TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 2, 2010
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KENTUCKY KERNEL online Football notebook: Cats not looking past Saturday’s game
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CELEBRATING 39 YEARS OF INDEPENDENCE
UK refutes sustainability report Annual rating of university’s progress ‘subjective’ By Drew Teague & Patrick Sullivan news@kykernel.com
While students rarely get a chance to dispute their test grades, UK is making an effort to refute its latest sustainability grade. On Wednesday, the Sustainable Endowments Institute released its annual College Sustainability Report Card for 2011 on Wednesday, and UK received a C+ for its overall grade. Last year UK received a B-. However, the lower grade is not indicative of UK’s environmental progress, Sustainability Coordinator Shane Tedder said. “Contrary to the findings of the report card, UK is in a better place now than we were 12 months ago,” Tedder said. Tedder attributes the lower sustainability grade to changes in the institute’s grading methods. Sustainable Endowments Institute Communications Director Susan Paykin said the changes were put in place to hold schools to higher standards, but Vice President of Facilities Bob Wiseman is skeptical of the report card. “It has been my long-held belief that the Sustainable Endowments Institute’s annual report is highly subjective,” Wiseman said in an e-mail to the Kernel. “It lacks appropriate data collection methodologies, is driven by ‘apples to oranges’ comparisons and offers little of real value for evaluation of institutional progress on sustainability matters and environmental initiatives.” One improvement to UK’s sustainability is a new website that allows users to view many of the campus’ environmental facets, Tedder said. In addition to the website, Tedder said his new sustainability coordinator position, which was created within the last year, has made UK’s efforts more efficient. Tedder also cited a $25 million energy efficiency and retrofit project and more student interest as factors in UK’s sustainable development. UK has also implemented energy efficiency in its classes to foster student involvement. “There’s a lot of interest in integrating sustainability into the curriculum and getting it into the course work,” Tedder said. “That’s an area that the Sustainability Report Card really doesn’t address.” Tedder said two new community gardens and increased recycling throughout campus have contributed to a greener campus. With its multiple efforts, the mediocre See SUSTAINABILITY on page 2
PHOTO BY BRITNEY MCINTOSH | STAFF
Junior guard DeAndre Liggins tosses in a lay up in the second half of UK’s first exhibition game vs. Pikeville on Monday.
Bearing down By Aaron Smith news@kykernel.com
UK Head Coach John Calipari made no reservations in his opening remarks on his team’s first performance. “We really had no real fight or viciousness to our game,” Calipari said. “We didn’t really rebound. We did turn it over 15 times. Couldn’t make a three. Other than that I
thought we showed some good signs.” All of that followed a 97-66 win over Pikeville College in UK’s first exhibition game. At the beginning of the game, UK was unorganized on defense, missing rotations and failing to rebound, and Pikeville gained a two-point lead in the first five minutes of the game. “It’s not okay to start a game the way we
started the game,” Calipari said. “The first half was the lowest hustle points that I’ve ever seen one of my teams have. We got beat to everything.” And then Brandon Knight hit two shots, and order was restored. With the Cats down 11-13, Knight hit a step-back three-pointer to give UK the lead. On the ensuing UK possession, he drove the See BASKETBALL on page 2
Miss Ky. 2010 crowns hospital’s ‘true princess’ By Nicole Schladt news@kykernel.com
Abby Martin’s party was fit for a princess, complete with princess balloons and princess party favors. But the party wasn’t for just any princess. It was for one a specific “Little Princess.” Six-year-old Martin was crowned the 2010 Kentucky Children’s Hospital’s “Little Princess” Monday at a party held by Champs Entertainment Complex and her classmates from Veterans Park Elementary School. Miss Kentucky 2010 Djuan Trent crowned Abby the “Little Princess,” complete with a sparkling tiara and a purple sash. “I am very excited to have the honor of being involved with her send-off,” Trent said. “It’s been a humbling experience for me.” Martin, who was diagnosed with a rare birth disorder known as CHARGE syndrome, has been a patient at the Kentucky Children’s Hospital since her birth in 2004. She underwent 25 de-
velopmental surgeries at the hospital during the first two years of her life because of complications associated with CHARGE, but she has shown a lot of progress since then. “She’s walking better and developing friendships at school,” Abby’s father Michael Martin said. “Kentucky Children’s Hospital has given us so much. Through their work and efforts, she’s alive.”
