xt7f7m041t3j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7f7m041t3j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1991-09-10 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, September 10, 1991 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 10, 1991 1991 1991-09-10 2020 true xt7f7m041t3j section xt7f7m041t3j  

ntucky Kernel

Hazing kills pledges,
says mother of Victim

By JOE BRAUN
Contributing Writer

Recounting the story of how haz-
ing by a fraternity killed her son. Ei—
leen Stevens told an audience of
700 new UK greeks how not to fall
into that trap.

Hazing. the forcing of pledges to
do abusive mental or physical acts.
is a common concern for many
members of fraternities and sorori-
ties. Greek pledges and members at—
tended Stevens’ lecture on hazing
last night at Memorial Hall.

Stevens founded the Committee
to Halt Useless College Killings,
which is nmrietl after her son,
Chuck. He was killed 13 years ago
after consuming an extreme amount
of alcohol as part of hazing practic-
es by his fratemity in New York.
Since that time. she founded
CHUCK and travels to universities
across the country with her message
about hazmg.

“1 travel to 35 or 40 campuses a
year. and 1 think that UK has one of
the most wonderful support systems
for students.“

Hazing is a violation of personal
honor. she said.

"Being a student at UK is an hon-
or." she said. “No one should be de-
meaned. degraded, abused or put
through any test of loyalty.”

During her address. Stevens
stressed such violations as alcohol
and mental abuse in the hazing pro-
cess.

"Ninety-nine percent of all hazing
incidents involve three things: alco-
hol. intense peer pressure and secre—
cy." Stevens said. Many people are
told hazing “unifies a pledge class,
builds character and — the saddest
of all —— ‘1 went through it' These
are all the wrong reasons to haze.“

Hazing was an issue at UK last
year after Phi Kappa Tau social fra-
ternity was suspended by then-
acting Dean of Students David
Stockham for three years.

The a1cohol~re1ated hazing inci-
dent was off campus and involved
Phi Tau‘s pledge officer, about 10
other members and the fratemity's
pledges — who were made to do
push-ups in the rain.

Although a minority of the frater-
nity took part in the hazing. the Uni-
versity Appeals Board in upholding
Stockham‘s decision said “all mem-
bers share a corporate responsibili-

 

 

 

By KELLEY POPHAM
Contributing Writer

miltment.

Wllh Morris at the benefit.

and try to make people happy.“

has ever had cancer .

 

Comtry singer and songwriter Gary Morris visited Melissa
King at the Markey Cancer Center

Grammy-winning singer
tours UK’s cancer center

SIX years ago, Grammy Award winner Gary Moms made a com-

A commitment that brought him from his Tennessee home to
UK's Lucille Markey Cancer Center yesterday.

“My real involvmcnt with cancer began in a Children’s Hospital in
Denver in the Leukemia Wing." Morris said. “To see these poor kids
who were struck down with leukemia. I guess we are all vulnerable
.. it attacked me. 1 jlls‘l made a committment to do some things with
my time that could help put an end to that."

In an effort to do )usl that. Morris toured the Center and met cancer
patients. hoping to gain a better understanding of the developments
the University is making in Cancer research.

“This Center is beneficiary to a concen we're domg. and 1 really
wanted to get an up close and personal view of what goes on here."
he said. “1 decided that this was a very noteworthy fatality and wonh
the effort to come and try and generate some dollars for it."

Although he is not renowned for his involvement with the Ameri-
can Cancer Society. he is well known for his country music.

Morris wrll perform Sept. 15 at the Red Mile for the Family Charity
Picnic Concert. Perfonners Pam Tillis and Rob Crosby will appear

“Hopefully. we‘ll have a big turnout and regardless of the fact that
it's a charity concen. people wrll come out and hear some great mu-
sic." Morris said. “What we do wtth our lives is try to make mus1c

While touring the Center. Morris spoke to patients currently bat-
tling cancer and those who believe they have conquered the disease.

“lts kind of a leaniing experience for me." Morris said. “Although
l have never been directly involved
its still something that is a terrifying notion

 

GREG EANSKernei Sta"

no one in my personal family

See MORRIS. Page 5

 

 

ty" for the hazing incident

“The Phi Kappa Tau incident sent
out a clear message." Stevens said.
“The administration’s willingness to
enforce the laws set the tone for
hazing. Students at UK are fortu-
nate to have an administration that
cares for its students' safety."

