xt7dz02z5v6k https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dz02z5v6k/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19631023  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 23, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 23, 1963 1963 2015 true xt7dz02z5v6k section xt7dz02z5v6k Faculty Part In SC Race Attacked

IKffiMMIE IL
Vol. LV, No. 28

University of Kentucky
OCT.
LEXINGTON,
KY., WEDNESDAY,

23, 19G3

Eight Pages

Chellgren, COUP
Involvements Hit
By BILL GRANT
Kernel Daily Editor

The three candidates for Student Congress president
pulled all the tricks out of their political duffel hags Monday
night and came up with charges of involvement by some faculty members in the congress race.
Specifically, Paul Chellgren, Student Party candidate, charged
that Robert Stokes and COUP had allowed the faculty member
in question to gain control of their party by accepting money from
members of the faculty and administration.
Chellgren charged that "the person who pays the piper generally
calls the tune."
Following Chellgren's

charges, James

Pitts, runnim? under

no

party name, charged that Chellgren also had strong faculty alliances.
He said that "paid members of the University faculty were involved in the campaign."
Pitts said that Chellgren's campaign was actually being planned

CamiHiign Trail

Presidential candidates answer questions at a public James Pitts, and Paul Chellgren. Also at the table
meeting. Aspirants are, from the left, Robert Stokes, is the moderator, Lois Koch.

Breathitt Gives Answers
To Students' Inquiries

By GAUY IIAWKSWOHTII
Kernel Staff Writer
Edward T. Ned Breathitt, Democratic candidate for governor,
at the College of Law in
a round-robi- n
question and answer session yesterday.
Mr. Breathitt fust outlined his
program for the state of Kentucky. Education, Jobs, economic
growth and judicial, penal, and
welfare reform are the real issues in the governor's race, he
said.
Kentucky has moved ahead in
education under the present adMr. Breathitt
ministration,
added, "And we must move ahead
in education if any of Kentucky
is to advance. Also, we must provide education for the functionally illiterate and for the technologically unemplayed."
The second point on Mr.
Breathitt's program was additional jobs through economic
growth. "Kentucky is eighteenth
in its economic growth rate,"
said Mr. Breathitt, "and I intend
to assure a greater growth rate."
Highways were the third issue
advanced by Mr. Breathitt. "I
intend to keep Henry Ward as
Highway Commissioner," he said,
"because he is the most able man
In Kentucky to serve in this

post." "Under his leadership."
said Mr. Breathitt, 'Kentucky is
first in the ration in state-federroad construction and second in state load construction."
Welfare and penal correction
was the fourth issue Mr. Breathitt reviewed. "I vait peiv.il institutions and parole reform to
have the same considerations as
welfare programs," he said. He
s?.;d that programs for the deaf,
blind, and handicapped must also
be met.
"The issues are the same today
for Kentucky as they were in
January," Mr. Breathitt stated.
He asserted that his issues had
not changed since he began his
race in the primary.
After his opening remarks, Mr.
Breathitt opened the floor to
questions. "I have enjoyed these
question and answer sessions with
the students at the different colleges," said Mr. Breathitt. "These
questions test the mettle of a
candidate."
Asked if he would like to run
in an election in which all of the
interested political fractions were
not requested to participate, Mr.
Breathitt said, "As a politician,
I have the intelligence to see
that that would never happen."
Breathitt told another student

that he was not nor ever was a
member of the ADA. "The only
things I have ever belonged to is
the Boy Scouts of America, the

Army Air Corps, and the Democratic Party," he answered.
"We are going to shoot for an
average eighth grade level ft r
adults." said Mr. Breathitt on his
plans for the functional illiterate. "This level of education will
allow our people some position."
He added that he is also work-in- s
with federal and state officials to determine setting welfare benefits in favor of those
who participate in retaining programs. "We are going to stop
pouring our resources down a
sinkhole," he concluded.
Quizzed on his stand on civil
rights laws, Mr. Breathitt attacked the "irresponsible extremists who have raised the racial
problem as a campaign issue."
Mr. Breathitt said, under his
direction, Kentucky would first
comply with the law. "I will recommend civil rights legislation
that complies with the Constitution, federal laws, and court decisions."
Mr. Breathitt pointed out the
excellent record Kentucky has in
civil rights issues. He said that
Continued on Page 8

