xt7f1v5bgd65 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7f1v5bgd65/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2000-04-13 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, April 13, 2000 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 13, 2000 2000 2000-04-13 2020 true xt7f1v5bgd65 section xt7f1v5bgd65 THURSDAYKENTUCKY Bat Cats

Couldn’t
Gender make last
night’s game?
Quotes Check out the
about the recap I A

sexes

 

 

“Men get JiltlEAISHQLSAGA
laid, but

Protesters still want change

screwed.”

-0uentln Crisp, author

By Katie Nelsen Sperber. and the countless others who Board of Trustees will agree with the stu- "Our focus has beeil oil gettilig tlle stuv
W— have increased student and faculty aware- dents at the May 2 meeting. and ultimately dent body behind us." Grant said. "Now
_ _ ness of the evils of sweatshop labor over put pressure on Wetllington to join the that we have everybost attention. we

Gabriel Sperber t3 well aware that tittt‘ the past two weeks at UK. are not letting consortium. don't want it to fizzle out."
COL?” h‘ave gobb‘ed hlm gains opportunity the arrests and 180k 9f support from the “Certainly we're not going to give up." Grant said more than 700 people have
“W ‘0 npea PP or. “man “is tS- administration stand in their “jay. Merrill said. “It would be detrimental not signed the petitioil after just tllree days or
omen . Despite being arrested and charged "YOU 100k at the cause being greater to have some kind of victory by the end of "lthe 'in ' TI 1 ‘t't' "ll bl ‘ I l ' tl .
With harassment. Sperber said he w'lllcon» than the cost " Sperber said . .. ‘ ‘ t“ ‘I t“ “ pt 1 "m “I L Uh“ )3 1‘
. . the semester. students to show the board on May 2 the

tinue to utilize his right as an American to The students that have risked ' '
nee a . . .. ~ . nettmg Gtt'n' d 1"l ' . ~ ~ ~ .. ‘~
VOice his 0 inlons and create awareness a , ‘( ‘ . ‘ . e ing arrestc is on y a lump ill the amount ofstudent support and concel n for
p r rested to fight for the cause are adamant road for students like Merrill who feel pas the issue.

reason about workers‘ rights. . that the University will be doing the right . y , ‘ . . .. . y .. g \ .. . y .
I realized I could have been born m a thing by 301mm: the Worker‘s ngms Con- stonate about sweatshop laborers. While the wet kel s lights issue ls new
different environment." Sperber said. "1 sortium (WRC). an independent monitor» “It s not something I wanted to ban to many students on campus. Grant stress
to have was given the opportunity to have a voice ing organization made up of human rights pen." Merrill said. "But. it has provided a es the point that many concerned students
— to have perspective." activists. lot of attention and that is the goal.“ have been trying to influence the Universi-
SeX While heis not proud of his arrest af— Currently. UK belongs to the Fair Lav For now. the students involved in the ty since February 1999.
ter partic1patlng in a Sit-in at the Adminis- bor Association (FLA). a monitoring orga- cause are looking to educate UK students She is hoping that the University's
men tration Building meeting last week. Sper- nization activists say is inefficient because and faculty on the facts of the FLA versus switch to the WRt‘ will make UK more re-
ber Will continue to work for the cause at its members belong to the very corpora- WRC lSSllt‘. spected ill terms of its moral statld.
- hand. tions it should be policing. Monica Grant. an anthropology SO— "I think we all value the time we
JUSt “I‘m ready to do what it takes to gain Leslie Merrill. an art history junior, nior. can be found almost anywhere on spend at the University of Kentucky."
awareness,“ Sperber said. "It‘s my duty was also arrested on April 5 for participat campus talking with students and encour- Grant said. “We don‘t want the University
need a as a human to stand up for those people.“ ing in the sit-in. She is optimistic that the aging them to support the WRC. to be linked with the ln‘liA."

place.”

