xt7c862bcf35 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7c862bcf35/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1983-01-20 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, January 20, 1983 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 20, 1983 1983 1983-01-20 2020 true xt7c862bcf35 section xt7c862bcf35 , . . . ,, .'.. -.,.. -.--.- M'Q’ "
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KENTUCKY . a , 0...“, ,t
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f) i . 4 With many recent failures. the famous
‘ _ ' neon lights of New York's Broadway ,
i 3' .e“ ’ may not be as bright, but there is a
U x l surge of the former greatness in some ._____,,___
,......,...._ .. .. ‘ ‘ ’ of the plays currently appearing. For a
brief rundown of some of the more
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Vol. LXXXV, No. 96 Thursday, January 20, T983 An independent student newspaper University of Kentucky. Lexington Kentucky
N d' I I desi ned * '
ew me ica p aza g ,,
.~ 2 .. ”4- <1. gr" - are _‘~
to eliminate overcrowding ‘ w
. . e I I o o '3 ' '~?.;;‘ :3- '3 \
I UniverSIty sets opening of SIS-million facdity for July , a. -. i, _, l i
Attached to the plaza will be a ample. she said. the dental facility // " M ' j ' ‘
By(‘l.'lt'l‘ ANDERSON large parking garage that will even- Wlll be built “in the round.“ allow» ' > "it t
Senior Staff Writer tually be reserved for patients. This ing all dental supplies and equ- 3.... _
centralization of outpatient services. ment to be stored in the center of .M -t
. .. . . .. . Shackleford said. will make "every- the room. W a»; t
-V . -. s: t
— thing much more convenient for the Webb said the opthalmology. gy- _ ' ' 3,
UK Medical Center administrators patients. They won‘t have to go from necology and obstetrics clinics. as . z?- , N
are hoping that overcrowding will be building to building.” well as most surgical rooms. Wlll re- ”1...... .. . ‘ f’ - l '
l reduced significantly in July With _ _ main in the main hospital building 7., , 3‘ l
’ the opening of the 133.000-square The plaza is going to be unique in The vacant space left by the move I" I t ‘ ' ,
foot. $15 million University Medical deSign. Shackleford said. with em» of the other clinics will be used for ‘ _ '. i . . -
l’laza PhaSIS on “making it the best POSS? expansion of those that are left be- 1 l ' ,
The plaza is expected to alleviate ble place for the patients " For ex» hind. he said. ‘ .. l ._
a great deal of the Medical Center‘s . .....,
outpatient load and ease the prob- ' J; E
lems of am bulatorycare patients, . .3
John Webb. director of the Medi- ‘ 41 M», “a“ = ('53:? . . t ‘ . . . 2
cal t‘enter's ambulatory-care serv- «, W,” ' :l «.-"‘~ 14" ,fi . _ n a
ices. said this is the first increase in K ya . . M 5;»,2 i ' , , . . _ ‘2 “g . "
space since the center was built in Wig/ax . I. lag/ii e,,,, ._ , ~ . * . , ’ swam», ., -
1963, He said about 250000 patients 34%;; , ‘r‘fgf JACK "tuna...“ slow
'i . . -' ’- ' - , ridde’zaaa . “it . . .
usc tht outpatient (llnlt Gold] 393? fiféwty’ , t. w , Central campus Mining Laboratory houses classrooms, offices and storage space.
