xt7t4b2x6r5j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7t4b2x6r5j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2002-12-10 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, December 10, 2002 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 10, 2002 2002 2002-12-10 2020 true xt7t4b2x6r5j section xt7t4b2x6r5j Need a job over the holidays? See Scene i 4

TUESDAYKENTUCKY

KERN EL

 

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Guy Morriss resigns as football coach

Gone: Morriss expected to coach Baylor University;
announcement expected at Wednesday conference

STAFF AND WIRE REPORT

Kentucky football coach
Guy Morriss resigned yester-
day to accept another coach
ing job. UK Athletics Director
Mitch Barnhart announced
last night.

Morriss. a Texas native.
is expected to head to Waco.

Students want
organized
environmental
initiative at UK

Focus: Students, professors
say UK needs guidance

By Joshua Thomas

STAFF WRITER

A panel of students and
faculty are talking about the
possibility of a task force to
look at UK practices and
policies and make them
more environmentally fo-
cused.

UK has never had a uni-
fied environmental plan.
said Les Miller, a member of
UK's Green Thumb organi-
zation.

“Environmentally
speaking. everything that
has been done up to now has
been an afterthought."
Miller said. "With the task
force. it would become a di-
rect effort to become Inore
environmentally sound."

Under the plans. the pro-
gram would be overseen by
an environmental coordina~
tor anti would have tentative
goals for one. three and 10
years.

The task force would
aim to improve such areas
as environmental education
at UK and around the city.
compost and leaf collection
and energy conservation
and efficiency The program
would also incorporate local-
ly grown and organic foods
into UK meals.

The idea is to make
things happen. said Ben
Abell. president of Green
Thumb.

“It‘s more than saying.
‘we need to recycle.‘ or ‘we
need to turn off the lights
when we leave.‘ We would
like to see environmental
thinking infused into the
mentality of UK students.
faculty and administration."
Abell said.

“It would play into how
we build our buildings and
how we plan for develop»
ment. It would be a whole
new outlook on education.“

Philipp Kraemer. the as—
sociate provost for under-
graduate education. sees a
great opportunity for the
task force.

“I can only see this task
force enriching the commu-
nity." he said. “It would be
an excellent vehicle for the
Town and Gown program.
which is looking for ways to
tie the city to the
university."

Also. it would be a good
way to promote UK as one of
the nation's T0p<20 research
universities. Miller said. “In
stead of spending a lot of
money marketing ourselves.
we would actually be pro-
moting the university by be
ing efficient and environ—
mentally focused." Miller
said.

“You don't get to the top
of that list by doing the
same thing as everyone else.
We are the state's flagship
school. If we could set the
precedent. others would fol-
low." Abell said.

Texas. to coach the Baylor
University Bears. and is ex‘
pected to announce the deci-
sion at a Wednesday news
conference

"I‘m very appreciative of

the contributions of Coach
Morriss. his staff and family
in laying the foundation for

the rebuilding of Kentucky

football." Bun Iartsaid We
wish them the best as they
take the next step in their
lives and careers."

Barnhart offered Mor-
riss a contract extension
through 2006 earlier this
year after Morriss led UK to
a 10 start.

His contract was already
signed and was to be ap
proved by the UK Athletics
Association today

Morriss. .31. was on the

Baylor campus in
Waco yesterday He lat-
er returned to Lexing-
ton and is expected to
meet with his team
today

His UK contract
paid him 8400.000.
which included a base
salary of 8170000 plus
3230.000 in compensa-
tion for his radio and TV
shows and the school‘s en-
dorsement deal with Nike.

Morriss

Baylor e.\
pressed interest in
Morriss to replace
coach Kevin
Steele. who was
dismissed Nov. 3.

Barnhart
granted Baylor
Athletics Director
Tom Stanton per—
mission to speak
with Morriss last Friday. Mor—
riss compiled a 914 record in
his two seasons after replac-

ing Hal Murnme on an inter-
im basis.

He was granted the con-
tract in September after the
Wildcats routed Middle Ten-
nessee State to complete their
non-conference schedule un-
blemished.

