xt73bk16n09t https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt73bk16n09t/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590210  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 10, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, February 10, 1959 1959 2013 true xt73bk16n09t section xt73bk16n09t Nina Warren Named Mardi Gras Queen
Nina Warren, PI Kappa Alpha
repiesentative. was named queen
of the Mardi Gras Saturday night.
It was the 13th annual Mardi Gras
dance sponsoicd by the Newman

Selected each year by the student canopy covered throne at
the
body as the most popular professor end of the ballroom, and the tables
s.
on campus, the "Rex" escorts and held streamers, balloons and
noise-maker-

crowns the quern.
This year's "Rex"
kissed the
queen instead,
however, as her
crown had been damaged.
won the sorority
The
division of the
costume contest
with a "Happy Chandler" theme.
Delta Tau Delta won In the fraternity division with a prehistoric
man.
The
decorations theme was
"Toyland," using paper mache rock
candy mountains and two large
jacks in the box. There was a large

Club.

The

sophomore from
chosen from five
finalists. The members of her
court wrie: Sue Buchanan, representing Tri Delt; Doris Leonard,
Alpha Delta Pi; Linda Nalbach.
Sterna Alpha Epsilon and Peggy
OlmsU-adPhi Sigma Kappa.
Jim Grant, Newman Club president, crowned Dr. Roy Moreland,
law profsscr, "Rex" of the dance.
Danville-wa-

s

Tri-Dcl- ts

.

is. is
i

i

The annual Mardi Gras festivities In New Orleans, La. will close
today with the twov fancy-dres- s
balls in the Muncipal Auditorium.
Masks, costumes, parades, elaborate floats, flags and noisemakers
highlight the Mardi Gras which
ends on Shrove Tuesday. It Is
celebrated in Catholic communities,
but in the U. S. is most widely
known In New Orleans.

ttt tvtjto

1A

46'

M

.1

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY

Vol. L

LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, EEli.

10, 1939

No. Gl

Forces
Unite For Campaign

Combs-Wya- tt

f

X

I

-

ganization Thursday night.
Action came after an hour-lon- g
meeting between the two groups.
The Wyatt supporters, all members of the
Youhg
Kcntuckians for Wyatt organization a part of the Louisville attorney's old
forces joined the group previously
organized to support Bert T. Combs
of Frestonsburg for governor.
The Thursday meeting elected
Bill Kinkead of the Combs group
and Al Schickinger of the Wyatt
camp
of the newly
merged committee.
Wyatt, a candidate for governor
until Jan. 21, withdrew from the
race then and joined forces with
Combs as a candidate for lieutenant governor.
In Sunday's Courier-Journa- l,
Schickinger urged in a letter that
other Wyatt groups in Kentucky
colleges join the united effort to
elect the Combs-Wya- tt
ticket.
Along with Kinkead of Lexington and Schickinger of Louisville
as
Jim Daniel of
Kuttawa is serving as secretary for
the committee. Approval of the
arrangement was anby Combs headquarters
nounced
in Louisville over the weekend.
Other members of the new campaign committee are Whayne
Priest, Hartford; Bob Chambliss,
Hardinsburg; Brad Clark, Covington; Lowell Hughes, Prestonsburg;
Tom King, Belfry; Margaret May,
Frankfort.
Ronnie Goebel, Frestonsburg;
Pete Ferlman, South Ft. Mitchell;
Willis Haws, Warfield; Jean I
Owensboro; Chappell Wilson, Cadiz; Lessley Decker, Owensboro; Ellen Van Arsdale, Louisville; John Anderson, Paint Lick;
and Kate Kirwin, Louisville.
Secretary Jim Daniel said the
organization will be given no official title. It will maintain an office in the Bank of Commerce
Building in downtown Lexington,
he added.
Wyatt-for-Govern-

or

en

Pair Honored

Bill Ramsey and Donna Reed were named as January's outstanding man and woman by the Student Union Board. Ramsey is active
in the BSU and Miss Reed was station manager. of WBKY and
now has a program on WKYT television in Lexington.

Reed And Ramsey
Receive SUB Honor
A

student-facult- y

committee

chooses the recipients of this award
from recemmendations made by
heads cf University departments
and organizations. Selections are
based cn qualities of leadership,
.scholarship and, usually, some accomplishment during the month.
Miss Reed, a junior radio arts
major frcm Carrollton, was cited
for her outstanding work as student manager of WBKY, University radio Citation.
Her recommendation said

Fats Domino
Concert Tickets
Ticket (sales for the Feb.

