xt74b853jb12 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt74b853jb12/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2006-09-01 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 01, 2006 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 01, 2006 2006 2006-09-01 2020 true xt74b853jb12 section xt74b853jb12 Legendary Bob Dylan and revolutionary
The Roots introduce new sounds for fans

 

www. kykernel. com

WOMEN'S Soccea

Freshman Katie Fahey
scoring all the goals

PAGE 36

 

_RIDAY

-September 1 2006

KENTUCKY KERNEL

 

CELEBRATING 35 YEARS OF INDEPENDENCE

 

K requiring checks of new hires

By Evan Israel

news@kykernel.com

Safety just got a little more expen-
sive for UK.

The university now requires back-
ground checks for all new employees.
as well as those who have worked at
the school for less than a year.

The policy. enacted by UK Human
Resources and UK Legal Council. took
effect on July 12 to comply with a law
passed earlier this year by the Kentucky
General Assembly. The required checks

students. and those who have worked at
UK in the past but didn‘t return until
more than one full calendar year later.

The goal of the policy is to improve
the school's hiring process.

"We wanted to extend our commit-
ment in providing a safe environment.“
said Human Resources operations di-
rector Mary Ferlan.

The policy requires that new em-
ployees have their credentials verified.
along with their criminal history and
other information that helps UK in
making hiring decisions.

The basic checks cost $60 each: en-
hanced checks. which are used for re-
search and health-care jobs. cost $84
each.

Between July 12 and August 25. the
school conducted background checks
on 936 individuals and estimates a total
cost between $60000 and $70,000. The
approximate cost estimate for an entire
school year is $420000 t0 $500000.

Some campus organizations are
questioning if the checks are worth the
cost. particularly in hiring students.

“It‘s now a state law. so we do it."

UK Dining Services executive director
Jeff DeMoss said. “I think it’s question-
able. but I understand where it came
from."

Dining services has yet to reject po-
tential employees based on background
check results. DeMoss isn‘t sure the
background checks will be useful for
the department. particularly since many
students are young and might not have
any type of criminal records.

“It's just another cost to do busi-
ness." DeMoss said.

Once the department administers

the background checks. the results are
sent to Human Resources, which then
accepts or rejects the potential hire

“It's very simple." DeMoss said.
“It’s cut and dry."

Although the policy makes the
process of getting hired by the school
more difficult. it doesn‘t necessarily
make it impossible for someone with a
record to get a job.

"Just because someone has a felony
or misdemeanor doesn‘t mean we‘re
not going to hire them." Ferlan said.

include all new employees. including

See Checks on page 82

 

UK to
reopen

Huguelet
Within days

By Shannon Mason
smason@kykernel.com

Huguelet Drive is scheduled to reopen to the
public within a few days. hospital officials said.

Michael Karpf. executive vice president of
health affairs at UK. said Huguelet was paved in
time for students to move into their domis. but the
Rose Street side of the road has yet to be made ful—
ly available to the public.

Bob Wiseman. vice president for facilities man-
agement. said that would change in the next few
days.

Wiseman also said the Huguelet Drive-Virginia
Avenue extension between Rose Street and South
Limestone was “well underway" and will open in
late October.

“Once we get the new road in. we‘ll close the
old road in late November." Wiseman said.

The “old road" is the section of Rose Street
from Huguelet to South Limestone Street.

“We're moving ahead." Karpf said of the
Huguelet—Virginia construction. “We‘re pretty
much on schedule."

Construction of the new parking garage on South
Limestone between Transcript Avenue and Conn Ter-
race is also on schedule. Karpf said. In October. the
first floor of the garage will be visible. he said.

The garage will have 1,500 spaces. with 700
open by September 2007 and the other 800 open by
January 2008. Wiseman said.

Demolition of the current parking garage will
be underway between September and November
2007. meaning construction on the new hospital
building will begin in November or December of
that year. The hospital will be built on the site of
the current garage.

Although the new hospital will not be open un—
til January 2010. plans of what will go in the hospi—

Pilot's
condition
improves

By Shannon Masfl
smason©kykernel.com

The condition of the only survivor of Sunday's
plane crash has been updated from critical to seri-
ous. according to UK Chandler Medical Center.

James Polehinke. the co~pilot of Comair Flight
519]. underwent his third surgery yesterday as
planned since arriving at the medical center Sun-
day morning.

“He continued to show improvement. so they
upgraded his condition." said Jay Blanton. director
of public relations at UK.

