xt7cnp1wh09t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7cnp1wh09t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1963-11-12  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November 12, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 12, 1963 1963 1963-11-12 2015 true xt7cnp1wh09t section xt7cnp1wh09t White House Reporter

To Speak At Coliseum
Merrlman Smith, chief
White House correspondent
for United Tress International,
lecturer and TV personality,

IL

will speak at 8:15 p.m. Tuesday at Memorial Coliseum
under the auspices of the
Central Kentucky Concert
and Lecture Association.
Smith has been White House
correspondent since UPI assigned him there in the period leading up to Pearl Harbor in 1941.
His reporting experience lias
covered such assignments as the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
President Roosevelt's death in
1945 at Warm Springs, Ga., and
the Paris Conference of 1!)C0.
Smith made all Eisehower foreign trips as chief White House
correspondent and is undertaking a similar assignment with
President Kennedy.
The newsman has written four
books about the presidency
"Thank You, Mr. President,"
"Meet Mr. Elsenhower," "A President Is Many Men," and "The
President's Odyssey."
Smith's articles appear in most
of the major magazines throughout America.

MERRIMAN SMITH

University of Kentucky
KY.,
903
NOV.

Vol. LV, No. 39

LEXINGTON,

tions that the University's
budget request for 1964-6would be large, Dr. John V.
Oswald said Thursday night
that UK "is on the verge of a
greater mission" than it has
previously undertaken.
6

Speaking to some 50 newsmen

at the

annual

dinner, the president said the
budget is the University's most
important document, because it
translates "needs into action by
way of dollars."
The budget will be presented
to the Board of Trustees when
that body meets Friday at 10 a.m.
The new budget, he said, will:
1. Reflect
5
the
percent
enrollment increase expected in
the next two years.
2. Provide for operating four
new community colleges at Somerset. Prestonsburg, Hopkinsville,
and Elizabethtown.
3. Place the faculty on an academic-year
pay schedule in

stead of a
plan.
4. Provide a new retirement
to replace the present
system
change-of-wor- k
status procedure.
5. Attempt to keep the salaries
of the faculty in line with the
average salaries at universities
near Kentucky.
Noting that he has detected a
"healthy ferment" at UK, Dr. Oswald said the University has provided good education for its first
98 years, but now it is ready for
regional and national status.
In discussing the four community colleges which will begin
he said
operation in 1304-6these colleges will provide terminal courses for students who
cannot, or do not want to, concourse.
tinue through a four-yeThey also will serve as a feeder
to the main campus.
system
After the talk, Dr. Oswald said
there are no immediate plans to
raise the minimum
entrance
standards for admission to the
main campus. At the present time
only graduation from an accredited high school is needed for the
admission of state residents.
Having a community college
nearby is equivalent to giving a
student a $1,000 scholarship each
year, the president said. The student saves that much in room
and board costs by living at
home.
In discussing the salaries of
faculty members, Dr. Oswald said
the University is aiming for the
average salaries of the universi

12,

1

Eight Page

Chemistry-Physic- s

Building
Evacuated In Bomb Scare
By GARY IIAWKSWORTII

Kernel Staff Writer
A crank bomb scare caused
Universityauthoritics to evac-

uate the Chemistry-Physic- s
Building for nearly
hours yesterday.

three

Lexington police, firemen, and
maintenance and operations personnel searched the building for
a bomb reported by phone, from
an anonymous source. A search

Oswald Hints At Larger Budget,
Predicts UK's 'Greater Mission'
By CARL MODECKI
Kernel Campus Editor
Giving some early indica-

TUESDAY,

ties with whom UK is in competition. Purdue, Minnesota, West
Virginia, and Tennessee were
among the schools he mentioned.
For the first time the budget
will be presented for the entire
University in one sum. "I am determined that the - budget will
go in as a single voice," he said,
"not as separate ones for the
Medical Center, agriculture, and
so forth."

