xt79gh9b8j97 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79gh9b8j97/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1994-01-14 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, January 14, 1994 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 14, 1994 1994 1994-01-14 2020 true xt79gh9b8j97 section xt79gh9b8j97  

 

 

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ssjjjfiiutsned 1394

Business and economics senior
apparently upset over Add/Drop

 

By Melissa Rosenthal
Staff Writer

 

Scheduling courses can be frus-
trating for almost anyone, but for
one UK student, correcting his
schedule ended with a trip to jail.

Late Wednesday afternoon, cam-

pus police were alerted that busi-
ness and economics senior Bryan
Ray Klein, 24, had forced himself
into a closed office and harassed a
staff member.

Klein apparently was frustrated
because he could not get into a
class.

Upon arrival, police tried to calm

Klein and asked him to leave.
“Klein continued to be belligerent
and pushed the officer,“ UK Police
Chief W.H. McComas said.

“The officer finally had to try
and subdue Klein with force."

McComas said a call was made
for additional police assistance and
when a second police officer ar-
rived, “Klein and the officer were
in a struggle on the floor of the of-
fice."

McComas said Klein was taken
to the Fayette County Detention

Center.

Klein was charged with third de-
gree criminal trespass, fourth de-
gree assault on an officer, resisting
arrest and disorderly conduct. He
was released on third party bond at
midnight yesterday and was ar-
raigned yesterday afternoon.

Derickson said he is unsure of

what type of action the University
will take against Klein.

“This is a serious matter, but we
don’t want to pre-judge anyone at

 

 

Student recalls
war with Iraq

  

 

By Anne Jackson
Contributing Writer

 

cred.

 

Almost three years to the day after the first bombs fell on
Baghdad, life in Iraq is more destitute than it ever was during
the Persian Gulf War, says architecture senior Aseel Al-Banna,
who was in Iraq during the U.S.-led onslaught.

“The people of Iraq are hungry, starving and dying of diseas-
es," Aseel said. “Food is very scarce. Inflation is very high.
People wake up in the morning and they don't know what to
feed their children.“ She said a chicken that used to cost two or
three dinars (an Iraqi monetary unit) now costs 80 or 90 dinars.

The destruction in Baghdad was not just structural. “They re-
built everything," said Aseel, but the community has not recov-

“There are a lot of thieves, stealing and crime that resulted
from the circumstances (of the embargo) that surrounded the
Iraqi people from the day of the invasion (of Kuwait).“

She remembers with vivid detail the day Iraqi present Sad-
dam Hussein‘s forces invaded Kuwait, Aug. 2, I990.

“I was standing in front of the American Embassy. I had an
appointment for an interview for a visa to come to the U.S.."

See IRAQ, Page 3

  
 
 
   
   
   
  
 
  
  
 
  
 

t“
g...

‘\

V -s...

JAMES FOBBUSWKemel Stall

 

 

U.S., Russia ease nuclear threat

 

By Barrry Schweid
Associated Press

 

MOSCOW -— It has been a
nightmare image for generations of
Americans and Russians: globe-
circling nuclear missiles targeted at
each other’s nations, a hair-trigger
away from mutual destruction.

Presidents Clinton and Boris
Yeltsin will announce an accord to-
day ending the targeting, a perilous
relic of the Cold War.

Their action will also lift, at least
symbolically, the specter of nuclear
annihilation from Britain, France
and others including Ukraine,
which is pledging to get rid of the
third-largest arsenal in the world

INSIE:

 

Arena. Story, / '
~The Lady Kinsman »
starrIng In their own ’ , i 4
‘UK Women Can't
Story, Page 5.

WEATHER. ’ .
-Mostly cloudy today with a“
percent chance of snow ' .
showers, little or no additional
accumulation likely; high
between 15 and 20.
-Mostly cloudy and bitterly
cold tonight with a chance ;
snow llurries; low around _

Diversions...

Viewpoint.

 

”s.....

