xt7x0k26dp6d https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7x0k26dp6d/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19660208  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  8, 1966 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  8, 1966 1966 2015 true xt7x0k26dp6d section xt7x0k26dp6d Inside Todays Kernel
YMCA tutor
proeel has been hailed
os a success; Poge Two.
Cor. Breathitt
may propose that the
Sfofo toke oyer liquor stores:
Page
Two.

tditor

YMCA plans trip to South America
this summer: Poge Seven.

t-t- v

Minister sea many causes lor tha religious apathy on campus: Page Fire.

discusses the Gorernor and the
death penalty: Page Four.

i

i

UK freshmen sutler their third loss to
the undefeated YMCA: Poge Six.

U
Vol. LVII, No. 77

rxr ni

ttp

"vi

niv c r t ity of Kentucky

LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, FEB. 8, 1966

Eight Pages

Student Bar Pmshes Honor Code

By CARL WEST
Kernel Staff Writer
A law school student bar committee has started work on
drafting an honor code to be
instituted in the University's
College of Law, Kevin Charters,
committee chairman, has reported.
Establishment of the code was
proposed nearly two years ago
by the Student Bar Administration. This is the second committee to work on writing a code.
William h. Matthews Jr., dean
of the College of Law, said he
and the faculty have always felt

there has been an "unwritten
honor code" in the college as
part of the tradition of the school
and that it has worked well.
Dean Matthews
However,
considers the honor code proposal as an improvement to the
school, and outlined three reasons
for establishing a formal, written
code.
They are:
1. To encourage the notion
among law students that the
same level of conduct should
exist in the SBA that exists in
the professional bars.
2. Legal instruction is chang- -

ing; students are doing more independent work and there is need
for a formalized

code to guide
them outside the classroom.
3. A code of honor would give
confidence to the students that
the standards they live by are
the ones that are accepted.
Dean Matthews said the idea
of a formal code was presented
to him two years ago by the

student bar president, alongwith
other improvement suggestions.
Included in the recommendations
were the legal aid program,
speakers forum, and placement
service.

With the exception of the
honor code, the programs have
been organized within the law
school.
Throughout the fall and spring
semesters of 1964-6a student
committee worked on writing a
code. A draft was presented to
the faculty for approval in the
latter part of the spring semester.
But the proposal was rejected
by the faculty, primarily because
the sections covering procedural
protections given the accused
(due process) were not clear.
Dean Matthews said the
faculty favored the code in
5,

principle,

"additional
guage."

but felt

it needed
refinement of lan-

Midway last semester, a new
committee was formed to revise
the draft.
Charters, who says the
committee is representative of the student body, summarized what he thinks to be the
current student opinion on the
issue:
1. A few students are strongly
in favor of a code.
2. A small number is not in
favor of a code.
Continued On Page 7

Cats Topple Florida

85-7- 5,

Move Into First Place Slot

o

By HENRY ROSENTHAL
Kernel Sports Editor
A tired, tired Kentucky Wildcat team staggered past a much
taller Florida squad 5 in Memorial Coliseum last night for
their 18th straight win this season, but soared into the number
one rating in both the Associated
Press and United Press International rankings.
The Wildcats, who won five
85-7-

games in ten nights including
a 105-9- 0
victory over Vander-bi- lt

then the nation's
school went ahead of
third-ranke- d

the Duke Blue Devils who had
for several
months.
Results of the poll are compiled after Saturday's games and
do not include Monday competition. Ironically, Duke lost its
second game of the season last

dominated the polls

0
to West Virginia,
night
only hours after the Blue Devils
learned of their drop from the
top spot.
"It makes us feel good to
be number one," University
basketball coach Adolph Rupp
said.
94-9-

"It's a grave injustice they
haven't been number one all
Continued on Pace

6

Director Of Space Flight Center

Von Braun To Speak Friday
Dr. Wemher von Braun, director of the George C. Marshall Space Flight Center of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, Huntsville, Ala.,
will speak here at 8:15 p.m. Friday in Memorial Coliseum.
His address is sponsored by

the Central Kentucky Concert
and Lecture Association.
Dr. von Braun is the top

The long Cator reach worried UK's number one ranked Wildcats
last night, but not too much, as the Cats won
for their
ISth win without a loss. Here, two Gators get a hand's length
above their UK opponents.
85-7-5

scientist in America's space program and has been primarily
responsible for designing and
building this nation's giant
rocket boosters.
The Marshall Center is in
charge of developing NASA's
large launch vehicles and conducting related research. The
Saturn space vehicles are being
developed to carry out the country's goal of placing men on the
moon and returning them to

earth.

