xt77sq8qfw3w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt77sq8qfw3w/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1998-11-20 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, November 20, 1998 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 20, 1998 1998 1998-11-20 2020 true xt77sq8qfw3w section xt77sq8qfw3w  

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r... m...—
I
s
l
A

Ideas for the day

Just
pondering

If you throw a cat out a
car window, does it
become kitty litter?

What was the best thing
before sliced bread?

Why don't sheep shrink
when it rains?

Did you know that
dolphins are so
intelligent that within
only a few weeks of
captivity, they can
train Americans to
stand at the edge of
the pool and throw
them fish?

Dancing - just a vertical
expression of a
horizontal desire.

Why do you press harder
on a remote control
when you know the
battery is dead?

If atheists say there is
no god, who do they
think pops up the
next Kleenex in the
box?

Note for the ladies in
the audience: "Bite
Me!" isn't nearly the
insult your mind
believes it's going to
be.

Could crop circles be the
work of a cereal
killer?

I bet infants enjoy
infancy as much as
adults enjoy
adultery?

My single friends kept
asking me to fix them
up with a "nice" guy.
so I did and all I
got for my troubles
was bitter
complaining. I figure
it's their own fault
though. because if
what they really
wanted was “nice
AND a full set of
teeth," they should
have told me that in
the first place. Then
again, my philosophy:
The longer you wait,
the better the date.

Did you know that five
out of four people
don't understand
fractions?

People who think they’re
perfect are annoying
to those of us who
really are.

- Source:
http://www.amused.
com/michelle.html.

Definitions

Hidden
meanings

DUMBWAITER: someone
who asks if the kids
would care to order
dessert.

FEEDBACK: the inevitable
result when the baby
doesn‘t appreciate
the strained carrots.

— Source:
httpzllmembersaolco
m/funnyfirm/bits.htm.

-RonNorton

 

 

mill.

Tomorrow's
weather

«5
4.6 2.8

Sunny and cold
through fuesday.
Kentucky
Kernel

VOL 3104 ISSUE #62

ESTABLISHED IN I892
INDEPENDENT SINCE 1971

News tips!

Call: 257-I9I5 or write:
kernel@pop.uky.edu

d I

 

PRIDAYKENTUCKY

KERNEL

49.7,...9,‘ , _

ii

s...

“He didn’t belong to us; he was on loan to us from God."
- Rev. Douglas Fortner, on Artie Steinmetz

One last goodbye

 

 

Flecks of
talent

Béla Fleck,
bandmates
bare creative
soul I 6

 
  
 
  
 

 

 

PHOTOS It Home HILER I KERNEL Sim

Family members and friends carried the coffin of Artie Steinmetz at the football player's funeral yesterday in Edgewood. More than 1,000 people turned out to pay their respects.

Overcoming losses: Hundreds attend
funeral for UK football player; ceremony
filled with tears, emotion, a little laughter

By Mark Vanderhoff

SfAFF WRITER —" __

Head football coach Hal
Mumme led his team into a dif-
ferent kind of challenge yester~
day that of overcoming the
loss ofa teammate and friend.

Shortly before the funeral
mass for Artie Steinmetz. the
player who was killed in the
crash. three buses pulled into
the parking lot at St. Pius
Church. the Steinmetz‘s parish
in Edgewood.

“He is gone from our sens-
es. but not from our hearts."
Rev. Doug Former. St. Pius'
pastor. said in his sermon.

Fortner led the mass. for
which attendance was so great
that rows of people stood in
the rear aisles and even in the
foyer.

As friends. family and
members of UK and Coyington

 

 

 

MEN'SHQQBS.

Bears declawed
in 82-51 drubbing

By Aaron Sanderford

SPONTSDAIL V EDITOR

lf ['K was (ioliath. Mer
cer was the lint in David's
belly button.

The Bears toil) knew
they were out-manned before
last night's 82-3] whooping.
but they left Lexington With
a 530.000 check in hand. Yet
it was the five Wildcat fresh
men that gained the most
from UK‘s lopsided win.

