tomorrow’s weather
76 56 isolated thunderstorms
tuesday 09.13.11
kentuckykernel
est. 1892 | independent since 1971 | www.kykernel.com
Target debuts new line
Looking ahead
online 3 ways UK can improve in week 3
Common Thread online
Earthquake survivors attend UK
WAKE ME UP WHEN SEPTEMBER ENDS
Want to become doctors, help restore Haiti By Brooke McCloud news@kykernel.com
In 2010, an earthquake in Haiti left the country hailing for hope and health care. International aid flew to the scene, including a team of doctors from Lexington. Over the course of a month, Dr. Pat Duff, an anesthetist, and his team formed a close bond with Haitian high schools students. Pedro Jean-Baptiste and James Blanc translated various languages into English for the Kentucky doctors. Duff and the team of doctors specially designed The Kentucky Haiti Partnership, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, to finance the two students’ undergraduate and medical school educations. This fall, the students began their first semester at UK. “After the earthquake, we had no hope to go to college, but the doctors gave us hope,” Jean-Baptiste said. Both students are studying biology. Blanc and Jean-Baptise plan to return to Haiti after their 10-year-long education, hoping for a better future for themselves and for their country. “Being a doctor could be good for my family, my community and Haiti,” Blanc said. Student Government President Micah Fielden is both a friend and mentor to the Haitian students. “They are the future of Haiti,” Fielden said. Fielden had worked with his family in Haiti after the earthquake and is a close friend with Duff. The two worked together, along with the rest of the doctors, to bring the students to UK. “After the earthquake I saw the need to have a good surgeon in the community,” Blanc said. “It has become my passion and I am fighting for it.” Duff and his Kentucky team offered services to a city with only a couple of doctors and zero surgeons. Ouanaminthe City, located in the northeast corner of Haiti, is home to 100,000 residents and has no running water. The 7.0 magnitude earthquake killed an estimated 46,000 people, injured 220,000 and left 1.5 million homeless. The city was desperate for aid after the See HAITI on page 2
UK president addresses faculty senate By Rachel Aretakis raretakis@kykernel.com
President Eli Capilouto spoke to the University Senate Monday about his desire to improve relationships, increase communication and facilitate postitive changes for students, faculty and staff. “It is the foundation of trust I hope to establish with the faculty senate,” Capilouto said. He has met with many groups of leaders from UK’s colleges, “to get some ideas and insights” into what people think. Capilouto wants to work on talking with each other rather than talking to one another, he said. “I’ve decided to embark upon something to develop what I hope is our vision,” he said, stressing “our.” The floor was then open for senate members to ask Capilouto questions. Funding for campus facilities was discussed, and Capilouto said by next year he hopes to make progress on this issue. Though he doesn’t think cranes will be on campus by that time, he hopes progress will be made. Gail Brion, an engineering representative, asked what Capilouto hopes to see 10 years from now for the university. Capilouto said he hopes to see students living rich and meaningful lives, and he hopes that everyone shares great pride in graduates and students.
PHOTO BY LATARA APPLEBY | STAFF
Shannon Vinci, a medical lab science freshman, enjoys the sun and relaxes outside of Memorial Hall Monday.
Just another manic Monday After last week’s colder weather, sun has returned to campus with higher temperatures. Footballs and Frisbees haven’t been stored yet, as summer lingers before the autumn leaves change color. According to the National Weather Service, Lexington will see daytime temperatures in the 60s and 70s during the coming days, with nighttime lows in the 50s over the next week. A chance of rain exists for Wednesday and Thursday, before a predicted rain-less weekend.
