xt79s46h482k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79s46h482k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2006-01-23 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 23, 2006 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 23, 2006 2006 2006-01-23 2020 true xt79s46h482k section xt79s46h482k lN tliii OPlNlON

THE

Judge Samuel Alito deserves the Roberts
treatment: confirmation PAGE 4

Ke ntuc

l SPORT

Cool Cats skate circles around Tennessee,
pick up weekend sweep BACK PAGE

 

Monday. January 23, 2006

 

y Ker

Celebrating 35 years of independence

Colorado shares diversity ideas at UK

Top UK Officials hear suggestions

on improving hiring practices
By Sean Rose
MERE—film

UK looked to the University of Colorado
for ideas on improving campus diversity in a
meeting Friday that outlined strategies for
recruiting and retaining women and minori—
ties.

In an effort to take a cue from other
schools, about 46 UK officials. including Pres-
ident Lee Todd. deans. and senior adminis-
tration involved with the President's Com-
mission on Women and the President’s Com-
mission on Diversity. met with two represen-
tatives from Colorado.

Dorothy Brockopp. a faculty member and
chairwoman of the women’s commission.

said she was very happy with the turnout
because one of the goals of the meeting
was “to get se-
nior administra-
tion to hear
some different
ideas and then
to ut a plan to-
ge er for what
we can do at this
university."

“If we’re go
ing to enhance di-
versity. the presi-
dent plays a very
_ , , , important role,"
Unwersuty of Colorado School of Medicine Brockopp said.

C a r m e n
Williams, assistant vice president for diversi-
ty at the University of Colorado, said having
Todd and other UK officials in attendance

”Key people were
here, and that's crit-
ical because you
need support from
the leadership."
Gwendblyn Hill

director of diversity and inclusion,

made a difference.

“Leadership has the power to make
change.” Williams said. “Faculty doesn’t.
(Leadership) makes the decisions.”

Gwendolyn Hill, director of diversity and
inclusion for the University of Colorado
School of Medicine. also saw the importance
of a high turnout from high-ranking offi-
cials.

“Key people were here, and that's critical
because you need support from the leader-
ship.” Hill said.

Hill said the presentation was based off
experiences at the University of Colorado
and the visit was a tradeotf of ideas.

“We‘ve tried some new strategies at the
University of Colorado to recruit and retain
minority faculty and women faculty.” Hill
said. “That's really in a nutshell what we
were talking about: How do you do that?”

See Diversity on page 3

 

Cats cash clutch
3—pointers, top
South Carolina

By Josh Sullivan
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

Just when. it looked
like the UK men's basket-
ball team was on the verge
of making dubious histo-
ry. 3-point prayers from
Patrick Sparks and Rajon
Rondo were answered.

After Tarence Kinsey
sank a pair of free throws
to put South Carolina up
by two. Sparks pushed the
ball into the frontcourt.
then suddenly
rose up from
the ‘K’ on the
UK mid-court
logo and nailed
a three-pointer
eight seconds
into the shot
clock to give
the Cats a 77-76

a minute to go.

“I‘m just
glad it went
in." head coach
Tubby Smith
said of the
1 o n g - r a n g e
bomb. which
was Sparks' only bucket of
the second half after sink-
ing a trio of 3-pointers in
the first. “Nobody draws
up a shot like that. but he
had been shooting well."

After two more free
throws from center An-
toine Tisby put the Game-
cocks up by one. the Cats
had nine seconds to avoid
dropping their first three
Southeastern Conference
home games of the season
for the first time ever.

“No secret who was go
ing to get the ball." said
South Carolina head

”I was nervous.
When I saw him
go out, I won-
dered what he
was doing. He
lead with half just broke free
and let loose."

Joe Crawford ShOt-

UK sophomore guard,
on teammate Rajon Rondo's
game-winning 3-pointer Saturday

coach Dave Odom of the
Cats’ final possession.

The plan was for Ron-
do to get to the rim, but as
he drove into the paint.
the Gamecock defense col—
lapsed toward the basket
and forced him back out-
side. Rondo raced to the
left side of the three-point
arc, created some daylight
with a crossover dribble
and nailed the game-win-
ner with 1.4 seconds for an
8078 victory.

“I just
knew coming
out of the
timeout I
wanted to take
the shot." Ron—
do said. “If I
was going to
lose. I wanted
it all on me.“

R o n d o ' s
t e a m m a t e s
were sur—
prised by his

“I was ner-
vous." sopho-
more Joe
Crawford said.
“When I saw him go out. I
wondered what he was do
ing. He just broke free and
let it loose."