    
 
    
  
   
  
  
   

  

    
 

and consequently will not be target-
ed by the United States or Russia

Administration officials acknowl-
edged yesterday that the U.S.-
Russia agreement was virtually im-
possible to verify and that the mis-
siles could be retargeted within
minutes.

Dunbar Lockwood, a senior re-
searcher at the private Arms Con-
trol Association in Washington,
called it a confidence-building ges-
ture that could be reversed quickly.

He said in Washington the accord
could have been strengthened if the
two sides had agreed to separate the
warheads from the missiles.

Still, Thomas Pickering, the US.
ambassador to Moscow, called the

 

See related story,
Page 3.

agreement “an important first step.“

“It has symbolic value but I think
it also has real value in confidence-
building between the two coun-
tries," he said.

 

Some of the missiles would be
aimed at uninhabited ocean areas,
but most would no longer be aimed
at any specific target, said adminis-
tration officials.

For decades thousands of US.
and Soviet nuclear warheads have
been on a ready-to-go alert, aimed
at the territories not only of the

United States and the former Soviet
Union but of other nations, too.

The targets included military
headquarters in large population
centers as well as missile sites.

The long-range missiles under
Russian control are spread among
four former Soviet republics: Rus—
sia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belar-
us.

Ukrainian President Leonid Krav-
chuk this week reaffirmed a pledge
to surrender the 1,800 long-range
warheads on Ukrainian territory by
the end of the decade.

Kazakhstan and Belarus took the
pledge earlier.

See SUMMIT, Page 2

  

BALANCING ACTS

  

Officials say research
vital to faculty’s image

 

By Don Puckett
Senior Staff Writer

 

Research is essential for building
the academic reputation of a univer-
sity, according to several UK ad-
ministrators.

“The primary ingredient of the
academic reputation of an academic
institution is the reputation of the
faculty," said Chancellor for the
bexingtonfampus Robert Hemen-
way. “The way that a faculty mem-
ber acquires a reputation for bril-
liance is through the process of
doing research and publishing the
results of that research."

Professors who
do not engage in
the research pro-
cess isolate them-
selves from the rest
of the academic
community, He-
menway said. Re-
search is the only
way for scholars to
demonstrate aca-
demic excellence to the rest of the
world.

Vice President for Research and
Graduate Studies Lee Magid insists
that an academic reputation is not
an end in itself. She says that a na-

    

tional reputation brings better facul-
ty to the University.

“One of the things that makes an
attractive environment at a universi-
ty (for a professor) is a past history
of attracting research funds,” Magid
said.

Magid said studies have shown
that agencies that fund research are
biased toward universities which
have previously attracted large
amounts of research money. Profes-
sors at universities with a national
reputation for research can more
easily attract grants because of this

See RESEARCH, Page 2

this time."

Derickson said the problem will
be addressed by the Dean of Stu-
dents Office “as soon as Klein is
found innocent or guilty."

McComas said the more of the
staff member who was confronted
has not been released because she
is concerned for her safety.

The University plans to treat this
case as an isolated incident.

“It could have happened any-
where, but hopefully this is an iso-
lated incident and it will never hap-

 

Man arrested for harassrng UK officers

pen again," Derickson said.

Although this incident is isolated
in its own respect, on Jan. 7 police
were alerted to an incident of ter-
roristic threatening at the financial
aid office.

Bobby Halsey, director of finan-
cial aid, reported to the police that
he along with other staff members
were repeatedly threatened by a
student who was trying to get his fi-
nancial aid check. The student later
was questioned by police, but no
charges were made in the incident.

King Day march
to be held Monday

 

By Trent Knuckles
Contributing Writer

 

Downtown Lexington will be
alive Monday with a march in cele-
bration of the 65th birthday of civil
rights leader Martin Luther King
Jr.‘s.

The march is sponsored by the
UK Office of Minority Affairs and
the Lexington-Fayette Urban Gov-
ernment, among others.

Office of Minority Affairs em-
ployee Delon Oliver, a member of
the planning committee for the
march, said he hopes the march will
stress the importance King's teach-
ings.

