xt74j09w1m1k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt74j09w1m1k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590106  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January  6, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, January  6, 1959 1959 2013 true xt74j09w1m1k section xt74j09w1m1k OUTLOOK
'

'59

HOMECOMING LOOMS AS 1959 ISSUE

By DAN MILLOTT
With the beginning of 1953 It Is
Interesting to takt out the trusty
crystal ball and give it a good loolc.
No doubt there will be issues
that will ari.c durin? the next
calendar year that will not be
touched heir, but as of
the
following things seem; plainly In

view.

the year wears on, one of the
bluest lswes will be the problem
of homecoming and who' will
the event.
The "autonomous steering committee" created by SC several
weeks ago has already begun
functioning, but there are many
yet unsolved problems in th3 whole
As

ter

matter.

Progress oyer homecomln? appears to be stalled over the question of who is to administer the
display contests. We might not
learn tQie outcome of this until
next fall, but the issue lsbeing
privately debated now.
IFC and Panhellenic will make
an all out effort to sell the "Greek
Week" program as an all campus
affair. There were some grumb-- "
lings about the misunderstanding
that developed over the nature of
the 1958 affair. The concert experienced a smaller gate than was
anticipated.
The new UK grading; system will
probably cause Its .biggest mortality rate the first year (1959).
After that it will level out when

the requirement Is firmly in mind.
.The UK campus will be politicaW
hotbed this spring when the state
gubernatorial campaign reaches its
critical stage. This will be the first
gubernatorial election in which 18
year olds. will be able to vote.
Student government and political science groups here are already
making plans to invite' candidates
for appearances.
In the Democratic primary race,
the three top candidates all have a
nucleus of a campaign organization already underway on campus.
These student campaign organizations will certainly be heard from

April 1 with the election coming In pass on a voluntary insuranco plait
May. Both parties will hold con- this spring. It Is possible, but unventions to select their nominees likely, that an NSA proposition
this year.
might be 6n the ballot in tho
As of now a few names can be May general elections.
considered as possible SC presiAnother debate appears likely
dential candidates for the coming over the touchy NSA matter thi
conventions. Among these are Dan spring. The possibility of UK ever
West, last year's Campus Party joining is brighter if positive acvice presidential candidate; Bob tion is taken during the Perinea

Chambliss, present Campus Party
chairman; and Whayne Priest
(SP), retiring SC elections chairman.
This year's nominees appear to
be more in doubt than in any pre-

administration.
f Since IFC made a conclusive rejection of Delta Upsilon last fall,
expansion of the UK fraternity
system is a remote possibility In
vious year.
by May 19.The student insurance and NSA 1959. The expansion situation for
The contest for SC president questions will be issues during the the sorority system also seems unwill get underway shortly after coming year. Most likely SC will likely this year.
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LEXINGTON. KV.. TUESDAY, JAN. 0, 1959

V
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t. I

The

in University traffic flow..
Beginning yesterday, the one-wa- y
circular drive in front of the Administration Building became oneway the other- way. .
r. The.Miuth 'sate is now the new
entrance to the University from
Limestone Street with the north
H:tp the new exit. The switch was
lollowini;"' a Lexinct(n
re:
t at f ;c
pi, m making 'Limestoiii'
rv

.

!

lanth from Montmall.'.i

o:u'-wa- v

Street tc Seventh Street.
:an L. I.. Martin announced
that the south entrance to t lie
will bo widened

c.itnpus

soon to

facilitate traiiic flow. Also, a fpw
campus parking spaces will be lost
by the move, he said.
UjAT Street has also beeiimacip
ont'-v.t- v
from
Seventh
sou'h
Street to Montmullin Street. '

ENGINEERS EXAM
The

I

nRinecr-in-Traini-

cninccrini;

students

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on

scu--

Thursday in Koom Idl.of the
Lrmiiu crin

Annex.

The tain will bein at
and will last until 5 p. m.

