xt75x63b0n89 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt75x63b0n89/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590521  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, May 21, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 21, 1959 1959 2013 true xt75x63b0n89 section xt75x63b0n89 Today's Weather:
Warm, Showers

Election Draws
More Opinions;

High 85, Low 65

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1939

VoI.L

t

Joint meeting of the old ex- ecutive and elections committees" of
Student Congress voted unanl- mously last night to delay the SC
election until next fall.
The resolution will be presented
to Student Congress in a special
session tonight.
The proposal for the solution of
the election dispute was presented
by SC President Pete Perlman.
Under the terms of the resolu- tion, Fred Strache, SC vice presl- dent, will serve as president pro
tem of the governing group until
I
the new election is held. Strache. a
senior, will enter Graduate School
Outstanding Students
in September.
The Student Union Board has chosen Cynthia Beadell and Pete
President Perlman, In a Rfite- Perlman as Woman and Man of the Year. The selection, announced
ment made to the Kernel last
Tuesday evening, was based on their numerous campus activities.
night, said, "I feel that this ar- rangement is the only one that
the interests of both
groups in a fair manner."
vie PrMidrnt strache skid ih
.
decision was reached on the basis
of several factors. First. If the
VY
election were held now. many ele- ments of the students and faculty
He was secretary of Lamp and would not support the governing
Perlman and Cynthia Bea- dell have been chosen Man and Cross and Lances and a members body. Strache also mentioned the
unfair aspects to one party or the
Woman cf the Year by the Stu- - of the Committee of 240.
toother if
dent Unicn Board.
Perlman said he was surprised morrow. the election were held
They were selected rcause of and deeply honored on receiving
The vice president also said the
their outstanding contributions to the award,
proposal would be a means of keepstudent activities and qualities of
ing SC alive.
.leadership and scholarship.
Under the pcoposal, the incum- Miss Beadell, a junior topical
WAA Picnic
major from Indianapolis, Ind.. has
A picnic for outgoing and were not up for election on May
a 3.0 standing.
6, will serve as a "provisional asnewly installed WAA council
Her activities include Kappa
members will be held at 5 p.m. sembly" until the election is held.
Alpha Theta, Cwens, Links, Mortar
today. Those planning to attend In the meeting last night, it was
Board, Student Union Board, Junare asked to meet in front of mentioned that the election could
ior Panhellenic, vice president of
be held about six weeks after
the Women's Gym.
ic
Alpha Lambda Delta and the
A

V

I

Perlman, Beadell Are
n

Wnmnn flhf Vnnn
Ulllclll Ul HJdl

lYlclll '

No. 115

Fall Election Is Asked
F SC To Decide Tonight
v.

V,

president pro

tem, Strache
an
executive cabinet and a judicary
board to serve until the new of- ficers take over.
In yesterday's meeting, Taylor
Jones submltted som stipulations
for hls rerunnin8 the race. Jones
wanted only the colleges where
fraud was involved to be rerun.
His proposal involved some six
representative races, three in each
party. The Jones proposal Involved
only Arts and Sciences, Commerce,
A8 and Home Ec and one other
As

will be empowered to appoint

college.

Th

Pan-hellcn-

Council.
was vice chairman of the
She
Little Kentucky Derby and chairman of the Leadership. Conference.
Miss Beadell was chosen one of
10 outstanding Greek women for
1958-5She was a member of the
Mardi Gras Court in 1957 and was
9.

first attendant in the 1957 Lambda
Chi Alpha Push Cart Derby. Miss
Beadfll has been a Kentuckian
queen
and Kernel
sweetheart.
Pete Perlman, a senior from
South. Fort .Mitchell, has maiu-taine- d
a 2.8 over-a- ll
in pre-laand
will attend Duke University Law
School next year.
Perlman was president of. SC
this year and has also served as
president, vice president, and

V
f

I-

r

w

treasurer of YMCA.
A member of the University

i

X

V'

So-

cial Committee, University Faculty
Committee and Athletic Board of
Directors, he has also been treasurer of Little Kentucky Derby.

