xt70gb1xgg35 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70gb1xgg35/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650427  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 27, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 27, 1965 1965 2015 true xt70gb1xgg35 section xt70gb1xgg35 Inside Today's Kernel

IS.
Vol. LVI, No. 114

Vandenbosch is honored by his
Poge Three.

Dr.

Editor

discusses

a

strange

First team is the victor in the
Wnite game: Poge Six

refusal:

.

15 lets bomb Vietnam:

Poge Four.

University of Kentucky
APRIL

LEXINGTON,

27, 1965

KY., TUESDAY,

Eight Pages

L'ln9ton

No! oil participating in the Wash- ington march were beatniks: Poge Five.

Trots

hare

Page Su.
now

opened:

9e Seven.

Sigma Chi, DZ Win Little Kentucky Derby

Delta Zeta sorority and Sigma Chi
fraternity were winners of pedaling races
in the weekend Little Kentucky Derby, an
social weekend.
Delta Zeta won their third straight
Friday night Debutante Stakes, tricycle
relay races between teams representing
women's housing units.
Sigma Chi broke a Pi Kappa Alpha
three-yewinning record to take the Saturday afternoon bicycle relay races at the
Sports Center track.
In other festivities, Pamela Sue Robinson, sophomore from Dayton, Ohio, was
crowned Little Kentucky Derby queen
Friday night.
ar

Delta Zeta. who had the fastest auali- fying time, now retires the rotating trophy
after its three consecutive wins. Weldon

House placed second and Alpha Gamma
Delta third in the races held in Memorial
Coliseum.
Members of the Delta Zeta team were
t,
Suzanne Ortynsky, Ann Price, Nancy
Virginia Ramsey and Patsy
Cummins.
Second place in the Saturday races
went to Alpha Tau Omega, and Sigma
Alpha Epsilon placed third.
Winning team members were Pete Goth,
Willie Nisbit, Tony Rabasca, Tom Corm,
Hon-hors-

Charlie Fields, J6hn Phillips and Carl Lay.
The race requires each rider to cover
mile.
two laps around the track or
Miss Robinson, who was crowned by
retiring queen Bonnie Lindner, will represent the University in the Miss Kentucky
pageant.
She represented Kappa Alpha Theta
sorority and Donovan Hall third floor.
candidates were entered.
Thirty-tw- o
one-ha- lf

Ohio Junior Miss and third
in the National Junior Miss
contest, Miss Robinson presented a song
from "Guys and Dolls" as her talent
A former

runner-u- p

entry. Contestants were judged on poise,
beauty and talent.
Other finalists were Katie Clay, first
runner-up- ,
representing Delta Delta Delta
and Tau Kappa Epsilon; Betty Chambers,
second runner-up- ,
representing Kappa
Kappa Gamma and Alpha Gamma Rho;
Susan Bays, third runner-up- ,
representing
Bradley Hall and Sigma Chi; and Jo
Yvonne Cline, fourth runner-up- ,
representing Chi Omega and Zeta Beta Tau.
Miss Cline, who presented a ballet
dance to the music from "Gigi," was the
talent division winner.
Also included in the events was a
Continued on Page 2

Alumni Association To Host
9 Outstanding Journalists
Two winners of the Pulitzer

Prize and seven other journalists
will be guests of the University

Alumni Association Thursday
through Saturday.
Among the journalists and
their wives visiting UK's Northern Community College in Covington Thursday and the Lexington campus Friday are Pulitzer
winners Don Whitehead and
Vance Trimble. Whitehead, a retired Associated Press correspondent and UK Distinguished Alumnus, has won two
Pulitzers for excellence in war
reporting.
Mr. Trimble, a former Wash

ington correspondent forScripps-Howarand presently editor of
Covington's Kentucky Post, won
his Pulitzer in 1960 for an expose
on nepotism in Washington.
Other newsmen attending the
first in a proposed series of alumni editors conferences are:
William Steif, education writer,
Newspaper
Alliance.
Dr. Roy K. Wilson, National
Education Association.
Grant Dillman, news editor,
United Press International.
Roy Steinfort, a UK alumnus
and broadcasting executive, Associated Press.
d

