xt7ncj87m976 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ncj87m976/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2001-10-15 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, October 15, 2001 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 15, 2001 2001 2001-10-15 2020 true xt7ncj87m976 section xt7ncj87m976 mm

Pun

The weekend
quandary

The weekend is
supposed to be a
time to relax, kick
back and have some
fun. it is here that I
often run into a
dilemma. The
weekend also
happens to he the
time when l have to
do homework - study
for tests and write
papers. These kind of
weekends suck, as
we all know, but
there is only so much
time. I've put
together a little
point-counterpoint to
help sort these
things out.

Point: The campus
weekend officially
starts on Thursday
night.

Counterpoint: Yom
Kippur was on a
Thursday night, but
that doesn't mean we
all observed it.

Point: You have all of
Saturday to study.

Counterpoint: Only when
you don't sleep until
2 pm

Point: Studying leads to
good grades.

Counterpoint: Not
relaxing and having
fun leads to no social
life and what I like to
call stick-up-the-butt
syndrome.

Despite Lorenzen's return to the field, LSU holds off the Cats 29-25
MON DAYKEN TUCKY

 

 

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hELLQ

UK men‘s

soccer move

into first in

MAC;
women‘s
slide
continues I

Few phone options frustrate students

By Emily Hagedorn

CONTRIBUTING WiilIUi

Everyone is exposed to “A
Dime Anytime" and the barrage
of “1010" numbers that placate
TVs and radios. Since other op
tions appear cheaper. many stu-
dents are becoming frustrated
with UK's telephone service.
Wildcat Calling.

Wildcat Calling charges be-
tween 9 and 18 cents per minute
for long distance calls and is the
only service permitted on campus
because of UK's phone system. It
18 available to students living any-
where on campus. Sorority. fra-
ternity and graduate housing resi-
dents must pay a monthly fee of
$31 in addition to a one-time acti~

vation fee of $24.60. Dorm resi-
dents do not have to pay this fee.

These fees and long distance
rates trouble a number of stu-
dents.

"I wish I could change
providers and pay what many oth-
ers off-campus pay for long dis-
tance service." said Tiffany
Woods. an undeclared freshman
and resident of Donovan Hall.

But Dan Woods. director of
Wildcat Calling. said the higher
rates are a necessity and in many
ways better.

"This service is selfcontained
and does not receive school fund-
ing. so to make up the difference.
the rates are higher. but the ser~
vices provided such as call wait-
ing and caller II) can be substan-

tially less than national
providers." Woods said. “Also
there is no monthly fee in dorms.
so a five-minute call on the week-
ends would cost only 45 cents
rather than a low rate."

Activating call waiting
through Wildcat Calling costs
$13.75 and the service costs $4
monthly. The price for caller ID is
the same as call waiting. plus the
purchase of a caller ID device or
phone. For Verizon's call waiting
service. activation is $9 and the
service costs $3.30 per month.
Caller ID activation is $9 as well.
and the service costs $7.95 per
month.

It is true that phone features
are less expensive. but many say
they would rather have the long

distance cheaper.

“(‘heaper long distance rates
would benefit students more be-
cause they use long distance
more," said Tiffany Vanvertool.
an educationjunior. “Call waiting
and caller ID are a flat rate every
month. so it might benefit more to
change that rather than the long
distance rates."

Wildcat Calling is considering
moving to wireless services to of-
fer more variety. Woods said. but
no definite plans have been made.

For those who call home fre»
quently. other options are more
manageable. “I don't even have a
home phone because cell rates are
better than long distance." said
Danny Fiss. a former UK student.

 

 

JESSE LEBUS I new S’Aff

Johnny Banks, a marnmaiian studies
freshman, chats with his girlfriend.
"It's cheaper to use my parents' call-
ing card than to sign up for Wildcat

Coiling."

ence and math."

Despite her love for learning.
she experienced discrimination
within the predominantly black
school because of her economic sta-
tus.

She said she felt the mindset of
many school authorities was “be-
cause you live here. you're going to
end up like this."

