xt7pzg6g4s26 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7pzg6g4s26/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1997-09-11 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 11, 1997 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 11, 1997 1997 1997-09-11 2020 true xt7pzg6g4s26 section xt7pzg6g4s26 .- .. . , , -. ‘ .._-~»~. I» "

UK profissor stars in tonight’s KET
documentaiy on Kentucky pioneer Boone

By Brian Dunn
Assistant News Editor

Hidden snugly behind a hill
on Highway 68 in Nicholas
County sits Daniel Boone's last
Kentucky cabin. A meandering
log fence circles the cabin,
which nestles up to a muddy
pond.

The cabin, a one-room shack
roughly the size of a one-car
garage, has not surrendered to
the rain, wind or snow over the
last 200 years. It sturdily guards
the pond as sunlight sprinkles
through a few shade trees that
rise above.

The simple tranquillity that
defines the place, however, does
not parallel Boone's last years in
Kentucky, said Dan Smith, a
contributing producer of A
Walk With Boone, which airs at
8 tonight on KET.

“He had some dark and dis-
turbing thou hts about Ken—
tucky,” he 88k?

Tonight’s documentary will
follow UK historian Thomas
Clark and Yale historian john
Mack Faragher as they discuss

Boone while touring sites he
pioneered.

The program allows the his—
torians to get “out of the dusty
libraries and walk the ground,"
Smith said. “To talk about how
elusive a figure Boone is."

One site they‘ll tour is the
log cabin in Nicholas County
where Boone lived before mov-
ing to Missouri in 1790 to get

See BOONE on 2

TBA“. BLAZER Daniel Boone

    

x'iisii‘l hilflfll' In this state. “I lc
lcfi Kentucky under (I cloiid. "
ciii'iltoi~ Ron David Biwiir .uiid.

 

Movie documents li e
and times of trail!) zer

  

 

3 Fort Boonesborough

  
  
 
 
    

@ Comm Gm, caivlng is Boone's tavern
Boone's M @ Boone‘s last log cabin
Boone‘s Station 0 Boone‘s grave site

 

 

cums aostuiiiiit iii-n.1,”;

 

 

Facility changes to he discussed

By Hllll Wll
Senior Staff Writer

Sometime next week, Vice
Chancellor James Kuder will
meet with the Chancellor Elisa-
beth Zinser to discuss the find-
ings of a report repared this
summer by the ommittee on
Campus Recreation.

One facility on campus the
two plan to discuss, the weight
room in the Seaton Center, is
an example of one of UK’s
biggest problems in recreation:

,U

 

 

trying to accommodate too
man eople in too little space.

“The bi gest problem as far
as the weight room goes is that
there is not enough space,” eco-
nomics senior Greg Goebel
said.

“It’s tiny and all the
machines are close together,"
said English sophomore Karyn
Hinkle. “People walking
through the room have to
squeeze between peo le who
are working out. T at can
interrupt your workout."

8

Many students agree that the
size of the wei ht room is a
problem, especia ly during busy
times like before S ring Break.

“Sometimes l ave to wait
(for equipment), especiall dur-
ing spriryg semester,” sai Ash-
ley (irif ith, a dictetics senior.
“Peo le definitely go (to the
weig t room) in the spring
more so than the fall."

“Closer to Spring Break, the
more crowded it is,” Goebel
said. “It really gets ridiculous."

See RECREATION on 4

 

I‘BIIBSTQIIGII TDI‘ KBIITIIBIW

FRANKFURT — The twin spires ofChurchill
Downs and the galloping mare and foal on the
current Kentucky license plate are hitting the road
after nearly a decade.

The new plates are a simpler design. with green
mountains on the bottom as foreground. a blue
sky at the top and a white outline of the state in
the middle.

The new plates will be issued as registrations
come up for renewal during the birth month of
the vehicle owner starting in _lanuary.

By popular demand. the county name at the
bottom of the plate will be about a third larger
than the current version. The plates will have
three numerals followed by three letters. instead
of the other way around as they are now, The
word “Kentucky" underlined by “Bluegrass State"
is at the top. The design came from the manufac—
turer ofthe reflective material. H1 (Zo., with stig-
gestions from several state agencies.

