Manual High School students use controversial speaker as a lesson. >>
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Speech Aftermath
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Digging out of a deficit
September 19, 2014 | kykernel.com
UK volleyball overcomes 1st-set loss to beat Lipscomb in front of season-high crowd.
UK CELEBRATES AFTER WINNING A POINT DURING THURSDAY’S WIN. PHOTO BY JONATHAN KRUEGER
>> PAGE 3
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 —Choose the option that offers the most fun. Ask for what you want. Romance blossoms, but there could be complications. You're attractive, and attracted, today and tomorrow. The perfect solution appears. Taurus (April 20-May 20) —Today is an 8 —Domestic thoughts have you entertained. Combine two old ideas into a new one. Get into a fun project. Home and family take priority today and tomorrow. Tend your garden and store the harvest. Gemini (May 21-June 20) —Today is a 7 —You're sharp as a tack for the next few days. Study at home. Your ability to concentrate gets enhanced marvelously. Learn whatever you set yourself to. Write or record your creative expression. Cancer (June 21-July 22) —Today is a 9 —Make extra money over the next two days. Watch for a new source of income and accept a generous offer. Keep in communication with your team, and set things in motion like a well-oiled machine. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) —Today is a 9 —You're strong and exceptionally creative for the next few days, gaining a distinct advantage. Sensitivity and confidence contributes to your game. Keep to practical, profitable goals. Don't steamroll anyone... patience is a virtue. Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) —Today is a 7 —The next two days are good for treasure hunting and solitary introspection. Get contemplative and pensive. Note ideas, speculations and possible directions to follow. Seek out the answer to a nagging question. Finish old business.
SUDOKU
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) —Today is a 7 —You have more friends than you realized. Committees can be effective today and tomorrow. Moderate a clash between normally gentle people. Remind them of the common goal. You can have the world you invent together. Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) —Today is a 7 —Social events contribute to your career. Assume more responsibility over the next few days. Be respectful, and don't let anybody push you around. Talk about your dream job, and your most interesting related projects. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) —Today is an 8 —Let your imagination loose. The next two days are good for travel (especially for business). Research and plan an itinerary that's fun, and gets the job done. Public performance is not out of the question. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) —Today is an 8 —Share your strategic vision. Discover your ideas are worth more than you thought. Pay the bills today or tomorrow. Attend to finances with care. Figure the costs. Craft a plan to increase your family's wealth. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) —Today is an 8 —Adjust to someone's demands or needs. A partner is a big help for the next two days. Listen carefully, and do what's required. Together, you can manage more than you think possible. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20) —Today is a 9 —Handle work issues today and tomorrow. It could get intense or be long-lasting. No more procrastination... dive in and provide excellent service. The quicker you move, the quicker you're done. Rest up after.
Sponsor the horoscope 859.257.2872 MCT
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SEC play begins with tough test SPORTS
Women’s soccer pushes to avenge loss to Arkansas last year
There is a level of intensity conference games bring during a season. They’re more physical, closely contested and played with a chip on the players’ shoulders. That’s what the Cats face on Friday when they visit Arkansas to begin their Southeastern Conference portion of the schedule. And UK is certainly familiar with Arkansas. The last KEVIN time they faced the RazorERPENBECK backs was in 2013, when the Kernel Columnist Cats gave up three goals in a 3-0 home shutout loss. It was the first home loss of the season, and it left a bitter taste in their mouth. UK always anticipates an increase in skill level when SEC play begins. It’s about honing in on the small details of a match, both offen-
sively and defensively, to win the inevitably close matches. The minor, inconsequential mistakes that are made during a nonconference game can doom a team against an SEC team. Head coach John Lipsitz said it best when describing the team’s mindset heading into preparation for Friday’s match. “It’s a whole new season for us and a whole new level,” Lipsitz said. “We have to take the good and the bad in preconference and prepare for a tough conference play.” And a tough conference it will be. The SEC has three teams ranked currently in the Top 15 so far this season. The Cats’ nonconference schedule wasn’t exactly a cakewalk, though. UK came away with a 5-2 record against nonconference opponents who had a combined record of 26-19-3, including its most recent match against No. 12 See SOCCER on page 6
PHOTO BY JONATHAN KRUEGER | STAFF
Senior Arin Gilliland has four goals and six assists in seven games during the Cats’ 2014 season. Gilliland earned Third Team All-America honors in each of the last two seasons.
