xt7jq23qzc7z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7jq23qzc7z/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-10-16 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, October 16, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 16, 1982 1982 1982-10-16 2020 true xt7jq23qzc7z section xt7jq23qzc7z W
“f ‘_l
‘ ‘1 Autumn night on the gridiron
.f" "' A . .
er 2 Erin, \ .. w 5..-... m"
. laying Jerry Clotbornes first victory as
. ) head coach. The game included eight
' Wildcat fumbles. four of which were lost
‘ to LSU. See page 5 for a photographic,
. summary of the game.
‘tli-
0
h».
I T
Vol. LXXXV, No. 49 Monday, October I8, I982 An Independent student nOWIPGPOF University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
P d t 'a safety
3 Dinkle admi istrators dis U ' 't ' r I
’ n agree on "IVGI'SI y S 0 9 Police arrest teenager in poisoning threat
—-——_.____By LINIS KADABA F' ’ . . M (w fggem Victims and local merchants to partic- A teen-ager was arrested in Louisville yesterday after au-
' Special Projects Editor _ 7, 5’. ._ A _ r‘ ‘ ., “Right now we don't have anything tangible. thorities received a letter warning that some food products
7' — ’ “ "’ . .; . but we’re working on it." Tichenor said about had been palsoned.
M... . z5 themeeting. . . FBI agents arrested a I9~year~old after a grocery store
3 La F 'I‘r . 19 t ff 'de lk 8P5 . 'i "i ChZZesaaigege aggrit'f‘gggi‘fimiggswktfllge EEK; received a letter warning that certain foods contained a
uren .. 0cm, ,5 o a SI wa - , . . . . . .
l Aug. 26 and died. She wsgpsfimck by a car, Ll" D Lexington-Fayette Urban/County Police statis- p°'5°"' Special Agem James YelV'"9’l°" said Lawrence M°Y

which carried her about 61 feet before she , r5; - IT tics, he said there have been more than 1:000 nard of Jeffersontown was charged With extortion.

flipped over its topand hitatelephone pole. ,w‘ , pedestrian-vehicle accidents on Euclid Avenue Yelvington said a Gateway store received a letter Satur.

The accident occurred at the intersection of i 5 in the last five years. ' day stating that some foods were tainted with a neurotoxic

Euclid and Kentucky avenues, on the OUlSl‘il‘lS , “There are P609” Wh‘? have been maimed poison. The writer demanded $5,000 in return for identify.

of campus. But it brought home the chances ,4. I ' and crippled fgr‘life,” 'I‘ichenor said. “Who’s ing the foods, Yelvington said.

about 2-3000 students take each week as they U : gowtgtobenetiit.“ h 7 ~ - -_ He said the note cautioned that "if you thought Tylenol
ive. bikeorwalk to their classes. ~ - en 009510" 0" W ether LmverSIty 0m ,,

Ten pedestrian-vehicle accidents involving cials are fulfilling the" responsibilities to pe- was bad YOU haven't seen anylhing Yal-
injuries occurred on campis in 1981 and four destrians. he replied. “I don’t know. If they Also, in Clearwater, Fla., authorities pulled Lavoris
5° far in 1932. according to campls police. ‘ havbel‘ "if (my certainly hasn’t-“3“ It'shaithe mouthwash from the shelves of a store after four bottles
These statistics are based on reported inci- . pro em very. very serious. S a 5 me were found laced with acid, the latest contamination of a
:ngIhtzrmeamng the actual number may be ‘ $233235 to get killed before someonedoes consumer product since seven people died from Tylenol

Tom Padgett, director of UK Public Safety, -4 . Dinkle forecasts a remedy for the pedestrian capsules containing Cyanide.
said the problem of pedestrian safety is worse ' ‘ "jg-3 gm ‘ 17;, f safety problem — using more signs and signals _ I I .
on this campus than most because of its loca- ..- . ,:54§;?5‘,3: _-.-.4.' — by the: end of 1982. He has placed the issue Israel sald pleased w|th U.S. support
tion in the center of town. .31"... . {: '~"-“;'$'§;f§: ' ‘_'_-.";{:' high on his list of priorities, adding he is hand-

