xt72z31nk63j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72z31nk63j/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1986-01-14 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, January 14, 1986 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 14, 1986 1986 1986-01-14 2020 true xt72z31nk63j section xt72z31nk63j g .
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A N _Vol. XCy N68" 3 3 ; .Iltohllshod 1894 University of Konfucky, Lexington, Kentucky Indopondont since 1971 ruflday, January 14' 1986
O O 0 . . '
14 New year I . . procee mg With caution
. . 9‘“ . - '3; O o . .1 . "
- rung In With | : in response to ranian search - -
0 d hass es l gyfiggigjéj; 1.33133, By BARRYSCHWEID warfare to find out whether neutral said a Navy source. insisting on ano- j , .'
‘ E .i » if in; AssomatedPross Sh'pwbga i: being used to provide nymity. '- . . .~ .
. . ' ‘ 333917, 1' .' contra h toits enemy. President Reagan had been notl- .- ‘. . r . .
Bags, bOXeS Slgnal ; 3"? : J WASHINGTON — The United Meanwhile, G. Quincy Lumbsden fied of the interception at his week; "" -» .’- '
t L , States acknhzwiedged yesterday that firwteilhe US. ambassador to the end retreat in Camp David Md ' "r .. 7. '
— .11, - Iran may ve acted within tradi. ni Ara Emirates was sent to Win H d 8' - ' A ’ -' "‘ ‘
i .. . ie ouse an .tat ) .
semester return .. -- 1- tional naval warfare ”15 in stop- Fujaira to meet with the freighter‘s officials had promptclvl eggsrt'g'be'i'd .f ‘ ‘
. I ‘ ' ‘ " . '1 ping and searching an American captain, Robert Reimann. Iran's action Sunday as "'a matter of ‘ 'V' 9 "' i 1‘
By KAKIE URCH . - . W . '. merchant ship near the Persian Gulf 1" a precautionary move. two serious concern " ' - ~' ' 5 ‘ . '1 '-
Featuros Editor ; ‘ '. to determine if it was carrying arms American combat ships — the de- The freighter'was stopped in inter "" " '. '.
i ,‘ for Iraq. stroyer Conolly and the frigate national waters a' i 1 i -" .i'-~‘ -..
, _ is ' _ sitheadli .Mi,
.‘The methods differ but the goal 5 Z 3. A final Judgment on how to re- Boone — had been moved to the Karachi. Pakistan. to r‘uieiil'ar.""'a ; -"';"-'.".'v';-' 5“,"
is the same. Get it upstairs; get 3 | .35.: spond to the incident was withheld Gulf. of Oman. where seven armed port in the United Arab Emirates 1 : " '3":
the semester started. ; . I, f; until the American ambassador to Iranian sailors halted and then After searching the cargo the ham ' ."-.".' "filth
Usmg anything from over- I l . no i the United Arab Emirates completes boarded the President Tavlor on ans permitted the shi to rtX' Ad ‘ " "'-
stuffed plastic garbage bags to l l 1 3%“. f ' his questioning of the captain of the Sunday. ' No injuries or damage spas rep )rt::i i' " " 3"": ' i" '9' "
neatly taped and tied boxgs, UK " l :2" i President Taylor, and other facts The Ships were there ”to prevent Iran, locked in a war with 'l'riiq for ‘ ' "' '. .' ,'
sltudents kretjurneddtotrfildenf': ‘ . aria . are assessed, State Department anything other than what hap- more than five years has stopped '. ., ' 3,
is wee en . rea y o ace 1 ' t sp0kesmanBernardKalbsaid. pened,” Defense Secreta ' C h‘ ' ' ' ' ' \ '~ 7 ' ~ .' ‘i‘.
hassles ofanew semester. { . it; Kalb‘s statement seemed to rep- W. Weinberger told repoiiersaasirz: isnc'l'ifdifiigni't'eitnclr'eni":;:' £?:ann'ré'ien(i .' ". ' '. 'w.
RESIdence halls Opened at to ! cg resent an effort by the Reagan ad- breakfast meeting at the Pentagon. Yugoslavia. over uni past me , - 2’ 7. .- 5
am. Sunday. Sororities also . 3 ..1 ministration to avoid a flareup with “The boarders left very quietly after months. but never an American reg; ' ' -' ~'
opened on Sunday, but some fra- g 3 3 '3 the fundamentalist Moslem regime an hour. an hour-and-a-half. There lstryvessel. ' . . '-.' ' '- 3,
ternities had returned earlier to ' ‘ J59}; ' in Tehran. which is listed by the de- wasn't any need for the kind 0‘ Rajie-Khorassani the Iranian am; 5 ~» ' ' '
Prepare for spring rush week. 7 partment as a supporter of terror- naval protection that the ship “'35 bassador t0 the United '\"t 1' ‘ ' ' ' " '
Spring rush isn’t the only thing $739 ' ' ism. seeking." in'a Cable News Veiwdr: :ztrcd': ; ' ' ‘ .' ' .. '
bringing students back to campus 3 5" ' ASkEd what the United States in‘ Sundav the interception was a " 'ie'e. ~' ' ' > :' " "
early. Late registration and cen- '. l “a m tended to do about the incident. Kalb The Conolly and the Boone were caution." to search for weaponspfor " ‘ ' ' ' .
Saline? add/drop was a big : f ' said “.‘we are evaluating our op- near the Persian Gulf but too far Iraq. ; . ~ ', .
Fax. :3. of 1 ed 3 , ,3 31, »_ / tions. Hedeclined toelaborate. north to prevent the boarding. and Kalb said the administration had ‘ " ~ '
toda .. said p‘ezfileiemgzrd in ~_____ _ However, the spokesman did say yet “they were close enough that cautioned mariners last September .» ' ' i.
nurs'i/n senior and Ken I' S t 335» - 1, in a statement that a belligerent na- they could have prevented the lrani- to exercise "extreme caution" in the . . . . .
Hall Eesident adviser “Ae in! | Eta?! tion "traditionally has certain ans from taking that ship under tow region because of attacks by lran = ‘ ' ‘ " ‘
pe0ple were here at io o'clocel:v ..__. ’ r3; rights under the rules of naval or forcmg it to an Iranian port." andIraq beyond the military zones , ‘ . '
ready to move in. It seems like a ’2 » ’ ., 935v 95; ’ O ' ' '
lot of people are pretty anxiom to ’ ,_ » ; . as 3.75;; . ' . . ' " -.
M... airman ge 5 na iona onor . ,-
Students in all types of housing so ' 7;:3% 3&3. ' - '
indicated that there is a lot of co- “27:? ,‘r gen? "1 . . . . . . . ‘
ggiiatlon when people move , . 3 an ' Head of CIViI engineering recognized by selence magazme ‘. _ -‘ .
“were real] in a hurr to at ' 9:39;". , . ‘ ~ "
thin s t y y g . 9‘9 , BySHAwo LAWRENCE arrangement actually improves . . . . .
g star ed so we help people . Sew . t ‘b t' . . . . »
move in quick." saidMark F‘itz- 3;,” , , “:33, 3 I. 3 Con ri u lng Writer “if“ I(liuality. TEE-water taertites it- . ‘ - .
atrick, a 'ournalism sophomore 3.2-», .1 ,‘ ‘ '_ :.'¥:_n‘:;_ . . 56 W en I IS own In 0 e air. a" . ’
:nd membtJar of Pi Kappa Alpha .“5 9 ‘ ._~ *3":an jig; .311, DaVid T. Kao worked five years This helps water quality immensely, '
fraternity_ 3". .‘-_ 3 , 9 2:" Lt; Eghls dream before bringing 1‘ into Also. there are nonegative pressure ' ’
“Everybody‘ll pretty much 9 = {e 3; '.':'« '. 'j":.1"."'v ing. ~ areas created. WhICh are the places ’ '
lend a h nd if k the n § on 3;; 3.5:; _ 3 ' g Kao has invented a new system in conventional dams that kill fish, . a '
. a you as m. . ‘ ' -"i; forh droelectric wer that hefeels ‘ " ' '
Ford sald' . o t 219:; ' ' .1 ma ychan e a f2: environmental- Kaosaid. ' ' ' '

