xt7cz892bz21 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7cz892bz21/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-10-06 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 06, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 06, 1982 1982 1982-10-06 2020 true xt7cz892bz21 section xt7cz892bz21 w
,_.___—_____
l r1
KENTUCKY ~ (*7
it“ . »
"7".fi'y‘r’ ‘ Hungry?
,/ ' Mr :; ‘ if you really want to eat, but you
,‘ 5.... know you shouldn‘t. perhaps the UK
., g; center for Rational Behavior Training
’. ' can help you learn to leave your fat
.1 . é behind, See pogelA.
Vol. LXXXV, No. 41 Wednesday, October 6, I982 An Independent student HOWIPOPOr University of Kentucky. Lexington, Kentucky
(AP) Extra-Strength Tylenol capsules tainted with ny had stopped producing capsules on Friday. the tainted bottles “cause for concern. not for panic." He heads a task force of more than 100 investigators
strychnine in Oroville, Calif, sent a 27-year-old man The California man, who has recovered, purchased The strychnine victim in Oroville, about 150 miles from federal, county and state agencies that is working
into convulsions last week, authorities said Tuesday. In the bottle at a Longs Drug Store in Oroville sometime northeast of San Francisco, suffered convulsions and on dozens of leads and checking personnel records of
Chicago, investigators narrowed to “eight or mne" the before last Wednesday, when the poisonings occurred in became ill Thursday after taking the Tylenol capsules. people known to have access to Tylenol during shipping
number of suspects in seven cyanide deaths there and the Chicago area, according to a spokesman for John- He was treated by a physician and returned to work and distribution.
said the two incidents probably were not connected. son &Johnson, which owns McNeil. Monday, according to Robert Kniffen. a spokesman for “This is very difficult because it’s different from any-
. in Chicago, Illinois Attorney General Tyrone Fahner But the man, who has not been identified, did not take McNeil. thing we’ve been through before," Fahner said. “It’s
said “we have no reason to suspect there is any connec- the contaminated capsules until Thursday, the same The Oroville man‘s physican reported to McNeil that the first time we've had to deal witha random killing.
tion" with the cyanide cases there. “But caution pre- day that the medical examiner in Chicago announced he asked the man‘s wife to get additional Tylenol cap- Meanwhile, Kentucky health officers are checking
cludes me from saying there is no connection." findinga pattern of cyanide deaths. sules from the store where the first bottle was bought. stores statewide to make sure all Tylenol capsules are
. . He said at an evening news conference the Chicago “The FDA was notified immediately," Foster said. FDA investigators were told the wife provided two off shelves.
| investigation as narrowed to “eight or mne" suspects, “The product was picked up within a 25-mile radius by more bottles, one of which also contained pink granules, Federal and state authorities have conducted tests on
all resxdents of the area, but declined to elaborate. How- our people." which were subsequently found to contain strychnine. three samples of capsules found in Kentucky. They
cg, he saltd none had been in California during the pe- It was not filmsdiately clear why news of the strych- The store operator removed remaining packages from were not contaminated with cyanide.
n in ques lon. nine was wit e1 from the blic until five da 5 after the shelves, and McNeil icked them u and found a -

A federal law enforcement source who declined to be the man became sick. pu y third bottle that “showed signs of tampering." flame]: Resourcles Secretarly Buddy Adams 58.“: yes-
identified said investigators had not discounted a possi< Strychnine, a nervous system stimulant, was formerly The capsules were Extra-Strength Tylenol with the [8:1 y t agosampes o rleca ed lots found m PikeVllle
ble link in the two cases. used for medicinal purposes in very small quantities. In code 1766MA, a batch number not implicated in the Chi- an Owens ro were ana y zed by . federal FDA laborato-

The latest twist in the case prompted McNeil Consum- larger doses it causes convulsions and death, and it has cago investigation. They were in 24-capsule bottles. ries m At anta and containednopmson.
er Products Co., which makes Tylenol, to urge retailers long been used asa rat poison. Fahner said investigators were interviewing numer- Lonnie Henson, a forensic specialist for the state in.
nationwide to withdraw all of its capsules from sale — At a news conference in Sacramento, California ous potential suspects in the cyanide cases. including lice. said the state crime laboratory checked a sample
both Extra-Strength and Regular—Strength. The compa- Health Director Beverlee Myers called the discovery of several with a history of mental illness. of capsules from Madisonville and did not find cyanide.
E ' ' ' fB 't ' , ,

