xt7fbg2h9q49 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7fbg2h9q49/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19641204  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, December  4, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, December  4, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7fbg2h9q49 section xt7fbg2h9q49 Registration Improvement

SC Committee Lists
13 Recommendations
By KENNETH GREEN
Kernel News Editor
The Student Registration Improvement Committee yesterday
afternoon formally submitted its report to University Executive Vice
President A. D. Albright.
The Faculty Registration Committee will hear the revised report
next week in a special meeting. At that time it will vote whether
or not to accept the recommendations.
The report, a revised version of the report submitted earlier this
semester, made 13 recommendations:
1. Registration for the spring semester, 1965, should be based
upon the students' grade point standings for the fall semester, 1964.
2. All tables which are not directly relevant to the registration
process should be excluded. This includes the Kentuckian table,
student insurance table, and all other related tables which have
been located in the past between the two main sections of class
registration (along the back of the Coliseum).
3. The deans of the colleges or the department heads should be
placed in the Coliseum for advising purposes.
4. Craduate assistants and students from each department should
be hired to staff all tables in the Coliseum. Students who have
worked in registration previously should have priority.
5. A supervisor should be placed at each class ticket table to
assist the students who are distributing the tickets, in the event
that a problem should arise.
6. Students should be required to show their blue IBM schedule
card to the class ticket distributor before they can receive class
tickets.
7. Deliquent blue IBM schedule cards shoud be placed in the
Coliseum. One person from the business office could collect fees
from the deliquent students.
8. Filling out of the information cards should be postponed until
after students have obtained their class cards.
9. All registration workers should go through a short orientation
program. This program could be conducted 45 minutes before registration begins. The person in charge of each of the eight stations
should be responsible for the orientation of his workers.
10. For workers at the Coliseum, there should be no lunch break
during registration without the station supervisor's permission.
11. Instructions on how to register properly should be printed and
made accessible to all students.
12. There should be at least six days to pay fees.
13. A few of the employees in the business office in the Administration Building should be on hand to help the cashiers when
students pay their fees.
Along with these recommendations, the committee presented a
revised registration plan, concerning the placing and the nature of
the different stations:
Station One: the student enters the Coliseum by presenting his
previous semester's grade report at his specified hour. Before
entering the Coliseum, the student must have obtained schedule
cards from his dean's office.
Station Two: the student goes directly to the tables in front of
the schedule board and fills out his schedule cards.
Station Three: the student's schedule cards will then be checked
for completion, after which he will be given a blue 1MB schedule
card and admitted to the class ticket area.
Station Four: the student goes to the tables of the department
listed on his schedules and collects him IBM class cards.
After making certain that each of the students has his blue IBM
schedule card, the class card distributors initial the students'
schedule cards, the student then goes to the work tables provided
and fills out his blue IBM class schedule card and completes the
other schedule cards.
Station Five: the student then goes to his dean's table and
presents his class schedule cards, his 1MB class cards, and his blue
IBM schedule card.. The deans' representatives check the cards and
retain the necessary ones.
The representative stamps the blue IBM schedule card and the
completed class schedule cards and returns them to the students,
together with a card from the student's college.
Station Six: the student proceeds to the registrar's table, where
he presents his college card, his blue IBM schedule card, and his
IBM class cards which have been approved by his dean.
Station Seven: the student is then given information cards and
admitted to the bleachers to fill them out.
Station Eight: After filling out his information cards, the student presents them to Station Eight, where they are checked and
given to the designated personnel. Having passed through Station
Eight, the student is either admitted to the ID picture line or permitted to exit.
The committee, with the aid of Student Congress, under which
it functions, sent letters to 31 different colleges and universities
across the country.
The letters sent out asked for the various colleges' and universities' systems of registration.
Of the committee's recommendations, Jerry Conrad, a senior
education major and a participant in the original protest from which
the committee evolved, said:
"If followed carefully and faithfully, I think that this plan will
work in the spring semester (of 1965). It's certainly not a cure-al- l,
but I think it will help a lot.
"The main thing is that no one should be in the Coliseum who
shouldn't be there. We have planned for about 415 students an hour
to come through, and if any more come through, it will mess up
the whole thing."
UK President Dr. John VV. Oswald received the protest Sept. 4.
It was organized Sept. 3, after the last day of registration.
At that time, Dr. Oswald said he accepted the petition "in the
same constructive spirit in which it was presented."
The petition, presented to Dr. Oswald by Jerry Conrad and Bill
Milam, a junior electrical engineering major, read:
"We, the undersigned members of the University of Kentucky,
protest the total lack of adequate facilities and personnel for registration and fee payment of this, the fall semester of 1964."
The petition was accompanied by over 400 signatures.
On Sept. 15 Student Congress President Steve Beshear, under
the supervision of President Oswald, appointed members to the
newly formed Student Registration Improvement Committee.

