xt7t4b2x4m9n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7t4b2x4m9n/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590925  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 25, 1959 1959 2013 true xt7t4b2x4m9n section xt7t4b2x4m9n Coed 'Gets Around,9 Visits 23. Countries
Mia Dickens trip were made
By KILL KETXTItK
Joy Dickens, a senior In Arts possible through the U. S. govgirl who you ernment. fler mother Is a civil
and Sciences, 1
might fy has been around.
.service librarian at Athena, Greece.
While In Helsinki. Finland this
Miss . Dicke ns, who . transferred
o UK during her junior year, has summer, she was offered to beeen in 23 foreign countries dur- - come a Russian citizen at the
Russian Embassy there. She was
the past two summers.
fng
,- required to go to the embassy
to
trip biclade vMts la
pick up visas for the Moscow trip.
W'ett .Germany, and Stand
The official there, she
rarl. She has been la -- every first went about his work said,, at
In' preEuropeaav caaatry except the far '
ones Spain and Portugal. paring the visas, and then abruptjwrstera
During her travels, which at ly asked her in good English:
tomes were hectic, she was Invited .."Don't snppooe yea'd Ilka la apto beccme a Russian citizen and ply lar a citizenship, waald yea?"
quizzed at length about America
There seemed to be a alight
by a student from the University aonnd af hamar In his voice. Bat
another official at the embauy,
of Mosccw.
She noticed the tense situation apparently his superior, repriIn Wett Berlin in a visit there manded him Immediately far his
this summer and defined the Rus- statement.
sian character as "solemn" and
There were no more Jokes or
one "interested; in nothing" but questions about Russia after that.
Miss Dickens said.
production."

Her trip to Moscow didn't seem
especially different, she said, and
the countryside was similar to the
United States in many respects.
The first alga af eammanism
came In the Moscow depot Huge

-

V

I

picture af Lenin and Stalin hang
an the walla.
The University of Moscow student was a Russian boy who spoke
English and was studying the
American way of life. He was
mainly Interested in American

.

Mas-row-

prices.

"He couldn't believe," Miss
Dickens said, "the prices in
America were so. reasonable. In
Moscow, prices are very high."
He asked a boot American cap-

particularly

different to Miss
Dickens.
"We were not surprised at anything put before us. Meals ranged
from caviar to sardines for break
fast and after that, who knows.
"Oaee I asked what ' was la a
bowl af soap they served as. They
amid It was fermented bread. In
the Julee af anion." .
Another impressing feature of
Russia, she said, was the wide
streets. They are wide enough for
six lanes in America.
"I had read that the people In

Russia never smile without a reason, and now I believe it.
-I tried smiling at them aad
they looked at me rather" fanny.
They are really solemn people."
italism and the Integration probShe said she met a correspondent
lem In the Sooth and was es- of Time Magazine that bought 38
pecially Interested In what U. S. bottles of caviar to take back to
students paid for clothes.
America with him. Russian ofThe food served In Moscow was ficials held him up for two days,

--

--

searching his baggage carefully.
In West Berlin. Miss Dickens
'
said, she felt more afraid. '
There la a very tense feeling
there. The people seem to feel
hemmed In. They are not allowed
ta travel very far outside tap
She made two trips to the Eastern zone of Berlin, and said there
was a great "economic contrast
in the two zones. East Berlin li
economically poor. West Berlin
is thriving.
She was stranded for two weeks
in Frankfurt, Oermany, waiting
for space on a plane. She 'went
from there to Berlin, Demnark,
Norway, Sweden, Finland, and
then Moscow.
The trip, she said, were enlightening and adventuresome, aad
she added:
,
"If I had the chance, I'd go
again.".

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nirs

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University of Kentucky

Vol.

