xt75qf8jh83t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt75qf8jh83t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-09-28 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, September 28, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 28, 1982 1982 1982-09-28 2020 true xt75qf8jh83t section xt75qf8jh83t KENTUCKY . ,1,
er 6 I ” é L~‘§ w"
It's the topic of two movies, one re-
. 7 ' leased sometime ago, the other new to
' I the scene, For reviews of the highly1oc1
I claimed German film “Das Boot" and
. the Korean War epic "lnchon," see page
. 4.
_ ' MW
Vol. LXXXV, No. 35 Tuesday, September 28, l982 An Independent STUJOI" HOWSPGIIOI' University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky
W_______
,1- 111., . .1. '
~ * 1 1"?

SGA recommends 1 M

, 1". 4 ,1 , ,1 11 't WU" . .1. f.- . ' V

mandatory charge 1’ 1. ,1- ~ , 1 _

- :51. V i 11 ‘ 1 ‘1“ ,. 5‘.‘_1“,_;,~,.va ‘ ’ ,:-
OI‘ ea serVIces ~ as 11— , _ .. 1'1” , _1 .1» 1-
, 151,131 £114.?“ 1 K“ . w y , I 1 , , 1, (I. ‘ .\
l _____—_.._ Students polled in the College of " ' f ‘ ,_ § h .‘ _ " _§ 3 z (:5

' By ANDREW OPPMANN Law opposed the fee by a two-to-one . , 1...- .. ,

NewsEditor ratio, said Bill Richardson, library _ 1 A W- , 11 , 1., l" l :

andJASON WILLIAMS sciences senator. In contrast, stu~ .1 . a _ _1 ’ “gm :1,“ .1:
Staff Writer dents from the College of Medicine ‘_ f M 3 ‘ .. .. . ”all. first .31,
supported the fee almost unanimous- {f , j E? ‘_ . , 3,1111 3; ' {1
_._________————— ly, said David Chalk, medical school if i i? ”it“ ' g . ,1 . .1, . 31*“ ,
senator. .
After almost three weeks of delib- In other business, the Senate , . 1” ..;~ ;'
eration, the Student Government As- passed an emergency measure to g . . '
societion Senate last night approved send a telegram to the Polish gov- . 1 s ‘ . ‘- ’
a resolution supporting the imposed emment urging it to grant four dis- ‘ , _

mandatory health fee. seating workers legal protection and we" . 1 1.

Ina20—12 vote withoneahstention. afairtrial. _. ‘ .1 _ .,, . 1:
SGA joined with the Student Health son President Jim Dinkle will 1; i , g , ' r as ,.
Advisory Committee in recommend- send the telegram on behalf of the j” ”'1. ' 1" 1 ‘
in; to ”Side!“ Otis Singletary that campus chapter of Amnesty lnterna- . , .1. .t. , . . 1
the Student Health Service, as cur- tional. . 1 “ 11- 1 -~ _~ . " «1' .; '
rently constructed, be continued Four Polish dissenters, Jacek - ' ' , . 1 . ,, , .
through the establishment of a re- Duron, Adam Michnik, Henryk . ’ 1 .. *- :1, “4,1,, 11:19:; 1 . 1 7%
quired health fee for full-time stu- Wujec and Jan Litynski, are mem- . W” ,1.; 11,1,
dents. bers of Komitet Obrony Robotnikow, t ::

Singletary and other University the committee for the defense of ‘1, :1
adminstrators have requested stu- workers. The Polish government has . ' 1% 3%
dent opinion before they send to the imprisoned them since the imposi- ,1. ' ' 51.:

Board of Trustees the preposal. tionofmartial lawonDec.13, 1931. 1; § ,1 11, ,
which would require every student The dissenters have been ac- i3 $2.1“
tosubscribewthehealth service. ccused of conspiring to overthrow ' it .1 111,.

