xt7pk06x0w5v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pk06x0w5v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1994-02-08 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, February 08, 1994 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 08, 1994 1994 1994-02-08 2020 true xt7pk06x0w5v section xt7pk06x0w5v -‘\ ...

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Kentucky Kern

Budget fine print
holds big changes
for many in US.

 

By Connie Carr
Associated Press

 

WASHINGTON — Poor chil-
dren would get better meals and a
head start in school. More homeless
people would get a helping hand.
But some defense workers could
lose their jobs. And smokers would
be left fuming.

Within the dry tome that is Presi-
dent Clinton’s budget —— column
after column of small, black and
white print — are the numbers that
can change the lives of many
Americans.

Hikers would pay more to enter
National Parks; some laid-off work-
ers would qualify for new job-
training programs. Ranchers would
pay more to use public grazing
lands; more poor children would
get the vaccines they need.

Much of the savings would come
from eliminating 115 programs.

So the proposed budget is bad
news for people who work at the
weather station in Samoa, sched-
uled for elimination, or who depend
on cottonseed oil export subsidies,
study the zebra mussel or plant or
enjoy new trees in state and city
parks.

Congress will have its say, of
course. Some pet projects may win
reprieve before Congress returns
the budget to the president for his
signature, this summer at the earli-
est.

Generally, taxpayers can breathe
easy: Unlike the 1994 budget,
signed by the president in August,
the new proposal contains no major
changes in income taxes.

But that may be little comfort to

smokers. Clinton wants to quadru-
ple the federal tax on cigarettes, to
99 cents per pack. The money
would be used to pay for health
care reform.

For two-pack-a-day smokers, that
would mean an additional $1.50 per
day, or $547.50 per year, up in
smoke. The expense could drive
some to quit. And that upsets tobac-
co farmers.

“There‘s a lot of people who de-
pend on tobacco for a living," says
tobacco farmer Frank Strickland of
Lakeland, Ga. “It's going to put a
lot of people out of work."

They aren’t the only ones wor-
ried about their livelihoods. Mili-
tary cuts will take their toll on
some, like workers in Fort Worth,
Texas, who make the Air Force‘s
F-16 fighter jet. No more of the
planes are ordered in the 1995 bud-
get.

And gun hobbyists who make ex-
tra money selling guns may no
longer be able to afford dealer‘s li-
censes.

Clinton wants to raise the fee
from $200 for three years to $600
for one.

Other professions will come out
ahead.

Scientists should benefit from a
research budget that‘s up 4 percent
from this year — especially if they
do AIDS research or their work re-
lates to the information superhigh-
way, a favorite subject of Vice
President Al Gore.

Border Patrol agents may find
some extra help makes their jobs
easier: The budget calls for 1,010
more agents along the U.S.-Mexico
border by late 1995.

Group holding drive
to find marrow donors

 

By Chris Tipton
Staff Writer

 

Most UK students probably know
about the value of blood donation,
but a national medical organization
is on campus today in search of an-
other vital body fluid: bone mar-
row.

The National Marrow Donor Pro~
gram is holding a bone marrow do-
nor recruitment drive today in 206
Student Center from 10 am. to 5
pm. The program was founded in
1987 to help provide marrow do-
nors for patients across the nation.

In Lexington, the Central Ken-
tucky Blood Center has been con-
ducting weekly marrow drives for
more than two years.

“In the last three months, our fo-
cus has been on African-Americans
because there are so few donors,"
blood center official Judi Baker
said.

“With the publicity surround Aa-
ron Speaks, people have become
more educated and are coming for-
ward to donate."

Speaks is an 18-year-old Lexing-

   

   

WEATHER:
Cloudy today wit
percent chance of 3
high in the mid-50$.
~Windy tonight with a 60
percent chance of showers;
low around 50.
.Thunderstorms likely
tomorrow; high in the 50s

   
   
   
   
 
 

INDEX:

Diversions ...............
Sports ......
Viewpoint ........
Classifieds...

