xt79p843tp2c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt79p843tp2c/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19611017  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 17, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 17, 1961 1961 2015 true xt79p843tp2c section xt79p843tp2c Editor Discusses

Today's Weather:
Fair And Mild;
High 72, Low 13

Degrees
Without Eduction

University of

Vol. LI II, No. 17

K

entne

KV., TUESDAY, OCT.

LEXINGTON,

hy
17,

11

Eight Pagci

Federal Aid
Wins Out
In Debate
Stale Teams
May Challenge
Debute Winners
IYiIcral aid to education was
approved in principle here Friday night in a demonstration
dchate staged by four high
school seniors.
The debate, fpcnsored by the
University Student. Forum, opened
tha Kentucxy
jeech Educators
held here over the
weekend.
The four drbatrr were chosen
from ity-fou- r
students who participated in IKs High School
Institute in July.
Speech
The winning team. Thomas Donovan and Warren Stambauh. are
hWh schccl seniors from Maysville.
The oppcsition, debating the nega-tlm- e,
weie John Dansby and Johnnie Patton, seniors from Ashland.
The affirmation based the need
for federal aid cn the lark of
qualified personnel In the teach-l- n
profession, and the shortage of
classrooms.
"There are 16 million more
teachers needed. The colleges are
now supplying 95.K0 teachers a
year," said Warren Stambaugh of
the affirmative.
' One hundred thousand teachers
le.tve the profession yearly. During
the 19G0's it is estimated that
pupils will te gained.
"In the United States today
there Is a shortage rf 140.000 classrooms. This figure in turn affects
56 percent c.f the children enrolled.
In Kentucky the
shortage is 8.406 or 40 percent of the
students aie hi ovei crowded classrooms."
Tom Donovan, debating the affirmative, proposed the Kennedy
p'an as the answer to educational
pi oblems.
"The proposed bill for 850 million dollars will luie teachers from
college into teaching." he stated.
"In Kentucky this would raise the
salary of every teacher by J200."
The winning tea.-- is now subjected to challenges by any team
In the Mate.

Orchestra
To Perform
In Coliseum

Llrn ft

iiSx

IfcJ

-

h:-

-

fc Mia? J

I'hyllis Ann Howard was selected 1061 Sigma Chi
Derby Queen. A member of Alpha Gamma Delta,
she proudly displays her trophies. Robin Boys,

Delta Delta Delta, gets a sample of an egg shampoo as she catches an egg in the strainer tied on
her head in the mystery event of the derby.

Kappa Delta Pledges
Win Sigma Chi Derby
By JEAN BROWN
Kernel Staff Writer
Kappa De lta sorority successfully emerged Saturday as the
winne r of the 1961 Sigma Chi

Derby.
Phyllis Ann Howard, Alpha
Gamma Delta, was chosen queen.
Each sorority entered two pledges
who were Judged by Mrs. Allene
Kennedy, Sigma Chi house mother,
Mrs. Katherine Roberts, Keene-lan- d
Hall, and Dr. Richard Gilliam, professor of law.
Other sororities and their placing. were Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Delta Zeta, Delta Gamma. Alpha
Gamma Delta, and Zeta Tau Alpha
tied for fifth place, Delta Delta
Delta. Alpha Xi Delta. Alpha Delta
Pi, and Pi Beta Phi tied for tenth
place, and Chi Omega took twelfth
place.
Cold fall winds failed to discour

age the throng of students who
lined the rope barriers anxiously
awaiting the beginning of the
derby.
The activities began at 5 a.m.
Saturday. Sorority pledges then
formed lines at the men's dormitories and the Sigma Chi house to
await the emergence of any man
wearing a SX derby.
A pledge suffered
a ruptured
abdominal wall on the porch of the
Sigma Chi house while she was
fighting with another pledge for a
derby. The injured pledge stated
that she was pounced upon by approximately ten girls from other
sororities and someone stepped on
her stomach.
Pity these men, for they were
stampeded from every direction
imaginable. One SX man was
chased for one and one-ha- lf
miles
through the center of town. Another was caught while delivering