I'K finished 7-5 overall
and 3-5 in the Southeastern
Conference.

Baylor compiled a 3-9
record and 1-7 conference
record this season.

 

Underwater classroom

Communications junior Kevin Woodward waves hello underwater. He said he's taking the scuba class because he's

going to Australia next semester.

BRAD mom I xtnntt smr

Students take the plunge
in UK’S scuba class

By Karen Ilooper

CONTRIBUTING WRITER

While most UK students are
taking cold walks to class on
Wednesdays. Emily Schulz and
Ashley Alexander are stepping
into wet suits and checking air
supplies. With fins. mask. and
snorkel in place. they hold their
noses and plunge into the water

Schulz. a decision science se-
nior. and Alexander. a finance and
marketing junior. are two of the
36 students enrolled in a scuba
class taught at UK. Each Wednes-
day in the Lancaster Aquatic Cen-
ter. the class spends two hours
learning how to dive. They also
learn other scuba techniques that

will give them the opportunity to
be certified divers anti learn how
to trust another person with their
lives.

It may seem strange to have a
scuba class in a state known for
bluegrass and horses. but the stu-
dents in the class say it has practi-
cal uses for them. In fact. the class
is so popular that it is often diffi
cult to enroll in the class.

Schulz said she took it to get
ready for spring break or summer
vacations. She said she plans to
dive off the Great Barrier Reef in
Australia this summer.

Her scuba partner. Alexan-
der. said she went scuba diving in
Maui last spring and the experi-

ence was incredible.

”There are a couple of girls
in Iny sorority who are certified.
and its just another fun thing we
can do together." she said.

Bill Conrad. the scuba in-
structor. said students in the class I
learn about five basic areas of .
scuba diving: using equipment. to I
adapting to different environ I
merits. (living off boats and an I
derstarrding the (live theory with I
the nitrogen load tables and con I
tinuation of dive tables,

When the students begin dive
sessions. the class divides into
pairs of two. and partners dive to
gether and practice techniques.

See SCUBA on 3

You’re air is cut off, and you have to be able

to find and use your partner’s
- EMILY SCHULZ. DECISION SCIENCE SENIOR IN UK'S SCUBA CLASS, ON A CLASS EXERCISE

International
students
react to slip

Private vs. personal: Released info
sparks debate among some students

By Elizabeth Van hersen

STAFF WRITER

The UK Office of International Affairs
recently gave personal information about in-
ternational students to the FBI that other
schools contacted for the information did not
give.

The incident garnered national atten-
tion. with a story appearing in the Wall Street
Journal last week. in which UK's general le-
gal counsel said the university is "embar-
rassed" about the slip.

Yet many international students who
heard about the release of information dis-
agree about whether the information should
have been given out.

Some say as long as a student has a clean
record. nothing should matter: others worry
about an unfair invasion of privacy.

“The international students who are at
UK are studying. so I don't see a problem
with the FBI asking for information and it be-
ing given out." said Mangesh Kolharkar. the
president of the Indian Students Association.

Clement Chin. an economics senior from
Malaysia. said UK should have not released
the information.

“It's beginning to look scary the whole
situation." Chin said. “It releases the feel of
paranoia Everything about me. and others,
is in those files. Our records are intimate. pri-
vate. The university should have let us know
before they released the records."

The FBI contacted UK and asked for iri-
ternational students‘ directory information.
which includes names. addresses. birthdays
and places of birth. but not the student's
country of citizenship. visa status and for-
eign contact information. That information
is not released without a mint order. subpoe-
na or in an emergency

The office gave that information anyway.
without a court order or subpoena.

“We released information other than Di-
rectory Informal ion said Paul \ In Booven.
UK general counsel.

"We. the Office of International Affairs.
released the information in good faith." said
Doug Boyd. the associate provost for interna-
tional affairs “International students after
Sept. 11 understand that they will be followed
around Inore closely not any student per-
sonally but we always keep current addresses.
etc."

