kentuckykernel
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MONDAY 2.20.17
Cats outlast Bulldogs at Georgia
UK men’s basketball escaped Athens, Georgia Saturday with a 82-77 victory over the Bulldogs. The game was a back-and-forth affair with no team securing a larger lead than six points. Freshman De’Aaron Fox scored eight points in the last two minutes of the game to put UK ahead for good in the game. He finished with 16 points which was tied for the team-high in scoring along with fellow freshman Malik Monk. PHOTO PROVIDED BY UK ATHLETICS Freshman guard De’Aaron Fox helped lead Kentucky to victory over Georgia 82-77. Fox had 16 points and made 6 crucial freethrows in the final minute of the game.
Sale of WNKU Walk-a-thon helps Lexington homeless raises questions about WUKY, WEKY
By Amanda Bryant news@kykernel.com
The Lexington Rescue Mission held its 10th annual Walk for Warmth in Phoenix Park Saturday morning. The benefit raises funds for Fayette County residents facing eviction or utility shutoffs. “Help prevent homelessness in our community!” was the event’s mission statement. The walk-a-thon gives participants the chance to get active while contributing to the community. Participants could walk a one or two mile path through downtown Lexington. Despite a chill in the air and slight rain showers, the event had a significant turnout. “We’re out here to help support the homeless in Lexington,” UK Psychiatry Patient Relations Assistant Susan Pulliam said. In 2016 Mayor Jim Gray said Lexington’s homeless rate decreased 26 percent from 2014 to 2016. However, the cost of living can cause strain even for people who have homes, especially since wages have not kept pace with the increase in rent. Any financial change can be “devastating,”
By Tessa Howard
news@kykernel.com
PHOTO BY ADAM SHERBERG I STAFF The crowd pauses for a prayer at the Walk For Warmth on Saturday. The walk was hosted by the Lexington Rescue Mission, and benefits homeless and housing-insecure residents in Lexington.
Lexington Rescue Mission Development Director Laura Carr said, so the Lexington Rescue Mission also helps people develop a stable environment in their new home to avoid these situations. “In 2016, our Homeless Prevention Program helped keep 105 families in their homes and 92 from having their utilities shut off,” Carr said. Walk for Warmth raised $18,500 in 2016. The raised money comes from donations and the $25 entrance fee for
the walk. About 250 people walked. Communications junior Kristen Taylor and biology junior Shannon Smith volunteered at the event at a booth where people could make encouraging posters. “Volunteering gives us the opportunity to give back to the community that has given so much to us,” Taylor said. “Lexington has allowed us to come in as college students and really find our place and develop as the people we want to be for our future.”
On Tuesday, the Northern Kentucky University Board of Regents voted to sell WNKU-FM to the Bible Broadcasting Corporation for $1.9 million. WNKU has been on the air at 89.7 FM since 1985. When NKU purchased WNKU-FM, WNKE-FM and WNKN-FM in 2011, the number of listeners increased to 3.1 million. In the last six years, NKU spent $4.1 million in subsidies for the station, according to a 2016 press release. WNKE will also be sold for $700,000 to the Educational Media Foundation. The sales will cover the debt and prevent the university from future subsidies of the station that come at the expense of its students. “In these challenging economic times, we must continue to direct our resources to support our core mission: the education of our students,” NKU President Geoffrey Mearns said
in 2016. Many students and faculty at NKU tried to save the radio station through a rally and a petition that had more than 3,600 signatures. The sale must be approved by the Federal Communications Commission, which could take months. WNKU will stay on the air until that approval. NKU joined a list of other universities that sold their stations, including Miami University and Georgetown College. The sale raised concerns among students and faculty who support WUKY (91.3 FM) in Lexington, Kentucky, and WEKY (1340 AM) in Richmond, Kentucky. UK owns WUKY while Wallingford Communications owns WEKY, but the station is connected to Eastern Kentucky University. WUKY General Manager Tom Godell said he believes WUKY will not be affected in the same way as WNKU. “The University of Kentucky’s administration is strong and supportive of
WUKY,” Godell said. In 2016, WUKY won a Lexington Music Award for Community Service. Godell said he is proud of WUKY’s efforts to serve Lexington by broadcasting news on the radio, its website and its Facebook page. “This is what people value. If there’s self-support for our station by students, administration and our listeners then there is no reason for the administration to take away WUKY,” Godell said. UK Vice President for University Relations Tom Harris said he hopes WUKY will not join the list of sold radio stations. “We are a listener-supported radio, so our goal is to connect with the community and serve our listeners. If that happens we hope those listeners and businesses will continue to support their radio station,” Harris said. “I think public radio, and WUKY in particular, provides a unique public service, but we also need the community to help support that service.
