xt71g15t9x49 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt71g15t9x49/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1983-01-25 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 25, 1983 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 25, 1983 1983 1983-01-25 2020 true xt71g15t9x49 section xt71g15t9x49 ' K' - r W i
Morel-tow
Ever wonder whose job it is to pick up
-w ”w”-.. after weekend parties in University resi-
dencehallfifnepageb. -———————————~—
Vol. LXXXV, Na. ”Tuesday. January 25. I983 An independent student newspaper University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
Committee recommends freshman weekday visitation
By ANDREWQPPMANN tion from 7-11 pm.) on Mondays and by Zumwinkle, probably after con- weekday visitation hours to fresh- “I was kind of at a standstill be- of 407 students who indicated that
News Editor Wednesdayseffective Oct. 17. . _ sulations With Main Campus Chan- men. fore thesurvey came out.” she said. they planned to live on campus in :
_Currently. freshmenhave VISIta- cellar) Art Gallaher) and President “That‘s the one i really wanted “I wasn‘t sure about it. Now that 1%3-84. Out of the 303. 34.2 percent
a___._.____________ tion hours only 0!! FridayS. Satur- Otis Singletary. he said. bad,“ he said. “There will be no ad- I‘ve seen the survey. it looks like the wanted visitation extended until 2
A . l U 't 'ttee da'ly‘sandSundltaéi. f ed d l . In the next few weeks the com- ditional cost incurged because]:l thle majority wants it.“ a.m,on Friday and Saturday
spema mverSi y commi e commi avor eaying . . . ' R.A.'s (resident a visors) wi a- ) ' .
last night tenatively approved a pro» weekday visitation privileges for .mi‘ttee) WI“ reView'further proposals. ready beon staff. The survey, prepared by 30b debt? ggifbriaiptiighhgnmagfisawgn
posal to give freshmen living in resi- freshman until the middle of the "‘"udmg ”mm“ We“ ““5? . C1“ ”m“ 93mins 3’63 cm'd’m‘ two nights duri kda f 7-
.. . .. hourson F‘ da nd Sat da until “ ' f thnk- tor and com iled b th UKS ve' ngwee ys rom
dence halls weekday ViSitation Fall semester, givmg the new stu- Fl y a ur y "5 a whole new way 0 l p y e or y 11 pm About 76 percent favored
hours. dents time to adjust to the academic 2 am, starting weekday upperclass- ing." Bradford said. “They (the ad- Research Center. showed students starting u rclassmen week da
_ . Also, results of a random survey andsocialstrainsofcampuslife. men ViSitation at 5 pm. and setting ministration) have always been polled favored a more liberal visita— visitation aim: in rather than g
of students in the residence halls The committee was formed to up a co—ed' residence hall “"01 24' againstit." tion policy intheresidence halls. pm p. I
presented to the Advisory Commit- make recommendations to Robert hour V‘S'Kanon' Lynnie Oetken. Donovan Hall Resident advisors circulated blank The majority of the students sur-
’ tee on Residence Hall Visitation Polo Zumwinkle. Vice chancellor for stu- Committee member David Brad- House Council president and the survey forms to 500 randomly se» veyed — 62 percent ~ indicated they
- icies showed 84.2 percent want visi- dent affairs. on possible changes in ford. who as Student Government committee‘s freshman member. lected residence hall students. 407 would be willing to pay an extra sio
I . tation hours extended until 2 am. on visitation policies for the Universi- Association vice president has been said she was influenced by the Uni- students - 81.4 percent — com- a semester for increased Visnation
,._. . . Friday and Saturday. ) ty’s 18 reSIdence halls, Joseph active in the push for extended VISI' versity‘s survey in her decision to pleted surveys and returned them to privileges. About 60 percent favored
The committee, comprised of se- Burch, dean of students and com- tation. said he was happy with the support weekday freshman visita- their resident advisors. the creation of a 24-hour Visitation
lected resxdence hall presidents. stu- mittee chairmansaid. committee's decision to recommend tion. Statistics were based u- n the 303 co-ed residence hall.
dents and administrators. approved Any alteratiom in current visita- ‘4
3 a proposal to allow freshman visita- tion hours will have to be approved
ys funds for 1
I l w-' 44‘ 3% -’
pra-forestpubllmty I
By SCOTT WILHOIT vised and a real threat to the Uni- »» ,‘ ‘ ) . K /
Senior Staff Writer versity." " K *‘ .
