xt7qz60bzw4v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qz60bzw4v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-01-27 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, January 27, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 27, 1981 1981 1981-01-27 2020 true xt7qz60bzw4v section xt7qz60bzw4v Vol.LXXXlll, No.94 . . University of Kentucky . , ‘
Tuesday. January 274 1981 an Independent student newspaper Lexington, Kentucky I >4, ,
MW ' I .4 4 4 '
' UK officials un eil "'
4' ' e , .:.: i 4:
«r .. . new parklng plans .
" 4* 4 . I 4’ 4 4 By DALE MORTON students don’tpay anything." * .4- ; ‘4
4g 4, 4% (\ / h ,, s W Staff Writer Padgett outlined a five-step plan 5- 4.4-
:.' " I -~» ‘1 . 3 is . for administration improvement. - '. *' r
t» . -, “to, d9 . . i ', ~" ' ' '
~. ~’ . ' 2 . = ’ “it ‘ Following 20 years of experience wComputerlzation of parking F 3- f :4'
‘ ll ' ; ' . a ' with the parking situation at UK, records to provide easy retrieval of U "
' 4 4_ 4 44 the Division of Public Safety has information “This WOUld give US _, ,"
. t ' . proposed a major change in the far more flexibility than we‘ve ever 2,
\ a- ' fl‘ : overall parking program on cam- had," he said, adding the com- ; i "
. . . {W pus. puters are currently in operation at ‘.
S A d ‘ so?“ ' Contained within a three-year the UK police department. .. ,~
18' I I lssa I I '0 Ion *- it“ , construction program, are drastic “The computers were the key to -.4 f. .1 -,'
t‘ . changes which affect faculty, staff the whole plan,“ Blanton said, '
4 . \ y .44., ' ~43 and students — bringing UK up to wlssue permits to all who park ’. r4 -.‘
‘ . l the same level as its benchmark in- on university property. This plan ’
0V rr 1 d b R /‘ stitutions Benchmark schools are would institute rate increases for g. '_‘. “
e u e y U C w 4' .4 other land-grant institutions of those who Currently purchase '; I
rs .- 44 4 comparable enrollment [0 UK Stickers, and charge students for ,,_ I' ' .
1. or, 3% The program follows a recent “R" stickers, .' ‘3' ~ .I
By PEGGY BOECK ‘ 4 , 4 " ' comprehensive update of a study Padgett said the plan calls for
Staff Writer 4 4 r ‘ ', is completed in 1901 by Harland. doubling the price of both “A" and ‘.-.~' .,. '
l. \ Bartholomew and Associates, a “B" stickers. from $36 to $72 and ' . j"
Student Association has allocated an additional $875 for legal and H A. traffic consulting agency from $24 to 548' r “spectivelyt M50290“ " -_ -
research expenses in their fight against the proposed rate increase by ,‘ ., Memphls' Tennessee, and is the muting StUdem's Shekers WI“ 1” 1' ~ . ~
General TelephoneCo. ' " ' u . first major change since 1961.The crease from $10 to $20. These in- i
SA last week submitted a motion to dismiss GTE‘s petition for a rate p _ plan proposes: creases WOUld occur either 35 3 ' '
. increase. Late Friday afternoon, the state Utility Regulatory Commis- " " 2T0 add parking space for all lump sum under the one-year plan 4 .2 7-_
sion overruledthemotion. -, stickered areas; or in increments over three years .4
The next move will be to Franklin Circuit Court, where SA will: (1) . ,_ , ITO streamline and improve the under that Plan ' 2
ask fora declaratory judgement on the constitutionality of Gov. John Y. W .4 -' bus System; The plan proposeS to charge : f, ‘. 4’ ‘, "
Brown’s plan to combine the Energy Regulatory Commission and the “T0 charge a sticker fee based StUdehtS for rfildehtlal Sthkel’St ‘. 1
URC into one public service commission; and (2) file for an injunctive a upon the “level 0f convenience" the Those Who live in apartmehtS and 3 4
relief so that no rate increase will be granted by GTE until the above l°t offers users. Tfildence halls Will have to pay . .
