xt74f47gt52q https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt74f47gt52q/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19631017  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 17, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 17, 1963 1963 2015 true xt74f47gt52q section xt74f47gt52q nmmmiwiw)i

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Homer ominj Queen candidates are, pirtured from the left,
first row Luanne Owen, Linda Woodall, Marline Noojin,
Mary Gail McCall, Margo VVaite, Susan Rhodes, Fran

A u;J'f

k

iwi

-

r

Secret, Judie Wylie; second row Sharon Tcrkins, Judv

Pope, Linda Tobin, Julie Kuhcv, Annette McC'lain, Fee
Ferguson, Marilyn Ornie, Judy Whitesides; third ro- w-

Anne Ilutcher, Donna Wilcox, Ann Combs, Martha
ivian Shipley, Janet .pence, Wnkie Jack-so- n,
Greenwood,
Shari Cuzick, Fat House.

Voters To Decide

Homecoming Queen
Candidates Chosen
f

By CHEAXEY RIXGO
Kernel Staff Writer

Who will reign over
The queen and her
to 5 p.m. Tuesday and
All students must present

Homecoming?
court will be selected from 9 a.m.
Wednesday in the Student Center.
their cards in order to vote.

Each candidate will receive a
number which will correspond to
her picture. Voters must circle
three numbers on their ballots.
All candidates must be seniors,
single, and have a 2.0 overall. No
past Homecoming Queen is eligible and no candidate can represent more than one group.
Any residence unit on campus
was eligible to nominate one candidate. The candidates and their
sponsors are:
Annette McClain, Alpha Gamma Rho; Frances Secrest, Alpha
Tau Omega; Anne Hatcher, Delta
Tau Delta; Linda Tobin, Kappa
Alpha; Fee Ferguson, Kappa Sis-m- a;
Eesty Fi.ihback, Lambda Chi
Alpha; Susan Rhodes, Phi Delta
Theta; Donna Wilcox, Phi Gam- -

ma Delta.
Luanne Owen, Phi Sigma Kappa; Judy Whitesides, Pi Kappa
Alpha; Linda Woodall, Sigma
Alpha Epsilon; Janet Spence,
Sigma Chi; Judie Wylie, Sigma
Phi Epsilon; Judy Pope, Alpha
Delta Pi; Martine Noojin, Alpha
Gamma Delta.
Sharon Perkins, Alpha Xi Delta; Ann Combs, Chi Omega; Martha Greenwood, Delta" Delta
Delta; Pat Rouse, Delta Zeta;
Mary Gail McCall, Kappa Alpha
Theta; Mary Ware, Kappa Kappa
Gamma; Betty Estes, Pi Beta
Phi; Margo White, Blazer Hall;
Shari Cuzick, Bowman Hall;
Wickie Jackson,
Breckinridge
Hall, and Julie Richey Keene-lan- d
Hall.

Autumn Yale Review

Vandenboscli Article
Is On South Africa
,
'

By BUNNY ANDERSON
Kernel Staff Writer

Dr. Amry Vandenboscli, head of the University's Department of Diplomacy, has written in the autumn edition of
"Vale Review" that the reappraisal in South Africa of apartheidracial segregation could lead to a better political
climate for the African nation.
The Nationalist leaders who giving the Indians and the
the right to vote. Yet this
are in the political forefront are

deeply concerned. Their policy of

partheid or "separate

develop-

ment," as they now prefer to call
it can be carried out by great
sacrifies and determination, supported by the conviction that
such a drastic program is the
only solution to their fearfully
difficult problem.
A look at the composition of
the country's development will
indicate the basic problem. Of
a total population of nearly
16,000.000 in 19C0, about 11,000,000
were Bantues, that Is, full Negro;
about 1,500,000 were colored, that
is, of mixed blood; less than
500,000 were Asiatics, chiefly Indian; and approximately 3.000,000
were Causacian. The whites are
in complete political control of
the country.
"It is obvious." writes Dr.
"that the principle of
'one man, one vote,' even if the
qualifications for suffrage were
kept high, would eventually lead
to political control by the Africans."
The whites could broaden their
political base considerably, in
luct, nearly double its sue by

