xt7x69700453 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7x69700453/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19621019  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 19, 1962 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 19, 1962 1962 2015 true xt7x69700453 section xt7x69700453 "r
Today's Weather:

Editor Discusses
SC

Fair And Mild;

Klectioo;

Sec I 'age Four

Hiiili 7.1. Low
Vni

Vol. LIV, No.

vorsit y of Kent it c U y

LEXINGTON. KY., FRIDAY, OCT.

18

US

I"

VMV1

itli t Page

r
-

,

t

'

i

'

v

.

'

....

'

:

"

.'

Election Results
till Not Completed
C

r

SAKAII I'OWLKS
Kernel Staff Writer

I'.v

Tahulation of voting lor Student Congress representatives
was still making slow progress
last

ni'lit.

6 p.m., only three official
counters were present at the Student Union Building. Mortar Board
and Omicron Delta Kappa, two
senior honoraries, are responsible
for counting votes in the Student
Congress elections.
Wednesday night only one ODK
member was present to assist in
the counting. Larry Westerfield,
president of ODK, said the lack
of response was because the honorary only has eight members and
they are very busy and don't have
much time. He said four are either
in graduate or law school and find

At

Tfc

flrn

'

firiinlmij

m

Two coeds ponder before marking their ballots for Student Congress representatives in an election held Wednesday. Unofficial
count for the record turnout was 2,071.

it dirfiu!t t get
vay. 1 ho ctlwr
four members :re fraternity presidents and they had In bo present
at their meetings. Apparently the
vice presidents were unable to preside, Westerfield added.
Approximately 10 Mortar Hoard
members were present to help with
the counting Wednesday: however,
and
Student
Congress officers
Kernel representatives, along with
other unofficial personnel, were
asked to assist with the tabulation.
By virtue of the Student Congress Constitution only ODK and
Mortar Board members are supposed to count votes, but the shortage of counters made outside help
a necessity.
Counting began at 5:30 p.m.
Wednesday. By 10:30 p.m. partial
returns were in on the Colleges of
Arts and Sciences and Agriculture

French Orchestra
Concert Series Freshman Senators
Opens
L'Orchestre National Francaise will open the
season of the Central Kentucky Concert and Lecture Series
at S:15 p.m. today in the Coliseum.
19G2-19G- 3

The National French Orchestra
is one of the world's foremost symOnly 18
organizations.
phonic
months after its creation by I). E.
Inghelbrecht for French radio it
was chosen by the great Arturo
Toscanini to conduct in a gala
concert at the Paris Opera.
This tour will be the first American tour since their debut in 1948.
This time the orchestra has the
prestige of being the first foreign
orchestra to be invited to perform
during the opening ceremonies at
the new Philharmonic Auditorium
at New York's Lincoln Center for
the Performing Arts.
The feature composition of the
concert, conducted
by Charles
Munch, will be "Le Mer" (the sea)
by Claude Debussy.
"Le Mer" is made up of three
symphonic sketches. They are entitled "The Sea from Noon till
Dawn," "Play of the Waves," and
"Dialogue of the Wind and the
Sea."
This work, published in 1903, is
considered one of Debussy's most
moving and impressive compositions.
Other works being performed are
"Le Corsaire" by Berlin?:, "Serenade" by Milhaud, "Bacchu-- . tt
Ariane" by Roussel, and "Daph-ni- s
et Chloc" by Ravel.
Student wives may obtain season tickets for $5.0!) if their husbands have ID cards. The speci tl
memberships can be bouuht only
from
Graduate
Lucy Hogan,

students have
U.X. Seminar trip next
places on the tour are

A

few

still open. According to Sondra
Ricks, YWCA director, applications will be accepted through
noon today.
The cost of the seminar will be
Slfi. When the application is submitted, $10 n.ust be paid and the
remainder before Oct. 24. Applications are being accepted in the
YMCA-YWCoffices in the Student t'nion lUiilding.
lour of the 25 applicants have
already been chosen to attend.
Gerald Coffee and Nancy Nollen- bcrger will be the student chair- nun for the trip, and Dick Challis
and Mary Katluyn La ne will serve
as
chairmen.
The remainder of those goin4
on the toar will be selected from
n the basis
the list of appheanS
of grades and interest in world
al'faiis.
The group will travel to New
Yo;k by chartered bus and will
stay at the Plymouth Hotel. Meals
will be arranged for the entire
troup with United Nations delegates as luncheon speaker.-- , each
day.
The group will visit the I'nited
Nations Building, the I'.S. and
third annual Law Latin American missions, attend a
session of the General Assembly,
Day will he held at
A

t

Lata School
Hosts Alumni
The

Alumni
the College of Law tomorrow.