Vincent Yeh. Graduate School sen- \
.A._ -. s, ....__- s s . .. . . ator. said he also was opposed to the _ ).
postponment. but he agreed the _ , . , Re
1 Student Government Assomation move will not damage SGA‘s stand K. g3? )
V°ted last night [0 POSlPON‘ funding against mining and exploitation of i, ‘ ' i g“ ’ s
0f a proposed campaign against '08- the forest's resources. ’ W" , , ,
ging Robinson Forest. approved by He said he worries more that the l I I '
the organization on Jan. 17. lack of advertising may influence an ' -
The bill would have allocated upcoming stand on the logging issue 9 l ”
money for advertisments in major by the University Senate. . ~ " . {is " j ) L . gigs gill ‘
newspaper throughout Kentucky. in other busmess, SGA voted to ‘ ' .)_ l :- , ' ".‘sgegwf"
stating SGA‘S opposition to mining fund a scholarship for an outstand- 4 ) s) , .1; v.9: )\ »\»
and timber farming the 14,525 acre ing student who has made the great- .6; _ Km, ' ,s. -
Universityowned teaching and re- est effort to protect. enforce and fur- “ 2K 4) )’ - ‘ 1
search preserve in Eastern Ken- ther student rights. g 25:) , ) := ‘ . ‘9 \
tucky. The bill, primarily sponsored by ' ".552,- Ki» . _ s» 25-3,.) ,. )3 j ., ) KKK .
At its December meeting. the Vice President David Bradford, was '3?» ‘ ”15%". f§§¥3§’ '~ g}?- 5 "13.33,:
Board or mam voted to inved- passed by an unanimous vote The i” W ‘- efi it’d - s. ..
) gate the possibility of generating scholarship, he said, will go to two Ki’t‘ufi" " )5 :. g ‘) m- ‘aiir W3
\ revenue from the forest by opening students annually who have best ad- Krfs. 3., . ,4”... of n ‘ , KM
part of it to commercial logging op- vanced the cause of student rights 4 : )1 {5); if“ “is ’. 5&2» T! .c ,, \
erations. and work for the betterment of the ~ ,3); ) 3);”; iii: K “ted-g) K’fi,‘ K 5
Senator-at-Large Jack Dulworth. campus community. 8K #33143; yll't 29"" ) \ e 1 =.. - 3‘?
who called for the postponement of Yeh objected to the bill saying he Kr "“ K ‘ ,. “Nev-- ) gin 3.1, “is“ - K *2“?
the campaign. said Senate is unsure was not sure if SGA had the funds to K: v. . =- ‘ -- .
how much money SGA has available sponsor the award. "While I support . . Ks '
for such Projects. the bill. I do not think we are sure of ’ " ' -
"We have not received the comp— the funds. I
. troller‘s (mid-year) report on how "I don‘t want to run into the prob
l much money we have." he said. lem last year where we were not . ‘
K “We were on a roll and allocating sure how much money we had at the - ‘ ‘ I
money right and left." end of the year. I remember it was "°“’""‘°°‘""""“’ “0"
Nancy Kelley. Arts and Sciences arealpanic,"hesaid, Madel hunt
senator. said she also favored post~ “I think we can run into setting
. poning advertising. “Personally. i priorities if we run out of money." Carmen Miller, on undecided freshman from Louisville, poses agenoes in New York City. The screening was held yesterday
think the postponement “'1“ "0‘ hurt Yeh said. “There may be something for a photographer from Prestige, one of the leading modeling of the Hyatt Regency. See story, page 6.
us. The people already know what in March and April and we won't
our stand is and this delay will not have the money tocarry it out.“
l really hurtus." Despite Yeh's objection. Bradford .
l ew payment process is so are success u
burg. however. opposed the postpon- ate that funds were available.
