xt7n8p5v9r37 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7n8p5v9r37/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19661027  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 27, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 27, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7n8p5v9r37 section xt7n8p5v9r37 Inside Today's Kvrnvl
Rowan judge says that Morchcad's
President Doran
has
denied him
"equal time": Pogc Two.

11

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of Kent

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LEXINGTON, KV., THURSDAY, OCT. 27, !
11

Vol. 58, No.

ni

New Theotre Arts production sched
uled to open next week: Page Three.

Eight Pilgrs

Dean Says

Housewives Report

Objectives
By JOHN ZEH
Kernel Associate Editor

By DARRELL CHRISTIAN
Kernel Staff Writer

Attempts to better the nursing profession being made now
are not for today's nurses, but
for tomorrow's nursing students
of today.
That, said the keynote speaker at the Kentucky Nurses Association convention, "is why we
feel so responsible."
The dean of the University
of Florida's nursing college, Miss
Dorothy M. Smith, said nurses
must have objectives, and those
objectives must be taught in the
classroom.
"We must teach these young
people to learn how to think,
to develop attitudes to make them
After The Kernel ran pictures of coeds playing pool this week
want to continue to learn" once several members
of the Faculty Club demanded equal time. Dr.
they graduate.
Weaver watches Vic Portmann show his form in the faculty
The KNA convention opened Ralph
club lounge.
Wednesday. The director of nursat the University Medical
ing
Center, and KNA vice president,

Officials reported Thursday the housewives' boycott of five
Lexington supermarket chains met with "good success' in its
first day.
"Business is definitely down on next weekend, the housewives
all over the city," said Mrs. T. will petition more shoppers on
S. Budzinski, one of the leaders Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
The boycott is aimed at using
of the boycott.
such things such as trading
Housewives petitioned shopstamps or games to lure shoppers only at Southland and Eastland shopping centers today, but pers to stores where prices are
Mrs. Budzinski said the boycott higher. The housewives in the
will include other Kroger, A &P, boycott prefer lower prices to
Gateway, Albcrs, and Winn Dixie higher cost prizes.
The petition signed today at
stores in Lexington.
"Many women came out (to Southland and Eastland read.
"The following people do
Southland) just to sign the petition and then did their shopping hereby boycott any stores using
elsewhere," Mrs. Budzinski said. games, stamps or contests to atThe boycott will be in effect at tract customers. Furthermore, we
least until Monday. If it is still want a price rollback to April
1966."
The prices could be as much
as four percent lower "right
now," said Mrs. Thomas C. Barr
Jr., a member of the executive

Caution! Sharks

ticipating.

Miss Smith

said "this is a

historic year for us. Because of
the American Nurses Association's position paper, nursing has
taken great strides toward increased professionalization."The
ANA paper says "education for
those who work in nursing should
take place in institutions of learning within the general system of
education," rather than hospital

Nexus Program Evolves
Into Wider Discussion
Although free speech in the
college community was the pro-

posed topic for Wednesday
night' s Nexus discussion, two
UK professors launched a wider
topic format dealing mainly with
the modern University's role in
contemporary society.
schools.
Panelists Dr. Frank Marini
The ANA theory has focused and Alvin Goldman, assistant
attention on nursing schools of professors of political scienceand
colleges and universities, where law respectively,
opened the
Continued On rage 8
session with a discussion of free

Stop The Snoopers,
GU Council Demands
The Collegiate Press Service

WASHINGTON
The Georgetown University Student Council,
expressing fear for student privacy, has asked the school to crack
down on government and business investigators.
In a resolution passed last week, the five councils representing
Georgetown's five undergraduate schools asked that investigators
be barred from the campus unless authorized by specified members
of the administration, that dormitory counsellors be forbidden to
talk to investigators about students and that academic data be
released only with student approval.
Georgetown has expressed its own concern for the student's
right of privacy. In a memorandum, issued before the student
meeting, it clarified its position on investigation, noting that
data on grades may be issued to an authorized government investigator on request, but that the personal folder may not be
issued to anyone.
Disciplinary information, the University said, is in another
file, accessible only to the director of student personnel.
In the resolution, the five councils recognized the existence
of the University's policy memorandum but declared they still
felt their rights inadequately protected. They contended that "any
intelligence divulged by a (dormitory counsellor) . . . represents a
violation of the trust he maintains with his charges."
University officials said they sometimes permitted investigators
to talk with the counsellors. However, Brendan Sullivan, third year
law student serving as supervisor of counsellors in one dormitory,
said they were not often questioned and that as law and medical
students they were all well trained in respecting the principles
of confidentiality.
University officials said that student records were not handed
over physically to investigators even before the memorandum,
although some professors and students say they feel it may have
been done.
Rather than dealing with communist or subversive affiliations,
he said, the political querries dealt with topics such as participation in civil rights activities and about attitudes toward the Viet-

nam war.

