xt731z41v39n https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt731z41v39n/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19650128  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 28, 1965 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 28, 1965 1965 2015 true xt731z41v39n section xt731z41v39n Inside Today's Kernel
Editor

TIT' t Rl tnrr
Li

Vol. LVI, No.

(i7

Ton
L

Hi TT

LLU
University of Kentucky
1

--

--

l

Kernel Arts
discusses F.u
ncne Hurdick's new navel: Vugv
Two.
Cold Dinner's Hall will hinhlinht
flic uerkend's social activities:
I'agr Tlirtr.
I'K Dental School basketball team
almost had Cotton Xash and Harry
Cramer: Pane Si.
Editor ays March's replacement is
a 'Fttrward Move': I'agr Four.

l

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, JAN. 28, HM5

VI

--

LiEight Pages

President

retin

ohnson will send Secof State Dean Husk to Sir

Winston Churchill's Funeral: V.iie
.

Experimental film society has firs'
showing: Page Two.
Picture pane on campus life at VK:
Page Fivr.
Fourteen students in tin' Collene
of Ennincerinn laid perfect stand-inn- s
last semester: Page F.iglit.

Noted Author To Lecture
On 'Unity Of Free World'

7
w

Barbara Ward, British writer
and economist, will speak at 8:15
tonight in Memorial Coliseum.
The subject of her lecture will
be "The Unity of the Free World."

K

''''

-

--

i
!

-

V.
V

''

Miss Ward is formerly foreign

affairs editor of "The Economist"
of London.

V

Talking It Over

V

She was born in Yorkshire and

i

Robert Johnson, vice president for student affairs, is now meeting
with students in the weekly informal conferences formerly conducted
by University President Dr. John W. Oswald

Washington Seminar
Meeting Thursday

The last of several meetings designed to explain and provide
applications for the Washington Seminar will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday in Room 111 of the Student Center.
In March, Steve Beshear, SC
The seminar, sponsored by the
Student Congress, is an intern president, and Whitfield will take
program set up to - familiarize the applications to Washington
where they will be directed to
students with government activities by providing summer jobs for government officials with job
them in Washington, D.C., in openings by the Kentucky Alumni
Association there.
various government offices.
Last summer, 10 students were
Eddie Whitfield, chairman of
the seminar, will explain applicaplaced in government jobs through
tion procedures at the meeting. the seminar and were given the
Applicants will be interviewed chance to meet top government
officials including President Lynby a faculty committee and qualdon B. Johnson and Sen. Robert
ified students will be recommended for jobs.
Kennedy.
-

was educated at the Convent,
Felixtown, at the Lycee Molire
and at the Sorbonne in Paris.
She also studied in Germany and
at Somerville College, Oxford.
In 1939 Miss Ward became
assistant editor of "The Economist" and has been connected
with that paper ever since. She
has also held important positions
with the British Broadcasting
Corporation and Old Vic Theatre.
Miss Ward is the author of
such books as ".India and the
West," "The West at Bay," and
"Policy for the West."

lN
BARBARA WARD
Miss Ward has traveled widely of that government to study their
in Europe, America and Africa.
Five Year Plans. She has also
She went to India at the request lived for a year in Australia.

Bob Guinn Elected President
Of Interf rater nity JCouncil
By KENT HICKS
Kernel Staff Writer

The Interfratemity Council
last night elected officers for the
year.
Bobby Joe Cuinn was elected
on the second ballot to succeed
Keith Ilagan, president of IFC.
Cuinn is a junior agronomy ma jor
with a 3.2 overall. He is a member of Alpha Gamma Rho, Student

Congress, IFC, Keys, Lances, and
Alpha Zeta, agriculture honorary.

Guinn beat out two other
nominees for the post: Tom E.ou-scaSigma Alpha Epsilon; and
SlanRittcr, Kappa Sigma.
In the race for secretary, David
Switzer of Delta Tau Delta defeated Ron Harmon of Phi Sigma
Kappa.
Switzer is a pre vet major
u,

and has a 2.5 overall. He is a
sophomore and is now president
of Junior IFC.
Harmon is a junior agriculture major.
Oscar Westerfield, a sophomore economics major, was elected treasurer. He is a member of
Phi Kappa Tau and has a 2.7
accumulative. Westerfield was a
member of Junior IFC and was
of I Iaggin Hall.
secretary-treasurWesterfield defeated Denny
Williman, a junior engineering
major and a member of Phi
Gamma Delta.
In other action last night, the
er

