xt7xgx44v24d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7xgx44v24d/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1981-01-21 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, January 21, 1981 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 21, 1981 1981 1981-01-21 2020 true xt7xgx44v24d section xt7xgx44v24d Vol.LXXXIll.No.90 . . d r 2] University of Kentucky ".l ' - I
Wednesd. ’ January 21. 1981 an in «pendent \tudent unnpapi-v Lexington, Kentucky ‘ . ‘A
II — — '- , ~ .

444 day ordeal endS' f 3 UK students ex ress 1‘
’ ' writ 3', "" "
nation doubly happy " . « - - - 71-0,“ on crisis
~~ , . ezr Opl l ..

By The Associated Press _ _ 2. ‘ i .' ,-_

Fifty-two Americans so long 3133321” headed the State » . - " ' all??? DECKER mediate” h they didn't release
hostagetoa distant revolution, flew The cit-hostages arrived in ‘ _ n er “60253333, mm}; 23:03:13 "-2.77
from the" Iranian mghtmare t0 Mggdasmrtflfilafter 8 P-g‘ffis'r ‘ --. Kernel Staff Writer Cindy Decker trade with them. Carter's too much ,
their dreainof freedomi amvms yes ‘ the 0 0m a r "‘8 . 3 . interviewed three UK students to of a human rights person. Reagan ._’ : ~' ‘-
early t°day “1 “8135 Where they 5%“; 1:5. Erenedcgl‘ beth Ann ’ . _ _,. get their reaction on the handling of would have acted swiftly." ‘
were officmlly trailisferred to US. S 'ft “3: :10 a 128hosta 3 « , §“ the hostage crisis. The students Ennis: “That depends. Do you I.‘ '_ '1!
governmentcontro . W1 . 0 _y women ‘ 89.5, \ ‘ ‘ei , a were: Brent Ashlns. undecided want the hostages or the honor of .f :

Aft 4;] the disembarkedf t chw n in ‘.. - - »- \ «- -
boardeé‘d: Joly'IOISB uédicoglne. y their hair el‘lgswi eraib ea_ngt_he .,. t . .1 s ‘ freshman. Newton Vance, finance the country? If the hostages, then P ‘.
tion came: for thgllastcl (33th:; SYmbol frontila p0 ular song “Tiea ..z . . '2: “W and Tony EM“: c°mPuter Carter was right; it the honor, then ""

r. J . ,, Q . , p ’ -' :5: selence freshman, Asswtant Day he was wrong. Maybe they could _.
freedom fhght and the planes Yellow R’hht’h Round the 01d Oak ,‘ - , -;.:’ . Editor Vicki Poole assisted with the have had an intelligent commando i- ' '
left Algiers foraU.S. military base Tree" which came to symbolize '? , ' C -. ' questions. raid " " .
in Wiosbaden West Germany. America’s wait for the captives ' . 7 3 'Do . if .-
' »_ . g , . . you believe the lranians :1" ;
{mirgixajgg’gmimléoigx hefifigzg’é Bruce Laingen the . 5 ’ 1. How do you feel about the were justified in breaking intema- ;..'
.ey . , . ' . t » Iranian-American deal made to tlonal law and keeping American ,* 1'_ ~
Iran, and the captives finally were charge d affalros WhO had been the release the has“ eso di I ts ., . »_
, . di 1 he .5. Emba . . H 8. . POII‘II captive. Why or why . -.
flown out of Tehran s airport top ploma at t U ssy . . . _ . ASklnS It stinks The t k ot"
aboard an Algerian jet minutes in Tehran when it was seized Nov. to deliver your fellow citizens to US- military airplanes m tW° '- ' y 00 n ‘ . .
after the U S "m den sad 4 1979 The other hostages followed you. Mr. Christopher, who officially groups for the flight to Wiesbaden. over our industry there'so it s only Askins: ‘ No, they weren't.
. . - P cy Pa 3 g _ _ represents the American govem- Thosewhose last names an with fairwegettheir money. They're barbarians and criminals. ,- ’-
from Jimmy Carter to Ronald in quick succession wavmg and beg . .. . . , . , ,
Reaganat noon yesterday smiling. ‘ ment here.” A through K were in the first plane “vane; it wa-S a waste 0f time. but they the“ to 3“ hke It was 7' t 3 2

“God Bless America ,, one ofthe One made a “V for Victory” sign There was a round of applause and those with names beginning . e): dht Salh‘ anything they Justlfiable. ' . _« ‘

i . ‘ . from the freed hosta es and ‘th thr . the d didn thave in the first place. . . . In Vance: “No way. They said it 5 *
hostages shoutedashe boarded one at the teleViSlon cameras, which . , . 3 W1 L ough Zwerein 5900“ the long run Iran will be seen a beca ‘ . . .. , -
of the military planes for the flight carriedthearrivalinAlgiers live to Algerian andUS. officials. aircraft. 1 Th ' - s was use we took the shah ,m' .