_ I
x prime minister 0 r! a n, . i V ,
soc 'alist writer speeches set
____._____— __———- t: .
By JAMES EDWIN HARRIS By BILL STEIDEN g y i 3
Managing Editor Editor-in-Chief - 2.; egg;
. . ' it. i“

Sir Harold Wilson, twice prime minister of the Brit- Michael Harrington, a 28-year veteran of the Ameri- ' awe-17a
ish Empire and the youngest prime minister this cen- can socialist movement, will speak on “Reaganomics
tury, will address a Memorial Hall audience tomorrow and the American crisis: a Democratic Left View" at
night at 8. Memorial Hall tonight.

Wilson, who headed Britain‘s Labour party from Harrington, 54, is the national chair of the Demo— _ . _

1963—1976, will have as his subject “America, Europe cratic Socialists of America, an organization de- , ‘
and the Soviet World: A Political and Economic Sur- scended from the Socialist Party of the late Norman "
vey." Wilson’s lecture will be open to both students Thomas,one of the leading labor activists of the '30s ? ‘
. and the public, .- ‘* . He is the au- ,
,_ and admission is ~ ' .. thor of numerous " "
free. ,1 --'~ -‘ ', articles and 10 " j"j_
The son of an ‘ 3 2‘ books, the best i .
34;; industrial chem- , " , known of which ' _ g .
a. .- . _. . iSt. James. tiara . t ‘ . is The Other " 1 -. . - -. 1,.-.. , _ .
j “ rm old Wilson was ‘ - . - America. an , ~ at: V » 3*
s a W by birth a lower- i" analysis of pov- ~.
h "- middle class citi- “ erty in America. « ~e. c
‘9. ,- 1 f. zen who received . .j ‘ __ Following its 3:
?, ~' an upper-middle ,. .. g publication, he /“‘
' _ class education ‘ worked closely ., -»
‘ . at Oxford Uni- ~’ :, with President .
versity. ‘ \ .. v John F. Kenne- f .
He became a ,, dy‘s administra- ’ ”
fellow of Ox- i \ tion in devel- if.
‘ ford's University V \ oping the “War f“ §
. College at 21, and , .. ~ on Poverty," - ' ‘
while there he "‘ ‘ .I‘ “‘ later a major ‘ ‘3
SIR HAROLD WILSON COIIaborated with MICHAEL HARRINGTON plank in the ad- “E ~
Sir William Bev- ministration of - '1 g. r ‘
eridge on work that led to Beveridge's stunning report President Lyndon B. Johnson. Kennedy’s successor. . 5‘ . x"
in 1942 advocating social insurance and other welfare Harrington, a graduate of Holy Cross University .. ‘3 a .
measures. and Bard College. became active in the leftist ,g g3 N 3;; . >g ,_,,M

Wilson was drafted into the British civil service at movement in the early 1950s as associate editor of the , ,5" . .. f.__ s . p . "”BW
the outbreak of World War II, and as director of eco- Catholic Worker. K; 3* . "" ' . ‘ “t
nomics and statistics at the Ministry of Fuel and . . . . . _ “$ 2, :__ ..

Power studied the mining industry in England, His 1' From f1954-56, hzdassgted in investigating tE'bIath . . , .1 at? . .. I

ubs uent book, New Deal for Coal (1945), was the _lsting o suspect su verswes in e en‘er inmen . _ a} .1 3g“ , _. WI. _ ..

5 .eq , . . . , industry as a result of Sen. Joe McCarthy 5 anti-com- . . ., , agar .. (a r I

baSls for Labours plans for nationallzmg England 5 . d , . . .’ a, ”a. ,, -.--._

coal mines. mfilshhinalgfsactive in the burgeoning civil rights , , I . g . .. ., §g , x ) . i

the Board of Trade in Oct. 1947, becoming the young- hut“? ng J“ afld garif'i’at‘fiu‘" £50132;me t: a . - .. Lir»'f-§§:.:’=s:f’- 5%: i: "

est cabinet minister since William Pitt. He resigned 9" Emery mare ‘ e ' .cme y . , . 'v '~ .

th . . . . . drive for full employment directed by King 3 Widow, 143.5,..5531 . ~ , » , _.5; . . g .- ‘

at post in 1951 in protest against the introduction of Coretta Scott Kin an d other leaders , > . .
national health service charges to finance rearma- g, ‘ WW M“ a w r; . 4' ,
ment efforts for the Korean War- Beginning in 1954. he voiced active opposition to i a fies?“ ? ’ - " ,. .

