xt7h707wq428 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7h707wq428/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-12-08 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, December 08, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 08, 1982 1982 1982-12-08 2020 true xt7h707wq428 section xt7h707wq428 ——‘- l
KEN'I 'UCKY " l ”a” ....... ......
/ Wildcat-win at t
I . Few people expected a close game be~
q tween Kentucky and Detroit, so there
' . were lew surprises when the Wildcats
, i took control early in the first half en
' route to 83-46 win last night in Rupp
4‘ Arena. Melvin Turpin‘s 20 points led the
" . team, which had ll players break into
I the scoring column. See page 4. '
.V
Vol. Lxxxv, Ne. 34 Wednesday, December s, 1932 An Independent student newspaper University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky
__ _ _ ._ ___—____., m M-Wh——rw A~~<~ >7- . _~ "w teAp—“m
- - ‘ - "9.,=v-=:"':"v"j‘i.‘.—5; “11”,, .. , .1. 7'. "f - I-
'5 5.~’ ,' "v, w... »‘ ,.‘.“l,'"-’-‘,:.‘t-:;'.‘t.'.‘.v"“,. './.'.‘..-~‘.
. , , i . House deletes $988 mllllon
f 4.} -. . ‘_x{¢£.l :1 "ffi’tlfi?’ ‘ .5 ”v: 'il»"§,.r7’.3‘-"*‘l :$"Lfl;-2,3,af.‘;f_ ‘ .
x’. inf": ‘ Ami: "e“ ., can”): fume-359w: 9455 est; .
‘, of; .l {'(e ’3‘:me ' ‘__ 1;": 1“;.- 3 ; . Vi: 5“ 4‘: :4' Eafiiggfi: ,3 ‘
( ‘ you ’ 5.5"}. . I, - , W '%31 ' ’ ‘i‘I' "I-‘.‘1‘3'§3" 3):“: £59."? or '0 ram rom I
‘ v . '2 . - .‘ which i 5 . r i» . 8 ”my '51. storms-t2.».Afu.’“-'-r‘: ‘ ' .
‘ ‘ I .35 figs 5- ' 3,1” 1:; 3:; the, .,, :3?! 3, ages/gerbil: ‘ .

. . . ~ {‘3‘ “ \‘5‘ .. «1%.. .3 fl %&;? § .\ {it} fajg.‘ a“ *j, f ‘1. : as; V“; :5. .i i: .1: :1 .

4‘- ,fl "\\\ 't may”? {' ”Pm“; 14$}? 33:15-13 if -" “-. 5B1 19:“ - » WASHINGTON (AP) — The House MX issue were advocates of a U.S.- the vote: “Unlas reversed in com-
' ‘ . \- ‘ ' radii." my _ 1 5“ i 51:“ ’- '. .'-' ‘VLJK it: (*2 ~.‘. *1 ‘ rt 42"“? yesterday rejected by 245-176 a down Soviet nuclear freeze and members ing days, it will seriouly set back
- . .N' {:3 ”one , .33.. “fwfixoffiflx . v“, - ;, rafflefa'k' payment of nearly $1 billion for the who contended that the MX was a our efforts to protect the nation’s se-

- - . {are ii‘fl‘,‘;,z¥:; " aft": V‘rfffihs’tiwi‘if‘t‘fi ’3' MX missile system, “The Peace- good place to make budget econ- curity and could handcuffour nego-

_ ' 1—" .3. ’ 4- 91-4 f_§~_ j" ’,._";?ra;‘,'~;. .33. . £395}! :--; keeper” that President Reagan omies since Congresshasnot yet de- tiatorsatthearms table.

'32:;51 ‘ ‘ fa; “* “{ .3: ’. »'*,ai.’t.t’y»;régc’. {fgjagfl “1a"; ‘ deems vital for convincing the Sovi- cided whether its proposed basing “I had hoped that most of the
33;] fii a; . " ~' *' , z.“ “5 , ‘ _, ." , 51 .19.; 51:; et Union to get serious about nuclear system will work. members in the House had awak-

1" _.i_L_-"'.T1’t7. s "' . .3 , “w ‘C ‘ .. "‘7‘ ‘fi'mfirg 1.3;: 'dt°:.;f3 ,2 arms reductions. Opponents were also seeking to ggetge'ugniagzahdgghm“u1fiaym
5411]," gffgjg}' A. " . i' . "3.. "4‘53: 25%;; 7,2312“ 4i?" The Home vote deletes from a cut other defense expenditures. ' tl mm A . _
-"\.’-“‘«_"—-i*.‘-£.?- Xx» ‘ ‘ ' . ~ ‘ ’ ' ’ , ‘§" ‘ ’3' ii ' “ .3’ “' . ,‘V-Y '- ?- $231.6 billion defense 5 ndi on W k 0 the entire a ro ri to was apparen y .' 'maJor

is..- zen-mgr? . x ' ' ~ - .“~ w“ ,, r’ 5.13.: . . pe “3 ‘ .°r “ pp p a' "5 ity chosetogo sleepwalkmgintothe
$93 Leg; 1% ». .3 . , , , . - .7 v. 2 £ ("11: 3&3; $11388 mfillionl carer‘riarkedf {:2 the bill was dexpected :10 ghee compleufi future"