The resolution supports a fee of no the government. They could be ~ , .. 311111111333?
more than $25 per semester effec- given thedeath penaltyif convicted. , ., '1 11“ '1:._'"~?¥;
tive during the 1%3-84 8‘3th year. The Senate scheduled a forum for 21$; 1 ' 1,

Without the mandatory fee, Uni- the 6th District cowssiona] candi- w «flag. m ‘ {5,}.
versity adminstrators say, the dates for noon to 1 pm. Oct. 27 on ' ' ” ' '
health service Will have '0 M re- the lawn 0f the Ammismm ' 1.0.VAmIKemetStott
assassination. msfiifiistme Jack mm You re a lifesaver. sis'!
reglutsiigt-tdathéheameltflfidh; :fitlc‘aalidfimrs Cgmrengitstee Clix: :Icippa Delta pledjge sisters TereLsp Ssimpson (left)ha'nt|‘l( Julie ng- at the first Alphp Ohmicgon PI Sorority Watermelon Bust at the
Committee for additional consider- terddy as WW“ the SGA ”vowed reg- ing concentrate on possmg a l e over on toot pic 5 yester oy AOPi house on Co um la venue.
ation. The comnuttee added four istration drive. Election Day will be
amendments “filth edema-canola Nov. 2_ R I l n ,
.. y *1 ~ - - ea a ebutted a h r n act ces
er, law school senator and a mem— [aggrigxnlghsfxflf g: g n r n I I r I
“figmg'nmel‘éemmmd on ““3" °‘ “ “m“? “is w” a”

, . pounced. Helen Cowan, a political __ tion has retreated from well-estab- “Look at the record,” Rea ans . 11 - ~
Students “WW “mm“ ‘0 a science junior,willreplace Smith. By MICHAEL puma lished, bipartisan civil rights poli- gestal, “The level of “mg of 3,1135 actfl fih‘g'afii :hfiaslhehflugf
comprehensive health plan be The Senate also voted to join the Associated Press Write cies"inseveral areas. administration in investigating and tration."
exempted from payment. ‘The Eml' Kentucky Into-collegiate Student Enforcement of school desegrega- prosecuting those who would at- The council study found these sta-
dent advxsory ”mu” m“ renew Legislature, which lobbies for stu~ .__.______.__ tion and fair homing laws has all tempt to deny blacks their civil lib- tisties med earlier by a Justice De-
future fee 1116113855. “1'86 the UK dent rights with the' state govem- but halted, according to the l38-page erties by violence and intimidation partmbnt official “highly mislead-
Medical Center to seek ‘8‘“!th merit. UK is cmrently the only state WASHINGTON — Internal records study. has exceeded the level of every past ing though technically accurate. .
money. and suggest additional 0M- univetsitynotintheorgamzation. of the Equal Employment Opportu- Only in prosecuting police brutali— administration.” .. Upon closer examination a different
atlng hours on Saturdays. Comer samurai-Large John Davenport nity Commission and a lawyers’ ty and similar violent denials of in- The lawyers council, which bills it- picture enter-gag” '
58.3311 0W the action, saying it. would study of Justice Department opera- dividuals’ civil rights has the Justice self as a bipartisan association of at- The 9,000 reviews Reagan men-
You Will have t? deta'mme the dilute UK’s lobbying efforts in tions contradict President Reagan’s Department excelled, the report torneys from private firms, govem- tioned are those required each time
tatenof our University health serv- manual-t. statement that his administration said. ment and public interest groups, a state or local gavemment covered
109. said Motion FISh. WSW 831' Dulworth disagreed. saying, “Any has enforced civil rights laws more Reagan told a dimer for black Re- said in its study published the same by the Voting Rights Act makes a
mIDStmthh Junior and Wm 0‘ lobbying we can get is definitely activelythanitswedeceesors.‘ publicam Sept. 15 that he ismlly day Reagan made his Speech that changeinits election law.
the WWI?“ , _ worth it.” ‘ An EEOC document obtained by tries to ignore personal attackS. the administration’s record in that Such automatic reviews have been

Three dlfferent student PP‘moh An activity fair was planned for The Associated Press showed that, “but one charge I will have to admit area is at least equal to those of the particularly numerous in the wake
surveys were discussed ms the Oct. 13 at the Student Center to en- contrary to Reagan's recent claim strikes at my heart every time I two previom administrations. of the 1930 census that forced wide-
Senate meeting. courage students to participate in to a black audience, the number of hear it. But Reagan went on to say, “The spread redistricting.

