xt7zkh0dzf2f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7zkh0dzf2f/data/mets.xml The Kentucky Kernel Kentucky -- Lexington The Kentucky Kernel 1979-10-08 Earlier Titles: Idea of University of Kentucky, The State College Cadet newspapers  English   Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel  The Kentucky Kernel, October 08, 1979 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 08, 1979 1979 1979-10-08 2020 true xt7zkh0dzf2f section xt7zkh0dzf2f f
Vol. LXXII. No. 37 Ker 2] University of Kentucky
MOM”. October 'i "79 an Independent student newspaper LexIngton. Kentucky
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Ten protesters arrested ’ ~ a
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as hundreds assault . 1 = , ‘ a In the wrnd .
I I t ”f" M i?” " 2 ii. i- a - , fr; "V 1:? This weekend's weather—clear.cool
nuc ear power p an a ' sis‘t‘tt- 5- _ . V ’t‘. I T” g; and breezy — was perfect for some
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' By ANDREW SCHNEIDER Ten people were arrested yesterday. as» > . / I VV ., Wt“ *7 _ 355V student. Ind Melinda McIntyre. In
Associated Press Writer bringing to I9 the number arrested on ”to?“ . V . Ad "a fag“ , at " ‘ 4” LT] nursing student. They were
criminal tresspassing charges in the 357" "” ”9W7 ” WW I“ , m, a .5331"; “x ., ' ”3‘ working on getting “M! kite up I"
SEABROOK, N.H. (AP) ~— two-day attempt to occupy the .’ V; - .V’ . ,e " W gm ,IV ' {\ ' V f tche '" n this. Sm“. between
Hundreds of anti-nuclear protesters Seabrook site, long a focal point for My»??? 7-5; 9 A . ”V K an?“ i . ‘” V‘s Nloiiulno'fli": d "d um and
( repeatedly assaulted the Seabrook demonstrations against the use of Mtg ”. i f 5 " -. V-;V.V.‘-~ “15% w” I. - , ' " c 0 ”V e 0' '
atomic power plant yesterday but were it uclea r powe r. O ne ot he r 5*”? Vfgit‘, b . ’ -’~"""-' %€fi , .
repulsed by state troopers and demonstrator wasarrested onacharge fig %_ 2; ,y/Mflgr r—-"- ”"”~1V” é \ .
National Guardsmen using fire hoses, of criminal mischief. Officers also * if}. ~ ~ 6, m1 ”a . {ft/:22)" \
Mace and asmoke-spewing generator. confiscated gas masks and other gear ”iii-f- . 4 " ”at l at?” t '5; 3:24» ” _‘ .
i Waves of demonstrators twice from protesters. 3" ”who, Vazh V. . .' ' ”453in "iii"- g,; it, if; \_ " '
assaulted the fence surrounding the Earlier. the demonstrators 4W4?! '3” 7' ”a; 1 "ifs-”#51 "it“ ”‘1. '5
construction site and ripped down attempted to enter the facility at By M“- KOSOVSKY/l‘tml 5""
whole sections of it with ropes. separate sites along the chain-link '
Troupers and guardsmen surged fence surrounding the l40-acre site. I l l -
through the gap, spraying Mace and The first assault, by about 75 ' .
