xt7tb27ps35p https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7tb27ps35p/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1979-10-01 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 01, 1979 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 01, 1979 1979 1979-10-01 2020 true xt7tb27ps35p section xt7tb27ps35p rm
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Vol. LXXII. No. 32 ‘ eralty
Monday. October I. 1919 h ’ Unlv of Kentucky
tan dependent student newspaper [Miami Kentucky
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Women S colle e enrollmen "” "‘9 "  " " ° '
I ”I" at 7 7"" 7‘ J 2. ‘ . ‘
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1* t 14% at t“, attest-til. ‘35s -.. :«
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as men's fun time 312 d t' “a" , it x... g , a '43
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' By JIM CAGEY continued increases in part-time more than 49 percent women in it. l960s. when "yearly population it * i ‘ {X m f “A”
St.“ writ" enrollment." Dunn said the percentage of women increases of 10 percent or more were ‘ ‘ I i gt " t I
At UK, the differences in student in graduate school this year is 52.2 typical." By contrast. Dunn said “a 4 ‘ . .4 ' . I, .
, UK‘s student Population profile is P0pulation make-up from the early to percent, the second consecutive yearin percent change (in growth) is a
gradually changing, revealing tate 705 largely have been made by an which women enrollees have whopping change for education in the ’3 '
similarities and differences of trends increased number of women attending outnumberedtmen. [9705“. I
among mugscs and universities in the college, according to Keller Dunn, an Overall. gains in enrollment have “There is an expected decline in the F h 3’ DAVID MAYNARD/hm“ 5"" '
region. enrollment analyst in UK's Dean of been Significantly affected by women number of all students in the [9805. II It“ man running In“ Chris Jones ran the h" from the 0'" ”"1
According to an analysis by the admissions and Registrar office, in the l9705. according tothe Fall l978 This may not affect UK or other large ne n the second quarter to “ye UK its second touchdown of the h'"- *
Southern Regional Education Board thinzesggggspebiéznlt of UKs growth 5:13:23}: :33: The taritble h(below1). unhverstties. Sepending on the types I .
(SREB) in Atlanta, women now make now 0 to colle e se more women [01:81 chan fom 19:3: 37ng the an _varietyo programs offered bythe S I .
up the majority of the student an?! M mg}; u [978 . ll ge fr d 0 int c institution. a broader spectrum, of ‘ ’I y ‘ ,‘ , game ,
population in the South. statistic;v slhjiw ca ritio of 3:133:13: “311$: gogtgthllh Sighting the ghignfzthecfghe “that” POPUIatmn
\ . . . s e, unn sai . .
The SREB analySIs also indicates women and 55 percent men, Dunn said l970s are different from those of the Schools thought to be mostaffected '
that'although recently there have been this year‘s freshman class is the first '9608- Dunn said the p05t-W0Tld War in enrollment Shifts Wt“ becommuriity as a end,"
significant declines in the number of class to approach equaldistribution of II “baby boom" placed concentrated colleges. technical schools and
full-time students enrolled in southern women and men; the class of I983 has numbers of students into college in the business schools. Atlanta‘s SREB .
___—____________—_________—______________ anaiysis‘ likewise, reported a [0 By JOHN CLAY CODtCSI tn the firm three Maryland
% of total growth percent drop in two-year college Shorts ”'2‘" 33ml” . bef
1970 1978 % dun“ acccounted for b enrollment in Kentucky for I978, and . . . ”.‘d 0" the game that
Underugdugte Wome: Similars drops in other Southern state mYe: Vfirginia.lin collhge foothill Wysocki wasn‘t gomg to get his
schools. L ry oo mirac es can appen. e average.” said Curci. “He might get i
. Men 7,9“ 8,602 plus 08.2 Declining population in America .sentucky Wildcats proved it l00 yards but he wasn‘t going to get :. 1
Women 5.840 7,092 plus 21.5 will continue to affect college Saturday afternoon as they his average."
