xt79cn6z0920 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79cn6z0920/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-03-27 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, March 27, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 27, 1981 1981 1981-03-27 2020 true xt79cn6z0920 section xt79cn6z0920 .‘ r ,
KEN I UCKY
K2] 2] ”‘4' I . I. 'l I '
Vol. LXXXIII. No. 128 University of Kentucky ' .
Friday, March 27i I981 Lexingtoni Kentucky . - > . .
SA candidates present platforms at forum ' ‘
. . . . Fivw My; ' I VI. '. ,t' r "
executive candidates su nut news to Kernel w.
. 1‘ 3-“ " ~ A ‘ . l ,.
Eta": . ‘5? '. ,' i-f’. if
By PEGGYBOECK .3 . _ . . _ . . .. , ~ . .- , i .-
Senior Staff Writer forum. J0hh hillam, (:lha l“UCCI. for new faces andnew ideas in SA ln Ayse Tamkoc is also running for A K V , .. '1 .‘ . _V .‘
Scott Hisle and Lynn Spoonamore order to get the "common man“ in- & S representative. Tamkoc said she . -.; _ 19 . " t - .
are running on a single ticket. Their volved at UK. is a foreign language major and in- . . .,_:»\;‘>.é { - 1" ,f
Candidates for the 1931432 Student platform advocates strong lobbying Randy Roek and David Bradford tends to give foreign students an * " ‘
Association positions were given the in Frankfort 35 repi‘es‘ehtative of the said they believe better communica- awareness of what is going on and an . .V. l’ : {V
opportunity to express their plat» student body concerning tillhoh Ih- tion is needed between SA and the Opportunity to express themselves
. forms to students last night in the creases and budget cuts. The group students. Running together on a through SA, . 1,9.
Student Center. H0wever, less than also advocates strong, dedicated ticket, Rock and Bradford said they The College of Communication has ‘.-;"."__‘
ten students and only not the 24 can- leadership. would budget SA money better, ex- only one candidate —— Jim Dinkle. :I .1 i"; ",-
djdatfi attended the forum. Kent Grubbs spoke for his ticket tend dormitory visitatiOn hours and Dinkle said he adv0cates improved .‘ ', -
“One problem is no one shows up WhiCh also included Mike Scott, activate student awareness concern- bus service, a college for telecom- "2'”? f
(q- the forums but the candidates Alesia Cornettand Rayvon Reynolds. ing campus activity. munications, and lobbying to restore t.
selves," Brad sturgeon, SA Grubbs stressed that all few can- ~W~-——~\—*~——i~——— financial input fOrhighereducatiOn. . 5,?- f’
fiesident said in his opening speech. didates 0" hiS ticket have had pi‘iOF Candidates for college represen- Malvaria Smith was the only one ._ 5%., ;' .. .
“Students need to be aware of what’s experience in SA. tative also expressed their views last out of three candidates that spoke as . _ 1711;“ l," :3
going on.” Bill Cox, running individually. said night. a candidate for the College of '-.VV\ ._
The forum was set up as follows: he would like to bring the campus . Joe (Yable spoke as a candidate for Engineering. Smith said she would . 5
Candidates were given two minutes together and make the students more the College of Architecture. Cable lobby to keep the College of :3" f." .
each to speak. Candidates running aware of what iS going. said because architecture is such a Engmeenng, try to get several days V Vt“ -: - a"
for senator-at-large were allowed to Debbie Earley. Denise Damr0n. generalized field. he felt he could off before ‘flnals week to study in- . -1_ 11-. .‘
speak first followed by candidates for Tim Adams and Sali McSherry also represent his college as well as all stead of asmgle day off and try to get .. g .-'.'.
college represenetatives, candidates chose to run together ona ticket. This students with ability. beerlnthe studentcenter. 1V . _. ,3 4.12.1». ..’.,' Li. .
for prefiideht and finally candjdates group stressed the need to listen to For the College of Arts and The College of Fine Arts has only .. - . 1 .
for vice president. Candidates runn- student needs and opinions, as well Sciences. Dean Garritson, ROdney one candidate ,— Nadlne Wright. .. » '. :1. .
ing together on a ticket were allowed as the importance 0f creating an el‘ Flynn, Condon McGlothen and Mary Wright said she is concerned about _ z {z . 1
to speak together. fective lobbying group for the Beth Speaks spoke together. These the effect of the budget cuts onVall c01- _. 35'.