9

cumstance did he want his nam
on the ballot.
Bob Wallace, Campus winner la
Pharmacy, said he felt the election
in his college was honest and that
he would not run again if his col- lege were to be renin tomorrow,
Jones said he felt It was the best
solution presented so far. He add- ed, however, that the arrangement
of making Strache the provisional
head of the government was not
the best possible,
He said he felt Strache could
not legally assume the presidency,
since his term as vice president
had expired and because he was
not elected president,
SP Chairman Kitty Smith said
the reputation of Student Congress
wouId benefit from the resolution,
b Wainscott,
Students' Party
presidential candidate, felt the
lslon was unfortunate.'' but that
be the on,y soIutlon
J at?Pare?.t
.

"

.

Scholarship Award
Presented To DTD

Delta Tau Delta was presented
Keys SchlarsP Awarf
thef
yesterday during the ODK Book
Awards program by Dick Watkins,
past president of Keys.
The award was presented to the
u
mjucov
scnoiasuc standing, nowever, me
school started
stipulation was made, Watkins
said, that, in case of a tie, the
fraternity showing the greatest
improvement ove'r the previous
would be given the honor,
DTD tied with Adpha Gamma
Rho but was given the award for
Douglas Curry, a radio arts ma- - improvement in over-a- ll
fraternity
standinS
jor from Harrodsburg, has been
j.eys is composed oi iraiernny
named student manager of WBKY
members who have a cumulative
for next year.

tn5

Curry Selected Manager
Of UK Student Station

st

O

fourth college Involved in
Kernel election fraud story
w
Engineering.
Representatives of the Students'
Prty wanted the election rerun in
colleges, including those
in
which no fraud was indicated.
Earlier in the day. two candi- dates, one from each party, ex- pressed a wish to run again if their
According to members of the
college were to have a rerun. Bill
ecutive cabinet, the candidates
(SP). candidate
Whittaker
in
Graduate School, said his opponent nominated this spring will have
Bill Setzer had won by a two to tne choice of running or not run-Pe- te
one margin and that under no cir- Continued On Page 8
th

,

semi-finali-

See Editorial Page

A

Curry, who was named by, the
faculty and this year's student
management, will select his staff
sometime before next fall.

r

Jr

l,w

Si

i

'

:,"

standing of
freshn J

3.0

or better for their
at UK The group

sponsors a dance each fall and as
sists with other campus activities
such as the Little Kentucky Derby
and Honors Day.
ankjiu aaiu wc cw iugiam
was siartea oecause:
"We felt Keys .should in some
way promote and encourage higher
scholarship on campus,
"To do this effectively we
cided that, by awarding a plaque to
the fraternity with the highest
standing would directly encourage
fraternities to put more emphasjs
on scholarship, and that indirectly
u wouia also euect sororities ana
all other persons on campus."
de-seme-

....:..:.

'

:.-...-:.-

w

,

m. ..

v

v

'

v

'

During the summer, Curry will
work in advanced production clinic
for radio arts majors at WIIAS-THe is one of the four radio arts
majors chosen for this. work.
Y.

He has worked
with stations
WHEM, Harrodsburg and WHIR,

.

DOUGLAS CURRY

Danville.

.

1,100 Diplomas To Be Awarded
In Graduation Program Monday
Approximately. 1,100 degrees will 4 p. m. Sunday in the Coliseum.
be awarded at the University's
Another highlight, of the com- program at 10 mencement day program will be
92nd commencement
a.m. Monday in Memorial Coli- - the presentation of a Sullivan
seum.Medallion to a person deemed, by
Degree candidates will hear Dr. the University as "Kentucky's Out- -'
Rufus C. Harris, president of Tu standing Citizen of the Year." The
lane University, deliver the tradl- - award is given annually.
,
tlonal commencement - a d d r e s . Harris has been president of
Honorary degrees, will be given. Tulane since 1937. He has also
Dr. Philip R. Edwards and W. served as president of the Southern
Hugh Peal, both graduates of the Association of Colleges and Secon- University in 1922.
dary Schools, the Association of
.
....Dr. Irvin E. Lunger, president American Law School and the
Transylvania College, will de- - Southeastern Conference.
liver the baccalaureate kermoo, at
A graduate of Yale University
-

