xt7hhm52js1k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7hhm52js1k/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-11-15 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, November 15, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 15, 1982 1982 1982-11-15 2020 true xt7hhm52js1k section xt7hhm52js1k M
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Vol. LXXXV, No. 69 Monday, November ‘ I982 All Indopondont student newspaper University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
MONDAY W I f d-
home to his first-floor apartment in into the building without shaking “So 'vemeacou eofda ”
fl -
SW announces candidacy BySYLWESTER KRUPPA this Baltic port city where his wife, hands. He was accompanied by four Thgre were nil:l accouhsts of the
AssociatedPressWi-ita' seven children and hundreds of peo- bodyguards whom witnesses de- greeting he received from his wife
McDOWlLL — Grady Stumbo, former state Human Re- ”Elba" maintained a 1°th aniaous scribed 35 government security and Children when he entered the
. . _ .__..__ v1 . agents. a rtment for the first time since
3:320: :icrzrry’i announced his carLdidacy for :he 'l)”m°d Walesa was arrested when martial After five minutes and in response lag: December. His wife, Danuta,
. .0 n '0" 0f governor ”5'9" 0V. among 0"" Y 0“ GDANSK, Poland — Solidarity law was imposed Dec. 13 and Solida- to the incessant chants of the crowd. and some of their children had been
friends In this coal-mining town where he lived as a boy. chief Lech Walesa returned to a joy- rity suspended. The independent Walesa came to the window and allowed to visit him during his inter-

Stumbo became the first Democrat to formally announce fill homecoming yesterday after (‘15- umon “’35 outlawed by Parliament said, “I will speak very briefly be- nment.
that he will seek the gubernatorial nomination. Those con- {Whig to:- mate :‘ffl $351311 Lajétmorllthaeflundregs oftot'hg 5?” cause I have "0t med my voice for “We are just looking at each
. . owmg s reease to y ea rs an ac ms a so oneyear. other," Mrs. Walesa told The Asso-
sidered tobe frontrunnars, Lt. Gov. Martha Layne Collins martial-law custody. were arrested and although many ciat ed Press when reached by tele-
and LouisVille Mayor Harvey Sloane, are expected to an- “In my future conduct. 1 will be have been freed. some are still im- “We have to reach an agreement. phone Asked if she would pass the
nounce by the end of the week. courageous but also prudent and prisoned. bl" h°t 0" 0“" “1°53, he said, phone-to her husband, she shouted:

there is no discussion on it. We must The crowd broke into cheers when 9¢h°'h,8 the statement he made ‘h an “You must be kidding! Now he’s

. win!” Walesa vowed. He spoke the 39-year-old union chief showed intemew “th the government teie- mine!“

NIXON says R0898" should consult Carter through a loudspeaker from a win- up just before 10:30 pm. (4:30 pm. “5‘0“ hetW°rk Saturday before he The crowd, which had dwindled

dow in his apartment after rmhing EST). “There is no freedom without was realeased. from about 2,000 as disappointment

_ . . . . inside past about 500 cheering Solidarity!"the crowd cried. When he asked if the interview ew that Walesa would not return

NEW Yo,“ :mhgrd N'xon his, ("fazed Prezde‘nt ”$09,?" friends and supporters. Waiesa, still with his bushy mus- had been shown on television yester- gr another night, chanted “long

'0 COM”? “0'.“ 0"“9" Pie" 3" . 'mmY °' 9" 'h '5 There was no immediate expiana- tache and wearing a gray suit, daynight,thecrowdroared,“No.” live Walesa!” and then went home
efforts '0 help b"m9 P90“ ‘0 the M'ddie 50“ tion for Walsa’s delay in coming jumped from a Peugeot and rushed “I have to think it over,” he said. athisrequest.

"I think consultations with Carter would be useful," '

Nixon said in an interview with The New York Times pub- w. ... ,_ ,
Iished yesterday. He said Carter knew Israeli Prime Minister . ~-'_ ._1 .. 3? ii” . , ' 1:1
Menachem Begin "better than Reagan does." " fl . g . M . :‘ -‘ .iz.

