xt7k9882ns1r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k9882ns1r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2004-09-10 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 10, 2004 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 10, 2004 2004 2004-09-10 2020 true xt7k9882ns1r section xt7k9882ns1r Friday

September to, 2004

www.kykernel.com
newsroom: 257-1915

THE KENTUCKY

Kerne

l

Celebrating 33 years of independence

Senior gets kick
out of leading soccer team
Page 8

 

 

UK breaks enrollment record again

Record includes more blacks

By Troy Lyle and Dariush Shafa
int KENlUCKY xrrmu

UK officially announced a
record-high enrollment yes-
terday and administrators
lauded a jump in black stu
dent enrollment.

A record of 26.900 under-
graduate students enrolled at
UK this year. a tworwrcent in»
crease froin last year. The
largest freshman class con
tributed 3,987 students to that
total. marking a nine-percent

increase from last year.

The number of UK applir
cants also rose by lll percent
from last year

"It was a very good year
for enrollment at the [Tniver
sity of Kentucky.” said l'K
l’royos‘t Mike Nietzel. ”The
freshman class is the largest.
most academically selective
class ever enrolled at UK and
is very diverse.”

Not only did more stu

dents come to UK. more of

last year's freshmen stayed to

continue their stud ies. Nietzel
said.

The provost also high-
lighted the large increase in
llK‘s black student enroll
ineiit.

“Most pleasing to us is the
fact that AfricanAmerican
freshman enrolltnent is up 20
percent over last year." Nietr
zel said. He credited both
UK's Office of Undergraduate

Admission and the Office of

Multicultural and Academic
Affairs for the increase.

The number of interna-
tional students coming to UK
incr ‘ased by 3.5 percent.

"(liven all the obstacles

they have faced with world
events. this statistic is re-
markable." N ietzel said.

The increases were not
limited to undergraduates.
Though graduate school en-
rollment held at about 6.000
students. the number of post
doctoral students increased
by 15 percent and doctoral
students enrolling in the med—
ical fields increased by 20 per-
cent.

Graduate School Dean
Jeanine Blackwell said the
medical fields include col
leges of nursing. pharmacy.
health sciences. medicine and
public health.

 

 

By Troy Lyle
Wt NICKY mm

and a queen. unsuited

to the middle of the table

Then the dealer threw
down “the river." the lifth
and final tard that deter
mines the fate of each pok
er player's hand Hunt‘s fate

and his night were de
terniiiied by an opponent's
measly pair of threes He
would be going home

“It was frustrating."
Hunt said. "But that‘s pok
er

 

(‘hris Hunt had an ace

He pushed all his chips

 

Hunt knows it could
have gone the other way
And that's what keeps the
undeclared sophomore. and
hundreds of [K students
like liitii. caught up in an
old titne game that has
gained newtound populari
ty

l‘il'lt Router. indoor tour
nament orgaiii/cr for the
[K Student (‘enter said he
expects soo students at .i
poker tournament lll No
veinber 'l‘hat crowd would
almost doillilc spring scltit‘s
ter's turnout .im

"livervone plays poker
these days. and who could

Gabe Prewntt. a business management senior, ponders whether to play his hand or told in a No Limit Texas Hold ‘Em poker game this week.

No limit to poker craze

blame them" ' asked Router
“It's like sitting in a theater
Watching .i sllsiw‘nsrlhli
mm‘ic You know something
hit: Is going to happen

"'l‘hat anticipation.
those biiitetllics in min
stomach there‘s nothing
like it in the world." the
('iil‘mislfl tumor s.iid

thgii'i slid iii has seen
a growing interest since the
first e\eni. held ill the fall
JIIU settlestei‘.

“We were expecting
about (to students that first
tournament. but tiiiicli to
our surprise. lTl showed up
opeiiing night." Router said

'l‘l‘avel

age of the World Series of

 

Blackwell said Kentucky
will benefit from more doc-
tors.

“These doctors are going
to be staying in this state.
helping to solve the many
health problems we have
here," she said.