4 Natalie Pascuzzi, who lives in g; . ‘ 3' "i - t5): . dsgbo ‘ Ray Bowen, dean 0‘ the college 0f « - ' ‘ ‘ '

i an off-campus apartment with 'P t 21‘, 3 ._ .; 'SKam'ns a hu dam. clia‘ f th engineering, said the system will be 15‘- _, : ~ . -
two roommates. said that when . 3* .. ‘ . .3332 3 0,. 4 . w o is . lrman o 6 very important to countries through' ‘ -, . 9 . 1 . .
she moved back Saturday, her , a) . ;5‘.“ . 3 UK cml engineering department. outtheworld. (M N .. ,3 .
roommates were not home but ' ‘ ‘ . l ." was named one 9f the nations top “It's important worldwide because ' .- . ..
had the “decency" to leave the ‘ j; innovators by 50mm? DigeSt "138‘ of the potential for bringing an en- . . .- 1 1
place neat. t ~ . “é 31,1318 "m5 December; 1985 issue. ergy source to parts of the world . .8...“ 3 , g .'

Pascuzzi said her method of * 1; .3 5.33; e magazme caled the 100 peo— that do not have access to cheap '

. » \2 - u .. i
moving involved a lot of bags. ; any“; Pl? recognized the vanguard 0‘ the electrical energy.“Bowen said. it ’ ' ;‘ ' . ‘.
but “they‘re not all garbage .3... 3 * 33.)»; .~ 13....fi.;-i;-_..- . sCientific revolution. They are .the K30. who came to the United v {3" 5‘ '1 ~ 3 ‘ .
bags.“ : . ..".;“‘f‘?'."‘w “ f 3 , '1' inventorsand innovators responSible States in 1963 from China. earned , . > .‘ 5 . 3 .