The 3-pointer was Ron-
do’s second since the Cats
beat Ohio on Dec. 30. He
had badly missed two
wide-open treys from the
corner early in the first
half Saturday. air-balling
the first and barely graz-
ing the rim with the sec-
ond.

But despite Rondo‘s
early troubles from long-
range. the Cats (12-6. 2-2
SEC) were on fire from the
field for the second

See Cats on page 3

UK 80, SOUTH CAROLINA 78

amuse-1H sure

UK sophomore guard Rajon Rondo splits South Carolina defenders Dwayne Day and Tre' Kelley
while going for a layup on Saturday. Rondo had nine points in the game, including the 3-
pointer that won the game for UK with 1.4 seconds remaining.

“I just knew coming out of the timeout I wanted to take the shot." Rondo said.

‘1'” I STA"

UK senior guard Patrick Sparks drives against South Carolina senior guard Tarence Kinsey during UK's 80-78
win on Saturday. Sparks finished with 14 points, including a 29-foot 3-pointer in the game's final minute.

'Mmm.wm23m

Cats' comeback
late corrects
columnist error

When we are out in class. a bar.
the confessional booth. anywhere Ker-
nel staffers often are asked questions
about the topics they cover.

When the topic in question is UK has—
ketball. those lucky
staffers get the ha-
rangues of every ex-
pert out there who
knows what the gener-
al problem with the
team is and how it can
be fixed.

Earlier this season.
according to the
barstool point guards.
it was low-post threats
and Tubby Smith.
Then. it was the lack of
a floor leader and Tub-
by Smith. Then. it was
cold shooting and Tubby Smith.

Then. in the weeks following the
Kansas debacle. it was how the team did-

Chris

£22129!
SPORTS EDITOR

See Johnson on page 3

 

 

Whykernelcom

UK hospital
expansion
on schedule

Limestone Street parking garage
construction to start next month

By Shannon Mason
THE KENTUCKY mm

By the end of next month. the progress in
UK's extensive hospital expansion project
could be quite visible on and around campus
— including construction on a major campus
artery.

Construction crews have completed two-
thirds of the demolition required to start
building UK HealthCare’s new parking garage,
putting the hospital expansion right on sched-
ule. said Dr. Michael Karpf, executive vice
president of health affairs at UK.

Another major part of the plan — although
further down the road — is closing Rose Street
from Donovan Hall to South Limestone Street.
Virginia Avenue will be extended through
campus to meet Huguelet Avenue.

“We are totally on schedule right now,“
Karpf said. “We are right on the money with
our schedule.“

Karpf said a fence is getting ready to go up
on the corner of South Limestone and Conn
Terrace. in preparation for the construction of
the new parking garage. Bids are now being ac-
cepted for the parking garage. and construc-
tion is scheduled to begin in the third or
fourth week of February. he said.

A new parking garage is the first step in
phase 1 of UK HealthCare’s hospital expansion
plan. A 250-bed patient care facility will be
built where the hospital's parking garage cur-
rently stands.

The new parking garage is slated to be fin-
ished between January and March of 2007.
Construction of the new patient care facility
will begin after the old garage is torn down.
and that facility is expected to be finished in
2010.

Phase 1A is projected to cost $450 million.

The three-phase project. which is slated to
he finished by 2020. also aims to build a new
critical-care facility and an ambulance facility

See Hospital on page 3

BOOK REVIEW

Max's drunken
memOirs a
guulty pleasure

By Doug Scott and Ian Conley
VIHE kimono KERNEL

A self-described heathen. Tucker Max claims
to “get excessively drunk at inappropriate times.
disregard social norms. indulge every whim. ig-
nore the consequences of my actions. mock id-
iots and posers. sleep with more women than is
safe or reasonable. and just generally act like a
raging d head.

