xt7vmc8rg01j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7vmc8rg01j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1993-11-17 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 17, 1993 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 17, 1993 1993 1993-11-17 2020 true xt7vmc8rg01j section xt7vmc8rg01j  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Review board leaves issues on table

 

By Brian Bennett
Senior Staff Writer

FRANKFORT, Ky. — Earlier
this month, state Sen. Mike Molon-
ey resigned his seat from the Gov-
ernor's Higher Education Review
Commission. His concerns includ-
ed the lengthy debate about dental
schools and the lack of input from
university presidents and board
chairs.

Neither of those was the use at
yesterday’s meeting.

 

A recommendation to close
UK’s dental school was presented
to the commission, but members
put off any talk or decision on the
issue until the next meeting.

And presidents and board chair-
man were more heavily involved in
discussion, one reason the meeting
lasted more than five hours.

Yet the commission failed to
reach any substantive decisions and
now stands just 35 days and three
meetings away from its Dec. 21
deadline. Still, one member said he

Campus escort service
wants increased usage

 

By Kelly Crew
Contributing Writer

 

Chivalry may have gone with the
wind. carrying with it images of
Rhett Butler, magnolias and South-
ern hospitality, but a UK escort ser-
vice is working nightly to rekindle a
bit of that spirit on campus.

“it‘s not a macho thing at all. it
just makes me feel good to know
l'm helping somebody.” said Cadet
Col. Brad Bugg, the UK Air Force
ROTC detachment commander
ROTC escort service member.

To spread the word about the 2—
year-oid service. which was created
to make nighttime travel across
campus safer, Bugg and Cadet-2nd
Lt. Johanna Yocum have arranged
for the placement of the escort ser-
vice‘s business cards in this year‘s
campus telephone directories, and
they have posted fliers in all cam-

 

Senate passes
bill to help stop
blockades of
abortion clinics

By Karen Ball
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The
Senate voted yesterday to arm
the Justice Department with
new powers to stop abonion
clinic blockades and go after
violent protesters.

 

Senators rejected complaints
they were stepping on peace-
ful demonstrators' First
Amendment rights.

The 69-30 vote followed a
lengthy, emotional debate in
which the Senate repeatedly
tumed back bids by anti-
abortion lawmakers to soften
the penalties and make other
changes to the so-called clinic
access bill.

Even strong abortion oppo
nents backed the bill, arguing
it was demanded by a growing
wave of violence aimed at
clinics, doctors and women.

A Florida abortion doctor
was shot to death earlier this
year.

“l am pro-life but we
cannot as a society allow acts
of violence to promote any
cause," said Sen. Harry Reid,
D-Nev.

“Violence is no response to
the issue that divides us," add
ed Sen. Dave Durenberger. R-
Minn.. another abortion foe
backing the bill.

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
D-Mass., an abonion rights
advocate and the bill’s spon—
sor, said the incidents targeted
in the bill “are not peaceful
protests.

"These attacks are more
akin to assaults.“

The House is scheduled to
take up a similar bill later this
week; Democrats in the two
chambers hope to work out a
compromise to send to Presi-
dent Clinton before Congress
breaks for the year at Thanks-
giving.

See CLINICS, Back Page

   

pus buildings.

“1 wish more people would call,"
Bugg said.

“We're trying to get as much ex-
posure as we can, so more people
will use the service."

On an average night, there are
about four calls from people seek-
ing escorts.

The most calls the service has
ever received in one evening is
nine, Bugg said.

All escorts are male. Female
ROTC candidates work as dispatch-
ers and answer the phones.

Escorts carry a portable radio
tuned into the same channel as the
UK Police.

Bugg says escorts often call in
crimes and accidents as they make
their way around campus, helping
to decrease police response times.

Because the escorts go places

See ESCORT, Back Page

“was encouraged" by the proceed-
ings.

“Up until today, it seemed to me
that the criticisms we've been hear-
ing of this commission were valid
ones," said Joe Prather, a former
state finance secretary. “That is.
that we were dealing with generali-
ties and not getting down to busi-
ness. But we do have top-flight
people leading our universities, and
every one of you can rise above
that."

Some of the highlights of yester-

day's meeting:

-The commission decided that
the idea of combining the state's
conununity colleges and vocational
schools was too complicated an is-
sue to solve by Dec. 21. Instead,
the commission will recommend to
the state legislature that an inde-
pendent group be set up to study
the situation next year.

