xt734t6f4b87 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt734t6f4b87/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660405  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April  5, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  5, 1966 1966 2015 true xt734t6f4b87 section xt734t6f4b87 Inside Today's Kernel
Trustees opprove fire
honorary degrees
to be awarded at commencement:
Poge Two.
UK students find optimism
among
those who oppose Vietnam war: Poge
Three.
A

rerew of modern court decisions
indicates a revolution in law: Poge
Five.

Editor discusses 'Treating the Illness':
Poge Four.
Top Alabama cage star signs to play
with UK: Poge Six.

"TS.IE DSKHE

Pledges seek donations to the eye
bank in Louisville: Page Seven.
Panel discusses Kernel editorial policy
and organizational structure: Page

University of Kentucky
APRIL
KY.,

Vol. LVII, No. 112

Eight.

LEXINGTON,

Ezelle Slams
Agent S ystem
.Before Board

TUESDAY,

...

5,

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19GG

Eight Pages

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By GARY D. IIAWKSWORTH

Kernel Staff Writer
in Kentucky
Sam Ezelle, executive secretary of the AFL-CIand a member of the University Board of Trustees, prematurely-lasheout at the county agricultural and home demonstration
agent system at the Board meeting today.
Mr. Ezelle, ignoring the past their combined
incomes
Board precedent of doing infightto a "tidy sum."
ing in a closet, questioned the
Calling for a survey of the
intelligence of paying county and
entire program, Mr. Ezelle said,
home demonstration agents $3.5
"Someone is going to look at
million in a state where agriculthis set up and make some modture is diminishing in importance.
ifications. Why don't we do it?"
He particularly attacked the
Suggesting that Mr. Ezelle
value of paying an agricultural
pay more attention to Executive
in a mountain county
agent
Board reports and less time lookwhere agriculture is practically
ing at demographic analysis, UK
nonexistient.
President Dr. John W. Oswald
Saying that such questions
Continued On Pace 8
had to be investigated, Mr. Ezelle
O

said, "I don't think the Trustees

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Don 7 Fence Me In
The sidewalk, near fraternity row, may someday
bordered by a fence. The posts are standing
waiting for the wire. This may be one way to

keep students off the grass, although the zig-b- e
zagging route it follows may present even more
problems.

To Advise Dr. Oswald

See related story, page two.
should just meet, eat, greet,
belch, and adjourn the Board."
Armed with demographic statistics, Ezelle pointed out that
the percentage of people engaged
in agriculture had reduced from
44 percent to 18 percent in 20
years.
He said that along with the
agricultural decline, industry
had replaced agriculture in overall importance.
The labor leader suggested
that in nonagricultural counties the county agents had little or nothing to do for what
he termed "a good income in
a

&.

:.XwM8 ULitOb MM

fi

Board Creates Development Body

GENE CLABES
Kernel Staff Writer
The Board of Trustees today
approved a recommendation that
a University Development Council be established to serve in an
advisory capacity to UK President Dr. John Oswald.
The Development Council
will have 20 members, two of
whom are trustees, appointed
by the Board, and five
members to advise on all prival
fund development for the entire
University.
Also included on the council
will be the chairman of the Board
of Trustees, the chairman of the
By

io

pauper county."

Mr. Ezelle also suggested that
many of the agricultural agents
and home demonstration agents
married each other, and that

of the
Executive Committee
Board of Trustees, the President,
the vice president of University
Relations, and the director of
development.
The council will involve volunteer leadership of persons of
the "highest quality" who are
residents, alumni, Kentuckians,
of the state
and
to develop a program to evolve
' as a major
contributing factor
to satisfactory financial support
of the University's "effort toward
higher quality in its program."
Basic qualifications for Council members are:
1. Positions of leadership in
ts

their chosen communities whether regional, state, national, or

professional;
2. A commitment to the University aspiration to develop into
one of the nation's strongest
universities; and
3. A willingness to support
its aspiration.
The recommendation
said,
"The basic support of an institution such as the University
must come from the state and
we are deeply encouraged with
the growing support from the
Commonwealth of Kentucky.

