xt7k3j392z7d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7k3j392z7d/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19631121  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 21, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, November 21, 1963 1963 2015 true xt7k3j392z7d section xt7k3j392z7d ;

Editor Discusses

Today's Weather:
Partly Cloudy, MiM;
High 59

Library Hours;
See Page Four

University of Kentucky
NOV.

Vol. LV, No. 45

LEXINGTON,

KY., THURSDAY,

21,

1

0G3

Eight Pages

ROTC Overhaul
Approved By ASC
Services Committee
Sends Bill To House
By GAY

'

CISII

Kernel Staff Writer

The House Armed Services Committee votetl Tuesday to
Completely revamp ROTC programs at the college and high
r
school level. The legislation will authorie a
RO I C
training program for universities that will permit all college
students to enter ROTC training as late as the end of their
iophomore year.
this is only tentative and has not
two-yea-

i

Students entering, however,
would first have to complete a
six - to - eight -- week accelerated
summer training period as pri- Col. James P. Alcorn, professor
of Army military science, said in
an interview that this bill, if
passed by the House of Representatives, will not alter the present four-yeprogram, but will
provide a more flexible military
training program with increased
pay.
At the present time, a retainer
of $.90 a day is paid to all students in advanced ROTC. Under
the proposed plan, this retainer
will be increased to $50 a month.
There is a possibility that scholarships will be awarded, although

Registration
To Be Based
On Standing
Remember those hectic reg
istrations of the past? You
may not have to go through
all that again. They're going
to try something new next
semester.
The first students to register in
January will be those who had 4.0
standings during this semester,
according to Miss Sarah Utter-baca secretary in the Office of
the Registrar. The students who
had 3.9 standings will be the
next to register, and so on down
the line.
k,

The grade reports

which are

sent out by the Office of the
Registrar at the end of each
semester will carry the hour and
the day when each student will

must bring
register. Students
these grade reports with them
when they come to the door, or
they will not be allowed to enter
the Coliseum and register. Brown
cards will be picked up in the
deans' offices as usual.
Graduate students will register
during their preadvising periods
Dec.
Miss Utterback said that
graduate students will register in
December before anyone else because they "are not as much
trouble as undergraduates about
dropping and adding."

A
All

Ami Home Ec.
students enrolled in the

and
College of Agriculture
Home Economics will
for the spring semester
from Nov. 20 to Nov. 30.
Students are urged to make
appointments with their advisers to facilitate spring

yet been included in the bill before the house.
Col. Alcorn said the use of the
two-yeprogram would be optional. The increased pay will be
given to all students in advanced
ROTC, but use of the two-yeplan will be up to students.
"The prime advantage of this
new program," said Col. Alcorn,
"is the opportunity for military
training. This plan will make
available to students who transfer to the University from any
school where a military science
training is not provided."
Col. Alcorn concluded by saying
any further niformation regarding the new military program
would have come at a later date,
because his department has still
not received all the details on the
plan.
Col. Richard Boys, professor of
aerospace science, could not be
reached for comment.

.rsjP'-:-- -

0f

-

New initiates of Lamp and Cross, senior men's honorary are, from the left, row one: John Hobbs,
George Harper, John Knapp, and Prentice Smith;

W

.1

ft

row two, George Strong, Jim Shuffet, Walter Da.
vail, Chuck Noe, and Douglas Hubbard.

Adequate Student Parking
Still In Distant Future
(Editor's Note: Kernel Daily
Editor Richard Stevenson has
made the following survey of the
campus parking system in relation to a recent Kernel editorial
on the financing of the system.)

The day when University
students will have parking
places on campus appears to
still be in the distant future.
An elaborate and extensive

By The Associated Press

I .OS ANGELES, Calif.-T- he
Kappa Sigma,
fraternity chapter at Occidental College says its national organization has an "unwritten gentleman's agreement" barring
Negroes from membership, so the local chapter wants out.

Contacted yesterday, John Conner, president of the University
of Kentucky Kappa Sigma Chapter, said he had "no comment"
a this time.
"We usually hear from our
national immediately on things
like this, and we have heard
nothing about this stiuation,"
said Conner. "Until we hear from
the national office we have absolutely no comment."
At another California school,
Stanford University, the local
i(;ma Nu chapter quit the national Hst fall because of its dis

!

