xt7rr49g7m9q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7rr49g7m9q/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-02-16 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, February 16, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 16, 1982 1982 1982-02-16 2020 true xt7rr49g7m9q section xt7rr49g7m9q “—fi“ —_—_—____ ,
Tuesday
Urn-MOM. % Outdordor .
The next two days will be warm ~ and o. We've all had problems relating to the
' rainy. Rain will continue today and and J serwces offered by our phone COMPOWI
sometime tomorrow. and temperatures This phenomenon caught the 9Y9 ‘1 local
won't drop post 50. poor. See page 3 .
VolrtXXXIV-No-lor tuo‘wayroommymm u».v....t{ot—x:n7..u, “mg.“ “my“; _ Ww—M~h—Au#— . , . .
U N ' '
. . OfflClaI doubts Salvador .
y W Administration officials cited the ,l .
> p 3' lower death toll,com iledb the US. j
" ig; we ' Whit“ Press Writer Embassy in San Salvgdor. tr); buttress U'N' ambassador . "' ‘
an i _ the president‘s claim. Most human ' ' _ s 'v
22., ' V " gt.- rights groups, including Amnesty In- turns CI'ItIC, ;
‘ . WASHINGTON—AUnited Nations temah'onal. have challenged the ad- ' ' ‘- 1'“.
a}: .3 human rights official says political ministration‘s assertion of any calls organlzatlon 1,;
, a .. murders in El Salvador last year human rights improvement. I , . , . -.
“ . , >_ 31$.“ #7 3‘1”” ‘ were about double the number the Pastor-Ridruejoalsocontradicteda l d'smal show 2,1;
_ rag? «as; _} '3, Reagan administration has cited in Salvadoran army spokesman who i ,"‘I‘
=: s, .. _ f .. oh telling Congress that the Salvadoran said on Feb. 3 that the army had ask~ . 3m , :1. . .
”as go‘ junta has improved its human rights ed the UN. commrssion to send a l Associated Press Writer 3., . g.
. it; - . » : record. delegation to the town of Nueva , »
. rfl ' M , iii his. Jose Antonio Pastor-Ridruejo, the Trinidad to lookll into ngil/lernment : ___—m , .~ ,

. -_ v, ,9 “a” . . t 5}». UN. Human Rights Commission’s claims that guerri asha ki ed 150to l g ‘ 5: _~ ;

‘ _ } 2 special representative on El 200civilians. l . WASHWGTON _.The Umtetha- f-

,o - , .3 .33 “‘ a ’ Salvador, saida report hewill submit Pastor-Ridruejo said flatly that no 1:“th ls a. very dismal show m L'. 2'

as? l / *‘t if“; . to a UN. meeting in Geneva later this such request was ever made, a state- 'Wh‘ch “hm“ are w°rsehed rather . '