driving the protesters back along an protesters, fizzled after a squad of S W r 0 e ["6 ”
access road. troopers moved from behind the fence '
But morethan l.000 of them quickly and sprayed them with Mace and l ' '
regrouped and marched a mile in the smoke bombs. ,
rain to the plant entrance, where they Other officers in boats used their rale as UK StUdentS teaCherS
were met by troopers and guardsmen jackknives to slash truck tire inner I -
standing shoulder to shoulder behind tubes the protesters were using as a
the main gate. Fire hoses were turned makeshift pontoon bridge across a By TERESA YOUNG student‘s father. questioned the Association of University Professors having TAs instruct lower level
on the crowd and a stream of smoke tidal inlet in the marshiand. Associate Editor suitablity ofthe reading matter and the to define TA‘s responsibilities, said classes. ‘
\ was unleashed from a generator. A few hours later. about 500 b00k5 were SUbsequcnlly remO‘Cd MlChael TOUTJCC. an English graduate About '20 sections 0f freshmen ”
But the chanting protesters, clad in demonstrators returned in two groups The first of a two-part series from the reading list. student and member of the English are taught mostly by part-time
rain slickers and plastic sheets, put and managed to bring down sections Because of Bryant's remarks. the organization. instructors and TAs. “If the University
their backs against the chain-link gate of the fence before being turned back. The graduate student union, which English department appointed an “I like the idea of teaching and had to hire associate professors to
and defied authorities to move them. The early skirmishes at first was organized on campus, has executive committee to renew the working with people going through teach all those classes," Tourjee said, '
Utility workers then emptied two appeared to dim the spirits of initiated questions about the role of operating. procedures of its faculty, experiences We had," Tourjee said, “they would have to pay a lot more
water trucks onto the crowd but were demonstrators who had camped in the teaching assistants at UK. Are they TAs and the department as a whole. “and l enjoy doing it, it‘sa challenge." money than they do now.” _
unable to disperse them immediately. rainVovemight in the marshland, after faculty members or students? The committee has not issued a Anthropology graduate studentand He estimated that most TVAs spend '
The demonstrators eventually a failed attempt to take over the plant last spring, Dr. Joe Bryant, statement concerning the need for TA Debbie Donnellan said she has 20-25 hours a week in class
backed offbut continued to millabout Saturday. chairman of the English department. change in any ot the department's gained professional experience while preparation, grading and counseling
in front of the gate. Some returned to On Saturday,about l,500 protesters said TAS ShOUld receive more operating Procedures- “learning a lot from teaching .. since for the “‘10 COWS“ they teach.
I campsites in the nearby woods. failed to force their way throughthe 8- departmental guidance when teaching There is no Uniiersity-wide she has to know the answers But she Donnellan said she thinks students
Police reinforcements from other toot-high fence along the south crassesanocttosing books‘fOrSrUaniS Wild-MdCU-Cirr-ifie‘i~‘i3‘~r-*‘f~“¥»3d1 said shethtnksthe 1A3 role shouldbe judge TAS the same “’33" they do
sections of the construction site were perimeter of the sprawling plant. They ‘0 read. department (“Cider ”5 9““ P0110) defined so TAs will know what their professors. “They are either 8004 or
brought to the main gate. Traffic was were repelled by more than 500 state Bryant made his comments after a concerning TASA responsibilities are bad.” .
blOCkcd on busy U.S. Highway 1, the troopers and National Guardsmen student and his father protested two The English Graduate Student " ' She said she thought TAs were
main road through the town of using fire hoses, Mace, tear gas and books English TA Betty Jean Gooch Organization recently worked withthe Tourjee and Donnellan said UK is “more personable and relate to
Seabrook. Continued on page 4 used in her class. Eugene Goss, the state chapter ot the American saving a large amount of money by students well.”
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POPE leaves U 3 after momentous week -I0flg VISIT
By HARRY F.ROSENTHAL million people would attend the Mass terminated, we will stand up and most spectacular of all the large to consideragreater role for women in the truth.“ V
Associated Press Writer on the Mall, police said about 175,000 affirm the indissolubility of the ceremonies the pope convened the church. Later, he urged leaders of other,
attended. marriage bond," he said. Framed by the Capitol and the In remarks as gentle in tone as was faiths in the United States to work ‘ . - »
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Pope ln this farewell Mass, televised to a “When freedom is used to dominate Washington Monument, with the red- his voice. the pontiff never responded together “in the defense ofthe rights of _
John Paul ll. completing his global audience, John Paul raised his the weak, to squander natural brick Smithsonian Castle as directly to the challenge. He re- the human person. in the pursuit of _
triumphant pilgrimage to America strong voice on a touchy issue that resources and energy, and to deny backdrop. there was a I.500-voice emphasized a declaration made in 803's ofsocialjusticeandpeaoe.andin . V .