.

with a Doctor of Jurisprudence,
Harris holds 10 honorary degrees
from colleges in the United States.
Lunger has been president of
Transylvania since January, 1958.
He was pastor of the University
Church of the Disciples of Christ
in Chicago for 17 years. He holds
three degrees, including the Ph.D.,
from the University of Chicago.
The Transylvania president
served as professor and academic
dean of the college before succeed- ing Dr. Frank Rose to the presi-o- f
dency of the
lnstitu- tion.
179-year--

I

f
Allen

JuC

U

I

Keys Trophy Awarded

; Dawson, right, receives a scholarship
trophy from Dick
Watkins. Watkins Is past president of Keys. Junior honorary,
which awarded the trophy. Dawson is president of Delta Tau
Delta.

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, May 21, 1959

-

h
i

"

'

i

1 Aeronautic Lab Given $9,750 PE Majors
Corelli
For Space Flight Research Elect president of th
Re-elect- ed

X

Aeronautical
The Wcnner-Ore- n
The second project will be direcResearch Laboratory has been ted by Prof. F. C. Curtis. Comgranted $9,750 to do additional reis scheduled for early Sepsearch on a space flight simulat- pletion
ing project begun a year ago, Dr. tember.
K. O. Lnnge announced today.
The lab was contracted by the
The additional grant includes Air Force to do the work. Wright
funds for the design and construc- Air Development Center will pertion of a second similar apparatus, form the experiments.
Dr. Lange.said.
The original device, completed
earlier this year, was designed to
create vibrations and rocking mo- tions similar to those experienced
when high speed planes ran into
To The
a sudden npdraft of air which sets
the ship in violent motion.
Such motion, called buffeting,
A SHERATON HOTEL IN
Could result in the pilot losing his
THE HEART OF DOWNTOWN
sense of sight, equilibrium, or could
LOUISVILLE
even cause death. The additions
called for in the contract are for
changing of the speed with which
SPECIAL U of K
it moves and reworking of the
speed ratio mechanism.
Contact BARBARA KOHL

i

4

1

''

1

j
t

-

r

V

f

Fhvsical Education Majors Clul
Monday night was Jo Corelli. Othe
officers are Janie Cheatham, vie
president; Becky Hudson, secretat
and Beverly Price, treasurer.
Other members of the club's E.
ecutive Board will be elected ii
the fall.

r"rK

yi rn rn tc
U ksJ IN D
Prescription

Go BIG BLUE

Cosmcstics
Rcvclon

WATTERSON

2

!,V

Thines looks over a scale model of a Napolenic coach
started 27 years ago. A son didn't have the patience for it, so
Mr. Thines finished the job.

Back in
1932,
was a
when
iuture gleam in a businessman's
eye, a high school student handed
his father 26 pages of blueprints
ind said:
"Dad, it's up to you. I just don't
have the patience."
Twenty-seve- n
years later the
father, who has plenty of patience,
finished the project: a stunning
cale model of a marriage coach
used by Napoleon and his second
wife, Archduchess Marie Louise
of Austria.
The model is accurate and
complete down to the tiniest bit
of gold fringe on the cushions and
buckles the size of pinheads.
All blue, red and gold, it's
a
tonbon of home craftsmanship to
move the
heart of any model

UK PR Team
To Compete

Phone

er

Leroy, agog.
a young
"Wow!" exclaimed
grandson. "What a wagon, gram-pa!- "

"I think it's pretty good

self," says Thines.

Central Kentucky's Largest

K

wii

ft--h.

COMPANY

Lime and Maxvell

I

$3.00

M

M

W

Last Times Today . . .
"Nowhere to Go" and
"Count Your Blessings"

STARTS TOMORROW
r

til

msm

FROM THE

BEST

sairi about
THE AOY
Y0UN6 ROQEMS
OF TODAY!