' . .. . _ MC," V“: " _.i‘i‘ month puts the number of assassina- ment supported by UN. officials in lthah "sowed: US- Ambassador q
. -. 4‘13" L. is. ”" tions at 11,000 for the first 11 months New York. “The government of El Jeane J' Kirkpatrick charged ‘ 1 ' .
gt Wanna a of 1%1. Salvador never asked the commission 1y flfdzg‘ d 225 leaders of the ‘ ‘- '.
' . ' In at tel hone interview from his “young."Pastor-Ridrueiosaid- l . . . , t -
l > 3. . ,‘ home in epMadrid, Spain, Pastor- The Salvadoran government claim tAmerican V990" ygwhday some , ,. _'
' 5- * - Ridruejo said he “found that there is of the guerrilla massacre also follow- lU'N' ”Bef‘cm mums “5 ”tutti: ‘ "-‘ . .~;
, -‘ ._ . ’ a consistent pattern of human rights ed American press reports of alleged icommiSSion, the World lHea l . .. .f
.. violations in El Salvador — most massacres of hundreds of unarmed forghmmlonfnd'ts mew” ohgilca .’ -'
é ' 1 . violations coming from the military civilians by Salvadoran troops. lseh'lhce’ d° "”15; gm" 5 "85 'I : ,
. a. " and rightist groups (but) some viola- Elaborating on his human rights §w_ chwe woulda PPY 00°" '_l :I _.
tions coming from guerrillas." report, Pastor-Ridruejo said, “viola- ‘tribute to. .. g j .
Q The report contradicts the ad- tions about life,liberty and security of But she added, If we 10"“ ht 7
. . .ministration's assertion that the peasants come most from the army What “399°” ‘“ NW Y°”‘.°“‘ ‘" .
‘ ' number of political murders in El and from paramilitary groups, but the Security CounCil and m the . '.
Salvador was cut from 9,000 in 1980 to violations 0t human rights that arise iGeneralAssembly, then I guess I 3
. ' about 6,000in 1981, from public and private property :belleve h ‘_S a very dismal show. , . .
’ . Last month, President Reagan cer~ camemostfrom guerrillas.“ jA‘Fd wh‘“ ‘5 “39' ."5 we“ ‘ f .
tified that the junta was “making a He said his report relied heavily on ,hhhk ‘5 almost. precisely the Oh ,. , I.
onvunolns KomnlStoH concerted and significant effort to figures prepared by the legal aid of- iposite 0f the lhhehh‘ms . 0f the '_ ,
Playing like the Devils comply with internationally recogniz- fice of the Roman Catholic Diocese in founders of the. Uhhed Nations ‘ ' ' .1 -' ‘ i.
. . . ed human rights” —— a requirement San Salvador. He said he was also 3me all to 35515! 1” conflict "5°” ,_ gfi" ;
Steve Cash (left) and John Dillon, members of the Ozark Mountain DaredeVils, perform If You Want To that Congress demanded for El given similar figures on political tion. , , '
Get To Heaven before an enthusiastic crowd at the Student Center Ballroom last night. The two-hour con- 1 . , de b Sal d Ar hb' h . “What we find instead is that con- t : g 4
cert included several encores. The Doredevils’ concert was sponsored by the UK Student Center Board Savador .to continue to get us mur rs y va oran c ‘5 op .flicts rather than being resolved ; . 5 "
Concert Committee. military aid. Rivera y Damas. lthere‘ are in fact polarized, extaid- i . , .-
- ' led and exacerbated. They are much f” -, ».
- harder to solve rather than easier to ' f; :
solve, generally speaking," She . f
U S can im ct world food shorta e crowd told
I I I ‘ The Reagan administration's v, ,- ,,
UN. ambassador made the
world's food problems, said Willett, growing steadily, Willett said it is ac- tion for infants and nursing mothers. are possible threats to our society by lcriticisms in response to a question - f
By NANCY BROWN but it can have a very important im- tually decreasing when divided by the “We must look to scientific the impoverished," he said, ltrom a Lesion memher who asked if ,1,
Senior StaffWriter pact. total population growthin these c0un~ research and education to providethe The seminar was the fifth in a lit was “warth ‘t" mtéhon algay for .; ‘ "
This countryis the largest exporter tries. essential unpinnings of the icular . - .90” one V0 95‘8“"S ‘3 wor ,.' ~
of food and one of the lax-get im- ”After the end of this century, the increases in food productioi’frwt’itliout hzhlihghdmlk‘lyvtvgégggzgigmem . After criticizing the General

Although the United States is a porters of food in the nation, and if needs for increases in the production excessive increases in cost," Willett ' lAssembly and §ecunty C0lthll. She

leading supporter of food programs in America can continue to increase the of food are likely to decline rapidly as said. The primary sponsors of the pro- lCOHClllded I "‘It 5 a very serlOllSPl'O' . : ,
Third World countries, Joseph W. distribution 0f food to developing the rate 0t population SPOWth “W tl l .. gram are the Blazer Fund, the Ken- jblem,Thatsnotthesortofactiv1ty .

- Willett, of the UK department of countries, the nutrition sitimtion will declines,“ Willett said. e mus earn ”dbl! ance POhthal tucky Humanities Council, the Center ‘we want in fact to underwrite. f’
agriculture and economics, said “we improve, Willettsaid. gefilfi‘ef” an economic for Developmental Change. and the l ,h was. "0‘ the hm “me that ;
can and shoulddomore." _.__—— “Thus it’sinthe period to the restof pa ' Office of international Programs in firkl’a‘mk' 3 mm“ ”“989. P” " . x

The United States needs to take a Thlrd this century that the challenge con- The most serials lim'tat' the Agriculture. lessor, has leveled sharp critiCism V.
short~term as well as long-term view fronting aSTiCUItul‘eiSSI‘eatest." United States faces is 1mg!" will m the ‘memahona‘ forum Where x'.'-f..' -
of the food shortage situation in world Population experts estimate that by not research and educahhn he said. D. Gale Johnson, chairman of the lshe has served for the‘PaSt year. a .. i