In a separate interview with WCBS radio, Nixon pre- ‘ j; . '_. . " " ‘ . . "
dicted another war if Begin refused to permit self-govern- i i I ‘ = ' l 3. H -.. - i ,_.'2'
ment for the Palestinians. 4*" ,5 . ~ ' . 3,, .3 ,

. . o a La . I
Vietnam vecs' memorial dedicated slng| n' -;. :- ., . _ .5, - . - __
WASHINGTON —— Under the soaring arches of the Wash- the blues G 3%! _ l. _ i” “iii , , ”-
ington Cathedral, Vietnam veterans heard prayers yester- .' if , 3 *3 " _ 3 ' 3
day that the reconciliation they seek can lead to an end of V V .. *; .
war . - " V N ~ ' ' 9 V9“-

While well-dressed Washingtonians prayed alongside Kentucky C0°Ch Jerry ' i {i V' if
visiting Vietnam veterans in frayed field jackets at the ca- Claiborne expressed his 1;... ,,, i 7,; . : '"
thedral, spontaneous rituals of remembrance took place at dissatisfaction overacall by . _ V :” i ’
the black granite walls of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. one Of the referees in z .3. ‘5.- -- "

The memorial, built at the insistence of Vietnam veter- Saturday's game With Florida (I , .s U l " 2.
ans, was dedicated Saturday following a triumphant veter- 0' Commonwealth Stadium. ./ ’3? 5 5": \
ans' parade down Constitution Avenue. The official ruled 0 Florida \, , 3, ‘3' .

The parade, the veterans said, gave them what they P055 incomplete 9V9" thOUgh ' il/ -»
wanted — a nation's ceremonial gratitude for their sacri- there were OPPOTGMIY "0 ' i Q,
fices no matter how divisive and futile the cause may have receivers in the area and I 5' I [My ‘3 ’
been. Claiborne was expecting an f \ C ”K «

intentional grounding call. The ’ . W.” ‘ ""‘ ‘ - ,‘\\ ”in“ " -
. . Wildcats lost 39-13, dropping ’ 4 L“) V

Briton brings anti-IRA campaign to U.S. their record ‘0 0.9.1. , 3 _ l . ‘
LONDON -— Dismayed by the acquittal of five alleged IRA [x
gun-runners in New York, James Prior, Britain's Northern ‘ .4,“

Ireland secretary, has begun a week-long trip to the United m. VANNOOSI/Kernel Staff - . .. 1 "
States in an effort to stop Americans from giving money to ‘ ,3. .
what he calls IRA front organizations. ‘ - ‘

Prior is taking his campaign to New York, Washington, - M , g ”
Minneapolis, Atlanta and other U.S. cities in a tour that " ,3 3 . *9 m, .
started last night. The government would not disclose his h ' ' " '
full schedule for security reasons. Aides said Prior's main . . .
mess-age will be that a political settlement is the only rea- PUbllSher promlses Improvements
Iistic solution to the problems in the British province and
that violence will achieve nothing but more misery. '

There are reports that guerrillas are looking for new era ea er to merge In Janua
weapons in the United States. I

—— " "_ ' . _ . dro 2.3 rcent over the l t

Gm“ chancellor visits Reagan 3" W333?” The combined paper wrllmcorporate "the best ningpggars, Rim 33,69 to 32,733.

features of both the Herald and the Leader and 031F123 the sameedpegwt herald Cir-

wasumotou — West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl ———-—————-— expand. . . our coverage and commentary in ggfiggggf‘s ”"9"“ {mm

arrived here yesterday for an official visit a day after Presi- The Lexington Leader, a mainstay ways that would not have been possible with The circulation 0‘ the Sunday Her '

dent Reagan gave German-American relations a motor of Lexington journalism for 94 the continugd duplication ofeffort inherent in a aid-Leader grew 46-? percent, from
boost with his announcement of an end to sanctions against years, will merge with the morning . ,, 82,754t0121.168.hesald.

