xt7g4f1mhp3x https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7g4f1mhp3x/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19581106  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, November  6, 1958 text The Kentucky Kernel, November  6, 1958 1958 2013 true xt7g4f1mhp3x section xt7g4f1mhp3x PR'sTo Pick Queen
At Dance Saturday
The annual IYrshins Rifle Coronation Ball will be held Saturday, Nov. 8, at the Student Union
p.m.
Ballroom lrom
Tickets, which are $2.50 a couple,
may be purchased at Barker Hall,
fiom any Fershing Rifles member,
or at the fcoxoffice at the door.
The ctewning of a Fershing
Rifles Quern as Captain will highlight the dance. t The queen will
have two attendants, a First and
Second Lieutenant. The girls will
be chosen today from 17 candidates,
and will act as sponsors for the
organization.
Each sorcrlty. and dormitory on
campus hr? nominated one girl.
The candidates are to be Judged
on beauty, poi.se, personality, and
interest in Pershing Rifles.
An open house was h?ld yesterday in Euell Armory in honor of
the candidates. The elections will
8-- 12

take place in the Fine Arts Building today.
As sponsors, the queen and her
attendants will attend Pershing
Rifle functions and will be invited to accompany them on all
trips and drill meets.
Jack Gay and his orchestra .will,
supply the musical background
with "Music in the Gay Manner."
Jean Lecompte will be the featured
vocalist of the evening. One of the
crack Pershing Rifles drill teams
will Rive a drill exhibition during
the dance.
Proper dress to the dance will
be uniforms and formats, Cadets
may wear their uniforms, but this
is not mandatory. Cocktail dresses
will also be acceptable for the

d

--

J

..,v,w' Of

)

girls.

Visitors from Eastern Kentucky,

Candidates for Pershing Rifles Queen are, front
row: Brenda Steele, Cynthia Hymes, Katie
Maddux, Lualice Hardin, Willie Jardan. Barbara
Zweifel, and Pat Humphrey. Back row: Pris- -

the University of Louisville and

several neighboring schools will be
welcomed during the night.

rilla Katz. Jill Fiedler, Carol Armstrong, Ann
Magrudrr, Linda Cnffman. Betty Ann Foley,
Barbara Burgan. Tat Horton, and Darlcne
Scheibel.

Students Shun Dr. Zhivago
g
novel, "Dr. Zhivago,"
Student interest is the Nobel
obviously isn't very high.
After checking with the UK Library, it was discovered Hi at a Kernel
reporter was the first to inquire about Tasternak's book. A copy is
on order, "just in case."
Morris Eook Store has been sold out since the day after the prize
was awarded and more have been ordered.
Purcell's reports its only copy in the rental library is in great deare expected by the middle of the month.
mand. More-copieSeveral calls have been received by the Lexington Public Library
for the novel, and more copies are on order.
Frize-winnin-

llm

US, 1X11

H

UNIVERSITY OF KENTPUCKY

s

.Volume L

Lexington, Ky., ThursdawNov.

(i,

H)8

Number 27

11 Students Get

.Record Senate Edge
Air Department Gained By D emocr-atCommendations
s

Force Base,
Eleven Air Force ROTC cadets tended Craig Air
were decorated yesterday as Dis- Selma, Ala., or Sewart Air Force
Base, Nashville, Ten
tinguished AFROTC Students.
were Cadet Majors
Honored
Marvin Gregory,
David Craig,
Billy Harlan, Donald Ockerman,
Donald Kaufman, James Stidham
and Ralph Stearman and Cadet
Captains Kent Combs, William
Kinkead, Michael Stafford and
Charles Pennington.
Lexington City Manager Glenn
Lovern presented the awards dur
ing the drill period for the 293rd
cadet group.
The cadet win
jwhich consists of allmea in' the
detachment here, is divided into
four groups.
The Distinguished Students are
AFROTC proall seniors
gram. To he qualified for the
award they must be in the upper
25 per cent of their college class
oiyin the upper 10 per cent of

Distinguished Students have the
privilege of applying for Regular

Soar,

Air Force commissions.

Ca-

dets Gregory, Kinkead and Stafford, have applied.
All
cadets .completing the
AFROTC
course receive reserve
commissionsupon graduation from
the University.

