xt7bcc0tt63r https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7bcc0tt63r/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19630926  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 26, 1963 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 26, 1963 1963 2015 true xt7bcc0tt63r section xt7bcc0tt63r Today's Weather:
Showers, Warmer;

Editor Discusses
USIA

Budget;
See Page Four

Ilish 77

University of Kentucky

Vol. LV, No. 13

LEXINGTON, KY., THURSDAY, SEPT.

26, 19fi3

Eight Pages

Shively Changes
Seating Procedure

IMS
.7

By TOM WOODALL
Kernel Staff Writer

Student seating procedures for football games have been
changed, Athletic Director Hemic Shively said yesterday.
Because of confusion at the
Virginia Tech same last week, thus filled one at a time with-

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Blue Marlins
Janet Huffman, Marlin instructor, gives swimming
tips to Glenda Rinehart,
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Julie Hanson, and Ginny

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Austin in practice prior to tryouts for the women's
synchronized swimming group.
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Committee Plans Hearing
On Student Achievement
By SUE ENDICOTT
Kernel Managing Editor

on
student achievement will hold an
' for alL students
open healing
Monday at 6:30 p.m. In the Helen .
O. King Alumni House.
The purpose of this meeting is
to find out what the students
want in the way of an intellectual
atmosphere at the University.
Dr. J. W. Patterson, chairman
of the committee, said he hopes
that through such a hearing the
students will help "identify the
aspects which are now promoting
an intellectual climate and identify those that are detracting
from that climate."
A similar hearing will be held
next month for faculty members.
The committee was formed last
May and consists of nine faculty
members and two students. Dr.
Patterson said that the members
feel that there is a "real urgency"
about getting some recommendations to the administration re
A special faculty committee

garding student achievement and
this is one of the reasons they
are working so rapidly.
He said the committee will
make some attempt to define an
intellectual climate but not to
define student achievement. He
cited five areas which the committee plans to investigate in determining what the intellectual
climate should be. They are:
The gap between faculty
and students. This will include a
study of the channels of communication between students and
faculty members, faculty attitudes toward student activities
and expectations, and teaching
techniques and methods.
The existing intellectual and
cultural activities at the University.
The extra curricular and
social activities.
The physical facilities.
The administrative
practices.
In addition to the hearings, the

Student Personnel Group
Formed By UK President
A Student Personnel Advisory Council has been formed
by Dr. John W. Oswald, president of the University. Its first
meeting is planned for Oct. 9.
In a letter sent to the comit-te- e Dr. Kenneth
Harper, director of
members, Dr. Oswald said the
the International Center, who
council would enable administrawill serve as chairman; Dr.
tive personnel working directly
with students, together with faStephen Dlachun, director of the
to consider
culty and students,
Honors Program and professor
and overall policies reproblems
of plant pathology; Dr. C. F.
lating to students.
Elton, dean of admissions and
Some of the areas to be conregistrar.
sidered by the council will be:
Dr. Roy Jarecky, director of
A policy for student employStudent Services at the Medical
ment which would include priority where possible for filling Center; Mrs. Katherlne Kemper,
director of the Placement SerUniversity staff vacancies with
vice; Dr. L. L. Martin, dean of
students.
men; Dr. Ernest McDaniel, proof the adRecommendations
ministrative
design of student fessor of education; Dr. J. L.
Mulligan, director of Student
personnel service to most effecHealth Services.
tively use the present staff resources.
Dr. Elvert Ockerman, director
A survey of sources and needs
of loans and scholarships; Dr. J.
reW. Patterson, assistant professor
for vocational counseling and
commendations on additional serof speech; Dr. Doris M. Seward,
dean of women; Joe Coughlin,
vices and staff.
Policies on housing of students treasurer of Student Congress;
and requirements for living in and Sue Endicott, editorial executive and managing editor of
the dormitories.
Members of the new council are The Kernel.

committee plans to collect data
from six student groups. Dr. Patterson said each group would
have a leader who would conduct
discussions and then report the
findings to the committee. These
groups will be members of Greek
letter organizations, dormitory
married
commuters,
residents,
students, students residing in
Lexington, and members of campus honorary organizations.
Dr. Patterson said he hopes
the hearings and the group discussions will result in some recommendations and new programs
where needed.
Members of the committee, in
addition to Dr. Patterson, are
Dr. Lawrence Thompson, director
of libraries; Dr. Doris M. Seward,
dean of women; Dr. Michael
assistant professor of
English; Dr. William Carse,
professor in counseling
and guidance; and John Hill, associate professor of architecture.
Dr. Ernest McDaniel, professor
of education; John Reeves, associate professor of political sci
ence; Dr. Stanley Zyzniewski, assistant professor of history; Mrs.
Inga Riley Carmack, senior English major; and Gene Sayre, arts
and sciences senior.

