xt7228050z4g https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7228050z4g/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19641106  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  6, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, November  6, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7228050z4g section xt7228050z4g Homecoming Recalls
Fiasco Weekend '63,
Infamous Foul-u- p
UK's 1963 Homecoming will not be soon forgotten by two
queen candidates, UK President John VV. Oswald, and a bevy of
students and alumni who watched a lackluster football game in 80
degree weather.
President Oswald made nationwide news in his second month
at the University by crowning the wrong Homecoming queen. Both
Vivian Shipley, the one who should have been crowned, and Julie
Richey, the one who was, registered mild shock. The mistake was
corrected midway through the third quarter.
Dr. Oswald, speaking to a group of entering freshmen this
September, said
"My colleagues in California were
awaiting news of my administration at UK, and the first word they
heard was that I had crowned the wrong queen."
The mistakewasmadebytheannouncer, whomisread the vote

totals.

The entire ceremony was highlighted by the use of a feedback
microphone, that phantom of Homecoming ceremonies which makes
even the most articulate speech sound like a drunken monologue.
Former Student Congress President Raleigh Lane was criticized
by a local minister for "public drunkeness" after using the tricky
device in the 1962 festivities.
The traditional Homecoming mums were wilted before the end of
the first quarter, as coeds dressed for brisk autumn weather found
instead an unseasonal heat wave.
On the saner side of Fiasco '63, Chi Omega captured the top
house decoration award for their display of a giant chessboard and
the slogan "The Ches-sur- e
Cats Checkmate Again." Pi Kappa Alpha
was second, and Kappa Delta and Kappa Alpha Theta tied for third.
Perhaps the most significant event of the weekend was the
dedication of the Helen G. King Alumni House on Rose Street.
Dr. Frank G. Dickey, former UK president, returned to lead
dedication ceremonies. Dr. Dickey said in his dedication address:
"It suffices to say that this building is a monument to the undying
love that a multitude of people have for their alma mater."

Finalists
Homecoming finalists
The five

were presented last
Homecoming queen
night at the Sports Center, folowing the torchlight parade and
pep rally.

Candidates in the final running are: Gail Davidson, representing Kappa Delta sorority; Caroline Jennings, Haggin Hall;
Sandra Lord, Donovan Hall; Amonda Mansfield, Delta Tau Delta
fraternity; and Susan Stumb, Phi Camma Delta fraternity.
The queen will be crowned and her court presented during the halftime festivities of Saturday's game.

Music Honorary "Plans
Recital Of Student Works
Phi Mu Alpha, music honorary at the University, will present a recital of American Music on Nov. 11 at 8p.m. in the Laboratory Theater of the Fine Arts Building.
The concert will include works fraternity for those interested in
by three UK students. They are promoting music at the local
Jerry Crady, Mike Jones, and Joe level.
Peck.
Officers of the fraternity are:
These and others works will
be performed by the faculty John Carr, president; Stanley
woodwin quintet, the student Carter, vice president, and Gary
brass ensemble, and the student Ferguson, secretary-treasureAn admission of 25 cents will
percussion ensemble. Individual
solos will be presented by Mike be charged for the recital. This
Sells, tenor, Mike Jones, violin, money will go toward a scholarand John Can, trombone.
ship fund for entering freshman
music majors.
Phi Mu Alpha is an honorary
r.

University of Kentucky
NOV.

Vol. LVI, No. 38

LEXINGTON,

KY., FRIDAY,

11

f,

Twelve Pages

First Speaker Promises Humor

Columnist Art Buchwald
To Kick Off Lecture Series
Humor columnist Art Buchwald will be the
first speaker in the Central Kentucky Concert and
Lecture Series at 8:15 o'clock in the Coliseum

Tuesday night.
Mr. Buchwald writes an amusing news column syndicated in 180 papers in this country and
abroad. His home base of Washington D.C. gives
him access to information from the United States
and Europe.

Leaving school to travel to Paris, Buchwald
became a correspondent for the show business
magazine, Variety. In 1949 he took a sample
column of witty offbeat scraps of news about Paris
to the Herald Tribune office and was hired as a

columnist.