The program includes a cot' lee
hour reunion, class visitations, and
a Law Alumni Association meeting
in the morning.
Dr. W. I.. Matthews Jr.. dean of
the College of Law, will host a
faculty open house in the afternoon.
Fur alumni arriving today, the
Fayette County Bar Association
has arranged a seminar on "Kentucky Appellate Practice" at 4 p.m.
at the Piioenix Hotel. A banquet
will follow.

j

Elected To AWS

Sally Kinj and Sally List, hoth of Lexington, have heen
elected to the senate of the Associated Women's Students.

Scots

revs Tickets

Tickets for the Hoyal Scots
Gres and Argyll and
land Highlanders
at X p.m. Tuesday are on sale
from . (l a.m. to I p.m. today,
Monday, and Tuesday and from
9 a.m. to i: noon tomorrow at
the ticket booth in the Student
I'nion Building.
Tickets will also be on bale in
the main office of the F.itoch
Grehan Journalism Building.
Suther-peri'onnan-

S.

...........

......

...::.-..:-

v.,,. .,. . .y

i

Co

(.1

n

An n'Au
(ill
Keve

(";;;'-,.'-

lr.ieice.

,1

lie'
of

Nursing, and College o! Pha inacv.
Counting for the C"!!(uf ot i;d- ucation and the College ' f
necring had not been started Wednesday niuht.
Kurt Broccker. corhairman for
the Student Congress elections,
said they would
complete the
countimr late last night providing
it would not run too late and the
people counting would stay beyond 10:30 p.m.
Raleigh Lane said if the counting was not completed it would be
continued tonight.
The unofficial count in the three
colleges is:
College of Commerce: Frank
Elackard, 38: Fritz Bodenheimer,
63; Kurt Broecker, 45; Katie
28; Paid Chellgren, GO; Jim
Childers, 77; David Clarke, 48; J.
D. Craddock III, 33; George Kelley,
71; Steve Larimoie, 84; Carol Miller. 34; Ed Monroe. 74; Patty Pin-so- n,
43; Edwin Squires, 51; Mary
Ann Tobin, 93; Donald Vizi, 72;
Michael Waldman, 33; and Lister
Witherspoon, 42.
College of Nursing: Donna Bart-le17; Ginuy Sue Graves, 17;
Katherine Henthorne, 21; Carol
Honaker, 10; Jean Kabler. 18; and
Mary Beth Sammons, 17.
College oi r'harmacy: Jim Brook-ma12; Dean Henderson, 21; Larry R. Logan, 17; and Sally Morgan. 11.
y,

official
for
all
spokesmen
freshmen women. They will also
assist in regulating matters not
included in the jurisdiction of the
I'niversity faculty which pertain
to women students.
Members of the AWS senate are:
a president, a vice president and
and two memtheir runners-up- ,
bers from each of the four University classifications. Two members
of Panhellenic and the Women's
Residence Halls, and one from the
applied to attend the YMCA-YWC- AWS House of Representatives and
the Women's Advisory Council are
week.
also part of the senate.
Others running for freshmen
and take a ferry tour of Manhattan. The students' evenins will senators were: Elaine Baumgarten.
be free.
Mary Beatty, Martha Carpenter,
Mrs. Ricks and Don Leak, di- Irene Danoe, Jane Gilbert. Lana
rector of the YMCA. will be chap-cron- Henderson, and Martha Jane
for the group.
5

25 Applications Taken
For UN Seminar Trip
Twenty-fiv- e

College

1(

Cap-elan-

Voting took place from 8 a.m. to
p.m. yesterday in Blazer Hall.
Only freshmen women were enAll students are admitted by titled to vote.
ID cards.
The freshmen senators will be

School, in Pence Hall. No memberships are sold for individual concerts at the Coliseum.

and Il'iiiv
(Mi'it had

A

n,

ODK Tui: Sale
Members of Omicron Delta
Kappa, senior nun's leadeiship
honorary, will be selling booster
tags today and Saturday for the
State I'niversity
football game. The money from
the tags, which are sold through
contributions only, will be used
to further service projects on
campus.

