xt76q52fb50q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt76q52fb50q/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660113  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 13, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 13, 1966 1966 2015 true xt76q52fb50q section xt76q52fb50q Inside Today s Kernel
Artist Frederic

T hurst opens a showUK Sunday: Poge Two.
Late registrants missed the first day
of dosses: Page Three.
Editor discusses Western State College: Page Four.
Freshman fraternity rush has opened:
Poge Six.

ing

Vol. LVI1, No.

5)

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY THURSDAY, JAN.

Twelve Pages

13, 19G(i

remain unanswered in the
ot
recent publications controversy
Western: Poge Eight.
Questions

at

Cliff Berger changes his style for the
best: Poge Ten.
Fleven candidates have been named
for Woodrow Wilson fellowships: Poge
Eleven.

Dr. Oswald Mum On State Budget

By JOHN ZEII
Kernel News Editor
University President John W.
Oswald today reserved comment
on Wednesday's House passage
of Gov. Edward T. Breathitt's
$2 billion state budget until after
the Senate takes final action on
the bill.
The House of Representatives
early Wednesday afternoon unanimously passed the record request without amendment. The
measure went promptly to the
Senate, where it was reported
favorably alter only five minutes
of committee discussion. It is set
for a final vote Friday morning.
Dr. Oswald desires to wait
until after Senate action before
making a statement on the budget
and its funds earmarked for the

not want ot imply it was getting
inadequate support from the Leg-

University, Vice President for
University Relations Glen wood
Creech, told the Kernel.
Funds budgeted for UK are
nearly $10 million less than the
figure requested.
A revised budget distributing
the funds appropriated will be
Dr.
completed by
Creech said. The orignal Nov.
22 request was for $93,710,400
and was determined by the
"financial requirements of program needs and objectives," he
said.
For the new budget, the source
said, priorities will have to be
reestablished and the required
to fit the
funds readjusted
Governor's allocation.
Dr. Creech emphasized that
the University administration did

J

Although Gov. Breathitt's
budget passed the House unanimously and unamended, the
action was not without expression of dissatisfaction with the
measure.
Republican floor leader James
M. Caldw ell, Louisv ille, was prepared to offer an amendment to
t,
Increase the teacher salary
but his attempt was
squelched when Majority Leader
John Y. Brown, Lexington, moved
the previous question.

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LRC Studies Tuition Hike
At UK; Would Raise Fees

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islature. He made the statement
while discussing Dr. Oswald's
desire to delay comment on the
budget until alter final passage.

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For Nonresident Students

Tuition costs for nonresident
students attending Kentucky's
institutions of higher learning
are now under study by the Legislative Research Commission.
The commission hopes to submit its findings to the 1966 legislature. Recently the LRC recommended that nonresident tuition
at State colleges be increased.
However, the commission said
that it felt the University charges
"appear resonable."

Despite this recommendation
by the LRC, the House of Representatives voted 56-- 0 in favor of
increasing tuition fees for nonresidents, not only at the state's
other five schools, but also at UK.
This will affect about 20 percent of the University's student
body. Tuitions for
students in Kentucky is considered to be lower than in most
other state colleges and
te

The proposed change would
hike the cost between in and
tuition to approximately
$440. This w ill be $9 over what
bordering Ohio charges.
Dr. Charles Elton, UK registrar, said that he did not think the
proposed increase would cut
enrollment.
down on

te

te

te

Hunt Assumes Duties
Of Managing Editor;
Other Changes Made
Terence P. Hunt, junior journalism major irom Bellevue, has
been appointed managing editor
of the Kernel, it was announced
today.
Hunt's appointment was one
five major Kernel staff changes
of
announced by Editor-in-ChiWalter Grant. The appointments
are effective immediately.
William Knapp, freshman law
student, will serve as advertising
manager during the spring semester. John Zeh, sophomore
journalism major from Erlanger,
was appointed news editor, and
Kenneth Creen, senior journalism
major from Winchester, will serve
as associate news editor.

