xt79cn6z097x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79cn6z097x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1984-01-20 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 20, 1984 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 20, 1984 1984 1984-01-20 2020 true xt79cn6z097x section xt79cn6z097x  

 

Vol. LXXXVI, No. 96

K

Established 1894

KENTUCKY

81‘ n

University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky

21

Independent Since 197]

Friday, January 20 I984

 

 

Sociology chairman attributes
excellence to diversity, grants

B) \\\.\ ”Allin
Stat i Writer

Faciilt} expertise, national and in
ternational research and extramural
tiinds have made the sociology de
partment one oi the top in the na
tion. said ('haii'inan .léilllt-s t‘hris
tenson

liixei‘sit} is the strength oi the is
taciiltt member department. he
said The department comprises a
\.il‘lt‘l}' oi programs such as drug
iesearch labor market research
medical stNltllliLl} and \pplathiaii
:iiidiegionalstudies

'l think the di\ersit_\ ot our ltii‘
tilt) (litlliL’ work lll so man} ditierent
.it‘t‘as t‘ontl‘ilttiti's to the strength oi
the merall program

'l'ht ilt‘lhil‘lllli'l." as .1
ll. more than st i:.tliioii a
mild ‘l'llt' i‘illtlt‘s
t't'ltb giaizts iiesatd

iii-said

whole hrtiigs
\"lil ill.

Hittite-t. ’l‘ttlli \ii
The ltnillt". is used toi lt‘\".tlt'lt on

hug

and tart: s‘.

use lllt‘l'!t.tl‘illi.t: agriculture

s?i‘lt.s ixt‘ituzlailia.

t-

'.\ti‘.‘l ’w..

t ,_
.t
I t

.t.,l.L‘

Aorta-rt : 'hr tatw: :wrw 'te

til t'lli‘iillis

\Jl‘l

\iosi 't'\t'til't t 'it

, ‘tLIZalln

are out in the country dealing with
hunting and farming systems." he
said

The rural sociology program is
\‘o 1 in the nation in terms of grad
uate programs and extramural
grants brought in by the stall. he
said The program was ranked by a
Louisiana State l'niversit) sociolog
ist. he said

The medical soCiology program is
ranked among the top four in the na
tion in its area oi expertise. ('hris
tenson continued The program also
has some taculty members in the
i'ollege oi Medicine iii the depart
ment oi behanoral science

i'lll'ls‘lt‘nsttll said one strength oi
his department is the qualit} oi the
teachers “We are one oi the better
teaching departments in the (‘ollege
oi \rts {it Sciences ” In terms ot stu
dent exaluations ot the teachers, the
department is "at or near the top.‘
lit-said

t'liristenson said the teaching as
sistaitts must go through a trainini.
process beiore the} are allowed ti
it'dt'l: 'll the classroom itnce the}
are :l‘. 'he ciassrimm. the) are mon
.tored \t'r\ closei} he said Me let

only the vent best teach courses
he said

A new doctorate program also has
been developed James lloughland‘
director of graduate studies 181d
the program is designed tor siii'litl
seientists who are planning to work
outside the academit setting 'l‘hex
are trained to understand the meili
odolog} applied to social research
he said

The doctoral students are also re
quired to go through internships
alter their course ttork is i‘ritltplt'li'
The purpose oi internships is to gain
"handson ex'pei It‘lli e he said

The department also is restructur
ing the undergraduate prograit.
('hristenson said The purpose ot the
restructuiIitg _s to cluster
courses s'i lliai
in the area wt
the undergraduate
said

The depa'Hm-ht .ii\'« has i? tat
ult_\ hit-tithe
iniolied
the
and
'lllt‘} al‘“ '~ ti’i‘tf

sudan and \li \‘t it

related
students t.ill tolloa
;ntei'est 'riiougl‘oa'

