xt74qr4np35v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt74qr4np35v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-10-29 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, October 29, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 29, 1982 1982 1982-10-29 2020 true xt74qr4np35v section xt74qr4np35v KENTUCKY '
In demend
, Athletic Director Cliff Hagan told report-
m on yesterday that NBC has asked UK '0
shift games with the Russian national
k team and Notre Dame to Sunde 0“
" ‘ -' n,“ lernoons. The contests would flll- the
'0” O ‘ time slots left vacant by the professional
';~ _ 5% . “bk football players' strike. See 909° 6‘
——____._______.___—____._._. +w___#
V°l- LXXXV, N°- 58 F'ld‘W- October 29' 1982 An lfldOPOI‘N‘OHT "0"." "OW'PCPCT University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
Libertarian using campaign
to publicize party's principles
Student seeks restricted government -,,, , - r
’ _ “g 1,: ,
—T— A: It’s hard to say. Ed Clark re- " a . .
go’llglgglfcmef ceived a tbomand votes in the 6th . ~ g , “new
District in 1900. Actively involved in .'};V". , _ ' ' _ nil I
the party, you're talking about 10 to '- '- ' . “hub
20 people who have helped in the ' _, .. A I
This is another in a series 0 r0 iIes campaign. ' b l" I .. .
onstudentleaders. fP f Q When you did join it’ what .- . I \‘ » '-
were your reasons? ,5") '2 ’ \\ ’ V

Candidates' offices by nature are ‘21 was 1““ impressed mm the ,1 .‘ "‘
colorful. Red, white and blue ban- conSIsteht stand they took on the IS- .
ners let visitors know immediately “a" 9W3“ consistently de- 3 . ’ . .
they are visiting a den of patriotism fend 1'“?!de freedom, “'le ' W M . ° .3:

J':..,..»..;:,«:- Haw.- “no“ Zd’thvgo you tlalkmg about economical lssues’ ‘ Q I V “A . , “Mfg; ' ° {(3. 7

’52” " That’s the main problem that I , . ”4.59? $3 . ~ ~ ,.., " a , ' .5

a, 5% / finghawittlll‘eliberals and conservThath: , g; if». ,3 ,

fig? sowing! lieve in some types of freedom but "..// , , ' ”gr"? ~ éiyufffio

’ig $4? m, they don’t want to defend the other '3 ..e« t” ,, -. W”; I“ l g

' a suy'srreedom- . a: . - as ,. "

"t“ I ii .;, Q: In a broadcast on the Parts Mythsfernmn, ._ ., ‘§&.&\ » ‘wM-flfi

:9 radio station you mentioned the to- r“ "- ft {2 M

.a. l‘ bacco Program. that you favored ,- , ' " i . .f

o in completely eliminating the subsi~ ,3,” t} . ' - .. -

" A: We Libertarians favor com- _ 1,: ' : i'¢'>",-__'

plete individual freedom and believe gs MW 232*, . ‘53 1
.§ ”We in ecOnomic freedom, and that * s , - ,fw , $31.. I ' .2“ ‘
means a free market. You don’t 2 . on,» Mt ~ "’~‘ -
. ,c have a free market when you have -..‘-‘ ., . ‘W’tl‘m ,5 '
i l the things that they do, like in the .I, " J»- -‘ "' " 2 . "
KEN ASHBY tobacco program. an vauuoox/xmel Staff

and dedication, a nerve center of They say who can grow tobacco, _ . p .

someone’s efforts to become a cog in what minimum price has to be paid . . Marian Fish, 0 busmessadministration junior, reaches from a

the dynamic, glamorous world of for it. And to boot the tobacco pro- Gh°u|lsh deh hf coffin for students touring the Boyd Hall haunted house last

politics. gram has been costing taxpayers a 9 night. Fish 15 a reSIdent assistant at the freshman residence

Room 414 of Kinkead Hall is lot of money. hall.
reached by ducking low ceilings Q: Personally, are you opposed to
while climbing the stairs. It lies tobacco onhealthreasons?
under the caves of the tamer dor- A: No. AS libertarians we defend I
mitory and from the outside would the individual’s right to smoke to-