“One thing we want to challenge
people to do is to not just know of
him, but to know him," Oliver said.
“The theme of the march is ‘The
Dream, the Challenge and the Real-
ity.‘ The dream is not one of fanta-
sy, but instead of a potential reality.
The challenge is making that dream
a reality."

The event should to be a fairly
large gathering, said Lt. Bill
Thompson of the Lexington-Fayette
Urban Government Bureau of Traf-

fic.

“The permit submitted for the
gathering approximates l,500 to
2,000 people to be in attendance,"
Thompson said.

The march will begin at 10 am.
at Heritage Hall. The event will
close Main and Vine streets —— be-
tween Rose Street and Jefferson
Street -— and all intersecting streets
for the duration of the march.

The march will end back at Heri-
tage Hall at 11 am, where a rally
will be held until noon.

Three speakers are slated to ap-
pear at the rally. Sean Edwards, a
representative from Micro-City
Government, will speak on the
dream aspect of the theme; the Rev.
Daniel Jones, a local minister and
faculty member at Transylvania
University, will talk about the chal-
lenge; and Karla Walker, formerly
with the UK Department of Educa-
tion, will speak about the reality.

“We think that this will be a big
event," Oliver said. “It will be an
excellent chance to learn of some of
the lesser known achievements of
King."

 

 

By David Foster
Associated Press

 

PORTLAND, Ore. — Arrest
warrants were issued in the at-
tack on Olympic figure skater
Nancy Kerrigan, authorities said
yesterday. ABC News reported
that a second person confessed
to the plot, said to involve rival
Tonya Harding's err-husband
and bodyguard.

The FBI arrested a man at
Portland Airport on a flight from
Phoenix; Port of Portland
spokesman Doug Roberts re-
fused to give any details about
him. ABC identified the man as
Derrick Smith of Phoenix, and
said he was involved in the al-
leged conspiracy to injure Kerri-
gan.

The network also described a
Portland mart, Steve Slant, as the
alleged hit man who carried out
the attack on Kerrigan at the
U.S. Figure Skating Champion-
ships in Detroit on Jan. 6.

The assailant escaped after
breaking the glass out of a
lockedarcrradocr.

tnDetrottdepulypolicecIuer
BcnnyNapclecnsald‘Varmts
havcbeenisstrcd." buthedid
not specify the number of war-
mtscrwhohedbccnnamcd.
Pcrdmduthcrltics refused to
confirmthuwmnhedbccn
benedbutsaidthcycxpcendto
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station WCVB repcmd that
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Arrests being made
in Kerri gan attack

Gillooly; bodyguard Shawn Eric
Eckardt; Smith; and Stant.

The station also reported
Harding was named in the war-
rants, but authorities in Portland
and Detroit denied that.

Eckardt told authorities that
Gillooly asked him to arrange
the attack, The Oregonian news-
paper reported yesterday, citing
unidentified law enforcement
sources. Harding and Gillooly
were divorced Aug. 28, but later
reconciled and have lived to-
gether since October.

After Kerrigan was clubbed
on the knee, she was forced to
withdraw from the figure skat-
ing championships, raising
doubts about her ability to corn-
pete in the Winter Olympics in
Lillehammer, Norway, Feb. 12-
27.

The U.S. Figure Skating Asso-
ciation named Kerrigan to the
Olympic team anyway, along
with Harding, 23, who went on
to win the championship. Kerri-
gan won a bronze medal at the
1992 Winter Games in Albert-
ville, France.

The charge of conspiracy to
commit assorrlt is a felony pun-
ishable by up to 10 years in pris-
on Ind a $100,000 fine, Oregon
officials said.

At the Detroit news confer-
ence yesterday, Napoleon said a
woman horn out-of-stn: celled ..
the police Wt Scurrday.

“She Medal b the thu she ._.
heard a ccnvcrsflcn reg-hf
the planed unit on Nutty
Karim” several melts m.
chleca an.

