xt7p2n4zkg5s https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7p2n4zkg5s/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19610411  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 11, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 11, 1961 1961 2015 true xt7p2n4zkg5s section xt7p2n4zkg5s I". ;

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University of Kentucky
Vol. LII, No. 89

LEXINC.TON,

Dr. Kadaha Granted
$40,000 By AEC

Dr. P. K. Kadaba, associate professor of electrical engir
neering, has been awarded a $40,(XX)
grant to continue bis research on insulation materials.
This mearch is being conducted attention of the
Atomic

A preclassification system
with emphasis on preadvising
was outlined before the Faculty yesterday by Dr. Lyle R.
Dawson, head of the Department of Chemistry and acting
dean of the Graduate School.

The new system Is to be effective
for program planning and registration for the 1961 fall semester.
Basically, the system is divided
Energy
for the improvement of insulation Commlsston whlcn
into two sections.
recently
materials to prevent unwanted lo.ss
as two.
the Unlversity $40
Students currently enrolled and
year research Brant for the work planning to return to the campus
Also working full time on this
project is Dr. 8. K. Oarg, who
came to UK under a research
scholar exchange. His Ph.D. degree work in India was closely related to the projeit.
Being very baic In scope, the
work deals with microwave ab- The Board of Trustees approved three honorary degrees
AmmmnH,
Arnltnn nf itinjila
aiRl 23 faculty promotions for the next fiscal year and appointed
very low temperatures. Dr. Carg
explained. He will use microwave a new executive dean of extended programs at its meeting
frequencies to determnie the mo- nr;l 4
ceive the honorary Doctor of Laws
l
leeular behavior of certain liquids
The three men to receive hon- degree. Kosasih, one of the key
and gases when the energy is
orary degrees at the June comfigures in modern
passed through them.
mencement exercises are Oov. Bert Indonesia, has been Invited by
The leadings he gets are so T. Combs, Raden O.
Kosasih, and President Dickey to attend Comcritical that "electrical noise" from Forest Huddelson.
mencement while on a trip to the
a fluorescent light affects them.
The Board of Trustees cited Gov. I'nited States this summer.
The compounds to fce measured as
leader- Combs for his outstanding
Forest Huddleson, Professor of
gases will be put under pressure a
thousand times teater than at- ship in "developing the natural and Microbiology and Public Health
human resources of Kentucky" at Michigan State University, will
mospheric pressuie. Dr. Kadaba since his election as Governor in
9.
receive the honorary degree,
said.
In
of his govern- - tor of Science, for his research in
This project has attracted the mental recognition
will the fields of agriculture and
accomplishments, he
the honorary degree of lie health.
Doctor of Laws.
The promotions in six colleges
Kaden O. Kosasih. President of and the Medical Center at UK for
the Institute of Technology of the fiscal year 1961-6- 2 include:
Continued on Page 8
Bandung, Indonesia, will also re- two-yea-

3 Degrees, 23 Promotions

Approved By Trustees

Cold, Rain

Is Forecast

"

f

for study next fall will meet with
their advisers between April 24 and
May 13 for advising and selection
of courses for the fall term.
Students will complete enrollment details after returning to
campus in September.
"We present this not as a panacea nor as a system which will
operate without difficulties. Some
problems will be with us always,"
Dr. Dawson told the Faculty.
"It is presented, however, In the
hope and belief that it may materially assist in providing an opportunity for an effective advisory
system, eliminating many of the
unnecessary drops and adds, and
providing accurate class rolls at
the beginning of the semester and
accurate records relative to students on campus," he added.
The new system is the result of
tudy of preclassification systems
employed by other-- universities. It
was made by a committee composed of Dr. Dawson, chairman;
Dr. Charles F. Elton, dean of admissions and registrar; Dean R. E.
Shaver of the College of Engineering; and Clay Maupin, director of
the Division of Accounting and
Budgetary Control.
In detail, the system involves
these steps:
1. Students
planning to return
to the campus will sometime between the beginning of the 11th
and the end of the 14th wek of the
semester obtain a program summary card from the office of their
dean. On the card will be listed
courses the student must take and
approved electives designated by
course numbers.
2. After the student and the ad- -

