xt7gth8bjz69 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gth8bjz69/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19620321  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 21, 1962 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 21, 1962 1962 2015 true xt7gth8bjz69 section xt7gth8bjz69 On The Ileach

Students Seek Sun. Sand For Vacation Rest
By JOE MILLS
Kernel Staff Writer

This year a special
booths along the beach. Students
who present their identification cards will receive plastic
which will admit them to a huge recreation area.
tags
In this area, there will be dancing or more
twisting every night, with bonfires, singing,
and barbecues. Also, there will be athletic, talent,
".Miss Jade Beach" beauty contests every night.
and
The plastic identification tags will help to screen
out the thrill-seekewho invaded the Lauderdale area
last spring. Many of the 300 who were Jailed last year
were largely responsible for the riots, never
and who
saw the inside of a college.
Many believe the riots grew out of the city's failure
to live up to its responsibilities to the young visitors.
One angered resident wrote to the Ft. Lauderdale
News: "The students were abandoned by adult society
a society which turned its back but extended its hand
to them, palm upward."

Last spring, more than 50,000 'students had no
entertainment planned for them. Since there were It

will place hospitality

It's that time of year again! Students from
Maine to Montana are hitting the road in search
of that lovely,
place with the glistening sand, blaring hands, and blowing fans . . . Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida.
d

Everybody's getting out for spring Vacation.
They're sick and tired of rules, regulations, snow,
wind, and Ire.
The annual invasion is beginning, with students
planning to rough it for a week on the beach, surrounded
a romantic atmosphere of palms, hot sun and cool
by
moon.
The first wave of 300 or more students will hit the
beach this week. Before it's over, there will probably be
more than 40.000, far from the watchful eyes of professors and parents.

boys to one girl, the shortage of feminine company
Increased boredom, excessive drinking and
three days of riots.
The battle cry of the rioters was "give us beer!"
and "give us Jade Beach!" They had been anRered when
beer was banned on the beach and when Jade Beach,
the scene of
parties, had bean declared off
limits.
The riots were a lot of fun for most students. For
others it was striped sunlight. Scantily clad rioters were
fined or thrown in Jail. Many appeared in court in bathing suits and barefoot.
At the
city Jail, scores of telephone callj
came in from parents of college students reported
arrested.
"My son doesn't drink. He couldn't be arrested for
intoxication," sputtered one father.

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University of Kentucky
LEXINGTON,

KV., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21,

12

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Eight Pages

International Center Planned
By SC; Dean's OK Needed

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Chech Mate
Gene Lewter shows the trophy he won for placing first In the
1962 SUB Chess Tournament.
Lewter Is a sophomore In the
College of Arts and Sciences.

Britisher To Address
Pharmaceutical Meet
An Englishman who takes a dim view of
socialized medical program is the chief speaker
ceutical workshop scheduled yesterday and
rhoenix Hotel.
lectures
Dr. John Scale, consultant in
medical economics and national
health services, London, England,
will give an address at 1 p.m.
today during the final session.
The workshop Is sponsored jointly by the Kentucky Pharmaceutical
Association and the UK College of
Pharmacy. All seniors in the College of Pharmacy will be guests at
the workshop.
Dr. Seale is holder of some of
Britain's top medical awards. Including the Wainwright prize In
medicine, the Haddon prize In
pathology, and the Toller prize In
medicine.
"I think I could be of help to
the people of America if I visited
your country and gave a series of

Great Britain's
for a pharmatoday at the

describing the British National Health Service and the
baneful effects of excessive governmental control of medicine," said
Dr. Seale when invited to lecture
In the United States by the Amer
ican Medical Association.
"An accurate presentation of the
facts about the British National
Health Service would make the
American people rethink more
carefully how far and how fast
they wish to go in the direction
of state medicine," he said.
Also planned
on additional
to be presided
Slone, dean
Pharmacy.

for today is a panel
professional revenue
over by Dr. Earl P.
of the College of

Former Associate Editor

Student Congress Monday
night established an International Student Center, but with
one catch permission to rent
an overflow house from the
University for the new organization.
Gene Harris, treasurer of Student Congress, said the rental of
the house would have to be cleared by Dr. Doris Seward, dean of

women, also adviser to the congress.
The house, located at 337 Harrison Ave., was used last semester
by the Dean of Women's Office to
house nine women as a result of
the crowded dormitories.
In a meeting Monday afternoon,
with Dr. Frank D. Peterson, vice
president for business administration, at which Dean Seward was
not present because of illness, Harris said an agreement was made
that the University would rent the

house to Student Congress for $75
a month until Aug. 12.
The agreement would go through
if the dean approved the use of
the house for the center.

