xt7000002d2b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7000002d2b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19610504  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, May  4, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, May  4, 1961 1961 2015 true xt7000002d2b section xt7000002d2b Student Forum

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Dispel Apathy;
Sec Pace Four

IL

Today's Weather:
Cloudy And Warmer;
Low 19, High

67

University of Kentucky

Vol. 1.11, No. 101

LEXINGTON,

Committee
Will Rule

KY., THURSDAY,

MAY 4.

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Candidates for the president of the newly formed women's govern -are from left Ann I'iper, a Junior In Education; Gypsy Barker, an
Arts and Sciences Junior; Pat Harris, also a Junior in Arts and
Sciences; and Ann Scott, a Commerce senior. The election will be
held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday in the Student L'nion and Fine
Arts Buildings.

Coeds To Return
To Bowman Hall

Concert Set

For Tonight

The Central Kentucky Lecture
throughout the spring semester of and Concert Series will present
19C2.
the Concertgebouw Orchestra of
Robert W. Blakeman, director of Amsterdam at 8 p.m.
today in
men's housing, said the decision to Memorial Coliseum.
move women back into the dormiThe
directed by Bertory will not affect a ruling nard orchestra,
Haitnik, appeared in Lexingwhich requires Junior men to live
ton in 1954 when it toured North
in Univeisity housing as long as
America for the first time.
there is room for them.
The musical organization, whose
Junior men were allowed to live
when women students performances have been described
were moved into Bowman Hall last as "a triumph In art" by the New
semester. When the women left York Times, attained Its reputathe dormitory at the end of the tion under the leadership of Wilsemester, the Juniors were told to liam Mengelberg.
move back into University
ing.

ODK National Offices
Will Be Moved To UK

UK chapter was organized in
During the past four years the
UK chapter has provided more
than $5,000 in services to UK students.
The administrative secretary post
Dr. Clay is assuming is currently
held by Dr. Robert Bishop of the
University of Cincinnati. The national headquarters
are now
located at Cincinnati.

LKI) Scholarship

Applications for Little Kentucky Derby scholarships may
be picked up tomorrow in the
dean of women's office or the
LKD office in the SIB. The
applications must be returned
by May 12.

er, Arts and Sciences Junior; Ann
mui.iiu.i, Pat
ripei, jumui
Harris, an Arts and Sciences Jun- and Ann Scott, a Junior in
ior;
Commerce.
The nominees for the offices of
the new government were screened from applications submitted to
a group of seniors appointed by
the House Presidents' Council.
The elections will be held from
8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday in the
voting booth of the Student Union
Building and the ticket booth of
the Fine Arts Building.
Miss Pat Patterson, adviser to
the new government, said that
Identification cards must be shown
by the women before they can
vote.
Besides
president, the vice
representative from
president,
the sophomore. Junior, and senior
ic
class, the residence hails, and
will be elected.
The government is divided into
a senate and a house of representatives. The senate will be composed of the officers elected Monday in addition to an appointed
representative from the Women's
Advisory Board.
Posts In the house of representatives, which is composed of a
delegate from each residence, will
be filled next fall with another
election.

Tappy Corbin, Joyce Cunningham,
rma strache, and
Ann Evans

jane withers.

Byrle Davidson, Anne Eastin, Deo
Dee Ellis, Yvonne Nichols, Carley

Revell, and Janice Troop are nom
inees for senior representative.
Candidates for Junior represent
atives are Helen Haywood, Jimmer
Leonard, Vanda Markham, Diane
Marek. Linda Puclrett, Beverly
Rudy, and Kay Shropshire,
Sophomore nominees are Cynthia
Allen, Carol Craigmyle, Sue Ellen
Grannis, Edith Justice, Phyllis
Vivian
Klrt'ey.
Nancy Moore,
Shipley, Mary Ware, and Pattio

" "lte-

-

Residence Hall nominees are
Bettye Choate, Ann Combs, Elizabeth Hale, and Julie Webb.
Alice Ford, Patty Pringle, Tracy
Travis- - Emily Vance- - Bobb'e Vin- cent, Jerry Sue Sanders, and
Nancy Williams are running for
Panhellenic representative.