In 1963, Wilson was elected leader of Labour and American intervention in Vietnam and was a major T WA‘ ' ..fl
Quickly united the party, preserving the moderate participant in the drafting of the Port Huron (a, is... . n H
stance of the past while producing new ideas to satisfy Statement in 1962, the document that became the WWW .. a , . _ V“
the party’s radical element. credo of the “new left" student activism of the 1960s. 0 "°- “NW/WW 5‘0"

He became prime minister for the first time in 1964 He campaigned for Eugene McCarthy, Robert Ken- ng ht WOI‘k
at the age of 48. Problems facing his government in nedy, Morris Udall and Jimmy Carter during their re- . .
cluded Rhodesia‘s quest for independence, which he spective presidential campaigns. He also aided New Shannon Conley, an employee at the Lexington Mall Cinemas, stretches to wipe dust from a
termed “treason,“ an overbearing balance of pay- York Mayor Ed Koch‘s campaign and was included on row of light bulbs in front of the theater. Conley. a student at Totes Creek High School, has
ments. a rapidly increasing rate of inflation, and a President Richard M. Nixon‘s“enemies list." been a proiectionist there since May.

SO. WILSON. page 3 See SOCIALIST, page 3
The eight women and four men an the ‘panel deliberated Chinese, SOVIOI‘S discuss normalization
WEDNESDAY one hour and four minutes before returning the verdict in

the courtroom of U.S. District Judge Ann Aldrich. PEKING __ China and the Soviet nion res m t | n
MAMMW Schmucker, ° 22-Iyepr-old student 0' Goshen College, day for the first time in nearly theee yearsL,’ 0:: Sitiseydhd
mistifr'ilgvovfef:s‘gri'zgcr't'2ehfe on the same $2000 bond set at Vietnamese leaders called for an improvement in relations

II' II . i . -

Brown says accounts In order He testified he could not register for the draft because between theircountries and China. . . .
his religious convictions and u brin in conflicted with the BU, Chinese, SoViet and Western diplomatic sources m
LOUISVILLE _ Gov. John Y. Brown said yesterday that on law P 9 9 Peking said earlier that the talks would be exploratory only
audit of his cash withdrawals from a Miami bank shows ' and would not narrow the distance between the two Com-

"everything is in order." munist giants substantially.

Brown ordered the audit by his accountants as a result - The Soviet delegation was headed bY Deputy Foreign
of a reported federal grand jury investigation into his with- Hundreds a’rosted’n Lebanon Minister Leonid F- llyichev, Who has been negotiating Wl'h
drawl of more than $1 million in cash over a two-year term the Chinese for more than l0 years, while Vice Foreign
from the All American National Bank in Miami. 'EI'UT' Lebanon _ The Lebanese army arrested hundreds Minister Qian Qichen led the Chinese team. They met be-

, . _ . , , , of people in Moslem West Beirut yesterday in its biggest ~ - .

The Miami grand iury reportedly is investigating several show 0‘ force since the I975-76c' il hind closed doors, and there was no offiCIal announcement
transactions involving the withdrawl of between $1.3 million w war. Ol Who' went on.
and Sl.5 million in cash. Hidden arms also were confiscated in the former strong~ \

The probe reportedly began after federal officials hold of the Palestine Liberation Organization and its leftist /
learned that the withdrawls were not reported to the gov- militia allies. The operation was part of a government \
ernment as required. Bank officials said the mistake was crackdown on PLO remnants and leftist militia in the M05- WEAT _—
caused by the bank's failure to record Brown's Social Securi- lem sector in 0" attempt ’0 790559" COMFO' over the war-

. ty number when he opened an account there. The trans '0'" country. / \
actions were reported earlier this year after the bank The state television said some of those arrested might
learned °l "‘9 9"0': the Oll'CIGlS sa'd- be deported, and a Saudi Arabian magazine quoted Presi- Today will be mostly sunny and warm with a high In
. _ _ dent Amin Gemayel as saying Palestinians who entered the low ”a.

