xt7xks6j4b7w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7xks6j4b7w/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 2001-03-07 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, March 07, 2001 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 07, 2001 2001 2001-03-07 2020 true xt7xks6j4b7w section xt7xks6j4b7w WEDNESDAYKENTUCKY

KERNEL

The madness
hits campus
SEC and
NCAA

previews on
inside I 4

Latvia-la

Music to my
ears

 

What would the world be

without music? Well, it
would be one large
cathedral with a whole
bunch of holy rollers.
That's not any good at
all. Music, no matter
what kind you prefer.
is something
spectacular. It can
make you happy, give
you chills, scare you or
make you cry (notice I
said you, not me for
that last one). Here
are some things I have
noticed recently in
music.

The Escalade is mentioned
in more songs than I
can count. What is it
with this automobile
that is so spectacular.
If I had a song it would
not go “on top of my
Escalade," it would be
like “in the back of my

 

MBMoard votes to increase student fees

The low down: Trustees researching WRFL and
SAB fees; Lee Todd's employment contract heard

By Tracy Korshaw
NEWS EDITOR

Students will pay more in fees
and room and board for the 2001—
2002 school year.

Room and board in residence
halls will be $3980. a $198 increase.
The increase includes an extra $30
on the dining card fee. Housing at
Greg Page Apartments and the

Sigma Alpha Epsilon House will
increase to $2,691. a $174 jump.

Rates for other UK-operated
apartments will increase between
$26 and $32. and rates for summer
session housing will increase be-
tween $22 and 355.

Student fees will go from $168
to $230.45. Trustees approved a 39
jump in the technology fee for full
time students and a $50 increase in

the student recreation fee for the
expansion at the Seaton (‘enter

Requests for fee increases
from the Student (‘enteix WRFL
and Student Activities Board were
tabled for further research. said
trustee and Student Government
Association President .Iimtny
(‘iIenn An ad-hoc committee has
been created to research the in-
('l't‘ilbl‘S.

"We didn‘t want to overcharge
the students." (llenn said.

Trustees also heard a report
on the employment contract of in-
coming I'K President Lee 'I‘odd.

’l‘odd could make an annual
salary of $2t‘fiii00. according to a
draft of the contract.

'I‘odd. who is away on busi-
ness. has not yet signed the five
year contract. He will meet with
Board Chairman Billy Joe Miles to
discuss the deal.

The contract allows his salary
to increase annually. based oti the
amount in the l'K budget for
salary increases for faculty and
stall'.

Todd can also earn more mon
ey through a pert}irmancebased
incentive program. The bonus.

which cannot exceed $100,000 per
year. Will be based upon predeter
mined institutional goals or strate
gic objectives agreed ttpon
between Todd and ITK oflictals.

An evaluation process ap
proved by the Board of Trustees
will establish the amount of the
perfiirmance-based payment,

"It is a contract that meets the
institutional expectations and is
comparable with benchmarks in
tcnns of base salary and benefits."
said Dan Reedy. board secretary
and trustee.

station wagon." Who
needs a SUV that
starts at almost
$50,000? I really
would love to have a
four-by-four that costs
so much that I would
be nervous about
parking it let alone
taking it off-road to
utilize all that luxury.
Leather and “mudd’n”
is the best match ever!

Catch phrases are running
out. When songs use
parts of “Old McDonald
had a farm" or others
such as “He loves me,
He loves you not."
These songs are fun
and I really do like
them. I just hope that
songwriters quit
before they get to the
catch phrases like
"keep your eyes
peeled" and “lay down
with dogs, rise up with
fleas."

When did jukeboxes get so
expensive? My favorite
hangout (it’s a chain,
I'm a loser, sue me)
just got this new
digital jukebox
thingamabob (and got
rid of pitchers which
makes me very
unhappy) with a TV
screen and whatnot
but it cost $1 for two
songs. Call me cheap
but geez! The music
was good before and
free. Now you get to
hear a loud jukebox
trying to be louder
then the restaurant
music. I enjoy paying
for that. While you're
at it, pay me not to
scream loudly over all
the music as I pull my
hair out.

Is it OK to be 22 and enjoy

 

an occasional Sinatra
song or something of
this genre? You bet it
is. Not quite music to
get down to, but every
now and then (when I
am not using the
persuasion that is
Marvin Gaye) you got
to bust out some good
old music (and I am
not talking about the
Humpty Dance.
although it is very
good. too!)