Crowd helps Volleyballl surge past Lipscomb MADISON TINDER sports@kykernel.com
PHOTO BY JONATHAN KRUEGER | STAFF
Junior Shelby Workman led UK with 15 kills as the Cats pushed past Lipscomb in four sets.
UK volleyball defeated Lipscomb 3-1 (21-25, 25-16, 25-15, 25-17) in front of a season-high crowd of 2,150 on Thursday night at Memorial Coliseum. The Cats improved to 9-2 on the season in front of a crowd who was helped by the Big Blue Madness campers who surrounded Memorial Coliseum awaiting Saturday’s ticket distribution. The Cats were led by junior outside hitter Shelby Workman, who tallied 15 kills, while senior outside hitter Lauren O’Conner added 14 kills during the fourset win. “This season we have been really focusing on the next point and the next play,” O’Connor said. “We just try to challenge ourselves, focus on this point right
now and be in the moment.” The Cats struggled in the first set after not being able to convert kills while fighting an inconsistent serve. Lipscomb came out of the gate fast and maintained the momentum throughout the first set, which the Bisons took 25-21. “We had to change the tempo of our serve and throw in some short balls.” UK head coach Craig Skinner said. “We kept the gas pedal down in set four and responded well.” In the second set, UK came out of its first-set funk and used O’Connor’s four straight kills to take its largest lead of the set at 11-7. UK took control with its offense and ended the set 25-16 with a Workman kill. During the third set, UK jumped to a quick 8-3 lead behind attack errors from Lipscomb. Workman and O’Connor notched back-to-back kills during an offen-
sive run that put the Cats ahead for good. The solid play continued for the Cats in the fourth set as UK jumped out to a quick 6-4 lead. The Cats maintained a substantial lead throughout the early part of the set until Lipscomb recovered with back-to-back kills to cut UK’s lead to three points. But consecutive blocks from freshman middle blocker Emily Franklin halted any Lipscomb rally and UK pulled away to a 25-17 match victory. Junior setter Morgan Bergren dished out 40 assists and senior defensive specialist Jackie Napper had 20 digs. Workman and O’Connor both hit better than .400. Lipscomb sophomore outside hitter Lauren Ford had 14 kills but five errors in 35 total attempts. The victory was the third straight for UK, who host Xavier at 7 p.m. on Saturday in Memorial Coliseum. 9.19.14 | Kentucky Kernel | 3
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Manual H.S. students learn from speech NEWS
Teacher critical of UK allowing controversial candidate to speak ANNE HALLIWELL ahalliwell@kykernel
After an unexpected demonstration of free speech rights Wednesday, students and teachers from Louisville’s duPont Manual High School received an opportunity to put the lessons they learned into action. U.S. Senate write-in candidate Robert Ransdell spoke at Citizen Kentucky’s Constitution Day event at the Student Center Wednesday and voiced his controversial political beliefs to the audience. Ransdell had used the event to speak about his “With Jews We Lose” campaign for the 2014 election. James Miller, a duPont Manual journalism teacher, spoke immediately after Ransdell was removed
from the stage and denounced his use of the public platform to promote his ideology. Several duPont Manual student reporters for the Manual Red Eye school media website stayed in their computer lab after school to put video and a print story online, Miller said. “We had a lengthy discussion about the First Amendment, freedom of speech, the obligation of public and private universities to provide a platform for invited speakers,” said Miller, who attended the event with 35 students to receive the Enoch Grehan Journalism award. Miller provided expertise and a sounding board for his journalism students, along with his wife, Liz Palmer, who also won the Enoch Grehan award Wednesday
3 women sought in attempted robbery