Ill ilia lion
Scheduled
77
ti f)I9 O T

TLf

Si'oma Delta Chi. men s pro
fessional journalism
soeiety,
will initiate new menihei's at
p.m., today in the Marguerite
Loom ol tlir
McLaughlin
L u o e It Ciehan Journalism
Building.
Th;te of the new initiates are
1

professional persons: Robert L.
Donohew, School of Journalism;
John B. Gaines, Bowlmn Green,
president of the Kentucky Pre: s
Association; and George A. Joplm
III, Somerset, executive committeeman of the KPA.
l iulergraduates to be initiated
include: James W. Curtis, Versailles; James S. Fitpatrick, llaz-aiJohn Pipes Gaines, Howling
Green; Alvin Grixsby, Itardstown;
John Pfciffer, Louisville, and Richard Wilson, Towanda. Pa.
The undergraduate chapter will
act as hot to the new members
at a dinner at (5:30 pin. at 'lhe
Coach Hon e. Pi of. Paul O'oerst.
College of Law, will speak on "The
Trouble with the Newspaperman."
Jack Guthrie, editor of the
Kernel, is president of the UK Sigma Delta Chi chapter, and J. A.
MeCauley, associate professor of
journalism, is the faculty adviser.

.

v

-

?

'

Ki

,4r$

'

.

VXW

--

""

sV0

,

s?

t

jlMX

lUuutilul l ull

transfer student from Syracuse I'niversity. Peggy Weeks, sas
that she really likes the Blue Grass Region, litis week's Kernel
A

Sweetheart,

a

terior design.

sophomore in Arts and Science, is majoring in inPeggy is a Chi Omega pledge from .tetuchen, N.J

9

p

i

* --

2

Till: KIAU

KNn..

Kt

( KV

I

iid.n, Od. If? fw.

-i-

-

--

2L

Numlift I'Icum"

lu

Telephone Operators Keep Busy,
slrcrd
.

the fart flut
Ihrrp are a limited number of liur
tnim Into the dormitories, and it
h Mutrslril that rallrrs limit their
cans in anoiu inr mmuu-- iiuim
hours even II II is necessary
to call luck later.
Meanwhile, as you're waiting for
that call, would you care to make
out a check for the phone bill this
month?

on the dorm

the heavy toncostion

JOHN KV.W. Krrnrl Staff Writrr

could

phonrs.

i

.
u
,
,.
... u.,.
l( li iilmiic talis do
oii make cvrrv u.iv.
that the Uimrisity
it( lilxunl is an operation tli.it opriator, ulio inM
that thlnjn
... il... V;. I...I
the switchboard
f :.! n.f nit t i.m 1, mc.v ire run routinely,
r:.ik l.foin in inrrpaw iml multl.
tlicl
:
p.m. every day
people uho angrily jerk plumes off ply around
:ulmin-itr.-

ll.. w in.uiv
n know
I

-t-

I

,.,-il-

.J

o-.',

.1

ilin to Cldo

Lillv.

1.

and do not slack off until mid- the wall.)
assistant of
She also says it takes at
Around 1.000 times a day some- niuht. six months to become an op- ;ind (";! ;it ions, the telephone
least
one as.es for information. Also,
liuatcd in thr Funkhnus-- r
etator, alon with a rapacity to
Hwiklim:. requires six fitlUiinc about every three minutes our remember
numbers
telephone
campus switchboard handles a thousands of them. IMIsh lleeves
op" r.itius. There arc a total of 13, Ion-distance tall either to or
Ac;--

plus

it

thne emergency operators, to from
campus.
the faculty, staff, and

here are about lMIII incoming
calls each day from off campus,
..
..
u tnik
,u i . inline, .uuuiiiii o.i.wii i.iiii .ti
made, and this tmrrly requires the
:
.
i.
,!ii,..i
i.i.iimi, ipi m- t Ml iniiiii ihuiuiii
hothrrins; the operator. Our .small- dialers" should note this; it
is. therefore, not the operator"
fault if you keep Retting a busy
signal. r.e.sidos. (lencral Telephone
To. thinks censored thoughts about

-

1

-

maintains that people are usually

Under the old alma mater, run- direction
,un" in slbn,t rvr,'-imaginable, ale in mink, lines.
tln :i lines which von nrobiblv
.
w alk over a doen or so times every
or so n nines
ihiv.. rmincr ine 1.)
on campus. Thirty lines go to the
Medical Center, and this is under- because the Center
Mandatle.
siloiio has around 300 phones.
Placed at strategic points are 11
pay phones, which serve to relieve

mm -

lie

In

CLASSIFIED

y--

se.-it-

1

1-

"- -l

Austin-He.ile-

3

t

Kentucky
NOV

!

Lost Monday.

X

1
i

IJost

W

vu

7:30
NO.

1

ITVV

isrsyi

1703t

rienffd mother; phone
Strrvt.

Coats, dresses
madf
skirts altered. Custom
New location 213
Phone
Maxwell. Mildred Cohen.

imn'l

PETER
SUSAN
HAYWARD : FINCH

11

'21

19041

and
hats.
East

20Stf

PLEASE return the bicycle that was
taken from north side of Fir.e Arts
10O4t
Uuildinn. Box 44C9. UK.

