xt7qnk36474h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qnk36474h/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1978-10-23 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 23, 1978 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 23, 1978 1978 1978-10-23 2020 true xt7qnk36474h section xt7qnk36474h  

 

Vol. LXXI. No. 47
Monday, October 23. I978

Fancy footwork

Outduelling a defender. l'I\' center forward Chris Dillon displays the
talent that made him I'K's leading scorer last season. The l' K soccer team
and Asbury Theological Seminary battled at the Seaton Field with l'K
winning 3-I. The victory evened the team's record at 4-4.

KENTUCKY

er

an independent student newspaper

e] Unlverdty of Kentucky

Lexington. Kentucky

Physical Plant is under investigation

I‘lflw-v-Stegam.
:

By DEBBIE MCDANIEI.
Copy I’ditor

The operations and the pricing
practices of the Physical Plant
Division are being informally
examined this week by the Senate
Council after written criticisms from
deans. chairmen and other
administrators were examined and
discussed Friday.

Letters circulated to council
members from Arts and Sciences
Dean Donald Sands. department
chairmen and other administrators
described the Physical I’lant‘s workers
as inefficient and bills for minor
repairs as exhorbitant.

“The frustrations of trying to get
even simple things done properly by
Physical Plant are all too familiar to
the faculty. chairmen. and staff of this
college.“ Sands said in an Oct. l6
letter. “The biggest shocks. however.
come when the bills arrive.“

Sands recounted a personal
experience where he asked the White
Hall Classroom Building curator for
two screws and a screwdriver to make
a minor repair in his office. . .
instead. Physical Plant took over.
Two men arrived to look at the job.
then went away because 4:00 was too
late to start a project. After two more
visits. several man-hours. and
outrageous cost. the job was
completed." Sands wrote.

Sands enclosed in his report several
letters from chairmen and
administrators who had encountered
similiar problems. He and the other

administrators alleged that l’l’l)
determines its charges by how much
money its budget needs.

John van Willigen. chairman ofthe
anthropology department. wrote to
Sands complaining about a Physical
Plant bill of $l9| for an hour‘s work
putting up bookshelves which used
screw-on brackets.

“I feel the Physical Plant must he so
inefficient that it actually does cost
them that much to do it.“van Willigen
said. “We simply cannot afford to have
them do our work."

Physics and Astronomy Chairmen
Fletcher (iabbard said. “I have the
uncomfortable feeling of being at the
mercy of somebody over there who has
much more reason to be interested in
covering operating expenses than in
rendering good service at the lowest
cost.“

Gabbard raised questions in his

letter on who the Physical Plant staff

serves. and how the customer is
protected against the plant staff.

Another letter said PPD charged
$56.81 to repair a roller and spring on
an office chair.

"Something has to be done." Senate
Council Chairman Joe Bryant said.
adding he once paid $500 for a door
that he could have had made for Sl00.
“All we‘d havetodo(to determine how
widespread the problem is) is solicit
horror stories.“

Student Government President
Gene Tichenor agreed action was
necessary. and said the Physical
Plant's estimate for putting up a
suggestion box was $l50.

0n the campaign trail

Republican Hepkins runs against big government

3
Larry Hopkins

John Lienhard. mechanical
engineer professor and council
member. said part of the problem is a
lack of communication between the
workmen. and their bosses. He said
although an interior decorator spent
long hours obtaining preferences for
color schemes for the engineering
department. "The painters came and
slopped down whatever they had in
their bucket.“

Sands said the operating budgets
allotted to his departments are
severely strained by even small jobs.
“It is getting to the point that some

by Senate Council for its performance

departments can no longer afford
these services. and the quality of our
academic programs is in jeopardy.“
Sands suggested the Senate‘s new
subcommittee on Analysis of
Resource Allocations investigate the

' operations and pricing practices of the

Physical Plant. However. a chairman
has not been selected and the
committee is not active yet.

After further discussion. the
Council agreed Bryant will look into
the problem informally. working with
Vice President for Business Affairs

Jack Blanton and personnel from
PPD.