. ' . “I have the great honor and In Athens where the Al erian osersr ey might have rubbed our but that wastheonly humane thing ,. .-
to Germany, which Will close the theUmted States. - - . - - ‘ g noses in the dirt but the ained todo ” . ' ‘
final chapter in a 141/2 month Deputy Secretary of State War- pnvdege in affirming that you are aircraft made an 80-minute refuel- mm .. - y 8 E . ‘ . .. . '. ‘
hostage-holding without precedent ren Christopher, who headed the back 33°”. and safely "‘ °“' ins stop. U-S‘ Ambassador to Em"? ..n, m t me d ”“54 N° mm” “a” “8’" t0 "z
in modern diplomatichistory. US. team that negotiated the final hands, Christopher responded. Greece Robert McCloskey did h°t 505m 5. b l: ow y. w: i: othat. - . , V .

A US. Army spokesman said the release agreement, and US. Am- “This event answers our prayers board the aircraft bm said, “I was huciezgi? w: becaiiscearhf Rllglaa otheiPOcthi‘hutitlhelsnthTrtdmwolldrgnd - V'-
hostagos would be served a bassador to Algieria Ulrich and we are more than delighted to assured all 52W"? aboard and that There are other wa to do thi ' i t A i e m an " ”V 4 1
Thanksgiving dinner of roast Haynes, greeted the h°St385 as accept the I’fiPODSibility 0f seeing has been cemfied m Tehran by the possibly supplying [liq with annngss' Limit: continue:r c: as a selfish ex- 3
turkey during the flight to the they left the Boeing 727 Of the t°it that you return to your homes SWISS ambassador. 2. How would you have had eit- Askins: “Arylarge part of them .’ t
Rhein-Main Air Base near Algerianairline. and families." . After leaving a still-secret 1008- President Carter handle the think we owe them something “ f 3
Wiosbaden, where they will be ad- The group moved into the air- Christopher thanked the Algerian tion in Tehran, the captives were hostage dilemma differently? Vance: “We 105} a M of self. 1:. "
mitted to a US. Air Force hospital 9011'3 VIP hunger where Algerian government for its Me as in- driven in a bus t0 the airport and Askins: “We should have had respect i won’t be satisfied until - ':
foraperiod of “decompression," Foreign Minister Mohamed termediary, saying ”Today's then escorted one-by-one by guards more rescue attempts. i think we get revenge v- -. . .l "

Former Secretaryof StateCyrts Beliyahla. snulmg and relaxed events would not be taking place to the plane through a crowd of Carter should have been more of a Ennis: “The Middle East and - ‘ 1
Vance arrived at the German air despite several Sleepless mghts Without the role of your govern- revolutionary guards, some waving hardliner, as much aslwould have Communist Third World countries .1" ’. ‘
base early today. to prepare to over last-minutenegotiations,said: ment." their fists and chanting “Death to natedtogoand fight." don't like us, but the Democratic I." :1
welcome the Americans taken cap- “It IS. - - my duty at this moment The ex-hostages boarded the two America" and ”GM is great." Vance: “He should have acted Continued on page 4 ,:
O h ' k V'"

at 18 ta. en “a; . i i i , 4 . . . . . . . . . . Local party held

as 52 leave Iran a .. . at Herit 6 Hall
ByWALTERR.MEARS ‘ » L i i . t A ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ :11» ag i.
' AP Special Correspondent ‘ ht " By BILL STEIDEN '. t'
g‘) Senior Staff Writer ;

WASHINGTON —-Ronald Reagan became President . ’ a . . . . y . ‘ t
of the United States yesterday, promising “an era of ‘ Senior Staff: Writer is a self-proclaimed cynic. I ,-' 1
national renewal” at home and restraint but never sure ‘ ~ 3' , i. . I ‘ ‘ Following is his, admittedly, biased account of the in- :_: ; .- :va
render abroad. His inauguration blended the passage I“ L} .. augural ball held by local Republicans at the Heritage '5' '5 I]; .1.
of power with a passage to freedom for 52 American . h r * a ‘ Hall Ballroom in the Lexington Center. 5 '. . ‘
hostages. l t' * 7‘ - v . . . ,3

.. ,, . . ~ u \ Ididn twant to go, but as alournallst, it was my duty ; .. I. .,
mailman“ "l t’ o * ‘ some acr-my.a......d.,.gmo w

. . . ‘ . ‘. » 0W- :2 ?
wfiil?$hg1fh§§l:lddfiw£lirygytghtainsiletll: , A . 1\ Who could have foretold the terrors I might face? .‘ft.

