Kentucky Government and Politics PS 557
Spring 2000
Required Texts and Other Required Readings:
- Penny M. Miller,
Kentucky Politics and Government: Do We Stand United- (Lincoln: University
of Nebraska Press, 1994).
- Malcolm E. Jewell
and Penny M. Miller, The Kentucky Legislature: Two Decades of Change
(Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1988).
- Penny M. Miller
and Malcolm E. Jewell, Political Parties and Primaries in Kentucky (Lexington:
University Press of Kentucky, 1990).
- John Ed Pearce,
Divide and Dissent: Kentucky Politics 1930-1963 (Lexington: University
Press of Kentucky, 1987).
- KY Long-Term Policy
Research Center, CD-ROM - full body of Center's work through December
1998 (supplied by professor)
In addition to the
assignments in the textbooks and the CD-ROM, there are several other required
articles, state publications, and book chapters, all of which will be
made easily available to you. Students should also read state and county
newspapers to stay current with developments.
Course Description
Political Science
557 focuses on contemporary government, politics, and public issues in
Kentucky. Only one state stands where Kentucky stands; and geography and
a historic character shape Kentucky's distinctive political culture. This
is the paradigm border state. An orienting theme in this course is that
of change. Kentucky is a very traditional state in many ways, but the
inertia is disappearing. Kentucky's political institutions -- the legislature,
the executive, the judiciary, and political parties and interest groups
-- have undergone significant changes in the last two decades. The state's
judicial system, long one of the nation's least-altered, has recently
become one of its most innovative; the educational system has undergone
radical legislative reformation, trying to escape its near last-place
national ranking. The legislative branch has gained more independence
and autonomy, and its relationship to the executive branch has undergone
an enormous readjustment. The state has emerged from its past stereotypes
of bourbon, fast horses, burley tobacco, and coal mines. Some things endure,
though -- political corruption, voter apathy, and an aged constitution.
See professor's web site for syllabus and links to other relevant web
sites:
http://www.uky.edu/ArtsScience/PoliSci/Miller
Attendance Policy
Class attendance is
strongly recommended since the exams will be based on the lectures and
assigned readings. Also, 10% of your grade is based on class participation
and required homework assignments. Students are expected to keep pace
with the reading assignments, and be prepared to discuss these readings
in class. If you miss class, contact someone who has attended. Announcements
pertinent to the course will frequently be made in class, and students
will be held responsible for knowing of these announcements. There will
also be several guest speakers who are involved in local or state politics.
Students' Responsibilities
On written assignments,
students shall not plagiarize or cheat. See Section 3.0, Part II, of the
Student Rights and Responsibilities handbook for definitions (page 37).
Students shall use non-discriminatory language in written assignments
as well as in classroom discussions. See the Writing Center for guidelines.
The last day to drop a course without it appearing on a student's transcript
is February 2, 2000. The last day for automatic withdrawals is March 10,
2000.
Course Requirements
The final grade will
consist of four components weighted as follows:
10% --Class Participation,
Required Homework Assignments (graded P+, P, and F) and a RequiredGroup
Project (graded P+, P, and F).
50% --There will be
two midterm tests: Monday, February 14, 2000 and Monday, April 10, 2000.
These exams will cover material presented in lectures and assigned readings.
Each exam will be worth 25% of the final grade.
* A make-up exam will
be given for an exam, only if the student has a legitimate reason for
missing it. University policy will be followed. A student must contact
the professor the morning of the exam.
20% --There will be a research paper on a topic specified by the teacher.
Paper proposals, with one-page abstracts and preliminary bibliographies,
are due on Monday, February 21st. The final papers must be between 12
to15 pages in length, double-spaced, and typewritten. The papers will
be due on Friday, April 14, 2000. Papers must be properly documented,
with an attached bibliography. Students must use a minimum of 10 sources
which have to be approved by the instructor. Late papers will be penalized
one letter grade per day late.
20%--There will be a comprehensive examination on Thursday, May 4, 2000;1:00p.m.-3:00p.m.
Required Reading Assignments
The following schedule
lists the topics of each class meeting, including the dates of the different
examinations. Since there will probably be some schedule revisions during
the semester, you will be held responsible for knowing these changes as
soon as they are announced in class.