Fats Domino concert In the

20
Coli-

seum have been announced by
Charlie Cassis, Student Union
Board.
They will be sold in the SUB
p.m. tomorrow and
from
Friday. Net week they will be
sold from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Monday
through Friday and
from 5 p. in. Wednesday and
Thursday.
1- -3

3--

WBKY'S staff had been increased
and its programming considerably
bettered during her managership.
She gave up her position at the
end of last semester.
Besides work on the WBKY
staff and as station manager, Miss
Reed is secretary of Cub Club and
a member of Theta Sigma Phi,
women's journalism honorary. She
also has done continuity for a
downtown radio station and has a
nightly television program on
Channel 27. Her overall standing
is 2.5.

Ramsey is from Somerset and Is
a senior majoring in music. He was
named for his work in conducting
the Baptist Student Union's
choir on its recent concert
tour. The choir sang in Kentucky,
Georgia and Florida. Its concerts
were termed "highly successful."
The choir conductor is also assistant conductor and soloist with
the University Chorus. He sang the
role of Figaro in the recent University production of "The Marriage of Figaro."
Ramsey is a member of Phi Mu
Alpha Sinfonia and Choristers and
is minister cf music at the Versailles Baptist Church. He plans
yraduate work in music next year
at Union Theological Seminary j.i
New York. He made a 4.0 standing
last semester.
47-voi-

1

9

Forces of Bert T. Combs and
Wilson W. Wyatt at UK officially
united into a single campaign or-

now-defun- ct

William Ramsey III and Donna
Reed have been named the University's "Man and Woman of the
Month" fcr January by the Student Unicn Board.

v

ce

PHYSICS CLUB
Dr. Lee W. Gildart of the Physics Department will give a talk
on "Water, Ice, Snow flakes" at
the Pence Physics Club meeting
at seven tonight.

0"

I

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"2

.A

A7m Warren, Mardi Gras Queen

Editor Ralph McGill
Speaks Here Tonight
By MEREDA DAVIS

Editor of the Atlanta Constitu-- .
tion, Ralph McGill, will give the
Blazer Lecture at 8 tonight in the
Education Auditorium.
Outspoken in his views toward
obedience of the law in integration
problems, he will discuss "To Be
Young and a Southerner."
The
editor has written
stories of important news events. While serving as
sports editor, he was on vacation
in Cuba when a revolution broke
out; he covered the story. McGill
was in Austria in 1939 when Hitler
invaded the country and gave
reports.
McGill has been editor of the
Constitution since 1942. He joined
the staff as sports editor in 1931.
Not being satisfied to do the
sheer mechanical duties of editing
the paper, he often covers such
stories as fires, national conven
on-the-s-

ene

tions and election campaigns, vote
frauds and international news
stories.
His editorial stands have influenced public opinion in giving
equal rights to whites and Negroes.
In 1947 Atlanta was planning another saddle horse ring for the
whites, but McGill blasted the
idea in an editorial calling it
Four new recreation
areas for Negroes have been built
in the capital city of Georgia since
that time.
A former student at Vanderbilt
University, he also has an honorary
Doctor of Laws degree from Miami
University. "
"un-America- n."

McGill writes a column in the
Constitution which appears daily
on page one, column one. It ranges
from politics to simple philosophies
on the merits of
left-hand-

ed

people.

Shula Named To UK
Grid Coaching Staff
UK Head Football Coach Blan-to- n
Collier announced yesterday
that Don Shula, backfield coach
at the University of Virginia last
season, has been hired as a new

grid assistant.
He will take over his duties immediately.
'
Coach Collier said that Shula is
highly thought of in both college
and pro circles.
"He is one of the nation's outstanding young coaches," Collier
stated.
National
Shula was a seven-yea- r
veteran before
Football League
turning to collegiate coaching last
season. The
native of
Painesville, Ohio got his start in
the big time with Cleveland
Browns in 1951, where he played
for two years. Coach Collier served
as Brown backfield coach at that
time.
Following his two-yestint with
ar

the Browns, the speedy halfback
was with the Baltimore Colts for
four years and terminated his professional football career with a
year's play with the Washington
Redskins in 1957.
Turning his athletic attention
solely to football, Shula played at
John Carroll University in Cleveio
land for three years, winning
honors in 1950. He was the
standout performer in one of the
country's top upset games of tha
year as little John Carroll defeated
Syracuse,
All-Oh-

21-L- S.

