xt78930nvn38 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt78930nvn38/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650430  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, April 30, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, April 30, 1965 1965 2015 true xt78930nvn38 section xt78930nvn38 Inside Today's Kernel

Three students commute 170 miles

the University: Page

TIT" TTrl TJD TXHT

Gn

J. J JjlIj
University of Kentucky
APRIL

.vXVol. LVI, No. 117

-J

CLd

I

CO

LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY,

30, 1965

to,

Two.

100 percent of the nursing students
are preregistered tor fall: Page Three.

Philosophy professor reviews the Spring
Stylus: Page Three.

J
Sixteen Pages

Seven.

trated

Graphics '65 show chosen as the outstanding cultural contribution of the
Centennial Year: Page Four.

UK mokes eighth straight baseball win
in skirmish with Georgia: Poge Four-

7

Kernel Photo by John Fearing

Hail To The Prophet

Earlier this semester, law professor Roy Moreland told his students
that before the end of the year they would be kneeling in sawdust
begging for mercy. So, the students decided to oblige him and here
he sees his prophecy come true.

By KENNETH GREEN
Assistant Managing Editor
Student Congress Thursday
night voted to draft a policy
statement urging the University
to actively support a
direction in all student areas.
The measure, proposed by SC
President Steve Beshear, stated:
"The Student Congress at the
University of Kentucky strongly
urges and recommends that:
1. "The administration of the
University take steps to insure
that students are located in the
dormitories without regard to
race or color; and
2. "The administration
encourage all landlords renting to

University students to follow a
policy of

rent-ing- ."

Copies of the recommendation

will be sent to University President John W. Oswald, University
Vice President for Student Affairs Robert Johnson, and to Lexington Mayor Fred Fugazzi.

The discussion of the antidiscrimination statement came
on the heels of a special report
published in Thursday's Kernel
which investigated Negro housing at UK and reported that
much discrimination exists in the
University itself as well as in
town housing for Negro and foreign students.
SC

Representative

n

students."