YMCA To

Sponsor Work Camp,
Seminar In Bogota, Columbia
By KENNETH HOSKINS

Kernel Staff Writer
The University YMCA and the National Student Council of the
YMCA will cosponsor a student workcamp and seminar in Bogota,
Columbia, this summer.
The program will begin July 5, in Washington, D. C, and end
in Miami, Fla., August 20.
Similar projects have been held by the YMCA for several years
in South America and other developing areas of the world. However, this is the first such program in which the University YMCA
has participated.
Donald A. Leak, University YMCA director, expressed the hope
that through this seminar the YMCA will further two of its primary goals education and understanding.
"By enabling students from Kentucky to experience life in South
America," Mr. Leak said, "we hope to further the educational
motivation of the participants and permit them to apply their academic skills."
"In the area of understanding the YMCA holds the view that
understanding is related to personal experience and communication
and through this project we hope the students will better understand themselves, their nation, and their world."
The 16 participating students will take part in weekly seminars
and Spanish study before leaving for Washington.
Topics to be covered in these weekly seminars include the
following:

History and culture of South America, social customs and economic structure, political affairs in Colombia, United States relations
with Colombia, communism, United States foreign aid programs,
racial relations in the United States, moral and religious climate
in the United States, political institutions and social welfare.
A three-daorientation in national problems will open the program in Washington beginning July 5. On July 9 the group will
fly to Miami, Fla., and then on to Bogota.
Two areas near Bogota have been chosen as work centers for
the 16 University students and their Colombian student
y

One group will develop community leadership and lead
recreation in Kennedy Village, the agency for International Development Project, which houses 20,000 people and was dedicated
by the late President John F. Kennedy.
Leon XIII, an adobe village near Bogota, will house the other
half of the group. There they will either further the construction
of a small schoolhouse or the facilities for a medical clinic.
Evening seminars with national, political, and academic leaders,
United States officials, and local community citizens are planned
for the students while they are in Bogota.
Weekends will provide recreation for the students in the form of
fiestas, reunions, and short tours to places of interest in the Bogota
area.
Later in August the group will spend six days in the Colombian mountains observing rural life, agriculture, communication and
transportation facilities, and geographical and cultural points of
interest.
An evaluation session at Cusco, Peru, will conclude the students'
summer in South America. This will be held with other groups of
U. S. students who have been serving on similar projects in Chili,
Peru, and Equador.
Mr. Leak listed these 11 students planning to make the Bogota
trip: Sain Abell, sophomore journalism major; JoAnnc Burks, senior
Spanish major; Earl Bryant, sophomore pre med major; Cregg Davenport, sophomore psychology major; Houston Davis, sophomore
psychology major; Diane Malette, freshman English major; Lee
Rathbone, sophomore sociology major; Robert Rich, junior pre law
major; Charles Webb, junior political science major; Chardell
Thomson, sophomore political science major; and Diane Williams,
sophomore biological science major.
The group still needs 5 more students. The program is open to
any University student. Election will be made through applications
and based on the student's interest in foreign affairs, knowledge
of U.S. relations inLatinAinerica.andfamiliarity
with the Spanish
language.

Continued On Page

7

Faculty Club
Asks Students
To Coffee
The University Faculty Club
members are extending invitations to a number of students
for an afternoon coffee Feb. 4.
Dr. John Carpenter, Faculty
Club chairman, said that letters
are being sent to about 10 members requesting that each invite
two students to the coffee.
Next week's meeting will be
the first in a series of student-facultdiscussions sponsored by
the club as its part in the Centennial celebration.
According to Dr. Carpenter,
the informal sessions will provide "excellent opportunities for
strengthening relationships
students and faculty."
Plans are being made to involve students from every college and manydepartments in the
conversations.
Dr. Carpenter said discussion
topics will be of interest to faculty
and students and will give both
groups a chance to communicate
about mutual problems.
The topic for the first meeting will be "How Much the University Should Re Concerned with
Student Morality."
y

le-twe-

* 2

-- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, THURSDAY JAN. 28, 1965

Burdick Novel '480'
Seems Money-Make- r
By DICK K1MMINS
Kernel Staff Writer
'
Eugene H u r d i c k s newest novel, "The 4S0," lacks something of the element of belief his
previous two books presented.