UK spent $34,000 in suit against Kernel By Lee Mengistu news@kykernel.com
UK spent $34,003.96 on outside attorney fees in the UK vs. Kentucky Kernel Press Inc. case between Aug. 31, 2016 and Jan. 24, 2017. An open records request revealed that the university spent the money on attorneys and paralegals at Sturgill, Turner, Barker & Moloney, PLLC, a Lexington-based law firm with an
annual contractual limit of $1,150,000 with the university. UK sued the Kernel in order to appeal the state Attorney General’s ruling that UK needed to release documents related to the sexual misconduct investigation of former associate professor James Harwood. A judge ruled in the university’s favor on Jan. 24. Of the projected budget of $1.15 million, $800,000 comes from the state through “insurance reimbursement after retention is met,” and $350,000 from local and other fees, according to the contract.
“The University can provide information as to how much has been spent on a particular case, but the Attorney-Client Privilege generally covers the specific details.” Jay Blanton
UK Spokesman
Sturgill et. al. work outside of the UK Office of Legal Counsel to represent the university in employment, medical malpractice, athletic legal matters and other matters when “counsel cannot feasibly be provided by in-house
personnel due to conflict of interest or workload considerations,” according to the contract. In comparison, the Office of Legal Counsel, which usually works on internal matters, had a budget of $1,999,6000
Check out the story behind Chicago playwrite Phillip Dawkins play ‘Failure: A Love Story’ Page 2
in 2014-15 and a proposed budget of $2,096,900 in 201516, according to the published Operating and Capital Budget 2015-16. Sturgill et. al. has been recognized by US News and World Report as a top-tier firm in multiple practice areas, including employment law and representing business organizations. Although the Office of Legal Counsel cited confidentiality as the reason the university could not reveal outside counsel billing invoices, UK UK spokesman Jay Blanton said the university generally pays
lawyers a flat rate of $125 per hour and paralegals $40 per hour. “For complex matters, the University may pay more,” Blanton said. “The University can provide information as to how much has been spent on a particular case, but the Attorney-Client Privilege generally covers the specific details.” The Attorney General has filed two other similar decisions in appeals against Western Kentucky University and Kentucky State University, who have announced that they will challenge the decisions in court as well.
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I Kentucky Kernel I 2.20.17
Brian Owens shares the ‘Soul of Ferguson’
By Matt Wickstrom features@kykernel.com
For Brian Owens, music has been a part of the fabric of his upbringing. Owens grew up in Belleville, Illinois, in a musical family led by his father, a pastor, leading him to singing in the church choir for much of his childhood. However, it wasn’t until his senior year of high school that Owens opted for a musical career path. According to Owens, he recalls his parents signing him up for organ lessons when he was eight years old, and after attending one lesson he ditched the organ for a spot on the baseball diamond. Since music has become his passion, Owens has relocated to nearby Ferguson, Missouri, where he’s resided for the past eleven years. The city has been in the spotlight in recent years
after police officer Darren Wilson fatally shot Michael Brown in Aug. 2014, sparking widespread outrage and furthering our nation’s racial divide. Owens’ upcoming record ‘Soul of Ferguson,’ set to release on Feb. 24, touches on many of the struggles and experiences the citizens of Ferguson face every day. Per Owens, the record will have a side A and a side B, much like oldschool vinyls, with much of side B being written during the fallout of Brown’s death. “The record in and of itself for me represents the heart of Ferguson,” Owens said. “The true depth and meaning of my city, which is people being in love, people expressing their faith and people dealing with tough issues. To me the record captures all those feelings.” For one of the tracks on ‘Soul of Ferguson’ titled ‘For
