xt7m0c4sn71f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7m0c4sn71f/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1987-10-06 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 06, 1987 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 06, 1987 1987 1987-10-06 2020 true xt7m0c4sn71f section xt7m0c4sn71f  

» a

 

Sports

 

Basketball team pulling its weight in
preseason, SEE PAGE 2

 

Diversions

 

Bananarama or Banana-bimbo?
For a review, SEE PAGE 6

 

 

 

60°-65°

Today: Slight chance of rain
Tomorrow: More cloudiness

 

 

Kentucky Kernel

Vol. XCI. NO. 37

University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky

independent since 1 971

Tuesday, October 6, 1 987

 

Survey shows 78 percent would fund station

By JAY BLANTON
Executive Editor

A student-run radio station at UK
is almost a “certainty" following a
survey in which most students
agreed to help fund the station.

A twoquestion phone survey spon-
sored by the Student Government
Association indicated that about 78
percent of the students polled are in
favor of paying an additional dollar
in student activities fees each se-
mester to finance the station.

Last month, Radio Free bexing-
ton‘s Board of Directors gave the
station until Thanksgiving to show it
had student support.

In addition, about 70 percent of
students said they would favor cre-
ating “two dead days" at the end of
each semester to allow for more
study before final exams.

The UK Survey Research Center
surveyed 540 students on both is-
sues. And in both questions, student
support on the average was highest
among underclassmen.

1n the radio issue, 81.8 percent of
the freshmen and 82.5 of the sopho-
mores favor an increase in student
fees. Juniors responded with 74.1
percent and seniors 76.8 percent in
favor of the fee increase.

()n the dead days question. 79.8
percent of the freshmen. 71.3 per
cent of sophomores and 76.9 percent

of juniors surveyed favored the
days.

However, only 58.9 percent of the
seniors surveyed favored the free
days.

SGA President Cyndi Weaver said
she was pleased to see that the
strongest support for the station
came from freshmen and sopho-
mores, because those students will
be around longer.

The survey was commissioned at
the beginning of this semester after
members of Rl-‘L, a student group
that has been trying to form a sta-
tion for two years, ran into unex-
pected construction costs last sum.
mer.

The dead days question was added
to the survey by Weaver.

Although positive response from
the student body was considered to
be the primary stumbling block to-
ward making the station a reality,
the SGA senate and the Board of
Trustees must still ()K the student
fee increase proposal.

A student forum will be held at
5:30 pm. Oct. 14 in 113 Student Cen-
ter to gather more student input.
Following the forum, the SGA sen-
ate could decide to ask the BOT for
a fee increase at its Oct. 21 meeting.

The BOT then could approve a fee
increase at its Dec. 8 meeting.
There is not a November meeting of
the trustees.

FAVOR OPPOSE

RFL members say that if the fee
increase is approved by the BOT.
the radio station will be on the air in
the spring semester.

One issue. though, that will defi-
nitely have to wait, no matter how
much students favor it. is dead
days.

Last year a proposal was made by
Weaver. then an SGA senator, to
move the UK academic calendar
forward two days to create additio-

4w~+*

DON'T KNOW DON'T KNOW
nal "free to final
exams.

Members of the l'K Senate Coun-
cil, composed of elected faculty
members, said that students must
be in favor of the dead days propo-
sal for it to be enacted. Weaver said.

Even though the survey showed a
large majority of students favored
two free days, the calendar for the
next academic year is already filled.
Weaver said.

Weaver said the proposal and surr

days" prior

 

.. pol-f

 

J ust-a-swingin’

w

Meredith Hairston, 4, of Lexington. was swinging on the railing
outside Miller Hall during the warm tall weather yesterday at-

ternoon. The weather tomorrow will be partly cloudly with a slight

chance of rain.

ALAN HAW“ Kernel Soft

 

 

Shortage of nurses beneficial, dangerous

By ANDREA WOOD
Contributing Writer

A UK nursing student could head
out into the work force and find a
job that is going to offer him or her
a bonus of $10,000.

The current nurse shortage has
prompted at least one hospital in the
state to offer large bonuses to at-
tract nurses to join their staff.

How has this shortage affected
current students in the UK School of
Nursing?

