xt7bnz80nt83 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7bnz80nt83/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1966-10-04  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October  4, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  4, 1966 1966 1966-10-04 2015 true xt7bnz80nt83 section xt7bnz80nt83 Inside Todays Kernel
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Vol. 58, No. 24

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of Kentucky
University TUESDAY, OCT. 4, 1966

LEXINGTON, KY.,

5ifecn University students ore working at the Narcotics Hospital: Poge

TT

Two.

Eight Pages

'Dr. Zhivogo' is beautilully-se- t
of the Russian Revolution:
Three.
Congressman Weltner mode the
decision ogainst hate, editorial
Page Four.

story
Poge

federal

money mokes the "rich richer
ond the poor poorer," Southern educators ore told: Poge Five.
The look of

a coach: it's not the same

when you lose: Poge Seven.

brave
says:

The candidates are still on the
bacco issue: Poge Seven.

to-

Governor May Back
Student For Trastees
Bet Oswald Hesitant
:, ...

Robert

Gov. Edward T. Breathitt
said Monday he would support
legislation to allow student representation on the Board of Trustees
if such action is endorsed by
the University.
He defined the University as
the students, faculty, adminis-

V

president of the Student Center Board, makes
a point during discussion at Monday night's Board
meeting of
the campus policy on speakers.
Walker,

'Anyone Can Speak
Any Time, Johnson
Tells Center Board
9

The Student Center Board discussed speaker policy for the
Student Center Monday night but reached no conclusions.
The discussion was an out
speaking," Harris said,
growth of an incident last week anyone wanted the
"Brad
speech on
when Student Center Director
the patio. If he had demanded
Fred Harris suggested to a freshhis rights, 1 would by all means
man that a planned speech on sohave let him speak."
cialism be postponed until a defHarris said that he and Johninite policy on speeches could
son had discussed the matter
evolved."
"be
if the Board
The Board also announced and agreed thatthe format for
would provide
it's Political Forum Committee such a
discussion, Johnson would
is sponsoring a talk Oct. 11 by
supply a professor to serve as
James Meredith, the first Negro
to enter the University of Mis- moderator.
sissippi.
In other business, Bill Eigel,
the Board s representative to StuThe freshman, Brad Washburn, has asked for space on the dent Government, said the govlast week
ernment had voted
Student Center patio to deliver
his speech.
Harris initially to enable the body to disapprove
of any campus speaker.
granted the request but later
suggested putting off the speech
Contacted Tuesday, Student
after he had talked with Vice Government President Carson
President for Student Affairs
Poter explained that the vote
Robert Johnson.
related only to speakers invited
Both Harris and Johnson said
by the SG's new "contemporary
their concern was for Washburn's
issues forum."
safety in light of recent trouble
21-- 1

involving SDS members. Washburn is a member of the campus
SDS chapter.
Robert Walker, president of
the Student Center Board, Monday read a letter from Johnson
in which he restated his position
that anyone can speak any time
on the campus.
"I honestly believe," the vice
president wrote the Board, "that
the Forum Committee (of the
Board) could offer more than the
student could provide himself,
i.e. promotion, advertising, a
larger audience, a PA system,
etc.
"At no time did 1, or anyone
else to my knowledge, suggest
for a moment that the young man
did not have the right to speak,"
Johnson wrote.
"I apologize if my own interest in adding to substantive

campus discussions has created
problems for the Student Center
Board," Johnson's letter concluded.

Harris told the Board that
he had suggested a delay because of the absence of a clear
policy on such matter and until
a suitable format and orderly
discussion could be arranged.
"There Is no policy against

tration and alumni.
However, President John W.
Oswald, contacted Tuesday, said
he thinks "the student purpose
can better be served without
students actually being on the
Board." He stressed the importance of student opinion being
a consideration of the Board,
but said the mechanics for this
presently arc available.
In an interview, Breathitt said
that although adding student
representation to the Board
would require a change in the
Kentucky Revised Statutes, "the
decision should be determined
from within the University."
But the governor said it is
a "healthy situation" for students to have a voice in the
decision-makin- g

process.

He

added that students should be
given "more and more" responsibility.