Thirty-five states in the country.
including Kentucky. have anu-
hazing laws. Kentucky law prohib-
its any action that “recklessly or in-
tentionally endangers mental or
physical health. or that require the
forced consumption of liquor or
drugs for the purpose of initiation
into or affiliation with any organiza-
tion."

It also is prohibited by the Uni-
versity of Kentucky Student Rights
and Responsibilities handbook.

Stevens repeatedly said she was
not opposed to fratemities and so-
rorities. only to the idea of hazing.

“One thing students need to re»
member is that you are legally re-
sponsible for your actions." Stevens
said.

Pledges and new members of the
greek system were told to report all
hazing incidents to the Dean of Stu-
dents Office.

University
commuters
gain office

By JARED PECK
Contnbuting Writer

1n hopes of getting more com
muter students involved on campus.
the Commuter Student Board is N-
ing restructured this semester

"We want to redesign the group
from being a strictly social organi-
zation to one that is more involved
in programming for commuter sltl-
dents." said Sharon Childs’. director
of the Commuter Student Office,

The commuter office and the stu-
dent board have co-existed tor 111
years. The board. originally named
STRAYCATS (Students That Re—
side Away Yet Care About Their
campuS) in 1981. was a social or-
ganization for commuter students.
which helped them keep in. Contact
with each other and also informed
them of campus events.

“We are hoping the tnewi board
will serve in an adVisory capacuy to
the office. helping us to know what
we need to do to help tcommut-
ersi." Childs said.

The previous organization only
served its members. but board presi-
dent Lynn Atchison said she hopes
the new advisory board will serve
the general needs of all commuter
students.

“We want to do more things to

See COMMUTER. Page 5

 

SEP 10 1991

.i

“ nig“o‘éku~: it‘d;- {mti 5.1.51.5: .. ,

 

TIME OUT

 

 

 

 

 

..

GREG EANS Karon “a"

Cathy Craft a 21-year-old marketing major from Lexington relaxed while reading between c ass»
es yesterday next to the Business and Economics Building addition cit Limestone Street

 

White House reporter to give lecture

Staff reports

Veteran White House reporter
Helen Thomas mil present the 1130?
Joe (‘reason Lecture on April 6. Di-
rector of the 1K School of Journal-
ism DaVid [)ick announced v'ester.
day.

Thomas has covered the presiden-
cy for United Press 1ntemahonal
since John F. Kennedy's inaugura-
tion in 1961.

A native of

Winchester. Ky..

Thomas is a member oi the Ken—
tucky J'oumalisrn Hall of Fame.

‘Et is a specnil thrill for me ill re-
turn to my ’ti'ltl Kcntuckv Home
where our family still has cherished
roots." '1 homas \\ rote 111 a letter tic-
tcpting the invnation.

1‘honias and Dick. a tornier ( 1'28
correspondent, worked iogcmer
cOvcring the presidency during the
‘(itis and '70s.

“She‘s very aggressive and she’s
always got her notebook going."

illtk \‘Altl

"Mntas ii ~ts.‘ :‘ i" ere w :re a :na—
;“t‘sidt‘nl had 11‘
would have [1'

=ir tTl\l‘v i-i 1' ;I'
'ITlVi'l t v ‘.'\t'J.\. t‘
.ili'lt Cl

“viii. 1 ant rotting "pat nothingr
'-\1li z'ttervsne with c.» appearance."
NC “10113.

"ioirias would be the lif\1 womzui
tsc l‘Cltch‘. which is en-
.1owed 1w ".ie t aurier-Joiirnal and

Tee YHOMAS, Page 5

'il Lil/C

Eighth republic declares its independence

Associated Press

MOSCOW —— Tadzhikistan de-
clared its independence yesterday.
the eighth Soviet republic to do so
since last month‘s bnef coup
against SoViet President Mikhail
Gorbachev.

“We can't lag behind other repub
lics. Everybody is declaring inde—
pendence so we are as well." said
Aleyev Abdodezhabad. parliamen~
tary spokesman in the Soviet Cen-
tral Asian republic of 5.1 million
people.

Eleven republics now have opted
for independence. including Azer-
baijan. where incumbent President
Ayaz Mutalibov won 90 percent of
the vote on Sunday as sole candr
date in an old»sty|e Soviet election

The Kremlin has already granted

 

 

.--.:... S P( ) RTS

 

Bengals coach not
admitting defeat after 0-2
start. Column, Page 2.