Fourteen of the 24 candidates runn- students in Frankfort. candidates stressed their prior SA leges and the quality of education. » ., . 5‘1 ‘ ;. . .‘
ing for senator-at-large attended the Hugh Findlay said he sees the need experience. Continued from page 1 . ‘ : .2, :13 ~.' T- ‘_
~ ‘ was?
St d A ' t' t k t d 'n uita ainst GTE' .
u ent ssocza 1011 a 655 an I S g , .
testimon iven to comb t38 ’ t ' ' t ’ ~~
y g , a percen ra 6 Increase . g :i
'2 7 | ' in." . ,I ‘ f
By ”SA WALLACE hearing. His statements clarified for average of operatin revenue u .111:
ASSlstant Entertainment Editor the commission UK's telephone ser- generated per employeeg; and two. gauge: ' scllhtfloplpeggliiatmt: e e231: I ' ~
The Student As . . vice structure under GTE. Conduc- that GTE maintained levels on par burden on to th .- (.1, '- .

. soc1atlon went to - - . . . 9 consumer. ark . - .
bat yesterday as testimony sum- ting the cross examination for GTE With national averages of employees said. I 1 I .
maries from the plaintiffs in a suit was attorney Wayne Goodrum. per 10'000 phones m operation from "We re resent 25 000 ~ . ' ~ '
against General Tele hone of Ken- On Tuesday, GTE presented its 1970to 1974. ‘btudemg d . UKcomume“ .19"
tucky's proposed 38 prcent rate i arguments before the PSC. Prior to Clark‘s evidence showed that over re resents th 8]" 3’ V P‘rOPer .~ ’. ,
crease were heard bepfilre the Pub]? the summary hearings, the two par- the past 10 years national averages suiher We { (I? thaigebit 9T!“ C9” .' -... ’ 5’
Service Commission held i': ties, GTE and the co-plaintifs -~ the have steadily declined while GTE that wé recei: ff? ” 2"?pfira'twe . 5"." ,.
Frankfort ' SA and UK as a whole. the office of has shown a significant increase in servic t fa?” an reasonable 5, ., V.

' the attorney general, Kentucky the number of employees per 10,000 . f a a a” and reasonable ‘ - x' ,-
Comptroller 13°th Clark Department of Finance, 'I‘ri~County phones which resulted in “a drasic price, he concluded. i
represented SA at the hearing as a Utility Association and ITS, Inc., a declinein productivity." The terms of the suit. filed on Feb. '. an. ,‘l_.V,
witness, contesting an executive competitive company — submitted Clark said that if a utility must 10in Franklin Circuit Court,say that. i ,1
order to combine two state detailed evidence for their cases. make great expenditures in order to GOV. John Y. Brown‘s executive r,
regulatory commissions and arguing Clark argued at the hearing that improve efficiency, the fairest order creating a new Public Service ~: '1.) .‘
that due to mismanagement and low GTE has not met two productivity method of financing Such a project Commission was a USUFPtiOH 0f Q» . ' '.
Pl'OdUCiiVity. GTE should not be standards in its service and manage- would be to split the costs between power. The SA contends that utility 7 7, . . .
granted the rate increase it is asking n‘ient measures as outlines by Stan- the consumers and the utility‘s in- rate-making is solely a legislative ‘5‘ w... .,.. .1 1 ' ' ‘5 "
fOI‘. dard and Poor‘s Industry Surveys vestors. process and that the constitutional a I ll». I: ’12," "
Jack Blanton. vice president of He maintained that one, GTE rates GTE's proposal does not include separation of power was violated ~ 4. ~55. 33 k ‘
business affairs, also testified in the are significantly below the national any plan for investers to share the through this 8Cti0n. i ”a. '4 ~Vj
"was -’ est-21...: ‘ we “ 4 +5, _ J 1:: '. .. , ’ ” “m" ‘ =‘ 3'. » ' 'i: I' ’-V
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2:7: 9,\11 -’ ' g. .’ . . . . » , .. -. . "V k _, t ‘ ’1 ‘ , ‘ ,‘ a .. 3.“; i . .
