xt77sq8qfw8t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt77sq8qfw8t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2002-09-20 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, September 20, 2002 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 20, 2002 2002 2002-09-20 2020 true xt77sq8qfw8t section xt77sq8qfw8t Awards show will honor TV's best Sunday; see Scene | it s

" ”KENTUCKY

RNE

Celebrating 31 years of independence

Parking appeals now
heard by 56 Court

 

 

Judgment: SG hopes new system will make students
more comfortable with the parking appeals process

.31 _.5939909i"9h§,"l
sun WRITER

Despite all the moans
and groans about parking.
less than 10 students ap-
pealed parking tickets last
year. said Tim Robinson. Stu-
dent (’kivernment president.

That might not be the
case this year because SG‘s
newly approved parking ap-
peals process could give more
Students a reason to try to zip-
peal their tickets.

The SC Supreme (‘ourt
comprised entirely of stu
dents. has the final say on ap-
peals under the new process.

unlike in the past. when a
committee of faculty. staff
and students made the final
decision.

"Parking has always
been a big issue and this is
the first significant victory
we‘ve had." Robinson said

Much of the process
will rei‘nain the same: Stu-
dents must pay their ticket
and file an appeal with the
1K Department of Parking
and Transportation.

The student will then be
assigned a parking officer
who will look over the case.
If the student does not like
the officer's decision. he can

then appeal his ticket and go
before the Supreme Court.
The Supreme Court con-
sists of seven UK and LCC
students who are selected by
the SG president and then
approved by the SG senate.
"If students get to go
before seven of their peers
to see if the ticket was justi-
fied. they should feel more
comfortable." Robinson said.
Supreme Court Justice
Philip Wheeler said the new
appeals process should help
alleviate the job of the De-
partment of Parking and
Transportation and give stu-
dents a better chance of
winning an appeal. As it is.
there are just too many
parking issues for the De-

See PARKING on 6

Grigsby designs plan
for career after football

Shed-Amalie
Your'liohet

I. Pay the ticket and file an
appeal with the UK
Department of Parking and
Transportation.

2. Meet with an assigned
parking officer who will
look over your case and
make a decision.

3. If you do not agree with
the decision made by the
parking officer. file an
appeal to go before the 56
Supreme Court.

 

'- :;.;;;~\‘£.

 

at

moms j kmttmrr

Amid the females, interior design junior Otis Grigsby works on a project for one of his design classes. 0n the field, he is I hey

defensive lineman for the Wildcats.

A welcome addition: Interior design professor says she's happy to have
football player in a major dominated by female UK students

WSMMV

STAF F WRITER

On the field. Otis Grigsby is a monster.
running down, intimidating and dragging
the opposition to the ground.

But in the classroom. the 6- foot- 4 253-
pound defensive end for the UK football
team studies in a major taken mostly by
women. Grigsby studies the art of house
renovations. furniture placement and space
arrangement as part of his major —
interior design.

There's no doubt that the big athlete
quells some popular myths about interior
design majors.

“It s not just learning how to decorate
your living room.‘ he said “Nobody goes
to school for that."

When Grigsby decided to change his
major from engineering, his adviser sug
gested putting his art background to work
in the College of Human and Environmen
tal Sciences. Grigsby said he chose interior

design because it fit his schedule best.

“I researched the major and thought it
was something I could see myself doing af-
ter I‘m done playing football " he said.

Grigsby said he would like to eventual-
ly attend graduate school for either archi-
tecture or interior design

“I originally thought I'd like to (go to
graduate school for) architecture. but now
that I've been in the interior design pro
gram. Ive been surprised at how much I
enjoy it. " he said “Now I' m not sure which
I want to do.‘

Grigsby said several of his teammates
have asked about his experiences in the in-
terior design department.