4 court matter canbedisposed of4 Jack Blanton, vice president for $17.50 (per semester: for parking 4 . .
If SA is overruled by Franklin Circuit Court, they will then appeal to ' business affairs. said the proposed stickers For students who wish to 3. : I ' 1'
. the Kentucky Court of Appeals. ' -' plan is a “major overhaul of park- park at Commonwealth Stadium, a 4‘.‘4~~ 4,’
SA attorney Keith Baker has already been paid $250 for his services in By WM MORAN / Kernel Staff "‘8 :4" ”T423544 h 44 4:4” sticker must be purchased for :4-
the fight against GTE. However, the additional ex es must be aid - , - - - N we one w at it 9 con- - ,=
in order to continue the processofintervention. pens p :a44t444l4a4s4t44314g4i14t44is44itgde42: xiiilgzigiymggifislzfnfjdii‘l; sulting agency) suggested in the Revenue from the sticker in ';'_f.- 1
Brad Sturgeon, SA president, said his organization has received sup- ing plan to the senators. Above SA president Brad Stur cell has 605' we would not be 1." web a "F55 creases WI” pay for all lm- ‘5 . :
-.‘ 901't from “high profile people “the political community" in the court to wait his turn to get the flobr during discussion of gthe con- now, Blanton sald.The fixed p rovments proposed by the plan. I» t .1 *‘V
I suit against GTE- This may somewhat decrease SA'S financial burden. stitution. All this made for a long drawn-out meeting which ""ml’e‘” Of parking spaces on cam- “A“ users She." the cost, ‘ Dav‘d '.» ,
Sturgeon saidheis "Ot “at libertytoreveal"who these supporters are. bought Sali McSherry to stifle a yawn while another senator pus ls ‘4‘almost4 guaranteed to give Brewster, 35$st dlrector for II ‘
In other action, SA responded to a special presentation of a new park- kicked up his heels. you an mcreasmg problem," he ad- public safety, said. “Our plan is .’ -. fl‘ 2' ‘4.
ing policy put together by Jack Blanton, vice president for business af- ded- based upon breaking even." " .3'
fairs, Tom Padgett, public safety director and David Brewster, assis~ I “We have a diminishing capabili- “Hire 10 StUdehtS to “augment ,« «‘3‘:
tant director for public safety4 44. , ty of managing the thing. The ad. enforcement" of problem parking 44.
While SA response was generally favorable to the proposals, not all - 43's" * ministration is to the point where it areas. ‘ .:'.
aspects wentwithout questioning. ”.m' ” can no longer afford todo nothing. These students would issue ,4 .
' “Overall. I feel like we’re going to endorse the proposal with some I ' I“. “Our proposal is to go with the tickets for parking violations in . {42,- 4,;
recommendations and improvements,"said Sturgeon. - plan at one time," Blanton said, ex- “problem areas," Padgett said. -" .9
In order to finance additional parking spaces and provide night bus .. * 4' 4 plaining that a one year implemen- Commonwealth Stadium would be " . 4. , ,
service, student and faculty parking fees will be increased. Students ' 4’, tation periOd (compared to a three a prime target, he added, j .. ' 3
who did not pay for parking before will becharged next fall. M .‘ l .444, year gradual transition) would pro- winstitute a graduated fine I .
Theproposal also calls forthehiringof students to control regulated 4 '” ‘ 4" ' '“ V vide an additional $332,000 in con- system for parking tickets to , ‘i f‘ {44
parking by giving tickets to illegally parked cars and working as lot at- .4 " ' . f -4 f struction revenue since all the reward those who pay early and .-
tendents. - ' ‘ 42*" money would come in a lump sum penalize those who are delinquent. . 4 y
LTI Senator Lisa Dacci questioned whether to charge LTI students, _ , . ' , * a in the one-year plan. Instead of the $5 parking ticket. 4’ ,. ;.tg"' .4
since these students generally do not use the bus system. Padgett said n a.“ ' fl ' ' Most dramatic of the three pro- anyone Who pays within one week , " .7 *'
these students willbeaffected bytheaddition of parking spaces and bet- 4,, ‘ ‘4 . , posals concerns parkingThe plan would be allowed to pay $4 and 7
ter regulation control. Therefore, LTI students will be included in the so , ‘ ".f‘ ~* ' I“ ~ calls for an increase in both park- those Who Wt 0“ paying WOUld be i“ * 3
implementation of parking fees. - I ” I" ing sticker fees and the number of chargedS7. ;
One means of controlling illegal parking will be increasing the fine for ' I parking spaces available. The plan also calls for increasing 4 '..- -'.3.
