xt7gf18scb3b https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7gf18scb3b/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19601214  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 14, 1960 text The Kentucky Kernel, December 14, 1960 1960 2013 true xt7gf18scb3b section xt7gf18scb3b Evaluation Urged

For Creek Week;
See Page Four

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Today's Weather I
Fair And Cold;
Lo - 10, High 37

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University of Kentucky

Vol. LI I, No. 44

LEXINGTON, KY., WEDNESDAY, DEC

Eight Paget

14, I960

53 Stadeiit Congress Seats Filled.
Returns From Two Colleges
Will Be Announced Today;
Constitution Ratification Sure

Trustees Approve
University Expansion

A plan of campus expansion expansion with the city's rewind, will c partly in cornice- - deIeJPmcnt Plan- areas In which the Uni- Fifty-thre- e
tion with Lexingtons urban verslty feels it will trow and the
.
renewal program was ap projects it expects to work on in JVW"

proved yesterday by the Board ,he areas

"e:

A women's and men's housing
area to be shaped roughly In a
Under the plan, the University series of "L's" and bounded by
grow systematically during Rse Street, Euclid Avenue, Ayles- the next 25 or 50 years. The rord Place, Rose Lane, Transyl- federal government, through the vania Park, Columbia and Wood- city's renewal program, would Iand Avenues and Hilltop Avenue,
help pay fcr the expansion.
A women's housing area to be
bounded by Lexington and Har- President Frank O Dickey said
that because the University will rison Avenues and reaching to- rnr,A
h
mi ward Maxwell Street. A .similar
areas surrounding the campus it section is to grow from the rear

of Trustees.

.n

wa

e'

thm.ohf

kc

tn

rnnin...,i

rrHin.f.

t.

ft

Polish Counselor
Will Speak Today
Dr. Marian Debrosielski, counselor of the Polish Embassy
'
in Washington, will speak on "Polish Foreign Policy" at 3 p.m.
today in the Laboratory Theatre of the Fine Arts Building.
The public is invited to attend
this program sponsored by the of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Dr- joined
Dbrosielskl
the
Patterson School of International
Polish- army "in Prance at thruut- DiDlomacv
break of World War II.
Dr. Dobroslelskl has served as
a member of the Polish delegation
to three tensions of the United
Nations General Assembly In New
York.
He was named Polish Embassy
Couuselor on January 1, 1959.
Previously he had been First Secretary of the Polish Embassy in"
-

J

Washington.
In Poland he taught at the University of Warsaw and the Institute of Philosophy of the Polish

it

anil the proposed congress
stitntion was headed for
;n
"7 " ..v.3.
day s general elections.

i,

'"

"J-'""-

As vote

The nine Engineering seats were

con- - filled by Henry Bennet, Ronnie P.
Harned, Glen
rati- - Porter, Norman

Braden, Hugh Allan Ward, Ronald
Blackburn, Robert Stovall, and
Thomas Francis Steeley, and Alan

4,

Two Frats

this arternoon.
Norman Harned. congress elec- tions chairman, reported that 956
votes were cast during yesterday's
election for 99 representatives and
ratification Of the new COnstitU- - Tola Ijinran. and Unda Challi.
tionThere were 83 votes cast in Educa- .
.ii
nil
us
igncuuure juieu n ui u n r tion.
seats even though there were only
jerry Strieker. John WTilliams,
14 candidates on the official bal- - James Sympson, Sharon Chenault,
lot. Ten of those elected were ra
write-i- n
candidates.
were elected from the College of
Six men were tied in Agriculture Commerce.
forty
with four votes apiece. Harned votes were cast in the Commerce
first said, "We can't decide who College filling its six seats.
will get this seat, and later indiThe College of Pharmacy filled
cated that no one will get the its two seats with Arnold Kemper
position.
and Tom Samuels with a total of
Representatives from Agricul- 43 votes cast.
ture are Ralph Douglas Wood,
School will select its
III,
John H. Ewing tTt Bob Scott. reDresentatives todav in a general
Fred Shank. Phil Sewell, Bob assembly.
Smith. Cecil Bell.
There are approximately 7.200
Jim Jackson. Bob Brown, Earl sjU(jents enrouea ior me
ian
ampoeii, Larry ixmg. rom yuis
Allen relatively smaU
enberry,
Pharr
Dennis
number of students
-

a.