8

soon as possible.
4. West bound vihie'les (in Main
Street will be permitted to turn
rmht onto Limestone. All other
twin.-at this intersection will be
--

n;

will lie given for

:r

e

a. in.

prohibited.
For Upper S reK
1. Parking will be prohibited at
all times on the west suie of Upi er
:

Ringo Is Appointed
To Campaign Post
Jerry F. Icingo, a senior in the
School of Journalism, was named
Siturc'ny to direct the organization of young Kentuckians in
behalf of Waterfield-for-governo- r.
UK student" is
The
publisher of The Menifee County
Journal, a biweekly published nt
Frenchbuig. He has served as national vice president of the Future
Farmers of America and as president of the Kentucky F.F.A.
The announcement of llingo's
appointment was made by Joseph
L. Leary, campaign manager for
Lt. Guv. Harry Lee Vui field.
Leary also announced the appointment of Carroll Hubbard Jr., a
senior at Georgetown Cullege, as
( bairman of the Committee of
Young Kentuckians.
Pingo attended the
In 1956
Democratic National Coinention.
and was the youngest delegate in
the history of the convention. He
o--

was the keynote speaker in 195(1
for President Eisenhower's Safety
Conference, held in Washington.

Ringo spent
months inXJapan and the Philip-pinesa representative o the
educational
Department's
SUfe
exchange.
In 1953 he won the state-wid- e
F.I'.A. speaking contest, and in
l!tj won the National Forensic
alf

fs

League

extemporaneous-speakin-

g

control. He won the Kentucky and
f the
national championships
American Farm llureau "Talk
Meet" in 1955.
Ringo is also publisher of The
Young Rural Kentuckian, a magazine for farm youth. He is an advisory director of Kentucky Industries Trust Co., Louisville, and
congregational chairman cf
ik
Frenchbuig United Presbyterian
Church.

111

VI

J

No. 50

Wslj Cau QPQ
UI Traffic CEaiiges
Lexington traffic officials have
released the following regulations
sysconcerning the new one-wa- y
tem governing Limestone and
Upper Streets.
Tor Limestone:
The f'u-- lane will be in effect,
as hrfore on the west side from
Pine to Church streets and from
West Second to Third Street.
2. The curb on the east side of
Limestone from. Water to Barr
streets will be com, i(ji'ly reserved
for loading and unloading ones.
3. Parking meters on the west
fide of Limestone from Church to
West Seeond streets will be
at a later date. Motorists are requested to ignore the
painted parkin" space lines and
park with their front bumpers approximately three leeX noith of
t ho meters.
The necessary relocation of
meters will be ao omplishfd as

X.

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By AL1CK KF.DDING
New Year ushered in a big