For the secondstraight
game. UK freshmen madc-
key contributions that Wild
cat coach Tubby Smith said
the (Tats (2-0) would need for
a championship run. albeit a
little less than their output
Tuesday against Eastern
Kentucky.

Despite struggling from
the field. the freshmen still
put up solid numbers.

time.

\(‘fll'U

gloire.

 

Freshman center .liiles
(‘amara scored in double fig
tires for the ghl‘llllll‘Nll'illLIhl
and
guard .I l’. llleyiiis failed to

“()liyiously.
good time to see how they
can perform.” Smith said

”Tonight. you could sec a
little dip in the freshmen.
Tayshaun
shoot it as well. Todd and
.I.l’. struggled. but that‘s gor
mg to happen to freshmen."

Buoyed by the now com
plotc two grimc \llslii'llsllilis
of junior center Jamaal Ma

Ryan Hogan and the near fin
ish of sophomore forward
Myron Anthony‘s. l'K‘s Fab
Five tallied ioo minutes of
playing time in the Wildcats“

See MERCER on 3 ’1‘ b ‘

('atholic High School waited to
pay their respects. they ex-
changed hugs and handshakes
and lamented Steinmetz's
death.

Bishop Robert Muench.
who delivered the eulogy. dis
cussed the connection between
the official colors of I'K and the
Virgin Mary. blue and white.
He then referred to the other
Hail Mary the long-shot des-
peration pass that arose from
the belief that prayers to Mary
often result in miracles.

When Mucnch suggested
Steinmetz could use his lii'W
heavenly leeway to obtain
frontrow. liiyard-line seats for
a football game. the bishop
managed to bring laughter to
an atmosphere filled \Vllll tears.

For Steinmetz. l’ortner

said. death is "the beginning of

a life of full love" with (lod and
is comparable to being born all

only freshman

this is a

(Prince) didn't

 

 

sophomore guard

 

 

over again,

”He didn‘t belong to us."
Former said. “He was on loan
to us from God."

Before the funeral. a line of
people streamed out of the en
trance on one side of the
church. as it had for almost two
hours during visitation.

Many at the funeral found
the large attendance comfort-
ing.

“There's strength in num-
bers." said the Rev Torn Far-
rell. pastor of the Newman Cen-
ter at UK.

The Steinmetz family left
immediately after the service.

I.'K students who attended
the funeral would not comment
on the service.

Steinmetz. 19. a freshman
anti redshirt defensive lineman.
and Christopher Scott Brock.
:21. of Hyden. died in the auto-
mobile accident Sunday after
the truck driven by senior Ja-
son Watts flipped over oti US.
1.7 near Somerset.

Watts. who was driying all

See REMEMBERING on 2 >>>

 

 

 

:41:

 

Head coach Hal Mumme consoled Marshall Steinmetz yesterday outside
St. Pius' Catholic Church, where the funeral mass took place.

 

Senior forward Scott Padgett told one III

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mums l ktniitisurr ’
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over Mercer forward Isaac Stalworth.

SIUDENIEQVERNMENI

Officials

to rally

0
against proposal
SGA members will march downtown to council
work session to protest housing ordinance

By Jill Gorlri
Stirrwmttii

The Student (ioyernnicnt .\s
sociation will sponsor a protest
rally next Tuesday at noon in
front of Patterson (ltiice Tower

The rally is being held to op
hose the passage of an ordinance
proposed bx :ird llistrict council
man Dick liet‘amp that would lim~
it the number of unrelated people
who could reside in an offcamplis.
single housekeeping unit to three.

The l,exiiigton-l‘ayctte l'rbaii
County (‘oiincil will vote on the
proposition next Tuesday during
its regular work session.

 

\\ part of the rally. SGA offi-
l'l.‘l1\ will march down Martin
Luther King Boulevard toward
downtown .it l:.lli p in . when the
council session begins.