ment. saying the move was not in “(Tim Adams. SGA comptroller)
the best interest of the forest. “The assured me before the end of last se- 3v MICHELE ERR (frutcher said. But. because stu- said. an hour and paid my bills in about
Senate has done a flip-flop from just mester that we were under budget.“ senior Staff Writer dents' accounts can be processed at This is a paramount concern of five minutes." Terri Quinlan. unde-
last week. " he said. “it is ill-ad- Freudenburgsaid. least every 60 seconds. collections top admmistration, he said. espe- (‘1de sophomoresaid
_ _ m) _ v . 7 ) . ) ) ) 7 shouldbequicker. cially in these times of declining en— “Now. my Owed“? I: m gm most,
_ Housmg and meal card proceSSing rollment and restricted admissmns students to tell other students, m tell
The disastrous 1932 registration were moved out of the Student Cen- And the improvement has been no higl. school students to u,“ their
TUESDAY process. fouled by computer prob- ter Grand Ballroom to 206 Student ticed. he said 4* sturdcnts have parents that it isn't really hard m
. lems and other errors, prompted ad. Center. “We just couldn‘t handle the made a point of Visiting his office to come m [K Poop“, an; "“0“le
FmAWmm ministrators to take immediate ac- huge number of people coming tell him what an improvement the there “Blanton said ~
tion. resulting in a more efficient through there in that short of a time new registration process is ‘
process this semester. Jack Blanton. period.“Blanton said. “i thlought if Iran qugc a bit in: thaltl'lhalh change tgiriizs't slowli but
' vice chancellor for administration. Also. financial aid was distributed tcr." enny Ta )tt. ustness an SW crcwc r0 om OmHVt‘
Arrests scores during MX missile protest mg m the Ballroom. but instead of hand) mmmmssenm Sm Add drop ,5 mm” m... M...“
:‘Registration was a much more mg students checks, which they ”1 iIOt my late registration don? 1“ 599““ 90990 1
VANDENIERG All page: IASE. Calif. —More than 200 pleasant experience for everyone in cashed to pay fees. the money is ap-
anti-nuclear weapons demonstrators were arrested yester» January," Blanton said yesterday plied automatically m the” at" a a
_ “Last semester finanCIal aid checks counts. I I
day as they sought unsuccessfully to block the main gate of were terribly [319‘ we ran into com- Jane Wonn. a partrtlme employee OPEC meetlng called fal ure'
) this potential MX missile test site. puter problems in terms of getting at the FinanCial Aid office. said the
K The group of 200 who had been arrested by noon includ- fees assessed and getting payment new Pl‘OCess has made d'Slr‘bVllon '
' ed 30 protesters who walked a quarter-mile onto the north- records established for students "WC" “1‘5"" "They had people from co apses over lsagreement
am part of the base and came within a mile of operational "After that. people on my comput- finanCIal aid right m the room with
g . . 'l l h ' .|.. 'd b d mg staff. in Busmess SerVices. in l5 and If there We"? and problems
a) Minuteman missi e aunc an ities, sai use common er Student FinanCIal Aid. at the Begis- they explaineditrightaway . . ‘ ‘
4* Moi. Gen. Jack L. Watkins. trar's Office and at the Student (‘en- National Direct Student Loan rc~ GENEVA. Switzerland An 'Uteiba Vias quoted l‘} ”W hull
g The others were arrested when they either tried to block ter got together and had a long cri- $391116 th‘m iii lpf‘ t “brim"; emfrgggcy Ugling‘efrigrlfi C02??? mzwfhgggifdsigh lfd‘malyl i; geclar-
f . - - ~ ' . s ' ' ea re mm C IT‘S wee 0 )‘95 er y in 158 (‘9 0V - . r l ( Ut‘f‘l‘S
K the base 5 main gate or “.0“ q nearby boundary wire, 0".- :gutfdi‘fnihuliZlctdwaprgilihmtowsdf‘lrirs: school to sigii promissory notes duction quotas . a failure that were “now free to deride \Ahal the)
; Cials of the Air Force'Calilornio Highway Patrol and Santa them_"hesaid. After processing. they were able to could for“, down mi prices and pro- deem suitabletor the protection of
, Barbara County sheriff s department said at a late morning The first major step was moving pick up loans the second week. cut longawordwide glut theirintcrests
