xt7b5m62819x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7b5m62819x/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-03-10 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 10, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 10, 1982 1982 1982-03-10 2020 true xt7b5m62819x section xt7b5m62819x Wm—
Wednesday
T-shlrts 0-day 90%. W'Y handed .
A all 333 chonc 3 33 &/ Approximately 1,400 students3wer¢3s3 (:2 3 ,3
then 9becoming6 s:333533°::3;s::3r3|3y.:01<:3y33 ‘ ) %. Trim: "ghl ";(|;'tic(:::;u::'r|:nrottl.ed ,
‘ mill“ in "W 0990f 503 to low 60:. Partly % L“ to be :old 0,520. This made some peo-
CI°UdY tonight Partly Sunny and mild ple KS'O'IC. Unfortunately however.
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. I e ow cm: s. envuous. pogo .
Vol.lXXXlV, No. In Wednesday, March lo, I”? Un-vetsrtmeniuth, Leninglon xmnwgy — A” .mdeppndm, 3,333,", ,,3,w3333333333 3,33, ,0” —‘——‘——————-—-———~——————<~5——————-— - 3 3*
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Class Sizes would increase .. . 5t. . 5.1.... egg-e55. e
'. its. . ”/u o’ ‘ " ‘. “W ’ l ' ‘;
I p0 Icy Is approved e5 on, 5 33. « ~ 3-,, t . ,, - 5
K‘ I . l I: _
' th p1 to' G dGershenfeld ' 3’3 at; H ‘J - ‘llla ; " l
——————— smce ere are no ans increase ray an say increas- ‘ 3, ' . - . 5. 'I
“QNDYDW‘ER the number of faculty ed class sizes are inevitable if the g ' . E if ‘ Q” I -5 ‘ '2: . ’ jg“.
Senior Staff Writer mernbers.“'l‘here’s got to be a major faculty's teaching hours are reduced .. ‘W ‘ : ‘. '5 v
___________ increase of (the size of) classes and more uisu-uctois are not hired. .3 M“ ' 5 5 ' 1 ' l '5
somewhereifyou’re reducing thesize “No new (teaching) slots are , ' ’ ‘ 1'! 7
Lower division business classes ofMBA and upper division classes." available for next year." Gershenfeld is . 5. .3 33 i
may be having more auditorium Associate Dean James A. Knoblett said. The college, though. may be \ \ “5,”... ‘ SQ“ _ "- ’
classesnextsemester. informed faculty members of the abletoreplace departing faculty.8he . N" X. i'?" 5 ._ ‘ ;. ~.. ., “so... “x3 ‘ . 3 Li -'
Class sires would increase if a new policy in a Feb. 11 memorandum. said. _ ‘ i” f "i mg: ”“ . 3 F3; .
policy to reduce faculty members' Students did not officially find out un. Student-teacher ratios will remain t 3 _ ‘ r, W * ‘ '4 5 .
teaching loads is put into practice in “til yesterday’s meeting. the same even if classes do become "‘ i ,‘, 3 ' . , ' ""' . - ‘i 3-: .5
theCoilege of Bminess &Economics. While both Gershenfeld and larger. Gersherfield said. “As lonaas " - s3 $3». I
The policy was formulated and ap- Michael Gray, assistant professor of the number of students remains con- 5 5'“? ’ * ~ 3r" -. ‘ ~ “3‘ , 51:33:53
Proved by the college’s operating business administration, agree a slant and the number 0‘ “10th re- ” ‘3‘ ' “ MM 3,, l
committee andthenapprovedbycol- reduced workload for faculty mains constant, theratr'o will remain .. 3 et- 5 ‘ V ‘ :j 5'
legeDean Richard Furst. members is needed, they question the the same, whether the faculty teaches a?" \ ~ 1 ' . .