Donovan Knights win in intramural
play: Page Si.
Over two thousand students hae been
placed in jobs by the Student Employment Service: Page Seven.

Food Chain Boycott
Success, Lexington

Implant

Miss Sue Kern, said many registered nurses from UK are par-

Editorial comments on need for space
for speokcrs: Page Four.
0

sc

Shriver and Snick ore at ends over a
project in Mississippi: Page

poverty
Five.

speech's relation to the

uni-

versity.

Goldman said free speech on
campus should not be structured
as an issue of academic freedom.
"Too often members of the academic community treat free
speech

as if it were

special,

apart . . . from the guaranteed
right of free speech ... off the
campus."
Marini differentiated from free
speech at colleges and that at
universities. "A university, in
theory and practice, is a place
where ideas are exchanged. students come there to hear ideas
and have them disagreed with .
and personally confront the frontiers of knowledge."
Colleges, he added, are for
the most part just one step above
..

.

.

high school where ideas are only
passed out and immediately accepted.
Universities must assume a
criticizing function, Marini ar

L

.

gued. Universities must insist on
being a threat to provincialsim
and ignorance, he added.
From this point the discussion
dealt with the universities role
as a catalyst for change in society. Goldman, who did not differ-

entiate between college's and universities' role contended that universities, in all too many cases,
were not the initiators of social
change.

"Students and faculty are
great imitators, but are not innovators," Goldman charged.
The social mood does not
come from the university system,
Goldman said. "That philosophy
was learned in the streets of
Harlem . . . and in the race riots.
Much of the reason for students and faculty becoming imitators, Marini contended, is that
university scholars are on "society's back burners." Take a look
at the scholars, he said. Where
Continued On Pace 8

i

Dr. Frank Marini, left, and Professor Alvin Cold-maright, talked more of the university and its
relation to society than the scheduled topic of
n,

'

committee.
"A good percentage of the
city's housewives" are involved
in the boycott now, Mrs. Budzinski told the Kernel today. Included among them are many
UK wives.

However, said Mrs. R. O.
Evans of the UK Woman's Club,
participation by any members of
the club "was a completely in-

dividual matter."
Winn Dixie's Louisville office

sent a supervisor to Lexington
today to study the extent of the
boycott and its possible effects
on the stores. However, an official
in the Louisville office said the
supervisor "has not found anything. The boycott just has not

happened."

According to Mrs. Budzinski,
there will be no demonstrations
or pickets outside the stores to
discourage shoppers. The petitions arc intended to "encourage
people to shop elsewhere."
The housewives organization
which launched the boycott will
hold its next meeting Monday
to evaluate the success of the
boycott, Mrs. Budzinski said.

i

free speech in the college
community Wednesday at the Nexus Coffeehouse. Tom McCoodwin
was the moderator.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

27, 1966

Judge Says Morehead Refused Time

Special To The Kernel
MOHEHEA- D- A Rowan
County judge charged Wednes-

HAROLD WAHKING

BSU Hosts
New Series
Harold Wahking, professor of
Psychology at Georgetown and
also counselor in their office of
student personnel, will speak at
the Baptist Student Center three
nights. On Monday his topic
will be "Down With the Old
Morality", on Nov. 1 the topic
will be "Up VViththe New Morality" and Nov. 2 it will be "Forward In New Testament Faithfulness."
Wahking has his bachelors
and masters degree from the University of Louisville. He has
served a chaplain at the Eastern
Chapter here in Lexington.
He will try to aid in each
person's coming to grips with
his own ethical decisions, Joe
Smith, B. S. U. director, said.
Wahking s emphasis will be on
Christian love.
These programs will begin at

what kind of constitution they

want."

