xt7gb56d5752 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gb56d5752/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2002-09-25 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, September 25, 2002 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 2002 2002 2002-09-25 2020 true xt7gb56d5752 section xt7gb56d5752 Cool Cats hit the ice for a new season I PAGE 8

EWKBNTUCKY

KENEL

WEEK?

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fitqg

 

September 25, 2002

Celebrating 31 7

 

 

Mayoral debate to be shown on TV

Issues: Candidates disagree about airport’s future,
whether Lexington should buy water company

By Rebecca Neal
STAFF WRITER

Lexington mayoral can-
didates Scott Crosbie and
Teresa Isaac debated their
ideas for improving Lexing-
ton‘s economy and the city‘s
quality of life during a taped
discussion at KET Tuesday.

While both agreed to
make Lexington a more di-
verse city, they differed on
their views of the water com—
pany's futtue.

Crosbie said two of his
goals are to improve educa-
tion and public safety:

"We should provide qual-
ity of life for all citizens and
leave no citizen behind.“
Crosbie said.

Isaac said she wants to
provide equal basic services
and have an accountable
government.

“Citizens will be treated
as the boss because people
are the boss," she said.

She said she supports
the creation of a living wage
for government employees.
citing surveys that set the
wage at about $9.63 an hour.

“Government should set
an example for the communi-

ty.“ Isaac said.

Crosbie disagreed with
the idea of a living wage.

“I don‘t think it is the
government‘s role to man-
date a wage based on sur-
veys." he said.

One of the key issues in
the campaign is whether the
city should purchase Ken
tucky-American Water.

Crosbie said the city
needs to develop a long-term
vision for the water supply.

“I am not in favor unless
the company, be it RWE or
whatever. doesn't fulfill their
obligations." Crosbie said.

Isaac. who prosecuted lo-
cal homeowners who watered
at the wrong times while
working as a prosecutor for

Find out what you can get for free | 5

 

http: unmltylternelcom

 

the city. said she supports the
city purchasing the company

“Local ownership is best
in the long run," she said.

Both candidates ex-
pressed their concern about
economic development.

The city has discussed
extending the runway at
Bluegrass Airport for years.
The airport currently bor~
ders existing horse farms
and neighborhoods.

Isaac said moving the
airport out of Lexington
could solve the expansion
problem.

Crosbie said he supports
expanding the runway and
marketing the airport more

See DEBATE on 3

riwmtmcii | KERNELSTAFF

Mayoral candidates Scott Crosbie and Teresa Isaac met at MIT Tires-
day to tape a debate that will air Wednesday, Oct. 2.

 

 

Marker commemorates
history of Memorial Hall

More than a lecture hall:
Home to controversial murals
and the first Christian western

By Janet Eaton
CONTRIBUTING WRITER

If there will ever be a ghost in
Memorial Hall, it will be the late

John Alcorn.

Alcorn was a janitor for UK for
15 years and took care of the build-
ing. Before his death in 1961, Alcorn
requested in his will that his funeral

 

be held in the building he had tend-

, ed for so long.

Though barely mentioned in the
news of the day, Alcorn’s funeral
was the first funeral held in Memor-

. ial Hall, on UK’s Central Campus.
‘ The organ was played in his honor:

Albert D. Kirwan, a former UK
president. and AB. “Happy” Chan-
dler, the governor of Kentucky from

. 1935 to 1939 and from 1955 to 1959,
had funerals there in later years.

The Hall’s more than '70 years of

' history was recognized yesterday

during a ceremony

President Lee Todd and Emily
Kinnaird, an animal sciences senior
and president of the Student Devel-
opment Council, unveiled a histori-
cal marker on Memorial Hall, recog-
nizing the historical significance of
the building that serves as a visual

icon for UK.

Each year since 1994, the UK
Historical Marker Committee has

chosen a site for a marker.

The building was chosen for its
unique history on campus, said
Aimee Baston, the student develop-
ment council advisor and associate

director of annual giving

Even though some students
See HALL on 3

 

JOHN em I KERNEL STAFF

IIII President Lee Todd and till Student Development Council President Emily KInnaIrd
unveil the new historical marlrer for Memorial Hall Tuesday.