Representative Michele Cleveland broadened the discussion by
The Centennial Convocation
at Covington was the second of suggesting that "theTown HousSpecial to the Kernel
Gilbert
COVINGTON
nine such convocations to be held ing Council should let Negroes
a Trustee, told a Cenat each community college in and foreign students know what
Kingsbury,
tennial Convocation at the NorthKentucky. The procession with housing is available to them."
ern Community College Thursfull academic garb was the first
Bright said that, although the
g
academic procession held at the University is "pursuing a policy
day that the University is
the possibility of "the
and this
college since its establishment in of
most sweeping change in 100
1949.
policy statement by itself might
years of service."
Following the convocation not do much good, the University
was a luncheon at which state Administration needs to know
Kingsbury, who is Executive a tranquilizer."
Director of the Kentucky Better
that the students and the student
"Why and How," Kingsbury and national newsmen were recRoads Council and was Vice said, are the questions we get ognized along with the commungovernment stand behind them."
from a liberal arts base program ity celebration.
SC president-elec- t
President of the Crosley BroadWinston
threw to the and they are the questions that
the luncheon Miller took the position that little
casting Corporation,
Concluding
University the question of wheth- lead to "doubt, knowledge, and President Oswald told the group could be done during the meeting
er it should restructure itself to an inquiring mind. It is routine that "Community colleges must and that the body "should wait
place emphasis on a liberal arts things that can lead us along be the leaders and servants of until next year to do anything."
curriculum during the first two pathways to knowledge. We need society." He said that the UniRepresentative Larry Kelley
broad horizons to understand the versity's goal should be to make backed him on this stand.
years of college work. .
"Shall the University insist commonplace."
the colleges as autonomous as
Instead, the congress passed
that entering students first parthe statement as a general stand,
Quoting the Bible, he conpossible while keeping the contake of a strong program of liberal cluded "Seek and ye shall find." tact with the University that and voted to empower the presideUK President John Oswald inarts or shall it permit students
to establish a civil
upholds the standards of the nt-elect
to immediately dig into the pro- troduced Kingsbury and in so do- whole University.
rights committee to study the
fessional skills and bypass all ing praised the Covington college
"After all is said, the test is problems "in conjunction with
those disciplines, studies and pro- as "one of our most outstandthe quality of the faculty and the the Campus Committee on HuContinued On Page 11
man Relations."
ing" (community colleges).
grams, wliich make for a full citizen, a responsible citizen?"
Speaking in the new college,
built on a high bluff overlooking
Greater Cincinnati and the Ohio
River, he reflected on the college's
One of these, Dean Joseph SutBy STEVE ROCCO
ace, where the Republican Nagrowth since 1949 when it was
Kernel Staff Writer
ton of Indiana University, was tional Convention was being
crowded into three rooms of a
Students should think of themquoted in the article as saying held, to picket against
public school in downtown Covselves as a unit and form unions
Berkeley's unrest was due in part
nomination, he said.
ington.
to internal communications probVeterans of World War II, he so as to counteract university ad"Students felt Civil Rights
said, returned home and were ex- ministrations that are being run lems.
activity was the most significant
posed to a need for a broader like large corporations, Steve
"That's thing they were doing," WeissWeissman said,
base from which to start their Weissman, a leader of the Unitrue." But he added that this was man said.
of California former Free not a
lives. They got their desire for a versity
For this reason, the SDS
sociological communication
community college close to home, Speech Movement said Thursday. breakdown. "Where there is a speaker noted, the Oakland TribWeissman spoke to between 75 situation of
and, as Kingsbury reiterated, they
conflict, we should une, wliich was owned by Sen.
fought to keep the college during and 100 students gathered for his ask whether the groups involved Nolan, and which was also bemidafternoon speech in the have the same
later years of crisis when the Lexinterests," he said. ing picketed by CORE, menconsidered drop- Memorial Hall Amphitheater.
ington campus
The trouble all began at Berke- tioned that University property
Currently on a tour of southhad been used to organize the
ping it.
ley last fall when university propIt is this broad basis, to start ern college campuses, Weissman
CORE pickets, and created a
from stuout on, wliich Kingsbury said the is working for the Students for a erty was taken away
dents for use as an organization great deal of pressure on the
offer. Democratic Society (SDS) in its
Community Colleges can
for political campaigns, Board of Regents.
He quoted President Oswald's University Reform Project. He is point
There was one other reason
said Weissman. He added, "The
blueprint for the University's fu- a former teaching assistant on
I would like to make about
why the University of California
point
ture which said, "Many students the Berkeley campus of the Unithat ruling is that it was made took away campus property from
versity of California.
are being overtrained and
the students, said Weissman, and
element."
Weissman, informally dressed by the
Although the need for
Bill that was. the matter of employWeissman said that Sen.
trained specialists continually in- in black trousers and blue shirt,
ment. While Sen. Nolan, accordcreases, universities would be re- and with his long beard casting Nolan (R. Calif.) was a campaign ing to Weissman, was advocating
reddish-browglow in the sunmanager for Sen. Barry
miss if they fail to provide stu- a
the right of the employer to hire
During the summer the
dents with a broad understand- - light, cited an article in the
anyone he chooses, Berkeley stuWednesday Kernel, in which Congress of Racial Equality
ing.
"The liberal aits concept is three deans said students play (CORE), organized with money dents were fighting discriminanot new. It has just been forgotten an important part in affecting from Pennsylvania Gov. William tion in employment.
Scranton, went to the (low Pal
Continued On Page 10
in recent years as sputnies filled university policy.
the skies and 'rockets whizzed
around the globe, It was Virgil
who said, 'Command large fields.
Cultivate small ones,' " he continued.
"Perhaps the liberal arts approach may make life a bit more
disturbing, the challenges more
demanding, but the rewards will
be gratifying. Education is not

exam-ingin-

teen.

