xt7x69700d5h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7x69700d5h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-10-13 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 13, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 13, 1981 1981 1981-10-13 2020 true xt7x69700d5h section xt7x69700d5h ‘ ' > 2 .- ‘ j 1 \' ‘ 2 1.2 - ,I 2"},igléaiwflfé‘aéy, :83;- Ligxi"
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1i VOL LXXXlV, N0-42 ' An indepuidmt standout newspaper since 1971 UhiVCl'Sity 0f Kentucky 1 2
l Tuesday, October 13, 1981 Lexington, Kentucky
‘i “
omorrow 5 re y ARC ADE2 ‘  
: . 1; .
t‘ uo y governor t .
By CINDY DECKER .. ‘” ‘12- high" “mum is his ”Emilie; 22.56%” 1 3
Senior Staff Writer ' " ' 2N6 wantttonVmow how he d ines ’5? $.ézflgr - ‘-
‘- nd KEN ALTIN . . W . °P Pm“ y- ’” 2 ” 31,1211“ 12:" " 2 i
a - E .. 1 .1 SA President Britt Bmckman said ,. Q ”Effie ”i3 . - .
Bureau Cluef . g. _ \ s . . 1 _ _ *MM .2. . .. .12... .. . . 1 V .
_ .1 \ “it isn’t gomg to make any difference - W22 W... - 11 V _ g, i
__________...__ 2’ _ ~ '.1 '. .2 to anybody other than those who are . . ' ‘ ' — ' ' 2 .;
IG°V~ 30h" Y- Brown has canceled - e at” :5 " i- coming solely to hhar the governor " ‘ ’ m; " Vl"". '"g 1,
iTussippeIefirgieegV; torziorrow 8 Rally 3 1 ӣ- 2 and had no intention of showing their - ' A d: u I! ,
0 V9 er uca '0"; f . 1 . ' i .. su rt for higher education." ,2- ,-
Frank Ashley, press secretary to 2' 1.2" We have always anticiapted this ; ,
the governor. said Brown Will be at an a“ - . a possibility as it is the governor’s habit 2, 2 2;:
engagement In Washington “MW 11;, ll ‘ 22 to cancel at the last minute,” he said. 1 , 22. .1 2 2
row. . . . . _ a; .. ‘2 ' “To me, this should rally more sup ' ‘1 . _
Brown accepted an imitation to at- I port and show the govemor’s true . _ 9;; __ ,- 1 .. 1 . . -.
' tend tehje ift‘;:::itBo::;0Cl;:ltilt)Srh _1 , a ' ‘ feelii'iflgs towagd highglrdeductatli‘oln." f . 1 422.2122»... ,; 1 ~ 1'
sponsor r a y . e2- " ‘ As ey sai e ’ no ow i ’ 2 ‘ . ‘ ' "
vice Prwideht- 0“ the KET television a anyone else from the governor's of- ‘ t ' ,2 2
show, “The People 5 30511155 Oct. fice would be attending the rally in ,2 '- Q
71 Brown‘s place, but “I’m sure that if .
l sesame . 4- .2. "We .0... W I-
as P3 i .s come.” ' I " ’ ' ' . . ’ H '
said Ashley. “We knew it the night he Brown will be on campus Oct. 18 ‘ e I , M;
1 11th01? it 0: KET- It m‘Bt have GOV' JOHN Y' BROWN - for a Government for the People day. ’2 2:“ ! 39’ ,5 ‘3- f.”
i “We" ‘Smin Ashley said. “at which time he will 2 rmaz ; _ -
3 Dean Garritson, Arts & Sciences “I1don‘t think it will change address the budget cuts, students' 0 J I ; e3;- 03%“ .5 , % - =
j? senator, said. “If it was let a slip of anything - our cause or what we‘re concern for higher education, and ‘ It. 5“ 1. .9: ”a, 1
the memory, I would say he’s a trying to achieve or get out of the ral- anything else that is one thestudents’ 3‘ I3 a; '5! ' 2 W . ’; -, its _
forgetful man." ly," Clark said. “The intent of the ral- minds ‘2" L i it ' ‘3? . .52.? ..
