xt7kh12v757x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7kh12v757x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1998-09-24 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 24, 1998 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 24, 1998 1998 1998-09-24 2020 true xt7kh12v757x section xt7kh12v757x m.» a“..- ‘

 

 

LEH 0i CLNTER

Extra! Extra!

We're bad

The Kernel has been
named a finalist for the
Pacemaker Award, the
highest honor in college
journalism.

That means the
Kernel has been rated
among the it best daily
college newspapers in
the nation.

Winners will be
announced at the
November convention
for the Associated
Collegiate Press and
College Media Advisers
in Kansas City.

The Kernel became a
finalist with issues
published last fall and
spring semester under
then-Editor in Chief Jen
Smith.

The list of finalists
totals 41 newspapers.
but that list contains all
newspapers, daily or
non-daily. The Kernel will
compete only with the
other dailies for the
award.

The other dailies are:
The Stanford Daily
(Stanford University),
Daily Egyptian (Southern
Illinois University),
Indiana Daily Student
(Indiana University-
Bloomington). Ball State
Daily News (Ball State
University). Collegian
(Kansas State
University), State News
(Michigan State
University), Daily Tar
Heel (University of North
Carolina-Chapel Hill),
Daily Pennsylvanian
(University of
Pennsylvania) and Daily
Texan (University of
Texas).

Two other Kentucky
college newspapers were
nominated for the
Pacemaker Award. and
will compete in the non-
daily category: the
College Heights Herald
(Western Kentucky
University) and Murray
State News (Murray
State University).

Sites

Club college

Want an online
community that offers
up-to-date news, local
college information.
discounts at a favorite
hangout and informative
chat room?

College Club
(www.collegeclub.com)
says it has the answer.
Students receive free e-
mail and voicemail. In
addition, they get:

-Scholarship
opportunities by being a
member.

-Discounts from
business.

-News, games and
daily polls.

~12 "interest"
sections featuring
student-hosted chats.

oLove advice from Dr.
Lovejoy.

~Products such as
CDs. concert tickets and
school merchandise.

One more time

Puh-leeze

Rail stuff needed.
Hello. C'mon.
Pleeeeease. We'll publish
it. we promise.

No, really.

..-»-L-' ..;-. ' ‘ '~..‘..'-..--..-e

   
 
 
 
 
 
  

 

September 24, 1998

THURSDAYKENTUCKY

. -1. .mo-flvbJO- ," , , .‘

0migod! It's TV
What’s cool,
what’s really
cool, and what
you wish was
cool I B

” http://wwwkyiternel.com"

 

SGA appoints new election board

Having issues: Brown unconcerned about creating board
during freshmen elections; new LCC bill draws criticism

By Rich Cook

CONTRIBUTING MRIIER

The SGA approved a motion last night
to create a Board of Claims to oversee any
complaints of constitutional problems
with the freshman elections.

The board members are Alison Sper-
lock. Cory Blake. Matt Anderson. Christy
McCoy and Chris Hailing.

Answering concerns about the cre-
ation of the Board of Claims in the middle
of freshman elections, SGA President Nate
Brown said, “We did what we could. Since
chairs were filled, then this is adequate.“

Brown also said because this is an

election for freshmen only, it would not be
a problem.

An important new bill was presented.
The bill would bring the Lexington Com-
munity College into the UK governing
structure. LCC would lose one of their two
current senators, but the community col-
lege would be treated as an equal to UK‘s
colleges.

LCC Sen. Brian Biermann pointed out
two main problems in the debate period af
ter several senators raised questions about
the validity of the bill.

First. he said. there has not been

enough research into how the relationship
between LCC and UK will work. He said

the transition committee is still in place,
and there has been no official documenta»
tion of the issue.

He added that the autonomy of LCC
will be taken away. There is a discrepancy
between how students are treated at UK
and at LCC, Biermann said. For example.
students at LCC are not allowed to partici-
pate in NCAA sports, join sororities and
they pay lower tuition. Because of these
discrepancies, he opposes the bill that
would treat LCC as just another college in
the UK governing structure.

Several senators debated this issue.
saying the differences in courses offered
and privileges does not matter and having
a single senator from LCC is as fair as hav-
ing a single senator from the various col-
leges.

The bill was sent back to committee
and will be addressed in the spring.