Football freshman makes early impact Running back sets UK freshman record By Ethan Levine elevine@kykernel.com
One week after rushing for the game-winning touchdown in UK’s week one match-up with Western Kentucky, freshman running back Josh Clemons was back at it again for the Cats against Central Michigan. Clemons followed up his 11 carry, 39-yard performance against the Hilltoppers, which included his 14-yard scamper to the house to seal the game for the Cats, with 14 carries, 126 yards and another gamewinning touchdown against CMU Saturday. Clemons’ achievements on Saturday earned him SEC CoFreshman of the Week honors for this week. “Once you work hard at practice and get the schemes down it’s, kind of easy to perform out there on game day just
knowing what you’ve been taught,” Clemons said. Late in the third quarter of Saturday’s game, with the score tied at 13, Clemons took a handoff from junior quarterback Morgan Newton and followed his blockers to the left side of the line, only to be stopped in his tracks by a swarm of Chippewa defenders who almost certainly would bring him down for a loss on the play. But when it was all said and done, Clemons had escaped past the outstretched arms of the defense and was sprinting down the right sideline on his way to an 87-yard touchdown run that would put UK ahead for good. Clemons’ run was the fourth longest in UK history, and the longest run by a Cat since 1970. It was the longest touchdown by a UK freshman in the history of its football program. In addition
PHOTO BY BRANDON GOOWIN |STAFF
Freshman running back Josh Clemons celebrates during the first half of UK’s season opener against WKU at LP Field in Nashville, Tenn. to rushing for the game-winning score in each of the Cats’ first two games, Clemons leads the team in rushing with 25 carries for 165 yards, an average of 6.6 yards per carry.
Although sophomore Raymond Sanders spent the summer atop the running back depth chart coming out of spring practice, Phillips and his staff knew See CLEMONS on page 2
Panel discusses Kernel, UK Athletics conflict By Rachel Aretakis and Brandon Goodwin news@kykernel.com
The UK Society of Professional Journalists held a panel Monday with a former Sports Illustrated writer and Kernel editors to discuss the conflict between UK Athletics and the Kernel. About 25 students and faculty attended the forum. During the panel, Billy Reed, a former Sports Illustrated writer and former Courier-Journal sports reporter, spoke about the
Newsroom: 257-1915 Advertising: 257-2872 First issue free. Subsequent issues 25 cents.
“punishment-reward” system implemented by UK Athletics. “When it comes to the mission of this university, it is more important for us to produce great journalists, not great basketball players,” Reed said. DeWayne Peevy, UK’s associate athletic director for Media Relations, originally planned to attend but called SPJ officials Friday and said he couldn’t. “I think he’s a busy man, and I think this is something he wants to put behind him,” said Brooke McCloud, the society’s president.
index
Classifieds.............3 The Dish................2 Horoscope.............2
Reed discussed his take on how Peevy handled the situation, and said he “is far exceeding his authority for setting policy on how reporters collect information for a story.” Kernel managing editor and basketball writer Aaron Smith was to receive access, along with other select members of the media, to one-on-one interviews with members of the basketball team on Aug. 30, but lost that “reward” when he attempted to interview Brian Long and Sam Malone, Peevy told the Kernel Aug. 29.
Opinions.............3 Sports..................1 Sudoku................2
The Kernel, an independent student newspaper, reported Aug. 29 that two walk-ons had been added to the basketball team — information that Smith reported after looking up the two players’ cellphone numbers in the directory on UK’s website and calling them. The names of the players were first released on Twitter the evening of Aug. 28 by UK freshman basketball player Anthony Davis (@AntDavis23) and also reported on Kentucky Sports Radio just after 9 a.m. Aug. 29. See SPJ on page 2
PAGE
2 | Tuesday, September 13, 2011
CLEMONS Continued from page 1 they had a potential programchanging back in Clemons. Through just two games, Clemons has asserted himself as a legitimate offensive weapon on a UK offense searching for a play-maker. “He was the back that showed up every day, didn’t miss a day. So he’s really durable, really understood our offense,” Phillips said. “Then when we went into our first scrimmage, some of the cuts he made — his vision, his balance, those things, his ability to secure the football — those are the things that told us that we thought he could be a pretty good back for us.” This week’s opponent,