Though he spent most of his time in Paris,
Mr. Buchwald traveled behind the Iron Curtain
occasionally, describing his trips as "showing the
Communists what a bloated, plutocratic capitalist
Now a writer for the New York Herald really looks like."
Buchwald has published nine books, one
Tribune, Mr. Buchwald began his journalistic
career as editor of his Marine company newspaper novel, and eight collections of his columns.
Before his lecture Mr. Buchwald will speak
in the Pacific Theater. Later at the University of
Southern California he was managing editor of the to members of Chi Delta Phi, women's literary
college humor magazine, columnist for its paper, honorary; Theta Sigma Phi and Sigma Delta Chi,
and author of a variety show.
journalism honoraries, and the Kernel staff.

Centennial Applications Available
For Subcommittees, Vacancies

Additional applications for
on the President's
Student Centennial Committee
are now being accepted from
members of the present junior
class or seniors not graduating
membership

before December, 1965.
Application forms may be

ob-

tained at either the Centennial
Office, Room 208, Student Center, or the Student Center information desk.
Deadline for returning the
forms to either of these two
points is 4 p.m. Nov. 16.
Centennial Coordinator Dr.
J. VV. Patterson said the applications are being considered to
either fill SCC positions left vacant by graduating members or
to add members to already existing
Upcoming
vacancies have yet to be determined.
The present committee of 15
was chosen early in the year by
President John VV. Oswald from
more than 150 applicants prior
to the president's making final
selections.

The Student Centennial Committee was formed to plan student
activities during the University's
100th anniversary which begins
in January and will officially be
kicked off with a Founder's Day
observance Feb. 22.
"Our main purpose in seeking these applications now is to
get interested and capable students to begin working with committees which have either expanded their original plans or

search and Creativity, and the
sale of Centennial charms for
scholarship funds.
Jim Svara and Sandy Brock
of the Steering
are
Committee.
Svara said today another project will be announced next week.

Ideas Wanted

ones which suffer personnel
losses through next May's graduation," Dr. Patterson said.
"The present committee has
initiated a number of challenging
programs and the University will
now look to members of the junior
class to carry this work on until
the Centennial is concluded in
December, 1965," he added.

Ideas for the University centennial program will be solicited
by members of Student Congress
Monday and Tuesday, Steve
Beshear, congress president, said
today.
Beshear said students could
submit their ideas at a table
which will be set up outside the
Student Center Grille. He said
the ideas received would be
discussed in detail at a Student

Three Student Centennial
Committee projects have already
been announced. They are a Centennial Class Annual Scholarship
Fund Drive, a Centennial Conference on Undergraduate Re

night.
Beshear urged students to attend the congress meeting and
voice their opinions in regard to
the centennial program.

Congress

meeting Thursday

Humanities Needs
More Turbulence
Arrowsmith Says

By HAL KEMP
Kernel Staff Writer
Humanities teachers need to recover "the turbulence im- licit in the classics, whether Greek, Latin or English."
This was the comment last 7:30 in the Vacuity Club at the
Student Center. His lecture is
night of Dr. William (). Arrow-smittitled "Turbulence, Translation,
University of Texas professor of classical languages. Dr. and Scholarship."
The lecturer is acclaimed as
Arrowsmith was guest lecturer
at the University on the Phi Beta a translator of the woiksol AristoKappa Visiting Scholar Program. phanes, Euiipidcs, and l'ction-icus- .
He was coauthor of '"The
said that
Dr. Arrowsmith
"
humanities teai hers are in thin- Cratt and Contest of
and editor of "Image of
ner of becoming technicians in
I he
the modem university, lie addItaly,
Complete Creek Coed, this situation is causeil by the medies," and "Complete Creek
humanities teachers thcmsi lees Tragedy."
Dr. Arrow smith has held a
who have increasingly expelled
Hhodes Siholaiship, and Bollin-gi-ii- ,
luely turbulence from their
ami tin ir classes.
I'lix de Home, and GuggenThe piofessor said that the heim fellowships, lie taught at
most tuibulcnt thing in the Ihe I niwisity ol California,
woild is thchelii I in human gicat-nes- s I'linccton, and Wcslcvan uni-sit it s before assuming his
and that the classics aie the
l
souice books of that gieatness.
position as piofcssoi of i
Dr. Arrowsmith u ill athliess
languages at the I imcisity
the II umanitics Club tonight at of Tcas in P)"S.
Iians-lution,-

stu-die- s

v
-

-

.

t

.

