xt7rxw47ss7z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7rxw47ss7z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650302  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  2, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, March  2, 1965 1965 2015 true xt7rxw47ss7z section xt7rxw47ss7z Inside Today's Kernel

luuor uiscusses the locked doort of
the library: Poge Four.
Kernel staff writers and photographers
have prepared a special report on the
Appalachian region: Poge fire.

Two UK surgeons discover that
practice is the best thing for a heart surgeon: Page Eleven.

The Supreme Court mokes banning a
motion picture more difficult: Page
Ten.
The creator of PockeTutor has announced that the device will not be
manufactured: Page Ten.

U--

The YMCA will sponsor a spring vacain Washington,
D.C.

tion seminar
Page Ten.

The UK Judo Club provides instruction in the art: Page Nine.

Vol. LV1, No.

University of Kentucky
8G

LEXINGTON,

KY., TUESDAY, MARCH 2,

r

A WS Nominates

JLLj

J

Twelve Pages

19C.5

4

'

28 Candidates
For Senate Race
Elections for the
Women Students Senate
seats will be held Wednesday,
March 3.
Polls will be open from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. in the Student Center
and in the Fine Arts Building.
All women students are eligible
to vote when presenting their
student ID card.
The Senate is the executive
and legislative body of the three-pa-

rt

AWS.

The House of Representatives
composed of a representative
from each living unit and acts
as a liaison between AWS and
that unit while House of
representatives work closely with
senators in carrying out projects
and activities.
The third organ, Women's
Council, interprets AWS
policies to maintain high standards of behavior.
All women enrolled at the
University are members of AWS,
whose purpose it is to supervise and regulate all matters pertaining to the welfare of women
students. Additionally, AWS attempts to further a spirit of unity
and service, increase a sense of
individual responsibility, and
maintain high standards and
ideals of behavior.
Senators are elected for a
term. All senators, except
the two freshmen senators, are
elected in the spring. The freshmen are elected in a special
election during the first weeks of
the fall semester.
Positions to be filled in tomorrow's election are: president
vice president
and runner-up- ;
and runner-up- ;
Panhellenic repWomresentative and runner-up- ;
en's Residence Hall Council reptwo
resentative and runner-up- ;
senior, two junior, and two sophomore representatives. Total Senate membership is 16 women.
Candidates and their positions
is

Ad-vise-

one-ye-

ar

are:

PRESIDENT
Dede Cramer, a junior elementary education major from
Lexington has served on the Senate as a junior representative.
A member of Delta Delta Delta
sorority, she would like to increase campus study facilities.
Miss Cramer is on the Kentuck-iastaff; historian of Links, junior women's honorary; was a
member of the 1964 IJifh School
Leadership steering committee
and an LKD subcommittee. She

n

is presently chairman of the annual Stars In the Night women's
awards program.
Linda Lampe, junior sociology major from Louisville, and
president of Kappa Kappa Gamma
sorority, views AWS as "an organization to unify women students." She is a member of Young
Democrats, Committee of 240,
Blue Marlins and Eta Sigma'Phi.
A past senator, Miss Lampe is
sorority editor of theKentuckian.
VICE PRESIDENT
Deedee Alexander, junior political science major from Louisville, wants to "eliminate unnecessary duplication of information and activities by a closer coordination between campus
legislative and social organizations." Miss Alexander has served the Senate as the Women's
Residence Hall Council representative. She is a member of the
WRH Council, Keeneland Hall
House Council, Young Demotutorcrats, and the
ing program.
Connie Mullins, sophomore
history major from Louisville sees
"continuance of trust of women
students" as the way to strengthen AWS. A member of Kappa
Delta sorority, she is president
of Alpha Lambda Delta. Miss
Mullins is a member of Cwens,
sophomore women's honorary;
Women's Advisery Council; WRH
pamphlet committee; YMCA cabinet; the Honors Program; Stars
in the Night Awards committee,
and Centennial Ball and Housing committees. She has been a
handmember of the
book committee, was a discussion leader for the High School
Leadership conference, and was
a member of the Stars in the
Night Steering committee.
SENIOR REPRESENTATIVE
Janice Ashley, junior home
economics major from Beaver
Dam.
Courtney Helm, junior art major from Lexington.
Blithe Runsdorf, junior journalism major from New York
City.
Marian Spencer, junior psychology major from Scotsville.
JUNIOR REPRESENTATIVE
Cathy Allison, a sophomore
history major from Lexington.
Gay Gish, sophomore journalism major from Nashville, Tenn.
Sharon Norsworthy, sophomore commerce major from
On Pare 12
YM-YWC- A