Terry Warren. home economics campus organizations. job discrimination suits approved by “That’s the suggestion that we Re Justice Department has filed nine Furthermore, the council said. the
senator, said she polled 102 of the New campts phone directories the commission has dropped sharp- publicans are taking a less active new anti-discrimination cases administration filed two new cases
170 residents of Blending II, an “13- will be available in late October, 1y. approach to protecting the Civil against public employers and has in the voting rights field during its
perclass residence hall. 0f the re- Dinkle said. The books will include And the independent Washington rights ofallAmericans. reviewed more than 91W electoral first 20 months compared to nearly
spondents, 63 percent favored the coupons from variom Lexington Council of Lawyers concluded in a “No matter how you slice it, that's changes to date-mine compliance a dozen during the first 12 months of
fee; 37percent did not. merchants. recent report that “the administra- just plain baloney. with the Voting Rights Act. the Carter administration.

Medicare, the health insurance program for 28 million el- leaders went ahead yesterday with a plan to unseat Chan-
derly and disabled Americans. cellor Helmut Schmidt this week.
TUESDAY Many adults seeking Aid '0 Families Wllh Dependent Helmut Kohl said after a meeting of his Christian Demo-
. Children will be required to look for work first. crat party that he still planned to oust Schmidt and get him-
meff, WI" W8 , Medicare will no longer pay for private rooms in hOSPl- self elected chancellor in a parliamentary vote of no-confi-
tals or skilled nursing facilities, unless the patient's condi- dence scheduled for Friday.
. tion requires seclusion. The health insurance program will But he added that a no-confidence vote would be con-
BOWIIIDgO’IOYbOfldS maybe OK only pay for semi-private rooms, saving $54 million. ducted only "if I have the certain expectation that a map”.
As part of the $100 billion tax boost that Congress en- ty willvote for it."
FRANKFOR‘I’ —— Industrial revenue bonds may be issued for acted in August, Medicare is putting new limits on hospital There are growing doubts, however, about whether he
the construction of a bowling alley, the state attorney gen- reimbursements to save $480 million. had sufficient backing to oust Schmidt, leader of the Social
eral's office said yesterday in an advisory opinion. It also will POY radiologists and Path°l°9l5l5 “W 80 P9" Democrats who have led West German coalition govern—
Assistant Deputy Attorney General Charles Runyon said cent of their "reasonable" costs, instead of the full cost, to ments for l3yeors.
a proposed project for the Lexington area that would in- save $l45 million. '
clude a bowling alley would be covered by language in the Although these and other changes in reimbursement Peacekeeping troops retufn to Lebanon
law authorizing bonds for "any recreation or amusement rates are directed at hospitals, physicians and other health
park." care providers, some advocacy groups fear the elderly will BEIRUT, Lebanon ._ French and Italian peacekeeping
Runyon said that whether such projects should be fi- wind up paying a larger share of their medical bills out of troops moved into the Sabra and Chatilla refugee camps
nanced through the bonds is a policy matter that lies with their own pockets. yesterday, scene of the Beirut massacre.
_ the General Assembly. The tax bill also allows states to charge adult Medicaid But L200 US Marines, third component of a new peace-
The Lexington lndustrial Revenue Band Review Commis» patients a small fee for all non-emergency services. Preg- keeping force. remained offshore. awaiting the complete
sion had withheld review of a request for the bonds until it nant women and children are exempt. withdrawal of lsraeli forces from this bloodied capitol.
could receive assurances that they could be legally issued. Also yesterday, Lebanese authorities confirmed that
Gilbert 0. Frederick Jr., owner of Joyland Bowl, had ap— UN debate begins,- Bpan'lblasts west about 600 deaths resulted from the massacre of men,
plied for the bonds to help finance the construction and fur- women and children in two West Beirut refugee camps by
nishing ofa bowling alley, which would also include three UNITED NATIONS _ The president of Brazil yesterday Lebanese Christian militiament Sept. 16-l8. Hundreds of
l8-hole miniature golf courses, two batting cages and picnic opened this year's policy debate in the U.N. General As- women from the camps gathered tearfully at a mass grave
areas on an adlocent six-acre site. , sembly blaming Western powers ,0, 11° profound crisis in mthe Chatilla camp to pray for the Victims.
the international economic system."
fiscalyeerbrlngsprogramaharges President Jooo Baptista de Oliveira Figueiredo. in a 35-
minute address opening the lS7-notion ossembly's debate, /
WASHINGTON — The nation's maior social welfare pro- urged the developed nations to take immediate steps to re- \
grams will undergo numerous adiustments Friday as the duce crippling high interest rates and to deal with other
government begins a new fiscal year. economic problems. WEAT —
« Twenty-two million food stamp recipients will get an av- The policy debate is to go on for the next three weeks.
erage 8.5 percent benefit increase. their first in two years. It was the first time a Brazilian head of state had deliv- / \
The average increase for a family of four will be $20 a ered Brazil's policy position. Figueiredo said it was "the se-
month. riousness of the international situation" that had br0ught
, LowImakers also altered the-formula to hold down this himto the United Nations. , Early mornlng fog today followed by .ff.fn°°n pun.
- '1'- years increase in the Sll.3 billion program. They ordered shine. nghe In the upper 60! to low 70'-
3548 million in savings in a bid to keep the fiscal 1983 costs oust” of Gmmin doubt Clear ”fil'ht- Lowe In the mid 50:.
"Ml" Sll b'll'°"- Sunn and warmer tomorrow. nghe near .0.
But the start of fiscal 'l983 will also usher in cutbacks IONN, w." Germany _. Despite a state election setback y
and economy measures in other welfare programs and that could erode their strength, conservative opposition

