xt7w6m334z38 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7w6m334z38/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19641203  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  3, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  3, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7w6m334z38 section xt7w6m334z38 Maupin Calls Athletic Budget 'Sound
By HENRY ROSENTHAL
Kernel Sports Editor

5,

The University athletic program,
to figures obtained from
Comptroller and Assistant Treasurer
Clay Maupin, is operating well in the
black. Mr. Maupin said the UK proaccording

gram was very sound financially.
This week one major college, the
University of Detroit, was required
to drop football because of financial
difficulties. In the Southeastern Conference, of which UK is a member,
Tulane University has had to curtail
its football program because of fiscal difficulties.

Operating expenses for the University athletic program are expected

tTT
Vol. LVI, No.

51

'

to run in access of $800,000 for 1964-6according to Mr. Maupin. Comptroller Maupin said the program is
entirely self sufficient and pays its
own way.

1

"VI

UK's football program will receive

the
amount received from road games and
will average about $40,000 for the
five away dates which were played.
$200,000 from

guarantees. This

Checks have not been received from
all opponents as of yet.
At home, proceeds will amount to
or an average of $800,000
for the five Lexington games. Mr.
Maupin said that the budget was

$400,000

tightly constructed but that these
ures were only estimates.

TTTN

"WTI

J

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON,

is

KY., THURSDAY,

I

DEC. 3, 1964

fig-

In addition to expected revenues
the year, the University's sports
program has in reserve an excess of
$200,000. This has been accumulated
from surpluses.

Basketball provides $38,000 in the
way of guarantees and $150,000 in
ticket sales for games scheduled in
the Coliseum.
The totals taken in from the two
major sports is $788,000 approximately,
and this would result in a deficit of

for

Also, the UK athletic department
has made acquisition of fixed assets
of over $800,000. These included structures and equipment such as the steel
bleachers at the Sports Center, field
lights, and office equipment.
Memorial
Coliseum
and Stoll
Field are not included because they
are paid off by bond issues. However, improvements have been made
to these structures by the athletic
department and these are not covered by bond issues.

$12,000.

However, Mr. Maupin said that
the University athletic program has
additional income in excess of $200 ,000.
These are derived from alumni grants,
broadcasting rights, and bowl game
percentages.
The budget includes all funds required to operate offices used by athletic personnel
including coaches,
secretaries, the ticket department, and
sports publicity.

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Eight Pages

Student Research Contest
Rules, Deadline Announced
Rules

for University

under

graduate original research papers in the Centennial Conference on Undergraduate Research
and Creativity have been an-

4. Graphs, tables, or calculaat the end of the paper.
tions for scientific papers may be
8. All papers must be neatly
included.
typed and double spaced.
5. A table of contents is not
9. Length of papers should be
necessary.
kept to a minimum. Fifteen hun6. A title page with the author's name, major, and expected dred words is the preferred limit;
date of graduation must be in- however, if the nature of the subcluded.
ject requires a longer article, pa7. All literature cited must be pers up to 15 pages will be aclisted in a conventional manner cepted .

nounced.
The conference, sponsored by
the Student Centennial Committee, will run through March 22.
Committee cochairmen
Jim
Wheeler and Annette Westphal
said today a list of the rules will
be given next week to all faculty
members for distribution in their
classes.
Papers in the areas of social,
biological and natural sciences
and the humanities are being
The debate team lost out in the second round of the Georgedollar savings
sought. Twenty-fiv- e
bonds to the outstanding paper town University Invitational Tournament in Washington D.C.
in each field will be awarded at last weekend.
petitors in the tournament. There
Phillip Grogan and Don Coch
were 216 debaters participating
the conference banquet in the
ran, the UK debaters, finished
in the tournament. Crogan and
Student Center April 10.
with a 2 record. This was not
two from
"Of immediate importance,"
for Cochran were the only
to qualify
Wheeler said, "is that interested enough, however,
the same school to be chosen.
final round. In the opening
This weekend Dr. Cifford Bly-tostudents should submit to Dr. the
rounds they defeated Columbia
Robert White, Room 219, McVey
the debate team coach, will
Brooklyn College,
University,
take 20 members of the team to
Hall, a brief prospectus or stateof Chicago and Kings
ment of purpose of their planned University
Cumberland College to particiCollege. They lost to the Unipaper. Deadline for this informapate in the tourney.
of Richmond and Southversity
tion is Dec. 19.
western Missouri College.
Rules for entries are:
There were 108 colleges and
1. All articles submitted must
It was incorrectly reported in
universities represented in the
Kernel that Mrs. Anne
be original and unpublished. They
tournament. Among them were yesterday's
Plummer Hall will be presented
may be the result of independent Dartmouth, Notre Dame, Ford-hain recital Friday night in the
research or other creative endeavUniversity and Pacific UniFine Arts Building.
ors.
versity, the winners of the West
Mrs. Hall's recital has been
2. Papers may not be based on
Point Championship last year.
rescheduled for 8 p.m. Dec. 10
work begun prior to June, 1964.
and Cochran, along in the
Grogan
3. Poetry, short stories, and
Laboratory Theater in the
with 13 other debaters were Fine Arts
Building.
essays will be accepted.
chosen as being the top 15 com

