xt763x83n650 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt763x83n650/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2001-03-06 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, March 06, 2001 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 06, 2001 2001 2001-03-06 2020 true xt763x83n650 section xt763x83n650 LEFT OE CENTER

Mindsames

lt'scalleda
breakfora

Tests during the week
before Spring Break. If
this is not the devil at
work, I do not know
what is. Your thought
process can only think
about pifia colodas or
at least time away
from school.

Here are some things that
you should be thinking
about but are being
pushed aside by
thoughts of something
better.

Should be thinking (SBT)
- "That calculus
midterm is coming up.
If I really get on it, I
can still get a B so
that I can pass this
class."

Really are thinking (RAT)
* "If I do not get in
touch with the airline
agency, I may not be
able to get back from
Florida. Maybe I
should just forget to
call them

SBT - “That girl walking
in front of me is cute,
but I really need to go
to the library and
study."

RAT — "I hope there are
tons of girls like that
in Daytona Beach. And
maybe i will be the
only guy there and
they will all love me.
So what if i have that
beer gut thing at 19. Is
that so wrong? All the
women will love me
for my personality."

SBT - "That paper due
the Monday after
Spring Break (I hate
that teacher. When
are evaluations
already?) really needs
to get done. Maybe I
could write it on the
car ride down to
Panama City."

RAT - “That paper due
the Monday after
Spring Break (I hate
that teacher. When
are evaluations
already?) really needs
to get done. I guess I
will just do it Sunday
night when I get
home."

581 - "Did that guy just
fart?"

RAT - ”Did that guy just
fart? How cool would
it be if I could fart
laughing gas? I would
live off beans and still
be the life of the
party! I would be the
next Chris Rock.”

SBT - "Remember the
sunscreen. I don't
want to get burnt."

RAT - ”Screw sunscreen.
I am coming back
tanner than a tan
Crayola crayon."

SBT — “I bet that class on
Friday will have a
quiz."

RAT - "I could leave
Wednesday afternoon.
That class on Friday
won’t have a quiz."

-Ron Norton
rail_editor@hotmail.com

m

Tomorrow‘s
west titer

m
4.2 2.3

Partly sunny or partly
cloudy...it is actually up
to you. Either way it'll
be cold.

Kentucky
Kernel

VOL 8106 ISSUE #114

ESTABLISHED IN 1892
INDEPENDENT SINCE 1971

News tips?

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

 

TUESDAYKENTUCKY

KERNEI-

March 6, 2001

Strip and
Save
Financial
gain in losing
your clothes
l4

/www.kykernel.com

Emchool shooting hits close to home

STAFF REPORT

Les Martin was flipping
through TV channels in his
dorm room yesterday when he
saw the breaking news about
the school shooting at Santana
High School in Santee. Calif.
which left two people dead and
wounded 13 others. According
to Santee Fire Department. a
freshman male students was
taken into custody.

Martin. a secondary English
education junior at UK. thought
while watching the news cover-

age that in just a few years. he‘ll
be the one inside a high school
classroom as an English
teacher.

Although this may seem
frightening to anyone pursuing
a career in middle or secondary
education. Martin said thoughts
about his subject position in re-
lation to the school shootings
came second. Instead. thoughts
of his younger brother and sis-
ter. both of which are high
school students. came first.

“It just scares the in general
that it could happen to anyone.

let alone my family or me as a
teacher.“ he said.

Martin watched the TV cov-
erage all afternoon.

"It is very scary.“ he said.
"just watching it on TV is emo»
tionally overwhelming."

Seth Dressman. a secondary
education freshman. also saw
the shooting yesterday
afternoon.

He said the actual shooting
didn‘t scare him as much as the
thoughts of the children com.
mitting the crime.

"It sickens me that someone

 

flty's myth and its
effect on women

would do it. and it sickens me
that teenagers solve problems
by going out to kill others."
Dressman said.

Dressman‘s initial thought
was anger toward the child. he.
said. but after thinking about
the happening for a minute, he
felt sadness for the child.

UK students were not the
only people appalled by the
school shooting yesterday. Evi-
dentially. students at Santana
were surprised by the measures
taken by the suspect as well.

Jacob Reynolds. a 17-year-

old Santana senior. said the boy
had been talking last week
about shooting people. but as-
sured listeners he wasn't
serious.

