xt73j960862n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt73j960862n/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1965-12-09  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  9, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  9, 1965 1965 1965-12-09 2015 true xt73j960862n section xt73j960862n Inside Todays Kernel
Human
Commission
rereals
Rights
need for state thril rights laws: tage
Two.

.1a
Vol. LVII, No. 56

University of Kentucky
1965

students protest draft
for demonstration
ticipation: Tog Three.

Michigan

Editor

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, DEC 9,

Twelve Pages

""sMp: P9

Keeneland't elres spark atom weeks
with holiday cheer:

College's

Four.

tage

Eight.

Rupp is highly pleased with Jarocx:
tage Ten.

Soviets Cite
Major Shuffle

Congress
To Open

Exchange
New

Book Plan
Begins Monday

By TERENCE HUNT
Assistant Managing Editor
Student Congress will open its
student book exchange Monday
in the Student Center TV lounge.
The exchange, resulting from
recent Congress legislation, will
remain open from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. daily until the last day of
final examinations. It will reopen
for about two weeks in the beginning of the second semester.
Operation of the exchange is
based on a filing system, according to John O'Brien, Congress
vice president. Envelopes for individual courses will be filed in a
box containing all the courses in
each department covered by this
semester's exchange.
Student participation in the
program before Christmas primarily will provide a listing of
buyers and sellers. Most of the
transactions will take place next
semester based on the compiled
listings.
The actual transactions will
be personal contacts between the
students participating. The exchange will provide a listing with
which the students can work,
O'Brien said.
Textbooks covering four colleges will be listed in the exchange this semester: Arts and
Sciences, Education, Engineering, and Commerce.
Congress planners hope the
book exchange will stimulate
better discounts and then Congress can terminate the program,
O'Brien said. The program, as
planned, is not a continuingone,
he added.
A recent Congress newsletter
says "For a long time many
students have felt the bookstores
are not doing their best to cut
prices of textbooks. The Student
Book Exchange is designed to
present an organized market in
which students may buy and sell
textbooks to each other and therefore save money on books."

Western

discusses

par-

group initiates bureau of
student speakers: tage Six.
Mrs. Oswald heads state oris committee: tage Seven.

The Associated Press
major shuffle in the Soviet high command today
assigned Alexander N. Shelepin to an influential job at the top
level of the Communist party and boosted Nikolai V. Podgorny
into the presidency.
Mr. Podgorny, 62, who has dently he played a significant
been No. 2 man in the party part last year in the overthrow
as one of its secretaries and a of Nikita S. Khrushchev.
Mr. Podgorny's career has
member of the ruling presidium,
replaces Anastas I. Mikoyan, a been associated with engineering,
member of the top Soviet comlargely in agriculture. He worked
mand for 40 years.
many years at party duties in
the Soviet Ukraine and rose under
Mr. Mikoyan said an operation
Khrushchev in the party leaderthree years ago had made it difship.
ficult for him to fulfill the deThe Soviets today also adopted
mands of the presidency. This
a resolution condemning "U.S.
largely is a ceremonial post.
Aggression" in Vietnam.
Mr. Shelepin, 47, was relieved
as deputy premier and head of
the committee for party and state
control. Communist sources indicated he would take the No. 2
post formerly held by Mr.
Podgorny. This job is second to
Leonid I. Brezhnev, chief of the
secretariat, the most powerful
unit in the Soviet Union.
MOSCOW-- A

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Bits of the Christmas spirit are beginning to be visible on the
campus even amid term papers and final exams. The annual
Hanging of the Creens was held Wednesday night, and the Centennial Christmas tree was lighted in conjunction. Located between
the Administration Building and White Hall, the tree is resplendent
with 1,200 lights, donated by Mrs. R. W. Mcllwain, Lexington.