UK ‘i‘oiiftv

Auditions for the UK Dance Ensem-

the three Baltic republics of Esto-
nia. Latwa and Lithuania their free—
dom.

Yesterday‘s independence declar-
ation by a special session of Tadzhi~
kistan's parliament was largely
symbolic. given the decision last
week to transform the Soviet Union
into a loose contederauon of sove-
reign states.

Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich
Genscher of Germany said in Mos-
cOW on yesterday that his country
was prepared to establish rCIanns

ble in Barker Hall from 4 to 6 pm.

With all sovereign republics in the
current Sovret Union.

Tadzhikislan‘s sluggish response
to change after the \ug. 23-21
coup. and opposition charges of in-
timidation .ri the weekend election
in Azerbaiian show how the we
dominantly Muslim republics trail
in achieving political reform.

latilhlkislnth‘ parliament also set
a presidential election for Oct :7
1ncumbent President Kakhar \lakh-
lit.unt)V. elected liy the Coiiiinuiiist-
dorriinated legislature in December
1990. has kept a tight lid on opposi-
tion movements.

A mountainous republic border-
ing China and ‘\lglllllll.\‘lilll. lad/hi
kistan has the highest birth rate in
the Sowet liiiion and is one «it the
poorest republics.

Tatlzhik lawiitakei's. meeting in

SAT biased, scores
don't matter Column,
Page 6.

as iiiéfx -

the republics capital t : Dushanbe.
also declared Sept. 4 to he a nation
.i'. holiday known as independence
"Jay They rciiaiticd downtown ie
:‘m Square to i er‘dt‘1115ilucflc.
iiniv t'ie Fussia reiteration. ’rsa
.iakhsuui. Human: and Turtmeiiia
have _~c‘1 to tltildl’C i‘tltflghl lfidk“
penitence from the Sov iet L nion.

‘\lt‘ll“dl).’t11. with (W million per»
pie. declared its independence on
\ug. it). Its declaration of
rcigiity in August 198‘) ~ meaning
that the republics laws would take
precedence over Soviet laws - was
met with hostility from the Krem-
3m.

Mutalibov's ascent to power ac-
telerau'd in January 1090. When he
was named leader of the Commu-
nist Party in Verbauan following

See SOVIET. Page 5

\UVC‘

Sports. 2
DIVGI’SIODS.. . 4
Viewpomt- . 6
Classifieds. 7

— — r-Aa—n-n— ———-———-— -——J
v .

 

 2 - Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday. September 10, 1991

 

 

 

SPORTS

 

 

 

Wyche, Bengals won’t admit defeat despite 0-2 start

CINCINNATI ~ Bengals coach
Sam chhe, never one to admit de-
feat. sure looked like a defeated
man Sunday night

He sat at the podium. media hov
ering over him like a hawk over a
dead possum, in the lnlL‘l’HL‘W room
just outside of the Bengals locker
room at Riverfront Stadium trying
to figure out how his team went
wrong.

The Bengals did not play pooih.
but still lost 307 to the 3111111—
\llHSlOnLll rival Houston (lilers. a
team Wiche is not exactly fond of.

“We played pretty darn well.” he
said, shd‘kll‘lg his head in disbelit:
“\M‘ played pretty darn well We
rust didzi i get am breaks. And they
did."

Cincinnati did .ltlSl what it wanted
to do get the hall to 13—year vete-
ran lames Brooks. The 5-footell‘.
lxltxiund t.t:‘.haek rushed for 101

yards and four passes for 27 yards.

“We moved the ball all night,"
wide receiver Eddie Brown said. "It
was Just the mistakes we made that
killed."

Those mistakes — a fumble on
the 2-yard line, a blocked field goal
attempt and an interception for a
touchdown —— sealed the Bengals"
fate Sunday night.

“We ran our game plan to perfec-
tion." quarterback Boomer Esiason
said. “But Sam didn't write fumble
out of the end zone or blocked field
goal or interception for a touch-
down on the game plan. If we don‘t
do that. then it’s a game."

The Wyche blues

Just the week before. the Bengals
were totally embarrassed 45-14 at
Denver. Wyche, at that point.
turned the Bengals' practice field
into an Army boot camp.

He did his best Vince Lombardi

presents

Walker and Kays

September 11. 1991
Breedings
509 W. Main Street
8:00 pitt
$6.00 JAF Members
$8.00 General Public

 

Walker & Kays.

