xt7qnk363z8x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qnk363z8x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650114  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 14, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 14, 1965 1965 2015 true xt7qnk363z8x section xt7qnk363z8x Inside Todays Kernel

EN

Two American planes slid doion in
Vict Nam raid: Page Two.

.Ld

MFL plans Eurojean study course:
Ppjjc Three.

University of Kentucky

Vol. LVI, No. 59

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, JAN. 14,

19G5

The college student may become
higlicr education's 'forgotten man:
Page Five.

Eight Pages

Coach Lancaster says UK's frosh
hav-- come a
long way: Page Six.

Editor comments on the theft of an
Eastern College Spruce: Page Four.

College women are a Ing Ixxm for
the beauty market: Page Seven.

Graphic Art Show
To Begin Sunday

Q
i

International Works
Displayed In Fine Arts

v..

f

L

BySID WEBB

Kernel Managing Editor
Graphics '65," an exhibition of international
graphic-ar- t
pieces by an impressive array of present-da- y
masters,
will be the first of major events on campus this Centennial year.
The show, representing the crux of
and drawing
in Paris today, opens at 4 p.m. Sunday in the Fine Arts gallery.
It is the most expensive exhibit ever to be displayed at the University.
Both UK and French government representatives will participate
in the formal presentation of the exhibit at the reception Sunday
evening.
"The magnitude, the number of reknowned artists that will be
represented here is almost frightening," Frederic Thursz, assist
tant professor of art, said. He collected these works during his
sabbatical leave last year.
"We have tried to bring important exhibits here in the past,
but the importance and quality of this one exceeds our greatest
dreams," he said.
The exhibit is the seventh in a scries of graphic displays at
"Paris

1957-1-6-

4,

print-makin-

1

g

UK.

Annette Michelson, P?ris correspondent and critic who writes
the Paris Herald Tribune and Arts International magazine, in
a criticism written especially for the "Graphics '65" brochure said
of the exhibit:
"As one examines this extremely comprehensive assemblage of
contemporary prints and drawings, one is again impressed with
the remarkably high, evn technical quality which is sustained
and assured by two factors uniquely Parisian. "The first is the tradition of workmanship, maintained unbroken since the Renaissance, in the city's great print ateliers
by fastidious, devoted, and superbly trained artisans.
"The second is the existence of centers such as the Friedlaender
and Hayter workshops which have, since the war, attracted young
artists from every country; these are places of experimentation
which encourage technical renewal and exchange. Many of the
accomplished young artists represented in this exhibition owe
their training and inspiration to the existence of these centers."
Atelier is a name adopted by young, experimental artists in
Paris who are exploring the technical benefits of traditional
for

Stars In The Night Steering Committee

Members of the Stars in the Night steering com- mittee (from the left), seated, Susan Robertson,
programs; Martha Eades, awards; Becky Snyder,
arrangements; Sue Dorton, decorations; Jeannie

Stanley Hayter, artist and craftsman in traditional
"teachers" in the new movement. It is the name of
his workshop, "Atelier 17," from which the young artist group
took their name.
The French word atelier by itself is interpreted merely as "study"
or "classroom."
Hayter's "Alba," a crayon drawing, and "Floating Figure,"
an intaglio, will be on exhibit in the gallery.
Johnny Friedlaender is another leading teacher to the "Atelier"

IFC Greets
20th Group
Because increasing enrollment
of men at the University eligible
for social fraternities, and the
desire on the part of the
Council to keep the
k
ratio even, IFC
Greek,
has announced plans to add one
new fraternity a year for the
next four years.
Theta Xi, now quartered in
Inter-fraterni-

ty

non-Gree-

print-makin- g,

is one of the

Continued On Page

secretary-treasure-

r.

Greek Expansion Important,
IFC Adviser Strache Said

-

print-makin- g.