Among the other motions passed was

the creation of the Environmental Con»
cerns Chair.

The chair, Katie Quitter. an environ-
mental sciences senior. will develop cam—
pus cleanup projects similar to Adopt-a-
Highway, as well as community projects
and a campus recycling program.

Also announced was the Mental
Health Awareness Week. held by Student
Health Services the week of Oct. 4 through
Oct. 10. During this week. Student Health
Services will have psychologists on hand
at the William T. Young Library for anony»
mous depression screening Oct. 8 from 10
am. to 3 pm.

Hepatitis B vaccines will be available
at Health Serv1ces from Oct. 10 through
Oct. 12. A series of three shots will be re-
quired. the first costing $15 and the other
two will cost $25 each. Flu vaccines will be
available to students free of charge this
year.

 

 

mucus

 

 

Ground-breaking

bles. Even the cappuccino.

 

 

Musicians Daniel Bishop, an education grad student, and Shane Gosney, a mechanical engineering junior, performed at the grand opening of the Ovid Cafe, the new restaurant inside the William
T. Young Library. Special performances will be held every Thursday night at the cafe, one of the many features UK officials touted before the library opened last April. After 8 p.m., the cafe’
becomes a full-service restaurant, and food service employees wait on the tables, said Carol Italtz, director of UK Food Services. All the food, she said, is made from scratch with fresh vegeta-

‘5.
\

INCH cock I KERNELSTAFF

 

 

 

DELCAMEUS

Residents relieved about 3

zoning of ‘student ghetto’

 

Tomorrow‘s
weather

m
89 6.5

Mostly cloudy. Scat-
tered showers Sunday.

Kentucky
Kernel

VOL 8104 iSSUE 8022

ESTABLISHED IN 1892
iNDEPENDENl SINCE l97i

 

News tips?

 

Call: 2574915 or write:
kernelOpopukyedu

Cleaning up the place: Some in Aylesford
neighborhood say the new ruling will keep
more people living there longer

By James Ritchie

.iohn Michler looks over
his fence at the mostly stur
dent-occupied apartment com‘
plex adjacent to his property
on Maxwell Street.

The building‘s basic de‘
sign and asphalt parking lot
stand in sharp contrast to
Michler's turn-of-the century
home. replete with lush vege-
tation and adorned with a
backyard fish pond.

He‘s glad no similar com»
plexes will be built in the
neighborhood. since the city

council voted Tuesday night to
make the area a historic dis-
trict.

And he‘s not happy be-
cause he doesn’t like students.

“Students will always live
in this neighborhood." he
said. "This had to do with sav-
ing the old houses, not chang-
ing who lives within them."

The H-l district designa-
tion will stabilize the neigh-
borhood. proponents say.
causing homeowners to stay
permanently and renters to
stay longer.

Such a neighborhood is
better for UK and its students.
said Michael Meuser. presi-

dent of the Aylesford Neigh»
horhood Association. Now a
lawyer with a home on Lin-
(lt'il Walk. he lived in the
Aylesford area even as a 1K
student

“It was sort of a neat.
funky neightxwhood." he said.
“Universities that are near
neighborhoods like that make
nice places to go to school."

He said in the last five
years the neighborhood has
lost about 15 homes to demoli-
tion. most of them nearly 100
years old. The historic desig-
nation mcans that any plan to
demolish a structure in the
neighborhood must be ap-
proved by a city review board.

Any plan for a new struc-
ture must meet a set of design
criteria written to fit the
character of the neighbor-

See NI on 2 >>>

How the H-1 Zone
proposal changed

Aylesford Historic

   

M-

6 Original zone
B Compromise zone

lECHNQLQGI

Students
battle junk
mail woes

9159“")! 7:349?!

SlAfi’ WNi'fR

.Iunk mail. nuisance mail or spam.
Whatever you call it. you usually don‘t
want It.

it's notorious for clogging iii-boxes
around the globe. but is there anything you
can do about it'.’

”preople feel they are getting nuisance
mail. they should complain." said Kathy
ilamperian. director of technical services
for Information Systems.

According to the l'K's “Policy Govern-
ing Access to and L'se of l'niversity of Ken-
tucky (‘omputing Resources." e-mail ac-
counts on the POP (Post Office Protocol)
system will never be given out or sold to a
mailer.