[)liidYaIL fa-

\ tilal film! .a’t s'ialt‘tt's
ptogt'atia ital-j
llt‘ltiil'illit'fils oi

lielta'u‘it‘il \t i‘tav

Phase bidding, new bond issue allow
new pharmacy building to continue

in \\(.l',l it It Ill \lil' ltsti\
\t‘l. oi \‘at‘ \li'1‘e:

\H‘rlit‘tal TH tlst‘ $74" ”t .'

ljiigmi ti” i-l‘itii- tm'ats Hill 'la' _,

‘. saH 3' '!.i.tlil ‘l.t'ii;;?.
i’l'int‘\\ ’i.i\t‘li.17tti'li l\i" ltr.\

l’llit'Ll" '1! l’llatlLat'»

i'ltf‘\t:lllllllrj til it i "h
t‘. Istor'. Pituaiitit.‘

The new

.Kliit’ll s

l’hariitax i.
trill): with

tit-\T li‘ Tilt"
'lll li‘al'.’

lill,0'§_‘t i,

\lllll .
\litt‘ti'
's‘stt\ llaill"

that x l-Lt

“4“,- \‘ \Ht.-

.euw‘ l‘tt :i'irtz

‘xKe re terj. cramped tor space.

he said and we ha\e become \er)

.lt)\l~.l’ll \ . \\\I\ IUSI“

illi‘t

tt'autiiehtmt
and rest-any p“-

considerable
pimple in; H

\x-. :iztos‘s a sa

oi l’tia'

til“
\lhl l Lupe ”tr

1 untiid sax ll‘ir i dilt‘fii'
mac} has hat
grams he sa d
tmit'im. .vt. lt;.ti‘:' ‘Iii uni.
i ‘1 i l t i y V
out pl‘t'st‘tl' piwgiain

stiltie stit'i't'ssljl

\ti'
l’ltariz.
\Iltlt't'
iumo:

ceiiti_i..,e ‘ie

tr: ti" tn-

\ I’H\N\l\t \

Reception will highlight availability
of new office space in old bookstore

lh Sll1l'll\\ll \\ \l l \I ll
\eus l‘i-i
l? ; viii sttateij
t'il stiat‘i'
arid
i'tillit'ielot 2i it

“mitti‘silajs vi. ‘. 'htw
tt-r \Klll hold ..: :u g :v-t eptw
acquaint :.u:il'\ and s'

iii-'3', *‘l lit: " '

ll‘it' \ldllv".'

,‘tcttuties lt'lt't'l

slow i"
lit'L‘aia/a‘ ~i.’ s
t'eiimate'iotttceszia t
The llllu't'sti}
t't‘t‘uli' The it't‘t'c'l it}
tormer I niwisiti llooi store iii'o ot

slitli' F'W‘NN‘ l

.oiv wrung 'tt

lice spat e tor stiidetzt 'ii’uatxt/atmns

tlnlm llei'ttst. r'tu‘teiit \. 'l\ ’
rectoi satd the 'il)t"l".v_.’ is des
’to laniiliari/e stilt! s
stati With the aim

The opeiti'nl also is a: attempt to
acquain' leaders o: taiatiis sttitieii’
ot‘gaiti/atioiis Herhst saiti

"Hard or \taht oigant
Iatioiis to gne a Mile e\posure tni
their iiidi\ tdual groups

to Hit} an

in alum

hesaid

 

“\"umber one, iris a
service and Number
two, I! has a ripple

effect, ”
John Herbsr,
Student .4 ctivities director

lll‘ttlti}\ oi ditterent groups will
he presentwi The Student (im‘et‘h
.\ssitt'l.tll(tll \Hll pl‘UHtlt’ te
treshtiients and a \ariet} oi enter
tainnient is being planned b)
l‘atricia \Vack. president oi Soc-tall}
t'oncerned Students

llerhst said he hopes the opening
.till make students more aware oi
the tenter which opened the begin
ning ot semester but has had
little business "The Fall semester

them

his:

d"
'tt's _
ptitet
titlt’li‘l' s'otlt‘t‘t' N
The it'lt't'l :i - w
'Hlst-i‘ win-7‘ t'mt "tpv
t:\e al't'
student list \i
st’l‘Ht't' and \ti’"'~'
ripple etieit 't t
thccenter hi sat-l
\\anda \dams
tioiiist said a
erate out oi the t..
oi the week we
lift" she said
\dams satd she
oi \arious groups
haw spent t' in-
out unique wins '1
ple doun here

siii‘x ti

Iffitilt

ill‘ttd ".i-ti two

 