M...............n...... noun... rm re eren um nears V0 9
is inadequate to set up television program that it gives the people in
lighting or hold news conferences bCSlngress 1n (Infuse to restrithct :0- 0
address, reall to serve as an thing cco or ea reasons in e u- d d
but what it is,ythe office otaymath- titremwmre government controls sun CIY sales WOUl help Pponenls SOY OpprOVOl
ematics teaching assistant. some 'ng, an industry, it also con- . d

. And while occupant Ken Ashby trolspeoples'lifostyles. Lexjngton, say proponents WOUl lead 1'0 7-day sales
will soon return to using the Q: What are your views on social . __.______ ____________
workspace in his role as an instruc- issues —— abortion, the government By MARK MACH and those opposing them is very By ADINA CHUML-‘TY fear that passage would be a “foot
tor and an engineering student, now control of abortions? Reporter small. REPOI‘ter in the door” that could pave the way
his efforts are more visible and pub- A: I believe in the freedom of the If the referendum passes, Cone for the availability of all alcoholic
lie-oriented. individual. The matter of abortion is _____._____ said, he believed the resulting Sun- —_______ __ beverages seven daysaweek.

He is the first Libertarian to run amoral issue. day sales of wine, whiskey and other In addition, the dry forces argue
for the 6th District congressional Q: On the matter of foreign aid, This is the fourth in a series of re- spirits would help Lexington become This is the fifth in a series 0f re- that the proposed law. which they
seat, an effort that he does not ex- what are your stands? ports concerning Sunday liquor sales aregional convention center. Ports concerning the issue of Sunday call unconstitutional, would create
pect to result in a two-year tenure in A: I believe government foreign in Lexington. The city already has the facilities liquor sales in Lexington. problems for local government that
Washington. aid should be abolished. Voluntary to attract large meetings, he said. would lead to an eventual tax in-

This $2,000 campaign, rather. is an foreign aid should be permitted. . . lf Lexingtonians approve a refer- . But it has lost some in the past be- bpponents 0‘ Tuesday ’5 referen- crease.
attempt to present his views to a Foreign aid is one of the problems endum Tuesday allowing the limited 539 no. page3 dum on limited Sunday liquor 581% "It‘s like saying to a girl. ‘Just
constituency whose knowledge of we have right now because of the sale of alcohol on Sundays, the one kiss is all I want,’ " said the
Libertarian principles is mostly Iim- great matter of expense. change would have significant finan- / l Rev, Wayne Smith, pastor of South-
ited to thr content of the commer- The majority of the defense bud- cial benefits for the city, the leader ' ) land Christian Church and leader of
cials of the party’s presidential can- get is disguised foreign aid. For ex- of the campaign for the measure \ ' , l the Concerned Citizens Committee.
didate in ‘980, Ed Clark. ample, the majority goes to main- contends. 1'3, N ' That group. as well as Citizens for

tain weapons and troops in Europe. “It is going to bring more people Qt ’ l a Distinctive Lexington, is working
Q: Why do you believe people in They’re not defending this country, to Lexington,” said Timothy Cone, {A j against the ballot question,
your party —- why have they chosen they’re defending other countries. head of the Lexington Committee for . 3 - / The measure, if passed, would
to form their own party rather than Q: If one of the two candidates Economic Progress. “It’s going to ' / ., / l allow the Sunday sale of wine and li-
go through the main two parties? wins, do you have a strong prefer- bring in pe0ple with money to l r, l quor by the drink between 1 and 11
Have most of them tried to shape ence which one of them it would be. spend.“ - S ? 1 pm. in restaurants seating more
their original parties, or was that A: No, if I thought one of them That would mean more business . , ' / 1 than 100 people and making more
impossible? was substantially better I wouldn’t for Lexington-area merchants, res- 7 \ i l _':_-.i , l than half their income from food

A: There are some Libertarians be running. As far as I know, I don’t taurants and hotels, Cone said. 4‘. l ‘ ‘v ‘53:? \ I sales.
who have been active in the Republi- know of anything personally wrong Amending the Sunday drinking ,’ l ,. A , ' Smith noted supporters of Sunday
can and Democratic parties . . . I with either one of them. It’s just law to allow sales by the drink be- h , l ‘ " «4’ " ‘ sales were saying the change would
would say most Libertarians were that their policies are misguided — tween 1 and 11 p.m. in qualified ros- V/ P“ , l, 1 increase Lexington‘s convention
not really active in either party. there‘s not a substantial difference taurants would also help the urban \ \g / . business. But he countered that in