PRYOR

PRE-ME-

D

d
Society
The Pryor
will meet tonight at 7:30 p. m.
in Room 313 of the Funkhouer
Building. Dr. Richard GrUe, surPre-Me-

geon, will speak.

* KENTIT.KV KtRNLI.. Tiusd.i). IV1. Il. 1!T9

li-- TIIE

23 Pakistani Officials
To Study Kentucky Town

LITTLE MAN ONXAMPUS

7

S

fe:

Twenty-thre- e
community development officials from Pakistan
will sprnd a week durinz
in the London area to study Kentucky community life as a part of
a special UK seminar.
The officials will visit businesses,
civic clubs, churches, farms, farm
agricultural offices,
and other spots to get a close-u- p
view of activities that may help
them in carrying out Pakistan's
Village Agricultural and Industrial
Development AID program.
They will slay In private home
M-irc-

Bl

'HJ
HlV
l

f

(

OWtXiWGV

i?t

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-- TKlS

WITM HIMSELF

TO

ECCENTRIC.

lTTr

IMS OUT IN TOT??

T

Astronomy Croup
Meets Tomorrow

pi;i:-Mi:-

Alpha Fpsilon. national
d
honorary. U organizing on
(he campus.
d
student
with at least a 3.0 orr-at- l
academic standing may attend a
meeting at 7:30 p. m. Thursday
evening In Room 124. Funkhouser
pre-me-

Pre-me-

during their stay in the community.

The special seminnr is under the
direction of Dr. Willis A. Sutton
Jr.. associate professor of sociology.
Clark Wilson, retired supervisor in
extension work, will be administra-

Building.

New York
City's waterfront
fire guards load old wooden pir; i
Members of the group underwent and pilings on barges atop
an
k
a
orientation in Wash- undercovering of sand, tow the n
ington before leaving for Lexing- out to sea and burn them :r:
ton. They will spend approximately waste. Then they dUriTp--, the ashfi
J
12 weeks in the
UK course and overboard.
then break up for study in individual specialty areas throughout the
United States.
The jtroup will be formally wel(NtiiiHi Um 1 ?M
comed to Lexington and I'K by
NOW SHOWING!
city and University officials in a
y
Spencer
Hunter
ceremony at ? p. m. in Lafferty
'THE LONE RANGER
by
Hall,

tive officer.
two-wee-

Tracy-Jeffre-

a tea to be given
followed
Gras Agronomical
by President and .Mrs. Frank fi.
Society ;md its junior section v.:l
meet tomorrow at 8 p. m. in Huom Dickey at Maxwell Place.

The

honorary

i)

n-.i-

"THE LAST HURRAH"
Clayton Moore

McVey Hall.
Featured will be a film. "Our Mr.

111.

VLRon

iJf

W JfciY
ftp

( ARE DIFFERENT

W

other ftopir

I

Sun." produced by BH1 Laboratories. The
film concerns
the
medium-size- d
star, said to be the
renter and probable parent of our
family of planets.
Mr- -.
Joseph Haycien. socie.y
spokesman, said the meeting is
open to the public. Se particularly
invited astronomy students to attend.

"vsf

New Placement Guide
Available To UK Women
The "World-Wid- e
Summer
Placement Directory" in now in
the dean of women's office and
available to women students to be
used only in the office.
Summer job listings include
camps, national and state parks,
resorts, travel tour agencies, summer theaters, gift shops and in

Miss Margaret Devine of the
Placement Service in the dean of
women's office said she has applicants who are experienced in
typing, shonhano. salesmanship,
filing, childcare. food handling and
other types of work.

Patriotic Too

Canine Comfort

ROANOKE. Va.. AP
The
Roanoke postoffice reports a 20
per cent drop in accidents involving postal trucks since the
olive drab ' paint of the vehicles
was changed to red. white and

COLUMBIA, S. C. TAP)
It's
from a dog's life for the
canines belonging to Mr. and Mrs.
Walter T. Carll.

i

0)

III INGTON

dustry.