newspapers at 5:15 a.m. But by
noon all derbies had been seized
and the campus prepared for the
afternoon events.
The tumultous roar from the
d
sorority-packesidelines slowly
subsided as Jim Todd, Sigma Chi
announced the
Derby chairman
winners of the derby chase. Alpha
Delta Pi came In first with 16
deibies, Kappa Delta was second
with nine, and Chi Omega third
with eight.
The first event of the afternoon
was the balloon toss. Alpha Gamma Delta and Kappa Delta tied
for first place by breaking the most
waterfilled balloons. Delta Delta
Delta, Delta Gamma, and Delta
eta tied for third place.
Next came the pie eating contest.
After gorging herself with chocolate meringue pie, hands behind
her back, Judy Waldon, Delta
Continued on Page 2

Symphony
To Open

Concert Series
The Hoston Symphony Orchestra will open the Central
Kentucky Concert and Lecture
Series at 8:15 p.m. Wednesday
in Memorial Coliseum.
Charles Munch will direct the
opening of the orchestra's 80th.
season.
The orchestra began when Henry
Lee Higginson. a music student in
Vienna, returned from Europe to
build a permanent orchestra that
would be devoted solely toward
ideal performances of symphonic
music.
He spent his fortune in this pro-Jeand after 37 years left a
heritage far richer than a fortune
in dollars alone.
Higginson assembled the best
musicians available in the United
States and Europe and engaged a
young German conductor, George
Henschel. The first concert was
held in the Boston Music Hall
Oct. 22. 1881.
Henri Rabaud conducted the orchestra for the 1918-19season,
followed by Pierre Monteux. who
was in charge from
In 1924, Serge Koussevitzky began what was to be the longest
term for a single conductor, 25
years.
Charles Munch, who replaced
Koussevitzky in 1948, will retire
after this season.
For the Lexington concert the
will
orchestra
"Quiet
perform
City," for strings, trumpet, and
English horn by Aaron Copland,
with Roger Voison and Louis
Speyer as solists on these respective
instruments.
Iberia ("Images", No. 2) for Orchestra by Claude Debussy.
Major,
Symphony No. 3 in
Opus 55, "Eroira", by Ludwig van
Beethoven.
The Coliseum is open at 7:15.
Student are admitted by ID cards.

Rats Dislike Idleness,
Unmailed Postcard
Hurts Peace Corps Schedule Experiments Reveal
U.N. Trip
Y-Clu-

IBADAN, Nigeria, Oct. 16 (AP A postcard that went astray has
given the American Peace Corps its first black eye in the field.
Nigerian university students demanded yesterday that the corps
unit sent to teach Nigerians be expelled because of criticism of primitive
African republic written by an
living conditions in this year-ol- d
enthusiastic, but thuifehtless girl In the group.
Her postcard heme, dropped accidentally on the campus, was copied
and circulated amcnt the students. It stirred 1,000 students at Ibadan
College to an angiy demonstration denouncing the American volunteers as "agents vt Imperialism."
Margery Mithelmore, 23, Smith College honor graduate from
Foxboro, Mass., quickly apologized to the university authorities for
wilting the "thoughtless card" and offered to resign from the corps
In an attempt to quiet the uproar.
Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver said in Washington he
talked to the Nigerian ambassador and "he did not seem disturbed.
He said it was the type of thing you could expect in this kind of
deration and I afcieed with him."
demonstration was organized after someone
The
reportedly found on the campus grounds the postcard that Miss
Mithelmore had written to a friend in Boston telling him:
"With all the training we had we were really not prepared for the
squalor and absolutely primitive living conditions rampant both in
the cities and the bush.
"We had no idea about what underdeveloped means. It really is
a revelation, and once we got over the initial, horrified shock, it is
a very rewarding experience. Everyone except us lives in the streets,
cooks in the streets, and even goes to bathrooms In the streets."
Her father, a business executive, said his daughter didn't know what
real poverty was li;e, explaining that bhe was brought up in a
atmosphere.