“I tell them it's not an easy major.‘ 'he
said. “We pull all- nighters and work hard
just like any other major. And some of
them think it' 5 pretty cool that I‘ in around
mostly girls all day.‘

Allison Carll. professor of interior

SeeGlthSlYono

It’s not just
learning how
to decorate
your living
room —
nobody goes
to school for
tha .”

mum

CATSEX'I‘RA

The Cats look toward
shutting down the
Middle Tennessee State
Blue Raiders and
improving to 4-0

on the season.

http: www.kyiternel.com

 

 

Ethics board
will investigate
Patton lawsuit

Allegations: Executive Branch Ethics Commission
to probe complaints by nursing home owner

FRANKFORT ~ The Ex.
ecutive Branch Ethics Com-
mission will look into allega-
tions from a western Ken-
tucky nursing home owner
that Gov. Paul Patton traded
sex with her for special treat-
ment from state government.

Tina Conner has sued
Patton and state government.
claiming sexual harassment.
outrageous conduct and
waste. She alleges Patton
turned state regulators loose
on her nursing home when
she broke off the affair

Commission Chair-
woman Cindy Stone said
Thursday she expects to call
a special meeting.

“I think we owe it to the
state to at least touch on the
matter before Nov. 22" when
the next meeting is sched-
uled. Stone said Thursday.

The commission has
broad authority, but has
rarely exercised it in the
decade since its creation.
Stone said the commission
was not yet undertaking a for-
mal investigation at this time.

Some politicians in West-
ern Kentucky said Conner
contacted them for help in
mediating between the Cabi»
net for Health Services and
the nursing home.

State Rep. Charles Geve-
den. D»Wickliffe, and Mar
shall County Judge-Executive
Mike Miller said they made
calls on her behalf but did
not attempt to stop regulators
from doing their job.

“I made a call to the gov—
ernor‘s office but was told
that the violations were ma—
jor, and that the problems
could be resolved if she would
just cooperate." Miller said.

Miller said be contacted
Conner. “I advised her just to
cooperate and she could get
things worked out." Miller
said. In response. he said she
claimed she was being ha-
rassed but never made alle-
gations against the governor.

)eveden said Conner
also claimed she was being
mistreated by regulators. but

See PATTON on 6

 

scon usumsrtv j KERNELSIAFF

Tickling the ivori 2s
Plano performance senior Cully Bell plays a Beethoven sonata during
a master class in piano performance Thursday afternoon in the

Student Center.

UK Hospital cuts
one helicopter
from program

Cost-cutting: Facing budget cuts, UK Hospital
says returning the helicopter will save $1 million

STAFF REPORT

UK Hospital will continue
its helicopter services. but
with one less helicopter than
before. hospital officials said
Thursday

Air Medical Services will
no longer be stationed in the
airports in Jackson and Pre-
stonburg because the heli-
copter that serves those areas
will be returned to the compa-
ny that owns it. said James W.
Holsinger Jr. the senior vice
president for UK and the
chancellor for the UK (Than-
dler Medical Center

By cutting one of its two
helicopters. the hospital plans
to save $1 million. The plan is
part of the hospital‘s $22 mil-

 

The Student Newspaper at the University of Kentucky,

Lexington

 

lion in budget cuts.

The hospital had been
looking at cutting the services
since this summer. ()l‘ticials
had considered scaling back
or closing the service alto-
gether. They had also consid-
ered contracting with another
service.

Under this plan. they get
to stay in control. Holsinger
said.

After reviewmg the Air
Medical Service budget. offi-
cials realized that the heli-
copter stationed in Eastern
Kentucky. which runs for 12
hours a day for seven days a
week. was only flying 200 pa-

See AIRUFT on 6

 

  

 

 
  
  
  
  
     
  
   
  
   
  
 
  
      
  
  
  
   
   
 
  
  
   
     
   
 
  
   
   
 
   
 
  
 
   
   
   
  
   
 
   
  
   
  
 
 
  
 
   
   
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
    
   
 
   
 
 
 
  
  
 

z | FRIDAY,SEPTAENBER720.ZOOZ | neuruckvkrnnel

WIHAI FITS,

The Low-down

Since this
transmission
by transfu-

sion appears
likely. it is

likely also
that we will
need to move
toward test-
’ of donor
iood."

Dr. Jose
m
the food and
Drug Administra-
tion. on the
possibility of the
West Nile virus
being
transmitted
through blood
transfusions.