Sandy Shackleford. of the hOSpl' «$513,6a’g/1M' 2
"tine of the criticisms of our outpa- g», " " t" R t d b I d
tient services was the great amount . ‘ . ,,I a’vé eno va 9 mining u, Ing seen
ot congestion" The new budding
w ill reduce the problem. she said. I 1
"Most 01 mi. immanent times on a s boon to accreditation process
be moving into the building." she
said Patients will be able to get the ,WW/flwffifi‘ ' ' Ta
(‘1er and Si‘T‘VK'f‘S they need much i that Leonard said eXisted belore its the 1981 story that they normally
"WW ”NIX. SmCi‘ the plaza W1“ 3 , ff)31.\ltl-\-lflll\5fl\ renovation hired only registered prolessional
. contain a pharmacy. an X-ray Uh” a 5‘3“!” Slit“ WNW" currently. most mining engir engineers To become a registered
1 and a hcalth evaluation unit. Which , . j, M .. neering classes are held in Anderson engineer. a person must complete
: handles tests such as electrocardior jg?“- ~35,” - , , Hall. he said. and many classes will two written tests alter compiling
i grams ” ., .. f/% '5';- continue to meet in other locations tour years oi engineering expert
The plaza will also have a Zl-chair fl " , We . ,, a . The long-ago student who because there isn't enough spat e in enci-
} dental facility and will contain the ,. g :3?“ 3' $3}? ’f scrawled "('lass oi oi on the side the new building In Kentucky and most other
i l'KStudent llcalthService. k2, ' - ' Mag/71,. of the Mining laboratory probably In a copyright story in a Septem- states. Back said. graduation from
‘3‘ "WNW E01112 ‘0 Ulllllt‘ the "105‘ 2" -' »» 1mm; wouldn't recognize the building her 1981 Kernel. Roger Eii.'hiirn. an ABET accredited school is not a
a modern equipment and settings pos» ‘i. . A 4/ today The only remaining part ot iticn dean of the ('ollege ol Engl requtsite lor becoming a registered
, siblc lor the outpatient clinics." . " . . mat the original structure is an outside neering. indicated the condition ol prolessionalengineer
Webb said The new building Wlli ,, l ’; brick wall. EWH lht' ill'ullitti has the budding was a maior lactor in It is. however necessary in most
make ll WNW ll” physwians [0 .23 been sandblastedaway the denial of accreditation alter the states to graduate lrom a school
maintain ollice practices. he Said. fix » "ll'S been Eullf‘tl and totally. i'i- \t‘t'l‘t‘t‘lilillltm Board tor Engineering whose state board ol professional
. because the outpatient serwce is '- newed ”‘8 llt'iiullllll. J‘N‘ph and Technology team visited the engineers has approved the pro
their only means of having these 3“ ' .49' . ”Wank, _ ...,,-_ ,. ‘ Leonard. chairman til the mining (in. mmwg that year gram ln Kentucky. that group is the
practices ‘ I " 3‘1". ”wt '3 . gmeering dt‘péil'llitt‘nl. said Monday "When the team walked through State Board at Registration -it Pro
3 Th“ hlllltlmt’. Will “9 connected W --L c~r'..,’ fl "tr 36;“ W." ' :\ formal rededication ill lht‘ ("Hi the laboratories. they saw piles ol lessional Engineers and Surveyors.
3 lht‘ mm” “0591“” Via the overhead _. "bye" ’3’ f ‘ tral campus building will probably .IUITK.” Eichorn. now dean ol the i‘ol Back said
i walkway over Rose Street. This will " ,W " take place Feb 36. he said The legc ol Engineering at the l'niversi Kentucky \ mining engineering
l allow patients direct access to ad- ' ' building opened about two weeks t_\ ol lltiustiin.s;ii(t program was approved by the statri
i vanced testing areas “'llh a mini- JACKSYIV!‘5/Kernal$tafl ago alter the $1 million renovation The Lexington Fire Department board in 1%: enabling subsequent
i mum of dilliculty The Primary Ambulatory Care Center in the Medical Center, ”if” begin In late Will had condemned the upper floor ol l'K mining engineering graduates to
i Th0 W")'(‘itl"tlltl ltlllldmfl. \Vhlt'h the building as a tire hazard iii 1977. gain tour years ol experience and
3 . now has three stories instead ol the but the buildin1 was renovated rath~ takethe registration test
‘5 PrO'eCls few compared to p053t original two. will house ollices for or than razed because the construc Back said he thinks I'K‘s program
