xt747d2q7q68 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt747d2q7q68/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640908  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September  8, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, September  8, 1964 1964 2015 true xt747d2q7q68 section xt747d2q7q68 Editor Discusses

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Oswald's Challenge;
Sec Page 4

University of Kentucky

Vol. LVI, No. 3

LEXINGTON,

ID Cards

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two-ye-

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ROTC Cadets
Commended
By Alcorn
Colonel James P. Alcorn, professor of military science at the
University, has cited 11 UK
cadets who earned outstanding
records at Army ROTC summer
camp at Indlantown Gap Military Reservation.
Ben H. Crawford, Hodgenville
senior, was especially commended. He was rated as No. 4
cadet for individual performance
n
in the
brigade representing 21 universities from 6lx
Army areas.
He also was top cadet in his
platoon of 49.
The other cadets cited and
their achievement ranking in
their Individual platoons: William L. Faulkner, Lexington, first
among 48 cadets; John Berend,
LaG range, 111., first among 44;
Clyde M. Richardson, Frankfort,
second among 45; Michael P.
Cox, Lexington, fifth among 44;
Robert J. Brown, Lexington,
sixth among 45.
Charles W. Hudnall, Portsmouth, Ohio, seventh among 46;
Walter 8. Flster, Donerail, seventh among 44; Arthur H. Knight,
Frankfort, eight among 46;
Charles R. Either, Chevy Chase,
Md., eighth among 50.
All are Distinguished Military
Cadets.
Of the 29 UK cadets attending
the camp, 14 finished In the upper third of their platoons.
Five of the 29 fired expert
rifle and seven
with the Mratings.
gulned
3,490-ma-

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fcharpt-hoote-

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Eight Pages

University Sophomore
Dies In Car Crash
A UK sophomore, Charles
Victor Gibson, died last night
whe nhe was thrown from his
car as it "toppled
and sideways" off U.S. 25
d

at the

interchange near

Clays Ferry.

Dr. Glasser
Named Dean
Of Pharmacy

Dr. Arthur C. Glasser, chairman of the UK Department of
Pharmaceutical
Chemistry, has
been named acting dean of the
UK College of Pharmacy, announced President Oswald.
Dr. Glasser succeeds Dean Earl
P. Slone, who recently accepted
a
assignment as chief
of the UK contract team at Bandung Institute of Technology In
Indonesia.
In announcing the appointment
of acting dean, President Oswald
said he Is "delighted that Dr.
Glasser, an excellent teacher and
research man, is willing to accept this added responsibility."
Dr. Glasser will continue to serve
as chairman of the Department
of Pharmaceutical Chemistry.
Dr.
A native of Pittsburgh,
Glasser, now 43, completed his
undergraduate studies at
University and received
the doctor of philosophy degree
from Ohio State University. He
Joined the UK College of Pharmacy faculty in 1953 and was made
chairman of his department in
1959. He was on the staff of the
Ohio State College of Pharmacy
before coming to UK.

A

KY., TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1964

All students

entitled to an ID
card who have not had their
pictures taken as yet must report
to Room 213 of the Journalism
Building between 9:30 a.m. and
1 p.m. Saturday.
Either a paid fee slip or a
completed schedule card must be
shown In order to have your picture taken.
Students
who have already
had their photos made may pick
them up tomorrow through Friday in the lobby of Memorial
Coliseum.

Tonight's Weather:
Gear, Mild;
Low 65, High Wed. 92

a check for S36 for a
parking permit fur faculty and administrative parking areas. Staff
members and disabled students are charged $24 a year for the parking permit, students 910 a semester. Plans are In the making for
two parking structures of 500 cars each to be completed by 1965 to
be located across from the Chemistry-PhysiBuilding and near
University President John W. Oswald signs

Coroner Chester Hager said the
Lexington native received fractures of the skull, neck,
and ribs, lacerations of the scalp,
and internal Injuries.
A police officer said the car
apparently skidded out of control
on loose gravel and then traveled
sideways about 150 feet on the
left side of the highway before
leaving the roadbed.
Gibson was thrown out as the
car flipped over the first time
and the car landed on Gibson as
it hit the ground on the second
mil.
Police said Gibson rolled about