25““ ' . a ’ . » J Iggy-515.51., irs ive o a pann 100 o t nu— today an sent to t e nate, w ' ' -

1:9:1333- i“ ‘ . . . .. ,‘ . ‘r, .- . new, .r 73:;‘5‘Efég clear-tipped, intercontinental mis- has a $233. billion version from its “ibiggmomwmfifl:
fifth/alga; a .' ' ~ I .. I ‘ a t ‘ 1'." I.‘::,l‘~"'-t‘ 511$. Appropriations Commlttee awaiting Pentagon legislative smmt aid.
3‘34!” ;-, .9 i‘ * ' ' ,';.-"«:.‘r»:'3 2,": The vote marked a personal de- floor action. “Wedon'tfeelthebattleisover.”
;;a_‘_~.‘;;.ii§§ J- 3 .3. ‘ . ' f 1 ‘ 1 :‘rg » f; feat for Reagan, who had led an in- Calling the outcome “a grave mis- The analyst, who asked not to be
out“? I ~ 2 . , ' , 1-: ,wfilf'l", tensive administration lobbying take,“ President Reagan said con- identified, added, “We intend to con-
ruff; At 41*; '. .‘r' , ,. . ,. , .. . i,,.,,_, , “j -,,,--‘-;j campaign to keep the production gressmen who voted against the MX tinue to work the problem on the
,5 . " ){ggqn ~ ‘1 . 53."; f; ‘2. ’3 ' r i. xiii-ill .33 money intact. were “sleepwaking into the future." Senateside.”
pm“ 41;}; ...' :.t; 5 ' '-. - i, ., ' “ r-s‘gffis'fig Fifty of Reagan’s fellow Republi- He said there was still time to re- This was a clear indication the
t‘. = 319-521;)?! “‘5 3-3.: ‘ _ .- ', . N 9,"? .-‘-_}",‘c_ cans joined I95 Democrats to give verse the House decision. and he Reagan administration was banking
rfify'i.§.1“".gt 25:,” » e .5 ' ., ‘ . .zté. “ the MX opponents their majority. pledged to take his case to the peo- its hopes for winning approval in the
.f’ $1335“ £4133,“ ‘1 . t ’ . . . ' :3. The minority consisted of 138 Repub- ple to rally support for the missile. Republican-controlled Senate and
. ' g‘;fi;__ ' ", gr, r, . H, , w ,, . , ,. . . . a; ,, .. “‘3‘? 3,", licansand38Democrats. In a written statement handed out then in a subsequent House-Senate
3?, g 2‘, 2-2 _- . » “ . j' ' z iii,»- ' ‘ . “2;; Arrayed agaimt Reagan on the at the White House. Reagan said of conference.
fiééegégwo ‘. t. , _ a - ~ 1 :4 v , , ' . . “M . . ,‘-,{::‘;$‘;‘ 4:. . . .
“" ~ - ‘- ' * ‘ ' v- - . ~« = w... Dlnkle plans re-electlon bld
.' ’7 WW5)» .e "‘ . ‘.‘ ;.-‘. '11»- 3:

3;}:- 2’4,» :5": .. 1 ~ . ., . ' r . ; sf” Lacie _—___ A lucrative Job offer after this interest in being his runnirg mate,
, ' ' ‘ “ W. ___,~->.~. f__:___”_. 1"“;‘9-‘7‘ By ANDREWOPPMANN academic year would be the only de- Dinklesaid.

