xt7n2z12r953 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7n2z12r953/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19620213  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February 13, 1962 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 13, 1962 1962 2015 true xt7n2z12r953 section xt7n2z12r953 '.

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Vol. L1II, No. 63

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LEXINGTON,

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KY., TUESDAY, FEIi. 13,

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State 'Stalls' Kentucky;
Wildcats Fall, 49-4- 4
out to be the best of prognostlca-tor- s.
He. had said that Misssisippl
State might try its domino offense.
Kentucky, with star guard It did, and it worked. Time and
Larry Pursiful playing on an time again the Rebels drove for
open layups. They couldn't stay
injured shoulder, made MissisBy DAVE HAWPE
Kernel Daily Sports Editor

sippi State's Maroons give their
best performance of the season
before bowing,
at Memorial Coliseum last night.
49-4-

who played most of
the injured
was taken to Good
shoulder,
Samaritan Hospital following the
game for
Pursiful,

St'-?-

State
Mississippi
Matching
basket for basket most of the
vtay, the Cats could never overcome the early lead established
Babe McCarthy's
by Coach
chargers, who used slowdown
to get only the good
techniques
shots.
Kentucky's Earon Rupp turned

Htt'

!

the game favoring

"

"a...

....

PURSIFUL

Honest A be 's Desk
Locked In Library

Abraham Lincoln's office desk is temporarily residing in
the Margaret I. King Library. It has been there since August
of 1900 and is under lock and kev on the fourth floor.
A Chicago bu iness executive and

historical collector, Fhillip Sang,
the library the desk which
's
wr.s taken from Abraham
SpringfielJ, 111., law office.
desk from Dec.
Lincoln used the
29, lfif.O to Feb. 11. laoi. until he
had to depart for Washington and
his inauguration.
Mr. Sana purchased the desk
from James T. Hickey, the curator
of the Lincoln collection at the
Illinois State Historical Library In
Springfield.
The curator bought the desk
from Mrs. Clarence It. Holloway

of Springfield who received it
from M;s. Josephine M. Sommer,
of I. oiiis Sommer, who operated a drug store
in Springfield for many years.
Mrs. Holloway took care of .Mrs.
Sommer in her old age and received the desk as a present.
daughter-in-la-

Louis Sommer's drug store was
across the street from the hotel in
which Lincoln stayed until he left
for his inauguration. Because of
their friendship and acquaintence
the desk was sent to the Sommer
Drug Store and remained there until 1902. Later it was taken to the
Bradfordton, 111 farm of Sommer.

University Faculty voted last nitwit to eliminate
education as a campuswide academic requirement.
Dr. Don Cash Seaton, head of the Department of
Education, proposed that the requirement he continued,
vote to discontinue the requirement carried hy such a
majority that the votes were not counted.8

physical

Physical
hut the
decisive

The representative body left the crease or decrease
the program,
matter of requiring physical edu- - but not to eliminate it entirely,
cation to the separate colleges.
Vnin hs f,aus on,y th0
giving them the option of requir- - University Health Service would
be able to exempt a student from
ing or dropping it.
the "luirement..
The action was the result of a
The third alternative action pu8
with the Cats in rebounding, but format report by. a Faculty comwas the dropping
they didn't need to.
mittee appointed February 13 of before the Faculty
of the requirement
completely.
The Wildcats and the Rebels last year to study the' physical
This could be done with no connow own identical conference receducation program at the Uniditions at all.
ords, and both are slated to keep
This Is the form of action that
their loss columns at one setback versity.

apiece. Thus, Kentucky can still
represent SEC in the Mid-Ea- st
at Iowa City.
The difference in shots taken
was reflected in the shooting percentages. Kentucky hit on 15 of
45 field goal attempts for a below-p33.3 percentage, while
on Page 8

The committee submitted to. the
Faculty a report that contained
three clauses concerning the program and how. to handle it.
The first clause asked that the
physical education requirement be
left as it was at the present.
The second form of action enabled the Faculty to. either in- -

was followed and the new physical
education policy will go into effect
at the end of this semester.
The committee appointed
by
President Frank G. Dickey, consisted of" Lawrence Bradford, Walter Pearce, Paul Scars, Martha
Shipman, and William Knisely,
who are faculty members, and
Leon Witheis, a student.

