xt731z41vd2h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt731z41vd2h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-11-11 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, November 11, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 11, 1982 1982 1982-11-11 2020 true xt731z41vd2h section xt731z41vd2h 7 I“
'
KEN I UCKY ‘
' Athlefleelly Intellectual
\ , .1 ‘ UK senior tight end Rob Manges is on
D , athlete who blends athletic skill and
/ scholastic achievements successfully. As
. ( well as leading the team in pass recep-
" tions with 19 this season, he was re-
, . cently selected as a National Football
, Foundation Hall of Fame Scholar-Athlete
‘ . for I982. See page 6.
‘_ W I ,1 TL. 1 . . l ___ —_—__h—
Vol. LXXXV, No.67 ThUI’SdOY, NOVGMP“ ”1 1982 An Independent student newspaper University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
I I I I
H” SDAY High Kremlin official rumored dead-
From AssochtedPressreporrs I
0...“. W" “mam °°"*“°'°" most speculation centers on Brezhnev
LOUISVILLE — State officials will meet next week to con-
sider changes in health care programs that could revolu- MOSCOW _ Soviet sources said The rumors circulating around the In the past, announcement of
tionize the industry in the state, officials say. They are Wednesday that an important figure capital did not focus on any one deaths of important persons have
members of a coalition formed by Gov. John Y. Brown in in the Kremlin hierarchy had died. member of the governing 13-man been preceded by mourning music.
April to find ways to cut the upward spiral of medical costs. ' ’ ”$1, No one would say who it was, but Politburo. . On teleVlSlon3 A 7:30 pm. concert in
In its 54-pa e final report sent to the overnor last President Leonid 1- Brezhnev‘s The Sov1et sources were reached honor 0f Sovret police was replaced
9 . , ‘ . 9 ~.. _ ”” name was missing from a state doc- by telephone in response to the ru- With a patriotic film about Vladimir
week, the group said outpatient obstetrical centers should 5‘?” is: , ument henormallysigns. mars. I. Lenin. founder of the Soviet state.
be devel0ped so babies can be born outside hospitals. It .. A " The Communist-Party daily Prav- The state news media did not re- There was no explanation for the
also urged more use of competitive clinics rather than tradi- ’ ’ ;_ ‘5 da, did not print Brezhnev‘s name at port any deaths among Sowet lead- change.
tional hospital care. ' " _- the bottom of the message to An- ers, but there were unexplained Klrllenko has been Brezhnev’s
. you . " o - olan President Jose Eduardo Dos changes in television programming heir apparent for years. His picture
Doctors ShOUId offer a set fee for regular care 59 people is ._;-_" {5.5. games on the seventh anniversary of and somber music played intermit- did not appear with those of other
can Visit a doctor as often as they like for one price, and _ . ‘3 the African nation’s independence. tently on the radio. Politburo members in public dis-
more people should take advantage of home health care ' The congratulatory message bore In Washington, U'.S' officials, who plays for Revolution Day cele-
- from avisiting nurse or hospice worker, the report said. Brezhnev’s signature in 1980 and requested anonymity. 531d they bratlons Sunday, nor did he attend
Leaders of the state's medical societies have declined 1981- were aware Of a lot 0f rumors. m the annual Red 5‘19“" military pa-
, th t b th h ' th The other names most frequently Moscow" that Brezhnev had died rade. Pelshe also dld not attend the
commen on e repor ecause ey ave no seen e 1’ . I mentioned in rumors of a death in but had been unable to confirm parade.
“ml draft. ’ . , the aging leadership were those of them: . . _ .SOViet sources and Communist
. . Andrei p. Kirilenko. 76, and Arvid OfflClals aSSigned to the Sowet diplomats in Moscow said Klrilenko
- ' » we... y_ Pelshe, 33' Brezhnev who is 75' desk at the State Department said had retired because of poor health.