The policy would theoretically in- method and timingofthepolicy. (as many classes)ornot.” ' , = ‘ .5.. 25‘.
crease faculty mernbers' oppor- “The whole schemeiscooked up Gray said although the proposed .3 ,. ‘ '
hmities for research. Another objec- to reduce the teaching load from nine policy is a good policy. classes are "5‘ ; ’ t
tive of the policy is to reduce class (hours) to six (hours),” Gray said. already overcrowded. “The issue , . .3 ' " 3, 3 ' , *' 5:;
sizes at upper division and graduate The policyisneeded,hesaid, because seems to be. ‘13 it the time to make ' § - . ‘ ‘ 3 ..
levels. teaching nine hours while doing the mave from nine (hours) to six ' , “’9 1%: 3,5: we 5;; ‘ ' 5
Doing this, however, will effective- researchistoomuchofaworkload. (hours) now?’ . .. The question is, _ i" 3 i333, 1 I- : .
ly “make all lower-division classes Recruiting quality professors who ‘Do we benefit the faculty or the ‘ " "" l ‘ ‘ ~ 5 j 3.
auditorium classes,” said Amy Ger— must teach nine hours and do students?’ And it seems thedean has Ticketmgnlu “°"”‘”°°“ """"5'°"l 5 I -
shenfeld. assistant professor in researchis diffith for the University madehismove towardthefaculty." ‘ :_
business administratiOn, during to do, he said. And since UK is a Game“ said students were not Bob Clay. north campus coordinator, reaches deep into a box containing over l000 lottery stubs last l 5,
yesterday's meeting for students research university, “if you do not consulted or inforrnedof the new pro- night when student tickets were sold for the upcoming first-round games of the NCAA tournament in .3 ‘, 5
about the policy. publish, you will perish. You will not cedure3 The faculty also was not in- Nashville. The games are this Thursday and Saturday and it the Kentucky Wildcats can manage a win "
Althtmghthepolicydoan’t mention get tenure if you don't publish," he formed until afte‘ the policy was over Middle Tennessee, they will face the Louisville Cardinals Saturday afternoon. That game would be I i , ‘.
that. she said. it will be the result said, see ME.pogeB b'°°°"°s' "°“°"W‘d° W (335- . 5 .
p tG' b d ' ' '
oe Ins erg rea s, srngs before enthusrastrc crowd .
—————-——— poems before intermission. “Kad- very seriom.” Ginsberg also an- tionari themael - iousn n . ”
2:135:33? CROUCH dish," written in memory of his notated as he read, letting the au- . Cuba; :fttglohgythey wouldvedsevzllot: :iomn:."a d the stuff 0f con --
°' mother who died after an unsuc- dience in on the more obscure some kind of democracy with ties to In a recent review of “Plutonium "‘-'-
———————-— cessfllllObomfhytwuflmWins work, references. Although Ginsberg is no longer the U5. Ode" the reviewer said, “Thepoems f,
3 3 33 especially With Ginsberg’s fine After intermission. Ginsberg sang covered so extensively in the media ”'I‘here's an exact parallel with arereflective,with stark insights into -' y;
Allen Ginsberg s “Howl began the reading style. He has several styles, William Blake’s “Tyger.” Blake, in as in the 1960s, English professor Vietnam: we aren‘t asking ourselves his aging sexuality - 5 5 the Poet haV- . " '
traditionofperforming poetry In 1956. and he used an appropriately gentle his role as poet-prophetseer, has ex- James Baker Hall feels ”he's more if the Salvadorans really want us ing ranted in his youth, b38113 t0 ' 5’ '-
Glnsberg continued that tradition last voice for “Kaddish.” ercisedagreat influenceonGinsberg. visible now really. His audience has down there. Haig is full of baloney, reach toward elegance." "
night before a packed Seay and he sang Blake inspiredly. Often shifted, but it’s broader now than in acting like a lower-EastSide bully. “1 thought my early verse W85
Auditorium, reading ”Id 811181118. il- ' 5. Ginsberg becomes nothing more than the ’eos; people go to him who never It's as nuts as a punk rocker dying his elegant," Ginsberg said. "My poems " '.V