There’s just such a substantial dis- between them. county government,Cone said. A , lg - ‘ most cases conventions don‘t meet
agreement in philosophy, in policy. l I think Hopkins is a lot more like “The money is going to filter to 3,; /‘,/ ‘ 5"” :‘T'a / \ \ I on Sundays.
think really that a third party is Reagan. He occasionally talks of a the government," he said, “because "’5 _. lb ‘ ‘ The Rev. Sewell Woodward, pas-
needed because I think the two Libertarian road but has been more (the beginning of Sunday sales) is ll 1' . ' t" tor of Centenary United Methodist
major parties now are pretty much of abig spender. going to increase tax revenues that ll I '1 ”MI“ " ‘ T” , , \ Church and another critic of Sunday
controlled by pretty powerful special Q: And Don Mills? we do not otherwise have." ' ' (3" ’14“ 0 sales. called the referendums limi-
interost groups, groups like corpora- A: Don Mills has, as far as I can The student vote could “very like- g f; Q4y," muons unconstitutional. He said the
tionsand labor unions. tell, offered no new ideas in this ly" decide the outcome of the race, /’ , " ' fl 3.; .55, proposed law discriminates against
Q: How many Libertarian Party campaign. He has been Offering Cone said, as the difference between LLMIIlo/KemeISii-itt restaurants that don‘t seat 100 or
members are living in the district? See CAMPAIGN. pages the number of people favoring sales See CON. page 3

FRIDAY Prosecutors close case against sheriff Official wants testing of teachers
. DANVILLE — The prosecutors brought their case against BOWLING GREEN s Raymond Barber, state superintendent
Fm Amcfatadpfassws Harlan County Sheriff Paul L. Browning to a close yesterday of public instruction, says he will ask the 1984 General As-
Study shows 'ltt'e BCOI'IOMIC growth by questioning a state police detective about the April burn- sembly to require mandatory testing for teachers.
ing of an Evarts house. "I am one of those people who believe every child in
WASHINGTON — A confidential economic forecast pre- Lawyers for Browning have indicated the sheriff would Kentucky deserves a competent teacher," Barber told the
pared for the Federal Reserve Board predicts that the econ- take the stand, perhaps today, after they begin their de- Bowling Green Rotary Club yesterday.
omy will grow very slowly next year and unemployment fense. Barber said a prospective teacher would be required to
will remain in the 10 percent range, according to govern- Browning contends he was framed: he has said he was take a written examination that, it passed, would result in
ment sources, conducting an undercover investigation of his own, trying to a one-year teaching certificate,

The internal staff forecast, drafted earlier this month for find hired killers he believed were in Harlan County. After a year the teacher would go before a board can-
the board of governors of the nation's central bank, is more The prosecution alleges that Browning wanted to hire sisting of one higher education official and two local educa—
pessimistic about the course of the economy than are Rear two ”hit men" to kill county magistrate Elijah Buell and tors. If the board evaluates the teacher favorably, a IO-year ‘
gan administration and private economists. county school board member John Y. Blanton. It also al- certification would be granted, he said.

The sources, who asked not to be identified, said the leges that Browning and two other people participated in a
Fed forecast predicted the economy would expand at an an- scheme to burn the Evarts' house to collect and share insur-
nual rate of only two percent over the next year, after ad- once money.
lusting for inflation. Compared with other post-recession State police Detective Merrell Harrison testified yester- mm“

, periods since World War II, that would be less than half the day that he investigated the fire at the home of Alma Ball
rate of growth Ioropast recovery‘ and suspected arson because of the pattern in which the
Reagan administration and private outlooks, by contrast, fire burned. ‘ . Today will be mostly cloudy wlth a 20 percent
see the economy expanding at on annual rate of between 3 Under crOSS-examlnotion by defense lawyer Lester Burns
, , _ chance of showers and a high around 70.
percent to 4 percent over the next year ,_, lust enough Jr.. Harrison acknowledged that laboratory analysis of car-
..._ , , , , Tonight will be cloudy with a 20 percent chance of
- - growth to nudge unemployment dawn slightly below the 10 pet padding removed from the house did not show Signs of
. . . ‘ . showers and a low In the upper 40s to low 50s.
percent mark. The jobless rate climbed to a 42~year high of accelerants, materials that would have quickened the burn» ‘I’ III b
10,] percent in “member. ing. omorrow w e mostly cloudy with a chance for
showers and a high In the upper 60s.

