xt78w950k77v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt78w950k77v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1990-01-30 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, January 30, 1990 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 30, 1990 1990 1990-01-30 2020 true xt78w950k77v section xt78w950k77v  

Vol. XClll, No. 100

University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky

independent SlnCG 1971

Kentucky Kernel

Established 1 894

Tuesday, January 30, 1990

 

Bush says his budget recognizes ‘remarkable changes’

By TOM RAUM
Associated Press

WASHINGTON —- President
Bush sent Congress a $1.23 trillion
budget for fiscal
1991 yesterday
that keeps new
spending below
inflation and
recognizes “re-
markable
changes" in the
world by scal-
ing hack de~
fense and re-
warding
emerging de-
mocracies.

Bush called the spending plan an
“investment in the future." But
Democratic leaders in Congress
pounced on it as a “standpat bud-
get" and challenged its claim to
halve the federal deficit, to $63.]
billion.

Fights loomed with the Demo-
cratic-controlled Congress on a

BUSH

range of fronts: Bush‘s desire to cut
Medicare and capital gains taxes. to
close military bases he considers
outmoded and, on the other hand,
to preserve some expensive weap-

 

I See Highlight’s of

Bush‘s budget, Page 7

ons.

Bush would increase spending on
space, education, the environment
and the war on drugs. Losers, this
year, are Medicare, college student
loans, farm subsidies, energy con-
servation grants and mass transit.

The president‘s budget for the
fiscal year that begins Oct. l calls
for $36.5 billion in spending cuts
and other deficicreduction meas-
tires.

lt projects a 7 percent increase in
revenues, to $1.17 trillion, without
a general tax increase and just a 3
percent boost in overall spending
— ~ more than a percentage point be-

Students rally around
faculty denied tenure

By ALLEN D. GREER
Senior Staff Writer

UK theatre students upset over a
recent decision to deny tenure to a
popular theatre professor, Patrick
Kagan-Moore, are sending letters
of protest to Chancellor for the
Lexington Campus Robert Hernen-
way.

Theatre junior Brent Hankins
said that he sent a letter to llemen-
way yesterday because he wanted
the chancellor to know "what an
outstanding professor Patrick Ka-
gan—Moore is."

Hankins also signed a protest pe-
tition that was sent to Hemeriway.
College of Fine Arts Dean Richard
Domek Jr. and Theatre Department
Chairman James Rodgers last
Thursday. The petition was signed
by 65 other theatre students.

“i wanted the chancellor to know
that Brent Hankins is not just a
name on a petition," he said.

Dale Kiefer sent a letter to He-
menway because he said denying
tenure to Kagan—Moore would be a
mistake.

“In my opinion, a truly gifted
teacher is rare,“ said Kiefer, who
has a degree in biology but is tak-
ing undergraduate theatre classes.
“You can tell that (Kagan-Moorei
loves his subject, and he instills
that love in his students. That‘s
what makes him a good teacher.”

Jeff Murphy, a telecommunica-
tions senior and theatre minor, sent
a letter to Hemenway because he
said he wanted to keep campus ad~
ministrators aware of his dissatis-
faction with the decision.

“if we hadn't done anything else,
it would have just blown over like
any other controversial issue."
Murphy said.

“The more vocal we get, the bet»
ter." said theatre graduate student
Todd Lacy, who helped organize

the petition drive and also sent a
letter to llertienway. “Petitions are
not nearly as effective as someone
sending a personal note that says
exactly why they feel Patrick is as
asset to this college."

Lacy said last week that he was
“shocked" that Kagan-Moore had
been denied tenure because many
students consider him to be an out-
standing instructor.

Rodgers said he cart understand
why students are upset. but he said
that there are factors other titan
teaching that nltl\l be considered
when deciding to grant tenure.

“Patrick‘s a wonderful teach-
er..." Rodgers said. “But I don't
think that (students) recognize that
there are other areas.“

Teachers in the regular title ser-
It“. such as Kagan—Moorc. are eval-
uated for tenure on the basis of
teaching ability, research and ser»
vice, Rodgers said.

Some theatre students said that
l’K‘s tenure evaluations may ptit
too much emphasis on research at
the expense of teaching.

“it tenure is going to be denied to
professors like Kagan~Moore. then
the l‘niversity needs to re-think its
tenure process,“ Murphy said. “If
research takes priority over teach—
ing, then the priorities need to be
rc»thotight."