i mining engineering laculty and mm ol a new building would have will receive accrmitation alter the
i I I graduate students. classrooms. labs cost more ABET team visits the campus He
; LaCk 0f fundln Slows constructlon andtestingcinipnient l‘lichiiHi said other lactors iii the sald he expects announcement ot the
- 3 The first floor. Leonard said. will denial ol accreditation were the do decision withina ycarol the visit
3' be used as a ”dirty area] where partment‘s dearth ol laculty mem The addition ot faculty members,
,1 rocks are broken and tested l’ilot bersiindequipment a revised curriculum and the new
3; By BILLSTI‘IIIHCN But. Since three successive cuts to otherwise. a smaller budding is equipment. used for demonstrations The story quoted representatives laboratory should tip the scales in
‘: l‘Zd'l"r"”'(‘hl9f the L’niverstty 5 general fund appro— planned. and lt‘SIlnR. will also be housed ot the coal industry who said lack ol ['K's lavor. he said. noting that the
t priation and a temporary statewide But financing for all ”“359 proyects there accreditation at the state s only min 1981 \isit by ABET was the lirst lot
3 , freeze on capital construction . in- was approved by the General As The windowless second floor has iiig engineering program would lowing the program s establishment
eluding renovation ~ in 1980»81.con- sembly before the appropriation classroom and laboratory space. as hamper graduates trying to get a in 1976
In 1970. this main campus looked sti'uction has slowed to a trickle A cuts. he said. The only projects for well as graduate student oilices. he ioli Kit-horn disputed that .\.l}1!lfl, The cost ol the Mining Labor-din
| llkt' a "construction camp.” Jack nearly completed $l~million renova» which l'inancing has been secured said The third floor will be dcmted students "will not have a bit ol diili ry's renovation was linanced en
. Hlanton. nu: chancellor for admin» tion ol the Mining Engineering Lab since then are a Mining and (‘oal totacultyotlices mm “mm“; loot “ liri‘ly through the t iiiversity s gen
l istration.recalls orator)" H Sf'mlllllm addition ‘0 the Resources Blflldm?» to be Paid for Th0 mining engineering lik‘llll} With the renovation completed crai tund appropriation. Leonard
i Work was underway on the Patter- Student (300191”. 8 $1.:l‘million "1‘0"“ through a SPPCWl tax lt‘Vll’d “3' the and stall. previously housed in Air tlic building should help the depart \dltl \nd the improvement w as in;
l son tit‘fice Tower and the accompa- tal care lacility at the [K Medical General Assembly last Spring. and a derson Hall. has almost completed nicnt got .it't‘l't'tlllt‘tl when the ABET tiated l\_\ persons outside the mining
i nying White Hall (‘lassroom Bmld- (‘enter and several smaller renova- parking structure for the Medical the move Most equipment is iii tmm \lstls rumpus. probably in engineeringtaculli
t ing. now the local points of the tions are the only major projects (‘enter Money for its construction place but not oix'ratioiial. Leonard l“.lll1983.l.t‘0l1.ll‘(l.\.lttl 'l suppose ultimately it was the
l campus' main plaza. as well as a completedinthe last twoyears will come from an increase in park» said Accreditation. lio\\t'\er. will not president oi the lniversity ltr
; number of other classroom and re- ('urrently under construction are a ing fees, Prior to the renovation. the Min make much ditlci'ence to the pro singletary he said 1 think he saw
i search buildings The Kirwan-Bland- Sift-million Primary Ambulatory After that. he said. the only money ing laboratory was ‘iiscd tor lab gram \ graduates. Lyie ltack. an en this as .i great opportunity to (level
. ing residencehall complex had been t‘are facility behind the College of the l'niverstty can plan on for capi~ work. storage. iiink and what have gineei'uig depai'tiiieiit .idiiiiiiistriitor. opthisarca
l completedthree years before Nursing and the $1?leth Devel- tal construction prOJects will be you." he said "There were no class \dltl Singlctai'v .icted .it "ic great
