xt7wwp9t4s6h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wwp9t4s6h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1990-08-30 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, August 30, 1990 text The Kentucky Kernel, August 30, 1990 1990 1990-08-30 2020 true xt7wwp9t4s6h section xt7wwp9t4s6h  

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First-year vending by UK proves profitable

By NIKKI BERRONG
Contributing Writer

First-year totals have proven that
UK’s decision to take vending ser-
vices into its own hands was a wise

one.

During the 1989-90 school year,
sales reached an estimated $2.1 mil-
lion, a substantial increase from the
$1.5 million figure from the previ-
ous year, according to Food Servic-
es Director Robert Braun.

“We expected the new system to
increase sales a little, but we are do-
ing a much, much better job than we
thought we would,” Braun said.

UK became the first school to run
its own vending system last fall, re-
placing leased vending machines
with ones that accept payment in
several forms.

The machines give UK students,
faculty and staff the option of mak-
ing purchases either by cash or by
debit cards. The machines read a

 

Sales generate an estimated $2.1 million

 

magnetic strip on the card and de-
ducts the amount of purchase from
the balance.

Braun attributed the difference in
sales to the wider selection and the
higher quality of products available.

In previous years, UK leased its
vending machines from Canteen
Corp. Under the contract with Can-
teen, UK received 17 percent profit

from the machines. Vending reve-
nues were put into a scholarship
fund.

The new system was purchased
on a self-loan from UK’s housing
and dining reserve funds. Profits
from the machines are being used to
erase the debt from the loan and
should be completely paid off in a

Braun said 17 percent of the prof-
its still go into a scholarship fund,
and that amount may increase after
the loan is repaid.

Many other universities have be-
gun to follow suit. Since UK in-
stalled the new machines, eight
schools. including Syracuse Univer~
sity, have visited the Lexington
campus to see the program at work.
Syracuse began using a similar
vending system in July.

Like UK, Syracuse will control its

own vending and will use the debit
card system. In addition. Vanderbilt
University will begin using a debit
card system, although the school
will remain under contract with a
vending company.

Braun said he remains confident
about the future of the program.

“We feel we made a real good de-
cision," he said. “The sales and in-
terest of other schools definitely
point to that. I think it will work out
well.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

MCHAEL CLEVENGER ‘“ e" D S‘s“

STADIUM WISE: Trina Arvold, a freshman in physical therapy. Studies in Commonwealth Stadium Monday afternoon. Trina will be joined Saturday by Wildcat football fans who will watch UK‘s first game ;

 

Lohman seeking raise in SGA presidential stipend

'By GREGORY A. HALL
Senior Staff Writer

Student Government Association
President Sean Lohman wants a
raise.

He says the $3,300 allocated by
the president’s office through the
Dean of Students’ office is not
enough to take care of school ex-
penses.

“By the time that I leave I would
like to see the student body presi~
dent’s stipend tied to tuition, room
and board.” Lohman said.

The cost for an in-state under-
graduate student is $6,770, accord-
ing to the financial aid office.

The second-tenn president from
Prospect, Ky., said he had to pay
about $400 more last year than what
the University gave him.

The stipend “didn't cover much at
all.” Lohman said.

Lohman said he is making the re-
quest because he doesn‘t want to see
a potential candidate not run be-
cause of the costs.

“If I went out there and got anoth’
er job, I could make four times that
money." he said.

The stipend for this year has not
been determined, Lohman said. He
plans to take up the issue with the
new University president.

According to the current stipends,
SGA Vice President Sarah Coursey
will receive $2,200.

Lohman hopes to split a $2,200
raise with Coursey, to make up for
the increases in school expenses
since the stipend was created by for—
mer UK President Otis A. Single-

Singletary set up the stipends to
pay for tuition, room and board,
books and other school related fees,
Lohman said.

Wethington defends
administrative career

By ANGELA JONES
Staff Writer

Charles Wethington defended his
qualifications as a leader of the Uni-
versity last night, saying he doesn’t
lack academic credentials and is in
touch with student-oriented issues.

“I haven’t been in Timbuktu for
the last 25 years," Wethington said
at a special meeting with a group of
about 50 students and staff on the
23rd floor of Kirwan Tower.

Wethington said he feels his expe-
rience at the community college lev-
el and nine-month stint as interim
president has given him a broad un-
derstanding of how UK works.

A student had questioned the 54-
year-old about his background, cit-
ing a letter printed in yesterday's
Kernel.

