xt7ht727d51h https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7ht727d51h/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661202  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  2, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  2, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7ht727d51h section xt7ht727d51h Inside Today

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University of Kentucky
DEC.
KY.,

Vol. 58, No. 65

LEXINGTON,

Berkeley
Boycott
Continues

FRIDAY,

ill

2,

19GG

f'v

St. John's gets another year to "put
its home in order" or hie its accreditation: Page Two.

i.

1

non-studen- ts

organize
a sit-i- n
that protested establishment of a Navy recruiting table
in the student union. Subsequently three students were arhelped

interfering with policemen who served warrants on
the nonstudents. A fourth student
was arrested on the battery complaint of another student.
Activists here are said to have
been searching for an incident
and their response to the police
appearance was immediate. They
took possession of the Student
Union across the plaza from
Sproul Hall, scene of the 1964
that made Berkeley a synonym for student disorder and
intellectual protest against authority.
rested

for

sit-i- n

Continued On Page

8

Oswald Denies
His Candidacy

For

UM

Post

University President John W.
Oswald said today he has heard
nothing of reports that he is a
candidate for the presidency at
the University of Michigan,
Reports circulating around the
campus and Lexington indicated
Oswald had discussed his candidacy for the position with Michigan officials.
Informed sources at the University of Michigan said about
75 persons remain in contention
for the position.

The Cats open the basketball season
with Virginia here Saturday: Poge Six.

It now seems a reality that the National Teacher Corps will be ended,
editorial says: Poge Four.

Plans to remodel the Grille have been
postponed as the bids were too high:
Page Seven.

Sonne Unhappy

With Cutbacks
In Ticket Sales

of more than 5,000 stood in intermittent rain on the University
of California campus Thursday
to support a student strike called Wednesday night.

who

There is a lack of unity among America's enemies in Vietnam, Joseph
Kraft writes: Poge Five.

reviewer concludes there is a
poor selection in town at the moment: Poge Three.

(c) New York Timet News Service
BERKELEY, Calif. -- A crowd

The university declined to
make an estimate of the strike's
effectiveness. Observers suggested that perhaps as many as
5,000 of the university's 27,500
students stayed away from
classes Thursday morning. The
American Federation of Teachers Local made up of teaching
assistants voted to strike. Some
professors canceled their classes.
The strike call came after the
police were called onto the campus Wednesday to arrest six

Kernel

Movie

Eight Pages

--

s

By FRANK BROWNING

Kernel Associate Editor
Cuts in basketball tickets available to the public have caused
across the state acdissatisfaction among alumni and
cording to E. J. Brumfield, associate director of Alumni Affairs.
The number of public tickets
available were cut by 600 this precedence over those public buyers who had established prioryear to supply seats to an inities.
creasing faculty and student dePurchasing priorities work like
mand, ticket manager Henry
non-alum-

'

"'Jij.

i.iteUiJ

. Mm

The Christmas Season Arrives

Joan Rickard helps decorate the Student Center in preparation
for the beginning of the Christmas season at the University. Friday afternoon, Santa Claus (alias Dr. Nicholas J. Pisacano) rode
into the Student Center on his sleigh and students participated
informally in the Hanging of the Greens. The annual program of
Christmas music is set for 11 p.m. Friday and again at 3 p.m.
Sunday.

Hodges said.
An increase of 336 seats was
made to students while 264 seals
were given to new faculty ap-

plicants.
Hodges said his phone had
been extremely busy with calls
for ticket requests which could
not be filled. He said while the
public was not dissatisfied that
seats were giv en to students, some
did not feel faculty should have

Shively Asks Consideration
Of Moving Coliseum Too
By HOWARD KERCHEVAL
Assistant Managing Editor
Athletic Director Berney Shively told Student
Government Thursday night although the possible
relocation of the football stadium is the present
concern, thought should also be given to relocating Memorial Coliseum.
He said, "I feel we should have a Coliseum
to seat 20,000 to 25,000 and a stadium to seat
from 50,000 to 60,000 . . . the coliseum question
has not come up in connection with this (the
stadium) yet, but when you think of the future
it seems natural" to combine the two issues.
Shively told the assembly, "I've been at the
University longer than any of you have been alive"
and said he remembered when the stadium seated
12,000 and basketball was played in Alumni Gym
which seats 2,800.
Most of the other discussion he offered concerned topics stated before in the relocation issue:
need of the Stoll Field site for classroom building, and the growing student population.
In reference to population, he said it is not
inconceivable that the student population will be
near 30,000 in the near future and added that
Lexington itself is growing rapidly.
Shively said he will be "very interested" to
see the results of the SG sponsored student refer

this:

First priority period was Sept.
1. Faculty and staff who
bought basketball season tickets
last year may order the same
number of books during tin's
t.

period. All faculty members who
have not before bought tickets
may also order two season books
then.
Persons general public who
purchased season tickets last season may purchase the same number again in the first priority
period; players may also buy one
ticket in addition to their usual
complimentary ones.
Second priority nuts Oct. 3 to
staff members
Oct. 15. Full-tim- e
may apply for two season tickets

then.

endum on the relocation issue to be held Dec. 8.
President Carson Porter announced the names
of committee members appointed to review the
Kernel and the Student Board of Publications concerning allegations of inaccuracies in the campus
newspaper.
Members of the committee: students, Joe
Bolin, Sheryl Snyder, Kendall Threlkeld; professors Robert Pranger, and N. J. Pisacano; and
alumni, C. W. "Deno" Curris. Curris will also
serve as chairman.
A bill was introduced to repeal the present
rules of procedure and adopt a new group. These
are rules concerning general procedure on submitting bills, establishing files, and gaining the assembly floor to speak.
Sheryl Snyder, author of the new bill, said it
institutes no major change. It only defines rules
presently on the books and clarifies some procedure which has been established by precedent
but never actually written in.

The Kentucky Students Association will meet at
a.m. Saturday in the Student Center to elect
a president and vice president.
The last KSA meeting was held on Nov. 19
when the delegates adopted a new constitution.
10

However the public and stall
priorities had to be cut or reduced this season with the 600
seats going to faculty and students.
One major policy decision
made by the Ticket Committee
of the Athletic Board according to
Chairman Glenwood Creech determined that "all new faculty
members would be eligible for
purchase of tickets."
Creech, also vice president for
univ ersity relations, said the committee decided to go back to
people who first started buying
tickets last year. All those people,
except faculty members, were cut

from priority.
The same procedure was also
used for those who first bought
tickets two years ago, Creech
said.
However, he explained, t lie
600-sequota had still not been
reached, and the committee decided to reduce multiple ticket
holders who have purchased for
the last six years to a two-ticklimit.
Continued on I'atfe 7

Kentucky Expanding Mental Health Services

FIELDS
Kernel Staff Writer
Comprehensive care centers being set
up this year in Kentucky will expand
and organize badly needed services in
mental health and mental retardation.
The federal government spends up
to $3 billion annually on mental health
By GRETA

services. Yet, over 50 percent of all hospital beds in the nation are filled with
people mentally ill, and providing care
for I hem, and for those on long w ailing
lists, is complex. In Kentucky, as elsewhere, there is increasing public need
services.
d
for more and
The need can be seen directly in the
g
of state mental hospitals
better-organize-

over-crowdin-

and their staff shortages, the inadequate
facilities, or the total absence of them,
in many communities, in the long wait

ing lists of clinics, and in the small
amount of treatment many clinic patients receive.
As a result of rising demand for better mental health services, Kentucky is
looking for a new pattern of developing
services, and is turning to the local community to organize mental health care

programs.
Under the state's encouragement, communities are setting up comprehensive
care centers to coordinate and expand
mental health services in an area.
Two years ago a state mental health
commission and a mental retardation
commission drew up plans by which
a comprehensive care center, or a similar facility, could be set up in each of
20 state regions, each region hav ing about
200,000 people.

In each region, a mental
retardation board, made up of representatives, primarily lay people, from
each county in the region, is set up.
The board has a professional and a
governmental advisory council. Each
health-ment-

board

hires its own professional

staff.