action would undermine the principles on which the policy of
apartheid is based. After granting
the vote to the Colored, there
would be no logical explanation
for denying it to the Bantus.
Until recently, almost all South
African whites were so firmly
agreed on a policy of white supremacy that the possibility of an
alternative
hardly occurred to
them. Dr. Vandenboscli writes,
"There were differences with respect to the extent of the measures to be used to maintain supremacy and their severity of
their application, but there was
basic agreement on the policy."
All White South Africans, and
especially the political leaders
have been struggling with the dilemma. In the last decade new
answers have been suggested.
The two major political parties
of South Africa have proposed
several revolutionary
plans to
prevent a monopoly in the government by one racial group. The
Progressive Party proposed a bill
of rights entrenched in a rigid
constitution, and an "anti-raciaContinued on l'uge 8

Vol. LV, No. 25

University of Kentucky
KY
1963
OCT.

LEXINGTON,

THURSDAY,

17,

Eight Pages

SC Amendments Set

For Referendum Today
Students' Opinions Show
Varied Levels Of Interest
By JUDY JENKINS
Kernel Staff Writer
A campus poll was taken yesterday afternoon in preview
of today's campuswide election for the ratification of the

Student Congress amendments.
The amendments, would:
Remove the election of officers for the congress from within the congress to a campuswide
election.
Alter the membership of
Congress from 110 members to 50.
also gives
members
(It
in the congress no voting power.)
Lower membership requirements for Congress from a 2.3
grade standing ot a 2.0. (This
amendment also requires that officers have a 2.4 academic standing and have served in the congress for at least a year before
their candidacy.)
One senior education major
said she felt that the Student
Congress work was so far removed from the general student
concerns that she just didn't
bother to read about it.
ratifications
The amendment
are attempting to include the
student body in more of the Congress business.
Approximately 20 students, including an equal number of men
and women, were interviewed.
They were asked first if they
knew what the amendments were
and what information they had
concerning same.
An average of 50 percent of the
students questioned knew what

Presentation
Platform

the amendments were, and were
able to name them. The majority
of the students who did not have
a knowledge of what the amendments were did express an interest. Three people said they
didn't really care what the
amendments were.
Of the students who were acquainted with the amendments,
the general opinion was in favor
of the proposed ratification.

SitKy

SuKy will meet' at 6:30 p.m.
today in the SuKy room of the
Coliseum. All members are urged to attend.

Polls will be open from 9
a.m. until 5:30 p.m. today in
a referendum on three amendments to the Student Congress
constitution.
The polls will be set up in tha
Student
nalism
Gene
Student
mittee,

Center, and the JourBuilding.
Sayre, chairman of tha
Congress elections comsaid the votes will be

The text
amendments
four.

of the proposed
appears on page

counted by hand. Votes in next
week's officer and representative
election will be counted by IBM
machine.
Sayre and members of the elections committee, Dr. GifTord B!y-to- n,
congress parliamentarian,
and Dave Graham, chairman of
the Judicial Board, will be tha
elections judges.
The three amendments will ba
listed separately on the ballot.
Each must receive a majority
vote of all students voting ta
pass.

Of

Candidates for president of
the Student Congress will present their respective platforms
and answer questions at a
meeting in Blazer Hall recreation Room at 7 p.m. today.
The candidates for president of
Student
Congress are Faul
Chellgren, James Pitts and
Robert Stokes. The public is
invited to attend.

Taking part in the ground breaking ceremony for the new Sigma
Alpha Fp.silon fraternity house are Jerry Truitt, SAE president;
Robert Babbage, president of the S.E housing corporation; George
Kavanaugh, associate business manager fur the I'niversity; Grady
SAE chapter adviser; L. L. .Martin, dca:i of men; and Keeu
Johnson, former governor of Kii.tuiky.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Oct.