Scripps-Howar-

d

Community College
Plans Arts Festival

Robert Webb, education writer, Cincinnati Enquirer.
James Driscoll, education
writer, Louisville Courier Journal.
Eel Magnuson, Time Magazine.
The guests will arrive at the
Greater Cincinnati Airport Thursday morning before their scheduled tour of the Northern Community College.
Following a Thursday evening
dinner at Spindletop Hall, the
group will spend Friday touring
the UK campus and interviewing
various UK faculty members and

'J-

.,f

if

-

r

A
V

:

administrators. President

JohnW. Oswald will speak to the
newsmen and their wives at a
Friday luncheon in the Student
Center.
The guests will also attend the
Breakfast Saturday at
the Governor's Mansion in Frankfort, and later the 91st running
of the Kentucky Derby in Louis-

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.

f,

...
m.aumS.J-

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in

The Winners

pre-Der-

A week-lonfine arts festival commemorating the University's
centennial will begin today at the Elizabethtown Community
College. Community residents have been invited to participate in
all events.
The organist and lead actress
Local paintings and sculpture will be exhibited today in the Bardstown summer production of "The Stephen Foster
through Saturday. Mrs. L. A.
Faurest is chairman of the show. Story" will perform in concert at
8 p.m. Thursday.
University chorus and chamJay Willoughby and Larry
ber singers will perform at 8 p.m.
Soloists for the performance will Kcenan will perform their probe Richard Franklin and Brenda gram, "Music for Awhile." Included in the program arc "When
Kerrickof Elizabethtown and
I Think Upon the Maidens,"
Neya Routt of Hodgcnville. To"Velvet Shoes," "Love's Phil8 p.m. Miss Kerrick
morrow at
osophy," and "Furibondo."
and Rachel Scott, Elizabethtown,
Kentucky author Harry Cau-diwill present piano recitals.
will speak on the people and
and Joyce Jennings, inJohn
structors of music at FCC, will problems of Appalachia at 8 p.m.
Friday.
direct the programs.
g

ll

22 ROTC Cadets
Honored At Review
Twenty-twArmy and Air Force ROTC cadets received awards
at the annual President's Review and Honors Day Parade.
Awards presented to Army caal; Wicklilfe S. Rogers, Lexingdets:
ton; R. F. Page, Ft. Knox.
Department of the Army SuOrdnance Association Medal:
perior Senior Cadet award: Alan P. Miles, Russellville.
Ren 11. Crawford, Hodgenville;
Awards presented to Air Force
Robert J. Farris, Flemingsburg;
cadets:
John B. Baxley, Jr., Lexington;
Mcrkcl awards: Stephen D.
J. M. Ellis, Eminence.
Johnson, Concord, Mass.; Robert
Reserve Officers Association M. Staib, Ellis F. Bullock and
awards: Michael P. Cox and War-reCordon A. McCannon, all of
M. Fee, both of Lexington,
Louisville.
Thomas A. Damron, Ft. Thomas;
Reserve Officers Association
James K. Nishtmoto, Takoma awards: William E. Stanlill, StanPark, Md.
ley J. Cajdik and Henry C.
all of Lexington; Dennis A.
Chicago Tribune Cold Medal:
RoIkmI J. Brown and Brute S.
Cain, Louisville.
L. Roberts award:
Archie
Coleman, both of Lexington.
Michael R. Ware, Lexington.
Tribune Silver Med
Chicago
o

Cul-let- t,

1

ville.

Band, Chorus
Musicale
Set Tonight
The final program for spring
musicales will be presented this

week.

