xt7hqb9v467c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7hqb9v467c/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1982-02-17 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, February 17, 1982 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 17, 1982 1982 1982-02-17 2020 true xt7hqb9v467c section xt7hqb9v467c M
K 'I' Y / ' '
3 EN UCK Ioln. rcln, and more ralnl ¢ k“ I
I 3 .
er 6 That's what's in the lorcast lor us. It's go 1 I ' Con °'. “Md" 3 ,3
ing lo rain all day today and throughout I” Lowly Florida stands ln the way of the '
the night. Not only is the rain remaining Wildcat basketball machine that has inch '
Constant, so are the temperatures. Today ed its way near the top ol the SEC Stan . -
the temperature will vary between the - ,33 dings A UK Vlc'ol’y tonight would bring
low 505 in the early part of the day, and 3 "' the Cats closer to earning a bye in the '.
then it will soar to the mid 505 this alter. ‘~ E postseason (onterence tournament
noon. Story pageo '7 3
UWVGWWY 0. KG'VUU‘V lexnnglon Kentucky — mWflfiK-WA F‘_—.‘A¥rA-n—H_V"NT V ' , ‘ -V‘ _' _A—' “_ V'i_‘i'—-_ '7' 3 '
Independent ‘An els’ '
I! rill , 9
‘ ~ I T7 ros r across U S
WM;me 7‘ 3 I I
3 a; 3 _ 3 3 .- 2- ' 7 -§ :7 -——————————— “We have to stay very clean because everywhere we go ,'
_7 $3 ' ., -3 ' i. "‘ gagftgféfDEN we get audited," he said. "We maintain a central accoun- 2‘ ,
3 3 «5 ,3 3 33 3:3 . u, ,,. , ww— 7- , , W7..- Jk 3. Egg system,and all the money goes toNew York City. We 7'
3 s, s . 7 ' ————————————-—~—- ell—ww— V6 to — if an individual chapter leader ever absconded '.:, '7 '
3g 3. . 3 3 33 3 3 3 3 3 3 with thefunds,lwouldbepersonally responsible. My rear 3;..7
3 “33 , 3 33 3 33 3 3» 3r; Curtis Sliwa and his Guardian Angels are a typically end is always hanging outaomiles behind." 3i i
_3 33 ,_ , « ”s, . 33 American success story—butw1tha tw153t. Despite this, Sliwa said leadersz in the organization 7 3. I -
., 7‘ I . $77733“ 7- . ., Although the 27-year-old Sliwa, who Wlll appear tomor— has “really blossomed in the past few years,“ leaving him ~7 .»
7r“ m "M33333 -‘“ 3 ., row in Memorial Hall at 8 pm, has been repeatedly with more timetodevote toexpanding the organization. .57 .7'
3 33 - , 3:33.333 33, ., , we « charged by his critics with demagoguery, and some have He said Guardian Angels chapters will begin organizing 7: «'f
W33 33 3 333333333333 33333 3 t... .3. .3 .3 accused the Angels3ofv1g311antism and falsrfied claims of sometime this spring in both Cincinnati and Knoxville, 7
. -, ., 3333 . .. ...mez;:.wi2:1ss:;ms,. ,3 33 3 33 um. . ,. - 3 . 33 success In combattmg cryme3 the orgamzanon connnues and chapters begun in suburban area _ particularly in 3 . 33..
. ' . 3 . v'...777«,,..,3,3«33- 333333333 33 “ 3 ~- .. ,_ s... ., , o... 33 ' i - mgrowsr 33 dj fth Gm di A 3 3 1979 Songsylvania, N35: Mexico and the area surrounding Les
.c. ,3 3 ~.7‘7 .‘7- . .7; 9,3777», .77 . , ”337,, .. . . 3 - mce iwa’s oun ng o e r an nge s in as ng 65, Ca. ~ ve accounted for “nearl 60 rcent of 2. ',
_ 3333 ‘7 3' ’ . “3 no.3 “332i“ .333 73:. a lit-member uniformed group patrolling the notorious ourgrowth in the past six months." y pe 3f «
33 33. M 333. . 3 . , 33 @7333 $33,333:}:33g 33:73: 33131; gay 3333:2313}; 33:33:, 321333383005: 38:31:1ng Although the organization has experienced a
. r 7 "”1. 3, "’57,, “97”,... _. . 7 ,3: .3," _ "t ...7. ‘ 4.33376 "'3 ’ x . i i 7 e AN E . 4 "' "
W 12‘ 1m,” 9 ' 3 7 3.33 3 7 .3333 333, 3?? 33”'j,3‘3;~l;3i‘~a;.'§"33..s3i ”:3“; 133:: Sliwa], a; the head of this expanding network, claims se G Ls page 3 , .;
33:73 #7733337. .,33..,3--733,333:-3,3. M33333 3-; ,3... , 13... 3 <3 7, » 3r :- 3 33 "7 33," to verea iz no great financial reward for his efforts.