100 feet after being thrown from
the car and that the vehicle continued on down the gulley for

about 300 feet.
The vehicle was equipped with
safety belts, but they were not
in use at the time of the accident, Hager added.
He said he was unable to determine where Gibson was going
at the time of the accident.
According to friends, Gibson
spent the afternoon
playing
bridge. He was reportedly heading toward Richmond to talk
with another UK student about
entering an
golf tournament when the accident
ng

Services will be conducted
2 p.m. Thursday

at the

at
pe

Funeral Home

chapel by the Rev. Donald Her-reBurial will be In the Science Hill Cemetery.

n.

cs

Stoll Field.

UK Begins Program
For Senior Citizens
Extending of educational facilities to more persons has
led the University to initiate an unusual program this fall directed toward the elderly set.
demonstrating that this instituOfficially known as the Her-

man

L. Donovan Senior Citizens

Fellowship Program, the recent
addition to UK's services stipulates that any person 65 or over,
regardless of educational backwithout
may enroll
ground,
charge for class work on the
main campus or in any of the
community colleges.
Regular night courses offered
on the main campus may be
taken under the program, but
extension courses, courses, and
special classes organized on a
it
basis are excluded, AH
regular requirements must be
completed for a participant to
receive credit for a course.
According to the office of the
UK Council on Aging which has
administered the fellowship plan,
UK is one of the few institutions
of higher learning in the nation
to offer a program of this type.
The program was named after
Dr. Herman I Donovan, president emeritus of UK, who suggested In 1961 that senior citizens should be given an opporstudy at the
tunity for non-fe- e
University. The Council on Aging
took the Idea from there and
with the support of President
Oswald and a special committee,
details for the program were arranged. The Board of Trustees
approved the adoption of the
program at a meeting last January.
Discussing the fellowship program recently, Dr. Oswald said
that its implementation was not
for purposes of research or experimentation, hut a means of
non-cred-

Nursing Lecture
Dr. John Kuiper, chairman of
Unfvertdlty
Department of
will be the firvt
Philosophy,
speaker this fall In the lecture
series a (Humored by the College
of Nursing.
Dr. Kuiper will speak on
"Ethics and the Nursing Profession," at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow
In the University Hospital auditorium.

the

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tion can constantly Increase its
resources and services to all.
"Naturally," the UK president
commented, "one thlntyi of a
university as being a place where
Is on teaching
the
emphasis
young and preparing them for
professional careers. This is certainly true, but a university cannot lose sight of the fact that
the reason for its existence lies
in unrestricted versatility."
He said that the program will
UK an opportunity to do
gl
something for Kentucky's senior
ctlaens. "And," he concluded,
"we feel that the classroom aid
we render will not only enrich
the lives of these people, but will
serve as a stepping stone In the
state's goal for a better educated,
better Informed populace."

Saundra Hobbs Named
New WRH Director
By BLITHE RUNSDORF
Kernel News Editor

The petite blonde who can be glimpsed occasionally flitting from dormitory to dormitory is not a freshman coed looking for a place to live. She is, perhaps, one of the few people
who can sift through lists of tripled rooms and find a mis
placed coed.

This refreshingly new addition
to the Dean of Women's staff Is
Miss Saundra Hobbs, Director of
Women's Residence Halls Programs.
A native of Evansrllle, IniL,
Miss Hobbs received both her
bachelors and masters degrees
from Indiana University and has
already begun work on her doctorate. Her AJB. was earned in
Sociology and her ALA. In Student Personnel Services with a
concentration in Residence nails.
"I became Interested in working with residence hall programs
In my senior year at I.U.," said
Miss Hobbs. "Twenty seniors were
chosen to work with graduate
students and the professional
staffs of the residence units. I
was one of those chosen; liked

it, and decided that this was
what I wanted to do."
Activity Is the keynote to Miss
Hobbs' way of life. After receiving her masters degree she went
to Northern Illinois University
where she helped to open the
first coeducational dormitory on
that campus. In answer to this
reporter's lncreduality at coed
housing, Miss Hobbs smiled and
said, "we've had coed housing at
Indiana for several years without
incident.
At Northern Illinois she also
organized an undergraduate volunteer program to work at the
Dixon State School for the Retarded.
Based on her experience with
a coeducational housing situation.
Continued on Page 3