Mandatory HIV reporting "Fund

B( )ST( )N w The distinguished New lingland
journal of Medicine is urging mandatory reporting
of HIV infections to state health departments to
increase the chances people will get early treatment.

More than halfof all states now require that the
names ofinfected people be reported to confidential
registries. However, New York and California, the
two with the most cases by far, do not require this.

Early in the epidemic, the need to keep .-\ll)S
infections private was considered more important
than any public health benefits.

However, opinion has shifted, and mandatory
reporting has grown less controversial in recent
years, especially with the advent of treatments for
people who are infected but not yet sick.

NAMEdropping

Ill-locus lllana 8m to In released

NEW YORK — Elton John's special version
of “Candle in the Wind” for
Princess Di will survive well
beyond the princess' funeral.

The new version of the song was
quickly roe-recorded after Saturday‘s
service and will be available as a
charity single on Sept. 16. Experts
say it could rival some of the biggest-
sellin songs of all time.

John said he didn‘t intend to per— John
form the song again live. Profits will
go to the. Diana, Princess of Wales, Memorial Fund.

(.‘mpiledfimn wire reports

 

 

 

  

 

 
  

   
 
  
  
 
   
   

 

  

 

as :-‘. a 3.5.5.
: Newsroom: 257-1915
V E K ' ' 257-2871
s it
A Fit“ d l.com
' Editor in cm... - Smith
,_ ‘ Managing Editor. . . Campbell
3 Associate Editor, ..... '? rt Dawson
News Editor ........ =, .......... Ritchie
Campus Editor ........ Herrcn
3 Assistant News Editor . '. . . . ....... Dunn
EditorialEditot ...... . ...... ‘
Sports Editor. ......... .. . L ................ Jay. G
EntertainmenuEditor- ...... . ......... 0.].ESoipl‘j
KeG Editor . . . . .......................... ..... .(ilaire Johnston
' Online Editor ............................... W ,, fsson
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1 WEdit .. .312: .................. '..- ............... Phalsaphie
" aniutsEdttor ......... _ ..... _ .. 'Rosenthal
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Elevator
UK loo/es into possible

Commons elevator
From PAGE 1

Depending on the re ort’s
findings, renovation may e as
extensive as two new elevators, or

as minor as adding a wheelchair
lift or altering the street curbs,
Kames said.

“It’ll give them the advantage
that they need, when or if they get
the elevator. Nobody has ever
researched the cost of this dog-
gone thing,” said third-year social
work major Chris Bederka, who
sug ested that the engineering
stu ents compete in a contest to
come up with the rough design of

the elevator, should it 0 through.

“I don’t think a li would be
too expensive, so we mi ht go that
route,” Cruz said. “Something
needs to be done.”

UK has also eyed North Cam-
pus as an area needing improve—
ments.

With the exception of Blazer
and Jewell halls, stairs lead to the
main entrances of all the dorms on
North Campus.

The university renovated the
first floor of Jewell Hall for stu-
dents in wheelchairs, but in Blazer
Hall, there are no first-floor
rooms and the students must
depend on an elevator that’s too
small, Kames said.

Bederka added one more area

that needs attention. 4
“Ever been in a wheelchair and”;

tried to get into the Administra—
tion Building?”

 

llWBStIII‘S

Builders: Ban will

hurt UK students
From PAGE 1

been uncooperative and unwilling
to share information.

Prohibiting construction of
housing for students, Deaton said,
keeps housing rices around cam—
pus high. An keeping student
interests in mind is crucial to the
community.

“If we don’t nurture the growth
of the University, we’re going to
be cutting the growth of Lexing-
ton, if not stopping it,” she said.

But the association’s issue isn’t
with students, said member Dan
Rowland, a history professor at
UK. Rather, it’s with the concen-
tration of students the complex
would bring.

“Students have their own kind
of lifestyle,” he said, which tends
to include later hours and more
noise. “It makes it difficult for
other people to live their
lifestyles.”

A smattering of students live in
the neighborhood, he said, and
they are an asset to the communi-
ty. Students have served as officers
in the neighborhood association.

“I have no objection to students
living in the neighborhood and
being part of a sort of ‘mixed use’
group,” he said.

