xt7tht2gbj3t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tht2gbj3t/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-10-14 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 14, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 14, 1982 1982 1982-10-14 2020 true xt7tht2gbj3t section xt7tht2gbj3t KENTUCKY » -- .
~ ' ._ . " \‘ Llnebedrer leederehlp
K t. H h ‘. John Grimsley, UK's leading tockler, is
- I; 2. providing stability to a defensive unit
. % m 5 that has faced larger opponents much of
r t .5 the season. Despite the team's 0-4-1 re-
, . . 5 card. he is confident about tomorrow's
. 5 a game against Auburn. See page 5.
Q N _ A .-.._, ,. 7 ,, l
VOl' [XXXV' N°~ ‘7 ThU'SdOY. OCtOber l4, '93? An Independent IflldOHf nOWIPOPOr University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
4 000 '
"' rotest martial law
2 . I P I
" " sus ension of Polish union
. .j. 1 p
a ‘ ' —- a railroad equipment and a pump had spread beyond the Gdansk area
' _ ' - . By WOMASWNE'I'I'ER plant — began a strike but went following theoutlawing of Solidarity.
' . , - - ... Associated Press Writer back to their jobs after “dis- Authorities put the Gdansk ship-
' ,A cussions" with authorities, the offi- yard under military rule Tuesday.
_ ., cial news media in Wroclaw report- and workers were warned they
’ ed. could face up to five years in prison
WARSAW. Poland — Almost 4.000 - for striking. The penalty is more
' Poles demonstrated in two southern Gd: kWestern correspondent m moderate than normal punishment
l _ . . ns said Witnesses reported . . . . . h
l ' Cities yesterday after two days of fresh riots had broken out yesterday for Violating military rules, whic
‘ street clashes in the northern sea- near the shi d - th 8 l - , couldbedeath.
. pyar in e a tic por-, . .
port of Gdansk over the outlawmg of but later reports from Western cor- The Sowet news agency Tass. in a
, . Solidarity. respondents said there had been no dispatch from Warsaw. voiced ap-
’ . " But most striking workers were rioting and that the city was calm. proval 9fhthf touhgh. Pleasure“, gay-
' - reported back on the job in the em- The Foreign Ministry said reports of 3:3 Polls aut nties are ta ng
t . "3". -, battled Gdansk shipyard. unrest in Gdansk were false. e “8935“. . y measures to. restore
.., ,. . . ,, In the southern city of Nowa Huta, “mg"mmns Will) the Baltic igliilgality in accordance With mar-
3.7.5; ' ' ~sc-a' . . " riot lice used tear and water port V0 neary imPOSSi e ' . .
. , '. . .. caring: to rout 3.oooga:teelworkers since telex and telephone lines were . Underground. leaders of Solidarity
“ who tried to march with Polish flags cut Monday. Reporters pooling their 1“ (““95“ ”mated a "Bane"
.. to the local Roman Catholic church, information in Gdansk often have to meanwhile. “’3‘“? workers to boy-
' witnesses reported. The sources said drive 50 miles to find a telephone to ct?" new'tiiade ““1095 authorized by
5;; the crowd attacked some public call fellow correspondents covering £53522; égeizlgéfikg‘d prepare
' gilllsdmgs' but they pr ov1ded no de- theSituation from Warsaw. . At the Vatican, Polish-born Pope
' ' An estimated 10.000 shipyard John Paul II offered encouragement
, The huge Nowa Hula church was workers struck for eight hours Mon- to his fellow Poles yesterday for
built in defiance of communist au' day and Tuesday in Gdansk and what he called their efforts of recent
,.' thorities by then-Cardinal Karol Gdynia, and riot police battled pro- years for the“common good."
,....,.' -' . Wojtyla. who now is Pope John Paul testers in Gdansk after each work In Washington. White Horse dep-
II. stoppage, witnesses said. uty press secretary Larry Speakes
M's m In the other city, Wroclaw, about A ham radio operator in Gdansk said. “On this sad anniversary of 10
700 people taunted police With ShOUtS was quoted as saying two protesters months of martial law in Poland
9t “Gestapo!" t0 Pl'Ot‘St the outlaw- were killed. but this could not be the workers are expressing their
one lhg of_ Solidarity on Friday and the confirmed. will and determination to have a say
lmPt’Sltwh 0‘ martial law exactly 10 Official sources, however. said in their own future, particularly in
montls. 380- The Wd "1 Wroclaw workers had staged a one-hour work the wake of the government's dele-
late’ “W Peaceftfllyv the “t stoppage Tuesday at a factory in galization of an organization which
. “f msald western Poznan. the first acknowl- had represented the vast majority of
:«J Workers at two Wroclaw factories edgement by officials that unrest all Polish workers.“
.J
- . 4—year degree to be offered
Mil-e N ' I '
_ P w ..... ursm g a ters curriculum
. e « h“— .
B CURTAND N nursmg- form the same dui' n
"W Ehlllmmflmm y Staff wring-380 “These courses will develop in the graduate. ”5 who they
student a better ability to make pro~ “The objectives of the program
n. E “5510"“ Judgments and better the" are the same no matter when the
Nursing students will receive a understanding 0f themselves and the student gets into the program." she
~ more complete education following Whethh-S 0t nursmg. McKenna said.

