xt7r7s7htn5g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7r7s7htn5g/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2006-06-15 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, June 15, 2006 text The Kentucky Kernel, June 15, 2006 2006 2006-06-15 2020 true xt7r7s7htn5g section xt7r7s7htn5g THE

Kentuc

SPORTS

Former UK hotshot J.B. Holmes tees it up starting today

in the U5. Open at Winged Foot. HY. BACK PAGE

 

Thursday, June 15, 2006

ky Kernel

Celebrating 35 years of independence

The above rendering showcases the plan for UK' s new I million- square- foot Albert 8. Chandler Hospital, a $450 million capital project. Pedestrians will reach
the new hospital via a convenient walkway from a new parking garage expanded to offer 1, 600 parking spaces, more than twice the current garage.

modern medicine

Hospital's $450 million makeover
the first step in ZO-year overhaul

By Crystal Little
THE krutucxv mun

UK’s Albert B. Chandler Hospital un-
veiled its plans for the new 1 million-
square-foot facility on South Limestone
Street Monday.

The $450 million project will be con-
structed in two phases beginning next
year; the first phase should be finished
by 2010.

Renovations include a 30,000-square-
foot lobby and a hospital parking garage
with 1600 spaces, which is more than
twice the number of available spaces in
the current garage.

The hospital plans are a facet of UK‘ 3
push for top-20 status as a public re-
search institution by the year 2020, as
mandated by the state legislature’s
House Bill 1 in 1997, said UK President
Lee Todd.

But, Todd said, the project will also
impact more than UK's academic stand-
1ngs.

“This project is about a lot more than
projects and rankings," Todd said. “It
will forever change health care for Ken-
tucky.”

Dr. Michael Karpf, UK’s executive
vice president for health affairs, echoed
Todd’s statement. With the renovations,
Kentuckians can reap the benefits of
quality in-state health care, Karpf said.

“The ultimate goal is to afford Ken-
tuckians the peace of mind that no mat-
ter how sick they get. no matter how
complex or unusual their illness is, they
don't have to go to a Cleveland Clinic or
Mayo for the best possible treatment,”
Karpf said. “They can be taken care of
in Kentucky at UK Chandler Hospital."

The two-phase project is the corner—
stone for a 20-year, $2.5 billion plan on
the south side of campus to increase
growth in research and health educa-
tion.

That plan includes:

I A new $120 million College of Phar-
macy building that will double class-

room space and increase research areas
by about 40 percent

I Additional research buildings simi-
lar to the recently constructed Biomed-
ical Biological Science Research Build-
ing at the corner of South Limestone
Street and Virginia Avenue

I A new shared Health Learning
Center, where students from different
health disciplines can interact and learn
together

I Additional buildings to house the
programs of the colleges of medicine,
dentistry nursing, health sciences and
public health

“This is really the beginning of a
drastic, substantive and long-term
change for the academic medical center
and the UK Chandler Hospital," Karpf
said. “This project will improve health
care for the people of Kentucky, while
also expanding the research and educa-
tion agenda of the University of Ken-
tucky and the economy and region and
state."

The overhaul and new layout will
also help bring six colleges _ medicine.
dentistry, nursing, pharmacy, health sci-
ences and public health — together on
South Limestone Street.

Interaction between students from
these six interrelated areas is crucial,
said Dr. Jay Perman, dean of UK‘s Col-
lege of Medicine and vice president for
clinical affairs. .

“We have a grand opportunity to
teach and train together," Perman said.
“We can learn to maximize the use of
our shared educational buildings."

The first phase of construction for
the new hospital has already begun. as
crews have broken ground on the new
parking garage, scheduled for comple-
tion next year.

“As we begin to take this slogan of
being a top20 institution and bring it to-
ward a reality. the medical center figures
as a key component of our drive" Todd
said.

“The new hospital and academic
medical campus of the future are going
to be extremely important in helping us
meet our mission, not only to meet the
top-20 challenge, but to achieve our mis-

sion to improve the lives of Kentuck-
ians.”