Search is on
for research VP

Vacancy: Three candidates up for position; candidate
Brenda Russell encourages undergraduate research

 

By Emily Hagedorn
EFF—[nine “TA“

The quality of research, not the size. is what matters.
said one candidate for the vacant vice president of re-
search seat.

More cross—departmental research
would benefit UK. Brenda Russell said
Tuesday night.

“The job of administrators is to enable
good things to happen for everybody else.“
Russell said during an open forum at the
William T. Young Library.

Russell is currently the executive asso—
ciate vice chancellor for research at the
University of Illinois at Chicago.

If selected, she said she would put em—
phasis on interdisciplinary research

“You can't do things with just a
chemist or a geneticist these days," she
said. “Interdisciplinary boundaries are
breaking and reforming all the time."

Cross-disciplinary boundaries could
bring faculty members recognition and
credit toward tenure. she said.

Russell also said she felt UK could gain
the most in the quality of research, rather
than the size of the program.

 

“It's time to get better, not bigger." she

said.
where you can stand."

“You have to benchmark against

Russell also encouraged undergradu-

ate involvement in research.

“They (undergraduates) are so eager.

They are so bright."

she said. “More under-

graduates are usually retained when they

are involved in the discipline.“

Robert Tannenbaum, associate direc-

tor of undergraduate studies.
advocating

Russell for
involvement

praised
undergrad

“The reason an undergrad would pick
a school would be because they get to work
with actual scholars.‘ Tannenbaum said.

James Bolin is currently filling the vice president of re-
search seat. In addition to Russell. there are two people up for
the position -_ Wendy Baldwin. deputy director of extramural
research at the National Institutes for Health and Frederick de
Beer. vice chairman of the department of internal medicine at
UK. Each will be discussing their views in the next few weeks.

Patton puts political future on hold; focuses on administration

Fallout: Facing controversy from Tina Conner affair,
Patton says he won't be involved in us. Senate race

ASSOCIATED PRESS

FRANKFORT Gov.
Paul Patton said Tuesday he
will take himself out of the
political arena. possibly in-
cluding his own aspirations
for a US. Senate campaign,
for the “foreseeable future."

Mired in the personal
and legal fallout from his af-
fair with Clinton nursing
home owner Tina Conner.
Patton said he will concen-
trate on his administration.

“I do not anticipate, in
the foreseeable future. any

involvement in the political
process including the US
Senate race," Patton said.
"The foreseeable future
is pretty indefinite." he said.
During a hastily called
news conference. Patton said
he wanted to answer ques-
tions about his administra-
tion. but said he would not
answer questions about his
personal and legal troubles.
”I must now focus on re
building my private life."
Patton said.
Patton,

who became

chairman of the National
Governors Association this
year, said he would not re-
sign that position. Patton
said he considered that part
of his gubernatorial duties.

Conner has alleged that
she had a two-year affair
with Patton. during which he
assisted her businesses.
When she broke off the af-
fair. her lawsuit alleges Pat-
ton turned regulators loose
on the nursing home. which
now is in bankruptcy.

Patton said he will pro-
vide for his own defense in
the lawsuit and has told state
officials to hire a legal team
to defend the state. Conner‘s

 

lawsuit names Patton indi<
vidually. as well as in his offi-
cial capacity as governor.
and the state as defendants.

The state defense team
"will be completely indepen-
dent of me." Patton said.

Patton said he would
leave it to lawyers to parse
the legal separation between
his personal activities and
his official ones.

Sheryl Snyder, Patton‘s
lawyer. has said he expected
to begin discussions with
Conner's lawyer. apparently
with the goal of reaching a
settlement before trial.

Patton read a statement
and also answered questions

during his 30~minute appear-
ance. but did not respond di-
rectly to many queries about
Conner's allegations or his
personal life. In contrast to
his tearful appearance last
Friday when he admitted his
unfaithfulness with Conner.
Patton was business-like and
even joking on Tuesday.