I. INTRODUCTION TO
KENTUCKY GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
A. Kentucky in National
Perspective (Jan. 12, 14)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 1 "Character, Divisions, Conflicts, and Change"
Chapter 3 "Kentucky in the Federal System: Dependence
and Resistance"
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Peirce and Hagstrom, "Kentucky: Diverse, Genteel, and Violent,"
in The Book of America, pp. 384-99.
Michael Barone and Grant Ujifusa, "Kentucky," In The Almanac
of American Politics, 1999 (Washington: National Journal, 1999).
B. Kentucky Media
and Politics (Jan. 19)
*****Required library/homework
assignment: Select articles from three different state/county newspapers
(over the past two years) which demonstrate the role of the media in Kentucky
politics. Write a brief analysis of each article, noting the treatment
by each journalist. Your written analysis is due in class on Wednesday,
Jan. 19, 2000; attach copies of the different articles.*****
Suggested Readings:
Marc Landy, "Kentucky," in Alan Rosenthal and Maureen Moakley,
eds.,The Political Life of the American States New York: Praeger, 1984).
Our Towns: Kentucky's Communities After 200 Years (Louisville: Courier-Journal,
1993).
C. Historical Perspectives (Jan. 21, 24)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
2 "The Political Development of Kentucky"
Pearce, TEXT: Intro and Chapters 1-3
Suggested Readings:
Temple Bodley and Samuel M. Wilson, History of Kentucky, 4 vols.(Chicago
and Louisville: S.J. Clarke, 1928).
Steven Channing, Kentucky: A Bicentennial History (New York: W.W. Norton,
1977).
Thomas D. Clark, A History of Kentucky (Lexington: The John Bradford Press,
1960).
Joan Wells Coward, Kentucky in the New Republic: The Process of Constitution
Making (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1979).
Lowell H. Harrison, Kentucky's Road to Statehood (Lexington: University
Press of Kentucky, 1992).
Robert Ireland, Little Kingdoms: The Counties of Kentucky: 1850-1881 (Lexington:
University Press of Kentucky, 1977).
Hamelton Tapp and James C. Klotter, Kentucky: Decades of Discord, 1865-1900
(Frankfort: Kentucky Historical Society, 1977).
II. POLITICAL CULTURE, PUBLIC OPINION AND PARTICIPATION
A. Political Culture
and Public Opinion (Jan. 26, 28)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
4 "Political Culture and Public Opinion"
Pearce, TEXT: Chapter 1
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, The Future Well-Being of Women in
Kentucky
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
*****There is a required
library assignment to complete the identifications of current Kentucky
politicians. The written exercise is due on Friday, Jan. 28, 2000*****
Suggested Readings:
Harry M. Caudill, Night Comes to the Cumberlands (Boston: Little, Brown,
1962).
Daniel J. Elazar, American Federalism: A View from the States, 3d ed.
(New York: Harper and Row, 1984).
Paul E. Fuller, Laura Clay and the Women's Rights Movement (Lexington:University
Press of Kentucky, 1975).
Emma Guy Cromwell, Women in Politics (Louisville: Standard Printing, 1939).
William S. Ward, A Literary History of Kentucky (Knoxville:University
of Tennessee Press, 1988).
George C. Wright, Racial Violence in Kentucky, 1865-1940: Lynchings, Mob
Rule, and "Legal Lynchings" (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University
Press, 1990).
Marion B. Lucas, From Slavery to Segregation, 1760-1891 (Frankfort:Kentucky
Historical Society, 1993).
George C. Wright, In Pursuit of Equality, 1890-1980 (Frankfort: Kentucky
Historical Society, 1993).
B. Citizen Input
and Interest Groups (Jan. 31, Feb.2)
Jewell-Miller, TEXT, Ch. 10
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 9 "Political Parties and Interest Groups"
Chapter 10 "Electoral
Politics"
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Malcolm E. Jewell and Penny M. Miller, "Interest Groups in Kentucky:Adapting
to the Independent Legislature," in Ronald J. Hrebrenar and Clive
S. Thomas, eds., Interest Group Politics in the Southern States (Tuscaloosa:
University of Alabama Press, 1992).