1

One-hundr-

ed

.

7,7

-

the signers are influential student leaders.
They include the editor of the
Kernel and the presidents of
Lances, Lamp and Cross, IFC, and
Student Congress.
Sipple says the group intends
to petition the Faculty CommitGarryl Sipple, senior in arts tee on Student Organizations and
and sciences, said yesterday that Activities for recognition this week
tha meeting will be held to elect or the week after Christmas vacaofficers and to set up a commit- tion.
tee to dralt a constitution for
Dr. Stephen Diachun, chairman
the group.
of the committee, said "We can't
The goal of the group Is to set discuss it this week. We have to
up an honor system on the cam-pu- consider the Judo Club, too."
Dr. Dtachun's term as chairman
According to Sipple, this is
of the committee will expire Dec.
the first time students have been 16.
He
the Instigator of such a move- happen does not know what Mil
to the group after that
ment.
date.
Sipple said that because the
Dean of Men Leslie L. Martin
move happened in such a novel said he does not believe the group
way, the Louisville Courier-Journis ready to be recognized yet.
and the Public Relations DeBoth Dean Martin and Dr.
partment have become interested Diachun believe the honor system
Is a fine Idea but they don't see
in it.
He said there are now 40 sig- how the group will be a step
toward it.
natures on the Act of Establish-m?Col. R. W. Boughton, head of
which he and Lana Coyle
drew up last May. He added that the Department of Aerospace Sci
n.

al

nt

shortened because they violated an Interfraternity Council
rushing rule.

Their punishment is the elimination of one day of informal
rushi"g at tl)e
glnnlng of the

second semester.
The action was taken yester-

day by the IFC Judicial Board.
Eddie Thomas, chairman of the
board sald "The acts committed
by tne fraternitles were in the
,orm of organized parties for
members, pledges, and alumni for

torfrahto. freemen

Such narties violate an IFC rula
which, under the deferred rushin
systeni( prohibits organiZed rush
narties for nrosDective Dledzes
during me semester, inese m- elude smokers.
.

...

....

JSfl

Student Directories

Legion Of Honor Begins;
Officers Elected Tomorrow
The Legion of Honor will
hold an organization meeting
at 7 p.m. tomorrow on the second floor of the Journalism
Building.

Penalized

vnMn. rt th1 hati wpnhr. --rhirh
I
MemDers or me judicial coara
.
forced us to move the voting tables and fraternity presidents met late
buiidings...
inside
yesterday afternoon to discuss the
yotes for tne
and ScU matter.
ence's seats will not be completed
A student close to the Judicial
untu late tnis afternoon.
Board, who refused to be identi- Three hundred and four votes fied said the tvappa Aipnas also
'
-- ,hv.
..rA
fh.
violated the University rule against
had 83 candidates- running for its
Continued on Page 8
Ec.
42 seats.
Nine of 10 seats in the College
Lack ot Intest ,n the e,Mt,on
of Engineering were filled by 253 w e.:dent by the smaU turn oot
of students in the Student Union
Building waiting for election reStudent Directories are on
turns. In previous years, most cansale today at Campus and Kendidates and their friends crowded nedy Book Stores and at the
around the SC office to get the Student Congress office, SUB.
results.
The price is 15 cents.
Most students were not familiar

7

DR. MARIAN DOBROSIELSKI

con-wou-

jonn Williams, election commit
tee member, said that there had
been three recounts and that an- other would be made today to de- Cide the winners of the two seats.
Sigma Chi and Kappa Alpha
To fill its seven seats, the Col- ege 0f Education elected Linda fraternities have had their sec- Coffman, Paula Judd, Jackie Wil- - ond semester rushing period
60n, Barbara Taylor, Jackie Cain,