Senate Council considers
expanding Student Code
standards on plagiarism

By DEBBIE MCDANIEL
Copy Editor

The Senate Council discussed
Friday the question of extending the
Student Code of Rights and
Responsibilities‘ section on plagiarism
to include fabrication and duplicating
work.

Ron Farrar. chairman ofthe School
ofJournalism. initiated the question in
an Oct. l2 letter. where he pointed out
the‘Student Code mentions plagiarism
but not the seriousness of fabrication
and duplication.

“Fabrication . . . isa cardinal sin ——
involving faking quotationshfaking
‘facts.‘ and reporting things that did
not happen." Farrar wrote. “At times
fabrication has been discovered in
writing assignments turned in by
students in reporting classes: when
questioned about it. students have
replied that they didn‘t know such a
practice was really wrong.“

Duplicating term papers to cover
more than one course assignment
without the professors‘ prior
knowledge and agreement also needs
to be mentioned. Farrar wrote.

Continued on page 4

 

Hoday‘

By SY RAMSEY

Associated Press Writer

LEXINGTON. 7 “If I were a Democrat. this
wouldn‘t even be a contest." Larry Hopkins mused

during a short break in his increasingly tense

campaign for congressman in the 6th District.
But Hopkins is a Republican. in a Bluegrass area
where Democrats have a 5 to l registration margin.
and opponent Tom Easterly of Frankfort has
begun to muster the state administration‘s support.

To an Optimist Club meeting earlier in the day.
Hopkins. a stockbroker who will be 45 Tuesday.
commented: “I know the power of the
administration. It's like David fighting Goliath."

But in a more private moment. Hopkins
wondered if the administration. under constant
criticism for various alleged irregularities. could do
his rival much good on Nov. 7.

It is such seemingly contradictory situations. plus
the fatiguing efforts ofa candidate with a family
Easterly. on the other hand. is a bachelor ~ that
keep the congressional race in suspense despite the
belief of many observers that Hopkins is in the
ascendancy.

Hopkins and his advisers appear to have settled
on a strategy which they probably will continue to
use in the remaining weeks: run against big
government and excessive taxation and charge his
opponent with being a captive of big labor.

In Hopkins‘ conservative-leaning home city of
Lexington and in the agriculturally-dominated
surrounding counties. the Republicans believe that
approach is meeting with success.

It had better. for Hopkins‘ sake. He needs a
massive margin in the Lexington area to offset
Easterly’s strength in the state capital. and he must
at least fight to a standoff in the district‘s l5 other
counties.

In appearance and behavior. Hopkins seems like
just what his party would conjure up for this type of .
race.

Of medium height. Hopkins is slender. wears
rather modish glasses and keeps his hair trimmed
on the short side. withjust enough gray showing for
distinction.

He has a soft voice in keeping with his low-key.
cool manner. His speaking gestures are adequate
enough to hammer home some points without
seeming wild.

Democrat Easterly counts on personal meetings

By HERBERT smattow

Assocrated PFC“ \\ we

Bl'RGlN. Ky. Tom Easterly arrived at a
recent campaign appearance in Frankfort in a tow
truck. While the truck was necessitated by repair
work to Easterly‘s car. it helped illustrate the no-
frills campaign he is running for a seat in Congress.

Easterly traverses the l7 counties of the 6th
Congressional District alone in his used Maverick.
which replaced a blue Maverick that carried him
”0.000 miles In his Congressional primary and
previous races for state senate.

The 38-year-old state senator said he had hoped
to keep the good luck car until after the election. but
“it just lost its pickup. It wouldn't pull the hills
any more.“

Easterly began his current campaign style. which
concentrates on face-to-facc meetings with his
hoped-for constituency. more than seven years ago
while laying the groundwork for his political career.

Easterly tirelessly met people and kept records of
their names in burlding a grass roots support that
helped him defeat an administration-backed
candidate in the I973 Democratic primary for state

senate. He was unopposed for a second four-year
term in I977.

A Vietnam veteran who speaks several languages
and attended college in Europe on a Fullbright
Scholarship. Easterly immediately began
expanding his base into the 6th District and was
able to surprise incumbent Congressman John
Breckinridge in last May‘s primary.