ROTC Gift Project
Gets More Donations
"Project Christmas Star," which appeared last week to be
headed toward disaster locally, was bolstered by
gifts
that gave the project a successful conclusion, ROTC SSgt. Harold
Haley said Wednesday.
The Droiect was designed to been set for Friday morning, 48
collect gifts from local donors gifts were left at the collection
for
undesignated servicemen points that day and had to be
area
fighting in Vietnam, and was a taken on to Fort Knox, the
by private
effort by the UK ROTC collection
point,
joint
detachment and the U.S. Army vehicle. In all, 63 packages were
donated.
Reserve unit,
Sgt. Haley said that newsArmy representatives said that
and radio appeals at a if such a gift project is initiated
paper
in the event the
point when the project appeared next year
to be floundering brought in United States still is involved
several gifts.
in Vietnam more time will be
the deadline had allowed for civilian participation.
Although
last-rr.inu- te

Philharmonic
Sets Concert
Here Tonight

There was no change in the
two top posts Mr. Brezhnev as
first secretary of the party and
Alexei N. Kosygin-ti- s
premier.
They suggested the changes, and
they were approved by the
Supreme Soviet.
Both Mr. Podgorny and Mr.
Mikoyan remained members of
the
party Presidium which
makes the policy executed by the
party secretariat.
Mr. Mikoyan also was elected,
following his resignation from the
presidency, to a Supreme Soviet
role corresponding tooneofmany
parliamentary vice presidents.
12-m-

Mr. Mikoyan, who marked his
70th birthday Nov. 25, was the
last of the Old Bolsheviks in the
upper reaches of the Soviet party
and government. He was a revolutionary in the Caucasus as a
young man at the time of the
great Russian upheavals toward
the end of World War I.
Mr. Mikoyan survived Stalin
pirges and innumerable shakeups.
He came close to the top of
the hierarchy but never seemed
to aspire for the top post. Evi

Jazz pianist, Enroll Carner,
will appear here tonight with
the Lexington Philharmonic at
8:15 p.m. in Memorial Coliseum.
This first "extra" of the Philharmonic's current season will
feature the noted pianist, in a
concert of his own compositions
and improvisations, as well as
dance favorites from all over the
world.
Tickets for the concert are
priced at $1 per person. The
Coliseum box office will open
at 2 p.m. today, and tickets will
be sold as long as they last,
said Scheer.
Mr. Carner will play "Misty,
along with other numbers in his
'personal improvising style. Ite
will play with the Philharmoiuc,"
and also have a featured solo
spot on the concert agenda.

"The dollar concert is an experiment by the Philharmonic
Society to see if the public wants
and will respond to a fine pops
concert at a nominal price," said
Leo Scheer, Philharmonic conductor and conductor of the UK
Symphony Orchestra.

La Grange: The Penitentiary Atmosphere
By

PHIL

STRAW

Kernel Staff Writer
LA CRANCE A tour of the Kentucky
State Reformatory here can be an
for one whose familiarity with
penology has been limited to a college
sociology course.
The merit of a day's tour through this
penal institution is packed into tlie realization of just having witnessed something
that previously had been contained in
newspaper stories or motion picture plots.
Life at La Crange isn't easier just
because the word "reformatory" is engraved on the administration building's
k bars and solitary
cornerstone. If inc
confinement for up to seven days make a
man a useful member of society again,
then the word has retained its definition.
This state penitentiary isn't operated
like a boarding school with room service
and a
atmosphere. Every
class of criminal who has been convicted
eye-open- er

in the state of Kentucky" can be found
inside the 3,000 acre "city." Chainlink
fence rows capped with barbed wire form
the circumference of the state's youngest
penal institution.
Only men sentenced to life without
privilege of parole and those on death row
are excluded from La Orange's inmate
population, which now totals 1.G56 men.
From the front door frisk to the sensitive
alarm system, this is a prison in every
meaning of the word. Symmetrically-space- d
watch towers are always occupied
by officers who, in case of trouble, can
spring into action with speed and simplicity that only the Strategic Air Command
can parallel.
former
The warden is a middle-age- d
gootball star who came to La Crange as
a psychologist after receiving his master's
degree from UK.
The associate warden, with only an
education and in charge of
eighth-grad- e