Theatre senior Tim Carter, Lacy
and theatre and English sophomore
Rebecca Davis plan to meet with
Henienway next Wednesday, Car-
ter said.

“We w ant to express our strong
feelings about this whole situa<
lion," he said.

The three met wtth Domek last
Friday to voice their concerns.

"It was a way to be heard." Lacy
said. “This was our voice. and we
felt that meeting with the dean was

See KAGAN-MOURE, Page 2

low the current rate of inflation.

Bush proposed defense spending
of $292.1 billion, a cut of 2 percent
measured against inflation; while
boosting foreign aid to Eastern Eu-
rope, the Philippines and Latin
America.

On the domestic front, his budget
would leaie in place the Social Se<
curity tax increase that took effect
earlier this month. But it honors
Bush‘s 1988 campaign pledge to
propose no general tax increase.

Still, the budget recommends
$15.6 billion in lesser tax increases
and a $5.6 billion increase in user
and service fees A: most of them
recycled from Reagan budgets and
previously defeated in Congress.

The budget calls for “family sav-
ings" accounts under which fami-
lies could bank tip to $5,000 a year
and pay no tax on interest on de-
posits held for more than seven
years.

“With an futtirc

eye toward

See Bl S”. Page 3

 

By MIKE FElNSILBER
Associated Press

WASHlNGTON — President
Bush‘s budget promises to save
your family $114,000 in taxes
over the next 25 years if you can
set aside $5,000 a year.

It makes enticing promises.
too, if you love trees, have a
houseful of tots or are fascinated
by magnetic lcviration.

But in budgetry, an exercise
somewhat removed from reality,
the budget that giveth also takerh
away.

The taking would come front
people who ride Amtrak or the
airlines, go boating on weekends
or work for the federal govcrlr
merit.

Don’t bank on the 31 l coon

 

Budget rewards the thrifty, hurts trains

windfall or get rid of your boat.
By August, when Congress usu-
ally focuses on budgets, Janu-
ary's proposals have a habit of
changing or vanishing altogether.

Bush’s proposal to require a
$25 decal on any recreational or
commercial boat using water—
ways patrolled by the (‘oast
Guard revived an idea originally
floated by President Reagan.
Congress balked, and the idea
sank.

So, too, did Reagan's proposal
to drop the federal subsidy re-
ceived by the Amtrak rail passer»
ger system. Reagan said it would
be cheaper to hand an airline or
bus ticket to every Arittrak pas~
senger than to pay a subsidy av-
eraging $30 for exery Amtrak
rider.

Bush’s fiscal WQl budget plan
drops that argument. btit retains
the proposal. llis budget director.
Richard Darman, said yesterday
that “the federal government‘s
responsibility is not to run the
railroads."

Magnetic levitatton is some
thing else again.

The budget document de-
scribes tt as “a new transporta-
tion technology that relies on the
use of magnets for propulsion
and leviutrion rather than conven-
tional steel~wheel-on—rail tech—
nology " litish proposed spend—
ing 93)? million to check it out.

in the meantime, Bush pro-
posed cluttinatiitg subsidies to
keep lFE;-.'ll}' mass transit sys‘

.‘iec ill ‘sll’S, Page 2

 

 

 

 

MCHAEL CLEVENGER/ Kernel Sta”

ON A MORE SERIOUS NOTE: Stephen Gunzenhauser, guest conductor of the Lexington Phil-
harmonic, reherses last night at the Otis A Singletary Center for the Arts

 

 

US. should favor German reunification, Kissinger says

Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The United
States will have to support reunifi—
cation of‘ the two Germanies, de-
spite hopes to the contrary on the
part of Soviet leaders, according to
former US. Secretary of State Hen-
ry A. Kissinger.

“The secret dream of the Sovrct
Union is that we will prevent the
unification of Germany," Kissinger
told John McLaughlin on his show
“John McLaughlin‘s One on One."

The German-bom Kissinger said

he personally
would have
been satisfied if
the reunification
issue “had not
come up in my i
lifetime. . '

”But it has
come up, and it
has come up in x
a way that
makes it una- KISSINGER
voidable, and it makes it important
for the United States to get behind
it, or else German nationalism is

W' m

’/

going to turn against the inited
States," he \Llltl.

“Visible major steps Wlll be tale
en Wllhln two years" toward Ger~
man unification. Kissinger said.

