xt76dj58gs44 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt76dj58gs44/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1983-11-22 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, November 22, 1983 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 22, 1983 1983 1983-11-22 2020 true xt76dj58gs44 section xt76dj58gs44 l t -
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yo}. LXXXVI "g, 74 . buttoned rm A MW at WAam. m Wot Slam I97i too-day. m 12. i”:
l . r " w Th 0 o bl o
l ;. Q _ .\ e unimagina e is
22 3 . * \ -... it daily procedure for
l i K J — L o o o
~ ' ' , ClVll defense office
i ,v t ’ . \ -
z i f . . , —_ ‘. :3 ‘i's
i ”.../r f l g ’ a in itoiiliit: K tlst it
i / I, 4 I - ,1 t \ Features issistant r”
l f ‘ \ . ‘ Anything t‘ttlllti be happening .n ‘jun‘u
l, A ' .1 ' Lettington when and it it lllM'lt'dl will . .‘c j
. fl . . :1 \ . _ were to begin But for now \.1\ .i ‘3; "’ ‘f/
i /, ,. _ :z. W at: u ».*3: __ . ' dog with a turn left ear l‘ tuning as
t ' I through an abandoned building
& . _ _ downtown lt is the middle of tilt nixititittig tenlei l‘u\|‘1'.i “as. .1
‘ day Someone is standing on the wt li-xttiittot; \i.lll tron: there the
I “ - - , her of High Stru‘t and “use with .i :tldi tuix \\\lt'tl‘l nil. tilt-tutu. Mike
[ portable tape player teetering on lll\ llil'tl. ._ .l iliii1\l.lli‘\ oi or it
i shoulder Hem) metal lttghwnx N‘ at 3% toward «hind-t1
' . 2mm Pang. pang tiling \ tkibkt’llklll hm‘ nth-s :t‘ \ Lilli ‘vtiuttnr-‘t ,lex
slaps againstt'ont‘rele Ntlllfiwllt‘l't‘ \llttttll' Hush \tomgumrrx ttouan
. y “_3 A lawn mower drones on Jefferson ital... l‘llld‘ik. l‘Ollll'l .inlt it'l- k »
- E p; .. . Street \ .k\ill t‘tliltlltiw
i ~~' it is July but all the hlitb sudden
t lyhavestoppfllchlrping l‘lll' yin-w. .. .lt‘ulxll theologian
3 At Mayor Scott} lkleslt't‘ \ idl'lll propped himself up till lll\ r'IlIlu\ w
i , ,, (in :\th9ns-Btltm'-N't‘tt l’lke it looks he ititlltl remh the riiiettiphnrie in
3 like the sun tell otlt til the \k} and front of him \M- are itlr"flti\ tight '
l ' crashui angrily into the earth The mg the llllI‘lO'.” war he said \tin
' l smoke and debris from the nut-lent day night during .i panel lil\llL\'~3ttli
stnke targeted by the Russians to limiul ll\ Alt! following the show
L ’"r’ "‘—"—_““"“ '—”" *' __. s- ., u ' ' ~~ . - - 4 . 7‘ knock out a triangle “hose corners iii;' of The il.|\ After All of m
"“""t"‘ “V “A" are the Bluegrass Army Depot llt.\l \llllllfl lien- talking about llr\l
High wire act and Mason Hanger t-nglnu-rtng ftrnt \ll'lkf'fi and hunted t-mifrontaiiott
hillows monstrtmly like .i huge he \fllti Hoyt run we mt-n tlilk
In a high level meeting over South Broadway, (.‘ecil Puckett power lines because of construction work scheduled to begin “Ott't‘r Ot'Prtht‘llrm't’lX'lW } about It”
(right) passes a line to Roger Nipper. The men are rerouting soon on the South Broadway~Soutltcril Railroad underpass. “'3'" and mm” "”"W "4’" It “”"Wt‘ “WWW" “t““tW‘M '"
anyone lb left alth‘. lhf’) nliklll t'till the lhtht'l dill-t till thaw were
._____ _. __.____..__ gregate at what is left of rLlistliind . tlHI ...
UK t ' ’
, 0 receive Wham L ...... Kennedy 5 death has created a gap
0 I rm \AHU‘
an addi ion 0 W- ' th h t ' d f
t t “-..-.. -..... -, .. in e ear 5, mm s o supporters
. t - . . .
mall] computer btunned Nation Buries its Presrtlent ‘ , : .. . .