The purpose of the board is to form
programs to develop the full range of
mental health services in a region.
Seventeen boards have been established in Kentucky thus far.
To set up a comprehensive care center, a board may get funds under the
"Kennedy Bill" (Community Mental
Health Centers and Mental Heturdation
Facilities Act), which provides for funds
to be given to the state to be allocated
to communities which will develop men- tal health care programs, and under Pub

(1(J3) which provides
to match starting
funds which a community has raised
to start a program.
The United Community Fund Agency, the Kentucky Mental Health Association, and other organizations also provide communities with funds to set up
care center.
Dr. Dale II. Farabee, Kentucky Commissioner of Mental Health, and Dr.
John II. Parks, executive director-chie- f
psychiatrist of the Central Kentucky MenRetardation Board,
tal Health-Mentspoke about the comprehensive care centers to a filled auditorium in the University Medical Center last week it a meeting
of the Central Kentucky Mental HeakJi
Association.
Continued on Page 7
lic Law
for

89-10- 5

the government

al

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. Dec

2,

1W

'How Many Gods Are Dead?
How many Gods arc dead? supposed a God who must be
That problem of numbers and present in being, and cannot
linguistics was posed by a panel be absent in another mode,"
of systeThursday to an audience whose the associate professor
size "proved there is life yet in matic theology said. "This is
the question of God s death," the God who would be killed,"
according to Prof. William Barr (since "God present in the form
of the Lexington Theological of the man Ghrist, who himself cried out in abandonment,"
Seminary.
contradicts it.)
Prof. Barr, Dr. Thomas Olshewsky, professor of philosophy,
Dr. Olshewsky agreed with
and Dob Flcischman, senior Fleischman' s suggestion that
philosophy major, all questioned Americans were
years bee
the meaning of the statement, hind Genua n philosopher
"God is dead."
and the rest of the world
He
Flcischman, representing the in considering Cod's death.
historiin the "debate," said he referred to this as "the
skeptic
the analogy of God's
felt the statement "meaningless cal event in
death to a human death."
in the literal sense(because'God'
cannot satisfactorily be defined,)
What has died that was once
or insignificant metaphorically
"real, important, and alive," Dr.
(because of poor taste and a lack
said, is the idea of
of precision)." If the movement's Olshewsky Modern
the sacred.
culture, he
proponents mean "the God myth said, has killed the biblical God
is dead or that belief no longer who acted both in and outside
exists," then the statement the world.
should be rephrased so that it
does more than "shock, or sell
Because all our references
and space, he
Time Magazine," Fleischman day are to
urged.
continued, we can no longer
who transcends
Prof. Barr said the statement, derstand a
variously by Thomas them. And scientific theory has
proposed
J.J. Altizer, William Hamilton, caused the idea of physical law
and Paul Van Buren, does not to replace that of divine inter-th- e
universe. "We
concern theism at all. It pre
vention in

like to have thing
control," he added.

in man's

Olshewsky said the second
deceased God (who is "unfortunately not dead for everyone")
is the "popular Cod" of security, (the God of "
somclxnly-up-theredikes-me"-

).

"Man hascome
of age," he said, for this God
in man's image was only "a
compensation for man's weakness."

50-10- 0

Niet-zch-

to-ti-

un-Go-

d

CANTERBURY HOUSE

University
Methodist Chapel
151

Episcopal Church

472

ROSE

ST.

SERVICES

SUNDAY

8:00 a.m. and 10:30 a.m.
7:00 p.m. 2nd Sundays

E. MAXWELL

Sunday, Dec. 4
PARK
East

"The Challenge
of Advent"
At 11 a.m. WORSHIP

SERVICE

METHODIST
CHURCH
High at Clay Avenue
DR. J. T. HARMON, Pastor
Dr. W. P. Fryman, minister, visitation
9:45 a.m. Church School
11 a.m.
"The Question"
7 p.m. "The Answer"

CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH

116 S. Lime (Next to Hospital,
Donald W. Durham,
J. R. Wood, Pastoral
Dewey Sanders, Associate Minister
Samuel Morris, Youth
(Parking in Rear of Church)
9:00 and 11:00 a.m. "WHY DID GOD GIVE US CHRISTMAS?",
Dr.
9:50 a.m.
Sunday School
7:30 p.m.
"UNDERSTANDING
THE INCARNATION"
Mr. Sanders
Nursery for all Services
(Parking In Rear of

It was this God, according
to Dr. Olshewsky, whom the
Cod is Dead theologians set out
to murder.

