xt72rb6w0s4z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt72rb6w0s4z/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1991-09-27 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, September 27, 1991 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 27, 1991 1991 1991-09-27 2020 true xt72rb6w0s4z section xt72rb6w0s4z  

Kentucky Kernel

' ‘332‘6fina‘3,
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'M.

 

Four students
chosen to be
ambassadors

By RESA WRIGHT
Contributing Writer

Four UK students will be the first
to represent the University across
the commonwealth as pan of the
new UK Ambassadors Program.

The students, selected individuals
who will serve as official public re-
lations representatives for the Uni-
versity, were notified of their ap-
pointment late last week, said
Becky Jordan, assistant dean of stu-
dents.

Jordan, who chaired of the inter-
viewing committce that selected the
ambassadors, said students chosen
are Brad Chambliss, Christa Col-
lins. David Hassler and Kimberly
Mayo.

The criteria for applying to the
positions included: a comprehen-
sive and working knowledge of the
University, good speaking skills. a
3.0 grade point average, ample time
and at least 30 completed hours at
UK.

Students applying for the position
were nominated by faculty and staff
and received applications. Upon
completion of the applications, stu-
dents then were interviewed and
chosen.

The ambassadors will serve many
roles for UK, including Speaking at
merit weekends, UK preview
nights, high school assemblies,
alumni groups and community or-
ganizations. They will also will
serve as media contacts, escort for-
eign dignitaries and help train ad-
vising conference student assistants.

This program, which will be
housed in the King Alumni Build-
ing, has been “in the works for
about a year," said Chambliss, who
thought of the idea last fall. “it
started out as a ‘what if‘ and ended
up a reality.“

Chambliss suggested his idea to
James Kuder, vice chancellor for
student affairs, who helped Cham-
bliss get both student and faculty
suppon for the program.

UK President Charles Wething-
ton OK’d the project and obtained
funding for the group.

Each student will receive a
51.000 scholarship per semester for

 

“l'm really excited to be
on the ground floor of a
program that will have

a long life span."
Brad Chambliss,
UK Ambassadors

 

their work and will be expected to
spend on the average of 10 hours
per week working for the Universi-
ty.

“I‘m really excited to be on the
ground floor of a program that will
have a long life span," Chambliss
said.

Another student involved in the
program is John Ragan. Ragan. also
appointed to his position and
awarded a scholarship. will serve as
a liaison between the ambassadors
and faculty adviser, Katie Daugher-
ty.

“1 will primarily be scheduling
appointments and presentations for
the ambassadors and doing admin-
istrative and clerical type work,”
Ragan said. “I think we have a very
diverse, qualified and talented
group and, most importantly, they
are excited about the program."

Daugherty agreed and said, “Half
the battle is over because they (am-
bassadors) are so wonderful."

She said the program is some-
thing UK has needed for a long
time.

“It shows that UK is constantly
moving forward and constantly im-
proving."

Before the ambassadors begin
their duties, they will go through a
monthlong training period, during
which time they will learn about as-
pects of the University and effec-
tive communication and public
speaking skills.

Mayo, a Spanish junior, said she
is looking forward to the training.
She especially is looking forward to
having the chance “to speak to peo—
ple who for some reason feel they
can‘t go to school. I want to show
them there are options and UK is
the place you can do it.“

. lit.

9”]...
I .L r) - ,, z. . V
. 3 1;. «p

7“ ‘ . ‘ 27. 1991

 

 

 

Building.

 

PICTURE PERFECT

 

 

 

GREG Ums~ ernei Sta.“

Margie Conkling. an art education graduate student from Lexington, is working on a painting for her art studio class in the Reynolds

 

Idea of all—black male school discussed

By JILL LEWIS
Contributing Writer

The issue of whether founding an
all-black male school in Lexington
would be the solution to reducing
the dropout rate among black stu-
dents was debated Wednesday night
by several educators during a town
meeting of the National Association
for the Advancement of Colored
People.

The speakers at the town meet»
ing, which was held at the YWCA
East End branch, discuSsed the is-
sue of whether black males would
be more productive in society if
they attended an all-black school.

“We have a serious problem in
the school system." said lvan
Banks, chairman of the Department
of Education at Kentucky State
University. “Black males need and
deserve an education.

