Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 61, Number 91, Decatur, Adams County, 17 April 1963 — Page 12
PAGE FOUR-A
i SKOAL WASHINGTON REPORT >• Better Teaching Hinges ! On Education Bill By U.S. Sen. Wayne Morse (D-Ore.) Chairman, Subcommittee on Education I "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of ' cMbzorioe, it expects what never was and never shall be.” ; L —Thomas Jefferson. 3 The Administration’s education bill which I intro- ■ (faced on January 29, 1963, as S. 580, is a comprehensive but selective measure. It is designed, in President Kennedy’s words, to provide ■MH the Congress with a "combination of ■ i elements designed to solve problems mmlk ? i that have no single solution.” .4W L. Although the bill covers many areas ML“*Sm|| [of education, it is not a general aid bill. LSgPjgg ■ It is a series of specific proposals de- * signed to accomplish specific objectives ■at every level. 1 *■-
The 24 major provisions ofr the bill range from a $1 billion Joan program for college classmens to an attack on specific learning problems of handicapped children. It contains a program for vocational training, expanding and improving the I George-Barden Act, and it helps ’ states to improve programs of I general university extension as- • sbtance. It continues existing > National Defense Education and j Impacted area programs and ) improves the service provided i by the Office of Education. ' Although our program does not contain scholarship proviI oonr for university students, it ' does provide work-study opportunities which should help, together with the loan insurance provisions, to ease the financial i hardship on families of moderate means. The Work-study I program not only provides the i student a job, it insures that * the job is geared to his educa- ■ tional program. The loan in- • surance brings into the education field the successful program which has made so many Americans home buyers. Existing programs, such as those carried on under the , NDEA, are strengthened and : unproved. This is particularly I true in the fellowship program *of Title IV of NDEA. Under S. ISO, the number of graduate I fellowships would rise from the J. patient 1500 to 10,000. Graduate student/ need to be trained
Khrushchev May Be jPlanning Rome Visit
By KC. Thaler United Press International LONDON (UPD—The Communist welcome for the Papal "Peace on Earth” encyclical has revived diplomatic speculation that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev may be planning a visit-to Rome later this year. Moscow has said nothing officially on the project so far, but aseries of Khrushchev gestures in recent months has pointed to a deliberate Kremlin policy to ease relations with the pontiff. Satellite countries, presumably with a go - ahead from the Russians, went out of their way to praise the Holy Week encyclical. Diplomatic reports have suggested the Kremlin aims at establishment of formal relations with the Vatican that would allow the Church of Rome to set up a number of consulate-type representations in Communist countries, including the USSR. There has been speculation that Khrushchev, who plans a visit to Belgrade this spring or summer, may take that opportunity to go to Italy and return an official visit Italian leaders paid him last year He, then, it is guessed, might call on the Pope. ' Conflict With China Whether Khrushchev makes such a trip depends on a series of major developmets. One is the status of the conflict with Peking with which he is pre - occupied presently and the outcome of projected truce Sino-Soviet talks in Moscow next month. Another is whether the ground is sufficiently prepared for a Khrushchev pilgrimage to the Vatican. Hie Communist press, in welcoming the Papal encyclical, read into it a virtual endorsement of the concept of Moscow’s so-called peaceful co-existence policy. The Vatican quickly put the record straight by reminding the Communists that the cornerstone of the “Peace on Earth” pronouncement was the freedom and .dignity of the individual which the Red reports ignored. Vatican radio said the calls for settlement of international controversy through negotiations, for racial tolerance and for world disarmament all eons li luted an important part of the encyclical. But, it told the Communists, the central nucleus of the encyclical was “constituted by the dignity of the human being, his rights,
in all higher education fields so potential college teachers will be available, to train the engi- [ neers and scientists our country . will need in the coming decades. One popular provision of the bill is the SSO million a year matching grant program for public junior or community colleges. This program is designed to provide the supporting technical personnel needed by our scientists and engineers in our defense program. The revision of vocational education legislation and programs of matching money for general university extension programs as well as the assistance provided for building public community libraries in our urban centers will give Americans of every age group an opportunity to increase their economic skills through training and study. The emphasis of the bill throughout is to improve the training of teachers and, in its cooperative research sections, to improve the quality of the education given our young citizens. This is why the bill ex- . tends NDEA titles providing for institutes at which teachers can be given refresher training. ■ I pay just tribute to President Kennedy when I say that the President has taken his responsibilities most seriously in sending to th* Congress this legislation.
his duties.” The implication is that the basis for a Soviet-Vatican rapprochement has yet to be found. New Soviet Twist Nevertheless, diplomats who have been following the Kremlin’s zigzagging policies feel that the current Communist attitude marks a startling change from Stalin’s determination to ignore and even attack the Vatican. Khrushchev’s recent approaches to Rome have been interpreted as an indication that the Soviet leader is increasingly anxious to take advantage of the weight the Vatican carries in the world. His soundings have included an audience with the Pope by his son-in-law, Alexei Adzubei, last month, preceded by greetings which Khrushchev personally sent the Pope on his 80th birthday and on the occasion of the new year. Ml /It ■ W w fJ! a wf fl Bl /Bi - SUB '•i Hh WaM fiS t Mt* a? arjawSß j P I iiWTLjte'f - EYE FOR MASTERPIECE— Francis Castlan can see right through his art work. He exhibited the free-form sculpture in olive wood in Paris.
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- THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, JRDtAWA
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1963