Garritson said SA realized Brown 1y is to inform the public and “The governor will be able to ad- 1. 3&1; .1! . 22 a” ‘3 2 _~'
had another commitment that day, legislature ofourproblems andneeds dressthequestions then thathewould ‘12 "a?" ’1 ’. '. """ , . V is
but it assumed he would be able to at- and how they can help our needs." have answered at the rally," Ashley 4 :V "-,"“” 1 :1: ' -
tend both of them. Clark said if Brown had attended said. " 3%
Clark said that Brown’s cancella- the rally, “he could explain to the Brown will alsobeat UK Oct. 2Bfor 1 -_.v . m V
tion will not change the meaning of students what we have to look for- a forum sponsored by the Socially 7 ‘.‘ . ‘ ' '
the rally. ward to. He did state on TV that Concerned Students. \V A
Collective bargaining the issue 9‘ 92‘
- . I ' 1
Mayoral race heating up 2 1- * '* 2
a : V. 2 ,
f, W‘amfi’w . ' " '1 ' ‘ x . V ~ -. "2.2..W2W2umn—u2 . . “.511er
-—.-,—'—':—-_ established on the property tax law ballots were cast in the ‘mar t t g h I ‘
B ' BRAD STLRGEON , 1 P“ yi “3 ; .
y . known as House Bill 44) of tins prediction may not be farfetched. - 7 '- ' "
Kernel Contributor . . _ p _ . g _ . . _
pollltlcilasteason. t ll be However, to accept that scenario one 9;, '; “ , M ,1 '1 a,
11—--~11-—~—-~-—-~—- nw may even ua y a major must also accept the assumption that 1 .... 1 . .2 2.1.
factor in the campaign for city hall, Baesler’s visits are convincing poten- W} ‘_ " ' ' ' ‘ " ' 1 " 'M“ _ “nukes jg.
last Friday morning. both mayoral » ”(,5th m mphflarg ”my-poisition‘ he] supporters, and that on 08' com ,f ;M wow“ . . :3 .2 . - V
candidates held P755 conferences on collective bargaining is clear and vinced, those voters will turn out at *‘ -.. ‘ ' ‘ " ' ‘ ’ ' ‘
that characterized the contrasting well known. I call upon my opponent the pollsonelection day. I ‘ I .
nature of each man's OCtObe’ to explain his views onthisimportant Unless a significant defection in ‘
:gatezgryy Afigéfci‘ggfiy :fcontftgentcg “bl?“ and his :pparently growing Baesler’s support is detected by opi- By J. D. \‘ANHOOSE/Kernel Staff
invo vement wit officials of the nion llstak ‘ l t '
nornligeef'uilntentionséor the “15‘ three Teamsters and the United Auto earlyp00ctchafinthnisa]saws-i:g'elanpbtfr‘o:’th1 Vldeo Venture
. W38 0 e “Oh‘Pa 153“ campaign. Workers, both of which are ct' l ‘ ‘ ' - 1 1 _
' Lexington voters can 9X98“ the race promoting collective bargainiiig the y 3:223)! Eggvzgimthgi Bourbon Graves. mechanical engineering freshman at Lexington Technical Institute. concentrates on a game of
to increasingly distinguish the can- ' t ll d ted y _ “Defender" at the Kentucky Arcade on Rose St. in Coliseum Plaza. There are several campus area arcades where
didacles. But Baesler may avoid that recen p0 5‘ con "c 1 by vhnous students can relax from theirdaily schedules.
; challenge. believing that he now holds 1003‘ “impale! organizations show
. I m— a commanding lead. although he us holding abouta 14 percent lead." .
I recognizes that H oskim may be mak- When asked if he is concerned about a
anaIYSIs ing headway in some traditionally four percent decline m hls lead 35
Republican precincts in the east end Sh?“ m a late August P0112 Baesler
of town. As one of Baesler’s :{aldkti‘e expected somalsllppage (3‘9” . . .
_____________._ associates explained while his can- 105 "5 awfiswe WISH)“ ver- UK “mm 0* dy d‘
The fir 5‘ meeting. held by SCOtty didate knocked on suburban doors, “if 31:31]“? but he allsoleg‘flfi’ecw any r rs “am In eys "I sm on sm m
Baesler. the consensus front-runner, Scott visits 20,000 homes as we have meo SW11 [0 8V8 - 1 .
marked the 15. 000th home the can- plannid V we’re in good shape because .The “issues'_' Baesler stressed at By DAMON ADAMS Prgjelcit fl‘tlEdiigs by theIUift'lt‘obzcco Will not be useful as research on
‘ didate had visited since May's [$8 than 40 000““ probably vote.” his early mormng conference clearly Reporter .3" ea 8?“ "S 1V U 9 Vave smoking effects.