E—mail

clittlenakykernelcom

By the numbers
$2.5 billion

Total cost of the 20-year
overhaul of UK's medical
campus of the future

$450 million

l
Cost of the two-part
renovations for UK's Albert

8. Chandler Hospital

$120 million
L Cost of UK's new College

of Pharmacy buIIdIng to
aid growth in research

1 million

Square feet planned for

UK's new Albert B.
Chandler Hospital

24,700

Expected number of
patients treated at UK's
Chandler Hospital this year

1.300

Approximate number of
’ jobs UK HealthCare has
created since 2003

 

 

U. S. emergency care in critical condition, report says

— were embraced by the

By David Brown

Long waits for treatment

 

THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON — Emer-
gency medical care in the
United States is on the verge of
collapse, with the nation’s de-
' clining number of emergency
rooms dangerously overcrowd-
ed and often unable to provide
the expertise needed to treat
seriously ill people in a safe
and efficient manner.

That's the grim conclusion
of three reports released by
the Institute of Medicine yes-
terday. the product of a mas-
sive, twoyear look at emer-
gency care.

are epidemic the reports said,
with ambulances sometimes
idling for hours to unload pa-
tients, and patients, once in
the ER, waiting up to two days
to be admitted to a hospital
bed.

As a system. American
emergency care lacks internal
stability and has no capacity
to respond to large disasters
or epidemics, according to the
25 experts who conducted the
study. It provides care of vari-
able and often unknown quali-
ty and depends on the willing-
ness of doctors and hospitals
to lose large amounts of mon-

y.If‘ixing the problems 15 like-
ly to cost billions of dollars
and will require the leader-
ship of a new federal agency,
which Congress should create
in the next two years, they
wrote.

“There is just such a gap
between what the public
knows, or thinks it knows, and
the reality. And it is getting
worse." said Robert Git'fln. the
Institute of Medicine staffer
who headed the study.

The reports — on hospital
ERs, on pediatric emergency
care, and on prehospital care
given by ambulance services

24, 000- member American Col
lege of Emergency Physicians
and its president admitted

that that fact. itself, was
telling.

“What other industry says.
‘Hey. look at us. our whole sys-
tem is broken‘?“ said Freder-
ick Blum, a physician in Mor-
gantown, W. Va.

Two key steps for improv-
ing emergency care are re
gional planning and creating a
standard way to measure out-
comes, so that lowquality ERs
and ambulance services can
be identified and fixed. the
committee wrote.

 

www. kykemel. com

Todd:
‘It’s a hell
of a budget’

Board passes proposed 2006-07 budget,
UK president defends capital projects

By Crystal Little
THE xrurucxv mm

UK’s Board of Trustees passed the universi-
ty’s $1.84 billion budget for 2006-07 by a 17-2 vote
Tuesday.

The budget approved raises for faculty and
staff, as well as $3 million to add 27 new faculty
members — a hiring move that is an integral
part of UK President Lee Todd’s quest for top20
status.

It also allots an average merit-based raise of
3.5 percent for faculty and staff, which goes into
effect July 1. and an average merit-based raise of
1.5 percent for faculty that will take effect Jan. 1
next year.

Staff trustee Russ Williams, along with facul—
ty trustee Jeff Dembo, a professor in UK’s Col-
lege of Dentistry and a former president of the
faculty's Senate Council, opposed the budget.

Williams took issue with the budget’s pro
posed twotier pay plan for faculty and staff.

“This is something I can’t agree with, don‘t
agree with, and can't get behind,” Williams said.
adding that he meant no disrespect toward Todd.
“I simply cannot compromise, and I will not
compromise.”

Dembo said the budget focuses too much on
UK's capital projects and research. which short-
changes UK‘s staff. That kind of focus, he said.
ignores UK's “human capital."

“There is a growing disconnect between the
direction the university intends to go, and the
willingness and enthusiasm of the people who
work at the institutions to go with it." Dembo
said, referencing UK's top-20 push.

Todd clearly took issue with the comments
and was quick to respond.