“If we have dedication to integra-

tion, then we won't have a crisis in
the community with black males
. Schools are not meeting the needs
of blacks. They are insufficient"

The nearly 40 people in atten-
dance seemed to support the idea of
an all-black school because the
dropout rate for black males in gen-
:ml :" high

Banks also discussed developing
what he called a “targeted assis-
tance" program, which would focus
on high school students who would
be considered high-risk candidates
to drop out of school

It would combat the low retention
rate and be a step forward, he said.

As an example of how it would
be the worth the effort. Banks com-
pared the cost of an education for a
college student to the cost of hous-
ing an inmate in prison

He said the government “would
rather spend 830.000 on someone in

 

W. Main St.

 

POST-G RAD BLUES

Thomas Robinson. 24. a zoology graduate, took a moment to collect his thoughts recently in the Lexington Cemetery. located at 833

JEFFREY BURLEW/Komol Sufi

 

 

Because of a copy-editing
error, Chancellor for the Lex—
ington Campus Robert He-
rnenway was incon'ectly
identified.

 

..... A .. .

. A; .«v- A.

By LARA KALLMEYER
Contributing Writer

Instead of being filled with eager
ROTC cadets, Buell Amory will be
filled today with thousands of
books, as the Library Associates
Annual book sale begins.

"It will be a giant garage sale for
books," said Paula Pope. who is in

V"; i “.4

The UK football team (1-1) seeks its
second win against Kent (0-3) tomor-
row night at 8. Preview, Page 2.

7

charge of the book sale.

Books and magazines will be on
sale today and is open to students.
faculty. staff and the general public.
The sale draws many local book
dealers from used book stores who
are looking for hidden treasures.
Pope said.

Although most of the books will
be sold for 55. some of the better

Parents Weekend activities begin. For

books will cost $10 to $15. Most of
the magazines wtll go for 25 cenm.
“A lot of students like to come
and buy a whole year's worth of
magazines, like lime." Pope said.
Raymond Smith. a retired UK
theatre professor w ho volunteers for
these book sales. said reading is the

See LIBRARY Back page

more information, call Missy Daven-
port or Barry Stumbo at 257-8867.

prison, rather than spend $7,000 on
a college education. Now 15 the
time to stop the cycle of blacks tn
trouble and make sure our children
will not be in prison."

As a result of the proposal, Banks
said families could save money by
saving their children.

During the meeting, Banks also
discussed the parents‘ roles

in educating their children “l-.du»
cation is the community‘s responsi-
bility as well. Schools do provide
one fomt of education. but parents.
need to provide the other." Banks
said.

If the concept of an all-black
male school was begun the
NAACP would ask retired teachers
to help them staff the school l-‘und-
mg for this educational system was
not discussed in depth. but Banks
did suggest that school districts

:ould seek federal funds

Banks said black males rigs: ;:
have role models ol their cw: .. -:
to look up to, and an alliiac‘r “ .1
educational system would
in doing so

“By providing this Kym-r“ ~ -
will be able to dew?!“
confidence because the) v ‘
.ltsrrit‘ "

Don (‘ordray vice presidcn'
Fayette County‘s NAACP affix;
the community to get lf'\"i‘~.‘ f w 1*

inc promtt

:.:l.ii t‘ :,_‘All.‘i l.\

“We need '_.‘ th‘l f‘ 3 'x'
.tnd \A APP l-‘ work toe-tr 'r
138m " (“Winn \llil

Also, ritual tcachm; 0' h-‘h
Lures. Hack .ti'l‘". unite wink : b-
intecrated .- 3‘0 ~dtxaltnm’
1an
Banks said it mas .‘at‘l’xrzflt for lf‘i‘
white {\opulaut‘in an . .
shot was happening Ll t3":

. :lliu’i

KSU’s president
wants investigation

By CHARLES WOLFE
Associated Press

FRANKFORT, Ky. —~ Kentucky
State Universny's president said
yesterday he wants a specral prose-
cutor to investigate the renovation
of his official resrdence.

That should prove all the work
and spending on the presidential
house. Hillcrest Place. was proper.
John T. Wolfe Jr. said in a news
conference.

He Will ask the Board of Regents
at a meeting Friday to request at}
porntrnent of a specral prosecutor
by Attorney General Fred t‘owan.
Wolfe said.