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ure there he has won the Paul
White Award and has been nominated for an Emmy award for
"Howard K. Smith:
his
News and Comment."
Working for CBS before joinseries.
ing ABC, Mr. Smith was chief
Mr. Smith is the second
news commentator to European correspondent for nearlecture this year. NBC's Chet ly 20 years. Later he was appointed chief correspondent and manaHuntley appeared in the Lecture
ger for the Washington bureau.
series last month.
While with CBS lie covered
an ABC commenMr. Smith,
Nazi Cermany from 1941 until
will speak on "The Changtator,
from there in 1944
ing Challenge to America? He his explusion
is on a coast
speaking for denunciation of Hitlerism.
Later he covered occupied Eutour.
with the ABC rope from Switzerland, Ouris.and
He has been
the Allied march through Bel
netwoik since 1961. In his ten
radio-televisi-

th

V

I f.

Candidates Announced
Candidates for the AWS Senate and their positions
are: row one, president, Delia Cramer (Linda
Lampe, also a presidential candidate, was absent) ;
vice president, DeeDee Alexander and Connie
Mullins; row two, Panhellenic representative, Ann
Randolph and Cleo Vradelis; senior senator, Marian
Spencer and Blithe Runsdorf; row three, WRH
representative, Susan Newell, Janice Ashley, Gail

Mayer; row four, junior senator, Linda Thomas,
Gay Gish, Susanne Ziegler, Becky Snyder, Cathy
Allison; row five, sophomore senator, Sandy Busam,
Madeline Kemper, Denise Wissel, Winnie Jo Perry,
Sandy Dean, Pat Granacher. Those absent were:
Ann Breeding, Ann Hamilton, Gloria Bailey, Courtney Helm, Shari Norsworthy, Emily Keeling:.

King Library Bomb Threat
Proves Only A False Alarm
By TERENCE HUNT

Kernel Staff Writer
A bomb threat telephoned to
the Lexington bureau of the FBI
closed the Margaret I. King Library for one hour yesterday while
a search was conducted.
The anonymous call to the
FBI was immediately relayed to
Lexington city police and UK
campus police about 12:20 p.m.
Both police forces met at the
library in the office of Dr. Lawrence Thompson, director of libraries.
Detective Howard Rupard of
the Lexington police force contacted the FBI office and reported that the call came from
an anonymous male who stated
simply, "There is a bomb in the
library on the UK campus." The
caller then hung up failing to
give any indication at what time
the alleged bomb was supposed
to go off.
A little before 1 p.m., Dr.
Thompson decided to close the
library for an hour while a search
was made. Dr. Thompson direct

Howard Smith To Speak Tonight

News commentator and author Howard K. Smith will lecture at 8:15 tonight in Memorial
Coliseum as part of the Central
Kentucky Concert and Lecture

f

gium, Holland, and Cermany.
He was in Marshal Zhukov's
headquarters in Berlin when the
Cermans surrendered to the Russians in 1945.
He also wrote scripts for "CBS
Reports," "Face the Nation,"
"Eyewitness to History," and
"TheCreat Challenge."
He won an Emmy award for
newswriting in 19G1 and won the
"Best Interpretation of Foreign
Affairs, Television" award of the
Overseas Press Club in 1963. He
has also written two books.
Students will be admitted to
the lecture free with their
ID cards.

ed that the evacuation of the
building be made according to
floors at two minute intervals.
Participating in the search for
the bomb was Dr. Thompson and
members of his staff, University
police, and members of the Lexington police and fire departments.
Contact with the FBI office
was maintained during the search
according to Lloyd Mahan, director of safety and security.
After a search of "obvious
places" proved futile, Dr. Thomp- -

son directed the library be re- opened at 2 p.m.
Mr. Mahan said afterwards,
"the call was unfounded as far
as we can see. "When questioned
about the procedure followed
with such "bomb scare calls" Mr.
Mahan replied, "we handle the
situation differently, depending
on the building, location, time,
and things like that."
An agent of the FBI office
would only comment that, "we
will investigate to see if there
was any federal violation."