‘ with an awesome Mass on the grassy divides his Roman Catholic flock in basic necessities to people, we will choir. An equal number of priests Philadelphia last week that the ChurCh questions 0f PUbliC morality.” ,
Mall of the capital, called again the United States: abortion and birth Stand up and reaffirm the demands of offered communion. never has and never will ordain He then celebrated M855 from a
yesterday for an end to abortion, the control. justice and social love. Thousands upon thousands of women. three-tiered St88" before hundreds or “ -
strengthening of marriage and love “When the sacredness of life before “When the sick, the aged or the Chrysanthemums golden. white and Referring to a prepared speech, thousands who gathered in worship at .
and Justice for the weak. birth is attacked, we will stand up and dying are abandoned in loneliness, we purple encircled the oaken altar John Paul urged the church‘s religious the park stretching from the Capitol ‘0 -
VRenewing themes sounded earlierin proclaim that no one ever has the will stand up and proclaim that they built for the occasion women to emulate the Virgin Mary, the Washington Monument. -
his week-long tour of prayer and authority to destroy unborn life,“the are worthy of love. care and respect.“ Following Mass, Pope John Paulll “the woman who speaks to us of Even before yesterday‘s dawn, g
pastoral teaching, the pope urged pontiff said in his worldwide- The pope spoke repeatedly of the left Washington for his flight to Rome femininity, human dignity and love." thousands had pitched camp on the 1 ' '
hundreds of thousands of listeners televised homily. family. abortion and marriage, which where hisjourney began nine davs ago In an address to educators and I25-acre Mall. toting blankets. l“ ”
who crowded onto the parkland to “When the institution of marriage is he said were “closely interconnected," when he visited Ireland. I theologians, the pontiff sounded a chests, lawn chairs and backpacks. Q , ~
. reflect on the “nature of marriage, on abandoned to human selfishness or as he toured America, from its largest As he began the last day of his stern warning for them not to trouble Their ranks swelled after sunrise as g. _
the family and on the value of life." reduced to a temporary, conditional cities to the heartland of Iowa. arduous tour, John Paul was the faithful With theories that can be thousands more streamed ‘0 the site . ”
Though it had been predicted that a arrangement that can easily be The Mass on the Mall was one of the challenged by a Roman Catholic nun manipulated “for ends thatare alien to Continued on page 3 f;
—The district must adhere strictly to the requirements of Booked for investigation of several felony charges including the reported presence of a Soviet combat brigade in Cuba.The .
the Kentucky Open Meetings Law to give the public an kidnapping. robbery. assault on a peace officer, and assault Soviets denied the report, which was based on US. i
* local opportunity to monitor the fiscal situation. with a deadly weapon. the sniper has a police record involving intelligence findings, and Castro insisted that the unithas been
Floyd County has been among districts with a continuing a drug arrest in Providence. RI in Cuba since I962 and its mission has not been changed. : -
MAJ. GEN. JOHN SINGLAUB says President Caner MIC“. which is Win“ Kentucky raw 3: 2 '
mishandled the issue of Soviet "001” in Cubs because of his Last August. the state Board for Elementary and Secondary world EAST GERMANS CELEBRATED 30 YEARS of V." .
concern for ratification of the Strategic Arms Limitation Education, on recommendation of public instruction Communist ruleVyesterdaVy with a display of military might i‘: .
Treaty. V V Superintendent James Graham, granted the Floyd system an FIDEL CASTRO HAS MADE arrangements to travel to and hVarled Sovret President lVeothd l. Brezhnev: troop
. “He has tried to finesse this whole thing and has used it to ”“39“” designation allowrng " to carry last year s deficrt New York this week to address the UN General Assembly, reduction plan '5 a mayor contribution to peace. . .