Larry J. Sabato, PAC Power (New York: W.W. Norton, 1985).
III. POLITICAL PARTIES AND ELECTIONS (Feb. 4, 7, 9, 11)
Miller and Jewell,
TEXT (entire book)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 9 "Political Parties and Interest Groups"
Chapter 10 "Electoral Politics"
Pearce, TEXT: Chapters 2-17
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Earl Black and Merle Black, Politics and Society in the South (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1987).
V.O. Key, Southern Politics in State and Nation (New York: Random House,
1949).
Alexander P. Lamas, The Two-Party South (New York: Oxford University Press,
1984).
Malcolm E. Jewell and Everett W. Cunningham, Kentucky Politics (Lexington:
University of Kentucky Press, 1968).
Larry J. Sabato ed. Campaigns and Elections (Glenview, Ill.: Scott, Foresman/Little,
Brown, 1989).
Frank J. Sorauf, Inside Campaign Finance: Myths and Realities (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1992).
*** FIRST MIDTERM
EXAMINATION Monday, February 14, 2000
IV. THE LEGISLATURE AND THE EXECUTIVE
A.The Changing Kentucky
Legislature (Feb. 16, 18, 21, 23, 25)
Jewell and Miller,
TEXT: Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 6 "Resurgence of the Kentucky Legislature"
Pearce, TEXT: Chapters 2 through 17
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Paper proposals, with
one-page abstracts and preliminary bibliographies, are due on Monday,
February 21st.
Suggested Readings:
LRC, Issues Confronting 1998 General Assembly
LRC, Bill Drafting Manual
Richard Fenno, Home Style: House Members in Their Districts (Boston: Little,
Brown, 1978).Malcolm E. Jewell and Samuel C. Patterson, The Legislative
Process in the United States, 4th ed. (New York: Random House, 1986).
Alan Rosenthal, Governors and Legislatures: Contending Powers (Washington:
Congressional Quarterly Press, 1990).
Alan Rosenthal, Legislative Life (New York: Harper and Row, 1981).
B. The Role of the
Governor and the Bureaucracy (Feb. 28, Mar. 1, 3, 6)
Jewell and Miller,
TEXT: Chapter 9
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 7 "The Governor and the Executive Branch"
Pearce, TEXT: Chapters 4 through Epilogue
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Thad L. Beyle, ed. Governors and Hard Times (Washington: Congressional
Quarterly Press, 1992).
Governor's Commission on Quality and Efficiency, Wake-up Call for KY
Lowell H. Harrison, ed. Kentucky Governors: 1791-1985 (Lexington:University
Press of Kentucky, 1985).
KY Cabinet for Workforce Devp, Kentucky's Workforce: Preparing for 21st
Century
LRC, Executive Branch of Kentucky State Government
LRC, Handbook for Gubernatorial Transition
LRC, Workforce Training Report
Alan Rosenthal, Governors and Legislatures: Contending Powers (Washington:
Congressional Quarterly Press, 1990).
V. PUBLIC ISSUES AND CONTROVERSIES
A. Education (Mar.
8, 10, 20)
LRC, A Guide to the
Kentucky Education Reform Act of 1990
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 12 "Contemporary Policy Issues"
Lexington Herald Leader series, "Cheating Our Children," November-December
1989
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, KY's Teachers:Charting a Course for
KERA......
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Courier-Journal series, "Kentucky Schools at a Crossroads,"
August-December, 1989
Betty Steffy, The Kentucky Education Reform: Lessons from America (Lancaster,
PA.: Technomic Publishing, 1993).
Chester Finn, We Must take Charge (New York: Free Press, 1991).
Edward Fiske, Smart Kids, Smart Schools (New York: Simon and Schuster,
1991).
*****There is no class
on Friday, Mar. 10th.; you have a required library/homework assignment
which is due on Monday, Mar. 20th. Using state newspapers, assess the
current status of education reform in Kentucky (250-300 words). Document
your analysis.*****
B. Economic Development
(Mar. 22, 24)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
12 "Contemporary Policy Issues"
Chapter 15 "Continuing Traditions and Fundamental
Challenges"
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, Entrepreneurs and Small Business
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
David Gelsanliter, Jump Start: Japan Comes to the Heartland (New York:
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1990).