tickets will be dsitributed a new
way beginning Saturday night, he
said.
Shively explained the new procedure:
The first tickets issued will be
on the
line and later
ones toward the west end zone.
Each section will be filled to the
top of the stadium before the
next section is opened. Tickets
will be arranged so the right half
of sections will be filled from
the right aisles and the left sides
filled from the left aisles.
Saturday night was the first
time that students had ever been
issued reserved-setickets at
football games. Before this season, students merely showed their
ID cards at the gates and sat
wherever they wanted.
The reserve
procedure
has been used for basketball
games in the Coliseum for several years.
On Saturday night, tickets
were given out so the first row
of seats extending across the
front of two sections and two
aisles was filled first. Rows were

Student Congress will meet
at 7 o'clock tonight in the
Student Center Theatre.
Congress will hear the reports
of its two outstanding committees. Both the Elections Committee and the Constitutional Revision Committee have met since
the Sept. 17 meeting of Student
Congress.
At that meeting. Congress President Ron Nickell appointed the
two committees. The committee
appointments followed a motion
by Gene Sayre to suspend the
w
Congress
provision pertaining to elections.
The Elections Committee, headed by Sayre, Is expected to report on its meeting Sunday, Sept.

Horse Farm Tour

Today is the last day to make
reservations for the Student
Center Board horse farm tour
to be held from 1:30 p.m. to 5
p.m. Sunday. The charge will
be 50 cents and reservations
can be made either at the International Center or at the
Student C e n t e r Information
Desk. All those attending
should meet at the circle drive
in front of the Student Center.

'Trio' Ticket Sales
Break University Record
The Kingston Trio Conceit has received the largest advance ticket sale in University history. Four thousand tickets
.sere sold in the first few days, with approximately 1,000 more
sold later.
certs can we bring the entertainDick Lowe, director of special
ers the students want," Lowe
student projects had this to say added. "Each individual concert
about the sales, "The better tichas to pay for itself."
kets are being offered to University students and they are going

fast."

The Student Center Board is
selling a section of seats for the
dormitories, which will be on sale
today in Donovan Hall Cafeteria.
Any group interested in obtaining a section of seats should contact the Student Center Board
office in Room 201 of the Center.
Of the 2,500 tickets sold 10
University students, 2,000 were
bought by fraternities and the
Law School. "If only 2,500 students buy tickets we will lose
money," Lowe said.
'
Only by supporting these con

SC Meeting Set
By BILL GRANT
Kernel Daily Editor

out regard to individual sections.
Shively said Gene Sayre, repthe Interfraternity
resenting
Council, asked him early this
week if the seating procedure
could be changed to cause less
confusion.
Groups and couples reportedly
were separated by aisles Saturday. Richard Stevenson, a senior
Jonrnalism major, said he and
his wife were issued two consecutive tickets at the gate one for
one side of an aisle and the other
ticket for a seat across the aisle.

Young Democrats

The Young Democrats will
operate booths at the crosswalk
between the Anthropology Museum and Miller Hall all day
today and tomorrow to notarize
absentee ballots.

For Tonight

tentative list
of election dates.
The committee voted to submit
any constitutional amendment to
the faculty on Oct. 17. The
amendment could then be presented to the students in a campuselection on the same
-wide
day.
Election of new representatives
is tentatively set i'or Oct. 24.
Sayre told the committee meeting
that no agreement had been
reached as to when officers will
be elected.
ly
The committee's report is
in half. The committee
also may ask that grade requirements be lowered from a 2.3
standing to a 2.0. Most members
of the present Congress and of
the revision committee also favor
a proposal to make members attend Congress meetings.
23 when it voted a

All tickets sell for $2 in advance and $2.50 at the door. In
the past the most expensive seats
were $3.50. r'ow the best seats
are dispensed on a first-com- e,
first-servbasis.