Food Services See No Fffeet
From Lifting Calliolie Meat Han
No decrease in the amount of fish served in the University
cafeterias is expected to result from the Nov. 21 announcement
that American Roman Catholics are free to eat meat on Fridays.
Fish is reported to be "very popular with the students" when
it is served in the cafeterias, according to Fran Arnold of Auxil-i- t
is served in the cafeterias, according to Fran Arnold of Auxiliary Services.
Checks with four Lexington restaurants also reveal no expected
decrease in the demand for fish. All expected no effects from
the announcement and none have cut down on their orders for
fish.
Previously, the Collegiate Press Service reported that Yale University's kitchens could be stuck with several thousand pounds
of fish because of the lifting of the Catholic ban.
Roman Catholic students comprise 13 to 14 percent of the
total student body.

St. John's Given Another Year
(c) New York Tlmei Newt Service
CITY-- St.
John's University

ATLANTIC

was

given Thursday what amounted to a year's probation to put its house in order or face probable revocation of its accreditation.
The order to the university to show cause
why it should not be disaccredited was given
by the Middle States Association of Colleges
and Secondary" Schools, the regional accrediting
agency.

It was issued in a report by the association's commission on institutions of higher education and presented at the association's eighth
annual convention here by Albert E. Meder Jr.,
commission chairman.
The university, at which there has been a
faculty strike since last January, was given until Dec. 31, 1967, to correct "institutional weaknesses" and bring itself into the mainstream of
higher education.
(In New York, the university issued an
official statement Thursday saying it accepted
the association's findings and would "welcome
the opportunity to work with this group over
the next year to create an even greater St. John's
University.")
friction at the university came
to a climax last December when its adminis
Long-standin-

g

tration dismissed 31 faculty members. No hearings were held, and no reasons were stated.
In some cases "unprofessional conduct" was
indicated but never spelled out.
of those dismissed were memTwenty-on- e
bers of the United Federation of College Teachers,
which the university refused to recognize.
On Jan. 3 the Federation called the strike.
The Federation has contended that more than
of the faculty have left the university.
The university has said that replacements as
good or better have been made.
The dispute started when some faculty members sought a greater voice in policymaking,
higher salaries and more representation in the
over-al- l
operation of the university.
The charge was made that the university, which
has 12,202 students, was too much under the
control of the vincentian order. The order
operates the university.
The report issued here said: "The unfortunate
events at St. John's University are symptomatic
of serious institutional weakness that cannot be
allowed to continue. Indeed if this weakness
is not corrected, it is predictable that there will
develop such deterioration of educational effectiveness that loss of accreditation would almost
inevitably ensue."
one-quart- er

PERSONAL MESSAGES IN THE KERNEL CLASSIFIED

COLUMN BRING RESULTS

Minister
Minister
Minister
Durham
Church)
See Dream Diamond

ALDERSGATE METHODIST CHURCH
1881 EASTLAND PARKWAY

9:50 a.m.

ORIN M. SIMMERMAN,

JR., Minister

Church

School; College Class: Sam Davis, Teacher
11:00 a.m.
"Evidence of Our Acceptance of Jesus."
7:00 p.m. Service of Unity Rev. Charles Tarr, Guest Speaker

ARE YOU SURE YOU
KNOW-WHAYOU'RE DOING?
T

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at

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Bowling Green
MORRIS JEWELRY

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SHIVELY'S JEWELRY
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Covington
Covington

SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH
TRANSPORTATION

T. HERZOG

ELMER

2356 HARRODSBURG RD.
9:30 a.m. College Class
"THE TIME IS RIPE"

DONALD R. HERREN, Minister
10:50 a.m. Morning Worship
The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper
PROVIDED FOR STUDENTS
Call 277-617- 6
or 277-402- 9

GETZ JEWELERS

Cynthiana
Frankfort

ROBERTS JEWELRY STORE

Greensburg
H. E. SHIVELY, JEWELER
Hopkinsville
CLAYTON'S

Church Of God, 812 Loudon Ave.

