xt77h41jj448 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt77h41jj448/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590116  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, January 16, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, January 16, 1959 1959 2013 true xt77h41jj448 section xt77h41jj448 Graduations Cause Kernel Staff Promotions
r

Bill Neiklrk will replace January
graduate Andy Epperson as Kernel
chief news editor next semester.
Five other promotions and
were made yesterday
by the Board of Student Publications as a result of graduations
and resignations.
Alice Redding, a senior from
Owenton, will take over Jim Hudson's position as Thursday daily
editor. Hudson resigned.
Mereda Davis, a Junior from
Cottle, will succeed Miss Redding

i

as Tuesday associate editor.
Successor to graduating Ann
Roberts as society editor will be
Blllie Rose
Paxton, Oreenville

editor and has assisted at the Lexington Herald sports department
for two years. He is also a member
of the Wesley Foundation and
Committee of 240 and has a 3.0
overall. He is studying the general
editorial sequence.
Alice Redding, Tuesday associate
editor, was feature editor of the
Georgetonian at Georgetown College. She Is a member of Theta
Sigma Phi, woman's Journalism
honorary, Canterbury Fellowship
Continued On Page 2

senior.
Wednesday Associate Editor Jim
Nolan, a Junior from Manchester,
will be changed to Thursday associate in place of Nancy Meadows,
who resigned. Bill
Blakeman, a
Junior from Lexington, will take
over Nolan's Job as Wednesday
associate.
Neikirk was a Kernel daily sports

'TV-fa

ill

Li
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY, JAN.

Vol. L

16, 1939

No. 57

'Nuf Said

y
New Kernel Editors
Promoted to new Kernel positions are first row I to r, Bill Neikirk,
chief news editor; Alice Redding, Thursday daily editor; second
row: Mrreda Davis, Tuesday associate editor; and Bill Blakeman,
' Wednesday associate.

Rupp Doesn9 Plan
To Leave Kentncky
By LARRY VAN IIOOSE

Church Groups To Show
Hollywood Films In SUB
Popular Hollywood movies of the
past will be shown monthly in thf
SUB Ballroom beginning next
semester. These movies, sponsored
by the campus religious organizations, will be Iree to UK students.
The Rev. Richard Carpenter,
member of the committee which
is arranging for the movies, says
the first film will be shown on
Feb. 12. Although arrangements
are not yet definite. Rev. Carpenter says this movie will prob- -

75 Date Tickets

ds

Almost 300 Sign
For Languages
Nearly 300 students have
'
for spring semester
classes in the Department of Modern Foreign Languages.
in the department ended Wednesday, Dr. A. E.
Bigge. department head, said.
The department did not receive
advance publicity on
It started classifying a day
after all other Arts and Sciences
departments.

nt

st

ball builder of the South after
UK's constant winning prod
ded other SEC schools to emphasize the cage sport.

.

29-ye-

ng

tail-end-

er

The colorful "Mr. Basketbair
has become the best known and
most widely quoted cage coach in
America and his personal fame
is equalled only by the success he
has installed in his
UK basketball powerhouses.
Rupp was honored with a Cadillac by Alumni and friends on his
anniversary of Wildcat
silver
coaching. He is the director of the
world's largest tobacco warehouse
and an internationally known and
respected Hereford breeder.
The master story-telle- r,
who
speaks with a distinct Kansas
twang, is equally renowned on the
banquet and coaching clinic
highly-publiciz-

ar

"The-Bluegras-

pre-classifi- ed

Tickets for
dates
and wives of I'K students for
Saturday afternoon's battle with
UT will go on sale tomorrow
morning at 9:00 at the Coliseum
Ticket offices. Only 75 tickets
have been alloted. They will be
awarded on a first come-firserved basis and ID cards must
be presented.
nen-stude-

ably be "East of Eden" starring
James. Dean, or "The Razor's
Edge" starring Tyrone Power.
Catholic. Jewish, and Protestant
camups organizations will Jointly
sponsor the movies.
The movies will begin from 6 to
6:30 p.m., depending on the length
of each film. This time was selected, said Rev. Carpenter, to make
living in the
it possible for co-eto attend.
dormitories