Patton said with politics
off the schedule. he will ac-
tually have more time to ded-
icate to running state gov-
ernment.

“From an administrative
standpoint. I‘ll be totally effec-
tive and spending more time
on administration than we
might otherwise." Patton said.

Patton said the scandal
should not diminish his ef-
fectiveness with the legisla—
ture. which is already small.
“I don't know that I could be
much more of a lame duck
legislatively than I would
have been." Patton said.

His term ends in Decem-
ber 2003 and Patton reiterat-
ed he has no intention to re
sign. The state is operating
without a budget because of
a partisan fight over public
financing for gubernatorial
campaigns in 2003, which
Patton said won't be taken
up until after the November
legislative elections in any
event.

 

The Student Newspaper at the Umversrty of Kentucky, Lexington T

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O

D

A

 

   
  
 
  
  
 
  
  
   
  
  
 
  
  
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
   
 
  
  
  
     
   
      
    
 
  
   
   
 
    
 
  
 
  
 
  
      
  
   
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
 
  
  
  
 
   
    
  
 
  
  
 
  
   
 
   

 

2 | vtovtsoiv,sirizvatn 25. 2002 t acumen man.

JLLIHEMEHSIHAILIIS

The Low-down

i
ii:

Hit iii
Sgigigtigtiz

- a British peti-
tion to Prime
Minister Tony

Blair, protesting

British involve-
ment in Iraq,

signed by Massive

Attack's Robert

"30" Del ilaja and
Blur/Gorilla:
frontman Damon
Albarn.

 

Jules Camara breaks hand

Returning UK starter Jules
Camara has a broken right hand and
Won't be able to play for the next four to
six weeks. UK basketball Coach Tubby
Smith said Tuesday. Camara. a 6-11 cen-
ter. fractured the third metacarpal bone
during individual workouts on Monday
afternoon. (Tamara's hand has been put
in a cast. “We hope to get Jules back as
soon as we can. hopefully by early
November." Smith said. “The good news
is that he‘ll still be able to continue his
pre-season conditioning and once he
returns. he‘ll have time to get a few prac-
tices in before we open the season in
Maui." (‘amara started 18 of the 32 games
last season. including the last seven con-
tests. He averaged 6.1 points. 4.0 rebounds
and 1.3 blocks per game.

Family searching for UK student

Family and friends of a missing
UK student are hoping he comes home.
Jacob O'Rouke Klee. a genetics senior,
has been missing since Thursday. He was
last seen on a Lextran bus on campus.
Klee is approximately 5 feet 11 inches
tall. 160 pounds with brown hair and a
goatee. Family said he has been known to
hitchhike. Anyone with information
should call his family at (606) 742-2150 or
the Lexington-Fayette Police at 258-3600.

Former sex addict will address UK

A recovered sex addict will speak
about how pornography and sexual
addiction impacted and damaged his
career as a church pastor on Thursday at
the Student Center, Gene McConnell. who
travels internationally to college campus-
es. will present "The Power of Porn" at
72:40 p.1i1. in the Worsham Theater. Former
dancers and models will also take part in
discussing the images of beauty and sex-
uality in American society The presenta-
tion is sponsored by Campus Crusade for
Christ. the Rock and Student
Government. A followup meeting will be
Friday. Sept. 27 at noon in the theater for
anyone wishing to get more information.

 

ACTIVISM:
Massive Attack's
Robert "30" Del
Mala joined
Blur/Gorilla:
frontman Damon
Albarn and pro-
ducer Brian Eno
signed a petition
that voices oppo-
sition to British
Involvement In a
military strike on
Iraq. The docu-
ment was deliv-
ered to to Down-
lng St., home to
the office of
Prime Minister
Tony Blair, on
Wednesday. "Un-
der the present
circumstances. we
believe an inva-
sion of Iraq would
be unjustifiable
and could have
potentially horrif-
Ic ramifications."
the petition reads.
"It would open a
Pandora's box
which may be im-
possible to close.
We urge the
British govern-
ment to announce
that it will not
support any mili-
tary assault being
planned by the
U.S.A. and will lis-
ten to both world
opinion and the
clear views of its
own electorate."
Albarn and Del
Mala. who have
designed and
placed ads In the
U.l(. weekly New
Musical Express
intended to raise
awareness to the
Issue of Britain's
participation In a
U.S.-ied attack on
Iraq, have sided
with the CND and
the Stop the War
coalition. The or-
ganizations are
staging an anti-
war demonstra-
tion in London on
Sept. 28.