Lamp -And' Cross

0ccitlental Coll
Kappa Sigs Protest
Segregation 'Rule'
Prentiss Willson Jr., president
of the Delta Upsilon Chapter at
Occidental, said in a telegram to
national headquarters yesterday:
"We feel that the basis of
brotherhood is
the
maintenance of which is foremost
in our minds. Therefore, Kappa
Sigma's discrimination membership requirements are incompatible with our moral obligations."
Willson said the chapter decided at an emergency session to
withdraw from the national organization. He said the national
fraternity had eliminated written
references about restricting membership, "but there is an unwritten rule against pledging
Negroes."

:.-?-

clauses.
President
Stanford Chapter
Thomas Grey commented at the
time, "It is becoming increasingly difficult to find a pledge class
that is willing to accept membership in an organization which
denies admittance on purely
racial grounds."
Five University of Virginia students chartered a plane to fly to
Yale to protest the imminent
pledging of a Negro to the Delta
Psl chapter there. They were
given a hearing, but the Negro
was pledged.
Restrictive fraternity clauses
have been outlawed at Rutgers
since 1958. Many houses there are
now integrated. In 1952 Wisconsin University had 13 chapters
with discriminatory clauses. None
have them now. At Dartmouth,
undergraduates at their own initiation voted to do away with
restrctive clauses.
criminatory

parking plan presented to the
Board of Trustees last June by
Campus Planner Lawrence Coleman has no timetable. The plan,
consisting of structures and surface lots, will be evolved as the
overall campus plan develops.
However, an expansion in the
current parking fee system could
provide more spaces in the current areas and even an early
start in the parking structures.
Presently, student parkers pay
most of the University's cost
while faculty and staff members
park free.
An additional $70,000 could be
added to the revolving parking
service fund by charging faculty
and staff the same fees charged
students.
This $70,000 would be collected if each of the 2.400 faculty
and staff members with stickers
were required to pay the same
$10 a semester charged students.
The revolving parking service
fund, responsible for construction, upkeep, and guards for the
parking areas, will take in about
$16,000 this year from student
parking stickers fees.
Additional money for the fund
comes from parking spaces sold
in lots during athletic contests
and from payment of parking
fines by students. Faculty members are not required to pay fines
on tickets received on campus.
The addition of approximately
$70,000 in new funds each year
to the revolving fund would allow an expansion of the present
system or a start on the system
of structures and areas.
The 640 students, paying $10
a semester (and $5 for a summer
term), are allowed to park in
only six of the 23 parking areas.
This student figures does not
include 1,400 students with free
stickers that do not allow
parking.
The 2,400 faculty and staff permit holders are allowed to park
in 18 lots. Only students with
hardship cases are issued permits
in these areas.
There are 748 available spaces
in the student lots, but only 2,003
available
in the faculty-sta- ff
areas. Thus this year overflow
faculty-staf- f
cars are being allowed in student areas.
The parking areas, faculty-sta- ff
and student, are of varying sizea
and capacities. Some of these
areas me actual ivrking tots

while others are portions of cam-pdrives.
Two adjacent parking area
were opened, this fall between
the new Student Center and Stoll
Field. However, these lots only
increase the total capacity about
60 spaces, as they were partially
designed to replace the lots
closed by construction of the
Student Center addition and the
Commerce Building construction.
Paving of the lots is the only
parking expense not met directly
by the parking fund. Money for
paving is borrowed from other
funds and the income from these
lots, on which money for paving
was borrowed, goes to pay for the
paving.
There are no current plans for
relieving the shortage in parking
spaces. With the growing faculty,
staff, and student body, however, the problem becomes greater with each passing semester.
While little is being done on
the current problem, Mr. Coleman has a long-ransystem of
parking structures and lots of
accommodate 11,300 vehicles.
These spaces would be in si
surface lots and seven parkin
structures. These parking areas
would help to free entrance and
service drives from the heavy
congestion, in addition to furnishing the needed additional
parking spaces.
The proposed seven parking:
structures will be located in or
close to the proposed academio
area. This plan would have a
structure located within
feet of each building to provide
a 3- - to
walk from tha
structures to the classroom.
From the student's standpoint,
however, the structure would furnish little relief to the problem
because the structures will be
reserved for faculty and staff.
The six parking lots, for student use. would be located oa
the fringe area of the proposed
new campus.
To a current student, the location of the proposed parking
areas will seem, rather than on
the fringe of the campus, to be
nearly across town. This- - is due
to the expanded campus which
will stretch from Broadway to
proposed new streets east of
Cooperstown and from Maxwell
to the newly extended Cooper
Drive.
Continued