Some students have moreto do ” v. "-2..“ for creating 0“? V1510" 0‘ the hi" his doctorate in civil engineering , ‘ '1 . - ‘ ‘_ '
than just bring in the bags, 5““- 1.0. VANNOOSI KemoISiuH “Ire. ‘ from Duke University' 3 3 pg" 4 .- I .,
cases boxes and unpack. howev- A female student is dwarfed by columns in the Kirwan-Blonding . K305 system lets the wa‘e.‘ force "1 d9 see great potential '" this," g . . , ' - '.
er. Some students have to move Complex as she moves in Sunday. itselfnlilgwt'grd Emoalfilh argughlzge :2: he said. "gewg‘ésw unexploded -: ' " ‘ '
out of their rooms and into new h ' H . ou. ' e 8"" s e ‘ sites can now us DAVID T. KA" ’ ’ --' ' " "" '
on. {smorgistti'itstri'ns :2 £222.22: :23: dealers :~° "S '3 was" '“e no... on me a... -' ' . ~ -
Delta Delta Delta sorority ro~ your things are already up here. nan'cial aid and loanvaclhale. t" conventional turbine used m dams unfinished although UK does have a edge of this technology.“ Kao said ' . ' ~ 3. .
tates residents from room to but (switching rooms) Wednes- pick up library bar codesctosoi: [caifi'ts th t t t f patent m the United. States and ‘3 “We have so many excellent re~ H; ..
room so that everyone has a day night's going tobechaotic.“ tain and'books to buy th e. tefv'th er Sitlppor 3'0? 9 9th“ mm.“- Funding for the pro- searchers; they should all be recog- '2 ' v", '7' 1 .' 9
chance to live m the choicest And just when the chaos on the Not eas tasks n' of th A' e weigh o e sysem an eimi- Ject. according to Kao. was given by nized“ ' . 1 . i . .
rooms. “I think it's a good idea," home front settles down there's Owenby said “This 3worst emr't l nates more than 25 percent '0' the the engineering'graduate school and '. -~' '. _."
said Tri-pelt Barbara Owenby, a always administrative chaos for guess, is having to bring itpzj'll up 5:: 0' building a hydroelectric sys- byut‘leiiAlterifiatge Eneég‘ytg‘prpgram Information for this Sm“ WIN also .' .. ' ':'-'.'"’ ' "'"V
communications Junior. The at- those who just can‘t get enough. thestairs. ' _ . 0 en uc y nergy a me ' gathered by Staff Writer Karon Mill ‘_. '. ’ 'i "i '-" . ,‘_
Another big advantage is that the “We want to make UK the leading er. . ', A: r‘ ' f. ,r
N d' t l'k l‘f .. ~— - . r
ew irec 01‘ 1 es campus 1 e U K researcher studies .2: ..-;
. - , . . op . 3,}. ‘. . "'.lv"." ;‘
Counseling and Testing Center 5 chief 18 no stranger to UK , production of soybeans 1-: - .- ~.
J .._l_._‘...,.l,3.>”l".
By KanERLY SISK Nichols returned to UK as assis- as innovative and creative as possi- . ' '9 " - ' "' ' ~
Staff Writer tant to the dean of undergraduate ble in their work." Nichols said. He ‘_ a' By SALLYREUSCH protein and 20 percent in oil toward '-' ' " ‘ ' "_ ff ,-
. . . studies and has served UK in va- also sees students for one-tonne v ContributingWriter animal feed. fillers and meat substlr '- ." ‘
TThe Uéiévttazsny Coanselinlg aieig rlous other capaCIIleS. such as fac- counseling and will be a lecturer in tutes ' ' ". ' ""1","
as me n r recen y we com ulty member in the department of thenew series spOnsored by the cen- ' ' ' . ' ' ’ . I " "i
back a UK alumnus who finds cam- educational psvchologv. director of ter “Let‘s Talk About It“. U'K agronomy researcher TOdd The grant was given by that .S. ‘
. u . . .. . . . 3 . ‘. . Pfeiffer has been granted $51,519 to Department of Agriculture. Its ad- ., .
pus life addicting and who firmly the Office of lnstuctional Resources Nichols said the center is effective ‘ ‘ develop new strains of soybeans equate for two years " Pfeiffer said ' ‘ ' ' ‘« '. ' ’
believes humor is important to one‘s and director of the Faculty Devel- not just for poor students but good . With no expections of immediately I t- m1 tor- . s' ilso - ' - '
well-being. opment Project based at UK. students as well. “We take good stu- ff ' - - "form“ '0" for '5. S 'l M‘ l T . . -' '
. _ 3 a ecting world hunger. Pfeiffer said athered bv Staff Writer Karon Mill . . . .
On Dec. 1. Michael Nichols was After working at Eastern State dents and make them better.“ he ' 1 "- his goal is to increase production po- 8 ' » ' ' '.
appointed director of the Counseling Hospital while still teaching classes said. ' tential b ' ‘ e" - -' ‘.
. 3 . _ ' 3 . y expanding soybean yield . .
and Testing-Center. ‘ 3 . at UK. Nichols returned to the Um- “Most of our counseling involves 9". per acre. - ' '
“There is something addicting versity as assomate director of the very normal students. who just need Kb " : “1 believe that some time in the .'. ‘
about the college env1ronment.‘ he counseling center in 1984, before help in making decisions. improving '. . future there is going to be a very MOE '
said. “There is something speCIal being made director this past De- study skills or providing emotional "£2- Ki» large demand for food " Pfieffer '