A&S Election
David Short, who was nominated Tuesday for vice presiArts and
dent of the 1961-6- 2
Sciences senior class, announced
yesterday that he had declined
the nomination. Arts and Sciences senior officers will be elected
Wednesday.

Mercy Killing Loses In Debate
By KERRY POWELL

Kernel Staff Writer

A proposal to legalize mercy
killing was defeated by a split
decision of three judges in an
Omicron Delta Kappa, men s leadership society for seniors
intramural debate sponsored
national headquarters
and graduate students, will move its
lv tliH c.fiKlwnr Frrnm vv(.r
1
to the University altout July 1
University in 1914 and the day afternoon.
This action and the appoint1925

ment cf Dr. Maurice A. Clay, associate professor of physical education at UK, as ODK administrative secretary came at the group's
national convention at Stillwater,
Okla.. Saturday.
The action was announced by
Trof. It. 1). Mclntyre of the Colli ge of Commerce, who has been
associated with the national organization as president, secretary,
a'ld treasurer for 26 year. Prof.
Alclntyie, Dr. Clay and Richard
Wiitkiii', Ft. Thomas, president of
the I K chapter, attended the convention.
Dr. Clay said the office for ODK
originally would be set up in his
own oil ice. At some future date,
lie said, clfices may be provided
at some other campus location.
ODK criminated at Washington

Pae

Four coeds have been selected to run for president of the
newly organized women's government which is now a part of
the Association of Women Students, a national organization.
The candidates are Gypsy BarkNominees for vice president are

faculty committee will
meet today to rule on the colonization of Pi Beta l'hi and
Delta Gamma sororities here
next fall.
A

Bowman Hall will be a coeducational dormitory again next fall.
The doimitory (currently used
exclusively by men) wilt .house
women s'udent in three of its five
sections, UK housing officials said
yesterday. It will be an arrangement similar to that which existed
1m st semester
in Bowman Hall.
Miss Eixie Evans, director of
women's housing, said only upper-classmwould be moved into the
women's sections of the doml- tory. She estimated that the dual
will
last
arrangement

Eight

Nominees Selected
For Coed Election

On Colonies

Dean of Women Doris Steward
will present the proposal to the
Student Organization and Social
Events Committee, which will meet
at 1:30 this nfternoon. The new
organisations must be approved by
the committee.
Dr. James W. Gladden, chairman
of the committee, said the committee hoped to reach a final
decision on the proposal, but it
may take more time.

11

Bob Patterson, sophomore ocean- ography major from Tyler, Texas,
and Nick Arnold, Junior premedi- cal student from Owensboro, op- posed the proposition that mercy
killing should be legalized.
KVaw
TrAA
frrshman nrclaw
student from Ft. Knox, and Alvin
Polk, sophomore speech major
from Louisville, took the affirmative side.
Todd began the argument for
the affirmative by stating that
"euthenasia (mercy killing) should
be granted to any sane person
over 21 who desires it.
"An individual has the right to
choose between life and death
when life no longer holds any Joy
for him," Todd said.
He cited the case of a Seattle
resident who had an incurable

bone disease for which he had
been operated on 62 times. When
time came for a 63rd operation,
Todd said, the man begged to be
"put out of his misery."
"The only release from this sort
of misery," the debater said, 'Is
eumenasia.
'It is true that life is a very
Drecious thin. "Todd concluded
"but e must learn to distinguish
between life and mere living."
Todd was followed by Patterson,
a speaker for the negative, who
based his argument on the lack of
need I0" mercy killing.
"This is 1961," Patterson said
"an age when pain is obsolete. The
literal meaning of pain no longer
exists."
Patterson said there are many