"This is enabling the institution to meet the demands of

growing enrollments and the
growing demands placed upon
it for additional research and
service," the recommendation
said.
In other action the Board
approved the establishment of
a Department of Accounting, effective July 1, in the College
of Business and Economics. Prof.
William W. Ecton will be named
chairman of the Department, effective also July 1.
The establishment of the new
department is a further step
toward organization in the College of Business and Economics,
according to the recommendation.
A proposal
that the
of business affairs,
Robert Kerley, and the treasurer
be authorized to enter into a
contract with the University's
external audit firm to audit the
University Medical Center fiscal
policies and procedures.
The audit is being done for
the "constructive purpose of examining and evaluating the
hospital fiscal policies and procedures," a report of which is
to be submitted to the Trustees.
Also approved was a recommendation to increase late registration fees from $5 to $20, effective the fall semester.
The Trustees passed a recnt

Hopes To Win As A

Write-I- n

Pratt Enters

SC

Pratt presented an outline of a
"based on people
platform,
speaking to me."
One of the ideas was to increase the financial relationship
of Congress with other student
write-i- n
candidate.
organizations. This idea, Pratt
Pratt, who does not have the says, is something like the
grades to enter the raceas a formal
candidate, said he will not have a
running mate. "I'd work with
either one of the vice presidents
elected," Pratt said.
s
(:
Congress voting regulations
t
,I
1
:
allow voting a split ticket. Pratt
would have to split up one of the
two slates announced last week
d
or Porter-FieldBy TERENCE HUNT
Kernel Managing Editor
Don Pratt, a commerce junior,
said Monday he will run for the
Student Congress president's slot
in Thursday's SC election as a

1

s.

O'Brien-Westerfiel-

Pratt does not have a definite
campaign platform but said it is
being formed as different students

approach him and tell them what
they think Student Congress
needs should be.
1 1 e sa id student s rea ize " Co
is not doing a thing for
them . . . Congress is not helping
the local government and student
organizations with finding open
housing for students."
1

DON PRATT

President Race
speaker's forum proposed by the
two other candidates except the
plan is to stimulate other groups
to bring speakers to campus by
promising financial support. It
also support student
would
seminars.

Pratt said he would consider
changing the structure of the
assembly. He said Congress
might consider having representatives elected by various organizations and housing units.
Another idea Pratt proposes is
a loan program for student organizations which, in some time of
their life, need assistance. This
would cover financial needs of
fraternities, sororities, and other
organizations, such as the YMCA,
for projects such as tutoring programs.
This loan program would
assist organizations not included
for allocations in the Congress'
budget.
Pratt also wants Congress to
go on record as supporting recruitment of Negro athletes for

University teams. Besides encouraging the University to recruit
Negroes, Pratt wants Congress to
assist in the recruiting by sending
letters to prospective candidates
explaining the advantages of the
University.
Pratt said Congress also might
express its concern on this issue to
other SEC colleges' student
assemblies and ask them to unify
student government support on
Negro recruiting in the South.
Pratt said Congress should
lend assistance to such programs
as town housing and theCampus
Human Rights Commission.
Congress should also "reconsider the National Student Association and our relationship to
other campuses. The NSA is a
good national student voice," he
said.
Congress recently cut off its
affiliation with the NSA "without real study," Pratt said. He
said Congress should voice opinions on questions of national
interest that are relevant to the
college student.

ommendation to activate

Jef-

ferson Community College in
Louisville. In concurrance with
the University of Louisville, they
promised the following steps be
taken:
1. The official site for the
new community college will be
the old Seminary site.

2. Four members of a joint
executive committee (to serve
with a like number from the
University of Louisville) will be
named by the President at an
early date.

The land where the college is
located is a 7.92-acr- e
tract.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April 5,

To Be Awarded May 9

lf

Trustees Approve 5 Honorary Degrees
The Board of Trustees today
approved a recommendation by
the Committee on Honorary Degrees to award five degrees at
commencement exercises on May
9.

