Kernel In Print — October 17, 2014

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time ut weekend

UK looks to rise to the top of the SEC East with statement win against LSU >> PAGE 3

kentucky kernel

October 17, 2014 | kykernel.com

UK LINEBACKER JOSH FORREST WAITS FOR THE BALL DURING THE GAME AGAINST LOUISIANA AT MONROE AT COMONWEALTH STADIUM SATURDAY. PHOTO BY JONATHAN KRUEGER

STARING DOWN SEC RELEVANCE


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 — Your words inspire others to action. It's a good day to send a love note. Let someone know where you stand. Ask for more and get it. Remember your goals and avoid overwhelm. Taurus ( April 20-May 20) — Today is a 9 — Put your efforts on display. Only go for the fun stuff. Prioritize steps to win a prize. Do the homework. Participate with a creative group. Gemini ( May 21-June 20) — Today is a 9 — If you can avoid overwhelm, a great opportunity becomes available. An expert friend would love to tell you how to do it. Listen carefully. Cancer ( June 21-July 22) — Today is a 9 — Grasp a fleeting income opportunity. Friends who share a passion have words of encouragement, as well as valuable connections and contribution. Rouse your joy and passion to play. Leo ( July 23-Aug. 22) — Today is a 9 — You can find a clever solution to the problem at hand. Consult an old friend. Turn down an expensive proposition. Stay home instead of going out. Write down words from a successful elder. Virgo ( Aug. 23-Sept. 22) — Today is a 9 — Accept support from loved ones. Friends are pleased to help, grateful for all your loving support. Respond in the affirmative. Get your message out. Libra ( Sept. 23-Oct. 22) — Today is a 9 — More

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work increases your sense of security. Nonetheless, keep your eyes open for new ways to bring money in. Share opportunities with friends in the business. What comes around goes around. Scorpio ( Oct. 23-Nov. 21) — Today is a 9 — Your mind is clear. Accept a new responsibility gracefully. You can do it. Let people know what you want. You have more resources than expected. Revise your plans to increase profits. Sagittarius ( Nov. 22-Dec. 21) — Today is a 9 — Today favors research. Stick to the rules, and prioritize basics. Think fast and work faster. There's plenty for all. Buy to improve household communications. Capricorn ( Dec. 22-Jan. 19) — Today is a 9 — Dance to your own drummer. Send words of love and you both feel better. Advance your career over the next two days. Aquarius ( Jan. 20-Feb. 18) — Today is a 9 — Begin anew with a romance. Discover wonderful things. The more you learn, the farther you'll go. Listen carefully. Pisces ( Feb. 19-March 20) — Today is a 9 — Create your own harmony. You have more than you thought. You're an inspiration to others. Don't let spending get out of control, even for something you really want. Get the word out to advance your agenda. MCT

2 | Timeout | 10.17.14

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SPORTS

Men’s Soccer to face New Mexico

Cats hope to continue streak JOSHUA HUFF jhuff@kykernel.com

After an onslaught of five goals of a 5-1 win against Evansville on a rainy Wednesday, UK men’s soccer will return to the Bell Soccer Complex on Saturday as it plays host to visiting No. 9 New Mexico. UK (7-3-3) has won three games in a row and increased its unbeaten run to five games. The five run outpour is tied for the fifth-most goals in a game in UK history. The victory was also a tune-up for the Conference USA matchup against New Mexico. The Cats unbeaten streak will be put to the test against the tough, defensive minded Lobos. New Mexico is currently fourteenth in the country in goals against average and has three straight shutouts while outscoring its last four opponents 12-1. The Lobos will also have the distinct advantage in scoring. They are ranked twentyeighth in the nation in scoring while the Cats are ranked 116th. UK will need to be mindful of Conference USA’s Co-Defensive Player of the Week Riley McGovern and offensive scoring machine Chris Wehan. Wehan leads the Lobos with five goals on the season behind 30 shots, with 15 of them on goal. Standing between Wehan and New Mexico is UK’s keeper Callum Irving. Irving has 40 saves on the year and is ranked seventh in the nation with a .870 save percentage. He has also helped the Cats post eight shutouts this season. With two defensive minded teams squaring, off the contest will come down to time of possession. And with UK’s offense returning to its dominant form, UK will look to knock off another Top 10 team. The Cats will enter the match looking for revenge after last year’s 2-0 loss to the Lobos. Saturday’s match will be just the second time the two teams have met in both programs’ histories.

