xt7bcc0tt61k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bcc0tt61k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19670202  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February  2, 1967 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  2, 1967 1967 2015 true xt7bcc0tt61k section xt7bcc0tt61k Inside Today' s Kernel
The first grants for the humanities
are announced: Page Two.
Dr.

Beers sees hope tor stability in
Indonesia: Page Three.

Editorial comments
budgets: Page Four.

on

educational

The Vietnam war is a war on several
levels: Page Five.
The freshmen swimmers
breaking

have a
year: Page Six.

Voting is this week for the Mardi
Gras king and queen: Page Eight.

iv

I

record--

.1

I

A

of Kentucky
UniversityTHURSDAY, FEll.
LEXINGTON,

Vol. 58, No. 89

2, 1907

KY.,

Election For AWS
Senate Scheduled

Prof Cites
Interest
In Research

Applications Arc Due Now;
Voting To Be On March 1
new AWS Senate will be elected March 1.
coke party to acquaint women students with the candidates
will be given at 4 p.m. Feb. 22 in Room 206 of the Student
Center, AWS elections chairman Barbara Bates said Tuesday.
All Senate positions are open.
From Feb.
The Senate decided, in an
applications for
president, vice president, and effort to cut down on "popularito Panhellenic, ty contest" pitfalls, that unlike
representatives
Women's Residence Halls, Town last year, women would not be
Girls, and the sophomore, junior, required to vote for at least two
and senior classes are available candidates in the representatives
at Student Center Information, races.
in the AWS office (SC 107), the
The AWS Constitution stipuDean of Women's office (Adminlates there be at least two nomiistration Building), and through nees for president and vice presithe AWS representatives in dormdent and at least four for each
itories and sororities.
of the other elected positions.
Runners-u- p
for the first four
Miss Bates said an outline of
offices serve regular terms in the
Senate. Two representatives of candidates' qualifications, along
Town Girls (UK women residing with their pictures, would appear
at home in Lexington) and two at the polling places.
members for each returning class
are chosen. Applicants "should
be in good standing with the
University," Miss Bates said.

Why men act the way they
do why they make war and
why they don't which is the
realm of behaviorial and social
scientists, may soon be getting
as much emphasis and financial
support as do the questions
studied by physical scientists
on better ways to wage such
wars.
Dr. Douglas Schwartz, a professor of anthropology and mem-

A
A

0,

Applications are screened by
a committee of thepresent Senate
and its adviser, Sandra Kemp.
Miss Bates said the committee
would probably be AWS president Connie Mullins; herself, as
elections chairman; a Greek; an
independent; and a Town Girl.
Officers are installed about
a week after election and meet
jointly over a transition period
with their predecessors. The AWS
House of Representatives is elected in the fall, with the usual
semester turnover meaning some
new representatives throughout
the year.
Voting March 1 will take place
in the Student Center, the Fine
Arts Building, and in Blazer and
the Complex cafeterias.

Growing Pains
Are Plaguing
Southeast Asia
By DARRELL CHRISTIAN
Kernel Staff Writer
Southeast Asis is suffering
from political growing pains, the

kind that cause unstable governments and internal power strug-

gles.
And, according to Dr. Richard
Butwell, professor of political
science, the situation can be expected to get worse before it
gets better.
Dr. Butwell, director of the
Patterson School of Diplomacy
and an authority on Southeast
Asian politics, told a meeting
of Phi Delta Kappa education
honorary Wednesday, "There are
trreat and diverse events taking
place in Asia these days . . . and

they represent problems in political development."
t these
He spedlieil live

events:

Internal conflict in China
suggesting that Mao Tse- - Tung's
Great Cultural Revolution may
develop into a second large-sc- ale
civil war there.
2. The Vietnam war involving
1.

Continued on I'd ft

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ber of a national committee
studying the formulation of a

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practices at the Memorial Hall organ which has been
reported nearly ruined by steam that seeped into the building
in early January. The damage is expected to run upwards of

A coed

$20,000.