about being around college students. cember. support," he said. ls "’4 ‘ \‘9 said. “There are two ways you can ' ' ‘
itis‘upbeatandposmve." Nichols said although he enjoyed The total counseling hours have meet that demand. You can either 1... I.“ "
Nichols received his master‘s de- his previous work outside of UK, be gone up fl percent in the last year MIKE NICHOLS have more high quality farm land or y K." are once
gree in community counseling at UK is most comfortable at the Universi- and the center sees 16 percent more you can increase the yield per again plagued by inconsis- ' ‘
before sewing two years as asSIS- ty. . . . clients, Nichols said. was 3. He has worked as a newspa- acre.“ toncy, o Kernel columnist
gint dean at Hanover College in In- I“My Job in running the center is to Nichols. was. born in Mississippi per writer and photographer. as well Pfeiffer said that since world pop- SOYS- For details, 599
mm. give support to my colleagues to be but has lived In Kentucky Since he as working in academics. ulation continues to increase, high m. Pogo 3.
C o . quality lfarm land continues to de-
crease caving the only alternative .. n .
ounseling center offers study skills workshOps W... n... .n n. .. n.
Pfeiffer's two-year project plan is other wocko adventure wtth
By Kimoenbv SISK workshop series. College learning estimted that about 200 hundred temoon talks to be provided by the Sofi’fi‘flfieo‘f’fl‘m‘s '"m'mmb‘m‘ 'h' ”"9 Wh° '°'“°"",d °
Staff Writer Skills, features classes in time man- peopleinetheprogram every year. counseling center. The informal combination Pfyeifferm'feelsmhgh rc- stone In I904. For a rovnew,
' . agement and motivation. note tak- In the past students have come talks will be presented by licensed extract “superior lant "flag" 300W, F"'9’"
The UK Counseling and Testing ing. organizing to remember. vocab- away with a lot more knowledge psychologists of the counseling staff which are better in resistance to dis:
Center is offering a study skills pro- ulary and test taking. about how to study. and some stu- and graduate interm in coumeling ease nd - ldi Kornol cola-Inlet quits and
gram and a series of talks in an cf- W‘th ,h‘ . . ‘ - ‘ - a yie ng more beans per
. l t is new format. students dents boost their grade point aver- PSYChOIOSY- acre" wont: to shot. it with the
fort to become more accessible to don‘t have to sit through a full age. The program is a “big morale Taylor said the new series was de- M 's - ' mid
UKstudents. ' course. Instead. they can pick and hoster.“Taylors-aid. veloped became staff members sion swgltizserinageagiecrofingten; ' For commentary, so.
Instead of being Vaulted a: so- choose the areas they really need All of the materials needed for the were looking for a way to incorpo- . pa 0 Vim, P”. 6‘
mester courses study skills will be , . , , , agronomy, said the development of
_ . help in. said Peg Taylor. assistant classes are prOVIded. as well as ac- rate the" own knowledce and areas a now soybean strain Md be im- 'i'l. t. y . .
presented in two series of two-hour director for learning skills. The one- as to the computers. There is also of expertise with current campus mm fa- Kentucky 3‘55"“ . ‘
workshops emphasizing different time fee allows students to take as program to help with choosing ma- concerns. The talks are informal be- ”Until now nobody has been “ if.” . "-I
academic needs. Each workshop se- many classes as they want.she said. Jon and how to choose a job within cause “we are dealim with set-iot- - - '
nee will includetwo sessions , .. , breeding (soybeans) particular for
Studen . The new program also prayides a yourmaior, issues and some humor and puspoc- Kentucky n Bitter said “If we could
to may attaid any or all lot more chaicos and flexibility; the The workshops start next week tiveisimportont."sheoaid. ' ari ' 7.4., m g. I
workshops in both series by paying classes are offered all different and will be held in an mzee Hall "If peoplecome to mine they will “mm: "g. V “any,a°'lle’°’b°‘.“" " m w m "'°"’ ""‘9’
aone-timeenrollmaitfoeof 810. timesduringtheday.“Taylorsaid. To enroll. students should come to live longer." said Michael NlChOII. naming“; " Wm for "union
The “1'" Wm 061.. COIlQe The ams have been “ mi Frame and their fee director of the coumol ky. . ltd tho W l" tho ""4 ”'-
Rud on pros; very pay baton “'8 “0W- Soybean are America‘s third
mastitis. en clauoo in successfultnth¢postNowwem thefirstclass. Nidiolssaidtheptrpooedtbetnlh Wmmmdmictim WWW be door with
“PM.“ ”tanner-am ”mm“? blemto ut:m£;them more accusi- ‘I'bet‘s Talk About It“ is theappro- was to do more outreach. He said M wily h! whut and corn' motor tn tho lowor 20-.
~ st ts, Taylor said. He priate name for the new series of af— Saw/m. Poe? W White 0 wt in

