xt7h9w09021w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7h9w09021w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640409  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  9, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, April  9, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7h9w09021w section xt7h9w09021w of
UniversityTIU'RSn Kentucky
APRIL

Vol. LV, No. 100

LEXINGTON,

KY.,

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SC Officer Nominations

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Set For Spring Election

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The Bayanihan Ballet of the Philippines will perform at the Coliseum
tonight in connection with the Central Kentucky Concert-Lectur- e
Association. The performance will be a bonus concert for ticket
holders. Students will be admitted by ID cards.

Bayanihan Ballet
To Appear Tonight
The Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture Association
presents the Bayanihan Pallet Company from Manila in a
bonus concert at 8:13 tonight.
Members are required to bring
will
be admitted with their I.D. cards.
the auVividly Interpreting
thentic folk dances and music
of the Philippines, thirty young
dancers and fifteen musicians
comprise the widely acclaimed
company. Dedicated research has
gone into every detail of recreating the regional dances, designing the colorful costuming, and
assembling the unique native musical instruments.
The Bayanihan Folk Arts Center was started In Manila in 1957,
sending teams of students and
teachers to all parts of the Islands to study and photograph
the muthe dances,
sic and collect costumes and instruments.
Bayanihan's immediate success
resulted in its being expanded to
Its present size and triumphant
tours of the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, Japan, Sweden,
Germany, England, Italy, Mexico,
Israel, Spain, Belgium, Denmark,

their tickets and students

France, Canada, as well as the
United States, have been made.
The experience of the dance
company as the hit of both the
Brussels' Universial Exposition
(1958) and the Seattle World's
Fair (19G2) foieshadows an
response
equally overwhelming
from visitors to the World's Fair
In New York next spring.
The dancers will perform for
three weeks at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and
will enjoy the distinction of bedance
ing the first
company to appear at the Center's new New York State Theater..
A tremendous
share of the
credit for establishing the Bayanihan Dancers belongs to Helena Benitez, executive vice president of the Philippine Women's
University. It was under Miss
Benitz's leadership that the Bayanihan Folk Arts Center was
born.

The Student Congress at
Tuesday's meeting put aside
discussion on proposed
changes in the constitution in
order to accept nominations
for the congress' officers to
be elected April 21.
Only the office of the vice
president caused the congress to
vote in order to limit the nominations to three. Richard Marsh,
Arts and Sciences sophomore,
Glenn Moore, Arts and Sciences
Junior, David Clarke, Commerce
Junior, and Howell Brady, Arts
and Sciences sophomore, were
nominated
and Marsh, Moore,
and Clarke were selected.

A

Conflict of Models."

The following are excerpts
from the lecture.
"But my argument
requires
that I raise the question whether
humanistic
studies, other than
the clerical sorts, can be significant without a firm metaphysical
dimension, which, it should be
pointed out, is not guaranteed

Shakespeare Scholar
To Speak At Guignol
Dr. C. B. Harrison, professor of English at the University of Michigan, will speak at 8 p.m. today in the Guignol
Theatre.
head of the Department of English at Queen's College, KingsThe noted Shakespearean

scholar will lecture on "Shakespeare After 400 Years." This
lecture, open to the public, Is a
English Departpart of the UK month-lonobg
ment's current
servance of the 400th anniverof Shakespeare's birth.
sary
Dr. Harrison, a native of Great
Britian, was educated at Cambridge University. He has taught
at St. Paul's Training College,
Cheltenham, King's College, and
the University of London. He was

ton, Ontario, for six years before
Joing the Michigan faculty In
1949.