17,

13

Moot Court To Present
Civil Suit Murder Case

Two Speakers

FiTsnitatioii (if a civil suit for cliiKl support at 0:30 p.m.
tonight ami a criminal case of murder ly poison at 1:30 p.m.
Friday will supply the litigation for the sixth week of Moot
C'ourt competition.
the defendants left a fellow pro-

The Blurgrass Section of the
Institute of Food Technologists
will hear two speakers at its
meeting Saturday at Carnahan
House, University conference center.
Dr. Dudley C. Martin, associa-at- e
professor of horticulture at
UK. will discuss food processing
on the West Coast; and Jack L.
Harris, systems engineer with
International Business Machines
Corp., Louisville, will explain how
computers can serve the food
technologist.
Dr. James D. Kemp, professor
of animal science at UK, is
chairman-elecof the organizat
tion.

In the civil paternity suit of
Arais v. KalensnikofT, the plaintiff (Arais) brings an action to
prove that the defendant is the
father of her child and also
seeks support money for the
child. Expert witnesses will supply information on the results of
tests, which were
made on the parties.
David T. Enlow and Charles
T. Walters represent the plain-ti(- T
and John L. Smith and James
r. Mahan Jr., are counselors for
the defense. Professor James R.
Kichardson, instructor for the
Practice Trial Court class, Is the
judge in the civil case.
State v. Long, the criminal
case, is brought on the allegation
that the defendant, Mrs. Long,
murdered her husband by giving
him strychnine. One expert witness will testify as to the symptoms of the poison, while a handwriting expert will testify as to
the signature in the poison register of the drug store, where
the poison was bought.
David H. Ashley and John J.
Chewning prosecute the case for
the state, while William J. Reik
Jr. and Roger G. Schnitzler provide the defense. Roy Moreland
Jr., former city prosecutor and
son of law school professor, Roy
Moreland, will serve as" judge in
the criminal case.
In last week's civil suit for
damages by the plaintiff after being shot by a guard of the defendant's water company, the
jury was unable to reach a result. In the criminal case where

Attention
Jon rnal ism Fresh men
Sigma Delta Chi and Theta
Sigma Phi. professional journalism societies incite all freshmen journalism majors to attend a joint meeting tonight at
7:30 in the McLaughlin Room
of the Journalism Building.
The program will consist of a
panel of students who have
wroked on professional newspapers. They will discuss their
experiences in the world of
journalism.

For Food Meet

fessor behind when all three were
trapped in a swamp with only
enough provisions for two, the
jury found the defendants guilty
and assessed a fine and a term
of imprisonment, but the judge
set the verdict aside as being
contrary to the evidence.
The Moot Court allows third
year law students to compete for
a chance to argue in the prize
trial on Law Day in May, for
which a Lexington Law firm presents a $300 cash prize.
Trials, which are open to the
public and last about three hours,
follow the Kentucky Rules of
Civil and Criminal Procedure as
described in the Kentucky Revised Statutes. All cases are
heard in the Lafferty Hall courtroom.

Fireside Clials
By YMCA

Fireside chats informal gatherings of students and faculty at
professors' homes may be revived.
The Special Projects Committee
of the University YMCA plans to
organize such a program if any
students are interested.
Fireside chats were held several years ago, but eventually
they died for lack of student interest.
Dick Roof, chairman of the
YMCA
committee, said small
groups of students (five to ten)
would be to establish closer teacher-student
he
relationships,
said.
Roof requested tiny students interested in participating to tele- -,
or go to
phone him at
the YMCA offices in the Student
Center.

Science Meeting
A.
Dr. Hilton

Smith, dean of
Uni-

versity of Tennessee, will be the
principal speaker at the Kentucky Academy of Science meeting at the University of Kentucky
Friday and Saturday.
He will discuss the relationship
of the federal government to
graduate education and research
in a dinner-meetin- g
at 6:30 p.m.
Friday in the Student Center.
A business session and election
of officers in Room 148 of the
UK Chemistry-Physic- s
Building
at 3 p.m. Friday will open the
Academy's annual conference.
Technical papers will be presented
in sectional
meetings
Saturday morning. The scientific
areas include zoology, chemistry,
botany, geology, physics, and psychology.
The outgoing president of the
academy is Dr. Lyle
R. Dawson, head of the UK Department of Chemistry.

Greek Week
The Greek Week Steering
Committee will meet in Room
116 of the Student Center at
6:30 p.m.

Tonite, Sat., Sun.

iiiiiiijigg!BMsg

Exclusive!