The decision came after the com-
mission heard presentations from
Ben Carr. chancellor for the UK
Community College System, and

William Houston. secretary of the
work force development cabinet.

“it's an issue that isn‘t going to
go away.“ Prather said.

°The Council on Higher Educa-
tion staff presented a recommenda-
tion to make UK‘s engineering
school one of the top 25 in the na-
tion. Gov. Brereton Jones indicated
when he established the commis-
sion that he wanted a “top-notch,
world-class engineering schoo"
within five years.

The decision to enhance UK’s

 

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arch window opening for the new engineering building recently.

 

JANE! CHBPIKemel sun

 

 

Professor brings minister to life

Monologue tells
preacher ’s story

 

By Kelly Grubb
Contributing Writer

The sound of a lone booming
voice filled the auditorium with
song as the monologue began.

An air of hard-earned freedom
flowed into the ears of listeners last
night in Memorial Hall as George
T. Vaughn became the Rev. Elisha
Green, a black Baptist minister and
early civil rights activist.

in front of a crowd of about 20
people, Vaughn, a Maysville Com-
munity College English professor,
acted out excerpts from Green‘s au-
tobiography, often. if not always.
quoting the book verbatim.

“I live in peace born in Ken-
tucky; born in Bourbon County,
Kentucky."

The monologue first described
childhood recollections of racial
persecution, then moved swiftly to
other persecutions that faced Green
throughout adulthood.

”is
m kt wit”
“ game'wiailhsa‘

three-pointersf . H

   

VIEWPOINT:
°Columnist’e sculpt ,
art may be interprete
incorrectly. Column. P ,_
oTheodore Roosevelt wo“
love NAFTA. Column. Pa

WEATHER:
-Thunderstorms likely today
with heavy rain at times; high
between 60 and 65.

Cedar tonight with partial ,,;
clearing; low between 35 '
4o. . "‘”‘
OSunny tomorrow; hig
between 55 and 60. i

INDEX:
Sports ...........
Diversions...

 

 

 

 

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Maysville Community College English Professor George T.

VICTOfllA ”OVER/Kernel Std!

Vaughn portrays Kentucky minister Elisha Green last night.

Vaughn, who assumed Green's
persona from the very first word.
showed how this black man. who
was born into slavery, earned the re-
spect of the white community
through his love of God and his

ability to preach.

Green was a man who was deter-
mined to escape slavery without
running. He bought his own free-
dom and the freedom of most of his
family.

He attempted to buy back his son,
but the slave traders who purchased
him had already left for the South.

Although the reverend was bean-
broken by the loss of his son, he
still preached and fought for the ab-
olition of slavery.

Green founded Bethel Baptist
Church in Maysville, Ky., in 1845
and another church in Paris. Ky.. in
1855.

Vaughn‘s performance concluded
with a rendition of “Amazing
Grace" and a brief question/answer
session. The bulk of the material for
the performance was gathered from
Green‘s autobiography. An Autobi—
ography on the Life of Reverend
Elisha Green. The rest was based
on visits to Maysville.

Vaughn said his motivation for
performing this monologue is to let
people know that the black civil
rights movement began in the mid-
18005. not the mid-1900s.

A prelude to the arrest of civil
rights icon Rosa Parks. Green was
the first to be physically removed
from a mode of transportation. He
sued the man who had tried to
move him and won a $24 settle-
ment.

school rather than the University of
Louisville‘s Speed School came
partly because UK has more facili-
ties and perhaps partly as a carrot
for the stick of closing UK's dental
school.

U of L President Donald Swain
asked how long it would take to
make UK‘s school nationally
ranked because, he said, “in the
short mn, this just gives advantages
to one school over another."

See COMMISSION, Back Page

Clinton signs
historic bill
on religion

By Ron Fournier
Associated Press

 

 

WASHINGTON — Reversing a
Supreme Court decision he said
threatened the nation‘s “first free—
dom,“ President Clinton signed a
bill yesterday making it harder for
government to interfere with relig-
ious practices.

A broad coalition of civil liberties
and religious groups. who foresaw
autopsies forced on families and cit-
ies meddling in church construc-
tion, said the law is the most impor-
tant for religious freedom since the
adoption of the Bill of Rights.

“We all have a shared desire here
to protect perhaps the most precious
of all American liberties -—- relig—
ious freedom." Clinton told sup-
porters in a South Lawn ceremony.