 

Remember the light jazzy vocals of the Hi-Los and the Four
Freshmen? Addthe stylish vocalese of Manhattan Transferand
you 've got the recipe for a great night of Iistenting. You 've got

Since 1973 this duo has compiled a repertoire of over
300 wildly divergent songs all tailored by guitarist Greg Walker
to suit the duo's lush harmonies. For example, a big band
selection like "Mood Indigo" seems a daunting challenge for
two vocalists and a guitar, but Walker & Kays "vocalese" mim-
icking of a full horn section guarantees the listener's delights.

The brilliant arrangements and harmonies of Walker
Qk’ays gives this small group one great big range.

 

J

 

Barry
REEVES

impersonation —~ he chewed a lot of
bull.

“He tore us a new one this week,"
Esiason said. “and we deserved eve-
ry bit of it. We didn‘t do anything
right against the Broncos.

“We did a lot of things right to-
night. that‘s what makes this hurt
even more.

“But Sam can‘t catch the football
or make the tackles or kick field
goals. We have to take care of that.
Sam did his toh. That's why I feel
so bad for him. He did everything
he could. but we let him down."

There were the standard 56,463

Read the Kernel for Kentucky foothollboverege.

screaming fans at Riverfront Stadi-
um — aka “The Jungle” —— Sun-
day night. but the 70-degree temper-
ature and clear skies made a
different Cincinnati atmosphere for
the Oilers.

The two previous times the Oilers
were in Cincinnati, they left town
totally embarrassed. The scores
were ugly — 40-20 in late Decem-
ber and 41—14 in the first round of
the playoffs.

“We don’t ever think in our wild-
est dreams that we’ll lose in this
place." Blados said. “This is our
place. You know, ‘The Jungle.‘ "

This time around. “The Jungle"
was nothing more than a playpen
for the Oilers.

“We felt a little bit better coming
into Riverfront this time." Oilers
wide receiver Haywood leffires
said. “We were a bit more confi-
dent There was no weather, no

 

 

119

 

Parents Weekend

September 27 -29
Friday 27 ~— HBO's Sue Kolinsky - FREE!

Saturday 28 —— Meet UK administration
10 - 12 noon, King Alumni House 0 FREE!

Big Blue Picnic

4 - 7 pm. 0 Commonwealth Stadium - S7

Sunday 29 M Wildcat Brunch
11 - 1 pm. ~ SC Grand Ballroom ° 87

Call 257-TICS for ticket info.

nothing.

“Just the Oilers and the Bengals."

The Oilers-Bengals usually
means that there’s a lot of pushing
and shoving and finger-pointing and
grabbing face masks and punches
and illegal blocks. Generally.
there’s not too much love between
these two teams.

The two sides were getting at it so
much that usually calm Anthony
Munoz, Bengals offensive tackle,
was penalized 15 yards for un-
sportsmanlike conduct.

“1 think l‘d be safe in saying that

99 percent of the men in this locker
room." Bengals offensive guard
Brian Blados said. “honestly really
hate those guys in the other locker
room.
“Sombody's always trying to start
something. It's almost like (former
Oileis coach Jerry) Glanville never
left"

A quick history lesson will tell us
that no team has ever lost its first
two games and advanced to the Su—
per Bowl. But the Bengals actually
feel they had, and still have, a
chance at football’s crowning glory.

“It doesn't matter when you lose
two games,” Wyche said. “This is
just two of 16 games. We could lose
the last two or middle two or split it
up.

“This team has a real chance to
do something special. We're not out
of it. not by a long shot. If you guys
count us out. then it will be you
guys that will be left holding the
stick."

A few minutes later. Sam awoke.
and asked if he'd been daydream-
ing.

Senior Staff Writer Barry Reeves
is a journalism senior and a Kernel
sports columnist.

Womenjs soccer team
wins 4-3 over Miami

Staff reports

The UK women‘s soccer team
won its final season opener as a
club team Sunday afternoon at the
Cage Field, defeating Miami (Ohio)
4-3.

The club will become UK‘s new.
est varsity team next seamn.

UK freshman Andrea Brown
scored two goals while freshman
Melissa Petts and senior Tracey
Brown each scored a goal.

UK coach Mike Joy said he was
pleased with his team‘s play. “It
was a good win for us." he said.

“We need to work on our defense.
We made some mental mistakes.
We are real young," Joy said.