Students who come to study in America

See FBI on 3

Former inspector says Iraq resubmittinq old declarations

their

own copies.

the five

IN. and American analysts

atomic bomb before 1991. but

 

12,000 pages: Five permanent UN Security Council
members received full iraqi weapons declaration

ASSOCIATED PRESS

UNITED NATIONS
Iraq‘s mammoth arms decla-
ration covers its nuclear pro-
gram Iip until the 1991 Per-
sian Gulf War. a terminated
project to produce a radia-
tion bomb and details of
Baghdad‘s efforts to build bi~
ological weapons. according
to the report's table of con-
tents. made public Monday.

A former weapons in-
spector. who reviewed the
list. said it seemed to suggest
the Iraqis were resubmitting
old declarations about arms

 

The Student Mewsphperat the university of hen

programs that ended in the
wake of the Gulf War more
than a decade ago, Inspectors
have said Iraq's previous dec-
larations were incomplete
The nine-page table of
contents was distributed by a
IS. official after Washington
obtained the I'.l\'. Security
Council‘s copy of the com-
plete 12.000-page declaration.
The full declaration has not
been released. and the United
States shared it only with
Russia. Britain. France and
China.

III exchange for getting

council powers will provide
weapons inspectors with ex
perts and intelligence data
that could help hasten a de-
termination of whether Sad»
dam Hussein is trying to
rearm. diplomats told The
Associated Press.

Other council members
will only get an edited copy
with sensitive material cen~
sored. an arrangement that
has angered some members.

The table of contents is
broken down into four sec
tions: nuclear. chemical. bio-
logical and ballistic missile
programs. The table provides
a glimpse of Iraq's account of
Its programs but it will take

some time before they can
determine whether the decla
ration is complete.

III the declaration. Iraq
asserts that it no longer has
weapons of mass destruction
or the means to deliver them.

According to the table of
contents. some 2.100 pages
are devoted to Iraq's nuclear
program before 1991. and an»
other 300 pages in Arabic de
tail current nuclear pro-
grams. which Baghdad says
are civilian.

Lt. Gen Amer alSaadi. a
senior adviser to Iraqi Presi-
dent Saddam Hussein. said
Sunday that Iraq may have
been close to building an

uclty, lexinqton ‘

he said Baghdad no longer
has such ambitions.

David Albright. an
American who served on the
nuclear Inspections team in
the l990s. said the table of
contents ”seems to confirm
that on the nuclear side. the
declaration has been recy-
cled. A lot of this is pre-
1991." he said.

The chemical declara-
tion is several thousand
pages and begins with a
chronology of Iraq's "former
chemical weapons program."
Sections dealing with the
chemical program include:

See IMO on 3

 

 

  

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-ALLIHE NEWS THAT HTS

, The Low-down

He’s lost
his
diocese.
He’s
hiding. He
can’t
appear in
public
here. We
need new
leader-
ship.”

Rev. Robert
Bdlock,

a leader of the
Boston Priests
Forum, on
Cardinal Bernard
Law. who has
been criticized
for his handling
of the priest
scandal in
Boston’s Catholic
diocese.

Firm to present campus master plan
Representatives for Ayers Saint (lross.
the architects and planning firm working
with the college town project. will present
the new campus master plan from 9-10 am.
Wednesday. Dec. 11 in the small ballroom of
the I'K Student (‘enteii The plan will guide
campus development for the next 10 to 20
years. Everyone is encouraged to come.

Peacemakers celebrate human rights

Peacemakers will be having a vigil. can
(llelight walk and short program today as
part of Human Rights Day. The vigil will be»
gin at 4 pm. at Triangle Park. and the can-
dlelight walk is at 3:30 beginning at Trian-
gle Park to (‘entral (‘hristian (‘hiirch at the
corner of Short Street and Martin Luther
King Boulevard. Preeti Arooii and Geoff
Young will speak at the church at ti pin. The
event is one of many that will be held
across the country as people rally to oppose
war with Iraq.