"It‘s made me want to make it,“
said Sandy Beard, 21, a nursing ju-
nior from Hardinsburg. “t know I‘ll
have a job."

According to an article appear-its
in the Lexington Herald-Leader, the
shortage began in mid-1m and is
progressively becoming worse. This
is not the first shortage of nurses,
but this time it could last longer,
possibly five to 10 years.

Beard said the bonuses appeal to
her but said she would not work

somewhere jrst because they of-
fered heralot of money.

“I wouldn‘t go to northern Ken-
tucky for $10,000," she said, refer-
ring to one of the bonuses being of-
fered by St. Elizabeth Medical
Center in Covington.

The UK Albert B. Chandler Medi-
cal Center has not adopted any type
of onetime bonus for relocation and
has not considered it, according to
Dr. Diana Weaver. associate hospi-
tal director of nursing.

“We are considering longevity bo-
ntses for staff. It would be a whole
package for retention and recruit-
ment,“ Weaver said.

Kim Roberts. a nursing major
from Virgie, said she isn‘t worried
about finding a job, and she said the
convenience of being able to find a
job anywhere helps when trying to
plan a future and marriage.

Beard and Roberts both agree on
their chances for success within the
profession. With fewer competitors,

better jobs are naturally more ac-
cessible.

“We won‘t move up as fast
though. We will be needed on the
floor more," Roberts said.

However, the anticipated nurse
shortage hasn't shown up in student
enrollment.

“The shortage in the nursing pro-
fession hasn‘t significantly affected
enrollment of four-year students,"
said Becky Hudson, director of stu-
dent services at the UK School of
Nursing.

“We are acutely aware of the situ-
ation. however." she said.

But while the shortage has created
a positive outlook for those seeking
careers in the profession, the short.
age could have a negative impact on
the kind and amount of care avail-
able.

Weaver said due to the shortage.
“nursing positions have remained
vacant longer than is the norm.“

“It could come to the point where
(patients) don‘t get the total care

needed because (nursesi will have
so many patients. I can see it com-
ing to that," Roberts said. “The
nurses will get even more frustrated
and the shortage will become
worse.“

Beard agreed. but said the pa-
tients will be affected “especially
emotionally. The nurse just won't
have time to talk to the patients a
lot.“

Not only will quality patient care
decrease but the shortage could in
crease the already traditionally high
burnout rate of nurses.

Not everyone agrees on the causes
or the solution to the shortage.

Hudson said the most obvious so-
lution is intense recruiting efforts
aimed at students making career de-
cisions in junior high and high
school levels, supplemented with an
increased public awareness of what
nursing really is.

A better ploy perhaps for hospitals
would be to me “creative employ-

Sec wast. Page 5

Karen Phillips Kernel /Graphics

OPPOSE FAVOR
vey results will now go to the Senate
(‘ouncil‘s calendar committee.

The try for a student radio station
has also taken a long time, but RFL
members say they shouldn‘t have to
wait until the next academic year to
be on the airwaves.

RFL Adviser Paula Anderson said
she thinks the station could be on
the air by March unless circum-
stances that haven‘t been antic-
ipated come up again.

RH. General Manager Scott Fer—

McConnell,

guson said the station had tried to
“hit” everyone possible loi' money
to fund it, but the group had just
come up short

It was only appropriate that the
students be the final link in funding
the station. Ferguson said “I'm
glad they knew ithe station was
worth the money” before any re
cords were even played.

RFL members had set a target
date of Oct l for being on the air.
but the l'K Physical Plant Division
estimated that it would take almost

25.000 to renovate a storage area in
the Student t‘enter for broadcasting
and recording needs.

The group had received 340.000 be-
tween the city ot Lexmgton and the
L‘niversity for start-up costs The
city and University had also t‘tmlrll’)»
uted $15,000 between them for yearly
operating costs

L'K Vice ('hancelior tor Adminis~
tration Jack Blanton said the show
of student support makes the station
almost a “certainty "

The survey results make the rest
of the process toward going on the
air just a “formality." Ferguson
said. "if students didn't want it
lit i wouldn't be on the air "

However. Rlanton. a member of
th‘lr's board of directors. said that
while gaining student support was a
“giant first step." there are still

my SI R\ I- \. l’m'c ‘

UK leaders

support Bork for court

By T\'R()i\'l-2 JOHNSTON
Contributing Writer

Wednesday. Oct. 7. is the date that
the Senate will vote whether or not
to make Robert Bork. President
Reagan‘s nomination. a Supreme
Court Just ice.