Conference To Discuss
Organizations Set
Representatives of more than
campus organizations will attend a conference on organizations Saturday, sponsored by the
Student Centennial Subcommittee on the evaluation of student
100

life.
Kelly and Mike Stan(othairmen of the groups,
said the conference would convene at Carnaliaii House, where
delegates will consider various
proposals for the coordination of
student organizations, (bartering
of new organizations, and combination of deletion of others.
Kathy

ley,

The conference, beginning at

a.m., will be ke) noted by
i
John Douglas, professor of
administration, and Eugene
Evans, professor of political science. They will open the confer11

busi-nes-

ence with speeches, followed by
question and answer sessions.
Alter a liuuheoii break, the
(oulcrcme delegates will be divided into seural groups for
(artful consideration ol spnilu

proposals. The proposals have
been submitted by delegates to
the convention and involve the
status of certain organizations.
Suggestions range from maintaining the present situation to complete coordination activities.
Moderators lor the groups will
be faculty and staff members: Dr.
Kenneth Harper; Miss Mary
Ann Harris, Mrs. Chrystal Darter, the Rev. Mr. Donald Leak.
Col. James Alcorn, Dr. Jack L.
Mulligan, Dr. Douglas Schwartz,
Dr. N. J. Pisacauo, and Dr.
Maurice Clay.
In addition to the organization's delegates any student is
invited to attend as a delegate-a- t
large. An) one w ishing to attend should register at the Student Center information desk
before 5 p.m. Thursday.
Transportation and lunch will
be piovided free of chaige.
Proposal for consideration by
confeience delegates may be submitted to Kathy Kelly. .SL'5 Co
luinbia Terrace.

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March 2. 1965

'Br. Strangelove' May Rank
As Peter Sellers' Greatest
By SCOTT NUNLEY
Kernel Arts Editor

"Dr. StranRclove," the third
Peter Sellers movie to move into
the Cinema in the past two weeks,
is perhaps the best film the British comic and actor has yet
made. In fact, Sellers stands a
chance of reaping an Oscar from
the "StranKclove" film, subtitled:
"Or How 1 Learned To Stop
Worrying And Love The Bomb."
Peter Sellers competition for
this year's Academy Award for
this year's Academy Award for the
Best Actor is intense. Peter
O'Toole and Richard Burton have
been nominated for their roles in
"Becket." It is a significant sign
of Sellers own developing matur-com- e
to be included with such
men.
Sellers' talen is character acting. Is there a real Peter Sellers
under all those people he plays?
"Dr. Strangelove" only adds to
the confusion, for Sellers plays
three separate roles himself.
In fact, Sellers was scheduled
to play a fourth role, but the
story goes that a sprained ankle
slowed him down slightly. Very
slightly. As the President of the
United States, as Mandrade of the
RAF, and as the
genius
Dr. Strangelove, Peter Sellers pre
zi

sents a tour de force of character ing the serious questions it raises
for present-daAmericans.
portrayal.
in the
" S t r a n gel ove' ca n be com pa
Only George C. Scott
movie approaches Sellers' comic
to "The Americanization of
skill. As a
ing Air Force Emily" as a fine anti war film.
general, Scott reveals just how But where "Emily" was high on
much he was wasted on tele- the
philosophy of self- - interest,
vision's "West SideEast Side."
"Strangelove" is high on comedy.
When Scott casually dismisses
If you are easily offended,
the probable deaths of 20 million
Americans as "having our hair "Strangelove" may not appeal to
mussed," the film's caustic attack you, it's true. But if you do see
upon the American military es- it and do not see yourself satirized
tablishment reaches a peak. And somewhere within it, your peramazingly enough, this peak is ceptive faculties are loafing.
Peter Sellers may not be able
maintained throughout the rest
to spring from a nuclear comedy
of the movie.
into Best Actor of the Year fame,
Besides the high quality of actbut in a year when his "Dr.
ing in "Strangelove," camera
has to
work and script writing must be Strangelove" performance
take only a second or third chair,
mentioned as basic to its great
with the
success. Released last year, there is nothing wrong
motion picture industry.
"Strangelove" was strangely absent during the presidential campaign. One of the prime targets
of the film is a fictious Jack D.
Ripper, rightist Air Force general
who holds fluoridation of water
as a Communist plot.
By SALLY ATHEARN
Whether this controversial eleAssistant News Editor
ment prompted the withholding
A company of 14 French perof the movie until after the camformers will appear Friday on
paign, or not, it would be diffithe UK campus in Paul Clandel's
cult in the winter of 1965 to view
"L'Announcc Faitc A Marie"
"Strangelove" without consider- Brought to
("The Tidings
y

