xt7d513tx35f https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7d513tx35f/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19610209  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, February  9, 1961 text The Kentucky Kernel, February  9, 1961 1961 2015 true xt7d513tx35f section xt7d513tx35f Editor Discusses
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Apportionment;
See Pace Four

nm mws& il
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Vol. LI I, No. 59

Today's Weather:
Cloudy And Colder;
High 38, Low 21

niv er sity o f Kentucky

LEXINGTON,

KY., THURSDAY,

FEB. 9,

Election Set

1961

Eight Pages

Kentuckian Queen
Chosen Tomorrow

For Favorite
Professor

Tlie 1961 Kentuckian queen will be chosen tomorrow night
from a list of 27 candidates nominated by University residence

Voting for the most popular
professor who 'will reign at the
annual Mardi Gras Dance Feb.
18 w ill be held at the Student
Union voting booth tomorrow
and Friday.

un,ts- Four Judges will narrow the list
first to 15 and then to five wo- men from which the queen and
her four attendants will be se- lected on the basis of ease in conversation, grooming, grace, and
manners.

dencees are as follows:
Martha Heizer. Phi Delta ThetaJ
Sue Buchanan. Farmhouse; Sub
Ramsey, Alpha Delta PI; Kay
nmMnrnhv Ainh.
fihr.
ry Oibson, Alpha Gamma Delta.
Barbara Harkey, Alpha Gamma
Rho; Joan Stewart, Zeta Tau
" " ,H," W,M
Lilll Clay, Haggln Hall;
J,
p.m. ceremonies In Alpha;
during the
Gail Peter- Memorial Hall by Barbara Wall, Katy Kirk, Triangle;
n
KcntuckUn
?h! "'fL?
Priest. Kappa Alpha Thet'a.
during
Linda Coffman, Phi Kappa Taaj
As Kentuckian queen, the wo
man selected will be featured in Sue RoM- - KPP Delta; Jane Con- the 1961 yearbook and will repre- - neH- - Chl Omega; Virginia Kemp,
sent the University at the Moun- - KOD KPP Gamma; Julie Nob.
tain Laurel Festival to be held in ,M' Keeneland Hall; Sandra Jagoe,
Pinevllle this spring. Her expenses A,Pn XI Delta,
to the festival will be paid by the
Myra Tobln, Sigma Alpha Epst- Kentuckian.
Ion; Kathy Herron, Dillard House;
To be eligible for the contest, a Susan Blount, Sigma Phi Epsilon;
nominea must be a Junior or sen- - June Moore, Kappa Sigma; Su- ior and have an overall standing zanne Keeling, Delta Delta Delta;
of 2.0 or above. She must be single Debby Daniel, Pi Kappa Alpha,
and not be on disciplinary proba- Barbara Zweifel, Delta Zeta:
tion at the time she is nominated. Jean Lester, Delta Tau Delta;
The women who have been nom- - Yvonne Nicholls, Holmes Hall, and
Inated and the nominating resi- - Betty Foley, Hamilton House.