"by a paid member of the University staff."
Speaking to about 25 students in a YMCA-sponsormeeting at
the Student Center, the three candidates made the faculty issue
the major point of their speeches.
In his opening remarks, Pitts said that he could claim "no paid
member of the University was involved" in his campaign.
Speaking next, Chellgren told the group Stokes last week publicly
admitted accepting faculty donations.
During that meeting. Stokes also said that COUP had received
about "one or two dollars from candidates on their slate." When
questioned Monday night about "outside influence" in COUP, Stokes
said he accepted donations from "some members of the faculty
and administration."
Monday night, Chellgren asked that Stokes "names and amounts
so that the students can know Just how much the faculty is involved."
He said that COl'P had become the "tool" of the faculty and
suggested that "COU Pnow stands for Clique Of University professors."
Chellgren said, "we are carrying this issue to the top, it's no
longer a student matter when they (the faculty) start paying tha
bills."
"Never has the name of the Student Party become more significant," Chellgren said. "We firmly believe that no Student Congress is better than one controlled by its own organization."
In his address, Stokes said that one faculty member made a
small contribution to his campaign.
Stokes said, "He (the unnamed faculty member) thought we
were pel forming a real service and wanted to help us out."
Stokes asserted that charges of "faculty control" were naiva
since "we have minds of our own."
On COUP's financial situation, Stokes said that they had paid
$35 for the printing on their leaflet 'Congress, Crisis, and COUP''
and "the rest was posters v.c made with our ov. n money."
On Tilts' charge that his camnaiirn was being planned by "a
pai'l member of the University staff," Chellgren said "that's absolutely not true."
During the open questioning of the candidates, Doug Hubbard, a
senior commerce student from Barbourville, asked Chellgren if he
had a "midnight conference with Deno Curris, a University staff
last Thursday night."
member in the
Curris is a graduate assistant in the College of Education.
and had
Chellgren said that he had met with Curris in the ir
dinner with him last week.
"But that's no different than Mr. Pitts meeting with Mr. Kenton
since I have known Deno from high school and we are good friends,'
Chellgren said.
The "Mr. Kenton" referred to is Bill Kenton, first year law student from Maysville, who has not taken an active part in the campaign.
Pitts said that he had not met with Kenton in over four months
and that "Kenton is not a paid member of the University staff."
Hubbard also asked Chellgren if it was true he tried to get the
COUP nomination for president and when that failed he tried to
get Pitts to promise to appoint him chairman of the congress Judicial
Board.
Chellgren said he had considered running with COUP but that
"their terms were unacceptable to me." He also said that he had
ed
discussed COUP with Pitts and agreed that "we had to get
on Page 8

ROTC Instructor Gives Account Of Career
By MELINDA MANNING
Kernel Staff Writer
"I'm just marking it off to experience,"

said
Sgt. Raymond Conley, summing up his year's stay
in Viet Nam as a military adviser to the Vietnamese
Civil Guard.
y
Now on a little more pleasant assignment, Sgt.
is an instructor in the University's ROTC program
and much prefers UK freshmen to Vietnamese soldiers.
The sergeant was stationed in Due My, a military
compound north of Saigon, with about 60 other military
personnel. The most remarkable thing about the compound was the weather.
"April through September It wasn't unusual for the
temperature to hit 120 degrees," he said, "and I've seen
it rain 30 inches In 24 hours."
An interpreter was vital in his work with the Civil
Guard because as Sgt. Conley explained, "there could
Con-le-