In other business last night.
Student Congress:
1. Heard a discussion of insurance and rcbidding for the student plan by Edward Bray, resident vice president of Higham,
Neilson, Whitridge, and Rcid,
Inc., a brokerage house that
handles insurance policies for
many of the nation's schools.
Mr. Bray assured the congress
e
that his firm could bid and
a policy in time to meet the
deadline, June 1.
2. Accepted a report from SC
elections committee chairman
Barry Porter that the Congress
may get the voting machines
pie-par-

Continued On Page

3

Willis

Bright introduced the discussion
by saying that "we ought to
recommend to the UniversityAd-ministratiothat the University
do everything in its power" to
eliminate discrimination, and "to
insure adequate housing for all

Kingsbury Views Possibility
Of Sweeping Changes H ere
-

Year's top 10 Kernel stories are illuswith photographs: Poge Thirteen.

Student Congress Supports
Action To End Discrimination

IE

By FRANK BROWNING

Readers sound off on treeings, women's
hours, ond "publish or perish": Poge

Committee
To Study
Government
The interim committeto study
the various proposals for reorganization of student government will
be composed of the newly elected
president and vice president of
Student Congress and six others.
The committee will work,
throughout the summer and is to
submit a reorganization proposal
to Student Congress in the fall.
If this gains the approval ofCon-gresit will go to a campus referendum.
Winston Miller, presidentelect of Student Congress, will
chair the committee. His
will be vice presidentelect John O'Brien.
Three members were elected
by the committee which drew up
the initial proposal to reorganize
the government. They are Betsy
Clark, Sarah Prather, and Ben
Williams.
Three additional members
were appointed by Student Congress President Steve Beshear.
They are Walter Crant, Claudia
Jeffrey, and Barry Porter.
s,

an

SDS Advocates University Reform
Gold-water- 's

under-educate-

!

f
1

d.

right-win-

g

--

n

Cold-wate-

r.

J

-

1
-

-

STEVE WEISSMAN

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, April 30,

1965

Three Students C
From Northern Kentucky
that commuting is a hindrance to

By CAROLYN WILLIAMS
Kernel Staff Writer
Traveling 170 miles a day to
classes is "old hat" to three University students.
They are among the rising
number of students across the
country who have begun .commuting in order to complete academic work on an undergraduate
or graduate level.
The UK trio, all women, are
from Northern Kentucky and have
previously attended the Northern
Community College in Covington
(85 miles from Lexington).
"Early in this attempt I had
to make a decision concerning

priorities," says Mrs. Alice

Man-chike-

academic standing, none seem to
be having any serious difficulties
maintaining above three-poiaverages.
Mrs. Manchikes has maintained a 3.58 while Mrs. Berg has
a 3.4. Both are members of Kappa
Delta Pi, education honorary.
"Commuting is hindering my
grades," says Miss Buckner who
has an accumulative of 3.7. "All
the time I spend travelingl could
be studying. Also, after riding in
a car for two and
hours,
by the time I get to Lexington
what I really want is a rest, not
a lecture or exam."
In lieu of the complaints, why
don't they attend the University
of Cincinnati or Villa Madonna
College at Covington?
"I would have lost too many
hours due to different programs,"
says Mrs. Berg, the mother of a
graduating high school senior.
"Villa and UC are quite expensive, too."
Mrs. Manchikes added that
there is less confusion by attending UK than in transferring semester hours to the quarter system which UC maintains.
"Commuting is not the problem it once was," Mrs. Manchikes said. "I make the trip in
about an hour and 15 minutes.
I've had no real problem with
nt

one-ha- lf

s,

graduating senior in English from S. Ft. Mitchell. "Family and husband must necessarily
come first. This is the only way
it can be with the
student-wife-mother-

."