.,~ ».5 _ _ "N‘" “4“” 5 .5," . ‘ "' " 1. ‘ '. -- ." “ ‘ ‘ v 515.5; NewsEditor terrent to his reelection bid, he “It couldbeanyofthosesix,"he
9% “4331‘ i”!- .4 2‘7, w, r ' f ‘x a ’ . ‘1’; it”. said. said. “Each one of them are very
“‘2. ,u Wk" "‘2' ‘ . 'i ‘ ‘“ _ . . * ‘ 5. r» 1* ““7“ _._—______ "The only thing that would we qualified, though I’ll have to decide
{if “.3423; ,"c g ' - - é ’ , ~ 3 ~ - ' {'2‘ J vent me from running again is if I which one by the first of March for
&'Z‘N»‘ ‘ ~ . 5 '“ ‘, . . 5' f . , ,, ‘ -~,‘ ' 23.; Jim Dinkle. Student Government had an outstanding job offer for $50,— printingpurposes”

.1 "@505: . y ., l t ,. T, 1' 35.3,. _~ ’4 3 .,_", «‘5 Association president, said Monday 000. which I don't believe will just Bradford said he was not shocked
- V‘s: . i. , ' g . 1"" ~ ' 5 -- if‘?‘ . ; ‘ . Jeff; hewillbeacandidate to hold the po- appear.“ by Dinkle’s announcement. “I’m not

f girl}, -" .- ,, i ” ' u f '2.) '53:“ , .. 1.» i, If: sition next year, in hopes of ~—————_——————— really surprised . . . I just can’t un-
fit a, : 32,}, _' . __ “ ‘5 . , (it ”1.5.14.1, ',~,' , mtg? strengthening his seat on the Board ”I have nothing to lose derstand why hedid it thisearly . ..
. fifty; '34:“ ., ' " _5,-,_»,, ,J . 3 , ' "3,7,53,1‘ ' . - ‘37: ‘ of'h‘tstees b running again it’sjist incredible.
g4? “Tufcg‘lfi'. . - ,' t, , ’ .. » r‘ t _, ‘, V453, 5,3,; “Iftheelection was today. I would y , , ,, " ' “I don’t see how Jim's plans (to

. 12’»:- r’f‘4 ' ‘ , . . . . . ‘ , 4‘;’I"*~x.v:f~?r-~;‘: 5 ,. “or. £5 be mine again." Dinkle said. ItS/ust thats'mple- mm for reelection) will affect me."

' .413} , . . ‘ . : .. , ,- ." . y t y of; .fmsgnzw; ; ,5? it“. “Yes, I intend to organize a cam- hesaid.

5,1 ~13, ;{ a“ ~ 4, ., 3, ,4, ‘ ,c, ‘ _ ‘ ‘3‘, ‘6},5‘. 3‘3 3 ;.. A ., .xfi‘pogj paign whether I decide to re- Jim Dink/e Dinkle. however, said it is impor-
uni-r“;- ék‘ffi‘ " 1.... r i . i}; ‘0 5‘ , . ,i . , , 'r i‘lj“~,,et’,.§,"§t‘;g ~‘f.~,.~, i, 1 ,_'..'- mainintherace remains tobeseen. _ tant to test thecampus’ political wa-
’” 3: their", *5, , _ 5,; T; a ,1“: 2 ,‘ gj'. “flicks #31»: t ,f 5 at,“ _f. “If I were to run for reelection SGA President tersearly,
f,_‘#"?g_}z§,,‘.g ‘~ . . ‘ffifi:."““?fj‘j‘,“'5‘,‘ ‘ Li‘;§¥§fp&‘§§$s¢§f2’ s2}: ti, and win, it would strengthen my “It’s important before Christmas
“_‘T .-"—' ‘3’} a ,, , "» ” " i “ if “r '3‘." ft; g7": 15%;}; 3;, :7: I: ,1 . ' “:.— seat on the Board of Trustees." he ‘h—‘—“_“—— to get somekindof idea . . . whether
win. (1,; *1 ' ' ‘ , " . f ' 1,535“; .iejvvl'efiwivg ' , 3 K said. Dinkle said he believes another Icontinue my educationorenterthe
$3.53.... ":19. "c ., s “a. git". 2." «an? ‘ .o. i 3"je’i’5’g‘ Jig: “ “i5- " ‘32; “We‘ve blocked the mining of year as student body president job market,” he said. “I want to
‘_.':k$‘§;tfif . _ “we, :5. '€:..t,“,'i‘it ‘tgif‘fl,’ ‘,‘,f ,.,, " it“: 5.51.4 ' ‘ "is ; 4'," fif." Robiison Forest and reached some would give him the opportunity “to strengthen my position on the Board
greasy 5., m . .- .» ha ‘ it; ""_V~1_» ' , " '~- - ; 3:1», (jpfiflfkc .'-’ S ; '-‘-'.-f'.;_‘. compromises on the (mandatoryl carry out a lot more of the long- . . . I don’t see this as any different

j-f‘; -...—,. ':‘j”""“"‘ v 5e .. . . f figps: ‘1‘ 2 “3,.” health fee," Dinkle said. “For the range plans" he has, such as ex- as (Bill) Steiden’s second year as
»"-%.3—‘~*1;',f~;; .ggaya'seffg' ., V,1.:‘~“Jj!§gs£; glue: .3.“ ,si" . ,,~,Is{,‘:?"i .‘ .‘c,,""'-_'-._ first time in a while, the student panding the SGA student legal serv- editorioftheKernel)."