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The revision of Lexington traffic on Lime and Upper caused some
changes at UK also. The circle in front of the Administration
from Seventh to Maxwell streets.
Z. All parking spaces and loadBuilding is now one-wa- y
from the south gate to the Studeiyt Union
ing zones are moved to the east
entrance. This change also became effective yesterday.
side of Upper.
3. Parking will be prohibited or:
the eitst side of Upper, ;rom Main
south to Maxwell- - from 4 to 6
p. m.. in order to expedite peak-hotraffic.
4. Vehicles going south on Upper
at Main will be permitted to make
rhjht or left turns.
5. MotAfeists' are ad wised to use
caution at "unsignaled" intersecOne UK student was killed and Long Island. N. Y., was dead on
tions at Fourth and Upper and three were injured in an automo- arrival at a hospital.
lax lid and Upper streets.
bile accident about three miles east
Treated and released at ihe hosIt was also announced that a of Wheeling. W. Va. on U. S. 40.
Peter' Durke, 20, of
pital were
signal light for Fourth and Uppr
Carl Kaffin, 21, of Miheola on Locust Valley, N. Y., driver of the
streets has been approved by the
auto, Rarry Averill, 20, of BrookState Highway Department, but
lyn, N. Y., and Carole Martin, 2),
that it will be some time beore
of Trenton,
N. J., according to
PHYSICS CLUP.
.sig'tial equipment' is received and
state police.
installed.
State police reported that the
The Pence Physics Club w ill automobile went
Studies to determine whether a
into a skid on the
tralfic hht at Euclid and Upper hold its regular meeting tonight slippery highway over a bridge and.
at fysP- m- - 'n Pence Hall. The smashed broadside into a tractor-trail- er
streets is necessary will begin immeeting will be held in Room
mediately.
coming in the opposite dibe prohibited at all 208.
Parkin? will
rection.
times on both sides of Ian lid.
Also injured over the holidays
were Hal Price Headley. Jr., 11,
123G Standish Way; a sophomore
University
and Lindi
at the
Crouch, 18. 205 Ridceway, a fresh- -'
man. The pair had their accident
on New Year's Eve here in Lexington,..,
According to a witness, John S.
Three construction contracts to- - the building and the installation ol
Mitthrl. 120H Tales Creek Hoad.
tally' worth over $820,000 have been six floodlights for one of the prac
Headley lost control of his car and
awarded to firms b'y UK in the last tice football 'fields.
struck and severed a utility pole
Fox and Bruce construction
month.
Action on the three projec's took company of Lexington was award- at P. Main and Hanover. He estispeed aj about 33
mated their
place in December and was an- ed a $12'J,100 contract lor construc
miles per hour.
nounced by UK vice president for tion of the new ATO fraternity
Headley suffered a broken nose
business administration Frank D. house on Clifton.
and possible chest .injuries, and
o
According to Dr. Peterson
Teterson.
of the building: programs struction on the new house will Miss Crouch multiple fractures of
the right leg. arm and face. They
will be on the Lexington campus begin immediately. The new dwell-whithe third is a $500,000 build- - ins is expected to be ready by fall. are listed in fair condition at Goad
The ATO's submitted plans on Samaritan Hospital by hospital at- ing for the Northern Center at
a house last summer bul they were tendents.
Covington
The two Lexington projects are turned down because of the COst
the construction of an athletics of the proposed project
The new Northern Center build
buildintr on the experiment sta- structure and
in is a three-stor- y
ticm farm and the ATO fraternity
is expected. to be ready by Spring
house on Clifton Avenue.
of 1960.
The University of Kentucky
The $243,170 bid for the athThe lower floor of the new
letic building was the lowest of building will house laboratories Dames Club will hold "graduation"
14 bids and was submitted
by
7:30 p.m. tomorrow in
for chemistry and other sciences, exercises at
Clarke, Stewart and Wood.
the Music Room of the" SUB.
room and a. music
an audio-visuy
Mrs. Frank Dickey will present
The building will be a
room.
brick and concrete block structure
The main floor will contain of- P. H.T. degrees (putting hubby
serve as dressing quarters fices, seminar and conference through! to wives of men graduand will
and a storage area for University roqms. a library and a student ating this semester.
athletic teams.
All wives of UK students and
center among other things.
The contract also calls for black
The ton floor will have 12 class graduate students are invited tcj
topping of anarktns area nex lo roo:n and offices for instructors, attend
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One Student Killed
During Trip Home

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On Three UK Projects

con-Tw-

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UK Daines Club
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* THE KENTUCKY KCRNLL, Tuesday, Jan.

UK Releases Report
On Indonesian Work

L;L. Danlzler
Dies Al Home
Livingston Dantzler.

Dr. Lfhre

of
n tired head .., the Department
.
r.t ,,tt,.n.,

-

)v me in Lexington
to.
Coronrr Chester Hager said
Uath was caifsecl by a heart at- lack. Dr. Dantzler had been dead
nt least 12 or 14 hours, he said.
A neighbor, Mrs. J. A. Ileaton,
discovered the body when she went
to It. Handler's home about 12:35
I), m. and saw him lying on his

A
fin-- f

Dec. 20. He was of

lrdrooni floor.
faculty
1

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in

Joined the UK
as an associate

1912

of English and acting

the department the next
Mar and served in that pc.c until
letiicment.
)lv held an A. 13. der
toll
WoiJoid Cnlleue. oiiartanburg
C, an M. A. degree from Vandcr- 1 lit
University and an honorary
p,,;tiT of Literature degree from

luad

of

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I)r. Dantler served

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itadfl Military College from 1906
to 1908 and as lecturer on English
literature at the I'nivrrsity of
1 eir.zte,
Germany, from 1910 to
191!.