After upcoming elections, East
Germany is likely to follow Czech-
oslovakia, Hungary and Poland iii
requesting withdrawal of Soviet
forces from li.\ territory, Kissinger
said.

He urged detiiilitarinng East
Germany and treating a nonaligned
military status like that of Austria
for “former satellite states.“

He said East Germany will come
under intense pressure to raise its
economic level to that of West
Germany or lose much of its popu—
lation through the open border.
This will mean forming a “corn-
rtton economic unit" wtth West
(Germany, Kissinger said.

Kissinger predicted that a unified
(iermany “economically will tilt
West,“ while nulitarily the new Sll.‘
nation will require complex arms
talks.

“l do not agree that you can de-
ntilitari/c .i whole country of the

\l/.‘ arid economic potential of the
licdcral Republic .. of all of Ger-
many, of some 80 million people."
he said.

The “most dangerous situation
for both fast and West would be to
have a neutral Germany unattached
to anybody, because that would re—
store liuropean politics to what it
\\ as before the two World Wars of
a Germany looking for its own se-
curity entirely to itself in the center
of the European comment."

See KISSINGER, Page i

Warford case
victory for
journalism.
lawyer says

By JOHN TlLLEY
( , . .,

. .’ . .1 t'-/, .H,

t'.l"l\' the “g

l t ,, r, ,
iii it‘. V ‘ .t!‘..t

Shy-it‘ll Ml tit» ._ " 7i

Jlit‘
x‘rznits
i'tttit‘s \
Stilltyai‘i rtii‘ .: ‘ i“ '. Votit.‘ :t
l K liltl'lttlihlll prof ‘ «or

»\.t\ an impor-

x'ztt: the me

iii Kl:'l!\,m Jhc
i~1ill}‘ic‘.=.‘.f‘z,j
«lt.t in ! i..~t “:1.

"\\ y: .i i _.f

.i l‘”‘ t:.. - '=

's' untied lit‘ll‘.
‘.'fC\ the lift“

'clil\ ‘
' R's lll'c'll.\ l‘.t.\-

all t .‘mlsr f: ‘. on!
l..‘li‘.’tli l‘ft‘:.'.’.tl‘.|

:»‘\lll~'lt\il high school star Stc‘xc
\le‘cr was trusrvit‘wctl lit the lien
: f l wafer .‘l'i‘l" being rt'crtiite l b\

' mist. o: l’ittsbtirch
9: viii safer rat‘ortt‘r in
f".'wl!tt\t'z\1ii‘.t‘r\ ctlllllllt‘nb that
it. :t Pitt-"innit: ;i\-.t\t;int coach and
t K ".itfti.s!.‘ erc “afford of
t.-r~t::t~i to.itteritll’itt
\\ \' '. \1t‘ti lli.il there \\tl\ll 1
an. other .tg. to interpret Reggie
\\.irtortl "'tltlt'llh .ll‘ttlll ti raise
.intl licitctvan Sf \ltllcr other
than it \k'Js riionct, ' iloulthan said.

\liller plated it: \\:stern Kcne
tucks l lll\t'f\li‘i and later denied
that “.ir'ford r had off-cred hint
tiioiiey .\ l .\' Herald-Leader rc
print of the \lt'l\ did not mention
\lillcr's .lcnial

lhe Herald-Leader did not in
.ltttlc the dental because it had
\liilcr on tape and had no reason to
belitwc othcr‘w lsL‘. lioulihan said.

’\\'c got it right, that Reggie
Warlord did recruit Steve Miller
tittpropcrly against NCAA rules,”
ilotihhan said.

The totirt ruled that “artortl is .i
public figure. which made it more
.liffit tilt for him to \Ut‘ the new spa-
pcr for libel. “With hitti as .i public
figure, :tcttial malice has to be
\llti\\ll which is very h.trd,' said
\ltiorc, .i i'ls' ll‘llflldllslli professor
xi ho spct fall/L‘s in media law

See lll-lRAl.l)-l.E.-\I)F.R. l’ag.‘ I

 

 

Diversions

i . ‘ Billy Joel
. Quantities, the fire.
' S; _ .ng 'e 3.

’

Sports

Lady Kats
show little desire.

Column. Page 4.

 

Weather
Today: Partly cloudy.

High 50°.

’ High 49°.