“But. I do contribute to humanity in one very
important way: I share my adventures with the
world.“

Take your most insane. depraved and de-
bauched nights. roll them into one tale of say.
agery unequaled in eloquence. and they might
count as a footnote in the annals of Tucker Max.
Max's recently released book. “I Hope They Serve
Beer in Hell." is a definitive collection of some of
his best work from his
ridiculously popular Web ,.

site and new vignettes to I was one Of
keep longtime fans laugh~ _
m the top 5

 

Max's work is the clos-
est thing to entertaining
that's been written in years.
Granted. he‘s no Hunter S.
Thompson. but unlike so
many others before him. he
never claimed to be. And in
this we find why Max is so
appealing: He‘s a true origi-
nal. a complete outlaw who
lives the events we can only
imagine and retells them in
a fashion that would make
any 40yearold sales clerk at Best Buy feel like an
arrogant. sarcastic and overconfident kid again
with no goals but reckless abandon and bedlam.

But Max still works. A workday for Max. how-
ever. is not unlike one of your most cherished va-
cation days.

“Honestly a typical day is not a whole lot dif-
ferent than a college student." Max said in an in-
terview with The Kernel. ”I wake up whenever I
feel like. I check my message board. I‘ll put up
some new threads. answer email. I'll go to the
gym. hang out with my dogs. hook up with some

See Max on page 2

Maroom: 257-1915

best-looking
girls at the
(University of
Chicago).”

Tucker Max
author, "I Hope lhey
Serve Beer in Hell"

 

    
    
     
   
  
     
   
       
  
  
   
    
    
    
  
    
     
   
        
        
   
    
   
   
   
   
   
     
    
   
  
  
 
   
   
   
   
  
 
  
 
   
     

  

Doug Scott

Monday Features Editor

Jan. 23, 2006 Phom: 2574915
PAGE 2 E-mail: dscottOkykemel.com

 

 

Max

 

Continued from paqei

girl. Whatever.”

Success does indeed build
upon itself, however, and bur-
geoning fame comes with a
price.

“The last six months have
been so busy, it's been like a
real job," Max said. “I haven't
quite had my tipping point,
haven‘t quite broke yet,
so I’m at that point that
I have to handle every-
thing myself, and it's a
huge pain in the awe."

A Lexington native,
Max attended Lafayette
High School before
spending his last two
years of high school at
Blair Academy in New
Jersey From there, he
attended the University
of Chicago for his un-
dergraduate degree.

“It’s the nerdiest
(school)." he said. “I
was the coolest guy at
the school, and I
shouldn’t be the coolest
guy And this was when
I was 19, and I was an
idiot when I was 19,"
Max said. “I was one of
the topS best-looking
girls at the school.”

After graduation,
Max attended Duke
Law School on a full-
ride scholarship. His
tenure would become
the genesis for the
lifestyle that has earned
him so much fame and
disdain.

“We had the best f ing
time. Law school was so f A
ing easy. I never went to class,
I didn't buy my books; it was a
f_,,,_ ing joke,” said Max. who
spent six weeks of one semes-
ter living in Cancun. Mexico.
while still enrolled in classes.
“Law school is way easier
than undergrad."

Max graduated from Duke
in 2001 and began his Web site
(wwwtucker-maxcom) that
he conceptualized as a date ap
plication page but quickly be
came an archive of depravity
and a platform from which
Max has leaped into the World
of publishing

Though popular for years,
Max’s worldwide fame was
something more akin to
serendipitous fate than calcu-
lated marketing strategy, and
by “serendipitous fate," one
means being involved in a
classic First Amendment law-
suit.

Katy Johnson, crowned
1999 Miss Vermont, filed an in-
junction in response to a story
Max posted on his Web site
(which is still available,
though not included in “I
Hope They Serve Beer in

l HOPE
THEY bEHVE BEER
IN

TUCKER MAX

 

The jacket cover of Tucker Max's latest book, which
recently made the New York Times’ bestseller list.

Hell"). In it. Max chronicles a
ridiculously debauched week-
end and also writes about
Johnson's ensuing lewd be-
havior.
Johnson sued Max under
a Florida law stating that two
individuals who possess “pri—
vate person” legal status may
not disclose mutually private
information in the public
realm. Max was eventually
vindicated on grounds that
neither he nor Miss Johnson
are classified as such: on the
contrary. Max said. they are
very much public figures.
That was the best thing
that ever happened to me‘

Max said. “When she sued me,
that was New York Times,
Wall Street Journal.
Newsweek, the Associated
Press, every f—~ing newspa-
per. The Lexington Herald-
Leader covered that s~-.

“I went from relatively
anonymous Internet writer to
f—ing everywhere,” Max
said. “It was awesome. You
can’t buy that publicity. And
the best part is, I was right.
Everything I wrote about her,
right or wrong, was n'ue.”

