xt7bk35mcn2x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bk35mcn2x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19620330  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 30, 1962 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 30, 1962 1962 2015 true xt7bk35mcn2x section xt7bk35mcn2x ,

Haggin Hall Assembly
Makes Motlcst Appeal ;
See Headers' Forum

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University

Vol. LI II, No. 90

LEXINGTON,

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Txjrn
.LLJ

1J
Kentucky

KY., FRIDAY, MARCH

30,

M

1

Today's Weather:

TT

Cloudy, Mild With
Showers; High 58

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I2

Eight Page

Daniel To Resign As SC Head
To

Williams
Become
Congress President

Jim Daniel, president of Student Congress, will resign hfs
position officially at the organization's Monday night meeting.
In a letter to Student Congress representatives, Daniel, a
freshman in the College of Law from Kuttawa, explained he
was retiring as congress head to devote more time to his studies.

Gvsundhvit!
Kernel Sweetheart Carroll Baldwin is no girl to
be sneezed at, even if you are alergic to her
nosegay. This stone-hearte- d
gentleman doesn't

seem to be too receptive. Carroll, a sophomore
Fnglish major from Paris, is a member of Delta
Delta Delta sorority.

Questionnaire Shows Frats
Spent 817,500 On Rush
By TEKRY

TROVATO

Kernel Staff Writer
A questionnaire showed

that

fraternities last semester spent
$17,500 entertaining prospective members.
A total of 250 freshman men
pledged fraternities, out of 600
who went out for rush at the
start of the Fall semester.
Fraternity membership at UK
now is 820 men students, out of
6.640 male students enrolled in the
University.
Jack Isaacs, IFC rush chairman,
conducted the questionnaire as a
means of determining how individual fraternities faired by using
the deferred , rush system which
has been in existence for the past
two years.

One question
stated: "What
changes should be made this year
to help with future rush?"
In answering this, one fraternity
man said:
"Have deferred rush rather
than deferred pledging. Maybe
have one week of open houses
for the freshman students in the
fall, and then hands off until
the grades are in."
Another member expressed his
views as:
"Rush was too drawn out for
the rushees as well as the members. It started off with a bang,
and then fizzled out. Rush should
start with the beginning of school
and last four weeks. Then a man
could be pledged."
Concerning other items on the

"Several of the projects we
planned at the beginning of the
year will soon be completed and
operational. This has taken much
more time than I expected when
I took this office.
"The result has been that I
have spent almost as much time
on the job as on studies, and
this is out of perspective. Since
I cannot continu
to devote this
much time to outside activities,
I feel it best that I resign,"
Daniel explained.
Diniel will continue as the congress representative from the College of Law. When asked if he felt
his resignation might be misinterpreted In view of the obstacles
which have confronted many of
the projects the organization has
attempted, the slender law student replied:
"Although we have had a number of disagreements with the administration, we have usually had

our way. If I had been In their
places, I may not have been inclined to have been so cooperative
on many occasions.
"When we compare, for example.
Dr. Dickjy's attitude with what
we kno
to be the attitude of
some other college presidents, we
could hardly ask for more cooperation."
John Williams, senior Commerce major from Taducah and
congress vice president, will replace Daniel.
Under Daniel's leadership, the
congress planned three projects
soon to be completed. The projects
include the Washington Seminar
program, the International Student Center, and the Vandenbosch
book project.
are presently
Contacts
bein?
made in Washington, D. C. for the
students
27 University
recently
selected for summer woik in the
capital.