Dr. von Braun will be intro-

duced by Dr. Karl O. Lange,

professor of mechanical engineering and director of the

Wenner-Gre-

n

Aeronautical

Re-

search Laboratory at the University.
Dr. von Braun was born in
Wirsitz, Germany, and received
his doctorate in physics from the
University of Berlin in 1934. He
joined the German Ordinance
Department and served as chief
of a small rocket development
station near Berlin before becoming technical director of the
Peenemuende Rocket Center in
1937.

the Army. He became a U.S.
citizen in April, 1955.
He directed high altitude firings of captured German V-- 2
rockets at White Sands Missile
Range, N.M., and later became
project director of a guided missile development unit at Fort
Bliss, Texas.
At the Huntsville installation
he directed the development of
Redstone rocket,
the
which was America's first large
ballistic rocket. The Redstone
booster, used in the Mercury
program, successfully placed a chimpanzee, and
two astronauts, Alan B. Shepard,
200-mi-

le

man-in-spa-

In the closing years of World
War II he and more than 100
of his fellow scientists surrendered to the Allied Powers. Dr.
von Braun came to the United
States in 1945 under contract to

Goldberg To Highlight Founders Week
Mr. Goldberg served as Secwill retary of Labor in President
Feb.
Founders Week,
be an address by Ambassador Kennedy's Cabinet in
Arthur J. Goldberg at 2:30 p.m. Kennedy appointed him Assoon Feb. 22 in Memorial Coliseum. ciate Justice of the Supreme Court
This Convocation, which will August 29, 1962.
include an academic procession,
During World War II he served
will be open to the public.
as Special Assistant with the
University classes will be dis- rank of captain and later major
missed between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. with the Office of Strategic
that day to enable the entire Services.
University to participate in the
He is the author of several
Convocation, President John W.
books including
Oswald announced Monday.
United."
Goldberg is a former Associate
Court
The Founder's Week celeJustice of the Supreme
and former Secretary of Labor. bration has been designed both
.He is the permanent represent- to conclude UK's Centennial, and
ative of the United States to the to observe its 101st birthday.
Founder's Week activities will
United Nations with the rank
of ambassador.
open on Feb. 19 with the

Highlighting the activities of
19-1- 6,

1961-196-

Founder's Day Ball in the Student Center.
Student Centennial
UK's

Committee will sponsor a cultural
event on Feb. 20 in Memorial

Hall.
The first annual Trustees' and
President's Dinner for the Uni-

L

S

vr

Faculty Senate will be
Feb. 21.
Feb. 23 Cuignol will
its Founder's Week
its Founder's Week
production of Shakespeare's
versity
held on
On
present

,

;

pro-prese- nt

"Twelfth Night."
Other Founder's Week events
will include the official presentation of the University's "Centennial Volume on Higher
Education," the first annual
"president's Dinner" for heads

"AFL-CIO-Lab-

ARTHUR J. COLDBERG

of campus organizations on Feb.
24, and UK Legislator's Day on
Feb. 26.

DR. WERNHER VON BRAUN
and Virgil I. Crissom, in
flights.
Dr. von Braun has received
many professional and scholastic
honors for his role in rocket n
and space research activity. Ii
1959 he was presented thedistin
guished Federal Civilian Service
Award by the President of the
United States. Admission to the
lecture is by membership card
only and students may be admitted with an ID card.
al

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Feb. 8, 1966,

Tutoring Project Draws
Praise For Success In Schools
YMCA
"The

hit

'We're Number One!'

This cheerleader's bright smile can only mean that "We're number
one!" UK was voted to the number one spot this week in both
the AP and the UFI polls.

Budget Director To Join UK Staff
FRANKFORT-Sta- te
Budget
Director Robert M. Cornett will
resign soon to join the University's new Center of Developmental Change, it has been
learned.