Until three years ago, such action
was considered unnecessary, given
the Constitution‘s First Amendment
guarantee of freedom of worship.
But in a 1990 ruling involving the
use of a drug in an lndian religious
ritual, the Supreme Court made it
easier for local and federal govem-
ments to pass laws that infringe on
religious beliefs.

The court upheld laws that in-

fringe on religious freedom so long
as they serve a valid government
purpose and are not aimed at inhib-
iting religion.
_ The law signed by Clinton poses
a stricter test — one used by courts
before the 1990 ruling. That test re-
quires that restrictive laws serve a
compelling government interest in a
way that poses the lightest possible
burden on religious freedom.

Clinton said the law. which
passed easily in Congress, holds
govemment "to a very high level of
proof before it interferes with some-
one‘s free exercise of religion.“

Congress should rarely reverse
the Supreme Court. “but this is an
issue in which that extraordinary
measure was clearly called for.“
Clinton said.

“Not since the adoption of the
First Amendment has the Congress
and the president done so much for
religious freedom.“ said Henry
Siegman. executive director of the
American Jewish Congress.

UT leads UK in Big Blue Crush

 

Staff report

 

The battle of the blood continues.

As of Monday night, the Univer-
sity of Tennessee was leading UK
456 pints to 431 in the Big Blue
Cmsh.

The blood collected during the
annual competition is used during
the Thanksgiving holiday season.

This year‘s winner will be an-
nounced during halftime of the UK-
UT football game Saturday at Com-
monwealth Stadium and will re-
ceive a traveling trophy.

Although UK won the battle with
em last year with a total of 2.350
pints compared to UT‘s 1.977 pints,
UT has decided to have no mercy
for UK, setting a goal of 2,000 this
year, said Marsha Berry. a spokes-
woman for Central Kentucky Blood

Center.

UKsetagoaltocollectthesame
amount of blood this weekend as

..Lm.4.~~mmmmiw ’ "W ‘ " ‘

they did last year.

"if we can match what we did
last year, we should win." Berry
said. “The goal that we have is a
tough one to meet.

“We have received more than
twice the amount of blood needed
each day.”

Berry said that UK gives more
than 5.000 pints of blood to the cen-
ter each year.

UK‘s central donor site is the
blood center. 330 Waller Ave.
which is open weekdays from 9
am. to 9 pm.

Dona: also may give blood the
Kirwan-Blanding Complex (‘om-
mons today from i to 9 pm. and at
the UK Hospital from 5 to 0 pm.

Dona centers are also set up in
Hazard, Prestonsburg and Somerset
from 10 am. to 6 pm.

This is the first year UK could
takethelcadintheseries.Thetwo
schools ue tied in the matchup at 2-
2-l.

 

Big

I'libmday ’ ‘

UK Hospital 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

Wday
' UK

 

Blue Crush
Bloodmobile Schedule

W :' .
dmsfibding Complex Commons l-9 pan.

 

 

 

 

 

       

  

2 — Kentucky Kernel. Wedneechy. November 17, 1993

ZdJE

FALL RUSH INFORMATION MEETING
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17 7:00 P.M.
STUDENT CENTER ROOM 231

DON’T MISS OUT ON THE
ULTIMATE FRATERNI TY
EXPERIENCE!!!

BECOME A PART OF THE LARGEST FRATERNITY
ON TODAY’S COLLEGE CAMPUSES

 

 

   

A BROTHERHOOD OF TRADITION,
PRIDE & EXCELLENCE, SINCE 1901

SPORTS

UK arsenal overpowers Crusaders
as Reed, Jansen, Roberts shimmer

 

       
      
      
    

 

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

STUDENTACTIVITIES BOARD _

SAB WANTS YOU!!!

THE STUDENT ACTIVITIES BOARD HAS
FIVE VAC; \"I‘ SEATS BEGINNING IN
JANUARY 1994. THE POSITIONS ARE:

SECRETARY/TREASURER
CONCERT CO-CHAIR .
FAMILY WEEKEND CHAIR
HOMECOMING CHAIR
MULTI-CULTURAL CO-CHAIR

APPLICATIONS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE
STUDEN' ‘ ACTIVITIES OFFICE, 203
STUDEN' ‘ CENTER. ALL APPLICATIONS
MUST BE RETURNED BY THURSDAY,
NOVEMBER 18, BY 4:30 P.M.
CANDIDATES WILL THEN BE
INTERVIEWED BY THE SAB
SELECTIONS COMMITTEE.