Mrs. Manchikes, the mother
of three children, one a freshman
at the Northern Community College, is joined by two other women, Mrs. Lorine Berg and Macye
Buckner.
Also a graduating senior from
S. Ft. Mitchell, Mrs. Berg has
been doing her student teaching
in the fourth grade at Linlee
School. In addition, she is on
campus two days a week for a
class.
"Commuting requires good
physical stamina; fortitude and
perse verence," said Mrs. Berg,
who has been commuting for the
past three semesters.
Macye Buckner, junior English major from Alexandria, is a
newcomer to commuting, this
being her first semester. She is
carrying five subjects (13 hours).
"My biggest problem," she
says, "is doing work out of the
classroom that must be done on
the campus rather than in my
home. Makeup tests are especially difficult to schedule."
Although the three complain

mMZIi

2

now!

:4S

9U

ADULTS ONLY PLEASE!

is kept in excellent

weather.

condition."

Mrs. Berg said once she had
a problem with her car, the distributor got wet and the car

wouldn't start.
"I solved the problem by drying it out with a hair dryer and
then covering it with a plastic
rain hat," she said.
A difficulty which all express
is that they are not allowed to
check books out of the reserve

rrn r nnr"irrn

...

room.

"I do not have time to use
the library while on campus because of classes," says Mrs. Berg.
"When you carry 18 hours, one
class follows another with no
break."

and

IDMIE

TONIGHT AND SATURDAY
No. 1
7:4 7

T

I

DALE ROBERTSON
TECRNICOLOI

whom kuce

TECHXISCCPE

No. 2

9:39

,

MB

rzu
iM6--

MM

31

find Sewn

Arts'

11:49

No. 3

HELD OVER!
3RD WEEK

FRANK SINATRA

Color

"Come Blow Your Horn"

JOHN FORD'S

SUNDAY AND MONDAY

.

DAVID N1VEN PETER SELLERS
ROBERT WAGNER -C- APUClNEl

"SiriT"

ol

OK GRILL

RATTLE

Of

C0ME0Y1'

1

.a
i

i

coram

(UNTO

USEE

r

1

man

SIMPLE

WALT DISNEY'S1
!

ALSO

NOW SHOWING

pizza; food
cfiar-b--

H

MLyd-pSHARON

-

f

HlffilST

u
I

HUGUENY

NICK ADAMS
DEBORAH WALLEYI

JJ

At 7:30 and 9:30

i

y

; ACHIEVEMENT!,

f

HELD OVER 2nd WEEK!
The unconventional

.
:

ft

GLENN FORD

ana

ANDREWS VAN DYKE

III

m

1

York

"DEAR rN ffc;
HEART"

The Kentucky Kernel
Th

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station, University of Kentucky, Lexington. Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
postage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Published lour times weekly during
the school year except during holidays
and exam periods, and weekly during
the summer semester. .
Published for the students of the
University of Kentucky by the Board
of Student Publications, Prof. Paul
Oberst. chairman and Stephen Palmer,
secretary.
Begun as the Cadet In UM. became the Kecord In IDOO, and the Idea
In 190. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 191S.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail $7.00
Per copy, from files $ .10
KERNEL. TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
2321
Editor
News Desk, Sports, Women's Editor,
2320
Socials
Advertising, Business, Circulation lilt

at a

con"
new

GERALDINE PAGE

. JECHKtCOLOR

x

2ND FEATURI

A MARTIN MAN U LIS Production,

BETWEEN

ALSO

CI)
EEzina-QraL

U

1

i.J 'III
-

ttitio Wstyn Ibjff rdSctfiArti

L3

T--

fr-- i

Praktom presenraroi

5

'

mm
1

j

Onnur

J

TlV0vjL0VES...TW0 WORLDS!

tuna

BEBdS GiEL

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, April 30,

that the county will give
the machines to us."
3. Heard a report from Kclley.
on the NSA National Student
Congress to be held this summer, and accepted a motion to
send president-elec- t
Winston Miller and vice president-elec- t
John
O Bricn to the
conference. Congress agreed to pay
all expenses.
4. Agreed to enter the Appalachian Volunteers program in
the achievement contest sponsored by the National NSA
Hood

1

used .in Tuesday's election
from tne .county. Porter said
County vJu'dfe Bart Peak
County Attorney Armand
"said the prospects

free

that
and
ci

look

three-wee-

I

i'V

-

-

STEVE BESHEAR
Outgoing Congress President

y vi
r?'
r
I

n

I

VM-zz-

t

Accepted a motion by
to "buy a gavel for our president, Mr. Beshear, to show him
how much we think of him."
Kel-le- y

nursing students have now registered for the coming school year.
This was accomplished by using an alphabetical system of
Saturday morning registration
sessions.. Each student was
assigned a certain time period in
which to register.