FAN CONDUCT
Veteran UK basketball coach
Adolph Rupp dismissed any rumor
Coach Rupp yesterday comof his leaving his post for a head mended the UK student body for
coaching position with the profes- s its "excellent support and fine
sional Cincinnati Royals yesterday show of sportsmanship" at Wild
"I have no plans at all of leavcat basketball games this season.
ing the University of Kentucky," "I am confident that you will
said Rupp, who has built Wildcat follow the high standards you
teams into the world's most conhave set as a cheering section
span.
sistent winner in a
Saturday when we play Tennes"Right now my only concern is see," Rupp added. His remarks
beating Tennessee Saturday aftercame after two SEC schools renoon," Rupp added. UK. deceived
publicity from paper-throwifending SEC and NCAA champoutbursts last week.
ions, is look for its 598th victory in
the battle with the Vols before national television cameras.
but said he would "answer the
The report was supposedly start- phone" if Wood calls.
Coach Rupp came to UK in 1930
ed at the suggestion of a Cinand directed his Wildcats to 19
cinnati sports writer that the
Rupp take over as coach conference championships and a
of the National1 Basketball Associa- record four NCAA crowns.
Baron of Basketball,"
Royals.
tion
has been regarded as the basket
When asked his position on the
matter, Rupp said, "Mr. Tom
Wood, who owns the Cincinnati
Garden and the Royals, and I have
been good friends for 20 years.
He certainly has a wonderful investment. I would do anything to
help him."
Members of the steering comThe basketball Hall of Famer
added that he had not been con- mittee for Religion In Life Week
tacted in any way about the job, will meet today to discuss plans
for the March
event.
The purpose of Religion In Uie
Week is to foster an awareness
that God is an integral part of
life, committee member Stuart
Goldfarb said. The committee
hopes that during Religion in Life

s

ed

Committee Making Plans
For Religion In Life Week

tions of such relationship within
his own life.
3. "The thinking and growing
awareness of God should continue
beyond Religion In Life Week."
Steering" the week's events are
Emery Emmert, chairman, Jane
Walsh, Sue Chandler, Glenn Buh-li- y,
Bill Hass, Sarah Cobb, Joan
Sheer, Richard Roberts, Stuart
Gcldfarb.
Week:
1. "The basic issues of life in
Religion In Life Week is sponsored by the Inter-Fait- h
Council,
relation to God will be raised.
can check on the interest and ef2. "The individual student may composed of denominational and
fort which faculty members' are begin to understand the implica "Y" student movements.
putting into the planning and conducting of their instructional work.
ir
iwum
Dr. Nicholas Hobbs, chairman of
the Division of Human Growth
y
and Development at George
College, Nashville, told the
group on Monday that "what happens in our colleges in the next
decade or so may well signal
whether society as we.know it will
1- -5

Raises Based On Research
Hurt Teaching, Tyler Says
"Without a sound basis
teaching we shalcon-tinu- e
to bas promotions and salary increases more largely upon
other factors," such as research
and publication, delegates to a
seminar at UK were told Tuesday.
Dr. Ralph Tyler, director of the
Center for Advanced Study in the
Stanford,
Behavioral
Sciences.
Calif., presented the observation to
persons attending the
Regional
Education Board
seminar on "Preparation for College Teaching."
He added that under the present
promotion system, "faculty members, In turn, will be more likely
to concentrate their efforts on the
activities which will be rewarded
rather than to seek to become
more competent in teaching."
Dr. Tyler said "one of the positive evidences of effective teaching
is the intelligent interest and effort put iorth currently by the
teacher in seeking to do the best
teaching job he can."
indicators of this interest
and tllurt r.jet "The development
of new syllabi, tests, reading lists,
science ckiiiunstratiunb, films, lab
UK-Southe-