Those to receive honorary degrees of Doctor of Law s are Dr.
Leo M. Chamberlain, Dr. Philip
E. Blackerby Jr., and Dr. Carl
M. Hill. The honorary degree
of Doctor of Literature will go
to John Mason Brown; and the
honorary degree of Doctor of
Science to Prof. Louis Cordon.
The Graduate Faculty and the
.University Senate approved the

recommendations prior to the
Board's approval today.
Dr. Chamberlain, former vice
president and professor Emeritus
of the University before his retirement in 1965, began his duties
with the University in 1929 as
an assistant professor after his
undergraduate and graduate
w ork at the Univ ersity of Indiana.
In 1962 he ended his administrative duties as vice president
and became Professor of Higher
Education until his retirement.
Dr. Blackerby, a Kentucky
native and former dean of the
University of Louisville School

Dorm Council Gives WRH $100
Holmes Hall House Council has given Women's Residence
Halls $100, removing WRH's deficit.
WRH
Barbara
president
Bigger said that the committee personal guide in University afwas "very happy" to receive fairs. The letters explaining this
the money, which was needed to program went out last week.
"A party is planned at the
complete WRH programs. One
program in particular. Big Sister-Littl- e beginning of school next fall to
Sister, which WRH called acquaint the big sisters with the
"one of its best," is now in full little sisters," Miss Bigger said.
swing, financed by the money "We are hoping to give these
from Holmes, and a donation of freshmen a feeling that someone
$10 from Hamilton House for this cares about them, for school is
usually confusing and hectic for
specific program.
Miss Bigger reported that over awhile."
WRH has made up a tentative
five replys have been received
from incoming freshman who budget for next year in hopes of
have expressed an interest in getting money earlier from Stuhaving an upperclass coed as a dent Congress.

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his position
is a noted author and critic.
His most recent work is the
first volume of a biography of
Robert Sherwood.
Dr. Louis Cordon, visiting
Centennial Professor of Chemis

try at UK In rjoo, is protessor
of chemistry and dean of graduate Studies at Case Institute
of Technology. He did his
study at UK, graduatin 1937. He did his graduate
ing
work at the University of Michigan finishing in 1917.
He is coauthor of "Precipitation from Homogenious Solution" and coeditor of the
"International Series of
Monographs on Analytical Chemunder-gradua-

istry."

The records for all judges
handling state police traffic
charges were published for the
first time in the new annual
report, although they have been
available and released in other
form in the past.
They were incorporated in
the report, the department said,
"in the hope that it will make
Kcntuckians more aware of, and
more interested in, the work
done" by the judges in such
cases.
The report reviewed activisix
ties of the department's
divisions Accident Control, Administrative Services, Boating,
Driver Licensing, Fire Prevention and State Police and the
Governor's Coordinating Committee for Traffic Safety. The
committee was formed to lead
the campaign against the loss
of lives and destruction in highway accidents.

FRANKFORT The odds are
about two to one that a person
arrested or cited by Kentucky
n
State Police on a
charge will be convicted.
The 1966 annual report of the
Kentucky Department of Public
Safety showed 65 percent of motorists arrested or cited to court
by state police during the period
from January to June 1965 were
convicted.
Of 45,669 persons against
whom charges were preferred,
26,711 were convicted. Other
records just completed, but not
in time for inclusion in the report, showed the 65 percent rate
held true for all of 1965 with
58,129 convictions out of 97,339
charges.
In 1964, the annual report
showed 61,946 convictions in
100,486 cases, for a 67 percent
conviction rate. That year, 12,338
cases were dismissed, 18,118 filed
away, 8,023 found to be outside
the judges' jurisdictions, with
61 miscellaneous dispositions.
In the first six months of
1965 there were 6,515 dismissals,
8,127 cases filed away, 4,227 outside judges' jurisdictions and 29
other dispositions.
traffic-violatio-

Such accidents killed 916 per
sons in 1965, compared with 911
in 1964 and 765 in 1960.
The report noted there were
motor vehicles registered in Kentucky in 1964, up 19
percent from 1960; 58,836 reported
accidents, up 45 percent; 454 state
police personnel, one more than
in 1960; and 1,330,000 licensed
drivers, up 12 percent in the four
years.
1,430,299

The police force's total authorized strength now is about 495.
Gov. Edward T. Breathitt's budget, passed by the 1966 General
Assembly, provides for 50 additional state troopers during each
of the next two fiscal years,
1.