Even though she said she was
treated unfairly. this was the point
at which she decided to study
physics.

Richardson graduated third
out of 486 students in her high
school in 1994 and was accepted
into a five-year fellowship program
at Clark Atlanta University. where
she received both her bachelor‘s
and master's degrees in physics.

“1 don’t even remember apply»
ing to UK. she said about the deci-
sion to come to UK.

Impressed with the research
opportunities presented to her at
UK, she entered the doctoral pro-

Point: Passing classes
leads to happy
parents and a GPA to
be proud of.

By Erika Simpson
swr WRITER h"

Though the path to earning the
degree isn‘t without trails. Atlanta
Counterpoint: Failing out . . ~ native Letetia Richardson will do
of school leads to i ,_ .1: a . ' . a it.
personal bankruptcy, ‘ 1 .
parental
excommunication
and, in extreme
cases, the rewriting
of wills.

Richardson will be the first
black female to graduate from UK's
Biomedical Engineering Depart-
ment.

Richardson. 26. grew up in pro-
ject housing in Atlanta. She and
her five siblings were often not al-
lowed to play outside because her
mother feared the bad influences of
the environment. Richardson saw
people who either had no desire to
excel or who had the desire but
lacked the resources to do anything
about it.

As a child she was fascinated
by science and stood out among
other children because of her acad-
emic ability and drive.

She. along with her sister. test-
ed into Frederick Douglass High
3011001. a SQCODdf'iI’Y magnet SChQOI gram for materials science and lat—
known for Its 80191109. engineering er switched to biomedical engineer-
and fine arts programs. ing

Richardson discovered just
how deep her desires ran in the sci-
ence program.

“I wanted to be challenged."
she said. “I felt this craving for sci-

Point: The quality of
study time is more
important than the
quantity.

Counterpoint: Ouality
does not entail
upping your ranking
in online pool.

Point: Sleep is a key
component of
studying. mm surr

Counterpoint: Cocaine is
not an acceptable
alternative to sleep,
no matter how
quickly you can read
a book after snorting
a few lines.

Success

Letetia Richardson in her office at the Biomedical Engineering Department. She will be the first black female
to graduate from the department. Richardson's awards include being a National Consortium for Graduate
Degrees for Minorities in Engineering and Science, the lmhotep National Black Engineering Award Essay
Contest winner in I994 and 1998 and the Clark Atlanta University Outstanding Mathematical Achievement
Award in I997.

She said the completion of an
arduous course load wasn't easy.
Being in the minority. Richardson

See STUDENT on 2

I’m still working on
finding the secret to
having fun and
getting all the work
done. it anyone
figures it out before
me, make sure to let
me know.

 

PS. I want to thank
everyone who is
sending e-mail and
especially those at
the UK Police
Department for
helping out. Write if
you like it. Write if
you don't.

-Jared lhaien
rail_editor®hotmail.com

Tomorrow's
weather

$
5.5 3.9

Leave it to the rain to
keep us indoors during
midterms.
Kentucky
Kernel

VOL 88108 ISSUE i835

ESTABLISHED IN i892
INDEPENDENT SINCE i971

News tips?

Cali 2574915 or e-mail
kernelOukyedu

 

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON I'.S.-led
forces opened a second week of
air strikes Sunday with an as-
sault on the capital‘s communica-
tions system and more of the rul-
ing Taliban‘s military assets.

U.S. warplanes have de-
stroyed nearly all of the targets
originally assigned to them. in-
cluding militant training camps
and weapons storage areas. the
captain of the USS Enterprise air-
craft carrier said Sunday.

“We're sort of in a cleanup
mode right now." said the captain
who cannot be identified under
military rules for covering the op—
eration.

Expanded ground operations
are expected to play a more
prominent role in the effort to
root out Osama bin Laden and his
terrorist network as the air cam-
paign winds down.

Meanwhile. the Taliban
sought again to negotiate an end
to the bombing. saying they
would give him to a third nation
if the raids stop and the United
States shows evidence he was in-
volved in the Sept. 11 attacks on
America.