t,i

open from
when students
may vote for their favorite pro
fesnor upon prenentation of their
identification cards.
For the past two years "Rex," as
the most favcrite professor is called, has been a member of the Law
...
College faculty. Last year It was
Dr. Richard Gilliam and in 1959
It was Dr. Roy Moreland.
Royal Conference
The 1961 Kentuckian Queen will be named at ceremonies In
Barry Averill, president of the
Memorial Hall tomorrow night. Bob Orndorf (left) Kentuckian
Newman Club which sponsors the
editor, Charlie Stone, associate editor, and Twink McDowell,
dance, said the theme this year
beauty editor, are making plans for the contest.
will be Hawaiian Holiday. The music will be provided by Buford
Majors and his Big Little Band.
Averill said the band, which
features Little Willie Brown, will
play "rock and roll" music along
with rhythm and blues type.
During the danre "Rex," who
By KERRY POWELL
will be presented by the president
of the Newman Club, will crown
Kernel Staff Writer
the queen of the Mardi Gras.
worried students formed a weary, winding
Thirty worn-ou- t,
Averill explained that five finalists will be chosen by popular vote line that made normal traffic impossible on the second floor
Wednesday and Thursday of next of McVey Hall Tuesday.
Still another preregistcred stu- week.
Kentucky's public schools are involved in several religious
Some of the students were sit- - dent had been unable to gain
g
The queen will be selected from
on the floor.
mlttance to a single class by ester-Som- e practices that have gone untested by the State Court of Aptha five finalists by a panel of
were tilted against the day noon.
peals, according to a bulletin published by the University
Judges. She will be judged on wa"- ,
Scores of students who register-Othe- rs Bureau of School Service.
beauty, poise, and personality.
for smallpox vacclna- retained normal posture, ed late will be unable to drop any
More than a dozen practices quirement
Uons of reiigious objectors, and
courses until their IBM classifica-"Where- 's acking court approval were found
chattering among themselves.
use of reiigious garb by public
tion cards are printed.
Dr. Black?"
in a survey covering 12 county school teachers.
"Won't this line ever move?"
Yet. for all this, the Adminlstra- - school districts.
CoUler
During thia century
'T've been here 45 minutes."
tion is maintaining a stiff upper
Among those found by the au- - wrote
le
contlnuinJ 8t
"Where's Dr. Black?"
lip. Dr. Charles F. Elton, dean of thor of the publication, the late the
gec- auon c, Cep
princi ,e of
Informal fraternity rush which
These anxious students were admissions and registrar, is still
V,
.dled tarianism and public education in
berfan Monday will end Sunday, only a few of the hundreds of I K hopeful that this year's registra- - shortly after completing
Kentucky has centered on four
Feb. 12. Rushees may accept pins studrnts trying to adjust their tion will be one of the best,
the Doctor of Education degree mre
of connict.
any time this week but pledge schedules by dropping and adding
"A fellow stopped me in the from the University, were:
areas ,isted b the author
cards may net be signed until courses.
or religious programs. were continuation of
Chapel
hall," Dr. Elton said yesterday
protestant
Monday and Tuesday.
One student who wanted to add "and told me that this was the singing of religious hymns relig- - non.sectarlan
reiigious practices
Only male students with a 20 a course to his schedule was told best registration he had ever ex- - lous holiday programs and bac- - , m
bUc school discovery
calaureate services, released-tim- e
standing based upon the previous by his adviser to go to the Coli- - perienced."
of ,s0,ated lnstances of sectarlan.
be- semester's work of at least twelve seum. The Coliseum has no part
,sm ln
Dr. Ejtoiv often criticized lor programs religious literature
bic schoo, efforts f
hours are eligible to accept a pin whatever in this year's drop-ad- d
. tn ,ntrnH
the confusion which befell regis- - ing given to public schools, church nrpw1ir(,
.h.
and p led ye a fraternity.
process.
tration last semester, could only use of school property teachers ous types of reigious lnstruction
checking church attendance.
in the schools, and increasing dereply to his benefactor, "I don't
ligious symbols in public schools, mands for "indirect aid" to secbelieve it!"
school activities tarian schools.
religious clubs,
But the dean would not official- objected to on religious grounds,
ly commit himself. It will be sevministers teaching and visiting
eral days, he said, before the drop-ad- d public schools, and reference to
3Iusie Program
procedures ran be evaluated.
religious affiliation on teacher apA chamber music recital will
To drop or add a course, a stu- plications.