UK readies for physical test PHOTO BY MICHAEL REAVES | STAFF

UK wide receiver Ryan Timmons (1) runs downfield during the game against the Ohio Bobcats at Commonwealth Stadium Sept. 6, 2014.

JOSHUA HUFF jhuff@kykernel.com

Three factors will determine the outcome come this Saturday when UK clashes with SEC rival LSU down in Death Valley: the battle between the lines, the winner of the turnover margin and UK receiver Ryan Timmons’ impact. Running backs vs. defense The most intriguing matchup will be between the play of LSU’s running back Leonard Fournette and UK linebacker Josh Forrest. Fournette is coming off an outstanding overall game in LSU’s 30-27 road win over Florida. The freshman rushed for 140 yards in route to 225 allpurpose yards. Staring him down will be UK’s leading tackler, Forrest, who leads the team with 40 tackles and is second on the team with five tackles for loss. UK will need Forrest and the rest of the defense to show up down in Baton Rouge, La., if UK has any chance of pulling out a win. Two out of the three SEC teams UK has played (South Carolina

and Florida) rushed for a combined 339 yards; a statistic that can’t be repeated with Fournette and Kenny Hilliard lining up in the backfield. However, physicality at the point of attack will be the deciding factor this week and with a potent UK defense brisling with confidence look for the Cats to contain the efficient Tigers’ offense. The Edge-Kentucky Turnovers In three SEC games, the Tigers have turned the ball over just once and have a +8 turnover margin, which is good for third in the SEC. UK is also +8 in the turnover margin and its defense is second in the SEC with 11 interceptions. LSU’s quarterback Anthony Jennings has thrown only three interceptions this season and with the Tigers’ focus on the run game, Jennings will helm an efficient passing game that will likely play conservative against UK’s potent secondary. UK, though, will have to rely on quarterback Patrick Towles to keep his hands on the football. His uncanny ability to simply drop the ball has put the Cats in

some precarious predicaments this season but his mistake-free game against ULM is a positive sign that he has nixed that problem. His game manager moniker is rightly deserved. As he picks and chooses the right reads and if he continues to do so against LSU, the Cats will be in prime position to pull the upset. The Edge-LSU Timmons’ impact Timmons is enjoying a year in which he has caught 27 passes for 315 yards and has become Towles’ go-to receiver. He has just two touchdowns on the season but both have come during UK’s last two SEC games. Prediction If the run game struggles to materialize for the Cats, which has been the case in the past few games, Towles and the passing game will need to step up. The Cats can only utilize the Wildcat so many times before teams start to catch on, so a solid ground game from Braylon Heard and Stanley “Boom” Williams is vital to UK’s success. UK 24, LSU 28 10.17.14 | Timeout | 3


LSU to challenge Cats SPORTS

PHOTO BY STEPHEN M. DOWELL | ORLANDO SENTINEL (MCT)

Florida defensive lineman Alex McCalister (14) sacks LSU quarterback Anthony Jennings (10) during the game at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, Fla., on Oct. 11. 2014.

ANNIE DUNBAR sports@kykernel.com

UK football will face its biggest challenge come Saturday, playing SEC foe LSU on the road in the rowdy Tiger Stadium. “I love the atmosphere,” UK head coach Mark Stoops said. “I’ve been down there before. They are passionate fans, and it's a hostile environment, and that's why we play. That's why we coach. We want to continue to win games to put ourselves in position to play in big games. So this will be a great challenge.” LSU (5-2) is coming off a close 30-27 victory over Florida in the Swamp; a game where head coach Les Miles’ team faced adversity. “It was a very exciting game,” Miles said. “It's one that I think certainly took twists and turns. The last six minutes, certainly, our football team needed to figure out exactly how to win that one, and it did. I have to tell you that I am very proud of the way they overcame some adversity there.” Throughout the Tigers’ matchup with the Gators, Miles saw improvement across numerous areas of the game. Most notable was his front seven and running back Leonard Fournette. “Felt like the offensive line keeps getting better,” Miles said. “I think it was a dominant day for them, rushed for just under 200 yards. Protected the passer fairly well, and again, this team's improving. Leonard for net rushes for 140 yards, two touchdowns, really runs the football like we're used to having it run around here.” 4 | Timeout | 10.17.14

