xt7cz892bp11 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dipstest/xt7cz892bp11/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 1966-11-22  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 22, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 22, 1966 1966 1966-11-22 2015 true xt7cz892bp11 section xt7cz892bp11 UK students

Inside Todays Kernel
yearn tor their natire
they can never return:

Three years have passed since the assassination of President Kennedy but
the doubts still linger: Poge Five.

Most UK facilities will close for
Thanksgiving but offices will be open
Friday: Poge Three.

The football team, amid tossed salad
and trophies, is honored: Page Six.

China but
Page Two.

Editorial discusses quality vs. quantity in American education:
Poge

The governor's race continues to heot
up and it looks like a Nunn-Coobattle in the GOP primary: Page

Four.

Seven.

TT

k

Vol. 58, No. 59

J

University of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, NOV. 22,

I'M.ii

Eight Pilots

Faculty Soon Will Get
Campus Justice Report
sented for approval to the Faculty
Senate in January, and if passed,
will move to UK President John
VV. Oswald and the Board of
Trustees.
If the Board adopts the redent and his relationship to the
port, UK will become one of
University.
the few universities to have a
The report, now in its final formalized statement of disciplindraft, will suggest the Univerary boundaries and procedures,
sity adopt for the first time
said.
a clear definition of the rights, Flickinger
powers, and duties of its stuImplementation of the committee's suggestion would
dents, faculty, and administration in matters of discipline. "make it easier for the adminVV. Carrett
Flickinger, chairistration, faculty, and students
man of the Senate Advisory Com- (to handle disciplinary problems)
mittee for Student Affairs, said by defining very clearly, succinctthe report will officially be pre
ly, what are the offenses and pro- By TERENCE HUNT
Kernel Excutive Editor
Sometime in December the
faculty will receive a University
Senate Committee's report outlining a new concept of the stu-

Pastor Asked To Resign
Because Of Civil Rights

cedures," the associate professor of law added.
The committee's report, if endorsed, would replace the single
sweeping University statement
governing student discipline,
which says:
"In issuing rules for the regulation of the affairs of the University and the government of
its students, it is not deemed
necessary to set out details. The
University expects all students
to hold to the strictest standards
of honesty and to conduct themselves in a seemly manner, bearing in mind that their conduct
determines in a large measure
their reputation and that of the
institution."
While specifics of the report
will not be released until the
faculty has the final report, Flickinger said the proposal is amove
away from the old "in loco parentis" concept of
relationships.
Last year Vice President for
Student Affairs Robert Johnson
told the Kernel, "We now operate quite clearly under the
"in loco parentis" concept. But
I think we will become increasingly restrictive in our jurisdiction to that which takes placeon
campus and in University-ownestructures."
The report seems to be a
move in that direction.
Flickinger said the committee
adopted a number of policy statements before drafting the specifics of the proposal. "The committee started out with the policy
that only that misconduct by a
student which directly affects
the classroom action, the rights
of other members of the

CBS News In Action
Ben Silver, a CBS reporter, talks with Dr. Earl Kauffman, director
of the Donovan Scholar Program, in front of Miller Hall. A CBS
team has been on campus filming a story about the program for
use on a future CBS Saturday Evening News.

student-Universit- y

(c) New York Times News Service

Pa. -- The pastor of the fashionable Swarth-mor- e
Church has been asked to resign because of
Presbyterian
civil rights activity and failure to preach more sermons on "peace
SWARTHMORE,

