xt7dz02z427z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7dz02z427z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19590317  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, March 17, 1959 text The Kentucky Kernel, March 17, 1959 1959 2013 true xt7dz02z427z section xt7dz02z427z Dogs And Veterans
Still Get Comment:
''Readers9 Forum"

W ear

The Green:
It's A Great Day

TTY

U2

For The Irish
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
LEXINGTON, KY., TUESDAY, MARCH

Vol. L

Tau Sigma Dance
Called 'Enjoy able'
By CAROLE MARTIN

The music, lighting and setting
wrre very effective. The blackout
at the end of the number was very
climactic.
An equally exceptional performance was eiven by Faye Stoklcy
in her translation of "Maturity."
She exhibited a strong feeling for
her role that was very apparent to
her audience.
Doth girls danced in a phase of
death called "Accident." The performance and choreography were
quite professional.
The first dance of the program,
"Friendship," painted an impressionistic picture of belonging to
and being rejected by the group.
A strong feeling of old age and
deterioration was aroused by the
mood of the rendition. "Senility."
Julia Barnhart performed in the
dance. "Faith."
was a refreshing
"Adolescence"
presentation of the various types
of teenage "queens." It was more
realistic than impressionistic.
One of the more abstract performances of the evening was
"Birth," danced by Lynn Bostick
and Ann Crawford.
Sandra Tattershall's choreography of "Jealousy" was very good.
Sandra was joined in the dance
by Susie Wilsox and Sue Harney.
All three of the girls gave outstanding performances.
The other phase of death, "Natural" was danced well by Lynn

I

Iff
In

v

--

No. 81

17, 1939

J

ly.

Tau Slump's presentation of "All
In Your lifetime" Saturday night
proved thoroughly enjoyable.
The piotram was a series of
dances depicting various phases in
a lifetime. All the cholegraphy was
done my numbers of Tau Sicma.
Julia I'arnhart's interpretation
of "Suicide" as a form of death
was perhaps the most outstanding
offering. I he dancer portrayed the
emotion of the situation excellent- -