. developing countries said Willettina ___—__E the turn of the century, the world . . ’ ‘ department of economics at the lShesaid last April 29‘ the Umted '_,_ .
. ’ . , . , . - - - - What '5 needed 15 the SUPPOl't 0f the - . - . Nations sometimes becomes tof .. .- '
speech to approxnnately 100 people at “It isn t 80mg to be easy,‘ he add- population figure Will be at 6.3 billion high levels of government Umversrty of Chicago, Will address g _ par ( . , .
a Third World seminar at the College ed. “There are difficult problems to 990919- ’ the subject, “International Trade and ,me problem instead 0f “’th the ,.- f, ,
. otNursing Building last night. besolved.” Willett also said that the United the Third “’0’“ Situamm" at the fpmblem‘ - .

“While there is great uncertainty Willett agreed the functional Africa has the most serious food States should not beworried about its sixth seminar of the series Tuesday. , I". h?” 5W?" ‘0 the Amer‘cf‘" . 1’ -
about the full extent of starvation and economic View is that man has the shortage in the world at present, national security as a “food power." February 23 in 115 College of Nursing 1159810“ 5 Foreign Relations hhh M" 3 f } _
malnutrition in the world, there isn’t ability and intelligence to lessen his Willett said. The situation is also , Building. It will be free and open to 5“?“31 .56“le C°".‘¥“.‘55‘°“5'
any doubt that there are large dependence on traditional bleak in Asia 8'“ portions 0t [Atlh "1 find the appeals to Olll‘ humanity the PUth- l’hrkl’aW“ sharply ,cnhglzed the l'j,‘ "i "
numbers of people who are suffering agriculture. America. and to our economic interests much . {SandlmSla regime in Nicaragua j _g "
from it,” hesaid. Although the production of food in He said the biggest concern in those more cogpeliiihgt reasltzjnshfor us to be dissggsedOffiugfi‘: 33:11:; t: faggdigdnfgugfisusggrgfigghw; 3 .s «

_ , . . - - ' ' '- concern ‘ ‘ V "" '
America cant solve all of the the developing countries has been 00mm“ ls PmVldlhg WOW nutri a u wor unger than are education, the role of women, ,lliberals who see causefor optimism {‘33:}:
PMTcIt' edas cause of some violent actions “eon stem ~
l ,l . . .
w .\ WEN».A ‘4 . , ‘ I, J 1‘ «
—-——-———- Sandie Smith. a cocktail waitress These landmark cases have opened It occurs during the four days before ‘ "“ M ' , ' r“,
BY’ANFTFW already on probation for stabbing a the door to much speculation from and the first four days of the an , . '_ ,/ gr: w,
StaffWriter womantodeathina bar, walked into doctors and lawyers trying to menstrual cycle, and its symptoms . / t‘ _I,‘ 7“ {a , ’. :7“
___—___..— a police station and threatened to kill establish sane sort of guidelines for include depression, lethargy, ir- / , " , Us ,5 T
a sergeant who she said had insulted thepossible PMT cases tocome. ritability, and emotional and mental ,~ . , ’ ’f 3'." ’l "

Recently in London, England, two her. “It is a very disturbing situation,” problems. 4,: . . I" . a"
women were tried for crimes of Both cases made legal history in said Dr. Gerald Swyer, an expert in PMT had not been used as a court ' ”is l; ,r; " , . ' .:-.".
violence. convicted. and set Great Britain. Both women claimed gynecological medicine. “Any defense for serious crimes such as ' r ~ has -~' 3., -.
free.Christine English. a mother of premenstrual tension had provoked woman can plead PMT and literally murder until recently, but has been .. ., ' VP» "’ 7 .
two b0”. drove her car straight at hlemeiOIGIOE- get away with murder." Dr. Swyer used to explain some misdemeanors . 491 is a. ,; J : V. -
her lover and pinned him to a Premenstrual tension,orPMT, isa also said he believes thesecaseswill suchasshoplifting. r. ' . 9.,” l .. . . MM .2
telephonepole,killinghim. long-recognized medical condition af- flicting most women to some degree. See PMT,poge4 f 1 o” ,2 \f', A‘ ’“ ”My: ‘ “ z 3 . y -‘

i , \ '\ '* sir ,,\ a f ‘_ ‘ '. .‘L .