First Lex. Showing!

Warner Bros, trots out their new stable of young stars
for a hot, hard drama of horse racing world!

0

First winner of Photoplay's

Award

for showcasing new talent!

71 M

WANTED

FOR SALI

FOR SALE 1960 M.O., red. Oood
after 5
condition. Call
1104t
p.m.
FOR SALE 1938 Triumph
Good condition, $850.

TR--

1504t

FOR SALE 1960 MGA, twin cam
roadster, light blue, excellent
after 5
condition. Call
1603t
p.m.
Mo-Pe1963
Call
FOR SALE
1603t
after 3 p.m.
FOR SALE New Royt 1 blue taf2.
size
feta semi-formNever been worn, $25.00 Call
1702t
after 5 p.m.
FOR SALE 1963 Triumph Bonneville 120, 1,650 miles, all acces1702t
sories. Contact

May Be Revived

UK To Host
the graduate school at the

CLASSIFIED

Scheduled

Third Ace

Gels

GARDEN CITY, N. Y. VP)
"It's In the hole or it's way
over," said Tyrone the caddie.
But when R. Earl Jones walked
to the fifth green he discovered
his ball in the cup on the
hole.
It was Jones' third hole-in-oat the Cherry Valley Club since
1958 when he aced the seventh
hole. Last year he got a big ace,
a 210-yadrive on the 11th hole.
His recent ace was scored in a
foursome with Clarence Edwards,
Dr. S. L. Sorgi, and Bram Bedik.
Jones, eastern manager for a
national athletic goods manufacturer, used a 2 iron.

Avenue

Part-tim- e
WANTED
appliance
salesman. Salary plus commission. Apply at Sterling Appliances, 669 S. Broadway. 1603t

WANTED Enthusiastic students
to work for Jim Pitts. Call Marilyn Meredith or Bill Kenton,
committee to restore
1701t
good government to UK.
MISCELLANEOUS

ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts
and coats for women. Mildred
Cohen, 21S E. MaxwelL Phone
6.
lOStt
TAILOR ATIONS (Alterations by
a tailor) Lexington's
leading
cuter-uper- s,
Amato's, 742 E.
High. Plenty of free parking.
1701t
LEARN TO BOX!! ielf-di
matter in the art of
Expert trainers' secrets can be
No equipment needed. Form a
yours!
campus boxing club among your friends
and real physifor fun,
cal fitness. Complete brochure and let
tons $1.00. Send to: PHYSICAL ARTS
GYM, 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead,
Long Island, New York.
B

fn.

a

ASK YOUR FRIENDS

WHO THE
STUDENTS'
DRUG STORE IS . . .

1:30 P.M.

OPEN DAILY

Euclid

WANTED Male student to share
nice apartment. TV, phone,
after
stereo, etc. Inquire
5 p.m.
1504t

Chan

Chevy

NAVE
Across the Street

LAST DAY!

Ask Any Girl
plus

Tunnel of Love

Starts 7:30

Adm.

90c

1st AREA SHOWING!

Starts Tomorrow!
"PLEASE DON'T
EAT THE DAISIES"

V

Doris Day

FAMFfft
DIRECTOR

also
"NEVER SO FEW"

CAROL REED

f OCUSES
ON

3 BIG HITS!
Hilarious

Ma and Pa Kettle
Mariorie Main
Percy Kilbride

11, mmm
SUZANNE PLESHETTE

TY HARDIN
.V.N

2ND

FEATURE

Connie
Troy Domh'jc
"SUSAN SLADE"

f

'

TRAND

Hillbillies

"Feuden', Fussin' and
Fightin' "

''T?'1''.T"tw

1

Stevens

THE MEDICAL JUNGLE

ddcto.is

PROVE

DOROTHY

IWcMbi k:uiu

iV,.Lu'l

FRI.

P'esentedti

&

.VAfi'iih b.v

Miri.i
G.iry Cooper
TREE"
"HANGING

Scheli
Color

KENTUCKY THEATRE

m mm

.
hean ecvis sino 10 new

DD.TT TALK
ACTJT!

f

r"f

yy

&j

mm. mmm

lllll
tuf

xr u tJ

vm

m m wmt

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ftlCroCOLCR

THE PICTURE THAT TAKES A NEW ATriTUtlF

v

ON LOVE!