0'

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By BOB ANDERSON
fall and assume the presidency In son for his resigning from the post.
Varsity football takes up three
the spring semester.
Kernel Managing Editor
Student Congress Vice Presl- - with the resignation of Schol- - hours a day, plus football meetings
dent-ele- ct
Frank Schollett resign- - lett, the SC assembly will have two nights a week, Schollett said.
..
.... .
4.w
v
w yvaiciu, to Qetermine - wnai ' win- oe a one BVIV wuuuuucuu
Schollett's resignation touched about finding an acting president graduation requirements also prompted the resignation, he stated.
of! a . Controversy as to who will for the now kaderless congress.
take over SC this year. Schollett. Dean of Men L. L. Martin said , Schollett declined to comment
was expected to Uke over the ta0 so Execntive Committee wiQ further, on his resignation, saying
president's seat In place of Presi- - mttt Monday ta decide the agenda: he did not want to create any
dent-ele- ct
Taylor Jones, who Is
the assembly meeting tenta- - "hard feelings.".
to Uke over the duties Mftlj t t9r Mdnday
Ineligible
SchoHetf. ialgnation .Utement
Vifl newly elected congress 305 White- - Chalrman of
addressed "to the facalty and
rnmmlttM whirh nlanned lMt
w..
",TC"7
member, will be installed Monday week., nrvai election, is conferring w- da"
night with Jones stepping down. with members of the assemblv to "Since the Student Congress
Jones had planned ta tarn the determine what niht will be most
.
president's seat aver ta Schollett convenient for SC to meet. Dean
Tolace wWch I feeL
f
?
:7:
an, as his term of office Is to run Martin- said
navsa a if"
rpiririinir piiftt. nn m
a year, make his standing this
for
White is the only SC officer who time gt the present. My plans tor
can call the meeting, since ap- future haVe.been greaUy al- pointments for SecreUry of Stu- - tercdf m at; I now feel it nec- dent Affairs. Judiciary Commit- - essary for me to devote the utmost
tee chairman, and Judiciary Com- - of my tlme
energy toward my
mittee members have not yet been cnosen career,
T
made. Dean Martin stated.
greatly appreciate the support
Schollett cited the restriction you
glven me to the student
The two exhibitions will be on
that would be placed an his time
dlsnlav until Oetnher 2.V
fry heading SC as the prime rea
Continued on Page 12
Refreshments will be served
during the opening on Sunday and
the Art Gallery will be open dally
from 12 to 4 pan.;1 Saturdays, 10
a.m. to 3 p.m., and Sundays, 3 to

Steam p Stomp

......

These saidentifled UK AFROTC cadets demonstrate ta UK Vice
PretMeat Frank,
thennrethoda thoy waald empley ta
apprehend any enemy which might be larking En the woods. The
cadets are armed with Mi carbines.

Drtersa

.

.

Receive Honors At Camo
A

Three UK students were chosen
as the tcp cadets at AFROTC sum- tner caxrps this year.
Cadet
rian Hogg, commerce
senior, was named outstanding
cadet at Greenville Air Force Base
this summer. Jim Hell was named
..

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fr

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utj
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Three AFROTC Cadets
.

No. 4

Schollett Kesi gns
Vice President Post

y.n- -

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LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1959

Qp9 s

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During the survival exercise,
UK's cadets were visited by vice
.president Frank D. Peterson, es- corted by Col. R. W. Boughton.
The menu for the VIP featured
rattlesnake meat.

"

n'

37.1

Art Exhibition Features

runner-u- p.

Jim Steedly, who attended Elgin
for
AFB, Florida, was runner-u- p
outstanding cadet In a class af 200.
Steedly la the wing commander
of the UK's AFROTC detachment.
The opening of the University
One of the highlights of the
Art Oallerv in th Pine Art.t
Florida camp was a three-da- y
Swamp Stomp," in which the Building will be held Sunday be- p.m.
cadets participated in maneuvers 'tween 3 and 5
At the front of the. gallery will
In the Florida swamp, living off
Collage-Cothe land, and being harassed by be an exhibition of
by Raymond Barnhart,
structions
Army Rangers.
5 p.m. Admission Is free.
associate professor of art.

Collages And Sculpture
.

.

n-

"pic- - '
These tores" are abstract organizations
of various materials, objects, ' vtscraps of paper, and other, ma
terials.
The constructions are the re-- -,
1
rkL

.

SDX Meeting
)

Sigma 'Delta Chi, professional
Journalism fraternity, will hold
Its first meeting of the year In
room ' 112 of the Journalism

three-dimension-

;.v-v-

al

1

-

'

1

X'eillAJOOlC

1
o bcheaule
from chaos.
J ii
The second exhibition
that of 361110' 'JtlCS
Af rican, tribal sculpture' and
.
.