Vol. LVI, No. 52

University of Kentucky
DEC.
LEXINGTON,

KY., FRIDAY,

4, 1964

J
Eight Pages

NBC's Chet Huntley Speaks
Saturday At UK Coliseum
Chet Huntley, veteran broadviewing audience.
caster of NBC news, will appear
Mr. Huntley admits that he
at the Coliseum at 8:15 p.m. is sometimes irresistibly drawn
tommorow night as a guest lecto the light news item. He once
turer of the Central Kentucky ended a new report with the
anecdote.
Concert and Lecture Association.
"There's a story, current and
Besides his work with David
maybe apocryphal, that Chester
Brinkley on the Huntley-Brink-le- y
Report, Mr. Huntley has also

done numerous assignments on
the "NBC White Paper" documentary series and other special
programs such as the Presidential Election returns and the coverage of the Democratic and Republican conventions.
During the years he has been
associated with NBC News, Mr.
Huntley has won more than two
dozen awards for his reporting.
He studied at Montana State
University. Here, he abandoned
an earlier ambition to study medicine and went to work in speech

and drama.

He transferred to Washington
University where he obtained a
degree in 1934.
In 1956, he joined NBC after
working for both CBS and ABC.
Within a year, he found himself teamed with David Brink-ley.

The

Huntley-Brinkle- y

team

anchored the 1962 election returns
which drew nearly half of the

Hanging
Of The Greens
The Hanging of the Greens,
the traditional beginning of the
Christmas season at the University, will be Tuesday at 4 and
7 p.m. in the ballroom of the
Student Center.
Dr. John W. Oswald, president of the University, will play
Santa Claus to children from the
Lexington Orphans Home.

Centennial Office
May Take Over
SC Music Room

Bowles was asked why he had

turned down a proffered job as
Under Secretary of the Treasury.
"He is alleged to have replied, 'I just couldn't see myself calling the Secretary on the
?
telephone and saying, 'Mr.
This is Chester.' "
Dil-lion-

SC Outlines Plans

For Centennial Year

Ideas on ways to accomplish the goals of the Student Concress
centennial committee were outl ined at Thursday night's congress
meeting.
Larry Kelley, chairman of the
committee, said congress should
consider joining a national student government organization.
He said by joining the National
Student Association or the Associated Student Governments, the
University congress could show
great benefits as a residt of an
exchange of ideas with similar

organizations.

Kelley said it had been suggested that Student Congress organize a Kentucky Student Association in order that student
governing bodies of colleges and
universitites in Kentucky could
meet and exchange idea.
Plans call for the formation
of a President's Roundtable, Kelley said. He said this would be
a periodic meeting of campus
leaders in an effort to achieve

better coordination of campus

events. Kelley said it was hoped
the first meeting could be held
early next semester.
Kelley said committees would
be appointed to continue the work
of subcommittees of the Student
Centennial Committee. He said
congress felt the work of these
groups should be continued after
the Centennial celebration.
In an effort to achieve coordination with other colleges
and universities, Kelley said it
was hoped Student Congress
could publish a study of student
governing organizations. He said

the study would be sent to other
institutions and would serve as
a congress contribution to the
Centennial celebration.
In other business, congress rea motion to reconsider a
$600 grant to the debate team.
Dr. Gifford Blyton, sponsor of
the debate team, told congress
the money would be used for
operational expenses, and other
funds would be used for financial
aid to debate students.
Dr. Blyton said he had committed himself to use the funds
after the congress grant three
weeks ago. The motion to reconsider the grant was made
two weeks ago after some congress members said it was not
the place of Student Congress to
give financial aid to students.
Congress appropriated a total
of $120 for prizes for winners of
a contest to design a central billboard for the University campus.
The contest will be a competitive
program among students in the
School of Architecture.
Construction of the billboard,
and two smaller billboards, will
be financed by the University
administration. Persons entering
the contest should submit completed plans by Jan. 25.
Prizes will include $75 for the
winning drawing, $30 for second
place and $15 for third place. Placing of the billboard is included
in the contest.

jected

Vice President Robert Kerley

has sent a letter to the Student
Center Board recommending that
the Music Room in the Student
Center be converted to the central
office for theCentennial Committee.

