xt7ftt4fr54k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ftt4fr54k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2003-11-20 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, November 20, 2003 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 20, 2003 2003 2003-11-20 2020 true xt7ftt4fr54k section xt7ftt4fr54k UK SHOULD TRY HARDER TO PROTECT TREES I DlALOGUE, PAGE 6

THURSDAYKENTUGKY

ERNEL

Cats to
face off
against UC
in tourney

 

November 20, 2003

Celebrating 32 years of independence

http://www.k kerne|.com

 

Students called heroes after stopping attack

Four men kept man from attacking woman on campus;
City Council and UK Police gave them certificates

By Ben Fain
STAFF WRITER

It was calm and unsea-
sonably warm when Todd
Seagrave left W.T. Young Li-
brary, heading to his home
on Transylvania Park on
Nov. 4.

It was 12:45 am.

At the same time, Jeff
Turok was walking with a

woman out of the library af—
ter finishing studying.

Scott Howe was walking
his girlfriend home to the
Kappa Alpha Theta sorority
house. He had slipped on a
pair of his roommate's san-
dals for what he thought
would be a short walk, he
said.

Nearby. Matthew Boone
was in his car with his girl-

friend in the parking lot of
the Theta house with the
windows rolled up.

None of them knew each
other, but over the next 30
minutes, they became more
than simple acquaintances.

And within the following
week, they would be honored
for their actions on this
night.

The four men were only
yards away from the Boone
Faculty Center on Rose
Street.

That’s when they heard a

woman scream.

“She yelled once —- I did-
n't think much of it," said
Boone, a business manage-
ment junior. “Then she yelled
again, and it was the worst
sound I ever heard."

The screams continued.

“They were the loudest
screams I ever heard,” said
Howe, an undeclared sopho-
more. “She yelled ‘Help Me!"
three or four times.”

All four ran toward the
screams. Boone and Howe
went together. “We took off

in a full
5 p r i n t , ”
Howe said.
S e a -
grave and
T u r o k
abandoned
their back-
packs out-
side the li-
brary so Roland
they could
run more easily, said Turok,
a political science sopho
more.
The screams led them to

the rear of the Boone Center,
where they said they found a
man with his hand around a
woman’s neck.

UK Police later identified
the man as Avery C. Roland.
25, a first-year freshman at
Eastern Kentucky University.

“She was doing every-
thing she could to fight him
off,” Howe said.

After all four men ar-
rived, the woman told them
that Roland tried to rape her,

See NERO on 2

 

Lisa Johnson:

Johnson, a campus-area resident, looks to improve
campus neighborhoods in terms of safety and noise

By Adam Slchko
STAFF WRITER

A crumpled Steak ‘n
Shake to-go bag with a plastic
lid and straw, lies curbside on
Transylvania Park.

Without breaking stride
or interrupting conversation,
Lisa Johnson casually picks
up the trash and places it in
the nearest trash can.

For her. it‘s second na-
ture.

Johnson is not a garbage
collector: but she does act on
every opportunity to make
her community better, she
said.

“I‘m somebody who lives
in the community, loves their
home and wants to make it
better for everyone else to en-
joy the same type of living
condition." Johnson said
while sipping coffee on the
front porch of her red brick
home.

Johnson is involved with
multiple organizations, some
of which have promoted ac-
tions such as the Lexington
Area Party Plan.

LAPP allows police to
designate a house or apart-

ment as a “no party property,”
and depending on how many
disturbance violations that
property receives, the desig-
nation can last for years.

Some of her proposals
have been unpopular with
students, including LAPP.
Former Student Government
President Tim Robinson
launched a “Wildcat War"
against the legislation, in
which he held a forum and
confronted the Lexington-
Fayette Urban County Coun-
cil at one of its meetings.

Johnson more recently
helped form and propose a
beer keg registration policy,
which the City Council is vot-
ing on tonight.