However, the treasurer told
Congress members this may all
be changed by the next meeting.
He was speaking of the yet to
come final clearance for the use
of the house and a possible
change in the amount of rent.
"I'm having a hard time finding
out who is to give the final permission (for rental of the house);
but I think if Student Congress
goes ahead and passes this we can
get it furnished," said Ann Evans,
one of the major committee members for the project, who talked
with Dean Seward after the meeting with Dr. Peterson.
Dr. L. L. Martin, dean of men,
Indicated that he would help to
get the center furnished, Harris
said.

High School Group Visits
Home Ec Department

The proposal went on to say,
"The center .shall be operated by
a board of directors comprised of
the dean of men, dean of women,
and the foreign student adviser.
The president of the Cosmopolitan
Club and the vice president of
Student Congress shall be
members.
"The president of Student Congress shall appoint four student
members, two of whom shall be
foreign students. The board shall
elect its own chairman and secretary-treasurer.

"The board of directors shall be
responsible for securing adequate
A group of high school
quarters, and shall have the general supervision of the center, profrom Highlands High
viding for rules and making necesSchool, Ft. Thomas, are visiting
sary expenditures from the Student Congress allocation.
the Department of Home EcoThe tour will include the home
"The board shall make a report
nomics and touring the cammanagement
sites, the nursing to Student Congress each semester
pus today.
on its finances, and any other
home, and the entire home eco- matter which it shall deem adApproximately 90 girls are maknomics facilities on campus.
visable."
ing the tour.
home-make-

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Helen Wilmore, assistant professor of home economics, will conduct the tour through the department.

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Places Eighth In Conlesl
to two students living in one of
the dormitories. The death set off
a series of events which led to the
wire services carrying the obituary
notices.
Thieo other Kernel staff memTonl Lcnnos, senior Journalism
major from Youngstown. Ohio, re- bers have placed in the monthly
Journalism contest. Ed Van Hook,
ceived eighth place in the February feature writing competition of Kernel editor, David Shank, a s'aff
the second annual Journalism writer, and Ben Fitzpatrick, sports
Awards Program sponsored by the editor, have won awards during
the year.
William Randolph Hearst Foundation.
The Hearst Foundation's object
The feature story was on the Is to promote excellence In
death of a cactus which belonged

In his proposal the treasurer also
asked that Student Congress allocate $600 to cover expenses for
the center. If the center is rented
at $75 a month, $375 will be used
for rent until August, approximately $60 for utilities, and the rest for
operating expenses.
The opening paragraph of the
motion read, "An International
Student Center shall be established by Student Congress at
the University to provide facilities for related American and
Foreign student activities."

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A former Kernel associate
editor has placed eighth in the
Hearst Journalism
February
Competition.

11

rain

Students in the Anthropology Television Class are
shown taking a test March 19. Tables were set
up on the floor of Memorial Coliseum to accom- -

II

orli
modate the 479 enrolled. Previously, the tests
had been given In Men.oriil Hall but the class
this semester is too large.

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wrrincsri.iy, March

21, 1002

Editor Says Sporls, Physics

3 Dominate Education Scene
the
lien F. Reeves, managing editor of the Courier-Journasakl the football player ami
the physicist have been the
twin symbols that have dominated the education scene in
recent years.
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Material Kesearch Laboratory use
The Highway
this indoor track to test the roads of tomorrow.
Highway materials are mixed and spread over the
oval; the tires travel over the track. It tests both

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lift
the durability of highway materials and tires.
The machine is housed in a temperature-moistur- e
controlled room.