r 3, 7 '73 '13 .5533 “gem 7 mg. 7,7". " .3, 7 " w ; ,M'V'r - . Contactedby telqihonelastweekmewaslivinginapublic [An els I ,0 . _
t , c: _ . “i372? 3—377’3337‘77 73.7%»; 3 , ' i' 3 ' 3.1.3..;“r',.3‘.'3 housing project in St. Louis with his wife, Lisa, while g 9 W
~. . - ow“; .1.77...;.€*3"."“7«77;:Qi7."? 3 7.. , " «77.7- 77‘7“”; , ' orgfizineaGuirganAnsetschahgterinthatcity- '
.. ‘ ‘ 1, -‘ ‘7...th *7 "' ", 3 " 3“" g‘ "“77“" 'tw' “ en 1 appi for pu lic using here, they just f 13 t 2 00 f
7,3 ' ’ ' 3 J" 7" . "53 '7; '7‘” 3 3‘ 7’3". 3:.» 3 7 . 33.73:? ‘ 7;. laughed at me,” hesaid. “But they went ahead and sent ram 0 [2 "
, c 73 "a is) ‘7‘ - » . ’ 475.1” 7 ‘ ' ' 3 333 . my application toWashington, and they sent it back with 3 _ .' ,
,{3; ,3 3 3 . 3, 3,333 l 3 3 ,, 3 7.33 3,3333- . 3 h 33 _3 7 the goahead when they saw that our combined income Curtis Sliwa, founder and director of the Guardian
' 31:. ‘ f.., “’7" , r «$177.75.; .,.,,, ' .7 7‘ 3. ' “' ' ‘ ' lastyearwas$12,500." Angels,hasbeennostrangertopublicityinhis27years. '
33333». 1' 7" .317}? ' 3’. 77,7 rd jfiz’wmgw, ,37‘3. 7 ‘: .,- 73 3 7 Sliwa said most of his income comes from lecturessuch Born and ”3le In what he described 35 a “nice" ."1
. 33 3,333 33.» , 3 . a.) 3 3 33333 33333 33 3334.." 333 3 .. :33 _ 3 3 as the one he will deliver here tommorrow, and what he neighborhood in Brooklyn, he made his first appearance
€333?“ 33 3 3 33 '7 3:33.333 73 7i“‘%. 7 i - 3-3.3. .3 ' ’ 377.753 fig; 3 _ has saved from the salary he received as manager of a 35 a teenage hero 13" 1970.3 When3he pulled three people 7' 3'
' 3 3 7‘ ;, .33 t5" 3 ._.',,33 7.333;)», 3.3.3 ’."mg‘ 3 ‘ 3:33, 3 33:5; '3, 3 439:» £4.73; 2'; ;-., 3 :‘g’ Q ‘ McDonald‘s in the Bronx, where hewas employed before fromabur'ning bulldlllg Whlleonhls paper 1‘0““?- ; '3
3’ ”7': .3“ 2:7, 3:37 13;}. '3 , 3 «7i. 2:“ 33:3”. 353’ '7 7 £133. .« .331“: .33: «7' wag-'37.; 7734.7: . quitting todevote his full energies to the organization and He ”3°9le recognition from Mayor JOhn Lindsay and .j
'3-3', "_ 333.,3.3;,p;;,3.,375734 “33'5“ ' - fl 7 3:33:55; 7' “333.3, ' ‘ ' 3 5 '7 333‘, ~,:.: 77.7 .32; promotion of the Guardian Angels. He said he receives no “'35 presented the New York state Hi8”? Achievement ' 3'. ‘7
.33, $33.3 3, i 3 33 3e”;- 3 .7 .37... 3 3 _ .fi3§33.,333,.,..._3§3g§.3 ,, ,3; /37 salaryof any sort from theGuar-dian Angels. AWard by Gov. Nelson Rockefeller. PresMent Richard ~ .7
#337 -: .333333333333 33 7 7. >7 ' . 3 ‘ 3 . 3,; '3 - . '3’ .373: / According to the Student Association, which is sponsor- Nixon 315° 80‘ '1“ the act, presenting him With a special 7 .7' '
"‘ cit ‘3 4&3"? 5:. ,j ‘3‘" ._ AWN . 7 .‘3‘.’ ' gel. 3 ing the lecture, Sliwa will receive $2,500 for his day-long “Newsboy 0‘ the Year“ award.
or ,33 .333m33‘3333 3732. .-33 3"?» 3 _ 3,3 3 33333 '35:: engagement atUK. Soon after that, he began a one-man campaign to clean ‘ ' 7.
‘ . 7 ‘ - 3. 3'3}? 7: , ’3; “@733 3,337: 7 3 "i .3 3 a\ '3' .3 Sliwa said the Guardian Angels organization is wholly PP his neighborhood. A5 he ”(33115. “everybody was talk- _‘.-'.