Cross, publicity; Margaret Gelbach, Pat Fowler,
invitationals. Standing, Betty Jo Palmer, adviser;
Dede Cramer, chairman; and Winnie Jo Perry',

Student Congress
Meets Tonight
Student Congress will meet
p.m. today in Room 245 of
the Student Center.

at

6:30

8

the Lydia Brown House, is hoping to become the first of these
four fraternities, and the 20th
fraternity on campus, tobe granted a charter. They have already
been approved by the faculty
and now seek approval from the
IFC Executive Council.
IFC president Keith Hagan
said that the council voted unanimously in favor of expansion
this year and the individual fraternities have given their support to the expansion program
here.
Fred Strache, assistant Dean
of Men and adviser to IFC, said
that he believes the addition of
new fraternities is important to
the Greek system at UK because
each fraternity is right for a different type of man and thus attracts men who might not be
suited for any other fraternity on
campus.
These men could, in turn,

Graphics Sliotv

'Vega," by

r

,

land-gra-

nt

1958.

Group Dynamics Course
To Continue Registering
Space is still available in a
group dynamics course to be
taught by visiting Professor Kenneth D. Benne of Boston University.
Sandy Brock, cochairman of
the student centennial committee
said about 56 students have registered for the course so far. Space
for 42 more is available.
Anyone interested in adding
the course may register at the
Office of the Dean of Women in
the Administration
Building.
Deadline for registration is 5 p.m.
Monday.
Listed as Anthropology 383-2- ,
the course is open to juniors and
seniors. Miss Brock emphasized
c
the importance of noting the
section number for the course.
The course will be held at
noon each Monday with one lab
session required. Lab sessions
will be conducted at noon each
day.
Dr. Benne, director of the
Human Relations Center at Boston University, is one of four
visiting professors for the Cen- cor-re-

Hungarian-born-

add to the leadership of the
school, he said.
Strache also said that the
established fraternities are increasing in number.
Last spring there were 10 fraternities with a membership of
60 or more. This spring, four
fraternities are expected to go
over the hundred mark.
There are several possible
ways of attempting to establish
a new fraternity on campus,
Strache said, but all new groups
must work with IFC and obtain
the approval of the council before they will be accepted.
uniAlthough most
versities have an average of from
30 or 40 fraternities, UK has
been slow to add new members
in the past.
The last group to be granted
a charter here was Phi Gamma
Delta which came to UK in

Parisian artist Victor Vasarely, Is a I960
University for exhibition by Galerie Denise Bene.
kilk-scrr-

print loaned to the

1

u

-

(
DR. KENNETH D. BENNB

tennlal year.
Dr. Benne holds degrees from
Kansas State University, the University of Michigan, and Columbia University, lie won the
Award for outstanding
contributions in American philosophy.
UK staff members with training in group dynamics will lead
laboratory sessions.
Kil-patri-

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Jan. 14, 1965

News In Brief

Trustees To Meet

2 American Bombers
Downed In Viet Nam

illiiV

First Run Thriller

STEP THROUGH THE "TIME PORTAL"... and you

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before it happens!

FUTURE

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At Its Finest

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8:30 'til 1:00 with

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the JOSLIN BROS.

second-degre-

fighter-bombe-

i

tion Building.

The Associated Press
Two U.S.
were shot down over Laos and an Army
border
spotter plane was downed near the
Wednesday.
The Defense Department announced one of the Air. Force jet
pilots was recovered and the other is missing.
There are indications that the jets were on a mission attacking
Communist supply routes from North Vietnam.
e
The crewmen of the Army spotter plane suffered
burns when their craft was shot down near the Cambodian border,
a U.S. spokesman in Saigon said.
Loss of the two
brought to six the total number
of American jets that have been shot down by ground fire in Laos
since last June.
Pentagon press chief Arthur Sylvester said that the reconnaissance flights that have been carried on at the request of the Laotian government will continue.
17 VA INSTALLATIONS TO CLOSE
The Veterans Administration announced officially Wednesday
that congressmen made known Thursday a reorganization involving
closing 11 hospitals, 17 regional offices, and 4 domiciliary homes.
Administrator William J. Driver said the reorganization will
result in annual savings estimated in excess of $23 million.
RUSSIA TO SERVE CONSUMERS
The Soviet government has given final approval to the revolutionary idea for the Soviet Union of manufacturing what customers want instead of what planners think they should have.
Moscow newspapers reported Wednesday that the Council of the
National Economy sovnarkhoz has ordered factories making 25 pere
cent of the nation's
clothing and shoes to produce on
store orders by July 1.
This change came as a result of an experience of a men's suit
factory in Gorky. The clothes they made were snatched off store
fight-bombe-