Nietzel said that though
UK was as selective as possi-
ble in enrollment, it also tried
to choose as many students as
possible and to choose stu—
dents who would bring the
best variety and abilities to
the university

“These. are all students
who wanted to come to UK.
and the university was able to

accommodate them." Nietzel
said. “Because all these stu-
dents are academically quite
well prepared. they help cre-
ate a stronger academic envi-
ronment at the university."
Though these numbers
may change with students en-
tering the university or drop
ping out later on in the fall,
administrators do not believe
the numbers will change sig-
nificantly
The figures will be report-
ed to the Kentucky Council on
I’ostsecondary Education lat-
er this semester
E-mail
newsokykernelcom

 

 

 

Joint mm | snrr

This year's tournament
is scheduled for o p iii Nov.
if» in the Student (‘enter
(irand Ballroom

(lne reason for the
game's popularity cottld be
the recent success of televi»
sioii shows such as the
(‘hannel's "World
Poker Tour." BSl’N's cover

Poker and the Bravo (‘hzlll’

Marc Broussard ‘just
a boy singing soul'

BY...§’.Y5.t§’_U!3J?
THf KINTUCKY KERNEL

Marc Broussard's voice is husky. tinged with a southern
lkiuisiana accent that conjures images of Bourbon Street and
the bayou.

“There‘s no other place that has a dialect like (southern
Louisiana)." Broussard said with an easy laugh. “Kentucky is
a little different it‘s actually more southern. in a way I
mean. y'all. well. y‘all talk like that.” he said. speaking a little
slower with a more pronounced drawl.

The 22~year-old singer-songwriter has been able to pick
out the intricacies of regional accents. given the frenetic tour
schedule that‘s taken him across the country and back, He’ll
be in Lexington tomorrow night. performing at the Dame
with opening act Blue Merle.

Broussard said the tour has gone really well. He just
doesn't get much sleep.

“It's a whole lotta traveling." he said.

That "whole lotta traveling" has included more than 200
shows since the 3002 release of his independently distributed
album. Momentary Setback. His second album. Carencro. hit
shelves early last month

Broussard has toured with the Dave Matthews Band. Tori
Amos. 'l‘oby lightinan. Maroon 3 and Willie Nelson, As of
\t'ei'lnesday in l‘hicago. he's embarked on his own headlining
toili‘

Broussard remained modest. With only good things to say
of his famous mentors.

”Dave tMatthew'si is a really. really sweet guy.” he said.
“And Tori is snpei‘»cool She took me into her dressing room
one night and shared '1 lot of wisdom ”

Broussard's eclectic blend of rock. R528. soul. folk and
(‘aJun styles has given him the freedom to open for such di-
verse acts He‘s been heralded as "a white boy with a lot of
soul“ by a myriad of music critics. from New Orleans to New
York

“i just. play soul musii Broussard said simply.

See Marc on page 4

UK will not host“w
Sept. 11 ceremony

8y Samieh Shalash
'li‘l' WWW

The number of Sept. ll commemorations this year is sig-
mticantly lower than on previous anniversaries of the terror-
ist attacks

l'K will not hold any ceremonies on campus. and only one
Lesirigton event the Roots and Heritage Festival will
publicly mark the anniversary this Weekend.

"You‘d think it would deserve a lot of our time and effort
and thought i"s hard to defend why it wouldn't." said psy-
t‘ilologfi professor (it‘t‘LZ Sililtii

Iii ‘JlioLI. l'K honored Sept. ii victims and their families
w ith .i "l).t\ ol Rem:~inbrance" that included a moment of si~
lence and .i vet-enioin .it the Memorial Hall amphitheater.
Earlier in the day. the bell iii Barker Hall tolled. marking the
specitic times tho the attacks on the World Trade (‘enter oc-
curred.

Last year I'K marked the anniversary by ringing the
Barker Hall bell again

See Vigil on page Z

tiel's (‘elebrity l‘oker Show
down.