. 3 . Le . H l d J n l two-newspaper operation.

the Sovuet gas pipeline. 'Ix‘tlilegtglmbeith 1:“de Herald Black said the staffs of the two

R9990" and Kohl pi?" several hours Of d'swss'F’m today Leader will be published as a mom- According to an article in Editor pers analysts see the changes as a gaspgfirxgl be corlriiglrftdéohpr;
'h‘” w'" “me" °"‘ 'h" 'mpl'cm'ms °l "‘9 leadership change ing paper. Creed Black. publisher of and Publisher. a journalism trade trend that is likely to continue,“ the 1 er b the” pape l t f It
in the Soviet Union and Reagan's decision to lift sanctions the papers and chairman of the Lex- magazine, the future of afternoon articlesaid. ”88601.38“ waning: (.0
against companies participating in the Soviet pipeline pro- ington Herald-leader Co., an- papers is uncertain. “Most newspa‘ Black said Leader circulation had ”Editorial zmployees atathfierald
iect. The sanctions had been a sore point in relations be- wI-‘g‘dty' an afternoon dail . , . ._ 3 ~~.~.- ., had no comment on the merger yes-
tween Bonn and Washington. published sinée um has experi’: « s 3313““ .3 : : _,v;‘.‘§~,.\ r: ' i - I $3133" dteferring to Black’s Friday

enced a decline in circulation. Black . .2337“: \‘ a -. ‘fi ‘ . ,
KGB WM .bOllt Afghanistan said, however. the merger was not I, #3:?“ - . a {0:13;} if e331 Giggpa‘filsb: or:
. widen m... MM... by i. Lilli iri‘tllllllmi ii-railrr a» duced a... means 1.... m a...
NEW YORK — A Soviet defector who has been described recession. '6'5" . ‘- " . “" .i equivalent of 30 full-time positions ”

. . . “While we have felt the effects of - . - . . . . . .. ....,. . M.“ . . . '
as a KGB officer says Leonid Brezhnev repeatedly ignored the recesion as most other busi- l . d 3 H I l . . An aSSIstant City editor at the‘Her-
KGB advice to stay out of Afghanistan and that Afghan "555 have. bur company is finan. .(‘J (.l'. e [0 fuel-go ““0 mommg Paper aiha Wh° 525k]? "0‘ to be identified,
President Babrak Karmal was a KGB agent ”for many cially healthy and confident about 7' "'3 3.3 .L:'- :erw-mw it. 3; ‘ viii-*LE'IE‘ 2:}: a”, :3' :2” $th drag?” [Semi like“;
years," Time magazine reported. the future," Black said in a pre- . . 3. ~ -1: :QWM“:= :wlfc ‘: j“, oftheLeader. ion partmen

The magazine also quoted Vladimir Kuzichkin, who de- ”figsmfit'“ the merger had I _ " ”7324’“? "" . €-'~."...;"‘ a”??? : 2:3”.523” Bl k sa' d the co b' ed pe

. . . . » . . . 4.33:. -1"; surf": " :,=,..-.:;:2. at“: r 80 1 m in P8 1‘
fected to Great Britain in June. as saying a special ’KGB-led, been solely based on economic rea- ‘_ 3 1 52:131.;33 33:33., 33:33:: $333?!“ T ygége’leik will incorporate “the best features
Sovtet assault force stormed the palace of Karmal s prede- sons. “we would simply fold up The ~ 5‘1“?” ’ 1--’~“'5-“- Y” 35 3......“ “‘ ~-"~“"~ of both the Herald and the Leader
cossor, Hafizullah Amin, and killed him because he wanted Leader. dismiss the staff and pub- Former chief and expand . . . our coverage and
to turn Afghanistan against the Soviet Union. “8'?th Herald “gm“ ‘3? change.“ figmmentar y in ways that would "01

K - - - , - , 3 ~ - e reason or e merger. ve been possible with the contin-

UZ'Chkm said "2,19 ate Sovne ”Oder '9'.”er warnings according' to Black. was “a long- ‘ 0f KGB gets ued duplication of effort inherent in
from the KGB that a Communist takeover in Afghanistan - - - , . . ..