Scabbard and Blade, Army ROTC honorary initiated five new members and named two sponsors. They are from the left, (row 1) Betty
Chambers, junior from Nashville, Tenn. and Pam Smith, Winchester
senior. (Row Z) William L. Faulkner, Lexington senior and John
Berend, senior from LaG range, 111. (Row 3) Roy Bachmeyer, Lexington senior, Ben Crawford, senior from Hodgenville and Jim
Cheatham, Fulton senior.

Debate Team Loses Student Forum Sets
Tournament Round Academic Plan Talk
n,

Correction

A student discussion of the University's academic blueprint will
be sponsored by the Student Forum next Monday.
The discussion will be held cations of the analysis.
at 7:30 in Room 206 of the StuThe academic blueprint, a
dent Center.
document entitled "BeginHowell Brady, chairman of the ning A Second Century," was
Student Forum, said his organpresented by President Oswald
ization feels that the academic
to the Board of Trustees in June.
blueprint has many implications The president officially presented
for students and their education
the analysis to the Faculty in
at the University.
September.
"For this reason," he said,
At that time, Dr. Oswald said
"we urge students to attend even the document was an "analysis
though this discussion is be- rather than a blueprint" and
ing held so near to finals."
encouraged the faculty and the
Four University upperclass-men- , students to engage in serious
William Crant, James
discussion about the University's
academic future. The president
Svara, Art Henderson, and Larry
Kelley, will discuss the blueprint. hopes that a blueprint for the
Dr. Douglas Schwartz, professor
next decade can be formed of
of anthropology,
will answer
its implications.
questions from the panel and from
the audience regarding theimpli- -

SC Board
To Sponsor
Quiz Bowl
the

Whitesburg High Loses Accreditation
19 Southern High Schools Affected
By TIM LYNCH

Kernel Staff Writer

The Southern Association of
Colleges and Schools failed to
credit 19 high schools during its
annual convention inLouisville
this week.
Whitesburg High School in
Whitesburg was oneof the schools
to lose its accreditation. The
others were 15 high schools in
Jacksonville, Fla., and surrounding Duval County, two high
schools in Tennessee, and one
high school in Texas.
jerry Miller, administrative
assistant to the Association,
said that Whitesburg High School
lost its accreditation because it
failed to comply with the Asso-

ciation regulation staling that the
head of a school system or school
must have a graduate degree from
an accredited college and that the
better part of a school year must

be spent in studying school

ministration.
The Association

ad-

had voted
earlier not to accredit the 15 high
schools in Florida, but final action
was withheld until an appeal
could be heard. The appeal was
heard on Wednesday, and the
Association voted to uphold the
original decision.
Officials at Whitesburg High
School could not be reached for
comment.
Mr. Miller said that this action
was taken because of the lack of
financial support given these
schools in the form of taxes. Mr.
Miller explained that the lack of
tax revenue caused the facilities,
sue h as the libraries, laboratories,
and services, such as custodial
care, to fall below standards set
by the Association.
Mr. Miller explained that the
loss of accreditation will affect

the students in these schools.
"Tendancies are for colleges

to look more favorably upon graduates from accreditated schools,"
he said.
Robert L. Biggs, an Arts and
Sciences freshman from Jacksonville, Fla., and a graduate of
Robert E. Lee High School, one
of the schools affected by the
Association's action, said, "We
have known for two years that
they were in danger of losing

ranked as one of the best schools
in Florida. A higher ratio of students from Lee to to college than
from other schools in Duval.
colleges will not be too
enthusiastic about accepting these
Out-of-sta-

