xt7j6q1sj05r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7j6q1sj05r/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661007  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October  7, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  7, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7j6q1sj05r section xt7j6q1sj05r PEtmdksiff--

Inside Todays Kernel
Backers of revised constitution blast
Judge Dawson's charges: Page Two.

Newest political power is the
Page Seven.

is picking

Brown,

Cooper campaign
up: Pogt Four.
The KSA has great

potential
correctly: Page Six.

Back-flicke- r:

University Club forms a forum to discuss contemporary events: Page Eight.

if

The Pikes remain undefeated
tramural football: Page Ten.

in

University

in-

Vol. 58, No. 27

o

f

Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY, OCT. 7, 1966

w

Weideer To Leave
For Wisconsin Post
Special To The Kernel

dent Oswald will make a
announcement here
confirming Weidner's resignation
and announcing that Dr. Howard
Beers, distinguished professor of
Rural Sociology on leave, will
replace him as director of the
Center for Development Change.)
Dr. VVeidner will become the
first chancellor of the University
of Wisconsin's Creen Bay campus, which is scheduled to open
as a
college in 1969.
He is scheduled to begin his
work in Wisconsin Feb. 15 and
will visit the Madison campus
on a number of occasions as a
special consultant between now
and his official move to
mid-aftcmo-

-

Edward
director of the University's Center for Development
Change and a
political scientist, was to be
named by the Regents of the
University of Wisconsin to a
new post in that school's statewide system today.
UVV President Fred Harvey
Harrington was to present Weid-nername to the Regents when
they reconvene following a lunch
break. The announcement of
MADISON, Wis.

VVeidner,

highly-regarde- d

's

Weidner's appointment

four-ye-

was

scheduled to be made in
Lexington time.
(The Kernel has also learned
from a reliable source that Presi

n,

SG Bill Asks Vote

On Stadium Question
Student Government may seek
of the football stadium by holding
In a bill presented Thursday night, SG would be required
to hold a referendum and to present the results to the next regularly scheduled meeting of the
Board of Trustees as a "true
expression" of student opinion on
the relocation.

.

Grading System
Hampers Learning,
Dean Ginger Says
A. revised grading system allowing more independent study
would aid learning, Dr. Lyman
Ginger, Dean of the College of
Education believes.
The present system of grading
does not properly motivate the
student or show his progress,
he said in an interview this
week.
In place of the present system
of giving grades of A, B, C,
D. and E, Ginger favors a three-grad- e
system. The grades would
be outstanding, passing, and failing. The upper 10 percent to 15
percent would be outstanding,
he said. There would be no
curve.

student opinion on the relocation
a campus referendum.
The bill was sent to committee and could be reported out

next week.

Whether students would rather
have the stadium at the present
site, the Coldstream farm site, or
the experimental farm site are
questions suggested by Sheryl
Snyder, framer of the bill, as
possibilities for the referendum.
Also on the agenda was an
executive order by SG president
Carson Porter establishing a president's committee to study the
problems and possibilities of obtaining a student seat on the
Board of Trustees.
The committee, to be chaired
by Porter, includes Sheryl Snyder,
Steve Cook, and Kendell Threl-keld.

Another bill which would provide for sanctioning members absent at three consecutive meetings, or six meetings throughout
the year, was sent to committee
for consideration.
When the sanctioning bill was
introduced, there was less than a
quorum of members present. The
entire meeting lasted less thant
15 minutes.

Weidner has not been at the
University a full year, having
moved into his present post this
spring. Prior to joining the UK
administration, he was at the
Center for four years.
Weidner, 45, has earned a
wide reputation for his scholarship in public administration and
development in the United States
and several foreign nations.
His appointment to the Wisconsin post was recommended by
President Harrington after consultation with a university-wid- e
faculty search and screening committee.
East-We-

Twelve Pages

st

--

J

0 oonpn"

"Our extensive search has
produced an outstanding man
for this position," Harrington
said. "He has a scholarly and
administrative ability, the drive,
flexability, and leadership that
such a project requires for its
success," he said.
A native of Minneapolis, he
holds three degrees from the University of Minnesota and did
graduate work at the University
of Wisconsin in 1943-4He has been on the Wisconsin faculty before as a lecturer
in political science in 1945. He
also was vice chancellor of the
Institute for Advanced Projects
of the
Center.
He has been on the political
science faculties at the University of California at Los Angeles,
the University of Minnesota, and
Michigan State University. At
Michigan State he served also
as director of the Institute for

r'U

5

9

5.

