xt7q2b8vdz0z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7q2b8vdz0z/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-11-16 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 16, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 16, 1982 1982 1982-11-16 2020 true xt7q2b8vdz0z section xt7q2b8vdz0z H
KEN I UCKY New thlala “MOI”!
ION”? The Philadelphia Eagles defeated the
Atlanta Falcons 20-” in last night's foot-
ball action, but player reps Stave Lawth-
”6 er and Jim Harris say they‘ve had it. A
strike is in the offing, and the votes get
E n !! BALL counted today. For perhaps the last
Strat-O-Matic NFL football this season.
see page5
._______________.____________.
Vol. LXXXV. No. 70 Tuesday, November lb. 1982 An independent student HOWSPGPOI' University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky
. ..I I '.I a; ,_ 5 I ‘ B I I
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., . . M: V V . ‘ . ’~. . *7 " ;' . . 1'
”View? ’ WV ., T‘VVV " {977: . 3.. / I I
is sis/psi between . . ovuet regime
l i wists” , ‘ ms', ”it: _ s21 . “i . " - I
l “ ,v .1553 .'I" y ' .j . f V . '~ . . Moscow (AP) — U.S. Vice Presi- meeting since Brezhnev simed the table.” .
. u, ;., w; , a. dent George Bush and new Soviet second strategic arms limitation Bush said he told Sowet leaders
, 2;” V;"I,,IsIfWV:EZI§3 « ’* leader Yuri V. Andropov met for a treaty with then-President Carter in Washington is ready to conduct rela-
‘- . '.;-.;.;;; a, "35.. ‘1, , ' .. half-hour after the Brezhnev funeral June 1979. The Kremlin has cited the tions “with the aim of expanding the
5. «.1» ». .. years... «2 , . a. 5 , _ .
. ,r .‘ miss/4i“ “‘4‘ we fit - is.» - 2 " . yesterday to discuss what both said latter U.S. failure to ratify that trea- areas where our two nations can oo-
. f ' W”‘”‘V3Vs:3 % s4? ' .9. ; ; areas a desire to improve relations ty as one major cause of tension be- operatetomutual advantage.
-° ' ii ...,f' is “is " f5»; "’- "°" ' g, ”is " - tween esu w . -
. .. ,. , is ,t ..., ... fl . . . . perpo ers. tween the superpowers. ..
' " ,. Qsz‘V V ..V :si‘VVV‘iVV‘ ..,'." ‘V; 3i "" " ' BUSh said a‘t‘i'iwa’d the talks Since “Side!“ Reagan took 0" mgémlagofiglgt: fofigimcgroon:
. . . swgs’fgfiv’fl i f -'-._ niflififigsfl , . were “frank, cordial and substan- fice in January um, East-West rela- lems in short peace and freedom
EqUIne 1%; “;f;;) ' . g I WW*$§V3‘W% st ., tive," . tions also have worsened over M. for A“ nations are the goals we
. . f, its» ... ~ ’ yrs 54“??? II The Sowet news agency Tass said nistan Poland. the Middle East. ., -
“as“ i e, ,. in, ,. ....w. ,. 3h” v seek Bushsaid.
Ii ..' s34: .:f digs? l . ,3. Ahdl‘OPOV told BUSh the Kremlin and Central America, as well as the ’
"es {gig fir; F’Vk grir’iséi’kiii was. was “prepared to blind relations arms race. Also attending the session were
g‘; f " " ...» 2% as; Lfiggsig; With the Umted States on the basis Bush said he carried a message Secretary of State George P. Shultz,
“1,, - -I I i ; if , " III” sis/Cassie“ ,- of full equality, non-interference, from Reagan for Andropov on “the U.S. Ambassador to Moscow Arthur
g3; . ' as; *w‘firg .V mutual respect for the interests of strong desire of the United States to A. Hartman, Soviet Foreign Min-
' ‘ [1:3; E? iii ‘3: '3 - the peoples of both nations and the work for an improved relationship ister Andrei A, Gromyko and Andrei
' ,. ..V " V53”? . in ..¥§;&; improvement of the international with the Soviet Union.” M. Alexandrov, a long-time Brech-
Th' . * : i WWW»? ' " ._; Situation." Reading a prepared statement be- nev foreign-policy aide.

