xt7dz02z643r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dz02z643r/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-10-07 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, October 07, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 07, 1981 1981 1981-10-07 2020 true xt7dz02z643r section xt7dz02z643r . , , . a, . . .7» ‘ .» " ,' .ij’Ea-V"‘i‘”-'?i;;f,"fi‘ii"§y7‘I :tt- ;,.}-}. ‘
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' Anwar Sadat assassmated during parade
, ————-————-——— were members of an artillery unit. hundreds of opposition figures sion address announcing the death of he would “shake the hand of he who . g,‘ '
By STIEVE K-HINDIY They said two were killed and the suspected of fomentiru Christian- Sadat: “We are accustomed to these pulled the trigger." a “at, i A' ~ "
} ASSOClhl-ed Press Writer others were being interrogated. Moslem strife in Egypt. He shared the wounds and we believe in God's will Western European nations joined in ' """ V I, 5 ,, -'
‘ ______—_.__~.___ That report differed from an earlier 1978 Nobel Peace Prize with Israeli and we will continue in the name or the lament, characterized by French 3-53? '22,; .- ' .
'8 statement by Egypt's ambassador to Prime Minister Menachem Begin the spirit and soul of our leader and President Francois Mitterand's state f ,- i'
’ CAIRO, Egypt — President Anwar Washington, Ashraf Ghorbal. He said after reaching the U.S.-sponsored our constitution that we will abide by merit, “The world has lost one of the . . .= ’ . . -.
Sadat, whose peace with Israel three assassins were killed and three Camp David accords. all treaties and commitments made.” best among us.” . ”‘7 a ’. -_ ' . :
, . i changed the course of Middle East were captured. Last monthheorderedthearrest of He said constitutionally mandated Palestinians in the occupied West . i', ' é- . .
, 5 - 1 history, was yesterday assassinated The Egyptian government has not more than 1,500 people, including fun- elections will be held within two mon— Bank, however, sang and passed out " j’I _. ,Ii 1
' i ’ by six Egyptian soldiers who jumped given offical word on the assassins' damentalist Moslems and Coptic ths. Until then, the government will candy at the news of Sadat's death. 3i,- ,_ ,, . . “ _
i from a jeep on military parade and identities, their ages, or their political Christian leaders, and ordered be headed by the speaker of parlia- Radio Moscow blamed the shooting . _ 3i .' _ ,
«'7 charged the reviewing stand firing and religiom affiliations. private mosques to accept govern- ment,SufiAbuTaleh, on Egyptian “discontent" with my," ? ‘
i _ . } automatic weapons. Army sources Vice President Hosni Mubarak ment control. . In Washington, Reagan said with Sadat's cooperation with the United f It ,3 . '
said the attackers were Moslem fun- declaredastateof emergency and the The attackers were said to have the death of Sadat .. America has lost States and Israel, and Col. Moammar - . . i, .
l damentalists. ruling National Democratic Party shouted, “Glory to Egypt!" and yell- a close {”de the world has lost a Khadafy‘s national Libyan radio ex- i '
H } Sadat has been under attack by nominatedhim tosuoceedSadat. ed “Agents and intruders!" at great statesman and mankind has ulted: “Everytyranthasanend.” ‘~ " - .
‘ . 5,’ Moslem fundamentalists who claim Grief was expressed around the foreigners on the reviewing stand lostachampion of peace... In aworld In the United States, Meir Jolovitz, ;;
i ; hebetrayed Islam and the Arab world world at the loss of a man President watching the parade. filled with hatred, he was a man of chairman 0‘ the JerSh Defense
3 through his peace with Israel, which Reagan called “a champion of Diplomatic and police sources hope,” League, called Sadat a Nazi and PLO it
"- broke the cycle of three decades of peace." But there was rejoicing in reported seven others killed and 27 . I sympathizer and said, “We certainly ANWAR SADAT 5‘?