"Everybody can‘t believe
that he actually did it."
Reynolds told KGTV. “He said
he was just joking."

Santee. a town of 59.I)0() resi-
dents. is about 10 miles north»
east of San Diego. Santana High.
which opened in 1965. has more
that 1.900 students in grades
nine through 12.

 

 

 

 

 

Finding support

DOUGMORGAN I KERNELSTAFF

Katie Haddix, a secondary education freshman. chats with fellow freshman Adam Ennis, a history education major,
as they ride the Kirwan Tower elevator down to the lobby.

When "average" isn't considered good enough: Part one in a three part
series about eating disorders and the complications that arise from them

By Julie Nelson
MANAGING EDITOR

Standing in one of her favorite designer stores.
secondary education freshman Katie Haddix remem-
bered how great it was to wear a size 4.

But that was in the past. She now sought a larger
size. She continued to dig frantically through a rack of
skirts. trying to find the size that would fit.

“I would hold the quilt of clothing that was my
size up to a size 0 and say. ‘Good Lord.‘ I still catch
myself trying on smaller sizes. just to see ifl can fit

into them." Haddix said.

Haddix said shopping becomes a “horrific" expe-
rience sometimes. because it is very hard to find the

right size in designer stores.

“I don't think sizes are realistic in stores." she
said. "Stores need to comply with the average size and
realize what American society really is. Not everyone

is 5‘10". size 0."

Size is something Haddix struggles with every
day. It is a social pressure for many females like Had-
dix. who suffer from eating disorders.

Gabriella Pessah. senior staff psychologist in the
Counseling and Testing Center. said that the size cri-
sis in America is a problem for most women.

“Nobody really wants to be a size 12 or 14." she
said. “It makes people uncomfortable."

But the reality. Pessah said. is that the average

American woman is a size 10 tolZ.

“We look at the fashion runways and magazines
and they are showing clothes for women on teenagers.
who are generally underweight." Pessah said. “When
a women’s size extrasmall and small fits a chiltl. this
suggests we have a problem with sizing."

In the beginning

Haddix's eating disorder started early in her ado-

lescence in the eighth grade.

Haddix was a chunky child. Sometimes. she said
her parents had to snip the elastic in the legs of her di-
apers so blood could flow freely through her legs.

“When I got older. I started to notice the thinner
people around." Haddix said. “i couldn't fit into Ex

press clothes."

lladdix‘s family had recently moved. and she
wanted to be liked by the new students at her school.

”I was feeling completely alone," she said.

Then things began to change. Haddix began

dating.

See DISORDER on 3

 

Commoneating
disorders

Anorexia nervosa
Symptoms: Refusal to
maintain body weight at or
above a minimally normal
weight for height, body
type, age and activity level:
intense fear of weight gain;
feeling overweight despite
dramatic weight loss; loss
of menstrual periods in
post-puberty women and
girls, and extreme concern
with body weight and
shape.

Warning slots: Dramatic
wmht loss “W
with weight, food. calories.
fat grams and dieting;

refusal to eat certain foods:

frequent comments about
feeling overweight despite
weight loss; anxiety about
gaining weight; denial of
hunger.

People with bulimia nervosa

will often appear to be of
averwe body weight.
Symptom: Eating large
quantities of food in short
periods of time, without
regard to feelings of full-
ness or hunger: following
hinges with some form of

purging: self-induced vomit'

ing, laxative or diuretic
abuse, fasting or obsessive
exercise; extreme concern
with body weight and
shape.

Warm sips: Evidence of

Dime-eating; evidence of
purging behaviors; exces-
sive exercise regimen;
unusual swelling of the

cheeks or jaw area: calluses

on the back of the hands
and knuckles from self-
induced vomiting; discol-
oration and staining of the
teeth.

People with binge eating
disorder can be of normal

 

if;
women,
real beauty

Katherine Belcher
STAFF WRlTER

Imagine feeling so strongly about
something that you devote more than 1:”)
years of your life working on it. This is the
case for photographer Frank Cordelle‘s The
Century Project.

Cordelle‘s exhibit is a series of nude
photographs portraying women from birth
to the age of 100. A personal statement
from either Cordelle or the subject accom-
panies each photograph describing the
scene of the photo and, or why the woman
posed.