imitatirg some of the directions he .. i 3 3 ,g .5 a political balladeer in his songs, but go to hear any other poet. He’s no hairpurple.” now have more rhyme because I've ') '1
hastakensincetheBeatMovement. .5 ‘5 his adaptatiom of Blake are less longer a freak but a part of the 3,
Ginsbers’s visit here was sponsored ' ,,,. topical and playful. literary establishment." _______—_______ '
by the English department and the Am'fl ’ - The rest of the second half was Ginsberg is a member of the “R . . . . . . , . . ,, ,
Mlmt’s Office. 3 g} devoted to readings from Ginsberg's American Institute of Arts and Let- Pagan it ."(H'Ilttl ('Ullllllrlll'3V m .‘imull Imprint is u xi'lfljultilhng
On a stage adorned with ““83 .. lamt book, P33330333?" Ode and Other ters and a co-founder Of the Buddhist ”Hydra-«)3 u-Ilirh trillfnri-i- llw rc-i-ulllflnnurlr'x In all) l’ll'lllxl'll't's "1'”, .3 3_ ~. 3-
Gimberg began the evening with 3333 ‘ P0233383 1977-1980. Among the works College Naropa Institute’s Jack (Tuba; ll’fl ulmw Iht’y u-nulrl (litrq'ldrp imnu- kiln! of ilvmme-i with ‘3-
“[3183. He was accompanied on the _ ., * ‘ "it he read from "lint book were ”Pill!!! Kerouac School of Disexnbodied (it's to tho ()5. Tllvrv‘s ml I'IIN‘I parallel u‘illi l it'lnrlm: "'1' urr-Ii‘l mtk- 1'; .‘
mm by Larry Calhoun, P39” 33_ 3 ,3 M Your33My 8'83 Crybaby 33nd 39133 PoetKS. H3.lS works have appeared in ing ouriu-ln's if (he Salrurluruns really u'unt us rlmrn Ilwri'. ”(rig is l l :
Hanrahan and later Harrison 3 ,3 5 . ,~ 5 5 s 333535, 5/ title poem Plutoman Ode. ‘Ode is such varied publications as City f I! b I , . . 5 H, I . l-‘ 55 - '
UMhlll, two "3353”” he met the 33333 ,. 3 3333 33 . along man about the overwhelming Lights 33033333033 ”33983303 the Atlantic 3 u of u lllll3t.3 m "rig l3 0 a nut:- ,uxl-Sult- lull/3v. II .1 mi Iluls mt a ' 33'3
night before at Lynagh'S, 502 Euclid t 3 3’ 3 :f t ” l“ ,i‘5 radioactivity of the element Monthly andtheNew Yorker. He also """k "n‘kw'bm‘g mum" "MP," 4; -' ' '
Ave; he accanpanied himself on a ' ~5 plutonium. the “new element before lists himself as “Advisory Guru" of 'A"*‘" “i"“mrfl
harmoruum and Australian aborigine 3 {.33 3 " inunbominnature." TheMarijuana Review. "'“'——"'—"“"" "“"“_‘“'""“ "*' “”“W 1' .,:'.
sini33i3id 322*] 61:31:31}: rueschorded 333 37f. 3 f 33 G313nsberg's involvement With the In conversation, Ginsberg is soft- 3Reflecting3on the 3Beat Movement, worked with rock, but 03333333333359 3335/33 3
W1 Dyan I" new antinuclear power movement, ev1 spoken and soft-mannered. Earlier Ginsberg said poetically the move- the 'remorefrank and licit .. 5 .
wavesroup'IheCIash- dentin thatpoem illustrates howhe yesterday in an interview with the m t «5 t- - of he y 59"“)- 1 5-:
Th that at the m tla ALLEN GINSIERG . . ' . . 3 en was a con i3nu3atlon t No longer really thinking m the 33 3
e ”“8 8 05 “8’15 has continued his radical tendencres. Kentucky Kernel and The Lexington Modermsm of William Carlos social revolutima terms ofthe ‘tim 7" 5-
WBS whathecalled an “anomalous In an autobiographical precis, Leader, however, Ginsberg showed Williams Gertrude Stein and Hart Ginsber comma?“ “If ou can’t '2, t .
noncommercial,” which didn't stop In a very different vein, Ginsberg Ginsberg wrote, “Arrested twice at he still has the same old rage about Crane -h'ying to reach an idiomatic 8 ' y 5 ‘5
- - i. 5 .. .. . . . . change the world, you can change 5
anybody from smoking during the in- read America, awa'k fromthelate RockyFlats Nuclear facility. practic- American imperialism." American language Spiritually the 5 . ' “ ‘
. . __ . . . . . . u , _ , _ 5 . yourself. takecontrolofyourlife. and ._ ,5 .3,
ta'lnlsslon poetry makes notlung 19503.1“ drew laughs as he brought ed sitting meditation on railroad Reagans Marxist conspiracy in Movement wanted to expand con- thus rebuild thebody litic likecell "2 ".