TERENCE P. HUNT

te

students."
"There must be a better way

Carolyn Williams, senior journalism from Covington, will serve
as feature editor during the spring
semester.
Hunt replaces Kenneth Hos-kinof Louisv ille, w ho resigned.
As managing editor, he will coordinate the various editorial departments.
A second-yea- r
member of the
Kernel staff, Hunt has served as
staff w riter and assistant managing editor. Last summer, he
was employed as an intern reporter by the Cincinnati Post and
Times Star, and he will serve in
that capacity again this summer.
Knapp, of Dry Ridge, replaces
Tom Finnic, who has completed
work for his master's degree. A
1965 UK graduate, Knapp has
served as a Kernel sports writer.
Zeh, who served as an intern
reporter for the Kentucky Post
and Tiiiics Star last summer, w ill
head the new s staff. He has served
as photographer and staff w riter.
veteran of
Green, a four-yea- r
the Kernel staff, served as summer
editor last year. He w as associate
editor during the fall semester.
s,

Miss Williams was an intern
for
the Cincinnati
reporter
Enquirer last summer and now
serves as UK correspondent for
the newspaper.

--

.

to raise money than raising
Dr. Elton
college tuition,"
added.
Entrance requirements for UK
were recently revised to admit
only those students whose academic records showed probable
success at the University. Since
the new system is more flexible
it has attracted a number of
applicants, Dr. Elton said.

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"Two things bring students
from other states tuition and
entrance requirements. A raise in
tuition will not hurt
applications," he said. "We
would just get the wealthier

'i'

1

Sororities Plan Rush
Spring semester rush for UK's
sororities begins tomorrow and
extends through Jan. 25.
All entering freshmen and all
transfer women admitted to the
University in good standing are
eligible for rush. Women previously attending the University
at least one semester must have
2.0 cumulative standing and a
2.0 for the previous semester.
Rushees may register for
spring rush in the Office of the
14

Dean of Women. Although any
student is eligible for rush,
adviser, Mrs. Betty Jo
Palmer, suggests it is to the
rushees' advantage to register.
Pan-hellen-

rush
Following the
period will be one Bid Day on
which all sororities issue invitations for membership to the
rushees. The rushees sign their
preference cards on Bid Day,
Ian. 26.
two-wee-

k

Indian Students To Hold
Shastri Service Tonight

University students and faculty members from
India will gather tonight in a memorial service
to pay tribute to their late prime minister, L;d
Bahadur Shastri.
Funeral services were conducted yesterday in
New Delhi for Shastri, 61, who died Monday of
a heart attack. His death oceured in Tashkent,
Russia, shortly alter he had signed a peace agreement with Pakistan's President Mohamned A ub
Khan.
Immediately alter his death was announced,
Cularilal Xanda w as named acting prime minister
of India. Shastri's formal successor will be chosen
by general election.
United States officials attending the funeral
services included Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey, Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and
former ambassadors to India Sen. John Sherman
Cooper and John Kenneth Calbraith.
Dr. Potu N. Rao, physiology instructor at the

Medical Center, announced the service will be
held at 7:30 p.m. in Room 245 of the Student
Center; public is invited to attend.
The program will open with the India national
anthem, followed bv a short eulogv delivered bv
Dr. A. D. Albright, executive vice president of
the University.
Covind Rhaduspur, graduate student in agriculture economics, w ill give a Minimal v of ShaMi i's
life. A resolution ol condolence, which is to be
sent to Shastri's family, will be read to the congregation.
The ceremony will conclude with two minutes
of silence to the memory ol the prime minister.
Dr. Rao said the Indian students at the University all feel the shock fl Shastri's death.
"It came at a critical time when he was at
the pinnacle of his popularity and when the people
of India had begun to accept him as a leader.
The whole nation was behind him," he said.

* -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,
Thursday, Jan.

2

13, 1900.