“You can‘t make salaries go up with $90 mil-
lion in cuts (that UK has endured in the last
three years)," Todd said. “I don't know what else
you can do , -» we can‘t print money One of our
students tried that, and he may be in prison now.
The comment about human capital I find person»
ally offensive.“

See Budget on page 2

‘Mumps' the word:
outbreak spurs
vaccine advisory

By Wes Blevins

mrxrmucxv xmu

UK students might be at risk of contracting
mumps in the largest outbreak of the disease in
the United States in 25 years. according to a
statement issued by the Centers for Disease Con
trol and Prevention and the American College
Health Association.

The outbreak started in Iowa seven months
ago, and has since affected at least 11 other states
with more than 2,500 cases reported as of early
last month. Though no cases have been reported
in Kentucky. two neighboring states ,_ Illinois
and Missouri have had verified diagnoses of
the disease.

College students between the ages of 18 and
24 have been most affected by the outbreak. Ex-
perts attribute this to students‘ living situations.
traveling and social interactions.

UK's University Health Service recommends
that all students have two doses of measles-
mumps-rubella vaccine before enrolling at UK
for the fall semester. The vaccine has been avail-
able in the United States since the 1960s. and is
routinely included in childhood immunizations.

But Dr. Greg Moore, director of University
Health Service. predicted “that 10 percent of any
large population is unprotected even though they
have been immunized." This is in addition to
those who have not had the vaccine because they
lived in areas without childhood immunization.
he said.

“Many of those who contracted mumps in
the current outbreak had been immunized as
children." Moore added.

To prevent the disease. Moore recommended
that students receive two MMR vaccines timed
one month apart.

“MMR is a very safe vaccine. even if a person
has already been inoculated or has had the dis-
ease," he said.

Though the mumps vaccine is not 100 percent
effective Moore said the rate of prevention is 90
percent “which is better than zero. " Repeated in-
oculations do not improve protection against the
disease Moore said.

Mumps is a viral illness that attacks the

SeeVaccineonpagez

 

   

 

PAGE 2 | Thursday, June is, zoos

 

 
 

 

 
   
   
   
  
 
 
 
   
   
   
     
   
   
  
       
    

   

 

   
   
     

 

SWINGIN' AWAY

mom | STAFF
A crowd gathered downtown at Main Street and Broadway, just across from Triangle Park Friday night to partic-
ipate in "Swingin' on Main," Lexinqton’s annual street dance. Blair Carman and the Belleview Boys performed

as part of the festivities.

 

NEWS BRIEFS

 

Todd receives $115,000 bonus

UK President Lee Todd received a $115,000
bonus Tuesday. The announcement was made
at the Board of Trustees meeting, and Todd’s
92 percent performance rating was cited. The
UK president‘s total pay for the fiscal year
that ends June 30 is now 8451.000.

UK garners $11.5 million donation

Dr. E. Vernon Smith. a Cincinnati in-
ternist and Greenup County native who grad-
uated from UK in 1937. donated $5.95 million
to the university. It was matched with a $5.2
million donation from the Bucks for Brains

program and 34375.0(” from UK

Telethon to benefit Kentucky Children's

Hospital airs Saturday

The Children’s Miracle Network Celebra-
tion will broadcast from Applebee‘s Park
from 10 am. to 6 pm. Saturday. The broad-
cast. which will air on Lexington’s WKYT-TV
Channel 27. will feature stories of children

who have benefited from the support of pri-
vate citizens who have contributed to the

Athletics. The

$11.5 million total is the second-largest gift to

UK in the university‘s history.

Children‘s Miracle Network in the past. All
proceeds raised in Kentucky stay in Ken-
tucky to benefit the Kentucky Children's Hos-
pital. the only participating hospital in the
state. For more information about the Chil-
dren's Miracle Network Celebration or how
to donate to the Kentucky Children's Hospi-
tal. call (859) 257-1121.

COMPILED FROM STAFF, WIRE REPORTS

 

Budget _

Vaccine

 

Continued from paqei

And while Todd said he i
was happy to “put more mon-
ey in people's pockets.“ he
also stressed the need for a
market-driven compensation
plan.

“I don't believe in paying
people more than what they
can get in the marketplace."
he said.

Todd also addressed the 3
university‘s emphasis on
capital projects.