-lton Norton
rail_editor®hotmail.com

f
4.5 2.?

Must make it through
midterms. Repeat: Must
make it through
midterms.

Tent? “(11% 1."
iii i‘i'sui
VOL. 33106 ISSUE 38115
ESTABLISHED IN 1892
INDEPENDENT SINCE I971

Newx tips?

 

Call: 2574915 or write:
kernel®pop.uky.edu

 

militfientucky residents

still slug

Running black: Forum at
UK will address effects of
°0ctober coal sludge spill

By Joe Anderson and
ltirt Hodges

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

INEZ __- “Its more of a cover-up than
a cleanup." said Monroe Cassady. a resi-
dent of Coldwater Fork, about the efforts
of the Martin County Coal Company to
restore the damage done by the collapse
of one of its slurry impoundment ponds.

Coldwater Fork and Wolf Creek still
run black.

An informational forum at 8:00
tonight in the WT. Young auditorium
entitled “What if This was Your Back‘
yard?" will address the spill and its ef-
fects on residents' lives.

Just after midnight on Oct. 11. 2000,
the floor of a 72-acre slurry impound-
ment pond of Martin County Coal Com-
pany broke. spilling some 250 million
gallons of coal waste through the aban-
doned deep mines below. Within the
mines. the slurry separated into a thin-
ner “black water“ that ran down Wolf.
while a pudding-like sludge crept down
Coldwater. The black water raced
through Wolf Creek into the Tug Fork of
the Big Sandy River (which empties into
the Ohio River). temporarily disrupting
water supplies to many parts of Eastern
Kentucky and West Virginia. Called one
of the largest environmental disasters
ever in the southeastern United States
by the US. Environmental Protection
Agency, the spill decimated the aquatic
life of the affected waterways.

At Coldwater Fork. coal slurry blan-
keted the valley from creekbed to hill-
side in a flood that rose for three days.
The great field of sludge stretched out of
sight. eight feet deep in places. destroy-
ing cornfields. grazing land. arbors and
yards where childrens' swing sets stood.
The dark. metallic glare of the slurry re
flected light in fascinating ways. In
places, it dried in stiff. angular walls.
twisted into fantastic shapes by machin-
ery: elsewhere it was watery and lay in
smooth. deep beds.

Coldwater Fork ran slow and black
with the slurry. Workers dammed Cold-
water Fork with gravel. turning the
stream into a deep black pool. The regu-
lar course of the stream lay hidden. ob-
scured by the flood of coal waste. Exca‘
vators squatted in the creek. scooping
away loads of slurry and dirt from the
stream to dump into waiting trucks.
Bulldozers and Bobcats slipped in the
muck on shore. All of this took place in
people‘s backyards. just a few feet from
their doorways. Houses were diked and
sandbagged; sheds were surrounded en-
tirely. marooned in a sea of coal waste.

Much has changed on Coldwater
Fork since the spill first occurred. Most
of the deep beds of slurry are gone and
with them the heavy removal equip-
ment. replaced by fields of straw and hy-
droseed. The native soil in many places
has been removed and replaced by
trucked-in rock. fill dirt and sand.

'This wasn't done in darkness'

Several residents of Coldwater Fork
have reported recently mishandled
clean-up procedures of the spilled slurry
on the part of Martin County Coal

Ia” '

.
r u‘ .
xi

Corporation.

“A lot of it on the banks. they just
covered it over with dirt and crushed
sandstone." Cassady said. “They had no
intention of doing it right.“

“This wasn‘t done in darkness."

WhatllT'hls Was Your Backyard?
mecbsonmcililaryltopperand
TeriBluitoanspeakatspm. atWiiamT.
vmwnmmsmmedwsci
erwironnientalconcemscormltteeand
WCIutheireshmentsprovided.

gish from spill

.» . ,

Before

(Above) After the coal
company's impoundment
pond collapsed last
November, 250 million
gallons of waste flooded
the valley of Coldwater
Fork. The sludge rose up
to eight feet in the span
oi three days.

mum j KERNELSTAFF

After

(Left) Martin County
Coal Company dammed
Wolf Creek and began
pumping out sludge.
However, the stream still
runs black.

new I KERNELSTAFF

said Greg Preece said. a resident of Cold-
water Fork who filmed much of the
clean-up work. “This was standard oper-
ating procedure. in plain daylight. in
view of everything."