Journalism Group
To Honor Portmann
Mr. Victor R. Portmann,

ant professor of journalism,
be honored at a testimonial

assistwill
din-

ner April 19 given by the Kentucky chapter of Sigma Delta Chi
and the faculty of the School of
Journalism.
Prof. Portmann will retire July
However, the majority of fra1 after 35 years of
instructing at
ternities stated that they did not UK.
receive as large a pledge class
The speaker at the dinner will
as they had expected because of
be Buren II. McCormack, the natheir rushee's failure to make
tional president of Sigma Delta
the required 2.0 standing.
Chi, national honorary fraterEighty-fiv- e
percent of the franity for men in journalism. He is
ternities believed the deferred rush also vice president and editorial
director of the Wall Street
system was definitely more expensive than the old system because Journal.
of the parties and other functions
Prof.
Among those honoring
held primarily for the rushees.
Portmann at the testimonial dinHowever, most of the fraterni- ner will be newspapermen from
ties believe that the present rush throughout the state, members of
system should be kept in affect, Sigma Delta Chi fraternity, UK
since it encourages higher scho- Journalism graduates, members of
the Kentucky Press Association,
lastic standing.
form, most fraternities agreed that
their scholastic standing had been
higher the last two years because
of the new system.

journalism students, and personal
friends.
He has been secretary-managof the Kentucky Press Association
since 1942. After letiring in July,
he will continue working with the
Kentucky Press Association and
will
act as consultant to the
School of Journalism.

WhillakerKelires
As Courl Justice
WASHINGTON, March 29 (AP)
Supreme Court Justice Charles
E. Whittaker retired today. Whit-take- r,
who has been a justice for
only five years, has been in ill
health. President Kennedy announced at a news conference that
Whittaker had decided to retire
effective April 1. The President
said nothing about a successor.

Suitcase Saga

Students Await Exodus To Florida

By JOHN PFEIFFF.R

Kernel Staff Writer

A general exodus toward Ft. Lauderdale,

Day-ton-

a

Beach, and Nassau begins next weekend.
Daytona llcuch brags they have already had
"twice the number of students as Ft. Lauderdale."
Ft. Lauderdale civic and business leaders have said
"they are not unhappy to see the students go."
Several I'K students have not been discouraged,
however.
David Sanderson, sophomore Engineering student,
said he could hardly wait until April 7. "I get more
excited every day."
"Last year I was sitting on my suitcases two weeks
before vacation, and I'm ready to go back to Lauderdale
again this year," Dottie Moore, Arts and Sciences sophomore, commented.
Reports of assault and murder are coming from Ft.
Lauderdale, and this seems enough to dissuade some
stuUunts.

Bob Carpenter. Junior engineering major, said, "I
want a good time, but I don't want to fight the crowds.
I'm headed for Daytona."
A former second-strin- g
University of Georgia quarterback. Buddy Asher, drove thousands of miles in a station
wagon to tell college students of the advantages of
Daytona.
He even promised free beer, free barbecues, and endless parties if the students patronize his motel.
Some braver I'K students are taking to the air
and heading for Nassau.
About 20 people ore driving to Ft. Lauderdale and
then boarding a plane for Nassau, Raleigh Lane, campus
promoter for the trip, reports.
"Last spring it was beautiful. When we water skiied
out around an ocean liner, we could see all the way to
the bottom of the water.
"There's plenty of night life, too. Some of the
clubs don't put on their khows 'til three or four in
the morning," Lane said.

Many parents and students are concerned about the
annual riots that hit the vacationlands. In the March
Howard Greene says he
feels vacationing students often turn towns, and their
own values, upside down.
Greene writes, "For several decades . . . many parents have been carrying on something like a mushy love
affair with their young; this is the generation of parents
that has been raising its children in agonized fear.
"They are under the totally false idea that to discipline a child will mess him up psychologically and turn
him into a Jack and Hipper or at least a tensedup
neurotic."
Carroll Baldwin, sophomore English major, commented, "I think a lot of the trouble last ear was
caused by people who were not in college, and I certainly
do think that UK students have enough sense not to
goalong with these riots.
"College students are old tnoue.h and tend to stop
and think about what they are diong," she added.