“I hear complaints about
putting money into capital
projects but we must have
capital projects if we want to
grow." he said. “i think it‘s a
hell of a budget."

Todd issued a statement l
Tuesday to reiterate his sup-
port of UK's topZO goal.

“I am equally amazed by
the progress of the past and
the enormity of the aspira- ‘
tions we have set for our fu~ T
ture." he said.

”We confirm today. with .
this budget. that the only 1
thing greater than the chal- ‘
lenge we face is the strength
of our resolve to meet it." ,
E-mail :
clittletakykernelcom l

By Paul Watson

ids—moat: nuts

K A N D A H A R .
Afghanistan , At least one
American soldier was killed
in fighting with Taliban
guerrillas as the U.S.-led
coalition prepared to
launch a fresh offensive yes-
terday against insurgents
in southern Afghanistan.
the military said Tuesday

The soldier died Monday
during a Taliban attack on
a patrol in Helmand
province. where guerrillas
and coalition forces have
fought several fierce battles
in recent weeks.

The US. military said
that more than 11.000
Afghan. American. British
and Canadian troops will
begin “Operation Mountain
Thrust" against Taliban
fighters yesterday in the
four southern provinces
where the insurgents are
strongest: Zabol. Kandahar.
Helmand and Oruzgan.

Afghan soldiers will
form the largest contingent.
About 2,300 US. Special
Forces and regular troops
also will take part in opera-
tion. which will include an

 

Continued from page T

body‘s glands. primarily
the salivary glands. and is
characterized by painful fa-
cial swelling. It can also at-
tack the testes. rm”...

contact with the saliva of
an infected person. With the
current outbreak, Moore
said students should avoid
sharing sodas. straws. ciga~
rettes or anything else that
might have been exposed to

saliva.
University Health Ser»
vice has issued warnings to
p a r e n t s

0 V a r i e S . l AVFYT'__ through iat}
breasts. pan- j , . . e A m1 a

creas and 1 Vaccmes are available by appomt- news etter.
brain. ; ment at the University Health Ser- M001“ 9 531d~

A l t h o u g h i vice in the Kentucky Clinic. For more
mumps is rare. l information, students and parents l
can call 323-5823, ext. 233.

its symptoms 5
can be severe. ‘
They can in—
clude meningitis. encephali»
tis and orchitis. any of
which can lead to hospital-
ization. and in rare cases.
death.

Most cases. Moore said.
involve a week-long illness.
During this time. there is
no contact with other peo-
ple. so affected students will
be unable to attend class or
live in dorms. Afflicted stu-

tiwi, iv

: dents will most likely have

to go home until the disease
has passed. he said.
Mumps is transmitted

‘ similarly to colds or the flu

typically by airborne
droplets from coughs and
sneezing. or from direct

Taliban slays at least one

effort to win the hearts and
minds of southern Afghans
with reconstruction and hu-
manitarian aid projects.

in Helmand province.
the country's largest source
of opium used to produce
heroin. Taliban fighters
have surrounded some dis—
tricts, Gov. Mohammed
l)aoud said by telephone
from the provincial capital.
Lashkar Gah.

“They threaten people.
They kill people. And some-
times they cut their heads
off.“ he said. "So this opera-
tion is intended to clean
them out."

He predicted the
planned offensive would be
more effective than previ-
ous operations against in-
surgents because it is better
planned.

“But we should also say
that the Taliban are getting
ready for this offensive." he
added. “It‘s not like they are
all sleeping. But still I don‘t
think they'll have the abili»
ty to fight against such an
organized operation. And I
don't think there will be
heavy fighting."

The offensive also is in-
tended to make remote ar-

.__~ 7, .7, fi_. A... 7.71

 

Information
will also be
‘ provided in
y the next
printed par-
ent newsletter. which will
be sent out before classes
begin in August. In addi-
tion, students and parents
will be warned of the out-
break during summer ad-
vising conferences. With
the warnings issued. Moore
said all the university can
do is “hope for the best."
which is for parents and
students to take action to
prevent mumps through
vaccinations.

 

Email
wblevmstakykernelcom

U.S.soidier

eas of the province more se-
cure for aid workers and re-
construction projects. im-
proving job opportunities
for residents. the governor
said.

