xt72rb6w0g2t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt72rb6w0g2t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19631001  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October  1, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, October  1, 1963 1963 2015 true xt72rb6w0g2t section xt72rb6w0g2t UK Dentists Seek

Oral Cancer Cure

Jim DSTntTE Hi

The University College of Dentistry is now conducting a
.
program for the detection of mouth cancer.
The program under the direc
send a biopsy sample, or a smear,
or both, to the College of Dentistry. Dr. Rovin, having examined the specimen, reports the
condition to the dentist within
two days.
The importance of using both
methods is in correlating the
findings. National studies show
that the two methods are In
agreement in 90 percent of the
cases.
Dr. Rovin, who earned his
D.D.S. degree at the University
of Michigan and then did advanced work In pathology, noted
that about five percent of all
cancers are in the mouth.
Dr. Rovin also noted that while
BO to 85
percent of lip cancer is
curable, less than 50 percent of
malignancies in the mouth can
be treated successfully.
.
Because of the seriousness of
oral cancer Dr. Rovin said that
people should have oral examinations. The earlier a disturbance
Is discovered
the better the
chance for recovery.
The Department of Oral Pathology and its biopsy program
were incorporated in the original
planning of the College of Dentistry. This was considered another way in which the college
could be of service to the state.

tion of Dr. Sheldon Rovln, chairman of the Department of Oral
Pathology, consists of using two
methods in detecting malignancies.
The first method consists of
surgical removal of suspected tissue (biopsy). Iii a year's time, the
department has discovered four
early stages, cancerous growths
among approximately 450 specimens sent in by Kentucky dentists. All four growths were discovered early enough to be cured.
The second method Involves the
taking of a mouth smear, similar to Dr. George N. Papanico-lau- 's
"Pap" smear used to detect
cancer in women. Mouth smear
studies in many of the nation's
dental schools are government
sponsored with the hope of developing an oval "Pap" smear.
The program
operates thl3
way: any dentist in the state may

Library

The circulation desk in the
Margaret I. King Library has
been moved. It Is now located
In the Card Catalog room on
the second floor lobby.
mumtmitaefammsmi

Nunn Speaks Today
At Center Theater

The Republican gubernatorial nominee, Louie B. Nunn,
appearing on the University campus today in a handshaking
tour to be climaxed with a speech at the Student Center
ensed operations.
Theatre at 7:30 p.m.
is

Also on campus

are

Speaking ahead of Nunn will
be his running mate, H. Brmis
Lawrence, Louisville attorney.
Nunn, the first Republican ever
elected to a public office in Barren County, was named Barren
County's outstanding man of the
year in 1957. He managed campaigns for the election of U.S.
Senator John Sherman Cooper
and Thruston B. Morton, as well
as the Kentucky campaigns for
former President Dwight Eisenhower and former
Richard Nixon. He is a graduate
of the University of Louisville
law school. He attended the University of Cincinnati. Lawrence
is a member of the Board of Regents of Western State Teachers
College.
Nunn Is due on campus at 2
p.m. He will spend the afternoon
meeting students, and is expected to discuss his plans for the
University of Kentucky, as well
as for Kentucky's educational
system.
Tonights speech will be followed by a question and answer
session.

several

other Republican nominees for
the November elections. Meeting
students on a handshaking tour
of the campus this afternoon
will be Gene Auxier, candidate
for attorney general;
Marge
Cruise, nominee for treasurer;
Hugh James, commissioner of
Elmer Begley, secagriculture;
retary of state; and Jim Nickell,
auditor of public accounts;
Nunn will speak on, "Political
Interference in Education," discuss his education platform, and
his views concerning an order
banning racial bias in state-lic- -

Veterans' Benefits
receiving benefits
550 and War
Public Law 631 report
Orphans
to the veterans office today,
in
tomorrow and Thursday
Room 201-- B of the Administration Building. This is for the
purpose of signing for your
checks.
Veterans

under Public Law

Vol. LV

No. 15

University of Kentucky
OCT.
LEXINGTON,

1, 190.1

KY., TUESDAY,

Eight Pagei

Congress Approves

Committee Reports

Amendments
Accepted
By BILL GRANT
Kernel Daily Editor

Twenty-nin- e
Student Congress members, five less than
a constitutional
q u o r u m,

heard and approved the reports of two Congress committees last Thursday night.