' ’ " ' “ the restructuring of the curriculum said. . . . McKenna also said that by obtain-
and the addition of a four-year bac- One F9850“ t0? the 1' ”151°" 15 a ing a more complete education nurs-
calaureate degree, according to the nationw1de nursmg shortage. MC" es can begin to address many of the
dean of the College of Nursing. Kenna said she hopes the program problems that have caused the cur-

The college will admit two types Wlh help increase the number 0t rent shortage.
of students, said Dean Marion McK- registered nurses 1“ Kentucky. Autonomy —how much control a
“N ‘ General students can begin at the "10"? opportunities 1" the hfld 0t —is one such problem.
"""°°"“’"""°‘ freshman level and obtain a bache- PUth health 0P9" to them. M?" Students with baccalaureate de-
Lea ps and bounds lor’s of science in nursing after four Kenna . said. The 3’93 0t PUth grees “will have a better shot“ at
years. health includes elementary and sec- attaining autonomy, McKenna said.
Joanne Corl, undecided sophomore, leaps while maneuvering on the balance beam at Seaton Students completing this program ondary '5‘;th hmv as well as The broader education provided by
Center. A member of the women's gymnastics team, which will have its first competition Dec. 3, will be prepared to take the Regis- PUth Chmc StatfPOS‘thhS- the new nursing curriculum will in-
she he. participated in the sport since age 10. tered Nurse Licensing Exam. McKenna emphasrzed that b°th still more confidence and responsibi-
Registered nurse students with WW 0t students W1“ be able to per ' lity in nurses. she said.
. - upper-division standing can enter
Most of the assembly plant's 1,337 workers :ltisdgzotgrgamn :gwéfgsgfiglt'et?
THURSDAY have been placed on layoff until mid-Novem- greesaftertwoyears. F‘ /
ber, when training and preliminary production Deadline for a 1 ' for admis-
anAeeochredPreeueperre will begin on the 1983 model. he said. sion to the pogrgl’hylgf next fall is / +
tomorrow.
Sloane cancels appearances 2 share Nobel Peace Prize The curriculum is designed so be-
ginning students and registered
FRANKFOR‘I‘ — Louisville Mayor Harvey Sloane OSLO. Norway — Two longtime crusaders for nurses Will 9ka the same 00%
has canceled all of his political appearances be- world disarmament — Alva Myrdal of Sweden during their Jumor year. By combin-
tween now and the Nov. 2 general election. and Alfonso Garcia Robles of Mexico — were "'8 the older students “nth “the
In a news release issued in Frankfort yester- awarded the 1982 Nobel Peace Prize yester- filling? tfleboihnegelgsogfimt§ get
day, Sloane said he is taking the action to give day. said 0 wor . c enna
him more time to work for passage of a referen- The Norwegian Nobel Committee said it se- ‘The older student will have the
dum on the reorganization of Louisville and Jef- lected the pair in hopes of spurring the grow- experience; the younger student the
ferson County government. ing worldwide movement against nuclear initiative,“ McKenna said. “We‘re
Sloane, an unannounced candidate for the arms. hoping to produce a more complete ,0
Democratic nomination for governor in the May Both Myrdal, a sociologist and former diplo- individual bycombiningthetwo.“ 3N”
1983 primary, had been scheduled to appear Fri- mat and politician, and the 71-year-old Garcia The courses taken in the junior «3”:
day at Morehead State University. The event is Robles have put years of work into the UN. year will be a synthesis of liberal K.Y.IlUM'IlLD/KsmmStall
part of a Kentucky Weekly Newspaper Associaé process of arms control negotiations based in artS. basic and applied sciences and
tion meetin and was to feature Sloane an Geneva. . .
three other gubernatorial hopefuls in a question- Myrdol headed the Swedish delegation to speaker says war not IneVItable
and-answer session. the Geneva talks in 1962-73. and Garcia Ro-
But Sloane said he believes the campaign for bles has been chief Mexican delegate to the not necessarily determine whether it