be as many as five dialects in one company."
"The war was pretty much all around us," he cried.
"If you're in Viet Nam, you're near fighting. But the
Vietnamese soldiers were very cooperative and made our
job easy. They looked to the Americans for leadership

and always asked our views."
Sgt. Conley had an opportunity to see other parts
of the country including the Western city of Da Lat. An
atomic reactor in the city was operated by a professor

from an American university.
"It was the first atomic reactor I'd ever seen." Sgt.
Conley said, "and I had to go all the way to Viet Nam to
see it."
He was particularly impressed by Nha Trang, a
lovely seaport city whose beach is quite a tourist attraction.
While the sergeant was there, the beach also attracof the president
ted Mrs. Ngo Dinh Nhu, sister-in-la- w
of Viet Nam.
Sgt. Conley said that she was a very attractive woman
and very Western in her manner of dress.
He explained that almost all the women in the counrobe of either white
try wore the same outfit, a two-pieor black that looked "like pajamas."
During his stay in the country, he was most impressed by the poverty of the people. He was invited to
the homes of several men and felt he was obligated to
accept so that the men "wouldn't lose face."
The mud and straw houses had almost no furniture

except a charcoal pot which served as the family stovs
and a box or two to sit on. And these houses usually
accommodated a family of 10 to 13 people.
A native of West Virginia, this was not Sgt. Con-ley- 's
first visit to the East. He has also been stationed
in Korea and Japan.
His two children have really been around, too. His
daughter was born in Nuremburg, and hi 3
son, who will be five on Christmas Day, was born in
Munich.
His wife is a Kentuckian and is delighted with her
husband's present assignment in the Bluegrass.
His family had to stay at their home in South;
Carolina during his assignment in Viet Nam because of
lack of accommodations in the compound where he was
stationed.
But the sergeant explained that even if he had been
permitted to take them, danger of disease and lack of
schools would have convinced him to leave them at home.
And Sgt. Conley has decided that home is a pretty
good place to be.
"I've seen how far behind those people are, their
dirt and poverty," he said. "I don't ever want to go back."

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Oct.

23, 1903

Alpha Lambda Delta
Initiates Three
'

A4

.iiMliivfe:

-

if

4

r"'

r;i
s

JilJ2.,v,.l

"J

-

I

r

r

1

!

'

'

Alpha Lambda Delta, freshman
women's honorary, Initiated three
sophomore women who achieved
a 3.5 or better overall scholastic
average during their freshman
year.
Pledge ribbons were presented
to Sally Athearn,
Bernadean
Jones, and Ellen Earle Chaffee
Monday night in a ceremony
conducted by the ALD officers
in the Student Center.
To be eligible for the honorary
a woman student must have a
3.5 or better scholastic
average
at the end of her first semester
or a 3.5 or better cumulative
average at the end of her freshman year.
Freshman women will be Initiated in January, after first semester grades have been

1

JU

U UiMi

Scholarsliit Winners

The 19G3-6- 4
I.KD scholarship winners are, pictured
from the left, first row Mary Iale McCall, A&S
senior, Dallas, Texas; Bonnie Ann Barnes, A&S
senior, Allendale, N.J.; Anna Laura Hood, A&S
junior, Louisville; second row Mary K. Bunnel,
A&S junior, Munfordville; Glinda Faye Talley, A&S

sophomore, Magnolia; and Juanita Green, A&S
sophomore from Bondville. Not pictured are George
Georgalis, engineering junior, Radcliff; George W.
Glazebrook Jr., A&S junior, Lebanon; Jerry W.
Grady, A&S junior, Louisville; and Rita Trice,
from C'ynthiana.

