xt751c1thr1p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt751c1thr1p/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-10-16 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 16, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 16, 1981 1981 1981-10-16 2020 true xt751c1thr1p section xt751c1thr1p ‘ . ~ - '1 ‘ . ‘-1 . v ' ‘ ’ . - ~ “:"I'. I " l" “J1- ".‘Tz'Ié. "»11I=:ii“'~‘“1I:-.:;L-’I;‘3': 531.1113 8’51?" ”- “:5“. l." ’
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_ V0l- LXXXIV. N0.45 An independent student newspaper since 1971 University of Kentucky I
Friday, October 16, 1981 Lexington, Kentucky ' _
1 .5 . I - I
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1 51 5 1
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. en orsemen comm 1
i 5‘ ‘ 5 By BRAD STURGEON ‘ ”‘3. Hoskins expressed strong support 5
‘ 51 “ “‘-’ " m - ' 1 f th Amat dm t t
5 . 51:15 1. w 1. . Kernel Contributor , (55.. (”.I. e oa inis ra ion , .1
- I 1.5.; 5 5 ~ 1; a“ 91%] Kentucky Kernel 5s 5 i. “5:115- I would not have run if Jim Amato
" 515,5“ 1' 51 1 1;» ’st f 5 5 1“. .: had run, he said. “because I believe
i 1 " $5,, 55 _________._______ l t "1* Jim Amato has done an excellent job.
l ..::"I "eI 1 ‘“ 3 59'; and believe in his r rams and was
15-” "‘ 1 -T 555, 5. @435 UrbamCounty mayoral candidate I” _ ' 55.5 p 0g . 1 ..
" .- ~ 515,-»; 5r; 5 55 .. . . . 1,. -. ,. ortunate enough to help him work on
. W :5 It .555, 55» W Bill Hoskins said yesterday he ex- his programs “
“95:1 .5, 55-31 r25 filmer'igorrl'stiment rigotm Mayor I, 1 1 In a separate interwew yesterday. 5
It . " t I - aHoZiin'sa ehictgnneciim: 3:2“ an 5 candidate Scotty Baaler also said he I
We“ ' 5: i M 55/55 5 . . pr ' . g 1 -‘ ‘1 1 would not have run for mayor this
511, i» j i ,4 ~«a5-5r5172 5:5 5 ;: interwew that coveredaWide variety W . 1
- .. 1 1... ,3 j . . - 5‘ 551,515 g - 55.”; L 11 of to ics :; year if Amato had sought reelection,
I ”55 5;» 51%,“; - . 2' (”552% 5 p j. 51 “ ~ '-' However. Baaler made no prediction
A I” “It 15““ “- rewardeI '3»: "I I: We lookforward to an en- “I" - about an impending endorsement
I ' ' ““5““, '1 fi”fi‘“”"fi ‘15. -‘ 1% dorsement from Jimmy (Amato)," t- .-
l 5955th“ ””555 5544/ 53;. 55%;‘35/ 1 g” :. ’I 1 .51" ’ said Hoskins ..Itis not going m be a /: ‘ ' I trom the mayor“
‘ - «55, ,1 ‘ " '“ - weg55 1 15 midnight endorsement, he’ll be very -, ““1“ -1 . . t” “”7“ 3395“? “P905“ Amt" ‘“
1 “a: 5;; d“ $5551 5,, . . the mayoral primary, but finished
5 _ 5». 5 55 51,5;5a’55xe ,~ .1 ° *- straightforward whenhedoesit,andl v1 1 5““ . 5 1
‘5‘- r11 55 5 55 :15» 5t :11 11.55,, . 1, n third in the non-partisan contest.
.1553» ,1 .5 5 i 5 ‘“ 5 5:“ 5 ’ 5:. _1,. ., “‘5 5," look forward tohlS endorsement. ‘h h - n] 5 he I l
“’r 5 W h“ " L}: % 5’1“““555/5 “ 55, ‘ . “I was a very strong supporter of . 5 I'I' )c nominates 0 t t Up .“0
55W 5’ j .11' t ixzfifiI W ’ ‘ , t5 15‘ 5-:‘55'1gé .1555, 5. _ . 1 Jim [0,5 when he ran four ears - - vote-getters for the general election.