"My friends atid i used
to play card games like
spades and rummy." said

See Potter on page 2

 

 

 

 

The Central Kentucky Council for Peace and Justice held a silent vigil for
peace yesterday in Triangle Park. It was one of 800 yigils held through-
out the United States. It was a national call in honor of the 1,005 Ameri-
cah soldiers who have died in the war in Iraq.

 

      
   
    
   
   
    
  
     
  
    
    
    
  
 
 
   
     
  
    

 

  
 
 

Continued from page 1

Ben Mears. a finance manage
ment senior “One night we
watched ESl’N's World Series
of Poker and decided to play a
game of Texas Hold 'Em.

“Mom that moment on.
We've been booked,“

According to ESPN's Web
site. an average of more than
1 million viewing households
tuned in to each telecast of
the 2003 World Series of Pok-
er.

(‘hris Fenton. a chemical
engineering junior. said he
had only played a few hands
of poker until he began
watching it regularly on cable
TV

“I had seen the movie
‘Rounders' several times but
never seriously played the
game." he said. “Now i'm so
addicted I have (poker) down-

Vigil
Continued from paqel

[K has no official plan‘s
to mark the Sept. ll anniver
sary this year for several rea
sons. said Tom Harris. asso
ciate vice president for exterr
tial affairs

"Obviously: on a Saturday.

  

loaded onto my cell phone so l
can play anytime.“

Rogier said he began play-
ing poker just for fun his
sophomore year, bttt now he
plays at least once a week.

“By the end of the sum-
mer l was playing all the
time." he said. “it wasn‘t uii~
common to start a game early
in the evening and still be
playing at -'. am."

Hinton. who called hitti-
self as a "poker junkie." ad-
mitted the game is addict mg.

“i can't stop playing." he
said. “As long as someone has
money and is willing to play.
l‘m willing to gamble."

Another attractive ele-
ment of poker is the strategy
involved with weighing the
odds every hand.

For Gabe Prewitt. it's all
about playing mind games at
the green felt table.

“Trying to manipulate
your opponent into thinking
you do or don't have the cards
that kind of psychology is

there‘s really nobody here to
hear it." Harris said.
"There‘s no suitable opportu-
nity Saturday to have strong
participation from students

“l'm sure a lot of schools
will do something at their
football games. but this is a
bye week for us." he said
"But nobody s forgetting that
day and all the pain and an
guish."

Student (iiiVi'i‘llitiI‘ili will

what it's all about." the busi
ness management senior said.

Others who play worry
more about their individual
approach.

“Every time l sit down at
the table. I tell myself that l'm
the best player here." said
Michael Ratclitfe. a communi-
cations junior. "Else there's
no reason to play the game.

“You have to believe
you‘re the best to wm the big
pots." he said.

But for many. it all comes
back to the rush and emotion
of the game.

"When you go all-iii and
push your stake of chips for-
ward. you're shaking and
sweating." said Jimmy Esco-
la. a finance junior

“it's do or die time and
whether you go home or see
another band depends on a lot
of luck and a couple of
c' s. ‘

E—mai'l
title a kykerm’l. com

not facilitate any commemo-
rations this year. either. said
Press Secretary Will Nash.
“()ne. it's on a weekend
this year; and two. l‘m not
sure it's iii Stl‘s role to do
that. The last time. students
really asked for it. but you
don't feel that sentiment as
much anymore." Nash said.
t‘ol. Mark Rowland with
llK's ROTC said the Air
Force honor guard will lead a

 

Winning Poker Hands .

hh

Twopdr
Three of a kind
Straight

Flush

Full house
Four of a Ind
Straight flush
Royalflush

 

 

 

parade tomorrow in
Danville. Ky.

The Lexington Fayette
Urban County Government
will mark the anniversary by
integrating a Sept. 11 tribute
with this year's Roots and
Heritage Festival.