on Page 5

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov.

21, 19M

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Mo-o-O'V-

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By Collegiate Press Service

if

Over!

Pictured with a prize winning herpford are the members of the Dairy
Cattle Feeding and Management group who are preparing for dairy
festivities to be held at 7 p.m. Monday. They are, from the left, Kenny
Williams, Tom Bonzo, Margono Slamet, Elsie Cooper, Toha Sutardi,
and Arthur Graden, instructor.

New Cadet Commander

Named For AFROTC
By RICH STEVENSON
kernel Daily Editor

Wilson
Routt has been named Wing Commander for
AFROTC wing at the University lor the coming
tlie
semester, Col. R. C. Hoys, professor of Air .Sc ience, announced
yesterday
Mary V. Marlowe, A&S senior

While Routt, an Engineering-seniofrom Nicholasville. will not
assume command until Jan. 13,
he and his staff will serve as
assistants to the present staff for
the remainder of the semester.
Fred A. Dellamura, an Education senior from Brooklyn, N.Y.,
is the outgoing Wing Commander.
Routt and his staff will run the
cadet wing under the supervision
of the 290th Detachment officers.
He is currently Personnel Officer
of the Wing.

;

'V''.-'--

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1

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t

wirsox

m.

noi'TT

New Commander

Treasury, IRS To Revamp
Taxes On College Grants

from Lexington, has been named
Executive Officer and will be
second in command for the Wing.
Named in addition to Routt
and Marlowe were nine other
senior cadets to fill key staff positions. Routt and the Commandant of Cadets, Lt. Col. Robert
Harman, will announce the other
Wing appointments before Dec. 1.
Each of the cadets will finish
the semester by observing the
person holding the position to
which he has been named to furnish on the job training for the

coming cycle.
The other carets named are
Gregory Monge, A&S senior from
Fairfield, 111., Administrative Officer; Mike Dew, Commerce
senior from Louisville, Personnel
Officer; Frank Deats, Commerce
senior from Rexford, N. Y., Inspector; Lionel Hawse, Commerce
senior from Louisville, Operations
Officer.
John Duncan. Education senior
from Owensboro, Material OfFinzer. A&S
ficer; Benjamin
senior from Kenilworth, 111., 291
Group Commander; Thomas
Gaffin, Engineering senior from
Versailles, 292 Group Commander; William StanfM, A&S senior
from Lexington, 293 Group Commander; Lewis Gaines. Engineering senior from Sadieville, 294
Group Commander.

.

WASHING TON- -'l leasury
and Internal
Department
Revenue Service officials arc
meeting with college and university representatives to work
out new guidelines for taxing
fellowships and scholarships
given to U.S. college students.
Officials of the American Council on Education (ACE) were the
most recent representatives
to
confer with government officials
about "A complete revamping of
taxes on student grants."
The study has been underway
since the IRS and Treasury Officials were forced into agreeing
that students receiving scholarships and fellowships, which included such duties as teaching
practical research did not have
to pay income tax on the grants.
Their decision last summer was
forced by two tax court decisions.
One involved the Bhalla case
at New York University, where a
student was given a fellowship
for working on an Army Signal
Corps Research Project. The other involved the Spruch case,
where a Vanderbilt University
student received similar aid for
another research project.
In both cases, the New York
and Tennessse Tax Courts held
that the students did not have
to pay income tax on the fellowships granted for the work.
Treasury and IRS officials said
the ruling would apply to such