happen. 3 3 the American scene of the ’505 up-to- tracks blocking train bearing South America is a self-fulfilling pro sciousness and visual awareness, us- by cell based on mammal pr“. :5, 53 ‘
Ginsberg read two of his finer datetothe 803: “old moweactorsare plutomum." phecy, which will force the revolu- ing poetry as a probe into con- 333383.. ’ “,3'
I '5 .~ - ‘ I
UK graduate’s film ’The Estate ’ ' ' '
, 5 , premieres In Lexmgton
—_ i ' l 3-'
aiflfmzfigmw The 1981 UK graduate has Wt tacky Theatre, the critical judgment estate. Before inheriting the estate, Godzilla-type monster who protects on a feature film. It‘s more of an "3 3.25,
over a year working on his first isoutofhishands. Blandingmustu'avelto'l‘ransylvania Count LaCardo's castle.Curysaidhe education thing." .'
—————— 1:80:31"? {111:1 He 1:110“ his film is “TheEatate,” billedasa “comic and learn who murdered his uncle. It worked for a month in the minute- Since most of the film was shot in '5', 3
s .111 ac ea murder in is ' will ' t arrow ' . segm ' ' , i wi 1
Brian Cury is nervom but confi- But when “The Estate” makes its Norman 8mm, a $33203: ataxia-‘01.n tonigh and tom mght 3:232.“ ent featuring the minfarhilcizl sift: (lickrlatsBi-ooil- f -,‘
dent. world premiere tonight at the Ken- New Jersey who inherits his uncle’s Cury may be the only person to “For the monster sountt. I got a ing's Restaurant. the Transylvania
3 ~ 3.33 g 3 ,4 . ' . ' :5 53 graduate fromUKwithafilmmaking prophylactic, blew it uphalfway and University campus, Spindletop Hall " _'t
,5 3 5. . \3 ' ;’ 5 t ’ ' . t3, degree—amajorofhisowndesign. sankitinatubofwater,"Curysaid. andlexingtonCemetery. ,ii'
. . 33,3, 5 3 33 ,5 ,, “The Estate" was Cury amd produc- “I rubbed it back and forth and then “I've spent the last eight months in ‘35 3 , 3'
' 1..~ 9,255" ,'. 3», 3 tion manager Amy Houvouras' senior tookthetape and played itinreverse New York editing the film," Ctiry “1.33-
3 , " Ii- 5 . ' ' , 5 projectLarry Valentine. who films and slow-motion. And it was exactly said.“lt's reallytediouswork.“ ‘5 3;
5 _ 't 3t" 1933’! ’3 ’ ifi " UK football games, did the thesoundlwanted." The makingof ”The Estate"wasn’t 5‘ 5
'. ~ o - camaawork. Following the tradition established without problems. Although he didn't
(54 Curyaaid“'l‘he Estate."is“aspoof by Hollywood premieres, the stars havetoreshoot any scenes,Curysaid 3.
,3“ ' 5» " ot'smliorrortilnuand'toe detective will arrive at the theatre in a hewasn't happy with mostoftheon- '3 -
l A, 5 ‘5 film" loaded with grotesqueand ex- limousine rented by Cury. Kentucky location sound. 3- ' _'
. " 3. ’ ’ " 3 ,3 . ‘ aggerated diaracta-s. Theatre managerFredMills charged “Mixing (sound) was a bitch," he 3 .