. -..‘ Student conwctedofnor registering Lebanon illegally must leave. Tonight will be mostly cloudy with it so percent
CLEVELAND — A federal court jury yesterday convicted MiliIOI’Y officials refused '0 SOY h°W many people were frat; of showers or thundershowere and a '0" In ”I.
Mark Arden Schmucker, a Mennonite college student, of rounded up, but reporters saw trucks filled with people. in "
failing to register for the military draft. He was the third some blindfolded, being driven away. Security sources said '°'“°"°‘" wlll I” cloudy with showers '“d ”'0'“
person tried and convicted of the charge in trials this year. 450 people had been seized during the army sweeps. d'""°‘"'" "k“Y- 1”" M.“ W'" 5. l" "‘0 "PROV 70!-

_._.____ .

 \ I"
Ker he" I
eliisoouon Andrei—Openn- “Mount. convention's-v llnltkodobo J.D.Vonflooeo wanted
“worm-Chief News Editor Am Editor Sports Editor 59.001 Front" (duo: Photo Editor Graph-cs Editor .
lemo- ldwln Nonls Cindy Doctor [Orion I. So".- Mlckey ”Norm loohlo Million Ion Von Hedi Chile Ash
M0“°9"‘9Ed”°' ‘d"°"°l‘d"°' A'i'itw‘mft AssisiomSpons EdI'O' SpoctolProloclsAssllvonl ChielPhoiogrophov Copy Dosh(hipl
w—Wm
C GI“ pol'c'es Of I I t b h d
Israel’s outrage in Lebanon has not wider conflict.
abated, despite the presence there of a 7,000-
member United Nations peacekeeping force .
reinforced by about 3,500 US, French and President Reagan’s essential ignorance of 5
Italian troops in shattered Beirut. economic realities became clear once again
Monday, Israeli jets bombed a Syrian mis- as he addressed voters Monday on a visit to
sile battery east of that city and also struck Ohio in support the state’s Republican gu-
Palestinian positions in the eastern moun- bernatorialcandidate. 0
tains. Meanwhile, 70,000 Israeli troops re- Inflation, he said, is the cause of unem-
main stationed in the southern part of the ployment. If only matters were so utterly e.
country. simple. Reduce inflation and restore employ- -
Although a coalition of concerned nations ment. Unfortunately, it hasn’t worked that /, / '
has attempted to restore peace to the area way so far: the rate of inflation is down —9.8 ,/
and Syria has offered to withdraw its troops percent in August —- but unemployment re- 7/ .
if Israel in turn withdraws it forces, the in- mains ata three-decade high. /6,, ,'
vasion of Lebanon continues. The real causes of unemployment are far // '/l , ‘ '
The Reagan administration’s tolerance of more numerous. More important thaninfla-
this illegal usurpation of a people's territory, tion is the continued stagnation of produc- .
an attempt to quash the rightful claim of an- tion, a problem which supposedly was also ‘ ,va _ ,,,,, ’1’, ,_‘
other people — the Palestinians — to a tied to the rate of inflation and the cost of \. ' ' "fi'; ‘ '
homeland, is inexcusable, particularly in borrowing.
light of Israel’s refusal to cooperate with in- As we have seen, despite a significant drop ,'%.- —, v ,
temational efforts to restore peace. in the prime rate this summer, the first l,” ‘ .- 7"
And, Israel’s more than obvious partici- since Reagan took office, the surge in invest~ .7], 2;. . ~ C duon Si
pation in the massacre of Lebanese and Pal- ment that supply-siders claimed would cre- \ “'1 \ ’ '
estinian civilians last month — recognized ate new jobs and restore the nation’s eco- \l. , v D. “-l
by 260 Israeli army officers who petitioned nomic health hasn’t arrived. And most ‘\ .‘
Monday for the resignation of Defense Min- economists don’t believe it will in the fore- V ‘ i ,
ister Ariel Sharon — further aggravates the seeable future. ‘/ I, SOVEREI (mm
situation. The president’s rosy picture-painting has . m
Although Reagan has talked tough, it is become an increasingly annoying and — for Y '6
past time for action. Needed are stern mea- him — politically dangerous practice. His in- r ‘ [
sures, including the cutoff of all aid to Is- credible naivete, whether real or staged, can ' ~ SoTom...AboseA-- El