l Mideast wars. Yesterday‘s parade some Arab capitals and by Palesti- wounded on the reviewing stand, _Ih_ Jerusalem, 15" “I“ Prime don’t mourn the death of Anwar The State Department said a US. 1:
i‘ marked the anniversary of what niaris who felt Sadat sold them out to which was littered with bullet-riddled Minister Menachem 393‘“ 53‘“ he Sadat." Man-he major, imid it Agenbmad :1? »
‘ ' l Egyptcallsa“slorious Arab victor?” the Israelis. armchairs and bloodied dignitaries mixed the ”559°”? ficegfi First official word that Sadat was of Bruneau, Idaho, an Air Force 7
. f- in the last conflict of that cycle- the In Beirut, Lebanon, callers purpor- thrown into pandemonium by the at- $3023; gntmue “:15 ’thfiil hr: assassinated came from presidential lieutanent colonel, Charles D. Loney ' ‘
I 1973 Arab war against Israel. ting to speak for three separate Egyp- tack. hea t “(:3 l we man” WI ta ~S adviser Mansour Hassan after of Austin, Texas, and an Air Force ,
' . 5 The raiders also were said to have tian opposition groups, claimed It occurred shortly after 1 pm. h r ' V9 05 h to 183:)“ if”? "5’?" emerging from ameeting with six top captain, Christopher Ryan of ,
i killed seven other people and wound- responsibility- Egyptian iime during a low fiyby by t ”ea“ ””55"“ a a ”e“ ' officials, including Mubarak. Asked Sacramento, Calif, were hit and .
i ed 27, including three American ser- The 62-year-old Sadat had enemies jet fighters. Explosions also were But hard-line Arabs reacted with by reporters if Sadat was dead or slightly womdedintheraid.
i vicemen and two diplomats. at home and throughout the Middle heard. indicating grenades were joy, firing rifles intheair in Lebanon, alive, l-Iassan said, “."dead He said An Egyptian Foreign Ministry of
The army sources said all six at East because of his peace treaty with thrown in the attack. The Palestine Liberation Organiza- the funeral would be held ”in a few ficial said Foreign Ministry officials
tackers, including one lieutenant, Israel and his recent crackdown on Mubarak told the nation in a televi- tion’s security chief, Abu Iyad, said days.” and others were wounded.
He .1. ’ W
i- } . KEN I UCKY CONTINUED COOL
i
Once again the weather is going to
I turn cooler. We should see clear skies
with the high reaching only in the low
60s Tonight will also be clear with the
i low around 40.
i W M 1,
V0]. LXXXIV, No.38 All mt “m. M” m 1W1 univemity 0f Kentucky :I-
' ,- Wednesday, October 7. 1981 Lexington, Kentucky
‘ ' i " ' I I I I
5‘4 ; Diplomacy director examines buildup :3;-
L ' ‘ * ‘ lead'ng ' ' - >
V = ~~ -» i to yesterday's assassination ;
., » . .e . r I
i _ m ,, ——-—-—— together and work out the nation's Robert Olson, associate professor
J- . - .. ."f‘ Meg , ‘ gaffiDEWOPPMANN problems,"Da-ris said. of Middle Eastern history, said he
I ' .. gig I. a n r One of the reasons that the thinks that the Egyptian public‘s
‘ {g ' . _ _ ._ v . is A ' M democratic system has not succeeded resentment towards the Camp David
$5 .I’ w - _' " Wi : .‘ . . . in the Middle East, with the exception agreement played an important part
.1.” ~' ’.-="- v,» 41? _ The assassmation 0f Egyptian of Israel, is the reluctance to exclude in Sadat‘s decline in support from
‘u . . t i "=4 {39' President Anwar Sadat can be at- religion from political operations, he within Egypt. .
. . ; ~~ ‘ *4 tnbuted to an array of internal and said. The accords were an insult to the
% >3. . i “3?“ external enemies, said Vince Davis, Egypt, like some of the Mideast, cause which many Egyptians died :f'
,, . ,. aim ' , .a' . g»- t: . ,I y . .. ,I director 0f the Patterson School Of tends to rule with emotion rather than for, Olson said.
Mi .' ”r: ”ya w M - “W‘ut; Diplomacy. logical reasoning. hcsaid. “Many felt Sadat was a traitor j;
, .. gig-'3»: ’ ext-"f; ”hesitate“ Sadat faced opponents in Egypt "He attempted to implement because of his trip to Jerusalem and
. I’ W . If?“ ~ ‘ ' -’ ranging from within the left and right democracy in small doses, but his inability to bring about a solution
iiié‘iéif ”i“ , “ ' i i t " ’ in i wings 0f the COUNTY'S pOIitical radicals within Egypt were attemp- to the Palestinian problem. Also, the .