news conference. the if?" payment process out Of the ““3 down on ballroom crowds d” OPEC did not change its base Yamani said Saudi Arabia would
Some 300 demonstrators showed up for the protest, SerVIces Building and into the for- mg the first week. Blanton said price of $34 per barrel. several min- not cut the Saudi price WllhOUl con
i though many did not obstruct the gate or enter the base. mer Student Center music room. "The results were fanmSl'f‘di isters said sent of other cartel members
3- Tha demonstration was against possible future MX missile “This made it more accessible to Frank Harris. director 0f the Nu} -- '
. , the handicapped and provided a dent Center. said “There were few “t’ut‘Wld "0‘ as??? on anything international bankers fear that a
‘ '95“ °' the base, located ‘30 m'l” "°"h‘”°3' °i L°5 An- more centralized location for every» complaints, and when people aren't at 8”. 531d Mana 339“ ("9'53- lhf‘ sudden and large drop m prices
. geles. one.“ Blanton said. llBS)‘ you have a fair indication that 011 mmlslf‘r 0f the l'mlt‘d Arab Emi could lead to default on mnmns of
“The new @le9" 5&1“le 15 things are gomg 51““)le rafts dollars of loans to muntries such as
’ what really helped." Ben (‘rutchcr. information was prepared to help Some oil ministers said there was Mexico and \‘eneruela which depend
director of Student Billings Services. students adjust to the new system. a consensus that the Organization of on (“153195 for nationalincomc
said Eight computer terminals Blanton said “It was written clear Petroleum Exporting (‘ountries drop MeXIco exports l 5 million barrels
, were imtalled in the Billings Office, ly. students read it, understood what its overall production ceiling by l a day. so 9”.“ pm“, drop of 51
eliminating the need for students to we were saying, and followed our ll ba 1 da l . t 1- ~ 11’ would cost Mexico 81 3 million a day
,, mi ion rres l_\ 0 mini ion, .
mm carry computer-cards planofaction ) ‘ about the current level of production at a time when lh“ country IS Sim!
“Pimrs'nshgs mm “at :44 .3 mm rm m W3:
ares or er. sai ~ - 4 4 ' sis an try? to v 0 an i l'
y “We planned this so that no one to work together in "“5 3'93- Blan- {3,2de :fldbflflfggflhfiffig lionforeigh die-gm pa,
woiiltiespend more than one may: 22:1]? flit“? nKKh:¢;:r£:liln(: a"): no agreement on any point i Meiiican oil OfllC’l‘aJS had no immer
In paying P700955. ." - ‘ ~ The ssibility was left 0 r. that iatecommentont meetintl
Burch. systems analyst ”08’3"“ same team There was a much more South gabia could carry ourtwits im Other economists say it also would
794‘" will 5. ‘lW‘Y ""5 0 M." l“ ”‘0 "PW' 30* mer for the Data PTOCPSSIUE 59D" cooperativeeffort plied threat to reduce its price if mean an improvement of conditions
Winds Tum-y nl'ht will be cloudy with a 20 percent ices. said “It worked to the mint ”This is the first tangible evidence there was no agreement. which for importing nations. such as Bra~
chance otenow showers. laws will be In the upper 20'. where Will? have come in early b‘" M the long range plan “'0er dcvel» could touch off a series of price cuts le
cause there werenolong “"95 H oping here to make ”“5 place "‘0" around the world and undermine It also would mean lower prices
Lines are Slill expected '0 b9 long accessible to. "1“” responsive “K UPI-it“s already eroding power o‘er for gasoline and other products
today the last day to pay fees . more friendly to students, Blanton prices made fmmcmm]

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Editor in (Net News iditor Arte Editor Spam Editor Swiol Prolom idlior Photo [drier Graph-u Editor
I P BRS UASION mm“ mm "W .............. ............ ”W
Managingidiior Ediloiiolfdilor AuiuamAm Editor AumoniSport-Ediior Swwl'lolxll Aulllcnl Chidrhoiogropher (09y Desi- (rim
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Lon line hassles are OHde
9 3 _ I FEE PAYME 'r SYSTEM: FEE PAYMENT “STEM
but a problem still remains w Tricia l ram/m. .
