THURSDAY 7.17.14
FORECAST
SUNNY | HI 80º, LO 60º
est. 1892 | independent since 1971 | www.kykernel.com
A JEWELL NO MORE Jewell Hall had been standing since 1940 before it was torn down on Wednesday. Students were moved out of the dorm in January to prepare the dorm for demolishment. The dorm began as an all-girl dorm and was recently a co-ed dorm before it was marked for deconstruction. PHOTO BY ADAM PENNAVARIA | STAFF
THE $6.55 MILLION MAN
TROUBLE IN GAZA
FUELED BY FIBBING
UK fans should be happy with having one of the elite coaches leading their program.
The cease-fire between Israel and Gaza goes awry hours after it began.
Kernel columnist Matt Young says news cable channels rely on setting their own agenda.
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HOROSCOPE To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Aries (March 21-April 19) — Today is a 9 — You're gaining authority today and tomorrow, with the Moon in your sign. Make optimistic plans. Inspire, rather than demanding. Others ask your advice. Show respect, even when others disagree. Clean house. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is an 8 — You're entering two days of private self-examination. Get serious about your strategy without getting stuck-up. Accept a challenge if it pays well. Keep quiet about everything. Finish up a project instead.
Gemini (May 21-June 20) — Today is a 7 — Check public opinion today and tomorrow. Words don't flow as easily. Misunderstandings could slow things. A pet theory falls flat. You gain an advantage, though. Don't get pushed into anything. Consider all options.
Cancer (June 21-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Don't share your dreams yet. Keep practicing. You're attracting the attention of an important person. Learn from an experienced tutor. Postpone a financial discussion. Use the next two days to forge ahead. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is an 8 — Friends offer good advice. Be polite. Concentrate on studies, and make time for an outing over the next few days. Avoid financial arguments and shopping sprees. Allow extra time for communication and transportation deadlines.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is an 8 — Consider the family budget today and tomorrow. Don't throw your money around. Home cooking delights. Keep track of expenses and upcoming bills. Expect delays with travel. Fix up your place with simple changes.
2 | Summer Edition | 7.17.14
SUDOKU
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is an 8 — Balance the good with the bad. Avoid arguments with a partner. Magnetic personalities come together. Today and tomorrow could get romantic. Someone admires your confidence. You change your mind easily. Be respectful. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Handle work issues today and tomorrow. Breakdowns with paperwork, shipping and communications could slow the action. Aim for great service, and handle whatever arises. Use what's already in your garage. Enjoy a walk.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is an 8 — You start enjoying yourself over the next two days. The more you learn, the more you wonder about. Consider alternative moves. Love's a comfort when money's tight. Don't take risks. Play it cool.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — Focus on home and family for the next few days. A temporary setback slows progress on a project. Action gets farther than words. Consider options before launching. Show how much you care.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 7 — You're exceedingly clever for the next few days. Catch up on reading. Consult with a professor or lawyer. Don't overlook your partner. Extra attention may be in order. You can get what's needed. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 7 — Postpone financial meetings until the numbers get nailed down. Make long-range plans with optional directions. Changes may be involved. Keep your eye on the money today and tomorrow. Invest in success. Keep a secret. MCT
NEWS
SPORTS
New music festival comes to Lexington By Anne Halliwell ahalliwell@kykernel.com
Acts like Moon Taxi and A Lion Named Roar into a one-day event called The MoonTower Music Festival on July 26 at the Equus Run Vineyards in Lexington. The festival, which starts at 10 a.m. on July 26, features several music acts along with food and shopping opportunities, said Kaelyn Query, founder of LexEffect. “People will not be bored, for sure,” Query said. “It’s music all day long.” LexEffect, an event management company, planned the event in conjunction with The Nest, a center that provides women and families with emergency childcare, free counseling and parent education, also based in Lexington. Aside from costs incurred running the event itself, the proceeds from the music festival will go to The Nest, which has helped with planning and promotion, said Patrick Hale, the director of sales at LexEffect. “One of the really amazing things is that it helps us connect with a new and younger demographic,” said Elizabeth Haynes, a board member of The Nest. “I think it’s very important for us to want to reach the young professional community, and I think the festival is a great gateway for us to do that.” The 18-and-up festival should cater to the interests and musical tastes of the 20’s-to-30’s crowd in and around Lexington, Query said, and since it’s taking place over one day, the need for camping or sleeping arrangements is eliminated. Local food trucks, band merchandise tents and local artists will all supply goods for purchase. Local up-and-coming groups are mixed in with popular acts, Hale said, which means a mix of musical genres that should appeal to a broad audience. “We feel like we’ve pulled together a lot of aspects of central Kentucky that are really young and fun,” Hale said. “Our goal is to pull it all together for one good weekend.” This is the first year of the MoonTower Music Festival, but the hope is that Lexington’s current lack of other music fests will lead to continuation of the new attraction. “This year will be great, but the next couple years will be amazing,” Query said. “We’re going to create something in Lexington that no one has seen before.” General admission tickets are available for $45.