SSw

to the music of "The Classics".
Available for parties and dances. ConTWIST

CUSACK --

or G..ry

tact Pete Stoner at

son at
--

KrJW'v

Scope

picture

'Almost Angels'
Both in Technicolor
Shows continuous from

12:10

fbtnt
WIWTUCWT

HEPeORN'S
Award Winning, Performance
GREGORY
PECK
in
AUDREY

with

"ROMAN HOLIDAY"
CAST! . . .
HUMPHREY DOGART
AUDREY
HEPBURN
WILLIAM HOLDEN

A GREAT

in

ii SABRMA
WEDNESDAY!
One Day Only
The First in a Series ef
"r,nLD!N OPPRFTTAS"

4:00, 6:C0, 8:00, 10:00

NEXT WEDNESDAY
One Day Only

"Brigndoon"

Gene Kelly

Cyd Charisse

10 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS!

THE FOUK SOUNDS The combo with
variety is available for your social
events. Call the leader, Dick Walker.
21S14t
for engagements.

EXCLUSIVE FIRST SHOWING!

TONIGHT AND FRIDAY
Elvis Presley and Barbara Eden in

"FLAMING STAR"

Color

Call 83:::!.

ALTERATIONS

There is never a dull moment for the University switchboard
operators. Every day approximately 8,000 calls are made on campus
alone. Anothtr 1.00!) incoming calls are received.

..

motion

Showings at: 12:00, 2:00,
Iloxhall

.

WILL CAKE for children in mv homo:

4

zvyi

v ristwaU-h-

MISCELLANEOUS

A

Rl

Newest

DISNEY'S

1704t

I.flST Ladies'

..trs.
l1

...

toocther with

t.

ap.irt-mon-

LOST

r

'Lady and the Tramp'

Someone to share
flood loiation. private entrance.
I'rivato bath, kitchen. $4i) per month.
WANTTD

Call

CILENIO

piety

WANTED

THEATRE

Sl2SffiKa

IH.L1) OVKII!
happiest motion

r. I.E- - Km yrloprdi.-i
KOI;
r.ritt.mir.i.
Il1h ed.tton. Muck .linr,iv bindmu.
di.m
Mint edition t'linutih
C.iir.biKlue punt. Cnll
idler (J
1904t
p m.

Switow's NEW

ViilMa

S

i

I

mum

DISNEf

fo

4--

tl mWOTOM

very considerate with the operator.
However, once in awhile . . .
Thp Univ(, it
iSystcm Va.s up- FOR SALE
dated jn po, when . it was moved
...
...
r
i.i
nom t.
hi pn SALE
lioom ,n in r uiimiou-i'19(12
Tempest LcM.ins
automat e.
sPrt .
piound floor. A mum coupe. Huckrt
jnom :17 on
...
ai.ikc oner,
uo.jj.
11II'. till II II 1W il H n iia.l IJllII Lilt' 1..
s(;,uai,,n ()f a network system-to- wn FOH SALE Sunbenm Alpine. Like r.ew.
jnilps. Windsliipld
A'ipprs. white
stm nU(cv
which li.nno wull
( obstruction
side
hrater. White
tires,
the caller to ask for a net- - r,.t1 iut.Tior. Hrasonabiy priced, with
c.in
permits
r
laotf
work line to Frankfort and then
dial the number he wishes. Also. FOK SAI.F.-K- ed
1900
UK has what is called the WATS 3'0n. Wot lirls. r.iclin, hc.i
overC.dl
Dunl;it
Area Telephone Ser- - drive, new 5:.'JO p.m. IIS--eokd.itires." lCOtf
system (Wide
w
vsi .
vicet by whi'li a staff member is
FOiJ
:iblt to reach any state office in v heel:-- SAI.K '59.nndr.liiek MCA. wire
snl t top
cuver. Kivid rendition. Anytime after 5 phone
or
very quickly.
Kentucky
UiOjt
!'...( k on campus one thiiiR that

ii

PHONE

Starts
7:30
Adm. 90c

The Funniest Adult- Comedy In Years

Nel-

9Q6t

FIRST-RU-

SPECIAL

N

Tonight-Saturday- !

Make it a late date after the
L.S.U. Game

wmmm o

-

NO. 2
RACING ON THE MAD FLOOD

A M0T1GH

OF WESTERN ADVENTURE...

j

4ym ra cutRiT3ii

PICTURE

Sergeant

They came to Hero's Island to
to fight... to pioneer
a mighty sweeping adventure!.

love...

AT LAST!

THAT

RUTLED6E"

DELIVERS...