Viet Cong Machine Gun
Stavs American Assault
By The Associated Press

PHUOC VINH. South Viet
Nam Twenty Americans flying five helicopters fought a
r
battle Monday with
a Communist Viet Cong crew
machine
firing one
and failed to silence it.
gun,
The action capsuled frustrafive-hou-

tions plaguing UJ9 efforts to help
the South Vietnamese armed
forces crush the Red guerrillas.
The battle was weighted In
the Viet Cong's favor because
the lone machine gun was hidden
and had a maximum effective
range more than double thai ef
the helicopters'
guns
h
rockets.
and
By the book, the battle, 25 miles
northeast of Saigon on the edge
D
of the Communist-Infeste- d
Zone, probably should not have
tuken place at all.
2.73-lnc-

More effective weapons were
available in the hands of the
Vietnamese army and air force.
But because of red tape and an
apparent lack of aggressiveness
and overcentralizatlon of command on the Vietnamese side,
they were not brought to bear
when needed.
The three copters made quick
firing passes and radioed to four
Sky raiders flying in the area,
asking for a napalm and rocket
attack. The Skyralders, flown, by
government pilots, refused to
change their mission. That mission was a strike only a few miles
away In an area which the
patrolled earlier In the
day and found clean of guerrillas.
Under Vietnamground rules,
missions ran only be changed
after going through channels In
Saigon.
Vietnamese regulations require
rs

an artillery spotter plane with a
Vietnamese observer to guide all
fire missions. The spotter plane
and an American pilot were ready
to go. But no Vietnamese observer could be found and so the
guns remained silent.
At 4:30 p.m, the Vietnamese
air force finally showed up, hurling rockets, napalm and machine
gun bullets Into the area, When
the planes and helicopters departed, the gun was still firing.
"By conventional war standards, a single
gun Isn't
much," a pilot said, "but in Viet
Nam, It's a major objective for
our side. If the Communists get
enough of those things. It could
mean the end of helicopter effectiveness In key areas."
As the copters returned to their
base In Saigon there was still
chatter over the radio about getting a Vietnamese observer into
a setter plane to guide artillery
fire.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, Sept.

8, 1964

Collegiate Canoeists Travel Jewish New Year
150 Miles Up Mississippi
To Begin Sunday
Rosh Hoshanah

By JUDY GRISHAM

Kernel Staff Writer
"Up the Mississippi" a popular old tune was played in a
new way when Camp Oak
Hills counselors began canoeing on a 120 mile excursion.
Sam Abell, UK sophomore
journalism major, explained the
trip from Grand Rapids, Minnesota to Benidji, Minnesota should
take approximately three days.
The boys, who were "not novices," left in two canoes on June
27 spending the first day canoeing 20 miles through a series of
lakes to the Mississippi River.
This was just the beginning of an
adventure-fille- d
trip for Sam and
his three campanions,
Lome
Swarthout, Dan Bower, and Eton
Williams.
The first night, Sam and Lome
decided to take the canoe out
into the river and go for a swim.
But the current was so fast that
mile
they were swept
downstream and took forty-fiv- e
minutes retting back to their
campsite.
"By 11 o'clock on the 28th after
making only 10 of the 50 miles,
we entered "Chipawaw National
Marsh" where the river meandered endlessly," Sam explained.
"We approached currents of four
streams, took the wrong one, and
became lost. We couldn't find the
lf
channel again for about 2
hours."
The four adventureers finally
landed, walked to the nearest
town, replenished their depleted
supplies of water and fruit, got
directions
from a Chipewaw
Indian, and were on their way
again.
After spending the night in
the backyard of an abandoned
Indian home, they continued
their trip upstream, finding it
harder to paddle as they reached
faster currents.
"We were halfway to the halfway mark " Sam laughed. He
then went on to explain that
Monday was better In the respect
that they got out of the marsh,
but worse in that a storm, catching them on "Big Winnie" soaked
all their food, sleeping bags, and
camera equipment. So, again,
they beached and set up camp.
"We were eating the last of
our good supplies pancakes for
supper " Sam exclaimed. "After
a sleepless night, one of the boys
suggested we were ready for
some
paddling"
After the wind subsided, they
to cross the lake, only
determined
to have the storm pick up again
as they were 5 miles out. Taking
8 hours to paddle through 4 and
waves, they finally reached
the halfway mark.
They followed the Mississippi
ten miles to Cass Lake where the
water was so clear, Sam said,
that they could see the fish. Since
the boys were "very, very hungry
and all out of food," they dangled
lures in front of the fish and
caught tlx northern pikes for
lunch.
Crossing Cass Lake and bethe four
ginning to
managed to bypass, luckily, three
electrical storms.
"We decided, by then, to go all
the way this day because we
didn't think Lake Bemidjl was
more than 25 miles away," Sam
said.
The MissLisippI was so shallow
one-ha-

