By Brandon Davis

A common dilemma many students face when beginning their college careers out of high school is figuring out how to stay in shape while adjusting to a new schedule.

The Student Activities Center’s fitness center offers a variety of different activities to help keep students in shape, including an accessible weight room stocked with treadmills, free and machine weight systems and other cardiovascular equipment.

“In the Louisville Metropolitan area, this [SAC] is one of the best facilities around,” Ken Carey, gym employee, said. “The vast array of equipment and stuff that this facility has here along with the facilities at the Crawford and Humana, it can’t be beat.”

The SAC is open weekdays from 6 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. and is free with an active student ID.

The SAC fitness center also provides five racquetball courts, two squash courts and complete locker room facilities along with four multi-purpose gym floors which are used for basketball, volleyball and badminton.

“It offers pretty much everything you want,” Greg Welsh, junior nursing major, said. “They have a gym, basketball courts, racquetball and they’re always open when you need them to be so it’s pretty convenient.”

For those looking to keep themselves occupied in some competitive form or just looking for a way to blow off some steam without all the sweat, the Cardinal Corner might be the answer. Also located in the SAC, the Cardinal Corner provides an assortment of free games for students to compete in, including pool, ping-pong, air hockey and foosball.

The Ralph Wright Natatorium, located on the corner of Warnock Ave. and Floyd St., is one for the newest facilities on campus and allows students a chance to swim in an Olympic-size pool. The Natatorium is also home to the U of L’s men’s and women’s swim teams and is complete with an eight-lane, 50 meter competition pool with depth ranging from four feet, six inches to 18 feet.

“It’s really a great facility,” Matt Blanford, graduate student and lifeguard, said. “It’s brand new and I think students are surprised when they find out that it’s even here and they’re allowed to use it for free.”

The Natatorium is open from 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. on weekdays and is also open at various times on weekends.

The Humana Gym is another facility available for students looking to work out. Located on Bradley Ave. and Eastern Pkwy., the Humana Gym offers complete weight and cardiovascular rooms, dry heat saunas and gym floors are available when not used for club practices. Free for students, the Humana Gym is open from 8:30 a.m. to 9 p.m.

U of L also offers a variety of different sports clubs and intramural league sports which provide students looking for a more structured plan to help maintain a healthy lifestyle, a solid solution while satisfying their competitive juices.

With clubs like badminton, fencing, gymnastics and many others, students are given the opportunity to compete while receiving a chance to learn a new sport or continuing to play a familiar one. There are also many different intramural league sports students can play including football, basketball, and soccer.

STI month encourages students to be tested

2009-04-20T00:00:00-04:00April 20th, 2009|Uncategorized|

April is Sexually Transmitted Infections awareness month according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention. This annual observance raises understanding about the impact of sexually transmitted infections that alter the health of Americans and the importance of discussing sexual health with healthcare providers and sexual partners.
In honor of STI awareness month,  tomorrow, April 22, at Campus Health Services on the Belknap Campus from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m., there will be free HIV testing.


Column: My memorable moments

2009-04-20T00:00:00-04:00April 20th, 2009|Uncategorized|

With only a couple more weeks left until I graduate, I've found myself reflecting quite often on my years at the University of Louisville. I've taken a large variety of classes and have met so many people along the way, yet the memories that stick out the most to me are the ones that involve U of L sports.


A face-off to look forward to, Anderson and Devine

2009-04-20T00:00:00-04:00April 20th, 2009|Uncategorized|

With football season quickly approaching, reigning Big East Freshman of the Year Victor Anderson and last year's leading returning rusher in the Big East Noel Devine are not only looking to compete against each other for the Big East rushing title, but also to lead their respective teams to a BCS bowl game.


Column: Why Do We Want To Be Good

2009-04-20T00:00:00-04:00April 20th, 2009|Uncategorized|

Of all the questions man has raised during his stay on this planet, the most pressing and most captivating seems to be what it means to be good. Morality is the central concern of most wisdom from Solomon's proverbs to Plato's dialogues, from Aesop's Fables to Jesus' beatitudes. Although ethics is an essential pursuit, its insufficiency is exposed by the more basic question of why we pursue goodness at all.


Students show their true colors

2009-04-20T00:00:00-04:00April 20th, 2009|Uncategorized|

When students make their decisions about where to attend school, most of them know the basic principles of the school's sports teams. They know the school colors, know their school's biggest rival and most own a school shirt. But what happens when a student attends one school but supports another?


Rick Pitino, caught up in extortion scandal

2009-04-20T00:00:00-04:00April 20th, 2009|Uncategorized|

After being in the limelight every moment during the 2008-09 basketball season, most people would not have expected to see University of Louisville Men's basketball Head Coach Rick Pitino as front page news or as the "more at 11" teaser for local television news stations now.


Students and professors put ‘Ideas to Action’

2009-04-20T00:00:00-04:00April 20th, 2009|Uncategorized|

Is it possible for instructors to learn while teaching students?  Professors involved in the Lights, Camera, Ideas to Action would likely say yes.  The event was a presentation of five classes who sharpened their critical thinking skills at University of Louisville through a 10-year initiative, Ideas to Action, i2a.


Go to Top