 ' I I
2- KENTUCKY KENNEL, Trashy, January 14, ms
Ki] (1 f talks [3011.08 With female jO rnal' t
By JENNIFER PARMI-ZLEI-I porters to his Wife Safia and four of broadly. Khadafy responded. “Yes. er site on the same barracks have no hostile intentions to do these Israelis and Arabs settle differences
Associated Press his seven children why not?“ when asked it he would youndsha crew from the RA! ltal- dangerom things against the United (mm.
The maverick colonel also extend— welcome Reagan to his tent on the ian teleViSion network was harassed States" _ _ ,
TRIPOLI. Libya — Libyan leader ed an impromptu invitation to Pmi- grounds of his heavily fortified bar- by young revolutionary guards who Reminded that ‘Arab nations his-
Moammar Khadafy talked of war dent Reagan. racks. where he works. relaxes and complained bitterly about U.S. He said he would send Libyan sui- torically had difflcmllfi setting
and peace, love and hate from inside Khadafy. perhaps best known in entertains other world leaders. threats against Libya. ‘ cide squads into American streets along among themselves. Khadafy
his tent headquarters. where an au- the Western world for his harsh anti- Asked why he chose just women The guards vowed any U.S. action only in the case of American or Is- responded, Y6. but the problems
tomatic rifle and a feather duster American and anti-Israeli rhetoric, for the interview. Khadafy said. “It against Khadafy would be met by a raeli“aggression"agaimt Libya. between Arabs have never threat-
- ' hung from the rafters and two cam- appeared eager to offer that same is because I encourage women to be violent Libyan response against ened international peace and Israel
els gabbled outside. audience a rare glimpse of his free. I feel women everywhere are Reagan. who holds Khadafy respon- .Khadafy made no effort to conceal now threatens international peace.