He said the most hazardous areas for pedes- c2 _; ' ‘a: 54:11:. ‘ . r; ling it himself because an SGA committee . . . .
trians, in order of danger. are Rose Street. Eu- ‘7‘- W} _ , if}: wouldonly“bogitdown." "L AY'V' Israel _ The F°re'9"_ M'"'$"Y sa'd yés'e'day
clid Avenue and South Limestone Street. three % 95‘s.. 3;“ _‘ iagwsév’r ; -;.-’:-l;.:‘:: “The pedestrian safety problem is one of the Israel '5 gratified by U-S- SUPPO" in OPPOSWEJ Ismail exPUl‘
heavily-used thoroughfares that form the * .71?- . yi-{Efi‘fi . . . ref: most serious problems on campus. considering sion from the UN. General Assembly and technical confer-
boundaries of main campus. '1', 3,; . . f ' 4%? the number of students who ride bikes. consid- ences of the world body.

Padgett acknowledged ll]? University admin' I ' I ’ ' “gr ering the number Whl.) 4“"? C?” and park "Israel is very appreciative and verY pleased with the
istration has a responsibility to maintain pev .,$_;... ' ' , ._ them andwalktoclass, Dinklesaid. . h h bl ,, . _ t k s n
destrian safety on campus and said it has ful- ..' . - “It‘s up there with campus crime, financial A’T‘er'm" appr°°c '° ' e pr° 9"“ ° mm" W spo 9 ma
filled its duty. '- wt)?" " aid. It's a chief problem on campis. " said-

“If we didn't have traffic lights and cross- ,_'« , F,” . Robert Zumwinkle, vice chancellor for stu- Secretary of State George P. Shultz said Saturday that
walks, that's a different story.“ he said. “I ’,‘,.’-' ' .i r , *" dent affairs, said he believes it is important to Washington would withdraw delegations and withhold pay-
thflllk “(Slvfifonseua’g wfccfon‘" t Association i ' , _,, Stake students more aware 0f pedestrian safe- ments to the General Assembly and the International Tele-

im in e. en vernmen 4 r A . . . . , . .
president. said. however. he has found several .. .. _, .. ,i ll He views the University’s role as being that communications Conference in Nairobi if those groups voted
areas along the edges of campus that could be "x \ of an educator. “I think we have a responsibili- '0 expel Israel. ‘ '
improved by additional traffic markings. , _ ty to assure that reasonable steps are taken for In Nairobi, the balloting on the Algerian-sponsored reso~

He said that, on a four~block tour around I, - ' safety. Also, we have a responsibility to cau- lution to expel Israel from the communications conference
centriil caflmpl‘ils‘ he lltlundl'ml‘i‘f firsmat: 531;?” ti?“ studentsiind other .mentiberts 0f the Univer- was scheduled for today. Chief U.S. delegate Michael Gard-
si a , a as in ye ow ig ween e ine SI ycommum yincrossmgs ree s. . . ,

