xt7fj678w48w https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7fj678w48w/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19640924  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, September 24, 1964 text The Kentucky Kernel, September 24, 1964 1964 2015 true xt7fj678w48w section xt7fj678w48w Smoking Study
Aide Named

Jmr

Dr .R.C. Bard To Direct
Smoking, Health Probe
UK President John W. Oswald
today appointed Dr. Raymond C.
Bard, director of research in the
UK College of Dentistry, as a
special assistant to the president
with the assignment of developing and coordinating the University-wide
research program on
the relationship between smoking
and health.

Vol. LVI, No.

J

I

i

i

f

I

Steve

Dr. Bard came to the College
of Dentistry two years ago from
Philadelphia, where he had been
vice president and research director for the National Drug
Company.
In addition to directing the
College of Dentistry's research
program, he serves as assistant
dean of the college.
Dr. Bard completed his undergraduate studies at the College
of the City of New York and
holds two advanced degrees, including the doctor of philosophy
in bacteriology and biochemistry,
from Indiana University.
In Philadelphia, Dr. Bard was
a part-tim- e
member of the Hahnemann Medical College faculty.
The applntment, announced by
Dr. Oswald, is effective

Beshear,

president

of

Student Congress, said today that
DR. RAYMOND C. BARD

4 Sororities
Pledge 11
InOpenRush

Four sororities have pledged 11 women during Sorority
Open Rush through Sept. 21,
1964, the Dean of Women announced.
Sororities and their new pledges
are:
ALPHA DELTA PI
Sandra Jo Collier, Ashland.
ALPHA XI DELTA
Sandra Kaye Eaton, Ft. Thom- DELTA GAMMA
Glenda Sue Cart, Union Star,;
Ann Denise Gardner, Montgomery, Ala.; Sandra Rae Heiser-maBarKent, Washington;
bara Jean Hancock, New Albany,
Ind.;
Emily Norrls McMillen, Russell; Jill Christine Pulley.
Nancy Lynne Redmond,
Elizabethtown; and Rickie Ann
Vestermark, Danville.
ZETA TAU ALPHA
Linda Ann Law, Franklin.

T-XT-

ii

I

24, 19fil

KY., THURSDAY,

it would be impossible to use
Fayette County voting machines
for the election due to the number of names appearing on the
ballot. Applications have been
filed by 50 students for positions
on the Student Congress ballot.
Beshear said ballots containing the names of the 50 candidates were being printed by the
elections committee. He said students voting in the election would
circle 23 nanves on the ballot and
place the completed blank in a
ballot box.
Voting will be held from 8 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Friday in the Journalism Building and the Student
Center. Beshear said students
must present a University ID
card and register at the polls
before voting.
Beshear said he did not think
any of the candidates in this
year's election were representing
student political parties. He said
he would discourage anyone from
getting up a party ticket of 23
names.
The president urged that all
students vote in the election. He
pointed out that persons elected

would represent the entire student body in Student Congress
functions.
Beshear said voting in the
election for representatives last
fall was held on IBM cards. He
said congress officers did not
know that the voting machines
could not be used until Wednesday. This did not leave sufficient time to have IBM cards
printed, according to Beshear.
voting for Student Congress officers last spring was held by votbe
ing machines. Votes will
counted Friday night by Beshear,
members of the elections committee and a representative from
the Kernel. The elections committee is composed of Phil Gro-gachairman, Suzanne Orty-nsk- y
and Vicki Beekman.
The new Student
Congress
constitution provides that "Any
challenge of the validity of election results shall be made in
writing to the Student Congress
Elections Committee not later
than 5 p.m. of the fifth day following the announcement of the
results of the election.
are not
"Where challenges
made, the Student Congress
Elections Committee shall certify as valid the election results not later than the same
period. The Elections Committee
shall adjudicate all challenges
and recommend action to the
Assembly."
Names appearing on the ballot
will be Sam Abell, sophomore;
n,

--

n,

n;