“We do not sell lists. It doesn't happen

See E-MAIL on 5 >>>

 

 

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J 'I ‘ .. W And it requires the council to revisit the is- 3 I‘
sue before any U.N. authorization of force is ‘ 1
I. .' :1 The resolution was intended to increase ,l‘
-. - w. 0 pressure on Yugoslav President Slobodan Milose- r,
- ~ ' t; vic to loosen his grip on Kosovo, where ethnic Al- g
' ‘. ' . -_ banians are fighting Serb forces for indepen- .
.‘ , .. ’ .. dence. i l
' ‘_ - E AWt MS m "M Hundreds of people have been killed. and f g
'I' .‘ ‘ "g.- MI“: more than a quarter of a million have fled the f l
*v t . ‘ .1 NEW YORK --— Secretary of State Madeleine 0.8. fighting around their homes since a Serb crackr ‘
"f o ' ‘ a Albright. after a lengthy meeting with Israeli of tutu“. downbegan in February. f
' ' . ; Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said today The situation has taken on urgency because i
a . .0 no agreement was made yet for further Israeli m of the rapidly escalatingcrism confronting the l
f ” withdrawal from the West Bank. w says people of Kosovo, an estimated 50,000 of whom r
" “We have made some progress," Albright ‘5' I3 I“ are roaming the hills of Kosovo with little food 3
‘ ' said after the 75-minute discussion. “We have a ”l0 moss and shelter. g
lot of work to do.” I“! IsnII I
. " Albright is expected to meet this weekend Prhe m l
. with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat in another 3.“ Kiss fires w M5 for new album f
'.- US. effort to reach a West Bank deal. m . . . ;
fk - Israeli officials emphasized that they need ch afing‘mooggftisafisbabggnmlgggmngfgg '
. more from the Palestinian leader on providing ears mg“! e arrsy Ps cho Circus("*ital) thegfirst
security against terrorism for Israel. y . y ' y . . .'
. "I am an eternal optimist." Albright said in a studio album by the group 5 four original mem-
; crowded hotel corridor after meeting with Ne- Rim 11“ neaflgnfiyeggh:Vgigenfiissedpgfssfixifit
~ . tanyahu. "We are taking it one step at a time.“ P tre 635‘: and Xce Frehle turned u in m)“
‘ . Albright would like to see the two Mideast- teer er :lsia to se for hgtos and take ues-
ern leaders conclude a long-delayed accord on sage; g th r225 and fins The were acqcom-
- West Bank withdrawal. Last week she said 1:315 ed Og‘ Eh: “Kissettes ,; fouyr bikini-clad
American mediator Dennis Ross had made a omen inyKiss makeu The ou .5 10-month
[don’t steady progress in shuttling between the two . p. gr p .
Sid“ world tour kicks off Oct. 31 With a speCial lHal- Jumrml “mm",
. . under- " loween show at Dodger Stadium in Los Ange es. P . _
. reservmg a neighborhood
stand how Glnquch rejects censure deal Protesters Wt debut of play One or the msons why John new: In favor of tire ll-l overlay is
peopiecan . .. , , mum bulldlngththemhflflflmm'tnmthm.
'a.‘ . Vl ASHIMiTON House Speaker Newt 0m NEW YORK _‘ Theater-goers at the first sol d-
' I ”I I I to a ariltthh 133521139153eaegtgglkoog‘agdirgngggéafiedfifil out production of Corpus Christi Tuesday were so small. the students move as
”W peachment inquiry while the Democratic leader met with airport-style security, almost twodozen 500“. as they can fihd "101‘?
demanded a timetable to end the process in a reporters and about 150 religious protesters. Continuum," meg ”3010115. quahers- ”18114391151-
before month or two They even witnessed an arrest. The brouhaha at 3'1rgogrsll?§ea;:(;g%r§gfifii:g 91er
. - ' - - - the Manhattan Theater Club revolved around the .
“r? n“ Wmiiii‘fi’. 0000 wrrrer 00 0000000 0000.00 arm or aarara
tab the hearts were dragging out the review of Clinton‘s which has a gay Christ figure as its protagonist. StrUCUOn 0f more high-den51ty , The hlsmnc deSignation
relationship with Monica Lewinsky - and would It has become a lightning rod for religious and student housing. . - WI“ make the neighborhood
investia- d th ~ aft f l . Ch I . uir socially conservative groups. . In addmonto not fitting in more deSIrable for everyone.
fim -0 e 58?? er a orma impea men inq y “We’re Catholics and love our Lord," said With the architecture or the renters included, he 531d:
rs approre - . _ . by - f A - f rest of the neighborhood. such Through a compromise be-
But Gephardt 5 request for ending the entire Norman Fulkerson. a pu 191“ or mericans or t . rt d
People process within a one-or-two-month period ap- Tradition, Family and Property. “It's not historia 00mP19X€S concentrate a large “99" supipoh'ers ”an d 9“”
eared at odds with Democrats on the Judiciary cally correct to portray him as a homosexual," he number Of students in a small nents 0 t er istoric esigna-