Survivors and victims of
Sept. 11 will be honored.
along with Marine Cpl.
Nicholas Dieruf. a Dunbar
High School graduate who

 
     
     
   
      
 
       
      
 
         
      
 
       
       
     
  

 
   

 
  

m m | swr

UK students Chris Hunt (left). an undeclared sophomore. and Michael
Ratclilfe. a communications junior. check their cards alter a deal in
another hand of poker. Eric Roqier, indoor tournament coordinator for
the UK Student Center, said he expects about 600 students at a poker
tournament at 6 pm. Nov. 15 in the Student Center Grand Ballroom.

was killed in iraq this April

A 1252person choir and
several music acts will per-
form at the Saturday event.
said festival organizer .leanv
nette Williams.

"This is the first time for
a Sept. 11 tribute." Williams
said.

"Usually there is ac—
knowledgement (by li‘lit‘tl).
This time. because it fell on
Roots and Heritage weekend.

we decided to do it together"

Williams said she expects
a good turnout. judging by
the high volume of calls and
e-mails she's received about
the event.

E—mail
sshaIas/i «I levkernelcom

NCAA committee Will seekinput, debate

8y Derek Poore
“if lil'WUCKV' Rim:

\ (‘llllllil lilt't' “\llillliillifl

status will seek feedback from the tiniver
sity community beginning next month
The committee debated and edited tin-
t-quity and studentratlnlete welfare \“t'
tions of their report in. a meeting yester
day. Rough drafts from all three subcom
iiiittees are finished. with the final topy
expected to b»- rmidy ltitci‘ this semester
l'l\"s .\'t‘;\.2\ SelfStudy Steering l om

«oinpletion ot

inittee is nearing th.

yearlong study
The Nt‘v\2\
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schools are entitled to compete in NCAA
functions and all sporting events.

l.iiiii~'l
l'K\

NCAA

t'iiitt‘iii's

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Williamson.
l-Ltium. Welfare and Sporting (‘onduct Sub
iiiiiiiiiiliw‘t'. said he was impressed with
p it ficipation
iliwii tuititlidness
‘We lliill t
(till!
Williamson. assistant dean for diversity in
A triculture. “That was very
into: iiiaiiye 'l‘licy gave us a good picture
x-i the athletics program that you couldn‘t
net l'SSdi'ilfy get from written documents."

from

Ilil' (Stillt'ge tit

chairman of the

Silltlt‘iiiiltl‘llt‘it‘S and

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the trainers. too." said

After spending much of the year as-

member
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and were into the reportwriting phase."

Williamson said.

Far-reaching input and debate is ini-
portant to any self-evaluation. committee
chairwoman (‘onnie Ray said.

”Broad-based involvement is a key to
maintaining the objectivity that yoti need
to have a good evaluation." said Ray. l'K's
vice president for institutional research.

planning and effectiveness

The committee will soon seek that in»
put and debate. Ray said the coitiiiiittec
plans to schedule several open forums in
October and November to answer tines
tions and take suggestions from the pub

lic

"We‘re going to have a who‘re series of

Willi the university community to provide

opportunities for them to have input." Ray

said

The steering committee will post the fi-
nal draft on lTK's Web site to gain addi»
tional feedback. Ray said. The target date
for internet posting is Oct. 20.

Presentations will also he made to vari-
ous student groups and organizations. Ray

said the l'niversitv Senate. Staff Senate.

l'K

‘~ We

Student Government and i’rovost (‘ouncil
a group that includes all the deans at

will be presented with findings of
the committee.
Willli

to share with them our

process and our findings and to solicit

forums where we're going to be meeting

their suggestions." she said
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 Man arrested after attempting
to sell childhood find on eBay

By Davud Haldane
165mm

Youthful indiscretion and
the power of eBay have land
ed a Huntington Beach.
Calif. man in hot water with
the feds.

Thirty-five years ago. Jere
ry David Hasson. 55. found a
prehistoric skull in the sands
of Hawaii; today he faces up
to five years in prison and a
possible $250000 fine for al-
legedly violating the federal

“These are the ancestors
of our native Hawaiians."
said Assistant US. Attorney
William Carter. who is prose
cuting the case. “All of these
remains are part of our his»
torical and cultural heritage.
and we have to preserve
them for the (native) people
and for ourselves".