    

 

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ton native who suffers from aplastic
anemia and is searching for a suita-
ble donor.

Marrow is found in the large
bones of the human body. It helps
in the production of white blood
cells, which aid the immune sys-
tem. Marrow transplants are re-
quired in cases of aplastic anemia,
leukemia and other diseases that at-
tack the body‘s leukocytes.

Today's recruitment drive con-
sists of a simple blood test to deter-
mine if a match is possible. The
blood is tested for human leukocyte
antigens, which are markers on
white blood cells that determine if a
donation can be made. The antigen
types are then listed in computer
files that are distributed nationwide
by the program.

Donors must be between the ages
of 18 and 55 and in generally good
health with no heart trouble or dia-
betic history.

The need of finding suitable do-
nors lies in the difficulty of match-
ing donors and recipients, doctors
say. In most cases, a family mem-

See MARROW, Back Page

 

e1

FEB 8 l994

 

 

 

Cost of parking permits
to rise steeply

 

By Don Puckett
Senior Staff Writer
and Kathy Larkin
Staff Writer

 

Rates for UK parking permits will double on
July 1 and increase gradually each year after so
the University can build an additional parking
structure, Vice President for University Rela-
tions Joe Burch said.

By 1999, commuter students will be paying
$144 for each C permit, and $104 for each
Commonwealth Stadium K permit. The passes
currently cost $40 and $20 a year, respectively.

Permits for residents of UK residence halls
will climb as well during the next five years,
from $40 to $144.

Faculty and staff passes will be merged into
one category, but there will be a two-tier price
structure based on each parking lot’s proximity
to campus. Preferred employee parking will
cost $216 a year by 1999.

Faculty permits now cost $60 each, and staff
passes are $40 each.

Both of UK’s existing main campus parking
structures were built with University money.
Burch said. The new parking structure will be
the first paid for by revenue from parking per-
mits.

“Parking and transportation is now expected
to be financially self-sufficient," Burch said.
“This is so since (the University) has had bud~
get cuts in the past couple of years."

The parking structure, which will be built
within the next two years, will add about 1.000
parking spaces to campus.

The site for the structure has not yet been se-
lected, but Burch said it probably would be
built on the north side of campus, since the last
parking structure was built near the Albert B.
Chandler Medical Center.

Three sites are proposed in UK‘s Physical
Development Plan: the comer of Euclid Ave-
nue and Linden Walk; the comer of Euclid and
Lexington avenues; and the lot between Kenne-
dy Book Store and Petersen Service Building,
now occupied by the American Building ware-
house.

In addition, 1.600 new spaces will be created
when UK paves land by Corrrmonwealth Stadi-
um during the next year.

The parking structure mostly will be used by
faculty andstaff, with a few spots reserved for
commuter students or campus visitors. said

cuanenr 1994-95

e' e,

 

IYL NEBLEVIKernoI Graphics

Bryan Sinkhom, a student who
served on UK‘s Parking and Trans-
portation Committee.

Burch said that in prior years,
the University’s financial focus
has been on funding education.
With no new money from the Uni‘
versity for parking, Burch said,
“any charges will have to be borne
by the people who park."

Burch said parking fees have not
increased for at least the past 10 years.
The large rate increase could have been
avoided if rates had been increased grad-
ually over the years, he said.

As a result of the increase in parking rates,
the University expects to eam an additional
$850,000 by the end of fiscal 1995. Revenue
also is expected to gradually increase each year
after because of the expected rate increases.

The revenue estimates assume a constant de-
mand for parking permits, but the revenue
could vary if people choose not to purchase the
permits.

“Potentially, you can get the rates up to
where some people decide they don't want to
have a permit," Burch said, “but I‘m sure we're
not there yet."

Sinkhonr said students will accept the in-
creased rates because they have no altemative.

“There is really nowhere else to park," he
said. “T here is simply no other choice for a lot
of students."

Some students said, however, that the rate in-
crease would discourage them from parking in
University lots.