The letter. written by a former fa-
culty member of the Board of Trus-
tees, said in part that Wethington
would not be hired as “an assistant
professor” because of a lack of
scholarly work and because he's
never been a faculty member. The
letter stated that if Wethington is se-
lected resident, the University will

“have great difficulty recruiting top
scholars.”

Wethington, who has a doctorate
in educational psychology, said the
scholarly background of an individ-
ual considered for the presidency is
“only a piece" of the criteria that
should be considered.

“I think skill and vision are also
important," said Wethington. who
said he feels his experience can
withstand close scrutiny.

Wethington believes a special
committee conducting the search for
a replacement to former president
David Roselle Ins conducted an
honest, unbiased search. He won’t
say whether he's still a candidate,
although he believes many people
may think his position makes him a
shoe-in for the position.

“By no means do I feel that the
decision has already been made,”
said Wethington.

The finalists’ names won't be re-
leased until the first one arrives at
UK on Sept. ll. UK Student Gov-
emment Association President Sean
Lohman announced at a senate

See WETHINGTON. Back Page

Dean of Students Douglas Wilson
said that the stipend was not intend-
ed to cover all expenses, but said
that an increase is justified.

“The precedent has already been
set,” Wilson said. “It’s just a matter
of an amount that is appropriate."

Currently, the SGA president’s
stipend is $3,300. There are two
$2,200 stipends for SGA vice presi-
dents. When the stipends were creat-
ed, there were two vice presidents.

Three years ago, one vice presi-
dency was eliminated. However, the
stipend allocation continued to be in
the University budget. No SGA
funds are used to pay the stipends.

Lohman said he hopes for an ex-
tra $1,100 by splitting the vacant
vice-presidential stipend with Cour-
sey.

Last year. the extra $2,200 went
to the SGA executive directors, at
the request of the SGA president.

 

By MARY MADDEN
Staff Writer

When students vote in the next
Student Government Association
election, they may not vote for
SGA president and vice president
separately, as in past years.

At last night’s senate meeting,
the Operations and Evaluations
committee passed unanimously to
the senate floor a bill that would
change the presidental/vice presi—
dental election to a ticket race.

If the bill is passed at next
week’s meeting, candidates for
SGA president and vice president
will run together on a single tick-

 

et, as in national Presidental elec-
tions. The total expenditure of the
ticket will be limited to $500.

In last year’s SGA election, stu-
dents who voted were asked if
they thought the president and
vice president should be elected
by ticket. The students voted ap-
proximately 3-1 in favor of the

proposal-

SGA President Sean Lohman
said that in past elections, not
having the candidates elected by
ticket had caused some problems.
The new officers sometimes
“wanted to complete different
agendas,” he said. Lohman, who
co—sponsored the bill with SGA

Senate to consider ticket amendment

vice president Sarah Coursey,
thought an election by ticket
would help SGA run “more
smoothly."

Christa Collins, senator from
the College of Education, said:
“We felt that as a senate (it should
pass the bill) because that is what
the students voted for last year.”

Also last night, the Appropria-
tions and Revenue committee
passed two bills unanimously to
the senate floor. The first bill rec-
ommended the allocation of $350
to televise six senate meetings
during the 1990-91 school year.

See SGA, Page 5

 

 

 

ONLY THE STRONG SURVIVE: Heavy winds took their toll on
umbrellas yesterday by the Student Center.

MEL Ctmmmm Sill

 

 

Officials
don’t see
hostages

By THOMAS WAGNER
Associated Press

US. officials rushed to Jordan's
Iraqi border yesterday to greet
Americans fleeing from Iraq, but
there was no sign that Saddam
Hussein had tamed out his pledge
to free Wcstcm women and chil-
dren.

No members of that hostage
group were aboard the two Iraqi
Airways flights that arrived in Am—
man. Jordan. from Baghdad yester-
day.

And although US. Ambassador
Roger Harrison humed to the border
post of Ruwcishid. northeast of Am-
man. to help greet Americans, none
showed up.

“I have no evidence...indicating
that people have been allowed to
leave," White House spokesman Ro-
man Popadiuk told reporters in
Washington.

On Tuesday. the State Depart-
ment said Iraq took nine more
Americans into custody in Iraq and
Kuwait, bringing to 70 the number

 

Gulf Crisis Forum
at Free Speech
Area

 

 

 

Volleyball sea—
son starts Sat-
urday with
Kickoff Klas—

, sic.