Breathitt said Oswald "has

made a lot of strides in this

direction."
However, Breathitt, who by
law sits as chairman of the Board,
said he has tried not to impose
his views on the internal workings of the University.
The move to obtain student
representation on the Board began through Student Government. However, the idea was
apparently dropped when it was
discovered such representation
would require a change in state
law.
Elaborating on his feeling

that there is no need for a student seat on the Board, Oswald
explained that the two faculty
members on the Board serve as
educational spokesmen and do
not sit as representatives of the
academic Senate. "At this point,
students do not have the background and experience to be educational spokesmen," he added.
Two faculty members have
members of the
been
Board since 1960. They are elected
by the faculty for three-yenon-votin-

g

ar

terms.
However, Dr. Oswald said
it is important for the student
position "to be aired to the
Board." He noted that Board

Kentucky Can Support
Colleges, Breathitt Says
Gov. Edward T. Breathitt foresees the University as the
great institution of higher education within the state.
But he thinks the state should
strive to make all five state unias universities was passed by the
versities first class educational 1966 General Assembly.
institutions.
"The state cannot affort not
The basic difference between to supply ample funds for all five
UK and the regional state uniinstitutions," Breathitt said. He
versities will be in scope and said the state should continue to
curriculum, Breathitt said in an give the greatest part of the

interview Monday.
He said he envisions UK as
the one state university with
emphasis on research, graduate,
and prodoctorate,
post-doctora- te

fessional schools.

Breathitt said Kentucky "has
the ability to support" five state
universities. He said the designation for four state colleges as
universities will help those institutions, but will not hurt UK.
A bill designating Eastern,
Western, Murray, and Morehead

Southern Educators Ask
For More NDEA Funds
The Southern Association of Land-GraColleges and State Universities closed its annual
meeting Tuesday at Carnahan House with a
resolution that NDEA fellowships be distributed
on a more equitable basis to include southern
colleges.
Auburn President Harry Philpott made the
resolution, pointing out that whereas the fellowallocations
ships had been increased
six-fol-

Related story on page five,
to southern schools had dropped from

36 percent
to 23 percent.
Specifically the resolution stated, "the total
allocation to all institutions in any state should
not be less than one-ha- lf
the number which
would be awarded on a fractional basis."
Copies of the resolution are to be sent to all
college presidents and to state's Washington representatives along with a personal letter asking "support for an appropriate amendment to the NDEA
which would result in termination of inequitable
regional distribution of fellowships."
PhiliMitt noted with his resolution that trend
whic h tended to decrease awards to specific regions
"seems to be in direct opposition to the original

meetings are open to the public, and any student can attend.
He also said that as president, he represents both faculty
and student interests to the
Board. He said the "student
purpose can be channeled
through the president by a petition or otherwise."
Dr. Oswald said there would
be no continuity in a student
seat. He explained that a student would be on the Board
for a year or two, and then
another one would replace him.
"Students would not have the
lime or the background to make
a substantial contribution," he
said.

committee was
philosophy of NDEA. A follow-ualso approved to further advance the resolution.
Earlier in the morning program. Dr. Winfred
Godwin, director of the Southern Regional Education Board, recounted actions by that group
to aid the South's predominately Negro colleges.
p

An SREB commission has been given a $300,000

Carnegie Grant to assess the past and present role
of these Negro colleges. The commission will issue
a report of its findings and suggest a program of
action whereby the regional board can aid the
schools.

Godwin discussed other current projects investigating graduate education in agricultural
science, the use of educational television and
recorded materials in coordinated plans between
universities, and the costs of advanced graduate
education especially in emerging state universities.
Wayne Reisz, president of the University of
Florida, was named president of the Land Grant
body to succeed Virginia Polytechnic Institute
President T. Marshall Hahnjr.
Other new officers are North Carolina State
Graduate Dean Walter Peterson vice president,
and Arkansas Graduate Dean Vergil Adkisson,
secret a ry-- t rea su rer .

state budget to higher education.
"But this will depend largely
on future governors and future
legislators," he said.
Breathitt said all five institutions "are on the move." The
regional universities now are
stressing the importance of
quality and a curriculum, he

said.
He said that although UK
will be the major university in
the state, "any student who goes
to Western should get just as
good an education in what he is
taking as a student anywhere

else."
The four new universities will
be able to recruit better faculty
members as a result of their new
status, he said.
Breathitt said the newly created Council on Public Higher
Education "will chart a strong
course for educational institutions." This should be an "effective body to prevent dilution
of our standards," he said.