of mind" and the "joy of salvation."
He is the Rev. Dr. Evor Hons two vears aeo and reminded
his parishioners that he told them
clergyman
Roberts, a
who has been pastor of the church from the pulpit what he was
for the last eight years. Roberts doing and why.
had engaged in picketing during
He told the congregation that
racial demonstrations in nearby he had not yet resigned, but was
Chester and had participated in accepting the committee's recomthe Montgomery, Ala., civil rights mendations and would seek a
march last spring.
new call.
He was asked to resign by a
Swarthmore is a
Special Counseling Committee community in the western subset up with the aid of the Philaurbs of Philadelphia.
A minister in the Presbyterian
delphia Presbytery.
The committee was named Church cannot be dismissed by
eight months ago at the joint the congregation, only by the
request of Roberts and the Church vote of the Presbytery, the deSession, its governing body of nomination's area governing
ruling elders. At that time the unit.
Session had questioned the effects of the minister's civil rights
activities on church membership
and congregational contributions. Similar problems have
arisen in a number of Protestant
churches in both the North and
the South.
The committee's report, made
Anthropology Chairman Dr. Henry Dobpublic at Sunday's service, said bins told the Kernel Monday a high number
in part:
of student complaints over one of his de"If Dr. Roberts had balanced partment's freshmen courses has caused conhis sermons by more frequent cern and some
investigation into that course's
references to peace of mind, the content.
joy of salvation, the love of God,
The course, Physical Anthropology 100,
the therapy of faith . . . many of
assistant professor
would have been taught by a
the problems
been the brunt
minimized and never have arisen Dr. Neal Eddiugton has
of numerous student complaints, especially
surface of the relationto the
following a midtenn failure rate of over
ship between pastor and people." 65
percent of the class's students.
said it
committee
The
Eddington teaches two sections of the
wondered "to what extent if at
would have course.
difficulties
According to Dobbins, who also is in
arisen, had not the moderator
and personal his first year at the University, complainby spoken word
action taken a strong stand on ing students approached Arts and Sciences
Associate Dean Herbert Drennen. The subthe civil rights issue."
stance and degree of the complaints were
Roberts said he was "deeply
distressed" that the problem had then passed on to the Anthropology Denot been solved "without a tearpartment.
of
Complaints made by students-soing of the fabric of the congrelife."
them honors students about the class ingation's
At Sunday's service he said he
cluded alleged unfair assignment of a paper
with sexual
had asked himself "if you think in one section,
that I have been a faithless matters in lectures in both classes, and a
have
shepherd to you, that
charge that the course is not being taught
not cared for you or about you,
at the freshman level.
that 1 have been lured away to
Dobbins admitted receiving those comother interests, other causes."
plaints in addition to others he would not
He referred to his participamention. He confirmed that greater than
tion in the Chester demonstrawell-to-d- o

d

Univer-Continue-

on Page

3

d

Shively Queries NCAA
About Swim Recruiting
By DARRELL

CHRISTIAN

Kernel Staff Writer
University athletic officials have asked the National Collegiate
Athletic Association if swimming coach Wynn Paul is in violation
of a recruiting regulation by also coaching the Greater Lexington
Swim Association.
student-athleteres
Athletic
Bernie prospective
Director
veal demonstrate, or display their
inShively requested Tuesday an
of the
terpretation of Section three of ability in any branch

the NCAA regulations which
deals with recruiting, the section says:
"No member institution shall,
on its campus or elsewhere, conduct or have conducted in its
behalf any athletic practice session or test at which one or more

sport."
Paul was manager of the
Greater Lexington Swim Associ-tiobefore he became coach of
the UK swimming team in a part
team, he has swimmers from
to high school age
n

Continued on Page

3

Anthropology Department Is Investigating
Course After 65 Percent Flunk At Midterm

first-ye-

all-th-

ese

me

over-concer-

1

n

percent of the students in Eddington s
two freshmen classes had failed at midterm.
"It is a question of the quality of teaching in the classroom about which the Anthropology Department is concerned.
"No hard and fast decisions on any part
of the action have been made," he said.
Dobbins explained he does not consider
the matter a question of academic freedom
in regard to evaluating and reviewing Eddington' s work in class.
"The classroom is to be an area for the
freedom of discussion for faculty and students. Everything is still so," Dobbins said.
The anthropology chairman sees the issue
as a matter of responsibility to all those
concerned with the operation of a state
university, including students, faculty, administrators of the University and of the state,
and finally to the taxpayers who support
the institution' as regards the quality of
education offered.
63

"The prime mission (of the University)
is to educate the students and in that context any member of the University faculty
who may be charged witli administrative
responsibility . . . must be concerned with
the quality of classroom education.
"Does this catchword academic freedom'
mean freedom from responsibility to the

taxpayers, the parents, the students, and
the University administrators? Does it mean
license, freedom to ignore this responsibility
to all these people?" he said.

"If your Univ ersity instructor is educating
his students within a pertinent discipline,
certainly academic freedom is meaningful
in terms of research activity within his discipline; it is meaningful in terms of the
information he offers his students within
his discipline.
"The Anthropology Department is concerned with the whole matter and would
not define it as a matter of academic freedom," he said.
Dobbins said all decision-makinregarding the case is being done entirely within
the department and that there had been
no outside administrative intervention into
g

it.