Last November's referendum to areas in those three urban counties.
be presented at 3:30 p.m. Sunday
slip-froAs to apathy, there were 457.184 dent must get a drop-ad- d
call a constitutional convention in
The Appellate Court, according In Memorial Hall by four memKentucky was killed by political voters who marked the ballot for his dean's office. The academic to Collier's review of history, has bers of the Music Department
criticism of the administration as president but ignored the question adviser must sign the proposed ruled it is legal in public schools faculty.
of the convention. Dr. Jewell said. schedule. Then the student must to have Bible reading, prayers in
will as by ignorance, misunderThey are Mrs. Sarah Baird
"If only 4 percent of these per- get the signature of the Instructor Christ's name, public school use Fouse, flute; Robert King, viostanding, and apathy about the
convention, according to a Uni- sons had voted for the referendum whose course he is adding or drop- of church property, transportation
lin; Dr. Kenneth Wright, viola;
it would have passed," he noted.
ping and return the slip to the of private and parochial pupils and Herbert Hermann, piano.
versity political scientist.
from county general funds, re
Dr. Malcolm E. Jewell, assistant
Concerning voting along ad- - dean's office for final approval.
lines, Dr. Jewell
professor of political science, writ- administration
ing in the January issue of "Re- presented these figures: Of the 27 World Mews Briefs
view of Government," summarized Republican counties (those who
the defeat by baying, "Education voted Republican in the 1959 gubin government is a slow process. ernatorial
election), 24 voted
The lesson of the 1900 referendum against the convention, 18 of them
Is that a public climate of underby margins of over 60 percent. Of
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (AP) President Kennedy
Senate Approves Weaver
standing ttbout Kentucky's consti- the 43 counties which support conceded today he does not know whether there is
be achieved former governor A. B. Chandler, 30
tutional problems can
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (AP) Robert C. Weaver
or not but he does still believe the
a "missile
won Senate committee approval today for his
and persistent voted against it, 19 by margins of nation is gap"
only by gradual
entering the years ef its greatest peril.
over CO percent. Of the 27 Combs
nomination to the highest federal post ever held
effort."
Kennedy backed away, at his third news conferAnalyzing the referendum vote counties, 17 voted for It, 12 by ence in three weeks as President, from his campaign by a Negro. But he ran into more "no" votes than
nominee of President Kennedy.
In the publication issued by the margins of over 60 percent. Of the
that Russia will outnumber the United any other 11-- 4
UU Bureau of Government Re- 27 counties voting more than 60 charges in missiles for three years.
vote, the Senate Banking Committee
By an
States
Weaver as administrator of the Housing
Dr. Jewell said that con- percent for the convention, only
search,
approved
Castro To Reshuffle Officials
and Home Finance Agency.
trary to the expectation of many, two were Republican, only four
HAVANA, Feb. 8 (AP) Prime Minister Fidel
the convention did only slightly were Chandler counties, and 12
n
Castro plans to make Ernesto Guevara, Argentine-borbetter in urban than in rural were Combs counties.
Kennedy Considers New Orleans
counties.
leftist, the Industrial boss of Cuba, diplomatic
WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (AP) President Kennedy
Twenty of the 27 counties with
a vote less than 34 percent favor- sources said today.
said today he will assume a role in school integration
There is evidence based on postNow head of the Cuban National Bank, Guevara disputes "at such time as I think it is most useful
election fc&mpling by Dr. Jewell able were either Republican counthat the convention did poorly in ties or Chandler counties, and in would head a superministry of industry in a major and most effective."
areas. Noting several cases both. Every one of shakeup of four agencies and possibly a fifth.
The President said he has been considering
lower income urban
Government sources were silent, but diplomats whether to step into the New Orleans situation,
its defeat in Jefferson, Campbell, these 27 had an urban population
where white students have boycotted two school
and Kenton counties, the professor below the state average and hid said they have been told the reshuffle will be comno urban population at all.
ordered integrated by federal courts on Nov. 14.
buid there are sizable
pleted by the end of Febiuary.
The booth will
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