East-We-

st

Research on Overseas Programs.
His international activities
have included membership on
the President's Task Force on
Foreign Economic Assistance
and consulting posts in South
and Southeast Asia. He has
served with the Department of
State, the Agency for Interna-

tional Development, and the
Ford Foundation.
A prolific author, he has written or collaborated on eight books
and has two more in preparation;
has published numerous articles,
pamphlets and chapters; and has
presented more than 80 papers
to professional meetings.
He is an officer or committee
member of 20 professional

Kernel Photo

Neiv Landmark On Tfie Horizon
towers in the new dorm complex
One of the planned
rises above Cooperstown and a fraternity football game. Two of
the high rise buildings are planned for completion by next year.
22-sto-

Chinese Students Ordered
Out Of Russian Schools
From Combined Dlipatcb.es

MOSCOW Soviet Union officials today ordered all students
from Red China studying in Russia out of the country by the
end of October.
Officials said the move was in retaliation for the ouster of
Soviet students from China in September.
Soviet News Agency Tass reported the statement to the Red
Chinese as follows: "This September the Chinese side unilaterally violated the principle of reciprocity and interrupted the
training courses of Soviet students and trainees in the People's
Republic of China." Soviet students were ordered out of China
by Oct. 10.
The Tass report continued, "Guided by principle of
reciprocity, the Soviet organs have adopted a decision to suspend
the training of students from the People's Republic of China at
Soviet educational establishments and research institutions.
The report added that Russia would consider the resumption
of the student exchange "as soon as the Chinese side displays
readiness to resume such exchanges."

Says He 11 Run For Governor
Breckinridge

By JOHN ZEH
Kernel Associate Editor
Former state Attorney Ceneral John
B. Breckinridge revealed during an informal discussion of Kentucky politics
here Thursday that he is laying the
groundwork for the 1967 Democratic gub-

ernatorial nomination.
Breckinridge said he thinks he can
beat out administration-backecandidates
in the primary and go on to win the
election because of major "disaffection
in the state today and a vociferous resentment of factionalism and 'musical
d

h.

.

entering what could be a "slug-fest- "
primary, Breckinridge feels he is
the only Democrat who has not been
calling names over the years.
Breckinridge says his primary opponents will be Robert Matthews, present state attorney general; Henry Ward,
By

highway commissioner; A.B. "Happy"
Chandler, a former governor who has
already filed; J.D. "Jiggs" Buckman, State
Senate Majority leader, also announced;
and possibly Harry Lee Waterfield, lieutenant governor.
Talking with some 15 University students and faculty members in the Student Center grille, Breckinridge said, "My
timing may be off four years . . . but
I think I can get to the electorate."
The
lawyer is credited with
down organized vice in Newport
closing
and
while attorney general in 1960-6with ousting the Carter County Board
of Education and school superintendent
for irregularities in that system. He also
was elected to the Kentucky Ceneral
Assembly in 1956 and 1958.
He said Thursday that young people,
who are more independent and on the
whole better educated, will play an im
3

