xt7w3r0pw182 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7w3r0pw182/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1989-10-10 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, October 10, 1989 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 10, 1989 1989 1989-10-10 2020 true xt7w3r0pw182 section xt7w3r0pw182  

Kentucky Kernel

Vol. XCIII, No. 42

Established 1894

University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky

Independent since 1971

Tuesday, October 1 0,1 989

 

UK gives tickets
back to students

By GREGORY A. HALL
Staff Writer

UK Athletics Director C.M.
Newton announced yesterday that a
plan to take 56 lower-arena basket-
ball seats away from the student
body to help finance Memorial
Coliseum’s renovations was re-
scinded by the UK Athletics Ticket
Committee.

The decision to return the 56
seats to the student body was made
in reaction to public disapproval
over taking away the seats.

“I made the decision over the
weekend to ask the ticket commit-
tee to rescind that action and to de-
lay it for a year, to give us a chance
to study or delay it permanently,"
Newton said yesterday before a
meeting of the Student Athletics
Committee.

Newton also said in a statement
released by UK Sports Information
that the University will need only
42 seats to give to boosters, all of
which will come from lower-arena
seats that have “traditionally been
held game-by—game for recruiting,
advertisers, visiting dignitaries,
special events, etc.”

“Because of the size of the dona—
tions, it has been determined that

we need only 42 tickets, rather than
56," Newton said in the release.
“But by rescinding this action, we
will now have time to study Rupp
Arena seating and will be able to
prioritize donor tickets as season
tickets become available.”

Newton also said last night that
he met with student leaders yester-
day and told them that on occasion
more tickets might be needed by
the athletics department, which he
said could come from the student
allotment.

“We'll be asking students to help
us out with those special events on
a game-by-game basis,” Newton
told SAC.

UK Student Government Associ-
ation officials proclaimed the deci-
sion to give the tickets back to the
student body as a victory for the
students.

“I think that the students have
won in this case,” SGA President
Sean Lohman said. “This shows
that GM. (Newton) is really mak-
ing an effort to work with the stu-
dents. C.M. assured me that we
would be contacted in situations
like these. We (the students)
screamed loud enough this time."

See ATHLETICS, Page 4

13 to be inducted
in UK hall of fame

By CATHERINE SALMEN
Staff Writer

Do the names Sarah G. Blanding,
Frank G. Dickey Sr. and Albert D.
Kirwan sound familiar?

They should to most UK stu-
dents, who use them every day as
they walk across campus to Bland-
ing and Kirwan towers or Dickey
Hall.

But these prominent individuals
have more in common than just
having a building named in their
honor— they are members of the
UK Hall of Distinguished Alumni.

And as pan of this year‘s home-
coming weekend 13 members will
be inducted into the UK Hall of
Distinguished Alumni Friday at a
banquet in their honor.

One new member, Shirley Phil-
lips, a pioneer in no-tillage agricul-
ture, has been associated with UK
as a student and staff member since
1944.

“I have a great love for UK,"
Phillips said, “and to be singled out
for this honor is one of my high—
lights of a 42—year career.”

Wendell Berry, a highly ac-

claimed poet and UK English pro-
fessor, said he is proud to be a
member of the UK Hall of Distin—
guished Alumni because he consid-
ers UK his “own university.”

“It is extremely gratifying to be
honored at home by the university 1
attended," he said.

The UK Hall of Distinguished
Alumni was established in 1965 as
part of UK’s Centennial Celebra-
tion. It now has 204 members. Pic-
tures of the 13 new members,
along with those of the other
members, which include govemors,
businessmen, professors, writers,
musicians and athletes, hang in the
King Alumni House on Rose
Street

The UK Hall of Distinguished
Alumni “was started as a way to
recognize our more outstanding
alumni who have achieved notable
accomplishments," said Jay Brum-
field, executive director of the UK
Alumni Association.

“The recipients are quite thrilled,”
said Kay Johnson, assistant editor
of alumni publications. “It is quite
an honor considering all the thou-

See 13 MORE, Page 4

 

 

 

SPORT OF INTELLECTUALS

Andrew Schrank of the University of Michigan's debate team competes at UK's Henry Clay Tournament yesterday at the Harm HE;-

tel. UK’s debate team is consistently one of the top debate teams in the nation.