The Cats‘ 1091 roster consists of
one senior, one junior. one sopho-
more and 17 freshmen.

UK took 48 shotson-goal while

Miami could only iiitister 18. Miami
fell to 0-2.

UK Will play Bellamiine College
Thursday at 5 p.m. at the Cage
l‘lk‘ld.

Lady Kat Golfers finish sixth

The Lady Kats golf team finished
sixth yesterday in the North Caroli-
na Invitational at Chapel Hill. NC.

UK posted a three-day score of
927, 32 strokes behind tournament
winner North Carolina.

UK junior Lisa Weissmueller led
the Lady Kats, finishing lOth as an
individual. She shot a 3-over-par 76
in yesterday‘s final round.

Junior Tonya Gill and sophomore
Dolores Nava tied for 33rd place as
individuals. lunior Laurie Goodlett
finished 37th and freshman Tracey
Holms finished 53rd.

 

 

 

 

Catch UK cross country coverage next Week in
. Kernel sports.

 

DanceEnaemloll
Auditions

KfiHWNm‘. V 'r . , ', n . h

 

 4 - Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday, September 10, 1991

 

 

——-- DIVEITSIONS

 

 

By DOUGLAS J. ROWE
Assomated Press

"A Moveable Feast: Proliles of
Contemporary Amencan Authors"
{Atlas Video Inc. $19.95 for each

Joyce Carol Oates is interviewed
in her suburban Princeton, NJ.,
home. the setting for “American
Appetitcs.” her novel about a mar~
ried couple hung a prestigious but
troubled upper middle-class exis-

tence.

William S. Merwin. a Pulitzer
Prize-winning poet, is seen in his
element —- the Hawaiian island of
Maui. And we also see quite clearly
why he concentrates on environ—
ment issues and the Earth's natural
treasures.

Series host Ion'i \‘itale, who has
been a cultural correspondent for
National Public Radio's “All
Things Considered“ and “Moming
Ediuon," introduces the sense of
place and its effect on a writer.

In the program about Trey Ellis,
who writes parodies of what he
calls “Afrobaroque glory stories,"

\(l-minute tape $159.60 for the
eight-volume sett

People who like to read serious
literature should like to watch a se-
nes that profiles contemporary
.Mnencan authors, offers a sampling
or their work and focuses on the en-
varoninent that most influences
lh.‘lll.

lath Videotape in the eight-pan
series titled “A Moveable Feast"
succeeds in giving the VICWCI’ the
sense of place — sights, sounds,
«nations and experiences indige-
nous to an area —-— that went into
testing the writer.

the Kernel...

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252-5121

 

 

 

Vitalc, who hosts a radio program
of literary readings and interviews
also called ”A Moveable Feast,"
points out that Ellis' milieu is New
York's Upper East Side and says:

“It has been said of the writer liv-
ing in New York, the subject is eve-
rywhere."

For his part, Ellis —- while being
a very funny writer —- seriously as-
sens that the black experience is so
broad now that “it‘s pandering for a
lot of urban. upper middle-class
blacks to write pretending that
they were born in a shack."

In the other half-hour videos, T.
Corraghessan Boyle offers a vision
of the Hudson River Valley; T.R.
Pearson explains how his four com-
ic novels give vorce to the South;
Chicago poet Li-Young Lee traces a
family of Chinese aristocrats turned
American clergy in Chicago; and

Sonia Sanchez focuses on race rela-
tions in Philadelphia.

Arguably. the most famous, or at
least enduring, of the writers pro-
filed is Allen Ginsberg. the beat
poet, who has written about his
mother's insane life and death in
New York City.

The series, which aired on PBS,
succeeds, too, because the writers
read from their work, giving view-
ers a little of their vision and pas-
sion.

Sanchez witnessed the 1985
MOVE conflagration in Philadel-
phia, where 60 homes were de-
stroyed after police bombed the rad.
ical group‘s fortified row house.
Eleven were killed, including five
children.

“This is a pan of our history,” she
maintains, and writes:

“Hurry on down to Osage Street.

“They're roasting in the fire.
“Smell the dreadlocks and black
skins roasting in the fire.

Oates talks of being not only the
sum but also the limit of one‘s expe-
rience as she recounts how three or
four men in the Princeton area think
they're the protagonist of her latest
book.