_ . ‘ - The risks were appalling. i might be forced to drink a ’, '_ .. ‘.
“lemma": $38“ theelliarade, pageantry, music, watery pina colada, or engage in endless and mean- [7,, .3 -.
cannons u . ameac ebrationof their freedom, \ ‘ ingless conversation with a farm county party chair .3 j.
t°°' _ . _ . - man, or «worst of all — be forced to watch Donny and . g; "t .
assessments“swam: : rarermmwwmsanmmetwe «~:

- - ’. .' ee co orscreen. 21-. ."‘,
not mention the hostages in the 20-minute address he ’ ’ Yes, i‘m speaking of the Inaugural Ball in the '1. f 3.3 4'
directed to this breed called Americans. coun- Heritage Hall of the Lexington Center, where hundreds (”SF-it“
trymenhedescnbedastheheroesoftheland. of prominent Kentuckians gathered last night to j

But tlie‘liberatlon 9f the captive Americais was the ' celebrate the swearing in of Ronald Reagan as the 40th i ..', .’,
focus of his last briefings by Carter, and his first hours - president of the United States. 'v ‘ . ,;
as the 40th premdent. _ _ . " it was even more horrible than i had expected, Hav- ; f -‘ ;..~

.Andsothe announcementthenatlon awaitedcamein ing voted for Barry Commoner, l naturally had no i a ‘
his toast to] congressmnal leaders at a traditional desire to celebrate the outcome of whatifelt had been {A "‘. ‘j.
ChPAifd lilixt‘icwegtconclude the toast with thanks to 33'1““ MORAN Kernel Sta” :ggrlcaadl elegticotgalltdoy amtxawas ‘19:: (:19 opposite, .‘ “‘.."

, ex spen event owningm '

Continuedonpagea Republicans dancetomusic at Heritage nail inauguration party. . Cm‘muedonpagez 5-": ..J

O '13.:

‘ O 5.12 [_i't‘.‘
Foreign TAs draw fire, N0 comprendo No one seems to know .
a g . - ‘ . 1‘

1 t t E 1- h g” UK IS getting grant
re a es 0 ng IS usage By DEBBIE MCDANIEL of Education, that college's the grant. Without that informa- " .51. 1'
By REBECCA KIMBALL of fa'etm TAsisdebatable. and then discuss any problems in Associate Editor research development office, and tim, members of the Research ' _' ':
Reporter The University has no standard the workshop, it is unlikely that several department spokesmen and Foundation would have to search _’ ,- -
hiring test; each department fundswill permit suchaproject. What if the US. Department of chairmen in the College of Arts a through four filing cabinets con- ' - .3 '

AlthoughUKstudentshave many follows a separate process. The wACCEP’i‘ABLE _ An eight- Education gave UKasao.i43 grant Sciences. faining preposals from faculty in _ ._ ‘.

complaints about the University. math dqiartment, for example, week program for TAsthesummer andnobodyclaimedit'? The grant was oneof 23 research all areasoftheUniversity ‘ . . § l
one that oftai comes up is the dif- watches 10-minute video tapes of before their teaching begins. TAs According to at Dec. 22 press projects awarded by the Depart- When initially contacted last - 1'
ficulty they have with foreign prospective TAs, checking poise, would come to UK for an eight- release from the department, UK ment of Education in December. week, Waldo and members of the “ : ’ ‘
teaching assistants. Academic Om- presentation and voice before mak- week project coinciding with the has received such a grant for a pro- The department allotted more than foundation expressed surprise at - ' . -

budswoman Jean Pival said she ingdecisions about hiring. eight-week summer session. This ject to analyze the possibilities of $2 million in contracts and grants the information thatUKhad receiv- ‘ " p. | , .

hears 38-40 gripes per year on this Because only an estimated 20 prop-am would mesh with the ostablishingabilingual school. for projects in 14 states to improve ed such a grant. “We don‘t recall _. . - .

subject. new foreign TAs come to UK each English as a second language No one at the University, teaching of bilingual students. theaward coming through," Waldo , ‘ , ' ‘~

Students do not like trying to semester, Pival believes separate course now taught by Dennis however, has heard of either the ”No, we still haven‘t heard said, adding that a search through "

understand foreign accaita. Pival dqiartmental hiring processes is Schneider, an assistant pi-ofessor in project proposalortheaward-in- anything on it," said Ted Waldo, his files of awarded grants proved ~ » ,

said, adding that language is not bothinefficiait and ineffective. English, but would require an ex- eluding spokesmen from the UK director of the Research Founda- fruitless. _ . ‘ .' ‘

theolily p'oblem. The point of controversy is pamion of the course. The pro- Research Foundation, the College tion‘s proposal preparation and “We haven't found a cotton- . .