“The thought of parking tags increasing in
price is certainly going to make me re-evaluate
whether or not I bring a car to campus next
year," said Jody Sammons, an undeclared soph-
omorc.

So where will UK‘s parking problem be in
five years?

“We're not projecting enrollment increases.
nor do we project any significant employment
increases." Burch said. “So our projections are
based on being in a similar position in five
years as we are now. At the end of five years,
we have some choices.“

Burch said if another parking structure is
needed in five years. the increased revenue
from parking fees will have generated enough
additional income.

UK planning
more changes

 

 

By Don Puckett
Senior Staff Writer

 

Members of UK‘s Planning and Transporta-
tion Committee hope to provide some relief for
campus parking problems by building a new
parking structure, but improvements in UK‘s
intra-campus transportation system will be re-
quired to solve all the parking problems on
campus.

Director of Parking and Transportation Ser-
vices Don Thomton said plans call for UK to
provide parking close to Central Campus for
people who need to make quick stops. People
who spend longer periods of time on campus,
however, will be forced to park in lots on the
periphery of campus.

With more people parking away from the ac-
ademic core, both the LexTran buses and the
CATS shuttles should have more passengers
each day, Thornton said. To accommodate the
extra riders, UK hopes to improve the efficien-
cy of the existing bus and shuttle routes.

“We want to decrease the amount of time
See PLANS, Back Page

i

i

lSOURCE: UK Traffic and Parklng

1994-1 999

 

 

   
  
   
 

JAMES FORBUSHKemel Staff

1 994-95

-Parking rates double, with
steady increases scheduled
clmprove public transportation
by purchasing an additional

C.A.T.S. shuttle and
scheduling
additional LexTran buses
during peak hours
~Begin installation of
mechanical gates to control
access to surface lots
'Pave Yellow Lot

1995-96 _

~Pave 7 gravel university lots
~|nsta|l more mechanical gates

 

 

199e97 __

~Begin debt service on funds
for parking structure

1997-98

~Pave 3 lots
~Upgrade shuttle service

1998-99

oPave 9 lots

IVL HENSLEVIKemeI Graphic:

 
 
  
    

 

 

Fake ID use up, state official says

 

By Lance Williams
News Editor

 

The use of falsified ID cards is
on the rise, a state Alcoholic Bever-
age Control official says, and the
muse may be tied to a recent influx
of sophisticated fakes.

Don Stevens, the ABC's assistant
chief of enforcement, said most of
the problems with fake IDs used to
involve minors who borrowed
someone else‘s driver's license.

\

Now, however, the ABC is find-

law enforcement

and nightclub ed with their products.

'9nQ‘l‘-‘~.-Afi~.-fl “

ing a large number of falsified ID
cards made-to-order by local coun-
terfitters.

“Before, it was the borrowing
thing; now people are setting up
shop and doing business,” Stevens
said.

With fake driver‘s licenses sell-
ing for $25 to $40, Stevens said the
increase in the sale of fake IDs is
“not be a nickel-and-dime opera-
tion."

Stevens said his agency, local

owners have seen an increase in the
use of fake IDs, but specific figures
were not available.

He could offer no explanation for
the increase, other than the profits
that come from selling the fake ID
cards.

Last week, Lexington Communi-
ty College student John Galik, 20,
was charged with making fake Kcn~
tucky operator‘s licenses.

Stevens said new manufacturers
also are becoming more sophisticat-

""‘..“..~.“-""‘

The cards allegedly made and
sold by Galik were of “excellent
quality." and even had the same
type of holograms that are put on
driver‘s licenses when they are is-
sued at circuit court clerks' offices.

Stevens said officials still are not
sure where the holograms were ob-
tained or how they might have been
duplicated.

ABC officials worked with [ex-
ington and UK police to track down
Galik.

. --,-,.‘ .'

“One of the informants that we
had charged earlier told us that
(Galik) is where he obtained it,"
Stevens said.