 

 

 

 2 — Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday, January 30. 1990

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘
Bush sa 5 b (1 et reco nizes ‘remarkable Chan es ’
O . C
y u g g g Kissmger: Gorbachev in trouble
Continued from page 1 For one thing, Bush's budget get are now possible.“ held for more than three years be Continued from page 1 the Baltic states but not the loss 4
. . uses an optimistic set of economic Bush said defense and interna- exempt from the tax. of more central Soviet republics -
growth. and expanSion 0"th h” projections that assume both de- tional policy “must take advantage The measure was similar to a Kissinger said Soviet Presi- now shaken by an upsurge of
man "9”?“ "‘9 “dig“ S ,Ch‘d clining interest rates and falling in- of the opportunities provided" by proposal that passed the House but dent Mikhail Gorbachev has “at nationalism. ]
emphasis ‘5 0“ ””95”““3 }“ 1h“ flation. these changes. was blocked by filibuster in the best" a 50-50 chance to survive
future, Bush ”“1 '" a bm‘ m?“ The budget also calls for overall However, claiming Soviet mili- Senate last year that would lower the nationality and other crises Kissinger said that the Krem-
sage ‘0 Congress accompanying growth of 2.4 percent this year — tary capability “will remain formid- the effective rate of the tax — on threatening his rule." lin currently is using more force 8
the 1,569-page document. compared to the 1.7 percent fore- able even after announced rcduc- real estate, stocks and other assets Gorbachev's assets are that than needed to quell clashes be- U!
But Sen. Jam“ Sasser, D—Tenn., cast by private forecasters and the tions,‘ Bush said he was proposing — to 19.6 percent. “he has established an extraor- tween Armenians and Azerbaija- I ;
called " a document or “I‘m 93p" Congressional Budget Office. a military budget that would allow Currently, capital gains are taxed dinary position in the outside “is l" the Soviet Union‘s 50W“ n‘
rations. 1‘ predicts huge “5“” The government's most recent the nation “to hedge against an un- at the same rate as other income — world. and secondly the mess em republic of Azerbaijan. ,
problems ahead and then 30°10” figures showed economic growth certain future." 15 pCfCCnli 31" percent 0' 33 per- inside the Soviet Union is so
‘0 propose “0 Chang? ”Wows“ slowed to 0.5 percent during the His plan calls for five costly new cent. great that no alternative leader The “real mOIiVC for the "‘33" m
'And House Majority L93"? last three months of 1989. 8-2 stealth bombers, another $1 The administration did not em- wants to take over,” Kissinger sive Soviet intervention is to “X
RlChafd Gephardt, D'MO",;§md‘ ‘1 “Obviously, the slowdown in the billion Trident submarine and funds brace a proposal by Sen. Daniel said. keep Azerbaijan in the Soviet cs
thtnk "‘5 a standpat bUdgCl bl” he fourth quarter makes everybody for two controversial intercontinen- Moynihan, D-N.Y., to provide a Kissinger said in a TV inter- Union to demonstrate that the ant
531d lawmakers would “take ” very nervous,“ Treasury Secretary Ni- in] nuclear missile systems. He also 862 billion cut in Social Security view earlief this month Gorba- center cannot be defied with im- yet
seriously“ rather than pronouncing cholas Brady said. called for an additional $900 mil- taxes this year and next. chev might survive secession of punity,” Kissinger said. ‘ 1
“ “dead on-arrival“ as Democrats Bush recycled many proposals lion for the Strategic Defense lni- However, it proposed that after ”0
had done With several Reagan mm“ which did not reach enactment in tiative, known as “Star Wars." 1993 — when the budget is sup- . . p‘ht
gets. , , , , 1989 M a tightening of the Clean House Speaker Thomas S. Foley, posed to be balanced under the Herald-Leader Vlctory 1n Warford KL"
Bush 5 Mid?“ direction. R‘Cth Air Act, a reduction in the capital D-Wash., said defense spending Gramm-Rudman law — any sur- , '0‘
5- Dannan, opened ”‘9 annual Md‘ gains tax rate. a $3,000 tax credit will be a crucial battleground and pluses in the Social Security trust reafflrde press freedom, lawyer says ing