Argtl; Building aid the Chi Omega and Delta He said the University administration has ner said he has sent copies of Shultzs statement to the
Delta Delta sorority houses on Rose Street. I taken no specific steps to insure pedestrian heads Of alldelegations.
A150. therewerenopedestrian crossing signs. \ safety other than advising residence hall dwell- Arab nations have spearheaded the drive to oust Israel
in addition. “we desperately “89d a signal \ ergandsfilfildem QJWPS tobecautious. in reSponse to the Israeli invasion of Lebanon to rout Pales-
where students cross near the Student Center ‘ - umwi e sai . however. that in re rd to - ~ - - - - _
and Jewell Hall (on Euclid Avenue)." Dinkle the budget. “I would say there are a nuiiaber of limo" guerrillas and lBhe. massfacre Of Palesnnmns by Chris
said. “It’s like a time bomb waiting to explode, ‘ other priorities higher on the list to do any- "a" m'l'l'c’me" m "”0 em" re ”gee camps.
forsomeone togethurt.“ " .\ thing significant to improve the safety situa- . _
Padgett said he is working with city officials . \ tion." Gemayel arrives in New York
. to resolve the congestion problem around cam- a?“ ”p \ Padgett also gives the issue a low rank be-
Emir‘w-"ei’39""""’?§u§?nw2l§r$§fs‘l’emy — ’ 53$:$351335?iiis‘i‘r’r'r‘erilc'rr’éaia'ér :33 "E" '°"" — “We” P'eS‘den' Am‘" Gemve' ("rived
rilelcisagngulizclklgtbidd thg area probably has Lowmmmmemm. costly. p p yesterday to ask-the U.-f‘l.'Security Council and President
“an adequate number of signals.“ but “people Despite signs like this one on Rose Although he said UK police officers‘ primary R9090" l°r help I" S’Ob'llz'"9 and FGbU'lding his war-torn
won‘t use them." Street, IO pedestrian-vehicle accidents duty is to patrol. they are unable to oversee country.
.UAS long as you have a main thoroughfare occurred on campus '05, year, and four congested areas because their numbers are Gemayel, elected four weeks ago after the assassina-
llke ROSE running through campus. students. so far this ear. llTltw- . g . tion of his brother, told reporters at Kennedy Airport he
won‘t use the Signals and traffic markings. Y Number one. theres not enough police offi- had c me ..f t th . ’ t' ' . d h
Padgett said. Blanton said UK now has no other pedestrian cers to do that. and two, if you provide cross- .0 ° carry o e 'n erna ”I’m. community cm i e
The department has installed a light signal safety improvement plans. “We have a pretty walks and traffic lights and someone refuses to American people "‘9 hopes and OSP"°"°"5 0i ”‘6 People Of
on Euclid and a “No Right On Red" sign at the good safety record.“ he said. “It's a minor use them. (you‘ve) done all you can_”he said, Lebanon after nearly a decade of suffering."
intersection of Euclid and South Limestone he- miracle we haven’t had anyone splattered out UKPD has 34 employees. including detec- He called for the withdrawal of all foreign forces from
cause of problems disabled students had crOSS- on Rose Street with the way it is heawly trav- tives. administrators and officers. Of these. his country and a comprehensive program to aid its recons-
ing thosestreets. eled." about 24 are patrolmen working on eight-per ' t‘
Also. Padgett said long-range plans to reduce Dinkle. too. has taken the problem to the sonshifts. NC 'On- . ‘
motor vehicle traffic on campus include clos- city. He approached the Lexington-Fayette Ur- Suggestions of underpasses or skywalks were T°d°Yv Ger“(Wei W‘ll address "‘9 Un'led NOlionS Gener-
ing congested areas. “We hope eventually that ban/County Council for support in improving frowned upon. “Depressing the road and over- al Assembly. Alfred Mady. Gemayel’s special adviser, said
RogeStreetgillbecomE‘a partqglcagiepui." [ Gimp: fidtf‘striarlnsafety and said he is headd cho’fswalks angleuvefrry gpgnsiix/ea" Padhgcrelt}: at the airport that the president would ask the Security
ewas re erring to epOSSi e ve opmen peas WI eres s. sai . “ ey're me i us . ut on'tt i - _ - -
of an alternate route for traffic now using Rose “There‘s been really good response from it will be used. It‘s ridiculous to me to do any CouncLl for a fthreemonthh extension m the Slay of a ”N”
Street. thereby restricting the street to pedes- Ann Ross (councilperson at large and vice majorconstruction." peace 999mg °'Ce '" sout ern Leb°”°”' ,
trian use. This would require city cooperation. mayor). Pam Miller (councilperson at large) zumwinkle said such proposals are not finan- T°m°rr°Wv Gemayel Will "oval '0 WOSh'nglon for fall“
and Padgett said no decisions on the issue have and Gene Tichenor 45th District councilman) cially possible, “The University is caught in an with President Reagan, Secretary of State George Shultz
been made. in helping me Set pedestrian safety markings unfortunate situation in a couple of important and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger.
Jack Blanton. vice chancellor for administra- and Signals.“ traffic arteries that will always be there."