people alive today who were given
up for dead by medical science
years ago.
"Mercy killing cannot be legal- ba- lzed on a probability-of-deat- h
sis," he concluded. "Where there's
there's hope."
life,
foik, tne tnira speaicer, reiutea
Patterson's claim that pain is ob
solete.
"Many doctors testify it Is be
yond their power to relieve come
sorts of pain," Polk said. "Drug
sometimes lose their effectiveness."
'
To investigate and carry out the
act of mercy killing Polk suggest- ed a
co.nmittee of
two doctors and a lawyer who
would consult with the attending
physician. If a case were deemed
Continued on Page 2

iw"

.1

Worltl New Uriels

Astronaut Flight Still Doubtful
CAFE CANAVERAL. Fla., May 3 (AP) A forecast cl squalls in the Atlantic cast doubt today on
whether astronaut Alan B. Shepard Jr. will be
able to make his pioneer flight into spnee this
week.
U S. space scientists set their sights on Friday
for the
attempt, delayed yesterday
by foul weather.
Weather Bureau said widely scatBut the U-tered squalls are expected for the next few days
over Florida and offshore areas. The distrubances
were more likely over the downrange capsule recovery zone than over the launch site here, the
bureau said.

Titan ICBM Sent Aloft

AlH FORCE BASE. Calif.,
VANDENDEUG
May 3, iAV) A towering Titan ICBM shot aloft

fV.,- -.

4

today from an armored hole first test of a "hardened" launch system designed to enable the United
States to strike back after atomic attack.
After a short flight it was to be exploded over
the ocean, but newsmen watching from two miles
away could not see the blow up. The launch was
in clear eather, ith about a
wind.

Congress Approves Wage Hill

WASHINGTON, May 3 ( AP) Congress today
gave President Kennedy a major legislative victory
by approving his bill to increase the minimum
wage and extend its coverage.
A dramatic victory in the House reversed an
earlier setback for the administration and sent the
measure to the White House.
3
The Senate approved the till earlier by a
vote. The House vole was

Phi Beta Kappa

Eleven students with standings above 3.5 were initiated into Phi
Beta Kkpiu yesterday. The new members of the I K chapter of the
arts and sciences honorary are, first row from left. Sue Ellen Ball
and Nancy Bidwell; second row, Fmajo Cocanougher, Nancy Fitg,
and Martha Frailer; third row, Patrick Furlong, Jerald Kii'hard i,
Bruce May hew, and William Arnett. James Tolli.er and Margaret
Wat sou were nut present vihen the picture was taken.

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

A

May 4,

11

Hilarious Comely

'Blithe Spirit9 Called Delightful

play, she stands out as the best performer. Her
mannerisms, particularly her emphatic facial expressions and her lumbering movements, are perfected. She dances, hops about, eats voraciously,
all within a conscious frame of acting. Every
movement seems impulsive and everything she
does is exaggerated to fit her character.
Miss Rue's deliberate awkwardness is a wonderful contrast to Penny Mason's airy, quality as the
spirit of the dead wife, Elvira. Miss Mason is pale,
spritely, and very feminine In general, a good
ghost.
The play opens somewhat stiffly but progresses
into a well integrated and coordinated system of
action. This is especially difficult since two sets of
characters are involved, the spirits and the people, and the people (except for Charles Condomine)
are supposed to be unaware of the spirits. Often,
however, when the spirits talk, the people seem to
be waiting for them to finish before saying anything themselves.
The set, an ordinary living room, is functional,
as no action needs to take place outside those walls.
The tricks at the end books tumbling from the
shelves and records flying across the room are
carefully controlled, effective even though it is
apparent that they are pushed from backstage.
This is a play In which the characters eat.
drink, and smoke with ease. They have well affected accents, good stage diction without becoming
involved in complicated dialect, just enough to give
touch of the British. They are funny, yet believable in an impossible situation.
We may say the same thing to Guignol's play
that Shelley said to the skylark in a poem: "Hail
to thee, blithe spirit."