Heavy Steam Damage To Organ
May Run Upwards Of $20,000
By FRANK BROWNING

Kernel Associate Editor
Steam which seeped into
Memorial Hall in early January
may have caused damage to the
pipe organ there extending upwards of $20,000, and cancelled
all student recitals there this
semester, The Kernel has learned.
Dr. Arnold Blackburn, director of the organ's use and
professor of music, said steam
had worked into various parts
of the instrument and that the
damage began to show up as it
dried.
Built specifically (or Memo rial
Hall in 1952, theorgan"couldn't
be replaced for less than $70,000,"
Dr. Blackburn said.
Steam was reported in the
building Jan. 5, Clyde Lilly, director of the Physical Plant Division, said.
According to Mr. Lilly, a report was made Thursday (Jan- 5)
after which big fans were placed
in the building to blow out the
dampness. However, he said he
got a call the following Saturday night that the fans had been
turned off by someone, and a
maintenance worker was dispatched immediately to switch
them back on.
Mr. Lilly explained that a
return flow heating pipe had
burst, allowing "quite a bit of
humidity to leak into the building."
A similar break had occurred
about five years ago, he recalled.
He added that claims were made
then that the organ was ruined
by the steam but that it continued to be played anyway.
Dr. Blackburn calls the organ
"one of the finest in this part
of the country." It was .made
by the Holtkamp fiim of Cleveland.
"We've had to cancel out
everything for this semester. Recitals have to be held somewhere
else," Dr. Blackburn explained.
Senior and graduate organ re
-

Eight Pages

citals are given about every two
weeks during the semester and are
degree requirements.
No decision has yet been made
on what action will be taken.
Dr. Blackburn said "stop gap repairs" could be made for about
$6,000 which might keep the organ useable for the remainder of
the semester, but a complete repair must be made eventually.
"The ideal thing is tc end
it back to the factory," he said.
Damages incurred while the organ dried include cracked wood
sounding pipes, damages to bellows and wood chests (both of
which handle air flow to the
pipes), and ruin of all "relay
contacts" in the organ which are
made of platinum and silver.
Specific materials suffering
from the moisture include cork,
doeskin, leather, and glue which

becomes

worthless as the wood

dries.

"The longer it stays here without repairs, the worse it will
become," Dr. Blackburn declared. "Within a year the whole
thing would be useless."
If everything but the large
metal pipes are returned to the
factory repair would take eight or
nine months. In addition to
$15,000 to $20,000 for repair work,
it would cost another $2,000 to
remove the mechanism from
Memorial Hall.
Officials in the Arts and
Science College Office were uncertain as to what moves would
be made. An undetermined
schedule for renovation of Memorial Hall may play a large part
in what action is taken.
Mr. Lilly said that none of
the damage was covered by insurance.

Social Science Research Council as a separate Federal agency, said this week that interest
in the behaviorial and social
sciences among members of Congress "has never been higher."
Dr. Schwartz sees a new emphasis in this country on those
sciences, "perhaps matching in
scope funds and interest that
has been available for research
in the physical sciences."
Because of space-ag- e
emphasis and the technological race
to build new armaments, emphasis on research in the last
15 years has been primarily in
the physical sciences, he said.
"Now, because many of our
major problems are a result of
ihe population explosion, our

burgeoning cities, and the increasing number of countries attempting to develop along the
lines of Western nations, much
of the world is turning to
and social scientists
for answers."
After a
study, a
governmental policy for an agency comparable to the National
Science Foundation, has been
evolved. The study group will
make its recommendations to
Congress in the next few months.
The survey committee's 30
subcommittees includes anthropologists, economists, political
scientists, psychologists, and sociologists. During the last two
and a half years they have attempted to define frontiers the
directions behav ioristic and social research should take and
where the support should be
given.

Dr. Mead Says Change
Should Not Come Slowly
American marriage. The draft, U.S. relations in Vietnam. And
most important, the notion th; it social change must be slow .