Kernel Announces Deadlines
Beginning Monday the following deadlines will be observed for
copy appearing in the Kernel:
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING must be in the Kernel advertising
office (Rooms 113 or 111, Journalism Building) no later than 4 p.m.
the day before the notice is to appear.
MEETINGS AND ACTIVITIES announcements will be run in a
new column not more than four times prior to any meeting or activity. Such notices are to be left at the society desk in the newsroom (Room 114, Journalism Building) no later than 3 p.m. the day
before they are to appear first.
WEEKEND SOCIAL NOTICES will be run in the "Social Sidelights" column in the Thursday Kernel and must be left in the
newsroom no later than noon Wednesday.
Late announcements will be run only if time and space permits.
Late classifieds will not run until the next day.

N

Eight Pages

Student Congress Election
To Use Handmarked Ballots
Marked ballots rather than
voting machines will be used
in Friday's election of 23 Student Congress representatives.

"I am pleased that Dr. Bard,

In his role of special assistant
to the president, Dr. Bard will
integrate the efforts of UK researchers in the new Agricultural Science Center and its National Tobacco Research Laboratory, the Medical Center, and the
chemistry and physics departments into a University-wid- e
program.

LEXINGTON,

Kernel Staff Writer

al

TTT

I'M

University of Kentucky
SEPT.

By WALTER GRANT

n"

President Oswald said the recent appropriation by Congress
of $1.5 million, to be used in initiating at UK an integrated
agricultural-medicresearch program on smoking and health,
provides UK with a unique opportunity.
a highly competent research administrator, has agreed to undertake this important assignment,"
Dr. Oswald said.

13

I

University Phone Numbers
Will Change On Sunday
Approximately 90 percent of
UK's campus phone numbers will
be changed over the weekend.
"The new numbering system,
which will go into effect Monday
morning, is designed to Improve
service both internally and externally," James A. Pelfrey, manager of University communications services, said In making the
announcement.
New directories will be distributed by Monday and should be
used beginning Monday morning,
Mr. Pelfrey also announced.
Changing the numbers will allow the grouping of phone numbers. Under the new system the
University proper will have numbers ranging from 2100 to 2700,
while the Medical Center phones

will be numbered

from 5400 to

5900.

Previously, phone numbers have
been assigned at random. For
example a department at the
Medical Center might have one
phone number of 2600 and another of 5700.
"Now numbers will be assigned
In sequence, "Mr. Pelfrey explained, "If the number called Is
busy and a department has more
than one phone, the call will
automatically be switched to another phone not in use."
An automatic switch cannot be
made if the numbers are not in
sequence.
The addition of new equipment
has made the change possible.

iirooKs

Alexander, sophomore;
Frank H. Bailey, junior; Kathy
Beck,
junior; Vicki Beekman,
Junior Thomas Bersot, junior;
David Besuden, junior; Terence
C. Black, junior; Michele Anne
Cleveland, junior.
Gary Crabtree, senior; Stanley "Skip
Craig, junior; Jim
Charles W.
Cockrell, junior;
Curry, senior; Martha Lee
sophomore; Jimmy Elkins,
sophomore William Foley, junicy;
Robert
Phil Grogan, junior;
Joseph Guinn, junior; Julie Dee
Halcomb, junior.
Heidi Alden Hanger, senior;
Charles H. Harpole, senior; Nolan K. Harrison, junior; Michael
A. Hoffman, Junior; Candy Johnson, Junior; Martha Kankler,
senior; Larry G. Kelley, senior;
Janet Kington, junior; Robert
Koester, sophomore; Sandra Lay,
junior; James C. "Jack" Lyne,
Junior; Winston Earl Miller,
On Page 8

Beshear Appoints
Terry II. Miller
To SC Committee
Terry H. Miller, a graduate
student from Hartford, has been
added to a committee which has
been formed to make suggestions about Improvements in registration.
Steve Beshear,. president of
Student Congress, said today that
he had appointed Miller to the
committee under the recommendation of Dr. John Oswald, president of the University. Beshear
said Miller volunteered his services to Dr. Oswald.
The registration committee is
the result of a student protest
directed against the lack of adequate facilities and personnel for
registration and fee payment.
Jane Carol Thomas, a sophomore In the College of Arts and
Sciences, is chairman cf the committee.
Other members of the committee are Charles Honaker. sophomore; Walt McGuire and Heidi
Hander, both seniors; Thomas P.
Bersot, Junior, and Charles
Thompson ,a graduate student.