Breathitt Supports
Free Speech Here
Gov. Edward T. Breathitt said
Monday a university is a place
where "young people should express themselves through thought
and free speech."

In an interview, Breathitt emphasized the importance of free
speech at the University. "In a
university community, people
must think and develop their
own ideas," he said.
However, there are certain
limitations on free speech for
all citizens, and these should be
observed, the governor said. He
would not elaborate on what he
felt to be the limitations.

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Oct.

2 --

4, 19ffi

Dishwashing Machines To Teaching

16 UK Students Work At Narcotics Hospital
it's not at all a dormitory atmosphere. They would like to be
real strict on us," he said, and
things are run in a military fashion.

The boys live on the second
and third floors of the administration building and have weekly
room inspections. Corton explained that the only trouble
came a few years ago when "a
couple of boys didn't think we
really meant business on the room
inspections."
The Q, S, and L employees
are often in a supervisory position over men in their fifties.
Boyer has found that sometimes
there is resentment among the
patients because of this and even
reported that it "could be a
dangerous place to work." There
was an incident of a Q, S, and
L employee being beat up.
The patients, most of whom

for Quarters, Subsistance, and
Laundry. Students work for Just
that, nothing more, nothing less.
The jobs, according toAshton

Gorton, personnel officer, range
from supervising the dishwashing
machine to teaching high school
classes.
"The students do not necessarily work in their college
major area," Corton said, "But
in accepted Civil Service jobs."
The only qualification is that
the student be a regular college
student willing to work the required 14 hours a week, he said.
Since the program began in
1942, several hundred UK students have worked at the hospital. "The major idea is to help
fellows get through college," he
said. "It doesn't cost the hospital much and we have the

are serving federal sentences for
narcotics offenses, are first broken
of their physical dependence on
drugs. A program of vocational
rehabilitation plus psychiatric
care then comprises their treatment.
"We must get the addict to
accept the responsibility for his
own actions," Gorton said. "Then
through is vocational training
we can find out what are his

room."
The students work closely
with the patients in recreation,

principal difficulties and what
is at the root of his personality
problems," he explained.
"Patients work at 750 jobs
within the hospital," Gorton
said. In any of these jobs the
patient is learning social responsibility and "promoting work
habits acceptable to our society."
"So, even in supervising the
dishwashers, the Q, S, and L
boys are helping the patients,"

work

crews, or in
the library. Others work in medical records, as pharmacy helpers,
and one in an educational unit.
Jake Boyer, a senior, is starting his third year in residence
at the hospital. He has worked
in the three libraries doing bibliography research for the doctors and other library work.
"It (the job) has its good
points and bad," Boyer said.
supervising

he said.

Jeff Glindmeyer, a senior
education major who is now

ra

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"some of the Q, S, and L jobs come to the classes if a variety
are useless."
of subjects were offered."
Glindmeyer works in the edThe hospital cannot give high
ucational program and teaches
school certificates but after a
high school classes several times
certain period, patients may take
each week. "My main problem
a high school equivalancy test.
is a shortage of materials, books
Graduation excercises last year
mainly," he said.
50 patients, valedic"The students are interesting included
and all.
and eager, since it is a voluntary torian
Chuck Bruce, another Q, S,
program," Glindmeyer continsenior,
and L, who is apre-meued. "However, there are not
teachers here for the runs the personnel newspaper,
enough
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Committee Named To Plan Homecoming
The Homecoming Steering committee includes,
left to right, Carol Michler, Susan Haga- man, Sandy Bugie, Nancy Coffman, and Carol
Piatt. Standing, John Thompson, John Carr,

Danny Sussman, and John Southard. The
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He
which comes out
has found the job "really a good
deal."
The only complaint found
about the Jobs was summed up
in a recent incident. After a
sign appeared asking that employees take only one serving
of a certain food, another one
turned up asking, "What makes
you think we want more?"
Another Q, S, and L also
commented that, "it's a great
job if you can stand the food."

"It's a good place to study, but ' doing his student teaching, thinks amount of patients who would

By SANDRA HEWITT
Kernel Staff Writer
Q, S, and L may just be
letters to you, but to 16 University students who live and
work at the Public Health Service Hospital, they mean a place
to live, food to eat, and clean
linen every week.
These letters are the code
under which collegiate help are
classified at the federal hospital,
which serves as both hospital
and prison for about 1,000 narcotics addicts. Q, S, and L stand

If

s

I

if.---

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I

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(

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL,

Tiicm1.iv,

(t.