Shh” = ‘ :3 'i‘L climate,hesaid. ting to take advantage of democracy resumption of trade with Israel did ‘;
. "V ”a .\ Leftist radicals supported Marxist to overthrow democracy." In Sadat‘s not bring about a better material life
I W 73? V j , Pl'thlPlS and close this to the Soviet attempt to stabilize recent problems for Egyptians".
l a,” - s . , ._ . . 3" - .. Union, and right-wing Islamic na- in Egypt, he jailed several hundred Thefact that the assassination took
I- - " ‘- " * ,. . tionallsts wanted the government to opposition leaders that were place on Oct. 6 — the eighth anniver-
. - . adopt the policies Of a religious reportedly causing dissent among sary of Sadat's victory over Israeli
.3 ' _ republic and break away from a Christians and Moslems in the coun- troops at the Suez Canal during the
I ' , W western-style government, Davis try. This became a critical situation, Yom Kipper War —— is significant.
. I .- .Is . f“... "‘“h‘hmoa NI said. Davis saidI Olson said
i ..; " .s? 'r: ' Also Opposing Sadat were those Sadat’s close association with the The date shows that factions in
‘. ‘ ' ”at. ,. "hm, _ ‘ ' , fl' individuals who simply wanted to con- United States also was impetus to in- Egypt considered Sadat as betraying
W ' . tl‘Ol the government because 0i ternal problems, he said.“Because of the principles that Egypt had fought
I“? , . . ’ political rivalries from within the his ties to the United Stata‘ Sadat ran for for so many years by supporting
.MM . ...., ’ loose democracy that prevailed in the risk of being considered a lackey the accords, he said,
. Courtesy of NBC NEWS Egypt. of American imperialism‘”, Sadat‘s death is a "very seriors set-
’ . Anwar Sadat is pictured here shortly before gunmen, dressed in military uniforms, jumped from a jeep and opened I “Democratic values never {00" root Sadat‘s ties with America evolved back in American p01icy." Davis
~45 fire, killing several people in the review stand, including Sadat. The assassination occured during a military parade lh Egypt.Sadat tried to move Egypt when then presidential adviser Henry said. The period of time after his
honoring the anniversarypf the 1973 Arab/Israeli conflict. toward lt- but, democracy works best Kissinger developed the close rela— death Will be a “period Of insurrection
where people with cool heads get tionship now shared between the two andchaos."
countries which has existed under the “Egypt has been important to the
. WKU stwenw rally to protest met m administrations of four US. Western powers because it is a
presidents. he said. strategic crossroad —- where Europe.
. ——_______ ing to take to make our collective stitutions may fall to unacceptably ”For every star."he said of WKU'S “Many Islazicbmtipniallsm along the MiddleIEasthand Ame? meet. The
By JAMES EDWIN “ARMS voices known in Frankfort." low levels." more-famois alumnae, “there are m someI a na ions “use? 90‘"?ny a so as grea economic
Bureau Chief Garritson along with Represen- The rally was the first of six to be dozens of people in supporting roles in Sadat 0f 59“"‘(4 out . the cause Sign] icance, muse. it controls the '
. . ’ . . I . . because of the friendship generated Suez Canal. DaVis said.
._____ tative LOls Eargle, D-S.C., and WKU held stateWide under the guidance of nearly every town and industry in . . .- . , 5
h— . . . . . . . - With Israel during the Camp DaVld He also saidhettunks that Sadat 5
President Donald Zacharias, vmced the Student Government Associations Kentucky. Together, the umversxtiss accords s nsor ed b the U 't ed assassination will r obablv affect the
Student Association Arts &Sciences their concerts about higher education of Kentucky. SGAK's rally here will of this state have trained the leader- States po y m steps“ I.