with shooting rapids that it took
half an hour to travel 50 yard.
"Shortly after," Sam went on,
"we got out of the canoes and
pulled them along. Finally, we
saw the dam and thought Lake
Bemidjl was on the other side.

But we found that it was still 15
miles away. As one of the fellows
said, we made the last ten miles
on nervous energy "
Sam's reaction to adventuresome canoeing trips 'Gruesome,
but great "

New Year's mornings
Yom Kippur.

: m'.

Lot

Collegiate Canoeists

These lour summer camp counselors wound up their summer's
activities with u 150 mile canoe trip up the Mississippi River.
The canoeists (from the left) are Don Williams, Ilecker, Minn.
Loien Swarthout, Grand Rapids. Minn.; Sam Abell, UK
sophomore journalism major; and Dan Bowers, Minneapolis,
Minn.

The New York Life Agent
On Your Campus Is a
Good Man to Know

Heads Inland
To Three States
MIAMI, Fla. AP Hurricane
Dora, large enough to blanket
most of Florida, Georgia and
South Carolina, continued whipping the Atlantic to a froth with
130 mil an hour winds today as
she headed for those three
states.
condiPresent
atmospheric
tions indicate the storm probably
will hit the coast of north Florida, Georgia or South Carolina,
according to the Miami Hurricane Center.
Top winds at the center of
the hurricane were estimated at
130 miles an hour with hurricane
force winds of 75 miles an hour.

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"SEVEN FACES
OF DR. LAO"

DELIVERY SERVICE

COSMETICS

GIFTS

Cfcsl

The Shofar says, in effect, to
look at yourself, see your faults,
and do something about them.
"Wake up Don't look for excuses for your bad habits. You
can replace them with good ones
if you try."
The historical significance of
the Shofar comes from the Biblical story of Abraham's sacrifice
of the lamb. When Abraham dehis willingness to
monstrated
sacrifice his son, God rewarded
him by letting him sacrifice a
lamb. Thus, the Shofar, made
from a ram's horn, is symbolic
of sacrifice.
Yom Kippur, known also as
"The Day of Atonement" Is the
second holiday of the Jewish
Calendar. It Is considered by
Jewish people to be the holiest
day of the year, beginning at

Hurricane Dora

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Kentucky
264 441 J

Has-han- ah

ar

down-strea-

117

year as set down in the Jewish Calendar.
Sunday was the first day of sundown
Sept. 15 and lasting
y
holiday Rosh
the
which begins the Jewish until sundown Sept. 16.
Yom Kippur, which accents
y
Religious Year and a
will of the Individual,
ending with Yom the free
holy period
has as its slogan "Repentance,
Sept. 16.
Kippur,
Prayer, and Righteousness," and
The Jewish holiday Is announit is marked by 24 hours of fastced by the "Sound of th Sho-fon the morning of Ttosh ing.
Hashanah. The Shofar, a flattened Ram's Horn is heard la
three distinctive blasts on the
ten-da-

lf

HOLIDAY HOUSE

Happy Rosh Hoshanah! Or, Happy New Year if you're
not up on your Hebrew, oday being the third day of the

two-da-

one-ha-

"lake-jump-

By FRANK BROWNING
Kernel Staff Writer

11-2- 4

IVI.