students now."
Suzanne Tuttle, a graduate of
Robert E. Lee High School and
now an A and S freshman, said,
"The school needs more librarians and books. It also needs more
laboratory equipment."
accreditation."
"The Naval unit at JacksonHe went on: "Duval is the
ville," she continued, "hassxn-sore- d
second largest county in Florida,
a 'Bootstrap Program' to
yet it has the second lowest rate raise the level of the high schools
of amount per student paid in
in Duval County."
taxes."
In discussing the reasons for
She also said that petitions
the Association's action Biggs have been circulated to have the
said, "The taxpayers act like they Southern Association allow the
don't care whether they have county another yeartocorrect the
situation before removing the
good schools or not.
"Robert E. Lee," he said, "is

Next semester,
University
will have a Quiz Bowl modeled
after TV's Quiz Bowl.
The Forum Committee of the
Student Center Board will sponsor the bowl and any campus
organization may enter a quiz
bowl team.
Elaine Baumgartner, publicity
chairman for the SF.C Board,
said that information concerning
the UK Quiz Bowl will be sent to
all residence units next week and
that off campus students may pick
up information at the Student
Center Board Office in Room 203
of the Student Center.
Teams will consist of four
members and two alternates who
will be given an elimination test
Feb. 2. The maximum number of
teams that can eomixte will be
32. The Student Center Board
hopes to make this a yearly event
and will provide the winning
team with a trophy.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

2

Dec. 3, 1964

University Choristers To Sing
31st Annual Holiday Concert

UK Student

Works In
Peace Corps

Omcr Alan Hryant, Jr., Liberty, Ky, a former University
student, embarked for Brazil on
Nov. 21 with about 17 other
Peace Corps Volunteers to do
work and agricultural extension.
The Volunteers completed 10
weeks of intensive training at the
University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee. The training included
practical field work in agriclub
cultural extension and
work. The Volunteers studied
Portuguese several hours daily,
and learned about the history,
culture, and life of Brazil.
The group joined over 300

The annual Christmas concert
by the University Choris-

Riven

1

1

A
OMER ALAN BRYANT JR.
Volunteers already working in
Brazil in the fields of agricul-

ture, community development,
health, and university education.

Smith Currently Leads
Christmas Seal Contest
Miss Sherry Smith, representingChi Omega sorority and Pi Kappa
Alpha fraternity, is currently leading in the "Miss Christmas Seal"
contest.
ma Phi Epsilon fraternities.
Mr. William W. McLinden,
Marianne Banta, Kappa Kapexecutive director of the Blue-gra- pa Camma sorority and Sigma
Tuberculosis and Health Alpha Epsilon fraternity; Kathy
Association, reported that 1,065 Ryna, Pi Beta Phi sorority. Kapvotes have been cast in the conpa Alpha and Kappa Sigma fratest. Each $1 contribution entiternities; Patty Lyons, Kappa
tles persons to vote for one of the Delta sorority and Nancy Rud-nic12 candidates
Zeta Tau Alpha sorority,
running for the
Phi Camma Delta and Sigma Nu
campus sororities.
In second place is Miss Eloise fraternities.
The deadline for the contest
Cox, Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Phi Kappa Tau and Triangle fra- is midnight, Dec. 11. Mr.McLin-de- n
added that contributions may
ternities while Miss Charmaine
be given to any one of the 12 soMarlowe, Alpha Delta Pi sorority.
Phi Delta Theta and Tau Kappa rority representatives or may be
sent to P.O. Box 53.
Epsilon fraternities is running in
Linda Carter,
third position. Miss
TYPEWRITERS
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Delta sorority, Farmhouse and
PHILHARMONIC
Phi Sigma Kappa fraternities;
Presents
Bevins, Alpha Xi Delta soJudy
GEORGETOWN COLLEGE
Lambda Chi Alpha and
rority.
ORATORIO CHORUS
in "The Creation" by Haydn
Zeta Beta Tau fraternities; Sherry
Plus a full Concert conducted
Binkley, Delta Camma sorority
by Robert King
and Delta Tau Delta fraternity;
DEC. 4
8:15 P.M.
Martha Theband, Delta Zeta soHenry Clay Auditorium
rority. Alpha Tau Omega and Sig- TICKET INFORMATION
1
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255-01-