,

Iauivvs Initiates
Lances, junior men's honorary, recently Initiated
seven new members. Aboe (lirst row from the
are Daniel II. rimell. Jay Durie. and Itobert Staib;
)

(second row, from the left), Jack ('. Lyne, Dick
March, William Hamilton, and Kaymond K. Davis,

i

pie-se-

lass-ica-

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Nov. f,

1964

AWS To Sponsor

Annua

U.S. ARMY R.O.T.C.

loA-Minut-

Night

c

roR
spon-sore-

by Associated Women

d

Stu-

with the

dents in cooperation

Women's Residence Halls Council, will be Saturday night.
On this night women living in
dorms and sorority houses will be
able to stay out until 2 a.m. if
they pay a penny for every minute they stay out past 1 a.m., the
regular closing time on Saturday

nights.
Ihe women win sign uui on
sheets and will
special sign-oindicate the time they plan to
return.
This will give these students
an opportunity to attend the
Homecoming Dance to be held at
the Student Center Saturday
Night.

AT?ii7

Sponsors

The two newest Army ROTC sponsors chosen in recent elections are
Virginia (Gee Gee) Wick and Becky Snyder (right).

Opera Theatre Presents
'Dido And Aeneas9
Henry Purcell's "Dido and
Aeneas" will be presented bythe
University Opera Theatre at 8:30
and Saturp.m. tommorow
day in the Laboratory Theatre
of the Fine Arts Building. There
is i:0 admission fee.
Patricia Bracken and Dianne
Davidson, both of Lexington, will
sing the leading roles of Dido and
Belinda. Michael Sells, Valley
Station, will sing the part of
Aeneas.
The accompaniment for the
production will feature a harpsichord, played by Anna Laura
Hood.
Henry Purcell wrote "Dido
and Aeneas" in 1689 at the invitation of Josias Priest, head of a
young ladies' school in Chelsea,
England. Musical authorities say
it is perhaps ironic that the work,
considered by many to be the
greatest opera to come out of
England, should have been written to be performed at a school
for girls instead of in the profes-iont hearer.

is

Miss Phyllis Jenness, UK Department of Music, is musical
and stage director for the

TYPEWRITERS
FOR RENT
DIXIE

CASH REGISTER
Inc.

Last year, $480 was made
first
from
semester, and $370 second semester. This money is used by the
AWS Senate and House to sponsor various projects.

Sen, Nelson Wants
Students To Write

probable that men were
imported for the first performance
for the role of Aeneas and for the
chorus and that the schoolgirls
took the other parts.
The story Is taken from Virgil's "Aeneid," and much of it
stays close to the original. Aeneas
has been driven by a storm to
Carthage where he has fallen in
love with Dido, the queen. The
opera begins at this point. The
witches in Purcell's production
represent a departure from Virgil,
and are probably the Restoration's
idea of portraying the gods.
It

Concerning Draft

WASHINGTON (CPS) -- Sen.
who
Gaylord Nelson
nas been campaigning for the
abolition of the draft, would
like to hear from students on
this issue.
The senator's administrative
assistant told CPS last week that
students who are among those
affected by draft laws "ought
to be communicating with their
congressmen."
Students are currently deferred from the draft so long as
they remain in college.
(D.-Wis-

A7

J

,

Hudson

TO SELL OR TRADE 3
or trade for a big
Call

LOST Corbin High School class
ring with initials A.C.C. If found
any time.
please call

254-18-

after

4 p.m.

ls

AF-- B

FOR SALE
condition,

TR--

252-31-

5N2t

6.

roadster, mint
firm price. Call
6Nlt

3

$700

3.

ROOMS for one or two boys. One
block from UK. 347 Linden
3N4t
Walk. Call
0.

ROOM for three boys.
Contact Russell Wright, 123
3N4t
State St., phone
two bedFOR RENT Apartment,
rooms, living room, dining room,
kitchen, bath. All bills paid.
Close to campus. Ideal for two
or three persons. Contact W. C.
ext.
Thompson, days
after 9:30 p.m.,
277; nights
6Nlt
HAVE

Stars In The Night

9.