' . . . 5 3 “was. 55 3 “You have the crazed and the marquee above the theatre en- said. “And syncronizing the sound . 3
3,, 3 .5; i 3 ,_ a mother. a pistolcarrying nut who trance to announce the world withthepicture was really tedioin." a 7’
l “r 9} ' ‘ " 5 & -' ' anti up being (Norman) Blanding's premiere of “Brian Guys ‘The He said he had to record 25 different " '
l .4 5' 3g}. ~ ‘3 3 l _ -‘ Y {I aunt in the aid" Cury said. "It has Estate.’ " 3 3 sauna — “Things you never realize . 3 5
33$ . ,- ‘I ,3 4155:2533 ~ the drunken auger from the mo: Cury, who now resides in are in the mowes: footsteps, dine-
_ .553 f? p ' - " r . . who’s still at the some nightclub in Biglewood. NJ. and New York City. sounth, birds chirping, stuff like -_ . ‘
3:33;; 3, 3 .‘ wag; the rm. The town is full of these hasheeninlexingtonforaweekpro— that." , .3
3333 3 5 ,5 l ._33 , ' strange cum." moting “The Estate." Telecable of ”The Estate”isn't Cury‘s first ven- -
33¢“ 5.; , . ' 3 _ 3 E3 . 5 The hour-long film stars Rick Scir— lexington, WKYTChannel 27 and the ture into the world of filmmakim. lie
5,55%: 35-55) - ' . cleasNorman Blandim,theherowho Lexington Herald have interviewed hasmade “abouttoneinekai boxes
_3;:3 7 ‘ , “tr-Mel's from a Woody Allen-type Qiry about his film and he has full" of filrm and video tapes since .
5. . 3 J' 3 ' . 3 . 3 ‘* r' / toe Humphrey Bogart-typeuhegets plutoedtliedtywith posters. ism. '
" 314, 4 3 t , 5“? , camhtup in this web of murder, in- "The Estate" is “totally student- Cury received a grant from the . .
3ft"! .9 33’ ‘ * ' ' ' ' 5 trigueandinsanity,”oirysaid. made. Even at NYU (New York Oswald Foundation, a UK organize .
.344”: ‘-"~ 3 3 _ 3 b t l l . . ' Other stars include Julie Stqlhais. University). it was student-made," tion that offers grants for research 5 3
I. , t ~' ‘ ' i 313% i 3‘. ‘3 5- foiuidar of the Junkyard Players. as ery said. He used NYU‘s editing andcreetivityin fivecategoricrang- _'
l l u 35" l. ; '6 4' t it Undue; the late UKdrama imtructu' facilitia while taking animatlai and ingfmm eciuice to the lumenitia. to
‘ Glories Dicker- ” lawyer hanklin editliuclaseestherelastsemeetc. make“Deydreems."
'. ' z 3.. . ' 3 Thomas Dolittle; Jdin B. Lyneugh, "proximately lOOectorsandcrew “l likettleidsaofm.“hclald. 5
. 5. , ~ ' __ ' 5.... " 5 - 5, owner of Lynagh's beer bar. as Petty rumba-s, all students, volunteered "They're a vista] trip. You wake up
moms/Kuwaiti" the Instunan; and [extrigtai freo- tbdr time for mum of the film. and say, ‘God, what a great deem:
UK filmmaker Brian Cury peers through the camera lens during filming of "1h. 5mm" at the lexington lance “I“, Walter M as the W“ ”Wt I‘m providing to my ”d it'd be a.“ if people 'dhd out ’
Cotmtry Club last spring, as an actor waits for his cue. "The Estate," Cury's first 9.0,”... mm makes in coll“ “Chm- ell-untaisexpertaice."0wyeeid. of my movie lam. 'God. what a
world premiere tonight at the Kentucky Theatre, 214 E. Main St. ' "m9 E'er" “'0 foam O ”WI not My day they get l0 M peat movie.‘ ” ‘
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r -. WW I" the legislature. . Unfeflered lawmakers make lrtfle mess
. .I * “I think (the legislature) has always blam- session began, and only rose to prominence
‘ ~. ; ; ed things on (the governor). This session I when bills concerning them were introduced.
' ‘ ' , predicted early on that we were going to be in In fact, the two most important issues facing U H -.. MR- wKE-R, I MAKE A MOT-I ON I i IAT:
. a different posture because the governor has the state have received only surficial treat~ an i W I
' I: I . always been so much in control. A guy would ment. {OR THE REM AI ”DER OF E SESS‘ ON/ E
g. I ’ . I' go back home and they’d say, ‘Why in the hell The first, ensuring quality education for 6 EN ERA-L ASSEMBLY CHASE. S. I I I N C;
, ~. - did you vote for that issue?’, and the guy Kentuckians of all ages, has received little
I ' would say, ‘Well, the governor made me. He more than lip service, despite exhaustive UPON lTS RIGHT THUMB, BUT HENCEFORTH
I ' wouldn’t give us roads or jobs or he wouldn't studies — particularly by higher education’s
’ , ‘ ‘ . give us this or that if I hadn’t done what he Prichard Committee — intended to prepare 5’ T UPON ITS 45F 7 ”"
_ said.’ . . . We can’t really do that anymore the state’s decision-makers to take badly-
. '.I . _; ’. because he's not really dictating like that . . . needed action as soon as possible.
