xt7tqj77x08j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tqj77x08j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1989-11-15 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, November 15, 1989 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 15, 1989 1989 1989-11-15 2020 true xt7tqj77x08j section xt7tqj77x08j  

Vol. XCII. No. 70

Established 1894

University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky

Independent since 1971

Wednesday, November 15, 1989

 

Bonn ties economic aid to E. Germany to more reforms

By NESHA STARCEVIC
Associated Press

BERLIN — West Germany said
yesterday that it is willing to give
East Germany massive financial aid
in the style of the postwar U.S.
Marshall Plan. but demanded politi-
cal and economic reforms the Com-
munists have so far rejected.

East Germany's new premier said

UK-U ofL
compete

to take off
the pounds

By SUZANNE REESE
Staff Writer

UK faculty and staff are compet-
ing to lose weight through Opera-
tion Weight Loss.

OWL, which is coordinated by
the Clinical Nutrition division of
the College of Allied Health, is a
weight-loss competition between

JK and the University of Louis-
ville, and individual OWL teams.

OWL is supported by 200 people
which are divided into 28 teams to
provide support and encouragement.
According to Linda Brooks, a regis-
tered dietitian and OWL team mem-
ber, individuals will keep with their
weighbloss efforts. so they do not
disappoint other group members.

“OWL promotes sound weight
loss using group dynamics as a
motivating force,“ said Thresa
Kremer, a registered dietitian and
OWL coordinator. “We are teaching
them sound, slow weight manage—
ment through team efforts."

Although OWL originated as a
weight-loss competition between
UK and L' of L, it has been extend-
ed as a contest between individual
teams to aid in the battle. The uni-
versity that wins receives a trophy,
and the winning UK team gets
S350 for their efforts.

Teams weigh-in weekly and are
rewarded for their losses during that
week. They also attend bi-weekly
seminars on subjects such as con-
trolling fats, sugar and cholesterol
in their daily eating schedules.

“Participants are on no set diet:
we teach them how to eat in the
right way and eventually they drop
the weight, slowly" Kremer said.

UK teams. which are currently
l,00() pounds ahead of U of L, are
named according to their area of in-
terest or profession and are led by a

See UK, Back Page

the Berlin Wall must remain, to
keep acquire immune deficiency
syndrome, crime and other Western
problems out of his country. He
promised a coalition government
but did not say whether the opposi-
tion could join it.

After a week of dramatic develop-
ments in East European countries,
President Mikhail S. Gorbachev of
the Soviet Union said in Moscow:

“They have a common direction.
which fosters the building of a Eu-
ropean home, for it makes the
countries closer, more open and
creates new opportunities for hu-
man contact and equal exchange.”
The Liberal Democrats, an East
German party that is allied with the
Communists but shows signs of
independence, said pro-democracy
groups should be invited in “round—

table" talks about East Germany‘s
future.

Discussions this spring between
Polish authorities and Solidarity,
which were given that name, led to
a non-Corinriuntst government in
Poland.

West Berlin Mayor Walter Mont
per said the sudden opening of East
Germany‘s borders was creating
traffic jams, currency problems and

other economic difficulties the two
goveniments niust resolve.

West Germany Economic \lini-
ster Helmut Haussmaiin announced
a six~point aid plan including in»
vestnicnts, JOlnl ventures and mod-
cmtzing East Germany dilapidated
communications and transport 3} s
terns.

liaussntanit did not name a figurc
for the aid arid said East (itgrniurty

 

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Physics Building yestreday.

 

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FOREVER BLOWING BUBBLES:: Jeff Babbitt from Ann Arbor Michi

Bush praises East German reform efforts

By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President
Bush, lauding East Germany‘s lift-
ing of travel restrictions as a dra-
ntatic advance for freedom, is order-
ing “all possible assistance" to help
West Germany cope with the flood
of refugees from its communist sis-
ter state.

The border-opening decree by
East German authorities on Thurs-
day caught U.S. officials by sur-
prise.

lf East Germany fully implc~
ments the promise to open its bor-
ders, the president told reporters,
“this (Berlin) Wall built in ’61 will
have very little relevance."

it was just 6 1/2 months ago in a
speech in Mainz, West Germany,
that Bush added his voice to the
chorus of U.S. presidents who have
demanded that the Berlin Wall be
torn down. He called it then a “bru-
tal wall“ that “stands as a monu-
ment to the failure of commun-
ism.”