é": " digit . ,5 ‘1 I “i ‘;1_ 555.5 , ‘ “‘9’ ,‘1uhua d d ed y BILL HOSKINS Baesler. the outgoing vice-mayor at
“”55 -‘ 3 “ €- - -.r 5.: “3°“ ea - - me me. endorsed Amato for the
M - " édégj I “it 5 ”5”“ 1 . 5:,- ~ Amato could not be reached to con- WOUld welcome Amato‘s cn- general election following his defeat.
.: -: mid-“2“?» .~ 5 ".1 555 , -"/ 5 ' ' ' ' - 1 ,
. 5: 5 “544?? .5 :55 mm ordeny HOSkthdalm- . dorsement, but neither had Hoskins supported Amato m 1977
.1 . : €21 ’5’” ' 2 %~ “ UM” yesterday ‘ both candidates speculated lh PUth about an impen- for both the primary and the general
I a . - “E 5 E 5 1 ~ had stated to the press that they dnzannouncomem. election. .
,5 “”56 1:: 51%,, 5‘55» " 3'”- 5: ”515 IV (744 * V5, I I I
5; 5, 5 j , “a 1. Will aid disabled
I 555:1 . “- '5 “ ,
. f':?'I.;5‘I-.iI 5’5!“ .5 - '- “wI‘” 5 z: - I" . I l ' ' I
., 1 we“ 1/ 157”” “5 ‘5” “J“
.v aw to 1m rave acc I II
. 9 "“25 % $555255 g, ,3 " 1, -
l 5 5,55 _' i5, 5 £252“5 , "l 3,» By JUDY HALE disabled ls ”slaw Slates SPeCIflcally 1500 to 2.000 people In wheelchairs 5
-i 5 5 .“: $555 the “M. « -“ StaffWri'ter and for “he “'8‘ "me inches the nuns: m Lexmgmn. wunam.» based
(.“flI :t, 5 ~W1’;5% 555% “5. fihgfi°§t : 1 ‘ said. President's Committee on Employ
5. .. ,. - ;W%“ 55 1 . 355;, 55.15555 1 l . . l l 'ned In the past. Kentucky has had no mentforthe Handicapped andthe Na—
1 .1 jg;- {55 1 ‘ " . Disabed P9099 C°hh to a laws forcing privatelvovmed apart~ t lCe t fH th - - :
5 . 5. . :1 1 1_ . 555 £55 _ .55 . 1; 5. 5 565.11 5 _ h l hal ha diff lt f‘ . _ iona n ero eat tatistics
3" :1 6%.?» “a "T173“: 45 -:’i . ; I - . ‘55 - 1 w eec r may ve 1c“. y mI ment complexes to bu'ld accessxble And where are these 2.000 people in
1 ‘I . .1: ~“'-’ I WI I. I I ; «I -.-I ‘ .5 -“ 5 ding an accessrble apartrlr‘ient m he’ll units. The only apartments that were wheelchairs livmg in Lexmgtmi ‘
. 5 5 . 5 ‘55.. 1 ,5 -. 5i : 5 "5:10:93; 13:25:21; but t e task w1 affected by equal opportunity housing They live m apartments ml do“
: r“ ’,3“" “:55 .e- , 1 -, 1 5 :5: ‘5“. 5 , 5-3; 5 a I regulations were those complexes have steps bUl are Shh "Ol really at“
_: ”-35 -5155”5. " V “ .555. .. 11 W; ‘55 ‘ , A law passed 0“ the last day of the bmlt with federal money. such as cesslblel
’ :5, Vi I' it 1; 5 ‘55:“;31555511 . “35:55 '.I1 I 1%0 General Assembly RHOWdes that 9'1th hOUSth projects. Loretta Crawford 8 paraplegic
55: “i“ “‘ ‘ 5 “:5 1 5'34; - apartment C°mPtl°x°5 bl“ t ah“ t1);- “I wanted to live in a nice complex. confined to a wheelchair alter a
- 2 , é Q II ' 11 2f, 2. ' 5%? “”4“ » , 15 must have at east one accesSi e h0t a hOUSth prolect where. I; would shooting acctdent. said she has made
'111',‘ 1 1 1. .~ .5 ‘1‘ . tf I , - 1 :_ “h'ttor every 24livmg “h‘tS- bescared of having my teleViSion and en nf h n - idif :-- mm m
55‘ 15 15 .- 51155.5 1.555555 .551, 55,553,555 5 l W'll' t di f .. - . “me e .er wn mi. . La. 1
£335,335 51% M51555»; I " “3‘! v Gera d ‘ iams, Sta e iector or stereo stolen. said Jerry Deets. a 33- apartments that she has lived m At
era;- . "”“~ 5 2555555225 = Item- 5M; .- “dd ““1“?“ 1 r“ the Staten?” D‘sabled semm UM yeaMld Parapleg'? ““10 "1°th to her firstapartmentshe hadtoremove