.

rr

SciKpli,by

PMONt

TODAY thru SATURDAY
2

ACTION-FILLE-

Mickey

Spillane

rrodbcad

and

Of"

J?

V

'

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TECKKiCOLOil

CANNES
"BEST

FILM FESTIVAL
ACTOR" 1963

RICHARD HARRIS

a K3E!Af mndof loue

DEE
MefflNErME'JoHNWND
CSMl RPMCRQ

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STEFANiE POIfERS

V

THELMA.RITTER

EVA

BABO-

STARTS

R-

MAURICE CHEVALIER

TOMORROW

"TTLKJnS
SPORTING
n-DEFLH"

RACHEL ROBERTS
miiittAjuiutwPnuii'i'ui

.(ssocatePrwIiice

Ed on the novel
CAROL

cvKMbi

HITS!
in

"strong'room"
starts sunday
3 Days Only!
HANG

mm

JOHN VORH'.ttR

JOHX

RE0"

by SHELtEY
PANAViaOM

PLUS

"girl hunters"
J ...PONT

ft

01

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and

AND LOVE! FROM

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SAT.

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A NEW KIND OF FUN

iXclr

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ADDED
Color

NAKED

IT'S A MILE

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MGM

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I'
Fresentj

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ME

MITROCOLOft

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, C)I.

Edited by
Nancy Lotigliridgc

Kernel Women's Page
Campus Calendar

Women's Page Editor
Asks For Comments

candidates 7:30 p.m. Blazer Hall
Cct.
Fhilosophy Club 4 p.m. Room 109 of Student Center
Beta Alpha Psi 7 p.m. Room CC7 Student Center
SAE-AZdessert.
Oct. 17 DeMolay meeting, 7:30 p.m. Presbyterian Center
Oct. 17 Game Night and Buffet Dinner, Spindletcp Hall, 6:30 p.m.
9
Oct.
Thoroughbred Debate Tournament
Oct. 18 Silence ends for fraternities
SC president

17

By NANCY LOUGIIRIDGE
Since the middle of the semester is rearing I feci that this
time to ask
is an appropriate
you, the readers of this page, for
your comments, gripes, impressions and suggestions on how it
could be changed to best serve
the campus and the reader.
It is my aim to run the campus calendar every day of the
week in addition to a religious
functions schedule which will appear weekly. The only time the
Campus Calendar will not run
will be on Fridays when the space
taken by advertising and social
events exceeds1 the amount of
space needed for the calendar.
If possible, in order to bring
you a more accurate and encompassing calendar I would like to
ask all campus organizations to
place this office on their mailing
list. It facilitates the planning of
pictures and articles on interesting coming events.
I had planned to run on this
page a column once a month on

TGIF
Law Student Dance
SAE party at Gardenside Cabana
Kappa Sig Gros party
FarmHouse Come as you want to be party
Homecoming preparations in full swing
Oct. 19 TKE party at house
Sig Eps record party
KA party at house
SAE's at Keeneland, followed by open house and excursion
to Joyland
Oct. 19 TKE campuswide jam session 5 p.m.
Cct. 19 Cosmopolitan Club picnic
Thoroughbred Debate Tournament ends
Last day of Keeneland Races
I
football game
Lambda Chi-AD-

Cct. 18

Fraternities entertaining
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.
Oct.

UK
21 Psl
21 Psi
22 UK

20

23
23

Muslcale, Symphonic Band, Memorial Hall, 3:30 p.m.
Chi meeting, 8 p.m. In Med Center
Chi, 8 p.m. med center
Women's Club 2 p.m. med center

Fraternity sorority active meetings
Dr. Oswald at Student Center, 4 p.m. Room

I-

an interesting faculty personality,
an interesting faculty wife, a
foods column, and when the articles present themselves a faculty soapbox. But this takes your
cooperation and interest in order to make such a page possible. We are interested in covering the married students social and cultural interests. But
this again taKes your help.
Please send all your news, information, and suggestions to this
office.

enjoy the thrill
of flight!