Trustees Approve Construction
Of Limestone Street Parking Lot
The Executive Committee of the
Board of Trustees approved the
construction of a
parkins
lot north of the Limestone Street
entrance to the campus Friday.

Dr. Frank D. Peterson, vice
president for business administration, said the state has taken bids
on the lot with the low bid being
$2G.564
plus an alternate of $270

to provide for a rock retaining
wall.
The committee approved an appropriation of $45,000 to finance
the parking lot and remodeling of
a storage building to be used for
art classes.
Approval was given for the
purchase of two pieces of property to enlarge parking areas.

TV Class Solves

Seating Problem

Dr. Charles Snow's Introduction
to Anthropology course which is
taught by television has found
enough places for the record number enrolled in the class to watch
the course conveniently.
There are 458 students in the
course, the largest number of people ever to enroll in a class at UK.
These students are watching their
class from classrooms, dormitories,
and sorority and fraternity houses.
Studio A in McVcy Hall accomo

dates 143 students and the Laboratory Theatre in the Fine Arts
Building, 73. In the men's dormitories, 47 watch the class, and 9 in
the women's residence halls.
Forty-seve- n
students watch the
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday
class from sorority and fraternity
houses, and 49 at home. Two are
taking the course at Hamilton HaH,
a local junior high school, where
they are doing their student teaching.

They are 258 E. Maxwell St., at
of the Coliseum, and
312 Clifton Ave.

the rear

The committee also approved
budget adjustments of $95,250 for
a Spindletop land note and $165,-00- 0
for an addition to the women's
dormitory under construction on
Harrison Avenue.
Sneaking about the new budget,
from which the Legislature trimmed about six million dollars. Dr.
Fiai.k G. Dickey, president, exare just
plained tint otfui.ils
starting allocation of funds.
"It will be necessary for the
University to resale its programs
particularly tiio-pertaining to
salary increases and to expanded
and new programs," he said.
Dr. Dickey said it should be explained that $8(57.000 of the
division of college budget
budget was not set up as a separate item but must be subtracted
because it has been committed for
the retirement of bonds.
In other action the committee
authorized
the employment
of
Staggs and Fisher, consulting
on Page 8

Pilot Project

Daniel Develops Plans For D.C. Seminar

A "pilot project'' is how Jim Daniel, Student Congress
president, spoke of the Washington Seminar, a program sponsored by the student governing body.
Daniel spent three days during the semester break setting
the seminar from the nation's capital. lie had been delegated
up
by the student group just prior to vacation to go to Washing
ton, D. C.
area, will act as the coordinator
Because the seminar is a pilot there.
project, Daniel explained, Student
Congress' first seminar program
will have to feel its way. However,
he added, the structure and goals
ot the project are sound.
While in Washington, the Student Congress president contacted Kentucky Congressmen, the
Civil Service Commission, and '
from the departl epresentatives
ments of labor, lieasmy. Army,
the Marshall Research Center,
r.nd the U.S. Atomic linergy
Commission.
Throuf h various meetings with
these officials Daniel was able to
gather advice for sitting up tlust minar.
Miss Dianne McKaig, a giadu- ate of the University Law College
a id president of the U.K. Alumni
Association in the Washington

Daniel appointed
Miss Mike
Fearing, Kernel Daily Editor, to
set the program in motion here at
the University. He said information
on applications for the seminar
will be released in a few days.
The S. C. president explained
that the seminar will be open to
e
student
any University
between his junior or senior year,
who is graduating this June, or
who is a graduate student. The
Kcminar program will extend
from June to August.
Emphasis will be placed on the
fields of commerce, political .sci- ence, law, agriculture, diplomacy,
and journalism.
.
The program will be two-fo'- d
giving the student a chance t'o
hold a job in u federal agen y

centered at his interests and an
opportunity to meet with government officials to discuss current
events.
Essentially, preparation for the
program will begin on campus
with the selection of the students.