In the neWs release. Dr. Andrew C. Bernard. a
trauma surgeon and assistant professor of surgery
at UK. said Polehinke‘s upgrade reflects overall
clinical improvement.

Polehinke suffers from fractures in his face.
spine. pelvis. left leg. right foot. right hand. three
ribs and a breastbone. He had a collapsed lung
when he arrived at the hospital but suffered no
burn injuries.

The National Transportation Safety Board said
Monday that Polehinke handled the aircraft during
takeoff. but added on Tuesday that pilot Jeffrey
Clay taxied the aircraft to the wrong runway. Clay
was one of the 49 who died in the crash.

 

www.mmam

 

Battle of brawn

 

 

 

 

Left: Sigma Pi members Zach Dimeti,

Above: Members of the lrater-iitv Slg'iia Pi, r.
Sigma Nu last night at Geudbam field
The two tratemitias, along With scma‘ others, rtwiitieterl 2::
the champion tug ti war fraternity

grit, fated off against
a trateri‘ity tug orwar ewflit
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Brian McMillan, left, a mwl engineering scahomom strain as tum phi
the more against manners of Sigma Nu last night

PHOTOS BY ED MATTHEWS l STAN

li‘ratcrnitics faced off in a

test of strength yesterday at
( ioodbarn field. competing
in a tug-o-war tournament

 

to take home hr tggine; g

bb

'ights‘ as the tug-o-“ar
champion.

Physicist uses symmetry to desenbe laws of natur c

By Juliann Vachon
imatykarnelcom

How would you have made the universe if

you were God?

Students. faculty and visitors were faced
with that question last night at the Center The—
ater in the Student Center.

Hosted by the UK physics and astronomy

department. A. Wee. a physicist at the Kavli In-
stitute for Theoretical Physics at the University
of (‘alifomia at Santa Barbara gave a presenta»
tion based on his book “Fearful Symmetry: The
Search for Beauty in Modem Physics."
“If you were the creator. you would he faced
with an impossible design dilemma. " Zee said.
"On the one hand you want to make the world
fun and interesting. yand on the other hand. you
want to see the beauty and predictability of sym-

metry."

In his first Visit to Kentucky. Zce discussed
the key role of symmetry the idea of simplic—
ity and unity despite transformation over time
in physics.

Zee used a compilation of images and ideas
to illuminate the history of symmetry in nature
and physics.

“People instinctively make things symmetri-

See Speech on page 32

"men: 257-1915; Advertising: 257-2872

 

   

 

  

 

      
     
     
   
   
   
  
   
  
     
    
    
    
     
    
   
      
   
    
 
  
    
   
      
    
   
  
       
  
     
   
  
    
  
    
   
 
   
   
  
  
   
   
 
 
   
   

PAGE 32 | Friday, September I,

2006

   

 

SPEECH

 

Continued from page Bl

cal." Zee said. "This notion
shows up in physics as well."

According to Zee. physicists
have used the simplicity and
comprehensibility of symmetry
to discover the laws of nature.

"Physicists only see parts of
laws of nature. and they try to
guess what they can‘t see based
on what is symmetrical with
that." Zee said.

He also suggested that the
universe began with perfect
symmetry and has become less
symmetrical over time because
of spontaneous symmetry break-
ing.

"Physicists look deeper into
nature in hopes to find that
things become more symmetri-

 

cal the deeper they go." Zee
said.‘

He compared this idea to the
roof of a temple that would be-
gin as a square. become an octa-
gon and finally be a circle — the
deepest and most symmetrical
shape.

Family and consumer sci-
ence senior Molly Pepper said
she attended the speech for a
class.

“I've never thought about
physics in this way as something
relatable to poetry. an and archi-
tecture." Pepper said. “I don‘t
think physics is quite so boring
anymore."

Lyle Goodwin. a physics ju-
nior. said he enjoyed how Zee
explained how physicists are us—
ing symmetry to explore.
physics.

“Zee's speech helped show
the way symmetry is becoming
a substantial force in modem
physics." Goodwin said.

ALUE GARZA| STAFF
A. Zee speaks about his book, 'Fearful symmetry: The Search for Beauty in
Modern Physics" on August 31 at the Student Center Theater.

HOSPITAL

Continued from page B1

tal have been completed. Wise-
man said.

Bob Williams. project man-
ager with UK’s capital project
management division. said offi-
cials have already planned out
what will go on each floor of
the new hospital.

Included on the basement of
the hospital will be the support
area. central sterile area, envi-
ronmental services, mainte-
nance office and linen services,
Williams said.

The emergency room. coffee
shopx administration offices
and lobby will be located on the
ground floor.