UK debate team is among the best in the nation

By ROBYN WALTERS
Staff Writer

it is called by some the sport for the intel-
lectual.

Their gym is the library, their gameball is
the evidence they research and their skill is ar-
gumentation. They work out for several hours
every day and they compete at home and away.
They are one of the best teams in the nation,
but few people on campus know about them.

For more than 10 years, UK has had one of
the top ten debate teams in the country.

Jeff Parcher, a coach for George Mason Uni-
versity in Washington, DC, said UK has
been among the best debate teams for more
than a decade.

“This team is consistently one of the top
If). The people in this program garner a lot of
respect in the debate community," Parcher
said.

The major forces behind the success of
UK’s debate team are J .W. Patterson and Rog-
er Solt.

Harvard University coach Sherry Hall, who
spent a year as Patterson’s assistant, said she
has a great deal of respect for UK’s program
because of its tradition.

“UK has always had a strong program.
Roger Solt is considered to be one of the best
judges and coaches around," she said.

Judd Kimball, a senior debater for Wake
Forest University, said UK has a very stable
team this year.

“T.A. (McKinney) and Calvin (Rockefeller)

are a good team. Their styles compliment each
other well," he said.

UK's debate team has won two national de-
bate titles and has finished in the top five in
other years during the last decade, Patterson
said

UK’s top team this year is T.A. McKinney,
a political science junior from Nashville,
Tenn., and Calvin Rockefeller, a communica
tions junior from Birmingham, Ala.

As freshmen the two won the National De-
bate Tournament for college novices.

And as sophomores they ended their season
as the third best team in the nation. They say
they hope to be the top team in the nation be-
fore they graduate.

“We hope to do well this season and eventu-
ally win the national title,” McKinney said.

Other members of UK‘s team include David
Walsh, a political science junior from Irving,
Texas: Jerry Gallagher a freshman from De—
troit: and Clark Wells, a biology freshman
from Bristow, Okla.

Patterson said the reason all of UK's debat-
ers are from outside Kentucky is because of
the decline of high school debate among the
state's high schools.

“While in the ‘705 most of the debaters
were from the state, there are now only three
high school programs left in Kentucky," said
Patterson, who has been director of UK’s de-
bate program for more than 20 years.

“Not enough (high school) teachers are will-
ing to do so much work for so little pay."
Patterson said.

Mn N BALLARI 107' >1 "#5.“

 

 

t

L‘K prepares for a tournament if. r,- car. 1
ing topics in the library. debating lY‘. pm. f.:.:'
rounds. and cutting and pastrg Pt' 1 . .
organized argument blocks

Debaters spend as much time pr:;‘».ir:r:,: Mr
their activity as the i'K haskc'tn‘l t-v/im
spends in preparation for a game

“Anyone who is nationally
thing spends just as much mm 2": their Ll=.".1\l
ty as debaters do." said Wells, {l biolt‘cv frcx‘i-
man.

Debaters say they L‘lllttj» irrtt Jl(,'.\'l' tit
several reasons.

Gallagher said he joined tho 7 'K iv“ 41‘ read
because he enjoyed the L‘t‘tiép‘l'tt-"P at tin
high school debate squad

“Debate in college is eiiirivzi‘err "v ' . x
for other sports. If you haw thc opportzs" "
you go," he said.

in addition to the thrill of .wn‘ywtrt .
hate is an activity that has pr.“ It. tl
tions in the classroom and (lilt'r aridnit- '

“It makes vcrv “all Ti‘lll'iti“' \! > it N
cause it deals with so ntzinv :wtm‘x” in: bar
said.

Walsh said he entoyx debate because of {hr
skills he has acquired from totizix‘titior‘.

“It keeps you informed about world l\\tlt.‘\
and teaches you critical thinking,“ he said

Hall said the skills debate teaches are appli-
cable in any field.

“It gives you the abilm tt marshal all of
your resources and present arguments clearly

~d at at».

l'K. Page 4

 

 

'Assoclated Press

Leaders of the NAACP have
adopted a resolution saying the
appointment last week of a black
woman to the state’s Task Force
on Education Reform was not
enough.