The
University symphonic band, under the direction
of Philip Miller, and the 100- member University chorus, directed by Aimo Kiviniemi, will be
presented at 8 p.m. tonight in
Guignol Theatre in the final musicale of the spring season.
The band will perform selections by Edmondson, Bach,
Schoenberg, Benson, Smith, Veri
.i
di and Boyer.
Kernel Photos by Sam Abell
The chorus will sing composiAnd The Loser
tions by Palestrina.Campianand
Jubilant members of the Sigma Chi team that captured top honors
Cibbs. The combined groups, diIn the annual Little Kentucky Derby race embrace (top) while a
rected by Mr. Miller, will perform
works by Bach and Rogers and downcast SAE rinds little solace after his team finished third behind
the Slfraa Chl's and the ATO's.
Hammerstein.
75-pie-

k...

i.

AWS Extends Summer Hours

In their last meeting of the
year, the AWS Senate passed u
motion Thursday to lengthen
summer school hours.
The new policy, which will
go into effect with the beginning of this summer's term, allows women students in the
residence units to stay out until
12 midnight during the week.

The

now

1

a.m. weekend hours
for Friday and
nights will continue.

in effect

Saturday

The measure had been proposed at the last meeting on the
basis that students have more
time for daytime study during
summer school and would not
need the 10:30 p.m. dosing hour.

In other business, ANN'S voted
to accept two
members from the Town Housing
Council to sit in on the Senate
proceedings for next year. As
the Senate is now arranged, town
women, members of ANNS by
virtue of their enrollment at UK,
have no representation whatsoever in the Senate.
non-votin-

g

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April 27. 1965

LKD Profits
Will Provide
V.i

h

-

.1

j-

The Kentucky

fourth

Little Kentucky Derby queen Pamela, Robinson
poses with her court. She represented Kappa Alpha
Theta sorority in the pageant. Finalists were (from
the left), Betty Chambers, second runner-urepresenting Kappa Kappa Gamma; Jo Yvonne Cline,

run-neru-

two unsuccessful tries, hit the
Bai Due Thon bridge in North
Vietnam today and buckled one
of its three spans, a U.S. military
spokesman said.
The bridge spans a river in a
fairly deep valley 160 miles south
of Hanoi.; It withstood two previous poundings, one. of them
Monday.
Eight FlOOs carried out the
strike on the bridge today. All the
planes returned safely, and no
enemy aircraft were reported
seen.
Four Vietnamese Skyraiders
also conducted reconnaissance
runs over Routes 7 and 101.
Then they turned on the IIuu
Hung highway ferry, on the Kien
Ciang River.
Bombs and rockets damaged
both approaches to the ferry, a
pier, and a large storage build-

".;

ing.

the aircraft returned

Twenty-fiv- e

safe-

jets flew top cover for both the
American and Vietnamese missions.
A U.S. military spokesman
said U.S. jets flew 44 strikes in
South Vietnam today.
A U.S. military spokesman
announced that two U.S. Army
men had been wounded during
ground actions Monday and that
a third was injured fatally while
fighting a fire after a Vietnamese
Sky raider crashed while taking off
at Bien Hoa base. The Vietnamese pilot was reported injured
seriously.
Meanwhile the commandant
of the U.S. Marines Corps said today his leathernecks "are prepared to take any steps necessary" to get their job done in
Vietnam.
Gen. Wallace V Greene Jr.
said on his arrival at Saigon
Airport that while the U.S. Marine role in Vietnam depends on
what the other side may do, "we
certainly will not sit on our rear
ends and do nothing."

it."

fecrcii!::LiEiJEa

NOW! At 7:20 and 9:30

ua.rjLUEi-sju.i-

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Marine patrols pushing out

from Da Xang in an increasingly

wide arc have been coming into
contact with Vietcong querrilla
units. There has been speculation
that such activity may herald the
start of fullscale combat operations by the Leathernecks to hit
the Vietcong before they can
close in on the base.

HELD OVER 2nd WEEK
The unconventional

GLEMFORD

love affair

that began
at a

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Sunday, 12-- 6
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Published as a public service in cooperation with The Advertising Council.