Bulletin

March 1C
President Elsenhower
tonight a conditional willingness to attend a summitt conji
ference with Russia.
Hut he also said the United
States and its allies "stand firm
V
w fffavf ' iiww
wherever the probing finger of
r" I
an aggressor may point."
Tau Sigma, modern dance group, depicted different phases of life in its "All in a Lifetime'
The chief executive reported to
the nation by radio and televisconcerts Friday and Saturday.
ion on the Berlin crisis.
He took the expected stand
that the United States is not
abandoning any rights or deserting a free people but still is
ready to negotiate differences.
In unmistakable terms, Eisenhower let the American people,
Russia and the world know that
the United States has no intention to "try to purchase peace by
forsaking two million free people
of Berlin."
Bostick.
The President spoke of the
The finale, "Childhood." was repossibility that the Berlin situaminiscent of many of the games
By BILL BLAKEMAN
tion might carry the seeds of
letter requested an extension or the March 14 deadline, even if the
way
said "the risk of played in our early youth. Thestage
war. But he
dance had been a financial success.
The deadline for the Military loan.
war is minimized if we stand each of the dancers left the way Ball Committee to repay the $l,50t
Kaufman said there was a mis- He added it was the first time any
was very effective and a novel
firm."
loan from Student Congress will take in the original request for organization had been unable to
of ending the performance.
repay SC on time.
probably be extended.
the loan. He said members of the
The funds loaned to the military
, The committee,
composed of dance committtee were unable to
groups were deposited for the use
members of Arnold Air Society, attend the SC meeting, and ar- of
all students. An agreement must
Pershing Rifles and Scabbard and ranged for Ed Blankenship, SC
be reached when and how the
Blade, presented a plan to SC last representative, to make the renight calling for an extension of quest. Blankenship was misinform- funds are to be repaid, Dean Mared of the repayment deadline, tin said.
the loan. '
SC President Pete Perlman said
Jimmy Dorsey's band, featuring Kaufman said.
he saw no reason why SC would
loan not grant an extension of the
Dean Martin said the
Anderson emphasized the im- Lee Castle, played at the dance
Deadline for filing applications
could not have been repaid by the loan. He added the motion requestheld March 7.
for the Student Union Board is portance of the applications rather
ing the loan was presented with
5 p. m. tomorrow.
than the election itself. He said A meeting was held in Dean of
Applications must be returned to that under a present faculty ruling, Men Leslie L. Martin's office Frithe idea the dance would make a
profit, but because it didn't was
Room 122 of the SUB by that the entire board cannot be elected day afternoon to determine the
course to be taken by the dance
no reason to blame anyone.
time. John Anderson, SU Board by popular vote.
committee and SC.
president, made the announcement
The Military
Ball Committee
All applicants will be interviewed
met yesterday afternoon. After the
yesterday.
During the meeting, Dean Marby the SU Board Personnel Commeeting, it planned to attend SC
Anderson said applications are mittee and the entire board will tin said the various groups were
available in Room 122 or at the select the slate for the April 7 as "people in a family who have
and present a plan for repaying
the loan.
main desk of the SUB. All appli- election. The election will choose a problem to work out."
cants must have a sophomore five of the
Those , present at the meeting
Dean Martin said the Military
board. The
standing by next fall and a 2.5 other five members will be ap- Ball was one of the finest affairs
in addition to Dean Martin, Perlover-a- ll
standing. 6
man and Kaufman were. Dean
ever put on by a UK group, except
pointed.
Seward, SC advisor; Dr. Ben Black,
The board president said the
loss, which was
for the financial
Anderson said the new board will not a reflection on anyone.
board will
SC advisor; Capt. V. D. R. Guide,
election of the 1959-6- 0
be April 7, but added that all ap- be concerned with the proposed
Scabbard and Blade advisor; Capt.
Air Force Cadet, Col. Don Kauf
Morgan P. Morris, Pershing Rifles
plicants approved for the election expansion of the SUB. UK plans to man, chairman of the dance comwill be members of the board next add to the present building in the mittee, said a letter had been sent
advisor.
near future.
year.
s
to SC explaining the position of
Richard Roberts, SC Judiciary
the three groups.
Committee chairman; Clay Mau-pi- n,
director of Accounting DeThe letter said the exact loss President Pete Perlman felt SC
would allow the Military Ball Com- partment; David Craig, Military
would not be known until Monand Jo Anne
day because some cadets had not mittee an extension of time for Ball
repayment of the loan.
Brown, executive secretary of SC.
yet returned unsold tickets. The
WASHINGTON,

(AIM

an-ounc- ed

.ii

.i.

Extension Of Loam
By S C Seem Likely

Deadline Is Tomorrow
For SUB Applications
,

Louisville High School
Wins Newspaper First
evaluation and obA day-lon- g'
servation of high school publications drew over 600 Kentucky
high school Journalists to UK's
School of Journalism Friday.
The event was the 32nd annual,
publications clinic.
An engraved bronze plaque given
annually to an outstanding high
school newspaper in the state
went to Louisville's Presentation
Eagle.
The plaque is presented each
year by the University chapter of
Si?ma . Delta Chi, professional
fraternity. Chapter
journalistic
President Gurney Norman said the
award would be mailed to the staff
at Presentation Academy.
1 hree contests sponsored by the
Lexington Herald-Leade- r
Company
brought us!i awards to 13 stu

Pianist Howard Karp

dents. Top performers in spelling,
vocabulary and current events
contests won a total of $75.
The winners were Anne Dean,
Frankfort High School, was winner
Donald Dayton, Jessamine County
High School, and Ann Ray Martin,
Madisonville High School, were
By MEREDA DAVIS
tied for first in the vocabulary
Howard Karp, pianist, gave the
contest, and Johnny Sergent, University a
touch of what is misFrankfort High School was winner sed by the postponed Van Cliburn
(Continued on Page 8) .
concert Sunday afternoon.
The UK professor, who studied
with Madame Rosa Lhevinne, Van
Smarty Party
gave an
Mortar Board will have a Cliburn's teacher,
performance for the large
"smarty party" for all second
crowd that braved the March wind
semester junior and first semeshear the Musicale.
ter senior women students with to Judging from the enthusiastic
a 3.0 or higher standing. The
comments, no one
party will meet at 7 p.m. today applaute and
regretted the time spent at the
In the SI B Music Room.
conceit.

