xt7prr1pk878 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7prr1pk878/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-01-19 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 19, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 19, 1981 1981 1981-01-19 2020 true xt7prr1pk878 section xt7prr1pk878 l
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KENTUCKY I_______. m... ii... -
| ANKARA. 'l‘urke) l:\l't v 'lwo .Xir \lgei'ia Boeing 127 jellineis landed at \nkara's ' '
Esenboga airport this morning. i'elueled and took off two hours later for 't‘ehran. officials . . I ' ,-
at the airport reported at 2:13 1].“). l-JS'I' " i, .-
There was speculation that the planes would pick up the 7.: \inerican hostages and i '3' .' ‘
take them to West (ieriiiany. 7N - . '_
The airport officials said the airliners took on enough fuel for the 2' hour flight to . -’ .
Tehran and then to return to \‘iiesliaden. “est (.ei'niaii). where the \lllt‘l'lt an hostages 5" . ' V. L
are expected to be taken for medical Humiliation and reorientation .it .- l s lllllllul'} N/ 1. 5 ’ ._
hospital, .1 ' ' ‘
Aviation officials said they did not know whether the pilots planned to land again at w ' ' 1 " .
. VOLLXXXIII. No.88 University of Kentucky "mu” .°"'h"_"m"r"mpi _ - ‘ ',
M°hdaiiv Januari; 19. 1981 Lexington. Kentucky A Boein ‘2‘ can ('ul'l'\ ltil assen ei's and sen-ll crew inetnbeis _.u.____ ; N' . .- .
’ .I 3 2”- ;'
.. .3, , .
. . l ‘ .
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U .S., Iran agree to hostag es release
.3 ‘ t‘u /' ..
F. [ bassy in Tehran, may be freed today. according ‘0 a . lionald Reagan "l suspu't that the lliilliilll.‘ lt-l' that .13,*“',7.
Ina agreement man who identified himself as one Of the 5“ Algerian H0 eSSOrS Cl te there could be little gained lli waiting to iiegot: tie with ' '1'; .' ’. h].
doctors who will examine the captives before their lleaglini ” _;,i inf-
. departure. . Haws said Reagan was only a marginal ta» tor :ii the 3"). '3’ 1th",
IS p anned tOday Shortly before midnight, Prestdent Carter “'35 5““ varlouS actors release of the hostagus. llc speculattd that iii-agan s ;r-.'- ;
in the 0V3] Office, hoping 10 address the nation once By J()"\ "“3”“ tough remarks toward the Iranians >tlt'l’ as mtwtzng :.~',i't;,‘NiN,ii_ .
By BARRY SCHWEID the settlement was completed and announced in seniorstaff‘Writer them "barbarians ' was in wilt-ct a t'tlrf‘lilll} ‘ll‘ ['Ni-‘a ‘N'.'N'.» 3-1.3.
Associated Press Writer Algiers. chestrated agreement between lit-agar. .iiid l‘i't-siilent '. 1",).‘5'.
A broadcast from Algeria said the Hhhhl hd’. 'l‘wo UK faculty members len the rest of the nation ('“lh‘r itlmt‘d at spwding li‘aiiian t‘espiillsv‘ llo- ~iiid hi";

WASHINGTON V The United States and Iran, in ac- justments to the agreement can only be h matter (h in believmg the hostage crisis is over ~Vincent Davis m” “hum ”"0 “WW“ ”I m“ “”hhhh ""‘U" “h“ pilv
cord on every point but still reading the fine print. hours,’ and Sen. Charles Percy, Chhhmhhh‘ the director of l'K's Patterson School of l)lpl()lllilt'\ and mh‘m‘hh‘h‘Imu’w'hmh ‘Crh'i'hk"
reached the brink of agreement last night for the Shhate Foreign RelahOhS Committee, said: ”I m can Political Sctence Professor Ernest Yatiai‘ella think Yanarella said he thought 'he hostage Es>tlt' could 1:125:33,
release of 52 American hostages probably before ta”? a deal Wlh be made PUth before we all go ‘0 bed thatan agreement has been reached, have continued \‘t‘H‘l‘iil more months had i‘ai-io-r been Nt’

‘ President Carter leaves office’l‘udsday, [Oh‘ght' _ . “l‘m convinced we‘re going to get the hostages reelected. but that it'lills man. l'iHlt’t'l‘li llt‘\ with "2