be

"

...."fiL!

Wearied Students
Adjust Schedules

Fralcrnily Kush
Will End Sunday

Religion In Schools
Untested In Courts

.

Constitution Was Beaten
By Politics, Prof Says

J.F.K. Reconsiders Perils

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY

KERNEL, Thursday, Feb. 9, 1961

LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS

Enlarge Rooms
By Redecorating

AsriculUircScnior
Wins First Prize

In Writing Contest

By VIVIAN BROWN '
AP Newsfeatures Writer
I low can you make a small room look larger?

Robert E. Boyer, senior agricul-

tural engineering student, has won

dwellers try to cram into a small space
Many
by
objects of clutter, such as bulky Empire
generous relatives perhaps and other extraneous objects that
aren't needed.
If you have a small room, take advantage of modern
Innovations when It comes to dec- - parent varnish, then wax It, and
orating. Don't buy or use some- - y0u can mop It clean after that,
thing because you "always had It if the paint Is too thick and you
at home."
can't see the grain when you ex- Limit furnishings to necessary periment on the first board, add
one-roo-

chests-provi-

objects. Choose light scaled con- vertible couches and chairs. Newer
narrow drawer cabinet units of- fer space economy, and can hold
clothes, silver, china. It's surface
Is useful for television, objects of
art, a lamp, magazines.
Consider painting your floors the
same color as the walls to make
your room look twice as large,
experiment worked out by a
in a one-rooapartment involved bone white
and matching floors. The
paint was mixed with water 4
"Ve$, I KNOW I'AA 6IVING TU' 5AM FINAL THAT I 6AVE LA5T
parts water to one part paint,
TERM
PUT THIS TIME J. CHANotP in W7Wk.z.
(Use plastic, rubber or water base
paint. The formula will not work
oil paint.)
The paint should be thin enough
that when it dries the natural
of the wood will be evident,
White gives an antique finish that
grows with wear. After the floor
The Army Ordnance Corps Exhibit Unit from Aberdeen is dry, coat it with a clear trans- Proving Ground, Maryland will visit the University on Feb. 10.
The exhibit will be shown in Barker Hall from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
4
The team of weapons demon- - the plane, the
C
0
THEATRE
ntrators with the unit will show rifle, and the new light
NOW SHOWING
cadets some of the latest cnine Bun that can be fired by a
soldier holding it over his head,
It's Boy-Gi- rl
Bingo
weapons developed by the Army.
The team from the Proving
Other students, faculty members, Ground will be
prepared to answer
and other interested persons are flUestions concerning the equip-Invitto view the exhibit.
ment and lts use and the missions
Among the weapons to be dem- - and activities of the Ordnance
onstrated will be the recently an- - Corps which spends approximately
le
xiounced LAW, the 4'i pound, dis- - three-fourtof the Army's
MTROCOIO
CinwuScopt
light antitank weapon, the get.
40 mm grenade launcher that looks
The Ordnance Corps is respons-Jik- e
a sawed-of- f
shotgun, the air ible for all research and develop-ciefenRedeye that follows its ment in the Army missiles and
target by the heat generated by rocket fields.

New Army Weapons
To Be Shown Here

more water.
a table may be more practical
than a desk in a tiny room. It
can be used for eating, writing,
About 75 percent of all forest
reading, and it's the ideal place fires in the northern Rocky Mounto put the bright light,
are caused by lightning.
There are small, chic tables tains
available suitable for the purpose,
Some offer washability and are
impervious to stains. White for-Omica can go with everything,
choose comfortable dining chairs
11
IK 6 TOM - K I N t U K T
1
that may double for company seat-wal- ls
NOW
ing.
There are chests to match any
Gable'i Last and Best!
French
decor. Early American,
Provincial, and some with an
Oriental flair. One modern cap-witains chest, available in red or
black, may be used with a match-s- o
item, if more stor-gra- in
ing
age is required. It can serve singly
as a window seat or used chest
on chest. Many chests can be used
as coffee and end tables.

GalleFnonroeiClift
in

Kentucky

22 Sludcnls To Receive
National Science Grants

Friday, Saturday
John Wayne

o

Each of the 22 students will re- $600 for working 10 weeks
under the program, according to
J. R. Meadow, assistant dean
of .the college and director of the
project.
The stipends are designed to