The decision whether or not to
accept the recommendation is
still pending.
When contacted this morning,
Miss Mackie Rasdell, director of
the Student Center, said that to
her knowledge "no decision has
been made on this matter. I believe that the decision is still
pending. The Centennial Committee has decided to enlarge its
office, however."
John Stadler, president of the
Student Center Board, was
for comment.

Correction
It was incorrectly reported
in yesterday's Kernel that participation in the Quiz Bowl will
be open to all campus organizations. It is open to all residence units, Creek organizations,
and
residents only.
Applications are available at
the Information Desk in the Student Center or from the Student
Center Board Office, Km. 203 in
the Student Center. Applications
must be in by Dec. 11.

English Department
Sponsors Poet Kelly

Poet Robert Kelly will be presented by the Department of
English in a reading of his poetry at 8 p.m. today in Room 206,

Student Center.

Mr. Kelly is the author of poems including "Her Body Against
Time," "Weeks," "Round Dances," and "At the Foot of the Letter."
He was born in Brooklyn in 1935 and was graduated from City
College in 1955. He is coed itor of the literary magazine, TROBAR,
and has a first book of verse, "The Armed Descent," published
by Hawk's Well Press in 1961. His interest and awareness has
constantly involved itself in the poem, the communication, the
"Deep Image." He was one of eight poets who joined in the
making of The Blue Yak, a poet's cooperative which managed to
keep itself alive through 1961 in New York.
The Editor's Note to "Her Body Against Time" speaks of Mr.
Kelly's work as follows: "Among the voices shrieking the madness
of these years, howling its agonies, examining its form and intention,
harnessing its dialogue, here is a voice which is noneof these and
all of them a particular examination deep as any moan yet light
as the lyric sun. The song is a profound one, streaked with the
lights and shadows of a world transposed on ours and coming out
of it his vocabulary and form are the language by which he shows
us what we need to see."
Kelly currently teaches English at Bard College where he lives
with his wife Joan.
In response to a request for biographical information, Kelly
wrote, ". . . .further my life has been a rich and exciting one in a
way no data would give any sense of. (Example: as 1 finished the
last line, Jody brought my lunch in to me, the touch of her gentle
arm against mine, a yellow flower in the tray in a tiny vase
Zukofsky gave us, the yellow flower trembling slightly in the
breeze. How shall I speak of that?"

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday

2

Dec. 4, 1964

AIAA Officers
Student officers of the American Institute of Aeronautics and
Astronautics have been named at
the University.

dm

Center Motel

65 Modern Units
Efficiencies
Restaurant
Across from UK Medical Center
On U.S. 27
Rose and Limestone
24-Ho- ur

The chairman is Davis Peck,
Lexington, who succeeds Ben
Kroderson, Franklin. Other officers, who will be installed at
a dinner meeting in December,
are Tim Skinner, Hopkinsville,
vice chairman; Dennis Johnson,
Rockford, III., treasurer; and
Mar' Gibson, Falmouth, secretary. George II. White of the
College of Engineering is faculty adviser to the club.

.3i C3

Phone

Lexington

252-009-

9

Weekend Delight
pancake treats
chicken, jumbo shrimp
steaks, 'Perkins-burge- r'

Taste-tempti- ng

Honey-dippeChar-broile-

Livestock Judging Team

The Uoircnitj U restock jadrinf turn recently took top honors in
LlTestock Exposition.
swine jadftaf at both the Fennsylf-aniPs- -, and the Eastern National Liresteck Show, Thnoniam,
Md. The Kentncklans also garnered second place honors In Jodging
all animal categories at the Maryland erent. One of the trophies won
Is held by Dr. Don Pinner, team coach. lie is flanked by Larry
Phillips (left). Maysrille. and Ben Crawford. HodgenTille. Other team
members are, from the left, Tom Oldneld, White Oak; Robert Fro man,
Ghent; Da rid Qnisenberry, Louisrille; Dennis Liptrap, Otterbien,
InL; and Owen Harris, Carroll ton.

...