“Kentucky Children’s Hospital has given us so much. Through their work and efforts, she’s alive.” MICHAEL MARTIN Father of “Little Princess,” Abby Martin
The princess send-off party was in honor of her Nov. 11 departure for Walt Disney World, where she will participate in the national television production of the
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Children’s Miracle Network Celebration. “This party is all about celebration,” Kentucky Children’s Hospital Development Council Vice Chair Jim Richardson said. “So many people don’t realize what an absolute gift the Kentucky Children’s Hospital is, and we have this world-class hospital right here in Central Kentucky.” Earlier this year, Martin was named Kentucky’s 2010 Children’s Miracle Network Champion. Other “champion children” from around the world have been selected to serve as ambassadors for hospitals associated with the Children’s Miracle Network. All of the ambassadors will gather at Walt Disney World for the annual celebration. While Martin will finally be able to meet all of the Disney princesses later this month, Trent believes the true princess can be found closer to home in Martin. “You are such a beautiful PHOTO BY MIKE WEAVER | STAFF girl, Abby,” Trent said. “You Miss Kentucky 2010 Djuan Trent crowns six-year-old Abby Martin as the 2010 Kentucky Children’s Hosare a true princess with the pital’s “Little Princess.” Martin has CHARGE syndrome and has been a patient at the hospital since her heart of a champion.” birth in 2004. The crowning was a send-off party for her Walt Disney World trip on Nov. 11. Newsroom: 257-1915; Advertising: 257-2872
PAGE 2 | Tuesday, November 2, 2010 from the front page
SUSTAINABILITY Continued from page 1 grade on the report card has not fazed UK, Tedder said. “We feel that there is a need and demand for comparing the sustainability initiatives of colleges and universities,” he said. “So earlier this year, the University of Kentucky became a charter participant in the Sustainability
BASKETBALL Continued from page 1 length of the floor for a layup. After that, the margin only got wider as UK marched to win its first exhibition game. “What (Knight) does, and what I like is he has a fight,” Calipari said. “When he saw we were dying he just took it and drove it, like ‘I’m going to do it.’ At times I’m going to let him just go. If no one else wants to do it, go do it all.” But Knight wasn’t free of mistakes, either. Halfway through the second half, Knight tried to jump a pass and missed, leaving his man wide open for a three-pointer. Calipari immediately called a timeout, shook his head and buried his face in his hands. Knight’s gamble may have been inspired by a previous play that did pay off. Earlier in the second half, Knight cut to pick off a pass, raced to the other end of the court and slammed it home. “One of the things he cre-
Tracking, Assessment and Rating System or STARS for short. STARS was developed by the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Ed with feedback from scores of institutions. We feel that STARS is a more complete, more transparent and more relevant tool for comparing the efforts of various schools.” Although taking steps in the right direction, Tedder
said he would like to see sustainability improvement in student driving. “I have a feeling there are a lot of people who drive by themselves for school, class or work daily when there are more sustainable options available to them like carpooling, public transit walking or biking,” he said. “I think that is one area we could really improve in.”
ates for you is a problem with being able to stop him in transition,” Pikeville head coach Kelly Wells said. “We didn’t play John Wall, but I can’t imagine him being a whole lot more difficult to stop than he was.” The alternating good and bad was indicative of the team, and the night, as a whole. DeAndre Liggins finished with 18 points, but only six of those came in the first half, something he attributed to coming out without intensity. “I didn’t have the energy at the beginning of the game, and Coach called me out on that a little bit, and I knew that,” Liggins said. “(Calipari) was very angry, but that’s what exhibition games are all about is getting better.” Darius Miller, who Wells coached in high school, was aggressive offensively throughout the game. He earned a double-double in the final minutes when he grabbed a tenth rebound to go along with 21 points. But like everybody else, it wasn’t a
complete performance. “Darius did some good things and there were other times when he just stopped playing,” Calipari said. “You can’t do that with these freshmen because they are going to stop playing.” Terrence Jones, who shined during the Blue-White scrimmage, picked up two early fouls and never found a rhythm. He finished with nine points, and a second-half alley-oop from Miller was about the only thing reminiscent of his performance at the scrimmage three days earlier. But Calipari said as long as UK acknowledged its shortcomings, the improvement could begin. “It’s Nov. 1, guys,” Calipari said. “As long as you don’t make excuses for how you played, as long as you accept you got out-toughed, out-worked, out-hustled. As long as you accept that we can work on it. If you want to come in and make excuses, then we got problems. And I think they all know.” Follow Aaron on Twitter @KernelASmith.