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Gen. Greene said the Marines
had a definite assignment "to
insure security of the Da Xang
area." There are about 8,000
Marines ashore around the big
U.S. and Vietnamese air base at
Da Nang, where many of the
air strikes against Communist
North Vietnam originate, and
in the Hue-PhBai area 40 miles
from Da Xang.

KENTUCKY
TYPEWRITER

RESTAURANT

I

"We are here to do a job and

we will do

U.S. Air Force

RANSDELL'S

That

p,

Jets Hit Vietnam Bridge

The Associated Press
Soutli
Vietnam
SAIGOX,
AP U.S. Air Force jets, after

AH

p,

p,

p,

ly.

Kml

representing Chi Omega; Miss
repreRobinson; Susan Bays, third lunner-usenting Bradley Hall; and Katie Clay, first
repressing Delta Delta Delta.
runner-u-

Continued From Page 1
Friday night dance at the Student
Center featuring three bands, Patty and the Emblems, the Five
Dutones, and Roy Wilson and the
Vibrators.
All proceeds from the weekend
toward scholarships. Last year
go
the LKD weekend provided funds
of all scholarships
for
d
given by UK.
The weekend is planned entirely be a student steering committee, headed this year by
Ophelia Speight and Bill Neel.
one-thir-

-J

.

li

Kadio Free Europe speaks
daily, in their own languages, to
80.000,000 captive people in
Poland. Czechoslovakia. Bulgaria. Hungary and Romania.
It spotlights Communist lies
and deceptions. With honest
news from the free world.
Help to continue getting the
truth through the Iron Curtain
by mailing your contribution
to:

Scholarships

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THE UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY'S OVN

TONIGHT

JACKPOT $275.00
(At Press Time)

3

STARTS WEDNESDAY

The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University ot Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 4o50fl. Second-claa- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published four timet weekly during
the Bcnool year except
holidays
and exam periods, and during during
the summer semester. weekly
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Hoard
of Student Publications. Prof. Paul
Oberst, chairman and Stephen Palmer,
secretary.
liegun as the Cadet In 18M. became the Kecord in lik, and the Idea
in loa. Published continuously as the
Kernel since Ittl).
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail 1 7. 00
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KERNEL TELEPHONES
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, April 27,

rot

MKT

FOR RENT
Furnished apartments. New, one bedroom, modern, airconditioned, with ceramic bath. Near UK. Days
or
Nights

Motor scooter, 1964
Vespa, excellent condition. Call
278-16-

252-959-

1-

FOR SALE

255-063-

255-296-

FOR SALE

1948 Willys Jeep,
drive. Aluminum top and
doors. Good condition. Call
after Wednesday, April 28.
'
27A4t
.

8.

22Atf

255-41-

FOR RENT New furnished
efficiency. Airconditioned.
On Transylvania Park near UK.
Available May 1. $100. Call
8.
22Atf

FOR SALE Mobile home,

sonably priced. Call

27A4t

254-182-

7.

254-793-

0.

'

In

p.m. Wednesday
Hall.

Memorial

THE FINAL oral examination for
Boice Daugherty, candidate for
the Ph.D. degree, will be held at
2 pm. Wednesday in MS 409,
Medical Center. The title of Mr.
Daugherty's dissertation is "The
Influence of the Value and Size
of Objects on Estimation of Their
Numerousness." Members of the
faculty and student body are In- "
vited to attend.;

ArrLICATIONS for the Board
of Student Publications are available in the Program Director's
office of the Student Center and
in Room 116 of the Journalism
Building.
of any University
organization, tor tha Bulletin Board
must bo turned in at the women'
desk in the Kernel ofiico no later
than 2 p.m. the day prior to publication. Multiple announcements will
be made if a carbon Is furnished tor
each day of publication.
ANNOUNCEMENTS

FOR SALE 1959 MGA, black,
wire wheels, new interior. Transmission Just overhauled.
No
rust, engine excellent, $950. Call
or see at 113 State St.
27A4t
278-28-

'

WANTTD

EIMICS

UNIVERSITY

252-947-

0,

pm.
'

'

'

'

'

TTPIMq

''

27A4t

JEWELRY
Complete selection of centennial
jewelry, lighters, charms, tie
tacks, earrings, cuff links, key
chains, money clips, and tie
bars, pen knives, julip cups, and
letter openers with the centennial replica of the official Centennial Device handsomely engraved. Price range from three
dollars makes these items appropriate for graduation presents, birthday or anniversary
presents, bridesmaid and grooms
presents.
Ours exclusively, the Centennial
graduate charm for bracelets or
key chain.