7:05 PM

 

FIRST RACE

STUDENT ID TO RECEIVE:

Festival celebrates local products

The seventh annual Central Kentucky
Harvest Festival will be Sunday. Sept. 22.
from 1 pm. to 4 pm. at Lexington's Red Mile
race track. Admission is free and there will
be food-tasting. cooking demonstrations.
craft demonstrations and entertainment by
Kentuckybased musicians. The activities
are designed to create public awareness of
the quality of Kentucky based products.

Walk will remember lost children

Babies lost through miscarriage. still
birth or neonatal death will be remembered
at A Walk to Remember at :l pm. Sunday.
Oct. 6 at Pavilion l at Jacobson Park on
Richmond Road. The event is sponsored by
Caring Together. a group of concerned
health professionals at the [K Hospital and
UK Children‘s Hospital. For more informa-
tion. call (859) Illll-tiltil

Escort service still needs sponsor

Student (lorermnent IS continuing to
accept bids from parties interested in oper-
ating (‘atWalk. the campus escort service
provided for student safety. All interested
parties must submit bids by .3 pm. today. A
committee will review the applications and
rank each application in order. The commit-
tee‘s recommendations will then be submit-
ted to the president. 'I‘Im Robinson.

Chinese event sponsored by UK

(‘hinese music. folk songs. Tai (‘hi
demonstrations and (‘hinese poetry will be
highlights at the (‘hinese MidAutumn Fes‘
tival today at (Stilt) pm at the Boat Mooring
Pavilion at Jacobson Park. The event is or-
ganized by the I'K ('hinese language faculty
and students For more information. con»
tact Beverly HongFincher at
bevhong‘uukycdu or (Iarol Bing Yu at
cbyu2u ukyedu. Everyone is welcome.

Center invites guests to open house

The Student Organizations (‘enter is
inviting organizational reprt'sentatives. ad-
visers and university guests to attend their
open house on Wednesday. Sept. 23 from -l
pm. to 3:150 pm. in room 106 of the Student
(‘enter Refreshments will be provided. (‘all

(859) 2.37 low or (8.39) 253771109 by Sept. 21 if

you plan to attend.

 

MO’ PROBLEMS:
sun "P. ”my"
Combs is taking a
legal and financial
beatdown over a
claim that he
bears responsibili-
ty for a beatdown
a North Carolina
limo driver says
he suffered in
1995. The Win-
ston-Salem Jour-
nal reports that a
Forsyth County
judge handed
down the $2.45
million award on
Sept. 10 in a law-
suit filed by
Cedric Bobby
Lemon, who
claims he was
beaten by body-
guards Combs had
hired to protect
then-client Mary
J. Blige. Lemon
claimed in his
lawsuit that he
had a backstage
pass for a Bilge
concert at Joel
Coliseum, but that
guards clearing a
path for her on
her way out of
the arena punched
him and kicked
him in the back.
Lemon's com-
plaint said he suf-
fered a broken an-
kle and a bruised
hand and was now
"permanently"
unable to partici-
pate in "active
sports." Combs
failed to appear in
court to contest
the lawsuit within
a 30-day limit of
receiving the
complaint, the
judge ruled. so
Lemon won the
suit by default.

Kentucky Catholic priest charged

LOUISVILLE v A Jefferson (‘ounty
judge set a trial to begin in six months for a
retired Roman Catholic priest charged with
42 felony counts of sexual misconduct In
Jefferson County. The Rev. Louis E. Miller.
who has pleaded innocent to the charges.
appeared in court Thursday before Judge
Ann O'Malley Shake. An attorney for Miller
and the state prosecutor said they expect
the trial to last at least two weeks. Miller's
attorney, David Lambertus. said he would
need until March to examine the state‘s evi-
dence. “There is a ton of material , some
of it going back as far as 40 years.” Lamber-
tus said.

Police begin search for escapees

FRANKFORT Kentucky State Police
took to the road Thursday to cap a months-
long investigation and round up prisoners
who have escaped from custody in recent
years. Dubbed "Operation Homecoming."
KSP and the Department of (‘orrections
started out with a list of some 100 former
prisoners. According to spokeswoman Lisa
Carnahan. many of those were found to be
in custody in other states or even (lead. Twu
of the former inmates on the list were cap-
tured Thursday. one in Cincinnati and one
in Detroit. Corrections Commissioner Vert-
ner Taylor said the initiates still owe their
debt.