tion. said that although realization of the Rose A council planning committee will meet in Enforcement of the jaywalking law would
Street plan is “not in the immediate future." November to discuss improving pedestrian alsobeimpractical. Padgettsaid, Pope depiores waste of food
administrators are working with the city. He safety on and around campis. said ’I‘ichenor. a “Jaywalking laws are the least enforced. We
added. however. that the deC'SIO" '5 “0‘ the former .UK student government precident. He could go on a binge and cite a few people and VATICAN CITY — Pope John Paul II yesterday deplored
UniverSitysbutthecny s. has inVited Dinkle. UniverSity police offiCials. See SAFETV.page4 what he called selfish consumption of food in rich nations
. . and asked for prayers so 'the cry of the poor and the hun-
Leaders predict more strikes 9,, w... be hem.
- - . Speaking to 50,000 pilgrims and tourists gathered in St.
Armed ollce atrOI POIISh elt of Nowa Huta Peter's Square for his weekly blessing, the pontiff noted
p p y that Saturday marked the second observance of World Food
Day by the Rome-based U.N. Food and Agriculture Organi-
Hy THOMAS W. NETTER . i. . _. . . .. ..._ _ _ . .. . ., . .7 away by police Friday night. zation.
Associated Press Writer 11;. . . . » ./ Sources with contacts in the SOli‘ He said the day remtnds us how much we owe to all
‘_ p - , i darity underground said workers in those wh r d f d , ff' f d II
. .. . .... . . -...v . £5355: . ‘ . _‘ 1 . - / Nowa Hula. Krakow. Gdansk and ’ O p o uce °° ' 'n a Sl’ 'C'em measure to ee 0
_ ‘ '- I ‘ % grit-L’fli/ Warsaw planned to stay home today of us. But it alsho maklt'es one think that in the richest coun-
WARSAW. Poland — Riot police ’ r / to protest the Solidarity ban and the "'95 many W a) se ishly consume more than others are
“filth aultomatlct Seam? patrolled _ ’. p .»:.: . GDANSK W/ government‘s new law restricting able to share of the fruits of nature that God has given to
l c 5th city 0' . owa uta yester- ," " unionac ivities. it
day to prevent further street fight- // / The law sparked strikes last week a :1 en k d f h h t h d
ing. Underground leaders of the / / in Gdansk. and riots there and m e 05 e 0" ProYe'S 50 l 0' l e (TY o l e poor on
banned SOlldarlty ”mo" said work. / / Nowa Huta. Poland‘s largest steel the hungry Will be heard and so that, in the spirit of true
ers in four cities will stay at home / PO L A N D factory with 36.000 workers: There brotherhood and cooperation. the problem of hunger in the
m3“: wmwtfst aCtllon. / were no dreports of unrest Saturday world Will be finally conquered. '
ac - r r unera notices ap- or yester ay ~ _ _
peared in Nowa Huta. a Krakow é . / Despite calls for new protests. :nE: spezcl; marking 201d FOOdbooy fFAO.d"TCN: gen
suburb where street clashes erupted % WARSAW / worker compliance with earlier such era ouar aouma SCI t e num er 0 serious y ungry
three nights running last week. stat- % / appeals was spotty, One or two- and undernourished people could reach 750 million by the
"18 Bodgen WlOSik- 20. WOUld be bur- % WROCLAW / hour work stoppages last week ap- year 2,000 without major efforts to boost food production.
icd Wednesday —~ one week after // o peared spontaneous and were re-
being shot by police during violent . V solved through discussion. An ap—
protests. // KRAKOW / peal for strikes in Warsaw and \
()ff' . l _ Kr k ' 'd / , O ' Krakow was largely ignored /
ICIa sources in a ow sai 7 Nowa The biggest Protest so far were \
the funeral could raise new tenSions. Huta two eight-hour strikes m (‘dansk
adding a firm date probably would . - . . . ,' . ~ ' —
not be set until today. despite the /// :lnlfihrifgsllapfied tVli‘gnesdayt aftter
privately printed notices. His death. 4 . // , 9 l . rea 9 .up ,0 I“:
officials said remains under investi~ /’~. -'/'--'r'»l,,.'.'r:: {7-, ’/ years imprisonment for workers / \
, "on ‘ ' ‘ / // who refused to obey orders.
8“ ' /////// ‘ //// // Archbishop Jozef Glemp. who ‘
WIOSik. who worked at the Lenin ‘ u ,, heads Poland's Roman Catholic Today will be sunny and mild with a high in the mid
. ‘5’ Steel Works in Nowa Huta. was the "“"'°"°”‘""""° Church. said Saturday that outlaw 9° upper 50‘
first person to die in street fighting ing Solidarity had removed all T i ht liibo " ' d ih ' ‘30
since Parliament outlawed the Sovi- posedDec. l3- so light only small children could chances of dialogue and left Poles on 9 w P‘" V‘ on Y" ' ' ow aroun '
et bloc's only free labor union on Witnesses touring N0W8 Huta on bring flowers to the spot where Wlo- With a "zero option. not only in the '°"'°"°“' wili 5' mostly WNW: 5"."1 '0‘ ”WM."
Oct. 8. He was the 15th riot-related Saturday said police virtually had sik was shot. A memorial of candles, realm of trade unions but in the gen- With a blflh in tit. low 70!.
death since martial law was im- occupied the 0")" and security was flags and flowers there was swept cralsituation."