He said the "people were
day "pressure is being exerted denied a chance to vote" on the
first and second constitutions in
in all state universities to promote revision (of the proposed 1792 and 1799.
"In the 1849 and 1891 connew Kentucky constitution)."
stitutional conventions, in disJudge W. C. Flannery, a vigorous foe of the charter, said regard of the people's vote, the
he had been refused equal time assemblies rewrote the constituto speak against it by Morehead tion to suit themselves.
"In 1966, for the first time,
State University President Adron
Doran. Edward F. Prichard, a the people's vote will be final
Frankfort lawyer, was scheduled and decisive."
The governor called the new
to speak in favor of the new
constitution today at the school. charter a "people's constituFlannery said Doran told him tion," saying "many of those
any request for a speaker against who oppose it simply do not
the proposed constitution would trust the people."
Breathitt warned the collehave to be addressed to him.
the new charter gians against voting no for the
Meanwhile,
was getting strong support from charter because of the tremenGov. Edward T. Breathitt and dous amount of "misinformaPaul G. Blazer, a member of the tion" being circulated by its
Constitution Revision Assembly. opponents.
Gov. Breathitt, in a TransBlazer, an official of the Ashsaid that land Oil and Refining Co., blamylvania College speech,
on Nov. 8, "for the first time ed Kentucky's failures "in attainin Kentucky's history, the people
ing its educational, cultural and
will have a chance to decide industrial potential" on the re- -

Special To The Kernel

over who can print and distribute
applications continues here.
.
Robert McLeod, a graduate
11C
are
at Murray State University, proand must vote by absentee baltested Secretary of State Thelma
that vote." He also said his
Stovall's stand that only she, or lot,
group had 1500 applications
any county clerk, has the right
printed and distributed before
to print and distribute the applithe deadline, Oct. 20.
cations. He said Mrs. Stovall was
Attorney General Robert Mat6:30 each night.
"misusing her office in trying to thews referred to the 1961 Kentucky ruling that the applications
could be produced by the voters
themselves, providing they include a sworn statement that
the voter is qualified to vote
and will be absent from his county
Lexington's sixteen day old bus strike has increased absenteeism
on election day. George Harris,
in the city schools, according to Delbert Cunningham, pupil person
a State Representative, said, "...
nel director.
there is no statutory restriction
Ambrose, acting superJohn
Cunningham told the Lexingwith respect to obtaining appliton Board of Education that ab- intendent, told the board that
cation blanks."
senteeism has increased two per- county school buses are being
Qualified voters must have
used in place of the rented city
cent but that the increase "was
mailed their sworn applications
not as much as we had expected" bus usually used by students in
to county court clerks no later
one area.
due to the bus strike.
than Oct. 20. Clerks are now mailSchool board member Mrs.
abWeldon Shouse noted the strike ing official ballots to the
sentees, and these ballots must
has created undue hardships on
be mailed back to the clerks by
some students, particularly on
Nov. 8 to be counted.
Dr. George Hillery will meet some children vvho were "walkwith the
Christian ing all the way across town to
at 7 p.m. Friday in school."
Fellowship
NOW
Room 109, Student Center. SpeFederal mediator S. VV. Duncial invitation is extended to
It STARTS WHERE MON0O CANE tin OFF!
can, from the U.S. Department
graduate students.
of Labor, met with representatives of the Transit Company
"BETTER THAN
Student Chapter of the Asand the striking mechanics and
MONDO CANE"
sociation for Computing Machidrivers this morning.
let Anltt Timtt
.
nery will conduct a membership
drive Friday in Anderson Hall.
The union demands a twenty-cen- t
RIHOLI FILM DISTRIBUTORS INC. PRESENT
wage increase, three more
are now being
Applications
paid holidays, and pay for time
taken to Off Campus Student
Association Legislative Council lost between shifts. Duncan has
and Executive Committee in met with the representatives three
Room 107, Student Center, from times since the employes walked
9 a.m.-- l p.m. until Nov. 7. All off their jobs Oct. 9.
students are invited
FRANKFORT

absentee-ballo-

A controversy

t

absentee ballot.

The offer was made by Stephen Porter, University of
Louisville law student and president of the UL Republican Club,
and Henry Vance, UK law student and president of the Young
Democrats. It declared "if any
qualified student is denied an
absentee ballot because of Secretary of State Thelma Stovall's
recent ruling, please notify us
at once and legal counsel will
be provided to protect the voting
rights of students.
"This offer applies to all students regardless of political affiliation or his or her attitude on
the proposed revised constitu-

pro-revisi-

tion."

EVERY EVENING

at 8:00 p.m.
I

WINNER OF

X

1:30 p.m.;

WED, and SAT.