JAN 1 41994

 

 

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WNW

itislkdythamenyatedeats
emgotlloughthekoollegeca.
reersandhaveteachlaglsistenta
teraMhdthekclasses.
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reseach university, studena go
mummyclasaeswithgram-
atesnidenaastheifinstructas.
According to the Council on
HigherEducation's Baseline Ac-
cotmtabilityRepats.atUK. 21.7
percentofclassesaeinstmctedby
teaching assistantsmo‘u per-
cent are taught by full-time facul-
W

 

The statewide average for full-
time faculty teaching is 78.2 per-
cent

Lee Magid. vice [resident for
research and graduate studies. said
UK does not apologize for using

 

 

 

offers some

teachinmistntsashstrnaas.

“It's extranely hnponut thu
weeducateourgraduatemdem,
nottodiscova'newhiowledgebut
tobedbbapplyitanddlaaemi-
nate it and be It effective teach-
er,”Me:idsaid.

UKPresidattCh-‘lesWethhg-
too said the University has been
trying to increase enrollment of
graduate students and that “it is
messaytlntweprovideoppomr-
nitiestortheeesmdentswhilethey
areMinadditiontoclassroom
experiences.”

He said it is important that the
University look at the ntmtber of
graduate students teaching under-
classrnen and include full-time fa-
culty for these classesaswell.

The University provides univer-
saltrainingftrtheteedtingassist-
ants with a weeklong orientation
heforeschoolbegins.

DuringthlsoriaimionJheTAs
famnnallgrotmalawhldlthey
construetalO-rnmuelectuend
nachitmthegroup.'l‘beleaaoaia
videotqedaodnTAudthew'
feeeoraadvneedTAwhohelps
thenew TAscnmahetmthek
lessons, look over the Ipe ad
dscnss problems the TA may
have.

JameyCuson,aTAinthehis-
mdepamienesaidtheorienta-
tionisgoodforraisingimportant
issues about the policies of the
University. but experience is the
bestwaytolearnhowtoteach.

“Itsasthebasicguidelinesbut
Ithinkexperienoeistheonlyway
tolearnhowtoteachadisemsion
session,”Carsonsaid.

International TAs have to go
throughascreeningprocesssothe
University can be positive that
their English is sufficient for stu-

training for TAs

mum
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mwmumbemae
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beginsinthedepartmentvhenthe
deparlnent swervisors Id TAs
get down one-on-one wwk to
week.”
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t'essaandchairofthedep-tment.
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ditt’erentteachingstybegrarling
techniqueeutdmanyhasicm-
giesofteaehmg.
Mostoftheftrst-yeruTAsinthe
political science depa'unent to
discussion leaders for lxge sec-
tions. Mingst said sometimes if

Thurman-Imam
theywllhearsipedomzm-
levelcouaasbym.

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mammal-thematic
m.thatsaidwhealteyI-
dveauntheyneetwhhtheh-
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Itddiacuaswhatisoapectedota
«them.

New'l‘AsintheEnglishdepart-
maualsoaresentnntaialsinthe
slimmer.

Thomasniueadirectmofthe
mmwwrhingis
oneofthemoetchalleaflgsnb-
jectstoteach.

“We're Mtg very under-
prepaedsmdenmandthatisvery
difficult.”hesaid.“lthink(TAs)
8'0 well-prepared under the ct.
nuisances.

“Learningtoteachiswhatyou
doeonstmttly.”

 

 

Research

Continued from Page 1

“halo effect."

Delwood Collins, vice chancellor
for research and graduate studies at
the Albert B. Chandler Medical
Center, said UK’s faculty today is
“of a much higher caliber" than it
was in the early 19805.

Collins attributed the improve-
ment to UK‘s designation as a “Re-
search l” institution by the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching.

We've
More College
Than All The

 

 

“(The designation) has improved
our academic standing in the coun-
try, and it has enabled us to hire
much better faculty," he said.

Both Magid and Collins said
UK‘s growing reputation for quality
research has also improved the
quality of the student body.

“It helps us to recruit better stu-
dents — graduate students, profes-
sional students and undergraduate
students," Collins said.

“All of these have improved
along with our reputation as a quali-
ty research institution."