,

Guignol Tonight
Guignol Theatre's production
"The Caine Mutiny Court
Martial" will be presented again
tonight, tomorrow and Saturday. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m.
Student admission s 70 cents
and seats may be reserved by
calling 2396.

j

"

-

designated Tentative
Students last spring.
were observed closely

The second weekly meeting of
the Student Union Bridge Club
will be held at 4:00 p.m. this
afternoon in the Social Room
.
of the 8UI1.
--

-

Democratic-politi- cal

hey-

..

.

a.'..-

"

A
"5y Cheese,

!

Please"

The first Kernel Sweetheart of the Week is Judi Green, a fair and
charming coed from Pittsburgh, Penn. Judi, a junior psychology
major, transferred here this year from University of Miami. 'The
Gpy Fiddle restaurant ha jtivited Judi and her escort to enjoy
two of their

meal.

With the outcome of gofernor-shi- p
races undecided only In Nebraska. Democrats had lost four of
their own governors and taken
eight places from the Republicans.
In all the scores of Senate and
House contests, the GOP managed
to unseat one lone Democrat. They
nudged a blonde former school-marRep. Coya Knutson. out of
politics something her husband
couldn't do in a widely advertised
family squabble.
One. other Democrat fell in the
balloting, but not at Republican
Brooks Hays of
hands. Rep.
Arkansas, a lay leader of
the
m,

mptist

unurcnana

eigni-ier-

ni

a
veteran in Congress, lost to
powerful write-i- n campaign based
d.
on the racial issue. Dr. Dale
a strong segregationist on the
Little Rock school board, ran a
an independent and took Hays'
measure with an apparent assist
from Gov. Orval Faubus.
With all Senate races decided
except the two coming up in Alaska Nov. 25 the political scoreboard spelled out the1 Democratic
victory this way:
Democrats rang up their first
upset over the GOP in the Maine
election Sept. 8 and gave revived
support to the tattered refrain
about "as Maine goes, so goes the
nation." To the Maine seat, they
added a dozen more in the election
Tuesday.
They also kept a firm clutch on
all the 13 seats of their own which
were on the line yesterday to add
to 36 held over from the last Con-

with an assist they didn't
want from Nelson A. Rockerfeller
New York, the Democrats
in
brought about a sizable reshuffling
of 1960 political prospects. In the
battle of the bucks, one millionaire against another. Rockerfeller
pushed Democrat Averell Harri-ma- n
out of the New York governorship.
At the same time. Rockefeller
shoved himself in the I960 presidential picture and cast a shadow
of uncertainty over the ambitions
of Vice President Nixon.
It was an election in which the
Democrats refused to yield a single
13
Senate seat while toppling
Republicans. The last GOP seat
tumbled in the last Senate race
to be settled, in Wyoming. .Sen.
Frank A. Barrett, a conservative
by
Republican, was nosed out
W. McGee, a gress.
Gale
Democrat
Continued on Page
young history professor.

12

BRIDGE CAME

at

Anck

Scheduled Nov. 21
8--

13-se-

days.

Ball

The annual Beaux-Art- s
Ball will
be held in the Fine Arts gallery
p. m. Friday, Nov. 21.
from
The motif of the ball is "Hallucinations." The costume party is
sponsored by the Art Club. Plans
are being made to have a combo
play at the ball.
Tickets will cost $2.50. They may
be purchased in Room 207 of the
Fine Arts Building.

The
gain surpassed by
one the previous Democratic record of 12 sets in 1932.
The dwindling trickle of ballots
from the hinterlands merely enlarged the dimensions of the most

triumph since the New Deal

training unit commanders this summer to determine
if they could keep their distinguished status.
Summer training unit is a four
week period of military training at
an Air Force base. The cadets at- Beaux-Arl- s

5

(AT)
Democrats
down a final Republican bastion in the West and produced
their biggest U. S. Senate gain
in history from belated ictuins
straggling in from Tuesdays
election.

44 spectacularI

in-h-

They were
Distinguished
The students
by summer

Nov.

battered

of

-

,

WASHINGTON,

Al-for-

S

Representative Election
In Cooperstown Today
Elections for mayor and 12
councilmen are being held in Cooperstown
today. Ballots were
passed out last night by Student
Congress
official and will be
picked up tonight.'
One councilman and one alternate -- wilt be Felected - from each
of the 12 viir.g'i. There are five

candidates for mayor.
The candidates for mayor are:
Ruth Freeman. Lucille Strattoi,
Bill Gay, Jerry Noe. and
Don
Wright.
The results of the election are
expected to be in Friday evening
and - will - be announced - in the
Tuesday Kernel.