Constitutionally a quorum was
present since its existence was
not questioned. Mid-wa- y
through
the meeting, Keith Burchett did
ask for a quorum call but withdrew his request after a long discussion.
The two committees, the Elections Committee and the Constitutional Revision Committee,
made reports after holding meetings the week before.
Ann Combs, reporting for the
Constitutional Revision Committee, listed three proposed amendments to the present Congress
constitution and a proposed apportionment listing.

Sayre Urges
Acls Defeat
Following Thursday night's
Student
Congress meeting,
Gene Sayre issued the following statement:
"I think both Student Congress
and the Constitutional Revision
Committee (and I include myself as a member of the Congress) have displayed the poorest quality of representation of
the Student body and do not have
any right to the support of the
students. I urge the defeat of all
three proposed amendments."
Sayre is the Interfratcrnity
Council representative in Student
Congress and is chairman of the
Elections Committee.
During Thursday's meeting, he
was one of several Congress members who favored the removal of
a year's membership in Congress
as a requirement for officers.

If approved in a campuswide
election and by the University
faculty, the amendments would
change three sections of the present constitution.
According to the amendments
the sections would read:
"Article Four, Section One
Three shall be a President, Vice
President, Secretary, and Treasurer of the Student Congress
elected by the student body in
a campuswide election. These
officers shall have served for one
year In the legislature of the
Congress. The order of succession
to the presidency shall be the
Vice President and the Chairman
of the Judicial Board,
"Article Four, Section Two
There shall be a legislative as- sembly of representatives elected
from the student body. The representation shall be apportioned
in the following manner: there
shall be a maximum of 50 voting
representatives.
The graduate and professional
schools shall be awarded the following representatives: Graduate
School, one; Colleges of Medicine and Dentistry, one; College
of Pharmacy, one; and the College of Law, two. The undergraduate schools shall divide the
remaining 43 representatives in
proportion to the size of the respective colleges. Reapportionment of the undergraduate
schools shall be mandatory each
fifth assembly and at the discretion of the Elections Committee. Non-votirepresentatives
shall be awarded the following:
Town Housing, Men's Residence
Halls, Governing Council, Associated Women Students, Panhel-leni- c
Council, and the Interfratcrnity Council.
"Article Four, Section Four
To be eligible to stand for election and to serve as a representative a student shall have completed at least one full semester
as a full-tim- e
student in residence at the University; shall be
in good standing with the University; and shall be registered

in the college in which he standi
for election. The academic qualifications shall apply to the
Officer
representatives.
and members of the Judicial
Board shall have an accumulated
academic standing of 2.4 or higher on a 4.0 system."
The amendments, if approved,
would cause several changes In
the Student Congress system.
Under the present constitution,
the Student Congress officers are
elected by the assembly. The
amended constitution would have
them elected by the student body
in a campuswide election.
Last year's Congress officers
were elected in a campuswide
election in the Spring of 196?.
But this election was made possible by a suspension of the Congress rules governing elections.
The 19G3-G- 3
Assembly was also
elected In the Spring of 1962. The
constitution calls for the elections
of representatives to take place
in the Fall semester.
Article Four, Section One, as
amended, would al.o eliminate a
President pro-teelected by the
Assembly.
Changes in Article Four, Section Two cut the size of the Assembly from 110 members to 50.
memIn giving out
berships in Congress, the proadds Town
posed amendment
Housing and Associated Women
Students to the t and eliminates the Family Housing Council,
the old Women's House President's Council, and the Student
Union Board.
The pi opesed amendment
would also change the basis of
apportionment from the size of a
college's faculty to the size of the
College's student enrollment.
The proposed amendment tj
Article Four, Section Four would
lower the academic requirements
for membership from 2.3 to a 2.0.
or, as the amendment puts it, "be
in good standing with the University."
The proposed amendment would
Continued on Page 8