In Washington, the UK Alumni
Association and a congressional
delegation are working to locate
the summer jobs.
The interested
student will
apply here at the University filling out a personal application

explaining his interests and why
he would like to take part in
the seminar.
Then the student, if asked, will
anpear before a board of nine University officials and faculty
on Page 2

f
i,

I

University students met with a Kentucky
Congressional delegation and other officials in
to
Washing ton, W. C. during the semester-brea- k
set up Student Connies
Washington Seminar.
1 mm the left are
Congressman Carl Perkins, I il ill
District; Jim Daniel, Minhnt Congress president ;
Two

t

T

Mike I'euiing, uho will coordinate the program
on cunpus; Congressmen Jot n Watts, !itli
District ; Frank
District; Frank Burke, Tl.i-- d
Stub! lefield. 1 irsl District; and W.Kiam Natther,
Second Distiiit.
m
m

.

4

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERN'EUTufsday; Tcli.
--

13,'

12

SC To Sponsor D.C. Seminar

ent to Miss McKalg. who, with a
Participants should bear In
committee, will study the applicamind that the agencies function
tions and send them to the fed-er- al as tools of government, not educaagencies in which the stution, and while our principle Indent's Interests lie.
terest may be the educational exThe S. C. president pointed out perience, that must necessarily be
that the University or Congress a' collateral matter to the agency.
cannot assure a summer Job to the
"The student must realize he Is
A spring house used to be on student. They can only recommend
the rife of the present Botanical him to agencies who will then do being hired to perform a service
for the agency," Daniel, who has
Oardens and the students gath the hiring.
ered there for their drinking water.
spent several summers working
the University faciliThrough
in Washington, said.
ties and the program under
However, the president went on
Student Congress, the student
to explain that the seminar phase
will receive the benefit of discussions with government
of the program will strive toward
ADVERTISING RATE
f eanta pet
an educational experience.
ward; 'in crnli mlntmam; t(l prrernt
dlseaant If adTrrtlarmrnt
rani 4 dart
4 hoari brrnrr
Copy Dradllnr
Phanc NICK rOPE. f.HOft he.
twrrn S p.m. and 4 p.m. Monday
thraufh Friday.
Continued from Pace 1
bcrs to be Interviewed. If selected,
the student will be asked to fill out
a government form.
From this point. Daniel explained, brochures on at least 23 of
the most qualified students will be

Archaeology Lecture
Will Be Tomorrow

The Kentucky Society - of the at the University f Pennsylvania,
Archaeological Institute of Amer- and curator of the University Mu
seum.
ica is sponsoring a lecture which
will be held at 8 p.m. tomorrow in
Room 6 of the Fine Arts Building.
"Oordion of the Royal Road"
will be the title of the illustrated
lecture given by Dr. Rodney Young,
NOW1-T- he
professor of classical archaeology

Bizarre Story of
Modern Rome!

CLASSIFIED

Hold
Speech Contest Tonight

Literary

FOR RENT
KOR

HFNT

Society To

3 Lime newly
f urnishod
rooms, kitchen and b.Hh. Suitable for
6
students, private entrance. Phone
Eight men will compote tonight
or
409 E. Maxwell.
9F5t
for honors in the First Annual
FOR RENT Furnished apartment' for Patterson Literary Society Extemrent. Small Ix'droom and kitchen. Utilities paid. $40 00 per month. Apply 2K0 poraneous Speaking Contest.
The participants were selected
South Limestone.
13Fxt
by a vote of students in introducLOST

LOST

Green cable-kncardigan sweatBoom 101 McVey Hall. Lost during nliiebra final on Jan. 23. Phone
Bob Wilson.
F3t

er

in

LOST Feb. 7 In the Margaret I. King
Library "Living With Books" by Helen
Haines. Blue and White cover. Contao
Hugh Schramm, 443 Park Ave. By
13F4t
postcard.
LOST Car keys In plastic clamp near
Chi Ojnega House Sunday afternoon.
Return to H. W. Hargreaves College
13FU
of Commerce.
LOST Black umbrella trimmed with
gold. Last seen In SUB Friday morning at 9:00. Call Jackie Elam at
13F2t