Applications are available for
positions on the Stars in the
Night Steering Committee.
for the steerThose
ing committee will head subcommittees in the planning of
the annual women's awards program held each spring. Six positions are open.
Applications may be obtained
from any AWS House Representative, at the Student Center information desk, the AWS office,
or the Dean of Women's Office.
sclc-cte-

0,

7.

'"

WANTED

WANTED Boy to share house,
308 Columbia Ave., $35 a month;
call
after 5 p.m. 2906t
254-&5-

English tutor for
visiting mathematics professor.
Call extension 2521.
6Nlt
3
' 3 3 mikiiIanioui s 1 s J J

WANTED

They should be returned to
the AWS office, the Dean of
Women's Office, or to Dede
Cramer at 468 Rose St. by
Nov. 17.

''

ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts
and coats for women. Mildred
Cohen, 215 E. Maxwell, Phone
6.

tf

Open

n.

Aim. 75c Cartoon 7:30
3 Feature Program
NO

,

It's not too early
to have your
portrait taken
for

HOLIDAY HOUSE

U

LASSIE'S GREAT ADVENfURiT

r

VI

iI

I

,

FABIAN

VTTt
a

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rfrwarawJ 4 Win.

2a
"THUNDER
ISLAND'

CinimaScopE

No. 3
More Action
GENE NELSON
FAY SPAIN

For Appointment

Tnm

flnp.ta

LOST White gold, oval shaped
Bulova watch with expansion
band. Reward. Call Karen Cook,
3N4t
extension 6205.

4.

Christmas Giving
222 S. Lime

817

prvir.

FOR SALE Two gray wool rugs
with pads, size 9x11 and 9x15.
5.
Two Spanish shawls. Call
3N4t

Less than
FOR SALE 1964 TR-one year old. 11,000 miles actual.
Will make trade. Call

ERNIE KOVACS

'For Living and Giving
jL

3N4t

Green corduroy winter
LOST
coat, :l length. If found phone
6754 and ask for Don. Lost In
5N2t
Donovan Cafeteria.

NO. 2
ACTION
JOHN WAYNE
STEWART GRANGER

Studio

CO.,

GIFTS

LOST

iali

For The Best
In Photography

Spenglcr

IBM, UNDERWOOD ELECTRIC,
ALL MAKES
MANUALS
9
124 N. Broadway
Ph.

-

CLASSIFIED

Project:

EUCLID

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AYENUE

255-667-

2

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7:30
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SELECTIONS

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Buddy

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OVER

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Paula Prentiss
IN COLOR

Bob Hope
Jim Hutton

explosive!

Can a girl
from
Leadville

find fun,
romance

ONIC

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or.'0;,..

happiness
-

9:30

NOW!
A

The Kentucky Kernel
DcKun
became
Cadet

$20,000,000?

T

0

the

ia 1894,
the tWord in liiOO, and the Idea ia
1004. Published
continuously
ai the
Krrn. l unce 1919.
fublished at the University of Kentucky's Lexington campul four times racb
week during the school year excrpt during holiday and exam period. I'ubliihed
wee kly during the tuiiiuier term.
The Kernel is governed by a Student
Publications
board, frof. faul OI.erst,
Collige of Law, chairman; and Steoheu
PalmiT, senior law student, secretary.
l.ntifed at the ot oil ice at Leung-toKeutucky as second cluss matter
under the ai t of March 3. 1879.
SUBSCHIPTION BATKS
Yearly, by inail-7.0- U
Per touy, from filet- -l .10
KLHNKL TH.EPHONES
Editor, Kiecutive Editor, Managing
fclitor
8321
News lJmk, Sports, Women's Editor,
Socials
8320
8314
Advertising, Busumms, Circulation

a.

Y0UBBT,

mm

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tuuK) hack

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Fly

In Color

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Nov.

