xt71ns0kw26v https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt71ns0kw26v/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1966-09-13  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 13, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 13, 1966 1966 1966-09-13 2015 true xt71ns0kw26v section xt71ns0kw26v Vol. 58, No. 9

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The percentage of Negroes attending
integrated schools is up this toll, a
surrey of Southern schools reveals:
Page Two.

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, SEPT. 13, 1966

J
i

Inside Today s Kernel

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iLLiLliiiiiitiiiiil

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series on constitutional
Page Five.

A

re-

vision continues:

the
mascot of Phi
Delta Jheta, dies from injuries caused
by chicken bones: Page Seven.
Ralph,

sad-eye- d

Coeds Plan Move;
One Dorm Ready
By End Of Week

1

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.1

Eight Pages

A new coffeehouse offers a link between students and faculty: Page
Three.

The editor discusses the Low School
Forum: Page Four.

r

By JUDY CRISHAM
Kernel Associate Editor
d
coeds, housed in the Phoenix Hotel after the
dormitory complex failed to meet completion, deadline, will be
moved from their temporary quarters this week.
Robert Johnson, vice president
adequate labor pool and labor
for student affairs, said Monday,
strikes accounted for the delay.
the women in the Phoenix will be
William McConnel, chief enmoved on Friday, into building
gineer of the Department of Finumber 8.
nance, said he anticipates no
Of the 200 coeds, 17 will be Gther
changes in the rev ised comhoused temporarily in the lounge
pletion schedule.
of another dormitory which has
The remaining three dorms are
not yet been completely furset for completion from Oct.
nished. The finished dorm will
29.
accommodate only 183.
Coeds who were rehoused in
"We were told we could get other University dormitory facilinto both buildings as we were ities and men involved in the
but the finishing rehousing will be the last to
promised,
touches haven't been put on nummove into the complex dorber?," Johnson said.
mitories as they are completed.
The 129 women housed in the
Three more of the eight low-ris- e
Town House Motel and the eighth
dormitories and two
floor of the Medical Center will tower dormitories are scheduled
be moved Sept. 23. Both dorms
for completion next fall. The total
were scheduled for completion complex will house more than
Sept. 16, but due to difficulties 3,000 students.
in getting furnishings and conApproximate cost of accomfusion involved in moving all modating the 700 students in com329 women at the same time,
mercial housing is $28,000.
officials decided it would be "less
disruptive" to move in shifts.
Johnson said building number
7 will be completely furnished by
Sept. 23.
The Phoenix coeds will be
moved to the complex dorm by
Two-hundre-

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Moving Day Nears

i

Coeds are to be moved into one of
the eight
buildings (above)
in the new dormitory complex on
Friday. The buildings, five of which
were scheduled lor completion on
Sept. 1, will open up to three months
behind schedule because of strikes
and other production delays. Workmen, right and below, are hurrying
to complete the interior work on the
buildings so that women students can
be moved from the Phoenix Hotel,
the Town House Motel, and the
Medical Center.
low-ris- e

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Colleges Get
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Maintenance
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Operations

"We definitely feel it is our
responsibility to move them,"
said Johnson. He added that the
staff would also provide boxes
and trucks for the move.
The women have been asked
to leave the hotel by 9 a.m. so
that the staff can begin moving,
Johnson said. They will report to
the dormitory at 4 p.m. to be
checked
into their assigned

1

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rooms.
dorFive of the eight low-ris- e
mitories in the planned $22
complex
million,
were originally scheduled for
completion Sept. 1. Rehousing of
more than 700 students began in
late July when University officials
learned the completion deadline
would not be met.
Scarcity of materials, lack of

Enrollment

By HELEN McCLOY
Kernel Staff Writer
With several community colleges at or over their capacity,
and Somerset nearly doubling
its figures from last year, the
Community College System enrolled 5,473 students for the fall
semester.