Johnson is vice president
of the Aylesford Neighbor-
hood Association and works
with UK Coalition, a group
formed to deal with offcam~
pus alcoholism. Among its
members are representatives
from UK, several UK Police of-
ficers and Iexington Vice
Mayor Mike Scanlon.

“She’s an advocate for the
UK student and the imder-
represented," said ANA presi-
dent Ike Lawrence. “It‘s hard

tackling kegs and parties

to count the number of differ-
ent projects she's start

Johnson works at the
YMCA and stopped donating
her time to the Good Samari-
tan Hospital emergency room
so she could devote more ef-
fort to campaigning for sever-
al 2003 candidates.

“She’s a fireball of ener-
gy," said neighbor Rep. Kathy
Stein, D-Lexington.

SG President Rachel
Watts met with Johnson earli-
er this year and said she came
away with a sense of John-
son’s commitment.

“She is very passionate
about her community," Watts
said. _

“I’m a believer in commu-
nity pride," Johnson said.

Living in the ptty zone

Johnson was born and
raised in Alton, 111., where she
developed her first passion:
children. Of her seven sib-
lings, Johnson was closest to
her younger sister Mechelle.

“Since she was born on
my birthday, I thought she
was mine," Johnson said. “I
was always watching her.
making sure she was OK.

“I used to tell my mother
all the time that I was going to
move out and take Mechelle
with me," Johnson said. "I‘ve

cared about kids ever since.”

Johnson’s first political
action also focused on chil-
dren. In 1998 she created a
program called Children’s
First Initiative. The program
addressed Johnson‘s concerns
about children being forced to
wait at bus stops in the dark
early morning hours with no
adult protection.

“I was really motivated
about that,” she said. “That’s
when I first began to be vocal
in the community."

Johnson, along with her
husband Michael and daugh-
ter Donielle, has been living
in the Lexington area for a
decade but arrived at her cur-
rent home on Transylvania
Park eight years ago.

Johnson recalled being
“up ‘til 3 am.“ the night she
moved in due to parties, a see
nario that would replay itself
seemingly every weekend.

“As an adult, it was
shocking that people acted
that way,“ Johnson said. “It
was an eye-opener, and it still
is. Adults really aren’t used to
that.

“At first, with all this off-
campus drinking I thought,
‘Whoa, I hate you kids', but
then I got to talk to them and
meet them. The ones that are
bad make it so bad for all the

kids. I realized that I hated
them all for what a few were
doing.

“But I don’t have tunnel
vision anymore; I realize that
many students are fine."

The situation grew worse
when UK became a dry cam-
pus in 1999. a decision that
left Johnson and her neigh~
bors to deal with more par-
ties. she said.

They had no idea how to
handle the situation, she said.

“You‘ve got to remember.
these students used to be on
UK's property, where the uni-
versity was supposed to be
monitoring them," Johnson
said. “All of a sudden, they
didn’t want that liability any-
more, so we had to start moni-
toring their actions, like their
parents. Suddenly, we had all
these stepkids, and we all
were like ‘what do we do?”

Johnson knew that some
thing had to be done to deal
with the increase in off-cam-
pus drinking. She was deter.
mined to make a difi‘erenoe.

“UK made usrbqk sh
the bad guys," Johnson said.
“They put students in our
neighborhoods as our respon-
sibility to raise. and we didn‘t
know how. We didn‘t have the
tools.“

Johnson responded to

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this problem and others by
getting involved in various or-
ganizations that promote
community betterment. UK
Coalition and ANA have been
two such vehicles.

“I don’t always complete-
ly agree with the issues that

See JOHNSON on 3

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Phone: 251-2011 I Eastman

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W

The Low-down

that Nachut could have been soothed

WAS GTON —- The nation’s worst blackout should
have been contained by operators at Ohio’s FirstEnergy Corp,
a three-month U.S. and Canadian investigation concluded on
Wednesday. The investigators also faulted Midwest regional
monitors.

