xt79gh9b8k2p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79gh9b8k2p/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1996-06-06 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, June 06, 1996 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 06, 1996 1996 1996-06-06 2020 true xt79gh9b8k2p section xt79gh9b8k2p ..-m—.mmv. a... .» .

  
  

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KcNTIICKY

“"00 NB Y0"
We take a look at
Lexington area tattoo
parlors. Perhaps a
tattoo may be for you.
Story, page 6.

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jam 6, 1996
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Classified: 11 Diversion: 6-7

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Crossword 11 Viewpoint 8-9

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1971

 

By Brett Dawson
Sports Editor

It was too good to pass up,
Rick Pitino’s chance to return
home and coach.

So he did.

He returned to the home he’s
adopted to coach the team that’s
won his heart — his UK \Vild—
cats. In doing so, Pitino passed
up a return to the New York
metropolitan area, where he was
raised, to coach the New Jersey
Nets.

“Everybody said, ‘wouldn’t it
be exciting to go home?’ Sure it
would,” Pitino said Monday at

In turning down the Nets’
offer for a second time, Pitino
rejected the chance to make a
reported $30 million in salary
and incentives. More exciting for
the former New York Knicks
coach was “the chance to take
something, build it and mold it.”

Pitino was so intri ed, in
fact, that he and his wi e looked
at pictures of real estate in New
Jerse the first few da 5 of their
wee ong tip to Ireland:

In the end thou h, the now
almost-famous wor s of Pitino’s
wife, Joanne, sealed the deal.

“Listen to your heart.”

“IfI listen to my heart,” Rick

challenge.

“We have to try to defend this
championship with four great
players — four NBA draft picks
-—- gone,” Pitino said. “And we’ll
have to do it facing maybe the
tou hest schedule in the history
of ntucky basketball.”

VVith the departure of Ton
Delk, Walter McCarty, Mar
Pope and Antoine Walker, Piti-
nos Cats will count heavily on
seniors Derek Anderson, Antho-
n Epps, Jared Prickett and Jeff
Sheppard, so homores Ron
Mercer and ayne Turner and
freshmanJamaal Ma loire.

But at least four 0 those play-

since I’ve been here.”

Adding to the uphill climb is
the Cats schedule, which will
include Duke, Villanova and
Notre Dame and top-quality
competition in the Great Alaska
Shootout and the Great Ei ht.

All of which provides Igitino,
who’ll coach his eighth season
next year, with plenty of chal-
lenges for the future here in Lex-
ington.

Pitino’s decision to stay,
though, means one man won’t
have an unwanted challenge after
all. C.M. Newton, UK’s athletics
director, admitted that he reluc-
tantly dusted off a short list of

 

Here's
The lleal

 

 

The contract the New Jer-
sey Nets offered UK coach
Rick Pitino would have made
him coach, general manager
and part owner. The five-year
deal reportedly included the
following:

$20 million salary.

-a Manhattan apartment.

mortgage payments for

Pitino's Lexington home.

candidates to replace Pitino.

“It would be nice,” Newton
said, “if I never have to hire
another coach again.”

Pitino told her, “there’s no deci— ers —— and perhaps Mercer —
sion to make. I’m staying at Ken- won’t be back in 1997-98. That
tucky.” means Pitino “will have to have
In doing so, he takes on a new maybe the best recruiting class

Bluegrass Ai ort. “And it is
excitin to be ome. This is my
home. It’s not where I grew up
but this is home.” -

Students learning NEW§bytes
lessons from ABC Clinton nronoses

. ,,,,.,,,,,,,,,, tax credit tor studeMs

NmEdiW PRINCETON, NJ. — President Clinton, in
a election—year biddin war with Bob Dole over
tax breaks, proposed a 1,500—a-student tax credit
Tuesday for the first two years of college, saying
to Americans: “Go to college, we'll pay the
tuition.”

Clinton’s proposal, to be financed by higher
taxes on corporations and a $16—per—passenger
departure fee for international flights, brought
immediate ridicule from Republicans.

