xt78930nvx0x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt78930nvx0x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-09-08 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, September 08, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 08, 1981 1981 1981-09-08 2020 true xt78930nvx0x section xt78930nvx0x tWVfiWVVVt tie! " , V “xiii it"‘fgWWiiiAiAigAh' " » . ' .. ‘ ’ *
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Vol. LXXXW. No.18 . . University of Kentucty it .i
Tuesday. September‘s. 198, An independent student newspaper since 1971 Lexmgton. Ken “0 3’ h} _
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, A Asa: fifis}*SVN‘VAA‘“&~V‘A~V‘t «e: , _ ‘. I »_.“-"_:_“"-.'..’.:j-n' -..~ ; .. A . ,, , season opener Saturday.At left, a
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' “A ' ‘ h,- [yi't'lfjomp‘fil/ehhél gm" By J.l). \nANiiocmla/Kémel Staff 0mm cheer with? Wildcats
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, . , .‘ ____ million, with the ABC and CBS networks for Kentucky is a member of the NCAA. and a t, htens Standards
; “3 ANN": CHARLES television football coverage while the CFA has charter member of the CFA. which was formed
i i Sports Editor offered its member schools an attractive in 1977.
A I l . 4 . . . , , package with NBC. Both contracts span a four The CFA was founded in 1975 by a group of ________—V_ year] 1 forsee the percentage being
' f year period beginning in 1982. the major football schools across the country By DALE G-VMORTW‘V less than that."
‘ " - . 3 The problems that have arisen over the cons The contract with NBC involves $180 million that were dissatisfied with the way the NCAA Bureau Chief He said the standards for admission
, ' V i flict between television contracts offered to the over the four years. “There are some clear ad- was being run, and “ . . . wachreated to give a l - , , .. .. .. . -.. _ 4. to the college are such that only 43 to
‘ l Southeastern (‘onference by the National (Vol. vantages to the CFA contract,“ Singletary focal pomt to these concerns, Singletary said. l 59 percent of those who apply are ac- .
. . \_ l legiatc Athletic Association and the College said. citing the fact that fewer schools involved Singletary IS also president of the SEC, and l Stricter requirements for admis— tually admitted. Academically these
3 Football Association are only the tip of the “mild mean more money for those SChOOlS- recently attended a meeting Wlth the heads 0! i Slons to education programs in Ken- students hold above—average GPAs
, 5 mom-lit, according to L'K President ()th That contract also guarantees those schools those institutions to discuss the CFA-NCAA I lucky will have little effect on enroll- when compared to other students.
i Singlctziry. lWO appearances 0“ national television during issue. . _ ment at L'K's College of Education. During 1980~8L sophomores admit-
l "Some action ton the CFA contract) will the contract period. . . The fundamental argument $1931th Wlthlthe 1 Harry Barnard, associate dean for ted to the college had an average GPA
' » , l have to be taken in the very near future,” The NCAA threatened ‘0 take aCUOh against contract 15 .3 property rights question. teacher education and certification, of2_9, while the entire l'K sophomore
’ I singletary told the UK Athletics Association its member schools that sign the CFA- SingletaVry said he feels that the rights for said. class held an average GPA of 2.4.
l Board of Directors ina meeting Friday. negotiated contract. Those actions include pro- negotiating a contract be With the institution “It will be a problem for other "These figures become interesting
’ A I The NCAA negotiated contracts, worth $233 bation in all sports 0f the institutions "“0le See ..CFAV" page 6 l iKentucky schoolsi more so than L'K. when you compare them to other V
. l..._.,_ ~77» ~~ . 4 ~ — . —~m~——~m—--v—3—W“_—‘-—‘—~————~—~————_‘ We’ve already had it (the program) figures," Barnard said, .. ,
' l for three years.“ said Barnard. One comparison can be made using
, . ? Under the new requirements. stu- the American College Testing Pro- "‘-
‘ ex," on ne m dent teacher candidates must attain gram scores The average ACT score
. an academic standing 0f at 19351 25- for an education student was 18.6. one
. A By NANCY BROWN ington/ Fayette ounty merger Which problems as sewage systems, housing its growth. “Students often come here The former GPVA required “1:82-25- and a half points below the University .
