xt7dnc5sb64k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dnc5sb64k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661130  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 30, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 30, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7dnc5sb64k section xt7dnc5sb64k Inside Today's Kernel
O.f.O.

is still
from Mississippi
Pago Two.

back funds
Head Start project:

holding

The Teacher Corps is helping
to
strengthen Kentucky's urban slum
schools: Page Three.

University of Kentucky
Vol. 58, No.

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, NOV. 30,

6.1

two-part-

196ft

Eight Pages

SDS Plans
The UK Chapter of Students
for Democratic Society will present the second annual Vietnam
Forum the day after General
Maxwell Taylor speaks here.
The purpose of the forum,
the group says, is to create and
sustain a dialogue on US Policy in Vietnam.

J
,--

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J:t
f

The Forum will begin at 7:30
p.m. Dec. 7 at Memorial Hall.
Gen. Maxwell Taylor, former Ambassador to South Vietnam, will
speak the previous night, Dec.
6, at Memorial Coliseum to a
Central Kentucky Concert and
Lecture Series audience.
Speakers for SDS will be Prof.
Richard Butwell, and C. Clark

Dr. Butwell has been director of the Patterson School of

and

International

Commerce and professor of political science here since September, 1965. He was a field
representative for the Rockefeller Foundation in the Philippines
from 1964-6- 5
and a SEATO Research Fellow in Thailand, Burma, Vietnam, and the Philippines in 1962. He was a
Professor at the University of Rangoon, Burma, in
Ful-brig-

ht

1959-6- 0.

There will be a short address
by each speaker followed by a
short intermission, after which
the speakers will answer questions from the floor.
Following this the floor will
be open to faculty members for
presentations.

Each

member of the faculty is encouraged to present his views on
some aspect of our U.S. Vietnam
policy.

J;

I

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Kernel Photo by Bill Gross

Campus On Ice
walks reflect lights near the King Library. The slippery
surface made walking hazardous for students as the light snow
melted and froze. A low of 20 is forecast for tonight with a high
of 29 for Thursday. Some snow flurries, also.

Professor Finds That Fewer UK
Graduates Leave State For Work
Migration of University graduates to other
states is decreasing even though nationwide competition to hire them is growing every year.
A UK associate professor who has been close
to the problem for 30 years says two factors
account for the change:
The growing number of industries locating sizeable plants in Kentucky and making
available more and better jobs.
A growing desire amoung seniors to find
their futures within the Commonwealth.
William A. Tolman, associate professor of
business administration, says more than 500 recruiters from companies located all over the
country will visit the campus this year to interview graduating seniors.
"Kentucky employers represent only a small
percentage of this group," Tolman adds, "yet
chance of
they now enjoy better than a
getting the men and women they seek."

By JOHN ZEH
Kernel Associate Editor

-

Northern Community

College students and staff members weren't
bragging about the commanding view from

their school's hilltop site Tuesday.
Before they could crowd into the classrooms, the icy road up the hill had to
be braved. On foot, it was a long, shivering walk. In cars, it was a treacherous
trail already lined with autos that didn't
make it.
For some, the day began at 8 a.m.;
for others, it ended at 11 p.m. The college
must operate all those hours because its
only building, built in 1960 for 800 students, cannot handle the present enrollment of 1,280.

There are 11 classrooms, counting an
auditorium and music room that have to
be used. Most classes are larger than director Thomas Hankins likes. Many bookshelves
in the library are nearly bare: the many
students overwork the too few books. Park

v.

A

brief holiday cease fire has apparbeen agreed upon in Vietnam:

ently
Page

Seven.

Johnson Tuesday for a hint of what maybe happening in Rhodesia.
He paraphrased Dr. Johnson's famous remark to Boswell:
"Depend upon it, sir, when
Among labor backbenders,
a man knows he is to be hanged
too, there seemed to be a perin a fortnight, it concentrates
ceptible shift toward some form
his mind wonderfully."
of verbal agreement with Smith
Wilson suggested that the on the crucial issue that is, an
imminent threat of a British ap- assurance of
steady progress
peal to the United Nations had toward African rule.
affected the attitude of RhodeIf Parliamentary Labor
sia's white rebel Prime Minis
is seen to shift in this
Ian Smith. He detected a
ter,
direction, it could be signismall movement
toward COm- - ficant for Wilson. He has been
promise by Smith.
concerned at the strong
In the lobby of the House greatly
of Commons, members on both party feeling against compromise with Smith a feeling at
sides thought Dr. Johnson's reodds with a general public demark was working on Wilson
sire here to duck a showdown
as well. They felt his mind was
in Southern Africa.
concentrating more on the possiWhat is increasingly affectbility of settlement as the deading the views of Wilson and
line for a tougher policy
some of his supporters is the
grim thought of what may follow
recourse to the U.N. The fear
is that sanctions against Rhodesia
could turn into a trade war with
South Africa, deeply injuring the