. In their report, they said the company’s operators were in-
adequately trained and computer problems in its Akron, Ohio,
control room kept them from recognizing immediately that
problems on three lines were causing the Midwest grid to be-
cOme unstable.

“This blackout was largely preventable," said Energy Sec~
rotary Spencer Abraham as he and his Canadian counterpart,
Herb Dahliwal, released a 134~page report on the blackout,
Which left 50 million people in eight states and Canada in the
dark last August.

The report also faulted Midwest grid monitors who should
have been able to observe the failure of three FirstEnergy,
high-voltage lines in northern Ohio.

Humvotestoalonemioyerstonetlidoonmrkers

WASHINGTON — After dealing with privacy concerns,
the House agreed Wednesday to expand a program giving em-
ployers access to a federal database to help them confirm that
their workers are not in the country illegally.

. The legislation. already approved by the Senate and now
heading for the president's signature, extends and expands a
1996 law used by employers in six states to check on the immi-
gration status of workers.

7 The bill, passed by voice vote by the House, would make
employers across the country eligible for the program.

Congress initially aimed the program at six states ——
Texas, California, Florida, Illinois, Nebraska and New York ——
that have serious problems with the use of counterfeit docu-
ments by illegal immigrants.

Undocumented aliens, said House Judiciary Committee
Chairman James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis.. use “easy and cheap
availability of counterfeit documents to make a mockery” of
the federal law making it a crime to hire illegal aliens.

Under the program, employers can check with the Social
Security Administration and the Immigration and Naturaliza-
tion Service to confirm that Social Security numbers and alien
identification numbers are authentic.

Without congressional action, the program would expire
on Nov. 30. The measure would give it five more years of life.
More than 11,700 employers have volunteered to participate in
the program, lawmakers said.

A previous version taken up by the House last month was
defeated. Many Democrats argued that giving employers access
to a federal database with inadequate privacy protections
would be an invasion of privacy and could lead to a nationwide
identification system.

The Senate bill sought to address those concerns by allow-
ing the Homeland Security Department to use the program for
other verification purposes and given state and local govern-
ments access to the information.

Grassley also put off until December 2004 the expansion of
the program to the national level. In the meantime. the Home-
land Security Department is to complete a study on whether
problems arising in the original project have been resolved.

The bill also extends for five years a program under which
up to 3,000 immigrant visas are issued every year to aliens who
invest at least $500,000 in specified economic centers.

aimmnm I warn

III-t out tor sheer Wheel Jackson's Inst

SANTA BARBARA. Calif. — Authorities issued a warrant
for Michael Jackson's arrest on charges of moles a child
andaskodthepopsuperstarWednesdaytoturn inand
surrender his passport Jackson's spokesman called the allega-
tions “scurrilous and totally unfounded.”

The “year-old King of Pop was accused of multiple
counts of lewd or lascivious acts with a child under 14.

“Iamsadthattheieisanothervictimoutthere.lfeelbad
for the family I feel bad for the victim. Beyond that, I feel it is a
sad thing for all thm involved," District Attorney Thomas W.
Sneddon Jr. said at a news conference.

Jackson was behaved to be in Las Vegas.

Sneddon would not say when or where the alleged crimes
took place or how old the youngster was. He said an affidavit
outlining the details will be sealed for 45 days.

But Brian Oxman, an attorney who has represented the
Jackson family over the years, told CBS that the case involves
the alleged molestation of a 12-year-old boy at Jackson's Never-
land Ranch, the storybook playground where the singer has
been known to hold sleepover parties with children. Oxman is
not representing Jackson.

CBS immediately pulled a Jackson music special planned
for next Wednesday on his greatest hits and the impact on pop
culture of the former child star who got his start with his
brothers as a member of the singing-anddancing Jackson 5.

On Tuesday, as many as 70 law enforcement officers spent
12 hours searching the Neverland Ranch for corroborating evi-
dence. The $12.3 million ranch has a mansion, its own zoo and
amusement park.

