4 Fridav. January 28, 1977 University Daily Kansan Comment Opinions on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the University of Kansas or the School of Journalism Librarv a top need It was good news indeed when the Board of Regents voted last week to amend the KU budget to allow the spending of an additional $5 million in movements to Watson and Spencer libraries. If the action is approved as expected by the Kansas Legislature, the money will be spent on increasing shelf space, improving lighting and cleaning and painting both libraries' lower floors so they could be used for storage. THE MONEY will come from some $1 million in surplus student fees collected last year as a result of larger-than-expected enrollments. Adequate funding for libraries at Board of Regents institutions has been hard to come by in recent years. Library attests to that. Last summer, visiting building consultants hired to estimate the costs of renovating Watson, said the building's crowded central stacks made it a virtual fire trap. Last fall, the library had to seek extra funding to pay student wages and maintain its regular business hours for employees. The installation of a sprinkler system in case of fire haven't been available without taking money already allocated for new book purchases— an indispensible part of any library budget. Yes, the $380,000 is definitely needed. But that sort of piecemeal funding is not the long-range answer. University officials have plans for more necessary renovations and, eventually, construction of a new $6 million library. The problems facing KU's libraries cannot be solved with emergency fund supplements and rechanneed excess fees. A GOOD library is the heart of any college or university. And, as far as numbers of books are concerned, KU has a good library, ranking among the top state universities in the nation. But these books aren't were paper they've been printed in. Paper that keeps them in good condition, safe and accessible to students and faculty. These are hard times for university budgets, and both legislators and taxpayers are getting more and more cautious when it comes to money for higher education. Every year the budget battle gets more and more intense. As KU fights its annual battle of the dollars, library funding should be a top priority. "OH, YEAH, YOU THE BOY JIMMY RECOMMENDED..." KU friend remembered With the death of Clytice Nichols, who died last week at 71, the University lost one of its greatest natural resources. Mrs. Nichols was the wife of former chancellor Raymond Nichols, who is best known for skillfully handling KU during the transition from E. Laurence Chalmers to Archie Dykes. She was much more than just Ray Nichol's wife, however. FOR MORE than 45 years she was a volunteer leader and adviser to faculty, student and alumni organizations. In 1975, she was awarded the Fred Ellsworth Medallion, the KU Alumni Association's highest award, in recognition of her many services to the University. She, like her husband, had a long love affair with KU. It began while she attended school here and never let up. Much of her free time was spent attending nearly all the University's theater, music and sports events. The faculty and alumni who knew her best remember Mrs. Nichols as a perfect hostess In a smaller college, Mrs. Nichols would probably be mourned by students who knew her personally. All we can do in a University setting is learn about her and wish we had known her personally. Schools have right to limit press WASHINGTON- One of our suburban high schools recently erupted in a controversy over a student paper and its student editor. Virtually identical controversies crop up coast to coast. They are the offspring, alas, of marty martyr. Our local contretemps was in the classic pattern. It occurred at a public school financed by public funds. The young woman won uite title editor conceived the idea of making a survey of "sexually active" students. Her thought was to determine what was to hold down the high school pregnancy rate. SO INSPIRED, the editor went out, gathered her SO INSPIRED, the editor James J. Kilpatrick c) 1977 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc. they knew about conception, or more accurately about contraception, and to report her findings. Her laudable purpose thought he was securing certain civil rights for the freed slaves: never in his wildest dreams, we may be certain, did he suppose he was securing the right of a student editor to publish a piece about diaphragms, vaginal foams and the pill. City grassroots grow deep, firm charm, but when he was done the niece was dead. For many, the term 'grass roots' politics evokes visions of idealistic citizens hoping to achieve often obscure and ambiguous aims, which they deem necessary for the improvement of a particular community. What starts out as a simple attention focus on neighborhood choice becomes overshadowed by personal differences, ideological factionalism and lack of competent organization. testing time of their viability, vitality and value to the community is at hand. For two Lawrence citizens' groups, the Spurred on by dissatisfaction with the present city government structure and operation the groups, Lawrence Citiz.us Voice and Citizen for Mayor and Council members, and proclaiming that Lawrence desperately needs change and that change can occur citizen involvement in determining school policies. The Citizens for Mayor and Council Government, meanwhile, hopes to replace the present city manager-manager district councilors. BOTH GROUPS find proof in the merits of their ideas from the present W head a lesson in an editor's freedom) just a few months ago, on the New York Times, when he wrote about the Publisher Punch Sulzberger. The issue was an editorial endorsement of Pat Moynihan and his brother Jakkes was against it. Sulzberger was for it, Guess who won? As a matter of law, the proposition strikes me as bizarre, but it is hard to tell what the federal courts will do with it. A U.S. district judge in Alabama already has found in favor of a student editor in such a case. Federal judges are capable of any damn foolishness. A federal judge ruled not long ago that a college football player's right to own a gun that the state cannot take from him without due process. Spin in your grave, Thad Stevens! Letters Policy Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address. that it does. It must furthermore examine whether its program, which on the surface presents an impressive list of remedies to present ills, is truly realistic and practical in view of limited city finances and manpower. Paul Addison Editorial Writer only by listening to the "voice of the people." IN BOTH cases, preliminary observation of their programs and motives reveals organized and cohesive groups with firm beliefs in their direction and goals. Participants in Saturday's Citizens' Voice convention, for instance, unanimously voted for "grass roots" to be implemented, would intimately bring improvements in the quality of life to the city. belfyling that he had been denied freedom of press on the Times, and for this reason: "I am an outsider. Times is not his press to be free with. Oakes had a right to oppose Moyhan; he was at liberty to write whatever he constituted right to have his stuff printed in the usual press." While applauding these groups and local neighborhood associations for their determination and obvious