. . . . ; reflect th (h- t' of hi eff ts improved. according to Acting Direc-
primary. An hour later at his head- with approx1mately 88 000 e rec ‘0" 5 or - - .- . eed "If . do ‘tt
- . - ' “We've found out from these walks -“ " tor lea-"e“ DaV‘S- Dans disagr )0“ n ry
quarters downtown, challenger Bl“ registered voters in Fayette County hat 1 1 1 b 1 to get a lead somewhere. then you
"05““ unleashed some 0‘ the hrSt eligible for the general election, and w peop e are tluiiklng 8 out m the It may seem like monkey business. - t'tled ”Chronic Tobac- 2 . . thi be t moke ef.
. . . See .. , ,, . The proyect. 1 won t know any mg a u 5
direct attacks (excluding differences considering that less than 30.000 MAYOR SMCE. P3895 but facilities for a smoke exposure co Smoke Exposure in Primates.“ fects on humans.“
l l . was started in 1972 at the institute to
Problems va InAfrIcan countries "‘9 °‘ °" A 25W “9“ .. “" ‘° ,
monkeys; calcu ate t weight of a monkey in
ry ' comparison to a human. Tlu's system
' -———-—-——;1———— grabbag of a nation. the epitome of parties followed tribal lines, and a While most countries are working The project is now located at East will helpin determining the effects of
V ‘ 1 By MQRT ROSENBFUM emerging Africa‘s extremes. series of coups ended democracy in hard to entice capital, one Western Tennessee State Universny in smoke on both ‘
I Assoc1ated ”55 Writer Nigeria was put together mainly 1966. The lbOS. rejecting military rule diplomat observed. “Here they think Johnson City. Tenn 1 because project . .
i *__..H___. _ _ from the Hausas and F’ulanis of the by northemers, created Biafra, but they're doing you a favor by letting head Lester R. Bryant moved to work AseCOHd group of rewewers prowd-
5 desert north and two coastal tribes, they were forced back into Nigeria in you in to look at the place." there, ed a more optimistic outlook: Because
Second ofa five part series the Yoruba in the west and the lbos in a 2'22-year war that left a million The climate offers high profits for 0f corrections 1” the faculty and ,
LAGOS. Nigeria -— One in every the east. dead. investors with the stamina to withs- In the project. 23 monkeys were research techniques. the proyect was
five Africans lives in this colorful At independence in 1960, political In a climate of reconciliation, tend the violent crime. high costs. in- divided into four groups. which were glvenapassmg mark
. enriched by oil. Nigerians built efficiency and what many call an ar- then variably exposed to a high rate h . V
. r i 2' ,1“ business empires. built roads and "I" rogant attitude. of cigarette smoke. a low rate of T 9 great?“ 'mpmv‘mem was to
. V ,1‘ I 2 ' tanglw their Ports Political tension is high. Riots in the Cigarette smoke and a normal livtng the smOklng maSk “58d by the
,2 ' ‘ ' w ' Today, Nigeria is back under northern city of Kano last December unit. One group was med as a monkeys
' I democratic rule. Its Oil {id‘t thrive. and 883m in June killed hundreds. “sham " attached to a smoke intake .. ~-
- 1 2 . . . . . . . A monke ' named Spock learned
. .22 / . but it is one of the most troubled na- The first were caused by religious mask but not receiving any smoke. to hold hispbreath between smoking
‘ ' 2 . tions in Africa. fanaticism and the second y a ; _ . . y
. ' During the post-war boom of the dispute between the elected governor However, 135‘ year 5 renew 0f the interxals The correction 0:90” Wk
1 ’ 1 . . ndthe traditional emir project pomted out some problems in made 590C“ take "1 t proper
197th. billions were lost to bad 3 The 1 bett 1 ‘Bot n the Tennessee facilities The amount of smoke rather than let the
i 1’ management. profiteering and theft. . news ls - er ‘2" swa 8' a laboratory temperature varied from smoke escape immediately.
