xt7wm32n938m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7wm32n938m/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-02-11 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 11, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 11, 1982 1982 1982-02-11 2020 true xt7wm32n938m section xt7wm32n938m Thursday
KENTUCKY in
er 2 “on". “n.” O ‘
\@- Wanna win a data? .
Yesterday's sunny weather will stay with " '
us, but it Will be warmer today wrth highs fl Holmes Hall's dating game takes place
in the mid 305 and lows tonight in the 205. tonight '" Patterson H0” dormitory amid
Clouds will come around on Friday, / accusations from two female students
"‘00th and ltemperatures will stay in the that the applications for the event were .
mid 305. chauvtnlstic See the story on page 3
VallxxXIV, NoJOA rhuudgyI pgbmary ll. .9.) University at Kentucky Lexington Kentucky An independent N'Udelil newspaper more 107' ' I
Committee hears . ,
I ' an. , -. . . .. a t '
KET 3 running out of . _ , W, - e ”is. experts results . <
a - 4 ' ’ relies W: m. i a - 3 J. a ' I K I . ‘ . ,
. ., .., . r’ ~ < , , _ . to a; x. - -..<:,=¢~’*~< on forest minin '
~/ ‘, y". .1; , $35: is” . c _. at -. a‘éfiihfifgfl‘ .. v . _~g_ ;I
41" ' 'i l ’ : "a; ”E; {@4733 . 1’. W ' . By DALE G-MORT‘ON ".‘ ':
Z. '- " -. . 3,4, .1‘4,, “and. fa. , '. Kentucky Farm Bureau and the .
fromthegovemment. Boston University. Press headed ruux sAivmo KemeIStgtt Sierra Club in voicing opposition to , j' :
“The most dependable funding UK’s Department of Radio, TV, and ICEcycles any mm,“ (Miami. *. .‘
3m would u sonic tax or fa,” mm. It was in this capacity that Jack BlantonI wee presiMnt for ,
Presssaid. _ . I Press, alreadya member ofthe KET A wave a freezing weather that brought rain and snow to the Lexington area helped decorate several business affairs, told the committee "(a ,‘Z«
The task force reviewed venom OIp- Board, began working with the sta- students means of transportation parked outside their dorms earlier this week. Bicycles shown here thatan outside legal counsel to review :3, ,"
tions at its 188‘ meeting. The commit- tion in 1933 as Executive Director. covered with icicles should be thawing out as the sunny weather continues, but the temperatures will re- the situation should be selected “by '
tee highly favored a National KETwentontheairileGB. main cold. the end of the week." "; ,L -
. ——_§— UK, UL game not law yet, -.
l a a '2' ' ' ‘
out f t - bl” stranded In committee
a [me —-— the games Guenthner said ticket , ._ 3 .'
By JAMES EDWIN HARRIS sales concession sales parking 1" ,4.
_ . . . ASSistant Managing Editor fees and television rights to the 13‘ I_’
Students, parents mad Social Security failed to notify them about phaseout ——————— 3333:, an: m: $311,133:
FRANK}: ORT * The bill WhiCli schools over a twoyear period . ,I r: ;
would mandate an annual UK— He also projected visitors to the ,‘I; .17-
“‘3 CHRIS’mPHERCO softball team and batted over .400last students benefits for May, June, July Republicans in Congress for not sen- University of Louisville basketball game would spend another $4 .I
Y . ”NE” year. Cindy, whose father died two and August and toreduce their checks ding notices to all 3.3 million children and football game was stranded in million in the same period. . : . =
AssociatedPress Wnter Years 880, is nowafrahman at Kutz- by 25 percent each September for the on its rolls, or at least to high school committee yesterday after lengthy “What it boils down to." Guen- ‘-'._<'
K townStateCollege. next three years. They will get no andcollegestudents. debate on a controversial amend- thner said, “is that we're faced .4
Nineteen-year-old Joseph Carey “It’s hard to comprehaid how the cost-of-living increases and the The agency did send incorrect pam- ment forced the committee to ad- with a situation of financing higher .I
decided last spring totake a year off government can get away with checlrswillceaseafter April 1:85. phlets to up to 100,000 youtls five joum. education, and we‘re sitting on a f ’v.
from Williams College to work as a something this unthrhanded. . . .” The fliaseout will save the ailing months before their 18th birthday, in— The House Education Commit- property in the community that _.._ ‘ ‘
mayor in Colorado. The absence complainedJanet Evam,aBaltimore Social Security system $915 million dictating they could Still gettheaid for teedebated for over anhouron the would generate enormous revenue “5. ,ii'
cost Carey, whose father died two highlchoolscnior who enrolledincol- this year and more than $10 billion college. merits of the bill and its amend- and put Kentucky and Kentucky -. .
years ago, nearly $500 a month in lege only threedays after learning of over the next five years. In Now the agency plans to send the ment, which would abolish the UK and Company in the mainstream Iv
SocialSecuritystudent benefits. thechangeslutmonth. December, the system sent checks correct pamphlet at the end of Invitational Tournament in favor of national television." a: .
Afterhisfatha’a fmiel-al,James H. Last month, 'l‘ha'esa White, 16, averagingasoto760,508students. February to all 760,508 student ofaChristmas tournament forthe Rep. Clayton Little, D-Hartley, 1