finch wire cwiiclu; fed Dec 22
".I'll burial in the Lexington
Cemet ry.
A,bout 3.070.000 young men and
enrolled in colleges
rr.ii. are
:o.(l universities
in the United
Kt.ite.v. this year. This is about 45
more than six years aco,
I ticfiit
i'lthouih ohly a 2 percent
in-tii-

a(

has occurred in the
Id population.
,
Bowdoiii Alumnus.
18-to--

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cational, research and administra
live aids to the faculties there, and
to train Indonesians to fill vacan- eies left by the departure o ,ttcb
and other colonists.
Dr. Mtii Baker, director of the
Kentucky Research Foundation,
which administers the program,
said one of the most important
phases of the Indonesian programs
is the return to that country of
American-DraineIndonesians to
contract-teamemreplace UK
bers on the faculties.
"'I he ultimate p'i;i;- - or trie program is to fill all positions at the
University of Indonesia with' Indo- nesian nationals, jiiurr sum. uu- rentlv. there are 30 Indonesians
studying in the United States
senting UK nave participated in
the program, with seven of them under the program.
coming from tne UK staff.
Pm Oak Farm's Derrick is aptly
Dr. '('hamhrrlain recommends in named. He is a son of Oil Capitol.
the report that the group leader,
Dr. E. M. Hammakcr, of the UK
Chemistry Department, and his
staff, make most of the decisions f
Get VVILDR00T
fact d by the contract team. Also
recommended is stronger' recruitCREAM-OI- L
Charlie!
ment ofCK personnel for the
tcam., possible goal of 50 peawent
I K staff participation is asked.
Shortly after the report's release, the program was strengthi . ...
ened by the signing of a contract
IT.
to the Col- providing additional aid

Indonesia last summer.
In the report, Dr. Chamberlain
outlines the progress of I'K's eon-trateam which was sent to
Indonesia in July, 1936. The team
is working under a three year,
S2.354.000 contract wth the Inter- ,iminisira-jM- v
national
tion a branch of the United Slates
State Department
According to agreement. tlK sup- pli
technical advice and assist- ance to the University of Indo- 'icsia. in addition to helping to
improve the teaching program nnd
helping to deWlop an effective rc- search urogram.
Up to the present time, 27 in- -

TAYLOR

24-HOU-

27

LEXINGTON

I A PURE WHITE MODERN

Between
Semesters

....

Come
To Sunny Flordia

Stay At TKeBcautiful
NEW LIDO orvSILVER
SANDS MOTEL
Lexington Owned

Daytona Beach, Florida

$2.50 per dayO

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Contact O.

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father, says:
"Makes your hair look real George!"

L. WHITE

Reservations

Woolcott Mifls,

Phone2-154-

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ONLY THE BEGINNING OF A

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Take A Break

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214 Journalism Building
9:00 a.m. to 12 noon, 5 p.m.
EXT. 2476

of Wildroot
and ...WOW!

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UNIVERSITY
PHOTOGRAPHER

was removed about three years
ago after similar complaints Acre
made about her in regard to voodoo practices, McQueen said.

G. Washington, farpous

AAA' ROAD SERVICE

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Up to Four Students Per. Room

' COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE"
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Photos for $5

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100E..VINE

APPLICATION
PHOTOS
One Week Delivery
This Week Only

Hall's' Chapel School where she

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Incorporated

2-71-

voo-doois-

CO.

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'

Attention
Seniors

Mrs.
WETUMPKA, Ala. (AD
Smith, a Negro
Frances Webb
school teacher accused of teaching
voodooism, resigned today.
Mis. Smith, who gives her age as
was teacher and principal o
thc Cathmagy Elementary School
and had taught for 31 years. Coun
ty School
Ross
Superintendent
McQueen said the Negro teacher
admitted she was a believer in
and discussed it with her

in Bandung. Indonesia, was re- - President Frank O. Dickey
The combined financial provi- leased recently by the University.
The report was drawn up by sels of the Bandung and Bagor
contracts brings the total to
Vice President Leo M. Chamber
lain, after he and William M. $4,421,737.
The purpose of the entire IndoJenkins Jr., assistant
nesian program is to provide edu pupils.
of the Indonesian project, visited

ct

Dantzler

Dr.

renrrt reviewing the lege of Agriculture and Vcterin- tun vpam nf thp TTnivprsit v nrv Mpdicinp at Bncor. Indonesia.
Kentucky's assistance program The contract was sipned by UK
40-p-