Easterly admits a traveling companion-chauffeur
"costs money" and the coffers of his campaign
treasury are slim compared with that of his
Republican opponent and fellow state senator
larry Hopkins.

But Easterly says that is not what dictates his ‘

campaign style. “I feel it is more valuable than a lot
of media exposure." he said while touring a Mercer
County factory last week.

“ People tend to forget the person in the ads when
they see his opponent in person." Easterly said.

While Easterly. who is also running ads on radio
and television. may be overstating his view. he does
place heavy emphasis on the personal encounter
method that has worked for him in the past.

Tom Easterly

 

local

l'K FOOTBALL PLAYER Chris Jacobs pleaded innocent to a third
degree assault charge last Friday. The charge was filed against Jacobs after
he allegedly assaulted UK teaching assistant Anthony Watson at the library
Lounge. Saturday. Oct. l4.

A hearing is set for this Friday at l:00 p.m. Watson and his lawyer are
waiting the results of the hearing for possible civil suit against Jacobs.

state

WORK WAS SUSPENDED at dusk yesterday by crews attempting to
clear Illinois Central Gulf Railroad tracks of chemical tank cars that have .
kept Princeton. Ky. on edge and about 20 families away from their homes
since Tuesday.

Richard Griggs of the federal Environmental Protection Agency said that
all but two derailed cars had been moved away yesterday from the immediate
area of last Tuesday‘s derailment. He said four of the cars 7* carrying
chlorine. vinyl chloride and butadiene ~ were placed back on the rails while
l2 others have been moved into a nearby field.

nation

THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION. with one big energy victory
behind it. is preparinga second energy program to close what it views as gaps
in the first plan.

Federal energy officials say the new plan will be aimed more at boosting
US. energy supplies than was the big energy bill passed in the closing hours
of the 9Sth Congress.

Energy Secretary James R. Schlesinger disclosed to reporters last week
that it will include some kind of proposed tax on oil intended to curb
imports.

ONE BODY WAS FOL’ND and hoped dimmed for IO other missing
crewmen yesterday as Navy and Coast Guard divers penetrated the gashed-
in hull of a Coast Guard cutter that collided with a freighter and sank in the
Chesapeake Bay. . _

Coast Guard spokesman Lt. Joe Bridger said the body was discovered just
outside the sunken cutter C uyahoga yestcday morning.

world

A CATACLYSMIC EXPLOSION that scarred a vast area of Siberia 70
years ago and has baffled scientists ever since may have been caused by a
flying saucer. says a respected Soviet astronomer.

The explosion. known as the “Tunguska Mystery."devastated a remote
forest region in central Siberia June 30. I908. It leveled trees over a 1.250-
square-mile area and was followed by intense radiation and a great fire.

A score of scientific expeditions to the area and dozens of scientific
research papers have put forth theories ranging from the crash of a
meterorite or comet to the collision ofa “black hole“ with the Earth. “Black
holes.“ whose exrstence has not been proven. are supposedly the remains of
collapsed stars.

weather

MOSTLY C LOL'DY with a chance of showers today. Turning cooler.
with highs in the upper 60:. Mostly cloudy and cooler tonight with lows in
the lower ‘05.

 

 

 

     
   
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
   
  
   
  
 
  
    

 
   
  
   
   
  
  
  
     
   
   
   
   
   
  
   
  
  
  
  
   
  
    
     
   
    
    
  
  
   
  
   
  
       
 
  
  
    
  
 
    
   
  
 
   
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 

 

     

    

 

 

 

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editorials 8: comments .

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Take a closer look

The Honors Program

By ALYSIA WHEELER
I‘d like to address Mike Kirkhorn
and anyone else who apparently hasn‘t
“looked closely enough“ at UK‘s
Honors Program lately.

for one. And then there‘s always
Student Center Board. the
departmental S.A.C.'s. resident
advisors in the dorms. Kentuckian
staff members. the debate team.