, New _.p___‘ __A_ 4--.. g! A... figs—1
l
l

That's snow business

til \

a

.t s .i.s stitvatall
xx \ellli‘liil’c" «it \\ Tit

~:' Huii'ci ( wiles:

.‘t atllltti’:

ct.
i’l‘ \l‘dlk‘c‘le'a”
2:: \e\\ ion.

'tt

ti~
ti

Debate team wins, goes to Georgia

it t\tti *I'l'. lli,\l)l‘|{\tt\

lui‘fit'llhill lt'att.

\iihiiri'. another

l ix celehrating ‘lé :rs‘
tourrattietit \ ‘t 'or) this tea:

The 1K “apttit'w‘
:."s' piatt' honors tast wees at 'ra
\ltami llliH‘t‘siY} ln\i.ationa: li-.:

‘t'afl. nits

tlt‘luilt‘ feat?

 

COUNTTERPOINT

('oiinterpoint. a new weekly feature of the Ken-
na». Kernel. makes its debut in today's edition. Ap-
pcaiizig each Friday. Counterpoint will feature articles
at L‘tllltll'léll interest, pro and con debates. columns
and lcitcis to the editor. Viewpoint. the Kernel’s reg-
ular editorial page. will be featured Monday through

Thursday. See page 4.

 

Award-winning poetess to teach two workshops

B) “E \\\ \ ~\llhll,
Staii \\ riter

She has been
two \‘tlllllllt‘s oi poetr} tr.» ft ain‘
Killing lioor. with numerous ‘Jl'll'Il';
awards. iellouships and teat hing p4»
sitioiis at universities. int-lud'ngl l\

The poet x\l is teaclii'ig
workshops in creatiie writing and
poetr) as a \isiting instructor at the
l‘nit'crsit} and plans to return to
teach in Spring 1983

Robert Hemenwai linglish tlt'
partment chairman said his depart
ment was interested in adding an
other creative writer to the statt

l't't tlfllli/t‘tl li.’ it!"

i‘tii»

Hemenwa} considers :\l as prob
ably one oi the best poets writing in
America toda). and we are tortu
nate to have her with us '

Ai. who prefers to not use her last
name. realized her interest in poetr)
at the age of 12 alter a nun at the
Catholic school she was attending
asked her class to pretend they were
martyrs being fed to the lions

The students were asked to write

the sister
".il hers \1 said.
iii to the tact that l

”t‘ls .itiil

.‘.l t r t~\t'l‘ since l
"tat I had tal

had its \irite

. ' ”so; the poems to
«sit lt'lil.tll\tl_\ titled Sari

'\-,o books were well re
mt han- sold approximatel}
and ,\i said she never
'I‘l works would he pub»
w: thought that she would

ti :‘t ‘oits‘i‘ut‘iH

..;t‘¢|\

\ tl'i‘lid took .-\i s cop} of her
graduate school thesis and sent it to
her current publisher lioughton
\litiln. I'l pant In about SIX
months _~.. tzeird irom the pub-
lishing : vi 'sKtllfl tor a new menu-
script iv v "M ii sh. did not reply for
eight lll'i't"

\ttei "- first book I couldn't
“Flit‘ tor alum” mu tears, ' Ai said
‘I didnt ttatt‘ to rewrite about the
same thing and I decided to change.

hut not drasticaih l
pand on my past \\orl\'

She has recened the tiuggenheim
Radclitte and .\.iil|lll.ti Endowment
for the .-\rts Fellowships "The
John simon (niggenheim
Fellowship is the most prestigious
prile that a writer can recei\e ' He
nienwa} said