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov. f,

1938

Plans For Canterbury
Club BuildingQotnpleted

4

Codnstructlon of a new Canterbury house for Episcopal students
on campus will begin immeriately,
the Rt. Kev. William It. Moody,
Bishop of the Lexington diocese,
has announced.
Razing of the temporary quarters of the Canterbury house, 427
Hose St., will begin .Monday. A
permit for the new building was
issued Tuesday by James L. Shea,

Lexington building inspector.
Cost of the two-stostructure
has been estimated at $112,000. A
chapel, lounge, social room, library
and recreation room are planned
for the building.
Officers and an apartment for
a theological student who will assist the chaplain will be located
on the second floor.
ry

i

"

.

,

:

',

'

.

1

11; piUJect is finance by the
Lexington and Kentucky diosrs of
the Episcopal church. Brock and
Johnson are
architects of the
building. Construction contracts
have been awarded to Eubanks and
Steele.
Active in the planning of the
chapel are Dr. James W. Kennedy,
former rector of Christ Church,
and the Rev. Ray Holder, former
Dean of the Episcopal Seminary
here.
The Rev. Charles Lawrence is
chaplain at UK. Ho
Episcopal
came here early In September from
Philadelphia, where he was chaplain at the University of
Talkies are here to stay.

t

-

Cahtebbuey Mouse

a

5EocrsiJonison

XA

11X

IN CTOM

Two hundred and fifty students
and faculty crowded Into SUB's
Music Room yesterday afternoon
to participate in an informal discussion on world problems with
former British prime minister Earl
Clement Atlee.
Dr. Amry Vandenbosch, head of
organized Patterson
the newly
School of Diplomacy introduced
the English statesman remarking
that it was probably the first time
UK had
entertained a former
prime minister.
Dr. Vandenbosch led the Tea 'n
s,
by
Chat, sponsored by
receiving written questions from
the audience.
Sub-Topic-

E. C. Holbrook, secretary
of
Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, said
yesterday that an independent, not
was
a Pi Kappa Alpha pledge,
expelled from school in connection
gas bombing of the
with the
Kappa Sig house.
The independent, who lived at
the Pi Kappa Alpha house, did
not throw the bomb. He brought
the bomb from his home and
gave it to the pledges. The pledges
who threw the bomb were placed
suspension" until
on "undated
June.
Undated suspension means the
pledges must stay ' out of trouble
until June. "The expelled independent may return to school next
semester.
.

WIU1AM

WYlfR'S

nue Auditorium.
The tests are designed to screen
applicants for an Air Force commission. They will measure the
aptitude and interest of the candidate.

Now Showing!
1

MOVIE GUIDE

j

ASHLAND
'Naked and the
Dead." 2:10, 5:55. 9:40.
"World Was His Jury." 4:20,8:05.
BEN ALI "The Blob," 12:45, 3:45,
6:45, 9:45.

O

If

"I Married A Monster from
Outer Space," 2:23, 5:23, 8:23.
CIRCLE 25 "The Defiant Ones,"
7:00, 10:35.

"Jungle Heat," 9:10.
"Apache Territory,"
FAMILY
The Chi Omega pledge class has
7:00. 10:25.
announced the following officers
"Stakeout on Dope Street," 8:45.

I

T

IV '

SCREEN

Catinm frt

2 PM

pa

9-

MARRIED I
A MONSTER II
FROM OUTER
I

1

K

WRSEAUT

COLOR

II

41i
'
tlr

MOTOROLA "Stereo-Phonic7- 1
Hi - Fi Portable Player

fp

XO Pledges Elect
--

WfDf
VISION

3URL

CHARLTON

CARROLL

Air Force Qualification tests will
be given to the sophomores next
Friday, Nov. 14 in the Euclid Ave-

i

NOV!

