xt7bnz80p447 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bnz80p447/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-09-16 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 16, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 16, 1982 1982 1982-09-16 2020 true xt7bnz80p447 section xt7bnz80p447 W
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C 1 4‘ 5“? Telltale.
‘. .' V ‘l‘i/‘ ' A’ At a time when many cultural tradi-
j , ”J .\" tions seem to be disappearing from
ii _ \- D " ‘ our lives, it's refreshing to be given
. ‘ :0 ,‘LJ/ 1'; the opportunity to observe and par-
1 a )5" " ticipate in a demonstration of some
t, , ‘ often-ignored talent. See page 4 for
1‘ ’ M4“ " . , ‘ details on Louisville's upcoming sto-
HQ? _% 3A4 rytelling festival.
‘—_—__.______Ce W..__~_i___..-vw w _,____4W________ ____ ~ ' ’ r.- (2
Vol. LXXXV, No. 27 Thursday, September 16, 1982 An Independent student newspaper University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
CH E t0 consider dental adm'ss'o S I. -t
“'0'“ Steffandere Reports WOUld be appropriate to reduce the based largely on the state’s dentist- producing nearly four times the na- requirements for admission to Ken- committee as to what is good basic
enrollment 0f the two schOOIS be- to-population ratio. tional average of dentists. tucky public colleges. preparation for the college-bound
__ tween 110and 114-, . He said there are several factors Peterson said the study did not ad- The committee agreed to hold studentinKentucky.”
Th ta Co _ . The committees recommendation that could not be determined. includ- dress the issue of maldistribution of hearings and take wide-ranging President Otis Singletary advised
. e s te mm! on Higher Edu- Same as no_ surprise to Bosomworth. ing the dental health needs of Ken- dentists. Statistics show there are input into the proposed standards the committee that the issue might
cation Programs Committee yester- We were involved With and under- tuckians. their willingness to see a more dentists in urban areas than in before taking final action in Decem- delay stricter standards for UK
day recommended an enrollment stood the CHEs stand onreductlon. dentist or their ability to pay for rural sections, where the need is her. freshmen. These had been tenta-
limit on dental schools 'at UK and We anticipated. the committee’s rec- dental services. ' greater at the present time, Peta- The standards, developed by a tively scheduled to go into effect
the UmverSity of Louisvflle for Fall ommendation. He said, however, “It is our best son said. committee appointed by Harry next year.
1%3. _ _ This semester‘s enrollment was opinion that the state is producing “We accepted the fact a maldistri- Snyder, the council's executive di- Singletary said he wants to study
The Committee voted 4—1, With one approitimently a 25 percent reduc- more graduates than it needs to bution exists in Kentucky, but the rector, would require incoming stu- the final guidelines approved by the
abstention. to recommend that the tion, he said. lomswile’s dental serve the population it has." Council on Higher Education has dents to have 20 units of high school councn before approving the UK
combined number of beginning den- school accepted 66, and UK enrolled Angela Ford, a committee mem~ little or no influence on where den- subjects, including some specified standards.
tal students not exceed 1L0 by the 47. . her, abstained from voting, saying tists choose to practice," Peterson courses. He said that would be preferable
fall of 1983. The proposal Will now be “We have already taken action to she was concerned if there existed said. Deputy Council director Robert to implementing standards on the
conSldered bythecouncfl. . meet (the CHE’S) objectives,” 80- adequate proof of an actual shortage He said distribution is an issue Sexton said universities will have school level and then having to mod-
Dr. Peter Bosomworth, medical soniworth said. He said he expects of dentists that would have to be addressed the flexibility to provide conditions ify them the following year.