Burns Jr. withdrew from Peabody. whosefatherdiedin imam." junior More thanwpercent were children beneficiaries along with the semi- eight state-supported universities‘ saw the game differently, ,' ,
Man. High School, where he was at John Dewey High School in whose working parent had died. annual school attendance form. basketball teams. however. “Today," he said, “Ifeel _.
senior class vice president, and Brooklyn. N.Y. Now she is a Natty percent hadadisabled parent Several dozen members of Con- But in a rollcall vote, the com- like Daniel Booneashe enteredthe ,. '
airolledinaoommmity collqe—on- freshman at Wagner Collqe on and so percent were children of gross are cosponsoring bills in- mittee defeated a motion to pass Cumberland Gap and saw the . ' f
lytodiscoveritwmlddohimnogood. Staten Island, retirees, troduced by Reps. Gerald B. the bill out with no recommenda- great things in Kentucky. When I . ‘
Hewlllstilllooestillent aidthissum- Bill Reed, 17. of Plymouth, Mich, Whenthestudentbenefitsstartedin Solomon, R-N.Y., and Harold tion, with further debate halted saw this sheet (which detailed - 3
ma- because his {stint died since son of I Marine killed in Vietriun in 1006, 206,000 students drew $165 Volkmer, D-Mo., to delay the May 1 almost immediately by the noon Guenthner-'3 projedionsljtlooked ‘ 5. ‘
Sqitanber, a month afte- Congress 187, already bu started closes at million. Both Presidents Ford and cutoff by several months to accom- adjournment, likeuiehappy hunting ground." . ~
cilangedthelaw. Oakland. He was I sailor at Carter had arsed Callous to phase modate this year‘s high school ifthebiii had been passed out of Little then proposed the amend- . . .
The can of Joe Carey and Jim PlymwthCantonillsllSdloolanan- out the mom before Reagan suc- seniors. committee in that fashion.itwould merit to eliminate the UKIT and
Burn are unusual. but they are not ton.Mlcb.,aDetroltsubu-b. cessfullytookaimonlt. Carey, the William College stu- have needed 51 votes to pass the establish the eight-team tourna~
shew of high school Reed’s mothq', Thane Gall. said The Reagan Idmmtntlon My! dent, said. “I took thesemesta‘ Off in House, which Rep. Jody Richarlb. ment. which hesuggested be nam- . .\
”more have scrambled into college bitterly, ”The government is doing a that in 1965 there was only 8272 good faith when the existing law was D-Bowling Green and the commit- ed “The Great Kentucky Shoot- “
in recent web to beat the May 1 marvel” jobof ranging (If its iro- million in other federal student aid that I could reapply and the benefits tee chairman, felt the bill would out." Little's amendment also - ;
cuuiff ofnewawarthof Social Securi- miles." comparedwithnbillion-plm now. could continue. I really object to not receive. scuttled the football game, and ,-
ty m aid. Frr my, the ex- Siestlllhualdemsqunrt- ButReaganismkingcutsofupto themetlndinwhichtheydidit." Oneofthebill's sponsors. Rep. proposed the revenue from the f .
magnum, meat pamphlet tint said the govern- 50 percent in othe- major lid pro- Thelaw said oollqe students had to [pols Guenthner. R-Louisville. tournament be distributed amom
A may by The A-oclated Press malt would pay a monthly income to arm. and Rep. J-J. Pickle, I} be “entitled" to a check for A08!!! saw theamendment as an attempt theeightrchools. >. .
thtmgw,m unnamed cldldran up to age a if Tuu.fears,"'l‘hestudenturebeing lflltokeepbeaefits. to kill the measure. termed momendmont passed 9-7, but .
and mm are Hita- about the they we full-time mu. “It’s glmsdotflewhammy." Jim Burns' mother, Judy. said: “ridiculous" and “frivolous" by not without comments from Rep. ‘ 3
Social Security Administration’s very hard to jildfy cuts like niece, inuty Social Security Commis- '“l‘he thin that I am really upset membersofthecommittee. Guen- Carl Nett, D-Louisville, who
fella-s tonodfy all amt. about the especially what all of this was put in- sinner Paul 3. Simmons says. “We about is that the social security office thner nevertheless vowed to con- credited Guenthner and called the
linpsadngpbusoutdtbsasbullm toeflecttolmmeaintogolngoffto bevebesrdverylittlea'itidunofthe nvemdiewronginfmmtion. tinuehiseffortstogetthebill out bill“a creative idea forasolution
mamforsbdsotsutlrwghzi. fishttbewar.”sbeuld. M revision linceits passage "1 jut hope there isn't some kid ofcommittee. faminproblem," -
“ltblnklt’lawfultbatdiepaldant Even than who beat the and! by in mt." He claimed the aguicy who has ldt ugh school mum in Guenthner med worth like Nett opposed Little’s amend-
hgdutodsprlvomedmyl-tyar attach. college hill-um. bafa'e mde“exuaa-dmry"effmwuct some community college whose dad “remarkable" and “munching" mam. m, uyim he would
docked,"laldandyAmdt.l7,ol Haylwlllletlusthanme-tmdd peopletodlednnge. hllpassedawaysinoeSethWMh to describe the revenue he not want to bring “the lesser
m.h.,wbovmtbeapmiiof mttbeywwldbaverecdvadlmda- mmmlmbeaimnay mareofttds,"uiers.Buf-ns.a meted mldbemllm from SeoUK-ul.paga:l
thaWneHdditl Hid: School dieddhw.mmwdnyall criticized by both Democrat and duty-adamant .
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._ VI/afl's u ; Interior secretary may be a good manager, but position
. . 7 u , I .