Pival said many student com- whether or not the University Continuedonpagel review department. “The thing picking thing,"hesaid. ' ‘ ‘ * .
plaints also center around cultural should provide money for a stan- ——————-—--—————'——_"" that surprises me is we have no About 31.8 million of the federal | .'

":15“ madam “no?“ ”Marx's "We Wm“ mesh .. rmtmamaasrr ‘ ~ "

be eons . a spec ve oreign . v a ,, -- ~__ we , ...,_._._____ —— - —~ »- We sai eisnoreco in our so a lone y- ‘ ‘ g ‘

differences vary from the inability others are in favor of such a pro- his office of the proposal for the required study of factors important .

of some TA! to make direct eye gram, and Pival offered three Today's editorial focuses on Today will be cloudy with a grant UK will receive. Also, the to the instruction of non-English-

contact withstudmtstothedeman- alternatives. some which she President Reagan's plan to put the chance of rain or snow developing {mum has “°t ”caved the speaking children, and four to _ . ‘ "

ding and difficult grading policies favors more than others. Kemp-Roth tax plan into effect_ during the d.y_ A high of 39 is ex_ federal documents for the grant develop inservlce training pro- *

ofother TM. .«mEAL - A full menta- ' . pected. Tonight will be partly yet. despite the press releue's gram for teachers of limited- - . _

Whether 0|“ “0‘ the frequency of orientation project which would in- For the reaction by human cloudy witha Iowans, December date. Wish-speaking students. .
complain“ “III for a chanp in clude a cultural and grammar students 0“ the hostage 011313 see The press release did not name These swank we made under '

Univa'lity ’01“!!! toward the hlrim workshop. TA: could teach classes Chl'is Mhts story 0“ Pale 4. the faculty member who received Continued on page 4 .