I,

Carriage House
Opens With 'Cello'
The trials of a university physicist applying for a job with
industry are the subject of IraVallach'splay"Absence of a Cello,"
which opens Friday, Oct. 7, at the Carriage House Theater.
Wallach's satire deals with
The professor's widowed sisthe problems the research physiter is played by Kmy Lou
cist finds when he is forced to
UK graduate student in
give up his private research in
order to erase a $200,000 debt. sociology. Doris Scripture is cast
as one of the professor's neighThe play has deliberate Faustian
traits in that the professor is bors who assumes the role of
the professor's mother.
expected to conform to the industry's "standards" before he
Sidney Lewis, a UK graduate
is hired.
student in Hospital Administra"Cello" opened in New York tion, plays the suitor of the
with Fred Clark in the lead. The professor's daughter, who is porshow toured with Hans Conrcid trayed by Miss Rae Hodgers.
portraying the professor.
"Cello's" director is Mrs.
The Carriage House producCharlene Butwell. Mrs. Butwell
tion puts John Landgrebe, UK has performed in "Mary, Mary"
graduate student in microbioland "Angel Street".
ogy, in the lead role. Landgrebe
has had previous theatrical exThe Carriage House Theater
perience in "Kismet" and is located just off Main St. on
Bell Ct. near the Episcopal
"Damn Yankees".
WLAP radio personality Jane Church of the Cood Shepherd.
Kirk plays the professor's wife. The 8 p.m. premier is the first
of fjve such performances Oct.
Miss Kirk has had extensive theater work in Huntington, VV. Va. 7, 8, 13, 14, and 15. Tickets are
$1.50 and may be reserved by
The industry representative is
calling
played by Richard Butwell, Director of the UK School of DiREAD THE KERNEL
plomacy. He was seen locally in
"Dear Me, the Sky is Falling"
CLASSIFIED COLUMN DAILY
and "Shot in the Dark."
Med-ma-

Ml

-

j

in,.

"Absence of a Cello," which opens Friday night
Richard
at the Carriage House Theater, stars
(1--

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r)

"""

Y

Butwcll, John Landgrcbe, Doris Scripture, and
Jane Kirk.

'Zhivago' Tells Of Revolution

By DICK KIMMINS
Kernel Arts Writer

But back to the movie. Robert
Bolt, who wrote the play "A
Man for All Seasons," wrote the
screenplay for "Zhivago." If anyone could adequately transform
g
Boris Pasternak's Nobel
book into a film script,
Bold could. His version is the
best job that possibly could have
been done in changing the poetry
and sheer magnificence of Pasternak's prose into a straight dialogue.

Mother always said 65,000
square feet of concrete can build
a good set but can't guarantee
a good movie. She was right,
but in "Doctor Zhivago," David
Lean has built stupendous sets
and managed to present us with
a startling account of the Russian Revolution that adds up to

Prize-winnin-

a very good epic movie.
The real value of "Zhivago"
lies not in the moral lassitudes
of a good doctor, but rather in
the excellent portrayal of a nation, the Russian nation, in a
time of internal turmoil. After
sitting through three hours of a
poignant mixture of snow and
despair, the viewer can realize
why the Russian people act like
they do.
When a nation is continually
subjugated, a rebellious instinct
becomes inherent. The militancy
and the distrust of anything foreign, which are traits prevalent
in the Russian heritage, are a
direct result of the treatment the
Russian people have received
from alien nations and most certainly from their own leaders.

Omar Sharif has worked with
Director Lean in one other film,
"Lawrence of Arabia." Lean
knows a good actor when he sees
one, and really picked a pro
when he chose Sharif to play
the title role. Sharif s change from
an elite doctor to a groveling
peasant is superb. Yet Zhivago
never seems to lose that poetic
emotionalism when he sees the
skt or touches a flower.
Geraldine Chaplin, as Zhiva-go'- s
wife back in Moscow, and
Julie Christie, as Zhivago's diversion during the Revolution, presents an endless conflict in Zhivago's mind between what is morally right and what is morally
wrong. Both girls play their parts
quite well. Charlie Chaplin's
daughter Geraldine makes an outstanding American screen debut
and Miss Christie clearly demonstrates her Academy Award winning acting talents.