Shuttle llftOff may b8 80"me has been in poor health for the past they had received no reports from There was no noticeable increase in
LEONID I. BREZHNEV year and was said to have had a the US. Embassy in Moscow that police presence around the Kremlin
CAPE CANAVERAL. Fla. — America's space shuttle stood mildstroke recently. Brezhnev had died. or in downtown Moscow.
poised on its launch pad, ready to make its debut today as
a commercial cargo carrier. But a major worry was weather “EV, ..,v-. WW” _, ., _ ”sews _HW . ., We,
in the West should an emergency landing be necessary. 0 d l ‘7. t. V g‘ F
If conditions are not adequate, NASA could make a last- , Th's Bu 5 T Q E 1.9;" .. “3" i; . 1
minute decision to scrub the launch for a day. liftoff on Co- ‘ Q . ‘ . ”C! " \an " v ‘3 l
.1 . i. .. -fl... ”W . . , _ ‘." r’ g 12,
lumbia s five-day return to space was set for 7:19 a.m. EST. or you - " ./~—' 1» \tw. ’9’. . r
The weather problem existed at Edwards Air Force Base X132} 7 1:313 ‘11.“! l M ~~”/ If «f’ .wé-g ;. “i in?!
in California, where the Mojave Desert runway was rain- Sigma Pi fraternity members ' :3: ‘ - = H . ' ' 1 ' ".I_ . :1 goo-2’ I _ . a} ”
soaked and unusable. The back-up strip on the White Sands borrowed a Budweiser truck l ‘. an . t ' :1 ' ‘ I g‘ ’ ‘ .r
Missile Range, N.M. was also expected to be wet. The Ken- and Joanne Amos, owner of t 1 ' l. '. 4- ," , 1 - .. ~ ‘ '1" ‘ q "
nedy Space Center runway, however, remained available Reflections Photography, re- * . ,3 F I" . ‘ i , ~ I ’ . ‘5 , . ,- W""'*'”"" '
for an emergency landing. corded the scene on film yes- 4-“ ' 3 1 Z ' ‘ r 5‘7 ‘ *P‘ ‘ M4 .. “m
The shuttle's four astronauts were told in a briefing yes- terday for a Greek event ti- .\ . la. l I. .. g) ‘— - . . ‘ " * W o . . .i‘
terday that a concrete runway at Edwards would be used as tled the "Craziest Picture . -» I , {91‘ y ,3 . 11" A ,, " > ' " '
the landing strip. Weather officials expected the runway to Hunt." According to Amos, H w ' . "I _ “I.
be dry. each participating fraternity l“ I - ” . “Judy
and sorority will arrange to l ' i
Vietnam veterans’ memorial opens have a group shot taken in 1 ~ > , f so
any way they want for the l \ 1 _ t ‘1‘ e
WASHINGTON — Hundreds of peoples yesterday visited contest, tobe 'iudged' bY Lex- [ I .- . ‘1 '1 ' -
the black walls of the new Vietnam Veterans Memorial for ”19'0" lum'"°“es Am'" Med ‘ , ;_- . ‘ i; .
the first time, reading the names inscribed and reflecting den,. Mayor Scotty Baesler, 9‘ 3%.," w .5 t} so:
on the war. Saturday, culminating a four-day national sa~ 5'9““ Singletary, C°°Ch Jerry . ”e . . " 3‘;ij ., N:
lute to the 2.7 million who served in Vietnam, the mon- Claiborne and COFCh Joe _B' . ' .. . 2;" “,1; 1. 15‘2“ .~ '5
ument will be dedicated after a veterans' parade down Con- HOH- A” entries M” be eXh'b' -” ” ' if? 1 . , I .. - ., ‘ ., " so "'" “in: '
stitution Avenue. ited at a ”Print Premiere - ‘ .. _ . "1. ..\ . Z , - ~17 ;:>-;.T‘
The monument's walls, 250 feet long, descend l0 feet Party" Nov. 23 of 803 South. Z 2 i . 'Z’ . .' ‘
into the sloping ground at center. The names of Americans The event '5 sponsored by Re: -' ‘M1V:. h , -. , . ,, >~ ' 4
who died in the conflict are engraved in letters half an inch flections Photography, Ph' “‘" if " '2. V ‘1». ‘1‘ ‘ it i ‘ .