“I think it will take time

”for development projects to

start functioning in differ-
ent parts of the province."
he cautioned.

The surge in fighting
has killed several hundred
people. most of them sus-
pected insurgents. since
Taliban and allied fighters
began their own offensive
this spring as mountain
snows melted and the guer<
rillas were able to move
more freely.

A US. military state-
ment Tuesday said com-
bined operation by Afghan
and foreign troops over the
past several months “have
greatly disrupted the ene-
my‘s ability to organize and
act."

But fighting continues
to escalate in Afghanistan.
which is suffering its worst
violence since late 2001.
when US. and allied Afghan
forces toppled the Taliban
regime following the Sept.
11 attacks.

 

 

go online for enjoyment.
kernel enjoyment, that IS.

www.kykernel.com

    
  
   
   
   
   
 

 

 

 

  
 
 
  
 
 
  

o UK‘s Alcohol Research
Center In the Department _
of Psychology is conducting
a number of studies involving
the effects of alcohol on behavior

   
  
    

  
 
 

Participants Will be WELL-
PAID for their time

0 Entertainment food and
beverages are provided after the
study in a comfortable setting

Call 257-3l 37 for more
information

     

0 Participants should be between 21‘
35 years of age for alcohol studies

      
    

- Participants ages 18 20 are also
needed for other studies not
involving alcohol

    
      

 

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 Thursday
June 15, 2006
PAGE 3

Features

Ellen Sawyer

Features Editor
Phone: 251-1915
E-mail: leaturesOkykernelcom

 

FRAMEXFRAME I in theaters and on shelves

 

i

* as ‘ r . . »_
I l g,‘ I» ‘ 2.. K ,
A. V,

‘N-

omflnmmmw

Keanu Reeves (left) of "Matrix" fame, stars In "The Lake House" with Sandra Bullock. The two fall In love, despite living two years apart, and com-

municate via the apparently magigal ragilbpx YOSU seeI just behind them and to the right. Yeah.
or us er " pee

heated up the screen In the 199

N THEATERS
'«fiiififiifli A TALE i}? TWtit
ti‘TiES'
Yikes. This tripe, set in the United
kingdom. is based on an implausible
plot involving mistaken identity and
Garfield masquerading over a castle. It
makes me want to save my money and
buy frozen lasagna instead. Not even
Bill Murray, who voices the fat cat, can
save this unfortunate sequel, which
opens June 23. Jennifer Love Hewitt also
stars. At Lexington Green, Regal and
Woodhill.

at“ tfitfit’i tifitifiE
A doctor just finishing her residency
(Sandra Bullock) moves into urban
;hicago. leaving behind a gorgeous,
unusual lakeside home. She leaves a let-
ter to the next resident, an architect
(Keanu Reeves) who is trying to escape
his famous father's shadow and come
into his own designs. The letter asks the
new tenant to forward the doctor's mail
and explains that the trail of paw prints
by the front door were there when she got
there. Reeves finds the home overgrown,
and as he paints the front, a dog runs by
and leaves wet paw prints exactly where
the letter said they'd be. The two
exchange letters through the house’s
mailbox, somehow never meeting, and
somehow begin to fall in love. Though
they are living two years apart. Then they
agree to — hello! - meet each other.
Weird, and kinda silly, but it's got two
take-it-to-the-bank stars and the quasi-
intellectual topic of time travel will
expand the minds of all devoted "US
Weekly" readers who want to see if the
on-screen romance can lead to real-life
sparks, or something like that. At
Lexington Green, Regal, and Woodhill.

tifitititit i§§§§§§

Jack Black is a Latino priest and a
wrestler. But, he's got a reason: just as
he stole the hearts of the pre-pubescent
crowd (not like that) in "School of
Rock." he's saving an orphanage from
imminent closure by moonlighting as a
masked Mexican Randy Savage. Seeing if
this one flops is like waiting for the
Roman emperor to give the thumbs-
down to the warrior asking about his
downed opponent at the Colosseum.
Black is teetering on the brink of disas-
ter. But if it works, he'll look like a
genius. With Jared Hess of "Napoleon
Dynamite" fame directing, it's a coin
flip. At Lexington Green, Regal and
Woodhill.