concern for the future of the city, each must learn to recognize and control the ever present risks. It is also important to duplicate the system it hopes to improve. material, and wrote her story. Then the principal killed it. The local school board sustained the principal. The distraught editor, her pet project thus became a national icon. Joan of Arc on a pyre of the First Amendment. She charged that her right to freedom of the press had been violated. Various civil libertarians took the cry. Censorship! Prior restraint! Oppression must vile! Their hope is that prospective city commissioners who were endorsed by those present at the convention will consciously press for such programs as a Lawrence mass transit program, neighborhood preservation and increased LAWRENCE needs a city government that can truly proclaim itself representative of all the interests of the city. Neither of the new groups would necessarily bring great changes to the city, but through continued active support from the important ideas we voiced and discussed in a wider arena than at city commission meetings. And that, surely, is what democracy is all about. THE CITIZENS for Mayor and Council Government need to closely examine whether their aim to replace the city manager by an elected-large mayor would be any real improvement on the present system. Selecting councilmen from city districts would permahake the city government more representative of the citizens but wouldn't alleviate the problem of non-professional, part-time public servants hindered by the constraints of job obligations and time. crises in the Lawrence city government structure that have brought numerous resignations and disputes between several employee groups, city commissioners and Buford Watson, city manager. In the group's scheme there would seem, in fact, to be few checks and balances to prevent councillors from being dominated by a mayor in the same city, but the group feels the present city commissioners are dominated by the city manager. The legal theory behind this argument is to this effect. The Fourteenth Amendment says that a state may not detain an individual in liberty or property without due process of law. The Supreme Court has defined liberty to include freedom from oppression by the First Amendment. Therefore the principal of a public school, as an agent of the state, may not deprive a student editor of the liberty to serve. The Citizens' Voice program, which supports environmental and local business development, must actively work to find its program really does have the support of the majority of local citizens. It can't simply presume THIS PROPOSITION would have astounded the late George Stevens. His courage in the court's defense, theendant, the gentleman from Pennsylvania BUT If some cockalorum on the bench will support this nonsense, few professional editors will go along. There is a shortage of them, unless he happens also to be his own publisher, who possesses the "right" the student editors assert. In the ordinary case, an editor's liberty stops where the book ends. I know, I have been an editor; this is the way life is. I worked under one of the most tolerant, delightful publishers ever born. When Tennant Bryan knew I was a purple piece, he killed it humanely, under the anesthesia of his THIS HAS to be the rule. Any other system means narcity; it means the end of publishing authority. In high schools and universities, fulfills the publisher's role. So long as student papers live by institutional subsidy, their editors have precisely the same liberty, more or less, of publishing, student editors are unwilling to accept the ultimate veto power of a high school principal or college president, let them write their own books. Then when they appoint some strong-willed editor, they can kill his stuff. And so it goes. Page should be forum To the editor: Regarding your request for feedback from readers, I would like to repeat a criticism I expressed to the editor last THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN Published at the University of Kansas daily August 27, 2014. Subscribers receive a $15 discount and June and July are excludied except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Subscribers by mail must be a semester or $18 year-round member of the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are a year outside the county. Editor Jim Roper Jim Bates Managing Editor Greg Hack Editorial Editor Stewart Brannan Gwinnih Associate Campus Editor Lynch莎妮 Jerry Sell, Assistant Campus Editors Barbaugh Barbara Copy Chiefs Jim Cobbs Sports Editor Bernel Johnke Jim Cobbs Sports Editor Gary Vee Photo Editor Courtney Thompson Photographers Mike Miller Photographers Joy Koehler Mariane Maurine Make-up Editor Susan Applain Dennis A. Meyer Mary Myera Aime Signan Devon Vosco Wire Editors Larry Boren Carol Loman Entertainment Editors Bill Uyik Contributing Writers Elizabeth Ribacharrouser Barewolf Editorial Writers Jay Benni, Paul Jefferson Letters Business Manager Janice Clements Campus Editor Allison Carden Advertising Manager Tim O'Meara Advertising Manager Manager Randy Higben Clausified Manager Randy Higben Promotional Manager Thurton Rinnell Promotional Manager David Rinnell Promotional Manager Robin Gunderson Stuff Artist News Advisor Bob Giles Publisher David Dary semester that I feel has not yet been satisfactorily resolved. However, I believe, and I think most responsible journalists would agree, that a newspaper's editorial page should contain editors from the same perspective, especially a newspaper financed through compulsory fees from a diverse population, thus insulated from an expression of dissatisfaction or any other aspect for that matter, in the marketplace. I hope the new policy of unsigned editors will not lead to an abdication of this responsibility and to a further till to take over editorial duties. A single, consistent, activist personality for the paper. It is my perception that the editorial page, specifically those editors written by student journalists, reflect a specific ideological outlook rather than providing a forum for discussion. Because any given editorial should not be required to give a fair and complete representation of all opinions on the subject under discussion, an editorial should assess the opinion of that individual writer. The excuse that I was given last semester was that it was difficult to locate editorial writers who weren't so liberal. I hope this semester's search proves more productive. Robert Jennings Lawrence senior Racism not limited To the editor: We wish to respond to the letter addressing the issue of racism in sorority rush. We are pleased that a sorority member had the courage to publicly question the tradition of white membership within the Greek system. It is important to note that racism is not limited to the Greek system, but is a part of our society. At the KU-Y, racism has been an ongoing concern, and in dealing with it we first had to come to grips with the racism that was within our own white organization. Racism is too often rationalized away instead of being dealt with openly. Reasons are found to support the status quo. We share Ms. Tolleson's frustration in identifying and dealing with the real issue, and we join her in asking for meaningful improvement important first step in beginning the process of the elimination of racism on the KU campus. Ken Jones Representing the KU-Y Board