Last year's total, according

to a community college source,
was 4,530.
Enrollment at Somerset Community College rose from 369
to 600. The Elizabethtown College, designed for 500 students,
toppled its 540 in 1965 by nearly

students, with 634 enrolled.
Other colleges and their enrollments are: Ashland, 852; Ft.
Knox, 328; Henderson, 432;
100

Hop-Continu- ed

On Pag e

8

The Registration Question: Man Vs. Machine
By FRANK BROWNING
Kernel Associate Editor

When computer registration was initiated for the fall semester 1965, it was
University administrators, who es- described as a first step toward a comtablish the method of registration to be pletely mechanized system. Since then
used each semester, have reached a point changes in staff and equipment have
of decision.
prevented such a complete overhaul ot
The decision cannot be made rapidly, the course collecting business.
they point out, since it involves the
Further, there is serious doubt by many
question of man vs. machine.
people students and administrators
that complete computer preregistration is
First article of a
series.
desirable.
As described by former Registrar
Registration this fall, for example,
Charles F. Elton, it would allow stuevoked one of the major questions of
dents simply to sign up for specific courses
what is called academic freedom:
without control of section, time or instudent-maintWill the student or can the
the right to choose not only structor. Enough latitude could be left,
what he shall study, but when he shall however, to block off specific hours during
do it, and most importantly whom he which the students might be working.
shall study under?
The computer woidd then feed back
No clear answer is available.
to each academic department how many
age-ol- d

two-pa-

rt

ain

sections of each course were needed to
meet demands. Courses and sections
would be drawn up accordingly. Faculty
would be plugged into one end of the
time slot; students into the other.
The idea is hardly appealing to anyone concerned.
One faculty member who is a freshmen
course director puts it this way: "If you
put it (registration) in the hands of a
machine, then the student will be in
the hands of time and schedule the gear
ami the slot.
"You either attend to the student or
the event. Anything in between' s going
to give you a problem."
He wished to remain anonymous, he
says, to keep from being appointed to a
study committee to solve registration prol-lemand consequently lose more time to
s,

the mechanics of administration at the
expense of his teaching.
As this man sees it the present system
is "pretty good." Rut he adds that "you
can't run a system very well when three
or four thousand of the people don't
know the ground rules."
The dichotomy made here that of man
and machin- e- is a familiar one around
college communities where at least lip
serv ice is given to the importance of individual needs.
However, Vice President for Student
Affairs Robert Johnson calls it a false
division.
He admits there will be less and less
opportunity for the lower division to make

vvide choices in his professors or in shced- -

Continued On

Itt(e

5

� Till:

J

KERNEL, Tuesday, Sept.

KENTUCKY

13,

!

Southern Survey Shows
on Barriers Fall
Segregati

the Office of Education is giving
a new and dramatic push to
the integration process.
Commissioner of Education
Harold Howe II recently called
tion.
desegregation "the most crucial
Faculty integration is beginissue facing American education
ning or spreading in most of
20th
during the latter part of the
the states except Mississippi.
Some schools in Alabama and Century."
The Office of Education refedLouisiana have begun integrating
e
boycotts, challenges
report this
pupil
a
teaching staffs, while this change leased which provides the first
eral guidelines, and at least one
summer
is well underway in most of
punch in the face of a superindocumentary evidence of a prethe other states.
tendent.
educators have long
Faculty integration was not mise that most children in this
Although the survey of schools
some schools without held, that
in 11 states from Virginia to Texas accepted in
wherever they live, atindicates that the number of trouble. A school superintendent country,
was punched in tend schools that are effectively
Negroes attending integrated in Sanford, Fla.,
segregated.
schools this fall may well be the face by a white father upset
The study was commissioned
double last year's figure, the most because his daughter's teacher
Civil
by Congress under the
is was a Negro.
development
significant
about Rights Acts of 1964 and is the
In Interlachen, Fla.,
thought to be the beginning, in
most comprehensive survey yet
the white children boyIt ina predominantly of American education.
cotted classes at
volved 650,000 children in grades
white elementary school which
1, 3, 6, 9, and 12, and 60,000
had three Negro teachers.
In Campbell County, Va., 25 teachers.
teachers resigned last month beSegregation by race is the
cause of integration.
major issue, but the report had
A wholesale boycott of white some other
points to make. It
schools resulted in Plaquemines suggested that segregation by
Parish, La., when schools opened
to spend a million dollars to under a federal court order and social and economic class may
be even more significant in
brainwash the people. Just show
five Negroes applied for transfer children's education than segredecide."
it to 'em and let them
to one of the white schools.
gation by race.
UK political scientist J. E.
Supporters of the boycott anhe had
Reeves told Chandler
The report also offered what
nounced plans to construct pritalked with Gilbert Kingsbury,
vate schools, an alternative to may be surprising reasons for
some conclusions: For example,
University assistant vice presitried in other states.
dent and educational coordinator integrationhas an estimated 11,000 it states that physical facilties
Louisiana
for a group supporting the docustate have almost no correlation to
pupils receiving
ment. Kingsbury told him he
achievement.
for private schools.
grants
was hav ing trouble raising even
many school systems, of faculty
integration- -a major effect of the
controversial guidelines handed
down by the U.S. Office of Educa-