rael, military or otherwise. be expected to result in a backlash at the ‘ . I Crushed y E
Israel must be forced to turn back from its poll, should he decide to run for re-election. : 1 ,1, 1,
current policies before its actions revive the The damage to his party is already appar- t2
always-present ties of pan-Arabism in a uni- ent and will be made obvious in November, 0‘, E
fied military effort against it, shattering the when Democrats, running on a moderate Q
fragile political structure of the Middle East, platform, can be expected to regain numer-
and perhaps embroiling other nations in a ous seats in both houses.
clEWS PROTESTING ISRAELI IllVdiVEMENT IN ,1 ' ' t "
lllEBEIRlII hem , uppo my ell-pres: en 8 Is 9 ta 9
% \\‘ . a. if] n l7)” l
A“ .. 1 a $6. ‘ If: 1 “it“ . n . WASHINGTON — Here’s an, ,up— .. ,25 speeches he delivers each year , 0n the homefront, .F‘ord earns . Though President Reagan has al-
will 1.3 \, g a) it}? fun]; 3 'mt ill , 1*, date on what our former presidents (usually at $10,000 to$l§,000each). about $500,000 per year from consul- ready made‘r'eléar Willingfiessfil a;
1 ('1. '* ,nygif‘f , ,Yl't‘g/ , t ,. , i, "t; ' ‘; have been domglatelyz. .. , tantships and seats on seven .eor to seek;a Milan ‘lflf'yeai‘o, chief-dd
I 1 :2me (my . ~ Jag, I, © 1 l1. , , KAN ' i f Jimmy Carter ViSlted Philadel- w ' porate boards. U.S. negotiator Louis G. Fields said
it l» .l ‘t/ Nagy/Y t / I‘m“ , ‘. fit} «A a phia last week where he inspected . - 4.....‘13,’ GLEN 0 Richard Nixon is reviewing in- “the attitude of the Soviet Union and
/ l 7 a “k . ' \4/‘7 . . ll ’ it, t» " « Lenox china patterns. (In a Reaga- . l‘ , "d terview requests for television and its allies" jeopardized the work of -‘
‘ nesque move, friends are treating ’ 7 g ' . a print appearances to promote Lead- the nuclear test ban working group,
ARABS PROTESTNG TZWMPK’S MASS/K3213. him and Rosalynn to 36 settings, at \ _ , ‘ ‘ ‘ SHEARER ers, his third book since leaving pub— organized last month.
THE, MAALOF SCHOOL MASSACRE. ancestimated cost 0320.000.) gay - lic office. Leaders, which sells for Meanwhile, the us. Energy De-
arter is now preparing an un- , 7 $17.95, has an initial press run of partment admitted it detonated six
Til}: ClERUSALEM BUS BOMBlNG-m precedented six-city promotional Just this week, Ford returned 100,000 copies. nuclear devices in Nevada (three in
tour for his soon-to—be-released book. from the Bob Hope golf tournament At a time of economic austerity, a single day a couple of weeks ago)
Keeping Faith, complete with press in London. He will depart in early we doubt American taxpayers need between July 1 and Sept. 27. A sev-
conferences and television and radio October for a television appearance to spend $11 million a year to under- enth test, scheduled for last Tues-
appearances. with Henry Kissinger in Japan. write three former presidents who day, was delayed because wintt _
' Before the New England Super- (Both men will collect an estimated are otherwise gainfully employed. were heading toward Las Vegas.
market Industry dinner Sept. 3 in $15,000 to discuss U.S.-Japanese re- While most Americans may be- During the same period, the Sovi-
Boston, Gerald Ford gave one of the lations.) lieve former presidents shouldn't ets conducted one announced test.
have to burn nickels in retirement, 0
the degree of taxpayer support is de- Before Doonesbury creator Garry
batable. Trudeau becomes a free agent in
Our self-sufficient former chief ex- January, the 34-uear-old is sched-
' ecutives may not require $75,000 an- uled to attend a November auction
" nual pensions, $300,000 per year for of his works in Washington on behalf
' staff and office expenses, or the of the National Women’s Political
“— costly lifetime retinue of Secret Caucus. Each year, Trudeau usually
. . g _ , . . Service agents donates original Doonesbury strips
leeS Frl'lZ you plainly it IS reVival, spiritual things presented at the meeting Harrington will speak at 8 pm. t0- There are, of course, some limits to four or five local Caucus benefits