portant part in his campaign. Money County commonwealth attorney; Richard
and organization of the Breathitt-backeFreymeyer, state senator; Foster Ocker-macandidates will be a problem, he adstate Democratic state chairman
mitted, but television will help him reach from Lexington; C. Gibson Downing, state
the masses inexpensively and effectively.
senator from Lexington; and John Swin-for"I hear people say 1967 is a Republican
year. We can't afford factionalism. We've
Asked if he was overlooking Combs
got to run our strongest men to keep in for the
gubernatorial nomination, Brecktune, in step, in touch with the elecinridge said, "I guess we could talk
he said.
torate,"
The top contenders, in order, for the all day about Bert. Nobody knows what
he's going to do. I think it was estabRepublican gubernatorial nomination, lished in Frankfort that he wasn't
going
said, are Marlow Cook, to run
Breckinridge
until talk started at the Southern
Louis Nunn, who
Jefferson County judge;
lost to Breathitt in 1963; and Eugene Covemors Conference."
Siler, former U.S. congressman from WilBreckinridge said he is glad the proliamsburg.
posed new constitution eliminates "musiJockeying for the position of lieutenant cal chairs" in state government by using
governor, Breckinridge says, are Wendall the short ballot. "Musical chairs" refers
Ford, state senator and former assistant to the trading around ofelective positions
to Gov. Bert Combs; Andrew Jolly, Camp- every four years; since certain elected
bell County judge; Mike Mills, Hopkins officials cannot succeed themselves.
d

n,

d.

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

7, 19((i

"

.

Backers Of Charter Hit Dawson's Charges
From Combined Diapatrhes

I.OU1SVIIJ

J--

Thrt--

promi-

nent back its of tlit new const-

itution spoke out Thursday
against Federal Judge Charles

I. Dawson of Louisville, when
he said the revision would destroy local tax exeinptionsgranted
to fanners and businessmen.
The provision in the controversy was added to the 1891
constitution in an amendment
passed in 1915 and allows local
governments to exempt certain
classes of property.
Ben. B. Fowler, general counsel for the Republican Stale Central Committee, attacked Daw-

son's opinion as "completely erroneous." Fowler, adding that
he was not speaking for the COP,
said that a phrase in the new
constitution "reaches the identical result as the 1915 amendment will respect to the right
of the legislature to withhold
from local units of government

the power to tax any class or
category of properly."
The proposed charter, he said,
allows the legislature to delegate
"parts of the taxing power to
units of local government. It
follows that the present exemptions may be continued, without
question, under the proposed constitution," he said.
In another part of the state,
ArloeW. Mayne, general counsel
for the Ashland Oil fic Refining
Co., agreed with Fowler's comments and stated that the new
constitution would give the legislature exempting powers "as
broad as those contained in the
present constitution."
Ashland Oil would be subject to millions of dollars of
additional taxes if Dawson's

"Contrary to the latest atby
opponents ... to
tempt
the voters withanolher
stampede
scarecrow, the local tax status

added that

would

Protesting punishment of a
student and charging misrule by
educational heads, students in
three Indian states have boycotted classes for two weeks.

From Combined Dispatches

set up
NEW DELHI-Ind- ia
a panel to inquire into student
grievances after riots that rocked
several northern cities.
Both political and academic
considerations are at the heart
of the issue.

Daily demonstrations against
the government are being held
in at least five states. When a

THE CHURCHES OF
LEXINGTON
SUNDAY

472 ROSE ST.

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

Invite the Students,

Church Of God, 812 Loudon Aye.
Tenn.
General Headquarters. Cleveland,
Phone

r

YOU ARE INVITED

255-51-

M:00 A.M.
11:00 A.M.
":3
7:30 P.M.

Prayer Meeting, Thursday INVITED
PUBLIC

TO WORSHIP

Faculty and Staff

ft

FOR CHRISTIANS

4X

:

CHARLES GARRISON,

of the

Campus Minister

Speaker:

University Community,

CENTRAL CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Short and Walnut

Services:

171 NORTH

OCT. 9
OCT.

AND THE PEP PILLS
(Is it moral to tamper with the mind?)

LSD

SOUTHERN HILLS METHODIST CHURCH
2356 HARRODSBURG RD.
9:30 a.m. College Class
"THE COMPELLING

CHURCH

East High at Clay Avenue
DR. J. T. HARMON, Pastor
Dr. W. P. Fryman, minister, visitation
9:45 a.m. Church School
Dr. Robert Mayfield
11 a.m.
Chicago, 111.
7 p.m. Evening Worship

VIETNAM

OCT. 23

(What Christian Principles are at stake?)
OCT.

30-T-

NOV. 6
NOV. 13

HE

NEW MORALITY
(What is the Christian

attitude toward

MOVEMENT
(Is it conspiracy, compromise! or creativity?)