Anthropologist

Margaret

Mead lashed out at all these
here Wednesday night calling for
either change or modifications in
each. Dr. Mead appeared as a
Concert and
part of the 1966-6Lecture Series.
Dr. Mead formed the core of
her noteless talk in taking issue
with what she called the prevailing feeling among social scientists
prior to World War II that it
is belter to move very slowly
and wait for the next generation
to make c hange.
The
former
Ivy League
teacher, who is largely responsible for gaining a recognition
of anthroixdogy in the public
mind, sprinkled dry wit through
her discussion as she described
life on Mamus, a "primitive"
island not far from Guam, in the
7

late 1920's and again in the 1950's
and 1960's.
Civilization there in 1929, at
the time of her first visit, was
but a little more advanced than
"our Anglo Saxon ancestors two
thousands years ago." Use of
metal implements was not

17- -,

r

y

known.

"Nobody thought the would
enter the modern world lor generations. When I first was there,
the adults wcie savages," she
said, adding that w hile they w tie
not cannibalistic they held no
reservations against selling war
prisoners to other cannibals.
"Then in 1951 I went to Australia where I discovered these
people had taken an enormous
leap," she exclaimed, describing
how they had been impressed by
American soldiers not trying "to

1

DR. MARGARET MEAD

convert them" and were desirous
ol adopting American institutions
and ci

iliation.

"They completely lcised
their own cultiuc they sat down
just as any group of anthiopol-ogistmight anil decided what
things they wanted to change,
she said. Schools, hospitals, a
Continued On Tuge

8

* -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Feb. 2. 1967.

2

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--

1

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By CAROL GREENE
ASHLAND Jesse Stuart, the

Appalachian poet, presented a
poetry reading at Ashland Community College Sunday to a capacity audience of students and
guests.
Stuart was introduced as "our
neighbor, and we're proud of

'

tl
';.
!

Jesse Stuart Reads His Poetry
For Ashland College Audience

-

.
:

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it."

Mr. Stuart said that his first
poems were written whilehewas
in high school and college, and
that he published them as part
of his efforts to enter Vandcrbilt
University. "I had heard somewhere that to get in there, you
had to have a book published.

In Abandoned Air Duct?

Tli is seemingly innocent piece of abandoned air duct is not at all
what it seems. Located near the Taylor Education Building, it is
a new piece of sculpture set out to beautify the campus.

First Humanities Awards Told
-

About
WASHINGTON
in fellowships to 287
scholars, most of them young

persons, were announced
Wednesday by the National Endowment for the Humanities.
New York will get the biggest
share of first fellowships from
the endowment; California is sec-- ,
ond.
Barnaby C. Kenney, chairman
of the endowment and former

ment

h

one-fourt-

Wednesday's awards consist

of 100 study and research fellowships for younger scholars; 130
summer fellowships, also for the
young; and 57 senior fellowships.
Kenney said that a "young" man
in this instance was one who
had received a doctorate no more
than five years ago.
The first type of fellowship
provides financial support for

N exus

for Students and Faculty

A Coffee House

Appa-lachi-

said it had established
three programs of fellowships
to increase the pool of "effective and dedicated humanistic
teachers and scholars." Earlier
awards to scientists had produced the same result, the statement said.

president of Brown University,
also disclosed grants totaling
$403,000 to institutions. Almost
of this total
will go to a program
$100,000
for "talking books" to aid disabled persons. "Talking books"
are phonograph records or tape
recordings of the texts of books.
Another grant of $100,000 was
given to an instructional television project in Boston.
In a statement, the endow- -

(c) New York Timet Newt Service

Guest Artists
We , come

up to eight months. The last
aids senior scholars for a year
of "uninterrupted study and writing which will enable them to
make contributions of major significance to their fields."

SPECIAL SHOW SATURDAY AT 11:15 p.m.