He is the author of "The Eliza-

bethan and Jacobean Journals,"
and
"Introducing
Shakespeare,"
"The Life of the Earl of Essex,"
and has edited a volume, "Complete Works of Shakespeare."
His latest book, "The English
Profession," is a provocative inquiry into the touching of English at all levels.

nominated a slate of officers.
Campus Organization for United
Participation dissolved, and some
of its past members have formed a new party, which is as yet
unnamed.
Niles will head the ticket of
Government
the new Student
Party. Niles has served as counselor at freshman camp, secretary of his engineering profession class, member of the board
of directors of the Circle K Club,
the Interfaith Council, president
of the Christian Church
on Page 2

Paul Chellgren, congress president, cast the tie breaking vote
between Clarke and Brady.
The nominees accepted by congress for the presidency were Jim
Svara, Arts and Sciences Junior;
Steve Beshear. Arts and Sciences
sophomore; and Bob Niles, Engineering sophomore.

fc
fc..i.N iaT
STEVE BESHEAR

L1I

Z

BOB NILES

distinguished Professor Gives
lecture For A&S College
Dr. Arthur K. Moore, Distinguished Professor of the
Year, presented the Distinguished Professor Lecture of
the College of Arts and Sciences Tuesday. The title of
his lecture was "Scientists,
Poets, and Administrators

Becky Anderson, Arts and Sciences Junior, Janie Olmstead,
Education sophomore; and Sus-anZiegler, Education freshman, were selected to run for
secretary.
Candidates selected for treasurer were Lois Kock, Arts and
Sciences sophomore; Ben Williams, Arts and Sciences sophomore; and Sam Long, Arts and
Sciences sophomore.
A new party was born and an
old party died at the meeting.
The Student Government Party

by the required programs in the
various divisions of language and
literature. It may be possible to
speak adequately of art without
metaphysics, though I am doubtful; but surely no one can believe that the values embodied
in art can be competently discussed in any other context. If
the defect of philosophy is as
great as I have suggested, then
the humanities on the literary
side operate with dubious war-

rant."

"In a speech last October before the American Council of
Education, Mr. Thomas J. Watson Jr., called for the formation
of a National Foundation for the
Humanities and Arts, which you
will recognize as a counterpart
of the National Science Foundation. He fondly expects the
humanities to supply the value
Judgments I repeat, value Judgmentsfor his computers and for

this

machine-oriente- d

civiliza-

tion. Whether the humanities,
separate and apart, ran perform
this awesome task may be doubted; in any rase, there Is small
Justification for the attempt from
any save a broad philisophical
base."
"If humanists can neither prescribe nor predict to the satisfaction of empiricists, they can
Continued on I'age 8

-

-

-

-

JIM SVARA

SC Rules Argument
Sets Long Meeting
By BILL GRANT
Kernel Daily Editor

Expected dissention over representation in Student Conmeeting Tuesday
gress threw the congress into a three-hou- r
night.
erning bodies on campus might
The meeting, which had begun
be coordinated.
at 1 p.m., adjourned shortly beamendment
was
Chellgren's

fore 10 p.m. when, on a quorum
call raised by Bill Kenton, a
quorum could not be reached.
Kenton's quorum call was a
of maneuvers
continuation
by
several groups to change the proon representaposed provision
tion.
The constitution
proposed at
the meeting by the Constitutional Revision Committee provided for 25 students elected in
a campuswide election.
Student Congress President
Paul Chcllgren stepped down
from the presiding chair, turning
it over to Vice President Sam
Burke, in order to personally offer an amendment to the section.
Chellgren said his amendment
was a compromise between two
prevailing thoughts on how representatives should be selected
by housing units or at large.
amendment
proChellgren's
posed an Assembly of 23 students
one each
elected campuswide and
from Associated Women's Students, Women's Residence Hall
Council. Men's Dorm Council,
Town Housing Council, Panhel-lenl- c
Council, and the Married
Students Council.
Chellgren's motion provided
that, unless otherwise stated by
a group, the vice president would
serve as the congress representative.
"A major problem has been a
lack of coordination among governing units," Chellgren said in
He
proposing his amendment.
oltcred it as a way in which gov