The kennels 'in which they raise

short-haire- d
pointers
German
have
radiant
heat for winter, an a sound
system through which music is
piped.

Deadline

1
.J

GROUND.

AtEC

CUISWESS-JAC-

wr

HOLDEM
K

RAVYXIXS 5

mi

r

N.

h

ELECTRIC
INSIDE
It's all about
'IN-CA-

HEATERS
THEATORIUM
the guy who

R'

andor

couldn't make the gat
U

L

B

ttnoj:aphic work.

Dry Cleaning

Kim Novak

J;mmy Stewart-J- ack
Lemmon Ernie Kovacs

"LIFE BEGINS AT 17"
Etra!
.

549

"Mr. Magoo Takes a
Cruise"

RENTAL SERVICE
For ALL Occasions

S. UPPER
TEL.
Dave Chadwick Campus Representative
4-65-

cigarette outsells every

t

king-siz-

easygoing mildness. The

f

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best tobacco makes the best
smoke.
Climb above fads

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Winner To Be Announced Each Tuesday

every regular.

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The Camel blend of costly
tobaccos has never been
equalled for rich flavor and

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Ticker Now

every filter, every

other

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SO. LIME

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other cigarette today. For
the 10th straight year, this

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Get Your Free Chance for a $7 Meal

Cleaning

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MEN'S
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More men in high places

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This Week's Lucky Chance

archie's

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2nd Feature
It's all about the First Surge
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the
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Test Center, the Naval Ordnance
Missile Test Facility and private
industry contractors at this proving ground are women. Members
of the fairer sex hold clown jobs
ranging from technical and
positions in the guided
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WILLIAM

Veter-

LAUNDRY

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CENTRAL CITY. Ky. fAP A
radio station received a postal
card from a jail inmate asking
records be
that a number of
played "before Tuesday."
One of the prisoners was to be
released on that day
and he had
the only radio.

NOW. SHOWING

O

AP

"BELL, BOOK AND

NOW!

Our Time

EL PASO. Tex.

ans of the famed First Cavalry
Division have selected a mascot.
He is
Big Red. a
cavalry mount retired
by the
Army when the division was dismounted in 1943.

far

MIMTUCHT

8IISAI1 Lfjvaenw

Cavalrv Mascot

f

t

-

There goes

our last pack of Camels!'

GRILL
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i;

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...

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* THE KEMICKV KERNE

iyi.

I., Tihm1.iv,

io,

3

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Heaves To Study AVir LXA Heads
r
if
English In Iiritain rsio it hi si. (i lirai
i
WW

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!

During; his second scmr.sler'.s
leave of absence Dr. Jack Ilecves
will study the local elections ihd
political parties of England.
Dr. Reeves and family left by
boat during exam week. His .laughter at Vassar will Join him later.

.w

1

ft!

i

1

J,.

'

':

--i.

:

i

New officers of Lambda Chi
Alpha were elected on Wednesday,
Feb. 4 and will be Installed to-

morrow.
The new officers are: Bob Barrett, president; Sammy Guy, vice
president; Ron Schmidt, secretary;
Wilby Pratt, treasurer; and Jon
After studying English parties Zachem, social chairman.
and elections, Reeves will make a
The new officers will serve
brief trip to the Continent.
through the spring semester.
Reeves plans to return to UK
by the summer session in June.
Fifteen Soviet students now arc
Reeves was granted a sabbatical studying in five American universities. There is one girl student,
for the trip.
at the University of California and
American Samoa
consists of her name is Aleksandra Va.ily-ev- na
six islands southwest of Hawaii.
Zhuravchenkova.

jTAYLOft TIKE CO.

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Kciituvkians Meet R vbvls With
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unci I'K student led Simmons, in white s'liit .it kit, ;iml sophomore Hob Iahc. while
'ill .u lihi. pox.l uiili CuImh uhcls dining t!Kir hciucen scintstcrs lip to Hav;in.i.
I. Nnc's .u fount ol the nip was in the 1 liil.iy, I'eb. (J Kernel.

400

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2-71-

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24-HOU-

LEXINGTON
AAA ROAD SERVICE

R

LK To Open
A Seminai
On Mid-Easl

community seminar

Mx-p.i- rt

h( Middle East will be opened
"

;

K

Fib.

15.