 Keane“ l ‘
II" “0“." Andrew Opmenn John Ormn Mm W. um URI 8. I.“ J... Van“... II. W
Editor-in-Chief News Editor Am Editor Sports Editor Special Protects Editor Photo Editor Graphics Editor
Janos ldwln Monk Cindy Mu Inch-n P. kilo. M" m ICON. “MOI Ion VIII Nook Chfle he.»
Managingidnor Editortulrdnar Alhl‘:év'llmlt;' AssistentSpoflIEdltor Spoctal'roiofloAlolltoM Chld'hotogmpher Copy Dull Chief
Mills be t cand'date 'n congress'onal ac ‘
Although newspaper headlines yesterday filigfi‘c'gdlhav'e cgtgfr‘l‘teh ‘0 th: 3‘ lPPhhS
predicted a landslide victory in next Tues- ‘ p a'guing e erican $0.0 y. .
. - - 1- One of his few black marks 15 his favoring :3.
day 5 elections for incumbent Repub ican . .
. h mandatory draft registration to keep the
Congressman Larry Hopkins, we have ot er Armed Forces atastage of preparedness
for the sixth con ressio— . . . ' .-. ' --- m
Efistfigt dreams g His other black mark is something less ap- 50 'lv-Ls RECORD is lF '(w p I U HAVE 3g.
Hopkins has advanced from the genteel giggtfidxlnhig a}? 1::ggfiigéggrtggbgg GOES 7/0/VABL5 BUT A DlSEASE, WHIQH » 33:.»
Kentucky politician. bgcoming a naanthoi jectivity that is an essential part of a jour- HW‘“S '5 AKNWM. TOBE WOULD YOU RAWER i.

‘ ’ n me ns, an a . . cv- (553";
Washington 5 ways a a nalist’s character. A former newspaper edi- ANTI»STUDENT AND WM 1?}
does not necessarily speak well for most of . . AVE THE FLU OR THE .3

. - - tor, Mills was bound in the past to a sense of I 4 3
the folks back home. His record, despite his fairness honest and dis ssion about the LY s E A, . W.) E4.
attempts to obscure it, shows he is against a events i1: his codimunl t Eli‘s can di dac now H . 3.3:. 3.
nuclear freeze and is at best neutral on the raises doubt as to hisycommitment 1);] the W W Al KtNDA :3"
' t in federal financial aid for col- . . . . . ,3...
lzsggestifdcelilit: past to prinCiples held high by Journalists. CHO‘CE is 7 7/147 .3/19 .

His platform in 1980, and his subsequent diggtghglfmal analgSis,lalthngiilgh {I‘ve‘tfheg can- 2:.
adhesion to it, suggests his close alignment b tt hgves t5 s ong yt thl 56th ‘13). t .’ 15.3 “ELL, LET'S ~ :31
with the policies and politics of Ronald Rea- v: if c t ice 0 represen e ‘5 ”c m _ ‘3'“
gan. His current image, however, makes as mg on. _ PUT [TM/5 4 l .
him a man of the people, fighting to the g ,l/ t 3 WAY'” ' - /l‘\ ./ , -
2222.2::22:::.:2:2:22.222.2222.2:: mmmiioipgmaimbe nu 4%

. . . . 3 . ' recognize or eire or s. 3, \ , - u H i
wafflirEg ish3puzzling, hls neizhigage a;false Don Pratt, a former Lexington grocer, (h i7 5 ,/ :_ 3 _ hi. } 1;. hi 3‘
....:2“.. ..................................., ¢ t a... 4- 4 .~. .

