xt702v2cbz11 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt702v2cbz11/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1999-10-06 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, October 06, 1999 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 06, 1999 1999 1999-10-06 2020 true xt702v2cbz11 section xt702v2cbz11 l
i

 

~ - w

 

Problem
explained

Do not try to deny it. we
all have our bouts
with a little
gastrointestinal
discomfort. Here is an
explanation about the
gas that smells up the
stalls:

Where does fart gas
come from?

The gas in our intestines
comes from several
sources: air we
swallow, gas seeping
into our intestines
from our blood, gas
produced by chemical
reactions in our guts,
and gas produced by
bacteria living in our
guts.

What is fart gas made of?

The composition of fart
gas is highly variable.
Most of the air we
swallow, especnally
the oxygen
component, is
absorbed by the body
before the gas gets
into the intestines. By
the time the air
reaches the large
intestine, most of
what is left is
nitrogen. Chemical
reactions between
stomach acid and
intestinal fluids may
produce carbon
dioxide, which is also
a component of air
and a product of
bacterial action.
Bacteria also produce
hydrogen and
methane.

But the relative
proportions of these
gases that emerge
from our anus depend
on several factors:
what we ate, how
much air we
swallowed, what kinds
of bacteria we have in
our intestines, and
how long we hold in
the tart. The longer a
fart is held in, the
larger the proportion
of boring, inert
nitrogen it contains,
because the other
gases tend to be
absorbed into the
bloodstream through
the walls of the
intestine.

What makes farts stink?

The odor of farts comes
from small amounts
of hydrogen sulfide
gas and mercaptans
in the mixture. These
compounds contain
sulfur. The more
sulfur-rich your diet.
the more sulfides and
mercaptans will be
produced by the
bacteria in your guts,
and the more your
farts will stink. Foods
such as cauliflower,
eggs and meat are
notorious for
producing smelly
tarts, whereas beans
produce large
amounts of not
particularly stinky
farts.

Source:
http://www.heptune.
com/farts.html

THE 411

 

Tomorrow‘s
“W. rt titer

Hi Lo
Sunny today...
Kentucky
Kernel

VOL. “I05 ISSUE N30

ESTABLISHED IN I892
INDEPENDENT SINCE I971

News tips?

Call: 257-1915 or write:
kernel®pop.uky.edu

 

061°”?! 6.- '999, . ,

 

 

wwequmoiesem

Bringing in the big bucks

By John Wampler
NEWS EDITOR

 

$132.2 million. That‘s how much mon-
ey UK‘s faculty and staff gained in re-
search contracts. grants, and gifts from
outside sources during the 1999 fiscal year.
according to a report released by the uni-
versity earlier this month.

That‘s a 10.4 percent increase over last
year. and is the sixth consecutive year UK
has broken the $100 million mark in re-
search funding.

“This is one of the finest faculties in
the world. and it is reflected in the phe-
nomenal growth of UK external research
support,“ said Jerry Bramwell. vice presi-
dent for Research and Graduate Studies

The report for the fiscal year runs

from July of the. previous year to July of

the present. was not issued until Septem-
ber because it takes a while to tally up all
the awards.

Bramwell said that UK has 441 re-
search faculty that have been funded for at
least five consecutive years. and out of that
441. 149 have been funded for 12 consecu-
tive years or more.

“We have an excellent faculty and a
very responsive administration. particu-
larly in research anti graduate studies. and
that‘s a great combination." Bramwell
said.

In addition to the $132.2 million award-
ed to UK faculty and staff. an additional
$2.6 million in royalties was earned by UK

originated technologies licensed for use by
companies.

Bramwell said that this was about a
8200.000 increase over last year. and it
placed UK 2lst nationally in terms of mon-
ey earned.

“We're just at the door of being a Top
20." liramwell said.

l'K issued nine new license agree
tnents «luring the 1999 fiscal year.
Bramwcll said.

Joe Fink. assistant vice-president for
Research and Graduate Studies. said that
UK has license agreements with a number
of national companies. They include Bris-
tol-MeyersSquibb. and Control Delivery
Systems. which is in a marketing partner
ship with Bausch and Lomb.

[K was issued 21 patents this year.
and applied for an additional twenty.
liramwell said. lie added that ['K current
l\ holds over 170 different patents.