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

participants with aspects
me Middle East situation from
U. S. standpoint, is open to the
l',ejcral public without charge. All
MSMons will be held on Sunday
jit its

ci" i
1

1

1

v

rnoons.

11

Dr. Leon Zolondek, instructor in
rritics at UK and director of the
m mioar, said members of the fae-u'- ti
ol the University, Transyl
vania Collete, Collere of the Bible,!
in the community will
.
t'tnilDct the meetings.
Dr. Joseph R. Schwendeman,
head of the UK Geography Depart- merit, will open the series with a
bsxussion of "The Geographical
and Political Configuration of the
M'ddle East." The program is
Mhtduled for 2 p.m. in the Music
Rocn of the SUB.
m

s

ami-other-

f

PT-'J-f

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Unbelievable

FEB.

J

60

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* Ralph McGill:

A Great Southerner
Tonight's IMacr lecturer is a distinguished Southerner, editor of one
of the Sou th's most eminent newspapers and a man whose unimj)ca( liable integrity and moderate ideas
have made his name synonomous with
the New South.
Ralph McGill and his newspaper,
the Atlanta Constitution, have become
a Southern institution. Since taking
over the Constitution in 1913, he has
been praised and excoriated, damned
and eulogied, scoffed at and scorned
but never silenced. His stand on
integration in Georgia has prompted
from .Time magazine a comment
which perhaps describes his entire
editorial career:

He lias steered an enlightened, but
discreet course.
No
editor, McGill often
.
He has
covers news events
also had his share of repot torial luck.
Once, while he was the Constitution's
sports editor, he was vacationing in
Cuba when a revolution broke out.
He covered it. He was in Austria
in 19.19 when Hitler invaded the
country. He presented an
ivory-towe-

r

first-hand-

on-thc-scc-

report.
His topic tonight will be "To Be
Young and a Southerner," a description that fits most of us at the University. The topic is jiertinent. The
speaker is eminently qualified to discuss it. We hope the auditorium is
filled.

End Of The Rumors
The flurry of rumors and simulations concerning the return of Dean

v

tional reputation in his field. Men of
Dean Welch's capabilities are hard to
come by, and the University is fortunate that he has decided to return here
and resume his deanship.
On the other hand, his announcement of his decision to return has a
rather anticlimactic ring, coming on
the heels of so much official University hedging, excuse-makinand indefinite announcements. In fact, there
was such a haze around the dean's
exact status up until recently and
such an apparent inability on the part
of the University to say anything definitethat it appeared the tail just
might have been wagging the dog.

Frank J. Welch to his College of
Agriculture jxst ' here was finally
ended last week with his resignation
as a director of the Tennessee Valley
Authority.
The dean has been on leave of
absence from the University for more
than a year, during which time he
has been the center of interest in a
sort of "he will he won't" game; one
report said he would return to UK,
another that he would try for a nine-yea- r
appointment with TVA, yet another that he would be given an
indefinite leave of absence from the

That Dean Welch was appointed
to his TVA directorship by President
Eisenhower attests- to his abilities as

,

-

an administrator.

He already had
to be a competent
authority, with a na

proved himself

V.W

V. .V

-

.

,

The collections at the University's
new Museum on Kentucky Life at
Waveland were considerably enhanced between semesters when Mrs.
Pansy M. Grant donated, a rare collection of 33 antique carriages and
sleighs varaetl at '$150,000.
Through Mrs. Grant's generosity,
the museum has acquired an historic
series of vehicles used in our grandfathers' time everything from a
stagecoach to sleighs for winter travel.
To buy such a collection if indeed
one were to be found for sale-wo- uld
have been beyond the mu-

Call 51331
Thesis Tern Paper-- )
Carbon copys, neat
Job guarantead(

Reprinted From The Furmin HOU.NET

'Whattaya Mean, Two Demerits For No Haircut?

The Readers5 Forum
Radio And Business

Radio And Sick Editors
To The Editor:

To The Editor:

was very amused when I read your
tditoral (sic!) (Thursday) morning!
It is line for you to criticize the

I'd like to compliment the Kernel
on the splendid editorial of (last)
Little Lle."
Thursday, "Noise-a- nd
Like a good many other Lexington

1

when you go and pick on the Lexington radio stations; you have gone
to (sic!) far.

bleton Tapp of the Department of
History. He has asked that anyone
having farming implements or other
y
antiques contact him
if they would like to donate themto
the University's collection. All items
are being catalogued and placed on
display in the Waveland mansion
early-Kentuck-

itself.