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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 5 — Romantic ideas concerning travel occupy you. If you plan a trip, allow for adjustments in the itinerary. Something lucky happens along the way. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 6 — Seemingly minor changes transform your personal work as if by magic. Greater harmony persuades others effectively. Allow time to receive and send communications. Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is a 7 — A close associate points out the need for intense focus. Everyone has done their research. Now sort out the salient facts and create your action plan. Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Apply mental effort to your work. Others are creative, but you need to keep
your eye on theoretical parameters. A partner offers solid advice. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 6 — Harness your enthusiasm and apply it to a creative task. This makes the work go quickly and easily. Family and coworkers appreciate the focus, if not the noise. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 6 — Apply physical energy to household activities. Your mind's going three directions at once, but keep your hands and feet busy organizing and doing cleanup tasks. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — Communicate with neighbors, friends and distant relatives. Opportunities today may not be completely smooth sailing, but there is power in building toward goals. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 5 — Plan for more folks around the dinner table than usual. It's better to have leftovers than fall short. Choose your best recipe.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — Paying attention to the task at hand may be difficult now. Fresh opportunities distract from a priority. For best results, stay in the moment. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 7 — Stick to basics as you discuss important issues in private. Group members are ready for a change. Effective direction is necessary. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 6 — Pay close attention to another team member's enthusiastic presentation. You find practical information that affects your side of the equation. Take notes. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 5 — If you find yourself in the spotlight today, you may squirm a bit. You're more ready than you thought to take on personal transformation. Try something new.
MCT
Tuesday, November 2, 2010 | PAGE 3
opinions
Election Day is here…now what? KERNEL EDITORIAL publicans and SG sponsored the event. As university officials have repeatedly emphasized, hosting candidates on campus is not an endorsement. Rather, it is a way to spark political discussion and inform the public on candidates’ platforms in a proximate, interactive way. In essence, the university is enabling and promoting what every political candidate already knows. Successful politicians understand that to get votes, they have to be accessible to the people. They have to clarify their platform and political SHANNON FRAZER, Kernel cartoonist agenda and, increasToday, Election Day, is the moment ingly, maintain that their records are of truth for all of these visitors, as votbetter than their opponents’. College ers take to the polls. Did the candistudents are a grossly underrepresented dates’ appearances really make a differ- portion of the voting population, and ence in the final election outcome, because of students’ impressionability, though? college campuses are obvious go-to loStudent political groups and Lexing- cations for candidates. ton-based groups certainly seemed to Bottom line: Canvassing is essential think so. if you want to win over and, more imOn Monday, Oct. 11, “Cats for Con- portantly, motivate the crowd to vote for way” and Student Government hosted you. Lt. Gov. Daniel Mongiardo, Rep. Ben An Oct. 27 Kernel article described Chandler, Attorney General and Senate student political groups’ use of this hopeful Jack Conway and special guest, strategy, including phone banking and former President Bill Clinton. door-to-door canvassing. The article exThe Oct. 20 mayoral debate highplained that groups hoped to encourage lighted current Lexington Mayor Jim last-minute voters to support their canNewberry and Vice Mayor Jim Gray. didates through these efforts. Last Friday, Oct. 29, the Republican SenPoliticians and student political ate hopeful Andy Barr came to UK with groups have done their part, now you supporter and youngest member of Conmust do yours. Be civically engaged gress Rep. Aaron Schock. College Reand vote. The UK community has enjoyed several campus appearances by Congressional and mayoral candidates in recent weeks in hopes of generating political interest and promoting political activism.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR When I picked up the Kernel on Oct. 29, I read the story on the Sustainable Endowments Institute’s “Sustainability Report Card” with the same sense of frustration and resignation with which I read the actual report when it was released to the Sustainability Office on Thursday. Both the Kernel’s article and the “report card” are flawed at their cores — and they do an injustice to our sustainability efforts at UK. The reporter relies entirely on an interview with the director of communications for the Sustainable Endowments Institute, who suggests to him UK ought to undertake several initiatives on which the university is either already working or has already completed. For instance, Ms. Paykin suggests that UK keep a greenhouse gas inventory. UK’s Department of Facilities Management has already earmarked money for doing this — and UK has registered for the Associa-