.‘\l grew up in Tucson. :\t'll She
recened her bachelor oi arts degree
ll‘t iti'ental studies troni the l lll\t'r
sit} oi Arizona and her master oi
tine arts in English at the l'niters‘itx
oi t .iliiornia l

'.\.ililt‘tl to e\

The poet said the master oi iine
arts is "a writer's equnalent to a
doctorate" and is a two-year degree
In intensive writing Ill combination
with literature courses

At said the popularit} of poetry in
creased during "the social and cul
tural upheaval of the 60s "

“Poetry is a lot more popular than
when I was an undergraduate." :\i
said "Women and minorities have
turned to writing as c form oi selfr
expressmn "

'-tt. s,\ s‘.'
"tattit'l‘i
\.'hot.glz ‘

‘il‘t‘ .i't4? .‘l‘

f..il’i‘s ‘his

low". 't e 'w'

ll \'ft‘!k\ltll

W at? sa v1

\i‘s'i'lilA) ",

‘tv \M'si tyt‘tit'g‘ai

ita .tliere‘ne.

)l'ii\:tt;a'iu~

he'tatioi.

l’attersot‘ s.t_

v
t
!

lean: lllt"lll‘t"’\
iieorgi.i witt’es
tiltttizatet wri‘i int! ' s
'l‘htW
flit one xtzl. 'akw "

til't' .i L; ”V ‘

llt s.i l

Ulll\|i

l‘
i INSIDE
_

“ining and dining is 3‘ m "an - .
dents will be spending this uscthend
[or a listing of hats. hands. “ men
and othcr
PASTIMES, pagei

_

acllHltL‘s at ‘h;' 't ' ‘L‘C

Students for I Belle! l k at; I‘l.ll< ‘tng
toot patrols across the campus to \lc
tails. see pagel

 

WEATHER

i___.i

Cold and frigid days are ahead lodax
it will be parth cioudt \Hll’l ! high ot
5-I0 degrees. Tonight It will hc r‘.irtl\
cloudy with a low oi < to Jecrecs
below zero. Tomorrow the men! icm
partures will COI’IIIDUC with i tmth at S
IOdegrecs.

 

 

 

 

 2 . THE KENTUCKY KENNEL Friday, January 20, 1984

lOrganization to implements patrols
. to better University, increase safety

Its \ \I‘\l.lt1t‘\ll)ll.l.
\‘tati \\ riter

Foot patrols to cut down on
campus crniite were discussed at a
t“t‘t‘llllg of Students For a Better
l K last night

tarry anng president of the
ginnup sand the response for organ»
:zn/ed toot patrols on campus was

great but the program needs
"tonet tor radios

ltnstg sand the foot patrols would
imitate better security for stur
2-‘Yls .nt and around campus at

mt I‘hetts from parked cars is

rm prohieiit here at [K and
s we teel like sorority row and
We walkway leading to sorority
«to a lot ot women have apprei
tneitsnons about trawling during
the ntnght hours around this area]
inc sand The patrols would police
'tte parking lots 'whnch seem to
e'tdtnre in lot of thiever) along

with the sorority quadrangle and
other areas. Btsng sand

The patmls would be nothing
like the Guardian Angels ' Bistg
said "These patrols will serve
merely as an e\tra pair of eyes
for the campus police .ttltl the pa
trols are nieyei' supposed to nntter
vene physically with the sus-
pects '

Bts‘tg sand the patrols would be
done initially nit pairs and eath
patroller would hate onie flash
light Each pair would share one
radio It the patrollers see .nr nitcn
denit. they would call :nto a (nu
zens Band radto and the person
at the radio xxouid thein contact
the Hi police

The equipment! requires money
Bisig said The group is in the
process of petitioning the Student
Government Association for the
money . but .n prttlilt‘ltt has arisen