finally accepted but not before
three amendments to the amendment had been defeated.
Phil Grogan proposed increasing the elected assembly to 35;
Bill Kenton proposed an increase
to 50; and Joe Coughlin proposed
reducing the elected representatives to 12 and giving two representatives to each of the
groups except married
students which would get one.
All were defeated.
Prior to discussing the representation, Kenton had moved ta
amend the constitution to require
a student to have attended the
University four full semesters before he could run for president
of the congress. "You don't make
attorneys out of freshmen and
doctors out of sophomores," ha
said. "It would seem necessary
to require mature and interested
leadership that would come only
after several years at the University," Kenton said. His motion was defeated.
As currently proposed, the constitution requires that the president have attended three full
semesters, one of which must
have been at the Lexington campus.
When the final quorum call
failed to find a quorum present,
the congress members still present agreed to meet at 8 p.m.
next Monday to continue discussion of the constitution.
On adjournment, the congress
was discussing urticle four of the
constitution.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April

9,

11

'Home By Christmas' Haunted MacArthur
By RF.I.MAN MORIN
Associated Press Writer

"Home

ly

Christmas" was

n luippy smtimrnt.

lint it became a mocking
memory for Gen. Douglas
MacArthur and his admirers,
and a larled taunt hurled at
him again and again by his
critics.
Oeneral MacArthur uttered the
U'ords on an icy morning In November, 1950, at a moment when
it appeared that the Korean War
was all but ended and victorious. This writer was present.
The circumstances of the episode, which figured heavily in
the end of his career, are these:
On Thanksgiving Day, one of
Oeneral MacArthur's aides telephoned and said, "the general
would like to see you in his office this evening at 6:30." Pour
other correspondents also were

Third of a Scries
summoned to the headquarters
In Toyko.
General MacArthur was alone
when we entered his office.
His desk was completely cleared. His aides always said he
woald never go home at night
until he had disposed of even
the
business of the
day, no matter how late he had
to Work.
Oeneral MacArthur's hands
were always restless. Now he was
rubbing the bowl of one of his
pipes. He looked up with a slight
smile and said he hoped he
with any
hadn't
Thanksgiving dinners. He said he
was about to go home and settle
down to his turkey. Then he
said:
"I am going to Korea in the
morning, I can take five of you.
Take-of- f
is at S o'clock. You will
be briefed on the plane."
This was somewhat unusual.
O e n er a y, when he went to
Korea, he disclosed the purpose
of the trip. Dispatches could be
prepared by the correspondents
for fast transmission and there
was time to look up any necessary background. In this case,
he said nothing was to be written in advance.
the next
Shortly after take-omorning, his aides handed around
a communique. It was dated November 24, 1950, and numbered
No. 12. It said:
"The I'nited Nations massive
in
compression envelopment Red
North Korea against the new
armies operating there is now
approaching its derisive effort.
"The Isolating component of
the pincer, our air forces of all
types, have for the past three
weeks, in a sustained attack of
model coordination and effectiveness, successfully interdicted enemy lines of supply from the
north so that further reinforcement therefrom has been sharply
cm tailed.
"The eastern sector of the
and
pincer, with noteworthy
has
naval
effective
support,
steadily advanced in a brilliant
tacticul movement and has now
reached a commanding enveloping position, cuttiig in two the
northern reaches )f the enemy's
geographical potential.
"'this morning' the western
sector of the pincer moves for- -

interfered

Admissions: 50c Frl. & Sun.,
60c Saturday
Showing at 6:30 and 9v
Fri. and Sat.; 8 Sunday

The Jeeps drew up in front of a
wooden shack.
Waiting inside were Ma J. Gen.
John B. Coulter, corps commander, and his Intelligence officer.
took a
Oeneral
MacArthur
chair directly in front of a large
situation map. The offensive had
started some five hours earlier.
The blazing blue and red symbols
on the map showed troop dispositions and the progress of the
advance. Oeneral Coulter told
Oeneral MacArthur of the latest
reports from "up forward."
General MacArthur askrd a
few terse questions. His knowledge of the terrain ahead was
impressive. He seemed familiar
with its smallest features.
Then General Walker said to
General Coulter:
"I notice you haven't mentioned any objectives. Jack. I
don't like that word, 'objectives.'
I think we should just keep pushing as hard as we can go."
"That's what we're going to