--

.

OLIVER
TRAILER RENTAL
1405 VERSAILLES ROAD

10

254-78-

81

PHONE

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821 Euclid

Established Since 1950

ON SALE NOW

Yy
IK!AISB BOOKS?

277-362-

27A4t

REPAIR

You get no headstart in your career by
dropping out of school. Instead, you seriously lessen your chances of success by
going to work before you're fully trained,
fully prepared. In these highly competitive
days, you need all the education
you can get. Stay in school . . .
S
"graduate" to a rewarding career. Oiy

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QUALIFIED
EQIUPPED
GUARANTEED

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in Chevy Chose Village

NICE ROOM in private home,
provided to female student willing to be companion to congenial lady, not more than 2
weekends per month when rest
of family away. Kitchen privi7.
lege may be arranged. Call

Volkswagen

'

PARMERS. EWELRS

school
and

tu.-fr.- -tf

8.

"
Quit

of dresses, skirts

and coats for women. Mildred
Cohen, 255 E. Maxwell. Phone
254-744-

254-798- 5

I

M1SCIL1AMIOUS

ALTERATIONS

From Berkeley to Brooklyn,
swarms of students are joining
in the noise and fire of new
radical groups. The current issue of The Saturday Evening
Post has the inside story of the
greatest rise of the Far Left
since the 1930's.
Read how some groups are
almost peaceful; others are so
militant that even the American Communist Party disowns
them. How young leaders of
the "existential radicalism"see
the Cuban Revolution as a blueprint for America. Find out
about new plans for protest and
unrest on college campuses.
How one far-ogroup, training
its members in karate, is secretly preparing to launch a
reign of terror.
Get the facts in the penetrating report of "The Explosive
Revival of the Far Left," in the
May 8 issue of The Saturday
Evening Post .

CENTENNIAL

TYPING Fast, professional service. IBM pica. References: Tur-abi- n,
Campbell, MJ1A. Style
sheet. 60 cents per page. William Givens, 254-73after 5.
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45 cents per
TYPING DONE
double spaced page. Copies 5
cents per page. Call
after 5 pjn.

OF

KENTUCKY

GRADUATING

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in

HEADQUARTERS

Sharing a ride home? Car too
small? Take more passengers
and luggage by .renting 4 Nationwide Trailer. Hitches and
spare tire furnished. Cheapest
rates available. Best equipment.
Small deposit holds trailer of
your choice. All sizes.

til

Hill

17

FOR

27A4t

senior desires
part time summer employment
I (apprbx. 25 hours per week). Experienced secretary. References.
6 pjn. to
Mrs. Fields,

u
nru

THE FINAL oral examination for
Hari Suseno, candidate for the
Ph.D. degree, will be held at 1:30
pjn., Wednesday In Room
Agricultural Science Center. The
title of Mr. Suseno's dissertation
is "The Relation of Peroxidase
and Polyphenol Oxidase Activity
to Symptom Development in Tobacco Plants Separately Infected
With Three Strains of Tobacco-MosaiVirus." Members of the
faculty and student body are invited to attend.

Student in Shawnee-tow- n
for part time work in sales
for the Broughton farm dairy.
Commission basis, regulate own
hours. Contact Tom Koledin,
0.