WBKY Staff
Announced
include Kathy
New fall staff members of WT.kY-FJim Allison, associate
gerald, associate program tl i tec
music director, and
duction director, Dick Park,
John Ryan, news direc tor.
who began their duties Sept. 1
Other members of the staff
are: Jerry Raybeck, news assistant, Mike Meredith, assistant
Fit-to-

fkVr rail

cw
Vv

WP.KY-r-

i

.

;

lias announced its

t

lM!!-fi-

4

..

staff. On the

... O

;

;,c

-

Dr. Striven"

To Discuss
Behavior

A

Jerry Itaylieck, Jim Itucff, Richard Lee Park. Third
31ike Meredith,

fust row from the left are Rosa Lee Parr, Julia row, Robert Cooke, Bob Paddock,
Meredith, Kuthy Fitzgerald. Miry Lou O'Connell, Richard Hoof.
Mike I rogge. Second low, John Ryan, Jim Allison,

'

The first speaker this year in
the Department of Psychology
lecture series will be Dr. Michael
Scriven from the Department of
History and Philosophy of Science at Indiana University.
Dr. Scriven will discuss "Computer Simulation of Human Behavior; Present State and Future
Prospects" at 8 p.m. Thursday iy
the University Hospital Auditorium.
'A philosopher of science who
has been particularly concerned
with the problems of behavioral
science, Dr. Scriven hns taught
at the University of Minnes'.Ha
and Swarthmore College.

r,

chief engineer, Carolyn Campbell, continuity
director, Rosa
Lee Parr, continuity
assistant,
and Julia Meredith, traffic director.
Announcers-producer- s
for the
station are: Jim RuefT, Bob Paddock, Mike Fro'ge, Bob Cooke,
and Mike Dtitseh.
Mary Lou O'Connell, music librarian, Sid Webb, staff artist,
and Margaret Lowe, staff typi-t- ,
are also among the station's personnel.
WEKY will becin its new
broadcat schedule 0'L 1. ani
several new prowill feature
grams.
WBKY is owned by the University of Kentucky Broadcasting Service, anil is under V.i
supervi.ic.n of the faculty of the
Department of Radio, Television,
and Films.

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL,

Tuesday, Oct.

1,

13
Personal Items

Placement Service
Announces Dates
The University Placement
Service, mulcr the ilireition

ical, metallurgical, and nuclear engineering at all degree levels. Citizenship required.
(Note: Other Divisions of North
American Aviation may be on campus
on this date. Please check schedule
books for late Information.!
Oct.
Monsanta Chemical Co.
Chrrmtrand Corp. Accounting, business administration, business management, general business, MBA graduates.
Oct. 25: General Electric Ca. December graduates In electrical, mechanical enginerelng at B.S., M.S.
levels for all plant locations, for opportunities In design, research and
development, sales, application, engineering, manufacturing,
program.
Oct. 25: Kurt Salmon Associates
Industrial administration graduates for
trainee positions in management consulting, for locations throughout the
United States. Citizenship required.
Oct. 28: Federal Aviation Agency-Electr- ical
engineering nt B.S., M.S.
levels, for design, engineering, production, training program in WashingDC. Citizenship required.
ton,

of. Mis.

Kathcrine Kemper,
has amiounrnl the following
placement interviews
have been set up for the last
two weeks in October. All interested students should contact Mrs. Kemper in Room
207 at the Administration
lUiilding.