Performs At Musicale
awe-inspiri-

ng

Several persons later said they while listening.
Schumann's "Sonata in F Sharp
Minor, Op. 11" brought any ' possible straying ears back to the
attention of the performance. This
work called for an encore which
was much better than the piece by
Mozart.
Karp played the entire program
with the finesse and enthusiasm of
a great artist. It is easy to underany movement.
moment in
Major (K. V. stand how he has been recognized
"Sonata In It Flat
570)" by Moart was to keep the us one of the top pianists of today.
Next Sunday the University
audience's undivided attention, but
did his part to make it worth Symphonic Band will play.
Karp

were surprised the University
could keep such a talented person
as an instructor.
Schubert's "Sonata in A Minor,
Op. 42 (D. V. 843)" w as one of his
best performances in the program.
The work was written by an expert,
but Karp played it with perfection.
There was never an uninteresting

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March 17, 1959

Medical Educators Meet Here
"Patterns in the practice of

e

mcd-idn-

are being altered and with
them arc the changing philosophies of medical education."
This statement was made by Dr.
William R. Willard, vice president
.of the Medical Center, during a
dinner meeting in the Lafayette
Hotel.
The dinner was held In connection with a Joint UK nd University of Louisville conference on
education and medical
college admission Friday and Saturday.
The aim of the conference was
to provide an opportunity for
advisors and medical
school faculty concerned with admissions to consider objectives of
and medical education
pi
nnd problems of selecting students
vith the greatest potential.
Dr. Willard said the conference
helped establish better relations
'between the University of Louis- pre-medic-

al

al.

pre-mcdic-

Dr. Erikson Gets
Top Woman's Award

villc and UK In the medical school
and the universities in general.
Hockaday, diDr. William J.
rector of admissions for the UniLouisville School of
versity of
Medicine, said that motivation is
one area to be evaluated In the

prospective student.
"Perhaps the most valuable motivation lies In an interest In liking people " Dr. Hockaday said.
The Increasing number of stu-

dents attending college will

pro-

vide an adequate reservoir of

po-

tential medical students, but they
must be Informed of the opportunities in the field of medicine,
Dr. Willard said.
Even the high school level is not
too early for students to start
thinking about a medical career,
he said. Many of the top students are lost because they do not
go to college, he added.
Broad research activity is needed in these areas, the dean said,
and may be done Jointly by UK
and the University of Louisville.
He added that he also hopes the
two medical schools can help the
colleges do a
better counseling
Job.

Dr. Statie Erikson, UK distinGroup discussion pointed out
guished professor of home eco- that too many students wanting to
nomics, received the Progressive enter medical school have only a
Farmer magazine's "Woman of C average in
studies.
the Year" award over the week--n- d.
pre-medic-

al

The award was made at the 25th
MOVIE GUIDE
annual meeting; of the Kentucky
State Dietetic Association, held ASHLAND "Home Before Dark,"
Friday and Saturday in Louisville.
2:00, 5:48, 9:36.
"Tank Force." 4:27. 8:15.
Other University representatives
included Dr. Abby Marlatt. School BEN ALI "Somebody Up There
Likes Me." 3:02, 7:12.
ol Home Economics head and the
"The Last Time I Saw Paris."
dietetic group's president:
1:00, 5:10. 9:15.
Dr. Marcia Dake. dean of the
School of Nursing: and other fac- CIRCLE 25 "No Name on the
Bullet." 7:10, 10:40.
ulty members, home ec extension
"Hong Kong Confidential." 925.
talf and students.
FAMILY "Hot Car Girl," 7:10.