Cornett will join Dr. Edward
Weidener, appointed recently to

assume duties of director of the
Center.
Cornett is slated to direct a
proposed study of
governmental relationships
and the impact of federal grant
programs on state government.
Dr. Weidener was unavailable for comment yesterday.
federal-state-loc-

al

Breathitt May Propose
The state administration is
reportedly considering asking the
General Assembly to switch Kend
tucky to a system of
stores.
liquor
A special Commission on
School Financing, headed by the
governor, will be handling the
discussion for now.
for
Three
proposals
to the matter were
state-owne-

commended yesterday by a
committee.
Many times in recent years
bills have been offered in the
legislature to make Kentucky the
sub-

nation's
state.

18th

liquor-monopo-

tutoring project is definitely succeeding. The
student's grades are improving
immensely in some cases. I encourage all my students to attend," commented Miss Jordon,
a fifth grade teacher at Lincoln
Elementary School.
Last semester the
tutoring program was expanded
to include elementary school
children. The project actually began in the fall of 1964, when University students began tutoring
students from Dunbar High
School. Today, both programs are
meeting success and problems.
Last fall, of the 150 students
at Dunbar Iligh School who
asked for the program, only 50
could be tutored. At times one
tutor had to help as many as
four students.
The tutors meet with the students either during study halls
at school or at night at the
Second Street YMCA.
The newly initiated program,
the Manchester project, found
that of the 260; pupils enrolled
in Lincoln Elementary School,
over 150 attended tutorial sessions. These students are taught
three days a week from four
to five at the Manchester Center
Settlement House.
"The ultimate goal of both
programs is to prevent drop- -

package-liquo- r
dealers was
about $9 million.
Many of the 1,102
retailers hold package licenses
also.
There are 17 states with liquor
monopolies. State officials report
that no state since repeal in
1933 has changed from monopoly
to open competition, or vice
versa.
These monopoly states are

974

The state's 974 private package liquor dealers and 27 wholesalers are expected to fight the
proposal. Presumably the
outlets will be continued
as private businesses.
The state's 27 wholesalers last
year sold 1.2 million
cases of distilled spirits to state
retailers for $55 million and realized a gross profit of $10.8 million
and a reported net profit of around
$2 million.
Gross profit of the state's

WRH Plans Will Move

After Congress Meeting
Plans for the WRH scholarship dinner will begin moving after
Thursday night's Student Congress meeting, according to the

president of Women's Residence Halls.
"Student Congress will meet
and will act on our budget," in them, and to help them become adjusted more quickly. The
Barbara Bigger said.
is set up so that the
WRH met last week with an program
little sister and big sister will
SC representative to discuss why
correspond during the summer
SC wouldn't give them the orig.months, and then meet at the
inal $546 they asked for. WRH
beginning of the fall semester.
finally settled for $321, and now A coke party and campus tour
are waiting for Thursday night's will
help these students feel more
SC meeting to allot tbem the at home.
money.
The big sisters will also give
the invited jju est s at advice on schedules, budgeting
Among
the dinner will be President and time, and the right clothes to
Mrs. John Oswald; Mr. and Mrs. wear.
At the end of the semester, an
Robert Johnson, vice president
v.i of student affairs; and Dean of evaluation study will be made
to see the effectiveness of the
Women Doris Seward. The guest
?
speaker is KatkerineTeden, Ken- - program.
tucky Commissioner of Commerce, who will speak on a topic The Kentucky Kernel
The Kentucky Kernel, University
concerning women and men
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexworking together.
4050S. Second-clas- s
ington,
In other business, reports on postage Kentucky,
paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
PubUvhed five timet weekly during
Sister Prothe Big Sister-Littl- e
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
gram were made. This program,
the summer semester.
Published for the students of the
j sponsored by WRH for the in-- J
University of Kentucky by the Board
coming freshmen, will begin in of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Xall semester. Applications
Oberst, chairman and Linda Gassaway,
4 the
"
will be sent to a number of secretary. as the Cadei la MM, be.
Begun
WOO, and the
Record
freshmen girls, and 50 will be came thePublishedincontinuously asIdea
in 190.
the
Kernel since 1915.
class girls may
accepted. Upper
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
apply to be a big sister, on the
Yearly, by mall $7.00
Per copy, from files 9 .10
basis of interest and time avail-

Lois Hausmann, who worked
with the elementary children last
semester, said, "Progress has
been made in the Manchester
of the
project. The vocabulary
sixth grade boys has increased."
"Now some of these boys are
and
helping to tutor in spelling
really excited
reading. They're
about it. We have better atten-denc- e
among the students than
among the tutors."
Miss Hausmann also said they
discuss future occupations with
the students to interest them in
furthering their educations.
Libby Swanson, director of
the Manchester Center program,
expressed a need for more tutors.