the disciplinary segment of the institution,
is as tough as the men who are required
to address him as "sir." This former police
chief, who has witnessed more than 20
electric chair executions at Eddy ville, lives
by the code that men work best under rules
that never falter or favor.
To him, the world that lies beyond the
prison's front law n isoneentirely set apart
from the one inside. He hated the last
execution at Eddyville as much as the
first, but feels these are men who must be
dealt w ith in the language they understand
best.
His "good morning" to an inmate
automatically commands a greeting in
return. A problem is handled as a problem
g
with few smiles and no friendly
A prison riot
for assurance.
administrator
veteran, this Marine-rugge- d
makes it a point to make a man's last
meal his best. He once drove more than
Continued On Pate 9
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� KENTUCKY IXKNEL.

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of tlie campus. Still tiie construction goes on. The interior
of the building is tlie focus of attention now. At left,
huge piece of equipment are being used for the com-

The tup at last. The cvucrae for the lap Hour of the
u? eifcht story eitsiueeriiij: buiidinr. Las been poured.
At rijrht, a workman is laying tlie final bricks far the
structure of tiie
completion of tin- floor. The jdiust-lik- e
--

tin- -

horizon of tlie center

Ob erst Report Shows Need
For Rights Law Immediately
FKAMlFOir- r- Stat

human
laws art- needed muretlian
ever since the enactment of the
l!X4 Civil Kicyits Law, according
to a report on tlie experiences of
otlier states released h
the
Kentucky Commission on Human

niitJ

Cov. breathitt said he wouicl
with tiie Human Rights
Commission and added "I believe
we need legislation litre to supplement tle F ederal law."
Galen Martin, executive director of tlie Human Rights
said tlie Federal Civil
Hights Act emphasizes enforcement should be through state
agencies which function under
state laws compatible with the
Federal statute.
Instances were cited in the
report of publu accommodations
complaints that the Kentucky
Commission has received that are
not covered by the 1904 Civil
flights Law but that would be
covered by the public accommodations laws in at least nine
of the responding states. Such
complaints concern golf courses,
laundromats and photographic
services.
From the reports of other
states, the Commission said, uniform coverage is fairer to the
affected businessmen, because it
puts all on an equal economic
footing. The states agreed that
partial coverage is unfair to tlie
work

-

Com-tnlsio-

hijjts.
Tiie report was compiled by
Paul Oberst, vice chairman of
the Commission and chairman of
its legislative committee. It was
based on a questionnaire sent to
states with enforceable
or public accommodations laws or both. Mr. Oberst
is a professor in the College of
Law at UK.
The leport was subrmtted to
Cov. Edward T. lireathitt.and is
a part of material the Commission
is preparing to document the continuing need for human rights
legislation in Kentucky.
Cov. Breathitt announced recently he will push for a state
civil rights law at the 1900
Ceneial Assembly beginning
Jan. 4. State Republican leaders
this week promised their support
for a civil rights law in Kentucky.

the overflowing classrooms for the future.

pletion of tlie top fioors of tlie building. Hie target
date for tlie opening of at least three of the classroom

-

buiidirig seems to dominate

floors is the beginning of spring semester. Dean Shaver
laid the new building will help lessen tlie strain of