SPJ Continued from page 1 Long and Malone confirmed to Smith that they are on the team but declined to be interviewed further. UK Athletics has not officially announced the two players as walk-ons, although UK head coach John Calipari has welcomed the players via
arch-rival Louisville, has excelled at stopping the run thus far in 2011, despite struggling against division I-AA Murray State and a loss at the hands of Florida International. The Cardinals have allowed just 94 rush yards per game through their first two games, allowing just 2.5 yards per carry. For UK’s slow-starting offense to be able to move the football against the Cardinals they will have to establish a running game, a responsibility that will rest on the shoulders of the freshman Clemons and his veteran offensive line. “(Clemons) is a special player. The thing is, (the touchdown run) may not have been the cleanest blocked play of the day, and he was able to clean it up for us and bust it out for a big run,” senior guard Stuart Hines said. “We feel like any
his personal Twitter account. During the panel, Kernel managing editor Becca Clemons pointed out that Smith and Peevy maintained a working relationship before the incident and continue to do so. Reed said Peevy’s absence was a sign of disrespect toward the panel and the Kernel. “The Kernel is just a bug
of our running backs are capable of doing that.” Clemons wasn’t the only Cat to receive weekly honors following the Central Michigan game. The College Football Performance Awards named UK senior linebacker Danny Trevathan Honorable Mention Linebacker of the Week after he led UK with 13 tackles, three and a half for loss and a dazzling one-handed interception in the second quarter against the Chippewas. Along with Trevathan, senior punter Ryan Tydlacka was named Honorable Mention Punter of the Week and sophomore kicker Joe Mansour was named Honorable Mention Kickoff Specialist of the Week. Both Tydlacka and Mansour received their respective honors for the second week in a row.
on the windshield of Big Blue Nation’s day,” Reed said, referring to UK Athletics. Peevy was invited to bring the university’s side of the conflict, which centered around Peevy revoking Smith’s access to a media event with men’s basketball players. “As journalists, we want it to be fair,” McCloud said. “We want to get both sides.”
4puz.com
Bob Seger finally puts albums on iTunes DETROIT — Just put those old records back on the shelf: Bob Seger is headed to iTunes. The rocker’s move into the digital music world starts Tuesday, when his two multiplatinum concert albums — “Live Bullet” (1976) and “Nine Tonight” (1981) — are released for download at iTunes and Amazon. “We’re finally doing it,” Seger said. “We’re going digital.” With 16 studio albums — and a new one to come next year — the 66-year-old Michigan icon has only scratched the surface, and said his remaining catalog “will come out in dribs and drabs.” Seger, who has never released a boxed set, said he'll also use iTunes to unveil songs from his sizable backlog of unreleased material. “There’s just so much of that stuff,” he said. “I’d love people to finally hear it.” In the decade since Apple launched iTunes, Seger was one of the most notable holdouts, part of a stubborn but shrinking group that still includes AC/DC, Garth Brooks
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 7 — With the moon in your sign, you've got the confidence to face any challenge. Consider seemingly crazy solutions that just might work. Take it slow, and finish up. Taurus (April 20-May 20) — Today is a 7 — You're inspired and you know what actions to take, so dive in. Work privately, and focus on completing previous commitments first. Unexpected brilliance results. Gemini (May 21-June 21) — Today is an 8 — Schedule meetings today, and enjoy friends ... group activities bring rewards. Encourage someone else's creativity. New opportunities unfold. Guard against jealousies, and share gratitude. Cancer (June 22-July 22) — Today is a 7 — Don't be put off by first appearances ... things aren't
and Kid Rock. “From a business standpoint, we wanted to make sure artists are getting what we consider a fair shake,” said Ed (Punch) Andrews, who has managed Seger since the mid-1960s. And there were other challenges. “It’s probably the best delivery system ever invented, but the industry gave up a lot of quality to have that system,” Andrews said. “At some point, if this is what everybody is accepting, we know we have to keep current. But if we were going to do this, we needed to make sure it was as great as we could make it.” “Live Bullet” and “Nine Tonight” underwent more than a year of remastering to ensure top sonic quality for the downloadable versions. This week's releases will each include a bonus track: “Live Bullet” will feature a version of Albert King's “I Feel Like Breaking Up Somebody's House,” while “Nine Tonight” will come with a 1980 version of Seger's own “Brave Strangers.”
