xt7t7659gw3v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7t7659gw3v/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-09-02 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, September 02, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 02, 1982 1982 1982-09-02 2020 true xt7t7659gw3v section xt7t7659gw3v m
KEN I U CK 1 *4 ’”c3‘\ Picture perfect
“.3131 ;; J \6 UK soccer is off to an exceptional
... ""'.’7 V. ‘ “I t "' start. "I feel great," said Jimmy Mil-
. #41955". 1le ‘ 7 lord, a center who yesterday led the
‘ a" 7 2-31.17 . team in a romp over Grace College,
' 13X Mm}? :5 sperms opponent And Coach
. , wfijwl 4?. ' ' ' W. av: Mossbrook sand every goal was
_fl£{'1\bu‘ .-'. ‘ .' ' "picture perfect."Seepoge6
Vol. txxxv, No. l8 Thursday, September 2, 1982 An independent student newspaper University of Kentucky. Lexmgton. Kentucky
Committee releases details
, ,5 1 .
' ' ' ' ’ 72.77:: at. "
we, . ... .. ,.
of selective admnssnons plan t ,, 7 ‘
{7,437 " "’1“; ”if? 3 ' .
—-——-———-— certainpercentageofthebestp'ospects. " ‘ ” /» ' ;,
By JAMES EDWIN HARRIS Several council members engrossed a range of con- 2 M” ,j
_ ManagingEditor cerns, however, when they learned the poposed stan- ' 7 z ‘j
darth could reduce tiamatically the site of the 1m '* ,, " I '
___________._________ frahmanclass. ._ 7 -~
More than 14,!» high sclnool seniors from the clue of 7 ‘ '2 ' ' 1
; HUI school seniors who are shopping for a college to 1&1 indcated on their ACT forms a wish to attend UK, 2 '3 fi at,
attaid next fall may be advised to put the following on Altaikirch said. or that number, 8,076 students would ' , 7 7- 7: 2‘

l theirlistswhen uneyvisit UK: have beanimmediatdyacceptedviathethreshold. ,. .‘
OAhighschool gradepoint averageofat least 15; 0f the more than 6,000 of the 14.00 who picked UK as ' ' 2.... -* . . 7 7 314.2231“ 3 .
oAnAmericanCollqe'l‘utscoreotlsoi-bettcmnd their first choice, 3,750 would have bean immediately . _, . ; hf?”- k..
0 A completed application for enrollment submitted accepted, Altaikirchsaid. 7'31 , .fit. .5: 7‘ '