8“ battle by proposing 3' ”“3“" for adoptions, tax breaks for child predicted Congress would make fund be used to pay off the national ace
“We fully expect- to, negotiate mm care and more money for fighting “larger reductions" that Bush pro— debt. nea
Congress over priorities,“ he told :1 crime and drugs. posed. As in past budgets. the Social Continued from page 1 Mt
briefing. . The most dramatic element of the The president’s budget calls for a Security surplus masked the size of .. , , , “The judge said that the C
BU‘Sh’S budget 9559mm}; was budget was the reduction in dc- 83 billion increase in outlays for the deficit. The 1991 deficit would The judge said that the Fm! First Amendment ma
meeting the 564 billion MIC“ W- ronsE. foreign aid, to $14.2 billion. it calls be 570 billion higher without this Amendment requ'rcd (Warlord) ‘0 . . Pc”
get for fiscal 1991. under lhc Propelled by relaxed East-West for $300 million in special assis- surplus. prove that what was mm was false reqmred (Warlord) [0 - C
GrammiRudman‘budget balancing tensions, the Pentagon budget calls lance “for those countries in East— The various domestic cuts to- and that they acted {n ”CH0“ (“3' prove that what was said ”,5
13W» “WHh SPccmc and defensible tor a reduction of 38,000 troops em Europe that are moving toward tailed $13.9 billion, with $5.5 bil- regard, Houlihan said. was false and that the I
measures fl and mum“ gm" and closing dozens of military bas- democracy” and another $200 mil- lion coming from trims in doctor The case was appealed [0 the ‘, y 0'?“
"“Cks'" , , _ cs. It was the most restrained de- lion for the Philippine govemment and hospitals payments in the Med- U-S~ Supreme Court. 3(3th m reCkleSS “f”
.HF’WCVPL ”1““ claimed ,‘hc “d‘ fensc budget submitted by the of Corazon Aquino. icare health care program. disregard” [101”
ministration's PFCSCUPQO“ ‘0’ SC“ White House in more than a dcc- It also requests $270 million in Other major program cuts in- “' _ “’31
""g the budget den” “0"“ 1° ade. outlays for the Andean countries of eluded $1.8 billion in farm price , ,
563-1 billion — from 1‘ WOJCCMi “Remarkable changes have oc- Colombia, Peru and Bolivia to help supports and crop insurance and .The UK SChOOl ofloumalism‘s major TOIC in establishing the HTS! hm
5123-8 billion-thislycar __ does curred during the past year. The stem the international flow of savings of $2.9 billion by limiting Hm Amendment Series 90mm?“ Amendment Center in ”10 EnOCh bug
rely on accounting gimmicks. .. Berlin Wall has been opened and drugs. pension increases to federal civil- this week as Kentucky Post Iiditor Grehan Journalism Building. bk"
“They continue topmmy the “1‘" democratic forces are on the move The administration renewed its ian retirees and by restraining cost- JUd‘lh Clabes “”11 talleobout EVC' Clabcs Wi“ SPCBR ill "00“ in 134 p“?
ures," said 56” Ernest F‘ BMW‘S‘ in Eastern Europe," Bush said. “As call for a lower capital gains tax, of- living increases to civilian and '3'de S Améndmcm- Enoch Cirehan Joumalism BUild- '3
D-S.C. ‘ 1‘ 5 another fraud. a result, savings in the defense buds proposing that 30 percent of assets military govemment workers. Clabes, a UK graduate, played a ing. 3:12):
The Kentucky Kernel — Bush ’ s bud et r0 osal rewards the thrift tiff:
W t d t g p p y W
and
e are S u en S Continued from page 1 band and wife would deposit a total credit of $1,000 ~ subtracted from “1
. , . , . , of $5,000. taxes owed -~— for every youngster man
438 S. Asland Ave. Minimum Delivery 2nd Anniversary :lclmofjgzgggibfifigmn Sdld that S If the accounts were left un- under age 4. And parents who blac
Chevy Chase Order $325 Air passengers would pay more touched for more than seven years, adopt children“ Wllh special needs cvcr
Of the FaUIConef , , . ., x the interest earned would escape could dcductSs,()00. 'll .
FREE DELIVERY ._ a boost in the 8 percent ticket . . . .. . 1 , J L
tax to 10 percent _ but would get taxation. Early Withdrawal, in less To start those tots on the road to 30m.
than three years, would carry a 10 school, Bush prriposed making said.