that

training

Oct. 21: Mrhl Manufacturing
Co.,
Cincinnati i Division of Phillips Pein arts
troleum i December graduate
and sciences, commerce, engineering
for management training in manufacturing, sales and marketing, administration, production, engineering,
Oct. 21: Txara Chemical engineering at BS. level. Chemistry at M.S.,
Ph.O. levels. Citizenship required.
Oct. 22: Appalachian Power Co.
Accounting: civil, electrical, mechanical engineering at B S. level. Citizenship required.
Oct. 22: Naval Ordnance Laboratory
Chemistry, mathematics, physics at
all degree levels; chemical, electrical,
mechanical, aeronautical
engineering
nt BS.. M.S. levels. Summer employment available for qualified juniors,
seniors, and graduate students. Citizenship required.
Oct. 22: Rohm and It an Co.
Chemistry at B.S., M S. levels; chemical, mechanical engineering. Citizenship required.
Oct. 22: Swift and Co., (F.vansvitlc)
General agriculture, economics, general business, marketing, merchandising, and sales at B S. level, for sales
positions. Citizenship required.
limine
International
Oct.
Machine
Accounting, mathematics;
mechanical and elect' ical engineering;
praduates in all fields interested in

of

Oct.

Reclamation-Ci-

l S. Navy. Officer Programs Officer will be in tlu Student
Cen'er to discuss various Officer Programs with all interested students.
Oct. 2.'i: American Air Miter Co.
May. AuguM graduates in physics;
chemical, civil, electrical
at FV3. level. Mechanical enginecrim;
at K.S., M.S. levels. Citizenship required.
Oct. 2.1: Atomic Fnergy Commission
Accounting at BS. level. Summer
employment available to qualified junior and senior men. Citizenship required.
Oct. 23: Devoc and Raynolds Co.
Chemittry at B.S., M.S. levels: organic chemistry at Ph.D. level; chemical engineering; for positions in Louisville. Newark. Detroit. Will inter-Viejuniors in chemistry, chemical
engineering for summer employment.
Citizenship required.
Oct. 24: J. C. Penney Co. Account-ribusiness administration. Business
management, economics, general business, marketing, merchandising, personnel management, sales, MBA candidates for opportunities in sales, general business training program.
Oct. 24: North American Aviation,
I. as Angeles Division Physics, mathematics at all degree levels; physical
chemistry at Ph.D. level; chemical,
civil, electrical, mechanical, metallurgical engineering at all degree levels.
Citizenship required.
Oct. 24: North American Aviation,
Atomics International
Chemistry,
mathematics, physics at M.S., Ph.D.
levels. Chemical, electrical, mechan

FUN FOR EVERYONE!

M

The room to the right of the
entrance of the Margaret I. King
Library is the Albcn W. Bark-Ic- y
Room.
The memorial room was dedicated in 1957 and contains personal and business articles that
belonged to the former vice president.
Among those items Included In
the exhibit Is a chair that Mr.
Barkley used during meetings of
the President's cabinet during the
Truman - Barkley administration
of 1949.
There Is also a desk In the
room. Mr. Barkley was the last
vice president to use the desk,
which was occupied by the presiding officers of the Senate from

vil,

electrical, mechanical engineering at US., M.S. levels, for design,
research and development, application,
engineering, construction for opportunities in 18 Western States.
Oct.
II mble Oil (Exploration
Department, Oil and fias Production,
Fsso Research and K.nf ineerinjr. Baton
Kouge Refinery, Marketing Department Chemistry at nil degree levels;
chemical, civil, electrical, mechanical
engineering at oil degree levels; geology, physics at B.S., M.S. levels;
marketing: law. Citizenship or permanent immigrant visa required.
Oct. 29: Mobay Chemical Co.
Chemistry graduates at all degree levels interested in research and technical sales; mechanical, chemical engineering. Citizenship required.
Well SurveyOct. 29: Srhlumherrer
Electrical, mechanical, mining,
ing
engeneral petroleum engineering;
gineering science, physics, geophysics,
engineering physics; for opportunities
in Louisiana. Texas. Mississippi, Oklahoma. Kansas, Illinois and California.
Ctizenship required.
Oct. 29: Arthur Young and Co.
Accounting graduates at U.S. level, for
professional accounting positions in
United States and foreign countries.
Oct. 3': Goodyear Atomic Corp.
Mav and August graduates. Chemistry,
mathematics, phtyaics nt B.S.. M.S.
levels; chemical, metallurgical engineering at BS. level; electrical, mechanical engineering at B.S., M.S.
levels. Citizenship required.
Oct. 30: Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co. (Corporate
ChemRecruiting)
istry; chemical, civil, electrical, mechanical engineering at B S. level; for
design, research and development, engineering, training program. Citizenship required.
Oct. 30: Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co. (Sales Personnel Department)
Chemistry ; chemical, civil, mechanical
engineering; business administration,
business management, marketing, sales
at B S. level. Citizenship required.
Oct. 31 : Marathon Oil Co. Commerce graduates interested in marketing; mathematics graduates interested in procedures research; secretarial graduates: accounting, business
administration graduates interested in
Accounting.
Oct. 31: Texas Instruments, Inc.
Analytical, inorganic, physical chemistry at M.S., Ph.D. levels; physics at
all degree levels: electrical, mechanical, metallurgical engineering at all
degree levels; for positions in Texas,
Massachusetts, Kentucky. Will interview graduate students for summer
employment Citizenship required.