PHOTO BY EMILY WUETCHER | STAFF
John Calipari talks to his team during a time out during the NCAA Tournament vs. Wichita State in St. Louis, Mo., on Sunday, March 23, 2014
The $6.55 Million Dollar Man UK has one of the few elite coaches capable of winning a national title UK fans will see a John Calipari they may have never seen before. A r m e d with a new hip and veteran players, Calipari will be akin to the Six-Million Dollar Man — NICK GRAY only he'll be Kernel Columnist the $6.55 Million Dollar Man, according to the contract he signed in May. And the $6.55 Million Dollar Man will have so many toys at his disposal. He will have a backcourt who have a year of experience under their belt and almost certainly will not shoot 39.8 percent from the floor in 2014-15.
He will have a potential SEC Defensive Player of the Year candidate potentially on the bench — and Willie Cauley-Stein. He will have a forward who has not fulfilled the type of expectations that come with a five-star rating and a 6-feet-8inch athletic and lengthy frame. He will have four Top 40 freshmen coming off of the bench. And still, it will be up to the $6.55 Million Dollar Man College basketball has been a coach's game for a long time. Coaches who cannot recruit or cannot manage a game properly do not advance to the Final Four, much less win a national championship. And so it goes that if the program's coach isn't Hall of Fame-caliber, the program is-
n't winning a national title. Jim Harrick is the last coach who won a national championship who wouldn't be considered one. The sport is elitist. College basketball is not the NBA; a guy like Erik Spolstra does not get lucky enough to run into two titles with the best player in college basketball. Even Rick Barnes won six more games the season after he lost Kevin Durant at Texas. The sport relies on coaches much more than the school's name. And before UK fans get upset, remember He Who Shall Not Be Named. Remember Butler. Flashback to 2002 — Maryland and future Hall of Fame coach Gary Williams faced off against Indiana and
coach Mike Davis in the national championship game. Davis was not exactly Hall of Fame caliber — the 2001-02 season was the only time he led the Hoosiers past the first weekend of the NCAA Tournament. Williams and the Terrapins won by eight, and Indiana hasn't been back to college basketball's golden weekend, at least without buying a ticket first. Indiana hasn't done it with Kelvin Sampson and Tom Crean, and UK didn't do it with Billy Gillispie. The name means just as much as the person who leads its program. It's the $6.55 Million Dollar Man's world. Enjoy him while it lasts. There's not many like him, and he certainly doesn't grow on trees. 7.17.14 | Kentucky Kernel | 3
NEWS
Linklater gambled and won with ‘Boyhood’ Movie featuring Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette was shot over the course of 12 years By Cary Darling MCT
FORT WORTH, Texas — Richard Linklater is the first to admit that “Boyhood,” his acclaimed movie tracing the arc of a suburban Houston boy's maturation from the age of 6 to 18, could have been a colossal failure. Filmed a few weeks each year over the course of 12 years, the entire project could have been sidelined by any of life's misadventures. The adult actors, including parents Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette, could have had other moviemaking obligations. The child actors, especially newcomer star Ellar Coltrane as Mason, the boy at the movie's heart, and their parents could have had second thoughts halfway through this cinematic experiment. Most distressingly, someone playing one of the main charac-
ters could have had suffered serious injuries or died during such a long period of time. “When you're collaborating with time, you don't know what's going to happen,” the director / writer says by phone from his Austin home base. “But you know something is going to happen.” But that knowledge wasn't enough to deter Linklater _ the director who has sketched a portrait of an ongoing romantic relationship through the movies “Before Sunrise,” “Before Sunset” and “Before Midnight” — from sticking to his vision of chronicling adolescence in something resembling real time.