'

VIOLENCE

AND MURDER
(Passing trend or permanent

threat?)

9:30 and
Discussion

led

following

Lexington,

Ky.

6-1-

1:00 each Sunday morning
by an Elder

RD., Rt. 5

Community WUlc
Meeting, Oct. 3
US- - 25

1

each sermon.

9:30 sermon broadcast over WBLG, 1340

X
L

rjX)v;
T.

T. MAY. Pastor

or

277-402-

9

Donald W. Durham, Minister
J. R. Wood, Pastoral Minister
Samuel Morris. Youth Minister

9:00 A 11:00 A.M. OBSERVANCE OF WORLD WIDE COMMUNION
0:50 A.M. Sunday School
A.M. Expanded Session
7:30 P.M. THE DURUAMS ILLUSTRATED
TOUR OF EUROPE
Nursery tor all Services
(Parking In Rear of Church)

Invites You To Visit

sex?)

THE ECUMENICAL

Minister

11:00

RICHMOND

extra-marit-

R. HERREN,

CENTENARY

17U S. Lime (Next to Hospital)
Dower Sanders, Associate Minister
(Parking In Rear of Church)

Richmond Road Church of the Nazarene

(Or are we?)

DONALD

1030 a.m. Morning Worship

VOICE OF GOD"
PROVIDED FOR STUDENTS
Call 277-617- 6

IS GOD DEAD

16

SCHOOL

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN

TRANSPORTATION
METHODIST

Subject:
The Changing Nature
of Liberal Religion

MILL, ST.
RICHARD T. HARBISON, Minister
9:45 A.M. Church School
11:00 A.M. SERMON: "PREDESTINATION"
12:05-11:3- 0
P.M. Wednesday Downtown Worship

To Attend The Following Series of Sermons
PARK

Minister, First Unitarian
Church of Christ

10:45 a.m.

these

(Vestago of pagen practice?)

Rev.

SERVICE AND CHURCH

ARE INVITED BY THE ELDERS OF

THE LORD'S SUPPER

ROAD

SUNDAY, OCT. 10

to attend

HAS THE CHURCH ANYTHING TO SAY
TO THESE BURNING ISSUES?

HIGBEE

James Hutchinson

YOU

OCT. 2

conference of educational and
police authorities was announced, students burned effigies of
Home MinisterCulzarilal Nanda.
Reports say leftist political
parties incited student rallies in
Lucknow and Fanpur against
"repressive" government

NEAR

& OTHER SINNERS"

502 Columbia (At Woodland)
:

meet

CLAYS MILL ROAD

"A Christian Church on Campus"
SUNDAY, 10:15 a.m.
PROPER TREATMENT

effectively

UNITARIAN
CHURCH

WITH THE

Christian Student Fellowship
"THE

do not

Hare you felt that juggling religious creeds to fit modern contexts is not intellectually honest?
Unitarian Universalists have
turned from being acceptors to
being creators, from being followers to being discoverers.
We would change religion from
n
rite to the chala
lenge of discovering and developing a personal style of life.
Join in the greatest religious
experience a person can know.
The College Group meets Sunday at 9:30 a.m. Our guest speaker will be Thomas M. Olshewsky,
of the Philosophy Department.
Complimentary continental
breakfast included.

SERVICES

E. W. Carden, Pastor
Sunday School
WORSHIP
MORNING
EVANGELISTIC
Y. P. E., Tuesday

He said that the trend toward
centralization of power in Washington stems in part from outdated state constitutions "which

For the
"New Intellectual"

CANTERBURY HOUSE
Episcopal Church

attitude."

SUPPORT THE ADVERTISERS WHO
PATRONIZE THE KERNEL

rec-

to (a special session.

ommend

reflecting an entirely different

India Will Inquire Into Riots

view is correct.
Cov. Edward T. Breathitt,
speaking Thursday in Louisville,

he

of all property will remain - under
. r .1
ll..the control oi me icRisiaiui,j-'ct
it has been," Breathitt added.
as
Breathitt said that the present
constitution was written "when
the country was moving from an
agrarian toan industrial society,
and as a result it is "restrictive.

if the revision is passed) the
are
passage of whatever laws
needed, if any, to continue present exemptions.