center chancellor, said the UniverSI- UKs enrollment to drop to 45 stu- However, Dr. William Worthing- jointly by the council, the Cabinet that, would allow admission for stu- “We are not looking at the ques—
ty has been working to reduce the dents next fall. _ ton of Louisville, head of the Ken- for Human Resources. the Kentucky dents who have not met the require- tion of admitting students for next
dentalsschool enrollment. . . Roy Peterson, deputy director of tucky Board of Dentistry, said he Dental Association and other inter- ments. fall,” Singletary said. “I would pre-
We have. been in discusswn With academic affairs for the council, thought the reductions did not go far tasted groups. Lois Weinberg, head of the com- fer to do it in a more orderly fashion
thet Ltlmversity of Louisvflle for the presented a staff report that said the enough. . ‘ The Programs Committee also en- mittee that drafted the proposed re- than jump in and get something in
”85 W0 years, Bosomworth said. statehad an oversupply of dentists. Worthington sald that even With dorsed and approved. in principle, quirements, said, “They are the best place next year and then have to
Several months 880, we dec1ded it . Peterson said the concluSlon was the reductions, Kentucky Will still be recommendations for new minimum thinking by the members of the change.”
-/- ‘*» 4 THURS
,,/~, - ~.., ~ DAY
,-«/ \ r ‘
, 2’ / _,:\ fig 3 From Associated Press reports
r. J / \ \ ‘ '
. . .«c . ' i, State refuses to reveal ski resort ns
4 .2“ . ~. f" ,
\ / ‘ ' 3 ~ ‘ 9., " ‘ ‘g -\ ; FRANKFORT - Commerce Secretary Bruce Lunsford said
My“ l" t : ~ ‘ ' f“, 5 .. yesterday it would be imprudent to disclose the state's
,. I ,.«"'/ a, i i; . 9 i M, 4-;- E ‘ ' \ plans for a bankrupt ski resort at General Butler State Re~
‘71”? . h ‘ § 3 23‘ . t . Q“ '5 f . - , .l E a l sort Park until a court decides the matter tomorrow.
_ .'- ’ M ' . ; ll 5 i. gt. M ‘ .5 ,- .. ‘ W He made the statement while fending off numerous
v__ ‘ a i t .x i x .3? .i s g. E l 2’ ' ‘. a . - .i ' .', ffi questions by members of the Capital Construction and
' ‘ a i; ii: l. - - L ll“: g; ., ii g . . " i ! - ‘ Equipment Purchase Oversight Committee.
, _ x . ,1ng ti if: i :1 g is w ’ MM i N ‘ 1 Lunsford denied flatly that the state is going to try to
. -. ”1341.. 1“ ~‘- in W "" E l , . M _ >_ » ' - bail out private investors of Northbank Ski Partners, the de-
h‘ M; . . M M " : l - :’ . -. ,3. l velopers who built the ski area on land leased from the
. is "a. . e , . " . l l l M = i . .5 l I XIme IML: , “-3 :l Commonwealth in the park near Carrollton.
e ‘8 w ‘ ‘ , .4 . . ‘ ' . t , , "There is no such intent . . . in no way, shape or form,"
_ '- 2‘ ti; - E . g“ i‘ ' . -- «a, ' l; . 5 Lunsford said when Sen. Ed O'Daniel, D-Springfield, men-
i. i . ( l ' a) » ‘ ‘1: , tioned the reports.
' ‘_ , a Q 9 t 5; l The state Parks Department, which is under the Com-
. __ is ; M , M , in :I . M L L... t; X“ g l T‘erciCabinet, hgs been appointed permanent receivefr for
. . ‘ E ; m “A . : l t as l resort on. plans to reopen it to try to pay of the
. ~ t“- >.; . 5 I millions of dollars in debts.
. = ‘ 3. :1 LE XWN :1: _ l A hearing is scheduled in Carroll CirCUit Court tomor.
. ~, “ t ‘ ~ . , row, when the state is supposed to reveal what it will do as
\é . * if _ I receiver. .
i \ ~ ‘ M ‘_ ‘ Bankers support cross-county banking
. ‘ . 1‘ “ "R LOUISVILLE — The Kentucky Bankers Association re-
“ "’ ~41"? . , V. we“ 1 «“ . .. versed itself and adopted a resolution supporting banking
» . . N’wétrgatg;‘wfif ‘ ,eg '” ‘ across county lines.
“A,“ ,“vmomywsw ,3 The vote was l69-9O Tuesday on the proposal. The KBA
‘ also passed resolutions favoring the deregulation of interest
The. Lexington Trolley (20., a non-profit organization, unveiled the ice Monday and will run a full circuit from the Lexington Center l '9'” on loans in Kentucky and for merger mm the Progres-
City 5 new trolley yesterday. The remodeled bus will begin serv- along Vine and Main streets, then back to Triangle Park. S'Ve Bankers Assocmtion.