needto g . Th 'tt De ts h bee said. space and disrupt the balance tion. the Woodland Triangle
‘r allowthe 9mm1t§ee bl'e comrtni t9: mOCI‘tEl ivet (in of the area‘s population. said busmess dlSII‘ICt was omitted
lifgmg rel“: ”amid: ,elnéore amt 8 5 ‘1 Y} , , Dick DeCainp. councilman for fromthe orlgmal proposalTho
1, orma 10“ ransml . 3 ." epe“ 9" ounse “£050“ and Natasha: It amt $0 the 3rd District. which includes district includes about 20 bust-
‘ m to R th St d t v Clinton a chance to re- ~ ~ ,
-. v R)! 55:33? Instiraldatgheocglmhiittee Democrats have the Aivflesford neighborhofod.f Bosses. $8223.;th ARamsey S
' » ' ' ~ - HOLLYWOOD — Liam Neeson and Natasha “ YOU EBI t00 muc 0 a iner 0“ . venue.
” said. the GOP has been rushing out salac10us ma- . h d h is no truth to re rts that congregation. you get a stu- "Everybody likes the
ward term] to the ubhc RIC ar 5°“ say t ere p0 . - - -
° p ' their marriage is on the rocks. They have issued dent ghetto. ' he said buildings as they are howgahd
. _~ . a statement denying that they are splitting up And 3 “student ghetto" they V9 beehwellmmtameé
. m m U.N. demands cease-fire III Kosovo and insisting they are much in love. The rumors makes for a transrent popula- without a historic overlay,
W a of marital discord began over the weekend with “(ma Michler said. The apart- 531d Richard Murphyr an at-
‘ “a” UNITED NATIONS W Hoping to stave off a an item in the London Telegraph. The newspaper ments 1“ SUCh complexes are torney for the busmesses.
a.“h humanitarian crisis in the snowy hills of Kosovo, said the Tony-award winning actress had con-
mm the Security Council demanded a cease-fire in the sulted with attorneys about ending her four-year
m Yugoslav province Wednesday and threatened marriage to the Oscar-nominated Schindler’s List
further action if fighting continues. star. Monday, the couple told the New York Daily For m M m M d "I. ”“9 I'M m": M
China abstained from the vote. News there’s not a shred of truth to the rumors. 9' 0" m m V“ II. t
The resolution is militarily enforceable. Nev- Neeson and Richardson are the parents of two mm
ertheless. it doesn‘t explicitly authorize NATO boys. m
intervention to try to stop the Serb offensive on
ethnic Albanian separatists. Coupled fro. wire reports.
a!" ' 3' 5'
«an
an! -
CAREERS AVAILABLE HERE . *
a-r ;: .
a: .. Tells you when your term paper IS due.
The Kentucky Kernel, your student KENTUCKY (Now if you could only find the time to do it.)
newspaper rs only as good as the
students who get motivated and ERNEL
th involved. AS the only daily SIU' The Palm lll'connected organlzer keeps
dent newspaper in the state, the STOP By: vackmwmme '- .
Kernel provides a unique place for , , ‘ I
. d. .d . h . Roouh 026 GREHAN -,.000000 .
rn lVl uals to gain on t e JOb 000 your cute ‘
experience In: JOURNALISM BUILDING lap owner's phone number an“. Saturday's parties
photography, graphic » ~ , 00W 00 g0000g 000 000k 00
desrqn, writing, reporting, r a: i0 0000‘ 000 0000a
copy editing, advertrsmg CALL Us: 000 t000r00t00000
and new madia NEWSROOM 257-1915 w 7,: ;.+.: easier is wore that paper Qrganizers
Show your face at the Kernel and ' W 9““ Com-WW4 was l0was$299'
get a head start on a career. ADVERTISING: 257-2872 a arrrr'zarzaaa ll ratatlrrorcartpus
’r,"cputr:' str‘rr’: 1 ‘ 830-242 3005 0'
E ....... k i """""" 6k"? --------------------------------------------- E t ”w? ..‘..W : a'"r;ampus corn
‘ K N I U '98-'99 Staff Application l
5 Positions: Check any interested in (rank 1, 2, 3 if needed) E 000.0000."
5 _ Staff Writer __ Columnist ;
: _ Photographer __ Productlon Assmtant 5
.. z __ Copy Editor __ Page DeSIgner 5
: __ Cartoonist _ Other : 5
£- 5 Name :
~ 5 Address ,7 Areas of interest 5
r; 5 00.10." 5
‘ : 5-; ma il :
E 5 Address 5
‘. I I’hoi’ie :
r I 5 mm; Publication experience (not I
2 required) :
a ’ E ( lass _ 7 E
’ j. r E Maior E
' ‘ f : GPA _g_. I
. . . 1' ' O
x‘ ‘2 J . ; : Expected grfilIllil'IH'i : aunt-humor",~nun .. .. W 'H'” ' " E
w r; {f . I Please return your application In person to Mat Herron. editor in chief. or mail it to: I
~ . ’ : Kentucky Kernel. 026 Journalism Building. Lexington. Ky. 40506-0042. 3
5 Questions? Call the Kernel newsroom, (606) 257-1915. 5
I I
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, ."F‘-‘-““MW"“5' . ‘. ‘ "W i"“"~" t.’ ' """' -*W” ' ‘
.— 17, "k: rl m ‘ n i: ‘ f i .V‘ 3 U i I A. . o . ' t , I]: --. v
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Matt May, Aaron Sanderford
SportsDaily Editors
Phone: 257~l9l5 l E-mati:mimavO@noo.uiiy.edu. sanderfordfllhotmailtom