always what they seem. Keep your house clean to avoid upset. Travel later. Hang with friends when you can. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 7 — Romantic persuasion works for you now. Your community brings out the best in you. An argument is tantalizing, if you keep your sense of humor. Take notes for future reference. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 6 — It's OK to question your purpose at this point in time. Don't go against your core values. Encourage others to make bizarre suggestions. You'll know when it's right. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 7 — Clean up any misunderstandings with your partner to create shared goals anew. Think outside the box when confronted with any challenges. Get expert assistance. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is an 8 — Jump into action. You can be especially creative in your work now. Be open for a pleasant surprise. You've got everything
MCT
you need, so keep your money in your pocket. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 7 — Confer with your family. You're attracting love and romance. A surprising development spurs you to new ideas. Choose for yourself. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 6 — Solve a mystery by cleaning up messes and tying loose ends. Don't get off the train until it has completely stopped. If you do, expect consequences. Better to stay home. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 7 — Practice and study flourish now. Don't be afraid to make mistakes. It's part of learning. Communication allows romantic conflict to end before it starts. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 9 — Push forward to complete projects, especially those that have resisted completion before. Your head's full of ways to make money. Finish up old stuff to make way for new. MCT
HAITI Continued from page 1 earthquake, but translators were needed first. High school students Blanc and Jean-Baptiste were assigned as translators at the Ouanaminthe City medical center. Prior to the earthquake, that medical center was their high school. For a month, Institution Univers, one of the best schools in Haiti, was transformed into a medical clinic. “They had traveled to the U.S twice before, both times due to their academic success,” Fielden said of Blanc and Jean-Baptiste. The tuition for their high school is $110 a year, while the average annual household income for the area is $400. “I am the youngest of seven,” Jean-Baptiste said. “My family did not have the opportunity to give me any more education. It wasn’t possible.”
During that month, Duff formed a strong bond with the two students and refused to let the two go without a college education. “We became close friends with the doctors, and after talking to them they told us that one way they could help us and help Haiti was to come to college in America,” JeanBaptiste said. Duff worked with Georgetown College and both of the students were admitted for the Spring 2010 semester nine months after the process had begun. “My family knew this opportunity was a good thing and when I come back it isn’t only beneficial for them, but beneficial for my community too,” Blanc said. Jean-Baptiste and Blanc arrived in January to unfamiliar weather. Neither one of them had seen snow before. “I didn’t like the cold,” Jean- Baptiste said. “I am used to the warm weather
in Haiti.” As the winter weather began to thaw, Duff and Fielden continued working with UK. In the fall of 2011, the students transferred to UK to continue their degrees in biology. The Kentucky Haiti Project estimates that each student will need $300,000 plus living and travel costs to complete their Kentucky undergraduate and medical school educations. Blanc and Jean-Baptiste want to become doctors for many reasons. “When I was young, my mother passed away,” Blanc said. “I also want to be a doctor because it is good for my community.” Blanc and Jean-Baptiste are living in Smith Hall and working in UK's Office of Admissions and Recruitment while taking 15-hour course loads. Fielden said their presence is welcomed. “We can help them by providing education, but in return they give us so much more,” Fielden said.