, 3 ‘33.: 33 3 3 3 7 ‘7 7 3»~ 3 . 37 , ,~ 3‘3 self-supporting, with members purchasing their own ing about cleaning up the environment but nobody was do 3",373
7 '7 . ditto ' ' . 7 v , - . 7" f:- uniforms andsponsoring radiothons and telethons to raise ing anything about "7 [decided ‘0 do something." For his 73
i 3 ‘ _33 3:47? 3333 7 377 7 £3 3 .1527; 3 , money for legal services. efforts, he reportedly garnered a note in the Daily News ,3 .-
3, 3 3 333333333 . . ., 7 t. i... “Each chapter maintains itself by raising funds3" he crediting him with single-handedly collecting fiveand— ,7;
3&3»? . 33 . ‘37 ‘3, oh: 3 3 said, “and training and headquarters facilities are usual— one-half tons 0f trash. 37'
“37333 ,. 3-3,,«9’5 3K. -7 ~ ~ , , , ,, , 3r 3 _ 3 3. ,«7 ly donated by people in thecommunity. See SLIWA, page“ 3 '
,, 7.. ,3. . .7; 7 .._, ~ . 7 ,, «7 7
3 3,33 3. 33.23pm, 3 ' 3“. ,x‘ ‘ ‘ . i ' 3,"_ n - 3
-. -- ~ » Columbia may launch earl '-
.- i. 1- - » y .
. 3 ,‘3 7 3 7 é 7 3.333 3 u) 3333-2. 3 3 333333 3 333333. 3 33 . By ANDREWOPPMANN ‘Things have JlEl gone so smoothly and we were able to mate them much,
, .7, ,Q . 7' ma; 7 o 7», 3 3 M {‘4' 7. ’ “fang”; _ " .7 :7 Senior Staff Writer that we were able to do the things in much qwcker,"hesaid. ' i.
- 7 ti '7 f ’ ‘ '33.; '31.:{3 =3, 3 - ,3 73"??? M, 33. *7 "7- the time alloted and, in some cases, The new attachments enabled the
, . .3 ,7 ' " c “*7” agree-.33 _. 7". , .37.: . '3}. ,_3 . “go-333- ‘-‘ ”’33" 33~'_ he . _ “—__m-_* we did the job a bit earlier," Thorn- launch crews to prepare the shuttlein «'
.' ' ' "‘33" 7 ‘- field‘s - '1' i'v'“ ,« . s ,7'..§'7';;,,-' ' 'E Increased efficiency in launch pro burgsaid, ‘2 days instead 0‘ the 15 days alloted,
' ' - ' ' ' .n.vmuoou “was..." cedures have 7led National 3Thornburg said one Of the most mgefibfiz'ibrahamson associate J‘ 7
Several blackbirds lay in the north campus courtyard after they were shot out of the air with a shotgun Aeronautics and Space Administra- time consuming tasks — attaching VASA'administrator ”has'discussed 7
last week by two unidentified men. Control measures have been used in the past to decrease the 60" officials to estimate the space the orbiterto the external fuel tank~ the §ibilit " of an earlier launch '7"""'"
population of the birds because they are known to be carriers of the respiratory disease ' shuttle Columbia Will be ready for was modified allowmg the crews to dat PO y ' ' ' 7" '
, 3 3 3 3 3 3 s u launch r U ns e for the sevenday mlSSlon With ,.,3
I histoplasmosw. The disease is spread through3the birds feces. launch two or three days ahead 0f peed p p epara 0 ‘ Richard Smith director of the Ken- .7
I ' schedule. 3 7 “0n STS-2's (the last mission) laun- liedy Space Center, Shuttle Opera- ';"',}7"
Shootin of birds on north cam 3 77777777777777me WWW... a...
and Intersrahon manager, S331d mated the orbiter to the external reporters. .3 '7.‘ .
l yfiiflday m a telephone mtervrew tank," he said. Problems with the At a news conference held as the ‘3 '7
w‘ eKernel, the time $3le was mechanical attachment caused the Columbia was driven to KSC‘s "3? "
causes concern amongst [85' ants due to new launch operations for the procedure to “take a lot longer than seaside launch complex, Page em- ;' .‘;77‘.3'.
:figemtzapfipgxtmfiiegnlmed we3originally planned." phasized such a possibility was slim ,37...;3. ..~.
By 3C1NDY DECKER breath the air around them may contract the disease, “When we put together the plans for we: 13.“ aoédthacthzrsbtlazm, {:2 '32: the dec'sm" YEP“ 0:in bg3niad3e3 '.'7',7.' " "1
591110? Staff Wnter saidDavidCobb,associateprofessorofpharmacy. processing STS-3 (the present mis- mechanical fitting b mak? some tmrri3ng 2:133:18 'Can pro ems "3} s . 7'
and Bob Clay, north campus area coordinator, said the sion) a few months ago, we based our modificatiom of they r9382? hard 8 The sand 15' e33 « .7' 'i '
WALTER PAGE shooting of blackbirds has not happened on north cam- - P ' e r « 3.” °f the Space Shut' '
3 3 assessment at that time on what work ware. So when we got into the same tle Columbia is scheduled for March 7"
Reporter before at least inhisthree ears there. - - - 7 7
p‘fie said'immediately after 3lhe shooting inc'dent he hadtobedone. munch on 8183' that fix worked 22' '"l" "
_____________.____.___._ i )3. 7 ,. .
contacted the UK Police Department. 7' I: ' 77 -«' .