which lasted from 10:30 a.m. until 1 p.m. revealed no bomb.
Elgan B. Farris, head of Maintenance and Operations, gave the
order to evacuate the building
after being notified of a threatening telephone call received by
a University operator.
"Maintenance and Operations
was notified at 10:13 a.m. by the
telephone operator who received
the call," said Clyde Lilly, administrative director of Maintenance
and Operations, "and Mr. Farris
notified the department heads in
the building; the city police and
fire department, and the campus
police and maintenance and operations personnel."
Dr. Lyle R. Dawson, chairman
of the Department of Chemistry,
said he announced on the intercom system that classes be dismissed. Students
immediately
left the building.
"The building was cleared with
calm and precision," said Dr.
was
"The
Dawson.
building
searched by policemen and firemen."
"We have been able to determine ihat the crank call came
through on a city line," Mr. Lilly
said. The operator said the

Stadium Seating Changed
For Tennessee Game
Three changes in student seating for the Tennessee game have
been announced by Student Congress president, Paul Chellgren.
The three changes are
1. Students
will be allowed to
go up any ramp to get to their
seats. This will alleviate the long
lines.
2. Tickets will be handed out
in different order. The first group
of tickets given out will be those
for seats in the first 35 rows
of Section C. Next will be the
tickets for the first 35 rows of
Section B. The third group of
tickets will be those for the rest
of Section C. The fourth group
will be the rest of Section B.
And the last group will be all of
Section A.
3. When any organized group

goes to the game they must enter
the same entrance. The first per-

in the group will tell the ticattendant how many are in
or her group. If the attendhas enough tickets to seat
the group together he will give
them out. If not, he will get
them. Hence, the whole group
can sit together.
son
ket
his
ant

prankster sounded like a young
boy and that he had said there

was a bomb In the Chemistry-riiysi- cs
Building and then hunj-u- p,
Mr. Lilly explained.
Mr. Lilly admitted earlier in
the day that the bomb scare was
probably a prank but added. "Wa
have to take every precaution in
a matter like this."
Dr. Dawson suggested that a
reward be offered for the capture of the prankster. "When you
consider the time and money lost
in this action, it has to be considered a major crime," he commented.
Dr. F. L. Yost, chairman of the
Department of Physics, said, "I
Just hope they catch the half-w- it
who made the call."
At 1 p.m. the authorities allowed the building to be opened for
regular classes.

Kittens Claw
Vols

70-0!- !

When they grow up . , .
Kentucky's Kittens went
over, under, around, and
through the Tennessee Vols
yesterday and went on to
make shambles of the Baby
Vols by a 70-score.
Frank Antonini, who was pre0

sented the Hierst valuable player
award after the game, led th9
jolting offensive barrage by crossing the goal line four times and
added two extra points for 23
total.
Antonini had plenty of contention for his stellar award, though.
210 pound halfback
The
Continued on Page 7

YWCA Speaker Says
Sex Becoming Pastime
By MELINDA MANNING
Kernel Staff Writer
"Not only is sex here to stay, but it is fast becoming

the

great American pastime," the Rev. Donald B. Clapp, Rector
of St. Stephen Episcopal Church in Columbus, Ohio, said
Saturday addressing the YWCA seminar, "Focus on Sex."
A chaplain at Ohio State Uni- biol-

worked his way
by being a jazz
pianist, he is the author of "The
Sex Scramble on Campus."
The balding minister refused to
preach to his audience and said,
"You don't want to here one
more preacher say this is right
or this is wrong. You have to
decide for yourself and believe it.
You have to learn for yourself
the responsibility of love."
Well acquainted with the many
problems facing college students,
the importance of
he stres.-e- d
dealing with sex openly.
"If you do not deal with it
afopenly, it will uncoiiseiou-l- y
fect your motivations and overt
actions in the most subtle manner," he said.
Discussing the views of several
Dr.
outstanding
psychologists,
Clapp said, "Sex hasn't been in
the cellar since Freud."
"Reaching the achievement of
intimacy stage in your development is as important to you as
getting a college degree," he
added.
He said that formal sex education Is important, but not enough.
versity

who

through college

tlVf'V

iff

h";3'',VH

The Rev. Donald B. C lapp, principal speaker at the
YWCA seminar, "Focus on Sex," discusses some
points of his address with some of the seminar

--

v

W

ty

'!

representatives. A chaplain at Ohio State University, Dr. Clapp spoke frankly on many aspects of
sex iu the Saturday meeting.