Medical schools usually accept only
students with B or above.

nt
Lexington, will study
Six University students have
Yale; and Porl H'ilklnson, LexThe opcnhTfj conference Includ- been named as Woodrow Wilson
work In sociology
ed a discussion of "Trends In Med- Fellows for 1959 GO, the national ington, will do
an undecided university.
ical College Applications," by Dr. fellowship foundation announced at
The fellowships this year went
Hockaday and a statement on Sunday.
to 1,200 American and Canadiiu
"Orientation and Cioals of Medical
They are:
for graduate work at 80
Education" by Dr. Edmund D.
Susan Darnell. Lexington, who students
professor and chairman of will study Enclish literature nt universities. Each fellow recei"s
living allowance plus tuiUK's Department of Medicine.
Yale; Phoebe Estes. Lexington, who n $1,500
Dr. Robert Straus, chairman of will study English and American tion and fees. The fellowships sire
the Committee on Medical Admis- literature at Harvard; Charles M. hacked by n $25 million Fo:d
sions, spoke on "Trends in Course Hudson. Frankfort. He will study Foundation grant.
Requirement and Admission Pro- cultural nnthroilogy at the Unicedures."
versity of North Carolina.
Dr. William F. Furnish, professor
flay f. Ross Jr., Lexington, will
of biology at the University of study mathematics, also at North
Louisville, spoke on "Orientation Carolina ; Marian L. Van Home,
Educaand Goals of
Allen Dawson was recently electtion."
Epsilm
Delta
ed president of
I
At a dinner meeting. Dr. J. Mur-r- y
chapter, Delta Tail Delta fraterKinsman, dean of the School of
MvvX nity.
Louisville and Dr. To
Medicine at
Other new officers are:
Willard spoke on "Medical EducaBrit Kirwan. vice president;
Lois Combs. College of
Miss
tion in Kentucky "
Economics instructor, will Dave Routledge. secretary; Eddi?
Homo
attend a workshop for electrical Thomas, treasurer; Bill McGood-win- .
assistant treasurer; Dave
living Saturday in Dayton. Ohio.
Law
secretary.
corresponding
Tage,
Miss Combs teaches household
sergcant-at-ar:nAll students now enrolled at
equipment here nnd is resident ad- Waller Hulette. guide.
UK expecting to enter the Coland Alan Isaacs,
management.
lege of Law next September are visor in home
requested by the registrar to
apply for entrance either Thursday or Friday. All applications
should be filed in Room 104, Ad--

Tfl-legrln-

Pre-Medic-

al

Attend Dayton

Applications

s;

:y.:,

I

S,

v

v1ift ii

fr

firs

W

NOW SHOWING

flip
int.

yy

7

:

PICTURE
ABOUT

Open Daily 1:30 p.m.

Remarkable

Euclid Avenue

PENNYmCKER

IIIGHT-

Chevy Chase

-

l

TIME

4

MOW SHOWING!
"HOME BEFORE DARK"
Jean Simmons Rhonda Fleming
"TANK FORCE"
Victor Mature Leo Cenn

if!

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
NO ADDED COST

Be

LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING

THAT
1

MR.

tlXINCTON

1:5G,

3:54. 5:52, 7:50. 9:48.
STRAND "The Mating Game."
12:00. 1:58. 3:56, 5:54, 7:52. 9;50.

mm

IHAI

Remarkable
12:00,

Mi BAY

ministration Building. The adat
mission test will be given
Ohio State April 18 and at UK
Aug. 1. Applications must be
filed at least two weeks before
those dates. Forms are available
at the Registrar's Office.

Cry Baby Killer." 8:50.

I'lfAll

Iiistruclor

Ilonif

10:05'.'

CH

o,

Dawson Is Named
President Of Dells

--

KENTUCKY "The
Mr. Pennypacker,"

Six UK Students Receive
Woodrow Wilson Awards
literature

GIRL!

Phone

Two Keys Restaurant
t'flnt
DEBBIE REYNOLDS
TONY RANDALL
MGM

ow Open
::-

J,

P"7heAdttitg Game"
Sy
JY

I

CAEtf ASCCPE and METRCCOLOR
u.r- -c

--

FRED CLARK

They parlayed Pa's
!Hm

N'

'

"

35

150 Discount
265 Euclid Ave.
Cosh & Carry
Next to Coliseum
1966 Harrodsburg Road
880 East High Street

KINIUCKT

A RACY,
RIOTOUS NEW
COMfD HIT!