', i, 7 -' .3 there’s a lot more responsibility (in the Education, on all levels, is mired in a tar pit
" - ' .' 1' s ,. legislature) - so we just have to assume it. " created by too many years Of unguided spen-
~, ' . 'j, ~Rep. Joe Clarke, D-Danville, ding. With the present funding crisis,there is
{'I, y. - in a Feb. 4, 1982 Kernel interview no question that some of the programs set up .
r '. _ during those years will have to be eliminated 8
" ' _' If what Clarke said is true, the 1982 session quickly -— and wisely, if the overall system is
' of the Kentucky General Assembly should to retain some measure of quality.
.1. . , have been exceptionally productive. Indeed, But so far, our legislators have apparently I
- ' asPresident Otis Singletary noted following been satisfied to maintain the status-quo, »
p' ; _ ‘ ‘ ,- yesterday’s meeting of the Board of Trustees, dodging the inevitable paring-back and _ d
' .I ' ' -: it has been lively, but at this late date in the reorganization, particularly of the university IW/Iflf/ v 2‘
. .. . . . . “mm I /////,/.,l>, at
; , I seSSion, it is still unclear what legislation of system, which only they can do. II... /‘/{ , , // Il mum "
f . -. . value it has produced. And the issue behind all issues —— generating will ’/.///// {x/ll II IIIII;......iI M.-
' . Much of the debate in the committees and on more revenue —— has been debated into the . “III III IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII “hf/4’1”!“ ’ III E \
g ' the floors of both houses has not been excep- ground without a whit of action carried , , , . II ‘1’, / ’/// 5:
. I' . . ' 8' tionally noteworthy, but rather, exceptionally through. I/ (W /M ”W I%/// 3
g trivial. Already, there is talk of the need for a / I/ III \ III I II,
Many hours have been spent arguing the special session in 1983 to wrap up the unfinish- ‘ // \/ //~" - .
I” " 'f merits of legislating an athletic rivalry ed business left over by this legislature — /I / . // III/fl ,. ~ "7:111,
I: ’5 5 between UK and the University of Louisville, business so pressing the state will by then be {If/1,, will / I'll; I/I/I/I/I/I/I/III/lc. 9% '
‘. *I enacting stiffer penalties for marijuana suffering the effects of inaction. Perhaps it I’M/’7 // l I // I“! III/II
'- if f f- cultivation without providing for their en- wasn’t such a bad thing to have a governor II II/ III //I/ I I ,/ I I‘ l/
forcement and limiting the right of women to serving in a semi-dictatorial role, ensuring / I ‘/ M II I; i/ //,,/.
j i" .. control their biological lives. that what needed to be done was done when it ' /II/ I II/I'I' III/III II //Il/II,“////////,,,, 1"
. ,v ~ . None of these were major issues when the hadtobedone. ' I' I " I ' '
"‘ " ‘ It is better to abstain when choice is between two rongs
. r1 I' The Umted States, being what it is, On Sunday evening, ABC News for the Duarte regime will have came to power. If nothing else, it Salvador, we can at least reduce the pour men and arms into El Salvador
_ g . , L . -' would be better served if El Salvador reported a massacre in El Salvador. several effects, all of them beneficial. would probably shorten the war; the slaughter. for years, yet shortof actual military
-, . I' , remained a noncommunist country. Shown to the site by the guerrillas, It would force the regime in power to US. has admitted that the govern- American military support for a occupation, ebuld never win the war
. . But what are the limits? We have so several human skulls (with no bodies either moderate or accept certain ment cannot retain power without foreign regime involved in a civil war for the Duarte regime. Americans
if,” ; 5. far avoided the question that must be attached — the victims of beheading) defeat. It could strengthen the cur- American aid. can be justified only if one vital cannot win El Salvador’s civil war-
;‘II. :- ‘I ' asked: At what point do an antl- were present, many of them the skulls rently weak moderate forces as the criterion can be met: The supported only Salvadorans candothat. ’
' .—.~‘ I _ I communist regimes’ actions become of children. The guerrillas alleged radical right weakens. If that brings the communists to government must have thecapability It’s perfectly legitimate fortheU.S.