MATINEES

AMETRO

Murry State Students
Pick Up Ballot Issue

counsel for any "qualified" Ken
tucky college student denied an

strictions and uncertainties associated with the 1891 Constitution.
"The proposed charter would
be much easier to understand
and interpret in relation to today's complex problems than our
present Coastitution," he said.
Blazer said the legislature's
authority to limit local taxation
would be as broad under the
new charter as under the old.
"It (the proposed constitution) would remove much of the
power now centered in Frankfort and restore it to voters in
the legislative districts where it
belongs, in accordance with our
representative form of government," Blazer said.
Elsewhere in the state on the
constitution issue, a
group offered to obtain a legal

GOLCWYN

SUN. 2:00 p.m

6

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)(

EJSCMD

to apply.

I

The Kentucky Kernel
Tho

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage 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 students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
ol Student Publications,
UK Post
Office Hox 4986. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell. secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1804, became the Record in 1100, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
SUBSCK1PTION HATES
Yearly, by mail $8.00

Per copy, from tiles
KERNEL

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Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
Editor
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* THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Thursday, Oct. 27,

'It's Almost Like Being'
Will Open Here Next Week
The Department of Theatre
Arts will present its second pro-

duction, "It's Almost Like
Being," a bill of three short
plays on next Tuesday through
Saturday in the Laboratory Thea-

sense it is about the bankruptcy
in taste and judgement among

in New York while Mr. van Itallie was a resident playwright
with that company and was produced at the Sheridan Square
Playhouse in New York in February 1963.

the potential spectator-audiencgroup for the performing arts as
significant and meaningful art.
The director of "It's Almost
Like Heing," Raymond Smith,
associate professor of theatre arts,
explains that the three plays
being offered are better suited
for production in the smaller
Theatre than
e

tre.

matinee is planned on Saturday.
The plays are written in the
tradition of the Theatre of the
Absurd and include Harold Pinter's "The Room," Eugene
Ionesco's "The Lesson," and
A

r

v.

f

f
German Counsel Here
'.

.

.

"It's Almost

Dr. Werner von Hollcbcn, center, the West German Counsel in
Cleveland, talks with faculty members at an informal reception
following his talk in the Student Center Wednesday. The color
film of highlights of Queen Elizabeth's trip to West Germany
was also shown.

UK Information Team

Starts Sixth Program

The University's Information Team will begin its sixth annual
visitation program on Monday to provide information on higher
education for high school students and their parents in Kentucky.
The team will visit 16 com
Seward, Office of Dean of Wonmnities throughout the state
men; Miss Rebecca Converse,
between Oct. 31 and Nov. 14.
Miss Edith Cones; Dick Stofer,
Specific information will be
and Dr. Elbert W. Ockerman,
for students interested
provided
in UK concerning admissions, Admissions; Jay Brumfield and
Miss Helen King, Alumni Affairs;
costs, financial aid, and academic
Ordie Davis and Jim Ingle, Stuprograms with emphasis on the
dent Financial Aid; Dr. R. D.
new Academic Plan for freshmen
Johnson, University Extension;
and sophomores.
Dr. Warren Walton, Engineering;
be
Particular emphasis will
Dr. Lewis Cochran, Provost; Dr.
directed to the University's ComMichael Adelstein, English; and
munity Colleges being used as Dr. Robert O.
Evans, Honors
regional centers for many of the
meetings.
The Office of School Relations under Dr. Elbert W. Ocker-niaDean of Admissions and
has contacted each
Registrar,
high school in Kentucky for
names of seniors expressing an
interest in UK.
Personal invitations have been
sent to almost five thousand high
school students according to
Larry G. K el ley, coordinator for
the program, encouraging them to
attend the meetings with parents
and friends.
A question and answer period
following a brief talk from the
Team will enable prospective students to obtain the same information they would receive from
a visit to the campus in Lex-

Program.

e
Like Being" by
van Itallie.
Since 1958 Harold Pinter has
been in the forefront of the new
British drama and the London
Sunday Times has said that
he is "the most original, disturbing, and arresting talent in
theatrical London." He is responsible for "The Caretaker," a
smash hit on Broadway.
The action of "The Room"
takes place in a derelict boarding house room and is invested
with the elements that make Pinter's work unique: the disturbing familiarity of the dialogue,

It is a theatrical counterpart
to Top Art spoofing the American penchant for the "personality" singer, musical comedy, the recording industry, and
film making. In a more serious