269-4693

75¢ off
the

Faulconer

all of January

more, for airport construction and
hiring 495 more air traffic control-
lers to help the 17,000 now scan-
ning the skies.

The S3 tax on international
flights would double.

Here‘s how that $114,000 wind-
fall would work for families able to
save:

percent penalty on top of the regu~
lar tax on interest.

Treasury Secretary Nicholas Bra-
dy figures that in 25 years a family
would save $395,000 of which
$114,000 would otherwise have
been paid in taxes. He. assumed the
family pays income tax at a 28 per-

room for 180,000 more Head Start
youngsters in a program that now
enrolls 450,000 needy preschool-
ers.

For investors who hold onto their
stocks for three years or more, 30
percent of the profits when they fi-
nally sell the stocks would be tax-

i

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Families with incomes under cent rate and 'can find a bank pay. exempt. That s more generous than '5
HOURS DELIVERY HOURS ' $120900 would be able to open ing 8 percent interest. the capital gains tax proposal that,
MON-THUR ....... 10 am. to Mid MON-THUR ....... 11 am. to 11:30 p.m. LISten to WKQQ two savings accounts in which hus— Poor families WOUld get a tax film Bngh .5 1:)aih'n51‘gtsfcq 11hr: __
FRI-SAT ....... 10 am. to 1 am. FRI-SAT ........... 11 am. to 12:30 am. for Freebies (Slime ut gm 9‘ m L ’ (mm as CD
SUNDAY .......... 11 am. to Mid SUNDAY ............. Noon to 11:30 p.m. y Federal wmkm mum be mom, 3_
. ' a l
the losers in the budgetary game (it
- = STOP winners and losers. ~—
INFORMATIONAL MEETI ““0“" MAKE“ ““10“““5” on. but... pm... m l.
The UniverSity of Kentucky College of Pharmacy is currently seeking month delav in a federal pav “neg 2
Coucoson volunteers (mole and ferric! e. non tobacco users ages 18 that is g ‘hel 1,, to tak‘ ‘ff-t‘t 0 't
to A5 years old and in good health) for a food screening study We \Mll ' ‘L ( u u ‘ (i i Q t '
pay $10 00 to individuals who qualify to fill out 0 food preference 3L And the 3“ WWW“ (‘1 stale and 3—'
’ questioncire (takes 20 30 minutes) local government workers who are __
Some of the individuals completing this questiondire will be eligible to exempt from 50“?“ SCCUI’HY taxes
participate in a genetic screening study. This screening pays $30.00 and ~— and benefits ~~ »- would lose that
involves the one-time administration of 4 cough tablets before bedtime status.
. and collection of urine for 8 hours The genetic screening test can be
done in the privacy of your own home.
Find out if you qualify" Cdll: 257-2561 Kagan _ Moore
For Juniors and Seniors interested in an MBA .
. ' - . Continued from page 1
- Master of Buszness Admzntstratton- b h i. . 1. I
. ' eltcrt an sent ing an in orma pc~
All MaJors welcome Dun pan 5 “110"." —
Lacy said that Domek explained

the tenure process in detail, but
Lacy said that Domck wouldn't
discuss anything about Kagan-
Moore's tenure case because it 1\‘
confidential information.

Domek did tell the three students,
however, that he elected not to send
Kagan-Moore's tenure bid on to the
next level.

Repeated attempts to contact Do—
mek over the past week have been
unsuccessful.

UK’s tenure process involves
several levels of review that begin
when a tenure candidate prepares a
dossier containing information that
includes teaching experience, edw

January 31, 1990 0 3:30 p.m. and 6 p.m.
Room 206 Old Student Center

Come for co fee, listen to a short presentation.
Talk indit idualy with people from the program about
Fall enrollment assistantships and scholarships

L'ttle Caesars Pizza
cational background, professional

T E R R I F | C
(IA/fiat you Ive $6671 (waiting for! activities, publications and re«

search.
‘ The dossier is reviewed by car
Resort , ,_ .L. " rent tenured faculty within the de-
i' ‘ partmcnt, the department chairman,
and ~ a college committee, the college
$ 5 o 9 9

dean. an “academic area commit-
2 MEDIUM PEPPERONI PIZZAS

cc, the appropriate chancellor, the
(Add $1 for delivery)

president anti the Board of Trus»
tees. The dossier also may be re-
. -\fL Offer good on all Tuesdays for a limited time
'9‘9“ (a ""-—‘ at our Duke Road location only

“”269 7354

School.
NO COUPON NECESSARY t2}.- Expires Feb 12th 1990

The college dean, however. has
Little Caesars; t‘ Pizza! Pizza!

the option of ending the tenure pro—
No great pizzasll&u One low price.