Translation Comes
First

206.

Delta Zeta founder's day
Governor's Conference on Higher Education
Club Bridge Party, Spindletop Hall,
pjn.
Oct. 25 Building displays for Homecoming
Annual Educational Conference and Annual Meeting of
6
Oct.
Kentucky Association of Colleges, Secondary and Elementary Schools
END
Oct. 26 Mid-terOct. 26 Cornerstone Laying, King Alumni House, 11 a.m.
Annual Alumni Brunch, King Alumni House, 11:30 a.m.
(Homecoming), Stoll Field, 2 p.m.
Football,
24

Oct, 24

NEW YORK IJP) The French
Resistance forces in World War
II are the subject of "Six Men in
a Broadway-boun- d
Question,"
drama that has won Paris praise
this season for authors Frederic
Dard and Robert Hossein.
It has been acquired for exhibit here by Leland Hayward,
who is awaiting completion of a
translation before lining up cast
and director.

GIRLS . . .
Look To

Alumni Activities
Oct, 25, 6:30 p.m. Senior associates meeting, Spindletop Hall
Oct, 25, 4:00 p.m. Reception for Century Club members ONLY, H.
G. King Alumni House
Oct 26, 9:30 a.m. 'til Alumni registration, H. G. King Alumni House
11:00 a.m. Dedication ceremonies, H. G. King Alumni House
11:30 a.m. Annual Alumni Brunch, H. G. King Alumni House
Kentucky vs. Georgia, Stoll Field
(Open House for all Alumni and friends immediately
following game, H. G. King Alumni House)
8:30 p.m. Annual Homecoming Dance at the Phcenix Hotel
(Ballroom and Convention Hall)

For The Latest in

CAMPUS FASHIONS

2:00 p.m.

f

,

Meetings

DeMolay
DeMolay will meet at 7:30 p.m.
today at the Presbyterian Center.
Beta Alpha Psi
Eeta Alpha Psi will meet at 7
p.m. today in Room 307 of the
Student Center. Lynn Aldridge a
recent accounting- - graduate with
Owens, Owens, and Hisle will

tpeak.

Philosophy Club
The Philosophy Club will meet
at 4 p.m. today in Room 109.
Professor John Kuiper will speak
on "Some Logical Aspects of
Possibility and Necessity."
SuKy
SuKy tryouts will be held at
6:30 p.m. today at the rear of
Memorial Coliseum. Homecoming
decorations will be made at this
time. Any student wishing to join
may do so at this time.

Taking The Makings

DELAND, Fla. (Pi A burglar
got all the makings of a real
whingding in a breakin here.
Missing from the burglarized
restaurant were 18 bottles of
wine, lots of beer, a case of soft
drinks, $3 in cash, two cases of
potato chips and more than 20
jukebox records.

The winner of last week's
Wondamere Outfit was Susan
Anderson,

Alpha

Xi Delta.

MASS MEETING
of students to hear

and question .candidates
for
STUDENT CONGRESS
PRESIDENT

TODAY
12:00 Noon till 2:00 p.m.

Memorial Hall Amphitheater
Sponsored by
S.C. Elections Committee

Your Dream Come True

Now You Can
Learn To Fly
There's no thrill like taking to
the air. Tha quick turga of pow. the short, swift takeoff
er
run . . . tha bouyant feeling as
re gradually airborne.
you

..

SUDDENLY. YOU'RE IN AN
EXCITING NEW WORLD
OF ADVENTURE
Today, learning to fly is so easy
with modern airplanes,
and safe

experienced instructors and latest
teaching methods. (Did you know
most people solo after 8 lessons?)
Wait no longer. Special rates for
university and college students
are now in effect.
CALL TODAY FOR
AN APPOINTMENT

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Tps

-

ft

17, !9f1- -3

J'