7 [K llonors Kenneth World lA‘ntlf‘rh Join By ROBERT M. ANDREWS t'heonette ‘ls it true’ he asked lot. [it under an .i:.ii.int he of
In Memorial Tribute - ’ . \rnt-rit-u ln \louriiing ASSOClated PTSS Wnter Without looking up the ruin i.iil\ flint kudniplwl the i-ntiie
, . - ms-“ .. ‘ ‘ .-:;'::.'=::r'-~. ; terman replied "Yo-s hex ill-ml itlt'dltll“
ggngi‘ESIt’ziifAitl‘IhEeyALLNER f;:~::‘¢;;»3;::::.;‘:.-:-_;-.‘":...L“; / ’- 1-.1; » j WASHINGWN The first The motorist rviurrmt to m i»... to mm l mm to with
aggfi'fij‘jflfi’_j__“j_' 11': . 12:: ‘. :. dreadful flash from Dallas clatv slumped behind the wheel and ll\ rliintir' ot t'hit .igo burst into il'4|r\
EXPanded comPUttng facilities on ;~"h-3::1_-r::£§-M- .. ;—_; tered across bell-ringing teleprtnt toned to the radio tttlllHttlb to the .it turn it "All“ .I\\ll Minx \ltt
campus — costing millions of dollars tiff: 17:73:37: ...“-.. _‘:“_.—‘§é.::5§;_':; ;— _, :-..:.::: ers in newsrooms across the count impatient honking .in. hot ”Lott t hei lliliitll-y went in
— should be operational by Fall 1%4 L§%§§&:N:: iwzmzm 5&3.th _::__f_:__=~ try at 1:34pm. Nov.22. l963. "My God My God What are television but was too stunned to
' if state funds are approved. Robert RETti-EEE-‘ZyfifFfi mutant §?i* £3.35; The news raced to car radios we commit to" said Speaker \lx'éllt
Heath, director 0f the Computing :15:EF':.€:::T:' -‘.’—:"——’-‘4-" 5.3;: EEK—7.55" and street-comer transistors. then John Mct‘ormat'k. 7]. the craggy rotlrthgritden It] .i ui-ullh‘i
Center,said. =':""_f.'3‘:ii r “77 53"}:3: 3 totelevision. Democratic warhorse from Boston liallns suburb cheered when their
Heath said all eight state universi— FJFz-F‘“‘-"--.4w v~ " 55"??1: 3-. ‘ 1‘ ‘ ‘ Hardly had the startled pigeons who learned from two reporti-n in distraught ti-neiier iiiumiw‘i
ties have requested funds for com- i—T'ffii‘i-'f‘i’flri'féj:"‘7' -' ‘ I ‘. ’ returned to their perches in Dea- the House restaurant that he \llti them tot m.- iL” .\ high on...”
puting expansion through the COW' 5-i.é':.-T-:Z '7' ‘ . ’ :3-1‘: 1'35: ley Plaza than an entire nation denly was next in line of silt-res mum m Amarillo in“. h”, "11.,
Cl] 0" Higher Education ”Right now a;i‘:£;k;.;.;..i.’ ...:..i..... 2... V . was plunged into mournlng- For 5'0“ t0 the Walden“) .9 restaurant and yelled llw.