I look lie vie iv

The Ambassador' Probes
Modern Man's Problems

ft

By MAKCAKET

1

well-define-

rr

Frederic Thursz, UK associate professor of art, is
shown in the UK Fine Arts Gallery where his
current show of paintings and collages is being
exhibited. The works were done both at UK and
while Thursz was on a sabbatical leave in France

and Israel during 1964 and 1965. A special opening
of the show will be held for UK students and
faculty Sunday, Jan. 16, from 2 to 6 p.m. in the
Fine Arts Gallery.
Kernel Photo by Margaret Bailey

Paintings Don't Just Hang There

Thursz Art Opening Set Sunday
Tbe paintings and. collates
of Frederic Thursz do not merer)
hang from the walls or dangle
from the ceiling of the UK Fine
Arts Caller). They fairly shout
with vibrant color, demand attention with their size and
and challenge the
strength,
viewer with abstract symbolism.
A special
opening of the major
exhibit will be held for UK Students and faculty on Sunday,
Jan. 16, from 2 to 6 p.m. in the
Fine Arts Gallery. The formal
opening for Kentucky residents
took plate last Sunday.
Working on a UK Research
Fund grant, Thursz completed
the 34 art works during 1904
and 1905 here and on a sabbatical leave in France and Israel.
The UK associate professor
developed a new medium for
his collages and has added a
"new direction" to his ahead)
highly respected career in the
world of the attrac t.
Thursz choM? to enter the
world of the French svmbolists
as an inspirational climate for
his new
s
and
dedicated the exhibition to conPerse.
temporary joet Saint-Joh'hose epic poem "Amers" or
"Seamarks
forms the vvmbolic
basis for these works.
One oi the most striking
m this group is
I he Sea on its
Page" from
Ferse's line "The Sea on its page
like a sacred litam." Thursz's
use of vertical flividinglines gives
the appearance of a horizontal
scroll
which the viewer may
"read" as theea-litan- )
.
Thursz's new collage technique demonstrated in these
paintings utilizes polymerized oil
as a binding element which also
causes the collages to have a
great degree of "toughness."
The exhibit actually comprises
two subjective areas for Thursz.
In addition to the works on the
sea, he has included his paintings
after Rembrandt's "The Jewish
Bride." These paintings utilize
round shapes and vast expanses
of warm color to symbolize the
bride.
of-a-

"The small gold strip in these

paintings grows and gravitates
to the center and becomes the
sex of the bride," Thursz commented. "All I can do now, after
Rembrandt, is strain the form
through tradition and contemporary idioms."
Thursz is presently engaged in
what he calls a "total revaluation of Woman as the Sea."
"I'm doing big circular paintings trying to create a new geometry by doing things to the
canvas," he explained.
This new exhibit marks the
first showing in three years by
Thursz. but he is also currently
exhibiting in Zurich, Switzerland
and at the Jefferson Place Gallery in Washington, D.C., which
he helped to found.
Thursz was honored in May
for making the most significant
contribution to the intellectual
life of the campus by the Delta
Epsilon Upsilon English honor-a- r
for liis work in personally

collage-painting-

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Station, University ol Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 40506. Second-clapoitige paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published live times weekly during
the fcciiool year except during holiday
and exam periods, and weekly
during
tUe fcuirnner fcernester.
Published for Ue tudenU of the
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Ober t, chairman and Linda prof. Paul
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the plot of the story and the of moral conviction and
His drama is the
moral and political dilemma
drama of man in the 20th Cenfacing Arnberley. The "cuckoo"
tury.
is Vietnamese President-dictato- r
The character of Cung effecPhung Van Cung, a Catholic of
-- an honorable
tively reveals the great concern
high principles
man and a stubborn man. He of the Asian mind with "saving
rules a country menaced from face." His stubborn determinwithout by conquest and divided ation and courage present a
from within by the civil strife vivid contrast to the Western
philosophy of adapting character
between the Catholics and Budto circumstance.
dhists.
The characters and events of
Cung's attempts to rid the
Buddhist pagodas of subversive the book are fictitious. But the
agents had alienated him from his complexities and problems of
people. "All I had to do, to rally both the political and human
the country and win the war, was situation are real. Morris West
to have the Cenerals chop off has
undoubtedly produced
another book slated for a
"
his head," says Amherley.
future.
And yet, to enter into a sub"The Ambassador" is being
versive plot with the shifty South
Vietnamese generals would make published by William Morrow &
Amherley a traitor to Cung who Company.