3 . 3 3 range decision based on marketing . atwo-newspaper operation.
presented hamraismg problems . . . an openly Communist and readership 33‘,de we have been 5 Brezhnev I He said it “will follow an indepen-
regime would arouse hostility that would then be directed conducting ioralmosttwoyears. J I dent editorial policy . . . and among
against the Soviet Union." “We are takins this course be- 3- 3f . . " -... . .3 .. ’ ‘ E the improvements we plan is an ex-

cause we have concluded that we 3» I A i «l. 3 _ . 3 3 , pended oppositeeditorial page to
\ “@nhettel'ofsem: tl;e gander: mfg”. 3; N‘ x . 3. .r i «r , provide additional space for a diver-
isers cenra a ens ern en- 3.: ' g . ‘ sit of 0 him."
\ / lucky by concentrating our re- " = W’ 3'12”” .. i y pl _
sources on a single newspaper than ‘ " ' "" 3 Among other changes In the new
WBAT _ by continuing to divide them be- e W 1‘11 ,._ Herald-header will be increased
tween two."hesaid. . ' 5' _ 3- *‘tfi coverage of business and religion.
Black said another factor was a W . ' "‘ “* i gw ”gin Black said the paper 315° will hire
i \ trend toward closings and mergers 5.57233: " fi‘fih’tfiwafij :‘E‘fiffifi figs: 1.373;: an editorial cartoanist earlyin 1&3.
of 8‘th newspapers that has .. .......»...;.-.,. '- Mm”... . swam... . W. 1'0”” . _""’""'° John S Can-o V 40. editor of the
. made their future “increasingly pre- Tlh'" - . 4 New stale vol. *I We Herald since 1979. will be editor of
Ioeomlng mostly sunny but cool today with a high In “doug- M a”? , . y. ' ll m W. the combined paper. Black SIM

thoupporios. Between 1980 and i979. the num- am $35 ‘53; . .. . :‘h£;‘a.""“ Steve Wilson. :5. editor of the
., . Cloor and cold tonight wlth a low in tho low to mid ber 0‘ afternoon dailies in the United * ' my} t i , ' .: ma“: 2"”‘3‘7 Leader 5m“ .1973' has accepted a
2°" State Mined from ”59 to ”05. _ 3., . ,3. ..>¢.‘NQ',-, ' U » . “t: ”a; can“ éfig’ 3:30“ 0:3 33:13:? lit) the executive
Sunny and warmor tomorrow with a blob In tho During thesame ”md‘ the "Mb“ i i' D: in- m “We, “”3"“:3 ‘- 63%;; l ‘ m ‘ ‘

mil '0” ‘0. of mm papers rose from 312 to ‘3‘“ 3. “3.; gm...‘ .. g... . .; ‘ .. afa-‘W » . at asoownedby Mam-Bidder-
PP" ' 382. with a 4.3 million increase in f -: st tit-3‘» ‘ 3‘9' 1.?" _'. ~ , . 1%: - . “6;! Although MEN-Richie? approved
circulation. " “ "i i"“""“"* ' ’ ' ”4 '~ - 'r- . 23-h ' the merger. Wilson said the “deci-