. r H t. .‘i‘: E: I» ‘ t J I "9 . .‘ .11

Greek weekend brings 130 to campus " ~ i ' ’ . .
I’m-s w. '. , s .h E ','.‘

. ,W . ~ ; iii ;

___—_— Greek publications and stressed pomoting the Arnold told the audience anecdotes and provid- ~..- ‘_ '_ ., . "i’ . .‘ :2

By JANET FISCHER positive 33”deer life. ed insight into the meaning of Greek life. " ' " J :. ‘

Reporter Shesaid Greek lifehasalottoofferin termsof fifeek Maze is ab:fut balling fgendzhips that r T. w;*pfllfl‘mw .. em... i f. '

_ _.__ _ __ .. ._._ scholarshi . leadershi and ' nthropic ro- ' astfor Post your '9." sai - ‘ ‘ -, ,' s.“ _ 5-2.. “ fate $5331. , .‘ ‘ e. ‘-

jectg but the Mg other-gem not ”gut Arnold said the Greek systan is not for ,‘ mag”, A§¢rweéifibifi ugh. . . ' .

Frata'nlty and sorority members from across these assets. "You need to do a better job of pro- everyone and not every Greek derives the same -. I .m»... {imitate 1 x; ,. i . -
the state united at the ninth annual Kentucky jecting whoyouane," Green said. degree of benefits- “You're only going to get out n m, _wa ' .
GreekWeekend 'ntodiscuss waysotimprovins Virginia Ln Charlie, national scholarship and ofitasmuchasyou put into it."hesaid. , .- WW ' ;’ .: » C.
their scholastic programs, their relations with vise:- to Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, said. Afternoon speeches covered Greek “18th M g \ l' l, ' 3.
independentsandrejuvenating theiralumni. “Greeks are stseotyped as social, rah-rah With administrations, residence halls and non- . x . . «l».-. M“? .. .. w . , _

About 130 people. so of which were University drinker-s." Greek; Greek weelr; legalities; memberslup its \, / i ; i j. ‘ ‘ .
students, attended the catfaence, hosted this To help combat thisattltude, Greek orgarliza- recruitment and hazing- ‘ ‘ -~ ' ' ,2- t ' p . .
yearbyUK. tiom should publicize their scholastic ac- Karen Brumley. an midecided freshmn from : i}- > -

A reception was held from 4 to 3:30 pm. Frl- complishmentsu wellas theirsocial events. the l1nivertdtyof WW9. said she enjoyed the 5 :1; ‘ . , _' t
day at Phi Gamma Delta International Head- LnCharlte listed to important componentsofa sessmrsmlegahhesmubhc relations and pledge '~-t _ ga....‘.'..... .; .
qtarta-s, 343 Waller Ave. Alpha Gamma Delta successful scholarship mam lncludiru time education. . ., , t h » - 1,; ,
sorority and Delta Tau Delta tnternity spon- managemait, advisiiigandsupporting improve Steve Smith, computer science sophomore and " 3, g . ,
weds thnceat the Hyatt Regency following the merit. Kappa $181M member, said the weekend led to \ i 5 .t, ‘
reception. _John Herbst, director or UK student activities better wider-standing of the Greek system. ”The \ ‘“ 5

An adulation welcoming conic-moo par- and Phi Sign: Epsilon fraternity mantis. held main problemueem tofaceuall.” ~~ ’ ‘ ‘
ticipnnts was conducted Saturday by co- uesslononpublic relation. Zeta Tau Alpha resident Jackie Sue Howard , '
diamanteAntmikonetaTauAlphaand BobArnold,ombuthman fortheDepartment sold“everyonerelatedwell"andtherewu“no . ,
KaiflanlmdSimAlplnEpilon. fa- Natunl Rnourcesmuthefeatured speaker tauion at all." She melted that future con. ‘

Participants Moulded speeches in such atasnidentOentclmcheon. imbelmaandadded. “l'dliketoseea
topic: on alcohol ovum, ol'flcer transitiai, Arnold was president of the UK chapta' of lotmmparticpatonbyGreekleadmatUK." lemxmm ,
rejumtim alunni. Greek ptiulcadom, inter. Theta an fraternity in m and gnudated from Bev Next-noes. Kappa Delta rush chair-pawl Window woman ‘

m ”It“... Me mum. IW fll- UK in 1m: “It? Nam d MW Young ht “ma State University, “id she felt the A resident of Patterson Hall on the north side of campus found time ‘
MMMWW- Democrats in 17"; MM Milli“ “1' Nl- WWW” “the nicest I’veevcrbeento."8he to gaze out her window and enjoy some milder weather recently. ,
"‘1‘?“th Holland-Wand m You W“ in 1'75; W radon-l “id the m was “'5' mm W The only drawback that the warmer temperatures have brought is on
m 0‘ All“ Dd“ Pl M”. W M WMMW from 1'71 t0 W73- thetqics mints-stimuli pertinent. extremely humid atmosphere in the form of fog and mist. ~
! .. ‘ -’ r t ‘ t *