He was taking that step “because
information has been given to the
press to suggest there are impro
prieucs." Wolfe said. “l'rn onti<
dent that there has been no wrong-
doing."

The universrty's Board ol Re—
gents chairman. former Gov. Louie
B. Nunn, this week ordered a spe-
cial audit of all spending on Hill-
crest Place. He met Tuesday With
two auditors from Arthur Andersen
& Co.. the university's contracted
accounting firm, to discuss lman-
cral records Nunn said he acquired
through univerSity channels.

undergoing reno-
vations. Story,
Page 4.

in .i tt‘llr‘r I'li‘ accruiniant'»
Nunn said the Board or Regents lull
discovered expenditures that Mi‘m
beyond a highly publicncd 552.3%
contract with a t-rankfon ulterior
decorator.

Copies of Nunn's letter were ill\<
cn to news reponers. Wolfe would
not say whether he \A,l\ referring?
the icuer in complaining or i'itor
matron suggesting unpropnetv. But
he said there had been ‘.t nuschar-
actenzauon" tit expenditures . n
Hillcrest Place.

All rclurbishtng ol the house “as
needed, and installauon wt quip
ment. such as a tax machine and
cellular telephones, was to inablc
him to work at ans llmC or dav or
night, Wollc said.

Nunn \Jltl appointment ot a spe~
cial prosecutor ‘would be a good
thing, not only to look into llillcrest
but to look into the entire KSU op-
cration."

Nunn said that would include ac-
tivities of the KSU Foundation, a
money-raising organnauon run sep-
arately from the universuy. There
has been a legal struggle. particular
ly by The State Journal newspaper
in Frankfort. tor access to the toun-

See KSU. Back page

Sports. ..................... 2
Diversrons ......... .4
Classnieds .................. 5

l

 

 2 - Kentucky Kernel. Friday, September 27, 1991

L

Cats hoping to defeat Golden Flashes

Curry says 0-3 Kent
plays with athleticism

By JEFF DRUMMOND
Stat? Wr'te

Ask Bill Curr) what has surprised
him the most sinee he took over as
head eoaeh of the Wildeats. and you
will get an Interesting reply.

“The biggest surprise since I
came to Kentuekx Is the athletic
abrhtx in the \IId~».—\meriean Confer.
ertee." Cum said. "Obviously.
there‘s a lot of good talent In Ohio
)ou don't know about In the SEC.
And the\ tend to gne us some prob-
Iems."

In praising the MAC. Cum has
set the tone for L'K's 3 pm. show-
down with Kent L'niversity tomor-
mw at Commonwealth Stadium -—
don't be surprised if the winless
Liolden Hashes Itl-BI follow sun
with recent IllSItll') and gixe the
Cats II-II hrs.

In the pasL L'K has shown a ten-
den. ‘.~ to underestimate its MAC op-
ponents.

\Tost recently, the Cats slipped by

Miami (Ohio), 23-20, in the season
opener. The game was nearly a car
bon copy of UK‘s first game of last
season. in which the Cats escaped
with a 20-17 victory Over Central
Michigan.

Tomorrow's game could become
another LIK-MAC dogfight, but
don't expect a clash of the titans.

The Golden Flashes are coming
off a loss to Ball State (2-2) and a
47-0 bashing at the hands of North
Carolina State two weeks ago. Kent
will be playing its fourth consecu-
tive road game to start the 1991
5038011.

The Cats, meanwhile, are coming
off a 13-10 loss at Indiana. UK
went into that game an 11-point un-
derdog.

Kentucky owns a 16—6-1 all-time
record against the MAC and has
won all three of its past games with
Kent.

Curry says the key to the contest
hes “up from.“

“We must run the ball better and

 

., UK, vs: Kent

We: Kenmoky 14-0
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When: 8 pm. Sunday
Mam: Commonwealth
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Radio: Live on WVLK~AIWFM g-‘:
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Baker and Dick Gabriel.

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we must stop the run better," he
said. “If those areas don‘t improve,
we're gonna have some problems
against anyone."

UK has surrendered 406 yards
rushing in Its first two games. But
Wildcat runners have been able to
muster only 179 yards rushing.