p' d nds wh ea bleof heed
-- . ema someone 0 IS H pa nmng a r”.

. g . In a recent Saturday _Evening Post column, or her duties, which include the supervision of M/NDLfS'S MIDI/$735741. GREED mat I‘ZESI‘IJ’W/fi 4 WE

' - Secretary of the Interior James Watt, in a all federal lands. , 521R I’ll/5 7H5 SAMGPE ONSL'AUGHT‘ Op...

- "‘n‘ ;. four-point summary, laid out what he says are The secretary, however, must also be a _ j \
. ; ' ‘ ', “ ”plain common sense” goals for his depart- planner in a sense beyond what would be re- i
, -,‘. ment. quired of a manager computing the needs of a . ,

.' . - T .. At the bottom of the list (last and least?), business office. The management of federal
“" a '7' Watt states that we must use our natural lands mustbeconsidered bothinterrns of the _

v ' 7 ' ‘ _ - resouces in a manner “respecting the needs of present and the future, with consideration not ‘\

‘~ . 5 future generations, but without impoverishing only of such concrete conSiderations as . / \

f -» . those now living.” mineral potential and recreational usage, but ’ fr , " (Ts
‘ ' -. . _‘ Wonderful. Watt says, let’s give the future also educated judgments as to aesthetic and . _. ‘ ‘ > ~ “‘0‘5' ‘ l .