“
“I wanted to tell a film about childhood, about growing up but all of my ideas were too dispersed over so many years. I couldn't pick a moment and a 7-year-old can't play a 14-year-old,” he remembers of his
the movie would go from year to year, he would gradually age, and go off to college. It all came in one kind of intense little flash.” He then shared his inspiration with Hawke, a friend who has been in several of Linklater's movies, and Arquette, who was in the director's “Fast Food Nation.” “Actors are brave. Ethan and Patricia jumped in quickly,” Linklater says. “A kid, however, Richard Linklater, Director of “Boyhood” can't really fathom the thing. first attempts to come up with You're really dealing with the parsomething around the turn of the ents. ... Coltrane was an actor, he century. “I had almost given up on had cool parents and they thought it the idea. And then the idea hit me, was a potentially positive thing in and the idea came fully formed that their lives. It was a huge leap of
How can a 7-year-old even comprehend 12 years of life?”
faith. He even says that it was not until year five or six that he realized what it was. How can a 7-year-old even comprehend 12 years of life?” In fact, Linklater's daughter, Lorelei, who plays Mason's sister, came close to pulling the plug on the whole thing by declaring at one point that she wanted Linklater to kill off her character. “I'm still traumatized by John Amos being killed off (the sitcom) 'Good Times,'” laughs Linklater, who says he never entertained Lorelei's idea. “She was no longer the 8-year-old bopping around and she didn't want to do it anymore. Ultimately, the film was a very different experience for everyone and meant different things at different times. Ellar never wavered. To give (Lorelei) credit, she rallied and was fine. Then she was looking forward to the film. It was, 'Hey, when are we going to do the next one?'”
Israel-Gaza ceasefire turns deadly By Joel Greenberg MCT
JERUSALEM — A ceasefire proposed by Egypt to end a week of fighting between Israel and Islamist militants in the Gaza Strip failed to take hold Tuesday after volleys of rockets were fired into Israel and Israel resumed bombardments of the coastal enclave. The Israeli army said that more than 130 rockets and mortar rounds were fired at Israel. The attacks caused the first Israeli fatality in the conflict, when a man who had come to donate food to soldiers near the Gaza border was killed by a mortar blast. The army said it hit 30 targets in the Gaza Strip, where the Palestinian death toll climbed be4 | Summer Edition | 7.17.14
yond 190. According to the United Nations, three-quarters of those killed were civilians, including 38 children. Israel had accepted the Egyptian truce plan, but it was rejected by the Islamist group Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip. Hamas officials said they were not consulted before the plan was announced and charged that it failed to adequately address their demand to lift border closures imposed by Egypt and Israel. The renewed rocket fire drew a sharp rebuke from U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who canceled a planned trip to Cairo. “I cannot condemn strongly enough the actions of Hamas in so brazenly firing rockets in multiple numbers in the face of a goodwill effort to offer a cease-
fire in which Egypt and Israel have joined together,” he said. The quick unraveling of the cease-fire plan underlined the lack of trust between Hamas and the Egyptian government under President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, who has taken a hostile stance toward the Islamist group and its backer, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. The previous Egyptian president, Mohammed Morsi, an Islamist from the Muslim Brotherhood who was deposed by el-Sissi, successfully mediated a ceasefire that ended a previous round of fighting between Israel and Hamas in 2012. The Israeli military held fire Tuesday morning after Israel's security cabinet accepted the Egyptian plan. But Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered renewed airstrikes six hours later
PHOTO BY ANDREW HARRER | MCT
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry criticized the Islamist group Hamas for rejecting a ceasefire and firing rockets into Israel. Hamas controls the Gaza Strip.
after dozens of rockets and mortar rounds were fired at Israel. “Hamas chose to continue this battle and it will pay a price
for this decision,” Netanyahu said. “Hamas leaves us no choice but to ... intensify the campaign against it.”