The Carter administration, driving for a latequght NLouisa Kennedy. “he hf hostage Moorhead Kennedy. back." said Davis while Yanarella commented “'l‘he regaining ”0m“ "3 ”5 ”WW “"5““ . i' it}
accord.completedits own review of the agreement and said Carter called her and another hostage Whhv is are being dotted andthet'sare being crossed -- Boil) professors said the aborted April rescue lilis .5354“
awaited “final review, approval and initialing" in Katherine Keough.pre5identot the FamilyLiaisnn AL" The 3. S 3305333333.NN.~ imminent release mav be the sioiiwasaiiiistake N 3'21"
Tehran, an administration official said. tion Group. yesterday afternoon and explained the pro- result of lran's economic hardships liliwhlt'h'lllt‘ cap '1 ”Oh" “'ih'.‘ ht‘ht'W that ”W mlhhir} ”Phi"? "H“ 5,525}

The official said there was no indication “that any blem OVCF translations. "He made US feel very €00de tive Americans have become a political “3mm” both ever .i Viable oni- \tllll 'idi’iill‘tfllt'i lle atti'1ttuied the .‘lN-'-.,‘--’.
major problems have arisen." He said the delay was she said. N . professors said i ‘ ' (lt‘t'lslttll partly to i arter s ll'llerthiiill in (timing with {if} f'
caused by the complicated translations necessary to ASKEd {0 describe Carter 5 mood on the telephone. "The Iranians need mom“. . thev 3m. selling N,” Iran and partly to the counsel oi National six-iii-ity .-\(l ._':'Y.' i :N'
prepare the agreement in three different countries and Mrs. Kennedy saidzN"We're all practictng ChUhOh m tuallv no oil.“ said DaVis lie said that Iran needed a "'5” Zhltlttic‘w Urn-“thin .3 f x."
three languages ~ English, French for the Algerian in- our thoughts. There 5 always something that can go meahs to finance the war it is waging with Iraq a func Davis said the mission was also politically damaging {he-3‘.
termediarids and Farsi,the language oflran. wrong? tion which its crippled oil industrv could no long“. toi‘arter "l think it hurt llilll \er} badly ii! that it i on 1‘33; I

Carter's successor, Ronald Reagan, endorsed Throughout the day. there were r990115 that an 0h fulfill ' trihuted iohis image as an indecisive leader c' :i-p;
whatever deal Carter could make. ficial announcement WOUId come at any moment, Pm' Yanarella said he thought the Iranians would be hesi- Both gate tair marks to t‘ai'tei‘s handling oi the " 25‘..-

The hostages, seized 443 days 38° from the US- Em- (‘ontinued on page 6 tant to start new ne_otiations with incomin Fr '10 at f”""""“‘ ”" P3349 '5 .. 5;.‘13‘3, "

0 O C e ’ ' 1‘.)
, Slip slidin ’ all day ' “
. . 133
,
These four schoolchildren found an unusual way to enjoy the _. , ' “high-If"
_ spring-like weather yesterday afternoon. taking a stroll -~— 373.1-
3 across the ice-covered resevoir in Jacobson Park. . ' ‘ N'; ’71:".
. Temperatures are expected to reach 50 degrees by 'hiesday. - 3"?
making this type of activity short-lived. ‘ .153“?
. By l).»\\’ll) ('OYLE/Kernel Staff ‘ ‘
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UK 'I r r fd r t' l
0 cm S a e unsu e o eseg ega 1012 p ans
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By BILLSTEIDE‘V supported colleges and univer- recruiting year 9V" Enrollmentof tion has been “steadily improv financial aid to minorities has \’]\ ii \tllll(‘ .it'adeiiiit- iii‘ugiuiiiis ii‘fi'
Senior StaffWriter Sities. It pointed 0‘“ that mostly» black students at ['K was 528 in ing H ~ helped to improve the l'nivei‘siti s it‘llglil he ti'aiisierred trim l K to ,fi,