Cylu

i

recessed meeting of the University Board of Trustees w ill be
held at 2:30 p.m. Friday in the
Board Room of the AdministraA

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This was in sharp contrast to much of Soviet consumer production, which is supposed to meet specifications of central planners.
Goods have been piling up on shelves because of poor quality,
undesirable color, and bad design.
BLISS SEES GOP COMEBACK
Ray C. Bliss, the choice of top Republicans for national chairman,
asserted Wednesday the party is strong enough to stage a comeback
from last November's Democratic election landslide.
"The facts are that we have a base that is strong enough in my
judgment ," he told a news conference, "that we can win in the

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in 1894,
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the Hecord in 1900, and the Idea in
1908. Published
as the
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Kernel nince 1915.
Published at the University of Kentucky'! Lexington campus four timet each
week during the school year except during holiday and exam periods. Published
weekly during the summer term.
'I he Kernel is governed
by a Student
Publications
hoard, Prof. Paul Oherst,
College of Law, chairman; and Stephen
Palmer, senior law student, secretary.
Kntered at the post of I ire at Lexington, Kentucky a second class matter
under the act of March 3, 1879.
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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Jan.

MFL Plans Foreign Study Courses

The Department of M ttlrrn
Foreign Languages is sponsoring
two
study trips to Monterrey, Mexico, and to Paris,
France, this summer.
The study course in Mexico
will be taught at the Instituto
Tecnologico de Monterrey. The
courses will correspond approximately to the intermediate Spanish, the Spanish novel and drama,
the Spanish conversation and
composition, and the Spanish
civilization course taught at UK.
The cost of the summer's study
program is $350, which includes
tuition and room and board. Students must provide their own
transportation to Monterrey.
Dr. L. Clark Keating, chairman of the Department of Modern Foreign Languages, will be in
charge of the study group.
Dr. Keating said that side trips
would be provided for the students at no extra cost. Other
trips in Mexico, he said, can be
arranged easily at the student's

The purpose of the two trips
is to provide the students with
practice in using the languages
and to familiarize them with the
customs and the life of the people.
Six credits may be earned in
cither trip.
The applicants for the trip to
Mexico must have completed at
least one year of college Spanish
or two years of high school Spanish. Four personal photographs
by two inches
should be submitted with the
applications.
Students will live in the
school's dormitories and will eat
in the dining rooms. There will
be three hours of classes each
week day.
In addition to the trips, conferences, concerts, and sports
events will be available to the
students.

six-we-

The trip to Paris will cover
six weeks and will provide the
students with six hours' credit.
The students will study at the
L'Ecole Pratique de L'Alliance
Francaisede Paris.
Courses will correspond to the
intermediate French, the conversation, and the French civilization courses UK offers.
Price for the French trip is
$450, which includes tuition and
room and board. Travel to and
from Paris will be at the students'

expense.

V

own expense.

1LJ

competitive tournament sponsored by the Student Center
Board Jan. 19.
Mr. Wiswell, who plays up to
50 opponents at one time in either
chess or checkers, will take on
challengers at 8 p.m. in the card
room of the Student Center.
Those students wishing to
challenge Mr. Wiswell in chess
or checkers should bring their
own sets.

Fran-cais-

:

1.