"Y ‘0 “ll SALT "-n Singlaub “id in Lexington Saturday Into this fiscal year. American and U N officials said yesterday. It would be the Tanks, missiles “d goose-stepptng "0°” Of the National
during taping of WLEX-TV‘s “Your Government” program . Cuban president‘s first trip to the”l‘nited States in I9 years. PCOPI“ Army paraded down flVag-bedVecked Karl M." An” '-
for string Sunday. FOURTEEN RAIL USERS have pledged financial A State Department spokesman David Passage said in before thousands of spectators, including Brezhnev and other Vs V
' The Soviets have ‘3 MiG-2Ijets in Cubs that are capable of support to a rail users cooperative, and some have already Washington that ma requests for Castro and his party were leaders of the Warsaw Pact. The parade capped four days of a
carrying nuclear weapons. Singlaub said. contributed. slid DIV! Adkisson, executive Vice president 0f made last week and he would p r obablv arrive in the middle of festtvrties that included events around the country. ‘:
l ' . . . ' ~ ‘ * v '
. .V The United States should use econonuc sanctions against the Owensboro-Davress County Chamber Of Commerce. this week. ”
the Sovret Union, including ' threat to cut off grain An executive committee ‘0 represent the ml users was Passage said Castro would address the current Assembly "I“: SW?" A SWISSMR DC'. JETUNER LAST ”g
shipments, to force a Withdrawal from Cuba and to gain named l3“ week "I OWCNSbOI’OVv Vind . ll“ ChV'ml’" 0f msion m his role as head of the non-aligned movement 7. the NIGHT. killing at least seven of the 154 persons on board :
V \, corstceslrona in SALT II. he astd.V commerce agreed to provrde administrative servrces to the organization of more than 90 nations that profess neutrality hm, skidding Vto a halt on . rainswept runway at Athena' . .
.. tnglaub clashed .m‘h Caner m ”77 0"" ‘h‘ P'°P°“d cooperative. . . . . . between the superpower blocs. Castro played host to a non- '“lem'l'W‘l IerpoVrt. . . 5'
V withdrawal of American forces from South Kores.lesdtng to A number of developments with serious implications for aligned summit meeting m mum 1m month. The CM! Avratton Authority reported three persons in :
. I his ouster tn June I977 as Army chief of Itafiin South Korea. area rail servrce are expected in the next six months. “There are no plans for meetings with US. official La serious comma: zand an “Nest“? numb: of then?)
VV . a Passe e de passengers a crew mem rs tng treat at t ns :
i I Stata natlon A sickesman for Kurt Waldheim said the UN. secretsry- “:23:th and crew escaped down ”mm chutes after I '
, SAN FRANCISCO'S SNIPER, whose sei e of a eneral ot similar information fro m (.‘uban U.N. . _ ‘ . ~
l ~ . . , ' ATTORNEY GENERAL ROBERT STEPHENS hfl downtown building ended Saturday night, was the vsietim of; imbassadaor Mr. Raul Ros Kourr. but he wins waiting for final heavy "“0“ "Id flames engulfed "'9 plane '“hm ”COM. 0f 5 ~ ,
V t . , ' notified Vthe Floyd VC°“"“Y “500' V'Ymm that be h “bad trip” on drugs, a woman who talked to him said confirmation. perhaps today. "' touchdown. § ” V
_ V ,V Withholding any action [sued upon its current $208M!) yesterday. Each yeara numberof heads of state and foreign ministers Gather "
.. VV deficit. but expects certain conditions tobe metin the coming The Berkeley woman who said she knewthe man whocalled address the General Assemblv in the first few weeks of its w ' ,
" _ ‘ ' ' months. , . himself “Chief Cherokee" told reporters he telephoned her “Won _ ‘ ,
I. . J. 5 . Vln a letter to Superintendent E.P. Grtgsby Jr.. Stephens from 1"“ after the siege ",4 told he, he h.d been on . “bad It had been expected that ('astto might visit the UN this INCREASING CLOUDINESS TODAstd warmervnth '
; " 7 l “'4: . . trip“ from taking drugs. year. highs in the mid 60s to around 70. A chance of showers i - . r
. . , —The schoolthstnet must conduct acomplete audit of its 11,e mp... m, jailed rm gummy .tter police chug“ into Castro‘s trip to the United States would follow a major developing tonight Inchontianingtontorrow. Coolerweather
.. - V financial condition. his stronghold and found the sniper and his host.“ asleep. dispute between the United States and the Soviet Union about tomorrow with highs in the mid to upper 60s.