, . y 'I - so reprehensible thatwe wouldbe bet- that this was the work of government It might weaken the insurgents who power, that is unfortunate. But the to win the support of its people once to take sides in the war, but if we can
I" ter off withthecommunists in power? troops, but were unable to offer any gain moral backing and political U.S. managed to prolongthekilling in given a respite from insurgent find no better side to take than the
In ~ . _ proof. power by opposing the US. It would Vietnam for years, and the com- pressure. This test the Duarte regime Duarte regime, we'd do better not to ,
. j . I7 >1 . If the guerrillas didn’t prove that allow the US. toopen ties with the in- munists cametopower there anyway. cannot meet. take sides at 311,
- .- I' . " theIgovernment troops committedIthe surgents, giving us more leverage Ifwe don’t have the powertokeep the The regime doesn’t seem to even Dana Picois agraduate student in the
I_ killings, the government certainly With the leftists when they finally communists from winning in El care to try. The United States could Patterson School ofoipiomacy;
.... as“: “m... - -
*‘ Pico . . I
=.-_ ‘ demed the allegation. But the guer- D you f e I the best pe so
‘; , . rillas didn‘t really have to prove the reams. rs m mln ma r n WI"
I'- . , -- The question is "01. Of course, that story. So many atrocities have been
I'.-._I'- ‘; Slmple- We haVe no way 0f knowmg committed and so much of the Spring is springing, and the time to compared to the tension of going madeajoke about freezing upinfront Although their facial expressions dif-
; I; .{1 j ; . I‘ Just Iwhat the Character 0f the com- evidence points to the government choose next year’s Kernel editor is before the editorial board for an inter- of the board, while reminding myself fered. I could see the fright in that
M ,3, 1.5 mumst regime in El Salvador would that most people will simply accept upon us. view. With the other three candidates, that my candidacy was probably a eyes.
; 5‘: be should the Innsurgents come Ito thisasthetruth. It most likely is. It’s difficult to believe that my term I sat in the basement of the Student long shot anyway — it would be no Then. the adviser announced next
2"" I- "'3. 7 power. The Umle States could In- The government forces cannot win. is almost over. I have no trouble Center on April Fool’s evening mak- yeat personal tragedy if I weren’t year’s editorwouldbe—me.
. I - :3 I": 5’ - crease the chances I‘ but n0t No government can expect to win the remembering where l was just about ing stilted small talk while waiting chosen, and I had no reason to doubt My fear subsided and 88“? way ‘0 '
'I,- _: '3‘2‘. guarantee) that the leftist Insurgents support of its people if it kills them in- this time last year — sitting in this my turn for 15 minutes of intensive that whoever won, my next year on near hysteria. [felt as if 30" Barker
.1; would be has h9shle lathe U-S- and discnminately. Rather. the govem- same room trying to decide whether grilling by the directors, who were the Kernel wouldbeworthwhile. had just told me to “come on down."
. ’-~.' less strongly aligned with Cuba and ment creates new rebels everytime it or not to make a go for it. As a mere assembledinaroom down the hall. So I leaned back, loosened up and and, 88 I recall, 1 reacted just 35
‘. , (If ,I the USS-R- by (”0?le ltSI support slaughters an innocent person who One-year veteran of the newspaper up plowed ahead, answering each ques- foolishly as any middle-aged accoun-
"I' ,2 f for the current military JUhV’Il- It has the misfortune of being in the against some apparently better- ' tionasdirectlyaslcouldtothebestof tent on his first trip to LA. I broke
., 3:3", ', would herel'lhehSS be hlShl)’ unlikely way. qualified old-timers, I knew the com- . my knowledge. It was over before I from thelineup and rushed forward to
-I ‘ v. that the insurgents would ever be as Apparantly the government either petition would be tough, but knew it, and the editor led me back shake hands left and right, dunking
2' , ". ‘1‘,- friendly to the US. as the current doesn’t want to win (since it keeps on something -— egotism, megalomania 3‘" down the hallway and collared the the directors and promising to do a
, .-I.- Is,‘ , regime is now. . killing) or it behevfi that the United or perhaps a real desire to make what Stelden next candidate, good job. If I had a tail, it would have
f'. IYet the current regime may be a States is so fanatically anti- I believed to be some much-needed Abouta half-hour later he returned been wagging furiously — I think I
*xI'I friend that we cannot afford and communist that it will support improvements — compelled me to tolead all four of is back beforethe was justatadtoooverjoyed.