PHONE

252-667- 2

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Mme. Marie-Ann- e
Hameau,
professor at the Alliance Fran-cais- e
and associate professor at
UK, will be in charge of the
French study group.
The study session in France
will consist of three hours' classes each week day. Other features

Jazz

"The Kingston

"The Sidewinder,"

Trio"

Lee Morgan
'The Cat," Jimmy Smith

'Joan Baex Vol. 5"

Popular

'Beatles '65"
'Marvin Gaye's Greatest Hits"
'On Campus' Doug Clark

include concerts, conferences,
movies, and visits to museums
and other historical sites.
Both summer sessions will last

Orlonwool

222 South Limestone

IT?

em's Pa nuts

To Conduct
Tournament
"

p

Spengler
Studio

weeks, from July 10 to Aug. 20.
Dr. Keating emphasized that
students going to Mexico need
only a visa, but those going to
France arc required to have a
passport.
For further information, see
or write Mrs. C. P. Sullivan,
Koom 301 in Miller Hall, the
Department of Modern Foreign
Languages.
six

(IS

Chess Champ
- yrW. champion , chess and.
checker, player. Tom Wiswell w ill
be on campus for the second

Keating said, however,
that the Department of Modern
Foreign Languages had arranged
for a special rate of $275 round-triwhich students might take.
Dr. Keating said he thought
that many students would like
to arrive in Paris several weeks
early to travel in Europe. The
extra trips, he said, would be at
the student' own cost.
Students who would like to go
to Paris for the summer study
course must have completed at
least one year of college French
or two years of high school
French. They must be at least
19 years old. A passport and two
recent photographs will be required at the time of registration
in the French school.
Some of the students will be
housed in the school's dorms.
The rest will stay at hotels accredited by the school. All students will take their meals in the
restaurant of the Alliance
Dr.

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* "Hut It Has To Go Some Time"

Eastern's Spruce Tree

Six University students come
before the Judiciary Board in the

In the first place, the tree was a
valuable shrub, and the loss had
lo be compensated for. Now the
Judiciary Board must impress on
these students the fact that unfavorable publicity for the school
cannot be condoned, that such
outbursts of juvenilism cannot be
tolerated.
The effect of the whole affair
is to provide critics of the state
University with ammunition for
their bitter attacks.
Hopefully the Judiciary Board
will not dismiss this lightly.

near future to explain the theft
of a tree from the Eastern State
College campus.
While the offense seems, on
first consideration, almost humorous, it takes on a graver aspect as
one considers it further.
Obviously the students knew
their action was wrong; there is
no room for compromise on this
fact. The theft of a tree from a
neighboring campus is absolutely
wrong in every sense.
Also, the students were not content to simply steal the tree. They
flaunted their unlawful act in the
faces of those who knew it had
been done by using it as the Christmas tree for Haggin Hall.
Thus the stolen tree became a
symbol of Christmas.
Unfortunately for the culprits
the affair was exposed by a student
at Eastern, and the six must now
be judged by a group of their

Kernels
It's too hard to be an atheist; you
Sahl.
don't get any days
off.-M- ort

The relation is very close between
our capacity to act at all and our conviction that the action we are taking is
right... Without that belief, most men
will not have the energy and will to
Lippman.
persevere in the action.-Wal-

peers.

Authorities at Eastern are understood to desire punishment beyond
what has already been done the
boys are to be made to pay for the
prize spruce and we must agree
with their conviction.

ter

When a man seeks your advice, he
generally wants your praise. -- Lord

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Reader Asks Guidelines On Firearms Control

The 'Constitution of the United
States confers certain powers upon
the national government :1iLHr52
serves

$&ept

,.
!

fircaijoccidents

ionic pcuicaiE

freedom iitoVnnotbc)ii
TheSe Tights whidk the

firearms legislation is the wrong

be used with common sense and
consideration for others.
Because of, organized safety efforts, trie rate of accidental deaths
has dropped over the years in spite
of growth in population. This is
true especially in industry where
prevention methods have been applied with the greatest precision.
On thejob deaths due to accidents
have declined nearly 30 percent
during the past 50 years despite the
fact that the work force almost
doubled. Likewise, deaths due..to.