'Broadside'
Released
Issues No. 1 and 2 of "Broadside," a new poetry sheet published in Lexington by the Helm
Press, are just out. Broadside
No. 1 contains poems by David

Ignatow (creative writing professor here last year) and Robert
Lima. Also published are John
Jones, Walter Brown, and Joe
Nickell, all UK students.
Broadside No. 2 publishes
Wendell Berry (poet, novelist,
and creative writing professor),
James Hartz, David Polk, a UK
student, and Ronald Long,
former UK student.
and
The poems are hand-se- t
on quality paper.
"Broadside" may be obtained
from Wallace's, Kennedy's, or
the English office inMcVey Hall.
hand-printe- d

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published five times 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, Nick Pope,
chairman, and Patricia Ann Nickell,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet in 1894, became the Record in 1900, and the Idea
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1915.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
$8.00
Yearly, by mail
Per copy, from files $.10
KERNEL. TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
2320
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News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
2321
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AdverUsing, Business, Circulation 2319

"Dr. Zhivago" is a notableex-ceptioto the regular repertoire
of costly, on location movies
Hollywood grinds out each year.
The magnificent scenery and the
cast of thousands only complement this gripping tale of a doctor
and his life shredded by circumstances beyond his imagination,
tion.
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� "That's Shownis: ' riiose Damned While

Standing On Principle
Hcprescntative Charles L. Welt-tier'- s stepped and softened his pitch,
decision to give up the Demo- and probably retained his seat.
cratic nomination for a third con- Hut Weltner never did identify
gressional term undoubtedly is dis- with the traditional mold of segappointing to many, hut it must regationist, and to do so now would
also he viewed as an admirable have been sheer hypocricy.
Compliance with the pledge to
move. The Atlanta lawyer has emsupport Maddox would have been
he will not comphasized that
promise his convictions for the an indelible strain on a previously
sake of position.
outstanding record. In a surprise
move two years ago, Weltner took
Weltner's announcement Monthe floor of the House to endorse
day explained he would rather
of Civil Rights legislation.
forfeit an opportunity to succeed passage
His vote for the 1964 measure was
himself for a third term in the
one of the few among Southerners
House than vote for Lester G.
supporting the bill. Now he has
Maddox, the hard-cor- e
Georgia voted for three consecutive Civil
segregationist who won the party
Rights Hills.
nomination for governor. Under a
Weltner also spearheaded the
Democratic party loyalty oath,
congressional investigation on the
Weltner would have been obliged Klu Klux
Klan, and he won wide
to vote for party nominees in the
support among college students
general election, including Madlast year for introducing a bill
e
restaurant owner which would have set the national
dox, the
who folded rather than serve
voting age at 18.
Negroes.
Weltner's
announcement
At a press conference Weltner brought a confusing rebuttal from
said, "Today, the one man in Maddox, who said, "The Demoour state who exists as the very cratic party is becoming more consymbol of violence and oppression servative by the hour." If anyis the Democratic nominee for the thing, Weltner's move and attitude
highest office in Georgia. His entire is many steps away from the
public career is directly contrary South's almost inevitable trend
to my deepest convictions and be- toward GOP conservatism.
liefs. And while I cannot violate
At the news of the candidate's
neither can I violate withdrawal, Speaker of the House
my oath,
John W. McCormack said, "Charlie
my principles."
bomb-she- ll
Weltner's
statement Weltner is one of the finest and
"I cannot compromise with bravest men I have ever met." We
added,
I cannot vote for Lester
hate
readily agree with the Speaker's
Maddox."
opinion, and sincerely hope that
There was an easier way out Weltner will again be given the
for Weltner. He could have back- - opportunity to serve.

Civil-Kiglitci-

V

'

one-tim-

...

Lexers To The Editor

A Note To Carl
Editor of the Kernel:
I would like to thank Carl
Seider for attempting to explain
my letter of September 20. HowTo the

ever, he seems to have read too
much into it. The letter was not
an attack on the contents of the
editorials and his letter, but rather,
an illumination of the irony of
the Kernel editor placing, on the
reverse of his editorial page, an
ad to be clipped from the paper-th- us
eliminating a third of the
editorial page.
After reviewing the articles
volved, I find that Mr. Seider is
hurting himself by opposing the
stadium move from Euclid Avenue.
As the Kernel stated on September 29, "That space is to be taken
up by a Fine Arts Building
This should interest Mr. Seider
since he is an art student.
in-

athletes and improve the products
of Kentucky high schools?
Concerning the SDS, I wonder
at their failure to request police
protection since they have met

opposition before.
I suggest that SDS make use of
the protectors of those same laws
that Mr. Seider so bountifully informed me were violated. That
job does belong to the police,
not the Kernel.
emotion-charge-

d

I would like to thank
Seider, in all sincerity, for
"setting the record straight." I
meant no personal injury to him
and I would take this opportunity
to apologize if such was incurred.
Thank you.