' ' . Crops were neglected. and youths nation of 850.0minhabitants and four 20: 100de ltho ‘i .
' . streamed into the cities. A nation that “"15 as many cattle. At ih' posgd to b62137: ugh l was sup- Davis said the information from the
‘ V; . once fed itself now spends $2.7 billion dependence. h had . almost "0 " ' autopsy. which will be available late
r ‘ a year to importVfood. . ‘ resources. What wasn ‘ sand was According to Davis, who has v“.de next year. should contribute much to
The world Oil glut is squeezing swamp. . . the Tennessee facility the problems the continuimz research of smoking
' ' . _ Next door to South Africa, it trades ‘ . . effects
Nigeria. already committed to spen
' V ‘ dim billions on a new capital city at With that white minority-governed havebeen Qwected and the profit ls
‘ ‘I Abu'a andona 'culture state. asdoall other African nations. nearingits final stage. In December. the UK Tobacco
J . 8“ - _ . . 2 - Autopsies Will be performed on the Research Board Will vote on theiseof
Lagos. designed for a population Bumnl'ke mw"'tad’“'ts't‘ k ‘ A ’lt t riy the effects so 5m llio f the ‘ The
D under a million has 3 to 5 million in- Sudden wealth from diamond and mon eysVin -pn 0 S u: ‘ l n or 2mm!“ year.
- . ' 2 ~ - . of smoking in comparison to non. new proposals Will include more
habitants Families cannot be mineral discovenee was thanneled ~ - ~ 2 -
1' 2 1 1 . - 2 . smoking monkeys smoking 9errlmenls that DaVis said
counted lm in net tin lean-toe off "“0 development prOJects, 5°C“! 59" - 2 - - ~
' 1 1 ‘ 1 n8 1 y . - However. the reViewers said they he and the institute are very confident
stinking ditches or m thatch shanties Vices and schools, The rural sector is bel’ that the ‘nf t fo d be ;
over the water. It is perhaps the most poor. and there is unemployment. but ieve ' orma ‘0" un a u
. expensive city in the world, but many it is a viable. stable nation. . . .
~ cannot afford enoughpoundedyam to Since "‘9 recent coup attempt '“ ‘ '
- makeitthmughtheweek. Gambia. the only African nations to . 2 _
' I ‘ Import controls mean some staples have "”9”“ when" multiparty '
i are available only to time who can democracy without internal upheaval On page 2. a student reflects on Solidarity Day in Washington . ‘
fly back mi“ "10“ cm of_ are Bdswana and ”I‘ll-it“! ;
fit-fig]; putt permits ftl' hum that The example of any nation makes a In a game. the coach is not all to blame. See page 6. I ‘ '.
sell for hlf the price of Wetted point applicable to othen. And the .2 . .
I / A 8/ locally-nude mi“ of tin “me twin cases of the Ivory Coast and Masochisf McGee goes to Keeneland — again. See page 7.
A08; 4 #MW‘. 7 thin. See“AFRl(‘A."p-ges V
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w a goal of Pnchard Committee k, . m n m.- PRESIDENTlAL RDERS
. . . . . 1 ,, ls PRES DENTIAL
Buried deep in the final section of the General Assembly would have appropriated : 3"," l] li‘zm.
Prichard Committee’s report is a five-page $96million more than itdid in him-81. 1% til it? :3“, \ ORDERS..- _
statement on the financial needs of higher Inthecommittee’s view, thereareplaces , ”.1 x at ”a": ‘ ~~ ,. '
_ education. where money is being wasted. 'lhe committee 1, ‘ - . _ ' y, we“ r
Thestatement, although short,may provoke asks for cooperation from all the university t.
much discussion in the coming months. It is presidents in conducting a “tough, fair- 4 - . ‘ . ~ ‘ .
the committee’s opinion that “under current minded analysis of existing programs,” With “x l _ -. . , _ . »
financial conditions Kentucky is headed an eye toward reducing or eliminating un- ‘, l ' . - . t. ‘ 7 _ ‘ 7,
- toward a crisis in financing higher education necessary programs and services. The ::._.- “i” a...“ 5 t , 7 7 , ,, , —‘“~
— a crisis which could frustrate hopes for the resources gained through the eliminations ggg “ :3 (I / . , :vrm i
‘ improved quality Kentuckians have a right to would be used to fund more effective or in- '==z.=s: ‘ , y ‘ 55:71“ 9;? ’
expect for their children . . . For the good of novative programs. i t: ' x > ‘ _ i i ' h; I
the Commonwealth, this trend must be And the committee calls for the Council on n ~ - - :22; 27:51:;
reversed.” Higher Education to ask the governor to ap- 1.5 7“ _:~__ - , w \ _ _ -.