20 issue of McCall's magazine,

* KtSTlK

HE

KV KERNEL; Tiulay," M.mli

"12

50,

:

Speaker Notes 2 Phases '
In Religious Development

Interviews Announced
By Placement Service

Many people never grow or deepen in religion because they do not
is such a thing
foreign trade. Administration recognize that there and childhood
as mature religion
Building.
4 New York Public Lireligion.
April
Dr. Samuel Sandmrl, provost
brary B.S., M.S. graduates In liscience. Library Science Deof Hebrew Union College, Cinbrary
partment;
cinnati, upoke at a convocation
YWCA
Women at Junior and in Memorial Hall Tuesday night.
senior levels who are Interested in His topic was "The Religion of
Childhood and the Religion of
investigating career opportunities
in the YWCA.
Maturity."
5 Union Central Life In"Religion on the college campus
April
surance Men in all fields inter- faces the problem of the Univerested in a career in insurance. sity student who emerges from a
local church which is necessarily
White Hall.

The riacvmcnt Srrvico lias day school missionaries, teachers.
Administration Building.
nniiouiici'il the follow ing schedApril 2 Toledo, Ohio, schools
ule of interviews for next week. teacher in all fields. Administra-

tion liuilcling.
6
U.S. Marine Corps,
April
Aviation Cadet Training Student
Union Building.
April 3 U.S. Public Health Service Journalism, psychology, public
health, sociology, social work, and
'other liberal arts. Graduate interested in public health program.
Will interview Juniors for summer
employment. Administration Building;
The Kentucky Co. Graduates
in all fields interested in invest
ment
Administ
securities.
Building;
State Farm Insurance
Men in all fields interested in investigating career opportunities
with State Farm. Administartinn
Thmuli-rbirdI
FOR SAI.K l.i9
Building ;
"ois
ItlllfMKe. Kxci'llctlt (Ollll'l nn
:i
niiike ie.iMin.ible offer. Call
Swift and Co. Graduates in ani6 p.m.
mal husbandry, agricultural science, dairy science, poultry science.
CLEARANCE SALE-F.vr- rv
thing lug
L. C Smith t pru l iter.
condition
accounting, architecture, chemical
Textbooks and others, ask for list j,,
Chevrolet.
with snow tires, $i5ii. engineering, civil engineering, elec
1952 Cadill.ic. $250. Call
en2li.M4t trical engineering, mechanical
6 p.m.
gineering,
mining
engineering,
FOR SALE 1954 Chevrolet liel-Ai- r
business administration
and ecosedan, standard shift. In good condition. $475. Phone UK ext. 33116 or nomics with minor in chemistry,
market analysis, commerce and
29M3t
April 2 National Missions of the
United Presbyterian Church Senin Investigating
iors interested
opportunities
typical administrators, Including
those for
agriculturists, dietitians, and assistants,
directors of Christian education,
directors of neighborhood houses,
maintenance, medical technicians,
ministers, nurses, office secretaries,
parish workers, pharmacists, physicians, program directors, . social
workers, student supervisors, Sun- -

delegation of UK students
this weekend heard officials
the existence of the niiieh- publicized missile pap between
the United States and Soviet
liiissia.
A

The group of four which attended the State Department
Foreign Policy Briefing Confer-enr- e
included Michele Fearing,
Rob Branson, David Blakeman
and John Burke. The students
were accompanied by Dr. Wil- -

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1'am M- - Moore, professor of
"!!!n:l!'sn1',
On the whole, Dr. Moore corn-den- y
"the foreign situation
mented,
Rives far more reason for optimism
than at any time in the past. We
were informed that tliere was
never any serious missile gap between the U.S. and Russia, and
the only phase of the entire program in which we trailed was
booster size. This we already were
aware of."
conference,
During the three-da- y
the group heard President John
F. Kennedy, Secretary of Defense
Robert S. McNamara, Under Secretary of State George W. Ball,
and Acting Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff George H. Decker.

"SERGEANTS

STARTS TODAY

(Spring

1

LEXINGTON
YELLOW CAB

Switow'i NEW

27M4t

8358.

The University's estimated value
of buildings, equipment, and land
Is over $97,696,400.

Students Hear Officials
Denounce Missile Gap

2

CLASSIFIED

ed
of limited horizons because of
people," Dr. Sandmel said.
Dr. Sandmel also spoke to a
faculty forum Tuesday afternoon.
His appearance on campus was
sponsored by the Office of Religious Coordination and the Student
Interfaith Council.