In fact. Max prides himself
on the veracity of his
stories, which often
crash into the walled
minds of skeptics.

“With some of my
stories, I'll take artis~
tic license 7* I’ll
change a timeline or
something like that to
make the story flow
better. But every story
is true," Max said.

“I Hope They
Serve Beer in Hell” is-
n’t for the faint of
heart. The short mem-
oirs Max writes are
real life times 10, and
real life itself is a
problem for most peo
ple.

Don’t just accept it
as funny, half-hearted
pulp literature and
walk away, either; the
book is superbly writ-
ten and the comedy
expertly executed.
The epic tale of “The
Foxfield Weekend,"
for instance, takes a
great risk at being
written in a bizarre,
hazy chronological
time log. By the end of
it. however, one couldn't imag-
ine it being done in any other
form, or by anyone else, any
better. Max knows how to
write as well as he knows how
to party just shy of human
sacrifice.

Reckless, alcoholic, un-
apologetic and completely un-
abashed, Max will at once test
your conscience and make
your sphincter rupture from
laughter. And to his detrac-
tors. it seems Max is laughing
last; “I Hope They Serve Beer
in Hell" just entered the New
York Times bestseller list.

E—mail
featuresrwkykernel. com

 

 

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Student Activities Board

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to fill out an application

APPLICATIONS DUE
Monday, February 6, 2006

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Monday, Jan. 23, 2006 I PAGE 3

 

Diversity

Continued from page 1

Williams said everyone in
attendance was willing to lis-
ten.

“There’s a lot of enthusi-
asm here for these issues,"
she said

The presentation advocat-
ed aggressive recruiting of
minorities and women to ob-
tain a wide pool of individu-

als to choose from when hir-
ing new faculty.

“The goal is to have a
large, diverse applicant pool, "
Brockopp said. “And then. of
course, you choose the best
people"

Williams and Hill ex-
plained that search commit-
tees trained to be aggressive
will yield more and higher-

quality applicants. The duo
broke down myths about
search committees, such as
the idea that qualified minori-
ty professors are already em-
ployed by other schools and

that white males have little or
no chance to get positions be
cause of the focus on hiring
minorities.

The other major subject
during the meeting was how
to retain a diverse faculty
once they’ re hired.

Williams and Hill present
ed ways of tracking the facul-
ty retention rate and ad
dressed the challenges with
retaining faculty such as in-
flexible promotion or tenure
criteria, as well as institution-
alized and cultural racism.

Williams said she wanted

UK’s administration to come
away with options for imme
diate use.

“1 hope they got some con-
crete rules that could make a
difference for attracting di-
verse faculty,” Williams said.

Representatives from the
University of Michigan will
visit UK on Feb. 17 for a simi-
lar meeting on the same sub-
ject.

Email
sroserwkykernelmm

 
  

    

 

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Hospital

Continued from paqel

 

as well.

As for Rose Street. Karpf
said the bids for Rose Street
construction will come out
in January and activity on
Rose Street should start at
the end of February or in
early March.

“You’ll see activity there
soon,” he said.

Karpf said there are
plans to hold open meetings
when work begins on Rose
Street in order to inform
concerned citizens. Dates
for those meetings have not
been set.

UK HealthCare had
record growth in patients
and revenues in 2004-05, ac-
cording to its annual report
released in late December.

According to the UK
HealthCare annual report,

the Chandler Medical Cen-
ter has seen a more than 13
percent increase in patients
during the past year and
each quarter has had more
business than the last over
the past six quarters.

This is yet another rea-
son to keep moving forward
with the hospital‘s expan-
sion, Karpf said.

“We're ahead of budget
and ahead of our job cre-
ation projection.” Karpf
said. “Things are looking re-
ally good."

Karpf expressed some
concern that Gov. Ernie
Fletcher only proposed allot-
ting $130 million for the pa-
tient care facility in his pro-
posed budget. The price tag
for the facility is $150 mil-
lion.

“We will be asking the
legislature and the governor
for the full $150 million,"
said Karpf.

E-mail
smasonrwkykernel. com

 

Cats

Continued from page 1

 

straight game, matching their
performance' in last Tuesday's
victory over Georgia by hit
ting 56 percent of their shots
Crawford led the way, hit-
ting sevenof- 10 shots for a
team- high 15 points Bobby
Perry reemerged on Saturday
as well, knocking down three

Johnson

Continued from page 1

 

n’t appear to care and Tubby
Smith.