"Failsafe" had its doubtful
moments, and in fact the entire
plot of the World War III
depended upon scarsely
believeable accidents. "The Ugly
American," however, had a solid
ring to it that still convinces
readers throughout the world.
Where "The 480" begins to
dissolve is again a crucial turning point. John Thatch, average
American citizen, is going to be
chosen by the Republican National Committee to win the presidential nomination at the Republican Convention in San
Francisco. It would really have
been interesting had the Republican National Committee been
seeking a choice to win the Democratic Convention, in Austin.
The decision to back Thatch,
who is so average that he really
doesn't even want to run, is
dependent upon his overnight
fame reconciling dissident native
groups in India. Mr. Thatch is a
construction engineer.
This piece of the limelight
becomes a golden flood when
Thatch
turns a
Red gyerukka babd agaubst ut$
Communist leader. The converted South-EaAsians kill their
leader, and Thatch becomes an
American hero.
If you accept this, you are
ready for "The 480." This technological wonder is a marvelous
computer which divides the
American electorate into 480 different groups, based upon geographic, economic, religious, and
social issues. It is the brains
behind the Republican National
Committee.
In an attempt to make it
clear that this computer directed election is a realistic portrayal oftheGoldwater Johnson
campaign, Mr. Burdick introduces into his novel the assassination of the President. As it
did in the 1964 race, this unexpected event alters the Republicans' situation.
Obviously, Mr. Burdick is attempting to convince his readers
"
that the
politics of
the bandwagon speech and the
$100-- a
plate dinner has been recomplaced by
puters and colder female psychologists. Such is the power of
Mr. Burdick's dialogue and plot
flow that many of his readers will
find it hard not to agree.
What Eugene Burdick lias actually done is another thing. For
the third time in a row, he has
created a platform from which to
launch another attack upon the
media of
America, at some slight profit to
those involved.
Mr. Burdick is not alone, as
a new and awesome generation
"
of
jockey for
top number on the
lists. Wouk's "Youngblood Hawk"
is a perfect example: big and
and exciting,
important-lookinfirst printed in hardback, then
paperback, to be finally realized
as a motion picture-pluPlus
advertising campaign.
Both of Burdick's earlier
underwent this process, with the added refinement
hair-rais-

er

single-handed- ly

st

"old-time-

cold-reasoni-

of

magazine

serialization

for

"Failsafe." But this profitable

pattern contains other elements.
Besides glamor, adventure, and
sex, (the usual things,) you need
to add education. The American
public loves to learn these days,
as long as the learning is something useful to be repeated over
Bridge and not too demanding.
"
The
provide
this added clement: find something the public is curious about
and devise a tension-filleplot
explaining how it works.
"Failsafe" explicated the mysterious and deadly Strategic Air
Command and its black boxes.
"The Ugly American" had already laid bare the diplomatic
corps of the U. S. In "The 4S0,"
now, the intricate
machinations of the 1964
Republican Convention become
the illuminated topic.
"
In the
once
you have placed your main
character in a position which
allows you to present your intriguing information, a big problem arises when it comes time to
end the lecture. What do you do
with the caracter involved?
Often, as in "Failsafe," you
simply kill off the offending question. "Youngblood Hawk" after
exploring the fascinating world of
e
publishing seems to ignore the problem by drifting more
or less into limbo. But in "The
480" Burdick plans ahead and
meets the trouble squarely.
John Thatch loves his wife,
but there is a lot that is not
generally known about her. During the last major war, shw was
imprisoned by the Japanese and
found it easier to do without her
virtue than her life.
Now the Opposition, (the
Democrats,) threatens to expose
her past shame should her husband receive the Republican nomination.
Blaming herself for this danger to her husband's career, she
decides to throw herself from the
Golden Gate Bridge while John
is speaking to the Republican
Convention. Mercifully, John receives her note while on the rostrum and is able to reach her side
in time.

I..

:

"super-novelists-

d

behind-the-scen-

"super-novel,-

big-tim-

Mr. Average American returns
to his average happy home and
his construction engineering, and
the reader cannot quarrel with
Burdick's skilled and tense culmination of the plot. Perhaps
only the computer has any real
cause to gripe, shot down again
by the human element.