. . .3 ; ..‘ “$0 .- ‘Mi‘. , .fi’t 2"..1 __V ‘, k? “I .. ‘ V ~ ,-. {at .. r0 urne é ~.i}“g -_. if 1 )2 r: .U’i"
3 - . , ’ "“1 1-: -' t a. . . e a. - ' 1 6 'u' , 1: » , -.».: ’:.-
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... ,, _ «a -. . ~. « . , , “,5... .. . from Enquirer .1. , 5.;
'l l "a ' i - ‘3, ‘i r i .. . z: ‘5. 'I . i i i' “tit. -"-
‘ ..‘_ J ‘- ' '1 I It‘s-‘8 '7 \ . '» i -. ‘, .
‘ - ' ,' . ‘ ' / ' * ' “'1 By LINDA DEL‘TSCH « § -. . .. 3;; . '1' 'r .
V x z "i , sw « it ° 3, Associated Press Writer . ‘ if ' '1'
~ " .. ~ , ‘ . . LOS ANGELES—Comedian Carol 1»: é
__ - g; ' .» i Q ' Burnett wona$1.6 million libel judg- glifi-f‘ff
.. .. J; ~ " »_ . t . g? . . , 3 ' ment against the National Enquirer ii’ii‘i'i‘f"
I . . t ~ ' £ : . ‘ sen ' ’ 9* . yesterday fora 1976 gossip item that i. -_". tic"
«to ’9 ‘ ~ V, a V_ "it“ P . ‘ said She had a boisterous run-in with , {in} a“
. __ .1 . 1W , if; v, “k‘ ‘1.» . Henry Kissinger in a Washington 3.1g. hi-
By DAVID COYLE/Kernel Staff flitgilohirytosglfaiil: She mum give .’ .5: j.‘
“I feel like I‘ve been pregnant for 7'73““- . ,. wars-231,5, " “‘ m-..“ ‘“
five years, and the baby is ~ ', git.
beautiful,"Miss Burnettexulted ata WW‘ ““ ' -. 1")
news conference moments after the “is???“ .,;'§+ .‘C'. 1. .
Superior Court jury‘s verdict brought 1;, - fr; .1,” _ ~ . A"; ', '1
tears to her eyes in a packed cour» E: " "° M" ‘ "i3 ‘ »~ ;,'
q 1 h 1 A 11 (1 Ed troom w ..
CO 0 wareness pa y 66m 3 SUCWSS “If they had given me a dollar plus i i ' " V. .- i
carfare i would have been happy.“ ' _. a.
she said. “It was the principle.“ ‘ H m -V‘,' '. ,
By CINDY DECKER . Although beer was only suppos- for two hours in a demonstration to William Masterson, an attorney for 3 : 5 - ' f.
5‘8” Writer ed to be served In 10 024 CUPS. some show how it affected him on the air. the tabloid published in Lantana, iii-‘4: ' ,- .
people were being served beer in IS Kruger said he was surprised that Fla, vowed to appeal and said he i ' . 5.: ‘. 3' ‘ .‘
The all-campus party, WhiCh was 01- and larger CUPS- Many students he started “feeling good" so quick- would move fora new trial as well. :5" , _ 1‘3 i 7 £3 " -V- ' a,
held y?;e;?a¥18:t:rnmn in thneck- brought their 0W" beer. ly. “This verdict is an affront to the 73%.“ V ’7 7 K .. t
i0" “’i CO 0 warehe‘s 9‘3 . “This is more low-keyed than a .. - . First Amendment to the Constitution I; g 2‘
”W35 definitely a 500C955." accor- (regular) beer blast." said Danny Peogigéaqfiie 3211:3233 2:3; and it cannot stand,"said Masterson. ._ g I i -~ . , ' _.
ding t0 sponsors 0f the Part.“ Gunther, a bio-medical engineering 3:: pfiavle cokesyand have an at— “This is almost the equivalent of , fig... ._ i ' . »
’I‘heparty.sp0nsored by Boosting senior, “Also, they usually don‘t mosbhere which, is conducive to capital punishment against a cor- if, $.31: -.V_ - a ' .- g .