The problem is the issue of lia-
bnlity. Bisig said If a patroller
should intervene in an assault or
theft and someone should be tn
Jured there 15 question as to who
would be liable. he said

anng said the patrollers would
probably sign a release toriit stat
ting that l'K. the SGA and his
group would not be liable for dani-
ages or injury to patrollers “The
odds are so small of anything like
that happening." he said

The officers of the group intend
to nittroduce a bill to SGA Senate
on Jan 25. which will request the
SSW needed for the radios

The group is looking for appli-
(‘ttnls to be patrollers "We d like
to get as many people as we posstr
lily can. ' Bistg sand :‘tppltcatnons
are ;n\ailable in the Student tlt‘gll'
itnzatnoins and Activities Center of
the Student Center

 

L, ._..

PIZZA PARTY FOR FOUR!

 

JUST $9.99

I PARTY FOR 4 — $9.99 :

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Eth't‘S1/22/84

Fast. Free Deltvery '
Gd; t: at an.

a Levi "gt." locate“

mums and 09m- ovor Ia
salt for rimas

 

cinem
, "alumina-seas

JOB OBJECTIVE: a;

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it?

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BROTHERS

On basketball home game nights. Spirits fuels your team spirit with two-fers
from 5 to tip-off. Now that's something to cheer about!

OPharmacy

t oniniiued front page one

the seats are too close together."
l~‘rnt1. said "It's hard to concentrate.
and a new facility would be more
condusive to learning "

"The new building will also con-
ceittrate all the health care facnlnties
to provnde a medical center that is
readily accessible in a general area
rather than spread out over the
campus." he said

The (‘ollege of Pharmacy brings
in a lot of money front pharmaceuti-
cal industries "and without more
space we can‘t take up any more
contracts. and in the lonig run that
could pay for the tnewv building it-
self.“ Fritz said

The t} pe of research done in the
Pharmacy School ts affected by the
current building. he said

"The quality of research is hin-
tiered by the stateot-the-art facility.
and the new building will hopefully
correct this situation." Fritz sand

(letting helpful hints front upper
le\el pharmacy students is some,
thing that Kevin l-Immnck. a phar-
ntacy ~itintnor. has missed because of
the current bunldtng situation

The first year pharmacy stu-
dents are in this building and the
upper level classes are in the Medi
cal t‘enter so we don‘t really get to
see each other that much." l‘jmmtck
said "And the new building will get
all the students together so we can
associate with each other more each
day

big, do

liquors

div

Research Facility No, 1. the build-
ing next door to the College of Phar-
macy, is one of the other facilities
that pharmacy uses Swintosky said
the facility had some seriotm tem-
perature problems in the past along
with leaking roofs and ceilings and
frozen pipes.

“We hope this new building wnll
relieve some of these problems as
well as pull us together." he sand.

Despite the definite need of the

building. the new College of Phar-
macy Building has suffered some fi-
nancial problems since the idea was
conceived in 1978, according to Swin—
tosky.
' The final authorization was given
around 1978, he said. “But by the
time the actual decision to go ahead
was made. it was found that. with
inflation, the $8.2 million authorized
would not be enough money to con-
struct the five-and-a~half«st0ry build-
ing that was neccessary." he said.

The LiiiverSity administration had
two basic chonces left: to have a
smaller building or start the five
andahalf-story building and com.
plete four floors leaving the other
oneeand-a—half floors incomplete
until more funds were available.
Swintosky said. The latter was cho-
sent

"The decnsion to increase the
scope came as a result of an early
Sl-mnllion savnngs which occurred

/ We“,

through a phase bidding process for
the present construction." he said
But there was still a need for $700.-
000 to complete construction of the
new building.

“The state‘s finance committee
approved the University Board of
'l‘rustees‘s request to use $700,000 in
educational revenue bonds to com-
plete the five-and~a~half-story build
ing as originally planned.” Swintos-
ky said

The $1 million saved by the Uni-
versity by bidding construction of
the new College of Pharmacy in
phases rather than as one total pro-
ject and the authorization of $700000
front the state brought the total
funds up to $8.9 million, he said

“After the $1.7 million came in.
things have proceeded very nicely."
Swintoswky said "The L'mverstty
administration did an excellent Job
of finding funding. for which people
inthis butldnng are grateful."