Even Paul Walker didn't sign on for this
one. Lucas Black (a That Guy from
"Jarhead" -— not Peter Saarsgard, but the
other one), is the unfortunate main char-
acter in the third installment of the
almost-popular series. Playing Sean
Boswell, who is sent out of the country to
live with his uncle in Tokyo and avoid a
jail sentence, Black discovers the world of
drift racing. which is street racing but
with the added benefit of hairpin turns.
After losing a race to the "Drift King,"
Boswell has to go underground for the
Yakuza crime syndicate to pay his debt.
Featuring Zachary Ty Bryan, the oldest
kid from "Home improvement" (by the
way. what happened to Jonathan Taylor
Thomas?) this should prove to be. if
nothing else, an entertaining two-hour
diversion from real life. At Lexington
Green, Regal and Woodhill.

.no worries, we' re not buying it, either Even if they

ON DVD

gigtfi Stifit‘t

Jerry Shepherd (Paul Walker) is the leader
of an Antarctic exploration crew forced to
leave their sled dog team behind by bru-
tal cold. The dogs and the humans all
fend for survival; Walker and the dogs
attempt to find each other again. Well,
Mr. Walker, we've come a long way from
the "I need NOS" days of the "Fast and
the Furious," huh? This movie got shock-
ingly good reviews (that was a joke, it's a
feel-good story about huskies, for God’s
sake, the best-looking dogs ever) and is
clean and wholesome family entertain-
ment. Go rent it. Don't buy it until you've
seen it, though; it's one of those that you
watch once and then forget about. Jason
Biggs also appears. He porked a pie once.
Rated PG for scenes of people not having
fun and brief mild language.

In a slick (get it?) film about the oil
industry and the money and people in it.
Bob Barnes (George Clooney, who won
Best supporting Actor last year) plays
what is turning into the most dangerous
game on Earth, the battle for control of
the world's crude supply. The film is
tense and quick, with most scenes not
lasting longer than a few minutes.
Disregard the impulse to throw this movie
to the floor because of Clooney’s smug
Oscar speech; it's a smart, tough look at
the smart, tough business of oil. Do gov-
ernments really step on their citizens to
gain control of the industry? No, and the
Pope isn't Catholic. Come on. Also fea-
tures Chris Cooper, Matt Damon, and
Amanda Peet. Rated R for violence,
George Clooney's beard, and language.

— conpuro or MANAGING canon cums JOHNSON

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(wwags.uky.edu/gs/gradhome.html )

 

 

 

A1:

Plus...

Look What’s On Tap

Beers on Tap!

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Sat. Kentucky Ale
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Wed: Redhook Sun Rye Pint Glass Nighf

Fri Kronenbourg (064 & Stella Artors

$273 Pints.
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TONIGHT

lcthus Festival featuring
Casting Crowns, Reliant It,
tobyMac, Audio Adrenaline,
Dellrlous?, David Crowder
Band, Pillar, Skillet,
Kutless, Falling Up, Day of
Fire, Alabaster Box,
Superchiclk], Kate Miner
and more

Tonight through Sunday.
Wilmore, Ky. Tickets cost $35
to $89.

Leo Nottke

8 pm. Southgate House,
Newport. Tickets cost $25 in
advance, $30 at the door.

De Novo Dehl wl Nana E
the Boy Noise

9 pm. The Dame. Tickets
cost $5.

Groovnotlc
10 pm. Lynagh's. Free.

TOMORROW
Bonnereo Music and Arts

Festival featuring
Radiohead, Tom Petty SI
The Heartbreakers, Beck,
Phil Lesh & Friends, Les
Claypool, Ben Folds, Bright
Eyes, Sonic Youth, Death
Cab for Cutie, Bela Fleck &
The Flecktones, Nickel
Creek, Cat Power, Blues
Traveler, Steve Earle and
more

Tomorrow through Sunday.
Manchester, Tenn. Tickets
cost $184.50 and are three-
day weekend tickets, which
include camping and park-
ing.