Alcohol Consciousness Concermng serve cokes and {00d — It s a great People who want to drink there“ poratlon. .. ”:3. ~ ;..S: I“... :5 I t * ' .
the Health of University Students idea having the food.“He added, “it said Michael Scott vice president The trial had been closely watched “ '~;‘.~fi,; 4:55;; ‘ fi;£“"~i 2 ; ' i‘.
and held at Sigma Alpha Epsilon seems kind of ironic.thou8h." of B ACCHUS. ' in the Hollywood community where tiff: ’ 2;? 3153:. - -E ‘ ~. .. 2 .
fraternity house, attracted approx- “1 think this is a good idea. .1 .. l h ho ha many celebrities have filed or talked . serif; 3%, _ .3 .. .' V..
imatley 2,000 people. usually get drunk at things like this There are peop 9 cm w ve of filing similar suits against the fin :j. “g; ~ ~. _.._ .: . . ' . .
but I‘m not today," said a girl who defimtely abused ihthS- We ex~ quirer. __ _.: . ’ n
“We want people to have a good asked not tobe identified pected some of that. But there are ._________ ".1“:- 1 . ~ ~ ,‘ .
time because of the people here — Randy Smallwood. a business ad- also people who are reading the inS‘de _. , . ‘ . _
not the alcohol," said Rayvon ministration junior, thought that literature and leamlng. Scott said. -»—~————:—r#-~— ~-~—V— l—vv- ~~~ . . g _V
Reynolds, BACCHUS public rela- the idea of an alcohol awareness “If we can help just a few peo- ‘Sports Editor John‘Uay picks [n V ' ‘ ‘ .
- ' .. . . dam to Win the NLAA basketball n) J. ). .»\. MOOSE/Kernel Staff ~
tions chairman. week was good. but to have a par- ple learn more about this and If we h ‘onshi next Mon da night t
About 1,000 bumper stickers t)’ like this seems kind 0‘ melSS help jmt one guy learn his 2922:), origage 4 y ’ ' . . -
saying, “Giveadamn —-don‘t drive People tend to bring their own beer (tolerance) level so he daesn‘t get ‘ ‘ Washln hlS wa u . VV .’ x ,
drunk,“ 700 pamphlets telling of to a beer blast and It promotes arrested for DUI (driving underthe t - c g y p _
little-known facts about alcohol, drunkenness.“ D Kr ' influence). then it‘s gone over suc- _MQ.-W__”W. ___. V ‘ . .
and 800 gauges that a person could WKQQ Deejay 8V8 ” iser' cessful."Scott emphasized. Toda will seem like spring as the . . . . , . n , h . ('cntral Medical ., .
m to determine his alcohol KnBenklats could be heard from “1“”th mph and their reac- high Simuld reach the mid 6m. gJfiien’llmg: ¥trlgrnligiu$firtlignrTrni‘t‘iraishrlts part-time as a
tolerance level weredistributed. the speakers setting on to? of the dons that," decide if we do Temperatures Will 8° into the 7th maintainancc man atthc Vicholamille- Road facililt, ‘ ‘
Beer. coke. pizza and ham- SAE house. Kruser was drlnlul'isa something like this again." Saturday,butthundel8l0rms are ex- ‘ ‘
mmdonatedtouiegrty. shot of whiskey every 20 minutes Reynolds said. nected todeveloplatein the day.
. 0 ~—:—" -' a . I » . .

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' UK lib t 9 hf 'lif NEWS ITEM: GenTeL Piesioent 9am Problems
. . ,
_. _ rary sys em S researc am 188 are Being CorteCtep.
could be badly crippled by budget cuts
.‘ . rm Here i
t ~ ’ Dear President Singletary: university is that its sons and daughters will compete to Fix _ .
i. . _ ‘ It is deeply disturbing to see cuts in the University of successfully with those from other parts of the land for 1’ J S
. g . i‘ ‘ Kentucky's already marginal library acquisitions good through learning. If the research libraries are Y9“? WOW. 7:7" ‘ .
- _ y _‘ 3 budget. I would like to speak to the central importance allowed to deteriorate, the University will evolve A hl ;\ 41 ”A
. -' ' -‘-: of libraries in the functioning of the University and in rapidly into a pedestrian teaching institution like hun~ a .,- v ’t f ”(73%
- p . . the fulfilling of its role. dreds of nameless public and private colleges around ,3. i h , 1% ,1 ., .’ i ' W7.