DILLMAM

819 Euclid Avenue
Chevy Chase Village

y

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VER
N!

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The world seethes with people such
as these. ..but never has the screen
dared to show them

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passions exposed!
No wonder
LIFE

magazine
cited this

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miss it

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C

THE

JEAN SCHWARTZ
Kernel Society Editor
Spring has sprung at last, and
the members of the campus population ar madly hunting for their
rhades and cruising around in
bright, shiny convertibles. Parties
are once again in season, so we
have something with which to fill
this delightful little column.
Tonight the inhabitants of Wildcat Manor are taking a short break
from spring training to hold their
annual spring dance..
Al-sdoing a bit of dancing will
be the Tau Kappa Epsilons at their
Twilight Party tonight at the chap
ter house. Appropriately enough,
the Twilighters will provide the

KETl t

KY KERNEL,

Ind.iy, Marli

'10

0.2

Don't try a recipe you've never
made before on guests! Have a
rehearsal first for the family only.

Club Bubble. Joe Mills will provide the music and everyone is
supposed to dress casual.
The Lambda Chis are holding a
hi-- fi
party tonight in preparation
for their Buccaneer Ball tomorrow night. The decorations will include a Spanish vessel, and the
pirates and their dates will enter
the hull of the ship via a rope
ladder. The rejects will provide
the boat rocking music.
Tomorrow the Wildcat baseball
team will play its first home game
against Centre College at 1 p.m.
The first cabin party of the year
will be held by the Pi Kappa
Alphas tomorrow at Herrington
Lake.
Over on Euclid Avenue tomorrow night, the Sigma Nu house
will be the scene of a pledge
party.
The Sig Eps will be entertaining at their Fools' Eve party at
the chapter house. Music will be
provided by the Temptations.
The Phi Taus will entertain their
parents at a banquet tomorrow

the meeting at Levns'
PI TAU SIGMA
Restaurant. Samuel Lyvcrsc. a cerPi Tau Sigma, mechanical entified public accountant of Ycager, gineering honorary, will initiate
Ford, and Warren, will be the new members at 5 p.m, Monday in
'feuest speaker.
the Music Room of the Student
Union Building.
Following the initiation, a banquet will be held at the Lafayette
Hotel. Dr. Kopius, retired head of
the Department of Physics wiff be
the guest speaker.

VOTING PRIMARIES
Kentuckians
must register
to vote in the May primaries by
noon tomarrow m their home
counties.
All

TONIGHT!

COLLEGE

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OUR DOORS ARE OPEN TO
COLLEGE STUDENTS ONLY!

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'Your Portrait Deserves The Best"

Wellington Arms

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The members of FarmHouse will

8

Social0 Activities

1NTEKFAITII C'Ol'NML
Interfalth Council will meet at
5:15 p.m. Monday in the
of the Student Union Building.
The church music progiam will
be discussed at this meeting. All
are asked to atrepresentatives
tend.
PHILOSOPHY CLFB
The Philosophy Club will meet
4 p.m. today in the Music Room
at
of the Student Union Building.
Dr. Henry Jack, assistant professor of philosophy, will conduct
a discussion on "The Nature of
Conscience."
BETA ALPHA PSI
Beta Alpha Psi, national accounting fraternity, will initiate
new members at 4 p.m. today in
Room 128 of the Student Union
Building.
A banquet will be held at 7 p.m.

night at the Campbell House. Morton Walker, an alumnus of the
Phi Tau chapter, will be the guest
speaker.
The Delts will no doubt be on
their good behavior while they entertain their mommies at their
annual Mothers' weekend.
Holmes Hall will be the scene
of the Women's Residence Hall
Council's dance tomorrow night.
Joe Mills will emcee the dance and
the Eldorados will provide the
music.