You,’ Owens collaborated with Michael McDonald of The Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan fame. According to Owens, a friend of McDonald, a Ferguson native, saw him perform in 2014 and thought Owens would be a proper opening act for a show McDonald had scheduled in St. Louis the following year. The show was a success, and Owens soon joined McDonald for more stops on his tour. While on tour, McDonald heard the song and a conversation ensued about working together, and the rest is history. The record, and Owens, both have significant ties to Lexington as well. Owens recorded much of the project at nearby Shangri-la Productions with Duane Lundy, and visited town earlier this month to finish mixing and mastering. For Owens, music has
taught him to not be lazy, but rather to push himself that extra mile to perfect his work. “If I’m not careful, I’ll stop at what I’m good at and not push myself beyond that, but really trying to push into the areas that are difficult, where I’m going to grow. Sometimes that means taking an extra ten minutes when I’m done or singing a take over again because I know it’s not completely in tune.” Owens will be performing in Lexington on Thursday, Feb. 23 at Soulful Space, better known as Church of the Good Shepherd, and will also serve as an album release party of sorts. The stop at Soulful Space will be the third show in the venue for Owens and the first where he’ll be joined by EVENT POSTER BY CRICKET PRESS his horn section and backup Ferguson, Missouri’s Brian Owens will return to Lexington on Feb. vocalists. 23 for a show at Soulful Space ahead of the release of his new album ‘Soul of Ferguson’ on Feb. 24.
Comedy, tragedy collide in ‘Failure: A Love Story’ By Christie Netherton features@kykernel.com
For many, February is the month of love with Valentine’s Day falling on the 14th. AthensWest Theatre Company has kept the theme of love going throughout the month, showcasing their production of ‘Failure: A Love Story’ in Lexington’s Downtown Art Center for the first three weekends in February. ‘Failure: A Love Story’ is written by Chicago playwright Phillip Dawkins and has been a huge success within the Lexington community, having completely sold out their production this past weekend. The musical, directed by Jerre Dye, revolves around the lives and deaths of the three Fail sisters who all live above their family’s clock shop in Chicago during the 1920s following the deaths of their parents, along
with Mortimer Mortimer, a smitten costumer who falls in love with each sister right before they pass. The play is a combination of comedy and tragedy with the added magic of talking clocks and animals to pull it all together. PHOTO PROVIDED BY ATHENSWEST THEATRE COMPANY | PATRICK J. MITCHELL The perThe play is a combination of comedy and tragedy with the added magic of talking clocks and formance animals to pull it all together. utilizes a small cast Robinson and Mark Mozingo. along with playing a significant of seven, including Shayne Mozingo has also appeared in role in the production. Brakefield, Rachel Rogers, HBO’s ‘Girls’ and doubles as a AthensWest Artistic DirecSebastian Midence, Gabrielle founding member and associate tor Bo List says that they decidMiller, Marianne Miller, Alexis artistic director of AthensWest, ed to showcase ‘Failure: A Love
Story’ because the company had a very personal reaction to it. “We just all fell in love with it. We found it unique, quirky, strange and beautiful,” List said. “We can’t quite decide whether it’s a very funny tragedy or a very sad comedy. It’s somewhere in between.” The play mimics life’s unpredictable and even absurd moments. It seeks to remind the audience of what is important in their lives and to love abundantly as well as being able to laugh at the silliness of life, according to Mozingo. “It’s very inventive and creative and outside the box,” Marianne Miller said. “There’s something about it being a love letter to humanity that is encouraging and sort of understanding and empathetic toward the human condition, which is that we’re all here to love and we’re all here to live and we’re all here to die.”
The cast and artistic team have thoroughly enjoyed the reaction from the audience and community. Not only has the play sold out this past weekend, but the audience has seemed to have a strong emotional connection with the performance just as much as the cast, according to Mozingo. “We really hold this show close to our hearts so we hope that people like it. It seems like we’ve done our jobs and that we’re affecting people,” Mozingo said. “They’re laughing and they’re crying and it’s making them ponder their own existence and all of the stuff that I feel like the show does for us.” ‘Failure: A Love Story’ will be showing one final weekend, February 16-19 starting at 8 p.m. Thursday through Saturday and at 2 p.m. on Sunday at the Downtown Art Center here in Lexington with public parking right across the street.