high. Sigma Kappa fraternity and .. g o . 1 ~ 1.x .. , ”4 i. .133an
Also yesterda , volunteers be an 0 vi il in the Washin - Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. A“ ~ § . -» ' " _ 1., tf‘ivgh
y 9 9 9 d .H b d d . . .. .. ., ., . ,1. . gm“ ,
ton Cathedral, reading the names of the missing and dead, procee s. .w' e photo to Z H ._. , ' . 3,. g --13 .4731” ‘.~ms\
one every two seconds, in alphabetical order. That vigil, 2] the Arthritis Foundation. Z w.‘ i Z l ,3 :3 . 1§'\:.’;”.::
. . . . . I . . .. _f. .. ..’ .4. .. ‘ ' “1‘35“?" 2 a}. .2. £21:- 'ng
hours a day, Will continue through midnight Friday. l .- flange 1.. to ;_ 339?”??? ‘.~ . , Til: 1.»
J.D.VANNOO$l/Kemei5laff 1,, - a!" .. . ‘s_ . , 1 «‘3 ‘1 .Ln\‘ o .5! h . ’ x. .g‘ ' » '
Poles riot; hundreds arrested ,.E___ 1 r 11 -1'- 1 1 11 ’ 1 ~* ' .. , , '
WARSAW. Poland — Thousands of Poles protesting the
ruling military junta and the the clampdown on the Solidari- I I
ty union battled riot police in Warsaw, Wroclaw and Nowa mlnls tra tors Stu y can e au ts
Huta yesterday. But tough measures by the martial law re-
gime apparently stymied nationwide work stoppages called __ t be h ‘d
by the union's underground leaders. By STACY SIZEMORE ynum rs. esal '
- - - - Althou n ual number of so-
Workers staged sporadic minor protests and stoppages Reporter NO difference seen In Cbl'lfy To pay cial mgr-lit: nflqmbers of repayers
in about 20 towns and cities, and there were student pro- and defaulters were selected for the
tests in four cities, according to reports from Western corre- faulters. the study showed. was be- Hesseldenz said the data med in study. notoall of those studied filed
spondents, the official news agency PAP and government Borrowers who default on student tween “‘13-, and $120. as com- the study was obtained by compar- Kentucky income tax forms. Hesse]-
sources. Police reportedly detained more than 300 people in 108113 arenlt. necessarily motivated pared to between 36.375 and $6,421 ing the social security numbers of denz slallld "“5 casts some doubt on
Warsaw, more than 250 in Wroclaw and 94 in Nowa Huta bx an mahlhty ‘0 pay, {W0 UK ad- for those who repaid their loans, those selected for the study to state theres ts. 'd th h
d K k fl ' t | h s ell as about '50 oth- ministrators have'found. Each subject had been away from income tax records. A series of com- The report 5.3‘ e researc yew
an m ow a er s ree c as e ' as w A recently-published study by 30“ UKfor4years.Hesseldenz said. puter programs selected gross in- 0‘“ Of an Can't” SFUdy 0f the group
ers elsewhere. Hesseldenz. coordinator of manage- w of students. in which a relationship
ment information 5 stems. and u - between those who defaulted on
B 't' h t ed David 5mm"). finanzial aid dime Iwas surprised by the results. We were loans. and certain personality chap
" '3 superspy 3°" °"° tor. found a minimal difference in the first to find any Indication It was not acterlstlcswasfound- ,
the disposable income of former UK I d t . ,, By studying defaulters and repay-
LONDON — Soviet spy Geoffrey Prime, convicted of espio- students who defaulted on loans and ’9 ate 0 Income- ers scores on the Qmmbus Person-
nage that caused “incalculable harm" to Britain and its thosewhorepaidtheirloans. ality Inventory. which all students
W stern allies durin l4 ears of treacher was sentenced “I was surprised by the results." were required to take m the early
e 9. . .Y Y' Hesseldenz said. “We were the first — Jon Hesse/denz 1970s. it was found that defaultes
yesterday '0 35 years m la'l- to find any indication it was not re- UK h were more tolerant of complex Situ-
The former translator for British intelligence was sen- latedtoincome“ “$— ations and loss anXlous than repay-
tenced to three additional years for sexual assaults on The researchers compared the The only major difference found come, income adjimtments. federal ers.Hesseldenzsald. th
three young girls.' Police questioning about those crimes led state income tax records of former between rcpayers of loans and de» tax paid. amount of itemized deduc- . [13,1979 Stmydmr: fetPersolnal-
him to confess his uilt and his eSPionoge activities to his students who repaid 564 National D" faulters in the SlUdY- he said. was tions and Kentucky income tax paid. It) mentory an at r ac ors, es-
. . g l' rect Student Loan with those of 117 that many of the latter had moved seldenz and Stockham were able to
w'fe' who informed po lce’ . . . NDSL defaulters. . . out of state after lean'ng school. The The study was “completely anony- predict ,“1th 5 percent accuracy
Earlier this month intelligence sources said Prime knew .The average disposable income proportion of in~state students was mous“ because those studied were which NDSL applicants would de-
every monitored Soviet message and every code broken at (income left after expenses) of de- the sameinboth groups identified only by their social securi— fault.