Hall of fame nominations requested

Nominations for the induction into the
2003 Kentucky Journalism Hall of Fame are
being accepted, Nominations should be sent
to: The Hall of Fame Selection t‘ominittee.
School of Journalism and Telecommunica-
tions. University of Kentucky. 107 Grehan
Building Lexington. Ky. 403000042. Letters
should be marked to the attention of Julie
Berry. The nomination letter should outline
in detail why a particular nominee should
be inducted to the Ilall of Fame. Deadline
for nominations is Jan. o. 200%}. The selec-
tion committee WIII meet Jan. 24 to select in»
ductees. The 200:1, installation will be held in
conjunction with the annual (‘reason Lec-
ture. which honors the late .loe (‘reasorr a
long-time Louisville t‘ourier-.lournal re-
porter aiid columnist and Hi journalism
alumnus.

Shuttles to Rupp Arena available
l'lx' Parking and 'l‘ransportation Ser-
vices will be providing shuttles for students.
employees and guests to and from Rupp Are-
na for all regular season men‘s home basket-
ball games. The shuttle services. which will
be available only while school is in session.
WlII be cosponsored by [K Athletics. The
round-trip cost WIII be $1 per person. per
game. For information on pickup times and
locations as well as return trip information.
please visit
wwwukyedu parking bl'iallhtm.

Bush taps new Treasury secretary
WASHINGTON President Bush
turned to railroad executive .lohn W Snow
to be his new Treasury secretary on Mon
day and signaled his determination to push
ahead with a new round of tax cuts to jump
start the sluggish economy. Three days after
shaking up his economic team by firing
Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and
Lawrence Lindsey. the head of his National
Economic (‘ouncil Bush announced he
would nominate Snow. the president of
Richmond-basetl (‘SX (‘orp.. one of the na
tion's largest railroad freight lines. as
O'Neill's successor at Treasury In many

 

 

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PRIME TIME:

In his first stab
at primetime
series televi-
sion, Iatenight
veteran Jon
Stewart will
write and exec-
utive produce
an NBC sitcom
starring fellow
"Daily Show"
writer/ actor
Stephen Col-
bert. Variety re-
ports. Stewart
and Colbert will
co-write the pi-
lot script for
the project,
which will bor-
row heavily
from Colbert's
experiences
growing up in
South Carolina.
The untitled se-
ries is being de-
veloped for
NBC's fall 2003
schedule. Stew-
art said he and
Colbert already
are flush with
ideas. "We were
just thinking
about what
would happen if
a gay man and a
straight woman
lived together in
a bar in Boston
and ate spiders
for $50,000
every episode,"
Stewart told
Daily Variety.
"We're going to
try to do a
show that has
everything
that's worked
on NBC before.
Before it's over,
Stephen could
end up helming
a genial black
family. He
could be the
next Cosby."
Stewart has no
plans to give up
his gig as host
and executive
producer of
Comedy Cen-
tral's Emmy-
and Peabody
Award-winning
"The Daily
Show."

ways, Snow. 63 has a resume similar to
O'Neill‘s. Both men served in the Ford ad-
ministration where they worked with Dick
Cheney and then both left the government to
pursue business careers. However. O‘Neill.
the former head of Alcoa Corp. proved to he
a gatfeprone economic swkesman for Biish.
infuriating Republicans in Congress and
roiling financial markets with his coin-
nients. Snow is seen as a more cautious pub,
lic speaker and a politically savvy operator
who will be better able to sell the Bush pro
gram in Congress and on Wall Street, “I look
forward to joining your economic team to
advance a pro-growth, pro-jobs agenda." saitl
Snow. who holds a Phi). in economics from
the University of Virginia and has been an
active participant in public policy debates in
Washington. at one time as chairman of the
influential Business Roundtable.