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The Team is composed of administrative officials, faculty,
staff, and alumni from the University.
Members of the 1966 Information Team will include Jack
Hall and Joe Birch, Office of
Dean of Men; Mrs. Betty Jo
Palmer, Mrs. Rosemary Pond,
Miss Sandy Kemp, and Dr. Doris

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and subtle characterization, the
compulsive power that can be
by turns terrifying, moving, and
wildly funny.
The evening closes with a
musical spoof by
van Itallie, a New York television writer. The action takes
place on a movie lot during a
typical day in the life of a Doris
D. and a Rock. The script was
developed during work sessions
of Joseph Chaikin's Open Theatre
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* "You Wanted Somclliiii" Modern, Didn't You?"

A Public Forum
The free speech controversy of
Therefore, we think the Adminthree weeks ago lias been resolved istration should consider providing
as a completely settled issue by the University community with a
most members of the University specific place for use as a public
community since the Student Cen- forum at any time, without the
ter Hoard forum committee initinecessity of reservations and the
ated its new speakers program, like. We would suggest the small
"Sound Off."
amphitheater at the rear of MeThe forum committee has done morial Hall as one possibility. The
all within its power and jurisdicarea is rarely used now, and seems
tion to allow students to speak ideal for such a purpose. Granted,
in the Student Center. But due the weather would present probto crowded conditions, it is imlems during the winter months,
for a specific place to but we believe this limitation could
possible
be set aside in the Student Cenbe overcome if the Administration
ter for spontaneous discussion and were sincerely committed to the
values of such timely and spondebate.
on any topic, taneous discussion.
Students can speak
but it is necessary for them to reMany universities already have
serve space in advance. The pro- designated such areas. Indiana
gram as structured includingpub-licity- , University and Sproul Plaza at
a public address system and Berkeley are two examples.
This does not mean debate and
a faculty moderator is not a necesfor speaking in
discussion at UK would
sary prerequisite
the Student Center. Students can be limited to a specific place. The
still speak there on their own at forum committee could and should
continue sponsoring its "Sound
any time without fear of adminisOff program. However, we think
trative sanction.
While the forum committee's
the inherent structural shortcomprescribed structure has obvious ings are obvious and should be a
advantages, it offers little to the rationale for the establishment of
student wishing to address him- a place where constant and sponself to a timely topic one that taneous dialogue and debate can
cannot wait for a reserved facility. be maintained.
out-of-cla- ss

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Lctters To The Editor

Reader Asks, 'What Reason To Cheer?'
Editor of the Kernel:
game, there are about five players
The letter signed by two coeds giving a good effort.
with the arresting surnames of
Your "fair weather" fan,

To the

Withrow and Beadles in last Friday's Kernel displays the same
blind insistence on "team loyalty"
that has been implied several times
lately by the Kernel sports editor.
These "school spirit" advocates
have chided the "fair weather"
fans for not cheering during the
football team's losses.
When a team shows as little
determination as the Wildcats
showed against Virginia Tech and
LSU, what reason is there to cheer?
The UK students do not, for any
reason, owe anything to the football team. If anybody owes anything, it is the team that owes
something to the University for

providing

scholarships

and

coaches' salaries, and to the spectators who pay to see the games.
Apparently, though, it is well
nigh impossible for a team to meet
this obligation while playing under
Charlie Bradshaw. After having
been blessed for five seasons with
the presence of The Christian Gentleman, UK has yet to field a consistent, determined, football team.
It is improbable, therefore, that
it is the players who are to blame
for such a poor effort. And since
the University has been so generous as to grant tenure to Professor
Bradshaw of the football department, it is becoming clear that
the Kernel made a good point in
asking, a few weeks ago, how the
University expects to fill a 50,000-se-

