xt79w08wdd2m https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79w08wdd2m/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1983-03-02 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, March 02, 1983 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 02, 1983 1983 1983-03-02 2020 true xt79w08wdd2m section xt79w08wdd2m ' 3 I i to H ' i . . 1. .. ._. 1.... . i -.¢-.'a'fl'>
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KENTUCKY .
Q WaitingtorAnt
4 “ lots of people waited last month for
"‘. V3 1' tickets to so. Adam Ant. and now
t1 %‘ K they‘re going to wait longer to see him.
Ant's concert, originally scheduled for
.- . . _. L; ’ Marchfi, has been postponodunttl April r—‘———
W I 4". 23. Sea pogot.
_________________ _-_ 1..-1-_-_-.h_____
V°i- iXXXV. N01 i25 Wednesday. March 2, 1983 An independent student newspaper University oi Kentucky Lexington, Kentucky
Board saves ROD-I130“ FOI‘GSt from logging
k R . B) BILLSTBIDEN The controversy that spurred the way I can imagine the Board would '
Editor-inChicf resolution began after a December want to convert it into a logging op- i
Board meeting at which several eration, -
. Trustees requested an investigation "This whole affair has been really I ~ . 4 ‘ g. g 4
l of the feasibility of commerical tim- ridiculous,“ she said. "i think p001 ' I 4 , ' s g f '
'l‘hc l'nivcrsity‘s Robinson Forest her taming in the forest. Brereton ple will view the Board as just " 5 ‘4 ‘t‘ i "4
:1 rcscarch and teaching preserve will Jones of Midway. one Of the Trust- scrambling i0i‘ hUCkS H 4 ’ t t t 2... 1‘ .1. ,.
; not be logged in the near future. the ees making the request. said he The Board also approved the issu- "- g ‘ ' l ‘ .‘ . .
4 Board of Trustees dec1ded yestcr- wanted “to find the best way possi~ ance of $8.5 million in bonds to fi- ' Q ,
. day. although a report prepared by bio of utilizing the forest in the spirit nancc the construction of a College . 4 4 ..__, .‘i 4 \ .4444 44 4 r.
" ('olli-go of Agriculture Dean Charles in which E.() Robinson made the ofPharmacy building. ; “’44 4 "" '4 4 -1 1 ‘14 4 4 1.1 . i
Barnhart and adopted by the Trust- gilt.” Medical Center Chancellor l)r , l - _ :‘T “‘5_ 4......“ \ as
cos did not preclude ihc possibility Robinson donated the forest to the Peter Bosomworth said the con» _ -' ‘1 .. ' _. .' .. 4_ .fi... ' . i
of logging ihc H.7oo-acrc forest University in 1923. In 1927. he struction has been bid for approxr ‘44 ‘. .4 44 4 44 ”h ‘v
after“ haslurthcr maturcd. deeded the forest's mineral rights to mately $6 million. and the remain- . '1 .117”: i \ 4.. 4 . 44,, 1-
"lt Wlll ix» thirty years before the theliniversity der will be used for finishing the ‘ ' w M ‘ - ‘ '2».
yr”.S rcach ii'uui‘rfiaiumy.” Albert Last year. the Board considered building's interiorand landscaping. 1m. _ ‘\ ' ._
(‘lav Vicc chair of thc Board, said. mining the forests coal reserves to In October. members of the Phar1 1 u“. ' e ...,___ ‘
“That doesn‘t mean some aren't at help offset state budget cuts. but dc- macy faculty protested when the ad» » ‘
rcadv maturc But if we wont in and cided against it in October on the ministration announced that the . 1 '
logged them now. it would dcstroy advice of UCLA law professor Jcssc money. approved by the General As-
so many trees that over the long run Dukeminier. who was hired to study sembly in 1978 but delayed until last
itwoulddccrcascthc valuc thcdeeds. year by a statewide capital con 4
“it could he thirty yours" bciorc Ann Phillippi, president of Stu- struction freeze. might not be ad- 4
logging bcgins. hc addcd. "or it dcnts to Save Robinson Forest. said equate for contraction of the build- . . . .~ 4
could bc ncvcr " after the meeting she believes log1 ing 4,, 1 . ' _
'l‘hc rcport said an inventory of ging the forest will never prove tea The administration had said thc . ' ‘1
timbcr in thc forcst, first logged in Sll)lt‘ bUiidlhg might hit“? i0 he i‘t’dUCfi‘d 1h 4
thc Pili‘h' 190054 showed the “M995 "(inc thing they ithe Trusteesl 50- size. but later compromised. calling '
ihcrc are immature. It said. howev- rely neglected is the reality of the for a five-and-onc-half story building CASSANDIA LlHMAN/KomaIStatt
cr. th‘" allowmg the life“ i" “find :Lmber glut." .Sh? 5mg] 'Bgurré’amih Sgasthgnsgaméijsmfli hairlimtifiv- The Board of Trustees met yesterday and took action on the Robinson Forest issue by stating that
zinothcr 2t! vcars wou “more t an are is a royec in 9 Uh ries " ' ' ' 5 “’5 1 ~ - 1- - ~ 11 - 1 - 1
(444444444444 ihciquantity 04 saleable tim- 444 the 4044544444 444 clear-cut a small incomplete until more funds wcrc the Universny Will of this time refrain from cutting timber in the forest.