the referendum must receive his full attention United Nations in Geneva since I977. The ByJASONWILLlAMS —_—— willgotowar.
durin the last three weeks beforethe election. Nobel Committee took special note of his key staffwriter ., "Sometimes you‘re forced to go to
"Begcause of the significance that reorganiza- role in negotiating a l967 treaty declaring ‘12.":0 “twet'hiltl‘lfl' #2::ma: war and it has no relation to the
“on represents to the future of the community. | Latin America anuclear-free zone. _—_____.___ ,h. “mm“ {or ”om“ war “{3th Y°tlhave~ ,
want to make sure there is no letdown during Myrdal and her husband, noted economist- In ,, “The de_C|_S|°n to use them IS a 90‘
these last few weeks of the campaign," Sloane sociologist Gunnor Myrdal, are the fourth cou— Paul Cole has some good news for "" occurr 9' I lltlcal deciSlon, and (the amount of
. l b - ~ the world _ nuclear war is not inev- —P‘W' Co ' nuclear arms) has very little bears
said. pe to oth wm Nobel Prlzes. He shared the . G ' U lverslt . . .
economics rize in 1974. Garcia Robles is the itable. eorge own n y mg on the decmion to actually use
~ - p - ~ Cole a senior research assistant CON" '0' 59'0"!" them became you have to use them
GMMOSlC-St ”carve“. first Mextcan to wrn a Nobel in the 81-year attheGeorgetown University Center and International Studies forsomething.
h's'ory Of 'he awards. for Strategic and International Stud- “You lllSt don't 8° and set M
BOWLING OIIIN * An era came to an end ies in Washington, spoke at a forum things off casually. It‘s a very im-
yesterday when 0 5'9“: black Corvette With 0 on arms control and nuclear freeze but I think . . . in a post-attack portantdecision.“he said.
leather interior rolled off the assembly line to Tuesday night atthe Student Center. world . . . there are systems which The world can never be truly se-
mark the close of the 1982 production year at “There are things that we can do Will allow in to contact our enemy cure no matter what is done about
' that will minimize the chances for and say. ‘let‘s call this off. and nucleararms.hesald.
GM 5 Corvette Assembly Plant near here. . - .. . “E ’f took all the 1
The car which will be sold for about $21,000 atomic war ever occurring. he those systems have been set up as a. ven i we .nucear
' - h said. result of arms control negotiations. weapons. loaded them up in little
by a Chevrolet dealer In Auburn, Ky., was t e Arms control will minimize the hesaid. wagons and dumped them into the
IOSt PrOClUCt'On m°d°l °l ° 5M" that GM has chances of war occurring and the He warned. however. that arms nearest reservoir. there would be
featured ““9 1968‘ , . , damage if a war does occur. Cole control by itself is not a substitute people who knew how to make them
Plant M0009“ Joseph Dell A“° said the said. for foreign policy. He said LT,S.-Sovi- . . .youcan‘t ‘disinvent‘things."
1"83 Corvette Wt" 5° radically different lr°m Today will be mostly cloudy wlth a high He lauded efforts by the United et relations are too complicated to People's desire to speak out on the
_ -.... the one that rolled °W°Y Y°5t°td°Y’ "9 d‘f around ‘0. Stats andtheSoviet Union to main- depend on weaponry regulatiom arms race is commendable. Cole
Clined '0 discuss 3|)“th changes in the “"5 Toni ht will be mostl cloud and cool tain contact. even under wartime aloneforsuccess said. but they needto realize all that
design but said the fiberglass b0'3Y WOUld be ' h 1 d y y conditiom. He said these included a Cole said nuclear freeze is not a is involved. “Enthmiasm isn‘t
more streamlined. w l o ow ereun ‘0' hotline with which the president can good means for arms control. saying enough; you have to understand the
No price has been set for the new models. '°"‘°"°"' "l" 5' mostly ”MW “'“l ° contactotherworldleaders. dieproposaldoesnotmakesense. problem.“
which should be available by January. "t". “'0""" "n" 0 ”9" l" "'0 '0'" “t “We don‘t have a previom nuclear He said the number of nuclear 'The Honors Program Student Ad-
war to draw these conclusions from. weapons a country possesses Wlll Visory Councrlspomored the forum.