1

mil

Southeast of Lexington

LEFEVRES GOSPEL SINGERS, Oct.
SINGING

9--

SPEER FAMILY. Oct. 13.

7:30

P

m- -

The Kentucky Kernel
The
Kernel, University

Kentucky
Station. University ol Kentucky. s Lexington. Kentucky, 40506. Second-claspostage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published live times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the student of the
University of Kentucky by th Board
of Student Publications, Nick VVf'
chairman, and Patricia Ann Nickeii.
secretary.
beBegun as the Cadet In 1894.
came the Record In 1900. and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously at the
Kernel since 1913.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail $8.00
$.10
Per copy, from f ilea
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
32
Editor
Newe Desk. Sports. Women's Editor.
t32
Socials
Advertising, Business, Circulation 2319

* KERNEL, Friday, Oct. 7,

.THE KENTUCKY

Art: Things
By JOHN JONES
Kernel Staff Writer
LOUISVILLE-Willh-

m

s

Bay-er'-

currently
exhibited at the Merida Gallery,
are beautifully measured, witty,
a once lucid and tenebrous.
Assemblage (or construction)
is the art of juxtaposing
accessible plane, and the
counterpoint between the con- -

Co-Respo- nd

counterpoint between the connotations of objects and their
formal union gives assemblage its
major interest.
Bayer does not rely on

Pieces of wood are arranged
in a violent torque; almost every
work is kinetic, charged with
vital energy. Rarely are objects
dormant, simply presented for

con-

ventional structural elements

contemplation. Perhaps the pervasive punning with objects is
what interests one most ("Fords
To Share"). Things
Two of the most dramatic
rather than hier- (and most literary) pieces are
radially
"Excalibre" and "Little Styx."
archically ordered.
The former has a finely "calibrated" hilt of pale
placed on a narrow black
panel.
It is the most prominently
colorful work in the show; the
other works are in muted greens
Edward Fields, winner of many literature awards, will read his and ochres
chiefly, thoagh fragpoetry at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Student Center Theater.
ments of old tires provide a kind
Fields wrote the book "Stand Up, Friend, With Me," published of chiaroscuro in
"Orange and
by Grove Press in 1963. He won the 1962 Lamont Award and the
Knob." "Little Styx" is a heavily
1963 Guggenheim Fellowship. He wrote the narration for the1
varnished box containing obfilm "To Be Alive" for Johnson's Wax pavilion at New York World's
jects choatically embedded in
York Film
Fair. The film won an Academy Award and the New
a thick, viscous sea of transCritics citation.
parent glue, the "art" of asNew Yorker attended New York University from
The
semblage
blackly parodied.
1946 to 1948. He served in the 8th Air Force during World War
"Pat's Garden" is the most "priII as navigator in heavy bombers on 27 missions.
vate" work, relying as it does
Fields has read his many poems in colleges across the country.
on the associational value of objects, but Bayer avoids an easy,
precious use of his material.
KATS That personal ad for a date
to the game brought 20 phone calls.
Essentially radical elements
deftly given form, a recurrent
KITTENS Maybe she got her man.
ironical violence all such sumWHO NEEDS A COMPUTER when
mations are meaningless, put bea $1.00 personal ad will do?
side the work. Go see the show.
nor-mon- ly

l9Wi- -.,

(framing, squared forms); his constructions have splayed edges,
seemingly gratuitous extrusions,
strongly opposing diagonals, are

Fields To Read His Poetry
Tuesday At Student Center

...

1

Jl

Wi

'

.

colored"-wood-

:!:!Fj

"f
'i:

1

'

K

J--

Mi it
"

'The Gray Flyer"

...

witty, violent

....

T;'i

EDWARD FIELD

Ivey Recital Set
For Next Friday

1.

Donald, Ivey, of the Department of Music, will present a
recital at 8 p.m. Oct. 14, in the
Agricultural Science Auditorium.
Featuring songs from Cam-pia-

How come you've been getting
such swinging computer dates?