Former President Ronald Reagan

said on the ABC television :>h()\rV'
“Prime Time Live," "If the wall
isn‘t torn down immediately. at
least they could keep the gates
open."

East Germany said it was open-
ing its borders to the rest of the
world and that its citizens may trav-
el or emigrate anywhere, including
through the 28-year»old Berlin
Wall, erected at the height of the
Cold War between the East arid
West.

“it’s a dramatic happening for
East Germany and, of course, for
freedom,“ Bush said.

The White House announced
Thursday night that Bush had or-
dered U.S. military units and U.S.
Ambassador Vernon Walters to
give “all possible assistance“ to the
West German government strug-
gling to cope with the flood of re—
fugees. The Pentagon said it was
making available housing for 980
people in; three off-base installa-
tions.

Other U.S. leaders reacted with a
mixture of joy and surprise.

Senate Majority Leader George

Mitchell of Maine called it a “sym—
bolic destruction of the Berlin
Wall” and urged East Germany to
“take the final step and tear that
wall down."

“The events of today are truly rc-
markable," said Vice President Dan
Quayle.

Bush, with Secretary of State
James Baker ”I at his side arid a
map of Germany open on his desk,
said, “We salute the people iii East
Germany, whose aspirations for
freedom seem to be a little more
down the road now."

Bush seemed subdued in an ex-
change with reporters summoned to
the Oval Office to hear his reaction
to the latest startling news from the
East Bloc.

“i am not an emotional kind of
guy," he said. But he added, “I feel
very good about it."

Bush said he was prepared to give
“maximum help“ to Bonn to cope
with refugees. About 200,000 East
Germans have fled their country
this year through Hungary, Czecho-
slovakia or other routes to the
West.

But recalling lll\ .ltl\'lct‘ list
spring to Poles to stay in int-tr
homeland to work for (lt‘llltxfill re~
forms, Bush said:

“These are Germans. .'\lltl ticf‘
mans love their country. ‘tntl at
some point, I think a lot of her
titans who have felt panit and tlll‘
able to move are going to say.
‘Look, we can move, but woultln t
it be better to participate in the re-
fornis that are taking place iii our
own country?m

Bush said that when he lllt‘t‘ls
with Soviet President Mikhail S.
Gorbachev next month in the Med-
iterranean, he would discuss addi-
tional steps the United States
might take to help spur change tit
East Europe including possible
restoration of long-denied U.S.
trade benefits.

Sounding a note of caution,
Bush said, “i don‘t think any sin-
gle event is the end of what you
might call the Iron Curtain, but
clearly this is a long way front the
harshest lron Curtain days."

gan creates glass bubbles in the basement of the Chemistryx

at as?

 

Q. '» .

S TEVE SANDtHbmernt-yi Didi

 

l
i
i

must achieve ' thorough change" in
its centrally directed economy.

Reforms pittilllsC‘tl so far by
('ommuiiist Party leader Egon
Krenz, who took over last month
from htirtflincr lzrich lionecker,
have resulted in more questions
lilt'ln ngA t‘fw. lllllllll \Llld in
Bonn

ii.ttl’-

s . \\ F\ l‘, link l’agc

College of
Medicine
professor
earns honor

By BRECK THOMAS

" , . Ann.
V0”! lb} ”Q ‘vv .H

A i'K College < l “HEAL.
fessor recentl, .~.:~~
'cifzc Vorthttu: inf? .w
Isl ill liit‘ Yettr

Dr Sai‘ft‘rti Elt' v'
en the award for . .
years of service in pitch. '

‘l was very \lll'I‘TlM ti 3 t
the award." liflf‘trvli‘tltlt
not given every year .' ‘2 i 1"
it ‘wtts \cr‘. 'llc" "

ilor~tntiiri 'xtlti
award because of his tI. ».
~Washington {'rii\;'r»:!x

florsiiii.itt his ilone
.in‘ pollution, works! .x 'h ;~t-;;v:.~

t lC\ to protect worker» axons. nr'

L».

tantr'rtiecnts and In: .1. 'k‘
lk‘sitt'ltlt‘ spun.