Alabama, Idaho, Iowa, Maine,
Michigan, Montana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio,
Utah,
Oregon, Pennsylvania,
Vermont, Virginia, Washington,
West Virginia, and Wyoming.
(V

7th

BIG WEEK!

At 2:13, 4:30,

:45, 9t00

'

ma "fed
FOrMMt

CLASSIFIED

MM
mm

Classified advertisements, 5 cents per
word ($1.00 minimum).
Deadline for acceptance of classified
n.
copy is 3 p.m. the day preceding
To place classified ad come to
Room 111 or 113, Journalism Bldg.
Advertisers of rooms and apartments listed In The Kentucky Kernel
have agreed that they will not include,
as a qualifying consideration in deciding whether or not to rent to an
applicant, his race, color, religious

Tr.

.as

m

T

new-come- rs

r

KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing

Editor

even more effective."

Tutors only work one hour a
week and transportation is provided if needed. Applications for
tutoring are available in the
office, Room 206 of the
Student Center.
A

MS81?Tuic flic

HS7IJ
LAST DAY

From 12.00

THUNDERBALL'
2 DAYS ONLY!
Othello ever by the
greatest actor of our time.
The greatest

LAURENCE

as

OLIVIER
OTHELLO

WED. at 1:30' 5:00' & 8:00
THURS. atl0a.m.,i:30,5,8
STUDENTS $1.00 WITH DISCOUNT COUPON or ID. CARD

.

WE

mm-

-

mm
YOUR

SHIRTS

preference or national origin.
HELP WANTED
STUDENTS

Earn

your spare time.
between

7

0
per week in
Call Don Rogers
10 p.m. 28J10t

and

STARTS WED.

FOR SALE
FOR SALE

1962 Corvair Spyder,
white, red interior, 29.000 miles.
Supercharged, 4 speed stick sht.
Phone
$F2t
5.

AMERICA'S
PLAYBOY HERO!

FOR SALE

1955 Ford Falrlane; 4 door
automatic motor. Tires very
new brakes, $175.
good condition;
Call VI Joe Andrews, Donovan Hall.
8939.
8F4t

MISCELLANEOUS
ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts and
coats for women. MILDRED COB EN
255 E. Maxwell. Phone
0.
tu&fr

We launder-ideodorant protection with L0XM the patented, specially formulated
jaent that locks
in deodorant, iocks out odor
and infectious 'bacteria. And,
L0XENE conttfm a fluorescent
brightening agtnt to make
whites whiter, colors brighter.
Shirts protected with L0XENE
ALL
stay fresh and odor-fre- e
0 AY LONG. For your protection, let us do your shirts the
n

NOW SHOWING!
U

1

7

L0XENE way.

Ffeel&Bl

COlLLlY

Plus
fMM

wT

JAWLS COEURN

2321

News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
2320
Socials
AdverUsmg, Business, Circulation 2319

program

iUB3

F

ability.
The purpose of this new organization is to help
feel the University is interested

"More tutors would make the

Liquor Stores

State-Owne- d

ly

reach the
outs, but we have to
students in two cimcrcm
nccti
The elementary students
with the basic tools, reading
help
andSpelling." said Lee Ratline,
director of the program.
"Rut by the time students
and
have reached high school
tools, they can
don't have these
chance for a
improve, but the
has long since passed.
foundation
In this case, tutor and student
need to develop a meaningful
communication so the tutor can
serve as a positive stimulus,
Rathbone said.

.

niMif

ntntr

i

mm

LEE J. COBB

CUCOULVWlilHARE
H'ilUrl tact BUll MAM

COLOR by Df. 1UXE

CINEMASCOPE

CLEAMLlLlS
U6W.Miiwsil'

235-43- 1

J

* lf-- 3

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Tuesday, Feb. 8,

A MM

$9M

MANY OF THE BOOKS LISTED BELOW ARE IN SHORT SUPPLY
SIMPLY CLIP COUPON BELOW, ENCLOSING PAYMENT
HISTORY

tiP,?70"Ui
f5j:.BU?rn,1 Tyl0'.