gum-che-

w

An experimental film is one which throws the concept of drama
out of the film and is dependent on visual images alone, Dr. Cuy
D. Davenport, assistant professor of English, said in a lecture

yesterday.

He said the individual per"The experimental film tries
to duplicate the act of seeing," ceives an object and refers it to
Dr. Davenport said. The camera his imagination for interpretation
and meaning. An object which
is made to be the eye, imitating
the natural action of lookingwith a person cannot identify will
a moving head and using no mean nothing to him. If a man
sees a woman who is beautiful
special tricks.
"If you relax when you watch but in a different sense from his
an experimental film, you won't learned earmarks of beauty, he
will not consider her beautiful.
get a headache," he told memDr. Davenport said the experbers of two UK women's honorar-ies- .
He said it was possible to imentalist's goal was to show
learn by watching such a film. what we need to see rather than
Spurred on by curiosity, the eye what is popular. He said some
viewers are shocked to see reacan learn to perceive
d
lism in experimental films when
images, he added.
Dr. Davenport said he consid- they think they have been seeing
ered Stan Brackhage as the father it all along in regular films.
Experimental films, frequently
of the experimental film.
as explained long and soundless, deal with
philosophy,
by Dr. Davenport was the idea such phenomena as sleep, eating,
that "we live in a visual prison visual images, andchanginglight
and all vision we have was given patterns on the Empire State
building.
tons by artists."
fraction-of-a-secon-

Mary").
Known as Le Treateau Dc
Paris, or literally, the Portable
Boards of Paris, the company
will perform at 8 p.m., Friday in

Memorial Hall.
The Department of Modern
Foreign Languages is sonsor-inthe French players, and
their appearance here marks a
Centennial first.
The play will be given in
French, but company manager
Jacques Conines says, "Even
people who do not understand
the language appear to enjoy the
plays." He estimates that over
a third of most of the audiences
the company plays to do not
understand French at all.
The Treateau Dc Paris is in
the United States for a
g

100-da- y

WW

Brack-hage- 's

COLUSA

(Other Than Text)

PICTURES

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MELD OVER!

Its Rocks
Riotous

Most

Love-Bou- t!

BOOK STORE
257 N. Lime

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Near 3rd

Iff

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Stanley Kubrick's

Dr. Strangelove
Or. How I Learned To Stop Worrying
And Love The Bomb

1"

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AT 12:15 - 2:40
5:00 - 7:15 - 9:30

fBWimii

WOMAN

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MAYBE SHE'LL DIE LAUGHING! 1

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The Kentucky Kernel
The

Kentucky Kernel, University
Station. University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, 40506. Second-clas- s
pottage paid at Lexington, Kentucky.
Pubhkhed four 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 1894. became the Kecord In 1100. and the Idea
in 11)08. Published continuously as the
Kernel since 1913.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Yearly, by mail $7.00
Per copy, from files $ .10
KERNEL TELEPHONES
Editor, Executive Editor, Managing
Editor
2321
News LVsk, Sports, Women's Editor.
Socials
2320
Advertising, Business, Circulation 2318

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HUDSO11L0LU0BRJGIDA

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The production will be aired

in 25 eastern states and five Canrun
adian provinces. A
in Montreal and a
slay
in New York arc on the tour's
agenda, as arc (J0 performances
two-wee-

k

10-da- y

in 70 college cities.
Two tons of sets, costumes,

and electrical equipment accompany the group. All of this is
packed in 18 to 25 wicker basketsperhaps the most unusual
technical accomplishment of the
tour and no prop is over seven
feet long.
Members of the company itself are selected from the cream
of the French theater. Director
Pierre Franck has won the cov