H

V

t is

(Hi

Jl buster );

VT

AiTTfcu

w

i

"

S

ji

Jim Un'
nf.rA. t
tti
r
MM

VI

i

Czr

i

elect."

6.

Everyone isn't having the registration problem that the College of Arts and Sciences is having.
A spokesman for the College
of Nursing Wednesday announced that 100 percent of the

v.'

Hvfttshwt M. thm

you

Sue Castro, junior topical
jor from Russell, to George

dwAjjWT

rr

MM

-i Mr
'

I

i
i
i

maOl-

son, senior political science major from Bellefonte.
Brcnda Morris, sophomore
sociology major from Cecilia and
a member of Alpha Xi Delta
sorority, to Henry Hughes, second year law student from
Prestonsburg and a graduate of
Vanderbilt University where he
was a member of Phi Kappa Psi
fraternity.

100 PERCENTERS

T- 7)

(

Mary Rcbckah Harlcston, education junior from Lexington and
a member of Zeta Tan Alpha, to
Thomas Heath, graduate in history from Louisville.

5. Heard outgoing President
Beshear reprimand the "poor elements of this year's Congress"
and "congratulate the good, diliYou all know,"
gent members.
he said, "who the good ones have
been and who the bad ones are.
"I hope that next year you can
get a good membership in Student Congress. Be careful who

k

-3

Engagements

Student Congress Urges End
To Racial Discrimination ere
Continued From Tare

19G5-

Tat Gibson, sophomore accounting major from Lexington,
to Hurshcl Dcbord. a graduate
of the University from Mort head.
Betty Quisenberry, senior elementary education major from
Winchester and a member of
Hamilton House, to Patrick
Reister, a junior pharmacy major
from Louisville and a member
of Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity.
Pin-Mat-

es

Janie Delph, freshman in
home economics from Corhin, to
Frank McCrackcn, sophomore accounting major from Paris and a
member of Sigma Chi fraternity.

with
MaxShukan

3)

TESTS, AND HOW THEY GREW
Just the other night I was saying to the little woman, "Do
you think" the importance of tests in American colleges is
being overemphasized?". (Incidentally, the little woman is
not, as you might think, my wife. My wife is far from a little woman. She is, in fact, nearly seven feet high and mantled with rippling muscles. She is a
Ogallala
Sioux and holds the world's shot put record. The little
woman I referred to is someone we found crouching under
the sofa when we moved into our apartment back in 1928,
and there she has remained ever since. She never speaks
except to make a kind of guttural clicking sound when she
is hungry. To tell you the truth, she's not too much fun to
have around the house, but with my wife away at track meets
most of the time, at least it gives me someone to talk to.)
But I digress. "Do you think the importance of tests in
American colleges is being overemphasized?" I said the
other night to the little woman, and then I said, "Yes,
Max, I do think the importance of tests in American colleges is being overemphasized." (As I explained, the little
woman does not speak, so when we have conversations, I
am forced to do both parts.)
But I digress. To get back to tests sure, they're important, but let's not allow them to get too important. There
are, after all, many talents which simply can't be measured
by quizzes. Is it right to penalize a gifted student whose
gifts don't happen'to fall into an academic category? Like,
for instance, Finster Sigafoos?
full-blood- ed

unpopular JiKvitWQ?