Thursda "s announcem nt th t blackN Kentuhhy, Shh? University 1978] figures for Fall 1980 Show 796 ”The imprOthhm has he‘hfh’w tilltt()l‘il.V retention rate . . Ks‘t in Miller w. .itirart Itl-tE‘t' "on ’

y . e , 8 remains raCially d'Shha from d“ blat k” at L K' and gradual. “0‘ spectacular. h(‘ 'The administration will ll.l\t' to minor-iii slittit'lils to ”in. :iist.ttitioii -,‘, . ‘~
the Kentucky COUhCh for ngher other state institutions, and that eh “I,” be waiting to Shh what goes Simi- adding that part 0' lhf‘ pm: get together to studi this he said one oi the >llltUlii'itJlls in lllt' tiff-‘33.: '
EhUCahhh mustN pmdhce 8. Shite— forts by the predominantly white into the (desegregation) plan, and hlem has been a poor "(“i‘hhhh rate adding that [K 'l’l't'Slilt'lll (itis desegregation order out .idded 753.3": ’i

. Wide desegregation Plat) Wlthln 60 universities to recruit greater what role we will play in it, but we foi'ltlack undergraduates gingham. has mm ”m ”1 [mm for th NI NM,“ a t: ”N”. PM”! ]N ”m. ”I N-‘g .1623"
days or lace .3 potential loss Of numbers or minority students 811d WOUId have do“? It anyway," he "However. as more and more ihepast week the i'eamns 'he slgite oi North filli'hf.‘

federal hducahhh funds has been faculty have been met With limited said' blacks graduate from 1“. [hf‘ “Sdiar the adtiiinistratitin has l‘arolinii rm oiitii wrted with .i iii/i,

met whha cautious response from success. Elbert ()ckerman. L'K “Ch presi- retention Shhlhd improve, he Mild " not had time to formulate a Man tit similmr Ilesegi'egatioii order is ‘1’" ‘3" '15.

UK gfhmhlh‘ who are Shh sorting JOhh Smith. Uh vice president dent for admisstons and registrar, Robert Zuniwinkle. l'l-x' vice action.” said Jack Blaiitoii l K preseiit‘i: ii intctinon with the ’Nii’l?‘7‘,.
our;;ee;::3p;:;::g:m was 9 red for minority affairs, hallehht hm found the {hhhthhf the survey ls two president for student affairs. said vice president tor business .itlairs. iit'lt Ethy- .JN‘NN.

' ’. .pu ‘ general. the reportNion “huh. the 3‘3th 01d significant. that a “verv significant portion" of “but it will be \erx time ronsiiii. '1 tl’tli ' tori-sm- the sl.iit* havmg 'v' 3,; ‘

by a letter addressed to (30v John letter was based) pomted out things "It bothers me." he said. “We've the fin n .‘ l . l 'm ,d H [K m v. ”0 NW3 'm.” he 3N NN . N N hi N H 1, ,0, 3th ,3 , {ff-.11,

Y3 Brown by the US- Department of which we were alreadv aware." made a number of improvements . h “a. (m gra ( .( ..,h . , ii i . _ .‘,'. 'm‘ “h (”h I.” h h LN.“ U ." 05:750.

of Ed c t' -. ()ff' f C .1 . . . . . .' N . . . , ,. ., students goes to the disadiantag- NStllllt‘Hlldi surprised ttit} sin: desegivgatioi. liltili unless the ‘fiEJ'r: N

. u a .th h ice 0 1.“ hm'th sand that the buth-V team since then, and I don tb‘il‘u‘e thesc ed." manv of whom are minorities, found us segregated ' demands are unreasonably high." “1'3? 5".

. Rights. which hasNbeen conducting thatput together the report came to were taken into account. . and maintained that increasing [3131mm 531d 13 was Wm Wm 3H ”Amman Nam ' .'i ,3;
3 state-to-state investigation 0f UK in 1978, and that 1980 has been ()ckerman said that the Univer— ‘ "i; {-N‘
racial segregation in publicly the University's best minority sity's minority recruitment situa» . , . 7.11;". :3}
a I I N‘uhlir'J'hN; A”
Right-to-lifers protest ' . . » .3335;
. - .. . .‘ i ii. ilhfih‘h
o o o o 0 his.» N Ni-RNNIN‘ i: N.
Abortion C we aces Opposmon . . . .. f
. " . "“ t !“ <.;.ii‘.-"
By CHARLES WOLFE Jan Harman. executive director of already performing abortions" but I . I ‘3' .“ h 13' .5 it»:
Assoc1ated Press Writer Lexington‘s Planned Parenthood might “raise public reaction so he . ‘ = .. j .
' chapter. i Robinson i won't be here long. " .3 _ _N .. , . ‘1'}... iii-3.