—_________—______—._. sion was all locally based.“

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Kér' "Del
slum Ante-w kill-m loosen mum lilnl tied... LEV“...- law
Editor-infidel um salvo: Am Editor Spon- Edito' Swiol Prat-m Elinor 'hote sailor Graphic. Editor
P E RSUASION Jun-Hula“ WWI-"e. Nitride-our. Mid-0y mom (”MOW luv-nu MM
MWW'WWW' (dilute! Editor AlllltOMAnlEditor Agilitnnlstaemidnor Special holocaust-tom (Helm Co” 0.“, ch...
‘ Mwbi’ ‘ A —_~____—_—_—.__—
World banking system totterin on brink of depression
In mid-October the prestigious En- hemibly large US. debt. A sizeable a fine impartiality. They financed Rome. Numerous small-town institu- tion Committees and will seek feder. and wise national leader who will re-
glish business weekly The Econo- portion is almost certain to be de- friend and foe alike, and many of tions have fallen. al rescue for their sinking ships. store confidence, build a sound cur-
mist published a forecast that must posited with a much larger regional the tanks that rumble beyond the The giants of the industry are Having supported welfare reduc- rency, balance the budget, inspire
have alarmed anyone with the abili- bank, perhaps in Cincinnati or Chi- Berlin Wall owe their existence to showing a distressing inability to tions for the poor they will clamor the world to cooperate for its salva-
ty to read and the wit of a wooly- cago. such sturdy patriots as David repay what they borrowed, including for welfare programs to save their tion and start the country into a new
worm. The world banking system, That bank will, in turn. deposit Rockefeller, long-time chairman of the like of Chrysler and lnternation- banks. era of self-relianceand prosperity.
warned the editors, is likely to some of your money with me of the Chase Manhattan. al Harvester in the United States, The politicians are certain to sym- 0n the other hand we ma
crash. New York giants such as Citibank. Simultaneoisly, the banking wiz- and the giant Telefunken AG of West pathize but their capacity to help is duce a dams gm Wm gxlg: .
-—-—--—-— Chase Manhattan, Manufacturers ards were pouring out their wealth Germany. limited. The treasury faces a $200 blame for all :tglruetroubles on some .
Hanover, Chemical Bank, Brown on “energy companies.” The devel- Around the world and across the billion deficit within two years, and cu] rit focus resentments and ha~
Harry Brothers Harriman and Bank of opers of coal mines and the drillers country bankers behold the woeful only the printing presses may be ‘ p, and ca ,5 into dictatorshi
America. of oil wells received abundant lar- faces of the empty-handed. The sup- available to generate the longed-for an d nu clear wiry p ,
if’ C A UDILI. In addition to matey flowing from gesseinAppalachia and Texas. plicants and delinquents range from cash, A country that must reduce Banking collapses are not new .4
w the American boondocks, the huge Abroad, the dollars went to cor- such giants as Brazil to humble Social Security commitments Will There have been man in our histo;
" ' international banks have been “re— porations and governments willing homeownersandtobacco farmers: have littleaid to offer the banks_ Nor should we beys rised b .
———————-————— cycling" erlm-mous sums from the to push farmers off their land and A Kentucky banker, $311118 We will almost certainly be forced rnhtional bankruptcies 1:? crash oyf f
The Economist is a most seriors oil countries whose treasuries would plant such cash crops as coffee, Moore of the Citizens Deposit Bank back to barter for a while. Money 1893 was tri e red b Argentina’s ;
publication whose counsels may be otherwise burst under the impact of cocoaandbananas. and Trust Company at Yanceburg, and credit will dry up, and we may inabilit to 88 a debtyto a consorti- = ,
ignored only at peril. Unlike the oil royalties increased 1,500 percent The debts piled up, commodity recently described the Situation in have a devilishly tricky time finding um of ganksplgd by London's Bari ..
Wall Street charlatans whose “news- since 1m. prices declined, econ0mies stag- graphic terms: “Our profits are something to trade for gasoline or Brothers ng ; ’
letters" occasionally send the stock They have done this by a process nated, unemployment rose, inflation down; we’re having tremendots cheese. 1 experienced this situation ' is
exchanges into panic, its writers are one banker called “offloading," soared taxes shriveled —— and those losses from business and farm fall- in 1932 when my father bought me a The Baring failure dried up the i:
renowned for their caution and bal- which is a term sometimes applied sovereign states faced debts they ures; we have high loan .delinqu- pair of shoes by agreeing to bring a money that was building Middlesbo- g...
ance. by farmers to the shoveling of cow cannot repay. Many energy compa- ences." merchant a dozen eggs twice a week ro and caused eastern Kentucky’s 3,171
.. Consequently. the class of 1%2 manure onto their fields. This was nies found themselves burdened The Economist believes the bur- fora month! » ~ - . {ii-signal depression. , ",1;
would be wise to put aside such accomplished by lending to sover- with vast obligations in the middle dem are too many for the banks to The federal gpvemment will find The difference this time is in f
weighty matters as football and pon- eign states on the goofy theory that ofagiobal fuel glut. carry. The nations, the corporations its borrowing power cut off and will scale. The catstrophe of which we - .2:
der the implications of this grim agovernment cannot go broke. Today the “less developed coun- and the small borrowers will come have to retrench. Veterans, Social have been forewamed will be world- in