Ky Long-Term Policy Research Center, Farms, Factories & Free Trade
Bruce A. Williams, "Regulation and Economic Development," in
Gray, Jacob, and Albritton, Politics in the American States, 5th ed. (Glenview:
Scott, Foresman/Little, Brown, 1990).
Ernest J. Yanarella and William C. Green, eds., The Politics of Industrial
Recruitment: Japanese Automobile Investment and Economic Development in
the American States (New York : Greenwood Press, 1990).
C. Taxation and Budgets (Mar. 27)
Jewell and Miller,
TEXT: Chapter 6
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 11 "Taxing and Spending, Kentucky-Style"
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, $5.8 Billion and Change
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Merl Hackbart, "Kentucky
Budgeting in Transition:Adjustments and Innovations," in Ed Clynch
and Thomas Lauth, eds., Budgeting in the American States (New York: Greenwood
Press, 1988).
Susan B. Hansen, "The Politics of State Taxing and Spending,"
in Gray, Jacob, and Albritton, Politics in the American States, 5th ed.
(Glenview: Scott, Foresman/Little, Brown, 1990).
Ky Long-Term Policy Research Center, Choosing Prosperity
Ky Long-Term Policy Research Center, The Budget Game
Group Project: Presentations
on Wednesday March 29th and Friday, March 31st
D. Environment, Coal and Water (Apr. 3)
Miller, TEXT, Chapter
12 "Contemporary Policy Issues"
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, Forecasting KY's Environmental Futures
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Courier-Journal series, "In the Dumps -- Kentucky Grapples with the
Garbage Crisis, January 1991.
Courier-Journal series, "Is Coal All There Is-," November 1989.
Caudill, Night Comes to the Cumberlands.
Environmental Quality Commission, State of Kentucky's Environment: A Report
of Progress and Problems, 1992.
LRC, Federal Acid Rain Legislation: Its Effect on Kentucky, 1992.
E. Health-Care and Medicaid, Welfare Reform (Apr. 5, 7)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
15 "Continuing Traditions and Fundamental
Challenges"
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, What Next for Kentucky Health Care-
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Robert B. Albritton, "Social Services: Welfare and Health,"
in Gray, Jacob, and Albritton, Politics in the American States, 5th ed.
(Glenview: Scott, Foresman/Little, Brown, 1990).
Lexington Herald-Leader series, "Code Blue: Crisis in Kentucky Health
Care, April-May 1993.
LRC, Kentucky Medical Assistance Program
*** SECOND MIDTERM EXAMINATION Monday, April 10, 2000
VI. THE CONSTITUTION AND THE JUDICIARY
A. The Courts and
Judicial Reform (Apr. 12, 14)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
8 "The Progressive Judicial System"
A Citizen's Guide to Kentucky's Courts: Justice in Our Commonwealth
Suggested Readings:
Herbert Jacob, "Courts: The Least Visible Branch," in Gray,
Jacob, and Albritton, Politics in the American States, 5th ed. (Glenview:
Scott, Foresman/Little, Brown, 1990).
William C. Richardson, An Administrative History of Kentucky Courts to
1850 (Frankfort: Kentucky Department for Libraries and Archives 1983).
*** RESEARCH PAPER
DUE Friday, April 14, 2000
B. Issues of Constitutional
Revision (Apr. 17, 19)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
5 "Kentucky's Constitutions and Constitution Making"
LRC, A Citizen's Guide to the Kentucky Constitution
Suggested Readings:
Joan W. Coward, Kentucky in the New Republic.
Richard P. Dietzman, "The Four Constitutions of Kentucky," Kentucky
Law Journal 15 (January 1927).
VII. LOCAL GOVERNMENT
IN KENTUCKY -- CITIES, COUNTIES, ADDS
(Apr. 21, 24, 26)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
13 "Local Government: the Centrifugal Forces"
Miller, TEXT: Chapter 14 "Local Government: the Centripetal Forces"
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
Suggested Readings:
Donald F. Harker and Elizabeth Ungar Natter, Beyond Voting: A Citizen's
Guide to Participating in Local Government (Berea:MACED, 1991).