ALL UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 257-8867.

 

 

By Brett Dawson
Staff Writer

 

Although the crowd in Memorial
Coliseum was a sparse one. you
could hear the occasional call of
“threeee” from the members of the
Student Athletic Commission if
you listened closely.

The Lady Kats made sure those
who yelled it gave their vocal cords
a solid workout. In their 94—39 ex-
hibition romp over the Kentucky
Crusaders last night. the Lady Kats
hoisted up 24 of the long bombs,
connecting on 11.

The Lady Kats got big long-
range production from their starting
backcourt. Junior shooting guard
Stacey Reed and sophomore point
guard Christina Jansen each drilled
three treys. Reed led the Lady Kats
in scoring for the game with 15
points.

Freshman point guard Chrissy
Roberts didn‘t give the Crusaders
any relief when she gave Jansen her
breathers. Roberts came off the
bench to knock down her own trio
of trifectas.

The outside game was as effec-
tive as UK head coach Sharon Fan-
ning could have hoped, but the
Lady Kats struggled to pass the ball
into the interior effectively all
night.

“I think we were seeing the in-
side passes a little late,“ Fanning
said after the game. “Maybe we
were seeing them in time. but we
were making them a second late."

Fanning was certainly pleased, if
not surprised, with her team‘s
three-point prowess.

“I expect them to shoot that well

every game," Fanning said. “'lhat's
something we have to have a lot of
confidence in."

Fanning was particularly happy
with her point guard tandem of Jan-
sen and Roberts.

“I thought we did a great job
comrnunicating." she said. “You
have a freshman and sophomore
running the point position, and they
did a great job of getting the team
where they were supposed to be
and changing defenses and making
calls.”

Fanning said she expects Rob-
erts, who matched Jansen for sec-
ond on the team in scoring with 13
points, to perform well off the
bench all year long.

“We don‘t expect to lose any-
thing at any position with any of
our players," she said. “1 think you
can see a lot of depth here."
Roberts wasn’t the only UK fresh-
man making her presence felt.
Stephanie Higgingbotham and Kee-
oma Wardford each scored six
points and pulled down six and sev-
en rebounds respectively.

Roberts said she wasn't surprised
to see the immediate impact when
she and her fellow youngsters en-
tered the game. In fact. she said. the
veterans expect it of them.

“I think they're looking for the
freshman to be strong when we
come in off the bench,“ Roberts
said. “We work hard in practice
and always pay attention, so we
know what's going on on the
court."

Defensively, the Crusaders didn’t
have an answer for any of the Lady
Kats, old or new. UK raced out to
an early 14-5 lead despite frequent
substitutions by Fanning. The sec-

 

 

 

Donate Blood Today!
Wednesday, November 17
Complex Commons

lp.m. - 9 pm.
FmI-Mdmbdlduw

Central Kentucky Blood Center
330 Waller Ave.. Lexlngton, KY 276.2534

Mid-week
Crush Time!

Going for a repeat
win over UTl

 

 

 

 

 

A

\
a

 

JAMES FORIUSWKOM St."

KAT KRUSADE: UK's Kayla Campbell drlbbles In for a shot last
night against the Kentucky Crusaders. The Kats won 98-39.

ond of a pair of three-pointers from
Roberts in a span of 1:10 gave the
Lady Kats a 27-7 lead.

Jansen connected from down-
town less than 20 seconds later. and
the Lady Kats had more of a cush-
ion than they would ever need.

The Lady Kats pushed the ball up
and down floor in the first half on
the strength of fast break opportuni-
ties created by their full-court
press. In the second half, though.
Fanning eased up. implementing
the press less than half of the final
stanza.

"In the second half, we didn‘t go
into full-court defense until about

seven minutes left." Fanning said.
“I thought that the numbers in the
full court pressure in the first half
gave us a little bit more of a transi-
tion, and we were something like
nine of 11 as far as fast break at-
tempts in the first half."

They were also nine of 14 from
beyond the three-point stripe in that
frame, a statistic that the Kats
would like to see continue through-
out the season.

“We work hard in practice on
(threes), and we work hard on them
individually.“ Jansen said. “We
hope they fall all year for us."