Each of the sex charges is punishable by three to eight
years in prison. Sneddon would not say how many counts Jack-
son faces. Bail will be set at $3 million, authorities said.

Sheriff Jim Anderson said authorities have been in con-
tact with Jackson’s lawyers and the singer has been given the
chance to surrender “within a specified period of time." An-
derson refused to say how long that would be.

“I believe he’s willing to cooperate with us,” the sheriff
said.

Jackson spokesman Stuart Backerman issued a statement
saying the singer “has already made arrangements with the
district attorney to return to Santa Barbara to immediately
confront and prove these charges unfounded.”

“Michael would never harm a child in any way. These scur-
rilous and totally unfounded allegations will be proven false in
a courtroom," Backerman said.

In 1993, Jackson had faced a child-molestation investiga-
tion that never resulted in charges because the child refused to
testify. Jackson reportedly paid a multimillion-dollar settle-
ment in that case but maintained his innocence.

California law was changed because of that case, and now
a child victim can be forced to testify, Sneddon said. However,
Sneddon said the youngster in this case is cooperating.

In a statement issued on Tuesday, Jackson denounced the
media coverage of the raid and noted that “dreadful allega-
tions" always seem to surface “just as another project, an al-
bum. a video is being released.” Jackson’s greatest hits album,
“Number Ones," came out on Tuesday.

The district attorney said the investigation had been under
way for a while, and the timing was umelated to the album.

In a documentary broadcast on ABC earlier this year, Jack-
son said he had slept in a bed with many children. “When you
say bed you‘re thinking sexual,” he said in the interview. “It’s
not sexual, we’re going to sleep. I tuck them in. It’s very
charming, it’s very sweet.”

' COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORIS

 

-
no

Continued from paqei

Howe said.

When Roland attempted
to escape, the men chased
afier him, backing Roland
into the side of the Boone
Center, said Seagrave, a
business management ju-
nior.

“He told me to back off
so I wouldn’t get stabbed,"
Seagrave said of Roland. “I
didn’t see anything on him.
I think he was reaching for
his keys.”

As Roland ran, he
turned around and hit a
tree on accident, Turok
said. Roland then crossed
Rose Street, he said.

Seagrave said the men
surrounded Roland against
the fence that separates the
Chemistry-Physics Building
and Maxwell Place.

President Lee Todd and
his wife Patsy, who live in
Maxwell Place, were out of
town at the time, said Kathy
Johnson of UK Public Rela-
tions.

A UK Police cruiser dri-
ven by Officer Scott Kelly
x stopped at the Columbia
Terrace and Rose Street in-
tersection around 1 am.

“(Roland) ran to the
front of the police car," Sea-
grave said. “He went to the
driver’s side and told the
cop we were trying to jump
him."

Kelly lined everyone up
and questioned them indi-
vidually, Seagrave said.

UK Police arrested and
charged Roland with first-
degree sexual abuse and

 

first-degree unlawful im-
prisonment.
During all of this.

Boone‘s girlfriend took the
woman who was attacked
inside the Theta house.
Boone said.

Howe‘s girlfriend
stayed behind to call police,
and Turok’s friend ran to
her car and locked the
doors.

The woman. who is a
19yearold student, suffered
defensive bruises, UK police
said.

Fast
weeks.

The four UK students
have been awarded certifi-
cates by UK Police and the
Lexington-Fayette Urban
County Council.

Roland remains housed
at the Fayette County De-
tention Center. awaiting a
grand jury to hear his case.
His lawyer, Alex Rowady.
could not be reached.

Roland’s EKU room-
mate, Kurt Fritz, an unde-
clared freshman. has visited
Roland in jail.

“He said he didn’t do
it," Fritz said. “I know he
didn‘t do it."

Fritz questioned the ac-
counts of the UK students.

“I think the whole thing
is sketchy." he said. “It
sounds like (Roland)’s not
nice. but he is."

Seagrave, Howe, Boone
and Turok said they‘ve been
called heroes since Nov. 4.