50-5-0

An unique publication, issued annually by
the Commerce Employment Association under
Tolman' s direction, has had something to do
with giving Kentucky employers of College of
Business and Economics graduates an edge.
booklet
"Bargains in Brains," a
printed on glossy paper, contains the photo and
biography of each senior who wants to find a
job. It is mailed each October to over 2000
employers. The mailing list includes most of
America's "Blue Chip" companies.
50-pa-

For 35 years the booklet has been mailed to
interested employers. "The number of jobs won
by those listed in its pages is impressive," Tolman says.
He estimates that every commerce graduate
who wanted a job has gotten it "to his

Perched Atop A Treacherous Peak
Is Overcrowded Northern College
COVINGTON

Si.

Party-sentimen- t

Kissinger.
Kissinger is a former National
Secretary of SDS, and was an
organizer of the SDS March on

Washington, D.C. to End the
War in Vietnam. He holds a master's degree in mathematics from
the University of Chicago, and is
presently a lecturer in mathematics at Mudelein College in
Chicago. He is a native of Henderson, Ky.

J

Louie and Pat may have the trouble
of trying to make an encore: Page

By ANTHONY LEWIS
(t) Nrw Vorfc Tim New Service
Minister Harold Wilson drew on Samuel

LONDON-Pri- me
--

children of Blue
learning how to

Rhodesia Shaken
By British Threat
Of U.N. Sanctions

1

Vietnam
Discussion

Diplomacy

split in the GOP. offers real
trouble for the
system, editorial says: Page Four.
The

Mentally retarded
Grass School ore
live: Page Five.

ing spaces are scare. Vending machines
in the "student center" a short hallway-sizeroom must have to be filled daily.
There is office space for only half the faculty.
University officials in Lexington, 75 miles
away, but only an hour's drive down
recognize litis "serious crowding," to use
President John W. Oswald's words. They
also realize the investment UK has at the
present "beautiful, commanding" site, and
plan to stay there.
Oswald Tuesday quieted speculation that
a "country campus" would be established
in suburban Kenton County. He announced
plans are being made for long range development and for construction of temporary
buildings on the hilltop, which overlooks
downtown Covington.
Prefabricated buildings to be completed
by fall will add eight classrooms and 18
offices to help handle an enrollment that may
reach 2,000. In
years, Oswald expects,
6,000 Northern (and Southern Ohio) students

d

10-1-5

may being taking courses at the center.
The first building of the complete development will be a

seven-stor-

y

classroom-office-stude-

center facility, scheduled
pletion

for com-

by 1969.

A good part of federal construction funds
for education, about 22 percent, has been
reserved for public two-yea- r
colleges, Dr.
Oswald told a Rotary Club meeting here
Tuesday. This is evidence of the growing
inimportance of community college-typ- e
stitutions in the broad field of college educa-

tion.
One of the best ways to fulfill a modern
university's main mission, educating undergraduates, is to dev elop community colleges.
About a fourth of all the freshmen and sophomores in U.S. colleges are in community
colleges, Dr. Oswald said. By 1975, he expects
that percentage to triple.
The enrollment figure at the Northern
Community College might v ery well parallel,
or exceed, the national trend. That is one
reason why the University is concerned
about adding more buildings there.

British economy.

The deadline was fixed by
Wilson himself. He promised the
commonwealth conference last
September that he would ask
for mandatory U.N. sanctions
against Rhodesia if there had
been no settlement by the end
of the year.