D

She spurned Love & Romance
for Cold Hard Cash

DD

D

A

A

nilPII

UnllUnfm nUOfl

The Most Amazing Gangland Story Ever - starring
Charles Bronson in

"MACHINE GUN KELLY"

I

'

I

i

"Never Love A
Strange" - 1:40, 5:10. 8:40.
"The Sound and the Fury" - 3:05

6:35. 10:05.
BEN A LI "Nowhere to Go" 00. 3:17. 6:30. 9:56.

8:00. 11:05.
"Three Stooge

12:- -

B
Odcii Af a
m
m

6:30

jr

s- t

ALEXIS SMITH

BRIAN KEITH

DIANE BREWSTER billie

FAMILY

William Faulkner's

"The

1

1

m

H 11

Starts
7:55

mm

STARTS TONIGHT
RJIOIIDil REMIKG

'TV

Ill Tl

.IN

I

mt

BIGGEST GUN.GAL
AND' GAG STAMPEDE

Fun-O-Ram-

--

a"

'

INTHF VVFSTI

Hunters" - 8:00,

1:45.

"THE SOUND AND

"The Ghost of the China Sea"

THE FURY"
Yul Brynner - Joanne Woodward
Margaret Leighton

"NEVER LOVE A
STRANGER"

--

10:15.

KENTUCKY

"Compulsion"

iraiwif'yySr1

--

JESSE

12:42. 2:54, 5:06. 7:18. 9:30.

LEXINGTON
"Bonnie Parker
Story" - 8:02, 11:22.
"Machine Gun Kelly" - 9:46.
STRAND "South. Pacific"
8:00.

John Drew Barry mo re
Robert Bray

TTTTTV

TV,

4
,1

VENDELL COREY

presents

W. H. Hudson's

AUDREY

romantic adventure

HEPBURN

r.

In Color

ANTHONY

PERKINS

GREEN

V.

burke . jon wiluamj

l

10:05.

NOW SHOWING!

Lira Milan

A

u.

iK

"Count Your Blessings" - 1:36,
4:58,8:15.
CIRCLE 25 "Alias Jesse James" --

AIR CONDITIONED

MANSIONS
...the forbidden forests

V;

Tomorrow

LEE

J. COBB
CwMlf

U MITIOCOIOI

m- -4

ENDS TODAY

Complusion''

Main St.

L

,8:00 &

ur
iVt

11:5

-- A-two

LENGTH

TREAT!

oe

(

II

p. m.

Z2nd ATTRACTION!
SPECIAL FEATURE

vV

V

shows

K

beyond the Amazon

Wellington Arms
E.

4 to a room

$3.50

TONIGHT

ASHLAND

Near 3rd

257 N. Lime

510

3 to a room

vi

MOVIE GUIDE

BOOK STORE

Adam Pcpiot Studio

$5.00

USED BOOK STORE

' DENNIS

"Your Portraits Deserve The
Very Best"

Iff

2 to a room
$4.00

"BONNIE PAKER STORY"
my- -

(Other Than Text)

Dad escorts you up the
aisle . . . the clergyman '
intones the service . . . you
and your nevhusband are
ivlmked away these most
precious moments are best
saved for future years in
photographs by our studio.
And your album of informal
photographs will help to
.nake eacb happy anniversary
iiiore meaningful!

Single

The Pershing Rifles Drill Team
will compete in the national drill
matches at Ohio State University
today through Saturday.
Some twenty schools are scheduled to compete in the contest. The
Pershing Rifles team won last
year's competition.
The squad will enter only thiee
events this year, the straight drill
competition, the rifle competition
and individual drill competition.
Last year's squad won both 'the
straight drill and the rifle competition.
The Pershing Rifles Confederate
Squad will compete against the
Ohio State University Yankee
come originally Squad., Last year Ohio State won
Crafts-colleBody
the match.

your

ortraits

YMI I Pi! IKJKJ
fc
I

Rite Per Person

ge

.

in
informal

Sandwiches and Short Orders
Open 7:30 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.

21

Weekend Rates

'

going."