awakening, divine intervention, etc. were true. night in Memorial Hall. He will also on former presidents. When Jimmy around the country, earning the or- 1
We would like to know what has Geis further complained that Ben Crumley participate in seminars on campus Carter requested Oriental carpets ganization about $25,000 in proceeds.
happened to John Fritz’s column hardly any concert footage was Comp. sci.freshman today and tomorrow. and chandeliers for Ms Atlanta of- .
about science. We’ve noticed it shown as advertised for the presen- In the early 19605, student activist fice, the General Services Adminis- In the unrequited love depart- .
hasn‘t been in the Kernel for several tation, and that what was presented H - 1. Tom Hayden wrote an article saying tration counseled against it. After ment: Actress Jodie Foster breaks
weeks and we’vemissedit. was rather outdated. I wonder if he 0"an on ' ' ' his generation trusted only three all, the law allows only for “adequa- more than a year of silence on the
Steve Branson ever considered many more current Michael Harr‘n ton . co . t people over 30 — and one Of those is tely furnished office space.” John Hinckley saga in the December
A&Sjunior examples 0t subliminal messages in cam us Fo th; g t ls Ting 0 Michael Harrington. Come hear the More often than not, however, tax- issue of Esquire. :
rock music might have been worse Hamlin ton [has Spasedseverc: years, man speak and find out why! payers are left with questionable In the self-authored article, which
Jane Moore than the ones shown. of theg D erv Safe 13?“? Tim fieudenberg bills, such as $2,242 for watering 22 the bright Yale student wrote while
NursingDept. Any real Christian finds refer- Am r1 emdwfil'c. .t ””51 130 SGAA&SSenator plants in Ford’s office, $518 for Nix- interning at the magazine last sum-
UK Medical Center ences to drugs, promiscuity. Satan, n? ca, 2?“ tth "t; Stiles), this on's auto repairs (including care for mer, Foster denies responsibility for
faith and? like verykoffensive. He $2flpuses m e m John Cain a damaged golf cart) and an undis- the Reagan shooting. However. she
° ’ t t ' ' - - osed ’ '
. Rock seminar .32: Sheila 133?»; 3238533: . Harrington has been well known 56" SM” is... 51......3‘37‘ '°' cm“ s "ew “’d ififdoflesi'iii é‘i‘é’flgéfieaé’ei‘flil’é
- - distasteful a light as Possible. Spe- internationally for over 20 years. “15 - . . on campus Some legislators are fortunately actress several years ago.
iwould likeIto reply tothe written cially if he feels mm things are best-selling book, The Other Ameri- tr .ng to “mi, such mganamed ex; ,
by Harry Geis, PlibllShed Sept. 30. be’ ted d - bl As ca. is widely credited with influenco Today and tomorrow the Student y) - - . -
- . . - "18 presen as eSIrea e. . . . . . penses in legislation now before the Teach Your Children to Love the
concerning the melt n roll seminar f - l l Chr‘ ‘t' 1] t mg President John F. Kennedy and Government Association, in conjunc- - . , , ' - -
he attended on Se t 28 I at the dis- or rev1va,a rea iSi ian W1 ry L d J . . ,, . . Senate. Perhaps With a bit of elec One They re With. We were espe
ti . . p. ‘ g to bring one about, using any meth- yn 0” ,, ohnson '“ the" War on tion “n"? many 0W!” campus tion-year heat from disgruntled cially heartened to see rock star
nct impressmn that he felt suck- odshe Poverty program. groups, Will sponsora v1s1t to UK by - . _ -
- - .. ~ . can. . . . . . Americans, Congress wont let com DaVld Crosby, now 40, sentenced to
ered into attending a thinly dis- I b - ha Ge‘ didn’ The late Martin Luther King laug- Michael Harrington, chairman of - ~ - - . _
. . . ,, su mit t t is t properly . . ,, . . . . man-sense reforms go unnoticed. 90 days in jail and three years pro
guised revwalmeeting. do his homework. The advertise- hingly told Harrington, You know, the Democratic Soc1alists of Amen. , bation for the beating of two women