, Reporter occurred Jan. 1. 1974. .The 1980 and transportation. and find jobs, especially those in “Udell“ “h“ “"9 admitted fore average. he said. . . .. _,
. statistics showed a consolidated city Reynolds said the sewage problem nearby towns,"she said. ‘h" 1931 fall semflter “1“ “0‘ be 3f” See iii-,ducation. pages
‘ ’ . ' ' . ' ‘ and county POPUIation whereas 1970 is being especially aggravated by Approximately three-fourths of tected by ”“5 changeV i4“—_ l ' I
A l v . . V . . . reports showed city population only. federal cuts. The Tates Creek area is UK‘S students have their permanent The new GPA requirements made V‘ Hall's father l .
.\ ,' J R999"! l S census figures which This same discrepancy was cited by having the most difficulty at present, residences outside the Lexington UP only a small 90mm 9f the I l ‘
\ l boast that Lexmgton ithhe nation 5 Walter Abbott, associate professor of she said, because without a good area. said Keller Dunn, associate systematic program of selective ad— V . .
A l fourth ,{a-‘tes‘fifo‘l‘n? city 8r? being 500010332 who said the error was the sewage system housing development dean for Research and Planning in "“55“"‘5 for all teacher edhcam’" ; dles saturthy
l (‘3'led absurd and “5195}de by result of changing population boun- is restricted. the Registrar‘s Office. programspublic andPr‘Va‘e; m Ken- l ._
a local .Cny planner and 11K urban daries. He added that if such an in- Finding low to moderate income Dunn does not see any relevant cor» ”Ck.“ VBarnard sa‘d~ Th“ mm‘ .’ after illness .»
l SOC'OIOg'At' crease had occurred in Lexington, the housing is also a big problem, relation in Lexington expansion and prehem've plan was adopted by" the i
According to the 1980 federal cen- effects would have been Reynolds said. Although the upper UK expansion. Whereas UK has Kentucky State Board of Education in V ~.
sus, 1’9 xington has experienced an “disastrous." and middle classes are locating grown 165 percent in the last twenty Jill-V 1981 . l 3mm—
. 338 percent growth spurt "1 the 10 "We do not plan for anything that homes, the lower class is having some years, Lexington has only increased Barnard served as chairman‘of the Reporter .
. years between the years $701980. . striking." Abbott said. The projection difficulty. UK students returning to its population by 49 percent. Kentucky Vt ounVCll on Teacher hduca- .
‘ ' Andre? Reynalds' Lexmgton 5003] for 1980 was a 23 percent increase, Lexington in [he {an often experience Hnwever‘ he said that as economic ilOll and k ertiflcation tha‘ devgloped t " " ' " 4. ‘““""" '
909mm? planner. said the data are almost one-fourth the reported trouble in finding moderate income conditions continue to get tight. more th“ "9“ standards based 0" exlsting ; , . _. . 1" ll th f
being misrepresented, and the “the" miscalculation. The master plan for housing close to campus. Lexingtonians may start opting to programs currently ",1 PM,“ I K' The A .(‘Adrles A , B“ Ha ' fa erl)
. . . figure is closer to a 17.1 percent in» the city couldn‘t handle a tremendous Reynolds said the number of colt stay here and attend college. purpose of the council is ‘to develop , L k. basketball coach Joe 8. Ha l.
_ "9359 . . growth spurt, he said, because Lex- lege students choosing to make their There isa lot of new interest in hex a"?! recommend mOd‘f‘Aat'9ns '" 9“ d1“? Saturday at (,ood Samaritan ;
A ' 01:5; magghoflg: :1; dCOMllfhng 14:: ington is too ”illogical" in design. homes in Lexington upon graduation ington because of the publicity as“: ”‘hmmfir’ cert'f‘catm" “a” l 22:32? after an illness or several .