"This department is tremendously
as a result of student concern which
has been voiced," Dobbins explained.
Eddington said he has no public statement about the issue yet but that he would
have one in the near future.
Eddington came to UK from the Berkeley
campus of the University of California on a
r
contract. Dobbins said his contract
is and would remain fully intact unless
Eddington chose to alter it.
coiv-cernc- d

one-yea-

� 2

--

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Nov.

22, l!Mi(i.

UK Students Still Yearn For Native China
churian government belonged to
Japan.
When the Japanese were defeated, he says, "China's government was supposed to take
over, but the Russians didn't
let us in and so Mao's men
came in to take it."

Dy FRANK DROWNING

Kernel Associate Editor
WeichenTien will always stay
Chinese.
Rut like his wife Janet and
a friend, George Kung, there is
little hope he can ever return
to the China mainland4 where
his father once worked as a government official.
Tien and Kung are both working for doctoral degrees at the
University.
Nothing is really unique about
their situation. All their families
worked in President Chiang-Ka- i
Shek's government, Janet's father
as a diplomat and Kung's a

WW

1

banker.
In fact all three men work
in the same relative positions
today on Taiwan, but far less
pay and in a far more cramped
habitat than before.
Only there is something more
than the typical misplaced refugee story to what these people

They seized 100,000 pieces of
military equipment for use among
individual soldiers, Tien said.
"It was no more than four
years later when we lost a war.
That was 1949," he added.
Tien describes the scenes in
defeated China as much like those
portrayed of the. Russian Revolution in the motion picture,
"Doctor Zhivago" long lines of

people waiting and running to

WEICHEN TIEN
a strong China better able to
feed its people now than at any
point in 30 years has emerged.
And frankly they are proud,
glad, happy for their people.
say. Perhaps it is a mark of
"Many people are not for Mao,
the Chinese outlook today.
but they're glad China's strong,"
While the reason each escaped Janet explained.
was for freedom freedom of
Kung gives the Red Chinese
mind and idea they do not deny government credit for a real concern for the Chinese people, adding that from information he has

gleaned, they are generally well
fed now.
By the late 1940's the people
no longer had faith in Chiang's
Joseph Binford, candidate for
Doctor of Philosophy degree, will promises, Kung explains, for a
take his final oral examination at war had been fought for eight
7 p.m., Nov. 28, in Room 112, years against the Japanese on
Frazee Hall. The title of his the old leader's promises.
When Chiang, due to the
dissertation is "The Politics of
ravages of the war, was unable
Horace Walpole." Faculty mem- to fulfill the
promises, the people
bers and the student body are "chose
the rising
welcome to attend.
Red
leader who could

Bulletin Board

Mao-Tse-Tun-g,

Chinese

offer better promises.
The YMCA will hold an Open
"It was exactly the same way
House on Nov. 30 and Dec. 1 it is in Vietnam right now,"
from 6 p.m. in Room 245 of Janet says in recalling the
the Student Center. Slides, dis- Communist take over and propplays, and registration informa- aganda spread to accomplish its
tion will be presented for next success.

hop trains to freedom.
"That's how it was in China
except worse." Tien recalled.
His wife added, "All we remember is war after war, burning

after burning, running after

runn-ing- ."

Her family left to go to India
in 1949, Janet recalls, but at
the time she was only eight years
old. Her father was in Chiang's
diplomatic corps, and when India
the
Communist
recognized
regime, he moved to Indonesia
only to experience the same thing
again. Finally he came back to
Taiwan.
Tien, then
his family

11, moved

with

back to

step-by-st-

the Chinese border, finally to
Taiwan.
Many were separated as only
one or two members of a family
went to the island refuge feeling
certain that return was imminent.
But they did not return, and
families were hopelessly and forever divided.

"At

that

time

we

never

thought we'd live at Taiwan for
more than two years or maybe
just a few months. VVc still had
when wc fought the
hope
Communists.
Today that hope is long abandoned.

related question though

A

does face the free Chinese: should
Communist China be included in
the United Nations if it desires
membership.

"I think it should,"

Kungde-clare-

s.