 

.. commentary

 

Selection for mEmbership in the
program is relatively simple: students
must have an ACT score of 27 or
above and must demonstrate
academic achievement] Befre anyone
screams about the inaccuracy of such
scores. let me interject that the score is
of course arbitrary. is recogniied as
such. and is therefore considered in
conjunction with such things as high
school grades. activities and
achievements. etc. . .The 27. once a
person is in. becomes pretty much a
Idead issue. The academic achievement
does not. Honors Program students'
GPAs ride high above the all-campus
norm.

Still. we are not a bunch of elites
who sit behind thick glasses and study
24 hours a day. We contribute more
than is realized. Check around look
at the campus leaders! Look at the
number of Honors program students
in Student Government. Consider
Gene Tichenor. SG president.
Consider the number of SC: presidents
in the past who were in the ranks ofthe
program.

How about Kris Plikc. Panhellenic
president? Check the fraternities and
sororities who are their presidents
and officers? Look at the Honors
Program‘s percentage in l’K‘s
honoraries. Check Phi Beta Kappa.

dd

 

  
    

people in med school. law school.
graduate school at Stanford.
Princeton. Yale. etc. . .And we don‘t
contribute noticeably? Maybe we
should all brand HP on our left wrist
so we'll be more easily identified.

Overall. we‘re the most involved
bunch of people on campus. That‘s not
to say it's a cause-and-effect
relationship; there are many eligible
and involved people who decided that
the Honors Program was not forthem.
Fine. But some people are willing to
reach out for something a little more
involved. a little better. a bit more in-
depth. The Honors Program is forand
about people; it‘s about the history of
ideas. It focuseson something that so
many students could receive no other
way in today‘s “get that job“ society.
Consider. for example. the
engineering student. Where else could
he read St. Augustine. Jung.
Descartes. or even Schweitrer'.’ Sure.
he‘d know Newtonian physics. but
would he appreciate the ideas and
philosophy leading to and supporting
it‘.’ I think not.

Our faculty is by far the most
versatile and energetic on campus. No.
perhaps they're not unique from all
other professors; but the nature ofthe
program encourages them to become
involved with students and experiment

with different classes. It‘s unbelievable
the things they can share. One

professor takes students to the gorge
each semester to share one of his
personal interests with them hiking.
Another bakes his own bread. in a
house he built himself. Students in a
mysticism class have. on occaision.
enjoyed tips about protein diets. Our

4 director wrote andstarred in a. film tat. ‘

be broadcasd on KET this fall. "The?“
poet ofthe staffeven ran herhusband‘s
political campaign.

Why not‘.’ The professors have
interests and hobbies just like anyone
else itjust happens that the Honors
Program is the one place in academic
life where this type of interaction is
encouraged.

One of the factors presently
crippling the program is a lack of
funds. lt‘s unthnkable that an
academic program of 800 people
should receive an adequate budget
whenthings asimportant as basketball
and football programs of 50 or so need
and deserve so much more. We
certainly wouldn‘t want to misplace
our priorities.

Dr. Kirkhorn. you suggest that
ideas are playthings that Honors
Program members should be good at
tossing around. l‘ll toss this one to
you. perhaps you're “smoldering with
a desire to get outside your deranged
disciplinez" maybe you. too would like
to display your versatility. Why not
teach an honors class'.’

Talk to Dr. Betts and set up _a
course. lecture. whatever. It would be
a shame to let your interest die after
such a concerned and engaging
commentary.

Alysia Wheeler is a junior in the
Honors Program and a Student
Government senator-at-large.

Walter Tunis
'lI‘I.\ ’ft/ilul'

(‘ary Willis
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David O‘Neil

“H't‘t It I" HI I'll: Ilt turd/Ill 1’

Tom Moran

I'hillu .llullrlgt'r

Nell Fields

Inmgt't Iiltlur

 

Opinions on press freedom

aren’t the best side of Cox

Archibald Cox has a deserved reputation as a
man of independence and strong principles.
qualities that were evident from his remarks during
a visit to UK last week.

As Watergate Special Prosecutor. Cox became
famous for his persistence in seeking out the truth.
and for being fired by Richard Nixon because he
would not give up attempts to obtain the Watergate
tape recordings.