Hasson could not
reached for comment.

According to authorities.
Hasson said he found the
skull while he and Charlton

lie

son played a bit part.

One day.
Hasson said.
he and tWo
friends. includ-
ing Fraser Hes
ton. decided to
explore a
guarded arche-
ological site on
Kaanapali
Beach.

"Being a
teenager. I
along with
some friends
decided to
sneak over late

“For 35 years,
I've kept this
ZOO-year-old
Hawaiian
Warrior as a
souvenir..."

David Hasson

”1 a description for the skull on eBay

entire

Skull found in ’608 could lead to j

a feature film starring the el
der Heston and in which Has

year "While digging in the
sand. we began to uncover an
skeleton and. of
course. I decid-
ed to keep the
skull. For the
last 35 years.
I've kept this
200-year‘old
Hawaiian Warv
rior as a sou-
venir of my
youth but now
it‘s time to give
him to the
highest bid-
der."
Hasson's
high bidder
turned out to

 

job includes posing as an
eBay buyer to enforce federal
laws that protect archeologi-
cal artifacts and the human
remains of Native Hawaiians
by prohibiting their inter-
state sale.

Members of a Native
Hawaiian organization. Hui
Malama l Na Kupuna O
Hawai'i Nei (Group Caring
for the Ancestors of Hawaii).
alerted Fryar to the ad and
told him they found it deeply
offensive. Over the next three
days. Fryar communicated
with Hasson by telephone
and e-mail. eventually win~
ning the auction for $2.500.

But Hasson knew such a

Friday, Sept. 10. 2004 | m:

311

no

for another item — a 1966
Fanzine comic book worth
$50 fl and Hasson would
"gift” him the skull. Fryar
wrote in his affidavit.

The FBI contacted Fraser
Heston. who recalled finding
a skeleton as a teenager in
Hawaii.

But Heston reportedly
said he had never heard of
Hasson. according to Fryar's
affidavit. '

After Hasson mailed the
skull to a New Mexico ad-
dress. it was examined by a
University of Hawaii anthro—
pologist who confirmed the
remains to be those of a Poly-
nesian woman who died at

Archaeological Resources
Protection Act by selling the
skull on eBay

Heston‘s son Fraser were liv~
ing on Maui during the 1969
filming of “The Hawaiians.“

one night and see what we
could find." Hasson wrote in

an eBay ad he posted this reau of Indian Affairs. His

be John Fryar. a special
agent with the federal Bu-

sale was illegal. Fryar said.
To “cover it up." Fryar
agreed to bid the same $2.500

about age 50.
Hasson is expected to be
arraigned within two weeks.

 

Brokaw looks forward to retirement

Long-time NBC anchor

By Roger Catlin
tHCHIRTFUFFCUUFANi

Now that he's covered his last presiden-
tial primaries and last political conventions
as an anchor of “NBC Nightly News." Tom
Brokaw has his last national election night
looming before he retires.

"A lot of my friends and even my family
members are waiting for me to blink."
Brokaw says. “But I don't think I will.“

At 64. Brokaw is the youngest among the
gray anchor elite that includes Dan Rather.
72. and Peter Jennings. 66 -~ what liejokingly
calls the "three aging white men who are still
living."

Yet Brokaw‘s hardly ready for total retire-
ment.

Indeed. in a report Friday on "NBC Date-
line." Brokaw follows Aron Ralston into the
Utah canyon where the climber cut off his
own arm to escape entrapment and death.

As Ralston climbs down a crevasse or rap-
pels 60 feet to a canyon floor in the report.
Brokaw is right behind him.

When Brokaw appeared before reporters
in Los Angeles this summer to reluctantly
discuss his retirement it was a few months
after his April climb with Ralston.