Story, Page 4

Diversions ..................... . 2
Sports ................................. 4
Viewpoint ............................ 6
Classifieds ......................... 7

 

 

 

who have been rounded up and ap-
parently moved to military installa-
tions to prevent a US. attack.
Nevertheless. State Department
spokeswoman Margaret Tutwrlcr
said yesterday that if Saddam earner.

See IRAQ. Page 5

 

 

 . 2 - Kentucky Kernel, Thursday, August 30, 1990

Auditions for UK production leave actors, directors hopeful

By MYRNA MARCA
Staff Writer

The UK Theatre department last
weekend held auditions for two up-
coming productions, “The Lion in
Winter” and “Extremities."

“The Lion in Winter,” a play writ-
ten by Jarnes Goldman, is a “classic
soap opera," said director James W.
Rodgers. This mainstage production
is set in 1183 England and shows
that times do not change, no matter
in which kingdom you live.

The plot revolves around the disa-
greement about who should succeed
King Henry. The play is set in a time
before the sons of kings inherited the
throne upon their father‘s death.

Auditions for “The Lion in Win-

ter” were open, which means that
anyone could watch the auditions,
but the auditions for “Extremities”
were closed.

Rodgers said he was pleased with
the auditions, and although the first
day of auditions was Sunday, there
was a good turnout, and students
seemed well prepared.

“Most were familiar with the play
one way or another,” Rodgers said.

Theatre junior Clem Stembaugh
said he was familiar with the script
before he came to audition for the
part of John. Stembaugh has already
been in two mainstage productions
and needs three more in order to
graduate.

“Auditions are hell for everyone."
Stembaugh said. “(My advice is to)

 

By 0.8. WILLIAMS
Contributing Writer

“Funnier!!!" ..
-—Sid Caeser

While virtually any type of
film genre deserves interpreta-
tion, analyzation and dissection
until nothing is nothing left, com-
edy is one exception to the rule.

Though many comedic films
are made with ulterior motives,
the bottom line is always ‘will
they laugh?‘ Two main reasons
why comedies fail are too much

 

Boring dialogue, director
turn ‘Business’ into waste

focus on motives and a lack of
comedic talent.

The people behind “Taking
Care Of Business" aren’t intelli-
gent enough to make the first
mistake and don‘t seem to care if
they make the second.

Instead, the writers give Belu-
shi and Grodin almost improvisa-
tional dialogue and exchange.
The characters with dull, cliche-
ridden lines that clash badly with
Belushi-Grodin bits. The bad sec—
ondary performers didn’t try very
hard to make a bad situation any
better.

 

 

 

 

DAVID BENIOT

SUN RA ARKESTRA

TITO PUENTE LATIN
JAZZ ALL STARS

THE JIMMY HEATH
QUARTET and

and hls QUARTET

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CHRISTOPHER HOLLYDAY 8 pm.

September 28, 1990
8 pm.

Memorial Hall
October 20, 1990

8 pm.

Memorial Hall

November 9,1990
8 pm.
Memorial Hall

December 1, 1990

Memorial Hall

 

 

 

Series tickets-$40 general public, $25 UK Students,
Individual Concert Tickets—$15

Tickets available at 106 Student Center Ticket OITICG. Extended Box
Office Hours 10 am to 7 pm, August 3031 and September 2-7. For
more information call 257-1378 Tickets on sale starting Thursday

SPONSORED BY THE UK STUDENT ACTIVETIES BOARD SPOTLIGHT JAZZ COMMITTEE
a. THE OFFICE OF MtNORITV STUDENT AFFAIRS

 

 

 

 

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Saturday September 15,8 pm!
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Ilk students receive $5 off with valid UK student ID'

seats $22.75 and now on sale at al Ticketmaster . . . ~»
and the Rupp Arena Box Oftlcel

 

pay close attention to what other
characters are saying about your
character and read the script until
you become the person.”

Some people auditioned for just
for the experience.

“As a freshman, I’m really just
want to show my face." said Candy
Webber, a telecommunications
freshman.

Webber auditioned for “The Lion
in Winter" and “Extremities” be-
cause she wanted to increase her
chances of landing a part, although
she admitted she wasn’t expecting
much.

In another section of the Fine Arts
Building. director Bruce LeCure
watched patiently as a crowd of peo-
ple stood in a hallway to audition for

a pan in “Extremities.” The play ex—
plores the psychology of rape and
how three women react when they
catch the man who has attempted to
rape one of them. It is based upon
one woman's true-life experience.

LeCure said he saw the play in
New York and was impressed by it.
He met with playwright William
Mastmsimone and discussed the im-
plications of the play.