 K‘é‘"r'"‘nel"'
cum-Hon Ant-monum- manna IWWJom' tlnl'.lo~h LIV” 0-0th
Editor-m-Chiei News Editor Arts Editor Sports Editor Special "°|.C'I Editor Photo Editor Glul’hi" “it"
P E R SUA SIGN ’00.. '1'“! Maul. CIMV MO! MP. Idle. MICK" Mm Knuth Mllllon ”Von“ Chris Ash
Managing Editor [diioviolfditor "I'LMMJI- AutuomSporis Editor Special'ropcts Assistant Chief Photographer Copy Desk Chiet
Assistant Arts Edltors ,
i >
Mone catche f in m'ddle f NFL t 'k
Fifteen hundred men found the time Sun- same risks, costs and usual personnel invest-
day to put up the storm windows, get the ment that plague any business. But, because
thatch out of the lawn, paint the spare bed- of record attendance figures at all NFL 2,
. - - , \ \l. "ill / /,// .253
room and generally do the things men do on parks last year, plus the new televxswn con- ‘-\‘\§\x \ g,
their weekends off from work. tract, the owners are sitting in the catbird / 'v ,, \\\\ f;
The rest of the American population regls— seat. They collectively run the country 5 ’ 9H - s s .
tered various emotions about that, however, most financially successful sports league. flhAA“ '. \\ i .
since the guys who had the day off were the The players work for them, however, and (At, / 2 v 1 "u, ,, .- w, l, ._
players and coaches of the 28 National Foot- their efforts clearly aren’t appreCiated. ' G‘. ' l- . 3:—
ball League teams. Someone whose career could end on the next : I 1‘ l 5- . \ f
It’s a shame America’s autumn pastime play earns an average of $83,811, far below M“ . \ _ !_ d; “:7 ‘3'”
suspended operation for the first time in 63 that of maJor league baseball. basketball ' ‘ *~ ' 9-.- .M ' § .. .
- ' - l d h f ‘ < = - l to r : '— -
years. The players, in calling the strike a and hockey P ayers. All t ecareer 0 an aV' ” 0\ ,1 , ~ .-..
week ago, said they were overworked, un- erage interior lineman lasts just four years. \ Q ‘ // 53% I X '
derpaid and under-appreciated by the people The players and owners are not merely *\ x . . a m 7 . ‘ . \ ._
who put bread on the table via their toil — dollars apart in seeking their settlement. LO - ,a / ...-" e> CHI‘ 5 .—
. - ( ' f // . ‘l ‘ , v
the franchise owners. The owners seek to protect their wallets and . ( 7 l‘ , § , >r u
The issue behind the strike is the one be- the players want to be recognized for what -7 o .3" ’ “ m ‘ “‘v' 6‘ aqfsf, ‘\ / i
hind every strike — money, specifically, the they are — highly-talented actors whose t\ y,‘ K, a. V/. ,~‘\ no“) '3“
motherlode beln'nd the picture tube of every weekly efforts on the nation’s most masswe ' ' ' .. V " L». , ‘
American’s television set. stage bring millions of dollars to people un- k _ ._ I .. P4 1i ‘ "I ll l" / O! 1/ / J,“ p l f
According to Ray Grebey, the head of Willing to part with them. L ‘ 5 i,“ 45-“;th I . , m» :r / 7 l , «:-
baseball’s Major League Players Relations And caught in the middle, as always, are , i ’Q} 47'0” . .. ' 'v! '1’. Ullmlllllmll ,. 1“ 1.._
commute. ...... am... ...... «... ..- .... ...... woe ... 0...... andoayers ”.../4 \ .e , l\\\\\\\l\\\ll\l\\\l\l\\\\\\l\i new".- will ,,
tablish full ownership of their ‘picture, num- argue ideologies, the fans Sit on their hands / ‘\, ‘ ~ v ‘ \\\\\\\\\\\\\\ ll W,““m“l‘l~\.:é-3 / ‘ . . / i 1:
her and likeness’ and the legal right to re- and wait for their favorite sporttoreturn. All.» ;\\\\\\ \\ \W\\ . .\.\\\ifi\\t\\\iillll . a] "At/k ., I,
quest a fixed percentage every time they are American homes never looked so good. w h , , ,‘ \\ \ \\\\\\\\\\\\\l\\\l\ll iv/// MC] V ‘ fl/x ‘ j,
shownontelevision.” e 9 ,1: , , \ WWW i. M l l g ,, / g ‘ ////A\‘ Z)»
c . . “in i....nl|"\ l ' A, A ‘ fl .0}, ' if,
That fixed percentage — 50 percent of the A round of applause is merited for the M113; N n V\\\\\\\ it (“I ,l‘ H ”I , l {/04 /////J ‘4' 'u. of:
NFL’s payment from the lucrative $2.1 bil- Black Student Union and the steps it is tak- , \ \\\\\\ l .l ‘l ”it: ‘w[ l ’ ll {/1 (l / 'V/Agi l/(/.‘ v ' l
. . . . . . . , ”f“ V. ,\\\ i . ,ll’l ‘ // ll b /%/ / ,1 u/
lion-five year network teleViSion package, to mg to ensure the Vitality of UK 5 black com- A tyim - . l V ( l {ll/l /// w/J .
be doled out over the next four years — has munity. / '1 / 9 / i”! ll r, W W /A i l
the owners seeing red. They don’t want to By working to provide black students a WM¢¢/} 1 '/ Il‘ ///*,._,,zl{(l .1111 l, H. I ..
part with the gold they have mined over the better academic environment through study ., \- g a, R / , .41, ‘11 r , / 1H / / mi 11,], '
past 20 years from the players and Me groups and awards for scholarships, and by é Z , 4 a ’% . N // ( ' -
vision. They also want to hang on to the giving UK’s blacks somewhere they can turn “/9 , 1' / «'2 /,
o . - - . . . s / fig 1’ f > '1 1% ,l ' -
pickings they could reap from the yet unex to for campus leadership, the BSU is capital- ' ,///1 fl _ 53;. A III,” _ H830“ Ktkllfil. ,
plored cable television market. izing on the opportunity to improve the stan- .M ‘ / 1‘ AW/ <9. ' ‘
The owners have continued to maintain the dards of life for a group that has been ne- . g}
NFL is a business venture, subject to the glected fortoolong on the University scene.
' I ' M 'd ' I
Even wrth Shu tz, peace In the I east 18 not anyc oser
President Reagan’s new Middle waiting for Menachem Begin’s de- would not have emerged in quite the It also included Paul Wolfowitz, a ation,” which is a code word for an revisions sent out in California and _
East initiative illustrates some good feat and anticipating that the elec- same collegial. cooperative and con- non-careerist, nee-conservative for- independent state and for “flexibili- back by DACOM, a secure teleco-
things about the substance and for- tion of a Labor government would fidential way that it did under mer Pentagon official in the Carter ty”inapproaching the PLO. pier system.
mulation of foreign policy as the ad- permit Jimmy Carter‘s Camp David Shultz. administration and a strong support- - Most disputerseem to have been Begin’s rejection was expected ——
ministration approaches its halfway process to be dropped in favor of an The process began in mid-July, er of Israel; Eagleburger, a ca- resolvedoiaslsrael’s favor, although in some quarters welcomed — by
pointinoffice. alternative that President Reagan about the time Shultz was confirmed reerist close to both Kissinger and some outsiders charge that NEA the administration. Officials said
Raiald Reagan himself, despite could gain credit for. as secretary of state, when Beirut Haig, and Robert McFarlane, Haig's succeeded in making the adminis- they hoped his rage would convince
his inexperience with the nuances of *— was under Israeli shelling. former State Department counselor tration’s actual negotiating propo— the Arabs, especially Jordan’s King
Mideast policy, despite a heavy NEW Shultz was sworn in as secretary and now top assistant to White sals harder-line than US. policy as Hussein,toapprove Reagan's plan.
bombardment of new informaton of state July 16, and on July 17, a House national security adviser Wil- stated in President Reagan’s The administraton hoped that Hus-
from the Arab point of view, and de- Saturday, he spent a full day in liam Clark. speech. sein could convince the Arab sum-
spite repeated frustrations at the REPUBLIC meetings with MiddleEast advisers. Pro-Israelis consider it a good Shultz’s planning group met at miteers at Fez, Morocco to amend
hands of the qun govemment, has _____— First he met with a group of State Sign that Shultz included Wolfowitz Camp David with White House coun- their 1974 decision designating the