In addition to improvements in
the quality of faculty and students,

 

Appeared

Doorsteps

Pizza Delivery

Collins said research has allowed
UK to improve both its academic
and research programs.

“Being classified as a Carnegie I
institution immediately allowed us
to improve the quality of all our
programs," he said.

“If you look at our record since
1986, you will see a continual
growth in about every aspect of the
University."

Collins said recent budget cuts
would have prevented this growth
were it not for UK‘s many success-
ful research projects.

Summit
Continued from Page 1

The move to de-target is a major
step in the casing of nuclear ten-
sions.

In 1991, the United States and
the Soviet Union took their bomb-
ers off alert

With the Cold War over. the

United States and Russia have been
discussing the plan to stop aiming
their long-range nuclear missiles at
each other and at allies for months.

Redirecting the nuclear weapons
is “one of the things we have under
consideration," Clinton said in De-
cember, adding that he and Yeltsin
had discussed the move at their
April meeting in Vancouver, British
Columbia.

 

 

The Kentucky Kernel:

We can’t believe this week was only three days long.

 

 

 

People Combined.

 

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Though college students are known for the staggering amounts of pizza they consume. no
pizza place in town can compare with the number of doorsteps The Courier—journal has
appeared on at college campuses. For 125 years, we've delivered Pulitzer Prize-winning

news, sports and feature stories from around the state and around the world.

Now, as a special offer to college students. you can get The Courier»]ournal
delivered to your door for 33% off our regular subscription price.
To subscribe. simply call 1—800—866v221 1.

It's an offer you can't close your door on.

 

@112 (flourisvalnumal

On

Parking tags
available
on Tuesday

 

 
  

By Amy Barnes
Staff Writer

It‘s that time of the year again —
the beginning of classes, when
many students try to take advantage
of UK parking officials and park in
off-limit spots.

Sorry, fun's over.

UK parking officers have already
begun monitoring the lots for the
spring semester and ticketing ille-
gal parkers.

For the past two days, UK park-
ing officers have been concenuat-
ing on monitoring the R and C lots
to find out how many additional
stickers they can offer to students
for the semester. On Tuesday. C, K
and R lot stickers will be up for
grabs for the spring semester.

The Parking and Transportation
Office will open at 7:30 am, and
Sandra Gary, who works at the UK
parking and transportation depart-
ment. predicted “people will start
lining up way before we open."

“The stickers are given out on a
first~come, first-served basis," Gary
said. “There will be a limited num-
ber of C and R lot stickers availa-
ble.”

K-lot. located at Commonwealth
Stadium, has stickers available to
all UK students. and they sell for
$10 for the semester.

Commuters can pay $20 a semes-
ter for C-lot permits, should any be
available.

Any student of at least a sopho-
more status, taking a full course
load and living in a residence ball,
will be able to purchase R-lot stick-
ers for $17.50. R1 stickers are
available for North Campus resi-
dents, 18 for Kirwan-Blanding
Complex residents and R10 for stu-
dents living in the Donovan/Haggin
Hall area.

All UK students may park in K-
lot using a temporary permit until
Feb. 4 without being ticketed.

UK students, faculty and staff
were asked to fill out a 27- question
survey at the parking office during
the last week of the fall semester.
The survey, which included a sec-
tion for written comments, will be
used to make the parking system
more efficient for students, officials
said.

Results have not been tabulated
yet, Gary said.

For fimher information about
campus parking, call the UK Park-
ing and Transportation Ofi'ice at
257-5757. The ojfice is located at
305 Euclid Ave.

 

 

 

 

  

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“it , .

. ‘kulwrg. -.__. _ ,

Some in Ukraine mad
at president’s actions

 

By Pavel Rolltyuk
Associated Press

 

KIEV, Ukraine — President Le-
onid Kravchuk‘s decision to disarm
Ukraine‘s missiles in return for
US. and Russian aid and security
guarantees angered many Ukraini-
ans who want the country to keep
its nuclear muscle.

"1 am ashamed of our president,"
Olga Lopata, a university student,
said yesterday.