Inn

m!i.

d

times.

t';

TM1
B. Hale and Peter- -

,rom

!l

to

KInetoscopet

$6.00.

BI,N0

OF

2 90

iar,?:.
y H,lel
Barnes. Jean.
p?.Y,1c.'.nd. ,ntrofor understanding Existentialism and Its impor-,-omovements
our 'tn ldlng700 pp.
time. Over philosophical
AND

NOTHINGNESS.

-

n

Orlg.

$10.00.

2.921

Only

JJiJM..REAJ,V.f A,M1R'CA. Text and pictures
the artistic Impulse, the
secreat heart Identify
of creativity In the arts of
AmerlcarBY NINE AUTHORS: John F. Kennedy, Elsenhower, Truman, James Baldwin,
ul? KFrnberger, John Clardt, Robert Frost,
Doren and Joseph Wood Krutch.
Mo
-photos; Syxliy".
1 .WW
Orig. $5.95. Only

v'n

7757.

NEW YORK: TRUE NORTH.

Gil-

By
bert Mlllsteln' and Sam Falk. A handsome
book In both words nd photos about "the
true north of the wrold
the most
desirable and the most difficult of cities
In which to live" the entire complexity
and compass of N.Y.C. Is conveyed through
Interviews with professional men, laborers,
and such noted city dwellers as David
Margaret Mead, Barney Rosset of
Grove Press, and Ernest Nsgel and 194
extraordinary photos. 8Va"xll".
QO

...

7479.

A TRIBUTE

TO JOHN

F. KENNEDY.

on

$2.50.

I

Only

711$.
Clifton Fadlman's
20 distinguished,
yet

gf
.UU

PARTY OF TWENTY.

informal essays from
Holiday Magazine edited and with an introduction by Clifton Fadlman Includes outrageous, amusing, but always original works
by Barzun, Beebe, Joyce Cary, Romaln Gary,
William Goldlng, Robert Graves, Piitchett,
Thurber, and more. Orlg. $4.50.
f .UU
I on.
i
Only
770. Colin Wilson: RASPUTIN AND THE
FALL OF THE ROMANOVS. Brilliant and controversial study of Rasputin, the saint, drunkard, miracle worker, satyr, faith healer, and
political intriguer who ''hypnotized" the Romanov household, and brought about, through
m
his disastrous influence, their
bloody fall Orlg. $5.50. Only
792. Robert Payne: THE LIFE AND DEATH
OF LENIN. The definitive account of Lenin
and his era, the searching portrait of an
intensely human tyrant. A major biography;
childhood, the years of exile and plotting,
the 7 years of power and its decrees, laws
and executions, and his fall, murdered by his
successor, Joseph Stalin. 672 pp.;
O Oft
photos. Orlg. $8.50. Only

on

'

STEVENSON COMMEMORATIVE RECORD
R447. ADLAI E. STEVENSON: The Man, The
Candidate, The Statesman. Expressing his bril-

liant intellect, integrity and wit these excerpts include speeches from his two presidential campaigns, the UN Disarmament Address, Cuba Crisis remarks, eulogy of Winston
Churchill, the entire
League
Address expressing his personal philosophy of
Pres. Johnson's eulogy of Stevendemocracy,
I
son himself, and more. 12" long-plarecord available to Marboro customers through
a special quantity purchase. Available through
mall order only. Just published $5.79.
A.TrO
Special Discount Price
n

HI-F-

o on

GREAT AMERICAN ARTISTS SERIES

Each of these handsome books is an excellent
Introduction to American art with a text by
an authority on the artist over 80 Illustrar
tions in each volume, with 16 in
plus full chronology, bibliography and index.
7"xl0"; softbound.
CO or 2 f WW
for
Special Each
4$37.
WINSLOW HOMER. By Lloyd Goodrich.
THOMAS EAKINS. By Fairfield Porter.
4334.
4339. ALBERT RYDER. By Lloyd Goodrich.
4340.
WILLEM DE KOONING. By Thomas
Hess.
4341.
JACKSON ' POLLOCK. By Frank 0Hara.
4442.
STUART DAVIS. By E. C. Goossen.
full-colo-

ff

l

J. B. Priestley: MAN AND TIME. One
of England's greatest writer
presents a lavillustrated personal essay on the Riddle
ishly
of Time, and on the essential relationship
between Time, and the life of man with ex7755.

tended, fascinating discussion of every aspect
of Time from measurement device and physicists' time to the revelations of poets, philosophers, novelists and playwrights, and the
changing concepts of Time through history.
311 lllus., 53 In color; 8V4"xll".
.