A locally based anti-abortion Harman is not involved in Right He said the campaign “would in- ,. N. N, I - . .N 1. a};
group has launched a campaign to Life's campaign and did “0‘ 3" Clude PtCkChng‘imcomes ‘0 that. ' h " ' -' 74‘. 3‘7). ‘N‘;
aimed at turning public opinion tend the news conference. But she butno court action . 3 N hip-fl.”
against Lexington's only abortion said Planned Parenthood chapters “Really, there's nothing we can N ‘3 _ ' N '5' 3‘3,
clinic. in the Southeast “do not refer Pa~ do (in courti unless it involves -” . '.‘:.'

tients to his tRobinson‘st clinics.“ something like zoning (lawst." ‘ - ' N _. > ijw

Fra hk Schwendema n, Harman said she did not know the Schwendeman said i I .. ‘ ' r“ ‘ '3 3:23 “
spokesman for .R‘ght. to I‘lfe‘ reason for the refusal. but said. Asked if she was worried about / 7 ~ 0 ‘3 'r -_It t',’ .
released an anti~abortion Nstate- ”we. have standards" for making possible picketing. Perkins said -- ' " . A ' ' it”
ment Signed by 30 local phySiCians referrals. protests actually have boosted t 'h;wie"‘*‘ ,. . 3 . . . . . ‘. \
atNa news conference Friday. It Those standards are based On Robinson’s business in other cities 5;: N 3 .‘_'_.‘
said abortions Chh cause damage clinical equipment, counseling pro— by gaining the attention of women 31% N 35,- 1 .. 1“" i. «3N
toawomansdelicate reproductive cedures and the physician's who did not know the clinim ex- ( ' , -‘N ,- ",3 -
system and lhad..m pr0blems m hospital status,shesaid isted. ., firm. a) . _ «a. M? j 1,.
future pregnanCies. Schwendeman and Harman said Harman voiced concern about -. ‘ __ ' .33" ""‘ 3 , . . ' 1 ,

The statement said that the Robinson apparently works alone. the Right to Life campaign. Plann- ’ . ~:“ _' a. i‘.
physicians “accept only those rare traveling from clinic to clinic. N0 ed Parenthood has no plans to join , £‘\ 0.. i. ; N .. ‘.
procedures required to save the life other physician is associated with the proiesLshe said. i ' $ E‘ ‘N
of the mother." the local clinic. “While they are questioning the "‘ h ‘ I _- in. ‘

Schwendeman said about 70 Elaine Perkins, program direc- credibility of Dr. Robinson. on the ~ : a , 3 , N‘.‘ .‘i-N
physicians were asked to Sign the tor at the local clinic, said Robinson other hand, they have pushed very p ': '~ i .‘ ,
statement, but most “feel that. by was out of town and could not be strongly on the statewide level \ O. .‘ N-N
working quietly. not getting their reached for comment. almost prohibitive standards for , * ' ” ' ~._ ~ \ ..
names on a public statement. they The medicalclinic asked to be in- clinics tobelicensed.” She said. . . . \.N I\ . g . . . . . " iN
candomore." spected and approved by the Le» Consequently. physicians per~ Stlll ShOtS 3} triple mpNosiiri- illustrates the adirie .till.NrNoNr tmerageNot the » Ni ‘.~ .

The object of the campaign is a ington Planned Parenthood Center form abortions in their private 033 . . N . . . Ine art of flee-throw shooting as La ) hat lmnational Tournament. .N N N
clinic opened several weeks ago by last month but later withdrew that fices. which the state cannot WWW*_ - ~ . t . .l‘ ‘-.
Dr, Ralph Robinsonagynecologist application. Other cliniCS where regulate, Harman said - 'dc tside . ~ ‘ ‘ff~
who advertises his services in local Robinson has performed abortions Planned Parenthood workers are lns' 0U . . .
newspapers. The advertised fee ‘5 have tned. hm failed to receive. telling those seeking abortions that Turn to page 3 and find out what the Wildcats mtist Temperatures Wlll continue to be warmer today. . .i .»;
“50‘ . . Planned Parenthood approval. . Robinson 15 not a member Of .thh do to return to their Winning ways against SEt' con with slowlv increasing tloiidiness and highs reaching \‘ . \