l l t g. ‘

 l" I I
‘ a.
l ed Ito rl a I s & 222:..wa man-IL“ 15:3in Les-mu
farm's“ sump-m-
' WWII '
I comme m‘s m... .......... W
‘ . 23;: W...
_ ! lithe-mart) [and welcomes Illlrllen inducer-mus. letters and WIWIch'tYD". M J8“ Nd “(HM ”.- M. Enleflammtnl Educ,
. i sound no Illdudt Me. readout and pmpu immune-nun inducing l I ID for sunk-Is and l‘l Day 5mm, Asmlonlmy Editor Jol- Llllo “w“ o- cunm ’
} Incline". lzllen should he Iiuuim :u 200 words and ups-bola and comments In M nods. ISM- AmmnIEulcflmnnkI-IEdHOI Std/Am."
I SauchAt/Wluu:
’ ‘ ’ K R ° ' .
- em - oth economics promise nothing A l ,t ,h (1-,
P. e er 0m ee tor
~ Following on the coattails of Carter’s Comprehen- considered inflationary, but also production, which
.‘ j - ‘ sive Energy Policy, Nixon‘s Wage-Price Freeze and has an oppOSite, deflatittlilnary eferct. IIt Clalenés thlaIit $121253? fieghgxggrmfiwéfiggmwm
" ' . the J FK-LBJ lan (endless land war in Southeast preVious economic eory as ignor e .. I- , i . . . , . .
. ' ‘I ‘ ’ . Asia), comes pthe beaming lovechild of the New hypothesis that when taxes are cut, people are in- Thatsall we have gomg in for tomorrows paper? What about the stories
_. I . - - - onthebudget cuts andthenew bus serVice?
. ' ~ . ‘> ~ Right: the Kemp'ROth Tax Plan. creasmgly Willing to pmduce as we“ as buy. “Jack and Jill weren’t able to get the interviews with the adminstrators -
. Supposedly, it’s a whole new entity, shining Well and good. Although the Kemp-Roth has been they keep canceling.”
I " ' . through the now-muddled darkness 0f traditional .deemed inflationary 1n the Sh?“ run, the long'ter m “That’s nothing new. Our reporters need to learn that the only way they’re
. I . .- ' . Keynesian economics with the piercing beacon of Increase In revenue reaching the government going to get interviews with these top dogs is tokeep calling them at boththe
- ‘ .' ' ' the supply-side approach. thI‘OUgh 1‘35 direCt Channels than lhcome taxes office and home. Ifyou don’t pester them, most of them will put you off.”
. - a . - . . . could be instrumental in solving the present cash- “Well,thosereportersare new. They’ll let have tolearn.”
' . z - The idea, 1“ layman 5 terms, {OHOWS ”“53 BY cut- flow problems and balancing the federal budget. “Did we getthosepictures taken at theart show?" .
. . ‘ ting federal income taxes 10 percent a year over a All is not sweetness and light, however. A few “The mole atthebox office wouldn’t let thephotogl‘aphers in- They said
' = = three-year period (that's 30 percent for those who analogies would beappropriate here. Does one upon they causeadisruptaflee-" .
’. ¥ . ' l" flunked multiplication). the Reagan admlhlSthahOh hearing strange noises eminating from the ,over- "Adisruptance? What the hell do they mean? If it wasn’t for our coverage
. . I. .-'. plans to stimulate not only consumption, which is revving engine of his car simply press down farther oftttIiIeeventt, few peoizlfhievould kitioifi about tiid They expect us t; do thestories
.' .- .-' ’ - on eirac ivi its, ye ywon‘ a owus opropercovera e.”
‘ - . .' on the accelerator and pray the machinery hqlds “I think they’re mad becausethelast timethephotographers took pictures
. II /; together, or does he Visit a garage at the earliest there they made alittlenoise ..
.. ‘, T ». I : ’flg pOSSible date_and attempt repairs? Is this country ”I het they wouldn’t say the same thing if the photographers had been
‘ . C - like a race driver. so desperate to stay in first place from The New Yo”. Times.”
-I ‘ ' ‘ , that it does not dare make a necessary pit stop? “We're not The Times.”
. _. " (63% Kemp-Roth calls for more production, more con- “And at this rate, we neverwill be."
. ’ .' . // . ' l [L sumption, more, more, more ina nation that already Later inthenight—aboutozao. .
I ~ ' , f if} I u has had so much that it is wallowing in its own “Have you finished edétinsthestory onthedebate team?"
. . ‘ - . . ~ '. ’ wastes. Jimmy Carter, if not an effective ad- :jWaSESupposedtgedltthat?” .
~ 45 - £I e. o ministrator, was at least insightful enough to main- IID'd" ”$91130“? I,
. I a ‘ ' .\ ' tain that Americans will be forced in the future to . ”gigglhg'og‘ifiigyw five mm ,,
. 1 K I. V ,, ‘ u . . ,, . . , ,
. fl 0“ .Y‘h/fi ‘ tighten their belts and adjust to a diet of “Okay, solmade “hue mistake. You dam have tobe ”hostile”
. . I U ()3 n'.‘ ‘4’ , . neceSSIties rather than luxuries. . _ The production manager waltzos in the office. “lemon (nickname for one
. ~ ' Q/ I I 3‘ , Sure, we can have more, as Reagan claims. With ofmammng modem typesetting mam that never work at night, but
’ 7 “5/ “ , .‘ .’ » i increased drilling for oil and natural gas, deregula- only during the day when the repair crew coma) is down again. We can't