New

g

of the center. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Frederick of
Louisville sculpted the brown-hue- d
mural as part
of the architect's original plans,

Molded in Kentucky river sand and cast in seven
panels, the new mural in the Agriculture Science
Center towers from floor to ceiling in the build- tag's front corridor, depicting the entire operation

Professor Publishes

Film Society Show
Termed 'Successful'
Featuring Kenneth Anger's
films, the University's Experimental Film Society began its
initial season with a success in
enthusiasm among its 130 members as well as upon the screen.
The major film of the three
shown, Anger's "Scorpio Rising,"
has been seized by police before,
purporting that the movie is indecent. In fact, "ScorpioRising"
seemed to be a tasteful handling
of an unpleasant subject, the motorcycle gangs that plague West
Coast cities.
As the film recalls, Marlon
Brando's starring role in "The
Wild Ones" presented this problem forcefully to theater audiences throughout the country. Anger's technique was more direct
he joined a motor cycle crowd
and shot most of the footage for
his film supposedly as "home
movies."

Yet the terror, the sadism imposed by Brando's hordes upon a
cowed town is not a theme of
Anger's work. Anger's interest
lies in the men who comprise

these often criminal bands; and
he humorously but also tragically
makes visual comparison between
these men and the masculine idols
other ages have revered: Christ,
Hitler, and the film star James
Dean.
The second Anger film was
"composed" as the motorcycle
epic was "spontaneous." A companion piece to Anger's "Fireworks," this selection displayed
"Waterworks" in patterns of jets
and fountains of falling water.
Toned in shades of blue, with
the one startling exception of a
lady's emerald fan, "Waterworks" was a cinematic artwork
of motion, texture, and form
highly enjoyable to watch.

Dr. Ernest Jokl, professor in
the Physical Education Department and Director of the Physical
Educatin Research Laboratory
of the University, has published
eight books. The scries devoted to
sportsmedicine celebrates Dr.
Jokl's position as a founder in the
field and one of the world's leading authorities on sportsmedicine.

Bluegrass Music
At Its Finest

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MANN

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"SHOCK TREATMENT"
Stuart Whitman
Carol LynUy

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, THURSDAY, JAN. 28,

The Merry

3

Fellows! How docs it feel to
have the shoe on the other foot? '
It s a rather strange sensation to
have to sit back and wait to be
asked out, n'est-c- e pas?
The Gold Diners Hall being
held Friday night is the one
chance in the year when the women can learn to
appreciate the
problems and pressures of securing a date. Touchy business if the
men decide to be coy. . .

The dance will be something
new in campus entertainment.
Two combos, the Delacardosand
the Torques, will alternately provide continuous music from 8:30
until 12:30.
If, by chance, the lady from
whom you expected an invitation
has made no mention of Gold
Diggers, blame Panhellenic.This
is the weekend for sorority initiation -- and the girls are going to
be busy. . .
After a whole semester of

Go-Rou-

by Gay Gish

shoe is well established on
over 200 women will
be initiated into the University's
12

sororities. Congratulations,
new initiates!
Friday afternoon Junior
and Junior IFC will hold
a closed jam session in Bucll
Armory for all sorority and fraternity pledges. Perhaps this will
serve as an introduction for the
fraternities' new pledges.
The Lambda Chi's are making
sure they have dates for Friday.
..
.perhaps they don't trust the
ladies! They're having a "relaxi-cizer- "
party to help the brothers
recuperate from rush, entertain
the new pledges and listen to
the music of the Temptashuns.
Saturday evening the Wildcats
will be playing their first home
game in a week. The Cats meet
Florida at 8 p.m. in Memorial
Coliseum. Let's show them what
we showed Georgia!
Pan-hcllen- ic

Basketball season is open
house season for the fraternities.
The Phi Dclt's and KA's will
open their doors for house party-opehouses.
Also in the entertaining mood
are theTKE's, SAE's, AGHs,and
Sigma Chi's. Everyone will retire
to their respective houses to get
as much partying done as the
game and closing hours will al.

n

low.

..