cases until new tax legislation
was completed and proposed to
congress.
As a result, an IRS spokesman
said "hundreds' 'of suits pending
against students who have refused to pay income tax on such
grants have been dropped, and
in some cases, refunds have been
made.
The temporary ruling upset a
section of the 1954 tax code, requiring students to pay income
tax on fellowships of money for
part-tim- e
Jobs such as teaching
or practical research.
Exempted under the code were
specific cases where the work Involved led to the award of a
degree. Cited were such cases of
practice teaching for students
seeking education degrees.
But the two court rulings held
that the work the students were
doing was part of earning their
degrees.
While admitting there were
some mistakes In the code by
the government, a spokesman
also pointed out that there were
abuses by students and universities involved.
'
IRS and Treasury officials are
now attempting to clarify just
exactly what is necessary work
for students working toward a
degree. An admitted government
mistake was not exempting certain science students required to
take part in research projects to
win advance degrees.
One unnamed medical school
was cited as abusing the code.
It set up "an advance medical

Student Wins Award
For Research Work

degree" for medical interns and
gave them what the government
thinks are wages in the guise ot
a tax exempt fellowship.
Other fellowships and scholarships for students not requiring
"work" are tax free.
Government officials said no
final decisions have been made.
"We don't know whether we're
going to loosen or tighten the
code Just yet," a treasury spokesman said, "but it looks like we
might end up doin? both."
Any new restrictions, he said,
would not be retroactive. But new
benefits would probably affect
persons who have paid taxes since
1954.
Also under scrutiny

are grants
and fellowships for professors and
other faculty members. Presently,
they can receive tax free. $3,600
a year for a maximum of three
years from a tax exempt foundation. The use of such grants in
intra-collerivalry for top research and teaching personnel
has been rapped by leading educators.
"There's a lot more than meets
the eye," A government spokesman said. "When you consider
the federal government
gives
higher education $1 billion a
year in aid for research and other,
programs, you're bound to have
tax problems."
Besides meeting with ACE and
college officials, the IRS and
has disTreasury Department
cussed the fellowship tax situation with the National Science
Foundation and other large contributors to higher education.

Arts Ami Science

James I,. Setser, University student from Van Lear, has
won half of a SI .(MM) award offered as first prize for "the outstanding piece of research dealing with meteorites done by a
graduate student in l'.Hi.V
neutron activation analysis, SetSetser, who will complete work ser determined the abundance of
for a master's degree in radio
zirconium and hafnium
both
chemistry after returning from
metallic elements in meteorites.
a stint in the Army, shares the
until now," Dr. Ehmann
"Up
total prize with a contestant at said, "there has been
very little
California Institute of Technolinformation in scientific litera-tui- e
ogy.
on these two elements which
The award was established for are considered important to the
nationwide competition by Dr. H. development of theories of meteH. Nininger, an American pioneer
orite formation and element com- -'
in research in meteoritics.
position in the stars."
The UK student's findings conAccording to Dr. William D.
Ehmann, associate professor of cerning hafnium are essentially
at UK, Setser's re- -' the only data in existence for
chemistry
search for a master's thesis has
determining the abundance of
introduced important new data
this element in natural materials
to the universal study of meteornot only meteorites but rocks
ites.
and deep sea sediments, Dr. EhUsing sensitive techniques of mann said.
ELECTRIC

Arts and Science Students
should make appointments with
their advisers to
for the spring semester.
will be this
week.

Kentucky
STARTS TOMORROW

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after 6
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Navy blue blazer.
Size 38. $20. Too small for owner. Excellent condition. Call 6933.

FOR

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ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts
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Good running gear, excellent
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SHIPPING and Receiving Clerk
need for part-tim- e
work, approximately 30 hours per week-m- ale
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Nov.

Interfaith Council
Interfaith Council
The Interfaith Council will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in
Room 206 of the Student Center.
Wesley Foundation
Supper will be served at 6 p.m.
Sunday at the Wesley Foundation. The Rev. Tom Fornash will
conduct a communion worship
tervice.