Tonight's meeting was called
for in Sayre's motion that suss.
pended the Congress
Some 67 members are on the Student Congress rolls. The original
elected number was 110. Graduacut the numtion and drop-ou- ts
ber.
Of the 67 members, 35 attended
the Sept. 17 meeting,
ject to Congress approval to set
up the official election machinery.
The Constitutional
Revision
Committee held an open meeting
Friday, Sept. 20 in the Student
Center.
William Kenton, chairman of
the committee, chaired the
sparsely attended meeting.
The committee is expected to
submit to Congress a proposal
that will cut membership approx- -

* 2

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Sept.

13

2fi,

Moot Court Starts
Third Week Of Trials
,

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Moot Court for third yc;ir law students starts its third
week ofrdnipetition by offering a civil trial tonight at 0:30
to access damages in a personal injuries suit and a criminal
murder case l iiday at 1:30 p.m., both in the Latterly Hall
courtroom.
facts that the defendant shot and
In the civil action of Junker-ma- n killed the deceased after the latv. Tilyou Co.. the Jury Is
ter had made some derogatory refaced with the problem of accessmarks about the defendant's wife
man who was in the presence of the defendant
ing damages for a
and his wife. David T. Enlow and
while riding the
injured
at the defendant's amuseCharles T. Walters are the state's
ment park. Wayne T. Bunch and
prosecutors and John L. Smith,
Mark Anderson represent the and James P. Mahan Jr. serve
the defendant.
plaintiff. Junkerman; while

in

Zl'

roller-coast- er

S. Whitehead and AlA. Burchett are counselors

Charles

Education Building

Architect's drawing pictures proposed building for 50 offices, 20 classrooms, and laboratory and study
(he College of Eduration. The $1,240,000 building is rooms,
to be rompleted by October of 19G4. It will contain

bert

for the defense.
State v. Zackowitz, the criminal case of murder, involves the

World News Briefs Pershing Rifles Pledge
37 Men In Fall Class

By The Associated Press
SANTO DOMINGO. DOMINICAN REPUBLIC The Dominican
armed forces and police overthrew President Juan D. Bosch today and
summoned leaders of opposition parties to pick a "respectable man"
to succeed him. Military leaders charged Bosch's administration was
chaotic.
Members of Bosch's Dominican Revolutionary Party and their
allies were not invited to the session aimed at setting up a provisional government.
Communists and leftists organizations supporting Cuban Prime
Minister Fidel Castro were outlawed, their signs and slogans torn
riot police and many
arrested.
down by white-helmetLeaders of the coup were men involved in the plot that ended
(he Trujillo family rule here.
The armed forces said they were setting up a lawful state.

U.S. Suspends delations Willi Dominican
snid

WASHINGTON The State Department
today the United
States has suspended diplomatic relations with the Dominican Republic. And, economic assistance to the little Caribbean nation has
been cut off until further notice.
The situation, one official said, amounts to a break in relations,
except that the United States is not taking the action "it was taken
by those who overthrew the government with which we had relations."

Unions Say lTs 'Too Late'
it is

WASHINGTON

too late for

The unions contended today

the railroads to withdraw their settlement offers in the work rules
dispute because congress has directed that these offers be taken as
a starting point for arbitration.
Lester B. Schoene, chief counsel for the five opcratr.ig unions,
n
told a
arbitration board assigned to pass on the big issues
of the 4
dispute:
"This board does not start where the Presidential Railroad Comseven-ma-

mission started, nor where emergency board 154 started. Public Law
108, from which this board derives its sole authority, limits the issues
to those on which the parties were in disagreement following their
negotiations on the Aug. 2 proposal of the Secretary of Labor."
Schoene referred to reports by two Presidential groups, both of
which were accepted by the railroads and rejected by the unions.

(ireck Premier Resigns

ATHENS, Greece Greek Premier Panayiolis Pipinelis submitted
his resignation to King Paul today in a move to ease the nation's
political crisis before the Nov. 3 general election, palace sources
reported.
They said the King put off until tomorrow a decision on whether
to accept the resignation.
Pipinelis took over in a caretaker capacity last June after
Premier Constantine Caramanlis quit in a dispute with the Royal
Family.
The caretaker premier made his resignation offer to King Paul
in a three-homeeting the monarch had called at the Royal Palace
with top members of the nation's political parties, the sources said.