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l KhNTUCKY Debbie McDaniel Jay iossett 5"“ Massey MI'K Green Thomas C lsrl Gary Landau
I [.diior in (‘hiel ( 'ampui Editor Teresa Young Paul Mann h‘nlerratnment Editor Direclor o] Pholographi'
".\\“i We Editor Richard McDonald
l (‘ary Willis 3 Lisa Doussarii “My McGee John Clay David Maynard
'~ l . Managing lulu“! [Editorial rrlirur Kirby Stephens Sports Editor Photo Manager
' . o t (‘irpi Ldtiori Iri Ill g d
I s 7 an C If
3 edltorla & Lol ',l ',e‘) 5 Assistant Sport: [-.‘diior ‘
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‘ lhc first direct vote for presidential candidates what the Soviets wish, they will discontinue their compliance with treaties is almost zero. said at a Lexington luncheon Sept. 26 the Soviet
. comes in New Hampshire early in 1980. One of the demonstration of “good will." “Out of27 agreementsthatcame out ofnine summit nuclear stockpiling is “unprecedented and uncalled
major concerns voters must be sensitive to is each According to White House officials, the Russian meetings. the Soviets violated. cheated on or ignored for. l recognize it as a threat.“ 3
candidate‘s toreign policy stance especially in the leader's speech was aimed at Western European 26." the retired general was quoted by the Herald- Deputy Assistant Secretary of State William Dyess,
field ol l' s -l' SSR relations. countries. He hopes to persuade them not to follow . Leader as saying. who debated SALT II with Stilwell at the luncheon.
The issues are complex. but ifUSrSmict relations Allied plans to deploy 572 new nuclear-armed missiles Almost 2000 retired generals and admirals have enumerated what he called the “overall aggressive 4‘ . .
fail and nuclear weapons are employed. death could capable of hitting the Soviet Union 44 in Europe. examined SALT ii and Signed a letter to the Senate designs of the Soviets." ' i
reach any American in any state. The continuing Plans for the new missiles are expected to be recommending the treaty‘s rejection. Singlaub said. The Soviets are obtaining high intelligence
debate on 5 Al l ii and the Cuban European-based approved at the December ministerial meeting ofthe He pointed to the recent discovery of Soviet troops in capabilities. he said. “When they are able. they are
\‘oiiet troops always brings one question to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Cuba as one more reason Russia can‘t be trusted. willing to exploit their advantage.“
surface: Can the Russians be trusted? The missiles are a response to the Soviets nuclear “This is our hemisphere. A destabilizing influence Without a strong president to show the Soviets the . ‘
The Soxiets will withdraw 20.000 troops and l.000 buildup which includes the deployment of about l00 has been produced by the Soviet combat brigade United States cannot be exploited, the Russians will ‘
tanks from Fast Germany'duringthe next year. Soviet SS-ZOS, a highly-accurate long-range mobile missile, coming into this hemisphere. it‘s a violation of the continue to ignore treaties, stockpile nuclear weapons 4
President Leonid Brerhnev said Saturday in an with multiple warheads targeted on Western Europe. Monroe Doctrine. which said that no introduction of and station troops around the world. ' '4
address on security matters. US. officials say the pullback announcement is European troops in the Western Hemisphere(shallbe With the Soviets increasing their strengths. '
Howeyer. Brezhney continued. ifthe L'nited States only symbolic, since the Soviet Union troops tolerated). and it's a violation Of a I962 agreement American democracy is threatened. ‘
deploys middle-range nuclear weapons in Europe, it outnumber U.S. manpower by about 100,000 in between President Kennedy and (former Soviet Although the presidential primariesare still months
"would radically alter the strategic situation on the Central Europe. The Soviet Union is estimated to President Nikita) Kruschev.“ Singlaub said. away. the candidates will begin surfacing soon.