Accused Voodist
Resigns Position

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* Standing Room Only

The Kentucky Kernel
t tk fort

University or Kentucky
Irnitntky
rooH cm ritt
tinW t Act of March
Lrifto,onrmg
iiw
mn wren DOLLARS rrruiar urnooi Tr rtcept Holiday! sod Clem.
SIX
A SCHOOL YEAR

CMHrf

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Jim Hampton,

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Ann

Editor-in-Chi-

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S. 1879.

ef

Ewhkson, Chief News Editor
Larry Van Hoosk, Chief SporU Editor
Ann Robebts, Society Editor

Tmrr Asrlky,
Ohooh Bact,
"

Business Manager
Norman McMullin, Advertising Manager
Staff Photographer
Hank Chapman, Carfoonuf
Marilyn Lyvew and Judy rennebaker, Proofreaders

Semes of UK students were surprised Saturday night at the Georgia
Tech basketball game when they
found the student seating section lull
30 minutes bclore game time. They
weie further surprised, and disgusted,
when they discovered that not students but
people, many
Irom Georgia, occupied seats they
thought they had permanent claim
on, by vitiue of their aymcnt in
oil-campu-

TUESDAY'S NEWS STAFF
E)an Millott, Editor
Axinc ItrDctNC, Associate Editor

Paul Scott,

Sports Editor

s

,

..
.
tuition.
These students were forced to stand
.

UK Basketball

in the aisles and concourses through-

The Swing Down South
Tonight the University's

undeleat-ctl-

,

Fledging Five will
open its scries ot road games against
Vandcrbilt University at Nashville,
beginning the annual circuit through
the Southeasterly Conference which
always iipds Kentucky as the team
to beat.
And each year, almost without
fail, the natural desire to beat Adolph
Rupp in particular and his teams in
general brings out some of the worst
characteristics in. the opposing schools'
fans.
The overworked and sometimes
trite sentiments of "good sportsmanship" are line for the
opponents which other schools face,
but when the Wildcats take the floor
such things as hospitality, --courtesy
and good sportsmanship go out the
window.
This is not to say that our teams
aie always badly treated, nor that
thr other schools should genuflect and
say "thank you" after being trounced
by Kentucky. Every school engages in
competitive athletics for basically the
same reason: to win. The desire to
win is one' of Mr. Rupp's basic philosophies, and he has sometirrfes been
top-ranke- d

run-of-the-mi-

f

y

ll

out the game. Many hail made special
trips iiom home, some bringing dates
and parents.
The fame was played just one

accused of overemphasizing it, of taking the "fun" out of basketball. We
suspect that many of his critics mere-lhaven't the courage to admit that
they, too, play to win.
Perhaps the fact that Kentucky has
for many years been among the top
A Standee Speaks
basketbaU teams in the nation is
To The Editor:
for the excellent reception
I was among
the several hundred
visiting tams receive at the Coliseum.
And perhaps it is'' equally resjonsible UK students who found themselves
Tech
anding.at the
for the enmity sometimes directed at
game Saturday riight.
the Wildcats the moment they apThis, in itsell, would not be a great
pear on the opjxsing team's floor.
tragedy if it were not for the lact that
Whatever the reception we get durwith the payment of my tuition at
ing this season's Southeastern Conference games away from home, we the start of the year, I was assured of
hope that visiting teams continue to a seat at all the games.
But when I arrived at the Coliseum
get the same treatment here that they
have had thus far. The very thought Saturday night (in plenty ol time lor
of losing is bad enough, but if it the opening tijoll), there were no
seats remaining. Consequently, I bad
happens let's not sink to tjiedegrada-tioto stand up. during the game.
of booing the other tam.
Now I don't know for sure what
happened. 1 understand the University sold some 2,500 of the seats
in the student section. If this is what
Hants ) vista, Batista
really occurred, I don't see how the
University can justify selling scats that
the students have paid lor and have

ody

.

k

students than iionnally attend the game, witlPthc result that
luanv students were lei t in the aisles.
Those responsible should devise a
'

L',500 less

against a lecuncme of
this situation, or just not sell the
student seats at all. Better not to
have sold and lost, than to have sold
the same thing to tw people.
salc-guai-

d

y

The Readers' Forum

UK-Georgi-

a definite right to.

was missing.