Pledges to the University of Kentucky Pershing Rifles will
he formally installed at the annual Coronation Ball on Oct. 5.
The Coronation Ball is open to
all University students. Tickets
are available from Pershing
Riflemen or may be purchased at
the door. The price of the tickets is $2 in advance and $2.50
at the door.
Names of pledges are Michael

Waugli Gets
UK Heart

Research Post
A University of K' ntiuky
associate professor of medicine has been named to a
new chair of heart research
at the University Medical
Center.

Atkins, Michael Bell, William
Benson, Joseph Bohnak, J. C.
Bourne, John R. Burch, James
Carter, Jerry Davis, David Ded-ma- n,
Robert
Richard
Dunn,
Evola, Frank Mitchell, and Stuart
Hammonds.
Dannie Hutcherson, Robert
Jackson, William Jackson, R. E.
EdAvo
Johnson,
Kiviranna,
ward Klopp, George Lindsey,
Philip Lorsf.v, John McGown,
Delfod McKnight, Ted Ogle,
and Terry Ogle.
Pascal Perry, Don Pratt, Robert P r i t c h e 1 1, Scott Rogers,
George Seagraves, Kenneth
Smith. Steven Spilberg, Ernest
Spokes, Michael Staed, Philip
Straw, B. Tatum, and John

Lawson King, a recent

grad-

uate of the UK College of Law
and former center on the University's football team, will act as
judge in the criminal case and
Prof. James Richardson, instructor for the Practice Trial Court
class, will preside in the civil
action.
The trials, which last about
three hours, are open to the public and students In other departments are encouraged to attend.
Last week, the Jury returned a
verdict for the defendant-docto- r
In a malpractice suit by sayin?
there was insufficient evidence to
show that the doctor was negligent. In the criminal trial for
murder, the Jury found the defendant not guilty by reason of
Insanity.
STARTS 7:30

ADM.

$1.00

r,
PREMIERE SHOWING

KENTUCKY

He is Dr. William Howard
Waugh, 38, a member of the UK
College of Medicine staff since
1960. Waugh is also director of
the renal (kidney) division at the
Medical Center.
The heart chair has been established from $15,000 given by
the Kentuckly Heart Association.
Waugh attended Boston University and West Virginia University and received his medical
degree from Tufts College Medical School in 1948.
He is a member of the American Heart Association and several other medical organizations.
Waugh has done special duty
In circulatory and renal

STARTS TOMORROW

JAMES

'

DORIS

,

STEWART-DAY-

Alfred Hitchcock's

"THE Mfl'J

IV9 J

KNHVlOOMUCfli

LGUISJOUBDAfJ

Alfred Hitchcock's

"THE TROUBLE

L, MTU HARRY
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tbcUINl,

f

ELSA MABTiNELLI
MARGAHET RUTHERFOfU
MAGGIE SMITH
ROD TAYLOR
NO

ORSON WELLES

Leaders Say Tax Cut Will Pass

WASHINGTON Democratic leaders predicted with increasing
confidence today that the House will pass President Kennedy's $11
billion tax cut bill before the day is over and without nailing a Republican-backed
spending lid to it.
As the final round of debate began in the House, there were
Indications a number of Southern Democrats would vote against
the spending lid. Backers of the amendment had hoped to attract
their votes.

THE
"VERY IMPORTANT

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YOUR
SIDESI
WILL
BE
SORE
FROM LAUGHING!"!

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Sept. 26,
UIM. WHUJf in

Kernel Woman's Page
By Nancy Loughridge
The campus fads and fashions
have taken a new shape this fall.
The men may not like them but
they're here. The shift Is the
monster of which I'm speaking.
Many moons ago the sack was
the rage, for about six months.
Then it disappeared from the
fashion scene.
Two years ago the beach shift
made its appearance on the east
and west coasts and today's fad
was on its way.
The shift soon grew in popularity with the younger set and
when they left the beaches they
took the shift with them.
No sooner had they unpacked
their bags than the fashion manufactures hit them with the first
versions of the shift, in wool. A
few really avant guard took it
up and in the face of some pretty
comments
derogatory
by the