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With education in Kentucky heading for public education, that some programs should ‘, which v
the intensive care list, David Grissom, chair- be shaved, some cut drastically and others . /. " 5 “"7“" ‘
man of the Council on Higher Education, has cut altogether. I ' / lwmgi):
a prescription that might be just the tonic to Harry Snyder, CHE executive director, " l ’~-—---- 3&3ng
lead the ailing patient to recovery. eloquently voiced the rationale the Council . 7—“:Tv lair.
'Grissom and the CHE Thursday voted to used in the past and on Thursday with re- . ’ 4 ‘ ‘ f) For t
limit enrollment at the state’s two schools of gard to the overpopulated employment mar- (5A5'A‘i ‘ \ r "t “TWO“
dentistry. By doing so, the CHE established ket. “The state, at taxpayer expense.” he .3 a 3 5: w it If”?
a precedent it should not be loathe to apply said, “maintains professional schools to sat- ‘ ‘ \ 7’ ' 1 5.1.1.1. Cili]
elsewhere in public higher education. isfy the state‘s manpower demands for that ‘ l \t , \mith,
The CHE allowed dental students here and service.” l‘t lizii'dca:
at the University of Louisville to rest easier That rationale should be put to the test in ,‘. 'f“”" ,K
when It Passed on the issue 0f closing one of the near future, before the CHE convenes its \\ - . 0‘ * ._ ' "m we:
the two schools, but it siezed what Grissom brightest thinkers to tackle budget appro- 3 -.’ 5“ , i; - 4;};
Viewed as a chance “to explore ways to con- priation requests for the 1984-86 biennium. In - ' ‘ i;
soli‘date functions and realize further econ- those meetings, financing levels for the [3”.-
omies” by limiting entering class sizes at state’s dental, law, engineering and other ""I“"“' F
the two schools beginning in Fall 1983. trade schools will be decided for presenta- u 0‘
Dental students aren‘t the first to experi- tion to the General Assembly, and with those WHICH ONE DO PRESIDENT ’l‘hanl
ence the fear and uncertainty of losing the figures must come the rationale to maintain G my 11‘? hated i
place where they choose to learn their craft. programs at their present levels. REAGAN WANT RE [5 e :13: "‘" F0“
During the summer of 1981, students at the If Kentucky educators and Kentuckians m ‘1". :wnitbal
tChomtrlnonwealth’s three law schools were on themselves find the wealth of lawyers, engi- . , , new fig ltflirellsy
e ot seat, worrying which of the schools neers and others to be so great as to make a P d b I - northyl
would go the way of the horse-drawn car- growth in the professional population undesi- r I n 08 an "9 mo Vle Princess 3% 'l‘hanl
‘ Inge. Nime did. however. rable, their programs should be restrained I . , *5" “"3385;
enta stu ents won’t be the last to sweat as the dental schools‘ have, and the appro- d g h t t Ily ' ’
out a crisis either, if the CHE responds with priations hearings will be the time to re- are 0’" W a comes "a ura ’ ESQ)“:
courage and tenaCity to the economic hard- strain them. BOSTON — It‘s truly like some- revived the dormant relationship, wouldn’t pass up the chance to ma- iiigton
ships imposed on Kentucky’s eight public After all, Kentucky hasn’t made a habit la- thing out of “Masterpiece Theatre.“ spending every available moment roon themselves on a tropical island
universities. tely of “consolidating functions" and “realiz- But, unlike another Whilimnd froyiill 33th Koo at the theatt‘er aniif the like. with eithe‘li;n 2:1 phincetor a soft-porn '. .
v - - n . - - romance, it won't provo e any ort - n. as most any 0 er se -respect- princess. , i pas experience is »
fl 1:11.59: 1:: ' riffs: Upfandfigggm feltliilploytmtent lvii'g gfithgggcgngmle§ "? hlgher edtlgcatlon. coming television specials. ing 22-year-old would have done, An- any measurement, the tabloid scrib- “
g ' . g o e, s a _e_5 ‘t e s eCtSIOn, It appears 9 ttme Yes, we’re talking about the affair drew planned a getaway, expenses blers on Fleet Street should have no