This weekend rent a new compacFCorvair from Hert- zHertz special low weekend rates are easy on your wallet!

college-

The Kentucky Kernel
The

assembling the "Craphics 1965"
centennial art show in France.
Although critics have lauded
Thursz's great sensitivity and
originality of color sense, he is
well aware of the controversial
nature of the abstract form.
While speaking to the UK
Humanities Club four years ago,
Thursz said, "After 50 years,
the role of art as pure painting
instead of imitation is controversial to the artist and public.
Abstract art will be challenged
in the same manner that imitative art was questioned."
But Thursz' current exhibit
has shown him w
to
meet the challenge to his chosen
medium with the boldness and
growing vigor of his "new directions."
The exhibit will close on Feb.
6. The Fine Arts Gallery is open
from noon to 4 p.m. Monday
through Friday, from 10 a.m. to
3 p.m. Saturday, and from 3 to
5 p.m. Sunday.

Want to get away from it all?

BAILEY

Kernel Arts Editor
Is a book both timely and
"The Ambassador" by Morris West
amid the complexities and confusions of the war in
timeless. Set
of man's search for himself and
Vietnam it tells the et' Miil story
to the r.iivcrse
his relationship
had treated him with honesty and
"What will yon do when they
would lead most surely to Cung's
kill the cuckoo.'
ask you to
assassination.
U.S.
Muso Soscki had asked
The character of Amherley is
Ambassador Max Atnherley in the
d
and convincingly
symbolic dialogue of the Zen
before Amherley left to complex. He is a man of maturmondo
take up his new jKist in Vietnam. ity and political sophistication
who still lacks the inner strength
Upon this question revolves

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'66 collec- tinn nf f
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unparaueiea in scope.
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shoes,
and accessories. You won'tlingerie, to miss
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spring collection. Come
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house.

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jmnm

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Jan.

13,

19GG-

-3

Delay Could Have Been Avoided

Late Registrants Miss First Day
By FRANK BROWNING
From 200 to 300
Univmity
st iiU-iis (lid not
)Vu classes
yesterday. Instead, tlicy went

s
that about
bad done nothing
three-fourth-

of them

about

As it approached mid-mo- i
ning
through "late registration."
the lines grew longer and the
These were students who did temperature remained cold.
not no through the regularly
Once inside the narrow baseschedided
class
registration ment hallway of the AdministraJan.
tion Annex, students went to one
They were waiting at the old of a half dozen tables where they
steps at the back of the Admin- were given the necessary schedule
istration Annex before 8 a.m. cards.
yesterday and except for a very
The next step in the process
few, very short breaks they kept
was going out on campus to
coming until the University
closed at 5 p.m.
was going out on campus to inNearly all oi late registration structors or departments' getting
could have been avoided, workers class tickets from them.
n
Class tickets, in addition to
said, had students used
and regular registration schedule cards, bad to be taken
to the offices of the academic
Saturday through Tuesday.
Most of those w ho were forced deans for approval and finally
to find classes yesterday were brought back to registration headrcadmission students, new and quarters in the Annex for filing
transfer students, those who and the final okay.
failed to preregister, and those
For the most part, the process
who had complete or uncomplete was long, tiring, and, as one stuschedules but w ho did not report dent put it, "hard on the legs
on the assigned day to complete and feet."
their class signup.
Perhaps the most frustrating
Dean of Admissions Charles aspect of it all was the last trip
back to the Administration Annex
F. Elton said that UK President John Oswald, concerned to deposit all the IBM cards.
Outside and down the steps
when he noticed students lined
up past his office window, called into the building the temperature
to ask the registrar if he could was never more than in the low
do something to alleviate the forties. Inside conditions were
crowded. Each student 's card had
problem.
Dr. Elton said he went out to to be examined before he could
talk to the students but found be sent to the proper table.
prereg-istratio-