- Billy Crystal, actor

«A ~ , Council to

woman’s

mic: a raise lines

that of a

man’s , for meters

her . e .
lat-s x“ .tntt’a‘i . .
sexual ‘ “h 3f if” a .' LL“3"fiafi'w‘”Wfltfi‘om‘vwammum

 

iEXlNGIQhL

UK isn't the only place in

de31re, ' g _ ,, a}; . ._ _ "I . A = .. Lexington to emit parking
‘ . .. .. : . . .. ., 1‘ 4 ; . t, _ ' " .J .' . - . ' . .

four
times; her ; . y \ _ ,. .. ,_ - ~ .t , , , ,_
intelli- ’ .t It . = . - «- g ' '- " BinlicoL'"

woes; try downtown

NEWS EDITOR

gence’ . _ . « ' ' ' ' *3 . . .» ‘ . .' Parking downtown may become
ei ht . . . . j - ‘7 ,, .. ‘ . - i.‘ ° ' more cumbersome soon.

g ' _ , . _, . .. . - ' y . - ‘ The Lexington Fayette Urban Couri-
times 9, p, . ,_ -.l I y 1 ~ ty Council will vote on a proposalto ill-

. - . p . ,g . . _ crease fines for expired meters tonight.

,' ;. .' . -- - , “It's a pain to park downtown as it is
-Sanskritproverb . . » r . now." said Mia (‘onner. a political sci-
' " ‘ ence and English junior who works
downtown. “I have to go out and check

MaI'Ch .- - ' ' "'- , .5 -» .5 1V , the meter every two hours when I park

. , . V . . ., there.“
1811 t the . ' t . '. A committee formed by the council
- - . ' > .. , " -. ' . ’ x ‘ . to check out the parking situation down—
only . ' - = 1’ - . ' ' ' ' . town is proposing to raise the fines for
. . ,- ;- ' ~ . . . _’ .. .. K .. standing violations. The proposal sug-
thlng . ' ' ' '-., ' ‘ _ ' ' 7 n gests changing the fines from $4 to $15
’ > ~ ' ' - , - for expired meters and increase all other

that’s in t' I' . . . . H ,0 I I .~ I standing parking violations. including
, ' ‘ " ‘ ' parking in the fire lane. blocking all eli-
llke a . ' trance. driving the wrong way on a one
. way street and others from $8 to $30.
an: mam - .
m! Another part of the proposal. which

llon’ OUt m M m was endorsed ill March. includes a sec-

tion that requires vehicles with three

llke a “aim umnmmmummmm-mm ammmuummmnmw— H d. k. y .. H. . t l,
mmmmflm'wfi . 0U san mg par mg v10 (1 mils .0 )t
lamb ” . towed alter recelvmg the fourth VIOIZIIlOll.
.. , A different section of the endorsed
‘ n ‘ - -- - proposal included changing the 10-hour
-tlllflll|llluus ‘ . meters to four hours. All of the other ine-
Sme' ters (20 minutes. one hour and two
- ' I III hours) will remain the same.
“ml/"II" Some students think the time limits
cut- are inconvenient.
bh/vlewJoltusp‘IJolt “l have about two tickets right
elD=156 W now." said Krista McHone. an integrated
strategic communications junior. “I
W“ by: W have to go outside and check on my car
Essltl all the time because I work full days."

I
With all of these fines. some stil-
’ money goes.

$g$€hr§§w s “The money is collected and put into
the (council) general funds." said Bill
7 Melissa Biennan dium. for Greek Day at the Ballpark. ()‘Mara. director or th“ ”Wt-W”? ”t Rf‘V'
As UK played U of L. Farmhouse President Casey Mulberry enue. "It S USPd t0 help the police. fire.
tossed out the first pitch. The Sports Center encouraged all parks. roads and 0th” thmttn- It 5 "59:1
7o 50 Ten years ago spring was the time when Greek students Greeks to be there by giving out free UK Nike hats to the first 100 for general 59m“? for tht‘ government.
Hi Lo

CONTRIBUTING WRITER

would get together and participate in events called the mattress Greeks through the gate. An added attraction for the fraternities Although Conner said she has seen
marathon. anchor splash. twinky time and chariot races. and sororities was the big screen television and DVD player theksam; lawftenfgrcei?)e;\11t ”t7“? 1“ 51V“
- ~ ' . ~ _ awarded to the fraternity or sorority with the highest number of 1C OtS ay a CF fly. ara 58“ (IV
The tradition continues. and this week marks the 45th an members in attendance. have had inconsistent enforcement in

CNN 9° bet 0“ the niversary 0f. UK‘S Greek Week. A dunking booth was also on hand at the game. Viewers paid the past.
Started m 1955 as a servtce day, Dean Susan West Of the Pan- 31-32 to dunk anyone who was willing. The proceeds went to the “We hope to have two or three full-

ponies. . . . ., .
___..___ hellenic Office described Greek Week as. a celebration of the ac- Pediatric AIDS foundation. time officers to enforce the parking Mon»

Kentucky compllshments 0f the Greek system. _ , The week‘s events culminate in an awards banquet to be held day through Friday." he said.