- . cu .. ' s .13 - . s . - ~ -- . . . ,. .. ar ,- esai . -~
. . V . . Reynold agreed, Tinting out Slfl'l has made a Significant diffezence in See Boom. page» Also. included in the plan IS the ad» Hall. 78.11vedat270 North Church ,
,..-' I dition of an admissmns test covering Street in Cynthiana. He was a
- Hiring freeze hits library salience dean .. -.....
A . ' eXlsting tests which measure skills in owning the Ruth Hall Florist Shop .
_____________ Although the resignation of the Sod! spent much of his time attemp- “it has been quite a hardship on us ham lllPTflCV. oral and written com. ; m Lexlngton
. ‘ BI" KIM BROL‘IIJARD former assistant dean, Jim Sodt. was ting to recruit quality students. , but in a small college if you lose munication. and writing. For educa~ 1 Hall was a member of the Cyn- i ,
. . , I - . R990?!” anticipated. it wasn't any easier to “Since we are a graduate pro- the assistant dean and one faculty “on students. this requirement essen~ ‘ thiana Elks Lodge No. 433 and the '
‘ A 4 4 _ . 4 . _. _. tak€.Sineath said. gram." Sineath said. “we recruit member. Lhat'sa large percentage of ham, covers Area 1 of the hmwrshy V, Kentucky Sheriff‘s Association. it
-; .- ”He was offered a very good job much out of the state as well as in the your faculty."Sineath said. requirements. Barnardsaid. . He also served as election com» g .
A" . The (‘ollege of Library Science has with AT&T with much more money state." He said he now “wears four hats" "It's an effort on the part of the pro- . missioner in Harrison County for 25 t ' . '
It" . , - lost its assistant dean and the current than we could pay him." he said. The assistant dean also taught — those belonging to the dean. the fessmntostrengthenitself."hesald. years and served two terms as , . V,
, V . hiring freeze is preventing the hiring “When he looked at the newspaper classes in addition to regular ad— assistant dean. director of graduate Approximately 1.150 students are .‘ county sheriff there. 2, V V , .
_ h ‘ of a replacement. according to and the economy and our recent ministrative duties including places studies and the department chair. enrolled m the College of Education | Other survivors include his wifeV 3 . . . .
' .' . ‘ Library Science Dean Timothy budget cuts he knew he couldn't turn ment and serving as dean of students man. this vear. a 50 percent decrease from V Ruth Harney Hall; another son. I. . ._ V V.’ .‘
. ,« . Sineath the jobdown." for thecollege. hesaid. the past decade . William c. Hall of Lexington; a ,. , _,
if, if “The freeze will probably mean 'Rosemary Dumont, the faculty . . (‘ollege of Education dean George l daughter. Laura Jane mmsberry . t ._ "hi
i that 1 will lose my top choices for the member Sineath had planned to ap— I slde Denemark said the hhw requirements V of (‘ynthiana. and a sister, . . , .V 1 3,;
:91. - job."hesaid. point to Sodt's position, also left the l, hrh a mem formality “ll doesn't .‘ Elizabeth Dickey of “1"]me i733?
3:555 I, Sineath said he feels there are collegebecauseofanotherjoboffer. represent a special problem for us." l Eight grandchildren and three . 1&1th
5: .‘f‘w - several qualified people who would be “Sol lost them both,“Slneath said. . . . _ _ _ V0 .. . .. he said. 1 greatgrandchildien also survive. 1th I. ,3;th "5‘
‘1»: ' .1 -” very capable of filling the position An assistant dean for the college '5 “9'99“” “dm‘ss'o'” d'sc'm'mm” 3" P'co 0" page? In fact. based on figures compiled ] Thefuneral will betoday at 10:!) QQQA‘V
AA’... A' and added thathehad already started Willbemissed in more than one area. f or the lmsl school year. only 12 l am. at Whaley fineral Horne. thiti’ifAi
A”: interviewing prospective Sineathsaid. 0n page4the Kernel's sportswriters analvse UK‘svictorv. WNW“ M the students would have l Burial will be in Battle Grove H515“???