b.iJes.
Oct.

ML

Of UarLley Now
In King Library

The flag on the right of the
room is the official flag of the
Vice President
of the United
States. President Truman ordered it designed.

CLASSIFIED
27S2t

ALLOWANCE PROBLEMS?
Beat them by selling Custom-Imprinte- d
SweaUhlrts in Just a
portion ofx your spare time. Big
on every sale. Every orprofits
ganization and group on campus
Is your prospect. Details from
RochElin Mfg. CoJ, Dept.
ester, Indiana. Men and women
27S3t
wanted.
FOR SALI

FOR SALE 1951 Plymouth,
gray,. 47.000 miles. New
tires, clean. 205 Culpepper Road.
25S3t
i

FOR SALE '58 Harley-Hummmotorcycle, double seat, good
running condition, good tires.
26S5t
Call
FOR SALE 1955 Dodge V-- 8,
excellent running condition $295. Contact Versailles

THEATRE

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tinnca flovlhla hnnpi far nonao- wards at
sary. Call D. A.
jt
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Shows continuously from 12:00
rhMti

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TODAY and WED'

AIZ GAYNOR'GIQ

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

COLOR

L'

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At 12:45, 3, 5:05, 7:15, V:25

1

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1:30 P.M.

OPEN DAILY

ENDS TONIGHT

SFORTARAMA" and "HATARI"
PLAY BANKO TONIGHT!

Av.nu.

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7:30

STARTS WEDNESDAY

7:30
Euclid

PREMIERE SHOWING

Chat

ADMISSION

COMING TOMORROW!

90c

JERRY LEWIS

as
'The Nutty Professor'
Plus

'The Lion'
William

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Trevor Howard
Both Features in Color

Starts 7:30

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$1.00

SHOWING

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AMERICA'S FASTEST
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GREATEST

and

ELSAMARliMELLI
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MACUIE SMITH
RCQ TAYLOR

DRIVERS!

1:30 P.M. POST TImT

CRSGN WELLES

im
LUNCHEON DAILY IN
BEAUTIFUL NEW CLUBHOUSE
OPEN TO ALL

PAN

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VISION'

First

and METROCOL.OR

Run

Comedy

Pctter Sellers

B

o At Least 10 Races Daily!
o FREE LADIES DAY
TV SET
WED., OCT. 2
AND DAVIDOW SUIT
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GIVEN AWAY!
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9

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f:r"".