7-53-

Fountain Service

STUDENT FACULTY

toolmakcr, doesn't pretend
that
it took him all of 27 years to
make it. In fact, it took him four
months.
"But I thought about it for 27
years," he says. "I just couldn't
find the time. When I retired recently I finally put on the steam."
atmosIn the pressure-cookphere of his home workshop he
spent up .to 10 hours a day bent
over jigsaw and lathe.
His family followed the project with interest. "You
know
even I wondered how the whole
come out," says
thing would
Thines. "That's what kept me

The plans had
from the Fisher
man's Guild.
"They gave
scholar
ships to youngsters," says Thines.
raker.
Victor. Thiqes, a professional "My son Leroy couldn't do it. He
just didn't have the patience, I
guess. He's a pipefitter now."
The unveiling of the completed
day
coach left the family, including

of days

Magazines

Free Delirery

For All Sheraton
RESESVATIONS

27 Years Needed To Build
Napoleonic Coach Model In Match
BUFFALO. N. Y. (AP)

Max Factor
Du Barry
Coty
Stationery

'

Took 27 Years

Victor

na

UV--

J

03aT

* s3
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday,

May 21. 1950 -- C

UKProf cssors Ag Economics Reputation
Attend Meet Developing As 'Little UNT
3

v)

In Washington

Fast developing a reputation as Nations Food and Agriculture ()
the "little United Nations" of UK ganizjUion in Rome. Contacts h
Is teh Department of Agricultural made in thohe countries indirecll
resulted in enrollment last fall
Economics.
two foreign students.
Of the department's 21 graduate at least
Dngan Kaviran, Ankra, Turkey,
students, seven are foreign students and for the past few semest- and Govind J. Khudanput, Poon.i
;
of India.
ers approximately
Kayiran was sent here by his
the Agricultural Economics students have been from other coun- government and Khadanpur, i
Ph.D. candidate is on a fellowship
tries.
The seven- - graduate students from the Council for Economic
Development ir
now enrolled traveled a total of and Cultural
40,000 miles to study in the Blue Southeast Asia.
now enOther foreign
Grass. Two of them, Joachim
department are Tal
of Bcnsberg, Germany, and rolled In the
Charles XV. Capstick of Blackburn, Chun Hon?, Inchon. Korea, whe
Berea
England, are. supporting them- did undergraduate work at Mani-zaleCollege; Hugo S. Valdez,
selves. The others are being sponColombia, on an UNEAO felsored by government and civic
o,
lowship; and Lulz O. Vieira.
organizations.
Brazil, also supported bj
Why did they choose Kentucky? UNFAO.
Dr. George Byers, an associate
professor in the department, thinks
Kentucky's agriculture has a lot
to do with it.
"Our relatively small farms and
rolling land compare favorably
with conditions in their countries,"
he said. "By studying and comparing our methods with theirs, they
are learning to apply new theories
of operation and management to
their farms."
Another reason may be the fact
The Prescription Center
that Byers visited nine Southeast Asian countries last year while
Near Rose
915 S. Lime
on assignment with the United
I

wy

:

1

x

:

"V.

,

i

I

1-

-

..Jmr

'writ
,??;

1

"--

.:

MfejJ

SuKy Officers

Officers rrcfntly elected for the coming year by the SuKy Circle
are, from left, front row, Kdwina Hutchinson, tryout manager;
Jane Connell, treasurer; Janet Stevens, secretary; Rebecca Carloss,
vice president; back row, Joe Bishop, SC representative; Rill
Tierce, cheerleader manager; Myra Tobin, corresponding secre- tary; Roger Minton, tryout manager; and Bob Schultz, president.

Future GI To Carry
Television And Radar

FT. HUACHUCA. Ariz. (AP)
The soldier of the future probably
will carry a rifle Into battle, Just
as his predecessors did.
But the new soldier also may
cairy a lightweight computer, a
tflevision camera and a radar set.
Vsing this equipment, hell report to a larger computer behind
the lines. It, in turn, will digest
his reports and those from hundreds of similarly equipped men,
then tell his commander what to
do.

Far fetched?
Not to the men of the

U. S.

Electronic Proving Ground
at Ft Huachuca in southeastern

Army

In the world of

elec-

GI Checks
Veterans may sign for their
monthly GI checks Tuesday,
Wednesday or Thursday of next
week, according to the Veteran's
Office.