ON
TOGS
By

"LINK"
til

Hi

'I

SumnmA

THIS is the season for sweaters,
and I have yet to meet the person
that doesn't like the good looks
sind complete comfort of one.
(Wish I hud more times to wear
thrm.) Just about any color, design or treatment is in vogue this
season, (just so it is a sweater.)
While on the knitted subject, I
would like to tell you about the
one "Mike Space," will be seen in.
(Toyed with the idea of purchasing this one myself). It is of a
heather mixture of soft shaded
blue, gold, tan and dark brown
and designed in the very popular button-u- p
style. Details trim
on the fronts and pockets is of
seudo-suedmis
dark brown
sweater is a sharp collection of
for anyone's sweater ward
yarn
robe. "Mike," that sweater or
yours is Just my size, may I bor
row it sometime? (Cheaper that
way.)
THE XMAS "Jingle Bell" holiday season is going to demand at
least one nice dress suit and I
tip you to select early and not
be forced to take the "left-overanother tip when trying on a
suit or sportcoat RELAX all
those athletic stunts ana gyrations some people do OR suggest YOU do mean absolutely
nothing after all you want your
suit for dress wear NOT a wrest
ling match!!
GOING FORMAL and not quite
sure of what is correct? (Lots of
people don't) then drop me a
card, phone me or meet me in the
"Kentuckian Shop" and I will
furnish you with a free pamphlet prepared by the world
famous formal wear firm, "After
Six." My supply is running low,
so don't procrastinate!
BUT SUAVE was "Gene
mon-frarts and sciences junior) when I met him
for the first time the other afternoon in the "Kentuckian Shop."
Gene looked very natty in the
following raiment. A blazer of
medium prey flannel, the three
pockets were piped with black
felt (very striking" his jet black
sport slax were of continental cut,
with slim tapered legs and worn
cuff less, (as they should be. a
button down shirt of small grey
stripes and a narrow tie of shaded
black and prey. He dropped by
ncain this afternoon and "lo and
behold" he was wearing a duplicate of the above, only this time
the color scheme was camel and
chocolate brown two very cool- ish sets of thread if you ask me
(and if you don't ask me I still
think th'.v are coolishi. Gene,
seems to have a lot of savvy about
clothes.
THANKS to "Gary Sparks" for
the gift of the controversial painting now hanging in my apartmentno, he did not paint it
that's another story!
LOTS OF inquiries and speculations as to the identity of the
sockless cat mentioned last week
I do not know DO YOU??
I merely report what I saw and
I still don't dig it
A NOTE to the fashion wise-w- atch
for the immediate and big
come-bac- k
of wool "challis" ties
and I am glad they are so right
with fall clothes.
PREDICTION the "Yak" coat I
told you about by "Robert Lewis"
will become a big item for campus and football game wearing-af- ter
all; years ago we had the
raccoon coat, and everything goes
in a cycle however, this creation
has more flair
T1IIRTY-HVTO EIGHTEEN
Congrats to the Cats and now
here is the bottom of the page.
So lor.g tor now,

AT .
LINK

i

P'fi

* Future Of Student Congress At Stake
The future success of Student
on this campus can well be at
Make today.
Congress' future rests in the hands
tf the student body as it votes on the
three proposed amendments to the
Student Congress constitution.
Of the three amendments, two are
badly needed if Congress is to become
a workable
body.
The third amendment, if passed,
would only contribute to the troubles
congress has been having and solve
Done of its problems.
The first amendment, as it appears
Cn the ballot today, states:
"There shall be a President, Vice
Trcsidcnt, Secretary, and Treasurer
cf the Student Congress elected by
the student body in a eampuswidc
lection. The order of succession to
the presidency shall be the Vice Pres-ideand chairman of the Judicial
Board."
For many years, students have
jisked that Congress officers be elected
in an open, eampuswide election rather than by the congress itself. This
amendment provides for that without
changing any other provisions of
Article Four, Section One of the
present constitution.
If students want a say in who will
run the congress, this amendment
ihould be passed.
The second amendment states:
"There shall be a legislative assembly of representatives elected from
the student body. The representation
ihall be apportioned in the following
manner: there shall be a maximum of
fifty voting representatives. The graduate and professional schools shall be
awarded the following representatives: Graduate School, one; Medical
and Dental Colleges, one; Pharmacy
College, one; and Law College, two.
The undergraduate schools shall divide the remaining 45 representatives
in proportion to the size of the respective colleges. Reapportionment of
the undergraduate schools shall be