Because educational experts
submit information and remit
findings to the task force. Dorrie
ville NAACP lenders recom-
mended Sunday that “African-
Americans who are sane of the
leading experts on education re-
form“ he invited to appear before
the panel.

“The state NAACP vigorously
W fair and equal reps-enra-
tiouonthctaskforceandits

 

NAACP leaders say input is needed
from blacks on education reform

committees,” said the resolution,
which was introduced during the
last day of the National Associa-
tion for the Advancement of Col-
ored People state convention.

The resolution also urged
members and leaders of branches
throughout the state to use what-
ever political influence they have
to accomplish the goals.

The appointment of Joan Tay-
lor, a Cabinet liaison in Gov.
Wallace Wilkinson’s office, as
the first black member of the task
force was summed Friday by
Wilkinson. Senate President Pro
Tern lohn A. “Belt” Rose and
House Speaker Don Blandford

The NAACP’: Louisville
branch had criticized Wilkinson

Tass reports aliens landed
in Soviet town near Moscow

and legislative leaders for not
naming a black member to the
task force.

Also during the conference, the
Kentucky State Conference of the
NAACP called for establishing a
$30 million fund to create jobs
for black men.

Details have not been complet~
ed, but the state unit plans to call
on the government and the pri-
vate sector to help establish the
fund to create jobs, said Cleopa-
tra Gregory of lotusville, chair-
woman of the resolution com-
trainee.

The plan is designed to benefit
the entire community by provid-
ing jobs instead of jail or prison

See NAACP, Page 4

 

 

UK barrier winner
in class, on course.

Story, Page 2.

By CAREY GOLDBERG
Associated Press

MOSCOW — It was a close en-
counter of the Communist kind.

Towering, tiny-headed human-
oids from outer space landed their
UFO in the Russian city of Voro-
nezh and emerged for a promenade
around the park, spreading fear
among residents.

At least that’s what the official
Tass news agency said yesterday.

Tass, contributing to a string of
weird tales that have crept into the
formerly stuffy state-controlled me-
dia in recent months, said in a
straight-faced report that Soviet sci-
entists vouched for the UFO‘s land-
ing.

“Scientists have confirmed that
an unidentified flying object recent-

ly landed in a park in the Russian
city of Voronezh," Tass said. “They
have also identified the landing $110
and found traces of aliens who made
a short promenade about the park."

A Tass duty officer contacted last
night by telephone, refused to iden-
tify the reporter who sent the dis-
patch from Voronezh, but stood by
the story.

“It is not April Fool's today," he
said.

According to yesterday's Tass re-
port a large shining ball or disk
was seen hovering over the park by
Voronezh residents.

They saw the UFO land and up
to three creatures similar to humans
emerge. accompanied by a small rt}
bot, Tass said.

“The aliens were three or even
four meters (9-12 feet) tall, but

with vcrv small heads," the news
agency quoted the w itness as say-
ing. “They walked by the ball or
disc and then disappeared inside."

The report rcsembled a story last
summer in the daily newspaper So-
Cialist Industry, w hich carried an al-
leged “close encounter" between a
milkmaid and an alien in Central
Russw‘s Perm region.

in that report milkmaid Lyubov
Medvedev was quoted as saying she
encountered an alien creature “re
sembling a man, but taller than av
erage with short legs."

The creature, she said, had “only
a short nob instead of a head."

The Tass report, which did not
give the date of the purported “land-
ing" in Voronezh, said onlookers

Soc SOVIETS. Page 4

D1 VERS‘ONS Spotlight Jazz offers

hip variety.
Story, Back page.

 

 2 - Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday, October 10,1989

SPORTS

 

By BOBBY KING
Contributing Writer

Ask most
college ath-
letes what they
value more —
success in
their sport or
success in the
classroom —
and you may
get an even
mix of an-
swers. But for KERN
Charlie Kern, a runner on UK’s
cross country team, doing well in
both areas is important.

“It’s not good to be a one-
dimensional person,” said Kern, a
history junior. “I try to do my
very best in everything I do.”

And since his freshman year at
UK, Kern has struggled to do just
that - and has had a considerable
amount of success. In his first
season on the cross country team,
Kern, a native of Amherst, N.Y.,
became an immediate standout.