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Theatre
SHOWS CONT.

"PINK PANTHER"

oio enrjs

David
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"FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE"

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, "Tuesday, Sept.

UK Rehabilitation Service

Teaches Patients

Sept.
Sept.

9

Self-hel- p

There is little tender loving care given
patients referred
for treatment to the Department of Rehabilitation Services
in
the University of Kentucky Medical Center.

Sorority Bid Day and
Pledging 5:15 - 7:45

pjn.
Last day to enter an

organized class for
Fall Semester
Sept. 10 President Oswald's Student Conference
Pershing Rifles Smoker
Sept. 11 Alpha XI Delta
Jam Session

"Sure," said Dr. Joseph Warservice is directed to helping the
ren, director of the rehabilitation
patient realize that he can help
service, "we gladly listen to pa5
pjn.
tients' problems that's part of himself. When he realizes this,
Alpha Tau Omega
Dr. Warren said, he gains the
the treatment." But it's also part
Dogpatch Party
of the treatment for patients to drive necessary to live and to
Student Center movie:
learn to do for themselves, Dr. "get something out of life."
"Experiment in 1 erThe rehabilitation service freWarren added.
ror"
wkh
is a
There are two primary divi- quently
President's
reception
sions in the department: Physical several departments in the Medifor new faculty
cal Center cooperating In patient
therapy, headed by Richard
Alumni
members
and occupational ther- care. A patient with a fractured
House 8 p.m.
apy, headed by Richard Wright. leg also may have a brain tumor,
seminar
for
Sept. 12 YWCA
In physical therapy the pri- for example, thus necessitating
freshman women:
is to get an in- the coordinated efforts of several
mary objective
Student Center 1
jured or diseased patient back to departments for complete care.
p.m.
ADL activities of daily living
as quickly as possible. For exIS
ample, if a patient's legs are
paralyzed he must be taught new
ways of getting around.
The patient must learn transfer activities which will enable
him to get from bed to wheel
chair and to do everyday tasks
around the home.
If arm and shoulder areas are
paralyzed, the patient must learn
to use a pencil and he must learn
anew to feed and care for himself.
1,1
Increasing ability to use weakened arms and legs is gained by
suitable tasks assigned in occupational therapy. For this, purpose, the department is outfitted
various special equipment which
1.
can be used to test patients'
adaptability. Some patients may
be started immediately in occu'
Pr-- m
pational therapy, whereas others
may have to have their affected
limbs strengthened before they
are turned over to O.T., as the
division is known in the department.
The
department supervises
care and physical training until
the patient is ready to assume
his old Job or go to a vocational
school where he will learn to
accommodate bis injuries to a
new job.
Phychological support is an
important part of most rehabilitation, Dr. Warren said. He said
4-;
the intensity of the psychologii .4. .
, ...
cal shock following injury, alDr. John W. Oswald, University President and Miss Jimmle Parrott,
though related to the Intensity of president of Pi Beta Phi fraternity, break
for the sorority's
the injury, is also related to the new house. It will be located on Columbia ground two blocks east of
Ave.,
previous knowledge and Rose St. When completed the new house will accommodate 48 women
patient's
to his psychological stamina.
and will be the largest sorority house on campus.
All treatment and the attention of the staff in rehabilitation
us

cross-servic- e,

Continued from Pag
Miss Hobbs plans to work closely
with the Men's Residence Halls
in planning social and recreational programs. "More than just
a program of one or two
dances," said Miss Hobbs, Td
like to see a far reaching series
of activities that would combine
the programs of men's and women's housing units."
Her plans for residence hall
programs mirror her thinking on
her own activities. "1 like to
read." she said, "but I dont know
whether that would be considered a hobby or a way of educational advancement." It does not
seem to make any difference,
though, since her programs com

In by 9 a.m.