During the next to years. con- opment Office at the intersection of whatever surplus funds it has left roomstospeakol ' "l n t really ll‘ilt“.t‘ that .iccred- urging ot {tinny ctipporters Leon
struction continued unabated. By RoseStreet and Roselu'ine over from its operating budget at The relurbished building. howc\ itati '.\lll make a great diitcrence. .ird said These supporters included
limo. the l'niversity had spent $117.5 ('onstruction of a budding tor the the end of each fiscal year And. he er. has space loi' classrooms and sillt't‘ all our graduates. ll‘. lllTlt‘. can tnr'tnhcl‘s ot the ministry who have
million on new building. adding Just (‘ollege 0f Pharmacy is scheduled to added. "if we don't have it. we can't other lacililies. perhaps satistying become [‘(uzix‘lt‘l't‘il pi'oicssional engi donated money toi' :hi- :iiipi'ovciiieiit
under 3 million square feet of class- begin next year it bids come in put ll m H “the great llt't‘(l tor space tor the llt‘t‘1\ ol the program. he said
rooms. residence halls. research ia< under the project's STtHnillion con But the l'niversity still has sevc mining eiigiiim‘ring department \1itiiiig industry lttt‘l‘itt‘t't‘s \.lltl in See RENOVATION,ooqe3
cilitiesandol‘fices Sll‘llt‘lIOn ceiling. Blanton said. See CONSTRUCTION.poge3
but balked at a requirement that KSU students reach a min» contracts to buy American cotton chemical fibers and soy
THURSDAY imum score on standardized entrance examinations beans
anAssodetedPrmreparts The U S Embassy refused comment on the Chinese oc
hon which is expected to complicate Secretary of State
. t t it t
. - Sturgill expects synfue' announcemen‘ IE‘:eebor2gi=i P Shol zs atks w h officio s in Peking beginning i
State desegregat'on p'an h'ts snag Shultz laced Chinese complaints over the Reagan admin t
LEXINGTON Kentucky Energy Secretary William 8 Stur~ istration 5 arms sales to Taiwan slowness in prOVIding U S '
LEXINGTON Presidents of four Kentucky universities will gill said yesterday he expects a government announcement technology to China and acceptance of of pot-iicol defectors
meet in the next few days to discuss a snag in the state 5 affecting one or more of the state 5 synthetic fuels protects from China
desegregation plan,an education official said yesterday. Directors of the US. Synthetic Fuels Corp will meet On its side the Unopd States .5 ,pportediy concerned
Harry Snyder. executive director of the CounCil on High» lOdOY I" HOUS'O" and the announcement could fOllOW the ab0ut recent Chinese diplomatic overtures towards the Sow
er Education. said the meeting would include officials from meeting. Sturgill said through a spokesman He would not etUnion
UK. Northern Kentucky University. the University of Louis- elaborate.
Ville and Kentucky State University. Sponsors of Six synthetic-fuel projects in Kentucky have
Snyder. KSU President Raymond Burse and Rush Dozier applied for development funds from the federal corpora
I chief assistant to Gov. John Y. Brown. met for three hours "on The proposed plants would produce liquid fuel from
i Tuesday in Washington with Harry M. Singleton. assistant coal shale and tar sands WEATHER
l secretary of education for civil rights. Sturgill and Deputy Energy Secretary David Drake dis
3 The conferees were unable to agree on a plan to guar» cussed the Six protects Tuesday in Washington with U S
i antee 3 percent of the admissions to state medical dental Synthetic Fuels PreSidentVictor Schroeder
and law SChOOIS '0 Q'OdUO'OS 0f historically black KSU. Increasing cloudiness and a llttle warmer today with a
Snyder said. high near 30.
The state may lose some federal education funds if the China bars ”.8. trade contracts Mostly cloudy tanlght wlth a 30 percent chance of
desegregation plan fails to W"! federal approval by Feb, l4. snow late wlth a low In the '0" 20'_
The professional-school admissions proposal was a key part . . Cloudy tomorrow wlth a high chance 0' snow and .
of the state's plan to attract students to KSU PIK'NO China retaliated Y95'e'd0V 090msl new U 5 Im hlgh la the low to mid 3°.
Snyder said federal officials support the 3 percent quota 9°" restrictions 0" Chinese textiles by barring any new .