Dr. Arthur i-‘rank
{KW lisptrtnngvii
\‘ictlicitw‘ «3.! l
il',‘..lllil \fitl ii.""»{!‘
,

lx‘tl\ lil'.‘ $11.. l.i~ -’

'lEt. 'lt’Vl'
( l

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if.t':‘h
~ li i'icnio. i“..",:"i’ "
«itilll ill in; us.» tt‘t‘
starch illltl a. ri..;r [‘1' My. 1;. it
'tltrstinnn. .vrx.‘ '

\‘-.‘ il'ttl'i'm if

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‘-.li' i7» .tliil .i' .3
.tltti .ti'c ;. t '
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T‘ick Int/nun, .-. .l 1.1::
V'.Cllisi tt'. livV. .- 2

iittrsllltitlt s. said it .2!

\t‘ “HRS l \l.\\

 

By MICHAEL L. JONES
Editortai to (0'

the (it) Slitkcrs.‘ ih Ham-
iner, Sikllltl} iioix, » and Red Hy
Nation \Hll lit-atliiitt it ltciiefit
show at the \\Ttl\l\lct_L'k tonight
for the Hort/on Center for the
Homeless. The 5-1 cover for tltt
show will go to the center. to
catcd at 2 If) (.‘orrall St.

The show is sponsored by the
l I\ Student (iotctnittcitt x\\\tl-
cizttioii's Public Relations ('omr
iinttec and the \Vrocklagc, S(i.»\
Public Relations mcntbcr (ilcini
l.anham organized the show
“1”] the aid of Public Relations
('hatrpcrstin EJ. Bun/cridahl and
VGA ('ollcgc of Fine Arts Sena
tor Rob Lolintan.

l.ohin.in is the campus ttltiltll-
natot of the National Campaign
against Hunger and H()lllL‘l\'\\
iicss.

"\\ c‘rc making plans to do .t
lot of other benefits for the

 

Concert to help fight
area’s homelessness

. t t , .
.tili‘- i". li'lx Li

I. )lllt. it' ;. 'l‘

“ intii’i \tii.

\CillCNlc'l l\ .‘1 «I

.lic it‘til }'\§'$.l\ .tic “:.l'~lllL' i.‘

t :Iiii‘iil \.litl litti. .‘ .
ftt'lif lli‘liic‘it‘~\llc'\~ xvi
leadership , t‘lHt'ltllI‘lt
,rigton t."..ii h:
Run/«:iidalti .intl l.fiti':.ilii in;
month.

ihh ucck Ski »\ is spt-ii~.o:i:tt;
\tt.uc tour Wealth ' iron: I;
.f in. to l pin, and 5 pit. to
pin. MM will have tables i.
the Student ('crtter where slit
.fqnis tan donate money i‘il'lli
their i‘tmcit‘ard to the llt)lllt‘lt‘\~

\(iA riitsctl Slel for the Hon
.r’ull t‘cntcr last month with
itilhls from .i inutl \ollcylxiil
llllli‘lltllllc‘lil, .iiid Bun/endaltl cuff
S(i.-\ ls planning .i benefit in:
tlic k‘illltitlll House, :1 ccntcr tho
houses mentally ill ht)lllt‘l\‘\s int
ticnts

v\ .ixi’l

kitl\‘ltti\\‘i ~\ .iit

 

The Call outstanding

at Breeding’s show.
Review. Page 3.

Gardener’s teammates

shocked by suspension.
Story, page 2.

ERS‘ONS

SPORTS tiv

 

 2 — Kentucky Kernel, Wednesday, November 15, 1989

SPORTS

Barry Reeves
Sports Editor

Team was shocked over Gardner suspension

STEVE SANDERS/Kern“ Siatf

UK defensive tackle Donnie Gardner, who has been suspended,
tackles Brad Smith during an intrasquad scrimmage this tall.

 

gritty KELLY DALE

 

 

 

 

Do you need help in BIO,
CHE. ACC, MA, AST?

Contact the UKSGA, 257—
9131, Room I20 Student
Center.

Students are eligible for 3 hours of free tutoring during the
two week period of Nov. 27-Dec. 8!

Contact SGA before Nov. 22.

 

By BARRY REEVES
Sports Editor

Anger, disappointment and sor—
row.