-

3-02-

i V,;

1

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applejack and daughter's
haystack into $14,000,000
tax refund

I

jC

Luncheon Special

T

Midnite

Hit First Dramatic Screen Role
Jolt You Out Of Your Seat!

.

,

Choice of Meat

as'Danny"

Two Vegetables

Will

Salad

STARTS

Drink

SAW

TOMORROW! ,

PARIS' and
"SOMEBODY UP THERE
LIKES ME"

-

KlTT

SAMMY DAVIS

NOW PLAYING
'THE LAST TIME

Serving from 8 a.m.

S'wiiif

EARTHA

,

r-

-

All
For

$1

STARTS THURSDAY
SOUP SPECIAL

THE GREATEST

NOW

HUMAN DRAMA

EVER FILMED!

&

WED.

Choice of Soup and Sandwich

"HOT CAR GIRL"
"CRY BABY KILLER"

SERVING

NIGHTLY

.

..

Steaks
STARTS THURS.

"HOME BEFORE DARK"
J.U
CCH C

'

AM

!'

A

r

.

"

fc.

MASSEY

4

Sea Foods
Lamb Fries

TWO KEYS Restaurant
333 South Lime

i
''

Chops

Chicken Liver

Jean S'"'.Tionj

..

Phone

I

OWNERS

W.

E.

McGURK and A. C. COLVIN

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Tuesday, March

UK Group
To Release
New Report

Applications for Links, junior
women's honorary, must be filed

March 20. All present second semester sophomores with a
3.0 academic standing may apply
In the Dean of Women's Office.

al

i?

UK Student

Ties For 4th
In Drill Meet

Application foims for membership in Omicron Drlla Kappa,
rr.m's leadfrship honorary, may
be obtained in the Dean of Men's
Off lie. Senior and second semester junior men having 3.0 overall standings are eligible. Forms
mu-.- t
be filled out and returned
to the office by noon tomorrow.

13-1-

Illinois.
Lee H. Hanson, Ben H. Badley,
Larry R. Strong. Bill Gross, Bill
Scale. David Stiff, and John P.
Emrath represented UK at the
drill meet.

Larry Strong tied for fourth
place with Wells E. Cunningham
of Missouri in the individual rifle
competition. Over 200 participated
in the latter event.
Last year UK placed Tom Shif-ffifth. Chappel Wilson sixth,
and Kenneth Hickson seventh.
Purdue University won the exhibition competition.
Pennsylvania Military College
won the regular drill competition.

Dr. Thomas M. Hahn Jr., 1954
UK graduate, will become dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences at
Kansas State College this fall.
He is former head of the Phyics
Department of Virginia Polytech-

nic Institute.

27

LEXINGTON
AAA ROAD SERVICE
'

GO FORMAL
COMPLETE

.

i

Patrick's Day because when the
saint preached the Gospel to the
pagan Irish, he illustrated
the
doctrine of the Trinity by showing
them a trefoil, or three-leave- d
grass with one stalk. The green
signifies undying gratitude to his
memory.

Newman Club

For ALL Occasions

NY'S

MEN'S
WEAR

120

S. UPPER
TEL.
Dave Chadwick Campus Representative
4-65-

00

JI

III
III

M
II

,

On-the-- go

'

Lenten devotions will be held
in the Newman Club Chapel tonight. Father Frank Campbell,
assistant pastor
at St. Paul's
Church, will speak on '"Stations
of the Cross and Renedictions."

Regular

Size-

-

HAMBURGER
WITH FRIED ONIONS
Crry-ou- t,

.

I
'J.LL

archies
106 W. Euclid

SvJP

...

JA&

235, 460, 620, 982

Four Winners

..

...

ft
CAMPUS

J

flg

5. 0 Ml.

or.

.