T

FECK'SIMMONS'BAKER'HESTON'IVES

Air Force Offers
AFROTC Tests

Correction

I NTUCN

JEAN

GREGORY

Alice Speaks
ToSUBGroup

H

PRICED AT

'

for the semester: Kay Shamer, KENTUCKY "Onion Head." 12:10.
president;
Katie Maddux, vice
2:29, 4:50, 7:11. 9:32.
president;
and Dottie Duncan, 'STRAND
"The Big Country."
'

WED., THUR., FRI., Nov. 5, 6, 7

"Naked and the Dead"

secretary-treasure- r.

easy

i

12:10, 3:05. 6:05, 9:00.

J1

In Color

Aldo RAY,

Cliff ROBERTSON

sanfeEEEa n

X--0

Also

"World Was His Jury"

N

Sounds wonderful anywhere detechable speaker cabinets
play close together or far apart. 16 watt oval amplifiers, 4
matched speakers tone and balance controls. Oval sapphire
stylus. Luggage type carrying case in spice brown.

O
W

Edmund O'Brien, Mona Freeman

r

ViJt'Idk
ELECTRIC

TERMS

BESTSELLERS IN
STEREO ALBUMS
HifSksT"

HEATERS!

"IN-CA- R"

3rd NITE

O CONCERT MODERN

we sure

FOR . . .

by Lcs Brown

had a lot
jof fun In

HES EVEN

2nd NEW FEATURE

YtoTimefbr

FUNNIER

Lex BARKER, Man BLANCHARD

Sergeants'

O LISTER LANIN GOES TO COLLEGE by Ted Heath

INTHE

O WALTER SCHUMANN

COAST

Presents The Voices

"THE DEFIANT ONES"
Tony CURTIS,

Sidney POITIER

"JUNGLE HEAT"
Admission

This

Eo((cmnt

90c

1

Only!

.

GUARD
DOntV
MiSS
Open 6 p m.

--

ANDY GRIFFITH

Admission 65c

o

FIRST RUN!
IN COLOR!
RORY CALHOUN

"APACHE TERRITORY"
Searing Suspense Drama about
Teenagers who're 'hooked'!

"Stakeout On Dope Street"
Brilliant cast .of young start!

ft

v

y

11

nI
If It

OPEN 'TIL 9 P. M, MONDAY THRU FRIDAY

!!

w

going cook
H' a
who put th whol Coast
Guard In a atow I

n
II

"J-

IK

r-

It

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CO STARRING

TEUCIA FARR

k

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FAMOUS

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FOR FAMOUS BRANDS

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JUST 2 CLOCKS WEST OF CAMPUS

WARNERBRoa

669 So. Broadway

Nobody Can Launder A Shirt Like
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mr--

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SAVE 15

ON CARRY OUT

CORNER LIME AND EUCLID
V

i

* TUT M.N M

School Students
To Attend Art Classes
s,
Art classes for hifzh school
sponsored by the Lexington
thapter of the Council of Jewish
Women,, will begin Saturday.
Trof. Raymond Rarnhart
will
ondurt classfn in drawing and
raintinnf. The clasc will be held
very Saturday from
a. m.
stu-lfnt-

he
of
nd

he
cts
nd

10-11:-

r

he

--

is
1

U

Tniiilit In SI
program

The thud
The UK debaters will attend the
Leadership
Tau Kappa Alpha Hewi.nl Con- will L' held at 7 0
ference at the University of Cin- tiie Social ntx '.w
cinnati Satuiday.
Schools fi"vi .Ohio. Pennsvl- vania. a no-uii be rep- r,... four
resented,
individual awtmis hst year.

Infirmary
Wednesday
Dismissed: Linda Engle.
Thursday
Admitted: Mary Otis Howell,
Carl Eounshell, Richard Shellman,
F)i Karem.
Dismissed: Arnold Watson.

C.

Of C. To Mvvt

CiMler OumixT of
p.m. ti.V if
ttili meet at
in theYMCA-SUthe r.ieulty Club Halph Wen"l.
Training srrlrs
v ill
p m.
in IrNir.tton itv uraia r salrnmn.
speaK.
the SUB.

R

O-r.ir.fK- e

B

2nd ANNIVERSARY SALE

Mary had a little lamb. This
astounded the medical profession.

THURS., FRI., SAT. NOV. 6, 7, 8.