ft

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KENTUCKY
TYPEWRITER

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was graduate students, Dean
Elton said.
Although graduate students
w ere able to preregister in Nov ember, onlv (!) per cent of the
Graduate School did, the lowest
percentage of an college partic
pating in preregistration.
Percentages ol students in
other colleges vv hodid preregister
were: Arts and Sc iences, S.j; Agriculture, 92; Engineering,; Education. 99; and Commerce, S3.

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An unidentified

student, loaded with newly bought books, joins in
the maddness of the opening of a new semester.

Founders' Day Ball
Planned For Feb. 19
This year's University Founders' Day Ball is planned for Feb.
19. A
committee, appointed by UK President John
NY.
Oswald, is working on the
event.
The committee, composed of
students, faculty members, and
alumni, is headed by Centennial
Coordinator, Dr. J.W.Patterson.
Cochairmcn arc Bob Bostick,
a student, Dr. James Little, a
faculty member, and Mrs. Joe
F. Morris, an alumna.
The ball will be held from
10:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. in the
Student ('enter and will be the
opening event of Founders' Week,
which will include Founders'
Day activities on Feb. 22 and
a four-nigCuignol Theatre production.
"This ) ear's ball is expected
to be much like the Centennial
Grand Bal j of last February w Inch
opened the Centennial jearV activities," Dr. Patterson said.
Other student members of the
committee are Richard Arena,
Robert Ecdhettcr, Bill Hamilton,

from

U

Jack I.) ne. Sarah Prather, Cail
Mav cr, Mary V. Dean, Nancy
Fitch, Susan Pillans, Richard
Wade, Dannv Sussman, (alloc k
Beals, Kenneth Biandenburgh,
and Sue Price.
1

Other faculty members are
Miss Jane Batcbeldcr, Col. and
Mrs. James P. Alcorn, Mr. and
Mrs. John Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs.
Cilbert Kingsbury, Dr. and Mrs.
Thomas Browcr, Dr. and Mrs.
Daniel Weiss, Dean Doris Seward, Dr. and Mrs. Blaine Parker,
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Butwell,
and Dr. and Mrs. Richard Miller.
Other alumni on the committee are Mr. and Mrs. Courtney
Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Guy A.
Huguelet Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Harkness Edwards, Elliot Peel.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Biovvnell
Combs Jr.. Mrs. R.W. Mcllvaiu,
Mr. ajid Mrs. Lawrence Jenkins,
Mr. and Mrs! Thomas Adams,
Mr. and Mrs. William Embry,
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Bell, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank McVey Jr., and
Joe F. Morris. .

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Since there was room onlv lor
one line, all students bad to wail
together those with classlickets
and those without, transfer students and those seeking rcadmission, freshmen here lor the first
time and retired men and women
here on Donovan fellowships.
But they all had one thing in
common. The) wanted to register
and leave.
Students pushing in lines,
cutting in front of one another
and tugging on the outside door
as registration workers closed to
go to lunch inspired Miss Sarah
Utterback to exclaim that these
were "the rudest students' she
had ever worked with.
One of the largest groups
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* Witir Ami

Western's Remedy
Western Kentucky State College
lias made light punishment of three
suspended students by allowing
them to return next semester, but
the soft pedaling of disciplinary
action cannot erase Western's error
in reprimanding the students in the
first place.