Police are looking for three women who are suspected of being involved in a “attempted strong-arm robbery” in the northeast corner of the UK Student Center parking lot near the bookstore at about 8:40 p.m. Wednesday. A woman reported to police that three women approached her, and that one of them demanded she turn over her money, according to a crime bulletin released by UK police Thursday afternoon. The victim reported that a suspect punched her, and knocked her to the ground where she was kicked by a second suspect, according to the release. The suspects are thought to have fled in the direction of South Limestone Street without taking anything from the victim, according to the release. STAFF REPORT 4 | Timeout | 9.19.14
and is a teacher at duPont Manual. Palmer and Miller did not control the content that the students produced, Miller said. “We are very much in mind of a prevailing idea … that the students are the editors,” he said. Some of Miller’s students have expressed disbelief about Ransdell’s right to speak at all, which is not the point of his speech immediately following Ransdell’s speech on Wednesday, Miller said. The issue is not whether Ransdell has the right to share his opinions with the public, but whether UK should have informed Miller and Palmer about Ransdell so they could decide for themselves whether to warn their students or opt not to attend, Miller said. “It has been my experience that peo-
ple like Robert Ransdell take every opportunity to talk about their poisonous, hateful ideas,” Miller said. “So for the university to pretend that … no one could have predicted he’d say this stuff is naïve at best.” Miller pointed out that speaker biographies are provided at virtually every event he’s been to, and make it clear to educators about who will be at the event. Teachers should know what they’re taking their students to, Miller said, although his expectations for the Constitution Day celebrations were not accurate. “I guess a better question is, ‘Why didn’t UK give us the names (of the speakers)?” Miller said. “Unless the point was to catch students off-guard.” Miller said that when Palmer spoke to Citizen Kentucky Project director and UK journalism professor Buck Ryan shortly after Ransdell began his speech, Ryan told
her the speech was going to give the students something to write about. His understanding was that Ransdell was asked to speak about the Constitution and had branched outside of the subject on his own accord, Miller said. He added that given Ransdell’s “long history of expressing his opinions,” the university could and should not have expected him to remain on the intended topic. “He’s publicly said the whole point of this campaign was to talk about the Jews,” Miller said. Miller and Palmer believe there is a time and place for speeches like Ransdell’s, Miller said, and that does not include any speech that comes “by surprise.” “If I had invited him to the classroom and allowed him to speak to (my students) … we would have fallen short of our duty as educators,” Miller said.
Survey predicts ‘no’ victory
MATTHEW SCHOFIELD McClatchy Foreign Staff (MCT)
EDINBURGH, Scotland — The United Kingdom appeared early Friday to have survived the threat of being ripped apart, as early vote returns showed Scottish voters rejecting independence. The first returns from Thursday’s balloting, coming from the rural district of Clackmannanshire, showed a surprising 54 percent of voters opposing Scottish independence. While the vote numbers were small from the sparsely populated region just north of River Forth, the district had been counted on to vote in favor of independence and appeared to set the tone for defeat. In fact, its importance to a “yes” victory had been rated by the Scottish Parliament as 10 on a scale of 10. The loss there was followed by losses in other rural districts, by similar margins. The early vote totals tracked with a
YouGov survey of 1,828 voters after they had cast their ballots, as well as 800 postal voters. The survey indicated that those opposed would carry the day by a 54 percent to 46 percent margin. The poll was in line with similar surveys in recent days, though around Scotland those involved on both sides insisted the election remained on a razor’s edge. The survey found that those who changed their minds over the last days of the campaign had gone from “yes” to “no.” Two years of sometimes bitter campaigning came to end at 10 p.m. Thursday, when the polls closed on a referendum on whether Scotland should peel away from the United Kingdom after 307 years together. Results were not expected for hours, but the cheers, songs and honking horns began in earnest as soon as the voting stopped, a celebration that was, if nothing else, a mark of relief that at last this nation known best for kilts, scotch and bagpipes, could get down to the business of