Some students at first thought firecrackers were being “It is my understanding from the University Police 7'.' T's":
set off in the north campus courtyard last Thursday that they were Physical Plant Department people and 31' ‘.7'.
night. Then they realized the noise they were hearing that they were authorized toshoot the birth,” said Clay. 7‘ 17,3.
wasgunfire. He did not know if the men were authorized to shoot in . ' f K.
The result of the incident was a wounded or dead the courtyard. He said the dead birds laid on the ground '7', 7' .,
blackbirds-also known as crows—in the courtyard. all night and were picked up in the morning by the ' "
Biology junior Todd Murphy, supervisor with han- 81'0unds crew maintenance men. ' 7 ,-,'
dicapped student services, was tutoring students in James Wessels, PPD director. refused to comment 7 7‘.
Holmes Hall around 7:30 pm. when he heard loud noises Monday and was unavailable for comment yesterday. - 3 ' ,. ., '7 '7
in the direction of the courtyard, which he at first at- Clay said he thlllks the residents of the north campis . ,f'i
tributed to firecrackers. “M4303 [a type of residence halls should have had warning the men were » ' _ 7
firecracker],"hethought. soingtoshoot the birds. “Without prior notification there '. 1' . .
Civil origineerins junior David Dale also thought he potentially could havebeenaproblemf’ .
heard firecrackers. Dale, assistant manager at Greg Murphy also thought the shootine was dangerous. He , '. ‘9? ~
Page apartments, was in the lobby of Patterson Hall said it was dark, people were in the area and the men 7 _ . 37."
when he heard something that “sounded like M-ws or simply walked up and started shooting. ' 7, , 3:
some kindofshots." Dale said, however, he wasn't especially worried ii .7 7' ,7. 7
Dale said he decided to see what was happening in the aboulsafety. “1 wouldn’t think they wwld have authom- ‘ 7 ' ' . 7 .7
. courtyard sohestepped outside ontothehallporchand ed them to shoot in a public area unless it was 7 . £5; .7 2
saw two men with shotguns walking away from the cour- Willy safe.” 7:, - ' .
tyard. After identifying himself as a University Murphy calledtheHumane Society Thursday evening ’ 777‘“ 3~ 3
employee,heaskedifthey had authorizationtoshootthe becamehesaidanumberofthebirds werenotdead and . r». .3333
birds. Whentheyreplied yos.heleftthemalcne. were jut squirming around in the courtyard and dying . We?" 7 ' . a . .
“I wasn’t going to argue with someone with a slowly. Murphy wanted the society to put the wounded . if ' 7 «r .'
shotgun," he said. Dale added, however, the men were birds “out of their misery because they’re going to lay 3 i i . «73K ' ' i 7
not obnOidoma'tlireatuiing. there antifreeze to death," but the society did not take ’3 , . 3‘ ; . 3 . 33 ' I ' if , ~ 3 '
Alex “Cash" Olszowy, accounting junior and a resi~ any action. .3, ,. ,3 ' . 1W“ 3 .333 3.: 3,7 g 7 7 ‘
dent adviser at Holmes Hall, was working at the lobby On Friday afternoon, Murphy saw three of the wmmd- 77. . 77 ' 7 3:77: $7 .77 . ‘7
deck what the shots were fired, He said many of the edbut alive birds inthecourtyard area. He caughtoneof , * 3 , 7.33 . ,3 -'3.__.__, 3 . “ ":7 '. ,. h. 7 7 7‘ ' ii; 7 7
students expressed indifference and went about what thernandtooklthomewithhini.Aftel-hefed andnursed " *7 7 " ‘i . . ' .3 7 3 ;. . .
theyhadbeendoing. Recidentsdidstay away fromthe theblnlnndthoushtithadmuperated.hereleuedlt 7 ' e ' ' '
courtyordaremlnwevermntiltheshoodng was ova-Jae Milk WWI. “Wipe architecture junior and I - 7
said. Holmes Hall RA, said one of the wounded birch has still , .