Speak out about college town

A student forum about the col-
lege-town plan will be held Sept. 26 from
3:15 pm. to 5 pm. in the Worsham
Theater at the Student Center. There will
be a discussion about the plans to build a
more college-friendly area around cam-
pus. with more jobs. entertainment and
dining available to students on campus.
Everyone is welcome.

Seminar will discuss Parkinson's

The UK Neurosciences Institute
will hold a seminar on Parkinson‘s dis-
ease and essential tremor at 10 am. Sept.
28 in the William T. Young Library
Auditorium. The seminar is designed to
provide information about treatments for
patients. family members and providers.
Parking is free and refreshments will be
provided. For more information. call UK
Health Connection at 257-1000 or (800)
333-8874.

KSU receives testing ultimatum

FRANKFURT Kentucky State
University was told Monday that at least
half its students taking a national exam
for new teachers this year must pass.
Otherwise. the school will lose its pro-
grams for training elementary and physi»
cal-education teachers - programs
whose students have had high failure
rates in recent years. "It‘s time we have
to start taking a stand." said Lydia
Coffey. chairwoman of the Education
Professional Standards Board. which cer-
tifies teachers and teacher-preparation
programs. A top administrator of
Kentucky State said it would satisfy the
mandate ~ that in fact it has already
exceeded a 50 percent pass rate. judging
from preliminary test data he has seen.

Louisville police officers arrested

LOUISVILLE —— Two Louisville
Police officers. implicated by fellow offi-
cers. were arrested Monday. charged with
stealing nearly $500 from a crime scene.
Richard L. Stephens. 43. and Daryl Wayne
Brown. 29. were arrested Monday after
they allegedly stole $468 in cash from a
stolen vehicle recovered earlier that
morning. Chief Greg Smith said.
Stephens and Brown. both with just
under three years on the force. were
among several officers responding to a
report of a stolen vehicle at 4 am. EDT in
eastern Louisville. Smith said.

 

 

BUM BLAM’EM:
Cam'ron insists
It's If love be-
tween him and
his ltoc-A-Fella
famllla, even
though they did-
n't monetarily
entice him to
join Jay-Z and
company on the
recent Sprite
Liquid Mix Tour.
But somebody at
Def Jam threw
enough ducats at
Cam and his
Diplomat Crew to
snare him for
Survival of the
lllest 2. That
trek, which also
features Foxy
Brown and
N.O.R.E.. starts
Oct. It in Myrtle
Beach, S.C., and
runs through No-
vember, though
more dates are
expected to be
announced. The
first Survival of
the lllest in T998
featured per-
formers DMX, Ja
Rule, Cormega.
Onyx and the Del
Squad. For Cam,
the lllest tour is
going to make a
busy month even
busier. On Oct.
25. his debut
film, "Paid In
Full," Is due to
be excused from
Hollywood pur-
gatory and hit
theaters. Three
days before that
the soundtrack
will drop. Cam
has the lead sin-
gle with "Bout
It, Bout Part
III," which fea-
tures Master P
and Jimmy
Jones.

  

  
    

Alligator attacks garden worker

GAINESVILLE. Fla. An 11-foot
alligator tore the right arm off the direc-
tor of a botanical garden as he was weed-
ing a pond. Surgeons were unable to reat-
tach it. Don Goodman was working
Monday in a water lily garden at the
Kanapaha Botanical Gardens when the
alligator bit his right arm off from just
below his elbow. said Justin Lagotic.
spokesman for Alachua County Fire
Rescue. About an hour after the attack.
wildlife officials harpooned the male alli-
gator, known as Mo-Jo by garden employ~
ees. said John Duncan. an officer with
the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission. Authorities
then shot the alligator and silt his stom-
ach open. finding Goodman‘s arm inside.
Officials took the arm to Shands Hospital
at the University of Florida but doctors
could not reattach it. botanical garden
spokeswoman Barbara Bennett said.