dl hamned t° Ohm" a COPY 0‘ the ment did not say that a balancing we d'dm know we were poor until ca. . , . . In a little-noticed development last at a friend’s house in California last
a vertlsement for the seminar, and ~ - d we read your book. Harrington s influence on Ameri- - ~ -
. . Viewpomt woul be presented, nor . . . . . . month, U.S. negotiators in Geneva November. So much for the rose in
it looked pretty straight-forward to did it indicate by any means that Gloria Steinem, editor of Ms. mag- can politics, the Democratic Party, closed the summer session of the the fisted glove ‘
me. It had a quote from the Bible such a viewpoint would be appropri- azine, has said of Harrington, “He and liberal groups the world over U N disarmament committee with '
and appeared to have a rather antl- was one of the few people of my gen- has been tremendous. ’ ' - - ~
. . ate. . . . accusations that the Soth Union Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
rock bias. Upon looking more close- If he felt offended by a one-sided eratlon who understood the depth of His book, The Other America, was was blockin eff . . . . . .
- . . . . . . . . 3 arts for an interna- are Pulitzer Prize-Winning national
ly. the name Of a radical Christian the problems of this country . . . It instrumental in influencmg Presi- tional ban on nuclear tests columnists
group on campus was associated presentation he should have stayed was Mike and Mike alone who dents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon ' ' '
withthesemimar. . home and not subjected himself to looked with horror at the economy Johnson todeclare the “War on Pov- . . .
It‘s no secret that this group 8P‘ any vexation. Besides. who's to say in this country." . erty" of the 1960s. He continues to Op|nlon Pol'cy
pears in 3:9 {NW speech area exact? that a revival is got needed? All one Since the 19505, Harrington has play a major role in the national
day prea th- ere anyone to V9 has to do is rea the paper to See been an advocate for such causes as Democratic Party and serves as an
enough courage to 83k 0“? Of the thatitmight not hurt tohave one. economic democracy, civil rights, advisertbmany notableliberals. .::::::;.7: xlhlsanzhcrhye 33::‘5'. welcome to
public preachers what their main lalso wonder if Geis wonders how and women‘s rights. He is an experi- The UK student body is indeed ”"'
. . . . . . . . Letters should be sent to the editorial edltor or
purpose or goal W85. they WOUld tell things WOUld fare With him it the enced scholar, writer and actiVist. lucky to have a speaker of the cali- 11 4 Journollsm lulldlng _ UK “1'09”" Ky.
_ ber of Michael Harrington on cam- 40506-0042. ' '
DRABBLE 5 by Kevm F090" 319;“ InHaaigrtihntgltgn [williesmatfil’e To be consldorod for publlcoton. letters must be
e ' n uve lcle "K . ' , I . f .d
. .'|| ©"°’ W ' 5"“ ' W W W ”N6 ,,, to speak on students on several 33%“..1?3.‘Z?.'i $575.33.. $17.13 '22:".221.'.i“3so
i ' (' WT“ YOUR 5%60- WWW/“6.. different occasions during his two- words.
. .. I“ ' ' pl] ““7le. day Stay; , , , , erters must also lnclude their names, addresses.
4 ‘ <3 - ,1. { " NEAL". V ,, it? will ”1?“ to parthipate m olne of telephone numbers. «long‘ with tholr melon, closel-
e m 1 " ’* fi4 2, ‘ ,4 "", ~’ 3 ” t fang: orfother evenats, p 38‘ flcotlons or connection wlr UK.
n) ' f ; 7. (714 ' 0., F... a '1 ~> c.“ , . .0 ice at 257' 191' 9" the lndenflty of writers who sent letters sent
1 n , ' r (.. ’ ) .I .. I,“ (fix .3 ringtons "3" presents opportunity through the mail will be checked and vorlllod ho-
. ”in,” 'l a ) ”H v mm, é / w JAc‘ for studnts to discuss the direction
I". QL‘ I, Wow 7 1 - a “In, any». thi t . tak' 'th one fthe fore publication. When more than one person slgns
( w A '0‘ do ' ’\ I {2.2574135 & h" 5 00“" ry '5 "‘8 w' 0. o letter. all ldonrmos must be checked and vorlflod
_ S. K“ m r, t;.- l - foremost leaders 0! the American 5"0'. PUbl'CC'IOfl. ..
.— QEQ ” M be“ Katy Banahan The Kernel reserves the right to ed" for gram-
[0‘ ’ | SC A Senatoreat-Large mr and clarity and to delete llbolous mrorlol. ‘ l

