xt77sq8qfj5j https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt77sq8qfj5j/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660902  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September  2, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, September  2, 1966 1966 2015 true xt77sq8qfj5j section xt77sq8qfj5j Inside Todays Kernel
Music, art deportment
ers: Poge Three.

odd

the

teach-

Middle East tour memorable to Wildcats: Page Six.

tditor discusses registration, rotation:

What is a typical UK student? Poge

Poge Four.

Seven.

1.87 concerned obout Sonet relations:
Poge Five.

Golf

Team sets organizational
ing: Page Seven.

meet

Vol.

LVIII, No. 3

University of Kentucky
LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY. SEPT. 2. 19f,6

Stadium Site

"MS?

2

Not Definite?
Officials Say

By JUDY GRISHAM
Kernel Associate Editor
The University has not committed itself to build the proposed
50,000-sefootball stadium onColdstream Farm, officials announced

r j:

.

v.

at

Thursday.

An official University state
ment was issued Thursday night
after UK and Lexington and Fayette officials and civic leaders
met Wednesday. The meeting was
held in the wake of seemingly
wide-sprea- d
opposition to the
Coldstream Farm site.
In July, the Board of Trustees
approved a recommendation by
Vice President of Business Affairs
Robert F. Kerley "that the President be authorized to undertake
all actions necessary with Commonwealth officials to conduct
physical and financial planning
for a new football stadium . . .
on approximately 150 acres of the

southernmost portion of

Cold-

that "when these steps are complete both matters would be
brought back to the Board of
Trustees and the Athletics Association

Board for information

and indicated additional action."
University officials interpreted
such approval as a
only for further planning and
reporting back to the Board regarding the site. Kerley said the
recommendation was only an approval for making further plans.
The Central Campus Development Plan approved by the
trustees in September,
1965,
scheduled the land occupied by
Stoll Field, the present stadium,
"go-ahea-

stream Farm," with the condition

Continued On Pace

3

r

The present site of the University's football
stadium .s on the Avenue of Champions. Ad- -

z;rrt;izrzz te

l42Uv

I

7 PRESENT
STADIUM

IL

lfoX

Dr. Willis Criffin, associate
director of the Center for Developmental Change, said today he
expects an invitation from Washington officials within three
weeks for the University to develop a research center in Thailand.

"

f

Tf60l

Y
1

Vyi

JLEXINGTON
Courier-Journ-

al

officials have been

ne-

gotiating with the U.S. Agency
for International Development
(AID) since June for an agricultural research center in northeast Thailand.
Discussions in Bangkok, Thailand, and staff changes of AID
officials there have been underway this summer, Griffin explained, and have caused some
delay in arrangements for the

X

Staff Map

expansion of the Fine Arts Building, shown in
the lower left, and construction of a new
parking
Mcmorial Coliseum is shown in the

AID May Soon Approve
UK Project For Thailand
UK

PROPOSED
STADIUM
SHE

"

j

project.
Early in June, some officials
close to AID indicated interest
in the proposed center had slackened although no official reason
was given for a slowdown of
the project.
Former UK Coordinator of
Overseas Programs Dr. William

Jansen said this summer he had
been informed that Communist
infiltration of northeast Thailand
had decreased ov er the last year
According to Jansen, UK has
been ready to negotiate a contract
since April but has been waiting
further action from AID officials.
Jansen was a key man in the
University part of the project
before it was taken over by the
Center for Developmental Change

here.
Although Jansen said he believes the delay in crystalization
of project plans has not stemmed
from political reason, he admitted
that doubts expressed by Senate
Relations
Committee
Foreign

Chairman J. W. Fulbright might
further hold up plans for the
UK center.
Washington officials have de-

clined

comment on a steady
buildup of bases and troops in
Thailand that has now surpassed
30,000 men.
However, both Jansen and

NDEA Prog ram Trains Better Counselors
By DARRELL CHRISTIAN
Kernel Staff writer

day and started work on Wednesday.
Major emphasis in the training is placed on practical
experience. "We look at it this
way," explains Dr. Donald L.
Clark of the College of Education, director of the institute.
"You wouldn't want a doctor
who has never had a patient
before, and a child doesn't need
a counselor who has had no
experience, either."
The experience comes through