!:?f ;:!r 'zeaii

;

Friday,
Building p-'
'
i
."
j
,
; Fraternity
"g
President .James '
"
;
la
was be- Nolan said the meeting
.arti- -.
..
.
Ing called ta pUu a program for
i::t
aM iht
Thi
He urged all SDX facts lent vby the University: of
the semester.
I Museum
m Phil-- ; unaffUiated; seniors may schedule- : . "Tenhsyivania
members ta attend.
'
' their Dhoto sittines for the 1960 t
adelphla.-.- .
!
-These". carvings and crafts by; book Monday morning In the main
j
tne primitive peoples or Africa. hall of the Journalism Building.
... states the; UK. Art .Department. , photQ 'schedules for the'
Orecks ..
.
- "reveal that they, had a strong
wttH fVl.
M.nA nttvV
tradition of, art which was to: ftCtua, hQtQ siUm
rto
VVrst?n?-Ti- ?
oaikth! tober7. The. 'fraternities wilTbe
!
T
.V."" d
.visen- - "
lmmedl7 pnotograpI?e1 ' w"-n-the ' sororities 1 Prank Schollett. c6nimerce
.nd America "
atehr followed by
a.. group ox ,. , ;' '
or, was "selected fron
'.
It was emphasised that all :
I ,0M cadets representing- 23 tnsti- 'Greek .organizations 'have .not yet,
tutiohs as top cadet in the ROTO
camp
Knox this summer... retnrned their .contracts for pages
Trouper Try outsselection was made
j ScholletVs
In the 19C9 edition. They are re- - J
UK Trouper's Iryouts wlll be
-nested to ret am them as. soon as
bn the tals of leadership, actual hcjd 6:30 p.m. Tueaday In the
Job performance, and military Lab Theatre of the 'tine Arts possible ta the Kentacklan office
Education Anyone?
knowledge. But on his actual conIn the Journalism Building.
Building.
stress, reactRush activities hero kept Dinah Smith busy bat a Kernel photogduct during tunes of
Students may continue to buy
All students who are Interstimuli, and his ested have been Invited ta ations to certain
rapher managed to get' her to stop long enough to pose for this
Kentuckians for $3.00 till the first
picture. Dinah, an AD Pi senior from Eddy vllle, is the Kernel
ability to teach others was one of tend these tryoats.
when the price will
of December
v
Continued on Pago 13
be raised one dollar.
Sweetheart this week. Uer major Is education.
i

:

Seh

IsTop

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* 2--

KENTUCKY' KERNEL friUTy, SqitcmUcr

Tllfc

2VlM$

'

KhrdsclievSbrimlefes?. Tout
Returns To Andrews AFB
WASinNOTON, Sept, 24 (AP)
Soviet
Premier Niklta S.
Khrushchev landed at Andrews
Air Force Base, Md., at 3:27 p.m.
from Pittsburgh, completing his
American tour.
Behind ' him was a hectic
sometimes quarrelsome introduction to the United States and a
thirr cross section of its people,
which began with his ceremonious arrival Sept. 15 from Moscow.
From the official f unctions and
pre Ifminary talks here, the Soviet
visitor went to New York to meet,
not too amicably, with bit figures
of the capitalism he denounces,
visit the grave of Franklin D.
Roosevelt, and make his total disarmament bid before the United
Nations. .
Next came Los Angeles where
Khrushchev sparred with movie
mogul Spyros Skouras, quarreled
with Mayor Norris Poulson, d
the movie "Can Can" which
he saw in the making, and. railed
at security curbs that barred him
.
,.
from Disneyland.
Then a train trip up the west
coast and a warmer reception mellowed Khrushchev's mood and he
liked San Francisco. But he ran
into a verbal fight there, too, with
labor leaders who fed him lunch
and wound up in "irreconcilable"
disagreement with about everything he stands for.
A hlrh point was Khrushchev's
Iowa visit Tuesday and Wednesday. He rot closer to more people,
hobnobbed with farmers and pics,
tramped over fields and talked
agriculture and food, a favorite
subject, with eorn grower Roswell
Garst, an old acquaintance.
Last night Khrushchev flew' to
Pittsburgh for more ceremonies
and a tour of a plant that builds,
the huge machines for steel plants.
At the plant today the visitor
enjoyed himself, gave his wrist
watch to a worker who handed
him a cheap cigar, and pressed
his trade campaign by wondering
aloud why the plant can't now
make machines for Russia as it
to-li- ked

.

used to do.