_ _ point a task force “to devise methods of in- gunmen-:55“ ' * _- 1 g . _ - . _ ~ at
Indeed, there has been a vast reduction in creasing appropriations or revenue for his , 5?: » . _ p ' > \ ir;_.\\::s_:; ‘ \o
' the number 0f tax danl‘S appropriated to consideration.” The committee’s recommen- r; 5‘ . : 3:1“ ;_; h. —
. higher education. Funding levels were at their dation for finding the money to increase ap- _ . - ’ * :fzi’iiizsz' G 3
highest percentage 01' revenuesin 1971-72, and propriations is, stated simply, to use what V is ‘ _‘ \ \ g!
, have plummeted ever since. During that time, Kentucky now has in its universities, cut pro- ,i 4, * {i p :5. .- \ a 1‘
services have been curtailed and illlpl'ove- grams that have outlived their usefulness and 5" Jog?" x g . l L‘ _ _ L; ' if? \ ‘
ment has been virtually halted. then find funds fortherest. ' 1, . it 1 _ f , _‘_-i** ‘3“: ._ l :
The committee’s opinion calls for money — Reform in Kentucky’s universities with or f i on I. p : , _\_ _ 5:; o :- - \f. f
lots of it. The opinion notes that state-funded without the recommendations of a task force p * __ :::_._\._\;_:\_ \_ . _. :77: r
universities would need $40million toreturn to is blatantly necessary. Whether that refom x, é; ‘ _ ‘ f; 3
1971-72 percentage funding levels, and that will come from closing universities, "- \1 *\\\\
estimate does not account for the University of eliminating schools or consolidating programs , :11“ ; \\\\ \\ x 1;. \\2_
Louisville and Northern Kentucky University. is the CHE’s concern. “I; v \ ‘ i \ i .
. which were later added to the state university The governor should he charged with o: \\\
SYStem- locating revenues that can be channeled to :=--- . ‘ o" ' \Fmtonsaxx‘ \ \
The estimate, the committee said, is not Kentucky’s rapidly worsening educational ' ‘
inflation-adjusted, nor dOGS it provide for new system. Education should no longer be the W e . m g . Md.
non-educational services added to higher poor cousin in Kentucky’s family. If Ken- 8 8mm am
education’s responsibilities. tuckians want quality state higher education, - - - -
A comparison of the commitments of Ken- moy moon to mum to provide the mom to evolves Into questions oorloenmg the We oflocuvanes
, tucky and North Carolina toward higher fulfill that wish. . . _ 1
education revealed a shocking statistic: if As the Prichard committee states, “Even if 2f“; “Egrroz's Rally“? hstav: hawfiuung around in mlmwfi
. , . . . - lg r uca on, we us I w ers givmg away e _
. liegtuggyegiatclied North Carollltia lsmfundlthng heaven cannot be reached lira Single bound, it would be appropriate to look back at selling bu .Some aware pie
0 g l‘ "ca Ion on a per cam a SIS, 15 time to take the flrSt Step' another recent rally‘ against budget- ’ nicking, and groups were chanting '
. . cutting. the AFL-CIO sponsored political slogans and playing '
s Solidarity Day rally in Washington, misicJ-lere and there were a few '
Mlng Vlew D-C- SePt- 19- What follows is a policemen on horseback, but theie ' i
_ recollection of the rally by John Her- werea lot less than [had expected for ‘
I l I a I - '0" as told to Bi" Steiden, editor-in- . ' smhahrge crowd .
Pt" “II M II, m liflfl ll till m of M, m chief. Herron is a part-time UK stu- at theSolidanty Day rally. 'l‘o 8.10“”. After I had relocated my groupand :
dent and industrial employee who at- people, It ”his? med 11.551th we formed up in lines, waiting for the I .