--

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public and businesses alike. They
also reported that enforcement on
tlie state level is quicker, better
and easier fur complainants and
respondents alike.
Tiie report of the Commission
d
contains estimates that
are
of Kentucky
employes
covered by tlie fair employment
section of tlie Civil Rights Act
of
which became enforceable
covering Firms with 101)
July
when
or more employes. In
the act w ill cover employers w ith
23 or more employes, 60 percent
of Kentucky's employes will be
covered. Torty percent of tlie
employes and S3 percent of the
employers will not be covered by
tlie Federal law. A state law could
provide more extensive coverage,
the Commission said.
one-thir-

lLeruel PUrto by Dick Hart

Visiting Professor Gordon
Schedules Coffee Hour
Dr. Louis Cordon, visiting Dr. Cordon lias been dean of
Centennial profes vjr in the ph
graduate studies at Case Instiwill meet with UK tute of Technology, Cleveland.
sciences,
students at a coffee hour, 3 to 4 Ohio, since YJA.
p.m. Friday, in the President's
One of Dr. Cordon's out standKooin of the Student Center.
.All students
are invited to ing contributions to science was
attend the informal gathering to the implementation of a successful method of extracting thorium,
talk with the scientist.
known a metal jKitentialh useful in the
An internationally
authority in analvtical chemistry . atomic research held.

14

States

which

Gloss Eottom
English

Pevter
TANKARD

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to

replied

the Commission's questionnaire
were:
Colorado, Connecticut,
Indiana,
Delaware,
Illinois,
Kansas, Maryland, MassachuOhio and
setts,
Missouri,
Washington.

Say
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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Dec. 9, 1965 -- 3

4 Michigan Students Will Appeal
Reclassification For War Protest
demonstration at the Ann Arbor
The Collegiate Tress Service
ANN AKROK, Mich. -- Four selective service office on Oct. 15.
students at the University of The demonstrators sat down in
Michigan who had their draft the office of Local Board 85, not
classifications changed hecause far from the Michigan campus,
of their anti-draactivity plan and officals charged they disto appeal.
rupted the work of the selective
The four w ere part of a group service system.
of 39 who staged an anti-wa- r
Several hours later, when the
protestors refused to budge,
police arrested all 39. Six of the
demonstrators were women; two
were under IS. The remaining 31
were men subject to the Selective
Service regulations.
ft

Flowers Tells
'New Image'
Of Alabama

NEW YORK (CPS)-Alaba- ma
General
Richmond
Attorney
Flowers is currently on a nationwide tour trying to present an
image of racial moderation prevailing in Alabama.
Last weekend he told about
150
students at the Eastern
Regional meeting of the United
States Student Press Association
that he was heartened by recent
convictions in Alabama racial
cases. In consecutive days, an
state jury convicted the
white slayer of a Negro, and an
Federal jury convicted
three Ku Klux Klansmen for conspiring to violate the civil rights
of Mrs. Viola Creg Liuzzo.
Mr. Flowers said he had been
on nine campuses to speak recently and has been invited to
speak at four others. The
campuses pay his expenses and
he accepts no honorarium he
says. He does use some state
money in his travels, he says,
but "if Cov. George Wallace can
take the state plan around the
country to campaign during an
election, I guess I can use some
state money too," he '.says.
te

all-whi-

She'll love you for this

Col. Arthur Holmes, director
of the Michigan Selective Service
office, called for a "review" of
the files of 26 of the demonstrators. The files were sent to the
Michigan office by boards across
the country; 14 were from
Michigan.
Into each copy, Col. Holmes
had inserted a photocopy of the
Oct. 15 trepass charges.
"We sent the files back to
their local boards," Col. Holmes
said. "We called attention to the
new and added information and
asked them to review each case
on the basis of all the information
on file."
These

reviews

almost

cer-

tainly led to the reclassification
of the four students just as
Col. Holmes had predicted they
would.

The four are Eric Chester, 22,
and David Smokeler, 20, both of
Royal Oak, Mich.; and Ray Luz-zan22, and Patrick Murphy, 19,
n
both of Detroit. All are
at Michigan.
Col. Holmes believes the
a,

upper-classme-

demonstrators violated a portion
of the Universal Military Training and Service Act, the law
under which the whole draft
system operates.
The statute makes it a felony
for anyone to "knowingly hinder
or interfere or attempt to do so
in any way with the administration of this title or the rules
and regulations made pursuant

thereto."