Ilomeeotnins

Today is the final day for
voting for Homecoming queen.
The polls are located in the
Student Center and will be
open from 9 until 5.
yastxtiiissseix

Teacher Tests
Set Feb. 15
At University

Faculty Member's
Speech Written
In Magazine

T1k licad of UK's Departof Agricultural
Dr. H. F. Parker,
lias liad a recent speech published in a national magazine.
The speech entitled "The World
You Live In," was delivered orhiah
iginally at a Kenturky
school. It appears in the run out
Ksue of "Vital Speeches of the
Day." a
journal
circulated by the City News PubPelham, N. Y.
lishing Company,
In his speech, delivered to students at Cai lisle County Hinh
School at Eardwell, Dr. Parker
emphasized that "we must have
100 percent
education" for the
ytuth of today and declared that
education must stop after the
twelfth grade. "We have now
come to the point where high
school is not enough for anyone
who is to live in and contribute
to our society," he added.

ment

The Educational Testing Serv- -.
will administer its National
Teacher Examinations on Feb. 15,.
ice

1964.

The tests are open to collepe
seniors planning to teach. Scores
are used by many school dis- -.
tricts as a basis for" employing
new teachers and by several
states for granting teaching cer- -.
tificates or licenses.
Future teachers may take the
Common Examinations,
testing
their professional knowledge and
general educational background,
and one or two of the 13 Optional
Examinations, measuring knowledge in specific subjects which
they expect to teach.
Education students should con- tact the school system in which
they expect to seek employment
or their colleges for specific advice on taking the examinations.
Registration for the tests opens
Nov. 1, 19G3 and closes Jan. 17,'
19G4.
Bulletins of information
may be obtained from the Placement Service.

Democrats Hold
Election Poll
On UK Campus
poll run by the campus demA

was held
ocratic organization
yesterday. Chi is Gorman, chairman of the Young Democratic
Club, said, "This is to be released
as a poll sponsored by the club."
He said the purpose of the poll
was to gain a general idea of
campus sentiment sis we move
into the final two weeks of the
campi' ii;n.
Paul O. borne, chairman of the
UK students for the
has issued a s,atenient say-in- n
that "the
organization did not have any
prior knowledge of, nor did it
consent to the mock election.
None of our members manned the
booths nor counted the votes, and
I sincerely urged them not to
vote in said election."
He added that "the many University students for the
team do not have any
objections to a legitimate mock
election, but we did object when
the election purported to be bipartisan and is definitely not."

Diplomat Schedules Speech
Before UK Patterson Cluh
Daniel J. von lalluseck, permanent representative of the
Netherlands to the United
States, and former ambassa-- .
dor to the Soviet Union anil to
Canada, will address the Patterson Club next week.
Von Balluseck will speak on
"Holland, Europe, and the U.S.A."
at noon, Saturday, Oct. 2G, in
Pooms 3 and 4 of the Donovan
Hall cafeteria.
Born in 1895 in Utrecht, Netherlands, von Balluseck was educated at the Rotterdam School
of Economics and studied social
sciences and economics at the
Universities of Geneva and Amsterdam.
.In 1918 he joined the editorial'
staff of the Amsterdam newspaper, the Algemeen Handelsblad.
He covered the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, was sent to New
York in 1920 as staff rorrespon-dan- t,
and in 1925 was transferred
to Geneva to rover the League

IVew

CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE

LOST

FOR SALE Tan leather attache
case 18x12x5. $28 new, now $15.
Post Versilog slide rule, case.
at 5:30
New; $15. Call
2304t
p.m.

LOST Brown looseleaf notebook
and intermediate economic analysis text. Finder please return
to 419 Huguelet Drive. Reward.
2203t
MISCELLANEOUS

FOR SALE 1959 Mobile Home,
35x8 Detroiter,
one
owner, excellent condition. Setup, ready for occupancy now.
Call J. S. Evans, Ext. 2739 or
2303t
after 5 p.m.
FOR SALE
brick, five
minutes from University. Near
schools. Plenty storage, carport,
storm windows, 309 Hummingbird Ln., $14,000.
2303t
FOR SALE
Master radio.
$25 cash. Call

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

Kentucky
THEATRE

NOW

PAUL NEWMAN

JCaWflODWAuLl

Channel
size.

High-fideli-

23Q3t

KIND OF LOVE

Phone

BAILV

S:M

P.M.