The Instant
Centennial
Recently two Student Centennial Committee members were
given six weeks notice to come up
with a "major cultural event" for
the Founders' Day weekend.
In December, President Oswald
announced that, among the other
events, there would be another
University grand ball and that a
committee would be appointed
"soon" to plan the event.
Administration officials now are
working, secretly at top speed, to
a Founders' Day Convo; secure
cation speaker who should have
been booked a year ago.
And the unenviable committee
has begun constructing the ball,
starting about five months late.
examSuch are
ples of Centennial planning
always characterized by the inevitable aura of haste.
Too many of the Centennial
events are, and show through to
be, the hastily-tacketogether work
of driving, but vastly overburdened
individuals. Although the Centennial administration has a large
budget and a large office staff,
it frequently seems shortsighted
in its planning.
The prospect of two students
preparing in a scant few weeks
something no more clearly described
than a "major cultural event" is
ludicrous, but such situations are
not unusual in the world of Centennial.
Several events have been noticeable exceptions from the last
ditch efforts. The Conference on
Women and last year's visit by
Norman Thomas are two. But
in both cases success was achieved
by advanced planning by individual
organizers rather than any major
contribution from Centennial Central.
We hope that when the University plans its next Centennial,
it will begin planning an abbreviated celebration much more in
advance and with considerably
more forethought.
d

Too often in American universities, the other side of the coin
the student's right to the same
unshackled inquiry into all subjects, is ignored. The learned,
paternal professor may speak his
mind as he chooses, but the immature student needs "guidance"
and "imposed restraint," many
persons believe.
But such ideas do not fit into
the concept of the modern university as a community of scholars,
with both instructors and students
contributing to the broad interchange of ideas and experience.
The student is not entirely a
parasite, sucking bits of learning
from the teacher, but often is an
inspiration for motivation and
greater learning to the instructors.
Just as better teachers can produce better students, so can better
students lead to better teachers.
For this interchange to reach
its greatest benefit, however, all
participants must share the same
freedom to discuss openly without
fear of reprisal.
The American Association of
University Professors recognizes,
this need and maintains a special
committee devoted to the study of
academic freedom of the student.
We wish the Western administrators could see beyond the students' salty comments to the larger,
more significant issue.
By putting a silencer on the free
flow of ideas, Western can only
harm its own standards.
Such expression deserves nurture, not condemnation.

$400

proposed

by

Governor

Breathitt's budget. And these demands are being echoed by Republican legislators who see the
issue as a handy political whip
with which to beat the Governor.
Some Frankfort officials, knowing
the political power of the teaching
lobby, are urging the Governor to
give in, present the teachers with
what they demand, and take the

University of Kentucky
JAN. 13. 1966

THURSDAY,

d

Editor-in-Chie-

f

.

Business Staff

;

v

, i;

Marvin IIuncate, Circulation Manager

value, providing local districts with
an opportunity to effect drastic
increases in school revenue through
more realistic assessment, but they
have failed to take advantage of
it and local support is" still deficient.
::. ":,f
'
the Governor can
Admittedly,
squeeze from his budget the estimated $23,000,000 'to $28,000,000
the teachers' demands would cost.
He can take it from.the colleges
and the University, from Child
Welfare, from the Crippled Children
program, from mental health, from
aid to retarded children. But Kentucky lags in these services as badly
as in education. And these are
agencies that depend entirely on
state support, whereas the teachers
can - and should turn to the
localities for increased help.'
The teachers, asVwell. as their
KEA leaders should iisk themselves
seriously whether or not they want
a raise at the expense of the retarded
children in Frankfort's
d
at the
Training Home,
expense of our overcrowded and
rapidly growing colleges, at the expense of the voiceless people in
our mental institutions, at the expense of the blind, needy and
crippled children who must wait
and hope for state help.
Their justified requests for better
pay have already earned them an
unfair reputation for being concerned only with nioney." But that
reputation can only grow, and with
more reason, if they insist on this
raise at any price, instead of turning
their fire on the home ront where
,

--

e
ments of the teacher's
friends in the legislature are
shallow, cynical and politically-motivateHe knows, and the
public must know, that while the
teachers have a strong case, they
are making it in the wrong place.
It is at the local level, not in
Frankfort, that Kentucky lags in
school support. As the Governor
pointed out in his television appearance here Thursday, Kentucky
ranks 14th among the 50 states in
state spending for schools, but last
in spending at the local level. Once
more this year more than 65 cents
of every general-fundollar goes
to schools; once more the biggest
budget increases are for education.
But there has been no equal effort
at the district level. The courts have
demanded that property be reas- it
sessed at 100 percent of fair cash
d.