To the Editor of the Kernel:
The American people and the
peoples of the world mourn the
death of President John F. Kennedy.
This was an incredible tragedy
which shocked all civilized human
beings. To those who treasure the
right to keep and bear arms and the
other basic American freedoms, the
use of a rifle to assassinate our
nation's leader is a calamity added
to our grief at his loss.

emphasis. It tends to disarm, the
g
citizens:, .whileat fails
miserably in its avowed purpose of
disarming the criminal. No legislation can prevent criminals from securing firearms, but proper legislation with adequate enforcement and
appropriate judicial implementation can make it to the interest of
criminals not to use firearms and
can send to prison, for long periods,
those caught doing so.
;
inHiVpat Amftrirnni. will uee
law-abidin-

liayenedW w

thatfdocbled
frl:tvew.w.....,..v

,VUb..

'

more

RiUi.

eTed
a;i ,o
&uxi:nZS!,
should beric;Mitj!Ad with
sey
V
vere punislmrent ior reoplevvhoiise

'rfnhe

illegal iurposes. The
lawless few muit not be allowed to
jeopardize !a tonstitAit()UAlir(ht of
firearms

n

--

?TWon to tjicovermnent,

rbKiwirts

tfiHie cruel and
The second

;

unusual ptrnishments.
Amendment asserts that "the right
of the people to keep and bear arms
shall not be infringed." Amendments nine and ten make it clear
that all rights and powers not mentioned in the Constitution continue
to belong to.tjit; citizens and to the
individual states.
One of the most.ifi&fft and
eaningfuJJiberties of
riaj American is the right jjojpt&ss
firearms and to use them for lawful
purposes. It was exceedingly precious to our ancestor : who were
forced toilee to this new country lit'
search uf personal freedom and hu- -

tMy

u&i

crimQcandt

V5oir5swho faced

--

ftiIWUdB'V
MtftrfnHP.iHPn
vau.."

--

nf tlTk
generation who believe in an inde
pendent America.
Because of the Constitutional
right of individual Americans to
'
keepand bear arms, responsible
to own fire-arcitizens have the
and to use them for self pro- itictiwC for tjucimty x)f our na
tiQJi,rrd Tor rWrejUiouif jtictivities
JMlMUViV

-

Uiim!

firearms.
JOHN C HEID
College of Law

The Kentucky J&sf itel

ESTABUSircp

'they haVe certain-'teNETohliftrfttons which mustbe fulfilled.'
Firearms must be handled with
safety and with skill. They must be .
condition Titji'd stored
in ah appropriate place. They must

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responsibility. "
to crimes involving a firearm is that
The Hirst, eight Amendments mfln Hiimitv. &'mhckd&$. that it
Pill the crime happens because the laws
guarantee freedom of religion, of
are too lax. Tfieyfail to realize that
speech, of the press, ot assembly of itfditOt wassmely impor
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The South's OnUtandtng College Daily
U Diversity of Kentucky

THURSDAY, JAM

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Jan.

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

14, 1965- -5

Education's 'Forgotten
Man May Be The Student
9

LANCASTER, Pa. -- The president of the 1,300 school American Council on Education has
warned that today's college student is in danger of becoming
"the forgotten man" of higher
education as the nation's colleges
and universities transform themselves into the "knowledge in-

and identification numbers represent, he said that "the depersonalization of the student, if allowed
to go unchecked or unchallenged,
represents a grave threat to the
very purposes of higher educa-

Among issues deserving attention, Wilson said, are the intellectual climate of the campus,
including the student body's view
of
life and the
faculty's attitude toward teaching, the personal conduct and behavior of students, and the high
rate of college "drop-outs.- "
He called for a reexamination
life of our
of the
colleges, adding, "It may well be
that certain of the adolescent
preoccupations of nineteenth-centur- y
college life are no longer

Speaking at the 178th Founders Day Ceremony at Franklin

.

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2P pp5."