towing cars from $10 to $25. Senator At-large Debbie Earley was con- Mk , “Parking rates are relatively the towing rate from $10 to $25. ,4. .r
_ cemed with this proposal. ’ - ' .. I now low," said Tom Padgett, UK direc- “(PeOple arel willing to run the 'I‘ I
Continuedonpage 6 By BEN VAN HOOK/Kernel Staff tor for public safety. “Essentially, risk for $10." Padgett said. “They _ ,2
commuting students and resident Continued on page-6 {.4 T “I.
' o y :i-/ :3,
es: ent eagan - w at to expect In the 80S = »
. ° ° 44 e o ’ a t': 4‘4-4 ' ‘
Tightenlng 0f belt mcludes ..-~2a* “a, , From humble beginnings to world s t0p Job
fl V ’ ',.4’4‘ Il-i‘“, f
cutback in student money former actor has relied on pOpular appeal
V -_ l ' l ;
By STEVE HUNT theloan program at UK, ,.4._ _ '4 4 oi- , - By KEVIN OSBOURN nght-wmgers like to crow that work — work With us, not over us, .. - ,3, 4
4 Reporter The only loan program that W 1’2, 2 Political Writer the country veered sharply to the to stand by our sides. not on our ‘-.‘- .44;
might be cut is the guaranteed stu- ,4, W t- . right when it turned to Reagan, but backs. Government can and must tr. ._‘ -.
President Ronald Reagan’s plan dent loans that come from banks, .4 Journalism senior Kevin Osbourn the probable truth of the matter is provide opportunity; not smother ‘ ~ ~

' to cut governmental spending will according to Prater. ' 5;: _ i? . is a Kernel POIltical writer- FOIIOW- that "met 0f the country had Simply it" ‘. 2',
have a definite effect on students, “I think that the EEOC would be . I' it ' , "'8 is his analysis of Ronald Stepped tit‘mly t0 the right 0t center SimpliStiC as the mandate may T f .4

‘ accordingtoUKofficials. cut, which in Reagan's mind is Reagan’s rise to power and the cf. . , .sick and tired of the vast, clogg- sound, Reagan seems to embody 42:4 5

Jack Blanton, vice president for almost a giveaway. But, 1 think the 4.42 fects it may have on the United ed federal machine; sick and tired somethlng beyond a former actor - ,1 - 4: '- t7 ‘
business affairs, said the five taxbreakwillcontinue,"said Brad ' States. of being broke; fed up with useless and governor who is invoking old
things to watch are the social Sturgeon, president of Student PRESIDENT REAGAN programs, crime, waste, guilt; not values and trying to make them .
security tuition payments, National Association. It was about noon on a late to mention shame in the eyes of the work in the ‘80s ” . f .1
Direct Student Loan program, In November, 1900, Reagan programs now in terms ofcolleges. January day in Washington DC. world——derision from our enemies, Maybe it's the swashbuckling
Basic Educational Opportunity assigned “secondary priority" to a “Infact, there wasastatistic that Thecrowd outside the White House dismay from our allies — fed up John Wayne image that is appeal- 1' *‘ 2
Grants, the tuition tax credit and multibillion-dollar plan to provide Weinberger quoted in the confirma- was buzzing with excitement, with all that, and to put a fine point ins about Reagan x ~ ‘ -'
theG.I.Bill. tuition tax credit to students and tion hearings. He said that 85 per- uncertainty, euphoria, fear and on it, fed up with Jimmy Carter, At 6 feet 1 inch. 185 pountk and 4. U

“There may be some effort to do their parents. cent of the Vietnam veterans took hope. Millions across the nation and what else would the nation do but astonishingly good looking for a 70- .