The fellowships, dispensed to
individuals in 44 states and the
District of Columbia, total $1.9
million.

313 Rose Lane
Friday and Saturday
8:00 p.m. - 1:00 a.m.

jj
1

"YOU ARE GOING

"OPEN STAGE'

TO

ENJ0Yva

(
vi,

'ALFIE' VERY MUCH."
LIFE Magazine

5

ininELr-i-

f

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1

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paramount pictures presents

l

urged young writers not to be
discouraged by people wlio say
writing is a Herculean task. "It's
not easy, to be sure," he said,
"but it's exciting. I often work
all night with my characters
by lamp light and black coffee."
Mr. Stuart said that he tries
to find something good in every
poem. "My students and friends
send mc their poems sometimes.
I always look for the best, even
if it's just a couple of lines."
He said, "I never want to
I want to be
reach the top
just under the top. The apples
are always better at the top of
the tree, but they're the ones
that always get stoned."
Mr. Stuart told the story behind his latest collection, "Hold
April." He had submitted a collection of poems to McGraw-Hil- l
without success. He said
that the company had neverpub-lishea single individual's work
before. Then while he was teaching in Egypt, he received a cablegram announcing that he had
won the "Academy of American
Poetry Award." Afterhehad won
the prize, McGraw-Hil- l
wired
him, saying they would like to
publish his collection.
Mr. Stuart closed the program with readings from this
book, including "So Let's Hold
April."

his little volume was privately
published. When I read some of
these poems later, I was ashamed
of them. Still, some of my friends
say these arc my best."
At any rate, he destroyed most
of the original copies of his first
collection. "Vanderbilt didn't
accept me too well . . . some
of them haven't yet," he said.
It was while he was at Vanderbilt that Stuart met the man
that would "change my life."
Prof. Donald Davidson, one of
his instructors, told him to develop his own style of writing.
"He told me, 'Go back, like the
Irish, and write about your people . . . Co back tn vnur own
people.' "
Among the people of
Mr. Stuart has found
a distinct culture. Hecommented
that when he leaves his area,
he hears people say that
doesn't know or have
any culture. He says, "I believe
we are the only people in America that do have a culture."
Stuart added that this is one
of the oldest cultures in America.
Mr. Stuart had words of encouragement for the young writers of the area. "Hills produce
poets." He said, "I think people here are closer to Cod, to
wild animals, to the soil." He
So

...

a,

d

UK Bulletin Board
Applications are now available for the Executive Committee of the Student Center Board
at the Student Center East Information desk.

Faculty members may turn
in applications for Faculty-StudeWeek until Feb. 6 in Room
nt

201

of the Student Center.

College Arts magazine is
sponsoring a $2,000 poetry contest open to all poets. The first
four grand prize winners will
have their own book of poetry
edited and published while every
entrant will receive an anthology
of the top 100 prize winning
poems. Write for details: Poetry
Contest, Box 314, West Sacramento, Calif. 95691.

Dr. Bruce Russett, Yale University, will speak on "International Regions and International
Systems" at 2:30 p.m. Friday in
Alumni House.

Students wishing to participate in the Baptist Student
Union's annual progressive dinner should meet at the BSU
at 5:45 p.m. Friday.

SKATING
Fri.

The University Symphony Orchestra, directed by Phillip
Miller, will present a concert
at 3 p.m. Sunday in Memorial
Hall.

and Sat. nights
10 'til

7:30 'til 10;

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

IW-

2,

7- i

Asian Situation To Get Worse, Bulivell Says

Continued From Page 1
more than 100,000 American fighting men.
3. Indonesia, rocked in September 19G5 by an unsuccessful

Communist coup, is stirring
again, and President Sukarno
may not last in power another
month.

4. Japan's

ruling Democratic
party was returned to office recently in a peaceful parliamen-

tary election.
5 India, the world's
largest
functioning democracy today,
laces elections this month while
famine threatens both the land
and the government now in
power.