T

Two years later he returned to
Poland es Section Chief of the

with the majority of candidates in
their respective colleges because
there was little campaigning
At the polls in the Journalism
Building where Arts and Sciences
students voted, one student, when
ld
queried about the proposed
stitution replied,
"What constitution? You mean
the state one. That was already

counting continued at Lindsay.
Richard Kuhns. William Kuhns,
William Druen, Milton Minor, and defeated wasn't it?"
Clyde Baldwin were tied lor the
Anotner said, "I don't know any
College seat, thing about the constitution."
10th Engineering
Only one vote separates Lindsay,
in the ninth seat with 59 votes,
and the four-wa- y
tie for the 10th.

p.m., the constitution led 305-3almost assuring that all repre- sentatives elected would te seated
under the new constitution.
Results for the Coheres of Agrl- culture and Home Economics. En- Steering. Education, Commerce,
nd Pharmacy, were in at press
tee. Results In Arts and Sciences,
with 42. seats to be filled, were
not expected to be known until
9

Cleaver, Harvey Crouch
Leon
With
' niii Rmith Hon nnrprth
" :: T
"Vv,,.
7J
Don Herring Phillip V
Smith. David
Robinson. Everett Lail. Larry
Quails. Ken Porter.
nmlcs elected Myra
n. Kmt
'
seats. A
to fill its
of
86 votes were counted for Home

erland.
and Infoimation Department

rM i corded.

--

Academy of Sciences.
Dr. Dobrosiflski received a Ph.D.
In Philosophy from the University
of Zurich, Switzerland. After graduation he was an employee of the
Polish Legation in Berne, Switz-

Pre

Student Congress votes, the second largest vote re

ence, is the group's unofficial adviser.
He says the aim of the group
will be to abolish the belief that
cheating is all right. The penalty
for cheating, accoraing to Sipple,
will be dismissal.
He said members of the group
aren't required to report cheating
by students wtto don't belong to
the group.
Members of the group would
have the right to take "makeup
tests at their own convenience

without having any faculty supervision."

The organization will not be
limited to this campus. Sipple has
hopes of it becoming a national
organization with its headquarters
at UK.
Sipple says the group might disonce the honor system is
installed .on the campus, but it
would still retain the national

solve

headquarters.
He figures that it will take between one to five years to get an
honor system started at the

Tom Harrington Named
Student Of The Month
Tom Harrington. Junior in elec- leaders uniforms will be ordered
trical engineering, has been selec- after Christmas.
ted Student of the Month for November by the Student Union
Board for his work as chairman
of the Homecoming Steering Committee.

The steering committee changed
the previous system for judging
Homecoming displays. Last year,
Harrington said, the judging system was criticized, and a more
efficient point system was installed.
"There were no actual Judging
rules before." Harrington said.
The steering committee acted as
a judicial body for SuKy in directing the work of inspecting disgame
plays, setting up half-tim- e
activities, supplying the crown and
flowers for the queen, publicity,
and trophies.
As president of SuKy Circle.
Harrington said that new cheer

LJUi
TOM HARRINGTON

* 2 -- THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday, Dec.

I,

I

10

Judo Club Awaits Approval
Of Constitution From Faculty
..Inst

feudal culture of that country,
Buddhist monks used Jujultsu. as
It was then caat w proieci
themselves against ttackini high- -

been adopted to naffftiard

ny DAVE BRAIN
Krrnrl Staff Writer

any poulble Injuria
aport which
Judo Is the
The recently formed Jmlo rednce8 pnj.sica, only and strengtn
stze
Club is awaiting approval of to little or no importance, accord- -

waymen.
competition Is
In? to Col. Rland Boughton.
s
by AFROTC commander. whose 15- - Dress for a Judo
its constitution and
leaftli
the JudoJI. three-qoartthe University Faculty before year-ol- d son Is the youngest mem- - white uniform worn with a belt
wrapped around the walt.
ber of the club.
making plans-tparticipate in
The sport stresses timing, speed,
nie color of the belts Indicates
--

by-law-

er

o

V(

I

the Southeastern Conference leverare, and momentum and the. the perlormer'a achievement.
,u,nt m"stJfarn tft.f b"'C Brown and green belts are steps
judo competition.'
body
belt,

'

'

.

the
toward the coveted black
The club now has 70 members.
highest degree a Judo performer
Judo wnlch obulned lts
and includes two women. Barrle larUy
Jgpan grew Qut of the caQ obtaln
major from ..Louisville, and Lee
Lakeberg, (education senior from
Lexington.
To its members. Judo Is a sport,
not an activity which trains them
to maim or injure their opponents. A simple set of rules has

py.