living with whatever the results of the vote turn out to be. Speaking on Scottish television, Scottish Labour Party leader Johann Lamont — firmly opposed to breaking up the union — said that while the campaign had revealed a deep divide, there was room for everyone to celebrate the vote. The 1707 union of Scotland and England, the foundation of the United Kingdom, came before the notion of a public election. “A ‘no’ vote means that after 307 years of union, the Scottish people have finally said ‘yes, we do want to be a member of a United Kingdom,’” she said. Even before the vote totals, members of Cameron’s Conservative Party were pulling away from their leader over a pledge he made that if independence was rejected Scotland would be allowed to set its own income tax rates while at the same time receiving the same amount of revenue from the central government. 9.19.14 | Kentucky Kernel | 5
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UK salivates during bye week SPORTS
Stoops said of his team. “The players really took (the loss) to heart, looked at the film and were very critical of themselves on where they can improve. It’s been a good couple days.” One thing UK can focus on leading up to its showdown with the Commodores is working once again with the new players. The time allows for freshmen and bench players to work their way into the lineup. “We talk about it and look at them,” Stoops said. “We certainly work with those guys a lot. It’s good to get around them again and get some reps with them.” The young players that have stepped up and contributed are living up to the expectations of UK’s coaching staff, such as freshmen wide receiver Garrett Johnson and running back Stanley “Boom” Williams. “It does make you feel a lot better,” Stoops said. “We bragged on them and thought they were very good players coming in and they showed that in high school.” Now they’re showing it in the college
ranks. Stoops was impressed with the how they played during the first two games at home and even more so on how they stepped up their game in The Swamp. “I was very encouraged,” Stoops said. “Again we’re far from perfect, we’ve got a lot of work to do with those guys but it is nice to see some playmaking ability.” Another focus for the Cats is rest and relaxation for the players that are injured, something that has plagued UK during the young season. But Stoops feels confident that UK will enter the game against Vanderbilt healthy. “I think we’ll get a chance to go into the Vandy game close to 100 percent,” Stoops said. Despite the opportunity to heal and refocus, the Cats prefer to play this Saturday. “If it was up to me, I think I’d love to go out and play,” Stoops said. “The guys are in good spirits, we have a lot left in the tank and we got a lot more left we can do. We’re excited to go back to work.”
Continued from page 3
Pepperdine. Even though the Cats lost to the Waves 3-2 in overtime, it was a good preview of the opposing skill they should expect in the latter half of the season, starting with Arkansas. UK will have to contend with Arkansas’ premier junior Ashleigh Ellenwood, who recieved Honorable Mention for the TopDrawerSoccer.com Women’s Team of the Week. Ellenwood finished last week with two goals and a pair of assists against Missouri State. Her two goals gave her 24 for her career at Arkansas. UK holds a 6-11-2 all-time series advantage over the Razorbacks, but Arkansas is 4-1-1 against UK in the past six matchups. There’s no better way to start off a tough SEC schedule than to win against the first opponent. It won’t come easy though, as the Razorbacks are coming off a 5-2-2 nonconference record after making the Sweet 16 in the NCAA Tournament in 2013. But if the Cats bring the expected SEC level of intensity, then they can eradicate the year-old bitter taste in their mouth.