"Students have been calling.
asking \\ hat SGA is going to do
about it." Senator at large Keisha
(‘al'ti'i‘ said

The (ioyeriimental (‘oncerns
(‘ommittee also opposes the ordi-
nance

“We are sending them e-mail
and letters expressing how we
strongly iipptisi‘ the idea." commit»
tee chairman Paola Murillo said.

See RALLY on 2 )>>

   
 

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ALLIHLNEILSJHALEIIS

The Low-down

Starr maltes his case

WASHINGTON ~ Independent Counsel Ken»
neth Starr laid out his evidence against Presi-
dent Clinton yesterday in the third presidential
impeachment inquiry in US. history. The inde-
pendent counsel. in an appearance before the
House Judiciary Committee. accused Clinton of a
months-long "scheme to conceal" his affair with
Monica Lewinsky. But Starr said his investiga-
tions into the gathering of FBI files by the (‘lin
ton White House and the firing of White House
travel office workers resulted in no evidence of
impeachable offenses by the president. The hear—
ing. which is being televised nationally. is still III
progress.

Clinton sees little of hearing

WASHINGTON h President Clinton was in
Asia beginning a five-day visit as Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr testified before the House
Judiciary Comtnittee yesterday. White House
Press Secretary Joe Lockhart said Clinton did
not watch any of the live coverage but saw one
short clip of it on a CNN news broadcast. But an
aide did brief Clinton on Starr’s prepared testi-
mony. Lockhart said. A battery of the president's
lawyers — private attorney David Kendall and
White House counsel Charles Ruff among them
— were also present in the committee room.
awaiting their turn to question Starr.

27 states backing tobacco

NEW YORK .__ Twenty‘seven of the 46 states
eligible to share in a $206 billion tobacco settle-
ment have embraced the package as of the eve of
tomorrow‘s deadline for accepting the proposal.
Nine states yesterday announced plans to sign
the deal designed to resolve state claims for the
costs for treating sick smokers. The pact an-
nounced on Monday after five months of negotia-
tions between negotiators for eight states and the

 

 

LABOR or Low:
Singer Paul
McCartney says
his wife Linda's
death in April
makes it tee
difficult for him
to male profes-
sional and per-
sonal plans for
the future. The
ex-Beatle tells
USA Today, her
death "is too
close to me and
too painful still.
I'm not makine
plans to be a
cheerleader or
the sad clown"
on behalf of
breast cancer,
which claimed
his beloved
Linda and his
mother.

 

Mediator rejects ABC union's claim

NEW YORK ~ A federal mediator yesterday
rejected a union's claim that ABC‘s lockout of
2.200 behind-the-scenes employees because of a
labor dispute was illegal. Although the decision
was a blow to the National Association of Broad-
cast Employees and Technicians. the union and
ABC will return to the bargaining table tomor-
row for the first time in more than six weeks.
NABET’s camera operators. producers and edi~
tors staged a one-day strike over health benefits
on Nov. 2. and ABC responded by locking union
members out of their jobs until they promised ad-
vance warning of future job actions.

Film director Alan Pakula dies

NEW YORK » Film director Alan Pakula.
who directed Klute and All The President's Men.
died yesterday in a car accident. He was 70.
Pakula‘s movies included 1982‘s Sophie ‘3 Choice.
starring Meryl Streep. See You In the .ilorning in
1989. Presumed Innocent in 1990. The Pelican Brief
in 1993 and The Devil's ()wn. starring Brad Pitt
and Harrison Ford. in 1997.

Heidi Fleiss released from prison

DUBLIN. Calif. -— Heidi Fleiss. the infamous
“Hollywood Madam" who provided prostitutes to
the rich and famous. was released from federal
prison Thursday and transferred to a halfway
house. officials said. Fleiss was freed after 20
months in prison under a deal allowing her to
complete the last part of her 37-month federal
sentence for conspiracy. tax evasion and money
laundering at a “community corrections center.“
Dublin prison spokesman Dominic Gutierrez
said.