of
ATLANTA -- A
survey
southern school districts has revealed that school desegregation
has expanded considerably this
fall.
However, the picture is less
bright than it might have been
since the survey also showed
spurts of new resistance white

747-pag-

FORMER GOVERNOR A. B. CHANDLER
Makes A Point In Law School Forum Monday

one-ha- lf

Chandler Hedges, Doesn't
Openly Oppose Charter
must be sold to the state within
By FRANK BROWNING
five years.
Editor
Associate
"Somebody's' gonna have to
Former Gov. A.B. "Happy"
answer for that not here, but
Chandler told jokes, recounted in the hereafter," Chandler deevents, and answered questions clared.
covering his "30 years in KenChandler told the body he
tucky politics."
was greatly disappointed as a
Though he would not say-hmember of the Rev ision Assembly
is opposed to the new conthat a unicameral legislaturewas
stitution, he told the packed not
adopted, thereby, he said,
ask
courtroom, "I'm not gonna
strengthening it.
anybody to vote for it."
"The governor controls the
"There's one provision in
...
I've
there that hurts me from the legislature absolutely I know.
been there twice and
top of my head to the tip of One governor said he could buy
my toes," Chandler said in refevery legislator there with $100
erence to a section allowing coreach and he proved it."
porations to hold land for their
The audience laughed and
own uses as long as it is to
applauded when he told them,
their interest. However, when"I was not so blatent."
ever the land ceases to be of
Further criticizing the prointerest to the corporation, it
posed new document, Chandler
said, "If it's as good as they
say it is, they oughtn't to have

F JAMES

.

STCWART

j

WOMEN

25

the constitution.

&OTC

.-

DCnnnrTlONS DfeWtS

S1M0NE S1GN0RET

-

YVES MONTAml

COtOR and CINf

MASCOPF

plus

For Underwear Ironed only on request.

BECKER
CO.

Cor. S. Limestont and Euclid

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English 161 Book. . . but
were sold a new one?

J

CHRIS NOEL
RELEASE

The Kentucky Kernel

The Kentucky Kernel. University
Station, University 01 Kentucky, s Lex- inton, Kentucky, 4050. Second-claspostage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
I'ublished five times weekly during
the school year except during holiday
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
I'ubashed tor the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications. Prof. Paul
Obvrst, chairman and Linda Gassaway,
secretary.
Ueua as the Cadet in MM. be- came tne Kecord m 1;0. and trie Idea
in isfutf. Published continuously as the
Kernel since IS15.

KATES
SUBSCRIPTION
$6.00
Yearly, by mail
$10
Per copy, from files
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Executive Editor. Managing
Editor,

Editor
Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
-J

New

socuu

iimcntotowtsniiHoi

NOW! Ends Thurs.!

less "Dry Fold"

LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANING

UNIVERSAL

Till AIIMf

SAVE ON UNDERWEAR

ALSO

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Shirts and Blouses on Hangers

BREED"

TONIGHT!

GARY CLARKE

NOW! Ends Thurs.
CaiMM PCllS!

for

Use Your Free Passes!
Come & play BINGO

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NO EXTRA CHARGE

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MAOREHi OHARA

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snow

GOVERNMENT
The report
on desegregation progress in the
South comes at a time when
WASHINGTON

Complete Laundry and Dry Cleaning Service
announces

JTrHF RARE

mfx.

NEW PUSH FROM FEDERAL"

"Gil Kingsbury could very
well be head of it and not know
a damn thing about it. It's a
funny thing how these people
put a nice, decent fellow" in
and "then do all the dirty work
without his knowledge," Chandler replied.
"I'm not a maiden. This is
not a maiden voyage for me,"
Chandler said, inferring that he
was not fooled by anyone about

becker's

ENDS TONIGHT
BREED OF FRONTIER

$40,000, Reeves said.