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s'ruDYitylGl QUITE (ON s’YsTEm OF MAY YIELD A conflict!
and watch law school fight «”m‘EE‘r‘iEE‘W" 2W“'”°‘Wdé’pl2i W “£me -
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When the fur starts f'lying this summer Council must decide once and f'or all whether 7H1 FISCAL MW“ LEM FURTHER SOTHAT '
over a review of' professional education in Kentucky is sufficiently inundated in liti- - W5 MYAWVE ATA
Kentucky commissioned by the Council on gation to merit graduating some 470 law stu- , a W THE DAY, FORIR I .‘ W RE THE.
Higher Education. it might be well worth a dents annually. And it must determine ,- -
civics teacher‘s time to herd as many stu- whether the 7.000 lawyers registered in this it MTG"? lAlQNlNO
dents as possible into the legislative cham- state are enough to administer to the needs 7‘ ’5‘ MTG AINTNN 55R _
bers to watch the decision-makin rocess of 3.5million Kentuckians - ' ' -- IOUS ”“530 WWI
From all appearances. it promises to be an It must deCide whether it wants to sen— 5 .1-' ~ NOS? ppm
experience unrivaled in Kentucky politics. fence intelligent men and women to lives as ‘2’ “if SS'NG a PROS
The Council will again be fishing for a way waiters and pizza cooks while they long for 9 { CHE 41‘ \ ,M OF . ' . W
to cut the unnecessary duplication of pro- jobs that may never develop. And it must de- 3y (g‘ AW 55” x V 4 N . 2
grams that has beached higher education on cide how to compare the legal education fac- ’CHE a 1' - w ' li
a sandbar of' tight money and low quality. It tories. to quantify what goes in. what is done " 5 7 fl;- 5‘ . l
had a strike last October. when it severely with it. and what comes out as finished prod- at 'f/Ii . ,3
curtailed admissions at the state's two col- ucts. 3‘: , i25255553 g‘ CHE ' i
leges of" dentistry. but last week it rented a It also has one other decision to make: Fl 5 .5533555 ;3
trawler and decided to go t'or a somewhat Whether to permit the wheeling and dealing 7 5 5%;
bigger fish —- namely. a college of law. prob- that could render it a powerless organization t: _ . 5 55; (8‘? 5 .
ably the one spawned in Cincinnati and now capable only of spending money to photoco— _. 'Wr #5
housed at Northern Kentucky t'niversity. py documents. .5 55 :5 ch g 5.
The Council has gone around and around The General Assembly convenes six \ _5 3 {aka fr 2, I
on this t'or years. most recently in 1981. ()n months after the decision. and any endorse- A“ 3 .:.‘.::-’35- 5 SW 5 5- 52:23. 555;
the heels of the Prichard Committee's pre— ment made by the Council could be lost in 3335555 . 55.5.5:';5-_5:;;5§ fifisffifiggszfifg 5555555' 55; 2'5 »
liminary recommendation that one of' the the shuffle. Who‘s to say that. if the Council 555553 6"“? 53 «:51. f 553_5 5- - :5 " 5_ 15515715 _
schools be closed. the Council began deliber- recommends the l'niversify of' Louisville's & _ “5‘, ES: ..;j;3' '--- w‘ “553.3252; €255?
. ' " . ‘ . . ‘ t , 's ‘ . . , t . ' . l ‘ . t :::::1;::§:...::':W if H .:: I. : :EEEE -.::‘:§’:E311i3i*'5 ,:3:§:: 5:1,,535 {5:1“: "3-3555: 5.25.213W5 , .:E::EH..::E:§}}§3
ating ‘1 Wth d move might be m the state 5 (.ollege 0f 14““ b‘ shut d0““~ 1‘ “0” d“ l 905‘ 3"” .. s2. ‘55.;5 s2efffiwzass222252252223232§222..:.. ::. 5212523 35:3;:3;.::e:3:35:53::i;:.323-‘53;5355535355552H255
and the professions best interest. [K the appropriation f'or a new home for the 55;? . 5. _ r W "Ir-3.33 2 t
that concluded Kentucky would have 75 per- Who‘s to say that. if the Council recom- ' " ' " ' " I
cent more lawyers than it will need by the mends Chase Law School be closed. other '
year 2000. the Council avoided a bloodbath in legislators wouldn't gang up and mug CK's Are the presidents of the eight publicly fi— the original big dealer? ,. t
the 1982 General Assembly and sidestepped selective~admissions policy"? Who's to say nanced universities artful traders or effec- Let‘s sit back and watch with the civics l
the issue the next governor won't pack the CounCil. as tive educators? ()r. moreover. are our elect- students, When the General Assemblv pulls 2;
Whether the Council will play the same Lome Nunn did in 1971 to create Chase. and ed representatives capable legislators or into port 15 months hence. we'll probablv 3 i
tune in 1983 depends on a few things. The senditoff to gut L'L's College of Medicine? grotesque. vengeful parodies of Monty Hall. know the answers . % !