:1.-amtw-.._,v

 

m my[I'ffiifiismii,sma§tszs_v2~;;_l_r__

 

 

 

High octane, low mileage

Unlike years past, Florida quarterbacks are carrying less of the Gator offensive load. Doug Johnson (above) and
Jesse Painter rotate the duties under center, and running back Terry Jackson shoulders the ground game.

Florida offense
under the gun

Close but no cigar: Gators’ offensive attack nation's seventh best
but stuck in shadow of tremendous tradition of piling on points

By Aaron Sanderford
SPORlSDAILY EDITOR

In just seven seasons with
Steve Spurrier at the helm. the
Florida offense has rewritten
the record books and changed
the course of a conference.

A program that had never
won an outright Southeastern
Conference Championship be-
fore his arrival has won five ti.

tles since.

The Gator
offense has
tossed an

NCAA-best 298
t o u c h d o w it
passes since
1990. the unit
has notched
300 or more
passing yards
in 61 of Spurri-
er's 103 games
at Florida, and
the Gators
have scored
more 30 or
more points in
49 of their last

67 games.
“It’s kinda unreal.“ L'K
freshman linebacker David

Johnson said. "You always see
Florida‘s offense on TV putting
up 64 points against guys."

Florida offense.

Two words rarely find a
marriage so happy. but this sea»
son, the relationship is on the
rocks because the normally
sure-handed Gators can't keep
tabs on the football.

Florida's 13 turnovers lead
the SEC. and their turnover
margin of -10 is dead last in Di
vision I-A (112th). All this on
the heels of Florida's first loss
to Tennessee in five years. a 20
17 oVertime loss last weekend.

 

 

 

It! I“ m Win It Fiorfla Field
Geinesviiie. Fla.

But there's ‘ sno rest for the
weary. lfpstart LK (d 0) visits
Gainesville, Fla. this weekend
with a much-improved defense
and the nation's top offense.

"I think this year's (Flori-
da) offense is a little more con-
servative." Wildcat coach Hal
Mumme said. “They probably
don‘t feel like they have a quar-
terback that‘s come to the front
yet. although the two guys they
. have are good
players. but
their system is
c a r r y i n g
them."