Fleiss also was concurrently serving an 18-
month state sentence for attempted pandering. to
which she pleaded guilty in February 1997.
Fleiss. who was arrested in 1995. was charged
with running a call girl ring catering to Holly-
wood's power elite and found guilty of the federal
charges in January 1997.

Number of pregnant smokers drops

WASHINGTON —~ The number of women
who smoke during pregnancy dropped 26 percent
in the 19905. but hundreds of thousands still
smoke while pregnant. the government reported
yesterday. A study by the Centers for Disease
Control found 13.6 percent of pregnant women
smoked in 1996. down from 18.4 percent in 1990.

Stocks rise, Dow gains 14.94

NEW YORK 7 Profit-takers tripped up the
Internet rally yesterday. but another rosy update
by Intel helped lift other technology stocks and
the overall market. The Dow Jones industrial av-
erage finished 14.94 higher at 9.05605.

Compiled from wire reports.

 

DEATH

Continued from page I

three on a hunting trip. suf-
fered a severe arm laceration
and is in good condition at
UK Hospital.

Brock‘s funeral took place
Wednesday in Thousand-
sticks. just outside Hyden.

Blood-alcohol tests indi-
cate all three were legally
drunk at the time of the
crash. Watts now faces a
drunken-driving charge and
two counts of second-degree
manslaughter. and is sched~
uled to appear before a Pulas—
ki County judge Dec. 17.

In related news. SGA Pres-
ident Nate Brown said the or-
ganization was considering
holding its own memorial for
Steinmetz. but the Senate vot-

ed no.

Brown said he talked to
Athletics Director C.M. New-
ton about the idea, but New-
ton requested a memorial not
to be held while the football
players deal with the tragedy.

“We have a memorial
walk every fall. and next fall
we‘ll have one in memory of
Steinmetz and all the other
students who have passed
away." Brown said.

Dan Gahafer, a
spokesman for the Kentucky
Alcoholic Beverage Control tie—
partment in Frankfort. ace
knowledged today that an in—
vestigation into allegations
that Steinmetz was served al-
cohol at Haney‘s Bar on
Leestown Road in Lexington.

Gahafer declined further
cotnment.

The Associated Press contributed
to this report.

 

H
SGA

Continued from page I

 

The ordinance does not
have to pass with a unani<
mous vote in the council to
move to the next level of de-
bate.

But if it does. it will go to
the planning commission for
further review and a pubic
hearing.

“We want to stop it
now." Carter said. “This is
ridiculous. We don't even
want it to go to the planning
commission.

Although the council
voted for the ordinance.
Carter said several of its
members side with the stu-
dents. namely George
Brown. who works at UK:
Bill Farmer. Teresa Isaac
and Al Mitchell voted
against the ordinance.

Isaac said it‘s hard to de:
fine "unrelated persons." be-
cause so many people have a
different perception of fami-
ly. Carter said.

SGA wants students to
get involved. call various
council members and express
their concerns.

"Once students get in-
volved. it could get shot
down." said Kent Fletcher. a
sociology junior.

“It‘s just one more thing
students are going to have to
stand up for."

Some say the ordinance
has been proposed partly be-
cause of the increased noise
and behavior complaints
filed against students this
year.

Some students have asked
how this will affect those indi-
viduals already living in an
apartment with more than
three unrelated people.

"I guess if you already
live in an apartment with
three other people." Carter
said. "then you would have to

leave when your lease is
done."
SGA president Nate

Brown said this kind of law
has been made in other cities
with large universities too.

“In other places. it has
been up to the landlords how
much they want to enforce
it." he said.

The ordinance would af-
fect every living facility
around the UK campus. not
including buildings owned by
CK.

Because 7:3 percent of UK
students live off campus.
some argue the economic
repercussions. if this ordi~
nance passes. could spell dis-
aster for students.