Advertising, Business, Circulation

2x:i

2319

1

2

s

2
1
1
1
C

I
5

v

Q

KENNEDY'S CUSTOMERS
GOT A USED ONE AND
SAVED $1.75

Kennedy Book Store

riiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiJJiiiiiiiiiiiitJiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiicjiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiim

j

H

M

Put your
FAITH to work
every day
RELIGION

IN AMERICAN LIFE

Worship this week

j

fUl

� .THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,

ikmI.iv.

I

Nh. It,

luuu

Nexus Offers Link

For

Students-Facult- y
By DICK KIMMINS

Kernel Staff Writer

"We wanted a place where students and faculty could meet
and feel free to discuss whatever topics were on their mind. We
feel we have succeeded," said Don Pratt,
manager of Nexus,
a coffeehouse at J1J Hose Lane.
"We don't particularly want
Nexus, a Latin word meaning
"link", was brought into being the professional artist on our
stage," Pratt said. "We would
in February, 1966, by the Rer
rather the members of the
ligious Advisory Staff. Its present location was donated by audience became performers in
jjj
the Presbyterian Student Center. their own right."
Other than its birth by the
In addition to the regular
HAS, Nexus has no religious conand orilineup of
nection. "We saw a need for
ginal poetry, Nexus hopes to excoma place for faculty-studepand its film series. Such films
munication and thought we could as "The
Island", "Requiem for
remedy the situation by forming
a Heavyweight" and "Parable"
a coffeehouse here at UKsimiliar
are beingconsidered for showing.
to those that have sprung up at
The various artists that perother major campuses," said Ed
form from time to time all donate
Miller, campus Presbyterian minister and President of the HAS. their services to Nexus. "What
"After we had the location, we need is more performers from
the University lent us some the faculty and students," Pratt
tables from the old Grill. We said. "We even had a fellow
got a rug from Carmichacl's who entertained for nearly an Louise Brock, right foreground, is silhouetted
downtown; the rest we built our- hour playing bongos. The auagainst a Friday night Nexus crowd. Nexus offers
dience loved it."
selves," Pratt stated.
Discussion at Nexus takes
Nexus has been havingpacked
many forms. Some students can houses since it
opened for the
better convey their feelings semester two weeks
ago. "We
through music; to others, poetry are
really pleased with the
is their individual art form. The
from the students; it looks
Nexus stage has seen its share
like a good year," Pratt conof drama also. Once last semester,
the Transy Players presented a cluded.
The coffee house will be open
play and on another occasion,
English Professor Rollin A. on Friday and Saturday nights
Lasseter presented his own play. from 8:00 to 1:00 A.M.
folk-singe-

CZ1JI

folksinging, poetry and drama to faculty and
students on Friday and Saturday night.

i)

res-pon-

'Antigone' To Be Shown
By RALPH CHERRY
Kernel Drama Critic
The Student Center Board will present Sophocles' "Antigone"
at 6:30 and 8:30 Wednesday night in the Student Center Theater.
If you have ever wondered why so many of the Greek Tragedies
have been dubbed "immortal," try to see this movie version. You
might learn something.

1

I

The story of Antigone, the loyal woman executed for honoring
her battle-slaibrother against the king's wishes, is a little hard to
approach unskeptically. You wonder what its "messa ge" can do
for you here in 1966, and the first reel shows pretty clearly that
Sophocles wasn't thinking of movie cameras when he wrote his
n

play.
Your skepticism dies, however, as you become more involved
with the morality of the king's second thoughts. Should a king put
a woman to death simply because she demonstrates love for hei
brother? More importantly, should any man place partiotism above
philial love? Moral pacifism or "patriotism"?
The recurring timeliness of these questions makes "Antigone"
certainly a picture worth seeing. If you can ov erlook the few imperfections of the film itself, you will be asking them to yourself
as you walk out, just as audiences have through the ages.

h
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A,'

lV-v-

.