By BOBBIE MASON
Assistant Managing Editor
"Blithe Spirit." Ouignol Theatre's play which
opened Tuesday night, may be accurately described
by its name. It is a delightful comedy, hilarious in
places, and thoroughly fantastic.
The play is a ridiculously funny situation about
a writer who holds a seance In order to get atmosphere for his book. Unintentionally the ghost of
lis dead wife returns and create a conflict between the writer and his second wife.
The actors are all Guijnol veterans. Charles
Dickens, as Charles Condomine, is accomplished
as usual and becomes very natural and authentic
as the play progresses.
iParolyn Stroud, as Condomine's wife. Ruth, is
the epitome of sophistication. Her elegance and
her diction make her a believable character in
epite of her undignified manner of walking.
Mary Warner Ford, as the Cockney maid, Edith,
ehows her versatility in a part as unique as her
portrayal of Madame Elizabeth in "Look Homeward, Angel" last fall. Here, she Is simply "cute."
Don Galloway obviously did not fit into his
role as Dr. Bradman. He seems bored In the first
,'icene and his British manner is hardly noticeable.
Mi's. Bradman (Peggy Kelly) is a shrill, annoying
Jittle person, which is exactly what she Is intended
to "be.
Noel Coward, after writing "Blithe Spirit," said
of Madame Areati, the spiritual medium, "She
seems to steal the show every time the play is
piodurrd." This is certainly true of Linda Brown
Rue, who is near professional.
Besides being the funniest character In the

CORE Injunction Suit
Will Bo Hoard Today

An injunction suit seeking to prevent members of the
from
Lexington Chapter of the Congress on llacial Equality
heard today
demonstrating at the Kentucky Theatre will
in Fayette Circuit Court.
Ai30 named specifically in Swl- Included as defendants named
Dr Abby u Mar.
u
M.
7
1

by
in the suit filed April
director of the Home Eco- Swltow & Sons Enterprises. Inc..
owner and operator of the theater, nomics School, and Daniel S.
are four University students and Claster, instructor of sociology,
two faculty members.
No date has been set for hearing
Vle luUdanl." ,n7Tf
a similar suit nied Feb. 20 by the
Bobbye
owner
senior; Henry W. Jones. Arts and Phoenix Amusement Corp.,
Sciences freshman; Lamont Jones, of the Strand and Ben All The- senior In education; and William aters, where CORE also sponsored
against segrega- Young, Engineering freshman, all demonstrations
tlon.
from Lexington.

Mercy Killing Deluded

Continued from Page 1
hopeless by the committee and the
patient requested a speedy death,
Polk argued, enthenasia should be
granted.
Arnold, the final debater, took
the .side of the negative.
"Mercy killing has been a crime
for 17,000 years In the minds of
all civilized people," he said.
Arnold added that valuable information is added to medical
science by the scientific study of
patients who are near death in the
terminal stages of disease.

The audience was given a chance
to vote before the Judges cast their
ballots and gave the negative position an overwhelming majority.
Judges were Dr. Paul W. Street,
director of the Bureau of School
Services, who cast his vote for the
affirmative; Dr. Jim Scott, English instructor, who voted fur the
negative side of the debute; and
Dr. Gifford Blyton. UK debate
conch, who cast the
ballot in favor of the negative
position.