'5 V'ew ° ° " , e a; s2" .... V: The meeting came four hours fore his departure from Moscow’s Neither Bush nor Tass disclosed
bluegrass horse farm “~43. ,. .. s. after Andropov’s predecessor as Sheremetevo—l Airport, Bush said, details of the talks. The news agen-
is located on Parker’s 3V " V2 I ‘ g“? .i, %. ‘ Communist Party general secretary, “As we leave Moscow, we are well cy said they included “a short ex-
Mill Rood in southern 0:“ . ' if V‘s" I! V” is’“ Leonid I-I Brezhnev, was given a aware of the difficult problems that change of opinions on the principal

9,3: ‘ . ' g ' a -. " .‘3 i " hero’s burialinRedSquare. confront us. The challenges, while questions of Soviet-American rela-
Foyette County. A .--.:-; ,, - - M . ~ , , . . . . ,,
i .. ,1 It was the highest-levelU.S.-sov1et enormous, are far from insunnoun- tions.
telephoto lens was W ,“;m« - .
(4,” 2”». is ’I' 5 i ,fi- . III" , 2.9;. a?” ”I ..VV‘ . . .
used to create a sense WV; “ism I IIIIIIII . .i;§i Student organlzahon plans lObbYIng
— of compressnon. Ma’”%i JV» 31? ii fit
so .s - - . -~ ..a is
wwww :js i” , gsr . ‘ ‘,,, K r ‘ ,‘ I
ngigi gm s, ;;%’£?V r ecogn’z es gay g p
V’VVV wwfiéVVVfliw ,V A”; , ._ *3; V _—
1 n " ”ii”? a , -' “i 4,; V " By JEFF HIN'I‘ON An attempt by students to orga- ceived no 0 ition, however, when
ucx SIIVIISIKemel Staff W; W s“ .. a , ' . 3441’s,“; Staff Writer mm 3 Similar group — the Gay Lib- it submitted a constitution and appli-
,.,_»i. is. firs if ... - s is us as. gm? eration Front — in Fall 1W2 met cation Octal.
W geisha,“ it “I; I; . .. I~ ”III-sag .. 'v with resistance from the University Robert Zumwinkle, vice chan-
‘ .g'm, -' ‘f g “ii, -. , V; ,. and resulted in a legal battle aiding cellor for student affairs, said the
it ‘ sis '1 . 'I I». After battling red tape and court in a 1974 ruling upholding UK's refu~ GALUS application was accepted
. " *‘ .. . 2"” judges, UK‘s homosexual po ation saltorecognize the group. “on the advice of the University at-
W ._ 7, a 1 W .. i ,
. ” tr the” . . . Vsie ; for the first time has an ““0131 “The reason the last gioup failed tomey.“
' fie“ 7', 1 - ' V ..fifj; ‘° campus organization. to get recognized was becuse it was Zumwinkle said GALUS’s applica-
" . . xi iii é -. ' .« Stephanie Hrkman, president of a social group rather than a political tion “was consistent with the poli-
...,eitifing-‘V iii"; I “$1;th 4; Gay and Lesbian Union of Students, group," Hrkman said. “Due to Ken- cies of the University“ and “their
. {335% V . . 5"“ ~’ 4; said the organization’s purpose is to tucky statutes on fourth-degree so- statement of goals met with our re-
__ 4 , «WV _’ ””1; ' “advocate civil rights for gay and domy the group was prohibited to quirements."
. := ‘ s; _: ,I lesbian people and make the public organize." Hrkman said, “There are 1!) to 35
is; , ss- ’ I; . ‘2." i -' awareof gay rights. Denial of the youp’s first request students in our organization who are
‘ "ii’ssige: . $3,; . I “We’re a political organization ac- for recognition this year was based interested in gay rights. We have
V ; 2,; swag; % ' tive in opposing legislation against on a ruling by then Attorney Gener- spoken to sociology classes and
i: "‘3." %%ai;i equal rights for gay and lesbian peo- al Edward Hancock that cited possi- other groups wanting to know more
' WV” V" "H ' Ple.“Hrkman said. ble statute violations. GALUS re- about gay and lesbian behavior."
SAB b 0/ 't'cal se of St dent Center display cases
________— Association elections board. one’s poster in the cases to be fair, I
By JEFF HIN'I‘ON Jim Dinkle, SGA president, at- and that would be impossible." he . ,, .. p: $33.41, {gaggwg-yfig - w“ 2...;
Staff Writer tacked Bartram's action. saying, said. . ‘~._,_’..5f"' rag/WW’W/Vé 4‘ , .
“In the past, the display cases have “We want to keep the Student Cen- -;>}i‘f‘.'; ‘ “7/" / / i” i “W 2 «_II,‘ -. ,u
___________._ been particularly effective in getting ter as apolitical as possible." NeW- ..Jg-f ' 17" n ' 1“ -.~ - .I' .
The Student Activities Board has students invloved in the elections.“ mann said. “That’s one reason for .. ers" ‘ l ' no q“ .
banned the placing of political post- Dinkle said. “What is particularly this clarificationinpolicy." . I. '5 . "‘g ...;
ers inside display cases in the Stu- odd about this revision is we weren't He pointed out that candidates I 9‘1?" l . ’ , AB‘ 2 .35, M
dent Center in what the prefident of even consulted until the memoran- who want to advertise in the Student . ' l 2f ‘ .;._ ,
the Student Government Association dum was sent. Center can rent tables in the ground .4 l m w A. . ‘13 ~.
called “a restriction of freedom of “Itwaslikeapieinthe face." floor lobby “instead of wing the dis- _i - _ - . , _ 7“ (
expression." Dinkle said the action has strained play cases, which are meant for _ ~r' I . It, 1
A memorandum issued by Kent relations between the two organiza- other purposes.” : ..v_ .3 g}; . = d: ‘
Bartram, SAB president, said no or- tions. “1 don’t think this policy revi- Steve Edelstein, SAB member-at- \ ' Ali-54;? if” H ,Rfi !.¢
ganization will be allowed to use a sion was intended to cause disrup- large. said, “It’s kind of unfair that 5% ‘.I_—-—————-—c I—--— .
display case to promote candidates tion.butithas,”hesaid. the limited space of the display (1‘53; '51 ,/ / Ci ,1.“
or groups of candidates in any cam- SAB Vice President Rod New- cases should be used for political ,I L; ’ f: . 3" 1/ / 7 I” i/ ' ‘L ,-_ :.3.-r:;;.-ai
pus, local, state or federal election. mann said the policy change re- posters when candidates are able to ‘ WM%_;~ “3'13? ,5. r 7 ~%mmg
If student government candidates’ suited from complaints from stu- put them up allover campus." l %fl,%7 ,7, «WQV __ V9 ”zip-gm”
posters are put in the display cases, dents and faculty over political use In addition. he said, political post- .,__ “V’s-m , . ~.\cs\_s§..;. .23.:um3tés-c‘3’sito-radii-2'. 5-") . ‘7‘”3'7‘54,’
Bartram said formal charges will be of the display cases. ers in the cases gave the candidates ‘ EYNV * -
filed with the Student Government “We would have to have every- See 5_A..”poge3 N" .1, K.1.IIUMIIII.D/Kemel5talt
tween smoking and health. Instead of going to other pro- .
TUESDAY iects, much of the institute's $3.5 million annual income BIShOpS debate "UCIOOI St'ategy
from the state cigarette tax would go to the scientists and . , . I
Fro," AssociatedPressreports their research. WASHINGTON — The nation 5 Roman Catholic bishops or-
A similar plan had been proposed last year by Dr. Gary gued yesterd:y over whetIher t: condemn ciIAmerican nuclear
_ . . . . _ strategy, wit some assai ing t e propose move as under-
SOVIOtS bury BfOZhI’IOV 3::jr'03: 37:;2: iii;:::°:ehr:e::srLIirsiieOVotierfSnsgngfd mining resistance to Soviet aggression. Other bishops, how-
ever, said the disputed declaration, which would preclude
__ . I . h employee harassment. I