by Febrtanry 15. But of that 3,750, 1,” students, or 48 percent, actual- ‘, 2.1,, ' _ " ’7; ‘
A University Senate committee my gave the ly registered for the 1931 Fall semestc, a statistic Al- ;: ' 2,7,”??- Wm ._
Senate Council that I I I I I I I I I I I I I I tankirch called 2 ‘7; .' " . "2:7,; 1 V‘ x ,
and more information “poor," ,: 2 7o 7 w. 7.2,-
duringa status report “writ-re did theotb- ' " . . . , ”‘1’“. j 7.
0‘ W5: ”lawns are go?" Altmkirch ; ' '2 ;\ 7
il l. or Uni‘ m. “I mtg ,W '.' . . ....,.~— 4 .. r ( W any
MW" new “33' . . . . . . . . WW." / as, .777 2 .’ >7 ;.'j V ,1 f‘ 5...; "s V' 2_-
tive admisions poli- Ten percent of the w” , , f'” ”may,“ , = .
The M3011. Fe- 201 students. would " f ' fly ’7 117”“
sealed by W Al- have been adrnitted ' 7 . - '2 . ’
tankirch, chairman of from an applicam My M30“ "5‘5." , any} _
the senate’s Cornmit- . . Q Q . . q pool of 1,36. forming WNW . 7,7 ,. W
tee (I) AM“)! and a lml freshman clue ;. V ' ' _ N 7', ” r7247i.:7V-"'3‘7‘,,7V 7,
Academic Standartk, of 2,010students. " " t“ "' V " ‘V ;,
is “not a final or ac- ‘ In contrast, 351 77.. . . ‘ "
tion item," and is students entaed UK
“inighly speculative,” _- as freshmen in the
according to Danald i; fall of 15m, a rise at
lvey, council chair- I O O . C .‘2‘ \' 1,241 students. Altai~ .
man. kirch said those stu- w z.
Itdoesnot include dentscamefrom tan- ' ’
admissions guitblines ; acceptable or pool
for transfer students, ‘5‘ applicants.
; Altankirch said, nor : Constance W'nlsan,
doesit addressthe M/Waneggfiidocotmcil
question of exception- . . . . . . J m mem . challenged
al students whose cre- é' ' x; Altanhrch’s 10 per-
dentials fall far below - - - - - - -.tl'lm§;_ cent pool ceiling, and
thoseguidelines. “'M """‘°"‘°'5'°“ asked how Altankircln planned to obtain enough students
Nanethdus, it gives prospective UK freshmen a toaeateamanageableh-eshmanclass.
glanceattheu'ita'iatheymayberequiredtoadheeto Altmkirchrespondedbypoposingtoraisethepeb 7~
iftheywishtostudyhereinlm’sFallsemestaJtalso centageofpoolapplicantstompercentinlfla,withre-
givesthemanewcalandartofollowwhanapplyingfor ductionsoverthenextfwryearstoafinalleveloflo
admission. percent. Such a rise would increase the theoretical 1S1
'lhe [repose], Altenkirch said, isdesigned to limit the classtozmmembersmrflt. ;
number of unqualified students who evaitnnlly attend He also suggested the University impoVe its recruit; '
UK. mentetfortstobringmorestudentswhowotddbeim-
Its core is a three-part “threshold.” based on statis~ mediatdyacceptable.
tics povided by ACT officials and several past fresh~ Such an effort, be said, conceivably would have .;
man classes, that would guarantee immediate accep- brought 674 students into the theoretical truhman class. :3?
tancetoallUKapplicantswhocanmatdna-sm-pass therebycancelingtheneedtodipintothepoolformore ‘85 , ’
Seniors whose high school grade point averages are His statanant was echoed by Art Gallaha, chancellor m
3.5 or above, and wlnose ACT scores are above 15, would for the main camptn. who said, “Unless we have an ag- H W .7, ‘
be accepted immediatdy at UK, as would students greasive recruitment program, you’re dead in the 7.7:... 7; . 7
whose GPA’s are between 3.0 and 3.5 and whose ACT water" V V “'VV‘“ .2 7..-
scores are 17orabove. Gallaher said the University would be forced to locate
A student with a 2.5 GPA and a score of at least 19 on thefunthneceosarytobuildsudna program. ' w-
theACl‘alsowouldbeguaranteedadmision. Altenkirch also said the number of immediately ac- .uuummmdw,
Amlicants wince GPA’s are 2.0 or lower, and whose ceptable students who become freshman could rise afte- OI‘I fhe ropes
ACT scoru are 10 or lower, would be rejected immedi- a statewide implementation of pro-college curricula
atdy. along with an Man of UK; reputation as a re. Mary Beth Kersey, an undecided freshman from Harlan, concentrates on the rope during a tug-of-
The restraining applicants would be lumped together sultoftheselectiveadmisionspolicy. war tywesterday emernogn at Sfiatog Field. She wasKo lost—mainuctie plalrticipcnnt,f oftehr "being asked to
in an icant 1, with accept.” ml to a join e team w ie si ing in er ormitor room. erse 's 0 Ho 4 team inis e as runners-u
appl poo ping y 5“ “d"‘l‘flm' 9°9°5 in the tournament, which included Greeks arid independentys. Y p
Reagan urges Israel ,.
THURSDAY The rbugget office said reld gnk for Lin: current. bufdget
year, w ic ends Sept. 30, wi e 5112 i ion. It a so ore-
to tranSfer WeSt Bank FromAssociatedPressrepons cost deficits of $152 billion in l984 and again in 1985. dis-
_ . _ . puting statements by the Reagan administration and con-
Admmstratlon weakensplpelmepenalty gressional GOP leaders that tax increases and spending
ByTERENCEHUNT raeli Radio lroadcast an outline of cuts approved in Congress last month will produce steadily
AssociatedesWx-ltq- thep'oposals. WASHINGTON — The Reagan administration made clear declining deficits in the future.