. .. . . . rt“ ."“ J g 1"
Few things are as frustrating as waiting in long lines —— today is the last day for fee ‘ 3 , \Y of“ ., ,
a long line. payment — the new registration plan is a big ,4 .. 3 . - l -. -. , If) 1 .
, - - - ‘ ‘ ' Ir ‘li r I
The frustration compounds as the hours go step toward eliminating the hassles: /§,i w . “if, ,. 3/3 : 5
by, and nothing can top it all off like finally Another step, however, remains to_ be EM I 3, , w a; l. l‘l‘ / A 3 $ 2
reaching the point of destination of that line taken — assuring there is adequate notifica- ,t" g 3,, Wk, ‘ iii ,3 .c , i
only to hear — “Sorry, but we’re closing up tion of the$50advance registration fee. My] W 2 4i -. .s 3
for the day. Please come back tomorrow and The long lines that _might have been re- W l i. A ' 4 \\\\\;\x .\ . ‘
we‘ll take care of you.“ duced by the new billings system, hagdstu- /. ; \\§\ , ‘3. § \o\3\,. \\\ 3
. dents known of the fee, was aggrava in- )V,’ R . 33 \ ,3 \ 3 ._ 3
That was "‘9 experience 0f more than a stead by the approximately 1,700 students 3f /§ M. is \\\\\\\\ Q \ i 3
few students In past semesters who went whose registrations were cancelled because 1 y \y ”g: \ - § \\
through the fee pay me!" process. And wait- they failed to pay the fee. ‘ s // l“ j ~ " ex; , ' ‘4 \ “ . § 5.4m -
ing 5” hours l." seemingly endless lines m While the idea of ensuring students‘ enroll- , / l, 433' ”i . 3% \\\\\§
, ' . . - - l i ,5 , ' '5 ; s ..
the Set? ice Emldmg d1]: Mt necessarily en- ment with the deposn is well-intentioned, the l. %l 4/ 5 ’ ’ E' ., _\\\\ ['(fi §\\§ 5 e l
sure t at stu ents cou pay for the" regis- lack of information on the payment created / lie \ My ‘ . .-. - ‘ §\\§ ‘ ‘
trationthatsame day. endless problems. A 7 j“ 6/. j/‘WI "l w .. .1 , 1\\\\\ ///\ l
Fortunately.thatis no longer "fie case. Advance notices of the pre-payment were / // .ll‘ l3, I pi“ ;- , l, [/7 //// j l ;
THIS semester, the Billings Office has been sent through the mail. and the Kernel _ran an j \ l "Will ‘ j " ‘ 'l' ' {j «/ / ‘
moved to the former Student Center mus” article concerning it in the last edition be- I, {i ”ll \ [M .‘.\ H I! r, m ,,
”0°?" The central campus location allows fore Christmas break. Students conceivably ill", I"; ll Wilt-l, ll ,, j 3_ H II I l til i .1, j l
.9351" access for handicapped students and could have missed both of these notices, lj’lll‘ ll. , . fluffy f . " ,-. .3 ,
'5 generally more convenient for every one. however, and thus have been left out in the ”i ll {V} ‘ , ”as! "19 1 . . /"« /,
. . . - l . - -. . , ' " , »‘
Also, by turning the old mus1c room into cold at the start of the Spring semester. 3 l 5‘ I?) 5 ll / l 33.3 —-e fl, W, _
the Billings Office, the administration has Advertisements, posters around campus l l“ , .\ (I 13"“3 .3. 3 , 3 I 7/ 32 3
shown an intelligent use of space made and even phone calls would all be effective hi3; I," .y 4- . \ 3; ~ ‘ 3 3 " ' //// ._
available by the Student Center Addition. ways of reminding students of the fee, at l, ,l M" 3 ;§\\\. ‘ 5 l 1: ”fl ’/ //// g»; l l
The big difference this semester, however, least until it becomesamatter of habit. 3 . I “.33. 3 i \\3\ : 3-3-77 3 , iJ ///I l»: . ;
is the new computer system used for proc- While the number of non-payers likely Will l I'M All ll. %..3 3 — j 33,3 \ 35a , 'lli, 3. ‘5.