TECHNICOLOR

JEFFREY HUNTER
ilillE

a

ad;

BJM

CONSTANCE

CARLETON

.

o,

TOWERS

00DT

VOJNC

tCt'iJilP

f(
PCZ.

STRODE

,,c

fciMELViLLE

i

SHA'.TLSON S

NO. 3

I

B

ftUDREY

SHIRLEY

HEPBURN

MacLAINE GARNER
P. Ji.it

ul
is

of Iht sJult nth.r
it fan - (A.j ft jt
not rtfdjfirne'i.te. tot tn.

j.f.li tfi.
J

UMrtu Aursrs
MIRIAM

HOPKINS

FAY

BAINTFR

KAREN BALKIN

Sllinnf

Play BANKO Friday

JAMES MASON

Jackpot $150.00 (At Press Time)

SUNDAY thru THURSDAY

5 BIG
DAYS

fw
H...M,.,

.!.(
1 tun--

if
mo!

Jr

k

CO-HI- T

x

.A

Elizabeth

Talor
NO

and
Montgomery
Clift

ADVANCE

IN PRICES

J

To Elame?

r

I

.j

v-

?

This pifeon csrn? to make war I
and she threw in the towel! 1

L

This wclf said: "No more
love in a pigeon cocp!"

2ND FEATURE

HAYLEY MILLS

m mm mm- mm mm m muw&

That 'Parent Trap' Girl

ALSO

"WHISTLE DOWN
THE WIND"

-

In

WILUAM HCLDEN CUHOM WEDB
I

Was Her
Husband

O
C

"

--

KATE MANX
RIP TORN
And U.K.'s Own
HARRY DEAN STANTON
Former Guignol Actor

STARTS SUNDAY

"A PLACE
IN

All New

THE SUN"

Space-O-Ra-

."PHANTOM PLANET"

1

And
FRANCE fiUYIN

0

i

'ASSIGNMENT
Coleen

Gray

SPACE'
Color

* V

0

kivmcky mum

rin:

Blue Marlins
FIRST TIME IN AMERICA!
!'"'

DtRCCT FROM EDINBURGH rCSTIVAL

Regimental Binds, Pipes, Drums end Dancers

II

SOOTS

ylEIB

r.M i: m
M.ii lin

liib.
'I

oi t:

is
ni..d

hr

.

n

i

Pll'llllj'T

i.i 1": I'

U ,11

li.

w

i!,

j

v.

kl

ii

f-

'.,
n

1GM n SraiSJlfl
100
heroic
regiments join in a
stirring spectacle of
rousing music, joyful
Highland dances
and thrilling
marching drills
MEN of two

.

NAM

i

Y

I

"

ill

pre.-ente-

Dili!

Social W h ir I

'

'

il

bccitiiif Marlins
in tli" .pi in.' how
by the uroup ii if pa iii-- ;
ithe M.ulin sl:ill test.
R"iiuuements
ftr tryouts U( i,.
a front dive, a l.ip of smooth and
controlled
bat k: t i oke.
freestyle,
'sidrstrokc, and urea: tsti oke, for- di- ward and back skull, chant-inlections, .surface dive, and an op- tional stunt.
New members are Susan Bailey,
jFran Drannen. IJetsy Colfey. Oail
Davidson, Susan Farmer, Judy Oct- (tilefinser, Caroline Haase, Holly
Pat Iliins, Ann Jenn- and Olivia Johnson.
jiis. Jones. Diane Koch. Linda
Jill
jl.ampe, Debbie Long, Dotir.a Mey- er. Linda Mills, Barbara Miuwm,
Bam NalliiiKcr. Frankie Oimylvck- cr, lionni Ranch, Tracy hlnllito,
Lynn Sousley, Bat Thompson, Di
ane Wall, Linda Whitcaker, Linda
Wood. Mary Woodyard, and B;i;n
Wvatt.

di.ppies u
alter ;i ppeai i!)".

j

jn

h,i,hm).i

I

I

Today, llih column i did u.i W d
th...
in. nibri.s til our mi- "icly you know ot whom I
Vou have seen tin in on
numerous occasions on your daily
Mnt t' classes.
They are the oiks who
.slowly, their eyes in a trance their
shoulders weighted with thr bur- den of the world. The sun relied
the Kiev upon their temples, and
an air of nonchalance and
cern follows them about,
Yes. your giirv was risM, we
speak of the wisp, old seniors. Hp
eom to them, all ve who still po
ssess that stream of
otitli. One
d.,v, ni yes. it will happen to ou
and vou will experience that indesrriN.iMe lech;:!- of tired '.'.cod,
an, little h.iniiPers kot k',i'i at
c,iir brain. And (ieritol will be of
i