’ 2:: -_.’_= -"£_‘ .".-:.£_‘.T‘;5.5- 'fii‘mt'. if“; 12 {:33 MW a.,~'~*?’_fi, body president is actively exercising ices and preparing the student lob- Taken off-guard by Dinkle’s an-
_ ,-“— .‘L~T”"»ijf-§-Ct“q~‘,-.-..}fo7 i 4‘ 3.313.“ ~. 3,3", if? . ,9" g 1": * «AVWnIWEf. hispowerasatrustee. bying effort for the 1984 General nouncement. Yeh, who will continue
' ' " ' - . -‘7:1":'ftiz.'1,7.»,“.;,“'§~"14i‘w, ifjr._;‘fu. :32 ..-.- , ' -4” ‘§;: “Re-election would give me an Assembly. as campaign manager this Spring,
. -- . “ ,1 '- {fig-f," up; 24725;: a . (5+9 - “ “,5," c' 9’ 31'“ ‘1 . a. {431’} added year on the Board of Trustees He said is considering one of five said he anticipates few problems in
_ " ' “iii! *‘9 23%,; '~ '.,5 _ ‘ '34:" '. “A, '_”- 'N and another year as an ex-officio senators or Vice President David the election. “Lastyearwe werean
'5' " ' 5'23}: ' ‘9“? . ‘ ~ -~ ., .. -. member of the University Senate." Bradford becoming his running underdog campaign . . . and we did
,_.,,,,,N,.°°,.,Ke,,e,$,a.. he said. “The second time around it mate in the Spring campaign. convinceaplurality.
s k would be a lot easier. You would The senators _ Senators at Large “_/..——"‘ ’ ?
tls l H - - $700 million for his a n terd h' h fraud crimes this year. /"”/ /\ /¢(

ca 1983 would undermine the fragile ge CY yes 0Y5 W “5 “People are looking for get-rich- , ,i ,

gains made by the least privileged in our 5h°Uld help delay increases in postage uick schemes" Lanny Miller. an T“ *00 0

. .. rates q . ' . ~. . . ’00 E“ )
socrety. 5 inspector With the Cincmnati office “mo
The accusation come in a report that also BUl John MCKeOn, 0 member of lhe Ogen- 0f P‘stal IDSpection serche. said. O . cmfi ' Q /

criticized the Justice Department's support €sz governing board, questioned ”‘0' total, “Theytaremomfispleé‘gteb i , in < / » .
of voluntary desegregation, charging that its s‘-‘Y'"9 he fell some unreliable data had theungmtaooi in 3,2, 3:0 $1,355,“, Mr- R' n . '
opposition to forced busing could mean the been used in arriving 0' the higher figure. year. Maj] fraud totaled nearly $900 117 “(6 K9. 3
return of separate and unequal public Another board member, David Babcock, million. with many cases going un- Letl i
schoolstor minorities. noted that workman's compensation costs reported.f b 11 Lt .

~ had been listed at l milli nl th n . Fear 0 em arrassment. sma
Commenting on the report, Lorry Speak- ected S 06 0 955 0 9" amounts of money involved. failure 5\ .

es, deputy White House press secretary, p ' ~ . . . to recognize that crimes have oc- y;
said the administration had tailored its cuts The P°5'°l Servrce '05' l'm5hed '3 fiscal curred. and not knowing how to re- l
in aid to college students so that students Ye"r '" "‘9 “0‘“ l" 1979' When i' ended UP port an offense are reasons Miller l
from families with incomes of less than $470 million to the good. That was followed cited for many cases going unre- /

ii it ' ‘ ' Ported. '
$l?,000 actually would get larger grants. He :Yill‘lfn in :92: $306 million '0 ‘980 and 5583 In October 1W9. the Postal Service :
said the Reagan Policies would meet the 5 organizedaconsumer protection de- , "mum's/K MW. MW
goal of assuring access to college for mi- partment because of an increase in ' " ' ‘ ' ‘
norities. whitecollar crimes especially mail velope-siuffing. magazme subscrip— for. Comumers should investigate
fraud. It seeks to educate the public iions. fraudulent correspondence before they invest."
. , . on mail-fraud schemes through con- rograms. and medical quackery He 3 ests that before ordering

'WOfSt '3 I'IOt 0V0? 'n "Ming tacts with media and Speaking at 50- :uch as diet pills and fake diet product‘sssthrough the mail, people