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x
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IIIUI1MU

Nearly a fifth of the U.S. population one year and over moved
between April 1961 and April
1962, according to the Census
Bureau.

faculty

activities
Robert F. Kerley, University
vice president for business affairs,
has been appointed to major posts
with two national education
groups.
Beginning Jan. 1, he will serv e
term on the federal
a four-yerelations commission of the American Council on Education. He
also will serve throughout 1965
on the steering committee for the
Third Institute on Administration
of the Association of American
Medical Colleges.
He will be the only senior
business officer of an American
college or university serving with

CENTRAL KENTUCKY
PHILHARMONIC
Presents
GEORGETOWN COLLEGE
ORATORIO CHORUS
in "The Creation" by Haydn
Plus a full Concert conducted
by Robert King
DEC. 4
8:15 P.M.
Henry Clay Auditorium
TICKET INFORMATION

PH.

Starts
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NOW PLAYING

He climbed all the way
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All

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2nd Week
"WILD AS A RUNAWAY
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he Yofk Times

BlacKSabMh,
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From first page to last blush it's a sizzler!
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The Kentucky Kernel
UrKua

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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Dec.

-

"Brushed
Look" Is In

Brushed wools are big fashion
news this season, and warm besides.
The
blazer shown
below is manufactured of a soft
new knit of Creslan acrylic fiber
and mohair.
Termed a "sweater-jacket- "
by
its makers, the squared-of- f lines
and deep
combine the
most attractive elements of femininity with classic simplicity.
Its jaunty brass buttons make
the blazer the perfect matchmaker
for pants and skirts that go everywhere and do everything. Avail-- ,
able in 14 different colors, it can
match nearly anything in any
girl's wardrobe.
Knee sox may be added to the
outfit, either to match the blazer,
the skirt, or to contrast with both,
for spice.
trail-blazin- g

2 rooms
ROOMS FOR, RENT
for 2 boys in each room. Kitchen
privileges. Two blocks from campus. Available Dec. 1 or for next
semester. $35 per month. Phone
lD4t
9.

.

FOR SALE 21 inch fur Jacket.
Genuine mouton pelt Jacket.
Dark brown, size 10. Only worn
twice. CaU C. Baker,
s.
after 7 p.m. 2D3t
3.

Mon.-Thur-

ROOMS FOR RENT One block
UK. Double occupancy available
now and one next semester. 347
Linden Walk. Phone
after 5 p.m.
lD4t

FOR SALE 1957 Plymouth 6,
stick. Good running and body,
paint new. $200. Contact Bob
E. High, Apt. 1,
Carter, 852

ROOM FOR RENT Lai je first
floor room with twin beds and
adjoining bath. Light kitchen
privileges. Two boys preferred.
Phone
3D4t

FOR SALE 1957 Bulck Super.
Recently installed plugs, points,
battery, etc. Good condition,
4D4t
$275. Call

252-07-

after

ROOMS FOR RENT Access to
stove, refrigerator. $30 a month
with or without roommate. 318
Transylvania Pk. Phone
1.

4D4t

FOR RENT Three-rooapartment, private bath, kitchen
furnished, clean, attractive, $60.
670 North Broadway.
4Dlt
m

254-16-

'For Living and Giving

HOLIDAY HOUSE
.

AVENUE

ALTERATIONS of dresses, skirts
and coats for women. Mildred
Cohen, 216 E. Maxwell, Phone
254-744-6.

TYPING Fast, professional service. IBM pic. References:
Campbell, MJL.A. Style
sheet 60 cents per page. William Givens,
after S.
Tur-abi-

266-441- 5

FOR SALE

--

GREEK

for your loveliest look

1955

look to

Chez Louis

TYPEWRITERS
FOR RENT

Tre-mo-

Bulck
New top and tires. Am
leaving the country and must
sell quickly.
2D4t

208 Woodland Ave.

252-098- 3

DIXIE CASH REGISTER CO.,
Inc.
IBM, UNDERWOOD ELECTRIC,
ALL MAKES
MANUALS
124 N. Broadway
Ph. 255-01-

CONTACT

LEXINGTON

LENSES

YELLOW CAB

Special Consideration for
lege Students, Instructors,
Personnel.

Col-

Inc.

and

Radio Equipped
DIAL
252-22- 30

135 W. Short St.
Phone

FRATERNITY

OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 9

24N6t

OPTICAL

DANSK DESIGNS
SELECTIONS

n,

255-40-

MONFRIED

Lexington, Kentucky
Dial

hair styling in the
highest fashion
Chez Louis BeautySalon

6.