- Senator Dean Garritson told 400 in Kentucky at the rally, which drew beon Oct. 14 at noon in front of theAd- ship and the supporting cast for life " at on pages ~
l, Western Kentucky University 400people totheWKU campus. mimmiiohlazmggnghard hi b and progress in theComImor‘iyKeiajlth'I‘I' . I
. Federal and state et cuts, Gar- n 't y state But oblems remain or . e t I d I
students yesterday that the rally held ritson said, have sgugegbilitated the cutbacks in higher education funding. publicpsrafety department has recent- Egyp [an ea 8’ s r u 9
there to protest higher education eight statesupported universities The university did not rehire 16 pro- ly absorbed a $600,000 budget cut,
hlld8€t cuts “’35 “exactly what l5 80‘ that ”the academic quality of the in- fessors to positiom in the Colleges of making a parking structure on the k d b h
., , Education and Business, and in WKU campus a “target," according mar e y c anges
" - Ogden and Porter Colleges. Students to Zacharias.
j , . are being turned away from the com- “When we get down so thin," he CAIRO, Egypt tAP) — September 28. cords that established peace between
' - puter science program,and the public said, “when an officer is ill or injured. 1970 was a day of gloom in Egypt. It the two nations.
‘ . i ' safety department has been drastical- we lose a couple men . . . making is was the day Game] Abdel Nasser died Sadat, third president of Egypt.
l , . ly cut back. very vulnerable." of a heart attack, leaving a void few was born Christmas Day in 1918 in the
v i I , ‘ - ' it But Zacharias said that he and the When asked about what more WKU thought could be filled, poor Nile Delta village of Mit Abu Al-
' .; .. - , ‘3‘ other university presidents were “do- can do should further budget cuts Into the void stepped Anwar Sadat, Kom. so remote the nearest bus route
i ins everything that we can to present arise. Zacharias replied that "we a virtually unknown vice president, was a mile away. His father was a
Ii “..,,.,,III‘ the case for higher education in this can‘tdoanything more WiIItIieiwt it hav- and Egypt changed direction. civilian clerk in the army; his mother
9 ' i.‘ state. ing a direct impact" on universi- . . . _ was Sudanese.
. a. i . , "Bl“ it's h°t 835%" Zacharias said. W- fictlthégdtzteizizahrglflh: taIknitnegngI His family later moved to Cairo and
- . t “This klthfSllPPOl'l from you means revolt a ainst him ex lied 15 000 Sadat entered the military academy
‘ I a i. that it is a genuine interest on your Zacharias said that a future cut So . t g . ers and staffed turni after it started admitting lowerclass
, ‘ , Q part, and it‘s something that the could cause WKU administrators to E “et'saorviltsantation from the WM: youths. graduating in 1933 One of his
‘ . I. ,- . I citizens of this state mist pay atten- look at what priorities would come tog United States ‘ classmates was Nasser. During
”its ., ' " . ' e tion to" firstattheschool- ' World War ii, they became iricnts
. - . ' . ;- .~ . ,I' The students paid attention as ihe Garritson's speech loomed on the in August 1976, Sadat won Parlia- and often talked about ridding the
" ,f‘: ‘i 'i M. " in ' Nd'tOWEI WthhB Eargle outlined the statewide effects that budget cuts Wlh ment‘s unanimous nomination for country of the British and the corrupt
' . ) iii}: , ’ ' "his . Pl‘08l‘55 that higher education has have. In EXPlallllllG the situation at another six-year term. He vowed to King Farouk.
_ I . ii" '5 J ' I ‘ ’ " ' .' ’ made. Kentucky State University, Garritson liberate all Arab lamb taken by the
I, -; _ ‘ V . “ After noting the technological, said that the university is facing “vir- Israelis in the 1967 Middle East War After the Allied victory. Sadat was
' . f 5‘ ~ v. . " ‘i scientific and 50d“ 83th that educa- tual oththth I and to establish a “Palestinian enti- jailed twice for involvement in - ,
m 5. ~. 3* tion has made in thezothcentury. she “Kentucky State.“ he said, I“is the inv- assassination plots against royalist . _.
-. . W. -.I, -. as . _ said, “We can invest money in ether most effective tool with winch we politicians but was acquitted both . -
i “53* 5 ‘ tion in the United States and in the have to meet the higher education He electrified the world in times. Released from jail in 1948, he . . 7
” If ' citizers of Kentucky to make this needsof minorities. November 1977 when he declared he drove a truck and worked as a jour— '
» statca better place tolive. “Now we are told," he continued, would go to the enth of the earth, nalist. ‘ " ~I .' f
-. , ' . “If you do that,“ she said, “you in “that it is a luxury to be able to ad- “even to the Israeli Knesset (Parlia- He once wrote: “I have always . . C
‘ , -I vest in something time can never dressminorityneetk. menu" to disciss peace if it would distnsted theories and purely ra- f “4*?