Service

"24-Ho-

Emergency

7

'TOYS IN THE ATTIC"
Dean

TAYLOR TIRE CO.
400

E.

VINE ST.

LEXINGTON, KY.

The judging panel Is Incomplete at this date, but will include Philadelphia
Sid Mark, Bob Share of the
Barklee School of Music, and Ira
Gitler of "Down Beat Magazine."
Plans are being made to have
two musicians serve on the panel.
Because of the early date,
deadline for applications will be
November 15. Final selection of
will
be made by
contestants
taped auditions to be held at and
conducted by the Berklee School
of Music on January 4, 1964. Interested groups should submit i
tape of about fifteen minutes to
the University. If possible, the
tape should be a recent one,
made since Sept. 1. Deadline for
tapes is Dec. 18.

Grissom

Takes Post
In Florida
Eugene E. Grissom, formerly
an instructor in UK's Department
of Art, is the new head of the
Department of Art at the University of Florida.
He joined the staff at the
University of Florida in 1953
two yenrs as a faculty'
member here. He has been act- ing head of the Florida Department of Art since 1962.
He has exhibited throughout
the United States and is repre- sented in many private and public collections.
.Grissom earned his B.S. de- gree from Kansas State Teachers
College in 1918, and a Master
of Fine Arts degree from Iowa
State University in 1951.

rXUS

"In the Cool of the Day"
Jjne fonda

Starts 7:30

TODAY!

TIME

Shows Cont. from 12:00

Von HEFLIN
Rita MORENO
James MacARTHUR

Adm.

90c

IS

RUNNING CUT...F0R

THE RUNNING

MAN!

"CRY
BATTLE"
COLUMBIA

WED., thru SAT.
Rood Service"

As was the case last year, Staa
Kenton is the Chief Advisor, and
will again attend the show. Ho
was quoted after the show as referring to the affair as a "spectacular," and added that "Never
ln my life have I ever seen a
more talented group of perform-ers.- "

Language Rule

Graduate School passed a
new rule concerning foreign
languages last spring. The new
rule reads, "If after four semese
ters of
graduate work
(above the A.B. level) the student has not satisfied the foreign language requirement he
must hae the special approval
of his adviser and the graduate
dean before registering tor further work."

ACTION
252-712-

Vill.niova University lias
announced that applications
arc now available for the
Fourth Annual Intercollegiate
du Festival, to be helil in
the University Field House
on Friday evening, Feb. 7

OF
OPCtt

Complete Automotive

of Nations activities. In 1927 he
was appointed staff correspon-dain London.
The government of V.2 Netherlands appointed him ns the perto the
manent representative
United Nations in 1950, where he
rerved for five years, after which
he was transferred to Moscow
and later to Canada as the Neth- erlands ambassador. Since
vinn Balluseck has been representing the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs on the board of the Defense College at the Hague.
In 1949 he became an Oirirer
of the Order of Orange Nassau,
and in 1953 a Knight in the Order
of the Netherlands Lion.
Von Balluseck has written two
books under the pen names of
Peter Bricklayer, "Holland's
House: A Nation Building a
Home," 1939; under Picter Scha-kel- k,
"Wij deelgenooten" (a story
of the Netherlands-Indonesia- n
relationship), 1945.

Jazz Concert
Applications
Available

Martin-Wnd-

y

T"Huiie"d!

PICTURES

Feared!

HARVEY

THE DAY"

REMICK' BATE

THE

PAWVIStON

OF

woouciui

AIM

RUfJfJinQ
73AM

Heller

ALSO

"IN THE COOL

4 CAROLREtO

IfE

LAURENCE

Wlfftff? COLOR

BREATHTAKING

COLOR

PLUS

"COME FLY WITH ME"

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Orr.

13 - 3

2.1,

o
(

C-r- s

7

uiMubaHiA,,..