Those were some of the emo-
tions felt by UK football players
when they heard
that senior de-
fensive tackle
Donnie Gardner
was suspended
from the squad
for the remain-
der of the sea-
son.

Gardner had
blossomed into
one of UK’s
leaders on and GARDNER
off the field this season. He was
starting to get as much attention
from opponents as fellow defensive
tackle Oliver Barnett, a preseason
All-America

And until Monday, Gardner was a
main cog in the Wildcat defense.

“It was a real surprise to all of
us,” UK defensive back Chris Tol-
bert said. “We were in total shock
when we found out.

“But I guess, most of all, I was
mad at Donnie for what he had
done. And I told him that. We
need him and he let us down."

Preseason All-America team

By JIM O'CONNELL
Associated Press

Two of college basketball’s new-
er stars and three well-known sen-
iors are on The Associated Press'
preseason All-America team.

Sophomores Chris Jackson and
Alonzo Mourning joined upper-
classmen Rumeal Robinson, Der-
rick Coleman and Lionel Simmons
on the team announced yesterday.

Jackson, a guard from Louisiana
State, was second in the nation in
scoring last season at 30.2 points
per game. He was named on 62 of
6S ballots by the same nationwide
panel which selects the Top 25 and
edged Mourning as the top vote-
getter. Jackson, the Southeastern
Conference player of the year last

 

 

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“1 was sort of shocked when I
found out," UK outside linebacker
Jeff Brady said. “I was sort of an-
gry, at the beginning, at what he
did, but I wish him all of the luck
in the world. I hold no grievance
with Donnie.”

Sources close to the football
team said that Gardner violated a
curfew rule last Saturday night fol-
lowing UK’s 15-11 victory over
Vanderbilt. If Gardner had not tried
to cover-up his mistake, UK coach
Jerry Claiborne would have only
suspended him for Saturday’s Flori-
da game.

But Gardner tried to cover his
miscue and was subsequently sus-
pended for the season.

“I wish Donnie had come to me
(before he went to the coaches).”
Tolbert said. “Maybe, I could have
lied for him or something. I don’t
know.”

The place where the loss of Gard-
ner could be felt most could be in
the huddle and at team meetings.

“Donnie was one of our more
vocal leaders on the team,” said
Tolben, a close friend of Gardner.
“We have other leaders on the
team, and I guess we are all going
to have to pick it up a little bit.
The loss of one person will not
have the effect on us that everyone

season, was only the second fresh-
man ever to be named All-America
and his average was the best ever
for a member of that class.

The 6-foot-10 Mourning aver-
aged 13.1 points and 7.3 rebounds
in Georgetown’s balanced attack,
and he and 7-2 teammate Dikembe
Mutombo combined for 244
blocked shots last season. A third-
team All-America last season,
Mourning was named on 58 bal-
lots.

Robinson was one of the keys to
Michigan’s march to the national
championship last season. He made
two free throws for the Wolverines’
finai points in the 80-79 overtime
victory over Seton Hall in the title
game. The 6-2 point guard averaged
14.9 points and 6.3 assists in

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might seem to think.”

Brady said: “Donnie was an out-
standing football player. There's no
doubt about that. He was also a
good leader. But we have to put
that behind us and move on because
we have two more games left. We
can’t dwell on Donnie. We have to
suck it up and get ready to play
Florida."

“Donnie will be missed, but I
think we will be able to overcome
it and go on for two more wins,”
UK senior running back Darren Bil-
berry said. “That's the only way we
can look at it.”

Tolbert related the loss of Gard-
ner to the loss of linebacker Randy
Holleran, who suffered a season-
ending knee injury in preseason.
Holleran was last season‘s leading
tackler and a preseason All-
Southeastem Conference selection.

“Yeah, this was sort of like when
we lost Randy before the season,
but only a little more severe,” he
said. “When we lost Randy, I didn't
think there was any way that we
could win six games because he
was our leading tackler, but we did.

“People just filled in and picked
up the slack and that’s what we
have to do again. We know we can
do it. We just have to prove it."