Eight Page

vlser agree on required courses
and preference among the elec
tlves, the advisor signs the pro
gram summary card, keeps It and
takes it to the dean's office before the end of the semester.
Upon returning to the campus
in the fall:
1. The student calls at the dean's
office, according to an announced
schedule, obtains the program
summary card which has been
turned in by the advisor and other
necessary cards.
2. He then goes to the Coliseum
where information
relating to
closed classes Is available, and de
velopes his schedule in detail.
3. After presenting both his IBM
schedule card and his program
summary card, the studnt is admitted to the southwest concourse.
4. He proceeds around the concourse where departmental per
sonnel are available to Issue IBM
class cards and record his name on
appropriate class rolls.
5. If a specific desired class card
is not available, the student must
adjust his schedule of classes, in
accordance with the program sum
mary card, to gain enrollment la
a suitable class.
6. The student then proceeds to
the dean's booth to leave a copy of
his schedule, program summary
card and other required materials.
7. At the Registrar's table, the
student's IBM schedule card and
class cards are collected and In
formation is provided as to how
and where to pay fees.
8. Photos for identification cards
are taken after finishing at the
Registrar's table.
The new system will allow fresh
men, seniors, and graduate students to register first.
It will also enable new and form
er undergraduate students to re
turn to the campus before a semester opens for a period of

V Ai
Today's Activities
'

I

Stars In 'I'll? iii:lit
Deadline for ieturning
the
"Mars in the Night" award letters is today. Any organi2.itioii
which has not returned this letter is requested to contact Mrs.
Illcn Williams in the Office of
t!ie Dean of Women.

11

Classification Altered;
Emphasizes Advising

Dr. P, K. Kadaba

Cold, rainy weather which welcomed vacationing students back
to campus Sunday will continue for
the next few days.
The U.S. Weather Bureau at
Bluegrass Field reports temperatures for the next five days will
range from eight to 14 degrees
the Lexington area's 50 degree
normal for this period.
Light lain is expected tomorrow.
Friday, and Satuuiay. Today's hiyh
will be 51 degrees.

KY., TUESDAY, APRIL 11,

t

,'

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.

'
4

Protection For Student Pedestrians

In answer to student demand for protection from
traffic on Rose Street between the Chi Omega
sorority house and the Fine Arts Building, the city
of Lexington has provided two warning devices.

On the left, a sign warning

pedestrians of the
dangers ahead, while at the right is one of the
two signs suspended above the street to warn
automobile driveis students may be crossing there.

STUDENT UNION BUILDING
State Speech Festival, Rooms
128, 204, 206, Ballroom, Social
Room, Music Room, and "X"
Lounge, 8 a.m.
Speech Festival Luncheon,
Roum 205, noon.
little Kentucky Derby Committee, Room 128, 5 p.m.
Y.MCA Advisory
Bourd Banquet, Room 205, 5:30 p.m.
IFC. Loom 128, 6:30 p.m.
Fraternity
Pledge Classes,
Room 204, 7:30 p.m.
OTHER
Pence Physics Club, Room 208,
7 p.m., Pence Hall.

Students, Instructors In CORE Demonstration
By MIKE WENNINGER

onstrations between March 25 and
April 6, CORE members "willfully,
maliciously, and unlawfully trespassed on the theater property and
conducted themselves in such a
manner as to interfere with the
operation of the theater."
The plaintiff claims the demonstrators blocked the ticket window
acM. Switow & Eons Enterprises, and denied the general public
Inc., operators and owners of the cess to the theater.
Included among the 15 defendKentucky Theater on Main Street,
e,
filed a suit' Friday in Fayette Cir- ants in the suit are Bobbye
Arts and Sciences senior;
cuit Court seeking an injunction
to prevent memters of the Lexing- Henry W. Jones, Arts and Sciences
ton COKE chapter from demon-Btiatin- g freshman from Lexington; Lamunt
at the theater.
Jones, Education senior from LexThe suit suys tiiat in nine dem ington; William E. Young, Engi

University instructors and
students have been involved
again in arrests and lawsuits
resulting from Congress on
Racial Equality demonstrations
protesting segregation in Lexington movie theaters.