Most of the Oct. 15 demonor student classstrators had
ifications. Col. Holmes said a
"student deferment is given in
the national interest in order to
maintain the educational level of
this country." The Ann Arbor
sit-i- n
did not contribute to that
end. Col. Holmes said, and therefore draft boards had a reason to
revoke the deferments of the students involved.
2--

One of the students who lost
his deferment, Eric Chester, said
he felt it was "intimidation by
draft officials" to show all protestors that they might be inducted immediately." Mr. Chester is president of the University
of Michigan chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society.
The Michigan section of the
American Civil Liberties Union
plans appeal proceedings in
behalf of the four and others who
may be reclassified. Col. Holmes
predicts that more of the 26 whose
files were reviewed will lose their
deferments as local boards get
around to reconsidering their
cases.
The University of Michigan
took the side of the students in
a statement issued by Vice President for Student Affairs Richard
Cutler and Vice President for

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clapostage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published four time weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Linda Gassaway,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet In 18M, became the Record In 1900, and the Idea
In 1908. Published conUnuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
w

Academic Affairs Allan Smith.
The statement noted that the
school "had lont supported" the
selective service policy. "As
educators, we still believe the
policy of student deferments, as
it has been administered in the
past, is a sound policy . . . satiseducational
progress
factory
should be the controlling, if not
the sole, factor upon which deferments should be based

SUBSCRIPTION

RATES

Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files

..."

Michigan President Harlan II.
Hatcher said the draft "should
not be allowed to become an
instrument for punishing dis-

sent."

Local boards still have the

authority to determine draft

class-

ifications. Any decision of a local
board can be appealed, but the
right of appeal is lost if a formal
appeal is not made in 10 days
from the receipt of a classification notice.
Students on several campuses
have drawn up petitions supporting the four reclassified students.
The petition said the students
should not have been reclassified
A
simply because of the sit-isimilar petition is being circulated at the University of
Maryland.

$7.00
$ .10

KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
2321
Editor
News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
2320
Socials
AdverUsing, Business, Circulation 2319

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� Western's Mistake
of retaliation. Without this liberty,
academic freedom does not exist.
While we do not make any
judgment on the quality or the
judiciousness of the magazine published by the suspended students
or the particular piece in question,
The incident stemmed from the we
support their right to comment
suspension of three Western stu- through their magazine as they see
dents as a disciplinary action fit. If Western feels the charges are
against their publishing of a satir- unfair or not based on facts, let
ical article on moral standards and them seek retribution in libel laws,
behavior at Western in an
not in unjust administrative retalimagazine.
ation against these students.
Distressed at the effect of the
We deplore the "big boot" tactic
article on the college's public used
by the Western administrators.
relations image, administrators We
hope the colossal backfiring of
responded like a perverse child in their efforts to shine the public
booting out the perpetrators of the image will bring them to their
action.
senses and that they will reinstate
Western the students and return to them all
By doing so, however,
made a grave mistake by inter- rights to criticize which they
fering with the academic freedom deserve.
of the students.
If the Western administrators do
and not do this on their own initiative,
Just as faculty members
administrators must be free to in- we hope the American Association
the Amerivestigate, inquire and explore (in of University Professors,
facets of can Liberties Union and all other
print or otherwise) all
stand
life, so must the students be free groups which have taken a
of free speech will
if they are to be given the fullest against stifling
use their influence to urge coropportunites of an education.
rection of the situation.
No college or university has
Western can only injure itself
the right to attempt to regulate
by maintaining the current attitude.
life of any of its
the
faculty members or students to the
extent that it interferes with that Letter to the Editor
person's individual rights.
A student or faculty member
must be free, like any other citizen,
to publicly criticize without fear To The Editor:
I would like to answer certain
allegations to the legal, circumstantial and moral . reasons as to
why the United States is in Vietnam. The 1954 Geneva agreement,
Monday's presentation of grievances about undesirable conditions to which neither the United States
in two men's dormitories to Vice or South Vietnam are signataries,
of the
President Johnson Robert is a lesson i provided for the division
17th parallel and
in the power of effective student country at the
for general elections to be held
group University administration
in the whole country one year therecommunication.
after.
Donovan - Kinkead Assembly
1. The North Vietnamese have
members, speaking for their, fellow
stated in the
residents, invited the vice president not provided, as
for student affairs to tour the Geneva accord, for a "free expression of the national will", because
look
d
buildings to get a
such a free expression is imposat the situations in question.
sible in a Communist country.
then presented Mr. JohnThey
Instead, they chose to "reunify"
son a list of suggestions for forceably, violating articles 10, 19,
eliminating the problems.
24, and 27 of the Agreement of the
Cessation of Hostilities in Vietnam.
He was impressed with their
2. On March 3, 1956, 80 percent
interest, their method, and their
and promised to get their of the elegible South Vietnamese
case,
suggestions expedited. He also voters gave President Diem a
praised their efforts.
popular mandate to draft an
We echo that praise.
organic law, with the just claim
that it has the support of the people.
We commend the Donovan-Kinkea- d
Assembly for their adult,
3. The United States is under
to Vice bilateral and multilateral agree"protest"
organized
President Johnson.
ments to come to the aid of South
Vietnam.