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ELECTRIC

ters marked its 31st year by presenting a program at three schools
in addition to the program that
will be held at Memorial Hall
at 3:30 p.m. Sunday.
The Choristers, assisted by
Arnold Blackburn, organist. The
University Faculty Brass Quintet, and University String Enn
semble, appeared at the
Community College,
Elizabeth town High School, and
Lindsey Wilson College, Columbia, Kentucky on Nov. 23.
According to Aimo Kiviniemi,
Director of the Choristers, the
Eliza-bethtow-

appearance at the Elizabethtown

Community College was scheduled as a part of the music department's program to work with
the cultural life of community
colleges.
"The concert at Lindsey Wilson College was given to mark

the beginning of a concert series
starting this year at that
school," Kiviniemi said.
Sunday's program will include
the Plainson,, Processional: Hodie
Christus na't'us est. Early American Carols, Forth From Jesse

Sprang a Rose by Anton Bruckner, All Night Vigil by Rachmaninoff, Five Pieces by Johann
Pezel, and Rejoice, Beloved
Christians by Buxtehude.
Also included in the program
will be a medieval carol,
Hodie, arranged by Bingham, Air and Allegro from "King
Arthur" arranged by Henry Pur- -

..
That You Will Be
Proud To Wear!
IN by 9 a.m . . .
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Admission

Sings Christmas Carols
and other Folk Music
At the Canterbury House
December 6, 7 p.m.
472 Rose Street
Canterbury House
No cbarge
Public Invited
)600000COOOOC

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Weekend Delight
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A

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NEW
THE DECEMBER
IN

"Why Europe Fears U" by Raymond
Aron: Misunderstandings
regarding
the use of nuclear weapons have led
Western Europe and Russia to fear
the United States and to doubt its
sincerity.
"Are Movies Going to Pieces?" by
Pauline Kael: A lively criticism of the
New American Cinema where there is
no plot, no sensible meaning, and no
recognizable form.
"The New Sportswriter" by C. Michael
Curtis: How sportswriters now use the
scholarly approach with a touch of
Freud and emphasize the motivation
of players instead of straight reporting.

J

SHIRTS

WHAT'S

ATLANTIC?

ccll, Contrapuntus I from "Art
of Fugue" by Bach; Ave Maria
by Francis Toulenc; and A Boy
was Born by Benjamin Britten.
This Little Babe from "A Ceremony of Carols" by Benjamin
Britten; Christmas Day by Gus-to- v
Hoist; and As I rode Out
this Enders Night by William-ett- a
Spencer.

woman could
feel him across
a room.

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PLUS

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0IARY OF A BACHELOR"
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SATURDAY

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Sft lVi.

V(l..tl: t

till
ktii W.iLr i k'xt..

IN COLOR
Siarrtag

...

WILLIAM HOLDEN
KIM NOVAK
ROSALIND RUSSELL
SUSAN STRASSEERG

in
Student
Center
Theater

Skew

Ae,eiies

T.:

4:30

S0
&

t.00

All

the

blister-hea-

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FFATOUS- -

of the

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novel that scorched the Jet Setl

best-tellin-

SUZANNE PLESHETTE

GENEVIEVE

fM siXSnggirci

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HELD

OVER! 2ND WEEK!
Shown ot 7:15 and 9:25

s
;

FKV.CO.SL"

"WILD AS A RUNAWAY TRAIN!
A LULU! FUN FOR FUN'S SAKE!"

VivllAC

.LAN StK;A,S

r.l.,1

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USIMANCOIOI

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

The Merry

c

jj

M

Go-Rou-

WHO?...

nd

Yes . . . Who do you
know that will give you
the facts about one of
your most important diamond investments?
The shape of her hand
may of determine which
diamond you wish
style
to give her.
If she is important, let
us advise you as to a wise
choice. She will love you
more for it.

by Gay Gish
"Oh, it's a long, long time
from May to December, and the
days grow short when you reach
'final exams'. . ."
Finals are a week away, the
Grille has become more a place
for copying papers and cramming
than for coffee, and "bids" have
gone out on
The University's basketball
season begins this weekend with
the game between Kentucky and
Iowa Friday night at 8 o'clock.
The Cats are favorites with sports
forecasters and students alike,
but Iowa plans to fight hard,
and it will be a game well worth
seeing.
Because of the ball game and
studies, social functions Friday
evening have been pretty well
limited to open houses and record parties after the game.
Many of the fraternities are
also using their chapter houses
as study halls so that the brothers
can "stash the books" Saturday
night.
The Christmas spirit has inspired both Farmhouse and the
Baptist Student Union. The fraternity is mixing a little rushing
with more Yule "spirits." The
BSU has planned its party for the
ball game crowd, and lots of
good entertainment and refreshments are promised.
The Phi Tau's and the Fhi
Sig's also have a "wee bit" of
fun up their sleeves. Both fraternities have opened their doors
for brothers who may find things
rather quiet on campus.
No-Do- z.