Portrait of an "A" Student
An A student is like Villager clothes. Versatile,
intelligent. Original but not odd. Energetic but not
frenzied. Villager shirts and dresses look like that. So do Villager
suits and jumpers, sweaters and skirts. So can you. Our Fall Villager
collection is ready now.
wide-awak-

irt Huunu'sUij
Lim(tonc

OHIO U.

407 5

PURDUE U.
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FLORIDA U
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Kernel Photo by A. Robert Bogosian

WEST VIRGINIA

EASTERN KY. U.

OHIO STATE U.

The display of African Arts objects now open at the Student
Center Art Callery includes this ebony carving. The exhibit is
open from 11 a.m. until 7 p.m. on weekdays, 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
on Saturdays, and from 11 a.m. until 3 p.m. on Sundays.

U.

BOWLING GREEN U.

rljJ.Jt

UNIV. KENTUCKY
UNIV. CINCINNATI

3

� "

Quality Program
Chandler

Without much fanfare, the Student liar Association continues to

Then Turn Down Slightly And Allow To Simmer"

speaking.

"Happy"

Scheduled for the next two Monservice for day afternoon sessions are senaperforin a
"the entire University community.
torial candidate John Y. Brown,
of Lexington, and Fayette County
The association, comprised of University law students, is again pre- Judge Joe Johnson.
The series has never lacked
senting a weekly speaker's forum
which has, in the past, attracted quality speakers. Among those of
top notch speakers.
last year were Gov. Edward T.
MonThis year's series opened
Breathitt, former Gov. Bert Combs,
day with former Gov. Albert B. Lt. Gov. Harry Lee Waterfield,
Jefferson County Judge Marlovv
Cook, and Federal District Judge
Mac Svvinford.
much-neede-

d

The forum plays an important
role in the intellectual community.
Not only does it provide for
speaker's opinions, but it also
serves as a channel for feedback
to the speakers. Audience members are permitted a question period
that allows them an opportunity
to challenge remarks of the speaker.

Understandably, popularity of
the program is rapidly spreading.
A number of attorneys and other
townsmen have been attending.
The Student Bar Association
congratulated. We hope

is to be

they will be able to continue to

attract interesting and
speakers.

We

knowledg-abl- e

only wonder
cannot

-

why other organizations
do the same.

m

m

Letters To The Editor

Reader Is Puzzled By Greeks
Editor of the Kernel:
Until the weekend of Friday,
September 9, 1966, I had always
been under the apparently erroneous
impression that the social fraternities and sororities had chosen
their respective Greek names because they associated their ideals
with the traditional historical role
of ancient Greece, that of a highly
developed, intellectually and aesthetically inclined culture. This
past Friday afternoon I was rudely
shocked out of my naivete when
one of the
Greek organizations began broadcasting rock
and roll over a loud speaker, so
loudly that it could be heard within
a four block radius. On Saturday
afternoon, Saturday evening and
now Sunday
afternoon
other
"Greeks" imitated their peers (as
monkeys, prepubescents, and primitives will do) by forcing their
auditory garbage on the ears of an
entire neighborhood.
It is the most puzzling to me
why a group of college students,
whose present lives are theoretically
dedicated to erudition and scholarly
pursuits, select this primitive form
of entertainment. Do these young
ladies and gentlemen completely
divorce themselves from the knowledge that they have obtained in
their humainities classes Monday
To the

so-call- ed

Intellectuals Vs. LBJ

through Friday, and over the weekend respond to the most primitive
expressions of the rhythmic and
melodic drive in mankind?
I am not suggesting

that fun
and entertainment are in any way
contrary to the aspirations of an
assiduous scholar. What I am suggesting is that these "Greeks" are
mentally bankrupt in their ignorance of the facts that Igor
Stravinsky's "Le Sacre du
provides more intoxicating
rhythmic stimulation than any of
their inefficacious rock and roll
ever did and that the first bar
of Wagner's "Tristan and Isolde"
contains more eros than the sum
total of all their neighborhood
broadcasts. (I do not think it is
Prin-temp-

s"