It is about time you people realized
that you don't run the UK campus, or
Lexington. It makes me laugh when
1 read that
the Lexington radio stations should change just because a
group ol sick editors want to hear
some sort ol different music.

d.

ll

So put down you (sic!) pen and run

Oiher Editors Speak

4Two Futures9 Apiece

g

--

communications, conservation,
and various types of
services as well as in actual farming
and teaching.
The brochure graphically underlines that farmers are no longer mere
tillers of the soil. Technology has
transformed production of food and
liber into a complex business and has
opened up many new
careers requiring specialized, educated skills.
Will 8,000 good jobs go begging
tin's year or will youth accept the
challenge? The Christian Science
tion,

out and buy all the classical music
you can find. It will at least be doing
something uselull (sic!), which is more
you (sic!) are doing now!
Ft I.ION

farm-relate- d

farm-relate- d

Monitor.

firms which sponsored
programs on a five day week b:nis, these
t
programs have all but diien
us off the air.
May I call your attention, sir, to
the fac t that we are co snsoi ing
a Sunday alternoon classk.il music
program ovei WllLG. We have had
an excellent listener resjtonsc horn
these programs. Our radio audicne e
recently requested the sponsors to
the number of commercials on
the programs and the sponsors have
obliged. I beliee this is prool tli.it
all of our citizens do not have the
te

oot-sui-

ic-du-

If you don't want to hear what
the people of Lexington like, my
advice to you is to go to Upper
Slobovia or some other place wheie
you can write your paper to penguins that can't read. Your arguement
(sic!) that the 1. J.'s play only
is not only wrong but stupid.
Anyone who reads the paper and
listens to the radio will tell you that
the I). J.'s play the top 50 records that
the people of Lexington buy. If you
want to hear classical music buy them,
put them in the juke box in the SUB,
if you buy enough they will be put
in the top 50 and thus be played.
rock-and-ro-

Dr. Tapp would welcome? any antiques that University students' families might wish to contribute to Wave-lanPerhaps your attic could yield
something which would shed a little
more light on bygone Kentucky life
if it were on display in the museum.
Why not ask your family next time
you write or go home?

seum's means.
The museum itself is progressing
under the watchful eye of Dr. Ham- -

"More than two futures" await
every agricultural science graduate
today, the Land Grant Colleges report in a new brochure, "I've Found
My Future in Agriculture." The fact
that only about 7,000 sucif graduates
are coming along each year, to fill
about 15,000 jobs, offers career-seekinyouth a new challenge.
In spite of farmers' steadily diminishing numbers in the United States,
around 40 per cent of all jobs are in
various phases of agriculture, the report states. More than 500 distinct
occupations can be' found in farm
research, industry, business, educa-- .

'"'

,V

ROTC and other campus allairs, but

NEED TYPING DONE?

A Generous Gift

'

w

(

.

g

University.

agricultural

V.-

..

(ill

Jol

S

low-grad-

ce

e,

teenage IQs that the radio
master minds would have us believe.
JOSEPH (.. GRAVrs
Vice Piesidcnt

Graves, Cox and Co.
(We appreciate Mr. Graves' enlightening comment from a businessman's standpoint. His f inn's success
with classical music over WULG illus-

trates a point that the other stations
(excluding the University's incomparable WRKY) are ignoring that
radio, like other media, has a responsibility to its public. The proportion
of morons and "zoot suiters" in Lexington is far less than the moronic
drivel and clamorous hog wash broadcast by'WLAP and WVLK would indicate. -- THE EDITOR).
--

The Kentucky Kernel
Eutrred

University of Kentucky

Tost Off ice tit Lraington. KntucVy its oetoitd tUs nuUir un.Ur Ifce Aa of March 3. 1879.
Fublmbrd four tunes a wei k during the rrgulur m txxil y ar rat-ruholidays ur1 eaamf.
SIX DOLLAHS A SCHOOL YEAH
.

Jim Hampton, Editor-in-ChiLahhy Van IIoom:, Chief Sports Editor
Chief News Editor
Uillie Rose Paxtov, Satiety Editor
Perry AsirLEY, Business Manager
Nohman McMuii in, Advertising Maiuintr
Cordon Baih, Staff Fhotografilier
ANK. Chapman. Cartoonist
ef

Bill Nijxibk,

TUESDAY'S NEWS STAFF
M tut da

Davis, Associate Editor

Dan Miu.orr, Editor

Sikwart lluxm,

Sports Editoi

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday , Feb.