1 . g _ generationsa break, but not if it requires any ecological value. ‘. 7511:3- 4 - yin“ ”my 1 “ ® “ME
.1 -. real sacrifice from us — it’s that same, tired . n 5% -_ p.14: P , {(65% . .0, Wfiw
3" ; . . 1., attitude that has us in the mess we are now. A man like Watt, With a background almost . 32%.. i, . )‘ filti’él‘Q-EQS’ 0°“ ,5de A,"
f V We all want our plastic disposable doodads devoid of scientific study, is not equipped to ‘ 4 ‘ I v {fir {.f}~i\2,';{w . ° v

_. . . and our nuclear-powered air conditioners, but make such judgments. And his religious \ fig-1": \ «a; X?“ g . _”"\\§'R§ ’ ‘

. _ . . . . ,v .p _ ,U r. ' 1' . .: --'~'l::. . , ,v - ’
" ~ don’t talk to us about where we’re gomg to put beliefs, although they may be his ”Sb? “’1er ‘ 4’» /" "' (953p! '. l’ :* “'3‘ ‘ * l ‘5.

j _‘ the waste that’s left over. Let the future worry the law, might be expected to color his deci- * r , __ g, x ", -- ‘11:, . 9" 0'}; .1?“ '1. A i ,

. - ‘ about that. sions. Why should a man who has publicly . FM' \{._ 4 Hg}.§{:h§§~‘: ,, {l/ ' '. 34,4.

- stated his conviction that Micheal the Ar- c 5% _ (it ‘1 .‘t- " f \‘e 4"". ,‘L. ' I” ‘

I ‘ 4 ' , Watt is just another rerun of the “new" old changel is due any nunute to sound the Ar- (/1 - '9‘" , , . i‘x' ';’ ' .:’3)§‘°6§' J . . ‘ /" -

f - - a“ , ideas that make up the bulk of the Reagan ad- mageddonbeconcerned about the future? Wwflm/ ij‘l x“ (1‘ {a éfilxttilléil’r‘fl (m 7. . ll v7, ‘
-.' ministration‘s “New Beginning.” But unfor- Furthermore, Watt’s background in govern- LOOK %//.t\:‘}’ . $4 a" w“;<\r‘.’l\\\$?i§%“ “at , Jr.
.2. __ ' tunately, Watt is something new in his par- ment is far from that expected of.a cabinet 00K.” ‘7/ § ”353555;; l m,- . 'an)? 1'3}, ,ink‘gfiqfé‘yfi 19."

, z , 5 . ticular position. In most recent administra- secretary, and thus he commands little of the M .772 W t’ 7 7W “ EQL‘E'I‘SYI?§§§\‘~-‘C‘3l‘z‘? {Q1 2, a

. " . ,' tions, presidents have at least considered the respect needed to effectively influence 3;, ’ f! 4/4 a if s“ g"? 6.11%:‘ficggfi 1:3“ “9-.” . f;

'. _- ‘_ 3 wishes of the environmentalist lobbying forces members of Congress and other admlmstra- L, x :- 5577? “ ‘1‘}‘7'564'9‘ztt- l Vifijfiffl 7? 313.3219) ‘ r r , I .

