1990 January
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MSUClip hee A sampJin& of recent articles of interest to Morehead State University MEDIA RELATIONS • MORE HEAD STATE UNIVERSITY • UPO BOX 1100 • MOREHEAD, KY 40351 -1689 • 606-783-2030 LEXINGTON HER~L!J-LEADEA LEXINGTON. KY. TUESDAY, JANUARY 2. 1990 I ·vu AR General Assembly begins today cH,vE:s amid controversy, major issues By Jack Brammer Herald-Leader Frankfort bureau FRANKFORT - Kentucky's Legislative news 1990 General Assembly that begins phone numbers today at high noon is expected to cost state taxpayers about $4 mil Herald-Leader s1att report lion. FRA:-.:KFORT - Toll-free Whether Kentuckians get their better schools. impro\'ed he:ilth pro• telephone numbers are avail money's. worth ~or the 3 ½-mon~ grams and rr.ore pruon beds? Will able to help Kentuckians par lawmaking session probably will •I taxes incre:ise? ticipate in the making of new not be known for years. The legislature's budge! chair- laws in the 1990 General As The legislative script about to men - Sen. :\lichael ~loloney. D sembly that startS today. unfold is fraugh~ with importa~t - Lexington, and Rep. Joe Clark~ .. D To leave a message for a and controversial - questions. Dan\'ille - have proposed raising legislator, call (800) 372-7181. How they are answ~ed will affect the sale:; tax and making sweeping To check the status of a the state for 'years. changa in the state's.income taxes bill, call (800) 882-0180. • Will Kentuckians get a school to raise at least $562 million a ye:ir. To check the schedule of system that gives each child a fair Wilkinson has said he would legislative meetings, call (800) and equitable shot at a good educa- veto anv tax inc:-eases on property, 633-9650. 'tion? incomi: ·and sales. But his adminis- The Kentucky Supreme Court t:ration is ccnsidering elimir.ating or floor leaders .,..;11 get an extra S'.20 has declared the state's school sys- closing some ta:< bre:iks. dailv. All other legislative le.:iders tern unconstitutional. Will a new • How will la,,makers grapple .,..;!( receive an extra $15 daily, and system be put in place by the 1990 with such emotional issues as abor committee heads get SlO more each regular session, or will a special · tion. the right to die. gun conrrol day. - legislative session be needed to and the em·ironme:1t? The legislative staff .,..;11 double revamp the system? The high court. "It looks like one of the most to about 240 employees. The ses has given the legislature until mid- difficult ever." said House Speaker sion will cost taxpayers about July to act Don Blandford, D-Philpot. $-t-0.000 a day or about S4 million .• Will Gov. Wallace Wilkinson "l agree." said Senate President in its entirety, said Robe.rt Glenn get his long-held "desire to seek Pro Tern John "Eck" Rose, D-Win- Osborne, head of the the legisla another four-year term? chester. ture's public information office. Some legislators have dubbed Blandford and Lt Gvv. Brereton Monday is a scheduled work Wilkinson's attei:npt_ to change the Jone:; as president of th~ Senate :,vill day. but the entire General ASS<;m· Kentucky Constitution and allow officially ga,·el the legislature mt? bly will meet in an unusual semng gubernatorial succession as his "ob- ~ion. They will fulfill the constt- - the Old Capitol in downtown session amendment." tutional requirement that the Gener· Frankfort. The meeting v.ill help But several legislative leaders al ..\55embly begin to meet for u~ to kick off celebrations for Kentucky's say it is a non-issue that is dead on 60 days on the first Tue-::...day art~r 200th binhday in 1992. arrival. the first ~londay in Janu:iry m • Where will money come from e\'en,numbcred ye:i_rs. Legislati\'e committees are ex to pay for big-ticket items like A proposed c:::ilendar for t~t! pected tc st.art considering bills · session c:ills for it to w:nd up ns \\iednesdav. "It's important to grt ~\·ork April 12. The legislature is to the session off to a fast Start recess :-.larch 30 through April 10. because there are ro many impor• and then to rerum co Frankfort on tant issues co be addressed in a ..