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Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Pubhbhed five timet weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications. Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Linda Cassaway,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1884. became the Record in 1900. and the Idea
In 1908. Published conUnuously as the
Kernel since 1913.

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65 Percent Of Traffic Violators
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CLASSIFIED

is a native of Virginia.
From 19IS to 1952 he was supervisor of chemical research projects for the Tennessee Valley

of Dentistry, Is currently with
the Division of Dentistry of the
VV.K. Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich., and associate
director of the Foundation.
He has been involved in
training auxiliary dental personnel and continuing dental education.
This spring will mark the
first graduating class from the
UK School of Dentistry.
Dr. Carl M. Hill, president
of Kentucky State College since

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April 5,

VIETNA M
Dy MIKE MOORE

Kernel Staff Writer
view from Washington
is different from the one found in
Lexington. There is more optimism among the people who are
against the war in Vietnam,"
according to Robert V. Frampton,
one of three students who recently returned from consultations in Washington with varying
opinions.
Frampton, Don B. Pratt, and
J. Douglas Newton were among
approximately 75 students partitalks on
cipating in the two-da- y
Vietnam sponsored by the National Student Christian Foundation.
The consultations were designed to enable interested students to take their opinions to the
capital, to express them, and to
sec the policy-makin- g
process of
the government in action, Pratt
said.
Frampton, a member and
former secretary of the UK chapter of Students for a Democratic
Society, said all the members of
the delegations represented "only
themselves" in Washington, regardless of affiliations.
Pratt is the current moderator
of the United Campus Christian

"The

Students Find Optimism
Among War Opposition

Fellowship, a member of the
National Student Christian Federation. Newton is a prelaw sophomore from Colorado.
The UK delegation met with
Kentucky Senators Thurston B.
Morton and John
Sherman
Cooper, Rep. John C. Watts of
the Kentucky Sixth District, and
other members of Congress.
Pratt is organizing a return
trip to Washington foradditional
consultations, set tentatively for
May 8. Any interested persons are
urged to contact him as soon as
possible at the student Presbyterian Center.
"It is something when a
senator gives you, practically
carte blanche, the opportunity to
discuss with him those issues
which you both feel are important," Newton said.
Pratt expressed amazement at
the preoccupation of the Washington figures with the Vietnam
problem and the enormous
amount of diverse information
available to these officials and
the interested citizen.
"The average citizen is unaware of the complexities of the
Vietnam war and probably incapable of forming accurate opinions about it," Pratt said.

University Starts Medical Program
For State's Community Hospitals
A new program of continuing education for the medical and
professional staffs of Kentucky's community hospitals has been
launched by the Department of Anesthesiology at the University
College of Medicine.
The program now is under way at the Warren County Hospital
in Bowling Green and will be extended to other community hospitals
later this year, according to Dr. Peter P. Bosomworth, chairman of
the department.
Unlike other continuing education programs, in which physicians,
nurses, and paramedical personnel come to the University for periods
of concentrated study, the new anesthesiology program sends faculty
members to work with hospital staffs in their own institutions.
The program includes:
1. Demonstrations in the areas of
operative, and
anesthetic care of patients.
postoperative
2. Demonstration of monitoring techniques, with particular emphasis on electrocardiograms, temperature and blood pressure in
recovery rooms, and intensive
operating rooms,
care units.
3. Teaching respiratory and cardiovascular resuscitation to rein
covery room, emergency room and operating room personnel,
addition to the physician staff of the hospital.
ia