. Khadafy‘ 43, was in a relaxed human side against a warm do- oppressed and I would like to see a sible for Dec. 27 terrorist attacks. at his intentions against Israel. which The session began with a family
mood as he talked with six female mestic backdrop. worldof men and womenequal.“ Rome and Vienna airports which he has long said must be. crushed visit inside Khadafy's tent head-
journalists. including this reporter. Although most of the substance of A top female aide. Fatia Saker. left l9peopledead. in order to achieve Middle East quarters of bright red. green and
Saturday night. his two-hour interview was not new. said Khadafy believed women had The crew had been promised a peace. yellow checked cloth. open to the

(‘lad in a peachcolored head wrap the tone was decidedly soft for a “more power" to convince their au- Khadafy interview but was not al- Claiming the Israelis want “to de— night air and equipped with straw
' and a powder blue jumpsuit with red man who has often incited his people dience and could better grasp his lowed to film the encounter and stroy all other nations until there mats to cover the sandy earth and a
shirt. a long. beige cape draped over to"eatthelivers”oftheirenemies. ('()mpleXIlleS. never met Khadafy_ is only them. the chosen people of large television with a video cas-
his shoulders. he introduced the re- Palms outstretched and smiling At about the same time, at anoth- Khadafy told his visitors. “We God.“ he called on outsiders to let sette recorder.
' ' ° ' h f MI t ff' ' l y
‘ V - U.S. making progress in searc or As, op o 101?! sa 8
. B) NORMAN BLACK eluded last week. has pledged to in- iisi'nss a published report Monday in North Carolina. claiming Ameri- sign of frustration that we all feel. Of those reports. all but 95 have
- -. Associated Press vestigate those reports. The Wet ‘ia it least one American had been can prisoners had been spotted in The families of our POW's and been dismissed as either fabrica-
‘ » . , namese also have iegun . lred in Laos last monthwhile Vietnam and Laos as recently as MIA‘s have been faced with this in- tions or reports involving men who
‘ WASHINGTON ~— A top Pentagon investigating reports from their own on a privately financed misswn to last October and that the U.S. gov« humane uncertainty for far too have been accounted for. The re-
’ ‘ official. condemning private at- people involving the status of miss- locate missing servicemen. He said ernment had done little to investi- long." maining 95. however. ”are under
. . tempts to locate missing American ing Americans. and they are allow- the State Department and Pentagon gate. continuing investigation in an at-
. ,- . . , servicemen in Indochina. said Mon. ing joint U.S.-Vietnamese teams to had received such a report and the In discussing the live-sighting re- tempt to confirm the information."
’ ‘ ‘_ ' day the L'nited States is making pro- conduct “multiple“ excavations at State Department was investigating. "We are serious people engaged in ports, Armitage said the United Armitagesaid.
.- ' ' gress with its campaign to deter- sites where American planes are "butwehavenoproof." a very serious effort." Armitage States had received 806 “first-hand Armitage said some of the live-
' « g mine what happened to the 1.797 known to have crashed during the said. “And I find allegations to the live-sighting reports“ from Indochi- sighting reports dated to 1975. but
' -" ' . ‘ Americans stillmissingin Vietnam. war.hesaid. “But the U.S. government is reso- contrary to be absurd. I think in nese refugees since the fall of Sai- the most recent unresolved report
. , Richard L. Armitage. the assis- There are more than 200 such Iutely opposed to private forays into great measure (such suits) are a gun in 1975. was received in 1983.
.' ‘ . tant defense secretary for interna- crash sites. Armitage said. but the Indochina.“ Armitage continued.
. . - tional security affairs. told reporters United States wants to begin the ex. “We feel that they can only harm