Residents also allege slurry and
slurrycontaminated dirt have been
flipped over by excavators. burying the
contaminated dirt under “clean" dirt.
Slurry has also been covered over by
sand and rock or hay and hydroseed.
Workers even use high-pressure hoses
to spray the slurry back into the creek.

SeeSLUDGEonIl

The Student Newspaper at the University of Kentucky, Lexington

Portraying
images of
erfection

court ANDERSON l mun STAFF

Magazine images can damage women's self esteem.

The cause: Today, the Kernel
takes a look at the causes
behind eating disorders

By Tracy Kershaw
as EDIYORWA'AAW‘A

Elizabeth Demaret graduated from the
University of Richmond with three degrees
and a minor and she could have done it a
semester early. Instead. the honor student
who worked three jobs during all of her col-
lege years opted to spend her last semester
working in Ireland as a legislative aide for
the man who would become the country's
prime minister.

When she left for Ireland in 1987. the
high-achieving standout was a picture of
perfection.

But when she returned. her own family
was aghast at the sight of her. She had lost 30
pounds overseas. most of it in toilets. She
carried 108 pounds on a 5-foot-9-inch frame.
eating mustard packets and bowls of shred-
ded carrots for meals.

“Whole carrots would be too much." she
said.

Though she remembers Ireland as a
“personal high." she also realizes that there
she began the destruction that would lead to
her personal low: bulimia and anorexia.

For high-achievers like Demaret. the
psychological strain of perfectionism can re
sult in eating disorders. said Gabriella Pes-
sah. senior staff psychologist at L'K's Coun»
seling and Testing C enter,

“You‘ve got someone who is constantly
struggling to create the perfect image." she
said. “but internally they're not feeling good
enough."

Not one thing causes eating disorders.
Pessah said. A combination of psychological.
interpersonal. social and other possible bio
logical or biochemical factors are at the root
of anorexia and bulimia.

“For each individual. it is different." she
said. “it might be some combination of one
or two or three or all of the above."

Mirror, mirror on the media?

Actress Alyssa Milano peers from the
November cover of Cosmopolitan. her
turquoise string-bikini top barely covering
two perfect breasts and leaving her nearly
concave stomach exposed.

inside the magazine. a section called
“Cosmo Diet" informs readers how to fend
off “food-pushers" and how to “reject sec-
onds in a sly way."

Has the media lassoed young women
with a distorted measuring tape?

Some say yes.

While the media cannot be called the
sole cause of eating disorders. it does encour-
age poor body image. which is one of the so
cial factors that can lead to both bulimia and

 

 

  

z | wroursmminciir. 200i | curriculum.

W

The Low-down

Because
my hus-
band is
in non-
profit
theater, I
have
had to
nag him
every
now and
then
about
getting a
paying
job I
think he
makes
negative
money.
Good
thing I
make a
salary.”

Sigourney
Weaver, Sl,
about her hus-
band, Jim
Simpson, to
People Magazine
at Monday’s pre-
miere of her new
movie Company
Man.

Studentssayotmmwmdofshootino

SANTEE. Calif. Some classmates de
scribed the 15-year-old as a "nerd" and a ”dork"
and said he was taunted relentlessly. Others said
the high school freshman told them he was going
to bring a gun to school and shoot up the campus
but they didn‘t take him seriously. On Monday.
the student who authorities identified as Charles
Andrew Williams allegedly opened fire at San»
tana High School. killing two and injuring 13 in
this middle-class San Diego suburb. One student
said he had a smile on his face as he fired away
with a .22-caliber pistol in this middle-class sub-
urb about 10 miles northeast of San Diego. Police
I.t. Jerry Lewis said the teenager shot two peo-
ple in the restroom. then walked into a quad and
fired shots randomly. He stopped to reload his
weapon as many as four times. getting off :50 or
more shots. Lewis said.