“It deals with an issue still unre-
solved, considering that one out of
every three women will be sexually
assaulted,” LeCure said. “There are
very few options women have (when
raped)."

Marcy Lubeck, an undeclared jun-
ior, auditioned for the part of Patricia
in LeCure’s play. She said she be-

lieves the play will open a lot of
eyes, because rape is an important is—
sue to address.

Lubeck auditioned for the “experi-
ence of getting in front of people.

“I just like to stay active, whether
it be watching theatre or trying out,”
Lubeck said. “Freshmen ought to au-
dition because it’s a good experience
even if you don‘t get cast”

She said she tries to create her
character's background before she
auditions, but even then, she some-
times experiences stage fright

“I think even professionals experi-
ence stage fright every moment,"
Lubeck said. “I don’t think anyone
can completely walk in front of an
audience that they’ve never seen be-
fore and be somebody else comforta-

bly."

Greg Collings. a theatre junior,
said he believes no one was really as
prepared as they had hoped to be, be-
cause the auditions came right after
the summer, and no one knew any-
thing about the plays.

Collings auditioned for the role of
Raul, the rapist in “Extremities.” He
said he finds acting as a way to be
someone totally opposite of his own
personality.

“It‘s fun doing something like this
because it‘s something completely
different than the way I usually am.
especially in this role."

Performance: of “The Lion in
Winrer” are Sept. 27-29 and Oct. 4-
6. “Extremities” runs Oct. 23-27.

Comedy Channel has hit with ‘Mystery Science’

By DEBORAH HASTINGS
Associated Press

LOS ANGELES -— Bela Lugosi is
having a bad day. Murdering brides
and stealing their bodily fluids to re-
juvenate your aging, cranky wife is a
disgusting job.

And “The Corpse Vanishes”
(1942), a sublevcl thriller, is a dis-
gusting movie. Just ask the two ro-
bots and the guy sitting in the front
row.

“No one can hold a candle to him
in this role," says one. “Actually,
maybe someone could douse him
with a flammable liquid and then
hold a candle to him."

Talking back to bad movies is
something most people can relate to.
But few are as funny (or a weird) as
Joel Hodgson and his two robot pals
who screen catastrophes of filmmak-
ing on “Mystery Science Theater
3000” on Home Box Office's The
Comedy Channel.

This show with a baffling title and
a bizarre premise is something new
in the land of comedy television. It's
funny, intelligent and off the beaten
path. Actually, it's in outer space.

As the opening song explains, Joel
was a janitor whose bosses at the
Gizmonic Institute didn't like him.
So they shot him into space. This all
takes place “in the not too distant fu-

ture."

Aboard the Satellite of Love, (also
the title of an old Lou Reed song),
Hodgson is forced to watch cheesy
movies such as “The Corpse Vanish-
es," “The Crawling Hand” and “The
Robot vs. the Aztec Mummy.”

Lonely Joel builds two robot bud-
dies out of spare Satellite of Love
pans, and together they sit before
this orbiting movie screen and deliv-
er a diatribe of bad puns, jokes and
sight gags.

The three appear in silhouette at
the bottom of the movie screen, on
which the film plays in its entirety
while they quietly comment from the
theater's front row.

“Mystery Science Theater 3000"
has become a cult hit for thousands
of devotees. “MST3K” (as viewers
call it) is one of the most popular
shows on The Comedy Channel,
which just renewed it for a second
l3-episode season.

The unorthodox success of Mys-
tery Science Theater is about as off-
beat as Hodgson himself, who puts
the show together in a warehouse in
Eden Prairie, Minn., outside Minne—
apolis.

The 30-year-old comedian stays in
Minnesota because he does not like
big city life or Hollywood. He has
had a speedy brush with fame and
decided it was too much.

 

 

Record

Friday and Saturday Only!
Alley beside
Woodland Park Book Store

516 E. High Street

Book
and

Sale

 

 

The
BREWERY

(upstairs at Breeding's)
presents

Jimmy Buffet Night - Tonight!

Featuring

LARRY REDMON

* No Cover, Margarita & Tequila Specials

 

Friday
& -
Saturday

 

presents

Thursday — Strolling Ruins
(Stonesy Soul)

* U.K. I.D. No Cover Charge

BAD GUYS
(College Rock N Roll)

 

At age 22, right out of college, he
came to Los Angeles with his stand-
up comedy routine and gadget col-
lection (including a burning purse
and a 360-degree head cranker) and
ended up doing bits on David Letter-
man and “Saturday Night Live."