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. Managing {dim hum “MU, Asimov" Managing Editors Assistant spoils Edam Ass-slam Ans Editor layout Editor (his! Vhoioglapliei
e WM—~~—M A—————_—— ._.___
" Drinkin nd drivin
' a I I I u
_ ~ . g g Proposal promoting stiffer penalty places emphasis in proper place
‘ . II .> . . . s s
' A serious problem is finally being tackled any part or shot the fine. Jail sentence and A fPlen Clr'mk‘"
. . I. ”I._ head-on _ the drunk driver. license suspenSion. In too many cases, this is
; ' :- A recent task force has drafted a new drunk- being done. ////, "‘
- . ‘ . . . . - 1/ K . \l
-. . ; . drivmg statute which Will come down harder One of the groups that has brought tlus pro . , // 1 h», .
, I_ .I on a person if s/he is caught driving while blem to national attention is Mothers Against /' "2”"; '
- . ' . under the influence of alcohol. Drunk Drivers. They have been working to ., :1 1/ -
‘ x The task force proposals includea jail term change the laws in many states to make 8 1" ,1 — J t ' 1
I I 1 I . . - of three to 60 days and a fine of $250 to $500 far IpenaltieIs stiffer for drunk drivers. They were i é , *5; g
. .' ; , the first offense; a jail sentence of 10 t090 days influential in the Kentucky task force pro— ; g» %/\ ; ; . 4r. .
I'«_ 1 and a fine of $350 to $750 for the second of- P0581. , , % ./ 1’. 3.3, c; ' a“: . 'I'~1I';I .54
; - r _ fense; and a third offense within five years Many of l ewomen are mothers who have v 1%. ~. we? "3%? ‘ 5&3.
‘ . .' would brin a all term of 45 da 5 toa ear and . . . . ' / ' > ' .er'. "Nth-'3‘" .
. I. , a fine “$550“: $1 000 y y lost children in traffic accidents because so- - - / ‘ r [fir a1.
I'.I" .. - ' ' meone thought they could drive safely after " r333 ‘fifi‘é‘; 3.:{5’ _ I
.‘ .- One of the best parts of the task force pro- they had been drinking. Unfortunately these % “‘5‘”;
;. " ', posal is that a person arrested can opt to people misjudged their own talents and an in- A ,
' ‘ reduce the jail sentence and fine if they go into nocent person was killed. ; . ‘ - " ,. I.
; _< ' a state alcohol treatment program for up t090 MADD representatives said they were not 1‘ ‘ ‘ ; {I . -, ,
' , - days. completely satisfied with the task force pro- ‘— ' 1,4 4 ‘ '1 ’1
« . These new proposals area good start. Drunk posal. They were especially upset that it did "g . . 3 j , ",7
r drivers cause over half of the highway not call for mandatory treatment anda license ‘ s 922, —___ :1. . , ‘ t 7’
" j . . fatalities in th: nautison. ThiIsI eqXIals approx- suspension for30days. I" ,oT:\\ _3_ WV“: ’ 2 ‘3,
v ' n . so,a rox- . . . . ‘ 7. ;”i-”"f/ - ' '"‘ ‘ . " ' _
. . . imately 25‘000 ea an ua bf . - - pp This pomt is well taken. Often, people Will ' “4;! .., :«2’ ,2 '2 . , 1‘; ‘W- ‘31:“ '. z:
.. , . imately one-half of the $2 million injury ac- . . . . , 7/}; r A 14 ? h . a.
.I -. « : ci dents have a [son driving under the in- serve their jail sentence and go right back out {as say . // a )K 453"” . s 2
' . ,- ; . pe . - and drive under the influence again. Treat- :3 57.”? ’ .7/ . \T . '1 c‘ '
. : fluence involved. These figures keep getting , I I, \I g . I «3‘ .
, 2 .' . , worse each year ment is needed to teach people the dangers of a; . r g “‘9 . . . _ \\‘.-‘ S
_ 2 ‘I ; ' driving even after “a couple of drinks.” Many f/ .- / ’—. '1, .3‘ 793% .50 $ é
.I. Still, very few states are doing anything people do not realize the affects of alcohol on 3-?» ,/ : \ gfé—g ,. I‘. _.«~ _ ./ ’ \ i