FOR SALE

convertible
white
FOR SALE 1955
carbureator. red
Oldsmobile 98.
and white upholstry. Must sell right
8F4t
awav. $375. Phone
Afternoon paper route. Ap$90 monthly profit. Phone

FOR SALE
proximately

8K4t

FOR SM.E Irish setter pups, pure
bred, one month old. $40.00 each. Phone
13F4t
after 5 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS

GO TO JAMAICA. West Indies, Azores,
and all of Eastern Furope. for student
rate. SWi) round trip by air, summer of
l!Wi2.
Also Nissan, spring vacation il
call Raleigh Lane
2 For information
at 33"
or
I'DT house.
Ntf
Clifton Ave.
ATTENTION - Don't miss fabulous Sultans with new lead singer that will be
appearing at National Guard Armory
8 Fat
this Friday from 8 p.m.?

For The Finest In

CONTACT
LENSES
See

KRAUSS

0PTIK
138 N. UPPER
Phone
By

Tr

Appointment

imiNOioN-mmu-

NOW

This was the opinion of Dr.

Gehart Seger, a representative

of the German Information
ter in New York, as he made the
vanguard address at a two-da- y
I'niver.sity t onfert m e on Germany.
Dr. Secer, a
member
of the German parliament, described the increased stability in three
areas:
1. Communism is failing in West
Germany. "At present only 2.3
percent of the population want
communism, and this number is
on the decline."
2. Germany is moving closer towards a two-parsystem. The
Christian Democratic Union (the
party of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and similar to VS. Democrats
and the Socialisa Democrats) and the Socialist Denationalize key industries) are the
two parties Dr. Seger predicts.
He expects the Free Democratic party to diminish down to
the size of the Liberal party in
Britain.
3. Revision
of Germany's "no
confidence" clause was the third
of the new stability. The repoint
vised law requires the German
parliament to elect a succeeding
chancellor one day before giving a
vote of "no confidence" to an incumbent chancellor.
Cen-

d

--

Follow t'lis emotionally warped
young man through psychiatry,
group therapy and tha one
woman who leads htm to

normal manhood

"THE MARK"
STUART WHITMAN
MARIA SCHELL
ROD STEIGER

CO STARRING

WARREN BEATIY
TECHNICOLOR

from WARNER

Bord en s
Very Big On

Flavor

Block from University
820 S. Limestone St.

1

parable to the American president
and the new law guards against
the instability shown in the French
government.
A graduate of the I'niversity of
Leipzig, Dr. Feger served in the
German army in WW I and later
was a member of the German
national legislature. In 19!3, he
was arrested by the Nazis as a
political foe of Ailolph Hitler.
He was sent to the first Nazi
concentration camp at Oranien-burnear Berlin, but escaped six
months later into Czechoslovakia.

944 Winchester Road

SIC FLICS

V

7

mm

PhiONI

::.

STARTS TOMORROW
f SFOORY

rtCK
it AN

SIMMONS

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BAXtR

cmw

TON

HKSiON
IVtS

RODERT
MITCHUM
Unit

Pk.

mhI

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YC,
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l'O'i

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'.'l.CK'IOiljJiClfl

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ICS

"Another Chesterfield? But
I just gave you one last week!"

;KIPsTG

jflUAIUiTTF.S

I

5S&3

f.RFAT T0RACC0S MAKE 20 WONDERFUL
AGED MILD, BLENDED

MILD

-

NOT FILTERED

MILD

--

SMOKES'

THEY SATISFY

m

BROsLU

REFRESHMENT TRY

"The King and I"
And
"Carousel"

And

"SEX CRIMINAL"!

WILLIAMS'

LAST TIMES TODAY

"The George Raft Story"

STARTS THURSDAY
Case History

IN TENNESSEE

"THE ROMAN SPRING
OF MRS STONE"

FOR THE FINEST IN

Germany's adolescent democracy is emerging towards stability, even though it is lodged in the path of impending holo
caust.
The German chancellor is com-

WED.