away With the social security tui- Theplan hesupported during the advantageof theG.I. Bill." world waited as anticipation reach- hang a right,“ wrote Roger yearold — the oldest to ever be . ‘

4 tion payment which goes to many election year campaign is probably edfever pitch. Rosenblatt of Time magazine. sworn in as president — Reagan ‘ _ ' .7
studentshereandarwndthecmm— dead for the 1981 legislative year “That soundsa little high to me," Then it happened. The orderly Conservatives everywhere cited has a disarming and affable per- ‘1 - '
try," Blanton said, adding “Their and maybe beyond, sources in the said a person in the Veterans Ad- transition of enormous power pass- the tremendous Reagan landslide sonality. While living on his Califor- , , * .
rationale for that is there areother Reagan camp told the Chicago ministration Office. “I haven't ed to Ronald Reagan as he was in- as a mandate to carry out their nia ranch. he seemed to represent » " ' . ‘
known programs which are Tribune. really heard anything about it, The augurated our nation's 40th presi- policies. fissentially that mandate all the glorious myths of the _ .
available. One problem with tax credits is wheels of progress grind slowly at dent. dictates eliminating government American wast. ,‘ ' ‘ . ‘

“IthinktheNDSLandBEOGwlll that they discriminate against theV.A." After all the speeches, songs, interference in private lives, put- Oftenhecouldbeseen in pictures 2 ‘ .. * *,'
be cut back,” he added. ”That will lower and middle-income students toasts, parades and emotional tins theeconomy back 0" track and sporting C0Wb°y b°°t3 and hat, ‘* . I
also come at a time when schools and minorities, according to the “Tel?” Bell, the new secretaryoi moments, Reagan quipped at one of taking a harder line with our adver- jeans, work Shirt Bhd riding 0" a l I
Will b¢ lookim for students to pay NflthMl Education Association. uca lon,4 ‘8 :rd4non-I4‘toea4g44a44mte the many inaugural balls that he sarios. beautiful horse across a landscape ’ ‘ . - j
for more and more of their educa- The largest tax breaks tend to go to ”mug"; “f. 1',“ . “a: had finally decided that he wasn't In his inaugural address, Reagan as flat as a pancake. looking lonely. I 2 *
tion." wealthier students attending high- a l 04v ’ na '0“ y SM“ asleep; these events were not a rosoundedthesethemes. rugged. determined ahd uniquely ' *

A worker in the financial aid of. mg colleges. °° ummsts. dream. Indeed, everything which At one point he said, “It is not my American. He symbolized the ’ ‘
flee, who wished to remain Another problem with tax credits On Tuesday Jan 20 during the occurred was reality. But perhaps intention to do away with govern- mystique of the west, There even . ‘, .
anonymous, did not think Reagan is that sometimes the parents will inauguration doverage' one of the it is all partofanew dream. ment. It is my intention to make it (‘omlnuodonpugeo ~ ~ ,
would cut the 3306 program. The take advantage of the credit and news commute“ rammed that With inflation at a crushing 12.7 —-——_———-—‘————————‘ . ' ‘
program has jut been extalded. keepthemonethisn'tuaedtohelp “Bell is committed to federal aidto percent at last year's end, the infidc outside -
There was a dance which now thestudent,Prateraald. education. prime-lending rate soaring to 21.5 , , , ' - ' 4
allows students a possibility of get- “Caspu Weinberger. the new percent in December, and the 14‘s ' ‘
dug a grant for five years. The mtaryofdefemedarepwtedas “This is not goingtobetheageof month-long hostage ordeal sym- On page five Reporter Lisa Cooler today with the high in the * 4
prevlomlimitwaafmr years. saying that he wants to examine low cost higher education. It's go- bolizing our national impotence, LaFalce looks at the fraternities‘ mid to upper 405. Temperature will ' . '

“I don't see any drastic cuts in muting] baiefits that allure to ing to be more expensive, with less the stage was set for the former Little Sister program. which those drop tonight into the lower as.
eitha' the NDSL or the EEOC,” military persmnel," Blanton said. and less governmental subsidy," second-rate actor Reagan to begin involved credit with enhancing High tomorrow will be in the low .