King Alumni House Set
For Second Celebration

One year after the dedication
ceremonies the Helen G. King
Alumni House has seen more than
10,000 alumni and friends pass
through the front doors into the
Great Hall.
Eighty-fiv-

alum-

outstanding

e

ni from all walks of life have
found their way into the Hall for
Distinguished Alumni.
The Alumni House is first a
central place from which to disseminate information to the varalumni
ious
organizations
throughout the United States.
Secondly, it is a home for returning alumni. Here, they can
invoke old memories many of
them almost forgotten with the
lapse of time.
In the year since the Alumni
Association has had its central
focal point, a rejuvenation in the
activities of local chapters has
been seen and attributed to the
increased efficiency of the central
organ. This year should see the
highest return of alumni.
Anticipating the increase of
returnees the Aiumni Association
has increased the scope of their
annual program.
From 9:30 to 11:30 o'clock Saturday morning alumni will register at the House. Immediately
following this is the annual
brunch. The charge is $2 per
person.
The game on Stoll Field will
include the half-tim-e
activity of
the Homecoming
crowning
Queen. William Cant, Owens-borpresent alumni president,
will crown the queen.
After the game alumni, faculty, students and friends are invited to a reception honoring UK
president and Mrs. John VV. Oswald.
At 8:30 o'clock that evening

1

Two

three-roo-

1

V

floor.

III HI

te

THE

ju

Om'ww

181 ii

Honey-dippeChar-broile-

d

d

Open Til 2:30 a.m.
On Weekends

Opposite
Med Center

COATS
Fur Trimmed and
Untrimmed . . .

7

Rose

At Lima

i PERKINS PANCAKE frjOUSE

DOOR TO FASHION
819 EUCLID AVE.
CHEVY CHASE

Homecoming
Special !

Irft

pancake treats
chicken, jumbo shrimp
steaks, 'Perkins-burge- r'

Taste-tempti- ng

1

-

Weekend Delight

o,

--

.eSjr
The colonial structure of the
V
'1
"j
in
Mpr
facade is contrasted by the bright
modern interior. Red carpeting The Great Hall features a dramatic contrast between its
offsets bold black and white
tile and red carpeting. The Hall leads into the library at the
flooring in the Great Hall and far end, over which is the balcony with several card tables. Meeting
rooms adjoin the balcony.
subdued tones of brown and beige
are in keeping with the atmosphere of the library.

awwa'

vw

&toHr titeA i

suites have

The Helen G. King Alumni House, located at the corner of Rose
Street and Euclid Ave. will play host this weekend to UK alumni
returning for the Homecoming festivities. The Alumni House is celebrating the first anniversary of its dedication.
Matin

i .tea

their entrances off the balcony
and two additional meeting rooms
are also available on the second

,

,

:J

'

second floor and has card tables
and other parlor game facilities.

Ray Hector and his orchestra will
play at the annual alumni dance
in the Thoenix Hotel Ballroom.
All activities except the dance
at the Alumni
are scheduled
House.
Miss Helen G. King, Director
of Alumni Affairs, is looking forward to seeing new faces at this
year's celebration. She and her
staff enjoy showing off the house
to any and all visitors.
Included in the house is a library,
meeting room and
downstairs lounge. A balcony encircles the entire perimeter of the

(i. 19it--

OFF
REGULAR
PRICE!

Students, parents, alums

.

.

.

with the cold weather still
to come Josef's is offering
their entire stock of handsome winter coats at this
excellent special price . . .
hurry in . . . we're happy
to help you.

CONTACT
LENSES
Special Consideration for
lege Students, Instructors,
Personnel.

Col-

and

MONFRIED
OPTICAL
135 W. Short St.
3
Phone
254-658-

KENTUCKY
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Not.

4

6, 1964

RALPH McGILL

Letter From A Southern Town
A letter from a rural Southern
county said: "I have been thinking about a happening in our community. We have a small farmer
here, a renter. He works hard.
His wife does her part. His daddy
and mother are still living. They
are old and live on the place with
this fellow.
"The old man is able to putter
around and do a few chores. The
old lady has been ailing for a
number of years. Last week the
old lady got real sick and had to
be taken into the county seat to

the hospital.