UK is requesting between $4 311d 35 fr73"'””' _. _‘ ' ~ _.::.'._'_"J._._::":.‘ : 339:}; four agonizing days in late No- Secretary of State Dean litbk great JFK u-rtuikwf' i
million."hesaid. ?‘~ E “ ,t“'s-‘€?"‘~='—~"»" .~. v-..-..j_.;:-._;> vember 1963. Americans wept. flying with other t‘abini-t rnenl ,tnnrnm firm-rill ltntu-rt r
He said the Uhlversny’s inStmc‘ r::"-r*'~*;‘r‘ "5":T-.i~'i.-;-_--;f:~: '3 '. '13:. h- : Prayed‘ Sh°°k their “St-9 and bers mTOk."” for trim" “4““ "‘it‘l Kt‘llllflh fllt’ltf'li up the [llil‘sltli'
tional computing Sfismurgéused "er ‘33.?znffl'47 37.7.5553: '. '5 "2L... gaff-H stared at their TV sets. benumbed the flash aloud ('omrnert'e bet‘rt- phone at lllh Mill-an \it home
ly for research an st nt wor , is E'f::_'::;~1j . ' . . . . , by the sights and sounds of the un- tary Luther Hodges, seated near and heard the news from Hit in
“saturated and completely utilized," tggfigaggggflgég {50:14]}7'2’0‘f"”'l" ya": I- thinkable. by. began sagging to the floor n-itor .l titular Homer fresh
and therefore. unable to tUthlon t0 :.7;=:'53-:I‘::wm ‘ 15.1.4." :11"), "-mm‘ Even now. 20 years later. people Rusk ordered the plane to turn mun sen Edward H Kl'lllll‘ti‘y
full capacity. ~ ..:‘fg—E‘} ~':-’:‘.:5: who have trouble remembering around over the Pifl‘lllt‘ and head was presiding nwr tho- senate
The lncreased use Of the comput- - ' E; “3:" $137.45.? Eiff— “..: details Of a wedding or the birth 0t home when someone whispered in his
ing facilities among the “soft sci- 7’ griefzfi-w” "inf“? gig—1::- a child can recall with remarka- Across the country shrimp-rs ear lle 'ltttt'tl.‘ mm nu. “wt ..n
ences," such as the College of Arts '“ " ffixff “—3- ”“1“- 1 .1 ble clarity exactly where they began weeping and praying to its side and ten the ehatniier He
& Sciences (especially the Spanish 3:23;: Lit-2:1 :‘~"_".:""—-‘-'-"'-' were and what they were domg. gather in the aisles of tk-rxirttrit-rit railed his mother MIL-w at than
and psychology departments). have £33355; :Ef:W:: 1:7;sz when they first heard that John F stores Traffic came to it halt nl\ l‘ort \iiiss After it pautw- \he
contributed to the saturation. Heath in... ______,_ 3-3:"13 itiE‘i; 5-2-1225 Kennedyhad beenassassinated (‘ourts closed in the middle of \e’fltl Viell be all right hung
said. mm?€5"""‘" =-"‘""‘""‘ 1413-11“; =31"- A man braked his car to a halt hoanngs Racetracks shut down up donned her coat amt “him
The order for the new computer. in the middle of a New York inter— bewrldenng bettors The telephone out for it stroll alone on the [math
60 to 80 new terminals, and all nec- KENTUCKY KERNEI.. NOV. 26. I963 section and ran over to a lun- system blacked out tn Washing ill \\I in ;... - I
essary communications equipment, i
will be installed in April after the . . . . . . . .
University‘s bienniel budget request A t t I] d d h f t A
isapprovedaccordtngtotteam. ssassma 1011 S l VlVl an 01°11 ying 0 many mericans
"I‘m estimating that it will cost
between ”50900 t° “00‘“,“0 pur- By ANNA HARDY their outlook on society to become that it was a surprise “We were sald. “We remember where we Although he experienced some
chase theequipment).."hesald. . Stafan'ter bleaker. The event caused Ameri- all shocked.“ he said. “It was a were and what we were doing unfortunate problems and failures
. “Th? CounCil on Higher Education cans to realize how prone they special disappointment to people when we found cut about it‘ a» premdent Kennedy WM ru-
!5 looking at 35k!“- for a spoon] let? Twenty years ago today, the as- were to violence.shesaid. who wanted a new generation of Green was a member of the Km pable of growth as president she
lslatwe; appropriation for academic sassination of John F, Kennedy The assassination was a shock leadership." tuchy Kernel staff when the asst said
computing, Heath said. According marked a watershed in mngempo- to Americans for two reasons. Lambeth. who was Washington sinatton occurred “H, “M ”W", Mm. hm ”up"
‘9 Councfl offiClals. recommenda- rary American history. Nancy Dye said. “Partof it wastheper— correspondent for the Gannett The campus was totally Nib mm" “mm 0, u". Kennedy ad
. . trons have already been made to the Dye, associate professor of Ameri- sonality of Kennedy himself and News Service at the time. said ev‘ dued. she said There was a me mmNmmm ”m M“ W “awn“
OfficeoftheGovei'nor. canhistory.said_ the perception on that administra- erymewasindisbelief. mortal service held in Memorial Hm mnmml to [film rights