possibility. The notion holds that a govern- tries” owe at least $425.2 billion to to them penniless, and in such num- security recipients, soldiers, bu— wide. East and West, North and g; ..
The banking system is tottering ment may “roll over,” or refinance the international banks, some 97 bil- hers that the House of Cards known reaucrats, college students and weld South, the peoples of the world will *
because for 8 long time many bank- its debts. but will not default. lion of it being due from Iron Cur- asl-lighFinancewilltopple. fare beneficiaries may go unpaid or wallowinpoverty together.
ers have not acted like bankers. Under this weird concept of the ln- tain countries. Poland — a kind of The big banking houses will crush face drastic reductions. This will If it comes, we will emerge from ,
‘ They have disbursed funds prom- ternationals gleefully off-loaded walking dead man — has already the regionals, and the regionals will cause such screeching as will set the it a different people. Many quiet
iscuously on a global scale and often scores of billions of dollars on Gen. defaulted on $324 million borrowed carry down the friendly people at printing presses going full tilt. dogmas will have to be discarded.
without any real prospect of repay- Galtieri's Argentina (remember his to buy us. grain. (The US. govern- your neighborhood bank. Then we In a little while the money short- Many old truths will have to be re. 1.
ment. comic opera seizure of the Falk- merit promptly moved in and saved will face a situation undreamed of age will disappear under a deluge discovered. Much of our personal .
Poor lending practices have be- lands?), Brazil, Mexico, South the financiers from loss on that since 1932, when 14,000 banks went ample to pay off the national debt liberty may be traded f“- a regu-
come routine throughout the West- Korea, Chile, Venezuela, the Phil- deal.) under. once and for all in fresh paper our lated“security." '
ern world, but the irresponsibility ipines and all manner of tea, cocoa, Mexico was saved from flat-out If The Economist and other equal- rency. In due time this green fluff We all hope the dire predictions .
has piled up deepest in the highest coffee, cucumber and banana repub- default by a hastily arranged new ly gloomy prophets trove to be cor- will be recognized as totally worth- from London will prove unfounded ‘5' .
echelonsof financial wizardry. lics. loan in which it acquired 1.85 bil- rect, whatshall becomeof is? Ifthe less and a Second collapse will but they may not. Even the most a
When you slide your paycheck Nor did they stop there. The bank- lions of new money to “service" un- world we know is flattened, how emue. fmlish of ,5 should think about the e——~—-—
under the teller’s grill, the money ers roamed the globe dispensing paid old loans. ThlB the banking shall we survive? And there will be other predicta- possibility, and how we, as individu. .2.
does not stay in the bank’s vaults. loans to the same Communist Bloc wizarth repay their banks with their Unfortunately there are few re- ble developments, including rioting als and families, as institutions and ii
Some of it is lent to people like our- nations against which we are now own funds by sloshing it through a spectable answers to such questions. in the streets and much marching to organizations, may survive and re- 2
selves for the small purchases we frantically arming. Poland alone bankrupt foreign country! Some probabilities may be and fro of troops as the once com- emerge wiser and stronger. :3;
crave. owes more than $0 billion, with Ominous cracks have appeared glimpsed, however, and it will be iortably well-to-do fall victim to peo- If
Some 806 '0 builders, businesses, nearly as much due from SUCh fiscal throughout the jerry-built banking well if we look at them. ple who prefer to rob rather than to Harry M. Caudlll is a professor in i
the loan departments of cities, for and economic powerhouses as Ru~ facade. A major regional bank, The Wise Men of Finance have starve. the history department. He has a in
municipal, county and state bonds mania and Bulgaria. Penn Square of Oklahoma, collapsed richly endowed presidents and con- Beyond this we speculate at our law degree from UK and has written r”
and to help finance the incompre- The U-S- capitahStS demonstrated — as did Banco Ambrosiano in gressmen through their Political AC- peril. We might raise a charismatic aeveralboolu about Appalachia.
I I .i”
German faces problem of unltlng country ~ 1.
3:
Perhaps more than any of his Vogel may have been the best week). L ET BRS
American counterparts, 56-year-old choice for mending the rift and ap- Nor will reconciliation with the as?
Hans-Jochen Vogel has his work cut peeling to West Germans in general. Greens and their supporters (who, 1*
out for hiln. The [Jemima] favorite of Willy according to opinion polls, number i?
T'T-‘——— Brandt, Vasel_ is also. a Catholic about 10 percent of the populace) Honest through a great portion oftheir lives careful not to mistake this so-called
its; his 4:" GLEN from oomahve Banana. happen overnight. _ Y unscathed and who have led, as Sal- “verbal promiscuity" with true hon- ~'
,, l ,. § lle was highly mtlcal of the left Deeply troubled by nuclear proh- I am somewhat concerned over leewrites, “pretty good lives." esty (one might speculate on tile .,
,e : OM dunns a stint as mayor of Munich feratlon as well as the foreign mflu- Barbara Sallee’s column No. a, in perhaps someone should tell them real, underlying reasons for prom. ;_
- v , SHEARER from 1960 to 1972; as numster of Jus- once over German economic and which she chose to lambast some about the other part, not only for iscuity, verbal or otherwise). Maybe »‘
. "Fe from 1974 ‘0 15m. be earned cultural hie. the Greens repeatedly nameless young man whose only their sake but for those who occa- if there was more honesty, there