Only four floors have been con-
structed and a wooden fence runs
around each level of them A red
crane. with an American flag on top.
now sits idly next to the construction
snte slightly covered with snow

Even though everything around
the area of the construction seems
to have slowed down because of the
weather. the deaii of the (‘ollege of
Pharmacy sand when the building is
finally finished. “life will be better ”

THE NEW PHARMACY BUILDING

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Busch $3700 1/2bbl
Old Milwaukee $3000 ‘/2be
Coors Light $4000 ‘/2bbl

Prices Do Not Include Deposit
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Smirnoff Vodka 80° ................................$4.99750mn

 

 

 

Come On Down

TACO JOHN'S!

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Every Saturday is Soft Shell Saturday
2 Softshell Tacos $1.29

'0 ' ouporn required and nc nrt ’
"0' volrd nr‘ (ombnnahon with other ’i”f"-

We're new and we're open.
now at the corner of Euclid and
Rose, downstairs, of the Col-
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and order
food, hot and fast!

up great

HOURS

Sun-Thurs ‘IOa.m.-Mldnight

Mexican

GENERAL CINEMA THEATRES
BARGAIN MATINEES-EVERYDAY $2 00
ALL SHOWINGS BEFORE 6PM. .

TIIRFLAID Ml “F31“
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«at

A A"~I, fl'-J

 

ME RYL
STREEP
KURT
RUSSELL

CHER

SILKWQ‘ng

.niio‘xyeu

 

 

 

i—m

 

 

Winn tho (DDI wool
and the courts can t
Stormy Coop-r wnll
any. you instu n'

JCJJSSsG'lSQSL

 

 

 

 

BES-TYPE

for a professional resume
257-6525

Wildcat fans, join us
for delicious dining
before tonight’s

(IK-Vanderbilt game

Surtnptuous selection of delicious entrees.
vegetables. salads. desserts and sandwiches at
reasonable prices. Takeouts available. too. Jonn
your friends for a pre-game treat at the beautiful
Kincaid Towers Cafeteria. second level. Kincaid
Towers. across Broadway from Rupp Arena. We're
open two and one-half hours before the game.

IIIIIIIIIIIIIII
"11111111111117

 

 

Kincaid
Towers
Cafeteria

 

 

 

 

 

t"n( l‘..t'ns"
c- ‘tfl'f‘ti‘ tan in.-

Opcrlud by Morrison 's

Ff. & sat ‘OOQMc'aaom- memenf Sgrvlcgg

 

 

n
AN ORION PICTURES RHEASE ®

 

 

A

, ml

 

 

 

 YHE KENTUCKY KERNEl Frtday, January 20.1984 3

 

 

 

 

 

AROUNDANDAfiéfiT. ‘ Artist uses classical craft for every era

[.mw vi/lo arr musezmz exhibits [he/)ul‘nling.» (1/ Jean-.111211Sl(’—/)()HIIIH(/ll(’ Ingres

NIGHTSPOTS .. .. . ..

i: shim Luiu‘o'x A
ilnlir' mum.» HUN

4"“ “" wri'i-i‘ [IE‘Ii .‘.’Ji\i‘ w

 

Wu" H ' v . . <
v V\_x.i. n4. xii-wiiwin!
AI'GHO". 55" South Lunestone 89 Mr ‘J Np.» . :3 - ;- ~ ' , - --' y i ‘ H \ \v ‘{1,\

(1‘ ihum' Satuvdoy irom b 10 ;; ni u ', K, i ‘, ‘ , , W, H Miwo-V‘ A! K

Auifin City Saloon. Waudhfl' Plaza Ow ‘4 A ‘ ' .- " . ' ' ‘ x ”“4“ “‘

 