IS

eted French Drama Circle Award
twice (once for this same pro-

duction).
Pierre Simonini
France's most
signers. Among

is

one

sought-afte- r
-

Paris.
Each year different actors give
up part of their Paris season to

tour with the company. Although few people in the United
States would recognize
their
names, the members of this cast
carry as much weight in France
as actors Art Carney and Zero
Mostel on Broadway.
Tickets arc available for the
production at

THERE AN EXECUTIVE
CAREER FOR YOU IN
RETAILING?

...

INVESTIGATE A RETAILING
CAREER WITH POGUES
The H. & S. Pogue Company is a division of
Associated Dry Goods Corporation, which is the
nationally acknowledged leader in quality department store merchandising. Pogue's and its
Suburban Stores represent prestige and
to the customers of Southwestern Ohio. quality

ness Administration, Liberal Arts, or Home
Home Economics and are interested in retailing, make arrangements through your
Placement Office to talk to us about our
Executive Training Program.

We will be interviewing on

your campus
Wednesday, March 3 1965
an interview, please contact:

MURDER

PERSONNEL OFFICE
THE H. & S. POGUE CO.

YOlin I'JIIFG'
EDWARD

ARTIST!

JUDO-arth-

haynes-TERR-

THOMAS

of
de-

recent "accomplishments is a long run production of Bernard Shaw's "St.
Joan", at the Montparnasse in
his-

P.S. If we miss you on Campus and
you would like

WJTO
UMITC0

27

to May 7.

If you are completing your
degree in Busi-

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TECHNICOLOR!

tour, running from January

Then

K0WR1 MMiimiH

NOW SHOWING
Peter Sellers George C. Scott

from

If you would rather have a career that is
exciting than work that is regimented
If you have the vision necessary to see
the opportunity for rapid future advancement in position and income . . .

DENNIS

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EXCLUSIVE
FIRST RUN

Central Kentucky's Largest

USED BOOK STORE

NOW SHOWING

..SIEVE

French Theater Comes To UK

Actors Jean Bolo and Germalne Delbat perform a scene
"L'Annonce Faite a Marie' ("The Tidings Brought to Mary").

French Players To Act Here

Art Films Discussed

MMM

'

CINCINNATI, OHIO 45201

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March

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Color Is The Clue
To Fashion Flair

I

vi-

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DyCAYCISII
Once upon a time a very long time ago indeed women's
fashion was dominated by a set of very strict rules, the most important of which were those concerning color. Not so today. There
is no longer any such thing as an 'unbreakable rule of color."
.
.
i
Ti
me u a iiiMn uses coior sure lo appeal. to am woman s
is the most personal ot tradefashion sense.
1. Mix more than just the obmarksimagine Houalt nsingthe
color techniques of Matisse.
vious. Try a dark blue, wine and
Men!
white art novcau scarf w ith pale
So it is w illi women and their blue; leopard with pink; a wild
clothes. What one lady must wear, glint of jet w ith pink.
another w ould rather die than be
2. Plan color so that it looks
seen in. And this spring the word
marvelously unplanned nc cr
is "go" for any new of unusual
have that set. new look of all
dashes of color that catch your dressed up and no place to go.
3. Use color like a master, in
fancy.
Not only is color important
free, sure sweeps, as if you meant
this spring. Black and white will it not dispersed in a lotofminc-inhold its own among the usual
little strokes. . .one tiny dab
of red earrings, one little red pin,
profuse array of
clothes.
red shoes. Carry through with
The famous color expert, Faber conviction.
4. Instead of matching, pick
lhrren, and some psychologists,
find in some people's responses up some of the more eccentric
to color strong disclosures of charshades of the color family.
acter.
5. Use black accessories sparBut whether you take color ingly , and never more than two
analysis seriously or for the fun pieces at the same time, except
of it, here are ten
"
perhaps, with all black and white.
rules for color this spring from
6. Kxperhnent!
Glamour's March issue that are
7. Color is an emotional thing.
Let go with it or else it's likely
to become more boring and rePep Pills, Drugs
pressed than really wrong.
8. About the only matching
Studied By House
that's interesting now is clothes
The Associated Press
WASHINCTON-Th- ey
call to hair say a bone linen dress to
e
hair with gray and
them yellow jackets and red devils and other picturesque names. white the only other touches of
color.
But from New York to Cali9. Break at least two color
from campus to slum hangfornia,
out, they can mean trouble and taboos you've always followed,
always.
wrecked lives.
10. Play
A youthful psychiatrist, who
slightly
varying
worked his way in among goof-ba- shades of the same different texand pep pill addicts and tures, say pale orange silk with
attended their "spree" parties tawny suede and tawny jewelry,
tawny hair, tawny lipstick and
gave the House Interstate Comblusher then jolt the whole
merce Committee a vivid picture of the problem Tuesday. thing with a streak of navy or
wine. . .
"The problem is like an iceberg, most of it being under the
Newley Is Back
surface," Dr. John B. Griffith,
director of the Oklahoma MenNEW YORK (AP)
Anthony
tal Health Planning Committee, Newley, who scored a major
told congressmen.
of
triumph here as the author-sta- r
are considering a bill "Stop the World-- I Want to Get
They
aimed at curbing the bootleg Off returns this season in another multiple workout.
traffic in depressant and stimulie will appear in "The Roar
lant drugs, specifically barbiof the Greasepaint,'
another
Grifturates and amphetamines.
creative collaboration with
fith was invited to tell them Leslie Bricusse.and also direct.
about his research project in and The show is scheduled for
around Oklahoma City.
February premiere.
Sa-cr-