"The facts of life from a
ogy course do not explain the
feelings of arousal," he said,
"Cold facts give you no foundation to work by, and don't answer
the question 'How far do we go?' "
His morning address included
a 10 minute history of morality
from Plato to "Playboy Magazine," which he described as
"Puritanism in reverse."
Dr. Clapp said he has observed
that the traditional double standard is becoming a transitional
double standard and young people t.iday aren't sure which to
accept.
According to the speaker, the
double standard used to mean,
"Some boys do: nice girls don't.'
Now it reads "Most boys da; nice
girls don't unless they're in loe."
After lit s m;r:ii::g address tha
40 students attending the
divided into discussion t'ou;.
Some of the topics brought up
by the discussion groups that tha
Kev. Clapp discussed later in the
afternoon were routine sex,
dating, premarital intercourse, and French kis-JnThe seminar was sponsored, by
the University YWCA.

� 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov.

12, IOf.3

Roosevelt To Discuss
Economic Development
The role of the development of Kentucky in the nation's
economic picture will he the theme of an address by Underdur-in- n
secretary of Commerce Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., today
Kentucky Development Day.

V-

-

7
What Finesse!

Winners in the Zeta Beta Tau Bridge Tournament
held Saturday were: sorority division, Tri-De- lt
with Ann Duggins and Ann Nichols as players,

fraternity division, Sigma Phi Epsilon with

Al Hern

and Ron Maturani playing. Kappa Kappa Gamma
took second place.

UK Visitation Program To Inform

High School Students About College
The University's Visitation
Program begins this week its
fourth year of programs designed to present to current
high school seniors information about all aspects of a
college education.
Two teams of leading UK administrators and faculty members will present programs this
week and next week at 16 centralized locations throughout the

state.

Student Congress

The first meeting of the newly elected Student Congress will
be held at 7 p.m. today in the
Student Center Theater.
Kon Nickel),
acting
president, will call the meeting
to order. Dave Graham will install the new officers. For the
most part of the meet in? will
consist of committee and parliamentarian appointments, Faul
said.
Chellgren, president-elec- t

Piano Teachers
To Hear Speaker

Mrs. Mary Jarmin Nelson, visiting professor of music education, was featured at a workshop for private piano teachers
at 8 p.m. Monday in the Musij
Lounoe of the F'ine Arts Building.
The event was sponsored by the
University's Division of Extended
Programs and the Department of
Music.
A former faculty member of
the University of Michigan, University of Maryland, and Rollins
College, Mrs. Nelson has directed
the Music Education Institute at
the National Music Camp at
Mich., for the past
eight years.
A .specialist in elementary and
class piano areas, her Monday
workshop was especially devoted
to problems of younger piano
students.
All piano teachers in Lexington and the surrounding areas
were invited to attend.

Some 3,000 Kentuckians are expected to attend the programs
which include a brief talk by
one of the team members, a
period, and an
informal social hour.
Each team will be made up of
about eight representatives of the
University's faculty and staff,
each an authority on some aspect
of college life.
Some of the members, including Dr. Doris Seward, dean of
women. Dr. Bert Ockerman, director of school relations, and
Miss Helen King, director of
alumni affairs, have been with
the program since its inception.

era Workshop

To Act Scenes
From . Operas

Scenes from theree operas will
be presented by the Opora Workshop at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in the Lab Theater of the
Fine Arts Building.
All roles will be sung by students under the direction Of Miss
Phyllis Jenness, associate professor of music.
A scene from the opera "Fal-staff- ,"
by Guiseppe Verdi, will be
sung by Dianne Davidson, Lexington; Barbara Dean, Manhas-se- t.
N.Y.; Pat Htegins, Hopkins-vill- e;
and Celia Butler, Parkers-bur'!- :.
W. Va.