entertain thier dates tonight with
a house party.
A T.G.I.P. bermuda party will
be held tonight at the Newman

in

to

Dances And Parties
Fill Spring Weekend
By

J

0

ft

nil

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$J

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lt U

S

A.

it

* The Kentucky Kernel
UxivrnsiTY

of Kentucky

Entered (it the post office fit t.exlnetnn. Kentm ky as decond clni mutter under the Art of March S, 187f
published four times a week during the regular Krhnnl year except during holidays and exams.
SIX DOLLAHS A SCHCOL JtEAR

Ed Van Hook, Editor

Kerry Powell, Managing Editor
Ben Fitzpatric.k, Sports Editor
Dick Wallace, Advertising Manager
Bill Holton, Circulation Manager

Wayne Cregohy, Campus Editor
Jean Schwartz, Society Editor
Si'sY Mi Hit.h, Cartoonist
Bobbie Mason, Arts Editor

FRIDAY NEWS STAFF

Kathy Lewis, Sews Editor

David Hawpe, Sports

Bevehly Cardwell, Associate

Don't Be Careless

The recent rash of "accidents" has
brought about the need for us to be
more careful in our daily activities.
One student remains hospitalized
after falling from a second story

window. The same student was burned badly last fall. Another student
suffered a cut on his hand last week
while turning in a fire alarm. One
student suffered an eye injury in an
air pistol accident.
In addition,

firemen have been

V

Set Of 'Principles'
understand how

liy
Assoc iatetl Press News Analyst
The RepublWASHINGTON
icansat least the Republicans in Congressare still trying to figure out
where they stand and for what.
They're working on a set of "principles."
These are to be ready some time
in June for use in this year's congressional elections, a field in which
they haven't been having much luck.
They've won control of Congress
only twice in the 15 elections since
1932. Their national chairman, William E. Miller, tried to pep them
up by predicting victory and telling
them not to be defeatist.
But, as Sen. Barry Goldwater of
Arizona remarked, getting Republicans to agree on a catalog of principles won't be easy.
Then Goldwater, the highly conservative Republican who seems to be
making more speeches than anyone
else in his party, uttered a thought
which, if it came to pass, might spread
more confusion than cohesion.
"What I would like to see," he
said, "would be a statement of basic
from which individual
principles
members can go where they want."
The congressional
Republicans
created a
committee of themselves to recommend the principles.
Before the 12 do that, they'll have to
agree on the principles.
Then they hope they'll get agreement from the Republican National
Committee and approval from all the
Republicans in Congress. Meanwhile,
they are asking for recommendations
from Republicans all over the coun-trJAMES-MARLO-

called to the campus twice recently
to extinguish minor fires. Fortunately,
there was no damage. In one case
a pillow was afire; in the other a
waste basket flamed up.
These "accidents" bring to mind
one conclusion: carelessness. Excitement often results in accidents, but
more often the blame falls on carelessness.
We are exhorted to be more cautious in our daily routine lest we
fall victim of an "accident."

-

n

y.

And, for a very simple reason, this
should be quite a list of recommendations.
The Republicans, like the Democrats, talk of themselves as a single
political party, a condition odd enough
to frenzy a
trying to

a party can call itself a party when the conservatives
in both parties join forces to defeat
the liberals in both parties, and vice
versa, which is what they do.
If anyone doubts it, he will have
to contend with Goldwater whose idea
of republican principles is not likely
to be a duplicate of Rockefeller's.
Goldwater recently told Republicans:
"If it is fair to claim that the
Democratic Party is schizoid, torn by
internal dissensions, struggling to find
a middle way between the extremes
of Hubert Humphrey and Harry Byrd,
it is also fair to say the Republican
Party has failed to present to this
nation a solid political organization
unequivocally committed to an easily
definable political philosophy."
It might also be fair to suggest
Goldwater's appraisal could be shortened to say: the Republicans are all
mixed up.
If they sometimes seem to have
an almost mystical unity in criticising
President
it
Kennedy's programs,
doesn't by any means exhaust either
their acidity or their critical enthusiasms.
Some of them haven't been too
happy with themselves, as they demonstrated notably at their Lincoln
Day Dinners when:
Sen. Margaret Chase Smith of
Maine' suggested the party's potential
presidential candidates were showing
"faintheartedness"
about running
against President Kennedy in 1964;
Sen. Jacob K. Javits of New York
scolded Republicans for "paying too
much attention to the thunder of the
Right and not enough to the thunder
on the cities."
In view of all the views that
would have to be reconciled to get
agreement on a set of principles, the
product may not be what politicians
like to call a ringing declaration.
Javits said he hopes it won't be
"fuzzy."