Blood to be tested for West Nile

ATLANTA Government health offi-
cials Thursday said West Nile can apparent-
ly be spread by transfusion. and announced
that all blood donations will probably be
screened for the virus as soon as a test can
be developed. “Since this transmission by
transfusion appears likely. it is likely also
that we will need to move toward testing of
donor blood." said Dr. Jesse Goodman of
the Food and Drug Administration. “While
the investigation is ongoing. we believe
there‘s sufficient evidence when you put it
all together that there likely is a risk."
Goodman said he could not predict how
long it would take to develop such a test or
how much it would cost.

Tropical storm becomes hurricane

HAVANA A tropical storm was up-
graded to a hurricane Thursday as it gath-
ered strength and headed slowly toward
Cuba. prompting the evacuation of tens of
thousands of people in the island‘s rural
West. Hurricane Isidore. the second At-
lantic hurricane of the 2002 season. is ex-
pected to drench Cuba‘s western half
through the weekend. with a possible 2 feet
of rain. the National Hurricane Center in

 

 

 

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BAD BLOOD:
A heroin over-
dose killed Dee
Dee knmone in
June. the coro-
ner's office said
Tuesday. Tests on
blood samples
taken during an
autopsy found
that Ramone had
a lethal amount
in his body, coro-
ner's office
spokesman David
Campbell said.
Ramone, a found-
ing member of
the punk rock
Ramones, was
found dead June
5 on the couch of
his home by his
wife. Drug para-
phernalia includ-
ing a syringe was
found nearby.
His death, at age
50, came it
weeks after the
band was induct-
ed into the Rock
and Roll Hall of
Fame and 14
months after the
group's 49-year-
old lead singer
Joey Ramone
died of cancer.
Dee Dee Ramone
was one of the
band's major
songwriters and
its bassist. The
first album, "Ra-
mones," was re-
leased in 1976.

Nationally Ranked Men’s
Soccer Host The
Traditional Bank Invitational

 
  

 

Miami said. Isidore's maximum Wind
speeds reached 75 mph Thursday after-
noon. with higher gusts. forecasters said.
Storms become hurricanes when sus
tained wind speeds reach 74 mph. While
upgrading Isidore's status. the Miami hur-
ricane center also issued a tropical storm
watch for the lower Florida Keys. “Any~
thing in the Gulf of Mexico is a potential
target in the next six or seven days." said
James Franklin. hurricane specialist at
the National Hurricane (‘enter in Miami. . '

More terror suspects in custody

KARACHI. Pakistan Pakistani pow
lice. working with FBI investigators. ar»
rested five men and accused them of"
links to an al-Qaida-backed group that
has targeted foreigners. churches and
American fast food chains. a senior police
official said Thursday. Among those ar»
rested was the owner of a soft drinks and
ice cream shop in Karachi. identified
only as Masood. who allegedly stored
weapons and sheltered members of the
militant group I’IilI'KillllldVIltllllll(lt*t‘n Al
Almi. the official said. speaking on condi
tion of anonymity. Four suspected associ-
ates of Masood were taken into custody
in the overnight raids on their homes in
three Karachi neighborhotxls. It was the
latest in a series of arrests that Pakistani
leaders claim broke the back of AlAlmi.
a domestic terror group that arose in Pak
istan in response to President Pervez
Musharraf‘s crackdown against Islamic
extremists.

OPEC maintains oil production levels

OSAKA. Japan OPEC ministers
decided Thursday to keep oil production
levels unchanged through year's end. de-
spite calls from the West for more out-
put. and fears a US. war on Iraq could
disrupt supplies. Consuming nations had
lobbied for an increase in output to cut
rising fuel bills. but OPEC figured the
market is adequately supplied and any
increase in price has been based on a
"war premium" whipped up by Washing-
ton's saber-rattling about toppling Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein. In an ac»
knowledgment of concerns that high
prices could prove economically damag-
ing to oil-importing nations. the minis
ters said they would gather again on
Dec. 12 at OPEC headquarters in Vienna
to take a fresh look at the market. OPEC
pledged more oil would be pumped if the
price moves too high. with some saying
they would watch closely for any action
against Iraq that might lead to supply
shortages. or hoarding by consumers
that could nudge prices upward.