Britain's Government Communications Headquarters for
electronic intelligence-gathering in Cheltenham. It was said . . . g . .
to be the most serious penetration of a British intelligence P I t I p t t k t p t f d I l b p g
.......w....w.. o I ice or les 8 a e on OSI ions on e era 0 r0 ram
__ oline tax. mass transit systems and rehabilita- Nov. 29.
\ By 10M SEPPY_ Transportation Secretary Drew tion of public buildings. At about the same time Lewis was
/ Associated Plus Writer Lewis insisted that the proposal he The $3.6 billion program would be lobbying at the White Home and
pushed during a 45~minute meeting aimed at communities hit hardest Roms was pushing the Democratic
_M" _.c..,... _ A .. _._ .. .s . at the White House was aimed at re- by unemployment. plan. Sen. Bob Dole. R-Kan. was
WEATH _ pairing the nation‘s highways and "One person must decide whether telling a Washington Press Club au-
WASHINGTON 7. With momen- bridges rather than creatingjobs, a jobcreation bill is to be enacted.“ dience the gasoline tax increase was
. / \ tum apparently building for new {911' But Transportation Department Home Speaker Thomas P. O‘Neill the way to go.
eral lohs F°8r3m5~ Democrats and documents said the program “'0qu Jr.. said in a written response to Dole. chairman of the Senate Fi-
Republicans staked 0‘" dlfferent W generate 320.000l0b8- Reuss‘ report, "Thamperson is the nance Committee. said the highway
Today wlll be mostly sunny. breezy end unseesoneb. sltlons Wednesday on what shape 03404901Under the Democratic ap1 president of the United States. 1 repair program would provide jobs
Iv worm with e hlsh In the low 10s. the winds will be 'hnzymd ”:91 3h“ ‘0 call them PM“: ouglined at a news confer hope that he does not frustrate the in every state.
a opay or em. ence y ep. Henry S. Reuss. D— growing concerns of the American Transportation Department offi-
' " ':°";"" 2’?“ " ”I?!“ “"‘M "m :: Maxwell! Democratic congressional leaders Wis. chairman of the Congressional people and the hard work of people cials said the package would include
‘ °“ Y "‘ '“IY W ' ' 2° ”"’M ‘ M. °"" called for defense spending cuts and Joint Economic Committee. 600.000 like Henry Reuss." a doubling of the current 4 cent-a-
ers and thunderstorms. The law will be In the low to higher taxes on the well-to-do. while people would be put to work next Reuss said his proposal has been gallon federal gasoline tax and a 1-
mld 50'. a Cabinet official lobbied President year on such things as repalnng translated into legislation to be in- cent increase in variois taxes on
Reagan for doubling the federal gas- bridges. maintaining roads and troduced when Congress returns large trucks.

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(dammit-Chief News Editor Am Editor Spom Ediior Special Violen- Editor Photo Editor Graphics Editor
PERSUASION ,.,........... ............. .............. ............. ........... ..........