Total 13,788 15,694 plus 13,3 “,0 enrollment in the next decade, astonished 57.800 sun-splashed fans It could have been that the . '
accordingto SREBprojections. James at Commonwealth Stadium by Wildcats beat the Tcrps‘ frightening . ‘ ‘ I
Professional Mingle, SREB research associatesaid defeating the 'hcaVily favored eight-man front with a quarterback
Men 1’0“ 1'0” down 01.6 total enrollment in the South for 1980 Maryland Terrapins 14-7. (Mike Shutt) whose right shoulder
Women 121 535 plus 342.0 will “showthe same level ofenrollment That was the most courageous feels like it is going through a meat
Total 1.137 1.5“ plus 334 100.0 as in I978.“ However, when the effort of any team I've ever been grinder cverytime he raises it to
projection counts only full-time assomatcd With,” said a tired but throw.
Graduate students. enrollment in the South may happy UK Coach Fran CurCi after And to beat that front Curci had
Men 1539 I 777 lus IS 5 drop by as much as 4 percent by 1986. the game. “It was the most planned on having freshman
Women .923 1,866 [I’m ‘02) According to the SREB report, unbelievable thing I‘ve been quarterback Randy Jenkins put the
Total 2,462 3,643 p lus 48.0 80 0 "This difference of more that 100,000 associated with.” ball in the air “at least 25 times.” But
, p . . full-time-equivalent students is What was so unbelievable? Well, Jenkins fractured his ankle during
All Colleges significant to the revenue and take your pick. UK‘s first posession. forcing Curci to
‘ Men 10 553 11428 workload prospects of higher It could have been the fact that the go with Shutt.
women 6,884 9,49 plus 8.3 education If an institution loses one collapsmg Wildcat defense turned in It could have been that the team I
T taI 17.“? 20,9 3 plus 37.9 {“1“th student, it needs to attract a stellar performance holding the with supposedly the best kicker,
o , , 21 plus 20,0 75.0 nearly three part-time students to Ierps Charlie Wysocki, the nation‘s Maryland‘s Dale Castro, was
. recoup revenue losses.“ leading rusher. to Just 59 yards on 23 upstaged by freshman walk-on Chris .
carries not to mentiona meager lo Poulton from Columbus. Ohio, who
yards on ll carries in the first half. had never punted in a college game
a The Terps’sophomore flash had and wasn‘t expecting to play in this
ance, o ryn i n meet u nexpected Iy to talk .
s . t. _. _ - Poulton punted so well that '
. .3. .- :5 ‘ . I . Maryland started seven drives on or
By BROOKS JACKSON remained at Camp David working on spokesman David Nall would give no Russians refusing to budge on Carter‘s s . "i " ts @ inside their own 29-yard line. The
Assocrated Press Writer a speech about the Russian brigade in indication of the meeting‘s purpose or insistence that they change the "status » §§ -, 3; y , It , ~ L3: m0“ important coming on the Terps‘
Cuba. even which side suggested it first. quo." ' m i ”h .‘ ’ _ final posseSion when he bounced 0“:
WASHINGTON (AP) —Top UZS' Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and President Carter said he would When Soviet Foreign Minister h I - s! In. § on the Maryland five. '
and ’Sowet officials held a surprise SOViet Ambassador Anatoly address the nation at 9 tonight when Andrei Gromyko returned to Moscow 3’ stud-3‘" . I I} Whatever you choose, as Curci ‘
meeting at the State Department Dobrynin began their meeting at 2 negotiations with the Soviets last week after meeting in New York “ t . I 'I said, .“It had storybook written all . I
. yesterday as PreSident Carter pm. but State Department apparently had broken down,withthe with Vance, he gave no indication of . _ h. Mi“ . H" , ' P cvsr It". . .