COEDS LISTED FROM STARS IN NIGHT
'
Names of University women who were recognized during Phi Delta Kappa Award.
Judith St. Aubln, Zeta Tau Al(he Stars in the Night program last week were released today
pha Book Award; Mary Lou
from the Office of the Dean of Women.
Delta Delta Delta

Eleven

women's

organizations

recognized nearly 200 coeds while
25 women were honored with in- dividual awards.
Stars in the Night is an annual
program conducted to honor the
Jeading women on campus.
Individual awards were given to
Emajo Cocanaugher, outstanding
woman in journalism; Julie Ward- Outstanding Guppy Award;
Jeanne Marie Goulett, Outstanding Marlin Award; Dorothy Mar-uiPhi I'psiion Omicron Cornell
Award; and Beverly Wong, Freshman Woman Award.
Judith Beetem, Kentucky Student Teachers Association Esther

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Hutchinson,
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BUFFALO TAVERN
Chevy Chase

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, May

Chore Boy Rusk
Prefers Matrimony
BERKELEY. Calif. (T) Sixty.
seven members of a sorority on the
University of California campus
will lose their favorite house man
to matrimony this summer.
He's David Patrick Rusk,
son of Secretary of State
Dean Rusk.
David has been earning his
board and room and pocket money
by waiting tables and doing chores
st the Alpha Phi sorority house.
He's following In the footsteps
cf his father, who attended David
fon College in North Carolina 30
years ago, waited on tables, took
sn active part In sports and still
lound time to study and become
a scholar.
David and his fiancee, a dark-eye- d
Argentine girl named Delcla
Bf nee Splnosa, both will continue
their studies at the University of
California after an August wedding in Buenos Aires.
"I met her three years ago in
Scaitdale. N. Y.," David says. "I
was in my last year of high school
and she came there as an Ameri

Utrd Press

NEW YORK Elegant coiffures
are not for wearing in sports cars,
ays hairdresser Michel Kazan.
"The only time an elegant hairdo has a proper setting in a car
is when a woman Is chauffeur
driven," he explains. "The proper
toiffure for driving or riding in
a sports car is one that has an
a
l(gnnce of disarrangement,
hairdo that can look tousled but
may be put back in place attractively with the fingers after the
drive."
Michel himself is a sports car
nthuMa.st, and he feels our cur-leinterest in speed has given
us a new perspective on fashion.
Hair that Is exposed to the
lements needs protection, he says.
And he advises women sports car
to have lubricating
enthusiasts

Bohanan Elected

Convention

Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi
Gamma Delta will have their annual picnic at 5:30 p.m. today at
the Kappa house.
Tin-Mat-

YWCA
Sondra Search, YWCA

director,
and Henrietta Johnson, Immediate
past YWCA president will attend
the national convention of that
organization to be held in Denver,
Colo., May
Miss
Search has reveived a
$75 grant from the national YWCA
to attend a human relations workshop during the convention. She
is presently on the staff of the
Dean of Women.
Miss Johnson, senior English
education major from Lexington,
has previously served with the
Southern Regional YWCA.

To YWCA Office
June Bohanan, sophomore In the
of Arts and Sciences, from
Lexington, was recently elected
vice chairman of the Southern Regional Council of the YWCA at the
Regional Assembly held In Richmond, Va.
Miss Bohanan was also selected
from the same assembly to attend the National Student Council
of the Y's in Wisconsin this August. She is presently chairman of
the University Christian Faith
,
Committee.
College

Heard The News.
THERE'S A NEW YOU IN '61

Have the newest look of fashion with a hair style

just far you. All this including

MR, FRANK'S SALON
287 S. LIME

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Connie Rieger, freshman educawill act as
a protective coating against sum- tion major from Aurora, 111., and

mer sun while riding, to avoid
discoloration particularly of
bleached and touchedup hair.
A color rinse is one of the best
shields against the sun's rays,
Michel advises. "It protects the
head Just as a little glove protects the hand."
"Because hair grows faster during the summer months, it should
be cut no matter what its length,"
Michel says. This helps dispose of
dead and split ends.
"The shape and cut of your summer coiffure is important to avoid
an untidy appearance.
A light
undercut! permanent wave gives
enough body resistance for a
graceful curl. Too much
permanent wave exposed to the
elements results In a frizzy hairdo."

a member of Delta Zeta to Don
Wulf, freshman engineering major
at Millikin University, Decatur,
111., and a member of Delta
Sigma
Phi.
Maxine Conover, junior commerce major from Panama and a
member of Delta Zeta to Stewart
Berryman, dairy science major
from Nicholasville and a January
graduate.
Rosario Medina, Junior commerce major from La Paz, Bolivia, to Marion Wilkins, senior
animal husbandry major and a
member of Alpha Gamma Rho.

i

Marriage is a school in which
the pupil learns too late.
German proverb.