“We've never had anyone have
a better freshman year," UK coach
Don Weber said. “He came in
very intense and focused and com-
peted on a very high level.”

Despite the praise he was re-
ceiving for his running abilities,
however, Kern was not satisfied
with his efforts in the classroom.

“Being successful right away
wasn’t the best thing for me,"
Kern said. “It took a lot of effort.
I put everything into running, and
as a result my grades suffered.”

So last year Kern concentrated
more on his grades than he did on
his running times. As a result
Kern went through what he said
was a sub-par year for him in run-

 

ning last season.

“I put more effort into raising
my grades," he said. “I studied
more and consequently got less
rest, which hampered my run-
ning."

This year Kern is striving to
balance his classwork and running
more efficiently, and they finally
seem to be coming together. He
was UK’s top finisher in the
Western Kentucky Invitational
and finished second overall in the
UK Invitational.

“I felt no pressure out there,”
Kern said. “I just went out and
tried to have fun.”

After the UK cross country
team’s most successful season in
1988. which included a Southeast-
ern Conference title and an eighth
place finish at the NCAA Cham-
pionships, Kern said things are a
little tougher this year since the
Cats lost two All-Americans from
last season. But Kern said UK’s
slow start this year is due more to
complacency than a lack of exper-
ience.

“I am as guilty as anyone. It
took a lot of work to win the
SEC last year." Kern said.

 

“We’ve never had
anyone have a better
freshman year. He came
in very intense and
focused and competed
on a very high level.”

Don Weber,
UK coach

Cross country harrier Charlie Kern
making strides in class, on course

rnacev comma/Korma $1.11

Charlie Kern, middle without a shirt, along with three other Wild-
cat cross country runners, practices recently.

“Everything fell into place (last
year) because we made it happen.
This year we just have to realize
that it’s not going to happen for
us.”

Kern said, however, a slow start
may help motivate the team more
for the SEC tournament.

“You want to do well during
the season, but we know that the
bottom line is the tournament,”
he said. “The tournament is really
the only thing that matters. Hope-
fully, we will peak around touma-
ment time."

The physical aspects of cross
country training are demanding, to
say the least. The team runs about
60 miles per week and spends
countless hours working out in
the weight room.

“Some days you just don‘t want
to do it (run),” Kern said. “But
when you're finished at the end of

the day you feel very self-
satisfied.”

Kem’s teammates said they ad-
mire his determination.

“Chuck is one of the most dis-
ciplined guys on the team,” said
junior runner James B. Kaiser, an
All-SEC performer last year.
“When it's a tough day, he‘ll get
on us and tell us to keep on
working because he knows it will
pay off.”

Despite the hectic schedule of
being a top college runner and a
full—time student, Kern said he
keeps his life in perspective with
the help of his religion.

“Training, racing and school
can really get you down," he said.
“But the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes helps to remind me of
what's really important, and that
is Jesus Christ."

 

 

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Barry Reeves
Sports Editor

Giants Win pennant
on Clark’s 2-run
single in 8th inning

By JIM DONAGHY
Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — The San
Francisco Giants got the ultimate
Thrill from Will and the Bay Area
got its ultimate World Series.

Will Clark's bases-loaded single
with two outs in the eighth inning
gave the Giants a 3-2 victory over
the Chicago Cubs and the National
League pennant yesterday and set
up a Bay Bridge Series starting Sat-
urday night in Oakland against the
Athletics.

Clark, in one of the greatest
postseason performances, set an NL
playoff record with 13 hits, a .650
batting average and 24 total bases
and was voted the series‘ most val-
uable player.

His single to center off Cubs ace
reliever Mitch Williams gave the
Giants their first pennant since
1962, four games to one, and
tagged Williams with the loss.

“I was just trying to hang in
there," said Clark, who had tripled
and scored the Giants’ first run in
on Kevin Mitchell’s sacrifice fly in
the seventh inning. “Mitch is a
gamer. He's come in all year and
gotten people out. I fought off a
few tough pitches and finally got
one I could handle."