. , 5 5' a = .' .. erase." “if we don't stop (the outfit" GIF- saveevenmeEyptiansoldier." tionai systems. ibelieve inthepower ‘ ', . ~
I . . Zacharias said that everyone at n‘tson said. “a 81‘8“” (0‘ WW Less than two weeks later. Sadat of concrete fact; and the realities i - ~I.~.~,
‘ ’hvo WKU students show th I durlnBy Zingyfaigflgzagg WKUfromcooksin the student center may very well find himself lh 3“ was in Israel, slunnif‘ his own nation have been my story and experience i . 5 ‘7‘5 i
i . “let em. to My." “he“; '39". "‘"y “ pirl d . “3*“..- Show M 09- to adminstrators and managers have awkward postion tellim an employer and horrifying most other Arab In Egypt. potentialities have always “ :3
I ‘ .' ”Klan tothe cuts made and any further one; being planned. The rally was "pr a “WWW” to make "‘3‘ the college "9'“ which he leaders The visit culminated in the been more important tlnn W hug”
. Mbymixn,mm ”mmmI I WKU gpeCIal- “mom and strong. graduated mlmser eXIllS- 1% U Sinediated Camp David Ac- grams." l , afifie
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tempt on the life of NAACP president Vernon recognized his unprecedented efforts toward 3. . - » '53 ,. engugnia ‘ 1 g,
3 Jordan, bombings of civilians in Jerusalem, peace in the Middle East as one of the great . ; ,, .. - " " ‘ia‘r‘i‘hfih‘ht 3E , h
Belfast and Munich—the listgoesonand on. achievements of statesmanship in this cen- _; ,a-t" this - ; _ _ .
. . . - ; r? : '_.,,"§§._~ Mains-ignezfizn _‘. ,,.,.;:;:-:;:;:;:;.;.,.;.;;,. ..;.;.-;.,:;:-:-.;.;:;' . b!
; The 19705 were among the bloodiest years in tury. ; ;-, ' __ . ' , m “1,, —— H, ' " a:
-. history. Will the 1980s beeven more so? Without Sadat’s stabilizing presence, and 1 , 0' ' H": , al
. given the growing dissatisfaction in Egypt . “7“ -' :4 g. “S‘ ‘1; .
. ~, Every day, we are bombarded with reports which was undoubtedly largely responsible for .1315; .. ‘GM ‘ :31? ., p.
,f of killings, war and terror, to the point where his killing, the Winds Of war in the Middle East ‘1, _, >,; .' y" w; . . al
violence on a world scale has become almost may 500" grow to sale force. 1 _ j; . , g3; 7:51. r333 '- "3 I,“ ;; 'L‘ :34 - 3’
‘ commonplace. With death and destruction It the world has in the past found it possible =/ 7 ’7': = .7, sighs: .3 $1 , in
becoming the daily breakfast fare of millions to ignore the; Significance of the death of a - - 5.7;..1. e323: '1' ,a ,7, n! 1...; c,
. of newspaper readers, is it surprising that ter— great leader, it cannot do SO now. a 2.5.0:}: :1 . .1 (1713:1311 2,1111”: .0 '5': th
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How does one deal emotionally tee, for Sen. McGovern did in his 1'.
with George McGovern? The speech) are willing to ignore a m w
presidential election of 1972 was 0 e lifetime of service and decide that {0,
the first in which I was Old enough a man is unfit fa- offiee m the' u e I I I , ha
to vote. 1 was 19 then, can age, pain. that would appeal to 51% of basis a; one pofitmn. Rather than Tulle spoilt II calm out for Stains tickets i II M 7 1
' and not thrilled with the idea of thevoters. take part in responsible political , , , , . . ha
conscription. I would not have The voice is still the same, the debate, they prefer to raise the Im not a big believer In minus; ——__— how sistaiitied its. We talked hitiif 10kt g ml
. ' gone to Canada, nor would I have manner of speech familiar. He is issue to an appeal to fear and mually need “00‘ ' sound 80h 33h mttf 83:18 81% ion a 1‘1 .