her that cart be harvested. as well as area to see how it effects water available
incrcascitsquality quality But the department of for- Yesterday. Peter Bosomworth
'l‘hc rcport estimatcd the currcnt estry can‘t find anyone who wants to said he is ”very hopeful“ the $6 mil a a
gross valuc of thy forpst‘g mm,”- at cut the timbcr They can't cven give lion bid will prove adequate ior con1 Two add'tlons made to Board Of Trustees
$3 3 million and IIS \‘aluc in to ycars ii 3W3.“ .. Sti'UCiiOh 0i ihi‘ five-and-one-half .
atSLZTi l‘lllilillttn And shc said that. unless surface story building. He said he IS await»
; ’l‘hc 'l‘rusiccs. approved a rcciim mining in Eastern Kentucky comes ing a deCisiiin from the statc ar 4 4 4
l incndation that thc (‘Uih‘i-lt‘ of 4Agri- to an end. thcrcby reducing thc sup» chitect‘s officc. U‘XihgiOh attorney I‘omniy Boll til Lam. “as i't‘lt‘l‘t‘t‘ in 1: Minimal last )i-ar along v ith two others. in
i culturc “Nun“, to updatc ”S invcn- ply 0f cut timhcr. “the same sflua» In other busmess. the Board ap» and 44lBhi4 general manager lcrrcll rootball Maguc championship play cluding Bctt) l’éit‘t’ (‘lark of Glas-
l 4444.4 and, "as 54.4.4404“ 4441 thc forest tion willapply ycars from now -- proved a policy statement prohibit- A ‘ l‘cd Lasscttcr wcrc sworn in off gamcs and Supcr Bowls ill and gow iormcr Board sccrctiir} and
‘ 4.4.44'4.h mummy (14.4.0104) 4,4 plan that Shc also said logging thc forcst ing sexual harassment of students. as members of thc l'nivcrsitys \ll. scrwd on tho l‘K .1\illl("ilt‘ .1\.\\it Bclls prcdcccs'sor Bcll. the :iluni
.4 “4“ .44 44444844444444 444 the ”44444.44 44' would rcducc its abilit) to draw rc» facultyand staff members. Board of Trustees mcciiiig )csicr- ciation Board oi llll't‘t‘lltl‘s \iii> iii s lll‘Si choii'i- tor the position, was
‘ ”4444444444 44". “444 444444444444 444 ”44444.44 44444.4 search grants In 1982. shc said. The statement. formulated by the day Each Willscrvc six-yeartcrms iotcd ihc Distinguishi-d .1\ltllillll mum-d to the Board by (iov John 3'
firms ' $400.4th was grantcd for Robinson Ad Hoc Ady'isory committee on Sex Bcll. general counsel and director Award. was past pi'csidciii of thc Broun
l (in said :in anti-logging rcsolu Forcst research proiccts. and thc ual Harassment appomtcd by i’rcsi? m" the ("1149“ i'hi0h Naiihhai Bank tircatcr lx‘xmflton :\i‘t‘it i‘hiiznbcr oi
. tion piisscd unanimously by thi Stu- forest "is rapidly being recognized dent Otis Singletary last March. pro— “4nd ”“1“ (“1 iihd ii partner 1“ iht‘ “immi‘il‘i‘ 1”“ di'h'ii 11> \‘itiillxtlL’H l.it.\\t‘llt‘l' u ho holds ii mnstcr s
g (lt‘lll (iovcrnmcnt .1\>;.sociatioii in throughout thc Eastern l'nited vidcs for tho invcstigation of sexual “Ml"- hlcaslc 51' 39” iii“ firm. N" “hiiiriiiith “W N‘“ “all” ”iiW iii-gici- in i-iigiiiwring tron. i'K sui
i. liiiiiuiri and thc l‘nivcrsiii Senate States" 115 an imixiriani sitc for Mt harassment complaints “with full ‘91th ‘0 his former posmon its alum Huddlcston ‘ i‘i‘i‘h‘t'iiiih ("itiiimllifl' t't‘t‘tlS hitll‘. l’ilut‘ll llcrmiinsdoricr,
i‘ 14M "4444444,! “had no “4.444.444! on tho ””15leth r0scorch regard for the L'nivcrsity's duc proc m lrustcc .i i-tl'llit‘l' finchsi‘. :iuichc: iron. .-\~h
Board's dccision not to log ”it“ lOT‘t'Sl "From realistic. economical and (’55 requirements “ Bald“ his work on m” Board. ”Ni “‘L‘ “”“lmw‘” I" ill" ““1" l“ “”“i “h‘N‘ itlililiiiiiiht'i‘ii “11> not W1
"at illiSlllllt‘ ' ' academic perspectives. thcrc Is no SeeTRUSTEEs,poge4 Bcll. a graduate of thc l'K (‘iillcgi- .i Spt‘t'lill i-li-i'tiiin iicid in :bi1 alumni llt"\\(‘tl
‘ SGA ' I .