New Outfit

Western State College, in an
attempt to wipe a student-flun- g
mudpie from its face, has smudged
its so sacred public image even
more by its sloppy handling of
the matter.

off-camp- us

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off-camp- us

Reader DefendsU.S. Involvement In Vietnam

Mature Protest

--

,

first-han-

Th Kernel welcome! Utters from readers
ltecauM of
any
wishing to comment on should topic.limited to JOG
be
Dc limitation, letters
to edit letters rewords. We reserve the right
ceived. Lunger manuscripts will be accepted at
the editor's discretion.
The letters submitted should be signed as
follows: for students, name, college and cuss and
local telephone number; for faculty members,
academic
rank; for
name, department and and class; for Univerammnl. name, hometown
and
sity stall members, name, department
and
lor other readers, name, hometown letters
number. Unsigned
hometown telephone
cannot be considered for publications. All letters
and double
should ! typewritten addressed to: spacedEditor,
the
Letters should be
Kernel. Journalism ulldin.
the Kentucky
of Kentucky, or they may be left in the
of tha Journalism
Koom 1U-rtitort
poal-lio-

tice.

.

Building.

Eisenhower on
President
October 1, 1954 offered assistance
to "develop and maintain a strong,
viable state, capable of resisting
attempted subversion or aggression
through military means."
4.

President Johnson and an
overwhelming majority of Congress
have pledged American support to
help the South Vietnamese create
5.

opinion (a wisedecision, that, since
otherwise there would be a great
deal of blank space in the paper)
because it will publish letters from
students who dissent from its editorial policy. This wordage restriction, however, is seriously compromising the Kernel's claim to
fairness. My letter, before
was less than half as
PAUL VALDES
the editorial to which it
Sophomore Agriculture long as
was a rebuttal. It is well nigh unto
impossible to effectively refute an
article. My original letter was not
an effective rebuttal. After being
Word limit Protested
cut, it was downright incoherent.
It was with no small amount of
Perhaps the solution is to print
chagrin that I observed the publiletters in smaller type. If the Kernel
cation of my letter in the Nov. 24
would stop reprinting material from
Kernel. Although I am aware the
Courier-Journ(which everylimit on the
Kernel has a
reads anyway) and the New
one
letters, surely there are better ways York Times
(which is available in
of condensing than omitting the
the library's reading room), more
"a's", "the's", commas and taking space would be available. In any
half of the first and last sentences
case, a forum is needed in which
in a paragraph and joining them, the
more articulate members of the
omitting all of the intervening student
body can express themmaterial.
and the Kernel is most
selves,
The Kernel has repeatedly stated assuredly not filling this need.
that, although it is supported by
HANK DAVIS
compulsory student subscriptions,
A&S Junior
reflect student
it feels no need to
the kind of secure and stable society
they desire, when they have crushed
the Communist uprisings from
within and blocked Communist aggression from the North. Then and
only then will they be able, as
free men, to shape their own
destiny, and be free to espress the
national will.