The tax credit would cost $7.9 billion over six
years. Combined with an earlier Clinton proposal

obonuses and incentives
totalling up to $10 million.

 

 

 

 

  
  
 
  
   
   
 
   
  
   
  
 
  
  

Students like to drink, and the Alcoholic Beverage Com-
mission knows it.

“It’s like shooting doves over a loaded field,” said Granby
Smith, Fayette County Diversion Director.

Liquor stores statewide have become an ABC nesting
ground for pinpointing underage drinkers. Since beginning
the Cops in Shops Pro ram in December 1995, the com-
mission has issued over §89 arrests and citations.

“The statistics prove what a large underage drinking
problem we have,” said Jack Blair, ABC special projects

 

coordinator. to offer $10,000 tax deductions for college
. Through the Cops in Sho program, ABC agents pose expenses, the total price tag would be $42.9 bil-
as store employees. Behind e counter, officers chec ID lion, according to the White House.

authenticity and legal drinking age of people entering the
store.

If a patron is carded and not of le 1 drinking age, the
officer will an the oflender. magma u underage
persons, many older liquor store patrons have been charged
with public intoxication and pure ‘

mmmmmu
Winn-bullets”

UK junior center fielder Chad Green became
the hi hest baseball draft pick in school history
when e was selected ei hth by the Milwaukee
Brewers on the first da 0 the 1996 Major League

 

astng alcohol for a minor.
Nonetheless, underage students are the number one target.
“We did try to focus on areas where we know there will

be the test problems, and those are usually around col- Baseball Amateur Dra held Tuesday.

leges,” Blair said. Green was listed ninth on the Baseball Ameri-
_ ca’s pro prospect lists for college players before

MINI “9 I“ the start of the college season and moved up to as

 

high as sixth in the middle of the season.

A19 ldUK h tered' to l‘ t
year-o 50p omore en m . iquorsore Baseball America also named Green the

 

with a 21 year—old student who was going to buy a bottle of m W WM “ ,, “ a ,
"m m m lllefilmbolpwrbm have tort W"? Fastest Player and Best Athlete in college.
Summon” Mngadriulmtba'r' amendcleenmod. WfimAPuJKrnuIi-ufi'm.

 

 

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2 Thursday, jun: 6, 1996, Kentucky Kernel

o

DUPLICATE BRIDGE
SIX DAYS A WEEK

V

CaMPuS
UK Credit Union to

      

  

nience as two of those factors.
Credit Unions traditionally
are less expensive than a re lar
bank when it comes to fisic
banking services and interest
rates on loans. When it opens,
the Credit Union will be the

For schedule
information
call 266 —2273

     
  
 
 

For lessons
call 272—8713

For other
information
call 885-9344

BRIDGE CLUB OF
LEXINGTON
1050 Chinoe Road

     
  
 
 

 

OIJBII new branch

I! m m
Staff Writer

It’s noon on Friday and you’ve
just finished classes. You’re look-
ing forward to a weekend of fun
and the last thing you need to do
is get some cash.

You fight through the road
construction and finally get to
the bank only to find a line of
people 25—deep and the drive-
thru line wrapped around the
building. You groan, and settle in
for a long wait.

Sound familiar? Probably so.
However, a solution is on the
way.
The UK Federal Credit
Union is opening a new branch
this fall in 249 Student Center.

Although an exact date has not
been set, the goal is to have the
branch up and running by the
time students arrive for the fall
semester.

According to Kathy Clark,

vice president of marketing at
the Credit Union, the branch
will give students a more conve-
nient location to do banking and
also allow the Credit Union the
opportunity to expand its student
base.
“Approximately 10 to 15 per-
cent 0 our membership is stu-
dents,” she said, “and we would
like for that to increase.”

There are many reasons a stu-
dent should consider joining the
Credit Union. Clark pointed out
the fee structure and the conve-

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only financial institution with a
regular office on campus. It will
also be adding an automated
teller machine near the Student
Center.