News In Belts
THERE IS a look of luxury
tbout men's belts this fall.
Fine leathers such as "cashmere" calf, the softest suede, supple but durable pinseal, handsomely grained "sharkskin"
marked lizard, tough buffalo hide, cordovan and select alligators are adding their fashion-and-oth- er
support to new suit
trousers and slacks.
Of course, in belts as in other
accessories, there are definite
styles for both dressup and sport
wear.
The dressup group is distinguished by a look of elegance
achieved through fine stiching,
"bluffed" stiching in which the
actual stiches are invisible, and
Jeweler treatments of belt buckles. Some of . the new dressy
smaller-size- d
include
buckles
harness types with Florentine
finishes and satiny brushed surfaces.
oiled leathers,
The heavier
typical sportswear fabrics, webs,
and heavy harbraided leathers
ness stitching lend themselves
appropriately to casual and sport
outfits. Most of those belts carry
or silvered
big. bold brass
buckles.
There are many other belts in
both the sport and dressy groups
that use side rings for added interest. Some of those "rings" are
squared to add a new look.
Match your belts to the color
of your shoes for the right fash-Io- n
touch.

male contingent they wore the
little gems.
Last winter, with the big news
in knits, the shift really came into its own. Every one who could
beg, borrow, or steal one, did so.
It was shift, shifts, shifts that
make you want some more.
Then came the spring and to
the disgust of most of the men
on campus the girls unfurled
their winter cocoon to reveal,
yep, you gussed it, a shift. How
discouraging to dream of spring
and the gorgeous creature you've
been dating, only to find her in
the figureless shift and the spring
bleak and cold. Someone up
there Just isn't on the male's
side.
This summer you practically
didn't stick your head out the
door unless the rest of you was
adorned by a shift, preferably of
madras or denium. They even
had shift maternity clothes.
Humm seems to me that's the
market this style was filched
from.

Meetings

Campus Calendar
University and University Women's club reception for President and Mrs. Oswald and new faculty members, Student
Center,
p.m.
Phi Delta Theta rose presentation to pledges
27 Spindletop Hall dance

TGIF

KA Hay Play

Fraternities entertaining
28

2S

AWS Convention Fteering Committee meeting
Spindletop Hall Fall Fashion Show
Football UK-Ol- e
Miss, Stoll Field 8 p.m.
Fiji open house
AGR open house
Sig Ep record party
Phi Tau party
Church

CARRYING an eyeglass case
or a fountain pen in the breast
pocket of a suit or sport jacket
Is rather like carrying a car Jack
on the seat of a limousine or a
sports car. An otherwise perfect
outfit can be marred by the misuse of that ' very conspicuous
pocket.
Here is how to make, the best
Use of the breast pocket.
In the business suit, the breast
pocket should carry either a
colored-bordcotton or linen
handkerchief to blend with the
Suit or accessories, or a silk
foulard pocket square color keyed in the same manner or planned to give a pleasing contrast.
(The colorful silk squares are
eminently correct for business
wear.)
. With a casual
suit or sport jacket, the silk
square is even a better choice
than a linen kerchief unless the
latter carries a sporting-typ- e
print. Go as bold as you plea.se
here. Bright paisley, sporting
motifs, etc., will give your outfit the "in" look.
For formal wear, make it a
pure-whit- e,
crisp linen.
You can fold them as you
please. However, the sophisticated dressers prefer the nonchalant
"puff." Simply open the hanker-chie- f,
grasp it by its center, fold
It in half and tuck into the pocket with the puff side out front.

WOMEN STUDENTS
The AWS Convention steering
committee will meet at 4 p.m.
tomorrow in Room 118 of the
Student Center. All members are
urged to attend.
SUKY
There will be a SuKy tryout
meeting at 7 p.m. today in the
SuKy Room in the Coliseum.
Any student who has not been
able to attend a prior meeting
and wishes to try out may do so
at this time.
ASSOCIATED
DUTCH LUNCH
Dutch Lunch will meet at noon
today in the Student Center
cafeteria. Dr. Gladden will speak
to the group.
CWENS
Cwens will meet at 4 p.m. Monin the Student Center.
day

Engagements

Maria Rennie, from Owensboro,
to Larry Cashen, a senior accounting major from Owensboro
and a member of Sigma Phi
Epsilon.
Helen Merle, a senior English
major from Ashland, to Bernard
Zohn, from Carthage, N. Y. and
stationed in Alaska.
Karen Schabliek, a senior elementary education major from
Venice, Fla. and a member of
Alpha Gamma Delta, to Ron
Kashiak, a senior commerce major from McKeesport, Pa., and a
member of Phi Sigma Kappa.
Judy Clift, a senior art education major from Cincinnati and
a member of Alpha Gamma
Delta, to Phillip Hutchinson, a
graduate student from Maysville
and a member of Sigma Alpha
Epsilon.
Sue Ellen Grannis, a senior
English major from Maysville
and a member of Alpha Gamma
Delta, to Chuck Kirk, a law student from Maysville and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.