The patents that came in this year.
however. are actually the reflection of
work done in years past. Fink said. ex
plaining that a patent usually takes at
least four years to be issued.

So while I'K is working on gaining
new research faculty the ones currently in
place have been doing a good job. Fink said.

"What this shows is that the people
that have been here fora while have been
extremely productive in commercializable
develtipments." Fink said.

"...Thc new people coming in will only
add to that." he added.

 

 

Old equipment
forces

 

 

clancelation

 

 

y“

NICK routccx | KERNELSTAFF

 

look like a scene from a sixties science fiction movie? Old equipment may work, but some think it's time to update.

Sometimes, it’s just enough to get by in
the Chemistry-Physics Building

By Chris Markus
STAFF WRITER

The glass-encased scientific
tools used in experiments scores
of years ago that decorate the
halls aren‘t the only antiques in
the Chemistry-Physics Building.

Some of the tools and equip—
ment currently used by students
and professors in the lab classes
are outdated or broken. Because
of this. some classes have been
forced to cancel their lab compo-
nent.

Dr. David Robertson. direc—
tor of general chemistry. said
that all sections of Chemistry 620
have dropped the lab portion of
the class because the equipment
used is so outdated. He also said
chemistry faculty voted to modi-
fy a chemical instrumentation
class to cut out the lab compo-
nent. This proposal is still pend-
ing in the College Council and
University Senate.

“We are the only school
amongst our old benchmark
schools that does not teach a lab
with both semesters of general
chemistry. We‘re way behind."
said Dr. Robertson.

Some students taking lab
classes have echoed the gripes

heard from the faculty. Sarah
Mello. a history senior who is
taking an organic chemistry lab.
expressed frustration with the
outdated lab tools.

"All the boiling point ma-
chines in my lab are broken.“
she said. “It's a total pain in the
ass."

More than causing frustra-
tion. broken and ailing lab equip-
ment has caused other concerns
for students.

“All of the machines in one
class give totally different re
sults. Our lab grades might real-
ly suffer from this.“ said Adam
Pierce. a mechanical engineer
solphomore. of his Physics 242
la .

The lack of funds appropriat-
ed for scientific equipment by
the administration. which Dr.
Robertson called “a mis-empha-
sis on priorities." has forced the
chemistry department to delve
into their own research funds in
order to provide adequate tools
for students.

"There are lots of things that
need to be done that we're doing
out of our own pockets.“ said Dr.
Robertson. “We used research
dollars to buy a $10,000 server for
our new TopClass program."

That program allows Chem-

istry 105 students to get instant
feedback on homework assign-
merits via the Internet.

Robertson said that an addi.
tional $25,000 was drawn from
chemistry research funds in or
der to finance the Smart Class
program. which allows profes-
sors to transmit multimedia onto
projection screens in their class—
I‘OOI‘IIS.

Although some faculty and
students have expressed dissatis-
faction with lab equipment.
these concerns are not shared by
all.

“Everything in my physics
lab is very well kept." said
Courtney Stoll. an undeclared
sophomore. “I haven‘t had any
problems with the equipment."

Despite the administration‘s
inadequate funding for new
equipment for the lab classes.
Robertson said they did put forth
$2.1 million to renovate two or-
ganic chemistry labs in Chem-
Phys.

Dr. Robertson praised the
renovations as being. “beautiful.
and much safer for the stu-
dents.“ He also acknowledged
that getting the necessary equip-
ment for the labs might take
some time because it is so expen-
sive.

  

 

.KIDSINJHEHALLS

Blanding Tower
ready to rumble

Residence hall celebrates Monday night
athletics to a different drummer

By Will Messer

conrfieunuc whirl:

 

Blanding ()ne‘s basement had all the basic elements ot‘a Monday
Night Football party last Monday: chips and salsa. hot wings. soft
drinks and. of course. rowdy adolescent males.

The only thing missing was the football. The rowdy adolescent
males were dressed as professional wrestlers. Instead of football. they
were watching wrestling and doing a little wrestling thi-niselyes

DeWayne Frazier. an RA in lilanding (inc and a graduate stu—
dent in the Patterson School for Diplomacy. organized the wrestling
party. Frazier said the party was intended to "help build community
in the hall because people can come down. relax. goof off and be
themselves."