3 DAYS ONLY

ALL CAR COATS
ALL SWEATERS
NATIONALLY

SHOPPING CENTER
and GIRLS

- 20
- 20

OFF
OFF

ADVERTISED BRANDS

ALL HUNTING BOOTS

- 20

OFF

2 PIECE QUILTED INSULATED SUITS
2 PIECE THERMAL UNDERWEAR

VELVET STEP SHOES

FOR LADIES

$14.95
$4.95

Many Other Golf, Tennis, Fishing Items At Sole Price!
USE OUR

CITY CLUB

WESTBORO SHOES
FOR MEN and BOYS

PLAN

LAY-AWA- Y

SOUTHLAND

SPORT

SHOP

Southland Shopping Center

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS 'TIL 9 P.M.

Tel.

Friday
Admitted: James Hudson.
Dismissed: Robert Barrett, Bev-t.J- y
Cardwell, Mary Otis Howell.
Sunday
Admitted: Phyllis Lilly.
Monday
Admitted: Joyce Roscoe, Carol
Kcneycutt, Robert Culton, Henry
Hawken.
Dismissed: James Hudson, Eli
Karem.
Tuesday
Admitted: Sidney Adams, Larry
Gibson.
Dismissed: Joyce Roscoe.
Wednesday
Admitted: Ronald Goebel.
Dismissed: Sidney Adams, Phyllis

E 3B EvJ invites

the 1959 Graduate
with Bachelor's or Master's Degree
to discuss career opportunities
Contact your college placement office
for an appointment for campus interviews

Lilly..

LEXINGTON
YELLOW CAB

N

Inc.

Dial

2-22-

30

Radio Equipped

If your degree major is in:

Career opportunities
November 24

Sales
AUTO

fir

Liberal Arts
Engineering

HOME

RADIO

Business

Accounting

Mathematics

November 25

REPAIRS

Applied Science.

Physics

Mathematics

Engineering

November 20

Product Development
PARTS AND SERVICE FOR
ANY MAKE RADIO AND TV.

While Votf Walt

Service

Electrical
Mechanical
Engineering Physics
Mathematics
Physics

November 20

Manufacturing

Electrical
Industrial
Physics
Mathematics

Mechanical

Complete Drirt-l- n ' Facilities
Used Stta louflhr, Sold and TroJed

DAVIS
SERVICE CENTER
417 S. Mill

Phont

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Some facts about IBM
IBM's phenomenal growth offers unlimited professional opportunities to
highly qualified graduates. Company policies lay a firm groundwork
for stimulating and rewarding careers in the areas listed above. At IBM,
you will find respect for the individual . . . small-teaoerations ...
early recognition of merit . . . good financial reward . . . outstanding
benefits . . . and many educational and training programs.
company-pai- d
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PHARMACY
The Prescription Center
Near Rose
915 S. Lime

IBM's laboratories and manufacturing facilities are located in Endicott,
Kingston, Owego, Poughkeepsie, Yorktown, N. Y.; Burlington, Vt;
San Jose, Calif.; Lexington, Ky.; and Rochester, Minn. Sales and service
offices are located in 198 principal cities throughout the United States.

If you cannot attend the interviews, write or call the manager

1

o Prescriptions
o Fountain
o Cosmetics
o Men's Toiletries
FREE PARKING
REAR OF STORE

Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.

-

r

I.. lir.S-- .'i

k

SHOP AT

HAPPY HIKER

IluiiMl.n. Nov,

I

Train in ; IVorain

DON MEYERS SHOE STORE

iry
He

rhon

are
ie high
school principal fo
tf rest
and talent in art.
A charge of $3.f
r
ulster
covers the cost of material. used.
Other costs of matennln nnd infurnished,, bv the
struction are
student

Chapter.
t'irouRh Jan. 21.
The classes are intended to give
liigh school students the benefit
f professional training in a
atmosphere, and in the
company of the most interested
nnd talented students of this area.
The classes are limited to 30
students from
different high
SOUTHLAND
sxhools In the Lexington area. The
uni-ersi- ty

ler

Debater s A Until
Cincinnati Meet

kl KM

( KV

of the nearest IBM office:
IBM Corp.
713 AlUndaU Or.

Lexington, Ky.

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7-39-

77

3

* The Kentucky Kernel
th Tmt
Published

Btafored

University of Kentucky
Offir nt Leinston, K'rotmVy M ioaHaii matter nnAer tti Act of March
lour time
wnk during thr ri'Hiilaf u tiool yrmt rcrjt holiday! and rianit.
SIX DOLLARS

-

SCItfM.U. YEAR

A

Jim Hampton,

Editor-4n-Clue-

c
3, 1879.