E One year ago, the association had voted down by a
WWWWWWWWW . 7 W . . . .. .WWWWW....—WW—~—- ,,,,Vw ,,,.,A_d__ ,,_ wide margin any change in the low to permit a bank to own
I I . others across county lines.
r0 ey to e In se rVIc I n do W n to W" Shortly afterwards, the PBA was formed to push for the
issue in the 1982 Legislature, but that drive failed by one
vote during the session.
—_______ Street, then to Woodland Avenue, Don Webb, 3 Lexington developer Three private organizations. the . '
By BRIANCALNON MainStreetandbacktothepark. and one of the trolley’s prime spon- Stems Co., the Knight Foundation The bonkers Stal‘d now does”? Change the state law
Reporter ' There will be no fare, and riders sors, said the Lexington Trolley Co. and Vine Center. a group of Lexing- b°”'"9 ”Ch exponSion. 8‘” Gov. JOh" Y‘ Brown, who had
can board and debark from the car grew out of a concept developed ton businessmen. assumed 10 per- Supported the Proposed change before the General Assem'
W at any poinltlalonhgritsroplte. 11 about two years ago by then Mayor cent of the trolleys‘ cost. The rest bly, indicated that the issue could be included in a call for a
. . . . Eventua y. t ee ot er cars Wi James Amato, who set up a task was financed with federal Urban - ll - l y - l t ,
baAkg'meldmd 233d 9181);“? $ t: bebroughtintoservice. force of local businessmen to deal Mass Transit funds. Spec“) 69's 0 we sess'on ear y "ex year
c oun an an 0 -88 on Many of the trolley’s supporters with Lexington‘s problems. The cost of operating the trolleys - -
(gill/8118’? crponing “My Olioléeptuctltrly were {resent at the unveiling cere- One of the task force‘s major pro ‘15 covered by urban funds and tax Brezhnev unVOIIS M’deastm Plan
ome 5'3 a nostalgic m or e mon . held at the corner of Main . , , .' deductible donat'ons su lied b . . - .
unveiling of the Lexington Trolley and lll/oodland. Some were treated to Jeets‘ a. study Of Lexmgtons traffic local businesseslbusinesspi’iien and MOSCOW * Pre5ident Le°md " B'eZhnev Imd out a 5"“
Company’s first trolley car mt“, abriefrideinthecar. snarl, indicated a shuttle service otherprofessionals,Webbsaid. pount plan yesterday for bringing lasting peace to the Mid»
dial)"h _ 01‘” hi ed t “It was so comfortable," said one dgingwiezbzzttidriay 0f relievmg 'l‘he Lexington Trolley Company is die East - based on creation of an independent Palestinian
e car iS an -85 on we rider. “1 justloved it." , - a non-profit organization in cooper- state in the West Bank of the Jordan River and the Gaza
styled 8ft? the famous trolleys 0t “It‘s special,"added another. Webb 581d some members 0f the ation with Lex'l‘ran, which will pro- Strip
San FPBMISCO- “Bide are old-style “It will add a lot to Lexington — a [35" force observed an “Prat“ vide the manpower to operate the i 4 . ,
wooden benches and leaflier ceiling little class,“ said Mayor Scotty "0“” Sys‘em “"1119 attending .‘he trolleys as well as handling all the ,, Blemne‘.’ 9°”?d Pres'de'." Re°9°ns M'd°°s' peoce pm"
straps. However, modem-day com- Baesler. who presided over the un- 1980 SEC tournament in Birmmg- maintenance.hesaid. basically Vicious for denying the Palestinians the right to
forts, including air-conditioning. are veiling. “Once we see the trolley, mm'dma' f—bafidmg more: SUPPOFUO :‘We hope that the people can go on independent notion. Reagan has proposed establishment
“0t neglected. . . . we'll see Why we all enjoy living toedeiea 3m ”“3"‘3 su a serVice downtown, leave their cars and sim- of a Palestinian state in association with Jordan, incorporat-
The trolley'wfll begin operation here.” ng ‘ ply hop on a trolley." said Brad ing territory now occupied by Israel.