The final act of "Carmen" by
Georges Bi7et will be presented
by Jan Maddox, Mayfield; and
Mike Sells, Valley Station.
Anna Laura Hood, Louisville,
Will be piani t for b:tth scenes.
The second act of Mozart's
"The Marriage of Figaro" will be
e;
sung by Patricia Bracken,
Dianne Davidson, Steve
Atkinson, Ewing; Judith Warren,
Alliance, Ohio; Stanly Carter,
Lexington; Ivan Bradloy, Ashland; Celia Butler, Ernest Teti-ricBellevue; Ohio; and Wayne
Kirk, Nicholasville.
Ruby Hatch, Lexington, will be
the pianist.
The production is open to the
public without charge.

Dollys SpO
Your
Neighborhood

Hardware
UPPER
AND
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JOHNSON'S
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CAR POLISH

Washes, Deep Cleans, as it Polishes
Now $1.38
Reg. $1.85

They rover such topics as financial assistance and specific
costs of higher education, academic requirements and expectations, housing, admissions procedures, and student services.
Each program is open to the
public, but high school seniors
rind their parents, teachers, and
counselors are particularly
to attend.

Music Teachers
To Convene Here
Nov. 16 To 19
A panel of nursing leaders
will discuss the relationship of
nursing services to nursing education at a University of
Kentucky College of Nursing
lecture tomorrow.

The program will be the seva series of monthly lectures sponsored by the college.
The series is designed to define
nursing's challenge in a changing society.
Participants in the panel
be Miss Lynda
will
Bishop, associate director of nursing services. University Hospital;
Dr. May Sanders, assistant dean
in the College of Nursing; Miss
Greta Fraser, director of continuing education in the col'.ese,
who will be moderator.
Mrs. Nancy Blakeman. director of nursing at Good Samaritan Hospital, Lexington; Miss
Dolores lliggins, administrator of
the nursing program at the UK
Northwest Center, Henderson,
and Mrs. Bess Witt, assistant director of the Public Health Nursing Division of the State Department of Health.
The lecture, open to the public, will be at 7:30 p.m. in University Hospital Auditorium.

enth in

1963 Austin Healey
Sprite, like new

The address will be given dur
ing a 1 p.m. luncheon in the Ballroom of the Student Center. Gov.
Bert T. Combs, chairman of the
UK Board of Trustees, will speaic
briefly and will introduce Roosevelt. Master of ceremonies will
be
Harry Carloss, Lexington,
president of the Kentucky Council for Community and Area Development which is
the event with the UK Bureau of
Community Service.
Speakers during the morning
session, beginning at 9:43 a.m.,
will be Thomas N. WatUins, Louisville, director of research and
industrial development of the
of ComChamber
Kentucky
merce; Charlie Dixon, Lexington, Secretary of the Kentucky
Development Committee.
Mrs. Ernestine Dickerson,
Sandy Hook, vice chairman of
Area Rural
the Northeastern
Community Development Assocand Howard Colyer, Rich- iation;

Tivo Speeches
Given At UK
To Be Printed
Two speeches given the University by James E. Russell, Secretary of Educational Policies of
the National Education Assn.,
are in the process of being
printed.
The speeches, "The Central
Purpose of Education," and "Responses in Elementary and Secondary Education" were given
here July 30 and 31. The printed
forms will be made avaialble to
students and other interested
parties.
The author does research as
part of his Job for the National
Education Assn. (NEA). This orin the
ganization, continually
process of reviewing the progress
of educational policies, is the
largest education association in
the world.

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FOR SALE 1950 Plymouth,
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cheap. Good for around town.
Leave note in box 4482, McVey
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Hall or call
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Nov.
RAINCOAT EXCHANGE
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Will person taking
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mond, chairman of the Foothills
Area Development Council. Dr.
A. Lee Coleman, bureau director,
w ill preside.
During the 11:15 a.m.-12:p.m. session reports will be presented by persons representing
the small community, town, county and area development approaches. The speakers will represent Munfordvllle, Middlesboro,
Carter County, and the Upper
Development
Kentucky Area area
Council. Films on
development will be shown at the same
time in the Student Center
theater. Both programs will ba
repeated from 2:30 to 4 p.m.