Human Kights
University students interested
in discussing human rights problems will meet tonight at 8:30 in
Room 117 of the Student Center.

Rates Up Since 1919

University Alumni Increase Family Size

University graduates are having increasingly large
families, a recent report by two UK sociologists indicated.
Dr. James W. Gladden, professor of sociology, and
Dr. J. Wilson Gregory studied graduates of 1919, 1924,
1929, 1944, 1949, and 1954, obtaining Information on marital status and chlldbearing.
The report was based on questionnaires returned by
of the possible
graduates of each class. Over
respondents from each class returned the questionnaires.
Over 1,750 responses were studied.
Published in Aurust by the Bureau of School Service
of the College of Education, the report is the second
In a serif on "The Recent Population Explosion and
Education."
The report showed an Increase from 1.6 to 2.6 average
number of children born to the graduate of 1919 and
1944, respectively. The percentage marrying was almost
Identical for both clusses, 96 percent In 1919 and 95 per
cent in 1944.
Graduates of the class of 1954, the latest class studied,
have already produced more than 1,000 children.
Fewer of the graduates of 1954 who were ever married were childless than in 1924. Of the 1924 group 25
percent of the married males und 40 percent of the
married females were childless. In 1954 this was re
five-sixt-

duced to about 8 percent of the males and 10 percent
of the females.
More than 20 percent of the women of 1924 never
married, while klightly more than 10 percent from the
class of 1954 had never been wed. About 8 percent of
the males from 1951 were not married as compared to
about 3 percent in 1924.
A drop in the average age at marriage was apparent between classes of 1944 and 1954. Averages in class
of '44 were 25.9 years of age for the male and 23.5 for
the female. Ten years later this had dropped to 24.5
for the male and 23.2 for the women.
Out of state women, averaging a 22.9 median age,
married earlier than Kentucky women in the 1944 and
1949 studies.
Rural-urba- n
differences in age of marriage were
n
meminimized, until in the last reports the
dian ages about equalled those from larger areas.
graduates from the classes of 1949 and
1954 were more likely to have two children, while both
male and female graduate from out of ktate areas had
families of three offspring.
marriages at UK have also increased, the
study showed. Only 22 percent of the married mules and
1J percent of the married females were wed during their
non-urba-

te

college years. By 1954 these figures had risen to 47 percent of married males and 33 percent of married females
wed before or during college.
The largest percentage of married graduates in all
classes wed within two years following graduation.
Dr. Gladden and Dr. Gregory attribute the rise in
marriages to a new acceptance of combining
education and marriage as opposed to education than
marriage. For a woman .this combination may involve
education, marriage, motherhood, and work.
The Interval between marriage and the birth of the
firkt child U less than two year for CI percent of the
mother who giaduated in 1954. Those who had more
children had the first between 15 and 18 month after
marriage.
Most of the mothers had two children by the end
of four years of marriage.
The writers concluded that UK graduates ure following a trend set by college graduates across the nation, increasing their families from an averuge of two
children to three.
"College education is no longer the dysgenic factor that it seemed to be at the turn of the century.
UK's graduates like others ure generally contributing
to the growth of the society," the sociulouiits wrote.

* 2 --

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Thursday, Sept.