Leolure

TNtATS.1

STARTS TOMORROW

"

iRocklPW

ma nof the constitutional revision committee, a member of Phi
Eta Sigma, Keys, and Lances,
Eta Sigma Phi, ancient language
honorary; the YMCA, and Little
Kentucky Derby Committee.
The Student Party Ticket includes Beshear, president: Clarke,
vice president; Miss Olmstead,
secretary; and Miss Kock, treasurer.
Williams of the COUP claims
not to be affiliated with any ticket and will run on an individual
basis.
Among the rules established by
the congress election committee
will be a provision for one debate between the presidential
candidates to be sponsored by
the congress. This debate will be
held at 7 p.m. Monday In the
Student Center Theater.
Other rules established by the
committee are:
Ballots will be cast on voting

W. P. Donovan, professor of
classics at the University of
Illinois, will give an Illustrated lecture at 8 p.m. today In
Room 245 of the Student Center.
The lecture, sponsored by
the Kentucky Society of the
of
Arrheological
America, is open to all interested persons.

Institute

i
student
center
theater

Cnl.r

WffM
"BEST

:

AMERICAN

FRANK

Burt

NIGHTT

AT

8:1

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tut

fl

I

1962'

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DEAN MAilTIM
ASKS THE

"Who's
Jk
Shnwi

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Admission 7Sc

Start! 7:30

QUESTION

I

H.MU

,

At 1:30, 5:00, 8:30

HOTIESt
Of THE lAY:

oeen

seeping

4o;a

NOW!

in My s

Cont! from 10 a.m.

t

Mil
J a Mot

ONLY

Lancaster n "THE LEOPARD"

STARTS

OF

SINATRA

DCd

LAST

FILM

'Come Blow Your Horn''

1

PANCAKE HOUSE

o

AND

T7irn?rsT

a.m. to 2 p.m.
Selection changes each day
Rosa
At
Always under $1.00
,

Hudson I Prentiss

World-Wid- e

in
satellites
Three
orbiting
proper position at 22,300 miles
would be able to provide communications coverage for the entire earth.

PLUS

SPECIAL LUNCH
For Students and Staff
1

machines from 8 a.m. to S p.m.
April 21. Two of these machines
will be in the Student Center
and one in the Journalism Building.
No campaign literature will be
posted in the buildings in which
the voting takes place while the
election is in progress.
It has been requested that no
campaign literature be posted
inside the buildings where the
election Is to be held and that
no painting be done on University property or nails be put Into trees.
treasurer candidates at this time.

Lilt Mtfaiint

ante1
NOW!

Zin PERKINS

V

J

I

TOMORROW

Shown At 7:40 nd 9:3J
A REAL LAUGMlWG GASSERI
STARRING

THE

"CARRY

ON

'

GANG

101

M0NKH0USE

KENNETH

atari

KJU.

Km

list

.

ERIC

KCtfl

CONNOR
BARKER
CUMMINS

VJ

"SUPEilB!"

V

0pZt"

"h o m
mas" probably
was designed for two purposes
to reassure Peking that the advance would end at the Yalu
and not go on into Red China,
and to encourage the troops.
In any event, it backfired
badly.
The savage, forbidding mountains on the frontier concealed
a Chinese horde. After the brief- flew
ings, Oeneral MacArthur
over these mountains.
Looking
down from an oversize window in
his plane, he carefully scrutinized the tortuous terrain. If he
suspected that it crawled with
enemy infantry, the only way to
flush them out was to order a
general advance. This he did.
For two days, the offensive
moved ahead smoothly. Then the
Chinese came out of the mountains like an avalanche and hit
the Eighth Army. A general retreat began.
There was to be no "home by
Christmas."
Next: Scenes of Bravery.

WED. - SAt.