. ‘ . The libraries are an essential resource for research the country. It will fail to attract, indeed it will lose, ‘ 2A 11,, g, , i a?” "’M '
' -» . . " .' and for maintaining contact with the frontiers of leam- fine scholars and teachers who could otherwise foster ' j; M; ‘ .- .3 V], 9%? a
. v ‘ , ing Without continuing acquisitions of scholarly Kentucky's other unrealized “ace-in-the-hole,“ its //////f ,; I l 3% ,a’" "
'_, g _' ' i a ‘ periodicals. new monographs, research summaries, receptive but underchallenged and understimulated y2/ ‘/ ‘-. ya,” 0 ® V”
. _‘ : reViews and proceedings,UK will increase its isolation pool of fertile minds. H”; i , //”¢ ‘ 33/1, , \
g‘ . from the mainstream of higher education already be- This is a plea that you use your authority to insure %a; 4/ (7/, " gig {ff/5 ' / x
. ,. : . ing brought about by salary discrepancies and inade- that the University’s library acquisitions are protected ,/ MM, om; ,rg . ' _, 7
- ; - quate public support for education in the Com~ from budget cuts;and that youredouble yourefforts to ’/, f? i“ ' f'.;é.-’-,,2*“" “if? ’ i '1 \#
' . monwealth. Because the libraries are a permanment communicate to Governor Brown that cuts to the 4 ' “p3? "‘ }/‘ i‘ ,.r,. i ‘
' resource whose current acquisitions must be relied University of Kentucky's budget are a severe blow to 3/ ”3;, " / fl; ., , '.
, ’. upon in future decades, discontinuance of Kentucky‘s future vitality. Educated people are the "7"“ QWJAW’W’ : "e . ,1 a
. subscriptions and missed opportunities to obtain new greatest natural resource for our common wealth, and i _ \ 1%/‘ ' l.’ -
i , scholarly books is a wound to the University that will higher education is a long—term investment of profound , //;/ \ -” 2:
i never heal With incomplete and outofdate library costeffectiveness. Kentucky simply cannot afford to i ii / y l K/ /// N
materials. researchers cannot keep the pace set na- fail. \ _ j/yytflr . . , 3
‘ . . a v ‘ ' ‘ ' ’7"///. «I; ’./// 7/ »
.‘ tionWide for federal research dollars. We Will fail in , , ,v/ W4 , g 3,}; . ., u
" our statutory duty to benefit the people of Kentucky Sincerely. -. ‘I l 7/ ”‘ “ WW ' / ‘5:
i . ‘ . through research. /' ' 5 ’ i «i; . ‘ .fi I
, _ g The quality of instruction we give depends on the in- Kai/5W .fl @, /‘ / .. .“ ..¢_§ , Al) Q) \\
' _. tellectual vitality of the faculty, maintained through . / i ’« -’ " — 4 ‘
. ‘ productivity in scholarly and artistic activities. The Keith B. MacAdam ,‘_ A. _i,
' potential benefit to Kentucky from a first-class state Assistant Professor of Physics
’ O O O O O
» Umted States rejecting immigrants om war-t orn E S vador
. 3 W ASIIING'I‘ON _. In tiny El stay. the United States might be “Once caught, they‘re told they can accept a hearing or waive Humanitarianism has gone out with
' Salvador. thousands of its natives are glen signaling a lack of confidence in the everything can be taken care of very their rights," said Verne Jervis, thetide.
'; fleeing their bloodied homeland for coalition government of President quickly," contends Maggio, “if they public information officer for the If the United States continues to
i, - '1 more peaceful. neighboring Hon- & Jose Napoleon Duarte. Moreover, agree to leave. The few who don‘t are agency. . .The State Department pursue its policies tt ward El
; duras. any such move would be an placed in minimum security camps has not advisedus to defer the depar- Salvador, it should immediately stop
i; The more daring among them are Shearer acknowledgement that the Duarte where they are required to post ture of any Salvadorans." departing terrified Salvadorans. We
’ ; scraping together as much as $1.200 ‘ government can't protect its people. bonds of up to $6,000 if they want to But the Salvadorans keep coming. don'thave to open up the borders, but
' each for bribes necessary to reach . 1/ Most of the Salvadorans entering leave. For those who don‘t file for Arecord 1,200 of them were caught in there‘s no point in returning those '
-. the United States. But it's at the US: , {I/ the United States are nabbed at the political asylum or refuse to wait February. Last year, of 12,240 ap- who are already here.