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Editor in Chief News Editor Am Editor Spar" Editor Special Proieas (diver Photo Editor anMcs [diver

P B RSUASION James uwln Mauls (Indy Met WV. Selle. Ml¢ey MW luhle Mullen ”Vaulted Chris Ash
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—_—_.._—_—__—————_§—____—_____———-—'—__—_—_
Ad I I. I' '1 Id t b d I d ' _ '
mnssuons po my s on no e e aye ,

It appears that the proposed selective ad~ meeting today will address a substantial
missmns policy, a subject high on the Uni- change in its requirements for undergrad-
verSity’s agenda for the past year, isn’t as uate admission to the state’s universities.
ready for implementation as many had It‘s expected the Council will ask high
thought it was. school seniors to study a specific curriculum AFT-ER SEARCH‘NGW AM) RlDlNG HST;

That might make high school seniors before applying for admission to public col- l” ‘
around the state breathe a little easier. The leges. That change has frozen all efforts to \WE‘VE FOUND O ”CL—7 ERA’LL’I‘OYU R
Board of Trustees, which will meet Tuesday, identify what credentials UK must ask se- AMI/“m m C II
will probably delay the policy's start until niors to present for consideration in admis- mfl‘f ' '

Fall 1984. enabling the continuation of the sion. I
traditional open admissions policy for yet Another problem strikes closer to UK’s / / l l [l/ ,
another freshman class. pocketbook. If a selective admissions policy / ”’ 7,. ,\\‘ ////,

But the delay in implementing the policy would {egultt m a Emaileiiblecdmhlm fulI: ‘ l] ’0 G t «\ ?’
baffles others. Various University commit- imedstu enI ens? meIn .t' 8. $129163“ t r/h, [I 7-, = $ to 2 / ,
tees have devoted a year to studying the pro- “ha“ ‘1‘." a Sizea fhl'e "$108 1." 'ts ungfil \ \\\§ - m3 “/5”
posal, and the sole result is a plan for auto- affoc: 1°" _ some ing e niverSi y ca 1 , Inn”. 2/
matically accepting students with which a 191: ' P . h d C m'ttee ttem ted to ( i \3 ”I b : '
many faculty members feel totally uncom- ll eth {If arb 0m. in a f rotegti n of 0;" 4 I ‘f
fortable. More involved details setting re- ?h 338 da I?” by rgqutiiegUnivgrsit ,S oallo- “KI ‘2 7 b \1\ ‘
quirements for those who, for whatever rea- i. u ge 1d 1;: “Strait ed from a logs in tu- AM'W \\\\
son, cannot be automatically accepted have 9:110” coun es pr ed b lower enrollment // / (M y hag “
been given little if no attention. than rlfiivseelgcti cealiltsimissiyons That rovision ' Ml 4’

President Otis Singletary a year ago asked . routgat ed holwever and Sin letair" is de- '5’
the Board of Trustees to adhere to the rec- ‘5 unedl mi about settin a rgecedezt - . / j l
ommendations of the blue-ribbon Prichard segI 3; st ’3; lorable rgblgm however is . 5,. r ~‘