$5?” .5- » - ”575 355,553 ‘ “I. v” ._1- 5? ”a i 'I ‘ , 1 and. 113150“ for GOV- John Y- Brown Lexington from California. “Anyway. the bathroom door and replace it with
II II I II II II I I I II IIIIII . . 4 ~ 5 ~ 5 , I during the 1981 lntemahonal Year 0f 1 can afford to pay for a nice apart- a curtain. which she said was rather
“5 (“ET 5" BLth‘lhernelStaff the Disabled. 531d the problem would ment with a swimming P001. tennis embarrassing since the curtain did
I not be alleviated overnight. But he rt d “‘ . -
TW’n TOW ‘ ‘ “ - - cou sari a sauna. little toproxide privacy,
9’s Sald lt was a 5“? m the fight direc- Williams said people think of the She added. “The cabinets are
. I \ii-liiii ’l‘urpiii. ii‘l I“. (at left) and Sam Bowie. Tl". got together yesterday at Wildcat Press Day to show how much “OHIThe most salient feature and the disabled as bet“? poor bUt m wavy always too high. I hate that l have to
bright "It'll” l’oi-s will be up against this season. It is likely that both players will see much action together as Bowie is bi est trium h for the h icalll acmdents and diseases know no ”(‘0' set all the dishes on the counter
min-«ted to mon- to the for“ ard position part of the time. For a preview of the 1981-82 Wildcats. see page 7. g p p ys y economic boundaries _ irather than m the cabmetst II
_ “There are a W 0f dOClorb- lawyers However. even apartments with no
l . I I l and other professionals out there in steps and wide bathroom doors are
. - n l as spea a senior Citizens 5......“ ..
dOIlIt realize. They thlhk that "105‘ “I started looking for an apartment
- - - 1 . . disabled W919 are thhg 0" welfare two months before I knew I was going
——_—————-—-—— Baesler, the other mayoral can- department. He said he was pleased said is in effect at his busmess. the or social security and it's not true." h“ 5 t l 5 th rt . I . .
By .-\f\l)Rl-.W()PP.VIAI\.\ d d“! I“ . k . . . 1 _ , . . me o eaye e apa men: was
1: , , , . l d 5* a >0 5P0 e. that the City counCil had taken action Lexmgton Building and Supply Co. According to Jacob Karnes. (115901 . .. Cr 50 d d
ScmorStaffWriler Don Hoffman director of ti UK tob 'n 200ff' r back“on thebeat" “ ' " ha th ' 1 - . .~ In' ,aw r sai ‘
5 ‘1 '8 n; g . ice 5 . . Senior P‘tlwhs V81 '3" rights, tor 0f Handicapped Student 59"“095- Crawford said she called around to
--—--———-————-‘ (Olintll 0” Aging, served aS by usmg this metmdhels SUpportlng- (00." HOSklnS said.quoting Lexmgton‘ there are about three or four “ac- apartment complexes and explained
. moderator for the forum, which was . HOSklnS 3180 sald he has a com- Mayor James Amato. “I think we cessible" apartments around Lex- to the managers that she was in a
lickington . mayorilll cavndilljate described as a 5 “nonpartisan" mitment for no tax increases for the should be standing up fa— them," ington. “Accessible" refers to apart» wheelchair and needed an apartment
\tilliam lloskins sayst ccrty s 9 er- presentation of. the issues pertaining bexmgton-I’ayette County Govern- Hoskins added. ments modlfled especially with with a maximum of one step which
ly residents should be more frequent- to the senior Citizens of the county. ment if he is elected mayor. wheelchair users in mind “h f It h Id “ "
u ‘ 5 ~ - ._ - - Baesler mentioned the door-to-door ~ 5 - ‘ ‘ e e S ecou ramp.