remained steady in his dedication to But it’s also true that even before Department officials, including Dep- in the planning group and also that selor Edwin Moose Aug. 14, and on PLO “sole" representative of the
Israel’ssecurity. Begin’s election victory, the admin- uty Secretary Walter Stoessel Jr. he consulted leading American Aug. 19, the same hectic day as Rea- Palestinian people to “principal“
Reagan’s new secretary of state. istration had to face a continuing se- and Under Secretary Lawrence Eag- Jews, including Michigan lndustri- gan’s tax-hike victory in Congress, representative, permitting Jordan to
George Shultz, despite his PI‘EVI'OUS ries of crisesinthe Middle East. leburge, Assistant Secretary Nicho- alist Max Fisher. Pro-Palestinians Shultz gave Reagan a major brief- playanegotiating role. ,
dale business connections with These crises included the Baghdad 185 VeliOtS and Camp David GUtOn- consider it progress that the secre- ing on the government’s agreed pro- Administration strategists hoped
Saudi Arabia. imp-asses both Arab- reactor bombing, Anwar Sadat’s as- omy expert Richard Fairbanks, and tary brought in NBA after its exclu- posal and got Reagan’s approval. to set up a competition among va-
ists and [Io-Israelis ill the adminis- sassination, the fight over AWACS, then with Kissinger and another sion by Haig. Reagan took off for his delayed pious Arab parties _ the PLO, Jor.
tration as a fair-minded analyst, a Israel’s annexation of the Golan groupofexperts. . In view of the president’s basis California vacation with the time dan and West Bank residents — to
prescient planner, a patient negotia- Heights — which left little time for Following the July 17 meetings, a stance, so-called “NEA hardliners" and manner of the plan’s unveiling outdo each other in showing flexibili-
tor and a respectful and persuasive pursinglong-term strategies. working group was set up that man- contributing to the working group‘s still undecided. ty toward Israel. .
counselortothepesident. It did not help the former Secre- aged to maintain extraordinary se- deliberations reportedly could try Although Moose and the presi- Meanwhile, with the Arabs offer-
Critics well may ask — and some tary of State Alexander Haig wanted crecy, especially given the bu- only to alter the emerging Reagan dent’s three other top aides - Jim ing olive branches, US. officials
have — why it took the administra- to make policy by himself along reaucratic and policy differences policy at the margins — to soften Baker, Michael Deaver and Clark —— hoped to create a moral and politi-
tion 20 mmths to decide 'how to ap— with only a few trusted aides, cut- represented by its members. U.S. opposition to the creation of an knew about the plan, the rest of the cal crisis in Israel that would either ,
[roach what everybody understands ting out much of the State Depart- The group included Veliotes and independent Palestinian state, and White House was kept in the dark force Menachem Begin to give up ‘
to be one of the world’s most diffi- ment bureaucracy. top deputies of his State Department to harden opposition to Israeli set- until a few days before Reagan de- his dreams of annexing the West
cult and dangerous iroblems. It’s a matter of dispute in the ad- Bureau for Near Eastern and South tlements in the West Bank and even- livered his speech Sept. 1. Bank or leadtohis defeat.
In retrospect, it appears that the ministration whether any Mideast Asian Affairs, which is generally re- tual Israeli sovereignty. The first draft, a short document It all amounted to a shrewd plan. '