I, _, about this problem. In most cases judges are reflexes. A split second can make the dif- *zgt» ”in I; - '. Tag. ,1. 5
unwilling to come down hard on the drunk ferenceinwhether someone lives or dies. 9&2? w 3 I ., s
I. ’. ‘. I- driver. The present Kentucky law carries This is a serious matter the Legislature will a, . :4;-

,g "I i fines of $100 to $500 for each offense and an befacing. The task force proposalisa step for- £/ . . \ I5

' I' . I .v' I- ‘ elevated jail sentence for repeating offenders. ward but even more could be done. People are 2 «m net) ve, \~

' . « ‘. However, Justice Department officials have going to have to learn that drinking and driv- ‘% . . ‘ix. ._. .. . . \.

.I :. I I' said the present law permits judges to suspend ing do not pay.

“X [none 3' ' htb I It t' for legislators
';I. I - -‘-, j When Gov, John Y. Brown believe that the executive’s budget is tion'Is revenue estimats unrealistic. revenue from the gasoline tax, is in governor have both reacted negative- fact that maximum income rates are
‘ _ I I I. ,I I presented his budget in early based on unrealistic assumptions foreing cutbacks in funds after they seriom trouble. 1y to this proposal and to a plan for so low in Kentucky contributs to
-' ‘.jI _ I January, he avoided any recommen- about the monomy; are appropriated.I'l‘hestate faces the Where would more revenue come returning a smaller share of the making the total Kentucky tax load
I .. I’ . dation for tax increases. Normally p0851blllty of losmg corporate tax from? Everyone has a different severance tax to the coal counties. regressive, bearing more heavily on
. I‘. . . " : the legislature would welcome such a , revenue from the new federal answer. Because cigarette taxes are There is more talk about imposing a thosewith lower incomes.

; ;’ decision. mung the session two 4“; depreciation rules unless the unusually low in Kentucky, a higher tax oncoal in theground, but even if

, 2 years ago, the legislature put ,A legislature changes the corporate tax tax on cigarettes is being mentioned enacted such a tax could not be im- Malcolm Jewell, a Political Science

; ' .- pressure on the governor to avoid or I “ ”Mm laws. . frequently. Representative Joe plernented quickly enough to help professor, has been at UK since

.1 '-/2 minimize tax increases, and during J all Meanwhile, the pressures are Clarke wants to increase the coal duringthenextbiennium. August, 1958. He is considered a
.- . " ' . g the 1981 election campaign legislators \ "V mounting for more adequate funding severancetaxfrom 4.5to6.5 percent; onepossiblesourceofrevenue that leading authority on state

. , I .~ med to discourage talk about the for a number of programs than the his committee commissioneda study hasattracted little attention would be legislatures, has done considerable
', '_,-'I, I need for more revenue to finance Congressmen fear that the hlldSCt governor’s budget provides. Senate showing that suchan increase would to increasethestate incometaxrates work on Southern politics, is con-
:‘ f' state government. I detlmts W111 he even hlEhel' than Majority Leader Joe anht believes not havea serious unpactoncoalpro- on higher incomes, or to prohibit sldered an authority on Kentucky
-; . But now we are havmg a rising Reagan “Pd Stockman predict. K8?" that elementary and secondary duction. dedUCting the federal income tax policics and has authored several
j 1 - ' . I . chorus of suggestions by responsible tucky legislators fear that Brown 5 education are not adequately funded But coal county legislators and the from income taxable by thestate. The undergraduate text books.
legislative leaders for developing in- budget: Wlh beI undtfirmut‘ied by dcogl‘ in the budget. A number of organiza-
>,; ; ‘1 ”in; creased sources of revenue. The tinu 909mm“: 5 gm on an y tions 9108de With the Senate AP' '

. 3 ~ I‘ .‘ chairmen of the Senate and House ap- the Cllts ln federal 81d t0 the StatS propriations and Revenue Committee Who cares abom the tlme 0, fly.)