. l 4 , A A.‘ mama!” When the hlring {”29 He said he MIIPVQS that the “BS Will ' been :walf‘d, Barnard said. M t This i Cemetery ! tit-Eh? 1%.?th
at: l ‘ struck. ' affecl next year‘s enrollment because ' LW_—~—~———————- , fl‘thtia2.
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-«rf‘rfn'V-r'fltf ’ H " ' ' 3530.“. _ 1 v . .‘ .' NZ"? ’Jigt'dtitt'ft.‘3“. “fir/W/fl/flll/fl /’ ”(ml/ll F..." _. -. "_ .~-\-.‘l- ~ . . i
1 Law faculty s, students defense ///// . W10, ”Er
. ' _ - - . ‘v *1. 3...", i . t : \ i I A _ I ’ i .
-: of Haitian refugees praiseworthy ~ ' r 5%. v w DON T NWT/av if
x ~ 416)) ”W“- l
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. “College students” and “apathetic” are as persisted in pointing it out, is the fact that the 7,;3‘ ,, ,. / g, . /////_/_/. \\“\i\-m\\\“~i lT1$ MK I j ‘
freely associated by present-day campus United States has for years actively supported , ' [I] ll” 5" ‘ \\\\\\ \\\\l \l\ l \ \\\ \\\\\“ . \\\\l\\i‘\l‘ll\\\\ ,___ PLEASURE / .
. . H ,, . . . . . . . ll ,- J \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\l\\\ . .,.\\\\\\ \\\\\\\\\\ l \ i \l\\\\l\\\\ l\\\\\\\\l\l llllu. .- ,
~ ohservers as children might resPond t0 cat With economic aid the fight-Wing dictatorship \lll““\‘iiiiil“\\m\\ii\ill\\\"iiilim\\\i\\\\\\\l\\\\\\\\l\\ \\\ iiiilmmiiiiiull1m““mi\\l\\\\\\\l\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ll\\l\\\l‘\l‘\‘\“‘““W‘ll‘lwl“lll\l\\\\“i“-‘\Fm. ‘ '
With (tmouseir’ of Jean~Paul Devalier, who succeeded his “i \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\iiil\\\‘\\\l\\\\\\\\\\\\‘\‘ll“mili\\\\\il\\\\ii\ll}liiiii\\\il\\i\\.\\,\\\\\\ _ i- . .. . .
But when a potential injustice reared its father Francois in 1971 as president-for~life of lllllll\“\\\\\\\\\\l\lv ,1 iii-wilt. ~ , 3
head in Lexington recently, a certain group of the poorest nation in the world. i, ,. n ‘x ~‘-- . ' 'y
UK students, faculty and alumni, particularly For the government to grant the Haitians ' 7 . / , .
within the College of Law, were determined to political status would be tantamount to admit- , ' ' ‘ ' , , .
, buck the trend. Out of a spirit of public con- ting that it has been responsible for the f . . .1 _
‘ cern, they have plunged themselves maintenance of a corrupt and undemocratic 7 . 7 : ' ., c/ ,m‘ 21/ ;
wholeheartedly into the immigration con- regime that has repressed, tortured and starv~ 1' f ' . . ,1“ I ‘ 1,- f . 5
troversy that will determine the fate of nearly edthe majority of its six million citizens. , 94;; ' 1 7 _'-_ , k... , _,.,,”/ , ‘. \‘x ‘ 1 >
200 Haitian refugees housed in the Lexington Although Fortune and Leathers harbor no il- .1 ; 7 ~ ’2 : n i “i ‘ ‘
Correctional Institute. lusions about making the government “fess / ’ lays -‘ \ l .; “ I; ~
Th H ‘t‘ . . l d . th up,” they have attempted to assure fair shake : ' / .Q- ‘2 tilt“ 2) ' 1
d: fa‘ f‘a" lSSlie '5 tc‘gnpt 5”" inedl‘n the for the refugees by asking that the hearings at f r 1-5.2: [ Kiwi)“ / z . . ,. ‘ \
wor 0 a 05"}? aw s u en invo,y tm the which the Haitians’ status will be decided be illilmsil “w c” .® : ' .