“You don’t feel quite
like a hero," Turok said.
“You do it just because it's
the right thing to do.”

forward two

E-mail
bfa in Qt kykernel.com

They were the loudest
screams I ever heard. She
yelled ‘Help me!’ three or

four times.”

- Scott Howe, undeclared sophomore

 

 

As an engineer in
the U.S. Air Force,

you’ll work on.

there’s no telling what

(Seriously, we can’t tell you.)

 

 

       

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one. Find out what's waiting behind the scenes for you in
the Air Force today, To request more information, call
1-800-423—USAF or log on to airforcecom.

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Mon - Thurs. lmn - close; Friday, I. - 7PM

 

 

  

manner. I ruunsoiw. uovrusrn 20. 2003 I 3 ‘

 

 

JOHNSON

Continued from paqel

Lisa takes,” Stein said. “Lisa
and her husband Mike seem
to be more rigid in their ap-
proach to the neighborhood.
but that is perfectly fine."

“I'm for the students
and for the community,"
Johnson said. “I‘m on both
sides of the fence."

Beer. parties and proposals

December marks the
two-year anniversary of the
LAPP ordinance, and as far
as Johnson is concerned, it
has been a success.

“From what I have gath-
ered, I‘ve seen great re.
sults," Johnson said. “Other
neighborhoods and associa-
tions that I've talked to are
seeing great results too.“

But LAPP is only one of
many ideas either created or
supported by Johnson. One
item currently on her agen-
da is a Neighborhood Watch
program for her area, which
Johnson was motivated to
begin after she caught a
man trying to break into her
home.

“My husband was get-
ting ready to take me to
work, and I saw this man
who, it seemed to me, didn’t
belong in the neighbor-
hood," Johnson said. “He
looked casual, almost too ca-
sual.

“So we left but decided
to drive around the block
and come back, and when
we pulled in our driveway,
we found him trying to
break through a window
pane in our kitchen and get
into our house," Johnson
said.

She was relieved that
her daughter was not in the
house at the time.

That incident made
Johnson wonder if this was
happening in other parts of
the community.

“I went over and talked
to students on Aylesford,
and these kids were telling
me all the things that had
been happening to them,"
Johnson said.

Almost 40 people
showed up for a safety meet-
ing Johnson organized.
“Many were college students
wanting to participate, and I
was pleased about that,"
Johnson said.

Her most recent brain-
child, however, is a beer keg
registration policy that ad-
dresses adults who illegally
serve alcohol to minors, par-
ticularly through kegs.

“(The keg policy) is an-
other project of UK Coali—
tion," Johnson said. “I start-

ed working on that a year
ago. It’s due to the parents,
the aunts and uncles of high
school minors who were get-
ting kegs. It’s a case of
someone wanting to be the
‘cool’ uncle or the ‘cool' par-
ent and buying alcohol for
minors."

Johnson stressed sever-
al times that the policy is
geared toward high school-
ers, not college students.

“I want the UK students
to know this is in no way af-
ter them," Johnson insisted.
“I'm being honest; this has
nothing to do with college
kids."

Some students
agree with the policy.

“It sounds dumb to me,"
said computer science se-
nior A.J. Beck. “Depending
on the party's location, it
could be hard or impossible
for the person who bought
the keg to make sure that
everyone that gets a drink is
over 21. And who’s to say
that these kids won't just
start drinking from bottles
or cans instead of kegs?”

Watts. the SG president,
said some students misinter-
pret the proposal.

“1 think a lot
of students don’t
know what the
purpose of the
keg registration
policy is," she
said. “I think
some students feel
it‘s an invasion of
privacy, and per-
haps that the poli-
cy is controlling
them too much.
The main problem
is that students
don‘t know exact-
ly what it’s
about,” she said.

Johnson was
quick to point out
that these ideas al-
ready exist in the
law.