“A lot of things have happened
to me in my life, but this is one of
the happiest,” said Giants manager
Roger Craig. “It’s great to be a
champion."

The Cubs, though, fought until
the end.

With two out in the ninth in-
ning, Giants reliever Steve Bedro-
sian gave up three straight singles
and a run before retiring Ryne
Sandberg on a grounder to second
to pick up a save.

Giants starter Mike Bielecki,
who allowed only three hits in 7 W
3 innings, walked pinch—hitter
Candy Maldonaldo, Brett Butler and
Robby Thompson with two outs in
the eighth to load the bases. Clark
had eight RBIs in the series.

It was yet another disappointing
loss for the Cubs, who have not
won a World Series since beating
the Detroit Tigers in 1908 and have
not even been to one since 1945
when they lost to the St. Louis
Browns.

It was the 16th NL pennant for
the Giants since the World Series
started in 1903, with 14 coming
when the team played in New
York. The Giants last won a World
Series in 1954 when they swept
Cleveland.

It was the first time the Giants
have clinched the National League
flag since moving from Seals Sta-
dium to Candlestick Park.

The Giants and Athletics have
met each other three times in the
World Series. with the last coming
in 1913 when the A’s played in
Philadelphia.

Rick Reuschel pitched eight in-
nings, allowing an unearned run
and seven hits to pick up the win.

Unlike the first four games, the
starting pitchers were in command.

Reuschel, bombed in Game 2 in
Chicago, allowed just the tainted
run in the third inning and Bielecki
pitched six scoreless innings before
the Giants tied it.

Almost predictable, Clark played
the pan of hero again for the Giants
and led off the seventh with a triple
into the right—field comer.

Mitchell followed with a sacrifice
fly to deep center field, tying the
score.

 

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Henderson combines
every baseball skill

By JIM UTKE
Associated Press

TORONTO — There's so much
energy, see, that sometimes his
nervous system must feel like it’s
on fire, and sometimes it's enough
just to run and run and dive head
first, as though toward a pool of
cool, clear water, in some desperate
attempt to quench the flame.

But other times, there’s just so
much energy burning inside that
he‘s got to run and run and talk
and talk, fast, his legs and his
mouth churning, churning, chum-
ing, to keep what's inside inside
and not let it burst through the top
of that neatly levelled flat-top Afro.

That‘s what makes Rickey Hen-
derson the most irresistible force in
baseball. That’s what makes Rick-
ey Henderson the best leadoff man
in the game today, maybe the best
of all time.

That’s what makes Henderson
run - and leave turbulence in his
wake.

“Even when I was a kid," Hender-
son said Sunday, “I got people all
worked up.

“I like to get people worked up,
see I don't like it when guys sit
back and wait for things to come. If
you’re that way, I'll always be on
your back, I'll always keep push-
mg."

Henderson was, for the moment
anyway, standing dead still while
celebration swirled all around him
in the Oakland Athletics‘ locker
room, an MVP with champagne on

UK women
and men win
at CC meet
in Chicago
Staff reports

The UK men‘s and women’s
cross country team dominated the
Loyola University Lakefront Invita-
tional in Chicago last weekend,
winning both team titles.

The Lady Kats, ranked No. 2 in
the nation, easily handled the 19-
team field as it scored an 82-point
margin of victory in Saturday’s
meet at Montross Hill — Lincoln
Park. Valerie McGovern paced the
lady Kats as she won the individu-
al title. Teammate Donna Combs
finished just behind McGovern for
second place.

Other Lady Kats finishing in the
top 10 were Sherry Hoover
(fourth), Kerry Rink (fifth), Jenni-
fer Kendall (sixth) and Christa
Holms (seventh).

Following the Lady Kats in team
scoring were the University of Day-
ton (second), Liberty University
(third) and Loyola (fourth).

The men’s team recorded its first
team victory of the season in Satur-
day's meet with a 42-point margin
of victory. Freshman George Yia-
nellis led the Cats with a third-
place individual finish.

Charlie Kern was the next high-
est Wildcats finisher with a fourth-
place finish, followed by Jim B.
Kaiser in fifth, Jim A. Kaiser in
sixth and Alan Thomas in seventh.

East Illinois finished second be-
hind the Cats in the team scoring,
and Loyola finished third.