r

Con-pre-

student-governin-

g

mandatory each fifth assembly and at
the discretion of the elections committee. Son - voting representatives
shall be awarded to the following:
Town Housing, Men's Residence Halls
Governing Council, Associated Women's Students, Panhcllcnic Council,
and the Interfraternity Council."
Of the three proposed amendments, the second is the most important. The difficulties of congress in
the past have largely centered around
too large an assembly. This amendment limits the number of representatives to a workable size. A quorum
would be 26 members, an easily
reached number.
If this amendment passes, congress w ill have its best chance in years
to be a workable, intelligent organization. If it fails, Student Congress
on this campus may well fail with it.
Amendment three is:
"To be eligible to stand for election
and to serve as a representative a
student shall have completed at least
stuone full semester as a
dent in residence at the University;
shall be in good standing with the
University; and shall be registered in
the college in which they stand for
election. The academic qualifications
shall apply to
representatives. Officers shall have an accumulated academic standing of 2.4 and
shall have served for one year in the
legislature of the congress. Members
of the Judicial Board shall have an
academic standing of 2.4."
This amendment would ill serve
Student Congress for two reasons.
The requirement that officers must
have served one year in the legislature of the congress will lead to a
static congress. As has been shown in
the past, a year's experience in the
congress assembly does not necessarily qualify one to be an officer. On
the other hand, many of the best
congress officers did not serve in
the assembly before their election as
officers.
full-tim- e

Well, Kid,

It's Your Duty To Vote!

The present congress treasurer,
Joe Coughlin, did not come up
through the ranks of the congress
itself.
The present constitution requires
all members to have a 2.3. The amendment would lower this to a 2.0. As far
as we can see, there is no justification
for lowering the grade standing when
the quality of an academically higher
congress is so poor.
The grade standing for members
would be far enough below the 2.4 re

quired of officers that the field r,f
officer candidates would be seriously
limited in the future.
Congress desperately needs the
passage of amendment two and the
student body should be very much in
favor of amendment one. Together
they will give congress a strong
foundation on which to build lor the
future. Amendment three would only
detract from what good the others
night bring, it should be defeated.
The choice, members of the student body, is yours.

Amendment

Amendment

One

Two

Amendment
Three

YES!

YES!

NO!

Campus Parable
God is passion and pleasure. This
is the ultimate value and force that
seems to be driving many of us. Everything is judged on the basis of how
it contributes to the above deity.
Without probing any deeper than this
surface comment some questions may

'

Kernels
A man travels the world over in
search of what he needs, and returns
Lome to find it. George Moore

It has been very truly said that
the mob has many heads, but no
brains.

Rivarol

Act according to laws which can
nt the same time be made a universal
law of conduct. Imunucl Kant
I do now know the method of
drawing up an indictment against a
whole people. Edmund Burke

be asked. Can I find real joy and
happiness in life by only intensifying
it in passion and pleasure? Can we
really stand a God we have made ourselves, even one made in the name
of freedom, pleasure, happiness, etc.
The God of passion is demonic because it can't deliver that which we
seek.
Moreover, how can it be an adequate source of value and meaning
ior it denies that I am valuable and
of worth myself. If other human beings are only there to be used by me
lor pleasure, then I must be the same
ior them. And this I cannot stand,
ine happiness and joy tome only
out of a context of shared life that
is given to another person; and this
is possible only because Life is given
to us by another the ultimate ground
ol everything that is.
Doic Saxdkrs
Campus Minister
Christian Churches
(Disciples of Christ)

l

Letters To The Editor
Student Party

To The Editor:
Most students recognize that a
successful Student Congress requires
the interest of the student body and
the labor of outstanding individuals
from all fields. For these reasons tho
Student Party was established. Believing that true student opinion can
best be expressed by a party representing all students, we seek support
for our programs.
This fall the students are faced
with a political group neither aware
of the problems of students nor who
have developed reasonable solutions
to them. These people, uninformed as
to true issues, are developing a radical campaign on negativism, as wit

nessed by their opposition to all the
proposed amendments to the constitution. We regret that this group rejects this opportunity to develop a
meainingful Student Congress.
We urge students to help congress
by supporting the first and second,
amendm