, when choosing a secretary of the interior, in tionofficials. _ ’_ I Vt ‘Vfirf . leggy-11’ '21:} ’1, 3‘ .
,1 i most cases choosing a candidate with some All told, Watt 15 an exception to the Peter 3“ f .. War “K- 32% c- , . n .

j *' ' ; sympathy for environmentalists’goals. Principle—he has risen beyondllls level of m- .‘ . -::i"':13§§523251“ I‘ $r' ru‘v . 2 / eq. , ' I
. 3': _ ; But Reagan, in his zeal to bring the business competency —and thus, in a pos1tion wherehe J' 333%: i” ( .YW. __ , ' ‘ , "'- é (/5
c i management mentality to government, has must make decisons that Will have resounding . §<\\/ gr J L? ' 31 i:

:— ,l 5 i chosen just that —a manager—to fill a posi- effects for years to come, he is dangerous. ., ) )k/ 55 :35- I‘ swigikf. I" _ t; , s«§ft(

- . - i tion that requires far more. Indeed, a This said, we join with the milhons throughout \ ‘i—o / ' a 1 r k 7 5. Ir,
‘ . . secretary of the interior needs to be a good the nation who have signed petitions — C D AWE/”7” VFEG A/VP TEC/INOMSC/STIWWW
' g] g manager in order to adequately discharge his remove James Watt. M L “Of/W, a [k U '

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, . _‘ l ’Sugar ’n spice n everything nice
' '. .. . i —

.' . - I l I
-. i Sweets prove need for better food additive regulations
415 f' § Have you ever noticed that Drs. s. A. Leach and R. M. Green Such increases ian, saliva flow and gressional hearings on saccharin and ed glucose, and theother called fruc- and Frostell, have shown that reduc-

‘ '= ’ Americans‘ taste is conditioned to be with the School of Dental Surgery at calcium are believed to promote a reversal in the FDA ruling banning tose. The body can either store the tion in sucrose consumption and a
' " l, ' 7 l favorable to sweets? Think about it the University of Liverpool in repair (remineralization) of reversi- thesweetner. . glucose or burn it for energy; the substitib'on of invert sugar (that is,
.' "-( . the next time you bite intoa fast—food England have recently reported the ble toothdecay. This is an important issue: fructoseis metabolized intheliverfor sugar containing equal parts of
' . ~ hamburger . . . the sweet ketchup reversal of dental decay (called The sugar substitutes are more sweetners are being watched by Big energy. glucose and fructose) for sucrose in
. ‘ ,C ‘ .. taste obliterates the taste of the fissure caries) in albino rats by slowly metabolized than sucrose by Brother; ifyou don’t know something Glucose residues left in the mouth the diet maybeexpectedtolower the
' -' . : paper-thin beef pattie! We are condi- sweetening agents. Such sugar decay-causing bacteria which live on about it, the quality of your life could after a sucrose containing meal number of decay-causing bacteria on

, 2’ 3 ; tioned to buy many products because “substitutes” are used in some diet teeth. The substitutes are actually change! snack or sweetened soft drink (even theteeth.

‘ . they contain sweets. Sometimes the beverages, low calorie {00th and sugars (carbohydrates, except talin) Most 50438110" ”SWISS" gums in very small amounts) will fromote -

. ’ sugaris present in such a low amount ”sugarless" chewing gum. but are called “substitutes” because contain sorbitol and mannitol. The tooth decay because bacteria on teeth Apparently, 3088? SUbSUtUtG may
7‘; that it is COMCiOUSly lmdetectablfi they are used in place of the more sideof onegumpackage explains that can use the glucose to grow and pro- reverse ‘00"! decay 89d decrease the
.‘ 1”,. WON“ you, for example, add sugar , rapidly metabolized sucrose. The the gum, “does nor promote tooth duce acid that decays teeth. number 0f decnycausms bacteria on
3‘ . : " f to your homemade CTRCkeI‘S and ‘ talin is a 11‘0th which has a sweet decay,”and “not non caloric." Notice the teeth. I think-more PMUClS f9?
peanut butter snack? I wouldn’t, but . ’ taste andis representativeof a whole the deceptive use of the double The sugar substitutes can also be human 001$“!th should contain
: ‘ fl . . '. many of the commercially prepared J°_"“ class of proteins recently reported as negative? The package further used by the bacteria to cause tooth sugar substitutes r atherthansucrose.
A5015 (vending machine-type) snack ‘\ Fm! potential sugarsubstitutes. states: “Sorbitol and mannitol are decay; however, they use such Nevertwessr 18'“ ”Wed by“
. f. crackers have a noticeable sweet - The“ substitutes should notbecon- metabolized as carbohydrates, but substitutes more slowly than glucose. prospect of even more government
'2 .‘gC; --j , taste. If you check the ingredients The me of sugar substitutes is has fused with artificial sweetners like moreslowly." «Thus the production of acid is regulation 0‘ our lives, but, I think