* ' . Mexican border where their luck 4 ’ border and returned home voluntari- months for their cases to be process- prehended in the United States, The plight of Salvadoran im-
' = runs out. ly. They have little choice, said ed, the answer is to return home." almost 2,400 were deported. Of the migrants received much publicity
- Incredible as it may seem. the migrants from Cambodia, Vietnam Michael Maggio. a local attorney While anxious for political asylum, rest,amajorityleftontheir own. last summer when 13 of them died of
' i United States of America. a nation of and Laos. Today, Ethopians in this here who handles immigration cases many immigrants are unable to ar- Clearly. the treatment of the dehydration in the Arizona desert.
,. immigrants, isn‘t putting out the country qualify forsuchprotection. for Salvadorans. ticulate why they fear persecution at Salvadoran immigrants doesn’t . But since then they have taken a
. - -. welcome mat for these helpless If the Reagan adnimistration “You‘ve got to picture the scene at home. They also don’t like to divulge begin to compare with that afforded back seat to Washington's
:‘f Salvadorans. While the Reagan ad- wanted to. it could give these the border." declared Maggio, who their polic‘iial associations to the INS, the Cubans. When the boats full of geopolitical concerns.
. " ministration is willing to provide El Salvadorans "extended voluntary recently returned from the fearing that the information will end Cubans arrived in Key West a year Too many of us stand quiet while
. 4 Salvador with instant military ad- departure“ protection, permitting Southwest. “These tired immigrants up inthewrong hands in El Salvador. ago, bilingual immigration officers Uncle Sam returns innocent
. ' visers and economic aid, it refuses to them to remain here until the are descended upon by border patrol The immigration service, perhaps were waiting, armed with the Salvadorans to their strife-ridden
- _' offer these immigrants a simple violence in their homeland has agents in helicopters carrying power- the most overworked and under- documents needed to file for political country. Is that the American way?
-. peace. diminished. ful weapons. The Salvadorans im- financed federal agency, contends asylum. The Cubans even had help
' ' . Historically. the United States has Yet. the State Department won‘t mediately associate our border that all illegal immigrants are filling out the forms.
allowed illegal immigrants from allow the Immigration and patrol with their own military. Many treated fairly and instructed of their The conduct of US. immigration Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
, ii i .' war-torn countries to remain here. Naturalization Service to pursue think they're going tobeshot and kill— rights. policy toward the Salvadorans is are “gummy syndicated colum-
- ~ . ' During the Indochina conflict. we of— such policy for political reasons. ed. Quickly they find themselves in a “They’re arrested, advised of their deeply tied to the new “get tough" nists. Their column appears every
‘ '. ' ‘ fend protection to illegal im— By allowing the Salvadorans to coercive, fearful environment. rights to free legal counsel and told us. foreign policy. Friday.
. ,1” . All contributions should be delivered to Ill Journalism Building, University of Kentucky, Lex-
. - ‘ i; _ lngton. Ky., 40506. The Kernel reserves the right to edit for grammar and clarity and to
. ~ ‘ I e 11 e rs to t he 2 d I tor - eliminate llhelou material, and may condenseorreject contributions.
. 5‘, 'i ' first and foremost, this: it is the tragedy of a man who “stimulants" and “sleep aids“ mimic a number of il-
' i Plastic man sad tendency cannot make up his mind." legal and potentially very dangerous drugs. In addi-
i' _ . _, Equally absurd is Barker’s wiser-and-holier-than— tion, the minimum quantity available appears to be i
, 1" "5pm” I“ I Beware 0' P 135‘” People, I “mud Dana Pico‘s column 0f March 25 reveals a sad thou attitude and his didactic tone throughout the rest 1,000 capsules or tablets, many more than most of us
2 ,i “he to say that, my 1”“ ImpreSSIOI‘l ‘5 thal the author tendency 0U"? bUSlne§S mind, namely. a blindness [0 of his opinion. So eager to save us from the grips of need to pull an occasional all-nighter. One can only
~',‘: “i Inn‘s?” “021d dppef" l0 he, 0" the borderl'm on 'f "0‘ mleldual dignity and Intergl‘ltl MR Pico ‘5 3W5! at Satan, Barker would first cite Christ's words and then, assume that Akers is aiming this advertising at a V
.-, I‘ r. . eamng lOVVde- PlablIClly himself. . the number of people who applied for, then lost interest as if afraid Christ couldn't do His job, he would step in customer who intends to resell the material (at a pro-
' ' ,.‘. ()ne "1““ m“ contemplate m9 problem 3‘ hand m in, telephone soliciting. (COUId it have anything lo do and translate Christ‘s simple langauge intoa complex fit) as something it is Mt. Many 0f the 03951119 and
..,‘, order to find the solution. and 11-15 up to the indiVidual with what they were asked to solicit, a topic Mr. Pico one for us illiterates. Thus, after quoting Christ, tablet options could be misrepresented as much more
. , ~i persons to find. their own unique solutions to the remained silent about?) As anyone who has been set Barker would bless us with his exegisis: “This means powerful, expensive, and illegaldrugs.