UK

Studying
Development
Course Plan
Charles Haywood, dean of
the college of business and economics indicated Tuesday a
course in industrial development
may be initiated here.
Cov. Edward T. Breathitt had
urged Kentucky universities to
consider such an undertaking
when he spoke to the Economic
Development Commission Monday night.
Haywood said he and Commerce Commissioner Katherine
Pcdcn had previously discussed
what assistance the University
might give her department in
training specialists in economic
development.
Currently the college offers a
course in economic development
on domestic and international
levels.
However, a regular course in
Industrial Development has also
been considered, Haywood ex-

plained.
The first step would be a
short course, conference, orsemi-na- r
with people in Kentucky in
industrial development participating.
"We have a project financed
the federal Economic Developby
ment Administration which is
aimed at providing technical assistance to business and communities in the Appalachian area
of the state," Haywood

* 2

--

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Nov.

r"

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Planned
Thursday

WW

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color-filtA
version of
Goethe's "Faust," in German,
will be presented at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in the Student Center Theater.
The film is entirely in German, with only a few brief subtitles in English
Starring the famous German
actor, Gustaf Grundgcns, in a
stage production at the German
Playhouse, Hamburg, all the action takes place in impressionistic style within the hollow,
vaulted area of a sparsely set

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Gretchen In 'Faust'

flJcorjje 01

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NORMAN

ftw.ewkVittvwww,v.,.v,w.v.wft

PANAMA

CARROLL O'CONNOR

PRODUCTION
GEORGE

TYNE' EDDIE RYDER Screenplay
Story

J

Feature Times:
1:05, 3:15, 5:25,'
7:30, 9:40

by NORMAN

PANAMA

&

MELVIN

by NORMAN
FRANK

PANAMA, LARRY GELBART

and Directed

Produced

and

by NORMAN

PETER

BARNES

PANAMA

RjS

TECHNICOLOR" FROM WARNER BROS.tii

Starts 7:30

mm.

252-449-

1

Frontier!

T

Dean

inten-

sive efforts to recruit poor white

Regional training officials of Project Head Start have received
word that communities must now provide an extra 10 percent
of the necessary cost of having the program.
Miss Vivian Burke, curri
culum director at the University
doesn't necessarily
"This
and RTO for 19 central Kentucky mean it has to be money," Miss
counties, said that a letter from Burke stated. "They can donate
the Office of Economic Opporthe building, pay the utilities
tunity had informed her that bill, or furnish school supplies.
the federal government could
Miss Burke said that she
only provide 80 percent of the
total cost of the 1967 Head Start didn't know why the money had
been cut back unless the fedprogram.
The letter explained that eral government "just doesn't
amendments to the Economic Ophave the money." In her words,
portunity Act of 1965 passed by "Head Start has been successthis session of Congress affected
ful."
the Head Start program. It went
"Head Start is not a program
on to say that the new law had
to give impoverished children a
not fully been considered, but
that it now seemed necessary to head start in the academic world,
cut back federal aid to the Head but to give them experiences
Start program and ask particiequal to those of their more
communities to raise 20 fortunate peers." Miss Burke
pating
said.
percent of the cost.

UK Bulletin Board

the

The Block and Bridle Club
will present The Little International Livestock Show at Coldstream Farm on Newtown Pike
Saturday. There will be a
lunch at noon for $1.25
a plate and a livestock show at
1 p.m. with no admission charge.
bar-b-q-

Off-Camp-

The University Philosophy
Club is sponsoring a debate on
"Is Cod Dead?" at 4:15 Thursday in Room 309 of the Student
Center. The speakers will be
Dr. Thomas Clshewsky, assistant professor of philosophy; Dr.
William Barr, professor of systematic theology at the Lexington Theological Seminary; and
Robert Fleishman, senior phi-

FREE MOVIE
WED.,

THURS.

SEE

WILLIE MOSCONI

r!

K1

UGIZOI3

f .i..' IsinnfTTTrn
MV'Haif

C2GDSS

r
xA

PLUS

Electric

Heaters

ter.

There will be a meeting of
Student Associ

TUES.,

1A.

In-C- ar

ation at 6 p.m. Thursday in
Room 111 of the Student Cen- -

BILLIARDS

IN
ir-- 3

)

to the project.

Local Head Start Leaders
Now Must Find Some Funds

MAKE THE SHOTS USED
"THE HUSTLER"

I

members several weeks ago signed and presented petitions to
Shriver asking him to grant funds

7 p.m.