He said after the “than sqmd" (as midants beenpemhliulnmwtsidethehnllumemlya-Mm- .. , ..
nicknamed the men) left, he round some of the spent . day lifts-noon. .. . . .. - .. .. .. 7 ' . 74*» .. ...
shotgun shells on the gromd in the courtyard. From the “It was just hopping around; ltcouldn'tfly,” he said. , . ted-W - - .
siieils, he determined the men were using 16- and no Clay tent I mp0n of the lncldent to'l'. Lynn William- cs. ,3 . ,, 3. ,, ‘ .- 7. - .
gunman sonnetlngdeanofstudents. o ‘13:? We.» ~ i ' ' girl 7 .. "
Itlsmtknownenctly why the men mahootlng the William said he had “forwarded the won-mum ;7 ,77777 . s7. ' ' v" .. ‘7‘ .74“ . .
birth'l‘heshootingmayhovebeenpertofavnivcalty [Clay's report] on to the appropriate University “ . 17'“ , ,. .. . ' 7'
orcltyplantogetrldoluieblrrhbecamethem outhorltlu." He belinedtoglvethenameloftheoe "MAM -.
“blacklint MM!!!“ ”WWW. ‘ raplnm “1%: d ,3 and ,3 ,3 ha The space shuttle Columbia, shown here during its first launch, is scheduled for its third mission on March .
W W" in the m and M will m "Wllliavriuonuldm I ' m M 22. NASA officials yesterday stated the rOCycled orbiter may lift-off two to three days early despite the
e ’ ' historical fact that no U.S. spacecraft has launched ahead of schedule.
0 ' 7 .
. , ‘ l ' l ’

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' K‘érnel "'
Dale G. Morton
, . - llilnliu mi
l . ll" 5'0“." Kan Alvin. MI'Iy MI. Alol Crouch Kirby S'IphIns M. Clo-Ml" loll»
_ . . (diioi .ncmei DU, (4., , Nancy C. Duels )‘IUH‘ Mimi Arts Editor Graph-(sidilw Phoio Editor
‘ ‘ e fiuas '0 n Anne Charles Uni KC‘GDO :zhn.lll::l:h “""‘ lobllo XII”: l..“. Mleeon 'OIIY M. To“
Monaqmgfditov (“W [.1 v. Assistant Monuqmq Editor‘ Assistant Sprint Edit.” Assistant Arts Editor luvoulfditm Chief Photographer
.‘ - I I .
_I . . I I I I I I
. , , FlnanCIaI ald, ReSIgnation of deans demonstrates need for solution to ailing education
- . , If Gov. John Y. Brown needs any more infor- University-wide hiring freeze, and only one of ,
I' . I maItionI about the decline of KentuckyI’s the 19 open positions can befilled this year. WELL"WE'RE THZ ONLY IF Oil/47’ WE. YOU Mitt/WE:
. . - univerSity system, he ought to start his The Situation can best be described as ON T O OULD CaE-T ‘l- I N
f s j research by talking to George Denemark. It’s academic hell for the college’s students. ES LEFT” DO THE C CAN CALL.
' " . ' possible the resigning dean of the College of Classrooms are beginning to overflow, JOB‘" - J , CORK/«15W! " ‘ WMWJ
7:} . . ' Education could do what a blue-ribbon panel courses are offered with less frequency and , / ,77 y . ' l/ ‘ I FOR THOSE "$051".
' 1‘ . and seven university presidents could not —— there is talk that entire programs will be KM , , "I N THESW’
a. _' - . force the governor to find the financial fuel to eliminated. // ‘ ‘ ,i’ . ,
- '2 ‘ '. . keep the flagship university sailing. What this may mean for the future is subject yép . ’ ‘
'. v, 'I Denemark, who last week said he was to debate. With the administration projecting “x t" .4 I, ”is, iv» a ///'/ / l
.- z resigning his post effective July 1, expressed little or no enrollment decline in the next :2 .5; " N35. -» t 93% $11 / \l /»V
'. f .I frustration and disappointment in battling the decade, one may assume the college’s popula- \x‘. l’ ‘3. l2? ‘1/ I / '
- strategy used by the administration to combat tion problem will not disappear. With the cur- é \ J I .I{I.}.I{I;{I§;{I.;.I If? t '5 ” 79% ‘ '* .
’f .- f C the understaffing problems which are slowly rent lack of both professors and students, one 2“ ,I. g ifi'l'i't'fif-ifi.-. .~-. ' 5 I? ,2 ”(l ’(lutfi:
., 1' decimating his college. Denemark finally said may conclude the outlook for those future % ~ :9 w a g ¢ ¢ (Q . ’x. //
‘ , what others are perhaps only whispering — students isn’t bright. ‘% iéégfigfiggi liai- ,4 fl 6 ”5:22-
i ' UK's colleges are in deep trouble, and total And with the governor indecisive on whether 41" M .. ”-'-'-'-'-'-'-’-'-"-
* . . collapse may be just around the corner. or not to raise new revenues for higher educa- ‘ m 0! D
. , Denemark knows of what he speaks. His tion, it may also be assumed the University’s 50 AT LAST THE As US /”l ER WOgDER ...W~
' 7 - . . reputation in national education circles is im- funding problems will continue. RRIBLE CHOKE WWE SHORT WW H W Mame
I « peccable. His was the longest term of any col- The bottom line is actually a vicious circle: MUST a MA ,,__ . 85% We NEW LONG maze-n .