"I found myself thinking
about this fellow'scase. He drove
his mother over a federal aid highway to the
hospital,
largely paid for with federal aid.
If it hadn't been for federal help
there wouldn't be a hospital
there. The old man draws some
Social Security and I guess the
d
old lady gets a
e
pension.
"Now, my point was that if
this had been "the good old days,'
there wouldn't have been a hospital, and this small renter's father
and mother would have been in
the county poor house. You remembers those county poor
houses? They were mighty bad.
Today, you hardly ever hear of
them.
I found myself thirJdng that
all of us, especially people in
the rural counties, would be a
lot worse off it it were not for
federal help in our lives. I don't
quite understand people who are
so heated up about what they call
socialism and who quote Sen.
Coldwater about how the government is taking away our
Hill-Burto- n

federal-matche-

old-ag-

on. I remember when Mr. Roosevelt came to Warm Springs and
we all cheered him because he
and his administration had
brought lights to the farms.
"In no country in the world
do farmers have so much help
and understanding from their
I remember
the
government.
lights, and I just laugh at these
people who go around saying that
the government is too big and
that it ought not to interfere in
our lives. I tell you we didn't
lose any freedom. We were rescued from darkness and kerosene
lamps by the federal government's interest and help, and I
won't forget it.
These two letters are samples
of comment.
A good question to ask those
who criticize the many federal
aids that have enriched American life and worked in partnership with the private sector (as
in electricity) to take burdens off
the backs of people is: Which
agency would you first eliminate?
Social Security? Old age pensions? Unemployment insurance?
Aid to dependent
REA

A letter from Meriwether
County, Georgia, said: "I was
a young girl just barely in my
teens when 'they turned on the
lights, but I can still remember
the excitement of it. There had
been a lot of planning. We had
watched the poles go up and
the wire strung. It took months.
"Then, one day, they got to
our house. You talk about kids
being excited. They wired our
house. The lights were nothing
fancy just a drop cord in the
middle of the room, except in
the living room. There were two
outlets so my mother could have
another light 'to sew by. We
had a big speaking and program,
and then the hour came the
lights came on. There was never
such a time. I sure wouldn't care
to go back to kerosene lamps and
lanterns.
"T was too young to know all
about it them. But as I gTew up
I learned.
If the govemement
hadn't come along with the REA
s,
the private companies
couldn't possibly have paid out
the money to bring lights to the
farms. But once the
were
formed and did it, then the companies and the appliance people
made more money than ever beco-op-

co-op- s?

co-o-

children, the blind, and crippled? Hospitals? Highways? Are
farm price supports, faulty as
they are, any less desirable than
.tariffs on manufactured articles?
Which shall be first to be cut

fore.

"In no time my daddy had a
pump in the well and my mother
was wanting running water in the
house. People bought bathrooms,
washing machines, and lots of
other things to go with the lights.
I was old enough to iron, and I
still remember how beautiful I
thought that first electric iron
was. It was like Christmas had

MEMlEt AMEIICAN GEM SOCIETY

You can give without loving, but you cant love
without giving.

h ulleR) & Wilder
f
log

.

ESPLANADE

ZIP 40507

.INCORPORATED

PH. 251.1 51 A

1

LEXINGTON, KY.

J

(Copyright 19&f)

Art Club
Selected student paintings will
be shouTi in an exhibit sponsored by the Art Club in the
Student Center Art Gallery
through Tuesday. Hours for the
exhibition wiH be posted--

WELCOME
ALUMS
Perfect For The Game and Your
Homecoming Weekend!

Special Purchase!
LUXURIOUSLY
MINK-TRIMME-

D

SUEDE COATS
:

There is a "common sense" way to select
your diamond rely on the facts. Let us show
you the overall picture of diamond
value and quality. Take advantage of our vast
gemological knowledge and experience.
Youll find this is the wise way to select the
diamond you'll be proud to give or own.

off?

come a big, wonderful Christmas when the lights were turned

.

WHAT IS MEANT BY "COLOR"?
When you find crystal-clea- r
absence of
any color In the body of a diamond it it
usually of the finest quality. This is interior
color, not the flashes of rainbow colors
called "fire." In general, the closer a
diamond approaches the absolute absence
of any color, the higher it is evaluated.

id

Vcluss

Sun
"

flannel ruffle
Lined wool flannel

""in

shift...

Hatching ruffle of
such importance that it cannot
be considered frivolous. It
has latpact. Like the differ-

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and stere clothes. Cool Pink,
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UNTRIMMED
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Values to $75!

7

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velveteen Jumper
soft

LABTBUG's

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pocket-tunneli-

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BASIC WOOL
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ELACX
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IC-1- 8

Welcome Alumni!
Homecoming

Saturday,
November 7tn

SHC$P
rasniors for
Young

.