Gardner will be replaced by sen-

Michigan’s improbable title run
under interim coach Steve Fisher.
Coleman averaged 16.9 points,
11.4 rebounds and 3.4 blocks per
game last season for Syracuse. The
6-10 Detroit native considered tum-
ing pro during the summer but opt-
ed to return to Syracuse, where he
will team with Kentucky transfer
LeRon Ellis and sophomore Billy
Owens on a talented front line.
Simmons was No. 3 in the na-
tion in scoring last season at 28.4
per game and tied with Coleman for
fifth in rebounding. The 6-6 swing-
man from La Salle has been Metro
Atlantic Athletic Conference player
of the year the past two seasons and
has a good shot at becoming the
fifth Division I player to score
3,000 career points. He also can be-

ior Doug Houser. Houser is not
foreign to the defense’s top unit.
Houser has started the last two
games for the Cats when Gardner
was suffering from groin and knee
injuries.

Houser also staned five games
last season when he and Gardner re
tated

“I feel very comfortable playing
beside either one of them," Brady
said. “Doug has been doing a great
job all year and I think he will keep
doing a great job. The only thing is
that Doug and Oliver will have to
play a lot more minutes.”

Barnett, Gardner and Houser have
been playing the majority of min-
utes over the course of the season.
But now, Claiborne will be forced
to play Eugene McClellan and Dan-
iel Lee in backup roles.

McClellan, 6-3, 266-pound red-
shirt freshman, has played in six
games this year and is credited with
six tackles. Lee, a 6-5, 254-pound
sophomore, has seen action in only
one game and has one solo tackle.

“They need some experience, a
whole lot of experience because
they haven’t played very much,"
Claiborne said. “But they play hard
and that’s all you can ask for.“

McClellan and Lee will get their
first test Saturday at Florida.

named

come the first to reach that figure
while grabbing at least 1,500 re-
bounds.

Hank Gathers of Loyola Mary—
mount, who led the nation in scor-
ing and rebounding last season. led
the remaining vote-getters. The 6-7
forward averaged 32.7 points and
13.7 rebounds for the Lions last
season to join Wichita State’s Xa-
vier McDaniel as the only players
to lead Division I in both catego-
ries in the same season.

The only other players to be
named on at least 10 ballots were
UNLV teammates Stacey Augmon
and Larry Johnson, the junior col-
lege player of the year last season,
and Mississippi's Gerald Glass, the
fourth-leading scorer in the nation
last season at 28.0.

Fanning signs guard
for 1990-91 Lady Kats

Staff reports

A senior from Southwest Dekalb
High School in Decatur. Ga., be-
came the second player to sign a
letter of intent to play for the Lady
Kat basketball team next season.

Tedra Eberhart, a 5-11 guard, an-
nounced her intention yesterday.

She averaged 16 points, eight re-
bounds, five assists and seven
steals as a junior and ranked among
the top juniors in the state of Geor-
gia.

She was named to the Atlanta
Constitution's All-State honorable
mention list and to the Atlanta Tip-
Off club's team of the Month in
January.

“Tedra is an excellent student-

 

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athlete who has a great deal of tal-
ent,” Fanning said in a news re-
lease. “She‘s quick, loves to play
defense and has good basketball
sense. She’s a very good leader and
team player. I feel she will help
contribute to our program immedi-
ately in terms of playing ability. as
well as leadership on and off the
court. Tedra is considered one of the
best players in Georgia.”

Eberhart, who chose UK over
Virginia, made the Dekalb County
Tip-Off Tearn-of-thc—Year, the De-
kalb News-Sun Team-of-the-Year
and the Dekalb Extra Team-ot-thc-
Year after leading her school to a
23-2 record last year.

She was ranked fourth in the
county in scoring, third in field
goal percentage (63.2) and third in
free throws (79.6).

Eberhart's signing follows Jenni-
fer Gray, a 6-3 center from Carson
City, Nevada, who signed last
week. The Lady Kats have three
more scholarships available for the
1990-91 season.

Mark Davis
wins the NL
Cy Young

NEW YORK —— Mark Davis of
the Sand Diego Padres won the Na-
tional League Cy Young Award
yesterday, easily beating Mike
Scott of the Houston Astros.

The 29-year-old Davis, who led
the majors with 44 save, got 19
first-place votes and four seconds
for 107 points from a 24-membcr
panel of the Baseball Writers Asso-
ciation of America. Scott, the 1986
winner, got four firsts, 14 seconds
and three thirds for 65 points.