The hours of operation at the
new branch have not yet been
decided upon. However, Clark
says that they probably will be
somewhat different than the
hours at the main branch.

“We haven’t decided on hours
because we want input from stu-
dents,” she said. “We want to try
to make the hours as convenient
as possible for the student popu-
lation.”

Putting a UK Credit Union
branch in the Student Center has
been in the planning stages for
years, but only recently has the
space become available.

The Credit Union did not
consider any other sites on cam—
pus because it wanted to be in a
place that would be most conve—
nient for students.

The UK Federal Credit
Union is a full-service financial
institution serving UK students,
employees, and alumni. There
are approximately 21,000 mem-
bers and the institution has
approximately $80 million in
assets.

The Credit Union offers sav-
ings and checking accounts as
well as home, auto and general
loans. It also offers the Mainline,
which allows members to check
balances, transfer funds and con-
duct other transactions from
anywhere in the world, 24 hours
a day.

The FBI and the Lexington
Police are still searchin for the
man who robbed the Federal
Credit Union on Thursday, May
2 3. According to police reports,
the subject entered the credit
union at 11:52 am. and demand-
ed money after showing a teller a
handgun.

The Credit Union is located
at 1080 Export Street. Until con-
struction on Virginia Avenue is
completed, it is only accessible
from Broadway via the Van-
Dixie parking lot.

The lobby is open Monday
through Thursday from 9:00-
5:30 and on Friday from 9:00-
6:00. The drive-thru is open
from 7:30-6:00 Monday through
Friday.

For more information, the
Credit Union can be reached at
257-2678. You can also e-mail
questions or comments to

UKFCUOpopukyedu or their
Internet site at http://www.
uky.edu/UK,FCU.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Kentucky Kernel. Tbur:day,]une 6, I 996 3

I.OOIOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOIOOOIOOOOOOIOOOIOOOO0.0...OOOOOOOOOOOIOOOOIOOOOOIIO.IOO0..0.00000IOOOOOOOOOOOOOOIOIOOOOIOOOOOIIOIOOOO

Construction to continue

Collections and cars

will find more space

By Ashley Shrewsbury
Senior Staff Writer

Two primary construction
projects are currently in progress
on campus this summer. The
first is a parking structure locat-
ed on Limestone Street adiacent
to Kennedy’s Bookstore. The
intended com letion date is‘lan-
nary 1997. ' he structure will
hold about one thousand parking
s aces for use by employees, stu—

ents and visitors.

Joseph Burch, vice president
of university relations, maintains
that the structure will serve as
permit parking. He is not yet
sure how the spaces will be divid-
ed to all competing interests.

“We don’t know the precise
numbers because we don’t know
how people will use it. The
intention is to provide parking
for both groups,” Burch said.

This new structure will allow
students greater 0 porrunities to
find parking at a cibser proximity
to campus. However, rules
regarding ermit prices and the
exact num er of spaces available
for students is not yet deter-
mined.

The most highly anticipated

of projects is the construction of

the new W T. Young Libra . At
an estimated cost of $5 8 million,
the library’s completion date is
scheduled for the summer of
1997. Revenue for the library
was generated by private
fundraising, the sale of bonds
and university resources. Paul
Willis, M.I. King Library direc—
tor, confirms that construction
“is going very well.” Weather
serves to either help or hinder
progress. “We had a cold winter

 

  

“"20, . 4

JAMES cause Knit/Qua

A" [fiction '1 PROGRESS The $58 million W. T Young library will
have over 36 miles of shelves and five floors by it: I 997 completion date.

and a very wet spring. That did—
n’t help the construction sched—
ule, but for the most part we are
staying on target.”

VVillis also contends that with
a determined and finite budget,
construction must remain within
certain confines. So far, he does
not anticipate any deviation from
the set budget.

Another project that is in the
discussion stage involves the cre-

. ation of a coffee house in the

Student Center. Philip Latiff.
assistant director of the Student
Center, says that “under discus—
sion is the best term to use” for
the proposed coffee house. He
stated that the coffee house was
“proposed by the Student Activi-
ties Board and they were seeking
outside vendors to do it.”