. . the Soviets softening their position. \s I/ t w: played Marylands type or
Russ t They maintain the brigade *7 which 3‘-.‘i' \32; game, CurCi said. We controlled
Ian roops reporte near apan momma ed ~
soldiers, 40 tanks and artillery and MW . \ ficl1dhposmon atlso. h . l
. . . , armored ersonnel carriers —- has f" . g . e reason or t at was “mp e,
By RICHARD PYLE Cuba,90miles from US. shores. is timing may be connected with the been statiopned inC b ' h I962 i t \ 581d Maryland C039h Jerry l
Aasoctated Press Writer an independent country where the election. especially because Soviet missile crisis withthngIFLILCJJICZEC of m“ ’ §§ Claiborne. “They whipped “5 at the
TOKYO _ N . . Russmns are offiCially welcome. tro )ps had actually moved in several previous American Presidents. a it ~ " W hm 9f scrimmage and completely '-
1 ' ot. only is the United Shikotan, 60 miles from Hokkaido, wetks earlier. part of a buildup during In a news conference F ‘d C b t _.\ ' . \\ contained our line in the, first half.“
. State!3 Wrestling With the question of has been claimed by the Soviet Union "recentmonths.”accordingt0the U S Pres‘d t Pd 1 Ca n alt. u an $ W\ ThlhES didn‘t 100k t0° WC" {0" the -
Sowet troops near home, but Japan, and Japan sinccthe Soviets occupiedit State Department. . ' hardlsig' ti! e d stro e; 3d the § 4 » him home team early in the game when '
. t9o.itseems.isfaccd withaCuba-iiiie at the end of World War II. The territorial dispute with the creatin ii; tiger?“ im'u'sc m of W s Jenkins hopped off the field after
- situation on an island Just off its coast. The Soviet-Cuban issue was forced Ru ' b Sh' ‘ ' g I ma Gum's. ' ”A,“ “h“ ' . i
A d' . ' . ssmns a out ikotan and "5 mm Caner then huddled With l5 retired 3.. s“ \. \t_-~.x W marching his team to the Maryland
ccor ing to a US intelligence on PreSident Carter by two US. island ' f ' l ' ' ' ' ' ' ' thw - \\\ t ‘
report, about 2000 Soviet milita b . 5.“ 0 Panic“ 8! Importance In national security officxaIS. including as t w\ 3 1' Shun came m and mm" the
l . ry senatorst 0th Democrats facing re- Hokkaido, where many thousand former secretaries of state Hen Us» “that ‘ Cats the ”5t Of the way, spinning
[Stersonne recently were moved to election in 1980. And Shikotan has its former inhabitants of the islands — Kissinger William Ro crs and Dcry ;' " ("W : twist,“ over from the three to give the Catsa
03121.3(: ~d on; of four small islands own political overtones. First leaked Japanese citizens and voters — now Rusk The president igent to Can‘t: ‘- is- §m§‘ \ 7‘0 lead.
main islahlt; 0' apan s northernmost to Japanese reporters m Washington. live. David Saturday afternoon. ”3h“ ' " Iii? Q‘s” Then in the second quarter Chris '
. Shikota ' d C ba it captured the headlines in Tokyo in Carter. who has scheduled a White House spokesman Dale - .. :4" "X {S Jones sneaked °V°t from ayard 0‘"
nan u are separated by the midst of Prime Minister television address fo t ' h ' ' ‘ - > I " ‘ If N d h C t ’
. not only thousands of miles but also Masa oshi Oh' . . . r .onig t 9" the Leibach ”"1 Sundaythe president was “ i ' to pa t e m ead to ”-0 I '
, differences in the nature of th t' ht y b" . ira s campaign to Cuban issue, has preVIously said the spending the day working on tonight's “as " siss- f The Cats seemed to be "1 control '
. . . 6 .18 en is grip 0h Japnns parliament Sowet troops in Cuba pose no threat address. Leibach said he did not . " H b“! surely it wasjusta matter °fthh° '
controversies surrounding Sowet in a general election set for Sunday. to US. security. bel' Ca h Won the Te 5 started to take ‘ i ’
troop presence. Japanese commentators say the C icve ' rter ad summoned any FRAN CUR” '9 V
ontlnued on page 5 speech writers to Camp Dawd. Continued 0“ In" 5 -
. C Amtrafk had asked both the Supreme Court and a US. agreement for the industry. The union is negotiating with before the end of the year to “evolve aposition"dcaling with ‘ y "
campus “33in: (259:3: 352;“)! :0 issue an emergency order gorgl'Motor C 0. on a contract and has set Oct. 4as the strike Israel‘s right to exist as a nation. 5
. , ny o iscontinue t c National ea ine. Hussein also indicated he believes most Palestinians would L
Limited ' ' ' ' ' ‘
- t a position that recognizes Israel‘s continued cXistence. . . ,
swarms mrcassran IN rm: a amp ' ' i '
HODES But Hussein, considered one of the more moderate of Arab
$20.35;: :21, pfsnram should attend tod'Y" world leaders. indicated the key to any successful resolution to the l.’ ' '
. ml It p.rn. in the Pres'd ‘ H‘ t 'llbel I' 'II' t ' Id th t' f t
. . Student Center. ' ent ' Room 't the RANK AN CUIAN PRESIDENT FIDEL CASTRO said yesterday ‘Pzrfesltcinizii “tome“; M mm“ o yie on e quea lo“ 0 3 ' .