.ththOh .8150 operates abortion Schwendeman said hlh group S Fayette (,ountyN Medical Soctcty tender Inuisiana State University The (‘ats face [hi the mid to upper 40s Light snow will likely dewlop ~ I
clinics in Middlesboro and several campaign probably won t change and has no hospital priVileges here. in Baton Rouge tonight tonight and (.nmmm. ”,3.” mmnm,“ ”WNW," ‘ ~. . ' '
southeastern states. according to the opinions of those doctors Harman said ‘ ‘ ,

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R l fh t ge would end Carter’s term on a high note
_‘ . , , Perhaps the greatest achievement of the as to just what the Reagan administration the likelihood that humiliating hostage It is somehow a fitting, and, at the same
' fl ‘ ' Carter presidency was reached yesterday would have done with this problem, trials would occur. time, ironic end for an outgoing president
_' amid reports of a resolution of differences although most experts have agreed that Furthermore, in the event of changes in who was haunted by the hostage crisis
‘ ‘ A. which would lead to the release in the next Reagan‘s approach would be harsher than the American positions at the negotiating throughout the elections. Many people, in-
‘ - few days of the American hostages held was President Carter‘s. table, Reagan could undo all that the Carter cluding Press Secretary Jody Powell, blam-
'. captive in Iran. ' This is evidenced by recent comments administration has done up to this point. ed in large part the hostage crisis and the
_ The purported mutual agreement could made by Reagan, referring to the Iranian Such a change would result in lost time and aborted rescue attempt to Carter’s almost
. ‘ ' - not have come at a better time for leaders as “barbarians" as well as by Haig, added frustrations to an already frustrated total across-the-board failure to win the
. .— ‘ President-elect Ronald Reagan, who will of— an army general who said during Senate people. elections.
. ‘ - ficially become the 40th president of the committee confirmation hearings that he As for time, another important aspect to But despite the role that the hostage crisis
. , . ‘- ’ United States at tomorrow‘s inauguration. favors a get-tough, military-minded ap- consider on the benefits of ending the played in the elections, Carter continued his
‘1 = ' Had Iran and the United States not ac- proach to international crisis. hostage crisis before Reagan gets in office efforts to solve the dilemma. Now he has
-' ~ ‘ cepted conditions for the release of the 52 Under such an approach, the hostage is the fact that negotiations and determina- seemingly achieved thatgoal.
‘ ' ~ " " , American hostages, Reagan and his foreign crisis could have very well become an even tion of the US position on the hostages . , _ ‘
‘ .1 ‘ . policy advisers, including Secretary of greater international face-off than it takes much time, time Reagan could better That_ in itself iS reason enough . t0
- > Statedesignate Alexander Haig, would already was, with bloodshed a possibility. spend on dealing with his number one recognize resolvement 0f the hostage Ci‘lSiS
, ‘ a have been faced with some difficult deci- It is during the first days of a president priority during the elections —- fixing the as one Of Carter’s greatest achievements as
_ sions on how to handle the 14—month-old that much of the philosophy of the ad- economy. a Uhited States pr eSIdeht- And italSO serves
'1 . crisis. ministration is set and much of the public‘s Carter, as well as Deputy Secretary of to illustrate Carter’s humanitarian ap-
" - , On the one hand, Reagan and Haig have perceptions are formed. Consequently, State Warren Christopher, Secretary of proach to all matters 0t C°htliet f an ap-
'. -' both said that they favor a strong U.S. ap- Reagan, in his desire to advance the new, State Edmund Muskie, Algerian officials proach that helped seal the hiStohiC Camp
.V r pearance in foreign affairs. Fifty-two get-tough approach, would be facing the and all others involved with the negotiation DaVid ACCOi‘dS, that helped to pOSSlbly save