The day is past when guidcounselors learned their
trade from textbooks and gained
their experience in the first
months on the job.
Thanks to a government-financeprogram under the National Defense Education Act
that provides better and more
useful training, counselors today
are entering their field with at
least a ear of practical experience
counseling children at the Kenbehind them.
tucky Village and the Methodist
The University is one of 25 Children's Home .
schools in 23 states sponsoring
"We feel you can't determine
NDEA counseling and guidance a good counselor by
just a test,"
nstitutes. A $199,121 grant from Clark said. "You've got to see
the U.S. Office of Education them actually relating to young
was awarded for this year's inpeople."
stitute, the third at U K
Most of the interviews are
From more than 400 applitaped for closed circuit televicants, 30 persons were accepted sion. "This way they can see
on the basis of their ability to themselves on television after
relate to people. The group artheir interv iews and perhaps corrived Monday for registration rect some mistakes that they
which continued through Tues
may not have known they were
ance

d

making," Dr. Clark added. Permission is obtained from the
children being counseled before
the filming begins.
The counselors also will see
films in the Student Center and
later hold seminars to discuss
their messages. They also hold
these group discussions following their own interviews with
children.
In the spring, the future

counselors will spend one day
a week in a public high school
counseling students. Besides the
actual counselors, there is some
classroom work involved, including studies in the humanities, sociology, psychology' and
other areas which are applied
in the counseling profession.
The federal program not only
has been a giant step towards
correcting a shortage of experienced counselors, but it has also
established the University as one
of the nation's top counseling
schools. U K was one of only
18 schools given a renewed con

Griffin state that the University
has been fully aware of military
conditions in Thailand and that
the center would in no way be
affected by themilitarization process.
Although he emphasized he
was not speaking officially for
the University, Griffin indicated
that should the center be in any
way connected w ith the military,
there would be "some serious
questions in our mind about going
on with the project."
If a contract is approved the
UK center would act only in the
realm of agricultural research and
a method of presentation to make
it readily available for area

fanners.

Socialist Sign
Taken Down
A poster put
up in the Student Center by a freshman recruiting UK members for the
Socialist Labor Party was taken
down by building officials Thursday because it was an advertise-

ment.

tract for the institute last year.
"We had the program before,
but we had only two people
on the faculty. The grants have
enabled us to build up the faculty
and expand our training," Dr.

Clark stressed.
Now the staff has grown to
e
three
instructors and
full-tim-

hree
instructors.
"With this larger faculty, we
half-tim- e

can work more individually

with

the students," Clark said.
All of the counselors' lees
except books are paid and the
students receive $75 a week plus
$15 a week for each dependent.
The 30 participants include 19
from Kentucky and one from
each of 11 other states.
"Less than 30 and the institute isn't worth it . . more
and we have too many tow oik,"
.

Dr. (Mark said.
Some w ill take counselingpo-sition- s
with high schools, but
many of them join the Job Corps,
industry and various phases of
the war on poverty program.

The part of the sign which
was objectionable was the solicitation for subscriptions to the
party newspaper, according to
Frank Harris, building director.
Commercial advertising is not
allowed in the building, he said,
because of display space limitations.
"Tired of Bellywash? Subscribe to the Weekly People,
official organ of the Socialist
Labor Party. Better yet. join the
Socialist Labor Party." and an
address was the sign's message.
It was placed on the bulletin
board near the giill by Bradfoid
Washburn, sociology anthropology
major.
Mr. Harris told Washburn the
sign would be okayed lor display
if the advertisement was deleted.
Washburn prepared another

sign today say ing " Is the American iolitician really as gutless

and as noncommittal as he
appears? Find out. join the Socialist Labor Party ," and it was
approved for display .

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sept.

2

2,

1

Of

UK Bulletin Board
Applications for both editorial
business positions on the

and

Kentuckian are now availin Hootn 210, Journalism
Building.
1967

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The United Campus Christian
Fellowship (the United Campus
Ministry of the Christian Church
(Disciples), Presbyterian Church,
Lutheran Church (LCA & ALC),
and The United Church of Christ)
will hold a dessert at the Center,
412 Hose Street on Friday, September, from 6:30p.m. to 8 p.m.
All students are welcome and
invited to attend.

7

X.

J on rn alls m Professors
Meet In Iotca City
Thorp and Dr. Robert Murphy, chairman of the UK School
of Communications, served as
panelists for discussions of journalism education.
Three members of the University's journalism faculty were
in Iowa City this past week as
delegates to the annual meeting
of the Association for Education
in Journalism.
meeting
During the three-da- y
which began on Tuesday, Dr.
Robert Thorp gave a report on
his recent study of Henry Watter-son'- s
racial view s, and Dr. Lewis
Donohew presented apaperdeal-ing

with communication and

change in Appalachia.

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IN THE WORST
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trophies. The local chapter was also cited for
improved scholastics award. Bryant was named
the second Outstanding Phi Kappa Tau graduate.

Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity recently won the national
chapter's Achievement Award. Chapter officers
(left to right) Oscar Wcstcrficld, president; Steve
Bryan. Earl Bryant and Ernie Harris display

Kentucky Kernel Photo

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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 Gassaway,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894, became the Record in 1900, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
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"7

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,

!

riday, Sept. 2, l!H(i

Officials Say Stadium Site Is Undecided

Continued From Page 1
for expansion of Fine Arts and
architecture facilities.
To meet academic program
scheduling, the first structure for
Fine Arts should he completed
on that site within four years.
Vice President of Student
Affairs Robert Johnson said today
the issue is not building a new
stadium, but rather making the
land the stadium occupies avail-

able

for

planned academic

pur-

poses.

"That land is prime land for
academic purposes," he said.
"We are concerned about the
student nine months of the year,
not just five days," he said.

C-- J

"So, really, we are considering
the student more if we do relocate the stadium."

The Coldstream location was
from four proposed
chosen
places: the Experimental Farm
south of Cooper Drive, the University farm on Nicholasvillc
Pike, Spindletop and Coldstream
Farms.

UK officials stated then that
the Coldstream site best met
criteria established by the Athletics Board who recommended
that further planning be conducted on that site. The Board
of Trustee action followed.
Kerley said today extensive

Reporter Joins Faculty

Fred Luigart Jr., a veteran University in 1950, Luigart's
of 12 years in the newspaper newspaper background has inbusiness, has been appointed as cluded managing editor and
a part time journalism instructor editor positions with the Hazard
for the fall semester at UK.
which
Herald, a
Luigart is replacing Dr. Lewis gained state and national recogDonohew, assistant journalism nition for its layout, design and
professor who is relinquishing news writing. Two years it was
some of his classes to work with named the best newspaper in
the Office of Economic OpportuKentucky by the Kentucky Press
Association.
nity.
Luigart is on a four months'
leave of absence from his posiBefore moving to the Courier-Journtion with the Lexington Bureau
Lexington Bureau in 1964,
of the Louisville
Luigart worked in the Eastern
He will return to his job there Kentucky Bureau inl960and was
on Jan. 1.
given an internship with the
Since earning his Bachelor's Washington, D.C., Bureau in
degree in journalism from the 1963.
semi-weekl-

y

al

Courier-Journa-

r

-

location has mounted.
One newspaper account attributed some of the opposition
to the fact that community planners were not consulted by University officials in regard to the
new stadium.
But University officials argue
that the development plans of
the University at "various stages
of completion were presented to
24 different local and state governmental and civic groups."
Another stream of opposition
seems to originate with downtown businessmen who fear loss
of trade brought by football game

our whole community in terms
of traffic-carryin- g
ability is our
central city," he said, terming
the central part of any city as
the hub of a wheel from which
the spokes generate.
He said it would be "difficult
to find its match."
The community's concern, he
said, is what it can do to assure
that it properly carries out its

responsibilities.
He listed those responsibilities as police and fire protection
and offering hospital facilities.
"There are five fire stations
in the central city, and four

30-4- 5

SUITABLY BOYISH, IS

12!"

visitors.
Bill Quails, director of the

Y'-'-

DAVID

Planning Commission, told the Kernel today he
felt the present location of the
stadium was the most ideal.
"Seventy-fiv- e
percent of the
facility is already in existence,"
he said. He suggested closing
the ends of the present stadium
to provide more seating capacity.
"The most unique spot in
y

City-Count-

hospitals within a couple ot
minutes' driving time," Quails
said.
Police protection is also a
factor, he said, xintiug out that
city police help direct traffic from
Stoll Field.
minutes
"It takes only
to clear out traffic after a game,"
he said. "There are a number of
different routes to be taken to
get out after the game."
The University has engaged
a traffic consulting firm to study
the traffic problem associated
with all locations under

FERGUSON

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traffic studies wotdd be made
of the proposed locations, with
the exception of the Nicholasvillc
Pike farm. He also said traffic
and parking problems of the
present site would be studied.
Since the June announcement,
community opposition to the new

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* "Praise The Laws And Pass The Ammunition"