Committee and review enrollment standards e 9 . p. p .' ' . ”:4 I 4:27. i; ...--.-.-..-~23-I?:1':3:?-23:1-1-::.-:
.- - the admmistrative foot-dragging that Will ; ., ~ .. .,,I » i

here, With an eye toward adopting standards , . , ,..;. -7 , ,/ . ,;, g i

u - - - force the delay. Chancellor Art Gallaher s _, / .7 / "5, -\

reflecting student academic potential for . . 1 e iew of UK’s admissions lic —- I , I . 3,5,;.;.I,I;.;I;.I_I;.:,I;.3;I.I;.3;.;.I;.;.I,;.;,;.-I,

the purp05e of limiting enrollment of fresh “13‘“? r V p0. y 6' ’7’ 7-. ‘;;.;:;;.::;t;;.:;_;; “"I-.:-:I~:~i~'-’"‘\
.. was five months late to the Board, forcmg » / , o I g.
men and sophomores. . . g i \
the UmverSity Senate to squeeze what should .. ' 0 it ,i N C, , ~.I;.;:I;.;:I;.;:I;.33:; I .

After going through two committees and be an extensive study of a history-making .I : yl; _ .ir’ ’ «pg-6‘ /x .3 I_.I;.::§::::§;i;:};f;:}j;:§:'I;:3_:§.
one debate by the University Senate, howev- issue into three short months. _ , $%/ ‘/////////////// ‘ t \\\\\\ .o:‘5$331333533313:5Ei3351$13333133333553:.
er, the proposal is no further along than it And despite its work to date, the Commit- II-I'cl’»?>ag%’//77// , ,v \\ . , M,x,I_.;..-’I'jI.I;:{:‘I;:f::13};:f:f;:f:I;1}:3:Ig}:§;:§:‘I;:}:};:{:I;:f:?
was a year 330' There are figures and pm‘ tee 0“ Admissms and Academic Standards , . ...o.r.o..»;»;~:;r:?:-:;i:o:EIEI:EI§?:§i§-i§2Sift-2.7....’j'i‘iio .. %/{Z{?/;goMfg/45.4%..o-;I;';.I‘_i_'.3.I;g;:§;g;:§;g;:§;g;:§:g;:f;g;:3;;;:::;;:§:g::§:g;;;:gg;:g;;;:g;;:I-'-'
jections, but the time constraints placed on has been forced by the faculty to reevaluate . . .. A?
the Senate’s committee on Admissions and its findings. In the coming weeks, committee ' . -'T"“ ...,;b .We 5“,. ,___ ., ,.: I
Academic Standards have left the University chairman Robert Altenkirch and others will 7;”, :t .. . — - ”’ e __:; * ,
without a selective admissions policy for be charged with resolving the many ques- " ‘ . ,
Fall 1983. tions raised at Monday’s Senate meeting.

There are several reasons for the wait. It‘s hoped their answers will be sufficient
The Council on Higher Education at its —and substantially quicker.

C I I h ' f f ‘
0a , nuc ear power are poor c class or uture energy

We hear many warnings of the pepper on a fried egg. Their smoke- edStates and Canada. would stretch from Lexington to acres. The toxic muck is assaulted the recent flood in eastern Ken I‘
dangers inherent in nuclear power: stacks rear up at Louisa. line the The congressional Office of Tech- Owingsville. by winds and rains, and its compo- tucky, and the w1dows,orphans, and
low-level radiation may spread can- 0th on both sides. maik the nology Assessment concluded that It is inescapable that each of us nents should work their way through crippled men who must be pensmn- 'i ,
cer in nearby communities; leaks of Bluegrass at three places with a the emissions of this pollutant from has lost friends or relatives to these air and soil to streams. and thencm."'i “ ‘f g . .
water and steam send radioactivity huge new one gomg up in Clark power plants and industrial facilities killer fumes. They mean, too. that if intothefoed chain. . 5, The IU.S Geological Survey re- 3”:
into streams and the air; spent fuel County) and — biggest of all — ii. are causing 51,000 “premature one has such persistent symptoms If this best possible course is fol- ported inI1I978 that stripInIiine Sllt is . .-
rods and other wastes remain “hot" the Tennessee Valley Authority deaths” annually. The sulfur—dioxide as coughing. congestion, smarting lowed, OTA calculates, those excess rapidly filling Appalachia 5 federal- IIIII‘II'I
almost forever, posing hopeless dis- country of western Kentucky. emissions turn into ammonium sul- eyes, and headaches, King Coal may deaths from sulfur dioxide will fall ly~owned reservmrs. he
posal problems; and an accident ————_——- fate and sulfuric acid. have tagged him or her for a prema- to 40.000 annually by the year 2000, a Other studies byIthe same agency
may cause a core melt-down as ' The study states. “Both types of ture departure tothe Spirit Land. . saving of 200Kentuckians. ; ' showed that unstripped landIyieltt
deadly as a hydrogen bomb explo- .' Harry particles are extremely small and Combustion emmisions total This best technology is"almost un- about 25 tons per square mile an- m
sion. . may be inhaled deep into the lungs. scores of millions of tons yearly and believably complex. The “bag nually While stripped land loses as ‘2