Miodsefilotvhle SLiV/ViZVtmllhi:r:e::ntei:/e 1:: ::e::veorrk:eris :92" :0: Several top-ranking UK officials were apparently caught eren a US. threat to use nuclear weapons, upholds Chris-

guried esterda in Red 5 acre in Z sgmber miligar Vcere- by surprise when me new plan was announced. " was “on teaching and enhances chances for peace.

U Y . Y I ‘l ' .Y viewed as posing a potential threat to some faculty mem- The debate came at the start the National Conference of
many as 9“le stolid as VHS ‘8 years 2" reveal"; helm. bers at other state universities as well as UK administro- Catholic Bishops, most of if l° focus 0" the draft pastoral

H's successor as Communist Party Ch'e '. u“ - -V n ropov, tors. The administrators said they did not like sharing their letter over nuclear policy. More than a year l" composition,

pledged m a °Ul°9Y '0 pursue Brezhnevs policms at home wer ' hire scientists with an outside board that until the planned teaching letter on peace has stirred extensive

°"d abroad b‘” warned the S°Vi°'s w°°ld "9“” ° crushing poI f II o | f - ' dissent in the church and criticism from U.S. administration
rebuff to any attempt at aggression." "“5 ° ' met on Y our "mes a year. defense officials.
The farewell to Brezhnev, under the gray skies and chill It condemns on f. .