‘V ' 5" “St. you Will find “sugar.“ It “85 ed on scientific well. Some Of cyclamates (not in use), and sac- WhatthismeansinEnglish is that delayed. This g'ves the victim a BigBrothershouldintel-vene.

,-' "‘"ri become the worst five-letter word in these chemicals are many times charin — both of which contain no the gum does contain sugars and chance to brush his teeth before the © 192”)“ Fritz
In?” theworld for those of uswho are con- sweeter-tasting than table sugar calories (are non-calorigenic) — therefore has calories. The sugar damagingacidisproduced. '
cemed about good dental health. (sucrose); thus foods need only can unlike the substitutes which are most of us are unfamiliar with is In fact, another group of research John pm, i, a graduate student in
5|? > I think the Food and Drug Ad- tain very small amounts to taste calorigenic. sucrose, table sugar. Sucrose is com- scientists at the Karolinska Institute Toxicology and i, pmduce, of
f , -. j ministration (FDA) should not only sweet and concomitantly contain less Artificial sweetners are generally posed of two forms of sugar, one call- in Sweden, in the labs of Drs. Okuda Telecable‘s “Science Newallne.”

':'; a regulate the actual ingredients allow- calories. The substitutes tested by not metabolized by the body, being 3

2 " 7 ‘3 ed to be present in foods, but also the Drs. Leach and Green included excreted directly intotheurine. Thus Berke W

' ’3." , amounts. Sugar should be banned xylitol, mannitol, sorbitol and talin (a they are considered important to the BLmM COUNTY by
" from certainfoods.Unsuspectingpeo- sweet tasting protein). They used quality of foods and beverages con- WWW/R594 W
3” pie are getting sugar from un- sucroseasacontrol substance during sumed by diabeties whom must limit WI 7 YES. I'P UKE nervous? E5. was LOOK“. SAIDIWW Wk HOLD
”3": suspected sources. Some of these theexperiments. or exclude sugar (calorie) intake. WU. WQGNH Pea"? ”5:556“? Egg If MYMX AND WW ' 11-5
' :p. sources will even elude calorie wat- According to beach and Green. the Obese people are also interested in \ Wmmw_ \ ’ mm! \ ' my my 15A MAYO W.

3;»: fr. . chers who aren't knowledgeable substitutes cause dental decay to keeping artificial sweetners available -, \ v I WWWA \ /

. , '2; ‘ about food ingredients. Did you know reverse by inducing an increase in the tcthepublic. hid v]. _ l( ”thy- . ‘ M WITH _\ .

that chewing gum labelled rate of flow of saliva which then Cyclamates were banned by the 4. ' fi/ 1, ' ’1 “7.14075“ , - 1/ 6
we? “sugarless” actually contains sugar? calmes a rise in both pH, and calcium FDA because they cause cancer in lab i,“ “' g . " .. ‘ myml g "’

'} Readthefine rint! tr tion. An increase in H ' l d harin.Saccharin 537’, / E ll .o ' ' "
| ,. '. «, r, v p concen a p anima SBS 0658M «1 .. n 'U , q\ (v
~l ~ 1.5,, ,{ Nevertheless. there is some good means the mouth gets more basic was scheduled to be removed from V/{é . g ,4, . v 4:“ .
' =_ 3:; ‘ news in Sugarland. Certain sugar rather thanacidic. These changes oc- the market also, but public concern / ,_—_ :8 — . “ ,—

f; ,i y- i substitutes may actually stop and cur naturally whenever a sweet overthelackofanyothernon-caolrie- N9“ 95 86', fig ’5 “-7—— gm