-

f

Larry Van Hoose, Chief Sports Editor
An.T ErrERsov, Chief News Editor
Ann Robehts, Society Editor
TnvFT Ashley, Business Manager
Norman McMullin, Advertising Manager
John Mitchell, SUtff Thotographer
Marilyn Lyvers and Judy Pcnncbaker, Proofreaders
THURSDAY'S NEWS STAFF
Jim Hudson, Editor

Nancy Meadows, Associate Editor

--

Bill Nehurk,

I)'

T

I'

Sports Editor

Congestion In McVey
Twp, minutes after (lasses arc dismissed, the north end of MtVey Hall
begins to look like downtown Lexington at the height of the Christmas shopping season.
Every student who has classes in
McVcy finds much to his dismay that
there is an enormous amount of congestion in the halls, on the steps,
and near the doors of the building
alter cadi (lass period. The unique
part of it is that it is unnecessary.
Although Dean While offered a
solution to the problem last year, it
was not solved largely because stuStill
dents refused to
something should be done to make it
easier to get into and out of the

Another solution would be to prohibit students not going to ( lasses
from standing on the stairs or around
the doors when (lasses arc dismissing. While this would stop the
method of
getting in and out of the building,
it is a rather unsatisfactory solution
because it smacks of military regimentation.
Probably the most efficient method
to avoid the congestion, and one
whidi was suggested last year, would
be to use either the south doors for
entrance and the north lor exit, or
vice versa. This would have to be a
voluntary courtesy as would any
other method because we can hardly
expect to have a policeman on hand
to direct the. flow of traffic.

e.

building.

There are many

things which
would eliminate miidi of the trouble.
For example, classes on the first floor
(ouhl dismiss slightly cailier than
(lasses on the second. This would
help by letting some of the larger
lasses on the first lloor to get out
of the building before the students
on the second lloor come downr

Amid all the screams lor more
the Kernel, we note

with mirth that Pasternak's Doctor
7Jiivao, winner of the 195S Nobel
Prie, is not in the University library
nor had there been one single request from students to check it out.

"Much Ado..."

Press

News Analyst

Students of international affairs have
assumed lor years that the time of real
crisis .between the United States and
Union will come when there is
.something approaching parity in their
industrial capacities.
the-Sovi-

Soviet announcement of indus-

trial plans, thcielore. produces special
interest in this country.
They have promised to amaze the world
in the next seven years, and to "bury"
the United States when thev are reaelv.
Now they are woiking on a program to
do in six years what they had previously

planned in
GURNEY NORMAN

4

1.5.

They hope to be producing, by I'J'VJ,
million tons ol steel. U. S. production in 1!)."7 was
million tons, some
20 million less than capacity. Russian
production liguies presumably are dose
Slates
lo their capacity. The
seldom produces at capacity except in
wartime.
!M

Another Homecoming has come and
gone.

I

he game is won. the- queen

is

downed, the chicken wire is stored for
another year and the alums are piob-abl-

y

about to shake their headaches.
Hut out the
atmosphere
picvails a cloud o! suspicion and rcscnt-luen- t
.directed toward one soiotit
bv
other sororities, suspicion ihat
one sorority
accomplished all it die?
during Homecoming weekend by devious
and underhanded methods.
On the receiving end of scores of
ions is Chi Omega, which privately and
unofficially has been charged with violating rules by getting professional help
on its Homecoming display, which took
iirst place in the sorority division. The
sorority also is charged with exercising
undue influence in "getting a Chi () in"
hs Homecoming Queen.
Whether these charges have any basis
in fact or are merely spawned from a
bitter, jealous sorority rivalry that
exists on this campus is open
Jor speculation. At present, no clear
into the squabble is apparent. "
anli-Iimaeli-

c

'

ly

in-tig-

There

ht

noticeable lack of persons
willing to make a formal and public
charge against
Chi Omega. No one
wished to be hereafter known as the
person who "ratted" on them, yet these
fame people are willing to hide and
tqtiawk.
Of course
there is the word that
Panhc llcnic his been advised to insuie
that all soioiiiics keep quirt about the
whole dispute. Yi t ihe whispeiing continues. It wotdil seem that Chi Omega's
(lilies should openly charge them with
they had any basis lor
loul play il
Mich a cbaige (and many pcisons.vovv
theie. is)... lather than slaudu them in
is a