)!
RESTAURANT

l!

AND
LOUNGE
A CASUAL
FRIENDLY

A

Judo Throw From

A

MM

Prone Position

To Receive Courses

State
Beamed From Airplane

Kentucky will be one of the six Midwestern states to
receive classroom instruction from an airplane.
The experiment, which will begin early next year, is the
first of its type ut history.
Xhe four cours offered at the

The project will beam instruc- tional courses on video tape from
an airplane flying at 23.000 feet
Indiana to schools in six
surrounding states.
It is. conducted by the Midwest
Program of Airborne .Television
Instruction and based at Purdue
University, Lafayette, Ind.
According to reports gathered
from superintendents and principals of local school systems in
the telecasting region. 526,518
classpupils in 16.939
rooms, assisted by 16,221 classroom
teachers plan to participate in the
project.
-This is really a preview or try-,operiod designed to allow schools
to test the signal and educational
content jirior to participating in
the first full academic year starting in September, 1961," said Dr.
John E. Ivey Jr., president of

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WE ALSO INVITE PRIVATE PARTIES
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HAROLD MICHAEL, Manager
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MP ATI.
He added. "The number of pupils
represents more than 10 percent
of, the five million students we
estimate are within range of the
airplane's signals."
The majority of the students,
454,597, will be enrolled in one
or more of the eight courses offered at the elementary level.

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students, and the two college
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* 1960- -3

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday

Social Activities
MEETINGS

show featuring Indonesian dances,
sonRS, and fashions, will be presented by the Cosmopolitan Club
from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 15,
In the auditorium of the Taylor
Education Building.
Alpha Zeta Initiate
The Kentucky chapter of Alpha
Zcta honorary agricultural fraternity recently initiated nine pledges.
They are:
Ray Prigge, a Junior from Union;
Gary Russell, senior from London; David Coffee, Junior from
Liberty; Wilson G. Collins, Junior
from Dover; James Huey, Junior
from Burlington; Robert L. Milam,
Junior from Shcpherdsville.
Pat Molloy, senior from Lexington; Thomas Price, Junior from
Llvermore; Jerry Staton, Junior
from Atlanta, Ga.; Hugh Mahin,
senior from Keene.
Initiates are required to have
a 3.0 academic standing and arc
selected on the basis of scholarship, leadership, and character.

Tryor rrcmrdical Society
Hie Pryor Premedlcal Society
will meet at 7:30 p.m. today, in
noom 313 of the Funkhouser
Building.
Dr. Frank Gaines Jr., assistant
dean and chairman of the Admissions Committee of the University of Louisville, will speak on

mental health.

Dr. Gaines, who Is a member of
the American Psychiatric Association, received his medical degree
from the University of Louisville
in 1941.
Any one Interested in mental
health is urged to attend.

Dlue Grass Astronomical Society
The Blue Grass Astronomical
Society will hold its annual banquet at 6 p.m. Friday, Dec. 18, in
Room 205 of the SUB.
Dr. Wendell B. DeMarcus, professor of physics, will ppeak on
"Current Views of the Evolution
cf the f tars."
CHRISTMAS PARTIES
Both the dinner and the meetCanterbury Party
ing following are open to all inA Christmas party for the chilterested persons.
dren of the Manchester Street
Settlement House was held SunSUB Jam Session
day evening by the Canterbury
A
Jam session, spon-for- Club at Canterbury House.
by the SUB Social CommitA dinner and presents hightee, will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. lighted the party for about 20
today in the SUB Ballroom.
children.
Charlie Bishop and his band
Ilaggin Hall Dance
will provide the music. Admission
Haggin Hall recently held its
25 cents.
is
first social function of the year,
Cosmopolitan Club
a dance in the cafeteria of DonThe Cosmopolitan Club will pre- - ovan Hall.
Fent an exhibit of Indonesian arts
Attendance was limited to the
and crafts from 10 ajn. to 5 p.m. residents of Haggin Hall and their
Thursday, Dec. 15, in the Social dates.
Room of the SUB.
FACULTY CLUB PARTY
The public is invited to attend.
A Christmas dinner will be
held from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Talent Show
"Indonesian Night," a talent today at the Faculty Club.
ay

pre-holid-

ed

Central Kentucky's Largest
USED BOOK STORE

CHOOSE RIGHT WOMAN
PLAINVILLE. Conn. JT)
The
local Business and Professional
Women's ' Club picked a woman
with an opt name to speak on
"Membership." She waa Mrs. Dor- -

cthy Joiner.