“The LAPP or-
dinance and the
keg registration,
all this is like an
amplifier to an ex-
isting law that no
one’s been using,”
Johnson said, not-
ing that it’s
against the law to
serve minors alco-
hol.

Johnson said
she is primarily
concerned with
education on
these issues and
the well-being of
everyone in her
neighborhood. '

“(LAPP) does-
n t keep anyone from party-
ing, it’ 5 just making people
responsible " she said “I m
trying to prevent anyone
from getting hurt. Public

don't

UK made
us look
like the

bad guys.

They put

students
in our
neighbor-
hoods as
our
respons-
ibility to
raise,
and we
didn’t
know
how.

- Lisa Joluison,
community activist

cunts mi mun surr

Lise Johnson looks out from her Innsylvenle Perl house. She said
she cores tor the students oi her neighborhood community.

safety is just a no-brainer."
Future plans

Johnson intends to stay
involved in the campus area.

“UK Coalition has a lot
of plans we‘re trying to
work on,“ Johnson said. “I
thank the univer-
sity to this day
for its help in
dealing with alco-
holism off-cam-
pus."

For starters.
the Urban County
Council’s Ser-
vices Committee
voted Oct. 13 to
pass the beer keg
registration poli-
cy, the first step
toward making
that proposal a
city ordinance.
“It's a great first
step," Johnson
said.

Another in-
terest of John-
son’s is helping
students handle
issues with their
landlords, many
of whom Johnson
said try to take
advantage of stu-
dents.

“I think a lot
of people blame
the students for
the way the land-
lords make them
live.“ Johnson
said.

Johnson met
at her home with
Watts and other
members of 86 to
discuss some
ideas, one of
which is a Web
site where stu-
dents can rate their land-
lords and post insightful
comments.

“I thought the meeting
went really well.” Johnson

,9

said. “I was amazed at all
the horrible stuff those kids
were telling me.

“That meeting was prob-
ably one of the best things
college students have done
for me,” Johnson added.

Johnson has had her
share of negative experi-
ences with students, from
party-goers urinating in her
flower beds to defecating on
her swing set, she said.

Others have stolen some
of her property, including
flags and other items from
her front porch, she said.

But Johnson maintained
that “over 75 percent (of col-
lege students) are really
cool. They want to be part of
the community. The other 25
percent make it look like at
least 50 percent are that bad
in the neighborhood."

Johnson believes that
the future is promising for
building bridges between
UK and its surrounding
neighborhoods.

“I think times are
changing, where (students)
want to become a part of the
community,“ Johnson said.
“They make our neighbor-
hoods what they are right
now, and I hope they try to
improve them."

“She’s really caring,"
said Chris Risalvato, an eco-
nomics junior who lives
across the street from John-
son. “She’s stressed with us
that if we have any prob-
lems, to come talk to her.
She pretty much welcomed
us with open arms when no
one else really did."

Johnson‘s goal isn’t to
stop college students from
partying.

She just wants them to
be careful, she said.

“You should have the
right to get a keg, but just be
responsible."

E—mail kernel@uky.edu

 

umuuummun

VALID ONLY AT Moe's -

southwest grill®

NEW IN immune FAViLiou. NEAR rue THEATER I MARBLE SLAI

"POOR COLLEGE STUDENT OPENING SPECIAL"
BUY 1 MENU ITEM.
GET 1 OF EQUAL/LESSER PRICE

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OPENING TODAY!

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UQDCNWVNNWVWVWVW‘

 

”IT-II.

Guignol Lobby
Noon - 6 pm

7am-5pm

 

Blood Drive ClM’lllllon
mum

Thursday,
November 20

UK Fine Arts Center

UKMC Room H-133

WE’RE
O U T
F O R

BLOOD!