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11

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YOUNC

I04t
MISCELLANEOUS

Kentucky

StJs

MISCELIANE

WANTEO

WANTED
Experienced organ
pHyer to play rhythm and blues
8.
for the Torques. Call

Hit

"The Wrong Arm of
the Law"

m

Peter Sellers

LNZS

tons;

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-

* THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Tuesday,

Oct. 1,

1963- -3

1

'0
1

11

s

l

f

,4

?.l vVi

roses and kisses to the new pledges. Still on the light
side, the weekend activities speeded up Saturday afternoon when the SAF's entertained the ADPi's with a jam
session. Of course the game didn't turn out too well, but
the two groups appear to have had a great time. On the

mmBmMmmmwmtmsmmmmmmmwmmmmmmst

Kernel Woman's Page
Engagements

Margo Waite, a senior psychology major from Los Angeles,
Calif, to Bob Farrell, a recent
mechanical engineering graduate
Irom Cincinnati.
Tudy Gilbert, a senior home
economics major from Hazard
and a member of Kappa Alpha
Theta, to Jax Carroll, a senior
from Marion,
pre-la- w
major
O. and a member of PI Kappa
at Transylvania.
Alpha
Mary Stuart McCabe, a Junior
education
elementary
major
from Lexington and a member
of Kappa Alpha Theta. to Phil
Morgan, a graduate student in
business
from
administration
Maysville and a member of Phi
Sigma Kappa.

T

'

i;v

1

S

The weekend and latter part of the week was a whirl of
activity. Keeping pare with the fast moving campus life
and the drive to become better acquainted with the new
sorority pledges, the men of Fhi Delta Theta made their
annual rounds of sorority row Thursday night giving red

I

Club Meetings

Keys
Keys, sophomore men's Honorary, will meet tonight in room
113 of the Student Center.
Troupers
Tro'ipors tryouts will be held at
7 p.m. today in the Fine Arts lab
theater. All interested students
are invited to attend.
DeMolays
There will be a meeting for the
purpose of possible organization
of both senior and active
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
In the Presbyterian Youth Center at the corner of Rose Street
and Rose Lane. For further incantact Steve Steformation,
ward, ex. 8579.
Pitkin Club
Pitkin Club will have Its first
meeting at noon tomorrow at the
Presbyterian Student Center. Dr.
James Gladden will open this
semester's series on "My Per- sonal Views on the Bible." Please
call 254-18today to make reservations.

Offieers Elected

Kappa Delta.
Kappa Delta pledge class officers are president, Susanne Zie-le- r;
!

Judy

Schlos-se- r,

secretary, Elaine Baumgar-te- n;
treasure, Judi Carnes; Junior Panhellenlc
representative,
sargeant-at- Connie
Mullins,

arms, Peggi Carnes; activities
chairman, Judy Rose; athletics
chairman, Joyce Billings.
Lambda. Chi Alpha.
Lambda Chi Alpha pledge class
officers are: president, Dean Da-no- s;
Glenn Dish-ma- n;
secretary, Ed Combs; treasurer, John Stream; and house
manager, Tom Renders.
Sigma Chi
The following men were reelected officers in the Sigcently
ma Chi pledge class: president.
Jim
Jack Durie;
Allen
Miller; secretary-treasure- r,
s,
VanOverbeke; and sargeant-at-armCharlie Fields.
Holmes Hall
Holmes Hall has elected the
following officers for the 1963-6- 4
school year: president,
Janie
Olmstead;
Clay
Smith; secretary, Carla Little:
AWS
treasurer, Myra Parsons;
Smith;
Sandy
representative,
WRH representatie, Bety Clark;
scholarship chairman, Pam Wy-at- t;
intramural chairman, Diane

ASK YOUR FRIENDS

WHO THE
STUDENTS'
DRUG STORE IS . . .

NAVE
Across the Street

Serving University of Kentucky
Students For 49 Years xi
..

1

Edited hy
Nancy Loughridge
music chairman,
Vickl
Blair;
activities
Bunton;
chairman,
Becky Snyder; hostess chairman,
Kay Smith;, devotions leader,
Oma Zimmernan;
dining room
chairman, Sharon Perkins; and
safety chairman, Penny Pember.

7
1

my.

i

M

fof

faculty side of our campus, the I niversity and I niver- sity Women's Club sponsored
reception for Presideat
and Mrs. Oswald and all new faculty members Thursday
night.

Campus Calendar
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

4
5

6

Ladies

Bridge-Buffe-

t,

Spindletop Hall, 10:30

a.m.-5:3-

0

p.m.