The Baptist Student Union
also plans an open house for
entertainment.
Student Center Movie fare for
Friday evening is the "romping
Roman" adventure, "Come September." The show offers a chance
to dream about
places
and the excitement they offer.
Speaking of shoes being on the
other foot. . .Have you noticed
the change in footwear among
some of the coeds? Saddleshoes
seem to be returning to the fashion stream. This more practical
far-awa-

y

eral Southern college campuses:
Tennessee, Vanderbilt, and North
Carolina.
While changes in fashion
trends are one of the occupational
hazards of college life, a more
immediate crisis demands our
attention. . .the birds!
The situation is not as dire as
Hitchcock conceived of it in his
"entertaining" film, "The Birds,"
but the various annoyances of our
feathered friends have reached
such a proportion that some of
the football players have threat

Engagements
Sharon Burnett, junior elementary education major from
Buck Grove, to Gary Hawks-wortsenior journalism major
from Brandenburg.
Sandra Gaylc Raybournc,
sophomore elementary education
major at St. Catherine Junior
College, from Springfield, to
Howard Carey, junior industrial
administration major from
Springfield.
Penny Ann Paynter, senior
majoring in medical technology
from Middles boro, to Donald C.
Rogers, senior marketing major
from Madison, X. J. and a member of Phi Kappa Tan fraternity.
Linda Ann Drawdy, sophomore education major from Nash-villTenn., to Samuel S. Hubbard, a junior commerce major
from Louisville and a member of
Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
h,

fj

SHIRTS

ened to wear their helmets to
Last Tuesday's dust storm afforded an unusual opportunity
for those of us who have never
been west of the Mississippi Hiv-er.

The admonition, "Go West,
young man,' may soon be unnecessary, if the West continues
to come to us in the form of dust
from Oklahoma and Texas!
Well crowded classrooms,
e
attendance at those
eight o'clocks and much burning
of the midnight oil indicate that
spring is just around the corner
as students strive to keep up with
class work in preparation for enjoying the nice weather that will
soon challenge the desire to stay
indoors and study!
wide-awak-

KENTUCKY
TYPEWRITER
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for $1.12

Dry Cleaning By

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'The King Is Dead , . . Long Live The King9
Center and at the Donovan and Blazer cafeterias.
and Karen Boyer give Mike Smith a
Sandy Lay
The new king will be crowned after all the otes are
last look at his award for Gold Digger King as
counted at 9:30 p.m. The Torques and The
Jane Atkinson removes his crown in preparation
will provide the music for the ball to be
for naming the new king at Friday night's Gold
held in the Student Center Ballroom.
Digger's Ball. Tickets are on sale in the Student
Bela-card-

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* "I'm Glad WcVc Filially Got A Two-Ma-

The GOP Moves Forward
"It

Republican National Chairman
Dean Burch submitted his resignation at the meeting of the Republican National Committee in Chicago this weekend. His resignation

will become effective April 1.
This move should be applauded
by the American voter because it is
the first positive step taken by the
GOP in recent years to strengthen
the two party system in America.
Indeed, the citizen of today may
wonder if we really have two parties powerful enough to be in contention for the highest national office, especially after Lyndon Johnson's landslide victory in the No-

vember election.
The woes of the Republican
Party came on the passing of the
Eisenhower years in the White
House, when a young senator
named John Fitzgerald Kennedy
upset Ike's vice president, Richard
M. Nixon, by an extremely narrow
popular vote majority. This was
1960, a time when both parties were
strong, but neither had a monopoly
on power.

The first serious query the voter
may have had concerning the modern GOP come after Richard Nixon
lost to Pat Brown in the 1962 California governor's race. At this time
Nixon threw a childish temper tantrum during what he tagged as his
"last news conference." He flayed
the press for impartiality and subjectivity.
Nixon caused people to ask "Is
this really the man who might have
been elected president?" The Chiwhich had editor-- :
cago
ially supported Nixon, was prompted to apologize to its readers for
backing him, and said of his "last"
Sun-Time- s,

n

Outfit

In Washington, Too"

news conference,

should be."
The waning of the two party system in America was speeded by the
railroading tactics of Arizona Sen.
Barry Goldwater in the 1961 election. Goldwater was less the choice
of rank and file Republicans than
he was the figurehead of a faction.
His nomination demonstrates that
good politics and good reasoning
's
are not always synonymous.
nomination should not draw
scorn to him and his loyal conservative followers. They were only
fighting for their "cause."
The scorn must be accepted by
the GOP itself, which obviously did
not follow its own conscience, and
which allowed its party to become
identified with groups alien to basic
American political and social philoGold-water-

sophy.