space, and now that they have The whole problem could have been
run out of rooms to divide and avoided by building one very large
office space, they are using a multi-billio- n office building across from the
dollar project to save face. Chemistry-Physic- s
Building, and
still could. By building one very
To give only a dozen examples
large office building, we could reof classrooms that have been diclaim at least 13 large classrooms
vided into offices, I will review and dozens of smaller ones.
But,
just five of the older buildings on I realize that our supposed
campus: in McVey Hall, at least
Administration cannot turn
two large classrooms on the second back
now, because to do so would
floor; in Kastle Hall, a large lab be an admission that
they are too
or classroom opposite room 206;
nearsighted to see their noses.
in White Hall, five large classThomas P. Juul
rooms (example, the Bursar's ofEducation Junior
fice); in Miller Hall, one classroom cut in half to make room for
Editor's Note: Plans have been
offices, and on the third floor, two made
for the construction ofa high-ris- e
large rooms subdivided to make
complex on
offices; in Frazee Hall, room 305
the land now occupied by Wliite
has been made into office space
Patterson House and the Carfor about 12 persons (capacity was Hall,
negie Museum. Demolition of the
more than 150 students.)
three buildings is expected to begin
The office tower
The Administration has allowed in
will be 1 stories high. Two more
office space to crowd out classsuch
complexes are
rooms, and now, to cover up their
included in the overall campus
mistakes, they are going to tear
down all the buildings on campus. development plan.

Jeff Wade
A&S

Junior
Editor's Note: The question of
who's going to Jill a 50,000-sea- t
stadium was asked in an editorial
originally published in the Kentucky Irish American and reprinted in the Kernel.

far-sight- ed

Office Space
The Administration of our University is using a massive building
program to cover their own inability and lack of foresight. The
older buildings on campus are being
used as a scapegoat for administrative mishandling and incompetence in future planning.
The Administration says the
older buildings are too small and
that they do not have enough classroom space. This is a
and an untruth. For the past
four years, the Administration has
subdivided classrooms into office

office-classroo-

mid-Januar-

office-classroo-

w,cme"

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The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky
THURSDAY, OCT.

at

stadium.
As for the comparison between
the football Wildcats and the
basketball Wildcats, as proposed in
Friday's letter, I can see only one
likeness at any given point in a

Walter

M.

Grant,

Editor-in-Chi-

Terence Hunt, Executive Editor
Ioiin Zeji, Associate Editor

Judy Crisiiam, Associate

Lakhy Fox, Daily Sews Editor

William Knapp,

27,

It is evident that three more
gentlemen do not agree with Brad
Washburn's feelings. That is not
unusual since my beliefs run counter to his also. I do, however,
think he deserves our admiration
since he dared to think, something
the three angry young letter writers apparently have not done.

196V3

tried humming "B. Washburn
dum-dum- "
in the shower.
Gene Clabes, Managing Editor It did not work. It kept coming
Editor
out "Washburn has guts . . .WashFrank Browninc, Associate Editor
I

is

Phil Straw, Sports Editor

Business Manager

m

Kebuts Letter

-

lll-teLepho-

ESTABLISHED 1891

y.

19-2-

mis-stateme- nt

nm tThL

m

Barry Cobb, Cartoonist
Ed Campbell, Circulation Manager

a

burn has guts."

Steve Robida

Education Junior

* Till:

r

LITTLE MAN
d(

The University Soapbox

ON CAMPUS

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V,

gOAKQ

BY'

The University Soapbox is
open to all writers who do not
wish to he confined hij the
normal 300-uor- d
limit in letters
to the Kernel. The
opinions are
those of the author.

.(iJrc,.

HIMSELF

A

f TRUSTEES

yZ-

Hl$ GlfcU -

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PRgSlPgNT-- -

"Inside Report"

by Evans and Novak

Shriver

Vs.

Snick

WASHINGTON
The real and widely misunderstood reason why
poverty czar Sargent Shriver cut off federal funds to the Child Development Croup of Mississippi (CDGM) can be found in the
double life of a young man named R. Hunter Morey.
Morey is a key policymaker
unjustified attacks by liberals,
for CDGM, which has been run
Shriver was not knuckling under
Head-Staning
kindergartens to Mississippi segregationists in
throughout Mississippi. But sithe CDGM affair. Rather, he was
multaneously, he has been a leadcoolly deciding that a governing activist in the Mississippi
ment committed to
Freedom Democratic Party and had no business
subsidizing
its parent organization, the Stublack racialism. Thus, the Shident
ver decision transcended MissisCommittee (Snick). At one point,
and the poverty program.
Hunter's business cards listed sippi
What makes the apparent
affiliaboth CDGM and Snick
death of CDGM a matter to be
tions.
mourned is the fact that it did
was not alone. The
Hunter
a valuable service in providing
CDGM staff was packed with
training to some 10,000
Snick operatives that
so many
impoverished Negro children in a
field investigators from Shriver's
state where a less militant orgaOffice of Economic Opportunity
nization might have been bur