$14.95.

.;......

c ne

Only
OF ENGLISH
SOULE'S DICTIONARY
7872.
SYNONYMS. Revised and Enlarged Edition.
s
book
Ed. by A. D. Sheffield. This
Is unsurpassed in completeness, simplicity of
Orlg.

arrangement and in the rapidity with which
the right word can be found. 600 pp.
Orlg. S6.00. New complete edition. .. ,
WISDOM OF GIBBAN: Apherlims and
7631.
Maxims. Ed. by Joseph Scheban. Brilliant compendium of Gibran aphorisms and maxims, each
a concise, tightly packed jewel of living wisdom,
startling in their insight, tenderness, and1 sense
AA
of almost mystic unity.
1
vv
Only
Orlf . $3.75.
78i6. ROBERT E. LEE: The Man and Soldier,
By Philip Van Doren
A Picture Biography.
and 80,000 words of
Stern, 350 illustrations achievements of his text,
to the
later
from childhood
O QO
years. HW'xlHV. Orlf. $.5.
edition
New complete

on

,B

SOULE'S DICTIONARY OF ENGLISH
SYNONYMS. Revised and enlarged edition; Ed.
long-famobook is
by a. D. Sheffield. This
completeness, simplicity of arunsurpassed in in the
with which the
rapidity
rangement and be
found. 600 pp.
right word can
Qfl

7818.

Orlf.

$6.00.

Ntw complete edition

2

'6373. Patrick Dennis: GENIUS. The author of
"Auntie Mame" has written another hilarious
book this time set in Mexico City.
s wv
Only
Orlf. $4W.

i

hand-tippe- d

IH.V5

Orlg. $25.00. Only.."....
4441.
THE LETTERS OF F. SCOTT FITZGERALD. Ed., with Intro, and notes by Andrew
Tumbull. Extraordinary Insights Into Fitzgerald's tortured private life from his rise to
fame In the 20's to. his Hollywood crackup in
the late 30's letters t his wife Zelda and
his daughter, to Hemingway, Edmund Wilson,
Maxwell Perkins, and many others an inval-

uable portrait of the man and the age he
came to symbolize. 595 pp.;
0
C.VII
photos. Orig. $10.00. Only
5523.
EGYPTIAN
MYTHOLOGY. Text trans,
from Mythologle Generate Lerousse. Sumptuously illustrated volume bringing to life the
myths and legends of ancient Egypt Bast, the
beautiful
the mystical union of
the high gods, Horus, Osiris and Isis; the great
Ptah, creator of the universe; Thoth, scribe
of the Underworld; Hathor, goddress of love
and mother of all the complete story of the
Great Ones who ruled all Egyptian life for
thousands of years. lllus., 25 In full color.
izo gravure; ay xii".
Special import

on

Jessica Mitford: THE AMERICAN
WAY OF DEATH. The explosive best sellharding expose of America's hush-hus-

Ed. by Pierre Salinger and Sander Vanocur;
fwd by Theodore Sorensen; Dedication by
Pres. Lyndon B. JoTtnson. The first published
collection of tributes to the memory of the
late President tributes by, among others: Joseph Alsop. John Masefleld, Norman Cousins,
Romulo Betancourt, Albert Schweitzer, James
Reston, Richard Rovere, and E. B.
from
the mass media and from lettersWhite,
written to
the family. 17 lllus. including the famous
m
Mauldln cartoon of Lincoln crying;
sllpcased. Orlg. $5.00. Only
7W1.
NEW YORK, N. Y. By F. W. McDarrah.
An excellent photographic tour of Manhattan
Island the drama of N. Y. City with 300
photos the views, architecture, life ef its peom
ple. Softbound.
Orlg.

Text by D. Valller.
With 210 lllus., 29
In
full color. An extraordinary volumesumptuous
based on
documents and insights by contemporaries of
the great "primitive" one of the exceptional
mm
personalities in French painting.