Fournette, in addition to running backs Kenny Hilliard and Terrence Magee, will be a handful for the Cats, according to Stoops. “(LSU) run the ball extremely well,” Stoops said. “They’re extremely physical. You know, with the emergence of their freshman tailback, Fournette, he's a physical guy, and. of course, Kenny Hilliard, their senior. They got some good backs, very big, very physical. Their whole line does a great job, so we'll have our hands full this week.” Another weapon for the Tigers is sophomore wide receiver Travin Dural. Dural is averaging 26.1 receiving yards a catch, totaling 626 yards on the season. The sophomore has also scored six touchdowns on the year. Facing off against Dural and the Tigers’ offense will be a much-improved UK defense, which LSU will have to be mindful of. “Defensively, they're allowing 18 points and it's, again, a quality SEC defense,” Miles said. “They turn the ball, they have taken the ball away from the opponent, they have got 11 pass interceptions, and their turnover margin is second in the conference … Very capable defense and we'll have to play well.” For UK, finding a flow on offense will be another challenging task against a disruptive LSU defense. The Cats’ started out slow offensively against ULM, which Stoops attributed to a variety of things but pinpointed to being flat during the lead up to the game. “It was a breakdown here or there, and those are things that we got to get fixed,” Stoops said. “… but you can talk until you're blue in the face. You can put all kind of examSEE CATS PAGE 7


UK rides perfect SEC Cats looking to climb out of hole record into weekend SPORTS

MADISON TINDER sports@kykernel.com

PHOTO BY TESSA LIGHTY | STAFF

UK senior Arin Gilliland defends the ball against sophomore forward Samatha Solaru during the game against Auburn on Sept. 28, 2014.

Before the start of its three-game homestand last weekend, UK women’s soccer found itself in a deep hole regarding its NCAA Tournament hopes. With three of its next six games against ranked opponents, the Cats needed a KEVIN quick response if they wanted ERPENBECK to continue to play for postKernel Columnist season contention. Winning 1-0 against then-No. 21 South Carolina on Friday was a nice start. But the victory over the Gamecocks doesn’t get them out of the hole they’re in; it only gives them the rope to start climbing out of it. Last week’s win was unquestionably UK’s biggest victory of the season. But the Cats will have a chance to eclipse that accomplishment when Ole Miss and No. 5 Florida come to Lexington this weekend. The question is: do the Cats have it in them to respond to an even greater challenge? It would be easy to have confidence in UK to pull off the feat if it showed consistency during the season. But the 2014 year has had the overarching theme of inconsistent play; winning a few games while losing the crucial ones. UK doesn’t have any more games left on

its schedule to continue to play inconsistent this year. With an 8-5 record, the Cats can only afford, at best, three more losses before they’re deemed ineligible to play in the NCAA Tournament. That’s a scary concept to think about, considering there is two more ranked opponents for UK, not counting any conference opponent it will face in the SEC Tournament. But the Cats have been making strides to rectify their inconsistencies. Head coach Jon Lipsitz shuffled the roster around after the team’s losses against Missouri and Texas A&M two weeks ago, moving senior Arin Gilliland from her forward position to the backline. This gives UK more experience on the defense (Gilliland played as a defender previously in her career) and a strong wideback combo as she joins junior Cara Ledman in the backfield. Combined, the two players have 40 shots on goal, seven goals and 12 assists. This weekend’s challenge will be a defining point for the Cats. If they want to continue playing well into November when the NCAA Tournament begins, they’ll have to keep their inconsistencies at bay and continue to win the crucial games. It’s the only way they’ll climb out of the late-season hole.