neering freshman from Lexing- Joseph Hospital for back Injuries.
ton; Dr. Abby L. Marlatt, director
Those arrested included 11 Juveof the Home Economics School; niles. The 11 adults will be tried
and Daniel S. Claster, instructor of
April 26 in Police Court.
sociology.
The suit says that on April 3
They include Young, Lamont
CORE demonstrators tried to in- and Henry Jones, Miss Wilhite,
cite a riot and struck .1 Kentucky WiMiam B. Stone, Instructor of
Theatre employee, doing "serious English, and MUs Julia Lewis,
bodily harm" to him. Lexington president of the Lexington CORE
chapter.
police that night arrested 22 demonstrators on charges of breach of
Miss Wilhite and Mr. Claster
were arrested on breach of peace
peace.
The employee referred to in the charges Feb. 17 during a CORE
demonstration at the Strand Thesuit is Frank Petro,
atre: The charges against them and
doorman, who said he was pushed four others were dismissed the foland kicked in the back by demon-stiu'.oi- s. lowing day by Police Court Judge
He was treated at El. Thomas J. Ready.

Miss Wilhite and Mr. Claster
were also named defendants along
with Dr. Marlatt in a suit filed
Feb. 20 by the Phoenix Amusement
Corp., owners of the Strand and
Ben Ali Theaters. The suit, like the
one brought by Switow and Sons,
seeks a permanent
injunction
against the Lexington CORE chapter to prevent its members from
blocking "fiee and ready access to
the premises" of the theaters.
The hearings of both suits have
not yet been scheduled. The city
has set up a human rights committee to negotiate with the theaters and CORE, but whether or
not the committee is doing anything has not been made public.

* 19G1

Tuesday, April II,

2

Tables Turn As Eichmann Faces Israeli Court
JERUSALEM, April 11 (AP)
The day of reckoning came
toil.iy for Adolf Eichmann, accused as the master executioner of Hitler's Reich.
The sliRht, balding man accused
of complicity in the slaughter of
rix million Jews will take his place
Jn the prisoner's dock, shielded
Jront possible avengers by sheets
of bullet-proglass.
Justice Moshe Landau, PresiIsraeli
dent of the three-judg- e
court, will turn to Eichmann and

ray:
"Adolf Eichmann, stand up."
'And the trial of the man run to
earth by Israeli agents in Argentina laet May will begin.
Eichmann muHt stand for the
reading of the indictment, a formidable document of 15 counts.
The indictment accuses him of
' crimes against the Jewish people
andi crimes against humanity."
The maximum penalty is death.
th'hrr.ann was chief of the Gestapo's Jewish affairs section in
World War II. To him in the cold,
impartial words of Nazi bureaucracy was assigned the job of
inding "The Final Solution of
i.be Jewish Problem."
The prosecution charges the solution was the Nazi death camps.
Eichmann will be asked how he
pleads once the indictment is read.
And before he answers his West
German attorney, Robert Serva-tiu- s,
is expected to rise and challenge the legality of the proceedi-

in
his
not
the
crimes allegedly were committed,
and is without Jurisdiction; that
he is being tried under a law passed after the crimes were committed.
Eichmann Eager To Explain
Servatius has said Eichmann is
eager to explain his side of the
story. His defense is expected to
be that he followed orders as a
Gestapo officer.
As the trial once more focused
the glare of world publicity on
Hitler's Reich, Chancellor Konrad
Adenauer of West Germany declared Nazism has been purged
"from our social life and souls."
"We wish that in this trial the
whole truth will come to light and
that justice will be served," Adenauer told the West German nation in a television address from
Bonn.
Crowds Scramble For Tickets
Small crowds scrambled for the
80 tickets still available for the
screening of the trial on a closed
television circuit in a 1,000-seauditoiium. Only 20 of the 746
seats in the court room itself were

that Eichmann was kidnapped
Argentina and therefore that
trial is illegal; that Israel did
exist as a nation at the time

P

ESS

available to the public and these
were taken weeks ago.
The trial is being held in the
Beit Ha'am (Community Center).
Outside the court room, blue-cla- d
Israeli soldiers patrolled along
the wire fenres thrown up as a serin i! y measure. But the atmosphere around the building and in
the ancient city was calm.
Following the opening legal preliminaries, the chief of the Israeli
prosecution, Attorney General Gideon Hausner will deliver his open
ing statement.
Statement Contains 50,000 Words
Running to about 50,000 words,
the statement will set forth the
main points of the state's case
against Eichmann and is expected
to probe deep into the dark recesses of the Nazi Regime.