126 E. Main St.

Timely and, oh so,

Terrific!
f

Vfi

Sues For

VK

Misses

Juniors
Jrs.

'

Young

Kerchiefs Needed

Anyway, the- fall at good ole
UK has arrived and with it the
shift. One out every Ave coeds I
saw at the game Saturday night
had on a ' shift. Most were of
tweed or flannel in cranberry or
loden. There was a sprinkle of
camel, grey and red as there was
of corduroy and suede cloth. The
long sleeve blouse Is really with
us also.
So shift into fall's most popular style. And with the holiday
season not far away the clothing
manufactures have another big
surprise for the men. The shift
is going to take on the Empire
look. In other words, the low
neck and high belt will be in the
same general area for a change.
The figure will still be covered by
the shift. In fact one of the
newest things is the shift evening dress. Elegant and expensive
yet teasing and tempting.
The boys may scream as much
as they wish but it'll leave you
with one fond thought: that
which reveals isn't as interesting
as that which conceals.

Sept. 25

SALE of

s

VJl

8 to 16

JUMPERS
Regular to $12.99!

$888
Check these Grand Fabrics,
too!

7,f bis

WOOLS!
CORDUROYS!
SUEDE

CLOTHS!

k--

'hi

III

HO

-3

Social Activities

Edited by
Nancy Loughridgc

The Big Fashion Shift
T

1963

Wonderful, perennially-popula- r
Jumpers at a wonderfully low sale
price! Choose from solids, checks,
plaids and novelties in f.ivorite
styles including shifts, sheaths,
demi-fi- t
drop-waitand shirred.
Come

in for yours

.,.

Engagements

Susanne Phelps, a Junior English major from Lexington and a
member of Alpha Oamma Delta,
to Fred Gillam, a Junior at Ttan-sylvan- ia
from Lexingujn.
Joyce Stromaler, a senior adu-catimajor from Toledo, O.. to
Nirk Pope, a senior journalism
major from Catlettsburg, and a
member of Sigma Chi.

TOGS
By
III

jj

JmUm!

"LINK"

BIGGER
and more important
in the fashion field than ever I
am speaking of "King Courdu-roy- ,"
that erstwhile material that
looks so sharp and can stand
rough wear. It has belied the
doubting Thomases that rashly
predicted it would not last in
favor.
offers
Today's market
corduroy car coats, corduroy
sport coats, corduroy sui's, corduroy sport shirts (with elbow
bender patches), corduroy slax,
corduroy Jackets, corduroy caps,
corduroy hats! (Just to mention
a few). I for one can see where
it fits perfectly in a college wardrobe for male or female. (Wrote
the above paragraph last night,
and now we have corduroy
belts!!)
WANT A COMBINATION
parka, jacket and car coat all
rolled into one? O.K. then get
one like "Roger Nof singer," (pre-de- nt
student) has. It sports a
zippered front, (but fashioned
in the parka style) a hood, and
is lined with a deep pile nylon
lining really terrif "Roger" also latched onto a beautiful olive
shaded
suit of herringbone
weave by "Career Man," his buddy "Sonny Cushing," (history
chose another suit by "Career
Man" of burnished brown and
gold heather with matching reversible vest (reverses to rust
colored imitation suede). They
are both transfer students and
it was a real pleasure to meet
them nice guys!!
BOBBY TERRY
(freshman
mech. eng.) is very proud of his
burgundy colored cardigan sweater by "Jantzen" made of 100' i
wool with the extremely popular
elbow patches that match the
trim on the pockets. This is the
and
biggest sweater year ever
Bobby, you were smart to grab
yours early!!
(pie-laJOHN SIWSON
showed good taste by selecting a
"Career Man" sport coat of wide
whale bone pattern. The colors
are a mixture of dark grey-blaand deep brown, and again
elbow patches of dark brown
that match the leather buttons.
Sharp, John, sharp
last night I
SOCIALIZING
had dinner with the "Kappa
and then held a NONSigmas"
COMMERCIAL, informal 'round
table discussion about current
fashions and etc. They made me
feel very much at home, and I
deeply appreciated their kind in'
vitation. These visits and discussions are by INVITATION
ONLY
(I DO NOT care to invade with a' selling pitch) and
these visits are NOT store sponHENCE
sored
they are
purely on the social level.
beer jackets
NORWEGIAN
(these I like natch) are hitting
the campus wear field like a "ton
of bricks "don't say I didn't tip
you "John Cox" (Kappa Sigma)
has the first one!
the "Wild Cats" and
WOW
"Rodger Bird" really exploded
last Saturday night
exciting
all I can say is great
game
JUST GREAT!
now 1 11 say why play
AND
"My O'.d Kentucky Home" in any
but the original tempo?
So Long For Now,