Deputy for _Finance Ed Carter tion."shesaid. Mostofthejournalists in Wash- Coliseum for the students Kald VT", “("1 rm, ”RNA I'lttlUB
said the Councrlhas recommended The significance of the event tngton could not make phone calls Green. former t.'K student Dub“ 1,}, L... “an. (M' “run,
that UK receive ; .33-4 ““1110": was a change in American cul- The “W reason was the appar- because the lines were over- cations advrser pr ' '
“Statewide. $11.5_ million has been ture. she said. Dye referred t0 it ent assassm, bee Harvey Oswald, loaded. he said. Thcrefa‘e, he said Dye said it is hard to rank Ken The other u-"lllm was the corn
requested,"hesald. ; asacultural trauma. “33$ himself assa‘sstnated .0" tele— he wrote a reaction story in an at- nedy as a prestdent because he riltment and decuion to name
He also said that by “1de anoth- V‘s'on‘ she said. It waswltnessed tempt to give readers an actual never finished his term In many he bombing in Vietnam soc-said
er system t” the present equipment, Americans seemed more con- collectively by everybody portrayaloftheevent. ways Kennedy showed a case of Lambeth said the assassination
the ”Stems. capacity should greatly fused than they did before the 85— Edmund Lambeth. director of Nancy Green. general manager poor Judgement as president she had a greater impact then than
“'31??an 7300 “went accounts sassination. Dye said, causing the School of Journalism. agreed of Texas snidait Publicatiom. said now c'alllngitalivina mint» .
“ is a . . . . _______._.___________ _~_._._._._. _ -__u
were entered." Heath said. “We are '
anticipating 9.000 to 9.500 in the K g . M“- .,._.-_.__
t kyC t f th At f fly I 3‘
women, system can mm..- en “C en er 01' e l' S ina comes a IVE , INSIDE
ly handle “around 6,000 accounts." . . ; 3
Heath said. “Beyond that. the per- By JOHN GRIFFIN Carroll approved the “wish list" raising drive that collected over chairs performed Flourishes and , .
formancestartsdegrading. ManagingEditor in 1977. and a Cultural Complex 812.3millionforthebuildi’r', Galas." which Morton (iould mm C“. the I"! w 3 :5:
“We should be able to handle 12 to Committee was formed with David- On Nov. it. several years of con- ponedfortheopenmg Wuhflwd” ,
13,000 students accounts" with the LOUISVILLE ~ "A building is a son at its head. The Gateral Asscm- struction ended and the crews were Producer George Stevens Jr . who m h rm Hg
additional equipment, he said. "ll building. a pile of concrete. until it bly allocated approximately $22.5 putting the finishing mocha on it orgamud the benefit. also gathered on u. to! ,
depends on the complexity of what comes to life. And making it come to million for construction costs. . The building was needy for its first canedtennc Lily Tomlin. artor mummy”;
thestudentsaredoing. life is what wearegoing todo." Bad news came to the committee performance ~ 3 "Hard Hat" can We: Fairbanks and columnist
"I think we‘re getting more use The worth of Marlow Burt. exec- in 1979 ~— an additional $12.5 million cert given in honor of the people Art Buckwald to attend the mute I. “flugnb
and utilization out of the system utive director of the Kentucky Cen‘ would be needed before the building wholndworkcdonthecentcr of ceremonies wu actor Charlton “ .0 “m
then most universities." Heath said ter for the Arts. came true last week would be completed. The problem of "The hall is tryim to any ‘thanlt Heston ~ ~ ; ‘
most schools can only handle 5.000 as thouanth of Kentuckians gath- where the extra funds would from you' toeveryone who worked on it." But the success of the opening- ”5- .. . y 7 45;}.
accounts. ered in toilisville to animate the was not solved until Gov, John Y Burtsaid. night benefit has not teamed some ; - , ;
' He also said the Council did not $33.5 million building at the corner Browntookoffice, 11): men was the beginning of people's fun that the Kentucky
recommend that any of the suite: otSixthand Mainstream . The City of Immune agreed to ii mm seriel of events that to Carter for the Am mil gene only
other universities receive higher The center heart as an idea donate the land for the complex and eluded a performance by folk singer the Mantle community and not
funds than UK. “The legislature and formed more than ten year! 980 by issued 815 million in m bald: Burl lvcn. ti gospel extravaganza. election state
the governor will make that decision Gordon 8. Davitbon. a Wowlle 81- to finance the We parkmg'p- and a concert with Kaitucky native A W attomcy who‘lulted ‘1 W.