bs

The campus YMCA and
YWCA annually provide an op-

portunity for persons who want
to learn moie alxnit the United
Nations and how it operates to
visit its headquarters in New
York City.
This year's seminar will be Nov.
"Thirty-fiv- e
students and faculty members have already made reChairman
servations,"
reported
Jim Congleton, "and anyone else
Interested should contact one of
the YMCA or YWCA offices before Friday."
Class absences due to this trip
will not be counted as cuts, said
Mrs. Sondra Hicks, YMCA director.
A list of those people excused will
be distributed, but students are advised to check with their instructors about assignments before they
leave, reminded Mrs. Hicks.

Rats dislike being idle just as people do.
This was the finding of a study made on "activity deprivation"
in rats by James W. Clark, former graduate student. Clark's work for
his master's thesis was done under the supervision of Dr. Edward Lee
Newbury, associate piofessor in the Department of Psychology.
Clark found there was a tendency for the activity of rats to
increase significantly during idleness.
The rats first learned to run a rotating cage without any reward
except the activity itself. After this running speed was developed the
rats were placed in an enclosed confinement during the normal period
of activity.
The rats were divided into three groups. The groups were confined for differing lengths of time prior to their activity periods. The
period of confinement caused an increase in activity.
"Experiments of this type sometimes produce increased or decreased activity, depending on the activity being measured. This is the
clearest evidence so far on activity deprivation in the wheel," Dr.
Newbury stated.
"These findings are related to the tendencies for animals to use
their surroundings for experiencing new stimulations. This is a fnuda-ment- al
trait of higher organisms.
"In humans this would be called curiosity. It Is best demonstrated
by people looking for something new on vacations or scientists searching for discoveries.
This experiment has added further Information to research 111
this field."
Clark, who received his M A. this past June after completing thl3
experiment, is now with the Army Human Research Office at George
Washington University, Washington, DC.

* KENTTC.KY KERNEL, Tuesday, Oct. 17, lOfil

TIIE

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WBKY (91.3 FM) LOG
A. M.

9:00

"Katridosroiir"
prismatic
mood and tempo.

music

constantly

changing

r. m.
"Kaleidoscope"
Humanities" required music for Hum. 204
".Music
Liszt: Les Pi eludes
Tchaikovsky: Homeo and Juliet
5:00 "Kiddie Korner" for children of all ages
5:15 "Odds and Ends" fragments of current events on the UK
campus
3:30 "Worldwide News" world and national news compiled
by the outstanding WBKY news staff
5:45 "Exotica" music from foreign lands
6:15 "Commonwealth In Review" roundup of news here at home
on world politics
30 "Age of Overkill" commentaries
7:00 "Perspective '61"
7:15 "International Visit" glimpses of foreign lands through
the eyes of exchange students
7':30 "Washington Reports" current events In the nation's
capital
7:45 "Musical Gems" brief glimpses Into the lives of famous
composers
g
News" a roundup of happenings around
3:00
the world
3:05 "Musical Masterworks" the music of the masters
Bach: Fifteen Three Part Inventions for Harpsichord
Gould: Dance Variations
Foerster: Violin Concerto In C Major
Schumann: Symphony No. 3 In
Major
:00
4:00
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)