--

He closed out his Pittsburgh appearance with a speech blaming
this country for keeping the cold
war going.' "
Through it all Khrushchev was
exposed to a scattering of boos
and sharply worded placards,
which he made a good show of
disregarding. There was also a
scattering of applause, to which
he responded. But mostly there
was quiet ' reserve.

.''

'

Forestry officials v. in Ontario,
CanadA, hiark trees .which may
be legally etif for fuef.

Giiipiol Tryoiils

sharp contrast to the red carpet

reception by Eisenhower nine
days ago.
The emphasis was all on getting
him pasl' rush-hotraffic to the
government guest residence, Blair
ur

House, i
A Soviet embassy

reception and
a private dinner with a list of

tap

business- leaders, were on
-

Tryoats for Gulgnol Theatre's
first production of the year will
be held 2:00 p.m. Randay, at the
Oulrnol Theatre In the Tine Arts
Buildinf.

DRIVE-I-

if Open

Maxwell Anderson's "Winter-set- "
will be the oprntnr
of Gulfnol's 32nd sea
son.
Anyone Interested In any
phase of the theatre may attend this casting and crew
organization meeting.
pro-ducti-

Throughout, Khrushchev hammered at his constant theme of
peace and coexistence, ' peppered
with predictions that the Soviet
system will triumph.
As if to signal that the hullabaloo is about over and the testing time at hand, arrangements
for his second arrival here were in. Camp David.'

WMEZj
END SATURDAY
Alt Ntwt In CWorf

,

"HOUND OF THE
BASKERVILtJS"

major museums
one museum dethe development
in Japan since

Peter Cu&hing as .th

1

Nut
Deborah

Kerr

Maurice Chevalier
"COUNT YOUR BLESSINGS"

GUIDE

"A Prlvafs Affair,"
12:00, 1:58, 3:57, 5:56, 7:55. 9:54.
STRAND "Pier 5 Havana." 12:15,
3:05,. 5:55, 8:45.
"Ten1 Seconds to Hell.
1:30,
4:21. 7:13. 10:00.

Plccin's., a stakes winner at Long-acrBy Tho Associated Press.
capFAMILY DRIVE IN "Back From
last year, is college-breA race horse performing a
The Dead," 7:20.
having been bred by. the State
riole, a courbette or a pirouette
"The Night My Number Came
subject to an in- College of Washington. Hillsdale,
would not be
Up." 9:05.
vestigation by the Thoroughbred a current candidate for championThe Mating Oame." 10:45. .
Racing Protective Bureau but ship honors, has been enrolled at
most certainly would bo put on the Hillsdale College, Michigan, and ASHLAND "The Angry Age,
was awarded a letter for track.
schooling list.
1:35, 5:08, 8:41.
Needles, winner of the 1956 Ken"Woman Obsessed," 3:18, 8:49,
Somje
and a few
10:22.
older horses go through these tucky Derby, was afforded similar
when in the paddock or at honors by the University of BEN ALI "Iii visible Invaders."
antics
es

.

"THE NUN'S STORY"

d,

,

the starting gaie In the capriole
the horse "rises in the air from
a standing position extending his
front and hind legs horizontally."
During a courbette he "folds his
front legs and, rising- - on his hind
legs, hops forward." In the pirouette the horse "keeps his back
legs practically stationary while
galloping around them with his
"

front legs."

horses go to' school "to
learn such behavior, but the famed
white lieppizans of the Haute
Ecole, or high school of the Imperial Spanish Riding School in
Vienna, would be considered highly untutored around a race track.
However, the . thoroughbred is
not entirely without culture. Lene
Some

Florida.

1:12. 3:44, 6:16. 8:48.