(oftheamotmtofmoney receivedi.“ torney. In 1973. Davithon M “It Jefferson CMty autimud Macaulay. to mill mymou. said. I use I“ {m , ‘v .. ”my“ '1:
Huthuid. his Wu with then-Gov. Julian In mere-ed nototu tint is d. mmwumwwm little moon to no to Milk for _ “w... .... :11; if
Money for “untested computa- Carroll. reeledtotheopeflttmdthecaller. last Sonny night. The openim- aim. much lens I mm” C; _ ._ g 1......»
am will come from the pre. "The governor asked I. to put to Burt Illd the tax will provide about night benefit W W by that orchestra or ballet We 2 W... ‘4, 1,. 3.»;
viou year‘s nut-pli- of the Capital setba- a wish list of how the state wallpaper, by Micky mess new: honorarium ”in.” g 4%.,
Conduction Md. Heath aid the cmld help [puisville and Jefferson Barry Bnigtlun Sr. chairman of m Diane Sam. my Flor- Burt mined the Imman- “ .. ; j Aw :1; I: .
mantle will not be acted won until County." Dnvichon aid in Fall cdi- the board of the Courier Journal and are: W and W "Hit in a cute facility (m. Wm“: rm
Febnnry.Marcha'Aprll. tonofscouxnmmauztm. Louisville Ttmu. led a private find- larch. Human. 1h [AI-ville Or- sauna. met ’ , ‘

 ‘ e
.‘ j l g
2 - “IE KENTUCKY KERNEI. Tm, W 22, 1'3
‘ C llaloo ’ receives support f o pr'nt'ng t
TALK By CARY W.PIEBCE Southern University in Baton We, and continued pub- The Poetry Series is supported in part by a grant
, ,s . mum - , heatienwhuiheeamomm ”mum‘:nwfiasfuridstiom ’
. Rnwell said the purpose of the magazine is “to pre- theendowmentgrant.
Callaloo. the lita'ery magazine published under the serve, encourage and help to develop" black writers Rowell has high aspirations for Colloloo. “We're try-
auspices of the English department. has been awarded from around the world. Although the magazine has to- ing to make it the most important literary forum for
I an $8,000 grant from the National Endowment for the cused on materials by writers from the American black authors," he said, adding that both The New York
Arts. South. It. has also published works by authors from Afri- Times and The New York Times Review of Books have
PEOPLE FOR $2 25 According to Charles Rowen. editor of Callaloo, the ca. Brazil andJamaica. recently mentioned the magazine in very favorable
. money will be used in conjunction with the magazine's Rowell also said the magazine is not entirely restrict- terms.
llassilmlfimnluiiil'nunl yearly funds from the College of Arts & Sciences to ed to publishing writings by black authors. “We occa- Hemenway was more definite in praise of Callaloo.
coverirmtms costs; momlly run artwork and photography.’ he said. “and “It’s the best joimu of its kind in the country,“ he
Wlule the magazine has earned a world-wide reputa- we also publish work by white critics writing about said. “and we’re delighted to have such a journal com-
WITHIN HOURS tion for its excellence in providing a literary forum for black literature.” ingoutofourdepartment."
black writers, Rowell said until now it has been ineli- Callaloo is published tri-annually, in February, May .
"' gible for an endowment grant. and October, and according to Rowell, its 300 subscrib— eflACCdeC to “We!" he chose the mime Callaloo' to
“l was on the panel which awarded the grants." he ers represent a sizable audience for a literary mag- r set the W s nuxturenof Publlshfid material.