Unitarian College Group
The Unitarian College Group
the Fellowship House on the

Clays Mill Road.
They will feature a tape recording of ad lib discussion of prejudice between four Negros taken
from the radio program "Lifeline's." This will form the basis
lor the further discussion.

Transportation stops at Holmes
and Donovan Hall or call Mrs.
Joy Query.
C. S. F.

There will be a series of Films,

at the Tuesday Night Meetings.
The first of these three will be
'Formation of the Bible." The
meetings are held at the Center,
375 Aylcfords PI. at 6:30 p.m.
There will be a Sunday night
Snack Hour, at the Center, at
5

p.m.
After the Tennessee Game, refreshments will be served at the
Center, 375 Aylefords PI.
Don't forget the Capsule Topics
Room 109 of the University Center.

Social Activities
Meetings
f

Philosophy Club
The Philosophy Club will hold
Jts next meeting at 4 p.m. today
In Room 109 of the Student Cen-

ter.
Frank A. Morrow Jr., instructor in philosophy will present a
talk on the subject of "Paradoxes." The meeting is open to
everyone.

Junior Pan Hell
Junior Pan Hell will have a
reception for the Black Watch
following their performance in

Coliseum on Monday evening.
The reception will be held in the
Great Hall the former main reception area of the Student Center. Pledge classes, pledge trainers, head residents, senior pan-hel- l,
members and some members
cf the administration have been
Invited.
Dutch Lunch
Dutch Lunch will meet at noon
today in the Student Center
Party Room. The program will be
from
a panel of representatives
.WAA Blue Marlins, and Tau
Sigma.

Pinnings

Carolyn Campbell, a sophomore
radio, television, and films major from Cadiz and a member of
Delta Delta Delta, to Don Mamajor from
jor, a senior pre-laCaledonia at the University of
Louisville and a member of Delta
Upsilon.
ram Nicholson, a freshman
nursing major from Middletown,
Ohio and a pledge of Delta Delta
Delta, to Bill Ilarkins, a senior
commerce major from Lexington
and a member of Kappa Alpha.
Kathy Linder, a sophomore
nursing major from Mayfield and
a member of Delta Delta Delta,
to John Augsburg, a senior agriculture major from Lexington
and a member of Kappa Alpha.

UK Woman's Club News
The International Relations
of the University
Department
Woman's Club will meet for
lunch Monday, at the Student
Center Cafeteria. Dr. Robert A.
of Louisiana State
Flammang
University will present first-han- d
account of "Current Economic
Problems
of Latin American
Trade Unions." Dr. Flammang,
an assistant professor of economics, recently returned from
Chile, where he worked with the
Economic
Council for Latin
America. Members may invite
for this meeting, and are
guests
asked to go through the cafeteria
line at 11:30 a.m., then adjourn
to Rooms 2, 3, and 4.
The November meeting of the
University Woman's Club will be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday, at the
new Helen G. King Alumni
House, with Mrs, Ralph Pickett
serving as program chairman.
The Plummer String Quartet will
furnish the program, "Music for
You."
The hostesses for the meeting
are: Mrs. Howard Bost, Chairman; Mrs. William Chambliss,
Mrs. H. J. Daily, Mrs. Carl Dela-ba- r,
Mrs.' Fred Edmonds, Mrs.
Randall Fields, Mrs. Oliver Gard,

These Black Sheep!
CRAIG (Jf) A yearling black
that enjoys pancakes and dog
food and likes to chase automobiles gave her owners on a
northwestern Colorado ranch another surprise.
She gave birth to four lambs.
The usual birth rate is one or two
lambs per mother sheep.

ewe

Morgan.Mrs. Wilbur Heinz,
Mrs. Sarah Holmes, Mrs. William
Mahan, Mrs. J. A. McCauley, Mrs.
Michael McNamara, Mrs. Thomas
E. Morgan, and Mrs. Paul Parker.
Because some of the members
are unable to remain for the
social hour following the meetings, there will be a brief social
period before the meeting.
The executive board will meet
at 12:43 p.m. in the conference
Room of the King Alumni House.
The
Newcomers'
University
Night Sewing group will meet
Tuesday, at 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. George Gunther, 2.r)38 South-vie- w
Drive. For reservations, call
Mrs. David White at
or
Mrs. Wayne Davis,
E.