'i

Kappa Delta Wins
Sigma Chi Derby
Continued From rage 1
Dtlta Delta, emerged as the win- ner. DZ came in second, and Kap- ya Alpha Theta was third.
Preparations were then made for
the flag chase. Three SX pledges
uwailed the throng of sorority
oledges with whipped cream and
:(lag.s safely inserted in their pock- ers. As the girls raced, whipped
cream flew, and ZTA - rose from
Lhe rukus with the first flag.
KD ran close behind for second,
and Kappa Kappa Gamma came
:n third.
In- the next event eggs flew
Mildly as the sorority pledges aimed
i wicked arm at the head of a
sig. IZ seemed to hit hardest and
a ni in first with KKG and ZTA
lying for third.
Alpha Xi Delta was the Xirst to
scape the flour and water riot of
he sorority plunge by quickly relieving its sorority paddle. KD's
:'lour-soakwas
representative
second, and AGD's was third.
The Thetas successfully return- -

ed the sack, spoon and peanut.
needle and thread, thimble and
coke bottle from the relay race to
the Judges first. DO ran close be- hind for second place, and ZTA
came in third,
Closing the events for the day
was the mystery event. Each girl
had to catch four eggs in a strainer which was tied to her head. DG
and KKG tied for first place. Tri
Delts. AXiD, and DZ tied for
third.

PlacciiHMit

Annual

The lt2 College Placement
Annual is available to all seniors and graduate students who
will seek Jobs in industry, at the
Placement Service, Room 207,
Administration Building.
The annual Is free. It lists the
occupational needs normally anticipated by more than 1.800
corporate and governmental

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Peace Corps
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"Practically everyone has something to give to the Peace Corps
if he"ll only look hard enough in
.lis background," Mr. Carl VVieck,
.?eare Corps representative, said.
Wiecic and James Lay are
anyone interested in the
Pt ace Corps program at the Place-.lifi- it
Service today.
Any American citizen over 18
volun- :nay apply for the
;t ir program which provides draft
rerun r.t but not exemption.
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'The job opportunities in private
companies, the foreign service and
government jobs are ti t imndoiii
when the Peace Corps member returns home," Wieck said.
The next test for Peace Corps
candidates will be given November
2S and 29 in Lexington. It is not
imperative that an application be
filled out before the test.

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday,

Social Activities
candidate for state representative.
All interested students are invited to attend.