After connecting Galik to the
fake IDs. officials obtained a
search warrant for his residence
and found a few fake IDs and the
equipment Galik allegedly used to
make them.

Galik was charged with three
counts of second-degree forgery

See FAKE, Back Page

  
  

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DIVERSIONS

it

 

 

‘ Schindler’ 5 List’ features unlikely hero
__

 

 

 

By Nina Davidson
Arts Editor

 

“Schindler’s List" is a coura-
geous film by action director Ste-
ven Spielberg that attempts to re-

create a horror more terrible than
anything the director of “Jaws" and
“Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom" could dream up on his own.

“Schindler's List" takes a har-
rowing journey through the realm
of history. focusing on the effect of
the Holocaust on a group of Polish
Jews and the efforts of a Nazi busi-

SPRING 1994

MEMBERSHIP DRIVE

  
 

 

,O LEGIANS FOR

 

UK '5 Student Recruiting Organization
Applications are available February 7th—11th at:

10 am—2 pm: The Old Student Center

5 pm—7 pm: The Commons

8 am—5 pm: Funkhouser Admissions Desk & Room 106 Old Student Center

JOIN THE COLLEGIANSIII

 

 

 

 

THE
GAINES
FELLOWSHIPS

0000

Two year program in the humanities
Open to all UK Sophomores

$2,000 stipend for the Junior year
$3,000 stipend for the Senior year

Call the
Gaines Center for the Humanities,
25 7 - 1 53 7.
for more information.

Deadline for Applications:

Friday, February 1 1

 

 

 

 

nessman, Oskar Schindler. to save
their lives.

Liam Neeson plays Schindler. an
opportunistic businessman who
seizes the economic benefits of
war by starting an enamelware
plant during the height of World
War II.

He hires Jewish workers for the
simple reason that they are cheaper
than Polish workers.

Schindler relies on his accoun-
tant, ltzhak Stern (Ben Kingsley),
to help him start up the enterprise.
Schindler‘s conscience slowly
awakens to the atrocities commit-
ted by his fellow countrymen.

Not a conventional hero. Schin-
dler is a compulsive drinker and
womanizer. His original goal is to
enjoy life and make money, not to
risk his own life for the benefit of
others.

Schindler easily manages to
charm his colleagues with expen-
sive whiskey and other luxuries
difficult to obtain during wartime,
and soon they are granting him fa-
vors that enable him to set up a
haven for his workers in Czecho-
Slovakia.

Schindler‘s plant is veiled as a
labor camp, but the guards are not

allowed to kill and the factory only
produces ammunitions that misfire.

The gradual
Schindler under-
goes from a self-
involved business-
man to a selfless
humanitarian lies at
the crux of the mo-
vie.

Neeson's subtle
transitions infuse
his character with I
the light of com- .MIME'
passron.

In contrast the Nazi commander
Arnon Goeth (Ralph Fiennes) takes
sadistic joy in killing and brutaliz-
ing his Jewish workers.

Fiennes turns in a fascinating per-
formance, as Goeth is shown in his
moments of subdued terror. Goeth‘s
relationship with his beautiful Jew-
ish house maid, Helen Hirsch
(Embeth Davidtz). explores the
complexity of hate.

His disgust for her religion is
tempered by his forbidden desire
for her, and the only way he can ex-
press his tangled emotions is by fur-
ther cruelty.

While Schindler and Goeth are
fully realized characters, the film

   

 

fails to develop the Jewish charac-
ters in the film.

Goeth and Schindler are shown in
the private. intimate moments of
their lives, with their wives, mis-
tresses and families.

In contrast. the audience does not
even know Stern is married until
the closing scene of the film. He is
shown strictly in the realm of his
work for Schindler.

We do not glimpse the private
moments of his life, and he is only
defined through his relationship
with Schindler.

Often in movies about minorities,
the films focus on a white, Anglo-
Saxon. protestant male to appeal to
a mainstream audience.