1 . ~: . o ( pressures of society that force them [0 hlde thelr true upon by a telephone Solicitor can attest‘ the anonymity. that GOdS'S Wl“ coma before any self-centered rights we live in a society ln WhiCh tw many mople have
.-, selves for fear of reprlsal from tlus socmty that looks Impersonality, and above all, the sheer gall of such . . become dependent on both legal and illegal chemical
. 2'3, upon any deViation from the set norms as an attack people is extraordinarilty annoying. Evangelistic zeal Not only would Barker improve Christ’s words, but means of coping with their lives, often with disasterous
1.9.1.“. , upon ”5 PXISlam‘e- . . _ _ on behalf of religion is hard enough to take, but the pl'O- he would clarify our secular terms {or us. In his die- results. Substance abuse and its psychological COH‘
*1 3,“. f0:‘he 5;)lulliQIl (tio'tlhifs probletzm 1:10:18 which‘islhglqm grammed zeal exhibited by phone solicitors op behalf tionary, “abortion" has this simplistic definition: the sequences has become one of our most critical health
o. ear “Ill(ll\'l ua acmg i . an o sugges , onle of their products and causes leads one to ask, ‘ Why all murdering of “unwanted innocent children!" (Notice problems.
. 99'3”“ tel“ find and enforce ‘3 rer-"fe rend for a l the fuss? the exclamation mark, his favorite punctuation sym- The Kernel, however, is not only adding to a Climate
5.. ‘i .11: people 15 lle’ll a SUggCSllOl'l 0i plasticny 0f.) the part Of Mr PlCO must realize that no one need remain bol, Which he sprinkled 3" Over his three-column opi- in Which me normal events of lIVlng cannot be carried
v f‘ '~ that Ixjrfifm» ”1 that he or Sh? 100k§ upon himself 35 an unemployed as long as the .mafia hires hit men and co- nion to awake us from our sinful, lethargic lives.) out without chemical help, but it is also participating in
‘l’ Milk") 0" “0“ each mle'dual m the moiety Should came smugglers have a clientele; but not everyone is But I am most appalled by Barker‘s false reasoning. fraud and the exploitation of the University community
i’. ‘ hem“ Wlllmg ‘0 accept SUCh employment. 1 “88°51 that, Arguing for Bible distribution and prayer in the public by Akers and their potential customers.
3' The“ “re many 99°91" Who place a far greater ém- While perhaps “9‘ morally questionable, telephone schools. be cited two reasons: 1) “Christ did not preach lam disgusted by the Akers advertisement and what
'. n, phas's 0” respons'h‘m‘“ that are ‘9 them far more ‘m’ 5315 of “imitation are objectionable, even outright the gospel to the whole world but stay away from the it implies. I urge you to reject further advertising of
2 .i ‘, 4, Doria” ”‘3” ”“59 "Wm?" by 500913; "“9“ they "9 demeemns, to anyone who places money after intesri- high schools . . Christ did not say, Thou shalt com- this type. I cannot believe that the Kernel is so hard-up
. .i .; ”d'cuk" and ““Cmf‘d "f bemg prewm‘m‘s- “‘59 990' W ”l hls films and aSkS other qu5tl°"§°f his work than mit logical fallicies. either; 2) “. . . the enrollment in for advertising that it must accept such blatantly ex-
. :. . pgi‘zirlinnolt hogssiilllln karma :1 £3330:ng Lilo: ari: “will it yielda return?‘ The mafia fat man probably Christian schools is increasing while that of public ploitive offers asthls one.