..........,......,

...........

iLmmm

Weekend Activities Swept The Campus!
in a
of

The ADPis downed the Lambda This in a spirited game of flag foot- ball on the Haggin Hall field Saturday afternoon. This event was
preceded by a pledge game which was won by the Lambda Chi

It's

OU1

pledges
tight game
Saturday night the ZBTs Initiated
the fall season with a Cosa Nostra party at the chapter house,

-

,

Stuff

Women In The Business World?
By JANIE GEISER
women than
ever before in businesses and professions. Seventy years ago the
women's place still wasn't In the
home; they wanted to "get away,"
to leave the stove, the washing,
and the housework to enter what
they considered, "the real world."
According to a book, "What
Can a Woman Do?" published
in 1893, by Mrs. Martha Louise
Rayne and available in the Margaret I. King Library stacks,
women were taking over professional positions and making quite
a go of them.
Mrs. Rayne, in her book subtitled "Her Position in the Business and Literary Professions,"
describes some of the various opportunities available for "energetic, ambitious young ladies"
uho want to enter the business
world, but who don't know what
they want to do or how to go
about doing it.
She says many jobs are open
1963 finds more

Meetings

American Marketing Association
The American Marketing
will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Room 245 of the Student Center. L. M. Beam, genet al manager of J. C. Penny Co.,
will speak on the "Revolution in
Retailing".
International Tea
Tomorrow from 5 p.m., the
Home Economics Club will sponsor its International Tea in honor
cf the foreign students on campus. The tea will be held in the
lounge of Erikson Hall. All foreign students and members are
invited to attend.
C.S.F.
There are Noonday Capsule
Topics everyday in the University
Center, Room 09. Please cornel
Kappa Kappa Gamma
The Kappas held their annual
Founders Day banquet last Tuesday at the Imperial House. Dr.
John Oswald, UK president,
tpoke on the role of sororities
and fraternities in the changing
college atmosphere.
Pitkin Club
Meetings will be held at noon
on Wednesday at the Presbyterian Student Center through
December 4.

for women as poets, music teachers, proofreaders,
journalists,
housekeepers, dressmakers, laundresses, and dentists.
For the woman who wants
companionship yet wants to receive "a small monthly stipend"
Mrs.
for her companionships,
Rayne suggests caring for invalids, or working as a traveling
companion to an elderly, wealthy
woman. In 1893, women could
also be proficient as elocutionists,
secretaries, typists, stenographers,
underglaze' pottery painters, typesetters,
government
inventors,
clerks, photographers, lady book
canvassers,
writers,
gardeners,
auctioneers, or engravers.
Mrs. Rayne observed that "women as a rule receive 20 percent
to 30 percent less than men for
the same or equivalent services.
No woman need feel aggrieved
or discouraged
it is one of
the barriers which men themselves erected to defend women
from behind which they purposed to earn bread for both . . ."
In 1S33, if a woman were a
good saleswoman she might make
a week; some "who
from
worked a longer time intent receive $12 or occasionally $15 a
week. Heads of the various departments such as the "loading
saleswomen in the glove or lace
departments or in dressmaking
0
a
receive as much as
week. There are not fifty such

...

WATCHES

WATCH

DIAMONDS

BANDS

JEWELRY

DODSON
WATCH SHOP
Fine Watch Repairing
110 N. UPPER ST.
6
Phone
254-126-

positions in New York City today," the author added.
Lary cashiers receive about $15
a week, "a very reasonable and
sufficient salary"; bookkeepers,
$20; teachers about $800 a year;
housekeepers, $1,000 a year"; if
they are capable, trustworthy,
and experienced," Mrs. Rayne
noted.
More jobs were open to women
in 1893 than ever before. Women
could work alongside men,' even
replace them as cigarmakers,
brewers, tanners, distillers, clock
makers, lawyers, church workers,
bankers, brokers, nurses and doctors, piano tuners, electricians,
telegraphers.
A good profession for any woman of the 1890's, Mrs. Rayne
was poultry raising.
thought,
"Give them (the chickens t sour
milk, scraps of meat, fish skins.
Vary their diet as much as possible . . . The business of poultry
raising is a safe and- pleasant
one safe in a pecuniary way
because there is a small amount
of capital invested ana
because it gucs the woman what
she needs, a hei.Uhy outdoor
exercise," Mrs. liuyne linitly believed.
Another fast
was