February Sale
In

 

Progress

DON’T MISS ITH
385 5. Lime 255-5125

 

 

 

 

Contemporary
sportswear

Lerington '5 greatest
selection ofswimsuits
andnaturaffifier
apparel of
iiiiitsym'ac'c slugs,
fraud 'Batiked Roger“,
(.‘ottom, linens and
feather trimmed knits.

. = Kagan-Moore is appealing the
255.7225 denial of tenure, Rodgers said last

MM‘WLLLLS filLL‘Z?’ (next to Joe ’Bologna '5) week.
Mon-5a: 10-8 __

cess before a candidate's dossier
goes on to the next level.

All regular title teachers at UK
are placed on a six-year probation
period, during which they receive
yearly evaluations, Rodgers said.

if an instructor is denied tenure
and doesn't win on appeal, the
teacher is granted a one-year “ter.
minal contract“ and must leave UK
when the contract expires, accord-
ing to Hcmcnway.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

DIVERSIONS

Billy Joel’s latest music is still rock ’n’ roll to his fans

By EDNA GUNDERSEN
USA TODAY/Apple College
Information Network

WASHINGTON -— In his cur-
rent concerts, explosive 2 I/"Z-hour
rock spectacles, Billy Joel bulldoz-
es through 22 songs with the starch
and stamina of a man half his 40
years.

The teens-to-boomers sellout
crowd at the Capital Centre was eu-
phoric, leaping to its feet for up-
tempo cookers like “Pressure” and
“Only the Good Die Young," sway-
ing during rare breathers, like the
accordion-sweetened “The Dow-
neaster ‘Alexa‘" from his smash
14th LP, Storm Front.

Onstage, the former boxer re-
mains one of pop’s indefatigable
performers.

Offstage, Joel is a Family Man
first, a Piano Man second.

The Angry Young Man who
once bellowed has mellowed. Joel
will display an eclectic combina-
tion of theses personas when he
comes to Rupp Arena on Feb. I6.

“I still get mad at the motor ve-
hicle bureau, but I don't get that
bugged about silly things, like ta-
bloids," Joel said. “You get your
priorities straight.“

Even when pressed on prickly
topics .A his financial woes, a law—
suit against his former manager,
criticism of his music, rumors of
marital strain _. Long Island's pop
craftsman responds thoughtfully
and with tethered emotions.

“What happens as a matter of
maturing is that blacks aren‘t as
black, the whites not as white, and
everything you were so sure of
all that pompous idealism -— gets
softened by the realities of life," he
said. “You tend to be a little more

 

 

Richmond Rd

1ft:
268-1414

oBarjo

The Boys

 

29 Free Cover w'h College lD . St
Gen (1'0“: . to 02 Long tsiond
Toos $2.75

 

X) Ladies Night o SI Kings 7711 n 51 Wells
. riot Legs Contest

 

3] South ot the Border . $l.75Coroms
and Mrirgt }' his - Wet irshirt

 

l Strut Your sum Finals

 

2 rolon Rob's BBQ Chcken and
imco Bar 0 51 oil d'rtks .
50¢ 0" beer 4-8

 

3 Open 5 . Java Dnnxs $l.75 7-0

 

 

“I haven’t lost faith in mankind, but I do not trust
people who have access to money in this business. I

manage myself now.

I swore that when I had a kid, I was going to be
around for that kid. Now I’m in a position where l
have to tour for a long time. And I’m bitter about

,3

it.

forgiving of people who don‘t agree
with you."

The man whose performances
once included verbal executions of
critics now shrugs at mention ot at-
tacks on his history-in-flasheards
single, “We Didn’t Start the Fire."

“I think any song that’s a hit is
suspect," Joel said. “I happen to be
suspect by a lot of critics anyway,
because I’m Billy Joel and I've had
too many hits.

“I get stereotyped because I‘m
successful. They say, ‘He's a com—
mercial tunesmith, a Tin Pan Alley
writer.’ Boom, that’s it.

“Or, ‘He’s a balladecr.‘ That‘s an-
other favorite. They don’t know
that I go through the tortures of the
damned writing. I‘m not cranking
out commercial hits."

Joel's unabating commercial suc-
cess takes the sting out of the
barbs. He’s had 2‘4 Top-10 hits, Ill-
cluding chart-toppers "Fire,” "It's
Still Rock and Roll to Me," “Tell
Her About It" and “We Didn‘t Start
the Fire," which has been nominate
ed for three Grammys.