The No. 12 UK volleyball team will continue SEC play this upcoming weekend against Georgia (9-8, 1-4 SEC) and LSU (8-7, 3-3 SEC). The Cats are on a 10-game winning streak and are coming off two straight – set wins over Tennessee and Auburn. UK (16-2, 6-0 SEC) is coming off an Auburn game in which it notched a record-setting 13 blocks and 26 block assists. The output gave the Cats their fifth SEC Defensive Player of the Week in junior middle blocker Sara Schwarzwalder. She led UK with 11 block assists, which is tied for most in UK history. The Cats are also led by a doublethreat tandem in junior outside hitter Shelby Workman and senior outside hitter Lauren O’Conner. The two lead the Cats with over 200 kills this season and both are averaging nearly four kills per set.

UK now will turn its attention to a Georgia team that has lost two in a row. The Bulldogs are struggling this season against SEC opponents. Georgia is led by the 173 kills from senior outside hitter Tirah Le’au this season and the 206 digs that senior Libero Gaby Smiley has amassed so far this year. Another SEC showdown awaits UK when it faces LSU on Sunday. The matchup will be the second for the two teams with the Cats defeating the Tigers in four sets back in September. LSU enters the match winning three of its last four games, two of which were set sweeps over Arkansas and Mississippi State. The Cats will have to contend with LSU’s freshman outside hitter Mimi Eugene who led the Tigers last week with 26 kills. UK will travel to Athens, Ga, to face the Bulldogs before returning home to face LSU at Memorial Coliseum.

PHOTO BY JONATHAN KRUEGER | STAFF

UK volleyball team celebrates after scoring a point during the match against Lipscomb at Memorial Coliseum on Sept. 18, 2014.

10.17.14 | Timeout | 5


Officials US opens direct talks with Syrian Kurds grilled Official met with party linked to group on US terrorist list for Ebola response NEWS

HANNAH ALLAN AND ROY GUTMAN McClatchy Wahington Bureau MCT

LINDSEY WISE McClatchy Washington Bureau MCT

Senior health officials defended the government's response to Ebola at a tense hearing Thursday on Capitol Hill, as lawmakers accused them of underestimating the danger posed by the deadly disease and flubbing procedures to contain its spread in the United States. “With no vaccine or cure we are facing down a disease for which there is no room for error,” said Rep. Tim Murphy, R-Pa., who chaired the hearing. “We cannot afford to look back at this point in history and say we could have done more. Errors in judgment have been made, and it is our immediate responsibility today to learn from those errors, correct them rapidly and move forward effectively.” Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told Murphy and other lawmakers that his agency is working 24-7 to protect Americans, but “there are no shortcuts in the control of Ebola.” He added, “To protect the United States we have to stop it at the source” in West Africa. Frieden testified Thursday along with other federal and state officials before a hearing of the House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigation. Frieden acknowledged that lawmakers have “a lot of understandable concerns about the cases in Dallas,” including about how health care workers at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas initially misdiagnosed the first patient, Thomas Duncan, and how two nurses who treated Duncan became infected despite following safety protocols. The CDC is working to identify and learn lessons from those three cases, he said. 6 | Timeout | 10.17.14

In policy shift, US opens direct talks with Syrian Kurds The Obama administration acknowledged Thursday that a U.S. official for the first time met with a representative of a Syrian Kurdish political party that's closely linked to a group on the U.S. terrorist list. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said a U.S. diplomat met with a counterpart from the main Kurdish political party in Syria _ the Democratic Union Party, better known by its Kurdish acronym as the PYD _ to discuss the U.S.-led fight against the Islamic State. The PYD's militia is engaged in fierce battles with the Islamist extremists, especially near the town of Kobani along the border with Turkey.