For Cordelle the goal of this project is
to educate people about body image and so-
ciety's attitude of beauty, as well as to pro-
vide a healthy alternative to the way media
represents women.

“The subjects portrayed are real-life
people." Cordelle said. “They are not stars
or models. They
span all ages.
body types and
have a rich va—
riety of experi-
ences to draw
upon and
share."

C 0 rd 9 l l e
first got the
idea from a
friend of his
mother who.
like many. fol-
lowed the domi-
nant ideology
existing within
mainstream so-
ciety that
women should
consent to the
white aesthetic
of beauty. After
college he went
to Europe for a
few months.
which was
when the con-
cept for the ex-
hibit came to
gether.

"A good
part of Europe
is a lot more
hip about these
issues than we
are here."
Cordelle said.
“The contrast
of Germany.
France and Scandinavia to America is like
comparing night to day.“

The exhibit has been shown across the
nation in art galleries. universities and
even churches. Its arrival at UK was co-
sponsored by the SGA and UK CARES in
support of Eating Disorders Awareness
Week.

Gabriella Pessah. a counselor from the
UK Counseling Center. wanted the exhibit
shown on campus so students could have
access to them.

“I was really struck by the care. emo-
tion and feeling that goes along with the
photos." Pessah said. “We know how im-
portant it is for these images to be out there

. we want to further the message that
every body is beautiful."

The Century Project will be on display
in the Student Center today from 9 a.m.-10
p.m.. which includes a reception for
Cordelle at 6 pm. It will continue tomore
row from 9 a.m-5 pm. and Thursday from 9
a.m-B pm. For more information. see
http: centuryconknetcom.

They are not
stars or
supermodels.
They span
all ages, body
types and
have a rich
variety of
experiences
to draw
from”

 

  

I l WY.WCH6.ZOOI l mum

.ALLlHLNElISlHALflIS

The Low-down

I was
raised to
squeeze
the
tooth-
paste
from the
very bot-
tom of
the tube
and roll
it all the
way to
the top
my
wife
wasn’t
raised
that way.
We have
two
roles of
tooth-

paste”

Noah Wk, 29.
explaining to
People Magazine
how he and his
wife Tracy
Vlarbin, 33, man-
age in the bath-
room.

Navy prepares inquiry into sub collision

HONOLULU An oceanside memorial Sun—
day for those missing from a Japanese fishing
boat that was sunk by a US. submarine came as
the Navy prepared to convene a court of inquiry
into the fatal collision The formal investigative
hearing, which begins Monday. seeks to explain
why the USS (lreeneville rammed the Ehime
Maru on Feb. 9. Greeneville Cmdr. Scott Waddle
is prepared to accept responsibility for the acci»
dent. his civilian attorney. (‘harles Gittins. told
ABC's “This Week" Sunday. The Ehime Maru.
carrying 35 people. was on an expedition to teach
teenagers how to become commercial fishermen
when the Greeneville plowed through its hull.
Four high school students. two teachers and
three crewmen never were found. At the time of
the accident. the (lreeneville was demonstrating
an emergency surfacing drill for l6 civilian
guests.

Former first lady christens Reagan

NEWPORT NEWS. Va. Former first lady
Nancy Reagan christened a nuclearrpowered air-
craft carrier in the name of her husband on their
49th wedding anniversary But it was President
Bush — not former President Reagan — who stood
at Mrs. Reagan‘s side Sunday as she broke a cer-
emonial bottle of American sparkling wine
against the ship's how. The former president.
who turned 90 on Feb. 6. has Alzheimer‘s disease
and was home in California recovering from a
broken hip he suffered in a fall in January. "1
want to thank the Navy for giving us such a won-
derful present. such a little thing." Mrs. Reagan
said of the massive. 31 billion ship - the first car-
rier to be christened in the name of a living for-
mer president.

Mori survives no-confidence vote

TOKYO Japanese Prime Minister Yoshiro
Mori survived his second no-confidence vote in
Parliament on Monday. but pressure for him to
go was unabated from opponents and even some
allies worried over his dismal public support.
The lower house of Parliament voted 2Tl192 to
defeat the no-confidence motion submitted earli»
er in the day by four opposition parties. Mori.
whose Liberal Democrats hold a majority in the
chamber. defeated a similar measure in Novem-
ber. The vote gave Mori's enfeebled government
a respite. but it was expected to be brief. Specula-
tion was rife that he could step down as soon as
this week as the Liberal Democrat Party readies
for its annual party convention March 13 and
searches for a successor.