''

uncon-Hcctorn-

o,

-

-

no

pl.K w:

a

t

h in loui t h in the ia t
i lit I" .it V
to the fool

pccial

;

remember that tin-the last vc ,w the d ir
it.
udId senioi s can sit in the
section and ( h.eer you on. ltnnr:n-wal- k
while you are out on (lie
ber th'-field, and come out growling!
And students
oi the younuT
cream
ela
help the fcniors
for
touchdown, their lung. are.
weak and their voice- - shot.
After the game. Jewell Hall is
sponsoring a dance. The entire
campus is invited, and all senior
w ill be made to le
at cae.
Athi.s column comes to an end.
ve days
l
w i mljer tint
'ii!"r c
.re id o coming to an nd Be kaal
to Ihcin lor some day
'U,
o,
hall

S'lU.id,

M.;lf. ni

is

:

-

;

t

will b'

a

amor.

Noiici;

u-- e.

T:i the luture all ame
If vim arc uoiii:; to hear Boy Or-O.
.it to till'
on toni'iht at Joyland, don't, that, aic
ii.ehu:
Mglied. 'I
be surpri'-'-ii your senior i ri ntl V.ut b,
iu:ageriu'iits, nnniti
iinnounces he is oinu. Be piitient, w t tl(llll".S
b? sweet, include hiin in the ac- - and club news.
tivities oi the younger set.
As tiiis is perfect hayride weiith-12- 8
cr, perhaps you are planning to
hop a truck and drive through, the
cool, quiescent evening breeze. Seii-- 1
iors especially hke this type of
DRIVE-I- N
sport, it. gives them the feeling of
complete outdoorsmen and defiers
2401 Nicholasvillc Road
of the elements. So please, don't
that he wear a woolen
At Stone Road
suggest
neck scarf or ascot, it will only
take away from him the pleasure
CHARCOAL BROILED

i

M

Meetings

2LTvTwo Thrilling Hours of

Action-Fille- d

... An Unforgettable Show

Pageantry

II ('
The Interfnitenuty Council will
meet at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Room
of the Student Union Building,
IMiilosphy Club
The Bhilosphy Club will meet at
p.m. today in Room 123 of the
Col
Student Union Building.
,Boughton, will be the guest speak- er.

-

!

STUDENT, FACULTY, STAFF
TICKETS AVAILABLE
AT
STUDENT UNION BUILDING
TICKET BOOTH

Price

YWCA

The Community Service Corn- mittee of the YWCA will meet at
4 p.m. Monday in the Y Lounge

$

For benefit of UK Journalism Scholarship Fund,
sponsored by the Ky. Press Assn. and the Ken-

tucky Kernel.

ZKTi

Get Up
SSO

vVV.

In

the

:

nil,H

TTi

ChiHon

the

'"

P-

K,r'' w"

re-fo- re

"
MUCH FUN,..)

Lexington
Yellow Cab

2-2-

Learn To Fly Quickly, Easily and
Economically with

OVER

Marshall Field
FOR

CALL . . .
RONALD LIVELY
U.K. Campus Representative
At
Between 7 and 9 p.m.

116 W. Maxwell

MEN'S TOILETRIES
COSMETICS

Free Parking

r1

SEA FOOD

SANDWICHES

Room

Dining

Curb Service
Take Home Service

Dial

or

57

mi urii

mi

r

Phone

Private Rooms for Parties

Reasonable Prices

and MRS. JOHN INNES, Proprietors

Whals New?
JUST ARRIVED
New Coect'on or Ph.D. (Philosophy
of Dress) Suits tailored by Michael
Ztern. The Philosophy of Dress suit
is made for
men and
Academy
Alumni
College men Business men
and those wio like to dress con
servatively with a vesf.'

Now $69.95
POST G3AD SLACKS
Smoothest pair of slacks that ever
hit a campus! Trim, tapered Post
Grads have the authentic natural
look other slacks can only try to
imitate. Belt loops and cuffs are
standard equipment too.

Priced

at $5.95

FIRST ON OUR LIST
Trim Fit sport shirts for the tapered
tailored look. Here are distinctively
different casual shirts for the broad
shouldered, slim waisted man who
wants the very best. These Ivy in
shirts come in handsonw
spired
plo ds and prints.

Only $5.95
V

ADAMS
MR.

o
O

Walk from UK

"High Fidelity Music for Your Dining Pleasure"

Across from UK College of Medicine

u

A Short

Home of the College Folks

683 S. Broadway

Open 7 a.m. to 10 p.m.