Cuignol Players'

"

"The Four Skulls of Jonathan
Drake," 12:00. 2:27, 4:59, 7:31,
10:03.

play "Farewell Sup- LEXINOTON DRIVE IN ' "The
per" will highlight the-- Ouignol
Last Wagon," 7:22.
Players meeting 4 p.m. Monday
"Harry Black and The Tiger,"
in the Lab Theater of the Fine
9:36.
Arts Building.
"Hot. Angle." 11:32.
The play will be directed by CIRCLE 25 (Auto Theater)
Hunter Howerton, a UK student.
"Hound of The Baskervilles,"
'After the play; refreshments 'ill 7:15, 11:00.
be served, there will be a tour of
"Count Your Blessings." 9:10.
,
".
the theater.
New members are being urged
to attend the meeting.
A

one-a-

ct

OPEN DAILY

-

Air Science Announces
New Policies, Personnel

Avnu

Euclid

'
'

'

VMM

Hayword-Srcphe- n

Boyd

"This Angry Age"

Mangano
Van Fleer '
(Both features in color)
Perluns-Silvon-

Triple Feoture!

"BACK FROM THE DEAD".
Peggie Castle
7:25
"NITE MY NUMBER
CAME UP"
9:05
"THE MATING GAME"
Deb Reynolds
10:45

l'

a

"HARRY
5

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'

Conte-J- o

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"ASK ANY GIRL"

"THE MAN WHO COULD
CHEAT DEATH"
(loth in Ttchaicolor!4

w Rkhard"

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DORIS DAY
i riminti

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Aximittion

75

OCBO

ERNIE KOVACS

FUN-FES-

It I In te'wcD

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STLMaM- -

Deliciout Treats At Our
Snack Bar

-

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.

T?r7T'.NOW thru thur.

rzs

JACK

or

A. Rook, from Williams AFB.

Arl-ron-

PAIANCE
MARTIN E

..2nd Hit f

TODAY AND SATURDAY
"FOUR SKULLS OF DRAKE"
Plus "INVISIBLE INVADERS"

CAROL

5ftiiEiAT 1
11 AM Ml

STARTS SUNDAY

TOMORROW NIGHT
,

Link and Sharp
And Their Orchestra

a.

All have been assigned to
the University for three years.
In conjunction with the
ArTtOTC program. It has been announced that the Sponsor Corps
needs six more coeds to represent

1

''

l

Also

IWAII:VI

Mr,JilTlTrPiW1

'

Gringti

SUNDAY AND MONDAY

.

"

.

WMmark

"

AND THE TIGER"
Coloe Stewart.
"'
.r
;
:
,
.-,
"THE HOT ANGEL"
Jackio Uugheny

BLACK

.

year..

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Also

In color

Aho

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STARTS SUNDAY!
Shirley MacLaine-- David Niven

AND SATURDAY
"

"THE' LAST WAGON'

.

.""Woman Obsessed"

Anthony
Richard
1

TONIGHT

Chvy Chase

NOW SHOWING!

Susan

TONITf A SATURDAY

P.M.

- Several changes of personnel and the cadets, and to act as official
policies in UK's Air Science De- hostesses for the detachment.
partment have been announced
by Col. R. W. Boughton, head of
NOW! ENDS THURS.
the department.
Among the new features of the
A SOUTH AMERICAN
department is an honor system
that has been widened in scope
over last year's policy.
This new system, according to
Col. Boughton, "is to provide the
radets with an opportunity to. develop personal honor and integiCinbmaScopG stereophonic clj
rity through practicing it in a
m nd
i yf
i
rVi
ifni na hu
I
position of trust." '
I.
CAROL
JANE WYMAN
STARRING CLIFTON WEBB
Elected cadets will serve on
LYNLEY
GARY CROSBY
JILL ST. JOHN
boards to consider the facts and
action deemed necessary in all reported cases of violation of the
personal honor system.
1
Also installed this year is a
HIIIHOM-lllT- M
(IT
tactical officer aid and coaching
plan. In this plan each officer of
the detachment will be assigned
JEFF
two to three senior cadet officers
LlLi-u
CHANDLER
and will personally aid and coach
4'
V
them in air tactics throughout the

These senior cadets will in' turn
servo as tactical officers for several jnabtr officers. The main,
objective of this sytem Is leader'
r
ship eoachlng.
Several, new officers have been
transferred to UK to complete the
officer-instructcomplement due
to Air Force reassignment.
Among the .new personnel are
Major Arthur. M. Burton, trans- fered from South Ruisllp AFB in
England; Major John Thistle wood,
from Yokota AFB, Japan; Major
Paul J. Schuler, from Sembach
AIT). Germany; and Capt. Dale

!

