should.

Brigham Young received 33 and
one-half of 57 first-place votes and
1.091 and one-half of a possible 1.140
points from a nationwide panel of
sports writers and sportscasters.
()klahoma. No. 2 for the second
week in a row. received 16 and one-
half first-place votes and 1.0% and
one-half points

A week ago. with 59 of the 60 vot-
ers participating, BYL' led Oklaho<
ma 34 and one-half to 18 and one-
half in first-place votes and 1.133

and one-half to 1.128 and one-half in
pomts Brigham Young, the nation's
only unbeaten team at 120, will face
Michigan in the Holiday Bowl on
Dec. 21 while Oklahoma, 9-1-1.
meets fourth-ranked Washington in
the Orange Bowl on New Year's
Night.

The Top Ten remained unchanged
from last week. Florida, which
closed out a 9-1-1 season by defeat-
ing Florida State 27-17 for its ninth
consecutive victory — the Gators
are ineligible for a bowl game — re—
ceived six first-place votes and 1.033
points. Last week, the Gators were
No, 1 on five ballots and received 1,-
048 points.

This week‘s other first-place vote
went to Washington, 10-1, which re-
ceived 963 points. The Huskies were
followed by Sugar Bowl-bound Ne-
braska. 9-2, with 888 points. Sixth-
place Ohio State. 9-2, which meets
Southern California in the Rose
Bowl. received 811 points to 808 for
No. 7 South Carolina, 10-1. The
Gamecocks play Oklahoma State in
the 0am Bowl.

Eighth-place Boston (‘ollege con

cluded a 9~2 regular season by
trouncing Holy Cross 45-10. The Ea-
gles, who meet Houston in the Cot-
ton Bowl, received 767 points. ()kla-
homa State, the No. 9 team at 9-2.
received 725 points while Southern
Methodist, which defeated Nevada-
Las Vegas 38-21 to finish at 9-2. re-
ceived 608 points. The Mustangs
have an Aloha Bowl date with Notre
Dame.

The Second Ten consists of LSU.
Maryland, Miami, UCLA. Florida
State, Auburn, Notre Dame. South-
ern Cal, Texas and Wisconsin. which
made the Top 'I\venty for the first
time this season

Georgia, which had been in the
Top Nenty for 11 straight weeks.
fell out by losing to Georgia Tech 35-
18. That made room for Wisconsin.
which finished the regular season 7-
3-1. In other weekend games involv-
ing members of the Second Ten.
Florida State lost to Florida. Auburn
was upset by Alabama 17-15 and
Texas was trounced by Texas A&M
37-12.

 

it unique opportunity for

-CleI Engineers-

"1 can really not understand why
we did not get a time out,“ Coach
Joe B. Hall said after the game. “I
don't know what you could do to call
a time out more aggresswely and
with any more compliance to the
rules than we did."

l'K passed the ball to James
Blackmon at midcourt. But all he
managed was a desperation shot.

The game was met with mixed
emotions. “l‘m encouraged. but it‘s
a little tempered because we could
have easily won the game." senior
forward Bret Bearup said.

SMI'. :i-o, set an intense defensive
tone early in the game with its
smothering 24; and half-court zone
defenses. forcing t‘K. 1-2, to alter
\('\t'l‘ill shots and turn the ball over
11 times

It was an all-Wright first half for
Silt as guard Wright dunked once
on a break-away and again on ati
Itiit'}-UUI) pass from Moore. With a
montage of Jumpers. he finished the
hall with 17 points

The junior failed to score in the
second hall,

Sophomore guard Paul Andrews
came off the bench to drill four
lulllp shots against the SMU zone.
His second one. a Iii—footer at 6:44,
brought the Cuts to within one, 22-21.

S\ll'. however. outscored the Cats
near the closing minutes of the half,
budding ati eight-point lead before a
semi-rciuvenated Winston Bennett
canned a turnaround shot to cut the
lead to six at the half, 31-25.The Cats
were still within striking distance
when they came out on the floor to
start the second half.

With .3 33 remaining in the game,
l'K‘s Kenny Walker pulled down a
rebound. feeding James Blackmon
to start a last break. Blackmon was
fouled tmietrating atid his two free
lillt)\\.\ notched the score at 48. the
first tic s‘lllCC the beginning of the
game

rm sin" Acme: sin—n

UK’s Kenny Walker pulls down a rebound during last night‘s two-
point loss to SMU.

 

SMt"s Jon Koneak hit a follow-up
shot which put SMU back up 54—53.

Walker canned a free, tying the
score at :34. then the Mustangs
called timeout to set up a last-min-

 

BUY KERNEL CLASSIFIEDS, THEYBRING RESUL TS

 

ute pla)

 

‘I'hi' Rig/ll II tints

it 4., Right Iimm
H: hurt“ , it [I'll toluw. ttl’l twili-
Itii rlttfllflil ltllt‘up In: lhi' I'I'N

\r‘n tmk iiiriA-vm uml m l iiiiontifli
mumm ~ L't'l'tl mt: It it It": mmrnmm
n .mlx men t Ilt‘l t'\‘tlr\ "I", he

knot. . tl

. . \.
(.enprosilv .25."
rte.
m min. fluidity...) mu it... uu‘mitr’r ,I- .
on h,‘ o... A ’

\Mwh unulrl ,t'll'filh" uunl it. but

i ’lt'llttlt; "and

it h. n tin . .immuf. um ilnn‘l hurr- in
look (in liiluttlt'l't\

WHAIJSA BUDDY?

 

. cscdhwsi" ,.....,, ’

.1 Good Listener

Ill-"I "(DIJMJI going through the
motions what you lhinli and
him tou feel are important to him

W __,

Strength
I'uihrtl to the wit". vou mlflhl not
hm k him in the t'lt‘bflt' ,l‘llt iirrri
urntlmii t-mrnarrwnt But in n
iii/iii iilt «mum-n. it'u nu r In linou
he‘ll lo '1' the mat for you

tudio Dlaygg

P'R'E'SOEONH'
THE MAN WHO CAME T0 DINNER
Comedy by Man a ttuthneti
Thurs-Sun. Nov. 29, 30. 31. Dec. 1, 2
Dec. 6, 1, S. 9
Dell Court Carriage House Theatre

Reservations 212-5676
lntormotion 266- 18.3

 

"ct-etc “.00
Students smooj

 

 

For you and the