With that experience. you‘d think Cox would
understand the differences between a legitimate
need for information and a fishing expedition. But
judging from his remarks about the celebrated
Myron Farber case. Cox has no such insight.

Myron Farber is the New York Titties reporter
who has refused to surrender notes to a New Jersey
court concerning a murder case. The state Supreme
Court ruled that Farber has no First Amendment
right to withhold confidential information in a
tnurder trial.

Cox evidently agrees with that decision. Freedom
of the press “has been progressively“ curtailed over
many years. he said. indicating that such freedom
could use some curtailment. There is a "severe
conflict" between the function ofthe press and other
important needs, he said. such as defendants‘ rights
to a fair trial.

According to Cox. press freedoms are "very. very
important. but you can run a good thing into the
ground." Finally. Cox said he thinks the news media
have exaggerated the notion that freedom of the
press has been taken away.

Ironically. Cox seems to have ignored one ofthe
crucial differences between the Farber case and the
incident that made him famous. When the
Watergate tapes were requested. it was done with

the utmost specificity. That‘s a good deal different
than the Farber case. where the defense attorney
demanded every scrap of information the reporter

had collected. without giving any reasons or
explanation.

Another oddity is Cox‘ belief that press freedom
has only now begun to be curtailed. In fact. the
Farber case is only a continuation ofa trend against
the press expressed American courts in the last
decade. Obscenity standards have been “redefined“
to so~called community standards. opening up the
media to suits to ambitious public prosecutors and
vengefuljuries. Fair comment provisions have been
weakened. and only this summer the Supreme
Court ruled that law enforcement officials may
suddenly search newsrooms for evidence.

What‘s missing from this trend and Cox‘
conception of press freedom is balance. Of
course. newsmen have nocomplete right to protect
the constitutionality of their sources during
litigation especially in criminal cases. But
reporters shouldn‘t be forced to provide
information unless relevant and specific
information cannot be obtained elsewhere. a
condition not in the Farber case.

If balance is not restored to the conflict between
the courts and the press. other types of freedoms
may soon wane. As columnist Tom Wicker pointed
out. the lawyer-client confidentiality privilege
afforded to attorneys (like Cox) might be ruled
invalid by ajudge who will get information any way
he can. What would be next‘.’ Doctor-patient
relationships? Husband-wife? Yes. Archibald Cox is
a principled man who has many qualities that
recommend him. but his opinions on press freedom
are not among them.

 

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Letters to the Editor

 

 

Tuition-free

When a child is born. it requires the
constant attention of at least one
significant adult 24 hours a day. lfthe
child is to develop as a healthy.
productive individual. this significant
persn will be needed until the child is
lit years old. Once the child starts

school. this person could be the school
bus driver. policeman. counsellor.
athletic director. and so on.

These people are provided by
society in order to insure that the child
has every oppurtunity to develop fully.

lfthe cost of these individuals averages
out to $2.50 an hour per child. the
society wil invest $60 a day. $2l.900 a

year and 5394.200 of its resources in
developing and educating each l8-
year-old youth. If. in the society as a

whole. there are two children per
family unit. the society will invest. in

round figures. $200.000 of its.

 

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'inividuals

resources in developing each Iii-year-
old youth. Would it be considered
impractical or unprofitable for society

to invest an additional $6.000. or $50
per academic hour. to provide these
with a tuition-free
education through the college level
and double their mental and
productive efficiency?

Now. let us look at the matter as a
sound and practical business
investment. The median income of an
individual with an eighth grade
education or less is. in round figures.
$5.000 a‘year. a high school diploma

$|0.000 and a college education
515.000 a year. If society invess 56.000
in order to provide an individual with

a tuition-free education‘through the
college level. and ifthe individual only
pays 20 percent tax on the last $5.000

of his income. he will contribute
$42000 more in taxes during his 42
years of productive life span than a

high school graduate. A seven-to-one
return on this investment is good
business in any man's language.