510

E. MAIN

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For That

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Nor is this simply a verbal promise. Artcarved's written
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By The Associated Press
BATH. England (JP) A lot of
early American furniture is crossing the sea to find a permanent
and gracious home in England.
The furnishings of the home
cf the late Joseph Downs, one
of the artistic show places of
North Guilford, Conn, have been
ent.
Expected soon is almost the
whole of an early American Inn,
once Conkey's Tavern of Pelham,
Mass. A massive stone lintel over
a fireplace is inscribed, "Conkey's
Tavern, June ye 21st, A.D.. 1776."
The furniture and many objects in domestic use in colonial
clays will be placed in one of
Britain's stately mansions. Clav-erto- n
Manor two and a half miles
from the center of Bath, where
they will form basic exhibits in
the first museum of American decorative arts to be established
permanently outside the United
States.
Funds to buy the manor and to
set up the museum were provided
of
by the Halcyon Foundation
New York. It was purchased from
the estate of Miss A. M. Sktine
who died in 1956.

HOT CORNED BEEF
PASTRAMI SANDWICHES
RYE BREAD
KOSHER DILLS

a free manicure.

PHONE

a

England

..

hair treatments. These

Colonial Furniture
Goes To

4, 1961- -3

Social Activities

Mortar Board
Pixie Priest, Junior home ecocan Field Service Exchange stu- nomics major from Hartford, was
elected president of Mortar Board.
dent.
Others elected to office were
"I was a member of a student
committee assigned to look after Judy Beetem, Lexington, vice presour foreign students you know, ident; Ann Piper, Russellville, seclike getting them dates and see- retary; Molly Ryland, Lexington,
treasurer; Pat Harris, Carrollton,
ing they were not neglected.
"I took her out myself," he re- historian; and Kathie Songster,
Elizabethtown,
calls with a grin.
public relations
Delcla, also 20 and the daughter chairman.
of a Buenos Aires physician, reThl Sigma Iota
sumed dating David when she enMembers of Phi Sigma Iota,
rolled as a freshman here two
years ago. She went home for a romance languages honorary, have
year, but now Is enrolled at Berk- elected Molly Ryland, Lexington,
eley as a sophomore history stu- president for the coming year.
Others elected were Nancy Jones,
dent.
As house man at the sorority, vice president; and Dorothy Carter,
young Rusk gets up early each secretary treasurer. The gToup
morning to give the two women also initiated four students. The
cooks a hand In preparing break- initiates are Mrs. Josephin Nlms,
fast. He checks the furnace, emp- Carol Koening, Rinda Fowlkes,
ties the garbage and burns the and Judith Stewart.
trash. The sorority is near the
PHI U CHINA DISPLAY
university's football stadium where
Phi Upsilon Omicron, home ecohe plays rugby on the Junior varnomics honorary, will sponsor a
sity team.
china design survey and exhibit
As for the future:
"After getting my Ph.D., I plan from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. today
to go into teaching economics on in the lounge of Keeneland Hall.
the college level," David said.
KKO-UJI- S

Expert Says Riding Hairdo
Should Look Neatly Tousled
By The Assoc

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3

Plcaso send mo more farts ahout d amond
rings and "Wedding Guido fur Bude and
Groom". Also name of nearest (or
A'Uarved Jnwuler. I am enclosing
10 to cover handling and post.iga.
Evening Stir
is in reclusive
pairntf d design
on ol Ailciived'l
setting.