Continent and poison the international atmosphere." have about 22 divisions. approximately 400,000 men, According to CS. intelligence sources, there are Americans need to cut through the election promises j
Such a situation would cause the USSR. to stationed in East Germany. now 4,000 to 5,000 Russran military personnel in and issue-sidestepping to determine which candidate .
"strengthen its own security" in return. Retired Maj. Gen. John K. Singlaub, in Lexington Cuba. They have been there Since i962. when the has the strenth and integrity to enforce disarmament i
What the Soviet leader called a “concrete Saturday to address a banquet held by the General Soviets withdrew most of the approxrmately 22.000 among the major powers. i
demonstration of the love of peace and the good will Society of the Sons of the Revolution, said SALT ii troops it had in Cuba as a result ofthe Cuban missile Can we trust the Soviets? We needastrongleaderin ‘ f;
of the Smrcl [ham and its allies"isjustthe opposite Should not be ratified because it is based on false crisis. the White House who can help us answer that ‘
it is a threat to the United States. if we do not do assumptions. Singlaub said the Russians historical Another Salt ilcritic. retired Gen. Richard Stilwell. question. i
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Letters 10 1") Ed? l
\ local churches. not their replacement. ' ' There‘s no excuse t0i this sort of case you don‘t know. Mr. Lincoln, show a little appreciation? Yes, Mr. . E
campus crusade Though our group at UK involves Nun" mUdSIInglng nonsense. The Kentucky electorate is your very existence isa result ofan act Lincoln, together you can doanything
A3 a student involved in a considerably less than the 2000 Once again our distinguished not as foolish as the Nunn campaign ofsexual intercourse by your parents. ~ except reproduce your own kind. -.
"33:33g333335" group at l'K. l have students claimed by the Christian former governor has demonstrated obviously believes they are. In other words, if it weren‘t for '
eniovcd 33,16 mm done by Walter Student Fellowship, for example, that there are no political shenanigans heterosexuals. gays wouldn‘t exist. So Jude Beyerle :
Page and l appremm his. research Campus Crusade has a full-time staff too low for him to StOOp to. That‘s Stewart Young why don't you and your gay friends Engineering junior
into this seldom-mentioned aspect of Of over60001n 9.6 countries around the right IOIkS. those fun-loving b0yS. the Phystcal Therapy junior .- .
university life. l‘m sure he spentagreat worlg. Olur desrre "5 to help students Nunn brothers are at it again. I . 1 ' I
deal of time gathering and seedt ereevanceofChristtotheirlives Republican gubernatorial can treproduce r a lo 3. 3
consolidating his information. a: to create an envnonment where candidate Louie Nunn and his '. '
However. as the official president of 23¢: 0:" grow Spirituagy.Pinterested brother. State GOP Chairman Lee In his opinion of Oct. 5.Joe Lincoln ,
Campus Crusade for Christ, a Ru ”,5 cznsconiie tot e residents Nunn,havebeenshowingcopiesofthe took a strong stand defending his . . . . .