With so much against Hopkins ' it would be though his political stands were vague. it / (fi‘ ’ " . 1 ‘ t/ “ I rm g a.
di . to th' . t ' t d Ken Ashby, the Libertarian candidate, _de- 1’» ‘3 . .— f _3 h _ « l , ’§\ .2“:
:h sserVice :5 comnliuili y to en $.53 serves recognition for his Sincerity during ‘ ,.,, -3, )l x ' M . E‘ 3, :3 s
e congressman 0T re-e 901°“ 0 a 1r the campaign. By far the outspoken candi- W11. .. 3 . 9: 5% . ', '_
term 1“ Congress. h 11 , H date, Ashby can be credited with a dedica- W , ”h ’3' é/r Z l /3__' '5 3'
.Don Mills, the Democrat c a engmg 09' tion to the principles of his less-than-prag- flA/i ’ M, l' r’/w;‘:‘:‘:.~' ~. / / “3‘ 3:33;; , r" ‘3
kms, presents a more palatable agenda for matic party. 11/ § I, / .1333» 1%;1 .i::‘:};,‘ 3 -. .
this community. At the League of Women ///.:5 @7' t "I '3 1:1 11 511;. . .. .. 5;.“ {:1}
Voters’ forum here Wednesday, Mills out- 0 / 3:;3- 5% M 7, " 3f: ,5}; / rig/341.3,: 7.1.333 , 3H1: .
lined his philosophies, and at a glance they Our stand toward Sunday liquor sales flit“: 5 3,13 I 31-2,.3711-3-73}. 3:11.752" / Z . 33-3 13‘ 13:35:; <~ 1233-! :_ 3;;
are withthe‘electorate’s best interests. _ needs no further clarification. In the many 11/2333: M”, 334.333.1117.},"ml- % f/ 3 2:; ‘llllllllil :1”; (:3 E . 1 33
Mills is definitely opposed ' to an consti- columns, editorials and opinions printed here /;3 3 E 7:: 1:3; 3 11 g 1;." . {__l. 3;: y Z...
tutional amendment banning abortion. he in the past year, the resounding theme has 173! = rj -2— - 714/? éré- . .5 #2:] d.
supports maintaining Soc1al Security Wlthout been for Lexmgtomans to exeruse thelr ’ét'W/a."""‘ .1:- 33-. .3151,_:_____ "tr—f: 2%: - a;§ *3 .31“ I 2w 2 1.31,
further tafxahioné helwlgnlg beXomeda co— right to decide whether to have a drink on =7 if; -» seize}. .571; ,1: ' , n 3.
sponsor o t e qua 1g ts men ment; Sunday, _, .— — 4 21:: E ’=-— I;— 2.. :3
and he is pro-balanced budget. acknowledg- We look forward to resounding approval of ' '3;
ing that runaway defense spending and for- the Sundayliquor sales referendum.
C c ssf I ’h 't ”7'
an SUC 9 U women 8V9 I a .
I . l J l We:
13,}, j . 41" k! l . '35.. “3
. h '\\ ’3; L 4‘ l :1;
/_ 3 7 t—J l lam a woman. was aware of what it really was. I’m plication away. The reason? “The pecially love this song — but I abso- it
~ 1 \3 V (p.787 / "r‘ p , Because of this. I know it will not sure whether or not I would have job’s just not cut out for a woman,” lutely hate this particular line in the Q”
I”: l 1 14 .1 ~. probably take more effort for my supported it. I‘m for equal rights, they’ll say. “Why doesn’t she stick song. Why can’t women have fears ”f2. .’
l / l' ’ . 3 a... v?" , ' 3 \ ; f . work to get noticed, that I will al- but I think the ERA was too vague tobeingasecretary?” andmen have tears, also? 3
l ‘ iggvgég ’ l l ways be wary of walking alone and -— too much could be read into it in I wish people like this would real- Some people like to ridicule a '1': :3»
[ ._; J3 . -. l 3 / > that many things I may perhaps ac- the future. ize women are just as capable as “grown man" for crying. Or, they
,. 3 yh‘g ' . I complish will not be deemed Still, it doesn’t seem exactly right mentohandle administrative duties. might get disgusted because a 3:3,...
‘. ‘ ’3 . . r) A: 3 f L ‘good,” but rather, “good for a that the United States of America is Many people just can’t realize that woman starts weeping. I don’t think 1
. w 3i . 32;! ‘M an: ,g , woman.” not on record as supporting equal women can hold executive positions. there’s anything wrong with men (or .-
L-va§‘¢;,;;!,‘-. ., . v .3 of 4,. if! "\ ' 4- . 3 rights for men and women. Even I am finding this out while still women) expressing their emotions. f
£5,312,533; 1,3313 , , \ , . . ‘k ., .c i . '. in college: the numbers of letters Infact,it’snotdoneenough. 3;, ’
,, «(.46 - ‘35—; ‘ ‘_. ., , '11; .. 33 ”It’s not the power that comes the Kernel receives addressed to With the way women’s rights have .
3.2. _ H. r009 \ \ a? . ’e gfl Cindy with the job that gets women down, “Dear sir” is infuriating — especial- been heralded in recent years, it’s 4.3,;
=V~Wg 2" Wk“ “'7. ,_\ .zl '. O 4" DECKER it's the powerlessness of the job ly when the paper’s letter policy not easy for anyone to keep up with I
' If" '33?" "_,;‘._,~ ”"f _ "' "A‘ l. V “'* romthe men." clearly states the letters are to be what should be said and done. Peo-
, s s. E s —- —— was f _ ,J
.2'. \‘i 955‘ , E55 5.4,... , \' — '~ - —Ellen Goodman sent to the editorial editor—namely pleareconfised. 3‘
