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