l'niicrsity-recognired group. and a Moom mt .c tu entCenterat6.30 0“ latest issue of Penthouse magazine to homosexual feelings and beliefs. In his Letters. OPm'ons and commentaries3must be typed and triple-
member of the Religious Advisers OTEdai nights. . little old ladies and men of the cloth, article he states. “we are realizing . . . spaced. and must include the writers Signature. address and f‘
Staff. I was disappointed to find that an you for allowrng m? to make contending that the stuff contained that we have positive contributions to phone ”‘imbef' UK students should include the." year and major ~ ‘
our movement was omitted from his the EIVCESHY aware Of a “Emma” therein portrays the Browns‘ lifestyle. make to society, and we will not be and Untversrty employees should "'5" their posrtion and I
list. Our ministry is very active on this at: sgmzhgimmmfd kstgdents who Such is a stunt is so repulsive it makes denied our right to perform those department. ._
campus. dhaving just this past week 0"" 00 e ' my bowels levitate. Since when has services.“ Healso states.3“together we. The Kernelmay condense or reject contributions, and frequent :.
3 :3ponsor3e meetings in over fifteen J Bi Brother Loure been deemed the can do anythingw even in Kentucky. writers may be limited. Editors reserve the right to edit forcorrect .
orms, raternities. sororitiesand With Iy tzer renowned role model for exemplary Yes. Mr. Lincoln. you can do spelling. grammar and clarity, and may delete libelous
athletic teams. We also sponsor such Applied Music senior lifestyles? anything; but you and your gay friends statements.
dCtl‘v'lIlCS as weekly Bible studies with lhave heard it said that Mr. Nunn is are denying yourselves the
the football and basketball teams. (Editor‘s Note: The Kernel regrets the so steeped in horse hockey that he opportunity to make the greatest Contributions should be delivered to Room 114 Joumslism. ‘5 .
()ur movement IS tnterdenomina- omission of Campus Crusade for cannot get himself out without contribution to society posiblc. the University of Kentucky,Lexington. Kit-“3506- 4'
tional. and we seek to be an arm ofthe Christ in the Religion at UK series.) slinging it around a bit. But come on! continuation of the human race. in .
For legal reasons. contributors must present a UK iD before ‘ 3
3 the Kernel will be able to accept the material. I 3!
SLUKR ow A‘l mud-THE (Elm Irs so WI ‘ Letters: |
. UE‘F m as U . YO) (AMT m Should be 30 lines or less and no more than 200 words. They
should concern particular issues. concerns or events relevant to 4
, lTa- '0 the UK community. '
a A r “\X i‘
/\4- r-\ (R rn
.. r/;>_ (‘- 4;- ‘2 Opinions: -
I 3/ Z: ‘ Should be 90 lines or less and should give and explain a position -
: f': f/; C 5 pertaining to topical issues of interest to the UK community.
.3" c ‘ I, \ 4 Commentaries '
‘r \ if Should be 90 lines or less. with no more than 800 words. These 4
' : ' articles are reserved for authors who. in the editor‘s opinion. have 3 3
4 ' ' ~‘_._2 l l special credentials, experience. training or other qualifications to y
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3, THE KENTI (‘Kt KLRNLL Monday. October I. "7,-3
' P e sks for worldwide eace ' m ' '
Op 3 p 7 SUV/6t ar 8 I'BdUCtIOD II? Europe debated
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br'n S A I I ‘erlcans I'Iessage 0f love MOSCOW (AP! _ The they Wlll still be viewed as part believes the Sovtet Limon has to contain some posuive
news media of the Sowetbloc of the Soviet military military advantage in forum: elements."