WEATHER cial and civic clubs. weight-loss schemes should read all information in adver-

Devastating floods that have driven 26,000 Miller said mail-fraud thefts are The Postal Service defines mail tisements. including the fine print.

people from their homes in the Mississippi probably lower ln Fayette (ohm) fraud as devising a scheme and never send cash, and beware of ex-

than in many other Cities. The usmg the mailtocarry itout. aggerated claims. If suspiCiom of

Valley surged downstream yesterday as N°' economy here hasn't been as hard Miller said most crimes occur companies' legitimacy. they should
tional Guardsmen and volunteers hustled to hit as the rest of the country.“ he after people answer advertisements contacttheBetter BusinessBureau.

shore up river levees. said. . in magazines or newspapers. espe- Kathryn Conklin, executive direc-

Domoge estimates from the flooding lncreaslng “00'5“.” '°“°Y with 0 M9“ He. however. described Fayette cially weekly tablmds. or after re- tor of the Better Business Bureau of
touched off by storms in the region '0", lost In the upper 40: to low 50:. County as typical of other Cities in sponding through the mail to a tele Central Kentucky. said mail orders

. . you...“ will be mostly cloudy and thetypesof schemes med. phone sollt‘ltallon, He said. however. are “one of our largest complaint
"'9" °PP'°°""d ’h’ h°"'b'”'°" d°"°' h , ‘ ,0 Insurance frauds. false directory the most common method is direct getters and inquiries. Traditionally
mark. At least 19 people had been killed by “M" “'m‘ ° b" I" ' . "PP" .." incidents. envelope-stuffing schemes soliCitation through the mail. they'reonthetopofthelist."
tornadoes and floods and leur were miss- '°"‘ 2°" and chain letters are the most com. According to Miller. the best way In 1%1, general mail-order com-
- " ing. Tomorrow will be mostly cloudy and men schemes reported in Fayette to detect a possible mail fraud plaints ranked first in ingiiriu re~
' ' cold wlth a hl h In the mid to UPPOF County. scheme is common sense “If it ceived by the bureau, wi no per-

; llltnors 'Gov. James R, Thompson declared 30' ' College students in the area are sounds too good to be true. it proba- cent of the filings helm meilvrhr

six counties —- mainly in the northern part ' more vulnerable to chain letters. en- bly ,s_ because you get what you pay See Man, p09,;