“Our offensive line must get bet-
ter, but our backs have to learn that
you just can‘t take what the line
gives you,“ Curry said. “You've got
to extend ii and get some yardage
on your own.

“When we get a crease, we’ve got
to have somebody besides Donnie
Redd to put a move on a guy or
break a tackle. So far, no one else
has done that."

and you‘ve created a monster. The
Cats have won nine straight night
games at home dating back to the
1987 season.

Freddie’s back

No, this isn't the new “Nightmare
on Elm Street” movie.

Remember Freddie
Yeah, Maggard.

He was UK’s starting quarter-
back in 1989 and pan of 1990 be-
fore suffering a shoulder injury.
Brad Smith stepped in to take over
the job, and Maggard seemingly
had disappeared.

Maggard, a senior, will be
Smith's backup in tomorrow‘s
game and has almost recovered,
Curry said.

“Freddie is throwing the best
since he got hurt," he said. “He
could have got down on himself
and poured when Brad won the
starting job. but he never did. He’s
kept working to get back in there.
We wouldn't hesitate to put him in
the game Saturday.“

Playing smart

The Cats have only been penal-
ized seven times for 45 yards in
their first two games, which is tops
in the SEC. UK drew only two yel-
low flags in last week's game at In-
diana.

Maggard?

 

 

Wiesenhahn, Norman, Hill:
Cross country, rugby, football

 

 

 

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STEVE MCFARLANO IKomol Sllfl

Freshman UK volleyballball player Krista Robinson descends
after a kill vs. Texas Sunday in Memorial Coliseum.

‘Killers’ travel East,
Runners head West

rocky strearnbeds and narrow al-
leys.

Tomorrow‘s course will in-
clude a dirt and grass terrain as
well as kilometer split markers,
both common in international
cross country meets.

Staff reports

The UK volleyball team will
take its 16.24 kills-a-game aver-
age, fifth-highest in the nation. to
Chapel Hill, N.C., tonight to play
the 5—6 Lady Tar Heels. The
Wildcats (5-5) will play Duke The women will run 6.000
(9-1) tomorrow night in Durham, meters, rather than the tradition-
N.C. a1 women's collegiate cross

Although UK lost to the country distance of 5.000 me-
eighth-ranked Texas Longhorns ters. The men, however, will run
3-1 Sunday in Memorial Coli- their traditional distance of
seum, coach Kathy DeBoer said 8,000 meters.
she is not discouraged. Last weekend UK's cross

“When we put our schedule to. country teams began the 1991
gether we knew we would come season at the Hall of Fame lnvi-
out of September Ieaming a lot tational in Bowling Green, Ky.
of things," DeBoer said. “We The Lady Kats finished second,
can reach our goals that we set while the men finished third.
for ourselves at the beginning of Senior Khalilah Muhammad
the year. We just have to stay fo- was the Lady Kats' No.1 runner.
cased and work on the things finishing ninth overall. Fresh-
that need improving and we'll be man Vadim Nemad led the
in good shape come the end of men's team, finishing third
the season." overall.

UK coach Don Weber said he
pleased with the team's perfor»
mance in Bowling Green but is
concerned with the its level of
fitness.

“Some of Our runners just
weren‘t fit to run," he said. “But
they ended up racing well de—
spite that. We still have a lot of
work to do, but we'll get better,
and that‘s encoaraging.“

Cross country teams running
in Montana

The UK men and women‘s
cross country teams will run in
the Mountain West Classic in
Missoula, Mont, tomorrow. The
Wildcats are the defending meet
champions. The Lady Kats fin-
ished third last season.

The Mountain West Classic is
unique in that it is patterned after Lady Kats coach Charlie
cross country meets held in the Schultz. shared Weber's analy-
19th century, in which teams bat— sis.
tied natural elements on courses

laid out over fenced pastures, See BRIEFS, Page3

 

 

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By BOB NORMAN
Senior Staff Writer

The last time UK played rugby
powerhouse Tennessee Tech. the
Cats could only muster four
players. Rugby. like football, re-
quires 11 players on the field
from each team.

Club rugby, however, isn’t
bound by those petty guidelines.
The game. being the source of it
all, must go on.