 

 

 

 

mm was mm;

"Mime ”EBA" Dan Rowland, a UK professor and member of the neighborhood association, says the South Hill

area should stay fire of student housing.

But dropping nearly 100 stu-
dents into a single section of the
nei hborhood isn’t good for any-
bo y, he added.

Students who rent apartments
have a different perspective on
maintenance than owners of the
historic houses in the area, who
often spend thousands of dollars

to improve their houses, Rowland
continued.

And, he said, living in such a
concentrated situation does not
offer students the benefit of expo-
sure to various “es of people.
They mi ht as we 've on campus
in a resi ence hall, he added.

Rowland’s involvement in

efforts to preserve the neighbor-

hood dates to 1974, when he
moved to South Hill and joined
the association. In 1975, the asso-
ciation sued the Lexington Center
Corporation to limit construction
of the Civic Center parking lot.

As a result, the east side of

Merino Street was saved.

 

 

 

 

Rnight’s show agrees
new look at exp rer
From me 1

awa from the Kentucky he hated.
“ entuc did not treat him
well,” said on David Bryant, a
rare books curator for the Ken-
tucky, Historical Society and
Boone’s fifth-great ne hew. “He
left Kentucky under a c and.”
Once Kentucky realized the
popularity of the Boone legend,
owever, state officials lobbied for
Boone to be buried in Frankfort
when he died in 1845, Bryant said.
After he was buried, his son
stood at the grave and said, “He is
now overlooking the Kentucky
Rizer. Whether he is happy or not

Boone was a pioneer, not a
financial man, B t said.
‘Boone lost tens of ousands of
acres of valuable Bluegrass.”

He was a “dismal failure eco-
nomical] ," Smith said, who has
won an y for his drama Ala-
more.

But finances had nothing to do
with theiife he led as a hunter and
pioneer, he said. He lived a life
that seems primitive to today’s

souety.
He lived a life of a settler.
In addition to trekking the

 

 

 

 

Wilderness Road through the
Cumberland Gap, Boone and
other settlers immi ated to cen-
tral Kentucky from orth Caroli-
na in 1775 to establish Boones—
borough, located in what is now
Madison County.

Fort Boonesborough still
stands today.
Boone also left his mark

throughout Southeastern Ken-
me and Central Kentucky.
he Kentucky Historical Soci-
ety recognizes sites such as a carv—
ing in a rock on the Cumberland
River that reads, “D. Boon l77l.”
But Boone wasn’t the great
ioneer that legend has portrayed
him, Bryant said.

He said Boone once returned
home after having been missing
for three days.

Someone asked, “Did you get
lost?”

“Well, I can’t so I 5:20“, but
I was bewildered or e days,"
Boone said.

A Walk with Boom will follow
Clarkand Fangherasthetellsim-
ilar stories and explore Boone’s life
and the places where it happened.

“It shows Fara er, one of
Boone’s most note Members,
and Clark, Kentu s ' orian
laureate, walking, ' , Isiah-
' , sometimes ' a t o
iBngone was,” Snug said. “He was
a farmore complexfigurethan the
legends t.”

“He is the image of frontier
Kentucky,” Bryant said.

By Charles Shamakar
Stafl Writer

The water runs cold after
your second minute in the show-
er. After that, an odor that
knocks you to the floor like an
up rent from Evander Holy-
fieiiizmanates from your milk.

Just asyou thinkyour daywill
brighten, an elevator ride
becomes an adventure that takes

ou through every possible
uman emotion.

Bein suspended 15 stories
above e friendly front doors of
Blanding Tower, your heart feels
lik; itlsasturgedlmooyopgstom-
ac an I: n crying
like a ba . M

For some students this night-
mare of elevation-via-stuck-ele-
vator has become reality.

“Compared to the number of
students who use elevators on
campus, this is a rare occur-
rence,” said Allen Rieman, direc-
tor of Auxiliary Services. “But it
does happen often; it is part of

' an elevator.”

“gloat accidents happen when
someone fools with controls or

 

Elevator problems
not the norm at UK

switches that they shouldn’t,”
Rieman said.

Ste 5 to survive an elevator
break own are few:

VRemain Calm.

VLocate the emergency tele-
phone or intercom and contact

elg.

followmg' theaesim este
whaty could be your mostpdrea ed
lifeexperieneemnbeoomeahero—
kmyofmngandtriumph.