" a? / d " :, ' 1,. . \ 1‘ -2- g, ——-‘-————-"" me.AndI’mnota“sir.” I think one of my greatest irrita- ,5: >
r v/ 'I/ ,’ 1 V‘, ‘x \\.\s\\_ This bothers me. I’m not really Iknow many women will apply for Bosses who daily compliment only tions, though, is when I go into a
- ’ ‘ l w big on feminism, but this just various types of jobs this year. their female employees on their ap- restaurant and the server assumes *“
u YUM A MUSHROOM o ow doesn’tseem right. Their potential bosses will smile at pearances bothers me, too. I realize I’m on a date with one of the men in f; »
" The Equal Rights Amendment them, compliment their appearance they are just trying to be nice and it my group. 5;;
was passed in Kentucky before I — and when they leave, file the ap- is indeed flattering, but it is sexist I remember two summers ago
all the same. when the two women and four men ,e,
l l . Working at the office is not a date. in my work “clique” would eat to— it:
These compliments just reinforce gether frequently. It almost never 2 3,.
l I the age-old theory that women have failed: Sally’s and my food tickets g---
to be beautiful to be accepted in the were automatically added to one of if
working world. the men’s tickets. $7
. These same bosses never compli- Why do people have to assume .:
' " I ment their male employees on their that women never eat out jist with
Growers, others would suffer If marijuana was legalized .p.......... n... W... .. ........ — o. a... u... coma
Newsweek’s Oct 25 cover hoto of , “business-like.” take dates somewhere themselves,
a ski-masked North Carolin: mari- When homegrown doPe. wasnt ing complex. Farmers simply weed Law enforcement officials and p01- _ While job discrimination or sex- including picking up thedinner tabs. ",3...
juana farmer was enough to make worth the Plekmg- A53 W‘th auto- out male plants early in the growing iticians would be among the hardest ism bothers me, there are other But even women have trouble
one believe that we live next door to "lomm- everyone was “9’5“” m season, prompting female plants to hit in a decriminalized society. With- things that worry me more —— the keeping up with “women’s rights,” :5.
a dangerous criminal wh0 protects hlgh‘quah‘y imports and the status secrete excess resin, which contains out such a safe issue, for example, things I (and most other people) are especially when it comes to the dat- M
his garden with an M-16 rifle and a that foreign grass brought. . grass’ active ingredient,THC. Ronald Reagan could hardly have powerless to change. Specifically, ing scene. I know men complain and
shiny new pitchfork ,The“ m .1978 L‘S’fmahced hgrbl' Unfortunately. no one really launched a iZ-region drugcontrol I’m talking about abuse. say they don’t know how to act now, f;
' Clde sprayings _0h marijuana fields knows the value of America’s fast- program three weeks before the Let’s just face the facts: Most butwewomengetconfused,too. 3343;“
W ., in 14““ Ameflca led market-Wise est-growing cash crop. NORML as- election,ashe did Oct. 14. men are physically stronger than For example, are women sup- .3...
- .....L!..,' GLEN SUPPheFS 1" this country i? spawn an serts that, bushel for bushel, mari- Moreover, suppliers who feed off most women. This means men can posed to be aggressive around men 2.73;“:
1 L. c . . indigenous “Yal- Though ‘t coma m juana yields more dollars than do domestic producers would wither make women do things against their and take the initiative, or are we "“
a’ l 3 ' . 3”" different qualities and 001?“ (from US. rice, potatoes or cotton crops under decriminalization. With dope will simply by using brute force. supposedto“waitbythephone?” ,5.
‘ 3 ‘ ‘ ‘ SHEA RER' nearly every State). U-S‘SI'OWh (between $8 billion and $10 billlion grown out in the open, makers of This is why there are so many oc- Ithink most women prefer a little *
2' 3 I grass “0w. recewes blue ribbons annually). halide lamps, hydroponic filter sys- currences of rape and abuse. of both, which is good, I suppose, be- 3.3,
from conhO‘Sseurs- 3 ,, NORML also believes home-grown tems, trip-wire security gadgets and This is also the reason I don’t like cause different men like different at- A
Yet the striking cover only fore- Ihdhed; the seedles ‘,b“d5 0f dope is now favored by 30 percent of specialized fertilizers ( with names to walk alone at night, or some- titudes. The problem is matching ah,
told a more remarkable storyj America 5 heSt — sensemilla ‘ has American users. The Drug Enforce- such as “dyna-grow" and “iron times, during the day. I get scared the types with the men — assuming «.9?