W said, “The Unitd sum yesterday it intends to scale back penalties against Euro-
_____*_ will not sumort the sublishmqnt of peon companies using U.S. technology to construct the Sovi- - - - - -
BURBANK, Calif. — Prath :11” Wt :3qu state in at natural gas pipeline. FI’O Starts In ”"83”, SIIO
Reagan said last t that Israel at Bank Gaza p. and Treosu Secreto Donald T. Re on told re orters the .
should yiddtheoocnllgd WutBank we Win mt w “09‘3““! “' administrarfion intends only to prevegnt the firm: from re- CHEYENNE Wye. '. A “Te 't'hot‘lbroke out :ext'to Ian
and Gaza Strip to Palutlnian self- permanentcontrolbylsrael. ceiving exports of U.S. oil and gas equipment and technolo- underground Minuteman ”|.mlss' e 5' o started w f." ms” 0-
govenunatt unit; Jfl’dlnlln 80- His remarks came but! after the gy, not all U.S. exports. :LonAoriund a yen, ignited m on above-ground U" ”Y room,
MW as Put a “huh start" last PLO “Chm evacmted 36M, That would relax the total export ban im osed b the e Ir orce says.
formula for "I Mable, jtlt and and all is “to , p y The military called the local civilian fire department, but
lastingpeace"lntheMlfileEut. mmmywasdmdmn mi; 'Chommircg. Department last week 090m“ Dresser-France, the firefighters said the blaze had been put out by airmen
W said the ~ Emma“. m e su sn nory of Dallas-based Dresser Industries, and on- by the time they got there.
mam m x W3; “ills“ 32%;??? .3?r'11."§§3t§'“‘°“°”°' '°' "“"p'"9 ”9"” The Air Force said the ruesdoy ortemoon me did no.
77-777 .7777- 1...... m7... 7.7.77.7- 23212122322715:L‘Zflfiitifié'iifi:7"s'.2f..2"si:":ofif
80m WV” _ , initial should be out U.S. goods "may need a little redefinition . . . a clarification t C | d d . d b W A" g B
“in association with .i' of I l within of whatwos meont."Regan said. eos ern _o org 0 on ts operate y orren nr orce ose
Jmn not in m 7.;: _ m ; 2 _ ,. ; ; here, which controls 200 Minuteman Ill missnles nn Colorado.
_ t t NEW - He sand the stringent order was, perhaps, mnsnnter- Wyoming and Nebraska
Hume on“ stat; ' 7 7 ’ ' mat in Us": preted or, perhaps, in its original, pristine form, was a little Sterling Fire Department Chief Engineer Gerold Acre
um f" that f' ..ii. 43 m.” W said, too sweeping wnthout gnvnng o precnse defmntnon of what said the tire broke out in the exhaust vent 0‘ a utility room
association. 2;. 3 “we have an W' was meant, that houses the silo's power generator and "two of their
Seeking “an ex- WW tunity for I mire . people had smothered the fire and had it under control"
gimme of guitaris- . " j g, for-mm pence U.S. budget grows larger than estimate when firefighters arrived.
fidmcelwum VV 1' M3 , $11“! the Mm“; "The only damage is to the exhaust-vent insulation," on
m the role of W" 2 mm ”‘2," "a; WASHINGTON — The Congressional Budget Office is- air base spokesman said.
Mu“, to W manant. He said sued :slightly higher forecast for the l983 budget deficit
we.” mu; Mm“ 061- yester ay, predicting red ink will reach a record Sl55 billion
n. aid the United ciala m mm despite expectations of |0wer interest rates.
3““ Will Mt NIP- "‘S'D'NT .i‘OAN with Israel, E”, The prediction is in sharp contrast to the Reagan admin-
pott any addltlml Judah and Sand istration's official estimate of SliS billion and the Sl04 bil-
mahguflnflltatufimhn: Areal. t I {or . lion contained in the budget plan Congress approved in WEATHER
' “dif‘ an” ‘ WWI am am“ June.
from by Imel" would «tit-nee ire-hm" summit. “min. sud . 7
r get Director Dovnd A. Stockmon and Treasury Secre-
wgmm “.0 held by a” mat”; gfiduvr—tmfi tory Donald Regan have conceded previously that the ad-
h.“ m 1W, "ml-t m m. m WW0" _ to . workable M. ministration's official 1983 forecast. based on relatively opti-
t divibd,”lllltahllobmm- “twee... mistic assumptions abOut on economic recovery, could
Reagan said tin Anna'ican com- “Selt-govennmant ; ; _ in Mg- easily prove too low. Today there is an 80 percent chance of thunderstorms.
mttmant to ““9“ security "l. iran- tion with Jordan oflu's the best And, a government report said yesterday that economic The hlgh will be In the upper 70s to low 80s.
did," but “1 “a" Vl" dnance tor a Mable. jut and last- figures give "mixed signals" on whether a recovery from There is a ‘0 percent chance of lingering thunder-
tually certain re tion by the .. - - -
WW“. hesald. “(9390" '5 Und" way. While the newest bankruptcy tolly storms tonight, then partial clearing late. The law will
' ‘ W'dmm' Th. lu‘ W“ h“ V" showed that business failures 'um d l t t -
“The United stet- will stand by ”r. w m I 9° as week 0 o 50 belnthelctwte mid 60s.
that: m". “a. w “a. “fig” to] t to e Y“!r P°°k7 Tomorrow will be partly sunny and pleasant with a
“an” m a“ in I “My "I said “We have cnh‘aced On Wall Street, the stock market turned IOwer on heavy high In the law to mid 00s.
tdevised m mailed Ita- ls- I ' SeellAOAN.poge3