"Cosh On Demand"

Jack Simpson, junior engineering
student from Central City, and
Riccardo Arce, senior engineering
student from Bolivia.
Emmett Moore Jr., sophomore
commerce student from Winchester; Roberto Arce, junior engineering student from Bolivia;
Joseph Sprague, senior engineering student from Sturgis; and Don
Sullivan, junior Arts and Sciences
student from Lexington.
Judges, all alumni of the host
Fatterson Literary Society, Include:
Richard Vimont, Lexington lawyer; Phillip Brooks, University
English instructor; and Elmer
Purdom, principal of Lexington
Henry Clay High School.

GERMANY RISING,
DR. SEGER INFORMS

I

T

THRU

tory public speaking courses. The
contest will begin at 7 p.m. in the
Laboratory Theater of the Fine
Arts Building.
Trophies, donated by Kennedy's
Book Store, will be presented to
first, second, and third place winners.
Speakers will be:
Bradley Switzer. junior education student
from Lexington;
Ralph E. Hopkins, junior engineerfrom Williamston;
ing student

VIVIEN LEIGH

Humanities Club
Mrs. Jill Claster will speak on
"What is the Closslcal Tradition"
at 7:30 tonight In Room 17 of
the Fine Arts Building. Mrs.
Claster Is being sponsored by
the Humanities Club.

* THE. KENTUCKY
.

.

.

Social Activities
Mfdlral Wives
At a recent meeting of the Medical Wives. the following officers
were elected: Mrs. Maxwell Kam-bal- l,
president; MTs. Gerald Points,
vice president; Mrs. Allen DawMrs.
son, recording
secretary;
Leonard
Mulary,
corresponding
secretary.
Mrs. Joe Christian, treasurer;
Mrs. Benjamin Bell, social chairman; Mrs. Bill Allen, publicity
director; Mrs. Bobby Campbell,
program chairman; and Mrs. Tom
Hagan, historian.

Meetings
Links
Links, Jiitilor women's honorary,
Js sponsoring a talk by Miss Chloe
OifTord, director of special activities, at 7 p.m. today in the Music
Room of the Student Union Build-in- ?.
V

.

Miss Oifford will speak to members of Cwens, sophomore women's
honorary; Mortar Board, senior
women's honorary;
Links; and
women foreign students.
"Tomorrow's Challenge Today"
will be the subject of Miss Clifford's talk. It will be a preview of
her around-the-wortrip.
Pryor Fremrdical Society
The Pryor Premedical Society
will meet at 7 p.m today in Room
313 of the Funhouser Building.
Dr. Roy K. Jarecky, dean of admissions of the School of Medicine will speak on the University's new approach to medical
education.
Trouper Try-Ou- ts
talent organization,
Troupers,
will hold try-ou- ts
at 6:30 p.m. today in the Alumni Gymnasium.
Voting For Mardi Gras Queen
Voting for the annual Mardi
Gras queen, and the most popular
professor may be done from 5
tomorrow and Thursday at the
ticket booth of the Student Union
Building.
Tickets at $1.50 a person may
be purchased at the same time.
The queen and most popular
professor will be crowned during
the dance from
Saturday night
in the Ballroom of the Student
Union Building.
The theme of the annual dance,
sponsored by the Newman Club, is
New Orleans. The Rejects will pro-Tithe music.
Block And Bridle
The Block and Bridle will meet
at 7 p.m. today in the Dairy Building.
ThcU Sigma Phi
Theta Sigma Phi, national journalism honorary for women, will
meet at 4 p.m. today in the McLaughlin Room of the Journalism
Building.
Physcis Club
The Physics Club will meet at
7:30 p.m. today in Room 208 of
Pence Hall.
Two movies, "The Mathematician and the River" and "Atomic
Power," will be shown.
Refreshments will be served.

-

Eniia&ements

Mary Jo Newromb, a junior eleeducation major from
mentary
Pin-MateMetuchen, N. J., and a member of
s
Delta Delta sorority, to Lu- Lena Llizabeth Cowherd, a soph- cien Itui ke, a senior premedi"al
in chemistry
omore nutritional research major student majoring
from Campbellsville, and a mem- from Prestonsburg, and a member of Alpha Gamma Delta sorori- ber of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
Martha Starks, a fresflman arts
ty, to Carl Kelley Marling, a Junior
student from
and sciences student from MidSwitzerland, and a member
way, to William Walden Jr., a reof Kappa Sigma fraternity.
Fran Jaeger, a junior secondary gent graduate of Williams College,
education major from Long Is- - Williamstown, Mass.