Monday, "1an from 9 a.m. t0_5 “The addition of the trolleys is The cars themselves were con- Cowgill.thecompany'ssecretary. The Soviet leader called for o soverei n Palesti - , t
pm. Its sponsors said the route will something a little different and structed by an Orlando, Fla, com- “That's the beauty of it." Baesler . g . . man s a e
b98111 8t Triangle Park 0“ Vine that’s Why Lexington is a little dif- pany and cost around $65,000 apiece. said. "You can get on it and ride °" lands '° be ”fined by "‘9 Israel's' Spec'f'cany lhe West
Street, proceed to Old Vine/Central ferent,"he said. he said. anywhere." Bank and the Gaza Strip. He said Palestinian refugees must
. - . I . . . be given the opportunity to return to their former homes or
OfiIclalS redlct increases in Universn enrollment
In addition, Brezhnev said, the Arab eastern sector of
__ ment.shesaid, nary enrollment {103%. but final The medical college-by-college .lerusolem must be returned to‘the Arabs "and become on
By minionnson Sept. 17 is the deadline for re- enmnment figures for an colleges breakdown of last fall‘s enrollments inseparable pori of the Palestinian state- Free access 0* be-
SeniorStaffWrite- instatement of students who have will be released by his office around compared to present preliminary lievers to the holy shrines of the three religions must be
not yet paid theirfees. . Oct. 15, figures is as follows: ensured in the whole of Jerusalem."
___________ Charles Wethington, community . . , oCollege of Medicine—819to 847;
college chancellor. estimated that UK maintains community colleges . College of Dentistry _ 52 to
Pine] airollment figures for the overall community college enroll~ at 14 locations. , 243; /
Umversity‘s main campm. commu- merit will increase by more than 7 According to Carl Delabar. W181 . College of Pharmacy _ 351 to
nity college, and medical colleges percent from about ”.370 commu- assistant ‘07 met and finance to 339; ’ ’
may reflect mixed trench. according nity college students last year. the medical center Chancel” ‘8‘?" - College of Nursing—382mm;
to admmistrators' preliminary esti- “We expect increases at all col- ""9 figures show 8 3118'“ increase In . College of Allied Health Profes- WEATHER
mates. leges," he said. “I think the overall enrollment among the ”neg“ 0‘ sions —382 to 405.
Main campta enrollment is ex- economic climate has had a consid- medicme. dentistry, pharmacy. Delabar attributed the largest in-
‘ pected to decline about 2 percent erable impact.” hilt-91118 and allied health Wtfi' crease _ 51 students in the College
tfli‘Bmtliist year to agipronmgtdy 2!; Wethington said he thinks the two- 5'0“ of Nursing to the addition of a
s uden s, eccor ng to can Mc- year occupational training programs The current total is 2.87. mm four-year generic nursing prop-am.
Cauley, director for planning and available at community colleges ap- pared to 2,186 last year. Previously there was a “2 pits 2" “TodLydwlll h. partly cloudy and cooler "l”. . M.“ M
policy analysis. pea] to many people, whether they Delabar said the count represents nursing trogram. in which students ' . m h to upper 1°"
.. Final figure will be announced want prepare for a specific job or the number of students taking who obtained twoyear associate “MOM will 5. PCFNY “OWN 50‘ “’0' With 0 '0‘" '0
. -. argund the second week in Octo- upgrade their existing knowledge classes in the medical colleges. lt arts degrees and then became regis- the low to middle 50:.
her after the pace period for non- and skill. . . . excludes part-time students and tered nurses could participate in a Tomorrow wlll be partly sunny and cool with a high
payment of fees has aided and offl- He said some mdmdual commu- nursing and allied health students two-year bachelor of sctence nursing In 9... mlddle 1°,
cials can accurately assess airoll- nity colleges may release prelimi- taking classes in other colleges. program. °

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Sudden deaths p ov'de easo f0 th ht

Journalists, by virtue of the work they do, The second had as its subject a 34-year-old
are somewhat dispassionate about the every- father of two. Criticized by his enemies as a
day events that make up news. The fury of ruthless streetfighter, he was nevertheless
weather, the nuances of city politics, the rig- so revered by his peers that he was nine
ors of daily life and the occurrences in days from his inauguration as president of a
places far away are measured not by their war-torn,battle—scarred country. .