Ilid David Praia, coordinatu of "’I‘here are pretty liberal kinth of Blanton said. hiaaacenttopower. their social lives, «is
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\ i wand and include name. rnmcm'r Ind proper identification induding l I ll) for student: and l K Day Edilm Assulanl waduo, JOE-I Um: u.- Wallace “an“ '
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‘ < , ‘ 1' e-game ype 18 S 0W y 1' llllllllg uper Sunday
" ' , “The precision-jackhammer at- seductively sexy or apt to change simply wait, watch, observe. kickers only 360.861. Walter has to do with this game I'm not
‘ * I ‘ , . tack of the Oakland Raiders our lives in any way. It was hard , Manyofthose who waited, watch- Payton. theChicagoBears running sure. i
* ’ , stomped the balls of the not tobecurious. however.asthere ed, observed, and, indeed, par- back who watched the playoffs on After watching seven hours of
~ ' ' . Philadelphia Eagles today by stom- was more to read and hear about ticipated, in every sense of the television. made more than any gas-guzzling automobiles, beer-
* s . . I ping and hammering with one the game before it began than there 2 m word as it applies to the sport of other player, $500,000 guzzling peopleandAmericam get-
. ‘ v‘ .‘ . precise jack-thrust after another up was after itended. ila es at. football on Super Sunday, were The Winners do not receive, ting whipped intoanlranian blood
. , - the middle, mixed with pinpoint- Every imaginable detail I businessmen staying at sizo-a- however. the Vince Lombardi hunt, my disciplineisat an all-time
' ' _' precision passes into the flat and preceding “Super Sunday" was griffin [(55 night hotels. More than 10,000 cor- Trophy theyarepresentedafterthe low. What would have taken the
-. , , .' » numerous hammer-jack stops drawn out and analyzed by the l , porate executives flew to New game.Thetrophy 80$ backto’l‘if- most discipline, and whatlshould
. " _. . - . 'I around both ends. I more than 2,000 reporters issued I ..,\ . Orleans in private planes to engage fany and CO- in New York to be have done, would have been to
I . z '. - Hunter Thompson wrote that lead media credentials for the game. We ’ ‘ in “client relations” (an IRS buzz engraved With the winning team's changethechannel and watch Sixty
3. i - I‘ for an article on the Super Bowl -- a know, for example, that Mrs. Lom— L word), an activity tha has few nameand the final score. Thesterl- Minutes.
.' - ,- ' different Super Bowl. so the names bardi practiced the coin “155 at There is going to be another one limits either in scope or price. ing silver trotihy stands 29 inches When the pro-game hype ends
‘ . " . of the teams have been changed — length before perfectingit. Her gnP next year because there are more Those who played, and here I high, weighs about seven Winds and the competition begins, it is
. . ' and it tells about as much about the on the coin was broken down into superlatives remaining to be used mean with the pigskin, were well andis valued at 320.000- It depictsa hard to believe that so much
. ' -' .- 7 game, any Super Bowl game. from Palm and thumb hOldSi and once and more products and more rewarded for their efforts. The vic- regulation-size football in kicking foreplay could lead to such an anti-
' any year. as anyone would ever the coin landed. its image blown-up players to use them on And there torious Oakland Raiders received position. and it was named for the climactic finish. And as for
. ‘ ' want to know once it was over, and displayed, a commentator said will bemore people eager to listen. $35,000a piece, $3,000 more than the late Vince Lombardi, the famed discipline, for the vast majority of A
,' i ,- .. 3 It is a testament to our collective “I'm sure Vince would have been It is this notion of giving us more vanquished Philadelphia Eagles. coachof theGreen Bay Packers. the 80 million or so viewers, Super
‘I '5 national attention span that more proud Of her for that one." that keeps the Super Bowl going, On the season, the average NFL “Discipline .. Sunday has nothing to do with
- , . than 80 million Americans devoted “If tluSisthe ultimate game, Why but what they are g‘ving us and player received $78,657. The 87 ' discipline. At least not the kind
3 , ' ,' their undivided attention toa game is there going tobeanother one?” where it is coming from are quarterbacks took home an This wordisengravedinthebase Vince Lombardi would have
I that was not extremely violent, -- Duane Thomas,Super Bowl Vl mysteries to most everyone. We average 0f $131,206 each, the 0f thebombardi “'09th bllt what it recomzed-
. - Ii. , O
v - Affluent student life makes to;
. . h
. . TueGooDNetois it‘llxtly.