, . . that the Pentagon has 95 "Iive-sight- cavation work by focusing on rough the issue. They do not have the tech-
~ ing reports" of Americans on file ly 60 "high-probability sites” in nical means nor the expertise to
. ’ _ that it cannot dismiss as fabrica- rural areas where it believes there deal with whatever they may find.“ WELCOME BA K
‘ tions. may be a good chance of recovering . .
But he added that the Vietnamese bodies. Armitage also dismissed allega-
. government. in negotiations con- Armitage repeatedly refused to tions contained in a private lawsuit \
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. I Dollvory Hours I identical ptm i Humid pm i
| Sum-Thur. "'M. - 1 IJII. | Prioo varlfdonfngn. on sin I“ | Prion urquBpoEnEn!‘ on III. and I sun. - Thurs. M
I Fri.-S¢t.4p.m.o2a.m. ' IIINIIIIIIIM topping- °m‘. v."‘ ' numb." Oi 0min] 016.0“. Valid l 4 P'm' ' I 0.171. STU DE NT 4 '. ....,.. ' on: ' \-_ .
. l . ,. 5.31“ I "'“ 2°“.:"-:2.:.":rs'.1:"”'°i a" raw-"mars: I nus... t ' i -- ’ 3t - 3 ’
‘ m . r . fl. . . l ' ~ , _ ‘
l(?% l J Expiros 5.31.» If??? Expires 5.31.“ : 4 P~m- - 2 mm. ”\ .6 fi _‘
r-rput . 1.. ,a , “i '0‘ L -‘ "' 7 .
I\1'./ mm .1- Mmmi 3;).ittwiuethesist GROUP : . - - .
' . ‘c—‘-———-—.---‘-..-——_--—-‘————--—-—-— I . _
I . . - . , . .’
.' cf" ‘3‘ .1 _
. It \ 4“" i.
’ . , . HEALTH if, \
, . . - Spring
- m...“ INSURANCE
:5 ” ’ (Through Colonial Penn Life insurance Company)
“1.. , Our h ye . ’t
i I: ' V» I .y ‘ two-year SC 0 l D's I Ion Students who wish to enroll in the Student Group Health Insurance Plan may do so during
‘_ ‘1 -_ - . '~. . ' _ . make colleg eaSler the time period of January I3, 1986 through Febraury 14, 1986.
I g . r . ; You may come to the Student Center the week of January 13 through January 17, I986
,. “t .. . between the hours of 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. (insurance table to be located at foot of ballroom
1:: _ ' Justeas1erto payfor. .n....o..........,
' OR
' 'I l ' , J 5’ f You may bring your enrollment form and check to the Student Health Service between the
‘;. l . .' ,'.. ' ' i _ hours of 8:30 A.M. and 4:30 P.M. daily during the enrollment period of January l3, 1986
i " . i i: EVCI’l If you dldn I. S_tart college on a SChOl and February I4. l986. Insurance Office is located in Room 1698, Medical Plaza, lst floor,
.I . . I arship, you could finish on one. Army ROTC behind thewildcat blue doors.
V i I i i ii i h : Scholarships pay full iuItIOI’l and allowances STUDENTS WHO WISH TO CONTINUE COVERAGE II t 2 d 6 h b
_‘ 3 .-_' - ' must enro or n ~ mont coverage y
'. ‘ -? T , ’j, :9; for educational fees and [€Xib00k5. Along mailing enrollment form, check and company notice in the envelope provided, by the dead-
. - :_ ' _ , With up to $1,000 a year. Get all the Facts. line of March 26, I986.
. . , . BE ALL YOU CAN BE. OR
' . . V I ' . Don’t delay. The early SChOlarShIp boards Will You may bring enrollment form, check and company notice to Insurance table at the Stu-
, ’ ' ' ' be held at UK the last WCCk in January dent Center the week of January i3. 1986 through January I7, 1986, between the hours of
' ' 9A.M. and3P.M.
‘ , ' . . : Stop by Barker Hall on the UK campus or 0R
. I ll - I . .
. . Cd 257 2696 for more information You may bring enrollment form, check and company notice to Student Health Service from
‘ ' January I3, I986 through March 26, 1986. between the hours of 8:30 A.M. to 4 P.M.
I ,' It you have not received a notice from Colonial Penn Insurance Company, please check at
. Insurance table in the Student Center the first week of school or come to Student Health
Service for information.
lNSURANCE OFFICE ‘i’ELEPHONE NUMIER: 233-6336.
' REMEMIER: 11’ IS YOUR RESPONSIIILITY ‘I’O ENROLI. IV THE DEADLINE WHETHER OR
NO? YOU HAVE RECEIVED A NO‘i’ICE EROM ‘i'HE iNSURANCE COMPANY.
ENROLLMENTS AND RE-ENROLLMEN‘i’S MUST IE RECEIVED IV ‘i’HE DEADLINES AS INDI-
- - - -, . - a - CATED AIOVE.NOEXECP‘1IONSVIILLIEMADI VOTHESE DEADLINES.
ARMY REsLRw. omc {Rb TRAINIM. u we