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The Kentucky Kernel
The South' s Outstanding College Daily
University or Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

1894

THURSDAY,

Walter Grant,

Linda Mills, Executive Editor

Sally Stull. Nwi Editor

Kenneth Green,

DEC. 0, 1965

Editor-in-Chi-

Kenneth Hut kins,

Associate Editor

Managing Editor

Judy Crjsiiam, Associate News Editor
Henry Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Marcaret Bailey, Arts Editor
Carolyn Williams, Feature Editor
Business Stuff

Tom Finn ik, Advertising Manager

Marvin IIuncate, Circulation Manager

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

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Dec. 9,

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Hie Beginner And Hie Sage Teacher

LEARNING TO TEACH
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and English grammar), arithmetic, social
studies, and health.
In addition to teaching students at the
average level Darlene has two special groups,
one an accelerated reading class, and the
other a slower moving arithmetic class.
Her reading class, she said, is well into
sixth grade material while the arithmetic
group is working at aii early fourth grade'
level.
Although keeping interest high and being
ready to answer questions about future
material are coustant demands with accelerated students, Darlene pointed out the
range of methodology necessary for teaching
the slower ones.
"You must have four or five different ways
of presenting one idea to these children,"
she said. "Their attention span is extremely

By FRANK BROWNING
Assistant Managing Editor
Darlene Musselman hasn't cut a class
this semester, as any of her fifth grade
classes at Yates elementary school would
quickly tell you.
A senior
in Elementary
Education,
Darlene is one of 79 students doing student
teaching in the public schools this semester.
Next semester the University will have
92 Elementary Education student teachers
with an overall increase of more than 100
in the student teaching program.
An average day at Yates for Darlene
begins at 7:45 a.m. and lasts until between
3:15 and 4 p.m.
At Yates Darlene is on both sides of the
desk. Not only does she teach the
about 50 percent of the time, but
she considers herself a student 100 percent
of the time.
Her supervising teacher. Miss MableCard,
a teacher in the grade for 41 years, said
that the students accept Darlene equally
as well as her in the classroom.
This week Darlene has the class
instruction entirely to herself with her supervisor merely looking in occasionally. This
is an integral part of all student teachers'
work, she said.
Basic courses Darlene teaches are the
Language Arts (including spelling, reading,

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short."

Darlene said that as a student teacher
at Yates she is accepted just as another
faculty member, attending faculty meetings
and seminars as well as supervising recess

periods and school bus loading.
"This gives me a view of what it will
be like when I have a class of my own,"
she said.
Darlene, whose home in Florence, Ky.,
plans to teach for a year upon her graduation in May then begin work toward a
Master's degree.

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Fifty Percent Teacher; 100 Percent Student

-- Kernel

Photos By Dick Ware

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TIl' KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Thursday, Dec. 9, 19to

New Record Set
At Rifle Tourney
After examination of 3,000tar-gets.- a
National Rifle Association
referee announced on Tuesday 12
national records were set in the
Kentucky State Indoor Rifle
Championship event held at the
University Saturday and Sunday.
One was set by Loretta Haggard,
member of the UK women's rifle
team.

Winning the state individual
championship with a match score
of 1,055 was William Rigby,
Richmond, student at Eastern
Kentucky State College. Only
Kentuckians were permitted to
shoot in this competition.
The 12 national records:
Iron sights competition: Open,
MSgt. William Krilling, USA
Marksmanship Training Unit, Ft.
Benning, Ca., 571; service,
Krill