21, 1964

Machine Displays Creative Touch
Computer Writes Blank Verse
By DOROTHY SCIIREMSER

Kernel Staff Writer

OH BRAVE NEW WORLD
Your bloom stamped gently
through fresh clusters
And flora rumored now at red
memories
Her dwarf grasped roldly
from sacred blooms
Their loves wilted
I. B. Machine
From the
Fourteen Ten Anthology
Thought provoking, profound,
beat, or Just childlike? Before
you decide, is your impression a
criticism of your thought projections or is it a criticism of
the IBM computer that wrote
the poetry? That's right poetry
whose author is a machine.
"This," Selwyn Zerof, statistician at the UK Computer Center,
said, "is symbolic manipulation
at a simple level." Zerof explained he had taken 200 words,
carefully selected to avoid any
"smutty" overtones, and fed them
into the 1410 computer. The machine was then "told" to select,
at random, grammatical parts of

The men were not discounting
the value of the human mind,
but the old chliche "the machine
is only as good as the human behind it," no longer imposes a
limit to machine potential.
"The computers have speed"
without the imbalance that occurs in human," Zerof explained.
"On the other hand, computers
may be said to 'temper. When
it's too hot or too cold, they don't
work."
Dr. Silvio Navarro, director of
the center, and his staff members
are Justifiably proud of their department. The center has tripled
its research possibilities and as a
result can expect more than $20
million in research grants.
The basement of McVey Hall,
where the Center is located, has
been remodeled into offices.
The IBM 7040, the newest acquisition, can perform 125,000

sentences and create four line
free verse.
"Its purpose was, buy means of
a simple exercise in programming, to demonstrate the power
of the language formula translation, he said. He explained that
the usual numeric language of
fort ran, was not designed for
symbol manipulation, but this experiment demonstrated an unusual application for which computers could be used.
"We don't even come close to
exhausting possibilities," he said.
"At another research center, a
machine has been programmed
to play checkers, not as the result of having every conceivable
move on its program, it selects
and improves its selection on the
basis of its experience.
There is a field called "artificial intelligence" he said, where
much work is being done with
machine reasoning.
"Think of it this way," Dr.
Nicholas Findler, computer scientist and associate professor of
mathematics said, "a child is
of genes,
born with a
additional information is given
him through parents and school,
and from this he weighs and
reasons for himself. It's
in a machine."

Lexington CORE
Presents

Dick Gregory
famous

operations In one second, read
the equivalent of 4,000 words a
second, and print its answers at
the rate of 600 typewritten lines
a minute.
In addition to the new 7040,
the Computing Center also utiIBM 1410
lizes the medium-siz- e
and a smaller IBM 1620.
University payroll and inventory procedures are handled at
the Center. Data processing for
UK research is handled quickly
relieving scholars of long hours
of tedious statistical tasks.
But checkers and poetry. . . .
Who knows what we might "overhear" if we would translate the
mechanical musings that make
up the hum of computer activity.

Lcn Chandler
folk linger

TIME: Friday, Sept. 25
8:00 p.m.

PLACE: Dunbar High
School Gym
549 N. Upper St.

m

HELD OVER!

"K" STREET DANCE

CIRCLE

Stadium Parking Lot

2nd Week!

(Euclid and Rose)

anol-ogo-

IK:

FEATURING THE . . .

In

v

Chicago Symphony
Delights Large Crowd

"NITECRAWLERS"

...

ANDY

WM$?

Admission 50c

nlLLIAMo

maurice CHEVALIER

Laura Young?

Strand
2 MRFORMANCIS
At 1 p.m. and
p.m.

LAST

RICHARD BURTON'S

"HAMLET"
ALL

SCATS

$3.00

MHIONKMi

LAST TIMES TONITE
"THE LOVERS"
Ar 7:30 and 9:30

and
The next program in the concert series will be one Boris
Opera series, performed
at the Coliseum on Oct. 1.

SI0CAISM

MOOT

4i

Exactly at shown in the long, long run
and Cinerama
showings in reserved-sea- t
theatres at advanced prices.

f

TtTTTf

UUIIILU

STANLEY

Ii

KRAMER

POINTED,
DARING!"
SAT.