-. , .I 1 . , N® .' 1/6"_I ,1 1‘ tion, construction of new nuclear power plants and l runanycopy foratleasttwohours.”
' I. .I - . 1/ l I“: ‘ ' ‘ I ll 8', production of synfuel from stripmined coal, the I “No hours—at that rate, we won’tbedone untilainthemorning."
, ; ~. l l'.|l‘ if. ’ ‘I . American energy future is limitless. Unfortunately, ! “’II‘hat’sriEht."
.’ " l ~ ll. e49“ ” ’ the environmental future is not. It is now 3a.m. .,
I . v ':, ‘ ‘ l {19” (Q 5‘ , I: Love Canal and Three Mile Island are lessons SW” sales?“ ”medeba‘e team?
- . . a " I , h I . ‘~ Reagan refuses to learn. Expanded mining and in- “Ineve’saw‘t' ‘t" w t th ta M t thr
g . i I (93“ dustry will inevitably lead to further destruction of l mug??? y°u mean y°u "ever saw‘ ' e sen e pe we” " ee
.- : . . . - , [3’ America’s environmental heritage. Rather than ; “Inge; gotit "
‘ - 1 ! self-defeating delusmns hke the Kemp'ROth plan, l Without further adieu, a quick edit is done on the unedited, and only, ver-
II f . . what 15I required 15 a real (I’verhalh Of our ehtIlre l sionofthestory tobefound.Thepaperwassupposedtobeattheprinter’sof~
.. , " .. , mil v' ~— economic SYStem, Starhhg Wlth the means by Wthh : fice about twohours ago, soaquick editisall that canbedone at this time.
_; ‘ » ' , I. . __ it is fueled — the technology exists, only the commit- ‘ Inhishaste, theeditor overlooksafew errois.
I - ’ ' ‘ ’ ment is missing. 3:40am.Paperisfinishedandtaken totheprinter.
" . x “ In conclusion: best fix it now, before it has to be It is 9:45 in the morning. A student picks Up the Paper in one Of the
_ ‘ _' I . — I replaced. bathroom stall: as he sits on the commode. It‘s a decent paper that day — a
. ’ I- ; ,' . 9._ V I‘ lot of good stories, some nice pictures and very few errors, except in the
. . . . I w storyabout thedcbatc team.
I ' ' i. I: ' - a . ‘\ The student chooses to read that story first. The errors do not go unnotic-
' _ I -» y . ‘—{;- >7 \ ed.
'_ . 1 ~ . , I~ 5’ 1’ \;’g _ ~l “Damn, this story sure hasalot of mistakes in it,” the student thinksashe
- Q5 ' . , a 'I ._ :— drops thepaperbackonthefloor.
‘ ~I ’ I ‘ W i ' Ithink I’ll writealetter to the editor."
, Q Wili’ tonne ’UN... WHEN #2 AND 'me MISSUS r-iRsT mm WWI? melee /
I. I. WAS No'l'HlNG liege exceed- A BIG . BUSTLlNG .BUReUCRA'flC CATV... 801'er llARDVibRk 9 . Mil {
- mopeRseiemicewemABLenmRNii mlbnleoeaallife WASBLANDIHJSGerDAX...’ 2724;
I: 2' . ~ ‘ /
. I I , " .' ..r i o o ’ °
- Sometimes it 5 easy to lose Sight of those we really love and care about
- .- The name Paul Caldwell pro. her parents. We stayed with them My grandfather is the man who I'll neverbeable to repay him for I made my way to a small room
i, .. .I I- bably doesn‘t mean much to you. ioreight years. took me to the Atlanta Braves everything he did for me - it would in the back of the intensive care
",‘If I .I 5 But it does to me ~ he‘s my grand- During that time it was hard for games, taught me how to laugh, let .‘ “.3. besenselsss for me to even try. ward where my grandfather was.
. I 7» ' father me to understand why my mom and me help with the household chores, 4%" 7 , But in the past few years I feel as My grandmother was in the room
Ij' He was never the stereotypical dad did not live together. All the even though I was usually just in - 3. if I have neglected him. I haven’t with him holding his hand. I felt
I grandparent who would show up other kids I came in contact with the way. anI .-.‘" " " been able to spenda lot of time with sorry for her because she looked so
I' ‘ .. once or twice a year with presents lived with their moms and dads. I He's the one who showed me the . him or anyone else in my family frightened.
.v I '- and .candy for the grandchildren. could never truly comprehend what only way to treat people was with man" . since I started college. It seems as My grandfather said hello to me
.. I. .‘ leaVing mom With a house-full of it was like to havea father. respect. Words such as prejudice, ; ifI’m always at work or school. as [walked in. [don't know where
t‘ . " spoiled brats a week later. No, he . greed and jealousy were not part of _ [promised myself thatduring the he got the strength to do so. His
.' " ,’ ‘. earned his t‘eSPeCt from his family But I never {9" cheated or bitter his vocabulary. -- ‘ Christmas break I would spend as eyes were sunken back in his head
‘1 5.'f'.~“:: by the example he set. With the ex- about "0‘ having a dad, because my Whenever I miSbehavedi he . much timeas I could with my fami- his speech was slurred and he had
" .‘ 3,' . -. ception of my mother, this man has grandfather became my father. I would let me know it. 1 don‘t V " ly. Well I did But the cir~ lost about25pounds