_-:fi‘ fr": ' 4 - .. . _ 1 to .4-

. .32" ‘ I reverse tooth decay. substance is taken into the mouth. contaimng sweetner resulted in Con / . t‘ 1-; /] A 1 g . /| I H .~\
14"”. ',‘:I It?" i - M
‘ BUSH Doux - .
" I i! ‘, m Gd SA lobby everythingwhetherit'sapackofgum legislators tospendtheirtimeonsur-
x g -, . ”M r” ._ or a newspapa'." The article then vivalofouracademic institutions in-

-. V", "" I . :v 1" {would like to clear “P any am- said, “Dupree said SA's lobbying stood (the same point made in a
t (,0) e biguitiesthatmayhaveresultedfrom committee is jut doing the same KcmoleditorlalonFebA).

Q n ' i j " Ir ‘ (3 _s_--_;-._ _ ;‘__'. the Kerncl'a coverage, on Feb. 2, of thing.” Actually, Dupree was saying SA needs the help of many UK

a ,;'1. ‘ ,1. - .s- .. , f ‘31 unsaldentmmfion'slobbyinsd- that SA has more frugal spending suidmhtomakethelobbyimefforta
5 I " " 6‘. U 'I: _ , ' 5 F; ‘g ~*- fort. practicesthancorporatelobbyists. m.PleaaestopbyoneoftheSA
-, _, «j . / r . _ an: ((3. '4/ , ‘ _; A - \ ' lo Lobbying before the General , lobbyingiinorimtimtablestoheipln-
y‘ , ,3 _ .m: — \\ ~/.:\ { /(j \ ."’ Assembly is a responsibility that SA Finally,aSAsenatorwaaquotedas sureaqualltyoducationforallofm.

‘. -, - 7 _ s. . *-‘=;\{ , ?’ , _~' . 4' takes very serially. Unfortunately, some thatSAu lobbynefor annual K‘

. r _'.r .l . g / I v ‘ I 1.- _“ " 8 § ' the Kcrngl article my have cram {NM and basketball games. Ac- Wm“

H. \ l -: ,_‘-:..:- " ‘ ‘ 0-. ' the ism,” m tually, SAlobbyista areobjecting to WWYMW

. , , ‘_ ‘7'. -. impressiontha every p- .

,’ ,- . I ,0: ., // ____ v pantandself-servingattitudetoward comiderationofthisiuueanduking SAadministrativemistant

g A (A. , 15 area. * 4.5." T; 'v \ ,r . lobbying.

.' .' . . \ / l ". 66' 'w 06 : Will Diipl'ee, SA'a lobbyist, was .

. - . .41 - ‘ t. es” cage . Li quoted as saying, um» legislators) Let's save Robinson Forest
‘y - ".5 ‘—-“' _ 2, —— think,"l‘heseguysmjutrowdyool-

,, 1,; it“? _'~, ~ .; ‘, < ‘5 ,, legesnidmtrwhodmthnveoieir

I » It _L_/ sluttogetherandarespaidingtoo Thefervor that existed last mnoumonli‘orest contaim

,- .; ~r. ".3! .,. ' Wis ’5 muchmoneymbuyimdrlnb.”ln mtaovuthefateofnobimm lS,Mecraofprbtineforatthat,if

- ‘ , ____. I w ‘\ ._ fact,Dupree’spointwuthetSAlob- Foruthueeemedtohavedimininh- minedmillneverbetheumengain.

. 7 ' 13;" r ‘— byista will NOT be min: snident ed.1‘hisisnotadeadiesue.Wecannot Allofthoeeconcemedova-thhimie
' ,i’ " l " mateyto“;etm"withieunnm pleaseletyowvoioesbeheerdand
, .1 ,/ becamethbbelnvlorwoulddlnnle allowthiureatobesu-faoeminedby letmpullnmotlon.
, ,. ' m ammonium-lobbyists. a lowly minority who are only ln- 3 L on
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 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. February 'I 1. 1982-3 .
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