. - lege dean‘s here, and he has been here during graduate students are being denied the oppor- DE IIg ”~14, LAST
g - , ‘ both the gravy and the lean years. In addition, tunity to become professors who will eventual- -';.I-, '.-.=;;::.'-75.=2?:-.z:%’.-ln.2,, filial” DEAN OF THE film.” ”/4. T 3
~ , V 'i' ‘ he is currently the senior dean of education at 1y teach undergraduate and secondary school I”'§’,: [ME-
' , f land-grant universities in the nation. students. Those students may in turn be inade- Wig/3’:'\~I,-o . 12/7
- , ' But Denemark has been dealing with a quately prepared to become professors W’ \ \\\”\~, ,f/ .i '\ .
. f; situation bordering on the torturous. His themselves. And so on. °//I// \ “£55.; \ ' ,, i '
English education department lacks a full~ The problem begs for a solution, and It ’“f: 7% 0"": fife .
j - '. . time faculty member; no new doctoral Denemark has outlined it with one word — IJ \- 4 files”? %I z; '
. students were admitted to the program this funding. It is up to the University and the state ‘ 8" ¢* /5' 1% W . a 335?: it“??? ,'
" I; - j ,' academic year. His department of higher to heed or disregard it. .4531: ~ \ .5 5/; '%/7%E \i K37 ’ if?" 3233;" ,
; .' "1 { education has one-and-a-half faculty members Denemark will continue to teach here after :izzf-vké‘ffif‘y‘ov . 7 3‘5" 5/?t :1";f‘t‘:-3,"é"f;:::§: 3;
5. f serving 61 doctoral students. Two department a six-month sabbatical. One topic he will be 07 t \‘\‘\J\ t .. to.
' ' ‘. chairmen have left the college in the pastyear researching during his final five years of ser- y/flI, V \\ \l I,” .‘i,
f r and they will not be replaced. vice will be the quality and adequacy of Z / "Q ‘~ § " .’ /i.d
. ’- . And Denemark has faced one other alarm- teacher preparation. When reflecting on his :5 fl’ d,\~\\§ If; if“???
. i' , .. ing statistic — 15 percent of the college’s facul- current dilemma, it is almost safe to say his : g/VM ‘ Ax si25235= ==:“““‘““355”5".“a“”555555:555535fifiz“ ”555555553555” MS‘ESEEEEEEEEE'
.' ' ty positions are unfilled because of the competence in the area will be unmatched. .
'. _ 1 , I I II I P I I I l
.~ -. , Political mai bag proVIdes reSI dent With several solutions
v, .3 Have you noticed that latelyIPresi- pointed to run the Equal Opportunity what they call ‘off-budget items.‘ Fred the beginning of the month. In need of this skill; but really, Base- eye dog, but that he and Emily had
. .IIi,_I , dent Reagan has taken to reading his Commission; the chairman of the They don’t go to making up the any event the Great Communicator ment Writer Person, if you were go- bad a talk about it, and she too was
. '. 'I 3. . mail in public? He‘s always got a let US. Civil Rights Commission has deficit.” showed up in Cincinnati with the text ing to go that far, why didn’t you go willing tosacrifice to, asthepresident
.' .' ter from somebody who, depending on been sacked and the Justice Depart- of a letter that a blind man “wrote in all the way? puts it, “get this country back on its
‘ '. . your politics, sounds like a patriot or ment has announced it will sue any “It Still helps swell the national Braille to tell me that if cutting his It would havebeenan application of feet." ‘
~ 51’. ,1 .‘ U ' a fulminating masochist. one caught giving a black person or a debt, Dad, and I don’t want to have pension would help get this country the goose pimply touch which Boyish
- ., . .' I' LaSl OClObGT- Boyish Charm was woman an extra break. Time for any part Of that. I’m going tosupport back on its feet he‘d like to have me Charm loves if you’d appended one © 1982, King Features Syndicate, Inc.
' ,I 'I .~ I’ =7, asked at a press conference about the another press conference and another our president andourcountry." cut his pension." more sentence saying that the blind
_ “number of black leaders in this letter in answer to carping questions The prevaricator in the basement It’s good news to learn that Mr. writer in question would, if his pen- Nicholas Von Hoffman writes on
.I' . country Ilwhoi have expressed some about outlawing affirmative action may have herniated credulity with Reagan reads Braille. Given the way sion were cut, no longerbeable toaf- issues of national importance in his
I; ~. ~ reservations about your policies.“ and weakening the Voting Rights Act. the letter he sent upstairs to Fecklm he sees the world he will have much ford to keep Emily, his faithful seeing syndicated column. '
“ The Feckless One began reading a It doesn‘tle much imagination to '
'1‘ rangi‘llsed correspondence by way 0f hear Old Velvet Voice. the waves of .