There has been much criticism of
Bork's policies in the Senate as well
as in the newspapers lately. Many
speculate that Bork will not be nom-
inated. ()f the 100 senators. only 32
senators support Bork. ()f the rest.
26 oppose his nomination while the
other senators are remaining quiet
on the issue.

At least one of Kentucky's sen<
ators. Republican Mitch Mct‘onnell.
will vote to nominate Bork. accord-
ing to Mc(‘onnell‘s deputy press sec-
retary in Washington. Michael
Mitchell.

“Senator McConnell will definitely
vote for the nomination of Robert
Bork." Mitchell said. “The Senator
feels that Bork is qualified to lake

 

For more on the Bork
nomination. See page 3.

the position of Supreme (‘oiirt .lUs-
tice ”

Mitchell said he didn't think that
recent publicity generated in the
news media had affected Bork's
nomination in a negative way. based
on Mc(‘onnell's constituent l't’SptlllSt‘

"The letters and responses that
Senator Mct‘onnell has received has
been about 60 percent pro Bork "
Mitchell said.

Kentucky's other senator. Demo
crat Wendell Ford. did not wish to
comment on the nomination of Bork
until after the hearing.

()n the college level. while leaders
of both campus political parties said
they supported Bork. they disagreed
over whether he‘d get nominated.

Pat Hart, president of the UK Col-
lege Democrats, said he feels Bork

Sec BORN. Page 5

Freshman council to be

more active

By JULIE ESSELMAN
Contributing Writer

The freshman class is typically an
uninvolved and uninfluential group
of students, right'.’ Wrong. if this
year's Freshman Representative
Council has anything to say about it.

The FRC consists of 30 members
— double the number from last year
— who were selected after inter-
views with members of the Student
Government Association early in the
year. The group is divided into a
senate council and an executive
council.

In past years, the role of the PRC
has been rather ambiguous. said
SGA President Cyndi Weaver. Mem-
bers only worked on already estab-
lished projects. But this year they‘re
trying to be more active and influen-
tial,she said.

“We have a really sharp set of
kids," Weaver said. “They‘re inter-
ested in what‘s going on.“

The FRC primarily will provide
freshman input into student govern-
ment and plan freshman activities.
said Greg Reeves, SGA senator and
PRC adviser. Representatives will
assist SGA senators as well as work
on variors independent projects
through the formation of different
committees.

Freshman input into University
activities is essential, according to
freshman James Blackmon, chair-
man of the executive council.

"We see things from a dttfaent
perspective,“ he said. ”If we get
things rolling. we can get a lot

this year

CYNDt WEAVER

One of the plans the PRC has is
the possible production of a fresh
man newsletter or student hand-
book, which would list the opportuni~
ties on campus available to
students. Such an item is badly
needed, said member Sean Lehman.

The Council would also like to or-
ganize a debate between students
running for the two freshman sen-
ator positions with hopes of generat-
ing some publicity for the FRC.
Elections are Oct. 14.

In addition. members will work on
improving freshman orientation.

“We have a lot of good people who
are ready to get in and work. We
want to make a difference." be said.

 

  

   
 
 
 
 
 
  
  
  
 
   
   
    
    

 

2 — Kentucky Kernel, Tuesday, October 6. 1987

Sports

  

Todd Jonee
Sports Editor

Jim White
Assistant Sports Editor

 

Hard bodies equal
hardwood success

By JIM WHITE
Assistant Sports Editor

For right now, the sounds of a bas-
ketball pounding the hardwood of
Memorial Coliseum have been
drowned out by the clanging of iron
weights on the concrete floor at Shi~
vely Sports Center.

Until Oct. 15. when the NCAA will
allow official practices to begin, the
UK basketball team will be concen-
trating on conditioning — that
means pumping iron.

”Strength helps in playing but it is
also a key factor in eliminating inju-
ries.“ said UK assistant coach
Jimmy Dykes “We try to strength-
en the whole body. Some kids need
work in different areas than others
so the workouts are kind of person-
alized.“

The team began working out with
UK weight coach Pat Etcheberry
during the second week of classes
this semester.