Half
Half

1

proposals.
The controversy over CDGM
has involved many staff members of the Office of Economic
Opportunity. More than 100 staff

CAMPUS

j

if

The reply said "The board
will establish procedures to prevent discrimination in hiring. Additionally, efforts to reach the
poor white community shall be
made throughout the life of the
program as vacancies occur."
The O.E.O. said it had made
its reply but would not specify
publicly at this time the unsatisfactory points in the sponsors'

commit themselves to serve until some evidence exists that a
grant is given."

The O.E.O. demands

i?3ttf(f
T vVra

ti'hk$t$

DEADLY.. .DANGEROUS...

the game is...

BLINDFOLD!

.

MW'

I

losophy major.

The Department of Theatre Arts Presents
TENNESSEE WILLIAMS'

The Glass Menagerie
NOV. 30 - DEC. 1, 2, 3, 4

Featuring

...

Patricia

--

(

(

BLINDFOLD

TECHNICOLOR c

IN

130 W. Euclid

&M

ROCK HUDSON CLAUDIA CARDItlAlE

mem-

bers.

Robert Peterson will present
a slide lecture on Brasilia at
1 p.m. Thursday in Room 209
of Pence Hall. The lecture is
sponsored by the School of Architecture.

HILARIOUS WEEK!

5

ASwingiriFun-Rornp-

Shriver has refused funds for
that preschool project since Sept.
30. He found it deficient in program, in financial practices, and
in personnel, and said it had
failed to involve the poor in
the white community. Mississippi political leaders accused it
of working closely with militants
of the civil rights movement.
One of the O.E.O. s conditions required "commitments
from qualified persons" to serve
in eight specific positions.
The reply to O.E.O. named
personnel commitments for nearly all the positions.

2nd

Adm. $1.25

children and adult staff

laid down
A
O.E.O. provides that CDGM's
by
board and its major committees
be reconstituted with new leadership, and that theboard'sbiracial
character be made substantial
and effective.
The reply said "CDGM has no
objection to increasing its board
membership substantially. We
will need clarification of what
Substantial and effective biracial
character in the board would
mean. The board has approached
a number of whites who have
refused to serve or who will not
"pre-conditio-

Meantime, more than 150
physicians, psychiatrists, educators, social workers and others
in the Washington area wrote a
letter to Sargent Shriver, O.E.O.
Director, requesting him to resume financing of CDGM. They
asked for an appointment to discuss the issue.
"Judged by professional
standards," the group wrote,
"CDGM has been an inspiring
success. To our way of thinking the Child Development
Group of Mississippi has shown
great accomplishment and great
potential in terms of improving
the educability of the extremely
deprived children in Mississipp-

I

'

with

LOFTUS

tices.

;(CODIPtfDS-ILDSD-S(C(IDtft- fi

t

A.

Tlmn New Service
WASHINGTON -- Leaders of
a Mississippi Head Start Project, which has been denied furYork

ther antipoverty funds, have replied to nine conditions laid down
by the Office of Economic Opportunity (O.E.O.) which considers the reply unsatisfactory.
O.E.O. sources said that they
believed progress was being made
in negotiations with sponsors of
the project known as CDGM
(Child Development Group of
Mississippi). Nevertheless, they
said the O.E.O. had informed
the sponsors that their proposals
on the nine points did not go
far enough in guaranteeing specific changes in personnel and prac-

ELLA BUCHI

Yiniii

Hot

JOSEPH

c) Hrw

studio stage.

Tony

Poverty Funds
Mississippi
Still Held Back By O.E.O.

252-220-

0,

--

armichae

Extension 2411

Curtain: 8:30 p.m. THE GUIGNOL THEATRE

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL.

dncsdav. Nov.

V

.50,

lM.-.-

'5

Teacher Corps Strengthens Urban Schools
By GENE CLABES
Kernel Managing Editor

-

LOUISVILLE
The great
migration to the suburbs by the
middle and upper middle classes
is leaving the central cities with
predominantly lower
socio-econom- ic

families.
Hooker T. Washington and

William

--

Perry

Elementary

schools here have predominantly
Negro student enrollments from
lower
families as
a result of this suburban sprawl.
Both these predominantly
Negro schools received interns
from the National Teacher Corps
this fall, and school officials
socio-econom- ic

Second of three parts.
anticipate a much "strengthened
program for slower students because of the interns.
"Most of the students are
from lower
levels.
Very few live in the immediate
school neighborhood.
Most of
the students come from the project area located across the street
from the school. A very large
percentage live with only one
parent, and most are on welfare," said Roger Conwell, assistant principal of Washington
socio-econom- ic

School.