The direct talks are a sign of the shifting alliances created by the rise of the Islamic State. In Iraq, for example, the U.S. is providing air cover for Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim militias that once targeted American forces. And now in Syria, it appears the United States is willing to work with a group that's tied to the PKK, or Kurdistan Workers Party, which has waged a guerrilla war for Kurdish rights in Turkey for 30 years and which has been on the U.S. list of foreign terrorist organizations for nearly two decades. Turkey and the European Union also have blacklisted the PKK. Psaki provided no details of the meeting beyond saying that it took place over the past weekend and outside of the Middle East. Kurdish and other media reports say Charles Rivkin, the undersecretary of state for economic affairs, and PYD leader Salih Muslim met in Paris. The new face-to-face U.S. channel to the PYD is likely to rankle Turkey, which on

Monday bombed PKK locations in Turkey and has battled Kurdish civilians near Kobani protesting the international response to the Islamic State assault on the town. At a joint briefing at the State Department, neither Psaki nor Pentagon spokesman Rear Adm. John Kirby would say whether Turkey was given a heads-up on the meeting. The PYD's relationship with the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad is controversial. The Kurds' declaration of self-rule in what they call Rojava in 2012 was not opposed by the Assad government and in some places, such as Qamishli, a mainly Kurdish city in northern Syria, the PYD and Syrian intelligence are housed in buildings that are near one another. But the PKK also has been active in battling the Islamic State in northern Iraq and Kurdish Syria and is pressing to be removed from the U.S. terrorist list. Psaki said there were no plans to remove the PKK from the blacklist.

Senate’s CIA inquiry continues The report side-steps blaming Bush, aides

JONATHAN S. LANDAY, ALI WATKINS AND MARISA TAYLOR McClatchy Washington Bureau MCT A soon-to-be released Senate report on the CIA doesn't assess the responsibility of former President George W. Bush or his top aides for any of the abuses of the agency's detention and interrogation program, avoiding a full public accounting of one of the darkest chapters of the war on terror. The Senate Intelligence Committee report also didn't examine the responsibility of top Bush administration lawyers in crafting the legal framework that permitted the CIA to use simulated drowning called waterboarding and other interroga-

tion methods widely described as torture, McClatchy has learned. As a result, the $40 million, five-year inquiry passed up what may be the final opportunity to render an official verdict on the culpability of Bush, former Vice President Dick Cheney and other senior officials for the program, in which suspected terrorists were abducted, sent to secret overseas

Ideally it should come to some sort of conclusions on whether there were legal violations and if so, who was responsible.” ELIZABETH GOITEIN

prisons, and subjected to the harsh interrogation techniques. "If it's the case that the report doesn't really delve into the White House role, then that's a pretty serious indictment of the report," said Elizabeth Goitein, the codirector of the Brennan Center for Justice's Liberty and National Security Program at the New York University Law School. "Ideally it should come to some sort of conclusions on whether there were legal violations and if so, who was responsible." At the same time, she said, the report still is critically important because it will give "the public facts even if it doesn't come to these conclusions. The reason we have this factual accounting is not for prurient interest. It's so we can avoid something like this ever happening again in the future."


CLASSIFIEDS

For Rent 1-9 Bedroom

3 & 4 BR/2 BA houses on campus. W/D, dishwasher. Call (859) 433-2692. 3-5 BR houses for rent. $875-$1,600 per month. Call Tyrell at (859) 585-0047 or email tyrell@lexingtonrentalhomes.net. Wayne Michael is now pre-leasing 1-6BR houses for the Fall 2015 semester. www.waynemichaelproperties.com. (859) 5131206.

1 Bedroom

1 BR at South Hill Station. $925/month- Water/Ethernet included. Parking. Near UK campus. Call Kelley at (859) 225-3680.

2 Bedroom

2 and 3 bedroom apt available now. Great quality. Negotiable rent. Call landlord Dennis 859-983-0726 www.sillsbrothers.com 2 BR/1 BA. $825/month, utilities Included. Near UK Campus. Call Kelley at (859) 2253680.

3 Bedroom

3 BR/1.5 BA. $900/month- utilities included. Parking. Near UK campus. Call Kelley at (859) 225-3680.

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.

Attention

BAHAMAS SPRING BREAK: $189 - 5 days. All prices include: Round-trip luxury party cruise. Accommodations on the island at your choice of 13 resorts. Appalachia Travel, 1-800-867-5018. www.BahamaSun.com. REWARD: Car stolen Oct. 3 in Chevy Chase. Town car 2006, beige. license plate: NAMCAV. Yellow Jane Fonda bumper sticker on back window. Reward leading to retrieval. Call Lexington Metro Police or (859) 8065199.