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Keane l *
II“ ”Old." Ali‘s-w Opmnn John Orlflln Stow-n W. lowthsr Mill 8. lad-b. LO. VIM ”w
Editomn-Chist News Editor Ans Educ, spot is tdmu Splfloi Prollfls Editor Photo Editor Graphics [dim
PB Rs UASION “WM mm mm W mm m
Mnnugngdlloi EdilolIaIEdIlov Illll.wldom1r. AssistantSpomtiiilnI SpenclplolstisAssislnnl (ti-al'hotogrophsf KHAN...
Assistant Ans Editors Copybook
i
A I ' 'd ft f ha I ederi
Citizens ra 0|“ “1 sexes IS ne ~
The crackdown on draft registration resis- seem, is to submit to a draft — not simply I? 'I
tors has begun, and as Jerry Reed would registration. 39, '
say, “it’s serryus bizness.” The obvious but overlooked logic behind to .
Already, the government has won this stand has been graphically illustrated in .3
judgments against two men who refused to any number of countries that have main- 5 L-
register, and it’s likely more are forthcom- tamed“ a standing' professional army. And it I , M7,), 01 '
ing. Furthermore, any move by the right- is the military coup that citizen militias, as m i - ,’ ‘ N :;
wing Burger Court to determme the constitu- set forth in the Constitution, are intended to ill I' .. . 7 :
tionality of registration would .be the shock prevent. Our highly-centralized political sys- ‘L _ ‘ W
of the century. Draft registration is here to tem, with far too much power concentrated '; ' - I. fit .4
stay, folks — at least for the remaining one«’ in the hands of one man —- the president — ‘/ m ‘ ‘,
and-one-half years of the Reagan admmi' so would be especially susceptible to a swift S a; ' ZZZ/Z I .. , 3 I,
tration (and despite the president’s .Cam- military takeover. Gaels“; W/ I, '“. ' ’ 3&0 I;
paign promisestothe contrary). A citizens draft — for all citizens, male . N grog-f /j// III/c", J? _ .
Those who have legitimately stood their and female, without deferment -— would ef- f flfk ,v I / ‘I . "I’"
ground, refusing to register in the face of fectively put an end to the dangers of an PR IV. , \ . ’ ,er II ' '
prison sentences and huge fines, deserve army dominated by “liters.” And, as a side »‘ W ‘ , .
praise for their courage and fortitude. But, benefit, the mix of inductees guaranteed by “‘ 5.2;: ‘W .. ' .
with the exception of religious objections, a draft would put an end to the growing phe- , m ’ / Q I. 1,
their grounds for resistance remain ques- nomenon of the armed forces as a refuge for / I g It " "
tionable. the barely functional, a comfort to the many III" I . I" I. “’I -. ‘ 7-}, " I V I I '
. Indeed, as they have pointed out, a stand- who worry about whys handling our nuclear III II II II III III II IIIIII II I III I II III £23 I I II , IIIIIIIII I . IIIIIIIIIIIIII I . _.
on military .5 an memo extravasance weaponry. . II III I I - III I III. I n IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII » , . . .
at odds with the Wishes of the authors of the Of course, it’s patently unfair to force a I I,-.I;;:f-s;;;;III :‘si [I f "I I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII .: . , f
I Constitution. But to argue that point while young person to spend two years of his or II II III I ~‘ ' IIIIIIIIIII'JII” I ‘ ‘ a
the nation grows more conservative with her life in servitude with possible risk of life 5 “1‘51-‘;{:§:3,I;;’;:.~,I I‘ ~ _ ’ II III III ,IIIIIIIIIII ‘. 5’
each day of recession is an exercise in utter and limb. Nobody enjoys the prospect of gov- ; ",I'»::}"I-~... ' I)“, I III I IIIIIIIIIII-Ig'
futility—tantamount to promoting full-scale emment-enforced slavery. But the altema- “III as; " .~ I II IIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘IIF.“I
revolution tiveisworse. ' I ' t I I IIIIIIIIIIIIIII52“ _ A
The most pragmatic course, given these So, if the Reagan administration is serious *" ' [III I IIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘M V 3,;
circumstances, is to instead work to pre- about maintaining the armed forces, let it I I I III 'IIIIIIIIIIIIII ‘35‘5‘31 , I
serve the fundamental roots of democracy. stop futzing‘ around with registration and Put I"'“'"_ i I . l . I 'I. III I .IIIIII = ”I a ‘ '
And the only real option, strange as it may thewheelsofadraftinmotion. ' I "' "II III III“, I .' IIIIII I I - " "I IIIIIIII II III. III“? §f