That's not to
say these
Gators lack
bite. The Flori-
da offense is
averaging 507.7
yards per
game. good
enough for sev-
enth best in
the nation. Not
quite the
balmy 572.7
yards L'K aver
ages. but close enough.

"When they had lke
Hilliard and .lacquez Green.
they threw a lot more." sopho
more l'K linebacker Marlon
McCree said. "With this of-
fense. they tend to run a lot
more and they don't run as
many reverses as in the past.

"But they still have enough
speed to run the reverses. they
still have enough speed to run
the passes. and they still have
enough speed to throw the deep
halls."

Running back Terry .lack
son leads the Gator ground
game. along with fullhack Rod
Frazier. Florida averages al
most 130 yards rushing per

FILE PHOTO

game.

"We‘ve tried to have a lot of
balance around here." Spurrier
said. “Every time we‘ve looked
back at games we lost. we al~
ways throw for more yards
than the other team. but we lose
the game."

Quarterbacks Doug John-
son and Jesse Palmer split du-
ties under center for Florida.
but Spurrier said the single-
play rotation used last week in
Knoxville. Tenn. is under reno-
vation.

The Gator coach said he
would switch quarterbacks by
series by situation or by quar-
ters but said Wednesday he
hadn't decided on a final ploy.

The good news for the Wild-
cat defense is that both Gator
quarterbacks are dropback
passers. senior defensive tackle
Marvin Major said. because the
[7K defense is designed wreak
havoc on pure passers.

The bad news for the Black
Flag defense is that an angry
Florida team will be waiting in
the Swamp to get rid of some
Volunteer frustration.

"We know that they‘re go-
ing to come out and try to shoot
all of their bullets in the first
quarter. and the second quarter
is going to be real intense as far
as aggressiveness. but we have
to go out and match their inten-
sity." Mctfree said. “If we can
do that. then we feel like we‘ll
be in good shape for the fourth
quarter."

So what is good shape go
ing into the fourth quarter
against a five-time SEC Champ"

”()ur big thing is if we can
be within 14 of them going into
the fourth quarter. we'll have a
shot." Mumme said. “That‘s
what were shooting for."

 

 

SIGMA PI

Superbowl
of
Sororities

Sat. Septemberao, 1998

at Seaton Field
Food *Drinks* Music

Everyone Invited to attend

Kickoff at 10:00 am.

2H

lle) KKF
KAG KA
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367 [MAIN ST.
MARSHA BRADY

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Kuhnell keeps
watch on goal

UK goalkeeper shuts out opposing scorers,
leads veteran women's soccer‘defensive unit

Iylllcheelllepper-aan

STAFF IMTEI

UK KEEP.

You may have seen those
words staring back at you while
driving around town. They‘re
implanted on front and back li-
cense plates. and the plates be-
long to UK senior goalkeeper
Carrie Kuhnell.

A present from her dad at
the end of her freshman year.
the plates aren‘t exactly her
fondest possession. .

"It‘s embarrassing." Kuh-
nell said. “I had a really good
year, my freshman year. and my
dad got ”em for me as a joke.“

‘Had a really good year' may
actually be an understatement.

As a true freshman from
Cincinnati. Ohio. Kuhnell
earned a school-record nine
shutouts. which led the South-
eastern Conference in 1995. and
placed her third on the career
shutout list in the conference.
She shutout eight of UK's last 11
opponents — including an SEC-
record six in a row — tied the
most shutouts in SEC Tourna-
ment history and was named
SEC Player of the Week for the
final week of the regular season.
Oh. and she led the Great Lakes
Region and the SEC with a
school-record .60 goals-against
average.

All this - as a freshman.

“She had a fabulous first
year." coach Warren Lipka
said. “She broke like every SEC

record that year. I didn’t expect
her to come out and be that suc-
cessful so early."

Her sophomore stats in—
clude much of the same, plus
the fact that she ended the sea
son ranked first in all five UK
career statistical categories.

Yet Kuhnell has seen every-
thing come full circle. She de—
scribed her performance during
the middle of last season as the
worst slump of her soccer ca-
reer. This. despite snagging a
personal-best 83 saves.

"Nothing was really work-
ing for me then," she said.