Si

STORY"

cohi

Will Dunn Drug
Corner of
Lime

I

0u

"FROM HERE TO
ETERNITY"
,,,

Rd.

S

Dial

1

m

urifiLn7iirD

STARTS TONIGHT

.."
tuoru rhrniirl hip a nlun. m
nuuu iidi auvei i

.

Student
Center
Theater
Admisiions 50c
Show Tim.: 6:30 & 9:00

.

NO. 2

DELIVERY SERVICE
DRUGS

FRIDAY and SATURDAY

FRANK SINATRA
BURT LANCASTER
MONTGOMERY CLIPT

Harrodtburo,

Adm. 75c

The College Store
COSMETICS

TICKETS $1.00

7:30

A,.rrr-

-

and Maxwell

S.

FOUNTAIN

ALL

m

Robertson

At 7:40 and 9:30

Starring

ULTRA.
PANAVISION

Comt at lata a 10 p.m. to tea complata
faatura. Wa rapaar tha first half.

SOUTHLAND 68

Brando

"THE BEST MAN"
Cliff

mam.

-- POST

M!nlt

Fonda

D0WIMY

Shown ot 8:15 Eoch Evening
'CARTOON REVUE' starts 7:35

EXCLUSIVE

Henry

in

MAD

"ORIGINAL,

IIIIIKS

it?
.V'

MAD.

ruin Mn
IIIHU, IIIHV,
VUHLIF

Marlon

J0MIHM

IT'S A

The designer of the new Sigma
Phi Epsilon chapter house which
was shown in Tuesday's Kernel
is Kenneth Miller. He is associArchated with Chrisman-Mille- r
itects of Lexington.

David Niven

Micuf aoourr

MtRttAN

Special

"WILD
Mm, PflMtnVI"

Sig Eps New House

WED. Thru

(IHU

HACMTT

Engagement

inter-ferre-

Who Is

ink.

My

d

"BEDTIME

FROM LOUISVILLE

8 Till 12

Utt

GOULET

The Chicago Symphony Orchestra delighted a large audience last night with a
performance of a somewhat unusual program.
Fighting the bad acoustics of lection, showing amazing control

bows.

at door

TICKETS: $2.00

TOMORROW NIGHT

SANDRA

Martinon took a classic approach to Brahams Symphony
No. 3 in F major, Opus 90, minimizing the dramatizing of the
piece. The melodious string passages were especially
but poor sound facilities
d
in the Coliseum may have
with the audience's perception of the smothness.
Martinon, who directed without sheet music until the final
selection, injected more emotionalism in Claude Debussy's Le
Mer, the selection best received
by the audience as a whole.
The concert ended with the
colorful Suite from "The Miraculous Mandarin" by Hungarian
composer Bela Bartok. Composed
in 1918 and 1919 during a time
of upheaval in Hungary, the selection includes many folksy
themes, dynamic contrasts, and
unusual harmonies, making it an
unusual selection with which to
end a program.
The brass section gave an excellent performance of the se

a Salute to Freedom

In

In Concert Series Opener

the University Coliseum, Conductor Jean Martinon, who fits
the image of a conductor in
every detail, led the orchestra
through a program including the
classical music of Brahms, Roof Demantic impressionism
bussy, and modern work of Bela
Bartok.
The audience, the largest since
the performance by pianist Van
Cliburn in 1962, gave the group
an enthusiastic reception, calling back Martinon for numerous

comedian
and

"

i

i

:

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icifc

n.