President Bush immediately
rejected the offer. Bush told re-
porters at the White House.
“They're harboring a terrorist.
They need to turn him over.“

In this image made with multiple exposures, lets take off from the flight deck
of the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise in the Arabian Sea on Saturday. The USS
Enterprise is one of the many ships involved in the US. led strikes on targets

In Afghanistan.

0n the eighth day of the
raids. US. jets destroyed Kabul's
Chinese-built international tele»
phone exchange. severing one of
the last means of communication
with the outside world. Residents
also said the capital's historic
Mogulstyle Balahisar Fort. built
in the early 20th century. was in
ruins. The report could not be
confirmed because security kept

outsiders from the area.

Other targets included the
cities of MazareSharif. Kanda-
har. .Ialalabad and Herat. accord-
ing to the Taliban Information
Ministry. Explosions were heard
in the evening well north of Kab-
ul. the capital. in the direction of
the front lines between opposition

See STRIKES on 2

i
I

The winners are

KS“ lEBUSi Iii-‘N-

Mary Thompson and Blaine "Bloomer" Ayers celebrating their royal-
ty after being crowned Homecoming King and Queen on Saturday.

 

Teh Student Newspaper at the University of Kentucky, in _

 

 

  

 

z I nonoiiiIocroeinisgzooi '| manner.

 

ALLIHEIIEMIS THAT HIS

The Low-down

"The
reason
men
oppose
progress
is not that
they hate
progress,
but that
they love
inertia."

- Elbert
Hubbard
(1856-1915)!
American
author.

A Message to
Garcia

Fighters to face fierce Afghan winter

WASHINGTON The fierce Afghan winter
and tiie fabled Afghan warriors who seem to
thrive in its extremes are very much on the Pen-
tagon‘s mind. If US. forces go to battle on the
ground. Americans could experience the worst
winter fighting they ever have faced 7- A "Vietnam
with snow" is how one military analyst describes
it. In January. the temperature in Kabul. the cap-
ital. drops below freezing and the snow usually is
at least ll inches deep. a combination that pro-
duces a skinsoaking cold. A fighter for the ruling
Taliban regime wears pretty much what he did
in July: a light jacket. baggy pants. a little canvas
over his feet. “Afghans are very tough fighters in
winter." said Afghanistan analyst Alex Alexiev.
"You see some people barefoot. You don't see that
anywhere else." For now. the U.S.-led strikes on
Usaiiia bin Laden‘s al-Qaida terrorist organiza»
tion and his Taliban allies have come from the
air. But if bombing raids fail to must the fighters.
the likelihood of ground force involvement in-
creases and weather becomes an important fac-
llll'.

3 treated in NYC for anthrax exposure

NEW YORK Anthrax spores were found
on the police officer and two lab technicians iii-
volved in detecting the case of anthrax at NBC.
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said Sunday. The may—
or said they were being treated with antibiotics
and were exrwcted to be fine. He emphasized that
exposure to the spores does not necessarily mean
they have the anthrax infection. He said the po—
lice officer who retrieved the envelope was found
to have anthrax in his nose. as did one lab tech-
nician investigating the case. Another lab techni-
cian was found to have a spore on her face. Glu—
liani said. The mayor also said the Police Depart-
ment has received more than 100 calls from peo-
ple concerned about exposure. and that hospital
emergency rooms have also experienced numer-
ous inquiries.

Embassy bombers to be sentenced

NEW YORK Four men convicted of plot—
ting the attack and a second bombing at the US.
embassy in Tanzania all members of bin
Laden's al-Qaida terrorist network are to be
sentenced Thursday in federal court. where secu-
rity is tighter than ever. All face life in prison.
Defendant Mohamed Rashed Daoud Al—‘Owhali
was to have been sentenced the week of Sept. 10.
but proceedings were put off in the wake of the
World Trade Center attacks. Friends and family
of those killed in the embassy bombings insist
the government should have done more to pre-
vent the attack in Kenya. more to compensate
those devastated by it and more to make sure it
never happened again. The families have filed a