essing payments. With of eight computer ter- be reduced next semester as the students l“ l 3 3 .33 ; 33 [war .- 3 _ 333, 5),
minals on line, students wait in much short- burned this time learn from their mistake, "in ‘ ' "— a " ”" M ’2" , _,_.—___ 195 g
- - . - - - ' ‘ ' ---— - «— . emu—K .
er lines and can usually be processed Within there is no pomt in anybody suffering an in- I“! l ‘ t“; _ 33 — _ ,3 3, ~———e-« 333‘
aminute. convenience because he or she was not in- ‘ ' _ .5 3
Although there probably still will be fairly formed properly.
l n .
Another view of the Beatles 3 hard da ’3 m ht of ram
I y g
Let's allget up and dance toasong/ nyish manager at every gleeful op- time they threaten pure chaos hurt your field." leaving the dis- over her tearfully joyous face. I get all the aesthetic criticisms and his-
That was a hit before your mother portunity to romp through Chapli- Everything seems to work here. gruntled old gent to curmudgeonly an intimation of the true reason I‘m torical perspectives I bring to bear l
was born nesque double-speed scenes. So why is the audience growing so bemoan the disrespectfulness of to finding this film so unsettlingly dis- on the film keep leading back to that '
—The Beatles. 1967 occaSionally picking up unplugged quiet? day‘s youth. appointing. Hollywood‘s quick cash- one inescapable. overworked and 5
guitars and lip—synching their hits. At first I think it‘s just me. Per- But something is amiss here. as in on the Beatle craze is, however trite conclusion. Once this film must f;
It's raining as we walk into the This is what we had expected; we‘d haps my own private perplexities well. Before the scene is over, I‘m unwittingly,instant history. have been a charming piece of silly ‘
theater. The freezing rain that un« hoped it would bemore than enough. are shrouding my perceptions. It‘s remembering the Monkees aping What I'm seeing is a far cry from pop art, but now it is an artifact, a ‘
balanced the day has settled into a been a lousy day and I‘ve come to this sequence just a few years later what I‘d expected. This is not the history text, and those are not often .
dank drizzle. casting us and the ' my favorite theater with my favor- on the small screen. With a little wry and witty parody of mid~19605 charming. g
slush in shades of gray. ite friend to hear my favorite gold~ shock. I find myself thinking I enjoy globe-trotting spy thrillers that I “The magical mystery tour is hop- ‘
“It‘s been a hard day‘s night , . . ._ en-oldie band nostalgically rock my those TV reruns more than I‘m en— saw in “Help!“ This is no whimsical ing to take you away . . The arti-
We have little to say Nothing is ' . q blues away. and I simply expected joying this full-blown original. The fairy tale like “Yellow Submarine." fact draws toa close. The [ads from .3
wrong. but nothing is precisely " too much. But a careful look and “5- Monkees were, well . . . more no lysergic. scatter-brained drug Liverpool arrive at the studio just in 3
right My friend sees someone she ten around the theater blows that charming. At least on TV, such coy— cult classic like ”Magical Mystery time to play a medley of hits for g
knows and stops to exchange mutual theory. This crowd is simply not the ness can be only partially attended Tour.“ their frantic fans. '
pleasantnes as I step imide the au- But before the first reel is over. same enthusiastic congregation that to. Splayed across the giant screen If “Let It Be" is the heartbreaking The music plays on as the closing 5'
ditorium just as the movie begins. the audience has grown quiet. The cheered the opening credits. True. it looks like a Silly Putty image tale of what happens to a dream credits roll over the obligatory
"I got a chip on my shoulder that‘s knee-jerk druggy cheers at John no one is leaving; it‘s not that bad. stretched beyond its limits. Coy when it sags under the heavy bag- Beatle mug shots. Goofy grins, .