Compiled from staff and wire reports.

 

  
  

 

 

        
   
   
    
        

   

 

U.S. was aware
of possible plot

Who knew what when: Congress examining intelligence failures;
government had a dozen warnings that planes could be used as weapons

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON 7 The US. gov-
ernment was aware of the threat posed
by Osama bin Laden before the Sept. 11
attacks, but didn‘t have enough specif-
ic intelligence to stop the attacks. a
State Department official told a con-
gressional panel Thursday.

“Basically, we know that bin
Laden had the means and the intent to
attack Americans, both at home and
abroad," Deputy Secretary of State
Richard Armitage said in written testi-
mony to the House and Senate Intelli—
gence committees.

Armitage spoke on the second day
of the committees' public hearings
into the Sept. 11 attacks. The commit-
tees, who have been meeting together
behind closed doors since June, are ex-
amining intelligence failures leading
up to the attacks and will recommend
changes.

In a preliminary report presented
Wednesday. staff director Eleanor Hill
revealed that the government had
many more warnings about terrorist
threats before Sept. 11. 2001. than had
been previously disclosed. A dozen
warnings suggested airplanes could be
used as weapons. None specifically pre-
dicted the Sept. 11 attacks.

Armitage said the government
was aware of the likelihood of attacks
and demanded that Afghanistan‘s Tal-
iban rulers stop supporting terrorists.
The Taliban were harboring bin Laden
and his al-Qaeda organization.

“What we didn’t know was at a tac-
tical level." Armitage said. “We did not
know exactly what target al-Qaeda in-
tended to attack and how and when."

Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz said lessons from the attack
show the need for the United States to
take action against Iraq.

"When people threaten openly to
kill Americans. we should take them
very seriously." he said. “That is true
of Osama bin Laden and it is true of
the regime in Baghdad.“

in her report and testimony
Wednesday: Hill did not say whether
the Sept. 11 attacks could have been
prevented even if intelligence agencies
had responded better to dozens of
warnings of possible attacks.

Some lawmakers do not
many doubts.

“Given the events and signals of
the preceding decade. the intelligence
community could have and in my judg-
ment should have anticipated an at-
tack on U.S. soil on the scale of 9 11."
said Sen. Jay Rockefeller. D-WVa.

Pressed by Rep. Ray Lahood. R-Ill..
about whether agencies had enough in-
formation to have prevented the at»
tacks. Hill said it was possible. but
there were no guarantees.

There are too many questions. she
said. Could the plot have been uncov-
ered? What would happen if they had
identified some of the hijackers? What
if they were able to listen in their con-
versations?

“It‘s one ‘if‘
said.

Her report also noted that during
the Clinton administration in August
1999. the intelligence community re-
ceived information indicating that bin
Laden had decided to “target" then-
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
then-Defense Secretary William Cohen
and CIA Director George Tenet.

The intelligence community inter-
preted “target" to mean “assassinate."
the report said.

CIA and FBI officials are expect-
ed to appear before the committees
Friday.

have

after another.” Hill

 

Bush asks Congress
for war authority

Bush: "I don't trust Iraq and neither should the free world"; resolution
would give Bush war-making authority, restate U.S. policy with Iraq

ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON * President Bush
asked Congress Thursday for authority
to use “all means he determines to be
appropriate. including force" to disarm
and overthrow Iraq's Saddam Hussein.
saying the United States will take ac-
tion on its own if the UN. Security
Council balks.

The president sent to Capitol Hill
his proposed wording for a resolution
that would give him such broad war-
making authority. He told reporters in
the Oval Office that the power to use
force was all-important. “If you want
to keep the peace. you’ve got to have the
authorization to use force,“ be said.

The president immediately began
trying to build support for the pro—
posed resolution that fills little more
than two pages and that he wants Con
gress to approve before lawmakers go
home to campaign for the Nov. 5 elec—
tions.

A letter to Congress accompanied
his proposed wording authorizing “all
means he determines to be appropri-
ate. including force, in order to enforce
the United Nations Security Council
resolutions (on disarmament), defend
the national security interests of the
United States against the threat posed
by Iraq and restore international peace
and security in the region."