"Iam sure the program helps.
It makes the students have a
sense of belonging," Conwell
said. "Before we had interns
the teacher was unable to get
around to all the students. But
with two teachers in the room,
the slower students can get the
much needed attention they require.
Dr. Harry Robinson, UK director of the program points out
that the National Teacher Corps
is not only designed to aid slower
children but all children who
live in culturally deprived areas
despite the use being made of
the interns in Washington School.

too hard. In the morning he
would come to the classroom
door, sit down and try. I would
have to go upstairs and push
him into the room, but recently
I
placed him in a room that
had an intern and the boy is
perfectly happy. The intern
helped him lose that feeling of
insecurity by giving him indiv idual attention.
"Because the interns are
younger than the av erage teac her,
the children have a tendency to
identify with them," Conwell
said. "Children see the male interns as big brothers."
E. W. Belcher, assistant su-

"During the last census track
the areas around Perry School
were the number one low socioeconomic areas in Louisville,"
Charles Rees, team leader at
Perry School, said.
"Of course it has been only
a month or so and w e have not
been able to determine the
amount of achievement on the
part of the slower students as
a result of the interns," Conwell said. "Even though I feci

sure the interns have aided and

will aid the school's work with
the slower students we are not
going to move a mountain in a
day, it is going to take time."
Conwell is a young, progressive educator, who appears to
have taken a special interest in
the Teacher Corps and its future
at Washington School.

"Some of the students enrolled here fail to see their dad
but once a week," he said.
"Many of the families must have
both parents working to even
attempt to make both ends meet.
Too many students have to go
home and take care of Mary,
Sam, and Jane in the afternoon
because the mother and father
are working. This tends to give
them a false sense of authority
and independence that creates
problems in the classroom. With
the interns in the classroom, it
tends to help these children get
the attention they need. If the
student can be reached before he
or she gets out of grade school,
his high school problems can be
cleared up."
Conwell says too many "slow
children" are pushed aside by
the faster students; the interns
help give them "much needed

aid."
"For example," Conwell continued, "one child in a class

had all kinds of excuses about
doing his work. He was only
in the second grade and he was
complaining that the work was

perintendent

of

Louisville

Schools in charge of Instruction
said, "I'm delighted wehave two
Teacher Corps teams in Louisville. I wish we could have received the sixteen interns which
we applied for."
Louisville asked for 16 interns,
but because several did not qualify for the
program,
the city's total was cut to ten
with two team leaders.
Belcher cited two reasons why
the Louisville City Board of Education believes the NTC program is important:
1. "It is dedicated to training leaders to work in underprivileged areas. It is the underprivileged areas in which we
have the greatest difficulty in
recruiting teachers to work."

interns upon their completion of
the program."
Mrs. Lillian Henderson, team
leader at Washington School, has
some reservations about whether
the program will ever graduate
its first group of interns. She
says the key to the program is
to get people who want to teach
in deprived areas to join the
Corps.

"This has always been a problem," Mrs. Henderson said.
"Very few teachers want to come
into these areas and the very
people who decide the future of
such programs at the NTC never
come to the area to see what
the problems are. Many of them
are not educators and don't know
the area's educational needs."
Concerning problems with the
NTC Conwell said "if the program has any faults it is the
uncertainty from Washington
about the future.
"The interns, teachers, team
leaders and school officials have
tried to make this program
work," he said.
Most" of the ten interns in
the two schools agree the uncertainty has been a serious problem.

ham, N.C. said "the problems
of not knowing where the next

check was coming from
a lot of anxiety but that
seems to be cleared up now.
We all plan to stay with the
program until it folds."
Elizabeth Shtimaker, also an
intern at Washington School,
said, "It's kind of like an adventure. If it falls, then we all fall."
At Ferry School interns have
organized a reading club to create interest in reading for "enrichment and recreation."
"Each day before school begins, slower students who have
been recommended
by their
teachers are asked to come and
participate in the club," Rees
said. "The students come at
8 p.m. or 30 minutes before school
takes up. It has been very successful. Apparently parents are
interested. They get the children
up and send them in earlv."
pay

caused

Despite apparent acceptance

by the parents, students and
school officials, the NTC's future looks dim. If Congress does
not fund it next year the two-yeprogram will die. The current $7.5 million operating budget will be exhausted in June
ar

