'Diggers' Return to Find More Hatfield-McCoy Relics
Descendants of both families formally agreed to an end to the infamous feuding of the Hatfields of West Virginia and the McCoys of Kentucky on a national morning news program in 2003.
Descendants of both families formally agreed to an end to the infamous feuding of the Hatfields of West Virginia and the McCoys of Kentucky on a national morning news program in 2003.
Some faculty featured in the New Faculty podcast series already have a history with the University of Kentucky. Nevertheless, we want to feature them and let our listeners get to know our faculty a bit better! This time, we interview Rebecca Freeman of the Earth and Environmental Sciences Department.
This podcast was produced by David Cole.
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Martha Peterson, the Associate Vice President for Research at the University of Kentucky, will be presenting a talk titled Exploring Administration from a Faculty Perspective.
Faculty Host: Dr. Edith (Phoebe) Glazer
Arts & Sciences Dean Mark Lawrence Kornbluh visited the Academic Science Building construction site to discuss its current progress and his excitement for what the facility means for the University of Kentucky. The Academic Science Building is scheduled to open Fall 2016.
Riding a bike is one of the best ways to get around UK’s campus. Find out just a few of the many reasons that members of the campus community choose to commute on two wheels.
Jalyn discusses her research on Disney princesses entitled "Gender, Beauty, and Representation of Femininity within Disney Princess Films." Jalyn identifies her reasons for researching the topic, her findings, and the value of majoring in Sociology.
Although the term didn’t surface until the 1980s, the concept of biomarkers has been around for almost a century. Today, doctors routinely test blood for signs of anemia or the antigen associated with prostate cancer.
Name: Kim Schindler
Position: Research Analyst
Department: Sedimentary, Environmental, Radiochemical Research Lab (SER2L), Earth and Environmental Sciences
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Hi Everyone! I’m Kim Schindler. I moved to Lexington in July of 2011. I’m originally from a small town in the Hill Country of Texas. I received my BS in Ocean and Coastal Resources from Texas A&M University-Galveston in 2006 and shortly thereafter, moved to south Mississippi for 5 years. I enjoyed my time at the University of Southern Mississippi, but I’m very happy here in Lexington and at UK.
I am currently the lab technician/lab manager of the Sedimentary, Environmental, Radiochemical Research Lab (SER2L). I’ve worked with Dr. Kevin Yeager since 2003 (almost 13 years!), and I love the research that we do. I currently oversee the day to day operations of the lab, as well as training and supervising our graduate and undergraduate students in the laboratory.
From the Social Theory Spring 2015 Lecture Series: Transnational Lives, February 6th, 2015.
From a chorus of more than 50 voices to the baton movement on a conductor's rostrum, the talents of the students and faculty of University of Kentucky School of Music were in the spotlight this summer in cathedrals, concert halls and theatres across Spain and in Prague