“Last night he looked like Clin-
ton’s servant, not a president. He
does not know how to stand up for
Ukraine's interests. He is ready to
give everything away in order to get

America's gratitude.“

After a brief airport meeting with
Kravchuk, President Clinton an-
nounced Wednesday night that
Ukraine had agreed to dismantle its
1,800 nuclear warheads over the
next seven years.

The agreement. however, would
have to be ratified by Ukraine's par-
Iiarnent, which has previously
balked at nibber-stamping agree-
ments Kravchuk has signed and is
particularly reluctant to give up the
nuclear missiles.

“Kravchuk may sign whatever he
wants to,“ said Sergei Golovaty, a
member of parliament’s foreign af-
fairs conunittee.

“But if the parliament does not
ratify the agreement, it will remain
just a piece of paper. 1 think the par-
liament should not ratify the docu-
ment."

Persuading Ukraine to give up its
nuclear arsenal has been one of the
United States' principal foreign pol-
icy goals since the Soviet Union
broke up in December 1991.

Ukraine's 176 long-range mis-
siles, inherited from the Soviet Un-
ion, make up the world's third-
largest nuclear arsenal.

The agreement is to be signed in
Moscow tomorrow by Kravchuk,
Clinton and Russian President Boris
Yeltsin.

 

Iraq

Continued from Page 1

she said. “The doors were supposed
to open at 9 am. They told us to
leave, that everything was can-
celed.“

So Aseel got in her car and
turned in the radio. “The news was
saying the Iraqi soldiers (were)
helping their Kuwaiti brothers over-
throw the old govemment."

Not even the soldiers knew what
was happening, she said.

“The soldiers who were taken to
Kuwait were put in trucks without
knowing where they were going.
Driving through the desert, you
cannot tell the direction you're
heading."

When allied bombing began on
Jan. 16, 1991, the city shut down,
she said.

“There was no electricity, no wa-
ter. Everything was closed.
Everything you had in the refrigera-
tor, you had to throw away," Aseel
said.

“We knew we were going to be
bombed, and we knew the whole
world (was) against Iraq," she said.
“Yet the feeling we had on the in-
side is, ‘They‘re not going to do
this. Why should they bomb peo-

ple?‘ ”

Aseel recalled that the Iraqi gov-
ernment reinforced this impression
and did not issue any precautions
to its citizens. it was life as usual.
In fact, Aseel had a project due in
class that day.

Life during the war was lived
minute by minute, Aseel said.
“Boom, boom, boom! Half the
street is gone and oops! You’re
alive!"

People spent the first two weeks
of the war mostly in bomb shelters
or in locations away from glass
and windows, so there was little
opportunity to even prepare food.
Aseel said.

She remembered when the com-
munications center for the Alwaya
area of Baghdad was bombed. The
building was only a block from her
bomb shelter.

“We had the feeling the moment
of that bombing that the building
(we) were in was failing, that only
the room (we) were in was still
OK," she said.

Aseel saw the bombed-out build-
ing the following morning.

“The building that was standing
there the night (before) was gone,
except the picture of Saddam was
still there, standing in the middle

of nothing."

Aseel blames the government for
the horrors of the past three years.
The government unilaterally makes
decisions and often takes actions
which victimize the people, she
said.

“Whatever happens. it is the peo-
ple who are suffering," Aseel said.
“The government is isolated from
the people. They're watching from
safe seats.

“Here (in the United States) eve-
rybody makes a big deal of the war
and the bombing, and everyone in
the West cared a lot and watched
the news day by day." Aseel said.
“But now, it’s worse than before.

“When it was had, everyone
cared. Now that it's worse, who is
caring?“

. .. a. '— _...---.t -7 _.

 

 

 

 

 

Students brave the rain and cold temperatures on their
way to classes yesterday.