SU15
,

To Sponsor

Tournaments

During Semester

Bridge and table tennis tournaments will be sponsored by the
Student Union Board and the
finals of the chess tournament will
be played early this semester.
Winners of the UK tourneys will
be. eligible for the Intercollegiate
Tournaments.
The tournaments
are played according to the Intercollegiate Tournament System.
The exhibition match of the
chess tournament also sponsored
by the Sl'B Recreation Committee
will be played early in February.
The
are Steve
Morgan, a Junior in the College
t)f Arts and Sciences from Lexington and Gene Lewter, a freshman
In the College of Arts and Sciences
from Louisville. The tournament
ts
narrowed the
down
from 23 players.
A trophy will be presented to
the winner and a pokl key to the
runner-u- p
by the SUB Recreation
Committee.
Undergraduates not on proba- tioji are eligible for the bridge
and table tennis tournaments.
Students must sign up in room
132 of the SUB by February 17
to i.ter the tournaments. Further
lr.fcrrnticn Tzz" z cbtsir. ?r?m
tbe program director of the SUB.

give science and mathematics
dents "a taste of research" to help
them decide if they want to pur-D- r.
sue research careers.
The grant also provides for 15
stipends of $150 each during the
1961-6- 2
academic year, Dr. Meadow
said. The project will be administered by the Kentucky Research
Foundation.
The fellowships will be distributed among seven departments
Anthropology, Botany, Chemistry,
Geology, Pliysics, Psychology, and
oology. Recipients of grants assist faculty members in research
activities.
The NSF underRraduate research
program, started in the summer
of 1959, continued during the I960
summer session and the current
academic year.

Stewart

'bcli

Thurs., Fri.

&

Saturday

IN COLOR

"DARK AT THE TOP OF
THE STAIRS"
PHONE

Preston and Dorothy
McGuire

Robert

f

ALSO

I

"THE GUNS OF FORT
PETTICOAT"
Audie

Murphy

Sunday

NOW

NOW AT POPULAR PRICES
CONTINUOUS
PERFORMANCES!

Grant

Kathryn

THE GREAT ENTE RTAINMENT
SHOW!

Starts Sunday February 12
"A FEVER IN THE
BLOOD"

OPEN DAILY

1:30 P.M.

Efrem Zimbalisr, Jr., and
Angie Dickinson

Granger

ALSO

ALSO

"CRACK IN THE
MIRROR"
Orson Wells

the John Huston productton

5lhetrna Rittcr

"NORTH TO ALASKA"

College of Arts and Sciences students will
this summer in an Undergraduate Research Proparticipate
gram that is being financed by a $24,770 National Science
Foundation grant.
Twenty-tw-

&

ded

first place In technical paper competition between students from 13
colleges and universities in 12
states.
The cash pward of $150 was pre
sented by the Southeastern Section
of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers.
Boyer, whose home la at Turner's Station near Campbellsburg
in Henry County, submitted a student paper entitled "Supplemental
Lighting for Winter Orowth of
Plants."

"A

NOW

BREATH

SCANDAL"
Sophia Loren

Juliette Greco

SHOWING!

"BUTTERFIELD 8"
Eliiabrth Tjylor tddm FitlMr
"I AIM AT THE STARS"
Curt J urgent Victoria Shaw

OF

John Gavin

stu-cei-

Have a real

cigarette-ha-

'For flavor, you can't beat Camels'

AVAIANCHE
MUNTIR, SQUAW
SITE OF 'GO WINTER OLYMPIC

y

blur--

V

Veterans

If

it

Veterans attending school
under the G.I. Itiil should register in the veterans' office by
noon tomorrow for the spring
semester.

Recreation Committee
Will Meet Tomorrow

a CAMEL

ve

1

i.

V

IS

The Student Ui:ion Board Rec- reatlon Committee uill have a re- at 3 p.m.
organization
Fn.t i v. Feb. 10, in Room 204 of
the fcUB.
This committee which sponsors
such events as the SUB movies, the
billiards, table tennis, and bridge
tournaments, horse farms tours.
and "Hanging of the Greens," will
meet each Friday at 3 p.m. dua
tag the spring aemester.
fpT mnhfr r invited to at- -

teuV

B.

I. lUrMliU

TuttAM

uwwui, WuiMMi4ltUa. N. 0.

L

VALIEY
GAMES

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, , Fib.
I
I

'

'-

iiji.

tmiwi.
"

-

Wt

I

'

I

3

..'VpV';
n

"

.