The Cats simply picked up the
rest of their team from the Lex-
ington Blackstones and. even
with the bigger, older Black-
stones, lost the final of Western
Kentucky’s Banshi Tournament
to the Tech team.

“Tennessee Tech has been a
power in rugby for a long time,”
said Taylor Marret. match secre-
tary. “They beat us even with the
Blackstones.”

The Cats will meet tomorrow
morning, at the crack of dawn,
and make the three-hour drive to
kaville, Tcnn., to take on
Tech at their home field. As al-
ways, UK will travel in its own
personal vehicles.

“The University was going to
charter us a jet, but that fell
through,“ Manet joked.

So have the Cats‘ opening two
games. The Cats began with
Western and lost 24-6. They fol-
lowed that up last weekend with
a 20-7 loss to the Blackstones.

But Manet. who co-coaches

 

UK rugby team
gets set to face
Tennessee Tech

the team. finds the silver-lining
lacing the muddy and bloody
UK Rugby Field.

“We looked 180 percent better
(against the Blackstones) than
we did at Western,” Marret said.
“We played together. The guys
are getting a better grasp on the
game itself."

The first half of the season —
during the fall semester — tradi-
tionally is a time of growth for
the Cats. The young players are
getting used to scrums and tries
and the bnitalities of rugby,
while the vets, like Marret, play
hard and keep an eye on the
rooks.

The brightest spot in UK’s
loss to Western was David
“Otis" Barnes’ try (a try is anal-
ogous to football’s touchdown
but is worth only four points).

“His try was textbook rugby,"
Marret said. “It was triggered by
a key steal by Pat Dougherty."

Barnes. the most talented
player on the team, scored all
seven UK points, four on the try,
two on the extra kick and anoth-
er point on a kick.

Tomorrow's game will begin
a grueling six-game road trip for
the UK squad.

“We owed a lot of people,

it

Manet said of the horrible
schedule. "And a lot of people
owed us.

“It was a case where we could
only get in touch with the people
we owed."

 

 

Briefs

Continued from page 2

“Overall I was pleased with our
second-place finish," Schultz said.
“We had a good solid first meet.
We hope to go to Montana and give
our best shot."

Soccer team playing in WKU
tournament

After 10 days off, the UK men's
soccer team will resume their inau-
gural varsity season tomorrow with
two games in the Western Ken-
tucky University Corvette Classic
Soccer Tournament in Bowling
Green. The Wildcats (2-3) play
WKU tomorrow evening at 9 and
the University of Arkansas-Little
Rock Sunday at 2 pm.

UK will play without junior
standout goalkeeper Rob Sunbel,
who injured his knee against Mar-
shall University last Wednesday.
Strobel will miss the remainder of
the season. Freshman Mike McKav
will start as goalkeeper in Strobel's

 

Read Sports Monday

 

 

 

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place.

UK coach Sam Wooten said
Western is a strong team. and he ex~
pects a tough game tomorrow night.

“They are probably one of the top
20 teams in the nation.“ Wooten
said.

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r__..__.._-___..._-_.._.-______

 

Sunday, Sept. 27th

 

 

   

Kentucky Kernel, Frldly, September 27, 1991 - 3

Top of the beat: Vols, Knights and copy Cats

CALL 911: 10 reasons why the
Cats will slaughter the Kent Golden
Flashes tomorrow.

1. UK still hasn’t forgotten last
weekend’s loss and probably never
will.

2. TheCatsareabetterteamthan
the North Carolina State team that
beat Kent 47-0 two week ago.

3. The Cats haven‘t blown any-
one out since 1989 and are due.

4. The Cats mnning game is due
to explode. This figures to be a
good time considering there hasn’t
been much flash in the Golden
Flashes‘ run defense. In three
games they have given up 716 rush-
ing yards.

5. With Kent concentrating on
stopping the run, UK quarterback
Brad Smith -—- if he can find his
center — will pick Kent's defense
apart.

6. Joey Couch.

7 Kent changed its name from
Kent State.

8. The Cats play in the mighty
Southeastern Conference and Kent
doesn’t.

9. The Cats haven't lost a home
night game since 1986.

10. Tomorrow‘s game isn’t on
national television.

QUOTE OF THE WEEK: Af-
ter tailback Donnie Redd's touch-
down run in last week's game
against Indiana, Redd told Curry,
“When my leg went, my only
choice was to run over the guy."
Redd earned the Wildcat Pride hon~
or for his valiant effort.