 %
Keiiiiel
II“ M Andrew W John 01mm “won W. “MM! Llnl I. I04... 1.0. V000...“ Don CIM
“moron-Chm. News Editor Arts Editor 590'" “I'm Spuial Protects fdlto' Photo Editor Graphics Editor
P E R5 ASION Juno-Idem. Home Ulric!- "In Selle. lull. NM Jr. Mldley hum KIN-lo MIIllon luv-afloat Chile Ash
l I Money-rigidity td"°"°'Ed"°' A""‘°""'" ““O' Autltamhporufdilor SponolProiuu Assistant Chief Photographer Copy Dul- (hint
W
President Reagan’s five-day swing through edly discussed the sale of helicopters and
South and Central America ended up being communications equipment to Guatemala,
relatively uneventful in real terms, although but insiders tell of massacres of Indian peas-
the president succeeded in his first trip to ants. . OF w I m,
the Third World in allowing his administra- Reagan a1§0 informed reporters he is pre- 50 ”5415-5185"; m 50” A. 5&1 W I,
tion the opportunity to improve the strained paring tIo reinstitute aid to El Salvador be- m,WAlT, W] ZOHNUHA W" LS, We RP,
relations between Western Hemisphere cause, in the administration’s view, the N (I I,
neighbors. human-rights situation there has shown con- MIB*RFM I ”O u MAWWK
In a triumph for the administration, the siderable improvement. The statement sur- ‘ '
historically cold relationship between Brazil prised Washington, since barely a month ago , ~
and the United States eased with the aid of Ambassador Dean Hinton threatened to cut /,t wwvmma/
an emergency $1.2 billion short-term loan to off all aid unless further inroads were made . // l ) YOUR
permit Brazil, the biggest and wealthiest na~ on the issueof human rights. H . ‘\ ”/4 NESSHCafi my...
tion in Latin America, to service its nearly Reagan also gave Honduras’ experiment , l‘, / I/ , . . it
$90 billion in long- and short-term debt. The in democracy a pep talk, although for some ”I; I}. '/ 4/ . . l. . '7” s
move by Reagan was more out of necessity time now Honduras has been the front line in ‘9 /' ‘ ‘l/ "‘W ’ 7" ll
. . ‘ . . . . . . iv / ’\/ u l lll'l' “”1 it
than out of friendship - if Brazil’s economy the fight to bring down the Sandinist govern- . t. , ~.' fit // 1 I ‘- , - \~\ . [7% ¥
collapses, it could conceivably take the West ment of Nicaragua. The Central Intelligence \ I ‘ , . ; \ ‘ ;\/ ,s a I \l\‘ g
with it. Agency has beefed up its squad of operatives ‘\ ’ I \ \\ 3 \\ ‘\"\.
Brazilian President Jose Baptista Figuei- and is preparing for a “quick strike” attack ,3 a o . ., g t} / \ . ,,:'l\\,\\\”\,5\
redo also approached Reagan with several on Managua, while American aid to Hondu- / I \ "‘ // “My? 9
gripes about the major powers’ stance to- ras is funneled into military support for Gen. .Q , , “:5 /I/%/// // “in new "
ward Latin America, and in return Reagan Anastasia Somoza’s exile armies. \ -. l t { S“ " ,,v/ ”m, M if
advanced his familiar gospel of democracy, Gen. Benedito Lucas, Guatemala’s most . I l (N r , / I? 'I ,. '//”l/Il;,‘-/ If,” l/Ii \in
free enterprise and partnership, and exhib- powerful military figure, told The New York II ‘ II J} / / ‘ If m ilIII \ ‘ \-._: "*
ited his worthiness in formulating a complex Times in February that, for the multi-head- . H \ \ ’ I / ii,” a m, \\ :2.
foreign policy and his personality in diplo- ed invasion to succeed, “there must be a ' U ) \\ r , M “MIMI” thallium W 9,; I,
matically cooler environs. green light from Washington.” The adminis- .I *3 , - l I' / m,, , . ""1"! \‘\\\\\"‘ V’ ,w I;
But a trip designed for promoting democ~ tration is acting much like a traffic cop, (( l l ‘9’ I j . l in \l‘ \ ,‘ . / Elr 3;
racy and reaffirming commitments to in- holding off its critics by alleging a menacing K H I), K. , II , I . I w»)i/i,v , ".
volvement in Latin America had undertones Cuban- and Soviet-influenced military build- Q? ~ “"‘I . ll, ,l :I g, ‘l b ; /// ,3; ' M"? _,
of the administration’s ongoing support for up in Nicaragua. t I I 5U, \ {It . , II . ////\ifi'l“ \. I a,
repressive regimes. His meeting with Gen. Reagan went south to talk democracy. / by , - ,« ./ 7‘57 0% ._ ’
Efrain Rios Montt of Guatemala had to take What the oppressed citizens in many coun- ’/ w . . - ~ w .t\ 3 , ..
place in Honduras because Costa Rica did tries heard, however, was the sound of free- ,
not want Montt in San Jose. Reagan report- dom being strangled. i
Ill/h th "I!" d II d ' ”
. all should help the unfortunate
M d d fairly common among student writ- presents, but maybe the store you “Hunger claims 40,000 children oneconclusiontomake. hoped to be a growing experience ‘j,
U ”1955 ers at this flagship umversitIy of a work at Will give you a discount and today” Indifference is killing these peo- for both parties and more than just f
, . . state where the sun 0f illiteracy make you fed 155 phony. Words, at This should headline every news- pie, not hunger. It’s a case of mur- monetary assistance.
Slhee the Kerhel editors advlse “5 shines brightly. I also have to admit least pnntable words, cannot ex— paper in the world until something is der by negligence and we are all Eighteen dellars a month can give '=:.,I_
t0 SWlteh t0 subyects other than Paul that about one-fourth of the fresh- press my disgust at your articles. If done. guilty. 8 human being hope forabetter life.