L

.t,5

t,

'

.

Meetings

y

Student Traditions Change' At Vassar;
First Female President Was UK Dean
Y.
N.
(AT) No longer tlo eager Vassar girls arise early to chant
Creek together before break-

fast.
The famed Daisy Chain,
once woven from campus flow- rs and kept fresh overnight in
the old gymnasium's swimming
tank, is now made for Class Day
ceremonies by a local florist from
blooms flown In from California.
Bermuda shorts, tfght pants, or
baggy blue Jeans are accepted
wear tcxlay, but there was a time
when a golfing skirt three inches
lrom the ground brought hundreds
of girls to gape at their audacious
classmate.
and
traditions,
Enthusiasms,
clothes have changed during Vas-tar- 's
hundred years.
first
But the school itself still stands
in the public mind as the arch-typ- e
of a women's college. And
"Vassar girl" has come to mean
anything from careerist and esoteric intellectual to snobbish socialite, to the dismay of the fiercely
loyal alumnae and undergraduates.
"Girls here aren't snobbish,"
protests Nancy Dehn, pretty senior from Philadelphia. "We honestly don't know who is rich and
who Isn't, although sometimes we
can recognize last names. It isn't
as if we had sororities. And lots
of girls work."
Dean Marion Tait says there's
been a remarkable change in how
ftudents think about life after
graduation. Many more are going
on to graduate school. For the
first time evert sophomores are
discussing what they'll do when
they get out.
"Students are now beginning to
ay they would like to have a year
or two at a job before marrying,"
the says.
Centennial Celebration
Over the years, Vassar achieved
many firsts from the first woman
to win a Pulitzer Prize (Edna St.
Vincent Millay) to the first woman
to run a coal mine and become
assistant secretary of the treasury
(Josephine Roc he.) The number of
famous women
ary.
As the school celebrates its cen
tennial year under its first woman
president. Sarah Gibson Blanding
President Blanding is a former
dean of women and political
science instructor), here are some
current statistics: Enrollment is
1.471
from 46 states, District of
Columbia, Puerto Rico and 26
foreign countries. The faculty
numbers 174 men and women.
Tuition and residence is $2,500,
a sum that would make its canny
founder, Matthew Vassar, blink.
Every fifth student gets schol-nrshaid; many do part time
work.
d
of the
Where once
graduates remained spinsters, now
90 percent eventually marry.
about
A good fourth are married the first
yeiir after graduation.

Kirt

Vassar

girls

have

taken

a

pretty serious view of life for a
long time. It isn't the oldest
women's college, but it was the
one.
first
On Jan. 18. 1861, the New York
legislature passed an act to in- corporate the
Vassar Female College. The Female
was dropped several years later.
Vassar's founder was a sturdy,
bespectacled brewer with little
education. Nonetheless, he objected
to the prevailing opinion that
feminine brain was too frivolous
a contrivance for serious learning.
". . . Woman, having received
from her Creator the same intellectual constitution as man, has
the same right as man to intellectual culture and development."
Matthew Vassar said, and backed
up his words with $408,000 and 200
acres.
The childless merchant watched
the girls' progress with fatherly
pride, often referring to them in
letters as his daughters.
He staked out ground for the
college two miles outside Pough-keeps- ie
and 75 miles up the Hudson River from New York City
on the day Fort Sumter fell.
The Civil War delayed the
school's completion for four years.
September. 1865, having paid $350
for a year's tuition and residence,
353 young women from the United
States, Canada and Hawaii began

r

w

turn

v

their studies

Activities

U'Xij

TedestrUns have a perilous time at campus crosHings. Since the popular mode of travel at Vassar is
by bicycle, cyclists And it a cinch.