(Other Than Text)
!

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GO TO

Self-Servic-

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Laundry

For You"

877 Vi E. HIGH

AP Newsfeature
Light promises to be shed on the
mysterious contents of a woman's
purse, missing keyholes, and possibly lost shoes under theater
seats.
The promise la in the form of a
flashlight not much bigger than
a lipstick.
Other uses for the petite purse-aliginclude reading programs of
deciphering scribbled addresses in
ht

the darkness.
The diminutive light was designed to be carried in a lady's
handbag with her other toiletry

X

quarter to five the phone rang.
It was a friend's voice.
"I'm sorry Poopsy, but his sergeant is punishing him and won't
let him have a pass," the voice
A

said.

"Darn him, I knew It," she
mumbled.
The UK coed slammed down the
phone and stood there half
dressed, too angry to move.
The party was at five. She had
been planning on it for two weeks
as the highlight of her first weekend at home in Louisville since
September.
It was a combination cocktail
and dinner party with another
less formal party after it. Her
friends across the hall at school
were giving them. Just about every
UK student from Louisville was
going to be there.
At first, the excuse sounded
possible, but at least he should
have been the one to call her.
As she stood there with her makeup on and new dress and shoes
laid out, her anger overcame her
gullibility.

ake

I
M

Tx

U

PH.

Occasion
CALL

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$17.50 Permanents on Special for $15.00

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Make Your Appointments Early

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Save Money At . . .

m.

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850 E. HIGH

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Special Discounts to Fraternities
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To get in the spirit of Christmas
fast . . . visit your Chevy Chase
stores now! Sparkling with Yuletidc
li" fits and decorations, they're as
festive as a Christmas tree, as full
of good cheer as Old St. Nick him-

LUTES INTERIORS
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self. . . .
They're also brimming over with
wonderful gifts for everyone on your
list. Gifts, practical and sentimental
. . . gifts scrumptious and simple
. . . gifts to make this Christmas the
merriest ever!

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802 EUCLID AVE.

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Open Mon. and Fri. 'Til 9 p.m.

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GREENWALD'S

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ETHEL KOHLER, Stylist and Color Artist, and MISS I
EDNA BLACKWELL, a. well known Operator in the H
.i
.
I
t r.
r y"
r
rr
Tieia ot cosmetology, aiong wim our KroTessionai starr .

"FINE FOODS, LOUNGE
AND DANCING

For Any

welcomes you.

LA FLAME
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941 Winchester Rd.

S.

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The Latest in Hair Styling
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The only catch is once she has
dropped it in there, she will need
another. flashlight to find it again.
Date-T-

--

Upon-discoveri-

items.

Impress Your
Her To

room, slamming the door so the
whole building shook.
Three of his buddies were there.
Each swore that he was at ' the
Army base.
She left unconvinced and'.fclill
furious, vowing to get even.
The next day she mailed Mm a
pocket edition of an Emily 'Post
book with this note: ..
"I got your thoughtful message
a quarter to five. Enclosed is a
message I hope you will get.":

Revenge was the only remedy.
She drove to the apartment that
her former date shared with three
other men.
his
car there, she stormed into the

rmmwm

LAUNDRY
"A

A Gift That Beams

Near 3rd

I

JIFFY WASH

-

Pharmacy Tarty
Students and faculty of the
College of Pharmacy will hold
their annual Christmas party for
underprivileged children at 2:15
p.m. Thursday in the College of
Pharmacy Building.
Thirty children from a Lexington grade school will be treated
to gifts and refreshments and
entertained by the students.
The committees handling the
arrangements for the party include Lambda Kappa Sigma, pharmaceutical sorority; the American
Pharmaceutical Association (Student Branch),; the Pharmacy Students' Wives Club; the three
pharmaceutical fraternities, Alpha
Zeta Omega, Phi Delta Chi, Kappa
Psi; and the officers of the sophomore, junior, and senior classes.