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Spring Style Ideas Of Favored Designers

John Moore, who was chosen to make Mrs. Johnson's inaugural gown, has designed the blue chiffon
sleeveless dress with blue patterned knit jersey coat
and matching pillbox (on the left) ; Mrs. John F.
Kennedy's chosen designer created this red wool

costume with red silk striped bow; Mamie Eisenhower's favorite Mollie Parnis made the white lace
cocktail costume with pale blue bodice; Adele
Simpson, another favorite of Lady Bird's, made the
grey worsted suit with trim tunic skirt.

Fashions Biggest Compliment:
Designing For The First Lady
By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON
NEW YORK (AP)-With- out
a

doubt the greatest compliment

in the career of an American designer is to be chosen to dress
the wife of the President of the
United States.
It helps when the First Lady
who does the selecting has youth,
beauty, unquestionable taste and
the great sense of style of Mrs.
John F. Kennedy. Oleg Cass in i

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designer into the ranks of garment district nobility.
Now Mrs. Lyndon Johnson

yt

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lias elected
laurels but

can vouch for that.
But not all that is necessary.
Although Mamie Eisenhower
loves clothes she did not have
the glowing youth of Mrs. Kennedy to carry her off as a national fashion symbol. Nevertheless, her choice of Mollie Parnis
styles did much to project the

,

TT

f

not to limit the
to scatter them a
little. The practical First Lady
deplores being a slave to fashion.
On the other hand, she appreciates the political importance of
being impeccably costumed.
In any event, her clothing
selections inevitably will attract
a world of attention to her designers, the few chosen with the
aid of chic Mrs. Angier Biddle
Duke, wife of the U.S. Chief of
Protocol. It figures that whatever they create in this favorable
limelight will influence fashion
as a whole.
John Moore, who designed
Lady Bird's inauguration gown
which is destined for Smithsonian Institution after its historical

public appearance, is an example
of that. According to a fashion
trade publication, as soon as
the word was out women were
buying up all the John Moore
labels they could spy.
That Lady Bird wears Adele
Simpson, and Norman Norell
does not hurt the stock of these
designers either.
Just how much effect the new
royalty will have on fashion this
spring is now ready to be
checked out by the nation's style
writers as The New York Couture Group begins its week long
program of spring previews.
The American Designer Series
arranged by Eleanor Lambert

i

,

follows.

"sure-eyed-

beige-blond-

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HR.

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393 WALLER AVE.
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Mardi Gras Queen

Sandy Lay is crowned queen of the Mardi Gras by retiring queen
Tracy Shilllto. The crowning was the highlight of the Mardi Gras
Ball held Friday night in the Student Center. Dr. M. J. Pisacano,
physician at the Medical Center, was named king of the festivities.