 l .
, . . i
KENMKVKERNEL Mum 14, im-J
“OM
Sports Editor
Jana-y
Assistant Sports Editor
.. .. . manhood...
K t ’° ' t ~ ,
a S mconsw enc 7"
y g . UK 8 road play suspect
- o n ‘ ° ° °
. ~ ~ . SECt , .
once again apparent t ”a in upcoming tip
I If.
—————— 3 . ~ 1 ' BNJUHNJERY one s the area We're haying ' ,

The Lady Kat'ba'sketball team ap- / t (3‘: " ‘h " ' ASS-15‘3"! Sports Editor some iiii‘ve‘i'ensiye breakdowns We'll - ‘
pears once again ,0 be predictably J IDI‘I .. 1 ‘ q 1 have bad shot selections 4 '
m;{e¢c:ble.' . \ _ . 4‘ While the rest Of the UK campus “We were inconsistent in Nash 1 -, ._

Ch 'et ims ,9th over the WILLIAMS . . l' ’ . is getting ready for the spring 58- ville iagainst Vanderbilti and in Au . ‘. '
mns mas reak indicates that any- ‘ z [I , ' “ ’ . - ' mester. the Wildcat basketball play- burn" j . . ' » _

.ing can happen on any given — F” » V‘ . ‘. ers already have two [055 scheduled Sotrue . ; f. . r
high]: thhl-s hast] been the case “nib The Kats also played their first. » i i I x r ‘ ‘ f /i inthe first week. In LIK's 80-71 win against \‘ander ' ' p

h 8 Since .e end of the Valerie ranked 0 mm of the season on iii? 3 I ': i , ~‘ ' (‘oming up for UK are Southeast- bilt Jan 4. a game much closer than '1 i ,i '. i' ‘
Sthll-Patty Jo Hedges-leaWise era the road ‘ihoNo 15 Ohio State nd ‘ . f ’ Q. ern Conference road matches With the score indicated. a lfiwpotnt hall ' ' ‘ ' 3" ‘ "it
¥oggofighucky was comlS'enuy a earned an impressive 70-66 viiin a ‘ A: m ‘ V : . - ._ MiSSiSSlppi State in .Slark‘hhe _‘°' time pad proved enough for the (“dis '3 i ' i‘ .. :' ‘1

Since the graduation of those three Three nightsi llater theuhats held a s ‘ ~ ' ‘ afizizzyahd Florida m Gameswhe igllthrd 0“ a ienaCiOib' ("minimi'il‘t‘ " i '. f ...'_~' f'
players in 1983, the Kats have been WWW ea ate in 9 game at g \ 3.. , Don‘t worr' bo . .~ _ '7 ' . t3 ‘ "- a."

‘ ‘ * ‘ ' ' f 3 a m players. “ho \andv Closed the a) ll ll\‘ t i ii
a disappointing 39-30 overall and 6-17 TegnestsgfisTech. 2:1! they blew it 113*. ._ “ 1 . _ will miss the first three days of palms {Nee “mes m m: :5le halt . , I! i i? L‘ii"?
agamsh Southeastern Conference anLaotS Wednegdaiie hire-K ts 1 ed gr 3 . , / 1 classes, They‘ll be ready for the until UK‘s Kenny Walker h” Mm. :~'._‘..,g‘.
teams, Including marks 0f 8-5 and . htsh- nked Miy‘i :3 -a-h pay. _ i it P . - I scholastic education this week ‘ kev baskets down the stretch. tin -' In”, 3..
0iilib’iiaiiuisthi!tsezjliaymchinfo riding ' that fhilly gilnpiy Rut):s 2:3: iirio: thlra ' i 5*" \~ Classes have been signed up for and ishingwith25p01nts " ' v' ‘.'

u ls o. - i i' instructors have been consulted. Two ni hts later. Auburn handed "‘ 3 ”£131.
the . current Lady Kats actually dmaen gigginfnatrhilgtiz-giie géhzii . « 3- ~ " [$3111. , ”Too often we forget they are stu- the Wildgats their Stilt’ Slit' ill» 3‘ .‘h' :'
boast "‘9‘" overall talent than the y. . ' . . * w ' , " ': dents first and not athletes." said 60-56 The Tigers lumped to d ”Holt! “I". i." l? "w ii if
team W" the 3‘3 “"99- UK has beh‘m’ by 2.0 poms w Old 00mm” ‘ w : . . 2 - ”V" Wildcat coach Eddie Sutton. leadlmidwavithro‘ugh tht- mot-hilt '
more high school All-Americans now before rallying. only to 10597469: in ~ ~ ; -. , 3 It‘s the other kind of education ~ and never looked b'l(‘k ‘ If". ‘i‘h‘: . :Zt'.
andhasmuchhlgherqualltydepth. The “3‘s 9'” 3‘ "“3 unwers‘ty 0‘ ' -"~ . ' - ' _ ' the traveling kind , that worries Although l'K (‘ul the lllll‘LIln tn i "‘2‘ -

Nevertheless, Lady Kat teams 0f Daytthn tonightthDa'yfigrdl was no "' i ... ’ ’ I '" Sutton. two pOints late in the ("Milt-(sh some ii“ #3:..." l'L
the lasttwo years have shown these mat? kfo'r "1:9 Tat l 'weliterln ———_— mm“. is« , The Cats haven‘t fared as well as Clutch Auburn l‘ret‘ llirtmsitinalileil 91;} ii"; : r‘i
tendenCies: failing to get fired up Kengc y 1': at F113" 955 1th U0)" ' “’9'“ “9 " Sutton would like on the SEC high- t