"I think it shouldn't, Tien
declares equally emphatically.
They do not agree on the UN
issue, and they may never gain
accord on it. However, it is significant that both do recognize
President Chiang's Taiwan as the
most stable land in Asia along
with Japan."
It is a sign to them the Chinese
people on a little island a third
the size of Kentucky with the
population of Tokyo can be as
strong as their brothers across
the gulf who have become strong
without the chance to think and

More than anything elseTien,
Janet and Kung would like to
return to the mainland should
the society become free. More
than likely they will not.
His wife's father holds a doctoral degree from the University
of Illinois in International Law
and Relations, works in the Taiwan diplomatic corps, and is
paid a pittance.
The sacrifices are great perhaps too great to be expected
from those who purpose seems
blocked and blightened from the
start.
They hold no illusions that
the Communist government will
be overthrown, and they cannot
make the one final sacrifice of

freedom.

"A Chinese is always a
Chinese," Tien declares.
"If one day the Chinese mainland is not Communist, we would
all go back immediately." But
such hope is not likely to soon
happen.

speak freely.

Indicative of the darkened
freedom on mainland area the
solid, black marks run over some
phrases in letters which had been
sent from relatives behind the
bamboo curtain.
Now Janet has not received a
letter since 1957. Kung got his
last one two years ago. However both were asked to quit
sending letters and gifts since
these were always intercepted
and their relatives loyalty to Mao
questioned.
Kung somewhat flippently referred to a "100 percent" taxation taken out of all money sent

I

i

-

,

GEORGE KUNG

in for relatives.

2--

Chinese communist movestudent
in Bogota, Columbia, and ments had been led by Mao
through the early 1930's and grew
South America.
to be a sharper and sharper thorn
Dr. Lawrence B. Slobodkin in the side of the Nationalist
from the University of Michigan Government. Soon China found
will speak on "Theoretical Ap- itself in a war with Japan which
proaches to Ecological Prob- lasted until 1945, and it was in a
lems" Nov. 30 at 8 p.m. in Room position for Communist Rebels
MS 563 of the Medical Center. to mov e in quickly.
"After the war the peoplejust
wanted peace. All the fields were
summer's

YMCA

work-cam- p

desserted.
People found they
didn't have anythingChiang promised. The country was just all
broken down, and a new leader
came offerring everything," she
explains.
Tien singles out 1915 as one of
the most important years leading
to Chiang
downfall
because at that time the Man- -

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U.S. Backs U.N.

Study
Of Chinese Admission
By DREW

MIDDLETON

(c) New York Times News Service

UNITED NATIONS The
United States backed Monday
an Italian draft resolution proposing that a United Nations
committee explore the question
of Chinese representation and
recommend "an equitable and
practical solution."
Ambassador Arthur J. Goldberg, announcing the Johnson
Administration's support, stipulated two conditions, which he
called "considerations":
The U.S. will continue to
refuse to repudiate its commitments to Nationalist China;
The U.S. will reject any
solution of the question that involves the Nationalists' expus-siofrom the U.N.
The American move was taken
on instructions from President
Johnson, relayed Monday morning through Secretary of State
Dean Rusk. Many diplomats here
n

1W

Complete Automotive Service
Phone

252-712-

saw it as the first crack in the
hitherto intransigent U.S. position based on keeping Peking
out of the world organization.
Ambassador

Picro

Vinci of

Italy indicated at a news conference that recommendation of
a
formula, seating
both mainland China and Taiwan, would be left to the committee to decide.
The delegation of Nationalist China condemned the Italian proposal in a strongly worded
statement. The draft resolution
was called "an immediate and
direct challenge" to the Nationalists' "rightful position" as the
government of the Republic of
China in the U.N.
The Canadians have sounded
opinion on this proposal in a
number of interested capitals
with negative results, according
two-Chi-

to a source.

Prospects for adoption of the
Italian resolution by the general
assembly are not good, in the
opinion of many delegates.
The U.S., they said, had
jumped on the bandwagon too
soon and by backing the draft
resolutions so early in thedebate
gave it the appearance on an
American tactical maneuver.

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Britain has already disclosed
that it will not support the proposal. France adheres to a policy
of admitting Peking and ousting
Nationalist China. The Communist bloc, the Scandinavian countries, a majority of the African
states, many Asians and some
Western European delegations
are also expected by these sources
to vote against the draft resolution. Fifty votes in favor was the
highest estimate heard in the
corridors and this is not enough
for adoption by the assembly,
with 21 members.

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AVE.

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.
UK Post
Office Box 4988. Nick Pope, chairman,
and Patricia Ann Nickell. secretary.
be
Begun as the Cadet
came the Record In 1900, in 1894, Idea
and the
in 1908. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1913.
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� TIIK KI'.VU CKY Kl liNtl., TimmI.iv, Nov. 21.