Research Team In Highway Lah
Seeks Better Road Materials

toward answering specific highway
problems.
"For example, the Department
of Highways has been working
toward constructing
smoother,
better riding pavements. Under
the research division, an automobile has been designed with
very sensitive aceelerometers and
electric equipment for recording
A UK research team of 40 is
the effects of pavement roughKenness and riding qualities."
working for improved
What are some factors in buildtucky highways in the Highing a highway?
way Materials Research LabComposition of mixtures: Roads
are made of agate (stone) and
oratory.
its bituminous (adhesive) materials.
directs
Tit
laboratory
efforts toward finding the best Agate varies toboth in refinement
sand
crushed rock) and
highway materials for specific (from
in characteristics
conditions in Mrht of the avail(durability,
and absorbtion qualities).
weight,
ability of local products.
Structure: A road has a height
Over half of the members of and width which are calculated
the research team are students in for the specific needs of the area.
the Department of Highways scholTraffic: The traffic on a road
arship program. The Highway Material Research Laboratory serves
as the research division of the
PALMER
Kernel Staff Writer
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the
first In a weekly series on I'K
research projects. It is an attempt to show the practical value
of research conducted within the
lTniverity community.)
By STEPHEN

refers to the weight and number
of vehicles that cross over the road.
An overload of traffic at certain
hours Is also considered.
Soil, moisture and temperature: The engineer must consider the environmental needs of
a road.
Drainage: Just as the engineer
must consider the rainfall, he must
also consider the drainage facilities so as to prevent mud washes
and land slides.
One of the most important developments of the Highway Research Laboratory has been the
"design method." It is a method
for designing highways in relation
to the above problems.
The research for the method began in 1946 and was finished two
years later. The method of highway planning was adopted by the
state in 1948.

"Between these two poles, the
great body of the collegiate story
remains largely untouched and
untold," he said.
Reeves spoke to 100 public relations personnel from six southeastern states at the Phoenix Hotel. He told the American College
Public Relations Association delegates, "A college is in essence the
story of the whole world the aits
and sciences all gathered up in
one place.
"Parents who pay the bills have
a rl;ht to know about the humanizing arts," Reeves said. However,
he added, newsmen have blundered in covering the college and university story because they have

been blinded by
spectacularism
of athletics on the one hand and
of the physical sciences on the
other.
"These twin symbols are the ones
that we in the news profession
have been quickest to get into
print and the ones which the reading public has been most eager to
buy.
"What are we doing about the
great unfolding stories in the
field of arts, social sciences, the
even in scholarship
humanities
itself?" he asked.
Reeves suggested these stories
are there on the campuses waiting
for someone to tell them, someone
to print them and for someone to
know about them.
He continued to say that often
newspapers are flooded with releases from colleges telling what
they are doing, but they overlook
what the people really want to
know.

The highest scorer ever to play
for a UK football team was Bob
Davis. He tailed 06 points in 1935
and 1936, but he is closely followed by Calvin Bird, 651958,
Bob Hard, 621955, and Al Bruno,
Arthur J. Snider, science editor Wilbur Jamerson, and Harry Jones,
of the Chicago Daily News, Monday all of whom scored 60 points restressed the importance of publishspectively in 1950, 1950, and 1951.
ing scientific news so that it can
be easily understood by the average
person.
Speaking here to about 100
public relations people from colleges and universities in six southeastern states, Mr. Snider said,
NOW SHOWING
e)
"Modern science is of such magniFrank Sinatra
tude and acceleration that its full
Dean Martin
portent cannot yet be appreciated."
Sammy Davis, Jr.
Snider predicted that in the fufetor Lawford
ture presidential candidates will
Bishop
Joy In
have to deal intelligently with scl-- 1
entific matters because science is
"SERGEANTS 3"
more and more becoming a matter!
TECHNICOLOR
of public concern.

Newsman Stresses
Science News

TODAY AND
THURS. ONLY

EN ALI
PHONE

department.
Construction

methods, materials,

and maintenance of highways are
the items under consideration.

THE ACADEMY AWARD WINNER

lit A

are studied through laboratory investigations and field-te- st
projects.
Dr. William B. Drake, director
of the laboratory, said:
"While some basic research is
conducted here at the laboratory,
most of our projects are directed
These

Afmrnm-- s
winner of grand

V

CLASSIFIED

CANNES

FltM

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FESTIVAL

EASTMANCCLOX

J

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FOR BENT Large front room with refrigerator, private entrance. $25 month.
20Mxt
347 Linden Walk.
I'hone

-

f Im.i .
r.i Michael Morgan, I'K senior, has attained high scholastic honors
despite the fart that he is not a high school graduate. Ireland-bor- n
Morgan posed with his wife, Claire, also a native of Erin,
and their son, John, two and a half.