administration did lose valuable initiative would have emerged if garded as the locus of Arabist senti- They argue for language prom- that contained the kernel of Rea- The only probelm is that both of the
time from January to June 1981 in Hiag had stayed. but it’s clear It mentinthe government. ising Palestinian “self-determin. gan’s plan, was prepared by State two sides to the Arab-Israeli dispute ,
Department officers Charles Hill reject it — Begin hotly and the ,
, I I I I l l I and Edward Walker. ' Arabs more politely but no loss deci-
ere s not in in t e tudent Center Addition .. ...... .. .. ...... ...... ......
Tuesday, Aug. 31, and was expand- Begin now makes it unambiguous-
ed, given historical content, and ly clear that he wants Israel to have
I was really disgusted to see the spent, but what really kills me is, The new bookstore looks like an center, complete with 23 listening “made presidential" by National Se- the WastBank forever. The Arabs
grand opening — complete with free now that we have it, there is nothing imitation of a Heck’s department stations — one for every 1,000 stu- cunty Councd aides Geoffrey Kemp are not Willing to declare, even con-
movies, popcorn and a ribbon cut- there. store or maybe an airport, complete dents—is ridiculous. and Howard Taicher until early ditionally. that they will accept Is-
ting ceremony, of all things — of the ——————-— with several revolving doors and Oh well, when you're tired of over- Wednesday momlng. rael’s fight toeiust. l
latat embarrassment to the Univer- .. _. two security guards. ( I don’t know if crowded classrooms, worried that The 011811181 plan was for Reagan .Under these Circumstances. even E
sity, the new Student Cents Addi- Andrew the guarik are still there because I your department will lose its accred- to deliver the address Thursday, but given Shultz’s negotiating ability
tim. . BALI. haven‘t been in the bookstore since itation before you get your degree, ABC News broke a story 0'} lt Tues- and Reagan’s communications .
I picked up a copy of the Kernel f v the first weekofschool. ) or just sick of school, you can go to day flight. and the Israeli sovern- skills, it is difficult to see that peace 1
last week, only to see a picture of f Whereas, at the old bookstore, it the new addition and listen to an ment began “33ka negative ac- inthe Mideast is any closer. '
our pl'sithnt, Dr. 0, standing in ' .... was very simple to find the book you album, see a movie, or just browse countsof its contentson Wednesday. © 1%, The New ReplibliC, Inc.
front of this monstrosity with a needed for a class, it takes forever through the new bookstore. On Wednesday the KemoTalcher
smug smile on his face and a pair of '1’. Lynn Williamson, acting dean at the new bookstore. There is no Whatajoke. text was worked _over further'by Morton Kondrache is executive ed-
sci-orspoisedaboveahuge ribbon. of students, got right to the heart of apparent order at all, with an inde- White Home ehlef speechwnter ltor 0f The New Republic. His 001- ,
Do I sound mu”. blttfl'. re— the matter laSt week 35 W8" as re- pendent Study section right next to Andrew Ball is a journalism junior Afram ,Baksma“ ahd commumea' umn is distributed by Field Newspa- .
sentful? I hope so; the question is, fleeting the whole attitude of the ad- the psychology section. There is, andaKemel columnist. thhS dim“)? DaV|d Gergen, Wlth Per Syndicate-
why? ministration. When asked what stu- however, to everyone’s delight, a ——-————_—_____—.__
nget the fact that there have dents were gaining by having this much bigger assortment of wildcat .
been millims of dollars in bucket addition, he replied, “A 4.3 million memorabilia. ‘
cuts over the past two years. And dollar building.” The new theater has an excellent ‘
forget the hirlm freeze and the What this building actually has is sound system and new projectors.