D FILE MEMBERS OF THE UNITED the dispute with the United States over Soviet troops in Cuba .. ' ‘ i ' ‘ ’ ’ ' f ‘ ‘
AUTO WORKERS union tf db , . , .. w . .. . . The issue is self-deternunation under conditions 0 .
. three- . ra i ie y a '24 margin their new 131a comedy that could turn into a crisis if President Caner freedom and if this were granted the Palestinians I believe v
ti C year. national wage agreement with General Motors .tries to flex US. military might around his Caribbean nation. that the overwhelmin majority would choose something that 3
. "a on 01rhp» tuniclm officials said yesterday. Castro also said he would not object to a meeting with all of us could live with .. Hussein said ’
h e ina tally announced last night was [29,374 favoring Caner to resolve the dispute. but said he was not calling for Th k' d h's cgmmm. in g taped interview with -‘
. rm: suram ‘ ° "W INN" Ind 51.39i against. the officials said. such a meetin . e "" m' ° ' . t . —
E COURT yesterday overturned a lower UAW d Do - - 3 re oner Barbara Walters on ABC s Issues and Answers .
. -. court order which would have required Amtrak to eontinu Blueston Pm'tdehé} uglas Fraser and Vice pretident Irving The Caner administration maintains the Soviet troops are The pro ram w“ broadcast rterda '
"mm” its New York-Kansas City train the Nmo el ratif he at M had been formally notified of the part of acombatbrigademadeupof 2.000to 3.000soldiers,40 g ye y. -
Limited, effective today. . na was: is: mine“. at dd. . I 24 tanks and artillery and armored personnel carriers. I
. . : Chief Justice Warren Bur r si the . . . ion. c a Iitiona cents an hour in “There has been no change in the nature or function ofthe ‘
. - U.S. Appeals Court ruling th'act ringleadhave $51!": This? : cm"°‘:“’}ng allowance , which. the union negotiated to Soviet military personnel in Cuba in the last l7 years." Castro weather . -
,, to continue operating the National Limited at least until (2t gym: :ontrcihrousilAbiflr‘esf period, not covered under the Md interviewer D.“ Rather through m interpreter. ; I
. — l r ’.
. . l ”The run” do“ n f members at GM plants Bluesgritixido Sept. 17 t0! UAW JAR"? iUNNY AND WARM weather today with a g
. not . ect our other trains , . . - . c nee o a emoon thundershowen. H' s 80 — 85. ‘ t
. bem‘ contested in other courts. VhOIe future is thiThe e<;¢;rit:actl with the Itarget company — which was OM KING HUSSEIN 0F JORDAN said yesterday he wants Tomorrow, pertlv sunny, breezy and won't-w weather with }
, . . ~ Y ' genera y considered the pattern-setting the Arab nations of the Mideast to hold a summit meeting highs 65 - 70.- t. t '
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RWY oust. Marx-iii Jay ran-a ' Sim Mun-i Matt on— no.- can Gary land-I
flier in Chief Campus Editor Ts!- Youg M Ma. Ditsrtsitittictit Editot Director of Photography . .