J.

nnmotoH mwrutsT
0SSN0

WROGOLiwmwYTH,
MVHTsmAHTHUfimFkO

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deHAVILLAND

TYPING

TYP1NO Special during March and
April. Thesis and dissertations 55 cents
per page including carbons. University
2IM4t
references. Phone
WANTED

For three months use,
Course in French. Call UK
20M4t

WANTED Ride to Ft. Lauderdale.
ing to pay expenses. Cull Betty,

BRAZZI

9

FOR SALE A good looking Spanish
fi.il-to- p
guitar in really good condi20M4t
tion. I'hone 8953. Barry Horrall.
FOR SALE 199 TR-- 3 roadster. 19.00
Excellent condition. Cull
miles.
21M4t
after S p.m.

2721.

Filmt, Inc.

(Iat

FOR SALI

FOR SALE Uikes pipes, full length. 6
months old. Call 8958. Allen Pow2M2t
ers.
Low
FOR SALE 1959 Thunderbird.
A2.89S.
or
mileage. Excellent condition.
2u:mi
liable ofler.

WANTED

topr

STARTS TODAY!

FOR RENT

FOR RENT Room tn the home of a
former UK teacher. Located in a good
residential area. Suitable lor serious student. Male graduate student or teacher
14M3t
prefttired. Phone

Extension

i

0FTHE

Will2UA121

LOST

LOST Kuiiicoat. In Kappa Delta House.
Cull Bull or 801.'1 ask fur John Cox. 21M4t
MISCELLANEOUS

ALTERATIONS Dresses, coats, skirts.
344 Alyesford
Place, Phone
ISMlSt
Mildred Cohen.
are available for
MUSIC
hpring Social Events. This combo places
2uM12e
emphasis on variely. Call
TOPPER Cl.UH presents the Sultans at
Jovland this Friday from 7 30 till ?,
a show and a half. Don t miss
ViiMi
ci.u.i
luis one. ia.'Keis i in auvance.

Irishman Skips High School;
Takes Top College Honors
Michael Morgan is recipient of some of the
highest honors in American educational circles and will graduate from UK in June even though he didn't finish high school.
Morgan dropped out of school filled out his student card for the
at the age of 15 for the lack of UK Public Relations Department,
interest. After working for five he wrote after "principal campus
activities" just one word: "Study."
years at construction jobs, Mor-

ELECTRIC

Dublin-bor- n

gan saved enough money to come
to the United States.
In 1955, he joined the Navy,
While on a Naval destroyer, he
developed a desire for a college
education. Two of his friends, UK
graduates, told him to apply here.
UK authorities told him that he
could enroll in the University if
he maintained a 2.5 overall standing for the first two years.
Upon discharge from the Navy,
Morgan entered UK and now has
a 3.95.
"The purpose of attending a university is to gain an education,"
said Morgan when asked about
extracurricular activities. When he

He is a member of the Phi Beta
Kappa national honorary society
and is one of the four UK seniors
to be Woodrow Wilson Foundation
fellows. He will turn down the
grant to enter the University of
Florida on a National Defense Ed- ucational Award scholarship.

Central Kentucky's Largest
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COMING THURSDAY

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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, WnliHMl.iy,
.

.

TIIKTA S ICS .11 A Till
Sit; ma Hit, women's Journalism honorary, will meet at 4
p.m. today in the McLauuhlin
Room of the Journalism Building.

Thcta

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Kapptt Tan Grcch WvcUvud
house.
at the chapter

as an ancient
togas.

Help Delegate's Serenity

Kaly V.Uk, a senior speech therapy major liiiiil ft. Lauderdale.