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Coed Stood Up, Sends
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883

BECKER

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Representing U.K. lot 46 Years

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Complete Line of
Children's Clothing

A

316 S.ASHLAND

I

PH.

* Something In Return
Now that the Creek Week festiv-

itiesconvocation, exchange dinners,
concert, dance, and workshops are
over, wc should like to suggest that
the Creek Week Steering Committee
begin a study and evaluation of the
week with an eye toward making
several changes in next year's program.
Especially needed are the opinions
of individual fraternity and sorority
members concerning all phases of
Greek Week. From our vantage point
it appears that it was somewhat less
than a howling success.
There was a serious lack of interest in the exchange dinners Thursday
night. Even after each fraternity and
sorority member was assigned a particular Greek house at which to dine,
many of those who bothered to go at
all seemed intent on going wherever
they pleased.
Attendance at the convocation in
Memorial Hall showed in almost no
uncertain terms that unless more interest can be stimulated this opening
program should be revamped considerably or be omitted from next
year's schedule. Perhaps some idea
of what type of program will attract
students would save what should be

the most important single event of
the week.
It did not take any great amount
of research and investigation to learn
that those atending the Saturday
night dance at the Student Union
were not too pleased with either the
Bobby Christian orchestra or the idea
of having such a dance in the SUB.
When a dance is planned for the
University, one must first consider the
UK public. It is not necessarily a
name band that attracts UK students,
but it certainly was not one which
is favored by Big 10 students. Here
again, an evaluation of what University students want in the way of a
band is called for before all fraternity
members are forced to pay $3.25 for
a ticket to a dance they will not enjoy.

There are many complaints concerning this year's Greek Week which
must be investigated. We have heard
that some fraternities are considering
refusing to underwrite next year's
Greek Week dance and others which
are dissatisfied with having to pay so
much for what they considered to be
second- - and third-rat- e
entertainment.
It must be remembered that when
a person lias to give away his money,
he expects to get something in return.

A Modern Christmas Story
AND IT CAME TO PASS, in dling tissue paper, with your names
on them."
those days that there went out a decree from the North Pole that there
AND SUDDENLY there was a
were only 60 more shopping days unrush toward the tree:
til Christmas so this shopping ought Praising Santa Claus, and saying,
to begin about the first of November. "Glory to Santa in the highest, for the
And all people went to shop everyone gifts which he has brought."
into his own city and Rudolph, the
AND IT CAME TO PASS when
d
reindeer, also went down Santa had gone away from them, the
from Galilee, out of the city of Nazachildren said one to another, "Let us
reth, into Judea, unto the city of go unto the neighbors and see this
David, because he was of the lineage which has come to pass, and find out
of Santa's reindeer To be harnessed if they got more for Christmas than
with his companion Twinkletoes.
we did."
AND IT CAME TO PASS that
AND THEY CAME WITH
while they were there, that the days HASTE, and found a wagon, doll, and
were accomplished that Santa should drum larger than the one they had
deliver all his toys So away through lying under the mantel. And when
the sky he went After going down they had seen them, they made known
the first 'chimney, he brought forth abroad the saying, "Our neighbors
his first toy, and wrapped it in swadgot more than we did from Santa."
dling tissue paper, and laid it near And all they that heard it wondered
the mantel, for there was no room at the things told them by the chilunder the tree.
dren. But mother kept all their toys
AND THERE WERE IN THE and pondered over them in their
SAME HOUSE, children, keeping
living room.
watch by night. For they wanted to
AND THE CHILDREN REsee what Santa would bring And lo, TURNED, glorifying and praising
their parents came vpon them, and Santa Claus for all the things which
they were sore afraid, and the light they had received, and for the toys
of the living room shone around them, which the neighbors had.
and they were caught in the act of
From "Paragraph from the
peeping.
Centenary Methodist Church
AND MOTHER said unto them: Bulletin.
"Fear not, for behold, I bring you
good tidings of great joy, which shall
Kernels
be unto all you children For unto
"When you sell a man a book you
each of you this day there is a toy
under the tree And this shall be a don't sell him just 12 ounces of paper
sign unto you, ye shall find presents and ink and glue you sell him a
Morlctj.
whole new
which Santa left wrapped in swad
free-for-a- ll

red-nose-

Tas-tor- ,"

ie."-Ciristo- phcr

The Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentucky

March 3,
Entered at th port offit at Leiingtoa, Kentucky a wcond olau matter under the Act ofand ciama. 1879.
year except during holiday!
Published four tunei a week during the regular
SIX DOLLARS A SCHOOL YEAR