= vrce resrdent senator announce for presrdency
l
. I
‘ ”....:-..mz.1-- .1 14,... _ 44,... .. ..14,1.,,-,41.
. 1 1 v 1 1% i1 if;
4; General Assembly . stressed in outline 44%. .14? i... ....,.;.4..-1.1 Z”
' 1 4144; :4 4 we ,1 "; ~24
é‘ B) ANDREW(tPPSl.-\.\'\ ' 44 R) \.\l)Rl-I\\ttl’l’.\l.\.\\ 2' V»
1: N’WS i‘ldiiUF '. . 1.- .\.’cws Editor _ W i 4 44 4 4
.3; Te .- . -- "H” . 11’”
é With thc atmosphcrc of a political ' fi A} . - 4 .lohn Davenport and John “4“”- I "it-1,.» 4 I};
h rally. l)avid Bradford and Tim 3444.449? 4 sporting a platform stressing stu- 4 . . a;
1; r‘rcudcnbcrg announced last night to " 4 a (M 4 dent rights and campus safety. an-
2. iihi’lii 5" SUPPON'STS iii ihi‘ Student ‘ 1;. :1: . nounccd )‘cstcrday their rcspcctiic " ‘17)
('i’hii‘i' their campaign for thc t0P .. . i%,\ 331% <,~~:=-C candidacics for Student tiovcrnmcni 4 W ‘
. two offices Within the Student Gov- i , ‘ \ $55,? 3.4.- \ 4.4.14.4 _.\-ssociation president and Vicc prcsi ‘4 : r 4
.44 crnmcnt Association ‘ 4 35.1.14" 443:3}? s 4 dcnt 444” . "
i iii'itdihi‘d ‘dhd Freudcnhcrg. sock- it. i“ 5211”. 9." fl .: Davenport. a political scicncc iii ’ . - $54.41; a .
i ing tlic offices of president and Vice ‘ 4 ~ ’ 4’ $5 ‘ nior. is scrvmg hlS second ti-rm iis . '1 ' H 1 2. ’ 1 ' 4.
prcSidcnt. respectively. formally \ ff ‘ .- $313 senator-at11argc He is thc Scnatc's H35!" 4 .. M,” 4 1.? .' , P'. J
' started thcir campaign undcr the 1 4 Mg»... i: chairman pro tcmporc. and L4. 4.4. «119' s-M ,1 4,111. , . 4
4 thcmi-ot "committed to changc." \ \2‘?‘ x *3 sponsihlc for bonding thc legislatnc M11449- 4 “’4 . .-

6 "Since I've been with the organi- 4 -,..1_\ ‘ ' ii body when thc SGA Vicc pres‘idcni is -_“_..:-'J ‘ ’ ' ._ " - 6 , .
l ration. I don‘t believe it's ever met “1‘44 44 4. absent 44.4, as .4. 4 _ . .44 or": . _ _.
its potcntial." Bradford said "Wc “‘L. §§€\ pf: Miller. ii political scii-ncc sopho 4“; ,. - ‘ " ‘4
4 arc committed to changc wc'rc \4 “‘ s14 4. ®QQQ§~ morc. is sci‘vmg his first term .15 ._ 4. ' s.
* thc good guys but “it (itxiifi \ l . \M§ ‘i scniitor-at-largcthisacadcmicyour ? 444...?" 1%. .1

: sakc. lct's Win ” 4 ‘1 kw . "I think \H‘ could do tlic host iob it"? a... 1; -” “‘1 ‘
'4 Bradford. an accounting scnior. .1 i 1 ot iinyonc looking at thc position. 3 4f . 4
t has been with student government “"lNDui-WMAN/Kw-ISta" ltiii'cnpori said “Wc havc lht' cxpc “amonumm MM, W.