. ‘ .' . hostages held captive in Iran would not add dilemma of being tougher with the Iranians process, are to be applauded for their thousands 0t lives during the Cuban
. ' ‘ creedencetothis appearance. while running the risk of possibly delaying perseverence during a time of transition boatlifts and hOW has ended the hostage
. . -' Consequently. there has been speculation the hostages‘ release as well as increasing between this country’s rulers. Ct‘ 1515 WithWt unnecessary bloodshed.
‘ ‘ ' a’ h ' ? '
.. What 0 fear ana’firetrucks ave In common. Read this story
. , ‘ It is early Sun dav morning and majors. And once he got out of religious — he just didn’t have the main onewas fear. Remember street put outafire, . , , . _
‘ Dean Landerson. enters the ,l, ‘ School he had to Work as an accnh’n' anythlng better tOdO. Psalm 23, Yea, though I Walk
-, .' . .v . Southside United Church of Christ. ,- ' tant, He couldn‘t work at a JOb And from his seat in the back of through the valley of the shadow of Ho
7- -, 1' . He goes to the last pew in the . other than accounting — there was the church he heard the pastor in death, I fear no evil . . The voice ‘ .
.g‘ back of the santuarv and sits at the joy . g a chance he might not be able to do the middle of his sermon: “Several then trailed off —— or at least it did OK I.“ end it there. “h sure you
‘ . ’ ’ far right. He sits there silently. by a it. of you are in your fifties, sixties and for Dean. are 3% tiredof reading this as lam
. ', g himself. He takes a dongmnh , ,1 3‘ Dean had the same problem seventies,"hesaid to the congrega- He began to think of all the things 0t writing it. 59 I'll let you end
_. — :' " envelope from the pew in from of tossell __‘ meeting friends as he did With the tion in his best sermon voice. “ he had always wanted to do but yoursele Doesdie 01' (19% he live to
. ' , him and places a single dollar bill '2 it rest of his life. He was afraid to Think about your life for a se- never had the balls to try. He had follow his new direction in life. I '
-' . in it. He then sets the envelope on ».: take chances Dean seldom went to cond. . . have you done everything had enough. He got up out of the dOh tknow. It SUPtO you.
' " the Small wood stand where com. ..: it :5 parties but when he did, he JUSt sat you wanted to do with your life. Can pew and walked out in the middle of Iflget any good endings 1'“ print '
' ' . munion glasses are placed. After -‘-’-. in the comer. He didn‘t get drunk, you look back over your life and the sermon. He wasanew man. theih 1" my next column. If not,
.. ward. heiooks 0‘.” the church pro, ‘ he didn't mingle, he didnt try to honestly say, ‘Yes, everything I As he was walking home from you ll have t0 read another one Of
.. . . .. a gram and waits for the proces- pick up women. He just sat: . have wanted to try in life I have church he decided to quit his ac- these bullshit columns. 50 please
-- " . sional hymn to begin. b t t 0. He was rett much a Deon did that a lot — Slttlng. lt tned.’ If you can honestly say that counting job, move into a swinging send them in. Please limit the en-
7. .7 - It isacommon procedure. He has rgclggeg mg. p y wasnt that he was lazy * even raise Your hand. Singles apartment complex and ding t0250W0i'dS or 1058.
1 . ‘, . been domg this sort of ritual at the In his four vears of college Dean though his parents, thought he was The pastor looked around the con- begin working on 'hlS life-long . _ _
. ' _, l ' church every Sunday for the last alwavs livedin a dormitory ‘—in a — but he just didn t have anything gregation for a raised hand but dream ‘of becoming an ar- Jay F0559" is themanaiging Editor
_ . A. ’ ; four months g ever Sm“, his job at rooni at the end of the hall About better to do. As a matter of fact. could not find one. “That 5 what I chaeologlst. . ' 0f the Kernel. This is his first col-