yesterday portrayed President contingent in Eastern Europe. \ In the longdeadlocked talks In addition to troop
‘ Leonid I. Brezhnev‘s promise In the United States in Vienna Austria on reducing reducti ~ . ,
_ . ' . . .. . . . . . . - . ons. Brezhnev volun-
Continued from ”'0 t centuries, he ““"d ”t Boston “8'“. Chdnted their love. for to reduce Red Army forces in presidential security adviser forces in Central Europe. the tereed to reduce the number of '
onfoot, by carand by busafter Monday, th? "‘0“ [”5“ 'of h'm and PWC'a'med thc'rta'th East Germany asamajor peace Zbigniew Brzezinski rebuffed United States has asked the medium-rang: Sowet mmucs
_ but. Untold others, in the Afmceriian'cities. and a bastian m worship. initiative. Butthe United States Brezhnev‘s suggestion that the Soviets to remote 65.000- targeted on Western Europe If
United States and abroad. saw 0 Frztmtthilrsem‘lt wa t N '1‘ reminded hthem 0t gt“? and its NATO partners took a NATO allies drop plans to 70,000 troops and L700 tanks “no additional mcdlumqangc
. the M3“ on "ICVISPP. w'th York wh ‘Ih 5.02 Z 5:” nee :10 itOtCCt uman “Sttsv far more cautious approach. deploy nuclear missiles in inreturntora l' S reductionol nuclear means are deployed m
I many Americans giVing up U , ‘d N": e ‘3“ c Cf to en t C nuclear arms race West German Chancellor Western Europe in exchange I,000 nuclear warheads.29.000 Western Europe."
E Sunday afternoon football to Aiiitecrica:uiiincjstandefengzi: agg‘to “tabl'Sh a worldWide ' Helmut Schmidt said the forareductionin Soviet missile men. 54 aircraft and 36 short- NA'IO nuclear planners are
l “Rh the pope. slums Then to Phila‘delphiag P Eherl) Yesterday morning in Sog'iel pkltdBC Wlfuid be ha Strength. ' range mum“ to meet m December on plans I
~ , Throughout his tour in .M . . ' _ . su stantia contri utton tot e ‘In East Berlin on Saturday lhe State Department said to deploy powerful new .
Ireland and in the United Des 0ines, Chm!“ ‘nd' one. _Ot hi5 last StOPS ”t reduction of certain extsting night, the Soviet president. Brezhnev ‘s proposal “appears Pershing-2 missiles m Europe.
. finally. the capital of a nation Washington, Pope John Paul b' 1 .. B t f- d l . . _ *
States—thepopeprcached the . . . . , .3 .. . . , 'm d “C“ U 0mg" ec aring the East bloc is
. . l ', l whose preSident has said 1t ”51th lhe (atholic UNVC" Minister Hans-Dietrich serious about detente pledged
traditiona.conservattvevalues suffers from a spiritual and sity. 3 . , - A '
t of the church. rejecting l l - .. I .. (lenscher. while calling the to wrthdraw up to 20,000
I - mora ma “5° We love you. We .ove you, Soviet move “a step in the right Soviet troo 5. 1,000 tanks and
movements active throu hout P
1 ' 8 ' If so, it probably was not they chanted. d' t' .. I' . d" t d h ~ . .
. the world toliberaltzedoctnne. "d th “I l ‘ . .. irec ton. a so ‘ln ica e ot er military equipment from
' . e“ ent to e POPC- ove )OU‘ ‘003 the P0Pe concern over Sovtet missile East Germany within l2
. After leaVing Ireland, where Wherever he went, he W35 responded. strength. months. He challenged
. hecalled foran end tOthC strife 8"“th by joyous. throngs of It was his message for all In Brussels. Belgium. 8 Western countries to make Q‘
- '._ . i that has torn that country for PCOPIC who "led m Joy at h” Americans. NATO official noted it remains similar stepsin Central Europe. ‘
. to be seen whether the Soviets Western defense officials ,
t - I - will withdraw only combat estimate Soviet troop strength
2 . Pope reaffirms ChurCh S pOllcy units, or support units as well, in Central Europe at between at , M G v
and how far they will be pulled 340.000 and 408,000 men .. . 7.3;, . 33...,1...
, ~ I ' back. If they are withdrawn In response, the State :._ ‘ s" 31' « W4" x
l t Nuns seek right to priesthOOd only as far as P