professmnal schools and on the state s abili- — and the opportunity — has indeed come to of Andrew and “Koo.“ And. no, we permitting. trouble stretching this scandal well
ty to finance the tremendously high cost of do so. are not amused. A free-spirited intoNovember.
American woman steals the heart of _§.“_. But at the risk of sounding like
a sailor-prince and, together, the «4.4.4: ., GLEN apologists, we think Andrew and
DR ABBLE 7‘? . couple earns the immediate condem- t ; _ . or; _ Koo deserve a break. First, they’re I
by Kevm F090" nationof a voyeuristic world. a i ; ‘-- , and only doing what comes naturally. 1
, , ”c The affair be an natural] enou h t ., ' ‘ ‘ Moreover, few ever trot as graceful—
BM HM. Jvc I’m “917/ W @1982U""°°‘°“'e5mw°" eight months ago when 3Kathlegn 1':- I . SHEARER 1y from adolescence into maturity as . t
'-—s9 datum! d at [0min 4h Calm ‘ :3 ‘ '-.§ Norris Stark. a 25—year-old actress, - their parents would have liked. Most mt
35 lumen). MM magi. that 3"- both" :32 scolded England's Most Eligible With his parents’ knowledge, An- 0f us have stumbled, and repeated- i
=‘ng 1014111011 4 M J M —‘e'. :4.- Bachelor in a chic London disco, drew secured the use of Aunt Mar- 1y.
2. - [only M MAW W E‘. y 1* 1:1; known as Tramps, for talking loud~ garet’s Georgian-style house on a re- Except in extreme cases. most n
Ea- . \ _: (T Q “1(- -.‘ ly- , mote Caribbean island, where he y°uh8 990?]? try to honor the" par- Hf
, =—' ‘ - '3, < / c‘ I) a I," Bells rang. Somewhere, strings was to fly via British Airways with ents best Wishes, even as they kno- ..
. _:- ( ,. 1 .71... / I. Ié/IM‘M ’71,.‘(W J .‘t/Wg, // could be heard. For the moment, his beloved, under the names of wingly stray from the rules. When ~ _
=3 2/, ’41 g/ =3'l— ' =5“: gig; 1:] love had conquered again. Then. as “Mr. and Mrs.Cambridge." they trip up, it‘s as if they've delib- . .- Im
a: a . , -= I; "am 7 =:% =‘ )1?” __ Alistair Cooke might have had it. Within days of the couple’s depar- erately shatteredagreatartifact. , inti
E§_ fi_ __ _- .- i , (-1.; CA ”' ” «7:; 0' \ Andrew was calledofftowar. ture, however, London’s Daily Ex- The blame for generational con- 5 a p
kg \} ~‘ g: H ‘ l “ ~ — "31 ‘ When the prince returned I’victo- press columnist William Hickey flict, of course, is shared. From day ;
$5 .. I- .13 '0"% g‘ 'Q 55 '1. riously. and. some said, a hero) he began to reveal, all of the bench: one, parents strive to steer their j, I00
marks in Koo’s short life. It wasn‘t kids iht" the right clothes, schools t
. long before the worldwide press was and “rd“ —-.all the Whhe encour- 3 84
running color photos from the blue as"!!! that Whichmakg‘ them. hap- ill
movie “Emily," in which Koo en- Plat; Since happiness ‘5 inevitably .__'
gages in some energetic shower predicated on parental conditions. . _
_ I . I scenes with another woman. agzggrtallfiese courses arent al-
B the time re rters finished -
Seminars tell graduating students how to find jobs M: ....,,.,,.g,,,,,;:9. a... day, But it were. a money to o..- con
_ later, it was clear that Koo was a StWCt a youthful freedom to make ifs; you
Throughout the Bluegrass. May is Sional significance of the material Now entering thr startingg .te. . . hire him. Keep this humility at all woman with both a history and a mistakes, too many young folks also 9:531:55
famous for the Run for the Roses. and wanted to devote more time to After achieving the proper karma times to avoid overconfidence or past. Everyone from Brighton to let their elders get the best Of them. 2 Sp
ThlS,.hOwe"er. is the season for pro— master it: and 2) was delayed in in which to begin the saarch, decid- even. horror of horrors, failure to Brisbane could detail the poor girl’s Even if Andrew probably was c
spective graduates to begin a more completing the course because he ing career 0bi‘:Cth8§ is in order. It follow through on all opportunities. ; films,flings and features. among the last to learn of ms girlf- ‘ ‘