From this initial stage of plan-
ning, it is not yet known when
this new addition will arrive on
campus.

The new home of

Larry Redmon

Performing every Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Located in South Hill Station
*Tooightoodeveyihursdayisudesiight Nevera
cover for the ladies on Thursday
'Tonightandeveryihursdayttallyouwantdntt
& well dink: special for everyone
’EveryFridayisSouthemFriedFridey, Llryiiedmon's
Triiute to Southern Rock and outta mm

 

 

 

 

     
 

KeNluCKY

Kernel

“Not devoted to any one clan, to any one department, nor to any
.rertion of satiety. but to every boy and girl in our great University.
- The Idea. early 190/)?r

Newsroom ....... (606) 2574915
Advertising ...... (606) 257-2871
Fax. .................. (606) 323-1906
E-Mail ..... kernel®pop.uky.edu

   
   

Editor In Chief: .................................................. Chris Padgett
Aiririant Editor ............................................. Sheri Phalsaphle
On—Line Editor ..................... Mott Drake
Cbiebeotograpber ............................................ James i" Irisn
CbiefCopy Editor: .............................................. 'liffany White
New: Editor ....................................................... . lulie Anderson ‘
Spam Editor ....................................................... Brett Dawson
Feature: Editor .................................................. iiric M. Zcman
Senior StaffColumnist"..............................;\shley Shrewsburv
Senior Staff Critic ............................................ Travis Robinson
Assistant Sports Editor .............................................. J ay G. Tate
StaffColumnirt .................................................. Tamara Morris
Staijepmerx
Ho Artis ..................... Ann Boden .................... Craig Bealer
La hanna Carter .......... Lesli Riggins ............. Darrell Wacker

 

 

 

 

Are you like totally
bored during the
summer?

Well then, take a little of UK home with you for
a totally bodacious 3 to 6 hours credit through
the Independent Study Program.

 

 

 

 

 

The

Ind. ndont
Stu

Program

Room 1 Franc Hall - 257-3466

 

 

 

 

 

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. sake star. .1 5K?»

 

4 Thursday, June 6, 1996, Kentucky Kernel

 

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MN 403 Chatdlar Medical Ctr(Detenae)

Nana: John Douglas lepter

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and Use ofX—ray

Bat Bats
aim for
Olympics

By Jay 6. Tate

' Assistant Sports Editor

The road to the Olympics can
take a variety of different routes.
Just ask UK baseball players
Chad Green and Scott Downs.

Green and Downs are in
Millington, Tenn, just outside of
Memphis at the USA Baseball
training facility. Althou h both
are vying for a spot on e same
roster, the journey has been dis-
tinctly different for each.

Downs, a sophomore pitcher
from Louisville, went to Milling-
ton hoping to capture one of the
walk-on spots.

“I am justo n to 0 out and
do what I inoér Igcan do,”
Downs said.

On May 28, USA Baseball
announced that Downs had
made the first cut and was added
to the 51- -man roster that began
the formal workouts last Thurs-
day.

“I was excited,” the Louisville _

native said. “I have always want-

TON GREEN 8
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“'5” ”M Chad Green hopes to represent the United States at this
summer} Olympics in Atlanta as USA Baseball is leadnfl' bitter:

ed to play for my country.”

Downs, who underwent
shoulder surgery this past Sep-
tember, went 5—2 for the Bat
Cats this year, including two
complete-game wins against
Southeastern Conference rivals
Alabama and Arkansas.

The USA Baseball team will
be touring the country this sum-
mer with only a 25- -man roster.
That means the remaining 26
players will have to be cut
between now and June 16.

Downs’ prospects look
promising.

“Scott has an excellent mound

t lHJlt ‘l with

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‘, . ..

presence, a good feel for the
strike zone and is able to throw
three strikes in a row... charac-
teristics we like very much,”
USA Baseball pitching coach
Jerry Weinstein said.