Hodgson, who tends to speak in
dry understatement and incomplete
sentences, described the genesis of
“MST3K” this way:

“It staned from the idea of talk ra-
dio. Someone being really alone.
The DJ being alone and you being
alone in a car. Gilligan's Island,‘ it's
kind of like, too. Being isolated.”

On “MST3K.” Joel's character is
about as isolated as you can get.
Hurtling through space with his ro-
bot friends Crow and Tom Servo,
the trio appear as silhouettes in the

(The fatal weghqtu_#_
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Ii:mim'de Stamihoaen s inks,
pies hot-us rm nes

sfi.

it's all for

 

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ium balls,onol

lower right comer of the television
screen, looking up at a large screen.

Each two-hour show contains
about 450 jokes, Hodgson said. The
writing takes place around a table in
the Best Brains warehouse, where
Hodgson, Mallon and the company's
eight other employees watch films,
make fun of them, and write it down.

In “The Corpse Vanishes" episode,
as one bride after another drops in a
heap at the altar, Joel, Crow and
Tom Servo break into "I'm Getting
Buried in The Morning."

When it becomes apparent the
brides are not dead after all, but
merely a little low on life-sustaining
fluids, an intrepid female reporter
proclaims “You mean they may be
alive in a catalytic state?"

“Iowa?” shouts Joel.

 

i’r‘

 

 

l

 

FULBRIGHT GRANTS
for graduate study abroad
1991-92
Information Session
3:00 pm. on August 30th
207 Bradley Hall
Campus application deadline Sept. 21
Call 257-8139

 

Holly Baumgarten
Caroline It'd
Tina Blevim

Tara Brennan
Deborah Brock
Julie Byron

Faye Campbell
Julie Click

Jessica Combs

Jane Kelly

Jennifer Cox
Julie Dentinger
Jennifer Doller
Danyelle Duncan
Michal Farmer
Lindsey Graves

Julie Grigg

 

The Sisters of Kappa Delta
proudly Welcome

Anissa Harmon
Angela Hatfield
Jmlfcr Higby
Wally Holmes
Stacey Humkey
Dawn Jolly

Kara Kirby

Jennifer Locklar
Keeta Martin
Natalie May
Stephhanie Miklosik
Amy McCutchen
Stacy McSweency
Barbara 011

Angela Overton
Amy Palmer

We Love You
Your KD Sisters

Swimmer
Amy P“

Abby Mn
Andrcakeagan
Kelley Mormon
Elizabeth Ryan
Caroline Shively
Courtney Thompson
Lisa Thompson
Kristi Thrift
Maquel Turner
April Vaughn

Amy Walker

Erika Wolff

Pamela Woods
Allison Wright

 

 

 

 Officials
search

for clues
in deaths

‘By RON WORD
Associated Press

GAINESVILLE, Fla. — An army
of investigators, including an FBI
agent who tracked “Son of Sam,"
Charles Manson and Ted Bundy,
searched yesterday for a “methodi~
cal maniac” with a loathing for
slightly built bninettes.

Community leaders in this terri-
fied college town organized a march
for “all those who are outraged.
fearful and in mourning” for the
four women and one man found
slain since Sunday.

Three of the women were horribly
mutilated.

About 600 local police, state in-
vestigators and FBI agents were in-
vestigating and providing additional
security at the off-campus apartment
complexes of the type in which the
victims died.

The killer is shrewd, a “methodi-
cal maniac” who apparently tracked
certain types of women and entered
their apartments through unlocked
doors or windows, or by forcing
sliding-glass doors, Police Chief
Wayland Clifton said yesterday.

“There is a similarity in physical
appearance in the four female vic—
tims as far as hair color, eye color
and general physical build,” Clifton
said.

An FBI serial-killer team and ex-
perts from the Florida Department
of Law Enforcement are developing
a psychological profile of the killer
stalking the University of Florida
area.

Among the FBI officials was John
Douglas, who was involved in the
serial homicide cases of Bundy ——
who died in the Florida electric
chair last year — Manson and Da-
vid Berkowitz, the 19705 “Son of
Sam" killer in New York City.

Criminologist Alexander Bassin
of Florida State University, where
Bundy killed two women, said there
was “an absolutely chilling resem-
blance” between the Gainesville
slayings and the Bundy murders of
I978.

University of Florida criminolo-
gist Ronald Akers said the killer “is
most likely white, older than his vic-
tims and probably has a background
of violence."