Jftj J Jffff

from sheath lines to a loser
effect.
ting, fringe-trnine- d

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

Elections

.

of.

'

..

.

Spengler
Studio
Make The Perfect Gift
That Only You Can Give

t

Corner Main and Limestone
PHONE.2-667-

2

Phone
Discount
15
Cash & Carry

265 Euclid Ave.
Next to Coliseum
1966 Harrodsburg Road
880 East High Street

Waif sag!!

Mo
r ""3
'

Laundry

116 W.Maxwell
.

and Dry Cleaning Service
Phone

and Delivery Service

Pick-u- p

PERMENTER'S
LAUNDRY AND CLEANERS
Corner Euclid and Woodland

Phone

Where Each Customer Is Given
Individual Attention

SENIORS:

Try Our Student Bundle
EIGHT HOUR SERVICE
No Extra Charge

You can now got your official
senior ring without the

STUDENT CONGRESS INSURANCE
for Second Semester plus Summer Months now open to students
not already enrolled. Premium to Sept. 10, 1962, $1 1.50. Complete coverage
information availoble at Student Congress Office,
APPLICATION
STUDENT CONGRESS INSURANCE, UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
fl

Home Address:

Print

I

wish to purchase this protection. My check for $11.50, made payable
to CONTINENTAL CASUALTY CO., is enclosed.

l

Men's

I

This application mutt be returned before Feb. 19, 1962, to: ADMINISTRATOR,

I

SULIER AND ASSOCIATES,

FIRST NATIONAL

$38.50

Women's
Available Only At

$33.00
.

BANK BILD., LEXINGTON,

..

Including Tax
Including Tax V

..,

CAMPUS

Signed:

I

.

ALL SIZES IN STOCK

Stat

City

weeks delay

We Carry OVER 100 RINGS IN
I

1

..
Stmt

6

customary

'

Date:

I

L

CURTIS WAINSCOTT

,;

LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING

Enrollment

I

,

CROLLEY CLEANERS

Lambda Chi Alpha
David Banks was recently elected president of Lambda Chi Alpha
fraternity. Other officers elected
include":
Fred Berge, vice president; Robert Peper, secretary;
John Powers, treasurer; Pat Ryan,
Tush chairman.
Bill Criswell, social chairman;
Louis Furlong, pledge trainer; Rick
Reusing, ritualist; Michael Meade,
steward; Ronald Compton, house
manager; Charles Bruce, guard;
Eugene Brown, athletic chairman.
Fenton Angell, alumni secretary,
editor, and correspondent;
Gary
Bates, song director; Douglas Rider
and Tom Tilt, Pushcart Derby
chairman; and J. D. Craddock and
Pat Ryan, representatives to the
Interfraternity Council.

Student:

"''

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
NO ADDED COST

Pitkin Club Moves

ONE HOUR SERVICE

.Portroits by

-3

.1062

EH0

fit-

The Pitkin, a Wednesday luncheon tlub, which has met in the
Maxwell Street Presbyterian
Church for the last thirty-fiv- e
years, will begin meeting tomorrow,
and from now on, in the Presbyterian Center, 412 Rose Street.
The club is an interdenominational group of students who meet
for "lunch and short programs between noon and 12:50 p.m. every
Wednesday. Students are able to
meet their 1 p.m. classes without
difficulty. The programs are chosen
by the students and concern the
The dresses, themselves are usurelationship of the Christian faith
'
ally sleeveless and have an un- to some aspect of life.
adorned scoop neckline. Body stylThe speaker for this semester 'is
ing is an eased sheath perhaps the Rev. Mort McMillan, minister
with an empire look or dropped of the Hunter Presbyterian Church.
waist.
Students interested in joining
With the change in dance from the club are invited to call the
to a less reserved Rev. John R. King, director of the
sophisticated
form, the fashion has also changed Westminister
Fellowship.