Harley-Davids-

9.

GIFTS

4

MISCILLANtOUS

ALTERATIONS of all types' Also
will do some ironing. Call
lD4t

SELL
125 cc. Motorcycle. Completely
rebuilt. 125 mpg, 45 mph. $75.
846
David Powell

MUST

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EUCLID

1883-196-

Charms
Fraternal Jewelry
Watch Repairs
Fine Gifts

3.

2D4t

817

4D4t

pm.

Yes . . . Who do you
know that will give you
the facts about one of
your most important diamond investments?
The shape of her hand
may of determine which
diamond you wish
style
to give her.
If she is important, lei
us advise you as to a wise
choice. She will love you
more for it.

1.

FOR SALE 1961 yellow Volkswagen; convertible. Very good
aftei
condition, phone
5 pjn.
lD4t

blazer is by
Beldoch-Poppe- r,
and comes in
14 colors, including blue Ice, carnation, and (len green.
brnshed-wo-

3

-- S

WHO?...

FOR SAU

RENT

FOR

rrrwc

HI
This

-

CLASSIFIED

4, 1964

254-658-

3

SORORITY

LETTER

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Come in and see
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and

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You can give without

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Curls pins
I

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* "This Time Let's Fix It"

A National Forum
Before the Presidential campaign
is completely forgotten, there is one

more thing that should be said. It's
not new. Almost everyone has said
it before.
The past campaign was boring
most of the time. Most everyone
agrees to that too. But why?
There remains no proper forum
for debating national issues.
Again why?
Was it the cost of television network time?
Was it the failure of the American people who own the airways to
provide time for this most important
purpose?
Was it the President's unwillingness to be drawn into a debate?
Was it the complexity of the issues? Was there no debate because
it's easier to look the voter in the
eye and smile than to discuss the
problems in Vietnam or the Congo?
In a recent editorial, the Christian Science Aon iter suggested that
the electorate was being "demeaned" rather than being respected.
"Whatever the causes," (for the
boring campaign) the Mon iter says,
"the result was worse than exhaust

ing with candidates rushing from
one locality to another to make
local pictures and local headlines.
It was the lack of a coherent national debate that disturbed us
most," the Monitor concluded.
We must agree. Early in the
campaign we, as did many other
newspapers, called for a discussion
of issues so that the voters might
be truly informed.
Now that Sen. Goldwater has
been destroyed at the polls one can
only ask why. It seems, at this
point at least, that the election was
decided largely against Mr. Cold-watthan for President Johnson.
This too is disturbing.
With four years ahead before the
next Presidential campaign and two
years before the next national campaign, we feel the Congress and the
Administration should give prime
consideration to developing a national forum of some sort.
Modern communication makes
this possible; modern issues make
it necessary. All we need is for those
national leaders who should be concerned to actually become

-

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Paducah Attorney Discusses UK Athletic Problem

To the Editor

of the Kernel:
In listening to my radio Saturday while returning home from my
law office I tuned in on the
e
broadcast of the
game conducted presumably by a Kentucky sport sea ster
and a member of the UK athletic
department. The program consisted
entirely (at least while I was listening) of a castigation, by the two
participants, of your newspaper.
More particularly the comments
'were directed against an editorial
rhich appeared in your newspaper
the previous week on the subject of
football at the University of Kentucky. I had not read the editorial
but I gathered from the discussion
that it had been critical of the
"professional athletic" situation at
UK, and of the football program
being developed by Coach
pre-ga-