tion for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education’s reporting platform, which will allow us to measure our general sustainability against all other universities. Ms. Paykin also suggests that UK move away from the use of coal. While this is a huge issue on our campus, the Student Sustainability Council has been working with a design/build engineering project called “chargeBlue” which would offset some of the university’s demand for Kentucky Utilities’ coal with solar energy. Finally, Ms. Paykin suggests that UK hire a “full time employee working in a sustainability office.” UK has had such an employee — Shane Tedder — employed as the sustainability coordinator for almost a full calendar year. All this begs the question — why did the Kernel not know about any of this? I, as the president of the Student Sustainability Council,
would gladly have spoken to the writer about the report card and explained to him that UK’s phantom drop in the “Student Involvement” category is unexplainable, as UK students are quantifiably more engaged in sustainability than they were in the past year. I am also certain that Mr. Tedder, the sustainability coordinator, or perhaps even Bob Wiseman, the vice president for Facilities Management, would have provided him with a quote had he asked for one. While it is absolutely certain that UK has a long way to go before we are an exemplar of sustainability, things like the Sustainability Endowments Institute Report Card do not help our efforts one iota. It is certainly disappointing that the Kernel failed to hear anyone from the university before parroting its uninformed report. Robert Kahne Student Sustainability Council president
I just wanted to thank you for what you’ve done. I try to reach out and represent my culture and faith positively day by day, and I’m sure many Muslims feel the same way. But our efforts often seem to have no effect when one black sheep spoils the entire image and we have to start over. It’s refreshing to read about a journalist reaching out from the other end. It gives me hope that someday, perhaps in the near future, all cultures can meet somewhere half way. Samir Rawashdeh Electrical and computer engineering graduate student
Submissions
LETTER TO THE EDITOR Response to Nov. 1 column by Cassidy Herringon. I really enjoyed reading your article in the Kernel today. I’m glad it was a positive experience for you. I really appreciated your “lesson learned” that the veil is about modesty and defining yourself by your personality and goals, not your looks. I believe it’s an essential value in Islam. Men live by the same attitude that our “value” as people is measured by our behavior, deeds and how “good” we are as human beings, and not by superficial values such as looks or abilities (showing off).
Please limit letters to 350 words or fewer and guest columns should be no more than 600 words. Be sure to include your full name, class, major and telephone number with all submissions. Telephone numbers will only be used to verify identity. E-mail opinions@kykernel.com
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Personals
FOUND- TI-84 plus calculator in room CB 207. Contact the Math department, 257-6802, to claim.
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PAGE 4 | Tuesday, November 2, 2010 features
Goodfellas finds a second home in Two Keys By Kendall Smith features@kykernel.com
Local bar crawlers in Lexington were in for a surprise a couple of weeks ago when one of Lexington’s latenight eateries, Goodfellas Pizzeria, opened a new location in one of the city’s most popular bars, Two Keys Tavern. The new location comes on the heels of a series of promotions by Goodfellas. “We did promotions on Saturdays for football games so people could see we were here and we could get our name out there,” Two Keys Assistant Manager Andrew Hoffman said. Still, the new location surprised most even though this was in the works for a while. Goodfellas General Manager Mark Stephens said he was considering a second location when his friend and new owner of Two Keys,
Seth Bennett, called him wanting to talk to Goodfellas’ owners about the idea. Goodfellas is known not only for its pizza, but also for the long late-night lines that frequently lead out of the store and onto the sidewalk at its downtown location. “It’s still the go-to store with all the bars around,” Goodfellas Manager Maurice Moore said. Although Goodfellas experiences a high customer volume during the late hours of the night, both the downtown and Two Keys locations receive plenty of customers during standard lunch and dinner hours. “We’ve gotten some business from the hospital right across the street,” Hoffman said. “The downtown location does real well with all the businesses and lawyers around there. It’s a major lunch spot downtown, especially on Fridays.”
Stephens emphasized the new lunch special at the Two Keys location (any slice, side item and drink for $6) as an incentive to attract more customers during lunch hours. So far, the new location hasn’t had much of an effect on the original downtown location. “We’re still busy night and day like it was before,” Moore said. With the new location, Goodfellas plans to add more options to its menu, as well as new services to increase the number of ways it reaches its customers. “On Dec. 10, we’ll start delivering,” Stephens said. “We’ll provide new menu items, new toppings and a new pizza size, which will be 16 inches.” The new Goodfellas location in Two Keys is open every day from 11 a.m. to 2:30 a.m.
PHOTO BY WILLIAM BALDON | STAFF
Alex Woods hand-tosses pizza dough in the kitchen of Goodfellas Pizzeria located inside Two Keys Tavern Monday afternoon.
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