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� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov.

in

I

12,

I.J-- 3

I

Women's

4
Hi'

i

D

rage

VTvt
I

v

rr

-

:

Meetings

Heme Fconomirs
Tlic Home Economics Club will
nitot at fi:30 p.m. today In Erik-h- :i
Hall Lounge. All frc.hii.'iiri
jJcji.'-come at (i p.m. to
incmbcr.'-liircciuii cnicnts.
Sprech and Hrarinp
TIip speocli and Hearing Club
Will n.cct at 6:30 p.m. today hi
Iloom 309 of the Student. Cenur.
A panel will dicus stuttering.
Trouprrs
Troupers will hold a business
meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in
Room 107 of Alumni Gym.
SuKy
SuKy will meet at 6:30 p.m. .toin the SuKy Room of the
day
Coliseum. There will be a tryout.

The Gift That Onhj
You Can Givel
Your Portrait by
Curtis Wainscott

While The Cat's Were Aivay The Students Did Play!

The excitement of partying on fraternity row was heightened with
an incident of hubcap stealing Saturday night but this didn't slow
any of the festivities. At the Pike House weird costumes were the
order of the day as everyone came in costumes for the "OutT- limits." VVilma Brandenburg and Wayne Gregory carried the theme
through much to the disapproval of Pikey. Seems that Wayne had

Public Institutes
Kentucky's six public institutions of higher education the
University of Kentucky and five
Etate colleges are anticipating
2,409 more students
than last
fall enrollyear's record-hig- h
ment of 29,191.

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FiUey's leash around his neck.. At the other end of the row, Polynesia
reigned supreme at the Lambda Chi House. The Hawaiian Lei party
was termed a real success with island gods, lotus blossoms, and a
pool complete with fish and waterfall. Merry Werner looks on as Dave
Irvin tries, in true island style, to spear a fish,

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AND LIVES AND BREATHES...
Progress takes many shapes in the Bell System. And among
the shapers are young men, not unlike yourself, impatient
to make things happen for their companies and themselves.
There are few places where such restlessness is more welcomed or rewarded than in the
phone business.
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� Male Dress Needs

The Kentucky Kernel

Improvement Too

Entered t the pout offk- at Lexfnfrton, Krnhickv us iwond clui matter undi the Act of March 8, 187.
Published four timet a week during the regular liool year except during holiday and cum.
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Last week we criticized tlie women
on the campus for the sloppy way
in which they appeared in public.
Some people have taken this to mean
that the men at the University are
'"perfect" in their attire. However, this
js definitely not the case.
Thanks are in order to the weatherman who has seen fit to make it
cool enough in Lexington so that men
lire forced to wear shirts instead of
running around campus in their
And, at least when a coed wears a
Sweatshirt it's clean. The men on the
campus don't seem to care where they
are seen in dirty sweatshirts with the
sleeves cut out and left to ravel.
Bluejeans, cutoffs, and bermudas
might be all right for sitting around
in a dormitory room or apartment or
tinkering with the car. However, we
hardly think they are proper attire
lor strolling on the campus, attending classes, or going to the library.
The worst, however, is seeing a
male student dressed like this waiting
lor a coed in the lobby of a women's

University of Kentucky
The South's Outstanding College Daily

residence hall. A woman would have
to be crazy to go somewhere with a
fellow who looked like this.
While these last two points may
seem insignificant, we feel that wearing socks and a daily appointment
with a razor would also help the appearance of the male population at
the University.
Surprisingly enough, a great many
of the men who dress this way are
nearing graduation. We wonder what
a perspective employer would say if
he saw any of these fellows in this
attire. It probably wouldn't be too
complimentary.
A few years ago, the majority of
the men on this campus wore jackets
and ties every day. While we do not
believe that this is necessary, we do
feel that slacks and a sports shirt
should be considered proper dress.
The current mode of dress is disgraceful to the campus.