Panic can your greatest
enemy in such a situation,
Reiman said.

“If you why calm andi disehthe

emergencyp one rovi e , el
willbe ° tchediinmediately,E
Rieman said.
Although the situation in
Blan ' ower Monday where
two in 'duals were stuck 30
mm in an elevator, took
longer than expected to be
resolved, most cases can be han-
dled withinafewminutes.

Students who depend on ele-
vators shouldn’t to deal
with sudden brea
the ' tsgooutandtheride
abru ms, Reiman says to

stayealm

 

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Class at 2001 welcomed to "It

Smith tells

studen ts to
trust faith

By Brandy Berry

Contributing Writer

Gerald Smith hauled UPS
boxes to et through undergradu-
ate school.

Exhausted from work and
classes, he would fall asleep at
stoplights.

He cleaned other people’s
offices and stared at the degrees
that hung on the walls, dreaming
of his own.

He failed biology twice.

He received his Ph.D. from
UK before the age of 30 and is
now an associate professor in the
history department at UK and a
local associate minister.

The guest speaker at the second
annual African-American Student
Convocation Ceremony, Gerald
Smith welcomed the class of 2001
yesterday afternoon with the mes—
sage that when it comes to achiev-
ing success, “It‘s What’s On The
Inside That Counts."

After speaking of the obstacles
he overcame, his speech encour—
aged students to rely on their
inner strength and faith to reach

 

 

    

 

a
3|

minim FAHRIS kernel m

SPEAK“ MAW Gerald Smith, an associate profiasor ofhirtoty.

stressed students should look to their anrertory to help them overcome adversity.

their goals.

“I believe in prayer, patience
and perseverance." Smith said.
“Adversity is inevitable, but as
long as you have these key ele-
ments in your life, you will over—
come adversity."

Lauretta Byars, vice chancellor
of Minority Affairs, who 5 on-
sored the event, introduced) the
ceremony by asking students to
take pride in their black ancestors.

“Remember the heritage ofour

people, the wisdom of our families
and the civil rights advocates who
allowed us to be where we are
today," she said.

She challenged the students to
continue their academic success
even though it's not easy and to
remember they are not traveling
alone.

“Too often students come to
college saying ‘V'Vho cares about
what we do?‘ \Vell, we want to
show them there are a lot of peo-

 

[\t"/!/lt") [\rnirl IhunJuy, September ll, I997 a

 

OPKN SUN. 16 FM

SALE

  

ALTERIORS

\‘u )lti :tN rm "ll

ple that care we. feel it s nice to SlOREWlDi m'm'me . lighting . UCCQSSMH‘S
take the time during the year to BurStao/s
show them this." M m" 0" 259.0867

Kegii d Auihte ler

 

l32 w. third sl lex

 

 

“I feel like it was a great oppor~
tunity for African American stu—

 

dents to meet administrators and
faculty." freshman .Vlariojohnson
said.

“It gives us a chance to start off
on the right foot here," he said.

“Statements of Commitment"
were offered by faculty, staff, stu—
dents, Chancellor lilisabcth
Zinser and Dean of L'ndcrgradu—
ate Studies Louis Swift, who
advised the students to depend on
each other through college.

“It is an opportunity for us as
faculty members to look students

[TIC Anlerican Civil Liberties Union
Organizational Meeting

UK ACLU supports;

'[ltC right to equal treatment under the law
'[llc right to read and express what one chooses

Scptcrtnhc'r I7 ~ ‘3:_’s() in thc sttlclc-nt
()i‘gzinizzttion (Ionic-r in tlit- Stink-lit (Icntcr

For more iii/iii‘tilrlllitll. cull litlii'iiril at .37.}- 5893

 

 

 

 

in the eye and say we’re here for
you," Zinser said.

“I want them to be comfortable
coming up to us and asking for

help."

 

Besides working as an assistant " "‘
professor, Smith was recently
named director of the African . ‘9
American Studies and Research available a,
Program, has written two books atombry'!‘ :5
and belongs to numeroUs profes— ‘
sional organizations. Garfield at Marks
lle organized the first Black NewFrontter i.
. . . , ..
Student L nion s Lyman‘l ._lohn— Cousin Johnny
son Awards Banquet in 1982.
which continues to attract new 525
members. ForJoseph
“I want students to believe that "
(iod plus hard work equals

achievement.“ Smith said.