If President Johnson were not
such a complicated individual, he
would probably find his relations
with the country's intellectual community warmer and easier. And they
would probably be warmer and
easier if his youthful and stimulating predecessor had not left behind a legend or is it a myth?
to which many intellectuals find it
easier to wed themselves than to
the Texan dynamism now in the
White House.
So to say is neither to denigrate
Lyndon Johnson nor to dishonor
the late John Kennedy. We are
merely stating facts, as we see them.
And we are prompted so to express
ourselves by reports in the New
York Times and the Washington
Post that Mr. Johnson is about to
lose the services of Eric Goldman,
a Princeton professor, whom he
brought to the White House as

The impression that this could
give of Mr. Johnson as a President
is unfair. His record of achievement
outmatches that of his predecessorno matter whether or not
one agrees with the impressive
list of measures associated with the
first three years of the Johnson
presidency. And on Vietnam the
issue which has earned him some of
the intellectual community's harshest strictures we feel that Mr.
Johnson cannot withdraw from the
commitment to which he rightly
remains loyal.

Harry Truman, the sometime
Kansas City haberdasher, and
Lyndon Johnson, son of the Texas
soil, were both pitchforked into the
presidency when tragedy had removed from it men with a patina
necessary for me to defend my
of aristocracy and intellectual disimplication that these and all collegians are seeking rhythmic stimucrimination. The type of thinkers
lation and eros.) Futhermore I am "part-tim- e
that had rallied to Roosevelt stayed
intellect
with Mr. Truman. Yet the type of
suggesting that the "Greeks" learn
a bit of humanitarian concern for
According to the New York thinkers attracted to Kennedy have
their
neighbors
Times, Professor Goldman is re- not found themselves at home with
the residents on Pennsylvania Avesigning "after deciding that he Mr. Johnson. Why?
nue, Pennsylvania
Court, Rose could not promote real cooperation
The answer, we think, is that
Street, Rose Lane and Columbia.
between President John son and segMr. Truman is an uncomplicated
Eleanor B. Adams
ments of the intellectual
man without pretension who inA & S Senior
stinctively knew the right decision
to make on the big issues made
it and stuck with it, and yet always made his associates feel they
The Kernel welcomes letters from readers
were party to it and part of it.
wishing to comment on any topic. Because of
The Soutli's Outstanding College Daily
space limitations, letter should be limited to 300
Mr. Johnson makes right decisions,
words. We reserve the right to edit letters reUnivehsity ok Kentuc ky
ceived. Longer manuscript will be accepted at
too. But nobody can call him unthe editor's discretion.
ESTABLISHED 1891
TUESDAY, SEPT. 13, I960
The letters submitted should be signed as
complicated. And there are times
follows: for students, name, college and class and
Walter M. Chant,
local telephone number; for faculty members,
when -- unlike Mr. Truman -- he
name, department and academic rank; for
Tehence Hunt, Executive Editor
alumni, name, hometown and class; for UniverGene Clabes, Managing Editor
sity staff members, name, department and posigives the impression of being overly
Judy Chisham, Associate Editor
tion; for other readers, name, hometown and
hometown telephone number. Unsigned letters
John Zeh, Associate Editor
concerned with his image as PresiFhank Hhowmng, Associate Editor
cannot be considered for publications. All letters
Phil Sthaw, Sports Editor
should be typewritten and double spaced.
dent and of being oversensitive to
Letters should be addressed to: the Editor, Lahhy Fox, Daily Netvs Editor
Hon Hehhon, Daily News Editor
the Kentucky Kernel, Journalism Building. Uniwhat others think about him.
Bahhy Cobb, Cartoonist
versity of Kentucky, or they may be left in the
non-Universi- ty

The Kentucky Kernel
Editor-in-Chi-

editor's office, Room
Building.

113--

of the Journalism

William

Knai'1', Business Manager

Ed Campbell, Circulation Manager

The Christian Science Monitor

� .Till:

POLITICS
By WALTER M. GRANT

politicians

didates are already campaigning
for governor, while the election
this year is to select a U.S.
senator.

president.
Details Left To Assembly
The document provides for
vacancies in office to be filled by
appointment until the next
biennial election. However, a

tinually shaking hands and
kissing babies. In fact, it's sometimes difficult to tell who's running for what and when.
Kentucky is one of the few
states in the nation conducting
elections
annually. With the
Second In

A

Series.

even-number-

primary system, this
means at least two elections each
state's

year.