Kernel The Great American Clean Up k‘Cked Off G“??? Week. Wlth Saturday at the Student Center Ballroom. Awards will be given “That is also in the. proposal."
.____._ 350 sorority women showmg up to 019311.119 0Ut§lde and around out for outstanding Panhellenic involvement, along with chapter The rates for meters. 25 cents per
VOL. 3105 ISSUE 33131 WINS beginning at the Baptist Student Union on polumbiaAvenue. and house director awards. The winners for the banner contest hour. will remain the same.

There are a to“ or events for P901319 to get involved in, said and the Greek Man and Woman contest will also be announced The council will vote on changing
Megan Turner. abroadcast journalism freshman and Panhellenic Saturday. mp fines tonight. [gym if the proposal
vice president pf organizations. “It really promotes the whole The awards banquet ceremonies will also include Dean of passes. it will still have to be voted on a
Greek community, as Opposed to one fratemlty or SOFOFItY" Students David Stockham as the key speaker and inductions into second time for a second reading to be-

The week‘s events peaked Wednesday at the C1117 Hagan Sta- the Greek Alumni Hall of Fame that was created last year, come an ordinance.

In this weather you

ESTABLISHED IN 1892
INDEPENDENT SINCE 1971

 

News tips?

Call: 2574915 or write:
kernelOpop.ulty.edu

 

The Student Newspaper at the University of Kentucky, Lexington

 

  

 

 

z I THURSDAY, APRIL 13.2000 lllkcnruckvkcnnci 7‘

 

ALLIHENEHSIHALEIIS

The Low-down

We asked
her what
a girl real-
ly wants.
Unfortuna
tely, it
wasn’t
any of
us.”

- llowle

of Backstreet
Boys, introduc-
ing “What a Girl

Wants" chart-
buster Christina
Aquilera at last
night's taping of

Vl-ll's “Divas:

Men Strike
Back."

Forrester: e-retailers will bust

NEW YORK Most retailers that operate
entirely on the Internet will be out of business by
next year. a respected consulting firm predicted
in a harsh report that fired another blow to the
battered online shopping industry. Intense coni-
petition combined with an ongoing selloff in dot
com stocks will result in a rapid rise in buyouts
and bankruptcies in the coming months. accord-
ing to Forrester Research Inc. The fallout has al~
ready begun. Lawyers and consultants are get-
ting swamped with calls for help from companies
in distress.

Reno in Miami for Elian talks

MIAMI BEACH. Fla. , Attorney General
Janet Reno came to Miami on yesterday. inter-
vening personally to persuade Elian Gonzalez's
great-uncle to hand the boy over and end the
wrenching 4 1/2-month custody case. Reno. tak«
ing a dramatic step toward arranging a peaceful
transfer. planned to meet with the Miami rela-
tives who have cared for Elian since two men on
a fishing trip pulled him from the sea Thanksgiyh
ing Day. Armando Gutierrez. a spokesman for
the Miami relatives. called her trip "a good sign.“

Jury upholds Sheppard verdict

C LEVELAN I) A jury yesterday refused to
declare that Dr. Sam Sheppard was wrongfully
imprisoned for his wife‘s 1954 beating death. The
decision is a major victory for prosecutors who

believe I)r. Sheppard killed his wife in one of

America's most notorious slayings. The juror‘s
decision means the couple‘s son. Sam Reese
Sheppard. failed to meet the burden of proof in
his civil lawsuit against the state othio. To win.
Sheppard needed to convince jurors the majority
of evidence showed his father was innocent.
Prosecutors believed l)r. Sheppard killed h1s wife
in the case that inspired "The Fugitive" televi-
sion series.

Little relief in Ethiopia's famine

DENAN. Ethiopia Aid agencies say a po-
tential human catastrophe looms in Ethiopia.
where a three-year drought is threatening 7.7
million people with starvation. Ethiopia. mired
in a 23-month border conflict with Eritrea. has
appealed for 920.500 tons of food aid because it
can‘t muster sufficient resources on its own. Its
own food reserves, which should be at 400.000
tons. are down to 50.000 tons. regional govern
ment officials say. Only half the relief food
Ethiopia asked for has been pledged by donors.