Sue Endicott, Editor

Daily Editors:

Elizabeth Ward, WnxiAM Chant, Richard Stevenson, and John Townsend

Carl

Modecki, Campus Editor

Tom Fowie, Circulation Manager
John Bcrkhard, Advertising Manager
of Sports
Jerry Schureman and Walter Facan,
John Pfeiftw, Arts Editor
Nancy Louchridce, Women's rage Editor
Phones: News, extensions 2285 and 2302; Advertising and Circulation. 2306

Campus Parable
Polyphemus
d
giant of
Polyphemus, the
Creek mythology, is still with us! In
the realms of science and imagination,
fact and faith, reason and emotion,
we tend to line up on one side or
the other, to be
giants. But
just as we need two eyes to perceive
depth, so we need both realms-scie- nce
and religion, faith and reason.
Man is both an ingenious assemblage
of portable plumbing and the bearer
of the divine image.
Einstein once wrote:
one-eye-

one-eye- d

Letters To The Editor
Gentlemen Gone
To The Editor:
Where have all the "gentlemen'
gone? Too far away, I'd say, and many
of my fellow females might say the
same. I am referring to the article
"Where Have All the 'Ladies' Gone?"
published in the Nov. 5 edition of the
Kernel.
We girls are criticized for wearing
cutoffs and sweatshirts turned
de-out.
Has anyone noticed that
members of the male sex wear their
cutoffs and sweatshirts,
without
insi-

David Hawpe, Managing Editor

sleeves yet! We are merely, "following the current style." I can't imagine
anything worse than a boy walking
around campus in blue jeans, dirty
sweatshirts, and unshaven.
Where have all the "gentlemen"
gone?

Jane Daucherty
President Breckinridge Hall
Arts & Sciences Sophomore
(Editor's Note: Today's editorial
criticizes male dress habits at the University. We by no means feel that
the men on this campus dress like
"gentlemen.")

"The fairest thing we can experience is the mysterous. It is the
fundamental emotion which
stands at the cradle of true art
and true science.- He who knows
it not and can no longer wonder,
no longer feel amazement, is as
good as dead, a snuffed-ou- t
candle."
He wrote that neither as a scientist nor as a poet, but as both. He
wrote it as a
man, perceiving depth. That made him a better
man than rolypheum. The distinction
between scientific method and religious imagination is one of attitude.
Both attitudes can appear in the same
person and this is no less strange
than having two eyes.
John R. King
Presbyterian Chaplain
two-eye- d

Kernels
to our
children is to prepare them to understand and to deal effectively with the
world in which they will live and
not with the world we have known
or tlit: world we would prefer to have.
Grayson Kirk

Our greatest obligation

Meekness is not weakness.
William Burney Benham

'Hourglass' Describes Civil Rights

(Editor's Note: The following article was written by Robert E. Steb-tinassistant professor of history at
Eastern Kentucky State College. It appears in the Eastern Progress.)
Everyone knows about the hourglass figure. A discussion of the meaning of civil rights might be seen in the
"figure of the hourglass." Starting with
the board base of rights in general,
corresponding to one broad end of the
hourglass, the discussion might move
successively to the slightly narrower
idea of civil rights, then to the narrow middle section of the Civil Rights
legislation in 19th Century America.
From this narrow waist of the
liourglass the discussion could broaden
again to the question of civil rights
lor minority groups in the United
States in the last thirty years. The
figure of the hourglass would be completed by the broadest conception of
rights in general about which the
minority groups and others in this
country stem increasingly to be concerned.
We may start with the broad base
t;f rights in themselves. For if there
were not rights in general, there could
be no point in considering the idea of
civil rights. Presumably, if there were
only one human being in the universe
theje would be no question of "rights"
everything would be 'his' to do with
as he w ished.
The question of 'rights' comes up
there are external circumonly wla-stances or other persons which might
limit the absolute freedom of action
end possession of that one imaginary
s,