——_——— high marks from the left for his {‘9' say "18‘ they W1“ "01 compromise crime appeared to be a lack of dis- sionally may be somewhat less than wouldbeless iromiscuity?
As the’man slated. to face West small“ to demands 0‘ tefl'Ol'ISt the" lll'll'llllli’l‘5 for the sake 0' the cretion in his conversation with her discreet. Certainly. honesty is special and
Germany 5 conservatlve ’Chancellor laws. . . SH); . . duringarecent lunch hour. i also am not advocating that we not always easy. Honesty calls for .
Helmut Kohl ln Marchs general Meanwhile, a brief tenure as 'l‘w1ce In the last year, lh {89" Perhaps onlyGodknows what pro- should go around “dumping" our sensitivity and discretion on the part
filectmlsi the new leader 0‘ the. left rnayor of youthonented West Ber- SPD efforts") form a malonty With voked this person to tell Sallee of loads whenever, wherever and upon of both sender and recipient of the
'5‘ 30°15“ Democrats must unite 3 1m. where Schmdt posted him last lhe Greens “l Hamburg City govem- some of the lesser attractive aspects whomever we please, or that we “honest"communication.
party that 15 more deeply film than year ‘0 W party splits, brought ment have failed._ , ofhis life. have to become receptacles for such Even in those most intimate and
the pemocratsmthe Umted States. him into close contact with the As Karsten Votght, a 91081“the Maybe he was struggling with loads. personal relationships in which we .
His, task may take years. to the Greens. member of the Bundestas and a 86- some awesome and potentially debil- What I am saying is that we need find ourselves from time to time, i ,
benefit of both Kohl s conservohye Despite his experience, Vogel ac- cunty expert for the SPD. told us re itating burden and needed to unload to develop greater sensitivities in re- wonder if their quality would be im-
coahtlon and the Reagan admlms- lmowledges that Kohl's party won’t cently._"lf we run to the Greens. the a little of it and wasn’t paying much gard to our fellow human beings so proved or their longevity better as-
tratlon. , _ , godowneasily. SPD Wlll be In for ll blazer Swfi attention wherehewas unloading it. that maybe we wouldn't have so sured if when one is ready to be hon-
, The once-unlfled 50°13] M003" Though 180.000 trade unionists It W1" kill” credlbllltY- _ (Don't we sometimes make a mis- many problems, personally and in est,theotherisaroundtolisten?
10 Party of former ‘ chancellor Hel- turned out last weekend in Stuttgart “Besides, if the cause 0f the" take and pllt our cars in no-parking society. Finally, those of us who endeavor
"ll“ Schmld‘ remains seriously dl- to protest the new government's eco fnstration was laid down years ago. zones without really meaning to vio- Perhaps, if we would just bear a only to gain applause might find it
Vided 0" the lssue of nuclear nomic 3“!le mam. K0hl has we can't_overcome lt (IlllelY- The latethe law?) little, tiny bit of each other's burden, comes more oftal, and with less
“”9095 . "flied ‘0 comply With 8 38888" ad- Greens W1" 00"th ‘0 918809 “5 for Maybe he was suffering from the every now and then, sincerely and pain mothers, inshow business.
Originally proposed by Schmidt, "1111““?th mt that West Ger- acoupleof years, at least." all-too-common but little acknowl- not grudgingly, for a very, very
NATO 5 P‘i". ‘0 “9'0? 2“ m9dlum- many boo-t defame expenditures in When the Mmh election arrives, edged malady called loneliness and brief period of time, some of our Terry Harmon
""88 mull“ 0" German 8°“ W," Ml terms next year (something Vosel’s work to revive the SPD may just needed to make some sort of problems might disappear, abate or Social work research assistant
year drew enough fire from SDPs which Defeme Secretary Caspar have only begun. contact with another human being, at least become more bearable.
lefthns. aswellas theyouthful and Wembu-ser wfll surely mention Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer and maybe he just found Sallee at- it might just be that those who
mcresslngly POWfl'flll Green Party, when his counterpart Manfred are Pulitaer Prize-winning national tractive for some reason and be- perpetrate horrendous crimes. such —
WWW“? the “me" chancellor. Woerner, VlSltS Washington next columnists. , came anxious and l'lusta‘ed ill an ef- as murder and other violent acts. L -
DRABBLE C") by Kevm F090” fort to permit her to know him would not have chosen such means ONOIS Pallcy
better. to get attention or to “pay back" so
66.00% m1 l'M NOT even else m V‘ Although the exact reasons for the ciety for some slight insult, be it hot-Io Miami». Ion-n to
59pm to (outline \F up an AFFORD (r man’s indiscretion are not known, it real or imagined, if, during those tho Kentucky Kernel should «-
VKETH L00“ A wwwwltlb ‘NK W [1' is almost certain he will long regret painful, often critical periods of dress tholr cornmeal” typed and
TURKE‘l ““5 . the encounter. Perhaps he can [tdit their lives, someone had men semi- Milo-opus“ to "DO “Noel-l od-
Mfll. ,, 7 a r from it and lake the plunse again tive to their need and had just given "or at no loom-nun lulldln' ..
" ’ i ‘ / d c. sometime with a better eye for them a few moments of their undi- UK. Lealngfon,Ky.40306om2.
f: ‘ f- , z . “shallow waters." vided attention. ' wmm must Include their
f . NJ" . P Q '\, ( “W7, '2’; I don’t wish to be particularly un- They might have not expected, or mules. addresses. telephone
,— - . ‘6 -— ~ "‘ ' W kind to Sill”, and I am trying to want“ anything more than just “8- numbers and their “love. cluel-
) t“. F Q M ° give her the benefit of the doubt in toning, and many unfortunate situa- Ole-um or connection with mt.
, -~ 3”) my attunpt to realize that there are tiom mlgllt' havebeenavoided. indonmloeolon WIIIMM“. ,
_ __._1 l l ”\' “W "'°" "‘° “m ’““‘° " ""° ”e" m“ ‘" W" "° —