Some nuclear scientists have a.“ r“.- .o C A UDII. l The high acidity of sulfuric-acid par- be dealt with in only two ways: they houses" at TVA‘s ShaWnee steam much as 27,000Itons. Fishtrap Lake _'
warned that such a meltdown would was 43/ ticles make them of primary con- can be dispersed over broad areas plant contain 32,400 fabric bags is losmg 150 million galIlom of stor-
render uninhabitable an area as big “I" t ’ cern for health workers." by sending them up tall chimneys, which trap the fly ash. Each bag is age space yearly from this cause. ,
as West Virginia. _ Each of the two countries is ex- or they can be captured by electros- goodly of girth and about 35 feet Coal‘ fl take man lives as

Then there is another consider- In the market place. coal means porting 2.000 to 3,000 “excess tatic precipitators and wet scrub— long. drs ootds'call demonitrated, on '
ation. IBt us suppose that we get many things. hUt most often. it deaths" to the other. (These are bu- bers and concentrated in dumps. As the bags are filled by super-col- 1’3”;st 33‘: 1k “2' West Virginia in .
intoawarwiththeSoviet Union. means electricity. reaucratic terms for killing people, The first has been tried and is lossal suction cleaners they are 1972 X daee m de of mine wastes

it one Of the incoming nuclear People may assume coal is a reli- Bullets. too. cause “excess" and being abandoned. Ever taller chim- emptied and their contents whisked 11. ed mbl'tgrat ed a half -doz en ..
warheads Strikes a nuclear power able 01d friend and an acceptable al- “premature” deaths.) neys simply make the pollutants ev- to the “disposal area." co a]? ' 0 )‘t' and 125
plant, the fireball Will add to its own ter native to the “nukes.“ A closer If Kentucky sustains an average erybody’s problems. This process will go on day and smaI communl "5 drowned
deadly poisons the fallout from the look shows it to. be a black brute share of these excess deaths they For example, our coal poisons are night for many decades to come. As p909 e. . .
plant's evnporated fuel r0d5. spent that can wreckusand our world. amount to about 1.020 each year. wafted to Canada and New England, industry everywhere adopts these The atom and coal offer us a grim ;
fuel rods, all stored radioactive The fundamental fact about coal is with each of the 120 counties averag— from whence are heard bitter com- clean-air technologies the stored choice in death: a chOiceI between . ‘3..-
wastes and other contaminated that it cannot be destroyed or "con- ing slightly more than eight corpses. plaints about “acid rain." wastes will mount into the hundreds the spectacular and the inSidious, ”If:
materials. sumed.” This is a ghastly toll comparable to With the best — and very costly of millions, then billions of tons. the sudden and the gradual. IEach 3a.:

When asked about these conse- A ton of coal is 2,000 pounds of the battle deaths inamajor war. technology —most of the wastes can Other problems involve miners has proved enormously expensweIlt or
quences, a scientist at Oak Ridge amorphous carbon. sulfur water and To put these figures in perspective be trapped at the plants. The slimy and mined lands. To date more than is virtually certain that both Will . .-
National Laboratories said they other compounds containing trace let us suppose those dead were laid sludge from the chimneys can then 122,000 men have died in US. mines, eventually have tobeabandoned.
were too horrible to contemplate. quantities of virtually all minerals. head to toe along an interstate high- bestored in deep pits or long ridges. and both deep and stripmining have Then what?

But contemplate them we must. including zinc. antimony, lead. arse- way. In such a macabre lineup. Ken- Whole farms have to be acquired crippled vast expanses of land. .