.‘i , .; f 103;“ thl p 1-: , . . g takes pride in his work.' but even an enthuSiastlc schools is dropping!" Maybe President Singletary
,gil “8 Hr 0“" “in busmessman like Dana Pico is unlikely to embrace should consider adopting prayer sessions in UK Kathleen M.DeWalt
‘. . . g him as a PFaCUUOneI' 0‘ the American work “No classrooms so as to boost UK's enrollment. Assistant Professor of Behavioral Science
.1 i ii "I inflow?ltlnctSIIonct w o F . . . Since Barker advised us to read tha Bible and see
I , . .rd ua es u en .. l . ,ngineering (Pl‘kel'tl‘oode‘l t t d t what God‘s will is, I opened my Bible and I read,
mills gra "81’s" 1‘" "Ju enot,that ebenot'u ed.“ '
i i Reforming Lake Maxwell d8 y i as People kl“
14-: " Judge not GilbertD.Chen
5’: , They‘re reforming it. Little does anyone know, but Part-time English instructor.
. _ right below your very nosesit‘s going on Every day we I smiled, chuckled, and almost laughed out loud D0 0 t d I'm writing this letter in Home to the article,
‘- .' are getting closer and closer to the final goal — the when I read Lou Barker‘s opinion, a lesson is morality lsappom e “Handguns Must Be Made mega] To Be Controlled,"
if j reformation of lake Maxwell. (March 25.) I haven't read heard a more ridiculous printed March 12_
{1.1 ' \ A lot 0t Peoplt‘ think the StUdent Center is being ex. {able than Barker‘s since I first read Aemp‘s fables lam writing to register my profound disappointment Mr. Findley apparently doesn't understand the pro-
'» i j 7 ii Palld‘fliwmngf long ago. solsmiledthe moment I recognized Barker‘s in the Kernel and the staff respomible for accepting blem. Guns do not kill people, people do. A gun is a
5 i i i . GOb)’ thereand 509 version of the big, bad wolf. I chuckled as I read the advertisement from Alters Pharmaceutical Com- tool; medicine is also a tool. They both have different
, .', .’ l First. the retaining Wall was removed. then the lake Barker‘s pretentious language in his fable: “ . . . be pany. I believe that this decision places the Kernel in purposes and yet both have not only taken lives but ‘
, ; x . bed was redug. and now the bridge is being can catered to their worldly desires. His boldness was also the position of participating in the pishing of drugs to have also saved lives. The tool is not to blame. it's how I
" r. .1 N structed. which Will link up with the Student Center taken into recognition.“ Aesop never used such pom- membersof theUniversity community. peopleuseit. ‘
' , ,- ,' ,: Island. The facilities on “The Rock" will be ideal for pous language for fables. Then I almost laughed to I am fully aware that the chemicals of which these The real solution to the problem is tobe found in the
'4 ; ' . .‘ the internment of parking violators. Besides that. tears when Barker's fable ended with comic relief: “stimulants" and “sleep aids" arecomposedof legal, judicial system_ The pluushment should fit the crime.
' , ' " - many lives Will he saved by the elimination of the “Angered over his defeat, the evil master datroyed relatively mild, over-the-counter medications. Perhap the five to 15 years extra prison time, as in
r. , .’ sidewalk that can‘t decide if it's a sidewalk or steps. the wolf.“ Although they are legal they might cause harm topeo California, is not enough. I‘m sure that it does make
. ' . But by far the best use for the lake will be as a sanc- To keep his theatre of the absurd going, Barker pie with special medical problems as Carol Beck, a them think twice.
’ .i . i . tuary for the oppressed “baked haddock." smugly pointed out the moral of his fable. Now, I can‘t fourth-year pharmacy student, pointed outlio cogently Handgun can and are mug in home gm. They
. . ' We must all show our support for the lake before recall Aesop ever tagging a moral to his fable; 1 in an earlier letter totheeditor. Shewas responding to may not be very efficient or reliable hilt they can still
. ' . ’ John Y. changes his mind and decides to build a park- remember Asap always leaving the moral to his au- a similar advertiaemtnt from Rock Creek Phar- kill.
ing lot, or worse, a fine arts building. dience's imagination. If I watch Hamlet performed on maceutical Co. which I noticed has not appeared A; for limiting handguns illegalgo“ tocontrol them.