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Writer bridges gap b tw '
e een s u my ear 3 an no rump -
li yttli ifon' play bridge dont Kurt and I had played bridge to “.Ui sitlts it‘tt oh. act did I «ion though it was lust a game He After a soul-searching moment lde- l've promised Kurt l wouldn't say
readthis column getber iii high school for years I 'w ‘ \l'liy " Why "' plucked one of the cards from his cided our chances were infinitely anything ‘0 him about It. and l d0!”
we were deiendinu LiL‘dll‘isl .. ltdt' had act-Usiomed my seli to his crea Kurt looked over his two cards at pair and held it for a moment. better if we each held a different intendto.
ticularly nasty six no trump in i. tiyebiddingtot-hmqupg, me and made a face studyingit with scholarly solemnity sutt. so I sobbed a little and pitched N0! foralong While- ' ' ‘ '
liieasant littie noose on Hell t nul’l l1 l looked again at my two reiiiain- Then he confidently placed it on out my Queen ofllearis ’ - THIS WEEK'S CONCERT-r Those
was the seventh hand oi .t ll'tl/llt‘tt ——-———— mg cards the Nine of Clubs and thetablelxtforehtm At that. declarer. suddenly smil- EUYS and their money better lei"? .
round of duplicate organized by my 'liat precious Queen He had to have The Jack of Clubs ing. laid down his Ten of Clubs. Kurt our forest alone. A
brother and held regularly at thls the iiiissitig .lack of Clubs or Mr A rippling shudder passed through looked down. surprised. and dropped ('AP'N ZAP'S (‘RlMESTUl’Pl-IR: §
houseoi a irieiidoi his James oinier could have claimed the hand me Everything was going black I the Jack of Hearts ontothe table. A“ Students FOle‘d 0t thclr classes =
The declarer at my ieit was study STOLL lotigago realized through my fading senses They both looked at me I looked by the advance-payment “htK‘k 5
ing his last few cards with a «loner Kurt had to know his Jack was the that I didn‘t even remember It the at Kurt. should be pleasant and friendly 1
ing tear evident in his eyes \\e had highest card left in the suit l l'(' TOW“ Clubs W85 >tlll0ul For 3 moment the declarer gasped “he" encouraging professors 1” I“ ~ ‘
dlt‘t‘dd) Ule "n“ ”Wk “1m m.‘ 3"“ “—— membered lllt‘ .lt‘tt'k of Hearts was (‘ould I stuff my Heart and hope? and Kurt smiled as though nelther of them into closed classes Not all j '
of diamonds and l was holding oiim . still out. and wondered fleetinuly it Was Kurt actually holding that Jack them knew I couldn't possibly win crimes can ”9 SOlVPd- bl" 8 P01”? 4 '.