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Kenneth Connor
Shirley Eaton
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Claudctte Coloert Barry Sullivan
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LAST TIMES TONIGHT!
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Doloret Hjrt George Hamilton
"FOR THE LOVE OF MIKE"
Richard Basehart Danny Bravo

NOW

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Servatius is expected to argue

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LA FLAME

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STARTS TONIGHT
Don't Forget Bcmko
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Zoologists believe a Jellyfish can
tell which way is up because of a
small organ called the lithocyst
situated at the base of the

WALT DiSNEY'S

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Impress Your Date-T- ake
Her To . . .

PHONE

ngs-.

He will say Eichmann told him:
"Blood for goods goods for blood."'
Abraham Krassik, one of a group
of Jewish prisoners forced to wipe
out traces of the work of Nazi
murder teams.
Servatius has said he has been
unable to find any witnesses to
testify on behalf of Eichmann.
Some might fear arrest in Israel.
Others do not want to testify. Stilt
others are hunted and may be
hiding in neighboring Arab

Waiting to testify for the state
are 39 witnesses, 13 of them Jews
who met Eichmann at the time he
was riding high as an 8.S. (elite
guard) Colonel of the Gestapo.
They include:
Dr. Hugo Kratzky, one of a party
of 1,000 weak and hungry Jews deported from Czechoslovakia to Poland and forced to build their own
concentration camp.
Yoel Brand, who met Eichmann
in 1944 when the Nazis proposed to
release a million Jews In exchange
for 10.000 allied army trucks.

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Very Big On

Fovor
A MOTION PICTURE
AS CREATIVE AS LOVE

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WE ALSO INVITE PRIVATE PARTIES

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April II,

Coed Finds Job
With Challenge
By The Associated Prm
Do

you

to

work

this

plan
summer?
It may be a breeze If you find
a Job that is different, advises
pretty Diane O'Dell, 18, Northwestern University freshman.
She found a Job last summer
''with an element of newness, a
challenge," as a U. S. mail carrier.
"I'd never seen or heard of a
pill mail carrier when I began
the idea," she explains,
"but I reasoned that I couldn't lose
anything by applying."
The postal executive at Wilton,
ConnM her hometown, did a double take when she asked for a Job.
"I thought it was a brushoff
when he said he'd let me know, so
I was surprised when he called me
to report for work," says Diane.
Her regular Job was special delivery carrier, but she also sorted
and sacked mail, working split
hours during the week, and a long
day Saturday until 11 p m. She
earned $90 some weeks, including
overtime.
"The big drawback for a girl is
dirt from the constant traffic in
mail bags. The trucks are dirty,
and sacking mail is like working
In a coal bin. It gets your arms
ami clothes filthy, especially around
the first of the month when bills
make the mail heavier. But it can
be lots of fun, particularly for a
giil."
There are people who look at
a mail lady in disbelief, she says,
quest toning whether you're rehearsing for a play or being initiated into a sorority. Others stare as
if you are absconding with government property, particularly when
you are on "pickup."
Women are more suspicious
than men, who try to help lady
carriers.
And every individual
seems to think that his special
delivery letter has come straight
from the post office.
"The popular conception of a
tpecial delivery Is that the carrier
drops everything at the post office
and speeds out in the mail truck
to deliver the letter."
Special mail follows the same
routes as other mail, Diane explains. "Those on the first part
of the route are friendly, those
who get their letters late are likely to growl." She delivered 94
ters in one day.
Diane says she's an "odd sort
of person for doing things nobody
else is doing," and it paid off in
the mail Job. The $1,000 she earned In 2 'j months helped pay her
college tutition.
If you'd consider a mail carrier
job, she says, the first consideration is not the money, the hours
or the working conditions.
"The most important qualification for the Job is strength and a
good set of muscles. Those sacks
are heavy," warns Diane.