0

Come In And Take A Look at . . .
DRY CLEANING that is REALLY CLEAN and
BEAUTIFULLY FINISHED

Crolley's One -- Hour Cleaners

HALE'S PHARMACY

915 S. Limestone

$1.00

7 Hour Service

INFORMATION

FOUNTAIN

23

FIVE SHIRTS LAUNDERED FOR ONLY

30 YEARS IN AVIATION
15 minutes from Lexington on US 25

A PRESCRIPTIONS

1:30-4:3-

SHIRTS LAUNDERED

Coy Flying Service

STEAKS

2--

8--

The Air!

t

STARUTE

can be so cruel
and unjust, let your senior sisters
Projects for the coming year will
date those freshmen men, they are
be discussed.
just attempting to regain the yauth
Westminster Fellowship
The Westminster Fellowship will which has left them so suddenly.
Kappa Sigma is having a Gross,
have their supper meeting at 5:30
The guest speaker Gross, Party" tonight at the chapp.m. Sunday.
tcr house. Apparently it is a myswill be the Rev. James Angell, minister of the Second Presbyterian tery party of some sort, because
the name suggests only a vague
Church.
feeling that it will be gross.
YWCA Retreat
The band is no secret, however.
The YWCA Retreat will be held it will be the group dedicated to
from 103 p.m., Sunday at the censorship and clean living the
Reservoir. There will be a discus- - Hot Nuts.
sion and a movie. Those who wish Friday afternoon Sigma Alpha
to attend should apply in the YW Epsilon and Kappa Alpha Theta
CA office by today.
have joined forces to present a jam
session from 6 p.m.
Cosmopolitian
The Newman Club is holding
The Cosmopolitian Club will
have a picnic from 8 p.m. Sun- - their weekly dance tonight at the
p.m. The Kar-- ;
day at Blue Grass Park. Tickets Bubble, from
must be picked up at the Y Lounge ribeans will play,
in the Student Union Building be- The Watusi and the Bird
5 p.m. today. Everyone
will cpuire young agile limbs, but seniors
meet at the International Center are possessed with the urge to
on Harrison Avenue at 2 p.m.
learn, so please he patient with
their attempts. If it takes hours to
teach them (and it will!) give
your time generously and willingly.
Saturday afternoon, Kappa Kappa Gamma and Dilta 'lau Del a
')
will jam at a session trom
p.m. The only outsider.-- , inuied are
the Temptations tthis is. a band,
Inc.
not necessarily the Kappa.-,-.
If the sparkling eieven recover
from bruised libs, siraiiud musRadio Equipped
cles and torn ligament.-- , we might
be able to reestablish
ouiseKes
in the conference. Alter all LSU
Dial
football team isn't so good. The Associated Press can be wrong in

of

.
--

* sc., Election

The Kernel has editorialized about
Student Congress elections time and
time again. It stems that after so
liunv rars these many words tn the
wise would lie suf icient, hut tliis is
it SC. Alter seeing
not the cisc wit
the complete disregard lor voting
it in
dining tlit congress fit
it n n
t
Wednesday we decided to try
oiuc again to correct this situation.
I

1

1

rcg-ul.-

it

m

i

We arc not questioning tin qualifications t)f the present officers. In
f.ut. we strongly bel;ee that with a
little more cooperation on the pait of
the candidates and oilier people associated with the SC that somt thing
good could posbiIy come out til this
I'resident
balcigh
mess, Congicss
Lane and th' members tl his stall
Wtnlxcil hard to set up this campaign
only to hivr it torn np by a lot ol irresponsible students who for some
reason or other decided to inn lor
ollice. We aie quite await ol the lact
that there were candidates running
lor the sole purpose of helping their
fellow students and the University,
but we led they are in the minority.
We also suspect that many students ran because their sorority or
Iraternity forced them into the position in order to control their votes.
This type individual is often referred
to as a Rubber Stamp Candidate.
And there are always those who run
ust so they can add another office
i ter their name.
At times Wednesday the polls
circus
I oked more like a three-rinas students were
tnan a voting place
campaigning inside the restricted
oting areas. In other cases students
v ere actually being told for whom to
ete while filling out their ballots.
In other instances the poll managers
themselves were guilty of violating
regulations. At a booth inside the
Journalism Building, a candidate's
tme which had been omitted from
the ballot was posted above the vot- g

11

Our Pi oMrm

Avs W

7

e

3

ing table. Announcing bis candidacy
for ollice is quite understandable, but
the particular candidate also suggested on the sign that a vote be cast in
his behalf. The sign hung in plain
iew ol

Ii

!

the poll managers.