- - y irst-strtke use of nuclear weapons or
0f the Moscow autumn. was deeply respectful and muted. walesa renews aneglance to UNION their targeting on installations near population centers —
Before the remains were lowered into the grave — in the both now enunciated as ne . . .

. . cessor o tions In U.S. strate ic
exclusive heroes' plot behind Lenin's mausoleum — Brezh- GDANSK' Poland — Led. Walesa renewed VHS allegiance planning. The document also dehothces any intention 9or
nev's widow, Viktoria, bent over the open coffin and, weep- to Solidarity in a news conference yesterday bill was cou- threat to use nuclear arms calls for a nuclear freeze and
ing, kissed his cheek and forehead. tious when asked '0 define his stand on the new trade offers only qualified support even to possessing such weap~

Hundreds 0V foreign leaders attended the ceremony, and unions Wh.'Ch replaced the labor movement he headed be~ ons as a deterrent, calling it tolerable only if disarmament
tens of thousands of Soviet citizens packed the vast central fore martial law swept POlCN‘ld '05? December. “9 0'50 also is being pursued.

square, silently holding aloft scores of Brezhnev portraits urged his supporters '0 COflllne themselves '0 peaceful OC‘

trimmed in the red and black of official mourning. tion and asked for at least a month to get acquainted with

the situation in Poland and decide his future course of do /
abacc - tion. \
T 0 'n'timto creates research COI’p. About the new unions, he said even the Solidarity stat-
LIXINO‘I’ON — The Kentucky Tobacco Research Board has utes had spoken of union “pluralism," adding, ”You can ioin WEATH '—
. given preliminary approval to the allotment of $1 million one trade union, you can ioin another, and you are free to /

annually to create an "elite corps" of five top-notch scien- join or not to ioin.” \

tists that would make UK's Tobacco and Health Research YesterdaY afternoon, after "‘9 shifts Ch°"9°d 0' ""9

Institute the leading cen'ef of research on the health effects Lenin Shipyard where Solidarity was born, about 2,000 peo- Sunny and warmer today with a hlgh In the upper

of smoking. ple assembled outside Walesa's drab apartment building, 40.,

‘ " The scientists would receive annual solarigg of $75,000 shouting for him to appear. They were dispersed by a body- Fair and not as cold tonight with a law In the upper

to $100,000 and a promise of ample research funds. They 9Wrd who said: ”YOU better 90- Standing here, you do 200.

would work full time on researching the relationship be- harm '0 him. M'IY “"WY '0‘ warmer '°M°"°W ""5 3 ”I" l"

the law to mld 50'.
________________________._____.—_________.