U.-el-

rn

oratory equipment and the like,
concrete efforts to
and to
clarify the major objectives for a
course, plans
for new ways of
teaching, for the use of new media
like television, development
of
programs for individual work, independent study, field laboratory
experiences, and work experiences'."
Dr. Tyler said another indicator
is the faculty members participation in faculty seminars on teaching "where the participation is not
cut and dried but shows thought
and concern."
The veteran ' educator pointed
out that "the evaluation of teaching involves appraising the learnremembering
ing of students,"
"learning is the acquisition by the
student of ways of behaving, that
is. ways of thinking, feeling and
acting, which he has not previousre-thi-

ly followed."
A teacher

nk

may check on the
extent to which essential conditions of learning are being provided by devices, he said. By making
tape recordings of class sessions to
play back in his study;
visiting one another's clause., and
uing a check IM, and by usv.xz
The institution
student opinion-.-

.

Pea-bod-

survive."

The new American scholar is a
$7,500 a year
renaissance man,"
produced in quantity but great in
mind and spirit, he said. He will
"effect a latter day Copernican revolution, resorting a new kind" of
man-center-

ed

v.

my

7c

world view.

"In essense this new world view
will say that man must not revolve around nations but nations

around man."
The seminar will close late today
after a windup by Dr. John Folger,
Atlanta, associate director of the
SKI II. Dr. A. D. Albright. University executive dean of Intended
of the
Programs, is chairman
seminar and director ef the SKIilJ-- l
Iw research program.

a

f1$

Sr

Pre'Classificdtioii
Dr. William

F..

Moore, School of Journalism professor, is conferring

with Charlotte Kingston about pre-- t lassification
recently.

which ended

* U

THE KENTITKV KERNEL, riM.iy. Jan.

If.. 19.V)

Guests Take Shot Glasses

The travel- - box holders quite difficult to open,
NEW YORK (AP
in? American, it seems, not only so usually the women have to go
to the trouble of removing them
is
but light-fin- in- - sheet by sheet. But they do It."
gered. While hotelmen only
Loss of the larger, more
frequently encounter guests who
is
sheets, blankets pensive items of furnishings
off with
and furniture, loss is high of such kept to a minimum by the floor
items as washcloths, whisky shot maids, who check a vacated room
highbflll stirrers, cleans- - almost as soon as the departing
glasses,
ing tissues, wooden coat hangers, guest has left, and by supervisors
shoe mitts, and. of course, towels, who keep an eye on a specified
Occasionally,
of rooms.
One 1.000 room hotel in mid- - block
town Manhattan ' runs through however, a guest will make off
21,000 shot glasses a
year, for with a blanket, a picture or even
instance, and its replacement rate a pillow.
on washcloths is 17.000 per annum.
When some such item is mlss- "Of course." conceded Neal Lang, ing, the hotel writes a first polite
general manager of the Roosevelt, letter to the guest asking that he
'there is considerable chippage on check his luggage and see If he
a
the shot glasses, but also they are hasn't "inadvertently" packed
of a size and usefulness that make blanket or whatever.
them dandy souvenirs, even thouph
TnP recipient of one such letter
they are not marked with the ho- - rcpiu.ci flirj0uslv that he not onlv
tel name. We used to have an even had not inadvertently packed
a
higher loss of face cloths until we hi,ntpf hnt
not
hn nUn
cut them down in size and thick- inadvertently packed a mattress or
ness to a point where they aren't the desk.
as attractive as they could be.
are not as
Towel collectors
Shoe mitts, which cost the homuch of a problem as they once
tel around six cents each.
are
replaced at a rate of 60.000 a were. For one thing, hotels have
less
towels
learned to make
year.
attractive: many now omit the
The usual presence of inferior
name of the hotel on them. Stage
wire coat hangers in even
first star
is
Walter Slezak. however,
class hotels is mute testimony of
a hotel towel collector but only
guests' collecting tendencies. Until recently no one had invented from the nation's very top hotels,
and unlike many of his fellow
a pilfer-procoat hanger,
but collectors,
is willing to pay. He
some of the J newer hotels are
free-wheeli-