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UK football enters its bye weekend coming off a heartbreaking loss to SEC foe Florida and now turns its attention to the Sept. 27 home clash against Vanderbilt. With the time off, UK has focused on solidifying a run defense that allowed the Gators to rush for 237 yards. “We’ve got to stop the power run game,” defensive coordinator D.J. Eliot said on JOSHUA HUFF Wednesday. “Those guys (on Kernel Columnist defense) have got to be able to defend it and that’s what we’re emphasizing and harping on this week.” The Cats had trouble reacting to the Gators’ runs, especially from running back Matt Jones who ran for 156 yards. The team also struggled responding with physicality at the point of attack. However, the Cats are spending this week reflecting and looking at ways to come out even stronger against Vanderbilt. “The attitude is good,” head coach Mark
SOCCER
Female characters underrepresented OPINIONS
I’m not entirely sure how to feel about representation of women in entertainment right now. While I approve in many ways of the increasingly diverse and realistic portrayals of female characters in television and movies, a few recent studies have indicated that the overall amount of female representation decreased in the last ANNE HALLIWELL year. With strikingly memoKernel Columnist rable characters like “Arrow’s” Black Canary and Felicity Smoak, “Scandal’s” Olivia Pope and “Orange is the New Black’s” entire cast dominating the screen from their respective genres, we must now raise the question — are women trading quantity for quality? “American mainstream cinema, a timid enterprise dependent on formulas and genres, can be mind-blowingly retrograde when it comes to women and girls,” wrote A. O. Scott and Manohla Dargis in the New York Times on Sept. 3. “And while an occasional woman or girl rules the box office, too many of their on-screen sisters are sidelined or just left out of the picture.” Female characters made up 42 percent of all speaking and major characters on broadcast television, cable and Netflix in
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2013-2014, according to the 17th annual “Boxed In” study from Martha M. Lauzen of the Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film. This is a decrease of one percent from the last year. Female characters are also still younger across the board, less ethnically diverse, less focused on work and more defined by their relationships, according to the study. “The picture of girlhood at the movies has become an increasingly diverse, sometimes contradictory array of identities, including bold revisions of age-old archetypes and brave new heroines,” Scott and Dargis wrote. “That said, the faces of these girls remain exasperatingly monochromatic.” Worryingly, this deficit may be connected to a four percent decrease in female creators and a nine percent decrease in women writers since 2012-2013. The study indicated that when a program has at least one female creator or writer, the number of female characters jumps by at least seven percent on average. While directing, producing and editing jobs have all seen an increase in the number of women employed, apparently that’s not enough to equal an increase across the board. The modest gains made by a few areas are notable; it is not enough to gain ground in one area only to lose it in another.
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For Rent
1-9 Bedroom
2, 3 or 4 BR near campus/2 BA. W/D, parking. $800-$1,150/month. 2 or 3 BR, Lansdowne/Richmond Road areas. $650/month. Call (859) 351-3370. 3-5 BR houses for rent. $875-$1,600 per month. Call Tyrell at (859) 585-0047 or email tyrell@lexingtonrentalhomes.net.
1 Bedroom
1BR/1BA apartment in Lansdowne. W/D, hardwood floors, offstreet parking. No pets, no smoking. Close to campus, quiet neighborhood. $700/month. Fully furnished. Contact meldelc@mixmail.com or (859) 5337640. Large efficiency apartment, $475/month + utilities. Very close to UK. 1 block from Young Library. Grocery, laundry within walking distance. Unfurnished. (859) 2706860. Quiet 1-2 BR apartment. Private patio, new kitchen/bath. No pets. 521 E. Main. $625-$650, water included. (859) 539-7013 or (859) 221-0998.
2 Bedroom
2 and 3 bedroom apt available now. Great quality. Negotiable rent. Call landlord Dennis 859-983-0726 www.sillsbrothers.com
3 Bedroom
3 BR Apt. All utilities paid. $975/month. Consists of all of 2nd floor of renovated older house in nice neighborhood (Kenwick.) 1 mile from campus. Central air, off- street parking, large deck. Available now. 1- year lease. $975 deposit. Please text (859) 351-1593. 3BR/2BA apartment across from Gatton College of Business, above Wildcat Textbooks. Available immediately. (859) 621-3128.
4 Bedroom
Large 4 BR house at 436 Oldham. W/D. Screened porch, patio, fenced backyard. $1,000/month. Available now. Call Jerry at (859) 421-2878. 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
608 E. HIGH ST. (859) 338-7005. 5 BR apt/ 2 BA. Central heat/air, W/D connections. Off-street parking. $1,500 + utilities.