; : I a major manufacturing company the onlv time he came out of his that was one Of the reasons he was thought, he said..“And what was Dean was so caught 'up in his “hi" 0‘ the semester (and "‘“iybe
. . :f. . brought him to this city, which was room was to go to the bathroom to Sitting in the back of a church on a the reason? I imagine one reason is thoughtshe walked right in the path his last). His column appears every
. ' . . newand strange to him. go eat or to go to Cass He studied Sunday morning. He wasn I fear. Im sure there are others, but of the firetruck racmg down the other Monday.
. ' E ‘ Dean is a 27—year—old accountant every dav during the week and on
. _ _‘ andl lives an a citly where the ha? no the weekends, ‘00 He went to bed ”qr/r; \ ‘. K
.1 . . rea frlen s. no overs an no 'un. , , .- , - ‘ ' {E ‘ ,
‘ . ' ' Dean has lived the city for five :0::]l%':' and got up at 5“ m the Lrh m 1 MW drlm I :1 "
-. . ‘ months and knows no one except , 9
. ~. his landlord and those he works €03,322 :31? :;(é:g}:)hf:rdh:ar:egi 'l lT LL & MR TURN b lHL t 1",. -¥ 1
' _ w'lth.and he barely knows them. . friend w his roommate. But even 1 Pd? m ”(EPAGQS WIT” m1 Q I ~ 3 ‘ ‘l‘\\-\ '
’ . . As a matter of fact. Dean s ”in hewas gone now. I ‘ f. _ [W ‘7" x,
' ' 3' ability to meet 990““ was one Of A lot of it was Dean‘s fault. He , d.D ”MDMAN AND HIS NNlCNALlST (X’s-«£84 w,’ r.
, 3 ‘ the reasons he jomed the Southslde had always been shy and kept to lll 0 "xvii K. a ' / A; . ’
. . j . ,- church it was just down the street himself. liven his parents never | MD (1 @1le FMIgun a (v: i F) /, / /,///I’,)
1" x from his apartment , asniall. two really knew him. And he had \\ ma: . I l
' _ _' ‘ VOW“ hermitage “h“h _ “d5 always been conservative—maybe \ I \\\ . It , ;
. ‘1' situated aboveaold.mscctantested [00 conservative. He was [00 old- .\ Q‘ _| m .n . \/ lei (I ‘ /// fl ,
‘” neighborhood grocery store that fashinoned. His father even told “k ‘ )1 93% “\‘~/‘ in / / -—.' l / 1
. ' i I . 1-, was on the brink of bankruply him that once. Dean never took a \7'3353- fllk’Sfl/W’." $4.. ’ . . 1,!
7‘." “ There was an ironic parallel chance , ” i - ‘1 =-' -7 W» ‘ A)! ' . " A 'l’ [I
i 1": ' ‘ between Dean and the store he liv~ , , » . _ , , ‘7 . ‘ K ,1‘. . ’ .i
'3 _~ 1, ed above. They both needed people “3:33;?lgffléefinhagab;8"; 'fl,,ig.?m «tam,» _ if” - ‘ > u
I. -_ . ‘ to survive. but neither was getting titude for math in high school and fl — , , ‘
, . enough _ was told that job placement for ac {'7 »\ , i . \\
.~‘ " Amway. the proprietor 0f the countants was very good. he decid- ,/ \ . . m
't-. *' store wand Dean S landlord as well ed that was what he should do. WW _ . - ' ~ ’ 4‘717/«44040/4 *—
t. ‘ was a member 0“,]? churchand But his real love was ar~ _ ’/’ Hg o, .‘
-- ~.'~ f imited him down one Sunday I‘hat chaeology. He knew more about an- ./ 9 h/ “ P
was about four months ago and he cient civilizations than most of his . l N T -‘ ‘t’ I 6";
.‘ 3 .. '. '. has attended services every week high school history teachers did. a . 1
., since, But his original reason for Butarchaeology was too risky The , l SCAE ‘1 . \ \
‘f- 3 coming “ meeting new 990““ __ job market wasn‘t as open and the li. -
Z'i-‘a': ! never really came to fruition. He pay wasn‘t as steady. Dean just i l NE." 1‘ , G
It 5“” knew very “3“ People "i ‘he didn't have the balls to take a risk , ' j/ , 1’ Q I I ,
_» '.‘ congregation. like that. \\\\ \ ‘. / ‘ ‘y 19‘}?! 4
j But that was not unusual for So, Dean went to school and \\\ ‘—~ - l\ i \i‘ 7” kg-
‘cl _- Dean. In college he was "0‘ voted studied accounting —~ and he hated ’ wt - . ‘3? “ & .1, . "‘“W ’ ’I
13" i “Most ()utgomg Guy m the Senior it. But he stuck with it because he ‘ 4; "i4”; - . £135»; - 0., , v > - ‘: J‘ r.
.1 ,r; g (‘lass ” Actually. he was anything couldn't take a chance on switching ..\. ‘ ‘ e .1)“ (“h/K: -
D m c ts must 0 ° t h d ff ti e influences
. it}. I,' When Ronald Reagan i5 SWOT“ is poor. and “supply-side" economics strengthening of. the great The organizing will have to be John Kennedy among modern