“()ne of the chief responsibilities of an RA is communitybuild-
ing." Frazier said.

This was the second wrestling party Frazier has sponsored since
he has been an IRA at I’K. “Last year I did a smallscalc one and this
one was a lot bigger. All together we had about ~10 people come
down." Frazier said.

Frazier decorated the basement walls with posters of the tnost
popular wrestlers and even set out action figures of the wrestlers.
There was also a cameraman from the Office of Residence Life to
videotape all of the action. Frazier said that the idea came from stu
dent requests.

The participants at the wrestling party switched back and forth
between the two Monday night wrestling programs. WWF Monday
Night Raw and WCW Monday Nitro. They also performed some of
the wrestling moves on each other.

Frazier said he decided to have a second wrestling party because
of the sport‘s booming popularity. “Neilson ratings show that RAW
and Nitro now pull a combined nine to 10 percent of the Monday
night market. WWF Raw is the highest rated program on cable." said
Frazier.

"Many people can‘t understand the reason that wrestling is
so popular." Frazier said. “People always ask. ‘Why in the world do
you watch wrestling?‘ They say that it‘s fake and scripted."

Frazier likened professional wrestling's popularity to that of the
Harlem Globetrotters: “They haven‘t lost a game in 10 years. every
body knows they're going to win. but it's sports entertainment."

Frazier added that pro wrestling is very similar to a soap opera.
in that there are heroes and villains and the fans root for them reli
giously.

“It‘s a morality play that mirrors society and gives the average
guy what he wants to see." said Brian Raho. a math freshman who
came dressed as WCW wrestler Rick Flair.

Frazier said that he did not want all the costumes. horseplay and
free food to distract from the true goal of his party.

“The main goal is to build community because college is the
most important transition of your life. The hall ultimately becomes
your home away from home. so you have to feel comfortable there."
Frazier said.

air-lines

I.

 

r.

Helmet: | ktnktisurr

Not the village people

ltlclt Flair, the Undertaker... some ill students have taken their passion for
the athlotlc soap opera of professional wrestling to new height: by dressing
as their favorite characters. They even practice the moves.

 

 

 fl

1.

..____i

 

wi wroitrsuiiv, OCTOBER 6,1999 1 KENTUCKY KERNEL

-ALLIlilE NEWS THAI FITS

The Low-down

I think
he’s
full of
ele-
phant
dung?

- Alan King.
on New York
City's Mayor
Rudy Giuliani's
opposition to the
controversial
"Sensation"
exhibit at the
Brooklyn
Museum of Art.

South Korea nuclear plant reports leak

SEOI'L South Korea Radioactive water
leaked inside a Sotith Korean nuclear power
plant during repair work. exposing 22 workers to
small amounts of radiation. the government said.
It said the radioactive water was contained in
side the plant and did not escape into the envi
ronnient. About 13 gallons of so-called "heavy
water" was leaked during the accident last night
at a nuclear plant in Wolsung. 100 miles south
east of the capital Seoul. the Science and Tech
nology Ministry said in a statement.

Clinton warned on test ban treaty

\VASHING'TUN The Senate‘s top llemoc
rat on t'oreign at‘t‘airs issues said he told I’resi
dent (‘linton the votes aren't there to ratin an iti-
ternational ban on nuclear testing. Sen. Joseph
Biden. lil)el.. said that. while all 17 Senate l)e-
mocrats are prepared to support the treaty next
Tuesday when a vote is scheduled. Republican
support appears to he disappearing. The White
House indicated that (‘liiiton would twilililllt' to
tight for the Senate to ratify the treaty

London rail crash kills 26

l.().\'1)(l.\‘ Two London commuter trains
smashed into each other (lili‘ii‘itl rush hour ves
terday. killing 30 passengers and iniuring 100 on
the same :“111 line as anothei I'atal crash two
years ago .\11.liill.lilt‘t‘ and tire crew s. police and
rail workers swarmed around the overturned.
tiianuled railt irs tor hours. locating and freeing
sttrvivors in the smoldering wreckage near the
Ladliroke Grow residential area in west London.
it was Britain's worst train accident in tnore
than a decade.