t

1

.FXLWOOb CITY, Pa? (API
Vi.cn though shesmly lGblonde
Michcie (Mickey) Kraynak"'can
look back on 13 years of experience
'
as a majorette.
The pert, blue-eye- d
lass started
twirling a baton with the Lincoln
High School band at the age of 3.
Now a senior at the Western Pennsylvania school, Mickey still is going strong.
her longevity as a
Vide frf-tmajorette, Mickey has the di.stinc-Del- ta
Hon of never missing a practice
session or pciformance of the band.

Fashion Twists To The 'Twist'
The new dance craze, the
"Twist." proves that fashion follows function. "Necessity is the
mother of invention," as the old
saying goes.
Creating as much excitement as
the Charleston once did, the Twist
has revived glamorous fringes as a
fashion change in cocktail evening
dresses.
While in the dance the movement accents the steps, such as
they are, fringe maintains design
decorum by decorating dresses of
absolute simplicity of line. Additional trim is either
or confined to fringe on a tie belt,
or a small flat bow, plain or pinpointed by a tiny bit of rhine-ston- e.

J

i'MapkMtcKcy

land. N. Y.. to Ronald Porter,, a
senior mechanical enginccrim; ma- jor' from RfuiclifT, and a member
of Triangle fraternity.
Janice Kernoriian, a freshman
social work major ..from Glci
Ridge, N. J., and a pledge of Pi
Beta Phi sorority, to Mike Reefer,
senior mining engineering stu- dent from Lynch, and a member
of Triangle fraternity.

IYI.

KERNEL, ,T'iCMljyp

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"Another Service o.Vour Complete, Campus Center"-

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The Kentucky Kernel

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University of Kentucky

lit the pot office t Lexington. Kentucky a second elms matter unr" r the Act of March S, 1879.
Published four times a week during the regular school venr except during holidays and exams.
SIX DOLLAKS A SCHOOL YEAR

Entrril

Ed Van Hook, Editor

Wvne Grkcory, Campus Editor
Kerby Fowell, Managing Editor
Ben Fitzpatrk k, Sports Editor
Jean Schwartz, Society Editor
Rick McRevnolps, Cartoonist
Dire Wallace, Advertising Manager
Bobbie Mason, Arts Editor
Bill Holton, Circulation Manager
TUESDAY NEWS STAFF
Nick Pope, Associate
Jvne Gray, Sews Editor
David Haute, Sports

sja:

M.iw

..'

Painting The Splinters

Tlie brisk stroke of painters'
brushes has added a welcome luster
to the interior of dreary "Splinter
Hall," officially known as the Social
Sciences Building.
But the improvement may prove
to be a waste of effort and money
since the old building is slated for
razing in the fall when the departments which it houses move to Fence,
and Kastle Halls.
The University may decide, however, to find use for the old building
when the Departments of Sociology,
Anthropology, Geography, and Folit-icScience make the move. But it
seems the painting could have waited
until after the transfer is completed,

since the building has gone so long
without redecorating. A few more
months would make little difference.
It appears more reasonable to wait
until ater the transfer because the
paint probably would be scuffed and
scarred in the moving process, necessitating another painting.
If, on the other hand, the building
is to be razed, money for the project
would be washed down the drain
w hen the
painters clean Uieir brushes.
This,then, would be an obvious waste
of
revenue.
It would be better still to tear
down the building, which already has
exceeded its life expectancy enine
years.
hird-to-g-

On Critics And Criticism
"If there is one thing a university
does not lack," says Fresident A. Whit-- "
ney Griswold of Yale, "it is critics."
But a university may lack thoughtful
the Alumni
critics. Consequently,
Federation of Washington University
has adopted a resolution recognizing
that where differences of opinion are
tolerated, criticism is probable and
admissable. The academic freedom