2

I guess you haven't
seen my personality

"Five foot two.
113 pounds.
Nearsighted."

questionnaire.

n,

Dowland, Handel, Williams, and Britten, the entire
program will be in English.

UK Students Good
At Loan Repayment-Universitstudents are good
loan risks. UK ranks in the top
five percent and possibly in the
top two percent of U.S. colleges
in student loans collection.
Of 3,000 students receiving
loans about 60 are delinquent,
or 90 days past due, in their
payments.
The big problem is not in
making the students pay but in
locating them, said Bobby Brun-neof the loans collection office.

3. "Play the ocarina

4. "Like cucumber

sandwiches."

r,

cnoose
5. You mean to tell me

(

those

before
choosing diamonds

Buy your diamonds with
your eyes wide open to

the real facts about that
stone! Our knowledge and
integrity aid you in your
diamond selection.

You can give without loving but
you can't love without giving.

Member American Gem Society

g

go for these things?

6.

girls

It's the last item that
really clinches it.

PILLOW TALK
U
it'Grnnnv nown with the old . fashion . look jit
.
a
;
.
Vi4

'2

"Stepping into swell job with
Equitable Life. Good pa v.
Fascinating work. Plenty of
chance to move up."
I think I'll see
Jane tonight, Susie
tomorrow and Fran
the day after.

.

carried through from the high waist to;
Ithe long skirt with the ruttle. he nigm- Jcap and booties add the final quaint ji
I

look. Blue or yellow. Size
UU TV ri I UYY m,
381 S. Lime
'
m--mm

seut'tcrj

great-lookin-

lit.

$6.00

-l.

rviMn
Acro$i

from

'

Helmet Hall
.

i

t

Jf
?m

For career opportunities at Equitable, see your Placement Officer, or
write to Patrick Scollard, Manpower Development Division.
The EQUITADLE Life Assurance Society of the United States
Homo Oihce: 12S5 Ave. of the

An

l

Ami-ricas-

NYw Yuik, N.V. 10019

Opportunity Hinfiloijt'r,

AF

Kijuitahle 1U66

* 1

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Oct.

7, 19(i(i

01
i

I

i

.

i

ill ii

s

i

m

I

-

"'ii
v

I

N- -

1

I

Ti

v

Ii

I

I

fir

,

I

GOP Fails To Cut
Education Aid Bill

i

i

Dltpatchti
efforts to cut a $6.4 billion educaan
WASHINCTON-Republic6
a measure
passed
tion bill failed Thursday as the Senate aid
school
program another two
that extends the grade and high
From Combined

54-1-

years.

is nearly
$2 billion over President Johnson's requests and about $700
million over the House version.
The Senate bill not only extends the aid formulas of the
1965 basic act but liberalizes
and expands them so individual
school districts eligible for the
grants would get larger sums.
Sen. John Sherman Cooper
said Kentucky's share of
the bill would be $39 million.

The Senate version

.)

KENTUCKY SELECTIVE SERVICE MAN TALKS TO YMCA GROUP

'

Students Are Urged To Report
Their Grades To Draft Board
Students who do not authorize the University to report their
status and progress in college
to local draft boards "could be
hurting" when they are classified for military service.

So said Col. Marshall Sanders Thursday in a discussion
of the student's responsibilities
on the draft at a YMCA meeting in the Student Center.
Col. Sanders and Col. Henry
Bethel led the discussion along
with R. L. Larson, assistant registrar at the University.
"The responsibility to get your
class standings and status to the
local board is the student's,"
Col. Sanders told the slim audience. "The University is doing
you a favor by offering to report
it for you."
Larson said of the 8,509 male
students at UK, 1,116 are not
reported to local boards.
Both men, who were stepping
in for State Director Col. Everett
Stephenson, urged all male students eligible for the draft to
take the Selective Service College Qualification Tests either
on Nov.

or 19.
"There are some 25,000 students in Kentucky and about
half took the test last year,"
added Col. Bethel. "It is one
way to measure yourself against
the nation in potential. Your
grades are an indication of your
18

application.
"A local board might look
with favor on a man who took

If

the test and did not quite pass
it. At least he manifested enough
interest to take it."
Asked whether the draft
boards would have to go into
college to meet the war's need,

1 tir

Col. Sanders said the possibility
was doubtful. "But the Selective Service is going to take
everyone on whom they have no
information do do otherwise," he

added.