2.20.17
OPINIONS
I Kentucky Kernel I 3
SPORTS
Court ruling targets blacks Baseball swept at UNC BOLAJI OLAGBAJU Kernel Columnist
Recently, in a school that falls under the Jefferson County Public Schools system, a memo was disseminated to students on a revised dress code, effectively targeting popular hairstyles worn mostly by black students. This form of targeting is not new for the black community, especially given the pervasive idea of respectability politics. Another such example is found in the ruling made by the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals — that companies are within their rights to fire people for having dreadlocks. A black woman named Chastity Jones was hired at an insurance claims processing company in Mobile, Alabama, but according to the suit filed
by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, a white HR employee informed her that her dreadlocks did not fit the company’s description of a “professional and businesslike image.” Jones refused to change her hairstyle, which would have most likely required her to cut her hair, and her employment offer was subsequently rescinded. In contrast, hairstyles that are associated with white women are rarely deemed “unprofessional” in corporate and working environments, so it is important to question why this distinction exists, and why it matters. Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have defined race as a symbolic category, misrecognized as a natural one, constructed according to specific social and historical contexts. My idea of being black back in my native Nigeria varies from the same ideas here in the United
States, for example. Thus, it is this social context that is key to our understanding of race in America. Thus, when the ban of a traditionally black hairstyle such as dreadlocks is institutionalized, it is not radical to deduce that dreadlocks are seen as “unprofessional” because of general attitudes directed toward blacks. The 11th Circuit’s ruling on this issue was wrong because it allows for adverse action to be taken on these culturally significant hairstyles. What we as a society should strive toward is broadening our view of what we deem to be acceptable, and more importantly respectable. As a young, black man with dreadlocks, it is disheartening to think that I, along with others who share this style, could be discriminated upon because of hair, especially when a hairstyle has nothing to do with work ethic and productivity.
Dean clarifies honors fee SAADIA AKHTAR Kernel Columnist
Thanks to the generous donation of $23 million by alumni Thomas Lewis, UK’s Honors Program will be revamped into an Honors College by the start of the 2017-2018 school year. With all of the changes coming, I decided to interview the Interim Dean of the Honors Program, Phil Harling, and Lisa Wilson, the Associate Provost for Finance and Operations. Part of those changes is the new Honors Fee. Incoming freshmen (class of 2021) will be paying $500 per year as their fee, while current Honors students will pay $75 in 20172018, $150 in 2018-2019, and $300 in 2019-2020. Harling says the fee is “designed to cement the advantages that we
are going to be able to realize in the relatively short term... the gift [Lewis’s $23 million donation] provides a ten-year foundation. Once that foundation is in place, our challenge is going to be to make sure that we have the financial wherewithal to continue to offer the advantages that we are going to realize in the short term of this gift.” The fee will be going toward three main things that Harling narrowed down: “One is the building of the new residence hall, Lewis Residence Hall... Number two, through the gift, we are going to be able to hire four dedicated career counselors for our Honors population,” and third, “some of the money will ultimately go toward beefing up the Honors curriculum, which we hope as of the academic year of 18-19 will move to a 30-credit hour curriculum.” Current students don’t have to worrry about the curriculum
change, though. Harling said, “Now, students already in the program at that point would have the option to pursue that 30-hour curriculum, but they would not be required to.” For students unable to pay the Honors Fee, Wilson assured that there would be financial assistance available. “We would utilize, as we typically do at the institutional level, for students who have need... through working with the financial aid office, the FAFSA form to determine whether or not there is a need. We would appropriately award scholarship dollars to offset the fee if there is a need there, that’s been identified there in our typical formula,” Wilson said. Harling ended the interview with, “We want to provide the kind of physical space, physical environment for our students that is compelling, that is as conducive to their education as it possibly can be.”