FCC warns on telecom merger

.\'l£\\' YiiRlx' The Federal (‘1imnumications
(‘omiiiission warned .\li‘l \i'orld(‘om lite. and
Sprint (‘orp that they "bear a heavy burden to
show how consumers would he better oil“ as a re—
sult oi' their merger. .\l(‘l \Voi'ld(‘oiii forged the
largest corporate takeover in history. a 5411.3 1111
lion acqutsition oi Sprint. the country‘s third
largest long distance compam 1111! l”(‘(‘ (‘haiit
m in Willi 1111 1.. lit on. 1rd s 1111 .\l(‘1 \\'oildt om
and Sprint will b w to in 111 : iliiiiL’ t ist tiii ap
plot 11

 

SICK PUP:
Actor Nicolas
Cage says his
fascination with
the morbid
began when he
was 4 years old
and. at 35. it is
still going
strong. He has
played an alco-
holic bent on
self-destruc-
tion, a private
eye investigat-
ing the porn
industry and a
psychotic sex
maniac, and
now he is star-
ring as an
ambulance dri-
ver on the
verge of a
breakdown.

 

KEEPING IT
REAL:

Brittany Spears
is once again
making an
effort to stop
the gossip that
she had breast
implants,
explaining that
her enlarged
cup size is sim-
ply the result of
growing up.
"When I first
signed with the
record label, we
took a lot of
photos, and
those were the
pictures that
got used," she
told TV Guide.

Bush chides GOP on social issues

WASHINGTON Republican presidential
t'rontrrunner George W. Bush accused his own
party yesterday ofbeing dour, pessimistic and fo-
cused on expanding the nation's wealth “to the
exclttsion of all else." It was the second time in as
many weeks that Bush has taken his own party
to task. The Texas governor last week criticized
congressional Republicans‘ plans to save money
by delaying tax credit payments to the working
poor. Bush also said he would tie testing results
to federal education money.

Clinton OKs military pay raises

WASHINGTON The Pentagon is ottering
pay raises and other incentives in hopes of at-
tracting more military recruits and keeping
troops in uniform longer. President Clinton
signed a $289 billion spending bill yesterday that
includes a 1.8 percent pay raise for the 1.11 million
men and women on active duty. The move came
after the Pentagon announced that the Air Force
ended the 1909 fiscal year with a manpower
shortage oi'aliout 10.000.

Ethnic Albanians attack Serb convoy

l’RlS'l‘lNA. Yugoslavia Ethnic Albanians
stoned a RussianSerb convoy in northern Koso-
yo yestrday. injuring some Russian troops and
lirench police trying to stop the clash. At least
one Serb was killed, according to Yugoslavia's
lleta news agency. Seventeen Serbs were injured,
two ot‘ them critically. A French military officer
said the trouble started when 5.000 ethnic Albani-
ans gathered near the town ot‘Kosovska Mitrovi
ca tor the funeral of 18 of 28 Albanians found last
week in a mass grave, Four Serbs have been ar-
rested in the case.

Dow Ends 0.64 lower at 10,400.59

NEW YORK Stocks fell yesterday in
\ t iiatile trading after the Federal Reserve decided
against raising interest rates again but left open
the possibility of a third rate hike later this year.
The [low industrials closed 0.64 lower at
10.10030. ()n the NYSE. losers led gainers 1.794»
1.3-1]. The Nasdaq rose 3.70 to 2.80016. The Fed
pointed out that the labor market is still extreme
1v tight. and that threatens to push up wages and
prices.

Jim Brown sentenced to probation

1.()S ANGELES NH. great Jim Brown.
convicted ofsmashing his wife‘s car with a shov-
el. was sentenced yesterday to probation and or—
dered to receive batterer's counseling. perform
community service and pay 31.700 to aid domes-
tic violence victims. His attorney told a Holly-
wood Municipal (‘ourt judge that Brown is ap—
pealing the sentence and will not accept any do-
mest ic violence counseling.

 

 

 

Friday, October 8th

515 Gcncraipublic $13.3? 1'1”Ct‘Facu11VSlOOO i'K/lCCiludcnts Willi 11)
for] itlc. t\& information 0111.237 TM
wwa' air edit , \llltIt‘Illt cnlcrx Silt

You've heard him sing.