(13:59, 90:31}? E’ f embaiThiassmg to e held in a location where immigration lawyers ‘ l“ R“ ‘ \ , w \ 5 .
eagan a . "“5 r 3 ion. .e case cen er S on and Creole-speaking interpreters are more , h (if-E5 \ .. ' v9 S i
the resolution of the question of whether the - - I U A , =.
, , , , readily available. \\\“ 54““ i jinn", \ .
. Haitians are, as the government inSists, . . . . t M N :~$§N\~,\‘é\x\wm’l ”:92. Q) 1
“economic” ref ees or as law rofessors Others in the community, including a large . // 9.7“". — ' . ../ i i
W'll‘ F t ug d, J h Le th p group of law students and alumnus Phaedra . , ' 5 1 (51m 3,, , g l i
‘ mm or one an 9 .n 3 er s argue, Spradlin, are also doing more than their share :35; y 3,, ,. ' "5*" -. "e, ~11‘1‘f. 13"“‘f’3‘3351 £51333, ‘ i
s pigs“? fleelilfi. a1 llolitically suppresswe to assure the Haitians justice under US. law. 2.1332315?”“if-5"» | ’ ',' Eh“, ‘ ' 23%?33 .
C ima 9— “PO l 103 re “8885-" Whether or not these people will be succesful git-52‘7” . ‘ fl -\ , r’"' my ._'." l
The conSideration underlying the govern- in their strivings is still unknown, but the fii‘i: Mffi mg A;\ l
ment’s stand, which might never have been Kernel expresses its wholehearted support for $53»... ’ ” — ”" “11.311‘553 t
consider in a bli 1i ht h not th e men their efforts. " ' ‘ 1_:~:...:.:.;-.:--..~..~;,- 1
ed Du c g ad es -'T'-’"@i°iri K... . _ 6-. a.
‘ g I I I I I I H
. stricter admissmns policy discriminatory .. .
. Ability for nuclear first-suite “
"(S)elective admission is a good are designated as repositories for further problems. Further, do we “
idea as long as it is based on quality." ”borderline" students, then any stu- really want to determine the entire ‘
— Art Gallaher. UK vice president for m dent who begins his collegiate train- future ofa state citizen basedon what by 80mm "at ampb rm “
academic affairs. ing at one will worry about being he did on one morning of his life when . _ . ”
labelled as a less qualified person. he was 17 years old? 3
The Council on Higher Education in wExpanding. LTl into a catchjall This will do two things: it will can If the judging of students is to be to Increase defense m r:
\ KentuckY'S Future (the PrlChal'd 5(3th (pnmanly dedicated to getting vince some students that they actual- done by high school grades, we run in— i'
Committee) has proposed a plan for students past the Umversxty’s general ly are underachievers, causing them to one problem and create two. It is 3
‘_ selective admissionstotheCouncil on studies requirements) would to underachieve, and it will cause unreasonable to assume that every Even the hawkish Wall Street it
Higher Education. According toCHE adversely affect the quality of the some students who would normally high school in Kentucky is equal to Journal. which criticized Presi- 0 u
‘ staff member Robert F. Sexton. UK technical programs being offered begin at a commtmity college tosave every other high school; they have dent Carter for neglecting “the if
. should “adopt policies of admission there. . money to apply directly to UK to different problems, different budgets, present danger.“ now tells Presi— . . pi
, including limitations on enrollment.“ The Pnchard Committee was avoid being labelled as an and different missions. In addition, dent Reagan to go slow on expen- would lose 10 million people, but
Ulher state-supported four -year COl' undecided about whether the state’s underachiever. Rather than reduce theplan would create an incentive for sive nuclear hardware. The paper America would lose 100 million '
leges would be encouraged to set ad- regional universities should also im- the number of students on the Lex- students to avoid the harder courses blames Carter for leaving an in- people, along with our silos and N
. missiors standards as well. Students poseadmissions requirements, and, if ington campus, this would increase in high school to keep their grades tellectual “vacuum” that mist be cities. Russia W0\lld be slightly