 

Ollicial: Students promoted too easily 5

Some pupils not
ready for move
to next grade

.‘liroriated Preys

\VASHINGTON — The head
of one of the nation’s largest
teachers' unions says too many
school systems are too willing to
promote pupils even though they
are not prepared to move on to
the next grade.

_i—i
——¥—_———_

“Neither social protnotion
nor holding kids back without
help is a successful strategy for
improving learning," Sandra
Feldman. president of the Amer—
ican Federation of 'l‘eachers said
Tuesday.

She spoke at the National Press
Club in conjunction with release
of a report by the ‘)~l(),(l()()—tnem—
bcr union entitled “Passing on
Failure: District Promotion Poli<
cies and Practices."

The study examined 85 school
systems across the nation and
concluded that most either put
strict limits on when pupils can

-
__

be held back, or tacitly encourage
teachers to pass them even if
their academic work is not up to
standard.

”That is a clear message to
promote socially," Miss Feldman
said in her luncheon address.

(Siting examples frotn the
report, she said students in
Orange County, Fla, can be held
back only once in elementary
school and in New Orleans they
can be held back only twice.

()ther districts forbid holding
back students with limited
English—speaking skills or who
have learning disabilities.

Don't Miss Out!

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Among other findings:

VSome districts prohibit
retention in specific grades or set
a e limits to move older students
alimg.

VStudent progress often is
iudged according to vague .md
varying criteria.

VTeachers play only an advi-
sory role in promotion decisions.

'01in 15 percent of the dis-

 

 

 

 

     

tricts mention tutoring .iiid l5 0
percent call for alternative pro— I ‘ '- s

grams and strategies such as lran- ltt't'lt'a}, tom ‘ I
sitional classes or extended E4 v, 4. ' 3

. . s . ‘ L“’7 ‘5.’ v rt.
instruction for pupils who are held 1 ‘ ' ‘ ”7d.“

    
 

back.

Fayette Moll 272-3401

 

 

 

 

Really want to stand out in
your next interview?

Learn Microsoft Office 97'. After all. 90 percent
of Fortune 500 companies run Office- making
it the first choice of trendsetters everywhere.

Office 97.
it’s the experience they’re looking for.

Visit your campus computer store today and
take advantage of special student pricing!

 

UK Computer Store
128 Peterson Service Building

WIn a real standout — a Compaq computer!

Check out the contest rules and entry form at:
http://www.mlcrosoft.com/oducotlon/hod/otudonts/

Or mail in your request for rules and entry form to:
Student Innovators In Higher Education Contest
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Contest ends 004 ember 1 1997 yam m stain wimp prim-ham ivy law

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Where do you want to go today?

 

 

 

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EIICIIVSEus

VSara Brookshire, who was in a photograph on Wednesday about a UK
medical student receiving an award. is being treated within the UK Chil-

dren‘s Hospital for diabetes only.

VEugene Williams is the vice president for htormation services at UK

on“

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House denies parental consent

Anodized Fran

WASHINGTON — Accept-
ing the argument that teen-a ers
would stay away from health c ' -
ics if forced to tell their parents,
the House defeated a measure
requiring parental notification
be are minors can receive contra-
ceptives.

The House vote Tuesday was a
loss for conservatives who have
tried, largely without success, to
put their mark on an $80 billion
spending bill to pay for labor,
education and health programs in
fiscal year 1998.

Republican moderates, who in
the wake of the balanced bud et
agreement have worked hard tiis
year to craft spending bills that
win Democratic and White House
support, instead pushed through a
compromise that narrowly passed,
220-201.

 

 

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That version, offered by
Re 3. Michael Castle, R-Del.,
an John Porter, R-Ill., re uires
federally funded health clinics to
encourage, but not mandate,
minors to consult with their
families.

It also requires clinics to coun—
sel minors on how to resist coer-
cive sexual activity.

Forty-six Republicans 'oined
173 Democrats and one in epen—
dent in backing the Castle amend-
ment.

The fight for notification was
led by Rep. Ernest