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I I
- N lear f
Call for total disarmament. T I" E uc reeze is necessary -—
The call for limitation of nuclear it is not a matter of policy — rather, ile Anyone who confidently condones — biological weapons, for instance
arms must go a step further: it is sheer survival. ;; j the use and tSilhollferatlon of nuclear — that will prove to be as frighten-
time to being work toward unilate- Most, of course, agree that a 1 n . weapons at 's time in the advent ing and as distasteful as nuclear
ral disarmament. Nuclear freeze freeze is preferable to the current ‘ («C‘ (R g” < 0‘ human civilization deserves the weapons.
and disarmament proposals have escalation in the arms race. But if , ’ ,a .- scorn of mankind. Fear is perhaps the most identi-
attracted widespread and growmg holding arms levels steady still does K; ' ' I , t Nigerltjhelfs, the clock cannot be fiable good to come from the stock-
support throught the world as ten- not address the problem at hand: - 7 ’ , urn c to t e 19405. Nuclear piling of nuclear weapons. As much
sion increases conciousness of the the stockpile of weapons already in tr, t l ‘ ,-‘. . W939°h§ are currently a key part Of as the Reagan administration would
immense dangers atomic warfare existence is sufficient to ensure the 5” ' / F _ ‘ the military strategies 0f eight "3‘ like the American people to believe
poses. destruction of the world and its pop / . w 7 tions. Sirnilarly, the horror of nucle- otherwise, the Soviets and the
D' ment is more a threat to ulace many time over, if such a ’,W t\\‘* . \‘ ar destruction tw1ce has been re- Chinese, 1.4 billion strong, wish to
isarrnat status uo than to the thing canbeimagined. ' , . ., l. leased on the human race. remain citizens of the world. They
Sovemmegm or Jgne same At some point, a balancing of . ’ Debate this afternoon at the free share our desire to keep the world
:weratg‘:1t ktee th two mrheain w- costs must be made. It is useless to l"; . I -. speec_ h area of the. Student Center from Armageddon.
:rfrom usi psnuzlear arms spouts argue that the disarmament of the , '_ ._,, /. , Wlll center on the issue of nuclear The endorsements in Congress, in
goth to contliiue stock ilin glar- United States and the Soviet Union a it“) V é ‘ r. ; destrilction and “what’s in it for state and town legislatures and by
h ds P 8 would not set the world on end, and > ' ; ill-ti ’7 W39 , you. The issue, however, is not one voters for a verifiable nuclear
e’lth I'dea that this fear could be that wars and chaos would not re- pt .\ ‘i ‘ 3; of destruction — it’s the life or freeze between the Soviet Union and
bol'ihhd b unilateral disarma- suit. “(:4 11’ ft‘ . death of nuclear weapons. the United States are by far the
a 1t desertves serious consider- But most of the world’s population 1'35 ', fl ParadOXical thought pervades most hopeful of signs that nuclear
me" would survive, Is the perpetuation : '31-; ,74" some halls of leadership. The bomb weapons finally may find their
ation. of a particular form of government ‘lfi‘, ,. ,' 2,. '; keeps us from annihilation. The best niche in civilization.
The reasoning behind disarma- or way of life worth risking the con- . it ~ ' ‘ _— insurance policy is a nuclear one. A freeze would be successful only —~
ment is as simple as it is clear: It tinuance of life itself? , ,1 "3.. ’i ' whether in silos or on bombers. Un— if the Soviets abandoned their time-
woulfd ridtt‘het wotrld of the oveibegf- The ]choice is ohulll‘s to make, par; .- . i, ._i , fortunadteléhtlhat spectre is frighten- hongiegfiitfi'atteugy of 1(loubletiij‘l’lkéind
ing ear a , a any momen , e tic ar y now, w ' e awareness o - ' ' ' " ing,an rl yso. ou e , suc an a n on-
nuclear roulette game may end in a the nuclear dilemma is at an all- ll (lm'l . m i It «Hi, But a total disarmament frightens merit, from both them and Ameri-
holocaust. timehi h. us. The dismantlin and dis al of ca’sleaders,is necessa . ,
Of course, many short-sighted in- In 19%6, a great comet will pass _ '.5 RUNNING all nuclear warhegds, in upgs final The citizens of in? world are
dividuals argue that unilateral dis- this way, as it does once every 76 o u T analysis, would be the opening of afraid, and more of them are admit-
armament is simplistic and lacks years. Will anyone remain to wit- the door toward the research and ting it. It’s time for a nuclear
value as a negotiating strategy. But ness thespectacle? development of other technologies freeze. .