SPORTS
Women’s soccer gets high-scoring transfer Michaela Doole, a sophomore forward from the University of San Diego, will transfer to UK women’s soccer with three years of eligibility remaining, the university announced on Wednesday. Dooley appeared in all 20 of the Toreros’ matches in 2013 as a freshman, starting in 18. She scored six goals from her forward spot. “We are extremely excited about Michaela joining our program at Kentucky,” UK head coach Jon Lipsitz said in a release.
“Michaela is a is a special attacking player, and that is backed up by her six goals last season as a freshman. We know that she will be a great addition to the Wildcat family and we are looking forward to working with her and developing her into a world-class player here at UK.” The Cats will return 21 total goals from senior Arin Gilliland and junior Zoe Swift next season. STAFF REPORT
RECYCLE THE KERNEL 7.17.14 | Kentucky Kernel | 5
COLUMN
Cable channels are full of opinion Terrorists care more about ideals than truth. The church that kept science dormant for generations cared more about ideals than truth. Sit back, freshen your drink, and prepare to be brainwashed. I promise that for some reason—God, human rights, oppression, government overreach, or the fact that 9/11 was an inside job—every word I say is true and morally correct. Thinking takes so much work; let me tell you what to think. MATT YOUNG Flip back to reality for a minute. The Kernel Columnist real fact is that your mom, uncle, best friend, and that crazy dude at the coffee shop all live in an input only state of mind. Millions of Americans are fed political talking points from the left and the right on cable and talk radio propaganda shows, and refuse to think for themselves. The Fox News and MSNBC crowd are taking too much of our country down with them. Politifact, a Pulitzer prize winning fact check site recently released an analysis of Cable TV personalities that should have been front-page news across the globe. 60 percent of claims from Fox News personalities, and 46 percent from MSNBC were rated false, many receiving the honorable distinction of ‘pants on fire’. If only it were possible to write this off to a mistake, or a cherry picked bias from an organization with an axe to grind, but this is actually a really common phenomena. Time and time again scientific inquiries have found Fox News and MSNBC viewers to be the least informed people in the country. In one study by Pointer, people with no news exposure were better informed than Fox and MSNBC viewers. Another by Pew showed that over half of each station’s programing was opinion; MSNBC was at 85 percent opinion. Even Congress’s disapproval rating isn’t that bad. Daniel Patrick Moynihan is often quoted as saying, "Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts.” But what did he know? This is 2014, and facts are only applicable when they support our pre-conceived bias. Cable news has created a Ponzi scheme of information. They tell us what we want to hear, and by the time we finally learn they care about us less than Bernie Madoff cared about his investors, our livelihoods and civility are gone, and we can only blame ourselves. Cable news is in desperate short supply of people fitting into categories one and two; therefore they bank on the third, and use ideological superiority in lieu of facts. Thus we have a nation full of uninformed viewers caring more about ideals than truth. If that is not so bad, consult a history book and see how a church that felt the same kept real science dormant for centuries. Better yet, go find the closest man strapped in a suicide vest; he can show you what happens when ideals trump truth. 6 | Summer Edition | 7.17.14
SPORTS
Playoff will stay at 4 teams — for now By Matt Murschel MCT
HOOVER, Ala. — There have been no discussions about expanding the new College Football Playoff to include more than four teams, according to the group's executive director. Bill Hancock told the Orlando Sentinel Tuesday that he doesn't see expansion in the immediate future for the new postseason format. “I really don't,” said Hancock, adding that the reason the playoff was set up for the next 12 years was to provide stability. The College Football Playoff was created as a replacement for the Bowl Championship Series, which expired last season. It features two semifinal games followed by a national championship game at rotating sites. “We should all come to love it and really enjoy it,” he said. Hancock adds that the reason for sticking with four teams for the playoff is twofold, “To protect the regular season and protect the bowl experience for student-athletes from top to bottom.” He said there is a concern that too many teams in a playoff could
PHOTO BY STEPHEN DOWELL | MCT
Florida State head coach Jimbo Fisher celebrates the Seminoles’ victory over Auburn in the 2014 BCS National Championship, the last championship to be played without a four-team playoff.
