Inside Today's Kernel

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Vol. LVII, No. 88

Student Center enhibit offers visual adventure: Poge Three.

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University of Kentucky
FEB.
KY.,

LEXINGTON,

WEDNESDAY,

23,

M

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Editorial commends
Poge Four.

withdrawal of University

Second of four part series discusses

19GG

Eight Pages

financial aid horn

YM YWCA:

varied views on Castro's airlift: Poge Five.

Goldberg's visit contrasts President's visit a year ago: Poge Seven.

Picketers Met
With Jeers,
Egg Throwing
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5

Bv JOHN EH
Kernel News Editor
About 23 pickets protesting U.S. involvement in Vietnam were
peltered with several do.cn eggs and man more insults outside
Memorial Coliseum prior to L'.N. Ambassador Arlluii J. Coldbeig's
speech Tuesday afternoon
Those caught were pulled out
The pickets, many of them
of the crowd by officers and weir
members of the campus Students
asked to go into the Coliseum.
for a Democratic Society, were
surrounded b) approximate!) 200
During the picketing, two students, David Holwerk and ban)
onlookers shortly after they began
Arnett, carried signs ncarb) sa)-intheir protest about 1:30 p.m.
"Interval" and Chi)san-theinum.- "
Just belore 2 p.m., students
Holwerk, ancngineer-inwith eggs concealed in their
freshman, explained the)
pockets infiltrated the crowd,
were marching in opposition to
aud the barrage began.
the egg throwers. Arnett is an
Shells cracked on the heads,
arts and sciences junior. The
clothes, and signs of the pickwords w ere chosen as a mock
and
eters, oozing yellow yolk
protest against "the Univcrsit),
sticky white. Most of the missiles
broke on the sidewalk, as the which has been planting its
throwers sacrificed accuracy for chrysanthemums at the wrong
anonymity. Arms looping hook intervals," Holwerk said.
shots could be seen alxne the
Planners of the pickets had
crowd, but campus police had a
expected a
hard time telling whose arms
"but not like this,"
were whose.
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Unilcd States Ambassador to the United Nations,
Arthur Goldberg, center, told students, facult)
and townspeople at the concluding Centennial
Convocation Tuesday that the "national debate
on America's Vietnam policy has shown a rcmark- -

Go. Edward T. Breathitt, left,
and UK President John Oswald, right, also part it -'
patcd in the convocation. This picture was taken
at a press conference before the convocation. '
able consensus.

Kernel Photo by Rick Bell

UK Envoys To Thailand
To Propose Ag Project
ByCENECLABES

Kernel Staff Writer
Two University representatives returned home Tuesday'
night from a month's stay in
Thailand with a "favorable" report for the U.S. State Department on possible agricultural deKaen
Khon
in
velopment
Province.
If a
proposal is accepted by the
U.S. State Department's Agency
tor International Development,
UK could be in the running to
supply manpower lor such a program, according to Dr. William
n
Jansen, coordinator for the
exchange program. Dr.
Jansen and Dr. William A. Seay,
dean of the Col lege of Agriculture
Indo-nesio-

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n

later this month will submit are-po- rt
concerning their sta in Khon
Kaen Prov ince and the feasibility
of initiating a crop development
program for the prov ince.
This will be done at a "debriefing" in Washington conducted by the Agency for International Development according
to Dr. Jansen. Results of the
study will then be forwarded to
the Thailand government for
study, he said.
final decision as to
whether or not a program of the
type we recommend is possible
must be handed down," he said.
"However this does not mean, if
the governments (Thailand and

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"The

niiiiinnr..

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:

U.S.) accept the proposal, UK'
will be the school to supply the
man-powe-

Four provinces in the northeastern portion of the country are
being entered by theCommunits,
Dr. Jansen said.
"Klion Kaen is at the farthest
point from where the Communists
are entering, he said.
The major problems confront-in- g
crop grow th are climate and
rainfall. It rains about 50 inches
a year and all of that lulls w it liin
one month, he said.
Khon Kaen is one of the least
agriculture!) inclined provinces
in the counti). The land is the
most pood) developed in Thailand, Dr. Jansen said.
The studv conducted bv Dr.
Jansen, Dr. Seav and Dr. Howard
Beers, UK staff member in Indonesia, revealed a need for a
fundamental program.
"We don't want to mislead
anyone and make them think the
program would be a large one,"
Dr. Jansen said. "If accepted by
both governments onl) eight to
10 scientists would be needed."
Most ol the program would be
centered around "hard work he
said. The cost would not be high.

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counter-demonstratio-

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Several protest pickets greeted the Convocation gatherers veslerdav
afternoon. One group of protesters was,' in turn, greeted with a
barrage of eggs.

World Law Emphasized

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Kernel Photo by Rick Pell

Ambassador Goldberg was guest at u short reception at the Law
Building follow ing his address ut the Coliseum.

Speaking at a short reception
at the Law School Tuesday.
United
Ambassador
Nations
Arthur Goldberg told students
the great challenge facing all
of us is getting law into the

woild."

The ambassador spoke ol his
in the UN as one not di
vorced from law but close!)
bound up with a greater law
that must be a "guide in rule
of the world. "
"The woild will not survive
a great international mistake.
rol

Either we do what )ou're being
trained to do create some inles
of law or we're all doomed,"
Ambassador Coldberg said.
"Kvei) da) at the UN an
agreement is made we re making
International Law. It is a different kind of law than the great
writers wrote about when the)
talked onl) of treaties," he explained.
Mr. Goldberg cautioned the
students to be neither "too critical about other countries
new ones" nor to be

"too superior" in viewing them.

He suggested thai when such a
temptation arose a perusal ol
American legal practices disregarding law be taken.
Discussing w hie h ol his jobs
he felt the easier 01 moie difficult, the Ambassadoi said he
followed a soit of "Paikmson s

Law:"
"When I was Sccictai) ol
Lalxu I lound that moie difficult; then I thought being on
the Supieme Couit was moie
Continued On Page 2

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