Namo
Addicss
City

Ccunty cr Zono

* Elusive Yardstick

The Kentucky Kernel
of
University

Kentucky

lit

Recond-clitr- a

postage paid
Lexington, Krnturky.
Published four llmei a werk during thp miliar whnol rar rvrrpi during holidays and eiami,
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR
Bob Anderson, Editor

Max Wenninger, Managing Editor

Newton Spencer, SpoiU Editor
Bobbie Mason, Assistant Managing Editor
Lew King, Advertising Manager
Beverly Cardwell and Toni Lf.nnos, Soriety Edilort
Skip Taylor and Jim Channon, Cartoonists
Perm Ashley, Business Manager
Nicky Tope, Circulation
UlUhbDAY NEWS STAFF
Norm

Johnson, News Editor
Newton Spencfr, Sfwrt$

Michele Fearing,

Associate

Antidote For Apathy

It seems that almost everyone concerned with college students is caught
up in the sound and the fury over
the
apathy prevalent among
students. .While we agree with many
of .the charges, we feel that not
enough credit is given to those collegians who are anything but apathetic.
For example, consider the Student Forum, an intramural debating
organization which has become
this semester. Organized
last fall by Dr. J. W. Patterson, assistant professor of speech, the Student Forum is well on its way to becoming a University institution in
which those students who are the
antithesis of their apathetic fellows
can freely express almost any opinion
they care to.
The stated purpose of the forum
is to provide training and experience
in public speaking for students who
cannot or do not want to join the
varsity debate team. In actuality,
however, the forum serves a more
important and worthwhile purpose-th- at
of stimulating open discussion of
controversial topics among students.
The forum has already dealt with
such subjects as the Eichmann trial,
atheism versus theism, Cuban intervention, and at yesterday's session the
contropros and cons of the age-olversy over mercy killings were put
before the public.
Another aspect of the forum
wprthy of commendation is that it
encourages audience participation in
d

Kernels
Tongue; well that's a very good
thing when it ain't a woman's.
Charles Dickens.

its discussions and emphasizes the
presentation of all viewpoints on any
one subject.
In brief, the Student Forum is a
firm rebuttal of the stereotype of the
college student. We wish
it continued success and urge students to participate in it whenever
they can. Who knows, perhaps the
forum will become one of those much
talked-abo"needed traditions" at
UK, and a truly worthwhile one instead of the "traditional" flippant
mass entertainment we have had in
the past.

Among its other problems, the
Kennedy Administration is wrestling
with an old one concerning business
-- how big is too big?
The hope, as related in this newspaper the other day, is to carve up
companies that are "too big." Officials contend they are not saying
bigness itself is necessarily bad; only
that bigness beyond a certain point is
bad. They want to find a yardstick
to determine that point in each major industry.
It's a neat trick if they can do it,
as earlier antitrust enforcers have discovered. One of the troubles is that
markets won't stand still long enough
for government officials to draw useful conclusions from their measurements.
Suppose, for example, it's decided
any company having over 50 percent
of a given market is too big and
should be broken up. Here's General
Motors; it's undeniably big, and in
1955 its share of the auto market
was nearly 51 percent. Plainly, then,
a target for the trustbusters except
for the awkward fact that G. M.'s
share was down to less than 44 per

cent last year. The change was
wrought not by government but by
competition from both foreign and domestic makes, including among 'the
latter a small competitor indeed.
Or consider U. S. Steel, another
"giant." In 1918 it produced nearly
45 percent of the nation's steel; in
1900, 27.5 percent, even though its
actual production had increased enormously in the interim. Once again,
competition at work, rather vigorously at work one might say.
Now competition is what the antitrust people are concerned to preserveat least, that was our impression. And obviously competition in
these major industries 1ms been
growing over the years ami is intense today. So bigness is a highly
elusive yardstick for determining the
existence of competition. Competition
either exists or it does not, and sie