" Rififi"
SATURDAY
FRI. and SUN.
"Imitation Of Life"

NEWMAN"

Kentucky

do," Oeneral Coulter replied.
"We're not thinking In terms of
objectives."
Oeneral MacArthur rose. He
put his hand on Oeneral Coulter's shoulder, smiled, and said:
"That's right, Jack. You tell
the boys that when they get to
the Yalu, they're going home. I
want to make good on my statement that they are going to eat
Christmas dinner at home."
This way the origin of the
statement.
General MacArthur could not
have meant it In the literal sense.
Even if the Eighth Army had
reached the Yalu River, if there
had been no Chinese opposition
whatever, the troops could not
have been withdrawn immediatemuch less
ly to bases in Japan
"home" by December 25.
He was simply hopeful of ending the war before the worst of
the winter months settled over
North Korea. He could not know
the intentions of the Chinese
Reds. Hence, the optimistic

Breshear, Niles, Svara Named
Continued From Page 1
tion, secretary of student YMCA,
member of Lambda Chi Alpha
fraternity, and is on the
Council.
The Student Government slate
Includes Niles, presidrnt; Marsh,
vice president; Miss 7.iegler, secretary, and Long, treasurer.
Svara will head the ticket
for the unnamed party. He is
cochairman of the Student Centennial Committee, a member of
Omicron Delta Kappa, men's
leadership honorary; and in the
Town Housing Association.
Svara's ticket includes Moore,
vice presidrnt and Miss Anderson,
secretary. Svara said he was not
giving support to any of the
Steve Beshear will lead the
only remaining old party, the
Student Party. Beshear is treas-ma- n
of the constitutional revi- -

Served weekdays

ENDS TONIGHT

"CAPTAIN

ward in general assault In an
effort to complete the compression and close the vise.
"If successful, this should for
all practical purposes end the
war, restore peace and unity to
Korea, enable the prompt withdrawal of United Nations mili-tai- y
forces, and permit the complete assumption by the Korean
people and nation of full sovereignty and international equality.
It is that for which we fight."
The tone of this communique
reflected the high optimism of
the moment.
Weeks earlier, when the North
Korean capital city Pyongyang,
was taken, Oeneral MacArthur
had said, "This war is very definitely coming to an end very
shortly." There were reports that
he had made a similar statement
in more positive terms to a
United Nations commission shortNow,
ly before Thanksgiving.
communique No. 12 told the
world, "If successful, this should
for all practical purposes end the
war. . . ."
But what of the Chinese?
These were the 'new Red
armies" to which the communique referred. They had started
appearing at the front in October. Peking said they were "volunteers." By the end of the
month, however, they had lashed
out with a strong counterattack.
Organized units of the Chinese
Red Army not a handful of
had conducted the
"volunteers"
operation.
Then a strange set of events
took place.
Mysteriously, the Chinese vanished. Large fighting patrols went
out hunting for them but found
none. Next, they released groups
of American prisoners. The soldiers said a Chinese woman
translator had told them:
"The Chinese do not want to
fight Americans."
Further, correspondents in the
Far East were given to understand that the Central Intelligence Agency Judged that large-scaintervention by the Chinese
Reds was unlikely.
It was against this background
that General MacArthur launched the offensive in the west on
November 24 and issued his communique.
When his plane landed, that
morning, Jeeps carried the party
on a Jolting ride across country
to Ninth Corps headquarters. Lt.
Gen. Walton H. Walker, commander of the Eighth Army,
rode with General MacArthur.