Lipka said her spot as the
starter wasn‘t secure before
this season with sophomore
Beth Wells waiting eagerly on
the sideline. But her prepara-
tion in the off-season put her
right back in between the posts.

“We needed her to be
stronger.“ Lipka said. “She
made some adjustments and
worked out in the weight room
over the off—season. so she
earned her spot back.“

And she continues to pad
her stats. Going into this year.
she ranked as UK‘s all-time
leader in saves (221) and
shutouts (18). In the Cats‘ (222)
first six games this year. she al-
ready has two shutouts and
double-digit saves.

Over the years. junior de-
fender Allison Peppers has no-
ticed a bond among the defen-
sive squad.

"It means a lot to me that

 

Keeping the faith

 

mammals | ktnnttsurr

UK goalie Carrie Kuhnell plays the ball in practice. The senior goalie
anchors the Illicat women's soccer defense. She is its backbone.

r

we work well together,‘ she
said. “I think the whole defense
just clicks well."

Despite playing a little mid-
field as a kid. most of her time
was spent in front of the net.

"I was usually the only girl
on the team growing up. but I
was also the only one who could
catch." she said. “so they stuck

me in goal."

Three older brothers made
her learn early to handle the
pain and the pressure. One al-
lowed goal can make all the dif-
ference in a game. even a season.

“You can‘t ever make a mis—
take." she said. “because if you
miss a ball. you don't get another
chance.“

 

Wildcat hoops nabs two top recruits

Tubby Smith closes in on what
could be best-ever UK class

By Matt Nay
smnrsouu EDITOR

Let the coup begin.

After a whirlwind weekend in which
three top basketball recruits visit UK. the
Cats have received oral commitments from
two of the recruits. with the third expected
to commit this week.

Keith Bogans. a 6—foot<4 guard from De-
Matha High School in Maryland. is a con
sensus top-five prospect and is considered
the best backcourt senior in the country.

Bob Gibbons. recruiting analyst for
All-Star Sports. raved about Bogans ability
and said he is a perfect fit for UK.

“We have Bogans rated as one of our
top five." Gibbons said. “He is arguably the
best player at the two-guard position. He is
a perfect fit for Tubby Smith."

Gibbons said Bogans‘ strong grasp of
fundamentals and experience in a promi-
nent program will make the transition to
UK easy.

Bogans. whose versatility attracted UK
coaches. has been high on UK from the be»
ginning.

He did not make any other campus vis—
its and had no in-home visits from coaches
except from UK.

Possibly joining Bogans is top-15
prospect Marvin Stone of Huntsville, Ala.

Stone. a 6-foot-10 power forward who
could fill the shoes Scott Padgett will leave
next year, is a close friend of Bogans and
has hinted that UK is his top choice.

Gibbons said Stone is expected to an-
nounce his plans to attend UK this week.

"He is a Top-10 guy.“ Gibbons said. “He
is expected to make an announcement this
week."

Gibbons said Stone's mobility makes
him the heir to Padgett if he chooses the
Cats.

“He faces the basket really well and is
an excellent passer." Gibbons said.

Bogans has said Stone is coming to UK
as well. but his coach at Grissom High
School. Ronnie Stapler. has said no deci-
sions have been made yet.

The third recruit who visited. seven-
footer John Stewart from Lawrence North
High in Indiana. committed to UK on Tues»
day.

The 290-pound center is considered a
project who resembles former UK big man
Nazr Mohammed.

Gibbons said Stewart has the potential
to end up better than Mohammed with a lit-
tle work.

“He is potentially a bigger version of
Nazr Mohammed." Gibbons said. “He‘s a
bit heavy at 290 pounds. but if he follows
the same recipe as Mohantziied. he has
great potential."

The signing of Bogans and Stewart.
with Stone expected to commit as well. Gib-
bons said the Cats could haul in the best
class in the nation.

“They (UK) continually get an out
standing level of talent.“ he said. “This
would rank as the top early class."

 

ATTENTION FRESHMAN

 

 

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Freshman Senate Elections
will be held T/Vednesday
September 23 and Thursday
September 24

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_ YOUR NAMEHERE ,
Hollywood Nights

Special Edition Kernel Publication in
Honor of University of Kentucky
Hollywood Nights Homecoming ‘98

and Parents Weekend

Publishes: Octo