'. _' r‘ propriations and revenue committees that 313888" isIrecommending. Whlle to provide more funding for social

Ij. ‘ j ;. —MichaelMoloney andJoeClarke— Brown recognizes that the federal services being reduced bycutbacksin I 1 . . . ,, _

5‘4. 5 .t have estimated that about sioo cuts will be damaging. he wants to federal programs, and to raise taxes .8” “ever “manual“? P°°Pl° “°“- . , "'8 eastward remarkably 105* 0“

.= w million in new revenue is needed just POStPOlle any tax increases, that may if necessarytoprovide such funds. telling me I am. “he“ I decide to.” 0r, 8?: Ben IFranklln more Simply calendar day. It must b‘? “‘33in

.ffi ,. for the first year of the biennium and be necessitated by cutbacks. until 8 There is a widespread feeling that “mew“e'e' I “We at the ”as" “at“ “me“mmey'" musclcammmpmd W- l“
. ‘7 V - f' have offered proposals for higher tax- special session to be held after the higher educationisbeing damaged by momentldeem suitable. the matter 0‘ one second, a person
I -‘ : es. consequences of Reagan’s program the cutbacks imposed during the cur- linemen m““°”‘“’a¥s can Shiniorloseil‘lhoum
There is an interesting similarity become Clear“ rent budget biennium andtheaustere agree “f"h me‘ I attempt ‘° ”9‘31" If, as Collier's states, “accurate”
. '; ' between the reaction of congressmen The Courier-Journal recently budget forthe next two years. Thead- that the" watches are not correct or timekeeping became possible in 1581
{‘1 v' to President Reagan's budget and of described Brown's budget as a ministration has not yet figured out that my 333"“ dofk (M "0‘ sound, M asaresultofGalileo’s inventionofthe
.I I I.I II Kentucky legislators to Brown’s “taped-up pup tent" that is “pitched how to close gaps in the Medicade :gthese excuses are only laughed Morton pendulum clock, thataboutthel,581-
‘;'I~ ; budget; In both cases the chief ex. on shifting and mostly Sinking budget orhow toprovide care forthe ' ————————— plus days mwhthndlmm?

V ',-, ecutiveis resisting tax increases that “htb" 1395130075 recognize that a indigent at the university hospitals. I would bet, however, that most . . .The answer '8 Simpl e _ early

.II .. . :II '. many legislators consider to be continuationofthe economic slump in The highway fund, hampered by clocks on Itlus campus do not reflect Collier's Encyclopedia says, “Time pioneers learned tointerpret thesun.

Z I I. . ... I nec I In both cm legslators Kentucky will make the administra- red luse of line and thus less thesametime.0fcourse,mostw111be allows is to establish when an event Farmers generally follow this prac-
I_I.I I. 955‘“ y gasu close, but few would be synchronized occurred in relation to other events." tice today, waking shortly before
If, ;,I. Bi-Ilets ' "_ " ' " "' "'_ " to the exact second. Therefore, how It continues, however, to describe sunrise and turning in shortly after
,.,t.é 'i, __-I;I; I. can any one person say that anotheris three systems of time measurement: supper.

. :1 1 . late? universal time (rotation of the earth), This makes much more sense than
. . D Oux Max Weber, in The Protestant qihemeris time (revolution of the dividinga “day” into ante meridiem ‘
:“tl' 3.x}? Ethic and The Spirit of Capitalism, earth around the sun) and atomic (am) or post meridiem (pm). If
.f ,I. I I; II;I«I;III.I and there are many differentIforms time (operationof atomic clocks). such a timekeeping scale must be us-
IIII,I, I _ . . _ . ,an manywaysIo VieWing,Itime. In the continental United States ed, the military comes the closest to
I3- . I -. 1’. I. U'dlstflct :“g‘:::i‘svt;dceghr£§:d 3:96:31: Pflce freedom He said mechamcal cloIck tune can alone it is four different times at the perfection — the 24 hour clock. (But
1 , ‘_ 9: Although l have serious reserva- straints of population equality, com- A common complaint that we have mome as: in tenzgfnimizfrgalltzhaé sari-1:1? Iomutznnt because 0‘ r mly how many people km 'l that “30
. '. ‘.‘I :- .:;' tions about the possibility of drawing pactness and contiguomness may vir- is memtof books and mam-jab We manipulation of Jami b ' N aslfilch be 5 zones, a ”“9“" hoursactually relatesto2:30p.m.?)