Third Annual Speech Educators Conference, Student Center

UK Musicale, Faculty Woodwind Quintet,
3:30 p.m.
Picasso Art Exhibit ends, Fine Arts Gallery

Memorial Hall,

X

Semi- -

y

and they

I

Formal
had this one

Suky Meeting

There will be a SuKy meeting tonight at 7. At 8:15 p.m.
a speaker will discuss a topic
of special importance to all
SuKy members. Membership
cards will be passed out to
those students who have not
received them.
Any student who wishes to
join SuKy may do so at this
meeting.

COMPLETE LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANING SERVICE

We Now Feature

.,

.

ONE DAY SERVICE
AT NO EXTRA COST!
In by 9 . . . Out by 5:00

BECKER

DRY CLEANING CO.
LAUNDRY
Corner of South Limestone and Euclid

THESE ARE
THREE HAPPY

INDEPENDENTS
weren't always happy.
they didn't smile at all.
Greeks
smiled.
Only
Only
3reeks had tickets to hear the
They
Once

KINGSTON
TRIO.
Independents felt discriminated against.
Why couldn't They really Belong? They did all the accepted
things said "I cannot believe
it," wore shoes- without socks,
iluuched outside White Hall,
So
but something was missing.

thes three Independents took
matters into their own hands.
They marched boldly into the
bookstore, asked for six tickets
to the Kingston Trio, and .waited for the explosion. But they
were not refused. The saleslady
smiled, and a lump came into
her pocketbook.. She even asked
for their autographs, because
they looked just a little bit
like
. . oh, never mind. Then
these Independents told all their
friends, and before you knew it,
every ticket was gone. (Some
late Greeks couldn't find a single seat.)
Here's where the Independents
went. Greeks invited also . . .
KENNEDY

BOOK STORE

BARNEY MILLER'S
DAWAHARE'S
GRAVES.

COX

UNIVERSITY

At

BOOK STORE

$2.50 at the Door
$2.50 Now

TV
106 Wolnut

caserns
"Of Course"

* Voluntary ROTC
r

Tlie University's

move this fall

from compulsory to voluntary ROTC
lias caused a change from mass indoctrination to a
program for the two ROTC departments.
quality-accente-

Each department has introduced
systems of drill for the basic
cadets this fall. These changes, airrfed
at a program with only 50 percent
of last year's enrollment, enable the
departments to present a better program to their basic cadets.
Each department has divided the
freshmen and sophomores in the drill
hours. Now, instead of giving the
sophomores the same instruction that
the freshmen are getting, and what
they received the year before, they
have separate drill programs.
In the past, one AFROTC advanced cadet has been responsible for
instructing up to 40 cadets. With the
new split drill, there is one instructor for every seven to ten freshmen
and one for every 12 to 14 sophomores.
Presently the Army cadre is instructing the basics. The advanced

rew

cadets will soon begin the instruction
of the basics. They will also be able
to give more individual instruction.
The Kernel believes this new program can only work to the good of the
students, the programs, and the University.
With the voluntary system, the
programs no longer have to instruct
the deadheads and others taking the
program only because it is required.
This can only work to the benefit of
those interested students taking
While the programs may lose a
few potential officers due to indecision over taking the program, this
will be far outweighed by the quality
of the enrolled cadets.
The programs should benefit by
the quality of those students enrolling
in ROTC because of interest rather
than compulsion.
The Kernel feels that this new
program can only aid the academic
campus by providing interested students with a workable system of
ROTC training.

Campus Parable
the

Kernels
But to him who tries and fails
and dies, I give great honor and glory
and tears. Miller
o

Let us have faith that right makes
might; and in that faith, let us, to the
end, dare to do our duty as we understand it. Lincoln
o

We keep on deceiving ourselves in
regard to our faults, until we at last
come to look upon them as virtues.