Combination Of Things
Completion of registration of
over 14,000 students for the fall
semester initiates planning for
On the
spring prercgistration.
whole, the registration procedure
continues to improve, but there
still remains a number of areas
that need to be examined.
Seventy-eigh- t
percent of the
10,800 students who preregistered
received complete schedules. They
were filtered through the Coliseum
in less than 10 hours at an average
of about 15 minutes per student,
ajttjobvious improvement.
But the question UK administrators, faculty, and most importantly, students need to ask is
whether that number is good
enough.
A fifth of the student body
did not get full schedules, for one
reason or another. And of those
who did receive full schedules,
many still found it necessary to
make schedule changes. While
some attributed the changes to
personal reasons as changed majors, or courses taken twice many
staff members and students found

rc

fault with the elements of the
registration process. Such as:
Failure to update the computer system for registration. The
initial computer process, promised
three semesters ago as "an intermediate step toward a complete
registration process," is still being
used and has not yet been revised.
Poor advising plans, or even
worse, a careless attitude on the
part of the faculty advisers and
students toward preparing a workable schedule for students. Administrators, advisers, and students all share the blame for
''quickie advising," the result of
too few advisers handling too many

students.
Inability or unwillingness to
work out departmental offerings
well enough in advance to avoid
the endless supplements to schedule books that stymie any system
of registration before it is even
begun. Advisers, attempting to
cope with unreasonable numbers
of students, had revisions to the
schedule book that were thicker,
and appeared longer than the original schedule book.
It is a combination of this lack
of planning and unwillingness to
work with the system that causes
the needless waste of time, people,
and finances. These same reasons
last year caused 4,400 students to
make 12,000 class changes through
the drop-ad- d
process. While final
are not yet in, indications
reports
are that the total number of drop-add- s
will be again around the same
number, or more.
Effective solutions for registration problems cannot be found
at the toss of the hat, nor can it
be accomplished by administrative
edict from one man's office. For
indeed the problem is one demanding cooperation and consideration
of the whole faculty and student
body in developing and adhering
to effective course planning.

Victims Of Progress

The negative reaction aroused
this past summer in certain quarters
over the removal of three University
deans has seemingly subsided. It
is unfortunate that this reaction was
initially aroused, but as with many
new programs, getting the message
across is half the problem.

The rotation policy has been the
victim of both misinformation and
disgnintlement by those most directly affected. Dissatisfaction with
the policy was magnified this
summer because announcements of
the three deans stepping down came
iiiside of one week. The impact
aggravated a vacuum of public
knowledge that was filled by rumors
until UK President John W.Oswald
labeled the changes as routine implementation of the rotation policy.
Still, Dr. Oswald has received
unfair criticism as a result of the
policy. In fact, the rotation policy
was formulated in various faculty
committees while Dr. Frank G.
Dickey was UK's president. After
passage by the Board of Trustees,
the plan was outlined in a memorandum to the faculty. It is not

Extra Teaching

Some antipoverty programs are
better than others. Those that strike
at the mental roots of poverty are
obviously most desirable. One that
appears best fitted to reach down
deeply into causes of want and
remove them is that of the proposed
National Teacher Corps. Its pur-

pose is to enlist and equip teachers
areas.
schools are
sadly handicapped because many
of their teachers,
for
this special and difficult work,
seek and get transfers to pleas-untneighborhoods as soon as
possible. These schools must carry
on with' high turnover and inexperienced staff.
A beginning has been made
toward the solution of this problem
with the recruitment of Peace Corps
alumni for work in the National
Teacher Corps. At present many
of these young people, experienced
in work with the poor of underdeveloped countries, are enrolled
among a class of 1,300 at New-YorUniversity. They are learning
how to teach children of the slums.
This sounds encouraging. But
there's a snag in the program. Apfor posts in poverty-stricke- n
At present these

er

unfamiliar to the person affected,
as some have contended.
A university moving forward
must seek the best college and department leaders, and the rotation
system seems a plausible way to
assure young, vigorous leadership
and reconstruction of faltering programs.
Rotation policies have proved
successful at many of the nation's
best academic institutions. Admittedly, it is still too early to determine the effect of the policy on
UK's programs, but one thing is
certain now. The rotated administrators are not victims of arbitrary
change, but are victims of progress.

k

propriations

for

the

National

The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily

ESTABLISHED 1894

University of Kentucky
FRIDAY,

Walteu

M.

Chant,

SEPT. 2, 1966

Editor-in-Chi-

Tehence Hunt, Executive Editor
Gene Clabes, Managing Editor
Judy Chisham, Associate Editor
John Zeh, Associate Editor
Fkank Bhowninc, Associate Editor
Phil Sthaw, Sports Editor
Ken Hoskins, Daily News Editor
Ron IIekkon, Daily News Editor
Barhy Cobb, Cartoonist

William Knafp,

Business Manager

Ed Campbell, Circulation Manager

Teacher Corps are being held up
in the Senate Appropriations Committee.
There is perhaps too great a
tendency in the United States to
look to federal spending for a quick
solution of local problems. Each
appeal should be carefully weighed
on its own merits. This one will
be found to stand up well. The
demand for specially trained and
socially motivated teachers for
ghetto schools is an emergency
need for which hardpressed school
budgets rarely can provide.
As an antipoverty measure we
believe the National Teacher Corps
should have priority. We hope the
Senate Appropriations Committee
will accord it that position.
The Christian Science Monitor

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Iiiday, Sept. -

'Inside Report'

by Evans and Novak

Soviet Relations
Concern LBJ

WELCOM 1 all COED

WASHINGTON -- Far more than he says publicly, President
Johnson is deeply concerned over the deteriorating effect of the
Vietnam war on relations between Washington and Moscow.