At the White House. nine Democra‘
tic and Republican lawmakers emerged
from a morning audience with Bush
predicting bipartisan support for the
commander in chief. “I think we have
no choice but to have the strongest sup
port possible for the president's efforts
here.” said Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash.

’ The president also stressed he is
not on the verge of declaring war. said
Rep. John McHugh. R-N.Y.

"The most important word I heard
inside today from the president was the
Word ‘if.’ He made it repeatedly clear
that this resolution is not intended as a
declaration of war. it is not intended as
an immediate prior step to aggres—
sion," said McHugh.

Bush spoke to reporters after meet-
ing with Secretary of State Colin Pow-
ell on his difficult diplomatic effort to
draft a UN. Security Council resolution
against Iraq. The administration has to
overcome strong reservations by Rus-
sia and France. which have veto power
In the Security Council.

“The United Nations Security
Council must work with the United
States and other concerned parties to

 

send a clear message that we expect
Saddam to disarm." Bush said.

“And if the United Nations Securi»
ty Council won‘t deal with the problem.
the United States and some of our
friends will." he declared.

The gap between Russian and
American viewpoints was underlined
Thursday in comments by Defense
Minister Sergei Ivanov. Upon arriving
at the Pentagon to meet with Defense
Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld. Ivanov
said he believed UN. weapons inspec~
tors will succeed in settling the ques—
tion of whether iraq has weapons of
mass destruction.

“Being experienced in that sort of
business , both Americans and Rus-
sians I think we can easily establish
(whether) there exist or not weapons of
mass destruction technology." Ivanov
said. Rumsfeld. who stood by silently
as Ivanov spoke. has said repeatedly
that inspections cannot be 100 percent
reliable because Iraq has a long history
of deceiving inspectors.

And Bush lashed out at the notion
that Iraq is in talks with the United Na~
tions about resuming inspections:
“There are no negotiations to be held
with Iraq. I don't trust Iraq and nei»
ther should the free world."

He declined to name any of the al-
lies he‘s counting on for support in the
event of war. saying only that “time
will tell."

In what some at the Pentagon in
terpret as Iraqi precautions against a
possible surprise US. attack. Saddam
in recent weeks has moved some mili—
tary forces into civilian areas. officials
said. They said it did not appear to be
the kind of large-scale movement of
forces that would indicate Saddam ex-
pects an imminent Americanled at-
tack. but rather a precaution against a
short-notice assault.

As Bush spoke. White House advis-
ers were behind the scenes telephoning
congressional leaders with notice that
Bush's proposal was on its way to Capi-
tol Hill.

Bush said he wanted the legisia
ture to give him not only the power to
make war with Saddam. but also an ex-
plicit restatement of U.S. policy that
Saddam must be overthrown.

On Capitol Hill Thursday. a group
of House Democrats condemned the
move toward military action. with
Rep. Dennis Kucinich. D-Ohio. cali-
ing it “unjustified. unwarranted and
illegal.“

' resignation l FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 2002 L 3

Hints of planes as
weapons came as early
as 1994

Eleanor Hill. the staff director of the con-
gressional inquiry into the Sept. ll
attacks, released a 30-page report

Wednesday that details previously classi-

fied terrorist threats collected by U.S.
intelligence and law enforcement officials.
The report lays out a number of signals
that terrorists were considering using air-
craft as weapons.

Algerian terrorists hijacked an Air France
airliner and threatened to fly it Into the
Eiffel Tower. The terrorists were killed
when French commandos stormed
the plane.

PUIIce In the Philippines raided an apart-
ment in Manila and found materials that
suggested a plot to crash a hijacked plane
into CIA headquarters outside of
Washington. One of the plotters was
Ramzi Yousef, who was later captured and
convicted in the I993 bombing of the
World Trade Center. Another was Khalid
Shaikh Mohammed, whom U.S. officials
now believe masterminded the
Sept. ll attacks.

U.S. intelligence received reports of a
planned suicide attack by associates of
known terrorists, including an aI-anda
operative, that would consist of flying a

plane from Afghanistan to the United

States to attack the White House.