VS- GALUS» I W111 aim "EX scalpel at men here have difficulty recognizing you would like to give me a gift: The most important problem fac- We struggle to get ahead but don’t It’s easy to forget the poor, but it’s 2
the P0!” .quehty 0‘ ““th as re the subiect and the predicate m a qmtwntms. ing us isn’t the economy, inflation, worry about the millions of people also easy to help them by just keep-
flectedmlts letters thump: . . soealled compoundeomplex sen- Dan Stichnot or defense; it's the millions of peo- we leave behind. The American inguiemiamind . . . to
N0 letters 11? particular: One 15 tence. . . Computer sciencesophomore ple who struggle for survival, and --Dream has a car in the mehheepm in nu'adavith a per- 1
by a“ “mum“ sophomore. the Focusms 0" sentence 1115 only. I . . . the mousands that lose that struggle and a chicken in every pot but says sonal resolution:
other by 3 Phys"5 freshman believe that an equally flagrant yet DISIllUSIonmenl everyday. nothing about those with no drive I'll never wear fancy shoes; not or"
I(Dec.3) Beth‘lVTltel‘IS are I35 quIddy more pervaswe problem is the in- . _____———— way and no pot. while many people can’t afford any
in the" thinking as in their writing; sane obsession with “dangling mod- TIhe Crunch must have had an off- Millions of people deserve more type of shoe.
.1! “”3 got higher grades than “C ifieis." Just one example from the spring 1“ the form 9f Barbara P' 6 than justapassing thought. I’ll never have an extensive ward-
m thetr frshman English courses physics freshman’s letter: “In re- Sallee who inherited his small heart, - . ’99 Help is each individual’s responsi- robe; not while many people dress
here at UK, I would protest in the sponse to R.R.’s letter, his mimick- but not his nuracle operation. Ireal- . bility. Whether “is a million from a only in rags.
name 0f Beelzebub. . . “18 0t J-P- was befitting - - ~" If this 3?, should ’3?“ guessedI she was a V .; MADDOX millionaire or a dime from a paup— I'll never live in a mansion: not
. They both are strickIen by a wnl' future physicist cherishes precise Grmchess earlier this semester er, if we pull together it will be easy while some people live in cardboard
ms, disease called faulty_ predi- thinking, he can again solicit help when she wrote mvmpathetlcally __________ tobeat. sham
Fatlm' -Had they not been in mm from his English teachers, or from ofpeople telling he? that problems. Yet, it‘s more than a headline. It’s Donatiom to organizations such as I'll never go on exotic trips; not
it, for imtance, they would have me (but I’m afraid I'll have to raise Barbara SallIee 8 Dec 6 “rude afact that: Care and the Red Cross provide food while there are people whose only
chosen a clearer expresSlon than my fee to 310 for this sentence sur- showed her diSilluSlonment about . Every two seconds in 1981 a and clothing to needy persons trips are searches for food.
9"“ tw° sentencw Jus‘ because Sewl- th' I “Nd? Slims? the ”go": child died from hunger or hunger-re throughout the world. These organi- I’ll not have the trappings of
we are freshmen ' ' ‘ d” “0‘ mean I hope that some observant Kernel ”3‘13“" gets .51 uswned a u lated disease. zatiom seek to reduce human suffer- wealth while the tragedy of poverty
our 09mm” are 1&‘5 founded ~ ' ‘ readers have h°tl¢ed that the two th “theme and some - 100 million children go to sleep ing in every form. surrounds us.
and ”Just because J-P- made 3 CW student letter writers more or less Fem by ”“3““th smc‘de».5tea" hungry every night; Sponsoring a needy child through Put simply, I think 1 shouldn’t
ple of potshoIts at 3’9)?! 870W» does side With J08 Paul, another muddy "'8' being irritable, complaimng or 0 200 million 6- to 11-year-olds the “Christian Children’s Fund" have luxuries in life when milliom
“(make “Us?“ " . flunk“ turned writer. wgataz; that . t . have no school to attend. gets one involved more directly. For don’t have the basics. This seems to
. My prescription. page 6“ 9t wnt’ . ogabl is are aware be ’ "0‘31 ls - One—fifth of the world’s people :18 a month, the sponsored child will be common sense. Let’s get every-
"'3 (ICowan 5' Cowan). the current Gllbel'tD- Chen pr y not gomg .to a m fight for life itself. attend school, eat a good meal every one fed first. Then we can proceed
English 101 textbook. Next, try Ap English Graduate Student Como or Madison {Avenue These “m come from the UN day, and become a contributing from there.
“mam“ “e’c‘ses‘ “imam 3' °“ - mthemu?’ b"; that dméodsmp report The State of the World's Chil- member of his or her own society lkeep checking that figure — 40,-
Page 616- If they cant understand Dlng$1 Chr' ting-om . rezlmgt' as g a dren1981-82. through self-help programs. Just as 000 a day — t° make sure I didn’t
the text or do the exIerCise, I suggest . . ls . s as ls '5 ch. . . The figures are staggering and the importantly, the child will know that misread. Yes, it’s correct, 40,000 die
that they turn to their current orIfor- This letter is addressed to Barba- (lncxdently, as a tlI'iVial fact, it reality’s worse. While we go to class someone cares. a day. I didn’t realize. I didn't know