JOHN
SI
She is a

full-blood- ed

Ogallala Sioux

WAYNE'S
OF A

THE

THREE-RIN-

BOSS

Finster, a freshman at the Wyoming College of Belles
Lettres and Fingerprint Identification, has never passed a
single test; yet all who know him agree he is studded with
talent like a ham with cloves. He can, for example, sleep
r.
standing up. He can do a perfect imitation of a scarlet
(I don't mean just the bird calls; I mean he can fly
south in the winter.) He can pick up BB's with his toes. He
can say "toy boat" three times fast. He can build a rude
telephone out of 100 yards of string and two empty Person-n- a

TRAVELING WHO WEST

SHOW...

RIDINa LOVlNa BRAWUNG

HIS

AROUND

WAY

...

.

THE WORLD!

tan-age-

CLAUDIA
CARD1NALE

Stainless Steel Razor Blade packages. (This last
plishment is the one Finster is proudest of not building
the telephone but emptying the Personna packs. To empty
a Personna pack is not easily accomplished, believe you me,
not if you're a person who likes to get full value out of his
razor blades. And full value is just what Personnas deliver.
They last and last and keep on lasting; luxury shave follows
luxury shave in numbers that make the mind boggle. Why
don't you see for yourself? Personnas are now available in
two varieties: a brand-nestainless steel injector blade for
stainusers of injector razors and the familiar double-edg- e
less steel blade so dear to the hearts and kind to the kissers
of so many happy Americans, blades so smooth-shavinso
that the Personna Co. makes the following
guarantee: If you don't agree Personna gives you more luxp
or any other brand you might
ury shaves than
name, Personna will buy you a pack of whatever kind you

RITA

HAVWffllllk

fer
r

NK:Y

J

I'M
1 1.

w

g,

long-lasti-

ng

Beep-Bee-

think is better.)
But I digress. Back to Finster Sigafoos artist, humanist,
philosopher, and freshman since 1939. Will the world ever
benefit from Finster's great gifts? Alas, no. He is in college
to stay.
But even more tragic for mankind is the case of Clare de
Loon. Clare, a classmate of Finster's, had no talent, no

1

ilOVD NOLAN nOHWD COtffE JOHN
IXCLUSIVE

FIRST RUN!

mLMJ

gifts, no brains, no personality. All she had was a knack for
taking tests. She would cram like mad before a test, always
get a perfect score, and then promptly forget everything
she had learned. Naturally, she graduated with highest
honors and degrees by the dozen, but the sad fact is that
she left college no more educated and no more prepared to
cope with the world than she was when she entered. Today,
a broken woman, she crouches under my sofa.
1

)

lUtlS.

Mx

Kliuluiuit

Speaking of teatt, we, the maker of Pemonna , put
our blades through an impressive number before we
tend them to market. We also make and thoroughly
test an aerosol shave that soaks rings around any
other lather: Uurma Share1 , regular and menthol.

* 4

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, April 30,

I

i

19G5

Talent Evident In 'Stylus

.