.«i 2' hi ‘} as president on Jan. 20. Democrats »- the 1980s veI‘SlOnl of “trickle challenge of rebuilding our CltleS done in the trenches .- in the Democrats provided it; Jimmy
1, 2, ‘11 'f .. would be wise to look beyond his eX- down" benefits from rich to poor. with adequate housmg, mass municipal, county, state and con- Carter offered hope in 1g“; but lost
View" mneym‘x’“ “"‘h ““ng As for the big Republican vic- transnorti‘m" and “0'10"“ gressionai election processes. But his ability to define and appeal to
15,-: ’, ' for 100 days or 50‘ and concentrate tones in November and the ensuing andtew revitalization. . this work should be guided and the voters’aspirations in 1980'
5" - on the long-range reorganization 81 predictions of a long conservative , And '" forglg“ 9°“?y- Democrats assisted by a strong national party Ifully suspect that the realities of
It f . ; reinVigoration of their party reign we might recall that election , v; should continue their support for framework for raising funds and inflation, foreign crises, unemploy-
f I landslides can be short-lived: Lvn, Young the kinds of aggrmlve diplomatic teaching organizing skills. In order ment and industrial decline will
. _ , ,3. A Democratic Strategy 0t don Johnson trounced Barry _ efforts which over the last four to accomplish this, the Democratic soon catch up with Ronald Reagan
." -" . '21 damage limitation against the for- Goldwater in 1964 but four years years gave us a measure of peace. National Committee will need new and his conservative comm, and
I '.~‘ I, t.’ thcomlng conservative proposals 0f later the voters gave us Richard ( a strategic arms limitation treaty, leadership WhiCh commands wide their heW'Old “ideas" Will begin to
. ‘ , a the new administration would only Nixon the Camp David peace process in respect among the main con- disappoint most voters. The
.'. * ‘.' ‘:, Wham? ”‘9 “Whom "WT ”‘3‘ the Middle East and vastly 'm‘ stituencios of the party andaisohas Reagan administration will not be
g fiepubllcans,“ and especially the So while Republicans whoop and proved relations With Africa and expertise in building coalitions. able to reverse inflation, and
fllll: ’ , :' New-Right. have a mlonomly on holler on Inauguration Day. don the best tradition and pro_ Latm Amenca- These requirements must be met Americans will not be more secure ‘
- .l '3 oggfrtlhgngegkgllls atnd p125? s.isa;lfd 03mm“ would 'do well to be gressive ideals of their party. In These are commitments which first and foremost by a new party by spending $30 billion or more for
'3 '4 fliited with longish? ralysis thinking and planning for 1982 and fact, Democrats should reaffirm have broad, long-range support chairman. I'Jeonard Woodcock, the extra tanks and missiles. . _
(,3! > pa y ' ”84' their basic commitments to the from segments of the population former presidentoftheUmted AiitO That Will prosenttheDemocratic
/ ' x Z" . broad coalition that has served thatcan make upapoliticalmajori- Workers and now ambassdaor to Party With new opportunities and
_;, », That myth grows out of the It seems to me thatthe first them so well since the days of ty in the United States: the trade China,comos tomlnd.Hewouldap- leadership. If Democrats put
.4 i V, Reagan sweep and the ability of the priority , for Democratic Party Franklin Roosevelt. unions, the young, the poor, blacks pea] to the diverse elements of the together strong coalitions, attrac-
‘ 7 . Republican right wmg 10°09 pom" leaders '5 to articulate a clear VI‘ The apparent popularity of and Hispanicsand that amorphous party. Woodcock ‘3 a lahor tive candidates and WW9
. ,. ' Clare and mass mediafi'ike intothe sion of the tutu“? 5° "‘9‘ the balanced budgets and lower taxes grouping sometimes known as “lit- statesman Who sot alone well With platform-i. they can begin to
‘. . . notion that conservatives are the American people will perceive the should not force Democrats to give [1e people" __ farmers, teachers, business while leading one Of the reverse the tide of 1”) as early as
3 . only people with i