 

 

 

m

 

 

6"“ ' Chi Cfi'uan
.m., Wtfitaiion in Motion
The workout of the 90's

New session starts Jan. 22nd,
Sat 12 p.m.—-1 .m.
10 wks for 50
French Qtr Square

Richmond Rd
269—Thes (8437)

 

 

 

FOUR
GREAT
COLORS

AWIMKM

"11:1 Mtjudgr. and will not Brj (d. 1);) not rat
11mm. and ya unlit); 5r rmdannl‘fjlm‘qwr, nnd'ym
M115: familial. '—lu(; 6:36

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
  
   
 

 

  

12.00 and .3300

 

;.ATION SESSIONS-33'7""
9am Januaryzo .

  

 

 

 

Applications for the following scholarships are available from Study Abroad Services, 105
Bradley Hall, unless otherwise indicated below. Information sessions on January 19 and
January 20 will review application procedures.

NATIONAL SECURITY EDUCATION PROGRAM

Scholarships for summer or semester/year study in countries other than
Western Europe or Canada. Language study required.
Application deadlines: February 7 for undergraduates, February 18 for graduate students

THE LEON AND EVELYN ZOLONDEK SCHOLARSHIPS
Grants ranging from $1500 to 2500 for Europe Study Program, Non-Western Study Program,
Europe Museum Study Program, or Israel Study in summer
Applications: Student Affairs, 529 Patterson Office

Application deadline: January 31

THE RALPH BUNCHE SCHOLARSHIP

$2000 scholarship for summer study abroad
Applications: Ofl'ice of Minority Affairs, 563 Patterson Office Tower

Application deadline: January 31

THE CARIBBEAN STUDY PROGRAM SCHOLARSHIPS
$500 to $1000 grants for the UK Caribbean Program in Trinidad

Application deadline: February 1

THE DEAUVILLE EXCHANGE SCHOLARSHIPS
Teaching assistantships in Deauville; scholarship for study of French at the University of Caen

Application deadline: February 1

THE MALAYSIAN STUDY PROGRAM SCHOLARSHIPS
$500 TO 81000 grants for the UK Malaysian Summer Program
Application deadline: February 15

KIIS SCHOLARSHIPS

$300 scholarships for KIIS programs In Spain, Mexico, Austria, Italy, Germany or France
Application deadline: Febntary 15

NEW HORIZON GRANTS
Grants of up to $1500 for a UK semester or year program

Application deadline: February 15

VIENNA SUMMER STUDY PROGRAM SCHOLARSHIPS
$1000 scholarships for the College of Business and Economics Vienna Program
Applications available: 125 Business and Economies Building

Application deadline: February 15

 

 

 

  

   
   

's‘r Basketball
7,“: Racquetball

fr Free Weights
s‘r Aerobics

   
 

fr Indoor Track ‘s‘r Aqua Aerobics

  

’\

a: Indoor Olympic Pool

 

t‘r Step Aerobics

    

t‘r Towel Service fr Line Dancing

s‘r Child Care
‘s‘r Volleyball

  

r‘r Free Parking

 
 
  

Not just a gym!

 

 

 

POLARTECTM

Fleece Pullovers

"9'i2?‘3.%2?y‘2?b"§lit‘ifi"°' YA R M O UT H

 

”New You Can Become
a Member of lexinzon's

Only 5 STAR Club r as
low as $19.17 month!”

Memberships May Include:

fr Cardio Center With

Kentucky Kernel, Friday, January 14, 1994 - 3

Eastern US.
gets ready
for big chill

By Mitchell Landsberg
Associated Press

 

 

As a breathtaking blast of Arctic
air descended toward the eastern
third of the nation yesterday. home-
less shelters stocked up on food and
bedding and road workers laid in
extra salt and sand.

This weekend is expected to
bring the coldest weather so far this
winter to much of the Northeast and
Midwest, with temperatures far
lower than those already blamed for
exposure deaths this week in Wash-
ington, DC, and Chicago.

Against that backdrop, homeless
shelters were on alert and some city
workers and homeless advocates
raised ominous warnings about the
coming siege.

“1 think there's trouble coming,"
said John Talbutt of New York
City's Social Service Employees
Union, which represents shelter
workers.

The Arctic cold front is expected
to shove temperatures below zero
Saturday night across pans of the

East.