EATON'S COKRASABLE BOND
Typewriter Paper
It's

ciricli to "rul out"
i
iuis and leave no
'Vine?' , when you use
Kat. Hi's Corrasuble IJonJ
l'aner. !S'i'er smears, never
t

x

j

ir

a

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f'

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''

:.

f

leeause
like-nuii-

c

siu laee . . . ckim's u ithout a
truce! (A lliek of the wrist
ami a. peneil eraser puts
things riht!) This line
quality homl paper gives a
lun.lsome appearance to all
your work. It's a perfect
crime not to use it !

v.,i

Erasable Corrasable is available in an trie wenmts y
m'fjht require from onionskin to hr-- y
lionj
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packets and Dtc srett rfcani bonei
venert
A Berkshire Typewriter Paper, tackeo bv the famo
Eaton name.

,K

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100-she-

jl
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7 for $1

OK GRILL
(2 Blocks from Coliseum)

,

McVcy Hall

The case of the typing paper
that erased without a trace

0

lilt

BOOK STORE

'.".'

ft

f-c-

j

simi'les

Wc Serve If Fast for
People

P
'

j

Conajhfe

W

O

WHY

Dr. Abby Marlatt. head of the
UK School of Home Economics,
will present a paper before the

Society for Research in Child Development this week.
The paper will be presented at
the annual meeting of the Na
St. Patrick led quite a life for tional Institute for Mental Health'
a saint. He was born neither Irish- at Bethesda, Md. The meeting will
man nor Catholic. Korn at Kilpa-trit- k, be from March
Scotland in 383, he was the
n
son of a
deacon.
When he was 16, he was carried
off by Irish marauders. His captivity brought about his conversion to Catholicism.
AT
In Ireland, many legends, traditions and stories have been in
spired from the earliest times from
this background.
St. Patrick confesses he was
imprisoned some seven, times, and
that his life was in danger many

RENTAL SERVICE
ECU

National Institute
To Get Marlalt Paper

more.
Legends say that he chased the
serpents from the island of Ireland by means of a staff given
him by Christ. To this day there
are no snakes in Ireland.
His vision of purgatory in a
wild cave on the island of Lough
Derg. caused the cave to be closed.
The shamrock is worn on St.

"COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE n
PHONE

3

I

Appointed Dean
Al Kansas Stale

EATON
PAPER

Incorporated

.

si
V
L

Celto-Roma-

TAYLOR TIRE CO.

R

0TfK.

19-2- 1.

o:i

2-71-

PDM

OF THE

VOI SH0ULD 0fc APLE TO COW- --V CENTRATE
AND THINK

UK '13 Graduate

St. Patrick's Day Filled

'

24-HOU-

will admnmez the

t'.s OUT

lecture on Bwtidhlsm will
be presented by Dr. Roger Chacon of the I'K Thilosophy Department at 4 p. m. today in the
SUB Music Room.

Pershing Rifles attended the
Illinois Invitational Drill Meet
4
March
at the University of

By GARNETT BROWN

Ep-m1-

VINE

V

WITH

-

A

Today St. Pratrick's Day is celeworld with
William Block has been elected brated around the
parades, dinners and balls. It's a
y w president of Tau Kappa
fraternity. He .succeeds Mark special occasion in Dublin, and in
New York there's a parade down
A.:dei on.
O'lv r new officers include Pete Fifth Avenue past St. Patrick's
Bake, vice president; Jim Harp-- r. Cathedral.
The day, observed .from earliest
McreUryJ Bill Desmond, treas-u:- r;
Barry Avcrill. social chair-n.- n times, expresses the patriotism of
Irishmen wherever they are.
juid Lonnie Yates, historian.

E.

cXAM-

With Legend, Tradition

II! nek Is Elected
Nviv TKE Proxy

400

7y cffiaoffu

I

Philosophy Club

er

(PI)K Applications

s

93!)