Bob Anderson, Editor
Newton Spenceh, Sport$ Editor
Wennumcer, Managing Editor
Ulax
Managing Editor
Bobbie Mason, Assistant
Stuakt Coudkarb, Advertising Manager
Akin, Society Editor
Alice
Nicky Pope, Circulation
Perry Ashley, Business Manager
Skjp Taylor and Jim Channon, Cartoonists
WEDNESDAY NEWS STAFF

Mejuutt Dettz, News Editor

Stewart IIkdcer, Sports

MiciitLE Feajunc, Associate

"Yes, Virginia, there is ISO Santa Claus . . .

THE READERS' FORUM
Greek Week Wallow

This is in no way a criticism of your
fine paper, but 1 would like to make
this clarification known to you and
the student body.
In the IFC meeting of last Tuesday, I reported on a recent trip to
the National Intcrfiatcrnity Convention at Ia)s Angeles.
At this meeting I made two quotes
offered by two different speakers.
These qii"es were reported in the
Kernel as if I had said them and
they were my opinion.
This is not so.
Sen. Barry Goldwater made the
statement, "I am proud of the fraternity system in America and I am disgusted with the people who knock
it." I quoted him as saying this in
my report.
A foreign student said, ""If Castro
had been a fraternity man they probably would not be having a crisis in
Coin now." I quoted him as saying
this m my report.
Both these views are somewhat a
matter of opinion and I cannot claim
to be the originator of them. I feel
this distorted your news story, but I
am sure the mistake was unintentional.
Thank you and I add another
congratulation to you on your recent
award for publishing one of the top
college newspapers in our country.
Dick Wallace
Vice President
Interfaternity Council

To The Editor:
But particularly to the amazing
Mr. Roberts so late arisen from the
majestic mist surrounding the Guig-no- l
Theatre. Sir, you read the words
of a heartily disappointed man; I had
eagerly anticipated response to my
last letter, but I had expected it to
come from those equally as concerned as myself with the existing
situation. Twas not to be . . ., and
you, Mr. R., have opened my eyes
to that harsh reality.
This noble heart that professed
desires to effect reform has been torn
asunder. Yet my honor doth move me
to cite one further example of campus
apathy. Last Saturday a shrouded
Greek Week wallowed unceremoniously on its pompous belly for several miserable hours and then quietly
expired. But it garnered not a single
tear in passing, and even the dictatorial requisitioning of funds from
every fraternity affiliate on campus
failed to stay the inevitable death
seizure. On Friday last, I (like many
others), was the proud owner of a
$3.25 dance ticket which boasted a
blackmarket resale value of less than
and twenty-fiftof its original price. Who plans these
futile attempts, and do they consider
campus opinion at all in their plans?
Now, Mr. R., can you still denounce my raillery of last week, when
so clear an example of injustice confronts your very eyes? I have heard
the faint "meow" of that famed cat,
but I find him too bloated with leth"Learning is nothing without culargy to fend off the tying on of many
bells. I ask you, Mr. R., is this not tivated manners, but when the two
are combined in a woman you have
truly a tragic state of affairs?
one of the most exquisite products
Wes Morris
of civilization." -- Andre Maurois.
h

Kernels

Misquoted
To The Editor:
I respectfully would like to call
your attention to some misquotes reportedly made by me which appeared
in your Thursday, Dec. 8, edition.

"To know how to say what other

people only think is what makes men
potts and sages; and to dare to say
what others only dare think makes
men martyrs or reformers." -E- liza-bclh
Rundle Clmrlcs.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Wednesday,

Dec. 14, 1060- -5