Both Kentucky' senators expressed their support for the bill,
but neither of them voted.
The Administration's requests were completely rejected
in the Senate version. President
Johnson had asked for a cutback
in the impact-are- a
program for
crowded school districts near federal installations, but the Senate
instead liberalized the program
so these school districts would
get more money than had previously been supplied to them.

Everett M. Dirkson
led a fight to trim the
measure back down to Administration levels. Senate DemocraLeader Mike Mansfield
tic
was also opposed to
Sen.

(H-Ill- .)

(D-Mo-

the bill.
Debate in both houses involved an alleged charge that
federal authorities would use the
bill to force greater integration
in school districts.

Ashland
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THE KENTUCKY KEIINEL

(THE DAILY TEXAN

* Till-

KENTUCKY KERNEL,

ridav.

I

t. 7,

VJUH

-r

Marriage Counselor Talks
On Building Marriages
Uiiildin
t

MKifslnl inaiii.tm-tin' topii' ol Dr. Ktlicl
tin National Marriage Counselors Association,

ii

of

speech line Tlinrsd.i) ninlit.
Part of tin- Woman s Wi-lprogram. sponsored by ANN'S,
Willi, and YWCA. Dr. Nash's
address was the first ol that
series.
"A will marriage would,"' she
said, "have each seeking to provide lor the other the emotional
-

are

i

v

iituall) incompatible

N.isli.
in htr
b

v

of their glandular differences.
Male sex drive begins cailici, is
stronger, and last longer than
an) one suspected. NVoman's is
less frequent, but when aroused.
Lists longer than males."
As far as finding out about
these differences before marriage.
Dr. Nash says, "It just doesn't
work that way. Whatever the reasons for or against
intercourse, the one about 'seeing whether we will be sexually
compatible' just does not hold

climate and the intellectual soil
in which both could thrive better than either could alone."
"No matter how much wo
love, marriage is both the most
satisfying and also the most demanding of all human relationships."
Dr. Nash also explained that
just being a homemaker is not
enough in today's world. Women
want something more than just
cooking and cleaning.

pre-marit-

AST

n

partners in a marriage
have to merge their differences.
The must also find compatible
recreational patterns "in the married pair set, yet space for the
separate enjoyments, too,"
she-said- .

Prior to marriage, she says,
lour tasks must be completed:
The roles in marriage are dif1. Separation from parents
ferent now. Husband and wife
without rejecting them
should be "two allies in their
2. Identification ol sell
joint careers" of marriage part3. Choice ol vocation
community
1. Decision
about the prin- ners,
and often earners. I
which one will try to members,
ciples by
can't stress too strongly that the
live.
old pattern of 'w ife and motherwoman must also
The young
hood lulfull a woman' just isn't
ask herself, "What do I want
true for most, nor. to use another
from marriage for myself, and
e
cliche, is 'homemaking is a
what do I want for my spouse?"
job'.'
Only after that will she be able
She urged the audience to
to help create a successful mar- "Go as far as
you can academriage.
ically, to be equipped to live
"Let's look at the obvious," devotedly in this new and acaDr. Nash went on. "Marriage is
demically oriented world."
based on differences. The temIn answer to a question reperature ol the house, tastes in garding
sex. Dr. Nash
food, drinking habits, reading said, "I
personally believe that
material, what time each goes to the marriage institution is enorbed, when one gets up, watching mously
important. You have to
TV, and many more."
analy ze it according to your own
There are also differences and self."
difficulties about sex. "The sexes
She also said that if you do
decide on
sex, "be
sure you're using an effecient
child-bearer-

s,

full-tim-

al

predominately female crowd turned out Thursday night to hear Dr. Ethel Nash, president of

Library Displays
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