However, a truly exceptional film
can transcend the boundaries of
race, religion, class and sex so the
audience can empathize with the es-
sential humanity of the character.

Spielberg’s “The Color Purple,"
for instance, is a film that managed
commercial and critical success
without pandering to a mainstream
audience's preference for familiar
characters.

Spielberg‘s decision to shoot the
majority of the movie in black and
white also lends an air of unreality

to the film. Death looks cleaner in
black and white, as the garish red of
blood is muted into somber grey.

However. genocide is neither
clean nor pretty, and the harsh reali-
ties of the Holocaust are soothed
away by the lack of color.

But the black and white scenes
are shot with spectacular effects of
light and shadow, and the cinema-
tography is striking throughout the
movie.

Spielberg is a master of emotion.
and several scenes are emotionally
draining.

One stark scene in particular
shows women who are accidentally
shipped to Auschwitz. Shom of
their hair and dignity. they are sent
to the infamous showers.

Minutes of terrible suspense en-
sue as they wait to discover whether
the showers spew deadly gas or in-
nocuous water.

“Schindler's List" is an excellent
movie about one man's character
transformation. Schindler, as an un-
conventional hero, is intriguingly
presented and superbly acted.

“Schindler’s List," rated R, is

showing at Lexington Green Cine~
mas.

Fine Arts Institute struggling

 

By John Abbott
Staff Writer

 

UK's Fine Arts Institute, a new
program designed to offer arts edu-
cation to people in the community
as well as UK students, is getting
off to a slow start.

But director Tom Brotz isn't
fazed a bit by the low registration.

“I’m not disappointed because I
think the program is a good idea,"
Brotz said. “I think it would have
been more surprising if all the
classes had filled. I am a little sur-

prised that it was as low as it was,-

however."

Thirty-eight classes initially
were offered for the Fine Arts Insti-
tute, which began Feb. 1.

Of those, the Fimo beadrnaking
class, two adult ceramics classes,

 

 

    
     

1994 Summer Advising-Confer
June 6—Jul

If you are a UK interested In we
with new students and _

 

 

 

 

WHILE You'RE $111.1...“ ‘

 

 

Raoul 026 learn-lint Building, UK.
moisten, KY 40506-0042 0 For (606) 258-1906

YOUR NAME HERE

 

Advertising

e_r_1__tucky "‘""‘"““"
emel

The University of Kentucky's Independent Student Duly Newspaper

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‘V’ . ,,'~’
v.

the jazz improvisation class, begin-
ning drawing for 9- to 12- -year-
olds, and two music and movement
classes look like they‘ll definitely
make the cut.

At least 10 people must sign up
for a class to keep it open.

Classes on the borderline include
the Rock’n‘Roll MegaGroup, the
architectural tours class, theatre
games and stories, painting and
photography.

One good thing that came out of
the registration was a mailing list
of about 500 people. Brotz said he
can use this list to focus the list of
classes offered next time.

Instead of simply thinking up
classes he thought it might be fun
to take. he can call these people
and ask them what they'd actually
be interested in.

Registration isn’t over by any
means, Brotz said. Some of the
classes. for instance, start in March
or later, so there‘s no reason that
people couldn't still sign up for
them.

“We' re going to be flexible," he
said.

The idea was to only offer a
class if there were at least 10 peo—
ple in it. though some classes may
operate with fewer.

In some cases, Brotz had to ask
if the instructor would teach the
class for less money because the
current enrollment wouldn't pay
the instructor's fee.Classes are sup-
ported wholly by the enrollment
fees of those who sign up.

“It takes time for a program to
establish itself," he said. “You
don't just come out of the clear
blue and have everybody want to
sign up."

Brotz said the people who did re-
spond were very positive and re-
marked that they were glad that

   
 
 

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l

RETURNING:

Thursday, Februa

Student Center Grand Ballroo

OFREEOFREE'FREEOFREE‘FREEOFREEOFREEOFREEOFREEOFREE‘FREEOFREE'FREE

-

 

 

Eighth-grader Fran Davis receives instruction from UK College
of Fine Arts instructor Cheryl Schaub during a mask-making

PNO‘I’O COURTESY 0F UK COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS

class for teen-agers as part of the new Fine Arts Institute.