The first floor will include a
waiting area. gift shop. volun-
teer offices and a small cafeteria.

Williams said half of the
first floor will be shelled —
built but not fitted for immedi—
ate use. Eventually. the first

floor will house a new. larger
cafeteria and same—day intake
patient facilities.

The second floor will be the
surgery area. complete with
pre-operation rooms. recovery

rooms and eight operating
rooms. The floor will be
equipped for 24 operating

rooms total. but 30 percent of
the floor will be shelled until
growth requires the usage and
fitting out of the other: rooms.

The pharmacy. house staff
area. blood bank. lockers, me-
chanical space and the air-in-
take area will be located on the
third floor.

The fourth floor is the first
of six levels of patient rooms in
both bed towers, Williams said.

The Rose Street construc-
tion. parking garage and new
hospital are all parts of the first
phase of the UK Health Care ex-
pansion.

The three-phase project.
scheduled to finish in 2020. also
includes building new critical-
care and ambulance facilities.

 

CHECKS

 

Continued from page B1

“It's America. People do their
crime. do their time.“

Ferlan said if a potential em-
ployee had a criminal record.
Human Resources would handle
it on a case-by—case basis. paying
attention to the applicant’s over—
all history and the time any
crimes occurred.

Not every place on campus
is affected by the background
checks.

The UK Bookstore. for ex—

 

ample. is a completely indepen-
dent entity.

“We do our own interview-
ing, which may or may not be
more stringent than the univer-
sity’s." store manager Chris
Lawrence said.

As a result. students and
other employees at the book-
store are not required to go
through the university back-
ground checks.

Human Resources expects
to have a breakdown of the
number of potential employees
who have undergone the back-
ground checks in each hiring
department within the next cou-
ple of months.

 

FBI 1n1t1ated student loans search for terrorists

By Richard B. Schmitt

[OS ANGELES TIMES

WASHINGTON — The Ed»
ucation Department acknowl~
edged Thursday that. at the re~
quest of the FBI. it had scoured
millions of federal student loan
records for information about
suspected terrorists in the five
years since the Sept. ll attacks.

The data mining -— known
as “Project Strike Back" A was
aimed at determining whether
terrorism suspects had illegally
obtained college aid to finance
their operations through identity
theft or other means.

Authorities said the program
was limited to "fewer than
1,000" persons who were con»
sidcrcd witnesses or "subjects"
of federal terrorism investiga-
tions. Most of the searches were

conducted in 200] and 2002: the
program was ended in June
3006.

The project 7 first dis—
closed by the Mcdill School of
Journalism at Northwestem Uni—
versity in Evanston. Ill. — is
similar to sometimes secret
arrangements the FBI made with
other federal agencies. such as
the Social Security Administra—
tion. to gain information about
terror suspects since Sept. 1].

But the idea of the govem—
mcnt trolling through massive
data bases containing informa-
tion on ordinary citizens has
concerned privacy advocates.
The sleuthing comes against a
backdrop of even more aggres—
sive moves that US. terror
hunters have made since Sept.
ll. such as the monitoring of

citizens‘ phone calls without a
court order.

The FBI said the searches
were triggered by intelligence
indicating that terrorists were
exploiting student visas and loan
programs.

“This was not a sweeping
program. in that it involved only
a few hundred names." said FBI
spokesman John Miller. “This is
part of our mission. which is to
take the leads we have and in-
vestigate them. There was no at»
tempt to conceal these efforts, in
that they were referenced in
publicly available briefings to
Congress and the General Ac-
countability Office."

Under the program. the FBI
gave the names to the Education
Department‘s Inspector General.
which conducted the searches.

The searches were limited to
“names of subjects already ma-
terial to counter-terrorism inves-
tigations." Miller said. adding
that “no records of people other
than those already under investi-
gation were called for."

The FBI declined to say
how the information was used
or whether it led to arrests or
prosecutions of suspects.

The Education Department
said the FBI sought the informa-
tion pursuant to an exemption to
the federal Privacy Act that au-
thorizes the release of personal
data for a criminal investigation.

“We also analyzed the re-
sults for potential abuse of fed-
cral student aid. but no cases by
our office resulted." said Mary
Mitchelson. the counsel to the
department's inspector general.

 

Unconventional wisdom Women

aren't as good at math

By Richard Morin
tut WASHINGTON POST

 

Strange but true: Women
scorc much lower on math tests
If they are first asked unrelated
questions about gender issues.
The phenomenon is called
"stereotype threat" a kind of
performance anxiety discovcrcd
in I‘N.< when psychologists
found that black students at
Stanford I'mycrsity did signifi~
cantly worse on intelligence
tests If they were first asked to
Identity their race on the test
form.