SPOKEN WORD

8:00pm.

Memorial Hall

$2

stage

 

Feature Writing.

 

Thursday. Oct. 14: From 1 - 2:30 pm. participants will
return to the Student Center Theatre for a panel discus-
sion titled ”Winning the Pulitzer Prize.”
will involve UK alum Angelo Henderson of the Wall
Street Journal, the 1999 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for

Free registration

is available through the
School of Journalism.
For registration and
more information, see
Greg Herron in Room
134 of the Grehan
Journalism Building.

Showed us

Withaflagflyingfromalifting beam.thefinalsectionofthe6atc-
way Arch is hoisted up to its place at the top if the 6304mm
structure In October 1965. The modernistlc Gateway Arch represents
the history of St. Louis as the entrance to the west.

4211113115.
Feed your brain

The Advanced Science and Technology Commercialization
Center will present two seminars this week. Lucio Cocco will
speak on “Nuclear inositol Lipids" today at 4 pm. in A149
ASTeCC and David W. Scropfer will speak on the "Anatomy of
a Start-up Product" Thursday at 4 pm. in the satne room.

 

You Are Invited!

The 85th Anniversary Celebration of the
University of Kentucky
School of Journalism and Telecommunications

Wednesday, Oct.13: design guru Tim Harrower
will hold a newspaper design workshop from

9 a.m. to 4 pm. at the Sheraton Suites on Richmond
Road in Lexington.

Thursday, Oct. 14: From 9:30 - 11 a.m. in the UK Student
Center Theatre, professional journalists and the associate
director of the Pew Center for Civic Journalism will be
on hand to discuss’ Civic Journalism and Economic
Development in Your Community"

This discussion

I
YIMD c-mrmv > ..
IIK (Alrrirlrn Jinl I» ’1)- 'rlf'YIoIII! m :lutlnl: film/annual!

  

 

 

NEW§PAPER
DESIGNER'S
WY? KS FTC)?”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

'1‘1‘3‘; .3 .i,..,.,....uis.e—.a...t. 1.. . . .

 

w—n—w—tmu—i—om.“ ._

8;

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REGJQN

Cleaning up

UK professsors say lawsuit may cost
consumers money, may benefit environment

By Greg Burqett

CONTRIBUTING WRITER

A recent decision by New
York to site coal-fueled power
plants should have tio immedi-
ate economic effects in Ken-
tucky and is warranted. some
UK professors say.

On September 15 New York
Attorney (ienerai liliot Spitzer
announced his state‘s intention
to bring a suit against seven-
teen coal-fueled power plants
located in the Midwest. among
them The Big Sandy Power
Plant. owned by The Kentucky
Power Company. in Paintsviiie.
Kentucky.

“Air pollution does not re
spect state boundaries. We are

UNITY-

utider siege by airborne poiiur
tion originating far beyond our
borders The time has come to
act decisively." Spitzer said.

New York‘s decision to sue
in federal courts stems from its
belief that power plants in
Ohio. lndiatia. Virginia. West
Virginia. atid Kentucky acted
in violation of Environtiientai
Protection Agency statutes de»
veloped front the passing of"|‘he
Clean Air Act of 1990.

The complaint said plant
emissions of sulfur dioxide and
nitrogen oxides traveled up-
wind to New York state. caus-

ing smog and acid raiti. de-
stroying forests. harming

wildlife.
asthma. and disfiguring piibiic
buildings and monuments.

Diversity at UK
will be topic of
symposium

Oct. 7 symposium at Recital Hall in
Singietary Center ties in with Top 20 goals

By John Wampler

NEWS EDITOR

 

A key element for lfK's
graduate school will be diversi-
ty in striving to reach its goal
of becoming a Top 20 research
institution. university officials
say.

“Diversification at UK in
its graduate school parallels its
research growth." said Jerry
Bramweil. vice-president of Re»
search and Graduate Studies.

To this end. a symposium
will be held tomorrow address
ing the longterm consequences
of race. diversity and inclusion
in graduate education.

The symposium will be ad»
dressing such issues as the iii-
evitability of diversification in
the face of changing student de~
mographics and academic coni-
petitiveness and diversifica-
tion. Bratnweii said.