‘ 1‘51“ ‘5 3 his in dor eamin ,asheunfolds
‘ Ji. children from Ashtabula, Ohio, who
. .' .'.' . ‘ ‘ I
.2," .cI, I:. . Ii I‘ ' :Sdgfibéfrgh‘zegfif 2:11:22? i202: The United States has made it Clea, there is no way, short of military in- and a new loan of $350 million, accor- merit of the risk rather than Mr. -
a it "32 -»I Nicholas ting rid of affirmative action is what that we will not do business as usual tervention, that the United States ding to the Polish deputy premier. Reagan’s effective use of power. Yet,
, tII ‘ Von Hoffman it takes for our country to end infla- with either Poland ("the Soviet Union could force Poland to change that Poland hadapaymenttomakea cou- had the President had Poland
:4 7" : I‘ ___ - ___—“— tion, it‘s a sacrifice she‘s glad to while repression in poiand continues. decision. Considering Poland’s rather ple of weeks ago, :71 million in in- declared in default, hecould have in- '
. III.- .;I. .I III had one letter jist a few days ago make.“ —Ale nder Ha‘ close big brother, that is not a teresttoWestern banks. Poland simp- sured that the European banks would
I 5:5 from a 16—year-old boy who identified Then at an anniversary party "8 18 reasonable option. 1y couldnt make the payment, and not extend credit. .
himself as black. And he said. ‘I am marking, last Year's elation VlCFOFY muggambfinadefilfid; fiiflt' Ad’gmgg“.“,"{f¥°°“°°":"g§ mam
I.I-,,t..~ _‘. wholeheartedly behind what you.” the president pulled another epistle What do we do about Poland? One U ‘ted ‘ Sta-t g: l t u]: at We met '30." mmfth cmhfilsd ~'
II-~j trying todo and I think itmeans much out of his breast pocket. This one was oftheproblemsofbeingasuperpower . :k the es g {elf-“mi; 1;“: . lIiIat eh?” '32th; with $0"; .
, .. more for my own future.‘ I had from a young man who wrote to say is the feeling of fristration that oc- 31f Sit woulpgme; dgrclar ed git; gurthwe £193 “I. will be-
“.Ig‘ ,: ;I iI another from a young black man who he was dropping out of college for a curs when faced with a problem ofhgrwise Secrets of State Ha' nha we'd unld coopIera "mu _ the
.‘I.-I=I-I, had just become the father of a baby year so he wouldn t have to rely on beyond its power. That is the plight of 09"" . l'y lg e no . er suc a po cy, 3.”
.-. , , h _ government loans. American foreign policy today. The Pico declared, Iwould be to weaken democratic Europeans canchartany -
, -' - 3‘” And he was "3“”‘3 that e . and W‘th ~ ~ . . . . Western umty. course they Wish if US. policy blows
"‘ .' ~ ,’ -. he had come all the way from being a 1 am suggesting that. there ls a Reagan admimstration came into Of' How? Certain] some banks would in all directions Democratic Euro
diehard Democrat to support this pm small prevancation room in the base- fice proud of its power, unready to That option being gone, the US. “ff ' . l y but NATO ould f It that ofPres'de Ca I De.
..i “I yarn -—and he said ‘because I think it ment of the White House where some yield unnecessarily, as they felt that must turn to less immediate forms of 5 er major 0556‘ w .9 one ‘ nt rter sma- .~
. . i ,:: . tamed slave thinks u nd commits . . . . not fall apart nor would Western JO!‘ failings was a lack of
. ,, . , . -:. means a better world for my P a . former President Jimmy Carter had power. A clear and conSistant policy . . . .
2 3: daughter . .. these noble thoughts to paper. one is done. to deal with the situation is required. 3°V°mm°ims °°uap°e‘ 7mm Pam?" mmm‘lmg and cmmta'lcytn “‘9
-. ,Li. . hard put to imagine the conversation Unfortunately, this is something that declared in default, Polish assets in foreign policy; they are beginmng to L
1 Doesn‘t that lump up your throat between that young man and his But power is one of those things the Reagan administrationhas yet to “Wat couldbeseizedtopay Off the getafeelingofdeja W“ . ':
73L". . ‘II‘H, IaI, and give your skin the heebeejeebees father after the deciswn to drop out of more useful in the potential than in formulate. creditors. Some Of those creditors . Certainly stronger econonnc 5“,” ‘
"...’* :I ,I the way it always happens when the school was reached. the use. American power, broadly . . . might “Pd themselves 1.“ bad shape, tions mu Mt cripple the .S°"‘°‘3
;'_.,I .1 , ”,4 ‘. Great Communicator givesa little tug ”Son, I just don‘t understand." and deeply based, can be a blunt in- me.5dmm15trat,'°" has suspended 3"" making risky loans "3 the hope 0f economy. “'9' “A" cause “Pam and .