Finally,

Mr.

..."

Richard Lee Forston

Education Junior

Similar Problems At UI
University Trustee Theodore A.
Jones hit the nail on the head at
the last meeting of the Board of
Trustees when he suggested that
the University has an obligation
to recognize the problems of the

While a disadvantaged student may
have the capability to do well,
he does not have the background
that will enable him to use his

"disadvantaged" student.

capability.

Jones was not suggesting that
the University lower its admission
requirements for disadvantaged students, but he did recommend that
the University do something to
overcome the deficiencies of these
students which makes the success
of even the highly qualified doubtful.
Lowering admission requirements will not make it possible for
these students to have a better
chance of success at the University.
That is not the solution. It has already been shown that even qualified students that is students with
the potential capabilities to succeed-often
do not. It is not that
these students are unable to gain
admittance to the University, but
that once here they are unable to
succeed.

This problem has been recognized in Operation Head Start
which does not make things

As for satirizing

Coach Hrad-shaI think the Kernel should
support all the programs of the
University while still maintaining a critical attitude. Football
hasn't hurt Michigan State or
UCLA, so what makes the Kernel
think that emphasis of this sport
is going to destroy the educational
status of our own University? Just
what is wrong with enlisting supporters across the state to recruit

The Kentucky Kernel
ESTABLISHED 1894

The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

TUESDAY, OCT.

Walter

M.

Grant,

Terence Hunt, Executive Editor
Iohn Zeh, Associate Editor

Gene Clabes, Managing Editor

Judy Grisiiam, Associate Editor

Larry Fox, Daily News Editor
William Knaff,

4, 1966

Editor-in-Chi-

Frank Browning,

Phil Straw, Sports Editor

Business Manager

Associate Editor

Barry Cobb. Cartoonist
Ed Campbell, Circulation Manager

The problem seems to be one of

environment and background.

"easier" for the disadvantaged,
but instead theoretically helps
them catch up on the things that
they should learn in very early
childhood which might make it
impossible lor them to succeed.
In like manner, the University
is now in the process of doing
essentially the same thing in areas
of Chicago and Last St. Louis.
Programs designed to help students adjust to what the University will require is what Trustee
Jones and the University seem to
be after.
Such programs should be continued and expanded; the University should not be made solely responsible for aiding the disadvantaged just because they might
someday decide to enter it. The
responsibility lies also with the
schools in the state and other
agencies which are intended to
help these people.
A mere lowering of standards
is not the answer; it would only
make the problem worse. But the
University and Trustee Jones have
the answer; now to make it work.
The Daily lllini
University of Illinois

� Till;

FEDERAL GRANTS,
By FRANK BROWNING
Kernel Associate Fx! it or

eral fellowships

sities.

Tail Biting Circle
he and his colleague
presidents in discussion see the
dilemma as one in which rich,
Roth

research-activ- e

schools

awarded

are

or perhaps "re-w- a
rded" fu nd s beca u se of ' '
demonstrated potential."
Research is thereby concentrated in fewer and fewer schools
to the loss of the smaller strug- pre-vious- ly

Wliere Money Goes

tail-bitin-

Williams did not neglect the
impact which federal money can
have on determining an institution's goals. "Federal fellowship programs have surprisingly
few strings attached . . . yet . . .
it is just this federal aid that
determines more and more which
disciplines will develop strong
graduate programs in America."
"My point is here that the
shape of higher education in
America is being more and more
determined by agencies outside
the academic community, by
agencies whose first concern is
not, and cannot be, the overall

day.

According to Williams they
include:
1. The familiar complaint of
too much emphasis on graduate
training in the sciences.
"Certainly we need scientists;
but am not sure that so high
a proportion of our best young
minds should follow the lure of
fat fellowships into the sciences,"
Williams contends.

well-bein-

1

(sjRADE A

r

of the academic

g

Untapped Resou