MOB LOVE:

The much-
anticipated sea-
son finale of
"The Sopranos"
whacked the
competition
Sunday night
with the largest
audience for
any HBO origi-
nal series pro-
gram, giving
M80 Its highest
rating since the
premiere of
“Titanic."

The mob-family
drama closed
its second sea-
son with the
highest
"Sopranos"
rating ever.

HONOREE:

For the fourth,
TNT tribute
concert series,
Joni Mitchell
will be honored.
She will per-
form at the end
of the show
hosted by
Ashley Judd.
Performers
include Mary
Chapin
Carpenter,
Shawn Colvin,
Elton John,
Wynonna Judd,
Diana Krall, k.d.
lang, Joni
Mitchell, Sweet
Honey in the
Rock, and
James Taylor.

13.000-acre wildfire burns in Fla.

NAPLES. Fla. . A wildfire that had de-
stroyed three homes and charred 13.000 acres of
brush and grass stalled yesterday between
Naples and Big Cypress Swamp. Fire crews ini-
tially feared “very aggressive fire behavior“ but
by mid-afternoon said the fire had not advanced
at all during the day. Wind was expected to pick
up later but was forecast to push flames back into
areas that already had burned. “We‘re just kind
of sitting on pins and needles waiting to see
what‘s going to happen,“ said Robert Heed. man-
ager of Kountree Kampinn RV Resort, which sits
about 2 1 2 miles from the edge of the burned
area.

Peruvians await final vote count

LIMA. Peru , Peruvians awaited a final vote
count yesterday to determine iftheir authoritari‘
an president. Alberto Fujimori. would win re-
election to an unprecedented third term or be
forced into a second-round showdown with an
upstart contender. With Fujimori just shy of the
majority needed to avoid a runoff against inter-
national economist Alejandro Toledo. election
board officials promised they would have 100 per-
cent of the vote available sometime yesterday.
Yesterday. officials said a count of 90.8 percent of
the ballots showed Fujimori with 49.96 percent of
the vote and Toledo with 40.39 percent in Sun-
day’s election.

Nasdaq plunges; Dow off 161.95

NEW YORK The Nasdaq composite index
continued its steep slide yesterday. plummeting
286 points and closing below 4.000 for the first
time since Jan. 31. Microsoft led the decline after
a Goldman Sachs analyst lowered his revenue es-
timate for the last quarter. The Nasdaq compos-
ite index fell 286.69 to 3.76921. its second worst
point drop in history. The Dow closed down
161.95 to 11.12519. ()n the NYSE. advancers led
decliners 1.4961459.

Williams withdraws, backs boycott

HILTON HEAI) ISLAND. SC. w Serena
Williams withdrew from the Family Circle Cup
yesterday to back NAACP's boycott of South Car-
olina for flying the Confederate flag. Williams.
one of the biggest names in sports to support the
boycott. was the first to commit in January to the
yearly clay court tournament at Sea Pines Rac-
quet Club. But she rethought the decision last
month when told of the flag controversy. ”My de-
cision to not play in South Carolina was based on
a much deeper issue and one that I feel strongly
about.“ said Williams. 18. the sixth-ranked tennis
player in the world.

Compiled from wire reports.

 

JCELREAMEIISIMESL

Ben & Jerry's
sold to Unilever

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MONTPELIER. Vt. -- Ben & Jerry's Homemade. the ice
cream maker founded by two former hippies. is being sold for
$326 million to Unilever. the world‘s largest ice cream maker. At
the same time. the multinational giant is buying diet staple
Slim-Fast.

The Ben & Jerry deal announced yesterday would bring the
maker of ice cream flavors like Chunky Monkey and Cherry
Garcia under the same corporate umbrella as Good Humor. Pop-
sicles and Breyers ice cream.

On the opposite end of the weight scale. Unilever said it will
pay $2.3 billion for Slim-Fast Foods Co.. a privately owned
Florida company that makes nutritional supplements and food for di-
eters.

Ben & Jerry's has played up its iconoclastic image as a
small Vermont company bucking the worldwide standard of
maximizing profits. It has long bragged of giving 7.5 percent of
its pre-tax profits to charitable enterprises and has purchasing
policies that favor family farms and sustainable agriculture.