Rules were being violated continuously, but even more distressing
is that no one seemed to really care.
In lact alter the polls were closed
showed up
only one member of
to count the ballots and he only stayed
a lew minutes. Other ODK members
who were scheduled to help with the
counting failed to even appear. It
sure looks as though there should be
a little more organization in the senior men's honorary, but apparently
there isn't. The members ol Mortar
Hoard, senior women's honorary, were
ready and willing to handle their
share of the counting but they
couldn't handle the job alone.
The tabulating was stopped at
l():o() pan. Wednesday and was not
resumed until 0 p.m. yesterday. For
reasons other than gross irresponsibility, it escapes us as to why this
lapse was allowed. It was the obligation of the two organizations so
designated to tally the ballots to fulfill this duty. Why they failed to do
so is a question which needs to be
answered.
This election was supposed to be
the epitome of success. Unfortunately,
it fell far short of such a goal. As to
placing the blame for such a farcical
display, the Kernel feels it can be
placed on no other shoulders than
those who knowingly violated the very
regulations to which they supposedly
subscribed. It is only unfortunate that
the candidates who were sincere in
their endeavors and who did abide by
the voting regulations should be penalized for the underhanded tactics
of a few. This will certainly happen
should the election be invalidated.

1

I

)

I

d

li lUM

111

w

:i$7'-(:- i

tJinr

Apr

SwhtZ&tiA

fob

v
-

.

J

r 177

C&H

1

f

w

'

a

Voting Rule Infraction

The Kentucky Kernel
of
University

Kentucky

the Act of March 3, 1879.
EDtered at the post office at Lexington, Kentucky r.s second class matter und
Published four times a week during the regular school year except during holidays aad exams.
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Jack R. Guthiue, Editor
Editor
John Pfeiffeh, Campus Editor
Richard Wilson, Managinf
Dick Wallace, Advertising Manager
Ben Fitzpathick, Sports Editor
FRIDAY NEWS STAFF
TirES Gaines, Associate
Sue Endicott, News Editor
Richahd Stevenson, Sports

ithin

The

H-Bo-mb

Editor's Ntitc: The ftiUowinj; artule
edition
appeal cil in the Aug.
ot the (.oiigiONion.d Uciord. It
consists of rcinaiks made by Hon.
Eile Cotke Jr. in a sermon deliv-eiett a church group in Maryland.
It is a sad commentary that in our
society today doing good is not considered news. The yardstick of news
these days is the evil that men can
perpetrate. The bigger the community, the more violent is this yaidstick.
Our greatest national problem toIt is not Comday is not the
munist Kussia. It is not the space missile gap. It is not racial unrest. It is
the cancer of moral decay eating at
our nation's vitals.
This cancer is slowly but surely
destroying every traditional American
virtue whether it be religious, patriotic, ethical, economic, moral, or
political.
On one hand we have divorced the
modern American from the rewards
of his efforts through our
tax system. On the other hand
we have divorced this same citien
from the penalties of his nonefforts
by the growing paternalism of a welfare state.
Perhaps the threat of the
hanging over our collective heads day
and night posing the instant cremation
of the human race has accelerated the
d

Is Not The Answer

true oldfashioncd values.
We are today living only for the present. We are not living today for
what we can contribute to the free
American way of life but for what

loss of all

tainted money we no longer care
whether the character with the dough

there pleaded the fifth amendment
when the Army opened an investigation of black market activities there.

got it robbing widows and orphans,
or a bank, or swindling his neighbors
Here is a new low in our morality
or stealing from his employer or cheatwhen men who have sworn solemnly
to wear the American uniform in
we can get out of it. We are Hearing ing Uncle Sam.
We give a lot of lipservice to fighthonor to defend God and country
the bottom of the barrel because we
either as individuals or as a ing communism, but how many of us become breakers of the laws they are
cannot,
nation continue to live beyond our today have the moral courage to turn plt ljed to uphold. It explains to us
our backs on individuals who have why we have turncoats in an Amerimeans and forever defer the payof the credit charges with which
known records of consorting with the can war.
ment
our future.
Reds? How many of us boycott shows
we have mortgaged
The bulwarks of our freedom must
in America today in
whose scripts are written by authors
We are living
first be erected in American minds.
the maddest pursuit of pleasure ever who have taken the fifth amendment If the Communists can demolish these
known to man on this earth. There when quizzed about their Communbulwarks in American minds, what
ist affiliations? How many of us acis nothing like it anywhere else in
good are our Army, our Navy, our
this world. The gratification of every cept as a literary bibles book reviews
Air Force, our Marine Corps? Our
selfish whim seems today to be the done by known fellow travelers and
missileers?
parlor pinks?
passion of our people.
We have made life too pleasurable
We haven't got the courage to
The only power of indignation we
in America at the cost of