my good tau-en oi lli-ar's like it a.“ l liked how he never made .i this Kurt had managed to forget the high of Hearts" the trick I regarded them both with request is clearly the best hope for g 1
my first-boim'hsid take twice after I berated him for it. cards in lmihsuits Surely he wasnt holding onto a a disgusted glare. then tiredly slld replacing your losses lf rational ar i
.\t great (luiyering length the tie tillt lie was very clever at commaV up \lould he actually hold the Jack of five or six of something lust as a my Nine of Clubs under declarer's gument fails you can always go for . l
clarer played 'he tast ot his good kHIhHW-yoncs llearts. forgetting there was a funnytbingtodo ten, thekneecaps. s l
spades and on 'he next tolast trick I tic "m to shot. l thought to my Queen out there iiist waiting to Surely bewasn't. Six no trump. A small slam 3" i
noticed my partner hesitate seli or iii, (m1 no ton r remember iiiunchoii it" Declarer. however. might have Doubled and vulnerable. James Stoll is a theater arts soph :3 l
\ly ht'itl's‘loplwtf A ,- ow: sum Ht- nizist not.- Kurt shrugged off the decision as any sort of diiiky Club or Heart, Nowlm not onetopreach, (more
0 I "f I d ' ' ' I ' ' ' ' '
n l e, 0 V8, an exerCIsmg In a C ”PIC waiting room l
“mm 1””)‘95- ["9 found. are ”n the “rum walking and shivering 0th” I spend hours 93Ch d3." “W15 I wonder how our lives will com- tinue to work. live and love. but in what is the warmest. brightest feel i .
places where one quite easily can in fear All the dreams we ever dering how Carol is coping with the pare Some of' them say they dont intrOSpective. private moments. mg known to mankind. 5i
take off a few of those unwanted had dreamt. all the hopes we ever mental and Phb'SIt'al strain. and she care for the inconvenience; some of some of them regret their inability l'm havingababv i
inches For the person waiting for a had hoped. vanished with the single spends hours each day wondering them say their lives are fuller; some to color their lives as some do 5'0 ' E
friend or loved one to be examined. word spoken by the kind doctor with how I am gomg to overcome the others react with strong emotion eaglly
there is a veritable variety of ever thesing-song voice pressure on our lifestyle while com~ when others attack the way they I wish I could change places with Jim Harris is a j"“'""“‘"‘ “M”
“59 available P'Nlnfl my 185‘ semesterin COHOEP- choosetoexist. them. not to escape what will hap- and managing “mm mm" Rpm"!
Eleven feet separated met that did} \Vt‘lf’ consumed by the terror-m. Still others qtllt‘tl)’ assume what pen [0 me but to allow them the i
from the water cooler in the Health Jim herent in financing a major medical fate has left them without They con- chance to experience. to thrill to. lm‘JimHarm .
care of the Bluegrass waiting room. t“ crisis There is a diet to be followed.
and l guess I “.81de am." a quar , HARRIS mm special foods in precise ————————_——_________ ,
ter-mile 1“ the late afternoon 5““ ‘fi ' amotmts. as well as various medica- ._
that filtered through the room s J lions and Vitamins intended to t
venetian blinds I sat down once I we told him repeatedly that he strengthen Carol It all costs money. 2
realizedlhad broken intoasweat was wrong, that the bacteria infect- and there's precious little of that ’i
l rifled every magazme there and ing f'arol had somehow screwed up after budgeting the rent and the say. ———*————————————_—_— 3
went through the clinic's newsletter her body chemistry and caused the ings account. are being strip mined while the “m5 . 2
”109- limbering my arms and “‘5“ 1” lX‘ DOSIUW ”9 shook hls Being what I am doesn't help ei~ Robinson Forest her is not properly harvested and Pllmpton to speak 5
wrists for more strenuous activity at head no and offered us space age ra- ther. I usually get home at eight or used on thelocal market Tonight. the l’niversity commu- '
thf? water “We? Th“ headmappmfl timl'flr‘.) tt‘y‘hmques as proof Of his (‘15 later. and (‘arol is asleep by then. .. Now the new houses bUilt to give nitv has a rare opportunity to hear
exerCise. which l used whenever the agnosis . dreaming whatever she dreams We ”“5 ‘5 an "9“” appeal 5‘0 'W’ strip miners opportunities f'or real 0m; of the world‘s most envied per- ,
door to the examining room Opened So we went to another clinic the need the conversation to help us prominent “'S'd“m*' ”t Vtoodford estate investments in the Bluegrass sons. George Plimpton. This New
worked wonders for my neck next day There was more walking. over this. and most of it is spoken (ounty.ul