.

use the

WANTED

252-166-

Pat-

terson School of Diplomacy honored retiring director Dr. Amry
Vandenbosch and retiring Prof.
MaxWasserman with a Saturday
night dinner.
Dr. Vandenbosch, who came
to the University in 1927, will retire in June. He holds the ranks of
professor of Political Science and
professor of International Relations.
Dr. VVasserman, who will retire in August, is a professor of
International Economics.
Dr. Vandenbosch and Dr.
VVasserman were classmates as
undergraduates.

c

FURNISHED apartment for rent.
Living room, bedroom, private
shower bath, kitchen; utilities
paid. Apply 260 South Limestone
27A4t
Street.
'

CECELIA SAMS, pianist, will
present her senior recital at 8

CANDIDATES for degrees may
pick up cap and gowns from the
University Book Store. A $10 deposit must be paid and will be
refunded on return of cap and
gown.

1,

FOR SALE 1958 Edsel Corsair,
2 door hardtop. Excellent condition. See to appreciate, $325, or
6.
make offer. Call
27A4t

st.

'

35x8,
com-

27A4t

FOR RENT Apartment; sharp,
one bedroom, furnished, to sublet
Near campus
and town. Call
27A2t

"'

81

pletely furnished. Attractive
yard. Owner graduating. Rea-

FOR RENT
Furnished apartment for 3 or 4, two blocks from
campus, for summer months

'

two bedrooms,

Homelte,

277-048-

252-395-

76

Good condition. Call
0,
ask for Cal Haskell. Leave phone
number.
23A4t

FOR RENT Large new double
efficiency. Beautifully furnished
for 4 persons. Two tile baths.
Hotpoint kitchen, airconditioned.
Available May 1. Call

ArrLICATIONS for housing in
men's residence halls for summer
session, are now available in the
Kinkead Hall office.

1960

FOR SALE
1959 Sprite, new
tires, fiberglass hood, new top.

0.

22A3t

May-Augu-

16A6t

277-41-

cs

6.

pm.

3000. Excellent

FOR RENT OR LEASE
apartment, 1 block from
Chemistry-PhysiBldg., $65 a
month, including water bill. 522
Pennsylvania Ave. or call

252-572-

5

Austin Healey
condition, new
paint, brakes, clutch. Two tops,
radio, overdrive. Call
after 6 p.m.
21A4t

21A5t

277-048-

after

97

266-740-

5.

BALE

70

Vandenbosch
Given Dinner
By Students
Graduate students of the

UK Bulletin Board

rot sau
FOR

252-65-

only. Call

-

CLASSIFIED

1965- -3

KENTUCKY
Bowling Green, Howard Jewelers
Covington, Motch Jewelers
Hopkinsville, Joy's Jewelers
Lexington, Victor Bogaert Co.
Son, Inc., Jewelers
Louisville, Lemon
Richmond, McCord Jewelry

I

DIXON'S
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Phono 232-950- 7
939 South Limestone

1220 S. Brood way
0
Phone
.

WASHINGTON, VA.
Co.
Huntington, Rogers

for summer employment.
Large International corporation now interviewlno,
consi
not a new program, we have been employing students for
This
secutive years. This year we have IS $1,000 scholarships available. Hiring
for
for special Interview work. Work near resort areas. Plenty of time
o.
of your own
swimming, boating, tennis, and dancing with students
who will be
No experience necessary, train at company's exponM. Students
vacationing in Kentucky, Tennessee, and Indiana eligible. Salary open.
call or write . . .

For appointment
JAMES I. SEADLIR, DSM
Louisville,
12 Francis Building
Louisville
or 5IJ-244or call 587-10-

to

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for CASH

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hoard money!

TENNESSEE

255-817-

SUMMER OPPORTUNITY

Why not sell your used textbooks

s

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Clarksville, Joy's Jewelers
Fischer-Evan-

Dyersburg, Lewis Jewelers
Franklin, Sparkman Jewelers
Knoxville, Kimball's
Lswrenceburg,
Downey & Jones
Lewisburg, Downey ft Jones
Memphis, Graves-SteuwMurfreetbero, Aultman Jewelers
Murfreetboro, Bell Jewelers
Nashville, George T. Brdnx
Green Hills Village ft Madison Square
orh Avenue
Nashville, Phil Brednak
Oak Ridge, Kimball's
Springfield, Downey ft Jones

Ky.