"All of the situations have
something in common," Dr.
said. "They represent problems in political development and
a movement toward somewhat
definable ends."
He said before the movement
can succeed and the wars in
Southeast Asia cease, four basic
goals must be achieved, including
more institutions with highly
specialized political functions, a
clear gap between political and
affairs, larger participation in politics and an "enlargement of practical decisionmaking authority in government."
It is striving for these ends
that has turned Southeast Asia
into a boiling pot of revolutions
today, Prof. Butwell explained.
"Political development at the
excelerated pace that most countries want it is highly unstable,"
he said. "Political unrest will
continue in Vietnam, Indonesia
and China and may well break

But-we- ll

non-politic-

out in rather unpleasant form
in India."
Elaborating on each specific
struggle in Southeast Asia, Dr.
Butwell emphasized that the
Vietnam war is not solely between the North and South Vietnamese. The Buddhists, Catholics, soldiers, and mountain people are all fighting for something in the war, he said.

He called United States participation in the war "external
intervention" and charged that
such a foreign policy could not
control political development in
another country.
He accused Sukarno of serving
as a "break in the natural political development of Indonesia,"
adding that his present criticism
comes from the general feeling
that he has "stood in the way
long enough."
"It is impossible for the U.S.
to guarantee any future political
developments in Vietnam either
in the North or the South," Prof.
Butwell said. He was referring to
American hopes to establish a
democracy in South Vietnam before withdrawing troops.
Dr. Butwell called China a
"country grossly under developed
politically." He viewed Mao's
Cultural Bevolution as a staging
ground for a more direct political move to gain power.
"Apparently, Mao was kicked
upstairs in 1958, andhehascome
back in rather unusual form,"
Prof. Butwell said, referring to
the announcement recently that
Mao's resignation as party president nine years ago was forced.
"China is least able to mobilize resources," he said. "The
United States has long overrated

China. I have one reason to be
optimistic about the war in Vietnam now: I believe the Chinese
turmoil is almost out of control."

than in Japan, where the recent
election seems to reflect a stable
government.
" The political structure is so
much out of step with so many
is India that Dr. Butwell
It
other aspects of Indian life
fears will become the next hot
he said, using the education level
spot.
and caste system as prime exHe sees India's political deamples.
Interest groups in India are
velopment as progressing too
quickly considering the country's asking for their share, but India
famine and says its democracy is has little to offer anyone, Dr.
much more precariously rooted
Butwell said.

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DR. RICHARD BUTWELL

Beers Predicts Indonesia
Will Become Stable Nation
"There is no doubt that more tral provinces aligned against
Communists were killed through- West Java and the other islands
out Indonesia in the several taking sides or being similarly
months following the attempted split," said the man whose excoup (in the Fall of 1965) than in perience in international affairs
Laos and Vietnam combined in began in 1949.
as many years."
Dr. Beers was
From 1959-6The author of that statement, a
community development specDr. Howard VV. Beers, distinialist in Indonesia for the Council
guished professor of rural socio- on Economic and Cultural Aflogy, spent more than six years fairs.
During the three years that
in Indonesia before he returned to
followed, he was chief of party
this country last year. He will for the
technical asbecome director of Center for sistance University's
team at Bogor, IndoneDevelopmental Change Feb. 15. sia.
Dr. Beers expressed hopes and
Dr. Beers said it was apparent
"expectations" that the country that "helpful intervention" from
will "now step forward to greater mainland Chinese had
already
political stability and economic
been planned to follow the
but he would not success of the 1965
development,"
coup in Insay he fully believed the period donesia had it not failed so
of crisis in Indonesia had ended.
"An aim of Indonesia's quickly. said the slow and to
He
present leaders in consolidating Western minds tortuous trials
their hold on the government
against coup leaders and the
is to prevent a division across
twisting of screws against SukarJava like that in Laos or Vietno must be evaluated against
nam, with the east and cen- - this strategy to avoid civil war,
and the interventions invited or
otherwise of other powers.
"The possibility of the split
has not yet been eliminated,"
Dr. Beers emphasized. "It is no
doubt considered in every calFOUND
culation by General Suharto and
FOUND High school class ring in
his colleagues in the present govmen's room of M. I. King Library.
Owner call and identify at Periodical
ernment."
. 2Flt
Room.
He added that it is a tempta
2