Meetings

ll-- 3

KERNEL Ads Bring Results
Elections

SOUTH BROADWAY

Kadio lub
Alpha Xi Delta
The UK Amateur Radio Club is
AWS
Alpha XI Delta sorority has
located in Room 130 of Anderson
The house of representatives of elected pledge officers. They are
Hall. Club membership is open to the Association of Women Stu- Carol Embrey, Ft. Thomas, presinil interested students in all col- - dents will meet at 4 p.m. today in dent; Melissa Bradley, Ridgcwood.
Room 205 of the Student Union N.J., vice president; Sandra MeyLater this semester, classes in Building.
ers, Lexington, secretary; Marilyn
morse code and radio theory will
Newman, Louisville, treasurer.
Tea Danre
te given to anyone interested in
Cecilia Sams, song leader; CathThe Sponsor Corps will be inobtaining an amateur radio license.
troduced to the cadets of the 290th erine Ward, Lexington, activities
Film
from 4 chairman; and Missy McVey, Ft.
The women's residence halls will Cadet Wing at a
social chairman.
two films on birth at 8 to 6 p.m. Thursday In the Student Thomas,
fponsor
Delta eta
p.m. today in the Keeneland Hall Union Ballroom.
basement.
Anyone interested in nominatPledge Officers of Delta Zrta
The titles of the films are ing a woman for the Sponsor sorority are Sharon Witz, Barring-to"Human Reproduction" and "Bi- Corps' spring election is asked to
111., president;
Betty Gillum.
" Wichita.
ology of the Unborn."
escort her to the dance.
Kans., vice president;
Penny Price, Earlington, secretary;
Exchange Dinner
Card Tarty
Bel Air, Md.,
Suzanne
Alpha Xi Delta sorority held an
Phi Sigma Alpha will hold a card treasurer. Ortynsky,
exchange dinner last night with party Oct. 20, at the Phi Sigma
Carol Rogers, Metuchen, N. J.,
Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity.
Kappa House.
social chairman;
Ruth Jenner,
Jam Session
The party is being sponsored by
Frankfort, Ind., publicity chairThe Student Union Board is the Phi
Sig wives, who will have man;
Regina Cedrone, Pleasant!
iponsoring a Jam session from 2 door prizes that will range from a
to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Student steak dinner at the
ville, N. Y., athletic chairman;
Saratoga to a Dorothy Callahan, Inez, parlia- Union Ballroom.
set of bridge cards. The prizes will
mental ian; Judy Wiseman, Win- be given away throughout the card
Christian Srirnre Students
Chester, scholarship chairman;!
An organizational
meeting for party.
Gina Hickman, Ft. Thomas, song
pll interested Christian Science
Tickets can be bought at the leader; and Diane Hutchinson,
students will be held at 6:45 Dm. door or from any Phi Sig.
Cincinnati, Ohio, art chairman.
today in the
chapel of
the Student Union Building.
GIURGEVICH SHOE REPAIR
young Republicans
387 S. Lime At Euclid
The Young Republicans club will
meet at 7 p.m. in Room 205
Shoe Supplies
k Zipper Repair
cf the Student Union Building. The
Jacket Cuffs, Bands
Keys Made
will be Barney McKeehan,
fpeaker
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Quality is the key to success at Western Electric
Admittedly, our standards are ln'tdi at Western
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management.
As we enter u new era of communications,
Western Electric engineers are carrying forward assignments that affect the whole art of
telephony from electronic devices to high-spee- d
sound transmission. And, in the management
category alone, several thousand supervisory
jobs will be available to W.E. people within
the next 10 years. Many of these new managers will come horn the class of '62.
Now's the time for you to start thinking
seriously about the general wink area that
interests you at Western Electric, the manufacturing and supply unit of the Hell Telephone
S)stem. Then when our representative comes
to your campus, you'll be prepared to discuss
career directions that will help make the interview profitable.
Alter a man joins Western Electric, he will

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Chollenging opportunities exist now at Western
lectric tor electrical, mechanical, industrial, and chemical engineers, as well as physical science, liberal arts,
and business majors. All qualified applicants will receive careful consideration for employment without
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information about Western Electric, write College tela
lions, Western Electric Company, Room 6106, 222
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* Ignoring 'Bad' News

If

been printed? because, we were told,
no election can be perfect that's just
politics.
Earlier, we had been criticized for
telling students about the secretive
attitude that mysteriously settles
Council
around the Interfraternity
whenever ugly, embarrassing matters
come up for discussion.
To recall a third incident, several
irate readers stormed into this newspaper's office last Wednesday when a
signed satire of Stoll Field football
games appeared in the Kernel. Is the
football team somehow set apart from
the rest of us and therefore above
criticism? we asked. The reply was
curt and confident: "Yes."
Such an attitude is deplorable, especially when it is discovered among
informed people of a society that is
supposed to be founded on the right
to speak, write, criticize, and dissent
as one's conscience directs. Clearly
many students at UK are not being
well educated about the freedom they
have as Americans and the responsibilities that are consequent to that
freedom.
The free press, let it be said, does
not exist to put out puff for anyone.
Its job is to inform the people, accurately and fairly, about all the news.
Any newspaper that does otherwise is
a newspaper unworthy of the name.