He looked as if he might have come di-
rectly from the mountains. dressed in his
rugged Montana outerwear instead of an an-
chorman's tie and jacket.

plans.
to pursue ‘lonqer-form' stories

“The fact is I didn't want
to come here for this." he
says. vowing to avoid the
kind of farewell hoopla that
accompanied the finales of
“Friends" and “Frasier" last spring. “I'm hos-
ing down ideas about parties and big epic
farewells. Ijust think that‘s inappropriate.“

But some acknowledgments. including
the Lifetime Achievement
Award he'll get during the
awarding of the News and Doc-
umentary Emmy Awards Mon-
day in New York. will be un—
avoidable. The change will be
major when Brian Williams rev
places Brokaw at the anchor
desk Dec. 2.

“The thought of losing
someone so talented is the kind
of stuff that keeps guys like
me up at night." says NBC
News President Neal Shapiro.
who rattles off the resume:
“He’s covered every presidene
tial election since 1968
served as White House corre-
spondent during Watergate. He's anchored all
of our networks political coverage. including
primaries. national conventions and election
nights. for 20 years. He‘s moderated nine de-
bates. He's traveled the world many times
over and reported on some of the most en-
during images of our recent history. And he's
a best-selling author who has literally con
tributed to the country's lexicon by honoring
our greatest generation."

Shapiro is relieved that when Brokaw
leaves the anchor desk after more than 3o

“It's time for
me to move
on, to do some
other things I
want to do."

Tom Brokaw

on retiring as NBC's anchor

and __

years. he‘ll stick around to do longerform re-
porting. like the "Desperate Days in Blue
John Canyon“ piece on Friday's "Dateline
NBC.“ as well as political coverage and inter-
national reporting.

Documentaries and special coverage will
allow Brokaw to be what he calls “unhinged.
if you will. from the tyranny of the clock
every night at 6:30 "

“I've been at this job for a
long time." Brokaw says. "It‘s
been the best ]()b that anyone
could possibly have. if you have
the interests that I have. But I
feel quite passionately that life.
in addition to your profession.
is about phases and stages, sea-
sons of a person's life. And it's
time for me to move on. to do
some other things I want to do."

It was qtiite different when
Brokaw. who was born in South
Dakota. began his TV career in
1962 in Omaha. Neb. before
joining NBC in 1966. where he
took over the sole anchor slot
for ”NBC Nightly News" in

1983.

“When I first began in this business.”
Brokaw said. "you really had two choices
every night. ABC was not even a player yet.
You looked into the evening sky. there were
two planets. (‘BS and NBC."

Then the television universe exploded.
first with ABC and eventually with 24-hour
cable news. news outlets with obvious ideo»
logical slants. the Internet and new Internet
blogs. "We‘re in overload in our business."
Brokaw says.

But amid this explosion of news. “I think
it's important to have one place every night
on a medium that is available to everyone.
without having to pay for it. that they can
turn to."

The conCise reports on the evening news
provide that. he says. and the audiences re-
spond. _

“When there‘s a big story they still come
to us on a larger scale than they go to the
many other outlets."

Brokaw wishes the best for Williams.
who. at 4:3. has been groomed as a successor
for a decade. ”I think Brian is very well-
equipped to do this job “

And. Brokaw says. he hopes Williams will
get a fair shake when the time comes.

"Dan. Peter and I have all been through
these difficult passages as well. Dan had to re—
place Walter Cronkite. for God‘s sake. Peter
came in when there was a three-headed mon-
ster doing the ABC News.

"I went through my own difficult pas-
sages We worked our way through them. and
we did that by going out and. I think. earning
the trust of the audience by busting our fan-
nies all over the World doing what we love to
do best. which is to report the news."

Cronkite‘s career may have been ended by
mandatory retirement at 65. But Brokaw. who
turns 65 in February. says he didn‘t make his
deciSion based on age. "It was more intuitive
on my part." he says.

Taking off some time in summer 2001. in
part to write his best seller. “The Greatest
Generation." made him "think about what I
wanted to do with my life. I love the longer»
form stuff."