Davis was 4-3 with a l.85
eamed-run average and 92 strikeouts
in 92 2-3 innings and had a win or
a save and one short of Bruce Sut-
ter‘s NL record.

Davis converted 44 of 48 save
chances and allowed l3 of 75 inher-
ited ninners to score and stranded
his final l9 inherited ninners.

 

   

 
 

DIVERSIONS

The Call delivers
outstanding show in
cramped settings

By KlP BOWMAR
Arts Editor

“We do it because we love to do
it,” Call keyboardist Jim Goodwin
said in an interview last week. “Be-
cause I mean we play dives and
make no kind of money."

While Breeding’s may not be a
dive, it is a smaller venue than one
would expect for a band that has
had six albums.

But whatever the venue, The Call
always pours their energy and vi-
brancy into their live sets, and
Monday night was no exception.

The show started slowly, and lead
singer Michael Been‘s voice didn‘t
have the rich quality that comes
across on the band's albums. But
by the third song, Been honed in
and the crowd throbbed to the beat
of “I Don't Wanna," from Into The
Woods. Been’s voice flushed out
the lyrics and gave them a rich feel,
proving that the band is at its best
live.

From there they slowed it down
to a more midtempo pace with a
strong blues feel that showed off
the guitar of Tom Ferrier and base
work of Been.

The guitars were especially
prominent on “You Run," from
their new album Let The Day Be-
gin, but they didn’t overshadow
Been's voice.

The crowd became restless when
the group slowed the tempo even
more, but was recaptured on “Same
Old Story.” The first half of the

Playwrights
get chance
to show
their stuff

By TOBY GIBBS
Stall Writer

How would you like to write a
play?

Two hundred-twenty budding
playwrights, many of them ama-
teurs, decided they would like to
try. Of those 220 scripts, about 20
are being read out loud for audienc-
es at ArtsPlace each Monday in No-
vember at 7 pm. Three of those
scripts could be selected to be per-
formed next May at ArtsPlace dur-
ing the Actor’s Guild of Lexing-
ton’s Theatre Festival.

According to Vick Chaney, the

never have been published or pro—
duced. Other than that, according to
Chaney, length and subject matter
is up to the writer. He noted that
submissions could be one act long
or full length. The guild receives
scripts of every possible genre,
from tragedy to comedy. Chaney
says the trend this year is toward
socially-relevant drama.

“A lot of the plays are dealing
with social issues: AIDS, terror-
ism, that son of thing," says Cha-
ney, who noted that very few
straight comedies have been sub-
mitted.

The Theatre Festival is in it‘s
fifth year. The approximately 220
scripts received this year is a high
for the guild. According to Chaney,
the two previous festivals each gen-
erated about 60 submissions. The
first year had about 20 participants.

While many of the potential
playwrights are from Lexington,
Chaney said scripts came from all
around the country and even from
abroad. One script came from
South Africa. Chaney says the
guild advertised in many nationally
known drama magazines, including
the New Dramatists Guild and the
Globe. in hopes of getting scripts
from all over.

Chaney says that each year the
deadline for scripts is in late Octo-
ber. The five member committee,
which has Chaney and other guild
personnel as members. reads the
scripts. Every script is read at least
three times because it requires three
rejections for a script to be black-
balled.

Some of the plays are selected to
be read during the November
“Month of Monday" public read-
ings. The readings are done by Lex-
ington actors who have free time.
Chaney says that four or five plays

artistic director of the Actor’s Guild Ct”??? 3/311”... __ _. _. _ _| 3 Visits $8 00 I
of Lexington, there are no real BuyOne Medium I 5 V' it $10.00 5...“:
guidelines for the scripts or the 2Topping pizza Get One I 10 VISTS 17. 9 {this
. ‘ I I I . 1";
writers, except that the script must FREE I 5 ts $ 5 is!
I . .

show readied the cr0wd for a rous-
ing second half.

An energy-packed “I Still Be-
lieve," from Reconciled, was the
undisputed emotional epicenter of
the show. All elements of the
band’s sound fused, giving the song
a hypnotic affect.

The crowd's presence was most
notable on “Everywhere I Go," also
from Reconciled. The band milked
the crowd to the point where the
only sound was that of the audience
clapping. Then drummer Scott Mu-
sick started playing the tambourine
and the band eased into the song be-
fore reaching a crescendo level. The
rhythm section made the song stand
out.