Weinstein went on to say that
he is looking at about 25 pitch—
ers, 11 or 12 of whom will make
the 2 5-man touring roster.

UK outfielder Chad Green
took a different route to Milling-
ton. Green, a junior outfielder
from Mentor, Ohio was invited
to the Olympic baseball combine
in Homestead, Fla. last October.

As a result of some solid
workouts there, including a
lightning-quick 6. 48 second 60-
yard time, he was invited to the
Millington workouts.

Green had his best year with

the Bat Cats in 1996, hitting
.352 with 12 home runs and 44
RBI. He also led the Southeast-
ern Conference with a record-
setting 55 steals in being named
first team All- SEC.

Baseball America magazine has
also named him the best athlete
in college baseball and college
baseballs fastst runner.

Although man people feel
that Green is a s oe- in for the
starting centerfield spot on the
Olympic team, Green is more
pensive about his chances.

“I’m just tryin to stay
relaxed, he said. “If continue
to play well, things will work
out”

 

 

Summer or

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Established company.

Many positions in various
departments. Will train.
experience
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lllt stars shine in summer

By Brett Dawson
Sports Editor

Thou h UK’s campus is virtu-
ally voi of activity during the
four-week intersession, the
school’s athletic teams don’t shut
down.

Over the past four weeks, sev-
eral UK teams —— and individual
athletes — have been keeping
busy. Here’s a rundown of some
of what you missed.

Comings and goings

Rick Pitino decided to stick
with the UK basketball team, but
Antoine Walker followed the
dollar signs of the NBA.

Walker, a sophomore on the
Wildcats’ national cham ionship
basketball team, electe shortly
after finals week to forego his
junior and senior seasons and
enter the NBA draft.

Walker has the 0 tion of
returning to school i he isn’t
happ with his draft position, but
the hicago native said that’s an
unlikel proposition.

“If wanted to come back,”
Walker said, “ I wouldn’t be
leavin .”

Wafiker said he plans to
return to school and earn
his de ee somewhere '
downgr the road, ”I
adding that “if we ’
hadn’t won a
national cham-
pionship, I defi-
nitely would’ve
come back to
school next year.”

Pitino will
count on a fresh-
man to provide
some of the low—
post scoring Walker
takes with him. The Cats
signed Jamaal Magloire
in late May. The 6-foot-
10 center, believed by many
to be the best high school layer
ever to come out of Cana a, will
be eligible to play next season.

As for transfers, UK gained

'ference baseball tour—

 
   
  
   
 
 
  
  
 
 
 

 

 

 

one, but won’t lose any. Heshimu
Evans, a 6—foot-7 forward from
Manhattan Colle e, elected to
come to UK after is sophomore
season. He’ll be eligible in 1997-
98.

No word yet on any other
transfers, though Pitino hinted
there might be one more.

Meanwhile, Allen Edwards, a
junior-to—be at UK, said he’ll
definitely return to Lexington in
the fall. Edwards had said he’d
ponder a transfer after the sea-
son.

Play hall — or don't
The UK baseball team, in the
eyes of many in the media,
got snubbed by the NCAA
when they weren’t included
in the field of 48 for the
NCAA baseball tourna- ,
ment.
The Bat Cats felt .-
especially down after a
red—hot run through
the Southeastern Con-

ney, in which they

knocked out
Arkansas, Mississip-

pi State and LSU.

All three of those

teams made the

NCAAs.

The Razorbacks

not only finished

behind the Bat Cats

in the regular-season
SEC standings, they
had a sub-.500
record in confer-
ence pla .

“The field needs to
be expanded — I’ve been
saying that for years,” UK
coach Keith Madison told
Sports Radio 630-WLAP.

“We were one of the

hottest teams in baseball,

and I think we really
could’ve done some dam-
age.”