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Be in returns to Israel followin wife's death SW“ "'° "' "“°
I I I '
9 9 III Imp assoclabon s
lzma.m.SurIthy(6:mp.m.ES‘l‘SatuI-day). mforlhelongfllght home. Angela, Naomi Levi, said Begin would ae- m sad W
’ ByARTllURMAx The 0-year-old Il'ime minister cut short The Begins were very close, and an Israel clude himself from news media to face his 3,. “Clog BOWUNG
Associatedpress Writer his plat-led “Hi-y American trip. which was Radio reporter traveling with the prime min- “more persorialloas." We,
to have helm tt'a‘elksmw‘i‘tuh film Reagan :‘tfhguoted him as saying, “I shoulth’t have In Washington, usistant White Home press
on llebarlon e peace [roc- ." secretary Mark Weinberg said President
us,andboardedhislaracllairfwcefloeing Asecretaryatthelsraeliconsulateinlsoa Reagantelephonedtheirimeministertoex- __————_
dERUSALEM — A grief-stricken Prime m “hi8_&le§tsly:paAtlli¢i';“Sem hillrht its pastor theannual Christmas
-—- mmwwmm 3°31" - n 30 Seal Drive, 16 womenwill com-
the United States yesterday alter his wife of A ff' I ' has sent a persaul note of condolence, the te in a “Miss Christmas Seals”
43 years died, and Israel began a day of otti- rm y 0 I C 8" S ('98 timon y content of Which would remain prime» the figment. spomond by the
cial moist-Iliuiitigmflordgctims of an explosion in spghkesman said. . ter ill the d] bluegrass office of the American
lemma We a a _ e prime minis w cheer-v. e tra '- LimgAssociation.
mainstrwmo mom: 00" trad/cts 399”? stance mommmmim iii: first: mad to; "i
. week that leveled Israeli military headquar- , . . this afternoon. Reporters were told Mrs. beg