But what the hell, L00 scats is
Vr.000 more lor the Univeisity and as
long as the students let them get
away with it, more power to them.
A.Mn

a

n

The Organized Gat
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)-Noblaughed when Mrs. Henry Gerlacfl
sat down to play the organ. They
did later.
"Jt was just horrible," she admitted.
"I know I donit' play too well, but
it sounded like a record jilayer that's
rejecting all the time."
She tried again alter the husband
came home. Same thing, only worse.
He juilled the ofgan away from the

riight before roost students were to
return to the campus after the holidays. Jt doesn't scern unnatural to
cxject a great many students to return a lew hours early to watch a
game against the kind of basketball
rival Georgia Tech has come to be.
Yet those in charge of tickets and
seating assumed jnfre would be

ElM'LRsO.N

Vacation And Final
To The Fditoi

:

Like, a lot of other people, I returned tf) class yesterday, bom a
Christmas vacation during which J
had planned to do a lot ol catching
up in my studies, but dining which
I actually did vety little.
J hat was a
bad enough blow, but I now find that
my mind will no sooner readjust
todassioom routine than
will be.,
faced with linal exams.
I realize the University has its difficulties in scheduling holidays-an- d
exams, but isn't it possible for us. to
have a little longer period between
the Christmas vacation and finals?
(Namk Withuli r)
1

Gullah: Disappearing Dialect

.

"Our new home has no basement,"
she said, "and Coalie must have got
wind that, we were planning to give
her away.'1
..Mrs. Gerlach thinks Coalie jumped
into the van and sat on the organ
pedal. "A llap opens when the pedal's
pressed clown and in she must, have
gone."

By

ARTHUR EDSON

WASHINGTON (AP)-- It
wasn't
until he was a good sized boy, and
had come up North to school in
Front Royal, Ya., that Harold S.
Reeves realized he didn't talk like
everyone else.
"I was out playing' ball," Reeves

recalled, "and

yelled,

'chuck it
Mrs. Gerlach cafikeep' the cat if hyuh!' Instead of throwing it to me,
,
wall and .Mrs. Gerlach jeeked in she wishes.
everyone quit and gathered round to
the narrow slot at the back near
"My two boys are crazy about her, see how I talked."
the top.
"
but she doesn't get along with the
How he talked was Gullah, the
"There were two green eyes staring cat we've already got."
most distinctive al all American diaat me. 1 nearly flipped."
Coalie, meantime, 'is 'bedded dow n lects, found along the shore and on
That's when Mrs. Gerlach tele- in the Gerlach greenhouse far from the islands olt the coast of South
phoned the music company:
keys and pipes.
.Carolina.
"Yon, know that organ you delivReeves &i;came interested in GulDon't doubf Afrs. Gerlach's storv.
ered to me today? Well it has a'olack
lah on the spot. Now, years later
"I've, got the cat. to ptoye'it."
cat in it with bells on!"
and manager of the Charleston, S. C,
"Now keep calm, lady," the salesSocial Security office, he's still inKERNELS
man suggested. "You'll be all right.
Practical jolitj'cs consists in i nor- - terestedand worrying because GulWhen's your husband corning home?"
Henry Brooks .pms lah is dying out.
"Look," said Mrs. Gerlach. "I'm a ihg facts.
l
"Soort," Reeves said gloomily, "it
.
Methodist
.0easy to be brave Iiom a sale will be a dead language, like Latin."
It is
"Why not lie down a ilitle while?",
Radio television, good roads, all
distance.
Aesop
the man continued.
combine to w.ipe out out dialects.
"I'm. cold sober. There is a big
Belpre it's i
late, Reeves tiopes
Perhaps it was right to dissemble
black cat in there. And he has on
but-w- hy
did you kick me some foundation will record Gullah'
a red leather collar with two bells your love,
downstairs?
John Philip Kemble the Library of Congress has a lew reon it.
cordings, but not nearly enough by
"Besides, my husband's" already
his reckoning so that a language that
In keeping with the trend toward
home."
a more realistic education, and bearhas lasted 250 years will have a lilThe salesman finally checked with ing in mind some of the pertinent ting memorial.
the movers. Seems they'd also stopped statistics, we suggest that the UniNo one is sure where the word
at Mrs. J. S. Wright' to n(ove a piano versity supplement its courses in mar- "Gullah" comes lrom. It may be a
into her new home.
riage and the family, etc., with a coiruption of Angola, the Negroes'
A call to Mrs. 'Wright . , . and course in divoue procedures, alimony,
Alrican home. The first mention
news that her hall Persian cat, Coalie, et ul.
Reeves has found dates back to lb02

'.