I

YOUR IAN:
Where has
Leonard Cohen
been for the past
nine years? the
legendary song-
writer has mostly
been in a Zen
monastery. it
turns out,
obsessively
rewriting and
polishing the
oblique. lapidary
lyrics for this
austere
collection. Ten
New Songs is
arguably Sharon
Robinson's
record as much
as Cohen's - she
co~wrote all the
songs, plays
most of the
instruments
(primarily a synth
that seems to
have freshly
emerged from a
chintzy I984
power ballad)
and accompanies
Cohen's gloomy
croalt with her
own crooning.
This is the most
subdued album
Cohen's ever
made, which is
saying
something. It's as
if he no longer
has time for
anything in music
or performance
that could alter
the meaning and
force of his
words.

 

multimillion dollar liability claim against the
government. accusing US. officials of underesti-
mating early warnings that a terrorist cell based
in Kenya was about to strike. In response. the
State Department said it received no specific
threat before the blasts. which killed 224 people
and injured 5.000 others.

‘Porn czar' handles 1,500 complaints

SALT LAKE CITY ,_ Paula Houston.Utah’s
first porn czar. spends her days immersed in the
intricacies of pornography. Houston reveals her
distaste for pornography in her expression and
somber tone when discussing the material sent
to her office. She describes pornography this
way: “It portrays a mindset that people buy into
7 of objectification. of not having a primary rela-
tionship. Pornography promotes free sex and
that's not good for marriages or families." Hous-
ton has devoted her first eight months on the job
to instructing others in pornography laws. She is
believed to be the nation‘s first state official
whose role is solely to fight pornography. So far
about 1.500 people have complained to Houston
about explicit ads. pornographic Internet spam
or partially obscured nude women on the covers
of magazines. She has heard few complaints
about Penthouse. Playboy or Hustler. but many
about Cosmopolitan concerning the covers of its
magazines.

Powder incident holds plane in San Jose

SAN JOSE. Calif. Eighty passengers and
five crew members were held aboard a jet for
three hours after it landed Saturday because a
passenger said a man had dispersed a powdery
substance in the ventilation system. The sub-
stance was confetti from a greeting card that a
man had accidentally spilled. FBI spokesman An~
drew Black said. Police. FBI and emergency
crews set up a decontamination tent for the pas-
sengers of the United Airlines flight. They were
released about 7 pm. The man's identity was not
released. Someone aboard the plane told a crew
member the man had dispersed powder into the
ventilation system.

Strike causes rising deaths at hospital

BLANTYRE. Malawi ~ Scores of critically
ill patients lay unattended on their beds in the tu-
berculosis ward at Malawi‘s largest hospital Sun-
day. waiting to die. It‘s been 10 days since staff at
Blantyre's Queen Elizabeth Central hospital
went on strike. demanding promised wage in-
creases be paid out. Patients have been sent
home or left to fend for themselves without med-
ication. “No nurses are available to remove the
dead." tuberculosis sufferer Marita Chibisa said.
Other patients in her ward were too ill to sit tip
or speak. A handful of Red Cross volunteers. as
well as patients who could walk. helped take the
dead to the mortuary. said Chibisa. a mother of
three children. “Most of us are here just to wait
for our time to die." she said. Officials who re—
mained on duty said patient deaths had soared.
but an accurate toll was impossible to determine.

Compiled from wire reports.

 

 

 

 

 

Milli?!

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WM? University of Kentucky
Alumni Association

bfingsyou

A Eli/t5? FROM THE PAS?

 

 

_
STUDENT

Continued from page I

 

said she sometimes felt alone
in such a rigorous environ
ment. “It was hard because 1
was already stereotyped."
Richardson said.

She admits to having feel-
ings of defeat during her
coursework.

“Many times. I felt like
giving up I prayed to Jesus
and asked for help. strength
and knowledge." Richardson
said.