. i I. ' j ‘, ‘; had more influence on my life than didn't really l00k like him and I remember him ever using physical cumstances were not to my liking .
I." ’ anyone. didn't even have the same last force on me; he didn‘t have to. 1 Right before finals week last Whenlretumed to thehospital at
I. My mom and dad were divorced name. but I learned how irrelevant knew I had let him down and that to him I wasn't really the little semester my mom informed me 5330that evening he looked worse!
; . ’l when l was a year old. Mom and I those factors are when it comes to was punishment in itself. 1 would monster I sometimes pretended to that my grandfather wasn‘t feeling didn‘t stay very long.
I‘» ‘ moved to Atlanta, Ga. to live with love. then do everything I could to prove be very well. I didn’t think the situa- Th . t
I”? ' 'I I' —‘ """mmk' 1’ """_'—_ "”T In 1967. mom remarried and tion was too serious, but his condi- yourself {1; iii; mm 3f 21.33;;
'. .' i,‘ - , _ . \ grandfather was transferred to ho" continuedto deteriorate. one. [haven’t had to deal with such
, i.” .' ° a d r L4 another city. Mom and her new hus- A week after our family had a situation before. As I left the
N» I. I "i band and I moved to DoraVille, Ga. eaten Christmas dinner together, hospital that night, the thought of
’,’» ,- 5”. r l Grandfather and grandmother grandfather was so sick he didn‘t losing my grandfather was
'.~ ‘.-‘ in. ‘ ‘ moved to Birmingham, “3' have the strength to walk. The doc- unbearable.
",«I’I, I' =" ' . , 'l So I started $311"? a man I bare- tor said he had pneumonia and . . I
.1 . g :‘ i. ly knew “dad’ while the man who maybe even diabetes But he would While nging home, I thought
",I '. ' r' , .‘o. _ ”I , . . " l . 'I‘ had been a father to me for as long be unable to treat the diabetes until back to my childhood and the years
.,I' , I.- '. . g - as I could remember started a new the pneumonia had subsided. I spent with my grandfather. [realiz-
.I . , I - / // I u lifea few hundred miles away. I I . ed that he would never really know
2 : in I,- a “ ‘ . I/ Fourteen years later, those days 0“ Monday, Jan. 5' his condition how much I appreciated and loved
,I I.: 'i 7 l . (4; seem like light-years ago. So much “{85 3° semusv "WI "'0'“ and '3‘" him. Even if he lived I could never
',' ’.' I f_ . ". I ' ( l B . has changed. My family moved to sister were determined to getIhim even begin to repay him for whathe
. I I' . I' . . ' C a 9 6‘ B 0/[0 . Lexington in 1973. GrandfatherIand 3:2: :amhmepdtaji'tgecei’iatiaildggttfi did for me.
: ‘I , ‘ amzrian coffees/0% $53 idling: 73:33:31 hospital and placed in the intensive Welt he did “W He left the
3’22. V ‘ y: ' l CmBZSSY T‘ ‘ \ ”all"?! 0/}. ’Pfi‘; retired. He wanted to spend his careward. hospital aicouple 0‘ weeks agoand
. ‘9 “' 9 6g - 0f Peale ’07; 6". later years close to his family. The first timelsaw him that day Is "0‘.” a lgtm.t° the problems
‘ 2‘ ' ' ' i.) g L ; ‘3 9* “r 0 However I will never forget my t 1 in As 1 0t off a, associated W't‘h diabetes. Knowmg
. a ,3 I), ,I, {I . i ; #4}, Pa? . ' wasIa P- - 8 '3 hlmlikeldo,he'llbebackonthe
. i. ,- I '5 [9‘ I 919 3: Pp . years in Atlanta for 99510118 as 1 hospital elevator I was very ner- golfcourse this spring
"‘X .' . "-i 3 \9 i/ I v “ do: Giaszlc‘fof ‘ 445’ live. I'll never forget Sittingonthe vow about what I was about to I I ‘
1‘, , I .l' . ;. "1 m) / g ‘I 304 ”09¢ {If/’6’? [b . back steps or. the hOIUSC dnnkmg faceI [didn’t knowwhat toexmctI I m glad m 5 home, I'm glad we
,- I’ I,- “'0 , . ‘ ” I x ’i to, 92‘,“ ~ Bo, milk and eating saltine crackers . . I havealittle more time lefttospend
. . .w s/N “0 e t 139‘- (Pg 0734 “’00 $ with my grandfather after helping UPO" enter "'8 the intenswe care together. However, I realize that
. , I, , \- L were», a, immed- statesman“: nearr'lm'mem
, , , i I * ‘o / N 9 . . - t 1m Ct I
‘ , l ' , ”W" “((92% I, {A ‘ rggghi‘;:"teo“’{ep “or I” dam “ngagwgséfitghcggerg either side of Hieroomallofwhich aindtheioviim he sfig‘m $2; 335?
I’ . II -. - ,0], ‘3ch Wrath/iv a 1 y P werefull.lnthemiddleoftheroom neverdjeI .
. , . , . — « ' . C‘ '3?!” ”#h’f‘p, 4*, came 30'0“ “‘9 day. He was pro- was a nurse's station. On top of the ~
. . , i . ;" ' i“ - ’ y. 9' 00:3 ’3' (as an: ' ‘ bablysmngmoretimesthanlwas. counter was a stereo which was
‘ —c no [the .qnwkv tunnel in. 9Q& 4‘: l ”1% l" m I'll never forget playing football playing Dan Fogelberg's new song. Paul Mann is a staff columnist.
, at ' $9,; 0 and seeing him in the stamb w”. It was the first time in my life I Hi! column will appear every other
« . . ching. didn‘twanttohearany music. Wednesday.
i ‘ ‘ t i
—--— A A __ _