Its annual meeting has coincided with a summer pop festi-
val in Vermont. where the bottom line has been played on bass
guitar.

There were already signs that the company‘s rebellious na-
ture might have become chilled.

Michael Garrett. the owner of four Ben & Jerry‘s franchises
in southwestern Connecticut and New York. said in January
that he and other franchisees were joining forces to stop the
company‘s sale “to corporate interests.“

Yesterday. Garrett applauded the sale. saying it “might al-
low us to increase what we do best. which is to be involved in
our community and to be socially conscious.“

The Ben & Jerry's deal with Unilever follows an effort by a
group led by co-founder Ben Cohen to take the company private.

The deal announced yesterday calls for Unilever to pay
$43.60 per share for Ben & Jerry‘s. a nearly 25 percent premium
over its closing price Tuesday of $34.93 3/4.

The agreement calls for Ben & Jerry‘s to operate separately
from Unilever‘s current US. business. There will be an
independent board of directors and the company will remain
in Vermont.

“While we and others certainly would have pursued our
mission as an independent enterprise. we hope that. as part of
Unilever. Ben & Jerry‘s will continue to expand its role in soci-
ety." co-founders Cohen and Jerry Greenfield said in a state
ment released this morning.

Ben & Jerry’s CEO Perry Odak said yesterday the company
will operate as an independent subsidiary. with one Unilever
member on its board. He said it would continue manufacturing
exclusively in Vermont.

Richard Goldstein, president of Unilever Foods North
America. said he hopes the company will continue its social
mission.

“Much of the success of the Ben & Jerry's brand is based on
its connections to basic human values. and it is our hope and ex.
pectation that Ben & Jerry's continues to engage in these criti-
cal. global economic and social missions." he said.

 

 

 

WWW om

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(Richmond Rd. 8 pm)
*Watch the NCA/NDA Collegiate

CBS Sports-April 15th (2 or 3 pm)
ARE YOU READY FOR THE BIG DANCE?

Clinics (April 17—19)
Try-outs (April 20)
Powerhouse Gym

National Championships

 

 

Spotlight Jazz Series

Jimmy Smith

April 14, 2000

8:00 PM Singletary Center

for the Arts

$7 UK Students,

$14 Fac / Staff,

$17.00 General Public

Tickets for this event are
limited, purchase yours soon!

257-TICS

for details

cosponsored by The office of African
American Student Affairs.

 

 

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BURLY BEAR NETWORK

BurLYBeaR.eom

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

W

Clinton to

preserve

sequoia forests

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON President Clinton is ex
pected to set aside 355,000 acres of forests in Cali-
fornia as a federal monument to permanently
protect groves of giant sequoia trees in Sequoia
National Forest. officials said today.

Clinton will announce his decision Saturday.
accepting the recommendation of Agriculture
Secretary Dan Glickman to preserve the majestic
trees and protect them from logging. The presi
dent will make the announcement at the forest in
central California.

“Despite their tremendous size. giant se-
quoias are vulnerable." Glickman said in for-
warding his recommendation to Clinton last
week. “They are very much affected by what
happens on the surrounding forest. Logging or
nearby development can profoundly affect water
quality in the groves and threaten the long-term
survival of these rare trees."

Clinton is expected to protect the groves un~
der the 1906 Antiquities Act. as he did earlier
this year to ensure permanent protection over a
vast stretch of land adjacent to the Grand
Canyon.

Environmentalists for years have cam-
paigned to impose greater protection of the giant
sequoia trees 77 about 70 groves in all .. that are
located in Kings Canyon. Sequoia and Yosemite
national parks and nearby Sequoia National For-
est in central California.

While about a third of the groves are protect-

ed within the national park systems. the rest are
in the national forest and could be endangered
by future logging or other development. Environ-
mentalists fear that while the trees themselves
might not be cut. nearby logging could threaten
their long-term existence.

Clinton has used the Antiquities Act on sev-
eral occasions to carve out major areas of land
for special protection. each time meeting strong
criticism from some western lawmakers and
state officials. White House officials have ac~
knowledged that the actions are. part of an at-
tempt by the president to leave an environmental
legacy. The sequoia announcement will be made
during a trip that begins Friday with an educa-
tion speech and political fundraisers in Atlanta
and then moves west to California. After visiting
Sequoia National Forest. Clinton will continue to
Los Angeles for a fundraiser Saturday night with
Vice President Al Gore.