She said without her rela-
tionship with the Lord. she
would not have made it.
Richardson recently complet-
ed course work for her doctor-
al degree and will take the
qualifying exams within the
next few weeks. She is work-
ing toward completing re-
search on fainting. under a fel-
lowship with NASA. She will
then complete her disserta-
tion.

The young scientist hopes
to improve the standard of liv—
ing for people ~~ the way they
“walk. talk and act."

Last month, Minority Ac-
cess. Inc.. awarded Richard-
son a Role Model Citation. She
is scheduled to attend the Sec-
ond National Role Models
Conference in Washington.
DC.

Adviser Anna Allen pre-
sented her with an award.
with President Lee Todd and
others present.

Richardson feels honored
to receive awards. but her
main goal is to give back to
the community. “A role model
should do things for the com-
munity."

As a role model. she wants
to target single parents and
children in the projects. espe-
cially young females.

“It is important to tell
young people. especially
young girls. that no door has
to remain closed to them.“

After receiving her doc—
torate. Richardson wants to
work for NASA. Eventually
she plans to own her own bi0~
medical engineering company
and teach high school or col-
lege.

”My goal out of life is not
just for me. I want to let every-
body know that Jesus loves
them."

 

STRIKES

Continued from page I

and Taliban fighters.

And the US. Air Force
was trying to gather more in-
telligence to check out the Tal-
iban claim that an American
missile had killed nearly 200
civilians Thursday in the vil-
lage of Karam. Pentagon offi-
cials said Sunday.

The claim. if true. would
make it the deadliest single
mistake in the campaign by
US. and British warplanes.

On Saturday. a Pentagon
official acknowledged that a
2.000-pound satellite-guided
bomb missed a helicopter at
Kabul airport and slammed
into a civilian area. As many
as four people were killed. ac-

cording to witnesses.

The Pentagon has been
regularly assessing damage
from the raids by using satel-
lite photos and information
gathered from spy plane over-
flights. But officials declined
to say exactly what was being
used to study the reported
missile strike in Karam.
which is about 80 miles east of
Kabul in an area where bin
Laden is believed to train
fighters for his A1~Qaida net-
work.

Relaxing a ban that kept
foreign reporters out of areas
of Afghanistan that it controls.
the Taliban took 15 journalists
to the village Sunday to see
fresh graves scattered about.
Villagers said more bodies
were buried in the mountains
and it was not possible to inde-
pendently confirm the number
dead.

 

 

 

Did You Know?

Maxwell Place was built in the early l870s
for Judge James Mulligan by his father.
Dennis. who owned land that included Max-
well Springs. In I917 the university purchased
13 acres that included Maxwell Place near
Rose Street. The home would be refurbished
and used as the prCSidcnt‘s home. With Frank
McVey being the first presidential resident.
Mchy‘s second Wife. Mary Frances Jewell.
former English instructor and dean of women.
helped to establish Maxwell Place as a center
ofcampus life and hospitality.

Maxwell Place
Circa 1920-1940

 

 

Visit your UK Alumni Association at King Alumni House at the corner of Rose and Euclid.
Monday through Friday. 8 am. to 4:30 p.m.. 257-8905. or check out the assoc1ation‘s

Have You Seen Me?

GOTQUESTIONS :2

 

Where: to noon cm lame
When: WEDNESDAY. ocr
What: ANSWER DAY

Why: 0000 ADVICE a pm 1'12va

5;".

web site at www.uky.edu/Alumni

CAREER FAIR 2001

. GRAND BALLROOM 11:00 AM —3:00 PM
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BANQUET

 

 

  

Black alumni unite campus,
honor greats at banquet

Gathering: Lyman T. Johnson banquet
recognizes achievements of faculty, students

I challenge you
to reach for
brighter vistas
Devote
yourself to the
uplift of
humanity”

— Doris Weathers,
UK alumna

.IECHNDLDGY

By Laniln Swann

SPECIAL SlCildN—S Eliot

Doris Weathers inter-
viewed Lyman T. Johnson as
part of her graduate work when
she was working toward her
doctoral degree at UK in the
805.

"I sat and listened to the de-
tail of events. 1 could still hear
the fire in him. though feeble
(as an elderly mam." Weathers
said.