One even has jokingly threatened
to sue, but that’s unlikely. she says,
explaining:

“I think most novelists are like
magpies or crows. taking bits of de-
tails and ingredients from real life
and weaving them all together into
a kind of fanciful nest. And people
look in the nest and say. ‘Herc‘s an
old ribbon. That was mine.‘ or

r

‘Here’s an old pipe cleaner or

Top writers shown in ‘A Moveable Feast"

something.

“But really it's a complete gestalt.
andinasensedoesn'tbearany rela-
tionship to those same things out-
side thc context."

Ultimately. the series soars be-
cause it's not stuffy. It's for people
who are not prisoners of public tele-
vision (you know the other type —
“The only television I watch is on
”) should enjoy these videos and be
turned on to some exciting litera-
ture.

As Boyle, winner of the PEN—
Faulkner award for American Fic-
tion. says, literature can be “so her-
metic" when it should be fun, it
should be entertainment.

Same goes for these videos.
They‘re fun. They‘re entertaining.

Hemingway’s Idaho: The last good country

“If we win here we will win eve—
rywhere. The world is a fine place
and worth the fighting for and I
hate very much to leave it." — Er-
nest Hemingway. ’For Whom the
Bell Tolls

By RICHARD BENKE
Associated Press

KETCHUM, Idaho —— Back when
Ernest Hemingway lived in his well
fenestrated hillside house overlook-
ing the Big Wood River. there
wasn't another building in sight

Now development encroaches
throughout the popular Sun Valley
resort area. and Hemingway is part
of the reason.

His son, Jack. hopes to be part of
the solution. He‘s on the board of
the Nature Conservancy in Idaho,
and he believes his father, who died
here 30 years ago. would have ap—
proved.

“In his day. the word ‘environ-
mental' wasn't in common usage.
certainly,” Hemingway says. “His
feeling for the land essentially was
that it should be unspoiled. In
those days when some country you
loved was overrun with people, you
just moved on and found another
place. Idaho was sort of his last
stand: he wasn‘t going to move on.
He wanted to keep what we had

The next time you need to take a break
from the books, make a break for
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__.._..._____.._.._____..\

here as inviolable as possible. I
think he was a little depressed to see
more people coming, but even in
'61 when he died the growth hadn't
even begun.

“There was no environmental
movement. You just had a very
strong feeling about what should be
done with the land.

“He used to talk about good coun~
try. and this was gcxxl country. The
country around here, the sort of de-
serty country, reminded him a lot of
Spain, which was a place he dearly
loved. He loved the bird hunting
here in particular."

When the resort was being devel-
oped in the late l930s, Hemingway
and other celebrities were brought
here to promote it.

They stayed in complimentary
quarters. and resort officials guided
them on hunting, fishing and skiing
adventures —— and snapped publici-
ty photos.

Some came back periodically.
Hemingway most of all. And in
1958, when he could see he might
have to leave his Cuban home be-
cause of Castro's revolution, he
bought the Big Wood River house
where he ended his life on July 2,
1901.

The house. a replica of the Sun
Valley Lodge. was bequeathed to
the Nature Conservancy by Hem-
ingway‘s widow, Mary, who died in
I986.

Conservancy state director Guy
BonniVier has his office in the up-
stairs room where Hemingway
wrote such works as A Moveable
Feast and Garden of Eden. standing
at a wmdow overlooking the valley
toward the basalt outcroppings of
the Boulder Mountains.

“When Ernest lived here, you
couldn‘t see another building from
this house." Bonnivier said as
walked through the imposing two—
story, poured-concrete house with
its dominating Windows.

Most Hemingway fumishings re-
main, including impala and lesser
kudu trophies of his African safaris

 

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Right Weigh
Diet Program
Fall Class
Starts September 12
Call 257-3052

 

 

 

over the fireplace and a mountain
lion pelt on the sofa.

Hemingway's deep-sea fishing
cap is on a shelf in Bonnivier's of-
fice.

The house and grounds are closed
to the public. a condition of Mary
Hemingway’s will.

Hemingway especially loved to
canoe down Silver Creek 30 miles
southeast of here on duck hunts. his
son says.

The Conservancy now owns the
Silver Creek Preserve. 3,000 acres
near the headwaters.

“It would be difficult for you to
find a desert spring creek in better
condition than Silver Creek.” Bon-
nivier says.