1 al rty h dt WM? " a h mil"
. -. , . r. /“~-. R‘
oc pove ar 0 see 2‘ which A «1 \i .
. _ . , , ; . - tile BAD H ‘ \i
.- . - .. Arena nights;naturist . l "WWW ‘ tat" I!
. . v, ,. recently after a basketball game, I becomes a means to an end, and a . w W E- \( , W
7 '. -. 531d a prayer 0f thanks for my . . college education is an advantage if y g. _
': ‘ ' warm coat as I. braved the gusty VCkl to a few. Will we value the profes- . l . \‘\ » t if
. - : " Winds and spitting snow of a cold sions we are preparing for only if ‘ ll » ’5‘ ,II’ t
'. I' .. dewntown Lexington. I looked they provide us with either .. } I .. l t/
'; -I . ' below at the sleeted streets filled am able activity ample pay or ‘ ,3. If m ., ,f l'!
‘ with a crowd of thousands. pOOIQ both]? Or will 0m: jobs be worth i Q a I V@ , '~ \ I r
. . . everyone bundled as warm as I, something more? If our jobs area ~III l g r. _ N . / , .
. , I ~ 2 andit occurred tome thatefich pro means to a selfish end, then the M .I.‘\ It“ A s‘I/IIA \ I / ‘i s:
. I I . I. . I :3th: :IagIhIagd a good mea ear ier poor are by-products of our enjoy- . t“ 4 I t t « fl a}. 3 ’;,—R\\tI \ I l -.
v I ' ' H We are so many People living so ment. However, If we value af- h ‘13! \‘ ' *Q ~\ , ' ‘ h
- . . . fluence for what we can contribute . .9 \' I ma >,L .
- M comfortably. Our hearts can break the roof we saw a panorama of to societ because of it the future W 1 / Jew .. . . ,/ . V i
’ I. ‘ II E ' when we hear the voice 0f poverty, sky scrapers. We walked to the of the ydisadavantagyed seems l k ‘ ~ ',.='¥ ‘ -.'
_ - but we remain the affluent other side of the roof and saw multi- brighter and work is suddenly I t / l i\\ 1/ ti?
' - f." ' '. I Americans. AS a college communi- story blackened tenement houses, meaningful ‘ ‘ / , \w I _L ‘ .I
I . .' I' ty, we are affluence in concentrate. decorated with iinefi of laundry A social instead of a selfish in- l , , 0 - \ I" .
. . I ’ ' 3 We have established ourselves as strung between the windows. terest in work implies that a job be , ‘ 1’ l I "-1“ l“
1, i citizens, WhO‘ most through family Back in New York this summer, I a roached differently regardless l ‘ Q
., s . I' .' funding and some through personal walked into a welleknown jewelry offihether or not it appears to be a W
7;; . perseverance. aspire to a life we store and heard a woman casually socially oriented profession Thus MMW
‘ ‘ . hope Wlll be better because 0t make a $15,000 purchase; outside architects design with thought in—
” .‘I ,' 1 i 1. education. And who can blame us’? the building I saw one of the in- stead of speed and society is
I " ' I Who doesn't want to live The G00d famous bag ladies, who wander the 5 red the financial waste of
. ‘ l'.‘ lull-9’.) Yet ll’l SO honestly 855855ng streets of [he cityI carrying every bfiildin S that are energ _
l '- 1 I. l: ourselves. we cannot overlook lag! possession in a paper $30k and inefficiint Doctors racticye O
-- ,, mamas Ca'ncer wamm S over one
.I ' 0““ 0r 0f Dame Fortune, are plac- The contrast between rich and :iedicine and businespsmen free
\fl‘I . t ed among the rank and file of the poor is stark in New York CityI but ethics and things such as environ?