Palestinian killed in clash with troops
JERUSALEM Israeli troops killed a Palesr

tinian in an overnight shootout. and Israeli po»

lice went on high alert Monday. setting aside oth-

l-‘ashion Inc.. the
WW Still.
citing a source
close to the
deal.

CLEVELAND
BOUND:
Johnnie "B.
Goode" John-
son, who
recorded such
hits as "Roll
Over Beeth-
oven" with
Chuck Berry,
will be inducted
into the Rock
and Roll Hall of
Fame on March
l9. Berry wrote
the hit song
"Johnny B.
Geode" as a
tribute to
Johnson.

er duties to concentrate on preventing Palestin-
ian militant attacks after the latest deadly bomb
ing. Prime Minister-elect Ariel Sharon stood
poised to assume power this week with the
pledge to restore security to lsrael after more
than five months of fighting with the Palestini-
ans. Sharon reached agreement Sunday with the
ultra-Orthodox Shas Party and now has enough
support for a majority coalition government. He
was expected to present his government to par-
liament this week. possibly on Wednesday. and
would take office if the coalition wins approval.

Conditions hamper recovery of victims

UNADILLA. Ga. Military crews pulled
the data and voice recorders from the wreckage
of a National Guard cargo plane but slick. mud-
dy conditions hampered the recovery of the 21
victims‘ remains. Rescue teams have waded
through 3 feet of slippery mud caused by a 4-
inch deluge of rain Saturday. when the C-23
Sherpa crashed in a field in soutlrcentral Geor-
gia, killing everyone on board. Defense officials
have sent about 150 soldiers and Air Force per—
sonnel to the site to provide security. remove the
bodies of the 21 National Guard members and
search for a cause. Although the storm had abat-
ed Sunday evening. strong wind hindered crews
at the crash site. Rescue efforts were to continue
Monday. as was an investigation into why the
twin-engine plane crashed while returning from
two weeks oftraining in Florida.

Drug companies sue South Africa

PRETORIA. South Africa Pharmaceutical
companies faced off in court Monday against the
South African government in a case that ac»
tivists say is a landmark in the developing
world’s efforts to get cheap AIDS medications.
More than three dozen drug companies are su-
ing the government to try to overturn a 1997 law
they argue would allow the health minister to
arbitrarily ignore patents on medications. The
hearing in the Pretoria high court was expected
to last more than a week. and the ruling might
not come before the end of the year.

Compiled from wire reports

 

coats.
Corrections

An item in Friday‘s “Left of Center" should
have said Oct. 23 is the last day to withdraw from
a course. Sept. 23 is the last day to withdraw
from a course and still get a refund.

An item in Friday‘s "Left of Center" should
have said Oct. 23 is the last day to withdraw from
a course. Sept. 23 is the last day to withdraw
from a course and still get a refund.

To report an error call The Kentucky Kernel
(11257-1915.

 

Get your green
thumb out

Salt of the earth: Green Thumb group
aids in quest for environmental education

15g)“ Sloan
STAN leiER

While UK continues to pay for more and more construc-
tion, a number of students oppose the path toward a concrete
jungle.

The Green Thumb Environmental Club is a student orga-
nization dedicated to raising awareness about local and re-
gional environmental issues.

Green Thumb members are concerned about the lack of
green space on campus and opportunities to recycle.

“UK kind of looks like a construction site." David
Hutchinson. a marketing sophomore. said. “There's no real
place to recycle on campus."

The club is concerned about more than campus. though.

Green Thumb is sponsoring an upcoming forum about
the Martin County coal slurry spill that occurred in October
of last year. “What If This Was Your Backyard?" will take
place at 8 pm. March 7 in the WT Young Library Auditori~
um. Speakers will include a number or regional leaders and
students involved in the cleanup of an estimated 250.000.000
gallons of coal slurry.

An ongoing project for Green
Thumb is a recycling petition asking
for UK to support increasing recy-
cling opportunities on campus.