important quest: the search for cm was completing an investigation that is hoped much of tins work was done Even if this doesn't land a job. you'll It seemed as if a kind of instant riend’s background, he ought to ,
ployment resulted in the resignations of three vears ago; i‘ew prospective veteri- be impressed by your own drive and indignation would surely see the have been the only one to deCide the ?
GOingt-mough the PaceS ~ - department chairmen. the end Of a harians will hr served by bachelor‘s determination. prince publicly scolded — perhaps futureofhis affairs. . it t
Ah! person who has completed gubernatorial campaign and the in social work. nor mechanics by de- A180. this is one race where ster— even grounded — by his mum at Indeed, it seems as h the royal Z 3 Imps
three years of college must realize scuttling of a politicized attempt to grees in business law. aids are dangerous. Lying on re- Buckingham Palace right after the family may already understand 3:, 255.
that turning the fruit of that work. redistrict the state? Deciding what area of the country sumes is definitely gauche. or so changingofthe guard. that. Even the stately Home Of it
which in all hopes are a diploma and _ to ocCupv can be tough. Tobacco Ms. Cooke writes whenever goons Andy ’n’ Koo are a good story if Windsor doesn't lack for missteps i:
a grade pomt average that won‘t be chewers should probably ignore 011 from the Post are not hot on her only because some percentage of and false starts (the frequency, in 3,;
mistaken for an IQ score. into a po- t ' a, - {ers from Boston, where such activ- trail. English-speaking people probably feet, helps exPlat“ Why Chart” and té
sition on some payroll involves out» 3 ,3 ”3 ities. houever wholesome and enter- But. most of all, be yourself. We - Diweresuchasmashhit last year). it.
of-class endeavor. \ ASH taming. will nevertheless be know we're ready to tackle any Given Princess Mar 8“?th almost {£73
That non-academic work involves . Shunned. Hot tub fanatics might do work assignment. No task is too _ nightly escapades alongSIde l‘OCk
non‘SChOIaStic Ch0r953 Wl‘ltlng ['9' _——————_ we“ to avoid the Far West; one in- small or too complex for us, be- Letters Pallcy . and film Stars (and damter Anne’s ‘
sumes. choosing the 1110K." few “'h0 The other seminar stressed that experienced L'tah resident reported- cause, after all. we‘re the selfish continuing “estrangement” from .
W1“ .59”? as personal references. exhibiting "smarts“ and perSistence ly squandered her state‘s water al- generation. aren‘t we? We've spent People submitting letters to the her husband, Mark), it hardly seems ‘ 1
begging for interviews With employ- to an executive are more important lotment for the summer in just this our time in the indulgent practice 0f Kernel should “at”! their com- likely that the Crown IS going to
ers and lists of unfilled positions. than clothing and a typeset resume. manner. studying instead of protesting an in- merits typed and double-spaced to blush for long over the suntanned ,
TWO recent seminars at the Jour- The news director of a television Do not be discouraged by a lack of crease in psychotic whales and a re- the editor at 1“ Journalism prince. .
nalism SChOOl 0“ the Nb search station said writing ability would tri- work experience. The American ported rise in the acidity of Salt Bufldlng,UK,405m-0042. 50— as we watch the magic 9t ‘
proved the importance 0f individual- umph over experience in front of the electorate may require 50 years of Lake — we are immature brats, Writers must include their Andy and Koo unfold, we’ll take ‘t
it)" At 0ne~ the director of the UN camera and he was not perturbed by experience in a presidential candi- aren't we: not worthy of occupying names, addresses, telephone for what It seems to be. _ two