t who did not meet the entrance so. whether they should be less str- thepressuretocome here. high enough to get into UK, leaving filled ~ but the Journal's own crippled. but we WOUld be \I
criteria would have to begin their col- ingent than or the same as UK’s. All Schools work hard for their them lofis prepared when they get editorials claimed to be filling that obliterated. m
legiate programs in the community three possibilities create major academic reputation. A good reputa- here. vacuum during the Carter years, Use Of numbers out Of context is . .n
college system. academic problems. tion is hard to achieve. A bad reputa- The second problem created would as did Reagan in his "MP3”? oneof mankind’s favorite ways °{ .1 .i
As it currently stands, any person If UK has high standards and the tion is hard to overcome. This pro- be increasing the pressure on high columns andhiscampaign. f00hn8 itself. “1810 mlllth‘Vs--20 “,1
. Vino holds a diploma from an ac- regionals haveeitherlower standards posal would have the effect of im- school teachers to inflate grades so The Committee on the Present million comparison neglects i
credited Kentucky high school may or no standards for admissions, die" mediately contributing negatively to that their students could get into UK. Danger was, it turns out, a com- everything that matters in a com- m
enter UK. (There are academic stan- the value ofa degree from them Will the community colleges, to the Finally, it is totally unfall- to the mittee for inducing hysteria. As parison Of World War II with 8 a“.
dards which have to be met by out-of- be cheapened. There will be the suspi- regional universities (if they do not taxpayers of Kentucky. Should people president, Mr. Reagan found nuclear shootout. Russia lost its 20 m‘
state students.) cion by some that students selected adopt standards as high as UK's), and be compelled to pay taxes tosupport a Russia was not so dangerous as to million cumulatively, over Six .
There is only one reason that the those schools because they could not indirectly to the entire state universi- state university from which they or justify upsetting farmers with the years. it did so while resmttngag- M
. selective admissions program is be- meet the tougher standards at UK. If ty system. The Prichard Committee their children wouldbeexcluded? grain embargo. Nor so powerfulas gression in a way that recruited ...\
mg corsidered — to save money. the regionals set standards as high as proposal would do all of this to save a The only fair solution is to maintain to offend Mormons by stitching nationalism 8"th the revolu-
, While saving money is both an ad- UK‘s. then students who live hearthe few bucks. the current system. It doesn't cost MX trolley tracks all over their tionary government. It didsowith
mirable goal and a fiscal necessity, regionals could be forced to attend that much more (in factytheprichard countryside. the help of strong allies and the 3
~. this proposal is oneof theworstpossi- school out of town rather than at the How do we judge students? The Committee has yet to demonstrate Then came the couapse of the promise of a share in victory's l
ble ways todoit. local university because they did not ACI‘ is as culturally biased as any that its plan would save one dime) economic dream of combining tax SPOUS’
- Under the proposal, LTl would be meettheadmissions criteria. other standardized test. This would and the integrity of the state schools cuts, a balanced budget and heavy In a nuclear shootout, even if
_ expanded from its current role as a Should a student who lives in have the effect of discriminating would be maintained. Right now the new defense spending. These Russia lost only 10 million people . “0‘
technical school to a comprehensive Morehead be forced to go out of town against minority students, and UK is system is extremely fair- everyone domestic problems have made (the very lowest likely estimate).