By VIVIAN BROWN
AI

Newsfeatures

NEW YORsotting in for
work for
spring.

as well as Republicans
me and vote for me."
Began Yoga For Health
The world "individualism" crops
up repeatedly in her conversation,
and her life is studded with incidents that show her own individuality.
She began yoga exercises 35 or
40 years ago when it was a subject that "you didn't talk about.
Just like you didn't talk about
yyphilis. You can talk about it
now."
She started the exercises to
combat ill health, and found "a
new method of exercise, of

She describes it this way:
"Yoga means union . . . finding
one's way into infinite consciousness. There are various paths, the
physical is just one of them. You
can achieve yoga through work,
love, intellect. The physical yoga
is based on 108 postures. You
learn the training of muscles so
you can take these postures.
"You learn how to really be
boss of yourself. It's a wonderful
experience."
Wartime Inspection
Congressmen nowadays are frequently criticized for taking junkets abroad at taxpayers' expense,
but Mrs. Bolton's trip to Europe
during World War II was NO
Junket.
After the Allied invasion of
France, she decided she wanted
to go to the European theater to
inspect hospital and nursing facilities.
Gen. George C. Marshall, she
recalls, objected strenuously.
"Please tell me what you think
you can do in a war," she says
he asked her.
But she went to England anyway, and Gen. Walter Bedell
Smith, chief of staff of European
forces, "took me over to the continent and turned me loose."
She spent three months overseas, getting close enough to the
fighting that "I was under fire
from shrapnel one day."
She says Marshall conceded on
her return that "I had done a good
job."
She went, she says, because "all
women worried about their sons."
and she felt she should have the
facts with which to reassure them.
"I had two sons, one in the
African theater and one at Iwo
Jima. I wanted to know what it
was all about."
Son Running Too
One of her sons, Oliver P. Bolton, this year will seek to rejoin
his mother in Congress. He served
two terms In the early 1950's but
illness caused him to retire from
politics for a while.

K-

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En garments

The house was decorated
Greek palace and everyone wore

Spring Hairdos Will Be Small

Occasional Yoga Exercises
By NEIL GILBRIDE
WASHINGTON W) The
from Ohio, Mrs. Frances P. Bolton, is 75 years old and
she still does an occasional yoga
headstand to keep in shape.
(She'll be 77 March 29.)
It helps her serenity, a quality
that would be sorely needed if the
win contiol of the
Republicans
House In thrs year's elections. For
In that event she would become
chairman of the House Foreign
Affairs committee.
At an age when most people
aren't up to a difficult new job
much less the 108 postures of yoga
Frances Bolton views the prospect with the same calm with
which she faced (1) enemy shrapnel in World War II and (2) a
charging elephant in Africa in 1955.
The Elephant Charged
"I don't feel any of it is so difficult," she says of her 22 years'
service in Congress, including 21
years of the Foreign Affairs Committee.
"I enjoy every bit of it. I think
only when you stop enjoying it
does the mind add up the difficulties, don't you?" she asks.
She credits yoga "You don't
pronounce the 'a' " with contributing substantially to this attitude
in the midst of a
life of politics.
The encounter with the elephant,
In the Belgian Congo during an
African tour, did give her "a few
breathless seconds," she concedes.
Fortunately, the big beast stopped
short of her car.
Believes In Individual
Although confident of her own
reelection
("I've had the same
opponent five times and I defeat
him a little worse each time,")
she isn't predicting any national
- GOP sweep.
"Unless we have something real
to offer, we won't get there," she
says.
Her definition
of "something
real" is a return to "the responof the individual for self,
sibility
state and country. There are certain things we stand for. Why
can't we say that?"
She feels a drift toward
in government began in World War II, when it was
necessary to the war effort.
"But we've never been able to,
get back to what we feel is a free
country."
Mrs. Bolton's Cleveland constituents apparently agree with her
theories. They have been sending
her back to Congress ever since
she replaced her late husband. Rep.
Chester C. Bolton, in a special
election in 1940.
"I have a wonderful personal
following," she says, "Democrats

fraternity.