UK—UT tickets going fast

 

Staff reports

 

There are about 500 student tickets remaining for the UK-Tennessee
football game this weekend, Director Administrative Services Rodney

Stiles said yesterday.

The tickets, about 90 percent of which are endzone seats, will be distrib-

uted from 9 am. to 4 pm. today.

The ticket lottery for student tickets to the Nov. 27 basketball game be-
tween UK and Louisville will be held Sunday morning at Memorial Coli-
seum, Stiles said. The doors will open at 8 am. and will close at 8: 15 am.

In addition, Stiles said about 1,000 tickets remain for the Wildcats‘ bas-
ketball exhibitions against Athletes in Action on Nov. 19 and the Australian
National Team on Nov. 23. Those tickets may be picked up at the east tick-

et window outside Memorial Coliseum.

 

1993-94

 

N.C. St.
$1.250

Ohio State
$1.250

Missouri
3 1 .406

 

VPI
$1,512

U. Tenn.
$1,580

Food Services

An Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer
and Self-Supporting /SeIf-Funded Division of the University

West Indiana
Virginia $1,9(X)
$1 .648

 

     

Purdue
$2.090

U. 111.
32,612

[K Food Services bringing you the fittest iti quality for the lowest cost.

 

 

 

 

 

Look
for the

Kentucky

Kernel’s

basketball
preview

coming
this
Friday

UK

University of Kentucky
College of Dentistry

 

 

 

 

 

OPEN HOUSE
9 a.m. to 12 noon
Saturday, November 20. 199}

 

Come and see why many graduates
of the University of Kentucky
have chosen to pursue a career

in dcnustrv at UK

 

For more tnionnatton call
the Office of Student Attairx
(606) 233-6071 or
i~800~28-UK»DMD

 

.,, 33...“. __'-,.<

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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By John Abbott
Staff Writer

 

Joseph Fratianni really knows his
way around a six-string. But you‘re
less likely to hear him bursting his
way through a searing Jeff Beck
solo as you are to hear him playing
Castlenuovo-Tedescos' “Concerto
in D, 0p. 99."

Tonight. under his direction, the
UK Guitar Ensemble will present
“An Evening Of Classical Guitar
Music" in the Otis A. Singletary
Center for the Arts Rectial Hall.

Tonight's program won't be an
“ensemble" performance as such,
since all of the planned pieces are
solo works. The concert will cover
a wide range of pieces by Europe-
an, North American and South
American composers, including
some studies and etudes by Feman-
do Sor and Mauro Giulani.

Nine performers are scheduled
for the program, seven of whom
are guitar performance majors.
Their skill level varies, ranging
from experienced seniors to begin-
ning players who will be taking the
stage for the very first time.

“Their first performance is a big
milestone," Fratianni said. After
all. “performing is what a lot of
them will be doing after they grad-

He is a new hope,
A new beginning.
He carries on the name.
Of It he is bearer.

My gift horn god,

and those left.

 

 

THE FIRST—BORN SON

No matter- how far in life he goes, he is
Now, this moment. my harvest.

A reason for my continued being.

My blood, my flesh, my breath all born anew this day.

Yet for him a different path, a different way.

Out of me, yet now of himself.

My son. My First, a fountain, a spring from those departed

He is something far more special.

 

 

PHOTO COURTESV 0F SANDY UNDERWOOD

Joseph Fratiannl will conduct the UK Guitar Ensemble in a
free show tonight in the Otis A. Singletary Center for the Arts.

uate."

“It's kind of interesting for the
audience to see how the student
reacts to the concert situation to
see a music student grow before
their very eyes."

The performers are from all over
Kentucky and Indiana. They have

been studying the instrument any-
where from two to nine years.

“Like an athlete. they have to
work on the physical pan of play-
ing the instrument. as well as on
aesthetic development," Fratianni
said.

“Going to a classical guitar con.
cert is kind of a unique experience
in an age of electronic music," he
said. “There's nothing between the
performer and the audience. You
don’t have an amplifier, or a PA.
system. or electrical effects. I
think people are really attracted to

 

that."

Fratianni said the instant recogni-
tion factor of the guitar also attracts
people to the shows. “It's very ac-
cessible for listeners because. even
though it’s classical music, which
people may not be familiar with.
they're familiar with the guitar."

When they do come. he said,
they enjoy it and want to come
back again.