Judging from the comments we
have heard in (lie last frw days, tin?
job of any newspaper, wlietlier it is
free or the captive mouthpiece of
administrators, is to report in detail the news that is "good,"
anil to innocently ignore whatever
news is deemed "bad." Such curious
treatment of current events, we have
been assured, will always put forward
a glorious, glistening image of the
community that the newspaper serves.
It is disheartening to see some
University students rallying around
ethic.
such a distinctly
They would have the Kernel forget
its obligation to inform its readers,
and gloss over the facts when the facts
seem harsh. They would have us blow
up sometimes - insignificant "good"'
news until we could scarcely contain
our
They would,
in short, have the devil take truth, especially when truth tends to stomp
on the soft, even bubbles of harmony
and good public relations.
The Kernel, for example, was a
popular target at the recent Leadership Conference. Some students there
instructed us that it was in bad taste,
that it showed a lack of school spirit,
that it was just plain wrong for the
Kernel to have published news photographs that showed the Student Congress general election in a poor light.
And why shouldn't such pictures have
y

psuedo-enthusias-

Degrees Without An Education
A faculty member on the panel of

tem would become more effective
once it had become traditional.
We hardly expect, as a result of
any honor system, to see school spirit
ring out from the classrooms as it
does from McLean Stadium Saturday nights. But UK might reach the
point where its students consider cribbing the exception rather than the
procedure, and campus organizations
might even burn their files of standard finals.
Any future cribbing scandal here
could be as shocking as the cribbing
scandals at the U.S. Military Academy a few years ago, where, incidentally, there has been an honor
system since the academy's beginning.

the seventh annual Leadership Conference at Camp Daniel Boone recently made the remark that "students
come to the University
but not education-oriented.- "
We
can only assume that the faculty member meant that students come to the
University to get degrees by w hatever
nefarious methods required, and that
there is no correlation between a degree and an education here.
Clearly, if the majority of students
come to UK to get degrees by whatever method they can, an honor system is called for. Hut later in the conference, the same faculty member
said he felt students were basically
honest. Another member of the panel
added that he did not feel that an
honor system would develop a sense
of responsibility. And that, apparently, was that as far as the honor
system was concerned.
The question remains, however,
are UK students largely cheerful liars,
given to various subterfuges to get
degrees, and, if so, would it not help
to put them formally on their honor?
We think so.
Viewing the question realistically,
we must admit there are some students enrolled at UK merely to get
degrees, with or without corresponding educational uplifting. However,
these students would be aflected to
some extent by an overall consciousness on the part of the s udent body
of the obligation of scholarship: to
honestly get an education. The sys
degree-oriente-

Kernels
I suppose there is not a man in the
world who, when he becomes a knav e
for the sake of $1,000, would not
rather have remained an honest man
for half the money. G. C. Lichten-bcrg

The way for a young man to rise is
to improve himself every way he can,
never suspecting that anybody wishes
to hinder him . . . suspicion and jealousy never did help any man in any
situation. There may sometimes be
ungenerous attempts to keep a young
man down; and they w ill succeed, too,
if he allows his mind to be diverted
from its true channel to brood over
the attempted injury. Abraham

The Kentucky Kernel
of
Kentucky

Univehsity

Entrird at thr pott office at I.riitiKton, Ki ninety a tond das inuttir undi-- r the Ai t of M.iuh 3, 1879.
Fubiulird loin tnm a wrtk durum thr n iiul.ir khxl vrar rxu pt during holulai and txdnn.
SIX 1KH.LAHS

A

SCHOOL

YEAH

Ei Van Hook, Editor

Wayne Chkcohy, Campus F.ditor
Jkan Schwahtz, Smiety Editor
Rick McIIlynolus, Cartoonist
Hoi ton. Circulation Manager
Bill
TUESDAY NEWS STAFF
Fum Piiii lips, Associate
SCOTTIE lltLT, Sports

Kkkry Powell. Managing Editor
Ben Fitzpatku k, Sports Editor
Dick Wallace, Advertising Manager

