_,., , . 5, 3.7.1 j. ,/.<- ’_ ' ' ' M I [momma 1 “WW“ 'ng‘é; ' 3 .; . . EC gm, OF KENTUCKY U (f _ . p ‘ ”J- ' SE? a a 3:72;"? 5 '. Official Publication of the Kentucky Press Service - Vol. 62, No. 8 - August 1991 ,' , : . . ' , o o 0 2 1 Periodic B d 1) 1d f t l ff 3 Room” oar approves new 111 111g 01? C611 ra O 1C6 :W ,. 2:85}le . professional office park called ,_ , i j , 9”}? Ollt Wlth the Old, Burlington Center (away from the " 5/ 1’ . . h he 1‘1 W flooding river). , , ’_ _ . f, ‘ m Wlt t e The 4,200-square foot structure /? We; / . ‘3, f 3} will have three floors, including i. ’ / - " f , It’s charming, homey and in a basement. An important addition for "" :- , ” ii . 7 : _ prime location for keepingasymbolic KPA members is space for a full- , i” 'g ' ‘ . / {at ' 3 .1» . V :1 g . eye on the state capitol. But it also fledged conference room in the base- , 1'1; . V . ”Wmmm»” ii. -' ii . floods from Kentucky River backwa- See Board. back page i é ,- ter and is hemmed in by neighbors «fix: ii , {3; ; 1' ' . p g : , and zoning regulations on expansion ' 3; iii i 9' a; . z. ‘i‘: :‘Z-,. ‘ ,_ ‘ z and remodeling. Tnple A buys -__v .. i f i i f i I : That’ 5 why the KPA board of di- ’ ' , ‘ f e .. “he i 7'37 reams VOted atitsl‘me meefingto sell Berea' Cltlzen tifii we... ‘5 _ ‘ W I the association's headquarters at 332 TfipleAPublishins C0-0fM0unt _. .- .. .. ' 1, Capitol Ave. and build a new central Vernon has become the third owner of %;5“’%;“ , . :;. office on the outskirts of Frankfort. The Berea Citizen in 1955 than a year. it; [er-v 7)" “3": 3 ' I. ; The new building, now under ChrisOttowayhadboughtthepa- 9‘... ‘63:“ _ i“ , constructiomsiocated onus izmusi per, which is nearlyacentury 01d, last — “he ..a» 7 W» south of melt-64 interchange, in a Winter from DiCkSO“ Media ’ ”we . .. . . , . Mi“ ' EK d '11 Peru“ Anderki“ and their 5"“ Rick wwwwfimii”. . U Stu ents W1 Anderkin, the Citizen's new general " H M i h ' V ' t ty >' .L ' manager. e pro 0 pe , Study KPA Pap er The Anderkinsalso ownthe Mount The new KPA building will closely resemble this already completed office , ' ‘ AfteraUniversity of North Caro~ Vernon Signal and Laurel County inBurlington Center, just south of I-64 inFrankfort. Construction is under- ‘ - lina class spent last fall critiquing the Weekly. way, with relocation expected to take place in mid-fall. _ i_ Georgetown Graphic, the KPA board #4” L i- hoped a Kentucky collegiate program , . , , ' would follow suit. One has. - C d d t b k d t 1 th _ . This fan the community journab an 1 a BS as m e 1 arm warm , ; ' ism class at Eastern Kentucky Uni- . . . . ; . 1 , 7 » versity will focusonayet-to—be—chosen l d h l d t t d t ‘ . . independentweeklylgmgitfl‘eme 1’08 C0 S ou 31" 0 rm Ll ver 18111 . type of scrutiny as the North Carolina . . e students did the Graphic. Theadvertisingaceswhohelprun papers to enhance the broadcast onlybecauseofthecostofairtime,but . _ EKU faculty member Liz Hansen political campaigns apparentlybelieve campaigns that cost them millions of also because of the production ex- '= approached IG’A executive director in the power of the printed word. dollars. And they spentcomparatively pense. ‘_' « David Thompson in June about the Toward the end of the May pri- little on advertising in thenewspapers How much did the s n d on _ , project. A former community jour- mary, political commercials on tele- they perceived as giving them cre- ne rs— them ediufh a}: tman 3‘ ;, nalist herself, Hansen said she read vision were chockfull of credits for dence. f l‘tNSPaPteh r edibil' 7A f rth o); t _ about the UNC project last fall and Kentucky newspapers. The state’s A very rough accounting, based t: tfigu iglNc ah T ltyéc n35“) . ., , wanted her own students to have a dailiesand even someweeklies would on the limited information provided Fia r e111“; Naaaenpe e ' pe. . ‘ similar experience. have been hard pressed to buy the air on campaign finance reports, reveals veTpe g1 02'7 69 Or 'ust ver one r- '7 _ She has taught Eastern’s once—a- time they got for free, compliments of that the gubernatorial candidates this cent OZhe amounts] ntgn broa (112:9: - yearcommunityjoumalismcoursefor the candidates. spring spent around $7 million on ra- m di That’s sorrpizwh re in the _ four years. While she hashad students Commercials for the candidates dio and television commercials. The ne? hborhood of what thee bemato- studysomeofKentucky’scommumty quite freely quoted newspaper en- bulkof that figureisfortelevision,-not 'alg d’d t t gu ' ‘_ papers, she said they’venever had the dorsements. The candidates appar- , n d 73““ l a es spen on newspaper _ opportunity to focus, as aclass, on one ently saw a kind word from The Daily . a 3.031 t th t th f' 1- " I . specific paper- Independent or The TribuneCourier, i ta 93%;” er fiesefffligutgjjfoef , This summer Hansen is busy for instance, as lending credibility to Whoafgfijgsgpeoplg?77Megfmg 3(1) x: .’ ey :p d' b t : ouiiiningthecourse,whiieihompson their campaign and influencing the KPAstaflPageslofl S; ° “0311139 ‘f lsegrsemendé- : accepts applications from interested electorate. Cmygntionmmpagg4 me canthl a) es ump expen 1‘ see EKU students, bCCk page didates used the free WOI'dS 0f news_ 553225512;53E153233333333333333gig-15335335553323212:i:123535:55233533123235:53E3'3221332355532Ii333532;};333533gEgEgEgEgigigigégigigi535252535;53532333233331 See Candidates. bGCk page ._