i ii)" iW“ years. (‘iWW‘i 5G1“ Vic“ TIM FREUDENDERG AND DAVID BRADFORD ricncc. ihc insight and thc hackbiini' JOHN MILLER AND JOHN DAVENPORT
2' president during the last Spring ' iiidiiii "
t clt‘t'lIOII Senatccaucus i)‘ IS struggling l0 C0111? l0 2.“va ltiivcnport and .\lillcr s campaign \.i.li .‘ill ltii-4\ tum taki' llt’ said I doni
3 Ho has been active iii thc effort to An Arts 8.1 Sciences senator and Wllh thc current hudgctary crisis.“ pliitiorm dcscrihcd as a "basic 'l'hi1 lil't‘Sitlt'lll\ ii: krizliiikx ~ piiii llllllh.ll‘._\lllitl‘('t'lll_\t'illlltt'iliiltlt‘
g incri-asc \‘lSllallOn in l'K rcmdcncc two-year veteran of student govern- hcsaid oiiiliiic yci iii ix- cut and drii-d" llt‘ llllI\i'l‘\l'lt'\ .igri-i-ii l-‘i1i1 EH to ’l'hi- tilllilltlillt‘.‘ pliitioi'ni also
balls as a member of thc special ment. hc hclped organize SGA‘s "We pledge to use all of thc rc- calls for continucd cmphasis on ll‘itl \iippiii'l .. l't‘\'.\t‘tl iiiimiim 'Hl ill\ t'itlIS ior 3.3 pcrcciii of St;.\ ~ budgci
l l'mvcrsity committcc that rccciitl)‘ Robinson Forcst preservation effort. sources of the Student Govcrnmciit lit" and pcdcstriiiii safety and lllt‘ ll‘illllllliL‘ \l.ili‘ minis In Ylli‘ innit-ix. in ltt‘ .iiloc.iti~d to the Mimi-iii um.
; proposed changes in the present piil- The candidates" platform 71 out- ASSOClathTl to lobby for fman- t‘l‘t‘ullltn of a campus voluntccr iooi llt‘.\ .iiicr .in .issi-ssmiiri: ii :iii1 illl': iii/.iiion \ss‘istiiiii'c Fund, ii Scnatc
5 ”I" i“ ihtht‘i‘i ZumWihth "190 Chit” lined by Freudenbcrg 11 calls for an Cial aid and for increased fundings patrolitiiringci-cning hours \idii.il llt‘t'ilS 1it min minnow: ;~ iitL‘Jtli/dliiiii tlt'SlL‘llt‘tl ii» iihlfllllllt'
ii ccllorlorsiudenlallairs increased lobbying in Frankfort next for l'K‘s academic programs cs1 'l'hc platform also supports ”11' (llk'lllllt‘lllt‘tl mono) lill' proii-i-ix simiisorcd l\4\
l Frcudcnberg. a political sciciicc spring for financial aid and in- pccially tclccommumcaiions. phar- ioriniilii funding plan for Kcniuckys In .iildiiion xllllt‘l'Nli‘tl'lt'.llltl in: i‘cgisii-i'cd Sititlt‘rll ill‘Liill‘il/iillttlb
i Junior. servos as Student iirganiza- creased funding of l'K‘s acadcmic macy and computer scicncc.” i-ight statcsupportcd univcrsitii-s \i-npoi'i \\lll ”minim-‘1' .iiizwix .mii thi1 l‘t'\l\.ii iii Si. \ ~ Book l2\ 4
l lion Assistance Fund coordinator programs l-‘rcudcnhergsaid. bcciiusc it would priividc morc .igninsi iuribcr t'lil\ ll‘. \liltlt‘lll izn.ii~. changcprogiuin:
, and is ii member of thc l7nIV9rSIi." “It is no secret that lhlS lTnivchi- See SOA.pagea mttllt'\ tor tbc l‘nivcrsit). .\lillcr t'li‘ll .iid 'l‘bc \lllill‘l‘l\ ll.l\t‘ l.iht‘ll See VOTINO.page3
i m“.—
. l . D E The Reagan plan would remove all price controls by to political manipulation in the administration of the 51.6
3 WE N SDAY 1986. The Carter program has been gradually lifting controls billion superfund
= FmAmwmrm since I978, but would leave some of the lids in place even Mr PTeSldent the time has arrived for you to meet
; after Jan. l, 1985, especially on gas from older wells. your assurances Dingell 5 letter said There exists more
4 Op ition 8m". 90. deregulation than a suspiciOn that documents are being Withheld to
5 I caver wrongdomg
t I
l WASHINGTON — President Reagan's plan to accelerate Inves‘lgatOTD DUDPCCt EPA WfOflBdOing \
l the deregulation of natural gas appeared headed for the /
E congressional back burner yesterday. with leaders claiming WASHINGTON —- A House Subcommiiiee said YGS'GTdOY \
3 strong opposition from consumers who fear it cauld send "‘0' President RGOQOh'S refusal '0 hand over some E”"”°"'
4 prices soaring. mental Protection Agency documents has led to "more than WEATH —
l Senate Maiori’Y Leader Howard Baker, R—Tenn.. con- OSUSPiC'°"”°i°C°V°'UP Of ('99th W'°"9d°"‘9' /
. ceded there was little chance of expediting the measure, "‘9 documents f"WY support 0il99°"°"5 of "‘9 EPAS po \
particularly in the filibuster-prone, albeit Republican-domi- litical manipulation Of the $1.6 billipn “superfund' i0" ('90"
, noted Senate. The bill was sent to Capitol Hill from the ing up hazardous waste sites. said Rep, John Dingell, the Mostly sunny today wlth a high In the upper 60s to
I White House Monday. Michigan Democrat who heads the subcommittee. low 70s.