Day Four on
Nov. 20th

Give blood and help
beat Tennessee'

r 'i 'll/l‘l

 

' 9

 

FROM
THE

BEGINNING

(859) 272-3920

 

F A T H E R H O O D

Right to Life of Central Kentucky
169 East Reynolds Rd. Suite 201A
Lexington, KY 40517

CKRTL@juno.com
UK Students for Life

THERE ARI-Z \I.Tl-'.RN.»\TI\'F.S T0 ABORTION. THERE HAS TOBE.

IS
LOVE

 

 

Home of Free Checking!

Located at Hamburg Place:

E)

W

2404 Sir Barton Way
Lexington, KY 40509
www.1nblex.com
Lobby Hours:

M-Thu 8am - 5:30pm
Fri 8am — 6pm

Sat 9am-1pm
859-264-BANK

flit.

I :NATIONALEE

 

 

Part of a balanced diet.
m.irylrernel.eorn

 

wen.

_ Kentucky Kernel
“5 design T, our Van?

Oilyers

0 posters

- noteca'ds

0 business was
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We can guar rwgpabetter rice. . . . .
. a gun guarantee?!” nauty . ""'

 

 

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”my—M}?

 

First 50 Checks Free!

”It’s not what we do . . .

STUDENTS!

Bring in this ad to receive a $10 gift
certificate from Ramsey’ s when
opening a new checking account!

it’s how we do it! "

Over I 00 Bottled Beer-5%,
Pl
3 us

Beers on Tap!
Daily Pint Specials
Thursday- Spaten & Franz $2. 50 Pints
Friday- Pilsner Unquell $2. 50 Pints

Saturday- Kentucky Ale $2. 00 Pints
Sunday- Newcastle $2. 50 Pints

*fiaggo’s firth
Open at 5 p.m. Daily

Pazzo’s Pub can accommodate large groups ,
parties & private functions.
For more information,

contact Dave or Willie @ 255-5l25.

255-5 '25 CornerofSouth Lime&Eudid

“Hill (Milli!

Week of November 17 - 23

 

 

 

 

The Campus Calendar lS produced by the Ollrce 01 Student Ac! Vii es Registered Student Orgs
and UK Depts can submit information for FREE online ONE WEEK PRlOR 10 the MONDAY In or
mation is to appear at http:/Iwww. niry. adulCarnpus Calendar Call 257- 8867 for more

information
Thur 2 O

m
om m All 100 Level Courses, 9:008m—7:009rn, Mathskoiler (POT)

“m

'UR w. Mm. 7:300m, Student Center, Rm. 231
'UK Co“... Wm, 7:30pm, Student Center, Rm. 206
'Anlnaaey International floating 7:00pm, Student Center,
Rm. 228

'Vdcaa tar Choice weakly rnaatino. 5:00pm, Student
Center, Rm. 215

'CRU, 7:30pm. Woreham Theater in the Student Center

W

'Iaok: Ind 00 Lib Photographs by Gordon Iaar, 11:003m‘51009mfiasdall Galiory
in the Student Center, Free!
WOOM'WQMMMWMMMMWM.
UK Art Museum

m

'01: Farrah. CM, 8:-00 10:00pm, Buell Armory

'UK Mona m Practice, 4; 45 7. Doom Club Sports Field (rugby pitch)
mm

'Oinflad on Mating .arna), TOOpm Voung Library Rm Auditorium. $3.00 or $2.00
with canned good
'Onaaiin Warriors. 7. 00pm, Singietary Center UK. LCC Students 55 00, General Public
$17. 50

‘UR m M Rm, Garrigus Building, Rm 109

W
'L.E.A.P., 1100 11.50am, Frame Hall Rm 301

«rpm Foam, 7: ”pm Baptist Student Union 429 Columbus Avenue (behind W..T
‘Malh Tutoring, All 100 Level Courses 9 00am 5 00pm
Mathskellor (POT)