bee

and the method of taking care
but she offers the following simof them, will be fully rewarded
ple advice which may well apply
for her trouble." Mrs. Rayne does to today's woman:
not suggest what the rewards
"Form habits of
would be. Stings, perhaps.
sound judgment, perserverance,
there's not a and endurance. Train yourself
She believes that
prettier sight than the long rows to right thinking, and acting,
that uprightness shall be your
of bee hives behind the farm
house. Well . . . "Do not try to
nature, truth your impulse." She
could be right, you know.
build up by crowding out some,"
one already established," she
there is room enough for
all the bee keepers of the Tnited
States for some time to come."
1
"Every room should be a home r
a castle to its temporary owner.
The landlady is the queen of the
realm and she needs to be wise
and gracious if she woukl have
loyal subjects," said Mrs. Rayne
about the profession .of keeping
boarders or being a landlady.
The ideal boardinghouse, she
believes, is one where the landlady has no time to gossip about
her boarders; where sh:? docs not
the management of their
domestic i l'faii's; where a community of laches an. I gentlemen
nnu-H'- -e
tlieir hoiucUcejan;; on a
cooperative plan.
Mayt ? Mrs. Havre's s:wi?e..ti ins
stein a lit;;!.' ant.quatcd lor 1003,

keep-

ing. "This is a healthv and delightful pursuit, and ec:y woman
who engages in it with some
knowledge of the habits of bees

1:2-

FLOWERS
For Aircy

Occasion

The Gift That Only
You Can Give!
Your Portrait by

MIC

Curtis Wainscott
of

'

II L E R

FLORIST

SPEyGLER
STUDIO
PHONE
N.E. Corner Main

CALL

Dial

252-667- 2

and Lime

255-658-

0

417 East Maxwell

Will Dunn Drug
Corner of

S. Lime

and Maxwell

Pin-Mat-

Nancy Sisler, a sophomore
nursing major from Ashland and
a member of Delta Delta Delta,
to Bill Pieratt, a senior physical
education major from Mt. Sterling, and a member of Sigma
Alpha Epilon.
Katlile Uarr, ' a senior elementary education major from
New York City and a member of
Alpha Delta Pi, to Lucian Johnson, a senior engineering major
and a member
from Vanccbur
of Sigmu Nu.

THE COLLEGE STORE

fa

Like most of us, you probably
feel pressured at times with the
demands made on you for original
for fresh ideas that
thinking,
will lift your work above th
commonplace. Through the study
of this book, Science and Health
with Key to the Scriptures by
Mary Baker Eddy, we are learning how to turn to God for tha
intelligent ideas we need. You
can do this, too.
We invite you to come to our
meetings and to hear how we
are working out our problems
through applying the truths of
Christian Science.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
UNIVERSITY

j(f)u
tihct

Fountain

Delivery Service

Cosmetics

Drugs

OF KENTUCKY

Lexington
Meeting timer 7 p.m. Tuctdoys
Meeting place: Student Union Eidg.
UM

Chrif.,,,,!
...(. Itr

;,,i'(A

:

ur.u.,

SYl.M.Y

lmktont. I'ap,rlwk

:(.V a! nil
S U.I.I ,.l

tMHwn

r,ln,J

fi.i.