4 i "' 'w i a rv‘ {gt-sty anouqiv 51' V71. . - - ‘ '- V , 111‘}; s
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WOHIQ' 730 pm MI Smith Goes 7:» Was" q‘ ' , '1' - .. “ 't ' "nice it
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Pastimes, the Kentucky Kernels weekly weekumi wnvw-mmnm \mn u

 

 

 

 Q - THE KENTUCKY KERNEL Edd-y, Jm 20, 1'4

COUNTERPOINT

Nuclear arms debate inspires a variety of opinions, emotions

Without question, the debate over
the existence and deployment of nu»
clear arms was one of the most pop~
ular topics published in the Ken-
tucky Kernel's Viewpomt section

In an attempt to illustrate the va
riety of emotions and opinions sur
rounding the issue. the following is a
collection of comments excerpted
from the articles and letters con
cerning the nuclear debate pub-
lished by the Kernel last semester

picture two men. standing

face to face. each holding a large

grenade set to explode, with a lot of

other people in the room. That. my

friends. is the world in which we
live "

Letter~Da\'id E Banks

1121 83

, even if it means suffering
through a few nightmares. it is time
to come face to face with the reality
L'nlike a bad dream. the devastation
of a nuclear holocaust doesn‘t disap»
pear with the daylight

In fact. it may well blot the day-
light out “

Column— JamesA. Stoll

11/21/83

“As unsavory as the idea of nucle
ar destruction may be. there are
certain things that are far worse.
For me. those things include repres-
Sion and dishonor. While liberty,
freedom and honor may be little
more than cliched abstractions to
some. to me they remain tangible
realities Obviously, mat of the
forefathers of this great nation felt
the same way "

Letter —- W. Jeffrey Walter
11/23/83

“I‘m not ready to go to work on
the collective farm. or hang a por-
trait of Lenin over my fireplace.
And if this stubbornness ultimately
eggs those thick-skulled Slavs into
bringing down the final curtain. then
I‘m ready to put on a pair of Way‘
farers. crack a cold one and listen
for the first snap! crackle! pep! Bet-
ter dead than red! "

Letter —- Brad Harville
11/28/83

"The ‘Catch~22‘ of nuclear de-
fenses is the fact that their existence
is predicated upon the affirmation
that they will never be used. Nucle-
ar weapors are. paradoxically, a
means by which we protect our in-
terests and threaten our existence."

Letter —— Robert Abell
11/30/83

' . . . in the first few hours after
the bombs are dropped the tempera-
ture would drop below zero, And it
would continue dropping until no
form of life is able to survive. This
marvelom condition would last
about six months - long enough to
cause the extinction of almost every
life form on Earth.

Yes. I enjoy my freedom. but
there is nothing that is worth annihi-
lation of the Earth. Nothing."

Letter—Sean L. Gilley
12/1/83

" . . . the environmental destruc-
tion of the planet and the massacre

of people not in our contending coun-
tries make such a war an act
against God, not just a national
choice. Those who do not labor to
avoid nuclear confrontation . , . cer-
tainly cannot justify their actions on
moral grounds."
Letter — Alan J. DeYoung
12/2/83

“A major nuclear exchange. as we
have all heard by now, would likely
cause an end to most of all the pop
ulation. . .

It has never been more important
to use our collective power to
change than now.“

Letter — Dan Hodge
12/2/83

“1 have decided. as most of you
probably have. since viewing the
television show (‘The Day After“)
that we do not need any nuclear
weapons. We do not need 40.000 and
we do not need four."

Guest Opinion — Michael Cornwall

12/5/83

Andrew Opponent-

“Carl Sagan voices my feelings,
and perhaps, everyone's. It took so
long for life to evolve on Earth, any
reason for destroying that life pales
by the enormity of the deed.”