Allman Brothers Band

8 pm. Riverbend Music
Center, Cincinnati. Tickets
cost $17.50 to $45.

Marsh wl Jackie Greene
and Ashton Allen

9 pm. Headliner's Music
Hall, Louisville. Tickets cost
$10.

John Jorgenson Ouintet

9 pm. Southgate House,
Newport. Tickets cost $15 to
$18.

SATURDAY

Dirty Dozen Brass Band wl
Sky Hi

9 pm. The Dame. Tickets
cost $12.

Atmosphere wl Brother
Ali, Daredevil: and Los
Nativos

9 pm. Headliner's Music
Hall, Louisville. Tickets cost
$15.

MONDAY

Slayer wl Lamb of God,
Children of Bodom,
Mastodon and Thine Eyes
Bleed

5:30 pm. US. Bank Arena,
Cincinnati. Tickets cost $39.

Mindless Self indulgence
7:30 pm. Bogarts.
Cincinnati. Tickets cost

$18.50 to $21.

TUESDAY

Mason Jennings w/ Teddy
Thompson

9 pm. Headliner's Music
Hall, Louisville. Tickets cost
$12 in advance, $14 at the
doon

Hourly Radio 11/ The
Octopus Project and Black
Moth Super Rainbow

9 pm. Southgate House,
Newport. Tickets cost $7.

WEDNESDAY

Howlin' Rain w/ Warmer
Milks and Hush Arbors
9 pm. The Dame. Tickets
cost $5.

Lyrics'Born wl Glue

9 pm. Southgate House,
Newport. Tickets cost $10 to
$13.

- Compiled by Crystal Little
E-mail clittlerwkykernelcom

,

UK

 

 

 

 

 

Dread T

hat. Class?

Set your own pace in your own place. Take a
course at home through independent Study.

The
lnde
Stu
Program

ondent

Room 10 Flnkbeeser - 257-3466
www.uky.edullSP

 

 

 

 

    
  
    
  
   
   
   
   
 
  
   
   
 
  
    
 
  
   
   
   
   
  
   
    
   
   
     
   
  
   
    
   
    
  
 
  
   
   
  
  
  
    
   
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
   
   
  
  

   
   
   
   
   

  
  
  
 
   
  
 
 
   
  
  
 
  
   
    
  
  
  
   
  
 
  
   
 
   
 

   

  
   
  
  
 
 
  

   

Thursday
June 15, 2006
PAGE 4

Opinions

Editorial Board

Crystal Little, Editor in chief
Chris Johnson. Managing editor
Wes Blevins, Opinions editor

Tim Wiseman, Sports editor
Doug Scott, Staff columnist
Andrew Martin, Staff columnist

 

 

MMM
UK’s hospital project
essential for top-20 push

Big things are in store for UK’s
medical community.

On Monday, administrators un-
veiled designs for UK’s new $450
million hospital, as well as plans for
a new academic medical campus,
which will move six medical col-
leges to a central location across
South Limestone Street.

Scheduled to be completed in
2010, UK’s new Albert B. Chandler
Hospital will be replaced in a step
by-step process, according to a UK
press release.

The hospital will be the corner-
stone for a 20year, $2.5 billion plan
to establish a medical campus on
the south side of UK’s campus that
administrators hope will accelerate
growth in research and health edu-
cation. ultimately fueling plans for
UK to become a top20 public re-
search institution by 2020, as man-
dated by the state legislature’s
House Bill 1 in 1997.

Ground has already been bro-
ken on a new hospital parking
garage with 1,600 spaces — more
than twice the number of spaces in
the current garage, according to the
Lexington Herald-Leader.

When the new garage is com-
pleted next year, the current garage
will be torn down so that construc-
tion can begin on the new hospital.

Dr. Jay Perman, dean of the
College of Medicine, told the Her-
ald-Leader that UK’s existing hospi-
tal is “not even anywhere near
state-of—theart.”

Dr. Michael Karpf, UK’s execu-
tive vice president for health af-
fairs, also told the Herald-Leader,
“Our competition is Vanderbilt, the
Cleveland Clinic the Mayo Clin-
1c.

“We need to be able to stand toe-
totoe with them