refused induction; I may not have perhaps less forceful than he was unreason, eyebau-tpoyehall proof- Smithy. my 5* ff Miyliaamorthe bomghcomd cmceit: 1, do
i‘ liked the war. but i liked the idea during the campaign, and his emo It is perhaps the greatest threat mmmfglllhgahx :01! the mght Off a : c ys partywi 11,; go
of losing my civil rights through tions are not so close to the sur- tiiat we face, the “new right.” As a 1 1. u n . 1 1 x l l
e; felony conviction even less. face. but McGovern can still McGovern pointed out. they are . Myfna'd’wmmwgu- “he“: afifmylmtrfifio'nwmmmé i’i °f
$3.733". Isat ina friend’s dorm room one charma crowd. willing to impose their particular _m WY“; but :0 Fem" mg]; . ln'on rum a- d Not I af a r -, t
3a fall afternoon in 1971 as he and I lidentify politically most closely (and peculiar) morals on all of us. integrity “1.081 him Mala local “85$: 11mm tingle th’Wardu‘ air «.1 .- his
i“ and everybody else in Holmes Hall with the “old right.” I wan’t that In the me of freedom of religion, While I W85 "1 the tub “ a “he“ ______ nti ofgme e cam: 31 J .
re were glued to the television, wat- thrilled with many 0f Sen. they would decide for is when and "a!“ theonset. . bor has 't f Apparet Z; Ru AmwStms ‘ “h
,1; ching theSeiective Service lottery. McGovem’s programs in 1902, but how and to whom we and our My "9.“ door nelgh ti kl muffin . drinki cof 5101:1180th mad? its we to the two .‘ 1
i was lucky, #254. Had i been born I certainly agreed with one -— en- children shall pray. In the name of a ”'7 ”ham ”me "‘8‘. c e : ”Wd‘es' and '3 ”a” ‘ disc - k M he’d m, a bag agl
; 13 hours earlier, i‘d have been M. ding the war. (Besides, my freedom of speech, they would sti- the Stones concert are some 0!! sa fee. ked 13c; cyst: ndliiinc 1 de‘
* Someone else was, because we’d mother,alifelong Republican, had he dissentand hbeimmmmm, tomorrow mormns. My Niel: rate several people came by auntie: ts rage us a mockmgmmrks. }
occasionally hear a scream of been telling me for years that ifwedisag-eewjthtmm; ShOt up, my respiration qui 310d what we wereup to. Stones can “Yeah Nola,how about that Stmes cal
fristrau‘on and fear as a lottery President Nixon wasacrook.) In a very real way, George andmy face flushed. may 80 9h salem the WW, tj concert last night (yuckyuck)?” pul
number was drawn. Listaiing to Sen. McGovern's McGovern was a angle-issue can- After several phone cails_to peole we libefirstin hne. Themforma on “It was something else, Gary. ,1
,, George McGovern was a distant speech last Thursday night sent a didate in im. His one issue (as 2"” “m“ have “a" ”me '"mm' must m‘ h?“ m.“ 3" {Trmm’ What about this weather? 1 bet time an
figure then, strangely professorial strange thrill through me. I perceived by the public) was the huh I had no better assurance ‘1 the asnooneyomed us "'ng - ink folks campilu out for tickets are real-
i; but still a commanding politician. disagree with him on many issues. war. ‘ Richard Nixon took tiiat truth 01' the may but I made a deft A security Md seemed to th- ly loving it (yuck yuck)."