7809.

o
JL.TfO

Only

HENRI ROUSSEAU.

2.98

Suss-kin-

Orig. $7.95.

792S.

uncommon masterpiece of delicacy, discretion
and refinement (with hilarious stories) The
Arabian Manual of Love, fully the equal to
the Hindu Kama Sutra, recounting all the
love practices of 16th century Arabia In the
m
classic Sir Richard Burton transla- UU
tlon. Hardbound. Special
1727. WORD ORIGINS: The Romance of Language. By Cecil Hunt. From Classical Myththis comology to contemporary
prehensive absorbing and instructive book cov- r
ers the centuries; it will fascinate every
and prove an Indispensable reference
m
for all who write.

ff

Orig.

$4.95.

UU

Only

GET THE MARBORO HABIT. HUNDREDS
OF ADDITIONAL SPECIALS EVERY
WEEK. BEST SELECTION OF $1.00 ART
PRINTS. COME SEE US SOON!
ROGET'S THESAURUS
of Words and
Phrases. Authorized, revised edition of the
book for ever) one who wants
indispensable
to find the right word at the right time.
e
m
hardbound edition.
.TTO
.'
Special
7447.
TREASURY OF WORLD SCIENCE. Ed.
by Dagobert Runes, Intro, by Wernher von
Braun. A philosophically oriented anthology
of fundamental scientific writings from Archimedes to Einstein, from Raman to Pavlov,
with emphasis on pioneers in every area of
science 146 articles and essays by such greats
as Ampere, Dohr, Tycho Brahe, Fourier, Hal-leLinnaeus, Planck, Roentgen, Vaselius, and
"V
more. 99 pages, illus.
4447.

on

on

......

Orig. $15.00 Only

Susan Perl: THE SEX LIFE OF THE
AMERICAN FEMALE. America's most famous
lady cartoonist, in her famous stiletto-and-instyle. REVEALS ALL about the fantastic sexual 'cycle, sexual antics and education and
OBSESSION with sex that Is part of every
American female from birth to death,
55 cartoons. Orig. $2.00. Only
7411.

k

cq.

4740.

GREAT

PALACES

'

OF

EUROPE.

Intro, by Sacheverell Sitwell. A scintillating survey of the royal palaces of Europe,
written by experts in architecture, decoration and furnishing Windsor, Versailles,
Caserta, Huls ten Bosch, Schonbrunn, the
Escoriai and Alhambra, Hamlet's Kronborg
30 palaces all told, described with all
their romantic past, each in perfect condition and fully furnished. 465 illus., 53
in full color; 10"xl2".
Orig. $22.95. Only

o ne
Tr.TrJ

on

ert Graves. The only complete
encyclopedia of world mythology from p
Greece,
Egypt and
through Celtic, Teutonic, Chinese and Japanese myths, to the myths of Oceania and
Black Africa over 70,000 hardcover copies
sold at 817.50 each. 868 illus. of art around
the world, 500 pp.; tVtxllV", softbound,
sewn tor lasting use.
Special Import
one-volu-

.4.95

THE GREAT AGES OF ARCHITECTURE: From Ancient Greece to the Present
Day. By Bodo Cichy. Gloriously illustrated,

473.

authoritatively written survey of the finest
examples of great architecture from the
Parthenon of Classic Athens through the
ages of Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic,
Renaissance, Baroque and Rococo, to the
Buckminster Fuller. 729 illus., 65 in full
color; 440 pages,
Orig.

$25.00.

fr
UU

Walter Kerr: THE DECLINE OF PLEAS-URTrenchant, telling analysis of contemporary unhapplness presents why the modern
woman is more enervated than her unmech-anizegrandmother an invitation to once
more enjoy the pleasures of life and art, writm
ten In way that makes these pleas- WW
ures palpable. Orig. $5.00. Only
7837.

d

TREASURY

OF PHILOSOPHY.

By D. D.

Runes. Over 1,300 .pages covering the whole
span of recorded philosophical thought and
writing. Each selection begins with a biographical sketch of the philosopher. Nearly 400
great thinkers, both Oriental and Western,
0 Oft
many not accessible in any other
collection. Orig. $10.00. Only

4989.