"One day in Washington
proved more educational for me
than an infinite number of news
releases and student forums in
grasping the total situation," he
continued.
Frampton evaluated the trip
as an excellent opportunity to
"find out in depth the positions
of Kentucky's senators and other
members of Congress on the administration's policy in Vietnam.
"We found that more and
more senators are standing up
against President Johnson's policy and total criticism is growing," Frampton said.
Frampton said that Sen. J.
William Fullbright's apparent
growth as an influential man in
Washington was indicative of the
changing outlook. The Arkansas
senator recently questioned President Johnson's policy in public
hearings.
World pressure was cited as
the cause of President Johnson's
bombing resumption by Ivan
Swift, Sen. Cooper's press agent,
Pratt said.
Swift said that Sen. Cooper
expressed bis disagreement with
the original commitment in Vietnam as well as with the resumption of bombing after the Christmas cease fire, according to
Frampton.
"Cooper wants the bombing

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munists to the conference table.
"Sen. Morton was also concerned with the possibility of
military victory in Vietnam but
failure of the South Vietnamese
to win social, economic, and political reform, causing our blood
and resources to have been
wasted," Frampton added.
Rep. Watts pointed out the
effectiveness that Congress as a
whole could exhibit in controlling
the war through their voting on
money matters as a form of "discipline" of the war, Pratt said.
Pratt also said that Rep. Watts
seemed very receptive to citizens'
views on the conflict and emphasized the importance of "open
communications to him by all
interested persons."
"I became aware of the need
for the United States to recognize
as a nation, not just a government, the importance of finding
a working and honorable peace
in Vietnam," Newton said in
summarizing his views after returning.
Pratt said that the trip emphasized a lack of unity of cause
among the officials. "We need
to analyze the Vietnam revolution as either a war for something
or against something, both from
the enemies point of view and
from

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now to be limited to South Vietnam and hopes that the conflict
will be settled by negotiations as
soon as possible," Frampton said
in summing up Sen. Cooper's
views.
Pratt added that the press
agent stated Sen. Cooper's belief
that the Vietcong and not the
North Vietnamese government
were the ones to be negotiated
with.
"We can't back out, that's a
thing you just don't do," Swift
said.
Newton said that Sen. Morton's views nearly coincided with
Sen. Cooper's, but that he advocated a blockade of Vietcong
supplies by way of the port of
Haiphong in forcing the com- -

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* El Tii

Treating The Illness
Too often we are apt to consider
treatment of a symptom as an efficient means of eliminating a
disease.
Whitcsburg attorney and author
Harry Caiulill pointed out the fallacy of this thinking in a speech last
week in Lexington. Lexington and
other metropolitan communities,
Mr. Caiulill pointed out, are footing
educational and welfare bills for
Eastern Kentucky. Yet Kentucky's
urban centers have done little to
curb the ravages of Eastern Kentucky and get at the heart of the
problem.
Mr. Caudill has said bluntly
finally something lurking on the
minds of many federal programs
will not hit at the roots of Appala-chiHe is correct also in feeling
that urban areas, which benefit
from their rich Eastern backyard,
should assume more leadership in
saving a potentially rich area from
oblivion.
Such oblivion, Mr. Caudill so
rightly pointed out, could harm the
urban areas as much as Eastern
Kentucky itself in loss of labor supply, valuable minerals and water
a.

Brute

supply for future development of
the entire state.
Mass renovation of Eastern Kentucky which now suffers so pitifully
by generations of ravages by exploiters would involve a tremendous
capital outlay, but the rewards
would be great. In addition to
relieving future urbanities of the
burden of supporting basic programs in the Eastern sector of the
state, such outlay could transform
a blighted, poverty-stricke- n
wasteland into a thriving showplace and
a valuable resource for years to
come.