W
Freshmen strive to show immat r'ty LETTERS
A few weeks ago, senior staff writ- boarfk and trash cans. the doors and ripped all the cam- hopeful came up with some frienfb. "——_"__"——_“——"—
er Dan Metzger and I were writing Then the warfare began. Some- paign posters off of it. My candidate “booking for some poster-rippers?,” , ,
our respective stories on the com- time before the next morning. the friend finally took notice and swung oneofthefriends asked. Verbal attacks the" have be“! "0 5“!”th
puter terminals in the Kernel office majority of the campaign posters thedoors openasthevandals fled. I replied that was what I was made as t° who “'1" be exempt from »-
whenldecidedtoamise myself. were down except for those of one He caught two of them, but the doing, in hopes of finding a news We are angry! For thousands 0‘ payingthemandatoryhealthfee. '
Using the message key, I typed a particular ticket, which had mys- one who did the actual damage es- story. years women have been dehuma- .15 theljlealth Seerce Admmt?“ W .,
lewd note that flashed upon his teriously taken their places. Interes- caped. “We weren’t going after “well, just stay cut another hour “119d, sexually and psychologically t‘°“ “'3‘th “nt‘t after the VOttn.‘ :1
screen. Rather than reply in a simi- tingly enough, all of those posters yours, just (two other candidate’s). or so, and you’ll find them,” he said. abused, mutilated, V1013ted_ and 0P- 5?"? place before making that deep 7;
lar manner, Dan showed mock dis- disappeared, and another pair of because they’ve been getting our “It’s getting pretty bad." pressed by man who has hidden be- Slon. Soundstacky tome.
approval. names dominated the scenery the friends’.” . bind a veil of religion This comes 1‘ ,lhls. crazy ‘5?!” P315563 1 am :;
_____.___— next day. He let them go (with a warning I gave up after a while and went sion continues today on our campus' CODSldel‘lng attending the Universilty i
Intrigued by musical poster prac. concerning the escapee). As we home. The next morrung, posters of free speech area. 0‘ Kentucky 1035 than full “hie. j?
GUEST “my I took a midnight campus walked down the walkway, we no both of the previous night‘s candi- Through the distorted position rather than be ripped off by some-
stroll. ticed all posters were down _ no ex- dates were down all around the taken by Bob Duvall and Marana- thing I don’t want or need. After all,
First I came upon one of the inde- ceptions. Then we met up with the Classroom Building. One of those tha, women on this campus have I’m paying for an education, not a x
OPINIO pendents Who was strategically PlaC- vandals again. and one called out candidates was putting up the last of been subjected to misogynist rhetor- health serVice.
ing his propaganda wherever the my name. her posters. ' ic. Women who are exercising their '1 urge .811 students to make the
——-—-———_—'—_—_ others’ was_ “It’s Fetty mm," he I recognized him as an old high ”I haven‘t me" getting any right» to crws campus have men the ”Sh"- ChOIce by ‘10th 883th am
“You can tell who the freshmen said. “I can't afford very many school friend. “Why is (this candi- sleep," the sendisiste said- “1"" 5° targets of vicious verbal attacks in- mandatory health fee Mar- Please
are,"hesaid. posters, and the ones i put up are date) so fired up?." he asked. “All 818111195 e‘ngl‘g‘: This has gone eluding phrases such as “slut.” P9 “‘3” ”fl“? defeat “50””
Unfortunately, the same gone the next morning. All I've got we did was rip a few posters down." on one 600 . t0 agree. “murderer-”and “inferior." issue ycas mg yotlr voteasN .
statement applies to the recent Stu- to say is if I catch anyone ripping [was lost forananswer. . - - HOW 1008 Shim“ 001' free SPGeCh Remember, "5 your money
. . _ . . _ . The followmg mght the Winners th . t t 'th
dent Government Assocuition fresh- mine down, they’re not gaing to live A few nunutes after the partisan were announced. area be used 85 8 platform for VCF- ey re waning 0 play W} i Mt
man senator elections. . tosee the election." _ . vandals departed, their candidates There has been speculation that :21 glistencefltaowards wftgtfen? We thelgsa; 33d "5 your education that
As a rule, the freshman year is .While we discussed the implica- appeared. The hopeful senators den- some other candidates will chal- _ .. a ce "1 amoun TSPOD- V y .