BKIANKtlTrJ.VERA

MILES

All MMil SHUn,

W

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, April

I

Kernel Women's Page
19 Million Bachelors

Running Loose In U.S
By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON
AP Newsfeatures Writer
NEW YORK (AP)
Circulating too freely In the
of unmarried women
are more than 19 million bachek
lors Mho
for neat numbers for their little black books.
Where? Church? The office?
Among the prospects of matchmaking friends?
Everywhere but with certain
reservations, says Bernard Gunner, a
eligible who
has made an unscientific study
the social habits of his kind.
of
At the church meetings are the
fame girls he's always known In
his community. Bernie does not
believe In office romances or
wooing his pretty lady clients.
Business and romance are an explosive mixture, he says.
Especially In the big cities
across the country
the social
has arisen called
phenomenon
the public dance with the specific
purpose of bringing lonely
together socially.
"On Friady afternoons I tear
out the page In the tabloids and
ttart to plan my weekend," says
a
who has not abandonned
the Idea of marriage. The dances
are enumerated there.
On a weekend In New York
city alone are more than 150
events divided by their
such
sponsors Into people of the same
general background. Dance admittance may limit to persons
or 25 to 40 or "over 29"
(which can be a euphemism for
doddering old age); or to persons of certain religion or foreign extraction; or with college
or specific cultural
diplomas;
Interests, professions.
"I can tell when a girl walks
Into these dances whether she
will have a good time." says Bernie, the expert.
"Negativism
registers on her face. A girl has
to be positive, and a little aggression Isn't bad either."
"Girls don't understand men,"
he contends, "men are deathly
afraid of rejection. A refusal
might ruin their whole evening.
That's why a pleasant countenance means so much. It's encouraging."
Traveling In packs Is a mistake, he says. Men are afraid of
being refused In front of other
girls. As for traveling in twos,
two men seldom see two girls
that they both like. To ask one
leaves the other girl stranded.
No, the lone wolfess travels
fastest."
Bernle's advice to
Bachelor
girls at these dances Is "start
with some one, anyone,
dancing
an ugly one, or a male friend as
a decoy, but look in demand."
A part of the market place
"are the cocktail meeting places.
The girls hate these, you can
see. They are on display, and the
competition is keen. Sometimes
they'll start up a conversation.
Does boldness brand them as
bad girls? I've made a complete
study and this has nothing to do
with it."

But the happy hunting grounds
are weekend resorts. For the
price of a date for dinner and
the theater, a bachelor can have
an evening and day of sports and
social activities with a bevy of
young girls there to be met who
are paying for their own lodging.
"At the resorts you can see
them under
different circumstances and learn better what
they are really like," he claims.
But the maneuvers have become
so sterotyped. I can conduct a
conversation with a girl without
listening to her cues.
"You arrive and meet two or
three
girls. But they
are shy, on the defensive. Anyway you don't want to commit
yourself because you might meet
some one cuter later on in the
evening.
"The dinner hour Is like musical chair, with the girls and
fellows switiching tables three or
four times before the dessert.
'But the social hour, the dance,
is the real rat race. In a dimly
lit, smoky room are hordes of
people switching back and forth,
and
trying to be scintillating
clever above the din of forced
laughter and blaring music.
"The girls in party dresses and
hairdos don't look the same as
they did in the afternoon and
you look frantically but can't
find the nice ones you cased
earlier. After a while you'll settle for anybody.
"By the next day everybody
seems to have met everybody
else to swim or ski with and
you vow you won't make that
mistake twice. You'll commit
yourself on a Saturday afternoon. But the next Saturday
you're back to thinking I'd better
wait awhile until you've done the
same fool thing all over again."
And that may very well be why
Bernie has reprocrastinating
mained a bachelor so long.

ATO Sweetheart
Lindie Hull was chosen ATO
Sweetheart at the annual White
Tea Rose formal.