versity placement serVice em' people‘s continuing to ask about job date; the instructor of management our spots on these hallowed sites of numbers ”“1 their majors, clusl- healthy young P901919 enJoylng each _
PhQSlzed the importance 0t openings trainees at Kroger‘s will be more protest valor? “cations or connection With UK- other‘s company '— rather than two
posnivism: explaining pOssible neg- Ari editor at the same seminar understanding. Uh. right. That theory resembles Identification willbeverlfled. irresponsiblesex-crazed brats. .
\ ative aspects‘of a person 5 back- said an applicant's scores on tests And down the home stretch. . . the residue of the Churchill Downs The Kernel reserves the rlght Those who suggest the latter W‘Sh
ground byturning them into pluses. given h." the newspaper mean more Application deadlines are impor- run. to edit “I grammar. clarity “d harder than they can see.
‘ She Clted a Student's attendance at than “-earjng a three-piece suit and tar“. lnltlallV' one must assume “0 length “d ‘0 elimm.te “kl“
four colleges as [WOOl that he had writing a bulky triology of personal one wants him and. in fact. could Chris Ash is a journalism senior material. Maxwell Glen and COdY Shearer
S'dllStled hlS need for ”EVE! and ad- data. (“31y eyes are green; my high not be patd any amount of monev [o and Kernel copy desk chief. are Pulitzer Prize-Winning national
venture and was ready to settle into school friends said my eyes were “ columnists.
a posmon. green: I. in fact. conclude I have an
One wonders. however. If this can tnherent tendency toward green I . l . . 55%}
Stereo-0 tic fu I db m d
. Will Barry Bingham really under Of course. we must draw the line p on [S e e y e la 1
stand that three incompletes in a His disdain of typeset resumes we L
copyediting course merely means blasphemous: two years of BesTnpt , _ . , E‘
the student; it realized the proles- ads have not been in vain. Through the press. the radio, the his work improve. ending a book where we started ex- predominate ”,"X “R” and “PG"
television and the motion picture. One day a bricklayer discovered cept at a little lower level and in a movies.
man is being lead through life. This he could build a brick wall the same worse condition. As has been said, people tend to
- ...'.‘n'E Will“ Lk .53; isthe Great Stereo-()pticon. size but thinner! It went unnoticed. It is becoming so that we believe imitate what they see and hear and
ftp/‘3' .‘iFJNNJNCEJTAE What we see is what is to be im- —— the fantasies andexaggerations that thus only make our situation worse. Ple
mg, 3.519%“; CUM-“Wm ’ o itated People work on the set. on GUEST we wrote in the first place, and thus Indeed. the pot of a person's defi-
, “ANOTHER "Whit-(hall!) ' the radio and in the newsroom. we are c0iling downward into the nition has cracked. and privacy,
\‘lY'tAR .:.,,- - Their object is to make money. To Great Stereo-Opticon machine, fu- Obscenities and the uncooked raw
‘ "" "W" make money. they play or show OPINION elm; 't “he a breeder reactor. stuff of like has spilled out.
(a _ .' . (a what the public thinks they want to I" IS true that many 0‘ our fanta- What is the conclusion? Where is You
,~— ) 7.3. ' r t E 1 Q hear. Egotism plays its role here. _..._____._________ 51% and ettagerations are 3 product the answer? If there is one, then it Adc
-. i i 1 , U. . _, w ‘ Throughout time egotism has One day someone else found out Of the "‘dt or. the cm“ character 9t starts With you!
t‘ i i. , J "'1 agy . O slowly taken over man in the areas and tried it himself - it worked! human behaVlor.' The Id today IS For the Christian, it‘s true and un-
rP- , t} 28,4. . of work and art. and so has the Soon it caught on and so it is with running Wild. ENNIS ho heed to the defiled religion that includes keep-
K? ‘ / t 7”") §‘= fl / . media The world is becoming irre- the world today. 880 or super 080. Mile" IS the part ing himself unspotted from the
‘ , :4 ~ , -' “n . —/ sponsiblc and lazy. losing all self- How d