Boston cardinal consults Vatican
BOSTON (‘ardinal Bernard Law cori-
sulted with the Vatican on Monday during
an abrupt trip to Rome. stirring speculation
that he was stepping down or arranging for
the Boston Archdiocese to declare bankrupt
cy. The archdiocese shed no light Monday on
the purpose of Law's visit. which came amid
a new groiiiidswell of criticism among once
loyal parishioners and priests about his han
tiling of sexual abuse cases against priests,
“He‘s lost his diocese." said the Rev. Robert
Bullock. a leader of the Boston Priests to

ruin. a group that represents about half of

the approximately 000 priests in the archdio-
cese “He's in hiding. He can't appear in pub
lic here. We need new leadership." Law's
trip comes a week after thousands of pages
of the archdiocese‘s personnel files were re»
leased. painting a grim picture of rogue
priests who engaged used drugs and en
gaged in sex. In one case. a priest seduced
girls studying to become nuns. telling them
he was the "second coming of Christ." In an
other case. a priest fathered at least two chil»
dren and abandoned their mother while she
was suffering a drug overdose. Last week. an
archdiocese financial panel authorized Law
to seek Vatican approval for an unprecedent-
ed bankruptcy filing to deal with the 400 or

so lawsuits brought by alleged victims of

child-molesting priests. In the past Week.
priests have begun circulating petitions
among the clergy calling on Law to resign.

joining a chorus of parishioners. The pope

is the only church official who can appoint
and oust bishops. Even when a bishop (le-
cides to resign or retire. he cannot leave his
post without the pope's authorization.

Brazil mudslide kills at least 34

ANGRA DOS REIS. Brazil Mudslirles
triggered by torrential rains slashed
through this southeastern city Monday.
burying houses and killing at least 34 people.
firefighters said. Some 1.500 people were dri-
ven from their homes by the torrent of wa-

ter anti mud in Angra dos Reis. a city of

about 60.000 tucked between mountains and
the Atlantic Ocean. 100 miles west of Rio de
.Ianeiro. “The numbers could rise a little but
we don't expect it to grow much more than
this.” said (‘ol Sergio Siinoes of the local
fire department. which led the search for
survivors and victims. In 24 hours. the city
got more than 3 inches of rain nearly as
much as the average rainfall for two weeks.
the National Weather Institute in Rio said.

Compiled from staff and wire reports

Need Money?

Looking for a job with flexible hours?
Want valuable experience working
with students?

The Center for Academic ‘8. Tutorial
Services (CATS) is hiring tutors for
spring semester.

If you are interested, please attend the
mandatory Tutor Orientation on
Thursday, January 16th at 6:00 pm in
the CATS quiet study, Room 123 located
in Memorial Coliseum.

For more information, please
call 257-8798.

 

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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

CRIMEREPORT

Selected reports from the UK police from
Dec. 2, 2002 to Dec. 8. 2002

Dec. 2: SuspiCious person reported from 620 S. Limestone
St. at 10:23 am, subject not supposed to be in building.

Dec. 2: Wallet stolen from 305 Kirklevington Drive.
Dec. 2: Purse stolen from 305 Euclid Ave. at 7:36 pm.

Dec. 2: Norse complaint reported from 401 Hilltop Ave. at
8:00 pm, people being loud in library.

Dec. 2: Drug/marijuana use reported from 754 Woodland Ave.
at 9:32 pm, marijuana smell.

Dec. 2: Trespassmq reported from 300 Alumni Drive at 11:14
pm, someone egged doorway.

Dec. 3: Drug/marijuana use reported from 769 Woodland Ave.
at l:16 p.m., smell of marijuana on 16th floor.

Dec. 3: Drug/marijuana use reported from 769 Woodland Ave.
at 9:41 pm, possrble use between let and 23rd floors.

Dec. 4: Suspicious person reported from 769 Woodland Ave.
at 4:59 pm, subjects throwrng snowballs at passersby.

Dec. 4: Suspicious car reported from Yellow Lot at 8:26 pm.
several cars domg doughnuts in parking lot.

Dec. 4: Suspiuous car reported from Green Lot at 8:53 pm,
Silver Jeep Wrangler dorng doughnuts.

Dec. 4: Suspicious car reported from Woodland and Columbia
avenues at 9:15 pm, vehicle pulling couch with person
strapped to 1t.