JUMBO SAYS:

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The numbers of Phi Kappa Tau fraternity and.
their dates pose in front of the statue of Baochus
at their annual Greek weekend held last weekend

Fla., nnd a member of Chi Omrea
to Kenny Baker, a recent nadua'e
and member of Delta Tali Delta

Jackie Demaree, a Junior French
YWCA
major from Louisville, to Buddy
for the YWCA executive
Voting
C'rutchfr, a former student from
council will be held from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. today at the voting- booth Frankfort, and a member of'Fhl
Delta Theta fraternity.
in the' Student Union Building.
All paid YWCA
members are
Bessie Hamilton, a nursing stuvote.
asked to
dent at St. Joseph's Hospital from
ALIMIA EFSILOX RT.LTA
Whitesburg, to Larry I.llincton, a
Alpha Ep.silon Delta, premedical
honorary, is accepting membership law student from Lexington, and
a graduate of Millersburg Miliapplications.
Sophomore premedical or
tary Institute.
students with 3.0 overall
standings or second semester Juniors with 2.8 overall standing sire
.
eligible.
Application forms are available
HAVE FOOD
in the Department of Zoology ofWILL TRAVEL
fice in the Funkhouser Building.
We Deliver
Deadline for submitting member5 p.m.-- l :00 p.m,
ship applications is Maih 20.
CHI O.MKGA
(No Charge On
The members of Chi 0:r.cja
.
Orders $2.50
and Over)
entertained their parents
sorority
at a dinner hekl la: t Saturday at
" It's On the
9VJ
the chapter hou-.eMenu It Can Go"

S J,

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3

Social Activities

'

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21,

fashion authorities, says hair will
be worn close to the head. And

Writer

Deflation is it has organized "dancing hair
hairdos this fashions" that "swing, sway and

The fashionable head will be
small or at least smaller than it's
been for some time.
The topsy-turv- y
world of
has had its ups and downs,
what with balloon heads competing with shaggy hairdos for coiffure supremacy, leaving the artists of the shears at loose ends.
Now a truce is in sight, and
"small neat little heads" will be
in the spring coiffeur lineup,
trend-settepredict.
"Hair length will be short, with
bulk adjusted to each person . .' .
with special attention given to
coiffures for smaller women in
keeping with trends in clothing
and fashions," says the National
Hairdressers
and Cosmetologists
Association.
Ihe association, with a hair
fashion committee said to be composed of more than 100 top hair

flip up into amusing and diverting curls." Height may be given
at the crown area.
A similar trend is noted by
Adrian, just back from a visit
with Antoine of Paris, whose
styles he promotes here.
"Paris hairdos sort of lift off
the forehead and there are wings
at the temples like a modified
The sides will be
pompadour.
close to the head; back will be
shorter than the front. The Brig-itt- e.
Bardot look is passe in Paris,"
he points out.
The idea there is to get rid of
the sloppy look, "the chemise bit,"
says Adrian.
Americans always go short in
spring, he says, but this year the
short loo.t will be neat. It's possible we'll adopt the French version, he says, but if we do, the
hair will need to be imchoied with
a barrette for swimming and other
sports.

COFFEE

500 Rose St.

THE NEW YORK LIFE
AGENT ON YOUR
CAMPUS IS A GOOD
MAN TO KNOW

4t

sritAIN WM.ON
Wtiter
in most towns
Although
womon aro not logally ponnit-tcto woar bathing attiro on
Main St root, ohancos aro they'll
bo toinptoil to sport swim caps
thore.
By J KAN

AP Newsfeatures

d

Who would know what they
were anyway?
Among the l'.Hi'i fashion collection are some that look like
night caps, others that look like
Easter bonnets, and still others
that look like wigs.
In fact, some really are wigs;
look at the
for the bald-pate- d
beach today js as passe ns a Yul
Brynner haircut. Everything topping a bathing beauty is hairy
(or at least dimensional! and dry.
For years coiffure-consciodaughters were so afraid to go
near the water that they got little
more out of a beach excursion than
sunburn. Although they could ul- ways count on tight rubber caps
for frown marks, white borders
around bright red faces and a
headache, they couldn't count on
them to prevent damp, limp locks.
However, bathing tap makers
now insist they really have the
water seepage btopped. Soft seal
bands encircle the insides of
caps and deepen back of the
ears where seepage is the most
likely to occur.
And because bathers simply will
not bob anymore in the brink
looking like billiard balls, manufacturers have covered the skull

contoured head (.ear with flowers,
rullles, bows, stiaws
anything
you're likely to find in a millinery shop and wius.
Water wirs oil'er all sorts of
oppui tunities to confound wat;s.
Can you imagine the confusion
of the male who meets a blonde
on the beach only to have her
come back from the locker room
a brunette one time and a redhead still another?
The wig caps arc actually two
caps, with separate
rubbery
tresses fitting over skull caps.
Indeed, a preview of the swim
suits to be worn with these caps
this summer indicates that bathing beauties may be wearing a lot
more on their heads than anywhere else.