usually the last time in people’s tions of such a threat, another aspir- led employing the others, however, lenge the results because of the Sibillty must accompany free
lives that they mist take abuse and ingsenator camealong. and said the ripping tactits were closeness of the race. There seems speech. Without it. our free Speech N9150h 3- Duncan 31F-
kidding for their youth. The stereo- Once he was assured we were not justified. “We‘re just fighting fire to be a good chance that the accusa- area could be used as a volitile Engineering Junior
typical freshman is innnocent, timid poster-rippers, he told is of some with fire." . tions and dirty work that character- weapon aimed 1“- - -7 '
and immature. new developments. “(Two other After promises to leave each 0th- - - - - NUC'eor fa”
. . . . . . . ized the campaign Will continue for , . y
The immaturity was ewdent in the candidates) spoke to some fratermty er’s posters alone, we departed. The a while Members Of Women S Stildlfi 1200
recent campaign. and sorority pledges and distributed next morning, all were down. ' t - ul- C 355 Do kn t
.Each Fall, the freshman popula- posters before the official start of Another candidate talked to me lymtextee‘r‘v thseflpautngmewifi, m a atomicyglolmb 3:2] zlhfhmfhifiofi
tlon elects two representatives to the campaign, 5° theyre m “Ota' about theproblems later that d3} sense of maturity and vote their con- Anfi-heahh fee you know the power of nuclear
serve m the SGA Senate. The fresh- t‘m' ’hesald. “It 5 getting ndlculous,” she said. science rather than fall into the va- weapons today? Do you know what
men senators have the same power The two late-nighters agreed to “(No of the candidates) have been ~ ' - - . ' - '
. . . . . . , . nous factions currently in the Sen it would be like to surVive a nuclear
and responSibilitles as the other file a formal complaint, this reduc- breaking the rules and havmg peo- ate I have heard both pros and cons attack?
members, which requires a certain ingthefield toeight. ple tear down posters for them. I’ll, ' concerning the mandatory health For the anwers of these and other
level of maturity. The next morning, I noticed a se- jlstbeglad when this is all over." Hopefully, as well, they can pass fee. There have been (so-calledo questions attend the educational
_ After an initial candidates’ meet- rious lack of either orie’s posters. That night, the last before the on what happened in this year's polls taken within small percentages rally on the nuclear arms race eliti-
ing to discuss rules and regulations My second mglit on the beat, I elections, the first candidate was Slt- campaign to next year’s candidates, of the student body, which were fled. “Nuclear Destruction: What's
of the race, hundreds of posters ap- found the first candidate talking to a ting by the fountains across from so the immature actions will not be hardly adequate, as far as represen~ In It For You?" The rally will be
peared across campus the next day. friend on the phone in the Funkhaus- Patterson Office Tower. He said the repeated. tation goes. held today at 1:30 pm. in the free
The late-starting candidates re- er Building. Glancing out the front plan to file the complaint fell Then, maybe, the freshmen wont’t We now have the referendum. We speech areaoftheStuderitCenter.
sponded that night, so by Wednes- doors, Isaw three figures cautiously through because no evidence could beasobviousasthey are now are getting a choice of what we [encourage everyone to come and
day morning of that week, eight two- walk up the stairs. The candidate ig- be found, so he was going to wait for want, not what anybody else wants. learn what thefuture may hold. _.._
candidate tickets and two indepen- nored my warnings. poster-rippers and eliminate some Jason Williams is a journalism The thing that really bugs me is
dents had their names plastered on One of the suspicious figures sud- candidates on his own. freshman and regularly covers 36.4 the statement concerning the 50- Louis Straub "
dorm Windows, light posts, bulletin denly went for the trash can outSIde While we talked, another SGA for the Kernel. called exemptions. Up to this time, SGA Senator-at-Large If"
- . . .