bigger than my feet I can‘t talk to Lennon snorting off a cola bottle But the laughter grows weaker in in- charm. to mix my similes, is a gage of reality, “A Hard Day's smug smiles and coy cuteness dance
people I meet so I’ll cry in- fade to occasional near-forced snick- verse proportion to the rising action. small balloon indeed; one inflating Night" chronicles the birth of that on the screen, and sobering as the ',
stead.” ers at Beatle quips that worked The Beatles. all four of them, bright puff too many and it pops, smearing dream. In this celluloid fantasy un- film has been. I am reluctant to '
Nearly two decades old. "A Hard much better in the spontaneity of and snappy on the screen. “and you sticky saccharine all over the plugged guitars make musical leave jmt yet. Who knows? Maybe if ,
Day's Night” has been re-released their early press conferences. know that can‘t be bad .. . You screen. So much for cheerful anar- magic in themostunlikely places. Isitherelongenough. .. .
Veteran of the Kentucky Theater "Something is happening here and know youshouldbeglad." chy. These days, the Rolling Stones can “The magical mystery tour is j
that I am. I can't recall the last you don‘t know what it is. do you "I'll give you all I've got to give/If The rest of the film has its mo- walk the streets of New York City dying to take you away." But mor- 3"
time the place was so crowded The Mister Jones. , ."” you say you love me too/l may not ments. Ringo sitting under a hair testing their new antenna-equipped tality has a way of worming through i
audience cheers as class1c Beatle The sound is excellent. Redone in have a lot to give/but what I've got dryer reading Queen magazine cordless guitars while the sound our dreams when we try to make ‘
mug shots splash over ClaSSlC Dolby stereo. the songs gush all the I‘ll give to you . . Ah, I think. now while John quips. “That's an inside booms from amplifiers in a studio 20 them real. Right spang in the mid
Beatles tines Raised on a steady exuberance. all the boisterous good here‘s what I've been waiting for. joke. y‘know.“ George running sar- stories above, and it hardly seems die of all these good-natured cine- {
diet of concert films and rock docu- cheer that rocketed them to the top The boys have given their manager castic circles around a buffoonish magic. In this cheerfiu anarchy matic snapshots, there‘s one of .3
mentarirs. garnished liberally with of the charts 20 years ago and the slip once more. and I‘d almost fashion designer asking this “typ- from 1964, kids can storm the streets John, mysteriously frowning. If I j l
the delightfully nonsenSical dessert firmly established them as p0p stan- swear the projectionist has cranked ical" youth his opinion of the latest and concert halls with all the frenzy don‘t want to own up to a cliche like i
of current cable teleViSion ndeo-ju- dards up the sound as “Can‘t Buy Me tacky styles. John and Paul th- they can muster and no one is “loss of innocence“ tonight. I defi-
keboxes. we've gathered here at the The jokes are charmingly deriva— Love“ rolls out of the speakers. warted each time they reach for harmed. Folks at Altamont and even nitely do not need a sad image of .
end of a miserable day for a rock ‘n' tive. The card-game sequence is lift- There‘s Paul and Ringo doing a booze at a press conference. A re- Cincinnati were ‘lOt so lucky. In this John Lennon. :
roll history lesson ed wholesale from the Marx Broth- little mock square dance in the mid- porter asking John how he found Beatlemanic dream. actions have no “It's been a hard day‘s night . .
We've seen the Woodstocks and ers' “Animal Crackers " Mixed with die of an open field. while John runs America. to which the Walrus re» consequences, the music is always The drizzle still fails as we walk .
the Altamonts. the Who on tour. the sly grins at the camera and the sud- off to himself, only to come somer- torts. “Turned left at Greenland." good, and the boys need no more slowly to the car. We do not speak.
Secret Policeman‘s Balls. the per- den appearance from nowhere of saulting back to the joyous clan. And,ofcourse,theecstatic fans. reason to sing than the existence of That image of John won‘t leave me
technic doomshows of Led Zeppelin those unplugged instruments as the Such cheerful anarchy is the essence The fans. Laughing, leaping and the song itself. The film is shot alone. Despite my best efforts. an»
and the folk-rockers" last waltzes scene becomes another delightful of this film. even weeping just to be in the same through with an innocence that ugly other image creeps in. a weeping -
And tonight. before the same Silver excuse for a song. the theft is neatly The Beatles break away for a room with the Beatles. As staged realities have banished from rock Yoko Ono with a police escort. bare~ '
screen. we await eagerly one of the acknowledged and Beatleized. good quick time. leaving their man- and trite as all of the rest of the movies forever. ly able to walk through the hospital
great-grandaddies of them all The threadbare plot ties the musi- ager in a nervous sweat wondering movie seems with 20 years‘ perspec- Innocence. There, I said it. I‘ve door.