1894

Advertising Manager

The Kentucky Education Association is angrily demanding that
the legislature give teachers biennial raises of $900 rather than the

late-com-

Executive Editor

William Knapp,

The Voiceless Needy

If he does, the Governor will
make a serious mistake. The Governor knows, and in time the public
is bound to realize, that the argu-

-;
Terence Hunt, Managing Editor
..
John Zeh, News Editor
Kenneth Cheen, Associate News Editor
Juuy Criskam. Associate News Editor
IIenhy Rosenthal, Sports Editor
' Marcaret
Carolyn Williams, Feature Editor
Bailey, Arts Editor
Mills,

ssr'

c

from services not championed by such a strong lobby.

The Svuth's Outstanding College Daily

Walter Chant,

X;

money

The Kentucky Kernel
LiNiM

Vrnyvr

Though the punishment is light,
the Hegents still voted to uphold
the suspensions in direct violation
to the students' right to free expression.
It has, in effect, closed off an
avenue of student academic freedom within its cloistered boundaries.

The Kernel welcome letters from reader wishing to comment on any topic. Because of apace
limitations, letters should be limited to 200 words. We reserve the right to edit letters received.
Longer manuscripts will be accepted at the editor' discretion.
The letters submitted should be signed as follows: for students, name, college and class and
local telephone number; for faculty members, name, department and academic rank; for alumni,
name, hometown and class; for University staff members, name, department and position; for
other readers, name, hometown and hometown telephone number. Unsigned letters cannot be considered for publications. All letter should be typewritten and double spaced.
Letters should be addressed to: the Editor, the Kentucky Kernel, Journalism Building, University
of Kentucky, or they may be left In the editor' office. Room 113-of the Journalism Building.

ESTABLISHED

A

r-

cruelly-overcrowde-

belongs."11

-

Louisville

"J: '

''.

Courier-Journ- al

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Jan.

13, lOfifi- -ft

Yale's Lynd, Others May1 Face Legal Action
The Collegiate Tress Service
NEW YOHK The return of
a Yale assistant professor and
liis two traveling
companions to
the United states after a
ely-financed
trip to North
Vietnam raises the question as
to whether the Justice Department will take any legal action
against the men.
The three, Prof. Staughton
Lynd of Yale; Thomas Hayden,
a founder of the Students for a
Democratic Society; and Herhet
Aptheker, the director of the
American Institute for Marxist
Studies, might he prosecuted
under any one of several laws.
Asked for comment, officials
at the Justice Department said,
"We're aware of the case and
we're looking into it." According
to sources w ithin the department,
privat-

Girard Will
Questioned
In Civil Suit
PHILADELPHIA, (CPS)-- A
new twist in the tangled Girard
College case came to light last
week when a nonprofit organization known as the Friends of
Stephen Girard petitioned the
United States District Court in
Philadelphia for permission to
intervene in the case.
The organization supports the
college trustees in contending
that the will of Stephen Girard,
founder of the tuition-fre- e
school,
should be upheld.
Girard, a Philadelphia financier who died in 1931, stipulated
in his will that the school should
limit admissions to "poor white
male orphans."
Last Dec. 16, the city of Philadelphia and the Commonwealth
of Pennsy lvania jointly filed suit
clause
to overturn the
after the school had been picketed
by the NAACP for over eight
months.
The civil suit against the
board of trustees of the
college charges that the refusal
to admit Negroes is a violation of
the U.S. Constitution, the laws of
Pennsylvania, and public policy.
of Stephen
The Friends
Girard, acting through an attorney, told the court that the
organization had 550 charter
me