By Chris Angolia
sports@kykernel.com
In what was UK baseball’s first weekend series under new head coach Nick Mingione, the Cats were swept against No. 9 North Carolina in Chapel Hill. For the Cats, facing a ranked team on the road was hard enough to start the season, but Tar Heel’s ace, and preseason All-American J.B. Bukauskas turned in a performance on Friday in game one that put UK in a 0-1 hole for the series after a 3-1 loss. Bukauskas struck out 10 overall and allowed just three hits over six innings of work in the series opener to hand sophomore Sean Hjelle a loss in his first career start. Hjelle went five innings, allowing three runs on 11 hits with only two strikeouts. While Hjelle was dealt a tall task matching up against an All-American in his first career start, it was still a promising start and the struggles at times were ex-
pected for someone who has never started a college game before. On Saturday, the Cats sent Zach Logue to the mound looking to even the series and jumped out to an early 1-0 lead, but unfortunately the Heels responded. UNC forced Logue to work and eventually chased him after just four and one-thirds innings of three-run ball. Despite allowing three runs, Logue was still dealt the loss as the Cats could not break through with an late-inning comeback. UK’s opening weekend concluded on Sunday, as Justin Lewis was given the ball looking to help the Cats avoid the sweep, but Lewis struggled right from the beginning. Lewis was only able to work through three innings, allowing five runs on four hits while walking three Tar Heel batters. Even though the Cats found themselves in an early hole down 3-0, they would tie it up with a three-run third inning that included a Riley
Mahan two-run home run. But as they did all weekend, the Heels responded with a pair of runs in the bottom half of the third to put them back on top 5-3. UK scored once more, and threaten numerous times but could not break through, falling 5-4 in the finale. Overall, the Cats’ three losses came by a combined four runs against a team that is projected to contend in 2017, and even though the starters went 0-3, there are positives to take from the opening weekend as a staff. Two guys in particular, Logan Salow and Zach Pop showcased their improvements made in the offseason this weekend. Salow tossed five innings of scoreless ball on Sunday in relief and Pop went one and two-thirds on Saturday allowing no runs and was up to 97 mph on the gun. The Cats are back in action Wednesday Feb. 22 when they travel to Lynchburg, VA to face Liberty. First pitch is set for 3 p.m.
S&D excel in championships By Chase Campbell sports@kykernel.com
The UK Women’s swimming and diving team took Nashville by storm this week, on a five-day tear that started Tuesday. The team matched its best ever finish in the SEC Championship – third place, which had only been accomplished once before in 1999. The week was headlined by the amazing performances of freshman Asia Seidt, a Louisville, Kentucky native. She scored in every race she competed in and was responsible for 295 of the team’s 938 points. Her worst performance was a fifth place finish in the 400-yard freestyle relay. But she also took third in the 100yard backstroke and first in the 200-yard backstroke. Seidt wasn’t the only star of the week, however, as several teammates had huge days
at exactly the right time. One of those teammates was Geena Freriks in the 200-yard freestyle, in which she broke her own school record of 1:44.98 with the time of 1:44.51 that she set in the gold medal performance, making her the first Cat since Kelly Heath in 1995 to win that race at the SEC Championships. Team performance was huge going into the last few days of the championships. At the end of a somewhat shaky day two, the women were in sixth, and the men were in tenth. While the men were in their position for the rest of the week, the women went on a tear for the last three days, getting to fourth place by day four, and finishing in third. The men weren’t nearly as explosive as their female teammates, but there were some very bright spots in the Cats’ tenth-place finish. They
took strong finishes in a couple events, namely, the relays. They had a 6th place finish in the 800-yard freestyle relay, beating out Tennessee and Texas A&M in that race. Junior Isaac Jones set a new school record in the 1650yard freestyle, with a time of 14:57.77, becoming the second Cat to breach the 15-minute mark. Both occasions where that happened were this season, so the men weren’t at all devoid of quality performances. The Cats’ season isn’t quite over yet. They’re looking to continue to push qualifications for the NCAA championships this year. They’ll be competing in the Ohio State Last Chance meet, as well as the Zone C diving meet in early March. If they perform like they did in the conference championships, they should have plenty of representatives in the NCAA tournament.
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Table Tennis Anyone? The Lexington Table Tennis Club has open play at Castlewood Gym at 201 Castlewood Dr in Lexington Training Hours : Saturday 2:30 to 6:00 PM Sunday 9:30 AM to Noon $30 annual fee, $20 for students, or $3.00 per visit. First visit is free! Check us out on Facebook!
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I Kentucky Kernel I 2.20.17
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