After a day off Sunday. Clinton will begin a
two-day tour to encourage investment in areas of
the country that are not benefitting from the eco-
nomic good times. He will start his trip Monday
in East Palo Alto. Calif. which has been left be-
hind from Silicon Valley‘s prosperity. Later that
day. the president will visit a Navajo Indian
reservation at Shiprock. N .M.

He will conclude his trip Tuesday with an
appearance in Chicago at a high-technology
show. COMDEX. where he will encourage efforts
to narrow the “digital divide" between computer
haves and have~nots.

 

LQMELEXJSSUES

Judge rules labels
aren't ‘dolphin-safe'

Groups split on whether decision
will help or hurt sea mammals

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON 4 A federal judge on Tues-
day struck down a government decision to allow
the use of the “dolphin-safe" label on canned
tuna even when some of the tuna are captured by
huge encircling nets that often harm dolphins.

US. District Judge Thelton Henderson. in a
ruling handed down in San Francisco. said the
Commerce Department improperly concluded
that the change would not have any significant
adverse impact on dolphin fatalities.

The ruling came in a lawsuit filed by some
environmental groups and dolphin-protection ac-
tivists who have argued that the labeling change
a year ago by the Commerce Department
amounted to a weakening of US. laws protecting
dolphins.

The three major tuna processors _,- Star-kist.
Chicken of the Sea and Bumble Bee ~ have all
said they would continue using only tuna caught
by methods other than net encirclement. The
three processors share about 90 percent of the
US. tuna market.

Use of the nets once was responsible for the
death of more than 100.000 dolphins a year. But
the dolphin death toll has declined to no more
than 3.000 a year in recent years. thanks to ag-
gressive activism that resulted in eventual

protective laws.

Henderson‘s ruling and the issue has had en-
vironmental groups sharply divided.

David Phillips. director of Earth Island Insti-
tute‘s marine mammal project. was pleased with
the court ruling.

“This is a tremendous rebuke to President
Clinton. Vice President Gore and the free-trade
bureaucrats who sold out dolphin protection to
accommodate a handful of foreign fishing compa-
nies, killing dolphins to catch tuna." declared
Phillips.

But the labeling change has had the support
of such groups as Greenpeace. the Center for Ma-
rine Conservation and the Environmental De-
fense Fund. These organizations argue the old.
strict adherence to when the label can be used
has blocked international cooperation aimed at
protecting dolphins. Some countries like Mexico
will not participate in dolphin protection mea-
sures unless U.S. markets are opened without re-
strictions. these groups have argued.

Even with the change, Commerce Depart.
ment officials have argued. observers must still
be stationed on tuna boats and must verify that
dolphins were not killed or seriously injured by
nets if the label is to be used.

In addition to Earth Island Institute, those
who joined in the lawsuit challenging the label
change included the Humane Society of the Unit-
ed States. Defenders of Wildlife. International
Wildlife Coalition. Animal Fund. Oceanic Soci-
ety and Environmental Solutions International.

 

This is not.

In fact, an iinhurn baby's heart begins to heat at 18 days.
Ar 40 days she has rncasurablc brain waves.
An unborn baby shouldn't be thrown away like a piece of tissue.

'I‘hink about it.

Right to Life of Central Kentucky
16 E. Reynolds Rd. Suite 201A
Lexington, KY 4051 7
(806 272-3920

CKRT

Olunocom

UK Students for Lite

 

 

Q Over.2.000 Ross Graduates
practice in the United States

9 Ross students pass rate on lot
attempt at USMLE is approx 90%.
9 Clinical Clerkship Affiliations
with over ‘0 Teaching Hospitals
throughout the United States
Email adMIss/onsgjmssmed odu

 

 

WSit our Websues for our Video.
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460 W 34th Street
New York. NY USA 10001

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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DELIUERY

April 10th-

l'E April 16th

Customer Appreciation
Week

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Campus Calendar

April I 0 - April 16. 2000

 

The (umpus (olendoi is piodured by the Ollite of Student Artivities, Registered Student 0r 5 and UK Oepts run submit inlormotion for FREE
online ONE WEEK PRIOR to the MONDAY information is to uppeui lll http://vnrvr.ufiy.odu/Stutlont(ontor/Studontlrtirilios