create a tipping point that would erode the regular season. To Hancock, four teams won't cause that erosion. “We're going to have four for a long time and it's going to be awesome,” he said. With a little less than six months until the national championship game, Hancock says the playoff group is in 'good shape' heading into the football season. He adds that while there are still some details to be
worked out, it's been a smooth transition from the BCS to the College Football Playoff. Hancock is on hand at this week's SEC football media event to educate the media on the new postseason. “It's really important to us that people understand how this playoff is going to work,” said Hancock, who referred to his session as College Football Playoff 101. Hancock said that he's been
following the developments surrounding the NCAA and its changing governance issues very closely, but he doesn't think it will impact what he and his group are doing. “Will it affect what we're doing with the College Football Playoff? No. The conferences came together to create the playoff and they're all a part of it. From a playoff perspective, we're watching with great interest.”
CLASSIFIEDS
For Rent
UK/Chevy Chase. 1 BR, one person. $650/month. Bills paid. Quiet area. Call (859) 539-3306.
2 Bedroom 1-9 Bedroom
2-7 BR HOUSES near campus! Huge rooms. Awesome yards/decks. Parking. All Appliances. Great service. Starting at $300/BR. Call/Text (859) 333-1388 or jessie@kampusproperties.com. 4 or 5 BR/2 BA house. 228 & 230 Waller Ave. All electric, two-story living room, W/D, patio. Walk to campus. Call or text Steven (859) 621-3313 or Robbie (859) 6213312. Luxury 2, & 3 Bedroom Apts. 30 feet from Gatton Business School. (859) 621-3128 for a showing. Only a few left for Fall semester. Wayne Michael is now pre-leasing 1-6BR houses for the Fall 2014 semester. www.waynemichaelproperties.com. (859) 5131206.
1 Bedroom
145 Virginia Ave. 1 BR/1 BA. Walking distance to campus. Available July and August. W/D, walk-in closets, parking included. $795/month plus electric and gas. Water, cable and Internet included. Contact (859) 285-1361 or www.mpmlex.com. Great location, great security. 1 BR/1 BA condo with a pool. Close to UK, Baptist Health and St. Joe hospitals. $645/month including all utilities. Call Brad (859) 9830434.
2 Bedroom Apartments at University Village. Starting at $490 per person. NO APP FEE and ONLY $99 Deposit. W/D and Cable/Internet included. Private Balcony. Call (859) 231-6160. 2 BR- 1 block to UK! Walking distance to downtown! $375/BR. Call (859) 523-2363 or www.touchstonerentals.com. 2 BR/1.5 BA for rent. $395 per BR, plus utilities. W/D, garage, and street parking. 833 Gerardi Rd. Both rooms available immediately. Call (314) 223-2691.
3 Bedroom
3 BR- 1 block to UK! Walking distance to downtown! $375/BR. Call (859) 523-2363 or www.touchstonerentals.com. 3 BR/2 BA and 3 BR/1 BA available August. Great places. Call Dennis (859) 983-0726. www.sillsbrothers.com. 3 BR/2.5 BA town homes, preleasing for August 2014. Red Mile Square Townhomes. $1,400/month. 2-car garage option, ceiling fans, W/D, all electric, security systems, private patios and large decks. Walking distance to campus and Red Mile busline. Contact (859) 288-5601 or mprentals@netbusiness.com.
4 Bedroom
4 & 5 BR houses! 1 block to UK! Walking distance to downtown! $375/BR, W/D, parking. Call (859) 523-2363 or www.touchstonerentals.com.