T

Pin-Mat-

Wlckle Bogard, senior education
major from Winchester and a
member of Kappa Kappa Gamma
to Raleigh Lane, Junior in the college of Arts and Sciences from
Louisville and a member of Phi
Delta Theta.
T w n k McDowell,
sophomore
Journalism major from Erie, Pa.,
and a member of Delta Delta Delta to Steve Webb, Junior pharmacy
major from River Edne, N.J., and
a member of Kappa Sigma.
Stella Curd, to Don Hering, a
Junior agriculture major from
Morrow, Ohio, and a member of
Farmhouse.
Janet Glass, to Bill Kohout, a
sophomore engineering major from
Thornwood, N.Y. and a member of
Farmhouse.
Lou Scott, to Jim Young a Junior engineering major from Hern-do- n
and a member of Farmhouse.

1l::r.J.

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vmmi

Tttephont

:

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Recently elected officers of PI Tau Sigma, mechanical engineering
honorary, seated from left are, Joseph Miller, Roger Jackson, Don
Fischer, Richard Edwards, Gerald Rapper, standing, Tibor Bondor,
C harles Bust
hman, and William Arrington.

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Questions tliey ask me about the Women's Army Corps
by 1st. Lt. Janet McMunus,

In recent months I've
met hundreds of bright
college pirls uho Hunt
to know about a

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Meetings

NEWMAN

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FARMHOUSE
Jim Young, a Junior engineering
major from Herndon, was elected
president of Farmhouse fraternity.
Other officers elected were Dave
Robertson, vice president and business manager; Oene Bogarth,
treasurer; Bill Kohout, secretary;
Don Colvin. social chairman; Ken
Martin, publicity chulrinan.
Don Hering, song leader; Ken
Overliults, historian; Bill Saylors,
chaplain; Leon Withers, rush
chairman; and Everett Lail, sergeant at arms.

CLI B
The Newman Club will meet at
5:30 o'clock tonight In the Newman Center, 320 Rose Lane, to
elect officers for the coming year.
FIRESIDE COMMITTEE
The Faculty Fireside Committee
will meet at 5 p.m. today in the
Y Lounge In the SUB. Plans for
The annual YMCA banquet will coming events will be made.
be held at 5:30 p.m. today in Room
205 in the SUB.
New officers will be Installed at
Habit Broken
the dinner. The officers are John
TUCSON, Ariz. (? Lena HastWilliams, president; Patridc Ryan,
vice president; Allan Todd, secre- ings Johansen of Tucson had a
tary; and Paul Kiel, treasurer. habit of leaving her pruning shears
Tom Cherry, the retiring YMCA on the sill outside her bedroom
window.
president, will be master of ceremonies.
A thief broke that hrbit bv
using
Dr. Earl Kauffman, faculty ad- the shears to cut a window screen,
viser to the organization, will be enter the Johansen home and haul
out several valuable items.
guest speaker.

fctllilitWa.r-f-

...

-3

Social Activities
Elections

i
conveniently located
home-lik- e
conomy minded
comfort . . . that's why the Aller-to- n
Hotel is Chicago headquarters for many school groups,
business and professional student affairs, field trips, athletic
teams, debate teams, speech
clinics, tours, etc.
For your own Chicago visit or
week-en- d
stay choose the hotel
close to everything on
ZSM I c h I g a n Avenue's
Magnificent Mile

3.

19GI-

the

nineu's Army Corps.
i

MaitiiiViiitsAiiiiiiV

I'hey ask basic,
II

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II

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i3

Tliev want laets,
ure-ihtrai'htl'iirvtaril iiifuruiulinn. A anili!
of the ino.t frtvj ik'ii t
a
an. I answers
lnif-'li- t
l" interesting to you.
,

What ihn

a

WAV.

otflrrr A?

he W'AC ollicer lias an iuiMrlaut j"li as an
MTiilive. As Mich, her ilulies are a.liiiiins-t- i
alive a
sujii'i isnrv. Hie jnhs open to her
to ciili.iu jnhs surli as
are eiuiali-nf
Itintillaril, Kilueatinii I'rorain
I'ulilie Inflations lirertor, Hmlet
I)ne tor, ami Personnel Sjn'i iali.-.t- .
'I

H here are WAC officer tlutumed?
Currently they're btalionej ut over 130

0bU

W

omen s Army Corps Officer Recruiter

in the U.S. anil around the plolie. Some major
ones are Sun Franeiseo, Chieapo, New York,
Munich, Home, Tokyo, Honolulu, Monterey,
New Orleans, Atlanta, West Point, Boston.