Johnson was the first black
student to attend UK in 1949.

Also earning her under-
graduate at UK. Weathers is
now the vice president for plan
ning. assessment and research
at Clark-Atlanta University in
Georgia.

New buying plans

Computers: Departments will no longer
have to buy software, UK will pay the bill

Jamie Robinson
vilified? '

Purchasing software license
es will soon be a thing of the
past for UK.

UK President Lee Todd an.
nounced that UK recently
signed a campus licensing
agreement with Microsoft.

The agreement includes
Microsoft Office and Microsoft
Operating System software up»
grades.

Jack Blanton. senior vice
president for administration.
said the agreement will allow
the university to stay up to date
with Microsoft software.

The license is in compli-
ance with current copyright in-
fringement laws.

Blanton said the software
used to be bought at companies
like Best Buy.

“Now we can get them in
masses under the price we paid
for the license agreement.“ he
said.

The total cost of the license
is 3431.000. The calculated price
was based on the number of
fulltime equivalent faculty and
staff at UK. rather than for each
computer.

Blanton said the agreement
is an annual agreement and
will have to be renewed each
year.

“We think it will save us
money because from what we
can gather we were spending
more than the cost of the li
cense each year." he said.

 

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In

Weathers. a history and
French alumna, and more than
250 people from UK and the
community honored the
achievements of Johnson and
other UK black altmini. current
faculty and students at the Ly»
man T. Johnson Alumni
Awards Banquet Friday.

“This is a very important
event. honoring the past and to-
day." said Angelo Henderson. a
staff writer for the Wall Street
Journal and UK alumnus. Hen-
derson was a Pulitzer Prize
winner in 1999.

Bob l’ickard. former presi-
dent of the UK Alumni Associa
tion, said the event also brings
people together. “This event is
an effort of staying in touch.

Pickard said to the audience iii-
cluding ()llen Hinnant. the first
African‘American graduate of
the UK College of Law in 1955.

Weathers. the featured
speaker. spoke of the adversity
that the first admitted black
students faced at UK.

"We ask them to sit togeth-
er sit with their fellow Ne-
groes. not sit with white stu
dents; to have their own social
life. and to find their own hous-
ing." Weathers quoted of a sepa-
ration policy from the UK ad-
ministration in the 505.

Weathers gave praise to the
faculty. students and alumni
honored Friday.

Weathers told future gradu-
ates to keep reaching.

"I challenge you to reach
for brighter vistas not to ne-
glect of the gifts given." she
said. ”Devote yourself to the up:
lift of humanity."

benefit budgets

The license will be very
beneficial for the budgets of the
iiidiyidual departments at [K
because the university will be
paying for the programs. he
said.

“Before. all of the depart
ments had to buy Microsoft
products out of their operating
budgets." Blanton said.

Faculty and staff will be
able to use the software on any
library lab or departmental
coitipuicrs.

In certain cases. they will
be able to use the software on
their home computers for work
related purposes.

Blanton said the agreement
allows UK to reduce costs in all
areas of campus software. in-
cluding upgrades and mainte-
nance.

The Fiscal Affairs and In
formation Technology Division
Will be in charge of distributing
the software.

it’s your life,
choose accordingly.

,\ -_ -.

Gettinguptospeed

A meeting will be held at
9 am. on Oct. 16 in the William T.
Young Library auditorium from
9 am. until noon to discuss more in-
formation about the campus licens-
ing agreement with Microsoft.

The agreement includes Mi-
crosoft Office and Microsoft Operat-
ing System software upgrades.

Faculty and staff can also go to
the UK IT customer service Web site,
http://www.uliy.edu/is/customer
service, for help.

The product can be down-
loaded by all departments at http://
www.uliy.edu/ulisoftware .

Fiscal Affairs and the lnfonna-
tion Technology Division will be in
charge of distributing the software
from the central server.

 

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This is a new program for entering graduate students interested in
biomedical research as a career ch0ice Stipends of 318.000 plus
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