1) utillltd. The candidates were limited to 15- A commitment is my word and I _ 5 Williams estimated there are about g” “LAW ., 3
"Senior citizens are one of the most minute statements and then staywithit."hesaid. ca’hl’algh he has been condUClmS ‘ ‘ ' page
“hlmlaht 3559“ we have-II he said. answered questions from the au- Hoskins told the Donovan during the race. 5
lloskins, speaking at the Donovan dwnce Fellowship members that he will “Me and my Wife have traveled to :
l‘It‘hh‘NShlP Program‘s “Personal Hoskins repeated his pledge to in- work towardsthe reestablishment of about ‘6'516 doors "t th‘? community,
Platforms 0" Issues Concerning Ag— crease the number of patrolmen on Saturday Lex-Tran bus service. He and the three discoveries we have -
”11?. forum .VPSlEI‘day afternoon at sircctduty- by relieving officers from said he strongly supports the senior made'l call dwrbells. dogs, and door-
the Student Center Theatre. Scotly administrative functions within the citizen discount program, which he mats. hesaid.
_ I On the issues. he said that a Lex- _
. ington mayor neecb to be “innovated I
Cain, Burress elected freshman senators 5.5.5.» .55 5
the ability to “use money wisely."
WW— what (‘ain called a “whirlwind cam- “We hung at least 100 posters a “Local government cannot be all
t.” ‘. ‘I St ”“1 .5“ b paign“ to a lot of hard work and night."hesaid. things to all people," Baosler said.
59mm ‘ a n er "twice as much money“ as any other In an election that drew 442 “but we have a rosponsibilty to do all .
_________— candidate. freshman voters. Cain. a bminess that wecan do."
1 (‘ain said that because the two major. received 201vot<5 and Bur~ _
John (‘ain and John Burress clinch~ senators ran on the same ticket. “we r55. 3 premed major, tallied 186 'He 53"? that due to the present con-
ed the two freshman senate seats in had twice as much money as anyone votes. ditions m government, we dont , .. A .
the StudentAssociation'sspecialelec. else."Headded thathewas upat7:30 Political science freshman Jack have the money .for everything
“ tions yesterday. yesterday morning shaking hands Dulworth came in third with 124 Energy and foraight 1‘s needed In ' '
The two attributed their success in with prospective voters. votes. 1003‘ government spending. he said. 5
I In another race. social work major ,
u "19 on Bark'ey Allison was won the soda: We- Baesler sa-dthatamayormustsee .
sions senate seat by 15 votes over that programs affecting 513"]:
5 social work junior Sherry Wil‘is. Citizens are promoted. 1H1" 58' “,1
1 , ovemrned b cwrt Kevin Matthews— the sole candidate would appomta semor c'tm’" sta .
H was elected graduate school to reach out in the commumty to
. senator discover problems facing the age .
By HERBERT SPARROW Although Barkley was found SUth The Home Economics senate seat group and to seek out other senior ,
_ ASSOClaled Press Writer of harassment. the Personnel Board remainsempty because there were no citizens to help in local govemment.
- did not penalize him because of the . , .
- 1. . -.51d145,1 _ 1e ,._, _w“ 1 1 5 . . formal candidates and no write-in :
‘ . y ‘ , 1 questions surrounding its authority votes He said he would select the senior
\ FRANKH’RT *' A CerUll JUdSP oi-cran elected constitutional officer. 1. .‘ 1 , 1 l sed ‘th the citizens helping his administration
» l ruled yisterdaythatthe State Person~ We were very pea WI ft It i" “'th I 5
l ncl Board did not have the authority Mcigs' ruling also affected action V0“? turnout. 53“" Barb Rowe. Ct} 3 er 1 “Ens“ 3.2:." 5;: sever:
l to find stale Agriculture Commis— the Personnel Board ordered taken chairman of the Specml Elections 01‘88'1173 IONS Wl lll‘ forgmlézlcy -
sumer Alhen Barkley II guilty of sex- against two other male employees of Committee Rowe called the number that could prov1de mstght or is i- 5
uallyharassmgafemaleemployee. thc Agnculture Department who also 0l\'0l€r5”3\'9r389 5'0” “ 1 -. .5
Franklin (‘ircuit Judge Henry had been charged in thecase. : ‘ 1 “
Meigs set aSide the Personnel Board The board ordered Barkley to sus- . . ,
ruling that came after a highly pend markets director Doquheeler, .
publicized fourday hearing last who was also found gong of harass- l n I .