Run like the wind
UK sprinter Tim Harden hat-

I
: @Imperial Plan |
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‘ ‘ 4 Coming up short

Kentucky Kernel, '[lvurvduv ]mzr 6, I996 5

’!|“l
0......00..0....CIOOOOOO0..C...IOOCOOIOIOCOOOCOCOCOOOOOOEOOOCCOCCOOOC0.0000000UOOOO

 

the Km lot-III ls prlltol on
recycled newsprint III In
recycle our Illlce refuse.

m VIII“ Vleeyclo

tled off injuries to finish second
in the 100 meters at the NCAA
track and field championships
last weekend.

Harden's time of 10.10 was
second only to UCLA’s Ato
Bolden, who ran the world’s
fastest time this year, 9.92.

Harden came up limping after
the semifinal round last Satur-
day, but was given a thumbs—up
to go in Sunday’s final.

,,,—-\_ His second—place
, finish brought
y him u just short
/ of what would
A/ have been a
/_ ,." fourth strai ht
first-place NCAA n-
ish.

Harden won in last ear’s
100 meters as well as t e 55
meters in indoor competi-
tion the past two years.

- CATS - SHOW BOAT . PHANTOM OF THE OPERA . ANNlE °

“A Grand Nightfor Singing! ”

Presents an All-Hits, All-Out Salute to

 

 

 

 

Saturday. June 8. 8:00 pm.
Singletary Center for the Arts

It’s hard to believe that the musical event
of the summer keeps getting better. Believe it!
This year UK's vocalists and summer orchestra
combine for an evening of greatest hits from the
greatest Broadway shows. From the timeless classics
to the newest rages, there are favorites from
15 shows in all. and all directed by special guest
Broadway conductor Linda Twine
(Jelly 's Last Jam. Big River. Am 'I Mishehuvin ').

The UK women’s olf team
advanced to the N East

Regional, but finished a distant
' 19th in the competition, finish-
ing with a three-day total of
995.

The to ei ht seeds in the
regiona a vanced to the
NCAA Championships. The
Lady Kats’ top finisher was
senior Kirsten Krogsrud,
who finished tied for
let after shootin

Hit the high note of the summer at “Grand Night."

UK

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File photo

COMPUTER BENEMTEB DRAGON The stafl at Industrial Lights and Magic used their

supercomputers to create the spectacular special effects in ‘DragonHeart.’

Dragonfleart soars

Efiacts ma/ee dragon

believable character

By Ann Baden
StaffCritic

The visual artists from Industrial
Light and Magic have done it again. In
“DragonHeart” they begin
with a mythical creature
and make it a reality.

When Draco, the dragon
(voiced by Sean Connery),
first appeared, I didn’t think
they were going to ull it
off. But once the dpragon
moves out of the dark, spe—
cial effects bring him into
the real world.

Set in the 10th century, .
the scenery reminded me of 51
the plethora of movies con- :-
cerning knights, kings, cas~
tles and peasants.

Though there are simi- '

larities in the plot with other movies of

the genre, there is an interesting twist.
An evil king, Einon (David

 
 
  
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
 

Thewlis), rules the land’s peasants and
underclass harshly and was exceedingly
cruel. As with many stories, there’s a
man, Bowen (Dennis Quaid), who
becomes a hero and leads the peasants
against the king.

The love interest lies between
Bowen and Kara (Dina Meyer), who is
bent on the King’s destruction. King

Einon tries to force Kara
' into marriage, but she
escapes.
; Includin DIEGO in the
f1 ht against t e annical
Z Eignon and Eli: link
i between Einon and Draco
f are ideas that separate
1 “DragonHeart” from other
fantasy films.
The story behind Draco’s
name was cool. And the
_ endin , though pre-
3 dictab e was touching.
The lot of “Dragon—
Heart recycles some very
basic fantasy story premis-
‘ es, but IS new_enough to
kee Viewers interested. Director Rob
Coffen and his team have roduced a
fairy tale for all ages wit stunning
effects.

 

lSul'f the Web, and discOVer
UK Federal Cre

 

4“ Union:

 

 

 

 

 

   

AWWW

By Craig A. Bealer
Staff Writer

According to Bob Munden of The
Fiery Dragon, there are two types of
people in the worl