e grass on t e at or Slde of campus Sidewalks Will never be greener
In the 1960‘s students smoked hills on dirt paths beside nicely ious. I started to follow a little path nothing but a little shortcut that was They’re about to remove the fence. Probably the best solution to keep- ‘
grass. Nenty years later, students ununsed sidewalks.” that was close to the new Student seldom,ifever, used. Hurry and you can be the first to ing the students off these paths
walk on it! What is the problem with stu~ Center addition. ' Today, more students prefer to stomp onthegrus!”hobsaid. would be moving the evangelicals It
Who needs green grass dents? What is behind their hatred The little trail tWisted for about trample down the grass, than me “Great, between tying cans to cats whopreachattheStudent Center. fr
anyway'.’ for sidewalks? onehunderd yards or so. thesidewalk. ‘ and tearing the wings off of flies. If we could get these guys to pre- »_ 1_'
—— I guess avoiding the sidewalks The path was quite plesant .to fol- Now, come on. stomping on grass is the highlight of ach near the entrance and cut 3:;
could be seen as a means of express— low. But, after about three minutes, It really doesn't take too much my day," Mark said. points of the paths then I’m sure stu. i.
We outflow. You know, where can I was beginning to wonder where extra effort to use the concrete side- And it was not just students on the dents would go out their way to s;-
f Soon you have the freedom to create a thispathwas taking me. walk.Really,itdoesn’t. scene. avoidthearea. ’r
' .. WILHOIT newdirt path today? Suddenly, the path came to an The University, however, simply There were professors and what I heard that Indiana University
. s “ Along with the wonderois feeling abrupt end. The patllll I\tlendedhflat ignoresthewhole problem. lookeld’elikcfiaadministrato'i‘s ablel awailt- had the same problem for years. In :
___________— of creating a new path, the attrac- square intoa stone wa . .ow w o in I stood in amazement the other ing nce to crus t newy the great Hoosier tradition, IU sim-
Who needs nicely mowed fieltb of tion 0: higumngta £13.31 fin thretlhrighrzangézd, create this trail and 3y washings tic: :dmvemttlle em- layied sod. few lutiom to keep- a]: waged limestone slabs over all ._
ass blowi inthebreeze urge canno i . t _ . oyees eel near ren- ere are a so . pa . -
grA brochuli‘rg describing this school urge is simply an exercise in adven- When I first came to UK, the path ovated Mining Laboratory. These ing the grass killers from their de- And hey look, lU got the movie
might read as follows: “UK _ a hire,it’satermendoinfeeling. by the Classroom Building leading guys worked all afternoon carefully structlvehabit: “Breaking Away" filmed on cam-
state univeristy located on rolling One day I was feeling adventur- to the Mining Resouce Building was laying down the sod and watering it. First placing small nuclear de- pus.
This went on for several days. But vices at the entrance points to every ,
b K . alas, their work was doomed from dirt path around the campus. Noth- M‘Ybe 1‘ UK placed '0‘” of’bure-
DRABBLE ® Y evm F0900 thevery start. ing like a little radiation poisoning ly t°b“?°° 0"" the P‘H‘Fv well get
SINLE were ALL tattoo but us WT Tum um lF cameos RAD co woos ileum butt‘otlliesfvfral 31% domains yew' ”832“” "531’“? WM' :10: 3333393331 {grieve "m-
l L uure mwas y,may a itexreme. , , _ , .
leKJiE MW A6 out MLKMOM‘. «Minimizes TURNEO MLK we nest . aflcouNTLREO i bleak. Then how about planting sharp .All the Joints aside. it people con-
mm mm lilo co m. M00! or. CAN'T tel A one its momma) chums. The moment the fence surround- pointed sticks, like the ones med in “nus '0 mid the Sidewalks and ere
um visit ammo time tourism snuo AWER‘olT‘l? r___ ing the work was removed, so ended Viet Nam, on stratgeic points along ate W dirt Paths the" 900" UK Vi"
mm mile, in cost WM! F ‘“" "" thechanceforthegrmtogrow. the dirt paths This would cetliinly 50°“, N "‘9 “WNW mammal
~— ,~, 3,? i5 \ ~ I could see, as the workman re- getthepoint across. “m"- , _
”Q 5 \ . , ‘ moved the fence, students eagerly Possibly digging several Burmese “9W “’0‘“ ”WW ' little ”"1“
r, '2 " awaiting to be the first to plant their tiger pits would work. mm" and