roUCHKEEFSIE,

under

30

members,

faculty

Recently

TIIETA SIGMA Till
Theta
Phi, women's
Sigma
honorary, will meet at
p.m. today in the McLaughlin
of the Journalism Building,
All members and pledges are
urged to attend.
STUDENT BAR WIVES
AUXILIARY
The Student Bar Wives Auxiliary will meet at 7:30 p.m. today
in the Seminar Room in Lafferty
Hall.
Guest speaker will be William
Brown, manager of the Castleton
Horse Farms. Wives of law students and Law faculty members
may attend.
DUTCH LUNCH
The Dutch Lunch Club will meet
at noon today in the Ballroom of
the Student Union. Fred Strache
will be the guest speaker.
The organization is a luncheon
club for women students who live
in Lexington and women who commute.
HAMILTON HOUSE ELECTIONS
Barbara Landrum, Junior home
economics major from Franklin.
was recently elected president of
Hamilton House.
Other officers are Linda Midkiff,
Hartford, vice president; Laurel
Hampton, La Center, secretary;
Jonelle Simmons, Auburn, treasur
er; Mary Jo Dixon. Independence,
huse manager; Elanor Burkhard,
Liberty, corresponding secretary.
Charlene Williams, Touristville,
cal chairman; Judy Hopkins,
Calhoun, activities chairman; Bet- -

Need Employment
Some 57 women students will be
unable to stay in school this semester if they do not get a Job.
Because many of the girls do
not type, nontyping Jobs are needed. Then again, some are very
Bood typists;
others even take
shorthand. Most of them are w ill- lnK to work wherever a Jpb is
available said Miss Margaret Ds- vine, assistant to the deafn of
women. Persons who can employ
such students should call Ext. 2213.

Fashion Notes...

At Mr. Mort, tney predict the
culotte replacing Bermuda shorts
(length here is Just above the
knee) . . . also jersey knickers,
worn under tweed skirts that but- ton down the front or are slde.
wrapped . . . overblouses and tunics sashed in leather . . . dimensional wools . . . lots of 'sweet
coiorSi such as yenow pink nnd
raspberry . . . blac accessories
used with navy And an emDnnsi3
on the costume look for weekellcl
travel-dreand Jacket, or dress
"'"i
and coat.
At Ship 'n' Shore, they predict
color as the number one fashion
item: the shock shades toned
down. They feel, too, that the
FARRANT - VAN ORDER
bateau neck,
look will
Mr. and Mrs. George A. Farrant, be Important. Belts will be of
Cheshire, Conn., announce the en- special interest
wherever they
gagement of their daughter, land, be it waistline, above, or beMarjorie, to James Stanford Van low.
Order, a Yale University gradu- ate from New Haven, Conn.
A small room will seem
Miss Farrant is a junior political whfll vnn lisp nisi in rnrfninc larger
in a
science major and a member of
ght color wHh walIs of the samQ
"Y" FACULTY FIRESIDE
Zeta Tau Alpha.
color. However, a small room seems
The Personnel and Campus Afeven smaller when dark or very
fairs Committee of the YWCA will
bright colors are used for the
Pin-Mat- es
hold a faculty fireside at the
curtains and the walls.
home of President and Mrs. Frank
O. Dickey at 7:30 p.m. Mon. Feb.
Sue Simmons, senior nursing
13.
student at the University of CinLook Better
Anyone interested should be at cinnati, from Ashland, to Larry
with
the "Y" Lounge at 7:15 p.m. or Deters, Delta Tau Delta, Junior
contact Dottie Martin.
major from Ashland.
CONTACT LENSES
Stringent Rules
Maria Mitchell, internationally
known astronomer, who presided
over the country's third largest
telescope in the school's observatory, was perhaps most influential
in shaping the first generation.
Guarding the girls' morals was
Hannah Lyman, the lady principal
President
John
by
appointed
Howard Raymond. A woman of
formidable femininity and virtue,
she kePl a vieant eye on their
urpuruiiem 10 De sure it was laay- like at all times, and required
them to change for dinner and
take two baths a week.
But a college girl of any generation is resourceful. Faculty
minutes in 1871 reported that five
students had smoked cigarettes,
three bad taken wine, three cor
responded with students at Bisbee
Military Academy in Poughkeepsie,
two of them with strangers.

"''

engagement

Eliminate
Acquire

P

it

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3

V--

it

.