TRADING CO.

205 WOODLAND AVE.
just down from
Ramsey's Restaurant

BIG anon

FLANNEI. SHIRTS
25% OFF
RUGBY SHIRTS 40%
OFF AND IAIN
JACKETS NOW

 

50 Separate Stations

fir Nautilus, Keiser

Cybex, Eagle, Karian
& Hammer Strength

s‘r Sauna, Steam

&Wh i rlpool

”That’s right, for as little as $19.35/ month’ you can be a member
of lexmgton’s Award Winning Club!”

 
   

 

West Twenon Court
—

Man ‘0 War Btvd.
West ‘I’Ivertcn

Fa BIIB
all

Nicholasvflla Road

 

New Circle Road

 

 

 

{exington r"

at [etic crush

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  
   
 

‘Membership lees based on length of term, type
programs 8. time cl use.

273-3163

 

    
 

 

 

 

   

 

    
 
  

 

 

"11111";ng Eros.
train derails, 2 die

 

By James Martinez
Associated Press

 

LAKELAND, Ha. —- A train car-
rying Ringling Bros. circus per-
formers and animals derailed yes-
terday at a crossing, killing an
elephant trainer and a second per-
son. Fourteen people were injured.

As rescue crews worked on the
wreck. a news helicopter covering
the derailment crashed a half-mile
away in a ballfield next to a junior
high school, injuring the pilot and a
photographer.

Nineteen cars jumped the tracks
shortly after 9 am. as the 59-car
train traveled across Florida from

St. Petersburg to Orlando, where
the Ringling Bros. and Barnum &
Bailey circus was to open tonight.
“The show always goes on. 1 sus-
pect we will be late. but the show

always goes on," said David Cohen, '

the circus manager and a passenger
on the train.

Theodore Svertesky, 53, an elev
phant trainer, was killed in a hous-
ing car, Polk County sheriff‘s Maj.
Grady Judd said.

One passenger who had been
missing was found dead, he said.
He refused to say where the wom-
an's body was found or if she had
been a performer.

Fourteen circus workers were
treated at a hospital and released.

ATTENTION ALL

CATHOLIC

Bowl Your Butt Off!

Time: 9-11 pm.

After Bowl Your Butt Off
Date: Friday, Jan. 13

Date: Sat., Jan. 14
Time: Midnight-7?

Catholic Newman Center
320 Rose Ln.
255-8566

 

 

Not going home this
weekend and looking for
something to do?

Date: Friday, Jan. 13th Where: Collins Bowling Center

Cost: $6.25-2 games with shoes
Meet by 8:30 p.m.- Apt. #7 at Newman Center

BW-3’s Wings, Drinks & Air Hockey Fest
Tinre: ll p.m.-?‘?

Midnight Mayhem: UK Cool Kats vs. Tennessee
Where: Lexington Ice Center
Cost: $4 admission

Meet by 11:15 p.m.-Apt. #7 at Newman Center

Sun. 9 am. 11:30 am. & 5 pm.
Student Night every Tues. 7:30 p.m.

(Our Sun. 8:30 pm. mass and our Sun 6 pm. “All you can eat
Spaghetti Dinner for $2" will resume on Sun., Jan. 23)

STUDENTS

 

Mass Schedule
Sat. 6 pm.

 

 

 

 

 

 

s iii, '

.

d.

.5 ‘., '- “u r .‘~
,.,“‘ h‘.1.:‘a. 3“;

A man walks toward South Limestone Street near the
Student Center. Recently melted snow may be replaced
today, as forecasts call for more frozen precipitation.

..‘..

M

 

. .

JAMES MOORE/Kernel Sta”

7,. -..-r‘.-w-.-vz.»-q vraewvv‘ w

Black families move
to all-white project
in small Texas town

 

By Terry Langford
Associated Press

 

 

 

 

JOE
BOLOGNA'S

@ 60" TV

Have our
SUPERBO LPARTY
at Joe B’s.

Call now to make
reservations.

120 W. MAXWELL
252-4933

Downt