- . April Barkley had challenged the ac- men'i. Without pay for 15 ys B) FRANK SALVINO/Kemol 8m" ' _
lionsina suit. Mule the board dismissed harass- The mar-82 Wildcat basketball team is unveiled on page 7 ' . _
Max Smith. attorney for the For men! charges against the third Whit“
sonnel Board. had no comment on the employee. Gerald heatherage. it The collected papers ofa former Supreme Court Justice enter the 1 ‘.
gullng fimtlhl satid h: Ivan-tend 5:: t;ri(1xtI¢r~ltI(i1h:I?wdow:i:iI; :kdpmy‘g unt‘IPrs'IttIIs archives, Jimmy (inum‘r‘. left. and Alan Blue work at caulking I Student Center win- ~
iscuss he sn ua Ion us wrt t I” 5 m3 do» edgewith pull\.Both are l’l’l) employees. :
board allegations ~ . 5 5 51
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1 . ‘7 7 —_______.———.——————————___——-
g.-. 3... 7i ' ms ° ®
, 4 Question of tax-exempt are
i i ‘ forrel' ron' hould be examined ‘
. . I9 8 _ - I
' - - - - a i cl 7
7 The outcome of a case now pending in a New start pondering the benefits of taking away the . . . P on a" a e 1
York federal court could have far-reaching tax-exempt statim of such“religlons?” ;
implications in the controversy over the tax- In all fairness, the reduction in the govern . ,
exempt status of religious institutiom in the ment’s role in funding such programs could Can 803 ‘3" d“, ? i
United States. lead to religious organizatiors picking up the P 3 o o . . (
The Rev. Sun Myung Moon, founder of the slack, providing services in a cost-effective, .
Unification Church, was charged in a federal humanitarian manner never approached by I
indictment yesterday with conspiring since bureaucrats. r
7 1973 tocheat the government of income taxes. Most obvious at this point is that the IRS e
- Moon, a resident of Irving, N.Y., was accused cannot tax some religions, concrete or ex- c
of filing false personal tax returns for three isting on paper only, without assessing the en- t
years and failing to report interest earned and tire lot. Such a value judgment on the intent of i,
stock received in financial dealings. churches would be an obvious violation of the . fl
constitutional freedom of religion. -.~ E E] f,
Publicity given the Unification Church and Less apparent, thoiigh, is whether a group, i ;.;..Ef§§§?7ti‘55515355332 a
_ other “le traditional” religions during the regardless of whether itisformed for spiritual 27‘ U a
19705 resulted in a movement, which unfor- or financial purposes, is guaranteed tax- fiat—Er) ’
. . tunately neverIgainedthepublIic’s attention, to exempt status by the Constitution. The con- b ' P
have the question debated on its merits, seek- stitutional safeguards on freedom of the press ‘ ‘ 7 3’
. mg to abolish the taxexemptlon statis of all are bent to fit the beliefs and/or grudges of J \ . [1
“31181005 orgamzatlons. . . legislators and judges periodically; probably ~ .. . S I
- Presently there are hundreds of indiViduals this area isnot different. 52555:? ,
' who, having declared themselves “religions,” Although this period in our country’s history KVXs< \X if
7' are able to shield their personal income taxes is being marked by cutbacks at all levels in 5» t" I... n45? % oi
. . from claims by the Internal Revenue Service. spending, it is also dominated to arguable 7 is... I de
This is not to insinuate that this is the case in degrees by fundamentalists such as the Moral ‘ f “3““ g 7
regard to Moon’s legal troubles .— such Ia Majority. Such groups would undoubtedly be "I
generalization W00“ be Inappropriate at this outraged at the mere suggestion of evaluating 9:
, time. Regardless of the specifics in the case, the tax-exempt status ofohm-ehos \ 2- . Ice;
however, the fact remains that the federal All the more reason for bringing h the ques- ‘ { ju‘.
government, in its greatest time Of fiscal need, tion_ Perhaps Americans will find out whether I I I I I I I .