On Monday. Wednesday and Fri~
day the team jogs to Shively. works
out with the weights for an hour and
then jogs back to Memorial for a
short pickup game.

The weight workout includes an
incline press and cleans to strength-
en the shoulders and upper body and
squats for the legs.

“We don‘t try to put on that much
bulk.” Etcheberry said. "In basket-
ball we try to develop as much

strength as possible without puttim
the bulk on. We try to concentrate
on their running and quickness,
too."

On Tuesday and Thursday the
team plays pickup games for about
three hours. Due to NCAA regula-
tions the coaches cannot supervise
the scrimmages.

When the season begins, Etcheber-
ry said the team will tone down the
lifting to “maintenance" workouts,
which concentrate on keeping the
strength the players have gained in
preseason.

Although the team does not lift at
Tuesday or Thursday, a new form of
torture has been introduced by the
coaches to increase the players’ lg
strength while they play.

The strength shoe is a basketball
shoe which has a platform elevating
the front of the foot. This causes the
players to run, pivot and jump on
the balls of their feet without the
heel touching the ground.

"What the idea is, is to strengthen
and stretch the Achilles tendon and
calf muscles" Dykes said. “That is
supposed to increase your explo-
siveness. your first three steps, and
your vertical jump."

The players run in the shoe for
about 20 minutes at the end of prac-
tice and actually play with the futu-
ristic sneakers on for about five
minutes.

"It‘s hard to realize how much it

 

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UK basketball players Reggie Hanson. at left. and
Cedric Jenkins lift on the incline benches at the

helps you until you take them off,“
senior Richard Madison said. “Then
your legs feel so much lighter. “

UK started a weight program for
the basketball team in the early
19705 and was the first college team
in the nation to do so. Etcheberry
said.

But although weights in college
basketball is now standard practice.
at the high school level, weight
training is sometimes still ignored.

And that shows when first-year

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players step into the weight room
for the first time. UK freshman
LeRon Ellis, who has never trained
with weights until now, said he has
some problems dealing with the ins
and outs of weight training.

“Right now, I haven‘t adjusted to
it yet," Ellis said. “When I first
started lifting I was really sore and
my shot kept falling short. Then I
started getting used to it. Instead of
getting sore I was getting stronger
and I started over-shooting. "

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Shively weight room. The UK team is lifting three
times a week to increase strength and speed.

Madison said he and the other
players who are med to the weight
training routine no longer have
Ellis’ shot problems.

And although Ellis and UK’s other
freshman recruits may be strug-
gling a little, Etcheberry is making
them pull their own weight.

“Sometimes I‘ll ask him if I can
start with something lighter," Ellis
said. “He’ll say, ‘Hell no, you’ll
start with a man's weight.‘ He real-
ly pushes you to your limit. "

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Rogerson
leads golf
tournament

Staff reports

Senior Lady Kat golfer Kate Ro-
gerson shot a twoover~par 74 yester-
day in the second round of the Mem-
phis State Invitational to maintain a
one-stroke lead.

Rogerson leads North Carolina's
Katie Peterson and Donna Andrews.
Peterson is one stroke out while her
teammate is two back.

With the final round to be played
today, UK is in third place of the
tournament as a team. The Lady
Kat golfers, who shot a team score
of 314-310—624 in the first two
rounds, trail Duke and North Caroli-
us.

Other UK golfers competing in the
tournament, which is being held at
the Colonial Country Club, finished
the second round with the following
scores: Noelle Daghe 78-76—154;
Debbie Blank 81-81—162; Cindy
Meuller 8&79—165 and Jayne Lohr
82-87—169.

This is UK's second tournament of
the fall. They finished second last
weekend to second-ranked Miami of
Florida in the Lady Seminole Invita-
tional at Florida State.

The UK women golfers will return
home Oct. 15-17 for the Lady Kat In-
vitational at the Spring Lake Coun-
try Club.

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REACH-OUT ’87

October 4-8
University of Kentucky

‘ TONIGHT

I Mom-Thom, October 5-8 7:00 pm.

 

Bernadette Saviano. Greensboro NC

Hear Bernadette' s own personal story

' mysticism Est a Eckankar and business and financial success in her
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Mon.-Thure., October 5-8 8:30 pm.