importance or their effects, but in how much He lived in peril’s shadow. Two years ago, 4
space will be needed in the paper, or how his lB-month-old daughter was murdered in E
much time will be needed on radio or video- an explosion meant to take his own life. One 9.
tape, to tell people about them. year earlier, another bomb intended to kill g
On Tuesday, the dispassionate journalists him was defused. L:
who work in the world‘s news media sat at His election as president was viewed by °
their desks, determining their spaces and diplomats as a sign of healing within the / :
times. Much had happened: The pope was country’s two politically and secularly op- , C
making preparations to meet the leader of posed groups, and it also reinforced his na- l ‘
the world’s most ferocious terrorist group; tion’s and party’s delicate relationship with , = ' , ,
bad weather had inundated parts of the con- its neighbor to the south. \'//
tinental United States, and the pilot of a jet- And the third was about a woman, 52, i
liner was reliving his ill-fated decision to whose fame spanned the world, and who, a
land the troubled craft. generation ago, hypnotized both the leading 1 Cl l k
And then three stories, each coming within men of Hollywood and the common men of ‘. C
minutes of one another, permeated briefly Main Street with her luminous smile and ,'
the sterile atmosphere of the world’s news- sparkling blue eyes. ‘t
. . . . i . V” ‘\
rooms, and forced the Journalists to ponder Her family, steeped in the tradition of the e/ V
momentarily the fragility of our most natu- theater, opposed her entry into dramatics, '1’) 'I/ \ —-—
ral resource—life. but she persisted in her rise to stardom until . ’K
The first story had as its subject a silver- she received the highest attainable honor —a 31/"
haired, 49-year-old novelist who four years gold-plated statue barelyafoot tall. "
ago devoted his prolific talents to teaching At 26, though, she abandoned her career
college students the art of creative writing. and moved to the French Riviera, where she W"
His literary life overflowed with brilliant shared a home and a marriage with the I ..
works written in a uniquely artful vein, ruler of the world’s second smallest state. i 7 '
learned by studying the classics and trans- Her life, she recently remarked, had not .
lating Old and Middle English texts. His pur- been less fulfilling because of her decision. ;;
pose as a novelist, he once said, was “to “That certainly is not the case,” she said.
make people good by choice.” That philoso- “Rather, the reverse.” i
phy was apparent in the characters, plots Three stories, about above-average people. , I;
and themes of his best-selling novels. That they were written somehow lessens , .
His love for his craft also led him to found the beauty and the majestic worth of our «2
a magazine to discover, in his words, “the planet. We mourn, along with the world, 4%
famous writers and artists of the future.” their writing.
5 "flab: _ ® I I . :' i}
x 00 a db st Ia escoal e a s
Ml l C x... m n U U I l n
l — :77
a 1.: W
l l .1be In .1933 Malcolm Ross’s Machine re-energized by World War Il’s_im- the down side of the economic cycle May of this year. The spot market we
‘ l.l ll § l We“. Are in the Hills described the tragic mense boom and for nearly eight struck in 1948. The 19503 and early virtually collapsed and long-term g
w, ‘2 \V \2", l H (i. fionsequences of a glutted coal mar- years there whas cow?! passes 1fhor sixties be“; as stark as the times contracts became hard to negotiate.
' ‘ ‘. , l or e - _ prospen y In 6 60011 W- e descri' Ross. Prices fell and lay-offs spread. : ,
fl 3-: $1, ‘ yi‘ He toured Appalachia when the orders for coal were plentiful, prices Neither coal operators nor state About 30 percent of all United Mine ,5
, fl --: 1W \j: l boom and bust cycle that has always _— governors pay much attention to Wm are now jobless and the of. , g
- ' ,_7 :50 W l , l ?\y plagued 0081 had 1’08.de 8 nadir in such observers as Malcolm Ross, ficial unemployment rate in eastern 5'
f—[@ . . . the Great Depresswn; On every _ , ”My and when the Arab states embar- Kentucky stands at 14.9 percent. In W
. t} I hand for hundreds of miles stood the ~ " . . goed oil shipments to the United some counties it is much higher:
) {15‘ : . rlstlng and rotting impediments of a ___g 2%? ‘ C A UDII. I. States in 1973 heady talk was heard Knott, 5.3 percent; Letcher, 2.7
Filly! , fl ,‘l;l vastly overgrown industry: attire e ._ in the land. Richard Nixon called for percent; and Harlan, 19.7 percent.