i 'We've got to do that some day. We've got to face the In a letter to Reagan. Dingell said his panel has "re Mostly clear tonight with a low In the mid to upper
issue. But it (the Reagan plan) will have a difficult time in caived sworn. direct testimony that the documents which 40.,
Congress. especially in the Senate," Baker told reporters. you have withheld for five months . . . contain references Sunny tomorrOw with a high In the law to mid 70s.
a ‘ l C

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Illl Mellon Andy-v- Oman John o'im» Midi-v hum UM S. lad-bu 1.0. yum Don ("Mord ‘
minor in Chief News. Idiioi Aiu tditoi Sport. Edito' Sporiuli'voiuu tdnw Fhotu Edivoi Graphics Editor
in... “an. mm. Cub-'- em. Sell.- II" I. Wldonu n. M MO'IOO' noun. MlllIon Ion Von Moot chm no. t
Manugtng Editor Lfimuutkdiioi AssisiuniAvu (ditoi AuiuontSpolu Editor SporlulProioUi Aumaoi CbiQOPhotogmphol ‘7‘th DH“, ,4 :
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I I V i
ety OMI‘I‘IISSIOD tac GS BIWO‘DMM ”'5 “TE", ”'59 ' 755’? W ,
:20 “Y'COA/ 72D F -7')/ //
_ _ _ . Véet/ m H .574 5 MW.
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urning Issue 0 cigarettes . we! I w m not“ i «
_ _ SOMETHtNG THAT meson \ '/ i
It is notable to reflect upon how far the Congress is preparing to ask the Consumer MINOR POTENTIAL FOR ' . I‘M /’ ,
human race has come since the dawn of Product Safety Commission sometime this PANGER 0R WyTl/RY.’ v 4»
time. It‘s been our great f'ortune in the last year to conSider repealing a ban on studying - . , /% y/
500 years to benefit from the thousands of in- Cigarettes for their safety factors. Then, the I“, 0° ‘\ I” 1,.) / U,
ventions and innovations that have made life commissmn presumably is gomg to wrestle f’ .. 1/ "
more comfortable and easier to function in. with making people saf'e f'rom Cigarettes. “ .' t . / ’ / g
Light bulbs. telephones. photocopiers. aceto- It seems people can't be trusted any long- w ~ ' , I
minophen. the list is endless. er to smoke safely. People drop Cigarettes in a j W t
. r \ s ' s . -. . ,’ i
But each new device comes with a set of strange places. hke bgdb and sofas 3“? such. t\ / 3
rules that ironically makes using it difficult. and the results arehcigarette-LauseThtreks m J“ i k 4, ~ 5
s - ~ ) v ‘ \‘ N ‘ ‘
Sometimes it takes the form of planned obso- more than “3'00“ 9"?” én‘ 19891' th e "'9; NW . \\\ rd m (,1 , N ;
lescence. Life is no more comfortable if a “Med 2"“ peopleiegijuro 33111. o Iersdan L 7 Q "“ E
three~yearold refrigerator goes on the blink caused 4‘" estima $30" ml ‘0“ m am— ‘ . ' git/II, g " §
when someone‘s on vacation. ages . . . i :9 ”to; ; , . ‘
A d . {m the rules come in the form so the tobacco industry and the commis- , “A f 4i ‘? I, y g
f‘fnllwmle 1i Th )re‘erye the user's safe sion have decided a selfextinguishing ciga- ' 5": *5 \\i§ Qt? ({ ‘ t
v i ' - . . . . g ' a, ‘ ,|
t). 31 " main: H0 it, hutlets onlv one wav 18~ rette. which would be designed to put itself :_- V/MWN ‘\ 3' ll
"\h fig? ii‘dg m (llllll electric a liances out within two minutes if' unsmoked, is the g 7:: ”Witt .. J O .
- - ' s s i ‘ ' . . . . ,,: ' ‘ If "t . '
mt (“5 U l . . pp panacea for Americans. It s clear the two ,3 ""tt\ l 5 .
and Chll(l~1‘t.‘5l$litllt caps are some of the . ‘ . .- ; ,, _. \ i I
m nv qudmuw H rivertedinthe home never thought of something simpler and far ; _— : walllllllll" \ ‘ I
a - ‘ “ . . ' bl safer~a total banon the f'ilthy things. ’15; 1., if I i
That s not to say the former is fayOFd f‘ One might wonder if. several years in the g;/ [m W ii\\\y\ “z t
or the latter is not; consumers surely dont f'uture. American homeowners may revolt :géé / ”MW b . l:
V ‘ l i . . _ . ~ . . . . .1 ’ l t k ' _ , .
want to ”1“" ”1‘” hardvearned money m and demand the commission tighten its rules 33;”; / W” R '- ‘ .