Dec. 4: Suspicious person reported from Rose Street at 9:22
pm, subject skiing down the middle of Rose Street.

Dec. 4. Alcohol use reported from 758 Woodland Ave. at 11:09
pm, mate subject impersonating R.A. attempting to get in
female rooms with alcohol.

Dec. 5: Burglary reported from 300 Alumni Drive at 12:52
am, brick thrown into window and subject attempting to
break into apartment.

Dec. 6: Theft from auto reported from 800 Rose St. at 11:52
pm, items taken from car.

Dec. 6: Theft reported from 769 Woodland Ave. at ":58 pm,
item missing from room after door was left unlocked.

Dec. 7: Domestic violence reported from 1035 S. Limestone
at l2:53 a.m.

Dec. 8: Theft reported from 120 Patterson Drive at 9:14 am,
vending machines broken into.

Dec. 8: Drug/marijuana use reported from 769 Woodland Ave.
at 11:55 am, marijuana smell throughout 22nd floor.

Source: UK Police Log at www.uky.edu/Police and

police reports.
Compiled by staff writer Emily Hagedorn

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FBI

Continued from page i

must sign a release from the
INS authorizing the release of
their student information if
necessary

“This was not a big slip-
up of the university." Van
Booven said. "The FBI could
get most of the information
anyway. They could go to the
[NS and get the student infor-
mation by working with their
fellow agencies."

Other universities. in-
cluding the University of
Louisville and Transylvania
University. did not give their
international students' infor»
mation partially because
their legal offices got involved
beforehand. Van Booven said.

The Office of Interna-
tional Affairs gave interna-
tional student information to
the FBI last year because of
national interest and security
afier Sept. 11.

“We debated last year. af-
ter Sept. 11, about whether or
not it was a health and safety
issue and if we should give
the FBI information." Van
Booven said. “We did release
the information thinking that
it would be helpful and appro-
priate because of the safety
emergency that everyone in
the country was feeling at
that time.“

The office does not re-
lease student schedules.
grades or Social Security
numbers unless it receives a

court order. a subpoena or it‘s
an emergency, Van Booven
said. The office is not going to
comply with oth-
er requests for
student informa-
tion unless they
are from the INS
or without first

Eastern district of Kentucky.
“Greg and I agreed to
work together on any future
FBI requests, so

that we can bal-
ance the rights of

our students ..

against the FBl's

need for inlbrma-

checking with the tion to tight ter-
legal office, he rorism.“ ‘ Van
Silld"‘After Sept. our records BOOVVililiibdghov'eii
ll.anact was cre- are and Boyd have
ated that gave the . _ said they have
government in- mtlmate not received any
creased powers to , ’ complaints from
get studexgt infog- prlvate, The stutlientlsy.K Biliyd
mation.” e sai . . . sau » ias
“But the FBI univerSIty “probably the
must go through best internation
court to get that Should haVe a1 student orien-
information. and let US knOW tation in the US.

educates

that is the route
the FBI should
have used to get
this.“

Instead. the
FBI sent a letter
to President Lee
Todd. The letter
eventually made
it to the interna-
tional affairs of-
fice where the in-
formation was
mistakenly given.

“The FBI sent a nice let~
ter thanking us for the infor-
mation last year. and our peo-
ple, being cooperative. sent
them the information again.
not really thinking the situa—
tion is different this year than
last year." Van Booven said.

Since the letter. UK and
the FBI have not correspond
ed. However. Van Booven
talked with Greg Van Taten-
hove. US. attorney for the

before they
released the
records.”
- Clement Chin,

economics senior from
Malaysia

which
them on how to
deal with inimi-
gration policies."

Rendong Bai.
president of the
Chinese Students
and Scholars As-
sociation. felt
comfortable.

"If it is just
normal informa»
tion being given
out. then I don‘t feel very un-
comfortable. I can live with it
because I feel that I am a nor»
mal student.“ Bai said.

Prakash Narayanan. vice
president of the Indian Stu-
dent Association. disagreed
with the release.