Associate Editor ”New
\ ' Cary WE lbs Don-rd CH: McGee Job (My David Maya-rd
Mm Editor Editorial Editor Km Stephe- Sports Editor Photo Manager
Copy Editor:
editorials 89 comments “- W
Assistant Sports Editor ,
The future of the College of Communications must the college‘s three units — telecommunications, program changes as they are about the total picture. meets Oct. 17. How can they approve the program and ‘ '
. be decided before next semester because it may mean journalism and human communications — are How much will a communications degree be worth if make a decision when they don‘t know if the college , ‘
, drastic changes for the students. faculty and staff. If separated, Kentucky will lose the only College of the people hiring UK graduates know the degree no will even exist next year? .
the presidential committee appointed by UK Communications it now has. longer CXIStS ttt UK because the mm“ was They can't, and they probably won‘t. ,
President Otis Singletary arrives at a With the college‘s overall enrollment up 30 percent disbanded. 0r, If one of the college’s three units — Th , . 2; ‘
recommendation on schedule, the answer should be this year - the largest increase of any UK college — telecommunications, human communications or recomc 5305‘" 3h? committee makes a 3
known by December. those 809 students looking for degrees in Journalism —- are shuffled and filed in the College of be m;n_ a ion an Singletary makesadecision, the i
_ '11 h . communications are worried. Arts Jr Sciences conglomerate, why major in these at be?“ hhlsB must "m get "ed up m committee, or i
How Singletary w; act on tfle recipmrnendatioii, Students are entitled to get their degree under rules all? (No matter what you major in, if it falls under the ore I e oard 0f Trustees. - i
3"" how 8:10“th Y“ h“ also ah ect :1 e mum“; n which were in effect when theyentered the University; A & 5 0011886 your degree Wt" be from Arts & The answer must come quickly, h°t onlytoquellthe ‘
any case. t 0km“ .ICtttth 0'” 3 C0 38¢ may a “t any changes made in the curriculum or degree Scrences.) worries of the students and faculty memebrs involved
other Kentuc y unIVCI’SlthS- requirements won't affect students already enrolled. Ironically, the Council on Higher Education is but to answer the questions of incoming students. If
UK is the only Kentucky college with a College of However, those students trying to complete their considering approving a recommendation fora Ph.D UK can no longer offer these students a major in ,
Communications and a communications degree. lf degrees in communications aren‘t as worried about program in communications at UK- The comic“ communications, they may decide h°t to come to UK- i
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Military rule tn perspecttve . ' ;
Civilian rule returns to N'ge 'a Letters to the am” "
3! DANNY AKEREJAH” military. Between 1967 and I970, the ambitious development projects. It is (John Leonard editor of the New first and be titled The Electric Kool- i
, . After thirteen years of military rule country engaged in a bloody civil war worth notingthat Nigeria isthe second Disconcertin find York Times hook Review) New Aid Dynograph Test. '
in Afnca‘s richest and most populous- that actually tested its viability and largest supplier of oil to the US. after 9 Journalism has advanced to critical _
country, the Federat Mltltttt')’ livability as a nation-state opposed to Saudi Arabia. . _ 1 find it disconcerting that a college recognition in the literary world and Christine Cetrulo : '
Government 0t Ntlcm Wt“ officrally 3 mere geographical entity. Nigeria When the °“t8°"‘8 ”that” "Shh” paper with the reputed high quality of has found its voice through Gay Department 0' EM” Instructor 1' ' i
hhh‘t 0"" power to a newly elected pursuedaccelerated reconciliationand announced in [976 its intention to the Kentucky Kernel cannot do a Talese, James Baldwin, Truman i :
iliillan governmentl today. This reconstruction With astoundingly hand 0"" WW" to the civilians 0“ better job of proofreading articles for Capote Jimmy Breslin Norman 4'
° ows a series 0 eections t° the positive results after the civil war. Oct. 1, l979, many peSSimiSttc ublication The lat t offense was Mailer .and Hal the Ch f‘ T ' t '
"3°“ Pam“! offices ”.5th and observers claimed we CW” “0‘ count hVednesday‘s excelleiifit commentary Wolfe.,These iouritalists, essl:yi)sts :riii Pro bOOk GXChange ;
23:31:; rt: Th: °::“'°"s_dw°'° in io n 9“ the PM”: of_“the °°ftt°nm °tt_h¢ by John Scarborough, which was so novelists insisted 20 years ago on the Yes, yes. yes. yes, yes. I'd like to .