The recently-approve- d
strip
mining ordinance requiring exploiters to repair destruction to the
land is only the first step in the vast
reclamation of the area that is necessary. Additional highway construction, better job training, better
housing, forest replanting, and
water pollution control are a few
more vital areas deserving immediate attention from the state.
For as Mr. Caudill puts it if
Kentucky lets its rich backyard
decay, its front lawns also must
suffer from the blight.
Barry

Letters To The Editor

Discrimination Charged
To the

Editor of the Kernel:

'

Parking Prohlem

Saturday the Student Bar AssoIt is refreshing to find the Uniciation sponsored a speech by Senator Wayne Morse, whose views on versity Police are at least enforcing
some of the traffic regulations-ev- en
foreign
policy do not seem
if it is only those involving
especially popular among UK law
motorcycles. There seems to be,
students. Ironically, eight people
were denied admittance to this however, more flagrant violations
public affair on the grounds that of parking regulations that the
police seemingly ignore. For insome of them had actively demonstrated support of Sen. Morse's stance, the area B and C lot between Clifton Avenue and the food
position.
storage building is constantly
S.B.A. Pres. Seotty clogged with cars bearing either
Thursday
Baesler had agreed with me to expired stickers, or no stickers at
admit to the speech, on payment of all.
$1 each, a group that wanted to
The "no parking" zones in the
hear Sen. Morse but could not
area usually contain not one, but
afford the dinner-dancFriday
Robert Frampton told him there two, cars parked side by side.
would be about 10 people. Baesler All of this makes it virtually imasked if we were planning to demon- possible for holders of valid parkstrate and Frampton assured him ing permits to find a place to park
we were not.
in this lot.
e.

When we arrived, the ticket-take- r
In spite of these flagrant violasaid he had no instructions
to admit us. After checking with tions, the University police have
the President, he said we would given tickets in this lot only one
not be admitted because we had or two times this semester usually
participated in demonstrations before most of the cars get there.
Perhaps the University police
(five are SDS members; the others
are not aware of these violations.
came into town especially for the
event). Baesler finally appeared and However several police cars a day
said he had told Frampton we park in the loading zone in front
could come only if we were not of the
grill while their occumembers of "an organization" or pants take a coffee break. Often
had not demonstrated. Despite these cars park next to a car with
urging by two law professors to no parking permit parked in the
alter his stand, Baesler insisted on loading zone, and all of this time
the policemens ticket pads remain
ignoring our agreement.
on the front seat of their car.
It is strange that this man was
It would seem that before the
awarded top honors by the Clarence
Harrow Society that same evening. police attack the relatively trivial
I can think of
nothing less appro- problem of motorcycles parking on
for someone who believes campus, they should correct some
priate
First Amendment rights apply only of flagrant problems they see every
to U.S. Senators.
day.
ELAINE S. WENDEH
JACK BUCHANAN
Graduate Student, Politieal Science
College of Engineering
ir

Coiy,tr

Down To Earth Congress
ica in the astronomically costly
arms race, and the degree of free
speech and literary liberty to be

Many signs hint that the 23rd
Soviet Communist Party Congress
most
will be the hardest-headesuch gathering in
Russia in a long time. One gets the
impression that it has been many
years since the top Soviet leadership has been more soberly aware
d,

allowed.

down-to-eart- h

It is equally clear that many
are going on within the
Soviet Union among and between
differing factions and outlooks.
Some believe it is necessary to open
windows still wider to the West.
Others hold that such windows are
already letting in too strong a
draught of fresh air. On another
side stand the advocates of Soviet
foreign aid as a means of enhancing
Russia's world power. On still
another stand those "isolationists"
who demand that aid funds be used
at home. Pulling and hauling in
many different directions are the
party-lin- e
henchmen, the powerful
Red Army officer corps, the brilliantly educated scientists and technicians, the stubborn peasantry, the
intellectually restless youth.
tugs-of-w-

of the problems facingtheir country
and more flexible in its approach to
their solution.
Speculation over the conference
has generally centered on the effect
it may have on Russian-Chines- e
relations. But most of the time will
be taken up with the economic and
ideological problems facing the
Soviet Un