THIS WEEK IN THE SEC: Al-
abama at Vanderbilt, Arkansas at
Ole Miss, Mississippi State at Hori-

 

 

GAME OF THE WEEK: Ten-
nessee and Auburn. The only two
undefeated teams in the Southeast-
em Conference. play this Saturday
in Knoxvttle, Tenn. Both schools
are 30 overall and 1-0 in SEC. The
Volunteers barely defeated Missis~
sippi State 26-24 in their confer-
ence opener. Auburn is coming off
a 14-10 win at Texas.

Hill‘s upset pick: Auburn

GAME OF THE WEAK:
Whoever Houston plays.

HILL’S BOTTOM FIVE: l.
Morehead State, despite its 0-3
record, it's given up 170 points,
which leads the NCAA. 2. Vander-
bilt because they’re Vanderbilt. 3.
The Lexington Catholic Knights. In
the Knights' inaugural season, they
have played tough but are win-
less.and lost to Casey County last
weekend. Sorry Wiesenhahn. 4.
The Cincinnati Bearcats (03) still
haven't rebounded from the 81-0
uouncing by Penn State. 5. Curry’s
fictional team — the Timbuktu lil‘
sisters of the poor

COPYCATS: UK and Ken!
wear a big “K" on their helmets,
and both teams have a Brad Smith
on their roster.

SCHEDULING BLUNDER:

 

 

   

‘ReadSportsMonday n

 

 

 

BILL RICHARD
MURRAY DREYFUSS

Bob's it special Itind of friend.
The Iiind that drives you truly.

mountain-Wanna” it
"x :AS'M 3 " a;

 

      
  

A“

‘(

Truchxitinr
I’k'urr‘

 

 

Wed - Sat 7:30 - 10 pm.
Sun 4 pm. $2.00 w/UK l.D.

 

 

 

IROQUOIS HUNT CLUB
HORSE SHOW & BARBEQUE

from8a..-m 5p.m.w’e. Lunch12z30-2p.m

 

Athens- Boonesboro Rd
(10 miles east of Lexington)
For more information call 266-6650

Admission Free

$6.00

 

 

 

 

“ONE UP ..a.
THE BEST FILMS OF
THE ii

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BIKE-A~THON

September 29 . ..
Commonwealth Stadium ,
Parking Lot

.........................

Registration 1.30 p
' Cost: $2.00

Proceeds to KY Council on Child Ab" "
and Court Appointed Speci ‘ " ’
For info, call Mary Malone 258-49

   
  

  
   
    
    
 
   
 

  
  
 
  

  
      
  
   
 

 

 

REDD

One reason why Kent is 0-3 and
likely to become 0-4. The Golden
Flashes have played their first four
games on the road. They‘ve trav—
eled to Eastern Michigan, Cincinna-
ti (ooh, that must have been a good
one) and Central Michigan.

DO YA KNOW —— DO YA
KNOW -— DO YA KNOW: that
Kent coach Pete Cordelli almost
played quarterback for L'K’.’ But h}.

 

 

COUCH

the time Cordelli made up his mi.rid
UK was out of scholarships

ANI) FINALLY: Which former
L'K quarterback hails from Cordel—
Us home commonwealth of Penn-
sylvania" The great Babe Pareii

Amman! Sports Editor A! Hill" :5
a fine arts junior, 0n the Bear H a
Kt’t’kil‘vff.’i‘1i'ult’(If/(C’flti/ 3mm

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Hurry! This offer expires next Monday the 30th!
Last week to join under this offer!

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 4 - Kentucky Kernel, Frlday, September 27, 1991

 

 

 

Jamaica native joins UK faculty

By JOHN DYER FORT
'jcritributtng Write'

Orville Hammond has perhaps
in: of the most eclectic resumes at
. k

After finishing high school in his
"atiye Jamaica, Hammond, now an
lif‘lSL’lnl professor of Jazz Studies
.:2 l'K. played piano on the cruise
«up circuu entertaining passengers
v‘ island-hopping commercial
chips.

~\tter that, he played in the
iounge at the Ocho Rios, Jamaica
wiayboy (,‘luo.