, 3 Shomd "03 want. The Al'm)’ NBS the anybody against communist in- give itatry. After 45 minutes of churning but- board for the announcement of the As soon as I finished my apprecia-
$11.5: .. ,;\I L" _.' government rather than the reverse. surgents regardlas of their behavior. In any case, I spent the next week terflies. the moment of truth was final decision. Suddenly, I felt ill tions, theeditor grabbed my shoulde-
,.; I" -3".‘I; Arm)’ UhIllS run rampantly across the If it doesn’t want to win, then we staying Up all night writing my editor upon me. The editor swaggered down, again, and this time it didn’t go away. again, intending to hustle me back to
; )I :I.I-_I, countrySideI. Unable to do battle suc- must withdraw ”support—there is proposal — an intensely-detailed 40 took me by the shoulder and led me My mind was working in reverse, tell- the office for a quick interview to ap-
'.t s CSSfully Wlth the guerrillas, the Ar- no good reason to back people who Page document—and,worntoa fraz- into the meeting room. Leaving me ing me I would never get over my pear in the next day's edition. As I
'l. ,I,-, I. my turns its weapons on the want to lose. [fit believes that it will zle, I finally delivered it to thefaculty seated at the head of the table around disappointment iflwasn't chosen. was led smiling out the door, 1 hap-
1"," ,I .:I :i' bystanders; thousands of people not have our support regardless of its ac- adviser about an hour after deadline which the directors were gathered, he Up0n entering the board room, we pened to catch the eye of one of my
’I. , . a: 1“: involved in any fighting have been tions, then we mustwithdrawoursup- date. I was committed — if not com- resumed his place and the interview were stood up against the back wall defeated opponents — the one I
. ~; g-I. ', ., slaughtered. and most of the evidence port _ American policy must not be a pletely in my mind, by my actions. began. as though in a police lineup awaiting thought was surebet to win.
, if», ,I 3*" points towarditbeing the government slave to any tinhorn dictator that The next hurdle, however, came lcan’t for the life of me remember identification, which only served to It was then I realized what it must
If: ~~‘, . 'I,‘ 'I IU'OOPS that are d0lh8 the slaughter- comes along. close to shaking that commitment. the first question, directed to me by increase the tension. feel like to be on the other end. EVE
,' In'I‘l mg. Withdrawal of American support Dreaming “pa proposal was nothing the adviser.A1llrecall is being swept The adviser made the expected since then, I've felt 8 "0992:8931”
5.4. I, ;.;'I»-,.-"{ by a wave of nausea and finding it short preamble, commend n 01' guilt whenever I recall ‘ mo-
_".I 1'. ., III,~I'.I BLmM COUNTY by Berke Bream hard to resist the urge to rush from the overall fine quality of ntl'gie ugh- ment -— I realized somebody else's
g-I. .‘~': I ' theroom. lstuttered. lstammered.l didates and the difficulty the board dreams died, at least temporarily.
“ , mgfl‘ggfio YA LOOK 50% mm, SOTHEMROCKN m minim. was making a fool of myself, and I encounteredinmakingadecision. whenmlnewerefulfilled. Andlknow
II I~‘ ', s: gadget Aeanwgem A MIGHT mwwg W5 RAISEDA' Wigs 'Tl‘llNT LOST, “£2,128 sudden] the _ Iti looked around at my com- it hadtohurt.
III , I.II.,I III, mm smvepmmsms m,” Bull 308. RUCKUS 5+ We . LOSTHISMOla, Etta-.608. me it y an: I plinth; c1123 mfl‘o lllny right mufithm Journallen’i‘ Sonic; Bill (Stallion is
If - 135'- R.‘ mum NIGHT 600%. /~.‘- 7’ %%p LASTINEHT. gtfflfi “P0“ . P“s - S was y-panicked . editor-in-c lefoft Kerrie
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