,Jzit‘ i - , fl *) 4:, towtnstof decayl'lng n’lililinerfif shantaes, - '* - a Prolect Inglepm to double Nor is lelelf‘sl: méhhzmee iigeeulfs
’7’ ‘7" ‘ ’ 3b 1'15 y W es, one es 81 - a- ____——____———— American co ion. Gaald ago, J.L. ac n, ' an o e
l.!__‘!‘.\ W l!@, @ ckedldcocglalgondglas, hugeofheapsegf rosie, wages went up and workers Ford wanted output of the fuel to Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank
\’ - ,, is! W unso , an swarms ragg , an their families ate well. Opera- rise 10 percent annually. James and a coal operator, told a Lexing-
e MGeoKie [8 n 11' AGAIN Monet... ties am us out mvtiew FUNDeD betel: " hungry and bewildered people- tors raked in abundant profits that a Schlesinger, Jimmy Carter's Energy ton group, “I don’t see anything
maniac!) ctliY W lilo “9’8 GOING'KSQND UP IN rt..." A decade later the coal fields were few preserved and most lost when Secretary, said, “Coal is our black very promising in the coal indistry
hope.” in the next 18 months to two years.”
J I. h Id Ink h a As a result of these goings on the In Alril, Chase Econometrics re-
inevitabie happened. There were leased a study that puts Kentucky at
ourna ISts s 0“ act I e “mans, “at manhlnes murmurs about “a boom that would the bottom of the heap in the eco-
last from now on" — through time nomic sense. It ranks at the bottom
. . toetern't.Coalwouldrunom'tl fth f‘ft tat , ' tbes'dew t
“Time we nemwy voices, and increasms numbers — and haunted bery.” There is a difference between with humans in creative ones. They mills allldy electric plants. It will; girgifiial. y s as ugh I es
some belong to journalists. When y comtemporary questions “91.!” valuable, off-beat. observation an." cannot laugh 0‘: cl'y 0? Bet irritated displace oil in plastics, dyes, paints What will a couple of years of se-
they me interrupted o, stilled. we answers. Journalists are realizing contrived observation. If the news is at the water dripping into the_bathr- and chemiealg It would be turned vere depression do to our hill coun-
suffer to”. and suffer more if, with that objectiVity cannot and should not confined to the facts, then it is momsmklnthenilddleofthenight. into gasoline for our cars and gas try? if past experience is a guide.
passing time, events which require not. always accompany fairness in certainly responSlbletothem. Unless journalists stop trying to for our furnaces. we were moving the lrospects are grim: Mass repos- ,
”new, ammo" “unobserved" their stories. If the Delaware County Times de- write as automatons, we will fail into a coal-fired world and produc- session of defaulted Big Mack
_ There is an emerging acceptance cides to convert to a flashy tabloid ourselves and our readers. Machines tion would grow exponentially at 7 to trucks, cars and home trailers, hun-
Michael Klrlchorn in the professwn that journalists are to boost circulation, who is to say have always made better machines 10 percent annually. dreds (perhaps thousancb) of home
"The Virtuous Journalist" people commumcatmg With people that, as long as it sticks to the facts, than have people. Mechanically, un- In this intoxicating atmosphere mortgage foreclosures and clogged
through machines, not as machines. even from different vantage points, emotionally, journalists are dispens- men were strangely moved From bankruptcy dockets.