Memorial Hall, UK Campus

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 By LARRY MARGASAK
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Robert -H.
Bork‘s Supreme Court hopes suf-
fered major new setbacks yesterday
as Senate Majority leader Robert
Byrd, a conservative Democratic
senator and two liberal Republicans
declared opposition to his confirma-
tion.

Byrd had been publicly undecided.
even suggesting that he and other
Senate Judiciary Committee mem-
bers should send the nomination to
the Senate floor without taking a
stand on it when they vote today.

But yesterday he called the nomi-
nation “doomed.” said President
Reagan shouldn‘t have picked Bork
in the first place and suggested that
withdrawing the nomination “would
Spare Mr. Bork.“

At the White House, Reagan said

he would fight on. declaring that
only “over my dead body" would
the nomination be defeated before
reaching the full Senate.

Before Byrd’s announcement.
chief White House spokesman Mar-
lin Fitzwater called the nomination
“very much alive." After hearing
about Byrd, he said. “It's getting
tougher but we're still working on
it."

Tom Korologos, the administra-
tion lobbyist working on Bork's be-
half. said, “lt doesn't look good, but
we‘re still in there slugging."

In addition to Byrd. Sens. Dennis
DeConcini, D-Ariz.. Lowell P.
Weicker Jr.. R-Conn.. and John H.
Chafee. R—R.l., left the undecided
camp for the opposition, with De-
Concini telling reporters, “I think
it's over.“

DeConcini said his personal count
shows at least 53 senators opposed

 

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to Bork. while Sen. Alan Cranston —
who counts noses as the Democratic
whip -— added that he now counts 53
and 42 in favor with five
senators'positions unknown.

“The outcome is now preor-
thined." Cranston said. “1 don't see
howitcanbeturnedaroimdnow.”

Fitzwater said Reagan telephoned
four senators yesterday, lobbying
for their votes. but he wouldn‘t say
who they were.

He said Reagan. who briefly an-
swered several questions on Bork at
an unrelated White House ceremo
ny. intentb to speak out for him at
the rescheduled swearing-in Thurs-
day of F8! Directordesignate Wil-
liam Sessions. Asked if Reagan
planned a television address. Fitz-
water said, “Every option is being
considered.“

The decisions by Byrd and DeCon-
cini also will affect the Senate Judi-

Pa
8 . aPP

ultyc""1ub is inw'v '

ciary Committee vote today on the
type of recommendation the panel
will maketothe full Senate.

They became the seventh and
eighth lawmakers on the 14-member
panel to announce opposition to
Bork. Cranston said the vote “would
likely turn out to be a negative rec—
ommendation" although a decision
of “no recommendation" is still pos-
sible.

Both sides have said the nomi-
nation should be sent to the full Sen-
ate. no matter how many committee
members oppose confirmation.

Five Republican members.of the
committee favor Bork, and Sen.
Howell Heflin, D-Ala.. is to make his
decision known today.

Weicker and Chafee became the
third and fourth Republicam to
speak out against the nominee. fol-
lowing Sens. Arlen Specter of Penn-
sylvania, a member of the Judiciary

nations. for Kitchen'

“I’S‘hwaShQI‘S', I’Di‘ning Roomff
.nd Buss'e'rs.‘ . .

Kentucky Kernel. Tuesday. October 6, 1007 — 3

Three senators add more Opposition to Bork nomination

Committee. and Bob Packwood of
Oregon. Democrats who say they
support Bork are Ernest Hollings of
South Carolina and David Boren of
Oklahoma.

Byrd said he would vote against
Bork because of concerns about pri~
vacy, the right of Congress to sue
the president in federal court. and
because the nomination is "too con-
troversial to go forward with.“

Asked if the nomination should be
withdrawn, Byrd told reporters, “I
think it would spare Mr. Bork and
I‘m sorry the president sent this
nomination up to the Senate.“

Byrd said he decided to switch
from the undecided camp now be-
cause. “Over the weekend I made a
lot of calls to West Virginia and

found a great feeling of concern. dis-
trmt.mease.“

“The White House should recog-
nize that this nomination is going
down. not up." Byrd added.

DeConcini said Bork's career as a
professor and an appellate court
judge “indicates a lack of under-
standing of the effect of judicial de-
cisions on real people. Judge Bork
views the Constitution as a bloodless
and sterile contract."