That is why Mr. Johnson,
taking the State Department
bureaucracy wholly by surprise,
made his strongest appeal to date
for new agreements with the
Soviet Union in his speech a week
ago in Idaho Falls, Idaho.
The origin of this speech,
which warmed the hearts of complaining liberals in the President's own party, tells much
about the source of foreign policy
initiatives these days.
They come not from State
Department bureau heads, nor
the chief of the department's
policy planning staff nor U.S.
embassies abroad. The seed-beof the Idaho speech, calling for
compromise lan"acceptable
guage" with Russia on a treaty
banning the proliferation of nuclear weapons, was the White
House.
Its author were no foreign
policy experts. The basic draft
was written by Harry McPherson,
the President's special counsel,
and Bill Moyers, his press secretary and inside man of many
parts. That draft went to Secretary of State Dean Rusk only
a day or so before it was to be
delivered to the press, on Aug.

cracv was far from hannv with
this thrust.

Indeed, the President's appeal
to Moscow raised deep concern
among State Department bureaucrats including Owen who are
most closely identified whith the
long, futile effort to create the
nuclear
force and give West Germany the
appearance of a larger share in
the West's nuclear arms. They
are afraid that if the U.S. makes
too generous an approach to the
multi-later-

26.

Rusk, who personally approves of Mr. Johnson's new
initiative with the Soviet Union,

routed the White House draft
to Henry Owen, the policy planning chief; Zbigniew Brzezinski,
the Kremlinologist from Harvard
who has just joined Owen's staff,
and several other State Department bureaucrats.
Although a few important
changes were made at the State
Department, the major thrust of
the speech was not blunted. And
the State Department bureau- -

al

Soviet Union a

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which the German reaction is
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Soviet Union, particularly with
Moscow under ever more shrill
attack from the Chinese
As he said in Idaho.
"The heart of our concern in the
years ahead must be our relationship with the Soviet Union."
In pursuing this course, Mr.
Johnson is scrutinizing every
Soviet react inn to the expanded
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level, he would have no complaints. This indicates to him that
the diplomatic road to Moscow
is not totally barred.
There are also domestic political reasons for the President's
overtures. Without diluting the
Vietnam war effort, he wants to
give voters something to think
about besides casualty figures.
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* 6 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sept.

2, 19(i0.

UK Wildcats: U.S. Ambassadors Of Basketball
Editor's note: The following

Adolph Hupp's questions as to
who would replace graduated
Tom Kron and Larry Conleythis
season, it did provide an excellent opportunity for the Wildcats to establish friends the best
they know how through basketball.
The University, one of three
Kentucky teams selected to participate in the U.S. State Departments good will tours this
summer, spent a total of 35 days
on the journey.
"I have no idea of how many
miles wc covered during the

of Kentucky's
summer
basketball and pood will tour
of the Middle East was kept
for the Kernel by junior forw ard
Tom Porter.
By BILL PUCH
Kernel Sports Writer
An all expense paid tour of
the Middle East sounds like an
advertising gimmick for poem
composition. Yet for Tom Porter and the UK Wildcats a tour
of the Middle East provided
memories for the globetrotters
to relive with friends and family
for many years to come.
Porter, a junior forward said
the team is "glad to be back
in the land of hot dogs and hamburgers." Despite the frustrations of travel and a loss of
weight, the team is ready to
tackle the books again and, most
of all, the upcoming basketball
season.
While the trip overseas did
not answer many of Coach

trip," Porter said. "What with

work and play, I lost track of
the miles' between New York

and Israel."
However, the tour was not
all work and no play. A combination of the two kept the representatives busy from dawn till
dusk. In addition to the many
friends the Cats made, they
managed to post 17 wins as
opposed to one defeat.

9

nfSW W'

J

17

3"

if

i ' 4!

In the good will department,
however, the record is unblemished. The U.S. Ambassador
to Iran, Armin II. Meyers, in
a letter to Kentucky Gover