UK was starting this kind of pro-
gram.

Brotz said UK used to have a

similar program that lots of people
enjoyed and participated in.

“It‘s going to take time to re-
establish connections with those
people," Brotz said.

“I think if you listen to your cus-
tomers and really bend over back-

OFFIEEOFFIEEOFREEOFFIEEOFREE'FREEOFREEOFREE'FFIEEOFREE°FFIEE°FREE'FREEO

BEYOND IMAGINATION

ward to serve them, then it won‘t
be long before you have a thriving
program.

“But it might take more than 10
days.“

For more information on the

 

 

 

 

 

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Fine Arts Institute and a list of
classes available, call (606) 275-
7831 or stop by 204 Fine Arts
Building.

 

 

 

Dr. Wand‘s presentations and stage demonstrations are
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SPORTS

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

' loam” it; lggiltt
IIIlpI‘ O V 111 g Lad y Kats 1.11 1111-11.. 1111 111i
1.. . . . . 2. Arkansas no
of 8. ”H.189 "
.. clash Wlth ClIlClIlIlatl 4- 111111.121 -
1- . , , . 5. Kentucky 125
1.1 Jansen has sparked UK to Wins in five of Six 8- loflsvfllo 118
as be I M . UKLh . . 7. TomnlnflZ
of By Pr.“ Dawson stepped r p ay up a note ‘ ‘ uring. s. lustre-alt. 8. 00"",ow 99
A ‘ ‘ S it Edit The sophomore pornt guard s l. pornt outing agtunst .
8- ssrs an po 5 or Arkansas was her fifth straight double-figure scoring a, 'I'aIIa a] ._:'
1e For the second time in as many weeks. the lady performance. _ “L I’III'IIIIC 87 ' _'.~-' ‘
Kats step outside Southeastern Conference play when Jansen is averaging 13.6 points per game over the y;
it, they face the Cincinnati Lady Bearcats at 7:30 to- past five games and has upped her average to 7.3 11- M33330IIII88II3 84 ,1.-
ly night in Memorial Coliseum. pomts per game. 11, McMgan 34 _
The Lady Kats, coming on an 81-60 rout or SEC The Lady KatS Wi“ “39° 3 “0'“ 13 Armin: 75 .
31' foe Arkansas, have won two in a row and five of their conference opponent in each of _
ly past six games, upping their record to 12-8 overall . the "6’31 tWO WCCkS its they head 14. caIIIIII'IIIa 74
0f and 4.4 in SEC play. 1 down e home stretch of their
ht During that stretch, U K‘s ice-cold season. :3 8¥Pacuse B7
shooting has begun to pick up. Next week UK travels to Mar- - MISSOIII‘I 38
n- The Lady Kats, shooting less than shall, and the followmg WWI" the 17. 8!. IIIIIIS 34
er 40 percent on the season, shot 46.2 Lady Kats hit the road again for 17 um 84
n- percent against Arkansas. Murray State
But lines seem to throw the Lady 082'. 111111: EEC game; 3mm" :3' mucous” 8213
nt K318 Out Of synch. 011 S SC e U 8 one ’(l tern 21 I 3" "one
er First. there’s the three-point line. EBERHART 29216228 te mm NO‘ 2 ICIHMSCC 20 MIIIIIqesota 28
n- UK hit just three of 10 from long c ' " '
ly range. On the season, the Lady Kats NOtGS! 22. 'IIIIIIIS 17
are hitting only 32.9 percent of their -Senior forward T edra Eberhart scored 16 points
is three-point attempts. and hauled in 10 rebounds against Arkansas, marking 28' cIIICIIIIIatI 12
e- The free.erw line has been just as ugly. her third double-double of the season. 24- M3I‘YI3II“ 11
UK is shooting a less-than-robust 64.1 percent UK’5 only {“th GOUble-dOUNCS 0f the will httVC 25. Search IBCII "I
from the charity stripe on the year. Against the Lady come from 11"thr guard Stacey R9001 Who ht“ [W01 Others receiving votes: "If"!!! 2,
,0. “WM"... 5.... Razorbacks. the Kats hit only seven of their 20 free -The Lady Kats‘ win over Arkansas was their sixth Pomgylvfia 1, XIVIOI'I
_ . . . . tosses. win in nine home games.
KAT ATTACK' The Lady Kats face Cincmnatl tonight at Memo- On the positive side, though, Christina Jansen has UK is 4-4 on the road and 1-1 on neutral sites.