-

secret. II the Chi O's are guilty of cheatis unfair to the other
ing, then il
sororiiies to allow thein to go. iinpena-lied- .
they ai e ' innoc en t. it is unlair
lo Chi Omega to allow the minors to
11

continue.
What can be done? Well, nothing, if
noJ MM.ly:u ants an thing cloruv-T
he sit u action may be to the point wheie
the
soroiities involved don't even want the
--

issue

mueh

resolved,

limber

because it goes back
than just the current

issue.

lint if a settlement is desired, a frank
and open discussion of the thing among
the live dissenting sororities and Chi
Omega would help. At least it would
halt the vicious rumors.
have
Certainly all views and facts
not been aired publicly, and until they
are no conclusion can be reached and
the childish bickering will go on.
The responsibility of stimulating an
investigation and discussion rests on the
shoulders )f the Panhcllenic Council.
If it has not already taken action, the
council is asleep on the job or-iweak
and won't admit it. (If it has taken
action, apologies.)
What is further needed is an end to
the "No Comments" from Silky, which
had charge
of all the Homecoming
competition. A tightening up on ton-tes- t
rules, a levamping of queen selection procedure is also SuKy's obligation
il it is to continue sponsoiing any pait
of Homecoming.
what is needed is for
Above all,
cuivbody to stop acting like spoiled
children in a sandbox and to bring
about a unilieel el fort, il one is possible, to le establish Home coming and
all il entails ns a thing ol dignity.
- Il was lai liom'that ibis
uai. '
s

Dud"

Other Russian

By J. M. ROBERTS

Z

By

A

Expansion In The Soviet
Associated

e

-

"Ivan Was Lucky. It Was

1

1

12

et

arc planned
on a similar scale, including consumer
goods. Consumer pioduction, however,
has seldom kept up with schedules during
periods of emphasis on heavy iudustiy.
Iii One field, iron oie, the Reds expect
to produce in 1'JliJ ncailv 75 per cent
more than the United Slates consumed
from all sources, boih domestic production and imports, in PJ57.
They would thus have oie considerably
beyond their steel and pig iion production needs which could be used as a
weapon against the West in their ecoinc teases

nomic war.
They already have used their expoit
ability in tin, aluminum and oil to disrupt certain spceilic inaikets through

dumping tin throughout the world, oil
in Argentina,
aluminum in lirilain.
Iron ore would be an impoitanl addition lo this list of weapons.
It would also inciease Russian ability
to make tiade agKcnicnts, incieasing her
lies with tommies which she will help to
elect steel mills.

Last Of The Liberlys
-

1IAIT IMORi: (AP)
Sine, she 's a
frowsy-lookinbucket now. You'd be.
too, if you'd gone through what, she has.
jiut yoli should have seen her then.
Seventeen years age), I mean. The toast
of the town. Town? The country. The
world or the part that mattered then.
They piled it on thick that day at
lictlilchem's shipbuilding yard here. It
was Sept. 27, PJH. to be exact."
The vice president's wife Mrs. Henry
Wallace it was then came over I mm
Washington to do the honors. And President Roosevelt recorded an address for
the ceremonies.
I tell you, it was something. The yard
was mobbed. They say that old Aclolph
could have heard the yell that went up
when Mrs. Wallace smacked that champagne bottle and said, "I christen you
Patrick Henry."
Within minutes after the Patrick Henry
hit (he water and became the Iirst Liberty ship, l;i others at yards on the Past
Coast and over Trisco way followed her
down. "Victory Meet Day," they called it.
The whole' country was celebrating.
This was the American way of doing
things, they were saying. Mass production. Walk across the Atlantic on their
decks, and that sort of stulf.
Matter of lael, it almost tinned out
lo be lli.it. The Panic k llciny was die
liisfol 'J, 700 Libeitys that untied the
height timing the war."--