 

mm

four biggest US. tobacco companies. No state has LISTEN TO ME:
yet rejected the proposal. Independent
. . . . Counsel Ken-
l-‘rrst Palestinian airport to open nethStarir fl
JERUSALEM .. The Palestinian Authority flouting:
went through lastvminute preparations yesterday House Judicia
to open1ts ovvn airport. which w ill give Palestmr C itt du .
ans for the first time a way out of the Gaza Strip omm ee r
without asking for Israeli permission. Palestin- "'9 ”IV the
ian negotiators said Gaza International Airport third impeach-
would open Sunday. Israel. which will oversee ment WWW in
security at the airport. has forbidden its own cit- "-5- M510”-
izens from initially using the airport. Israel‘s
Channel 2 TV said. And all flights. which must be
approved by Israel in advance. would not be al-
lowed to fly over its airspace.
m “all—IMA- “oJ/n-ma-u- “all-um

ulna”

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SUNSHINE PROMOTIONS

PRESENTS

DAVE

CONCER

g;

Friday. November 20
Rupp Arena

MATTHEWS
BAND

T

I TONIGHT

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THE FINAL PIECE

IS lNl!

:

DON'T MISS THE NEW INSTALLATION!

RECEPTION TONIGHT

DURING GALLERY HOP

FOR

WHAT WAS IS TO WILL BE

BY

TIM SPRINGSTEAD

“One of the most intriguing and thought provoking exhibits I have
seen in years. A good trip for anyone interested in modem art.“

— Steve Cornell

S-BPM RHSDHLL GHLLEIW

GREHT HHLL STUDENT CENTER
SPONSORED BY STUDENT HCTIDITIES BDHBD

  

 

 

 

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Matt May. Aaron Sanderio
SportsDaiiy Editors
Phone: 2571915 | E-mail: m'

‘ .edu. sanderiordélhotmanlxom

 

 

W m I FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1998 I 3_

 

 

WANT TO WIN BIG THIS WEEK?

SPUBTS lNTElllflENBE NETWORK

WINNERS:

1 800 746 3006 or www. sportsmtei com

Ti“:l ,'\I_1 '

‘ti it“ ‘1! 'il‘iiiJIJrAi ii t‘."1

 

Priority Registration
Spring 1999

Cats show
no mercy ~
011 Mercer 'Siiiiztf."::.:§::::,:.;";';":’;;

S-‘tI-S'I'II’ '. .~
By I | I nected on five first-half three u it ( I(( u ( “if [mm lor (litails

surrvmrrn pointers. enroute to taking a 30
point lead heading into the locker
room.

Oh yeah. there was a second
half. but it wasn't exactly a high-
light reel. UK only scored five
points in the hall‘s first seven
minutes. before a 13-point run.

“We got complacent in the
second half." Evans said. "We
can‘t afford to do that."

Coach Tubby Smith once
again gave everyone on the team
its fair share of minutes.

“It was good to get guys play-
ing time." senior forward Scott
Padgett said. “Although we didn't
play as well in the second half as
we would've liked to."

The Cats once again strug»
gled at the line. making only 11 of
20 free throws. Sophomore center
Michael Bradley continued his
two-game struggles. He was Hon
:3 Monday against Eastern Ken-
tucky and just 2-for-5 against
Mercer

"I want to play a perfect
game every time I go out there."
Bradley said. “And it‘s frustrat-
ing every time (when the free
throws don't 12111)."

For Mercer. there was joy de~
spite the score.

"1 was just so excited." Mer»

 

 

1ittp://\\ \i \\ .uk) .cdu/chislrar/schcdulehtml

Kan-um
ERNIE.

://www.kykernei.com

 

Mercer rolled into Rupp Are-
na last night. but there was no
No.33 in sight.

No "Air Pair” in the house
last night. just a few air-balls.
You guessed it: no Ron.

The letters MERCER was
about the only thing the small
college from Macon. Ga. had go~
ing for them after they tipped it
off against the Cats. And after a
few trips up and down the court.
the Mercer Bears were probably
ready to be the "Mercy" Bears. as
in. “have mercy on us."

l'K. though. would have no
part it.