Recently

Delta Tau Delta

April

Larry Kelley, Lexington, received the Jim Shropshire award
at the 40th Founder's Day Banquet of Delta Tau Delta fraternity last weekend.
Kelley, a pie-lamajor at
the University received the $50
award for scholarship and leadership. He has a 3.8 overall, holds
several positions In campus organizations
including president
of Circle K, the Kiwanis service
and was recently
organization,
elected Omicron
Delta Kappa,
senior men's
honorary. Kcllry
has taken an average of 22 hours
a semester while at UK.
Another
Ken
Lexlngtonian,
Brandenburgh, received the outstanding active award. Brandenburgh,
president of the local
chapter, was recently named the
outstanding Greek man on campus.
Herb Llggon, Madisonville, was
named the outstanding
pledge
for the 1963-6- 4
school year.
Prior to the banquet, attended
by alumnus, 19 men were initiated into Delta Tau Delta.
Those initiated were: Robert
Creech Jr., Bill Davis, Jim Harty,
John McCracken, John McRey-nold- s,
Steve Merkel, Bill Moore,
Chris Morgan, John O'Brien, Bill
Simpson, and Lewie Sutherland.
were Mark
Also activated
Trumbo, Billy Vermillion, Dick
Rick Wakeland,
Art
Wade,
Walker, Lyle Walker, and Craig
Wiggins.

April
April

Wed

Judy Miner, a Junior topical
major from Louisville and member of Delta Gamma to Peyton
Hay, a Junior commerce major
from Louisville.

Christian Fellowship
The Intervarsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Friday in the Student Center.
The film "Missions in Crisis" will
be shown. This film was made at
the 6th Student Missionary Convention at the University of Illinois.

Will D. Gilliam of
has been
chosen "Professor of the Month"
for the month of March by the
men of Phi Kappa Tau. The
award, presented each month of
the school year, is presented to a
professor who, in the eyes of the
chapter, has given outstanding
service to the students of the
University. Dr. Gilliam will be
honored at a dinner at the chapter house.

the history department

April
April
April
April

April 15

April 16
April 16
April 17
April 18
April 24
April 25
April
April
April
April

25
27
28
29

April 28
April 26

Musica.l I K Choristers, Memorial Hall, 8 p.m.
English Department Movie, "Hamlet," Laboratory Theatre,
4 and 7:30 p.m.
Art Gallery Talk and Reception for Carl Holty, Fine Arts
Bldg., 7:30 p.m.
Kernel Dinner
Audubon Film, "Kiwi Commonwealth,"
Memorial Hall,
7:30 p.m.
LKD
LKD
President's Review, h a.m.
Old South
Old South
Delt Formal
Army ROTC Honors Prade Day, 8 a.m.
Spindletop Hall Dance, Spring Formal, 9 to 1
Blazer Lecture, A. Hunter Dupree, Guignol Theatre, 10 a.m.
Inauguration, Dr. Oswald, Memorial Ciloseum, 2:30 p.m.
Musicale, Symphonic Band and Chorus Guignol Theatre,
8 p.m.
Classes end at noon
Inauguration of President Oswald 2 p.m.
Musicale, Men and Women's Glee Clubs, Memorial Hull,
3:30 p.m.

Engagements
Pat Rouse, a senior elementary
education
major from Ludlow
and a member of Delta Zeta, to
Phil Smith, a recent graduate
from Glasgow and a member of
FarmHouse.
Beckey Miller, a sophomore
French major from Deerfleld,
111. and a member
of Pi Beta
Phi, to Jim Docktcr, a Junior
commerce major from Louisville

presents

Be Proud To Wear
5 FOR $1.00

Shirts That You Will

i

Dry Cleaning For Those Who Care
Alterations For Men's ond Ladies' Wear
Emergency Service! If Requested

CROLLEY CLEANERS
116 W. Maxwell

see:

exotic dances
songs
international acts
a I&
M

WHOLESALE

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3

7:30
Memorial Hall

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DIAMONDS
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JEWELRY OF ALL KINDS
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TYPEWRITERS
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PEN SETS
CLOCKS
HI Fl
RADIOS
TRANSISTORS

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UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY CHARMS
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WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS
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$1

Kennedy's
Shackfeton's
Dawahares

Dial

To Buy At

Cosmorama

pi

and a member of Alpha Tau
OtneRa.
Barbara Parsons, a sophomore
art major from Nashville, Tenn.
and a member of Chi Omega, to
Danny Bowles, a Junior math
major from Lexington and a
member of Phi Kappa Tau.
Autumn Ann Ebie, a sophomore home economics major
to Charles
from
Cynthiana,
Wayne Copes, of Cynthiana.