,Mditon,

INDIANA
Oicar C. Bear ft Son

Wallace Boole Shade
305

S. Limestone

(not to

OPENING
(tunt

in

at

Euclid

Bccktr Laundry)

May 3, from 0 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Monday thru Saturday
tht Peatl

on

WLCX-T-

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April 28. 8 p.m.)

* An

to

"Come On, Fellas, Let's Bury The Hatchet"

A Strange Refusal
this
attempt
by a sociology class

interview

requirement quite absurd. Is
really any business of the national
organization whether or not the
members as individuals
(individuals who would be identified only
by number) chose to grant an interit

randomly-selecte- d

members of four campus sororities
to study participation in sorority
functions was met by refusals from
members on the basis that the
project and the questionnaire had
not been approved by their national

view?

The logic behind such a reorganizations.
quirement seems a bit hazy. The
Because of limitations of time, strict control on members imposthe class members chose not to ed by the national organization
petition the national groups but to in this situation can cast only a
limit their study to fraternity mempoor reflection on the institution.
bers, who posed no similar ob- This requirement of "censorship'
jections.
suggests the organizations have
since the students something to hide.
Especially
were to be interviewed as indiviWe feel this situation indicates
duals and not as representatives of an unnecessary imposition on the
their sororities, the approval of the freedom of the individual sorority
national organizations seems quite members by their national
unnnecessary and the devotion to

Beard Isn't The Only Issue
There are times when
of a basketball

being
governor must be frustrating.
Civil-righadvocates and several
newspapers, including the student
paper at the University of Kentucky,
have been increasingly critical lately of the school's failure to recruit
Negro athletes. But when Governor
Breathitt took the lead recently in
trying to recruit Negro star basket-ballButch Beard for the Wildcats,
he was immediately condemned by
the Student Council at the University of Louisville, where Beard is
also much wanted.
Admittedly, there is something
basically ridiculous in the pursuit
ts

er

player by gover- nors, educators and businessmen,
purportedly for the glory of an
educational institution. But given
the educational facts of life that
we face today, the Governor's conduct was not only proper but time- ly.

It is true, as critics have said,

that as governor he owes allegiance
to all state schools, though he is
an alumnus of UK. But he is also
chairman of the UK trustees, and as
such he has special obligations,
and in trying to recruit Beard he
has helped to underline a policy
and to establish an attitude; that
will be beneficial to the school.
Nor is the school alone involved
here. The integration of the athletic teams at the state's university would benefit the image of
the entire state as well as the
status of its Negro students (it
might also prop the sagging record of UK teams). And in trying
to speed this integration, the governor is exercising the leadership
which he owes the entire state.
The Courier-Journal

New Look In Dixie Politics
Sen. Olin Johnston of South
Carolina, who died the other day,

could have reasonbly been described as an
figure or as a
forerunner of the coming trend in
Southern politics, for he was both.
In one guise he was a throwback to the Populist politics of the
1890's. He was a champion of the
working man and the small farmer,
of the poor folks against the rich.
But as the Negro vote has grown
in South Carolina in the past 15
years, he also mastered the double-tal- k
and the underground lines of
communication which enable some
Southern Democrats to mouth the
phrases of white supremacy while
covertly appealing to the Negroes.
old-fashion-

The national Democratic Party,
under Presidents Kennedy and
Johnson, has in fact placed its bet
for the future on the calculation that
out of the present political flux in
the South a new majority coalition
of whites and Negroes based on
economic interests will emerge.

Sen. Johnston sensed this trend.