Fratianni has been teaching clas-
sical guitar at UK since 1985. He
often finds that he has more classi-
cal guitar students than he can han-
dle.

For instance. this semester he
was unable to offer his beginning
classical guitar class because he
had so many other teaching com-
mitments. He attributes this to the
guitar's popularity and accessibili-
ty.
Fratianni has performed through-
out the United States and Spain, in-
cluding an appearance in Seville at
the Spanish Pavilion during the
World Exposition in 1992.

He has studied under such classi-
cal guitar virtuosos as Oscar Ghi-
glia and Benjamin Verdery. His
programs have been on National
Public Radio, cable and public tele—
vision networks.

This winter, Fratianni will be
playing solo shows in Minnesota,
Ohio. Pennsylvania and West Vir-
ginia Next summer. he will be
teaching in Salzburg, Austria. as
pan of a Kentucky Institute for In-
ternational Studies program. as
well as doing performances in Eng-
land, Austria and possibly Spain.

Next fall, he will take a leave of
absence to teach at Cambridge Uni-
versity in Cambridge, England. as a
part of the Cooperative Center for
Study in Britain.

The UK Guitar Ensemble will
perform at 8 [ML Admission isfree.

, ..- .. .. 0-5..“ .¢.m~smw.-_.. -uaa.

Kentucky Ksmsl, Wednesday, November 17, rue - 3

 

 

UK THEATRE PROUDLY PRESENTS

 

by Joan Schenkar ' .5
(iuignol Theatre . November 18,19,20-8PM.

TICKETS: 257.4929 52".".- ‘

Singlctary Center for the Arts Ticket Office
$9 (icnerul. $6 Students/Seniors - All tickets 56 Nov. 3 and 4
UK - T H E A T R E

lelxno mm RI MW“!!!
mama-mal—

 

 

 

 

 

 

SKISHEHHWBDAT'
January 3-8, I994

UN RSITV OF KENTUCKY
Travel Committee

      

 

  

tenant... ‘ m

Only 40 Spot: available _______——2———

  

 

 
   
   
  

 
 

- 8399.00 Package Prics Collegiate ski '
based on quad occupancy elliscoontsd ran
- 4 day h’lt ticket ~lastar lacs
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- 5 nights at The Lodge "’6“ "n m"

 
 

 

 

 

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Discover a challenging
future with opportunities to
advance. Serve your country

while you serve your career with:

0 great pay and benefits
0 normal working hours

Discover the leader in you . . .

flWWWMWW!

Applications are now being accepted for the Spring ‘94
Emerging Leader Institute. This ten week course ex-
plores topics and building skills in leadership including:

. Effective Communication
. Ethical Decision Making

 

   

 

.mv’- w “

 

 

For be Is the sum total, a piece ofeach and 0 complete medical and dental ' Valuing Drversrty , _
All who came before him. care 0 Critical and Creative Thinking
He alone this day is tomorrow. s 30 days vacation with pay per

He is many thin”, but still yet one. year and MUCH more...

He is this day the First~Born Son.
Find out how to qualify as an Air
Force professional. Call
USAF HEALTH PROFESSIONS
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1-800-423-USAF

' -—Eenry Kmey Jr..
_! ‘ Journalism fmhman

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Applications are now available in Room roe, Mam
Center. For further inionnation,csl257.-1099. Desi!
for application is Monday,Novenbsra. f .

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

    

“BUILDING
PARTNERSHIPS FOR
COMMUNITY SERVICE

AND LEARNING”

“An Interactive
Teleconference”

November 17, 1993
Center Theatre, UK Student Center
1:30—4:00 PM

  

 

 
    

«wwwwnsem: ~

    
 

 

FEATURING:
SPEINGER-VEELAG

MATHEMATICS ANII ENGINEERING

SALES.”

UNIVERSITY OF

KENTUCKY
BOOKSTORE

Student Cooler Anm‘x

If?“ " x Pu“
kwwmoln

PREMIER (.[NTIEHINS (lUll

"riinéri WEEK!"

FREE ADMISSION'

" ncxr‘r

An opportunity to explore the role of learning
through service at the University of Kentucky

UK Faculty and Students To Serve
As Commentators On The Teleconference.