'

CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE

'J '

tion to American impatience to
conclude that the"Sukarno(iues-tion- "
should have been settled,
and "decisively," but many Indonesians explain similingly that
the solution is being sought "in
the Indonesian way." But there
also is impatience in Indonesia,
he said, and the continual organized protests of students have
exerted a strong pressure to get
the matter over with.
The rural sociologist described Sukarno as "once an undisputed master in balancing opposed political forces and staying
in power at the nexus of their
compromises."
He said the Indonesian president still retains a charismatic
hold on the Javanese millions
that is a reality difficult for Western minds to understand. The
Suharto strategy acknowledges
this, he added, and has peristent-ltried to destroy the Sukarno
power in government, at the same
time preserving the Sukarno
which he said
is the Sukarno face universally
visible among the masses.
Reports are, he added, that
the vacancies will be filled by
representatives of the
groups, and he forsees
pressure from the parliament in
the next several weeks to destroy Sukarno's power.
y

myth-of-the-her- o,

PERSONAL
the temporary absence of
our Editor, The Kernel staff takes
great pride in informing the campus
of his impending betrothal to Miss
Ann Straus of Louisville. Accordingly, we have begun our prepara2F2t
tions for August 5.

DURING

WANTED

ATTENTION I need 20 girls who
are interested in working only
hours per week for $5.00 and up
per hour. If interested call 6344 or
31J4t

6651.

WANTED
Girl to share
furnished new apartment. Call
lF2t
after 3:30 p.m.
STORE
BOOK
needs
WALLACE'S
your used textbooks. Bring them in
anytime. We pay top prices. We buy
lFtf
all used textbooks.
WANTED
ROOMMATE
Boy. to
share efficiency in new apartment
building. Off street parking, private
after 5 p.m.
entrance. Call
lF2t
ROOMMATE

277-32-

254-84-

l

Want a date for the Mardl
Gras with the Black Knight? Ted.
2Flt

COEDS

SPECIAL
HOSIERY

The last 100 days are the
hardest, but go by the quickest.
2Flt

M. A.

You looked so unhappy today.
What can I do to cheer you up?
2Flt
Teddy Bear.

K.

SALE!

Furnished
FOR
apartment. Across street from UK
Med Center, $125 monthly. Living
room, dining room, kitchen, bath.
RENT

COMET

2F7t

Call

LOST

Light gray male cat in vicinity Clifton Ave. Reward. Call
30J3t

LOST

I

r

255-11-

2

pair for

Black, Richman Bros,

topcoat
with zip-olining. Exchanged Sat.
who
night at Crane's. Will personChemhas it return ti to Room 303
2F2t
istry Bldg.
Introduction to Literature
LOST
book.
Between Splinter Hall and
Reward.
Student Center, Monday.
2Flt
or 2516.
Call
LOST

NYLONS

x

On-The-Camp-

....

2321
2320
2447
2319

97c

i

Nave Drugs
331 S. LIME

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University of Ktutiukv, Lexington. Kentucky 405oii. Sen. ml class
postage paid at Lexmnton, Kentucky.
duinu:
l'uMisheil rive times ,ne!
the school year except heliJ.ivs and
exam periods.
l ublished by the Hoard of Student
Publications, UK Post (Ml ice Box 4D.I6.
Nick l'ope. chairman, and Patricia
Ann Nickell, secretary.
DcKun as the Cadet in 1894 and
published continuously as the Kernel
since 1915.
Advertising published herein is intended to help the reader buy. Any
false or misleading advertising should
be reported to The Editors.