Catholic-Naz- i
Dilemma: THE DEPUTY.
Rolf Hocbhuth. The magnificent drama
the
Europe and Broadway
drama accusing Pope Plus Xfl of abject cowardice when he was faced with the choice of
whether or not to protest the Nazi 6.000,000-deaJewish VPinal Solution"-rcomple- te.
uncut version of which theatre audiences have
seen but a fraction; fwd. by Albert
m
WU
Schweitzer. Only $5.95. Only
5994.
Jules Feiffer: HOLD MEI Here Is an
eyeful or delightful Irony, a collection or
s
Feirrer's best
rrom the
mcMlorn "Dorian Gray" to the political philosophy or "The Radical Middle."
Koribound. Orlg. $1.95. Only
3VC
7394.
The Mademoiselle: CAREER
GIRLS
GUIDE TO NEW YORK. By Faye Hammel. under sponsorship or Mademoiselle, invaluable
reference Kuidc for NYC newcomers
that anyone can have a fine time proving
on the
Drsl-jo- b
paycheck-everythi- ng
from where to
rind low priced, comfortable apartments to
bargain clothes, placement agencies,
UU
furniture shops, etc. Orlg. .
Only..

By

to 1940. Honor roll of 47 distinguished
stories by the decade's most accomplished
and adventurous writers stories by Bellow. Cheever, Nadlne, Gordimer, Mary McCarthy,. Frank. O'Connor, Nabokov Salinger,
Updike. Eudora Welty, Tennessee Williams,
Angus Wilson, 36 more a wealth 01 mem
orable fiction. 780 pp.
1950

Orlg.

$7.50.

that stormed

d

.

fg

2.98

Only

Frank Lloyd Wright: ARCHITECTURE,
Man In Possession Of His Earth. A rare objoct
lesson In design by the master architect himself a history of architectural materials with
a Wright design or construction as the contemporary culmination of each material stone,
brick, wood, glass, steel and concrete with
a biography by Iovanna Lloyd. Wright. Over
225 illus. in color and monochrome.
7738.

9V4"xl2V4w.

cartoon-caricature-

go

ne
t.VJ

a

Only.
7742.' PICASSO AT WORK: Ah Intimate
Study by Edward Qulnn. Text by Roland Penrose. Exceedingly handsome, brilliant
during moments of
photo study of Picasso 282
creation and relaxation
photos, 52 in full
color, of Picasso, his paintings, studio, friends
and family revealing with unique insight the
process and Impulse of creation, against the
background of Picasso's personal and dally
life. Handsomely bound;
O OC
Tr.Va
10Vwxl3V4''. Orig. $25.00. Only
7855.
An Illustrated History of Christianity:
THE MARCH OF THE CROSS. By L. W: Cowiu.
The magnificent story of Christianity and , Its
vast panorama from St. Paul to Rcinhold
and Billy Graham with a wealth or .'10.1
maps, art masterpieces, architectural splendors and other extraordinary
illustrations,
many in rich full color.
Jl OK.
Orig.

$10.00.

Photo-graph-

ff

1554. BEST PHOTOS
Ky II. I). Milhollcn

'

ff

4077.

RED

OSCAR

WILDE.

A

LETTER

SHAKESPEARE

Shakespeare's complete dramatic and poetic
works. FOR THK FIRST TIMK the
Shakespeare with every famous and
Important passage or quotation printed In
red letters for quick and easy
reference I'LUS a comprehensive, topical concordance to all read letter passages the perfect reference . work Tor every Shakespeare
reader and lover, every student and teacher,
douevery speaker. 1.344 puces in
ble column formal.
1 OO

THE BERENSON COLLECTION. Preface
by N. Mariano. Intro, and notes by F. Russoli.
Published by Arti Grafiche Ricordi under the
auspices of UNESCO and Harvard University
105 Color Plates reproducing all the masterpieces
deIn Berenson's famous Florentine collection
8033.

easy-lo-rea- d

Orl.

$7.95.

O.VO

Only

Norherl Lynlon. A fine repAO
resentation of Paul Klee's vast talent
paintings in full color plus 12 drawings and
sketches all uivintf Tree access to that strange
other world from which Klee drew his vivid
lancing: colors and almost falrylale-likImuKOMt- with an introduction and appreciative
.syKXmcnl or Klee's life and work. 62 lllus.,
m
50 1n full color; O'xlOtt".
I QO
Special import
KLEE.

9931.

luxe cloth binding,