Mike Nietzei. (lean of liK‘s
graduate school said that in
1989. the University created an
associate dean for recruitment
and diversity to increase diver-
sification.

Deneese Jones currently
holds that position.

"It‘s been an effort. particu-
larly in the past it) years. to ad-
dress the diversity of graduate
students here." Nietzei said.

As a result of such efforts.
UK was ranked ~14 in the nation

this year in production of
Ph.i).s by African-Americans in
Black issues in Higher Educa
tion magazine. Nietzei said.

Nietzei said that UK‘s di-
versity greatly helped those in
the graduate school.

“When you have students
of very different cultural or
racial backgrounds. they con
tribute to each other's educa
tion in ways that a homoge-
neous population cannot." Niet~
zel said.

ilraniweli said that diversi-
ty is not just a matter of race.
however. He said that while for
many years there existed in
Kentucky a Visible legal barrier
to Af‘rican-Americans in gradu-
ate school. there was also an in-
visible barrier that affected
women.

Today. this is hardly the
case. Nietzel said that currently
tnore than half the total num-
ber of graduate students at UK
is over halffemale.

Another component of the
symposium is inclusion.
Rramweli said that inclusion
means having a policy of in-
cluding the best and brightest.
rather than seeking to exclude
based on some arbitrary stan-
dard. such as race or gender.

"By increasing our diversi-
ty we increase the pool of excel
lent students which comprise
our graduate programs."
Bratnweli said.

increasing the rate of

their stacks

Specifically. New York con
tends the plants failed to obtain
permits necessary for allow iiiL.’

substantial alterations or addi
tioiis.
I'K I’l‘tiii‘ssttt' (III I’idiiit'JI

Science Ernest Yanareiia said
that the action is “probably
quite warranted "

“It is ttot at all surprising
that New York is taking the iiv
gal route to get some sort of
compensation." he said, "This
seems to be the latest esatiipli-
of the ongoing politics of acid
rain.”

Mike ilealy. a I'ix' law
school professor. said the
specifics involved "a very coni-
plicated factual question.” but
that section .‘ftI-iAil of the (‘iivan
.-\ir .-\ct "very clearly antici
pates ‘citizeii suits‘ with the ac-
tion brought against the

source."
“This is part ofa IHil‘J’lt‘l‘it‘i
struggle (iii

the Northeastern

 

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\I‘iit‘s against the Midwestern
statv-s. witlt the Environnientai
Protection Agency caught iii
the middle.” Heal}. said

iieaiy beiieyes the stilt may
lead to more stringent etuis
stons control.

Some suggest
New England ari-a‘s pollution
problems may stem from auto
mobile ettiissiotis more so titan
faraway coal fired plants. ivui
most agree people will
give up their cars and resist
eitiissions standards they think
will cost them money.

"This sort vvfdispute is stip
posed to he
I‘II’A." said Frank Scott.
ecotioittics professor

“if the suits are successful
then obviously they will have
to retrofit the plants. \\I1ii'li
would raise electricity prices."
Scott said. "It won't reduce the
demand for coal. though. i
think"

a I'K

 

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STUDENTS ARE YOU READY TO

BECOME A NON-SMOKER?
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HOW?
UHOUI’ SMOKING CESSATION PHOGHAME

WHAT ARE INDIVIDUAL SMOKING CESSATION SESSIONS LIKE?

NF- ON- ONI. SESSION? WITH A JMOKIN(} CE ‘ ‘ Avr OI. L IECIAI IS7

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ANNIVERSARY SALE

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MERRIEILIL

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Postings in the calendar are free to all registered student organizations and
UK Departments Information can be submitted in Rm. 203. Student Center

 

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4 | “outshinocioiirn 6,1999“ if itEiiiucitviiEiiiiEL

LINDERELLA .GDES. HOME

John Dobson _
Asst. sports editor
Phone: 257 ms | [meat trueblueadamdvahoocom

Reds October ends
early for team, fans

Cincinnati's unlikely ride comes to a halt, but
players, management say future looks bright

ASSOCIAIED PRESS

The sheets of plastic in
tended to protect the Cincinnati
Reds‘ cubicles from champagne
were rolled out. ready for de-
ployment at the final out.

They weren't needed. ln-
stead o