Heine

Entered lit the pout office at LeirfnRton, Kentucky an lecond clan matter onder tlie Act of March 3, 1879.
Published four timet a week during the regular sctinnt year rtrrpt during holidays and eiami.
A SCHOOL YEAH
SIX DOLLARS

Sue Endicott, Editorial Executive and Managing Editor
Daily Editors and Editorial Board:

Elizabeth Ward, William Grant, Richard Stevenson, and John Townsend

Carl Modecki, Campus Editor
Tom Finnie, Circulation Manager
of Sports
Jerry Schureman and Walter Pacan,
John Pfeiffer, Arts Editor
Nanct Louchbidce, Women' Page Editor
Kernel telephones: News, extension 2302; Advertising and Circulation, 2306

David Hawpe, Assistant Managing Editor
John Burkhard, Advertising Manager

MB
TO
For Student Participation
To The Editor:
Criticism can
ment of someone
pending upon the
criticism. Recent

be for the better-

or something depurpose behind the
letters from a certain campus organization for another organization have tended to
spread confusion and incur damages
to the Student Congress rather than
help it as they had earlier proposed
to do.
We are for united student corporation, however, we support the action
taken by the Student Congress in postponement of the elections and the reduction in the number of Student
Congress members. Having attended
the meetings of the Student Congress
and its Committee hearings, we are
in favor of those actions deemed
necessary by those 31 interested Student Congress members.
We do not believe that a group
the sie that "COUP" proposes to be
would have had only three of its members at one of the committee hearings if it is really for the implied
purpose of United Student Participation.
Jim Adkins
Commerce Sophomore
Sam Long
Arts & Sciences Sophomore
M. Douglas Smith
Arts & Sciences Sophomore

fMJ
More On Student Congress
To The Editor:
What is all this noise about the
Student Congress being a student government? Stop deceiving the student
body. It is not a student government
but a student advisory board. It has
no power of its own and its purpose
is to advise the faculty in the best
interests of the student.
And speaking of the Student Conof the
student body? Of course it isn't! It is
indimerely a tool for
viduals to gain campus recognition.
They represent no one but themselves.
But lo and behold, there springs
forth from the campus a new group
of saviors called COUP. They preach
of library "liles," responsible student
"government" and other goodies, but
frankly, we are a bit skeptical. Why
is COUP trying to salvage a "glory machine?" What makes this latest gioup
of reformeis any different from those
in the past? We would like to cite the
The
"Progressive Party" of
Retrogressive Party would have been
a more appropriate name.
What is to prevent this mess from
occuring again? How do we know
that COUP intends to work in the
interest of the student rather than to
further its own ambitions? If we are
going to wind up with the same type
of Student Congress as we've had in
the past, why have any at all?
gress, is it really representative
glory-seekin-

12.

Alex Salltjstio
Arts

&

Sciences Senior

Ron Mvtiram
Arts

&

Sciences Sophomore

Wisconsin Student Reports On Cuban Visit

Bv DAVE PROSTEN
From The Daily Cardinal
'
From all over the country, people
aie traveling south to aid in the fight
jor integration, because this is what
they believe in. One University student, however, has traveled even further south for what he believes in,
and for what he hopes everyone else
in the country will fight for.
John Coatsworth,
year old
rad student from the University of
.Wisconsin traveled only J0 miles from
Ji is country, but via a route which
took him nearly half way around the
vvoild. He is one of 5'J young men
and women who, despite State Derailment warnings, traveled to Cuba
this summer.
Coatswoith, a graduate student in
Ameiican Histoiy who specialies in
iAnieiitan foreign lelatious with Latin
Amciica, kit that there was no better
Way to learn about Cuba than to visit
the island himself. So he did.
To travel to Cuba, Coatsworth and
the other students had to lly from
Jlague, Czechoslovakia, to the island.
American authorities would not have
J

The South' Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

ROTC.

Campus
Beginning tomorrow,
Parable will again appear regularly
on the editorial page of the Kernel.
This feature is prepared by the directors of the various religious organizations connected with the University
and is
by Don Leak,
of the YMCA and reiigious
coordinator.
We leel t