 : THE KENTUCKYKERNEL 47“» Combat, m: - J
' l I
' So a t
, 0 MISC" . CI [IS Support the Cats!!
. Continued from page I .
Continuod'rom pogol cheaper to do their shopping in the morning rather Currently, he is a professor of political science at x ‘
’ lack of a substantial power base in Commons. His thanwait until the afternoon." QueensCollege. . . _ . o ~ . .
first government owned a mere five-seat majority in Although Heath's Conservative party won a plurali- Harrington’s political PhllOSOPhy advocates WOFklhg a“ .
Commons. ty of the popular vote, he could not forge a coalition through the capitalist system to achieve 5008““ ,.», ;
He was lauded in the British press for his political with the minority Liberal party and Wilson succeeded 80818, and is opposed to totalitarlamsm. ‘9
- sawy and his bureaucratic experience. “There is a in forming a new government, becoming the first per- In his many lecture tours, he has stressed. hi“ cm-
" widespread belief," it was written. “that never before son since the late Sir Winston Churchill to ascend to ployinent, centralized economic planning t including
has so great a master of tactics set at No. 10 Downing theprimeministrythreetimes. public ownership of the means of production) and AW“, Alabama
5t," He ended England's five-month old coal strike be— democratization of corporations through the inclusmn H l
His bold though ineffective economic and financial fore his swearing-in, abolished the three-day work of workers and public representatives among their di- are We Come.
policies included severe budgets, a six-month freeze week that cost the country $46 billion during the FeCtOI'S. _ . . . '
on wages and restraints thereafter, a 14.3 percent de- strike, froze residential rents and began a sweeping The lecture Will begin at 8 pm. and admisswn is
valuation of the pound sterling, a firm tone toward program to stem Britain's economic difficulties. free It is Sponsored by the Student Government Asso—
labor unions and proposals to make welfare selective The empire’s woes continued, however, and on ciation, Democratic Socialists of America, the College
rather than universal. March 16, 1976. he announced his resignation to a of Social Work, the Office for Minority Student Af-
He was also plagued by industrial instability Stunned cabinet. fairs, the Arts & Sciences dean‘s office and the depart-
through wildcat strikes and another devaluation of the His resignation brought alternating reactions of merits of philosophy,political science and sociology.
pound, and he could not effect reforms of trade unions praise and vitriol; the socialist London Daily Mirror .
andtheHouse of Lords. said, “He has done a tremendous job in tackling Brit- u A free press- T’°"SP°"°"°" '0 AUbum' ‘5 Pass VG"
In 1970, with polls favoring the retention of the La- ain's economic CFiSiS- He has given backbone to the .".‘.',‘,5.‘.‘."_'... ' L90V93 00- 3th NCO"
bour government, Wilson called the second general Stmggleagainst inflation." in Your ke $35 per person, gas Included
election of his term. He was upset, however, by the And the conservative Daily Telegraph vilified him: y Return: Oct. 10th
Conservatives and their leader, Edward Heath. “Wilson has turned Britain into a nation near bank- l'fll‘." to freedom. for info: Conrad Chevrolet Rental 269-4321
Heath’s economic policies also failed to move Brit- rupt, living on tick (credit), sinking under a prepon-
_ ain into step with its Western European neighbors, derant bureaucracy, almost defenseless, all effort,
and in March 1974, another general election was skill and achievement savagely penalized, all shiftles- .'.'.",:.‘.‘.'".
called. Wilson spent the campaign attacking Heath’s sness rewarded, its best ci