Cheney expected to return to work

\t‘.~\SHthl’l‘()N Vice President Dick Ch-
eney should be able to continue in his job unini-
peded by his latest heart problems. doctors say.
shrugging off any suggestion that he should cur-
tail travel or his intense workload. But Cheney
also was given some tough news after he had an
angioplasty to uiiclog a coronary artery Monday.
liven if he sticks to his norbeef diet and rigorous
workout regimen. there is a fair chance he will
be back in the hospital facing the same trouble
soon. his physicians said. Cheney. who has had
four heart attacks. underwent the angioplasty af-
ter he experienced a series ofsubtle pains in his
chest. Doctors said their best evidence indicated
that Cheney. 60. had not suffered another heart
attack.

Naval investigator outlines sub collision

PEARL HARBOR. Hawaii A series of mis-
steps by the crew of the USS ()reeneville paved a
destructive path that led to the submarines fatal
collision with a Japanese fishing boat, according
to testimony from a Navy admiral. The mistakes
ranged from the submarine rushing to get back
on schedule to vital sonar data not getting to the
skipper. Rear Adm. Charles Griffiths testified
Monday. the opening day of a Navy court of in-
quiry into the Feb. 9 collision. Griffiths. who con-
ducted the preliminary investigation. painted a
picture of a submarine crew so consumed with
putting on a good show for 16 civilian guests that
standard procedures fell by the wayside. The nu-
clear attack submarine was demonstrating an
emergency surfacing drill for the guests when it
smashed into the Ehime Marti. The boat. carry-
ing 35 people. was on an expedition to teach high
school students from L'wajima. Japan. how to
fish. Four teens. two teachers and three crewmen
never were found.

JACKO HELPS
THE CHILDREN:
Michael
Jackson is in
the UK to pro-
mote his new
children's char-
ity. On Tuesday
he gave a
speech at
Oxford
University
about "Heal the
Kids." The
charity aims to
“encourage
adults to give
children more
love, attention
and time."

New Endmd mum Much Wooster

RYE. N.H. ~~ Despite the direst of predic-
tions. the East Coast largely rode out a snowy
March nor’easter although New Englanders
watched a strengthening blizzard and feared the
worst was yet to come. From Connecticut to
Maine, shelters were set up, schools were closed,
flights were canceled and offices shuttered Tues-
day as an unofficial holiday for many people
stretched into a second day. More than 20 inches
piled up early Tuesday in Keene, in southwest-
ern New Hampshire. according to the National
Weather Service. Half of it fell during a three‘
hour period overnight.

Spy suspect ordered held in jail

ALEXANDRIA. Va. — A federal judge said
Monday that the government's case against ac-
cused spy Robert Philip Hanssen was “extraordi-
narily strong“ and ordered Hanssen confined to
jail. Hanssen, who appeared at a hearing wearing
a green jumpsuit with the word “prisoner“ print-
ed across the back. did not contest his confinement
under an agreement forged with prosecutors. A
US. official. speaking on condition of anonymity.
confirmed that law enforcement officials believe
Hanssen may have alerted Moscow to a secret tun-
nel built under the Russian embassy by American
intelligence agencies for eavesdropping.

Remains of guardsmen recovered

UNADILLA. Ga. , A somber procession of
military vehicles delivered the remains of 21
guardsmen to a central-Georgia air base as Army
investigators scrambled over the site where
their plane crashed. mapping and videotaping
the charred wreckage. Lt. Col. Deborah
Bertrand. a Robins Air Force Base spokes-
woman. said the bodies were transported Mon-
day to the base south of Macon. Local law en-
forcement officers escorted the convoy. The re-
mains of the three Florida Army National Guard
crew members and 18 passengers from the Vir-
ginia Air National Guard were to be flown Tues-
day. weather permitting. to an Air Force casual»
ty center in Dover. Del. The plane. a C-23 Sherpa
was flying from Florida to Virginia when it
crashed Saturday in a field. The recovery team
had been slowed by 3 feet of mud caused by a 4-
inch deluge of rain. Wind and sunshine helped
dry the field Monday.

Court upholds freeze on Estrada charges

MANILA. Philippines — The Philippines
Supreme Court on Tuesday rejected a request
that would have allowed prosecutors to immedi-
ately file charges against ousted leader Joseph
Estrada. The ruling. which means Estrada can»
not be charged until March 23, was in response
to a request by Ombudsman Aniano Desierto
that the court lift its 30»day suspension of crimi-
nal cases against Estrada. The court said the sus-
pension. ordered Iast month. cannot be lifted
since its ruling Friday that stripped Estrada of
immunity has not yet become final. Estrada had
15 days to appeal Friday’s ruling.