person. In a sense, then, rights' result
from limiting the degree to which one
person or group of people can limit
others.
A dictionary definition of rights
often includes a phrase indicating that
a right is "that to which one has a just
claim. That is, a right is something
that no person and no society can
legitimately or justly deny. Many discussions of rights have been based on
the acceptance or rejection of the idea
that "might makes right." Generally
modern democratic societies have
tended to say that it is something
other than might or power which
makes right. They argue that there is
some ideal or Ideal that makes 'rights'
good and valid even without might.
There can be little explanation and
proof of why there should be any
such rights; men are simply forced to
affirm them, and societies find that
they cannot prosper without them.
The Declaration of Independence
shows this very clearly: "We hold
these truths to be
that all
men are created equal; that they are
endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable rights; that among these,
are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness."
The Declaration of Independence
wisely refused to say that such truths
and rights were
it only
said that those who united in making
the Declaration held them to be
t,

t;

The Declaration of Independence
went on to say that it was to protect
such rights "that governments are in

stituted among them." This is the
origin of civil rights in our country in
Laws declare certain things to be
the rights of men and attempt to set
up the conditions which will guarantee those rights. Civil rights, in other
words, are those rights which the
laws set up or recognize and attempt
to protect for a given group of people
as for a nation or part of a nation.
Since the general civil rights under
the Constitution and the laws of the
land had not been conceived as extending to the slaves, and since political and legal rights were not universally and automatically granted to
the former slaves, the Congress passed
laws in 1866, 1870, and 1875, known
as the Civil Rights Acts, attempting to
extend at least legal and political
rights to the Negroes.
From these specific Civil Rights
Acts, which may be considered the
narrowest part of the 'rights hourglass,' the conception of civil rights
has broadened to the attempt to include more and more rights for minorities under the protection of the law.
As was noted from the beginning,
civil rights were established at first
in order to assure that some natural
rights would be held inviolate for
some people.
In the last twenty or thirty years
there has been an increasing recognition that the laws in general did not
guarantee the same kinds of rights for
all people and especially not for some
minority groups. A concern for the expansion of civil rights began to grow.
This is generally the meaning applied

Sir

to 'civil rights' today. It represents
a considerable broadening of the concept of rights as declared in the Civil
Rights Acts, and a more expansive
interpretation of the guarantees added
by Constitutional amendments.
The final broadening of the rights
hourglass seems to be the growing
concern for rights as such for minority groups, and going even beyond the
sort of rights that can be minutely
prescribed by legal or civil means.
This broad end of the 'rights hourglass' is very much like the other
broad end of the hourglass in seeking rights (this time for the minority
groups specifically in addition to
rights for people in general ) as "something that no person and no society
can legitimately or justly deny."
It would seem that the discussion
of the 'rights hourglass ends in a
circle. It leads back to the question cf
rights in general. Conceptions of
rights and civil rights have been
changing in recent years.
The fact that the Declaration cf
Independence spoke of "all men" has
been interpreted in many different
ways. The interpretations given by
some have been causes for consternation by others. The interpretations
given by others have exceedingly displeased some.
The questions of rights and civil
rights have become among the most
hotly debated in our day, and those
who argue on each side are looking
increasingly at the hourglass of time
as well as the 'rights hourglass.'
their broadest sense.
,

� THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov.
iTlie

13-- S

Campus Squabbles Continue

'

The University of Miami Student Publications Board dismissed the editor of Its student newspaper,

25,

The

Hurricane,

October

but denied that this was due

to a controversial editorial urging
greater participation of Negro
students in campus activities,
which had appeared the week
University of Miami Vice Presi-

dent and Chairman of Publications Board, H. Franklin Williams, said Monday night that
there is a requirement that student editors carry a full class
load and that editor Elayne Gilbert fell below that standard.
"It Is not true that Miss Gilbert was taken to task for the

'

12,

National Scene

editorial she wrote. The University extends a great deal of freedom