ng

ex-ma-

ANDY EPPERSON

ANN ROBERTS

Graduation Causes
Kernel Promotions
associate, has worked on the Manchester Enterprise
doin? photo;hkI has a 3.3 overall. Miss Redding graphy and advertising, and during
io studying the general editorial vacations serves as chief news edisequence.
tor. He began working on the
Mereda Davis, a member of the Kernel his sophomore year. He beThursday staff in the general edi- longs to Sigma Delta Chi. -- men's
torial sequence, has a 2.3 overall. journalism fraternity.
She is also a member of the ComBill Blakeman. reporter on the
mittee of 240.
Tuesday staff, has worked on the
Jim Nolan, former Wednesday Kernel since his sophomore year.
He is a
member of BSU and
'
Sigma Delta Chi. Following the
general editorial sequence. Blake
man has a 3.1 overall.
N
Staff members retaining posi
O
O THEATRES
tions for second semester are Jim
On Northern Beltline
Hampton. editor-in-chieDan
editor; Joan
Millott. Tuesday
Weissinger. Wednesday editor;
'Bill Hammons, Friday editor and
Jane Harrison, Friday associate.
Continued From Page

1

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Alan Ladd - Deborah Kerr
Corinne Carver
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Claire Trevor
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Captured by

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PLAY '6ANKO' TONIGHT

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Shirley Booth - Anthony Perkins

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Jan 18, 19,20

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Edmond O'Brien-Sterlin- g
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1:00. 3:19. 5:38. 7:57. 10:16.
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"Kill the Umpire" - 11:02.

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2nd. New Feature

almost $100 a day just t v
print those for the various restaurants within the hotel. One of
the restaurants uses an outsize,
elaborate menu which costs lf
hotel 30 cents each. Once, thinkV
ing it good advertising, there wju
a line on the menu urging guest t
to keep the menu as a souvenir.
Now the lir Is removed.

i

installing nonremovable hangers

which travel on tracks.
Women, the hotel
executive
says, are usually the ones who
abscond with
cleansing tissues.
"Men." he philosophized." use
the tissues as they need them:
women anticipate using them in
the future. We've made the tissue

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?

llectorand it costs Lang's hotel

of

"Paratroop Command" - 1:20.
Harold Wetzel has been named
4:15. 7:10. 10:05.
Chairman of the Executive ComCIRCLE 25 "Thunder in the
mittee of the Conference of Schools
East" - 8:50.
and Departments of Social Work.
"Lucy Gallant" - 6:35. 10:35.
Wetzel, head of the UK Department of Social Work, will preside FAMILY "Denver & Rio Grande"
6:45. 10:00.
at the undergraduate
school's
"Flaming Feather" - 8:30.
dinner January 20. and at the
'Home
Before
of the graduate and KENTUCKY
Dark" - 12:18. 3:16. 6:14. 9:12.
undergraduate schools January 21.
STRAND "Some Came Running"

"THUNpER IN THE

Plus

iht

ke

intends to have a bathrobe nn J
of them.
Many a traveler is a menu co-

ELECTRO-VOIC-

E.

On Upper Near Maxwell Opon Mon.

&

Fri. til 9

* -

.

int.

f

7

:

v

"

WILLIAM S. WEBB

Webb's Book

Honored
UK distinguished professor's
h f k'J.as been
chosen as one of
tin 22 most attractive books in
iv;pn and book production en-- f
cl .11 the
Books
('( :r,yA : it ions.
The book is "The Adena People
!.'.. 2.' by Dr. William S. Wfbb
0.'--' .i.t uished professor of physics
;
pmftssor of anthropology.
lure: tor of UK Libraries Dr.
A

1

Mid-Weste-

1

rn

Thompson, notified
the honor, said that
a double tribute
selection
le i thf book, wnich already had
!.M!i retnmmended by archaeol- s
for its scholarly contents.
The book was . published by the
Ohio State University Press last
! :iAi '.ce
V( CiVJ

ftEW IOM MC

rcRi.-traiio-

Dells Leading
In
Trophy'

In Contest
r

Mr

Cumberland.
Center Set
For 1960

C
s.!