Wayne Turner cattle out
strong. scoring i'K‘s first five
points. A Jules (‘amara dunk and
a baseline threepointer from se-
nior forward Heshimu Evans
marked the start of an 11-1) run.
and the Cats were well on their
way to another early-season
home blowout.

You could say the game was
over at halftime for ‘Da Bears. It
was evident the team were over
matched in the first half when it
became known that UK shooting
guard Tayshaun Prince was
taller than any Mercer player on

   

 

EXPANDING AGAIN IN LEXINGTON

We are a cacuai t_uii cervicp dinneri iouco Oftlrilifi a vaimiu mt nu
that it 'made from cciatcii daiiu Now lining;

'SERVEK 'NOKQ'HOST/EQ 'BARTENDEIE
ODISl-MASl-IEIR 'WEPOOOK“. 'EXPEDITOK

——Wataluifl§ofourmu———

“Flexible Schedules 'Advancomnni Opportunities.
OProfngcionai Management Imam 'Paid Vacations

° MedicaI/Dentai/Vigion/Preccriptionc ° 401(k)

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morning to a little kid.“

But Smith sounded
more like the Grinch.

“Free throws are something
we've been working extremely
hard on since last December."
Smith said. “We need to go back
to the drawing board and see
what we need to do "

Evans Davis. were held to a com-
bined two-of—nine from the field
in the first half. while their first-
half leading scorer had three field
goals for six points. That explains
why Mercer only had 19 firstahalf
points.

13K. meanwhile. shot :35 per-
cent from the field and also con-

Managemoni Opportunities fax mentor to; Mating: ':.r.' 7 In P.

(561)615-6013/6001 - www.tiir~cookti.rotn

much

 

CAMPUS
CALENDAR

noel! lilLElt 1 mmsmr

Freshman Jules Camara dunked over a Mercer player last night as UK
stomped the Bears In its last game without suspended players Myron
Anthony, Jamaal Haglolre and Ryan Hogan.

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

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III d 1H M n 1! schedule Monday. playing a freshman most quickly im» , “5 3” t C (951519115. d? Free Math Tutoring for Math 1098. 123. Room 20i Frazee Haii.caii 257—8703 tor
Evans 22 HO 2- 12 6 ll neutral-Site game ”I (,‘incin- pacted by the end of suspen- in‘gbtlSitiithihthertfi are ‘30“: flmfiefiNgs
PM 22 3.7 0-2 3-4 5 9 mm against Viright State. But 510113 {1:31 fink“ llldter ESL: (TL ’OLtls Campus Crusade For Christ weekly meeting. 7:30pm. Worsham Theatre
Bradey 25 5-7 0-0 2-5 5 12 ' ' x ‘ ,. . , . A » ' C (1 Z .' ff ‘ H‘ . 5A8 Contemporary AfiairsCommittee meeting. 4pm. King Cultural Ctr.
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Legal concerns

MIAMI - The judge
5. presiding over the
, *1 nation's first class-
.‘6 action smokers'
. ‘5 lawsuit to reach trial
'~ . . has ordered an
' ' .. inquiry into a
'. ‘ . . 1 cigarette ad that
.'.'* :-‘ appeared in several
‘ Florida newspapers.
Ihe full-page, color ad
. . for Kool Natural
. : Lights appeared
. .‘ locally Wednesday.
‘ ' . _ '- prompting plaintiffs'
' .' attorney Stanley
‘ ' Rosenblatt to
v‘ - ' complain it was
‘ “blatantly improper."
Defense attorneys called
the ad's timing a
coincidence.
"Let's put it this way,”
Circuit Judge Robert
, Kaye said. “It raises
: i . one’s eyebrows,
' serendipitous or
not."
The ad states in part:
"We're not saying
these cigarettes are
safer than other
cigarettes, but we
think you'll enjoy the
perfectly balanced
taste."
Rosenblatt, who's
seeking $200 billion
for at least 500,000
sick Florida smokers,
contends the ad was
meant to be seen by
jurors hearing the
"‘ case. He said no
7 tobacco company had
. f: '~ ever explicitly talked
,, . about the safety of a
‘ . f product in an ad.