VVASHINCTON-- A dense
evergreen forest may once have
covered the area where Washington now is located.
The U. S. Geological Survey
said recently it had uncovered
evidence of such growth following an excavation for a building
across from the White House.
Arthur Knox, a survey geologists, reported that the vegetation apparently was much like
that now found in Newfoundland and southern Labrador.

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* The

Those Locked Doors
Some time ago fire doors were
installed at the King Library- - This
was accomplished, not without a
little prodding from the Kernel and
other sources, because only one exit
was open and the risk in case of
emergency was obvious.
From the time the addition to

the library was completed and the
open-stacsystem instituted until
those fire doors were installed, only
a library official with a key could
open any of the exits except that
in the front passing past the checking booth. Now the heat from afire
will open the doors automatically.
Even though the problem of fire
safety is seemingly solved, still
other dangers exist. Monday's bomb
scare at the library is a case in
point.
The bomb scare made library
officials painfully aware of the lack
of a disaster plan of any sort. It
also makes us realize that, in the
case of any disaster other than a
fire, those closed doors would remain closed.
The first point pertains not only
to the library but a number of other
buildings. The University Hospital
has a disaster plan. Such a plan is
a requirement before a hospital can
be accredited.
k

ct

emergency.

to the second point, there is
perhaps no way to assure all the
library exits will be open in case
of any emergency except to have
them open at all times. This would
mean that checkers would have to
be employed at each exit.
As

However, some study should be
initiated by the proper administration planners as to just what might
be done. If our assumption is correct then we feel there is little
reason not to hire the additional
personnel to open the other library
exits full time.
It would then become a point
of safety. . .to say nothing of the
convenience to the students.

President Johnson has been busy pill of voluntary restraint on foreign
making fresh efforts to win friends investment easier to take. Corpoin the business community. He
rations are being requested to forthe sizable plum of a
go the higher returns they can get
million reduction in cor- in foreign money markets and to
tax bills by relaxing the speed up the return of profits earnporate
rules applying to write-off- s
of plant ed abroad while banks are being
and equipment. And he asked busi- pressured to limit their lending in
ness to cooperate in halting the outEurope. The Administration does
flow of dollars; specifically, he not frown on investments in devepleaded for a cut in foreign investloping countries or in Canada,
ments by corporations.
which runs a big trade deficit with
the United States. Its concern is
The revision of the rules on dewith those that are economically
preciation allowance for equipment advanced and would not suffer from
will help to assure a sustained rise
a temporary decline in the inflow
in capital spending. Corporate outof dollars.
lays for modernizing and expandBecause Washington prefers to
ing production are an important limit the growth of foreign spendfactor in the continued expansion in
and lending abroad instead of
business activity. These outlays ing
it off, its demands are reahave been rising strongly since the cutting
sonable enough. They may appear
Treasury first liberalized its deprepainful in comparison with the
ciation yardsticks in 1962; the latoutflows that have been takest modification will serve to keep huge
ing place, but that is the reason
activity rolling along. Many busifor the program. It is clearly in the
nessmen would like to see the
interest of business to cooperate in
Treasury scrap its yardsticks altoorder to avoid mandatory action.
gether so that they could count on By
setting explicit targets and repermanent reductions, but the Adquesting specific details, the Administration is wise to keep a meaministration is letting business
sure of control as a curb against any
know that it has an effective stick
excessive increase in investment
in case the President's appeal for
cessive increase in investment
a voluntary partnership does not
spending.
work.
The tax relief will make the
-- The New York Times
pro-offer-ed

00

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

ESTABLISHED

G.

Asmtciate New

America.
In a nation of immigrants, he

seemed

the

prototype

arriving

from Vienna at the age of 12, a

penniless Jewish waif unable to
speak a word of English.
There was his subsequent brilliance and industry, leading to
scholastic honors, a series of government jobs to which he brought distinction and controversy a quarter
century as professor at Harvard
Law School, and his appointment
to the Supreme Court in 1939.
There was his enlightened public spirit, combining a warm personal interest in his Harvard students with a habit of sending them
to Washington jo