Kentucky.
The Kentucky Geological Survey
will issue the booklet. "Behind the
Scenery in Kentucky." It Is written for general reader interest and
for visitors to Kentucky.

ge

in-'p.-

1

LITTLE MAN ONXAMPUS

Dr. A. C. McFanan, nead of the
UK Geology Department, has written an illustrated: booklet on the
geological structure and history of

by

The University's Bureau of
School Service has released a
report
entitled "Where
Does Your Community Stand in
Financing Its Schools?"
The school srrylce staff said the
rrport was not presented assuming
money Is the most important thinjj
and communities should 'race' with
each other.
Tables are presented with the
amount .pent on each child In
Kentucky school districts, comparisons of amounts which school
dbtricts spend on each child,
sources of school revenue and tax
iates on real estate.
AUo presented are the relationships of welfare payments to
and support compared to
state-federsupport for education
in the local school districts, and
;ther charts.
46-pa-

UK's McFurlnn
Writes Hooklel

Links Applications

17,

11-

t lf
'
-

EATON'S COKUASA1JLE

IJOil

Made only by Eato.

ETO

I'AI'KK

COIU'ORAIION

'

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E)

I'll TSI

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I

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* The Readers' Form

The Smear That Lingers
A little

over half a decade has

passed since the nationwide "Commie"
hysteria of the McCarthy committee
-- more than five years for the various
"lists" to be discredited ami forgotten.
We thought the day had passed when
an organization or an individual
could be blackballed simply because
someone with a selfish motive or an
undying grudge whispered "Red."
But, unfortunately, we were mistaken.
When Diane Hatch, NSA executive vice premlent, presented the program and aims of her organization
to Student Congress last week, fully
half the discussion dealt with NSA's
reported communistic leanings. That
NSA was included on the "Redlist"
same
compiled by J. B. Matthews-t- he
man who indiscriminately smeared
7,000 American clergymen with the
same charge made no difference to
SC spokesmen. These representatives
had received their information from
sources who evidently were determined, by any method, to keep the
University from becoming a part of
NSA.

But another SC representative
pointed out that National Student
Association has the support of such

notorious "Commies" as the President
of the United States, the vice president and Sen. John F. Kennedy. This
information, along with Miss Hatch's
explanation of the setup of NSA
which makes Communist infiltration
within the organization impossible,
should have conclusively voided the
"Red" label.
If persons affiliated with the Communist Tarty were to be sent as delegates to NSA's annual congress, they
would go with credentials signed by
their deans of men and women as
well as by the president of their
student governing body. They would
represent a school which had been
taken over by the Communist Party.
For NSA policy decisions to be made
of the
by Communists,
member schools would have to have
a "Red" student body and an ads
ministration made up of
Such a situation
or
is not likely to arise.
By joining a national body, Southern schools could have a voice and
votes in policy decisions, and, perhaps, by making their position on
segregation clear, could cause the
policies affecting them to be tempered.
s

two-third-

card-carrier-

fellow-traveler-

s.

Tempest In A Cookie Jar
the
Like all good newspapers,
Kernel has always stood amongst the
.staunchest supporters of those three
great symbols of America: motherhood, the flag and Girl Scout cookies.
But, alas and alackaday, we have
been brought to our knees in adject
humiliation' by reading in yesterday's
newspapers that one of our revered
idols Girl Scout cookies has crumbled, as it were, at our feet.
We had always thought Girl Scouts
were nice, wholesome,
maids, banded together in troops led
by matrons who were pillars of the
home, the church, the community
indeed, the nation. We were so overcome by our naivete that we thought
their principal activities were camping, singing, roasting marshmallows,
and selling carloads of Girl Scout
cookies each year.
How could we know how could we
have even suspected the truth Little
the
did we realize the chicanery,
charlatanism, that hid beneath those
crisp green uniforms, behind those
innocent blue eyes. We had no inkling, until yesterday when a California Teamsters Union local revealed
kid-sisteris-

the inconceivable
Scouts have

h

truth, that Girl

been selling

cookies

bakeries!
The union did the only right thing,
of course. It withdrew $4,000 from
the United Crusade, a San Francisco
groups.
association of public-welfarAnd to show that he meant business,
the union's secretary, one Wendell
Phillips, said the funds would be
withheld until the girls promised not
cookies.
to sell
We toss garlands of editorial roses
to the Teamsters. The Girl Scouts
must be shown that they cannot hide
under the guise of charity and
Americanism and get away with such
baked in