4 Bedroom Burley Townhomes-LIMITED TIME SPECIAL! $350 per person. Cable/Internet, W/D, security system, private party deck. Huge basement for second living space. Call (859) 231-6160. 4 BR/2 BA house near UK Commonwealth Stadium. W/D, off-street parking. $1,200/month. Call (859) 269-7878. 4 BR/2.5 BA town homes, preleasing for August 2014. Red Mile Square Townhomes. $1,500/month. 2-car garage option, ceiling fans, W/D, all electric, security systems, private patios and large decks. Walking distance to campus and Red Mile busline. Contact (859) 288-5601 or mprentals@netbusiness.com. 4 BR/2.5 BA- $425/BR. Huge apartment! 1 block to UK! Dishwasher, W/D, parking. Call (859) 523-5331. 4 BR/4.5 BA, each BR has private bath. All appliances, including dishwasher and W/D. 1 block from medical center. All electric. Large off-street fenced parking. $430/BR. Call Darrell (859) 229-8665 or Darby (859) 492-1369. 440 Marquis. 7 BR/3 BA, 2200 sq.ft. Remodeled kit & baths. 2 blocks from UK. New appliances. $3,400/month. (859) 381-0000, Cold Harbor Realty. 4BR/2BA House - Oldham Avenue. With appliances. Within walking distance to UK campus. Off-street parking. Call (606) 5471040 for more information. Large 4BR/2.5BA duplex unit, close to campus. W/D, deck, garage, eat-in kitchen, quiet cul-de-sac. 630 Big Bear Lane. $1,000/month. Available now. (859) 278-0970.
5 Bedroom
5 BR/2 BA apartment, 608 E. High St. Central heat/air, W/D connections, off-street parking. $1,500 plus utilities. Available Aug. 2014. (859) 338-7005.
Help Wanted AAA is looking for a few friendly voices to fill open full time/part time/seasonal positions in its inbound customer service call center in Hamburg. Excellent listening and verbal communication skills, computer and typing skills, the desire to help people, a flexible schedule and ability to work weekends required. The option to schedule FT in 4/10’s is also available. All schedules include a minimum of 1 weekend shift. Base hourly rate + incentive pay plans. A variety of benefits available for PT and FT staff. Please apply online at: http://ohiovalley.aaa.com/About/Careers today! Healthy Tobacco Smokers Needed for Research Study. Researchers with the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Department of Behavioral Science are recruiting healthy tobacco users between the ages of 18- 50 to participate in an ongoing behavioral study. Both daily and non-daily smokers are needed. Study involves completion of up to 11 testing sessions. Participants must be willing to abstain from tobacco for 8 hours before each testing session. Study is run in a pleasant setting during daytime hours. Qualified volunteers will be paid for their participation. To apply visit our website at: http://rrf.research.uky.edu.
PT assistant needed for property management company. Must have excellent computer and communication skills. Send resume to 860 South Broadway, Lexington, KY 40504. Researchers at the University of Kentucky are looking for individuals 21–34 years of age who have received a DUI in the last 5 years to participate in a study looking at behavioral and mental performance. Participants are compensated for their time and participation is completely confidential. For more information, call (859) 257-5794. Researchers at the University of Kentucky are conducting studies concerning the effects of alcohol and are looking for male & female social drinkers 21-35 years of age. Volunteers paid to participate. Call (859) 257- 5794. Toddler & Preschool Teachers: We are seeking enthusiastic and energetic early childhood professionals interested in teaching in our outstanding preschool program that emphasizes nurturing and embraces children of all backgrounds and faiths. Perfect for Education majors, experience is required. Conveniently located just 5 minutes from UK campus. Full and part-time positions available. Signing bonus, Highly Competitive Wages. Please call (859) 335-9922 for an interview.
Real Estate For Sale Downtown Living. New Development, The Village at South Broadway. 3BR/4 full BA, hardwood, granite, stainless, FP, large decks, 2 car garage, all brick & stone townhomes. 2 blocks from Rupp. Next door to the JDI Grille & Tavern. 7 Sold, 13 Available! 502 S. Broadway—299K. Tyce McCullough, (859) 494-7079, tyce@rhr.com.
Roommates Wanted Christian female seeking 1 or 2 roommates starting in August. Female student only. Call landlord/owner Dennis at (859) 983-0726 or www.sillsbrothers.com. Roommates needed for August. Male or female. Great places. Best landlord. Call Dennis. (859) 983-0726. www.sillsbrothers.com.
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7.17.14 | Kentucky Kernel | 7
8 | Summer Edition | 7.17.14