 

 

 

rial Coliseum. UK has won five of its last six.

Close games harden,
shape UK for N CAAs

 

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TV HALPIMIKemal Graphics

W Michigan stars may be Charged

for involvement in Shoplifting

 

Associated Press

ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Prose-
cutors issued warrants against at
least five University of Michigan
students yesterday in connection

 

Moeller suspended tight end Dam-
on Jones and kicker Remy Hamil-
ton yesterday, also for violating
team rules.

 

EAST RUTHERFORD, NJ. —— ri, both of whom are right at home Sophomore Jared Prickett, the In. 23,1" with alleged Shoplifting at a con-
To judge the true potential of a under the public microscope. player responsible for checking Roe IIIIfllafl) venience store. :- _ — - - - "' "' - " " -
team, one need not look at the mo- Seeing Pitino and the younger, throughout the contest, reiterated ' Michigan basketball players were Ody I
ments of glitter but rather at the more flamboyant Calipari‘s his coach‘s comments. ”$411.3 suspended for one game for violat- :
squad’s ability to muster victories ‘

Over quality foes on the off-days

 

near-vaudevillian theatrics
up and down the sidelines

“Coming in, we knew we
had to rebound — someone

5m
8
5
e
E

ing learn niles.

. . . ,. . Ra Jackson, Jirnm Kinv and
that mevrtably come, on days .when surely left more than a few had to come up big. 1, h ”'1“. Chrisy Fields will playy in [fiday15::8unsations:'
forced mtoa style of play foreign to victims of myopia thinking That someone was Prick- I) . WWI.) game with Indiana. I
ltS own- they had seen double. ett, who quickly put to rest In. 8,1 The trio missed Friday's practice TANNING SALON . ,
Such was the case Sunday. as UK The similarities in the two the memories of his Charlie kua mm) and Saturday’ S 59_51 win at Michi- I 2035 Regency Rd. Suite #1 I 1':
overcame a cold coaches physical appearance Brown/Murphy‘s Law-type II gan State. I Lexmgton, KY I '1"

 

 

   

 

 

 

the grasp of a

With all of this Italian

 

Despite Prickett‘s stellar

9. maiitm

 

 

 

 

shooting pcrfor- is obvious. The fact that performance against Ala- II' 27.1.“ Michigan football coach Gary I LOWEST STUDENT RATES I if"
mance andarelent- Calipari imitates Pitino’s barna with a sparkling 17- 8:: ms _ 5
less UMass defense foo[-5[omping routine is point, lS-rebound effort wake. 1“ KW) 3 ’17-?qu (_2§3__92__|l L
to pry victory from comical. .uuflm Sunday afternoon.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