w

Interview schedules for the week mathematicians, and physicists.
Mrs. Katheiine Kimpcr, direcof second semester
have been set by the Placement tor of Placement Service, reminds
all students to reserve a place in
Service.
2 and their sprint; semester schedule for
Monday and Tuesday, Feb.
3 Air Force will interview experiinterviews with various companies
enced teachers for overseas teach- coming to UK.
ing positions. Applications must
be submitted to Wright Patterson
Air Force Base, Ohio.
Thursday and Friday, FebS and
6 General Shoe Corp. will interview men in all fields who have
no military obligation and are
interested in sales.
Friday, Feb. 6 Baltimore Co.
Maryland Schools will be seeking
UK's Cumberland extension cen- teachers in all fields and all levels. ter will be opened in the fall of
The Administration division of the 1960, according to Finance ComU. S. Navy will interview engineers, missioner Orba F. Traylor.
Meriweather and Marye. Lexlng- ton architects, are scheduled to
colsubmit plans for the two-yelege to Traylor today. ConstrucI-- M
tion, weather permitting, will start
Delta Tau Delta leads the field by March 25 and be completed by
for the
trophy, the summer of 1900. The Departapproximate scores released by as- ment of Finance will advertise for
sistant intramural director Tom bids around Feb. 9, Traylor said,
and open them March 15.
Freeman showed yesterday.
President Dickey said no formal
The Delt's lead
Sigma Alpha
Epsilon by 210 points to 209 while opening date had been set for the
Phi Delta Theta is third with 195. Cumberland Center.
.

This new G-- E wakes you to sweet
music reminds you of appointments turns on your favorite programs. Attractive G-table radio
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11

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jr

till11

w
A

S.
of

jri.-t-

ar.
Prof. Webb has conducted Te-hi ch on the Adena people, who
were prehistoric Kentuckians, for

19:)- -:;

at Barney Miller's

Interviews Scheduled
In Plaeeinenl Service

V

Iii(b), Jan. 1,

KERNEL,

THE KENTUCKY

3

Where Radio and Television

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT

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BusinessNot A Sideline

many years.

IScicman Club

why the smart switch is to
the '59 Chevrolet

.

Newman CInb Holy Common-ie- n
will b? held from 7 to 8 a. m.

periods Monday,
fcr
Tuesday. Thursday, and Friday
of next wek.
The Laws of Fat and abslin-rnc- e
for lent will be discussed
at the next Newman Club meet-

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V&s: eight to
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One short drive and youH know
the smart switch is to Chevy.
Come in and be our guest for a
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ROOMIER BODY BY FISHER:

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waxing for up to three years.
NEW RIGGER BRAKES: better
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PJaU Glass. SLIMLINE DESIGN:
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* The Kentucky Kernel
Katrd

University of Kentucky

the Fot Office at Ltiington, Kentucky u wcood cUt mattrr nodrr tb Act of March 3, 1870.
Published (our tim a wrrk during the regular achool year except holiday and cxama.
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Jim Hampton,

Editor-fa-Chi-

J'

III

ef

Larry Van Hoose, Chief Sport Editor
Society Editor
Ann Roberts,
Norman McMuixtn, Advertising Manager
Pkrrt Ashley, Business Manager
Fhotographer
Hank Chapman, CartoonUt
Cordon Baer, Staff
Marilyn Lyvew and Judy Fennebaker, Proofreaders
Axdt Epperson, Chief News Editor

FRIDAY'S NEWS STAFF

Dill Hammons, Editor
Jane Harrison, Associate Editor

Bill Neikire,

JJ

Sports Editor

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A Need For Candor

The Committee Of 240
This week the Committee of

210,

newly reactivated after several years'
dormancy, met with President Frank
G. Dickey and Louis Donohew of the

University's Public Relations Department to discuss the committee's part
in explaining University life to the
state's high school seniors.
At full strength the committee will
have two representatives from each of
each of
Kentucky's 120 counties,
whom has agreed to meet with groups
of high school seniors in his county
and answer questions about University life in particular and college life
in general.
One of the points stressed at the
meeting, and also mentioned last
week by Dr. Dickey, is that the committee is not a recruiting group designed to tantalize prospective University students with grandiose tales
that UK is an educational Utopia. It
is, rather,
merely an informative
group whose aim is to answer, frankly and with all possible candor, questions which high school seniors have
about college life.
This function, we think, can be amplified beyond the functions"of the
committee; while every student
should promote the University at
every opportunity, it is grossly unfair

to .prospective students to make
claims or accusations which might
lead a student to come here when he
would find another school more suited to his qualifications and ambitions.
--