“Guns, Grass and Money ” Amer" filled the gap between supply and ment Administration says NORML’S mix”)would go belly-up. because I, too, am vulnerable. I the men are the types the women Kg:
ca’s Billion-Dollar Marijuana Crop.“ demand It s enough to bring tears figures are inflated to make legali— Authors of the respectable library don’tlike being vulnerable. want (or vice-versa). 13;???
Domestic production of grass, par. t0 the eyes or the ”BUY American zation appearafai'taccompli. of advice on clandestine cultivaton If I need to walk somewhere at I feel caught in the middle of the 33
ticularly the development of a high. crowd Yet, regardless of the extent to would have to chart new courses. night, I try to find a male escort. women’s movement. Should I call 4
powered seedless strain known as Grown 1" greenhouses and 0“ which locally grown grass has won High times would also mean hard But I still worry — because I know him and ask him out, or will he be .
sensemilla, has advanced such that rural plots. senesmilla 15 to regular the hearts and minds of Americans, times for the innumerable drug law- there won’t always be a man conve- insulted and think I’m “easy" be- 5W3.
the nation's habit has become. it .VOU grass as the3 Mx 153” 13‘1“" gun. its emergence only confirms our yers who make a living defending niently around to walk me to my cause of it? Or, should 1 just do
will,ingrown. "Its a quicker hl38h§ explained feeling that the “evil weed" will the guilty (a national directory is destination. And there have also nothing, hoping he’ll realize I want 7;§-;J::i5:.;.§f;23
After years of indoctrination in Kevin Zeese of the National Orgam- neverbelegalized in the US. available from NORML). been cases of women being raped by to 80 out with him and let him worry 3 .
schools and politics about the desta- zaton for the Reform of Mamuana we aren't just saying that because Finally, it seems clear that Ameri- those very escorts who supposedly about setting it up? .
bilizing threat 0f imported dope 1‘3“ “You used to haye to smoke Nancy Reagan told us to. Though ca’s 200,000 grass growers wouldn't set out toprotect them. It is wrong for me to still like re- '
from Turkey. Afghanistan and C0 10ml after 10"“ ‘0 get high 0“ Mex" one could make a good case against benefit from a free market. Legali- However convenient an escort ceiving flowers and being taken out "3’73
lumbia, it seems the new 9mm." m can dope (5"de 59h5€mma3 “’1“ do decriminalization on the basis of zation, as with deregulation of other may be to find now, though, I don‘t for dinner and dancing? I hope not, 3
the war on drugs C011“ be the boy or the 30h after one 0" two this 0" a medical evidence, the real reason is service industries, would only spawn like the thought of having to depend but I’m not really sure, given cur- .23
girl nextdoor. “816‘le ” 3 _ that legalization is not longer in the more competition. Small-business on someone else to get safely to rentcircumstances. 33.13.:
Time was. even several Years ago. Senfiemlhae secret reClPe ‘5 10‘” national interest. men, who now enjoy a monopoly of wherel’m going. I don’t have the answers, only 9: 3
A sorts, would be eaten alive by the I can honestly say I usually feel a some of the questions. I want to be a
DRABBLE 5 by Kevin Fagon bi discounters. little foolish for asking someone to feminine; I want to be attractive — 3 is
r in time, the Japanese would prob~ take time out of his evening to es- but I don‘t want to be just an object, 2%
60 LONG, PATRICK! HAVE TIME 60M, ruas‘ OUR I'LL or, SM) um “1'3ch MILL AthHé HAVE ably find a way to grow dope faster cort me someplace because I don't because I’m a person first. I want to .
Fm TRKK-OR-TRLATNG‘. sun's “(1.)le UP! ViNALH (96,15 ulELL "7 NORMAN. and cheaper, and decriminalize it want to walk alone — although I be smart —but I don’t want to give ~ _,
~——' 100 the FOR OON'T . “L A for the sake of the yen. know it’s usually a necessary pre- up my womanhood for a career. And
i 3‘ I C; HALLOWEEN! uoRRi . l ' ‘ -- 3 So, at the risk of sounding conser» cautionary measure. But there‘s not lshouldn’t have todoso. .
’§J “ .\ 9‘ 3 ‘ .171 vative, we’ll endorse the status quo. really anything I can do to change Iwant to have it all, or at least an _.
‘ ‘ ' .’ l , I Business is booming, profits are thisandlrealizeandaccept that. opportunity for it. Is this trying to ~ " 31
a 5 i ‘v, . ’ large and the highs are higher ( ‘an have it both ways? [don’t know. But
. N -’ ' l 3 anyone deny that money grows on “I have my fears like every man; if it is, it‘s time to start having it ‘
(t .