Graduating seniors on the GI
Bill, may sign for their checks
early if they are leaving the campus before Tuesday.

tect a man moving at 1.000 yards,
a vehicle at 5,000. Light enough
to carry on your back, it's alYMCA Notice
ready being used by the U. S.
Presidents of ail campus orgaBorder Patrol in the Southwest.
AU of these devices, officials
nizations are asked to submit
say, are designed to give comthe following information to the
manders a faster, much clearer YMCA office in the SUB to be
picture of battlefield 'conditions used in planning the "organizathan has been available in the tions and activities" night in the
past.
fall.
Computers also will free more
The committee needs the
men to fight by immeasurably name of the organization;
the
speeding up the huge amount of name, college address, summer
paperwork it takes to maintain address, and phone number of
a modern army.
each skit chairman; and the
During the Korean War, offiname, college address, phone and
cials explain, it took 23 men 11 summer address of each booth
days to figure out the maneuverchairman.
ing of a single large detachment
A skit chairman is needed for
of troops, while, a computer could all organizations wishing to take
have done the job In two hours.
part in the skit.
Ft. Huachuca, built by the Cavalry in the 1870s during the war
against renegade Apaches and deactivated after World War II, was'
chosen as the site for the proving ground in 1954 because of its
isolation and the clear, warm climate" of southern Arizona.'
It now is the fastest growing
Army installation in the country.

possible.
And. in the five yean since-thproving ground was founded,
they've gone a long way toward
making the abvoe dream a reality.
In fact, they say Jokingly, about
the only thing that hasn't been
dt tr rmind is whether the existed
nut n (if the future will have to
his commanding computer.
deAmumj the
vices l:ein; tested at. the proving
buildA new
round is a television camera
produces a clear.- - Tiarp ing to be opened this spring will
which
image, using only star light as house the world's largest digital
computer, a 3' million dollar
illumination.
hunk of equipment built by IBM
Aiso
tested are several
Within the next few months, the
models of
small
aircraft which can carry television proving ground will put into opcameras, radar, radio and motion eration a huge new test area.
picture or still cameras over enemy lines. These drones can get
a clear picture of enemy installais

e

ed

FLOWERS
For Any

Occasion

g

ground-controlle-

tions, troop strength and dispers-mein good or bad weather, day
or night.
One of the most amazing pieces
of equipment being tested is a
computer capable of being bounced
ever a battlefield on the bed of a
truck without damage. It's called
Moby Dick, a corruption of Mobl-di- c.
short from Mobile Digital
Computer.
Another Is a radar set, called
the Silent' Sentry, which will de

LEXINGTON
YELLOW CAB

Dial

2-22-

Pern-ambuc-

PHARMACY

BEAUTY SALON
PERSONALIZED STYLING
PLEASE CALL

2-71-

SOUTHLAND SHOPPING
CENTER

REAR OF STORE

Plenty of Free Parking

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

SHOP AT

DON MEYERS SHOE STORE
SOUTHLAND SHOPPING CENTER
HAPPY HIKER

FOR LADIES

AAA ROAD SERVICE

GO FORMAL
COMPLETE

RENTAL SERVICE
5 or ALL Occasions

keWts
120 S. UPPER
Ojv

and GIRLS

CALL

Michler Florist
DIAL
'

3-09-

CITY CLUB

WESTBORO SHOES

FOR MEN

and

BOYS

29

417 East Maxwell

OPEN

F RE DAY

NIGHTS 'TIL 9 P.M.

ATTENTION!

CO.

LEXINGTON

--

VELVET STEP SHOES

GRADUATING SENIORS

27

E. VINE
R

FOR

86

AN APPOINTMENT
Open Til 9 p.m. Thursday and
Friday nights

Radio Equipped

"COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE

24-HOU-

Prescriptions
o Fountain
O Cosmetics
o Men's Toiletries
FREE PARKING
O

Mi-Lad- y

30

Incorporated;

PHONE

ch

Inc.