Too often

students,
prospective
especially those with outstanding high
school records, are approached by collegiate recruiters who are interested
primarily in enrolling the budding
genius and only secondarily in whether the school is one where that genius can best develop.
For the Committee of 210 and,
again, for every University student-the- re
is a great opportunity to do immeasurable service to prospective students and to the University itself by
keeping in mind this need for candor.
A student with
poor high school
grades should not be encouraged to
enroll and possibly fail here when
a smaller college might be more suited
to his capabilities.
.

"Give 'Em Hell, Wildcats!"

The Readers' Forum

Kernels
The turtle

less fish.

Et Tu, Brute
To The Editor:

lives 'twixt plated decks

Which practically conceal its sex.
I think it clever of the turtle
In such a fix to be so fertile.
Ogden Xasli

,

whive-livere-

d

curs.

(Name U'iiiiiiiid)
(ylmeiitn is the greatest lathi of all.

.

On your editorial page in recent
issues you have printed several letters
written by people who refuse to
identify themselves. In this great, free
land of ours it is surprising to see so
many cowards afraid to loudly and
clearly express those opinions about
which they feel so strongly. The spine

The

-- THE EDITOR)

A

Salutation

To The Editor:
We leel that a salutation
"

is in

older

among people of common inteiest.

Hail, Merc ui!

Pu to And Perskphone

The Arabs And The West
By WILTON WYNN

CAIRO (AP)- -1 is clear that the Arab
world is more gravely threatened today by
Communism than at any time in its history. Western diplomats ask: what can be
done about it?
Most of them concede there is virtually
no hope of building up an elfective West-ti- sponsored bloc in the Arab world to
oppose Communism.
The two most ambitious attempts by
the United States along this line the
Baghdad Pact and the Eisenhower Doctrine are dead horses as lar as the Arabs
arc concerned.
Last year saw a long line of pro West-cArab nilers removed from power or
icduccd to impotent). They- included
Null Said and King Faisal in Iraq.
and Sami Solh in Lebanon, King
Sand in Saudi Aiabia, and Abdullah kh.i-liin Sudan.
It became apparent that no Arab leader
could openly back the West and hae a
political future.
Arab repudiation of the West can be
traced to a long series of conflicts, chief
among them creation ol the state of Israel.
And it is probably unlikely that the West
will backtrack 'Sufficiently to win back
Arab good will in the near future.
While the West lias lost, the Communists hae made great gains. The Reds
have moed into key positions in Iraq,
par lk ul uly in the police, judiciary and
propaganda fields. If Iracj goes Communist, then Syria, Jordan and Iran face
itrious problems.
n

Getting The Jump

This Matter Of Vacations
Every year, somewhere 'around the
' Christmas vacation or the break between semesters, someone raises the
question about the seemingly unplanned svstem the University has for holidays.
The situation is usually summed up
in the conclusion that we should have
lewer holidays during the first semester and thus allow for several days'
vacation break sometime during the
spring semester.
And, usually, the suggestion is that
we eliminate several of the nine or 10
days between semesters, allowing only
a few da)s for a breather and then
lesuming classes again.
a sound
theoretically
enough scheme, but it is an unworkable one at 'present due to the system used for recording grades in the
Registrar's Office.

This

is

.

We have checked with the registrar and found that it now takes a
minimum of five days to process, record and prepare
lor mailing the
thousands of grade sheets his office
must handle.
Until such time as the processing of
grades is made faster, there is little
hope that any days could be subtractvaed lrom the between-semesters

cation and added to a spring holiday. The alternatives to faster processingnamely having instructors handle more of the bothersome
minutiae or else allowing
students to register for the second semester before their grades have been
lecorded-a- re
not very satisfactory.
It appears that we're'eaught on the
horns ol the proveibial dilemma until someone comes up with a workable
solution.
record-keepin-

g

Cha-mou-

n

k

With no hope of building up a
Western Arab bloc, the West obvioudy
must find some purely native foice to
resist the Communist bid for power. And
the main force isXtab nationalism, whose
leader is Carnal Abdel Nascr.
Most Western diplomats now concede
that Arab nationalism is the best hope
of the Intuit', but they seem to want that
nationalism without Nasser.
Hut past events have proven that

I.igh-dad- .