\ pril 11 for a two-day session to comparatively short time." said leg• consider any bills vetoed by the islarive spokesman Osborne. go\'emor. Today's action in the ~ouse and E\'ery day legislators are m Senate will deal mostly \\1th house session. including Saturdays a~d keeping procedures. A join t_ session Sundays. each ,,ill receive $100 tn is scheduled for a program m mem salary and S,5 in expenses. Bland· ory of Edith Schwab, a ~igh-rank ford and Rose will gee an exrra $25 ing General Assembly staff member a day, while majomy and minority who was killed in April. - A service of the Office of Media Relations- LE_2(1NG_TON HERA_LD-LEADER, LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, JANUARY_2, _1990 New president will signal UK's intentions • • • ' • • ' l __The announcement that Univer ciple that Kentucky will hire only . sity of Kentucky President David the best person available. I Roselle will leave to become the The university needs to search , president of the University of Dela far and wide to find the best person 1 ware was unwelcome news. available. I · It also sets the stage for another The criteria used in 1987 wheri tug-of,_war involving Gov. Wallace Roselle was hired should be re- i Wilkinson. examined, but it is hard to imagine The ·governor says he is not they can be improved much or that ' interested in exerting any influence times have changed so greatly that over the process of selecting a new they should be altered. And most leader for the state's flagship uni Kentuckians agree that the process versity. and the criteria led the committee to But plenty of people at . the an outstanding selection. university- suspicious, perchance, Kentucky has spent much of the because of the governor's battles decade discussing ways to improve : with President Roselle - are not the state's education system. The ' displaying a lot of confidence in the choice of a new president for UK · governor's disavowal. · will signal whether the state is · ' Their confidence, however, needs · ready to move ahead toward the to be buoyed by a selection process next century or remain bogged ! that is careful, immune from the down in petty politics. · . · _I whim of politicians such as the · ·_. The (Covington) l governor, and dedicated to the prin- ! Kentucky Post t . 'CEXINGTON HERACb-LEADEff[EXINGf6N;·i<Y~;-suNDA'i'; DECEMBER 3(1989' l Tql jtiCal ;d,qptrqbi§~tl;)i g;cpn~~r11 at UKl /la~i~-L~~ke •.·· i ; ;'· ·,.,·,:/ .:_:; : : 'Ockeiman and the board vowed .. ·t"Kentucktiy hast'sirufin"ggd lecrfor-ibte;::, C~dler ~added in his wheel- : .. · • · .. -, '· .. 1· d ct · artia' I nati'onal pas genera on a way 0 ch · hi I ed h f th ,raid-Leader education writer . : ,., : 0 con U an unp . treat its universities° differently than 1 • arr, S eyes COS muc o_ . e . -Wben Charles Wethington be- ~ch for a_permanent pres1d_ent t? its"highway departments and pa-' time. He was.roused for two cnti~ une ·interim president of the Uni}eplace DaVld ~oselle,_ the ~mv~1-, troriage politics," Sexton said. .. , ·-,~- V?les. Both li?'es, the trust~ at_Ips. ersi~ of Kentucky last w_eek, some.~_!lf_ Dela~es,?e\V presid. ~nt ., .. , ;;·:The"ildmiriistrationsof UK res: ~1de and_ a_ fii.l:lld who w~eeled him . ·omed that UK had been reduced .. · ~ut Sext~n said, "By saymg th_e,,.d · tsJ h Os Id Oti s· 1Ptary mto the meeting told him how to ' a po_liti_cal spoil . .'; .. ·. '. 'C: c_'.-i,f!I' mterun pres1~ent can be a cand1-t :mc:r Riseie ,;:etty r::uchg:roke !oJe~ . '. --; ·•. '.i'•· .. ; ·,: . ! . ··Others · including Wethington, date for presiden~ .they, to some, that tt f !'ti 1 tr. Th · r•,, It wasn t even subtle. Everyone' ud he wdu!d rise above the coniro- degree, set the tone of.the search for - P~, em 0· po I cabe~h i°.'1 ·; · e.,, in· the rciom could hear him being ' =y an' d prove"·himself an inde- a permanent presiden.t::.:·'""'" '~ .. percepedl~~_nq~ ~- - a _Y.e:t_elprompted ".Bratt, the chairwoman-· r w~ ·· JJ - uld be d'd · ...,~ ..... ·unlik revert · ·· · · · ' ' · endent leader>',,;.;';;·_--,S:~f,;,.J•t: N;.,Vf~_ ..; .8!n I atesar~ e- · ·...... •-'-- ·, electofthe,UKSenate,said._''ltv,,as fHe took a siepin "that direction ly ~Cl go _through th~ .. a:msi~erable ff l~t "".ould!" ·d blotiv ~l~s-1,just outrageous."· ' ·, .. , .,._ ,--... , :<s_'i 1e}morning after _his '··selection I tro?ble and _professiona! .. nsk.'. of ~i~. · ~ mov~- . ~. ,';'. t ·, ~; ._. ~ i\;5."Chandler's ·vote assured. Weth-. ·hen he met ·:with three elected_ yYlng for 1!1:Job ~use it looks o.;:, -, ,. • ·.. .' • ., ·.• ·· :-,-' ... , --:,;,· .11ngton's supporte:3 the mar!llll they 1culty leaders: J- ._.. ·.c,;~_d, _.,,,, .if the .dec1S1on .has. ~'J?retty much ·I ·1:... Robert Bell, who serv~ __und';f needed. Wben the outcome became -:-'"He sald he wants"to·reassure been made,_Sexton ~1d._ ..-' :, ·.-. several Kentuc)cy governors and 1s_ i;lear, some trustees who aid not · ie faculty that he doesn't hold · "·"That person from ·outside wt!!, a former ._cha~ of Kentu~ky want to let a contender for presi rudges, which was a .very ·nice: also ~:'e I? ask_ whether the hand Adv~tes for Higher Education, dent serve in the.-interirn switched live branch," said Carolyn Bratt;a of P_Ohl:cs _is gomg _to be more on wa~ \n the gallery Thursday w_hen .sides.