STARTS SUNDAY!

Horses Go To School
.

new

Sherlock Holmes

KENTUCKY

' "'

Trice 73c

6 p.m.

on

to-

night.
Tokyo has 11
tomorrow the emphasis and art galleries,
. But
shifts. A tour of the National voted entirely to
Institute of Health was. cancelled of transportation
to. give Khrushchev more time to 18T2.
prepare for the cold, war talks
with Eisenhower.
The Red business starts tomorrow evening in the seclusion of
MOVIE
Elsenhower's
mountain retreat,

MOVIES

N

ON THE BELTLINE

ON THE PARIS PIKE

J

,

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Sqtciabcr 23,1939- -5
r

Girls From A laska, Hawaii
Have Two Things In Common
'

'

f

4

By CHRISTA FINLEV
Despite the thousands of miles
which separate their homes, Susan
Dees of Anchorage. Alaska, and
Kathiene Cabot of Honolulu, Hawaii, have at least two things in
common.
The two freshmen coeds claim
as their home the country's recently acquired 49th and 50th

tory life. "I didn't expect it to be
much fun" she said. However,
she does miss her pet Siamese cat,
who recently became mother to
four kittens.
Her main problem so far has
been In finding enough time during the past two weeks for all the
activities she Is participating in,
such as dates, classes, and rush.....
Neither of the girls plans to return home throughout the school
year. This Imposes a slight problem because each of them has already experienced that "nostalgic
melancholia" commonly called
so

states.
First, the mother of each girl
was born In Kentucky and met
her husband while attending UK.
Second, botn gins are impressed
with the University and especially
with the friendly atmosphere they homesickness.
have found on the UK campus.
The coeds differ somewhat In
Miss Dee, whose father works
their opinions on the annexation
for the United States Defense Department, has lived in Alaska for of their respective states.
Susan feels that statehood will
two years except for the time
she spent at a girls' prep school certainly benefit Alaska but that

It will take time before any drasllo
change can take, place.
Kit says she hasn't lived in
Hawaii long enough to be greatly
excited by its entrance as a state,
but she feels there will be no great
change In Hawaiians' attitude toward annexation "since they have
.
.U

1

I

.

6

fl

Both girls favor many of the

natire dishes of their states. Susan

loves Alaskan king crab and to
lesser extent, moose and polar
bear steaks.
Kit misses such Hawaiian foods
as opihl (small muscle fish),
haupla (coconut pudding), "mahlhl
(porpoise) and malasados ,(Port-ugues

doughnuts without the
hole in the middle).
Does she do the hula? Sorry
boys.

In Virginia.

UK Or Bust!

CK or bust roald hare easily been the slogan for these two, for
though they lire In the United States It's a Ionr way home.
Kathiene (Kit) Cabot, left, who lives In Honolulu, Hawaii, and
Susan Dees, right, who lives In Anchorage, Alaska, are attending
t'K this year after making the long journey from home.

Berlin Economy Booms
Despite Soviet Threat
With all this. West Berlin still
AP West
Is not self supporting. Isolated 110
Berlin la enjoying Its biggest miles behind the Iron Curtain,
boom since World War II despite West Berlin cannot pay fully for
the Soviet threat that still hovers what It has to buy.
It depends on massive West
over the isolated city.
German . assistance 1 4 billion
The economy Is behaving as if
(375 million dollars) a year
there is no Berlin crisis. Surging marks
for economic survival. The
growth characterizes almost every
United States contributes about
phase of economic life.
4'i million dollars a year.
The comeback has been fast
from the economic dip caused by
Soviet Premier Khrushchev's deClu b
Cosm o
mand hut November that the AlCosmopolitan Club will
The
lies get out.
hold Its first meeting of the year'
million West In
Then, with the
of the Student
the
Berliner gripped by anxiety, sarUnion Building Friday from
in ts accounts slumped, replacing 7:30 to 10 p.m.
10 years of steady growth.
In
An announcement said the
January and February new indusmeeting would be a get-atrial orders fell off. Construction
declined.
International organization. A
West German Industry moved program of
International social
swiftly to place big new orders
dancing, games, and refreshwith West Berlin plants. The West ments has been planned and
German government pledged help. anyone Interested In this organiThe West . Berliners accepted zation may attend.
American pledges that the U. S.
position here will not be basically
BERLIN, Sept., 24