- . I I _ I: I ,I on, I I .: III I l ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHI' L \ I) "j?
I, . l .32..
"t "to" S h I d t ' 'II I “
“,7, IE»- 0 on prayer amen men 13 I ega
(a ‘II (@
’II' V “Kat” :-, .. In these days of fimdamaitalist Rigel vs. Vitale, determined this son within its jurisdiction the equal the unwilling student going to do,
\t . My“?! 1‘ .JJ‘ r“ religioru' political clout, the pro- practi.e violated the separation of protection ofthe laws." School pray- not listai? Run out of the building
. . = ., a,» ' ; posed comtitutional amaldlnait to church and state. And, this is not the er, in order to be constitutional. flChdfly?
4‘4 , /~ ya" a, ’l allow [rays in piiliic schools has only constitutional question. neetb to protect the rights of all in- The students are not the ally peo- ,
N‘L {\ ‘ “(Q 1t?” becomeamajc iuue. dividuals — not just the rights of the pie who hear the payer. The teach-
. A“ \l . // In viewing this topic from the con- majority. I feel the school prayer ers, administrators and janitor-s are
r \‘_ ‘ 1‘s, ', «9"» a ‘33 stitutional and comm sense ap- P‘“ amendment would violate this prin- mature adults with their religion
‘9 \s «A? ,4k\.,;{\ .~ in". \ preaches, l lindthisamendment has cipie. views already well established. ;
$1.3m it" ”'3‘ . , , no place in the basic documm of LANG The “mn-sectarian”~ prayer for Those who do not want to partici- -
‘ \Qr ' ‘ 1’". ”5.. argovermnmt. which the amendment calls would patehave littlechoice.
1 *- ‘>\ ,5“ School payer remained a com- ——-—— be similar to the Regent’s prayer This violata the non-participants'
\M’r “ ' ‘ gt: [tactics mail 1962. Ifln'ethlt yea:f The 14th Amendment instructs the high court struck down. The right not topracticea religion. Even
I» lie - W Supreme Court. in case government not to “deny to any per- prayer reads: “Almighty God, we for those who do may, not all have
m N am fiwmw.wm W 0‘ Comm h acknowledge our dependence upon the desire to speak to their make at
thee, and we beg thy blessings upon precisely 9:10 each morning.
us, our parents, our teachers and One must keep in mind there are -
our country.” no laws forbidding anyone to may. '
"_ —- it is safe to say the Regent’s pray- If students want to how their heads ,
er has its roots in Christianity. Yet, in the middle of class, recess or -
this country contains a significant lunch,more powertothesn.
population of non-Christians whose Prayer has always struck me as
definitions of ‘god” are considerab- an extremely perstlllal and intimate '
iydifferentfrom theChristian view. process. I can’t see how the same
W To this nation's GGJXX) Buddists, (313er M ?m;m Old! digit?
do? Who ammg us have never cut in my wt; 1 ran into a wall. The“ labor and vemm t two million Minlims and an atheist si I' want y tut anyone's - '
'Close calls' front of someone, ran a yellow light I saw the lug. so Kernel and real- for full agoploymerel‘t‘ 3}“ fniflfifl pollination estimated at 20 percent, iiiality- 9n the contrary. thecut and _ :
orspeddownaresidentiaidrivel ised Jim Harris beat me to it, and lie is also known for making the no- a Prayer 0" the Basel" "1069' “0' dry Mime °‘ ‘ ”it my“ my :13
We oftai become mtrapped so didamuchbettcjob. toriom White Home enemies list. lates their "Khts under the equal turn some peopieoff F9118“!!- y:
A good friend of mine once stated thoroughly in our every day routine As a dedicated bicycle commuter What a perfect way to kick off the ProtectIon 018““ The Shun" mm“? M“
(hiring the middle of one of those that we will risk just a little too who obeys traffic laws and never John Dean visit. (Dean will be here In order toochieve the soul of re our society’s opinion! needs. Mic
“Friday night philosophy" dis- much in order to move a little has passes cars on the curb side (which inOctober.) lisious observance in schools with- education by convention deals with
cllsions, “We're all human beings, to». What does it take befa'e we re- is another whole letter), I am espe- Unlike Dean, Harrington will work out denyins anyone equal Protection academic M- Our W mt?"
whykilleach other?" alias the responsibility to eta-selves ciaily aware of the same amenities closely with faculty and students as Shhents We! he allowed to woo with“? are havihs I “to"! time to:
Now tdl me, have you ever and to others we assume when we commenced by Mr. Harris. Howev- well as the community in his two- tice their particular faiths. For ex- m to teach "m to M’
pained foramoment tocoruider it? getbehindthewheelsofourcars? er, I am not fortunate enough to day visit. We hope the Student Gov- ample: while the Christians are muchifioahyhhhsd'e- “this
Oh yes, there is always the reassur- Maybe if we were all just a little have two tom of hard metal ll'otec- ernment Association will approve gathering f°'_ pr ayer, the M‘sllms Education doe 00‘ need ‘0 take a: g“
ing answer, “Well, I never killed nits-e comelmtioin and responsible tion. his visit and work closely with the WW“ be bowmg toward Mecca. At the ””1““th 9V5“ in Mi ‘0' $5“
anyone, whatcanldoabout it?” in our driving lubits, the road would I hope the gentlanan who stepped many students here at UK who su- the some time. the Mots are me the moral d“lithium"! of Mm-
We can always find someone dse leavema-emomfor natural error. out in front of me lat year, calling port hs visit. He’s the type of speak- diating and the atheiSts are diS- It 9‘0““ Mt be the duty 0f 0"! flV'
to it! our him on. but did you Anyway.ifyoumliy dun’tweJ me to claim a front wheel and er a university should have and we cmhisphilooolihy- . mom to loci-late relishi- mat- ~
“WMMmight (kill some- hope you never have to receive a break my arm, appreciata the ef- inpethisopportunityisn’twasted. A" mm 9! this country are “5’3- The mom will 0‘ tht'
unlucky? call from the police askim you to fort it took for me to avoid him se- suaranteed religion: freedom. This country's youth is I responsibility ' ‘
Let me put it a different way. cometotheema‘gencyroomimme- riolninjury—butldolbtit. mmulwl freedom is the right to practice that should remain With the Chm ’
Have you ever had a “close call” in diately. This Hugs to mind m 30811811“?th whatever spiritual disciple you sndfamily.
your automobile? Maybe as a result might. Lauren Trocin ml; the . _ choose, whenever you desire. The Constitution is a Mautiful doc- I
of «rum, or a lack of careful- Dotglas M. Kennedy only victim Wednesday night. me Jacioeiidmision i think that implict in this freedom ument, designed to guide American
noes? “Oh yes, but that only bap- Cunmmucatiom junior driver of the automobile will live Enslwhsemor is the right not to partake in a reli- society to live together with equality .
penstosomeone else,”yousay. with the eifpeiiqice for the rest of . gious practice. Most pro-amendment and justice. Our foundiu fathers
In my own relatively short period his life. My infill-is we healed in Mike MW?“ politicians throw in the words “non- had the wisdom to separate dun-ch
of driving, I have come [rays-s Lane’s Policy .1; m; m to“ will it take {an Sociology senior mandatory" or “voluntary." There andstatelet'skeeplt thatway.
away from a oer-loin ls‘gb-speed col- him? Thanks, Jim, I hype you _ is nothing voluntary about it. When
lision mire times than I’ve parallel W the Wmofun aoss~ 3001‘! We the prayer starts being read over Pete Long is a computer science .
parkedflhere was that time in the reoplu submitting lctfurs to walk. Healthadmmsenior the public address system, what's seniorandaKernelcoiumnm. ‘
rain al New Circle Road when I was the Kentucky kernel should ud-
mgwgz: lidmt gym N: :m'.'fl.'f ‘m’u‘m': I mwd R' Wm“. ATM TREK.— A creation 0' GONE Roddenbell. By Ron Harris and Sherman DiVono
turned sideways in the road, the llorullialoumullunaullslng_ I an,dCfln|chuu-itim . . I" .. . , . . _. _ . . _, .. ”I
at“: car; kagnmfllao: ult.isalngton.liy.eosoe-ooaz. ' ‘ g/q- , fif‘fiIqu 7/ , ' ' _ ~ ..
m -75 st to» should he ll loud to . 0/ , /_, . ' «5” I” 1 ' ' - ‘
physical injury occurring to me no :24. or i... animoplnlons For Harrington ,l/ ~~-- ' ' '. 1 m 9 " I -
seemsimpossible. should so limited to son words or '. N 7 , ’ —.’ . , .-.‘ _ - . R I I “mtg; ‘
missummertheexperiaicecsme loss. 'i‘hisSqltanber,UKhastheop- . ,4 ' ‘ "h“ ‘
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 V , - . - THEKENTUCKYKERNEL JhMy, W2, 1m - 3
Polish police shoot, kill at least 2 . ~ .. .. ...... ..
durin Solidarit demonstrations ~ * -