Even staunch Democrats will
concede that a large part of Lyndon

Johnson's "mandate" last election
was actually composed of citizens
voting against Goldwater (further,
evidence of the weakening of the
two party system).
Now we're told that Richard
Nixon is the leading contender for
the next GOP presidential nomination. If this should occur, chances
are excellent that Lyndon Johnson,
if he runs, would be reelected in
1968. This means that nearly 20
percent of the American population
won't even remember a reigning
The South's Outstanding College Daily
GOP president.
University of Kentucky
fix our atIn the meantime, we
ESTABLISHED 1894
THURSDAY, JAN. 28, 1965
tention on the glimmer of hope
William Grant,
sparked" by the ousting of Dean
David Hawpe, Executive Editor
Sro Webb, Managing Editor
Burch, for this may mean that the
Linda Mills, News Editor
Henry Rosenthal, Sports Editor
Republican party is learning its Kenneth Green, Associate News Editor
Gay Gish, Women's Page Editor
and that the two party G. Scott
lesson,
Blithe Runsdorf, Feature Editor
Nunley, Arts Editor
system, so vital to American democBusiness Staff
racy, will begin to breathe again. Tom Finnie, Advertising Manager
John Dauchaday, Circulation Manager

The Kentucky Kernel
Editor-in-Chi-

Reader Comments About Article On Cancer
To the Editor of the Kernel:

Reading the comments of Dr.
Clarence C. Little in the Jan. 13,
issue of the Kentucky Kernel regarding the relationship of cancer
to smoking I could not avoid applying to this situation the rules of
evidence sometimes recommended
to a juror in sifting truth from nonsense. I am not sure whether I
should be criticizing the Kentucky
Kernel for misquotation of Dr.
Little for his statements.

great University.
One is that the local populace
supporting the university requires

The California maihuana farm-

balls at other freshmen in both
Haggin's Quadrangle and as they
went in and out of Donovan's
Cafeteria. It certainly is a pity
that our professors can't find
enough work to keep these studious "Kittens" at work. But it is
nice to know that the "Kittens"
are starting off the year in a gentlemanly fashion no one went to
the hospital, only windows were

er may be a Kentucky Kernel reader, and as such may wonder why
his particular kind of poison is
discriminated against in favor of
the burley producer in view of the
damning evidence of violence to broken.
RICK TARRANT
the lungs of the public.
Sophomore Chemistry major
DR. JACK S. RADABUCH
Visiting Professor of History

However, anyone who has read
even the vaguest Lousiville Courier
Journal article on smoking realizes
that no one has ever claimed that
smoking is the basic or simple
cause of cancer. To imply that the
Federal government critics of

In conjunction with your recent
editorials on the rights and wongs
of total football I would like to
bring one unmentioned but important point of view. Unfortunately for the past few years our
campus has been plagued with an
unrully litter of "kittens." Last
year the men's residence halls were
matched against the "Kittens" not
in academic skills but in a snowball
fight. As many will recall the studious "Kittens came out the
victors sending one boy to the
hospital as well as injuring several
others.

tobacco culture have suggested this
is to indulge in the rankest kind
of intellectual dishonesty.
It is equally unfair to suggest
that the statistical evidence does
not prove conclusively that the
two pack a day smoker is in double
jeopardy as regards cancer as compared with the one pack a day
smoker, or that the half pack a
day man is not twice as well off
as the pack a day smoker. Such
intellectual dishonesty can be attributed to a number of sources,
none of them worthy of the intellectual integrity necessary at a

truths. Would not it be wiser to
submit to the truth, to work out
ways of converting the tobacco
farmer over to healthier fields of endeavor.

this sort of tripe to nourish its paying ego. Another is that Dr. Little
has simply been bought off to submit to the dissemination of half

This was, of course, all done in
good clean fun. Last Sunday the
g
"Kittens" were at it
again; they were throwing snow
fun-lovin-

We, the brothers of the Theta
Xi Colony, wish to express our
appreciation for your excellent
coverage of our becoming established as a colony at the University
of Kentucky.
Not only do we thank you for
the article and the supporting pictorial concerning our movement
into the Lydia Brown House, but
also for mentioning us in the social
calender. At this time we would
also like to thank you for publishing the Interfratemity Council's
approval of Theta Xi.
We will strive to remain on the
best of terms and will support to
the best of our ability The Ken-

tucky Kernel.

THETA XI COLONY

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, THURSDAY, JAN. 28,

in