on Au til '3‘: .°’ h? late“ .ency Op instruments °tVt°t°h°° t0 VOhthtaht)’ aptly butchered by the Kernel. 1 power achieved by applying the think the interest in a.student book 5
was “at!“ out “'3‘; ‘c 3:31”! "hhtlutSh power. Perhaps. _ the counted twelve typos within the first devices if fiction (primarily narrative exchange were the result of the power ',
who contested e ivecan ‘ ates ————-:———— traditional stereotype. of a “nutty column alone, at which time l ceased and point of view) to nonfiction. Their of positive thinking. for many': the .
in what ‘ld be d d After the fi“t_m|htlfy c0‘19 0t ”.me does not r" ‘“ thecase. of keeping score; it was obvious thatMr. eager readers still substantiate this hourl‘ve spent of late mullingoverthe ‘
most tremeiid’gus an drip; e :5 :2; 181th"! 1966,'reglmes have changed N‘ch' The ”09‘” of “cm“!tém' Scarborough lost. May 1 suggest that belief. most effective way of bypassing the '-
election in Africa a ec'coizl ucbl hands three times, "Sh though the “,0“ of 90m”? and military you find a more dexterous typist ora As worth is measured by ones' bookstores and had resolved to stand \ .
f h 47' '1' mm 'era e third administration ‘5 regarded ‘“ dmnflgflnnfl Wh'Ch began m early more keen-sighted copy checker? dollar, sincerity by the size of one‘s alone, sign aloft, at next semester‘s :
percentage 0 _t 6 ml 110“ registered Nigeria as a continuation of the ‘976 h” PTO"? to be really gift, so goes the way of New drop/ add. if this book exchange idea t 2
voters casttheirvotes for “hdldotfl 0t preceding regime. The military officers remarkable. Th? thlhthry has retained Carolyn Stewart Journalism to the realm of becomes reality, 1 shan't have to do - .
therrfchorce. Thtthzeht t9 ofenormous who are currently handing over power “t enviable P°S|t|°h "1 the making Of A & s senior quanitification. Now New Journalism that. And that would be nice. See you .I f
:18“; “:33: :Snll in Resauftpuzfieitdl $03; civiliansftjosklgggvelr in the Nigehréa-s wearing . toda f Alh ,. N J I. is left sadly to electronic monitoring, in Room 119 at the Student Center, i
. . . ess coupo y . ttoowas . In Y 0 8." translat'n 't v'tal't t t '1 Oct. 3 t7 .m. ;
development. More importantly. It is a victim of a coup attempt that failed Shehu Shaun as the first executive . 9w ourna 'sm needle‘sl risiealsiireriierityof znzs‘s“:irli:i a p ‘ !
Nigeria s second attempt at in Febniary I976, resulting in the president of the Federal Republic of Dr. Lewis Donohew‘s electronically conductance.” Perhaps Tom Wolfe‘s C. Black
constitutional government since assasination om,” Head ofState, the Nigeria helps to put military rule in induced discovery that readers next book will be a reappraisal of his A t S sophomore
becoming independent of British rule jute General Munala Muhammed. Nigeria in its proper perspective, I respond more strongly to “story- ' '
on Oct. l, 1960. . Murtala Muhammed is regarded as sincerely believe that the apparent telling“ news reportage than to I
The collapse _of the first republic the first nationally accepted leader of trans-Atlantic movement from “traditional summary style“ 9 9’8 p0 Icy ;
came after a military coup carried out Nigeria. London to Washington in search of a- (“Narrative articles increase reader . . ‘1
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. t rill: ksnrucav KEINEL. Monday. Oatabn l. ins-s
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3 7/1, '/ d '/ 7/ Pope denounces Irish murders
oyswr eg/rsan grrswr
' HEMPSTEAD. N.Y. (AP) The slim. 28~year~old “We were forced to use a KNOCK. Ireland (AP) — great wound nowafflictingour ‘0 put down their arms. A have already warped their ,
— Policeman Michael Keamey's uniform was a male as a decoy because we Pope John Paul II took his peOple" and appealed to the nationalist spokesman in consciences and have
Kearney didnt know hecould handbag. make-up. a blonde don't have any women on the peace pilgrimage to Ireland‘s .V‘IE'" Mary ‘0 “CU" and heal Belflsl "id the "Y" 0‘ WWW“ the "“9 I0! 0' 1i“
look so attractive — but wig. spike heels. tight jeans force." a police officral said. most sacred shrine. in the bogs 11- liberation" would continue. With drugs. sex. alcohol.