5

i

bine the best of both. "Educational endeavors can be fun, and
fun can be educational; there are
no clear lines between them."
In line with these plans two
new positions were created with,
log the residence hall framework.
They are Director of Recreational Programs and her assistant.
It appears that some new activities are about to be undertaken as far as residence hall
programming is concerned, and
Judging by what has already been
achieved and planned by the dynamic new director, the Centennial Year should see progress
in another phase of the University.

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Home Ec Proves
Valuable Field

Editor? Note:

This article is
condensed from one written by
student Catherine
Journalism
Hepner for Journalism 203, Principles of Newswriting, under Dr.
William Moore. It was published
in the Rural Kentucklan mags-sine.

"It takes determination, but
it's worth it," said UK coed Lena
Cowherd of Campbellsville.
"Home economics has given me
a chance to learn more sauut
homemaking, interior decorating,
child development, and the arts
that go with the home."
"In home economics you realize
your capacity as a woman. In
this field you are given a chance
to do things as a woman rather
than follow the man's role In
business. It also helps a woman
to develop and express herself as
she should." said Carolyn Lamb-di- n
from Bell County.
"It is a very versatile field."
Mary Martin, a dietetics major
from YlUmore,
Ky., believes.
"Home economic gives expression to a woman's personality
creativity within the
through
con Ma cm and the area in which
her sex has placed her."
Thete comments came from
women living In the home economics management houte last
bpring. The University maintained two home management houses
in which home economics majors
get some practical experience before graduation. Four or- five
women live in each house for 8
week inriods.

In the houses they put to work
all the principles they have learned in four years under the guidance of Miss Helen M. Wilmore,
professor of home management
and housing. Miss Wilmore directs Richards House, and Miss
Lois Combs directs Mary E.
Sweeney House.
A typical day for the girls living in Richards Home Management House begins with a 7 am
breakfast. On weekdays the food
manager and assistant get breakfast, set the table, and clean up
On Sundays
afterwards.
they
have leisurely breakfasts on trays
in the living room. Lunch is served at noon and dinner at 5:30

V.-- ..

Hello

I'm

..

Margaret
from the
MART.

School days,

school days
... oh those
golden rule

days. Here is
lesson number one.
The
golden rule at the SPORTSWEAR MART is . . . coed
casuals at discount prices.
This means famous labeled
name brand clothing in only
the most fashionable styles
and colors. And lesson number two . . . the arithmetic
problem is simple . . . huge
savings on every sweater
and skirt leaves more money
to buy the beautiful dark
print shirtwaist dresses. Now
pjn.
for lesson number three . . .
They attend classes and do
their own marketing during free we add poetry to history
hours. They divide up their duties . . . during the past year, if

and change every four days.
The hostess answers the telephone and the door and Is In
charge of cleaning the upstairs.
She also invites diner gutM.3. Hie
downstairs cleaning Is done by
tlie fourth girl.
The girls living in the two
houses meet weekly. "We discus
the things we are doing and find
out more about the equipment we
Sometimes we have demonstrations by the local utilities
company," said Curolyn Lambdln.
Each hou&e meets separately
once a week to discuss its own
problems. "We feel a ttrong bond
of kirchlp In home economics,
especially we who live In the
house," Lena Cowherd said.

. back
you'll remember
in 1963
.
August and
you purSeptember .
chased school clothes with
fcshion so smart, they could
only have come from THE
.

.

fj

Your Villager

Hcadaaartcrs,

fl
fi

.

.

.

.

SPORTSWEAR MART. Seriously though, your homework problem will be solved
if you remember that the
SPORTSWEAR MART caters to coeds who can afford
the finest, but are wise enough to take advantage of
the big discounts. The
SPORTSWEAR MART is located on the Northern Belt-lin- e
and is open
daily.
9-- 9

-- 3

Sauiidra Hobbs Named Director

Calendar
8

8, 1964

i

u
and so is our wistful, wonderful
collection! New colors, new prints, new
Villager
shapes in shirts, sweaters, dresses, end jumpers.
FALL