Alter she was lilted out, the P. II.
became the fiist Libel ly in set vice.
turned over to the government a lew
weeks after Pearl Haibor.
They put a good pair of trottiu' gams
on the gal. On her maiden voyage she
hauled 11,000 tons of war supplies almost.
8.000 miles. Averaged 12 knots, too. On
that first round ttip, she covered 30,000
miles and hit 11 ports with less than
three hours delay for repairs.
Some of die trips were soft stuff, like
to the Caribbean and all. but she also
made the Murmansk run over the top
of Europe to' Russia. That was suicide,
but she came through.
Then the war ended. She was overservice.
And
hauled
for
peacetime
wouldn't von know it, a lev. mouths later
in July '10 she soaped her bottom oil
I lorida.
That was it for ihe olel gill. She was
put out (o pastuie at Moliilc, Ala., with
a lot of her sisters.
Last month, she and !1 other old
ladies weie sold to liethlehem lor sciap.
So what happens? Hoe comes old P. II.
arcl-t- he
back to the voy
oy
same ways wheie she was launched to
be junked.
Well, as they say, dial's life, I guess,
lint she was a guat old gal. And did a
leal gieat job.
Sec ya," Mar, '"
She-wa-

s

"

* 5
Engineers Enter Fourth Estate
THE KENTIT.KY KERNEL, Tlitirl.iy. Nov.

"on

the SPOT

f

By PALMER

I

With
DAN MILLOTT

LOOK AT HOMECOMING
This UTfk the behind-the-scenhassle which developed over home-omin-

Hummeldorf, to Vneouraxf engineering students to display their
tiously if the affair became pub- journalistic talents. Fven when
lic, it would reflect badly upon suitable articles are obtained the
the group charged with adminis- harassed staff Is faced with the
problems of editing the ropy, laytration of homecoming.
The point of all of this is to ing out the magazine and othershow the need for an entirely dif- wise assembling it.
ferent arrangement on the stuHummeldorf says, however, that.
dent administration of homecom- "the magazine is a true repre
ing.
sentative of the quality of the colAs the student pep organization. lege itself."
SuKy is entitled to some voice in
The magnitude of the Job of
the homecoming weekend, but the editor may be seen through
evidence of their past perform- this responsibility of choosing ma- -'
ance seems to show that they are terial which will reflect favorably
not entitled to all the responsi- upon the college. Articles must be
bility.
selected that not only are informa- -'
Homecoming should be handled tive and helpful but also are not
by an
committee under so technical that they limit their
an arrangement similar to the interest value to readers of a
Little Kentucky Derby. I offer given field.
'
the suggestion that the commitTo encourage writers for the
tee include the president of S(
magazine, Mrs. Betty Preece, a
three from SuKy, one from IFC,
one from Tanhellenic and three 1917 engineering graduate and
students from the campus at former editor of the Engineer,
donates a cash prize of $10 for
large.
This group could act as the the best article appearing in the
steering committee for homecom- magazine throughout the year.
Currently the magazine itself
ing. The Little Kentucky Derby
system of organization has proven is sponsoring awards of $15 and
that the steering committee idea $10 for the two best articles ap-- i
works quite effectively. IFC and pearing in each issue of the magaFanhellenic. for example, have zine. University students other
adopted this approach by utilizing than the Kentucky Engineer staff
the steering committee lor the members are eligible to submit
Articles of a technical or non
Greek Week program this year.
This year, with SC sponsoring technical nature but relevant to
the homecoming dance and SuKy the engineering field. The awards
taking care of the rest of the are made "possible by the Student
weekend events, the two groups Council of the College of En- ran into several conflicts of au- gineering.
thority. Certainly one group
This year's staff has plans
charged with full responsibility in which should improve the over-a- ll
this regard could do a far more quality of the
publica- efficient job.
tion. The magazine will attempt
In order to have a
a series of articles dealing with
homecoming program the humanities to inform, and it
we need the entire campus in- is hoped, to educate the engineer
volved in the administration of it. readers.
The plan I mentioned would proThe first edition this vear, which
vide for this arrangement. My will be out by
will
comments are not directed toward
SuKy, but rather on behalf of a
better homecoming for all the
campus.

A

es

g

displays and queen candidates illuminated some of the
plaring weaknesses of UK's pres-setup on homecoming.
The hassle which Ourney Nor-ma- y
discusses today is only a tangible example of the problem here.
Several days ajro SuKy denied
the truth of this writers statement
1hat "SuKy, in theory at least,
sponsors homecoming;." They
rlaimed then, and I imagine they
are still clinging: to the belief, that
Ihey are still "the" organization as
far as homecoming Is concerned.
This is the