Lebanon

E. W. Carden, Pastor
Sunday School
MORNING WORSHIP

Lexington

General Headquarters, Cleveland, lenn.
Phone

JVASGEUSTIC
.
Tuesday
Prayer Meeting, Thursday
PUBLIC

8

INVITED

jU:m A.M.
11:00 AM
,:30 P.M.'
7:;0 p.m.
pm

JEWELRY & GIFTS

POLK JEWELRY
LeROY'S

JEWELERS

Lexington
P. EDWARD VILLEMINOT
Louisville
GRAY & MERKLEY JEWELERS
Louisville

171 NORTH
:

11:00

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN

WOODLAND CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Ave.
Miss Mary Hulda
Church School 9:30 A.M.
Sermon

"THREE

Elmore Ryle, Minister
Allen, Minister of Education
10:45 A.M.
Morning Worship
STAGES IN THE LIFE OF MAN"

Nursery provided during Morning Worship

Youth Croups

5.00 P.M.

CRESTW OOD CHRISTIAN CHURCH

1882 BELLEFONTE

Sunday

Worship--10:- 30

DRIVE

REV.

SENG JEWELERS

JEWELERS

Madisonville

Mil l. ST.
RICHARD T. HARIIISON. Minister
A.M. College Class. Mr. Jack Matthews, Leader
A.M. "THE DRESSINGS OF THIS IIEE"

East High at Kentucky

NORMAN

Louisville

JAMES A. LOLLIS, Minister
a.m.
Sunday College Seminar
9:30 a.m.
For Transportation Call 277-378- 9

BRYANT'S JEWELRY
Mayfield

People in love have a crazy way of getting wrapped
in each other and forgetting about everything else.
up
So, unless you want to make a mistake, forget about love
when you're buying a diamond ring.
If you'd like some expert help, in fact, go see vour
ArtC 'arved jeweler. lie has beautiful diamond rins from
$150 to over $1000. Every one has a gemologist's evaluation
inscribed on the inner band. Every one is guaranteed.
So don't get emotional at a time like this. f!et careful.
If you don't know anything about diamonds, see vour
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ENIX JEWELRY
WEIR'S

HEFNER'S

JEWELRY
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Prestonburg
BURCHETT
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JEWELERS

MARK J. SCEARCE

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FREEMAN'S
JEWELRY & GIFT NOOK

Stanford THE TIME SHOP
Winchester LeROY'S JEWELERS

* .THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Fiidav, Ihc. 2, I9fr -- 3

Cinema: A Poor Selection
MICHAEL YOCUM
Kernel Arts Writer
"Not With My Wife You
Don't," with George C. Scott,
Virna Lisi and Tony Curtis spends
an hour and a half doing next
to nothing.
For the first time that I can
remember, Scott is disappointing.
Even in parts as thin as he has
here he usually manages to
squeeze out something. Not this
time.
Virna Lisi doesn't act worth
a damn, but she does have one
By

The family of Dr. David L. Dowd has added more than a bit to
the international flavor of the Lexington campus. Dr. Dowd himself is a specialist on the role of artists in the French Revolution.
His wife, Lyla, born in China of Russian parents, is a private
music teacher. Their daughter, Sandrcttc, a high school junior, is
also a musician. An older daughter, Irene, is attending Vassar.

Revolutionary Movements
Subject Of Prof 's Work
Thirty years of research is producing a book on the revolutionary
movements of the 18th Century.
The book is a collaboration of Dr. David Dowd, a history professor here, and Jacques Godechot, dean of the Faculty of Letters
at the University of Toulouse, France, and a top authority of the
French Revolution and Napoleon.
The book will be published by Holt, Rinehart and Winston in
May.

Dowd came to UK this year, after 17 years at the University
of Florida. He teaches a new specialized course in European history.
The Ohio native graduated in history and in art at the University
of California in Berkeley. After receiving his doctor's degree, he
studied art history at Harvard. He won a Ford Foundation grant
to study art in the University of Paris, the Ecole des Beaux-Artand the Ecole de Louvre.
Dowd is a member of almost a dozen European professional
organizations, participates in professional assemblies in France,
Italy, England, Sweden and Senegal, and is technical advisor and
consultant to three French museums.
Six years ago, Dowd joined Godechot in France for a year as
a visiting professor on a Fullbright Fellowship.
After completion of his book with Godechot, Dowd plans to
either write a book on Jacques Louis David or to study artists
affected by the revolutionary movement. Jacques-Loui- s
David was
a French painter.
Dowd's wife, a Russian born in China, pioneered in music
education in Florida. Dowd has a daughter at Vassar and one at
Henry Clay High School.
s,

UK Bulletin Board
The United

States Marine

Corps Officer Selection Officer
will be on campus Dec. 9 in
5--

the Student Center between 9
and 2 p.m. to accept applications for commissions in the MaSecond semester
rine Corps.
freshman, sophomore, junior and
senior males and junior and senior
women may apply.