.

.
-

.

.

"

W'

LEXINGTON
OPTICAL CO.

'

(

s

Eyeglasses

that Chic Look

Phone
For Appointment

V-

v

i
I

Wed

Ann Milton Smith, Kappa Kap.
Pa Gamma, senior commerce
iOT lrom Georgetown, to Clay
bel t Adams Jr., Transylvania Col-Rolege, from Cynthiana.
Judy West, Kappa Delta, sophomore art major from Mayfield, to
Don Harroldson, Kappa Sigma,
from Princeton, now at Murray
State College.

m ii n i i

.'I'm

,

3

133 W. Short St.

-

F

I
assar beauties of

1918

perform the fairy frolic. The frolic is a ceremony of selecting the class tree.

Fashion Future For 1961
'
T
is Leaning Tower Look'

NEW YORK (A') More than 200
fashion writers from throughout
the country were served a smor-- (
gasbord of spring trends in worn-U- K
en's clothes recently when they
were guests of a New York cou
ture group.
Tidbits in millinery, shoes and
children's wear were offered during the afternoon, with some solid
fare in the evening when International Silk Association members
numbers
introduced
from the
spring collections of well-knoAmerican designers.
Much of it was served with a
side order of the style influence
of the wife of President John F.
Kennedy.
Audiences heard the "best hatted
award winner of 191)9," Eleanor
Searle Whitney, tin a red derby)
describe a series of miniature sailors, silhouette turbans, and wide- -

brimmed cloches with the comc- hither appeal. But in between
sentences the ladies whispered
about the startlingly realistic
of the Kennedys brought
out at the John Fredrics hat show
earlier and designed to star in
retail store windows next spring.
Through the day reporters filed
this fashion data in their note-

VAv--

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SHOPPING CENTER
Ice Skating Indoors Or Outdoors

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books.

MORNING

The 'leaning tower look' will be
the fashion posture for 19G1.
Never mind carrying books on
your head or straightening your
shoulders. Pile your hair high, tilt
your chin forward, slope your
shoulders and push your tummy
forward a bit so that you look like
you slant when you walk.
In shoes the foot will be elongated, the point not quite so
severe, and with much of the style
carved into the shape of the beel.

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Children

OTHER SESSIONS
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75c Children

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* THE READERS' FORUM

The Kentucky Kernel

Physical Fitness

Univkhsity of Kentucky

d
postige pnld t Lexington, Kentucky.
Published four times a week during t!ie regular nrhnol yrar exrept during holiday! and exami.
SIX DOLLAK3 A SCHOOL YEAR
Second-clou-

Don Anderson, Editor
Newton Stencer, Sports Editor
Managing Editor
Hohmie Mason, Assistant Managing Editor
Lew Kisc, Advertising Manager
Beverly Caroweix and Tom Lennos, Society Editors
Skip Tavi.oh and Jim Ciiannon, Cartmmists
Business Manager
Nicky TorE, Circ ulation
Terry Ashley,

Mike Wenninger,

THURSDAY

Nonius Johnson, Keic$ Editor

"

NEWS STAFF

Newton Spencer, Sports

Miciiele Feahing, Associate

Fairer SC Apportionment

Now that Student Congress' fall
election is safely out of the way and
the congress has begun to work under
its new constitution it is time for the
body to consider revising a constitutional weakness that could seriously
damage student participation in the
congress if left unremedied.
Many students have already begun questioning the representation
clause that grants colleges congress
representatives according to the number of their University Faculty members instead of by student enrollment.
Under this clause the College of
Arts and Sciences with 2,300 students
enrolled for the fall semester has 42
while Engineering
representatives
has only 10 representatives for its
1,356 students. Thus, engineers have
of
the representation
Arts and Sciences students.
Agriculture and Home Economics
had only 557 students for the past
semester, yet the college has 28 congress representatives almost three
times as many as Engineering with
its 13 hundred students.
Such an apportionment is almost
as inexquitable as that of the Kentucky General Assembly in which the
District with
19th Representative

ll,2o l