 

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Friday Hillary Canada
Sept. 10, 2004 Feia l l I I les Asst. “1:23:33;
PAGE 4 E-mail: hcanadaekykerneltom
N U K A t E h ° b ”C

By Doug Scott

«mew»— ~-

    

   
      
     
 
      
    
     
 

oounnsv or
mt unrum mm ummurv or
untrue" All
The UK Art Mtisetirn uuscw
will celebrate the opening of This Louis
its newest Art Nouveau es»
liibition this Friday night CmeMt
with a French (‘abaret WWW 993'
The exhibit. “()pening COCK “COW"
the (kites of (‘onsciousnessz ed vase, c.
Art Nouveau anti Pottery." 1900 from

 
 

opened Sunday and features
works from the Art Nou-
veau and the lin-de-siecle pe»
riods.

' The evhibition teatures
about 7.". pieces of glass and
pottery from the UK Art Mu
seuni. the Syracuse Univer-
sitv Art (‘ollection the
l’roskauer collection. and
private collections from
\N’ashington and Lexington.
The showing coincides with
the 2004 Idea Festival later
this month. The festival's
theme is “conscitiusness.” \ ’ -

"The focus is Art Nou viewed alongside other Louis (‘Onlfon Tiffany
veau as it relates to the idea pieces of furniture. wall cov- whose father founded
of hidden realities at the erings. textiles and decora- 'I‘lffany & (‘0. Tiffany is best
turn of the century." said tions. known forrhis stained glass
Kathv Walsh l’iper. director The combination in lamps. which were very pop
of the [K Art Museum tends to create an atmos- ular in the early 20th centu-

The Art Nouveau move- phere that puts the viewer W ‘
ment began in France and in a dream-like world and ’

Syracuse Uni-
versity's art
collection, is
part of the UK
Art Museum's
newest exhibit,
running
through Nov. 7.

  
     
      
       
      
    
     
       
    
    
    
 

 

 

 
     
           
     
   
       
 
   
    
    
        

The museum will host a

       
    
 

sun mm“ 5“" then spread throughout Eu- inspires further creativity: free French (niqut concert
Singer songwriter Marc Broussard wrli bring his brassy brand of LogiSIana blues to Lexmgton this Saturday at "3")" “”d ”.1“ l ”Md States. “Md .lane \rahlkamp An- Fridav night featuring
The Dame. 1 he st_\‘l(‘ tinds its roots in drus. Marketing and Mein ‘ '

   

French music and show
tunes with a champagne re-

  

the Arts and (‘rafts Move- bership (‘tmrdinator for the
ment. wliicii originated in museum.

  
 
  
  
  
 
     
 
 
   
   
   
    
  
  
 
 
 
  
  
   
    
  
 
   
    
     
   
   
     
  
 
 
    
  
   
   
  
 
  
   
   
   
   
  
    

 

 

 

   
  

  

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‘Odyssey' reading continuation of an ancient tradition

 

 

 

ay your (or in, .~ '. -. , ."Ti.' I'lii‘ poem» i:.- ”on: t-i:'l.t"'v is .i 3.3M) tears old and tells of his encounters Six people each hour will read 130 to :3le
..: .w q. me: . 4 “4:1 c : “.‘iitlt mm. s will with sirens, kings and queens. nymphs. a (‘v lines of the poem. There will he a break at
s on the i we. Wu. is shorter and chips and a sacrificial lamb. the end of each hour with the next readers
lo: we. no .‘.:;t . .1 i: . . . .‘ . . '- .- 'l i e limo ' '1. mill: it This l'K‘s second antuial reading of The beginningat the topof the hour
“mm,“ \ ”1“ Mel. i‘w- l h ilw it? ‘ _. g» ~. ‘ mote l'W‘IE. », p» :‘lorm l1 l\ :iisn (ldvswv and will ieature such local ('(‘it‘iit‘lv Readers will be wearing brightly colore