V:

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main it.

-

iopkitCtaiti

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday. Nov.

Teenage Problems
Topic Of Meeting

"Problems of Teenagers: Heal
and Unreal" will be discussed
at a fall meeting of the Mental
Health Association of Central
Kentucky Monday.
The topic will be discussed
by a psychiatrist and a psychologist at 8 p.m. at Memorial
Hall.
Dr. Dale Farabee, chief consultant psychiatrist. Division of
Community Service, Kentucky
Department of Mental Health;
and Joseph Willctt, psychologist
the
at
Northern
Kentucky
Mental Health Center, will be
the speakers.
Dr. Farabee is also a member
of the faculty and staff of the
UK College of Medicine and is
chief of the psychiatric section
of the University Student Health
Service.
Problems to be discussed include improved communication

tr

)

"

I! II

between parents and adolescents, development problems of
adolescence and the real problem which arises when a teenager loses the ability to adjust
to his increasing independence,
group relationship, and physical

e--

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opj

WJ

1

That's how you feel, and WOW is how

Wheeee!

you look in Hoedown or Hoot.
'

if

Either will do

it

or both,

that's better. Instant Fit linings. Fashion with dash.

-

Colors you name

it

Edith Henry

A

71)

cum lively

sunminma

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w;

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Sizes

has

sing out yours;

it. 2

to

14.

IT TAKES
LITTLE PUSH

There are many ways to
earn a good living today.
There will be as many if
not more tomorrow. With
one difference. In tomor
row's good job, you'll be us
ing different methods, work
ing with new machines.

You

won't get

tomorrow's Jobs with
yesterday's skills
Tomorrow's jobs will

de-

mand more. New skills. New
abilities. The men who fill
those jobs will have to have
more to offer. They'll have
to be qualified.
You can qualify for the
good fobs of tomorrow by
re training. Today. It might
mean taking a few courses
at nignt school. Or some
time practicing a new skill,
boning up on new techniques.
Is it worth the trouble? It
Is if you want to make a better living tomorrow, and in
the years to come. The local
office of your state employment service can provide
some helpful Advice. Why
jriot take itf

now
for tomorrow's Jobs
Train

The HOOT $10.99

SSw

HOEDOWN $10.99.
sizes over 10 slightly higher

wife's
155

EAST MAIN

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Th.,. UXHGTON,

KY.

sjc

11:

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* "What's The Latest On The Keel Khrtishlash?"

Thoughts On Homecoming
that

It is interesting to note
the event which brings alumni back
to campus each year is Homecoming, which is focused on a football
game between the team which represents the University and the
team representing another school.
In the process, one potentially
productive aspect of this occasion
is ignored: the possibility of alums
and the campus leadership students, faculty, and administrationexchanging ideas concerning
the University.
What better time for the major
groups to exchange information
concerning progress achieved, current problems, and plans for the
institution's future?
Instead we are spending the
entire weekend cheering the football team, crowning a queen, partying, reminiscing, and engaging in
other superfluous activities.
Perhaps if alumni were made
aware of problems currently facing
the University, they could be motivated to participate in their solution. Perhaps they could contribute
to the growth of the institution, and
not merely to the growth of the

Alumni treasury.
We propose, then, that the
homecoming steering committee
broaden its outlook, that it reassess
the value of what ranks as a success socially, but rates a failing
mark in the realm of productive
exchange.
We understand that Homecoming 1965 will include an alumni
seminar, planned by the alumni
centennial committee. We suggest
this might be the instrument
through which the major groups on
campus students, teachers, and
administrators can communicate
with alumni concerning the state
of the University.
We propose the conference include a round table discussion, at
which alumni could gain some sort
of perspective concerning the current status of the school. At this
conference alumni would be able to
ask questions and express opinions.
The planning should include persons in positions of leadership in
each of the major groups. It would
include instructions to participants
that a candid, realistic discussion
of problems would be desired.

my

x

Nuclear Safety
It will be easy to create a world
in which most nations, large and
small, responsible and irresponsible,
are loaded with atomic weapons.
It is only necessary to wait.
It will be extremely difficult, on
the other hand, to prevent these
weapons from spreading. It will be
as difficult, politically, as it was to
create the atom bomb tec