Judith Mitchell, an intern at of 1967.
Next: The Rural Side.
Washington School from Dur

"1

"Because the team leader
the intern provides for
schools where they are working
much needed additional help."
Belcher said it has been
demonstrated in many places
that children from underprivileged areas need more adult supervision per fewer children.
ex"I think this
perience is a good method for
training teachers," he said. "We
will be interested in hiring these
2.

and

CLASSIFIED ADS
WANTED

LOST
LOST
Eastern High School Class
RingC. with initials IfS.A.H. Lost in
found contact
P. building.
the
30N4t
Reward.
Shirley,
TYPING

WALLACE'S

STORE

0.

Expertly and promtly done
home,
experienced, legal,
technical and academic. Call

TYPING
in my

266-81-

23N6t

TYPED

Manuscripts, stencils, multi-lit- h
masters. Dai y
p.m.; Satur-

per week. Transportation
5.

Burn draft cards not
babies. Abolish the ROTC. Teach
love of enemies. Not hate.
3;Ntf

WAR IS EVIL.

TEDDY Even if we vote unanimously for you, we will fight amongst
30Nlt
ourselves.
Evelyn.
WANTED
Lavalier mate to share
new G.T.O. and fancy apartment.

provided.

29N3t

Kappa Delta, Kappa Alpha Theta.
Kappa Kappa Gamma and Alpha
Gamma Delta need not apply. Call
33Nlt
or
255-58-

GIVENS,

p.m.

day

TUTOR
WANTED
for high school
boy in Plane Geometry. Three hours
Call

f

PERSONAL

needs
your used textbooks. Bring them in
anytime. We pay top prices. We buv
all used textbooks.
15Ntf
WANTED
Spanish tutor. Prefer
senior or graduate in Spanish. ApShawneetown
ply at Apt.
after 4 p.m.
28N5t
BOOK

FDR SALE
FOR SALE

1964 New

Moon.

10 x 56.

Separate din.ng room, breakfast bar.
2 bedrooms, fenced yard, awning.
22N5t

Call

SALE

FOR

Sport 5); excel2.000 actual mi!e3. A

Honda

lent condition.
or
very good buy. Phone
29N3t
anytime.
fast
FOR SALE 1964 Jaguar
back coupe; excellent condition. Call
256-28-

266-62-

E

29N5t

5.

FOR RENT
FOR

RENT

effici-.nc- y

FOR

RENT

Apartment; modern,
efficiency. Walk to UK;
and parking. Call

apartment, attractive y furnished; walk to UK. 317 Transyl-va- n
23Ntf
a Park. Cah
two-roo-

3

or

FOR RENT

Wftfo

29N4t

Two private rooms, linboys only; close to
738 Trrinont St. Call
29N3t

ens furnished;
bath; phene.

'

FOUND

Woman's sorority ring, near
3UNU
4759.
Uirker Hall. Identify.

FOUND

The Kentucky. Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel, University
of Kentucky,
Station, University 40506. Second-clas- s Lexington, Kentucky,
at Lexington. Kentucky.
postage paid
Published five times 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
UK Post
of Student Publications,
Office Box 4986. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell. secretary.

--

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* The Kentucky Kernel
The Smith's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
ESTABLISHED

WEDNESDAY, NOV.

1894

30, 1966

Editorials represent the ojtinions of die Editors, not of the University,
YValtf.h M.

Chant,

Stkvk Hocco, Editorial Papc Editor

Editor-in-Chi-

William

KNArr, llusiness Matwper

Dialogue On Vietnam
dents with little

University students will be afforded an unusual opportunity next
week to gain a fuller insight into
the Vietnam conflict. General Maxwell Taylor, former United States
ambassador to Vietnam, will speak
Tuesday in Memorial Coliseum.
The following evening, UK's Students for a Democratic Society
(SDS) chapter will present their
views in a Vietnam Forum.
Speakers at the SDS assembly
will be Dr. Richard Butwell, director of the Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce and professor of political
science at the University, and Clark
Kissinger, former national secretary of SDS.
These two meetings should provide an exceptional dialogue on
Vietnam, and we hope that stu

or no responsirefrain from spoiling the
bility
events for other more intelligent
and more interested members of
the University community.
Should pickets develop at either
gathering, we trust that the right
to picket will be recognized and
that there will be no childish incior name
dents such as
calling. With the new Student Center policy for speakers in effect,
no students with something to say
need go unheard.
We encourage students to take
full advantage of the speech by.
Taylor and of the SDS Forum, to
listen 'to the issues involved, and
to take a more vital part in them.
Certainly, the Vietnam war is
one of the most significant issues
of our time, and we must create
a greater awareness of it.
egg-throwi-