Applications for the Founder's
Day Ball Steering Committee are
now available in Room 201 of
the Student Center and at the
East Information Desk. The
deadline for these applications

The annual "Little International" Livestock Show sponsored by the Block and Bridle
Club will be held Saturday, at
Coldstream Farm on Newtown
Pike. The third or north entrance
is the one to use. A
lunch will be served at 12 noon
for $1.25 a plate. The show will
start at 1 p.m. There is no adBar-B-Qu-

Frazee Hall by Dec.

"The Fortune Cookie": Billy
Wilder and I.A.L. Diamond role
out another one, this time copping the idea of an episodic
film broken by inserted titles from
Jean-LuGoodard's "Vivre Sa
Vie." And that is almost theonly
noteworthy thing in the film.
Wilder's inverted romanticism
is boring after ten or so minutes
and one is left watching for shots
of city streets and neighborhood
bars for which he shows real
feeling. As a satirist he is like
Evelyn Waugh (his nearest literary equivalent), taking extremely
sharp, extremely shallow bites
of a society not worth barking
at.

All-Nati-

A

nighly.
a

ten minute film about

boy who forsakes
his skateboard for a girl. "Skaterdater" was made b Noel Adams
as part of her classuork in cinema at UCLA and conveys in
a few moments what any other
film maker would need an hour
pre-tecnu-

for.

Her impressionistic style operates chiefly through understatement and swiftness; often when
I realized what was happening
Hawks.
on the screen she was well into
"Skaterdater" played a couple the next shot. There are plenty of
of weeks ago at the Ashland and signs of a germinal talent at
as far as I know is not now work in this film: I can only
being shown in Lexington. If it hope that her study at the foot of
does return I recommend it Beverly Hills doesn't kill it.

c

One of the paintings on display now at the Student Center is
shown above. The display is of war art.

"The Professionals": Best of
the lot and still not much. Director Richard Brooks started out
as a writer and it is hopelessly
evident in this movie that he
hasn't made the transition yet.
In a film which needed an
absolute minimum of dialogue
Brooks has his players constantly
speaking. The lines themselves

Taking your

e

mission charge.

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
is Dec. 9.
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
who have University of Kentucky by the Board
University students
of Student Publications,
UK Post
National Defense, Nursing and Office Box 4986. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell, secretary.
Health Professions (Phannacy)
Begun as the Cadet in 1894, beRecord
student loans approved for the came thePublished in 1900, and the Idea
in 1908.
continuously as the
1966-6- 7
academic year must sign Kernel since 1915.
KERNEL TELEPHONES
promissory notes for the second Editor, Managing Editor
2321
half of their loans. These notes Editorial Page Editor,
Associate Editors. Sports ... 2320
are to be signed in the Office News Desk
2447
of Student Financial Aid, Room Advertising, Business,
2319
.
Circulation
1,

of the hardest, crudest and ugliest faces I have seen and it would
be interesting to see her typecast in any number of bit parts.
Tony Curtis continues to play
the nauscatingly boyish role he
parodied (not very well) in "The
Great Race." It would be nice
to blame the badness of this film
on the plot, it it had one.

are embarrassingly sophomoric,
and, occasionally, just plain silly.
A lot of the film was shot
in Death Valley and the Valley
of Fire, and, as the cast sets
about breaking the
Verbosity Record, the landscape
slips in on brute strength, making the rest of the movie worth
sitting through. I would very
much like to see the same script
and cast directed by Howard

15.

1

p
Do

your
cramming
witli
MODERN

BRIDE

From previews
and trousseau

fashions

plans for an

Things go better with

bridal
to exciting

of the newest

European

first-hom-

furnishings,

post-nuptia-

1

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* The Kentucky Kernel
The South' Outstanding College Daily
UnIMIIMIY OF Kl MICKY

ESTABLISHED

FRIDAY, DEC.