UK golfer Tim LeRoy shot a fi-
nal-round 71 to claim 10th place in
Eastern Kentucky University's Fall
Colonel Classic Sunday afternoon
in Richmond. The Wildcats im-
proved their team standing by one
place to finish fifth overall. UK
posted a 54-hole total of 892 to put
them 17 strokes behind team cham-
pion Marshall University.

LeRoy finished tops on the UK
team with a 3-day total of 220, sev-
en strokes behind individual cham—
pion Jay Davis of the University of
Louisville. Wildcat Chris Liner fin-
ished second on the squad with a
221, and Robby Davis finished
third on the UK team with a 225.

 

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invited to attend this tree talk

“Christianity and
Responsible
Healing for Children
and Adults"
by David L. Degler, 0.8.8.
of Nashville. Tennessee
Member oi the Christian Science
Board oi Lectureship
Thursday, October 12. 1989
7:30 pm.

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Kentucky, 214 N. Broadway
Lexington. Kentucky
ALL ARE WELCOBE
Free child care and ample lighted
parking provided

Auspices oi First Church oi Christ.
Scientist

 

 

Lexington. Kentucky

 

the top of his head only - as though
he wouldn’t or couldn't stand still
long enough to be properly an-
minted.

Dirt, however, was smeared
across the front of his jersey. Same
as it always is and always was, ever
since that day in the minor leagues
that Tom Trebelhorn, now the
manager of the Milwaukee Brew-
ers, taught Henderson to slide head
first, to go after every base leading
with his chin.

Sometimes it got Henderson into
trouble. Sometimes it got him no-
ticed

This time, though, it made Hen-
derson's whole greater than the sum
of his parts - speed, power, grace,
flamboyance - and it made him the
most commanding presence in a
post-season series since Reggie
Jackson abdicated the title of “Mr.
October."

And most important to Hender-
son, this time it made Henderson 3
winner.

“I started to wonder if I was ever
going to get into a World Series.
I’m just glad I did the things to
help this club win," he said.
Among the things Henderson
dirt

In Game 1, he broke up a double
play with such velocity and ferocity
that the tying and winning runs
scored on second baseman Nelson
Liriano's feeble, ultimately wild at-
tempt to complete the play.

In Game 2, he stole four bases,
almost single-handedly creating two
runs for the Athletics.

Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday, October 10,1989 — 3

 

 

Notre Dame, Miami still tops

But Colorado Buffaloes
charge upward in poll

Associated Press

Notre Dame is still No. 1, but
the explosive Colorado Buffaloes
are winning supporters on and off
the field.

The Irish, who beat Stanford
27-17 Saturday, received 54 first-
place votes from a nationwide
panel of 60 sports writers and
broadcasters, accumulating 1,494
out of a possible 1,500 points.

Notre Dame has topped the As-
sociated Press college football
poll since supplanting Michigan
the first week of the season.

The third-ranked Buffaloes, who
blew out Missouri 49-3 irt their
first home game since the death
of quarterback Sal Aunese, picked
up a pair of first-place votes. Col-
orado, which moved from fifth to
third last week, received 1,371
points.

Miami, Fla., which pounded
Cincinnati 56—0, remained No. 2
with the other four firstvplace
votes and 1,428 points.

The top three learns are each 5-
0, as is Nebraska, which stayed at
No. 4 after racking up 723 yards
of offense in rolling over Kansas
St. 58—7. The Cornhuskers col-
lected 1,298 points.

No. 5 Michigan (3-1), No. 6

Tennessee (5-0) and No. 7 Arkan-
sas (4-0) all held position.

The Wolverines, the top-ranked
preseason team, shut down Wis—
consin 24-0 and received 1,232
points. Tennessee, which collect-
ed 1,205 points, edged Georgia
17-14. Arkansas got a pair of
touchdowns each from fullbacks
Barry Foster and J uJ u Harshaw in
beating Texas Christian 41-9 and
get 1,108 points.

Houston (4-0) got six touch-
down passes from quarterback An-
dre Ware in a 66-10 victory over
Baylor and made the biggest jump
in the poll, from No. 12 to
eighth. The Cougars have 1,002
points, eight more than Pittsw
burgh (4—0-1), which dropped one
place to ninth after beating Tcrn—
ple 27-3.