tuesday 09.13.11 page 3
kernelopinions
eva mcenrue | opinions editor | emcenrue@kykernel.com
Let’s actually reflect on the past decade By Tyler Hess opinions@kykernel.com
The Sept 11 remembrance spectacles were, to a degree, important in the immediate years following such a tragedy. But as the 10th Anniversary passed for what is commonly held to be one of the most significant events of the century, I marveled at the vacuous content of the supposed “reflection events” and their media coverage. Front page stories in most newspapers I encountered had personalized interviews, creative cartoons and incredible graphics. But much was left out. It is important nonetheless to remember the dead. The husbands, wives, mothers and fathers who died, and those living with that loss deserve their time of grief. Yet the patriotic parades and flag-fluttering lawns must begin to be more than media charades. The dialogue should indeed be a time of proper remembrance for the
victims, and reflection on the country's response. Whether in most national syndicated papers, or in Monday's Kernel, some of the most important facts of the last decade were overlooked. Rarely are the true costs of America's war(s) and offensive death counts elaborated on in the same news-attracting manner as memorial unveilings. In 2008, a conservative estimate by Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz estimated the real dollars cost of just the Iraq and Afghanistan wars to be between $3-5 trillion. Later, a $600-900 billion addition was needed for immediate projected veteran healthcare. Death counts on the American side are recently troubling as suicide rates skyrocket. Total soldier deaths now number more thn 6,000. But turning to the always avoided dismembered victims of American cluster bombs, night raids and drone
strikes – are hundreds of thousands of innocent Afghani, Iraqi, Pakistani, Yemeni and Somali men, women and children. Let's be clear, these numbers (300,00-500,000 dead) do not include “militants,” are often are low estimates, and don't include the several millions displaced. These imperfections are due to heavy restriction on inspection of the decimated areas and peoples. A recent Wikileaks cable detailed an incident when a botched night raid ended in the deaths of a large family. An air strike was called in to destroy the remains of the housing. And just now are we learning of these deaths. Must we not honor these deaths too? Incredibly high costs, of the wars, placed entirely on credit, have brought a tremendous amount of human suffering. This includes aforementioned millions of Iraqi and Afghani affected. However, often equally over-
looked is the general American public. As deficits rise, and domestic spending cuts are enacted, war spending must begin to harbor its due share of culpability. The expanding war budget is the White Elephant amidst the incessant discussion on the suffering of the American domestic economy. I have heard, and continue to incessantly hear news of impending financial ruin. The “experts” then give us their not-allowed-to-bequestioned advice on how to fix it. A charade of supposed “debate” happens between two corporate funded vague semblances of political parties. Never do the actual perpetrators become questioned. It becomes which category of victims to we pick on in this American Legislative Exchange Council crafted legislation. Do we break the regulation-hungry unions? Steal from the pension-greedy teachers? Cut social spending, eliminate
assistance for the poor, reduce student loans, etc etc? As the more serious effects are still unfolding, how is the current war economy treating you? Large oil corporations and weapons manufactures like GE, Exxon, Lockheed Martin and BP are bathing in profits as school classrooms double in size and the young Black unemployment rate topped 47 percent in August. General Electric (GE) in particular has paid no taxes for the past 2 years, instead raking in billions in tax breaks while outsourcing thousands of jobs. If the U.S. government still desires to use this past anniversary as a nationalistic rallying to support increased war spending and nose-diving social spending, then let the greater populace insert proper critiques into the conversations around us. The innocent victims of Septr 11 should not be continually “honored” by justifying ongoing illegal wars. Has no
one learned about Charles Johnson’s “Blowback” in the past decade? Remember the victims by reflecting on the last decade. Remember in particular how in so many conversations, more than 3,000 deaths were used as baseless invocations necessitating an ever-expanding surveillance and permanent war empire. “Where Were You on 9/11?” type quotes and interviews do not give justice to the arguably tens of millions of lives displaced, eliminated and affected because of the 21st century of global war. If these words didn't paint enough of an image, just YouTube “Collateral Murder” or investigate some of these statistics yourselves. The last decade of death caused by the world's “war on terror” deserved to be better honored with more than million dollar waterfalls. Tyler Hess is a sustainable agriculture junior. Email opinions@kykernel.com
‘Tucky Tweets featuring
Big Blue Nation We scanned out Twitter feed for the best #BBN tweets. Follow @KyKernel to get involved.