Campus Parable
RICKS
Director, YWCA
Stop ami feci wind on your face,
blue grass underfoot, clothes clinging
to you, books heavy in your arms.
Stop and look at the mass of
buildings, the greener grass, the
cracked sidewalk, the gray-blu- e
sky,
the budding trees, the colorless peo
By MRS. SONDRA

ple, the bright colors you wear.
Stop atul listen in a world that is
full of motor noises, whistle noises,
bird noises, speech noises, our noises.
Stop and meditate amid a campus
of hurrying students, anxious traffic,
harassed
professors, weary house
meetings, our blues.
Stop and pray to Codl

Susy McHiigti

So

Maybe HE Has Horse Sense

THE READERS' FORUM
that new

screws had to be ordered, a
larger, so the latches could be
lirmly placed into position; that was
live months ago.
Again we have asked, "Where are
our latches?" Now the reply comes
back that the screws are on order and
have been for over five months. It
seems the University of Kentucky,
noted for its Fabluous Five, its high
caliber graduates, and its social life is
now about to have another prestige
bringing honor bestowed upon it:
We are about to become the only
university in the world with one way,
chrome-plated- ,
15 cents apiece, toilet-doo- r
latch screws.
So if by chance you hear someone
on campus ask how long it will be befasteners arfore these custom-madrive, tell them it will not be long,

FDR's 1932 Definition

sie

To The Editor:
Your attempted clarification of the
political left and right doctrines has
been admirable in purpose. I have
found, however, some of the articles
confused and confusing.
Little has been written of the relationship of those two extremes to
doctrines. At
the
the risk of oversimplifying the issues
involved, I think a statement made by
Franklin D. Roosevelt in a campaign
speech in 1932 would enlighten the
minds of your readers:
"Say that civilization is a tree
which, as it grows, continually produces rot and dead wood. The radical
says: 'Cut it down.' The conservative
says: 'Don't touch it.' The liberal
compromises: 'Let's prune, so that we
lose neither the old trunk nor the
new branches.'
"This campaign is waged to teach
the country to march upon its appointed course, the way of change, in
an orderly march, avoiding alike the
revolution of radicalism and the revolution of conservatism." Schlesinger,
9
"The Politics of Upheaval," pp.
(1960).
(I think Roosevelt used the word
liberal, above, as his definition of his
own
doctrine.)
middle-of-the-roa- d

e

64S-64-

middle-of-the-roa- d

Philip Taliaferho

Ilain

Assembly Appeal

To The Editor:
This letter pertains to an action
recently taken by our superiors in
Haggin Hall. It seems, so the story
that we were told goes, that the toilet-doo- r
latches in our restroom accommodations began to mysteriously disappear.
For fear of someone using these
ingenious mec hanical devices for some
other purK)se jhan was originally intended, all the latches were suddenly
removed with no provision to protect
our modesty whatsoever, with the exception of a bright red stall door hangs
ing about
ajar.
After persistent inquiry into the
possibility of having our modesty protected by having the latches replaced
(a relatively minute task requiring
only two screws) we were inlonned
three-quarter-

.

for someone much higher than us is
working 24 hours, clay in and day out,
to bring this great honor to our University and to restore the PRIVACY
OF OUR STALLS.
We of the Haggin Assembly are
conscientiously trying to act in the
best interest of Haggin Hall. We feel
there has been a certain laxity on the
part of the Men's Residence Hall administration in cooperating with us.
We feel that the above example clearly illustrates this point.
Modestly yours,
THE HAGGIN HALL ASSEMBLY
Fktu G AkUL.NtR, Secretary