something ”lht"“’l”l haimful to them. concerning the use of' wood in homes. After L . flgm _ , Q ~
But the current stink over selfextinguish— all. wood burns f'ar longer than cigarettes. ' ’ ‘ — ’/ [WI h ’ .. f '
ing Cigarettes promises to bring consumer and it is the fuel f'or infinitely more fires. A / ’ )‘lll We / \ i
awareness to new and more ludicrous levels. congressional investigation could step in, ef— ’ ’ ’ ‘ . " _
..'I‘his is a very- complex issue.~~ says Wil- fectively ban wood f'rom homes and allow fl , , [/7 / a o g g
liam Toohey. a Tobacco Institute spokesper- the American public to sleep in peace. @ [3 fl " U ,’ ,1 fl ggw i
son. and no one aliye could agree more with Or it could ignore the whole silly mess — [J O -
him — most could find it hilarious. as the commission should do now
_—_____—___—__._._—_———_—_
P - on Of can 0 'ence balance on tigh trape in Poland
I-Zy er hear tiic i..il‘.}t' Itednorski“ ment opposed to“ A bit of recent his tial law This resulted in the arrest Why. we wonder. would a man It “as this strength that tht‘ Polish Otters of conscwnce” like Bediiorski l
Miet-zystaw Iéi-iftiorss tory willhelptoanswerthis of ottoft Polish citizens ithe highest like Bednorski. a man with similar government feared and moved to do and others '
l hadii ‘ t'l'illtl .:.t.. "1:;s year and tin Dec 13. 1981. tieii \toicieck figure quoted h.‘ poilgh uuthurinps life goals to ours and the rpgwngiin] stroy by declaring a state of martial The official battlefield has moved :2
I would pl'liltiilm. sl;.. :- ;:2 the dark Jaruzelski announced to the Polisii as of .laii 2.3 19813 and thc convic~ ity of a wife and three L'hlldl‘t'n. law from the public stage to the qmet di
today .iboii' \lr' i-tutiiorski if I nation that the State (‘ouncil bad tioii of oier Too individuals. accord» choose to defy the military and lead Th0 plight 0t tht‘ POtlSh people plomut‘y‘ carried on between nations 3
hadnt seen It» z:.-.:t.i- -i: .i letter proclaimed a “state of war ’ 'l‘his IIIL‘ to Amnesty International esti- thestrike" came immediately to this nations and the Polish bureaucracy But the
from his '.\llf’ translates into martial law. a condi mates Anyone who has ever stood by a attention In the West. both public real battlefield and promise l'or a "
She wrote to \tzziies'y Interiiation- tion under which many of the (if course. these Too convictions principle m the face of ‘the recog- opinion and national policy was mo- better f'uture are spelled out m 3
al to ask for sillft‘uit" ~t i'lf'l' husband world's citizens have suffered This handed down iii what are known as nized authority and suffered mm” t)llll(‘(l in an attempt to moderate Bednorski's simple request 3
I thought I it ".‘i mii .irmtit him and is where the military takes oy er and summary courts are not registered than back db“; can understand the actions of the Polish government "Please write on behalf of my hiis %
then let j.iiti'fii"k .woii' stippor' every aspect of lite ls controlled by illltlt‘l' the same trial proceedings as Hednorskis reasoning Anyone “h“ and in a limited way they were stic- band and askthat he be released " ‘
Bediiorski is .-. 't‘\'.li' worker iii the military. not by the elected or in normal civil proceedings has ever stood {1p for what he knew cessful Action in the form of panning and g
Poland from the area near l,od/ representative offiCials' In these summary proceedings. a tribe right regardless of the cost .\ow over a year has passed and letters is already being undertaken
Sometime during .a'i- -:1 or early Polish citizen is arrested and held knows the answer “0"" to our till“; the once sharp focus has become a by Amnesty international and the t
'82. he most hate in...” .ingered —_ for an indefinite period of time be mm; Indeed countless men and blur The martial law decree has Adoption (iroup n68 active in the -
about labor -.oii.fi'ioi:s .ir.il worker‘s tore going to trial or even being for- womct‘ even t'htltll‘t‘ll tx’rforiii m“ 9‘99” ”lt’dltml- thousands l‘tiK't’d ”l [A‘thiltllll("l”lmlmtl.‘
”ghtfi 1” hl‘ “Wt-V“ 7"" ttU-‘t’ tlt' ”l' LOSIO mally k‘tltll'ts‘t’d very in}. of .H“ and germ“. cu-ri (leteiitmot-amps are slowly being rc batters are being sent to Poland