'Then You Haven't Decided Yet Whether
You'll linn, Governor?"

Danger Possible For The

Two-Part- y

System

The Republican Party scored
handsomely in November's election, and for the first time in at
least two years America again has
y
a balanced
system.
Before the election Richard
Nixon, defeated in previous bids
for the White House and the governorship of California, was one

of the leading contenders for the
next GOP presidential nomination.
Now, Republican stajs are more
numerous and shining more brightly in the political sky.
With Lyndon Johnson's popularity sagging, at least for the present, primarily because of apparent
stagnation in the Vietnam war,
GOP chances for a four-yestay
on Pennsylvania Avenue seem suLetter To The Editor
perior to those at any time since
1960. At least we seem assured of
ODE
KY
an interesting and perhaps vital
To the Editor of the Kernel:
election in 1968.
We sincerely hope the GOP
O General Ky, O General Ky,
will not destroy its new life by
You're wrecking our economy.
You're the cause of the inflation resorting again to petty factionThat is sweeping this great na- alism. Unfortunately, the potential
for such a devastating squabble
tion,
Gold-watAnd I wish I'd never heard of Gen- is visible. Recently, Barry
and Nixon criticized Micheral Ky.
igan's Governor George Romney,
who seems to be heading the GOP
O General Ky, O General Ky,
in terms of presidential timber,
I see through your
conspiracy. for
having not supported Goldwater
It's all for you and none for me;
in 1964. They asserted that the
You're a costly fixture, General
party should not nominate a canKy.
didate for the presidency who did
O General Ky, O General Ky, not back theGOP's standard bearer
Hitler's heir you'd like to be. in the previous presidential elecYou'll achieve your great ambition tion.
Another split in the ranks could
At the cost of nuclear fission,
You're a facist and a fool, General come if Ronald Reagan's
forces became
Ky.
two-part-

ar

TO

er

O General

Ky,

O General

Ky,

I'm doubting our mentality,
For spending lives and treasury,
To fight your battles, General
Ky.

O Ceneral Ky, O General Ky,
Because of you, they're draft-

ing me.
Tom Dotson
Commerce Senior
.
Warren Sproul
Arts & Sciences Senior

George Romney

Haynie in the

Courier-Journ-

al

BONES OF CONTENTION

too inspired by a victory in California (conservative victories are
so rare their enthusiasm might be
understood), and tried to push
their way into the nomination.
Factionalism raged in the GOP
for months following the 1964 election, and it seemed for a time
that the party might be vanishing from the American scene. Since
then, however, Republicans have
found their way back to the mainstream of our nation's politics and,
as they discovered, that is where
the votes are.
The Goldwaterites in 1964
boasted they were offering voters
a choice instead of an echo. But
Americans traditionally have not
desired a choice between the extremes and the mainstream; rather,
they want to select from within
the mainstream.
This should not be considered
a bad thing. Politics is not a
case of good or bad, white or
black, far right or far left. Rather,
it is a shading of these factors.
Were it not this way, the Ameri

can political scene would be nothing but a chaotic reaction of one
extreme against the other, considering but the fringes of the
pendulum's swing and ingnoring
its center of gravity.
Certainly we are not discouraging stimulated discussions of
ideas within Republican ranks. The
purpose of the national convention
is the selection of the most qualified candidate, in the eyes of the
delegates. It would be impossible
to determine qualifications without discussion and debate among
the party's contenders.
But this should not be reduced
to petty politics as the dying
make a final
for power. The voters made
grasp
it explicit to politicians in 1964
canthey did not desire fringe-are- a
didates, and Lyndon Johnson's
slipping popularity and Ronald
Reagan's conservative victory notwithstanding, the mandate has
been made.
Perhaps in years to come conservatives w