. . The reader can identify and compre- itiSbad? able. Personally, we are not. AS ‘30 everywhere personages descended Other occurances will be long
Journalists are like grandfathers: bend a human more easily than a In the end, the difference is the Kirkhom’s version of the Virtuous on the coal counties with man to ues of ple waiting for federal
M °‘ special “mm" and We" COumer- hidins behind something you’re not. Journalist and the speaker men- invest Th included banekyers quhanedouts olfegheese beans and dried
day after day to the same 01d audi- corruption and hope over and over, tion,machines havenovoice. at least 'a corug'l‘e of retired New demographic turmoil as pmple'
eneee They are hum" and “there Robbie whether you‘re Grandpa Joe or the In his report on the American Bar York co and no end of Texas oil leave in serach of nonexistent jobs 7
:lzi-eailli‘iiobjeccmtmivequagntlilgyeihresflow . 6 Delay Priesshlyourtobest contribution Association Convention on Aug. 8, men. Alla. wanted “a position in and severe fiscal shortfalls in the
- ' lS ma e 8 , . ' ' ' ” .
.. . n... .. .. .... .. wt “'8" ...... - ° "'5 "‘7" tees" teammates some me . .......... crew samurai:
those journalists Still smug in the h «a i When the National Enquirer de- clashed over ethics. One lawyer at For nearl a decade the - eneral all-peat to other climes b
shadow °f the inverted pyramid and —-—-——— clares there is a new cure for can- the convention warned journalists ed Wage); reached $100 y P38 5mm“, oil t oons who will hay:
their own ideals of detachment: But If “Lou Grant,” the now defunct oer, it pretends to be telling the that, “If alleged abises are not cor- 2:1 thoisands of out-migrantpsacami learned that my: and petroleum are
more than ever, the u'end_eeeln§ to CBS television program, made us all truth. When Hunte- Thompson rected, the public may demand re- “backhome " an unhealthy mix and a mighty
be away from stiff traditionallsm appreciate this a little more with its writes an article titled “The Ken- peal of the FirstAmendment." Mobile homes were the miners’ clamor for fillet-zed welfare pro- , "
and toward the style of Journalism believable characters and inno- tucky Derby is decadent and de- In itself, this suggestion is ridicu- only hope to, that, and they gm
apoused by 909?]? “Ch 85 Hunta- cence, it has served a valuable pur- prayed" — though his conclusion Ious because the First Amendment mata'ialized by the thouands, then All this will bring the media to re- :
’lhompeon and justified by "”59 like pose. may be questionable — he is at once is for the public first and foremost. tong of “month, Homes were built port on the region’s poverty as in
Kirkhorn. _ , . It seems, after all, more unfair to admitting his bias and making a The press gets second dibs. Free- by the more effluent __ many thou. the 1980s It will send geiemig'tg and
‘Journallsm 18 W0“ from the pass off a necessary perspective as newstory outofanoldone. dom of speech, freedom to know is sands ofthem and the best in the re- teehhologigtg to the drawing boards
facts, not confined to them writes the whole truth than to acknowledge The Journal of Communication ours firstasU.S.citizens. gioh'g higtory Misguided all men to oduce a new eneration of
”Wm 3" ”31mm "“550” 0‘ it as the truth only through the Management. in a short piece on Not every story must or should be raised immense new tipples (2’. so pr-eff'ci t machinis to replace
mm ‘9 the WWW- ”? is uniquelyehaped eyes of the report- Speechwritins. says. “A speech can a venture in soft prose. or com. least one of them with a waterless uo’fiisémfi“ miners when “good
"mm“ “elm“ by “ab", “3“”, er. In the increasingly srey issues of be a masterpiece of rhetoric and topheavy news stories have their wuhing plant)! The new invest- times" return Politicians will
technology or pompous professmnal- the times, is it not more truthful to reason and yet fall short of the mark place among the fundamentals of meotg in mines machines plmts blame me another for the m and " 1'.