I. I. ,.I III. .I . at your emotions? “It‘s simple, Dad, I don't want to strument, difficult to employ against all official food shipments to Poland. increasmg profits isapolicy that they force the Sowets into directions that -
l' 3'." . Since then Boyish Charm's pm take out that student loan because it small or hard-to-get ~at targets.Soit is That is a good move.ISending food to have freein chosen Further, due to they would not have chosen.I The .
5'. . i: ' gram has gotten up to speed. as the would contribute to the budget with Poland. Poland (food for wluch they cannot insurance, it is highly doubtful that pressure must be made consistant
. II, '51,. masters of businfis administration deficit." payI) can only ease the burden on the any major banks would actually go and kept on. ,
5:".i .Ii.’ around the Casa Blanca say. A man “What? Eight hundred dollars? What do we do with American POllSh Inulitary regime. Although under. . Easing thepressureonPoland and
CL. .5," Who, by many reports, has never been Boy. did i raise a dummy . I . Anyway power? Having made the decision to some might argue that this weapon is Only about one fourth of the Polish the §oviet Union only allows them to
, 88"“tu employed has been ap Mr. John of Arc. student loans are derail Solidarity through martial law, aimed at theIwrong people (people debt is owed to American banks; by continue on their present course, not
a: .. Ir, With guns don t go hungry), the total paying the interest for the Poles the helping thePolish people but enabling
4 ,' r", ‘ . BLmM COUNTY by Berke Bream effect of this will increase the pro- U.S. is spending mostofthemoneyto the Kremlin to maintain higher ef-
vi 5. blems that the military regime faces. prop up foreign banks. forts at agitative behavior elsewhere.
i I ies 312...qu flew... myI/Iwm/I saw I But we do sell food to the Soviet HowII great: UnIimtideemtes “st: Asmin once rernhglrtkecIiI; ifhihe coal:
,5. .I .- W ~ . . . wer. . n power in were a
v; - j 33%,?“ mm 3ft", 1'" MED I/MAt/éfiAI/D WWW , FORGOT/ ”mm ”we” ““3““ ”t“? “”3 gopmeextaitlofia of American credit capitalists, the capitalists wolllsd sell
- '1 evaumum W H . MDWHIM Off me. U'S‘ grain embargo that President to Poland but that does not stop themtherope.
- . .I . / l Carter imposed on the U.S.S.R. after . ’ .
.I mvaass. mnussmtt? . mmmomwm .M, m ”I , . . . “ foreign banks frommakingloansto .
.. , ‘. '. . l I?” \ I ’ ”NM ' II// My /1‘. . " ,. fozdaiszanzflg‘gfiawifimt Poland. The fact that they have for Dana Plco tsagradunte student lnthd’
I_II, - .. a . ”:4" ‘ \fi, .» ,5; i::‘.'\ I // gas Scansismmgedsagfiiaegé bit the Ithetime beingisduetotheirsssess PattersonSchoolofDlplomacy. I
, '3... .\ ,9: . .J .‘ a) 7‘» I}. v, . / ‘25:.“ ’ If? . . . . now , can .
. .- . , -. I. ... l ”-1., -‘ "’ _e on] dosobecausetheU.S.feedsthe ' '
.' ;, , [filth—5» l‘i’ 2: __l ”’3’ l- “35%“. “TN u ‘. Soviets, embargoiig food shipments Nirvana Gained
. ‘ . ' ‘ = . ; =- " 3 Mn: I: . I to Poland without also doing so to the h." Term" “airman
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. I I; , 14 . "-“",‘.”-- ”Ii”. -.'>£§§;:v ‘ r- - .‘ apron I if- r g owing wings - prgnnun Ii to reel at all .
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I . I. ' gm ml wow marg‘ BKWIUW‘IKNQRI V let than continue l0 mlITOW mmey lthr hrnuly holds eye-i- in awe). l-miln III Ire simply rhnhlnl.
. .. ' , ', WIN, OWSlHE w ruffle M‘VED” micro. z Calms "gm pom m, that they cannot afford to repay. ‘m lone no the um did min" brill" 7"" "ml" “no""mt M "‘8"-
, ' , . :3?” ”07' WW! mwr 04 “55 WNW YOU IN A o’m That‘s good. We should not help in... lll’l‘lll. it bury“ iii. iiimii.
" " ‘ ’ \l l W395 .’ (IRWIN. “mm'fm W! M006: finance martial law in Poland. But we V", ."in m. If..." .mu . ii...) .mi Sum-mired min. crumble ll whim
. , . , ,. , \ 5N9 THRT. \ I \ still eXtend wt to the sonet Union. ”N" [nothing uanntn‘l rem-inn).
" / «\i‘ ., , ; - 'l‘heU.S.S.R.,itselfsti-ugglingtomeet
, 11% ( 1/ .n O , (‘3/ ”a ' '/ its ”mm“ l0 Westu'n an“. ll ll- {ls-w remember ll"- day of lie-Ill. Vile nenrhn once mmmonplm dlIIp-
it A A; 1 I . ing that mm to. .mm 0016' Mrmrin of pain rent to "in. pear
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