' I ’ L EL ' l IE”): 1 trees in America? you have your tears like every bothways—for bothsexes.

M —- . ’ ‘ l woman." ‘ "2 "

a II ‘_, , Cf Lljr-l-:: :— Maxwell Glen and (mi, Simmer , Billy Joel in"Until the Night." Cindy Decker is a journalism and _ W

' h“ I / \ _ __ 3 ‘! are Pulitzer Prize winning: national political science junior and Kernel 3:
'i. ‘96?Ummd'ouuveSwa-uie Inc 2: ,._ h -7 columnists. I love Billy Joel's music and l 6' editorial editor. g

 THE KENTUCKYKERNEL -Frldly, W21, 1m - 3
L .P I -
, ’0 - - - - ampalgn
, .. McFadden 3 opinions
, cause of the current Sunday liquor the police chief there has noticed no c “H
law. changeintheSunday arrest picture. ontinu rom pagel
“In order to be fully competitive, Furthermore, Cone argued, Sun- on referendum Vary NewDeal policies that failed us. broadcasters underestimate some of
the hotels need to be able to attract day sales would enhance, not hurt, Sometirnes I think these two guys their audience.
peopleonSundays,"hesaid. the quality 0f life in leidnston. are just totally bad. Sometimes I Q: What would be the bottom vote
Cone described thelinancial losses Reins able to drink on Sunday. he W— Statistics show that Lexington. agree with them. . total ~ it that is how you would
for Fayette County as “very real said, would be a matter 0‘ conve- y Reporter Fayette Urban/County Police now But that goes back to my original measure success, is there a certain
and tangible." “i“‘ce- make the fewest alcohol-related ar- criticism of the whole establish- point you would be comfortable
Critics 0f the proposal say the ad- “The convenience enhances the rests on Sundays. McFadden said. merit. You take your liberals, your With? .
vent of Sunday drinking WOUld have quality oflife,”hesaid. The number would be likely to rise conservatives, your Democrats, . A: We decided earlier that obtain-
negative effects on the quality 0f life Cone noted the repeal of 0th" if the referendum passed,hesaid. your Republicans. They will some- ing a high vote total was not our top
in Lexington and would increase the blue laws in Lexington t° allow re- Lexington’s top law-enforcement Limited alcohol availability on times support the freedom of the in- priority in my campaign. The top
number 0‘ drunken drivers. Those ‘3“ 3m to 09‘“ 0" Sundays he.“ officer said last week he thinks Sundays would also probably open dividual, but they will not COnSlS- priority was and is to reach the
developments. they say. outweigh not diamond the quality of life in Fayette County could do without thedoor for beer sales seven days a tently do so. most people With the Libertarian
v the mible financial benefits. any way. Sunday liquor sales. week everywhere in Lexington, he Q: Do you resent the way every- message, and-on that message as
._ Cone disagreed with the argu- The