This Weekend is what College Football is ALLl about!!! Rivalry Week...Tailgating...Night Game!! Love it!! #BBN #GoCats - AndreWoodsonJr I wanna be remembered when I leave the #BBN. Home town player that made it. - WinstonGuyJr21 Wow! @rcobb18 is the first player to play in the #NFL who was born in the 90s #ifeelold #BBN #Packers - timcouchtv Kentucky’s Fall sports now hold a combined record of 22-3-1. - #BBN - UK_IMG_Sports CHRISTOPHER EPLING, Kernel cartoonist
kernelclassifieds Call 859.257.2871 to place an ad • Ads can be found at kykernel.com • DEADLINE - 4 p.m. the day before publication
For Sale 1999 Buick Century. Good condition, excellent sound system. $2,500, Call 859-559-5980 or email dmconrad89@gmail.com
For Rent 1 Bedroom Great location! Great security! 1BR/1BA and pool. $595/month including all utilities. Call Brad 859-983-0434 1 BR Landsdowne, private pool, hot tub, bball court, $450 mo + utitlities. 859-396-7743. Female roommate needed for one of 4BR, 2BA duplex. Woodland Ave. $350 plus utilities. (502) 475-2488 Great location! Great security! 1BR/1BA and pool. $625/month including all utilities. Call Brad 859-983-0434 Studios $395. Call 368-7317. Four miles from campus. Mention ad & get 5% Student Discount. 1BR/1BA Apartments on Woodland Avenue. $495-$600/month, includes utilities. Please call 552-4147. 2 Bedroom 2BR Apartment, 261 E. Maxwell Street, $650/month, not including utilities. Call Aida @ 859-537-7218 2BR/1BA near campus. Pool and laundry on site. Electric and water included. $800/month. Call Jon @502-552-7216. 3 Bedroom 3BR/1BA House, $750/month. Walk to UK. W/D, D/W, Large backyard, Parking,
Storage, Central Air. 859-421-0054 PERFECT FOR ROOMMATES!! 3BR-3.5BA! Each suite has full bath. Big kitchen with stove, fridge, dishwasher. Laundry has W/D. Garage, deck. $960/month. Sherard Circle. (859) 351-0030. 251 Simpson Avenue #121, 3BR/2BA, $900/month. ½ off first month’s rent. Lexingtonrentalhomes.com. (859) 559-3108 or 859-278-7752 (Office). Campus Downs #203, 3BR/2BA, $925/month. ½ off first month’s rent. Lexingtonrentalhomes.com. (859) 559-3108 or 859-278-7752 (Office). 4 Bedroom New 4BR/2.5BA Townhouse with deck, parking, eat-in kitchen, W/D included. Off Tates Creek Road. Clean, Painted, New Carpet. $975/month. 278-0970 NEW and Nearly NEW 4BR HOMES – Current place not what you expected? Only a few left, very nice. Close to campus. View at lexingtonhomeconsultants.com. Showing daily. Call or text James McKee, Builder/Broker 859-221-7082 Historic house at 319 Grosvenor Ave. with first floor apartment that has recently undergone extension renovation. Hardwood floors, tall ceilings, large bedrooms, beautiful mantles and fireplaces (inactive), colorful antique mantle tile work, new kitchen updated baths. Offstreet parking and laundry facilities are onsite. SMOKE FREE. PET FRIENDLY. Aug. 1. $1,095 plus. Call Allyson at 859-552-3793 or PVHProperties@Insightbb.com. 1-9 Bedroom Listings 344 Aylesford Place, 7BR/4BA, $2,200/month. ½ off first month’s rent. Lexingtonrentalhomes.com. (859) 559-3108 or 859-278-7752 (Office). Parking
Parking Spaces Available, $295/Semester, 423 Aylesford PL. Check out google maps to see amazing Location, Call 859-270-6860 Anytime
Help Wanted PT Tutors and instructors who can teach English language and school homework to Japanese people whose ages range from preschool to adults. Math tutors are highly sought. Degrees required. Send resume to: Obunsha Bluegrass Academy, 2417 Regency Rd., Suite F, Lexington, KY 40503 or E-mail: KKuroki@aol.com
Experienced servers, greeters apply in person, The Ketch Seafood Grill, 2012 Regency Road. Childcare in my home for infant to two year old. Hartland area. 273-9015 Mail processing needed Monday-Friday from 4:30p-7:30p $8/hour. Ability to lift/carry 30 pounds and push/pull heavier weights. Email resumes to jobs@bgmailing.com. Keeneland is seeking applicants for part-time Gift Shop Sales Associates for Fall Race Meet, October 7-29. Flexible hours with some work through January 2012. Please contact Amber Arnold, Monday-Friday, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm at (859) 288 4353
Columbia Steakhouse downtown, 201 N. Limestone, now hiring servers, host/hostess and kitchen help. Apply in person 11am-2pm or call 859-253-3135
Office Help at Champion Window Company, corner of Winchester Road & Fortune Drive. Tuesday evenings 3:00-7:00, Saturdays 9:005:00. $9/hour. Email resume’ to Sue @ Lexington.omgr@championfactorydirect.com or call 859-277-9150
Front desk receptionist wanted for plastic surgery office. Part-time/flexible hours. Close to campus. Please call 859-254-5665 or email resume to srwaldman@aol.com
Caregiver for Part-Time homecare position. Overnights and fill-ins needed. $8.00/hour. 859-309-0081 Construction help needed. Full time, good pay, benefits. Apply in person 1170 Industry Rd. or send resume to gulleyremoldeling@aol.com
Club Scientific Bluegrass is looking for energetic college students to teach after-school science clubs to elementary-age kids. Part-time position with good pay and great resume’building skills. Apply on-line at www.clubscientificbluegrass.com or call 859-899-3343.