Tr,
i

'

One of tin- major projects
of the new Department of Theatre
Arts is the visit of guest artist,
I'atricia Carmichael,

''

project as a valuable experience
lor her as well. "It's good for
me to be stimulated by the academic approach and to know
what we've got coining up in
the theatre. Also, I am always
anxious to challenge myself with
the reactions of a new audience."
For 17 years Mrs. Carmichael has been

r.

During her three week stay
she will conduct lectures to theatre arts classes and portray
Amanda, the mother, in Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie," the third production of
the season to be presented next
Wednesday through Sunday.
Mrs. Carmichael, who has
spent her life working in the
theatre and loves to discuss any
aspect of it, is excited about
her visit. "The project fascinates
me," she says.
"The sooner actors on a university level can be exposed to
Guest artist Patricia Carmichael rehearses with David Hurt, an
A & S junior, in a scene from "The Glass Menagerie." The play
will be presented at the Guignol Theatre Nov. 30 to Dec. 4.

and director, with her husband
Fn-Carmic liatl , of the Dorset
Playhouse in Dorset, Vt.
In the past few e.irs seven
UK students have apprenticed
at the Dorset Theatre with Mis.
Carmichael. Two, David Hurt
and Beth Hoagland, apprentices
with last summer's company, are
playing the roles of her children.

Shively Queries NCAA
About Paul's Activities
activities in the sport, Paul said,
citing UCLA and Vanderbilt
among others as also having the

Continued From Page 1
including one boy from Bryan
Station and two from Henry Clay
High Schools.

the current state of theatre and
the competency required, the better prepared they will be for a
future in it." She recognizes the

program.

Orignially, the question arose
that the CLSA's use of the Memorial Colesium pool was violating an NCAA rule. Thegrouphas
practiced at the pool one Saturday morningthisyearand plans
to use it until construction on
their own is completed in January, Paul said.
The NCAA said this was no
infraction of the rules.
The Physical Education Department reserves the pool from
p.m. Monday through Friday for the University teams.
Lafayette High School had
asked to use the pool in afternoons on weekdays but was
denied the request because UK
varsity sports take priority. Officials in the Physical Education
Department in charge of the pool
said the school had made no request for the pool on Saturdays.

The question centers around
the definition of "prospective
and whether or
not Paul's association with the
Lexington club can be considered
as illegal recruiting in the University's behalf. NCAA headquarters in Kansas City, Mo.,
is expected to make a ruling
next week, stating whether his
GLSA activities come under this
jurisdiction.
Paul told the Kernel Tuesagencies are not clearly designated. A student who commits day, "I go to the boy and his
an offense may face a number parents and tell them, as UK
of possible actions, such as apcoach, I'm in a difficult situpearance before the Dean of Men ation. I tell them I will make
or Women, the Student Governno effort to recniit the boy at
ment Judiciary Board, a dormiUK, and if he wants to go to
tory council or house standards another school, I'll do the best
council, the AWS Women's Ad- I can to get him in.
visory Council, or an academic
He pointed out that memdean.
bers of the GLSA team have gone
No formal code or line of to Eastern Kentucky and Michprocedure has yet been estabigan Universities and earned
lished to outline what sorts of
swimming honors. He
cases go before the boards and charged Lexington Lafayette
what types go directly to a dean. High School with banning its
In practice, the Dean of Men swimmers from participating on
and the Dean of Women are the the
Lexington team.
clearing house and final authorUK is not the only school
ity in nonacademic offenses and whose swim coach has outside
the academic deans have the
same power for academic ofstuden-

t-athletes,"

Faculty Soon To Receive
Report On Campus Justice
Continued From Page

.'i

Guest Artist Will Play
Amanda In 6M enagerie
-

'