.

J

when a man named Gullah Jack got
his name in print.
The early South Carolina slaves
worked under Scottish and English
overseers, and Reves vhvn he occasionally is mistaken for a Scot
or
Englishman.

Reporters coveting Capitol Hill
are laiyiliar with the dialect because
of the l.Ytc Sen. Burnet Rhctt

May-ban- k

ol Chai lesion, S. C. When May-ban- k
was excited, which was often,

he lapsed into quasi Gullah.
Pine Gullah probably can best be
descr ibed as Uncle Remus' with grand
llourishes.
It has its own words.
"Yeddy," lor example, means do ,y 0,1.1
hear, or have you heard?
Incidentally, the Social Secuiity

people translate their institutions
into L'2 languages. Not to be outdone,
Reeves took to the air in Gullah. He
reports it was a success, not only
among oldtimcrs who lound straight
English hard to understand, but also
among the more erudite who got a
kick out of the old dialect.
Gullah depends largely on its inflections, and so is hard to render
into the printed word. But here's an
example:
"One time, een Angus muni' lox
done "duh wood full hunt bittle. 'E
hongry luh true! 'E
come to de
nuP grapevine
swamp, 'en
"
tanglety up een.de ticket
That's the beginning of the famed
fable, "The Fox and ihe Grapes."
'e-s-

ee

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Jan.

New Colors

Every Girl's A Sweater Girl
Are Forecast
For Spring

fe?'

The 1859 fashion colors forecast for the upcoming spring and
rummer will be vivid blues, pale
furrn, and bright, chalky pink.
Bold striped silks in shirts and
jkirts, stylized prints that recall
the modernistic Ballet Russe designs of the 1920's, and colored
pen line drawings will dominate
the sports clothes and evening

t

Y

fixtures and surah types, are

v-- -

V

If

d

fav-cie-

How do you start the New Year?
With solemn resolutions of what to
do and not do? Do you seriously
resolve to do something and by
January 6 you've completely forgotten what it was, much less do
it?
If you feel like you need a lift to
1959, why not
start this brand-netry a different approach?
Start by making a list of all the
'personal things wrong with yourwrong hairdo,
self. Overweight,
skin blemishes, brittle nails, etc. To
admit and face these problem or
other is half of solving them. If
they exist, there is no point' in
closing your eyes to them. The
sooner they are recognized as problems, the sooner some action can
be taken. And this is exactly what

.A '
,

for ultrasimple, loose cut
dieses for outdoor luncheons and

)

pjjvate parties.

White crepe shirtwaists cut like
man's and with
bring worn by
fronts are now
smart American, Italian and Greek
women abroad who favor them
with sleekly tailored shorts. Shorts
d
in flowered or
silk
cr silk alpaca are worn with the
.shirtwaists.
Silk kerchiefs tied around the
hair will still be in the hot sum-ir-New, handsome j bulky knit sweaters for every girl.
fashion scene.
Here are two popular styles of the season: left,
The
dress will be long double-breaste- d
pullover in honey-com- b
stitch
prpular for evening wear.
a

fine-pleat-

ed

if

.

,

V'OY

you need ACTION.
Do the easiest repairs first. Start
gruadally and work up to
the
major problems. A new makeup or
hairdo can make you feel ever so
glamorous. They will give you the

plain-texture-

Ji.,.....,.,,.

er

nlk-chiff-

Action Needed
To Eliminate
Your Faults

w

silks, both in nubby

te

-

V

V-

jHshions.
Fure-whi-

"

6, 193!) -- 3

on

It Isn't Love
It's Just Perfume'

,

sjiy

bl

with unusual center panel; right, husky lift needed to