g i l fin: ‘ “a, I. . . l : In T!

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Martial en in Gdansk alter visiting her hur- 'I‘hetbcreesincluded: i ” i :» I , ,
law forces shot and killed at least band that tlne union leader opposed - hornpt action in investigations 1 “a, _ _ _ t: e .4
two Solidarity demonstrators, ar- street rioting but felt workers shondd against dissidents from the Cunnili- . 3 j. ., i l r s .
rested 4,050 otlners iii a dosen citiu fight the authorities with “appropri- tee for Social Self-Diane, a key ad- - ,. l . J; »
acro- the natiorn arid (belared yes- ate measures." Ste did not elab- visory youp to Solithrlty. and in- - 3 1;; . ~: , ,. as . ,1
terday that “no luniancy" will be crate. dictmunts “for crimes committed ‘. 1 ' j I, . *l 3 ,5 ~ ‘
shown to the organisers of 'I‘tnes- Southrity’s underground leaders agaimtthestateandsociety." _‘ . l ..._.:i _ w ""'"l' 1 > . x, ‘/

" day’smaasivep-otut. called for the anniversary demon- oSpeedy poaecutionofpeopletb- __ ‘ - a_ Q. .____l__ “he; I
Authoritiu in Gdansk also diacov- stratitn and said they wee a tat tainedfor participatinginriots. ‘ : k i l— l " ' . .