Compiled from wire reports

 

 

An article in Friday's Kernel failed to mention that Brati-
tion Abner is running for reelection as the Student Govern-
ment Association‘s College of Education Senator

An article in Monday‘s Kernel. “Women fought for recogni-
tion in history.” should have said the fight started in the 19th
century.

To report (in error. call the Kernel or 257-1915.

 

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mm I WEDNESDAYJARCHTJOOI I I

 

 

 

 

SLUDGE

Continued from page 1

Many others have ques-
tioned the effectiveness of the
cleanup.

"When it rains. black water
rises up through the hay. hy-
droseed and fill dirt." said Lilly
Adkins. a Martin County Sun
reporter.

"Martin County Coal thinks
they can put icing on a big
round rock and make it look
like a cake and f‘ool our govern-
ment officials into signing off on
their clean up." added a resident
of Coldwater who did not want
to be named.

Officials of the Martin
County Coal Company insist
they have handled the cleanup
properly and effectively

“The company has not been
remiss in any way since the
spill occurred. We addressed the
problem quickly anci with great
vigor." said Baxter Phillips. vice
president of AT. Massey. the
parent company of MC CC.

Bill Marcum. a spokesman
for A.T. Massey. called the resi-
dents‘ complaints. "Not true. Pe~
riod. There has been no attempt
at a cover up on the company's
part."

However. many residents
feel their opinions and concerns
have gone unheard.

"We had absolutely no con-
trol nor any input into how this
cleanup would take place. nor
what level of clean up would be
satisfactory. We have no control
over our own land." Preece said
Several town meetings were
held by the MCCC. where resi-
dents could pose questions to
Dennis Hatfield. the company‘s
president.

“The people had all kinds of

opportunities to ask questions."
Marcum said. “We feel the com
munication process was work-
ing."

Residents (‘on-

disagree.

 

cerning the meetings. Cassady
said. "There is no relationship.
It has been severed. They had a
few town meetings. No ques-
tions were answered; they
would say, ‘l‘m not sure. I‘ll
check on that.‘ Few questions
were really answered.“

Other recent developments
have added to the debate over
MCCC‘s accountability in clean—
ing up the spill. Core drills pre»
formed by the Mining Safety
and Health Administration
show large inaccuracies in the
company‘s mine maps. MSHA‘s
core samples show the distance
between the failed impound-
ment floor and old mine shaft
tunnels was less than 10 feet.
contrary to the 90 to 100 feet
shown in maps submitted by
MCCC in 1994 for a permit to en-
large the pond.

Despite MSHA's findings.
MCCC insists that the maps are
correct.

MSHA also issued citations
for several other violations of
the same slurry impoundnient.
MCCC filed an appeal of these
citations with the Natural Re-
sources aiid Environmental Pro-
tection Cabinet.

"Why they would reopen it
remains a mystery." Preece
said. "it failed in ‘Stl: it failed in
Boon Why risk lives to load it up
again‘.’ it doesn‘t make sense."

 

 

IMAGES

Continued from page i

anorexia. Pessah said.

”The cultural pressures glo»
rify being thin and place really
high value on having the 'perfect
body.” she said.

Demaret is quick to say soci-
ety didn‘t cause her eating disor-
der. but she's also the first to
point out the negative image it is
sending to adolescents. She said
she worries about how to protect
her daughter from the “thin is
beautiful" societal messages.

According to an article in
the Nutrition Research Newslet-
ter. past research has shown that
eating disorder patients and
women showing high body dis
satisfaction tend to overestimate
their body size after viewing thin
models.

Now a healthy weight. l)e-
maret said she will never see her
true reflection in the mirror; “I
see rolls of fat and dimples. l
have to use other mirrors my
husband and my children
things that will give me positive
feedback."

it is difficult to find positive
feedback about body image any
where. said Jill Kindy. a

lflLNAESIERSAQA

dietician at Student Health.

“We don‘t have too many
good examples of someone say-
ing i am OK the way I am.”
Kindy said. “and you are OK the
way you are."

But UK advertising profes-
sor Dennis Altman does not
think it is up to the advertising
industiy to set an example.