Letter — Carol Manley Beach
12/6/83

“ . . . I believe in preserving the
standard of life to which we have
evolved in this country. Submitting
to a perverse form of government
such as the Russians impose would
constitute a possibly irretrievable
step backward in that evolution,

Read what Alexander Solzhenitzen
has to say about life in a Siberian
concentration camp. “

Editorial Reply — Brad Harville
12/7/83

“ . . . the willingness to fight, and
die. to preserve one‘s freedom and
the freedom of others is a universal
character of man,

“We“. Wallace

Editor-in-Chiel News Editor

Llnl S. Kai-ho
Executive Editor

Jane A. Stoll
Editorial Editor

Rmsian dissident and Nobel Lau-
reate Solzhenitzen labels ‘better Red
than dead’ an ‘accursed phrase.‘ is
Lech Walesa a ‘menace in the pre
sent day' for saying ‘it is better to
die on your feet than live on your
knees'?"

Editorial Reply —— Davy Jones
12/9/83

. the real problem is that
there are 50,000 nuclear weapons out
there, and to destroy the Earth in a
suicidal justification of one‘s politi.
cal bias is an act of utter foolishness

Suicide is not justified if you force
others to die with you. Death is not a
sacrifice if you don't have a choice
in the matter. "

Letter— Lawrence G. Oberc
12/12/83

And the debate continues. . .

Compiled by JAMES A. STOLL

 

 

by Berke Breathed

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WT KNOCK?

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BLNM COUNTY

Fro? Those NEW VIEWS .1
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Who says you can't teach an old page new
tricks" Today the Kernel premeires a new editorial
page called Counterpoint. which will run each Fri-
day in place of the normal Viewpoint page

The name itself was selected for its two defi-
mtions. both of which are pertinent to the direction
of the new format Webster's first calls “coun-
terpoint" a muSical term describing “one or more
independent melodies added above or below a
given melody." or "the combination of two or more
independent melodies into a single harmonic tex-
ture " Secondly it is a verb meaning "to compose
or arrange in counterpomt." or “to set off or em-
phaSize by juxtaposmon "

roe I AM N3» AN
Encmw‘ttu 57481;

765.5% COMV'J'EJ

:Nr QNllé’ib we v; ,.
MERRY m we» m0“
Mt’é'u “Wave? ‘
mutt Iv We: «05' H ‘
3‘ 'CW?

“1984"‘Big’?B“”f7' fit
entering our lives '
in some small ways

Vhoent
YEH

1%. It has finally arrived. We have been antic-
ipatiig the arrival of this year with Me unifying
numerals because of George Orwetl’e tum novel.

’l‘herelmvebeenmanysighsotreiietaathecw-
rentreaiityturnedouttabediftaenttromthemvel:
www.msomesmallways,8ig3rotherisantu-
higotu'lives.

Financial aid fir malesot‘ acertain age isconditio-
nalmdraftregtstratim.Whlleregistei-irigtorapos«
siblefuhnedafiispartotthelew,whlchallcitim
shorild uphold, the linking of these two Mame
amsisaninnovationinthe decibel.

No me checks to see whether a homeowner has
paldhisorherprtipertytaxbetmaflreengimgoes
out to answer an alarm (at least. not yet). ’me'flre
willbeputoutandlaterthegovemaitmaytake
thepropertyawnertooouanwhiohmegovern—
mentmmtprevetheownertadelinquem.

In the linking of financial aid to that! registration,
the applicant mist prove that he is in compliance
with the law. imagine how mm effort the govern-
mentisaparedbystiiftingtheburdenatp‘oot.

ltthisexperimentissuccewuliaeaaingtheprob~
lemsotregulatingtheaftahsatordimrycitim,
therearealotofwaystoexpandthisprinclpleflow
aboutrequirtnglawyerstompwtmmplciu ac-
ttvitiesbytheirclients?

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quiredatamily therapist torepertmtmtienalmt
acaaeotallegedehlldmolutationmmthoughthe
therapist gained tln's information tin-0gb a family
competingeeasim.

Indiscowagimchildahmeratromseakingm
atoml help, however. this law may mte many
knividualcaeesdmolestation.

t.\/

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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