V

By ALAN SHAVZIN

Department of Philosophy
To begin with, "Stylus" continues to surprise us by being
worth reading. This is surprising,
because relatively few things in
the world are worth reading, ind
no one would expect the UK
students' literary magazine to
consistently (for four years, at
least) be one of these few
Before I suggest why this
I wish to
Frederick M.. Thurz, assistant professor of art, received the Delta "Stylus" is valuable,
make a comforting introductory
Epsilon Upsilon English Honorary award for his contribution to the
intellectual atmosphere of the campus in bringing Graphics '65 to remark: all the people who apthe University. Scott Nunley, Mr. Thurz, and Gordon Landes, DEU pear in this issue are talented.
The short story, especially,
president, discuss the annual award.
is a demanding literary form.
Ever) one who has written here
DEU Grants Award
has achieved' something, and I
respect what they hav e done, and
understand that they may do far
more impressive things in the
future. Howev er, it would be unfair to pretend that they are all
excellent, fully realized works of
art, when so few of them are.
With this disclaimer of malice, I
will proceed.
Frederic M. Thurz, assistant
grade standing and a 3.5 in EngA Review
professor of art, lias been named lish.
At the meeting Tuesday night
Scott Nunley has written an
recipient of the first annual Delta
Award. DEU, in which Mr. Thurz was voted impressive play, and it opens the
Epsilon Upsilon
the award, DEU members elected issue. It parodies the Creek
the University's English Honorofficers for next year. Gordon legend ofMelcagros, the hero who
ary, grants the award to the inLandes was elected President and would live so long as his mother
dividual who it is felt has contributed most significantly to the Wilma Brown
refrained from throwing "his"
In a special action, the log on the consuming fire. He
intellectual atmosphere of the
group voted Gary Scott Nunley even manages to work in the lovecampus.
Honorary President of Delta Eply ancient fable of the virgin and
Mr. Thurz was selected for. silon Upsilon for his work in the unicorn. Nunley specifically
his work in bringing last seorganizing the society.
insists that the spirit of the play
mester's Graphics '65 art show
is burlesque, though I don't think
Eight new members were inito the University. "Many of the tiated into the Honorary at the this
altogether characterizes the
artists exhibited," said Cordon. Tuesday meeting at the home of drama's tone.
Landes, DEU President, "would Dr. Ben W. Black, the sponsor
P.S. The whole thing quivers
not have been otherwise repreof the group. The new initiates the first time the mother refers
sented at UK. Without Mr. include Wilma Brown, John to her son as
"Meleager." That
Thurz's personal efforts the Sanders, Peggy Bailey, Ellen does sound
silly. (I assume it is
campus would not have had a Chaffee, Martha Eades, Michael supposed to.).
chance to see their work."
Randall, Philip Bare, and Mary
Victoria J. Spain has lost a
Anne Hauser.
person one who notices things
Mr. Thurz thanked the HonorDEU has on alumnus now in and is annoyed but brave. I'm
ary in appreciation of the award the Graduate School of the Uniand promised to speak informally
Emily Potter, and nine
TYPEWRITERS
before the group next September. versity, initiated last semester
members
Landes explained that DEU will
FOR RENT
including Gordon G. Landes,
ask each award winner to meet Patti
DIXIE CASH REGISTER CO.,
Robert
Harldn, John Patton,
with the group and speak upon Rich,
Inc.
Kathy Kelly, Ann DickinUNDERWOOD ELECTRIC, IBM,
any subject he or she wishes. son, Gary Scott Nunley, Margaret
ALL MAKES
MANUALS
124 N. Broadway
Delta Epsilon Upsilon was Scott
Ph.
Gaines, and Lyn Geisler.
organized in the fall semester of
this year as the University's only
honorary recognizing outstanding scholarship in English. Admission to the group follows the
Larga international corporation now Interviewing for summer employment.
first semester of the junior year
This it not a new program, wo have been employing student! for six consecutive years. This year wo have 15 $1,000 scholarships available. Hiring
and is based upon a 3.4 overall
of time for
interview work. Work near resort areas.
for

Graphics '65 Chosen
Year's Outstanding
Cultural Contribution

Secretary-Treasure-

r.

2S5-012-

SERVICE

special
Plenty
swimming, boating, tennis, and dancing with students of your own age.
No experience necessary, train at company's expense. Students who will be
vacationing in Kentucky, Tennessee, and Indiana eligible. Salary open.
For appointment call or write

...

JAMES E. SEADLER,
912 Francis Building
or call 587-105- 8
or 583-246-

Pathetic Fallacies and sad

the

and

relative

stiel is an attempt at a lyrical
invocation of the poet's frugwith
rancid, debilitating nature. I have
tried saying it to myself, both
meditatively and with passion to
try and rise to the intended mood.
I will assume that his poem
"To Eliot" is to T.S. rather
than Eliot Anders. It uses some
of Eliot's forms a grave wracking lyrical announcement, with
harsh images keeping scabs on
the sentiment, the repetitions,
and the ironic voice coming
through to the edge of a cough.
It is a poem with many virtues
(like Joseph), and certainly the
best by Ron Roscnstiel I have
ever seen. None of the lines I
like are sufficiently strong to be
exposed separately on this page
but when all together in the
whole poem, they work. It is
an ambitious poem, and mainly
successful (the ending, however,
is metrically boring, facile, and