ism. Oneisreminded that the moral admit thegrayness? ifit failstoreflectthespeaku’s per- journalism. So too however does trucks railroad, ' git, homeg’ scarce] a goul will venture a iii
reach and civilizing effect 0f journa' Of course, there is no place for spective.” perspective journ'fljsm, perhaps and cars mint hawfiched ‘1 up unnatyuwaway out 5.;
llsm have been established by the fabrication such as that found in the 'lhat more and more composing more so than what has been writtal lion In truth there may be no way out $1
oftui W" accomplishments ““0““ Enquirer, which, as ' fa” room "RN03!” are being replaced todate. The gross gave these tbvel- of east Kentucky's old and ruinom i;
ONXCGPUOMIMEM WW3, met editor said, trains its P9901188 by data-to-plate compute-s is a deer The death of solely muckraklng‘ opments the mug] shallow cover- dilemma of boom and bust ‘3;
Piusured by increasing W010- With instructuions such as, “Ask message: Humans cannot compete newspapers like the Rochesta Pa- uge- unpoveg-iuhou MI was ' g
83' _ computers have been P991397 leadingquestions," and. "The 301! with machines in mechanical fielch. triot suggests an impending end to growing rich. Pikeville had become Harry M. Caudill is a professor in g
“'3 ”mm mm “WW” m d°"‘ “"9 “Mme make “ m” 3‘" neuter can machines compete mmtggdcogyfihed t3] means: a city of milllgielres. me Well the history department. He has a "
. rs 0"“ 85- C Street Journal ( ov. 12, 1978) said law degree from the University of 3&3}
ATM TREK; A creation oi Gone Roddenberry By Padralc Shigetanl he geefi met WV“ ins. 0:11 the mines we so rich, they were Kentucky and has written several ~..
_— more. e news mus “ . .y‘v‘re
Gem/74015”, PLEASE, ”m, WE DID“ ASK ”RM/6 A7 A Fromm/ow suns/mo so reported but increuinsly i); $339“ in planes. pools and Ace books about theAppalachla region. $5
I DON'T HAVE TIME to FOR yous ASSISTANCE/ Is A cue/mm; ave/v55 WOULD t be 't i find And 'i ' in
WASTE SETTLING - YOU entry: TALKING TO ME on mus conexue ._ or In the mm“ mm“ at
youa Perry r 3 : To THE LOCAL Aumomnes’e that, we need Vllulble Input from acted a swarm tax and became "‘
500455‘55/ T l maplbled 8M1! lt- depaident on the blue revenues tb- ' 9
. e. "a“. Y ”in, and . Haveagrlpe. ,
/-\ i 3”,. cw or as 'onel scendngfmmtheldllamtothelaxy . _ .
/ '~ Y ‘ ' ”Emmott" wq‘gggil: may that keeps home in VOICO your opinion:
, . a . on, . .
. ‘ , ‘ ' mains: Doest that make either of It all learned very good, and cer- wnle a letter
,, .» — , M16331- ‘WflhY- taintolastforevc.Nooneinepoel- to the editor, _
- 7 » might: Ind rightfully, the tion otleadashipeomded a warning ”4 l' I
“in. ~~——'— : Jr's-er ' Wt!" “0- to anyone foolish «tough to need it Journa ism B d.
/ //' " ’ 7 _, , . # - M- Robbie Kai-or is a Journal!“ 1""‘0' "1.1;? m caldhme subsided in A
"fl“ ' ‘ and a Kernel columnist. 1
.._.
9'.

 THE KENTUCK VKERNEL -Thuruhy, 80(1th 15, 1982 - 3
I I I
" srae I tan 3 troups move II‘ItO GSt GII’Ut
: BEIRUT. Lebanon (A?) — Israeli had entered West Beirut in force flagdraped coffin as the Mass was tanks captured the Beirut port and lem-Christian civil war. fantry force advanced into West Bei-
tanks and troops surged into West since they invaded Lebanon 14 read in Arabic at Bikfaya's St. swept into the former PLO strong- Another Israeli tank force moved rut’s Moslem neighborhood of Bar-
’7' Beirut yesterday. andtheir gunboats weeks ago. Abda's church. bolts of Fakhani, Bir Hassan, Ram- behind mine detecting. teams into bir throuyi the national museum
' began firing missiles against beb- Several thousand guerrillas are The wooden casket was then let al-Baida. and, according to Leb- the downtown commercial centq on crossing, abutting the rmd-cnty horse
anfie leftists and Palestinian guer- still in the country, many of them in placed on an army gun carriage and anese sources, the vicinity of the the Green [me that diVides Beirut racetrack. ' . .
rillas fOlIOWhIS the death 0f Presi- the eastern Bekaa Valley camped taken ina slow-moving [rocession to Soviet Emb