Joseph Pasinosky
West Virginia l'niversity

Likes Larry

I am a strong believer in freedom of
the press as guarranteed by the First
Amendment. The press should not be
harrassed by any government agency
or politician. Congressional candidate
Tom Easterly. however. apparently
doesn‘t agree. for on a recent
campaign trip to Shelbyville he
stopped at the County Court House
and inquired about the voter
registration of Jim Edelen. the editor
of the Sentinel-News.

lf Easterly had asked Mr. Edelen. he
would have been glad to inform him
that he is registered'independent and.
yes. he is for l.arry Hopkins. This.
however. will not influence his paper‘s
campaign news. because Mr. Edelen
withdrew himself from election
coverage in order to maintain
unbiased policy. This. along with Mr.

 

Easterly‘s flip~llops on many issues. is
why I'm supporting l.arry Hopkins.

Kent Weber
A&S sophomore

Reach out

Right now I‘m supposed to be doing
a management problem and to relieve
the monotony I‘m doing what many
students do at a time like this: I‘m
daydreaming. For some unknown
reason the Iranian problem has
surfaced in my mind and I‘d like to
express the l‘reedm of speech l‘m
entitled to.

Everyone now. I‘m sure. has heard
about the situation and has developed
their own personal ideas. It seems
every day I hear someone say “why
don't those Iranians shut up and go
home and solve their own problems."
or “Don‘t bother me with that
nonsense.“

I can't help but shudder at our
apathy. I. like many people. don‘t
know a damn thing about Iran. its
culture. its freedoms. etc. but one
thing I do know is what‘s right and
what‘s wrong. If this Shah is doing any
of the things these people say he is.
then we‘re wrong to support him
anyway! A simple sentence. a simple
statement period!

It‘s asisnine to form a negative
opinion about these people‘s ideasjust
because they Ion/t different or war
different (lollies or talk funny.

For once in your life. have an open
mind. think of both sides of the coin.
Didn‘t you feel sick when you heard
about Kent State‘.’ Didn‘t you feel sick
wwhen you read that Hitler killed six
million Jews‘.’ These were wrong eeeee
and no one should have been
castigated for protesting them!

This case is no different at all. For
once in our lives. let‘s put our apathetic
arms around our neighbors and
believe what is right instead of just
forming senseless opinions and
pushing it off our shoulders and not
caring. which seems to be the easy way
out for many of us.

Randall 0m
Agriculture senior

 

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Stansfield Turner says CIA to con tinue covert

recruiting despite Harvard restriction

WASHINGTON (AP)
CIA Director Stansfield
Turner said yesterday he will
not comply with a Harvard
University ban on covert
recruiting of foreign students as
CIA agents.

“Ifwe were required to abide
by the rules of every
corporation. every academic
institution. it would become
impossible to do the required

job for our country." ’Iurncr
said. “Harvard does not have
any legal authority over us.“

In response to a direct.
question. Turner said the (‘IA
would ignore the university‘s
restriction.

Harvard President Derek C.
Bok complained to a Senate
committee this summer that the
CIA covert recruiting threatens
“the integrity and indepen-

dence of the academic
community.“

He said Harvard was willing
to allow the CIA to recruit
personnel openly on the
campus. But he said the CIA
was using faculty members.
administrators and students to
recruit others especially
foreign students and to
collect information useful in its
own operation.

Republican Hopkins is trying
to be all things to everybody

Continued from page I

He has the type of presence
and confidence. perhaps
stemming from his occupation
as stockbroker. which make
new acquaintances feel that he
is a nice guy. 4knowledgeable
but not pushy.

He plays down his
Republican affiliation. as
would any GOP candidate who
does not have political suicidal
tendencies.

_ As a Methodist. he does not
neglect the sensitivities of other
denominations.

To a priest at Frankfort. he
submits a legislative voting
record which indicate that as a
state senator he opposed
abortion while his opponent.
also a senator. supported it.

To a Jewish organization at
Iexington. he says the
separation of Jerusalem should
not even be a negotiable item in
Mideast peace talks. ,_ --

But his bread and butter
theme is the same to all
farmers.
workers: the nation , is in
trouble because “60 percent of
the people are pulling the
wagon while 40 percent are
riding in it."

‘ A typical day for Hopkins
begins about 4:30 a.m. and

ends sometime about If p.m.