Editor, Managing Editor
Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors, Sports
News Desk
Advertising. Business.
Circulation

X

Sale

The Kentucky Kernel

HATES
SUBSCRIPTION
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Per copy, from files
KERNEL TELEPHONES

us

On Famous Make
SWEATERS,

SKIRTS,

Open

10--

Phone

BLOUSES,
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I

i

SUITS

soff

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13

--

121

-n

A YARN SHOP

Walton Avenue
Lexington,
Beatrice E. Barnes

Ky.

252-750- 0

STRAW TOTE BASKETS
KITS
off Sale!

Needle Point your Initials
or a Motto

* The Kentucky Kernel
The Smith's Outstanding College Daily
Univi hsm y ok Ki.nii cky

ESTABLISHED

THURSDAY, FEB.

1894

2, 19G7

Editorials represent the oj'inions of the Editors, not of the University.

Walti

h M.

Chant,

Editor-in-Chi-

William Knait,

Sum: Hooco, Editorial Page Editor

Business Manager

Exploi ling Education
It is distressing that universities in six states are currently

budget cuts, this coining
at a time when higher education
is more vital than at any moment
in history.
The budget cuts are generally
being accompanied by the increase
in tuition. Wecan understand some
tuition increase in that the price
of everything, including the acquisition of knowledge, is going
up. But some hikes are outlandish. For example, the Texas College and Universities Coordinating
Board has suggested that
tuition at the Univ ersity of Texas
be increased from $100 to $224
a year, and that tuition for
students jump from $300 to
facing

in-sta- te

out-of-sta-

te

prompted the presidents of the
state's four universities to warn
that their budgets must be increased or higher education in the
state would slide downhill.
Of course the most absurd

inancial crisis facing an American
university system is being created
in

California under the

right-win-

g

governorship of Ronald Reagan.
If his proposals are adopted, the
cost of education at the University of California would jump from
$220 in "incidental" fees to $620

tuition for California residents,
one of the highest tuitions of public
universities in the country. This is
coupled with a $7.5 million reduction in state funds for California-owne- d
in

colleges.

$640.

In Indiana the State Budget
Agency reduced the state college
budgets from $525.1 to $243.8 million for the 1967 fiscal year. This

f-

We

Staff Artist

hope state legislatures open

their eyes quickly before American
higher education suffers injuries
which will take decades to heal.

I'll Sing

A

Simple Little Song For Yon!'

Letters To The Editor:

Reader Raps Rupp's Recruiting Results
To the Editor of the Kernel:

character of
The
UK's basketball team still reflects
the Administration's apathy towards the problem of racial discrimination.
If we begin with the fact that
Coach Rupp and associates have
not recruited a Negro basketball
player, then we might draw several conclusions. They are as follows: (a) qualified Negroes are very
scarce and very difficult to come
by; (b) Rupp and associates are
victims of circumstances plus they
are not very good recruiters, or
(c) Rupp and associates have not
made a sincere or genuine effort
to recruit basketball players regardless of race.
The Administration and other
apologists for the University's ap-

Except to the paranoid or the
very simple minded, all of these
reasons are extremely transparent.
It is a fact that in Kentucky and
many other states, Negroes make
up a large percentage of the best
high school and prep school players. Many of these youths are well
qualified to meet the academic standards of both UK and the SEC.
If Rupp and his staff have been
recruiting high school basketball
players without regard to color and
creed, the probabilities dictate that
at least one Negro player should
have been recruited. And since we
have failed to sign a Negro to a
basketball grant-in-aione had to
d,

conclude that a
recruiting policy has not been

fol-

lowed.

If UK were to win the NCAA
parent discriminator)' recruiting basketball title every year by folpractices have continually ex- lowing its current recruitment pole
plained Rupp's
policy" icies, it would still be a loser, moras mere fate. The official explanaally speaking. It is indeed sad that
tions usually focus on the alleged the Administration has seen fit to
difficulties of recruitment.
"go along" with this situation.
When all