mer English teachers; that “fled” ra Sallee. I am happy 5:0“ are a se- must be an exaggeration that there 300 die; we Slt through 8 lecture - Sponsoring means involvement. it was that bad. But now I know, and
ask me for the incredibly low fee of mar so your drivel wont be appear- are three children for every adult in 1.500 die; “.5 lunchtime and still 700 The sponsor receives a photo and in- you do, too.
$5each. . . . mg in the Kernel much longer. the store where she works, Since more die. We have a good night’s formation about the child’s personal
strict;- farteShUnltanfofoThgosgdgrtl sl‘x 213313333: 1213!: lwoillllgeaagrgee 33;; graexlfigtgeorfialgislyurn 2.0 Sleepi eat 3 800d meal, and enjoy Situation. Exchanging letters is en- Greg Maddox is an undecided ju—
- ' . . . ' b t e e - e ' .
years, I admit that the “adverb- elated. L.B.Wagers free tlmei and they the “13195 U couraged as sponsoring a child is nlorandaKernelcolumnlst
clause-as-noun clause" syndrome is It’s too bad you owe Christmas Family studies senior
l I f I l
A merlca-where expressmn o Ignorance Is guaran teed
Free speech is the basis for every nalists because it puts f00d on their must know what they are doing Joe’s the guy who has sparked the know what he’s doing." editor with sweaty palms who hopes
otherfreedom in America. tables. I . when they publish banter on an greatest influx of scathing mail to “The letters, man. the controver- tohearfrom you againsoon.
Without the right to complain, peo- Jed Smock has every right to smg issue at any level of intelligence. the Kernel this semester. sy, the readers. . . ” .
ple slide under heels much more andIdance ”0W the Student Cen- They have to get a chuckle over Joe’s the guy who prompted floods Columnist's note: Professional
easily. ter if he wants to. Anyone else has printing a letter they know is full of of replies calling him closed-minded, greed will overwhelm human kind- Terrorism has come to Lexington.
—-———— equal “EhtS to step UP and make confused statements. hateful, sophomoric, blatantly igno- ness90percent ofthetime. At just a little past seven on Mon-
theirownwews knowntoJed. They know that several amused rant and much, much more; so The editor-in-chief, a man who has day evening, Dec. 6, 1%, a night
James As It happens, Jed usually sends and angry readers will write back to much, in fact, that the Kernel had to seen strong men reduced to tears manager at the Student Center Addi-
them away Wlth their underwear blast the published letter. Depending draw the line and stop printing with unrelenting rhetoric, is hesi- tion picked up a telephone and was
shredded and smoking. You can call on how well-written and viscious the them. tant. “The ’1] me] him into the givenabrief, memorable message.
STOLL , 3! pm
hlm 8 schmuck - l have heard him blasts are there is the equal possibil- Joe‘s the guy who inspired Stepha- concrete." “You get those fags and lesbos out
_____________ called worse - but he 5 a real ity 0f counter-blasting. nie Hrkman, president of GALUS, to The editorial editor rubs his swea- of there or we will,” the caller said.
So f lks . CFOWd pleaser. . All of this is happy news to an edi- the following rhetoric: “Perhaps ex- ty palms together. “He’s got a right, “The bomb goes off insominutes.”
ill me 0 m our own government Lately the Lexmgton Herald has tor needing eight more inches of posure to straight-forward homosex- ain’t he?" GALUS had scheduled a meeting
st "'1 t0 “Tense what 15 known In carried an IalImost daily debate on copy for his Opinion page. uals would shed some light into the “Run it Monday." inthebuilding that night.
your Webster 5 .as. censorship, but the Iauthenticity Of the Blble and Which brings us to today‘s point: abyssof your mentality.” Journalists areaprofessional lot. There was an evacuation, the fire-
compared to a?" internation com,” 00d S Word. Reverends and atheists Joe Paul, political science sopho No, I would not want to be Joe. I don't care to reply to Joe Paul‘s men came and searched. No bomb
:PPIl'tS. American Journalists ‘10“ have JIometIl in public mudsllnging more. Joe’s the guy who wrote the Actually, I would not care to know conceptiom of sexuality, love and was found.
veitsobad. and hairspllttlng for the amusement “Anti-GALUS” letter in the Nov. 29 Joe. normalcy, even though they genui- GALUS went ahead with the meet-
F0l' theImost part, any Ischmuck and edificationofthemasses. Kernel. But even schmucks have got a nely offend me. Plenty of readers ing they had planned for the eve-
gets theIright to say whats on his lam certainly amused . . i would not want to be Joe right right. havedonethat already. ning, not to be intimidated by point- e, ,
mind. Its "‘0" important to 10“" As writers, all editorial editors now. I can imagine an editorial editor l’m not one to stoop to running less bomb threats from anonymous ~—
r5 . and an editor-inchief on some anon. through my thesaurus for synonyms cowards.
DRABBLE by Kevm F090" ymous large newspaper turning Joe for “stupidity" or “intolerance” be- The mystery calle