AH

Kernel Deadlines Announced
The Kentucky Kernel will include any announcements in its
Bulletin Board column beginning next week.
These announcements must be typewritten, double spaced and
brought to the women's desk in the Kernel newsroom (Room 114
of the Journalism Building).
Try to limit your announcements to" six typewritten lines; if
you wish more than one announcement, submit separate copies
for each date of publication.
The deadline for such announcements is 3 p.m. the day prior
to publication.
--

extra-curricul-

and Marshall College, Logan Wilson said that amid the demands
made upon colleges by communities, industries, and government
agencies, "there is a recurrent
need to recall that colleges were
created primarily for students."
The "seller's market" in higher education which has young
people clamoring for admission to
college, he said, makes it all too
easy for teachers and administrators to avoid confronting issues
involving students.
"Because others are standing
in line to take the place of the
dropouts, there is a danger of our
becoming indifferent, if not callous, to the sources of discontent
and the causes of failure," Mr.
Wilson added.
He said that rate of expansion
of college enrollment may leave
the student with less personal
contact with the faculty and college staff members. Citing the
"faceless anonymity" that programmed instruction, IBM cards

extra-curricul-

V

Nigeria's political agony and
the threat of political dissolution
prpught back a memory:
It'waV 'a hot sunny afternoon '
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The U. S. Information Officer
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There were soft drinks, cocktails and tidbits. There was a
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Close by Ibadan are four cities
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some 240,000.
mere are "more man tnree
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a teC3tica te&a nd
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Some of these students, he
conceded, are outright academic
failures, but others find "that
they do not fit a preconceived
mold or are repelled by the pressures and irrelevancies put upon
them." He said that in the collegiate "race for 'excellence,' too
many students who would have
been successes a decade ago are
found in the tally of casualties."
The American'Council on Education which Dr. Wilson heads,
is the principal coordinating agency for higher education in the
United States. More than 1,300
colleges, universities, and education organizations are members
of the Council.

"With the rising expectations
and standards demanded of students and, I hope, the increasing
level of student maturity, we can
afford to drop the enervating and
activities that
(on some campuses) preoccupy
the energies of students and obstruct realization of the real goals
of education," he said,
President Wilson also decried
"the low value attributed by faculty and administration to the
effective and committed teaching
of students" with the resulting
inference by the student body
"that such activity is not considered terribly important."
To questions of student honesty, integrity, and morality,
"colleges and universities cannot
be indifferent," he said. However,
he pointed out that the institutions sometimes caught themselves between parents who "do
not support the restrictions which
colleges have traditionally placed
on students ' and other parents
who "expect colleges to police
their sons and daughters in ways
which they themselves did not,
or could not."
"It is no wonder," he added,
"that the present tension exists
between students and institutions regarding rules, discipline,
morals, rights, freedoms, and responsibilities.
"I believe that every college
or university has a responsibility
time-consumi-

imagine the difficulty and ex-pense of finding teachers to
teach the first five tirades in as
many different languages.)
Until the present crisis Nigeria was developing a
system. Its parliamentary, federal
system has been a magnificent
experiment. Lagos, the federal
city, is a success, though immense
dif ficulties remain. The rural conservative Hausa and Fulani
people of the north and some
Yoruba people in the west are
jealous of other regions. The
south fears the relatively huge
population of the north Mos- lem-a- nd
was. never sympathetic
with thejother region
' Tf)?
thns. in it P
fWifonv Tflc Mtfvolnnmonf ic
SMrn
ktx'wrMM. mo innh
m. rfiy vp t t w tnrr m
n
i; tunica
Has tried hard. It is perhaps
secession lteparateoountrytrU
geria
thmost initiate of the new .,.NiefiH Is an excltUigtxW'' nations irrtlmca. It spends wore iftd, varied country. t tiasjTOjWotlts tax dollar on eoUication than omer qj
larger
any ather'vlhe children are than anyatropean country save " .
a4tfln the five major tribal ;ftussta if we clasjthatjru&r
land mass s EropiK. It wrl
bmgHaggs through the fiftbgrade.
Creli&h is Ieatned in those years. be a reHy great tragedy if this
crisis is not, somehow, resolvcsi.
kUf shrYifth grade all instruction is in English. One can
(Copyright 195)

jet?.

cnarming
asUrii! beauty of north- aNrueha.Kudunais its capital.
It i$4henduf thellausa people.
Next most numero