I'ldli--

1

sity community, or University
property is within the University's domain," he said.
"We are not in the business
of punishing students for violations of local, state or federal
laws," he added.
However, it is possible that
a violation of a local, state, or
federal law might overlap and
also be a violation of a University rule, the law professor
noted.
He said the report lays down
two academic offenses and 10
disciplinary offenses. "These are
the only offenses for which disciplinary' action may be imposed," Flickinger said.
Currently, there are only two
offenses listed in the "Rules of
the University Faculty" for
which disciplinary action may
be imposed hazing and financial delinquency. However, inherent in the broad University
policy statement on conduct are
grounds for punishment for a
limitless number of other actions.
Flickinger said the report was
basically concerned with the student and his relationship to the
University as a whole as a student and as a member of student
organizations. The report "reremoves the University-studen- t
lationship in the areas of housing,
employment, and retailing,"
Flickinger said.
"The University would be
no different .and would have the
same rights as any other landlord, employer or retailer . . .
and the student would have the
same rights as any tenant, employe, or purchaser," Flickinger noted. "If there is a violation of legal rules, the Univer

sity should use legal actions of
the state."
Flickinger said some of the
format of the report was drawn
from a preliminary statement of
the American Association of University Professor's committee on
the "Academic Freedom of Students."
Relating to the area of
freedom of students, the
statement says, "Students who
violate the law may incur penalties prescribed by civic authorities, but institutional authority
should never be used merely to
duplicate the function of general laws.
"Only where the institution's interests as an academic
community are distinct from
those of the general community
should the special authority of
the institution be asserted.

"Disciplinary

proceeding

should be instituted only for
violation of standards of conduct defined in advance and
published through such means
as a student handbook or a generally available body of university regulations."
Flickinger said the University committee "tried to comply with the AAUP committee's
recommendations, in so far as
they related to disciplinary matters."
The jurisdiction of various
governing boards and administrative officials concerned with
discipline is also defined by the
report. "The report tells who
has power and what they can
do with it," Flickinger said.
Currently, jurisdictional limits of the various disciplinary

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Under the present setup, decisions of the student disciplinary
boards stand only as recommendations for action to the deans
or administrators, who may accept or overrule the recommendations.
Asked if he thought the committee's report would be adopted
by the Senate and the Board
of Trustees, Flickinger said, "As
chairman of the committee, I feel
there will be no objections to
the statement of policy. However, as the policy statements
are translated into concrete
terms, there may well be objections to the specifics of the
terms."

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U

Athens

PURDUE U.

OHIO STATE
BOWLING

Lofayette
U
Columbus

GREEN S U

WEST VIRGINIA
S. Lime$ton

and Euclid

407 S. Limestone

U.

Ohio

Morgontown

MIAMI

U.Oiford

EASTERN KY. U

Richmond

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Gainesville

U. of KENTUCKY

U.or CINCINNATI

Loington I
Cincinnati;! L

� The Kentucky Kernel
The Smith's Outstanding College Daily
UNivi nsn y of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

TUESDAY, NOV.

1894

22, 19GG

Editorials represent the ojtinions of the Editors, not of the University.

Walti.h

M.

Chant,

Stkvk H(k:c:i, Editorial Pope Editor

Editor-in-Chi-

William Knait,

Business Mantiger

Quality Vs. Quantity
The United States today has
the highest proportion of children going to some kind of school
of any nation on earth. And with
the burgeoning population, there
is no let up in view. This steadily
increasing population coupled with
the rapid technical change of our
modern world is putting unprecedented stress on American universities and creating a unique
challenge in higher education.
This dichotomy means the
United States faces two seemingly
conflicting objectives in education.
On one hand, there is the desire
to offer some kind of college experience to all who desire it. At
the same time, however, there is
the urgent need to identify and
fully develop the talented individualsthe necessity of recognizing
the special talent and gifts of future
leaders and creative people.
As the United States moves
toward the ideal of higher education for everyone, the brunt of
the responsibility increasingly lies
with the state universities. UK,
for example, unfortunately must
students who
accept all
for admission. This implies
apply
that all Kentucky high school graduates are able to attend the University regardless of individual
in-sta- te

ability.
This

in itself represents the
unique challenge: that of reconciling quality with the universality
of education.
Heretofore, the private universities have set the standards of
higher education in this country.
But this is no longer so. Especially
with the increase in federal financial support available, many
state universities now have the
opportunity for quality also. UK
is now making tremendous strides
in improving its graduate program,
attracting an excellent faculty, upgrading research facilities, expanding classroom, dormitory, and office

facilities, and invigorating its undergraduate program.
But past experience has shown
that nearly 50 percent of the freshman class each year will fail.
Whether the fault lies with the
advising system, the student's background, or the student himself has
yet to be determined. The import
of these statistics, however, is that
if the University must assume the
responsibility of educating all Kentucky students who apply, it must
not relinquish quality in the process.
Advisers must necessarily be

competent and readily available.
Courses must necessarily be tailored to a student's individual abilities and ambitio