Within five minutes the film‘s cal romps together with just the if they‘ll be back in time for re- tive, those fans at least are real. No circled around and around the sub- Itwasrainingthatday,too. - ,
premise IS set the Beatles on the right gentleness. givmg the lads hearsal. And a polite anarchy as director had to tell them when and ject. trying to find some other expla‘
road «traveling by train“ 1. mobbed room to ham it up with droll disre— well; when the romp is done, George how to act out that frenzied Beatle nation for my disappointment to Gary W. Pierce is a communica- '
by shrieking teenyAboppers at every gard for the plot-mired rules of film apologizes to the old groundskeeper. mania. They were living it. During a night, but there’s no fighting it any tion graduate student who gets
stop. slipping away from their nan— making, pulling in the rents each “Sorry, Mister, we didn't mean to close shot ofa girl holding her hands longer. That innocence is gone. and maudlin on rainy days.
B 'ld'ng her 8 3' Is ' o ent 'n economy
After a 24-month pause in his Yet as appealing as this notion deed. it it‘s “pent-up" at all. it may that the level of durable goods sales While our guess is that consumer We're not sounding a note of pessi-
usuallyprosperous real estate buSl- may be at the new year. it unfortu- only let loose after FBCOVET)‘ IS well will return to some normal annual taste hasn't changed irrevocably, mism because we've got a crystal
ness. a middle-aged friend told us in sight. 3 rate. Idoubt that you‘re going tosee most middle-income Americans ball or because. in economic debat-
last month that the economy was on “3“”... Technically speaking, pent-up de- an explosion." have discovered that making do es. we prefer playing the bear to the
the brink of improvement “' “'7‘“ 3 5 GLEN mand represents those purchases A darker possibility, however. is with less is easier —— and perhaps bull. The current enthusiasm seems
To prove his hunch. he produced " 25' ‘ ”d that consumers would have made that back-to-back recessions have even healthier ~ than they antic— only too reminiscent of bipartisan
""99 charts outlining a two~year Pt" . ‘ . , SHEARER over a period of time —- say the last alienated some Americans from ipated. If this proves to be the case, optimism cultivated two Januarys :
riod of depressed single-family hous- ‘23 two years — but didn't because of their consuming habits of yester- celebration of “recovery by de- ago about the power of tax credits
ing sales. saturated demand for economic constraints The definition year. Indeed, hard times have led mand“is certainlyabit premature. for business. Then, the godhead was
rental units and the recent decline of nately could be more imagined than seems to imply that over time. con- many people to modify their life- if any real pent-up demand hides supply-side economics; today, all _
interest rates in his small Western real Consumer demand isn‘t likely sumers stop worrying about the fu- styles. This is dramatically evident out in America today, it‘s for a $2,— h0pe is being laid to the demand .
town The figures. he said. pomted to lead any full-fledged recovery, In- ture and make those purchases that in two supposedly-prescient mar- 000 automobile, a $25,000 dream side. Are we again putting our faith
to a ”pent~up demand" for houses they‘d been postponing. 3 kets: ln housing. cost has led many house, a 29-cent gallon of high-test; inapieiiithesky?
thatis set toexplode in 1983. . Yet. according to Ohio State Um- people to form groups, pair up or or, with one in 10 adult Americans ,_
"Pent-up demand“ is an increas- Letters P 0' [CV versity macroeconomist Richard live at home: today, we also drive unemployed, for steady work it3elf. Maxwell Glen and Cody Shearer
ingly popular buzz word to which Anderson, during recovery from re- less and keep our cars longer than All the rest we hear about is likely are Pulitzer Prize-winning national
many economists. business people Readers of the Kcntucky3Kernel cession comumers mually behave ever before. tobespeculative. columnists.
and politicians have recently at- are welcome to express their own like bears: having taken scary e
tached remarkable healin