America must devise an energy poli- nic. manganese. magnesium. tin. tucky‘s dead for a year would ex- for waste disposal sites —- a process Such ravaged earth has its retri- Harry M. Caudill is a professOr in
cy that will guarantee ample electri- cadmiumgold and mercury. tend a mile. All the 51000 victims that consumes many thousands of bution as in the mud flows left by the history department.

city throughout the country for gen- It is fossilized vegetation, and

erations tocome. every substance that once consti- .

Much of our energy dilemma can tuted the forests of the carbonifer- . ,
be resolved by conservation. b... ouo aooho h hood in hose horo y eno scare S OWS 0W peop e open on pl 8
population growth and the wearing black lumps.
out of Old plants make inevitable the As coal they are densely packed WASHINGTON — No one will ever Meanwhile, 12-year-old Mary Kel- University of Michigan research- eloquently refuted the senator: "We
building 0f many new power Sta‘ together. Burning releases, scatters know how many Americans had just lerman’s only problem was all itchy ers have found that body tempera- are not going to be intimidated by
tions. . and diffuses them. They become taken Extra-Strength Tylenol two throat, for which her father supplied tures of up to 102 degrees Farenheit McCarthyism,” said the 57-year-old
. EIven DOW. Wherever one livesIhe parts ofIthe air. water. 5011 and all weeks ago. only to hear Dan Rather Extra-Strength Tylenol. Even com- may help strengthen the immune mother of three at a weekend con-

15 likely to be Within 50 or 75 miles llvmg things. including our own hOd‘ announce that the pain reliever had mercially-minded pain-killer man- system. Aspirin, they found, might ference of college students here.

of a generating plant, and the Utlll' 195- . just killed several people in Chicago. ufacturers don’t list itchy throats, hinder the healing process. “We are not going to be painted ’ .,
ties have mapped many future de- They are released for alltime so Yet the poisoned-Tylenol murders let alone depression, on products la- 0 red if we question something about

velopments. far as human relevance IS con- have given many of us pause. They bels. . . I . thiscoumryj' .. ._

Last year, Kentucky was Ameri- cerned. Never during that span will were not only cowardly but a re- Although Californias Republican . *' ‘
ea's largest coal producer. Its min- they be locked up again in coal. minder of how Americans pop pills "5.“. Attorney General George Deukmejl-
ers dug 155 million tons — enough to They will circulate from air to water like candy. . MK an trails Los Angeles Mayor Tom Feet?" Y0” Seat Belts ; _
fill a continuom train stretching to soil to plants to flesh ad infinitum. Indeed, had some of the Chicago ~ ' , GLEN Bradley, 3 IDemocrat, in the race for ,The Federal AViation Admmistra- '
three times across the United There is somewhere a limit to the victims not fallen prey to this all- . ” ‘ ' if and that States govemorship, White tion has proposed controversial g
States. amount of such entropic matter that too common habit. they might have V“?! _ SHE A BER Home IoffiCials apparently think changes in safety rules allowing an it. _ ,

The planet‘s top coal producers the world as we know it can absorb. escaped their tragic fate; {1. . that, With some extra effort, they ““3 to regulate themselvesIln the -? ” '
vere the US, Russia. China. Po- If that point is passed. anew geolog- Take. for example. the case of "~ .__.. canIpush theirfavoriteoIver the top. areas of maintenance, equipment .5;
land and Kentucky — in that order. ic era — a return to the carbonifero Stanley Janus; 25; and his 19-year- Vice President BUSh is now sched- and training.“ H , , L1...
It I: no wonder the industry calls ous -- Will have been UShered in by old wife. Theresa. They‘d just re- In the coming weeks, the deaths of uled to make anoher appearance 0“ Win” the regs wont necessari- ”:7
coal Kentucky’s ace in the hole. our SPeCieSv turned from the deathbed of Stan- Mary Kellerman, the Januses and Deukmejlan's behalf 0ct.I _23 only ly take effect ‘0? at least three

In recent years the vulnerability That is the reason a prolonged. in- ley‘s brother. Adam. 27. another 'l‘y- three others are likely to spur public two weeks after his last VISIt. Good months, John GallpaultI ot the Co-