The club has gathered more than M
1.200 signatures. according to their WW
web site. Volunteers are always wel- cm
come and can download a copy of the
petition at www.uky.edu'Studen-
tOrgs/GreenThumb.

Past activities for Green Thumb
have included co-sponsoring a forum
on factory farms. lobbying in Frank-
fort and traveling to Martin County
to view the effects of the coal slurry
spill.

Other major events include an
America Recycles Day celebration.
Green Thumb distributed material about recycling along
with free popcorn anti cotton candy at the Student Center.

The club also took part in a bike awareness day. Cyclists.
along with police escorts. rode around campus to raise driver
awareness of the rights of cyclists on roadways.

Club members also like to take time out of their sched-
ules to dig in their campus garden. join together for a vege-
tarian potluck or hike around the Bluegrass State.

Green Thumb members enjoy the broad perspective that
the group offers.

“By joining this club. We learned a lot about what's go-
ing on in Lexington and around the world.“ said Leslie Daw
son. a natural resources conservation junior.

TheGreen

Group meets at 8:30
pm Thursdays in the
Student Center, Room
106. For more informa-

titm call Suzanne Webb
at 389-9213.

 

 

 

6-8 PM

Come get tips on:

alcohol safety
sexual safety
personal safety

Guest Speakers

- Pizza
° Drinks

SPRING BREAK SAFETY FORUM
I

TONIGHTL

Old Student Center Ballroom

Bridget Wells, Pam Woodrum, Tiua Chilton

PREE

- Condoms

Brought to you by:

Immediately following the forum

 

 

Follow
A Higher
Calling.

Jiilll a team when- nursing l\ more than a
tar-mi. It‘s .i ( .illing. t it” mission - lulu- yours—
is in hinil the \xliiilc tiers: ll]. And we llt‘llt'Vl‘

in rewarding those who help us With:

- Staffing patterns that let you focus on patients.

~ A warm and supportive nursing team.

0 New, higher pay scales.

. Health and dental insurance that start the
day you do.

0 individualized orientation that ensures
you're confident and ready to start.

' Outstanding tuition reimbursement and
nursing scholarships.

0 Dedicated staff educators providing excellent
continuing education on-site.

0 free. in-house fitness facilities.

0 A workplace named louisviile's ill family

friendly hospital.

 

|l you he.” illl' ( .illmg, \‘.t“(i MW in lllt‘t'l vuu.
\A'e will lie um ( ampus Wednesday. March 7th
from 1pm to 4pm in the Musing itinltlmg
(tilllt' visit us'

0 runnnt nut in
wninnu

(i\l\'l l \\ llt'.|llll \t‘iw l'\

( NRITA'S Nivtlit .il ( t'nlt-r twill.“ llil elifl.‘
( ‘\Rll‘\\ l‘i-m i- ( enter «302i 4‘04345

 

 

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IHSOHEHHR

Continued from page I

“I felt for him [her
boyfriend] to like me, 1 had to
lose weight." she said. ”I had to
be really little."

She wouldn‘t eat iit front of
her new beau. and if he asked if
she wanted something to eat.
she would say she wasn‘t hun-
gry. There were days when
crackers were the only food
Haddix ate, anti then there were
days that she (lid riot eat at all.

“I could go for three or four
days only on water.“ she said.

Although she had the clas-
sic symptoms of someone with
anorexia nervosa. it was more
than just that. Not only was
Haddix starving herself. she
was also forcing up the food she
ate, a symptom of bulimia ner-
vosa.

“I would sit down to eat
with my parents. aitd then go
the bathroom and throw up."
Haddix said. “I just couldn't
handle it."

After several tttoiiths. Had-
dix had dropped frotti Ht).
which is the average weight of

American women. to 105
pounds.
“Everybody was saying.

‘You are looking great. What are
your secrets?” she said.

()nly she knew what her se-
cret was. The weapon she used
to create the look she wanted
was an eating disorder. and the
target was her body.

Facing the illness

Dealing with an eating dis-
order is a personal battle that
consumes not only the hotly. but
also the mind of its victims.