.

Christmas carols to their usual sis, the modern dance fraternity,
dance repertoire.
will incorporate two seasonal proThe "Old South" tradition is ductions in its annual Winter
getting an early start this year as Concert. "The Nutcracker Bathe Alpha Xi's auction off 40 of llet," by Tschaicovsky and "The
their most beautiful and useful Little Match Girl," by Hans
pledges. The highest bid will buy Christian Anderson will be ofa group of no less than six young
fered at 8:30 p.m. in the Euclid
"lovelies" who promise to do Avenue classroom building.
their "owners" bidding until 4
Sunday's activities are geared
o'clock that afternoon.
to "just taking it easy."
Formals
and semi formals
Bowman Hall will take a break
highlight Saturday evening's fes- from studies and open its doors
tivities. The Fiji's don black tie to visitors. Rooms willbecleaned
and do a little "wing flapping" up for, perhaps, the last time beat their annual White Owl For- fore residents begin their final
mal at the Holiday Inn in Frankall-ostudy efforts for exams.
fort.
Fraternities will take advanatThe Delts and Tri Delts,
tage of a slightly reversed "bustired in similar dress hold their man's holiday" when Holmes
traditional joint Formal at the Hall women seranade them with
Phoenix Hotel.
Christmas carols.
The Student Center Theater
Kappa Alpha Theta is planning a date dinner and dance. will be showing "Picnic," star"Dinner is served" at the Theta ring Kim Novak, William Holden,
house and the Lansdowne Counand Susan Strasberg, on Friday
try Club will be decorated for and Sunday evenings this weekthe dance following.
end.
. . .And so the last weekend of
Celebrating the end of football
season and the advent of the holithis semester's gaiety comes toan
days, Wildcat Manor and Kitten end as we prepare for the "big"
Lodge prepare to relax with a week of testing. Good luck!
combined dance.

Campus entertainment will be
provided by Chet Huntley as the
Concert and Lecture Series hosts
the second of its lectures at Memorial Coliseum at 8 p.m.
Since Christmas, at least originally, is a religious holdiay, the
Guignol Theatre production of
"The Flowering Peach" is in
keeping with this aspect. While
the play is not directly related to
Christmas, the biblical story of
Noah and the Ark provide the basis for this slightly modernized

Christmas, the international
holiday, will be heralded in like
manner Friday night when the
Cosmopolitan Club hosts its annual Christmas Dance Party. Ray adaptation.
Rector and company will add
Sunday, Tau Sigma of

1883-19-

Charms
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Watch Repairs
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Washington

Seminar

Students interested in participating in the Washington Seminar should meet at 6 p.m. Thursday night in Room 113 of the
Student Center.

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Measures Of Knowledge

With finals now a mere week
away, library facilities and other study
areas overcrowded and students bemoaning the stacks of piled up undone, work, a critical look should be
taken at the past semester.
Many of the conditions outlined
alxwe are, admittedly, nothing more
than procrastination on the part of
students; which will exist despite
methods introduced as aids. But some
problems, arising particularly at final
examination time, could le reduced,
if not completely alleviated, if professors relied on a battery of tests, given
over the period of the entire semess
and
ter, rather than just
final exams.
The use of such a scries would
serve a multi-fol- d
purpose. First, if
students were to le tested on a
basis, assignweekly or
ments would Ik more carefully and
completely done, and assuredly on
a class to class basis.
True, students should stay abreast
of course material test or no and
tests are not generally incentive to
the shirking student. All too often.
--

mid-term-

We Stood Up To Them, They Might Ke Of fended"

course takes priority,
however, a student falls behind in a
course, not because he is shirking but
merely because at that time another
The purpose served by a continual
testing system would be of as much
advantage to the professors as to the
students. Faculty mcmljcrs could use
test results as a barometer to remain
aware of the student's grasp cf the
material, areas of confusion now made
apparent, course material that needs
stressing or merely as an indication
of how lectures are being perceived.
Finally, some of the pressures exs
erted on students because
and finals carry so much singular
weight would be eliminated: one poor
showing on one exam would not destroy a student's standing in the class.
The rewards to be gained from a
series rather than from only one or
two major tests far outweigh any
additional burdens or problems it
would impose. Perhaps in keeping
with the forward progress of our Centennial Year this revision of the
measuring of knowledge will be considered and accepted.
mid-term-