‘ 0t Persiai: (hilt Oil and the perils 0t dustrialized. coal-powered, global lenol victim. when sorrow prompted demand for factory seals on over- luck.team. lumbus (Ohm-based Airline Safety
nuclear generation (including mo- society is out Of the question. them tolook for an antidepressant_ [hefounter medicines ° InStltUte SIaYIS new rules would en-
ronic construcuon and management Already we are paying a terrible But did they down a shot of whis- Since 1972, child-proof safety caps , morass 8.1mm. .to Iforego backup 3
laxity) have inspired a rish to build price to Kentucky‘s ace in the hole. key or sip some tea? No. Both have helped to cut almost in half the HOWIGbOUtthe Garment Workers. radios, air-conditioning equipment
coal-fired steam plants. Coal Age Magazine reported in Sep- reached for the Extra-Strength 13.19- number of deaths because of im- Monga Wulk-Mathies, gigs-s be- and auxiliary power supplies — any- .

There are 33 of them in the state. tember the results of a new study of no] and later died at the hospital properly-ingested pills. Presumably, (geme eIfuIst woman (tic . West thing to lighten loads and w Bite
and they dot Kentucky like flecks of sulfur-dioxide emissions in the Unit- they‘d viSited hours before seals would prevent pre-purchase rmany S argest traI e union, the departures. :
~ tampering with the product 1.2 million-strong Public SerVice and "If the FAA makes the changes _
DRABBLE® by Kevin Fagan Yet, packaging changes won't TransporgI Union. In the United but monitors the airlines, it could be .

. . _ States, ere are no in ependent a good change, said Galipault in a

mean much to the compulswe pill . . .

. . . umons or AFL-CIO affiliates headed telephone interview, “Historically
mm M I come m The 100 taioeimtu mm on. HA6 we seen me so con i mom scams pepper. Such characters W!“ “mm b ' ' '

- I - . . _ yawoman. however, the FAA hasnt been too

(a? : sum 00ml DADS new occlude TROPLN, TRoPlH OE M16 mg 5.1““. ue to indulge in the powders and po . oodat that so rt of thing ,,

\ .35, M1 aotues Tam sou mime when lit No... Mom's m7. out mom m mo tions that promise peaceful sleep or 3 ' ‘
. I; ‘ ., on? CAME Home .Kaariue mM , .. comaoc To “MR instant relief. In many wayS. they Sen. Jeremiah Denton’s charge .

..- . m . ' “5%“;pr “Congo “)ng 4:3 A m“ are victims of a culture that lowers last week that Peace Link a wom- Pennsylvania has become the Iat- ' '

' ,f; mm, i (,wg if M“ ‘ , I ‘ , our threshold for pain. I en's nuclear-arms educational net- at sum to join the computer .39,

T0 MKE\I - f . TOEETHLR .. \ . [,3 Unfortunately, It sometimes takes work, was directed by the KGB, By 1m, all 8th graders in the

o. ' ~00 0?. $33 A. ' . m z, '- ‘ _ ’\ extraordinary tragedies to make us earned the Alabama Republican no Keystone State will be mm to

1.1%,} \ Ia " . 0;) '. ‘yh “ _ 7M;: (7] see that weakness in ourselves. points among Senate colleagues takeacomputer competency course.
_._ _— 2/» (3E , I ‘ \.\ , '4 ' ‘ ' ‘ Footnote: The October issue of (many Senate wives are memlnrs of ‘
- - w l ”U ' ‘o - ‘ Prevention Magazine reports that the group). Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
’ll - * (a . Nlja . those With slight fevers may "0‘ Nonetheless, it was Peace Links are Pulitzer Prize-winning national
' 2-27,- I I b ' ' a I c '90. ii--iearenlor;§>no7c;ieint //" want tomkepainkillersafterall. founder Betty anws who most columnists,

 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Jurmby, October 14, 1912 - 3
l l I
. Democrats rebut nonpartisan speech
Amnesty International chapter B . .
I ll 1' H ' t a. eagan says economy is recovering
p ans can 0 lg 0 ans r _ _ _ _ gent priority for all of uS, and espe- paying the price. You are."
By JAMES GERSTENZANG cially for this administration." He said the administration policies
By SUSAN