Jine

Chay, Seus F.ditor

77S...I

$

03SEZHE
Cm

toon by Rick MiHeynoIds

Reasons For Giving
This year, as in years past, members of the University community are
being confronted with the familiar
cry, "Give the United Way." This is
the plea of our United Community
Fund. Like all issues there are two
sides to be examined.
A United Community Fund is an
organization of most local and a few
national charities. It has one purpose
raise funds. The organization is private; its funds come from contributions rather than public taxes.
While most members of our community know about UCF, few stop
to think about its reason for being
in existence. Fund raising is an expensive business, so UCF unifies the
expenses and puts them into one campaign. The UCF tries to lessen the
bother on the donor no one likes to
see a hand out everywhere, or a cons
stant flood of
at his
door.
UCF helps the small charity and
those with little appeal instead of
making them run competition with
other charities. UCF assures the public that all its member charities are
in good standing that money raised
goes to the needy, not administration.
Though giving the united way appears to be the best method, there
are some drawbacks which merit attention. They are mentioned, not to
be cynical, but to point out the need
for reform.
The UCF has a goal; a composite
money-seeker-

of the budgets of the participating
charities plus the cost of the campaign itself. If the goal is not reached,
problems arise. The money is divided,
ft
after costs, by a
An organization which receives
only a part of its budget may try to
relieve its problem by staging a campaign to raise the needed money, but
cuds up defeating the purpose of a
united drie.
d

Under the UCF plan, a donor
gives or doesn't give. This either
or situation causes problems. The
donor interested in one small charity
is out of link with a gilt to UCF.
So is tin donor who is opposed to
one of the
charities, as
some are to the Bed Cross. To give
to UCF is to gie to the lied Cross.
UCF-memb-

A third
piohlcm involves the
donor as an individual. He may disassociate himself with the individual
charities, and give a di peisonalii d
gilt. A gilt can become a
payment for services. The donor feels
Jie can get rid of the poor, sick, and
destitute in the same manner he gets
rid of his garbage, or pays the light
bill.
iiiiud-ease-

In the future, when the appeal
comes, let us be fully aware of what
and why we are giving not to remain
complacent to simply give because it
is l!ie accepted thing to do.

Student Chureli Affiliation
Christianity among college students seems to be dropping. The
number of students who have no
church affiliation has grown considerably of late, according to the records of dillerent colleges.
In the 1937 TCU General Information Catalog, there were two students with no church affiliation. The
1961 catalog lists 3S2.
Could this mean that college students are breaking away from religion, or is it only a tendency to show
independence from the straight and
narrow?
One senior expressed his views,
"I don't have anything to do with
church anymore, for it seems to have
become a commercial venture."
Others simply sleep too late on
Sunday mornings.
One coed says she does not have
the clothes to compete in the church
fashion show each week.

Studies and late parties on .Saturday night could be taking their toll
on the Sunday morning worshipers.
Some students give lack of transportation as their reason for skipping
church.
This lack of interest in organized
religion apparently is not totally dependent upon Christianity itself.
Although they may not go to
church, most students profess a belief in God.
A religion
professor explained,
"Students who attend church regularly at home sometimes quit going
when they come to college since
there is no one to make them get up
and go."
Could this be the answer to the
question why students don't attend
church? Or is the solution more
Christianity failing among a
The S k h k,
part of the educated?
Texas Chhisuan UxivutsnY.
scri-ous-- Is

i

* THE KENTTCKY

KERNEL, Tuesday, Oct. 17,

PAGING THE PAST
yi
!

t

Game
Big Event In '19
UK-SM-

U

Recall, if you can, autumn 1949
a time when football was nrrious
and University opponents faced
coach PhuI "Bear" Bryant.
Pi lor to a game with the Cats,
Southern Methodist University
coach Marty Bell was pessimistic:
"Kentucky Is unbeatable. There
Is no use for us to practice for the
game." But, fate smiled on Marty
Bell.
While Bell was bemoaning the
thought of playing Kentucky, our
fans were overly optimistic. The
week previous. Kentucky had
thrashed The Citadel 44-the
losers gaining only one yard rushing. It had been the fifth straight
win
for Kentucky and many

17' rsM

William Jennings Bryan, rrar Rrat. left, is bring
entertained by former President Barker on a
Inspection. At the wheel of the auto- mobile is former Engineer