Weicker said he could not ”accept
several months of seemingly innoc»
uous. sophisticated banter" by Bork
as a “substitute for that nominee's
lifetime of unrelenting criticism or
disdain for . . . laws giving our r-on-
stitutional ideals their highest
meaning."

go blue. white

 

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 l — Kentucky Kernel. Tuesday. October 0. 1007

Viewpoint

Dan ”assert

Jay Stanton
Executive Editor

Editor in Chief

Thomas J. Sullivan
Editorial Editor

 

Rep. Harper shows
best understanding
of state’s problems

It wasn‘t the Lincoln-Douglas debates, but anyone who
watched Sunday night’s debate between Democrat Wallace
Wilkinson and Republican John Harper should have gotten
a pretty good idea how the two candidates stand on the is-
sues.

Both of the gubernatorial candidates said they were the
“change" the state needed to save it from the terrible
ways of “old politics

But neither of the candidates appeared to be the real
political salvation the state truly needs though.

Wilkinson, with months of political coaching behind
him, came off as more polished, but not necessarily more
knowledgeable about the issues.

If the debate had been judged on appearance alone, Wil-
kinson would have won the debate hands down.

He smiled when he had to, used all the right gestures

and waved to his supporters before going on the air.

But on substance, Harper emerged as the winner.

The state representative from Sheperdsville displayed a
much better understanding of the problems confronting the
state, although he didn’t convey it very well.

He didn't just echo what the voters wanted to hear — an
easy and quick way to economically recover without rais-
ing taxes -— he told them what must be done.

Several times during the debate Wilkinson appeared to
change his position on some issues.

During his race for the Democratic nomination, Wilkin-
son spoke of a state lottery as the way to economic salva-

tion.

But during the debate, he said that a lottery is not the
“answer” to all of the state‘s problems.
Wilkinson had also pledged not to raise taxes during his

campaign.

However, he told Harper that he would “consider” rais-
ing them in the second half of his term if the state’s per

capita income went up.

Harper pointed out that state’s per capita income goes

up every year.

The two candidates will square off again on Oct. 19 on
the campus of Eastern Kentucky University and let voters
in the eastern part of the state hear them speak.

We hope that by then, Wilkinson will have not changed

his mind again.

 

tucky Kernel.

Building, Lexington KY 40506.

material.

rors and for space.

 

Letters policy

Readers are encouraged to submit letters and opinions to the Ken-

People submitting material should address their comments to
Thomas J. Sullivan, editorial editor, at the Kernel, 035 Journalism

All material must be typewritten and double-spaced.
Writers must include their names, addresses, telephone numbers
and major classifications or connections with UK on all submitted

The Kernel reserves the right to edit all submitted material for er-

 

 

      

 

LETS, SncK 'iBTFlE

/

issues WALLACE .

 

 

 

it‘s too bad that the people who
need this column most won't even
bother to read it.

They figure they know all about
newspapers. You read something,
disagree with it, claim it‘s biased
and write a letter about it.

Well, sorry buddy, it just isn’t
that simple.

First of all, not everything in
the paper is an article. That
means, obviously, that not every—
thing is supposed to be a mere
account of some facts. Work that
appears on the Viewpoint page,
for those who haven't picked up
on it yet. is supposed to be bi-
ased.

On the other hand, work that
appears on news pages is sup-
posed to be objective — that is,
not reflect any of the writer‘s
opinions.

That's pretty easy to under-
stand.

But here are some definitions,
in all seriousness, to help.

EDITORIAL -— When you opén
the Viewpoint page. the thing in a‘
two-column format down the left

 

Reading new

A-
tr” .

    
 
 
 

i'.’

Dan
HASSERT

side is the Kernel's editorial. This
is the paper's opinion, decided on
by an edit board made up of sev-
eral editors and other key people.

Contrary to what some sim-
pleminded and grudging people
think, this is not the personal
opinion of Editorial Editor Tom
Sullivan, based on the whim of
his personal dislikes and likes.

This group holds a weekly
meeting, decides on topics, ar-
gues (pretty fiercely sometimes)
and then votes on a stance. One
of the board’s members then
writes it up. The editorial is sup-
posed to be b