Letters To The Editor

To the Editor of the Kernel:
The girl who wrote the letter

to the editor in last Wednesday's
Kernel, has attacked the Kernel
editors as being "those who sit
in windowless rooms where it is
impossible to perceive the light
of day" and then has compared
them to the "university 'intellectual'," saying that they (i.e. editors and intellectuals) "know nothing of people and much, much
less of life.;
Now not being an overtly intellectual person myself, I fail to
follow her brilliant logic which
demonstrates how deeply football
is concerned with observing and
interpreting life. Obviously football is concerned with such important problems as people being
shackled by poverty and discrimination. This probably accounts for
the playing of "Dixie" at ball
games 'after the "Star Spangled
Banner" and for the display of
those beautiful
banners, the Confederate Flags.
The writer's contention that the
Kernel's attacks on the University's
football program have been "narand utterly unrealrow,
istic" seems to indicate that she
has failed to read and or understand the editorial in a recent edition of the Courier-Journwhich
and clarified the stand takpraised
en by the Kernel editors. And her
statement that the editor's position took no courage is one that
is most astonishing. It certainly
did take courage to make the attacks, for doing so left the editors
open to angry criticism from anyone who is deeply influenced by
the aesthetic actions of our true
campus intellectuals the football
players who refuse to stay in
windowless rooms but prefer to wallow in the mud.
She has also said: "It will be
interesting for me to follow the
careers of our current editorial staff
as they make their ways in their
chosen fields." Now, we can't say
for certain that each of the Kernel
editors will have his biography in
Encyclopaedia Britannica but each
seems now to be working toward
anti-Americ-

one-side-

d,

al

something beneficial to humanity
whereas Mr. Bradshaw's "cause"
is questionable. As to whether the
Kernel editors will continue their
work in as respectable a manner
as they are now doing remains, of
course, for the future. I do feel that
they should step back and size up
The leaders of the Union of Tiumor, the suspense, the morality
their opponent (s), and then strike South Africa have banned teleportrayed in television programs
with both fists, rather than merely vision. They say television is a mirror the attitudes of the maslapping with a white glove.
weapon used "to underrri.ie the jority. Television offers the generThe writer's defense of Mr.
morale of the white min and even alities of our times and ignores the
"philosophy" linking to destroy great empires within minorities.
"Christian attitude and behavior to 15 years." "Anglo-America- n
Without a doubt, the philosophy
dedicated football" is as grave an ideas," they say, will destroy
of the Union of South Africa is in
insult as could be given to (what
the minority. Its program of aparI suppose is) her religion. And does
What this absurd little attack
theid goes against the integration-is- t
she threaten those in windowless means is that South African film
policies of the rest of the westrooms with lightning? Brethren, companies are able to produce only
ern world. On its own continent,
look out!
d
the material for a broadSouth Africa stands almost alone
casting day. The rest of the time
"You are criticizing another
countries which
among Negro-leman's profession," she says, "about would have to be taken up with are struggling ambitiously for total
which you know nothing and in English and American movies, independence. In such a precarious
which undoubtedly would ocwhose place, you could not funcobvious that South
situation, it
show Negroes and Africa cannotis tolerate the dissemcasionally
the last
tion." I keep
whites in situations alien to the
ination of alien viewpoints.
part of that sentence. Is she imcountry's apartheid policy.
plying that the Kernel editors are
To Americans, television is conThis refusal is representative
jealous? Wanting to make them
sidered as just another piece of of the problems the country is facfor not
jealous? (I apologize again
being intellectual.) Or is she saying furniture in the living room, the ing. Television is a staunch, everythat one has to be capable of per- South African attitude may seem day symbol of the modern world.
rather ridiculous. It shouldn't. The It is commonplace in many counforming a job before one can criticize any part of it? If one has essence of television is contrary to tries and represents the wave of
never served as President of the everything the Union of South the future in many others.
If the Union of South Africa
United States, must he accept every Africa represents.
Television was the step which must hide in terror from someaction of the man who is President
brought mass communication into thing like television, its time rewithout question? Really now!
solid reality as a basic component
maining as a bastion of bigotry
Where