_, ered the M of a 22-year-old man of whether the urnion still had tread o Approplate “roolute” stqns by ‘ \ ‘_ ' l a ‘1 g . ‘ . I... m... ‘ It i

s; with head Wm near the site of rumor-t. [rovincial leaders to “wire peace . _ e . I

- 3‘ protests called by Solidarity on the Gun. Wojciech Jsruelaki. Po- arndpuhlicu'der.” . ~ l e . . y ‘

. second anniversary of the irndepen- larnd's martial law clnief and (‘om- Warsaw’s governor, Gan. _ ‘ , ‘ t; l _ . . . \

dent union, and launched a probe murnist Party leader, met with his Mieczyslaw Debicki, held a meeting . ‘ ta ... ' ”

- into tlne came of death. officials Military Council of National lie- of the Warsaw provincial defense \ .- . ,.

' , said. demption and issued a seriu of law- committee and declared. “No le- ’ .__ - m ’ ' - " . -_

i The wife of Lech Walua, the in- and-order decrees, state televisiorn niency will be slnown to the uganiz- : ‘ ‘ ‘ ' , , f

‘: tuned Solidarity chief, told report- said. gs and participants of (Tuesday’s) . ‘ ‘ . ‘ ' '

. ots."

j Praident Reagan condemned the ' f

f . eagan meofforceinPoland. :

Staking to reporters in Santa W Mg‘ s.

Continued from page] Mid, am. “1 sum they Wll] Bu 1‘, Calif, Larry MC, the

f the Camp David framework as the claim there is no deviation from Whiteuliot-e deputy W mt g- “ '

‘, only way to woceed.” addirng, “Its Camp David and we will claim there said, “‘59 evernts anceagain point W :‘ i. __

.; language provides all partis with is,andwe’ll overcome that too." “P the need ‘0" reconciliation and t: " ..

‘ the leeway they need for successful The Israeli opposition Labor Party "“0"” by tlne government 0‘ " .; i

_ i negotiation.” welcomed Reagan’s plan. basic human rightsinPoland. a“

Administration officials described A senior administration official, He (RB-8m) My We“ and ‘ .w» ,

' the president’s address as “a major briefing reportas on behalf of the condemns the use °f deadly '0'“ ‘0 J.D.VANNOOSI/t(smel5taii

newpeace initiative." president, said the administration M W peaceful rbmonstratiom in

*' Rum called for a fun nu.“ MP. W Hmsein of JW Wm Warsawandothercitiuul Solihri- Carol lreson (left), assistant to the director of nursing, and Kathy Giauque, a registered nurse,

‘ withdrawal from the w“t m M ”e the ml. “ . «dwfic‘m ty’s second anniversary." Speakes examine some of the equipment used in the bone marrow transplant procedure.

. Gaza, in exchange for Arab recogni- and seriou" irnititive that will in- said- hen“ the will

' tiorn of Israel's light to exist and se- ducehimtoenta'thepeacejrocess. W1 killing

' curity guarantees. The official said that no response m what. he called a chasm se~ pl p g

. Under the W. m” we no been received from the m p.m., pm “mom, in", m, OCTOTS announce marrow trans ant T0 ram

- be linked with the administration of states given advance notice of the WMWe- . _—

‘ ' the West Bank, at least as an intc- contents of the speech: Israel, Jor- . The “Wt pros m“ ““1 ByJASON WILLIAMS when experiments were performed The first six manths of work on

- im measure, with Palstinian auton- dan,EgyptsndSaudi Arabia. 1'} addition '9 tlne 4:50 arrested, .57 Staff Write- orndogs. the project were spent establishing
omy over use of land, water and “We have put this before Israel noters “d “3 policemen wee nn- Scientists developed conclisions facilities for a steile ernvironmernt

,n other natural resources. andawait their response,”hesaid. jured My and a velnicleskwere —___ from the studies, leading to the first for the patients, as any germs could

,‘f The plan also asks for the immedi- Overall, he said Reagan and Sec- “$838M“ a fire true tlnat human transplant in 1988. Theuper- prove fatal. Next came the utiliza-

ate freeze on Israeli settlements in retary of State George P. Shultz be- am 'd totgrch. slnot and There may be hope for patients ation was performed on an unfant tion of equipment nnade available by

the occupied territories, but does not lieve that “the principle leverage ”fliedwmm “9'3 m M suffering from diseases once triougiit with a deficiency in his body’s de- Dr. Yosh Maruyama, the lnead of ra-

- call for dismantling any of them at the United State has . . . is the pos- . 12 wounded m n w tobeincurable. tenses against disease. diation therapy.

75 this time. sibilityofpeace.” police came under attack by an A bone nnarrow tramplant pro- The process involves radiation The equipment was coupled with

’s In the aftermath of the settlement “And we want to put th