Foreign students could be stranded

WASHINGTON -- If a new gov-
ernment system for tracking foreign stu-
dents isn't working by early next year as
required by Congress. as many as 80.000
students could be stranded waiting for
permission to enter the United States. an
education group said Tuesday. The $37
million system is expected to be up and
running by Jan. 30. with about 1.000 col-
leges and universities providing detailed
information on foreign students who
want to attend class. an official with the
Immigration and Naturalization Service
told a House subcommittee.

U.S. troops head to Ivory Coast

ABIDJAN. Ivory Coast M US. troops
headed to West Africa on Tuesday to safe—
guard 100 American school children holed up
in a rebel-held city after the bloodiestever
uprising in the Ivory Coast. Frightened resi-
dents reported heavy artillery and gunfire.
French troops moved closer to the central city
of Bouake as well. ready to rescue their
nationals and other Westerners if it appears
they could be caught in a crossfire between
government troops and renegade forces who
launched the coup attempt Thursday: “A very
welcome development." said a relieved James
Forlines. director of Free Will Baptist Foreign
Missions. a Nashville. Tenn-based church
group that had sent calls for help overnight
after rebels breached the school's walls. firing
from its grounds.

Compiled from staff and wire reports.

 

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Fort Campbell
gearing up
for Iraq attack

Preparations: Desert Storm deployment put strain on
local businesses; community braces for new threat

FORT CAMPBELL. Ky. , The last time there was se-
rious talk about war with Iraq. nearly 20.000 soldiers here
found themselves in desert fatigues leaving by the plane-
load for the Middle East.

Shots fired frotn 101st Airborne Division Apache heli-
copters started Desert Storm by knocking out two Iraqi
radar sites. The Fort Campbell-based division also made
battle history in Desert Storm by conducting the longest
and largest air assault into enemy territory in history.

With Iraq back in the news. once again talk of deploy-
ment is filtering through coffee shops and bars.

Business owners anti other community members still
recovering from the mental and financial strain of the de-
ployment of 5.500 soldiers to Afghanistan say they are
bracing for another deployment.

Many remember the ghost town the community be-
came when the entire division was deployed in 1990 to the
Persian Gulf.

“If anyone on this block is not preparing, they are stu-
pid." said Bill Anderson. owner of All American Video on
”the strip” near the post‘s main gate where businesses sell
everything from Army boots to tattoos to sandwiches.

The 101st. nicknamed the ”Screaming Eagles.” is a
rapid-deployment division trained to go anywhere in the
world in 36 hours. The Persian Gulf War was the first time.
the entire division had deployed since the Vietnam War.

All but about 200 soldiers of the 4.000 deployed from
the IOIst have returned in recent months from
Afghanistan.

“1 don‘t know if we're going or not. Our mission is to
go anywhere in 36 hours and conduct combat." said Capt.
Frank Baltazar. 27. of Clarksville. Tenn.

The post is also home to the 5th Special Forces Group
and the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment.
which have both fought in Operation Enduring Freedom.
America's war on terror.

Anderson said he started cutting back on expenses on
Sept. 11. 2001. when he had just $5.36 in sales. He said he
thinks he could weather a mass deployment to Iraq. but if
no one is walking in the door. “I may as well shut down un-
til they come back." Anderson said.

Chelsea Harknis. military affairs director of the Hop-
kinsville Christian County Chamber of Commerce about
20 miles north of Fort Campbell. said chamber leaders
have been in touch almost daily with Fort Campbell.

She said they have been assured that it is not clear
what role if any the 101st would play if the United States
decides to go after Iraq.

“Fort Campbell is so important to both surrounding
communities on the Tennessee side and the Kentucky side
because we are so close to them personally and through
our business. It's going to effect us in several ways during
any type of deployment." Harknis said.