7 - .' r‘t‘ poor . . . m our own Lexmgton, the tall, m." ment in mind in addition to profit. ‘
. ' But it Is dllflCUlt t0 graSp the maculate,white Patterson'l‘oweris Educators continue to muster
-. .- '.-’ meaning ofooverty and even more visible from the poorest sections of em to fight the a th so
.I. '- . difficult to hold onto it without can the town. The reverse, of course, is revilent in roblem-ridd: thool Everything is car- fl and carcinogens, we must be
'_ I :. . .I I . tinued firsthand experiences. Occa- not true. unless you climb to the top 5 stems Ml; 'ournalists avoid cinogenic. Everything. doing something right.
.. “i I: .i «. sionally through the mass of news of the hniiding and look out. And I y neralilzatlons J Every day some deadly . Dr. Enstrom emphasized
4- .~ stories we read filters an unsettling think thatis significant, gePovert should not be come chemical leaks into the en- that cigarette smoking is pro-
’_ . one such as that of the Louisville Those who graduate from col- nientl iyg nor ed b the affluent vironment. john bably the only suspected car-
.f .2‘ : woman who was found starved to leges with marketable degrees can Neithzr should it {)e however a‘ Alot of what is happening is cinogen that has been
' ' -' 1‘ a" death on Thanksgiving Day in her feasibly live lives ignorant of source of meaningless’guilt Rather killingus! ""2 . positively shown to be cor-
_":j.',' S" (‘an semi-home several years 880- poverty, especially as suburbs con- vert should be an issue we re- \ related with disease: lung
I‘I 5. '.j In theh magazines WEI-’1 flip through, tinue to grow and leave innercity gain dominually aware of so that I \ cancer.
I ‘ . \‘ . , n _ . . ‘ I
_5.;"‘,' -.‘ .II‘. :hg l:uhgfyagyyfansvfhgmisieai‘ltl Sli’éf'iufaéilira'r’i’ifiin $3532 izxfieizgggggsfiilzsfigzgy Th? at: onlyIIa few or: the f ‘ ‘3 He stressed that widely ‘
l . ‘1': wrenching stories disappear when people when we leave the universi. bet p . . p mytI s t at ave eeIn l “who?“ enwronmental
- " ,- u . . - . - ween those Wh° live m pen cultivated by the news media contaminants like water and
. 7 . . the pages are turned. ty haven Will determine in part if ~ W-.. H___%___ . . .
. ». . I. , x . . . . thouses and those who live out of over the last decade or so. food additives chemicals
. , I: The impresSIons of poverty that they remain entrenched in lives of , . . . . ’ . . ’
_ 5 . . . . . . paper sacks. Remember, we re talking stories frequently highlight smog, low-level raditaion,
7 * pen“! are those we experience hme hope. But more important bo t the same news media u beat ‘good’ news items i ha‘ I ‘
~ ’ .. i firsthand. I remember a summer than being only aware of poverty, . . . . a u . . p ' . . . ' .5360“?in and "f $‘° 0"
I-'.:Ii I I- ., . t n 'n N'ew York Cit several I.“ be h . affl e to Vicki Poole is the assnstant day that forced the resignation of Then, the institutions that ings are most likely
iaca '0 ' ‘I h ky th V” ,0“ we use our uenc editor. Her column will appear and molded Nixon’s public tram people to become associated with diseases for
I'i-E- years ago M" fat er too me [3 9f affectI n' {0.1. poverty Without every other Tuesday. image as a notorious politi- editors teach them to which the death rates have
., : " top or a hmel‘ ‘md from one 51 e 0 Mldas S touch '5 unchanged. cian. The power of the press, relegate features to page 26 decreased or remained con-
fad-2."): i‘ ' ’ "WW" ’ ”'W’W“W"_ if simply because it reaches because “good” news isn’t stant during the last four ,-
' ' Iii"- l into almost every home, is news. Hence, the bad news is decades.
' , l f .‘I I etters l greater today than ever. on the public‘s mind.