Consequently,

oftentimes begin campaigning for
office two or three elections in
advance. For example, some can-

vacancy in the Cent ral Assembly
or the U.S. House of Representatives will be filled by special
election.
The details of voting and elections are left to the General
Assembly under the new constitution. The present constitution,
on the other hand, contains detailed provisions relative to
voting, absentee ballots, registration of voters and even the hours
the polls will be open.
In fact, the 1891 document is
so restrictive regarding elections
that it had to be amended to
permit absentee voting and the
use of voting machines.
Although significant changes
are made in the suffrage and
elections sections of the new
charter, parts of the document
contain few, if any, changes.
For example, all 26 sections
of the Bill of Rights in the present
constitution are retained in the
revision. In addition, three new
basic liberties are added to the
Bill of Rights.

4Iltside Report9 By Rowland Evans and Robert Novak

Federal Rewards Seen
For Integrated Schools
-

In the
WASHINGTON
highest reaches of the Department of Health, Education and
Welfare (HEW), planners have
secretly put together an education bill for 1967 that would be
certain to whip the white backlash to a frenzy.
The bill recommended by a
policy planning task forcequietly
at work the past several months
would make a radical departure
in government policy by supplying extra federal funds to school

districts which achieve an integrated racial balance in the
schools. Put another way, school
districts which do not achieve
that balance would be penalized.
This would escalate the federal government's attack on de
jure (legal) segregation in the
south to an assualt on de facto
(neighborhood)
segregation in
the north. In fact, the task force
recommends for the first time
that the Johnson administration
actively promote such politically
explosive integration devices as
school "bussing" and pupil exchanges between the white suburbs and the black inner city.
Whether the White House will
finally put its stamp of approval
on this combustible package and
send it to Congress next year is
a matter of considerable doubt.
Nevertheless, the fact that federal
officials who have the mosttodo
with education would seriously
consider such a plan is a matter
of major interest.
For quite apart from adding

KERNEL,

TiumI.i, Srpi.

El, lM.--

.-

an( Shaking, Baby Kissing Never Slop
Willi Kentucky's Two Annual Elections

Elections Terms Rearranged
Elections
cost the state
millions of dollars, not to mention
the costs to each political party
for endless campaigns. Elections
also take considerable time.
The state's proposed new constitution would eliminate this
burden by rearranging elections
and terms of office.
Under the new constitution,
the number of elections will be
cut in half. Consequently, the
expense of elections also will be
sliced in half.
The proposed charter provides
for biennial regular elections in
Local
years.
officers and U.S. representatives
will be elected at the same time,
but the governor will not be
elected at the same time as the

Kernel Editor-In-ChiPolitical life is sometimes conbecause
fusing in Kentucky,
there's always an election around
the corner.
The result: politicians are con-

KENTUCKY

bill. It calls for the "equal education opportunity act of 1967"
to provide extra funds for school
districts willing to take steps
to achiev e racial balances.
Specifically, Howe's planners
talk of encouraging district-wid- e
rezoning, site selection designed
to produce integrated schools,
school bussing, pupil exchanges

between the suburbs and the
inner city, and even new kinds
of curriculum designed to aid
racial integraton. The task force
recommends that these integration grants start at $175 million
in the next fiscal year and climb
to $375 million four years later.
Even more interesting is a confidential suggestion by the task
force that school grants be made
a part of the metropolitan planning section of President John

son's "demonstration cities" bill
now pending in Congress.

M

7

't

,

r
SSgCSAJW

The added
mean:
1. An

provisions

will

accused person will have

the right to waive indictment by
the grand jury and be tried by
information.

a person charged

Presently,

will not he imprisioiied on thai
ground. Under the present constitution, officials have the right
to hold witnesses in jail.
3. The people will be protected against wire tapping and
electronic listening dev ic es. This
has been termed by some members of the Constitution Bev ision
Assembly as one of the most
vital protections in the new con-

with a criminal offense must go
through the routine of indictment
by the grand jury even if he
wants to enter a guilty plea.
In other words, a person who stitution.
Provisions relating to elecplans to plead guilty may have tions and
the Bill of Bights have
to wait in jail several months
before he can start serving his caused little controversy in the
drive to get Kentucky's proposed
sentence.
new constitution approved in the
The Bill of Rights in the new November general