poli tan

She chose UK because she
favored a southern school, and because her parents graduated here.
She is also attending UK because it provides a wider range Get-Togeth- er
of interests and coeducation.
In secondary education, Susan
The Hillel Foundation,- Jewish
is majoring in biological science
religious organization, will hold a
and mlnoring in psychology. Her
at 8 p.m. in the Social
only trouble since arriving here
been in disciplining herself to Room of the Student Union Build. has
ing.
study.
"The purpose of the organizaKathiene (Kit), who was born
In Louisville, has lived In Hawaii, tion," said Irvln Steinberg, presi"the most beautiful place in the dent of the Foundation, "is to
world," for two years. Her father provide a social gathering for the
Is In electrical engineering.
Jewish students on campus.
Hillel, a national organization.
She has been favorably, impressed by the boys at. UK, who Is also open to Jewish students
remind her of those she went to from Transylvania College," he
school with in Hawaii.
said.
President Steinberg said the
Kit is also impressed with dormi

Hillel Foundation To Hold
In SUB
-

get-toget-

Ol

Hillel Foundation plans for the
year Include visits to various
places In Lexington, including the
Narcotics Farm.
"The club also hopes to prganlze
a program with some of the other
clubs on campus," Steinberg added.
Officers for this year are: Irvin
Steinberg, president; Donald Drey
fuss, vice president; Robert Branson, secretary, and Margaret Rich
lin, treasurer.
Advisors for the club are Rabbi
Alan Weitzman and Rabbi Rosen
bloom.

II If

SCt?2lQMlll

c-

.

;

changed.
This is the result:
Industrial orders now are well
bore the level of last year. Shipments U West Germany the city's
biggest customer are 12 per cent
higher than last year.
Unemployment stands at '38.000
compared- with 60.000 a year ago.
About 30,000 of these 38.000 are
unemployable. There are about
10.000 unfilled Job openings.
- "This
city is now at the point
of practically full employment," an

LEXINGTON
YELLOW CAB

i

Inc.
MH4

-

Dial

2-22-

30

.

Radio Equipped

official said.
.New office buildings, subways
and express highways are being

built.
Savings accounts started to Increase when the Big Four Foreign
Ministers met at Geneva In May
to discuss the future of Berlin
and other Issues. The accounts are
now back to the level of a year

-

laD(J 70Q)

II

Residential building is brisk. .
Thousands of tourists surged into
the city during the summer, keeping the hotels well filled and pouring money into stores and restau.

TciF!

And Phonographs

ago.

rants.

"Uin

.V

i:

-

h

-

ON TH

OIAMONO CORNCR.
.
MAIN AND (.IMS

4

.

.

Homo of tho College Folks
I

683

S. Broadway

Mi

PHONE

4-43-

73

Reasonable Prices
Prirote Rooms for Parties
"High Fidelity Music for Your Dining Pleasure'?
MR. AND MRS. JOHN INNES, Proprietors

WHERE RADIO AND TELEVISION IS A BUSINESS
NOT A SIDELINE

East Main Opposite The Esplanade
A Few Srs East of Lafayerto Hortl
.

r. I

--

.

* L

SCs Problem

Prestige To Regain
Student Congress, after yesterday's
resignation of the vice president-elect- ,

.

is now temporarily leadcrless. And,
'

with the resignation, the prestige of
the assembly was swept away in tor
fashion.

nado-lik- e

Tin's is not to say that the vice presi-

dent s resignation was not Justified.