‘3 . Abortion
' wrongs

. NEW ORLEANS —
Abortion rights
advocates went to
court yesterday

' ’ seeking to overturn
‘ wording in a state
law that said a fetus
becomes a living
baby as soon as it
enters the birth canal
~7 - even if it gets
, . there as part of an
' abortion.

“They are
trying to
change the
constitutional
definition of a
person by
moving up a
few inches into
the woman’s
body.”

- Priscilla Smith, attor-
ney for the Center for
Reproductive Law and
Policy in New York, re-
garding the Louisiana
trial to uphold a consti-
tutional prohibition
against partial-birth
abortions.

Compiled from wire
reports.

Chain
reaction

Readers are
encouraged to submit
letters to the editor and
guest opinions to the
Dialogue page.
Address comments to:
. ”Letters to the
‘2‘ Editor"

3 Kentucky Kernel

-. Editorial Editor

.‘ 35 Enoch J. Grehan
Journalism Building
. '; University of

”i Kentucky

.f Lexington. Ky.
' i- 40506-0042

I ' " Send electronic mail to

Lettersshouldbeno
morethanZSOwords:
guestopinionsshouldbe
~ .‘ . mlongerthan600
‘ words.
Allmaterialshouldbe

 
 
 
 
 
  

 

DIALOGUE

 

Editorial Board

Matt Ellison, dialogue editor Ashley Shrewsbury. columnist
Nat llerron, editor in chief James Ritchie. canpus ed'tor
Chris Campbell, managing editor Nelanie Cniz. student at ltge
Clark Case. asst. dialogue editor Jen Smith. senior staff writer

FRIDAY NUVIMBER ’0 1998

KENTUCKY KERNEI.

 

 

 
   

 

 

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(softy. but it Seems that Mr.
B: Cum has Jus+ Saw
‘I’Ine Undod SIOI’eS of WC]...

 

 

 

  

     
 

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READERSLEQRIIM.

@ Expressions

Freedom is lost
in our precious
justice system

To the editor:

Let me begin by presenting the
concept of freedom as portrayed by
the United States Constitution. We
are free. We are free to make our
own decisions and live our lives
here in America. clothed in our
precious liberty.

Yes. friends. this is freedom.
Even without legislating morality.
the fathers of the Constitution
knew freedom is not all inclusive.
The foundational principle is this:
My freedom ends where yours be-
gins. Your liberty ends when it in-
fringes upon mine. This is known
as the common law.

Now the powers of justice
have deemed it necessary to en-
sure rights to those Americans
still in the womb; those certain hu-
mans who will cover their eyes
and ears when introduced to the
outside stimulus of bright lights or
loud sounds.

These Americans now hold
government-given rights, includ-
ing the right not to be harmed by
those "mothers" who choose to
abuse alcohol or use illegal drugs
during pregnancy. It seems to me

that these government-sanctioned
rights should not be given to the
non-living.

I am pro-freedom. I am prolib-
erty. I am pro-choice. according to
the definitions of freedom and lib-
erty. Finally. I am pro-life. I be-
lieve life is a gift from God. that
life is a creative expression of an
expressive creator. Life is pre-
cious. and finally. I am not a fan of
murder.

BRIAN S. NEURER
BIOLOGY SENIOR

‘The Body'
ready for a life
of service to his
constituents

To the editor:

Although I admire your enthu-
siasm toward the election of Re-
form Party candidate Jesse “The
Body" Ventura. 1 think you (as
well as the majority of news publi-
cations) have failed to recognize
the fact that Ventura has not been
wrestling for the last 10 years. be-
cause he has had an active career
in politics and has even served as
mayor of a city in Minnesota.

The media blitz after his elec-
tion w