“Advertising merely reflects
what exists." he said.

"Size four supermodels are
clothes hangers. not role
models."

if American women are up-
set by the images they should
speak up. but they don‘t. he said.
“They just say ‘what a pretty
(iress.'"

However. Stephanie Lticch-
ese. an integrated strategic com-
munications senior. doesn't just
see pretty dresses when she
looks at models in magazines and
on billboards.

During both high school and
college. Lucchese has known
girls with eating disorders

But the preoccupation with
body image began for many of
her friends in middle school.

When Lucchese looks at a
Cosmopolitan she would like the
cover to be a true reflection of
American women: "They are
putting false ideals in the way we
see ourselves."

» - .......

1W ‘- reassig-

.-h';—:

.3 “lag/”(J , “ ‘-o

Tho machinery used to
clean up the coal splh
croatos a grout deal of
noise. It is noise that
coolant: of Coldwater
Crook have hocom

  
   
   

 

accustomed to hearing.

MW | cram smr

- -
..I

 

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FIRST MONTH 's RENT FREE!!!

RICHMOND LAKES

266-0801

WAITING LIST A VA/LABLE

SSS

 

 

safety. MCCC illegally blocked
KY 908 for a short time. allow-
ing no one through but
residents.

“KY 908 has changed from
being that pleasant drive home
to the prison walk where you
show your pass at the road-
block." Preece said.

Heavy machinery blazing
through yards crushed the sep-
tic pipes of some residents‘
homes.

“We now have the constant
smell of raw sewage in our back-
yards." Preece said.

"We are told by health de-
partment officials that we can-
not replace our iii-ground sys—
tems f‘or a full year after the
property has been restored.”

The Preeces and other fami-
lies have resided in apartments
since they were displaced by
this catastrophe. unable to re
turn to their homes until their
septic systems are fixed.

These are homeland people.
with long memories and deep
connections to the land.

”I would say most of the
people will stay.” said Cassady.
a lifelong resident ot‘titi years.

“Some may lock their places
up and go. There’s no such thing
as selling your place. No one
wants to live on Coldwater."

Academic Achievement

Leadership
Extracurricular Activities

Social and/or Personal Qualities

 

Call For Nominations

W5. 14am
0Wmflmd

This award is presented annually to the student with a
disability who best serves as an inspiration to the
University community through excellence in any or

all of the following areas:

Nominees may be full or part-time students.
Nomination should include the studen's name and
a letter of support addressing their qualifications
to be considered for the award.

DEADLINE FOR NOMINATIONS:
March 22. 2001

Nominations should be maildcd to:
Disability Resource Center
Room 2. Alumni Gym 0029
or by E-MAIL to:
jkarneskfl popukyedu

For more information call 257-2754

 

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means you make up to $20 a month!

1840 Oxford Circle
Lexington, KY

254-8047

 

 

   

 
 

MEETTNGS

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SPORTS

    

  

WISH YOU WERE HERE?

All thg benefits of a part-time lob without all the work.
So break out the suntan lotion! There's no better way to earn that Spring Break you're wishing for.

Campus Calendar

March 5 - March 11. 2001

(ompus Calendar is produced by the Office of Student Actiyities Registered Student Orgs. and UK Depts. can submit information for fl!!! online ONE WEE t

PRIOR to the MONDAY information is to appear at: http://www.ohy.odo/(upu Colo-dot
(all 257-8867 for more information.

MEETINGS

'Amnesty international. 8pm. 22!! Stud. (tr

'Freslimen Focus, 7pm Bopt Stud Umon Chapel

'UK Lambda Mtg, I30pm 73l Stud (tr

'Dovotionsn-lunch, l2 l5pm, Boot Stud. Union Multipurpose Room

'(ompus (rusode for Christ 7 30pm Stud. (tr Worshom Theatre

‘Doiry (lub Mtg, 7pm Gorrigus Bldg Rm 108

'(liristion Student fellowship Synergy Born (ST corner of Woodland

and (olumbio

Green Party Mtg. 9pm, l06 Stud (tr

SPORTS
'UK RUGBY Practice 68pm (luh Sports Field
‘Men 5 Basketball SE( Tournament Nashville

 

    

 

FOR AN EXTRA $10, get the coupon from

our website at www.aventisbioservicescom

 

 

     
      

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