West Virginia, tied with South
em Cal last week as No. 9. had
the biggest drop, falling to 20th
and to its first regular-season de-
feat since 1987, a 12-10 upset at
the hands of Virginia Tech.

USC (4-1) rounded out the Top
Ten. The Trojans beat Washing-
ton 24-16 and picked up 951
points.

The Second Tcn is made up of
Alabama, Auburn, North Carolina

 

 

 

 

1 Notre Dame (6) 5-0 1
2 Miami 5-0 2
3 Nebraska 5-0 3
4 Colorado 5-0 5
5 Michigan 3-1 3
6 Tennessee 5-0 10
7 Arkansas 4-0 6
8 Pittsburgh 4-0—1 9
9 Auburn 3-1 6
1 0 USC 4-1 11
1 1 Houston 40 —
12 Alabama 4-0 12
13 Clemson 5-1 13

15
14
9

Others receiving votes were:West Virginia 6 and Oklahoma

 

bec'ae Varzoeky Kernel sports 513“

State, Clemson, Oklahoma. Illi-
nois, Air Force and Washington
State at 17th, Florida State and
West Virginia.
Last week’s Second Ten was
Auburn,
North Carolina State, Clemson,
Oklahoma, Syracuse. Illinois.
Texas .-\&.’\1 and Air Force.

Michigan State, ranked 21st.

Houston,

Alabama,

State and l’(‘l..~\.

TRISH HAPVRING‘w'n "

and UCLA, .\o. 22, each named
up three spots. Penn State and
South Carolina were next, and
Brigham Young and Florida ttcd
for 25th. South Carolina, BYU
and Florida were all newcomers.
last week, positions 21 to 25
were held by \Vttxhlngtttn State.
Honda Statc. Oregon. .\ltclu:;t!t

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

  
 

  
 
 
  
  
 
  
 
  
   
 
 

  
 
 

 
 
  
 

  
 
 
   

 

 

“I wasn’t rubbing
it in—l just wanted
Eddie to know
the score of
last night’s game.”

with

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
 
 

 
  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

lot lc

Go ahead and gloat. \i ru tan

rub it in all the way to Chicago

Altir’l‘ Long Instance Service

Besides. your best friend Eddie
was the one who said your team
could never win three straight.

So give him a call. It costs a

ss than you think to let him
know who‘s headed for the Playoffs.
Reach out and touch someone.“

If youd like to l\'11()\\‘ more about
A'l‘&T products and scrx'it‘cs. likc
international (ltlling and the .Xlt’x‘l‘
Card.

call its at 1 800 333-0300.

>

“T

The right choice.

 

 

 

 

  
  
 

 
    

 4 - Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday, October 10,1989

13 more to be inducted into UK hall

Continued from page 1

sands of graduates from the Univer-
snty."

Nominees must be UK graduates
and have achieved national or inter-
national prominence in their field
of study that reflects favorably on
the state and the University, Brum-
field said.

Nominations are made by UK
alumni and are evaluated by a com-
mittee appointed by the president of
the Alumni Association. Tradition-
ally selections for the hall are made
every five years, but Friday’s alum-
ni induction banquet was moved up
a year to coincide with the celebra-
tion of the mom anniversary of the
founding of the National Alumni
Association.

“The alumni banquet is the cul—
minating event in our celebration
of the National Alumni Associa-
tion's centennial,” Brumfield said.

Athletics

Continued from page 1

Newton said he expected outcry
from students over the initial deci-
sion, but he said he was surprised
by the response he received from
boosters who were to get the tick—
ets.

“I had anticipated that some stu-
dents would be upset over the com-
mittee‘s action,” said Newton in a
release. “I had not, however, antici-
pated the tough situation this
would create for these donors.
These are people who, in a time of
real need and out of love for the
University, gave money to support
this renovation. This has turned
from a very positive situation to a
negative one for them, because of
their feeling of displacing the stu-

About 120,000 people have grad-
uated from UK, according to 8mm-
field. Selections for the UK Hall of
Distinguished Alumni will not be
made again until 1995.

This year's