ganized ant: law-i ‘ist .i str'k‘e ii: his y The citi/t'n will be charged \Vlth d“? Many m our nation's hum” leased. and the Western press has asking for Bednorski's release and ‘
wool mill :3: l.oit.' ABUKHATER an offense t'OIIs‘ldt'l‘t‘d serious by the have (‘lone‘so and many I dare m“ Inovt‘don tonews events an. at least serving in retiiind ”H. t
He was arrow“. ‘: u: and sen military authorities under martial , . . . l . " But nothing in Poland is llltnllli.’ Polish authorities that we know his l
» art prtpart d to do it again _ .. y y 1
tenced m on. “may o;;i.i.ii-y to law H . _ ) 4 (iUickly Ihose Polish citizens con conditionandwillnotforgethiiii >
three years .iiipr st)l‘.tiit'l.' and three ___—_____ The person is theti tried in a mili- [he men and 33mg” [0’ } olangl. Vlt'tcd and sentenced under the mar Now. what about that support that ,
years toss oi ll':\t'l'. .:'ii_'t:ts tary court under military proceed “(k0 ‘Bednorski. ' a” )url’ng ' ‘ tial law decrees have no such hope I mentioned earlier” Are you. after 1
Bednorsk. ..i-s .r. .i prison People's c1v1l and human rights iiigs that are shortened in order to early months (1" 19ft“; the agony ”‘ fora quick release hearing the story of one Polish pris ,
near lee/yea Mg... J will“, in” can be stripped away m an 1mm“ accommodate the “N number m Polands lpe‘t)pt was oiougit into Bil ‘k tlll _ th- . ( ., oiier. interested in finding out more
Even in, “no ,\ not .,,.o,t.tif to see for the slightest offense under mar contictioiis The t'lllM’ll has absolu- sharp focus b} the mass media 01 l “tenors : Ill 11;: .mV ; plhl’Rfi‘. ittWUt hlb Plight “Nd that “t “”10””
him tial law and who except the people My noright toappcal the western world “(I"'~\‘(;l‘ 1" '1 1“]; (fl ‘1‘ Ru“. .. it” Are you interested in writing one '1
Knowing 'tzis i."le 'yi‘ .iluitll him of the world1 is there to complain This then. is what happened to We had earlier witnessed the cf- ‘ll‘m‘: :1!" \t lmdh)xl ( 5“ '5 short letter to Gen .lariizclski 5
down 1‘ onset-r Ytlt' vilit's’wtl Why" t0" l‘it‘tilltll‘>kl llis offense. considered forts of a trade union called Solidari “1 ‘ ‘ )‘ 5 ( Ml 0“ or t p asking for Bedtiorski's release" _
Why was Itcdnorsk. muted to striki- In Poland. Jaruzelski set up a :1 serious by the military government. ty. a group of laborers organizing It is this. simple letter that lets us ,3
and filter. stzriso-u..eui' arrested member “Military t'ouncil for the cost fiiiii three years of his life in themselves into a force strong know what we should do We must Lesley Abltkhutt't l.\ on hiiulisfi
Why is striking \ltl it serioiis of National Salvation." created to run prison and three years of his civil enough to gain more control over begin now the loiig process of, at graduate student and (I "It’nlflt’t .ii‘ =
fense‘ What is rtii Polish goicrn- the country for the duration of mar rights their living and working conditions tempting to tree those Polisli “pris- Amnesty Intt'rliuliunul
Re ardl 0 I. I th [h I 1'.” k b t l
g 988 1 sex Ism , 8 pronoun e S I war 8 es ,
SOW ”5 R‘W‘t‘Mtt” pearance of semantic seXism. along form ttthers may have simply dis- a graceful and completely non-sextst enough to make me feel the scene and play on our sympathy. We were
Id tmiill} Rottw- UN“? to those with an often lengthy description of covered how advantageous such pronoun form. I‘ll be only too happy all over again. not unlike hearing a damn near classically conditioned to 't
clumsy ' he sht‘ s sprinkled the methods he used compromises can be when luring to» to use it line f'rom a favorite poem or a melo» laugh as soon as Frank Burns apr . .
throughout yirtuailx slit ”‘U‘Vt DUN! day's liberated woman into that old- Meanwhile. I think I'll Just stick dyfromacherished song. maredtnascene '
cations Dfi‘pltt‘ 'ht' lht‘tttdttlt‘ ttmfl' estof compromising posnions. with my old-fashioned chauvinistic Monday afternoon. a friend of But predictable or not. a show that
UNWlStlnE awk'vthtlht‘Ss l d even \ I realize language reflects our at~ pronouns They're considerably easi- mine expressed dislike for the show could make us laugh and cry. 0m.”