non-unio-

n

e

non-unio-

n

cookpoltroonery as selling
ies. Would they ignore the fact that
the Teamsters depend upon those
cookie sales for their livelihood?
Would they deny the Teamsters' kiddies their nightly bowl of milk, their
non-unio- n

new Easter shoes?
Tears stream down our face as we
envision Jimmy Hoffa, standing before his glowing oven, waist deep in
unsold Girl Scout cookies, each bearing a union seal impressed upon the
union-madcookie batter by the tender, loving hand of the conscientious,
community-mindeTeamsters lead
er.
Shame on you, Girl Scoutsl
e

d

An Educational Swindle
Many college presidents for a number of years have been trying and
hoping to recapture athletics from
professionalism for education. Now
one of them, with the gilt and the
courage for saying things "with the
bark off" (to quote John Nance
Garner, has something as is needs
to be said.

The athletic scholarship, President
A. Whitney Griswold of Yale told a
Johns Hopkins University audience,
is "one of the greatest educational
swindles ever perpetrated on American youth." Why? Dr. Griswold
spelled it out:
Its aim is not the education of that
youth but the entertainment of its
elders; not the welfare of the athlete,
but the pleasure of the spectator.
athl
Are outstanding
letes sought and wooed and athletic
high-schoo-

scholarships granted for truly educational objectives? How many recipients, qualified and eager for a college education, would be denied the
opportunity were athletic scholarships
abolished? And how many recipients
both qualified and eager, (and there
are doubtless quite a few) find that
the obligations they incur to the
stadium or the basketball court get
in the way of their ambitions for an
education? Do they, too, find that
their college training has prepared
them chiefly for professional sports?

There

is

nothing

intrinsically

wrong with professional sports when
carried on as frankly professional.
But there is a great deal wrong with
a s)stem that carries on a form of
professionalism under the guise of

education philanthropy.
-- The Christian Science Monitor

Veterans Ask Too Much
To The Editor:
I think the time has come for somebody to say something about the
complaints of residents of Coopers-tow- n
over the proposed raise in rentals. The burden of all the complaints
is that GI's cannot pay any more with
the government allowance. That is
not the fundamental point. The question is whether as an economic fact
the rent should be raised. It is believed that if the students affected
will investigate they will find they
cannot rent apartments out in town
at comparable figures.
There is something wrong when a
GI expects the government to send
him to college along with a wife,
baby, automobile, radio, television
and otherwise support him in the
style to which he has become accustomed. Let's see these young men
perdo something for themsclves-a- nd
haps put some personal sacrifice into
their educations. There is some limit
to what the government should do
for people even GI's.
P. S.- -I am an
a taxpayer.

don't cherish the idea of having
was in his playpenmy little boy-w- ho
licked in the fa(C by an
-being
dog that has been rolling
around in cow excrement in the fields
behind Shawneetown. This has hapI

ill-bre-

d

pened
I have noticed that the "house dogs"
in Shawneetown arc those that must
come out to "pcifonn" and then ate
turned out and 10am free. May I also
call it to your attention that most
of the dogs in Shawneetown belong to
couples without children. How can
they possibly anticipate the problems
that arise when a child and a dog
meet?
Granted, dogs are valuable to science, etc., but so are monkeys and
horses, and theic is room enough for
them in the fields behind Shawneetown, too.
Having a dog in my own home
when I was young makes mc awaic
of the niceties. lint how can people
be so cruel to a dog as to have him
feared by children and haled by
neighbors, as they are at Shawnee- -'
town? How can we have a pleasant
feeling toward these dogs and their
owners when, after a day at school
and work at home caring for a child
Roy Moreland
and husband, one must listen to a
dog that is tied up in the yard bark
A Matter Of Guts
all night?
To The Editor:
c
People aie due a bit of considerNothing burns me more than to ation also, Mrs. Hannin.
read a long, windy dissertation by
Mrs. RrsshLi. Miiukln
bitterly complaining
some irate reader
about some trivial episode in his
Political Menagerie
amoebic life and then find at the
bottom of the letter: "Name With- To The Editor:
Recently it has come to my attenheld."
Obviously the world is full of tion that our beloved student pep
cowards, but the few individual