. ,5; I remembered him vaguely from One topic on which he devoted a away from him. Watergate gave sion: if tickets dogoon sale; and I m that we were on the right track from And so it went. The cut
E, 1968, when he tried to lay claim to good deal of time, SALT II, was of him a replacement issue, but it not there, Chane? are I won tgetaie I!“ and [“936 he had heard from that tickets wu'e absolutely not 8°-
1% theiegacyof Bobby Kennedy. But particular concern to me. I was all that he had, negative ataii.iftheydon t,theworst thatcan arena employees, and may” 1:: ingon sale (““th Memories
as {all passed into spring his disagree with his positions and can rather than positive, a lonely voice ham ‘3 ”1.1” a “‘3” 3 SR?” and couraging: “fulfill; lsi' ons1 in as of a similar announcement came
, 3 polished voice and impassioned find a great deal wrong with the in the wilderness. George take some "é“:me from my friends. I been playing a . 2?“ k back to me, leaving anothe- film at
, ,2; ideas won the hearts of the youth of way he used certain data and ig- McGovern emerged Tram the 1972 made my decima- tunesand thesuys over In V 92:; - bad taste on my mowing brew,
3, America with one thought — end nored other, more pertinent facts. campaign a tragic figure. 7 ARC: 033m a check ft!" $125. :1]: "8 said they heard tickets go on e
, is, the war! But I could not help feeling pull- The George McGovern of lmi is informing a few 010“ friends f at9a.m. tal of t' lots of Last year, a rumor that Springsteen
e George McGovern did not end ed by the man. He is a good man. not tragic. He has lost an election 88" me ”my ‘° 3“ “ck?“ °' Ref?” “3 ‘3‘ :1th3“ red tickets were about to go on sale
thewar; Richard Nixon ended the and he was a good senator. He and his cherished Senate seat. He them, I t00k my roommates car, rock n roll stars tiiabout than?“ broughta lot ofpeoplerunnilg tothe
:2] war his way. Sen. McGovern, pdnted out one of the greatest has accepted that ddeat, and pickedupiiarveyandwewereoff. at RuppHetoldusa _ Mimi; box officeAbout an hour after those
f the nation in his hands, ran a terri- powerful emergence of extremist McGovern is stronger than ever, The fact that 1M. _ else was Chi"? here and the big party 0“ 8 tickets would be available that night,
33-; bie campaign. It wasn‘t merely single-issue pressure groups. and his greatest work may yet be “'8 out at the C1v1c Center thdht local horse {hm- . _ another announcement on the same
that the majority were not ready Those iressure groups (and let tocome. quenchourenthusiasmor our spirits. Then. itstarted rauung. EYE“ radio station confirmed the rumor,
for his ideas (and they weren‘t), .us list names such as the Moral Dana pica is a graduate student in Harvey and I planted WW5 9h 8 under thelpawllon at the thket Wln- aiid thosefolks lost out on their prime
. ‘s but McGovern was simply unable Majority and the National Con- the Patterson School of sleeping has ”(1)393“ the time do“. we Md our Shims became msitimsinlines.
to put together a coherent cam- servative Political Action Commit- Diplomacy, playing 20 questions and Stones damp. but the W that we thht
trlv1a,eatiig peanut butterandhoney see the Rolling Stones from the front 1 could see that happenilg again a
_ after N gone home to my warm, dry
% wnmuumummmm.Mumutmmwapxumucmm-i in Jun bed.lwasn’ttakiicany chances.
I
' - "'5" ."MM UK- m. The final blow came when a “Rupp .
. ; I e — oux Mmfllvmttyeliphyeandetherioterutodpem noetiiielodetbeirnineeJddmmJelepbo-eunbennd official” came out 8M Md us that
Min-Jon.cI-Mcub-ewco-ccth-withvx.lmelhouldbeflmitedtozsem. , .
mxomlmucm ioodii lei-grammar, clarity and length. udteeliniliatc iibelo- material. "W; dogged our t?» to 80 booze 81:41
3 ; eve any ore rum . e
packedup and did jlat that. .
. . . harder to come back when there is ht- I me up. Perhap I have been a sleep tober 14, is a smaller part of a _Th|8 ‘0“? has already shown the I
’5 '3‘ “3' fill! tie support from the fans. One of the Ti, (Ill t h ing sheep. Those labels made me cohesive coalition of Student Govem- signs ofpoor management and canto m,
E things we humans are best at is put- Sheep. Dumb sheep. And even iss think of a lot of people as sheep. And ment Associations of Kentucky. The Sim 39 the dates and appearance MI
E UK football fans are the greatest ting the blame on others. Sure, the aware of the world in which we live where there are sheeep, there are purpose of this event, and similar 80W“ change almost daily, and III
I fans in the world — as long as the coachilu staff must share, too; they than that! Someone is accusiig UK wolves. i don’t mean to call the events to take place on university nobody here knows whethertherewdl .
i ,. Wildcats are winning. When the make mistakes. But it is my opinion students of being obiiviom to tha'r studentson tin‘s campia asleep, buti campuses across the state, is to beacmwertatail. 1
g Wildcats get behind, surprisingly few that the fans must take their part of whereabouts, and unconcerned about do want to caution all that there are displayourdiscontent over cuteinour Still tip fans can hope and wait‘
' . 5 ofthe tam get behind the Wildcats. the blame also. tiiedirectionoftheiriives. wolves in this world ready to prey on educational budget. if you