U.S. intelligence received reports of a pos-
sible Hezbollah plot to hijack a Japanese
plane over Israel and crash it into
Tel Aviv.

The FBI and CIA received reports that a
terrorist group had bought a remote-con-
trol plane that could he used to crash into

a building.

U.S. intelligence learned that a group of
unidentified Arabs planned to fly an explo-
sives-laden plane from a foreign country
Into the World Trade Center. The Informa-
tion was passed to the FBI and Federal
Aviation Administration. The FBI took no
action; the FAA found the plot
”highly unlikely."

U.S. intelligence learned that Osama bin
Laden's next operation could involve flying
an aircraft loaded with explosives into a
U.S. airport and detonating it. This infor-
mation was supplied to senior government
officials in late I998.

U.S. intelligence received reports of a bin
Laden plot involving aircraft in the New
York and Washington areas.

U.S. intelligence learned that an Islamic
extremist group in Turkey was considering
crashing an airplane into the tomb of a
Turkish leader.

-% g

U.S. intelligence received reports that Iraq
had formed a suicide pilot unit to use
against U.S. and British forces In the
Persian Gulf. The CIA considered this

report disinformation.

; 2} :2 §‘%
U. S. Intelligence received reports of an al-
anda member, an American citizen. who

was planning to fly an explosives-laden
hang glider Into the Egyptian presidential

. palace.

   

A walk-In at FBI's Newark, il.J., office
claimed he was supposed to meet five or
six people in the United States to hijack a

piano and either fly it to Afghanistan or

blow It up. The man claimed he had been

trained In a camp In Pakistan. He passed

an FBI polygraph, but the FBI was unable
to verify his story.

is y.

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A U.S. Intelligence source with terrorist
connections speculated that bin Laden
would be interested In commercial pilot:
as potential terrorists. The source was
offering speculation rather than specific
knowledge, U.S. intelligence officials say.

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Sign} innit

MHNLC‘UN.’ i3

Sewing FUUII
Mon. - Sat. 11 am - 12:30 am
Sundaill -11 pm

ZWPYIIUIIIIS
4-1Pilla1lI-1AIII

IIIIIIKS BY Till llTEll

I’lll'lU Willi!

lililii i iii

Week of September 7622,. 2002

The Campus Calendar is produced by the Otiu e {2' Stories: A2 122. 2I2e~.
Registered Student Orgs and UK Depts. car: sulmn‘. 2:2‘rrr2ratirz:. to
FREE onliue ONE WEEK PRIOR to the MONDAY iitormat2.>n is to super
at: http://www.uky.edu/Campus Calendar. Cali 257-8867 tr 2 own

information

 

   

’La Residence francnise 5 6pm Kt enelamt

Hall . 2
“Fall Retreat September 20- 228 air oi ti2 Fri
earth Light of the World Le aye at 4 30m

Newman Center in the lobby

 

“Chi Omega Golf Classic Low 6 12 00 N02 2

Tee time 1:00pm, Widows Watch (50“ Course SAR tr 2 x: ..1.,2- 22. Sid-2 '.
adults

'Robort Herndon Reception 6 0.0 P 00:22-2- 2’-‘i in! 1...“. -. “3H

FOODI

SPORTS
“UK Men's Home Soccer Game vs. Cleveland State
Soccer Complex

'UK Women’s Home Soccer Game vs. SE Missouri State 2 30: 22
UK Soccer Complex

'Tno Kwon Do practice 5 30 ‘

'_tt‘{ ‘i‘ . -

(“LUZ A2." ii.” I ‘1

 

ARTS MOVIES

'Chambor Music Concert S212..22.l222- ‘l‘ 2.. .. 2 . 22 2n.
Noon. Little Fine Arts L2: i m2 .Jciw ‘i2 t N m Ii I‘ . “iii
SPORTS

'UK Homo Football Game Against Middle
Tennessee State. 1:30pm Commonwealth
Stadium'

‘Tae Kwon Do practice it 003m 12 300w
Alumni Gym Lott

’Womon'a Rugby Match Noon Rugby P27. ii

.21

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SPORTS
'UK Mon' a Home Soccer Game vc. Coastal Carolina 2 10m 2 Iik
Soccer Complex