because he did, I0 men have and a snug turtleneck over a “For the past five years, we've of County Mayo. yesterday “Mother. protect all of us Earlier yesterday. John Paul vandalism and the empty
been charged with soliciting well-stuffed bra. used a sergeant asadecoy to and in a forceful denunciation and “Pecillly the youth of made an appeal for nonviol- pursuit of mere material
the services of a prostitute. His arrests. in just three catch muggers. But this is the of terrorism declared."Murder Ireland from beins overcome "10°10 8‘30!" 250.000 cheering possessions?” he asked.
. Kearney was among hours. included a certified first time we‘ve used adecoy is murder, no matter what the hydhOSllllly and hatred," he lhrdish youths gathered for a It. was one of the most
officers assigned to a ublic accountant and the to arrest johns.“ motives or ends." sat . ass at Galway's race track. explicit denunciations yet by
crackdown on prostitution in :wners of a dry cleaner anda Two prostitutes were also The pontiff called the Bl" the Pope's Plus for “C to” the CalhOIlC youths the 59-year-old P°|l|h IN)!“iff
the L0 Island communit . delicatessen. arrested. police said. Northern Ireland conflict “this peace were not persuading the that a “moral sickness" stalks of the srowins material
mostly Catholic guerrillas in society. concerns of Western consumer
British-ruled Northern Ireland “How many young people societies.
'Going broke’ easier under new law '
N 3, LOUISE COOK exemption which allows'a debtor to keep an interest of up to
yum,“ p w ~t $7,500 in real property berng used as a reSldence. along wrth up to b d d d
m‘ n er $I.200 in a motor vehicle and up to $200 ina number ofindividual OCtO er 2” an 3r
. A new bankruptcy law which goes into effect today will take items like clothing d
I some of the pain out of going broke. A debtor is allowed to choose between the federal exemption Stu ent center
i The Bankruptcy Reform Act of I978 is thefirst majoroverhaul and state exemptions which. Presson said. range from "very I II
E. of the US. bankruptcy code since the l9305. It is expected to generous to very miserly.“ But States have thought to prohibit 1st F 00" Ha way
i result in an increase in personal bankruptcies. already on the rise debtors from choosing the federal exemption and several
. g beeaus of the recession. legislatures have already taken steps to do so. 10-3
' ‘ In general. the Iawallows individuals who file for bankruptcy to The wage-earner plan Chapter 13 . allows ”“3 dCbIOT ‘0
i keep more of their possessions. it also restricts the right of keep his or her preperty and repay creditors over an extended S St t G
‘ creditors to repossess property and simplifies the filing period in a plan worked out by the bankruptcy court. n r d b d
i procedures. In the past. individuals usually had to pay back all oftheir debts DO SO e y u en ove rn ment
{2 Personal bankruptcies reached their peak of 224.354 during the — l00 cents on the dollar. The new law allows ajudge to approve a
recession year of I974-75 when private individuals accounted for wage-earner plan providing partial repayment. ,
Z more than 88 percent of all the bankruptcy petitions that were .
_ , . filed.
' The number of people seeking help under bankruptcy laws ll . ”
' declined steadily after I975. but increased again this year. In the H b I fl h
l2 months that ended June 30. individuals filed l96.976 ave you een e angl "g
. bankruptcy petitions accounting ’for about 87 percent of all \
filings. h d 1
“We think that this trend will continue," said H. Kent Presson, because you a
assistant chief of the bankruptcy division of the Administrative 9(5- V , .
Office of the US. Courts, discussing the increase. \6 . 5K 0- ..r] .
. Credit counselors say the state of the economy is partly to gavwoot‘toa‘p to or nee to r;i\,‘.'Li,.
blame for the me. “One would expect bankruptcies to go along (‘i 3° " ' t.
. - .. - - . ~ r0 as ;.
wrth the business cycle. said Bill Hampel of the Credit Union \3 59‘3- ' 2 . I
National Association. 9 ‘r3\’ -, rop a C aSSa ‘ ‘
They also note that