KwtN, OF THE DAMNED

S

ALICE

I

3 mi

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r

ia

n
1 RJTiTrin va Aw

L
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JACKPOT $325.00 (ot Tonight
press time)
B

A

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL. Thursday. Sept.
!
5

Announcements

Society

... edited

of the
Satin- -

AIT TO INTERVIEW
The Aviation Information Team
from the Memphis, Tenn. Naval
Air Reserve Training Unit will
be on Campus October 5, and 6,
to interview college men who
are interested in the Navy's Aviation Training programs. Programs are now available to qualified college men between the
Interested male
ages of
students may contact LCDR
Ryan in the student center.

what other people expect of the
Greek system. One of the main
objectives of the retreat is to get
sororities and fraternities to work
together for a common cause."
The faculty members attending
the retreat are Dr. Doris M.
Seward, dean of women; Dr,
Kenneth M. Harper, dean of
men; Mrs. Lizctte Van Gelder.
department of English; Dr. James
Gladden, department of sociology; and Dr. Holman Hamilton,
department of history.

NATIONAL TEACHER EXAMS
to
College seniors preparing
teach school may take the National Teacher Examinations on
the following four test dates:
December 12, 1964; and March
20, July 17 and October 2, 1965.
Prospective teachers should contact the school systems in which
they seek employment, or the
dean of their college, for specific
advice on which examinations to
take and on which dates they
should be taken.

by Frances Wright

Retreat To Be Held
By Greeks, Faculty

The University Greek orga niations and members
faculty will hold a retreat from (i p.m. l'riday to I p.m.
day at Boone Tavern in Berea.
On Friday, all sorority and frathe Greek
Steering Committee, Panhellenic
officers and committee chairmen,
IFC officers and committee
chairmen, and a group of faculty panel speakers will meet and
discuss the goals and achievements of the Greek system.
Saturday, there will be smaller
group discussions about the common goals among the various
Greek organizations and how
these goals can be achieved. The
role of the individual in the
Greek system and the future of
the Greek system at the University will also be discussed.
These group discussions will be
followed by a second large group
discussion during which the students and faculty will talk about
how the goals of the Greeks can
be put into practical application.
A printed form of the discussions will be sent to the Centennial Committee.
"Greeks get a good deal of
criticism," Betty Jo Palmer, assistant dean of women commented, "and people want to find out

ternity presidents,

Elections

UNITARIAN
CHURCH

Karen Hangs, senior home economics major from San Diego.
Calif., to Hank IMorrk, from Colorado, Calif., and an engineering
senior at San Diego State Col-

Higbee Mill Road

at Clays Mill Road

lege.

Marty Ilenkel, junior special
education major from Winchester, and a member of Kappa
Delta to Ed Drark, a senior music major from Ft. Thomas and
a member of Lambda Chi Alpha.

10:45 a.m.
Service and
Church School
Speaker
DR.

make a vanilla substitute, put a zing in perfume, flavor
toothpaste, ease toothaches and
are chewed like gum in India.
Cloves

Title

ROBERT STRAUS

"Poverty and Health
in Rural America"

b

pep

FOREIGN STUDENTS DANCE
Sponsored

By

The Newman Club

Saturday, Sept. 26th,
To
8:00

1964

12:00 p.m.

p.m.

SMALL BALLROOM
STUDENT CENTER
JAZZ QUINTET
Call

Opn

DELTA GAMMA
The Delta Gamma pledge class
has elected officers. They are:
vice
Glenda Cart;
president,
president, Anne Binkley;
ecretary,
Jane Wightman;
art chairman, Betsy Hardy; historian, Nancy Benton; song leader,
Nancy Redmond; and junior Panhellenic representative,
Nancy
MacLean.

6.

Engagements

3

21,

REFRESHMENTS

255-046-

For Information

7

a

10-- 5

121

Phon

Walton

Phon

8

8

A YARN SHOP

treasurer-s-

Want to knit "that special one"

a SWEATER for Christmas

Mf

HALL

BOWMAN

Bowman Hall has elected
House Council officials. They are:
Ruth Bledsoe; vice
president,
president, Susan Carr; Secretary, Libby Hazelrigg; treasurer,
Carol Stenken; and social chairman, Barbara Fisher. AWS representative, Sue Manning; WRH
representative, Kay Yancey publicity chairman, Kay Schroeder;
Elaine
intermurals
chairman,
Morris; hostess chairman, Joan
Hutchison; and scholarship chairman, Margaret Farris.