'-.v ” g‘I’, a so-called "University District" tually force such divisions, par- must recognize the fact that college Hatched in On Fl 0 y use l” timm tered by daylight 33"” Imposetheeholltlm of,” “We”
I fl . given the scattered residential pat- ticularly if the group is scattered in does involve certain expenses, Cucmt. Nest) :1- mgmg 9 m e. methods 0f tannin-“en. .WhO ‘3 to
>.I, ,".' I terns of UKstudents, the major pur- termsof residential location. however, ridiculously overpriced methodofsocialdevelopment as it But even this system is not nwmsmtmilfiocfi a? 11:: d
.",IXI".I-" ' ' . . . . . ‘ 6' Mn
:3" U,‘ ' ' $56225?;;$e{nl:0: $3331.30: Furthermore,I It .15 lmP°S§lhle to material Sh°llld not he ll part Of 0“? Although not necessarily correct, foolproof. Greenland, Antarctica and a conh-aption with twodi’f’ferent-sized
»‘I,'.I.. ff 1’ Feb. 5 1982. drawI counc1l districts premised on burden. A certain pipeting bulb, for Weber’s observation is worth noting: Mongolia do not use time woes; in bars that travel around in circles? 1
.I. -. .. Youicomcny pointmt “thaI certmI n types of interests one my example. costs ewmiumately .‘1‘.’ at timeis relative—itdepenrh on who Saudi Arabia watches are reset daily operate betta' at night (the term
_ I I : non equality and “identifiable II wish to recogruze under the terms of the Umverinty bookstore. A similar establishes the standards and who is at sundown; and 14 countries have meaning during the dark portion of
i . , . _ . . _ group the Charter. Unless someone Wishes doingmeohgem times differing from the established '

i. ,; '_. leiSions are important pnnCiples tom-def spatial clusteringofmen and bulb at the chemestry stockroom uW . ng - tim zonesb - each day), and I become incensed
r; i I. governing the redrawing 0t Urban women into separate areas of town .003” 57 cents! filrthermore, a bulb of si:?\:fegrnvrsotc Errfiewlfi A: a multlgfmtltnamlm mics when people tell me I should be
31:; . " 9‘ County Council DlStl'iCts- However, one would be hard pressed to draw menu“! t° the one a?“ at the human. life is infinite in?“ d thcreisone ‘ntonthe mkmwll ”leap-

.1 noevidencecanbefoundintheprovi- council districts according to sex bookstore cost approximately 60 , y 8 I an theln P°|I 8| And, the next time someone tells

I .i 7 sions of the Urban County Charter to Similarly one might argue that suc: cents at Grogam Medical Supplies, pm“ to make sureIof one s own asdicul ternational Date Line. This me rm late. I win just sit back and
. 'I 'v 7 , support your further contention that case in integrating homing by race whenpurchasedlnlotsoflz. eloegtibonm. to: gut nine M fl McglnifnomenonIallows for laugh.

' l ; ' . f " “district lines cannot divide. by law. will make it more and more difficult s a slty’ nth: ‘ ' an”, even some? using panellilities.
I; ,' I 1 .: . .. black communities." to draw black districts The students will continue to be mine eep h '3 necessary “I? Demon “'3"de westward Dale Morton la a senior majoring in

I 'f I What the Charter says is that Coun- - taken advantage of so long as we do health, six to at most 018“ hours, l8 across thedate line suddenly changes journalism and political science and
' '-‘, cil Districts must be drawn first and What can be said is that than who “0‘ stand up {0" ourselves. The y 0‘ absolute moral condemna- toone day later, and a I travel- is editorial editor of the Kernel.
>2 ; I',“ 'I foremost on the basis of “population wrote the Urban County Charts in umvmigomfiemmnm
v.’ I - equality . . . as (is) reasonably [rac- ism devisedtheinitial setofdistricts eh“!!! m more n
. I I -. . mmgnsgcmdney must by “com- along several lines within the con- “”1?”szme BLNM COUNTY by Berke Breathed
.' T pact and contiguous.” Finally. the strait-its imposed by the populatim 30°.“ our t 5W toward IEEK CORT
, i . 'I ,: Charter provides that “within the principle. Among them were notions freedom fromthelocal bookstores. ’ 32%: HOME% ma!“ wfiw

,‘ ' ' “ml“ umblm above. the We“ Wing N.Ck ndglwm, "1‘ “tr, support an s A by m ./ @ mflem m W W“ UIILLMSG W

.’ t I may take cognizance of such factors ner city areas, older built up areas, th 1 our hunt! .t the end of the , ;,.~-- “we?” wwwm'W' ”ax“ mm" m
n . . , 88 ‘community 0' divefllty 0' in- newer suburban areas. and therural semestu' and by buying their med 39¢. ’“ mg” mm m... \ j M,

. ' . ' - ‘. 3 tauts,‘ ‘relative rates 0‘ population area of Fayette County. Whether “a.” t the - of the man °- \ r all“ '
_ ~ ' « . grown: .. and ‘petterns of social time ideas should or will be med " beam" "at" \