Investigators say all five victims
were stabbed to death.

Police have released autopsy in-
formation on only one of the vic-
tims. Christa Hoyt

Hoyt, 18, was sliced open from
the pelvis to the chest and decapitat-
ed, Alachua County Sheriff Lu
Hindery said.

The Orlando Sentinel reported her
head was found on a shelf in her
apartment, but Hindery would not
comment on that.

The bodies of roommates Christi-
na Powell, 17, and Sonja Larson,
18, who were found Sunday, were
mutilated.

Investigators who spoke on condi-
LIOI'I ot anonymity said tne VIClImS
breasts had been cut with a surgical-
ly sharp insu'ument.

The bodies of Tracey Inez Paules,
23, and Manuel R. Taboada. 23, dis-
covered Tuesday, had not been mu-
tilated. police said.

Police warned the killer could

 

re

 

 

REFLECTIONS OF RELIEF: Heavy rains yesterday caused huge puddles like this
one in front of the Classroom Building. But rains let up by late afternoon.

IICHAEL CLEVENGER/Kamol Stall

 

 

change the way he gains entry to
apartments.

“He can change his method of op-
erations as he desires.” Clifton said.
“We’ve gotten a rather shrewd indi-
vidual on our hands.” He did not
elaborate.

There was no evidence of satanic
cults or messages left for police by
the killer, he said.

The murders came at “possibly
the worst time of all," said Mayor
Courtland Collier, because of the
large influx of students for the first
week of fall classes.

Although hundreds of fearful stu-
dents temporarily have abandoned

their off-campus apartments, univer-
sity spokesman Larry Humes said:
“We are not seeing a sea of empty
desks. The numbers are down, but

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there is not a mass exodus.”

University President John Lom-
bardi promised to suspend atten-
dance regulations for those who felt
they had to go home.

But he said the school “would be
abdicating its responsibility” to
close down completely, since most
students want to continue.

Many students are spending their
nights in large groups.

Linda Helton, of West Palm
Beach, said she spent Tuesday night
with nine other people.

Others bolted themselves
their rooms.

Stores reported a run on weapons,
mace, deadbolts and even broom-
sticks that residents were using to
secure doors and windows.

Calls by concerned parents. and

into

from students calling home, over-
whelmed telephone circuits in the
Gainesville area, said Southern Bell
area manager Judy Boles.

A crowd of about 500 held a
noon-hour campus prayer vigil yes-
terday.

Speaker Susan Wieder, a 20—year-
old junior from St. Cloud, offered a
prayer for the murderer.

“I want to pray from the killer. I
want to pray for hint because I feel
sorry for him. I hate what he is
doing. I hate it, but he must be a
hurting man and he‘s out there
alone right now."

 

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Classifieds

 

 

 

Thursday. August 30. 1990 - 3

 

 

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Nancy Custer
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Darin Duke
Sarah Fleseli
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Becky Fuson

 

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Kelly Sullivan
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 4 - Kentucky Kernel. Thursday, August 30, 1990

WILD CAT VOLLEYBALL@
New edition of Cats hopes to spike opponents

Demanding schedule
will test team’s mettle

By BRIAN JENT
Managing Editor

Going into the 1990 volleyball season.
UK coach Kathy DeBoer does not expect
her team to storm out to record-setting start
of 10 consecutive wins like last season.

In fact, for about the first month of the
’90 season, the seventh-year head coach
will be watching her rag-tag group, consist-
ing of one senior, three juniors, two sopho-
mores and five freshmen, come together as
a team.

“We have a solid group of returnees and
our youngsters are very talented," DeBoer
said. “If we can mesh together, I think that
we could Start playing some decent volley-
ball by thc first of October."

Unfortunately for DeBoer. the 1990 sea-
son begins this Saturday, as UK hosts Ten-
nessee Tech in the Kentucky Kickoff Klas-
sic at Memorial Coliseum. The Cats also
play West Virginia Saturday night and tin-
lsh the tournament Sunday against Central
Michigan.

After the Kickoff Klassic, it won’t get
am easier as the Cats battle Brigham
\ oung and the University of Pacific, both
v. hich DeBoer considers Top 20 teams.

We jump from the frying pan and into
the fire." she said.

Although DeBoer expects UK to take a
few lumps in September, she predicts by
midseason the Wildcats will be rising up to
challenge every opponent they face.

“By the end of September, we are going
to know a lot about our team," DeBoer
said. “I am not looking for us to sport a
stunning win-loss record, but I think if we
can get some quality match e