“It all depends on the in-
formation given out. though.
and how that affects the peo-
ple. Like if it is home address
es. then that may not be that
safe.“ he said.

 

 

 

 

SCUBA

Continued from page i

For example. one person
takes his mask off and leads
another person to the other
side of the pool. where they
help each other into the 40
pounds of equipment and
practice maintaining balance
in one spot.

Schultz said that breath:
ing techniques are important.

“Your air is cut off and
you have to be able to find
and use your partner's alter—
nate air source switch." she
said. “It‘s not unexpected.
They let you know when they
are going to turn it off. You
just have to be able to find it
with your eyes closed."

The class also takes trips
together. The fall semester
class take a trip Jan. 2-5 to
Freshwater Springs in Flori-
da. There. they will mimic
the skills they learned in
UK’s pool in a final require-
ment of four dives to earn
their licenses. The class.
taught by New Horizons

Travel Company. also has oth-
er trips available through the
travel company.

Conrad said scuba diving
is a practical skill to know.
even in Kentucky

In Kentucky. one can dive
at Lake Cumberland in Rus-
sell County and Cave Run
Lake in Morehead. he said.
There is also a diving park
near Paducah.

“You can do anything
anywhere with scuba." he
said.

“The opportunities are
available locally as well as for
travel."

 

 

 

 

IRAQ

Continued from page]

Research and development
activities. the production of
chemical agents. relations
with companies and a termi-
nated radiation bomb project.

The radiation bomb pro-
ject was discovered during
the previous inspections
regime. which ended in 1998.

The biological declara-
tion includes information on
military instimtions connect-
ed with the former biological
weapons program, activities
at a foot-and-mouth facility
and a list of supporting docu-
ments.

The ballistic missile dec-
laration is the briefest of the
four sections and totals some
1,200 pages. Under UN. Secu-
rity Council resolutions. Iraq
is banned from missiles with
a range greater than 94 miles.

The table of contents was
submitted to the Security
Council in the form of a letter
from Iraqi Foreign Minister
Naji Sabri.

The complete report ar-
rived at UN. headquarters in
New York on Sunday. One

copy is in the hands of
weapons inspectors who have
been combing through it for
details. The other copy was
taken Monday to Washington.
where US. officials quickly
duplicated the material and
delivered it to the Russian.
French. British and Chinese
embassies there.

The deal for the distribu-
tion, reached late Sunday.
outraged Syria because it re-
versed an agreement among
council members Friday that
would have let inspectors re.
move sensitive material ~
including possible recipes
for bomb-making material W
from the 12,000 page docu-
ment before showing the re-
port to anyone.

The United States had
initially accepted that deal
but changed its mind over
the weekend and began con-
sultations for a new arrange-
ment.

Eventually. US. officials
instructed Colombian Am-
bassador Alfonso Valdivieso.
the current Security Council
president. to hand over the
complete copy of the decla-
ration, which to the aston-
ishment of many in the UN.
halls, he did.

Meanwhile. U.N. Secre-
tary-General Kofi Annan
said it would take some time
to review the declaration

and he called on Washington
and others to be patient with
inspectors.

“The inspectors will
have to review them. analyze
them and report to the coun-
cil, and I think that‘s going
to take a while.”

White House press secre-
tary Ari Fleischer withheld
judgment on the massive
documentation and said the
United States would study
the material ”thoroughly.
completely and fully and
thoughtfully.“

The real test will be the
document‘s transparency.
which could determine
whether Iraq will face anoth-
er war with the United
States and its allies.

Under the terms of Se-
curity Council Resolution
1441. passed on Nov. 8. false
statements or omissions in
the declaration 7" or a fail-
ure to comply with inspec-
tions ,_ would be a “material

breach" of Iraq's obliga-
tions.
A breach could be

enough for Washington to ar-
gue that military action is
the only way to force Iraqi
compliance.

Only after inspectors de»
clare Iraq in compliance
with UN. resolutions can 12
years of crippling sanctions
be suspended.

 

 

 

 

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