It

Was a position almost impossible

But, according to the SC constitution, the SC president is elected for a
term of one year. Since the presidentelect is ineligible for the first semester, he will not be able to perform the
duties of the presidency until he is
academically eligible.'
This situation will make the first
semester leadership only a tentative
one and will perhaps make it less
powerful in excerising its duties. At
ariy rate, SC will operate under two
leaders during one year, if the presi- .

ct

becomes eligiblo for. the

duties of officp.
The course of action the congress
will take Monday
night could or
could hot help it regain the ground it
has lost during the past four months.
The selection of a weak leadership
could only detract from iti effectiveness to the student body. The SC
representatives must choose an acting
president who will run the assembly-witthe authority of an elected one.
The wliole election mess, no matter
how much it has reflected on the inefficiency of SC, also must be forgotten if .the congress wants to perform
effectively and represent the students
adequately during the first and second semesters. Division within its
own ranks is the worst possible thing
that could develop.
The early renin of last years disputed election is now" beginning to
show its harsh effects on the assen.
bly. The provisional government
established last year could liave run
tb.6 assembly until the new election
which, as we first understood it, was
to be about a month after the beginning of school.
Instead, the election was immediately rerun at the expense of SC
prestige among the student body. Regaining that prestige is going to be a
problem.

.

i-

'

I

'

"

'

::

-

'

v

."

:

J.

-

.

to maintain while devoting full time,
to hi j other campus activities. He.
would, have assuredly succeeded to
the presidency at next Monday night's
S"C meeting if he had not resigned.
The resignation leaves the assembly
with only one course of action, since
the SC constitution docs not provide
for succession beyond the vice president. The congress must select, without delay, a leader to run its already
crippled assembly.
.

tlent-ele-

J

I

..

h

The Age Of Euphemism
If pay scales are rising around the

i

industrialized vorld, so are job titles.
Some of them, in fact, ..have- risen
nearly out of 'sight, 'and we often
yonder if there are' any privates left
in the army.
i Our colleagues on the
London News
Chronicle have dubbed this the Age
of Euphemism. In support 'of the
title they point out that rat catchers
are now politely called "rodent operatives,' garbarge men "refuse collectors," and at least one nlghtwatchman
fancies himself a "noctician."
j
Just as many euphemists are at
work in the personnel departmentsof
America. Almost everyone of consequence in the financial or managerial field today is some kind of vice

'

president, whfle lower forms of corporate life sport titles like "assistant to
the vice president."
EDGEWQOD, Md., Sept. 25 ( AP)-- On
Or a general, investigating such an
Janitors are no longer janitors, but
outburst, may find lnself discussing
a barracks wall at 'the super-secr"building superintendents." (We know Army
'ChemicaJ Center here hangs a rreuaun psyenoiogy witn a private
of one tony building superintendent printed sign: Turn lights off when leavacting as spokesmen for the offenders.
who has become a "curator of equiping." ;
Or four SPPs may hold an unmoni
ment") An elevator starter was re
tored press conference inside the
d
"To this an anonymous author has
portedly recently to have been retitled v" added iu pencil, "please" perhaps as a
walls of their laboratory to articua "building circulation engineer."
reminder that at Edgewood the Ann)' late their gripes for public Consumption.
All these things have happened ' at
This isn't the first Age of
ihould remember its manners een when
Edgewood.
.
ism to come nlong. And .we're "not jsddressing a corporal.
y
After the
songfest last Aug.
seriously Worried about it. In fact,
Ior at this closely guarded base 20
13. criticism of the nation's schopls and
we're beginning to "wonder whether - miles northeast of Baltimore, most of the
parents came from Brig. Cen. Harold
we shouldn't start telling our noctician men in uniform are enlisted. scientific
Walmsley, commander of the chemical
next time we chat with him that we're and professional personnel, a fraction of center.
a "prose artist" instead of just a plain the 3.500 Srfs whose special knowledge
"Somewhere along the line,' he Said,
old writer. Tiie Christian Science has been harnessed by the VS. Army in "American parents and educational sysvarious chemical,

Freud Joins The Army

.

et

.

flask-line-

anti-Arm-

,

.

engineering, physics
and administrative centers across the
nation. '
College-traine- d
and mostly in their
early 20s, they lead a curious kind of
i
double life as scientists by day and '
;i
soldiers by night.
:t
For 16 hours a day they are under
J
.
t
I
I
1
i
military rule. They polish brass, scrub
the barracks floor where they sleep and
':
I