 THE KEN] l (‘K\ KERNEL “cdnesdeanuary 21. [981-3 I. I
“*Mfl'fffl—m‘_—' I I I
d compledtroml campus bnefs———-———-——— .
l l . ‘ .
news rou n up up d'spatcms I For more information contact SAS .
—_————————————*—«—————-———m—~-*- -——~——- President Darrell Allman, 2554151. ' ,. .
C . . . . . Last day for payment ,-.
am us Thursday lransfemns maior promo US Supreme Court deClswn that struck I . . I
p tional functions from the Agriculture down a Kentucky law requiring the The last day for payment of registration More Classes - I
Department to the Kentucky Council on posting of the Ten Commandments in fees for the spring semester is Tuesday. . _
There will be a welcome home party Agriculture... which now is part of a new public classroomsas unconstitutional. Jan. 27. ITheI Lemneton Fayette Urban County II .
for thehostages tonightat Donovan Hall EnergandAgi-iculture Cabinet. According to an announcement by the DlWSIlOH 0f Parks and Recreation will be . I ‘ '
after the UK-Florida game. The party is Barkley has challenged the legality of . . . Office of the Vice President for Business offering four Classes Slarllhg Monday Feb. :2 , ,. , ‘
being given bytheDonovan Hall staff. thegovernor’s action. saying Brown was Beshear had "“"f’ny asked "‘9 Affairs. students who have not paid 2- I , ’ -
removing functionsfrom the Agriculture Supreme CW" ‘0 clarify the impact 0‘ registration fees by that date will be drop The four Classes include: A Class I" , I . '
Department that had been put there by its ruling on thousands of 0°?” 0‘ the ped for non-payment. Reinstatement can Martial Arts «Karate and Kung Pu). which . . n~ x
L003 theGeneral Assembly Ten Cmndmems that have already be made through Thursday, Feb. 5, with will be held on Mondays from 6:30 to 8:30 . .. ‘5'.
. charm; of Brown said last week that he ordered beenphcedin Kentucky sch°°15 sth payment of fees, plus an additional pm; a class entitled “Know Your Anti- .- g .
William 1" Young: we: t has n the transfer after H :El'ving complaints aprivate fund-raising drive. reinstatement penalty fee of $50. ques," which will beheld on Mondays from ‘n ' ',
GOV- JOhh Y- Brown s cabmih'e G beam] from farm leaders about the effec- The Supreme Court refused to issue a Students who have not paid fees at the 7 to 9 pm; a class on ceramics which will i . ,‘ . x ‘L
"3"?“ ManI 0‘ the Year 0:100 rea r tiveness of the Department of clarification last week. close of business on Feb. 5 will be dropped be held on Mondays from 7 to 9 pm; and a . _ ' .. -' 4’
LexiOIngIntgon ho Chaénber fortunmemficteiie Agriculture. Barkley has maintained from the University for the spring Class in beginning guitar. Which Will he ._ {I .~ n‘I
Y ' w [:1]: e in! ' chairman of that Brown’s decision was based on semester and no late payment will be ac heldOh Mondays fl‘0m71039-m- .
peanut butterC 1 lgw'flsu ' ton and political reasons — a charge Brown cepted after the reinstatement cutoff All four classes will be held at the Tates I .. -' .-
“033:1;va if a °g£m $235981“, denies. 01‘ date. In addition, delinquent students will Creek Community Center and the tee tor .. .5; ;
a ' ' Dung g . ' 'ned The ammmem 0‘ the mrfiahila‘ Israeli children will begin planting a be held accountable for payment of one- each 0m.” “1.355% is “5“” ‘0 weeks ”9‘ ‘ -.'I 3'
has been a UK tnstee and 101 _ . I I
Brown's circle of advisers in 1979 tion came a short while after P1?"s “John Lennon Peace Forest" next month half tuition should they deClde to return to registration IS rquUll'ed f0rIall four clesses . .- Ii I. ~
reports regarding alleged sexual harass- in memory of the slain former Beatle, UK at a later date. and you may do this by calling 2550833 ext. . I ,,
Stat