Since then. do/cns of other
csperimcnts have confirmed that
subtly cumg women or minori—
ties to think subconsciously
about their sex or racc causes
them do poorly In areas where
the stereotype suggests they are
weak.

l'nivcrsity of Texas psy-
chologist Matthew S. McGlone
wondered if there wasn‘t anoth~
er side of the story. What if you
prompted people to think about
tthr strengths rather than tthr
stereotypical weaknesses
would that be enough to In]?
provc performance in areas
w‘hcrc they weren‘t supposcd to
do well?

In a no\e| set of cxpcrI»
mcnts. McGlone. working with
Joshua Aronson of New York
University. found that the an-
swer Is yes. “The idca that
something is immutable due to
some biological factor can be

trumped." McGlone said.

Their ingenious study in-
volvcd ()0 students. half men
and half women. at Lafayette
College in Easton. Pa. The stu-
dents filled out a questionnaire
that first asked them general
questions about campus life. In
a second section. researchers
varied the questions to get these
students thinking in slightly dif-
ferent ways.

One group of students were
asked whether they lived in a
single~scx or coed dorm. Previ—
ous studics found cvcn this be—
niin question unconsciously ac»
tivatcd male and female stcrcov‘
types. McGlone said.

Another group answered
questions about why they chose
to attend a private liberal arts
college. The goal was to nudge
these young women and men
into thinking how smart and ac-
complished they were. “We
were activating their snob
schema." McGlone said with a
chuckle. The remaining stu—
dents. the control group. were
asked to write about their cxpc~
rIcncc living in the northeastern
I'nited States

The students then took the
Vandcnberg Mcntal Rotation
Test. a standard test of visual—
spatial abilities linked to math
performance in which objects
are shown at different angles
and thc test-taker has to pick the
identical pair. Previous studies
found that men are three times
as likely as women to do well

on this test. McGlone and Aron—
son wrote in a forthcoming issue
of the Joumal of Applied Devel—
opmental Psychology.

When they analyzed the
data. they found that men in the
control group did. indeed. per-
form l5 to 20 percent better
than the women on the Vanden-
bcrg test. in line with previous
studies. Among those who had
been subtly cued to think about
their gender. the gap was even
widerVguys did “25 percent to

30 percent better than the
women." again consistent with
previous research. McGlone
said.

The surprise came among
those who were primed to think
about their status as students at
an exclusive private college.

The gender gap closed dra-
matically. as women‘s scores
improved while men's stayed
the same. “There was no signifi-
cant difference between men
and women." McGlone said.
“With a pretty simple manipula-
tion. we could significantly re-
duce this gap." which suggests
that “there might be things that
make all of these biological fac-
tors go away."

Add babies to the growing
list of overweight Americans.

Harvard researchers studied
120.680 children younger than 6
and found that the prevalence of
overweight children jumped 59
percent from I980 to 200].

The number of overweight
infants up to 6 months old also

or are they?

ballooned a whopping 74 per-
cent during the 22-year study
period. said Matthew Gillman.
an associate professor at Har—
vard Medical School.

Feeling blue? Get married.

Graduate student Adrianne
Frcch and sociologist Kristi
Williams of Ohio State Univer—
sity found that depressed single
people were far more likely to
benefit emotionally from mar-
riage than better-adjusted men
and women.

The researchers used data
collected by the National Survey
of Families and Households.
which interviewed a representa—
tive sample of Americans in
19874988 and then re—inter-
viewed them in I992~I994. in-
cluding 3066 people who were
single at the time of the first in-
terview. The researchers pre~
sented their study at the recent
meeting of the American Socio—
logical Association.

Frech and Williams sug-
gested that depressed people
may benefit more from marriage
because they may be in more
need of emotional closeness and
social support. Then again. hap-
py people are already feeling
good about themselves,
Williams suggested.

Richard Morin is a senior
editor at the Pew Research Cen-
ter. Versions of this column ap-
pear at washingtonpostcom and
www.pcwresearch .org.

 

    

Mairrti‘sts

Ask for Kathleen

   

        

    
    
 
    
   
   
   
      
    
 
    
   
     
    

 

      
 

LEXINGTON‘SNEWEST(IOMIIGGAMINGSI'OIIE3

32- T- HELE 001‘] OF GAI‘JJJI‘JB I‘JJJI‘JIAI'UI’E
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FEATURES

  

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