tougl; Minute‘tnan flair under one roof, you kind of ex- display, the Cats found themselves II. 21.1.“
5‘1““ l" the ma] pected the vendors to sell fettucine in dire straits at crunch time, trail- fit FE I ' I 1
minutes. rather than hot dogs and the ushers ing 64—60 With jUSt more than two 0 ‘ Nagy“)
“It was their to be draped in tuxedos and belting minutes remaining. Then, Tony, - o .
tempo, "0t a KCD- out operatic tunes as they showed TORY. Tony diditagain. "WWW” OtlS A. Slngletary
tu§kY’St}’l¢ Saute," you to your seat. Similar to his icewater-in-the-
' _ _ Wildcat coach R'Ck Calipari, the 34-year-old, Pitino— veins shot at the end of regulation and
“"3 Pitino, said Of W335 “Somewhere cloned coaching neophyte, is the at Georgia, Tony Dfilk nailed a con-
399 along the way ("l the NCAA TOUT‘ protagonist in a grand rags-to-riches tCSth l7-footer that sparked the de- from a distribution of the scoring W. L . Matthews, Jr.
'in nament), we H have ‘0 play a team story, one in which he has taken a CiSiVC 7-0 UK run that buried the wealth. , . - 1 - v.
1 9 like that." ro ram whose victories were as Minutemen .. . . , . UK Seniors who expect to enroll in one of the Univcrsny of Kentucky s
Addin t0 the im ressive stature p g ‘ ' . . . . One night 1' 5 Tony; one night graduate or professional programs for 1994—95 are elibible to apply for
f th g - mp f” thA UK endangch as the spotted OW] and In the process, Pelkjomed Travrs "’8 R0dl’1Ck (RhOGCS); one night it’s the Otis A. Singletary and W. L. Matthews, Jr. Fellowships. Application
)n't 0 e Victory '8 c act at ”Swim“ the seedy eyesore ""0 Ford as the team S unofficral 30'“) Jared. AS long as we win, I‘m hap- forms and a statement of criteria for eligibility are available in the
' played UMass at the MCfldOWlahdS a machine worthy of a spot in the guys in the clutch. " , . . 1. 1. , . , 1 .
mg Arena which on this day amounted h'gh r nt distr‘ct of olleg hoops A ked 'f h th ball d PY— Graduate School, 365 l .tttcrson Office Tower.
1 .. i-c.i C e . srewantse ato— '
10 ‘0 Amherst South. . Of course, the myth-maker has or-die time, the sophomore guard mg}: 15:]: hitgehgr’gvegortleieygoaég Stipend $109000
'Yes. technically it was a neutral help as he performs the miracles, responded, “you always have to games than not. Application Deadhne: March 7’ 1994
srte, bllt anyone denying the det namely in the fortn of All-Amenca feel that way. Surely, that is musrc S da , . d’ tha
the that the Minutemen enjoyed it sig- candidate Louis Roe. Since the jun- to Pitino's ears. ""1 y‘hs gamde "L icates th .I
f of mficam home‘cou" edge '5. pmb‘ ior forward arrived in Amherst, the And to Ford, who has been sub. 36" h. .dc r03 Its 1.:rrllpy’l (I):
375- ably from the same €11)th WhICh be- Minutemen have rolled up a gaudy jected to bounding defenses all if: r21 6 ‘5 "0 l C Y 0 . .
Arts lieve Ross Perot s claims that the 73.17 mark. year. Following the victory, the sen- ep me
Black P3901075. staged tactical "‘3‘ Roe has dominated the nation‘s ior guard commented on how the Er 1c M05013" ‘5 a “V" “81“” ‘ T I T A Z Z
neuvers '“ his front yard and elite this season, pouring in 28. 25, team has benefitted in recent games mg graduate student and 0 Ken-
'. George BUSh canived to sabotage 27, 30 and 24 points against North lucky Kernel columnist

I

I

 

his daughter‘s wedding.

While the fans' actions usually
have little to no impact on the out-
come of a game, an edge of any sort
could have been considered signifi-
cant in this game based on equality.
Consider the striking similarities in
the stat line.

Field goal shooting: UK, 24 of

Carolina, Kansas. Oklahoma. Mary-
land and Cincinnati, respectively.
More important to the Wildcats
in their pre-game preparation, how-
ever, was keeping the Atlantic 10
Conference‘s top rebounding squad
from dominating the glass.
Throughout the year, the Minute-
men have fought for rebounds like a