shortageof teachers. a new movie theater, a new For the first time, I saw a movie at
Never mind the computer science bookstore and a “music listening UK without being tortured by a __________________________
departnient is on the verge of col- center." jumpy picture, continuous stops for broken we w‘ll do btl do 0 1 that t f th . .
lapse and we don’t even have an ac- The only thingthe new bookstore “technical difficulties" and an un- BGiI'Ul’ massacre again. ' l u as s 5:12; of mgfmi'épfiffisré’; Jose’s;
ueditsdnilmiigengineeringschool. has going for it is that it is bigger discernible soundtrack. But the very Is there any way out of this end- extend to defending lsraeli policies
1” 9‘me 0W” there are a than the 0“ bookstore and we all same improvements could have Last week i stopped briefly at the less cycle of death? There is —- but that have become truly indefensible.
billion better ways the money for know” that bigger means better. been madcintheold theater. . Palestinian Student Organization’s only when both sides can rise above
thll Student Centu- could have been "Sht- I tlunk the WhOle Idea 0i 8 mime vigil [roasting the massacre of Pal- their natural desire for vengeance Jeremy D. Popkin
DRABBLE (it) b . estinian civilians in Beirut the week- and their all-to-human refusal to see History professor
Y Kevm F090" end before, because I, too, as a Jew, each other’s point of view.
am shocked and saddened by these in practical terms, Israel must .
mm momma mum names, INSTANT Mon mo um i CAN'T nouns deaths. abandon its hope of permanently Letters Policy
I we WMTHING menu? OATMEAL... INSTANT ORANGE JUlCE. om l6, tion) COME These killings were a direct out- holding all the occupied territories , mm . ,,.,, ,
FOR BREAKFAST. . I'M Athh‘l‘S LATE FOR growth of the Israeli invasion of and dictating terms to their over- ”1": '0: ‘ "" Jun." d°
.. e g 5CROOL7. Lebanon, and the futile policy of via. whelmingly Palatinian population. a '3' V "m, ' “J
,. g ' lence pursued by the Begin govem- And, the Palestinians must learn to "" ' ' m”: 2“”:‘1';
" > v. ' ‘ " ment -- a policy that violates a cen- live with thereality of Israel. MN’W '° " ”3'... '
/ f % tral tenet of Judaism, the pursuit of All those of good will must share "°' " "‘ "°""" "'" 004;. ‘
4,” l m“ g justice. the yief expressed by the Palatin- “K' “""flfl' “Y'wm’ hot
4 , 4." 5 / Over the years, I have been to ianstudentsherethisweek. ”"0" "W" “W“. ' '
~ fl '-' . i " many other visils. Today we mourn In this holiest week of the Jewish m, out-mm '0 owl-om. I
B “ a 6&5 ’%\E\ V/ Palestinian victims. Often, in the year, Jews have a special responsi- ““5." 'M m." "'4’"; :2;
\‘ Q ’k ‘- § 3 a, past, we have mourned for Israelis, bility to remember that we are our "“"°"' °' mm'm' " :4 '
s " ‘1‘- “ '- bc—A e 18“. K—J and if the cycle of violence is not brothers’ keepers. and to make it 'm'muflmwmhm '

 . THEKENTUCKYKERNEL, -Tueehy, SeptelnbeIZI, 1m - 3
.. U I I I
. . Campus Crime Cafeterias receive new serwces
~ Sept. 17 — A bicycle valued at $260 was stolen from a car parked at the Commonwealth Stadi- _ n _ , 9 _
from a Medical Center bike rack. A purse and um red lot. Also stolen from another car in the By VICKIE BOWLING well Tm the students, Rieman chasmg food_suppli§ and allotmg
. ' . h h Reporter said. though some still prefer to for other semces, Rieman hopes the
. contents valued at $228 were stolen from a car at were eig tcassette tapes wort $38. eat regular cafeta'ia meals. and servicewillbreakeven.
. parked near the Agricultural Science Center- Students reported the theft of wallets and thosearestillofferedtothem.” There are about 210 full-time em-
South. contents valued at $47. $26 and $20 in separate ___.._____