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! Accounting Assistant Part-time accounting help needed – data entry, AP/AR, scanning. Flexible hours between 8:30 a.m.- 5 p.m., either T/TH or M/W/F, 20 hours/week. No weekends. Prefer Accounting majors. $8-9/hour. Send resume and class schedule to Sharon@AndersonCommunities.com.

Angliana Cabinets is hiring near campus on Angliana Ave. FT /PT general warehouse help. Relaxed, flexible hours, no experience needed. Store Hours 9-5pm Monday-Saturday – no night work. Go online at AnglianaCabinets.com/job-vacancy for further information. Basketball and Baseball Statisticians- Looking for experienced help to keep stats for local high school basketball teams and youth baseball leagues. Send email to: wlstats@aol.com. Events Coordinator, Part-time Local real estate company seeks an Events Coordinator to conduct all aspects of special events, create newsletters, and assist with social media. Hours vary, events occur mostly in evenings/weekends, average 10-20 hours per week. Prefer previous event planning experience or Marketing majors. Must be creative and energetic. $12 per hour. Send resume to Sharon@AndersonCommunities.com. LLM is seeking candidates interested in working part-time for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. Weekend & afternoon hours available. Starting at $10/hour. Full-time management positions also available. Apply online @ www.lordslegacyministries.org or call (859) 245-2233.

Looking for graphic design intern, strictly volunteer basis. Photoshop skills required. Work with the UK football team! Contact Cody James at cbja222@g.uky.edu or Dan Berezowitz at danbrez22@uky.edu. 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 and FT server and host positions available. Day and evening. Josie’s in Chevy Chase. 821 Chevy Chase Place. Please apply in person 8-11 a.m. or 2-6 p.m. Mon-Fri. PT receptionist needed for property management company. Must have excellent computer and communication skills. Apply at 860 South Broadway, Lexington, KY 40504. PT sales associate. Join our college-age staff. 12-20 hours/week. Apply in person. Chevy Chase Hardware, 883 E. High St. (859) 2699611. Raising Cane’s-Crew Members Needed: Raising Cane’s is looking for Crewmembers for our Lexington locations who love to have fun while working hard. Raising Cane’s offers free uniforms, holidays off, and flexible scheduling. Visit www.caniaccareers.com. We make fun of work!

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. Shamrocks in Hartland now hiring for all positions. Apply in person, 4750 Hartland Parkway, Ste 128.

Roommates Wanted

Female student looking for female student. Non-partier. Call landlord (Dennis) 859983-0726 www.sillsbrothers.com Roommate needed. Students looking for male or female. 3 br / 2 bath. Non partier Call landlord (Dennis) 859-983-0726 www.sillsbrothers.com

Call 859.257.2871 to place an ad | Ads can be found at kykernel.com | DEADLINE - 3 p.m. the day before publication 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.

CATS FROM PAGE 4

ples in front of them. We try to prepare them the best we can, and hopefully they learn something from it. It’s not just emotion either. You don't just turn emotion on, on Saturday. It's about the week, and I know I talk about that all the time, but it's so true. They've got to walk in our building today with a great attitude about them and a strong mindset to have a great week of preparation to put ourselves in

position to win a game.” Setting the tone early and establishing that offensive flow will fall on the shoulders of quarterback Patrick Towles said Towles. “I know he's going to have to throw the ball well for us to win some games,” Stoops said. “And this week it's not going to be easy, and he has to be more than a manager in this game. His talent has to show and he's got to play confident and he's got to throw the ball and he's got to play aggressive.”

CORRECTIONS On the October 16th edition of the Kentucky Kernel, an article covering the public debate between adult film star Ron Jeremy and Christian pastor Craig Gross paraphrased James Collard, director of engaging issues for the Student Activities Board, as saying "The event will raise awareness of the dangers of pornography

addiction." A more accurate paraphrasing of Collards statement was that the debate would focus on issues surrounding pornography related to gender issues, relationships and business. Collard said that the debate would present both sides of the argument allowing students to decide for themselves. 10.17.14 | Timeout | 7


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