21, IWil

Kernel
Woman's Page
Edited ly
Nancy Louglu klgc

Editor's Mote
(The Kernel will publish one
Issue next work and this will
appear on Tuesday, thf re fore,
for your meetings and other
events for the rest of the week
and for the first week in December to appear in the Kernel they
should be turned in t'i the Kernel office not later than 10 a.m.
Monday. Please jot down your
events and get them over here in
plenty of time).

Campus Calendar
Nov.

Spindletop Hall Club Bridge Party, 8:30-1- 1 p.m.
Yell Like Hell Contest 6:30 p.m. at Wildcat Manor
Nov. 21 Dutch Lunch noon, Party Room of the Student Center.
Philosophy Club, 4 p.m. in Room 109 of the Student Center.
Newcomers Bridge 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. with Mrs. W. J. Huffman, 218 University Ave.
Nov. 22 Lambda Chi weekend
21

Nov. 21

TGIF
Nov. 23
Nov. 23
Nov. 25
Nov. 25
Nov. 25
Nov. 25
Nov. 26
Nov. 28
No . 30

Stoll Field, 2 p.m.
Football,
Spindletop Hall Club Dance (Ray Rector and Orchestra), 1
Brothers 4 concert
Concert, Black Watch Band and Pipers, Memorial Coliseum,
8:15 p.m.
Football banquet, Student Center Ballroom, 6 p.m.
UK Musicate, University Chorus, Memorial Hall, 8 p.m.
YWCA cabinet meeting 6:30 p.m., Student Center.
Black Watch reception.
Only Kernel for the week
Thanksgiving
Basketball,

Dinner, Spindletop Hall, 12-- 4 p.m.
Memorial Coliseum, 8 p.m.

YYVCA

The YWCA Cabinet will meet
et 6:30 p.m. Monday in Room 307
cf the Studei-.- Center.

Desserts
the
The Theta's entertained
ATO's with a kiteflying maraat the
thon and refreshments
chapter hou.--e Sunday afternoon.

Elections
Kappa Sigma
The members of Kappa Sigma
recently elected Glenn Moore
Other officers are:
president.
Keith Warren, vice president;
Bill Comm. master of ceremonies;
Michael Deitsch, treasurer; TyJeff
rone Meridith, secretary;
Points and Virgil Price, guards;
house manager.
and Floyd Ellis,

Wear

the Natural
Look?
CASCADE

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

V

Dress your own

hair?

New Language Rule

If so,

for more perfect
results
A Hair Cut by

Mr. Paul
(The winner of more hair cut-

ting trophies than any hairdresser in Kentucky)

''if

HAIRCUTS
$2.50
Featuring
the Continental Cut
(Includes conditioning shampoo,
sun l3nip drying)

$4.00

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* Extending Hours
For Reserve Room
Since last year, library hours have
been extended until 12 o'clock midnight so that students may make better use of the facilities.
However, the Reserve Room closes
pt 9 p.m.
The reason for this seems to be
80 students can check out books from
the Reserve Room of the library.

The Kernel

feels

that at this point

In the semester more students

will

The Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentucky
The South' Outstanding College Daily

need to use the books in the Reserve
Room.

Sue Endicott, Editor

If the Reserve Room were kept
open until library closing hours, the
students who needed to use the books
would have ample time to do so. It
would increase the circulation of the
books, and allow more students to
make use of them.

Carl Modeckj, Campus Editor
Tom Finnie, Circulation Manager
John Burxhard, Advertising Manager
of Sports
Schureman and Walter Pacan,
Jerry
John Pfeiffui, Arts Editor
Nancy Louchridce, Women's rage Editor
Thones: News, extensions 2283 and 2302: Advertising and Circulation. 2308

The experimental program for

tending women's hours will also increase the number of students using
the library until its closing hours.
This increase will probably fill
all the study space presently available. Keeping the Reserve Room open
until midnght would increase this
space.
When the library closing hours
were extended until midnight, it was
assumed that all facilities normally
available to students would remain

With the reason for keeping the
library open, and
tending women's
would like to see
remain open lor

the reason lor

ex-

hours, the Kernel
the Reserve Room
student use until
regular library closing hours.
If students still wish to take these
books out of the library, they could
still do so. But more students would
be able to use them.