 M
new
III! M m w John m “cm W. W Hal I. I“... J... V” I.“
Editor-in-Ch'ld News Editor Am Editor Sports Editor Special Projects Editor Photo Editor Graphite Editor
PBRS UASION "W "M“ .......... ........... “W ......... W
, Managingidioor idl'wa'H-ier AellltMtAnIEdltor AuietomSpornEdltor Spoclol'roiofllAnllm' Chlotrhotoovcohor Copy Desk cruel
é
Reagan '3 absence slights Soviet leader
In the United States, where by design lead- at rhetoric and opens its policies to reconsid- _
ership changes regularly, we have grown ac- eration — a move Rea an could have si - L"70% THlS is YOUR BlG W Dm THSTEN‘ID - ,
8 .
customed to the orderly transfer of power naled eloquently by attending Brezhnev’s LHANCE T0 (at? N GOOD THFF MARI VA em 1
between one administration and thenext. _ funeral. w WHOBERTHE NEW SHOW‘EM THAT YER 5?
Leadership changes in tlhe Sovret Union, Fortunately, Andropov seems to have m CHARGE WILL BE r 7006/7: My s‘nu, g 1
however, are comparative y rare. Since its taken the slight of his absence without bitter- “~ COO; AND TRY, MEAN 8157/4/55: M) :5;
establishment in 1917, it has had but four ness. In a meeting with Vice President Tv‘g‘ErSB'lgABLlsl-f A mm WHO'S :05 ‘6 1,
recognizable leaders: Vladim1r Lemn, Josef George Bush yesterday (the first meeting WONAL . . HEAD Hm i
Stalin, Nikita Khrushchev and Leonid Brezh- between an American leader and Soviet mp0; . t" l E 0/ NOW 0R
nev. The passing of the former three were leader since Reagan took office), he spoke of .. / / 5 ..7l M’.’ ting
followed by periods of uncertainty and un- improving relations between the two coun- UAW ‘\\ ‘7 {I , , %
rest. tries and the “international situation.” ,‘ ‘ “to.“ fit .’
Whether a like period will follow Brezh- If Reagan can only damper his latent Mc- " m; 7/” .J‘ ' ‘s-i—
nev’s death remains unclear. Although a Carthyism and make a real attempt to coop- l I 7" 6g 4 I / ’ ’ H’ [\l“ L‘ . ‘ .
new party chief, Yuri V. Andropov, has been erate, there is still hope that conflict over ‘J . F 7 ”fi ' . '.. .5 r,
appointed with unexpected speed, his power Afghanistan, Poland, Central America and Q: , 't. @7' 3‘. . . _‘ ~. “ \ n $0"ng " “
is not yet established. Indeed, after Khrush- the arms race will not further worsen rela- 3;; . \ ; \. r .,‘ \ c" ' fit UNlON . 7 7"“
chev was deposed, Brezhnev competed seven tions or lead to the unthinkable—war. 34- W ' . \ \\ 7 “5;
years with Alexei Kosygin to establish his . " 4. ,,. t . ( a ‘ ‘ l ”Emmy- k *,_..;:
preeminence. . _ j \ ' \ ( 334.4 access ,0“ ‘ gin;
The form his government took, a collective 0" Fl‘lda)’. we also observed the 98581113 0f ‘ X J \, k ‘ (“i \ INDW ”5555‘ J j-
leadership of Politburo members, brought another Leader — Lexmeton s only af- [a .\ . \ in“ fig"?
the Soviet Union an unprecedented stability tempo“ newspaper, Wthh W111 merge Wlth J 3 , ( , , , ,
in the 1970s. But in the last few years a stag- its Sister. the Lexmgton Herald. Jan._1. ' l \ '
nating economy, crop failures and the pres- Although the house .“hltefl W111 stand '«rwm , ' . jg;
sures of guns vs. butter have combined to stronger then It did dwided. it; also means ~ it}. 5 gt”;
produce growing dissatisfaction. this town Will have one less editorial vorce. p" 7. l7 r”! l 4‘ K
The direction the new leadership will take As happens in hard times. democracy has t; , I g ill \ g a}!
is therefore unknown and unpredictable. taken another blow. . ’2‘ / y . I l7 t l it
During its formative period, the Reagan ad- While what 15 essentially a ‘33um news- 7 . ’. 7 I . l l ‘ r
ministration has an incredible opportunity to P3913? cannot pretend to fill the gap for all Of {7 ,5 l a ‘4 ll t l
influence its policies and attitudes. It will do Lexmgton. we Will not any from the chal- . - %
so, however, only if it swallows its anti-Sovi- lenge-
-
I ‘~i“'3:
- Election results show a
War memorial overdue, better late than never _ _
Did you see the papers this week- heroes,brave menandwomen. Yet, they went, and for over a out of the sand and realizing it was r 9180 tl on Of Reagan
end? The Vietnam War veterans There was no fanfare, no hands, in dozen years gave their lives or our nation’s doing that caused the a?
were welcomed home. 1972, the year I graduated from high existed in prisoner of war camps, or waste of precious young lives, the The 1m mid-tam election results Democrats picked up at least *
Didn’t that war end 10 years ago? school, for all the men who were ended up missing only to go through dreadful memories and physical were a resounding defeat for Reaga- seven governorships and have come :é:
shown on television getting off the terrors we will never know. Most did handicapsthesepeople live with. nomics but provided no mandate for to power by overwhelming margins igi’i';
“Watt. airplanes. The ones who walked come home, but notas they left. That war will always be a part of Democratic control of the govern- in some Midwestern states — Michi- §
‘ rein were few. Canes, wheelchairs and nd their lives, while the majority of us merit. gen, Minnesota, Ohio, Wiscomin — fl
- Donna even stretchers was the way I re- “’33 mglflh? mfii‘ I‘m} haveletitfadetogray. ———-— whose industries are most in need of 1%