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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! Bluegrass Bracing is in need of a dependable college student for help in the stockroom. $12/hour, 6-10 hours per week. Set your own hours between 8 a.m.- 5 p.m. Applicant must be presentable, courteous, respectful, have your own transportation and be a team player. Attention to detail is a must. (859) 266-5500 or kimisaacs@bluegrassbracing.com. Business/advertising representative needed to complete the Kentucky Kernel staff. Must be a friendly, self-motivated, goal-oriented UK student. You will be responsible for selling and maintaining classified accounts, handling client requests, streamlining office calls, assisting with staff tasks, overall organization of office supplies and files, along with other duties as assigned. Must be able to work up to 20 hours a week, Monday-Friday, sometime between 9-4. Email resume to clpoor2@uky.edu. Busy pediatric practice seeking energetic person for PT office work on Mon–Tue-Wed afternoons. Need someone willing to work 10-20 hours/week during the semester and 30+ hours/week during the winter/summer breaks. If interested, call Becky Cooper at (859) 260-7700. Challenge Yourself! MARKETING ASSISTANT NEEDED FOR ESTABLISHED FINANCIAL SERVICES ORGANIZATION. Flexible Hours (15-20/wk.) Base Pay + Bonus. Must be dependable, comfortable with Social Media, experienced in Microsoft Office. Being good on the phone is a plus. Interested? Call (859) 271-8694 or email moneylinefinancial@yahoo.com. Construction help needed. Must meet minimum requirements: Able to lift 75lbs., valid driver’s license, pay best for experience. Sales experience helpful. FT/PT available. Email gulleyremodeling@aol.com. ESP (Lexington Parks and Rec after school program) is hiring motivated people. Monday-Friday, 2-6pm. No weekends. 859-2882929. Fun, supportive environment at Jenny Craig. If you have an outgoing personality and are self motivated, we have a weight management consultant opportunity available! 20-30 hours per week. Call Leslie (859) 269-2639. Hardworking go-getters to the front of the pack. Excellent pay and benefits for those fitting the bill. Must be 21 and have a clean driving record, as well as mowing experience. We work in all kinds of weather to get the job accomplished so work ethic is critical. If you’re ready to join an award-winning team, call (859) 509-5493 to set up an immediate interview.
High school wrestling referees wanted. Minimum pay $18/hour. Previous wrestling experience preferred. Contact KWOAofficials@gmail.com or www.kyofficials.com. Jenny Craig has an opportunity for a PT receptionist. Tuesdays & Thursdays 9 a.m.-6 p.m. and Saturdays 8 a.m.-noon. Call Leslie at (859) 269-2639. Keeneland is seeking seasonal part-time applicants for Guest Services, Gift Shop Sales Associates & Stock Clerks, Parking and Security during the October Race Meet, Oct. 325. Please contact Alexis Witherspoon at (859) 288-4158 or apply online at keeneland.com. Kickstarter campaign needs help in the following areas: creation of 2-D and 3-D CAD drawings, creation of architectural sketches, creation of architectural animation, structural engineering analysis. Cool project. Will cooperate with your college for internship or credit. Unpaid. Successful campaign and launch will result in generous delayed compensation, as agreed. Email damron@damrontech.com. O’Charley’s on Nicholasville Road now hiring enthusiastic FT/PT servers, guest assistants and cooks for a fun, fast-paced environment with flexible hours. Interested candidates may apply directly at www.ocharleys.jobs for the 212 Nicholasville Rd. location. PT assistant needed for property management company. Must have excellent computer and communication skills. Apply at 860 South Broadway, Lexington, KY 40504. PT sales clerk. Apply in person. Chevy Chase Hardware, 883 E. High St. (859) 269-9611. 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. 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. Salvage Building Materials hiring FT/PT general warehouse help. Flexible hours, no experience needed. Apply: 573 Angliana Ave., Mon-Sat, 9-5, or cabinetkings.com/job_vacancy.html. (859)255-4700. Website looking for 1) office accounting, and 2) general shipping help. Warehouse near campus off Manchester Street. More details online at www.TeakCloseouts.com/jobs.
Roommates Wanted
Female student looking for female student. Non-partier. Call landlord (Dennis) 859983-0726 www.sillsbrothers.com Male looking for roommate. Across from Gatton College of Business, furnished, nonsmoking, everything paid, $725/month. Furnished. Available immediately. (859) 6213128. Roommate needed. Students looking for male or female. 3 br / 2 bath. Non partier Call landlord (Dennis) 859-983-0726 www.sillsbrothers.com
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