Kentucky-Tennesse-

Brad-sha-

The two gentlemen, expressing
disgust at the views of the editorial, spoke of the need for the University and all its facets to present a united front behind Coach
Bradshaw and the Kentucky football team if UK were to have future
successes and winning seasons. It
was the nature of these remarks
which prompted me to write this
letter in support of t lie editorial,
which I have not yet read, but to
whose position
fully subscribe,
if its tenor was as gathered from
the remarks of these unenlightened
sportsmen on the radio.
first of all wish to nuke it
char that am not an alumnus of
the t ntwisitv ot Kentiuk, .onl
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Both the University of Kentucky
law school. Just as I was gratified itories, given special academic con- to see concern over this problem of siderations, taken continually from and the University of Louisville
athletics there, where it is certainly
the classroom, and exalted to some are fortunate in having an adminis- less than it is at UK, I am gratispecial status among the student tration which realizes the values
fied to see some at the University
channel for
body. And when the attitude pre- - of an
of Kentucky becoming more acutely vails that the football team must student opinion on university pol- aware of a situation which has for win at any cost and the university icy.
some time threatened to undermine must subvert all of its other facets
It is discouraging, and in a
or at least hamper the growth and to achieve this goal, by uniting way frightening, that a small-tow- n
development of higher education in behind the coach and team, as the paper feels that censorship should
America.
two men on the radio would have be placed on any university pub-i- t,
The remarks of the two persons
then it is time for criticism. If lication.
Without constructive criticism
on the radio, typical of those whose your editorial provided that criti- whole existence revolves around cism then I urge you to continue, by an effective campus newspaper,
college athletics, indicated their even if it requires you to suffer an important avenue of advance- attitude that a university, and in the angry cries of the athletic de- - ment is lost by the college as a
this case, the University of Kenpartment, the sportscasters, and whole.
SANDRA STRUCK
must subvert its goals to those alumni whose only kinship
tucky,
those of the athletic program. If to the University, and benefit from
The Cardinal,
the student newspaper objects to it, is watching the football game
University of Louisville
on Saturday afternoon.
policies of the athletic department
or the football coach, the fault is
JAMES C. APPLE
with the newspaper, not the athPaducah, Ky.
He that cannot forgive others,
letic department or coach. Aside
Editor's Note: The following breaks the bridge over which he himfrom the fact that a student newsletter appears simultaneously today self must pass if he would ever reach
paper should have the right and as an open letter in The Cardinal, heaven; for every one has need to be
privilege to comment on university University of Louisville student forgiven. - Herbert.
policies and activities, in the views newspaper.
of the two radio commentators lies To the Editor of the Kernel:
We take greater pains to persuade
the great danger in the current
The Cardinal supports you and others that we are happy, than in entrend in college athletics, so typ- your stand against those who feel
deavoring to be so ourselves. oldsmith.
ically illustrated by Coach Bradthat a university newspaper should
o
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0
shaw, who must win at any and function as a "mouthpiece" of the
all cost.
Administration and should support
Action is eloquence; the eyes of the
The University of Kentucky will the institution officials in all its
ignorant are more learned than their
continue to exist whether the foot- ideas and its projects.
ears. - Shakespeare.
ball team (or the basketball team)
lias a winning season or a losing
season, or does or does not beat
Tennessee, and will continue to
serve the state and nation as an
The South's Outstanding College Daily
institution of higher learning. But
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
neither the ends of the University, ESTABLISHED 1894
FRIDAY. DEC. 4. 1964
the gnals it seeks, will he servW'ui.iAM C.ukst, I'.ditor In Chief
I)avu llAWi t, Iiecutnc llditor
ed h the encouragement dt a
C.akv
aw ksw on mi, Muiurit
F.diti
kVsMTii Ci'n. St us l.ditnr
Ik lehy its Iuik tioii as an
ai
Waitih C.iasr, Aslant to the I xautnc ,,,
H, Nv
Sports V.diUn
Ssi Ann, J..ii 'mi. Joiis; I'i mm:, yi,7. ;.i.m
institution til Uilinuii' aie made
1.1
il.Utr
Smiv Ami h., ',u n'i l: future Idttor
MtliselN lent to till" loo tl.all tian. V.AY V..1SII,
lUaiu, i St.;ij
and athh tii piogiam
Wmi.1!' A crfi in. '
,r
Ji'iis. 1. lu.innv. Circulation Mtnuccr
This is not to sa that athat a
letics have in pa
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* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, Dec
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4, 1964

-- 5

FOREIGNER'S VIEW

China's Hostility Is Basically Psychological

By SIRYOON CI ION

its upswing, and proud China was
insulted and humiliated to carry
a badge of second class race.
No one can be so abjectedly
furious as the man whose pride
is hurt. The West raped China, so
to speak, and she became a whore.
Having lost her virtue, she allowed herself to float along with the
tides of the times. Now she rea piece.
signed to the demands of the powBuxer Rebellion and Opium' erful, and now she cast a wan
War registered a voice of protest smile to cater her customers. But
against the West. But the West deep in her heart was seething
ignored the protest, for might was silent grief that had no consolaright, and