nnentcneatet cutouts-imam revenue tonsnuctve evaluations at tttoon are p..- Unvasma wrse ill shady Implementing
It is this need for revenue that could make mitted in this society, or if religion is to re- let
this a volatile public issue. With social pro- main a sacred cow above the examinations of me w ' ' ' a":
grams being cut drastically, will the public all persons affected by it. m to
. Oneoftllemost fundamental prin- standndsin the minds of most . he‘
ciples of public higher education is m ethicators, theadoption of someform . th‘
I 7 nowinquestionatUKandtheother 2 v . I ofadmissionsstandarttisaforegone ‘
. state schools. Thequestionofwhether conclusion. .' M‘
a diploma {TONI 9 MW high supported community servicecanaf- eee toll
school is a sufficient criteria: for ford to categorically assign overload- Random Ramblings from the Rally , Old
automatic admittance to the higher eduaddngresponsihilitiootoanpm. . . . . it was “an immense success," ” a"?
, acafimiinstiuiti‘onof thegraduate’s femors. indeed. Even the most desperate 4 SP‘
' cc is Irelevant. considering the Before the Brown administration cynic must have been favorabl im- ’
123-1wm35m current fiscal crisis. discovered in June 190 an ammuy pressed. Perhaps the challengeywas
sanctum-bomb“. U til recurring $100 million defecit in ex- risky, but Student Association Presi-
' “wan—humanist '1 PW;_”‘e‘mWhasfiePewiy pected state revenues, beta-e the dent BrittBroelnnanchoseonehellot
“'m'""'"w been ‘yes "7‘ open “Mim7 governor deferred the problem by an event upon which to stake the
, hummer-tact However, the fact is that more than - ' ' '
! Inna-amen _ halfofUK’s 180°" incl the cutbacks in budgeted higher ethca- reputationofhlsadrninistration. R!
"m 1] age“ ‘3“. tion approiriations by nearly $75 Thanh; to good argamzation by SA
°° e3“ °f medicine, Wv million —$23 millionof that sum from and W coverage by the Kernel, In;
and - . UK’s operating budget alone —- some UK experienced probably the largest
~ l h, mm“? and mammal”? farsighted edicatois and edication demonstration in its history. Accor- rep
I ‘u‘ .- V8 established standards for ad , , , wag
, missiontosomeoralloftheii-pro— advocates recognized that as all dingtovarloussourcesandrecords. 7
/ mm public lnstitutiom entereda periodof the day after the May 4, 1970 Kent SOP‘
‘ limited resources. highe- education State shoot-up. almost 2,500 UK :7 0"“
. We must also decide whether the must develop plans to maintain and students marched near the Student ”Hm
I 7 l state’s primary institution for ' improve the quality of public educa- Center. Estimates from Wednesday‘s tn]:
research and academically. tion with less capital. considerably more civil protest range ' ‘
‘ 4 -7 The same people also recognized intheneighborlioodofz,sootos,ooo.
. theneedtoimprovethequalityof 00-
‘ education high school gradlntes Conventional political wisdom in
e e r syn rome received in this state, as a direct Kentucky holds that a proposed
- meam of improving the essential amendmenttothestate's comtitution
, remedial slrrl' lsdemandedofuniversi— mathempportedbythetlu'eemajor
. . ' . . . . tyundergradintes, ur n areas and the university com-
Wmmmmnmmmmmmm 'l‘heseconcermandtheirpotential munitiesforanyhopeotpssssfle-m
solutiom aiewhat the Prichard Com- rationale for that contention is that
Since many people are displeased ——-———— at the box office. Phyllis talked about Never fear! The-e is a dark horse: mittee and its final report areabout. raidents Of those areas tend to be it" - ;
withthejobthattheactorintheWhitc l‘ootballonTVandhasbeenseenat Lindafloristadt,singeraridstaroftlie The solution to this problem of formedandpoliticallyactiveconca— : gr
" Horse is doing, some suggestiom are 5, fl therace track. revivalof “The PiratuofPenzance." declining quality in a period Of fiscal nine 91M improvements in 0“" C
bemgmadeinordertounitethearts a Alltlireeareembodimentsofthe All she needs to do is rope Jeri-y reshaint,beyondtheobviotanedfor systemofgovemance. g“