Robert Ireland, Little Kingdoms: The Counties of Kentucky, 1850-1891.
KY League of Cities, State of the Cities 1993, 1993.
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, "New Traditions -- How Rural
Kentucky Can Thrive in 21st Century"
LRC, Duties of Elected County Officials
LRC, Kentucky Municipal Statutory Law
LRC, County Government in Kentucky
W.E. Lyons, The Politics of City-County Merger (Lexington: University
Press of Kentucky, 1977).
Allen J. Share, Cities in the Commonwealth: Two Centuries of Urban Life
In Kentucky (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1982).
VIII. CONCLUSION (Apr.
28)
Miller, TEXT: Chapter
15 "Continuing Traditions and Fundamental Challenges" KY Long-Term
Policy Research Center, The Leadership Challenge Ahead
KY Long-Term Policy Research Center, Visioning Kentucky's Future
Relevant articles on KY Long-Term Policy Research Center's CD-ROM
*** FINAL EXAMINATION:
Thursday, May 4, 2000, 1:00pm.-3:00p.m.
See professor's web
site for syllabus and links to other relevant web sites:
http://www.uky.edu/ArtsScience/PoliSci/Miller
SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR RESEARCH PROJECT : PAPER DUE FRIDAY, APRIL 14TH
The Clash of Mountain,
Rural, and Urban Cultures in Kentucky
A Descriptive Analysis of One of the 1995 Gubernatorial Primary Campaigns
A Descriptive Analysis of One of the Other 1995 Statewide Campaigns
A Descriptive Analysis of the 1995 Gubernatorial General Election
A Descriptive Analysis of the 1999 Gubernatorial General Election
Kentucky in the South: A Part and Apart
Kentucky as a Beneficiary State from the Federal "Hand-to-Mouth"
Programs
Kentucky's Involvement in the Appalachian Regional Commission
The Role of Blacks in Kentucky Politics
The Role of Women in Kentucky Politics
Legislative-Gubernatorial Relations in the 1998 General Assembly
Assessing Governor Brereton Jones's Four Years in Office
An Analysis of a Particular Issue in the 1998 General Assembly
The 1996 Special Session on Workmen's Compensation
The 1993 Special Session on Legislative Ethics
The Role of Money in the 1995 Gubernatorial Contests
The Effects of Campaign Finance Reform in the 1995 Races
The Role of Interest Groups in the 1997 Health-Care Reform Special Session
BOPTROT and Its Aftermath
Why Are There So Few Women in the Kentucky General Assembly-
The Current Health of the Kentucky Republican Party
The Current Health of the Kentucky Democratic Party
Recent Voter Turnout in Kentucky
The 1998 Congressional Races in Kentucky
A Descriptive Analysis of One of the 1998 Congressional Campaigns
State Legislative Races in 1998
A Descriptive Analysis of One of the 1998 State Legislative Campaigns
The 1996 U.S. Senate Race in Kentucky
The 1998 U.S. Senate Race in Kentucky
The Rise of New Interest Groups and PACs
The Impact of Geography on Public Opinion
The Role of the Media in Kentucky Politics
Battles for House and Senate Leadership Positions in 1997
Electoral Abuses in Kentucky, 1988-1999
Gubernatorial Succession and Its Initial Impact
Republican Takeover of the State Senate in 1999
The Current Politics of Education Reform in Kentucky
The Role of the Judiciary in Education Reform
The Power of Local School Superintendents
Nepotism and Cronyism in Local School Districts
Is Education Reform Working?
The Politics of Higher Education in Kentucky
The Reorganization of the State Economic Development Apparatus
Kentucky's Newspapers and Economic Development Initiatives
The Impact of Toyota on Kentucky's Economy
The Role of the Governor in Economic Development Initiatives
The Plight of Kentucky's Finances
The 1998 General Assembly Budget Battles
The Current Health of the Coal Industry in Kentucky
The Health-Care Reform Battles in 1993-1994, 1996, 1997, and 1998
The Politics of Kentucky's Environment
The Current Health of Kentucky's Water Resources
The Plight of Coal Miners in Eastern Kentucky
The Politics of Burley Tobacco in Kentucky
The Politics of Amending Kentucky's Constitution
Current Judicial "Gymnastics" in Kentucky
The 1993 Race for Eastern Kentucky's Supreme Court Seat
Why Are There So Few Female Judges in Kentucky?