Becky Cox. manager at Pal's Shop Ezy. said she
learned a long time ago to just take one day a time and not
worry about deployments. The store is across from the
post and soldiers frequently come in to buy Kentucky lot-
tery tickets.

“We take the good with the bad.” Cox said.

Our mission is to go
anywhere in 36 hours and

conduct combat.”
- CAPT. FRANK BALTAZAR, IOIST AIRBORNE DIVISION

 

H
DEBATE

Continued from page 1

 

effectively to attract business.
Both candidates said di-
versity and race relations
were important.
"We can make a differ-
ence. but it‘s a cooperative ef-
fort ~ not just the govern-

 

 

ment." Crosbie said.

Isaacs said qualified mi~
norities can be found for
every field.

“We should use our bully
pulpit to tell businesses
about minorities." Isaac said.

Tunein...

The mayoral debate will air
Wednesday, Oct. 2 at 8 pm. on
WKYT-27.

 

    

PHOTO FROM m.UKY.EDU

Memorial Hall, built on 011': Central Cam us, was dedicated In 1929
to serve as a memorial to the 2,756 Ken ucltlans who died serving

the country in World War I.

HALL

Continued from page I

have had a lecture class or
two in Memorial Hall. few
know it was designed as a
memorial to the 2.756 Ken-
tuckians who died serving in
World War I.

When the campaign to
raise the funds for the build-
ing was initiated in 1922. the
building was envisioned as a
student gathering place with
rooms for club meetings,
recreational opportunities, a
large auditorium. and exhi-
bitions of war relics. records
and mementos.

Dedicated on Memorial
Day 1929, the building be-
came a central point for com-
munity entertainment.

Concerts. radio shows.
music lessons. glee club
recitals. plays and even a
showing of “Mr. Texas.“ de-
scribed as the first Christian
western. were all held there.

Sunday afternoon musi-
cales. which began in 1931,
were very popular. They fea-
tured everything from glee
clubs to noted sopranos to

the YMCA/YWCA Christ-
mas pageants.
In 1934. Anne Rice

O'Hanlon painted a mural
depicting Central Kentucky

history on the wall.

The mural has created
controversy over the years
due to O‘Hanlon‘s depictions
of blacks and Native Ameri-
cans.

“Basically the mural
portrays African slaves as
lazy, native Americans as vi-
olently savage. and Euro-
pean settlers as industrious
and hard working." said
Zach Webb. the vice presi»
dent of the UK National As-
sociation for the Advance—
ment of Colored People.

Some students don‘t re‘
alize the mural is there. just
as they also may not know
that the hall is built above
limestone caverns with sta-
lactites. stalagmites and
pools of water with blind
fish. much like Mammoth
Cave in western Kentucky.

Tom Rosko. a UK
archivist who helped write
the inscription on the mark-
er that was revealed Tues-
day. said he's glad the hall is
being recognized.

“Memorial Hall is a sym-
bol of the University." he
said. “When you think of the
university. you think of
Memorial Hall.“

Laughingly, he said the
marker may bring enough
attention to the building so
students will stop accidental-
ly showing up at Memorial
Coliseum for lectures.

 

 

Student Health Advisory

Council (SHAC)

First meeting of the semester

FREE PIZZAll
All majors welcome!

 

SHAC Purpose:
To promote the quality and delivery of health
care. at the University Health Senice for
students at the University of Kentucky

UK

lwmyd tttttt
0..an Irma -e-u1

 

 

 

Thursday, Sept 26 4:45 pm.
119 Student Center Building

l'niversity Health

For information call 323-5823. x 281 Service

 

 

 

 

 

ii

The Student Organizations Center
invites organizational representatives.
advisors, and university guests to
attend an ()pen House on
Wednesday September 25, 2002,
in Room 106 Student Center
from 4 pm — 5:30 pm.

Refreshments will he provided.

Please call 257-1099 or 257—! 109
by September 24. 2002. if you plan to attend.

HOPE T0 SEE YOU THERE!

'I‘I‘IZIJ'VI Flt-Ill I I“.

 

 

  

 

 

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