Atomic Cafe’ now taking applications for servers. 10:00am – 4:00pm. Apply in person @ 265 N. Limestone
Vendors Needed!!! Work UK football games selling various items. Make commission on each item sold. $50 bonus if you work every game (7 total). Please contact djccs31@yahoo.com or (859) 803-4068. First game September 10th.
Full/Part-Time Help Needed at Vet Clinic. Apply in person at 1073 S. Broadway.
Child care needed after school 1-3 days each week from 2:30 – 6:00 for my 3 school-aged children. Help with homework and drive to after school events. Must have reliable car and references. Call Ellen 368-9519.
Mature male staff needed to provide daily assistance to a young man with intellectual disabilities in Lexington. Flexible hours are available M-F / $10 per hour. Minimum requirements: high school diploma and personal transportation. Experience with computers is a plus. Contact Homeplace Support Services 859-936-2010
Tony Roma’s is now hiring servers and hosts. Experience preferred. Apply in person M-F, 2pm-4pm, @ Lexington Green Mall or www.tonyromas.com Energetic, creative childcare assistants needed. FT, PT and substitutes with two’s to preschool, EOE. Call 266-8490 or email crestccclex@windstream.net Wanted: Caregiver for Part-Time homecare position. Overnights and fill-ins needed. $8.00/hour. 859-309-0081
LOOKING FOR M & F Social drinkers 21-35 years of age with or without ADHD. Researchers at the University of Kentucky are conducting studies concerning the effects of alcohol. Volunteers paid to participate. Please call 257-5794
Carino's Italian, 135 Rojay Drive, is now hiring for hosts, servers, and carry-out attendants. Please apply in person. Specialty Foods/Kitchenware/Deli needs enthusiastic individuals with good customer skills. Please apply @ Mouse Trapp/Gourmet Specialist, Landsdowne Shoppes, Tates Creek Road.
UK Team Shop now hiring for Retail and Warehouse Workers. E-mail resume’ to ukteamshop@yahoo.com Become A Bartender! UP TO $250 per day. No experience necessary. Age 20+ okay. Training courses available. 800-965-6520 ext-132
Professional Services Dance classes forming now. Ballet, Modern, Jazz & Contemporary. Barbara Ann School of Dance. Close to Campus in Chevy Chase. (859) 266-5861.
Personals Curious about Catholicism? Or exploring The Church? Open House Tuesday evenings 7:00pm-9:00pm, Catholic Newman Center, 320 Rose Lane or contact Dennis, 859-3963210 or dendever@insightbb.com LEARN TO SWING DANCE WITH THE HEPCATS! Great way to meet people, plus good exercise. Beginner Class starts September 19. Only $35 for the entire 6-week class. www.Luv2SwingDance.com; 859-420-2426; info@Luv2SwingDance.com
Roommates Wanted Looking for 1 or 2 Christian girls for roommate. Grad student preferred. Located onetenth mile off campus off Euclid. $600/month divided evenly. (757) 510-8521
The Kentucky Kernel is not responsible for information given to fraudulent parties. We encourage you not to participate in anything for which you have to pay an up-front fee or give out credit card or other personal information, and to report the company to us immediately.