The chief opponent of this approach within the Democratic Party
has been Sen. Richard B. Russell
of Georgia, who has been ill for some
months and whose retirement next
year is now widely expected. For
20 .years Mr. Russell has been the
brains of the Southern bloc in the
Senate. Under his leadership the
members of this bloc have fought
d
a stubborn but losing
civil rights legislaaction against
tion.
The probable future course of
the Democrats in the South seems
clear. In most states they are likely
to follow the path of Sen. Johnston
y
we hope with decreasing
and increasing candor
and not the path of Sen. Russell.
The big question concerns Republican strategy. Will the party of
Lincoln resume competition for Negro voters or cling to the Gold-wate- r
strategy of alliance with the
conservatives?
rear-guar-

dema-goguer-

lily-whi-

te

-- The New York Times

Cabbages And Kings
New Student Government 'Plan'
JOEL COHEN
"What do you think's going to
Then, and this is an entirely
,
happen to the HCUA?"
distinct function, a student governj
V xTo the what?"
ment must be able to represent stuHarvard Council for dent opinion. In response to the
"The
Undergraduate Affairs, our student question, "What jobs do you think
government."
a student government ought to
"Gee, I dunno. What courses
perform?," seven randomly selectare you taking next semester?" ed Harvard Crimson editors
gave
no answer, and one randomly selectStudent government is an issue ed humor.
magazine editor cried,
of burning interest to every stu"Down with the Crimson!"
dent at Harvard. The iron hand of
Thus at least 12 percent of the
administrative despotism lies heavy students interviewed favored alteron our shoulders. The time has come
ations in the college's policy towhen we students must take the wards student
publications. What
future into our own hands and mold more effective
way to remedy this
the world that will be ours. No evil than for 4,500
undergraduates
better way exists than to begin to storm the
steps of Paine Hall
with effective and powerful student shouting "Press makes mess! Press
government, here and now.
makes mess!"
The first thing an effective stuIn short, I advocate mass
dent government must be able to
action individualistic mass action.
perform is present the demands
of the students. For instance, for We shall soon have the chance to
more powerful light bulbs over the divide the monolithic, inert
student governments in two.
toilets in Lamont Library.
We must seize the opportunity. But
Some of the student comwe must not stop there.
munity's most distinguished intellectual leaders have gotten eyeWithin the month, we must
strain trying to read under the petition for another referendum to
divide those two governments in
inadequate lighting in Lamont toilets. What more effective way to two again. And when we have
remedy this evil than for 4,500 four student governments, we must
undergraduates to storm up the petition and vote for eight. (Divide
steps of Emerson Hall or where-eve- r and conk her, as one auto mechanic
the administration is shoutsaid to the other). For in numbers
there is strength.
ing, "Might makes light! Might
makes light!"
19G5, THE COLl.KCIATE PHESS SEHVICE
By

"..

so-call- ed

The Kentucky Kernel
The South' s Outstanding College Daily

University of Kentucky

ESTABLISHED

1894

TUESDAY, APRIL 27. 1065

William

David IIawpe, Executive Editor

Crani--

,

Editor-in-Chi-

Sid Webb, Managing Editor

* tTHE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday; April 27,

Not All Washington Marcher;
Were Beatniks Or Extremists
By JOHN ZEII
Special to the Kernel
WASHINGTON "The only
thing this march proves is that
there are at least 15,000 degeneg
rate,
in
this country."
That was one of the criticisms voiced by onlookers at the
weekend March on Washington
to End the War in Vietnam.
The comment was extreme,
however, and at least partially
unjust.
left-win-

draft-dodge-

rs

News Analysis
True, many of the marchers
"beat." They had shaggy
beards and hair cuts, wore sandals, dressed recklessly, and had
all the other characteristics of
modern America's conception of
the "beat generation."
But there were others. Some
wore coats and ties, but the
majority of marchers wore normal, everyday clothing.
Several papers capitalized on
the "beatnik" situation and presented the public view, as was
reflected in a Hugh Haynie's
cartoon in the
Washington's
Sunday Star
published a quarter page composite of "some of the 16,000
pickets who marched for peace."
That "some" was six
looked

Courier-Journa-

ing marchers. Again, the people
depicted were extreme cases.
Were the marchers
Admittedly, they marched under
the sponsorship of Students for a
Democratic Society (SDS), a
group which calls itself "extremely l