FPSlfiht‘ft myself to Making ‘or her ‘ Gary W. titudes and views of the world Se erto use Well. there's no accounting for taste. at the same time. and could do so
onto every W‘WH} lndmmp UM. of V a; PIERCE mam” sexism. httWt’Vt’t‘ Inadver- I suppose; like the weather it can't consistently. while constantly rer i.
the masculine pronoun L 21 tent. is a slap in womankind's face. REQL'IEM: Too much has been be regulated. and I‘m certainly no minding us of our all»too~human fra» ’
But the final straw has oroken this ' .. In fact. the more subtle the slur. the written already about the passmg of barometer of it. Yet. as far as I can gility. wasa rarity
reformed linguis‘a ~e\:st s back (In ' ' more insidious It‘s the prejudice "M'A‘S‘H." but somehow I can‘t recall. I've never heard anyone else In one sense I envy my friend who
a form currentij». ii. «INN around the we're unaware of that's the hardest resrst adding a few words of my express dislike for“l\1‘i\*S*ll ” doesn't like "M‘A'S‘ll " I suppose t
SI’t‘t’t'h ttt‘pilr’lllt‘tl' “1”“ tht‘ most That's right. I did say he. This lln' tochangc own I guess that's as fitting a tribute some people don't care to laugh at :1
insidiotis prorioiii: compromise of guistic selfconscious malady seems t‘hildreii taught seXist attitudes by As that final episode wound to its as any to a show that was such a our common foibles. and can't be l
them all ”s fie ‘ to afflict men almost excluswely: the very words they learn to use predictably tear—jerking close. I re- common denominator. a T\' pro- moved to tears by the tragedy of §
5 ht‘ lht' ‘\ ”WW ltttllttt'ittltmfi Women who inSist on ustng the dual may be doomed to repeat the sins of alized how much I'll miss that show. gram that showed strangers yoked human helplessness. For the first
alone are sluggi‘f‘iflfl tor the first pronoun form do so quite fluidly It‘s their fathers mothers vmo/fath- and how glad I am there are still a together by war. learning to live and time in a decade. I wish I were one
“m“ M' “m“ m" ”mm" half of m" the men Wh" trip the" tongues 0"" ”5"" Bl" there must be some bet- few reruns from recent seasons I've even love under the most adverse of' those people ‘
pronoun ”HTIPWWN' "Ut tr’ml dtltt attempts at semantic fairness. ter way to make language sexually yet to see Like good bourbon. circumstances. and in the process. Perhaps then. I wouldn't find my
dlSN'Earde thf‘ \tmti 'ttt‘ ‘7'th 1* whenever they refer in the abstract fair than by filling the printed page "M‘A'S'H" mellows with age. And taught us all something about the re self so embarrassingly choked up
51mphtht‘tf‘mdtt'l'r'ftt‘tll“”Wit. toman womankind with slashes and our speech with like bourbon to a Kentucky boy. siliency of the human soul flow over the final episode of what was
lm “(It ‘UlIlrl-‘Wt ttlt‘ ““‘Urtt‘ft' ”I And of course. the results almost clumSilydangling pronouns "M’A’S'H"was always there could anyone notlike that" after all onlv atelevision show
the hath 0t dt'«ttt(‘hi" ‘v‘ht‘t't' (Mt always sound ridiculous Women's struggle to gain men's I never plamied my evenings Granted. the show was often pre-
knows no self respecting intellectual I ve often wondered why othermse unadulterated respect has been diffi- around the show I didn't have to dictable We always knew llawkeye
wants to appear narrow mmttt‘tt intelligent and rational men force cult That respect may come sooner Somehow through the shows sheer would avoid any attempted court- Gari W Pierce is (l Kernel (‘tlflfnl
Try findint a tvxltmk potiltstwt In themselves into such linguistic con if women can devise an elegant and longevity I managed to see most epi» martial as soon as his prosecutors ni‘st who likes his language as cont
the last tt‘ 9 it'd?“ 'hd' 'tmNt' ”1 vulsions Doubtless some of us actu comfortably usable alternative to sodes often enough to know them by saw hitn at work in the tilt. or that fortuble and easy to live Wlth (:8 PM
elude ir its prefai i- stifIit‘ mention of ally recognize the unfairness and the "he she" syndrome When some heart. Catching a glimpse in passing some guest star was bound to die siblc. and his television
the Butt-Uri 'dttt’ntvt “f “Wt 7h" up creeping seXism of the traditional woman. any woman. comes up with of a familiar scene was alwavs Just so a helpless doctor could cry programminflthesamt'
%
A f h got “professional“ experience from to"... members of the administra- performance ordering of the center's guidelines Nancy McKenney
rent: 0 f 9 arts these concerts because Mr Schick fiori who "Somewhere along the [think it .5 mm. for a complete n. so that l‘iiiversity ensembles re Musicology graduatestudent
ele‘s mUSIC was conSiderably easier way mav have gotten the mistaken """"‘tlr~‘l Prl‘trlt." In SCthUtN‘H
than our regular repertoire In fact. idea that the center should be sort of “mu com by W ’W
As a member of the l niversity tir thanks to our very capable condiii- a Itupp Arena of the arts" with its
chatra. I wish ti. add my comments tor. Phillip Miller. we perform purposi- being to generate revenue. M‘ms m WNW“,
to those in the article concerning the "“1810 that usually equals and some its a result. all University ensem- M. MDT?“ .7047 mm (MON m M
PDQ Bach ioncerf and the orches~ times surpasses the difficulty of that bles have difficulty getting concert SAW WY- m I fine ‘1 W 1mm
tra's problems with the (‘cnter for played by the local professional or and r