I made the mistake of
agreeing with the last one.

Well, not the Tubby Smith
part, but that the team didn’t
seem to care.

And I was wrong.

UK got down 12 points at
home with its low-post threat
in foul trouble to a South Car-
olina squad that it appeared
had arranged a trade with Sa-
tan involving their souls for
unlimited 3-point range.

And came back ~ with
the aid of two of the biggest,
jawdropping, tear-your-heart-
out, what-the-hell-is-hedoing-

 

of six 3~pointers to match his
career-best from the perime—
ter.

“Bobby has struggled and
I told him he might want to
try the outside shot because

he has missed close to the has-
ket," he said. “Those were
huge buckets."

Perry and Crawford were
part of a lineup whose sec-
ond- half emergence was time-
ly in more ways than one
against South Carolina (108,
14 SEC).

After center Randolph

Morris got in foul trouble
with 12 minutes to go, Smith
sent his own version of
“Rupp's Runts" ,, the mem-
bers of UK's 1966 team, hon-
ored at halftime Saturda W
into the game to help erase a
12-point South Carolina lead,
playing Perry at the center
spot along with four guards.

“Our bench was very posi-
tive,” Smith said. “They're
the guys that got us back in
the game when we were
down.”

That lineup played the key

 

oh-my-God-what-a-shot bas-
kets Rupp Arena has ever
seen.

Players who don’t care
don’t make those shots.

Actually, players who
don't care don't take those
shots.

Patrick Sparks from, as
fellow miracle worker Rajon
Rlondo put it. “Tayshaun lev-
e

Swish.

Rondo himself, with less
than two seconds left on the
clock crossing over some
poor sap in a South Carolina
jersey and shooting his one-
handed Jumper.

No NBA range?

Swish.

“I wanted to take the
shot,” Rondo said simply.
looking up at reporters like
someone had just asked him
the color of the sky.

 

Players who don't care
don’t want to.

“Ravi (Moss) told me I
could beat anyone in the
country off the dribble," Ron-
do said. “Joe (Crawford) told
me that this was it they en-
couraged me and that got my
confidence up.“

The mental block for this
team wasn’t apathy it was a
lack of self-esteem. as odd as
that sounds.

The last few post game
press conferences have been
littered with talk of confi-
dence and general esteem is-
sues.

Smith himself it ap-
peared had lost some confi-
dence in his team and his
coaching style staying qui-
eter on the bench and in front
of the media.

Sparks was passing up
open looks and sitting on the

role in a 204 UK run that cul-
minated with Perry’s third 3-
pointer. which put the Cats
back on top (ii-62. A trey from
Ramel Bradley stretched the
lead to four.

“Coach did a good job of
downsizing, matching their
outside shooting with 'a small-
er lineup,” Sparks said. "I‘ve
got to give him credit for
putting us in a position to
win."

E-mail
jsulli van (a kykernel. com

bench during the last minutes
of games.

Then, he sunk That One.
falling into his teammates
and grinning at them while
getting back on defense.

Now he‘s stepping up
from, as Carolina coach Dave
Odom said, “somewhere in
the Rupp Museum."

Swish. His fourth :i-point-
er of the afternoon.

"I was glad it went in,"
Smith said matter-of-factly, to
the amusement of reporters.

But while he wasn't smil-
ing, he had reason to.

His recruits had proven
all of us wrong. They do care.

And now is a good time to
do so. because these are the
games that winning streaks
are made of.

E-mail
cjohnson a kykernelrom

 

 

 

2006 Fillies
llanceTeam
'I'I’Vllllts

‘Vou MUST be 19 years old to tryout.

-The fee for tryouts is $25 and can be paid by
cash or money order. Orders can be made out
to The Pep Club. N0 CHECKS!
~There will be an open clinic for persons trying
out on January 25th from 7-10 pm at The Pep
Club. this is optional, but recommended.
-Tryouts will follow on January 26m from
8-10 pm.

-Dance attire is appropriate for the tryouts.
-The location of the tryouts is at the Pep Club,
located at 261 Huccio Way, off of Reynolds

Rd., behind Meijer, inside the Omni Center.
~For more information, call linda Parker

at 859-983-891 4

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

       

 

 

 

This job is great.

 

It lets me work the pa
hours thatwerk for me!

 

 

 

        

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Part-Time UPS...
Package Handlers Where
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