urn-

rl

GENE CRAVENS

Nylic
NEW YORK LIFE
Insurance Company
r LIFE INSURANCE
t ACCIDENT AND SICKNESS
INSURANCE
Warren

2C2

Swim Caps Featured

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JIICIILER FLORIST
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417 East Maxwelf

COLLEGE SPECIAL
Tuesday end Wednesday
The bearer of this coupon

entitled to one box of Claussner hose, a $4.10 value,
for only $2.65.
One Box to a Customer, Please
is

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819 Euclid Ave.
Chevy Chase

P"

* Our

All-roun-

Wildcats

d

This year's basketball team will
go down in the record books as having won 23 "games and having lost
only three. The record will indicate
this has been a good year, but certainly not the best Kentucky has
turned out.

It cannot be compared with the
"Fabulous Five" in either performance or color. There have been bits
of brilliance and at least two players
have attracted attention, but on a
whole it cannot be called great.
And yet, this is the
come through the year
greatest
teams of all
Ohio State, which was
ted" to win, Kentucky
crowd-drawin-

g

team that has
as one of the
g
and
time. Unlike
always expeccould always
crowd-pleasin-

lose. For some reason this has made
them a more desirable spectator team.
As we sit in classrooms with these

players and pass them on the campus
walks it is impossible not to admire
them. They fit into campus life with
ease and mix with students with a
graciousness and friendliness seldom
found in major college athletes.
In the little country towns over
the state each of these players is an
adopted nephew to hundreds of men.
These players are the heroes of high
school players and hopefuls. They are
the idols of grade school boys playing
on clay courts and shootiag at baskets hung on garages.
Never in the history of Kentucky
basketball has a team acquitted itself
in a better manner on or off the court.

More Power Than Brains
Every time fast driving causes a
serious wreck someone asks why auto
manufacturers make cars that have
so much power. The auto industry is
then trounced for being unethical,
impersonal, and interested only in
making money.
The people advocating less power
have good reasons and arguments.
Speed limits do not allow fast driving; initial cost, depreciation, and operating costs make powerful motors
uneconomical; and the extra power
tends to make people drive fast and
take chances in passing.
It should be remembered, however, that the auto industry makes
what the people want. When compact
economy cars became popular, Amermade compact
ican manufacturers
economy cars. But the Wall Street
Journal reports that the trend this
year is back to power. Many of the
cars are still compact but they have
more horses under the hood. This
trend shows that Americans are more

interested in power than economy.
The Automobile Manufacturers
Association is not completely unaware
of the cries for less power and more
safety. They pledged "to encourage
owners and drivers to evaluate passenger cars in terms of useful power
and ability to afford safe, reliable
and comfortable transportation, rather than in terms of capacity for speed."
A gentleman's
was
agreement
made to ban factory participation in
auto racing and speed and acceleration tests or the advertising of race
results.
But even with this pledge manufacturers are making more powerful
cars and will continue to do so until
the public raises its voice. A Chrysler
advertising man says, "Some of the
glory of the high speed cars rubs off.
It's a thing in people's heads. They
want that power."
Until people really decide to slow
down and live, manufacturers are not
going to slow down their cars.

Campus Parable
By CALVIN ZONGKER
Director, Baptist Student Union
. . any man's
John Donne wrote,
death diminishes me, because I am involved in mankind."
We are inescapably social beings,
but we have difficulty in getting along
w ith each other. One of the greatest

rules of interpersonal relationships declares that we should treat others
as we want to be treated. This places
the burden of responsibility not on
the other person but upon us!
Regardless of what our neighbor
is like, we must practice

Susy McHugh

THE READERS' FORUM
Kose Street Problem
To The Editor:
After reading your editorial in the
Tuesday, Mar