THE READERS' FORUM

To The Editor:
I I enjoyed your remarks concerning the Geology Department's stump
(Thursday, Jan. IS). No doubt, the
results of the use of this facility will
be of great benefit to the cntird
campus!
I fear, however, the future usage
of the stump will be monopolized by
the future William Jennings Bryans
from Lafferty Hall.
.
In addition, should the Kernel
wish to report the inevitable

earth-shakin- g

uttered

pronouncements
there will exist a factor of
inaccuracy induced by the travails
encountered along the way by Kernel
reporters on their way to the Grill.
there,

Therefore, I propose: With the
Kernel's support and possible finances
and the administration's hesitant blessing, huilda true University soapbox
in or in front of the Grill.
Furthermore, I suggest that only
one rule govern the use of this facility: No one may speak on any one
subject, for more than five minutes
unless he is criticizing the state or
school administration and no discourse shall last more than 10 minutes.
David F. Smith

To The Editor:
I should like to ofTer some rein defense of moot to the
very biased critique offered by Miss

buttal

Mason.
Miss Mason has very eloquently
stated that her one word summed
up the first issue of our magazine.
I didn't think that your charm ex

Don't Be Surprised
Khrushchev cried that West Berlin
was a bone in his throat. But could
it be that East Germany is an even
bigger obstruction and that a single
operation could get rid of both? Isaac
Deutscher, in a very long article in the
London Observer t( Jan. 28) says as
much, and when Deutscher propounds a thesis it is always worth
examining.
Deutscher believes that the entente between Khrushchev and
is as precarious as a Hollywood marriage and that the Western
view of Ulbright as Khrushchev's
pet is unsophisticated. This ibes with
Ulbricht's recent declaration, through
an official spokesman, that East Germany will not echo the sweet tones
with which Khrushchev has been
serenading Adenauer and Franz Joseph Strauss. If Adenauer quakes
every time Kennedy makes a friendly
gesture toward Khrushchev, or even

3Iaking Friends

...

A Bulgarian military attache in
Home was explaining why a flier in
a Soviet-buil- t
plane who fell in Italy
should not be regarded as a spy.
is not the best Soviet
"The MIG-1bloc plane for reconnaissance,'' he
and
said. "We have the MlC-1M1C-2now. The MIG-1is what we
send to countries like Egypt and
Cuba."
.
Won't that be liked in Cairo and
Havana!
The t Christian Science
7

9

1

Monitor.

7

proposes to negotiate with him, would
not Ulbricht have similar misgivings
when Khrushchev smiles on Adenauer
even with the prop smile of diplomacy? But this is only the first sign
of a detente which may surprise the
West.
Deutscher admits that his interpretation is "partly hypothetical," but
he suggests that East-Wediplomacy
"may be approaching quite an unexpected turn." Indeed it may. All one
can be sure of, if it comes "to pass,
is that most American commentators,
going ther dreamlike way, will be
surprised, if not stunned. The

gear necessary to put out a magazine
of any sort, much less one exemplary
of your humor which I personally find
quite distasteful. You attempted to be
"in" on our publication, but w hen you
found that the humor would not be .
on an intellectual level (God help our
academic intellegensia if your humor
is intellectual) you walked out.

Offers Rebuttal

that invites differences of opinion,
however, must be above criticism; it is
the heart of a great university. The
resolution quotes Jefferson's request
that the University of Virginia "be
based on the illimitable freedom of
the human mind." While Washington
University stands on that principle,
it need not fear criticism. The (St.
Louis)

ceeded your beauty, Miss Mason,
but I see that I was wrong.
I see that it was irrelevant for you
to do so, but why didn't you state
your purpose in criticizing our magazine? It couldn't have been editorial, because your article didn't appear on the editorial page. Therefore,
since you failed to do so, I shall state
your purpose of criticism for the
benefit of our readers.
You are bitter, Miss Mason. You
are bitter because you don't pack the

The Stump

,

We of the moot staff thank you
for leaving us in our formative stages.
Otherwise, we might have been compelled to publish some of your work.. .

RohertE. Deitz

"

Campus Parable
By DONALD

A. LEAK

YMCA Director
of the Uniindicates a lack of
versity community
commitment and a loss of discipline.
This may be one cause of students
to evade the ultimate question of
meaning and purpose. On the other
hand, every student has moments of
purpos