What it a

WAC.

officer'

Hilary?

AC officers receive the same salary uinl allowances as male officers. A 2nd. Lieutenant's
$ !2'!.X per
Marling salary plus allowances
monlli. AKo, there are medical and dental
benefits, and thirty days' paid leave every year.

the Women's Army Corps. If they desire,
they apply for commissioning after graduation from college.
1 it

''feminine'" to he an officer?
Certainly, just as it's feminine to !e a
businesswoman, a doctor, or a diplomat. In
world women have
today's
taken on many new responsibilities, and they
these without ever losing leii.iniao
meet
poise and dignity.

Ilinr

Ion-- ; must a MAC.
officer nerve?
aely 2 years. The lir- -t lew niontlis ar
Y AC Ollicer
lu-i- c
Com e. The
(.pent at the
remainder of the tmir is spent at a post and
U'siLiuuctit . Ic.'led to icllccl the iu!i iihiafs
interest and abilities.

(lollepe jiininiH may "hample" the WAO
Vtithout eomir.itiiient. I inler a special
paid pKiprani they peiid t summer
weeks at the W AC tlenter, Fort Met II. Man,
Ala. Here they receive basic orientation iu

(OI.OItH I. M:V ItOOKI.I T tells how
young women may serve the l .S. as region.
sihle executives in the Women's rinv Corps,
L.S. Aniiy. To get your copy, simply wi ile:
The Adjutant General, Department of the
Army, Washington 2
U.C., Attn: ACST.
Ask for "Selected for Succes. " Please give
your name, address, college, date ol graduation, and field of Mudy.
A

* 'Non-Violen-

Demonstration

t'

Last week a
employee
of a downtown theater was injured
during a "stand-in- "
staged by tlie
Lexington chapter of the Congress
on Racial Equality. He claims the
peculiar distinction of being the first
casualty in Lexington due to COKE
activities.
After the man was struck and
kicked by demonstrators, a crowd of
approximately 200 persons, blocking
traffic and sidewalks, began to yell
at the stand-iparticipants. The
arrival of police, delayed by the
blocked traffic, prevented what might
e
well have become a
riot.
CORE professes to strive for racial
equality with what it calls "direct,
action." Does the injury
of an aged theater employee fall in
the category of
action?"
An earlier Kernel editorial stated
that CORE methods may be unsuitable and unnecessary in this area,
which has been achieving integration
at an evolutionary pace for several
years. The editorial resulted in many
letters to the editor, most of which
questioned our stand on the issue.
We would now like to see some
justification for CORE's use of violence, which is an obvious violation
of its stated principles.
CORE cannot wave away personal
injury and breach of the public peace
with the banner of racial equality.
Legal defense is called for. Until a
plausible explanation for their actions
is offered, we feel that CORE is open
t0( further criticism.
No date has yet been set for a
n

full-scal-

"non-viole-

.

hearing on an injunction brought
against CORE members in February
by another downtown theater. Until
the hearing, CORE has found it advisable to halt stand-in- s
at that theater
until the counsel for defense prepares his case. CORE members involved in last week's stand-ialso
have agreed to hold no more demonstrations until after the hearing on the
case, scheduled for April 26.
Demonstrations in downtown Lexington seem to lie defeating their own
cause. Representatives of CORE and
the American Civil Liberties Union
might accomplish more by talking
privately with city officials and
theater management than by scheduling further public demonstrations
which certainly cannot win the public
over to their cause.
n

Again we say, CORE methods are
unnecessary and inadvisable in Lexington.

Kernels
Vigor is found in the man who
has not yet grown old, and discretion
in the man who is not too young.
Onasander.
Factual knowledge (in medicine)
has already exceeded the comprehension of a single individual.
George W. Tliorn.
No one lives content with his
condition, whether reason gave it
him, or chance threw it in his way.
Horace.