COME TO THE BEE HIVE
We have all those hard to find yarns plus

the "old" stand bys
We Also Hare

...

Tweeds from Scotland for Skirts
Hi

there

.

.

Sweater Kits

.

I'm Margaret

Lessons in Knitting and Crowel
All Knitting Accessories

from the
Sportswear
Mart. You
don't have to

There's an exciting
new label in

be wealthy to

LowcnUialvT

:buy

;

quality
clothing . . .
even

those

families with nominal income know that in the long
run they get more for their
money when they buy name
brands and famous labels.
We're lucky to have here in
our city a fine group of
ladies fashion shops . . and
by carrying only the finer
clothing, they can guarantee
you superior fabrics and
later styles . . . better fits
and finer tailoring. Now the
Sportswear Mart sells this
identical prestige casual
wear at discount prices. If
you girls have ever been accused of not knowing the
value of a dollar, you'll never be incriminated again,
for a purchase from the
Sportswear Mart gives you
the satisfaction of having
purchased the best, for the
.
least. Just remember
you always get wfiat you
.
but at the
pay for
Sportswear Mort, you get
mere. The Sportswear Mart,
and is located
is open
on the Northern Beltline.
.

,.

.

9-- 9

.

STUDENTS and FACULTY
Your UK ID Card Entitles You
To Buy At
WHOLESALE PRICES
.

NAME

WATCH IS
CHINA

BRANDS ONLY
DIAMONDS

CRYSTAL

and it's

TROPHIES
RINGS
WATCH BANDS
JEWELRY OF ALL KINDS
PEWTER MUGS
LUGGAGE

CIFTWARl

PEPPERTREE!

.

...

.

Two cases in point:
The round collared roll sleeve
.
.
Assorted plaids, sizes

APPLIANCES
TYPEWRITERS
PENSETS
HI II

ENGRAYING
SHAVERS
RADIOS

it's

.

oun alont in all Lexington .
you'll find it on the
all tiny
freshest young dresses, jumpers, shirts 'n such
priced to fit a coed's budget!

CAMERAS
SILVERWARE

LIGHTED

PEARLS

.

CLOCKS
TRANSISTORS
TAPE RECORDERS
UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY CHARMS
FRATERNITY
SORORITY JEWELRY

Button-dow- n
collar,
sorted plaids, sizes

.

long sleeve
.

.

.

shirt
6.00

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* Toward Responsible Government
Student Congress representatives
will he elected Friday in a campus-widelection.
students have been
Fifty-on- e
placed on the ballot and of these, 23
will he elected to the smallest congress
in University history.
A new constitution -- passed last
spring -- placed the number of reprec
sentatives at 23 and outlined a
election rather than election
of representatives by colleges.
Most noticeable in this year's
election is the absence of factional
politics. It was generally agreed that
last year's factionalism -- first between
two and then between three different
a major deterrent to
"parties"-w- as
worthwhile accomplishment planany
ned by the congress.
Campus attitude toward the governing body had reached such a low
ebb by the spring elections that a
scant five percent of the student body
could be mustered to vote in an election that 'offered only one slate of
officers and a constitutional draft on
the ballot. Three slates had been nominated to run -- by election day one
candidate for each office remained in
the race.
This year, hopefully, things will
be different.
e

cam-puswid-

President Steve Hcshcar, elected
that five percent vote, seems adeby
quately aware of his responsibility to
all the students. At this point, he has
already been called upon by President Oswald and other administrators in a number of ways, indicating
that the opportunity for a responsible student government to really get
something done exists with more
reality this year than ever before.
President Heshear, quite understandably, is concerned over the
quality of the congress that will be
elected to work with him.
There is no easy or simple way
to obtain a responsible student government at the University. The only
answer, we would suggest, lies in the
hands of the voter -- the average student.
Without recalling all that has
ever been said about the right to
vote, we would remind the students
that only by wisely casting their vote
on Friday can they help to insure a
responsible student government at
the University.
Those who do not bother to
vote -- for responsible students, not
just friends -- will have little recourse
to complaint should the Democratic
process, once more, bog down.