BY USING said, “and that would have created a conflict of inter- azine. Another two hundred copies of each issue are When I started the magazme. he.mid, I wanted a
est." sold in stores. and Rowell said he receives mail from immebothat summeidmed tsfisflfirneady g‘vd:t waglndt‘i uese ‘
. Gum beca rused c r-
_ According to Robert Hemenway, chairman of the En- readers from the West Coast, New York, Washington . . , t . , _ :,
itmmv . glish department, the endowment grant, along with Uni- D.C.. France. Nigeria and West Germany. . tainly am” ”'3“ tocall ‘t Black-eyed Peas.
crne vewty funds. will be a neceessary part of the mag- The Callaloo P09"? 58115 has also PUbllShed two When ROM/ell heard a Southern woman describe the
azine’s continued functioning. “The College of Arts & booksby black authors. The fiist was a collection of po- recipe for a dish called “callaloo,” he liked what he
Sciences has supported the magazine ever since it etry "fled Chang“ 0! Territory. by Melvm Dixon. an as- heard. “A ‘callaloo’ is something like gumbo.“ he said,
CLASSIFIED ADS b08311 here. but we have to have suppOrt from both in- somate professorofEnglish at Queens College. “a mixture 0‘ variom vegetables and different kinds 0f
side and outside the University," he said. A collection 0‘ W5 by former UK graduate student sausages. I‘d like to think this magazine is a mixture of
. ‘ Brenda Marie Osbey should be released Within two all kinds of literary vegetables and sausages. We even
OUR NEW DEADLINE FOR CLASSIFIED AOSIS Rowell began the magazine in 1976. when he was at weeks, Rowell said. ran that recipeinourfiist issue.”
3 PM DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION 0 a
, , ,- 0C1v11
W I i . _ Continued from page one
~ / all
‘, , L there precisely to talk about nuclear war —— Wiesel's Lexington is included Ernest Yanarella, a political For all the preparation the United States and its com-
‘ / ’ .‘ -. ’ point remains. Perhaps the main objection to the spe‘ science professor, said the we of bomb shelters in the munities have done for a war that Carl Sagan, a noted
\ . y cial was its unprecedented graphic depiction of a nude United States is “pointless in terms of the elements of astronomer. has said could easily mean the end of the
’l " g ’. ar holocaust. ABC, the network that aired the contro- our overall civildefense program." human race; the Soviets have prepared even more ex-
. ' -l\‘\‘ I) ’k n / versialsh0w,advised parental “The latest plan for civil defense in a nuclear situa- tensively.
My D discretion throughout the night. And Newsweek asked tion is organized around what they call a crisis reloca- ”To the extent that the US. takes seriously this pro—
/'; ,/,, ;,. 5P9Rrs r . the question: “The Day After: Public Service or Propa- tion program,“ he said. “In the event of international gram, the Soviets must too," Yanarella said. “We live
7"] '_. 4. : - _ a ganda?" crisis this plan anticipates that individuals living in in an era of massive overkill; the Soviet Union has ,
' t I, _ F: Such detailed what-ifs confront Judy Stimpson every large metropolitan areas would be moved in an orderly many more weapons than are necessary to hit all major
x’ day. At her civil defense office in Lexington she is fashion to what they call host cities. located sufficiently targets in the US. several times over. In the event that
’4‘, w forced to imagaine the unimaginable every day. In fact. far away from the major urban targets. the United States would implement this program of cri
@E her work involves her planning for such a day in labori~ That is assuming the attack is accompanied by some sis relocation seriously, the Soviet Union would only
‘m' [:1 I_';§]L ousdetail. warning, Stimpson said. “That’s the whole thing there," have to engage in retargeting its weapons to the reloca-
" ._ " "We would evacuate all people from this commu- she said. “There is more of a threat of a terrorist sur- tion centers."
‘ l 4. 571.4333. 4‘ nity," she said in a phone interview last week. “Shelters prise bombing than one from the Russians. I doubt Yanarella said the Soviet Union has a more extensive
;,"‘:-3‘;,§§esi;,_ 3 are obsolete. And since the president chose that cities of there would be a surprise bombing from Russia. There civil defense plan because it has a history of being in
‘ '3}'r;,ji'.‘.jf"h..‘."~_‘ 'u' ' _ ._ 50,0000rmore wouldbeevacuated.. . would be quite a buildup (of tension and conflict) be- vaded, while “the American attitude has generally been
i 33.. W forehand," she said. that such planning is fruitless.”
'\ ’ L‘. y Tonight at 803 South Still, the plan is “taken seriously and is in the process Lexington would be a first strike city said Stimpson
\\ >5: ’ of being implemented in a phased manner," Yanarella and Yanarella, because of its major industrial and mill-
'\ VI; . {5‘ / / \ . said. “The Federal Emergency Management Agency is tary installations and more generally. its population.