David Hawpe, Managing Editor

Daily Editors:

Elizabeth Ward, William Chant, Richard Stevenson, and John Townsend

Campus Parable

ex-

open.
Many students have complained
that under the present policy they do
not have enough time to use the
books on reserve. In many cases this
is the only place where the outside
leading material for classes can be
found.

ri

Entered at Hi port office at Lexinirton, Kentucky m lecond cIum matter under trie Act of March 3, 1871,
Published four timet week riming the rrfftihtr ithiml year except during holiday and eiams.
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

From The Jewish Tradition
There was once a Rabbi Johanan
who decided to take a trip through
the desert. With him was a trusted
and loyal servant. Reaching a field
just before entering the desert, they
came to a narrow path between two
large stretches of grass. Walking alongside his master's camel, the servant
said he could describe very accurately
who traveled on the path before them.
"It was a camel laden with two
bottles," said the servant. "One of
the bottles contained oil and the other
had wine."
Rabbi Johanan was amaed at the
servant's description. " The camel was
blind in one eye," continued the
servant, "and one of its front teeth
was missing. There were two drivers
with the camel, one of whom was an
Israelite."
The Rabbi continued to be amazed

Kernels
part of the mischiefs
that vex the world arises from words.
A very great

Burke

To me nature is everything that
man is born to, and art is the difler-enc- e
he makes in h.Jultn Lrshine

at what the servant said but
doubted if all the description was accurate. "Let us go a little faster," said
the servant, "and we'll catch up with
that camel."
They went faster and soon caught
up with the camel ahead of them.
To his surprise, Rabbi Johanan saw
that everything was just as the servant
had described.
"How did you know?" he asked.
as well as saw," said
the servant. "I knew the camel was
blind in one eye because the grass was
cropped only on one side. I knew a
front tooth was missing because the
camel left a narrow row of uneaten
grass. I knew what the bottles contained because on one side of the path
were many Hies and on the other side
it was sticky and glistened in the sun.
I knew one of the drivers was an
Israelite because the camel made its
tracks only on the path and was not
allowed to stray to the grass, which
may have belonged to a private person, in order not to violate a Jewish
law."
"How wonderful it is to have an
observing eye," remarked Rabbi Johanan, "lor many of us look at things
but few of us ieal!y see them."
Rabbi Robert Rothman

"I observed

S pecial Report

Relations May Take On New Look

French-Germa- n
r.v HARVEY HUDSON
Associated Press Staff Writer
PARIS-Wh- en
Chancellor Ludwig
Hi hard of West Germany comes to
Paris today to see President Charles
le Gaulle, he will be starting a fresh
relationship, like a new kid in a
school, or a recently arrived neighbor
jn the bloc"k.
The chummy mood that has been
Liult up between France and Germany in the past five years has been
the fruii of a warm and friendly contact between l)e Gaulle and Konrad
'Adenauer. Xow, with Adenauer out,
and Erhard in, there is bound to be
a new approach and perhaps a vast-Jdifferent result.
The change will be apparent the
minute Erhard steps off the train.
lie will be met by Premier Georges
Pompidou and Foreign Minister Man-licCouve de Miuville, a correct wel- jint" by protocol standards. Hut it
it presents a switch, because De Gaulle
mi several occasions went out of his
Vav to giect Adenauer at the airport,
Mulching piotocol, since De Gaulle
is a chief of state and the German
chain clloi a chief of government.
Adenauer and De Gaulle used to
do thc.ii most effective uoik in man-lr
inan sessions without even an
De Gaulle and Eihaul
will meet tlnee times today and
but they will be alone at only
cue of these meetings. Ministers and
'

y

e

o

inter-j'Ute-

.

advisers will attend the other two, according to French sources.
All this does not mean that De
Gaulle and Erhard will not pu