now!

LINK
AT . . .

VI

* The Kentucky Kernel

The USIA Budget
When Congress cut the budget

ap-

propriation of the United States

Agency by 15 million dollars, it left some very important questions in the minds of many people.
One of these, USIA Director Edward R. Murrow, charged Congress
with not taking the agency seriously.
"'If CongTess took us as seriously as
it takes the Russians, we'd be all
light," he said.
Murrow insists that his budget request was realistic and unpadded. He
charged that the United States will
miss a priceless opportunity to gain
ground in the propaganda fight with
the Russians and Chinese.

Most Americans act as if propaganda is a dirty word and that certainly we shouldn't be guilty of using
it. The fact remains that the Ruians
and Chinese are spending more than
two billion dollars annually to tell
the world their side of the story.
The American agency charged
with telling both sides, not just one
side, is asking for a annual budget
of 157 million dollars. Congress then
saw fit to cut that still more.
Last year alone, 700 new foreign
television stations went on the air.
Most of these will run USIA programs

The

without charge. Foreign libraries are
hungry for American books. Murrow
points out that some libraries have
more members than books!
Last year USIA translated

and

distributed six million volumes overseas. The Russian output was 40 million volumes.

Under Murrow's leadership, the
USIA has posed a real threat to the
Russians in their own backyard. More
and more people behind the Iron Curtain are being reached.
But many of the Congressmen who
publicly favor "victory at all costs"
fail to realize that a victory of ideas
is as important, if not more so, than
one acquired by force.
Either Congress favors ideas and
information or it does not. If corners
must be cut, there are many more
wasteful government agencies than
the USIA.
Perhaps the Congressional urge to
cut down on wasted funds could be
realized closer to home. The Congress woidd do well to look at its
own expenses and balance them
against the cost of ideas distributed
by the United States Information
Agency.

Entered nt the port office at
Published tour time

Sou th's

Outstanding College Daily
University of Kentucky
LrxJnpton, Kentucky M second clas matter tindrf the Art of March 3,
week during the niinlar school year inrrt during holiday! and exams.
A SCHOOL YEAR
SIX DOLLARS

1879.

Sue Endicott, Editorial Executive and Managing Editor
Daily Editors and Editorial Board:
Fitaheth Ward. William Grant. Riciiahd Stevenson, and John Townsend
Carl Modecki, Campus Editor
David Haute, Assistant Managing Editor
Tom Finnie, Circulation Manager
John BunKHARn, Advertising Manager
of Sports
Jerry Sciiuheman and Walter Pacan,
John Pfeiffer, Arts Editor
Nancy Louchridce, Women's rage Editor
and Circulation, 2308
Kernel telephones: News, extension 2302; Advertising

White House Library
When the White House Library
was revamped recently, the Commonwealth of Kentucky was represented

liberally on the list of titles.
Dr. Lawrence .Thompson, director
of libraries, notes that 20 books listed
have a direct connection with the
Commonwealth.
The University Department of
History was represented by three professors, whose books were included.
Dr. Holman Hamilton's "Zachary
Taylor," Dr. Thomas Clark's "The
Emerging South," and three books by
Dr. Clement Eaton "A History of the
Southern Confederacy," "Freedom of
Thought in the Old South," and "A
History of the White House Library
eluded on the White House Library
list.
"The Henry Clay Papers," edited

by Dr. James Hopkins, is also listed.
The University is fortunate to enjoy the services of these eminent historians on its faculty.
An institution of higher learning
grows and matures through the establishment of a reputation for excellence, and these scholars have enhanced that reputation for the University through their publications.
Inclusion in the White House Library of works by these men is commendation both for their person