“That’s where I learned the bun-
izy bop," Hammond said, laughing.

For the past seven years, Harn~
" ind has been in the L'nitcd States.
his jazz piano style has
gained him recognition. He has
worked in the recording studio for
\‘ievie Wonder. He toured with Jim-
aiw Cult, playing keyboards for the
reggae legend. And he has opened
ltli Bill Cosby. Gary Burton and
iiiantord \larsalis.

Eiammond's repertmrc includes
George Gershwm, Cole Porter,
Duke Ellington and other jazz
greats. For the most part, however,
Hammond prefers to play his own
original jazz “i love to improvise,"
5" says.

He was not always encouraged to
you. it up.

“I played the piano at morning

u my“.

chapel in high school." said Ham-
mond, who joined UK's faculty this
year. “It was boring playing the
same old hymns every day. I'd try
to elaborate a little bit. make it
more interesting. Finally, one of the
teachers told me to play the music
the way it was written."

Before leaving Jamaica. Ham—
mond taught jazz piano at the Ja-
maica School of Music. On the
side, he was writing commercial
jingles and even appeared in a tele-
vision ad for Red Star Beer.

Hammond then decided he want-
ed to continue his music studies and
accepted a scholarship to Oberlin
College in Ohio. Alter graduating
from Oberlin, he got his master‘s in
music at the Eastitian School of
Music in Rochester. NY.

Hammond has always wanted to
combine playing j'd/J. studying mu-
sic and teaching.

“School is one way of learning, a
very efficient way," he said.

Hammond believes music. even
jazz. and study go hand in hand.

“The idea that you are born to
play jazz is a myth. You have to
learn yOur limitations. Jazz is free-
dom within certain set parameters.“
he said.

As a new faculty member at the
UK Music Department, Hammond
will be busy. Together with Jazz
Studies director Miles Osland.
Hammond will develop a jazz cur—

riculum for the school. This will in-
clude courses in jazz theory and his-
tory. improvisation and jazz piano
and ensemble. The goal is to estab-
lish a jazz studies major for music
students.

“We're happy to have him here,
not only as a great piano player and
instructor." Osland said, “but to‘
gether we're going to construct a
new jazz studies curriculum."

Hammond was the featured per-
fomier when the UK Jazz Ensem-
ble, led by Osland. appeared last
Thursday at the Recital Hall in the
Otis A. Singletary Center for the
Arts.

“His forte is solo piano stylings,"
Osland said. “He had the Recital
Hall enthralled. You could hear a
pin drop, which is unique for a jazz
ensemble crowd. Then he played in
the ensemble and was still unbeliev-
able.”

Fortunately for the UK communi-
ty. Hammond will be around for
awhile. In addition to teaching
classes at UK, he is planing various
pcrfomiances, both locally and on
the national level. As soon as his
academic demands are under con-
trol, he plans to have a recital on
campus.

And eventually. he would like to
play the occasional lounge gig in
Lexington, he said.

GREG EANS Kernel Sta.“

Or/ille Hammond. assistant professor of Jazz Studies, lists touring with reggae legend Jimmy Clitt and
an appearance in a television commercial for Red Star beer on his diverse resumé.

State’s fall music festivals offers a little something for everyone

By DAVE LAVENDER
"Mitr-buting Writer

‘t is now offiCially fall, which
means it is time for many things.

lime to call mom and ask her to
send sweaters and flannel shirts,
Time for football. the crunching of
leaves on cool windy days, and un-
fortunately, time once again for our
fee; to find out what a sock feels
iikL .

The weekend subtly is peeking

 

Bikel to give
free concert at
Center for Arts

Staff reports

World-renowmd actor and
singer Mic Bike} will
give a free concert next week
at the Otis A. Singietary Core
to: for the Arts.

Five local Jewish organize»
t‘tons ate combining their re-
sources to sponsor the con-
cen. said Sharon Sharer of
the Central Kentucky Jewish
Federation, one of the partial
gating maps.

Bikel has made numerous
stage, film and television at»
pmances in addition to stud
ying acting under lawnnce
Olivier.

His credits include the
films ”The African Queen,"
“The Russians are Coming.
The Russians are Coming.“
and theater productions of
“Fiddler on the Roof" and
“The Tln’ecpenny Opera}