IUIORING

'Motli l09-3 3 50 8 IN: 4-4 50, 203 iiutee Hull
'(hemittiy 7 IOprn Holmes lounge 8.7 9pm Hoggm
'Moth.6 IO. Holmes (lattioom 868 in (ommons 308A
restroom & 6 8pm 306 (ommonx

'ilistory I0! MOS. 4-5 45 Holmesf
'Sponith, 6 8pm. Noggin (ompuler lab &4
'llistoiy IOU 8T0? 24 (ommoiit Bollioom
'fienrli 47 Keenelond

MEETINGS

'Iliursdoy Night live, 8pm (hristion Student fellowship
'fieshmonforut 730pm BoptistStud Union
'Devotion ondluiirh l2pm Baptist Stud Union St
‘(ompus (iusode for (hint 7 30 Worshom fit

(all 257-0867 lot more information

'Ulllnmbdu l30pm 23lS(
'Golden Key 7pm 23lS(

“IIII'S
SPORTS

‘Kempo Sell defense (lub bJOpm Alumni
Gym loft

'lce Kwoii 00(lub S 6 30pm Alum Gym
Basement le9

'llugliy Piutliie 57 (lub Sports field

EECIURE
'Aiihileituie 530 Penre Hull

SPEUAI EVENTS

8 (ommons 3088

13

 

Arodemir
'Airhilerlum l2l30pm 2i“ Main St

SPORTS
'UK Rugby it Xuvtei, lpin (lull Spotltfield

SPECIM EVENIS
‘Jiiiiniy Sniilhluii(on(eit Ilprn SE” (0075

ARTS
'Violin Rental ll Vitiello lpm Memorioliloll

Fl‘l l memos
; '(olholii Moss 6pm Newmonfti
ltNIRAMURAl/RE(REAHON
l 'Whillle Bull Tourney
'Doubles Tourney

8‘" 15

l SPEflAl EVENIS

I "Dr Maya Angelou 8pm ST” 757 ll($
'Alphu Gamma Delta Daisies lor Diabelet
Wolli 7430pm UK Arbozelum

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7II(S

'Iurtulle‘ 8pm, Riggs Theolrel (all 257 4929 for lirliets

lUghOIING 79 ’

' OMISII pm No motion 2
'Sponish E7 in Nolmesllursi'dgm
'llitloiyl08 09 Slum (ommom

MEEIINGS

'Newman I.

Bollioom Sam and 8 30 i
‘P

'Mth blOpm (ominous 308‘ Wayne

Sunday Mowing Worship “on lhm'm‘i
Student lell‘twtl’t‘p

ARIS MOVIES

~Soiophoiie lliw'nE U Bailout 3pm Me'nn'iclltr‘l
inadvi'inolieutal l Budge" ago: Mer'oiiclhc“
lfirullP ‘lom H'iugt lhectte (nil787197‘llot
I't el'

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xmgtnitil THURSDAY, APRIL “-7399? | _._3

 

 Phone. 2571915 I E MIWMxOM

SportsDaily or

 

 

4 I THURSDAY,APRILI3.2000 I WIN

 

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Wilson, Moore spark Cats

Cardinals canned: UK Bat Cats jump past Louisville, extend
non-conference winning streak to 23 games

By Ian Cox
51A" WRIIER

The UK Bat Cats extended their non-
conference winning streak with an impres-
sive 103 win over the University of
Louisville Cardinals (11231) last night at
Cliff Hagan Stadium.

The streak is now at 23 games, with 21
coming this season.

The Cats are coming otIa poor showing
last weekend. going winless in three games
against the Florida Gators, two losses and
one tie. They were outscored 31-8.

The win closes out their 10 game home-
stand. finishing up 5-3 -1, with two washed
out.

“We didn't play well at all this past
weekend." coach Keith Madison said. “I
thought we came out and was swinging the
bats very aggressively tonight."

However it was the Cards who came

out swinging early. They knocked up UK
starter Rob Corrado for three runs in the
first. Cardinal centerfielder Mike Hook
started the game with a leadofi" home run.
The Cards got two more in the inning.
when Paul Brown doubled home Scott
Kohler and scored on Tony Taylor‘s single.

Although those three would be all the
Cards would get. as Corrado would calm
down and pitched four scoreless innings.
He also got help when the Cats‘ offense
woke up in th