A Chink At Best
It is interesting, though perhaps
not at all significant, that the Kremlin has done away with censorship on
outgoing news. This means that foreign correspondents will not have to
seek an imprimatur of sorts before
transmitting their stories to overseas
outlets; they will not be subject, that
is, to the advance approval or disapproval of Communist bureaucrats
(party-lin- e
hacks) empowered to
edit the heart out of certain types
of reports, or to suppress them entirely.
As far as it goes, this is a "liberalizing" development that the free world
has reason to welcome. Still, encour- aging though it may be, the thing
must be taken with a grain of salt.
After all, twice before (in Stalin's day,
in 1939 and 1946), there was a similar
lifting of Soviet restraints on the out-flow of news, but in both instances
the relaxation was exceedingly short-- '
lived, and the censor got back to
work not only in a great hurry, but
with a vengeance. Needless to say,
the Communist system being what it
the
is, the same sort of about-face- ,
same sudden reversal of policy, could
happen again in Moscow within a
matter of weeks.
Moreover, lest anybody be tempted to overrate this latest Soviet move
:

j

f

1

'

in the field of censorship,

the fact
should be emphasized that the "liberalization" involved carries with it
an implied warning to all foreign
newsmen in the USSR that they will
be held accountable for the transmission of any reports that strike the
Kremlin as being "incorrect" or otherwise displeasing. In short, if a correspondent transmits a story (no matter how accurate) that conflicts with
the party line, he will be exposing
himself to immediate expulsion from
the USSR.
So the Kremlin's strictly limited
retreat from censorship hardly warrants a lot of hoopia. At best it constitutes only a small chink in the
Iron Curtain. Certainly, as far as incoming news is concerned, as far as
untrammeled contact and communication with the free world are concerned, the Russian people are still
being kept in the dark. And this w ill
continue to be the case, as our State
Department has noted, as long as
Moscow keeps on jamming our radio
broadcasts, and bars such other things
as the normal distribution of newspapers, magazines, books, and films
from our own and other
lands.

Eveninc

Star (Washington)

The Kentucky. Kernel

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
week during the regular whool year except during holiday! and cxamf.
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Second-clan-

Published four timet
'

s

Bob Anukhson, Editor
Newton Siencer, Sports Editor
Mike Wennincer, Managing Editor
Bobbie Mason, Assistant Managing Editor
Lew King, Advertising Manager
Beverly Cahdwell and Toni Lennos, Society Editors
Skip Taylor and Jim Channon, Cartoonists
Business Manager
Nicky Poi e, Circulation
Perry Ashley,

TUESDAY NEWS STAFF

Warren Wheat, Newt Editor

Scottie Helt, Sports

Kathy Lewis,

Associate

THE READERS' FORUM
Disrupted Classes

To The Editor:
One often hears complaints from
high school students and teachers that
the educational process is constantly
and interrupted.
being impeded
Teachers do not have time to teach
because they have to interrupt already
short class periods to read announcements and sign notices. Often they
have to help students who are looking for lost books and purses.
It is too bad that these conditions
also exist in institutions of higher
education. We have come here to
learn and we are paying
money for this privilege, but we are
not getting our money's worth. I am
taking a course (required) which has
not met five times this semester already. Maybe we should pay for the
hours we actually spend in class
rather than for the hours the professor decides he has more important
things to do than teach. One student
last semester got an "E" on a term
paper which was marked late. The
paper wasn't late and she called the
attention of her professor to it. He
told her that he didn't have time to
see her then, but to come in next
semester. That really helped her grade
a lot.
Today our class met to take the
midterm exam. We were entertained
during this time by the class upstairs which was having films. We
could hear the dialogue quite clearly
hard-earne- d

rather like turning on the TV set
in the living room and then going
up to the bedroom to listen to it.
Alter these most interesting films

were over, the members of that class
decided to rearrange their furniture.
Dragging tables and chairs create
quite a disturbance in the room below. I'm sure we all did very well on
our exams. I could go on and on and
I'm sure that every other student in
this university could do the same.
I shall end with one final comment: Some disturbances can't be
avoided the grass must le cut and
the science building must be built.
However, I do not foster the same
sentiment for a young coed who disrupted our entire class while she
hunted for her lost pledge pin.
Cay-Elle-

n

Ea