The 'Kingmakers' Meet
Mostly Europeans
By RALPH McGILL
In 1954 a croup of knowledge- able Americans and Europeans met,
under the chairmanship of Prince
Hernhard of the Netherlands, to disc
relations and meacuss
sures that might improve the solidarity of the Western community of
nations. Because it held its first meeting at the Hotel de Hilderberg in the
Netherlands, it came to be known as
the Hilderberg Croup.
Those attending came from both
private and official life. They were
present as individuals, not representatives.
There was but one policy -- and it
is one that since has been strictly adhered to-t- he
group does not attempt
to make policy or even recommendations on policy to governments. The
results of this informal meeting and
off-th- e
record discussions between
men from the various Western nations, mostly NATO, were excellent;
it was possible to replace rumor with
fact, suspicion with confidence.
A larger measure of cooperation
between Western nations and allies
was made possible by these relaxed
and frank sessions in which there were
only discussions -- neither agreement
(in policy nor recommendations of
policy.
The Hilderberg Croup meets usually twice a year. Two of the meetings
have been held in the United States.
The first was at St. Simons Island,
Ca., in early 1957. The group, with
its invited guests, filled a small hotel.
The second was at Williamsburg,
Va., about four months ago. The
late anil distinguished (Jen. W.
Smith, who had been ambassador to Russia from 1940 to 1949,
was among those interested in having
the group meet in this country. A
number of Americans, many ol them
distinguished in industry, business,
and the professions, were Invited as
trans-Atlanti-

He-de- ll

guests to the first and second meetings held in the United States.
No reports or agreements are
made, no policies determined or recommended. The entire proceedings
are simply private discussions designed to strengthen the Western com-

munity. Since that community is
largely European, those attending the
group meetings are predominantly
European. Politics, as such, are never
discussed.
After the first of the two meetings
in this country, an extreme right-winwriter proceeded to see something
sinister in such a meeting. There were
a few preposterous charges of secrecy,
of the contents of waste baskets being
burned, and so on. (What does one
do with the contents of waste baskets?
At the hotel where the group met,
the daily debris of papers, empty
paper match packets, et cetera, were
burned every evening, the year round,
in the hotel incinerator.) The columnist had not heard of the Hilderberg
Croup and assumed, in error, this
was its first session.
All of this is background to one
of the more hilarious and preposterous pieces of Coldwater political
propaganda now in circulation. In
a book devoted to extolling the senator, the first of the two Hilderberg
meetings in this country is given a
few paragraphs toward the end of
the book, and it Is declared therein
to have been a meeting of political
"kingmakers" who for years have
been nominating the wrong man to
head the Republican party. That certainly will surprise the group, most
of whom were Kurojeans.
g

The writer finds himself listed

as
one of these kingmakers. Alas, alas,
would that it were true. The writer,
if a kingmaker, knows whom he
would designate as king.
(Copyright !V(i4)

II Will Depend On The Cement

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Letters To The Editor
"

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.

Editor of the Kernel:
Due to the preponderance of letters advocating the support of Sen.
Goldwater, it is only fitting that some
reply should be evoked from the opposition. Indicative of the Goldwater
view was the highly literate letter of
Sept. 22 by Mr. Wainscott. He objected to the stereotype imposed upon
Coldwater supporters by a Ralph
McGill column. He contended that
his support of Goldwater was based
upon the belief that government was
becoming too socialistic and that freedom of the individual was being suppressed. Coldwater was his candidate,
Mr. Wainscott said, because of the
ideas of human dignity he supported.
This view can probably be termed
characteristic of Coldwater advocates.
Ix-'us examine it. First, Mr. Wainscott, you accused M