IS HERE

Shown, basic Villager Shirt 6.
EMBRY'S

ON.THf-CAMPU-

311 SOUTH LIMESTONE

* Dr. Oswald's Challenge
The complaints heard on carruslast
week about the "registration mess" were
characteristic of each new term. It seems
that each fall and spring, students spend
several days complaining about registration before they actually settle down to
the semester's work.
But if the complaints were characteristic of years past, the action that followed
was not.
Instead of turning a deaf ear, President Oswald asked Student Congress President Steve Bcshear to appoint a student
committee to look into the situation and
make definite suggestions to his office.
This action by the president was significant, we think, in several ways.
First of all, the complaints were not
altogether unmerited. Registration is not
all that bad but certainly a more efficient
system could be employed in registering
the increasing number of UK students.
But the system itself is only moderately

important. What is of major importance
is the fact that classes are closing before
all the students who need to be are enrolled. Thus students cannot take what
they have been advised to take because of
an inadequate number of sections in some
courses.
The answer to this may be a simple
one-amore sections of key core
courses. On the other hand, a more complex solution might be indicated -- greater
University regulation of each students
dd

"Call A Staff Meeting At Once, And Tell Them
To Tell Me What To Say I Said Yesterday"

schedule. But whatever the answer, time
and the number of new students expected
in the next several years demand that it
be found. Only a study of the sort the
president proposes will arrive at an equi-

table solution.
But the significance of the president's
action goes beyond registration itself. It
is, perhaps, best explained by a casual
comment made by President Beshear after
his meeting with the president. "Students
are going to be busy this year," he remarked, "President Oswald is going to
give us more and more to do."

This represents more than action
toward revising the registration system.
It is a change of philosophy within the
University administration. Student leadership is now to be respected and utilized
more than ever before.
We wholeheartedly concur with the
president's philosophy of using student
intelligence and student energy in facing
many of the problems of the University
community.
Thus the chance for a student to make
a definite contribution to the University
is increased. In giving the students more
responsibility within the University, President Oswald has, in effect, challenged

j

each student to discover his potential, to
develop his leadership, and to become a
constructive and contributing member of
his society.

Medicare Wins
The Senate's approval of medicare
last week is a clear-cu- t
victory for the
nation as well as for the aged. All Americans would benefit from the establishment, under the Social Security system,
of a program designed to insure older
people against the hardships that can be
caused by huge hospital bills. The elderly also need the higher monthly retirement benefits that the rest of the measure

provides.
Special credit belongs to the five

Re-

publicans whose votes made the victory
possible. Their action was a rebuke to
their party's Presidential nominee, Senator Goldwater, who once again voted to
shut his eyes to a pressing social need.
President Johnson played his large
role in the Senate triumph, but the ad

ministration's task is only
measure now goes to a

The

half-don-

Senate-Hous-

e

where it must surmount the
blockade erected against medicare by Chairman Wilbur D Mills of the
House Ways and Means Committee. A
full use of Presidential persuasion will be
needed to keep the medical care program
from being killed, especially since some of
the key Senate conferees are not much
more enthusiastic about the program than
Mr. Mills.
The House has never had a chanceto
vote on medicare. It is long past time to
allow it that opportunity and thus incorporate in law a program essential to
round out the nation's bulwark of social
insurances.

-

.

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sl

wM4rom

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Pott--

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conference,
one-ma-

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Thereto

York Times

Quiet In Biloxi
The good news out of Mississippi
continues. In Biloxi 16 Negro
entered previously all white
schools under federal court order. At
present writing there has been no incident.
Let no one think this just happened.
Gov. Paul Johnson conspicuously refrained from interfering. He said the matter of integration would be left to the local
communities. In Biloxi the school board,
r
the
Associations and other
civic groups worked hard to keep the
transition smooth. The police were on
hand. No crowds gathered and no one
demonstrated. A new organization called
Mississippians for Public Education,
which is a state-widgroup formed to
support the public schools during this
difficult period, said that 2,000 members
had been enlisted in Biloxi in anticipation
of this week.
Consider that most of these people are
outwardly, at the least, opposed to integration. They are adjusting to federal
requirements which they f