; community college for Lexington. toa community college when there is already in trouble with the federal has an equal opportunity 'to pass or even right-wingers look again at these people would be lost in- »
This woulddotwo things: a state-supported school just down the government due to the low numbers fail on his merits not the judgment of the scare they had thrown into stantly, not cumulatively. Medical
wit would decrease the value of a street? Such a plan would eliminate ofsuch students here. a bureaucrat. ’ themselves—and, when they look- and communication services
oegree from LTl because the school the possibility of post—secondary To reconcile the two, UK would edagain,thebogeyhadvanished. would be instantly crippled.
would gain the reputation as a education for many. have to set different ACT standards Dana Pico is a graduate student in The Russian f’u'st-strike threat Radioactivity would be 8 remain- ‘
.. warehouse for low achievers. If the state‘s community colleges for different ethnic groups, creating the Patterson School of Diplomacy. was a mathematical invention. It ins problem. Many Wild be car- vol
threw up castles of conjecture rying their deaths around in them,
. lAtterstetheedltorsheddbctyped. triple-spaced eldeddr'essedtetheedlurl-ledltor nuiuou-niism Building. UK. lacking any density Of the real. and many more “'0‘“ M they _
"5" "1' The deceptive use of numbers is il- were.
' e — wx When submitting letters, students, Unlver'slty employees and cum Interested perm must include their names, ad- lustrated by the 10-million-trade- Besides, Russia would be the ag-
m. telephone numbers and their melon-s. classifications or connections with UK. Letters should be united to :50 Off scenario. In this dream Russia gressor, (.tynically trading its peo~ ‘
takes out our land-based missiles pic on its own initiative. not 1
witha miraculously accurate first recruiting loyalty even in the
- - _ . . . . but "relieving" oneself in another's ed and panted? Who cares? The film- sex on the screen, you should read the strike. It then threatens our cities midst Ol gradual losses. And what
i WU Victims II M backyard?! The only fenced yard on makers’ point was not to see how reviews and find out what the movies if we try to retaliate from nuclear would be the profits 0f RUSSla'S '
the street!! many people they could make heave are about beforehand so you can subs or SAC planes. “victory"? By trading its "“0108?
. Last week's Story 0‘ d UK stildetllfs Seemingly, poor judgment abound- and pant. spare yourself. Moreover, if you are But what if signals get mixed, or capacity with America, it wouldbe
7 involvement in a shooting accident 15 ed early on the morning of Aug. 26, As to your reference of “You and I, not moralizing then what do you call we can the Russians’ bluff? What disarmed in the immediate after-
‘1 far from being complete. The Victim but i wonder if the real victim will Lhecollege student, not knowing what it? How else can you make a movie if our subs adopt a launchon- mathtoa Chinese attack.
is described as being a college seruor recover as quickly as the other's flesh love is,” you should speak about about young people without using attack strategy? Then the Rim- With onegiant destroyedand the
g, and officer of a prestigious fraterm- wounds? yourself and leavetherestofthecam- young actors and actresses? As for sians would take a heavy blow other crippled, evenminornuclear
g ty; the alleged attacker is just a 67- pus out of it. Just because you know the purpose of 60-year old producers, even while “winning” with their powers like France and Israel
3:; yearold man. . Ruth Fister Hull not what love is doesn’t mean I am quite sure that deflowering secondstrike againstourcities. would have sudden new leverage.
Is anyone interested in Mr. Cole's Graduate student/TA everyone else does not. Many people young virgins was not what they had The number-theorists say Russia would have created a whole
g extra-curricular activities? In the re- ‘ . . 7 experience love in their teenage in mind. ‘ Russia would go ahead even if it new generation of superpowers '
' 3;; cent past, his keen observations and “IN a W. years. and Framo Zefferelli made a If all you get out of the films men- thought this outcome likely. After With a mOllVO ‘0 stop that mad
’ respect of others resulted in: police . brilliant account of one couple’s love. tioned in your article is sex, i might all, sincethe Rmsians would know government from radioactivating
’ .. stopping a rash of break-ins at local I would like to comment 90 the 001 If thi