_ , _ . . . . tendedthe rally. “"9“.va .9 we “"3" m y planned parade down the mall to ‘ ‘
Ronald Reagan lsnt the only ex- way but it mt'l‘lIEChntztlan way. achievmg anything. But we were go- begin ..
actor to take up another vocation and It might cause [8 think we ~ , ing to say what we wanted to say, and - ‘ _ l I
goontobeaworld figure. That is also laWi'ilili' truly wanttheworld Ronald Reagan Woswmmngiozmnmc tomgrggllyu: we Md make it m that we olivmfiméflifi even I
John Paul II‘s personal history but wants toglve is, a three-tiered socie- ’, , - ~ _ . didnlt like whatthegovernment‘s do- y ._ round. L I
. . . ., .. .. . . . - tth bott Reaganadnumstratlonsbudgetcuts . , . werethebannersofvanmsumons _ .
there the Similarity between the pope dmd tlc splrlt" [5 put in practice. ty With the truly needy a . e om was being planned for the weekend 1 mg. That s a lot better than jmt Sit- and leftist organizations As thechan- ‘ l
and president ends. Eveg time an administration 11th 0“ 51°95. thevast nuddle com- was in ted but a little bit a, ting back and wishing it “Mild go . . , - . hat - l
. . . h other’s teres p- tmg picked up, it was obVlous w .
Indeed the gap between Reagan figure appears beforeacongresslonal Petlng by SlaShmg 93° prellensive away. the crowd thought of Reagan’s F
l and John pan] is as large as that committee he sings a song of praise throats t0 betby. m, m top, for 8 5 of 1m labor riots and an 'mebusridewasn’t bad.Mostofthe policies u n Reagan he's m
between Reagan and Brezhnev and it for that evil individualistic spirit, for few, the graClous me Of taffeta and u g . l u people were steelworkers from FMC ' ~ g ’ ’ ,n t
‘ - . ‘ ' k led F N humus mtltrwshmybead. . . . good, sendhlmbacktoHollywood. .
goes beyond the Amencan govern the free market mechanism which “met 13“. “S by .my ”cy‘ and I also had to consider that l "shthmmw‘lmmvmtme we“ “We shall fight back we shall L'_'
ment‘s supplyingguns to El Salvador Leo insisted could not be substituted her coutuners andherfrlends. wasn’tamenlber of the AFL-CIO the from as far away as western Ken- fight back against the cuts in .
, ’ so that they may be turned on John for “the intervention of 3 created in- Q‘OHPSPO - therally. ’ tucky Most of them were “(“19 education and social “Mm!" _ .
Paul's priests. nuns and bishops. The tellect” in the running of a society’s ©'“"8 ““m‘ s"“°"‘"“°' But my sympathim were with the aged, and a 1“ °‘ ”“5“ “a" the“ “For labor's cause for loboli's
two are divided by utterly different affairs. John Paul II agrees. _ _ union and the protesters. The com- wives alom. cause'" ' .
views of men and society. The Vicar He calls putting the market in this Nicholas v03! Hoffm" “89"”? "my I work for was just when we, For most of them, the rally was a ' fit 80 man e I
of Christ does not care to walk on the central position “materialistic issues of national importance ln his byARMCOSteel andsomeofthenew way to show the administration that Illlfl. 'e .YWI Mb? ' _
i . ,, . . . ndl- ated column . . . . . . . . . wishing I hada pemcope. my _
suoply S de. economlsm, which heexplalns is not 8? c pohcnes have been good I W they still believe in their umm. He S camera up trying to get a picture of
In an hour when the American “theoretical materialism in the fun becauseoftheinflueneeoi‘theunion o beensaying that mint workers walld the whole é'mu but it was im 3- '
liberal left scuttles to the rear in gem of the term, but it is certainly ' be better off without the unions. and bio p, p m'
‘ backward falling confroim. the pope practical materialism,amaterialism 0 ' ' Finallyldecided‘whatthehell”— he’s been blamim them for higher - .
_ in Rome gives us a picture of the New judged capable of satisfying man's m V it couldn’t be any worse than some of unemployment and inflation. These wna. we leached the center of the
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