UK (ATS l’l/ILDOIT'S

h
0‘” N '

To register for the teleconference, please
call the Student Activities Office at 257-8867

It Hun-n no a I Vrt em roe

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Kentucky Kernel
Established In 1894
Independent srnce 1971

 

Editorial Board
Tyrone Benoit. Editor in Chief
Oim McDavrd. Editorial Editor
Mary Madden. Managing Edna

Dale Greer, Executive Editor
lance Williams, New: Editor

Farce Patterson. Assistant News Edna

BUN] Bennett, Semi: Staff Writer
Meredith Nelson, Columnist
Anne Sunt-Argnan. Staff Writer
Jerry Voigt, Editorial Cartoonist

 

 

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Students giving blood

to Crush will give life
during holiday season

 

EDITORIAL

 

Think of Thanksgiving at home.

A family surrounds the table in

hope of slicing into a large turkey that's had everyone’s mouth wa-
tering all morning.
Everyone is laughing and having a wonderful time, enjoying the
holiday weekend.

Now try to imagine the scene if one of the members of that fami-
ly is in a accident on the road during the busy holiday weekend.

That is the importance of the Big Blue Crush blood drive this
week.

The annual drive is more than j

ust another rivalry between UK

and the University of Tennessee; it’s one of the main functions for
Central Kentucky Blood Center throughout November in prepara-
tion for increased accidents during the holiday season.

The blood center's goal for Big

Blue Crush is fewer than 2.500

pints of blood. When you consider than more than 20,000 people
are on this campus each day, that doesn't sound like a lot.

And it isn‘t. The big problem

is many of those people think

they’re too busy to stop for a few minutes and donate blood.

If the possibility of saving a life

isn’t enough to motivate you to

donate. do it because Tennessee was leading the drive by 25 pints
as of Monday.

 

 

FACT CAT

 

Dear Fact Cat: There are
percentages of failure rates of
birth control pills under two
categories: “perfect use" and
“typical or average use."

Would taking a pill 10 min-
utes, 30 minutes or even an
hour later than the scheduled
time. say 5 pm, be under “av-
erage use." and is this cause to
be worried about the effective-
ness of the pill?

I have never missed a pill,
but because of my work sched-
ule I find it hard to take one at
the same time every day.

Also. could you please tell
me or list some commonly pre-
scribed antibiotics that may
interfere with the effectiveness
of the pill?

Dear Nordette-28: Oral
contraceptive pills should be
taken at a consistent time every

day, but efficacy is probably
not affected unless the pill is
taken more than 12 hours late.

If, however. you experience
break-through bleeding when
the pill is taken only a few
hours late, you should use an
additional method of birth con-
trol.

You might consider carrying
your pills with you so your
work schedule won't interfere
with your pill schedule.

Rifampin, used to treat tu-
berculosis and leprosy, is the
only antibiotic that has been
shown to affect estrogen and
progesterone levels.

Antibiotics, such as tetracy-
cline and ampicillin, however.
have the potential to decrease
the efficacy of oral contracep-
tives.

Additional contraception
usually is recommended when
you take any of these medica-
tions.

Other drugs that can de-
crease OCP efficacy are anti-
convulsant drugs, such as di-
lantin and griseofulvin. an anti-
fungal drug taken by mouth.

Contact your clinician or
pharmacist if you have ques-
tions about drug interactions
andwhat to do.

Send your questions to Fact
Cat, c/o Student Health Ser-
vice. P.O. Box 1090, Campus
40536-0284.

 

 

 

 
   
  
   
 
   
   

 

 
 
    
   
  

 

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/,
WW6

I think Teddy Roosevelt would
be all for NAFTA.

Teddy was a man who feared
nothing and loved good healthy
competition and enterprise. He
wasn‘t the most politically correct
guy in the world, but since when is
that a measure of character?

He did a lot of good for this
counu'y, and any die-hard Ameri-
can who fears foreign competition
could learn a lot from this great
imperialist — and maybe get some
guts in the meantime.

I‘m speaking here to the soul of
the Republican party, which is
finding itself in conflict because a
few fear-mongers among our
ranks can’t distinguish between
progress and liberalism.

Pat Buchanan may be right on
the button in terms of what‘s ac-
ceptable and not acceptable in
terms of our nation‘s morality and
social policy. As a president, he'd
be great on domestic affairs.

But his isolationist foreign poli-
cy just won‘t fly in this century, or
the next Like it or not, the global
market is here to stay.

Many Americans understanda-
bly find that distressing. But what
would good ol‘ TR. do in this