'L’. .- .i '- -"I I Cancer epidemiologist, Dr. Some of the facts pointed Sostop worrying. We’re not
I’Ir . , , II , , W WWWWW _, .. WWWI Wl James Enstrom, reveals out by Dr. Enstrom include being poisoned by car-
. 1.. . ' ‘ several interesting facts that the following: cinogens. radioactivity, 0r
2 .' TI ' V , ,1 have been “covered-up" by 1) Life expectancy increas- evena high noise level - . .we
,1 eff, The Kernel welcomes and encourages no more than 250 words for letters, no the news media. Journalists ed about 10 percent over the are being poisoned by too
a response from both student and faculty more than 800 for opinions. For legal are, on the average, credible. last fourdecades. muchbad news!
.5; :I members of the UK community. Letters reasons, valid UK ID must be presented But news stories are so often 2) The death rate decreas-
, \I."- '-,‘ I'I,1-I and opinions can be submitted to the for material to be accepted. The Kernel piecemeal, and so brief,Ithat ed by 45Ipercent during the
' V editor at 114 Journalism Building reserves the right to edit for grammar the Who"! truth doesntset sameperlod- The “mm“ 5””
-’ .. ‘ ‘ - - - . ~ out. So, despite the tremendous welcomes JOhn Fritz to its
- ;, , anytime during the busmess day or and clarity, and to remove any libelous . . . . i _
_' ; -' through campus mail Letters should be material Submissions ma be condensed Or, perhaps the problem is increase in use of chemicals, page. A8 I 80 ence 00man
,3, g - . ‘ t r d d bl _ ' d d h l d be ' y that there aren‘t enough news nuclear energy (with all its tutor. his material will coin-
" I ' . ’, yped d“ 0” e space i an s ou to conserve space. feature articles. Feature waste disposal problems), clde with sclencelnthe news.
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news roundup °°m'°"ed "°"' 1 C" I lpUS brief
dp dispatches 1 '
___._._———————————_..___.—_——*~—————~w__mvc_ _ - , .. . l Classics lng Office as soonas possible '
. ‘ A specific section of the dorm Will not be . '.
Inca l Officials who will run the new combin~ rituals ordinarily reserved for kings, Some first editions of the great classics of set aside as has been the case in previous '_ i
. . ed state tourism and public information statesmen and astronauts. English literature are now on exhibit in the years; however. an indication to the Hous- " ,

l-‘lre investigators yesterday sifted the agency began a month-long task yester- A State Department spokesman, mind- gallery 0f the M1 King Library. ing Office that you prefer living in the same ' ,

blackened ruins of a five_story day of deciding its goals and surviving fill of the precarious psychological condi- Perhaps of Widest interest isafirst edition dorm with other Honors students may allow ' .
warehouse tllat was placed on the Na- employees. tlon of some of the former hostages, said of Dr. Samuel Johnson‘s great English Dic- you that privilege , . _
tional Register of Historic Places just 'niestep which Govuonn y, Brown Jr, officials vetoed plans for a full-blown tionary. Published in 1755. It took Johnson , ' .
threemonths ago. took last n-iday —abolition of the Public welcoming parade. several years to complete the work, which Writin ontest , , ,. r

The building, officially vacant for the Information Department and merger “Our principal concern is for the went through five editions in his lifetime. g C ' .
past eight years but a frequent haven for with the Tourism Department —— will health and well-being of the individuals,“ A number 0f works by the PO"?t Alexander - ’ _
hobos, was destroyed in a three-alarm result in proportionately the heaviest he said. “Some may not yet be up to Such Pope are also on exhibit Among them are F eb.21 is the deadline for undergraduate - ~ ' . .' ‘,
blaze Sunday night. layoffs of his tenure. astrenuom schedule." his Essay on Man and Epistle to Arbuthnot. students to submit manuscripts to the " _ - '

It was adjacent to the Lexington Of about 160 workers affected, about All 18th-century oil portraltof Pope, former- English Department‘s annual P‘arquhar» ‘ .4 .

. Center and 23,000-seat Rupp Arena. site half will lose their jobs. This may not States are free to allow radio, televi- ly in the collection of Princess Louise Vic- Dantzler Awards competition in fiction , . ' . j .
ofUKbasketball game