Tip

TAYLOR

Li

El-tcri-

d,

nt

400

one-four- th

s,

-

tronics, they'll tell you anything

non-classifi-

Lange, director of the
lab, and Dr.
UK aeronautical
C. Clark, psychology profesFor,le
sor, attended a conference on the
training of animals for experimental space flights In Washington,' D. C. last week.
The meet was attended by members of the National Aeronautical
Space Administration and aeronautical scientists. The conference was held at the Walter Reed
Medical Center in Washington.
The conference lasted four days.
Dr. K. O.

ass
TEL.

4-65-

00

Chjdwick Campus Representative

You may have your photograph made in your cap and gown Sunday afternoon at 2:30 p. m. behind the SUB before you line up for
Baccalaureate. The University Photographer will also be available
after Baccalaureate in front of the Coliseum.
As a special service to graduating seniors, prints will be available
Monday morning at the University Photographer's office on the
second floor of the journalism Building.
In

caie cf inclement weather, photographs will bo fallen inside the Coliseum.

.

* The Readers9 Forum: A Flood Of Opinion
Correction
(In yesterday's Readers' Fortim, we
t,
printed a letter from Mr. John T.
one sentence of which read:
("Unfortunately, the
efforts of these people were exploited
to achieve a most unjust result a second election throughout the entire campus under conditions more unfavorable
to the defeated candidates."
(The original text of the letter contained the word "favorable" rather than
"unfavorable," as appeared in print. The
error was made by the typist who
transcribed the- - letter for the Kernel
composing room, and we failed to notice
the mistake when editing the copy.
(The Kernel apologizes to Mr. Bond-urafor inadvertently' changing the
meaning of his sentence.)
Bond-wan-

well-intention-

Jim Hampton
ef

Lawyers

Rocking-IIors- e

s,

high-scho-

graduates.

ol

A

ed

nt

Editor-in-Chi-

ple so handy, with brooms.
So come down off your rocking-horselaw students, and try, at least, to act like

.

To The Editor:
Three cheers for Miss "Disgusted
Coed's" letter to the editor in Tuesday's
Kernel. I have been wondering when
someone was going to get around to
commenting on the kindergarten being
run over there in Lafferty Hall.
Not only have our "honorable" gentlemen degraded themselves by publicly
games such
participating in
as
but they have also proved
that they can take criticism no better
than the average
If this is the way the future professionals of our country are being trained
at the University, of Kentucky's Law
School, then I suggest that Lafferty Hall
But I wouldn't
i lose down its doors.
want such a prospect to frighten the boys
of the Law School, for I'm quite sure
that M&O could find vacancies for peo

A

Concerned UK Student

Candidate Withdraws

To The Editor:
Regardless of what decision is forthcoming from the Elections Committee
(today), I wish to announce that I am
officially withdrawing from the election
as representative to Student Congress
from the Graduate School in favor of
my opponent, Bill Setzer.
The previous election in Graduate
School was won by Mr. Setzer by a
margin of 2 to 1. There was no evidence of fraud or misconduct on the
part of students supervising this poll.
Therefore, I could not conscientiously
take office by default or otherwise,
knowing that I had deprived the duly
elected representative of his seat and
voice in student affairs.

Bill Whitaker
Graduate School

pre-scho- ol

hop-scotc- h,

To The Editor:

In a conversation
students following

meeting Monday
me why I voted
and "no" to tho
"yes" for a
excluding the Law School
amendment
and Graduate School from voting. I
jokingly said "because I hue a grudge,"
but then went on to add that I was
voting in proxy for an elected representative who found it necessary to leave

Some come, some go,
Some just stay around;
Some think, some don't,
Some just in letwccn;
Some smile, some frown,
Some just wear a gloom;
Some love, some hate,
Some just stay alone;
Some yes, some no,
Some don't give a damn.

on

before the vote was taken. She asked
me to cast her vote as her convictions
dictated. So even if I did hold a grudge,
it was immaterial in the way I voted.
I was only following my obligation to
the elected member I represented.