t. . member them leaving the tramport- , , . ' Let’s give them the respect and, retooling and whose workers must “
1‘. ' ”A M II. TON ersand being greetedbyloved ones. monal dedicated “5’3“”; 2:; yes, esteem, they deserve for fight- NEW beret-ainedtoface the future. g
These veterans, it seems, have the “am 0‘ 537339 W 5.9” ing a war that was intaided to iro- Democrats might begin puturigra.
.. ——-——-—— had to fight for medical care to heal died and are put now being P9008- mote and protect democracy, only new agenda to work inl‘Wgsliirygfig . .,
Was our government so ashamed the many emotional and physical nized. most of us didn’t know that at the REPUBLIC next year, but the election res~ T .‘
of US. involvement and the outcome wounds they received during the It wasn’t the government’s idea to time,oreveri now. suggest that it will have to be tried _ .
that it has tried to deny that these war that was not a war. Did you erect the shiny black granite wall. A The war didn’t make any sense, —-———. out first in the states, much as pro- fl;
men and women existed? ever hearotAsent Orange? Vietnam veteran and enlisted man butgiving thevetstheirduedoes. the Horse, which by corstitution- gressive programs were tried out
Not to mention the reception they These men and women were bad a dream. Jan Scruggs, and his They were called to serve, and al design reflects short-term public priortotheNew Deal. if
received from the populace When drafted! They didn’t 881‘ to be sent organization, raised 87 million to theydidafine job. sentiment, will be more strongly Meanwhile, however, the national it:
they returned. MOSt people ignored to a foreign land, an Obscure little erect the Vietnam War Memorial. . . Democratic, and returning Republi- government needs to function. Jobs a
and ridiculed them. labeling them country rife with troubles. They did Hewastheretodedicateit. Donna Hamilton is in journalism canswill befar less likely than they mustbefoundfortheunemployed. "
murderers for their part in the war; not know of or care about Vietnam The memorial was long overdue. I senior and Kernel staff writer and were in the first two years of Presi- America’s international trade po- ‘7
others, usually older, called them —only politicians did. hope all of us are getting our heads columnist. dent Reagan’s administration to sition must be improved. Deficits 7 .
vote solidly (even blindly) with him. need to be controlled so that interest
g ’1 But there will be no change what- rates continue going down.
J’N . -'~‘ ever in the balance of power in the The Social security system needs
/"V"\.- \
Senate. Democratic aspirations to tobekept solvent.
, pickupfiveseatsandregaincontrol Noneofthiswillbedoneiffleao
I /
/ ' miller. ”W ' — /' ofthesenior body_were dashed; Re- gan insists on believrng' his own
/ “that“; h 1'00»; L a“ - publicarsstilldomrnate,54-46. campaign slogans and staying his ‘
, , “this; ”Kw “an-..“ r - Reagan’s power is weakened, but disastrous course even though vot-
aM’t g WI- '0‘ It».
“Sigh" "Dnepuuo khfifm “was lion,“ u. ’( ’ the Democrats do not have the ershaverejectedit.
”W“ later A?“ ‘ lit-c, '- a... i , power to push through their own Democrats lave the power toundo
mama“. MMRIUMQ‘ 2354». it... awakgmw‘” ~_ __ M‘fgifig programs. the previously enactedtaxcutsorto a
WEN » Weir am M2?- m-n...""_~o.w”:;‘-.”':-~I~:3:3~‘-£? 25%?!— 37‘ f i ’ This is either a recipe for stale- institute necessary new jobs pro-
. ’mE HN‘lLflvew ”We“ ‘" Dent to...“ m “‘“L wameoza~- 2- :3 E, :: :. 5'723; .12; it I mate or an opportunity for a grand grams if Reagan and the Senate op- ,. H;
WAR M9! Ml mastprufimm“-mfllflmultumxmr-«Z‘Zv r: 12'. E ; =59???- 2/ compromise. The latter is prefera- posethem. 5.
WWW! Pose macaw Wmm int-not on“ no“. N,“ - ""“‘"-*--T-“:"...:l"- :— 3': 5 ,. 2’"- g 5"” ble — an agreement among the The country neetb a compact be- V
~ hWNIWKHmOKrw NM ma m “flu“ Ml“ *wfih"““‘"' W‘ 15:" " v "' 35‘ -‘- ""' f4 ’ the ti 1 t H Democr ti leaders
,4,» v . m... m,“ M mm m... M __ ~ - 3v 9 g; o; .— W Q White House, compare ve y ween one a .c . _.,_,;.
9’ “.3 tame“: Meow w. mac-m “.mtvmu-alrem w,‘,‘:;:;::‘-$¢— or a— “ an r . moderate Senate Republican lead- and the president reflecting a wrll-
=3 t}? ‘MWL’ Rmifih "*th :mmmx afirjmzfi~::%?gf’a .. ~"- ership, and the Democrats to tem- ingness on each side to settle for j
‘ a: ’5). .‘msmnt Whoa. v- tam-t «not. run” 3:111:33 731:";‘35 :3? j? A pler at: am of gifReagam, lei: mesh? “it“ a: actuall if;
\E? ‘4. 4‘ um more... mam-M" ”0' f sow esr enses . ren prosra _ y ,
'\ Mia“ 1,59 / A“ a. a. MUM ‘ and rebeve the suffering of the un- could emerge from comprornlse — :5
rm fl'i' M I (l ) .l\ employed. if, for example, Reagan gets to keep -
r “t4" ,, 7i” l President Reagan gottrouncedin thethirdyearofhisindividual in-
‘ ‘ “m” the House, and White House efforts come tax cut but agrees to gasoline
"'mmn’wws'w todeny the fact are unavail'lng. tax lncrases to finance road build-
W . .
_ The true yardstick by which to figoirgf mm" “m" ”d ,
Judge the 1982 elections ls the 12-15 President Reagan [raved as Cali-
seat losses suffered by the ln-party fornia governor he could work effec- a
in the firgt off-year electron of a new tively with a legislative opposition. ..