Young Library)
' M m Iarvba. 8:00pm. Wesley Foundation

Fri 2 1
1m
'Frtdav Football. 3:00pm Good Barn F raid at vvnsst vom Commonwealth Stadium
'Taa Kwon Do Club Practice, 5 30 7 000m Al 1m" Ger s Loft
'Iaclr: End of Lila Photographs by Gordon Bear 11 003m 6 mnmfiasdaii Gallery
in the Student Canter Free'
'OIIIOW Hop WM. 5 00 8 000m Rama” Gnl'erv n the Student Center

'UK M m. 'Iovl Don' t Cry, R 00pm WTY Library Rm Auditorium Frael
'Viaiona of America: Photographs from the Whitney Mun-rm at American An,

UK Art Museum
Sat 2 2
Sun 2 3

manna:

'M m All 1” lav“ Clan... 6 00 8 000m 307 Commnns

'W m. A" ‘W LOVOI Clan.- I 00 70 000m 30 Commons
‘mm, Al iOOIavaiciaaaaaandzit/lia, 700 iOOOpm 307

Commons

'm m A" we LIV“ Cm. 7 00 10000!" 307 Commons

'W M. 2.1. A 30 7 009m. 307 Commons

m
m I... o- m m. 11:000m-12'flpm, Alumni
“WWI Lo“

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”doorman Center Iaaa. SOOam 11 30am 5 009m 8 30pm
Newman Cantor 320 Rona Lane

'CONOI. m Mice. 8 ”am South-tide Church 0'
Christ

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Brittany Clarli
Assistant Scene Editor

seen Phone: 2514915 I E-mail: oclartOlyhrnolum

4 I TWISMY.WUEIZO.2003 I mm
' Comprehensive Eye “mm,
Mun 'lucs Thurs in.

Barfly stops to smell the Rose Bud ‘

 

  

him! mad: “hi-Mm an Ned-hut R4 Man "U Wu

971-0589

0 Walk-ms Welcome

 

Rosebud.

Charles Foster Kane wasted his last
breath on it.

Consequently, people were driven to
madness in attempts to find its true
meaning.

I‘m not sure
what it was that at-
tracted me to visit
the Rose Bud.

Perhaps it was
the cinematic
grandeur that the
name conjured, or
the possibility of a

Forestry Grad-
uates Seth
Barry (left)
and Eli Scarr
(right) select
tunes on the
computerized
luhe box at
The Rose Bud.

    
   
      
      

10% OFF FOR UK STUDENTS!
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’ $2,:t‘lfi BUY 1 PANINI, 7 57-3322 i
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133 N Limestone St. , Phone. (859) 252- 3825
(across from the new courthouse) Email: Vignyscafe@ky_trade.com
Lexinton. KY 40507 wwwkytradecom/wgny'shtm

10mm run I
KERNEL swr

 

 

  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
   
    
 
  
   
   
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
  
  
  
 
  
   
 
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
  

bar so deserving of
its title.

But what‘s in a
name?

This crowded, hole-in-the-wall bar
did not excite me the way I thought my
first impression of it would. There was
no dramatic lighting. no fedoras and no
shrines to Orson Welles.

It turns out, the Rose Bud is just a
cozy little bar that by any other name
would smell just as sweet.

Located downtown, across the
street from Cheapside Bar and Grill.
this pint- size watering hole is no more
than a great place to grab a drink

Trust me. the Barfly knows Consid-
ering I have spent many an evening
here with friends falling off barstools
and attempting to dance to the well- s-e—
lected songs in the jukebox, I feel I have
gotten a pretty good taste of the scene.

The decor isn‘t much, unless you
look up at the beautiquy painted ceil.
ing that makes you think it‘ s daytime at
11 p. m. But don t spend too much time

staring in adoration or you might
knock the drink out of someone 5 hand
or end up wearing your own.

The seating is limited. and on a
Thursday: Friday or Saturday night. it‘s
usually standing-room only. This can
get bothersome unless you have the
Barfly skills to sweet-talk an unsuspect-
ing gentleman out of his seat.

But the close quarters are what you
make of them. Eavesdropping and “un~
intentionally" rubbing up against
someone are just a few of the ways to
entertain yourse