* Pitts' Statement

We want to provide a revision of
tlie constitution to make the body,
with the consent and advice of its
faculty advisors, a STUDENT CONGRESS that is responsible only to the
student body and to the President of
the University.
As a result of this change in the
power structure of the Congress we
feel that many worthwhile programs
can be carried out. Without the
change none of the proposed programs can be carried out effectively.
STUDENT CONGRESS WITH
THE POWER WE WOULD GIVE
IT WOULD BE ABLE TO:
1. Provide the Student Congress
with the ability to coordinate all the
student groups on campus.
2. Provide not only more jobs, but
higher wages for the students.
3. Work with the Student Achievement Committee.
4. Investigate and evaluate the allocation of tuition fees, for the benefit of the majority of the students.
5. Make every committee a representative one.
6. Provide a committee within the
Congress to present petitioned suggestions to the body for improvement.
In following our campaign theme
of voting the people not the party, we

endorse the following candidates for
Representatives. These are the people,
regardless of affiliation, who would be
best able and best qualified to form
the nucleus of a WORKING STUDENT CONGRESS.
Arts & Sciences: Gilbert Adams,
Toni Barton, Dave Book, Ann Combs,
Pat Fowler, Heidi Hanger, Lois Kock,
Jeanne Landrum, Mary K. Lane, Ginger Martin, Pauline May, Roger May,
Anne McCutchen, Liz Ward, and Ben
Williams.
Education: Susan Downey, Candy
Johnson, Kit Lapham, Kathy Kelly,
Jane Olmstead, Dan Varney, and
Joyce Watts.
Engineering: Pat Adkins, Jim Noe,
P. V. Price, and George Strong.
Agriculture: Ben Crawford, Bob
Guinn, Jackie Good, and Bary Staples.
Commerce: Jim Bersot, Joe Cough-liPhillip Grogan, Wayne Jones, and
Eddie Whitfield.
In conclusion we would like everyone to vote, regardless of your preference. Your vote is your PEROGA-TIVyour POWER and your PRIVILEGE.
Jim Pitts President
Jack Reisz Vice President
Debbie Delaxey Secretary
Jim May Treasurer

n,

E,

Letters To The Editor
On COUP Financing

To The Editor:
It is indeed regrettable that a
clique of University professors and
administrators have meddled and interfered in strictly student affairs.
However, it is far more regrettable
that Robert Stokes.Jim Svara, and the
other COUP politicians have been
apparently involved in this and thereby have further undermined student
confidence in Student Congress.
COUP's true colors have been revealed and the matter has been
brought to light. In order to save
some respect COUP should disclose
the names of the "interested faculty
and administrators" who are financing
and running its campaign.
Never has the name of the Student
Party become more meaningful. It is

a party founded by students, composed only of students and is responsible only to students. No interested
faculty and administrators are
our efforts.
The Student Party enlists your
support to develop a meaningful SC.
To this end, our party has always
been dedicated. One thing is certain
it would be belter to have no congress at all than one that represents
the students in name only.
Student ratty
con-troli-

Paul Ciiei.lchex

Sam Burke
Steve Besmear
Candy Johnson
(Editor's Note: The above letter
stemmed from a mass meeting of Student Congress candidates held last
Friday and reported in Tuesday's
Kernel.)

Student Party Stand
The Student Party offers "mature,
proven, and responsible leadership
that is aware of the problems of congress and can do something about
them. We feel that congress should
be the governing body for the students at the University, and not just
a glorified coordinator of programs, or
the main organ to increase culturalism
on campus.
Paul Chellgren, our prseidential
candidate, has been in congress before and has worked on Student Congress projects (Vandenbosch book,
and the committee that investigated a
student-ownebook store). He has
other proven leadership including being spokesman for the Committee of
240, and a member of the debate team.
The other officer nominees also offer this type of proven leadership.
This leadership, we feel, can accomplish or at least start work on
the following programs:
Restore stability and respect to
the congress.
Completely revise the Student
Congress constitution.
in such
Continue participation
projects as the Harper Lecture Series,
the Vandenbosch book project, and
the Washington Seminar.
Assure adequate representation on
all faculty and administrative committees by removing any student representative who misses two meetings.
Develop a student owned book
store.
Stop the practice of giving single
faculty members preference over mar-lie- d
students in University married
student housing.
Achieve proper stand