presrdent 8 term. , Home Speaker Tip O'Neill proved in
Presrdent Reagans ‘1“th was last year's Social Security reform
twrce the average and Virtually - -
W . . that Re discussions that he could give on .
wrped out mosfitg‘flm land- supposed iterm of democratic ortho- ‘
Deferrence to replace them, deployment 00886. tive and formidable, they are aging. wishes. Nuclear war would be more 9193181“!!! sc e ' doxy - until Reagan pulled a fast
Forthisdiscussionofthefreeaetit Builtinthe early 1m,theywill likely. “- . t. boutwh onebytryingtoplacealltheblame
The issue of nuclear weapors is will be assumed that the United wear out by 1990, leaving the US. No nation has ever attacked the The" " n" ‘1‘“ '°“ i' t l 03; for Social Security adjustments on
probably the most important one States and the USS-R. would obey essentially unarmed if they are not us. at a time when it was strong or Demwms ‘”°“ “m3" °°" '° movements.
facing our society today. Everyone suchatreatyinletter and spirit. replaced. likely to retaliate. For example, the theHome. _ 11‘ how ed that There's no clear m] in die elec-
has a stake in the issue. and many Let’s assume that the treaty has The Soviet force is much newer. us. “won" the Cuban Missile Crisis New“ 9‘" P° “‘8 ‘ f d tion returns as to who or what vot-
speak out about it. just been signed and ratified. Now The helium admires are still becaugeda so to ”nominee in de. hi8" WWWM‘ “’9‘ 3', ‘5: era are looking for in im presi-
The general goal, understandably, what? Immediately - nothing. being poduced, with an expected liver-able warheads. In short, deter- away the. most powerful issue m e dentialcandidates.
is the prevention of nuclear war. American and Soviet arsenals are life of :1) years each. The Backfire renoe works. maxim- , ll ABC’s poll indicated that Walter
Many methork have been proposed on a close enough par with each bomber, which is intercontinental, Those favoring a nuclear freeze .Accm to ABCs ‘1: ' voter ofs Mondale is a stronger rival to Ed-
to this end. One such method is the other to ensure deterrence. Deter- was first deployed in rim and is still ehotrld look at the facts and history “WWW" °‘ ““3“ 3 $3“ to ward Kennedy (ammo Democrats
nuclear freeze: a ban on the devel- rence has worked for :5 years and in production. Current models are of the nuclear age and reevaluate unemployment by a W 70 and the population in genrel) than
opment, testing and deployment of will continue to work for the next expected to remain in use until at their stance. Nuclear weapons are 30percent. . . previouly airtight, but the network
new weapons and weapon systems. few years,freeaeornofreeee. leasttheyearmm. among the greatest meriaces to our human Simply cannot gm“ 3' failed to ask about John Glenn, Gary
Many people favor this plan, so it However. notables will soon basin. So, around mo, alargewindowof society, but they simply cannot be “'3 W °‘ 3:" 91“,. fin“ t Harterothercontenden.
deserves some attention. The mainstay of the United States’ vulnerability would exist in favor d “dislnvented.” The next best thing creases, huge ficita, thh tel-es The ABC poll slowed that 80 per.
At the broadest level, a freeze is a deterrent force is a combination of the U.S.S.R. Without a “big stick,” is to see that they are never used, "m “d “mm” stagnant“ to cent of the powlation wants Presi-
protracted method of disarmament. Polaris/Poseidon submarines and B- the US. maid be in no position but and data-mace, not a freeze, will .3. Democrats are "“9sz b- dent Reagen not to run again, but if
Weapons wear out. and with no way 52 bombers. While than are effec- to accede to the Soviet Union's wrethis. 3mm 3%le “ ma he does..he m neck and neck with
DRABBLE ® by Kevin Fagon _ in mum,” m, W “M W MN“ The im'
Jamcs Kevm Holbrook Hm Wam- leader Robe" pllcation new to be that rm is no
' ' ' f one conclusion and that neither
:9- ‘ Will. NORMAN! V ransom l6 so was me me BMW/hm” ”than” Michel survived by a bare 2.000 :3 preteritly llllPll'Gl mm,“
2 l . . {motivate M0 W 006,qu WOW" “. votes in his party: strutghold of mmmmmflnwfle
I Ctr— ' " W “57 5N9 5’5 0‘5““ FOR h “40 " Long’s Pal. central Illinois and he is returning '
- g l” ' . Icy . ' For the Democrats, the most im-
4 , » m‘l CM‘ to Washington with a message for mm m between now and 1m
6,) , l l I ”f "/7 ”FORD h 10““ I THINK leaders of tho rte-roost Item! Reagan: Adjustihecoune.
7/}; , | a A, Y willnotbetochooececendidetebut
4 4/4, . ,2 Q6 a? 1M; ,, “5‘1““. 1‘ Mime , erelmltednoxmtholropln. ltieclearlhetwherepeopleactu- tofuhloneprognmthetwlllbee
r O, ‘ ' 7o ‘\?‘:§\ 7 '\ -3 . motoctfw. S “ lene on the editorial . rot. ally live work (orlookfor workhzo
, -. t‘ tr 1} , .. 1. . ”l' . coherent, workable and compassio-
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n .-.' ‘ ~,' .’ '7 “Montana-torso." lntheetatee—theywantmorecom-
/ , , ‘ W .3 541‘ l 2 re the editorlol ooltor at in minute, immemendmawee- Mom" Km'achuuumw w
. 1 . - __4 .54 v _ Journalism lending — 0!. tom elve pvernmcnt ey ve re- ltor OITM N", Republic.
1 1.2000!“le - lac ‘ H lerKy-“MQ. celved “'0"! the Rqrublicam in
‘ I —_——_ Washington. O II}. Field Newspaper Syndicate.
g;