Even with all the help from
an adequate staff and
volunteers. and the haven of
headquarters in a suburban
shopping center. it appeared
rather grueling.

A breakfast speech. Then to
headquarters to catch up on
mail and answer and make
telephone calls. Next a tour ofa

factory or large office the

businessmen.‘

said called it the best vacation
of his life.

Despite what Hopkins calls
the fervor of his cause and
supporters, and even with
funding which has enabled him
to outspend his opponent 4 to I.
Hopkins is ever the realist who
knows how to count and
understands that hackers will
tend to tell him only the good
signs.

Still. though his gait is weary
at the end ofa day. the vision of
a post not dreamed of last

- spring beckons.

It turns out that Hopkins
had set up a political action
committee to run for governor

probably an uphill endeavor

when (iOI’ congressional
nominee Mary Louise Foust of
Shelb‘yyille suddenly an-
nounced her withdrawal.
claimitrg labor financing for
Easterly was overwhelming.

Hopkins stepped into the
void not. he said. as eagerly
as believed and the contest
took on a new hue.

Now. it‘s possibly just as a
copy of two newspaper
headlines. dated Nov. 8.
hypothetically describes it:
“Hopkins Defeats Easterly" or
“Easterly Wins By Narrow
Margin."

Congressional hearing
to be held today at UK

The effects of anti—tobacco
legislation on the state‘s
economy will be the topic ofa
US. Senate subcommittee
hearing to be held today at the
Seay Auditorium.

Led by Sen. Wendell H.
Ford. D-Ky.. the hearing will
begin at 9 a.m. Ford said a
number of witnesses had been
asked to represent the panel.
“representing not

segments ofthe economy which
are directly and
influenced“ by tobacco.

He said

only the
tobacco industry. but other

indirectly

information is
needed if congressmen and

senators from tobacco states
are to “accurately portray the
short and long—range economic
implications of anti-tobacco
legislation."

According to Ford. Robert
Miller of the US Department
of Agriculture is expected to
witness at the hearing. Miller is
the author of a May I978
report concerning the
imporatnce
industry to
economy.

Ford said that this report has
never been presented before a
congressional committe in the
form of a testimony.

the national

of the tobacco

lurner' replied yesterday that
corporations also engage in
covert recruiting and added. “I
think it's very dangerous for
our country when a particular
segment ol‘our society in this
case the intelligence communi—
ty is singled out for
discriminatory action.“

’l'urncr made the comments
on the CBS interview program
“Face the Nation."

On other subjects during the
interview. Turner said:

There are “very good
prospects" to achieve an arms
limitation agreement with the
Soviet Union. but the talks are
too delicate to relax in
confidence.

The CIA has re\ icwed and
in some cases tightened its

security procedures in the wake
of the alleged sale to the Soy IL‘I\
of a spy satellite manual by an
agency employee However. he
said. oyctall scctrr rt_\
precautions at the time of thc
lnCldCtll \\ L‘t't‘ [lttlgt‘tl It) hi:

. satisfactory and the intelligence

agency by its nature cannot
oyer'ly restrict
classified material by its own
staff.

Access to

He has no knowledge of a
high—level foreign agent wrtltrn
the (‘I A. as has been rumored.
btrt “for me to sit here and tell
you confidently that there is
none would be foolish " He
said the agency is constantly
“inking for leaks from within
the organi/ation.

  
    
   
  
  
   
  
 
    
   
    
 

II|_|* I\I- \Il ( I“ th\I I. Monday. October 23. ”78—3

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The Kentucky Kernel,

210 Journalism Building,

University of Kentucky, Lexington. Ky. 40506. is published
each class day during the spring and fall semesters and

Proctor and Gamble trip was
called off because the building
had a fire. but another office
headquarters was substituted.

Later. a tour of the
Stockyards. Then a walk in
downtown Lexington. solicit-
ing votes. At night. there was a
political forum and finally a
women‘s business reception.

Actually. all this is normal
activity for a race which
extends beyond a usual
legislative boundary.

But the pace and scope is new
to Hopkins. who said his eight-
year-old son Josh has been
affected by his absence. though
two