The 1994 Battle Over the New Payroll Tax in Lexington
The 1998 Municipal Races
The 1998 County Races
The Leadership Styles of Mayors Pam Miller and David Armstrong
The Ascendancy of Northern Kentucky in Economic Development
The Politics of Kentucky's ADDs
The Power of Eastern Kentucky County Judge-Executives
Recent City-County Merger Failures
Battles for Power in Kentucky's Courthouses
The Politics of Special Districts
The Financial Distress of Kentucky's Cities
Western Kentucky's Growing Poultry Industry
The Political Power of the Golden Triangle
The Kentucky Lottery Commission Under Attack
The End of Local Political Corruption in Kentucky?
The Politics of Creating Local Government Ethics Ordinances
***Another option
for your paper would be to interview at least four Kentucky legislators,
bureaucrats, and/or elected statewide officials and then present a comparative
analysis.***
Paper proposals, with
one-page abstracts and preliminary bibliographies, are due on Monday,
February 21st. The final papers must be between 12 to15 pages in length,
double-spaced, and typewritten. The final papers will be due on Friday,
April 14, 2000. Papers must be properly documented, with an attached bibliography.
Students must use a minimum of 10 sources which have to be approved by
the instructor. Late papers will be penalized one letter grade per day
late.
Homework written exercise -- due Friday, January 28, 2000
Name _______________________________
S.S. # _______________________________
Provide the current
or recent national, state, or local governmental or political party position
held by the following Kentuckians:
1. Paul Patton -
2. Pam Miller -
3. Rocky Adkins -
4. Eleanor Jordan -
5. Jesse Crenshaw -
6. Marshall Long -
7. Steve Henry -
8. Arnold Simpson -
9. Crit Luallen -
10. Judi Patton -
11. Jerry Abramson -
12. Kathy Stein -
13. Mary Lou Marzian -
14. Brereton Jones -
15. David Karem -
16. Scotty Baesler -
17. Ernesto Scorsone -
18. Ann Northup -
19. Pete Worthington -
20. Janet Stumbo -
21. Greg Stumbo -
22. Grady Stumbo -
23. Susan Johns -
24. Ruth Ann Palumbo -
25. Charles Ellinger -
26. Julie Rose -
27. Ellen Williams -
28. Rebecca Jackson -
29. Joni Jenkins -
30. Tom Buford -
31. Steve Nunn -
32. Sara Combs -
33. Dan Kelly -
34. Dottie Sims -
35. Mitch McConnell -
36. Ben Chandler -
37. John Y. Brown III -
38. Viola Miller -
39. Jim Bunning -
40. Gene Strong -
41. Ron Lewis -
42. Robin Webb -
43. Wendell Ford -
44. Skipper Martin - -
45. Hal Rogers -
46. Ed Whitfield -
47. Benny Ray Bailey -
48. Larry Forgy -
49. David Armstrong -
50. Robert Stephens -
52. Jonathan Miller -
53. Joseph Lambert -
54. Mary Noble -
55. Julia Tackett -
56.Bob Damron -
57. Gerald Neal -
58. Lindy Casebier -
59. Isabel Yates -
60. Ken Lucas -
61. Nickie Patton -
62. Brett Guthrie -
63. Alice Forgy Kerr -
64. Larry Saunders -
65. Steve Nunn -
66. David Williams -
67. Susan Westrom -
68. David Stevens -
69. Ed Hatchett -
70. Danny Ford -
71. Stan Cave -
72. Elizabeth Tori -
73. Ernie Fletcher -
74. Scott Crosbie -
75. Barbara Colter -
See professor's web
site for syllabus and links to other relevant web sites:
http://www.uky.edu/ArtsScience/PoliSci/Miller
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