P. G.

Obligation, Not Grudge
To The Editor:
As the representative mentioned in
Mr. Bondurant's most recent letter, I
would like to clarify an observation he

Nantz

TllLHLS

University Soapbox

Some Students Do Give A Damn
To The Editor:
The May 12 letter on "Students Don't
Give A Damn" was written in response
to a May 11 article which dealt with the
indifference, laziness and lack of interest of the UK student. The letter would
have been a good answer if the writer
had not tried to cover such a vast ground
as to describe the whole American society with statements which could be
condemned for their lack of support.
Furthermore he contradicted himself,
leaving . the reader bewildered as to
whether he understood the final issue.
The writer gave his statements, his
opinions and his thoughts in the article
personal
but failed to prove them-bexperiences, facts and statements by
persons who were known to be the lead-- ,
ers in their fields. He wrote: "We
would rather receive a college diploma
without the labor of studying" as standing for all the students. How could
he dare to say. that we would rather
receive a piece of paper that stood as a
poor certificate of our accomplishments
in college when the truth is that many
of us came here to learn how to live,
work and be leaders in our field of study?
The writer says: "Everyone realizes
what is right for themselves and others,
but we can't seem to become serious
y

Implicated in the recent Student
Congress election fraud was . . .

Much Ado About.
The Purpose Of Public Critics
By GURNEY NORMAN

When one has been associated with that, it has wrongly cast aspersions on
an editorial page of a daily newspaper, things that should be above comment,
even in the occasional manner as I have such as the American flag, religion or
been this year, he cannot help but University traditions. But I repeat what
feel the presence of a hammer of critiwas just said, that nothing is above recism that hangs above his own head proach. A wrong approach to even the
every minute he himself is criticizing, .American flag can be far more dangerheld by a very thin thread that a single ous than outright treason. Take, for inmisguided word will sever.
stance, the late Sen. Joe McCarthy's attitude toward what the flag represents.
But this is not necessarily a bad feelCampaigning under that banner, and
ing. It serves as a rather strong guideline the writer 6f criticism must adhere professing to be protecting it through
to, or fall victim to a wrath more his tactics and extremist attitudes in
Comsevere than any he ever concocted. In "purging" this country of
munists, he succeeded only in dampenthis respect, the pressure of having to
write "on solid ground," supported by ing the integrity of the very flag he
facts, is a constructive pressure that carried.
The same holds true for religion. A
most public critics welcome.
religious radical achieves nothing but
But there is another kind of criticism
mass emotionalism that can be dangerthat critics themselves are subjected to ous if it finds the proper channel. Take
that is both frustrating and disappoint- the Spanish Inquisition as an example,
ing. This criticism comes from those when any
one suspected of holding perpersons who maintain that there is no sonal views contrary to those set forth
room in this society for "professional by the church was burned
to death. I
critics," especially of the newspaper rather
think this wolud be suitable as an
editorial page variety. "People should editorial subject,
even though it does
mind their own business," these people concern the church. And the potential
$ay, "and should let well enough alone."
for a recurrence of such as this is quite
It is my contention; however, that prevalent today, ready to unleash itself
there is not one single idea, person or at anytime the people let it, as Mr.
institution in this whole, vast world that McCarthy illustrated.
js not above reproach of one kind or
There will always be something wrong
another (newspapers and editors into criticize, some public and private
cluded). Those who say "people should shirts that need unstuffing, and the
mind their own business" fail to realize people, in this country can thank their
that that is exactly the problem-peo- ple
Great
that there will
won't mind their own business, and always be voices around ready to yell
someone more responsible has to mind at unfairness, if those same people give
it for them. In fact, that could well them the chance.
be the essence of civilization a struggle
It has been gratifying doing this
between the right element and the column since September. But, other than
wrong element in minding society's busiexpress a word of confidence in the
1939-Gness.
Kernel staff (which I hereby
this do), there is little else "Much Ado" can
The Kernel, and occasionally
column, bas received much complaint now say but "much adieu."
"

so-call- ed

.

.

made concerning me.
with a group of law
the Student Congress
night, someone asked

The Some Of The Whole

Editor-in-Chi-

ef

Herndaa

road to leadership of our country.
We wished the writer would teach
our whole society some of his simple
solutions. He could, for example, contribute to our society