.. , ‘j:~"“F’5§%/\ . fit . \ ospmn in charge of this plan and expects it would take five “Lexington right now has one, probably two, Soviet mis-
\— ~\ , fig’figfi// B W ‘ years, maybe 10, to get this program completed.” siles aimed at it," Yanarella said.
M/ t 1 e Because of that, its evacuation plans are all a matter
“ _. //w’jt' , s P N do 5 9 of record in Stimpson’s office along with chilling details
Z—f 1:11; 57-“ 4,,u/ / Day After reaCheS about theprobablescenariopreceedingastrike.
5.1" g: g \\ f , , ‘- I ‘1 A . . “They would hit during the day," Stimpson said.
: T” “:5 j: . 1 . « " ~j Wear any hospital ° “They want the community to be active and centralized
\: _ 21'; a; l - j I attire or display any 100 mllllon VICWCI'S when it hits."
,3 ’3; 7 \ ~ hospital paraphemalla But if bomb shelters are obsolete, evacuation pro-
‘51. :1 ' and 9°t two-lorone Associ ted 5 grams also may be outdated — before they are even
- . . a Pr 5
\ . mixed dnnks 3" feasible, Yanarella said. “I have difficulty imagining
night. The largest audience ever for a television movie — an we" a relocation taking place in any kind 0f orderly ‘
estimated 100 million people — watched nuclear war in manner. _ . ,
Let the KERNEL “The Day After." ABC said yesterday, and Americans Donna .Loughnge, a_ registered nurse who works with
in schools, homes and offices were talking about how to the “05W“ program m Lexungton, also ‘5 '“YOlw-‘d w‘th ‘
prevent Sunday night‘s fiction from becoming tomor- Physmians for 50°13] mmm‘b‘ht-V‘ a national gm“? ‘
Help YOU reach row‘s reality With a local chapter. The group, founded by a nurse who .
803 80. Broadway 233-9178 PreSident Reagan, who saw the movie twice, said yes— was formerly a member‘of the faculty at _UK. seeks to .
terday it was well handled although i." didn’t say any- teach two things, Loughrige said: the medical effects of
ALL Of the ——‘——! thing we didn't know. We‘re trying as hard as we can" a nuclear attack and that a nuclear war would ”0‘ be .
r . 7 ‘ to prevent nuclear war. survivable, leaving prevention as the only solution. ,
UK c Resumes . ’ “Most people would die from the initial impact of the ' .
ampus . . “I do not want this film to be a preview of coming explosion, but the major trauma for the survivors would l
I A 8'9 Question For YOU? attract??? Islam Davild thonghurst. mayor of Law- be burns," she said. “There are only four burn beds in .
. . rence, n. “ is is stil t e day before. We must not Kentucky, Burn victims require special things such as
communlty Get a“ the 'nformatlon wait until the day after. The issue is one we're going to blood plasma, but those things just aren‘t going to be .
F' d in the have to come to grips with sooner or later, and I'd rath- there after an attack." .
u . ,, er Come“) STlPS With it sooner-" boughrige said no one would be capable of surviving
we 3V5 Career Advancement Portfolio. . . . radiation poisoning, the major long-term effect of a
. Anti-nuclear groups sponsored discussmns 0f nuclear clear explosion. “People who were in Hiroshima or Na-
ava|lable at arms across the country yesterday, including one at a - - - ~ ~ ~
eac wee . , gasaki during those explosmns are still suffering Side
Church m New Y0?“ and another at the Young Women's effects " she said. ”We even have some people in Lex-
ChnSt‘a" Assomation' 1." Pittsburgh. A group m St' Louis ington getting treated for cancer who were in those cit-
. . begana three-day petition drive at supermarkets. 'es n
0 Fills round-ts 0 Find a job | Yanarella said that if a nuclear power plant were hit
° M"? _ ' Trade The Interfaith Center to Reverse the 'Arms Race in a nuclear strike it would be vaporized and plutonium
0 Offer can. name 0 Francis yard sale | sought a fullt-ipageoad m the has Angeles Times seeking would be scattered over “a wide area." Plutonium. he .