 THE KENTUCKY KENNEL Juarhy, New 1‘. no: - 3
Urban League operating FM channel CIUb SGGkS to help UNICEF
I
I I I .
. BIaCk S ta tIOn hl t8 alrwa V98 ties wit], foreign students
_______—_ The station will have a variety thTeilJe‘hible awardedvlhee station to
a “mu-z MILLION of programs and will be available 6 r n league. n the com- 5 . . . . . .
Spe’cialProjects Asistant seven days a week, said Dale pany made its bid for lexington's 33' SCOTT WILHOIT American students in contact With Some of the other actiVities the
Josey. the station's projects devel- cable franchise, it offered air time Staff Writer one another and an increase in llie club sponsors, Lockard said, “m-
_ _ _.._ oper. to the organization that could emergency relief fund for foreign 911146 Whaling foreign students to
Programing will include many house the station and offered the a students inneed,sl_ie said. lifeinAmencaandKentucky. .
Telecable subscribers accus- types of music, including jazz, best proposals for using the sta- The C _ . “This is the third year 'Weuhave Other fund-raising projects in.
turned to m] radio statiom can gospel and records from the top 40 tton. osmopolitan Club will sell had the sale, Lockard said. Last volve the sponsoring 0‘ children
now time their radio dials to “5.3 rhythm-and-blues chart. The Urban League was chosen cards and calendars In the Student year we raised about 31.200: this 39'0“ the world and collecting pen-
? 7 FM and hear black cultural In addition to music, news will from other applicants, including Center until Nov. 23 to raise money yearwe hopetoralse more." _ oils, paper. crayora and other
mic_ be broadcast every hour, and the the Lexington Public Library and for UNICEF _ Students from India, Pakistan. materials for students in foreign
.— On Oct. 28 the Urban mm Urban mm hopes to connect employees {rm wquglvm be- The dub is selling UNICEF cards Italy, Hungary and several Middle lands, shesaid.‘
is broadcast WTLA, the first full- with the National Black News Net- cause they had the best proposal and calendars to raise money for the East countries are members. The Following tins sale, the club hopes
’ time black station in Lexington. work. and facility, worldWide relief of children. Ap- club has 60 members, With about 50 to continue Its fund-raisin wolects
3:. Its slogan is: .. A Countdown to Also included will be interview- .. proxunately 10 percent of the funds percent of the members being for- throudi an international cafe in the
.3 m5." ing programs, ta