1894

2. 10(56

Editorials rcpnwnt the opinions of tJw Editors, not of the I'nivcrsity.
W'ai.ii

h M.

(Inwr,

Editor-in-Chi-

Dying In Infancy?
that

The possibility
Congress
may not provide funds during its
upcoming session for continuance
of the National Teachers Corps
seems too real for comfort. Should
the program be discontinued it will
be killed in its infancy without an
opportunity to attempt erasing
numerous cultural barriers depriving youths in both urban and rural
poverty areas of education opportunities enjoyed by their more advantaged middle and upper class
contempories.
The program, designed to eventually provide more adequately
trained college graduates as teachers for these areas, is focused on
one of the nation's major sociological and educational problems: how
to stimulate youngsters already deprived of basic educational stimuli
with the desire to learn. While
currently the NTC only sends
teacher-trainee- s
into these areas,
is hoped these persons will later
it
become the foundation for a cadre
of specialists in these poverty pockets. At this time the NTC interns,
while working toward masters degrees, divide their time between
classroom instruction at universities and aiding educators already
teaching in poverty areas.
Obviously these areas are the
least desirable locations for most
teachers. Not only do few teachers
start their careers there, but those
who do seldom remain for more
than a minimum time. The NTC,
hopefully, will encourage teachers
to start their careers in these areas,
and more important, will encourage
them to remain there.

As Kentucky has more than its
share of both urban and rural
poverty areas, it has a great stake
in the program's retention. In Harlan County, an educator affiliated
with the program claims the NTC
strikes at a fundamental educational problem facing school districts in poverty areas, that of educational inbreeding. The NTC
brings to such areas teacher-trainee- s
from other parts of the nation, who
in turn bring new ideas fostering
new attitudes and concepts for
children in these school systems.
To date, in Eastern Kentucky where
NTC interns have worked with
permanent teachers in the mountain school system, this concept is
already showing signs of slow progress.

urban areas, although inbreeding and stabilized attitudes
are not problems to be surmounted
to the degree of the rural counties,
similar progress has been in eviAs for

Back In Your Corner
"Now, Down, Boy
"
Down
That's A Good Dragon

dence.

There seems little basis for argument that the program has not and
cannot continue closing the educational and cultural gap victimizing school children in deprived
areas. Whether the NTC though
will be scuttled by the 90th Congress for economic reasons remains
to be seen. President Johnson has
already intimated some sharp budget pruning is likely and persons
working closely with the NTC are
apprehensive that their program
may be one of the first to go.
We hope they are wrong.

Advancing Louisville Education
University officials announced
last week plans to open the Jefferson Community College in Louisville in January, 1968. The new
school will be operated jointly by
UK and the University of Louisville.
Also last week, a committee
studying possible state affiliation
for UL met again and heard how
institutions of higher education
elsewhere became part of their state
system.

Letters To The Editor

What Standards For Housemothers?
the Editor of the Kernel:
The Nov. 28 Kernel raised the
question of what criteria was used
in the assignment of roommates
in the men's residence halls. A
question of equal, or even more,
importance is, "What is the criteria used in the selection of housemothers?"
In my opinion, these persons
should be honest, mentally stable,
understanding, experienced and
appreciative of the fact that they
in some ways influence the lives
of the girls under their jurisdicTo

tion. I cannot see a housemother
as my mother away from home,
but she should be worthy of the
same respect that I show my
mother. In my personal experience,
the housemothers have not always earned, or been worthy of,
this respect.
I think it is hypocritical of me
to pretend to have respect when
in actuality I have an aversion
for these persons. I do not base
my criteria on any outdated standards but on the standards that
I seek in my associates as a whole.

The fact that the University Administration hires persons who lack
honesty, mental stability, experience or appreciation for their positions seems indicative of a lack
of concern and interest in the
welfare of its women students.
Beverly Westbrook
Arts and Sciences Sophomore

Study Disturbed
To the long list of gripes concerning everything from professors'
grading ethics to padded bras, we
wish to register our complaint.
Now that we are entering what
might be termed the "elevent