Amman, or Riyadh cannot uplace
Cairo as the capital of any effective, aita-wid- e
mow inc ut. The West milit
t
some anti Nassei gioups but they would
remain weak and an easy, pie loi Communism.

on

I'.un without Nasser, Caiio

c

bound to
be the center
any tllcctie Aiab political i n t ii it lit. It is not only the biggest
and most modem Aiab city but also the
radio, in w sjajet and liliu capital ol the
region. It is the only Arab city with big
modern universities and a. sicable body
ol tlained tec hnic ians.
is

Kernels
To Univeisity

coeds who ate fond
of wealing lieimuda'y, we oiler this
wry obsetvation by Ogden Nash:

Sine, deck your lower limbs in
pants;
Yours ate the limbs, my sweeting.
You look divine as you advance-Ha- ve
you seen yourself letreating?

* -

State Resorts Lure
UK Vacationers
By niLLIE ROSE PAXTON
UK
mistakenly
look south for a haven of rest.
Shortening
their vision a little,
they could find a vacationland In
their own backyard.

students

Falls,

Cumberland

Kentucky

pam, and Kentucky Lake state
arks will be open to students between semesters. A flat rate of
J7.50 a day
Includes a double
room in a hotel or lodge plus three
fquare meals. Snack bars are also
Available for nibblers.
As for recreation, emphasis will
te placed on seasonal sports as
or
lishing or horseback riding
1. iking.
No doubt more popular
than these will be the Indoor
ports, such as cards or pool.
For the
student who desires
escape, any of these three places
would be ideal. Use that last ounce
r f energy to place your reservation with Bill Piatt, campus rep-- r
mutative for the Division of
'
Farks.
Rock-a-by-

Monday, Jan. 19 - Friday, Jan. 23
SEMESTER EXAMINATION PERIOD
Saturday, Jan. 24

Plummcr
To Head

Basketball: Georgia Tech
U. K. Women's Club Meeting
Annual Farm fc Home Week Convention

School Study

Thursday, Jan.

(UNIVERSITY

MM

111!

IV

8:00
FREE

BUS

TRANSPORTATION

William Lowe
Keith Mee
Minister of Ed. Minister of Music
Bill Bonner
Director of Youth

State Porks

ICemtiLDcky

HEIGHTS)

o

o

o

o

o

o

o

BibU Study

6:00 p.m. Evening Worship

CUMBERLAND FALLS, CORBIN, KY.

MONDAY:
7:30 p.m. Men's Training Class

LAKE STATE PARK, HARDIN, KY.

WEDNESDAY:

'BARNEY KEITH, EvanUqist
Telephone
or
89

DAM STATE PARK, GILBERTSVILLE, KY.

88

ONE BLOCK FROM ROSE ST
ON CLIFTON

95

.PEN NW

ti

ooooooooo

Id

I ml

o

o

3

1I

0

9:45 a.m. BibU Classes
10:45 a.m. Morning Worship
5:15 p.m. University Students

For Fast Carry Out Service

I I kj

8:00
9:30-4:0-

VISIT

10:00 a.m. BibU Study
7:30 p.m. BibU Study

H

8:45 a. m. Morning Worship
9:45 a. m. Sunday School
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship
5:30 p.m. Sunday Night Snack
6:15 p. m. Training Union
7:30 p. m. Evening Worship

328 Clifton Ave.

Service

av

H. B. KUHNLE, Pastor

0

29

comprise
industry.

Church Of Christ

o Sea Food
o Sandwiches
o Fountain

7-99-

High St. at Woodland

For Your Between Semesters Vacation

SUNDAY:

or

9:30-4:0-

0

H

WELCOME TO A