with politics. motherhood image. In other words, Brown,theCaliforniagover-norwhois grater state fundiru, is theadoption Courier-Journal Framfort bureau VI
It is a fashion nowadays for they havealtidorkitk. acandidateinevery election. of an admissions policy for chief Ed Ryan recently noted that
Hollywood celebrities to become in- In! As usual, eachofthem seems to undergraduates that is based on Gov. John Y. Brown may not have
volved with politicians because the P on have a major suilre going agaimt John Griffin is a journalism minimum academic indicatorsd the airport in these crucial places. It
chance of becoming first lady adds a ____— them. sophomore. applicants’ probable success as a stu- may be that our clever governor
dimmw‘ncm’weeH'“ ' . , . .. dent. realized an Wt)! to tum a :2:
provides the prospective candidate “3"?” mifmm W“ “W7 . . As Dr. Art Callaha, UK vice presi- hostile constituency into a neutral if
. additional publicity because of the Each of these women has the 'Y; Shes 3'1th and we had a W" I m m dent of Academic Affairs. said last not supportive political force. Witha
_ recognizabilityofhername. charm and grace needed to fill the “mmwmemum week, “The state deserves one high manofBrown’scapabilitiesasacom-
\ - After all, Nancy Reagan was on role at the nation’s first lady. But Fonda was, active in the Vietnam In submitting letters to this quality thitveuityendwecannotsus- munlcator (he apparently can turn a .
' . actreasherselt.Andifabitactressin what are their other credentials? War. ltdoesntmatterhowunpopular me writers should “m” their tain another. The iroposal we will crowd around as well u a phrue) '
2,7- “B"moviescanmake it totheWhite Whatelsedrawsourattaitiontothan the-war was, Site Y“ WM out H ’l tat dandtriple-spaced submit to the Council on Higher leading the attack, the succession
93. m Ii,whyean'taTVcelebrityora ”MMname-I, against somethmgin which America totheedit i ledltor “ 114 Jour- Educationwinbebucdmgrmndsof amendmentisnotyetalostcause. C
257 full fledged movie ween. (Personally All of them are white, mo Sax- 3m Involved, atrium wees a "189* Mm mam UK .05“ um improving the quality of teaching ... '°
lthinkit'ustepdownfromqtmn to on andclaim tobeProtestant. (We’ll 1n the Opponents favor In any w- Student. um",m;ty “pinyin we’reabletoprovide." Finally. although it is difficult to N
I first lady, but i don't know if they overlook [its conversion to Juthlsrn cumstance. and other ihterested m mint One of the most politically potent determine the total impact of the ral~ n‘
it refliaeit) {W forrnerhtlbandMilre M.) 13'! 81W“ can't ”a. Mk «1 3 M” M m ‘M mt! agaimt this ma], 88 1y, M m m for sure. Whfll
,2: Rumor has it that many of these face it, no minorities for these namefor-liercliild.\vhatwoiildsliebe W numbers '1'” their ma: stated on a posta- at Wednesday’s student leaders lobby in Frankfort ll
'7; polidcim It! mm seekirg women. likeifghehndtomkeupim-mindm m classifications or connection Rally to Save Higher Edication, is thisJamary,fewlegislator-urelike- M
‘ Itll'tdd printing bumper m 0" time winter of America's most Well for“, it seems like we got a tow“ mimloerillprovideMualityealca- We maynothave directly influenc-
7 makingbuttomfortlle 'ucarnpaioi covetedaward: mtthepulimrorthe pretty close race hem the little Those WW to contribute to tion for whom?"ln etha- words, will ed any single piece of legislation
intheirbesanents. ~ Nobel Peace Prize but the Oscar. ladies.lfonedoesn’tpiilloutiiithe “0",,“ch opentoanyone higher edicatlon become available Womaday, but at leastwecanbe
I1 mmmmwchevethe Phyllishaan’tbeenaolucky,hltahe leadordinpotit,wemyhavetode. cocamorlntiiecommunity ally totheellteaa weend what confident that manypoliticlamwlll :
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: mhmd. meyallaeemtobetheoutdoor ‘And it could be worse. Brooke tingmaterial. Hales, we can expect lively taxpayers. i .
37, lntheDernou'atlccprnertwoma- type.thekindwholovetogetbackto Shelthcmlddecidetomarry'lleddy 'l‘heKernclraer-vestherightto deliberations'ova' thh lsmechring .
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