According to Jill Kindy.
health education coordinator
and dieticiatt with University
Health Services. five to 10 mil»
lion women across the nation
suffer from these devastating ill.
nesses. Fifteen to 25 percent are
college-age females. Kindy also
stressed that females are riot the
only ones to suffer froitt these
disorders. Nearly 10 percent of
all eating disorder patients are
male. and that number is climb-
ing.

There are several different
types of eating disorders. Eaclt
of these illnesses although
differing iii the method itt
which the person consumes
food all have the common ele~
ittettt of depression.

Pessah said this depression
is more than just feeling sad.
She said itiost people struggling
with eating disorders may have
depression that coincides with
their illness due to the brain
aitd body chemistry that
changes when the body is being
deprived of what it needs.

For others, she said. the de
pression may cottie before the
illness.

Haddix‘s depression coin-
cided with her illness. She slept
all the time and missed a lot of
school because she was so weak.

"I was very tired and I‘ll“
down. pale and skeletal look-
ing.” lladdix said. "I was not re-
ally looking or beittg young."

It was ttot long after llad-
(lix‘s depression set iit that her
parents realized she had a prob
lent.

After discussing it with her
mother. Haddix agreed to get
counseling. But as the tornado
in lladdix‘s mind began to set.
tle. the aftermath of the destrucr
tiott began to take hold.

“I started getting sick.”
lladdix said. "I was tired all the

 

ACADEMIA

time. and I didn't know what
was causing it."

Now was the time that Had-
dix had to accept the health con-
sequences resulting from her
eating disorder. She continued
to go to the hospital throughout
high school. seeing doctors
upon doctors. and getting no re-
stilts.

“I had every test run on my
body. but no one could tell what
was wrong." she said.

Finally. she was diagnosed
with a stomach illness that doc-
tors said resulted from the
abuse she put herself through.
Her stomach is paralyzed. She
must drink Ensure everyday to
supplement her body with nu-
trients attd avoid her favorite
greasy foods.

“My stomach just gave up
on me." she said.

The road to recovery

It has been a long. hard
journey. but four years later
Iladdix can sit back and talk
about life with art eating disor-
der. As part of last Monday's
”The Road to Recovery." an Eat-
ittg Disorders .-\wareness Week
forum iii the William T. Young
auditorium. she told her story.

Her message is one of conse-
qitence. Slte knows she now
must deal with stomach prob-
lems for the rest of her life. But
she also knows she cart make it.

“I think it is getting better
with me." she said. ”I have to re-
alize that everybody likes me
for me, It is only me who doesn't
think that people like me for
me. It is a selfish. selfcon-
science thing."

Sometimes she still catches
herself skipping meals. And she
still wishes sometimes that she
were a size t.

"It is a constant battle." she
said.

Zinser accepts job
at Southern Oregon

'lt's a wonderful opportunity for Dr. Zinser': Chancellor of UK's
Lexington campus takes on role of president at new school

STAEE REPORT

Within i IUESDAY.IAICN6.ZOOI | a

  

 

  
   
  

 

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Chlld,

The new president of Southern (tregon holds

  

Elisabeth Zinser. the chancellor of UK's liex-
ington campus has been named president at
Southern Oregon University.

Zinser. who Itas been chancellor at UK since
1995. has held the presidential post of a universi-
ty two previous times at the University of Idaho
and Gallaudet University iii Washington. l).(‘.

At Gallaudet. the only university for sillv
dents that are hearing impaired. Zinser was pres-
ident for only one week. Students protested for a
hearing-ittipaired president at the university. ac-
cording to Saturday's Lexington Herald-Leader.

Before coming to UK. Zinser held several po
sitions in university administration as vice
chancellor for academic affairs at the University
of North Carolina. Greensboro and senior admitt-

a bachelor's degree front Stanford L'niversity and
a PhD. from the I'niversity of California.
Berkley.

UK President Charles Wethington is delight-
ed to see Zinser become president at Southern
Oregon University.

“It's a wonderful opportunity for Dr. Zinser
and a wonderful opportunity for Southern ()re-
goit l,7iiivei‘sit_\'." said \S'ethington. who is stepr
pittg down as l'K‘s president in June.

Taking the position as president this sum-
tttei'. Zinser is replacing Sara Hopkins-Powell.
who served has Southern Oregon l‘niversitv's
presidettt since 1993.

A ITS-acre campus situated in :\sItI£llltI. ()re..
Southern Oregon

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