The private, non-profit Conser-
vancy also owns 8.000 acres close
to the confluence of the Snake and
Salmon rivers in the Hell's Canyon
area near the Oregon-Washington
border, 120 acres along Soldier
Creek. three miles of river frontage
in the Thousand Springs Preserve
and a half mile of Wood River
frontage which Bonnivier calls "the
Hemingway Preserve."

“There is all sorts of development
encroaching on the (Wood) river,"
Bonnivier says, a particular problem
because of the river’s tendency to
flood.

Home owners who have built
down in the flood plain have ri-
prappcd their river frontages with
protective boulders. altering the
course of the river and increasing its
speed, he says.

A group called Friends of the
Wood River instituted a program to
counteract ripraps with “drop struc-
tures" designed to slow the flow
and return it to its normal flood
plain.

The Conservancy, meanwhile.
wants to acquire riioie Wood River
frontage. “We want to get hold of
the pieces that aren‘t riprapped,"
BonniVier says.

The Nature Conservancy, some-
times called the real estate wing of
the environmental movement with
more than a half-million members
nationwide. acquires ecologically
sensitive land, then sets about reha-
bilitating it. In Idaho, the consonan-
cy has been involved in protecting
some 45,000 acres overall.

But the Silver Creek Preserve is
something of an anomaly.

“There had been no history in the
past of the Conservancy allowing
any public hunting on any of their
land. but it was really felt that this
was a traditional use," Jack Hem-
ingway says.

DIDVOLI

KNOW?”

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- Parents Weekend
samumby'”;
Coll 257-TlCS for;
tlcttct Information

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

Bonnivier says hunters are ai-
lowed to canoe d0wn Silver Creek
three days a week, to shoot from the
public access riverbed areas to the
high-water line and to walk ashore
on Conservancy land to retrieve
their birds.

Besides ducks, Silver Creek has
long-billed curlews, wintering bald
eagles, visiting peregrine falcons,
breeding pairs of Swainson‘s Hawk
and sevcml owl species.

And there is the Wood River
Sculpin, a 2-inch-long bullhead~like
fish found nowhere else in the
world

Hemingway also loved Thousand
Springs along the Snake River 100
miles south of Ketchum, where the
birds favor the warm spring water
and the neighboring comfields.

“One of the phenomena that at-
tracted Hemingway was the
500.00() to a million mallards win«
tering there, but it still doesn't rate
itself as a primary flyway." Bonniv-
ier says. “And there are at least a
dozen other species wrntenng there.
The water is 52 degrees _— very
warm. especially when (the air) is
25 below zero."

It‘s pretty far north for wintering
birds, he says

“Those birds Just don‘t go any
farther south. They go from the
spring water to the com. the corn to
the spring water."

When the time came for Heming-
way to consider where he‘d live af-
ter leaving Cuba, his son says: “I
don't think there was any question
in his mind about where he'd go.
This was it."

He had worked on many of his
books during Sun Valley visits.
starting with For Whom the Bell
Tolls in 1939. and he had many
friends here.

Sun Valley erected a modest
Hemingway monument 25 years
ago overlooking Trail Creek. A bust
of him sits atop a pillar. On the base
is an inscription distilled from Hem—
ingway's eulogy for a friend killed
in a Thousand Springs hunting acci»
dent:

“Best of all he loved the tall, the
leaves yellow on the cottonwoods,
leaves floating on the trout streams.
and above the hills the high blue
windless skies. Now he Will be a
part of them forever.“

Sliitlcnl (Icnlcr ’l‘ii ltcl Office.
is now a

 

  

Morris

Continued from page 1

and very real."

Morris is known for his hits such
as “100 Percent Chance of Rain"
and “Wind Beneath My Wings."

Morris has also acted in the tele-

vision series “The Colbys" and in
the Broadway hit “Les Miserables"
and the play “La Boheme.”

This week Morris will appear in
Washington D.C.. Austin, Texas.
and Los Angeles before returning
to Lexington next Sunday for the
benefit. Tickets are $10. and all
proceeds go to the Lucille Markey
Cancer Center.

 

Soviet

Continued from page 1

bloody ethnic violence when Azer-
baijanis attacked ethnic Armenians.

In renewed violence this week-
end, 13 people were killed and more
than 30 wounded in of Nagomo-
Karabakh, the Tass news agency re-
poned yesterday. The predominant-
ly Armenian enclave is inside Azer-
baijan.

Fighting between Armenians and
Azerbaijanis for control over Na-
gomo-Karabakh began in 1988 and
has claimed hundreds of lives.

Opposition