STUDENTS and FACULTY
Your UK ID Card Entitles You

Cosmopolitan Club

rn

April
April

English Department Lecture, G. B. Harrison, Guignol Theatre, 8 p.m.
Young Democrats election of officers 7 p.m. Student Cctner.
Bayanihan Dance Group 8:15 p.m. Memorial Coliseum
10 TGIF
10 Research Conference, Che mistry-riiyslr- s
Building
Cancer Teaching Lecture Series, Medical Science Bldg.,
8:30 p.m.
Spindletop Hall Dance, 9 to 1
10 Cosmorama, 7:30 p.m.. Memorial Hall
Lambda Chi Pushcart Derby dance
1
Central Kentucky Faculty Conference, Student Center
11
AFROTC Donors Day Parade, 8 a m,
Tushcart Derby
Army-Ai- r
Force Military Ball, 8 p.m.
11
Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra 3 p.m.
13 Musicale, Norman Chapman, Tianist, Memorial Hall, 8 p.m.
13
Concert, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, Memorial Coliseum, 8:15 p.m.
15 Tlieta Sig dinner
9

Phi Tau Award

the

A rvv

April

9

Pin-Mat-

Ann Lippincolt, a freshman
from Riverton,
Spanish major
N. J. and a member of Delta
Gamma, to John Gay, a Junior
chemical engineering major from
Jamestown, N. Y. and a member
of Pi Kappa Alpha.

Professor

YWC.A
New YWCA officers are: Linda
Lear, president; Mary Lee BayJane Stivers,
ers,
and Jo McCauley,
secretary;
treasurer.

-3

Campus Calendar

Edited by
Nancy Loughridge
April

Over

9, 1901

109-11- 3

Church Street (Near Post Office)
OPEN 9-- 5 Monday-Saturda- y

* The Kentucky Kernel
The South's Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky

Entered it the post office at Lexington, Kentucky at second class matter under the Act of Mnrch 8, 1879.
Published lour times a rpk during the miliar school year escept durinll holidays and exam.
Subscription rates: $7 a school year; 10 cents a copy Irom iilee

Sub Endicott, Editor in Chief
Caw. Modech, Campu Editor
David Hawpb, Managing Editor
Associate and Daily Editors:
Richard Stevenson, Sandra Brock, William Grant, and Elizabeth Ward
Departmental Editors'.
Sm Webb, Cartoonist
Nancy Louchridce, Social
Wally Pacan, Sports
Tom Finnte, Circulation Manager
Job Curry, Advertising Manager
Phones: News, extension 2283 nd 2302; Advertising and Circulation. 2306

What Is The Mark
Of True Greatness?
Every great University has a large,
spacious, beautiful student center,
and the University of Kentucky, in its
newly avowed purpose to be a "great"
university is no exception.
Last year, when the University
looked more like a construction camp
than an institution of higher learning,
plans were completed and construction was begun on a center to encompass student activities.
This construction, in all of its
magnificence, represents more than an
emulation of the fine traditions of
great universities. It stands as a constant reminder of the backward thinking, poor planning, and shortsightedness of our "great" University.
For within the shadow of the Student Center stands the Social Science
Building (Splinter Hall), Miller Hall,
and White Hall. These are just a few
of the more prominent, insufficient
Student classroom facilities.
It appears incongruous that students must leave their few moments
of recreation in the roomy,
elegantly furnished Student
Center to attend classes in crowded,
dimly lighted fire traps.
Certainly the University has an

swered the plight of the ancient
scholar who went to the great halls
of the universities to hear the lectures
and then retired to a hoval to consider those ideas over a loaf of bread
and a glass of wine. For the University has styled a cafeteria with more
than adequate facilities for dining in
comfort and has left the design for
the lecture halls unchanged.
We cannot alter past decisions, but
we mus