Sharing a ride home? Car . too
small? Take more passengers
and luggage by renting a Nationwide Trailer. Hitches and
spare tire furnished. Cheapest
rates available. Best equipment.
Small deposit holds, trailer of
your choice. All sixes.

at Harrison

MORNING
WORSHIP
EACH SUNDAY

Sunday School, 9:45
Morning Worship,
10:50
REV. TOM FORNASH

Minister
JOIN US IN
STUDENT WORSHIP

rage

11

MEMBER

AMERICAN
GEM
SOCIETY

our
Diamondscope tells

At our store, all diamonds are
scientifically evaluated by the
available
Diamondscope
only to members of the American
Gem Society. It probes into the
heart of a diamond, giving
the "inside story" of the gem's
beauty and its price.
This assurance of true diamond
value costs you no more.

Puller) & Wilder

1405 VERSAILLES ROAD

254.7985

PHONE

Jxt

JcsL

JKJC

ff II

ZIP
40S07

JCl

vl

Jyt

U.VJMfW.k;

imm

Js

DSM

Louisville,
Louisville

Students

Ky.

Thank You for making our first year
at UK a huge success.
We appreciate your comments and
suggestions and have used many of
them to guide our buying for next
fall.

Until

MAY

You can be sure

3rd

BE

GLAD YOU DID

Wallace s Book Shacli
305

S. Limestone

at

OHIO STATE
OHIO U.

Euclid

(next to Becker Laundry)

we will have

We will be open all summer so
stop
in if you are in town. Have a
good
summer.

WALLACE'S BOOK SHACK

YOU'LL

that

a fine new selection of Men's and
Women's traditional clothing for
Be sure to
you next September.
check with us when you come back.

Then Sell Them At

BOWLING

W

U. of

GREEN S U.

Q

MEMBER AMERICAN
GEM SOCIETY

OLIVER
TRAILER RENTAL

METHODIST

Maxwell

On

of DIAMOND VALll

252-020- 7

STUDENT
CHURCH

Continued

il

CARBONS, RIBBONS,
OFFICE SUPPLIES

Ph.

of

signature, "Victoria J. Spain."
It is a small stroke of genius to
have introduced the vulgar and
mechanical "J." between the
wonder-name- s
Victoria and
Spain. An ordinary girl would not
have thought of this.
The first poem of Ron Rosen-ste-

X
ADDING MACHINES
OLIVETTI ADDERS AND
PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS

St.

reality

her parka. (This jx)cm reads like
a fragment of a longer fragment.)
Dy far the most successful line
she gives us is her marvelous

ADDO--

387 Rote

sihs,

is brightened only by the nice
possibilities of being lost in an
April something (not existence);

a
flat). "New Generation,"
Dylanesquc (Bob) "beat" poem,
is very successful. This is Ron's
metier.
Robin Schold's "Portrait"
falls victim to the old trap of
a tempting ironic contrast which
is too easy, too obvious. The
contrast between age and youth,
and especially the age and youth
of a single person, has to be
handled with more sublet)',
novelty, etc., to be interesting
and convincing. The ending

9

SUMMER OPPORTUNITY

111
KENTUCKY
TYPEWRITER

not sure why she confides in us.
Her confidence, heavy with

KENTUCKY

MIAMI U.
PURDUE U.
U. of FLORIDA

WWWW

mmm

jjL

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, FriJay, April 30,

Annual Graduation
Set Here May 10

Candidate

Gov.

Edward T. Breathitt and President John Oswald will
officiate at the University's 98th annual Commencement in Memorial
Coliseum Monday, May 10.

C

roup

Hurting

0

J
Art

D

0

n

Advanerd Depree

Candidates for the doc