* -

Latin Clubs
To Hold

.fir

Convention
The 13th annual Convention of
Latin Clubs and Latin Students
will be held Saturday. More than
1,000 Kentucky high school students are expected to attend.
Students will arrive at 8:45 a.m.
and will place exhibits in the first
floor corridor of the Fine Arts
Building. They will register in Memorial Hall where the first session will open at 9:30 a.m.
Convention president, Peggy Per-greHigh
Lafayette Senior
School, will preside.
Robert G. Tiff, director of
conferences and institutes for
I'K Extended Programs, will
greet the students. BIrnda Parker of Franklin County High
of the
School and secretary
Olympic Council, will ive the
response.
Skits will be given at the morning session by students from Highlands High School, Ft. Thomas;
Campbell County High School,
Alexandria; Danville High School,
and Academy Notre
Danville,
Dame of Providence, Newport.
During the afternoon, students
from Holmes High School, Covington and Henderson County High
will present
School, Henderson;

;

Tin' Mcilkal ("ciitrr Library

AWS Meeting
Miss Pat Patterson, assistant
dean of women, and seven rep-

prominent Louisville educator
who died in. 1!J.")U.

tt

Med Students
Members of the Student American Medical Association, seated from
the left, are Mrs. Shirley Moore, M. C. Kimbel; second row, Bal- lard Wright, W. M. Hill.

Professors To Present

From Kodak
The Department of Chemistry received a $6,000 unrestricted grant Wednesday from
Eastman Kodak Company.
used In 1962-6- 3
for a fellowship for a doctoral
student In his last year of study.
The remainder will go Into a
fund to promote the welfare of
the department. Dr. Dawson said
this $3,000 would be used throughout the year as needed.
$3,000

will

be

A departmental scholarship committee will select the scholarship

recipient.
Dr. Dawson said Eastman has
given two or three previous fellowship grants to UK. Twenty-tw- o
colleges and universities this time
received a total of $250,000 in
grants, ranging from $6,000 to
$12,500.

'Get Out Of The Grandstand"
LEONARD
SERVICES

683

DIAL

UNIVERSITY HEIGHTS

CHURCH OF CHRIST

ADAMS
S. Broadway

Phone

MR. AND

MRS. JOHN INNES,

Proprietor

PHILIP MORRIS
Group Saving

CONTEST ENDS

Marlloro

TOMORROW
1.
2.

Each empty package of Marlboro, Parliament or
Alpine will be valued at 5 points. Philip Morris
Regular or Commander will be valued at 10 points.
All packages MUST be turned in at the SUB to
your Philip Morris Campus Representatives between
10:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon tomorrow, in bundles
of 50. Separate your 5 and 10 point packages.

Tour The Horse Farms and
Historic Points

328 CLIFTON

SUNDAY:

Of Interest

9:45 a.m.
10:45 a.m., 6:00 p.m.

Worship

WEDNESDAY:
Lodies' Bible Study
Closset For All

HARMON CALOWELL,

9:00 A.M. AND 11:00 A.M.

Reasonable Prices
Private Rooms for Parties
Fidelity Music for Your Dining Pleasure"
"High

er

Classes For All

Minister

RULES

Brakes Adjusted and Relined
Stewart-WarnElectronic Wheel Balancer
State and Valvoline Motor Oils
Quaker
Tires, Tubes, Batteries, etc.

ONE BLOCK FROM U.K.

DeLAUTRE,

Home of the College Folks

At Rose and Lime Intersection
Complete Motor Tune Up

Dr. Lyle R. Dawson, head of

the department, announced that

III."

THIS SUNDAY:

ASHLAND OIL PRODUCTS

UK Receives

No.

The public is invited to attend.

1716 South Limestone

TJfT'I AffC

Jim Shescley's Service Station

The University Symphonic Band
present a concert at 1 p.m.
Sunday in Memorial Hall.