'Wmm 0 Filliemploysss a Sgtffiem “figaimfifi :pe’akt outdon nuclear 15' said, has a half-life of 25,000 years, which means that ,
“mm ’ Salim a JOHNNY 9 ' ya a e, I sai ' half the initial amount released in the explosion would
080' 0 Alliance matings o PRIN T ‘I . Viewer reaction ranged from those shocked and stdlbeinthegi-ound 25.000 years later. . .
e M . m . W moved by the movie to those who thought it was biased, .lt'would be in the ground emitting destructive radio- a
9 . milder than a horror film and not worthy of the publici- actiVity for a long time, Yanarella said. "Whole. areas
. a) ty it received. of the country would havetobecordoned off. ,
547 3 LIMESTONE Anuclear nightmare within a nuclear nightmare. .
Km . q 2546139 (3 ABC got 3,304 calls during and after the show, with
Immod. g": _‘ those favoring the program outnumbering those op— Editor’s note: This is the second of a third-part series
G Help Wnag ' u ‘r‘ g ACROSS mm U“ can ' _ __ posed by a 2-1 margin. on the possibilities of a nuclear war.
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Icer- ‘T‘is the season to be jolly. or SO through the Garvey‘s land and later 0"I~‘lre&arter" and “Christin" ' ‘ ,
they tell us. With the American con- 1 B J flout the valley -— all in the name — So now we come to the Stephen \ .
th await; til: M1315 0t Big Brim. ‘3». any ' of progress King category that presently seems \ ‘ ‘
3 e e 5 “1° 3’” genera y 806 . . , . . endlss These two latest contribu
It he out the window when, in January. 4 WILLIAMS .Well, m a we" mt": sense, "“5 tiom to the screen adapted from his ‘\ \ '
id _ film could be a tut. The premise ‘ t . ,
58 v we check our pocketbook only to be . . novels both promise lots of scares.
d5 0t come quickly morose. And so it is at a thin. sallow young man with a sounds a b" overdone but ‘I mm but we'll have to wait to see u the ' :
re of the cinema. Big Bucks is also the jagged scar dovm one side of his “d Spacek prove to be the sizzling translations arejustified
even name of the game here as the holi- face. One of the central themes of duo they could be, "“5 "“0", prove s .
day season rapidly approaches. the film will be the cocaine industry to be one Of the better sebum" 0‘ “Fire-Starter“ has a cast that "
December is traditionally the time and other such contraband that is the holiday season. seems like a fantastic collaboration .
of year when the movie industry, the key to survival for many such "Hard to Hold" — This could of talents Included in the film are ’ ‘
and anyone remotely involved with hoods. well be the “working class dog” of George C Scott. Louise Fletcher, ‘
it, hopes to gain many monetary "Scarface“ is my personal pick of the year. I‘ve not seen enough of Art Carney. Dayiid Keith. Martin .
gifts from the American public. We the new crop of films. It has been 3 Rick Springfield‘s acting to be a Sheen. Drew. Barrymore and Heath- ‘ /
mm are given such a proliferation of long time in the making, but the competent judge of his abilities. but er Locklear The story revolves _ .
ioted films at this time that it is often dif- combination of talents should prove the premise sounds more like his au- around a bewddered child -Bany- .
f the ficulttokeepall of them straight. successful. In its timely and contem- tobiography than anything else. morei. who is endowed with a bi» '
9 ex- The following are capsule pre- porary setting. it seems an intelli- Springfield portrays rock idol zarre. paranormal skill which turns . . ‘
views of some of the upcoming re- gent and representative look at the Jamie Roberts who is holed up in 3 her childish fear into a fiery weeps .
pro— leases that will come your way. current gangsterunderworld. San Francisco hotel, working on his on. .. \ H r '
. live They are by no means reviews since o‘inie River" ~ Mel Gibson and next album. Surrounded by all of the The girl and her family have come ‘i t
has . we have not screened any of them, Sissy Spacek «two of the current cin- tribulations of rock-star success under the scrutiny of the Depart ‘5
13]” but rather opinions of what these ment of Scientific Intelligence, 2 co ( - N
that films will be like. Included with _ vert govemment agency known as . .
tcl'i each is a plot synopsis to give you _, . ‘ ' “the shop." You can guess the nest ‘5 ‘i
only some idea as to whether to shell out _; ' " - u (H d H [an The agency wants the girl and her ,.
loca- the money for the overblown ticket ’ . (If [0 0 ' ' ' pow