After a short break, the band re-
turned to the stage and exhorted the
crowd to make themselves felt.

The encore started with a quick
pace but on at least one occasion
the keyboards were overly empha—
sized and the vocals didn’t stand
out.

But the band’s passion for their
music came out in their last three
songs, starting with “The River."
Been personified the river and
showed its powers through lyrics
like “The waters rolled like a beast
from hell."

They followed that up with their
break through song “The Walls
Came Down” from Modern Ro—
mans and concluded with “Uncov-
cred,“ the last song on Let The Day
Begin.

The Call played about two hours

Kentucky Kernel, Wednesday, November 15, 1989 »— 3

Kip Bowmar
Ans Editor

:‘
r .

 

STEVE “AN"! ’r’ '

The Call played to a sellout crowd of 800 at Breeding's Monday night and many more heard a live broadcast on more state-n . ' “

and drew from many of their al~
bums while still pleasing the stand-
ing-room only crowd. With that
kind of live performance and ener-
gy, The Call could develop into one
of the bands of the 00‘s.

 

THE ONLY ALTERNATIVE LEFT

“.1 51/
Booth

All procedes will aid God’s
Pantry & Community Kitchen

Open Today -
Old Student Center,

2nd Annual
Thanksgiving
F on 7:71 Drive

Friday, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
outside SGA Offices

Donations of non-peri shable
foods or cash accepted.

 

 

 

 

{— _ _ Earge. sing]; _ _ 1

I Topping Pizza
I only $7.99

I
l
I
I One large Single topping of your (home, I
' original crust pizza. Dine in or take out. I
Coupon may not be used With any other
I discount or spectal offer. I

Dine in or take out. Coupon may not be used
with any other discount or specul offer
Coupon expires 12/31/89.

I Large Sampler Sale
I only $10.99

I
I
One large original crust pizza With ll toppings. I
Dine In or take out. I
Coupon may not be used With any other
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Thurs.-Nov.16

  

UK~UT BATTLEOE

Donate at
CAMPUS BLOOD DRIVES

Patterson Office Tower 8:30 am —4:30 pm
Haggin Hall 2:30-9:30 pm

Memorial Coliseum 11 am- 8pm

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Call 271-4599

 

 

 

Kernel

Personals
The perfect gift

 

 

MEET MISS KENTI rim

———Melanie Glasscock~
.ll

W

335 S.I.llilk.‘\iiil‘.k’

TODA V” “’0‘

("ANT tn: 'l

 

Kentucky‘s honorary (_‘li;iirper»
for the Great American Sziro‘».

 

 

 

UPDATE D

CLASSIC
CLOTHING
FOR
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i.._.._o..__~ -

M-S 10-6, Th, F 10-8, Sun 1—5

J

 

zereadeach Monday.

 

 

 

 

 

 

    

 4 — Kentucky Kernel, Wednesday, November 15, 1989

Playboy diversifies and tries to recover from down year

USA TODAY/Apple College
hformatlon Network

Christie Hefner is celebrating her
first year as chairwoman and CEO
of Playboy Enterprises Inc. — and
the party is all business.

The daughter of high-living Play-
boy founder Hugh Hefner has made
costly and difficult moves in the
first year in which she has had full
control of the company.

It didn’t seem to help at first:
Playboy posted a $3.8 million loss
in the year ended June 30 on reve-
nue of $166.2 million. But now
the company “is in the early stages
of a transition," back to profitabili-
ty. said Robert Wiley, an analyst at

Furman Selz Mager Dietz & Bir-
ney.

Playboy stock hasn't reacted
much to the firm's earnings ups
and downs during the past year. It
closed Monday at SIS 7—8, down 1-
8. Its 52-week high is 818 3-8 and
low is 511 5-8.

How Hefner‘s overhaul of Play-
boy looks so far:

-Magazines: More than half of
the company’s profits still come
from Playboy magazme. Circula-
tion has declined from its glory
days, when it peaked at 6.8 million
in 1972. But Hefner has stemmed
the fall at 3.7 million.

“It's never going to be what it
used to be, but that’s not so bad,"

 

Hefner’s daughter as