Magazine
Help Lure
UK Males

WontGFl

for and about

Music, Soft Lights
And He Is Trapped

114-pro-

of

Tea Gowns Return

Ky TATTY SIMMS

Playboy

magazine seems to be
offering the male a
rhinoceros hunt and love along the
'
lower Zambezi.
Brigitte Bardot
)
:
V
i
i.
seems to be proof enough in a recent edition. Professors are even
borrowing the magazine from students and casting their eyes on the
article. At the same time the girls
are keeping up with the women's
magazines and articles that are
much more deadly.
What chance does Brigitte
have against a whole phalanx of
I
I
morally indignant clergymen, marI
'
J1
?:j
riage counselors, and psychiatrists
who dish out helpful hints on how
to keep your male at bay and yet
bring him to heel?
The men are reading their arI
i
,u L
M
ticles for relaxation and escape.
The women have something else 'in
1
mind.
The men brag about what they
read, and make comments. Do the
women? No, they Just sit, listen,
and keep their thoughts
and
angles to themselves.
Articles are continually found in
magazines on such topics: "Can
m nmintii iftnurfitl
This Marriage Be Saved?", "How
To Impress Your Dates," "How To AGE OF ELEGANCE . . . Tea MODERN STREAMLINER
Talk To Males."
gown in boulevard velvet, strictly Another way to look at home-slee- k
Really, men! Do you think you
party pants.
flattering.
have a chance? Your reading is so
tame, compared to what the opcostumes this winter. The feminine,
There's a new look in
posite sex has in mind.
flattering tea gown Is back with a bang, challenging the supremacy
You see males reading Ann
skinny pants for hostess wear. Women who are
of the
Landers, but do they take it as
tired of wearing pants are discovering anew the flattery and elegance of tea gowns, made in luxurous fabrics and frankly feminine.
stick. But our faces looked like
You'll be seeing them in lush velvets, brocades, satins and sheer
us."
wools, often lace trimmed and always beguiling. They make a
Many of those stars are still
pleasing change from the hostess pajamas or party pants, which
around, she points out because of
also are still with us.
that. Mary Pickford, Norma
Shearer, Gloria Swanson and
how weak are we?
Barbara LaMarr had an inde- seriously as the women? If they But, just nowadays equipped Most
with
finable something that was the could overhear a breakfast table females
"know-how- "
soto trap, entice,
the
individuality of their own person- conversation, in the dorm or
rority house, they would hear and subdue men have accomplishalities, not products of a paint box.
strategy from readThe air of mystery of silent someone say: "What does Landers ed this feat of
say today?" Then there is a big ing magazine and newspaper arscreen personalities added to the
ticles. And, strangely, this guidance
intrigue and kept them "alive" discussion.
Women may be the weaker sex. has been written by men.
longer. Says Miss Myers:
"Newspaper columnists didn't
exist, and the public knew very
little about the stars and their
home lives. They hid the fact that
they had children or anything that
would upset public illusion."
One reason why Garbo is news,
she says, is because she mainBag . .
All You Can
Into
tained that same kind of legend.
People will always be interested in
any scrap of news about Garbo, because they know so little about her,
0
believes Miss Myers. On the other
hand, modern stars bare thc!r
souls, so fade in public affection
This service is designed especially for
in a short time.
students. We furnish the bag to you
fly-tyi-

ny ROC.KR FOUTIN
"PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE, STOP IT!'' has been the ardent plea
i.l many an unspecting male, trapped in the web of soft music and
dim lights, spun by a determined coed between semesters.
The Innocent victim is lured under the pretense of a prearranged
meeting with the parents of his date only to discover that they were
unavoidably detained at the residence of a sick friend.
SCENE of the STRUGGLE: The panelled rec room of the coed's
home, complete with soft music, dim lights, stocked bar, and handy
couch, not to mention the inviting coed, knitted into her cashmere
sweater and slinky slacks.
TIME: A good three hours before the loving parents renew protection of their naive little darling.
ACTION: The gentleman is informed of the situation by a seemingly
embarrassed young lady and in