And critical sneers have not taken
the wind out of his sales. Shir/rt
Front has sold more than 2 mil—
lion eopies. And fans have scooped
tip more than I million tickets on

Flamingo Bay
Tanning

and Toning
Wolff Tanning System

1 Visit $3.00
3 Visits $8.00
5 Visits $10.00
10 Visits $17.95
with coupon
("D 33890

269-9377

French Quarter Square
(Richmond Rd.)

— Billy Joel

his tour, the season’s phenomenon.

Still, Joel is perturbed that his
detractors have described “We
Didn’t Start the Fire“ as a yuppie
anthem and a laundry list of histor-
ic buzzwords that fails to draw a
conclusion.

“It’s 40 years of sound bites and
headlines and that’s all it is," he
said. “I never made believe it was
anything else. There’s been criti-
cism that. there's no editorializing
or perspective. I had 4 1/2 minutes
to squeeze 40 years into."

Q
‘E LIVE VIA SATELLITE!

A

IHE CELEBRATION
OF
BLACK HISTORY

Once again. on February I, 1990 thou—
sands ot-Arncricans will participate in the I
national kickofffor Black History Month. ,
Beyond The Dream II: A Celebration or i
Black History will bring together distin- :
guished experts on the contributions of ‘
Blaclg to this country with audiences at
colleges and universities. military installa-
tions. secondary schools, national asso-
ciations, the private sector and federal.

state and local agencies.

“Fire” was conceived as a rap
song, a format Joel discarded.

“Basically, I need something
with melody and chords," he said.
“Rap music is an oxymoron. There
is no ‘music,‘ only lyric and
rhythm. I appreciate rap intellectu-
ally and it really gets me in the
pelvis, but there's something miss-
ing in between the head and the
butt. Maybe it's the heart."

And there is a message in “Start
the Fire". Joel points out.

“I’m saying in the chorus that
the world’s always been a mess.
the world's a mess now, it's going
to be a mess when we're gone." he
said. “But we tried to fight it. You
can‘t drop out and fall into despair.
It’s easy to be a cynic.

“I was a cynic. There was a time
when l was very depressed and sin-
cidal. It‘s a cop-out. I think the
world is better than it was, and I
think it's going to get better."

His role as father makes that phi-
Iosophy “imperative," he said.

Joel and model Christie Brink‘

' Busmess & Economics

I BERNICE KING
Daughter at the late

ROBERT C. MAYNARD
Editor 8 President

The Tribune. Oakland, CA
WILHELMINA DELCO
State Representative

at Texas

RAMONA EDELIN

 

Urban Coalition
SANTEE RUFFIN
NBPTS— Vice PreSident
tor Education Policy
and Reform
WARRINGTON HUDL‘N
Fit‘mmaker/PrESIdent
Black Filmmaker
Foundation
I NARA SUDARKASA
Prudent. Linco/n
UniverSIYy
I SV'LVIA P MUNDY
| Entrepreneur/Franchisee
l

 

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr I

President/C E . 0 -Nati0na/

Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday. January 30, 1990 - 3

Icy, his wife of almost five years,
are raising 4-year-old Alexa Ray in
a quiet Long Island neighborhood
far front the paparaui that dog them
elsewhere.

“Parenthood is hard, but the pay-
back is incredible," he said. ”Your
heart jlhl busts, it‘s so lull of love.
Being a parent does try your pa-
tience. I'm not going to hit my kid.
When I was her age, I got hit some-
times. lt reinlorces Violence as an
option, and it shouldn't be an op-
tion."

(irowing up the daughter of ce—
lebrities won‘t be easy, Joel av
knowlcdgcs.

“When hordes ol papara/li con»
verge on her, it scares the hell out
of her," he said. “But you can’t pro-
tect her entirely. You have to deal
with it With a sense of humor. As
crazy as it is, I think it's fun for her
to grow up III a show business tam-
ily. She gets to travel all over the
world"

Joel JUSl smiles when faced with
the onslaught ot tabloid rumors.

FEBRUARY 1, 1990

MAJOR PROGRAM SEGMENTS
' Arts 6: Entertainment ' le Rights 5; Politics
i ‘ Historical RCTTOSPCCTIVCS ' Education

PROGRAM